Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, May 05, 1868, Image 1

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    .GIBSON . PEACOCK. Editor.
VOLUME XXIL-NO. 22.
TilE; EVENING BULLETIN
PUBLISHED EVEIVI" LVVNING
(Sundays excepted).
AT TEE' NEW BUILII,Ef lIN
607 Chestnut Street- 1 Philadelphia,
BY TUE
EVENING BELLETIN ASSOCIATION.
ntoPu.t.rro RS.
GIBSON PEACOCK ERNEST C. WALLACE
FETITONt 'f.lloe. J. WILIAANISOI4,
CASPER BOtJDER . 4R.. FRANCIS WELL&
The Irot.tXrlbi 19 served to subscribers it: the city stll3
emu , er wee Ps able to the carriers. or 68 per annum.
iNVITATIONS FOR WEDDINGS, PARTIES. (tO..
eseeuted In n superior mnnuer.
MIMS. 1033 Ell ES'I NO STREET. fe2o4¢
MARRIED.
ALEXANDER—WEI:AIL—At the Cathedral. on the 4th
Wet.. by the Rev. Father Jae. 11. 4. Alexander to
itaehal IL, daughter of Jr.o. It. Welsh, Leq.. all of thte
DARLING—WELSH.—On the 4th MA.. by the Rev.
J mines O'Reilly. of the Ca hedral. Alfred IL Darling to
Mat y G., daughter of J. all of Oda city.*
DI ED.
KiRKWOOD.—In Baltimore. May 2d. Ann Kirkwood,
in the &sib year of her age.
PATTERISON.—On the :id f0rt...13(4We M.. daughter of
Beery C. and Elizabeth T. Pat:enson. aged 15 menthe.
The friend* of the family eta restweviully invited to
attnnd the fume'. from tlio parente' reFidence. N 0.1813
Weßace Arcot. on Wednesday afternoon. et 3 o'clock.'
11.;51. Y.—On the morning of the sth. instant. Albert
,Raymond. eon of Joplin., and Bessie K. l'nee3'. aged time
••
months and three weeks.
LupwBLACK PARIsIENNES. TA3IISES. MOUS
Reline*: lionilnizineß,Ghalließ and Burnett Elernsuiß,
;itrt opened by BESSON d BON.
M ing ourn Dry (lands Howe.
No. foil Chestnut greet;
12 LACK LYONS GROS C;ItAIN SILKS.—JUST
JP opened. aAM stock of a.; ~no Groo Groins and Drap
do France, from 82 to do 3.l yard. 1:"....V50N d SON,
Itiltolasaln and ,Ketail Mourning Dry Goode House,
loY6t No. 41g (neatnut irtreet.
ERE d LANDELL OPEN TO.T.:AY THE LIGHT
altadea of Spring Popllux for the Farldoualde Walking
nreeßts.
Steel Colored Popliw.
.51043 Colored
Bimatck Er.uct
ItrECIAL NOICIUL.S.
RFAMOV
WILLIAM W. ALLEN,
Agent and Attorney for
The Traveler's Insurance Company,
or
IlAitTroLtD, CONN.,
HAS REMOVED
yuou
407 Walnut Street
TILE FORREST BUILDING,
No. 117 S. Fourth Street.
ud Accident Politica con bined. or either reptrate.
myl t In IV Lit
, siar LIBRARY COMPANY OF Pli/LAUELPIELIA.
Way 4 a, tbfa.
At en elettfon tot Efireetom arc) a Ttetwarer of the
- cilwary Company of Phhadtlpoia, tho following oilicert
w , fe appointed for the etorattot Year;
ofuzoff , a..,
GEORGE W. 'NORRIS. "1 a:ALL,
HENRI J. WILLIAMS. LI: XAN lf Eft
'4,.:13 ARLEN , WILLING. IfIY.NRY WII A KTON, .
DAVID I EAVL-4,. lEI N ICY :ItAMoNO.
-L 1...C.t.A1L1E. MAKE, lel. MORRIO WALK.
TtE
LUAU) 85it1 If)
4.)1 , 171(7 - C 1.....4 AW/135A I , t ..
4111 F-NO. 424 'WALL% Cr nytait-/-&-AD COMPANY
. . - Pan.A e- ,
At the annoil election of Ow ( :." I"
Mai 4th. 18rA
ecY. held !hie day the iII j3."7l''a H4111."4
41V41
. 0 Wing oftleers were elected :
. . .
PILIMIDEST,
AL P. nUTULIiNSON
713111C4Toite.
:SAMUEL MERBIt3I..,
J. V. WILLIAMSON,
Emil,lnn WEAVEJI.
F. IC. SHIPPER,
E. SHANNON _
J.L. New York.
E. JOHNSON, Secretors',
_ _
.*Brotrivz OF Tile, IiA4LETOIS P.ALLSOAD
COWAN r „Mo. 3 WALNUT STSEET.
PUILLDELI'IIIi May 4.1868.
A Special Meeting of Itlitockholdera of the Hazleton
tlailroaci Company will held at their ottlee. on PIM
DAl7,_Diar =4, 18618. at 12 o'clock M., for the purpose of
considering and acting upon so agrceinvnt for consolidat-
Jug the said Company with the Lehigh Valley its.ilroad
Company. By order of the Board of Directors.
says BC CHARLES C.l.osowykteni, Bec'y.
- italre* OFFICE PENNSYLVANIA MILE COMPANY,
""""" NO. =.3 MARKET 8 rnEtT. Arart.29ru.
The Perrosyhauls Milk eccinpuny has therm/edits fa.
citing* ter doing business ee as to bc able to supply its
customers la the thickly settled districts of the city with
reasonable regularity.
The Prices are for Cream 28 cent , ' per quart; Milk.
cents per quart ; Bklxtuntd Milk, 4 coats per quart.'
ap.9o-6t
J. C. 811/iIteLESIL Secretary.
TDE TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF TUE
elan Sunday School. Tenth and Sarah street, of the
Spruce Street isaptist church will be held in the c hurch.
