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t I K THE SUN, MONDAY, AUGUST 1). 167'). I 1 j MONDAY, ATHU8T 0, INS. Avrrnge Dally C'lrculntloo Ovrr I'JO.OOU Ci iitil) t to 01 ef All tl finer sMtth t "r!" I'l,u i Li Ub tiKvait In Ul fit. i f ( tf f lit f turn iU Htm !. tit of ii ar t totmti frnm ' U net I tot II t (iffrUnl Vi fUr 1 mUi tn trh 4illf totusi h III tilt truf f wmj rf ti mi cr rr u iftry 4 lUi-- r in Nf York, Ifrtfetf i( n iltUmihurKk, mI itj I j, wilt. ! tibMrU l ir Ailhi.b Ini t mi ilj i"t1f it nUd In tt i tT inl n rl i. tt ti t lrfr t mm 1"1 ' !. Wit II tlfj, ltMiaJ (of, M MfillUlH ? (If i tld f ' il I i n it tt If f lnn ft n M aftftiU III U v 7tt It'alm I'iii t Su ri udmJ SO.OIB HK4) iKLrtt SiilUk. titt ti it 11.1 t ll ntui ., (i t? iur ptt At i. idtttiitK Dt4tini. ti Utut Pit h r'iiiy tl .bU ' feill h ti.l toil f rinUt .i tkl wfeu fcitt iwoil rfmllitt' i kl,titiii( limit UttH hum or him litJk U iiMtll E , ui or b) rtVtt U ltl, u utrt ik-- ill i'i aliii it wrfri F U KitHt ( t ir4 Im lickDf ill.sviUbW Lailkkft at Ux fttf i l' .in kf 4l i ftkMtilkk, y ntl, tUfi fti4, 11 ( I i " Arivrrllluu '(Mrs. I A Stkllrs lii.tt-,ai- l, tu l u sio.uw rssSits, wis kklsl.sk L IcIUm ASvitllir,kl., M' kksti llss, ?n iti . mi lskl ihsiu.i,ii rat. rsr lifl, ;J (lata N. i.f lei-i- , l . .,.. ...I . .l .. t" I k, "J" tlll. ill! IUrrir- - k4 Ifftlhi, r' "' S i lilkiii in tui fl't M.fit ArtKl. ft V. t u alri fcil.m,MUi A4 , ' U '. ! - S I kK.ftlMllfllk "At., lilM r4MM I (J j Tlir Wrrklr fnn. I ' lltl'I'TP il" I IMIR ll llllH, f ' , 1l Vlllll II lt"lll Kpin l firrnlttlfl. Al I tt 4 tr fr imif lb I hii i IjIk U tvuMi) it II tk iKiMti aik ltd (! r )ili4. llxn r I ' ll xftklT r"' 1 D'n' fciiaim imI tttltti m ftiiKKliRikl In ilfnfti, IvltillMii, b4 alt I lil aniilM. II u iifteiall taltiAbk, hil ll ba umti, birfi iiila- - I. 4, im tl tt la tfcfftl mul it Mil, MiltftnJ I ur iih it vuii k iii ii itiil. ' 'I tt4liiait Aili'tttMOifHU r link 0 60 I ti bkiltik ihkif fnf uU PF JifkUfti t'kk. H fkl rill Nul Iff. ! lkal, 11 llkt. & t ' U llll.l t .tklllrk, lk JI, lt IHl, ... 1 Vl 3fi rnVk. til t. b.nlif.1 ttffktj, 11.1 k tiM. X KkIiii.Iu Im il " k i. TlipNrkv I'oklHl iBr In bo I'rrtmltl II Tlic new tiiftnl law, nlilrh tciiultt'i liropav- - V ' IcrLt of iK'ktanr by iu1itlklirr on til p rloalcAU cot to " '! hUitlnrn, Inok rffict Jin. 1. 185.V TMk .oiiht ii drtrruiliifU ti; nclslil, and lo It paid t (! In tn ilny tu in in hulk. J I'Oktai;).' un I'ailt Si'.t from Jan. 1 will tie flfir !,; (iom-iii- a yrar, nrfle if; crntk a month for monthly i. i mticnhrrk Huh'cruilkm to Tur IXll.t Pt'M lUXiO u ;J lr,ur fltt). tire (M etuu a month, ruklage i'iJ. i j t AinUkk'Uii-utb- Tulliir, r Ftatral rarlt Ward n -- un n N xit, Otneink, . riflh Akf nuf TlioatraA Bamh ferr', f Lltmnri ' I'oitrr-r- lrdrn nh if, kal ilk . i MilropiilltRii The ntre Vkt lit. I i! ktcblnkOH IIhiI-- L ich k in Itut Sin. In hot weathor nn iViack of Di.irruir i. i r. In-d- d, any 1' idal'.l if I lie buwris. rmuli) t n tusis me strength, aud reiulrra tlic lirersatty of proiii it ire.lt in in liiiin rail ve luull men i al. Pr . I u.it-a- r v r h it ta an rflr. uial remedy acting ipili kiy niul c iruig tii'irjugu i. .1 .i- Deposits In tho Mtltil tl llcneflt S.tv.i.g- - llin't So. I rem estrirl. s'w na rflioig mill. 111. , itia lulir Ckt from ll)C Crit lit mry mgiitli,-4i- ff, ! Tin- iftfitftir diiHi ccitI(t(loii o The Sun lJ or tlic imi cuiUufj Aim. 7 ittij; u Mondir . . fjs.,'i?:i rimnaar ft.'.lil ! hiMUaT fli.niit frMir ' . f Viiiuiiiiiif I'U.UII satunu.' rjk,,Uli) tf , TctnlfortrewMli ill.SVi It , Bally uvira.-- f I'J.S.OIII , J i Miickcy U'lilppcil I'lril Srtire A(:nliik.i the I'riniM Ivitnlii nin. J Tin- - riillnili lplim Times nunouiKW the . . inii'tltiK niul tliu lm.iliucH of the Hitiklnp if' Ktiml (.'i'iiiini.-iuiior- s of I'liinsylvmiia AlAiKUY, QfAV, ntul Tkju'ix ut HariU- - 11 lnirt', In lctti'i- - signed (.'apitau niul in . j an cAiilliuit K'Uiliii artlili', both of thvin ,' wrltttn In llio lllpii.uit style wlucli iiliiiiiiis , 'lu tlmt papur on tlio tiviiMiry . j lsutn.'. "Mr. Mackuv," rays thcTditf, " having toyiil with matittseablo Oi'inocmts until U no longtr usiofnl for Ills mr- - ) poif, mi't tin' Coinmlsloiiiis ot tliu Sink-I- t; i inu KihkI mi .Mutiila,lmilhl- - politiial twin ( lu ut lift , Sfi I'tnry Qiiav. umvp to yny ofT . nil tnu iiiUi'iiuthlo iloht that ii llontiiiK i( arotintl, anil thuii privcntril ti tU'tulk'tl k j taleitx nt of Imtli tin- - triit!iiry niul flnU- - Inp fiiiul m i oimta ami ilcpueits 'ftippoit- - oil by proper voiiUiims' n tlit ilvrputch I rtati.-r- , anil hail them veiilled. lie hits I i theri'fnn'. playcil tin1 treanny lstio on tho 1 j (Irfiiletitinn inn until It wouhl no Imicvr .1 Pii.v-- ' j tr. tAricnv nriiT playeil the Uraaiuj if wu iimlcistmul tins lnn?, on tho ; di'fiih-.itlo- n line lit all. Tur (rum it ; lie I bus no friend morn tiii.tlins than he to I 2 avoid the line. Wo liavu ' i watelieil pretty elotely tlm buttle which i , the hontbt rennylnnla lleinueratn are i 1 making iipalnst the ltlnp, tiutl we believe J that not u single man or jnnrnal nmniis . ' them ha so far ilKUgeil the irin nf exit- - r fiiee of any tleialontioii in the inin-- e in I '. whieh .Mai-kkv- , Mveiis, nml MiCi.t'iu: per-- J ; alht In iisinc the wonl. They have nlli'Red . ; mid pi nveil that millions have beim pin- - ,' j bizzletl from the (.'onitnonwealth In the ' I fot la of Interest on thi! piihlie iiionev, that ,, frauil, bribery, anil iieeulatlon relpi In . ' tint tna"itry, mid tliat uvci ybody anil ' cvorytliiUH In unci ubout It U tlmroiiislily '' coriupt, yea, rotten. They have ileiunn- - I atnited aii a legnl pioposltlon that the i , Treuitirer Is responsible to the Comtiion- - "i . Health for every dollar ho bus made by thu uo of tliu public money; mid they 'i Iirtvo promiiied. In cam of their nefesPlon to power, to put in motion tliu iniiehliieiy of justieo neeesjury to recover the mine, i oitherjis- money etolen, us in the Twi:i:n ciise, or III theshiipeof line for tliu several j offence. Mr. Ma kev ami his friemU hid cjiiito welcome to any small comfort they '' may ilulvu limn thu line theory, that a ' trulee muv steal millions fnun hU trust fund, that a public olllcer may convert the Il , revenues of n Rretlt Ptate to h!n private j o, without IilIiik guilty of u ilefiikatiim. i In the thlelV linpi of the Ireiiniry circle, tins may nut bu called a defalcation; but ' lionesl men lu I'eniisylvaula as well as , ' , elsewhere knew preciiely what It U in , ' fact, ami mean to apply the jiropei ; remedy. " The Intt opcrallon of the mighty Mackkv 1 tlic ureiit Ntiiiikonlc feat which the ' 27ims ha long ptedntcil. the oiidrou pleeo of leKerdeiii.iln by which Mai'Kkv wascoliiK In detent Jutico and turn the tidn in fu or of thu King. And what is it lie Is compelled by force of public opinion j recently awiiUciiud, to consent for once, i that thu money In the altikliii; fund shall I he applied to the payment of tho k ptihlii! debt n the law reiiiui's. ' . llu nuver did (his before. Until the i j , lecnnd day of August, lti"i, the tlnkiiiK fund win regularly robbed every ipiarter, '' . and the lan;r pin I, il of being ap- - plled to the reduction f the debt, was l e- - ' ' u tiiined by tho Treasurer, loaned out to his accomplices, niul the pun etila used to fat-te- n the lllng mid corrupt tho Slate. It Is a ennr. s.ijii of jenre of continuous rime; and is thu llrst pieat and splen- did victory of the retm-mur-- , the Hist of an honest light, and thu signal of a Dcmoeiatlc Aiulltoi.ciuiiei.il. Ifriill.i morn grape, ami thu handiti,' I will crumhlo into nuns. The stu- - ifij ! Ii!inloiis election of fruud Is viaildy wink- - j j 1 ming In all its fnuudatioiis mid lotlcilng 7 .'ft, to It, full. Woe betide the Denio- - i1 j i 0il mid ludcpciidouts wlio may bu found 111.' Bl,ll,l 'lu lllbbishl ' '' ii Mr. Mauicv U also nuppofuil to bavu " , lono eomclhiim very wonderful when hu :' ' Xuinlshcil, under the muuio t'oiiipuUiiin, a i list Of his priniint denosltorles, )) dons . ' not tell whero tliu vast Minis withdrawn i ,i : Irom tho flnkliiR tuiul mid the treasury ''if lu the loiiKjuuri past haw beun, what t I,' JosTns, what AlLVUiisns have liad them, ' ." what politicians, and what piesses have been lu ibi d with them, llu include- - only In his coiideFceiuluig statement tlieineiigiu balauep hum on hau l, mid i f tins it ap- - f pi-.l- fs tho l'cople s 1' uiK li i.i. KlMiil.l JkjpV hn flb2,MiS.03, Is thill hotel of i u.ltor ij iff 0 KlkfllM. foi s.V J .till outslnnillnn ? Is tho ItltiR Btlll " carrying" that huge timber ppecutntion? Ami hns this continuous deposit with Kemiilk any- thing to do with that? Hut the Time, with lie ttstml Impartiality In the discussion of this subject, plvos ono paragraph to tho eneouraKunicnt of Mai'k-x- r, niul ono to tho cnoourugumrnt of honest people. Tliu following Is probably intended to help tho latter: "I'mlrrall modem aihnliilatratlons, of what-ty- er partr, thr prostltutlim of the power of tho tri'iistiry to control political rvaufta haa tieou eunimoii. tint umlor no ono has thu power been so aUllfull)' nndauiloflantly usfldaaliyMr.MACK l,r. lit) Iicllovrs that tliu first duty ot a Htalo nffli'sr Is to fleet the lloinihlloaii einillilts,antl that tho troaaury and all tho powers of er de- partment aro liut uL'uack'S lo be employotl to seruro tmlltlrnl sttccpks, This peril, nfiko to the purity of our clcctlnus, to tho aafrly of tho truuaury, and tu reapect for publlu nutlinrltt. Is one of the great tallica that men of all parties to take pvisc and pirty lines In any necosaary efforts to cermet It; and l( the l.rln Convention shall t tho tolls of )lr. Mackky and his depen- dents, ntid present n c.uidldato for Treasurer whoso ehnrHCtrr will ho n complete eimraiitco of thorough reform lu thu preaenl truasury system, Mr. Ham l.K will he next to tho fellow that's elected, niul not particularly closoBt that." For the sake not only of l'utinsylvanla long thu inoit corrupt uuil dl'eased of all our .States but of tho entire country, hit us hope this last prediction may bo fully realized l Tlic Tramp Nuisnncr. A I'ositlvlst pamphlet, published a couple of ycnis iigoln this city, ilumonst rated with no little ingenuity that the general ten- dency of our present civilization tho centrallailon of eiijiltal and power a coiidltlou of things familiarly ex- pressed us " making tho rich richer and the poor poorer." It can scarcely bu expected that wealth will readily untlclpnto any danger to Itself from such progress; but tlieie are, nevertheless, ominous signs of futiiro (rouble. Thu able-bodie- d unem- ployed man Is bikini: very effective men-su- re tu call attention to himself and to thu causes which have made him what he Is. For weeks past the press has been teem- ing with eomtneutsanil speculation' upon the tramp ntiNatice. This juts gradually ac- quired an alarming prominence, and there appears a general disposition to speak of thu tramps as a sort of epidemic or plague suddenly broken forth. It istruo they aro n plague, as It l true that poverty exists everywhere; but sluco our country has been at the mercy of charlatans In finance anil knaves In polities, we ought to have expected jut such plagues and Jut such a form of poverty as this. In fnot, wo have deliberately crenteil ami Increased the very evil of which we complain, lu order to af- ford to jobbing politicians and thu special friends of the Administration opportunities for building up vast fortunes at tho pub . He, expense, wo hare broken ilo 0om-m- e ree. stopped Industry, P';,)iru,to,'t lmllk. rttplcy, and denied ,;. to M)orcn of every grade. rjtw tmt ,.0 eutinnomly rl1''' in natural resources wo have tin ued over to thu rule of organized plunderers anil their people have been re- duced to want, some of tho bust markets for our manufactures being destroyed as n eonseipu'iiee of this wholesale robbery. A llnauctal policy without consistency or Intelligence, with larcenous ofllclals in all branches of the civil service, unparalleled extravagance In the tnuuugemeut of pub- lic affairs, a President who takes his doublet! pay without performing his duty, audioes bis olllce to enrich hi relative and cronle as well a himself these eaties have contributed to the gcnor.it prostra- tion of business and the discouragement of honest labor, which have brought such hardships upon us. Of such it condition the tramp Is n legitimate product. With him It U no mere theory, but a glnustly fact which ho feel lu every tlbrc of bl being, from hi empty stomach out to his halt-cla- d skin, that thu poor aro becoming poorer and their eau tnoro hopeless. Net er before In any summer have there been so many of the industrious and de- serving poor unemployed and actually suffering from want, not only lu this city, but throughout the land. I It any won- der that they tlce from the crowded, fetid streets, where bitter experience has taught them it Is useless to seek longer for lmneat work, out tothocountry, wlierethey miiynt least glean n scanty living from tho llelilsiind orchards, and sleep lu fence cor- ners or in thu woods, undisturbed by tho clubs of the park police? The lli'st step to tills vagabond life is, for most of those who enter upon It, undoubtedly a very hard ono : but thereafter the descent in the so- cial scale is by very emy, almost Impercep- tible gradations. They glulu from shame to Indifference, to vice, and at length almost certainly to crime. Tho necessities of tho tramp's dally life tend to tho weakening of his appreciation of tlic rights of prop- el ty; while. tliu universal aversion mid sus- picion with which tie Is rcgaided by tho"o whom he luu learned to envy and oven to hate for their happier fortunes, drive him Into the attitudo of an Uluuuolite toward all society. What has the tramp to hopo for in tho futuic'r Dally lie sees increased the mul- titude of semi-outla- to which he hu- lling?: daily ho is made to feel nioro keenly tho atilagouisin between himself and thu mid foitilliate class from among whom fate has driven him. Tliu prospects for employment me, Instead of Improving, growing smaller all tho while, (iradually, hopelessness begets He no longer wishes, for employ- ment, but Is resolved that, work or no work, he will not starve, whoever suffers for his support, lie fore him I tho terri- ble winter, when