The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, July 16, 1866, Image 1

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    THE DAILY GAZETTE.
PIIIIISSICED BY
Penniman, Reed & Co.,
se, Sf FIPSII 87/IXWI. PITTSBUSGS
• IL. BY
TI
MIS
PS& WEEK. 6MAEID
BY flurluk.u- 118'1
'trite WittOurgit 64rtte.
MONDAY, JULY 16, 1866
ILLINOIg POLITICS.
The Union men of the State are in earn
est, says the Springfield Jeer-Iw'. Though
the cariltglign has not opessl, the people
feel the anysirtanee of an early expression
of opinion, and already in a large number
of counties conventions have been held,
which give tkositive evidence that the true
men of Illinois arc alive to the claims of
the 'war, All the boastful prophecies of
the Copperheads that a division of the
Union party was inevitable go for naught.
Never was there greater harmony of feel
ing or more concert of action in the ranks I
of the Republican party than now. The
fallacies and falsity of the Copper-Johnson::
are so apparent, dud the selfish motives
that prompt the otlice-secking slaves tlf
"my policy" are so conspicuously exposed
that no man eon be deceived. The Union
party is n unit, and places its shoulder to
the wheel with a purpose and strength that
ensures success over all opposition. The
contest may be severe, tint the result will
he as in ':)0 and l'opperlgeada and
their rebel allies will he ivoshial laineath
the victorious advance of the Union le
g-Um, The Stale Convention en the sth ni
August will develop the spirit of those who
understand the vile plots of Copperheads
and the scheming indict ility of the hilts
sniffles. As an iiistance of the animus of
the people, we refer to the action of the Pe
oria Co. Convention. which instrueteil its
delegates to the i)ist rue( ('out ention to go
for Mr. Ingersoll first, last anti all the
time. Thus it will lie in the whole Dis•
trict..Jn _•rrsoll's renomination was said
by the jutting Johnson teen to he
simply because he dared to tell the
truth conSidering the President. The
members of the Convention believed that
Andrew Johnson had treacherously be
trayed the party that devoted loin to pow
er, and dared to ,ay They believed
that, "my policy" (a telici coin) wasilan
gerous to the twat etti rests of the nation
and the cause of freedom, and by the Un
animous renomination ‘,l' Mr . 1 1 ,• . enA011, s o
rendered the verdict.
FROM GEORGIA
Mate Egoist Right. Convention—The
President of the A•eoelation De
and at a Liar and Swindler.
Aecireir., G .n., duly 4.—The Georgia Equal
!Lights Ask•oriation ttt l'reekimen, reps eeteitleg
twenty-four coaatie4 of this State, after a ses
sion of three days, has adjourned. Tine object
of the Convention wit, to clan:flue Into the
conduct of J. C. Ilrya ntn, President of the An
arnentiton anti minor of the Low/ Geergion.
Mr. ILI - O.IIE. 1111.4 “CellSeAl of swindling the
freed:lieu, awl alter an ra inorie hearing, with
out summoning With... 51.1,5, the investigating
ComMitteo reported favorably to Mr. MTant,
anitimg a resolution 4,0716er...inn; the 1.1410 to
which helm - wiled Line Loyal litormun in attack
ing General Tillson, 14,141 demanding tact 11.
should emu.c. Upon 111 V ILALIOD. Ih:tient! Till-
sou osinlresstsl the Convention, saying, that II
wildlife ditty to inform the tuembors thdt Bry
ant ton liar anti tt. swindler. The r,urse he is--
persoing is Injurious to the colored raw. lie
argod tioanheird against civil'' , him any sup
port or ronntneaustnee. The Convention , then I
pursed a tesointion thanking General Tlllnon
for lits apcech nntl 1,1(0,11:100f,
nesteptren of General Sherman at Roe
lof,
..ftei - a . o.a, July 14.—Ortneral W. T. Sherman.
wn.s tormallY reoelveil tioa foreman( m thr
City Mai, they:leather - a 01 the city govern
ment and ales;.. tit tuber of elLl7.olle electing
Lit glee lam a welemmi. alwarL,rases-esahei. araawa
01 Wilt Yn attendance.
The .111111 pamed uV ir Ith great clieermg and
general anflattel Mo. t ten o'clock, the Gen
sal proceeded to the ,11t1 0 Home, where ho
KIM rev . .!IVed by Governor 111111001, 111111 warm
' welcounal to the lampaallata of the old hey
SState- frasiveral s of the accent Mel
thll - 1.5 . 4111111 BI.,1,1110111.••• ll.+ regiments, widen
were in Sherman's army ou their march to tine
bell, were lien' 10 greet their old COlllllll‘llller.
