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wert ne OT aid ech setae MSC Seca tee, TEal: Ea RES SN So a Bales ss serene { i 4 q i } 1 } _ptnann antennae ne Sree: ere 8 y THE CHICAGG” The Grilinre. TERMS OF SUBSCRIFTION, BY MAIL-IN ADVANCE: Dally edition, one yoar,. VYarisota OSTAGH PREPAID, AL TaAy, Monda,, Wednesday, aud Friday, nor your, Sunitay,'10-payo editlon. per year... WEEKLY EDITION—PousTPAIn, One coy ar FONT. KO Cin aP tivo. Feit ‘Twonty-ona coptes. OO Speetmon copies aout treo. Give Vost-Omico address in full, including County and sinte, Remlttancos may ho made either by draft, express, Post-Ofiieo ardor, ur in reulatored lotter, ut our risk. » TO CHEY SUNSCHINEIS. Inily, doltvored, Sunitay oxrepted, 25 cents per week. bally, deltvored, Sun 20 centsper week. Address COMPANY, Corner Afadison und ut Cateagn ly as Secont > Matter, Forthe bonent af aurpatrans who dosiro to sont Slagle copius of Pith THIMTNE Uhyrough tho mall, we rive borowith the translent rate of pistao: Entered at the Lost e Bencand eae ee Fer Come ight and Twalve Inve Vapor, mis, Bixteen Paxo In ‘iB cents. TRIBUNE BRANGIL OFFICES, NF CHICAGO TRINTNE has established branele ofticrr for the recelpt of subscriptions und advertises ments an follows: NEW YORK-Room 2 Tribune iullding, F.T, Me~ Fabnex, Manager, u Heotland—Allan’s American Nows te American Exchange, 49 Strand, 0, Avent. ND. Comdial F atroote Movley's Theatre. Handotph streat between Clurk and La Halle, Engagement of llvvley’s Comedy Company, “ Birds of a Feathor,”" Grant Opern-Touse. Clark street. opporlt new Court-House. Engnge> mentof the Unlon-Yquara Theatre Company. “Fo lela, or Woman's Love. MeVieker’s Theatre. Madinon stract, between Stnte and Dearborn. Engagement of Mr. Gus William Wanted, 0 Car- pentor.* : . Olympic Thentee. Clark street, beiween Lake and Randolph, Enguge- ment of Huffalo Bit, “ho Pralro Wait.” SOCIETY 3. ASTILAR LODG: 2, Sd, FS A. Bi Stomfberst. The tratornity cormalty tnyited wu Gos "Tho {rater cord vited, bec weit UKANIS, Scorotary. Roulnr pics) TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1881, Pov. YExxon may be gratetul for the intelligences that there is und been for “months an obstinate drow) in tis country. He may also be glad to know that there was no consiiterable frost in the United States yesterday or the day before, as he predicted. ‘The Weather Buronu, on tho other hand, has had several snmll trhunphs of i.e, Its pre- alictions for the Upper Like region were ful- Ned to the letter yesterday. ‘There was Wher temperature, snd every dication of continued dry weather; yet thestornesiguals were ordored ont in the morning, and by the tine these “ines are read it will be possible ta Judge how far that vrediction also has been fultilted, Tuy penalty that Gen, Carr will have to pay for bolng murdered ts, 0s tho New York Tribune tersely puts tt, “a volley of eritl- elsins fired over lis grave. Yet there ean be no reasonable doubt that he did all a pridentand brave officer could do to Insure the safetyof his command. ‘Lhe treachery of tho native scouts could not be fureseon or guarded ngninst. It Is a new element in modern Indian warfare. ‘Tho scouts, If they ure trusted nt all, must be finplicitly traste When once they have been engaged, no ordl- nary precaution can pravent them from lead Ing their white companions Into an ambush ani beginning tho inassuere If they aro sv in- elined, ‘The temportzing, truckling Indian peace-nt-any-price pulley fs the real rvot of the diflicult; “Tne enuso of Jennie Cramer's death bus not yet been ‘definitly oseertained. ‘he ehemlst who analyzed parts of her body re- ported the presence of arsenic in quantity suMctent “probably”? to cause death, But expert testhnony Is proverbially contradiet- ory, Another chemist mmy bo found to tes- tify that the arsente reported was snot suftl- clent to cause death, Conneetiout has re- cently had experience of the worthlesness of expert testimony under certaln conditions, and may have more In the near future. Lt is sald that Jenniv Cranter took arsenic for her complexion, ‘I'races of the poison ware found In the brain, liver, lungs, and other organs, ns well as inthe stomach, ‘Lhe de- fense will undoubtedly set up that the ar- senie was not taken inn fatal dose, or If this should be proved, that It was administered ye herseff either Innocently or with suiclda nitent, : ‘Tue usual summer sensation In the Southorn press Is a report thatthe Alissisalppi River {3 about ta leave its bed above New Orlenns and find « new channel to tho Gulf, ‘This year the story was that the rlyer had serious desigus upon the Atchafulaya Bayou Unless the encronchments of tho Red River upon the banks were stopped. ‘The Now Orleans “Democrat prluted tho orignal artlele, “It has now furnished a prompt and complete contradiction of {t, In the opinion ofrlyer men of experience the Mississippl not only doos not Intend to go dowh the Atchafalaya, but will, Lf lut alone, etectually close that outlet, ‘Thore was no occasion for alarm i) tho first report, ‘Tho Father of Waters eannot bo turned asite by a trumpory outlet, ‘The main channel fs too deep for that. But the <Atehalafayn might have served a useful purpose by drawing off ten or twelve toct of flood-water, If it had Jessened the regular depth of the rlyer from the mouth of the Ned River to the Gult by that much, no harm would have ensuud. New Orleung could havo survived the (oss, und Capt, Eads, as usual, might lave cone tinted to furnish his private channel of thirty feet “through the jetties,” ——_—_ Census Dutterin No, 345 furnishes the atutistles rolutiug to the anit manufacture In the United States, ‘The production of salt in the Unitert Stutes in 1879-80 was us follows: By solar evaporation, 4,851,190 bustiels;' by kettle or pan process, b4l bushels; by steam evaporation, 16,113,851 bushels. The auwnbvor of establishments hus decreased from 899 an 1860 and “293 In 1870 to 264 in 1850—the Jarger establishments gradually swallowing up the smalter oues, ‘The greatest number of porsons cimpluyed at any une tue during the year was 5,005; the total amount of wages vald during the year was $1,250,113, Tho tons of coul consumed 453,840, of the value of $405,050; cords of wood, 510,418, of the value of St21,63t; vulus of ‘othor mutertals, $1,057,004, ‘Yotal value of all materi als, $2,005,510, ‘Total production, £0,800,- wus bushels, having a value of $4,817,- 63, ‘Tho cavitul reported us invested ty pul down at $8,225,710, which of course Ine cludes all the water which the salt monopo- les have been issulug during the fast twenty years, ‘These salt companies have been en- joylng an enormous protection, sometiines fn excess of 100 percent, and frequently pro- hibitory, They havedemanded this protec- How in the name of “Auerlcan Jabar.’ ’ when in fact, Including men, women, and ehildren, the greatest force of Inbor em ployed! fn the salt business, and that only for f part of tho year, was 5,065 persons, The whole wages palit in a year by the great New York monopoly was less than $275,000, not more than ts patd by any frst-class newspaper establishinent In the country. Yet these salt-robbers for many years ex-+ neted of consttners a bounty of. 100 per cent on galt. es Is another part of this Issue will bs found martiely taken from the Philadelphia Press reporting # conversation with dudge Holt concerning the last days of Buchnnan's Ad- thinlsteation, Judge Molt fully substautiate: the stntement of Jere Black as ta tho part, taken by tha latter fn those exelting tines, dJutge Black was n loyalist. Of that fact there enn no longer Le any serious doubt. The was tho victiut of a misiderstanding. HMisown conduct after the War broke ont. obseured the real nature of his services while he wags amember of Buchanan's Ad- ministration, Ie was trritated and wounded hy tho criticisms of the Republican press, and was possibly driven into « position of extreme antagonism that he would not voluntarily have nssumed, and tho error of which he has pereelved and regretted before now, Judge Holt also testliles to the loyalty of Prestdent Buchanan and Gen. Scott. ‘The Inter nueded no testimonial, ‘Che former 1s not now Ina position to be profited by one. The wrong that ho dia the Republic lay in shirking the responsibility that justly be- longed to him, Lo endenvored to tide mat- ters over.his own Adininistration, and looked at public necessities from a personal pointot view, Judge Holt says that he was “aman of peace.” Precisely at this polnt lay his fallure of duty to the Government. Ho had no right tobe Aman of peace when he was surrounded by men of war and the exist- ence of the Republic Itself was threatened by tholr plots. Judge Molt unconselously bears witness nguinst his former chlef, who was 0 negitive loyalist when he should haye been au aggressive guardian ot National honor and safety. Ly all the discussions concerning the Pres- identlat disability too little stress lias been Inid upon the faet thatlegal evidence of It is not furtheomlng, Beforo the Vice-President ean proceed te assime the duties of the of- five he must have oficial fuformation that the Usability contemplated by tho Constitution exists. He cannot get notice that would be sullelent in Jaw from the newspapers or from consultation with any of his personal friends, An oftfehl notice cannot, we like it, euine from an tinofichs! source. Disndillty mnust be ascertained and declared before the Vice-President can act In conseatence of I. ‘Thers is ona case, utd one only, in whieh it might falrly be presumed to exist. If there were any obstruction of the functions of the Government so gortous ng to bow matter of common re- amark the Vice-President might be justified in offering to discharge tho dutles of the residential office, 1f they were neglected and the negleet was the cause of tho ob struction, But there ts at present no such condition of atiairs, and cammot be except during & session af Congress. ‘The Gover nent Is so organized that the President may have a vacatlon of several months without riment to the pubtic interests, President Garfield Is taking such a vacation now. is ness has not brought the Government toa standstill or embarrassed it In any way, ‘The faet ds, that the propor duties of the Presl- dent during the summer inonths aro ex- tremely light. lls labors have consisted miinly in passing on applications for oftiee. ‘This cluss of business can afford to wait. It ought not to be linposed on the Vresident. Mis failure to discharge It for a short tine will be no injury to the country, Tus physleians in attendance upon the President havo made a number of serlous iiistakes, [wag a mistake to carry hit up- stairs In the ratirond station the moment aftar he was shot; to hurry him through the streets of Washington at rncing speed; to deny hin food and sthnulunts for eight hours ufter tho shouting, on the erroneous supposition that he was bound to dle; to nd- iit general visitors to his bedside for weeks after his convatesconco began; to glve Rock- well and Swatn and other such amateurs ‘the command of the sick-room, Instead of 0 corps of tralncd professional nurses; to feed him onjons and vinegar, and force his appe- tIte beyond its natural demands. Abuye all, it waa ‘a miytake to keep hin in the Whita LMousopivien he was well cnough to be moved. Bit wo have not yet seen tho evitlence that any of these errors or all to- gether were sificient to chango the result of the ense, Thora might have been worse biunders, Ignorant or offlelous surgeons— oven the accomplished Hammond with his extenslva program for probing and eutting— might have hurrled tho President to his grave long before this, It may bo entirely duo to tha skill of lis treatmont that ho is sul Hving, and’ has one slender chance left, Let not the American people be guilty of the suprome weakness and cownidlee of, throw- ing the blame of a fatal issue, If one shull come, upon the surgeous, ‘That ig a do- mestic privilego whieh the nublic ought to reject. Deuth fs ar ugly fact which medicine has not buen able te got over yet. It may be as well to bear this fact in ming when an attempt ts made to hol the best medienl ukIll of the country responsible for life or death, which it can only temporizo with, but not control, SES as THE PRESIDENT’S REAL CONDITION, ‘Tho advices from the President's sick-bed, (hough rarely contradictory, have varied so mnueh from day to day, and deal so freely In cuinparisons with the conditions un previous days, that publie opinion has become very much confused us tothe patient's actunl state, ‘Tho luiterest in the case $y so keen and wide- spread that very slight encouragement ts siutlejent to Inspire the publlo with lively hope, anda mere runorot any wafayorable symptom is enough tu create the despest de- preasion. ‘Phe very best deserlption wa have scou In sevoral weoks of the President's real contition was furnished yesterday by ‘Tie ‘Tuimune’s chief correspondent at Washi ton, who ling watched tho cuse unrenittingly ever slncesthe President was shot. It {sat ouce y record and 2 clear dlagnosls of the present conditions, and we reproduce It bee tow, In order to Impress upon our readers a clear understanding of the case. ‘Tho sun inary is us follows; Tho President is suderlug, tret, frow an une heulod gunshot wound whoso lougth fy catimuted ut sixtuoy juchcs; scuvud, from 8 compound fracture of the tenth sud acontusion of the ¢loveutt rib, wady by tho bullet in its course; thin, by the presence in the body of wu jugyed wad bullet nut ouvysted and traveling slowly downwartl; fourth, from a puisonous etute of tbo blood, uf which the inflamed parottd glund {8 osymptomn; ith, tho glund itself, which ts How # causo ud Woll as 4 result of trouble. ‘This burrowing abscess in the choex-Ja now disehurg- ing in seven chuunals, four of which were pened by the wurgeon'’s kulfc, and three are spontuneuus openiigs Howing through the eur, Inuuth, and vostrile, Tha next complication ia tho weuk und dyspentic staw of the stoluch, which buy ot Hines selected all