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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1880—TW ENTY PAGES. League, to give the En aa glish people a con- | conference will propose the appointment of Ed thi FOREIGN. tak oeaniatgn sees ee? of | a nteatonal deintadoa Commision | LEMA’S DERENSES, | to prsmey iv pen nares oa'og oe | SOME EFFECTS IN CHINA [ae tales, 9 rage elr organization, will strike determine the new Greek frontier, Taken, ike Chiltans wherever they found Or two, a plate of biscuits: tl pes, A pear “A STARTLING BLOW” estar, 7 § Wounded man either cut his throat or “d - inthe h 5 escripti Peru’s To: .. | fastened h ti cs * 5 ;_ | sundy, which I will place near the fire, anda Gladstone’s Letter to Boycott | nine. atthe ar Herren res erie Deol An authoritative dentat ts | 2 eee ae Delgado, wou along til nie was dee ane ofiter eases | 4 Model anal ‘imei Pee se es se OF te. window eo Bae 3 = “ ven e report that . o prisoner was thrown it ; te jife. * Occasions Much Adverse | recived some dlarming intelience on thls | cign ifairs has had a cosferter nah ons Had a Hand in It, on the polnts of Davonets. In eho chile eee iy ecu, ou shal vgn up fea . is Kept as secret as possible. | Secretary of the G E h Mmy there is shooting going on all the time, Sas Ty ED ” Comment. There is no allusion made to the German Embassy here re- he men shoot the officers when chances New Fork Ti is the table. subject in the newspapers, but the fact is Gecting the projected cession of Crete to Life in the Capital City—Tho Expected Chilian olfers, and executions are, of course, com- | ¥fy neighbor ont the flight below has been doen ere, pod ners amazed, bat rg None the less unquestionable. In so large a | S7ee°e instead of Epirus. Attack and What Will Happen if it tit ae ea ee Binder, She quite civil to me. Somehow or otherhisface | spread a white tableclouls on a small square London Times Speaks of | “iy itis necessarily difficult to guard against TEALY. Bored: Whole body will go to pieces at’ once. | istamillar. Evidently heis a foreigner. 1 table, nd smoothed ont a crease. “You , danger, and especially an unknown danger, | Rose, Dee.18—In the Chamber of Deputios ce 2am afraid that when the battle before the | wonder why itis thatT associate him with Business alway ee eae ae eROrS nia It as the Government’s at all points, and people, remembering | Premier Caffoll said no plan of international Canltal ts dought, and the Chiliang ate | the sound of tumbling seas, clanging horns, | of the eloth, not at rele cence eae parallel Latest Blunder. the Clerkenwall explosion of Dec. 13, 1867, arbitration fordetermining the line of the New York Fons ba rn Ther Feeling 1s so stron qe Pemba and a filet of beef, with Maderia sauce,rare? | with the sitter. Thar brings luck. On a Te, Uaturally nervous and apprehensive, | Greek frontier had been proposed, but that | Among the passengers by the Pacific Mall there may be noquarter shown, No such re- | Lam trying to recall a vacuous smile which | Small table like this there f@ novtanco toe T 5 such proposit steamer Clyde, which arrived yesterday |-oi art, and it would be difticult to show yon ‘he police are constantly on the watch, but Proposition might be brought forward. yesterday |-ciprocation has yet been exercised, but I | I have seen somewhere, which has enchanted grand coup. But let me pretend fone do not know where to watch or for what to | Hesaid he hoped European concert would | morning from Aspinwall, was Mr. Eulogio | would not like to be responsible for the lives | me at some time or other. When I gaze at | foor of this room is the table, and that a Farmers Rapidly Succumbing | keep atookout it is be maintained, but he perceived the posst- { Delgado, of Lima, Peru, who is well known | of those invaders, Ehey fight for no princi- | him I find myself repeatin, iz the fable of the | change of plates has t up jon” of 8 (Asai det on RBA CNR RE SEES bility of complications arising, to American firms trading on the western Fionn tess tocuo patriotism, Wehave Dought | cricket and the ant Publig thinks that sole eNO che to the “Persuasion” oj with all who ato responsible for the public ExCHaNG® OF ¥iEWsi coast of South America, being himself the | each and deserts os comuon, thee |. -Thave been singing ‘and chirping all sum- | things. You may remember how Houdin - Peruvian representative of the Philapelphia | should the Chiliane tice Lima, tt would not | mer like unto the cricket; and he,as the ant, | Body was isappointeds Paton he Sate peace or safety. Rome, — v the League, coun ae: OME, Deo. 18—An active exchange of | house of Fralick: Murphy & Go A a | Ea the saavor ste, Government would retire | has been undoubtedly toiline ducine “tho it rattling wheels and clicking ratehet-work, views has commenced between the Powers to the interior, ane . a A correspondent had. a long and interest- relative to the last Turkish note. The Pow- | &*0 who is a nativeof Lima, was educated carry on the war Toe eee ATegUIDe, plensant weather. He isto meas moral, | then only was his work admired. ‘The world : . ing conversation to-day with Mr. Th at Cambridge, Mass., isa civil engineer by ala Fi s “ requires jar, just asin music it ts Wag- a Consultation of Irish Nation- O'Connor, M. P., who has just pie to caus cussing whether or not they shall profession and the special study he has made | foot or See 13,000 more aa that ae Fat have pond tee sate pall that met: and Berion ves alists to Be Held Soon London froin & Very successful tour‘ of the SACKED IICER. of exblasives aa been of eras aang to be We can carry on a war to any length. | winter has come why don’t you dance?” ; BUT NOISE IS NOT ART; vi whi is native cou: in war wii . you with some pre in Paris. Ieetures On the” preseat oer of an Coxstaxmmoris, Dee. 18—The Vilage | 1 When I left Lima on the 2ith of last | £8M.a Peruvian, butit you wilt eee arte abe aban i , When f nothing 8B | Moret would be arartise. Nowe ine eneee 2 tale is He an Of 8 | of Mush, in Armenia, has been sacked by month,” he said to a World reporter who | WY: Fralick, who’ comes also on the Clyde, oe pies ig, | Pass him on | ozen piates from my pantry and Pomenen ee ‘ objects of the Land eet es Turkish troops. ome met him on the steamer Yesterday, “ the Kmevican Spr how the situation strikes ait ‘4 supposes ‘ain mon id through change of | WYatm. if Echiose Jcouldgun u und down ss Ritualists Released | s2id that he believed the situation in Ireland GREAT BRITAIN. Chillans had just landed a force of 12,200 men | Mr. Fralick, who has been spending three | fortune. fess When Inst at Gare Taseended far Englis Prison by Order Was most grave