.bprtieetstreet below Falb, en Tiurtday kleening.liny i th.
at 8 o'clock; a variety 6f exerciace by the chUaren. Ad
dmaes by the Rev. Dr.:Warren Randolph, Rev..T. Spencer
ennard, and the pastor. Bev. J. Wheaton Smith.
D. D. inys
FUEL 'SAVINGS SOCIETY OF THE tJITY AND
Libertiee of Phlladelphis.—The Forty-seventh An.
:null Sleeting of the Society will he held THIS EYEN•
LNO, Fifth month (Hay). 1413. at half.payt eight o'clock. at
No. 109 North Tenth street, 2d story. Election of °theory.
BY order of the Manosory
L
13, W. BEES S EY.
1t" eeTetory.
Ber LECTURE—THE REV. J. P. HeCLELL AND
will deliver a Lecture on - TALK AND TALKERS"
at the ArCh Street M. E. church, on THURSDAY EVEN..
LNG. Kay 7th. at ft o'clock.
Tickets of admission, One Dotter; to be procured at the
took-store of Higgins A. Perkinpiae, Feurth street, below
Arch street; and at the M. E. Tract Rooms. Arch street,
below Tenth street. inv4.4trW
s or N aFor A ilir l iiti r LEturi ZINC COMPANY,
The Tratiderkvi 4:tat:a l: Ant atr y lp s an l y will
Vtb iuo • • -
be closed on SATUItDAY .. , lueL, TuT.d . "
la FRLDAIC. 10th Inst.
ta/311 , CORDON MONGER. Treasurer.
sir THE' GRAND COMBINATION CONCERT AT
Athlette R&11. Thirteenth street. above Jefferson. on
TIMMWDAS. EVENING. May 9th. promises to be a rich
treat. The ehorbtera are some of the meet eminent
in the city, and. the selections are from the best mar
tens. It•
oar. HOR fICULTURAL 13001ETY.—ANHEISAY ON
ow "The Importance of directing Grave Vulture to the
production of Cheap Wine,__" by Col. J. H. Sullivan, Sykes.
vine, Md., will be read THIS EVENING, at 8 o'clock, at
Horticultural Hall.
gaggps , A MEETING OF THE COLORED SOLDIERS'
and Salim' Orphans Committee will be held at
No. 711 Hansom etreot, on WEDNESDAY, May B, at 436
-o'clock. itOBERT R. CORDON,
Secretary.
"HOWARD HOSPITAL. NOS. AND 1520
* Lombard street, Dispensary Depart. '
treatment and medicines furnished grte Howdy to the
poor.
ser . s rufeD t ELlall i AOßTHl er F6 DIC HOSPITAL ,
nal dlneesca and bocNill uy
ts. hi p
ppli d d:rl j ;
at 19 o'clock. apl6 mrp§
l e r NEWSPAPERS BOOM, PAMPHLETS...WASTE
Pager, Ac., bought by E. RUNwER,
apg&tf No. 613 Jayne street.
POLITICAL hiliiticks.
isitr. EIGHTH WARD.—A LARGE AND ENTHUSI.-
aatio meeting of the Republican citizens of the
:Eighth Ward was held en MONDAY EVENING, May
4th, at the OLD HORTICULTURAL HALL, southwest
corner of .11road and Walnut streets,. for the pupas° of
organizing a Ward Association under the new rules.
The following named gentlemen were unanimously
elected to serve as officers for the ensuing Year:
President—HENßY 0. CAREY.
Vice Creeident, let Division—CHAßLES
CoL CHAS. 3 Blare
$3.1 " ED. BROWNING.
" 4th " WM. T. BLANCHARD.
" . sth " ISAAC G.COLESBERRY.
"• 6th " D. C. MoCAMMON.
7th " WM. ELMBLIE.
Secretaries—MANUEL N. PHILLI.PB. 8. W. PENNY.
,P Sec
lt§
or TENTH WARD.
_____
.
In pursuance of public notice, and in compliance with
Rule 2d of the Union Republican Party, the Citizens of
Tenth Ward feet on tins 4th Inst., in the Hall, northeast
corner of Broad and Race streets, when the following
gentlemen were unanimously elected officers of the Ward
Association for the emir year:
.Itesident-40.11 PR CIE WETPIERILL,
„__,,„„ JOI N ANEW,
__
lice . ~ ..K "..."' G: MORRISS) (*ATVS.
ji
Tioettsturer—BA ITEL P. D. s • sic,
__
Reoretasitlf 1 ° A7 . 011 / E / 10. (1013, -TuOUGH. .
. .
1.111 , ; COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK OF
PENNSYLVANIA.
. .
70 ,
ILILADELNITA. May sth. 1868.
The Directors have this 'day deelared a eerntannnal
Dividend of tivn.rer Cent.. payable on demand, clear
of all taxer.
s i ar THE CONSOLIDATION NATIONAL BANK.
AT.y 4, 1818.
The Board of Directors have thin day declared a olvi
dend 01 Six Por Cent., payable on demand. clear of Taxes.
WAL 11. Wel%
inyls.3tl Cashier.
ger NATIONAL MOM OF GEI:M&NTOWN.
PILILAVE PHIA. . .
GERMANTOWN, May sth, 18 , 38.
The Directors have this day d4.,cla , ftd a Dividend of
SEVEN AbD ONE-HALF rLR CENT., payaole on do.
maud, clear of United States tax.
m35.31' CRAB. W. OTTO, Cashier.
stir TDB WESTERN NATIONAL BANK OP PHILA.
MAY, 5, 18tP3.
The Directors have this day declared a Dividend of
MET per cent., payable on demand, c'ear of tax.
U. N. WBYGAN DT,
myb-lita Usahier.
sor MECHANICS' NATIONAL BANK,
PIIILILIJELPHIA, May sth. lEM.
The Board of Directors have this day declared a Divl
dand of Biz (6) Per Bent, payable on demand, free of
taxer. J. WIEGAND. Ja.
my 5.60 Cashier.
lar ß illeBllB , ANI) MECHANICS' NATIONAL
PHILADELPLIIA. May 5, 1803.
The Board of Directors have. this day declared a Olvi •
deed of Five Per Cent., payable on
W demand clear of tax.
