«feJnt» 2T> ■: : ‘ i m (tv t x VOLUME y. She Denver lladital. The Radical Is published every Friday morning s , the following rates; one Year, (payable in advance,)... Sis Months, Tbt.es ..52,00 .. 1,00 .. 50 S-S.iLE COPIES 05 papers discontinued to subscribers at the expira tlo;i of their terms of subscription at the option of tbe publisher, unless otherwise agreed upon. Professional or Business Cards, not exceeding 10 Une * of this type, 55,00 per annum. Advertisements of 10 lines or less, 51,00 for one insertion, and B cents per line for each additional whether of displayed or blank lines measured by lines of tills type. Advertisements by tbe montb, quarter or year received, and liberal deductions made In proportion to length of advertisement and length of time ol Insertion. . . , n Special Notices inserted among loca. Items at 10 cents per line for each insertion, unless otherwise agreed upon by the month, quarter or year. of 5 lines or less, 50 cents for one Insertion, and 5 cents per line for each additions Marriage or Death announcements published fre of charge. Obituary notices charged as advertise ments,lnd payable in advance. Local news and matters of general interest com municated by any correspondent, with real name disclosed to the publisher, will be thankfully re ceived. Local news solicited from every part o the county. .. ■ Publication Office: In The Radical Building Corner Diamond, Beaver, Fa. ll communications and business letters should i Addressed to SMITH CURTIS, Beaver, Pa. Attanuys. OA. SMALL, . attorney at law, BEAVER. PENNA Sv.viffl IN the COURT HOUSE. [de2o-Iy | i) II N E A|K I N , LAW/ M\lN ST., BEAVER-FALLS. [jalO’73 C AMERON. JOHN Y. MARKS. & MARKS, A T T AND. REAL ESTATE AGENTS, ROCHESTER, PA., Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to t'j.ircare and have superior facilities for buying i.ii'l selling real estate. decl3 ly r . H. AG NEW. ,T. M. BUCHANAN. A GN E W *fc BUCHANAN, A ATTORNEYS AT LAW'. tNEAU THE POST OFFICE,) ocU BEAVER C. H.. PA /ULBERT L. EBEIUIART. VT ATTORNEY AT LAW. W;li give prompt attention to Collections. Pro : ir..' Bounties and Pensions, Buying and Selling it, .1 t.rfue, etc. OFFICE ON BROADWAY, i > P ;m-ire K. E. Hoopes’ Banking Ildiise, NEW BRIGHTON, BEAVER CO., PA ■ V'-'-'L J LEULIE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, < Office, in the Radical Building,) BEAVER, PA A', haziness entrusted to his care will receive [ "uip: attention. dfcc4’6B:ly I 11 M’CREERY, t) . AT T 0 lIXEY AT LAW, THIRD STREET, " ■Fa>t door below the Court House,) i'TU—\‘y , BEAVER. PA. {J EXTRAL CLAIM* AGENCY, JAMES M. SELLERS, SOUTH SIXTH STREET PHILADELPHIA Pensions, Back Pay, Horae Claims, ‘ *** i wiinis. etc., promptly collected. No charge ’ • ar.ation, nor when money is not collected. ‘Fviv.n b. young, " ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEAVER PA. and residence ob Third st.eastofthe Court I* )•; ho A I law business entrusted to my care shall re prompt attention. Also, persons having ‘■■‘a. K*tato for sale, and those wishing to bny town ptuper’y. coal or farm lands, may save timo and n mey by calling at my oluce. [apr29’Vo ly. *AIISIULL SWAUTZWELDEB TSO.C. BARB. WELDER & BARR, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, N 'o. t)6 GRANT STREET, PITTSBURGH. [se22'7l-ly J ACOB DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW,, No. 75 GRANT STREET, (n,;s ’ r floor.) PITTSBURGH. I> ear. by' eve kYbuuYT ' 7EE BEAVER RADICAL tt 44 J. S. RUTAN, Proprietor PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY J. S. RUTANi FROM PITTSBURGH. Temperance meeting at Oily Hall Pittsburgh on Thursday Night—Out pouring of the People. Correspondence of the Radical. Pittsburgh, February 28,1873. City Hall was crowded last night by an orderly and intelligent audience to hear speeches on the Local Option question. Although the call for the meeting was by the friends of temperance, yet the plat form was free, and friends and opponents met to discuss the merits of the measure in twenty minutes James Park, Jr., presided, and introduced as the first speaker George W. DeCamp, Esq., who apologized for his inexperience in addressing an audience upon .so moment ous a question, took strong ground against License, and said the question to be de cided was whether the people are to per mit the moral and social happiness of a great portion of the community to be des troyed by granting license to sell intoxi cating drinks; that he did not profess to be an able constitutional lawyer, but he did profess to say that no man whose opinion was worth twenty shillings would say that the people of a district had not the right to say whether liquor should be sold in their midst or not. How was the Constitution adopted but by the people ? He had nothing to say in con demnation of the members of the Legis lature for their course in this matter, but he did not think that they could so far forget their duty as to vote for a law pro tecting those who not only make their families, friends and neighbors unhappy, but inflicted upvjn the community a de mon more to be feared than a pestilence or a famine. The gentleman sat down amid great applause. Then Thomas M. Marshall, who was the next speaker, after being