and threatening, and that a ‘astonican diac at Pisco, which is a port about 160 miles from montis Ini aoa en Bualness, said: © The site | have inte th Wott a ot | BIBERE the pyramids with two dozen und 1 iC respect ere i the fresh e; alt of from 1y bloody Christmas was not at all improbable. Lima by land. The country ’between Piseo | ation is an issue of about $60,000,000 of te. | early epring thertsame 2 flood of ‘good fort ilrow them cn the seed anes ofa piano Soectat Cable. of Court. In his opinion, the greatest danger was tobe | Lonnoy, Dec. 18—Owing in part to the | and Lima is very bad, being mostly desert ber currency,—greenbacks, for they look ex- | une. I accepted an engagement, of literary | and they would be mute. But, as 1 re- apprehended in the West, where every male | disturbed state of aifairs here, renewed at. | Plains with fertile valleys between thom Belly like our old war currency,—but in issu- | editor on a poultry gazette. Odd jobs were marked, the world wants noise, for tho Claug is armed to the teeth, and where all tention has been turned during the week to | The forces landed, according to the Chilian | ing it Gen, Plerola, the Dictator, issued also plentiful, and I did them all. £ was mak- | of plates is supposed. to produce appetite, tion Still U; have revolvers, many ritles of the most ap- | American investments, ‘The chiefs stocks | 8ccounts, include 10,000 infantry, some cav- te olitsitver Brien far any anicieg produced | did Eonoy Yalan’ tainpe meee “WY Thea o hnette i ike plateson iis asca and a 9 LY + mn The Greek Question Still Upper- | proved pattern’ and to ineoneiderabie en, | Aimetican inves advaneo were Iinols Cen- | Siss-tnd some fld batteries, shout fourteen | inthe county: not Seat Nees prouuced | did, Conoy” sand leading artisis in tho | Lheard S soulane: beet ae ae an : " 4 jeces in all. There were at Pisco some ‘i ; ;) st in the European - ber carry both kinds of weapons, tral, Lake Shore, Atlantic, Mississippi & | Pit 3 W! be made in currency. You see the effect ot | Ladies’ Paper-Model Dress-Pattern Sympo- | as the click of castahets in the opening meas- a nas Capitals.’ Pi It had been asserted, he said, that Ohio, and New York, Pennsylvania, and tian Thee aes eee ee nore Rteeeraa he a Sa ie Tin im wetores inins arduous allot sive me Med sce nd at tt we ane i Pike the ya sd rake Nine e ver for x y-| 5 a F | a A FENIAN MOVEMENT Ohio first mortgages, the last named owing | men at Arica, and the transports had Shag | ZSuite of rooms. This time I paid 50 cents a | tissues. of flimsy paper, and improvising out charae: then it subsided te 8 monotonous +] Was organizing, and he admitted the presence | to rumors of coraing dividends, to be paid | back after them. We do not know what day in the same coin or $5 in currency. The | of such sleezy material elaborave: gorgeous, | ruffle, tik - the Report Co 2 of pean ugents .at ‘work among the peo- | partly incash and partly instock. Apart from Sear intentions are Lethe Hine, ll ae fare from Calling to Dia was 50 cents In sil- and reeplendent summer iresses hey: foun funeral marehe Ra eet 21 28 ut oh i i fini a yer; now itis 50 cents in currency or 5 cents | 8 relic! ancy, in going from the shams to * Wou Denial of the Repo: mcerning | ple, @ denied emphatically that | speculativestocks,everything good findséager coreume a month’s time, or whether thay | insliven Glaus tet e Gene iy. paid 10 | tho-realities of lite “Thefromicee es £0 plate>™ ud you kindly request me to break a the Proposed Cession of the people were Organizing, and said that | buyers, and what is bought is held very | will reémbark and come north by water, Of | conts for Lo uct for 1 cent. The cur- | splendént:' We made a sensation on the |? 6. ” Crete. Fs he eanetly eae ype Sing frau. "There is Cone By La ne aa ea ape dE they reney, is faxen for duties, "Beet! gota 3 Beach, and thelr appetites rere in Keeping | « Ranybody can do that Eset a like a ‘ur he success No TRUTH fore for cents a-kilogram, or 20 cents @ superbness of their clothes. It was | Remenyl breaks string at will, is it chance? + 000 cavalryinen or guerrillas to harass them 8 pound, now it sells for two cents a pound | an entire course of mutnal edneation—of 2 What Dimean ts ‘hiss Choose any. partiewiar so far of the Li: e whi v as Land League, which is | whatever in the reported withdrawal of Sir | and impede their progress. Lima is weil in sitver. This pair of shoes cost me $80 in | gustatory character—which ¥ paid for, We | plate. Shall I break the second or. the fifth IRELAND. Winning alt along the line, makes a | Edward Thornton KE. 6. B., fr i i 5 . B., from Washing- | defended and fortitied, and an attack made currency, but, you see, I got them for $3 of | rose inthe dietetic scale b: degrees. At | or Teventh 2 AN EVENTFUL WEEK Fenian movement entirely needless, ,Sbeak- | ton, where he is likely to long remain the | 00 our works will end’ the money Ltook detm tome Pierola has | first, at the close of June lost, whee thas SF Mie eloventh ah, the ae ee is Special Cable, ing of the stories of volence, Mr. O’Connor Dean of the Diplomatic Corps. IN THE DEFEAT OF THE CMILIANS. issued another class of greenbacks, a sort of | came a succession of very hot days, a simple ‘ THERE IT 1s!” “Ioxpox, Dec. &—Since the beginning of | denies that the League had harmed ‘or in- icine aROKEs OAUEY, We shall act on the defensive, for to go out | gold certificate, and he promises 10 have the | chowder and a glass of beer at Norton’s suf- A plate split itself into frarments, and it 3 Be ae paging md tisiea battle Would, I think, | culn ready to meet thom. ‘They command a | fied. Then we ascended. to Cabins seal the third trom the bottoms ton at ee - a the Irish disturbances no week has witnessed | tended to harm people. The arms now in a E greater political excitement, none more ji fl To the Western Associated Press, be unwise, We have in Lima 30,000 troo} higher price. 