prottored food, and yoquired to be wlwavs treated in the moat. delicate manuer. For neurly three weeks the Presldcat his tut swallowed a mouthful of sotld food, ‘The seventh item of unxlety und danyor Js thy teusful debility brought on by the injury and its physical consequences; and the eights is the imental weakness cosulting frum the local and coustitutionul troubles, ‘There 43 no doubt that tho conditions enumorated above are nceurately deseribed. ‘Thoy constitute un aggregate of cumpllea- tions which is certainly appalling. ‘They are ealeulated, when considered together, to chill the confidence in recovery which tho President's strong constituuion and manly tlaht for tife have inspired, Certainly, in these conditions, the slightest change for tho worse fs niuch more shenificant than the oceastonal tmpravement which is reported. When the Presttent emerged a few days ago from tho seml-comatose state In which he was lying the public Inclination was to be- Move that the crisis had been passed. But. these hard facts which ‘Tis Tripune’s cor respondent has grouped together ure a warn- {ng that another erists may set in al any lime. Recovery 1x always possible so long 1s there is life, but the conditions are well nigh hope- lesa. ‘Tho removal igcertainty tho last chance. Moturla could not be added to the other com- vileatlons without making death certain, and tho President in his present debilitated con- dition cannot remain in the White House, overlooking the miasinalie marshes. of the river, without becoming tufected with mu- larla. ‘Tho ‘hesitition about removal whieh tho physicians have shown ts probably nat- uralin view of tho overwhelming sense of responsibility they feel, But they need havo No apprehension of blame for such a move ment, Whatever othor. criticlsi may bo passed upon their treatment, tho removal will be approved oven though the President dio on the road. It 13 the solitary hope which remnalns that the’ change of air may prove to be sufticiontly invigorating to ena- blehim to taken now hold on. Hfe. It Is useless now to contend thata removal should have been attempted before thts. There is no doubt that the doctors havencted In every respect ns thoy, in their judament, thought to be best. But thera is no longor any rea- sonablo doubt that the change should bo made unless the President Is actually dying when they are ready to Hft his bed. It is possible that there may be sumo tangible Im- provement from the moment he shall begin to brvathe the open air, Such an effect has frequently been noticed in cases of extreme debillty, At all events, such a change seems. to bo all that is leftto work and pray for, TAXATION OF MORTGAGES. ‘The question of the taxation of mortgages has been a perplexing ono to that class of stutesmen who seam to requrd the possession of capltal to be a crime against the public, and erie of such magnitude that nothing less than {ts legal confiscation or exelusion trom the State will meet the ends of justice, ‘Thy laws of this State provide for tho taxa- tion of mortgages, but, Hike all the othor onth- bound and ciist-lron provisions of our Reve- nue law for the discovery and taxation of credit, the law is s substantial fallure, There has always boen a radical defect in the Jaw in Uils Slate, inasmuch as It pro- vides for tho double taxation of tha property mortgaged, ‘Thus tho tract of land or the improved city lot is assessed at its taxable vilue; to tax mortgnge given to secitre the purchase money or to se- eure the money burrowed and Invested in the iuipypvement 1s of necessity taxing the same property twice. Neverthe- less, for many years the presont Inw has been in force, and Its gluing Injustice has been ‘zealously championed and defendel, Last whiter, hawever, light seems to havo brokon upon the intelligence uf the antl-eapital Jegistaterd to the extent of enabling them to discover that the lnw of Iiinols taxing mort- wages provided for double taxation, and the tate session was'spent In frultless-efforts to remedy this dofect, ‘The same discovery seems to have been inade by the Legisinture of Massachusetts, and that body did mature alow which, at the tho of its passnge, was held up as aspecial model of Jogistation ‘for tho linppy manner In which it provided for taxing mortgages withont resorting to dou- ble taxation, As this Massachusetts scheme may be presented in this and other Western States for adoption, It is well to seo what it mens, This now Inw [3 intended to make tho mortgagee pay the taxes on the amount or value of his mortgage, and tho process by which he fs to be reached may be stated thus: A-hns propurty assessed at $100,000, and taxable at that valuation; he borrows $20,000 of B, giving a mortgage therefor. Tho new law provides that tha Assessor shall re- portthe valuation and the mortgage, and the tax colléctor shall makeout «tax-bill against the mortgageor for the tax on the property assessed on the valuation in excessof tho mtortgago, nnd another bill against the mort- gneee forthe taxable value of hls mort- Bage—the mortgageor and mortgageo being treated tor purposes of taxation as owners uf the property in proportion to thelr several In- terests therein. If thoro be more than one mortgage, then the value of each mortga- keo’s Interest shall be ascertained, aud he shall bo served with a tax-bill, ‘The law further provides that wherever. the mort- gageo falls to pay the taxes on his Inturost the mortgageor may pay the same and be en- litled to u credit on the mortgage itself for the amount pald by him, ‘Uhis is the procees by which tho Mussachusetts Legislature ox- pects to collect taxes on mortgages In that Stato, and to distribute the taxation among the saver! persons who should justly pay the same, . Unfortunately for the Inw, or, more prop- erly speaking. unfortunately for the en proposed, {t contains x proviso that nothing therein contained shall be construed as depriving the parties to the mortgaye from contracting ‘that the mortgageor alnall pny all taxes on the mortgaged premises, ant tha suecess of tha Inw {s. further embarrassed by the fact that tho ‘genera! form of the mortgages now existing and in foreo in that Stato con- talns this particular stipulation, ‘The result will be that, so far as oxlsting mortgages aro concerned, the new law will be non-operative, * aud it Is pretty certain also that in all new mortgage contracts the mortgaycor will be required to pay the taxes, ‘Tho practical result, therefore, of the new {aw isto relonsa the mortgagees of all legal obligations to pay taxes on the security, and if the law be enforced at all the unfortu- nite debtor will hayo to foot the wholo Dil, We fail to see, therefore, how thore is by this law any rollef to the debtor clus, or how the burden of taxation has bucn transferred to tho money-lending eapltallst, In Callforntu, if wo mistalke nat, there isu prohibition of nny contract by tho borrower to pay the tixes on the mortgage, but this extreme and extruordiaary reguli- tion wns too much for the wlatom of tha