Among 100111 were firocral 4 . Untie:remit and
Cogswell. Tile battle thhts of the regancitta
wore ttleiplayLal, and ter scone was one 01
great. interest. This afternoon, •
ttttt 'cal 'eh er-
Man will visit the Navy Lula, Bunker Hill,
Harvard College, ant often liter.. of titterer(.
On alonilay there V. 11l eV 11 grand reception, In
Fanuell thrill, and on Tuaailay, he will haze
lite termini. he Hanover, N. IL, passing
threcia, lohittal sterittan goes to
Now liant paha, to all mat the eonitienectuent
Of iartetiiilll College.
=
New nic ll.—The ttppottitment of
delegate , . to 10e 0,10 , 0121 h 4011ettilL1011 NVIL,
deferred Lel 114,1 ucod..
The LOULSIII.IO/ /1111/LOll , COLIVeLdIOLL 10011
decided step.. t.l elllleitle orphan children of
The cutter Delaware, at tialveston, was as
lined and visited I,y the Span hill Coaxed.
The Ptrattranster 414eueral.ship
July it —The President. Llll4
Ilflerl34oLl tiomlnated to the Senate A. W. Ran
dall, now Sleet Assi•taitt., to be Poattnaater
General, in the place of Dennison, resigned.
No other resig none of Cabinet officers had
been received by the l'reahlent no to noon to
day.
llreawunre low EVlTepe.
Now You' July 14.—Tb.. steam . for Europe
1....4.1ny look out *l, 00 In trenNurr..
CITY ITEMS
11.11,11 od Cocoanut. Cream
For the hair. It ha.+ no ennal for promoting
the growth or hair. For gale at idilitPti's Drug
Store; corner TULL and SurithUold litrOntn.
Left on Sale,
A splendid Rosewood Plano, of a celebrated
ruake, full seven-octave, and handsomely fin
ished, price very low, at Gardiner's great
Boot and Shoe !louse, No. Mt Fifth street.
filarNnpririlla
it In hard to kill out the moillelnal tmo of
thin famous root. It must be excellent., or it
would not be demanded no entemilvai. After
all, amid MA it may be, the kidid.. sJ 14nac,
which thu llostou ellendlts COILIAMI AN ILII It,
U. a more valuable alterative and Louie t
Sarsaparilla_ The sarsaparilla whit iodide of
Limo must be It selentifle and valuable
remedy.
A Good Time Coming
The Grunt LIM Concert. Is certain to take
Waco oh the 3011, at City MIL See calveettse.
meet Jn another column. We futtlelpate as
exciting and_lnterestlng time on that occa
sion—spieudelinuelc and very valuable gifts.
Every one should have a ticket In It. Now IS
the'l time to get tioketa—scaling very Stet.
l'oattivrly no move poStpOnietnentS.
Pnre Black b4lrry Wino
is one of the most useful articles to have in
the h o use during the hot 1.0390 , 1,-03P.ChalY
in it good for any dertmgement of the Bowels,
and harmless 09011 for infants; tile grout diffi
culty heretofore has been where to gut it.
Fleming, Druggist, No. eN "Afarkot street . , has
at length supplied the want, having sent to
Cambria comity, on the Mountains, where the
Blackberries grow to such great profusion,
and secured a strictly pure article. iVe men
tion this for the Mment of
in those of our renal.
ere who may wish to have It the 110 , 30 e.
