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1 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1874.-QUADRUPLE SHEET. into the earth on their way to the Colorado as for | already gathering. Our instrument was packed | Mes andindtviduals—in a word, the liberty of the | | afattering kind. Under ordinary circumstances NYUVAI i Beate : ‘a , e vest ty of suciety aud of the horse, wiih ten pounds less to carry than he : - high mountain ranges in some portions of i. | on a litte black mule that ean travel | press logerve the best interests of society a } ne horse, iH 1 | Colton on hie map ot Ubiurado, used tn S part for | almost anywhere, but our saddie — aul- | the families and individuals who compose tt, in | | hac on nis back when he won this race twelve +P] LY ' | the title, which, to sn atlas ' pudlisier, las an | mais we da not take for fear of large | Obedience to estaviished law and tn Conic uty | moWths ago, would patnrally baye been 3%. 4 . | entire blank. Qn the Guunison Kiver the party rocks hidden under the snow, For two hours | | with tue eternal principles which are the basis of | | Mense favorite with the public; but after | and one of the largest canyons yet discovered in Colorado. {tts about flity miles in length, aad cut into granite rocks to a d@oth rangiuy from 4.000 then we took “he instrumen’ Co! 1 te Sketch of the Hayden to 4,000 leet. ‘The walls of this tr i pounds, On our backs, anu at lour u’cluck we stood mple } aces eaepign ana tke tie "ip-top una commenced observing. : | over its rocky bed like a torrent, All ths re Ished jast before suuset, and the gathermg storm | Surveying Expedition. | has been thoroughly tapped, ail the bizh woun- had already commenced to break ‘upon the moun- Luin peaks Were ascende |, measured and located us to tue ast, A sense Of dread came with the | by triangulation, expanded irom a base live lo- broke the trail for that mule, picking out the places waere ae could vet through the rocks, and Weighing seventy ‘ng light and inereasing storm as we stood our dearest rigut., Whats it that is proserived aua condemned by the proposition which Mr, Glid- stone uot ouly uuwarrautaoly divides into three i dn- | distince ones, but tae meaning avd purpose of which be (Wifally or unwittiogiy) laisifies’ Here nis Frou this completely fulse conception of social goVerument ihey co uot hesita’e to main- tain an opmion most pernicious alike to tie Cath. e ry s depicted on | wlobe in that great wilderness of snow and rocks, | Oc Church ang to the salvation of souls, and a map 2 One woaid ves ie trem a Dauloan, looking | # Sensauon that I can hardly descrive or | stigmatized a8 a@ mad dream by our pre- duwa from above, Une of the most interest- | analyze. We descented rapidly to our | decessor, Gregory XVI. (im the encycical THE WORE ACCOMPLISHED. ing discoveries was 4 bed of anthracite | wule, and then commenced the jong hours Mirari vos)—uamely, that ireedom of conscience ’ coal, four feet in thiekness; but, a8 it is | OfSDow breaking up and down great ridges. On | aid Of religious worslup is a right belonging located on the Ute reservation, tt cannot be | the peak | was almost frozen standing by the In- | to every Luman being, which ought to be pro- | Wave available for many years to come, sirumentin the suow, With No cOat to protect ne claimed by law and asserted in every properly | Game was pot jound gpundens ay & a ore | seen; but smail game wa: > Tne aan met with the Utes frequently, but were | Sweat dropped fiom me. We ne ‘once stopped treated Well by the This has been the usual | torest im all these hours of work. two hours experience of the Survey, as it has never hada | after dark we reacved our saddle ani military escort and attitude of hostility to the Indians. Abundant Materials fr a complete geological as well as geographical map were received. The party ts now | On ita way to Washington, to commence at ence | the jortucoming annual report, | THE THIRD DIVISIOM, ; under the direction of Mr. A. D. Wilson, operated in Southwestern Colorado, in some of the most MOUNtAMEUs portions Of our Continent, Au in- | Serestine account has just been vecetved from 3b the eyed under the supervision of Mr. TOPOGRAPHICAL AND GEOLOGICAL RESULTS | ‘>: np isa mouutumeee ant survey oF | of great experience, amounts to a iittle more than Six Uhousand square iniles. On July 14 the party jest Denver and reacned the Los Pinos Agency if July 27. There tue works began—joming that por- OVer the greater part of Colorado, securing some tion to the eastward, which bad been surveyed by ©! [the most remarkable iilustratcons of | the same purty during the fleid season of 18 mountain scenery yet obtained in the West. | During the entire summer the party had to co His colection cousists of about $00 choice | tend with disagreeable weather, rain falling al- Begatives as the result of the season’s work. | most every day and night, Rain im the valley The most interesting Culiection’ is about torty | was, of course, snow or hail on _ the | peaks that had to be ascended in order to do the topographical and geological work, | Very little aaa been kuown regarding tue region | travelled, Some scattering reports, or rather | rumors, Were current, all agreetug that it was a | gvod miming and game region. In 1873 the United | plates government purchased from the Ute Indians | the so-called San Juan country, whieh jell into the ai ict tis year surveyed by the southern divi- sign of the United States Geological Survey. Al- though but very jew of the 2,000 1odes that nave been located in the San Juan district have been opened to a depth exceeding eight or ten eat we, suriace Jncioations al 4 number 0} es are so promising, 1c LIFE IN THE UPPER AIR. ore so rich that the coniidence o/ miners in the Value Of their lodes ts increasing. Capital ts | Wanted in this pew district, so that the most | favorably situated lodes can be opened, and money Wasuinaton, Dec. 5, 1874 will circuiate, As yet but little builion las been It tshardly possible at this time to give more Ovtained irom St. Juan ores, although assays ranging from $200 to $2,000 per ton are not rare. The than a briefsummary of the results, of the labors Gres are al SD NEE On 250 Ae ores are almost entirely silver ores, containing a of the United States Geologtcal Survey in Colorado small amount of goid. A few gold mines have during the season of 1874. Most of the party are been located, however. Southwest of the youtbful stiliin the fleld, but from short reports which enty of Del Norte, on the western edge of San Luis have reached us from time to time we have com- valley, another mining district has sprung up, 0 ; budding fair to become a rival of some of the older the San Juan inines were obtained, piled the following account. In a former letter We stated that the survey made Denver its head- ones. It