Mussichuselts statesmen, sv they made a tuw recognizing the right of borrowers aud londers to contract who should pay the taxes, nul thereby effectually abolished all danger of double taxation, All that fins been ne- complished by the new law Is to provide for duplicate assessments and dupllente tax-bills, but leaving the unfortunate debtor to pay all the taxes, Ln ono senge the new law makes asad muddle of the whole business, but dues roully abolish double taxation. ‘The Constitution of Llnols provides for the taxation of all property, real, personal, aut mixed, the tuxatlon to be by rutes imposed wecording to valuation, ‘Ubis 13 a slmple proc vay, ‘The tax fs on the property without riference to ownership, aul the tax follows the property, The Assessor never inyestl- gates or determines questions of ownership; he makes return of the property and Its val- uuilon, and tho Jnw imposes the tux. ‘This platn, clear, aud direct system of taxation has been to some extent mystitied by the efforts to reach capital, tn the way of taxing credits, treating property self and the price of it as two distInet properties to bo valued and taxed. As we have snid, after yenrs of agl- tation and discusston the advocates of the taxation of credits conceded Inst winter that tho taxation of mortgages was double taxas tion, but ft will take them perhaps a genera tion longer to discover that the only way to avold doubte taxation in taxing mortguges is to let mortgages zo untaxed. WEATHER PROPHETS. The general publle fas lost confidence in weather prophecies, and the experience of the past fow days has induced n good many peopls to belleve that the prophets are pro- fessional frauds, Observing people will con- cur in tho statement that there have never been so many kinds uf wenthor of sueh tn expected and extreme disagreenbleness as during the past few years when preposterous fellows have undertaken, to foretell tho at- mosphoris conditions. We lave had Myer, ‘Thee, and Vennors we van stand no more. Each has had his “boom? and each lias proved in tho enct to ban false prophet, less reliable In hls prognostications than the ave- rage farmer. Vennor has been the sorest disappolntinent, because his earlier efforts were so successful that he had gained more than tho usttal amount of public confidence. But the past two months have taken all the wind out of hts sails, and it is to be hoped that he will remnin in the remoteness and obscurity of Mount Washington, whither he had gone to see a snow-storm In August at last ecoitnts, Vennor’s weathor prophectes for July and August were complete fallures, A critic in tho Now York fribune recently took his July prophecies and contrasted them one by one with the actual experlences of that month, Ife predicted, for instance, » great deal of rain, whereas thore was a deticicncy of soveral luches In tho rainfall in nearly all parts of the country, and a drouth was in- augurated In that month which has lnsted ever since, Mo foretolt that there were to Ug an unusual number of severo storms dur- ing that month, whereas the storms wero une usually rare and slight. ‘The temperature about tho middie of the month was to be “oxevelingly hot,” according to Vennor, antl it turned out to be nbove the mean through- out the greater portion of the United Slates and Canada, * Veninor might possibly be forgiven for his false predictions as to duly weather, silico it is all past and gone, but te should be held to personal accountability for his deceptions as to August and September. Me told us that we were tohave hot days but cool nights. Almost anybody would have hozarded 2 guess of the sume kind, becnuso that is tha rule for August; but this year August nights (ns if for the express purpose of showing how ttle Vennor really knows about | have been almost uniformly warm, Then wo were to‘have frost in the latter part of the month, and, when that failed, the frost was to bo postponed till early in September! Anybody who had happened to think of such aprediction in the stiling nirof yesterday would have been justified in looking around. for Vennor with a club, This practic of weather prophecy has been tolerated to the very Iinit of human endurance, Ibis to bo hoped we shall hear no more of ft.” ‘The results show there is no’scienes about it. Vennor was for a Umen better guesser than his rivals, but even his theory of cycles has been exploded. ‘The weather is almost always bad enough whiun It comes, without adding the trials of disappuinted expoctations, ————— OUR PORK AND CANNED GOODS IN BUROPE. Among the Consular reports for tho month of August, Just made public by Secretary Blaine, those touching the subject of Aimeri- can pork and canned goods in Europe are the most interesting, nnd among these that of Consul Mason at Basle, Switzorland, is the most fmportant, not only as conveying the elreular ot the Swiss Government revoking its decree of prohibition, but as showlng the unjust and oven malicious manner in which our salted and eanned goods are treated In Germany, ‘Tho cirewlar itself derives Its chicl importance ‘from the fxet that it en- boilles the results of an Investigation by ex- perts, and that they present their conclusions strictly upon sanitary grounds, ‘The elreular, which js dated June 3, 1881, sets forth generaliy that “the tenchings of obylous facts and experience do: not justify an Intordiction of? Amertean pork nor an obligatory inspeetion of those meats as a precaution against -triohinng.’ While their examinations showed that traces of trichinw were more frequent Ju American than in European pork, still thoy declare that tho cases of Injury to public health have beun exceedingly rare, aud, more Important still, the fow cascs of trichiniasis which have oc- eurred In Switzerland cannot be attributed to American ment, With regard to Inspec: tion the report makes some very sensivie “atatemonts, It docs not recognize its ulllity, because In Northern Germany, where exten- sive inspections aro made, trichintasis stilt prevalla, and beenuse ono part of the hog may be freo from trichinw it does not follow that every other part is exempt from these pesta, In closing thelr clreulay, the commit- tes maken recommondation whieh has fre- quently been monde chere, and whieh, when foliowed, Is & sure precaution against any danger. ‘They says: We urge you, therefore, to inform tho peo- ple of your canton, in tho most etfeetun! man ner, that Amerioan pork linported in part by loval dealers ia largoly conmumed tn Switzers Jond, and the consumption of these meats as well awof pork in general ts attended with danger sn Tea it {a thorottyhly couked before eaten, As to cooking we Ind that 4 temperatura of 6) do- grees, does not aucure absolute sufety, hut wat iv ovder to antely destroy the ‘parasites which may bo in tho Interior of the pleces 9 toinpora. ture equal to‘ that of boiling water Is required, Consul Mason sends u second report, which Is also of extraordinary Interest, us tt por- tains to canned meats and soups, and shows how omaltelously