-
Ladies of Delicate Cottontail-ion
And uncertain health are strenuously advised
to throw aside the nanseous and useless prepa
rations with Which thevaretuseustained to drug
themselves, t
hen test the hygeian, body-and
mind-strengting virtues of llossarrga l s
Chmitaitaxxn liTostecol licrriuus. in all the
OomplalniS and dlealltiltleo arising from va
rious exust, they will fled this cheering, re
freshing and invigorating_proparatien of ex
traordinary efficacy. Its regulating proper
ties are wonderful, and as a remedy for the
languor, named, tremors, convulsions, hysto
sic, aa., which often accompany the develop
ment of womanhood, tt has no equal among
the prescriptions of the faculty or advertised
medicine. For the ninny distressing feelings
which ushgr in and often follow the period of
maternity, and also for the painful and:dan
gerous symptoms which sometimes emote
,any "change -of life,...Earyarrait'a Bursae
Ewe earnestly recommended. 'No other recto
rattie seems to milt en well the /ventilations
and the, organtzationa-of the feebler ass. In
all delis of Female floblllty, where, there is a
• want o:prielriltal action, the Erruas • pro
duce a inekt talporUnd chinge,relleslng local
weak:up:o,rd .10-rt,OLLBDing the general
health.
ilostetter's Miters
'dos sold irtiolSsalesod retail Stvory lowrstos
iiendoes Ding andl'otifd IdediouroDepot,
rip. Et& Marta Attract; corner of 'the Diamond
adil Martt4. near FatArttt ittaet.
Nil
THE PITTSBURGH GAZETTE.
VOLUME T,IOCX.---NO. 166
ICIIIII ERION.
FOUR O'CLOCK, A. M.
VERY LATEST TELEGRAMS.
FROM EUROPE.
Arrival of the Steamer America
THE NEW ENGLISH MINISTRY,
Sailing of the Great Eastern
Tikt I . ..tk* On the Continent
VICTORIOUS PROGRESS OF PRUSSIA.
The Austrians Defeated in Bohemia.
GITZVIIIN TAKEN HI STORNI
Nl4O 1 c , R., .1111 y I.—The steamer Amerlea,
tenth ,ulthaulptognthe 4th, huts arrive.'.
The Cit) • , I rani, and
1111/I`llllllLll arrive,' out
ll=
@ME
hrrlrturg, pnx•ecda to London.
Lora Derby had nn Interview with the
ljneen, and sninnittrwl the Pillow tag names for
a now miuf.arv, which w ere approved •
Derby, Premier and Loader m Lords: teLinteli,
Chancellor of the E echequer and bead or In
the t onion A; Stanley, Foretan Secretor
Walpole, Homo secretary: general reel, We;
Secretary; l'asiuglou, Aduitrelty; Nortiteole,
=I
E9!Mr3MM
. . , . .
A great reform meeting took place in Lon
don On Monday night, at a knelt these were
front this ty to arty thousand people present.
The Prince of M ales, While riding along ltot- •
ten Row, nn Monday, was ruts against by a
runaway horse. The Prince's horse Wu. thrown
down, rolling over and over, lint the Prince
escaped not much hurt.
The (treat Eastern, with the cable on board,
on her way to Taletitta, passed Vent nor, on the
Irish COX.. nt 2:43 T. X., on I lie find. The
The race between Hamill and Kelly was to
come off on the morning of the fourth.
The London Times' city article, of Tuesday
evening, says the news of the rapid progress
of tin. PTUOnnOI army his crealeo um impren
sou en 'Change as to the early possibility of
uczoLial ions tor peace.
Lseestasol, ./uly 3—P. bill.—COtton quiet and
nchanged; sines of IS,OM bales, Including 4,u00
.pc future and exporter,.
rhe ',1...1..1109u, market is quiet and steady.
I. ion; del aud le los, cr. Wheat very doll and
ma sr. holders press ms; on the market;
. - -
e.t,11.111. Pork steady. li.".0011
,! 1.5r.l Innet I tr. Petroleum, email sales
ut renuc,i MI. IS 10 ..tl.
London, M.—Consuts L.
W.jrc6s' „: Erie, 374:77t,; illinots Central,
rho Prussiansiln lkiheinui were making VIC-
I mime, progress. llitseme was taken by
storm. Thel'rustilitr. loss seas not incolistile.
ruble. Tile Austrian loss was 4.000. It In an
nonnemi that the .11151rioll total losses up to
the present, were lial.Cs.Y to MAO.