tliu cold will ilrlvo him bin k to thu cilj lo seek hi lodging In tint polluted atmosphere of thu tr.uup'a room lu a station hou-e- , ami tu hunt hi food lu tho gai huge but rul mid tho gutter. For men in his condition the law puts a pre- mium iipouei'linu. Let htm stop Just short of mutiler, and hu knows that hu can commit no offence which will not be re- warded by an improvement lu thu cer- tainties of Ills existence. When these fuels are contemplated in their naked hldcoiisiicss, and It is re- membered that wo are constantly adding lecruits to thu vast army of tramp who, by a natural and Inevitable pro-gie- ss of demoralization, will ore long become an in my of criminals, wo may well viow with serious apprehension the future lu store fur Us. Already thero Isobkcivablo an alarmingly rapl(l Increase in tlm num hi r of offences against tho per- son perpetrated by theo outcasts. They began with offences against property, mid tliu pi opruss was vury natural. .Mi-cr- except in raro Instances, Is an element of disintegration, not of cohesion, In thu masses; so wo need not aiitlelpatu any such seriou disturbance as organized In rail nuts, and thu wholesale siicrillcu of life and propei ty to the sudden fury of the hungry mob; but that which we havo to fear is thu presence lu our streets, dur- ing the com ng winter, of a honlo of Indi- viduals morally ami mentally prepared tor auuoit uuy extrumo of uvil action, uuj Indifferent to overy hazard which stands between them and food. Tho scctl sown urourtoastby tho plunder- ing, corrupt, anil reckless Ghant Atlmlnls- -' trillion hasnoweotuo to blossoming all over thu land ; next winter bring forth so copiously that our nlmshouse anil our prisons will bo glutted with tho harvest. Grant Responsible, Wlioti Mr, Wavnk MadVkaoii, of Himon Camriion, was recently at Iiong Ilrnuch, the President proposed to make him one of the Commissioners to In- vestigate tho charges preferred by Prof, Mailsii. lie was shrewd enough to decline that service, but took oucuslou to go out of tils way, us others who profess n doslro for reform lu the Indian service have done, to eulogize thu man who of nil othurs Is most responsible for tho wrongs. Hero Is what ho has said lu a published letter: "It docs seem to me, therefore, that all men, howeter illfferlmr from him In other renuflcts.otiKht to ncree in alvlnif credit to tho President for his persistent offuru to Im- prove tho relations of tho Indian agencies to tho national Government." Now, all the experience since Oiiant be- came President gives n Hat and emphatic contradiction to this stuteifient. Hut for him, thu infamous system by which thu Indians have been cheated, robbed, niul outraged, could u ot havo been can led on at all. Ho has known It lu nltnost every detail; ami white it is the fashion to saddle tho whole respmi'lbllll v on Dfi.ano, be- cause of bis known corruption, he is really les answerable than Oiiant Is to the coun- try, a word from whom would havo stopped tho con option before It ever uiiido heailwuy. The Indian Hingis just as strong at the While I Ionic us It Is at the Department of the Interior, nnil the proof of it Is to bu found lu various orders issued by tho Provident, itMl others com munlcutcd through llAucoi'K, 'lu has notoriously been mi instrument of t'J.'o Hlng for years, and a bencllclary of their plu'Mlcr. Two year ago tho Hoard of Iuti.'n Com- missioners whom ho had chosen lili.'tself, ami whoso standing buforo the count rv was of great advantngo to n wcuk and Administration, appeahsl to tho President personally, over Dehno and tho Indian lliircnu, to airest the most barefaced frauds. They presented com- plete proofs of every ehmge, showing how tho law was dolled anil their authority over the disbursement of money for tho Indians was trampled under font, r He heanl them, mill dismissed every charge as proundlcss, upon the ussurnnoos of Vuo Inculpated Rime anil their subsi- dized agents In tho White House. Tlieo Commissioners found themselve utterly powerlois for good, and resigned n work which would have achieved beneficent re- sult If tho President hud kept faith or shown the least disposition to live up to n part of his cheap professions. So too lu regard to thu appointments, which all emanated from him, anil were all controlled by the samo sinister Influ- ences that protected the thievery. Kvery man who reslstiil the Hlng, or refused to obey Its orders, or was unwilling to be- come its purchased slave, wa market! and pi escribed, no matter by whom hu may have been supported. It will not Oo to makoDnnNo the scape- goat of all this iuitpiity, lion ever conve- nient that policy may be for the friends of (Iiiant who have shared In the spoils, and who know that without the President' aid It must have fallen through. No won- der when Delano was driven Into a cor- ner, and threaten! d with lasting ilisgraeo In order to save his superior, that he turned upon his confederates mid warned them to beware ot further attacks on him, Ills menace was heeded promptly; for while It Is true that he was to retire ou the 1st of July, his demand for tnoro time was ut mice granted, and he personally selected and llxtsl the pay of tho Commission which Is now investigating everybody but the mosl guilty. Tho "persistent efforts" of the President mid his surroundings have been directed to sustain the most heartless mid greedy Hlug of thiuvts that have dis- graced the public survlee. And that Is saying much, with all the revelations of the last six years of (Imutlsiu staring us lu thu face. Fortunes in Congress, Ono of thu most strlklnir facts connected with the history of legislation during thu last fourteen years of Itepublicaii rulu lu Congi ess, Is the great number of fortune acquired by members of the Senate and House of Representatives, who went to Washington poor, glad to receive the pay as a means of subsistence. Most of them were merely professional politicians, and had no other business to improve their material condition. There but ono possible explanation for this sudden acquisition of wealth, and It Is to be found In the ennrmoiisgrunts of pub- lic land to railroad corporations; Immense subsidies of money in vurlou forms; special legislation for the creation of hugo monopolies; the passage of fraudulent claims; great appropilatlous for corrupt Hlngs; Credit Mnbiller Jobbery; Pacific Mall stock pools, and other method", by which the Treasury was robbed anil the people wcro crushed down llh ruinous taxation. Chnirimiuhlps and places on the leading committee which control the tarlfr, bank- ing mid currency, public lands, Judiciary, appropriations, Paeillc railroads, Post Olllce. army, navy, claims, patents, District of Columbia, anil others of less Importance, but still uvallablu for venal uses, wcro not sought fur the honor they conf cried, but almost solely on account of the profits to be dei Ived from mi abuse of these ti lists. They became objects of bargain and sale, of partisan nrningcnients and of caucus spoil. Presidents, and tlircetoin, and stock- holders of banks, iiiilroads, and other cor- porations, not only shaped the legislation alTccting their own Interests, thiough Hie committees over which they presided mid held In hand usually by a majority of threo-fourth- s, but they openly advocated uuil voted for thesu schiinis, lu ilcllancu of all parliamentary morality and decency. The Credit Milliliter investigation tlio system of nionllty which pre-vail- in Congress. Astounding as it wa, by exposing tlic shainnlesa. venality of the mot neiiptcd Itepiihiican leaders, who prci.chcd piety and lectured on morality while in tho vol y net of stealing, It deserves to rank us a mere trllle oompmcd with tho wholesale spoliations in other dlrei Hons fllihh us yet have only been partialis brought to light. According to the Siri mjhrhl lleinihllctin, Hi.Aixn appears a tho third highest ou thu list of taxpayers In Augus- ta, Maine, to the extent of f 1,035, lu a city where taxation and assessments are low, He is nl-- n a very largo pioporty holder Hi I'uiin.-ylvanl- a, and owns a ft no house lu Wash Uiitou, which is kept up on u costly scale. Whllo he sworo vigorously beforo tho Credit Mohlller committee to having no interest In that particular job, Mr. Dlainb admitted that ho had 130,000 In- vested In tho Hloux City road, which wns really a branch of tho great concern, and managed by some of tho snmo men, nnd with tho siimo seven principles. Mr. Ui.ainb went to Congress twelve years ngo, poor, like most of his associates. He lias received no Inheritance and been engaged lu no business outside of politics. Yet In this short period of tltiiu he has grown to wealth, lives liken prince of tint blood, and even aspires to be President. Ho Illustrate the system at one end of the Cnpttol which John Shrhman does nt tho other, who hns become n mllllonnlre by pulling tho wires of legislation. No won- der they all looked sad and felt badly when tho people revolted last year and left thorn out in the old. Text nuil Sermon, No pertilstoiico or fierceness of Invective caittkt Ki ilcral idlrflictdro ran Mile nr eirnae ilic aiii and comfort tthlrli la now Induatrluualy ofjorlaff to Twikii.- - AkiiIhi VW. What Federal officeholder are these! Does the I'ot refer to Isaac Hendeiisok, who robbed thu Federal tiovcrnmcut of enormous sums when he wns Navy Agent there was ono dash of K.D0.U00, If wo re- member correctly and who pleaded the statute of limitations when bu wa brought into court for ttial mid punishment? Ho was n Federal officeholder then, but Is one no longer; yet, unpunished mid uurcstor-In- g public plunderer us he Is, this same Ilcviinusox is now the publisher of the Brriilrit; I'nut mid Its largest proprietor. Thero may be n good reason why tho I'ont should now diplay an exceeding en- ergy lu Its denunciations of those who as- sert that Twcni should have all the rights thu law guarantees to every accused man ; but such energy produces a curious Im- pression with Isaac Ui:m)I'.iison standing behind It with his stolen money safe in his grasp. It la an naloaailliiK dortrlno that tho opinions of ronrla are nol to he crltlcl rd It waa Hie uolvi ra l and uure'tMitlnic rriHrlsm rf the riotiitroiia linen Scott ilpilaltui -- a JuJifiilfnt of the Supreme Court of the t'nitsii Males llial tiflpcl lu ru'i" the country to aatc Ilk liberty and irurcrnuieut. Ilarv'r't tteiklu. Who ever put (ortli such a Joclrlno? We havo nevi'v seen it held anywhere, and ahould ho to Cud It advocated by any Intelligent person. Thero Is, lioweicr. another doctrine that Is not su objectionable, ClUiely, that a suorJlnate Judco has no business to criticise Vne nctlmi of superior tribunal, especially when that action sets aside his own previous decMons, Hut any orf Innry clllien and anv newspaper ha an unquestionable rlchtto call any court to ac- count and to cxiiiilue ami cotnlcinn Its utter- ances and decrees; hut In order to do thl wisely nnd rfrertlvcly.lt Is necessary to stand upon the truth, and discuss those utterances and decreos candidly, liitellli-'enlly- , and without equivocation. That, however. Is what Mr. O'Conou has not done respecting tho recent de- rision of thu Court of Appeals ; and therefore he Is criticised and condemned. The reference of fiirjr's HVJili to the flnm Scott decision revive some Interesting recol- lection,. This very O'Coson. whom that Jour- nal now holds up us a groat authority upon mat- ters of Justice, was not only the most violent partisan of that very decision, and wrote vehe- ment declamations about tho wickedness and stupidity of tho'c who presumed to call It In question, but ho went much further than Judge Tanet, nnd boldly tnilntalned that al.ivory was a cood Inktltutlon In Itself ; If not absolutely di- vine In Its orl.-ln- , at least the wisest of possible human arrangements for regulating the relt-tlo- between vthlto men and black men. This alto I the sama OTosoit who for tho list four jears has been engaged most Industriously and with nn Immen'o expenditure of loirnlns and Ingenuity In mailing It Impossible for the peo-plo- of Hilarity to recover anything of the mil- lions that Twr.r.n stolo from them. It la not torlh whllo to praise htm much now without better reasons than my that have yet been pre- sented. Tho nuetlnn was raised by Dr. 1 ooi.snv, lu tila ltarv rl Phi Hi la Kkppa S'ldr-- k, rnftiifr true honor eaa flouruh la a democracy irmnyfau JUputh Whatn pltrth.it Dr. WooiJrv did not raise the aaiuo question at Yalo College, of which he was h ng tho President, and Is still tho most dls. tlnculshed ornament. At the very time he was expounding the doctrine of true honor at Cam- bridge, his successor. President Pohteii, of Yale, was nutting himself forward as a conspl-cuou- s endorser of IIe.miy VYAnn IIelciieii's true Inwardness; and Yale College Itself waa listening uttb admiration to (lov.CitAMntttLMN ot South Carolina, one of the most noted frauds of the day, n hum tlio professors of that Institu- tion ucro pit'scntlng a a model statesman to their students, ll is In Yalo College that Presl-don- t Woowuiv should liiako hi greatest efforts fur the promotion of true honor. The Springlleld J.'riiiMciiii perceive that there Is one man and only one In the coun- try ho might be a winning candidate for either party nt'Xt year. That man Is ClIAIII.ts 1'itANCI Al'AUs; and either party that should be luckv enott.th to get him to run would besureofvlc-tury- . Hut our contemporary docs not believe that ho will be nominated. "The politicians of both parties," It says, "are about as fond of Mr. Adams as the devil la of huly water: yet If bt any uccldeut ho should he nominated In suite of them, and should accept the nomination, they will liuto their hiinds full to prevent hl elec- tion." Wc are sorry to sou tho trjiuMfmu so lucking In faith. Has It forgotten that a n Is to bo held In Cincinnati sumo time early next spring: that Mr. An .tin It tu ho nomi- nated there; nnd that tho Itoptibllnaa party Is to he fnri'i d to accept III in rather than bo anni- hilated 'r I) m't ho so mucin discouraged, neigh- bor: The prospect of tho future Is gayer, per- haps, than you suppose. The union of l'.unipe nnd Africa, by means of u tunnel iinurrtho Straits of Gibraltar. Is one ot the great engineering schemes ut pres- ent contemplated. '1 his tunnel, us projected, U to be a light line, extending between Tarlfa uud Algeslras, on the Spanish coast, to C'eutn and Tangier on tho Morocco shore, tho submarine portion to bo ,1U) feet In length, or nearly nine miles. This vast enterprise offers, It Is said, more difficulties than tho similar work under tho laigllsh Channel, although the latter will havo more than tn Ico the length. Tho maximum depth uf thu chaiiuel ut the point to bo traversed Is stittcd to he onlr about HKJ feet, whllo that of the Ftralt Is s.ttli fcot. Supposing that the tun nel under Gibraltar ha bored at a distance n( ono thousand feet under tho lied. Its tutal depth under thu sea level would ho over 3,000 feot. whllo tho entry and exllgallcrics would he each three miles In length. When Damhi. O'Covvkm. was rill vp. the 7'iifmiir. with JIoiucf" Giirr.i.r.v ut Its head, never failed to do Mm honor: hut on the oce.i. lion of his hundredth birth day, that Journal has not n word respecting him. Tho louug odl-t- Is doubtless too bus) looking after tho stock- jobbing Interests of JavGoi'I.u uny at- tention tu the .monitor of Ireland. fill llotvn the Dend Tree. Tl) Tlir. r.linon or Tin: Sun sir : There arc In Witkhiuglon nUce, Juki otf Ilroadna), nto mount ui tjliek amUir iggy Ireea in a rotv, uli iuI nfi) feet aiiurl, I mi irein from tlir iMi.i.r.