ganavoter fittelliganar. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1868 County Committee Meeting. The Democratic County Committee will meet on SATURDAY, JANUARY 25th, at 11 o'clock A. M., at the Democratic Club Rooms in the City of Lancaster. A. J. STEINMAN, Chairman. B. J. McGDANN, Secretary Democratic State Convention HARRISBURG, PA., Jan. 8, 1868 The Democratic State Committee of Penn sylvania have fixed WEDNESDAY, THE FOURTH (4th) DAY OF MARCH, 1868, at 12 o'clock, M., as the time, and the Hall of the House of Representatives at Harris burg as the place, for holding the annual Convention of the party. It is ordered that this Convention be com posed of one member for each Senator and Representative, who shall be elected in the usual manner; and they will meet at the time and place aforesaid, for the purpose of nominating candidates for the office of Au ditor General and Surveyor General, and of selecting delegates to the National Con vention for the nomination of candidates for President and Vice President. The members and committees of the or ganization, and all conservative citizens who can unite with us in the support of Constitutional principles, are requested to proceed to the election of the delegates in their respective districts. By order of the Democratic State Com mittee. WILLIAM A. WALLACE, Chairman G. G. DETHE, •S'ecretary The Democratic State Convention The 4th of March, a historical day with the Democracy of Pennsylvania, has been appointed for the meeting of the next State Convention. The coin ing Convention will be one of decided importance, as delegates to the National Convention are to be chosen, and can• didatcs for Auditor and Surveyor Gen eral nominated. We shall enter upon the coming campaign with a confident assurance of success. The Convention meets at Harrisburg. Openlna of the Campaign The great campaign of ISOS is now fairly opened. I n New Hampshire the battle has been going on forsome weeks with a really flattering prospect of an old-fashioned Democratic victory in March. Such a result would be a most propitious opening of the spring. In Ohio, Indiana and West Virginia the Democracy have put forward able can didates, and laid down popular plat forins. The fight began in each of those States on the anniversary of the battle of New Orleans, and the struggle will be carried on with Jacksonian energy. We believe each of them will record their vote for the Democratic policy, first at their State election in October, and afterward at the Presidential elec tion in November. The present campaign will be the most exciting one this country has ever witnessed. It Will be a gigantic con test for the establishment of great po litical principles, and the issue will be so clearly defined that no citizen can mis take them. The question• with each voter will not be " who are you fur hut ." what are you for name, the rank and the past conduct of the candidates for !President will signify less than such things did before. The two great parties will do battle for an tagouistie political policies with all the might that is in them, :and the Democ racy have so greatly the :advantage it) this respect that they are very properly confident of success. They do not ex pect, however, to achieve the victory without labor, and they are ready to work as they never did before. They must and will have an efficient orgaui• zation in every election district in the different states, which will see to it that the doubtful are convinced, the wavering confirmed, the hesitating fully converted, every legal vote polled and every illegal one challenged and rejected. Every member of the party must work with energy in this great struggle. The truth must be pressed home upon all who can be induced to receive it. Democratic newspapers, the agency from which the greatest results are to be expectep, must be put into the hands of every man who will read them. The Lock In the House The, lock in the lions°, which so un expectedly prevented an organization of the Legislature, is somewhattlifficult to understand. The generally expressed opinion at Harrisburg was, that it was a tight between the PetinsylVania Rail road and the honest advocates of a free railroad law. If that be so the "mons ter monopoly " must own almost the entire body of Radicals who make up the majority. Mr. Davis is known to Le a fast friend of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad. 00m - outsiders seem ed to think the opposition to Davis sprung from his supi;hsed identilicm Lion with the corrupt ring, which sold everything for which a hid could be got last winter. The bolting member from Lancaster is said to have taken h is stand on high moral ground, and to have been open in his declarations that he would support no one for Speaker who was ever accused of corruption. Other busy outsiders were so uncharitable as to de clare that it was only a plain business matter, a mere question of dollars and cents Willi a majority of the bolters, and that they were pre pared to conic down as soon as they heard the well-known voice of Captain Scott. Sonic went so far as to assert that a figure hail been named, and thud the modest stun of ItrciNJarry hundred dollars Lead, was demanded as the pre-requisite to a surrender. We do nut pretend to know how accurate these various rumors may be. It is sure, however, that a majority of the people of Pennsylvania have 11,, con fidence in the honesty or integrity of the men with whom the Radical party tills the Halls of the State Capitol. Is This a Slavery Repudiation Platform The Ilurrisburg Stu!, t;mirdsapi : The Democratic platform, as now ar ranged Mr the coming Presidential election, is to make this :t uma's t ioverllttlirnt by re-establishing slavery, and to relieve the people from tax: own by repudiating the -National debt. Peholleion is ready to run fur President on such a platform. The extreme to which the platform /gibe Ohio Democracy goes in the di rection of slavery, is to do away with the negro despotisms in the South, and to preserve the supremacy of the white race in every State until white men vote to make negroes their political equals. The same platMrni pledges the party topayment in gold of every United ;States bond on which it was stipulated that gold should be paid when it was hssued, but asserts that such as were created to be paid in greenbaela shall be so discharged. If that is a pro slavery repudiation, the Radicals are welcome to make the most of it. It is the platform for the people, and we notice that Republican County Con ventions in the West are taking their stand on a precisely similar financial policy. If Grant is put on the proposed Radical platform he will be more sig nally defeated than poor old Scott was. Yet the Republicans cannot adopt any other. They are in a pitiable condition. WEDNESDAY of this week has been set apart for the consideration of Thad. Stevens' bill in reference to the estab lishment of a system of public schools in the District of Columbia. It is framed with a design to compel a recognition. the social equality of whites and 41acks, And gravely proposes that every white man who refuses to send at least one of bis:chilldren to the schools which are to he,protniscuously filled with the differ ant races shall be disfranchised. The words "all men are created equal are to be inscribed .upon the walls of every school room;" and the doctrine of negro equality is to be .enforced both by pre pept and examFle, THE LANCASTER WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER, WEDNESDAY - , JANUARY 15, 1868. What Position Will the South Occupy In the Presidential Election What position will the Southern States occupy in the coming Presi dential election? That is the great question which i w agitating the public mind. It occupies the thoughts of every intelligent citizen. It is a question which,must be settled, which we sincerely hope may be settled peace ably, but which might lead to difficul ties of the most serious character. The rebellion sprang from a belief, long cherished and deeply seated in the minds of the Southern people, that any State bad a right to secede from the Union. They claimed that their relations to the Federal Government were completely severed by the adoption of ordinances of seces sion. We denied that doctrine, de nounced it as a fatal heresy, and deter mined to do battle against it. From the beginning of the war to its close every message of Mr. Lincoln or his successor Mr. Johnson, every proclama tion, every State paper, and every act of Congress-proceeded upon the hypo thesis that no State could secede from the Union. Once in the Union, always in the Union was our motto. Mr. Lincoln and all his advisers treated the war as an insurrection, as a rebellion against the rightful authority of the Constitution of the United States—a rebellion of the people of the South and not a rebellion of States. All Union men held that those who engaged in the rebellion were individually respon sible, and that they could not shield themselves under the action or author ity of the States to which they be longed. Mr. Lincoln, and his advisers in their management of the war went on the principle that every ordi nance of secession and every act of the Legislatures of the rebel States in that direction was a nullity, unconstitutional and void, having no legal force or effect Whatever, and that all those States were according to all law still in the Union. The insurrection, or rebellion, was finally put down, and the people of the South, unable to accomplish the object for which they madeso many sacrifices, submitted, and acknowledged that their attempt to secede was a miserable and most costly failure. We proceeded at once to arraign Jefferson Davis for the crime of treason. He is now under bail to, answer to that charge, and Chief J us lice Chase is pledged to try him there for. If the States which composed what was called the Southern Confederacy were ever out of the Union, then is