In consequence of the sueewssfill storming
illtsehin, the ;unction of the Prussian army
ureter the Crown Prince and that under
jetties Charles, had been completely effectinl.
Gitschin was much damaged. Austrian pris
oners were moron unity arriving.
The Anstt tan Hanover, ltomming anti Mar
-1 tun: regiw cats were wholly aunihilated, and
I the Stir .lager bat tuition annibliat.l to the
last man.
•
• • •
A V leans. - telegram ol the first Inst. states
that the First Corps and Saxon army were re
intl4Nl by the Prussians yesterday, In eons,
.ittettee of w slob the AUstrhat army fell bank
the direction of Kuntz° tiratz.
.t dispatch f rom nugve, an the *nit ult.. re
ports engagements ott the iffittit, near
resulting tarot-ably to the Austrians. It glees
the 1111.1110 S *evernl places evacuated by the
liresistans. The latter were also defeated
while flying trout Fllein, leaving their dead
arid Wounded ou the Itch. These engagements
are prolialuy rile Mollie 13.4 before reported.
front name. sot 11..sti, glee, 00.1.
chit 11-pet -11 from the wirier. of Grown
Priucc, saying the result of the three day. ,
tigliting, in wittelt the Fifth Prussian corps
has been cnguglel, citnnot Ito Lou highly esti
mated. On the it true opposed by the
A Leitrim] Corps, under treneral Item
tutor..
A I.•tt e - bB Moue addreseed by the hate
ta General Itenedelt, to Josephstadt, which
:,trorils complete proof that the force, under
his command were theronghlv exhausted. fie
therein requested General Ilenedek to Aenti
eau two fresh brigades, in order that his
troops might bi vomtek under their Prot. , '
lion, and acknowledged that they would not
he able to fight on the following day.
The Fifth Prussian corps was therefore, op
posed on the trith ami leith by tile corps of the
Archduke timpold itinl General Tmdleres.
The lighting oa these two (talc extended over
a murk greater line than on the .I.7tit. The
Aestrlutt c 011.., toiler General Gabler,. wes
completely broken up. ilesitltm innumerable
I 'wheelers, twenty guys, tire colors, and u
I standards belonging Ic the cwt.,' of General
taiblenr., fell into tilt hoods ot the Prussian
troops.
A great number of workmen have seft here
for Dresden to elect entrenchments the Au
trians have evneuated Oxivirein.
The King - of Prussia tied arrived at iteichen
berg. He was entiminantleally cheered o
leaving Berlin.
A Berlin telegram of the , ays . NOtY. itl
atanaing the recent sanguinary fighting, LI
Pronoun army. Is in excellent xplrita.
Another Xll»pnuh littn9tutcr the arrivr..l
the hug at Ilitss }tin, where he ei as received
in, Prince Frederick Charles. The streets
everywhere showed tromps of an obstinate en
gagement. The enemy tied in olsortier under
the env., of the night. The ernilluet of the
Prussian troops was excellent. The Corps of
11uards repeatedly repulsed the charges. of the
i•Avalry without iormlog squads. The head
• I aattern of prints Frederica Chart es have been
removed beyond WLchut. The Junction tot
the hint and second 'truly onrns WIP. Complete
ly etTeeted. The number of the Austrian pris
otters already exe••eils tiro thousand. An I tat •
tau forming mill of a contingent of
1 A iist fin to strengthen the eighth federal corps
nail arrived at Frankfort.
FROM WASHINGTON.