W. RUSH J
TON, ig.. Cashier.
Sir - SOUTHWARK NATIONAL BANK.
PIIILADELPIIIA, May 5, 1801.
The Board of Directors have this day declared a dill
dead of Eight Per Bent, payable on deronna
tnys4lt P. LAMB, Cashier.
or THE 3IANUFACTUMEIIi i i:Li d o , : iIdI fah:.
The Board of Direetore have thin day declared a dlvi
dend of live Per Cent., payable on demand.
reyE-31; %l. W. WOODWARD. Cashier.
Z COMMONWEALTH NATIONAL BANK.
PUILA PELN II A. May sth. I/9-X
The Directors Lave Oda day declared a Dividend of
FIVE PLR (AST., for the hod mix months, payable on
demand. dear of Mice,
11. C. YOUNG. Cashier.
a i r COEN EXCHANGE NATIONA FUNK_
PIIILADELPHIA M tIY 5. 1?A54.
Tbn Hoard of. Direetora have this day declared a dist
dead of Per Cent. for the last nix months, payable an
&ma ad, clear of taxce. . .
te t y- RENSINGION NATIONAL DANK.
PiLIf.APEI.I . ifIA, &raj' 5. 1 1 9
The Roard of Directoro has thin day declared_ a Divi
d ,. .nd of Twelve Per Cant., payable on demand. clear of
Tow. W3l. CONNELL,
t:•yfi.,t} Ca4hior.
se t f- CITY ,NATIONAL BANK.
Pnit.Alirl.lMlA. May 5,1513. i.
The Board of Directors have tbis day declared a divi
dend of Six Per Cent..payable on demand clear of United
Stikies tax. ALHELT Lewis.
R, Z. Zit. Cashier.
icar THE CENTRAL NATIONALE INK.
t it it.animrizin. May u IS6?.
he Pirectara have declared a dividend of rive Per
Cent., clear of taxes, payable on demand.
KITCHEN,
§ Cashier.
ger SECOND NATIONAL BANK OF PHILADEIr
PlilA.
FRANKFORP, May 4th. ti!A
Ti Dircetore bavethll day declared a dividend of
Per Cent. for the lazt eta - reoutliF. Payable on de.
mend. clear (.4 taxec. WM. IL SUUELMEIhDI\E.
544 C.,
53r. GIRARD NATIONAL BANK.
Pin LAM:I.I . II:A. Mar 5, Pi.'
The Directors have &dared d)videud of Per
Cent.. out of the prorite of the Itut six tuouthe, payable
on demand, flee of taxee.
Nir p ii s ,....ti Jarctir sos
nE F,I na sUItANCE CJ.3I
- 4
!,. Jstal.l o4 N.
• Tfie itirsicfo+l hare thli day' dielattlen 'sso '"rsu - al
Dividend of Three Par Cent (clear of all faset).,iay n at!le
on and afts.r the . 14th put.: 211.1L1Y E. CuLESIAN.
snY:S.::fl: ' ' Secretary.
lIIe°CIIELTENEAM AND WILLOW GROVE TURN
YIKE.—The Managers breve this day declared a
Dii , idend of Three .Per Cent, on the Capital dtock cf the
Com( any for thelast eix months (clear of taxes). pays
Me on and after the 14th inst. PEROr. Treas.,
41111 ,1).01 (mys eV) .14. W. cur. Sixth and Master stP..
cf Phflidelphis.
kr. GEP3IANTOWN AND PERKIO3IEN TERN
PIKR.—Tho Managers have this day declared a
Dividend of TIMED PER VENT. on the capital stock of
the Company for the last six moult ,o 0 clear of taxes, pay.
able on and after the 14th inst. WM. S. PEROT. Trea.
4111 MAY. led& froyhati N. W. eon Sixth and Master eto
Iti THE course of the comment made by this
paper upon the first performance of Tangled
Threads, at the Arch Street Theatre, the very
objectionable interview in the first act between
"I)argle" and "Fanny" was severely censured.
The a/taut:at, rather than the language, was
offensive. The actor (Mr. Everly) was con
strained by the absolute requirements of the part;
and, in some slight degree, by the language, to
give the scene the character it bore. It would be
unjust, in view of this fact, and in view of the
actual arrangement of the original play as it ex
ists in manuscript, to attach the blame to the
actor, which should belong entirely to the author.
THE THEATRES.— Mr. John Brougham ap
peared at the Walnut last evening in his drama,
The Lottery of Life, which will be repeated to
night. While this play bas been shorn of its most
objectionable features, it is still of such a low
grade that Mr. Brougham cannot hope to attract
audiences of a very intellectual character. We
liope that during his engagement he will appear
in some of those personauons in which he has
teen wont to excite the enthusiasm of his admi
rers in days past. "The great Morlacchi" did not
appear at the Chestnut last . night, according to
announcement, but the management are entitled
to entire exoneration from blame. Great clan :era,
like Other great artists are apt to be careless
about their obligations; genius of the legs like
genius of the soul is inclined to eccentricity. It
may be regarded as nearly certain that Morlacchi
will appear in the Black Crook this evening. Miss
Fanny 'B. Price will appear in Tangled Threads
at the Arch to-night. The drama The Poor
Noldenula will also 'be given. A varied perfor
mance is announced at the American.
ELEVENTH STREET.OPERA HOUSE.—fin attrac
tive performance will be given , at this , popular
place of amusement. The Impeachment Trial
will be given, with the most accomplished.paem
bers of the company in the parts; a burlescrue on
Tangled Threads is also announced, together with
other burlesques, farces, singing by Cameron
and the company, negro eontiealities, and a mul
titude of other good things.
CONCERT HALL.—This evenin at Concert Hall
a panorama will be exhibited descriptive - ;of:a
journey through the Holy Land, Egypt, Syria
and Turkey. The pictures are of the handsomest
description, and are painted from photographs
and sketches taken especially for this purpose.
An eloquent speaker will deliver the descriptive
lecture.
