TIUU OHIAHA DAILY BEE : FKIDAY , JULY ao ; 1888 , THE DAILY BEE. I'UliMBIlKD kVKUV MO1UNINO. TEUMS OK SUlf-OHIITIOX. Dnlly ( MortilnK Killtiou ) Including Sunday llrK , Ono Year . Jl" Of ) 1'or HlxMontlm. . t , ( J'nrTlirea ; Mouths . , " WJ 'Jliu Umnlin Sumtuy IlKH , malted tunny ml- arcs * . One Year . 203 OM.tll.\ < > l'KICF.No3. \NtiniGFAIlSXM.STHKCT. . Nr.vr YOHK UkfiCK , Uoou H ANiilSTiiiiursis IIUIMIl.MU. XX'ACIIIMITON OFUCK. NO. 5IJ COItHKdI'ONUENCB. . , . . All commuuicntlons rt'latliiK to ucivs nnd i-a | torlal nmttcrMiutihl bondilrfi < c < l to thu Klirroit , , . , , All ImilUUNS loiters nnd remittances should lie nddreiseil to Tim MKK I'IIIII.ISIIINU COMPANY , < ) MUA. . DrultH , rhfcka and puttolllte orders tel l > e mndo p.iynblo to the order of thu company. The Bcc Pull isWDgCoipanx , Proprietors , E. UOHEWATEU , Editor. _ xi 1 10 iui ; : . Rvorn Statement orClrculntlim. ftnte of Nebraska , I , Couuty of Douglas , | B' ° ' Oeo. II. Tr.schutlc , secretary of The lice Tub- llffilim company , does solemnly swear that the actuarclrcumtlon of the Dally llee for the xvoek udltif ? July 7 , 18 * $ . waa us to Hews * Saturday , Juue3U ! " ' ! " ' ) ! , Hutiday , July 1 18- ( ] Monday. July ! i IVM Tuesday , July ! 1 JMr. Wednesday , .mly 1 J'MWI ' 'Hiursday , July r > g1 * ' Vrlday , July ' ' . - ATera8C aKo/nLTZScuiiUhS01 Fvorn to before mo and subscribed lu my presence this 7th day of July , A. 1) . . 1IW. N. 1' . Kiiu ; Notary I'uullc. Btnto of Nebraska , i I8 > s > Comity of Douglas , Oeoi o II. T7.sihuck , beliif ? first duly sworn , Arpobus ud says Hint ho Is scorelary of The llee I * I'tiblliihlni' company , Hint the actual average fe dally circulation of the Dully Hee for the month of July. IbS" , xvas 14.1MJ copies ; for AiiKint , 1887 , 14,151 copies ; for September , 1M7 , 144 : ! ( copies ; for Ocloler , IW , ll.iCCtcopies ; for Novemlxr , U7 , 10 , 0 copies ; for December , IW , irWI copies ; for Jamiorx' . 1 88 , IB/JlW cop ies ; for February , Its1 , IfuOSiS copies ; forMui-ch , K 10.CIU copies ; for April , 1N-H , 18,711 coliItM. ' .May , IbXP , 1 , I81 copies ; for Juno , It * * , I'J.-MI ' OKO. II. TXSnitTCK. 8x\orn to bcforo me ami siibHcrlbed lu my presence this ixitli day of June , A. D. 1W.H. N. 1' . PHI I. Notary IMhlle. YKSTKUDAYtho price of hogs reached the highest figure of the season S-5.95. GKNKIIAL HAUUIHOX is in luck. Al ready ono hundred and forty-four babies have been named Bon Harrison , and the campaign IB not half over. OMAHA should make it a point to maintain at. leant ono great central at traction in the summer season and onu in mid-xvintcr. There ia both xx'isdom and profit in it. WITH the steady hand of Chairman Quay , of the republican national commit tee at the throttle , the "limited" carry ing Harrison and Morton xvill reach Washington on time. Tin : high school grounds are noxv lighted by electricity. A subscriber sug gests that the cable company could make a few nicklos by giving a series of sundown open air concorls there. Tim decision of Judge Couch , ol Iowa , that ginger ale falls under the ban of the prohibition laxv , xvill in all probability increase the consumption ol "cold tea" in the proscribed districts. TUB noxv system of street sxveoping in- ppcction seems to bo xvorking bettoi than the old way. The city cngineoi will please keep his xveathor-oyo open , hoxx-evor. That is the only xvay lo in- buro clean streets. THIS is nn ago xvhen people seek fet something noxv and novel. All the Omaha fair projectors xvill have to do is to meet that demand , and people xvill rush into our gates as they did into the ark. JOHN C. NKXY of Indiana , xvho ac ably championed the cause of Mr. Harrison risen , has been dubbed Tippeca Noxv. That just suits him and ho is striking some vigorous bloxvs in his paper for the republican ticket this fall. Tint farmers of Crnxvford county , Illi nois , have determined not to raise any wheat , barley or rye for the next throe years in an effort to exterminate the chinch bug. This is a boycott drix'cn ns it were , into tlio ground. "IN the matter campaign clothes , ' Bays a loading democratic newspaper of Noxv York , "wo can say xvith equal con- Mldcnco that the democratic suit is graj in color. " Gray gray xvasn't thai the color the democrats inarched ii : during their four years' campaign , txx'onty-llvo years ago V AT the close of the last state legisla ture Tin : llKU published the names o those illustrious men xvho comprised n galaxy of treacherous boodlors and dis ciples of Ananias. The goats xvore cast out from among the sheep foi future reference. The time is ubou ripe for a foxv pointed observations. L indignantly refuses to clcai himself before the special commissioi appointed by the tories of the charge : uiado agaiiiHt him by thoLoi don 'fintcs Although Pnrnoll himself had asked foi the opportunity , ho does not propose t < appear before a packed and biased jur ; of his enemies. It xvas a clover scheme but the tories xvill have to bait thoii trail with another kind of choose before they can hope to catch the Irish loader TUB bill passed by the senate placinj General Fremont on the retired lis with the rank of major general is i measure xvhioh the people of the xves can heartily approve. The service which General Fremont rendered to tic union us a gnllunt soldier and darlni explorer can never be repaid. It i only mi act of justice to recognize ii BOjno xvay the public services of thoyroa 'imthtlndor. " TlIK Indiana republican stuto commit teq has very properly taken charge o the matter uf fixing the time nnd pine nt xvhich General IJurrifcon will roco'ivi clubs and de-legations. This is noccs enry lu order to give the cnndldat needed relief from the rather inconsiderate orate xvay In xvhieh visitors