THE "ILEAIHELU lEFCBLWAJ,," , 1 i t OOODLANDEH & L.EE, CLRAHFiSLD, PA. ' GITABLIIHED I IS... fh largwel Clrtalatlea of aay llearepaptr ta North Central Peaaejlvaula. Termi of Subscription. If paid It advaaoe, or wllhla I month...... IM If paid after I aad before t naonlba .. 9 at, lr paid after the expiration o( aoathi... a M Bates ol Advertising, rren.lent advertlaomont., per aquaro of 10 llneaor lo, I lime, or lore 40 For each .ubaenuent iaeertion,. 00 Admlntelratura' aad r.xeuUtre,BotieeaM,... I 00 Aaditera' aotloee . H S 00' Caution, end R.trnyl .. 1 00 i blaeolatlnn notleee I 00 Prareaaicnnl Card., A Uaoe or le..,l year..... A 00 ; Lel aotloee, por Ha... MH to ; YEARLY ADVRRTHiKMKNTK. I I eqaaro. ... 00 Mlau.......i0 00 1 I . a ..! 1 .uuaree m..la i i. -0 I .ohm. 0 00 I I eulumn. ltd 00 0. B. OOODLANDKR, NOKL R. LKR, P.bli.hece. w7c. ARNOLD, LAW COLLECTION OFFICE, Cl'RWKNPVILLE, Jel Cle.rt.ld County, Poena. 5y taoa. a. auaaar. cnui tuaiwa. MURRAY tt GORDON, ATTOBNEYS AT LAW, rOfici la Plt'i Opera ileal, woond floor. 9-.U14 FRANK FIELD I NQ, ATTORNBY-AT-LAW, Clearfield, Pa, Will attend to til bullae! raited to bin pioaipUj aid faithrultjr. aof 1173 WILLIAM A. VALLACB. Aaar r. waixach. OA Tin b. ancaa, jo w. waisi.KT, ; WALLACE A KREBS, (Ravatnm la Wallaoa A Fi.Uiaf,! ATTOHNEYS-AT-LAAV, ll-ll'ir. CUartteld, Pa. ' Xi G. KRAMER, ATTOKNEY.tAT-LA W, lical Kstata and Collautiun Agunt. CLtCARFItCI.U, PA., Will promptly attend ta all legal builnMa aa Irajlnd to bi. aare. jHa-Onina with John II. Fnltord, oi'0.it. tha i Ctfiut llou.a, aprll l-m" ! lewara a. a'lxaLbY. n.xiEL v. a'cranr. I MoENALLT & MoCDEDT, ATTOKNEYa-Al-LAW, Clearlleld. Pa. ! ' trLajrtl baalnt attended to pn.mptl wlthj " g:r7barrett, - ATTORKkY AflU C'oUNaRLOR at Law, CLEARFIRI.D, PA. the pr. ti.. of tba i.w la bu old otitia at ciew-: ..II Will .....J it., m I. ..f I.IT.....n .n.l ' Elk eono'tle. when .peei.ll; telaiaed In e..nll..n lib re.ldrnt eonniel. 1:14:11 WM. M. McCULLOUGH, ATTORN KY AT LAW, wrtc. ia court iio... iBh.riir'e oai). tH.ugUt and luld. JpH'TI A. W.' WALTERS, ATTOUNEV AT l,AV, ClnrOrld. Pa. arbL-OIBite In Orahaai'e Ruet. deoS-ly " H. W. SMITH, A TTOHNEY-AT-LA W, tl:l:T rteartJald, Pa. WALTER BARRETT, ATTOKN ey at law. CIcarReld. Pa. r-nmo. In Old W.ilern U'ltel bnlldln, ooru.r af lleoond and Market 8U. novll,,. ItfiHi naiiaea prviapitj aia;uiaJM Hi, ISRAEL TEST, ATTtIRN KY AT LAW, ClaarOald, Pa. rotl.a la tba Conrt Boaia. ( jy I l.'fll JOHN H.FULFORD, ATTDRSEY AT LAW. ClearReld, Pa. p- Offoa on Malkat rtreel, opp. Court lluaee, Jan. 1, 1874. " JOHN L. CUTTLE, " arrouvEY at law. tnd Ileal Galaia A(eut, Clearlleld. Pa. I)!-, oa Tbird atreet, bet. Cherry A Walnut. 4Mte.pMtfallj erffera Ma eerrlaaa In aellln tad bujtair laada In OlearOeld and adjoining lonntlel ; and eeilb aa eiperteaeeol o?ar tw.ntr teara aa a anrvejrar, dattara hlnaelf that h tiaa render lallafaetloa. Fob. ii:'3:lf, j7 BLAKEWALT ERS, HKAL ESTATE J5IIOKER, . ABO DBALBB IB Haw Ijogt and Iiiinilior, CLEARFIELD, PA. co In Uraban'a Row. I:li:7l J. J. LINGLE, ATTOKHEY-AT-LAW, 1:1, Naraola, tltardeld Co.. Pa. Jrpd T. 8 . B A R N H A R T, ATTORNKi AT LAW, Wlllpr..,..,.. m 9lm aJWaliailU OJIIiriV 1MB. eaajiBiaj wHvaunr and iwllMtioa of eialai aiadi rpeeialtlea, nl'T I DR. W. A. MEAN 8, PHYSICIAN k HV JIQEON,' LCTIIRR.IBHRti, PA. Will JK r ..I aa lri.ll. nM nntl .ualB'JO " I"- r- i---- - DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN ANDSUROKON, OBo. on Market Street, Clearteld. I'a. (f-OBea biur. I I to II a. m , and I to I p. m. 'jqb7 ErOcincuTiEKf IIOMdOPATHIO PIIYRICIAN, Ofloa la re.idrace on Market rt. April 14, I07J. Cleardrld, Pa J. H. KLINE, M. D., I' II Y 9 1 C I A N A SURGEON, IT r AVI.NO loeated at Peanleld, Pa., offer. bl Tl nrofeMlanal aarrlea. to the penpla of that plaoa and .nrrouadiai coantrjr. Alleetl. promptly ot. II tl. DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD. Late f nraeea ef thelltd Reiaieat(Peaniylranla efere kl. arofeulaael tareioea te tba oltll.ai . . afClearOaldeoaBly. aar-Prreeaioatalli praaipUy elualdto.; Oae oa Beeoad .treat, foramlyoeeapiee ay Dr. Weoda.. pr4,'00U DR. O. VAN VALZAH, CI l:AKIF.I.D, PKNM'A. OKKK'K JN MASONIC nnLUlXO. ar OaV hiara rroB. U to P. el. May II, llll. ' DR. JEFFERSON L1TZ, WOODLAND. PA. ' ' Will promptly atlrnd all call, la Ike Use of II. , , i iu i D. H. DOHEBTY, FAfilll0NA.nl, a BAIUHR A HAIR DRF.SSRR. CLEARKIKLD, PA. Rhp arxt deer ta Weaver A Bette' ttore, Sewad .tre.t. Jnly II, "li t IT rARKY SSYDEll. (Fonserly wllh fwkuler.) , . j RARIIKR AMD HAIRDRESSER, flbop oa Market RU appo.Ua Court linnet. A eleaa towel far every auetoeaor. way 19, 'TO. 0. W. WEAVEE CO., HRU(,;iIST8 k APUTIIECARIES, ' OlatTRNSVtLLK, PA. Dralrn la all bind, of Irmgs Medlclnra, Faa. ey tiood. and Drnggt.tl' Bundrloa. Curneaaiilla. Jlaiok IT, l7t. GEOEOE V. FERGUSON, t. W. T. L1PP1U0TT A CO., , , dtalerar. UAT CARH, BOOTS A 8UOEH, Id. TA tf 111 MerM sow, PalWpalB. I ... '.. GLEMFIELD GEO. B. QOODLAHDEB, Proprietor. VOL. 50-WHOLE NO. JOHN D. THOMPSON, Juatleo ef Iho Peeee sad Scrivener, V.. ea.'.. .w 1 1 1 .. X... ; V.Cnlleelloni' made ami money promptly - . . P"" no, iut r.l,21'7lll ..BBNHT ALIHIIT..M.......W. At.BBBT W. ALBERT A BROS., MaanfaetBrereAaitanalreDoalanllB Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, &o., WOVDbAHD, A, Mr-Orderi fi'llrlted. Bill, tiled on thnrt aMlea and rearonable termi. Addreia WooJImd P. 0., CleatOrld Co., Pa. e3s.r W ALUKKT A DROS. FRANCIS COUTRIET, M KUCHA NT, frructa'tlla, t'laarflrld Coanty, Pa. Kaapl ooaetantly oa band a Tnll aaMrtmant af Llr, uooaa. llarawara, uroeenee, nan eTeryuiine aaiialle hapt In a retail eUre, nUltib erll) be .old, for teak, aa obeap aa elnwliare IB tua oonntj. P..n.b.llle, JuoelJ, IStll-lj. . TH O MAS H . FORC E E, VaaALaa i GENERAL MKRC1IANDISR, C.RAHAMTON, Ia. Alo, vitenrlvs aiiaufaetarer tnd dialer In f quart Timbar ina Sawed Lumber or all kindi. jt-Oran lolielted and all billi pnreitlv sued. rjyio' RE OB EN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Pcitn'a IbWltl execute Jobs In hi line pn-mptlf itnd la vurkntftDlikc msnncr. u ri1 G. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NRAH OLEAKPIKLD, PENN'A, rPampi lwjfi on hnd d made h order n abort Boiiee. nrtei uoreu on raaBabie term. All work warranted to render lalUfaelUm, end delivered trdcilmd. mylStlyi-d E. A. BIGLER A CO., DRALBR IX SQUARE TIMBER, ! ' and tuanuracturer. of - ' JAS. d. GRAHAM, , .. dealer la Real Estate. Square Timber, Eoards, 1 ' ' RHIWULKR, LATH, A PirKETfl, ,:ir7 tkerfl.U, ra, fAMUS AIITCHKLL, j", ; , , , i Square Timber & Timber Lands, JtllTJ, CIEARFIKIJ. PA. S. T. SNYDER " u.intlriL tt' A Tf'tl M A ITti R ' naAita ia Watthcs, Clocka mid Jowalry, Omlmm't Hum, Mmrtn Sir I, CLGAItFIKLlt, PA. All kind, of npalriog IB my Hae promptlr at eailed to. April 21, UU. HEMIIVAt- , REIZENSTEIN & BERLINER, ; wholeiale dealer! Id GENTS' HRMMUMj OMIDS, HT raMoved to 1ST ChwrfK atraet, between rranblla and WalU all , Kw York. m. Tame ; sh7 l y r l i'9 In Kratacr't Bull din n, Clearfield, Pa. IaUr In tiroeerlw, PnTliloni, Vegetablef, I'm tie, Plovr, Kred, etc., etc aprU'7.Mf - J AM W K. W A TSUN & C().f HEAL KHTATB BK0KKHS. CLKAHKIKLUp PENN'A. llouie and Officfi to lei, Collection prowiptty made, and flrat-elan Cnal and Fire-Clay Land and Town properly for n I. Office in Weilera Uolel Ualldias(2d floor), tfe-ond Bt. i,.jV4 Uj Iddvery Wtablo... THE anderiiftuod beft leave t In form ttie pub lic that be li now full; prejiar-' to aretiniiDo. date all la the way of fornUhlnir, 11.. mi, Bufft.ee, Baddlea and Hameai, on tba ahorteat notice and n reaionable termi. Heeidenoe on Urnl itreat. aetwetn Tbtrd and ronna. K(). W. OKARHART. Ilcarlfild. Fol. 4, 1874 L IME! LIME Tba Madarilaned li now prepared to fur n tab tba public