Jefferson Davis no traitor, and Chief Justice Chase would have no more right to try him fur treason against the United States, than he would have to try the Governor of Canada. in case lie should be captured in a war between this country and England. It was not until after the death of Mr. Lincoln, when Mr. Johnson hail taken steps to carry out the plan for restoring the rebellious States to their former statusin the Union that the doctrine of State suicide was advanced by Stevens, Sumner and :other Radical leaders. I t was put forward by them front partisan motives. They saw that with a restored ( 7 lilon there would be an end of the domination of the Republimn party un less it abandoned its odious doctrines ; and not being prepared to do that, they resolved to resort to the desperate expe• Went of subjecting all the recently re bellious States to the domination of the negroes, and of keeping them unrepre sented iu Congress, and practically, though not legally, out of the Union, until they should consent to the adop tion of the odious and unconstitutional conditions thus arbitrarily imposed upon them. Thaddeus Stevens never pretended that there was any constitu tional sanction or warrant for such ac tion. He admitted that he and his party were "acting outside of the Constitu tion." The time has come when the so-called, reconstruction acts of Congress must stand the test of judicial investigation, as well as a rigid examination before a popular tributhd. Within a few days it is expected that one or more cases, testing the constitutionality of these en actments will come before the Supreme Court of the United States, the legiti mate last court of resort in all such mat ters. That the decision of that august tribunal will be against them is conced ed. The Attorney General of the United States, a great and conscientious lawyer, has declined to argue what is known as the case of. McCardle vs. the United States, because he, cannot do so consis tently with his honest convictions. ble withdraws from the case, and leaves to some other lawyer the task of attempt ing to show that the reconstruction acts are constitutional. The Radicals are terribly frightened at the position of affairs, and are taking hurried steps to perpetrate new out rages. They now boldly propose to pass an act of Congress, declaring that not less than two-thirds of the J udges of the Supreme Court shall have power to decide any act of Congress unconsti tutional, hoping thus to delay the over throw of the negro empire which they have established on the ruins of tea States of the Union. Should the Supreme Court decide the reconstruction acts of Congress to be unconstitutional, as there seems to be no doubt it will, the country will glad ly accept such decision as an authorita tive settlement of a dangerous and ex citing question. The Republican party will be disorganized and destroyed by a single blow. All the hopes they have founded on the negro vote will be blasted. The whites of the South will cast the electoral votes of those States, and Congress will not dare to refuse to count them. But,tindependently of the probable decision of the Supreme Court, it issure that electoral votes cast by the negroes of the South could not be counted, without the most open and flagrant vio lation of express provisions of the Con stitution. Thatlnstruwent provides that all who are entitled to vote for members of the most numerous branch of the State Legislature, and none others, shall vote for members of Congress and for Presi dential electors. Congress has no power to enlarge or restrict the elective franchise in any State. It cannot confer the right to vote upon any class who are deprived of it by the laws of the several States, nor take it away from those to whom itis is thus granted. That is admitted even by very many prominent and lead ing Radicals, and it has been too long recognized as the fundamental law of the laud to be successfully disputed. Such being the case, it is clear that electors chosen by the whites of the Southern States will be the ouly body entitled to meet and vote for President and Vice President, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution.— Their action alone will be legal, and the return sent by such a body of elec tors will be the only one entitled to be received by the President of the Senate, opened by him, and counted in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives. Should an attempt be made to elect a President by the ille gal votes of negroes over the expressed will of a majority of the white men of the combined North and South, the white majority could not reasonably be I expected to submit quietly to the perpe , tration 'of such a gross and infamous outrage. We hope, expect and believe that the difficulties which threaten to result in danger will all be speedily adjusted by a decision of the Supreme Court, de claring the reconstruction acts of Con gress to be unconstitutional, void and of no effect. Such a decision would restore the Southern States to their proper re lations to the Union atonce, and nothing would remain to prevent a return to permanent peace and prosperity, unless the Radicals in Congress should insist uponcarrying out their unconstitutional acts, in defiance of the declared law and the expressed will of the people. They. would be speedily rendered powerless, however, and the removal of a large majority of them from office at the coming election would be a foregone conclusion. Geary on Pardons When John W. Geary was inaugu rated he took occasion voluntarily to condemn the practice of pardoning crim inals, Insinuating that his predecessors had too frequently interfered with the course of the law. This part of Gover nor Geary's inaugural elicited univer sal commendation. The entire press of the State, without distinctiori of party, approved the declaration of the Gover nor, and endorsed as wise and judicious a certain set of rules which he laid down, and by which he declared he would be guided \in the consideration of all appli cations 'for the pardon of parties who might be convicted. Had Geary been sincere in his utterances, and had he followed up the line of conduct which he marked out for himself in this par ticular, he would have gained some reputation for honesty. Did he do so? Let the recordanswer. The very first pardon he granted was obtained through partisan influence, the offence being improper conduct on the part of an election officer. The Slate heard publishes a list of the pardons granted by Geary, over half a hundred in all. Of these a very large proportion were of a character which render& it sure that they were granted for political reasons. Quite a number of them were cases of ruffians who had disturbed the quiet of election day, and indulged their brutal propensities by beating unoffend ing opponents. Several such cases of an outrageous character are recog nized as we glance over the pub lished list. Now we have only this to say: IfJohn W. Geary intended to par don all violators of the election law who belonged to his party, and all the Radi cal ruffians who saw lit to assault and beat their opponents, he would have done well to have omitted that clause from his inaugural in which he con demned such a use of the power vested in the Governor. But, it is possible he thought he might blind the public by such a previous declaration. It is very sure that he has not succeeded in doing so. He has gone further in the abuse of the pardoning power than any one ever did before him. That such is the fact cannot be denied. The very record it self proves it. How the Dead Lock Ended how will the nine bolting Republi cans answer to their constituency and to honest men of all parties for finaly voting for a man whom they so clearly stigmatized as corrupt? „.The paper read by Mr. Armstrong just previous to casting his vote fur Mr. Davis, will neither exonerate him nor any one of his comrades from the gravest sus picious. In that very document they declare, not only thatthey believed, but that they :ail( btli&rc Mr. Davis to have been "responsibly connected with of fensive legislation." They in factbroadly charge him with being a corrupt man and a dishonest and mercenary legisla tor, and yet they vote for him in the very next breath. \Vas ever such in consistency witnessed? They say Mr. Davis has given "pledges anti cc.w.wu•nnees." No doubt he has— "pledges and assurances" which will be perfectly satisfactory to the men who professed to be holding out for " princi ple." Those men should have voted for Davis without assigning any reason, and have thus made aquiet end of the farce. This published statement only renders it the more certain that the charges made against them by the Republican majority were true, and that their op position to Davis sprang from dissatis faction with the proposed division of the prospective spoils. We are sorry to be forced to such a conclusion, but we cannot read the doe ument presented by Mr. Armstrong without feeling convinced that there is room:for the gravest suspicions that he and his associates were not honest. If they had been, they would either not have yielded, or have been able to give better reasons for doing so. This pre liminary tight, coupled as it is with the taunts of each friction flung into the teeth of the other, shows that the hon esty of the House has not been im proved, and leaves room to expect that the legislation of the present body will be as corrupt as that of any which has preceded it. Curtin is. Geary At the Convention of the "Boys in Blue," a small assemblage of what Gree ley calls" soldiers of vengeance," which met in Philadelphia last week, there was a fierce fight as to whether Curtin or Geary should be nominated' for Vice President. The hero of Harper's Ferry and Snickersville was beaten. But the queeresttl lig of all is;the pretence which has been attempted to be set up that it was not a political body. The Morning Po,t, of Philadelphia, takes up the Reading