croxvd ii upon him at nil hours , as xvell as to al loxv him time for giving attention t some other matters besides that of re colving these visitors. The state com mlttoo xvill do. wisely to arrange th sohedulo so that General Harrison cm obtain a required rest and bo * onablei to get n ful.l night's sloup at least thrc times a week. The "Q" Dynamite Cit- > . The development on Wednesday in the invcBtigalion of the alleged dyna mite plot ttgaiivst the Burlington road go far to justify till that Tills UKU has heretofore said regarding this matter , and especially its suggestion that the public should not hastily form it judg ment unfavorable to the accused on the presentations of the prosecution , but wait until both sides xvero fully heard. It xvas shoxvn on Wednesday that ono of the prisoners , Wilt-on , is not , as had been reported , u member of the LJrothor- hood of Locomotive Engineers , but a full-Hedged Plnkcrton detective. This is clearly ono point gained for the brotherhood , but this is not all. This man Wilson xvas a hire ling xvho had u xvoll'doilnod xvork to perform , obviously that of making a case of conspiracy against members of the brotherhood. This xvas to bo done , it is fair to assume , at all hazards , and as a xvell-trainod detective , especially selected for peculiar lituess In xvoll-un- derstood respects , Wilson xvould not scruple at anything necessary to ap prove himself xvorthy of the trust con fided to him and to earn the probably generous roxvard of success. Ho ad hered to his task faithfully , but the dis closure of his true character xvill of necessity militate against the force of his testimony xvith all fair-minded people , xvhilo it in jures the cause of the prosecution in showing that it has not bcon clearopen and straight-forxvttrd in its proceeding. Of course it was known to the prosecu tion that Wilson xvas simply a doled ! vo , yet It permitted him to appear in the character ot a member of the brother hood , thus unjustly and unwarrantably casting a stigma upon that organiza tion. If it could Imvo had its choice in the matter the prosecution xx'oulddoubt- lesH have adhered to this policy to the end. As to Informer Dowlos lie is a bolf-coafesocd falsilier , and nothing he has said or shall hereafter say should receive any credence. Whatever may bo the outcome of this investigation , it is evident that the attempt to involve the brotherhood of engineers as an organi sation has already failed. There is no reason from xvhat lias thus far appeared that the order should suffer in tlio slightest degree in the respect of fair- minded people. Speaking through itw highest ollicials the organization has declared as strongly as the circum stances render necessary , that it is op- po = ed to all forms of huvlcf-sness , and that if any of its members are proved to bo guilty of unlawful conduct it xvill deal xvith them to the extent of its au thority. More than this no reasonable man xxill expect of it. Meantime it xvill not hesitate to use all -propei means to protect the innocent , and it will bo sustained by intelligent and unprejudiced public judgment in doing this. There is still ground for the opinion that this alleged plot xvill bo shown to bo more of a detective than a dynamite conspiracy. Precept null Practice. The fourth report of the civil service commission presents some facts of inter est regarding the progress of reform in the service , and also submits several recommendations for HSJ extension xx'hich it is to bo expected will have the full approval of reformers , While not claiming that all has boon accomplished under the laxv that its moro sanguine friends expected , the roportstates that "in the results of its execution is shoxvn the wisdom of the principle of dix-orcing the subordinate olllcors of the govern ment from politics and elections , and making continuance in oflice dependent not upon party service , but upon merit and good behavior. " In the professed vioxv of the commission the laxv has in this respect produced sur prising results. This is said in face of the fact that subordinate otlicers of the government have been conspicuously active in every democratic caucus and convention of the present year , and xvorc on hand in formidable force at St. Louis as an out side inllucnce to asoist the administra tion managers in carrying out the pro gramme arranged at Washington. It is said in face of the further fact thai the senate committee to investi gate the civil service has found a number of instances of removals from ollico in xvhioh the question ol party service undoubtedly xvas consid ered. In revioxving , not long ago , the course of civil service reform during the past year the president of the national league said that the anticipation re specting the progress of reform undoi the present administration "has been largely disappointed , " and broadly intimalod that the temptation of a second end term had induced the president tc abate that interest in the reform of the civil service xvhich ho had so strongly profos&cd at the out&ot of his adminis tration. Referring to a puVllo denial by a member of the cabinet that reform had boon abandoned by the administration , and his assertion that the laxv has boon rigidly enforced , Mr. Curtis frankly remarked that "if the constitution had made the prottlduut ineligible for re-election there xx'ould Imvo been no reason for the assertion that reform had been aban doned , the application of the law \\-ould have been much moro xviduly extended , and its spirit would Imvo been so gener ally observed thai no successor of the provident xvould have dared to return tc the old abuse , and the president him self xvould have happily identified hia mime xvith ono of thu moat benellconl political reforms in our