with aa axeellant quality of Bellefonte Wood-Burned Lime, for plartrrlnft parnuae, 1y lh Urgt or (mall quantity.' Can ne found lor the preaeat at Pie't new building, aa Market atreet. oetltf U K. McCULLOfOU, . - Tie Beet is the Cheapest ! TbontaJ R filly baa rrreived another lira; lot of "Mitchell WaKona," which are tmoog the very bert an u Tar-tared, and whlrb ho will tfll at the I winat rea-H.nrir.le ratra. Ilia Mock iBeludee aim oat p wrjeranw vinaii, w mr ant nKrrt.w trarn. l til an i lee men,. ..r 74 TI1UMAH HEILLY. I IOIIN A."STAI)I,KK, U RAKER, Uarket St., Clratltld, Pa. , Frr.b Rrrad, Rti.k, Holla, l'l.l and Cakoa oa band or made to order. A general aMortrnent t( ( onlectiooarie., 1'inlt. at,i Nat. Ib rlMk. Ire ( rni and (l,trtr In rrrinn. FrIokb aiarly l-1-i.lta the P'tiffra. I'rlrer niodrrete. M.rrl, 10-', A. ANDREW HARWICK, Mai bet airret. Irarlleld. I'a.. BAai'rAt-Ti nt.a a ki, rBALRB in NARNEKR, FAUULK.1, iJllllll.tlt, CuLI.A HH, aad all bind, or IIOHSH H l.Xl.tlll.SH O0OHM. 4 r, full etork of rtaddlera' Hardware, Bra.be1 1 1'uml,., rllinkalr, Robee, eic, !). i.n band I .fari fnr aaie at the In weft eaah iirieei All kind. rra(rn; pn'iiinij iat-iiri4 v. All htnda "I bi lea taken ia earhai'ife fr bar. nva and rrfiaiilnK All feiadi of bariitM Iraifaer TU ba.iae.. .ill be under the ln.nii-.IIMe i ... i..Lb r, .k enperneran ot Joha v. net. Ltrain.io. Jan. l, jJAIZK H, SCHWARTZ, . . flale Geo. K van, A Co.,) MILITARY UNIFORMS ANb . EQUIPMENTS, HI). HON MAMtibTTHKKT,PMI A. Hand., f ntntiante., Ae., fnrnlrbrd. Rempl.., l"" iee. ibirfograpka an 4 aelf atreraring direction, rent . MCRCIIAKT TAILORS A CLOT II I IT..", " .. -1 till MARKKT RTRKRT, Jfcly let; T.-lr" ' '' ' Plilla. yj N I) E R T i A K I N (i. mvr-r.jz Tbe ueer.Mrnrd are ao tally prepared to!,,,,, ihe atrangchl spoolnclc will have ' j been presented, of a chaiigo of h qal 1IJVDKIITAKINCI, .opinions with chunging circumslances, . ' it u v a u.i. a ti i.a ha'tus. I of a decision affected by matters iiilsw. "" . As l rr.peetlally aohrH tbe palroro ef tkni. in ill I Hut, earyloea. joii 1 llt'l. I jnnn, JASIR.4 U LEAVY. Cleerilrld. P... F.l. U. 1174 nOt'SK AND LOT FOB SALE. The Honee Bad Lot ea the eoraer of Mar. M aad FiitA Mreeta, Cloart.U, Pa., ia for aale. Tbe lot eoauiae arerly ea arte ef ground. Tba eeeM le a Wrg euahls fraeM, mnulaiaf nine rake. Fee araat aaat eaaer iaaraaaVa ef ply aa Abe eabeerllret, at U feet Oalee. a-.rll P. A.flArtrrT. 2 - 163. SPEECH HON.A.G.THURUAN, OF OHIO, 11 TBB VXITEP STA TES ,S?AM TK, FKIIHIMR V T, IBM. Xlio Scnuto liariitir iimlt'r tousiiliTii turn the lullowtiifr ruaululiun iVnofcW, That P. II. 8. Pinchbeck be admitted aa a ricnator from tba cllale l Louitena for tba teria of fix year. beglBiting tbe 4th day of Mareb, 1B7I. Mr. THURMAN said : .Mi 1'mmidf.nt: 1 know that it will bo irksome to tliu Srnnto to liston to ftirtlior tliwnnsioii ol'thc qu ration bi'furv it ; and, eurtuinly, no lusk coo I1 bo more (linniriwnblo to mo thnn thltt ol irjH'ntinn what I have more than once said upon it. Hut tbe chairman of the cummittve f.Mr. MortomI who reported tbo rcHolutioii under cotmidenttion, for the iKlniiiwion ot riiiehbnck te a neat in thin body although at proviouaaoa aiona ho hitd li-eipivntly and fully dis- ctmaca the anhject cltwmod it nnpor- tmit, int rriuny, to recall totno mem orieti of Senntoffl tho grotinda Hpou whieh huudvocuteathoi'utioliition : and if it was proper for him to do that, as no one 1 ttuppoaed mil deny, it is equally proper, Penatont, to relrenh your memories by a relercnro to tho argument upon the other side. This I shall attempt to do not by a full, much Icks an exhaustive, anrumcnt but by a brief and condensed summary of the case. And 1 shall stick to the citsc. I shall not Hiitt'er uny ttrnrocS' tion to make mo Wander from it for n moment. I shull not, therefore, reply to the parly apncols of the Henator iroin intiinnn. I snail make no such appeals myself. A nd, certainly, I shall not leave tho Stale of Lotiisiauo to dis cuss tho elections of tho State of Hcor gin and attempt to season my rcmurka by a rehearsal ul tbo reported sayinpt, whether well or ill-founded, of Mr. Robert Toombs. I am not accustomed to urguo a lenl question in that mode. I am not accustomed to make tho right of any mnn depend iiion theuttewnccs of some other man, a stranger to the record anil tho caw. Tho question before us is, in its nature, judicial, and' should bo judicially considered. It is a simple question of legal right; as much so as a question ot legal right to land in on action of ejectment. ' Thero is no room for party or political con siderutions in its decision. If Pinch hack has a legal right to tho seat ho claims, ho ought to bo seated, whatever may bo the party or political effect of scaling nun. Jt, on tho other bund, ho has no such legal right, no party or political considerations can justify us in AUMltinn, lilm In nlltaii w,.nla l. iu neither to gain or to lose a scut In tho Monato by considerutioug that havo no relevancy to tho legality of his claim. II we allow such motives to Influence our votes, wo usurp the powers of State Legislature and fleet a (Senator, Instead of oxcrcisingourcoiistitutional, judicial, unction of Uelerraing who lias been elected, or whether tiiero has been an election at all. Tho first point made by tho Senator from Indiana is, that Piuchback has a prima icit case because ho holds a certificate of election signed by William I'ilt Kellogg as (.lovemor of Louisiana, und that, therefore, he should be seated ut onco ; anil if any valid objection to his election exists, that is to bo subse quently inquired into. If this proposi tion be true, the Senate has done the grossest injustice to l'iiichliack and a flagrant wrung to tho Statu ho claims to represent. Ever sinco the resigna tion of her Senator Kellogg, a period of more than three years, Louisiana bus had but one Senator on this flour. Claimants enough, und more than enough, for tho vacant scut havo ap peared. Sol to speak of ol he is, let me remind you that in January, 1873, came John Ray, with tho certificate of William 1'itt Kellogg as Covernor that lie bad been duly elected to till Kcllogg's unexpired term. And after ward cumo V. II. 8. 1'inchback, with a similar cirtificnto that be hud been duly elected for tho full term of six years ; and thut both Ray and 1'incliback were elected by the same body of men cluiniing to bo tho Legislntiiro of their State. If, then, 1'incliback hasapriuui facie cuso, so had Ray ; and if l'inctv back bus it sri'trwi favie cuso noip, ho has had precisely the same cuso ever sinco M-rch 4, 1873. Why, then, was not Hay seated on his prima faeit case ; and why havo nearly three years boon sull'ered to ellipse without seating 1'inchback on his ;in'ii facie case ? And why, at our very lust session niter a period of two' years of such migrant wrong and injustice, if tho proposition of the Senator from I ndiaua is sound was the decision ot l'inch buck's claim postponed ! nine mouths mure on motion oi'ono ot hissnpjHtrters, the Senator from his Stale ? And why did tbe Senator fituti Indiana votu fur the postponement t, Huvo Seiiulois I (ecu so ohltl-e that for three years they havo been liiiiible to coinpldicml u plain, valid, pniini ii case, even when fully and ollcn explained by tho able Senator from Indiana t Is that the caliber of tho fnrty oild lawyers who hold or huvo held seals iu tho Semite since this question arose? Why, Mr. 1'ivsiilunl, if such liu tho case, the sooner these lawyers resign their seals Ulld go to aollle gtHid luw-achool the ,l.....u it -..ill I... l i . ., oeiier lb mil uu lur ineiii unu lur lue country. Anil mark it. Senators, tho fuiltiro to seat Ray uud 1'inchback cun not be ntlrilmted to tho oppoaition ot