greeted with an outburst of cheers, began as follows : Mr. M. said that he had not attended the meeting for the purpose of making a speech, but simply as a citizen. He was pleased t 6 note that as far as order and decorum prevailed that the meeting would with tbat* / bTSaUadar hall [Laughter.] Thef [ gentleman regretted that he was not at that meeting, as it would have pleased him very much to have seen his Ameri can, German and Irish friends for once coalescing, if it was on a subject of such mighty importance as local option. As a citizen he desired to express his opinion on the question of allowing the people to say whether or not liquor should be sold in their district. To those who dispute the question of privilege he said that is not law—no, not schoolboy’s law. The gentleman here reviewed the case coming under the decision of judge Bell in regard to the power of the Legislature to dele gate to the people the right to make law. He held that the Legislature delegated to the people the power tp amend the Con stitution of the State, and If such a power was given the people, surely they should have the power to legislate an eight by ten grog shop from their midst. Not constitutional! As an illustration—di rectly underneath is a market house. Every marked day the butchers stand at their stalls and ■ the gardeners at theirs. Legislation provides that meat shall be sold here and greens there, yet we cannot get legislation tp say that liquor shall or shall not be sold rn the "Old Bloody Fifth.” How absurd! Legislation says that frame bouses shall be erected in cer tain wards and not in others —a wise act tending to the general good—yet there is no law to decide whether liquor shall be sold in certain districts. Was there ever more absurd reasoning ? If the Legisla ture can throw safeguards around the sale of oil in certain districts why not around that of whisky ? The Supreme Court it self derives its authority from the people and the Court will do just as you say. You will hear it said that the civil gov ernment could not be carried on one day without what is called delegated civil power- If the Legislature can delegate power to the City Councils it can dele gate the same to you. The gentleman concluded with some humorous remarks in regard to women suffrage, yet claimed that had women the right to vote on lo cal option, the fate of the tavern keepers would be sealed, indeed. After Mr. M. had closed W. D. Moore, Esq., a representative of the liquor aide, made an argument against local option, taking the ground that neither votes nor might could settle great moral questions. Might never made right, nor never could. The people of Israel had set up a golden calf and worshipped it as the true God. The Jewish people crucified the Son of God, and mobs had committed many acts of tyranny and oppression. After illus trating this poliit, he passed to the con stitutional view of the question. There BEAVER, ; PENN’A, MARCH 7.1873. were natural rights and constitutional rights, which could not be denied Or withheld. The right to sell intoxicating drinks was undeniable. As to alcohol/ man never made a drop of it, nor ever? could. It could, only be made in the laboratory of nature. It was the gift of God. Man could determine the condi tions, but nature must produce the albbS hoi. He then advanced the argument that, the use of liquor was in itself lawful and right, and the abuse of it only hurtful' and wicked. It was not contrary to re ligion'or good morals to use liquors, but on the other hand their use Was fully recognized by the Redeemer, and their abuse only condemned by Him. The ap petite for strong drink was irresistible 'in the nature of man, and defied reason; conscience, religion, heaven ; and hell. The sale of Intoxicating liquors was a nuisance and a curse. /Tremendous and ? long continued applause, which altpost disconcerted the speaker.) After silence had-been restored, Mr. Moore continued,- and said that the abuse hf ardent was the point to which moral reformers' should direct their efforts. The speech. ( was cloSely listened to, but its sentiment# did not meet the approval of the audi*- ence. " The next speaker called upon was •; Marshall Swartzwelder, Esq The gen- tleman was enthusiastically received, aud t on being introduced by the President;' ■ made one of the most logical, concise and? \ interesting addresses of the evening. H#| simply attended the meeting as a citizen/ f and not with the intention of making a ; speech. . From a legal aspect the question#! \ before the people were, should the llquof; { traffic be abolished or should license ta sell liquor be granted. What might be the effect of the passage of the bili li| question ? If the Legislature has not power to delegate to the people the qubit tion of local option, it certainly has 4h#|[ power to throw certain restrictions the granting of licenses, and if ft the one it certainly can 4° the The Legislature says that the drukelfi shall not sell poison save on the brearoßß tion of A reputable physlclan; lltt|n^gi<^ around that slowe*, but no lew certain poison—wbisky. While scriptural quota tions may be made in defense of the wine, yet that grand old sentence “Lead us 'Hot into temptation" may also