annuls. " liut Mr. Cleveland can enjoy no such dis tinction , and on the contrary is shoxvn by those xvho xvould gladly conceal his shortcomings to have largely failed in practice to carry out his precepts , under the inlluonco ehioll } of the allurement of u second term. It xvas hardly possible for the admin istration to have done lcs < ; than it has in observing the civil service laxv , anil it has absolutely no claim to credit foi xvhat has boon done under the hnv. II is noxv putting forth a little extra efforl to make it appear to the mugxvump re formers that it has resumed interest in reform , bul il is merely a campaign ex pedient. The fooling of the democratic party regarding civil service rofortii wtw cU'lonccd in Iho omission from the national platform of any approx-al of the reform , or of Uny promise or pledge committing the party to Its future support. It Is a ixjlicy hostile to democratic traditions , and it would not bo maintained a day If the democracy was in full control of the government. Mr. Cleveland determined some time ago not to bo any longer at war with the general sentiment of his party on this question. A. Free Kridgc. Wore the now bridge made free of toll , the rich products of Pottawattamle county would How into our gates , cre ating a better market than is now en joyed across the river , and lessoning prices on domestic fruits and garden truck in Omaha. In many other lines of trade the two communities xvould greatly profit by a perfect commercial union. With quick transit between the two cities many business men in Omaha xvould much prefer a residence in Council Bluffs , for no other reason tliuu that which loads them to build palatial homos in our suburbs , away from the heal and dust and noise of a bustling city.Those Those who look forward to the day whoa Omaha and Council I31utrs shall bo merged into ono great business com munity , can realize their hopes in no surer way than by advocating a free bridge between the two prosperous cities. Money \vill secure it. Tun democratic candidate for vice president has a very extended public record , and it may take the greater part of the campaign to look up and expose its faulty features , but lot no democrat doubt that such are to bo found in suf ficient number to make the xvork of ex planation and defense a very serious task. The fact that the "Old Roman' xvas the author of the resolution in the national democratic platform of ISOI , which declared the war a failure , is no ! denied , and it is important to romeinbei that Mr. Thurman was not at that vital period in tlio rebellion a supporter ol the union cause. The declaration oi the democratic convention of that yeai gave more aid and comfort to tin confederate cause than any other ex pression of the democracy during the \var , and was really worth more to tin enemy than would liavo been several victories in the field. It xvas the most elTcctivo attack on tlio union cause Iron the rear that could have been planned and it is xvoll remembered lioxv cheer tully it was received by tlio friends 01 the confederacy everywhere. The pa triotism of the north rejected it , however - over , as false and cowardly , and over whelmingly repudiated the party thai adopted it. If Mr. Thurman and his party could have controlled the cour&c of alTairs then ho would not now bo tin candidate for vice president of an undi vided country. SOUTH OMAHA can fairly lay claim tc the name of magic city. The xvonder- ful groxvth of its building operations foi 1SS7 , and especially for the first &b months of the current year , can not be equalled by any city of its size in tlu country. Cottages and dxvollings spriujj up as if at the touch of a magician' ! wand and business blocks seem , like Jonah's gourd , to spread themselves it a single night. The various largo pack ing companies arc extending thcii plants , and before the year is over thoj xvill have almost doubled their capac ity for handling beef and pork This is clearly indicated by the oilicia reports sent out from Chicago , Kansas City and Omaha. South Omaha ii credited with a gain of 60,000 xvhik the other named cities show a decrease crease in the number of hogs packet as compared xvUh the returns o a year ago. The very fact tha since January 1 , 1S8S , nearly $000,001 have been spent in the erection of per uianoat improvements is a snlllcien index of the prosperity and desirability of South Omaha as a city for the invest niont of capital. Tim imposing mooting botxx'cen Alexander andor and William at St. Petersburg ii not likely to have any political sigmfi canco. Bismarck has not accompamei the young German emperor on his visit and it xvould not bo diplomacy for Wil liam to enter into any serious ncgotia tions xvith the czar xvithout the pros oaco of the old chancellor , It will however , bo a great social ovent. Rus sin , so to speak , xvill lay herself out t < entertain her royal visitor in mugnifi cent style. The barbaric splendor o the Russian court will be displayed before fore the Germans xvith all the spectacu lav accessories. BKLYA Locuxx'oou confesses that sh < has celebrated fifty-four Novembers and an authority assorts that a grea many more xvill frost her head before she gets near the presidency. The KIUIXV Nolliluun. \ \ ' < iihliHtnn Ci fife. A convention of the American party xvil bo hold la Washington in August. W < Knoxv Nothing about it. Some Other Day. Clilcauo Tribune , Wo congratulate Cliauucoy Dcpoxr on bii snfo arrival on tlia other shlo of tlio inulu , He xvho resigns nnd Halls axvay , Muy live to run seine other day. One Point ol' Difference. Gtiilic-Demociat , General Harrison tins boon making speeches every iluy smco ho xvas nominated , and IK lias not yet drawn a single fact or suggcstloi from the cyclopedia. This is