-U- ie nr inches of each full r V ravins Willi ihoso uf il nelithhor. llio rrrcnl ilcliiiii) u. ik Hi" irwt elnsnlm out of tl e ili'Pirunrnt'a Iihi.cIi fur thr utmi iii'lng, sml euuuilrlt o riiulii.1 lilt, .iii.Ii, t.nuji.. uurr ami uihrriiiihi nut u luckily (llu not wum ilown ti,eilrt trrr, aa thst might Dun raiunl ,oh uf im. Tniae Irrrk ktmmd Iw t.t It atouce uildglli'l) tu tie poor. NlMTY rilllCt A SMiggrMlun lor the No Tibil. 'In nil. liuium or Tub ai.s-- Mf ; As 1h gnat KjiaLU trial mil prohauly be reopened mn Muaiobereniru n in hSl t ,t?i,i, 'i ,,A,?2 ' mumon fee uf ten elVarge ! cems he an tiiai i t,S Hi eecila no .livid, d hctneeu I ir cilfci nV I i?. r Ilionki) ii lor honira inr Mlkjn wi'm,.,, ,. " hoamial in thr piuporilon oi "i, , i'.'J." lor hiooklju ueJ fur vofi. Ain'iu,.'u Tin: s TitAsn nir.s soth hook. A t. eel n re on I'nlao llnlr unit llalr Dreaalna, Naiiant, Aug. 0. Somebody has said that In this country lovo affair and summer excursions, pretty much llko fox hunting In England, bring parties together who wouldn't meet otherwise. If 1 had Jotted down mem- oranda of the various kind of persons I have met since I left New York, I would have hnd by this time enough materia! for n thrcc-volum- o novel. And from everyone of these persons! learned something woith knowing. There was n French hairdresser, for Instance, of some twenty years' standing In Ilnaton, whom I en- countered on one of the excursions, and who delivered to me n lecture nn the subject of false hair and halrdrcsslng, of which I give here an almost verbatim report for the benefit of tho fair readers of Tux 8un, There Is no country In the world where tho trade lu human hair Is so extonslvo and so prof- itable as In the United Htates. The reason of this lies not so much In the fact that American women hive less hair than Riiropean wor.ien, as In the fact that every American woman wears false hair, while In Europe the practice Is re- stricted to n comparatively small class of tho population. We havo there what I called com- mon iieople, who would never dream of Indulg- ing In anything of the sort, while here, wlicro everybody I supposed to ho a "lodv" or n " gen- tleman." and where there are accordingly no common people, the pooret servant and factory girl tries to Imitate, the wife of the hanker. This has not only Immensely Increased the price of human hair, but has given origin to various Imitations of hair, which aro used almost exclusively In thl country. White and gray halr,whleh arc p.irtlfiilarly costly, aro In con- siderably greater demand here than lu Europe a circumstance which Indicates that old women do not much differ from the young ones so far us the use of false hair Is concerned. Another circumstance which lnercaes the de. mnnd for hair K that the Amcrle.ui womxn aro too lazy to dress their hair, and do tint know how to do It. rhu nverago French woman buy false hair onlv to add lothe natural, which tho altsav tries to make the best use nt; while tho American woman purchases a mass of hair ac- tually amounting to a wig, under which sho -- unreal her nattir.il capillary adornment. Tho poetry of I almost unknown here, (n Franco, ln.It.ily, In Sualn, the hatband or the lover of a woman who has anything llko a good, natural supply of hair, finds an Immense ploasurn In being present when sho Is combing It, or In combing It himself. No end of songs and pic- tures, Including tho celebrated picture of Titian combing his mistress' hair, show that this sort of was In groat favor In all ages. With tho Anelo-Paxo- n race It seemi to have never been a fashion. An Amcrlum woman dresses her hair herself only when she cannot afford to pay a hairdresser. Aud still morequecrlsih?n""on of considering this prucoss as ono requiring strict privacy. The hairdresser (frequently a very young man) Is the onlv male person allowed to ap- proach tho onlvhalf-dretse- d lady. Her husband, and even her father aro refused admission luto the room, though they may want to enter It mere- ly to ask a question or to fetch something. The presence of the male hilrdrcser Is considered of no consequence, upon tho theory, I suppose, that, llko the doctor, ho Is not a man. Of late years female hairdressers have also been Introducod, a having tho double advantage of answering tho requirement of propriety and charging but one dollar Instead of two. There aro sumo hairdressers who charge even as low a twcnty-llv- c cents for overy day's dressing, and flftr rents for dinners or evening part lit. This cheop halrdrcsslng costs, however, very dear In the long run. It require a great deal of falsi) hair, and the Inexperienced band III use. Into the bargain, the natural hair, in the most barbarous manner. The oikIiiI.HIoim or crimps on the forehead, which are o Intensoly vulgar and which the mas of American ladles arc so fond of, Is the main clement of destruction. The ravsge has gone so farthnt false crimps have had to be Introduced to protect the llitle hair that Is still left on the forehead of some of the ladles who Indulge In this practice. These false crimps aro made ot thin, almost Imporceutlble hair lace, Implanted with crimped hair. The lace costs about 30 cents an Inch tn France, and Is sold, when linpl-nte- for t lo fA an Inch here. The excessive uso of false hair Is unotbsr agent of destruction. The heavy load thus car- ried on tho heud stifles the roots of the natural hah, prevents tho access of air to tt, and thus paralyzes lu growth. The sunn InOuonco Is exercised by the uso of night caps and nets. The hair should he left loose at night time or almply twisted. U Is prettier and healthier. The cap Is good only for eldorly womou having but little hair left and subjectod to rheutnatlcal headache or to neuralgia. The Injury thus done to the natural hair Is all the less purdonablo as the average American woman Is not the most protusoly endowed with It. Tho richest and mot beautiful heads are those ot tho Southern worucn-Gro- ok, Turkish, Spanish, Creole, and Italian. Next coins the French, tho Swedish, the ltuslan, aud the Danish. The North American woman stunds on the same footing as the English so fur as quantity Is concorned, hut she cannot com- pete with tier IlrUlth slitar In matter of quality uud shade. The richest blonde shades are to bo found In England, while Ireland supplies a J't black very nearly approaching that of the far South, In this country tho predominant color Is an Indifferent brown-t- he cheapost In tho market. Tho last stage In this gradation Is oc- cupied by tho German woman, who has usually very little hair, and the little sho ha of It Is of li.nl color and coarse quality. .The siilert.lt J blonde and golden shade of the English women have been attributed by somebody to'.God's o tn glvo John Hull n compensation for his neteraaelag tho sun. The human hair market Is supplied mainly by Prance, Sweden, and ltussla. Normandt. Ilrlt-tnn- r, and the Ativerjne are. however, tho pro-- t luces which furnish the largest and best slock of hair. Wherever a national heidscir mure or loss concealing the hulr Is worn, the it omen part with their tri'sso vory rc.idllv. Germany, d, and tho Tyrol supply a considerable amount of hair, too, luit Its quality uud color bring terv common, the price for It, and cunso-iiaeall- tho bidueemctit to part with It, Is nut very great, Eiiglmd and America furnish very little h tlr, the only source ot obtaining It being from poor factory ntul farm girls. Tho general belief that most of tlio hair Is obtained from ho. Pititl is erroneous. Tnohuirnt sick, and still more so of do.id person. Is lifeless, nnd cannot be worked properly. It breaks llko straw when It conies Into tho hands of the dresser. Consequent- ly tho lidlc who purdiaso their tresses, crimps, chignons and the llko from first-cla- deders, mid pay a good price, may be sure llicy woir the hair of living, not of dead persons. I say persons, becausa overy article of ladles' head toilet Is mudu of an assortment of hair i' lining from manr different sources. I'liero aro tresses for the fabrication of whleli perhaps u hundred heads havo supplied the material. The natural tress consist of hair of very varied shades and length. U'non It ha boon out off nnd cleaned. It undeigne n process of suiting, according to sinde, length, and thickness of t' hairs composing It, la this way ono natural tros-- i Is broken up Into u number of small bunches, nnil It I only of such carefully match- - eu uiinciios coming irom ti liferent ho.uls tl ni tho false tress Is made. In this way the A' lU,. can belle wear upon her head u kind of '" thm d capillary exhibition In which and nationalities may be reptcsen' , p. , u , ' ' boui, when Inn moment of mr .. W.s.und Impresses It on tlr , 'T ' t"M " ' himself with the though' ' ic1l,,,'.ca ponMy embraced tho whole ,' I he hair market f " tul,l'll'1 "mu!l 1,1 11,0 'i ne ..I.'.m iu tlio i"i bo nipp' itiirket of home Industrie used Una all ncd In olden days. Huyow uro tiavel-- . , . Jvjr the country wherever hum iti hair is I ' 'V ti be found. I'hey uro nailed inqi us, or C""'T., ,i,d .av peddlers or trlnk-- t- and f ill Hie sauio nine, llio ' 'in't-B"- ' ' .i.pt. 'i 'U sell tn r tre-se- s elihtr forcasn "r "' eveli ii''"' for "in.) iirtli lo uf the toilet, glv liit'n t.r re- - ti I'.itteradoii.tli'ortrlplo ,in l t.i il ing n pr '(1 The cri c of tint is tar I ii ic iy ui'' tr ityo, and ev ii o ue l .r ..I lnt n lullty. The aver age price, however, Is about a dollar and a quar- ts)'. Sometimes, when the hair Is particularly fins end promises to Improve still, while It osessor Is heavily pressed for money, the cutter buys It for future delivery In two or three years, Tho tricks to which this trails gives occasion nn the part of the cutters, and the painful dramas that take place In connection with the no retslt) for the poor woman to part with ner best attire, noed not be alludod to bore. The reader can easily enough Imagine them. As a rule, few women can sell more than one or two tresses during their lifetime; butcaMs seem to be known where the hair wa crowing fast enough to enahlo Hum to sell four or Ore rich tresses, and tho older they grew the more money they got for them, as the hair rose constantly In price, and as gray hair Is always much mors valu- able. Pure white hair, for Instance, (assorted, of course, for thero could never be found a nat- ural white tress,) twmtyelght Inches long, costs $1(0 per ounce wholesale, while at the hairdressers' shops It Is sold at fancy prices. There are gray tresses (much less costly than tho white ones, slnco they consist of n mixture of white and dark hair,) about three or four ounces weight, which are sold at flvt and six hundred franc in Franco, and at upward InNew York and Ilostuu. The rough hair collected by the cutter passes Into the hands of the wholesale doalcr at n price, varying from 1 10 to (12 per pound. It Is he that clean It and makes tho first sort-bi- g, based chiefly upon tho longth of the hair. The further sorting by shade and quality rests with tho manufacturer, who I tn this Instatico tho halrd lesser. A pound of hair a yard longrosts In France, w hole-s-.l- r, about 100, while hair of the length of only thirty Inches would nut fetch moro thin fnO. In the United States tho prlco Is much higher thnn that. Tho duty on hair Is twenty per cent, on rough material, thirty per cunt, ou cleaned and Sorted, and forty por cent, on trcises or other manufactured articles. An avcrokru tres of about four ounces In weight and thirty Inches In length costs In Paris about (20; In this country the prlco Is double and more. Tho custom of using false hair Is by no means n new one. Roman women used It, and were particularly fond of tho golden hue Into which ladles so frequently dye tholr hair non adats. It does not seem to have boon well ascertained whether thev dyo It In the samo way as tt Is ilono at present; but It I known that they were largo purchasers uf golden hair from German uud Gallic women : old songs and tabs of Ilrlttany, among other testimony, shows that women there havo been selling their hair since limes Immemorial. Thl Iooks llko another proof that wc are In more respects than one returning tn the tastes, habits, and prac- tices of cla'slcal antiquity, - It would seem also from the lat Tarls ts that the anclont Roman trtfciitiim Is going to be the new fashion In hairdresslug. Tho celebrated M. Auguste Petit, of the Hue de la Pali, has Just Introduced In Paris n patent slnglo hair not, which ho calls tho tnirhnrVn, on account of tho strength given to tho ono hair of which tho net is made, Arachne, the dntishtor of Tlmon, King of Lydbi, nnd rival nt Minerva, was a great band at embroidery, and had somo almot Imperceptible thread of strength to work with. Minerva got Jealous of her and transformed her Into a snider. So my lecturer says, at least. And It I In honor of that Mis or Mr. Arachne that Mon- sieur Augusto Petit has named hi new inven- tion, Tho advantage ot the net Is that by woar-I- nt It a ladv ran not only dance or drlvo to n summer ball In an open