5 ran the gamut until we reached the Oriental, 4 : = ee duatiiioes of tae anearoe spirit ol} bee ete ee ei may "30. | ,20NPON, Dec. 18—The Directors of the | armed with the Fenbody, rill and besides PIEROLA 18 A WONDERFUL MAN, noeed, Fontes that aun a sybarite? Ram. } Ayre du anat if these were Savres plates ag lawlesness; none the more rapid develop- | cleties Anglo-American Cable Company have deeld- | thero ate front 6,000 to 8,000 National Guards- | ang he possesses the entire confidence of the mine who, itty years pel Coummenced wits { Would be just the same.” Molded with beter jizen soldiers who drill every da‘ By 5 i . d_to postpone repairing the Brest cable of | Men or citi . Y | people. Even those who were opposed to y material and more perfect in shape, they are ment of the crisis; none has drawn DAVITT. be = . and are armed with Remington rifies. We Bf 2] ve hii green peasin New Orleans, and i vork wit parc an none has mado laine te pu | vie Sie Pareto he Toten ea | an ucommngrobneerouswente. | Hava ili ltzagand a sepa amet | Hey? 9p cure, te doe not | een posta ey Grea and ‘isis tho place-ahuile” Lereugeen eee parties, and none has made plainer the pur- } Davitt, Mr. Parnell’s able lieutenant, who <p LOST AT SEA. siti ig ‘aceonil ng Le ev careful ieee feels confident of deteating the Chilians in | stage by stage, through many delightful | a half-dozen plates on each arm, and they poof the Irish leaders simultaneously to | only recently returned from his trip to | _‘The bark Nile, Capt. Dixon, from Quebec, Phe city wil be Surrounded cage pe Ehirign? aa abou shoo OUTS, Bima. The | months untill ue came abreast with the last | Jumoed” about frou” ong ‘arm io we hiltans had abot sunder the political ties of Ireland and En- | America, has been determined on, and that | Nov. 15, for Cardiif, became waterlogged and | works, and it will be very hazardons for the | we left and RUOUTTO,OO res Heo when eitgulee nate ona ee ate oor inst ioe Pheeier ob gO TEE onened as on them gid, and disorganize the existing social | the warrant will issue immediately. capsized on the 22d of November. Part of the Chilians to make an attack. ‘The feelii and twenty miles’ journey will bring them to | pressive dinner at Coney Island in the stand: | it would be ler. Now, I will fabric of their own country. ‘Three suc- LAND MEETINGS PROUIBIRED. the crew landed at Flushing. The Master in Lima is one of complete, Satisfaction of the woritsabous jour pale theremrecnthe est manner when the season closed, “DoT lng aha door as it te ween fable” tehen tt eessive Cabinet Councils, each long and S S see! Cabie. ‘ and remainder of the crew were drowned. ea sien Sate ch the sity There ie bills overlookin, the fown plenty of heavy Taek donee eons, spent? am ben my commenced chucking places, a pip haar 9 : TBLIN, Dec. 19.—Great excitement pre- + 7 ; 2 guns, 1,000-pounders an unders, look- st dollar Went, wit 6 iced champagne | as it were, but each crockery sphere wheele ansious, sufficiently indicate the severity of a JOINED THE TRANSPORT SERVICE. taken by the invaders. The people are ing cue toverin the bay, but capable of | and the fee to the waiter, there came sudice into its piiee and subsided into its exact posi- the political strain. Altnough no crisis, | Valls in League circles to-night in conse Capt. Carey, who becaine widely known in | united in believing that the war should icht ov i adversity. ‘The poultry gazette went to roost + i 7 thi woperly speaking, occurred, it is known that | quence of the announcement of the probi- | connection with the death of the Froach | Pace cied oe eying, that, termination, and | Gaink Shots rit eh aN thay’ ToGke RES | early in Nove a uery magette went fo To to | teonthe ointe' in the Middle eke ae ae bition by the Government of several land | pri, -- | Any suggestion of compromise now would be very y, i . DIFFtRENCES OF OPINION Prince Imperial in South Africa, has deter. y ‘ood fighters, every one of them, and they | do their duty, and’ I was left as one poached late rapidly in turn, he slung it intosthe hooted down at once. The Chilians have | & eered” t or addled. “My cousins are kind, not un- eentral lates then he seized at one swoop meetings which had been arranged for to- ined 55 ing are well officered’ and very finely arme esti tbe Cablnet hich are each day he-\| Mecsas which meetings thus proscribed, | pret to Join the transport service, leaving | made very ittie Te irarercat—far, less | There are no lack of atms and autaunition, | grateful, hopeluleren that lone tere ones the whole pile and pitched it as a body into & eoming broader. There was no intention till ings P his regiment, the Ninety-eighth, and ceasing | than they pretended to havemade,—and they | and 50,000 idges a d: f | more; but their tea is very weak, the slices Itw: seade of china, but thi fie end of last week to hold a Cabinet Coun- | 50 far as at present known, are those | tobe a combatant officer, fight very cautiously indeed. Considering the factory they heave st tant et at of their bread diaphanous. and the butter on fragile wate. seemed prot neal ‘aceldene = i before Wednesday. The summons | aMnounced for Ballybrophy and Cullohiil, mL that we have no navy, I think we have made arms are all imported from the United States | them insufficient. under his accomplished hands, for it subsided. “fot Monday was certainly occasioned | both in Queens County, Howth in County The Rey. Gervase Smith, ex-President of | 2,YetY 800d showing against them. You by way of Panama, and over 50,000 have gone | _ Why should I ndt accept his invitation? It | without noise ava nestled inacorner. * ty Mr’ Forster's ureent tele s from | Dublin, and Nobbertrim in County Meath. the Wesleyan Confer Sedan ously Ul recollect the sestructian st their transport | down by that way tecently. There are maga- | is very cold in my bare room, and my poor “It is only practice. You can see, how- Dablin, Tt is equally certain that afr. | No official proclamations have been issued cee en ah | Len by a torpedo eoneealed in a frult-boab ines of anmunition whe aklne ge digits | tobe taser cree soy atutemmenet He | ever, that wien a Inndiord is disagreeabla . 7 is DI a ins, kis it us jow entirely he isin our power, for we can Svs ahi optuiets eld Seiya tees | Gio Rea ores atara tate cag eet | to dant of ta Draenens 8 Westatnalas Fie Trom arhagansaney eo eeraune Of the | would not end'the wat-so far‘ as the Pore, Sargt Hernbardé could oniy be induced to | ruin i in ehina Suppose dome ‘ane ' os - a § i stu nglish, why, e would retous SI ha} Wi ie or Bi tncrean ofthe easoutve nome Bournemouth ln evening ne? S| arkansas oot i main | Soy aan When Tia at teas | seat eae veut mou | foil app tobe wala on Was roto mediate increase sideréd extraordinary that the Government ne remit the bearer balers Ai should proscribe the meetings at this hour, | Bournemouth last evening. and, shen the 300 pounds of dynamite ex: | o'clock to see but iknow my neighbor bas a good fire, and BEVENGE Is MINE. true that Mr. Forster at any time offered his | 98, it may cause a collision between tho ‘he Gout of Athen oa HEISON: is Res fan tes mimes ret fog Sunk Jn The shutt matiheata rd DPI ith arush pane Hts Peniecandd wane oar: ane have ‘to. gon Banding the Othe " ice i: - ie Court of Appeals lay has agreed 4 = ie shutters of the shops up with a rus! Lae = re 5 or his hea » With