only ouu of ttii many ways , however , in wlucli ho differ : froia Mr , Cluvolaml. Us Proper Place .1 melted. In the Kclqn Musco's Chamber of Horrors , Noxv York , tborois n sat of tableaux illus trating tlio story of a crime murder , arrest conviction rim } execution. In tlio lust scene the criminal belli ; , ' led to the scaffold has tlu noxv fuinoil biimliiua xvrapped carefully iirounil bis nock. 1'rotoctiMl Out ( > r KUsleuco. I'htlcuMvhtit aVIftfrrijih , It xvill bo tlmo enough to talk about sub eIdles , or even about Increasing the compeii hiitioii of steamship companies for mail c.ir rmgo in tho. scumhiuly innocent xx-uy pro jioicd by Mr. Hiiigliiuu , xvhoii the laws whicl have protected the American transluutU Mourners practically out of existence and Imvo contributed ouo American Hug to blue water xvburo there ought to bo 100 nro re- po.ilfd or amended , BO that American ship- exviicrs xvill Imvo a fulr chance. The Democrat Hat. A conwpomlout of a Uaurbon exchange tuipiiros whether the democratic- hat of this suasou should bo hunt ono xvitli 11 dark b.ind or a dark ono with a lliht baud. It ought to bo a hat with an clastic baud , cap.x- bio of expanding tiller a democratic meeting mid of shrinking to its ordinary dimensions when the head sliHiiks , Not Altogether Happy. fVjrildini Ortoimtan , For Its oxvii part tlio Oregon Ian I * free to soy there are snx'oral parts of the protective system It would llko to sou given up bo fore tlio taxes on liquor * ntid tobacco are repealed. For example , It would like to sec sugar nnd rice mid food products gouorally put on the free list , but this the democracy xvill never nlloxv , bocauao they xx'aut to continue pro tection to the states that furnish straight democratic majorities manufactured to ordur. i Own Country. Htntrlcc Dfnincrat. While loxva , Dakota , Minnesota nnd Wy oming tire being devastated by cyclones , No- braslta , and especially Oiigo county , is indulging in balmy skies and glorious weather. As noon us it gets it little too xvarm for comfort , refreshing shoxvors loom up nil nrnuntl us and happiness reigns su- promo. The quiHtion noxv agitating our farmers Is xvhether lo lay in extensive lad ders lo gather the corn oren or tlo the tops doxvu to kuep the tassels from brushing the dust oft tlio clouds. When People are Dry. Rock and rye In July Should by topers bo passed by. When It's ninety in the shade They xvill llnd that lemonade Uleurs the e.xe. Mukes them spry , Quenching thirst \yhou they are dry. STATIC JOTTINGS. Norfolk lox-ora oC snort hox-o organized a base ball association. York expects to have a Y. M. 0. A. organ ization in the near future. The Itcd Willow county republican conven tion meets at Imlumola August-I. CiTho Webster county republican conx'cn- lion bus bcon called to meet at Red Cloud August 1& . The receipts of the York postoulce this year will entitle it to be raised from third to second ulasrt. The fifteen Ivnights Templar living in Nor folk have petitioned for a dispensation to organirc n counmindery. Hall county claims there is less litipation in her borders in proportion to the population than in any other county in thu state. Mltidcu will soon bo connected by tele phones with Haitwcll , Normun , Kceiic , Lowell , Holdrcgo and all the little towns uioiind. Fruit trees in the vicinity of North ISoiid are dying in piv.nt numbers. Tlio apple trees begin blighting at the ends of the limbs and keep on dying doxvn to the roots. Hex- . Father Simeon , of thoUatholicchurch of Hastings , hus iciigned his pastorate , ami preached his farcxvell sermon lust Sunday. He has been pastor of this church seven years. Fred Lutlmn.station agent atPlattsmouth , played the role of peacemaker betxveon two lighting dogs and noxv canies hts lug m a sling as the results of tlio bites of the angry brutes. Dr. A. C. Smith , of Silver Creek , a prom inent cili/en and veteran of the xvar , died on Alomlaytho Kith nist , aged forty four years. The funeral sorx-iios xvuro conducted by tlio Grand Army on'Tucsda.v afternoon. Thomas II. Douglas and Mattie E. Johnson - son , of Graham , Tex. , found out they loved ono another xvhile making an overland drive to Nebraska , and upon icaching IJed Cloud Wednesday xveio made one by Hex' . Mr. Sxvccz.v. They then continued their Journey in double harness. loxva. West Liberty is reported to have n case ol small pox. Andrew G. Uiggs , charged with horse stealing , stole out of jail at Gleaxx-ood ami cannot bo found. A lot of stamps and a $10 bill rewarded the burglars xvho broke into the Lucas postoftlce last xveek. An insurance accnt named A. W. Seymour has been arrested at Altu xvith forty charges of forgery hanging over his head. What Tipton wanted to bo an artesian xx'cll only prox'es to bo a hole m the ground 2,700 feet deep , xvhieh cost $5,000 , Governor Lurrabco has issued a proclama tion offering a reward of SoOO for the appre hension anil conviction of the murderer or murderers of Alice Kelly , at Ottumxva. Perry Summers , a farmer near Fail-field , and Hugh Copeland , an employe at thu guard lock of the government canal eight mllus south of Keokuk , xx'cro killed by light ning Sunday. The case of the Turnoy box- , who wus so unjustly sent to the state prison txx-o ycurs ago from Jackson county , is again coming to tuo front , and the flagrant xvroug demand ing to bo righted. For the past ten years the oxvnor of a Hour- lug mill at Dubuquu 1ms hud a sign on his lire proof safe reading : "No money here. Please call at the liouso. , " It xx-as intended for burglars , nnd the other night ono called at the house and secured $1,870. Within the past four or live days a ncxvnnil peculiar disease has appeared among the cat tle of Washington township in the vicinity of Duucombc , that has already c iucd the death of ox'er tweaty-nvo head of cattlu. The dis ease appeared very suddenly in different drox'us of cattle , ami rapidly spread until entire - tire droves are noxv affected. Thu approach of the disease is marked \-omitiiig and loss of appetite , and generally xvithia txx'outy- four hours death reiults , Only txvo or three have recovered after being attacked by the mysterious disease. _ Ncarly : iOUO ( ( > O Souls. 