carriage, hut can almost underiako to faco a hurrlcano without her chig- non I.a Vulllcro or Coiffure Montespan (new kinds of elaborate hairdresslug) being la tho least disturbed. This net will probably preve to be something similar to what, accordl., lo Homer, Andro- mache used to wear, or what Is represented to adorn tho head of Dlano de Poitiers lu ono of Umoslu's enamel works In the Musee du Louvre. This classical reticulum was given up by the mcdlrcval ago, but resumed by the Henuttxinrr. Subsequently tt disappeared unaln, to be brought into fashion once more under tho Second Empire. Mauy fair reader probably have themselves worn similar hair nets within the last twelve or thirteen years. They are going to wear them again, only tho A rucJiiiiVii seems to be a greatly Improved and refined specimen of that very samo Implement which they were accustomed to use. A COTTAUI. JIY Till: SKA, The Koine In n Itllllard ttoom Hint la lVleli. ed on n Hitek Oil Stony Creehi f'onn. Tiumulb Island, Aug. C If we wcro In the neighborhood or Union square and wanted to play billiards, we should walk upllroadway, tall buildings on either hand, meeting pedes- trians at every step, and rarrlages and stages rat- tling and banging up uud down the streot, turn the corner at Fourteenth street, pass the Union Square Theatre, climb a flight of stairs, and stand In a brilliantly llgbtod room. Here, having smoked our evening pipes, wo haul tho small boat alongside the yacht, and paddle off up tho watery street that divides tho Islands. In place of tho buildings thero are high rocks. The same star shine that light broad-wa- but the only nolso Is that made br the oars lu their rowlocks, and overy dip of thu blades turns up molten silver enough to put to sliamu Itlchirdsoii's to pot resumption. A turn around the corner of a rook bring us Into n narioner channel and tn sight nt lights mi another Island. Another turn and tho keel grates on a bit of beach twenty feot long, an I the only une ou the Island, for all tho rest is rock bound. We haul tho boat up out of reach of the tide, climber over giant boulders, and stand tu front of tho billiard hall. It Is anno-stor- v frame building, with a liar ut one end and u billiard table at the other. The rltv folks must have gone to another .1 tint or to bed. for ot tho tito loungers one t'llks about thu milk ileld aud Uiu other ot tho fish crop uud of tho largo num- ber ot vl'ltors thai throng these uleasam islands, and a shaggt dog lie blinking ou tho fluur. Light I given by kcrosono lamps with llu and It Is good as far us It goes, Tho table Is lino when wo consider tho usual effect of salt air ou billiard tables. Wo play long enough to find out that It wo wanted to play pln-pn- wo should havo to visit a neighboring and borrow tho pins from u buttling alley; then wo climb over tho buulders again, si.ovooff tho boat, and paddlo through potficl stillness lo u floating bed. Andrew Johnaou's Idle Insurance. Johnson's death will bo rcgrot-- t by ni.ne in re dr. pit ttun byl.ie InHiraiiCi tomp . u:re. lie ttas a belitver in lift lntu-ai.e- an i lliua-- t ainl lus faith hr la acta lo an extent tint la rare in i:el, rirn nossdste. rue ag jrrgair of itu. poiirlri ml Ins I if a, is no leas Hum s3so,iai, U haitpv lielra ran ttrll rtflord It aay no more auout thai llitle tale ol jro.i on wiiUh tlir ut.l'rvaideLt Ion I.) ti e liaiuiuplcy of Ja) Cook's bank. -- C"! i!l"ii Insurance men hero say that the foregoing Is grusslv exaggerated. Ono goutlciinii said l " Why, tho thing Is absurd on tlio face of It. Tocsrri policies aggregating ja'sVilO would an annual outlay ot (i;,oOU, that Is, If tho person Insured took out his policies when ho was 50 year of age. Hut for even addltlinal yearthcio would bu un addition;,, pieml uii.ux- - ekenVfS?Sohn,I'','.',l'tl-i'-l- r to suppose that J Mi." "" ent" u'u "''""''dons liMhi'i.' -- iiratico he did not tal.o out the V -- HI ut one time, but with considerable ...orvnl between them, HI hlstoiy shows fittt lie wa not III n condition to enrrv a very heavy Insurance much before, he was l,r. and '.lence the Inference I natural that his pollcle must havo been taken out boiweeu the ugo f sjanUOU. Another thing worth mentioning is Unit .Mr, Jolui-o- n wu a very prudent anil iocs teiilallous mail, who would never h ive had tne fully to insure lor a turn so lur beyond nls iiicuns," Wirrltnl tn l.uhe .llb'hlgnii GltVNli lUvr.N. Mich., Aug. T. The a. hnonei Itixv inqtc. Capt. y.iuiigktunr of Chicago. i'"l wiih lath, luipocr. n. plckiu, ki'rung aleak afirr liiiring Mutkrgon, and ma Ic f ir Uiu pari. Juki at alio nciire I the hirliorrnti alien iie refused t "ln'i tin- nr till, and wm lull tu awing ul tl isret of llu; t, it e.. i Ii i w eu- - ii'i'hi. uf waier in lirr hold, and iiiocrewuf niie men mailed to tne rigging. I my weie nftiir being lu tlir ttatir if trlt lliri'.i Ii "Ur. I lu- kleti. ar l whs m U. ami I nil. omig-- i in.' this itcri!)' in. IU . I. a lal ll.) ti.J "tl. lot ti'k.el U il lulu losa. Hie t in. i ha. been hi won, a gale f ir tliu in imjij tour liuuie, but ruu ub ncd, aVNIlt'.AStX. I Mrs. John C, nrcckcnrldgo Is going Q I move from Kentucky lo Arkansas. I Somebody Is hiding lu the woods near I Natnua, N. II., sndihootlng al dots tin vrniure tear 1 A person looking nt some skeletons' W sikrd a ynnng doctor preaent where ho got ttiera la replied, " We raised them." Seventeen beam have been klllsd In Mittawstnkcag, Maine, thl season, Tin state rij, fire dollars for eseli capture. Tlio accusation mndo by Mis Alloa Sfslnst t!ie Itsv. llr. Porter, et Weybrldge, Vermoot, Is under Inveitlgtllon br the church. Ono of tho ludy teachers in a Detroit school Is named Mecca, but stie has plurim who or. ships st her ilirloe, sod Is presently eipected to Mete change ber mine. , Tho University of Copenhagen now admit woaven sludcuu the lauie a uion.uulj lliey can't atudy theology or pass csaminstlons lust would sstbor Ixe them lo preach. MlssMolllo Allen of Lnkcport, fnl.,ha again received ftMaV) from lite Buriervlrori of Lake cotinlf on aTount of xitilrrel till , the work of tier owe rifle In less than two weeks. The gambler of lllnncn City, Texas, have addrrese ta clrcnlar to Iho f raterntly ta other Pisces, warning them agalnit " Arkanan Inn," uu, pert al canli who pretend to ho a grenhorn, An Ohio nimhst was asked If he waj going lo hear Ham (Jsrr. " Wall, I rather think not,' was the reply i " of tlic two, you m iy an mil ripect mt to go to a akuak's funeral and klas the corpse " I,aw-iibldli- ig liquor sellers lu thotulgh. borhoodct City Hall squiro complain of the piriiaiitr of tho police In allowing the TYitiMnt's rum ihop to (a open ou Buodty, when all rcapcclable bars are closed. A certain minstrel manager advertises In one of the sporting pipers for u Irnor afngera "whone vocal shilltlra sre , anil who knows how rk up a laugh when tbe cud uiaa Is getting tt a Joke." t "As to being conflicted with the gout," satl Mrs. Partington, " high tiring don't bring II ou, 11 Is tnculicteut lu somo families, ami la handed down from fstber tu son. Mr, llsmmer, poor soul, who has beta so long III with It, disinherited It from hla wlle'a fraud, mother." A wlfu who had been lecturing lacr huiband for coming homo Intoxicated, beciius Is. censed st hla Indifference, and rxclalmrd, "Uti, that L could wring tears ot anguish from your eves I" To which the hardened wrotca hlccuughe 1, " Tin 'Una 't no uic, old wouiin, to f )r witer here " llyron, n villagoon Hock Itlver, Illinois, hss al ats been lentarkablc for a rigid exclusion ot the liquor trslbc. A Ucrman, recently, tried the eipeiu moot of upentn a latter beer saloon there. H remalaed open one dav . and tlic same nlgbta party of cllliena tlcurojel the stock, smtsacd a billiard tabic, sal scared lbs proprietor out ot town. , There la n remarkublo cat living Irf Whltnejville, Coun., near Lake Whitney. Ills sevea or eight years of gc, and rues a Billing for lla mtHi, It will aland In water up lolia thlgaa and aclis email fish and eels, Some of the latter have been twenty Inches long. The greatest achtvetnent of this cat was the capture, recently, of a fish weighing three pounds. Thesnttnsl cornered tbe flau la shallow water aud lata pushed II ailmrr. The will nnd codicil of Thomas Kelly were admitted tu ,.r0bto In Knglan.1 Ike other day. Tl. bequest lo tlio codicil was expressed In rhyme, and Ik Instrument run I I, harlna- - neither kith nor kin, ltetitieaih all I've nam'd hercm To llarriel, my iirarral wife. To have and bold aa hrra fur life. While in gum! health and aouud lu mind Tula codicil I've uudirsigncd. Ills wife and daughter, lu whoso favor the will soft codicil were made, nd the exocutora n tied In the will, predrcenirtl him, and he Icit no known relations. Iu spite of the frequent expressions ot disapproval on the part ut the Uoiiian rsihohc clcrry-me- n, the practice of waking the dead aim prevails to a, very great exteut In the north of England. At nines, head, ou July So, a wake took place, at which al. present' hecamu lutuxicated i aud In lamenting llio loss of tU suhjrit uf thr ts ake, au ul 1 wumin lot fall a csudle Inlo the coffin. Thr shroud and elotbre initsntty csught firs and hlised up, and as all were Incapable of eatlnsrilsh-In- the nimei.tbey continued until a police oRlrer, hourlugthenoike aud coafuslou, wuut and cillugulsaei them. At llanbury, In Knglnnd, the other night, there was a great detcuaiirition sgiuut the Compulsory Vacctnatlou act, tbo occasion being the re- lease from Northampton prison ot a nnn who kaffered fourteen data' linprikimmr nt rather h ,vo hi, skiu vacrlnatrd. He was met at the rtilwsy station rj; a great nuuit.ii'r of pcraoui,a ime of whom csrrietl b loners denouncing tho Vacclnslloa set, and bauila of marie played. Hpicruea cr maSc by the Iter lions ttotheryand nthers connrcted with thr National Aoih Vscelnaiior League. While, the nun, recnted a purse of gald, auJ lesututlons were puicd aikloil the set. During the recent epidemic of measles In the Ftejec Iilsnds tne natives brrame luttioea with the terrible Idea that now Hie U.lo3i tEnillia people) tisd become poairssrd of their laod. they rid of them. In many Instances II wa Ira possible to dlipel the Idea that the King bid Deen tskea to Sydney fur the purpose of communicating to tlm a falsi polii a, with which ullerlr to Utktr y all l.lt feo. pie. Sick men and wouisa would look yun fairly la tbe face, as though convinced uf their loeiorable tale, asx say " I am golna. to dir." sud st once srtlle down lo death. To tell a r't'ejecin ho looked kick wain V cerlalu ilttalruclluu lo l.lin, In mauy hjalauic), uabula 7 let tbrmxh hla heart would be. It U well known that lu tho compart- ment atylo of rains ay earriagra utel lu KugUnd, msck comfort depends upon aelcctlug one's travelling tcra psnlons. Various devices sru resorted tu lo prvrtsl latrudrri, aud where a party of tourlitl can secures baby lor company, they aro generally avoided, and have the compartment to theinaelves. Hence tbe s advertisement tn a I.ondou paper of "AttTtllCtAt lltUIES roa TRAVktLMS." The I aria uf prleis ta as follows i "lommon travelling Infauls, ileldlng Intcnnillrti rrlea et fear, and capable, ot bciug put into lie " r.i'cuni class, erring uot too loudly, but latnentAtly and inkiiiipurrbiv-2- ii klntitngs. Thlrtl clssa, full kqiullers, wltli s very pi. r. lug sod aggravarlng voice of Itroociarra- - Ki. I'hr atone arrainrnl as prumpl rritealer X.'ili. " 11 I Ikkr, urn l,Ullll)',CaiMuliol c JUUUUi 1 JOklS Ing i i ' A celebrity of tho pilloys, M.irtui Folv reuiolle. died remutly tu France, lie Ion mrtaoesl over lAJO.Otk) trancs. On June 1:1, 1U. I ulsaeuwlle wu condemned lo tint Killers for life, foriuviu assiass listed priest, thr AhM llalins, vvh.ini If in I believe! tobctoo Intimate with his wife. Ilettia ..ui lotas gslleja at Ilrckt, but lut ing had some e litem ju. wsa soou f ouml to be imite tisef ii lu iu cliulers epldemle of 1KI J he showed such rare emir u and self. forgrttulneas thit efforts sure sfteraarl insiriooo, lulu acoaiuiulalloa of Ids seatence. llu Cmpi "' polwuIII. p.irtl.uina ht.li In ISW. lla s.ai i. ivrsis, ami, hfonnilm a pay siclart there, aimsi" I tpi U'Sfur' tune. Tour yesrs ago he return d n frm anitfi tlcdln llio tillagu ot Yirres. lie u.r t u a. Of." lacl that lie hid In tho gilleva, aul .in I to in an old patihed pair of trousers he its I irn i Bnsi llu died evaelly t hlrlfturee jeara loatlu alnrlll date uf hla cou Icmntllou A very sluing" lawsuit, which. Indei'l. ( serms almost liirrrdihle at the pren'iii dir in la'elf I created a great icuistloa at Surr'iiieig Uir dJ eru't j to tp of the rraucolllsn proviuers uf Itivart As UitiS j protlnces unco belongrd to l'rusaiv, c. " I'rrus.isehrs f l.ainlrecbl," ir.)'iiiilgiitrd by 1'r.Mieriek II. u slill Is full force there, an I thus a Nurenb-r- g c in hat tut Is decide lu all earnest whether a if.' I' in ft rid Co legally pren tiled from contain. iuni I. n- II M ' plebeisn match wllh n miller's dsii.'h" ' llie f'M held of one of Hie CnlCil fm1llk uf Hie ' irtirv.t" disgusted r, mi younger bnttlsr's "gr ' had b:oiivhl an an lun against tliu luer wi i..ni' solcle parsgraph ot the " l'reukicli. a Lsuditt" qnoled b) him HI favor of hu dcms'i I Hi" should put a vet i upon tho intnuli d aabrsayk, H.nna lite hunur of his fnu'y '" ur,, (" llio Hat art in i uiatliution hating fur uprd ( cenluri reeoguied Hie equality ul ml 1"' " w law, he was .prrdilv lion siilie.1 bui I"' ' " "" bring tho str.nr before llu High euurl l Huuu '' O llinMlilrrf TitvaiM' vi'h Us tilth 'r 'n't'"' Ail' ti hur.ili i i ..alil'ifk ul in " '" " Wli..rl i " .1 "I t'U'i'S are u' " Ant' i nir"uuis llie dr .lieu of aluri ' " run "in maid " wife or u n Aim gam. ui' "'I uiuiit't tun horro i; lluie. 'i i. a t .t lusi. o t lo kiuv I i .' , i0ira. Wliust mi" oi noe fortune I m' I'hr light of ti e moiiii on llu" water d I" '' I he vlli". ui Hi" liorlleo tangled an I Noluiigirali a mi lus a'n or eii l , I. AlulJ.il sell 1.111 Ut slii lo'- - r''; ' tCV t Yuu miderst uiifilseurald. i e r u : Yttu'wliow Hi tt I'.'le-tin- .' li mi le n ;y "' , r, It Is uolliimi I uiu mil ) "i I'l'lg ' to .uUfOtt litl nun it l k.ii.ttanek snal WU ' Itesri. "."r'n:., i lik'r iii- - ' . ""i'", i 1 lul. ii t v,, , , . i I tt"". t (Hi IM- - ' , " . I if V .i , s ;' a.iy - V u " ,f , , - , a ' ' k V,".. "' . ..