a well-stud rot mo- recgnation or ultimatum. People and the police In consequence of in th THE CORVET COVADONGA and the men all begin forming ih line. Every: | _ {Was kindly received, with affability, To tion of the Soup-tureen, to allow @ spoonful A 3 ici: - | hear the cases of the Rey. Messrs. Dale and E i is no actual crisis, no proffered | Sufficient notice. The League officials con 3 was destroyed in pretty much the same way. | body who. is able to. must. how shoulder’a Tose as he responded to my inquiry whether | {1° slop ovér and trickle down the back of resignation, But certain members of the | Sider that the Government desires to provoke | Enright, Ritualists, and ordered both gentle- This vessel, you will remember, was taken | musket. ‘There are 6,000 Ltalians in oreccae | “2 mighs of the in.” Z elancel around. ieee his coat. ‘We spare women’s toilets, though arow in order to secure the passage of a | men released from imprisonment, on the un- | by the Chilian Admiral. Willen Lencnede mand a6 a sort of home-guard, forthe inter. ; deeubant of the room had ‘Quite a numberof | 1 2ave known waiters, without a ehivalrous- Government are resolved to set 5 Spell ‘4 7 ion act. derstanding that they shall not do anything | from the Spaniards in 1865. He was in the | ests of Italy are quite large in the city. This rae impulse, to spoil a handsome dress, Glass : DEFISIT LaNTs Coerei pete Sinan in the meantimecontrary to Lord Penzance’s | Esmeralda and hoisted the English flag, as | is the more noticeable because the’ Italiane | French novels; on the etagere tumblers, goblets, and wine-glasses, when to"concessions, one Minister, among the athe Bobrick Smee : monition. though he was in distress. ‘The Covadonga war-vessels have been specially obnoxious to A COLLECTION OF CUPS AND SAUCERS, properly handled, present some few novel- highest, freely referring in conversa- Associated Press. , ran down to help the Chilian, and when she | the Peruvians. They were the channel | of which, strange to say, no two were alike. ties; but the circus-performers have intro- i Lownos, Dec. 18.—A dispatch from Dublin Was near enough a raking fire was openedon | through which information of the doings in | was attracted toward these keramic ob- | duced them tuto their shows as they have wa oe ror oe Ais to the Times says the loyal_farmers and SPAIN. her, and the Spaniard was captured by sur- the Capital reached the attacking ores a jects, and was astonished to see that on the knife-throwing,—they are vulgar tricks, A ¢ traders in many counties, hitherto undis ONEROUS CUSTOMS REGULATIONS, prise. Well, the Covadonga was bombarding | least that is the general and apparently well- | cups and saucers were ae in allcolors | guild of writers by no means sufficiently ap- prybody resigns it~ will not be | faders in yielding very reluctantly to the | | MADrro, Dec. 18.—The Captains of Amer- | Chageay, a small port about forty miles from | founded tacos eee eee | Cur names of the leading hotels in the world. | preciated are those found on the beers ae Mr. Chamberlain. Evidence accumulates » to join the Land | ican vessels have had to complain of heavy | Lima, when a-smauil boat, *got up? to look as | in Limaand Callao are very large. In a | Paris, London, Hamburg, Venice, Florence, |-ocean-steamers. Education of the arms and tt Mr. Chamberlain does not represent the | Pressure put upon them to join the -fines inflicted for the slightest irregularity ix if it was the gig of the Captain of the port, | zecent inventory taken by the Alinisters Naples, Rome, Constantinople, Cairo, New | how to balance things are terrestrial accom fober opinion of that large radical section of | eseuc and to subscribe to its funds. manifests and ship papers, as in the resent | CMe, outto her. ‘The -corvete, sus; cting | there it was shown that $23,000,000 of prop- | York, Chicago, New Orleans, had all tur- plishmen but the leg equilibriam can onl: fae Liberal party he assumes to speate BOYCOTT AND GLADSTONE. soinething wrong, fired on the small boat, erty In these cities belongs to foreign houses | nished their quota of crockery, Was Iny en: acquired at sea. I have passed throug k Libe pif a ith Correspondence is published between Capt. | Case ofa vessel thatentereda Spanish port in | and its crew at’ once jumped overboard | and of this $16,000,000 is credited’ to Great | tertainer a salesman in the china business? that school, I might mention to you for. A good independent atithority as- Boycott and Gladstone. The former asks the | distress, and with a cargo not destined for | and swam ashore. _ The Chilians sent | Britain. If “Lima falls into the hands of | Tasked him“ What house he represented?” | the most celebrated artist in ‘our ‘erts to-day that three-fourths of the ist 5 4 ify | 2 peninsular or colonial port of Spain. The | launch after the boat, They were very | the Chilians lam afraid we shall see the “ Ah,” said my friend. with a slightly for- | line that I know of, and that is Wa House of Commons are ready to | assistance of the Government to indemnify Board of Trade in England not long ago | faullous about it for their Admiral | greatest pillage of this centnry, and one that | eign adcent shose nts wae ee aey fore dislass, of the Hotel d’Angieterre, assent to measures of coercion. hhim for some of the losses caused by his hay- Fa flici mitt the atte: ez has issued orders to them to keep clear | willbe a difgrace to our time, and especially want to haye around me reminiscences of | at St. Petersburg. I have seen that wonder- ' It is understood that Forster to | ing to quit Ireland. Gladstone replies that | issued official notice calling he attention of | of all boats adrift. Well, they passed | to the United States. Ithink a strong pro- | my life.” Then he took anapkin and com- | ful creature with an aspic of sterlitz in one ‘ soaks Orsied, FEMMTHS 40:1 48 Goverment has already largely assisted | the trade to this system. Foreign Legations | a rope under it to see that it was really | test from this country would end the danger | menced furbishing a cup. Now, no one—L hand, anda tureen of cream-soup with en- Ireland strengthened by the assurance that Boycott with t and Consulates, including the United States | clear of any wires, had it examined by. a | of massacre whieh Would follow in case the | saw that at once—ever could have handied a | cumbers in the other hand, descend like the needed measures shall be introduced at | Boycott with troops. representatives, have to ask, and generally | Calker to be sure that there was no false attack should prove successful. The Peru- | cup that way unless perfectly accustomed to