'J'lie Kimch. Troxv'a city directory for 1883 esti mates the population of New York city at 1,070,110. This is according to the Panic authority , 100,001) ) more souls than this contained a year ago.Vhon Brooklyn's thrqe-fluartors of a million are added and a.Ji\\r \ allowance is made for the population of suburban New York" in Winoluistor county and Nexv .lernoy , it will be found that the metropolitan - politan district cbntains a population but a little short of ! i,000,0l)0 ) souls. It is estimated that the day population of New York city exceedsby 100,000 that to which it affords sleeping room , and it is perhaps as good an illustration as could 1)0 had of the enormous aggregate of people to xvhoin tlio city is thu centre of business and the source of livlihood. Wlnu-t'uno Conic * Illuli. f 10 per daj lor ouo year $ . ' 1,050 $ Jor U per year for fourteen yours 51,100 , Fourteen years ago , saya the Noxv York Herald , the then secretary of the navy Bent the double tin-rotted monitor Terror to Cramps'shipyard for estimate for repairs that xvould make her seaxvorthy , but the price xvas more than congro&s thought it advisable to pay , so the vo& > ol xvas left at Crampat an expense of $10 per day for xvharfuge. Rattier than have the Terror entirely taken xvith the crampsSecretari Whit ney somu nfonths ago had her hauled axvay to League Island navy yard and began preparing her for removal to New Yoric navy yard. In n foxvdnys she xvill bo ready for her voyage and xvill bo towed around by two government tugs. When she rcacnc-j Noxv York she xvill be fitted up xvilh noxv decks , steer ing apparatus , furnlturo , etc , , xnd xvill bo taken to Boston tor other noces-iai'ios and ammunition. It may bo recalled that the Terror xyill carry four fifteen-inch guns. FROM A FRENCH STAND POINT , A Parisian Journalist's Itoaumo of the Irish Question. EVILS OF EXCESSIVE POPULATION The Abolition of Fnrtti llent Would Only Partially Ilcmcty | the Trouble AVIioitiHalc I tun Her Bulvntlon. The 1'ovcrljr of Irolnnrt. Translated from nu ni-ticlo In the Paris Revue dos Uoux Monties : In n population of ; i.KKIJOO ( ) there uro 1100,000 landlords , of whom 170,000 go to Eng- laml , 110,000 to Iroliuid and 10,000 to Scotland. In other terms , one Knglish landholder to twenty-six householders , while In the United States' ' there counts one to ex cry three , mid in Franco one to every two. In Ireland the dispro portion in yet greater ; one to every fiftv-two ; while the soil is poor and the population donfor 160 to the square mile. There Is a limit in everything. No country exclusively agricultural as is the case with Ireland , deprived % of manufactories and machine shops can support a population of over one hun dred inhabitants to the .square mile. Therein lies the whole Irish problem. Spain , Portugal and Hungary are , in Europe , the three countries which , like Ireland , depend chielly upon their field products ; yet their other sources of rov- cnuo exceed hers , while the proportion to the square mile is hut eighty-six in habitants in Spain , 120 in Portugal , and 128 in Hungary. If in Franco it reaches ISO , at the same time showing an average pros perity greater than elsewhere , one mubt attribute it to the fact that France post-esses far superior resources , largo machine shops , numerous manufactories and an accumulated capital invested abroad ; and the one-half of her popula tion derives from these various sources an income independent of that xvhioli the land produces. If in England , the density of the population , which was " > 0 to'tho square mile in 1881 , had risen to 100 in 1871 , and is now 450 , thus at taining a ligure whoso equivalent may be found only in the rich flanges valley or in certain provlie2s ) of China , it i's because England is the most enormous xvorkshop in the world : because she pos- sos-es the most formidable accumulation of machinery and capital ; because one- fourth only of her population look to the coil for their subsistence , and be cause the other three-fourths live by trade , industry , navigation , or on in comes derived from the savings of pre ceding generations. The annual rental of. the cultivated land in England is estimated at C.r)0- , 000,000. Tliis is only one-twentieth of the total revenue of the nation , and , according to the latest calculations , the culture of the soil provides , moreover , foMho needs of 1,1)00.000 ) inhabitants. If then. England , with a more fertile soil than Ireland , with double her su- ncrlieies. with considerable capital at command , and perfected agricultural implements , cannot succeed in obtain ing therefrom a livinir for more than about 0,000,000 inhabitants , landlords , farmers and cultivators , it is easy to conceive how miserable is the condition of 0,000,000 Irish , distributed over a surface of but one-half the extent , and dependent almost exclusively upon the tillage of the earth anil what it brings in. Ireland pos-osses 1,000,000 inhabitants whom she knows not. what to do with , and whom she cannot feed. The excessive poverty of the people is an insurmountable obstacle to industrial development ; there is needed in the first place , a , certain degree of individual prosperity before a people ple can create for itself now resources and extract from the land it occupies all that the latter is capable