they are discriminated against In certain parts of Europe. The favor with which they have been received and tho rapidity with which thoy are driving other canned goods out of competition hayes aroused a bitter enmity agalist thom among local butchers and ancat-dealers, and thoy stop short at no methods that will help to prejudice the people agulust them, oven to the extent of most delormined lytiz, The newspapers dovoted to that futerest—among them the Hlelacher, Zelttarg, which Is the orgin of butchers’ Interests all over Contral Kurope—are fled with maticlous assaults, which are copied by the dally Journals all over Germany, Austrla, and Switzerland, An address dotivered by Councilman Ruloit al the Ist session of the Gormnn Sovlety for the Protectlon of Publle Henlth has beon printed and scattered broadcast, and that our packers und mont-presorvors muy realize the nature of the assaults made ugalust their gouds we extracts fow sentences from tho nddress, Ho says: Bevldes splouitls und oryaipolay thore oxists anuther digo the so-culled “hoot disteme per,” which js so futut that in tho State of IIll- ‘noid alone there dicd from tt in ono your a wlll- fou swinu, und it may be aaserted With outire certainty that tho tush of those antwals was converted juto canned iments. Among tho Anioricun cattle mialignunt opldemty maludies are not less provalunt, and expeohilly sols the wo- called Toxus fovor, 4 ihicuse akin to the rlndere pot Which fa a uulyersal scourge, And since vof vatile have a higher valio than hogs, this digcage can bo latent in thew longer thon in ewine, So, also, there can bo no dottht that the flesh of theso iutwals’ become " cornod buet." Doreuver, the chousist Meyur bys discovered in of lead. During the tranaportation of enttlo from the States of Texns, Kansas, ard Colorado to Chicago, where the ‘congervod meats ure prepared n distance of 1,500 milous, thoy ne inevitubly exposed to var disenses, eo that it is wuloubtediy tro that a large proportion of tho cattle whose Hoh {9 cons verted Into corned bof ure Infected with matige nant disonses. All thia must be true, sluce It by nsrerted by even tho Amoriean press, which furthor assures ua that ltoranticsh (8 also uscd for the same purpose, Tutsince virulent con- taglous inatter {s tot, destroyed by the process of propuriug, cunned meats, tho question ape preiesousy Are wa obliged to uso this corney poor, And is tts consumption really a mattor of economy? Tha ruswer fs inovitably, No, sinco recorded facts prove that in sevoral cages por- song having exten those conserved meats woro nuide fil thereby, and, moreover, beentise noun eontalning tivo pounds of ment, and which costs 43. conta, 18 ingch more expenslye than the samo. qttantity of equality good native met. ‘This tissue of esuggorations and false- hoods fs not made by an trresponstble per- son, but by a revognized ollelal of high standing to the highest public sanitary asso- elation of the German Linplre, and has been ‘everywhere copled nnd used by butchers and meat-dealers to prejudice tho people aucalnst American canned ments, ‘Chese and shullar reports go uncontradleted. ‘Chere Is noone thera to auswor them, It belvoves American shippers, therefore, to meet theso eatumiiles and ond them by sumo authorita- tive statement. ‘he triching senre was ended by promptly meeting tt, and conyin- elug the European consumers that thore was no danger. It will bo much easter to ox- plode these ealumntes against our cauned goods, and Cons) Mason Indicates the way by stigaesting that “it fsof the first impor- taneo to tinned-meat exporters of the United States that thoy should unite in meeting mis- representations like that quoted above with elear and authentic statements deseribing the methods by which enttle aro brought to St. Louls, Chicago, and other meat-conserving contres, how they aroinspected, slaughtered, and thelr flesh cooked and eanned, and tho precautions by which the danger of lead polsoning is now entirely obviated.” THE MUMMY DIS00VERY, Mr, Emil Brugseh, a delvar among the an- tiquities of Egypt, has unearthed near Thebes a treasure-trove which eclipses in Interest anything Dr. Schiemann has discovered among the débris of ancient Troy. He lias: been turning up Kings and Queens by tho score, mtd thelr royal paraphermulln in be- wildering profusion, Time was when tho finding of the mummy of an ordinary Prine cess was heralded ag nremarkable discovery, and poets sang the praises of tho Inte de- purted, byt Mr. Brugsel has found no less than thirty-nine monarchs of both sexes, some of thom of grout renown, and all of them possessing more retrospective Interest than the remains of contemporary monarchs, permanently retired from business, will have 3,000 years henee, Ile has a lavish weulth of Pharaohs, anyone of whom would make ww fortune for a shownnn, ‘Tweuty- six of the thirty-nine hive been idontified. Though they are not fn a condition that would make them desirable house compan- fons, evep in these days of esthetics and auite too utter tomfoolery, they are better looking people than the most of us will be 3,000 years hence, their fentures being dis- tinguishuble, their teeth ag good as new, and their hands ready for a welcome shake. ‘Lhe ornamentation of their burial-eases in all their hues of green, yellow, and orange is also as perfeet ne Lf It were Inld on yesterday. ‘The vldest gentleman of the lot, who has so suddenly revisited “the pale glimpses,” and who could tell such strange storles If ho had the gift of speech, is King Raskenen, one of tho Inter monarchs of tho Soventeenth Dynasty, who was lald away In fine hnon and splees nbout 3,700 yenrs ngo, or 400 years bo- fore the Israelites astonished his successors by crossing the Red Sea dry-shod, while they went under—horse, foot, and dragoons, The official description of fila preset owner isas follows: No. 1. King Raskenen, ono of the Inter Kings of tho Seventeenth Dyuusty, The mummy, wrapped tn the tsunl shrouds of tine Inen, is inelosed In-throe wooden mummy-enscs, cach disclosing tha form of the poy and fitting in another Ikea nest of boxes. Upon tho ids of the three munimy-cnses ara carved in high re- Hef the bead aud armsof the King, Tho right hand wrasps tho.cris ansatd, and in tho foft fa tho seeptre. Tho arms rest upon the brenst crossed, Above tho fucial portralt is carved the yoyil headdress, with the ures sorpents In gilt. Ench of the cuilin-cnscs is tterully covered, Doth Inside and outside, with inscriptions and representations In yellow and orange upon olive-green ground, Poraile race exctusive- jy tothe ritual of the dead, The mummy aod ensos aro In porfeet preservation, ‘There are many others who are nearly as old and much moro famous, among them Anmes L, who founded the Elghteénth Dy- nusty, drove out the Shepherd Kings, and suppressed the Nubian rebellion; his good Queen and several of hissons and daughters; King Aimenophis, who waa quietly resting among lotus flowers that looked asif they hat been nlmost freshly plucked; ‘hotmes IIL, the