lightning, with stream! napkins, on one i In consequence of the refusal of Gladstone : bottom, and even then were not satistied, but | vians fousht well at Tacna, but whether they | snch business. The intricacy of the handle foot, down the slippery side of a2 Montagne Mnepening of ts session, ABEAS Ceures | tO assist Boyeoty, the ‘English public will be | obtain, from the Siadrid. Government a Te doa ncReinect from the corvet go out’ and | will at Lima remains tobeséen. ‘The Chillans | was as nothing to him, Sora Gaal etlece he | ogee me lose a fragment of hig ish or hearin eas TAB ;| Sppealedto foraid. A list of committees | duction and often the entire repeal of the ex- | look the boat over. ‘These doings were very | are a band of breathed on the cup, ana with a gentle fric- | spill a drop of hissoup, Pietro, of Doney’s, act. The Irish authorities say unanimously: orbitant fines inflicted under Custom-House | closely watched from the shore, Lean teil CUT-THROATS AND PLUNDERERS, tion of his cuff imparted the last’ gleam of | at Florence, is good. With blindfolded eyes. will be published shortly which will organize polish to it. Ihave seen the lamented Heller | he will pour out. coffee at fifty different ta~ “We know the men who are fomenting dif ‘i - | you. Finally, they seemed to determine th: ris. & ting regulations for the slightest omission or in- | 3; Mibrend ‘ Te tues! | Their ery is, ‘On to Lima?’ and there they execute some clever tricks, but my new | bles, and never soil the table-cloth. 1 have ces and organizing disorder. Half of | ® Subscription in aid of Boycott. the small boat was all right, and the Jaunch , el them will fly at the canes pl The Times in an editorial says: “fhe | accuracy in the papers of ships, even when | {72 her in tow to. the side of the corvet. iutend rob ae thelr Petre. eet epian friend did something with that cup and | devoted more of my time, however, to seuaindes gan be orca ee Government’s last and unnecessary blunder | entering ports of Spain in transit or in dis- | ‘They attempted to hoist her up, but as soon | fou Bie (any OMe valuables have gone | S8ucer which was miraculous. Posing the EFFECTS IN CHINA, Te | is Gladstone’s reply to Boycott’s demand for | tress. as the weight of the boat came on the rings ang many ENE cup and saucer on the palm of his hand he I Toravel fi essary. Comparatively few arrests will = Gadstone’s reply to Boye Smmanid’ 20, 4 Se | back to Chili from the invaders. Lima with heaved th inal ; | with, I trust, somesuccess. {travel for my wore ‘tranquillity be ie a intimated that assistance by the Government, which is con- SOUTH AFRICA, pe ceach torte aE cern ee its 200,000 inhabitants and Callao with its jpparenty beaved ecient taunched ike), | att, and have been much disappointed with : ived i iri i ‘Oke 1: . a a i : ste ) Spa » Ja e x ve Stel ceived in a spirit that wil! provoke uch dis- BRITISH. SUPERIORITY. suapped and 300 pounds of dynamite stowed | 49,000 people are. virtually one city, and they | (ois? acrrated in the air, followed closely aie pave seer of walterss It ig aneglected Mt. Forster, being certain of the suspension ther o 1 ‘ich. ty-nine churches of i of the Habeas Corpus act in January, | Sptistaction. Public opinion cannot be of- Loxpox, Dec. 18—Advices from Acera, | ite alr-chambers along each side of the gre very eb een of mold aud silver { BY the cup, and both alixhted at the same | are There are ative: walters ae aysier- 4 fended by the letter, which is devoid of id & boat exploded, and in ten minutes the Cava- id other adorn- | time on the etagére, the cup in the saucer, houses,—strong, brawny fellows, who sport BIy proceed I oe ee ENE 8 | Satural sympathy, and comestven iw roice | We coast of Africa, under date of Nov. 18, | don Peng Sant he men on shore hurried { Mem M,fents statues, and other adorn. Pons BPRS Iati Te ke cee, Seeing that | bare aims, who always Have 9 thremsnine probabi o' persons so 4 & # are as follows: out in boats and the launches of the corvet, ian vail, raid that the | Was appreciative, taking aspoon in a care- | Pare ‘A six-foot waiter is an impossibility: detained ing released e | Of Pettishness against Boycott for having i which were out ding patrol duty, also | Chilians | prevai (el Jess way (the spoon came from his waist- ap Bpension. ae is aimitted “that hig | ade necessary the employment of troops, | Disagreements arising between the Colo- helped to pick up the Inch in the water, | £07elen houses woinld not be respected, | Jess way. (the, spoon came from his walst- SAeould fender “the ealline reticent Unsatisfactory as the action of the Govern- | Mal Governor and the native King, the popu- | Qutof 100 men on board ete forty were SRouel Box & Gor Grace Brewers Cos mumbletoe-peg, he threw it, end over end, | av Mntciivent man Ine ee auguous. Tecent circular to the Magistrates was inef- i Tati including the Fant id it fell, ‘I downward, into the cu FE f mentis, and usable as they are to agree, we | lation, including the Fantees, assumed a | saved, ving i 2 i and it fell, bow! downward, in ins uyg | must act his part. There should be Benul. the Magistrates almost unanimously | ment 1 md weable as they are other reason | hostile attitude towards the few Europeans | ° * The last attempt to use the torpedo Pee eT aang HBPorLanE ofllces oF thele aud, went round and round as if stirring up | Bit on" the icagt shade of sanietcude — Rolying that they are powerless to enforce than that we should ‘not change horses | here. Just as the situation became critical, WAS NOT SUCCESSFUL, Spared, but the destruction. would be ve Pleniatlen ite | ‘The utter indifferent manner really takes Repressive measures and unable to rely on while crossing a stream.’ Itisto be hoped | the British gunboats Foam and Dido were | It took place about twenty days before I left | great, ’ It is the last hope of the Chilians, It You ‘are—” saidI— away a guest’s appetite. I utterly repudiate the codperation of even law-abiding citizens, + will b th te vhen the ti sighted, when the King was privately ar- | Lima. The ironclad Blanco Eucaleda is de- | fs their main army, and it is held together ‘e e the ‘stealthiness of some of the craft, who who are paralyzed by the completeness of | they will brace themselves up when the time ted ahd taken. on boarlicnect i failed to keep the blockade at Callao, and | only by the prospect of taking and sacking ‘A WAITER, approach the table with cat-like steps, as ~ the law-defying organization. .