Despub-h on that point in the following style, It says: The Coll\aalti01), notoriously , was a po litical body, and in proof of it is the tact that its tenon was political, and nothing but political. It met for the sole purpose of nouniaing candidates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency; and while it was unanimously in favor of Grant, the friends ;if teary :aid Curtin had a downright bat tle. It this is no: political, what is? We do not denounce the Convention for being What it was, but simply rid.cule the absur dity that it wan a spontaneous movement of the soldiers. Comparison of the Public Debt State- A comparison of the public debt state ment on January 1, with that publish ed on the Ist of December last, shows an increase of debt bearing con interest of nearly STio,ooo,ooo ; ou the lebt bear ing currency interest a decrellse of up wards of $51,000,000; on did matured debt not presented for payment an in crease of :l , 1,703,000; ou the debt bearing no interest au increase of 52,327,000. Decrease of cash in the Treasury, near ly $1,000,000. Total debt, less cash in the Treasury, increased upwards of $7,- 000,000. BosToN has inaugurated a Democratic Mayor. The office of Mayor of Boston is not, to he sure, precisely pivotal in the great scheme of things terrestrial ; but an event which would ordinarily provoke only local comment gains just now a certain claim upon the attention of the country, from the fact that the overthrow of the Republicans in the capital of New England, even upon a municipal issue, must be taken as a striking evidence of the extent and energy of the political reaction now go ing on throughout the Northern States. IT is a very fortunate thing for the South that it was a " loyal " assassin who attempted the life ofJudge Busteed. That simple fact has saved them from a deluge of Jacobin billingsgate, two or three confiscation acts, a regiment of Massachusetts clergymen, and a two weeks' debate in Congress. We have no love for Brigadier General Judge Dick Busteed, but if he had to die, we are pleased that it was by a loyal in strument. HORACE GREELEY winds up a strong editorial on the coming Presidential contest with the following declaration : We cannot win this fight by merely bang ing away on a drum ; and here is just where we apprehend that the managers of the Grant movement are sadly mistaken. Greeley cannot convince the men who are running the Grant machine. They are chiefly the more disreputable men of the Republican party, the gang of greedy placemen who care nothing for principle, and who only desire mem for the sake of securing the:opetle, Geary's Meanness and Malignity John W. Geary has given to the world an exhibition of mean spirited malignity which should make every high-aouled Pennsylvanian blush, to think that such a man fills the Guber natorial chair of this great State. He inserted in his Annual Message a lengthy paragraph, in which he vents his spleen against the mouldering re mains of the dead Southerners, whose bones have been consigned to Northern earth, within the ample enclosures of the cemeteries of Antietam and Gettys burg. His hatred goes beyond the con fines of the tomb, and he declares his willingness to harrow up the last rest ing place of these now unoffending dead. He professes to be horrified at the idea of permitting them to lie where they have been deposited by the hands of men who are as loyal as he dare be. In high and creditable con trast to the vindictive malignity of this narrow-minded creature are the gener ous words of the Radical Governor of .New York. When a letter was ad dressed to him complaining in regard to this matter Governor Fenton replied, speaking especially in reference to the Antietam cemetery, as follows : Conquerors, as we were, in that great struggle, our stern disapproval of the cause in which They fought did not forbid our ad miration of the bravery with which they died. They were Americans, misguided indeed, and misled, but still our country men, and we cannot remember them now either with enmity or unkindness. The hostility of the generous and heroic ends with death, and brief as our history is, it has furnished an early and striking example. The British and Americans who fell at Plattsbuig sleep side by side; and a common monument on the plains of Abra ham attests the heroism of Wolfe and Mont calm. To-day nothing perhaps could sooner re waken a national spirit in the heart of the South than the thought that representatives of the Northern States were gathering the zemains of its fallen sons for interment in our National Cemetery; and in future days, when our country is one, not alone in its boundaries, but in spirit and affection, and the recent struggle is remembered as a war less of sections than of systems, the ceme tery at Antietam, with its colossal statue of a tnion soldier keeping guard over the ashes of all who felt in the opposing ranks of McClellan and Lee, will have s common interest for the descendants of those who died on either side iu that sad and memor able civil war. Let any one compare this with the passage in the message of John W. Geary, iu which he speaks of the Na tional Cemeteries. The two paragraphs will show the true character of the two men—both Radicals—but the one with something noble and generous about him, the other evidently one of the !meanest and most narrow-minded bigots that ever disgraced any official position. Ballots and Beefsteak The New York Nation (Radical) says "the ballot is a great thing, but the na tural man craves also beefsteak and po tatoes." This is downright heresy. We had supposed it to be an article of Rad ical faith, that "the ballot" was itself meat anddrinlc,lodging, washing, cloth ing and fuel. litit the Nation seems to think differently, and it is undeniable that reports from the South give plau sibility to its theory. Even the Wash ington correspondent of the Worcester (Mass.) Spy, himself a Radical member of Congress, says : "The letters received here daily from all parts of the South, by the Congressional Republican Committee, are tilled with the most ominous fears and most melancholy statements. lit' people in many portions of the, country are ltterally nturinny. Of course they are restless, and inclined to vio lence oven. Crime is becotning more com mon, and Open pillage is feared. In South Carolina and Mississippi this state of :if fairs is the mo,t alarming. In the former State, the thilure of the crop has ruined planter, fintior and laborer alike. The plaster has beggared his factor, and cannot 110 W pay the freedmen, who are told at the end of their year's work that they have not earned anything beyond what they have bad to eat." Vet the ballot was to be the panacea for all the ills that freedmen are heir to, and now, after they have been forci bly invested with this sacred right, so called, of humanity, they are suffering from an ill they never knew before, the pangs of unsatisfied hunger. The Eighth of January With the eighth of January come memories of a glorious past. The day is intimately associated with the fame of one of the long list of great patriot leaders furnished by the Democratic party. It should be observed by our grand old party as a holiday in every city, village and hamlet throughout the land. Its annual return should be greeted with the lire of artillery, and it should be spent by the Democratic hosts iu joyous festivities. We are glad to notice that the present anniversary of Andrew Jackson's great victory at New Orleans has been distinctively marked. The Democracy of Ohio, Indiana, Nebraska and West Virginia set it apart as a proper time for hold ing their State Conventions. A grand dinner at Washington also marked the day. We would respect fully suggest that for all coming time the eighth of January be declared to be a grand annual Democratic holiday. Let it be observed everywhere as a pe culiar occasion, to be set apart and hal lowed by proud recollections of a glo rious past, appropriately commingled with patriotic resolves for the future. The day belongs to the Democratic party, and it should be kept by Demo crats as a holiday.. rp for Sale .tgain It appears that the wardrobe of Mrs. Lincoln has not yet been disposed of, and that it is shortly to be offered for sale in Providence, Rhode Island. The entire lot, it is announced, will he on exhibition on the day of sale, the price of admission being fixed at the moder ate sum of twenty-five cents, and the proceeds to inure to the benefit of the widow of the " late lamented." For the sake of decency, it is to be hoped that this rumor is untrue. Good Nontinatlon Among the nominations made in the Democratic caucus of members of the House, that of George Bailey, Esq., of Harrisburg, for Sergeant -at-Arms, is worthy of special commendation. Mr. Bailey is not only au ardent and un flagging Democrat, but a high-minded, generous-hearted and liberal-handed gentleman, WOO enjoys the respect and friendship of everybody who knows him. The Semi-Weekly .llmpleeute We have received from a friend in the Memphis Avalanche office a batch of Southern papers, among which is one published at Jefferson, Texas, bearing tbeeuphonious title of the Semi. flSekly Jint . plcrute. It is in its third year, and appears to be in a prosperous condition. AN army contractor in England was recently sentenced to five years' im prisonment for merely attempting to swindle the government in some con tract relating to the Abyssinian expedi tion. If such a law had been rigorously enforced during the late war in this country a large proportion of the leaders of the'Republican party would now be in the Penitentiary. BRADLEY, the negro delegate to the Georgia Convention, who was arrested, a few days ago for drawing a pistol upon the editor of the Savannah Re_ publican, was tried in the Mayor's court on Monday; convicted of riotous and disorderly conduct, and sentenced to pay $lOO fine and undergo ninety day's imprisonment—to which are added ten days for\ gross contempt of court. The verdict has created great excitement among the nigs, who swear they will tear the jail down and clean out the city of all " white trash." A. Radical exchange says Members of eongress are determined to make the revenue laws so stringent as to render their violatiOn a matter of impossi bility. In other words they have resolved to accomplish an impossibility. The wis dom of the .4 adicAls is truly wonderful. h Not This Repudiation imutonwealth vs. Nev. Washington V. I posed of without unnecessary delay. i Proceeding's or the Legislature. ' .Gotwaid-The Record in the Court of Very respectfully, yours, News Items , Quarter Sedulous of Adams County. ; HAerusnuno, Wednesday, January 8. I There are 20,000 Baptists In Maine, and M. &W. Mee tEa:a • Jack Hopkins, Defence. SENATE.