is summit District. One mine, the Little THY SEVENTH DIVISION . Ylelds very rich ore and a@ considerable | Was under the imuiediate direction of Dr. Hayden. quantity of it. | Pty om pene the big ol heh g's fountains uarters, and from that point started out seven VOLCANIO MOUNTAINS. | the parcy made a careful survey of a belt of coun- pectin pal the purpose rsh explorations in Almost the entire diserict surveyed this year | try irom Canyon City to the north line of Volorado, purp ig exp was mountainous, particularly the northern and along the base of the mountains, jor’the purpose various parts of Colorado. The survey has been westera portions. The massive Uncom-paligre of determining the area, vaiue and age of the coal remarkably success{ul in every respect, and about group, covering, with its spurs, about 2,500 square beds. ‘ihe area ot te coal region, as ascertained 18,000 square miles of the most rugged, moantain- Miles, presents an imposing aspect as seen trom by this survey, is very extensive, and some por- ous and least Known area In the West has been carefully mapped, The frst division is etili in the Meld, and nothing has been heard from It since the reception of a letter from Mr. A. K. Marvine, its Explorations of Lofty Mountains, Arid Plains and Deep Canyons, dangerous trail we had come, until at last we reached Umber, and at twelve o'clock rolled up in our biankers to awelt the dawn, roved successful. Magnificent Scenery at Great Altitude. I reached far out to Sierra | ell's stations. Lolty as the Uncompagure ts, ldo Hot thiuk It as Ligh asa great peak inthe San Miguel, aoout forty miles .urther southwest. Since this Clunb we pave success{uily ascended anotner ig Station, soutn of the Rio Grande, and here also Darely escaped being caug it ma storm. THE SIXTU DIVISION was the photographic party, underthe direction of Mr. Willan H. Jackson. This party meandered “Volcanic Regions and Their History. Invizn race, 1 the dry canyons of New Mancos and Montezuma rivers that cut dry channels throuzb the mesus to tue Colorado River. dicate the former existence of a race far superior to any oj our Indian tribes, with some approach to civilization. They appear to have veen a race of sun worshippers, for the buildings are ail made SO 4s to rout the east, that tue dwellers might see the rising suu. Ou the pottery aiso, whicn is covered With curiously wrought Ogures, glazed, are Ogures of the sun. There were also found Many stone implements, The duildiugs are wade of wick wails of hewn stone, laid in mortor, With cedar Mutels above the doors and windows. ‘Tie buildings were in many instances square, with LWo stories, aud in other cases they were round like towers. Stone implements were Jound mungied with the pottery. What 1s very curious Is The fact that many of these nouses are built in the crevices of the canyon, $00 to 1,009 feet avove the bed of the stream below, and at this time almost inaccessible. These curiously wrougnt buildings in the cavities or ou the sumniits of the cliffs looked to the veboider from below like swal- low nesis. Curious Remains of Extinot Cities and Villages. Dutlines of the Area of Immense Bitumi- nous Deposits. ress to withstand a siege. Many fine views ol its highest peaks. A number of the hiyn pointsin tons of it are richly endowed with deposits. this group are over 14,000 seet above sea level, and North of the “Divide,” between the Arkansus and many of them over 13,000 feet. Deep and ire- tbe Platte, in a large butte near Tug Creek; again quently ragged canyons cut down into the moun- on the Platte, near Bear’s Creek; along the west tains, leaving narrow yaileys at the bottom. in slope of the Green Mountain; on Ciear Creek. at ™ that turee-quarte:s of the region 1s above along the Cache la Poudre to the Higley mine, and See Seagal om whieh Sep nem Geet Bails | Fee (11,500 feet). ‘Aoove’ timber at the northern sources of Box. Elder Creek, are Row in the far northwestern part of Colorado, line SOmetimes ‘extensive plateaus are found, | the chiet localities where the great indications of THE FIRST DIVISION, almost level, partiy covered with short grass, | the Dlack fue! are found. partly showing hothing but ihe fragments of black basait. ay} th macy, says he, on the 10th , PORrine she Agraar. ne ae ba Mb That entire group is volcanic; enormous the whole party worked eastward along the divide of traenyte aud other voleanic rocks and | determine accurately the position of the coal, but | between the southern branches of the Bear and ving been emitted during the tertiary 8 investigation gocs on Irom year to year the White rivers, and not far irom the latter, finally Period at several points—provably not simul- facts will be gathered and utilized to the best pos- sible advantage, both ol science and the develop- ment Of the resources of Colorado. GLADSIONE'’S “DECREES.” taneously, however—and from these flowed in horizontal or shghtly dipping strata that now are jocaily coutorted, but, as @ rule, show a very | uniform aud regular structure. It is owing to this | quasi-stratification that tne mountains show the beautiful and imposing forms they possess. At umes columuar structure occurs within certain turning southward and camping on the White, about thirty-five miles above here, The trip had brought to our notice the western and northern edge of a high region lying at the sources of the White and Bear, and which we had seen from the “Pradentius” Deelares the Ex-Premier straw, giviog tue slopes of mountains the east, and of which Dorne-peak is the culminating ° Soot atte “or vgtgantic. palisades. Bright | Guilty of Having Misinterpreted the mass. On ail sides it showed formidable preci- cojorg vary the dreary appearance of | Intent and Point of the “Syllabus.” pices and had given me much apprenension lest it the enormous slopes covered only with the dédris | y tuat hag falien irom above, Ail shades, from @ | TO THE Epiror oF THe HERALD :— pure white to yellow, orange red to the most in- | The pamphlet of Mr. Gladstone, on “Tne Vatican tense and warm vermilion, can be observed, beau- tulally blending into each other. Azain, certain ol Strata will be green, turning maroon, and the cap bowever, its platean-like character became more ‘of tbe Mountain ts black. d. yellow, brown and apparent than before, and we decided totry and = gray prejlominate, however. Pleasant’ as the con- ke the top, and remain on the same until it templation of this TERRIBLY GRAND SCENERY Was sil worked up. may be to the tourist, it 1s not altogether without | should require much time and labor in tts explora- tlon—more than we had to spare, indeed, in so shortaseason. From a high station at the north, now in the hands of every American. From the President in the White House to the remotest | Dackwoodaman, every citizen of the republtc is thus enabied to judge