4 iiitobittlix6attft. Gm a= BEGINNINu OF THE END The Southern rebels, as well as their Northern synipathizers, begin to realize the situation. At first, Judging from the distractions prevailing in Congress, mid the impatience manifested by some sec tions of population of undoubted loy alty, atwhat seemed to be needless de lay in determining the conditions of re construction, they fancied • they would ultimately dictite a settlement, or at least have terms proffered that would be con- genial to their pride and ambition. The Jamaican° withewhich they made demand.; the haughtiness with which they rejec• ted the rot deaf prescriptions; the impla cable vengeance with which they_pursu. ed, whenever opportunity offered, the supporters of the government; the os tentation ileith which they honored the -memories of on who had fallen in ; armed re p t , Ilion; the connivance of local authoriti I with multifled atrocities in - -Meted u n white and black-loyalists; it'd the nteMpt with which acts of Congress designed to rectify these abuses were treated; induced a sterner ' feeling on the part of Northern men who stood by the Union throughout the war, and were desirous of a lasting re-organ . ization. This change of feeling found expression at the ballot-box last fall. During the section now drawing to a close, Congress has not only recorded the new impulse, but has participated in It. The new Congress which' will Shortly convene, will be still.more In clined to rigorous measures than that which is expiring, and for the plain rea son that it is the latest authorized reflex of public opinion. Nor has the tide of sentiment lost force, or altered its three tion during the last three or four months. It has rather gathered'strength and coherency. The determination is so full and abiding that the rebellion which, beaten in the field, essayed to raise Its head in the councils of the na tlon;snd demand immunity*, shall be so crushed as to be effectually deprived of powe'r for further mischief. During the war the National cause, and the progress of llberty was immeas urably helped by the teverses which be fell the loyal armies in the !kid. But for repeated failures Northern opinion woulcVno; lutvebeen elevated to the pitch of demanding and sustaining the Proc. lamation of Emancipation; of recogni sing the citizenship of the, blacks by putting them into the military service; „ and of demanding a final adjustment upon immutable principles, and not upon a deceitful compromise. In the same way failures in legislation hare turned to beneficial account. If Congress had arranged the details of reconstruction at the opening of the last Benton, tho rebels could well nigh have dictated : their own-terros. At the close of that session no harsher conditions would have been exacted than were contained in the projected Constitutional Amend inept. 'At the commencement of the 'current session, last December, there J 'WM a decided stiffeningi-which has in ; creased all the way through: - The rebel• now begin to feel that their wisdom con sists in caking promptly what is offered, "lest a worse thing come upon them." This conception of the case is well founded. No lighter terms than those now presented will be noncetied. fresh refection will unquestionably dead to a bill the little finger of which will be thicker than the loins of this one. Tux Derby Government-Li compelled to clum subject of tactics on the orm.• They eet out with a es bf resolutions declaring certain g.marril principles of reform in Parlia mentary_representation, and insisted up on action on them as preliminary to the introduction of a Reform bill. But the cable informs us, that the Government on Tuesday, yielded to the double pres sure Of popular demonstrations and Par liamentary opposition, the peOple out side, and John Bright and his coadjutors within the walls of Parliament, and have withdrawn their resolutions, prom-. ising atthe same time to introduce a re form bill in rejular shape, and on their proper responsibility. It is generally believed there will be a break up in the lfinistry, and a dissolution -of Perlis . ment. Ex.