TUE NEW WEST.—This Tuesday evening Major
Calhoun, who has just returned from an extended
tour in the far west, will deliver a lecture upon
the above theme, at, Green Rill Hall. corner of
Seventeenth and Poplar streets.
WYNAwk—The magician Wyman will give an
exhibition at Assembly Buildings to-night.
Legerdemain and ventriloquism are on the pro
gramme. Various articles will be distributed to
the audience.
The Eastern Shore or Maryland Dio.
The Snow Hill Shield states that Talbot
county, Md., has raised the liberal sum of four
teen thousand dollars towards a permanent fund
for the support of the Episcopal Bishop of the
Eastern Shore diocese.
—The dog proclamation recently issued by the
Mayor of a NeW Jersey town, commences as
follows: "Whereas, Several dogs has lately been
killed in this town, and was supposed to have
been mad, and most probably has bitten several
dogs in the town."
—A cheerful individual, who evidently speaks
from experience, says that boils tend to purify
WS blood, strengthen the systemr, cainv.the
nerves, restrain impatience, tranquillize, , the
spirit, Improve the tomper, and beautify the ap
pearance, - •
Bar 5, 1868.
DIVIDEND NOTICES.
S. C. PALM
Cuhler
IL P. SCIIETKY,
Caehier
W. L. SVILAFFER.
Ca...bier
THEATRES, Etc.
PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1868.
(From the Toledo
.Blado.l
NASISIC.
A Convention at the Corners to Nom
inate a County Ticket—Hoar Joe
iilsler Perverted the Resolution
Usually Adopted at such conven•
%lons,
POW DI7I6,CONFEDIIIT X ROADS, (Wick is in
the State uv Kentneky, April 26, 1868.—There
never will be peace or anything like it at the
Corners till that disturber Joe Bigler, and his
faithful adherent, alder and abetter Pollock . , are
shot or otherwise killed. In the olden time,
afore the inoggerashen nv the Ablishen era,
we hed a short way •uv disposin uv
eieb. It wuz a maxim in the South that
ther could be, peeve only where ther wnz
a perfeck yoonanimity uv sentiment and to bring
about that onenis of Idees—that delitefal con
cord wick wuz so desirable—we were in the habit
nv shootin or hangin the most stubborn nv those
wick didn't agree with the majority, and tarrin
and featherin those who were yet accessible to
Kentucky reason. By vlggerusly persooin this.
course the minorities in this vicinity wuz kept
tollobly small and controllable. Why these
cusses havent bin so treated passes my compre
hension.
Our Convensbun to nominate candidates for
county offices wnz held yesterday. I wnz cheer
man nv course, for I now okkupy that posishen
(since it wnz discovered that Capt. McPelter kin
rite he hez bin Eiekretary), and I felt a sinkin
sensashen when I saw that cuss Bigler and that
other cues Pollock enter the door.
Deekin Pogrom, ez he saw em, bled over.
Rising to his feet, the venerable -old patriark ex
claimed In a voice tremulous with emoshun, wat
in thunder he wuz there for.
"Josef, hey yoo a rite to set in a Dimocratit
convenshun, holdin, ez•yoo do, opinyuns the re
verse or Dimocratic ?"
"Deekin," returned this Bigler, "I carry in my
body Fedral lead—l , wuz under the Contedrit nag
in sixty battles, skirmishes and skedaddles. I
hey a certifikit to that effeck from the late
lamented John Morgan. That certifikit wood
admit me to a seat in any Diuiocratic Convenshun
in the North—shel it not be sufficient here in
Kentucky? Alars, the Profit is not without
honor save in his own Cross Roads."
And Josef let on he wept, when Pollock oaten
ta E•buslv handed him a pocket bandkercher.
"Ef I held any hetrodox views I hey repented
or cm, tne and Pollock, and we perpose to vote
for all yet resoloosbens, like frisky lambs wat is
glad to get back to the troo fold. Don't we, Pol
lock ?"
"Certin, we do. The Convenshun may go on
and count us in ez troo converts Irom Abilishen;
which, in view of the fact that my store hez bin
set on fire twict becoz of my awful opinions, I
may be sed to be litraily a brand pluckt from the
burnin. Go on."
Findin they wuz bound to stay, we went on.
The first thiLg in order wuz the adopehen uv re
,mlooshens, ez follows:
I. We resolved we bed the utmost confidence
in Androo Johnson, President uv the Yoonited
Mates. pervided he wuzu't impeached; of he wuz,
then we shood hey the privilege uv considrin him
worthy uv confidence or not, ez the circumstances
uv the case shood warrant.
2. That the Congrisuy the Yoonite.d States wuz
unconstitoosbnel body, with vvuz persistently
endeavriu td break up the Government uv the
l'oonited States, with we wuz ez persistently
t•trivin to save.
3. That the only hope uv Yoonun lay in the
displacement uv sich traitors ez Grant, Sumner
and Stevens, and the puttin their in places sich
gileless patriots ez Breckenndge, Brite, Vallan
dygum, et al.
4. That the thanks uv the Democracy is due
the people Tr: the South for their forbearance in
not rising to sweep the radical faction from the
face of the earth.
' At this pint Big,ler arose. He wanted to know
cf this coavenshen stylin itself Democratic,
wuz agoin to be satisfied with them resoloash
ent? - He called for the readin uv the regler one,
without which no Democratic platform wuz com
plete. He referred to the one dedicatin this Gov
ernment forever to white men. "Here it is," he
ecti :
Restdeed, That this Government wnz established
by white men, and that white men will keep it
intact for white men and their posterityforever.
"I demand, ez a white man, sed this Bigler,
"that this resolooslitin be added. Let every
white man, every proud Caucashen, who believes
in race, say 'aye,' and with emphabis."
And every one nv em hollered out "aye" with
all their mite.
"Good!" sed Bigler, "good. White men and
their posterity! wat a noble sentiment. Bay, 'aye'
to my resolooshun agin."
And they yelled "aye" agin.
"Now Pollock, brother in the troo faitlinesvly
baptized, will you open the door? Its better to
be a doorkeeper in the house uv Democracy than
to dwell in the tents of Ablishnism. Open the
door."
Wich Pollock did,and then entered—wat! Good
Heavens!