Creat, who ralsed Egypt to the summit of her greatness, the most glorious monarch of the Hne of Pharaohs; Seti I, who re gained many foreign conquests, lost by his predecessors, and who had a temple whero all the gous of the Egyptian pantheon wero: kopt In state; Rameses 1L, the Pharaoh of tho Jewish captivity, who was found with o roynl whip iii one hand and the royal hook In the other, his features boautifully carved upon the case aud surmounted by the crown of Upper and Lower Egypt with tho serpent; and lastly, King Pinoten, a great warrlor, Jn addition to the royal muniies a multl- tudy of objects inyo been found, among thom the Ieuther tent of tho last-named King, covered with hferoglyphics and numerous papyrl, which it Is betleyed will contripute Important information concerning the Jew- Ash captivity, written by eye-witnesses, + [tis no slight thing for one man to otvn thirty-nine monarehs, at of them Pharaohs, If, as hag been stated, they go into the pos- scasion of Egypt, it is possible that the Khe- «ive ean be prevailed upon to part with some of them. As ho {s friendly to thls country, and has lot New York havo an,obelisk, he might possibly lot Chiengo have a Pharach, It fg Jmminterial which one, though woshould profor ‘Chotmes the Great, who was the most onterprising of the lot, and who, set up in our South Park or out in Pullman, woutd wn- auestlonably onjoy thoatir, energy, and brisk- ness of the place, 28 reminding him of his own getup white ruling ovor ‘Thebes; whilo St. Louls might take old Naskenen, whose conservatism would not be disturbed In that sleepy town, excopt by tho directory can- vauser, Junan Van Vorst, of New York, hay ren- dorod a deetston of great finportance to people who aro fortunate cnough-to have anything to do with inturost-boariong vonds, At the thu of tho colobrated Northampton bank rebbury, Stra. Fanny D, Wylie bad on. deposit in tho vaults of thut justitution a wumber of mortgayo coupon bonda of the -Pacitis Railroad of Missourl, all of which wore stolen, Tho robbery of the bank took placo In 187d, aud on the 00th of Decomber, 1878, thirty-alx of the ooupons, of the par valuo of $1,080, ull past duo, wore purchased by tho firm of Lazar, Spoyor & Bllisson, Frankfort- on-the-Matn, from 9 reputable merchant of that olty named "Leopold Gompertz, the full market prico bolug pald for them, The Frunkfort drm sont tho coupons tq Spoyer & Co, of Now York, for collection, and tho ratlroud company gave a check for tho amount, where- upon Mrs, Wyllo brought sult ta recover tho value of the coupons, tho paymuntof the chock huving boon stopped by Injunction. Tho do- olsion of Juuge Vun Vorst, beforo whom tho cise was tricd, und who xave u judsment for tho plaintif, ts a model of brovity, “It scoms quite cloar," be gays, “that plaintif's ¢itle to the coupons was wholly unulfooted Ly tho purthass of them by Lazard, Bpoyer & Elltssou in Frank: fort. There ja nothing to Impeach the good fulth or boucaty of the purchaser, but that \ gor Rn ere coon = et : pond a2 TUESDAY,” SEPTEMBER 6,” REIT WELVE Paces a box of cored beof ninoty-nino milligrams | transaction; the coupons being overdue cantiot | endeavored to shoot the last nyall to invest tom with atitle.” After tholr maturity the voupons lost. the attribute of ne xotlabllity, and thoy trepped to tho category of ordinary property to whioh title doos not pass by more delivery.” Tho Jndge admits that the FrankCort brokers woul! have had a good title “provided that some person Is tho obnin of tithe hotweon thont and the true owner of the securl- tics had avgulred auch title and trausforred It tothom, Butit the coupons ronched tho hands ofa bone fide purchasur before inaturity this fnet mist bo established by the defense, "it is’ not proven’ says the Judge, ‘who, from whom, or for what conatidori tion, or uniter what cirenmstunces, Engrave, allas North, from whom Gumpertz purdhused the coupons after thoy lind matured, cumo into posgession of thom. fo did state at the time ho sold tho coupons to Gom@ertz that tho bonds had been the property of an estate which hind been some yonrs in Htlgation. Thore is nothing to show that Lagrave had any better title than the robbera who commilted tho burglary.” Under tho Inws of Gernutny a perdon who pire chnags bonds in good falth obtnina n title to the coupons against all others, whether tho purchuso bo mgte before or after thoy full dite, and it {3 for this renson that stolen bonis aro so com. monly disposed of in Mrankfort, the want of good falth on tho part of tho purchaser being of vourse impossible to prove. The dceision of dudgo Van Vorst ta founded on principles of aquity as woll us luv, and hereafter tho money. changers of Frankfort will pot beso ready to buy securities from porsons concorning whose ownership of tha anme thera 13 no proof, a ‘Tits Truune is pained to observe that a coolness bas arison botween tho fon. John A. Logan and tho Dally News, Thore was a timo when tho Junior Senator fram Milnols found ready and cord! nppreointion in tho columns of that Journal; bur, with all its efforts tot! plense, it could nover be the personal organ he desirod, Some of his frionds, thoreforo, estip- Mshed an opposition paper that should moro completely ropresont his tutereste, espocintly with reference to a posglblo, Presidential cam- paign. With thaso oxptauations, which may bo relled upon as trustworthy, the rendor may find a good don! of interesting political Intolllmence botween tho Huey of. tho following paragruph frum ‘tho Netus of yesterday's Now and: then wo hear of a newspaper boing started to promoto the political aspirations of i politician. ‘To those who know how great an anlfulr a newapaper fs to start, and how small an affair the personal uspirations of any politician beeune tn the comparison, such an undertaking seems Iko buikilng « barn god then burning It down in ordor to roastit rat. 2 On be rie nani DOr xonerally requires, to start and run it, from ilve to twenty tlmies aa much vapltal as tho profes: sional politichty elthur posscases, ar cun borrow, or oven sighs for. Whon this anjount of capital bas _bven invested it becomes of so much moro consequence to make it pay than to clect an, particular man to an office that the politiclan ty yery likely soon to be traveling one way and bis orgon tho othor. The pollticinn discovers that to stand identified with a now and feeble organ that is ee withont circulation or in- Huenco throws all tho wolght of the catabiished. newspaper agalust him. People judge of his strength by tho weakness of tho cornet that toots: for him. Tho newspaper discovers that tho number of subscribers or ndvertisors tt gots by belug regnrded ag an uppontuga to the cont- tails of a politician fs but neg: fraction of tha number it loses, So, tiking burns ng thoy run, and nits ag they run, and nuwspapers and poll tlefang ag they run, while nearly overy barn that Igy built sooner or Inter burns and rosets t rut, yot it doca uot pay to bulld and burn a bara on purpose to citect that result, And