a hostile party majority, lur they huve all tho lime belonged and yet belong to tho dominant party 'in this floor. Why, thuli, I retreat, wua Ray kept out, nolh withstanding hia pt ima fticiecato 1 And w hy has Pinchback been snllervd to w under through these hulls and corridors for tbreu long years, like a rejected ehost ou tho bunks of the Styx, ami found no majority to do him justice? There ia hut one answer to give to this question, but one answer that is consistent wilu the character, : tho dignity, and tho sense of jtiatico of I tho Senate; and that is I hut Senators, i without respect to party nfllliations, . have not been ablo to see that ho has i either a prima face or an actual right to the sunt ho claims. And should ho lio seutcd now by the votes of Senators ivlioan volpa have lu'tWolnrn ItettL liim iquent and alien to the controversy, i that has ever yet lietiB seen III tbo his tory ol thoScnalr. iiiiemonthsagolhc friends of Pinchbaxk tvero unwilling that the decisive rote should betaken. Why unwilling? but one answer can bf given j they knt)W or at least they thought, that ha would be rejected. Hod he been rejected MtA, no one ean tell whether a RetioUlcan or a Demo crat woukt aattf bean aunted In hi toad, jtut mm that tk rrmtt c tba CLEARFIELD, so-called Wheeler compromiso has boon to givo tho Democratic party a majority on joint ballot in tho Legislature of Louisiana, who bavo proceeded to elect J. II. Kustis, tho Senator from Indiana hastens to warn bis party lrteinls that thoy bavo to choose between 1'inch back, tho Republican, anil Kustis, tliu Deinottrat ; as if you, Republican Sena tors, who only tuiio months ago were conscientiously opposed to I'ineliback'a claim, are now bound to suppress your convictions, smother your consciences, and humbly vote to admit liim in order to prevent the admission of a Demo crat, Alas, Mr. l'rcsulciit, we havo lallon to a low estate indeed, if a claim to a scat in this body, sometimes called august, is to bo decided hy such a con sideration I ' Mr. HOWE. Will It Interrupt the Senator it 1 ask him one question T l 'T' II T -1, tf , V v ' : . : t , . iur, lueaaiJiii. a ce,eir, ivwui. f I am making an argument, I prefer not to bo interrupted. 1 will with pleas- tiro answer uny question tho Senator asks when I am done. Mr. I1UWE. Certainly I will notask a question if it will interrupt tho Sen ator. Mr. TIIURMAX. Mr. President, in view of tho facts to which 1 huve re ferred, I maintain thut whether Pinch back has a prima facie case or not is no longer an open question. It has been decided by tho refusal of tho Senate for nearly three years to seat him and by its refusal to sent his predecessor, Ray. To say now, alter these refusals, that ho has a prima facie case is in ef fect to attributo to tbeSenatetho gross est stupidity or tho grossest injustice, and neither imputation is admissible. -No, air: tho benute knew w hut it was about when it refused, or neglected, wuicb fa equivalent to a relusal, to seat Ray or to seat Pinchback upon a sup posed prima facie cose. It know that the Senate, by its proper committee, had invcstiiruled themeritsof thocase. und that all tho facts of tho etiso hud been rcMrled by thut rommittco and wero before tho Senate. And it knew that when a court has gone into the merits ol a cuso there is no longer room to talk ol i n'mo farirt. A prima, facie case Is good only when tho actual cuso is not before the court. Tho moment tho actual case appears the prima facie caso vanishes. J lore wo have the so- lunl case before us. We ordered our committee to ascertain it-; it did ascer tain it and reported it to us ; tho re port stands uncontradicted by further testimony ; tho facts have become a part of the authentic and official histo ry ot the country, and wo aw as much bound to Luke notice of them as we ate bound to tako notice ot any fact in the history ot tho Kepumic. In view ot theso tacts thus brought before us, and which wo are thus bound torccogniic, there is no longer a prima cii' caso upon which wo have to decide. Our decision must bo Ujxm the merits, for it would be the height of absurdity to admit Pinchback utsjn a prima facie casu, and thon uimmi the testimony al ready belore us turn around and the next day unseat him. Before leaving this point I ought perhaps to notice tho fuel that, at a previous session, the Senator from In diana quoted some remarks ot miuo in tho lioldtbwaito caso to support bis proposition that tho certificate of tho liovoruor constitutes a prima fiiciVcaso. Rut every lawyer knows that tho lan guage of a court is to bo restricted to tho case in hand, and tbo sumo rule ap plies to tbo language of a Senator in reference to a judicial question. Thus restricted my remarks, quoted by the Senator, were, so far us my investiga tions hail gone and as 1 believed, per fectly correct; although I havo since been informed by tho Senator from North Carolina Mr. Mehrimon that a moro thorough search into the pre cedents discloses the tact that 1 had overlooked some of them and that my statement was tso broad ; and I think that, at tho Inst session, he referred to some cases iu which it was held that tho Governor's commission ditl not con stitute a prima iinecuse. Rut 1 re peat that what 1 said in the (Joltl tbwaite case was correct when applied to the fuels of that caso; but they have no application to a cuso like the pro sent. Tho body thut clouted Gold thwaito was confessedly tho Legisla ture of Alabama, tho iiovcrnor who commissioned him wus confessedly the liovernor of tho State, and no investi gation by tho Senate, or any commit- teo thereof, bad tuken place; and so I hern was not one particlcof testimony before tho Senate to invalidate his elec tion, . And the memorial presented against him did not question tliu exist unee of a lawful Legislature or the ti tle of tho Uovernor. it simply ques tioned tho right of certain muiubers of tho Legislature to their scuts a ques tion of whitdi wo could havo no cog nisance, mid even hail their seats been vacatud there would have remained fiir more thnn n quorum of lawlully elected members, mid consequently n luivnii Legislature, til course. In ii i-hao like I hut, 1 was correct in saying Hint the f lOvernor'scwrtiticHtc muduu prima facie case. Rut what bus that lo do with the case in hand, in which Ihure wero two bodies, each claiming to bu tliu Legislature of Louisiana, anil two persons ench claiming to bo tho (ior ernor of tho Slate, and our couiiiiiltee had reported that neither body wits a lawful Legislature and that neither person ought tti bo recognised as (iov ernor f To apply my reuiurks to a cuso like this is simply to ignore the blond est und most fundamental distinctions between the canes, and to wholly mis apply tliem. Besides, on a subsequent day, I sluted tho rule withgrtulerlull neas and accuracy, aa follows; I read tho remarks I madoonthataubaoqnciit occasion : ' ' Ma. TurnHAS, The Committee aa Prtrilreo. and fcieetioBp, In accordance Milk the UBivcreal practice ol tbi, body froia the foundation of the Unrernmeat to Iki. day, a practice that ba. net e etnghj oiceptien, ripnrted that tbe ori-atia'a of thta scnlleniee being- eorrttl, een A. aoriMf area cfrrfrd ey a eorfy roetI.el la rcrr, be tree prfa. aefe emitted to hi. cent end lo Be .worn in. end lltet any greand of conte.l would tie hcetd afterward. fS,a,rM.i'onaf OUtht, ear-ond ee..iB Forty aceoad Oeagrew, Part I, page SiO. Hero yon soo, Mr. President, that tho rule, as I stated it, requires that tbo claimant shall havo "been tirctcd by a My rom)x1en1 ta ctcrl;" but the very fact upon which 1'inchhack scose turns Is. " W as ho elected by such a body It' he was, no one denies his right to a seal ; if be was not, a thousand tiover nor' commissions could