A HUNDRED MULATTO, QUADROON AND OCTOROON
:imams—TWO BY TWO
"Wat does this mean ?" shrieked I
"Who are them ?" gasped Deekin Pogrom.
"H-11 !" Bed Issaker Gavitt profanely.
"They are the posterity referred to in my reso
looshen. 'This Government wuz established by
white men and shel be preserved for white men
and their posterity,' I think it read. These are
the posterity. There may be a few here who
wood be barred out on the score fly bein the pos
terity of white women, but these are excepshuns.
I shoot] hey inclooded white women in my reso
looshun. The majority nv those here, ez yoo
kin easily determine by their color, are the pos
terity nv white men. They are not pure black.
Here is every shade from the subdood yallor of
mulatto up to the almost White uv him who hez
only a sixteenth part nigger blood in his veins.
UV course they will take seats and assist us in
nominatin the ticket with called us together."
"Uv course they won't!" roared Deekin Po
gram. "I will never set in a convenahen with
niggers—never! never!! never ! I !"
"Very good. If this is the yoonanimns deci
sion, we won't nominate any ticket I take the
responsibility uv bustin this Convenshen. But,
oh, Deekin! wat a goin back on yoor prin
ciples! Dare yoo deny that these shades,
these modified mokcs, are the posterity uv
white men? Deekin, should you cast yoor
beamin eye over this assemblage, wood
ent it rest parentally and lovinly onto yoor own
posterity? Oh, Deekin, of yoo go back on the
resoloosben which yoo yoonanimonely voted for,
don't, I beg nv yoo, go back onto nacher. Don't
desert yoor childrin.. Don't turn a deaf ear to
the pleading nv nacher, or a blind eye to,her sup
plications. Hannibal Pogrom, go and beg yoor
father to permit yoo, his posterity, skarcely
blacker than he and a cusaid site handsomer, to
mix in this yore caucus."
The Deekin indignantly left the room, and I
follered soot, wick eggsample wuz follered by all
uv us. Bigler and Pollock remained and nomi
nated a ticket uv these half-bleached cusses,
making it up entirely nv the Pogrom, Gavitt and
Punt niggers, ez these namea s they sed,hed weight
in the county! Who will deliver us from these
two bodies nv death.
PETROLEUM V. NASRY, P. M.,
(Wish Is Postmaster.)
Ova fur traders and trappers in fitting out here
find Ayer's medicines one of their most profitable
articles of traffic. Around Slave Lake and the
wild regions of the north the Indians know their
uses and have an abiding faith in them. They
say: o Ayer—great medicine--enre sick man," and
his remedies, for the ,theeeees from whibb they
suffer, will often bring forth their stock of skins
etren quicker .thanwampum, rum or tobacco.
Savages are not fools if they are unsophisticated
in some of the arts of civilization.—Montreal
—Highway robberies bestir every night on the
roads about Cincinnati, . and vigilance commit
tvaa,aro spoken of.
OUR WHOLE COUNTRY.
1H WOMAN'S CLUB IN NEW TURK.
At the second regular meeting of the" Woman's
Club," which took place yesterday at Delmonl
co's, the following inaugural remarks wore made
by the President, Miss Alice, Cary, who presided
in person for the first time:
Ladies: As it will not be expected of me to
'make speeches very often. hereafter, I think I
may presume on your indulgence if I take advan
tage of this one opportunity. Permit me, then,
in the first place, to thank you for the honor you
have done me in assigning me the President's
chair. Why I should have been chosen, when
there are so many among you greatly more com
petent to fill the position, I am at a loss to under
stand; unless, indeed, it be owing to the fact that
I am to most of you a stranger, andyour imagi
nations have clothed me with qualifies not my
due. This you would soon discover for your
selves; I mention it only to bespeak your for
bearance, though in this regard I ventured
almost to anticipate your lenity, inasmuch as
you all know how untrained to business habits,
how ignorant of rules of order, and how unused
to executive management most women are.
If I take my seat, therefore, without confidence,
it is not without the hope of attaining, through
your generous kindness and encouragement, to
better things. "A woman's club ! Who ever
beard of the like ! What do women want of a
club? Have you any alms or. objects ?" These
are questions which have been propounded to
me day after day since this project was set afoot;
by gentlemen, of course. And I have answered,
that, in our humble way, we were striving to
imitate their example. You have your exclusive
clubs, I have said, and why should not we have
ours? What is so promotive of your interests
cannot be detrimental to us; and that vox find
these reunions helpful to yourselves, and bene
ficial to society,.we cannot doubt.
You gentlemen profess to be our representa
tives-- to represent us better than we could pos
sibly represent ourselves—therefore, we argue, it
cannot be that you are attracted by grand rooms,
fine furniture, luxurious dinners and suppers,ex
pensive wines and cigars, the bandying of poor
jests, or the excitement of the gaming table.
Such dishonoring suspicions as these arc not to
be entertained for a moment. '
Of our own knowledge, I have said, we are not
able to determine what special agencies you em
ploy for your advantage and ours in your de
liberative assemblies, for it has not been thought
best for our interests that se should even sit at
dour tables, let alone share your .councils; and
oubtless ' therefore, In our blindness and igno
rance we have made some pitiful mistakes.
In the first place, we have "tipped the tea-pot."
This is a hard saying—the head and front of the
charges brought against us, and we cannot but
acknowledge its justice and its force. We are,
In fact, weighed down with shame and humilia
tion, and impelled, while we are about it, to
make full and free confession of all our wild and
guilty phantasies. We have then, to begin at the
beginning,proposed the inculcation of deeper and
broader ideas among women—proposed to teach
them to think for themselves, and get their opin
ions at first hand, not so much because it is
their right as because it is their duty.
We have also proposed to open out
new avenues of employment to women—to
make them less dependent and less burdensome
—to lift them out of unwomanly self-distrust and
disqualifying diffidence into womanly self-respect
and self-knowledge. To teach them to make all
work honorable, by each doing the share that
falls to her, or that she may work out to herself
agreeably to her own special aptitude, cheerfully
and faithfully—not going down to it but bringing
it up to her. We have proposed to enter our
protest against all idle gossip, against all demor
alizing and wicked waste of time; also, against
the follies and the tyrannies of fashion, against
all external impositions and disabilities; in short,
against each and everything that opposes the full
development and use of the faculties conferred
upon us by our Creator.
