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Bho e Srilnae. TERMS OF SUNSORTERTON, pally eu edition, ene yor. Nurts of & Font, rant! Dally and Sir Taeedae, TF pis ine an ce yer WRERLY fpfttoxosrr fiwenty-ane eupie é Speclnion coples sone feet. Givo Post-OMcy nddraas ta fall, Including County and Htato, Atomittances may bo made olther by draft, express, Post-Ofico order, ur in reuiatered Ietter, nt our rial. {PO CLTY BUUSCRISEIS. Dally, dellvercd, Runday exconied cents porweoks ellvorent, Sunday Inciudl Address THE TRIBUNE COM Cotner Madiaom nnd Bearbors ead, 1, POSTAGE, eal = Entered at the Postotoften at ChirsgA, Mls a4* Sceand= clas Matter, For tho benetitof aur patron who dasira to wend singte coples of TE TUUENY thrauuh the mall, wo blvo horowlth tho transient rate of postagas gn aiid Danvestie. Te Cong Hight and Twrotv Bixteen vee Vap pttinUN MIE CHICAGO TRINTNE-hns estabilabed Uranch ; ovices for the recoipt of subscriptions und advertisa~ monte ns fonoire: NEW YORK—itoom 29 Tribune Building, 6.9, Mc+ Manazor. fs GLASGOW, Seotnnd—Allan’s American Nows Agency, St Kentalttent. sumelewy Exehanso, 48 Strand, w “ASI Expuattion Muthting. Michigan avenue, opposite Adinis strect, ‘The Silucerfest. Enterthinients at? and § p.m, Qyami Opernstonen. ; Clark street. oppealy now Court-ifouso. y ment of dame, ell, Uolobrated Cas > ternogon und evening. Itoutey’s ‘Theatre. Randotph scot, bo:ween Clark and’ Ln Sniin. Fagugement of Augustin Daly's Company, "“Needlos und Piak" Aftetnuon ant evaning. MoVicker# Thentre. Madicon alrect. tetweon Stato and Nearborn. Fnyaxement of Seem, tha magician, Magic ¢n- terlulniment, Afternoon und evening. Chlesyo Delving Parke At the tort Maultson stroct car-tract. Mun ning commences at: Witlle-Stucking Parks Lake-Front, aypusit Washtiyton scetut.. Gamo bo tween the Cileaze aud 'Trvy Clubs at 0:0 Be mh vy M Gs. 7 socn ST, MEUN AID coma art XO. Bw, duty ‘4, ba fat The so dntending to he sir TARE to Usa DI nt completed, ure hereby order Aariias vi 2abweday, iio 2a tates WE Anueue fe adtte Vite Innit Wisk aaatee AL io prusraiuoy ror the evlebration rid Henear i Rae Attn, Commander, dr Pa ea x. Stine CHAUTER, xo, We Wh Ay ate sic inia Conteoonts, Special etn aunt i a Bat > Degree, JULY 2, 1831, for Wark umd Ac N, Dy utise' Pred al Necrutary, SATURDAY, n Tin resignation, for reasons best known to. Mmself, of Mv. Miomis C, Pint, one of the Inte Senhtortal enndidntes In New York, clears the way for tho election ot nt least one Senator by the present: Leglstatirn heforead- Jourmmnent. It fs probable that this decisive action on Mr, Platt’s part will Involve tho re Hrement of his prinelpal competitor, Mr. De- pews apd da attempt will be made to hae nontze tin party upon sont person ait cone + ipicnotsty entitled with elther side, ‘The raeaney for the lung term wil be fled, fn all probabllity, before the oud of next week. What efeet this action wilt have upon Me Contding’s caudldney remains tobe seen, . 1b ‘s difflentt to seo how he-van be helped by the setirementoft Vint. “Their fortunes werd to sone extent bound together, United they “stood, united they fell, and united they should «by iti thelr polttteal borinl, ‘tait Prince of Wates Ins undertalcon to + testora Col, Valentiné Daket to zon society -nLondon, At the Instance of the hopeful slon of Royalty the Colonel hits already been seadutitied to the clubs, nnd {tis not doubted shat ho would fiistuntly have the entréd averywherd If the Prine were on the throne. Whether theaction of the Prince ts regurded as eshnplo defianea of pubile opinion, ar mere. {y ns a courageons avowal that he is himsele ho better In respect to same things thin Col, Baker, bts eunplonshty of the cause of a falten friend will not injure bh Inidiyidually * Inthe regard of the people. Its almost + tradition In Creat Britain that a Princa of ,, Wates inust havea Royal allowknee of wild onta, mid if he stops sowlng “his sinall grain whwn he comes ta thé’ throne all fs forgiven aud forgotten, At the samo time, it must be confessed thnt the present isn siteninrly ute “propittons this for extibiting the heli'te the erdwn In Great. Brituln as a defender cir avologlst for profllgney, Not muny such ox. * hibltfons would be needed ‘to weaken tho sight hold that the superstition of Royalty ati his on the Imaginntlin of tho lower } elnsses, liowever stanchly tha nation of shop- keopers inlght be dispusee We shocking murder that Intoly took place In an Englinh rathway-earrlage ins convinced somo of the staunchest supporters pf tho system: that it admits of improve: ments, ‘ho truth fs, that’ the raliway coneh In England Is, 08 Its name Smplles, eg vival of tho stage-conch, Kuch first-class compartment has nbout the same number of » sents, and ts In respect of conventences and _ Arrangements very Httle better (an an old: faxhtoned fourewheelor, Thore ts even less _* chatce of communication with the “drlyer another Mnyering reminiscence of stags * days—than thorg used to be, It is true that a bell-cord fs provided, but 1t is not easy to get at, as was proved jn tho case of the Inte mitrder, tho victim nving evidently mnde desperate but unsuccessful, efforts to reach it, Tho passengers are curefully locked tn betweon stations, ‘The guard does nut pass through, but by the side of tho: ear. tiago On a foot-rall, and in Ue nofeo and rush of tho train it- is possible for murdor or fouler deeds to’ be done with- out the knowledge of n soul ontalde tho com purtment, The Miler murder a few years ago was ng ensily neeomplished as if the yle- Mv had been caught unawares Ina tunely forest; and tha Gould murder was nul even A wuspected unl! the conch was exmulied at ; the station in London and blood was found {on the floor and seats, Col. ValenthieDiuker's v4 * Bseapade also took place, it will bo remem- ocred, In one of these death-trips, ‘The En- slish tire conservative people, but It eannot ae doubted that they are slowly leuraiys the “4 disadvantages of compartnient carrluges, It is {t hed not been for. thelr cluas system it Is - probable that the American cars, or somo noditicution of them, would nye boon . Mopted long ago, ‘Tus Ney, Edward Cowtey, of New York, * was conyletéd of efuelty to children a year ugo and sentenced to a term of imprisons junent Jn the Penttentiary, He has just been released, having served out hls time, Ils ‘Ucbt te the public has just been dischurged, but it was generally supposed that he haw atil} an uvconnt to render to his ecclesiastleat superiors, ‘his appears not to be the ease, Mr, Cowley is stlll a minister of the Protest. tuut Episcopal Church {u good and regular — standing. A commiittes ‘waa appolnted by Bishop Potturté, lols Inte the ease sf Cowley and determine whether he hat! rendered hit “} stlf, Mable sto -veclastastiont discipline. Ace cording to the Rev, Dr. Ue Rylance, one of