-The Senate met at 12 o'clock. 18,000 in Connecticut. Sworn: Mr. Gotwald came • A petition signed by A. B. Foster, praying A Con t I membersslature to pass a law for electing tcONTLINHED.I grega ions church at Oberlin pro of the Senate and House by a Cu- poses to excommunicate Freemasons. W ln ash th in e gto ces .N e „.. o uo f th m e ni Co d.t m h c e n i o ur nw y e ti a n it d h t Lr ti with two horses and a carriage. They came the prosecutrix, Eliza J. Walter, pay thea mutative system of voting, was read, and There are 800 houses of prostitution and in the evening, about dusk. The evening costa. B. G. PETERsoli' 1 the committees not yet being appointed, it I 3,500 courtesans In Chicago, was very rainy and heavy. He was in his State of Pennsy lvania , aerate of Dauphin, i was laid on the table for the present. A ' The price of coal at Louisville, Hy., late brother's room at College; I saw him look -38 . : similar disposition was made of the follow- ly fell off two-thirds in a single week. lug at papers. I saw Dr. Baugher get into .-----, L Josiah C. Young, Clerk of the ing bills and petitions: A bill offered by Mr. George the carriage. They went awa on Saturday. Francis Train sailed for 1 1 Court of Quarter Sessions of said ' Mr. Searight, ot Fayette, repealing the law Europe on Tuesday. I brought the horse into towns William told SEAL. d h b certify that the : relating to the sale of liquor passed at the • county, o ere y me. I came into town and saw both broth- above is a true copy of 1111 the re- 1 last skstion, and one for a restoration of the . The vote of Governor Morphy, of Ar kin a hastitan is s, rejected by the registrars. era there, Washington and William. I car d an d proceedings In the case there statrd , Connellsville Railroad. By air. Lowry, a - brought the creature in once before; the so full and entire, as the same remains of i petition praying lor the creation of a now The Richmond Whig now opposes negro first time I brought the horse in, but can't 'recordsaidCourt.suffrage which it countenanced recently, tell the time. in 1 county out of parts of Crawford, Venan Witness my hand and seat of sa id C our t and Warren, and an act providing for the Louisiana Penitentiary convicts are to be Dr. Baugher: Richards lives in Allen- at Harrisburg, November 25, 1867. I same, By Mr. Wallace, a bill repea li ng t h e put to work on the Hickey crevasse. town, and Baugher in Norristown, both J. C. YOUNG, Clerk, act which compels the indiscriminate ad- There were nine bridal parties at a hotel preaching. Jack Hopkins, recalled : It was a two- Among the records of the court of Qu a , mission of negroes to the railroad .cars.- in Dayton, Ohio, on Christmas Eve. ter Sessions of Dauphin county of April By Mr. Davis, an act to promote the im- I seated carriage. I can't tell the time they week's inter' 1 ,not la revenue receipts 865 N '''', i i ta' das fol. provement of real estate by exempting the ' a term, 1 ,x o. s con me amounted to $7,744,000 went away; the three young men, I mean. ,lows: " mortgages thereon, to a certain extent, from Mo Henry Rupp sworn : There are no gas- , DOCKET ENTRY. taxation, By Mr. Beck, a bill entitled joint Rain Worms and snow lu the Rocky lights on the other side of the street, there Commonwealth vs. Washington V. Got- resolution relative to the currency, and a Mountains are swelling the western rivers. is one on the opposite side, at the diamond. wald.-Certified copy of record f rom t h e revision of the tariff laws of the United The wages of the employees:in the Pacific I think the one could not, and the other is Court of Quarter S ons of Adams county. Stntes, mill, at Lawrence, Mass., will be reduced too far away. The door has a recess. The Indictment, neictment fornication a nd b as t ar dy, on House,-In the House two ballots were 15 per ceut. after 15th Instaut. door being closed, the light could not shine , oath of Mae J. Walter, April 26, 1865. De- had for Speaker, without result. Mr. Herr The Post-office and three stores at Johns in the side-lights. fondant being arraigned, pleads not guilty, offered a resolution condemning, in strong town, N. Y., were burned on Friday. The X Mr. Codwin, who lives opposite, has a Trial ordered, whereupon a jury of the . terms, the course of the Republican mom- . loss Is heavy. gaslight immediately opposite this house, , county being called, came, to wit: Benja- : bers who refused to abide by the decision Swope occupies the opposite h ouse, and has • min G. Peters, Wm. H. Cassel, Joseph A. ,of too caucus. The Clerk, who was pr e _ Leonard W. Jerome has recovered $400,- gaslight. Ido not know what kind of light , Mager, Germon,Laird, John I siding, declared it to be 4nit of order. ci a 000 of the ,81. 4 00,000 which he sunk in Pacific the front burns; I do not know if any lights ' No finger, Geo. Hoffman, D. C. Detweiler. motion, adjourned until 10 o'clock Thurs- Mull were burned in the front room In April, op- Daniel Miller, Thomas McCord, George S. day morning. Mankato, Minnesota, lately shipped 21,- posite. Kemble, Joseph Meredith, twelve good and • HAerristionti, Jim. 9, INX) muskrat skins for the Eastern market John Lease, sworn: I went to Sunday lawful men of the county of Dauphin, duly SENATE.-Mr. Burnett, of Monroe, read in one lot. School 28 years ago last summer. She was selected, summoned, returned, empanelled, in place, a bill repealing the third section The New York Tribune compliments a small chunk of a girl, 7or 8 years old ballotted, and sworn or affirmed, according 'of the act of 1667, relating. to judicial sales Johnson on his ability to make so much use then, to look at her. 'the Sunday School to law, Sc., who, upon their oaths and and the preservation of mortgages, and ' i ofGrant. was iof a mile off. My wife and her are afftrmations, do any that they find the de- 1 leaving the law as it stood before. first cousins. It was in 1835, the season we fondant not guilty, and direct that the pros- I A committee in the contested eleetion , The inventor of rho needlegun, whose death we notir moved into Menallen. My attention was , ed some weeks since, Was 1 , 10 ecutrax, Eliza J. Walter, pay the costs. ease between Mr. S. T. Shugart aud John tender-heartcnd that • he would not kill a tly. asked to this to-day, since I came into town. K. Robinson was chosen. It comprised -, ••••.... Rev. Luther Gotwald, sworn : I live in Leb- The Bottom Out. the following members : Messrs. Cowles, i Oeneral Fremont Is stated to be opposed r t C end Grant, and In favor or Chief .1 us anon, and am a brother of the defendant. I'Vill G R W . (MoKean,) Fisher, (Laneaster.) Landon, I ° ( 'hose, Grant run upon a epu ican He is younger thaa me, fouryears Younger. (Bradford,) Ridgway, (Philadelphia,) and ' [ice for the Presidenev. His age is about 28 years; lam nearly P. Platform, with the bottom ou . t,•"rhat's Taylor, (Beaver,) all Republicans, and Tao jury in the case of Van Stilen, Ittr the I received a despatch from him three or four the question. All eyes will soon turn 1 Jackson, (Sullivan,) and Luiderman, murder ctf Dr. Ilareourt, at St. Paul, failed weeks before the 17th of November; I met upon the Supreme Court, The Mc- (Bucks,) Democrats. ,to agree, anti were diacharged. him at Harrisburg in pursuance of it. I Cardle case, from Mississippi, is there. . 1 A message fronethe Governor,:relating te At Lynn, Maseachuset a, there is a floats went there in the cars. He came from Not many days now will elapse before , a number of last session bills with his ve- ing bridge which is sixty•seven veers old, Chambersburg in the morning train, and I the case will excite more intense dis- toes of the same was received. After the and is still serviceable. from Lebanon. cession and interest than anything iu consideration of a portion of the list the St. Louis last year hart 3 .) ,7775e0 by tires .`o3IMONwEALTH FtEsUMEs. Congress: Senate adjourned unul Monday evening at on which there was iill;llrilileu fo the Eliza Walters, recalled: Nut examined, The vali ~.y LEE of the. laws establishing S o'clock. ' amount of $1,761,0:28, George Jacobs, sworn; I am a merchant Housk.-In the House the day was again j . military despotism in ten States of the i Imy thousand Arabs have died of tailor in Gettysburg. Mr. Gotwald got . e. spent in repeated abortive efforts to elect a , Union is now brought directly in clues- I I . I measured fora coat, dress coat-whole suit t to t ra in A geria, and now finitino threat , 45 republicans voting for Davis ma _ , in the last week of March or Ist week of Lion, upon a habccra•corpris case. . ei Id S bolting and voting or ditlerent ens the survit ors. April. I made it up. The defendant called Cardle was arrested, imprisoned,and parties. The Democrats constantly cast 45 The number of deaths during ISe7 in Nett fur it and got it. I went to the city in April, arraigned for trial before a military votes for Mr. Jones. At 6 o'clock in the York City was 23,710. In Brooklyn during and was there on the 13th riff that month. commission, for publishing articles iu , es-cuing the House adjourned to meet at II the year, the mortality amounted to 5,32:.. The coat was delivered before I went to the his newspaper at Vicksburg, denounc- ~ o'clock on Friday morning. A young II I inoisan , aged twenty-two city. Mr. Baugh, gut hiile.iat on the illst lug their acts as unconstitutional, and ' FRIDAY, Jan. 14, years, owns fifty thousand acres of land of April. I know he got it beton) the 21st of advising the people to vote against a HousE.