We have proposed tqb lessen the antagonisms
existing at present between men and women by
the use of every rightful means in our power; by
standing upon our divine warranty and saying
and doing what we are able to say and do, with
out asking leave and without suffering hinder- •
ance. Not for the exclusive good of our own
sex, for we bold that there is no exclusive, and
no separate good—what injures my brother in
jures me, and what injures me, injurei
him, if he could but be made to know
it; it injures him whether or not he, is
made to know it. Such, I have said, are some of
our objects and aims. We do not pretend as yet,
to have carefully digested plans and clearly de
fined courses. We are as children feeliti n r , our
way m the dark, for it must be remembered that
it is not yet half a century since the free schools,
even in the most enlightened portions of our
country, were first opened to girls. How then,
should you expect of us the fulness of wisdom
which you for whole centuries have been gath
ering from schools, colleges, and the exclusive
knowledge and management of affairs.
We admit our short-comings, but we do feel,
gentlemen, that in spite of them an honest, earn
est and unostentatious effort toward broader cul
ture and nobler life, is entitled to a heartier and
more, sympathetic recognition than we have
as yet received from you anywhere; even our
representatives here at - home, the leaders of
the New York press, have failed in that magna
nimity which we have been accustomed to attri
bute to them. I
If we could have foreseen the sneers and sikr--
casms with which we have been met, they' - of
themselves would have constituted all-sufficient
reasons for the establishment of this woman's
club ; as it is, they have established a strong im
pulse towards' its continuance and final per
petuity. But, hales, these sneers and sarcasms
are, after all, but so many acknowledgments of
our power, and should and will stimulate us to
braver assertion, to more persistent effort toward
thorough and harmonious organization; and con
cert and harmony aro all that we need to make
this enterprise, ultimately, a great power for
good. Indeed, with such women as have already
enrolled their names on our list, I, for my part,
cannot believe failure possible.
Some of us cannot hope to see great results, for
our feet are already on the down-hill side of life,
the shadows aro lengthening behind us and ga
thering•before us, and ere long they will meet
and close, and the- pacet4 that have known us
know us no more. But if, when our poor work
is done, any of those who come after us shall and
in it some hint of usefulness toward nobler lives,
and better and more enduring work, we, for our
selves; rest content.
Miss Cary's remarks were warmly applauded
by the ladies of the club, of whom there were in
all about forty present. A lunch was partaken
of, after which, certain business was transacted
which we are requested not to publish. Hereaf
ter, ladies wishing to join the club must be pro
posed and balloted for as in men's clubs. Many
of the ladies present were young and distin
guished, and some of the toilets were superb.
A Sensation In Pittsburgh—Discovery
of a !Missing Dian.
[From the Pitt burgh Gazette of May 4th.]
The sudden and mysterious disappearance of
Mr. Anthony Freyvoegle, a well-known mer
chant of this city, some three months since, has
at last been partially explained by the finding of
his body floating in the Ohio river. The manner
and cause of his death, however, still is, and, in
all probability, Will forever remain a mystery.
The circumstances connected with. his disap
pearance have been eo extensively commented
upon by,the public press that our reader are all
doubtless familiar with them, and we will not,
therefOre, enter Leto details regarding it.
On Tuesday, January 21st, at about eight
o'clock In the evening, he left some' acquaintan
ces on paitOrld alley and started for home.
Not the el teat peculiarity in his demeanor or
in 'the elrc lencee attending him was noticed.
After that-:. until Friday evening last, noth
ing was ason'or hesid of him. Every effort was
Plias Alice te►r Hakes a Speech
[From the N. Y. World of to-day.
run WOMAN'S CLUB.
made to solve the mystery; rewards were offered,
detectives endeavored to find traces of him; his
friends and family left no means untried to find I
the lost ono, but their untiring efforts were of
no avail, and no explanation whatever could be
given,of the affair.
About four o'clock on Friday afternoon Jacob
and John Lashell and John Hughes, while en
gaged in pumping' out a fiat-boat at Lashell's
Landing, opposite Sewickley, discovered the
dead body of a man floating in the river near by,
which they at once secured. and notified Coroner
Clawson by telegraph, stating in the despatch
that the body was believed to be that
of Anthony Freyvoegle. Saturday morn
ing the body was removed from
the water and examined, when unmistakable evi
dence of its being that of Mr. Freyvoegle was
found. The deceased was dressed in vest, pants,
shirt and boots, the coat and hat being gone.
The clothing was readily identified and one of the
boots bore the patch spoken of in the first ac
count of his disappearance. In the pockets of
the pants and vest were found Dopers which
rendered the identification complete. All bore
the name of "Anthony Freyvoegle."
Large }ire in Booton--$75.000 Loss.
(From the Boehm Herald of the 4th Ind.)
Shortly before 1 o'clock this morning fire was
discovered in the premises of the Boston Milling
and Manufacturing Company, located on Eagle
street, East Boston.
These works cover a considerable surface of
ground, and are used in grinding and preparing
,bones for manuring purposes. The works com
prised several two-story wooden buildings, and
they were all nestled so closely together that the
fire leaped from one to the other with ease and
rapidity, and a second alarm called over a por
tion of the fire department from tie city proper;
but in spite of the labors of the firemen the Barnes
raged for nearly two hours, and the work of de
struction was very - nearly complete.
In the buildings was a large amount of valua-_
ble, machinery, which was heated afid broken and
rendered comparatively useless. There was also
a considerable quantity of manufactured stock
on band which was ruined by fire and water.
The total loss Is estimated at $75,000,and there
was an insurance, we understand, of up
wards of $lO.OOO on the property. A branch of
the same company's works,in the same neighbor
hood, was badly damaged by fire a few months
ago. The origin of the fir. last night is unknown.
MUSICAL.