| of legislation comes, however limp may be | Tested and taken on board one o: she vessels, | has an anchorage ground off the corner ot | Crow ae they are defeated. the war is vit- | he replied, modestly; “and have had the | much asIdo the swagger of the American : Les their ‘attitude as the Executive Govern. | and sentenced to sixteen years’ imprison- | the Island of San Loreuzo, whicte fore one | tually ended. The authorities in Chill are | pleasure of serving you frequently lastsum- | waiter, who assuines the galt of the pazilist The resolution of tho American House of | Meat” aa: Out, fo sua every night tobe sate ne” Su | 88 anxtous as the Peruvians for pence butt | ines at, AManiattan age those elogantntics | ay ypu ting, There ea word to be anit = 2 GLADSTONE’S LETTER. out to sua every night to be sate from any | propose it would lead to a revolution a iz a Ss e i ing walter; he has overtasked his enerstes, itatives expr. sympathy wi - o GERMANY. night attacks in small boats. Every morii- e, for the whole country is expectant of | who always dined with you? Yes,Saturday SS i Trish tenants SIGE Cees ate ‘The following is the text of Gladstone’s SON ae ing about 8 o’clock she returned to her buoy the coming plunder, 1 tink that the United | was your day. You may remember I always | and is to be pitied, for he has lost his indi- comment except from journals always hos, letter in answer to that of Boycott asking for BERLIN, Deo. 18.—Yielding to Cow t Hi to auchor for the day. Wearranged a sunken | States could of all the great Powers most } Kept a table for you. It was not for the hand- viduality through being ale W eure a Government assistance: ty aes 20s ng fo Count Harry | torpedo of two boats fastened ‘ogether-and | properly make a protest against the continu- | some feé you gave me,—for you always did it | very much abused race, and a great many fle to America and eager to seize Mz, CHARLES Boycorr: Mr. Gladstone hag re- | Von Arnim’s repeated solicitations, and on | sunk just under that spot. ‘The explosive was | ance of the war with its present prospects, as | en Prince,—but Thad a sympathetic feeling | dreadful stories are told about us. bid B ° ii jack vder, Oke i ively | for you. You were very appreciative. “ Weare supposed,” he continued as he every discreditable incident to ceived your letter of the 1éth inst. He desires | the strength of medical certificates, the | 8,000 pounds of black powder. lock-work | our Interests there ste, nes jcomparativel tf ae id have forgotten that you once | placed acruet on the tation ee bet Be “magnify dissension between England and | me to say that he is not Sure in what way ho ig | Courthas granted hin six months’ respit | Was settoexplodethe massa? 9:0in themorn- slight, an b i t ad " $: We Englishmen generally perfectly | to ‘understand your request for assistance from | before undergoing the terms of his sentence. pita shore watciae ea ea area crowd. wih eetterest ee ee ay ae ae Raised Berri pete pe 0 POET eee ee reat OF that the resolution is “bun- {the Government. It has been very largely ‘The public prosecutor has appealed against | to geo hes © ‘0 up,’ tor she had come in and cision. But. thioke would be a great | much. I had taken especial pains with that | human beings. We never are made heroes tombe,” and isintended to conciliate Irish- | afforded you in the use of the public force. Be- | this decision. The Count’s health is ina j anchored in her old spot. But it seems that | ruction in that Chilian army if they dressing, and I really expected some recogni- | of, and romance and poetry have given us American voters, and is devoid of political | yond this it isthe duty of the Government to very precarious condition. He is at Nice. the tide, which sets very strong at that point, | were not given at least one blow at | tion other than money. You never swore at thexo-by. Iam a novel-reader, and I seek i its best exertions in the enforce: tof ex- had carried the torpedo about ha i Peruvians were compar- | me, Itis not for me to ask what change of | in ¥ain for some happy delineation of a walt- MRuZe and, while regretting the possible | Use its best exertions in the enforeemen away, and all we had wasa voey fe water pe ines ae son see and land, but | fortune has brought you jpto this house, in | er. Now, if L could only think that you Rixhievous effect on Ireland of such | Sst law, which they are endeavoring to en- ROUMANIA. x i ery fortable if Id give the public some iden of wat y ask: a spout. Now the Blanco Eucaleda they have built up a very fine land | which, after all, one can “be comfor! ‘able if | would give the public soi le Yatonic declarations, they regard it | force through be SUaee nd Be se tony waen THE PREMIER CONGRATULATED. tnsen overs night, but leavesseveral hawsones Toree. Ab sea the Chillans: nresupreme, with | you have the means. T exhaust myself in my | really high art there is to be found in our necessary, the assistance of the Legisinturo to % complacently as they do Gen. Butler’s amend or enlarge the law. Thisisa matter of | Bucwanrest, Dec. 18—) early all the Goy- | to patro! the anchorage ground. anavy which I wish the United States pos- summer's labors and pass mY rates here ae TNE TE have ated ee ee d all Pepeed invasion of the Irish Courts. ‘The | uch importance, on which sen oats eee: | ernunents, including tho Dewey States, have | son ee wians, ate Mery careful of those | sessed. ‘The Perervian Sipe are ou fastened |) Ine touiil condition, ot F measure. Now, to please myself’ 1 shall PitAmericans now at. the head of the | only reecive information tictee ee ee | Cone Srang dine the United Stat is es- | ep and. the Adnitral Gocteane nego an, | Muna the guins of the batteries carefully { “You have heard of the retired tallow- | feney that are regarded as far otherwise than | Nc generally. SeyMoUR, Private Secretary. | cape. sided with nine-inch tmetal amidships, the | maintained, “The Pervians have been chandler who, rolling in his millions, used | yoy arn THE EARL OF BEACONSFIELD, fomidable, the authorities agreeing that] WHERE THE MILITARY WILL BR USED. armor thinning down to five inches at the | yeny succEssFUL Wirlt TORPEDO practice, | to seek the Teousted of is private chamber | just come home from an exhausting debate, Rix siventurers are giving little real trou- | The correspondent of the Bdinbure Sootch- VARIOUS. They cae ore Realy admirable vessels, | and. Mr. Deliado, who comes now to this and spend many happy hours making venny- | and fam to serve your Lordship is supper. y Placing their unscrupulous ability at | man says: “The dispatch of further troops ANOTHER ARCTIC EXPEDITION. They carry six guns each, —300-vounder Arm- country on a commercial mission fer his | “ips. He biomiedes Gl hunk ysiog- | Zils would be about the method.” Then my service of sediti y Hacue, Dee. 18.