of pro ducing. A division of the soil other than such as now exists would nowise moilify the terms of the problem , because it could not add anything to the tillable sur face. The reduction or oven the aboli tion , of farm rent would not increase the agricultural productiveness of the country ; it would transfer to these what it tool ; from the o , but the total to be divided among all would remain the sumo. Divers utopists do not hesitate to behold in such a spoliatioa a means of public salvation. As they put it , Ireland would thus bo bouolittcd by the sums which now go to increuse tlio in comes of her absent landlords , who spend them out of the country. They do not take into ac count the fact that tlio greater part of the rentals of farms it > appropriated , in the country itself , to the payment of overseers ami workmen , that a meagre portion only gets abroad. Cl,000,000 at the most ; that this million pounds would not give 000 francs a. year to .10,000 people , hardly enough to taveoll' starvation ; and that the question is not one of feeding 60,000 or 100,000 individ uals , but of supporting 1,000,001) ) human beings , the surplus of a too dense popu lation , every day increasing , yet unable to emigrate for lack of resources. It is not the largo territorial fortunes that ruins Ireland , but the want of equilibrium between the superficies of the arable soil and the number of those who look to it for their daily bread. Consequently we have seen the same causes produce the same effects in Ire land as in Injlia and China a too dense and too miserable population , decimated in IK" " ) by famine and sickness , losing in a few years one-fourth of its ollee- tive , the survivors being alleviated by that cup of terror and darkness , which caused a period of relative comfort to follow abruptly upon one of unspeaka ble misery. THE FETE DAY OF FREEDOM. Years Ajo tlio Frenoli Was Sat'keil. Noxv York World : In blood and lire the first now republic of tlio Old World was born ninety-nine years ago. The throes in xvhich a dibtiMiight nation brought forth that glorious cloud , con stitutional freedom , xvoro the llorct-stof modern times. The column on the 11th of Jnlv is the birth btono ut up to mark the advent of the IiVonch republic among thy nations of the xvorlil. And it also murkrt an event that takes prece dence in ox'ery Frenchman'H heart , of all other joys to be celebrated. That event xvas the destruction of the ba-tilo July H , I'M. The "Third Estate , " as the people of France , apart from the clergy and no bility xvoro called , did thisglorioiwdeed. Hut'already the peoples Jiad rechrls- toned themselves. The third estate had become the national assembly. The national iihaumbly hud created the national guard. ThOhO xvoro the throws of parturition , for in Franco ovm-y- tiling comeby throes. Then , after giving fhoiiHelves a namp and an army , the people ) saoked and i'u/.ud the crown ing monument of inoinuvhica ! ' ! . : : , and freedom xxu * born ! The ilubtilo wiu a great deal more torriblc in the French people of a cun- vv a'o : tnun it Is possible ; .now to fe.ul- l o. Oppression , oruolty nnd brutality oxolUi so hearty nnd ItiHtnutnncouH n tloxv of fndignfttton , so eager tt thirst for justice and retribution in the aver age American crowd or community that they cannot imagine xvhat it xvould bo to liavo in their midst , yaxynlng ever for a prey no human machinery could compel it to disgorge , a vast black dun geon nnd inquisitorial tomb. A hundred years ago no French father rose In the morning xvithoul the sullen , remorseless recollection that ho might sleep thenceforth no more in his own bed and under his own rooftree - tree , but on ii stone lloor of noisome dampness in.sidu xvalls twelve feet thick , xvhoro lie knew not , save by the horror and mystery of ills surroundings , and removed forever from thn knoxvlodge and love of his family and the rescue of the laxv. The great gloomy mass of masonry xvhluh Frenchmen called La Bastille , "tho building , " as if it xvere a building apart from and above all others , reared its eight gigantic castellated toxvor.s near the gate of St. Antolno in Paris. It covered a good deal more ground than the Now York postotllco doe.s. and the battlements rose nigh in the air be yond the reach of ordinary attack. A great ditch Ixvoiity-llvo" foot deep guarded the bases of' these toxvors , in xvhieh ( though the world knoxv it not ) were the cells of the prisoners , brain ing out of this moat and through some of the underground dungeons xvoro the ditches that carried oil the prison drainage and filth. Into the moat horrible rible of nil the cells the specially un- forUmato. the most bitterly hated xvoro thrust , tj suffocate in darkness alone. shut forever beyond the hearing ol mankind. The Bastilo. xvhieh the people almost regarded as a living thing , a monster more frightful than any wince the Min otaur , had three epochs in its career of existence. It xx'as built by Chnilos V. in litW ) . So it stood for li > ( ) years , At first it XVIIH a royal fortress , not es sentially differing from many other fortresses in Franco , except in the fero cious strength of its xv.ills and sullen depths of its foundations , in xvhieh the dungeons xvoro afterward dug. Being the royal fortress of P.iris , it got to bo recognji'.ed as the citadel of Athens. Very different xvas the stately fortress , the impregnable safe deposit of the royal and municipal majesty from xvhat it xvas to bo. Charles VII. made the Bastilo the great state prison , and it at once took on a strong resemblance to the Toxvor of London , But cruelty and outrage xvere not yet associated witli its xvalls. In 1418 the people of Paris broke into the Bastilo and readied the cells of the Princes Armagnao , xvho were confined there as state prisoners. The princes xvero massacred. This xvas the B.istile's baptism of rapine and blood. Those twin furies never lott it afterwards. Tiie third and last change in history took place when tlio Bastilo became a common jail. This xvas after the dcatli of Louis XIV. From that time on until the end the minister's rival , the prince's pel iivoriion , the queen's enemy , the king's discarded faxorite , the trollop. the murderer , the thief groaned and sullcred and starved and died in a com mon agony , under a common roof , and xvitli a common hopelessness of redresser or release. For 100 years the Bastilo had been the supreme logic of the tyrant , whether on the throne or beneath it. The suspected , the hated , the danger ous , as xvell as the criminal , xvero forced to yield to its arguments. Nobody knoxv xvhat xvent on within the Bastilo. But fearful rumors of remorseless - morsoless xvrong , strange , faint cries of despair and death , pierced its monster xvalls sometimes and stole out into the city. Such voices in the night kindled a mighty fire of rage and revoiiiio , xvhieh smouldered for years. The very xx'alls of the big don of all that x\-as de testable stauk in the people's nostrils and reeked in the morning sunlight. At last this torrent of fiorv halo burst its barriers , and as if amazed that they hadn't done it long since , on the morn ing of that eventful day. just ninety- seven years ago , the people made a rush for its hoary xvallt. Outside of the moat , and completely surrounding it and the baslilo itself , was an outer barrier , xvith ramparts and a "garrison of thirty-txvo Sxviss soldiers. Within , the main struc ture xvas garrisoned by a fcxv able- bodied men and nearly a hundred super annuated or invalided troops of the king's guard. Governor Dolaunny com manded thorn and the prison. But they didn't stop the mob long. Such popular fury had not dared to come to the surface since the crusade of Peter the Hermit , the first Salvation Army preacher. The entrance to tno prison was adorned by throe gibbets. Under these the t > ooploin xxild disorder , yet strong as giants in their common purpose , rushed with the ruge of a long pent mountain torrent and swept the guards under and .smashed the gates and fired the xvoodwork , and poured on- xvard and forxvard into the mouldy hell xvithin. Then for the first time xvoro the secrets of the Bastilo shown in the open day. On roared and foamed the popular overllow. Wealc men and women xvho couldn't have laid a course of stone on its xvalls seemed suddenly gifted with superhuman strength , and tore whole towers down. Hopes , axes , bludgeons , torches , bayonets , daggers and crow bars wore the woajions xvith which they did their dreadful work. As tower after tower of the grim eight was reached and ransacked , the fiendish hardships of the prisoners be came apparent. No prisoner xvas nearer to light and air than two foot. That xx'as tlio least thickness of tlio toxver \\alls. Some of the cells xvuro in the center of a mass of musonary twenty foot thick in all directions , communicating with the outside air by a barred "xvln- dow'1 four inches square , in xxhich the light xx-as spent long before it could punetr.ite the dripping trough. Hero Had lain , and in some cases rotted , such distinguished prisoners as thu Sieur do liiroa , the marshal of Franco ; Kiclielieii , the satosiuun-eardi- ual ; Voltuir , Bassompierre , Latudo , thu man xvith the Iron mask , and lastly , Blaixot. the librarian of King Louis , whose shockingly cruel treatment nnd causeless confinement had been the straw that broke the camel-back of pop ular patience. Here had lain , unknown , unheeded , en Ing out to chilly walls and implacable , inaccessible xvarders. hundreds and oven thousands of the bravest and best of France , shut In they know not \xhy , and their friends and families know not xvhere , dying xvithout the cold consolation of a tear on their tombs without oxen tomb- , themselves ! Only seven living prisoners could bo found'by its cuptow in the Bustilo. Among them xvas a hollow-eyed , ragged man oil xvhoso pale forohuad youth had withered before his beard sprouted. Ho was the Count do Sul'ago , a prisoner olnco he was eleven yearn old ! Another xx'as named Tnyornior. Ho xx'us clothed only in chains , and his matted white looks. He had boon in the b.istllo thirty years. lid xvas dragged nut of one of the dungeons below tlio moat , which opuiuid open only in thu iower. fjo looked aghuatat his savior * , ilaoil , distraught by thin lorriblij ox- poriuneo. The plUnblo spoolaclo of this victim. uf diVtimtlaiA 'tiddod ' lluo to the fury ot Lilts c\ptors. The s'uavds had long bfnco fallen or fled. Door after door \vn3 burst , stnlrxvay after s.tnlrxvny fired. At last the xx'ull.s began to fall xvith n thunderous crash and a roar and uu avalani'ho of dust that aroused nil Paris. The battlements tumbled Into and tilled up the moat , the subterranean cells xvero dug open only to bo closed forever. and the place xva.s ru/.od to the guttural level and loft free to the xvinds of heaven and the minshino. On its site rose the column of July 1 1 , n tall , graceful shaft , that rises straight to hoax-mi nnd polntH like n warning linger a moral for all succeeding gener ations of tyrants. Let the fall of the bnstllo be cele brated by Frenchmen and freemen in Noxv York and ulwoxvhoro by all lovers of that liberty of xvhleh the price in eternal vigilance. ( lonnral Grnul'H Humor. Noxv York Hornld : It is it fact not generally knoxvn that General Grant xvas a humorist. Ho hud n propensity thai ho could not oven rosint , while punning or dictating his memoirs , to draxv his conclusions of people and events in it foxv sharp , dry sentences