for himself of the merits of this, the greatest controveray of modern times. Leaving the party at a permanent camponthe ganger.. Many a peak iust be climbea White, Laad, Chamenet, Poelps (assistant packer), where @ single misstep must lead to im- | It {sthe Vatican, or, rather, the venerable Pontit, evitable “death, and when the summit who dwells a political prisoner and a spiritual Yount and myself, and three packs, attempted to work the region up. Once upon the summit our expectations were more than realized in regard to the continuity of the top. We could travel about it readily. There being higher points still biesome, Myuntains are natural lightning rods, | reached, after hours of the most fatiguing work, jJatiguing for the body as wel! as nerves, astorm | that approaches with great velocity may euvelop | the occupied point tn clouds and obstruct tne | view. 1t if not only the clouds that are thus trou- | sovereign within its ancient precincts, that Mr. Gladstone arraigns solemnly before the judgment seat of Christendom. Toward the Catholic Uhurch, from (he ley Wind; bat, even im the night, the ex- ertion of breaking the suow was go great thal the | has’ never placed itself man | them also through the snow and rocks back by the | Reservolrs were found near those | houses, in which water and provisions were stored, | abd ol your allies in switzerland aod Italy, that nigh country it will be no exaggeration to say Golden City; near the biuf south of Plattsville, | In mauy places along the line indicated s0 little | prospecting has been done that it 1s impossible to | | Decrees and their Bearing on Civil Allegiance,” is | | @$ an abstract society, the ex-Premier of England above it, and jutting out, apd the structure ofthe and the discharges ol eiectricity on their summits mass being simple we could study it rapidis, Gunaerein temera ths sont user mee 44 while the grand views from its edge enabled us to mountains fall off into a low couutry, where the | see nearly ali of our district east of the junction of OLD, RUINED HOUSES AND CITIES the Eagle and the Grand, and, with but little are found. Travelling down the Rio Antwasa considerabie tract of land, good for agricuitural | velling, to complete & very large area. After purpos:s, was found, and pot far off enormous thia two weeks of living st oF near the timber | degonis Ot cghow rendered te sarpossible todo ari Nine we'descended at the norhern end of pore work during the season of 1874, and, the massjand joined the permanent camp. | though a number of peaks were climbed throug! In order toavoid taking the train over suche | oe = S ee bee Sicha a Oe ered rugged country, a8 well a6 to svoid passing over | ward, Gn October 19 the last topographical g Known ground, we decided to flank the region to tion was made at Pueblo, id that evening th the west, working it up ag we went, This move | southern pitt Posner simone | brougat us wituin twenty miles of here, and, it | nay peen very hard. A great aeal of mountain | being about mati time, I came in, hoping to hear | climbing was done, in spite of the inclemency of | from you. I find, however, but a brief note, ve: weather, and Baty eins tineae oe elicited. | lew years more will de © San Juan coun- | through Chittenden D. Ladd, trom Twin Lakes, | tr . and the imterest region that was visited from which I gather that you have been among | tals 7 ar aystematically tor the first time will be- come better known to the public at large, bendy laa and are on the way to the Bos ie oats ee THE ‘This division, in charge oi G, K. Bechler, to) "a- From here we strike southeast, tothe junction ve i Posing | | biged leit Denver on the 10th o: July, its course being of the Grand end Eagle, up the former and across | i the north branca v! the South Platte. Afver mak- and down the latter, aud then further | 218 careful investigation reiating tothe drainage down the Grand and between it and here. | the Toutes of travel within reaca of this vicinity | neo f° the Ranosha pase and’ thence’ diagonal 4 | or the osha nce diagonal aL. aaa fopa ag Pome dgs badd | serous South P rx into the Blue River country. | of a section along these rivers, what I | Here they came into a region of lofty mountains, | had laid out (or work early in the season, when I | hago spars 200, nigh, | shar Brig’ niet give had expected to divide the party more, But itis | = 16 Sourct oi most important as well Low as then—so long a8 it te done—ior the | Wales coarees, Bee $9 tne Sine, Saale, Piatto and Arkansas, together with tneir tributaries, of Proteases to feel no hostility; toward Catholics as @ body or as individual citizens of whatever rank he is kindly disposed. z Thank him for so much! Bat with the great doctrinal authority that speaks and judges sovereignily at Rome snd in the Vaticaa, now its only refage, Mr. Gladstone as no patience. Why ? Whatisthe special crime | committed by the Roman Pontiff against our matured conception, in this nineteenth centary of the Christian era, of wnat human society is, and Of its rights and duties? “The Rome of the Middle Ages claimed universal monarcby,”’ so Mr. Gladstone beging. “The modern Church of Rome has abandoned nothing, retracted nothing.” Ig that alif Par from it, By eon- demuing (as will be seen) those who, like Bishop Doyle in 1826, charge the mediwval popes with aggression, she unconditionauy, even if covertly, Maintains what the medieval popes maintained. “The decrees of the present and perilous pontif- cate have been passed to favor and precipitate prevailing currents of opinion in the ecclesiastical world of Kome.” “Rome bas refurbished end paraded anew every rasty tool she was fondly thought to have disused. Is toils, then, a fect, or isit not? I will state in the fewest possible words @ few propositions, all the holders of which have been condemned by the See of Rome during my own generation and especially within the last constituted society; and that ail citizens possess an tnberent right lo rhe most periect liverty, un- shackled by auy ecclesiastical or civil authority, | of expressing thew every thought by word of ais, aud lea | Movtu or ia print, or in any other way Shey please to make it known, or declare it im pubii private.” On tuts I have two remarks to make:—First, it 18 against every rule of tair judicial interpretation or in ln spite of all tue difficulties the observation | to detaci trom a sentence a sinule cinuse and | Make it bear @ meaning whieb its author never tn- asaile, in Utah, and connected with one of Pow- | tended and waich can only be put upon tt by sev- L ering it Violenily irom the Context and stripping | itof tne qualifications and lmitations It bears therein; second, I would put ts to any twelve in- telligent American jurymeu bere a tuil beucn | mu tue Supreme Court of tie Union, or of j any state within it, whether our