-Gov. Suanxiv having presented the . Johnson-Dixon plan of TeCODICITIC . lion to Governor Humpkreys, of Missis sippi, the Governor submitted it to the Legislature. That body referred it to a committee, and the committee reported two resolutions for adoption, instead of the-Johnson-Dixon - scheme of recon struction, and. the Legislature adopted the resolutions. The substance 6f these resolutions wail that Congress be re. cuested to submit to She &ate of Missis sippi a final plan of adjustment, the adop tion wkercof would secure the represen tation of the Btatel. Congress has promtly responded to this request, and the Missiasipplans need remain in doubt no longer. That response is the Sher. .man bill. NMI Co:Ninnies is coining slowly to the con clusion that Outbreaks among the diens are not due eo much to !heir zin t ura] ferocity as to the manner in which they are treated by the agents of -the Government and white men prosecuting the vocation of trailers. The fact is, that the Indiat treaties, indemnifications, annuities, and what not, have been swin dles upon the public treasury. The In dians have received. somewhat, but the 'agents have . managed to get the lion's share: It is high time the whole best ing.; liaS remodeled, and put on a fair and honest basis.. 110 X. X. 'RUSSEL TIIATER, present . Representative of the Fifth Congression al district, is favorably the and ;will ;be supported before the next Republican state Conventton'as a candidate for Su preme Judge, to flit the vacancy occasion ed by the expiration of the term of Jus tice Woodward. Trig filthy details of the Stewart...di_ wore° ease are still a delieious morsel for the Chicago newspapers. A. "new chap -ter" &nil "new revelations" of this most disgraceful scandal, shame the columns of the pspers.this week, and will coo -1 thine to do - so until another seasatibn bubbles up. Tun late Unton.Convention at : Fnnk fort, Ky., was much the largest midmost influential of the kind ever held in the State. Four hundred delegates were present, reliresentlug nearly every'coun. ty. The Convention-eat loose from the meter! etives, sad adopted a radical plat -- Tia.Commeticut canvass grows excit ing. Genered Logan Ls lending the Union piitibls trivalnible seieices, by speaking at different prominent towns of the Etata?l B~nvtrt, of Redd-wide fame, etc., is running for Congress in Connecticut against another Barnum, of local notori: sty as a manufacturer. Pheneas T., on being solicited for money by an over anxious friend, "to carry on the elec tion," responded that - "under no con ceivable circumstances will I permit a dollar' of mine to be used to purchase a vote, or to induce a voter to act contrary to lilt honest convictions." And fur ther, says the great showman: "The idea that the intelligent reading men of New 'England can be bought like sheep in the shambles, and that the sa cred principles which have so far guided them in the terrible struggle between Liberty, and Sl,ery, can non - , in this eventfull hour of the national existence, he set.uii at auction and knocked down to the highest bidder, seems to me as proNsterous as it is shameful and _hu miliating. But if it is possible that oc , casionally a degradcd voter can thus be induced to sell his birth right for a mesa of pottage, God grant that I may be a thousand times defeated sooner than per reit one grain of gold to be accursed by using it to basely I" Tnn proposition to submit to the peo ple of Ohio at the nest State election, an amendment of the Constitution of the State, striking from it the word "White," was voted down in the Ohio House, on Tuesday, by a decisive majority, The Republicans voting in the majority have committed a mistake. On this point tlas Cincinnati .Commercial says: "They have listened to the doleful pvedictione of political calculators, who - have flgurtid up a conclusion that the teat of negro -suffrage would cost the Re publican party, not their supremacy in the State (for it is believed the word "white" would be stricken out by twen ty thousand majority at - least,) but twenty counties .in which they now possess the offices. And it.ie to save the ellica-holders of these twenty counties that this flagrant omission is he fair and right thing in Ohio is.permitled." TELE water was to hare been let into the Lake tunnel at Chicago, on WeLlne.9.. day. As we hare bad no glowing tele grams on the subject, it is to be interred" there Ise leak somewhere. LOITER FROM WASHINGTON Correspondence of the Pittsburgh Gazette. WA,sunicirox, Febru'ary 25,1667 Scarcely any previous session of Con grese can present a more eventful, inter esting or checkered history than the one now drawing to its -close. It has had great possibilities. It has done, some