the Comuntttee, the tivestigation ‘was mado to cover ‘two points, (1) Jind My. Cow- ley connnitted immoral nets? @) | Mad Ye been .gullty of criminal nets? They. deridett that’ he “had? déhe “nelther tho one thing nor the other, Now, it must Ye remembered that (Cowiry was tried hin court of justice nnd. scverely punished for condugt whieh, JC he was guilty of It, was Voth Imuorat ahd érindnal, ‘Cho enineinted Hersons-bf hid Hiths (éthnd were “produced {h court, and thedr condition was sueh as to dseite for thon. thy: vampasston of -all who smw (hem, aud for thd aan who had so atarved and beaten them milversal indigna- thon, At the ecetestnstien] court hing nny evl- Alenco to refute that brought- inte the civil aourt it ought to bo produced, Mr. Cowley in thut ease fins been the Viellm of 2 co splyacy, anil isa martyr. stb, if hig fellow- clergymen have no sieh’ evidence. they can only bring scandal and, shame upon their Chureh by throwing its protection over’ such monster in Jiuman forming the Rey, Ed- ward Cowley hus proved Himself to be, New Yonk fs ovldently wheeling into Une to colypote with Looistana.dn a tournanient. of disreputable: polittes, From the very beginning of the ‘contest now going on the Inefdents have been damaging to the dignity ‘and integrity of publle Ife. ‘Tho exhibition of two ‘Senators: abandoning thelr poats of public duty on account of thely failure ta colitrol the United States Senate in thé | interests of themeelves ant their ellquo, was of Itself demoral- izing, JThalr oxample was still more demoralizing when thoy summoned the ap- plinneed of the “machine,” ard even whipped the Vice-Prosident of the United States into “Uieir services In order to se- cure a condonntton of the, insult they had offered tho “Amérlesn prople. From that moment tha .evit spirit of ‘seandal seemed ta selas upon the whole crowd, Ao bribery job Was put up to bring discredit: upon. the attempt to elect others than the two renegade Senators, Corruption was charged In the {interest of one of the oppost- ton candidates, with what truth nobody ex- cept those Iu the seeret cnn positively nssert. ‘Then the lobby methods begai to be exposed ow all sites, snd tren now wider Indlepment elatn thos, will inake [tf warn. for the “Dueks 't If the Dunk leaders allow. them to be convicted. ‘Then eame the nnsty expositre Of Matt We the woman serial, And now it Appenrs that professional Ucteettyes” ara em- ployed on both sides to hunt down or mantt- facture damaging eases against thelr oppd- nents, ‘The whole contest secs to have assumed an exceptionally low and vicious aspeet, ‘Tho presences. of another Mrs. denks could not add anything to the disgraceful character of the proceedings,’ It thommnagenent-of affairs were darned ‘over to the keupurs of tie brothels and dives of the.town, we donbt Wwhethor pubtle decency wold be so mich offended by tha resalts ne they have been under the imdaagement of men who wugtt-to show the highdst respect for morality anit deceney, If this: sort of thingisto go on nt Albany, perhaps tho svoner the Legishiture shall “adjourn | the bet. ter It will be for the country. Mire Conkling will surely be prutshed by defeat, ‘fof It 1s his thfluence Inore than any: other man’s which has brought New York polities to so low and vilo a condition, ‘the -Demderits may be able ta elect ‘the two ‘Senators, by reason of the obstinate Conkling fight, tn case tho present Legistiture ‘shall adjourn without an election, btit “the Republican party of the country niny. hotter -afford to suffer temporarily than do -bo: the unwilling velele for parading before. the work tho Ath wut nastiness of .the New York polltics that now prev. “FARMING-HORTH. AND SOUTH, + There are mnny Southorn famtlies ‘visiting - the Northwestern States, ald enjoying. tha plensuires afforded by anr rural resorts, and enjoylng also tho ellinate of this region, which st thts seasun is’ go diferent from thelrowan, ‘Thess porsons are deeply im- presser not only With the ‘business. activity of our eitles, bat nso with tho evident pros. verlty of Lhe farming districts, ‘Mnoy see the Breat fields covered with promising erops; other lunds oveapled with hdrds of fat enttte aud other Hye stock; Jarge’ and comfortable dwellings, enormous baris, well-kept fences, © and all the ovldences of wealth and of tho frittful and prosperots cultivation of the sail, Looking: at these things, so. diferent trom whit Is to be sedi at the South, thoy Inquire, Why fs tt that such a vast dilference exists in the condition of tho agricutturists ofthe two sections? Most of theae persons tinelude thatthe difference ts In consequence of tho dfiference In-the Inbar system, and they talk hopefully of the schemes In progress In inost, from the North and from Europe te perform tho farm-lihor ih Dose States, ‘They pth ex- presa a wish that Northora meh would take cthelr enpital to the South, would take white Inuor there, and show the landowners how to furni successfully and profitably, ‘Chere tn difference between the Inbor systems uf the two sections, bitt our South- .ern countrymen fall to distingutsh the easene “thal and practleal potnt of that “difference, Western States generally, the “persons who perform the Iubor on the great and product- {ve farms which are everywhere to,bu soon are the owners ant inembers of the trmtties of the owners of those farms. ‘There is ng such chiss known ts permanent. “fame or who rent farms on shares, are men who fre saving trom thelr wages or profits enough fo Hurchase oF pay fora farnvot Hier own already purehased, and to whieh they wlll ove sv soon As the BN needed Is obtalned, ‘This Is a aystein of Jubor alnost unknown In the Southegn States, “fhe Northern farm er with his fugly cultivates his awn Inids the sons Iabor with him wntll they warry.and start for themselves; the'wlves and ‘daugh- ters contribute to, the family. industry ‘find rosperity, ‘The chitdren are well eduented; the farin-house has Ibs constantly! -Inerensing “brary tu the fignily room; the ibfury table’ Issupplted with the current Mtergture of the day,—the thagazines, the dally paper, anda religious weekly. It the.