The Sun. (New York, NY) 1875-08-09 [p ]. › lccn › sn83030272 › ...k j taleitx nt of Imtli tin--triit!iiry niul flnU--Inp fiiiul m i oimta ami ilcpueits 'ftippoit--oil by proper

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  • t IK THE SUN, MONDAY, AUGUST 1). 167'). I

    1

    j MONDAY, ATHU8T 0, INS.

    Avrrnge Dally C'lrculntloo Ovrr I'JO.OOUCi iitil) t to 01 ef All tl finer sMtth t "r!" I'l,ui Li Ub tiKvait In Ul fit.

    i f ( tf f lit f turn iU Htm !. tit of ii ar t totmti frnm' U net I tot II t (iffrUnl Vi fUr 1 mUi tn trh 4illf totusih III tilt truf f wmj rf ti mi cr rr u iftry4 lUi-- r in Nf York, Ifrtfetf i( n iltUmihurKk, mI itjI j, wilt. ! tibMrU l ir Ailhi.b Ini t miilj i"t1f it nUd In tt i tT inl n rl i. tt ti t lrfr t mm 1"1' !. Wit II tlfj, ltMiaJ (of, M MfillUlH ? (If

    i tld f ' il I i n it tt If f lnn ft n M aftftiU III Uv 7tt It'alm I'iii t Su ri udmJ SO.OIB HK4) iKLrttSiilUk. titt ti it 11.1 t ll ntui ., (i t? iur pttAt i. idtttiitK Dt4tini. ti Utut Pit h r'iiiy tl .bU' feill h ti.l toil f rinUt .i tkl wfeu fcitt iwoil rfmllitt'i kl,titiii( limit UttH hum or him litJk U iiMtllE , ui or b) rtVtt U ltl, u utrt ik-- ill i'i aliii it wrfriF U KitHt ( t ir4 Im lickDf ill.sviUbW Lailkkft at Ux fttfi l' .in kf 4l

    i ftkMtilkk, y ntl, tUfi fti4, 11 (I i "

    Arivrrllluu '(Mrs.I A Stkllrs lii.tt-,ai- l, tu l u sio.uw rssSits, wis kklsl.skL IcIUm ASvitllir,kl., M' kksti llss, ?n

    iti . mi lskl ihsiu.i,ii rat. rsr lifl, ;J(lata N. i.f lei-i- , l . .,.. ...I . .l .. t" I k, "J"tlll. ill! IUrrir- - k4 Ifftlhi, r' "' Si lilkiii in tui fl't M.fit ArtKl. ft V.t u alri fcil.m,MUi A4 , ' U '. ! -S I kK.ftlMllfllk "At., lilM r4MMI

    (J j Tlir Wrrklr fnn.I ' lltl'I'TP il" I IMIR ll llllH,f ' , 1l Vlllll II lt"lll Kpin l firrnlttlfl. Al I tt4 tr fr imif lb I hii i IjIk U tvuMi) it II tk iKiMtiaik ltd (! r )ili4. llxn r I ' ll xftklT r"' 1 D'n'fciiaim imI tttltti m ftiiKKliRikl In ilfnfti, IvltillMii, b4 altI lil aniilM. II u iifteiall taltiAbk, hil ll ba umti,birfi iiila- - I. 4, im tl tt la tfcfftl mul it Mil, MiltftnJ

    I u r iih it vuii k iii ii itiil.' 'I tt4liiait Aili'tttMOifHU r link 0 60I ti bkiltik ihkif fnf uU PF JifkUfti t'kk.

    H fkl rill Nul Iff. ! lkal, 11 llkt. &t ' U llll.l t .tklllrk, lk JI, lt IHl, ... 1 Vl3fi rnVk. til t. b.nlif.1 ttffktj, 11.1 k tiM.X KkIiii.Iu Im

    il "k i. TlipNrkv I'oklHl iBr In bo I'rrtmltl

    II Tlic new tiiftnl law, nlilrh tciiultt'i liropav- -V ' IcrLt of iK'ktanr by iu1itlklirr on til p rloalcAU cot to" '! hUitlnrn, Inok rffict Jin. 1. 185.V

    TMk .oiiht ii drtrruiliifU ti; nclslil, and lo It paidt (! In tn ilny tu in in hulk.J I'Oktai;).' un I'ailt Si'.t from Jan. 1 will tie flfir!,; (iom-iii- a yrar, nrfle if; crntk a month for monthly

    i. i mticnhrrk Huh'cruilkm to Tur IXll.t Pt'M lUXiO u; J lr,ur fltt). tire (M etuu a month, ruklage i'iJ.

    i

    jt AinUkk'Uii-utb- Tulliir,

    r Ftatral rarlt Ward n -- un n N xit, Otneink,. riflh Akf nuf TlioatraA Bamh ferr',f Lltmnri ' I'oitrr-r- lrdrn nh if, kal ilk .i MilropiilltRii The ntre Vkt lit.I i! ktcblnkOH IIhiI-- L ich k in Itut Sin.

    In hot weathor nn iViack of Di.irruir i. i r. In-d-d, any 1' idal'.l if I lie buwris. rmuli) t n tusis me

    strength, aud reiulrra tlic lirersatty of proiii it ire.ltin in liiiin rail ve luull men i al. Pr . I u.it-a- r

    v r h it ta an rflr. uial remedy acting ipili kiy niulc iruig tii'irjugu i. .1 .i-

    Deposits In tho Mtltil tl llcneflt S.tv.i.g- - llin'tSo. I rem estrirl. s'w na rflioig mill. 111. , itia lulirCkt from ll)C Crit lit mry mgiitli,-4i- ff,

    ! Tin- iftfitftir diiHi ccitI(t(loii o The SunlJ or tlic imi cuiUufj Aim. 7 ittij;

    u Mondir . . fjs.,'i?:i rimnaar ft.'.lil! hiMUaT fli.niit frMir' . f Viiiuiiiiiif I'U.UII satunu.' rjk,,Uli)tf , TctnlfortrewMli ill.SViIt , Bally uvira.-- f I'J.S.OIII

    ,J i Miickcy U'lilppcil I'lril Srtire A(:nliik.i

    the I'riniM Ivitnlii nin.J Tin- - riillnili lplim Times nunouiKW the

    . . inii'tltiK niul tliu lm.iliucH of the Hitiklnpif' Ktiml (.'i'iiiini.-iuiior- s of I'liinsylvmiia

    AlAiKUY, QfAV, ntul Tkju'ix ut HariU- -11 lnirt', In lctti'i- - signed (.'apitau niul in

    . j an cAiilliuit K'Uiliii artlili', both of thvin,' wrltttn In llio lllpii.uit style wlucli iiliiiiiiis

    , 'lu tlmt papur on tlio tiviiMiry. j lsutn.'.

    "Mr. Mackuv," rays thcTditf, " havingtoyiil with matittseablo Oi'inocmts until

    U no longtr usiofnl for Ills mr- -)poif, mi't tin' Coinmlsloiiiis ot tliu Sink-I- t;

    i inu KihkI mi .Mutiila,lmilhl- - politiial twin( lu ut lift , Sfi I'tnry Qiiav. umvp to yny ofT

    . nil tnu iiiUi'iiuthlo iloht that ii llontiiiKi( arotintl, anil thuii privcntril ti tU'tulk'tl

    k j taleitx nt of Imtli tin- - triit!iiry niul flnU- -Inp fiiiul m i oimta ami ilcpueits 'ftippoit- -oil by proper voiiUiims' n tlit ilvrputch

    I rtati.-r- , anil hail them veiilled. lie hitsI i theri'fnn'. playcil tin1 treanny lstio on tho1 j (Irfiiletitinn inn until It wouhl no Imicvr.1 Pii.v--

    ' j tr. tAricnv nriiT playeil the Uraaiujif wu iimlcistmul tins lnn?, on tho

    ;di'fiih-.itlo- n line lit all. Tur (rum it ; lie

    I bus no friend morn tiii.tlins than he toI 2 avoid the line. Wo liavu'

    i watelieil pretty elotely tlm buttle whichi , the hontbt rennylnnla lleinueratn arei 1 making iipalnst the ltlnp, tiutl we believeJ that not u single man or jnnrnal nmniis

    . ' them ha so far ilKUgeil the irin nf exit- -rfiiee of any tleialontioii in the inin-- e in

    I '. whieh .Mai-kkv- , Mveiis, nml MiCi.t'iu: per--J ; alht In iisinc the wonl. They have nlli'Red

    . ; mid pi nveil that millions have beim pin- -,' j bizzletl from the (.'onitnonwealth In the

    ' I fot la of Interest on thi! piihlie iiionev, that,, frauil, bribery, anil iieeulatlon relpi In. ' tint tna"itry, mid tliat uvci ybody anil

    'cvorytliiUH In unci ubout It U tlmroiiislily'' coriupt, yea, rotten. They have ileiunn- -

    I atnited aii a legnl pioposltlon that thei , Treuitirer Is responsible to the Comtiion- -

    "i . Health for every dollar ho bus made bythu uo of tliu public money; mid they

    'i Iirtvo promiiied. In cam of their nefesPlonto power, to put in motion tliu iniiehliieiyof justieo neeesjury to recover the mine,

    i oitherjis- money etolen, us in the Twi:i:nciise, or III theshiipeof line for tliu several

    j offence. Mr. Ma kev ami his friemU hidcjiiito welcome to any small comfort they

    '' may ilulvu limn thu line theory, that a' trulee muv steal millions fnun hU trust

    fund, that a public olllcer may convert theIl, revenues of n Rretlt Ptate to h!n privatej o, without IilIiik guilty of u ilefiikatiim.

    i In the thlelV linpi of the Ireiiniry circle,tins may nut bu called a defalcation; but

    ' lionesl men lu I'eniisylvaula as well as, ' , elsewhere knew preciiely what It U in

    ,' fact, ami mean to apply the jiropei

    ; remedy." The Intt opcrallon of the mighty Mackkv

    1 tlic ureiit Ntiiiikonlc feat which the' 27ims ha long ptedntcil. the oiidrou

    pleeo of leKerdeiii.iln by which Mai'KkvwascoliiK In detent Jutico and turn thetidn in fu or of thu King. And what is itlie Is compelled by force of public opinion

    j recently awiiUciiud, to consent for once,i that thu money In the altikliii; fund shallI he applied to the payment of thok ptihlii! debt n the law reiiiui's.

    '. llu nuver did (his before. Until the

    i j , lecnnd day of August, lti"i, the tlnkiiiKfund win regularly robbed every ipiarter,''. and the lan;r pin I, il of being ap- -plled to the reduction f the debt, was l e- -

    ' ' u tiiined by tho Treasurer, loaned out to hisaccomplices, niul the pun etila used to fat-te- n

    the lllng mid corrupt tho Slate. ItIs a ennr. s.ijii of jenre of continuous

    rime; and is thu llrst pieat and splen-did victory of the retm-mur-- , the Hist

    of an honest light, and thu signalof a Dcmoeiatlc Aiulltoi.ciuiiei.il.Ifriill.i morn grape, ami thu handiti,'I will crumhlo into nuns. The stu- -

    ifij ! Ii!inloiis election of fruud Is viaildy wink- -j j 1 ming In all its fnuudatioiis mid lotlcilng7 .'ft, to It, full. Woe betide the Denio- -i1 j i 0il mid ludcpciidouts wlio may bu found111.' Bl,ll,l 'lu lllbbishl

    ' '' ii Mr. Mauicv U also nuppofuil to bavu"

    , lono eomclhiim very wonderful when hu:' ' Xuinlshcil, under the muuio t'oiiipuUiiin, ai list Of his priniint denosltorles, )) dons

    . ' not tell whero tliu vast Minis withdrawni ,i

    : Irom tho flnkliiR tuiul mid the treasury''if lu the loiiKjuuri past haw beun, whatt

    I,' JosTns, what AlLVUiisns have liad them,' ." what politicians, and what piesses have

    been lu ibi d with them, llu include- - onlyIn his coiideFceiuluig statement tlieineiigiubalauep hum on hau l, mid i f tins it ap- -

    f pi-.l-fs tho l'cople s 1' uiK li i.i. KlMiil.l

    JkjpV hn flb2,MiS.03, Is thill hotel of i u.ltorij iff 0 KlkfllM. foi s.V J .till

    outslnnillnn ? Is tho ItltiR Btlll " carrying"that huge timber ppecutntion? Ami hnsthis continuous deposit with Kemiilk any-thing to do with that?

    Hut the Time, with lie ttstml ImpartialityIn the discussion of this subject, plvos onoparagraph to tho eneouraKunicnt of Mai'k-x- r,

    niul ono to tho cnoourugumrnt ofhonest people. Tliu following Is probablyintended to help tho latter:

    "I'mlrrall modem aihnliilatratlons, of what-ty- erpartr, thr prostltutlim of the power of tho

    tri'iistiry to control political rvaufta haa tieoueunimoii. tint umlor no ono has thu power beenso aUllfull)' nndauiloflantly usfldaaliyMr.MACKl,r. lit) Iicllovrs that tliu first duty ot a Htalonffli'sr Is to fleet the lloinihlloaii einillilts,antlthat tho troaaury and all tho powers of er de-partment aro liut uL'uack'S lo be employotl toseruro tmlltlrnl sttccpks, This peril, nfiko tothe purity of our clcctlnus, to tho aafrlyof tho truuaury, and tu reapect for publlunutlinrltt. Is one of the great tallica that

    men of all parties to take pvisc andpirty lines In any necosaary efforts to

    cermet It; and l( the l.rln Convention shallt tho tolls of )lr. Mackky and his depen-

    dents, ntid present n c.uidldato for Treasurerwhoso ehnrHCtrr will ho n complete eimraiitcoof thorough reform lu thu preaenl truasurysystem, Mr. Ham l.K will he next to tho fellowthat's elected, niul not particularly closoBt that."

    For the sake not only of l'utinsylvanlalong thu inoit corrupt uuil dl'eased of allour .States but of tho entire country, hitus hope this last prediction may bo fullyrealized l

    Tlic Tramp Nuisnncr.A I'ositlvlst pamphlet, published a couple

    of ycnis iigoln this city, ilumonst rated withno little ingenuity that the general ten-dency of our present civilization

    tho centrallailon of eiijiltal andpower a coiidltlou of things familiarly ex-pressed us " making tho rich richer and thepoor poorer." It can scarcely bu expectedthat wealth will readily untlclpnto anydanger to Itself from such progress; buttlieie are, nevertheless, ominous signs offutiiro (rouble. Thu able-bodie- d unem-ployed man Is bikini: very effective men-su- re

    tu call attention to himself and to thucauses which have made him what he Is.

    For weeks past the press has been teem-ing with eomtneutsanil speculation' uponthe tramp ntiNatice. This juts gradually ac-quired an alarming prominence, and thereappears a general disposition to speak ofthu tramps as a sort of epidemic or plaguesuddenly broken forth. It istruo they aron plague, as It l true that poverty existseverywhere; but sluco our country hasbeen at the mercy of charlatans In financeanil knaves In polities, we ought to haveexpected jut such plagues and Jut sucha form of poverty as this. In fnot, wo havedeliberately crenteil ami Increased the veryevil of which we complain, lu order to af-ford to jobbing politicians and thu specialfriends of the Administration opportunitiesfor building up vast fortunes at tho pub .He, expense, wo hare broken ilo 0om-m- e

    ree. stopped Industry, P';,)iru,to,'t lmllk.rttplcy, and denied ,;. to M)orcn ofevery grade. rjtw tmt ,.0 eutinnomlyrl1''' in natural resources wo havetin ued over to thu rule of organizedplunderers anil their people have been re-duced to want, some of tho bust marketsfor our manufactures being destroyed asn eonseipu'iiee of this wholesale robbery.A llnauctal policy without consistency orIntelligence, with larcenous ofllclals in allbranches of the civil service, unparalleledextravagance In the tnuuugemeut of pub-lic affairs, a President who takes hisdoublet! pay without performing his duty,audioes bis olllce to enrich hi relativeand cronle as well a himself these eatieshave contributed to the gcnor.it prostra-tion of business and the discouragementof honest labor, which have brought suchhardships upon us. Of such it conditionthe tramp Is n legitimate product. Withhim It U no mere theory, but a glnustly factwhich ho feel lu every tlbrc of bl being,from hi empty stomach out to his halt-cla- d

    skin, that thu poor aro becomingpoorer and their eau tnoro hopeless.