good things; it has left undone many more. It has not reached public expec ' tation in many regards.. It has seemed often stricken as it were with paralysis when the very gods seemed to beckon it up to sublithe heights. It has die , counted no bill on the faith of a great people. It has often groped and felt its way blindly, when tie great lights of heaven seemed shining in glorious efful gence on its path. It has faltered along so wearily while the mighty people, like the pioneer in Leutze's great picture, had already, far in advance, scaled the crags and planted the banner on "a heaven kissing To „think that at this late de) any one could be found in the ranks of the fire tried republicans to have commerce and chaffer with him of the White House I That any man who had been honored by a noble constituen cy should be' found bold enough to an. nooses that a bargain was pending be. tweet'. the 3louuteb ink of Ten. • nessee and the Harlequin of New York I as a reason whys mighty interests involved in bills then , before Congeesa should be held in abey ance. Fortunately, conclaves by night-, and commerce by day, failed to'cleteat some legislation which, if carried out. will denbtlesa effect much ct;;l.d in the rebel_State.L.---Tigii - all the unfultli !.. men - • who haii promised fair, and shrunk from a lair performance, the Sherman bill, with wholesome amend ments, passed, and is still seeking the signature of the man at the White House. It is a pity that such a law should la I needed ; that in this laud, and in this I age, a people can be found sensible only to the behests of brute lorce. But so it ,•is. And yet a measure likely to dle be 1 1 tween the two Houses would have much more. cheerfully been supported by l me. • It seems to your "Occasional" that the ' Eliot Louisiana Bill is the thing W Wu- Dag. It presents in a plain common seen way a tribunal to which all can re sort, where justice is likely to be meted out, and where the baydnet gleams only behind the statue of the blindfolded god dess. From some obserAiation I should say that all the forms of justice are Ob served in most of their Courts in the rebel Slates. ,The trouble, after all, is that the agents or the law are the most unmitigated rebels. .They are ruled by a consuming passion—that of malignant hate against all who stood aloof from, dis couraged, or in any way obstructed the "loss cause."- Under the rule of the I present administration no Unionist could gain an office the most inaigniff. cant. Take for, example, as I have al ready alluded to it, the State of Louisi ana. Under the administrational Banks, -in 18b4, the convention which framed the existing Constitution of that State was called. That Constitution gave the right of voting to all white men twenty one years of age who had resided in the State one year. The result of this was made evident in toe Spring of 1560, when Munroe was re-elected Mayor or New Orleans—the most notorious rebel and sliouldenhitit-r in the city—and rebels fresh from fieldsla slaughter placed in every elective office in the State, except perhaps in that of Governor. He con nived with all parties and laid his plans so as to secure both the rebel and loyal vote, and was 'elected, tied hand anti foot, and gave himself to the Philistines. He was thus perhaps a more useful man for them than if one of them from the - first. The machinery of the law now in force is thus worked, as if it - .were the devilish enginery of pandemonium-for the suppression of men obnoxious to the' displeasure of the reeking traitors who sit in many of the high places of the State. The law has argue-eyes. for the discovery of every short-coming - of those who, amid persecution and obliquy, have stood by the Ilag in the republic's dark est hour. No place so safe from obser vation or pursuit but there it will find such an offender out. But if, on the other band, an offender be one who has borne arms against his country, and thus commended himself to the regards of the officers of "justice," he has nothing to' fear. Every crime to such an one hatk impunity, so 'it were committed against a Union man. Thus he who was true to the flag still feels the sharp and cutting rod or pcmccution laid upon unshielded shoulders. That this is not an overdrawn picture, let me refer you in proof to the recent report on the New Orleans Riots. Thu names of more than a dozen melt appear,,,there who this day walk,with