not confer that right. And this brings me to tbe merits of tho case. In considering them, 1 find it unnecessary to inquire who was the lawful, or tlio dc facto (iovernor of Louisiana, Mi F.nery or Kellogg, for, as 1 bavo said, it l'nich back was elected by a lawful Legisla ture, ho is entitled to he seated, ho could not be deprived of his scut by a refusal of either Kellogg or MoKitary to give tho proper crrlitieato. On tho other hand, if the body of men w ho elocted bim was not tho Legislature, then be would) have no title even bad McEnerr aavd Kellogg bulb wtified that he ipm eiectod. Now, what ar PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. PA., WE )NESDAY, MARCH 22, 1878, aavaBBBBBMaaBaBaBBaBaBBBBBBaBBaiMaMBaBMBaaBBn tho facts J 1 gliall state them as found by your comiirlteo, lor lo givo them in detail, from tho thousand pages of i toHiimony, wonu occupy too ninca tinio and be tod great a draught upon your putienre. For you bavo heard that tostimon; discussed time und again, and its ; ciierul features uiv all that need bo .iculletl to your memo ries. - I On 'Novcinu-r 4, 1872. a ecnerul election wus 11 id in Louisiana for u (ovci noriind oilier State officers, mem bers of Congrats, ono-half of tho State senate, nntl al the mcmlK-rs of tho House cf RepruVentativos of tho State. there wero two parties who had tick ets in the field, i ho Republican purty, .!..... l:.l.....c..-;...; it-Ti i.,hu luNuiuuiuwi uuvunior wus it II- Hum Pitt Kellogg, and tho fusion par ty, so culled, whoso ciihernntorial can didate was John I'cKnorr. And each of theso paHfen bad its candidates tor other Mate otllccs and tor members of tho (Jcnerul Assembly. Tho ofllciul returns of tho election showed majori ties ranging from nine to lateen thous and lor tho fusion cundiikites to tho Legislature. Coii theso returns the Semite, including tho Suuitors who held over, stood 22 liisionintg and II Republicans und the House stood 71 Fusionists and 39 Republicans. These tncts wero abundantly proves1 before your Committee on Privileges and Election, and I am not nivaio that thoy nro disputed by any one. - (Sue roMrt of committee, Carpenter's, page 81, et $cg). And yet tho body of meu assuming to bo the Legislature of tho State, who protended to elect Pinch back United Slate Senator, contain ed a majority of Republicans! . How was this struugo resell brou.rht about? You havo only to look at the teiKirt of your rommiuooano tno accompanying testimony to sec. j no whole history i there given in great fullness and detail. 1 havo no Lino to repeat it, and therefore let it suffice fur me to say that, under a law of Louisiana, which your committeo found to be unconsti tutional, all election returns were to be canvussed by fivo men, called a return ing hoard; that throe men, to wit, Jno. Lynch, James Longftrect, and (icorgo K. Bovee, unlawfully assuming nntl usurping the functions of this board, pretended to canvass the election with out a single official return before them, and, ny rejecting about tltirty-ono Fu sionists, who, according to the official returns, wore elected, and substituting for them tliirty-oi o defeated Republi cans, constituted a sham Legislature contuining a Republican majority ; thut to curry this conspiracy into ef fect, K. II. Durell, District Judge of the United Slates, "out of court, lute nt night, December 8, and without appli cation by nny pnriy'" made an order that tho Marshal of tho United States should "forthwith tnke possession of tho building known a, tho Mechanics' Institute, und occupied na the Stale ilouso for the assembling of tho Legis lature therein, iu the city ot Now Or leans, and hold the snmo subject to the further order or this court, anil moan while, to prevent all unlawful assem blage thereiu under tbe guise or pre text of authority claimed by virtue of pretended canvass und returns of said reluming olllcors," (Hint is to say, tho I'cronct Doom, who hail canv nam. the actual official return and w hose canvass had been pnx'laiined by tho uovernoi- piirauanl to law;) tliut, in cotnpliaiicu with this onler of tho Judge, the Marshal, 8. 1). Packard, taking to bis aid a body of Federal troops, scir.ed tho State Ilouso tho same night and held armed possession thereof with said troop for about six weeks; that, two days nller tho mak ing ofsuiil onler, to wit, on December 7, tho sb mo Judge, in a suit brought by C. V. Antoino, enjoined every Senator and member elected to the Legislature who had not been lelumed bv tho so- called Lynch board fioin participating in mi inuiirriii too orgiiiiisuiion oi toe assembly j that this ordur was enforc ed by Marshal Packard, aided by his Federal troops, by excluding uH sucb members from tho Statu House at the timo fixed for tho asucmbling of the Legislature, to wit" December fl ; that consequently no olio who was not re turned ny aatd .Lynch boon! waa per mitted to tuko part in such organ na tion, and tho Republican portion of those thus returned, containing less than a quorum of the lawfully elected members, assuming to bo the Legisla ture of tho State and niado a pretended organization ns such; nnd that this was the body or men thirty-one of whom had no color of title to seals in tho Assembly thus constituted hy tho void order of a Federal Judge nnd sustained in their usurpation by tho bayonets ol the retleral Army, who, on tho following 1,'ith of January, ami while the Statu Ilouso was slill in pos session of Mors'uil Packard and tho military, assumed to elect I'. It. S. I'inchliiiek a Senator of the I'liitcd States. And now, Mr. President, what said your couiti itlee in ivlcronco to these proceedings ? First, in inspect to the Lynch board, w hi h is made the foundation tor this so-culled Legists lur", the imiimitte said : The foltuwiug nr. eme t,f ihe objeiHioti. t tbe mliiliij uflltctr procc-ding. ! I. 'I ho hoard bad Istcn ab'iti.hct by the ait of November 20. So that even if Ihe hoard hud ever hud II legal existence, its legal exist ence was gone by that ncl. I. Ilie board wa. under valid und dieting In junction, retraining it free, acting at all.sud an taianetiea In lb Armored eeeo retraining it Irmn making any ennra. at bated npnn Ilia official retarn. ef Uia election. A. Conceding tL-ebrdwa in ta .tente.tnd bad full auihurity le caura.l lb. returh', It hil no relirrae lu caavara. The nturna frm tti. iar!he. had been mad neder tbe law of 1.70, le the Uovernor, and not one of ihein wee belore Ihe Lynch bunco. It wn to.iiued before yi,ur cummin., by Mr. Bovee bim'ell He was one of this Lynch board who p.rtlcipattd is thi. eanvn. hy the Lynch board, that they w,-ro deteiminnl te bere a Re publican Lcgl. latere, ami niad. their canra . to ileal .nd. 1 he tc.llusiny ebuminntly e.teMl.licd lb. fr.itdnl.nl character of their rnnva.. In ...me eevc. Iliey lied what were .opposed to Is otplee of lb. f-riginal reliirna, ia e(br enaraihcy had B'.lbtng but arnrpapcr elalamrhl., nnd In atbrr onler, where Ihcy bad nalhing whalerer le ect n)UA, Ibey maila an ctimate l.e.ed upun Ihcir knowledge of the political com- Clokion of Ihe p.ri.h, uf wh.t the vole nurhl te ave been, 1 hey atao aoantcd u Inrgc number ef aaidavit. purporting lo be awara lo by voters who had been wronglully dented regt,tr.tl.a nr tbe right t. vote, meny of which en1d.vlt. tbey mu.l have known te be forgeri... It wa. twlt Ood by on. wane.. Ibet he lorgad ever e Ibnee. end affidavit., and drlir.ied them to the Lynnb hoard while H wet la eewin. ft la nulla ua- aeccaaary t weete time Ib eoa.lderiag Ihia part L ef tbe eeaa) for no per.,,, nan .Aamine tbe toll- f money ever ao cureeriiy without nrcing that thi, pretended cunrnm bad Beeemblaneeef lolcgrlty. Yet upon that pretended canvass, mad by throe men without a shadow of right to act as a returning board, having not a single official return be hire them, and who, according lo tho truth of Hove, canvasrwd with a deter mination lo make a Republican legis lature, this Federal Judge made his onler, and Federal troopa wero cqi ployed to keep out uf thai State llouao and out af that asemnihly every man that this fj-auJulcut, , aud prulepdad board did not rrtum, .. , ,f.;KU 0-..:' - I : . : ' ;. ! I.'