federai or State laws accord the absolure and un- restricted liberty of worship, press aud speech, 80 explicitly and iormally claimed as an unques- lonabie rigut in the proposition bere enunciated, ‘There 13 not a lawyer, @ judge or jurist of auy standing im Boglund or iv tie United States who, iL this proposition were submitted to him as it stands and sounds, would not declare that the unliuited itberiy of speech here claimed 48 an Views of the remarkable mines of an eXtinct | iMberent rigut meant absolute icense to utter aud circulate slander, blasphemy and every ob- scene abomination; that the liberty of worship Yhese mines in- | hereta asserted or demanded was the legalizing of idolatry, demou worship, polygamy, commun. ism and promiscuity of tne worst kind in the name of conscience, or a3 an attestation oi the absence of ali conscience, And, when such &@ monstrous utterance, deliberately jormuiated and sent avroad, is* submitted to the supreme judge of jaw and morality in the Churen, you, Mr. Slade stone, alawyer, & statesman, a scholar anda Christian man, dare affirm that the sen. teuce Which proscribes these pregnant errors 1% @ condemnation of true and well ordered liberty! For shame! I will not say that you garbled, mistranslated or mutilated wiliuly, but none the less certainly have you mis- represented and misstated the facts on which you base your Jeariul accusation against a venerable authority, and the passionate “expostulation” you address !0 the entire Christian world, Ah, your soul is fred with indignation at the violations Qi true liberty, Pray tink not of us here in America, but lvok across >t, George’s Channel at the doings of your mode! and master, Bismarck, There is, dear Mr. Gladstone, one other proposi- tion among the memorable eighteen I design to recall to you in good seasén—the eleventh ou your list. It touches the great question of iree edu- cation. Here is what you say:—‘The Pope con- demng all Who maintain that any method of in- struction of youtn, solely secular, may be ap- proved." Syllabas, Here it is as transiated from tue original text given by Mr. Gladstone:—‘Catholics can approve that manner of educating yoath which is independent of Cataolic taito and of the power of the Church, and which has tor tts sole or primar object the Knowledge of mere natural things an the attaimment of the ends vf social lie on earth.” There 1s, perhaps, not one jourual vf pub- lic Opinion in the Protestant world which has not presented to its readers some state- ment going to say that by the above censure Pius IX, absolutely condemned all but Catholic schools, and made it @ in to erect or to conduct any School save on Catholic principles. Is this the | obvious Meaning elicited irom te proposition itself und its coutradictory ? The Pontid does not Say one Word about the manner in which con- scieutious Protestants, Jews, or even Pagans for that matter, couduct educatioual establisiments. They are not within bis jurisdiction, and he has Downing to say about them, But a writer prociaims to the world “that Cathollés can approve, aud therelore use, a system of education which sets aside Catholic iatth, teaciing and direction, and whicd aims solely or primarily at imparting mere scientific knowledge, and lumiting a young soui’s aspirations and exertions to Lnis life’s purposes ;?’’ then the Ponud, called upon to pronounce on such @system, condemns it as submitted to him in these terms, And so do you, sir; so does every Christian man in the community, be he Episcopalian, Presbyte- rian or Methodist; so do tne Jews, ior whom 1 have @ profound respect; so did every well- ordered pagan community that ever existed. They did not wantand could not in conscience Approve & “godless system of training for youth,” education not basea on the immutable and unl- versal principles of natural religion and morality, as distinct irom the mere motives of utilitarian- ism plainly avowed in the condemned proposition. I have trespassed already far too much on your Space and must not be tempted to demonstrate the monstrous and flagrant misrepresentation of Proposition 4. This 1 must leave to another time, or leave to the jnielligence of your learned readers. This only shall I venture to say in con- clusion: that 10 all the propositions of the much calumniated “Syllabus” there is not a single one which bas not been .wrongly interpreted and waich 1 would not willingly undertake to explain and submit to the candor and independence of any @udience of American freemen. PRUDENTIUS ANOTHER WIFE MURDER. 4n Indians Man Shoots His Wife and Kills a Neighbor whe Cemes to Her Rescue. (From the Terre Haute Express.) The smallest causes, apparently, are the basis of the most terrible crimes. Such @ case is that which eccarred in Cloverdale, @ little village of Putnam county, twelve miles below Greencastle, on the evening of December 2. Within about twelve miles of this ‘‘village of the plain” lived a young ‘urmer named Thomas Martin, seemingly an honest, well behaved man. He was living with his second wife, @ girl of eighteen, to whom he had not been marriea long, and they had one child. With his wife and child Martin went to visit a neignboring family named Stantop. At last Mar- tan and his wife, who were not of the most loving dusposition toward each other, BEGAN TO QUARBEL SLIGHTLY, and at last Mrs. Martin said something which angered her husband to a great degree. His anger grew frightiul and he swore he would kill herit legisiauon and the guarantee oj our every | This is proposition forty-elgut in the | The Race for the Great Shrop- shire Stakes. THE SHREWSBURY CUP. Reciprocity in Horse Racin een France and England. x Lowpon, Nov. 21, 1874 The Shrewsbury meeting, the second last of the English flat race season, was held this week, and proved @ great success, as do all the “back end’? gatherings, for reasons which I nave before ex- plained. The principal race was that ior the great Shropshire stakes, an important handicap, which always brings out & good field of horses of that class, On this occasion the favorite was found, among seventeen runners, in Peeping Tom, a three-year-old, belonging to Lord Falmouth, and trained at Newmarket by Matthew Dawson. It was, however, only at the last moment that weight and money brought him to the front in tne quotations, and previously his stable companion, the four-year-old Thunder, was in far greater de- mand, Peeping tom has always had the reputs- tion of being a good horse in private, but be has never shown much of his quality in public, having ‘taken only one race in the course of his career. He ran, however, very prominently for the Don- caster stakes, for which he was beaten by NO MORE THAN & BEAD by @ good horse like Leolinas, while another first class animal, Trent, winner of the Grand Prix de Faris, was @ length and a half bebind