so, while nonrly overy nowspaper gooner or later helps or hinders sonia politician, it does not pay to etart newspapers with that object In viow, Finally, ag Jack Bunsby would say: “Tho pint o' this pusre eaten, es werry much Jo the application orine Tho * pint of thoobserwation " Is thatSenntor Logan {4 the “ politiclan” roferred to; the Chi- cago Herald (now two-cent dally) is tho “ feebto organ without elrculation or Iniluenco’; and tho News fe tho Journal that refusea to be “an uppendage to tho cont-tails of a politician.” ‘fhe paragraph above quoted is a challenge to mortal combat. « It will bo « morry picnic for thie two-couters, and may end, iike the famous cneounter between the Kilkonuy cats, in to total deatructiou of both, ny Some enthusiastic but Impractien! per- sons in-New York havo been endehyoring to orente a scutinent in favor of tho employment. of women us ticket-sellers on tho elevated rall- rouds In that oity, wheroupon a man, who seems to huve tho Intorésts of women fully as much at heart ag do the onthusinsts alluded to, but ia not. as visloniury ag thoy, shows the fuollsinoss of this proposition, Says this sonsible party, reply- ing to n communication In the Herald: Wo will imagine that wo have ladies at our sta- ons. Lyerything would bo: vory nico for fol- lows of Mr. Krank’s type, ‘They would not think anything of stopplog to aponk with the falr one, delaying others who are wilting to got thor tickets, Now, suppozo an intoxtcated pergon caine along to'ride? Tho nay, Is in dis- tress: abe don't know what to de. Tho man ts nat allowed to ride, so sho must tead bin down from tho station, and take all kinds of abuse. Now, what would this weak, timid orcature do when sho had fivo or six onses of this kind each day, and at some stations man Xr moro? Perhaps it would Le ngood thing for Mr, Frank to sug: gost that the company engage men to stand und over thege idles to seo that they are nat insulted or run away with. For hoayen’s guke, Mr, Frank, give us something that Is not so ridiculous, * Nobody with a grain of :mantinces in bis com- position will abject to tho occupation by women of any omploymont for whivh thoy nro fit, ‘Thoro is no doubt that a large class of situations in mercantile life that properly bolong to women aro Mited by a cortain apeoles of mon who aro content to pit thomselyes against the wenker sex In compotition for thoso sltations, and work for atarvation wages {u order to retain them. The case of dry-goods clorks Is a notable Instauce ot thle, Thoro a no carthly reason why 0 per cent of the olorkships in dry- goods ‘atores shoul! net be Alled by women, thoy boing bottor titied in every way to uls- churge the duties appertaining to thea, oe ‘Tne male Mne of the reigning family of England, with the possitle exception of Princo Leopotd, does not scem to have tho faculty of making remarks In public developed to the ex- tent that Ia expected In this country of a 30-yenr- oll boy, Eyeu tha London papors commented on the extraordinary clumsiness of n short ad> rors dolivercd by tho Prince of Wales at tho opentag of sunio pudltc institution nt Woolwloh not long ugo, and now hla olitest aon, Prince Albert Vigtor,a young man in hia 18th yonr, f9 tho aubject of pltyins criticisin by the austras Mun Sournata jfor a simitar cituge, Tho Prince and his brother were recontly given a reception at Ballarat, aud in responso to an address of wolcomo read from a paper tho following: My brothor and myself thank you and tho oit- zeus of Ballarat fur tho hoarty welcome given ‘us today in token of your loyally to the Queen. Tt would scom that a 17-yeur-old boy might at lenst commit these few lines to moinory, but bis tutor waa apparently afraid to trust so much to Wo injud of England's futuro King, eo Menico {s not generally regarded as 0 par- tleularly olyilized country, but In. some respects its styto of doing thingaisnn adinirabjo onc, Not long ago n terrible acoldont ocourred on tho Morolos Mullroad, by whlch ayer 300 Yves woro Jost. Inthla country a Coroner's Jury would Lavo conaured tho attivials to whoso negligonco tha diguster waa attributable, the rolatives of somo of tho vivtima would have begun sult for datnages, and that would hayo boon the end of tho mutter, The unolvilizod Moxicuns, howe evor, huve somowbat Improved on this plan, Tho Dopurtinvnat of Public Works has begun olvil proceedings agalust tha rallroad company to recover pucuniary damages for tho fauulites of the killod and wounded in tho recont disas- tor, und ulyo taken stops to sooure the Immodi- ato lndictinentand trial of tho ongineors by whose fuuity construction of a bridgo the aect- dont was rondered possibte. A fow such Moxt- cut idens as this would prove of great benefit in the United States, ————— Onive Logan says that Queen Victoria will oot sleep in room with a carpot on tho Moor, Oilve tight just as well have stated that tho Quecn was in tho babitof playing soven-up ovory night before retiring—sho had exuctly the same chavo to know, Perhaps ufter awhile the Euronean female corsespoudents of Amorl+ can papers will leara that all people on thia aldo of tho wuter aro not nocessarily natural jdlots, and quit writiog stuff that any 10-year-old boy can sce is the rankost klad of bosh, at INDIANAPOLIS seems to ba a rather un- healthy place Just now for Cutcago oven, capo- clully It thoy uro at all Inclined to regurd tholr Place of residenco with favor,.and object to baving its mauifold beautica anu attractions mado the subject of contumely, Last Saturday Charlea Nachiwan, of Terre Huute, took upon himself whilo Ju the office of an Indianapolis hotel to furlously denounce Chtcugo and ail tts works, aud, upon belug remonatrated with by a bergon named Hurley, produced a pistol and har Tho fact that the dofendor of thin nitme bolonge! to Haverly's Rr shade of advertising eine ta agelt ever, Mr, fackman may he able mye enya in Iudianapolls, but ho tut weqeetse Ce tho experiment in this elts, Our May, Cr Du tty neal from Coney Island, on 8s atrongthoned by Lu gen breezes and Ib a but tvigorating lam. and anybody rit tempts to vilify the town aver wiht sides will got into troubte, 10 Pte EY Ub i ‘itA‘r good but somewhat tady, Men. Swissholin, hus of Trea wean old ly hneletng away at Prostdont Gaenuy tt clans, buy apparently disgusted qt hee 2M sitceogs, she bas suddenly turned fae * round and commonced bolaboring 81, Pan calling him an old fraud. As Paul inne flesh, tho old Indy has it all ber own enn thwnck him toher heart's content th IC tho muscular old Christian wore alive CU sult would probably be a diferent one, ai aa Swisshelm would tind herself with heeds Tull. Hor assault Is nelly fale tuner nett cumstances. As Ramses, during wrote tio ehildren of Israol wore persecuted, cently been tnearthiod tn full funtine with whip in band, Mex. Soristcim might geet him, and make It interesting for that mummy, ss ‘. ‘wrannleat a ‘Ti convention of FreePint: ' has been in session nt Mormetivine gt leh Journod Inst Baturday ovening, nnd ainod vA