Canto, of Republican Congressmen— I
Time for Adjournment Agreed Upoo—
Postmaster 'loners! Dennlimil••• Letter
of Ifsialgotillon and President's Reply '
Thereto—lnternal ftevenne Bill Sign
ed—Report Concerning Secretary
Harlan—Resignation of Attorney men
eral Mimed—Committee on Foreign Ai.
lairs and the Monroe Doctrine,
IS - ANUTICOTON, July 11.—The Republicans of
the Senate and the House of Representatives
held an adjourned caucus meeting to-night at
the Capitol, General Banks in the chair, to
hear the report of the committee heretofore
appointed with reference to the condition of
: public Medusas anti an halhertlitiellt. They
stated their views at some length but recom
mend that a day he not now timed. Mier sev
eral sea - lemon had spoken on the subject,
Representative Weedier:lu, of Illinois, offer.'
a resolution expressing the opinion that the
state of the Minimise was such that Congress
ran adjourn no. die on next Monday week.
This was the Impression of the majority, for
the resolution was agreed to by a vote of Oa
against 40.
The following correspondence has Just Leen
promulgated:
Washington, D. C., July 11th, laill.—iiir-1
have the honor to tender you herewith my
rceignatten of the 011100 of Postmaster Gener
al, to take effect upon w ithdra win g noing me y o ur
acceptance. In thus i from ur
Cabinet It is proper to saY that I do so chiefly
hocanat, of the difference of opinion between
us In regard to the proposed amendment of
the constitution, which I approve, and the
movement for the Convention to be bold at
Philadelphia on the fourteenth proximo, to
which I am crpposeil. My confidence in the
I patriotism of the UlOOlll Republican party,
and conviction that upon its control of the
Government depends, Ina large measure , the
happiness of the conntry atti tude ermit of
my holding an VIIIIVOGEti not
u In p respect
Ito'
Anlineing you of my yiersena: regard and
appreciation of the uniform courtesy 1 have
received from you, I am very respectfully
yours, Ate. Signed,
Wm. D 61131.03,
To the President.
Executive Monson, Washington,
14, P.M.—Sir: lour reslgtuttlon of the 01110 e of
Post Master General, tendered in your letter
of the 11th prat., to hereby accepted.
Fully appreciating your kind assurance of
personal regard, 1 tam
Si , very truly and respect,
tally yours. gned
AI(OILeW JOHNSON.
To the Hon. W m. Dennison, Washington, U. t .
The President, on Friday, signed the Inter.
nal Revenue BD l . The Internal Revenue Bu
reau commenced complying with the laivso f
winch it Ls emend story, and the preparation
of instructions and regulations.
A report tins found lie way into print that
Secretary Marian wrote a letter to the 'tepid.
Rican caucus, In which ho elaborately detailed
conversations ha the Cabinet, and advised the
radical members of Catlin - des to remain In
perpetual session, hot there Is the beet
au
duo
icy for stating that lie wrote r e
had no counnuntesatton with the caucus.
'I he nominating et A. W. Randall, to ISitrost
master General., has been referred to the Ben
ateresteflice Committeecaa is usual.
Mr. Speed has formally tendered his resig
neaten as Attorney General. According to
the report , * bin bitter Is even more emphatic
in bin disapproval of the 'PresidentAi policy
thatituat of AV:Dem:aeon.
The elaborate report 'of the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, ou the traidect of Mexico, will
be presented in tile Mimeo early this week. It
strongly sustains Me Monroe doctrine.
Notwithstanding Atte Mepuldican minims
last night expressed detire for an ad
journment sine die on to-Morrow week, it la
not certain the%ln place on titer as a
number of Working man in both tion.ses
slo not - thirrao early a day probable.
• ...homing fur,y, and 'lave out Du' cottimuulea ,
LATEST FROM. Eli ROPE , tton between the Anatrian and federal esinF.
. In the weßt the l'enastan victori% hada de
, chiral effect on financial nod commercial
- affaii, There her a general Improvement In
Arrival of the nova Scotian.' .--ke-h----
consols and other Keeuritles at the Loinlou
There was great buoyancy
In the Liverpool cotton market, nut a dePre. -
i sillll in llreilliffllllrli.
-- In the Paris Bourse. Rent. advanced lki.„, and
AUSTRIANS BEATEN AND RETREATING. • u
t . ,l n
.'",l' o " 1
UM nu attacked
the AllStrilllol
' at Alont , ••• The Austrians made a
'Amin:resistance. Thevoluntrersllv fell
A Pitched Battle Unavoidable. Adak la good order totritialdi was slightly
in
•oilied In the thigh. The ammunition of
the volunteers won rendered useless by It very
heavy rain.