-Pursuant to adjournment the In his native State wad twelve thousand In April. Convention. It is a case involving per- House me , lit 11 o'clock this morning. Ito- Nebraska. al Can't tell who gave it to him. I did not mediately after the body Was called loonier, r ,ii Nr : , mere sonal liberty upon a writ of right, and .itaie :Ire 267 Ito post churches, charge it at the time, but afterwards, by , c Mr. Thorn moved that the I tomer take a re before the Court it talc es precedence.. with leirtie mem lairs. In Cop nee! ionthura omission; a month or al, less than two cess until 2 o'clock. The o yeas and nays illontLai. I can't tell how long after it was '1213e case presents the naked question . • ere 112 churches of the same denmination, were called and the motion was curried by with 1 , n,. 10 got it was charged. lie got the coat on or of the validity of these laws. The Court a ~,ote of r,O ye, i t) .1 . -„„,,..,. A , .. 0 . ( , 1 „,., t e . atom hers. near the time Baugher got his, must meet and decide it; and they will. , tee house reassellibled, and, on motion pro- ' Freitekn recently hung himself be g COdOri, SIVOIII : In the dwelling These laws are Stich open, flagrant seeded to the twenty-sixth ballot tor Speak. ''sense his gran, dunned him fiir a bill of opposite Walters gas was introduced into it violations of the Coustitulion that it is , or. When the name of Mr. Armstrong, of twenty dollars. Thereupon lint son shot the before April of lust year. 'lle Catholic Priest impossible they will not be declared such . Laneaster, was called, he asked that the grocer. Thi account in still unpaid. oceupied one of the rooms, Father McKin- b y a majority of the Judges; and that following be read, which wits clone: •Throe parties lire aiming to get possossion ney. The bracket would reach half over Hor s ,: ci „ 1t,,,, TAT ,,,,,, , ) of the Missouri Pathic railroad, Vander decision knocks the bottom out of the the window; bad it burning every night to January le, ISO , . Kilt, the Pennsylvania Central, and a St. Republlc.an platform. 9 or to o'clock.. • I think he was at home in We, the undersigned, Republican mem- Louis party. April, 1863. Can't tell the time; hardly But the ease is likely to resent an - hers of the House of Representatives or the Austria had to dock Maximilian of his ever a week away. Once a month he preach- other interesting feature. , Commonwealth 4,f PenlisylVallia, having title of Emperor before it could i.tet. his body. ed in Fairfield, and once in the meantime. Upon the bench sits Chief-Justice , declined to attend the caucus of our party Ile was styled " the late Archduke" in all He was hero on Easter Sunclay. Chase, a candidate for the Presidency, friends, held for the purpose of making communications with Juarez, Jacob Brinkerhoff, sworn: My house is especially urged by the negro organize- nominations of persons to till the offices of ' on account of the reappearance °flit:, out the fourth house from Walters' noose. On Hens of the South. President Johuson this House, mid haying up to this time 110 disoute at Antwerp, the Dutch Govern night s when there was HO moon they lit the will be represented by the Attorney- I withhold our support ]rum the mown. of meet has taken rigorous measures of pre streets up. General, who must concede in open i said caucus for the position of Speaker, de- caution en the frontiers. George .Yleope, sworn : My house is on the I sire to lay before this hotly, our immediate ~ , . Court that those laws are unconstitu t Iver 812,000 worth of tickets have been comer. Walters' is on tbe opposite side. constituents and the people of the Suite, 71.1 e room towards tits squats was lighted [ion al; al • that will compel General Grant, , . sold for the first six nights or tho "NS bite the reasons which hate influenced our ac- with gas, and were never iu that. The one who represents the War Department, lion. Fawn" ill New York, The Fawn Is the I burn the gas in is nearest Walters'. The and has the military reconstruction I rr , , ,r'e dave been opposed to the election of Black Crook's suceessor, burner is attached to the jtunofthe window. under his control, to come into Court 'the candidate for Speaker presented by the While Hemming, was seeretary of the If. D. Wattles, :acorn: Mr. Mills, as soon also, by counsel specially employed camels above referred to, because we be- rebel treasury, the joke went round that he as he got it, he introduced gas, four years for that purpose, or he must aban- lieved and still believe that the will of the had said the debt amounted to 8600,000,000, ago ;he dirt it. don the military supremacy sought people and the interests of the Republican "r t's,u oo . ooo , oo o-he Ihrget which. Martha June LeSon, sworn : I lived at to be established by those military re- party at this tone in this State, demand the Peat sells in Madison, Wisconsin. at mix Walters' in the spring, or 1863. I saw Got tio era Speak e r, with, among where, dollars a cord, and is generally HIM salts construction bills. And there will up- "lac It S weld there the evening I went after her. At : the following qualitientions: factorily used In that place us a substitute that time Mr. Nlublenberg's whole family, pear also the counsel of McCartile to , ! Pirst. One who is in all respects free from fur caul and wood. Robert Fisher and Mr. Baugher boarded re resent the liberties of the people, ; 1 respmeible connection with the past legis- /ei there. The family of Mn, MuLdenberg went and to maintain that the Constitution fatten of this body, cousidered offensic oby is caila „,„,, l , La la 'f he Nora Caroline peanut or° i this year high as letyou b l ushers, of away after that. They came hack again. I which expressly forbids the arrest and i , Lie people. which 30,en0 have been already shipped. don't know- of any others beim, at Wel- trial of American citizens not engaged Second. Ono whose record and life show Virginia also grows ft large quantity. fens' at that time. After Mr. 7,%Fuhlenber g in the naval or military service, by tn il- ' him to be in favor of reforming the abuses went back Mr. Black came there. Mra, itary courts, is still the supreme law of 1 that have erept into the managenient of •\ hotel Lou"II I' ii ew e fBl.lsvi. e, ‘31., ni be Muhlenberg was in the back parlor the the land. But the curious inquiry now . public affairs In this State; and of retrench- called iii,cult house, is 'mug' . erected at evening. that Gotwald was there, sitting . . 1 ing in all primticable way s c m exp e ndi_ n coat. of el,-06,000, It will he linislied by t immediate effect will it have is, waa . 0 midsummer, with I\ I iSS Maria. When I came down ; twos of the Coln monweelth. upon candidates and parties ^. stairs I went for Eliza to Brinkerhoff s. ' Third. Ono who has not been identified, Last your there were 3885 leaflet in Cin.- She then came home, and then I went to Many sagacious men believe that , ' ill a Wav that would be likely to effect his einnali; the ',Nees by tiro were sl,tina„uoo„ my bed. General Grant, who has always express- „ °mead action, win, any eorperation in the ex ile more than the instiraneo; tile city V, There was no light in the front parlor; ed reluctance to leave his present high State that has heretofore shown a tlisposi- expenses, $2,553,421 71. could tell if any light was in the hall. There position to be a candidate for the Presi , non to mouopolize privileges, to exercise Several highwaymen, on Sidurtiuy night, was a table and a chair on the right hand dency, will say to the Radical Polita- powers not granted by charter, and to con- stopped the stage due at Omaha from Sioux side. I can see into the back parlor from clans who desire to nominate him, "the tee legislut ion by improper influences. City, wounding several passengers, and where that chair is. bottom of your platform is gone. I ! Iburth. ton, win, would so constitute the (tarrying cdf about $5OO. dr,sce Wolters, sworn: Miss Eliza is my have resolved to remain Where lam committ ee s of this House, and so direct its Mr. Roberta, the sexton of the uernetery sister. I was living, in the opening of last . action us to carry into etlect in good faith upon the solidifiatform of General-in -at Bellontaine, Ohio, fell deed tit the side of year, at home, where Eliza wits. I rernem the will of the party to which we belong, as Ch'of theA Ishall adhere Cola Army, ant a grave be had just finished, from over ca ber the evening Mrs..Mulilenberg, WEIS there thou a I expressed at. its late ('once ention, held at ertlon on Thursday last. spending an evening. She was sating with that until I find a sounder basis tar Williatosport, in favor of the passage of a ' her back towards the door as I came into Republican plataorm." : Free Railroad I.IIW. There are thirty ladies and one hundred the back parlor, under the gas. This was But for the Chief-Justice what a lo- And judging the candidate for the Speak- six and gentlemene employed us telegraph -...........