resolutions was ono that it indorsed the ai ie of tho ‘lexns Governor In rofusing to call a of fasting aud prayor for the recovery of P; ed dent Gartield, ‘Tho nettan of tha conveute this regard will not occasion very gouoray F prise, as the infamous wretch Gulteay bluse claims to be a Freo-Thinker, ant the aeuon. the convention beara blm out in the Assert = butif sympathy for a good man dying at ae hands of acowardly assusin cannot bo expresill by Freo-Thinkera, thoir right of freo thought! ought to bo clroumseriued befors such Cons! tomptibte organization produces moreGulteany] —<—<—<—<——___ oF Hh nt way. tet ‘Tis latest “Ohio idea,” although novet, fy notby any meats wood ouv. Thoottleiatact tha State Penitentiary have discovered that sever) convicts wero busily engaged in tho manufact. ure of counterfolt nickels, which they contrirey to pags upon unsuspecting merchants of Colum. ‘bus by tha ald of a prisoner who was pormltiey to drlvo a teain about thecity. — A NEW but exceedingly proper Punishment for brutes convicted of nssnult on women lw now botny put In force by the Canailian author. tles, Persons convicted of this eriino ate nos, in addition to terms of Imprisonment, subjected toa dogo of tho cat-o'-nine-taits every ton days, 3 re LAKESIDE MUSINGS, “1 am willing to bury the hatchet apaoy provided I can bury lt in Mr. Tilden."—Juig, Melly, . A-couplo of sharpers tried to bunko Gen, Grant in Now York last Friday, but itis hardiy necessary to gay thoy wero unauccessful, A New York paper assorts that bleyele.. riding causes brain diseaso, This Ja very doubt. ful. It hus always been understood that {now fokto Require brain disease a person must bars brains, Washington dispatches state that a fresh: Warrant has Leon issued for tho arrest of Capt, Mowgate.” Itis dittlenlt to conceive how tts ‘warrant can be any fresher than tho person who fasued'it. Observers report avast number of new #pots on the face of tho sun. Perhaps thes has been teytog towin tho 40 thata Doster pugillst offora tu anybody that will spar tim four rounds. A Now York physician states that a wound from tha toy-pistol sa inuch used by boysln variably produccs lockjaw, For tho Inform: ton of, persons wishing to abip tos-pistols Dennis Kearney, wo will stato that bis addres San Francisco, The nightavas beginning to lower; My heart waa o'orladon with wo; Telimbed tho steep stops of ntower, | And gazed on tho city bolow, Faleo gitt! I would leap through the distatey Down down to the cruct stones whirl; But a man only bath ono existence, And tho wide world hath many a girl. —From “Mellow Moments," by C. A. Dana. Ono Chicago paper, at tenst, seems tobe represented nt Washington by 9 collexo grade ate. Ho begins n recont dispatch concernsy tho wounded Prestdent with tho remark tht “Tho leaves were falling from tho trees on tht ‘Whito House grounds fo-day. The brown grass, strown with the dead folinge, recalled with dreury emphasis tho reallty of autumn preset nt Inst.” Nothing could add to tho beauty of this ploture, except tho corpse of the man the would send such gruel by telegraph lylag peace Tully In a fence-cornor, ‘Tuesday Fifine was sitting on tho sldewalk in Rat alloy Just opposit tho fruit xtand run by By Milan, Fifino waa thinking. Hor doll, 9 crude thitt randy Of linen and sawdust, with o rag bed Jay in the gutter, the aun beating piulecy down ypon tt A dog on # nelghburug door Rtop “turned lazily to bite on tes and He Fitine. He came mluwly towards tho gid, mu Ing histall ina aolt-duprecntory mannor. This dott Name was'rut, nnd he wus a groat favorit with tt ehildran tn the alloy. Ifa laid duwn beside the dot with the rag head und waa soun usiorp. Fidne lute at them Tovingly for a moment, and then colle hersolf slongaida of ‘Tot, pinced her cheek saiat his none, Adox's cose ta always cold. Figse inet this, and the nelghvors often auld that the hermia otor was protty low when ebe yet left, Fine und Tot bad bean sleeping nearly an bed whon Coupoan canta along. Coupeau was 0 rere Mlontst, and hud (hrown a derayed auple atone at tt Innporial Quania tn tho bloody days of the Commie ie belloved In thu division uf property, but Ht never worked lume enough to secure any odie io wasn true Communiat, When Coupest Fitino and the dug sleoplog In tho gutter hu etnck hourevly to tilmsolf, und ruulod unstedliy 1074 them, Coupeau had been drinking absinthe, Sey ing carofully ovor tho dog hie tied to the antmalen) ‘Athi can, and to that ho udlxed the doll, Ths breathed In 'Tot's faco, aud tho Jutellixent ier at once awoke, Auother smell of Jacques’ batt and he ‘dashed wildly up the atroet, Hl sé) movement awoko Fitino, who mur Ler darling 0 bolng whisked past hur rioso with the speed ofee wind, Tuvtinctivaly sw grasped bor childish re” ure, and waa drawn swiftly after the teelnd nial, Noaring the corner of Wat alles Rue Tin Cou abe saw thut Tot was going to Cue the latter thorougfure and thut ber only bert te to lot go of tho doll, Sho reinxed her grep, Bi momentum acquired carriod ber clesr sro | strovt, whore her bond struck thy curbsooe quiver of tho little body, and sie wasdenl yy ‘two duys later Filino'a body was borne fern house in rorewoud comin with fur handles oe, alde, tho tmaurtalles on her breast lvoking Rar Joss fair and pure than tho face of the dead a Be tho funeral corséxe reuchou the sidewull o Oto avon crouoliing underneath the hears. It © ae ‘the cau wos stitl on bis tall, but tho doll 1 tr Foran Justant nu uno spoke, ‘hon ix EUS OS “omobody entch tho dug.” Conpeau soph Oy to seizo the anlinal, but Vot snurled savaged Oy bing on the nus, Inan tnstant the sate me was enjoying tho dullriam tremens, 80 awloutes moro he was doad, te tdte L’Assommole bad done tte work.— Evite PERSONALS. — ‘s Princesa Dolgorouki, tne wilow ot} hale Czar, bas beon ylaltiug tho Austrian aoe and Empress at Sehonbruun, She Is Curlsbad, . ‘Tho present Princess of Ee! divo's onty wife, Is a cultivated aul minded womun, She revelved a Eun by cation, and ber children ure vrouaht uP glish governessce and In Kaglish way’ rat, 00k Crow-Dog, who killed Spotted. Te a ual abud-looklng Indian. Hto wears # OO ote form; and on ble shoviders ary ne Arias. Viret-Ligutonunt of the United Brat ser vO Prof, L. M, Mitchell, 0 Now Yor has boon for many years Inthe Kue ay on to, sated from Now Yorks last Satu! mre Poturn to Egypt in tho Byitanate, al ends 12 {oy a four months’ furlough with bis tert Te thigState, Tho Professor 16 tsp rie angulution fa the Exyptiun national ion ‘The Rov, Phillips Brooks, of Bost sine acribod as giving an oxbllaraclog ponte * bagyago-suiebers" at the ee escent Othorduy, Ho arrived at the aie geil adkea where the baquxcmaster WAN area ble trunk asi¢ ft were a tritllut poo and crossed tho wharf lgbtly (0 wa 3 standing, 118 res lotty. oltoal, fesse an die ig gent net vpt, the Kbe sot tberde pean ele those who. di Triully thought ho wus # man,” Eliza MoParlun, of Hamden, O29 1° were engaged and tho day epPd oe! weddug., Her parcuts oppve urs Edward Borray, of Sheldors Sete vd