—The Second Chamber has | S'oNgs.—so arranged that the guns nay be | Government, i very, expert in preparing | longings. My knowledge of huinan physiog- | just Grew the curtaing down, keeping out Se, to Ireland has no reference to any expected voted nt of 7,000 guilders ft Ar brought to bear in the direction in whieh the | torpedoes.’ His. engineering ability was | Romy tells me you are hungry, the sounds. from tie street, and fit some GOSE TO SPEND CHRISTMAS, Popular outbreak. The Government has in | voted a gra veg) Builders for an Arctic | yesse] may be going. brought into play in laying out the fortifica- YOU SHALL sur.s candles, which he placed on the table, I was lon Spectal able. view the use of the military in those districts | expedition next year. THEY ARE VERY BADLY HANDLED, tions ‘around Lima, and the torpedo boats | and it will afford me infinit pleasure to walt | seated on a sofa. He held 2 chair in Lis ‘ NDON, Dec. 18.—Mr. Gladstone has gone where the magistrates declare they cau no RESIGNED. - | sofaras doing any execution is concerned. | should be credited to him in_ large | on you. O it gives no trouble. Isharethese | hand, which he placed in_ position for me. warden, and the other members of the longer depend on the police. The same | Rose, Dec. 1&8—~De Sanctis, Minister of | For instquce, Chorillus is a watering-place | measure. At first, when much of this | lodgings with an Alsatian cook who hap- Then, noiselesty, the galantine of turkey was Gbinet have departed to their respective V3 din 1864.” lic I ion, 1 " ed near Lium, about twelve iniles away. Itis | work was in the hands of foreigners, tho ns to be absent is now, and we always | put before me. ‘The sardines stuffed with homes to spend a“ Merry Ch: ” Sourae was. adapted ia 150, Public Instruction, has resigned, on the coast, and it ‘was bombarded under | details of it got to the Knowledge of the eep a well-stocked larder. | Waiting has its | truffles had been arranged in a Greek fret on Be, dled, 3 Host teroenn ee AEE oa aioe ik, the impression that it’ was an unfortifed | enemy. At Laena a mine sullcyent to pretty | penuitcs,& barber is privilered fo talk | plate. ris blseults repgsed on a napkin. Ns 18.—. au nt A.T. Stewarts Body. “They 3 e ve ante hargi urce of 6, eaumarchais gave him permission to in a small china basket the g SUBETS: Dee. sis mniters concerning, place. | They used a 300-Dounder, and came well Se ing as. the ‘wires had been volublein his Fi ‘aro’; but a wuiter'slipsare | pear or two, a ruddy apple, and a cluster rot ere was % ‘thousands in Ireland. The move. N i. i the State trials are now arranged by the New Yor, Dec. 1%.—The body of A. T. yery near in-shore, so near that a'battery of wr, fhe Lads Ment of tr =, Faroe Stewart has never been recovered. That is the relve ie i : eeting-key did notswork. Now | sealed. We are forced to listen to so much. | a Na-marine-tinted grapes. ¥ ways that, fe nese, Spectator | Land League, Yarnell will not insist on at- | Stewart has navor been ersons close to Jude | tne’ shuns oped Ree igh We liad fixed on | cut, the connect preparing and placing these | St'ls” oxquisitiy: paintel fos te “oo tees f anuamarine tinted ‘Then, with a glittering s been put into the hands of | the stupid chit-chat of ordinary din-| knife, he cut me an ‘honest ‘slice of Week says that, if necessary, tha Gov- tendi: Parli: the shore, opened fire; but we had hardl t fending the opening of Parliament Jan. 6, as | Hilton. The thieves who stole it reed upona | #7 iH . arly does tins Head nen Ota throw 150,000 men Into Ire- | he had intended doing, even at the vis of | tena meamieees ye sole ft relied pon a made off and taok up 8 poster reais Rene, | torpedoes has, Deon put into tho hands of | the” stupid Iusipld talks of men ‘and | boned turkey, with iis fraprant’ flings Zext week merely by calling out the.re- personal collision with the Government au- Sporty prlee,, Bat to ho same rel ee ee north, where she was exposed to the Are of | Gen. Piérola. is very cnergetic, now in pre- | women devouring tenderloins with mush- | Then he dressed the ‘salad in a thou shetul 3 reembedying the militia, But the | thorities. His reason for making this change | REceeLrye se weengs append when thoy no | two cighty, pounders on a hill overlooking | venting the carrying of information by spies, | rooms, But at Pirefched Such bembace, | MANNEE., the Burrundy, with the chill just Teally offer no protection against | in thi utpose is he hopes that by submis- | Mn would lle safe in bis grave; that they wero | the town. ‘Then she went off again behind a | and an order is in force which prevents any | that life becomes wretched. Such bombast, | off, was iy lasses: Hon the sentences of the Land League, for they Spe pe Te F ioe mi® | not necessary to the repuse of hor busbants | $70 jutting out on one side of the place, and | person from leaving the city. Idoubt ita | such rhodomontades, such platitndes, such | was poured. Into one” which was remove lave no Ls #ague, for they | sion to the Government the authorities may | soul, and that ff he could appear to her in spirit from behind this hill, without seeing the’ city, | foreign Minister could get away now. We— exaggerations, such turgid commonplaces! | after examination, and den & goodly quate farurrocng to met excent in case of actual | he induced to postpone the trials within a he would tell her never to give one cent to keep | fired eighty shots, elevating the guns enough | Mr. Delado and I—had the greatest difi- | If we only could talk, how je would dispute | tity of the ruby-colored te au a Hea anot ber less, don, meanwhile, dicted Land-Leaguers to reach Parliament | pense and long waiting on a reware for nothing. | Clahty shots only thirteen fell in'the city, TBRCO Ot 2 en rer is aa an wait in ni ere was no hiatus, no gap. The few sim- pe Foncolstkad fudge Hiton for information a | AB 3.00 about teenty eens, they Amhinuwon toe Bet gee ae So | ae a nguages, “Be ei always Fie cones followed one another at short in: full of Irish refugees, and to-day a v 2 ning. Pan Mir writes tothe papersbegeine that someva- | £2 me for CaO He acaeany fell'sou itt had angtiiae to enya eee | aso on Hees aka Ewenty miles trom alms Washinton fo-aaye Ss conics. Lhave s dear: Seer cede Sue | ple courses followed one another st short tn- iy South Kensington Aiuseummay | A targe part of the troops sent to Ireland paper, Giscussion of the subject is mainly de- | and the damage was immaterial. “In Cala ‘A. Streot- Car. Scenes Sarma TOA Ee ey reno, was Witness to | had the true relimious flavor! x] ie ve signer ist the tl ve ‘tort mor ve a New Yor a a There is meen cccty ws ae pera ne will be scattered ‘roueh ie west. from irs Stewart When the oytjeet den out, the Rombergmery Pa ob. co, combat by et amusing inoldent “ceepeee on 3 Sei ionk Beach. ence rasa rich aml haughty father No Gebel timed NO FUSSINESS. aa i ‘1 PHENS. and the wounds of the hour are beale may e ‘ at ¢ other day. 50, and mother, and a beautiful daughter,—suel ascreen my waiter: was ensconc fs qe made a calculation that these men’ had about 25 yenrs old, got aboard at a crossing to eyes!