    Net er before In any summer have therebeen so many of the industrious and de-serving poor unemployed and actuallysuffering from want, not only lu this city,but throughout the land. I It any won-der that they tlce from the crowded,fetid streets, where bitter experience hastaught them it Is useless to seek longer forlmneat work, out tothocountry, wlieretheymiiynt least glean n scanty living from thollelilsiind orchards, and sleep lu fence cor-ners or in thu woods, undisturbed by thoclubs of the park police? The lli'st step totills vagabond life is, for most of those whoenter upon It, undoubtedly a very hardono : but thereafter the descent in the so-cial scale is by very emy, almost Impercep-tible gradations. They glulu from shame toIndifference, to vice, and at length almostcertainly to crime. Tho necessities of thotramp's dally life tend to tho weakeningof his appreciation of tlic rights of prop-el ty; while. tliu universal aversion mid sus-picion with which tie Is rcgaided by tho"owhom he luu learned to envy and oven tohate for their happier fortunes, drive himInto the attitudo of an Uluuuolite towardall society.

    What has the tramp to hopo for in thofutuic'r Dally lie sees increased the mul-titude of semi-outla- to which he hu-lling?: daily ho is made to feel nioro keenlytho atilagouisin between himself andthu mid foitilliate classfrom among whom fate has driven him.Tliu prospects for employment me, Insteadof Improving, growing smaller all thowhile, (iradually, hopelessness begets

    He no longer wishes, for employ-ment, but Is resolved that, work or nowork, he will not starve, whoever suffersfor his support, lie fore him I tho terri-ble winter, when tliu cold will ilrlvo himbin k to thu cilj lo seek hi lodging In tintpolluted atmosphere of thu tr.uup'a roomlu a station hou-e- , ami tu hunt hi food lutho gai huge but rul mid tho gutter. Formen in his condition the law puts a pre-mium iipouei'linu. Let htm stop Just shortof mutiler, and hu knows that hu cancommit no offence which will not be re-warded by an improvement lu thu cer-tainties of Ills existence.

    When these fuels are contemplated intheir naked hldcoiisiicss, and It is re-membered that wo are constantly addinglecruits to thu vast army of trampwho, by a natural and Inevitable pro-gie- ss

    of demoralization, will ore longbecome an in my of criminals, wo maywell viow with serious apprehensionthe future lu store fur Us. Already theroIsobkcivablo an alarmingly rapl(l Increasein tlm num hi r of offences against tho per-son perpetrated by theo outcasts. Theybegan with offences against property, midtliu pi opruss was vury natural.

    .Mi-cr- except in raro Instances, Is anelement of disintegration, not of cohesion,In thu masses; so wo need not aiitlelpatuany such seriou disturbance as organizedIn rail nuts, and thu wholesale siicrillcu oflife and propei ty to the sudden fury ofthe hungry mob; but that which we havoto fear is thu presence lu our streets, dur-ing the com ng winter, of a honlo of Indi-viduals morally ami mentally preparedtor auuoit uuy extrumo of uvil action, uuj

    Indifferent to overy hazard which standsbetween them and food.

    Tho scctl sown urourtoastby tho plunder-ing, corrupt, anil reckless Ghant Atlmlnls- -'trillion hasnoweotuo to blossoming all overthu land ; next winter bring forth socopiously that our nlmshouse anil ourprisons will bo glutted with tho harvest.

    Grant Responsible,Wlioti Mr, Wavnk MadVkaoii,

    of Himon Camriion, was recently atIiong Ilrnuch, the President proposed tomake him one of the Commissioners to In-vestigate tho charges preferred by Prof,Mailsii. lie was shrewd enough to declinethat service, but took oucuslou to go outof tils way, us others who profess n doslrofor reform lu the Indian service have done,to eulogize thu man who of nil othurs Ismost responsible for tho wrongs. Hero Iswhat ho has said lu a published letter:

    "It docs seem to me, therefore, that allmen, howeter illfferlmr from him In

    other renuflcts.otiKht to ncree in alvlnif credit totho President for his persistent offuru to Im-prove tho relations of tho Indian agencies to thonational Government."

    Now, all the experience since Oiiant be-came President gives n Hat and emphaticcontradiction to this stuteifient. Hut forhim, thu infamous system by which thuIndians have been cheated, robbed, niuloutraged, could u ot havo been can led onat all. Ho has known It lu nltnost everydetail; ami white it is the fashion to saddletho whole respmi'lbllll v on Dfi.ano, be-cause of bis known corruption, he is reallyles answerable than Oiiant Is to the coun-try, a word from whom would havostopped tho con option before It ever uiiidoheailwuy.

    The Indian Hingis just as strong at theWhile I Ionic us It Is at the Department ofthe Interior, nnil the proof of it Is to bufound lu various orders issued by thoProvident, itMl others com munlcutcdthrough llAucoi'K, 'lu has notoriouslybeen mi instrument of t'J.'o Hlng for years,and a bencllclary of their plu'Mlcr.

    Two year ago tho Hoard of Iuti.'n Com-missioners whom ho had chosen lili.'tself,ami whoso standing buforo the count rvwas of great advantngo to n wcuk and

    Administration, appeahsl to thoPresident personally, over Dehno andtho Indian lliircnu, to airest the mostbarefaced frauds. They presented com-plete proofs of every ehmge, showing howtho law was dolled anil their authorityover the disbursement of money for thoIndians was trampled under font, r

    He heanl them, mill dismissed everycharge as proundlcss, upon the ussurnnoosof Vuo Inculpated Rime anil their subsi-dized agents In tho White House. TlieoCommissioners found themselve utterlypowerlois for good, and resigned n workwhich would have achieved beneficent re-sult If tho President hud kept faith orshown the least disposition to live up to npart of his cheap professions.

    So too lu regard to thu appointments,which all emanated from him, anil wereall controlled by the samo sinister Influ-ences that protected the thievery. Kveryman who reslstiil the Hlng, or refused toobey Its orders, or was unwilling to be-come its purchased slave, wa market! andpi escribed, no matter by whom hu mayhave been supported.

    It will not Oo to makoDnnNo the scape-goat of all this iuitpiity, lion ever conve-nient that policy may be for the friends of(Iiiant who have shared In the spoils, andwho know that without the President'aid It must have fallen through. No won-der when Delano was driven Into a cor-ner, and threaten! d with lasting ilisgraeoIn order to save his superior, that heturned upon his confederates mid warnedthem to beware ot further attacks on him,

    Ills menace was heeded promptly; forwhile It Is true that he was to retire ou the1st of July, his demand for tnoro time wasut mice granted, and he personally selectedand llxtsl the pay of tho Commission whichIs now investigating everybody but themosl guilty. Tho "persistent efforts" ofthe President mid his surroundings havebeen directed to sustain the most heartlessmid greedy Hlug of thiuvts that have dis-graced the public survlee. And that Issaying much, with all the revelations ofthe last six years of (Imutlsiu staring us luthu face.

    Fortunes in Congress,Ono of thu most strlklnir facts connected

    with the history of legislation during thulast fourteen years of Itepublicaii rulu luCongi ess, Is the great number of fortuneacquired by members of the Senate andHouse of Representatives, who went toWashington poor, glad to receive the payas a means of subsistence. Most of themwere merely professional politicians, andhad no other business to improve theirmaterial condition.

    There but ono possible explanation forthis sudden acquisition of wealth, and It Isto be found In the ennrmoiisgrunts of pub-lic land to railroad corporations; Immensesubsidies of money in vurlou forms; speciallegislation for the creation of hugomonopolies; the passage of fraudulentclaims; great appropilatlous for corruptHlngs; Credit Mnbiller Jobbery; PacificMall stock pools, and other method", bywhich the Treasury was robbed anil thepeople wcro crushed down llh ruinoustaxation.

    Chnirimiuhlps and places on the leadingcommittee which control the tarlfr, bank-ing mid currency, public lands, Judiciary,appropriations, Paeillc railroads, PostOlllce. army, navy, claims, patents, Districtof Columbia, anil others of less Importance,but still uvallablu for venal uses, wcro notsought fur the honor they conf cried, butalmost solely on account of the profits tobe dei Ived from mi abuse of these ti lists.

    They became objects of bargain and sale,of partisan nrningcnients and of caucusspoil. Presidents, and tlircetoin, and stock-holders of banks, iiiilroads, and other cor-porations, not only shaped the legislationalTccting their own Interests, thiough Hiecommittees over which they presided midheld In hand usually by a majority ofthreo-fourth- s, but they openly advocateduuil voted for thesu schiinis, lu ilcllancu ofall parliamentary morality and decency.

    The Credit Milliliter investigationtlio system of nionllty which pre-vail-in Congress. Astounding as it wa,

    by exposing tlic shainnlesa. venality of themot neiiptcd Itepiihiican leaders, whoprci.chcd piety and lectured on moralitywhile in tho vol y net of stealing, It deservesto rank us a mere trllle oompmcd with thowholesale spoliations in other dlrei Honsfllihh us yet have only been partialisbrought to light.

    According to the Siri mjhrhl lleinihllctin,Hi.Aixn appears a tho third

    highest ou thu list of taxpayers In Augus-ta, Maine, to the extent of f1,035, lu a citywhere taxation and assessments are low,He is nl-- n a very largo pioporty holder HiI'uiin.-ylvanl- a, and owns a ft no house luWash Uiitou, which is kept up on u costly

    scale. Whllo he sworo vigorously beforotho Credit Mohlller committee to havingno interest In that particular job, Mr.Dlainb admitted that ho had 130,000 In-vested In tho Hloux City road, which wnsreally a branch of tho great concern, andmanaged by some of tho snmo men, nndwith tho siimo seven principles.

    Mr. Ui.ainb went to Congress twelveyears ngo, poor, like most of his associates.He lias received no Inheritance and beenengaged lu no business outside of politics.Yet In this short period of tltiiu he hasgrown to wealth, lives liken prince of tintblood, and even aspires to be President.Ho Illustrate the system at one end of theCnpttol which John Shrhman does nt thoother, who hns become n mllllonnlre bypulling tho wires of legislation. No won-der they all looked sad and felt badlywhen tho people revolted last year andleft thorn out in the old.

    Text nuil Sermon,No pertilstoiico or fierceness of Invective

    caittkt Ki ilcral idlrflictdro ran Mile nr eirnae ilicaiii and comfort tthlrli la now Induatrluualy ofjorlaff toTwikii.- - AkiiIhi VW.

    What Federal officeholder are these!Does the I'ot refer to Isaac Hendeiisok,who robbed thu Federal tiovcrnmcut ofenormous sums when he wns Navy Agent

    there was ono dash of K.D0.U00, If wo re-member correctly and who pleaded thestatute of limitations when bu wa broughtinto court for ttial mid punishment? Howas n Federal officeholder then, but Is oneno longer; yet, unpunished mid uurcstor-In- g

    public plunderer us he Is, this sameIlcviinusox is now the publisher of theBrriilrit; I'nut mid Its largest proprietor.

    Thero may be n good reason why thoI'ont should now diplay an exceeding en-ergy lu Its denunciations of those who as-sert that Twcni should have all the rightsthu law guarantees to every accused man ;but such energy produces a curious Im-pression with Isaac Ui:m)I'.iison standingbehind It with his stolen money safe in hisgrasp.

    It la an naloaailliiK dortrlno that tho opinionsof ronrla are nol to he crltlcl rd It waa Hie uolvi ra land uure'tMitlnic rriHrlsm rf the riotiitroiia linenScott ilpilaltui -- a JuJifiilfnt of the Supreme Court ofthe t'nitsii Males llial tiflpcl lu ru'i" the country toaatc Ilk liberty and irurcrnuieut. Ilarv'r't tteiklu.

    Who ever put (ortli such a Joclrlno? We havonevi'v seen it held anywhere, and ahould ho

    to Cud It advocated by any Intelligentperson. Thero Is, lioweicr. another doctrinethat Is not su objectionable, ClUiely, thata suorJlnate Judco has no business to criticiseVne nctlmi of superior tribunal, especially whenthat action sets aside his own previous decMons,Hut any orf Innry clllien and anv newspaper haan unquestionable rlchtto call any court to ac-count and to cxiiiilue ami cotnlcinn Its utter-ances and decrees; hut In order to do thlwisely nnd rfrertlvcly.lt Is necessary to standupon the truth, and discuss those utterancesand decreos candidly, liitellli-'enlly- , and withoutequivocation. That, however. Is what Mr.O'Conou has not done respecting tho recent de-rision of thu Court of Appeals ; and thereforehe Is criticised and condemned.

    The reference of fiirjr's HVJili to the flnmScott decision revive some Interesting recol-lection,. This very O'Coson. whom that Jour-nal now holds up us a groat authority upon mat-ters of Justice, was not only the most violentpartisan of that very decision, and wrote vehe-ment declamations about tho wickedness andstupidity of tho'c who presumed to call It Inquestion, but ho went much further than JudgeTanet, nnd boldly tnilntalned that al.ivory wasa cood Inktltutlon In Itself ; If not absolutely di-vine In Its orl.-ln-, at least the wisest of possiblehuman arrangements for regulating the relt-tlo-

    between vthlto men and black men. Thisalto I the sama OTosoit who for tho list fourjears has been engaged most Industriously andwith nn Immen'o expenditure of loirnlns andIngenuity In mailing It Impossible for the peo-plo- of

    Hilarity to recover anything of the mil-lions that Twr.r.n stolo from them. It la nottorlh whllo to praise htm much now without

    better reasons than my that have yet been pre-sented.

    Tho nuetlnn was raised by Dr. 1 ooi.snv, lutila ltarv rl Phi Hi la Kkppa S'ldr-- k, rnftiifr truehonor eaa flouruh la a democracy irmnyfau JUputh

    Whatn pltrth.it Dr. WooiJrv did not raisethe aaiuo question at Yalo College, of which hewas h ng tho President, and Is still tho most dls.tlnculshed ornament. At the very time he wasexpounding the doctrine of true honor at Cam-bridge, his successor. President Pohteii, ofYale, was nutting himself forward as a conspl-cuou- s

    endorser of IIe.miy VYAnn IIelciieii'strue Inwardness; and Yale College Itself waalistening uttb admiration to (lov.CitAMntttLMNot South Carolina, one of the most noted fraudsof the day, n hum tlio professors of that Institu-tion ucro pit'scntlng a a model statesman totheir students, ll is In Yalo College that Presl-don- t

    Woowuiv should liiako hi greatest effortsfur the promotion of true honor.

    The Springlleld J.'riiiMciiii perceivethat there Is one man and only one In the coun-try ho might be a winning candidate for eitherparty nt'Xt year. That man Is ClIAIII.ts 1'itANCIAl'AUs; and either party that should be luckvenott.th to get him to run would besureofvlc-tury- .

    Hut our contemporary docs not believethat ho will be nominated. "The politicians ofboth parties," It says, "are about as fond of Mr.Adams as the devil la of huly water: yet If btany uccldeut ho should he nominated In suite ofthem, and should accept the nomination, theywill liuto their hiinds full to prevent hl elec-tion." Wc are sorry to sou tho trjiuMfmu solucking In faith. Has It forgotten that a n

    Is to bo held In Cincinnati sumo timeearly next spring: that Mr. An .tin It tu ho nomi-nated there; nnd that tho Itoptibllnaa party Isto he fnri'i d to accept III in rather than bo anni-hilated 'r I) m't ho so mucin discouraged, neigh-bor: The prospect of tho future Is gayer, per-haps, than you suppose.