-famlly: room or parlor, whore there ary grawlog: girls, there Jay plane or an organ, or san othor musical fustroment, aud the fact that the female members of the family do labor tn alt things needed of them does not prevent them from enjoying the ‘refinements aud surroundings gvneral among enitivated ladles, AL this is possible whore Industry bs recoguized and pradticed as 8 inoral principio, and where tla made possibly by the thrift of system atized labor: by tntelligent taborers, ‘Vhia sfate of things ls not uxcoptional, but the vate,’ atnong the furmers of the Nurthwost, ana Jority of whom by their own |aboy broke the virgin prairie of these farms with the plows Systemutized Inbur by Intelligent laborers who do thelr awn work aud reap all (ts prof. {ts in tho Jabor that hina aiady thesu States ‘so proiifia In yleld, so wealthy in neous lations, so prosperous in thele socinl and political condition, and su intelligent aul cultivated In all tho surroundiuze “of tho | faintly home, But, say tho Southerners, while-we cannot THES ‘CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, , JULY rs] ay 1881—SIXTEEN PAGS. fidtés or expect poople so prosperous as there to ntmutle (otha South, there ave the | The Immense increase In the production of foretguers, pourlng tity theconntry, What is | tls country Is met by the corresponding Ine to prevont then: from golugto the South, and | érease of consumotion, abrond and at home, by, their labor and atrengtl batld up that } witch fs rendered possible by the regular In- terton nd the Northwest has been bullt up? | erense in wages, or the means in the hands of ‘Sia men who migrate to this country from | the people to putehase the food. ° This ren- Etiropean States, are of elther one or.two } ders ft slnost certain that the pulley adopted classes: they are either men who come hither | In the Continental States of Europe of tax 18 ton lanl Of plenty, hoping to escape fahor, | ing articles of food imported fron: Atmarten, and to Ive nlite of seml-patpertsnt; these | thits dimintshing the purehastiue, power of lo hot séek. farm Iavor, but prefer to dive fn | wikes, will nbcessttate’ in Hhineifiate~ and the efties, and spand fives of comparative | compensating Jucrease of wages, No people fuleness on the hibor of others, and of thid | will éver subinit to any reductlon of ‘tho kind the South ta already ampty aupviled | quantity of thelr food to which thay have be- from the natlyo stock, ‘fhe other class conte | comoaccustomed, Here expecting tu Inbor ns they havé for- |. ‘tha improvement of the working elnsses of iterly done, but they also expect to ob- Europe consequent upon the Introduction taln from that Inbor moru abundant profits, | din nppllenttion of steam machinery’ is of tnd to be able to supply themsetves from. tsalfn tefutatlon of the theory that, hmon thofe necuniulations with comforts, compara | Ife hag been sucrificed by* the nyarice which ‘ive luxuries, good habitations, and to alive | substitutes steam and tron for human Inbor, tholr chiliron that edneation and the refines | Instedd df-placing the workman niore In the tients of social Itfe utterly impossible In power ot the employer, It has mate hitn more (hofr'native land, Thesd persons we here | essbntti! to the employer, Machinery has ty Inbor, but. to labor for thomsetves; they | reduced the cost ef proiluction; lis thereby dome here to ‘Inbor tn the fields, yut those | Incredged. consumption, and by Ineredsing fleids must be thelr own, with all tho prod: | cotiguniptlon: ‘necossitated nh increase of tiets. ‘They come here to lite fn States and | production and of labor.. ‘Che ‘increase of doummmnities where labor ty a padgo of su | wages ling Increased tho interest of Iavor In perlority, and not of inferiority, and where | its product. With Increased wages, the work- tho gront-soctal distinetion ig that which ex- | nan ls encouraged to linpraye his. condition ists between the man who enrns-his dwn | and thatof his family oy education and by 0 Dread and the man who docs not. ‘These | general adyancement in oll things, In the thet it ts needless to say, do not go South, | general finproveraent of his class tho ditfor- and will not until the soclal system at } ences in social rinks are gradually removed, the South Is revolutionized. , The - pros.) and (t leads np toa broader eq talizution of tho perity and the absence of prosperity in the | rewards for Industry, skill, and frugality. tivo seotions ary explained by the difference | ‘Phe incrango of wages consequent. upon tho in the labor systoys. In-a community of a” {nerunso of employment and in the employ- thousand farms In the Norttiwest thera araa | ment of skilled labor Indicates, as ts sug> thousand familics at labor, eneh ntdinber | gested in the urticle from which we have varning something more than he consumes, | quoted, that labor, buing more essential than. and tha ‘surplus is earned profits, In alike | dver to capital, ta gradunily recelving by; the community at the South there will bis ono | process of inevitable laws of compensation thousand hired ‘Inborors performing the [ a greater proportion of the foint earnings of Work, while the imenibdts’ of the thougand | capital and Inbor, and this fs shown in the families do no'labor, do not produce what | reduction of tha rates of interest the world they consttme, but subsist uponthe compara: | over. This fact is also shown In tho figures Lively scanty surplus left after paying forthe | we have qttoted trom Mr. Atktuson, ' ‘Ihe hired Ivor,’ ‘he social tawthere stamps the | prices of certaln quantities af certain arti- Inborers with dogradution, while tt pxalts the f cles of food In 1840 and’ {n 1890 amounted In non-produgtive glass, who at :the.. North | New York to within a fow cents of the same would-be justly ranked ng Idle pnupers, suni, . Owlug to the reduction of the cost of The South, viotwithstanding. all ity great, transportation, the same welght of the same naturat rdyantages, ean hope for nothing but | articles was delivered in New York in 1870 gompuratlvely Insianiheant prosperity until | for $61.02, agninst $185.84 11869, ‘Tho dlifer- its land ts handed over to those owners ‘whe | drenge,, $124, was that mgh nilditional will by themselves cultivate it, Ownership | compensation to the Inbor ‘6n -the farm;. mifst precede produetive and profituble Inbor, 4o much additional t6 tha, share of The man who owns and cultivates lls own | the $612 which fell to the ‘farmer, Held must be recognized 43 the peor af iny | and so ‘much, less of the $185 whielt in many hls social oquality mist nat depend on | 1869. wis takph ng the share of the enpital Ws Idteness: his Industry must iiot bo tho quiployeil in transportation, “Take ang of badge of inferlority, THe must bo a frooman, |, the joint productiong of labor and enpltal aud In all things... With prosperity: will cqmo | st wit ba found that the irenter tho ganntoy- oilucation std cultivation, —Loaferism, and | mnt of inachinory the lower the custuf pro- idleness,. and whisky-drinking. niust cease duction; the lower the vost of production, the continue to malntain thelr present average. sto. be the distinguishing “marks © of n-| greater the clemand for consumption; rthe “gentleman? | With, Industry, ad the | grenter the consumption, the grenter the de- profits. ‘resulting from It there will | mand. for tabor, and the grenter tho wages follow comfortable homes, well-stocked | of labor; and though the article produced tarnis, ait all the machinery: and Inbor-siv- ing appiianeen.: Chere will be more reading of books aud papers qnd legs fox-hinthig and quarter-racing aud cross-ronds gafiering for whisky bouts;. there will he more enjoyable Tomes, grenter atiachment for homo ‘pas; thus} there will be more books nnd more male on farms, and more achiool-louses; all ehfldren “Will go to schoal, aud all men nnd 7 all wonten will contfibute something of thelr own carnings td the general store, and tho South will thus become ay generally prosper- ous as any other part of tis widely-extended country, nay be sold ‘to consiuners it imuch less price than before, the profit on the Invrengedt pro- dnetion is so mine)y’ ‘gventer that, both capital saul Iabor nré more prosperous, nnd tho share falllag to! Iabbr 18‘ more equitably propor. toner. ‘Thora’ maybe excoptionnl cases, but, this role way be regurded as genigrall verks, r fled by, facts. aas- FOR. LIGHT : AND! ‘br G. W. Slemens, who rev ‘ manufacture: of steel; by his’ regenerative furnace, delivered an iutoresting lecture be- fore n<vonforence Of gas-manggers at Bir- —_—— winghim ,on “tho! “ih ult? + While. “Ds. THE PROFITS OF LABOR AND CAPITAL, Siemens is one of the firmest bellevers In tho In the Now York. Commerelat Bulletin | future of the electric Nght, he is alo con we find ad abtivle comimentliyg tipon the Iu- | fldent that gas as an agent both of Hight and ‘erensu of population In “Evrope, and a dls “heat {s yet far from having: reached. its full- cussion of the current improvement of tho | dst devolomnont. ‘Lhe graduul extension of material condition of nen, partiewlurly with | electric lghttur has stimulated the: efforts of reference to, the rate of wages, tho price ot | #8 matiagers Lo hnprove thelr own product, food, the increnso of tradg,,tho effect of mn ‘Thuy havo discovered, as scleniitic men tong |: chilnery on employment, atid the general do- | go Informed them, that tho chicf disndvan- cling In the rate of interest. toge they Jabor under arises from the imper ‘The canauses of the various Europenis | eet combustion of enrlion tn the ‘gas-famo. 1a | keep emnbustion of y to wv dea! Fatranbett. or oven be: me ‘hls paint arrangement Thavo adopted for thia put a DEAE AS ho oretians. 7 Ateanit tebe, mounted In Asinall eytindrival chamber of slivat copper gonnected With a vertival of vopper, pros feetug upwirds through the contre of the rier, atid Abe tibia het in # cupelike uetet dion at a polit about four Inchps H 0 tho we rittves, ora ntevel with tho topo tho ‘nine. still mnss of fre-elay Alls the eu prajeut~ ing upivards froth. ity A rontuded and pointed fora ‘The copper veaacl surroundine rer is contracted at its upper extremity wit wt directing a current of als neainat the mas the burner, and on its clrouniferunce It is por= forated forstho nduission of atmospheric air. rae bottond, atirfneo fa forinnd of A perforated ise cuverat with ayn sautize, nd wire waniZe alsosurrounds the eirenniforence .of tho per- forated osHider. Tho external wirds heated bn pussing through those * regenerative” stirfaces, and tho Samo te. thus fed with alr, bontert te tho point above ladiested, which by more olaborate arrangements jnlgit ho ralset te a still highor degree. ‘Tho ball of fire-clay in tho contre of tha burner, which fs hunted to redness, serves tho useritl rela of conmpteting the combustion af tho wud thus dimlalshes the Hability: to Binekening of the eelting. ‘The London Tinea deserlbes the theory of this apparatus ng follows: : ‘The reason why gas gives leht is that particles of carbon, which are released from combination with hydrogen whon that eluipont unites with atmospheric oxyon to forin water, aro rentered Inenndeseont by the heat of the hydrogen Hane. It the temperature of this flume is too low, as Will often huppon when tho gus apply 1s 11 Ox- coss of tho air available for its cousiinptton, portion of the crrbon Is not rendered inenndes- cent at allbut ts given af nea cloud of hlauk ginoke, A tomperature somewhat bleher will yonder tho amuko invisible, but will leave tho flame onty of 1 dull red, and will so toad tho air Of the reont with uncunsiinod carbon as to pro- ones W perceptible reatralntof breutbimg, ‘Cho igher the. temperitun, the more the carbon Partictes nro hanted, with the doubld eVect ot Arse Ingrensing tho pincunt and brightens the soir of tho Hight whieh they 1 Mord, ry second> & of providing, for thelr complute oxidation, {ithe moder’ improvements tn zas- havo attained thoirs ab uamsai matt paar ran uininuting power ‘by the - npptleat na “tg principio; und now Dr. Blomens yr oO Slirposs them nil by an arrangement so ra ‘aualogous to thut of his own furnnoe. Thitler of copper is used to concentrate tho alres a ball of Hre-clay ‘In supported above it to con sume, by ita heat, the last portions of the ascending carbon... i The lnprovement of the Mlumtnattug qual- ity of ans in the manner Indicated may seem fo managers at first glance chimerical. Uut it should be romomborest that Dr. Siemens Is one of the foremost gus-engineers In the world, aud a remarkably profific and success- ful Inventor, Certainly his project for ‘«is- tributing gis for henting purposes, if It should be shecessfully accomplished, would commend lin to the favor of ltouseholders tho-world aver," FRANCE -BEYOND SEA. It ts not long since that’ M. Gambetta de- claret the polley of France was peace with all nations, and this aentiinent has been con- firmed ‘by the dectarations of other French statesinen, Including the President.of the Repubtte himself,” While France is at peace with .the world, however, she Is not Idle, and In the placu of the war-making tendency a new ania has selzed ber—numelys the passion for.territorial extension. . Instead of, warring with her neighbors, she bit gating savage races, anil A to establish soveralg tory, sha is extelf out-of-the-way pla of tho sens Ter rpld tablishiuent of . 1 protecto¥ate over tlint prov- Ince, upon pretext of punishing the Krow mir; for their incursions into Algeria, aro now suflteteriti mae ‘familiar, and that the.pro- nti noutt to untiexation is very ded. This gives her controt ft Africn of Algeria oud t content’ with this, she ae ja ‘Ttirkoy thnt if sne does not aulet “Trlpoll will’ be taken ‘next, though It would be inynded at the risk of war with Italy, who !s already riven to the verge of cotiision by. the appropriation of ‘Punts.’ ‘Whis fs not the tim{t of her sinbitlon in Afclea.: ‘The receitt. ‘Froneh’ expedition, nearly all the anembers of: which were nur dered bythe hostile tribes In the Sahara, wus. beht not so much upon exploration as upon tho nequisition of territory. ‘Recently a Fronclé:Captuin obtained ‘from the King of ‘Upper Senegal the exclusive right Gt havient- ‘Ing tho Upper Niger In return for a aubstdy, qud other stopstwere taken.which polpt the way, to nn or rn gion, Frenelt* englicets* ‘fre busy upan a Sehome ay vastus my of thelr canal opera-’ has supply upon tho tinine, and, yentual protectornte in that re+ follows up her advantages, wherever s: tang nv footing, an addithonal reason for re- gardlag with suspicion the attempt of the ureat Freneh engineer to establish limeelf as firmly con the Isthinns of Panama as he hagalready seated himself on the Isth- mus of Suez? In this the Guzette reckons without Its host, for the Amertlean people are quite as willing «that ML. de Lessons shiutd make a great national highway be- tween the AUlantic aid the Paetile as they word tint ha should connect the Mediter- ranean tut: the Red Sens, and, mora than thls, that France, if she is so disposed, should inke all tho istands in the Paeifie Ocean. en ENORMOUS SENRIONG. TAX ON THE PUB- ‘The falure of the American pensions sys. fom will require all tho wisdom and cournge® of, true stntesmanshtp to protect the people from wholesale plunder and thelr earnings from general confiscation. Upto this patnt the legislation, and toa certain extent the administration, of our pensiotis system has been governed by rank demagogism, No other nation {nthe lifstory of the world has underinken to provide, during an Indefintt period, for tho supportot a disbanded anny find thea descendants of men who fought aither ag ‘volunteers or conserlpts fr ‘some ong war. The broadest obligation put upon Government under the most liberal theory df ettites {s to. enre for those who were per- muinently disabled in tho service of thelr dountry by, wounds or disense contracted during ‘war. But: tha Amerlean Gpvorn- mont, under the influonco of utterly reckless dumngogs, and, the manipulations of spect- lating clan agents, {s In'n falr way to bo saddicd with the support ot nll the mon whose names were ever written upon a mus- ter-roll who «desire to take advantage of the Joose and extravagant facilities which have been provided for drumming up appllestions for penston.': Whenever the subject of pen- stons has como up in Congress, there lias been arush among membors of both parties tu take the lead tn voting away the -property of the taxpayers. Democrats, whether they fought in the Confederate’ army or skulked In tho rear nt’ home when the Government was In peril, have proved to We as precipitous in Congress fis Republicans In ostentatious efforts to plunder tho taxpayers. There has been no discrinination as to the extent of service rendered, and hardly any as to Injury recelved or disease contracted In the War of the Rebellion, ‘Phe gates have been thrown wide open to all comers who ean procure tho certificate of any person representing him- self to-be a physician, or who will enter Into An arrangement with a professional ¢elaim agent to divide the bonus. ‘The universal disposition among jiollticlatis of all shrides to |‘ pander to the “ soldfer-element” among tho yoters lins deprived the exceptional Uheratily .of the’Governnient even of sneli safeguards AS common prudence and considerations of Justies would suggest. Mr. Beutloy who has been recently erowd- ed outof tho office of Commissioner of Pen- stons because ho sought to warn the polltt- cians of the danger ahead, and ondeayored to exercise tho feeble restraint upon the award df pensions which the law permits, hins'made i statement of tho ntuirs of the Bureau the public.resources in tho future. Already proprinted for the fiscal’ yonr ending July 1 ts exhausted, and the penslon-rolls and new claims admitted In’ May and: June re- main unpald, Tho sum of fifty millions was appropriated Inst winter for the present fiseal year, but Afr. Bentley. estimates: that It wilt fall forty mililons short. Tho detletency will cortainty not be any less than ‘the ‘estimate, ‘The deficiency Jast year was twenty. mile fons, and that of this year will bo daublo as much, ‘Cho expeditures of the: Government this year on account of back’ pensions will be‘greater’ than tho ‘interest’ on the public debt, and the prospect Ig that the annual tax onthe people, before‘ ‘all the applientions: for arrearnges and new, pensions shalliava been: adjusted, will ba twice as largo ns the annual tax which the public debt hnposes upon the which Is slenifieant of the serious dvain upon- the shermous sum of fifty , millions - ap! other out Westmiiater, ot th Cute ao eet isa aovenscoliitt pay sun] ben Bina ‘av larger than tho Waclelasie tng. According fo burepedt iens of Ute aan paper business, 51 Ateepase dems to be tm. nate ry wad " a tad Tite Naayth, Navorihe- itis true, 40-8 cay. oF Tint TINCAGO sintay ee of Huy 22 ts beture us. 4 Hetlons Aineripa ia areal. Wille Titi nn Winaeca the WV tame clon of Hts renders by ity relgelos poblieation, the speeches of -tho great. Tree-thinker, Hob Tosormolt. ty epatte na legs: aut itLtods and Acer rst WkeY Wo hear thrtewhiet lize! deliv tia tect trey phe drent ntdely it tho “Opernsitanise, uyory Bort ms m1 ailleey amis Ae snd Te wins ee rotinded mpplatge. 30! HON bs te VU Ane mann’ SAU inn, suit germ ener ay ts for miny an orae itis leutures and specones: r14p sends All over Me country nade” you era ae with the aumoe retinas ns the transiagions of THE DMO UES, plous diviaes ° of Oxford und Westminster, ah Tree hag been a good deal of curiosity ag to what passed “hoticcen ‘Preattent“Gnifield And Gen, Grant at.thetr recent interview. The Loulsvitlo CourtersZournat professes to-report. tho conversntion nt the meeting ns follows: Ulyases— "Howdy 1105 auton “ Howdy Ue, Heneral 12" It's ‘boo coal ths Mine de Yi f5, Henorals iva been pretty cool tiisstu TL date kage when ihore'a beet wich x eoo! dang. us this Juno," i Nor Hit doit iknow other when thera’ been such a cool’ June asthis duhe. Uo" It wwe hivo inany ines Ike this June the June vegetation won't beso forwnrd -as it is jn some ae a I" Yes; afew dunes ‘ke ts dune in Bmush with the stirs crops." . MBo yout th Ink Sani be atthe ‘Grane all toil dunes? LN nu-not this Junes Dut Tox- pect to be here ‘A a pxeuht all the cdrre- fpautents oxcept Jennie. duno, who - wasn't ————— Tur decline of the shipbuilding Industry, which formorly gave so much prospenity to Now Kngtand, enn be nppreejattd by nu coinparison” belween 1965 and 1880. In the former-yoar tha tonnage uf the vessels built was i429, In tho Intler it was only 40,074, tho émnilost ngeregate Klice 18M,with the exception of 1602,a War year. Whe substitnilon of fron for woorten craft, and. of steam-power for suits, may have mitch todo * with the decline, but m scnacless necumulation of protective dutics on many Yarleties of Gulld- ing material is the chtof trouble, As it 1s, whole districts on the const of Maino, which ware> once flourishing, are now rapidly falling Into deoay. ‘Yoo much protection has killed the . business; but {n no. Stato nro they more walla protectionists than in Maino. rte ae z ‘Tr Missouil Legislature at {ts recent session