!'- , , 1 , , . ' .i ..' ' . n ' :" ' . ' .- ,v i . REPUBLICAN, ..I I I,.'.. or .; ., .,' hi . . I. 7 !'! , . Well, air, let us go on farther. , Sec ondly, what mid your committee, in respect to Burcll ' midnight order that order for tho seizure of the State House and the cxolusion from it of tbe members who wore oertitiod to.be elected by tho De Fcrit-t board, tho on. ly board your committee say that hail the semblance or point- of legnl right. nnd a hoard which I -say; after raro - fully looking into thb -report was a lawful returning board) nnd. what Senator Trumbull said in favor of its legality is fully sustained lv tho facts wtiut did your committee say in ref erence to this midnight order ol Dnroll to exclude the lawful member from the Legislature, and put that State nouso under the control ol f ederal bayonets? Yourcommittce said: It I. ImnoMtlile to ii.ne.lve of a mora Irre.uUr. Illegal, and ia everr war laeaeiuabl. act on tba nerl of b lud... Ooucedia. tk. eMM mt h. court to make auek an order That was only a concession for tho purptaH) of the argument, not in fact Conceding tbe power ef the eoeri ee make such an order, tba Judge, out of eoerl bad no more authority t. make It then had tba marahal. It ba. sot B.ea tba form of judicial preocee. It waa nut eeeled, nor waa It .igncd by the olerk, and aaa ao more lagal en,t tune ao wmcr IiobmI by any nrirnte ciillswm. There bad been bo am.Dilia.at of la. bill of camplalat. The law of Norembor 10 bad been preiaulg.teu. 'rb. De r.-tet bovd bad bistn ap polnll ia pretended nurrnanoe ibareuf. WbMb- er, aader the CuB.Ututlao, tba t.o.ernor had tbe power, ia Ihe vacation ef tbe Leai. latere, lo an- polal that hoard, upon tbe ground that lb. not of novcmiMr zu created oDicc., and therefore reoae- eiec in omce, your eemmittee do not Inquire, nut it U nnuer.UKid that tee Coaalttutloa kas bwca Co eoa.ltued In that Stale, and that Judge Dibble wee appoini.il ny the uovernor under almilar alrcoin.ianaw. , Th P. Fcrlat board, therefore, bad color of nffi .inl.Ai.tcac. ' Their eanva.l waa completed, and in. reeuii promulgates uuuer nolor of lac aula law, and it ia clear that tbi. gave Ihe Federal eourt ao more rtgbt lo aelae the State bouea than to vctae tnta uapttol. - i ' , Tbe mar.hal,oa nclviae thi. preteoded erder. called for a detabujeul ef I'hlled Htatea troop, to act aa a pace ceciiiafea, .cited I be Btal. aoaaa at a a. at. 01 ueoemuer 0. and held It for week.. That is w but your committee said respect to that order of Dnrctl. Again, speaking of It In a subsequent part of tbe report, they aay : Ib th. oninlon of roue committee there U no doubt conceding Ihe validity of the act of November iOtbaA It trecferf ed lb. duty of raovae.ing me reiura. oi in. la.t electloa to lac board to be elected under the prori.fea. of the act. Tbo act provided for anon election be the Senate, and, taking effect In th. vacation of th. lgllatore, e realm oalcee te be ailed thereafter hy lb, Kenau. Tbia is what ia .tried ia lb.l Plata an original vacancy, which, banpeaine. in lb. vaoatlott of tbo Legi.latare, tbe nlnvcraer la nutburiaed to All hy appoiulmenti and it I. Mid that th. mart ef Ibat Blate her. ren.at.dlv roe - egeiaed ia. right ef tbe Uuverejor to mnke lock epputulmrat.. , Ibat showed that tho Do tenet board was a lawful board. And, sneak ing ef Durcll's orders, the committee say n ; . - .. Viewed ia aay light la wkica yoaroommlttee cooeiaer tbcro, tbe order, aad Injunction, mnda and granted by Judge Dercll Ib tbi. aeeee are meat reprebeBiible. erruaoou. in point .f I.w, aad are wholly eoid for want of juri.dlctlon t aad your eommlttee muat eapveea their aerrow nad bumiliatloa Ibat a Judge of tbe failed fllaAeo .houtd have proceeded is .neb lagruat dirrerard of hi. dety sad have so far overatped the limit. oi federal juriMioiien Thirdly" What said the committee in resiiect to the Inst order of Durell, In which 1 have referred : that order by which Lo enjoined every Sonutor and member ol the lioose ol ltcpro sentativo of the Legislature, who Was not on the return oi tbe Lynch board. . Irom taking any part whatsoever in ,,, ..r .1... A t.t.. tho organization of the Assembly, in consequoncoot which theywere wholly excluded from that Stuts boos and the conspirator wora enabled to pro ceed with their ao-vallcd organixation ? I read again Irom th report, page 43 nnd 44. After showing thai the Judgo could by impossibility have had any jurisdiction to make that order ; that it was made directly fn the face of the act ot Congress which provides that th jurisdiction of the Judgo shall not extend to the election of members of a State Legislature wa not only a flagrant usurpation of th Judge, but wus directly in the vory teeth of the act tif Congress under which he pre tended to act, tho committeo concludo as follows : ' ' . ledeed, H I. impoxlhle not te eee that the. bill wa. Oled, end tbe retraining order iboreon waa leaned, for the ante pnrpuee of eeoompli.hiaf wkat an Federal eaurt baa tk. Jurl.di.tion In tic, lb. organiialiua of a State Legi.lalor. Aad your eommlttee cannot refrain from et preeeieg tleeir e.lvai'kmeot Ibat aay Judge ! the United Ht.le. .huuld Ibue unwarrantably bate Interfered with a State gorerement, aad know a. language toe alroag to exprat. their condemna tion of .ucb a proceeding. It at tbe opiuloa of yeue eeiuetltteo that, net fur the nujn.tiflable interference of Judge liurell, wbuee order, were executed by Tatted Plate, troop., Ibe ceavufe made by the' De Feriei board nnd pmmulgnlad by Ibe tiureraor, declaring McKoery to bare been elected Oorernar, Ac, and al.o declaring wbn had ommi .leeled to the lgia letore, would bore bee. aeqnUMCod ta by lue peo ple and that government would have entered nuietly apon tbe aiMviM of the eoverelgB power of tbe Stale But tba prooeediag. of Judge be rell aad the .apnort given tu kirn hy railed State! troop, raaalled la ..lahliehina tb. nathorilr de .rle of Keliugg and bi. BCMictatc. iu Stale oRloe. and ol the penmna dectaped by the liynca bo.rd te be elevtcd to lb. Legi.lature. V.'e bare nlreedy even that tbe proceeding, of that board cannot be aaMaiaed without di.regardieg ell the principlm of law applicable te the aehjeet and Ignoring tba di.lincliea between good failh nnd fraud. What said the chairman of the com mittee, the Senator from Indian Mr. Morton? I read hum his minority report, page 70 : -' The eoaduol of JuJgo Purell, eitting in the cir. cuit court or Ibe failed Htelcc, OAnnul 1st j,i.lllli-J or defended, lie greealy exceeded bi. juristic, tion and aerumed Ibe axoroiee of power, to which he eoold lay no elaim. The only authority he had in tbe matter giaw nut of Ibe net f Congrer. ol 1870 to enfurce Ihe fifteenth amendment, end tbe net amendatory of that, p..eed in lay I, which gave ee lha eoaru of tba failed rit.lea. Juriadic. lion in nil eaer. In law and equity arl.iue under tbe former not. fader the tr.t ncl Iw. otae.e. let caeca mlbt ariee t fir.t, ncli',na to enforce tbe right, ot tboae ivbo bad b.n Illegally denied tbe right te v. upon the ground ef race, ael'ir. or previou. aondllion of ecrvitude ; nnd, vcwnd, no ttoa. te enforce tbe right, of the. who bad beau deprived of oftne by ro.cn ef Ihe dcnlaj lo per Miu. of lb. right tu rote on a-cnnnt of race, color, or previou, coaditloa ef eerviutde and euit. ia couity. anclllery ur iu ul lot