him. Thander is, over a mile, the distance of the Great Shropsbire Stakes, one of the greatest horses of the time, and only last week be ran second to Louise Victoria for the Liverpool Autumn Cup, giving her a year and | seventeen pounds, but, despite that performance, 9 to 1 was now obtainable about him. Syrian was Jor some days hardiy mentioned in the betting, but he was im enormous demand at the finish. ‘The people connected with him, and in particular, Peck, the trainer for Mr. Merry, who had the “management” of him, protested that they did not fancy bim at all and ascribed the position he lar terly gained in the market to public money. This waa, to say the least, 4 CURIOUS THEORY, for the public must either have been remarkably clever or remarkably stupid if they backed Syrian. The horse won this very race last year, with ten pounds more than he had now to carry; but, on tye other hand, his performances this season have been so extremely bad that it appeared e@bsolute folly to invest a shilling on him. He had previously ron seven times this season without scoring @ single victory, and last week, in the Liverpool Autumn Cup, waen he carried a pound leas than he had now to do, he RAN DISGRACEFULLY, never getting near the front and finishing nowhere. It was, howeveg, to be noticed that on all these Occasiong he was never supported by his party and that whereas at Liverpoo! he had on his back a “chalk” jockey, A. Wood, he was now ridden by a “square” jockey, Glover, to whom most of the great handicaps of the season have fallen. A “chalk! rider is one who has a strong arm and can use tt when wanted. A “square” one does not possess these dubious qualifications. The result will be found in the summary of the race. The Miss Hawthorne colt, who was next in demand to Syrian, ran very well in the great Lancashire han- dicap last week, when he was beaten by no more than @ neck by Spectator, who was conceding nim filteen pounds, Rostrevor, who was muob fancied by bis party, 1s @ useful horse, but bas a great infirmity in a bad temper. Newry’s principal pe formance was as a two-year-old, when he won the Middle Park Plate and proved himself a drss class animal; but he has the misfortune to belong toa party WHO CANKOT “GO STRAIGHT,” and in trying to overreach the public have always overreached themselves. Modena, who was & fine two-year-old, has returned to her early form this season and has won some important races, in- cluding the Steward’s Oup, at Goodwood (six fur longs); the Steward’s Oup, at Brighton (one mile) ; the West of England Handicap, at Bristol (five furiongs 120 yards), and the Moulton Stakes, at Newmarket (@ve furlongs 140 yards). Knedive ‘was ® great three-year-old, but subsequently lost his form, and for slong time was in retirement. He started, however, @ great favorite for the Cesarewitch, in which he ran very badly; but he Was nowonce more trusted. Delay is # fair handi- cap horse, who won the Prince of Wales’ stakes, at Newmarket, in the spring, but had not since Gistinguisbed himself. Benedictine was the early favorite for the Osmbridgeshire, in which she greatly disappointed her connections. Kidbrooke Tan so prominently fora mile in the Liverpool Autumn Oup as to Sppear to have @ good chance here. Conseil ran very indifferently at Liverpool. Lowiander, at one period of this ¥ SHOWED SPLENDID FO! end in the Cambridgesiire, under a crushing Weight, he was, pronanyy, though he did “nut obtain the third place. Kelcnburn and Raby Castie, who were aiso intrusted with some listie money, are only moderate handicap SUMMARY. {ded (0-8, sweepetaken of 25. so¥H. endl, 16 10 ad to @ Swe 5 r= feits; winners extra. Sew straight mile, 48 sub- acl Hiajor Stapyiton’s ch. bh. Syrian, by Mentmore— wretched performances this year who that wag Rotin. whe, secret Would have believed in him? That the hanJicappers did not is evident from the Nght weigat whicu they gave hin, and it is evi- dent that if he had had @ Stone more jn the saddle he would have won—a fact which, does not say much tor their discrimimauon, jor Stapylton aud his immediate iriends protest that they have fet pene of the money and tas Ba neg ie all, it perhaps they ‘protest too .! important of the ther races at the meeting wad that for the SHREWSBURY CUP, for which Fageant was made a great favorite. This horse, who belongs to Mr. Gomm, an agent for the great brewing firm of Allsopp’s, has showo very good form of late, A fortuight ago he won an important handicap at Brighton, and thereby ‘0! eing that as tt was he was third to Louisa Victoria and Thunder, Un Wednesday, the day preceding that on which the race under notice Was to be run, ageant won the Columao Handicap, beating Conseil tnto second place— Which, a8 will be seen, he had occupied in the great Shropsuire stakes—and Freemaa into third. Scamp, who won the Queen’s plate at Shrewsbury, on Tuesday, and had won several important handicaps this year, Including Goodwood Stakes, and the Brighton Stakes, Was next in demand, The old mare Flurry, who was greatly fancied for thé Liverpool Autumn Cup, ior which she ran very badly, was again trusted by her party, Chivalrous, despite his heavy weight and his indifferent per- formances recently, met with plenty o: jpport. The Quail, WO 18 DOW SIX years Oid, hus uever won @ race since she was Jour, but she bad now an un- deniable chance given her. Consetl’s running tm the great Suropshire Stakes and Column Handica| attracted some attention to him. ‘he other an mals mentioned in betting may be desoribed gen- erally as of only Moderate handicap class, SUMMARY. Tae SHREWSBURY CUP of 600 sovs. (in spe added to a Handicap Sweepstakes of 20 sovs. bait torleit; winners extra; about two miles y “p.m. The Quail, by Thunderbolt, Fravolina, 6 years, 91 1b, (fhompson).. (i Mr. Gomm’s b. g. Pageant, 3 years, 10% lbs, (Conatable),. beserepessereecessenen "3 } f, Lady Alice, 3 years, 91 lbs, 1 cluding 14 los, extra), carrying 106 Mr. Groucock’s ch. Irous, 4 years, 124 lbs. (J. Os . Houldsworth’s Falkland, aged, 113 1bs,, carrying 114 Ibs, (I. Osvorne). oe Mr. Payne's Flurry, 6 years, 112 lbs. (Glover). Sir J. Astley’s Scamp, 3 years, 111 be, (Butler). Lord Faimouth’s Peeping Tom, 8 years, 107 los. (FP. Archer)......