passed o Inw making tho keeping of a gainbling-houso a felony, punlahable by. con- . finetent in the Btate Prison, Tho result of the * uw 1s tho closing of all, the gnining-houses In Bt. Louis, ‘Mithorto this class of offenders hava Gefed the Inws of Missourt, They have con- trotled Courts !n too many places,and they Touyhed atatatutes which cmtod with flies and n_ fow weeks’ Imprisonmont Ina. county “jatl. Tho newlaw {8 more ‘gerious. Gamblota;for ‘whom {Inos and county jails bave no terrors wilt ° hesitate 1 to ply a trade which may Jand them for , nterm of yoars{n a Stnto prison, : It's id wood. - law, Ttought to be rigidly enforced.” It ought | to bo copied uverywhore, And pool-sellers “ show ld bo Included. a A pI By the reeént agreement of tha trunk-ltie managors tho large frofght of tho: Wabash, — 8t.,Louls & Paoliie -Itnilway-.will bo .dtvitled = equally between tho Lake Shore, tho iCanada :, Southern, and the Groat, Western Hallways, Tho ‘: comprentise oxtends to both the cast-bound and: weat-bound traftic, ani the Watiash,.New York Central, and tho Erie Rntlways are parties to the equal diyiston of traitio nimong: the:three.com= . poting roads. Tho contract fs for ono year core tain, alter whien tine it can be. terminated -by - any ono of the parties giving aix months’. notico i fn writing of bla Intention to retire from Aten a Ty the four years that have clapsedsince tho great fire of Jurio 20, 1877, at St. John, N. By, > 1,131 bultdings have been created, and tho Tele~ graph remarks: ‘A yonr ago St, Johnwasprac- . ‘leally robullt so far as its shops .and dwollings ‘Were concerned, and this year tho sume may be said of itis regards {ts publie buildings, Tho Custom-Houso and Post-Ofice are now complet- ed and occupled;. all tho churches’ destroyed, , with one exception, hhve been rebiillt on a muck” jurger and grander scale than before, Thdecd, » tho new St. John Is’ far auperior in‘ poiut' ot: beauty to tho ult ol - a Banon Maoyus,- German “Ambassador to Denmark, ‘dttonded a banquet given to Barat Bernhardt, by her admirers’ at Copenbago Sarah tg ‘not only A Froneh’ subject, but nr vory: atroitg antl-German, 8c the Barou'was deemed . to havo inisreprosented his couutry and was at Ra once reealied, Ile dlsrrace bis so worn upon * him os to drive bim ‘into Insanity, This way ta’: . regarded us an evidence. of -hypersonaitiveness, © but it {ans nothing compared. with; that of the ~ conk of Loula XLV., who committed suicide be- ; haa of the Southern States to obtuln Inborers’ In Hlnols, Lowa, Wiseonstn, and tho North. hands"; the men who -hire out thelr Inbor,: States show a continuous Increase of popu. [48 Df. Slenens said iu'the address rolerrud: Intion, — notwithstanding - the imunigration, Sinco 1875, the population of Gennany has Incrensedt 2,500,000, ninking that of the Ein- pire at present 45,104,172, and the Bulletin estiniiite’s that. fn {900 this population willbe 10,000,000, ‘Phe same paper suggests the very finportant question, and one of grent concern, tu thiseountry, whether the means for feed- ing thesu people keeps pace witli the Increase ofnimnbers, From an articlein La Statleque .de France ts quoted tabto showing the In- crense In the rate of wages In France in dit. t Os country, and perhaps ‘ohe-hall of the entire. tlons—namely: tho, bitfding “Of ‘a railroad From a puroly hoorettont print of. view, ie cay Dor xbown ‘thyt of the calorie! energy dos, Seloped in tug combustion OF sens. propoction ably, nob exuceding 1 per cont) Is -roully. ro! iitzed lu tha production of hininows rays and + that avon in the cleotric Nght nines enttis of tho onergy set up in the are fe ‘ilsper rae in the form Gf bet, and onu-tonth only is utilized in the form of himinous rays. Dr, Siemens proposes to utilize tito waste- -lwat now dispersed In the gavilame and ot the same thuo to fmprove its iltoninating quality, ‘Tho problem he has set himself to Solve $4 (1) how to obtain by separation-n gas ferent trades from 18} to 1877, whieh table |"or greater Inminosity than that now com- Bs i as follows: : alrornye wages Ti —per dlem— orentee, he 17 Ver ai? Era, Era. cent. TUWLOLG ere cese even renner nes otedd 40 aT Asutohers, oOo aw ot iy # rt re Tinanalths.... Wiatolnianakora,.,,, re Printers, h Gardner ¢ Gh al) 41 “onnerd, ” Upmatsteroray se, * Dyers a au She Increase In wages during these twonty> four yenrs has pyeragéd 63 per event, and tho Sncrease vontlives, ‘Tho shiny rio in wages, has been genoral fn atl the States of Europe, ln sane places grestted, and tin othibrs fes8,— General avornyO..., 004.200 nnd the rio coutinues to this time: ‘There ave two fucts noted as Inving apeelal refere ence to iis rae in the ‘pride at labors tho. one fs thatthe price of bread hax remained! aslitionary, and the other 3 that the Inerunsy vt wiges has beeh greater ny those tradua du whieh tinchinery has been Introduced, Jn recent actlels by Mr. Baward Atkins son, of Hostun, he polite out that during the ten yYoara tron: 1870 to 1870, Inciualve, there’ Wis a saving & the vost of transportation of wierchandise, which Inrgely enters tito tho, -eost of thie article; tty conmmired with the mtes | dharged from 1860 ta 1889, Inclusive, equal to “Givelye litumdred milttons 6t dollars In gold: secon, Ho computed the values of certain quantities of the severil kinds of breadstutts, aul also of beuf, pork, batter, lurd, aud woul, sand -novertalued: that the values of thes articles fn 1889 In New York aggregated: “SU.68, and ln 1880, $031.02, The cast of moy> ing this quantity of articles of. foul wits, Jin 1800, $t8.84, und tn 1879, was $61.68, a allt: ferenca of $12 ‘Thus, while the cost of transportation was lirgoly yeduced, the prlee uf foud Was substantially unehanged, Thus, the fuct that tho price of food hus remntned stationary in France hus been cons “Hemed by the experlengy In tits country, and the probablilty Is that, unless there be somo Vextrnordiuury cause, the vrlves of fond will “maanutaeture, i sas coming froma retort varies greatly In its 7 | character during: progressive periods‘af dis- ‘nanly supplied, and (2) how, to “rafve the tomperature of the gas-flame so that the’com- tuslion may become moro nearly, perfeat, ‘The solution of the first part of tho problem 1g foul In an improvement of the process of Ito ‘has discovered that the “Mation,- Dirrkug the first quarter of an hour afturthe -rerort Is closed marsh-gns {6 prin- elyally given off; together with other gases mid vapors, nolo of which possess. a high |- Mnminating powers ‘Tho samo .is ‘true of tho guses* ind: vapors obtained from the two hours finmedintely following tho first quarter of Wn bour after the retort Is closed. ‘The gas of tho middlypertod fea reh hydrocarbon, and burns with a bright “and flere light, whereas the gus of the first and lost periods contains a great dea) of enlorle and