be found in the Book of Books. If you apply the latter quotation the Local Option bill will pass- It has been arged that no law will pre vent the sale and disposition of liquor. Very good. If it drives its devotees to dark cellars and removes the glittering sign of the tavern keeper or the grog seller from our highways it at least keeps jus from temptation. Let the temptation j be removed, and the people would soon j find that they could get along without | taverns or dram shops. Hide the jog, and j the temptation is gone. It has been as serted that it would be unjust to legislate away the large capital now invested in the liquor trade—a capital invested un der the laws of the State and the United States—wrong to do away with the great i revenue which the business yields to the State and National governments. But let us strike a balance between revenues, and we will find that the expense con nected with oar hospitals, our alms houses, our work houses, jii'.s aud penitentiaries has been ten fold the amount derived from the source named. The gentleman’s address was frequent ly applauded, and had great effect -upon bis hearers. The Committee on Resolutions ap peared and reported the following through the Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Por ter : To the Honorable Members of the Senate and Bovse of Representatives of the VommonVbealth of Pennsylvania: We, the friends of the Local Option law, citizens of Allegheny county, assem bled in mass meeting at the City J3all of Pittsburgh. Thursday evening, February 27,1873,hereby place on permanent record an expression of our wish and of our will, and respectfully memorialize your hon orable bodies. Our prayer is that you will give imme diate and earnest heed to the demand of this community to remove from us a dis ability which it is believed now exists which, if this fear is well grounded, will deprive tft of the tight of suffrage on a measure that concerns our highest in terests, a right now exercised under the general law throughout the State. Such discrimination is unfair and unjust. The trouble of which we co&plain has arisen, we believe, through no design on your part, as the makers of the law, but the ef forts to remedy the defect have met with the moat subtle and determined opposi tion at every step up to yesterday. The record of the action of the House -TCmS|B^’TWODOLLARS T»*CK AJfNTTM IN ADVANCE. •i ■■■ --”te '‘.“v. t ■ .« . , ay fills us with high hope. The threat lhatthe bill for our relief should basfallen t 6 the gfiMoa' tßrough the wise and judicious of those who are willing that the VoCce of the people shall be heard. to express our liveliest' satis faction at'lhc recordofthe large ; majorl* earnestly petition that thte’bifl aiay be carried through all the stages df legislatioh at the earliestP mo- thalthus we may be secured p cnncisely stated what ac* lion we now deeth essential to secure us ttlesarighlfc fee would further deefore': tKI; That## believe the highest interests oftbe community are at slake in this mat ter'itnea df tl) parties and all shades of political opinion are united In favor of this aHt«& and sisters and parents, #bqse homes and lives are made miserable alid WTetijbed by nqnor. plead for it through tim bope it Holds out to them \The 'gr<»f body of the law loving, law abiding peeple.in country and city alike* look tb it aagivlng them an opportunity to rld themsstvesof a terrible curse. 2. The ft**to* la favor of this measure Isno resspifrniaoOat aad growing than it ift widespafcad. For years the burden of ' ll|e traffic li liquor in the shape of crime tmd vice ft|d poverty and Increase of taxa* glfiWter and greater, and repeated efforts faUnre of the friends of law and" or the determination has grown deeper sal tbegrievanceshould at some future toan end. Now, with nothing In National or State politics to distract our intention fdr years to come, we see our op pray you relieve us speedily liift&eembarrassment which threatens to from embracing it. ■ 1 , MThere were other speeches and an elo jment ietter read from Rev. Father Hick ha meeting adjourned at a late hour md was iD everv wav.a great demonstra- . Mi OMWASHINGTOm [Correspondence of the Badical. ] Washington, D. C., March 4,1873. , Investigations are the order of the day, and tbe present Congress will be known in history as the Congress of Investiga tions. During the present winter there have • been appointed the following committees : of investigations; 1. Tbe Poland Committee, by the House » to investigate charges against members of > Congress for dealings of corruption in i connection with the Union Pacific Rail- I road Company and the Credit Mobilier of I America. 