CAnt. WOLFSOHN'S BEETHOVEN MATINEES.—On
Friday next the tenth and last of this series, will
be given. That concerts of such a high order of
merit, appealing, of course, to a small fraction
of lie great public for appreciation and support,
should be sustained during the past season of com
mercial depression and stagnation, is an evidence
that the concert giver and his sub,;^..eist Of In
pretadon possess claims of no ordinary charac
ter. Many persons, even some of musical culti
vation- and refined rtaste, find three Beethoven
Sonatas at one sitting a rather heavy meal of
high-art pabulum for comfortable digestion, and
it is only when well rendered by agile fingers
and matured intelligence - that the body and mind
can find refreshment withottt fatigue.
There is a world of thought in these works of
Beethoven—mme or less clear to the easy-going
amateur who only seeks a merely sensuous enjoy
ment: but those whose aspirations are of a higher
character, love to truce out the mental working
of the composer, as he wanders through fields
and forests, across mountains and valleys, giving
lull play to his iniugination In the poesy and
fantasy which so characterized his country and
day.
To such an attempted analysis of the Sonata,
opus lot, in B lint, may not prove uninteresting
even if imperfect from its necessarily confined
limits. This Sonata was dedicated by Beetho
ven to his friend and patron, the Archduke Ro
clolph, of Austria, Cardinal and Prince-Bishop of
Olmutz. It was composed in 1818 and originally
published by Artoria and Company, who, in their
advertisement in the Wiener Zeitung, oeSeptem
ber 15, 1819, speak of it in glowing terms of
praise, and prefer it to all other of his creations
not alone in reference to its rich and abundant
fancy, but also for its artistic perfection and sus
tained style.
This Sonata is not the most beautiful; it is
simply among Sonatas what the Symphony with
chorus is among Symphonies. It is of equal
strength; it is overwhelming , sublime, and des
perate in its difficulties. It is hard to measure
such a work by the prescribed limits of the Son
ata form. It is an ode of Pindar; a hymn of
Tyrteus, found again on the lyre of Beethoven.
Ills cotemporaries, Viennese and others, did not
signal this mighty ship which bore Caesar and his
misfortune; its great sails were flying a long dis
tance beyond the horizon of their intelligence.
A thorough analysis of the Allegro might well
form the subject for a book of itself, so immense
a conception is it, so rich in a thousand details of
which the execution transcends the means of ac
tion of the piano. It might be supposed to be
long to a Heroic Symphony for the piano. The
second part of the _4 Ilegro presents a IllyTtO
tiro which has the effect of a prayer, an address,
or harangue before engaging in the Battle
of the Giants which is in question
here. This impulsive and exciting episode
breathes somewhat the Ruth and heroism of
K irner's Prayer Before Battle. This Allegro, the
most astonishing, perhaps, of all the Allegros
among the Sonatas, could not have been under
stood if the way for it had not been prepared by the
other Sonatas which have preceded it, the most
considerable of which are so many terraces
which this colossus overlooks.
The Scher:o is quite a picture of fancy—it is a
poem by itself, a sonata. The diversity of styles,
and the mechanical resources which it demands
make it a study for pianists of the first rank. The
Adagio, a grand maw with variations yet
grander. The style for variation could go no
further. There is a curious fact connected with
this movement. Ferdinand Ries had been charged
by Beethoven to sell in London the manuscript
of the sonata. When there ho received a letter
from the composer begging him to add two
notes to the adagio, la and do sharp.
Ries was greatly surprised that he
should have to add two notes
to a composition of this stamp, entirely finished
since more than six months, and which seemed
to preclude the possibility of the least change.
The effect was however marvellout. The trio
notes, la and do sharp, now form the first meas
ure of the adagio, and are, so to speak, two steps
leading to the door of the sepulchre. Beethoven
had aimed so high in the first allegro that no
other resource of style remained for the finale
but the fugue. "Beethoven," says ono of his
most ardent admirers, "was not the man for fu
gue, and he was never less at home than in this
nightntare—rudis indigestague moles!"
Mr. Wolfsohn, in this last of his concerts, will
he assisted by Mr. Theo. Haboltuan, the well.
known German tenor, and our talented towns
man, Mr. Wm. Stoll, Jr., a virtuoso on the violin,
of great fulfilment, but of larger promise. The
variety of the programme will make this one of
the most pleasant entertainments of the series,
which will thus close with brilliant eclat.
RICIIINGS OPERA. TROUPE.—Linda di Cha
mounix was produced at the Academy of Music
last night to a moderately largo audience. This
evening, in accordance with general request,
Wallace's charming opera, Maritana, will beer
formed and and for the last time. The cast will in
clude lilies Illebitiga_, Mrs. 'Seguin, and Messrs
Campbell, Castle, reakea and Arnold. The house
is always well filled when this opera is announced,
and there is, even reason to believe the
audience will be unusually large to-night. To
morrow evening Mr. Wm. Cattle, the popular
tenor of the company, will have a benefit, when
The Bohemian Girl will be presented in splendid
style. It Is hardly necessary to urge Mr. Castle's
claims upon the musical public. He ranks rem
high as an artist and is deservedly a favorite with
the public. A new+ prima tionna,Mlss Edith Abell,
will make her first appearance in this perform
ance.
E Z..MI THERSTON. Nubbyhen
PRICE THREE CENTS.
FACTS AND FANCHS.
-ICloyte Bakin is theThekens of Japan.
—"Long Nines." A base ball elnk,of,
^footers.
—Rossini's new hobby is the Chinese act.lempm
which he has composed a polka.
—Quite a number of ladies earn a good tiviaL,
in London as wood•ongravere. •
—An old lady in London htut died of a "shuts
from the late Clerkenwell explosion."
—Goldwin Smith has written a book on
History and Irish Character."
—A prolific cow in this StAte bad five calves--
none of them false ones.
—Weston is to talk and walk in Boston on ins
12th.
—Miss Braddon was once an actress L. Ser
deen.
—Seventy-five periodicals, ranging fram denies ,
to quarterlies, are published in Chicago.
—An undisputable right of women—the rigs.
to bare arms.
—The new 3farquis of Salisbury is a good hat -
of Disraeli.