tbeee right .farlion, wonld come within the Jurisdiction of the eircoll court of tbe fulled Sl.le., emong wbicli would be a rail te perpetuate te.lnauny. Hut ia tbe prcten.e that in a .ait le p.rpctu.te tertimony Ike euertoeuld go heyimd lb. aetarel and reneona ble juri.diotiuii, to dcuide wb. con.titutvd tbe legal reluming board under the lawi of Lonl.i.uj, and to MBjrre Ibe right, of earn aa it might cm. lermme te be member, of lhat board and lo ca jole other, who were aot, I. withont nny fonnda. Ue. In law or logic In tbe Auloine ca.c, Ju.lgc Durell aol unly n. aumed lu tletermlne w." euneiltuled the kgal ee. Inrniug b.ieril, but tt. prsMribe who .huuld ha liernnt.ed to lake part in the organi.ulion af the Legi.lature le enjoia nil poreun neea iaklBg part in aucb erganl.ation who were not returned by the Lynch boerd aa elected ; end thi. acumptlna of Joned'eliea waa made In tbe face of taeeaproe. prori.iua la tbe aot of IS79 lhat ita beacOt. .hoBld not extend to candidate, far elector, for Oongre.., or for the Uinta Legi.lature. Hit urder il.ued is tbe Keliugg ca.a 10 tbe failed Slele marabal in take po.eea.ia ef tku Sloce hnaea fur tb. purp'iee of preventing anlnwful aaeemblegee, nnder which the marehal called to bi. nid a por tion ef tba army ef the failed italae ea e aeem cois,r.fe., nan only tea characterlled n. a uturpv Thoso were the opinion of the Sen ator from Indiana when that roport was made, and there never were truer words striken by man ; and they arc conclusive of thi case, aniens, indeed, tho Senato fs prepared to aay that aao-oalled Legialstura, stablisb(sl hy th void orders of a Judge and tho unlawful use of the military Dower, a sham Legislaturo, in which there never was a day, up to lb time and for some timo after tho election of l'iiichliack, when there waa a quorum In it of th lawfully elected mombers of that boily, i Ui km iwmijtd auUamv the SaaU I preptired toaanctity thmol flagrant NEW I usurpation known In tho history of a State, and give ono of Ike chief conspira tors tho reward for hi crimo. Hilt further, sir, what wero the con clusions of the committee after review ing Hi whole case ? Thoy are found on pages 14 ami (10. On page 41 the committee say;, , ., '.,-, 1 nr enramlltee ere therefore led t I In l l" that, if tbe.ieMien M.i in .Vnrcmher. tsr, fcTftiSlS "iff lTTrJilZ: and the p perenae certified a. meintmre of the l.va. leisture ay tr.a be reriet hoard, ouirbf In be ree gnircd a. the lege! government of Ihe Slate. V. aidering all Ib. laeu eelabh.bed before your mill., there Mem. en eesape from tbe alternative tbal the McKnery aovcramcnt tnu.t be recogulred ay iwongrca, or longrea. rauat provide fur a re election. Let us panso lor ono moment to con ider tbe full scope ot this statement. They roport that if there is any legal government at all, it is the McKnwy government ; u inert, i any legal liov ernor at all, Stcr.ncry is tho man ; n there is any legal Legislature, It is the Mo Knory Legislature ; and they declare, In the most potntivo and decisive terms. that this so-called Pinchback Legisla ture was no Legislaturo ut all. 1 hey afterward go further. Having demol ished 1'inchback and hi legislature and Kollogg and bis Uovornorshin, tuey proooed to demolish, upou rumor and suspicion and tho like no, some testimony, too, for I want to bo per fectly fair McKnery and his Legisla ture, as they suppose, then what conclusion doc that bring them to ? First, having found upon irrcfrugablo testimony thul the so-called rinchback l,cgisluturo hud no Icgul validity at all, and then after having found upon what thoy admit to no very looso kind ol testimony that the Alofcncry govern ment also had no legal existence, they come to this conclusion at tho close of their report, which they, embrace in two resolutions : ' ' ' 1 ' ' Therefore your committee recooaoteBd the adup- liua of Ibe following rernlulioa , . -. I. if ceo red, Tbal there 1. no Htate flovcrnmcnl at preaeat ealeUag fa tba BtaAe af Leal daaa.. If there was no Stato government existing at all, thon the so-called Leg islature which elected 1'inchback had no legal validity. . They report lhat there was no legal government then in Louisiana: and that disposes of tho so- called legislature which elected Pinch back and the McKnery legislature Me at men. i ben they report a resolution 1. rtcaolerd, Tbal neither John Ray nor W. I.. McMillan i. entitled ten eaat ia theKennlfc neith er having nee eleet.d hy Ibe Leg.ilature of tbe mete oi Lrfiui.iMB. - Ah I neither John Hay nor .McMil len whoso credentials wero beforo them bad been elected by tho Legislature of Louisiana. Hut It was precisely (hat so-called legislature which elected Kuy that elected Pinchback, ami, if 1 recol lect aright, on tho very self same day ; nd it was precisely that so-called Mc Knery legislature that elected McM il len, and lhat at tho tame timo, so that they report in their resolution that this body culled ft legislature, by which Ray and Pinchback were elected, was not a Legislaturo ol tho State nr Lou tsiann. - i ''... Now, who signet! that roport? It was signed by Matt. 11. Carpenter, John A. l.ogan, J. L. Alcorn, and Jl ii. Anthony, air. Trumbull made a separate report for himself concurring in the condemnation ot tbe i'mchback leirialalur at all. but disaureeinir iu respect to whether Alcbncry had boon elocted Governor, aud also disagreeing in rcleronco to a romody that had been proposed. Ho, therefore, is to be ad ded to thoso who condemned this sham legislature by wbicli Pinchback was elected, . . . Who next? ' Next comes the Sena tor from Georgia, TMr. JI ill 1 llo also condemned tho Pinchback legislaturo, hold that it bad no legal existence, and ho only dissented Irom the majority of the commute as to tho modo ol redress. So hero are six members of this com mittee concurring in every word that t have said to-day. I hen comes tho seventh, the chair man of the committee, tho Senator roni Indiana, and doe ho dispute uny one of theso fuels that I bavo related to-day? I think not. Ifhedoes,! havo overlooked it. Hut be base his dissent from Iho view of tho committee, if 1 understand his report and havo not overlooked anything in it, solely, or, if not solely, m inly, upon certain decis ions of tho supremo court uf Louisiana, which ho says recognised tho Lynch board and the Pinchback legislature; and, becoming an advocate of State- rignu an at once, no moiniuins mat wo are bound by theso decisions of the supremo court of Louisiana. Xow, Mr. President, I havo -this single remark to make to my friends who signed this report: It thoy will stand to-day by their aolemnly recorded convictions; if they will give tho vote his day which their report requires them to givo, hy a logic which is per fectly inexorable; if tltcy will nay to day, a they nid when they niado that careful report to us, that the body that elected Ray, being tho same body that lected rinelihiiek, was not tho Legis lature of the State of Louisiana if they will say that, 1 think there will bo an ond of tho question. that is not all, -Mr. President. Mr. Carpenter afterward Introduced a hill n consonance with theso resolutions, providing for a new election In the Stato of Louisiana, and that bill was founded entirely upon this report. Tho only basis fur the bill was that thcro wns no law ful government within tho State ot Louisiana. The only basis for Ihe bill was what is declared in this first resolution: That there la an ritale goreremtul at Dretcot cxiitiag Ib the State of Loni.kna. That bill after a long debate came to a vote in thin 8cnato. 