- in the month of April, ISG:i. I can't tell the rious opportunity to present himself in ership favored by the majority of our puny operators on the line of the Pennsylvania HERE is what Forney's Pros said of time of the month; it was before Mrs. Mule. an elaborate.opiuiou as the champion friends by his votes in this body, by his Central Reilroad, Hon. Benjamin • Fitzpatrick, when it lenberg left home. She left on the 23d, and defender of the negro ring military published remarks and speech., and by The Pennsylvania c nal Company mined They came the first day of April. They ill rs we have not deemed him and shipped to New York 861,730 tone of despotism policy, and par exerklence, its his surround 6. , . • I him to be iu favor of forcing • • - supposer II paid me for their boarding. remember head and re tresentative. He may thus , the person best qualified to poet the just liiithracite coalduringthelS - i year .If, , an n the odious anti infamous reconstruction was writing off the tax tJaplicate for the . creaso olatla,ooo tons over the previous }'ear. increase t 1 his l e ance for the nomivatiou ' expectations of the Republican voters ot the scheme upon the South : , school directors to levy their tax. The law ~ or to give strength to that party or- An English contractor inis been sentenced requires the . Commissioner to furnish them at Chicago. Let u s wait patiently. \N e 'State, , e . ganlzation whleli saved the country from to five years' penal servitude for merely iit " The lion. Benjamin I,li.kzpatriek, for - : : .. the first Monday of May. I have never yet shallsee. disruption by war, and to which a patriotic tempting to swindle the Government In many years a Democratic' Senator from had them unfinished on the Ist of May. --sn'assa- c people look for wise government in pea.. Hupplies for the A byssininn war. Alabama, advised the people of the State to Robert Fisher's testimony read. Mr. Pendleton's speech. vote for the new Republican Cwistitutlon„ ' Our temporary separation from those with A gallibler reeentl y arrested in St. Louie l'rial ended April ''3, 180. The following ia the speech delivered in 1 wholii we have heretofore acted has been and 'to g 0 to work acid build themselves testifies that IF ' 1. • II " • ye •le s in that city had , the Ohio State Convention by Hon, George ! n9lllllll to Us. The step wae taken in the up from the ruin and poverty that wild Se- eiroceettiscis oN TRIAL IN ADAms Emu NTv• been paying 100 per month each for "Dro ll. Pendleton after the passage of the re so- first place, from no feeling of flisuppoint- i•i• i i ' • • cession and revolution have caused.' Ihe tent on -1. e., 'mummy Crum arrest. In thc Court of Quarto. SCSSiOns of the Peace, lotion declaring him to be the choice of anent or revenge, from no disposition to be rebels tried to get hint to write on the other a 4,1,,,,,, ,0,,,,t, ~ j , ,, , Ohio for the Presideney. Mr. Pendleton , with no intention o tacomini., di s -factious' . ' r , ~ • , side, hilt. the veteran .1),I1110erat mid the , , ,;-/, '''' ..i„ . for school plirposes is 1,019,1 e:,, di, idecf. ae. r Comnionaealth vs. ‘N asnington V. Got- said : organizers, but we claim to have been actu- • , boys cut ' Ile could not see it, and there ttre Wald, No. I', AugustSessions,lstA charge ma. president and (PO/smut of the Chum - aced wholly by a high sense ]duly to our- " I " ws : N N tut" mill'''. ' - ' )7 '' 9ll ; rwlta-les. he be if be would do any such thing.'" iisl ; colored: nudes, 12,1130 ; females, Fornication - and Bastard, August 16, 1564. vention: Language fails me to express the selves, to Our chustituents, and It, the party ' Since the publication of the truly Tree bill, August 17, 1504, continued to No- emotions of my heart at this moment. I ' whose best interests we have always tried /3, i 92 . patriotic jotter of Mr. Fitzpatrick, the vember Sessions upon motion and affidavit thank you for the high honor you have done i to s er v e , A boy in Norwich, Conn., got lit his, Prtss has not had a s ing e word to say of defendant tiled. By the Court November me. I thank. you for the approval of my 1 j At no time has the thought been enter- father's gin bottle last week, dritined It,, ' l in commendation of him. 13, 1861. By consent of the defendant the convictions, my character and my conduct; tattled by any one of the undersigned of an wait d insensible for thirty-six hours, It Court order that the deposition of Maria but, gentlemen, I thank you still more be- casting a single vote, under any possible was with difficulty he could be revived by -- -..-.....----- - Walter be taken, one of the counsel from cause this compliment comes from the tried, circumstances, for the caddichtte supported at physielau. The Gotwahl Case. each side attending, and appoint A. J. the true, and the triumphant Democracy of by the party called Democratic. The Louisville Journal says: " President We give Malay the conclusion of the Cover, Esq., commissioner. Same day the my own native State-a Democracy which, our hole purpose, from the beginning, Lincoln, who was nev, a calumnious mail, defendant, N'ashington V. Gotwald, pleads by itapatient and devoted courage, its heroic has w been to secure time for reflection on the said to his friends at Weshington that Pope case of the Commonwealth vs. Rev. I,V. not guilty, and for this he puts himself up- effort, and its unswerving fidelity to sound I part of the majority of our own party, was a good fighter, an inordinate eater, unit V. Gotwalti. We have published the on the county, and the Commonwealth of principle, has achieved within the last year i hoping that on sober thought they would a monstrous liar." Pennsylvania loth the like issue and rule an unparalleled success, uncl, in the short see the mistake they had made and hasten entire record, precisely as it stands on An angry husband at Omaha mused a for trial. space of five years, has brought us up from to correct it ; and time for the people to so blow Up by putting powder Into moult) of the records of the Courts of Adams and Whereupon a jury being called, attested, a minority of a hundred thousand to a ma- express themselves its that those who are his Wile's stove wood. She wits not hurt, Dauphin counties, aud have no cona- tried, sworn and affirmed, do serve, to wit: jority in the State. but their servants could not help being b at , ~,,,,,thing that. would cost money la Nicholas Heltzel, Anthony Guise, Levi The issues that were presented last year anent to make, deeming that to be fin- made acquainted with their voice, and replace, was ~,,,,,,ho d . Whole, Devitt J. Melhone, Jacob lianas, were well worthy of the struggle. They through it [night be willing to yield to the ' P as the libel suit growing out of Stepheu 11inard, Nicholas Seltzer, John were to sustain [lce supremacy of the White popular demand. Minorities have respon- . Ni Lawretioi Fuller, " l"'gli.inttEprecher at our allusion to the proceedings is now Crumrine, Joseph Cruinrine, Jesse Bucher, race, and prevent the Africanization of the sibilities as well as majori tiee, ~,,,, , e , such . i ii , e . trii, i i .t. ,er , , d rigt i I ry i r i o s r eoll , lll .. , al lust week J. J. Bieseeleer, and David Bricker, twelve States of the Union, and the protection of we feel that we have but discharged our ° °°° ' . i ' ' 4 .'"! 14 'oven °"1-l" pending, and likely soon to be tried, end a beet, parts of all of %thief, were found good and lawful men of the county, who our own State of Ohio from hyliridation. : duty. --...-... ea upon their oath and solemn affirmations, 'rhey were to raise from the shoulders of an • In the hope that a change would be effect- in his possession. Till.: Radical papers at Harrisburg an- respectively do say: over-taxed and oppressed people the bur- ed by a little delay, We have not been dis- ThuM ..assitellusetts State prisons pay a Hounee that W'ziyne McVeigh is a eau- Nov. 26, 1861-10 o'clock I'. M.-Court ad- dens about to be put on them, and to lead appointed, yearly profit of tr2i,ooo unnually. If con journed to meet at 91 o'clock this evening, them into anew career of prosperity; and • rile candidate for the Speakership pre- ducted so as to diminish, not merely punish dilate for United States Senator. He 91 o'clock I'. M.-Court met. Present, these same issues are to be settled in the : seate d by the majority has not been with- crime, then their profit is inealeu lably more is a sou-indite" of Simon Cameron. If •l edges Ziegler and Wierinan. Adjourned coming contest, not only in our own State, drawn, 11S W 0 huff hoped he Won Id he, but than can be presented In dollars and rents_ to meet at 91 o'clock to-morrow morning. but in the whole country. And if the peo- he has given us such pledges and assur- A "perambulist" ill Cheyenne attempted Simon could buy a seat in the Senate Nov. '7, 18134. Court met at 01 o'clock A. ole of Ohio will do their duty as [bey have slices that tee feel we have gained slibslan- 1., walk seventy-five csmsecuti ye hours for himself, what he to hinder him from I‘l. Court met. present Judges Ziegler and in the prLst, whoever shall be selected as the tinily the object we aimed 111, and that our without food or sleep, but beiiiime del irk i•ita ' f his son-in-law. It 11'111 buying one or Wierman. Adjourned to meet at 41 o'clock standard-bearor of lice Democracy 111 w- hay° course will be fully justified by the pro- at the 01141 , rflifty hours, and was compelled this afternoon. Same clayll o'clock P. the pleasure and honor of placing them in dent and independent character of the legis- to quit. only be a quesliou of dollars and cents 3d. Court met; present, Judges Ziegler victory and power in the seats ot National - lotion Una the party in power in this House A colored femily in Washiligton worn if the Radicals have a majority in the and Wierman. Adjourned to meet at 9 power, will enact during the present session. finale seriously 10 a few days shier., after -............_- -- - - o'clock to-morrow. next Legislature. Nov. 26, 1864-9 o'clock A. M. Present, eTh itemovai of Governor Jenkins ' Not having, therefore, any further end to dining cat turkey, by a poisonous weed gain that will justify a longer delay, and which had been used in the stuffing by Luis- Judges Ziegler and Wierman. Adjourned - - iiimiusTA, GA., Jan. 13.-The following desiring sat the liouse be organized as take. ' In meet at 11 o'clock' P. St. 11 o'clock P. , order was issued this morning: -,-, : speedily as possible, that the public busk- The ma. Legislature m.—Court met. Present, Judges Ziegler IIeaDqUARTERS THIRD alit IT ,114- , ness may he transacted, we will bow re- and Wierman. Adjourned to meet at 10 TRIcT, ATLANTA, Jan, 13, 1868.