—Alexander Dumas has translated. "Les 13Iaueg
et lea Bleue."
—A jealous farmer's boy at Neufchatel threw
his sweetheart into a well and drowned her.
—"lnveigling a lactealidistillery" is the Cincin
nati reportorial for stealing a eow.
—The Archbishop of Algeria proposes to
convert the starving Arabs to Christianity, or,
failing in that, to drive them into the desert.
—Arkansas furnishes artificial limbs to all
citizens of the State who were so maimed as to
require them while fighting on either side.
—Stump oratory—Grant, from his smoking
habits, if nominated at Chicago, will doubtless
take the stump.
—lt was not General Hooker, but banker
Hooker, who gave the recent reception to. Faro:
gut in Rome.
—An autograph copy of the Twelfth Mass,sue
cessively possessed by Mozart, Beethoven and
Hummel, is now owned by a man in Providence.
—A whale made his appearance in Province
town harbor on Tuesday last. The boats were
manned and Leviathan was chased, but escaped.
—Fred. Douglass denies the truth of tits report
that he is about to remove from Rochester, N.Y.,
to New Jersey.
—There were one million barrels oflime manu
factured at Rockland, Me., in 1867, at a coat of
one dollar per barrel.
—A Chicago girl of sweet nineteen now sports
her, fifth husband. His four predecessors enjoyed
=tried life from six mouths to a year each.
—Mrs. Bloomer is living quietly., clothed on
with skirts, and in her right mtrid at Council
Bluffs, in lowa.
—Payne, who left New York last November in
a walk to California, has reached Omaha, and
proposes to keep on round the globe.—Er. Bat
how about that unpleasant Pacific ocean?
—The old • mansion at Cambridgeport, Mass.,
occupied as Putnam's headquarters during the
siege of Boston, is to be moved from its present
locality, and preserved as a revoln•ionary relic.
—There is a thrifty individual in 13loomville,,
Delaware county, N. Y. (name not given), who
charges his maid servant 16 cents per month
for sitting in his pow in church.
—The London Times thus begins an editorial;
"Now that Italy has come by her own, would
she he so kind as to take back her organ-grind
ers?"
—An nssociation is to be formed in England
to promote the reunion of Episcopalians and.
non-conformists, on the basis of the National
—Canada has an order corresponding to the
Knk-files Klan. Several of the public teen of the
Dominion have been warned that their lives are
in danger.
—Flotow, the composer, was recently arrested
by a stupid Vienna policeman for selling milk
ithout a license. Perhaps he had been seen in
dulging in the can-can.
—A newspaper says Parepa is one ,of. the lon,
and another newspaper says' It is ungentlemanly
to say so, and besides It isn't true, for she does'nt
weigh nearly so much as that.
—A lady in New York recently sent a request
to a friend, to accompany her to grace Church.
The reply came back; "Sorry, bttt I'm dressed
or St. Paul's."
—Among the wedding presents received by
Elise Dix, daughter of General Dix, at her recent
nuptials in Paris, were twelve magnificent fans,
almost as many lace pocket handkerchiefs, four
lace parasols, and a parare of diamonds.
—An appeal for aid was recently made by the
Jews of Tetuan, Morocco, to their brethren in
Europe, and in response Baron James Botha--
child sent the munificent sum of one thousand
francs.
—A St. Louis grocer has Just received $75, 044
in gold, won in. a Havana lottery. And we pre
sume that twice seventy-Ave thousand persons
have recently invested in Havana lottery tickets,
without getting a dollar in return.
—The following epitaph maybe seen in the
cemetery of a parish in the environs of Paris :
"Here lies Madame N—wife of M. N—,
master blacksmith. The railing around this tomb
was manufactured by her husband."
--For being badly shaken up in an accident on
the Northeastern Railroad, in England, Mr.
Samuel Buxton sued for damages received on
three accounts: let, for business..losselq 2d, :for
structural eufferings; and 3d,. for agony endured'
in the anticipation of an untunely end. He got
eight hundred pounds sterling.
—A new tenor in London is fifty-three years
old, and Echoes from the Club declares that no
living tenor of thirtY-five can equal his vocal
efforts. But it seems to that journal Abet the re
juvenated tenor's lungs are in much better condi
tion than his liver. He has sunken eyes, swollen
eyelids, and a cadaverous complexion which,
the critic pensively adds, is the complexion to
which we all must come at last.
—A Chinaman working; in a mill at San Fran
cisco was standing with his back to a revolving
shaft, when his queue was caught by the ma
chinery, and wound up until his head•was drawn
close to the shaft. He uttered a yell which
alarmed the workmen, one of whom, seeing the
critical position of the poor "Celestial," sprang
forward and threw off the belt, which stopped
the machine, and saved the-life' of the Chinaman.
Narrow escape from a queurious accident.
—Alice Purdy, sixteen years old, committed
suicide a few days ago, by drowning herself in
the Ohio river near North Bond. She left home
in company With a little girl in the usual flow of
'spirits, without giving out, a word as to her pur
pose. Arriving near the 'river she handed the
little girl a note, addressed to a young man to
whom she was engaged 'to be married, and. re
quested her to deliver it. She besought the young
man not to think hard of her, made it known
that she was only carrying out a purpose shelled
for some time entertained, and bidding hini a
"long farewell,r closed.
—George Fracas Train spends his time' in the
Dublin Jail between writing enough to' fill the
New York World each day,and drawing animated
charcoal sketches on the wall. The first of these
pictures represents the British lion dead, and the
American eagle perched on a vonderous pile of
greenbacks, flapping his wings in exultation. I n
the background is a fair representation of the
Capitol Buildings at Washlinzion, where George
Francis himself, wearing the Stars-and Stripes as
a necktie, and using tho Fenian flag for a pocket
handkerchief, appears, Just opening his moath
to take the oath prescribed as President of the
United States. At the end of, the avenuo the
White House is seen in a blaze of glory, and Liz
the distance is a cenglomeration of corner lots,-
street ears, German autos, Pacific raliroads,bms4
buttons, grind 'iotels, greased rainbows, Oce.