heads erect, the streets of New Orleans, though there is abundant testimony that on the 10th day of last July they did repeated murders in high ' neon upon both white and black men. Can you conceive it pissible that in your community; in two hours on a sum mer day, more than two hundred people should be killed and wounded fern fight en Fifth street, and yet nota single man be breu ght tetrial for It I—not a single man be arrested ta t it , ind yet the than who fired the ant shot se known to the whole city. as well as any citizen in 'lt I and ,orie man who led the police on that day a known =tittere r ! I say can' you Imagine such an event la your commun ity, or In any community where Men wear the erudite and give out the law and its interpretation, and, as Montalto' would say, "come tilt that sort of dodges ?"- What then is the matter? Why aim. ply that the agents of the law are cot clean to heart . and mind; they do not sit there dispensing justice. because they are designated by the men who have come Just /I,OIS from the battle against the Its public, and demand that this of bars led them there el:mil still direct there ! that the cause lost at Gettysburg and Five Forks 511n11 rule at New o:leass and in tine Capitol at Washington. No;. it is a shame that the Thirty 'ninth Congress will permit the Louisiana Bill to fall between the llcrirses; that a measure so replete with wisdom, so adapted to existing circumstances, and so carefully drawn by wise, conscien tious and able statesmen as are Mr. Eliot and Mr, Shellabarger, should be left to die. True it may be revived and brought forward in the Fortieth Con gress, but the Thirty.ninth, a child of so many hopes, owed to itself and the gen erous people who spoke it into being, that this measure of justice should have I received its endorsement and been passed by it. And it is for this, among other reasons, that I say, while it has done sonic good things, it has left many good and necessary ones undone. • Moreover, there is this to be =Jades al in relation to the 40th Congress, that no less than six loyal States will be un represented in it for several months, and it is doubtful whether for that time a two third working majority can be formed in us place. It was, therefore, doubly- de sirable that . the Nth Congress should have placed its seal upon a measure so replete with wisdom as I conceive the Eliot bill to be. Then, further, it is now beconiing clear that the tariff bill is going to fail for want of time or for some other cause, The Representative from Pittsburgh has laboted in season and out of season, to procure the passage of that most benefi cent measure, but to this hour it hangs in the Committee of Ways and Means. The suffering interests of the land have sent their representatives here to urge it forward; labor pauses at the forge and anvil, and looks wistfully hitherwaril.; soup societies and benevolent organiza tions of all torts are taxed to the utmost by men and women who ask nothing but work ! Still this great measure which would go ' so far to set in motion all our mills hangs week after week, and month after month, while the [nighty work of impor tation of the results of pauperized labor in all parts of the globe is pouring in in an incessant river upon Our shores. This ought not se to be. I believe that the bill as it came from the Senate was good measure. After carefully examin ing it, I saw to many more good than bad things in it, that it seemed to me the wisest thing to do would be to push it right through and trust to future legis lation to remedy any defects that might in use develop themselves. Let us still hope for the best. It is barely possible that the bill may yet pass this Congress. Whether it does or does not, too much credit cannot be given to General Moor head for his indefatigable labors in this great cause. The law enfranchising the colored peo ple in the District of Colufnbia will al ways stand to the honor of the expiring Thirty-ninth Congress. It was and is a great measure of justice.' For what rea son or right, is there in denying a loyal colored man, or a loyal red-haired man, or a loyal man with a freckled face of a right to vote, when the tat collector comes regularly after him? • Yet always until now the black, copper-colored, or mulatto man—whatever may have been the shade—vs-is obliged to pay Liston for the support of the schools here, while his children were not