+5 Fagor Mr, Peddie’s Mendip, 4 years, 09 Ibs. (Mil! Mr. T, Jennings’ Conseil, 8years, 06 lbs, Mr. Johnstone’s St. Mark, 4 years, 88 @AD)....... ae, wacaee Serta fet Bradford's Bug.e March, 3 years, 88 lbs, (H. att). b> senna hsdoonisee eons Mr. eis Doyer’s filly by Lord Lyon—Rouge Bot 3 years, 88 lbs. (E. Page)..... te eeeseececs BETTING AT THR START. Sto1 against Pageant (taken) ; 11 to 3 againss Scamp (taken) ; 6 tu 1 agaiust Fiurry {raken) 3,100 to 12 against Chivalrous (taken) ; 10 to 1 against Quail (taken) ; 10 to 1 against Conseil (taken) ; 100 to 8 agamst St, Mark (taken); 100 to 7 against Mendip (taken) ; 20 to 1 against Falkland (taken) ; 33 to 1 aguimst Lady Alice (taken) ; 33 to 1 agains Bugle March (taken). * The first to snow in advance, when. the flag fell, was Conseil, whose attencants were Qual! and Florry, St. Mark lying well up on the left and Fale. land on the right. At the stand Quail headed Com- seil, behind whom were St. Mark, Falkland, Men- dip and Lady Alice, Pageant, Chivairous and the Rouge Rose coit torming the last lot. Rounding the turn Quail increased ber adeanhoge over Vole geil, the others lollowiog in the order already given to the five turlong post, when Falkland re- tired, Pageant at the same time making up to Mendip and Lady Alice. Consetl had the .misior tune to be cannoned against on rounding the bend into the straight and fell back. Pageant rapidly Tan past his horses, and, in entering the straight, took second place, St, Mark at the same time dropping away, Mendip when 4 few strides jurther | on gave way to Lady Alice, but neither she nor | Pageant couid get on terms with Quail, who was haifa dozen lengths trom Mr. Gomm’s horse, the latter finishing four lengths in tront of Lady Alice, Bugle March was fourth, Conseil fifth, Flurry sixth, Mendip seventh, Peeping Tom eighth, Scamp ninth and Obivairous tenth, Falkland being the absolute last. Time, 8:27. Value of stakes, £950 or $4750. RECIPROCITY WITH ENGLAND. At a meeting held this week of the Comité des Course the French Jockey Club declined to ao cede to the request of Admiral Rous to throw~ open the principal races in France to Englisa | horses. The French animals are allowed to come pete in all our races and have had for some time More than @ fair share of success. Witness the victory o Peut-etre in the Cambridgeshire. The refusal to grant some reciprocity will probably, entail on the French horses weights wi theur! owners will not like. HORSE NOTES, Mr. Richard Penistan, of Kentucky, yesterday purchased the celebrated racehorse Fel by Australian, dam Aerolite, four years old. will be remembered that Fellowcraft made the fastest four mile time on record—7:19},—at Sara toga lass summer, beating Wanderer and Katie Pease. This grand horse will pow be retired from the turf and put to the stud. The price paid by Mur. Penistan for Fellowcraft isa secret between buyer and seller. Mr. Penistan has a large estate in Fayette county, Ky., near Lexington, on which be has some of the fastest young trotters im the worla, among others the chestnut filly Lady Stout, by Herr’s Mambrino Patchen (own brother to the great Lady Thorn), py Mambrino Chief, dam by Gano (son of American Eclipse, he by Duroo, son of imported Diomed, dam Betsey Richards, son of Sir Archy, by imported Diomed), second dam bys son of Sir William of Transport, he by Sir arcny, out of Transport, by Virginius, son of im ported Diomed, out of Rhea, by Chatham, Lady Stout’s dam, Puss Prall, was by Mark Time, he by Bethune, son of Sidi Hamet, by Virginian, son of Sir Archy, by imported Diomed. The filly Lady Stout, three years old last spring, won the se third and fourth heats in the stake for colts an fillies of that age at Lexington, in 2:30%, 9:29, 2:23. Three days after this race the filly was given a public trial in the presence of a large as< semblage on the same course at Lexington, and she trotted in 2:303¢, 2:28%, 2:28, the fastest time borne Mr. J. jajor) 8, (Fa total work done has been as much, only further | which Swan and Snake rivers are tne most ‘*Welve orfiiteen years. Andin order that I may t incess, by Autocrat, aged, 101 ibs. Glover). 1 | ever made by a three-year-old. This performance west than at firstexpected. This has, in reality, | important. This great group of peaks and do nothing toward importing passion into what ls ee AA nk Ferrets baad Lahepg 5 medll peeling M. Lefevre’s ch. c, Conseil, 8 y 84 lbs, a i Stout the fastest and best three- i 4 Md mountain masses is principaily composed of ‘4 1 a d—n you, or I'll kill you!’ he exclaimed, savagely. gq | Stamped Laay at tl an Proved the most natural Why of studying the re- & part of the main or front range @ matter of pure argument, I will avoid citing any “{ will not,” was her firm reply. “If you do not year-old in the world. Mr. Penistan also owns gion. All tbe northern portion down to the White | the ocky Mountains, smpracing its or bakin uapittaed mueseptis opines Jn bie the | take it pack in three minutes I will kill you!” +. Lady Davis, a four-year-old, by Bourbon Ohief, consists of cretaceous rocks, and itis only from | minating | points Grays sud Torres. re LoWL In tas Dotrnhee hn tomers 4 ie trite ‘The wife said nothing bus compressed her lips and that can trot a mile in 9:9% here that the older formation begins to appear | Kiver and Park ranges, here form an intersection. Leiaeuar pet ¢ Propo. | ieaned back in the arm chair in which she was sit- | Conrad, one of tue twin colts by Kentucky, dant from beneath them. The structure ts largely con- Mr. Bechier made seventeen mountain stations | *!tlons condemned, tie original propositions being ting, The three minates slowly ticked themselves Lady Blessington, two years old, died of lockjaw Ceaied by lava, The platean at the head of the | for ine purpose of careiiny ee youn ana zo | yen tn fail ip Latin in an appendix, away, and, as the laintsound of the last second was © | gttne Nursery inst week. Mr. Belmont also lost White is a great lava mags. Here it has accumu- phy | Itis bere that in the face of the civilized world | heard, Martin started up, He drew his revolver io bd vvtain im detail, a iar as possibie, ail the com: | 7 Mr. Glad: fi fs from bis pocket, walked to tne door, and, turnin, stable)... rrerrey +s» © | his brown colt Filibuster, by Kentucky, dam lated to a depth of hundreds and perhaps thousanas = plicated twisis and Ved} the Ca ee 5 pie ea r. Gladstone for unfairness in translat- about, fired straight at his wife's face, the bail, ir, Chaplin’s Khedive, years, 101 lbs. iG, ported Felucca, about the same time. offeet. ‘The erosion, however, has removed tne curls 4 Yer] Complsie Kuowicaue olive ore Jag and couveying the meaning of toe Latin text, | Howover, catering her head, DUFYing Wali in Wer | ORS) isaac Geass Bb (Gk ° |” The Dortaman (Bnglied) of November 37 aaysy— thinner borders of the sheet for miles, and on ac- | pir’ saune, over the Hoosier pass, Maki jbecreal nostra dl 'v eee ey Rardin = ca tat KILLING HER INSTANTLY. DEY sss. suee ppnaleet herp! ... 0 | “The Epsom event of next year was brought into count of the softness of the sedimentary rocks graphical stations, and Working up the topog- | 0 downright untruthfulness, And yet it is on As Martin levelled the revolver, Stanton, the Lord | Falmouth’s Peeping Tom, 8 years, 96 lps, notice by the acceptance of £600 to £60 sgainst below, has now left the circumscribed lave area apy with care srom Mounts Quandary and Lin- | such @ false sense, presented with unjustifiable | neighbor, who had been flattering himself (F. Archer) «+. o +.