-Cienera t spectfully to the will of the majority. rho prop,, lt , ! to abolish its prohibitory o'clock to morrow. Orders, No. 8.-First-Charles J. Jenkins, ANititew A itiesTimect, -, I lir uor law w ith favor. Both houses hate Nov. 'ill, 1864-10 o'clock A. \I. Present, Provisional Governor, and John Jones, J. lion, Earl', reniseil to receive bills abolishing the State Judges Ziegler and Wierman. The jury be- Provisional Treasurer of the State of fluor- ActilsiTt's LIE,•EERT, constabulary who eon,. the lots. ing brought into Court, they Were asked if gig, having dechued to respect the inform:- SAMI•EI. M'CAMANT, A gift entertainment in Louisville :elver t hey had agreed upon their verdict; they dons of, and failed to co-operate with the JOHN T. itieltAitos, tisol to present a horse to the holder of i mo replied they had not, and there was no pos- , Major General commanding the 'Third Geo. It. Rinimn, lucky number. When a toy horse e m , sibility of their agreeing, and asked to be Military District, are hereby removed from ' 1i.,,- in D. Sm rro, brought out as the prize, the mutton. discharged. Whereupon the Court, with °Mee. 11. S. WirA Faroe, couldn't See the joke. the consent of counsel, discharged them. Second-By virtue of the authority grant- air. Armstrong, then voted for Elishn W. A leek of income, It is said, Interferes with January 19, 1865. Continued on behalf ed by the supplementary Reconstruction Davis, all the bolting members doing the the prosperity of NI ichigun tepurtamen and of the defendant to April sessions, 1865, on Act of Congress, passed July 19, 1867, the some, except al r. Biddl,,, of Agegia,,,a,, N lumbermen. The former can get but little account of the inability of his mother, Mrs. , following named officers are detailed for who voted for George Wilson. Mr. Da, is Venison, and the latter ere unable to haul Gotwald, (a witness) to attend. c duty iu the District of eneorgia: 1 Brevet - , . ~. bonus H. was conducted to the Chair by Messrs. their timber. By the Court. JAMES J. FINE, Clerk. , Jones end Mel 'amant, find delivered a The funeral of Biallop Hopkins takes AmiticATioN FOR REMovAL To DAUPHIN Ruger, Colonel of the 33d Infantry, to be short address. The House then proceeded ' a. ,- cotar V AND PROCEEDINGS THERE. ' 1 Covernor of the State of Georgia; Brevet place inßurlington, t„ nu the Lith Ins[. to She election of other oili c e r , i , with 1110 fol- A large attendance iif the Bishops and Commonwealth vs. Washington V. Got- 1 Captain Charles F. Rockwell, Ordnance : lowing results: clergymen of the United States and Can ward, (Minister.) No. 12, August Sessions, I Corps, U. S. A., to be Treasurer of the chi e f- clerk-Gen. James 1., Selfridge,!of aria Is expected. 1884. Indictment for Fornication and lies- I State of Georgia. . Northampton comity. tardy. And now, March 16, 1865, on man- I Third -The above named officers will Assistant Clerk-Edward G. Lee, of Phila. ace. Greeley lectured in Readin t Hor . 14 1: „ lion in Court of Quarter Sessions or Adams I proceed, without delay, to Milledgville, del raps other evening. Among the citizens who county, the Court order and direct the Clerk Georgia, and enter upon the duties devote- Transcribing Clerks-Wm. A. Nichols, called ciri him Was Hon. Mester Clymer, of Quarter Sessions to make up the record ing upon them, subject to instructions from ' - Reuben Bernard, John F. lien Frederick Frederick tylio subsequently placed his sleigh itt his of said case, as the same remains in his , these headquarters. McGee and George A. Bakertym. disposal, mid aecomp Quarter Sessions of Dauphin county, in R. C. DRUM, A. A. G. anied Win on n ride. office, and certify the same to the Court of 1 By order of Major General Meade. Sergeant-at-Arms-Capt. Casper (fang. 'rho riot between the whites end blacks at 1 . Arrsistant Ser I I Sergeant -at-Arms-John oin ale- Pulaski, 'renn., on the evening of the sev pursuance of Actof Assembly changing the : - at 10.30 A. Si, this order was read to the Connell, Israel K. Ira u, Robert Johnson enth, resulted in the killing of two negroos venue in said case. Approved January 1 9 , 1 Convention amid much applause. and A. J. Woods. and the whundine of five. One white unto A, D„ 1865. By the Court. - , Doorkeeper -J. IL Hall. was wounded. It is feared the riot will be Ronkur J. 'insulin, 31 'sit°. ri. I Assistant Doorkeepers-Samuel Mitchell, renewed. ISAAC E. WIERMAN , General Paltrier, treasurer of the Union IJ. ii, Vincent, aloses Arndt and 'lsheodere Commonwealth vs. Washington V. Got- Pacific Railroad, Kansas branch, now in Chase. wald.-Washington V. Gotwald and Dr, i charge of the surveys on the "1115 and 3ad ; Messengers-P. C. ilemphilLiatnes Mc• le G. Fahnesteek, you, and each of you, I parallels, through New Mexico, Arizona, Catey, B. Bishop and Barrett lirown. acknowledge to owe and be indebted to the and Calif writes to headquarters here, Pestuerater-A. G. Henry. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the' under date of Fort Mohave, Arzona, De- Assistant Postmaster-Jaines Penrose. sum of eight hundred dollars, to be levied combe d 28, that he has a good, line to the Mr. Chalfant, (Dem.) of Montour, moved of your goods and chattels, lands and tene- Colorado river below Melte:id offeivigation, 'to amend by inserting the Rune s of the men[-4, respectively, upon this condition, at an excellent bridging point. south of Fort ' fllowing gentlemen in lieu of those teen- that it' the said Washington V. Gotwald , Mohave, about 1,370 miles from Kansas honedio idiotic: shall be and appear at the city of Harris- Assistant Clerk-John reCoriner, a Alle- City, and 561 train San Francisco. burg, in and for the county of Dauphin, on The descent into the Colorado Valley, , gheny. the fourth Monday of April next, (A. D. which was considered the most doubtful Sergeant-at-Arms--Geo. haik,y. 1865,) at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that Doorkeeper-dohs Rawl. point in the whole route, is accomplished day, and not depart the court without leave, then this recognizance to be void, or else to 1 within the maximum, and chiefly within Pestmaster-Samuel T. Bw rou, sixty feet grades. For two hundred miles, Mesaanger-Moses T. Fox. be and remain in full force and virtue, between Albuquerque and the Colorado HARRISIMMG, Jan. 13, Taken and acknowledged in open Count ' river, the route lies through, or immedi- SENATE.-11l the Senate the Standing this sixth day of February, A. D. 1865, be- I ately adjacent to, extensive pine forests. Committees were appointed. A bill was In fore me. JAMEs J . FINE, Clerk, : The party has seen no-snow, except two troduced exenapting from tax personal prop- State of Pennsylvania, Adams County, s a t . ' thousand feet above our highest summit, erty, moneys at interest, and bonds and Our animals found good grazing all the j mortgages not issued by corporations. The ,x_s__, I, James J. Fink, Clerk of the way' y There is no frost here yet, and the; appointment of General Provost as Major 1 SEAL.I Court of Quarter Sessions, of the trees are still green, and there is no evi- General of Militia was eontirtned. On mo• i j• Peace in and for. the county of dente 103 yet of winter. lam satisfied that, Lion, the Judiciary Committee were direct- Adams, do certify that the fore- with the facilities afforded by the Colorado ed to inquire why the curreut surplus In goirig is a full and complete record of the river, by the mild climate, abendantaimber the Treasury and sinking fund cannot be case of the Commonwealth vs. Washington and 'productive soil in this valley, the invested to produce interest. V. Gotwald, (minister,) No. 12, August whole line can be completed in four years. House.-In the House a resolution look- Sessions, 18114. So far as the same remains lug to the appointment of a Gas Inspector in this office, that said record includes all _ I was introduced and postponed. the original papers on file, as also a tine copy of the minutes of said trial, taken from Quarter Sessions docket G. • In testi mony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court atGettys burg, this 16th day of March, A. D. 1885. JAMES J FINK', Clerk. Commonwealth vs. W. V. Gotwald, In dictment for fornication and bastardy. Re moved from the Court of Quarter Sessions of Adams county to the Court of Quarter ' , EISSiOIIIB of Dauphin county; and now, April 19th, 1865, I, Eliza Jane Walter, the prosecutrix in this casa, hereby enter a not pros., and direct the District Attorney of Dauphin county to enter thesame of record. ELIZA J. WALTEIJ, Witness, JOHN A. Swore. The Radical State Treasurer of Penn sylvania has just made his report, and in it appears the following significant clause in relation to the manner in which a part of our State debt has been paid within the last year: Some few of the foreign holders have re ceived their money under protest, contend ing that they were entitled to receive the principal of the old bonds in gold, but this has been done to a very limited extent. It is but Justice to state that no citizen of Penn sylvania is included in this list of protest ants• uniform reply to such protests has been "that It was no part of the origi nal contract to nay in gold." The State Treasurer asserts what Is untrue when he declares "that it was no part of the original contract to pay in gold." It was the very essence of the contract, for at the time these bonds were issued nothing else except gold was a legal tender in this country for any debt. No wonder the foreign bond holders objected to receiving "green backs." When the Radical State Treas urer thus undertakes to pay our old State bonds in the legal tender paper of the day, how can any Radical holderof five twenties have the face to demand that the people shall be taxed to pay him in gold" Thad. Stev with the ens j asserts greatest positiveness, and with truth, "that it was no part of the contract to pay them in