thai have boon described by "Mark Twain" as indicative of a power beyond Burdotte and himself. The statement has been recently made that a great manvot the humor ous passages and cominontH occurred in General Grant's manuscript and that they xvore ruthlessly clipped bv the publishing firm of xvhieh Mark txx-ain is the head and front , for the reason that they xvoro out of place in it xvork of that description. That they xvoro cut out of the gen- oral's manuscript is true , according to Colonel Fred Grant , and for the reason given , but Colonel Grant declares that the excisions xvoro inado by General Grant him&elf. Mrs. U. S. Grant , xvith the colonel and his family , are spending the sum mer at Cranston's. Colonel Grant chatted freely on the subject with a Herald reporter , xvho called upon him at the hotel last evening. "Yes , " lie said , "it is true that father xvroto it good miinv humorous stories xvhilo engaged on his book. "Ho cut them out himself , however , and I am not aware that Mr. ( 'lemons or IUH publishing linn hud anything to do wall it. I don't think hat they hud , although it may have been at Mr. Clemen's advise that ntio funny pas sages wore loft out. "Some of them xvoro very good in deed. I liavo them at homo , but thej are not for publication. Most of them are too severe. "You know father used to road xvhat ho had xvritten to many cf the friends that called upon him. No doubt Mr. Clemens hoard all of it. Before com pleting the xvork father came to the conclusion that some of the stories xvere too severe , and all xvero too humorous to be printed in a historical xvork such as his book xvas. Then us * said , lie de cided to omit them. That's all there is to the story. " Mr. Hall , a member of the Charlea L. Webster publishing company , said yes terday positively that no humorous 'pas sages xvore stricken out ol General Grunt's autobiography. "I ttok down several chapters of the book in short hand , " ho explained , "at the general's request , and I know that no changes xvero made except such Blight ones us xvere suggested by the general , Colonel Fred Grant and the proof readers. It is absurd for any one to suppose that the publishers had mangled the general's manuscript , and I am confident that there is no foundation for any contrary . " statement. _ He Divided With tin ; Company. Noxv York Sun : "Not long ago u prominent Eighth xvard politician vc- oininended a man for the place of Con ductor to the president of our line , " said the starter of a hor&o car line yes terday , "and the man xvas promptly made a conductor. lie had been a faro dealer , I believe and he xvas very quick at learning. When ho had learned the business ho xvas put on the 0 o'clock run the car on this trip generally being xvoll filled. Ho got back to the depot and turned in twelve fares. The re ceiver thought il xx'as strange but said nothing. The 8 o'clock trip is tlio heaviest in the morning. lie returned to the depot and handed the receiver seven faros. A few minutes aflerxvard ho xx-us invited up stairs to meet the president of the road. The folloxving conversation ensued : "You are Air. Blank , " said the presi dent , "xvho was recommended by Mr. - , politician ? " "Yes. sir. " "This is your first experience as a conductor ? " "Yes , sir. " "Don't you think you ought to got in some position xvhoro .xour talents would have greater scoop I mean scope. Suy cashier of a bank ? " asked the president. " 1 try to do the best I can xvlierever I am , sir , " meekly replied the con ductor. "I had gathered that. Lot mo sop : You xvont'out on the six o'clock trip and turned in txvelvo fares and the re sult of your management at the eight o'clock journey xvas seven. " "Correct " the . , xvas reply. "Well , Mr. Blank , xvliile it is a very unpleasant duly to inform you that our business relations muni co.iso somewhat abruptly , I desire in behalf of the trustees and stockholders to thank you for bringing back the horses and the car. " The man xx'alked proudly out of the ollico. The KnlgliH or ImlKiiIn New York Sun : .Some years ago the Knights of Labor xvere planted in Eng land * but they have been a small and feeble body until very recently. Within the present year they have Ijiien growing and spreading in a re markable xvay. Michael Davltt , who lias both ability and experience as an jrgani/.or , is assisting the growth. Wu llnd some news on the subject in Hoy- uoldS Nexvpaper ( London ; . It allt-gos that the organi/.ution is spreading , es pecially in the northern mining and manufacturing regions , knoxvn as tlio Black .country , that its suc- L-ess surpasses the mo-it sanguine j.\jieclaUoiiH of the promoters , anil that t is attracting all grades of labor , from the scavenger to tue writer. The an- .agonism of the trades unions to the knights of Labor that him bcun HUOII in , ho United States is unknown in Kng- and , and many of the strong trades inionti in the cities are in fuvor of the ibjecU of the I'oxv organi/.atlon. Wo earn from lluynolds' Newspaper that , he methods of the K. of L. in England I lifer from thee of their brethren in .he . United States. As Englishmen do tot laver secret , misturmus and dieta- orlal procedure , neveral i hango.s in the nothods of the order have been made- n uccordanco xvith th.U fact , and there shut little secrecy about the English iiBsomblics. _ Vigor niul Vitality \ro quleU.v given to every imrt of llio mdy by Hood's Sursaparilla. That , ired foaling is entirely overcome. The ilood is purifiod.oariuhud and vitalised , tnd uariioa health Instead of disease to ivory oigan. The stomach is toned and itrongtlicnud , the uppullto restored. I'ho kidneys n.nd livnraru roused and nvigoratcd. Tito brain ia nfre ) < linu , , ho nilnd mad' ' ; clour and ready for vouU , Try 'U.