-++ Q | Galopin, Who, tt is evident, will be t! Winter (pv. the main South branches of the Bear and all the up tue Arkansas ior’ the porpose of ascertaining | reat scholar and statesman dares to challenge | {£5 Pisey” co atay tiie’ latal, mistake. "Tuere | Mz. Jounstone’s bey coli, by Bilnknoolle—wias — | two-yeay-old of the present season that he principal branches of the White. The top of the th@ drainage and character of the Park ran) the jadgment of the civilized world! The English | wag coniusion tor un instant, and Martin, turn- Hawthorn, 3 years, 83 lbs. (Thompson)....... 0 | leit off with an ulmost unbeaten certificate, for nis was only six or seven and sometimes only three sas rivers. “The attention o: the division was then | Years been taught tha: Plus IX. had officially Sie breast aud iu one land, indicuuga terrive | Mr. A. H.T, Newcomen’s Keichourne, 6 years, curious that Prince - Battnyany should have feet in width, and onone side was a precipice turned to the S« no Park Water Basin, which was | eomdemned by his encyclical letters and by what ‘wound, from which he cannot recover. By this 86 lbs. (car. .9 Dead fa seoee O | matched his colt to rum the Kowley Mile about 1,200 feet in beight. The trembling mul Sonat ae none Fr Sees see er | 19 known as tho “Syliabus,” gil that modern so- | time it 13 Mg arta Rachael bpdedl Bt Sir G@. Cl nd’s Kidbrooke, 3 years, 86 lbs. ‘4 eae LE ae pe he were unpacked and led. Frost ts destroying tne sxetcbod: tne geology and otner important fea- | clety and the civilization of the nineteenth cen- house of 8 neighbor, ‘and asked some of them to lictine, 3 years, 78 lbs, (car. the same month as the Derby. ‘The stakes aré pass. The lava mass has been subjected todecided ‘ures properiy vted; its stock 10g facilities | tury hold dearest—the liberty of the press, liberty | come over, sayiug that her husband was bein, 19 ibs.), (Macdonald)....... seseeee O | £600 8 side, And With both horses well, the en; " inquired into, and @ complete survey of its net- | or conscience and worship, libert hand | Killed, ‘Théy ran over at once, anu as they went | Mr. J. Rooinson’s Kaby Castie, 6 years, 87 ibs. | ment is almost certam to come off, ‘as will the glaciation; most of the suriace being a mazeof work of roads made whicn is characteristic of that | Py ¥ Of speech and | Hee tne room (ROYt@) ...sseeccersecees sssovcesseese 0 | MALOD proposed between Galopin and Heseldean, half grassed roche mortanne enciosing hundreds famous park. | Mverty of education. The ideas which we attacn BETTING aT TH! 4 FEARFUL SIGHT PRESENTED ITSELF to be run at Lincoln next autumn, the ily to re- i] 1 Of smalbacattered lakes. This glaciation has had | ‘conn division then resumed its march to the | to these words are so powerful that they move | to view. In the arm chair sat Mrs. Martin, ber | 100 to 16 agalust Peeping ceive twelve pounds. ‘The fact of Mr. Chaplia nosha range, Wuich girds tne porth branch of pe face set and stony, the featuies haviug settied | Sgainst Syrian (taken); against | matching his filly toran® mie with Galopin in tect in determining and forming the canyon- | the South Piutte Kiver on the soutn side. ibis pnd nigh? bs ncgeenaend Gepths. The enemies of | fies i teribie stilitess. A small holeis the side | Miss Hawthorn colt (taken); 6 to 1 against | dicates nis belie! that she can st snd many peo; CaaS CER TP TOS ND, US: Mil Oh | SEE ee car eh Ge ae ot ee ee | ne a we regard as the enemies | of ner head was the only indication of the fatal | Rostrevor (taken) ; to '1 against “‘Thun- | ple would regard the maton in the ight of @ ‘tl fences of {t abraptiy cease at tne very edge, | pial wane leer igheis foo eaeantine Evans! | of the human race. shot which had let oat her young ife. Herarms | der (taken) ; 10 to 1 against Newry (taken); | for the Oaks.” en If 18 did extend further ine sotter natare of the | and was thoroughly surveyed and examined, Ju: | | NOW, alr {t mast be to your own certain Knowl | mere shill cuayed Micnt Mer, Mn: ea ite DOO, | I actnae Mouive. (taken) 100 teri against | in'the destie of Dalerian, oy Tom King, an surrounding and underlying sedimentaries and | cluding ‘he mountaigous region near tne | edge that for the last twenty years the Oatnolle | in smiing unconsciousness of tne terrivie tragedy | Delay (taken); 100 to 6 Against Beneaictine | Knowsley, by Stockwell. ‘The former was fouled tuffs has allowed erosion to most effectually re joe = ie ee eo} Ris gga | saert Church and the Pontiff—who is her sole represen- | whicn was belug @macted. Stanton lay on the | (taken) ; 20 to 1 against Kidbrooke (taken); 25 to | in 1863 and the latter in 1850. move all evidence of it, Whether certain seat- | district tne part: Complicated mountein recive in the eyes of all men—nave been constantly | H00F 1n 8 povl of his own viocd, in a state o! semi- | 1 against Lowlander (taken); 100 to 3 against | Captain R. D. Upton, who left England recently ad 4 MUAY SPSeOe OR unconsciousness, yet uttering’ the most irighttul | Conseil (taken); 100 to 8 against Kelonburne | for the purpose oi visiting certain Arab tribes an tered lava boulders resting on the lower rocks | to the Hogvacks, whic skirt the mountains wlong | aud systematically placed betore the mind Of | gng nearteending groans. Ive murderer was no. | (taken) ; 100 to d against Raby Castle (taken). extending his knowledge of the Arab horse, has distant from the mesa, sre remains of moraine, or | {HO casiern slope, and extend ia a uorto aiid soukh | Cristendom as the deciared enemies of all these | where to be a had fed nd shaped nis | They were got of at tho rst attem and Khe- | Arrived safely at Alsppo, and | purposes “com> \- vs eourse 1c le. Trived there \y ir jasher O rol mencing his Inve are true erratics, or are the wash irom the sum- or gaps between the mountains and the foot uli, | ereat liberties. Toe condemned propositions set HE BRGAN PRIGNING INSANITY, followed by Benedictine, who in afew strides de- | ‘The Austrian journals speak of a “competitive mit, or, yet again, are remnants of the once From wiere the Platte fows out on to the forth by Mr. Gladstone, im the Appistons? edition | gng stoutly asserted that he had killed gentle- | prived him of his command, having «now close | ride,” undercaken by fifteen army and militia od) . | Plains to the great masses oi mountains which { e ont from Vienna to Pardubiia, farther extended tava suet, it is dificult to tell; ty - Of his pamphlet, just issued (pp. 16, 17 and 18), be- | man In Cloverdale by the name oi Dare. upon her Rostrevor, Kidbrooke and Khedive. | cers and two civilians, group around Fise’s Peas dir, Bechier kept up® gin vy enumerating these great social and indi- Shortly after that Martin