2. The Wilson Committee, by the ! House, to inquire into the state of these 1 companies and ascertain the causes of ■ failure on the part of the Union Pacific I Railroad Company to pay tbe interest t upon bonds due to tbe United Stales, now - amounting to more than five millions of 1 dollars. • 3. In the Senate tbe Morrill committee, ‘ to inquire into the conduct of members i of that body in relation to the same sub -5 jects. v 1 4. The Frelinghuysen committee^-to inquire into charges of bribery against • Senator Pomeroy in recent efforts to se i cure his return to tbe United States Sen ate by the Legislature of Kansas. And besides these— i 5. Tbe Standing Committee of tbe - Senate on Privileges and Elections have been investigating similar charges against e Senator Caldwell, from . the same State. f And also the political condition of affairs in tbe State of Louisiana. » The last committee have made a report • that Senator Caldwell’s . election was f illegal and fraudulent, and that the Senate 7 ought to declare bis seat vacant I In the case of Louisiana, tbe same com t mittee have also reported in part upon - tbe state of facts in Louisiana, exhibiting an extent of demoralization and corrup • tion in the primary meetings of the peo f pie and at the ballot box. wbich is sad dening to the heart of every honest man s and upright citizen. 1 Thd report of the Poland investigation i committee, and the action thereon iu tbe • House, has created a profound impression, j No such document has been introduced i in Congress since the foundation of the g Government It reviews the history of , tbe building,of .the Pacific railroad; ex r plains the nature and character of the • company knoWn as the Credit Mobilier i of America; discusses the growing cor ruptions and dangers of large and power ful monopolies and monied organiz itions; e sets forth the operations of Messrs. Ames and Brooks, and the connections with the matter of MesSrs. Blaine, Dawes, Scofield, 1 Bingham, Garfield, and Kelly, as well as 1 of certain Senators and ex-members and < other persons outside of Congress, and 1 expounds at large the question of Con- < gressional jurisdiction over subjects of this character. /•' " This report is understood to be unani mous, having thefUppr|>val of all the Re publican and Democratic members of the committee, so that it can be said to be in no’sense a political, partisan report. It announces as the result that Speaker Blaine is entirely exonerated from any participation in or connection With these affairs,.save his conversation with Mr. Ames as to the purchase of stock, and bis prompt rejection of all idea of such pro. posals; that Messrs. Dawes, Bingham, Garfield, and Kelly are shown to have purchased stock of Mr. Ames, but it does not appear that they had any corrupt knowledge or motive in so doing, and therefore they may be excused, with the admonition that they should have been more careful aud scrutinizing in their business transactions; and that Messrs. Ames and Brooks deserve to be and should be expelled from the House. Mr. Voorhees defended Mr. Brooks; Mr. Butler Mr. Ames, while Banks, Sheila berger and others sustained the commit tee’s report in favor of the expulsion of the corrupt members. The debate closed on Wednesday, and the following resolutions of Mr. Sargent’s were substituted over those of the com mittee’s, and the first passed, yeas 181: nays 36; the second, yeas 174, nays 33. . Resolved, That the House absolutely condemns the conduct of Oakes Ames, a member of this House from the State of Massachusetts, in seeking to procure Con -1 gresslonal attention to the affair of a cor poration in which he was interested, and whose interest directly depended on the , legislation of Congress by inducing mem bers of Congress to invest in the stock of said corporation. ' Th« seeood resolution was then adopt .director of the ITn of member of this House to procure the assignment to himself or family of stock in the Credit Mobilier of America, a cor poration having a contract with the Union Pacific railroad, and whose interests de > pended directly upon the legislation of J Congress. The Republican party has not quite done its duty, and these exposures will e trouble it hereafter. It should with its # own hand of power cleanse the Augean Stables. The party is in a more critical e condition than its leaders seem to be f aware of, a cloud over shadows its ebar a acter and if the thunderbolts do not de -- scend and destroy its power, we may f thank a kind providence and not our Representatives in Congress, e A strange spectacle occurred in the e House when the vote was declared. Mr. •f Brooks conspicuously left his seat and c went first to Elliott, colored Representa it live from South Carolina, and in the v presence of hundreds in the rear of Elli >f oil’s scat, /hanked him at length and em phatically for the vote which be had giv :, en, and he then did likewise to Rainey, s also from South Carolina, whose seat was >- in a distant part of the House. This spectacle attracted general attention, o The President has signed the bill to al it low the Northern Pacific Railroad Com puny to build a bridge across the St. Louis i- river, between Rick’s Minnesota, and Conner’s Point, Wisconsin. Mr. Morrill, from the Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, reported, without amendment, the House bill ap propriating $300,000 to purchase a site for government buildings at Pittsburgh. The Judge Sherman case at Washing ton has gone from the Committee of Ways and Means to the Committee of the Judi ciary of the House to inquire whether Judge Sherman ought to be impeached for asking a ten thousand dollar fee on the ground of having procured certain legislation for the New York Board of Brokers. The