—and a poor young clerk, who nsed 10 weiind 8 fe cen. ne rten et Gee ne re ene, way_think, because | Pants, Dec. 18—A. consultation of Irish be time to talk up that questio: a ‘Bese ; 4 5 been hit at an expense of $10,000 each to thy 7 d. She stood for a mo- money or eeati¥e in London without | wationalists Is expected to take vlace Mon, —————— Chillans. “Ou land all the Chitian victories | 202 O° eae eee ne oe sed mes | sit ata table peat the pursenroud parents. | could And at once whatI required? Magio- 8 oe ‘lends, and wander about the day, at which the Fenian head-centre, James Sy quayer Seu leyie stands: ited the'| U3¥qebeen, In eases where they were oyer- | about 4s yonrs of aga she observed: Ss The flerk Toved: the _aiananten. ea her, ally, Intuttively, 7 rants were supplied. e = Sei + 0! ilade! visi 8 : jority. ‘Taena 1 hea 1 car? a IS p ter the finger4 “4 al 1 © great, strange city, utterly | stephens, is expected to be present. He is | , Mayor Stokley, pia, Wheltningly In the majority. At ‘facua they |“ fudeed, T duchor" be replied as he looked up | while df us ohate eat cents that was.all | ar, two cigars anda halfdozen ftascian ja i 3 House of Refuge the other day, and fu the course 0 fi oj te. Families that were comfortably hourly expected at Havre from New York. | Sfaspecch tepie beige Bede ope men Pore Se cly, eOr and down. © Hf thore ain't and you are going | he could afford. ‘The young lady loved the | Cipaveis vere put before me ee of, oF even rich, + 3 ; a fa rich, three months ago, are now There's a littte fellow down there that looks and then when our men ha ti clear through. I'll hunt up one for youat the | young man. My friend the waiter would was lit. Poverty. It Is learned from the TURKEY. {aft shout the: way Tlooked when. J resent SeuEres of the Chilians ane ee and eae endof theiline: silence fora mo- | Passa dish from the rich table to the poor | “ipne Rarl always uses a wax taperto light authority that, all the statements in THE MERIDITES. about ss much money in ins pockets as that boy the battle. At Tarapaca, where there were done get ten signe broke inon him all of-@ | Oe, so that our hero his cigars with, and the Prince of Wales and Soday’s London papers regarding the inten- | Coxstaxrrvopiz, Dec. 18.—The Porte has | has, and1 don't think he bae’a cent. I was oy | 7,000 men on each side, the Peraving forces | sudden and he atose and said: MIGHT TASTE OF THE SAME MORSELS AS HIS | the Earl smoke the same cigars. These were ton of : 5 ? a doy us there was in Fhiindelphia; but I | swept everything before then " this scat, madam. Tam altus BELOVED. sentme from Hughenden. I might have ne Government to suspend the opera- | resolved to send the recently arrested Prinee | poor a voy us there wns, fe Ipblas swept everything em and captured You can bave this scat, 2 t in:b ik tons of the writ of pee ee ‘iefs of Ibani made up my mind to work, and I did work. By fourteen field-guns and six Gatlings. At | perfectly willing to stand w and give my seat | No, sir—yon wrong my friend, he would not | given you acigar from Varzin; but Bismare of habeas corpus, or to of Meridite and other Chiefs of the Albanian | fathor died and my mother and wy sister and Arica, which is a fortified place, there sere | to anybody older than myself.” take any Billets-doux,—would not allow any- | smokes wretched weeds, the Strongest, the PROCLAIM MARTIAL LAW League for trial before a council of war. | badn’t a roof to cover us. I started out and got 1,500 Pernvians agathst 7,000 Chilians, and ‘That decided her. She gnve him a look which thing of that kind. He was a father himself. | most acrid, as anodynes for his surfeits of pete assembling of Parliament three weeks | The Austrian and French Embassadors have Lela ap helpers aes, Cubing ® | there was along battle. Bowill not forget to his dying day. suds zeabbing | ity fiend used to tell us about it inverse fauerkvant stewed | iy champagne. oer eet , ., kg ONAN 5 . ivi- nd ¥ _ 5 sb 18 y * whi vi KI ; a eon very. rel 31 in ce, are wholly without foundation. No | made representations in favor of the vrivi- | [stuck tomy work and learned a trade. When | THE BUTCHERIFS BY THE CHILIAN FORCES five seats had become vacant. MM pec he abapray eed wt Be ltenen i bres ape ig ppl uae eee gretty +e, in I wus 21 J fell in love with a girl, and I bad a have been terrible. They are a band of Lp Ree ET Fs is lions. 1f | only one thing wanting,” said iy host, with have yet been, decided upon. ‘The re; 4 d 5 pretty big heart and made up my mind to marry | piundere: id the men control the offi Dicky had been silent during his Thanks- | whole 350 waiters, cooks, and scullio nly on ing ing, ny pon. D- jed favorably. nderers, and the utrol the officers. vicky. xt year we ion of self-repro: and I pra: the Porte has respon’ LY ber. I had € a week and she earncd $3 with her Iihey were got together with the promise | giving dinner, but finally he rested his fat thes ‘come 22, Coney, sland ny hati Suit s es otiiselon, othe pray tatives of the radical element in the Cab- v1 .. i THE GREEK QUESTION. needle, and we put the $8 and the $3 together | they Ww ipeotane the table, with knife and fork up- are absolutely got married. and that girl, to ey should plunder wherever they | elbows on the table, é nse the Jady. “But I | the effects might have been more perfect,—L fen lutely supreme, and they seem | It fs believed that the Powers are taking | and we ot married, and that girl’ f am ‘pied could, and they have been doing ft. They | right in ether hand, and gave a.great, sin man bal eee ee dng Hew tel seater to worn Kmeebreeches aud 4 ie Dessures tor the resteration of law and leges of the Meridites being respected, and inet -: , is livit it. Weset little she Bn , aa 0 Jet crehts take their course. | into consideration the objections of the Porte | S8¥,{s ving yet. Wesetup a little ioe ceen, | look upon Lim as a rich prize tobe divided and sald, “wish turkeys could be gulantine of turkey, the componente of a ‘uring the holidays the Land | to the frontier settled at Berlin, and that the | and we worked together, and worked bard.” up. In many of the places they have taken