was arrested and taken | Nearest to them were Tester aud Syrian,and the | ‘the distance is about 136 English miles, ag the but in most cases that I have observed | think consecutive odometrivcal survey, und, vesides Vidual liverties, ag ceususad, condemned aud | to the hotel and placed under guard. Tue fact of | most prominentof the others were Delay, Modena, crow flies, and above 160 by any of the roads. Bach one was allowed to take the route he pieased. They started at seven A. M. irom the Central alry barracks in Vienna, in the presence of a great number of officers. The extreme limit of time given was three full days, so that horses arriving aiter that length of time were out of the race. One of the competitors, Herr Tippelt, @ civilian, did the distance in filty-two hours, and won. rotent was raised by the second, but it was disab lowed. making @u asceat of the Peak, succeeded in they occur in the last mentioned manner, and that 7 pie making @ most Salisiactory reconnoisance of the Slaciation was probaviy confined to the Bigher piceiy peak group on tue east 2d Lortheast side, Mass and that it was not accompanied by condi- | Which embraces a series of mouatain masses irom tions to scatter erratics over the surface of the | 12,000 to 14,000 feet bign. surrounding country. W: TUB ¥S¥TH DIVISION | bowever, ote preeka of ie lavee? perl gpd was directed by Mr, J. I. Garduer, who hadcuarge | Now, ie: ue siiow tut itis not lairly presented. | Gale, and it was growing stronger, 4 ted, | Gr the primary trianguiation ‘of the suivey. | Here are Mr. Gladstone's incer pretations of these THE CAUSES WHICH UNDEKLAID THE CRIME Of tue reat being Thunder, Modena, Newry and @nd (hus we change from water to fire and then | Within a comparatively small area group of | pregnant propostuons, and, beiow the faithinl | were not very singular. Martin nad become en- | Delay. At the di Oce Syrian increvsed his iead, to ice and to the present, all in & comparatively | eleven figh peaks was found, over 14,000 ieet in trausiation of the Original Latin text:—Mr. @iad- | goged, before bis warriage to the woman he | and at the same time Conseil took second piace, short time. elevation, some Of which will probably approach stone maintains that in proposition 1 are cous | fifea Sunday alternoon, tou young lady living in | while Lowlander, thunder and Modena, ali of We 14,000 Jeet. For graud and rugged scenery and § demned “those who maintain the hberty of the | Cioverdal be he paid attention to the laaqy who | whom had now had enough of it, were succegs- The front range, of which we had » splendid | loity mountains this portion of Col@rado bids fair | press;”’ in pruposition 2, “tnose Who maintain the | afterward became his wile be gave up the other, and | ively eased. The next to give Way was Beuedic. view from Long’s to Gray’s, and ali the great mass | to surpass any other portion of our Continent. In hiberty of conscieuce anu worship,” and, in prope 40 ut the time he was married he had a | Une, and Delay then took third place, but nelther Of mountains from Powell to Logan's, and beyona, | ¥T!t1D of this region, Mr. Gardner says:— sition 3, “thoxe who maintain tho wberhy of br Of promise suit on vis hands. it went | her nor Conseil could overhaul Syriau, who had be oad, “[ have been perfectiully successiul in climbing speech.” I submit it to any candid reader of him, and he paid the $500, He had been | so much in hand that he came sailing away from at the south, all were grandly beiore us, and ap- om peared quite covered with snow. THE SROOND DIVISION roscrived by the Catholic Church through her | the double murder was soou known, and the pop- end there ‘opti, ‘Ihese Gre tbe chie! heads of the indict. | ulace grew ciamorous for Martin's life. All it meut sovmived to the Kuglisu-speaeing world | needed was One boid wan with nerve enough, and | for @ soemu, deliberate aud just verdict, We | be would have bad a crowd at his heels ready to | Catholics do not fear the issue, provided that 18 | do anything against tue lie of the culprit, Such be fairly presented to court aud jury, | was the jeeiing when our iniormant leit Ulover- Conseil, Tounder and Lowiander. At the was a ‘scrimmage,’ which effectually disposed of the chance of Rostrevor, who at once dropped away tothe rear, A little further on Syrian beaded Benedictine and took up the runping, baving in attendance Benedictine, Conseil, the Miss Haw- thorn colt and Lowlander, the iost conspicuous B8PORTING NOTES, Astrong effort is going to be made by some of our amateur athletes to get up an athietic game, open to all amateurs in the United States and the Canadas. It 1» proposed to have the games early in January, ali my stations in spite of repeated snuw storms, | yours who holds in 18 hand Mr. Gladstone’ chafing udder the restraint of living with his wife | them with the greatest ease, and won in a canter It was @ tremendous effort on this great Uucom- | phiet anu reads these words in order on lor some time, and he irequently offered her large by @ length and a naif irom Conseil, who beat pazhre Peak, where Jor miles we broke our way | teenth page, 11, in perasing the auchor’s wort gums Of money II she would allow him to be di- | Delay by # Couple of lengths. Bonedictine was & hrough the new snow aiter it had been falling does not take it tv be lis obvious meaning tO #@¥ | Vorced. Sle reiuseu ail the time, and said that | bad sourth, Newry fftn, Modena ri Knedive | of the survey was under the direction of Mr. Henry | for jour days. At one o'clock We reached e ridge, that Hume rere condemns these iiberues io the | woe she was divorced sue would kill hervelly geventh, add Thunder eighth, the last two being Yale College have isened 8 programme for some Gannett, and the area assigned to it lies between | from — we loonee Loge A re, wy fo, tne Rieeaboa bivcd eee that every citizen of oe 80 ID lenges ot de % yores, until | fe "lender 309 Tester, oettevor mary Sulde. of ited rae on may? MR a ‘eut peak, The spow la} jeep, O-! ood and = tramin, nderstands tern! i oded al ¢ does not a in with the crow me 1% + a had ‘She Gunnison and Grand rivers, important a there the dark ri y ra he jummit them? And whut is thaty he” liberty to if shat he accused his wie of any infidesity 4 stakes £1,366 or $6,826. The victory of Syrian was fess they wish (he contestants debarred itom Come hours ‘otruded, 7 branches of the Colorado of the West. This couid not be reached itae than th: or hes + uve id square pe at work. Ui ordi res shor ve descen' the ry | @amped UL morming, | print and circulate everything and je vows, | He had no personal enmity | as might have been expected, a | ing in poten with justice and MONT UN LAR | the liom and indepen i , the purity, honor and ri Sica ag | BERraaN areolar | ets ee penne With otuer amatet re TEe AS WAR at the ere mot of