    The union of l'.unipe nnd Africa, bymeans of u tunnel iinurrtho Straits of Gibraltar.Is one ot the great engineering schemes ut pres-ent contemplated. '1 his tunnel, us projected, Uto be a light line, extending between Tarlfa uudAlgeslras, on the Spanish coast, to C'eutn andTangier on tho Morocco shore, tho submarineportion to bo ,1U) feet In length, or nearly ninemiles. This vast enterprise offers, It Is said,more difficulties than tho similar work undertho laigllsh Channel, although the latter willhavo more than tn Ico the length. Tho maximumdepth uf thu chaiiuel ut the point to bo traversedIs stittcd to he onlr about HKJ feet, whllo that ofthe Ftralt Is s.ttli fcot. Supposing that the tunnel under Gibraltar ha bored at a distance n(ono thousand feet under tho lied. Its tutal depthunder thu sea level would ho over 3,000 feot.whllo tho entry and exllgallcrics would he eachthree miles In length.

    When Damhi. O'Covvkm. was rill vp. the7'iifmiir. with JIoiucf" Giirr.i.r.v ut Its head,never failed to do Mm honor: hut on the oce.i.lion of his hundredth birth day, that Journalhas not n word respecting him. Tho louug odl-t-

    Is doubtless too bus) looking after tho stock-jobbing Interests of JavGoi'I.u uny at-tention tu the .monitor of Ireland.

    fill llotvn the Dend Tree.Tl) Tlir. r.linon or Tin: Sun sir : There arc

    In Witkhiuglon nUce, Juki otf Ilroadna), nto mount uitjliek amUir iggy Ireea in a rotv, uli iuI nfi) feet aiiurl,I mi irein from tlir iMi.i.r.-U- ie nr inches of each full rV ravins Willi ihoso uf il nelithhor.

    llio rrrcnl ilcliiiii) u. ik Hi" irwt elnsnlm out of tl eili'Pirunrnt'a Iihi.cIi fur thr utmi iii'lng, sml euuuilrlt oriiulii.1 lilt, .iii.Ii, t.nuji.. uurr ami uihrriiiihi nut uluckily (llu not wum ilown ti,eilrt trrr, aa thst mightDun raiunl ,oh uf im. Tniae Irrrk ktmmd Iw t.tIt atouce uildglli'l) tu tie poor. NlMTY rilllCt

    A SMiggrMlun lor the No Tibil.'In nil. liuium or Tub ai.s-- Mf ; As 1hgnat KjiaLU trial mil prohauly be reopened mn

    Muaioberenirun

    in hSl t ,t?i,i, 'i ,,A,?2 'mumon fee uf ten elVarge !cems he an tiiai i t,S Hieecila no .livid, d hctneeu I ir cilfci nV I i?. rIlionki) ii lor honira inr Mlkjn wi'm,.,, ,. "hoamial in thr piuporilon oi "i, , i'.'J."lor hiooklju ueJ fur vofi. Ain'iu,.'u

    Tin: s TitAsn nir.s soth hook.A t.eel n re on I'nlao llnlr unit llalr Dreaalna,

    Naiiant, Aug. 0. Somebody has saidthat In this country lovo affair and summerexcursions, pretty much llko fox hunting InEngland, bring parties together who wouldn'tmeet otherwise. If 1 had Jotted down mem-oranda of the various kind of persons I havemet since I left New York, I would have hnd bythis time enough materia! for n thrcc-volum- onovel. And from everyone of these persons!learned something woith knowing. There wasn French hairdresser, for Instance, of sometwenty years' standing In Ilnaton, whom I en-countered on one of the excursions, and whodelivered to me n lecture nn the subject of falsehair and halrdrcsslng, of which I give here analmost verbatim report for the benefit of tho fairreaders of Tux 8un,

    There Is no country In the world where thotrade lu human hair Is so extonslvo and so prof-itable as In the United Htates. The reason ofthis lies not so much In the fact that Americanwomen hive less hair than Riiropean wor.ien, asIn the fact that every American woman wearsfalse hair, while In Europe the practice Is re-stricted to n comparatively small class of thopopulation. We havo there what I called com-mon iieople, who would never dream of Indulg-ing In anything of the sort, while here, wlicroeverybody I supposed to ho a "lodv" or n " gen-tleman." and where there are accordingly nocommon people, the pooret servant and factorygirl tries to Imitate, the wife of the hanker.This has not only Immensely Increased the priceof human hair, but has given origin to variousImitations of hair, which aro used almostexclusively In thl country. White and grayhalr,whleh arc p.irtlfiilarly costly, aro In con-siderably greater demand here than lu Europea circumstance which Indicates that old womendo not much differ from the young ones so farus the use of false hair Is concerned.

    Another circumstance which lnercaes the de.mnnd for hair K that the Amcrle.ui womxn arotoo lazy to dress their hair, and do tint knowhow to do It. rhu nverago French woman buyfalse hair onlv to add lothe natural, which thoaltsav tries to make the best use nt; while thoAmerican woman purchases a mass of hair ac-tually amounting to a wig, under which sho-- unreal her nattir.il capillary adornment. Thopoetry of I almost unknown here,(n Franco, ln.It.ily, In Sualn, the hatband or thelover of a woman who has anything llko a good,natural supply of hair, finds an Immense ploasurnIn being present when sho Is combing It, or Incombing It himself. No end of songs and pic-tures, Including tho celebrated picture of Titiancombing his mistress' hair, show that this sort of

    was In groat favor In all ages. Withtho Anelo-Paxo- n race It seemi to have never beena fashion. An Amcrlum woman dresses her hairherself only when she cannot afford to pay ahairdresser. Aud still morequecrlsih?n""on ofconsidering this prucoss as ono requiring strictprivacy. The hairdresser (frequently a very youngman) Is the onlv male person allowed to ap-proach tho onlvhalf-dretse- d lady. Her husband,and even her father aro refused admission lutothe room, though they may want to enter It mere-ly to ask a question or to fetch something. Thepresence of the male hilrdrcser Is considered ofno consequence, upon tho theory, I suppose, that,llko the doctor, ho Is not a man. Of late yearsfemale hairdressers have also been Introducod,a having tho double advantage of answeringtho requirement of propriety and charging butone dollar Instead of two. There aro sumo

    hairdressers who charge even as low atwcnty-llv- c cents for overy day's dressing, andflftr rents for dinners or evening part lit.

    This cheop halrdrcsslng costs, however, verydear In the long run. It require a great deal offalsi) hair, and the Inexperienced band III use.Into the bargain, the natural hair, in the mostbarbarous manner. The oikIiiI.HIoim or crimpson the forehead, which are o Intensoly vulgarand which the mas of American ladles arc sofond of, Is the main clement of destruction. Theravsge has gone so farthnt false crimps have hadto be Introduced to protect the llitle hair that Isstill left on the forehead of some of the ladleswho Indulge In this practice. These false crimpsaro made ot thin, almost Imporceutlble hairlace, Implanted with crimped hair. The lacecosts about 30 cents an Inch tn France, and Issold, when linpl-nte- for t lo fA an Inch here.

    The excessive uso of false hair Is unotbsragent of destruction. The heavy load thus car-ried on tho heud stifles the roots of the naturalhah, prevents tho access of air to tt, and thusparalyzes lu growth. The sunn InOuonco Isexercised by the uso of night caps and nets.The hair should he left loose at night time oralmply twisted. U Is prettier and healthier. Thecap Is good only for eldorly womou having butlittle hair left and subjectod to rheutnatlcalheadache or to neuralgia.

    The Injury thus done to the natural hair Is allthe less purdonablo as the average Americanwoman Is not the most protusoly endowedwith It. Tho richest and mot beautiful headsare those ot tho Southern worucn-Gro- ok,Turkish, Spanish, Creole, and Italian. Nextcoins the French, tho Swedish, the ltuslan,aud the Danish. The North American womanstunds on the same footing as the English so furas quantity Is concorned, hut she cannot com-pete with tier IlrUlth slitar In matter of qualityuud shade. The richest blonde shades are to bofound In England, while Ireland supplies a J'tblack very nearly approaching that of the farSouth, In this country tho predominant colorIs an Indifferent brown-t- he cheapost In thomarket. Tho last stage In this gradation Is oc-cupied by tho German woman, who has usuallyvery little hair, and the little sho ha of It Is ofli.nl color and coarse quality. .The siilert.lt Jblonde and golden shade of the English womenhave been attributed by somebody to'.God's o

    tn glvo John Hull n compensation for hisneteraaelag tho sun.

    The human hair market Is supplied mainly byPrance, Sweden, and ltussla. Normandt. Ilrlt-tnn- r,

    and the Ativerjne are. however, tho pro-- tluces which furnish the largest and best slock

    of hair. Wherever a national heidscir mure orloss concealing the hulr Is worn, the it omen partwith their tri'sso vory rc.idllv. Germany, d,

    and tho Tyrol supply a considerableamount of hair, too, luit Its quality uud colorbring terv common, the price for It, and cunso-iiaeall-

    tho bidueemctit to part with It, Is nutvery great, Eiiglmd and America furnish verylittle h tlr, the only source ot obtaining It beingfrom poor factory ntul farm girls. Tho generalbelief that most of tlio hair Is obtained from ho.Pititl is erroneous. Tnohuirnt sick, and stillmore so of do.id person. Is lifeless, nnd cannot beworked properly. It breaks llko straw when Itconies Into tho hands of the dresser. Consequent-ly tho lidlc who purdiaso their tresses, crimps,chignons and the llko from first-cla- deders,mid pay a good price, may be sure llicy woir thehair of living, not of dead persons.

    I say persons, becausa overy article of ladles'head toilet Is mudu of an assortment of hairi' lining from manr different sources. I'liero arotresses for the fabrication of whleli perhaps uhundred heads havo supplied the material. Thenatural tress consist of hair of very variedshades and length. U'non It ha boon out offnnd cleaned. It undeigne n process of suiting,according to sinde, length, and thickness of t'hairs composing It, la this way ono naturaltros-- i Is broken up Into u number of smallbunches, nnil It I only of such carefully match- -eu uiinciios coming irom ti liferent ho.uls tl nitho false tress Is made. In this way the A' lU,.can belle wear upon her head u kind of '"thm d capillary exhibition In whichand nationalities may be reptcsen' ,p. , u ,' 'boui, when Inn moment of mr ..W.s.und Impresses It on tlr , 'T ' t"M " 'himself with the though' ' ic1l,,,'.ca ponMyembraced tho whole ,'

    I he hair market f" tul,l'll'1 "mu!l 1,1 11,0 'i ne..I.'.m iu tlio

    i"i bo nipp' itiirket of home Industrie used

    Una all ncd In olden days.Huyow uro tiavel-- .

    , . Jvjr the country wherever hum iti hair isI ' 'V ti be found. I'hey uro nailed inqi us, or

    C""'T., ,i,d .av peddlers or trlnk-- t- andf ill Hie sauio nine, llio ' 'in't-B"- '' .i.pt. 'i 'U sell tn r tre-se- s elihtr forcasn

    "r "' eveli ii''"' for "in.) iirtli lo uf the toilet, glvliit'n t.r re- - ti I'.itteradoii.tli'ortrlplo

    ,in l t.i il ing n pr '(1 The cri c of tintis tar I ii ic iy ui'' tr ityo, and ev ii

    o ue l .r ..I lnt n lullty. The aver

    age price, however, Is about a dollar and a quar-ts)'. Sometimes, when the hair Is particularlyfins end promises to Improve still, while Itosessor Is heavily pressed for money, the

    cutter buys It for future delivery In two or threeyears,

    Tho tricks to which this trails gives occasionnn the part of the cutters, and the painfuldramas that take place In connection with the noretslt) for the poor woman to part with ner bestattire, noed not be alludod to bore. The readercan easily enough Imagine them.

    As a rule, few women can sell more than oneor two tresses during their lifetime; butcaMsseem to be known where the hair wa crowing fastenough to enahlo Hum to sell four or Ore richtresses, and tho older they grew the more moneythey got for them, as the hair rose constantly Inprice, and as gray hair Is always much mors valu-able. Pure white hair, for Instance, (assorted,of course, for thero could never be found a nat-ural white tress,) twmtyelght Inches long,costs $1(0 per ounce wholesale, while at thehairdressers' shops It Is sold at fancy prices.There are gray tresses (much less costly than thowhite ones, slnco they consist of n mixture ofwhite and dark hair,) about three or four ouncesweight, which are sold at flvt and six hundredfranc in Franco, and at upward InNewYork and Ilostuu.

    The rough hair collected by the cutter passesInto the hands of the wholesale doalcr at n price,varying from 1 10 to (12 per pound. It Ishe that clean It and makes tho first sort-bi- g,

    based chiefly upon tho longth ofthe hair. The further sorting by shadeand quality rests with tho manufacturer,who I tn this Instatico tho halrd lesser. Apound of hair a yard longrosts In France, w hole-s-.l- r,

    about 100, while hair of the length of onlythirty Inches would nut fetch moro thin fnO.In the United States tho prlco Is much higherthnn that. Tho duty on hair Is twenty percent, on rough material, thirty per cunt, oucleaned and Sorted, and forty por cent, ontrcises or other manufactured articles. Anavcrokru tres of about four ounces In weightand thirty Inches In length costs In Paris about(20; In this country the prlco Is double andmore.

    Tho custom of using false hair Is by no meansn new one. Roman women used It, andwere particularly fond of tho golden hue Intowhich ladles so frequently dye tholr hairnon adats. It does not seem to have boon wellascertained whether thev dyo It In the samoway as tt Is ilono at present; but It I knownthat they were largo purchasers uf golden hairfrom German uud Gallic women : old songs andtabs of Ilrlttany, among other testimony,shows that women there havo been selling theirhair since limes Immemorial. Thl Iooks llkoanother proof that wc are In more respects thanone returning tn the tastes, habits, and prac-tices of cla'slcal antiquity, -

    It would seem also from the lat Tarls tsthat the anclont Roman trtfciitiim Is going

    to be the new fashion In hairdresslug. Thocelebrated M. Auguste Petit, of the Hue de laPali, has Just Introduced In Paris n patentslnglo hair not, which ho calls tho tnirhnrVn,on account of tho strength given to tho onohair of which tho net is made, Arachne, thedntishtor of Tlmon, King of Lydbi, nnd rival ntMinerva, was a great band at embroidery, andhad somo almot Imperceptible thread of

    strength to work with. Minerva gotJealous of her and transformed her Into asnider. So my lecturer says, at least. And It IIn honor of that Mis or Mr. Arachne that Mon-sieur Augusto Petit has named hi new inven-tion, Tho advantage ot the net Is that by woar-I-nt

    It a ladv ran not only dance or drlvo to nsummer ball In an open carriage, hut can almostunderiako to faco a hurrlcano without her chig-non I.a Vulllcro or Coiffure Montespan (newkinds of elaborate hairdresslug) being la tholeast disturbed.

    This net will probably preve to be somethingsimilar to what, accordl., lo Homer, Andro-mache used to wear, or what Is represented toadorn tho head of Dlano de Poitiers lu ono ofUmoslu's enamel works In the Musee duLouvre. This classical reticulum was givenup by the mcdlrcval ago, but resumed by theHenuttxinrr. Subsequently tt disappeared unaln,to be brought into fashion once more under thoSecond Empire. Mauy fair reader probablyhave themselves worn similar hair nets withinthe last twelve or thirteen years. They aregoing to wear them again, only tho A rucJiiiiViiseems to be a greatly Improved and refinedspecimen of that very samo Implement whichthey were accustomed to use.

    A COTTAUI. JIY Till: SKA,

    The Koine In n Itllllard ttoom Hint la lVleli.ed on n Hitek Oil Stony Creehi f'onn.