PROSPECTS Dl' PEACE. The Bavarians attacked the Prussian out
pc,ts at Borefleld. There were plight losses /
on both sides.
Intense enthusiasm prevailed at. Berlin
where the Prussian victories were announced
with salvos of artillery.
tr Unarms.—Tlin second boat race tat.
swoon liaal I 11, Ult. American, and Kelly, the I
Austrians ("ompletely Routed. Englishman, on the Tyne. took place on the I
Ottli, and again resulted In an easy victory for
Kelly.
For the first time the anniversary of Ameri.
11.000 PRISONERS CA PTU ED. can independence wm celebntted on the 4th of
July conjointly by British and American war
vessel+ li, an English port_ All lien Majestrs
• at Portsmouth hoisted the American
,t the main royal rant, and at noon al
sawn I..fr: 111 g ..• guns tired a nal 1011 a
tr , ..ari
There was n. mind fete given the Amer'.
The International Scullin g Match. cans In Paris In celebration of the Mirth of
July, at which the Prince Imperial wits pre-
GREAT BATTLE AT LIIDOWA
Venetia Ceded to Napoleon
I sent.
In Liverpool, the Americans hart it banquet.
RAMILL BEATEN IN Will RACES, xl the w..hington now.
LATENT COSAMEFIVI AL. PIM Nll5O SCOTIA,.
Losslioel CM/on Market dertyll.--The broker's
steamship Circular reporttr l lhe sales of eottois for the
Nova seotrarr, 1511111 Li, eriaa m J a r, ;al, via, m'eek at rk4,0110 bad., inelmling 5.1,000 11611”1 IU
Londonderry .1 Ills rith, passed this point thin rrir aa il' a a iVe,,,N o d a,rfl d' a l! b a 'Ll' r r r i t' omi l i M erj:rT l ,l7lst . ..
evening , The •deldnshlli Scotia, from New closed buoyant, with an advance of 4 ngd ml
York, arrived al Itverigsrl on the iMtli American, Unit n o other ileacript lona
I owing to the prospiet of frentAU. Tiro salmi WI
LATEST XIA LON 1i0N05.1105. IIV TM.IIOII r ny, wore 91. 11„. e t
1 0.d...1, July li,.rn,nli IN,ot thinks Con INK filmier and advancing. The ant norirerl
ress will shortly assemble, and lir e ii rs . rre r r ~1 IMM.IIOOII are tirleans, fair, irsti 1,1.111110 g,
Gore, ~,,, o tt f u ill propose a general d raara ,.. . blohllo, fair, IMO: 1.11.,01; I . ix-
Mont . tani\ 8, fare, IliThe stock In
to the eommereial erreiro, L oo don Vinylts . rd 7,1.100 hales, Incloding 429,De.) bales of
1. rt.:Z . 10 , 101 S. V irt unity or Met ! Amerieda.
Tni. Pitney Imperial wins present nil he fete 'Node - report-The Manchester market to
hl l it t tx. on the 4,14.11,.1 ton o f Am e r t o ,, n firmer anddull, steady.
d tr e Iclineoaristua all s- .The market
very WWI a on 11 11111 ILICS.
penl l.llsellin telegram of lin , 3il St hat the Pri . " l " , 1 . 1.1 ;
111,1100 telegram of he ii. 1.11 ult.. announcing i. -114 .m. JuUt 11 .-4 onsols melee. al
the tit.. sigh gun- 11, I be.
officially denied. The Priedilatts have not lost 11.1 V 01 1 111111.10,
a single gun, but hat e emltmed 1 wenty-fourrseeesin 'bred Staten Iwln's 6740
Austrian guns and ,
eight gags. 0). 4 ; Illmois Central, 77...,a7re,r Erie, y'4o '.
'ln the evening of the a pros...ran an
,mile sum eremd anan bgade, and vale
.mt P Austri ri WIG PASSION A L PRIICEEDINCS.
The King left for the outposts of the artuv
ander the Crown Prince.