Is nvarly usuless ay an Uiuninate faguxent, According to the figures given In the experlinents of ML. Eltlssen, President: of the French Soelety of Gas Engineers, 1t° nppears that nearly two-thirds of the total production of gus quakes placu In tha middle Musing the Jirst quarter of sn hour snd the Idat hour’ and Uhree-quartors,. Dr, Slomens proposes to have cach bench of retorts con- neeted witha heating gomaln and an Hue inlnating gash. ‘Dhen, he says: ity changing thu direction of tho How of gag at ‘the'pertuds trelbeatc, alice allowing the fret results oF distitation ta How [nto Houting Masel, tBen for ily couasoutiya. b hours inte the uml. mittng guvemaln, and forthe remuinider of the period spats auto the heatloy Jerectualt, on iad youlme of heutimg ay Ewosthinds ursnitliig gis would be obtutued, with tla ine Povtant diterunce, tat the Hhasmintthig us woutd be of 16.10 Instead of 15 ain Ua the be C ty! ittualuathu power ‘ot only. thos candies, puted be preferable to tho wibxed yas fox heute day purposes in bein leds Hable In ite cumbia tun to deposit aont npon beatabsurbing wire Jaces, and ju glving, weixkt forwolxbt, a caloric phwek superior to alent guy, For the distribution of the gases two sots of smalus would bo yequired, and {would also bo nesessary to Instruct the public In the use ‘oF As Sor heating purposes, Due nelther of these obstuchs apponrs to Dr, Siemens to he insupensble, Tho introduction'vf the eleetrie Veht fy Ukely to-open the eyes of the gus imanngera to the’ nevesslly for extentlig the vines “Of thelr products, and putting them within peach of the public by reducing prices. ‘The seeaud part of the problem above ro- ferred to—thot of making the combustion of the curbon fu tha gas-ttame more nearly cou- veto than it-ls—Dr, Sioniens provosey to .bolye by the introduction of un apparatus which he deseribes as follows? ‘This way by efestud by certain mechanical arranuementa, whereby uy pordcn of the waste heat produecd by tho tame ital ty rondereg uyaliabin ty Bese tha weg saul ale engtalaliy fp . ‘ the Inst hour and. three-quurters - of the ‘charge... ‘The gas maluly useful for Ighting purposes Is derived from 63 | ‘period, while tho Tamatning tiled fs distilled: | be: ormpized the teativicies in aw way terosa the desert, to’ capture the tiado of the Soudan. Steps have also been tuke recent: ly tq establish 9 colony.ou the east African const, ‘opposlt Aden, on the: Red Sea, and the Commissioner who saccomplistied: this, has niso secured yarlous ports.on tho. Peralin , -Gulf ond at the mouths.of the Euplrates.as ‘Fronch agencies, Furthor+south they -are + rapidly xetting control” of Mndngasear, In Asin, Frac’ is" purauing. the. ganie polley, qnd England looks on with something lke : conaternation as gh@ behotds her raplilly ex- ‘tending a protectorate over Tonquin, adls- ‘trlet just ‘ronth of Chinn: and: ndjicent™ to, Burin and Siam, nid eperoneliing upon her eonimercial supremacy. | The latest extepston of, hor ‘sovorelignty 1s ovar the Islands In the Pacifle formerly goy-, .erned by King Pomare V. "The sovereignty was ceded tothe French lust June, Tho wilt was accopted on the 20th of . Deconbor, ‘and the public ceremoninl took place on the 2th of last Marek, which is thus described by tho Putt Mall Gazelle: t ‘Tho ceremony: appears to have beon marked by tho display ag well as by, tho tuot whlch char netarize Our nolglibors wcross the Chunuel:: (tho. French canunuudunt, M, Chesyd, “who bud le: “ready taken part in tho utmexation of bo ‘srnted of the Protectorate of Guinbler ang of Happu,”* heuurindd ‘fabk tans, who Cully nowy ty op my sitalny thal dcunrations. “al sel, Phe natty St word aagured Wat a sr ways by troqted as woll-betoved children. b Prange, to whnse evown ‘Tanith was aided tt i n ‘rlek and beautitulyous, ‘Yauttl was Buen formally TWoulared to ben French colons, and afer nivel Oy arate eunnonefirig, wad spauch staal | the day wud -browghe tun cluge by nner mainder tho, trees, yt which Jd wuosts # dlowny droafudite tho Kin ani Hoyas Santis’ ae well.us tho. glucwt inhavitants of tho dhferaut nattonatities represonted jn tatutl, ng Pos: yu tre propysed Cio’ eulth of Comimindane Obed, avo TE fa esr Pennines: a hentth of tho Heeutdene Gf tho Mepnblia. Now fnstituiions word promisad the dusky Tahitian. und when tho Bang ct: wag ended both tha French and thelr lun subjects appear, to pave Leow ob the wt of toriad, ‘Tho islands thus: aunexed ara tho ‘Tonit “or Ceorginn, beloriging 40 the Socloty Rroup, avhig nit aren of 433 square jalles aye w po) “wation of 13,800, ‘Though frat disvoyered by the Spanturdg? ln. 1000, thoyiwore first occu ded and named. by the English under Capt Cook {un 1700, and that the English hive not, rotained possession of this’ tefvestrint yars fillsg fe sanawhat slngulur, especially ns the intlience of thd English misstonnries was pararuount In Tali) downto: 240, when the Vrench established a protictorate whieh has “at inst’ glyon placa” ty netnal . aunexption, Though tho isjands ive tountalnous In tho Ipterlar, the cliinate ‘fs aulubrigua’ and the soll very fertile, ‘They prods every varlety Of tropical fryltiand vexolatlon, All the do- mdstle ankyals thrive well thera, and. the ox+ ‘porta of cocoaput oll, arrowroot, sugar, ani hex shall anount to $1,090,000: animally, An ellmate anil yataral beauty the: Islands ayo wv paradise, ‘ Commortially considered, ‘thay ave of the utmost finportance to France, ne thyy give: hor a ventral yoaltion midway between Sap Franelsco, Valparalao, New Zoyland, and tha Sandwfeli Talutids, ash when tho Jsthiius of Panagyua fs Mulgljod, ‘they will ite fy acirect Ine southwest from France, Naturally. enough, tho Engllsh rogard all these forwarl movewonts of Franco witlip Jentous oye, though curiously enough in hor acquisition of Tahiti, they aro concerned leat the Uniteil States should in some way be en- dangeredd ‘The Pull Mull Gazette says: “It is possible that the Americans muy sve In the vieur ond dejar nation whith awhlah France A public expenditures of the Nation for a whole , gehenition to come. | Stich an exhibit of pura -aratulties would startle nny other“ people on the globe hito some decid” “tnovement,, for curtaliniont, é “This‘flved of: penstons tins beeti cugmiented ' tb its present: chormous ‘proportions by tHe net providing that every new applicant up to nvertitn’ date should bo awarded the’ sr- ;Yeara of sponsions which he would lave drat had his application been filed at tho thine of his discharge from tho, army, Tens af thousands ’of ex-soldiers’ who. uever: in: ,ngined themscives sufficiently disabled vy, service ‘in the ‘army to apply for, peusions haya beon. Induced, to’ put forward such claims since the passage of the retroactive Penslon-Arrears bill, wiiich onables them: to draw a hundred doftars a year clear. back to tho timo of their