permitted to attend them:. The "nigger" era. disagreeable, but not so much so that the "Virginia" child could not, if be would, be educated at his exnense! Oh chivalry, thou beau tiful thing, how art thou into the sere and yellow leaf: Yesterday, in the neighboring city of Georgetown, the anticipated and enfranchised lila& man • walked peacefully, manfully, honestly to the polls, and with the aid of a littl^ band of determin ed white men elected a 'srhife man to to Mayor! sent 'the puffed up reprcrentative or defunct rebellion to re• &ad in the quiet of hit _home upon the "sad degeneracy Of the day on which he has fallen 1" One would have thought whle the_ act of onfrauchlaement was pending that, should it pass, all peace, and decency, and safety, at the polls would no with Itl and yet no such de cent and cafe an election has transpire) for years in Georgetown and no man so rt,pectable been elected. The same hue aLd cry was raised when the act of eman cipation was pending here, and that, too, has brought only the most beneficial fruits.' The old - Imoon come• bare at every stem "It is always safe and well to do right; to give justice to all men.' And now it is the time for Penney's!, ilia to put her seal to a deed of justice, az.] as .inn ad are may, entrant:Lime every gaol citizen she has! ihst tho man 'who pays and tights shall &IF° vote. - ' It►ntc►L. Mfr. GEORGE "11111.. of Arm ottron Coat Works. to.u.hfp. county, speaks o f01i0... of ths REV. E. A. \ALMON'S Great Remedy fur Consumption rednerd to In- .10:icon...qt.. that I ars. on.ble Late say W., and el, .417.1,11 ,, a Intorno:a cro. lb.. they c0...1 4 • ntoLtor more I o. me. so. cat, 4•lng rty that ta.l .er.a , nl OS,. month At I.not•taxe I .•• InJuerd to try 11.0. and .o-day I am ...I. a. any sc. In the world. If ib•rr a an, who doui,l 1.141 stmt. cornt. lt.y cayn call are nd owe no.. cam por an... • glee theca all Lbao•et.lll.l/1.411 at my extraoroluar, rtro,a rya oolrt te,oncy for ito.saie or WILSON'N C./N- I:111'TO," k. )141-1111.1.1 In rlltsburan 1. bold by drag/as. e very., herr. P , ,le arrot (a I . l4t.tarah. JoaLVII Dragdist. 14 3lartet Meet. GU AY HAIR, BALDNESS, 1111AND RUIT, ANY r•lnt ASK Isl . THE MCAlrt . .—Nr DISCOVRItY VAN .4 , 111.A111R WITH . I,N RON HAIR COLOR RESIN *MK AND Waal IN. ••Locaoa Our Rest hale Cora? Restorer'. ••Loaant Harr Galor R.storer•` l'hyslelans Half Color Restorer•' •`lOll4OO Barr Colts Restorer'• ••t.undonle and Hair tii , lor hesiurer” 'London II al r Coln r Ile storet•i ••Londors If...commend IL liolr Color Restorer' , It never rolls to Impart Ilk, growth. and +lgor to tbr sieasest halt i fasnroa and stop. . Is sure to proalues • nei• 'rossili of pal, cousin'', to grow thick and strtin".. yell 7L cents • bottli,ll4 the p O (Joann. I told by kfcCI..••II,N s IicKEN MN P 5 KELLY ITA Wiiod al.. nnd 406. PLEMINti, 04 Mortal strest' !Ma ure., KANS. I,IOJ.ITT, 14 IVEAUS AGO NO V. FIFTEEN Y CARP Alit) lIOSTETTgiIS STOM ACH I.lliTrEfin was struggling — into null•• aielest It. prejudices which traisthize bowevereiulleot. le doomed .ceicounter- DAT It stmt. at the bead of all the tonI• and slterattve preparation. In existence. Its cal.b rlt.Ou evoked 0.1 irultatione but 00 us•.ahs. Physiolans pronounce It lb. OILY earl STIMU LANT that b. bseu introduced Into tee sick chamber. In to. Hospitals of toe Army and yy, the Surgeons Sod It toe very Inert tneic f r coeval... Ts, re and port It es far .11.11111•Dg the vigor of trnops on tee m•rsh. se • reeoy fur teen, y Rol all seerbutic at. .flow; endtn as the o ly opeclac for sea sleaneo. Cali fornia and An•trailaharrwmptiatlcelly endorsee' It al the 017511, blanictwa peresecilenae. and in nine sh and ail tropleal It le con oldeles the only reliable antidote to ep idemic fever. There Is no mystery sle mit the caner. of It. ucce.e. /OM tri•ntity etentschle end eiterativ• In wthen are combined the witted requielte. of a bore and unvltieted ..... mltunient, with the Anent ...Inn of tonic matt.t.lll.m., alit-loot••PPerlent and depor•tly• pl•nte, room sea Delta that hare ever been La termlard .13 medttlnal pmparatton. It is ale...proper to stat• lust the MU , . are sold exclusively In slam, 104 never, under any circumstances, by the g al l on t h e barrel. Im p... ens laillatora ere shrived, •nd the only safeguard the public ha, elle.. then. It 10 Wm that the hits hey b. • car tne•neremod label end note of Weiler.. /ft...letter Yore to. and