"the Duke of Coburg hart arrived ut
sada
MIEIMIIIIIIME
W AnilltsOTON. July le, lasi,
.... .
. SENATE.
_A Merlin official telegram of We 3,1 State, Mr. Edmunds called up the 'loose resolution
Mat General Iteerslek found himself man..
poled, In ~,,,,,,,,,,,„,,„,„,. of We .. hio .„1„,„, .4 for tile appotintment of a Joint .0W mittee of
the corps of Gen. Gel , len 0 and the retreut of : two Senators anti three Representatives on
tiro -A aatriaa "" ''...n tr..°ll, to abandon the subleet of retrenchment to sit, during toe
operations. He had eomtneum d mote t• it
re hie, and ermeent rated Me army at a more dr,- recess of 101ig1,,,, , , um' report by bill ist °teem
tuft point. ' weie •
A GILSOIIin telegram of the 2.1 stutter I hat , i nit motion of Mr Sh••riustn, the resolution
13,0 1 0 Austrian prisoners have been made by i aaa a 11 a . tai" a° s` to alloy to the tellitarY
a s . 1 , ,,,,i,,,,„ „,„,„ ~,, ~,i,, ~,,,i ~,,,,,,, ~,,_ • and naval, us well as the civil curs lett of the
trier, have been killed and wounded. Thu Ga s ‘,..... r : t ... ' ' ' I •
A „, i , ri,,,,, army 1,,,,, , ~, 1 I 0 , , ~,,, ~, 1 ,,,,, •
i. r...llthonV 1110,41 to amend by inserting
tarn between .10...phetsit and Komar,. so, 1 , lenvislret that the Lomntlitee entlelee Ist.'
ant as/online to tire statement 4il tiOrne id t iii• , lie ettwilletn'Y rd se //banging the teeth ed °I
rept ere. Metiers, the -Misers are ,Ilecottraged aPPetta mints to the el vi I service, as to Pet
an,
the arnix in a runt sf drosolut s. t hem beynota the power of being used foe
The ,lesertsim of Sterna° -slot I, Imre.- Party peri,o....s It rovides for the retention
Mg. , lit arspotnt kneels during good Itelinvior, Ac.
, , Adopted
The retreat id the A astral. na • vs-I y pro - „
el The ail' k..llettlehi meN ed to anletiel by Waking
The London Tinter of the Olt sae, llorrilde th e "tem" Mrs' veto o ' l o f three "11-atiire aria
as the carnage has been, ii bunt ha , looked • nye R e i" eae " lttriree • A d° P ted
upon as a men. OM 110 , to tine pitched battle 1 Mc, .1 dlaa ' ai ettnu' red a eel"' tint, was„ ..
. i . out mast num to be subuotted to the I res.-
:tow unavoitlaele, re sr their the quarter of a
million of men will pro/nobly be engaged out "at
either chle. Mr. 4:•115,1511,1. ~t 1c aes nisi It was a elm-
About four thintistot•l men of a focittrul 1,11, P l ' ' e '''' 1 " 1, " I .”. r, I', ills' tall 11'.....
corps had inecupteil Wetiier, levieel a contd. ' ' • h e rei' autla. 1 . 1 attienee'l• teas ad°Ptol
Mr, Johnson reposed a hill for the relief of
button on the Inhabitants. nil left in the di- ..,,, . ~ . - . , ,
recline ill I i
,sae.re or soder,. or the rot Liana nem+. it author-'
an -
tai r . —T he listrlatis eine . . that rapture 01 : 11.. .' , " 1 " I • 1 esideat 1 " ea"iv to en Pareitased
such provisionn, and clothing and melt other
4,0 X/ Italians at (Usti.... and I 4 Generals. ,
finAtnit! ARTNIt.. I'rat.l A , Anne. Jour as _ f lit tick, 14... he .. , hlil 1 ...cm imlel,..ittle, ILIA tO
Nreportatoe has ono/erred. Tie en. ' " ad " tha au!. ' ll th e arsme of the Gov't" - ,
othtng Of t
• mem of this 1 Trued ...Ales 1.0 the Mate Of
roily , . patrols make frequent remelts/desre. ,
0 ,.,,, , Maine toe the. ratan( of We ettleetta ,
~•w iro, ,M V, . .• I
on the right bank of the Mottrio They
watclual 1,5 our cavalry patrols. Four sort,l- ' ;I .e. "' °Y the ' at ` are In the e'IV ut , - ,7 si a; t l,l
eons of Austrian Dosser, had advanced ire 1 1 ~...t . 9 1'. 1 '.7,',1 1 . 1 .a,1 , e2_ a .:,..1,0 ,. .,‘," 0 1 ,, ,, :` 0 7„T 0 u r0 a1 ,1 Z 1 . , 1
Italian terntory to the right of the 5110,10. , t".e'eaa." dollars. • 11 r ' '.. to air
lint they were uneountertsi by the third ...ono. 1 I'Mr.