1 had tho vote beforo me a litllo whilo ago. Suffice il to say that it rccoived the voles of 18 for and Inure wore 20 against, and ot llto eighteen who voted tor il seven teen were Kepiiblicaus, and eight ot those Republican are on this floor to day ; and, if they will stand by tho logic which brought them to give their votes then, this question will be docidod, and deeitled according to the vory righl uf iho case. They cannot Justily, thoy cannot protend to justify, themselves for oiiO, moment in tholr vote in (uvor of that bill, except upon the ground reported by this committuo, that there Wat) thon no Stato government in ex istence in Louisiana. Thai is tho only justification they can havo lor the volo they gave tor that bill, and, thereltrro, If what tbey thought then was true, they aro bound to give effort to that fact and to say that Pinchback, elected by a body called a Legislaturo but which was no Legislaturo at all, ha no right lo a scat on this floor. And hero I wish to aay and 1 wish lo say it with nil propel- respect to theso gentlemen for 1 am not assum ing to lecture them aa to their duty; 1 am not aoeustoraed to lecturu Smta- tora as to their duly but 1 beg leave in the most respectful manner lo call to their attention the met that, al though nbiHwiuent event might make tt wine or aren jutliljabl for them to .-wgalM Helloggdv now tbe (lover nor of th Stato, ijiat I no jnatiflreAtioit I. . is. TEEMS $2 per annum In Advance. SERIES - VOL. . 17, NO. 12. for their voting to seat Mr. Pinchback, Subsequent events the uoquicscenoo of tliu people of Louisiana, tho long tlmo ho has held tho office, tho short tinio that, romnina .if lux t.irm iniirltl justify Sonutor in recognising him the liovernor. ut vast i c facto, out o .ptdilicul considerui ions; but when j t oiiiCH to volili" noun ll. nesli.,ii jwhetlier Mr. I'mt hL.nl; , infilled - . '" '""'' l.mlv vmi cannot m-i rid p ft till) flllestioli. ll'. tlu: :ll.,l iUtt. !i liim' the. J.,nil,itiirc nf tlmt State f Anil no subsequent events can make it tho Legislature if it was not so at the timo that election took plneo. If it wa not the Legislaturo then, there is no process of ratification that, going back to tho beginning, makes it u Leg islaturo !, initio. Tiiero is no such thing as thut known to tho law of a case like this. I ti therefore perfectly jilain that if tliniwi Senators who y,ot,l tor lhat bill the Suiiulor flout Kliode Island, Mr. Anthony, tho Senator from Now Hampshire, Mr. Craiiin, tho Senator from Michigan, Mr. Fea lty, tho Senator from Now Jersey, Mr. FatLiNtmi ysxn, iho Senator from Maine, Mr. Humliu, tho Senator from Wisconsin, fMr. Howo.l tho Sen ator from Illinois, Mr. Logan, and tho Senator lroinOhio,Mr.biiKB.MANj will vote to-day, as they voted on Mr. Carpenter's bill, fur a new election in Louisiana, I say once mora that this question will bo decided, and decided correctly and right. Now, Mr. President, the wholo mat- tor of this caso is in a nut-shell. There ia one thing upon which tho question turn, and that is, Wus Unit body of meu who assumed to elect I'iiicliback the lawful Legislature of tbo Stato of iyouisiana 7 If thoy wore, then Ibis fact entitle Liln to tho.nuut; if thoy wero not, then he ia not entitled to tho sent, nnd by no possibility can any thing cure the defect in his title. In respect to tho decisions of (lie supreme coartof .Louisiana upon whieh tho nenator from Indiana places such great relianco, if there over wus any thing demonstrated by Jcgal argument it is demonstrated by the report of tho committee that thoso were docisions made without jurisdiction of tho ques tions they professed to decide; thul what the court said in reference to tho Lynch board and the Pinchback Leg islature was moro obiUftliiium, nntl Hint no resiiect whatever is due to, thoso docisions under Iho circumstance of tho case. 1 shall not go into lhat pane of judicial history, the most painful and the most disgraceful naco of judi cial history ever written in the annals ot tbis Jtcpiibhc; a pago of history in which not only error but corruption stares you in Iho laue at every step yon tako; a page cf judicial history which shows men rewarded lor the part they took in this conspiracy by bcing elevated to tbo bench by Pinch back when acting us ''.iovcriior, and by Kellogg nflcrward ; a pago of history which shows tho relative ot judges re ceiving high nnd lucrative positions, and the decision of tbo judge iu precise accordance with the wishes ot thoso who granted tho office. I say 1 will not go into thai in detail. It Is a sconce too disgusting for nny man to wish illmgly to look uivuu. 1 pass it by, for there is one conclusive answer to all that has boon said about tho decis ion ot tho supremo court of Louisiana: and that is, that the question beforo us is to be decided by this Scnnto and by Ibis Senato alone, and thai the decision of no court, not even if it wero tho Su preme Court of tho United States, has even the force of a precedent on a qucs tion like this. 1 hoi (institution makes the Senate tho solo judgo of the elec tions, returns, and qualification of its members. It cannot, therefore, be bound by the decision of any other tribunal or nny other body of men. If It could be, it would ceaso lo bo tho solo judgo. If it could be, its power would be limited and hampered from day to day, as tbo courts ot tho coun try might render their decisions. o, sir; Ibis power of decision is vested In and in us alone. 11 o cannot abdi cate that powur ; we cannot cost aside tbo duty to exercise it. 11 e are bound to decide for ourselves, irrespective of any hoilv's decision; whether that do called Legislaturo that elected Pinch back wns tho real Legislature, the law- lul ticncral Assembly ol the Stato of Louisiana. In that inquiry no human power can control our own judgment; no human authority is authorized to ntertore with the exercise ol our own iidgmcnt. Wo must decide it fr tho Constitution compels us to do so by making us the sole judgo of that ques tion. Therefore, il is all useloss to talk about theso decisions, even if they wcrcdocisions ol courts that stood with their ermine unspotted, their learning undoubted, their firmness nnd courage ndunnted ; lor even then wo would havo to say, "Whilo we respect your opinion and appreciate your characters, wo must dccido lor ourselves. . Hut when the- come from such a conrt ns that which pronounced them, il is use less to talk uboat their having even the licrsuusivo force that even tho opinion ol a good inun, though unlet tered, would have upon it Jtnlgc in de ciding a cnusi'. M P. President, in conclusion I have only onco more lo repeat that thcro Is (nil one question In this case and that is, Wus tho body lhat elected Pinchback tho lawful Legislaturo of louisiania? ft it was not, no mnttcr subsequent can make il the lawOil Legislature, ll ft was not, no ratifi cation can go back and make it ah Hifio lawful, nollint wenre nnrrmved down to that ono single question. , .Now, 1 say onco moro that It tilling-1 2 circumstances have not changed i legal opinions ; it the assertion ot th Senator from Indians iu his appeal to you, Republican Senators, that you are j called to volo between a Republican and u Democrat ns if you wero silting hero as electors of a Senator instead of, judges to decide whether a Henator has j ut-tni ,-ivi itti n mi,! viiiisiuuiniioii n , incu cvorvihig ill tho world to pro to havo no weight, if yon will stand !Todt id; suhl-or ad widter id is all tho by your consciences ol three years ago, m,0, l brealho through by bouth frob if you will stantl by your consciences Juduary lo Deccbhcr, frob tho begidig which induced you to voto for the do Iho edd of tho year. I'ro tried Carpenter bill, then 1 promise yon that 0VCry systcb ol hcdieid, bud id wasnll thero will bo a rmnlt consistent with i,l vni.l All Ithte. or ina l. ..i justice, consistent with troth, consist-! cnt with tho dignity und charoctor nfi tbo Sonuto, and