Senate, after a lengthy discussion, has adopted no amendment to the sundry civil expenses bill, transferring the print ing of the debates of Congress to the Congressional printing office. At present the contract is held by pirivate parties. The House Committee on Appropria tions has considered the Senate amend ments to the Postofflce Appropriation bill, and agreed to non-concur in the amendment forbidding the tranmission of all free math-v so far as the same affects exchange among newspapers. The hfil to create a ne w j j jicial district out of the Western District of Pennsylva nia, which passed the House some time siit'ceT it js now understood, will n/»l be acted up m by the Senate this session. NUMBER 10 A new revelation, it is asserted, is; made? herein regard to Colfax, and first pub lished in the New York TTorW, that riv ets fast upon him the long line of decep tion and falsehood that he has gradually developed from his South Bend speech to the present hour. . It will be remembered that in his very latest explanation he in sisted that George F. Nesbitt, of New York, bad. given him the $4,000 at odd times in the summer of 1868 as voluntary contributions, out of friendship, though a total stranger, and that all the favor that was ever returned was a few tickets to the inauguration ceremonies in the spring of I 860; Now it has just come to light, from the official records of the Post Office De partment, that Mr. Colfax was the attor ney and lobbyist of Nesbitt, and that be filed an argument in reply to one made by the AUorney.General for the extension of the stamped envelope contract then in the bands of the, very same Mr. Nesbitt. It is there endorsed as submitted by him. In order that no injustice may be done Mr. Colfax, it should be stated that while the twenty pages of argument’s in Nes bitt's, behalf are not in his handwriting, his letter indorsing it and transmuting U is there. It may have been copied for him, or it may have come from Nesbitt's lawyer, but Mr. Colfax alone appears on the record as making the appeal for Nes bitt in violation of the act of 1868,making such an offence from the Vice President, or Senator or member the subject of crin* inal indictment. It is not believed that. Mr. Colfax will rise to explain any more. It is bat just, however, to say that the Postmaster General denies the above re port. He says that finding the Nesbitt contract for stamped envelopes had been extended by his predecessor without ad vertisibg for competition, be referred the question of its legality to the Attorney General, who decided it to be without the sanction of the law, and said that the De partment shdald terminate the same on reasonable notice, and issue proposals for a new contract wbjcb was done. In the meantime the question arose as to the thehpw contract should comhujnce, >ad IPresident Gdlfax"%fged that Nesbitt having the necessary buildings, machinery and materials, and not having forfeited their contract by any malfeas ance, should have opportunity to work up, until the new contract was let; or that they be allowed to present argument as to the validity of their contract as ex tended. The history of the transaction is simply this: When Postmaster General Ran dall retired from the department he allow ed this contract to continue without ad vertising for competition, When Post master General Cresswell came in he thought this was irregular, and called oa the Attorney-General for an opinion, which was soon forthcoming, and adverse to Mr. Randall’s course. It was to this that Mr. Colfax died a reply, and on this Nesbitt’acontract was allowed to run un til some time after, when bids were in vited. The fourth of March is near but there would be no difficulty in Congress having time to dispose of all important legislation by Tuesday noon, if the members would Work upon the important matters f but there is a disposition among a large num ber to waste valuable time in debating unimportant matters, to put themselves on record as champions of sofne impossi ble project. The Senate has agreed to the House ap propriation for the improvement of,the Ohio river, and payment of debt ot Louis ville canal, which will speedily reduce the toll to the cost of repairs aud atten tion. The inauguration to-day was a grand success. Everything passed off according to previous arrangement. President Grant’s inaugural was brief and to the point concerning which you will receive fuller information through the dailies than I have time or space now to give. The city is filled with strangers from all parts of the United States, West Pointers, cadets, and crack military companies are here. The Inauguration Ball this even ing promises to be a brilliant affair. Ax excitable individual writes to the Johnstown Mountain Voice that he has examined the" poor-house accounts, as presented by the auditors, and has "codie to the conclusion that the whole arrange- ment is a barefaced and unblushing fraud." Warming with his theme, he insinuates that the |l4O charged for "pro dace" was spent "for groceries purchased from wholesale liquor dealers.” Al) of which rather reflects upon the good name ' of Johnstown auditors. Forest cbtxTY wants the office of County Superintendent abolished. Sam.