gold." The Fourteenth Section The Ohio House of Representatives has adopted a resolution withdrawing the assent of Ohio to the proposed 14th Article of the Constitution of the United States, and the Senate will unquestion- ably concur in the action of the House. The New Jersey Legislature will speed do the same thing. . e Fourteenth Amendment makes, in its first section, all persons born or natur alized in the United States citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside, prohibits the abridgement of their privileges or immunities of United States citizenship by any State, and pro vides for the equality of all persons before the law. The second section apportions representation to the several States accord ing to the whole population of each State, excluding Indians not taxed, and provides that when the right to vote for United States or State officers is denied to any male inhabitant, being 21 years of age and a citizen of the United States, or in ally way abridged except;for participation in rebel lion mother crime, the basis of repre-ynta [Mu shall be reduced in proportion with the number of such mule citizens 21 years of age in such State. The third section debars from holding any Mike, civil or military, State or N:111011111, those who, having pre viously taken an oath to support the Con stitution of the United States, became en gaged in the Rebellion, or gave it aid and comfort. Congress may, by a two-thirds vote of each Ilouse, remove such disability. The fourth section asserts the validity of 'he National debt, and prohibits the pay ment of the Rebel debt, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of slaves. The filth section gives power to enforce, by ap propriate legislation, the provisions of the article. To the section which refers to the na tional and rebel debts there could be no possible objection, but the opposition to the other clauses was proper, and the withdrawal of the sanction of the Leg islatures of Ohio and New Jersey will meet the approval of a majority of the people of the North. A Sign of the Times At the Republican County Conven tion, held in Indianapolis last Saturday the following preamble and resolution was adopted: WHEREAS, Equal and exact justice should rule the triton of public as well as private debtors in dealing with their credi tors; therefore, Resolved, That the bonds and other obli gations of the General Government which do not expressly stipulate for payment iu com on their face should be paid in legal money ; and that ; ur delegates to the State Convention are imtructed to vote for a resolution in the State platform embodying this rropOSltioll. What will the Eastern Radicals say to that? Tine fine pictures which have here tofofe adorned the State Library at Har risburg, or a number of them, have been removed and taken without any authority to grace the parlor and recep tion rooms of Hans (teary. The Patriot awl rs ion very properly suggests that this mutter should be inquired into. They were purposely placed iu the Li brary that the public might see them. Thy: Democratic members of the Pen nsylvan ia House &serve great credit for the unanimity with which they voted for the caucus nominee, and for their earnest efforts to effect an organi zation. They invariably voted against adjournment, and in no way can they be charged with obstructing the organ ization and delaying the business for the performance of which they were elected. Jill/CF: THURMAN was nominated on Monday night by the Democratic cau cus of the members of the Ohio Legis lature for United States Senator. He is one of the ablest Democratic statesmen in the country. The Radicals will vote for Ben. Wade, the present wretched incumbent. THE Bedford (ki.:cttc nominates Hon. Edgar Cowan as a candidate for Vice- President. He is an honest and able man, and would do credit to the position. A Good Joke An occasional correspondent, said yesterday's Tribune, writes us from Washington the following dialogue, which we print as a good joke, without at all vouching for its authenticity: Inquiring Republican (to General Grant) —Well, General, what do you think µ•ill he the effect of negro suffrage, fairly curried out? General Grant—Have you seen Marshal Brown's pups? They are the finest in the District. [Exit inquirer, quite satisfied with the pertinence of the answer, and leaving the General smoking.] The Lazy Xegro Conyentlons The following from the New York Tribune sounds like sarcasm : The Southern Reconstruction Conven tions take matters about as easy as the New York Constitutional concern. Yesterday, the Virginia Convention rushed business so far as to adopt the first section of a bill of rights, consisting of Jefferson's "all men are equal" dogma. In the Louisiana Convention, the day was spent in trying to decide where tax collectors should pay in their receipts, and the report (per telegraph) closes with the astounding intelligence that "to-day one member was asked his opin ion of the eonstitutionelity of ttie Recon struction laws, and gave it, as his individual opinion that they were unconstitutional." Harry Rod enbaugb, constable in the Sixth ' -.yard, of Harrisburg was accidentally shot on Saturday night by a friend, who was unloading a revolver. The ball entered the windpipe, and passed downward into the lung, He is still living. .7-rysriviaa, April 19th, 1885. A. Jr. Herr,'Esq. DEAR SIFt : We are the private coun sel of Miss Walter, the prosecutrix in the case vs. W. V. Gotwald. She desires a nol. pros. entered in the case, and we send you enclosed authority to enter the same. Several days ago we informed the counsel of Mr. Gotwald that the proSecntrix would not appear, You will please give the mat teryp4r etteritiorh putt theca ett =yin die- The Supreme Court nod Reconstruction. A special telegram from Washington to the N. Y. Tribune says: There was a rumor around the Capitol to-day that the Supreme Court was about to render a decision declaring the Bacon , structionactsunconstitutional. On inquiry, however, it was ascertained that the case which involves the validity of these laws has not yet been considered by the Court. The facts are as follows: An appeal is i taken from a Court in Mississippi, where ' a writ of habeas corpus was refused. The 1 papers are now on file in Washingtont but the case has not yet been assigned a place on the calendar., It is stated that the Attorney-General refused to act as counsel or appear at all in connection with the mat ter, being of the opinion that the laws aro unconstitutional, and that the appeal is ' well taken. The Acting Secretary of 'War has been requested to proc ire ceunsel to appear and arguo the case when it comes on for trial, which will be in a very short time, q'he subject excites a good deal of attention, and derives additional interest from the fad that the AttOrney-General • t a a v n e g i u t i t s s h llast e ia i n i o n n i, a t th hat eg e e law O o r l ww e ma e re unconstitutional and would be go declared. Miscegenation The Atlanta (Ga.) Intelligemccr of Tues day says: va Ic. The bridegroom hails origi " We are told that a gushing bridal party from Alabama passed through this city on Sundayflatly ram the North, the bride being one or Alabama's sablest daughters. On leav ing this city they claimed and took posses sion of a berth in the sleeping car, and went on their way rejoicing." Beal Hampshire Election The election to New Hampshire for Governor, Legislature and other officers will take place on the 10th of March. Great interest will attach to the result, as It will be the first State election of the year. The votes of this State at re cent elections were as follows: Dem. Rep. Rep. 3 f .Vi 1884 39,034 36,595 , 1866 30,481 35,137 4,658 1887 93,603 35,809 9,148 John Bishop, of St. Albans, shot his wifo and then killed himself Saturday noon. Bishop is dead, and but slight hope is en tertained of his wife's recovery. Jealousy was the cause, although there seems to have been no ground for it. A Vermont paper Nays: Water In Bur lington is selling at half a dollar a barreL Welts, springs and cisterns are generally dry, and water has to ho drawn from the lage. The cartmen are reaping a good har vest •by drawing water for family use. Rev. Alex. Lackey, an old end respected citizen of Carroll township, Perry county, Pa., while preaching on 'New Year's even ing, suddenly fell down and died in a few minutes. Pie was a local preacher of the United Brethren denomination, about sev enty-one years' of age. Geo. W. Williams has been arrested and bound over for trial iu $6,000 in Boston, for forging government stencils. It is alleged he is the party who inade and furnished the revenue stencils which were used In theex tensive Buffalo and Boston whisky frauds.' some months since. Mayor Hoffman's Inauguration, Now Year's day, led to a report that Fernando Wood is dead. Ile announced In the can vass, six weeks ago, •'that if ho was alive he would meet his friends In Coe City Hall on New Year's day, when they would see him sworn in as their Mayor." Hon. 0. D. Coleman, State Senator from Lebanon, delights In deeds of benevolences On Monday last be distributed one hundred and fifty tona of coal, to the poor and needy of Lebanon. Allegheny county contains a largo number of very wealthy coal dealers, but few role-men like be oC Lebanon. In the Missouri Senate Thursday a hilt was introduced to make it compulsory upon parents and mutrdians to send their chil dren, between the ages of nine and thirteen, to school at least four months each year,. under penalty of from ten to thirty cents per day for absence without satisfactory cause. The Winhlngton correspondent of the. New York Timea says of the paintino_n the eye of the dome of the capitol, that " Wash ington looks as if he was about to join hart promenade of all hands round' with the, Genius of Fame, whose face and figure are said to be a very good likeness of the 1110111 i stylish and fashionable of the demilnonds. of Washington." t ~