of good import for nil umo to come. TIIK MODKns YOL'A'O MAX. The modern young man is often moro nice than wise. Ho has more sensibility than sense, and rtftt n with somo ability he has still greater plans. ibilitv. Ilrookiiiu? looso from all Hroukiiig looso from all ro- strnint, ho run tho independent line. and th fast lin, too, al the panic time, llo goo very much ou tho principle thai it takes "niuo tailors to make a man," especially such an exqiiisito rs himself,- lie ilso goo on tb principle that "modesty i a quality that highly adorns a woman but ruins a man." lie grossly iierverl the proverb tiiat ' the early bin) catches, the worm," pot iversely ooiiiiiitnUng on it thus: "Tho (vonR ;hrtd rtf btisinotf' to-got ni no 'curly, or He would liot tavo uueu caught.'' Ho often joins in sillying the well-known snug, '-wo won't go homo till morning,", and iu his caso ft has oven moro truth than poetry. Hotuiy "you might as well be out of J ho world as out of tho lashion ;" but bis fashion will tuko him out of the world sooner than ho dream of, .1 lo speaks in pa tnuiiztng stylo of his piiivnta tho old man, ami tho old won(i, and their old-fashioned ideas of Industry nnd evuiiuniy, aim mites un uis lliallll jro it while you'ro young," giving as u good illustratioo of tho saying "come easy, go easy," and a "fool auel his mon ey soon ported." "A birds of a leather flock together," he irrfbnnd in tho company of fust young men and gay young ladies, whoso udvico, like Ri-hoboain, ho prefer to that of the old fogies, who were tho old cronies ot his parents. 11c is soon a well known by his company jia by his conduct. Ho lUlil'B gtvui. ll'iviusb III LIIU lUtebb 1UC' as i u,n.c'. buse-l-all, mgilistic und hoi-sc- lllglllS ell as i "'K m'"i wen us in me inirst, (dime novel ; l.ut n sermon, leeiureor W' II.V illlcl! '' l'ltll ul jet I is Ul In j ''''ided it -Inhv." lie in: go to nuTcii ns ft m.tiler t-l la-hhtit i,ui s to tun pent ii. .line jroiii in linalloc. lie is fond of iliiiiciog his feet being, full ns light as his head. He, pluys catils at tiist fur luulime, afterward Ibr profit, and tinully with great loss of money, morals and reputation. Ho likes a horse-race, being an illustration of his own brcak-ncck race to ruin. The sidewalk in duo time is too nar row, and tbo street hardly wido enough for hia deviona locomotion. If a lawyer he practices at too many bars; ii a iioccor nl) tuKcs loo uiueu lltjuui ai incdicino himscllj nnd proscribes loo much for others, if a tailor, ho takes more "fit" Ibuu ho makes; if a shoe maker, ho too often makes tho shoe for tho wrong foot; if a sign painter, he shows the worst sample of his work in his own luce ; and if ho has no useful occupation, and parts bis hair in tho middle, he joins u fashionable "social club," here ho learns to play curds, chow und smoke tobacco genteelly, and discuss tho points ot admiration and weaknesscsof his femalu acquaintances. If bo should" tako to fancy shooting, ten to one ho w:ll hit tho wrong man, which may lie himself. If he should got murrivd, it is nt once understood thai two fools have met, and it may not bo long until they huvo parted hy mutual consent or in mutual disgust, by a timely divorce or an untimely de cease. Hi erratic career would "point a moral or adorn a tnlc." Should he tako himself up and reform, however, thoro might bo wrought in him the mettlo of a man. AUoona Tribune. . MAKE rillEXDS. '1 will give you an unfailing key to success, said an experienced man to a young friend: "Make one new friend every day, and retain all you make," three hundred and sixty-five friends a year would certainly bo an impor tant auxiliary to tho "productive re sources ol an nmhilious young man making bis way in tho world. But then comes the question, "How are these friends to bo made?" It will bo easy onough lo retain n Hand onco earned, but how can tins very excel. lent prescription ol maktnn lriunds bo carried out ? Thcro may bo many wa s in which progress may bo had in this direction, even if tho task should not bo literally accomplished. Let us look at tho mutter in a rational way. To commenco with, civility is an ex- cellonthnit with which to catch friends, and civility is cheap. Nothing is cosier than to keep a supply "constanlly on nana, i uoro nro bogus article some times attempted to bo palmed off for the real thing, but they uro all so boso that they aro eaMly detected. Obsequ iousness is one, nailery nnoiuur, mocK modesty a third, officionsncs a fourth, add ao on. . Theso may have tho gen uine stamp, but their spuriousness i easily detected. Tnio civility needs no false lights to show its points. It is tho embodiment of Truth, tho mere opening out of tho inner aolC Tho art and artifices of a polished oxlorior aro well enough ; but if thcro aro any thing less or more than a tairoxponcut of inward rectitude their hollownoss cannot long escapo detection. Shake spoaro had said, "A man may smilo, nnd smilo, and bo a villain ;"but all the world knows that there is a wido differonco belwoen tho smilo of a vil- -luin and that Of an honest man. Courtesy, whieh is tho natural out growth of inward gentleness, boars its characteristics by the artless child as by the grown man. Civility, there fore, to bo effective in Ibis quest, must havo the substratum of goodness. It must bo pervading anil uniform, not exceptional nnd fitful. Il is all very well to lay tbo blutno ol an unreliable and explosive temper to weak diges tion, or that "rash humor ' inherited from others ; but it disastrous effects are all the sumo. Tho worst tomor lire made subservient to a well settled and persistent principle of right doing, and that is the only thing which cau be relied on. How A Cricket Savfd a Ship. In Southcy' "History of Hrnr.tl" be tells how Cubeza do 1 aca was in a great ship going to South America with 400 men nnd thirty horses ; and after they had crossed the equator, thecommand- er discovered there wero only llireo casks of wntor left. Ho gavo orders to ninko tho nearest land, and for three days they sailed for tho coast. A poor sick soldier who had left Cadiz, with them, brought a grillo, or ground cricket, wilh him, thinking its cheer- 1 ii I voice would amuse him on the long, Irenry voyage. Hut to his great dis appointment, the littlo insect was per fectly quiet tho wholo , way. iho full l til morning after the ship chang ed her course, tho cricket, which knew what she wns about, set up her shrill est note. '1 ho soldier at once envo u tt-,, nil mr In tltrt niltt.fiou 1. ..l.nx.M ..I' ;jngged nicks just uhcn'd of them. lliu ,iot;i, Hlf, PUtfll SMW lllllll Tho watch had been careless, and (ho great ship in a few moments would have been dashed on tho ledge, if this puny creature had not scented the land, anil (oltl them of their danger. incu mey cruised along lor some days, and tho cricket sung for them every nignt, Inst ns cheerily ns it she bad been In far off Spain, till they trot lo their destined porl, the island ol Catnlinu. . , ' Kkiicts or a (.'old. "Hy dulio is Jodes. I ah tho most bisoruble bud udder the slid. I ah otcnlallv catchier Cdde, so that I devcr cad talk plaid I old wibbed a dtmtruhs havo beed tried : l 0 awallowed ctlough of Uieb to droiiwd be; bud ids do use. Doling udder heaved cad keeh by feet wnrb; tlolbig keen bo from catchii? code." Jones went to acrcnado his ladylove anil after this fashion : fub, ob, eub witb be, Th.lioed la bealiig ; fuh, oh eub with be, Th. alar, are gleabig, Ad all amud above, It ilk bc.uly leelilg t nooJIigtit hour are beat fur lab. An old lady nnliounwd In f-onrt t hie she hail no lawyer t lint God wa her lawyer. "My ilcar madam" icplivd iho Judge, "tit) doesn't prnctic in thi. court.", Biwk-knepliig may be Litight tn three. Wrttda Never lend them.