    Tiumulb Island, Aug. C If we wcro Inthe neighborhood or Union square and wantedto play billiards, we should walk upllroadway,tall buildings on either hand, meeting pedes-trians at every step, and rarrlages and stages rat-tling and banging up uud down the streot, turnthe corner at Fourteenth street, pass the UnionSquare Theatre, climb a flight of stairs, andstand In a brilliantly llgbtod room.

    Here, having smoked our evening pipes, wohaul tho small boat alongside the yacht, andpaddle off up tho watery street that divides thoIslands. In place of tho buildings thero are highrocks. The same star shine that light broad-wa-

    but the only nolso Is that made br the oarslu their rowlocks, and overy dip of thu bladesturns up molten silver enough to put to sliamuItlchirdsoii's to pot resumption.

    A turn around the corner of a rook bring usInto n narioner channel and tn sight nt lights mianother Island. Another turn and tho keelgrates on a bit of beach twenty feot long, an Ithe only une ou the Island, for all tho rest isrock bound. We haul tho boat up out of reachof the tide, climber over giant boulders, andstand tu front of tho billiard hall. It Is anno-stor- v

    frame building, with a liar ut one end andu billiard table at the other. The rltv folks musthave gone to another .1 tint or to bed. for ot thotito loungers one t'llks about thu milk ileld audUiu other ot tho fish crop uud of tho largo num-ber ot vl'ltors thai throng these uleasam islands,and a shaggt dog lie blinking ou tho fluur.Light I given by kcrosono lamps with llu

    and It Is good as far us It goes, Thotable Is lino when wo consider tho usual effectof salt air ou billiard tables. Wo play longenough to find out that It wo wanted to playpln-pn- wo should havo to visit a neighboring

    and borrow tho pins from u buttlingalley; then wo climb over tho buulders again,si.ovooff tho boat, and paddlo through potficlstillness lo u floating bed.

    Andrew Johnaou's Idle Insurance.Johnson's death will bo rcgrot-- tby ni.ne in re dr. pit ttun byl.ie InHiraiiCi tomp .u:re. lie ttas a belitver in lift lntu-ai.e- an i lliua-- t

    ainl lus faith hr la acta lo an extent tint la rare ini:el, rirn nossdste. rue ag jrrgair of itu. poiirlriml Ins I if a, is no leas Hum s3so,iai, U haitpv lielraran ttrll rtflord It aay no more auout thai llitle tale oljro.i on wiiUh tlir ut.l'rvaideLt Ion I.) ti e liaiuiuplcyof Ja) Cook's bank. -- C"! i!l"ii

    Insurance men hero say that the foregoing Isgrusslv exaggerated. Ono goutlciinii said l

    " Why, tho thing Is absurd on tlio face of It.Tocsrri policies aggregating ja'sVilO would

    an annual outlay ot (i;,oOU, that Is, If thoperson Insured took out his policies when howas 50 year of age. Hut for even addltlinalyearthcio would bu un addition;,, pieml uii.ux- -ekenVfS?Sohn,I'','.',l'tl-i'-l- r to suppose that

    J Mi." "" ent" u'u "''""''donsliMhi'i.' -- iiratico he did not tal.o out theV

    -- HI ut one time, but with considerable...orvnl between them, HI hlstoiy shows

    fittt lie wa not III n condition to enrrv a veryheavy Insurance much before, he was l,r. and'.lence the Inference I natural that his pollclemust havo been taken out boiweeu the ugo fsjanUOU. Another thing worth mentioning isUnit .Mr, Jolui-o- n wu a very prudent anil iocsteiilallous mail, who would never h ive had tnefully to insure lor a turn so lur beyond nlsiiicuns,"

    Wirrltnl tn l.uhe .llb'hlgniiGltVNli lUvr.N. Mich., Aug. T. The a. hnonei

    Itixv inqtc. Capt. y.iuiigktunr of Chicago. i'"l wiihlath, luipocr. n. plckiu, ki'rung aleak afirr liiiringMutkrgon, and ma Ic f ir Uiu pari. Juki at alio nciire I

    the hirliorrnti alien iie refused t "ln'i tin- nr till, andwm lull tu awing ul tl isret of llu; t, it e.. i Ii i w eu- -

    ii'i'hi. uf waier in lirr hold, and iiiocrewufniie men mailed to tne rigging. I my weienftiir being lu tlir ttatir if trlt lliri'.i Ii "Ur. I lu- kleti.ar l whs m U. ami I nil. omig-- i in.' this itcri!)'in. IU . I. a lal ll.) ti.J "tl. lot ti'k.el U il lulu losa.Hie t in. i ha. been hi won, a gale f ir tliu in imjijtour liuuie, but ruu ub ncd,

    aVNIlt'.AStX. IMrs. John C, nrcckcnrldgo Is going Q I

    move from Kentucky lo Arkansas. ISomebody Is hiding lu the woods near I

    Natnua, N. II., sndihootlng al dots tin vrniure tear 1A person looking nt some skeletons' Wsikrd a ynnng doctor preaent where ho got ttiera la

    replied, " We raised them."Seventeen beam have been klllsd In

    Mittawstnkcag, Maine, thl season, Tin state rij,fire dollars for eseli capture.

    Tlio accusation mndo by Mis AlloaSfslnst t!ie Itsv. llr. Porter, et Weybrldge, Vermoot,Is under Inveitlgtllon br the church.

    Ono of tho ludy teachers in a Detroitschool Is named Mecca, but stie has plurim who or.ships st her ilirloe, sod Is presently eipected to Metechange ber mine. ,

    Tho University of Copenhagen nowadmit woaven sludcuu the lauie a uion.uulj lliey can'tatudy theology or pass csaminstlons lust would sstborIxe them lo preach.

    MlssMolllo Allen of Lnkcport, fnl.,haagain received ftMaV) from lite Buriervlrori of Lakecotinlf on aTount of xitilrrel till , the work of tier owerifle In less than two weeks.

    The gambler of lllnncn City, Texas,have addrrese t a clrcnlar to Iho f raterntly ta otherPisces, warning them agalnit " Arkanan Inn," uu,pert al canli who pretend to ho a grenhorn,

    An Ohio nimhst was asked If he wajgoing lo hear Ham (Jsrr. " Wall, I rather think not,'was the reply i " of tlic two, you m iy an mil ripect mtto go to a akuak's funeral and klas the corpse "

    I,aw-iibldli- ig liquor sellers lu thotulgh.borhoodct City Hall squiro complain of the piriiaiitrof tho police In allowing the TYitiMnt's rum ihop to (aopen ou Buodty, when all rcapcclable bars are closed.

    A certain minstrel manager advertisesIn one of the sporting pipers for u Irnor afngera"whone vocal shilltlra sre , anil who knowshow rk up a laugh when tbe cud uiaa Is getting tta Joke." t

    "As to being conflicted with the gout,"satl Mrs. Partington, " high tiring don't bring II ou, 11Is tnculicteut lu somo families, ami la handed down fromfstber tu son. Mr, llsmmer, poor soul, who has betaso long III with It, disinherited It from hla wlle'a fraud,mother."

    A wlfu who had been lecturing lacrhuiband for coming homo Intoxicated, beciius Is.censed st hla Indifference, and rxclalmrd, "Uti, that Lcould wring tears ot anguish from your eves I" Towhich the hardened wrotca hlccuughe 1, " Tin 'Una 'tno uic, old wouiin, to f )r witer here "

    llyron, n villagoon Hock Itlver, Illinois,hss al ats been lentarkablc for a rigid exclusion ot theliquor trslbc. A Ucrman, recently, tried the eipeiumoot of upentn a latter beer saloon there. H remalaedopen one dav . and tlic same nlgbta party of clllienatlcurojel the stock, smtsacd a billiard tabic, salscared lbs proprietor out ot town. ,

    There la n remarkublo cat living IrfWhltnejville, Coun., near Lake Whitney. Ills seveaor eight years of gc, and rues a Billing for lla mtHi,It will aland In water up lolia thlgaa and aclis emailfish and eels, Some of the latter have been twentyInches long. The greatest achtvetnent of this cat wasthe capture, recently, of a fish weighing three pounds.Thesnttnsl cornered tbe flau la shallow water aud latapushed II ailmrr.

    The will nnd codicil of Thomas Kellywere admitted tu ,.r0bto In Knglan.1 Ike other day. Tl.bequest lo tlio codicil was expressed In rhyme, and IkInstrument run I

    I, harlna- - neither kith nor kin,ltetitieaih all I've nam'd hercmTo llarriel, my iirarral wife.To have and bold aa hrra fur life.While in gum! health and aouud lu mindTula codicil I've uudirsigncd.

    Ills wife and daughter, lu whoso favor the will softcodicil were made, nd the exocutora n tied In the will,predrcenirtl him, and he Icit no known relations.

    Iu spite of the frequent expressions otdisapproval on the part ut the Uoiiian rsihohc clcrry-me-n,

    the practice of waking the dead aim prevails to a,very great exteut In the north of England. At nines,head, ou July So, a wake took place, at which al. present'hecamu lutuxicated i aud In lamenting llio loss of tUsuhjrit uf thr ts ake, au ul 1 wumin lot fall a csudle Inlothe coffin. Thr shroud and elotbre initsntty csught firsand hlised up, and as all were Incapable of eatlnsrilsh-In-

    the nimei.tbey continued until a police oRlrer,hourlugthenoike aud coafuslou, wuut and cillugulsaeithem.

    At llanbury, In Knglnnd, the othernight, there was a great detcuaiirition sgiuut theCompulsory Vacctnatlou act, tbo occasion being the re-lease from Northampton prison ot a nnn who kafferedfourteen data' linprikimmr nt rather h ,vo hi, skiuvacrlnatrd. He was met at the rtilwsy station rj; agreat nuuit.ii'r of pcraoui,a ime of whom csrrietl b lonersdenouncing tho Vacclnslloa set, and bauila of marieplayed. Hpicruea cr maSc by the Iter lionsttotheryand nthers connrcted with thr National AoihVscelnaiior League. While, the nun, recnteda purse of gald, auJ lesututlons were puicd aikloilthe set.

    During the recent epidemic of measlesIn the Ftejec Iilsnds tne natives brrame luttioeawith the terrible Idea that now Hie U.lo3i tEnilliapeople) tisd become poairssrd of their laod. they

    rid of them. In many Instances II wa Irapossible to dlipel the Idea that the King bid Deen tskeato Sydney fur the purpose of communicating to tlm afalsi polii a, with which ullerlr to Utktr y all l.lt feo.pie. Sick men and wouisa would look yun fairly la tbeface, as though convinced uf their loeiorable tale, asxsay " I am golna. to dir." sud st once srtlle down lo

    death. To tell a r't'ejecin ho looked kick wain Vcerlalu ilttalruclluu lo l.lin, In mauy hjalauic), uabula 7let tbrmxh hla heart would be.

    It U well known that lu tho compart-ment atylo of rains ay earriagra utel lu KugUnd, msckcomfort depends upon aelcctlug one's travelling tcrapsnlons. Various devices sru resorted tu lo prvrtsllatrudrri, aud where a party of tourlitl can securesbaby lor company, they aro generally avoided, andhave the compartment to theinaelves. Hence tbe s

    advertisement tn a I.ondou paper of"AttTtllCtAt lltUIES roa TRAVktLMS."

    The I aria uf prleis ta as follows i"lommon travelling Infauls, ileldlng Intcnnillrti

    rrlea et fear, and capable, ot bciug put into lie

    " r.i'cuni class, erring uot too loudly, but latnentAtlyand inkiiiipurrbiv-2- ii klntitngs.

    Thlrtl clssa, full kqiullers, wltli s very pi. r. lug sodaggravarlng voice of Itroociarra- - Ki.

    I'hr atone arrainrnl as prumpl rritealer X.'ili." 11 I Ikkr, urn l,Ullll)',CaiMuliol c JUUUUi 1 JOklS

    Ing i i 'A celebrity of tho pilloys, M.irtui Folv

    reuiolle. died remutly tu France, lie Ion mrtaoeslover lAJO.Otk) trancs. On June 1:1, 1U. I ulsaeuwlle wucondemned lo tint Killers for life, foriuviu assiasslisted priest, thr AhM llalins, vvh.ini If in I believe!tobctoo Intimate with his wife. Ilettia ..ui lotasgslleja at Ilrckt, but lut ing had some e litem ju.

    wsa soou f ouml to be imite tisef ii lu iu cliulersepldemle of 1KI J he showed such rare emir u and self.forgrttulneas thit efforts sure sfteraarl insiriooo,lulu acoaiuiulalloa of Ids seatence. llu Cmpi "'polwuIII. p.irtl.uina ht.li In ISW. lla s.ai i . ivrsis,ami, hfonnilm a pay siclart there, aimsi" I tpi U'Sfur'tune. Tour yesrs ago he return d n frm anitfitlcdln llio tillagu ot Yirres. lie u.r t u a. Of."lacl that lie hid In tho gilleva, aul .in I to inan old patihed pair of trousers he its I irn i Bnsillu died evaelly t hlrlfturee jeara loatlu alnrllldate uf hla cou Icmntllou

    A very sluing" lawsuit, which. Indei'l. (serms almost liirrrdihle at the pren'iii dir in la'elf I

    created a great icuistloa at Surr'iiieig Uir dJ eru't jto tp of the rraucolllsn proviuers uf Itivart As UitiS jprotlnces unco belongrd to l'rusaiv, c. " I'rrus.isehrs fl.ainlrecbl," ir.)'iiiilgiitrd by 1'r.Mieriek II. u slill Isfull force there, an I thus a Nurenb-r- g c in hat tut Isdecide lu all earnest whether a if.' I' in ft rid Colegally pren tiled from contain. iuni I. n- II M 'plebeisn match wllh n miller's dsii.'h" ' llie f'Mheld of one of Hie CnlCil fm1llk uf Hie ' irtirv.t"disgusted r, mi younger bnttlsr's "gr 'had b:oiivhl an an lun against tliu luer wi i..ni'solcle parsgraph ot the " l'reukicli. a Lsuditt"qnoled b) him HI favor of hu dcms'i I Hi"should put a vet i upon tho intnuli daabrsayk, H.nna lite hunur of his fnu'y '"

    ur,,("

    llio Hat art in i uiatliution hating fur uprd (cenluri reeoguied Hie equality ul ml 1"'

    "w

    law, he was .prrdilv lion siilie.1 bui I"' ' " ""bring tho str.nr before llu High euurl l Huuu ''

    O llinMlilrrf TitvaiM' vi'h Us tilth 'r 'n't'"'Ail' ti hur.ili i i ..alil'ifk ul in " '" "

    Wli..rl i " .1 "I t'U'i'S are u ' "Ant' i nir"uuis llie dr .lieu of aluri ' "

    run "in maid " wife or u nAim gam. ui' "'I uiuiit't tun horro i;

    lluie. 'i i. a t .t lusi. o t lo kiuv I i .' , i0ira.Wliust mi" oi noe fortune I m'

    I'hr light of ti e moiiii on llu" water d I" '' Ihe vlli". ui Hi" liorlleo tangled an I

    Noluiigirali a mi lus a'n or eii l , I.AlulJ.il sell 1.111 Ut slii lo'- - r''; ' tCV t

    Yuu miderst uiifilseurald. i e r u :

    Yttu'wliow Hi tt I'.'le-tin- .' li mi le n ;y "' , r,It Is uolliimi I uiu mil ) "i I'l'lg ' to .uUfOtt

    litl nun it l k.ii.ttanek snal WU 'Itesri.

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    lul. ii tv,, , , . i I tt"". t (Hi IM- - ' , " .

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