the licereennicel 'temp or•r the enek of the bottle. THE HEALTHINESH OF THE WHITE PINE One of the most valuable oompounde that hes ever been brougl 1 before 00 American public la that of the white pinc i jeslled POLAND • I3 WHITE PI NECO el POUND. It is compounded from the inald• berg of the pine free, which growl abundantly term shout all the New nit land 8010, and has in I been known and val ued for its •uff.orerbutte properties. net:only by the inhabitants of that regit n of country now reeldent, but likewise to the wild 10.11 ans who formerly roamed the wildeeOeet of the New Eng land plea region, and (rum whom Its Seat seedi est virtu... teem to lan been learned. id WHITE PLNK. COMPOUND is, then. nothing mere falter. as its tome :report., then a complete. pleasant and efecteal remedy mace from toe sweet inside but of .hat rateable hotel tree, oembined with a few other well anow It di tactics. Its erects e, on the I. !dem sad other aecemting organs on surprising, but prr. racily logical and scientitic at tbe Immo lime, it 'WI b found eaceedingly ratnabl• In all dor aant and dieeamen mates of thetissues. nd we would eta Lally recommend it where Naehn and keen like remedies hake frillud, as be ifig more active and attract°ua tar diabetes, bleeding from the kidneys. blinds/lin, armrest., g 1, and nearly every dl.ease of the mucous inter of the bladder and kidoele• Sold by the gross, &mice. or tingle bottle, en Dm KaTkig.l3 l 6 {treat Medical norm 140 Wood street. 0.22-tre H Divari ira WWI 0474 - 3 a 0:11, WM. BINUILLU, Jr., Adams SWIM Of. ftec,6ll Btreet,l• an authorised 4,7ff1l to reasim Advorttuvuotte for the oasErrig, and ail oilier papers fasougnesd Al Undid Malin and Vin Canadian NEW AIiVERTISENCENTS NOW CON VEItTLNG AL it. KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES INTL/ THE -• New 510 Gold Coupon Bond, INCLUDING VIII led Slates G's,ISSI; United States 6's, 1862; United States 6'8,186-4 United States 6'A, (old) 1565; - And all Series of 7 3-10's. James T. Brady & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Corner Fourth and Wood Streets. IgrLECTUItE. lIT REV. • 1 ocean, On TUESDAY EYE? INO, Larch Itb, ISO at OA IETIIOI.II4T CHURCH. • East Birmingham, for the benefit of the Sabbath School. 21, ua eat.:-..W110 AU X. YOU, or CHUISTIA3 IMO WUALITY." /Ault/igloo 3 croo.• morl:a1: TO MERCHANTS . —A Gentle .. man WI. heat !artily, and a little past the meridian of life who is n pcitical refuses from pe. State, and who bashed co:molls-sabre ex. ertains in nosiness, is desirous of obtaining rtploymen stt (active or sedentarel In 111/13. , Her. a up, or menorastoringeablisuntent t..r A gen c s• •s employment Is his sbleat. COLIVTIESLiOI4 Will be a second consideration. •ddress,- n. C:, at Ibis ° , Iterereca to gmollemen of Mali standlng In In this and other rtstrs. marl 05$ WHITE GOODS, Twilled Long Cloth, French Brilliant, Swiss Muslins, Cambrics, Nainsooks, Pique, &c., A 'brie astot Walt" for We by WHITE, ORR & CO., .123 ftki. Zit:root. lal • TN TUE MATTER OF THE: ES TATS of H. D. MeI:ARTIST, dee. &sad. In the o,basas• Court of • Ilegbeor Count). December Tenn. . • , Aunt now, Y. nruary 2150. 1547, 11. 11. Herron, appointed Auditor, to pm. upon excuptione lied =I From the Record = The undersigned, At3.llc.r. will et ill per tt. • Intereatad. or tae ourpose of his app. , at ment. al •tne °Mtn of A. NC Zaq. No, 10 (Irani a•rel. l'ltte.urgh. Pa.. on rrltlniAhe 29th !1.7 of Ilarcb,A.D,lS67, I , o , c:ikk nahl:e3 11. li. HENRY-G. HALE Wing COE. MN AND ST. CLAIR STS, New Spring Goods JUST OPENED, eamortale, all the noveltl.• of the 1141.117. st,h as to found In a Cr" cue Merchant T-llorlng ( - WA ITTEOLY Of the vatt , v,r2: tor fir the yea, 114, 1111 No vealber lel. 110,1 111 , 1, Dor.. TWO, 1M ,!!t, .10 , tv 1,11 1,1 1.44 .... 2; IS 4 v.,{ Iv Ilqe.lll 4) 67. , tja. {-•I• Ore arta. .1' ..lt • tairtf•uxey lot, 14" ' Teal. • s I =MI 1."• I 4'UAN. J. ILLIII2. In•noi-lor. To Jetty Ifef:•sino. contr.,. 1•1rr0•v5 , ...•. r...,u•n 1,7 .1,t3:1 IMPORTANT CARD. Dr. ROBERT BUNTER, or sr. Tort. hi. •rr.vti lo 1 . ,[4bur0.. I 1,•11.•4 01014 Itt• • A.LercliantN' Hotel, EMIMIMMEI s.r. • • Tiew• 1.. n•.ars.. ,sn, It.sm•nt •f Van Lar..• and 11..1 -IA 1...exp....Er...11 In • ...tr.. ol It Is y rrss. t•T 7'1.1 I.r. Ft lit•• ifr Is Me f of -Tats.u. of the. ••thcf Li • ...pool., .34 of 111.. r....tmest ..ses upon tbs. Impartly tl.s. tnblr...•l .lE o '..Ein.i THE LADIES