discharge .from the ‘army, This nlnost irresistible’ temptution’ to’ apply fora pension fs making 9 frightful Shroad upon the pockets of the taxpayers. . ‘The pay- inent of the-grent war debt itself Is Ikely to shrink Into insiquifentica in comparison with future drafts on the ‘Irensiiry for. back. and ‘forward pensions to nion who wore ‘not per-' “manontly dishbled by thelr-imilitary sorvice, A great gulf opens up before tho .vigion of, the dismayed.taxpayer, through ' whose ore tals may pass his earnings, ' ‘Tne clubbing: of cltlzens’ by Now’ York's “Anost police jn tho workt" bas brokon out afroah, and tho nowapupers are awearlng mad uty te ‘he latcat outraye of: this character, Oc- cures th that ally on Munday night. John ae Aun Modan ih Biahaed nusd ita, sroreenurgne 8 polleemin disurderly vonduot,: The “wan whon nreatcnoh }, aeter aving, been locked Up wll night, presented, nm tare 6. apectudle, being”: chvered ‘with from five severe wounds on tho head. apento to Inquiries Trom the Court as to wis Sela teu pond ton tho onleer cually said,“ Flo Feaiitod, moand! gave him the wtivk.”: ha evidence ‘showod that MeDonalil and uae wit hunt beon alttiog up wit ialck child, und in order tc et somo frosh alr thoy’ broughe 4 ho Hitle ayilertr to the front duore A fay nine after taking tholr gent the policeman urdercd them to 40 fuside, ibis ‘order McDonald satuked 38 pores: thar Teer marking. that: bo own yromiges, «The weer “het ta od hin, und upon hig refusing fico hie thon he why brutally: nutens Frayed Yo tho ‘ati aa und locked 4), ter Daueini other tes is ' ay the sare menarkeds | consider that Theat people have been trented in a aes Oltte yageots mnnuer, Wo lave w rocloly for tho vention of cruelly te fale, but 1 think We should have a pogiety £ rat vroventign of oruely to humun bet Leah nee votive alive who do wot know. wher hy ai er begins an ends! After ttt case had bi woh disposed of, tha wine palicoman: preforred charges ayatnst ‘vo other persons whont ho bad arrested tha previy dita Higbt qu the most Frivolous pretuxte, avery sane uf whan, wad peiunphiy. Asuase dua TE Hho ny ie Lak ny oO) afta) Torved PP agnttst tho’ dittcer,” bat pita jbriieattty aboutd not bo permitted tu go unpimlehac Ocvuslonally the pulfoo in this city eo. thetr’ elubs tou freely on vitizons and’ on foo snall provocation, Polloemen of course huya a right tounploy tholy weupone in sglfedafonse ang to toad _quall rows, buture not. authorize! to pound o t ‘prisoner aver tho head. with ‘tholy.oluns on noe ‘count ol "hud Jonguaye” or yotasal or snag to jnarch of tp tne lookeup with ‘spocd and ‘olucrity, ——— ‘Tur’ Rhetutecher Wurier, iriblished in? Wicabadon, Gerinany, pays ‘TR Cutoago Tryue ‘PRB tho following complimont: am On tho md of Muy just Tin Cicada Thruuap treated Its readers “to 4 Jaxury. Thit paper BH rinted On BIXtCOn pages, ae Ha ath addition to ite atiguy, issue, tho pew Oxford transition of the bic, protaclos tho aume with a long jutroduet- rele article, in which 1¢ comments upon former ‘translations of tha Bible. atthe samo time roe ferrtug to the new onc-~t algo informe its rend. chd bow thy one ft prints was uecumplishud; that tho sume wus performed by. two coulila. -aluna, ove having ie scat dt Oxfturd, the cituse tho King did not ask for a second.pleag of -- tah that iad Leon propared with uncommon ; care. : ee : Mn, Tugny @, Vesxon thints ho AB. nots, much of a weathér prophet’ who docs not‘oocn- * sionally rovise his predictions, . “To bolt’ toa prediction mado for twelve months In nuyance,"* | hosiys, “Wwotlld, at th present staye of weather ~ Prognostication, only. tend to mnko. tho whole” attempt ridiculous, Tho test these.pradictions *, undergo for, the frst six months fs alone n ad. :* vere one, although it ia my Orn conviotion that ‘1 * thls spaco can bo coverod, and that’ with conald- “i erablo ‘ndduraoy, by an Intelligeiittobsurvanca + of. tha lending principles ‘connected. with whe. we metoorolugy of our country." Dr Junin ‘OF Kantianti, Til. hus progofited oa fino cailection ‘of mineralogical and puleontoloxical: aupcliiuns, iwhich he shas:y been more .than thirty yess In: ‘thakthe,i to: . Hiackburn University, « Preabytorian instity tlon, tt Curlinviltc, IN. Tho collovtion fs aatd ‘to? bo tho most extensive and valuable west of the’? Alloghentes, and numbers over 80,000 specimens, ° : et ‘uz Indinnapolls Tournat. Rays? twenty-five cent rate per barrel from Indian olla. to Now York was given oi” 7) ‘barrels of. Nour yesterday, ‘This fe tho lowest potnt; yet: touched: The soohur rites ate droppad. to the W wi “toweat figure, tlonbtlosa, tho soon setloni take ‘place and rhics bo restored. Py ee Jaws MeCoxxuit, Esq.,.nsks: the cliy of is | Now. Orleans to puy hii $00,000 ‘fpr attending as 2 speclal counsel during the pust twonty-flve Yerra to its tntereaty hy tho suits" mers by” Mra. Myra Clurk Gains ugainat it, 3 0s a Vesindit avis phi} alr in in ti stabi ful ' Mmakey tho fact of hits snowing: poy tly ‘at all “yemarkuble, / # Attor ‘catofally, ing. ‘don ddiian's remutke on the buttte of Nashville, Gog, Soho fold hie coulugat that bo was not thigro «i ape “© Lago that the ecinat te teavinug’ “the earth ot tho Fate of 0,000 fatled f& dny,* I conld ‘be | ‘very thppy'ion that ony i “+ #Polithelan Y—It bf not goiiorally belloved ’ that Mr, Bhutng birllt tho parbod-Wiro | Teneo yay , Whloh Bir, Conkling'’d Savorit muro hlirt jigrsal! aa Joaquin Milloy wHE spond the! eutinineriat Ramitoyxh, Tha: trngle-hhtied: Heatletiina: Crom’ tho Bisel repently lost all ts mouty ia Walt stret, Brpoklyn,'1f they nro not. provided with write fue rnutertals “it Is Uellutod that thoy. a} Ave happlly togettion — * Wi sven Helly, of Amwauked, hagaued Mis, Logan, ut Cinclanats! for broveh of wromisa, layin, damaged (at 895,000, o Men aro. wrndunily Ee tholr righta in chia country, * ts You pod ‘tne “Gbrbinn ‘Sold Maran}, wants t0 resign, birt the Funporar Won't’ nee ‘of It, Ho hos been rondiag avout tio Conkling and . Platt row, and ‘doosn't fants ‘nny ta aia pons th Mra, Carlylo’ tld. -chller 10 1887 that Car- ye delighted hit ot hur ittte doy, Nery, wbich bo pullg pl hy with’ time: Ho stiaps the tongs’ ab lum, tina ‘oro"ddes pat Like tht," sho wonton, Quite sIkely not; cariyla ‘shdppod the tongs at a guod many pouple In ho course of ‘hia Ufa but yobody, eyorNkad ih He once ‘oven tied un, oxopty tin: fortla salle” sald poor Mrs, Curlylo to her caller, “and sont the poor dog scampering gi over the lousy Mi great ter- Yor, Jt was cruel of bly todo, that,-absolutely eruel,—and } told bin a0, -T told bia st-wae an Amusyincnt Nuft for a philosopher; law, deyrutle ing." And what thon?” the euller usked. “0, ho only Inughed oft thé more‘at Nero and yt me." Cariyto evidently understuon fll: tho privileges of a husband, nnd, ulillke come mien he bud tue i courage-tu suespiae abeu, a