..,,
~,„
net of the Foggia la, ass's and v. 1.1,011,41 to I
, f , ! , .?"'a Me ailed L.,‘. li , P, it ilinCient APPr.orri
, atm 1 i in, 5 , Melt is s • , I Douse yest4•n ay, '
retreat to tout° ,anal Itlvalta. The A ustrian-
lost several kiiied. 1 sod Oil :11. ..... le 411 II was retern. to :ta, fi
r nonce Column es.
"e 4 an' ".. ,- a" I , ' ',, ,Aea I. 1 Mr. Pomeroy. 'rum ti I. onnut Mee of Cruder-
To, e, Molornasel, .1 illy Ist —The Malmo A.- ; ~,,,, en tile 101 l trnu e.
iting lands for the con-
Irian cavalry mdett,,,,,, to ~,,,,k,„, reeoenol- 1 ,traction or the 5.,r,i,..ri, hens. Knit rem l,
metres. No brisk en/Moment loo• Luke" Plan' , nosh/ a report whirs a st. 4,r.leleal tO tie over
since yestentay 'a en vomiter. lit
Foggia Lances, sesde forty Austrian prison- xi , p„,,,, , ,, , -.4.. • s „ ,be 51,,,,,,,,,,,, hat,
era. The troop. are In excelleut health ~,tel i ~,,,,,, ‘.„., o „,„, ~,,,
~..,,,,,,, ~,,. A o „„. ).
spirits, Lite division which sefferea most In the i m, II „,.„, __, ~,, ~,,..„,,,„„,,,,.1„„„,,,,,
battle of Custstra art , in ni, stay disionted. 1 ..„., ~,,,, s i ;„,,,,,, s ~,o hr .,. , ~,,, 000 ,„.,,,,,,,,,,.
and express their CIL:011 11C5441 1141.11 11 tribe phi.•o.l j 1 ,,,,.. „1„, of t the- i „ no ,„ ~„,, „ , „ ,o „ o
at the front In the next battle. king Valor , isi „, i .„, „„„ i „, ; „, jy ,,,,, ~„, 0 , ~,,,, i „,,,, ~,,,,,,i,,,,,
of i of Mega mic. We letters to he for It term of
EISOII.OIIBI hoe sent a telegram to the King
Prussia cOngratulating him trysto the recent . .„,„, [111„‘„ i,,,,, ~...0 „ „_,,,,,,
~,,,,,,,,,,,, to
sautesof the Prussieti antis. ' reatUillthielil ei el y hive year - cola, rent to lit
FlArt - ric... Jld y x.—Alt edictal report from, the . 11 ,,, is„ alas 11 ,. 1 „.,,,,,,,,, ~,, paid try those
headquarters of the Malone army dente. the , „b„ n0w„,,,. 0 „,.„„., 0 ,, r ,,,,,,, ,
acmiracy Of the Wtrot hilliest, Dented by the 51, Cons, -, urns,. the tall, as opposssl to
Austrian commander, tot slt lea the latter an- i 1 . ,• prlses,••••l , el tee g.., I ometit. Noted upon
nommed that the garrison ot Mantua made a , ii . „1,.„ ,:, i ,,, abater, VA semi lc/longs to the
sortie and repulsed the Italians nt Clirnltee.
..-.; ., , : . 1 . 4 ,, , , . ;... t ... 1 , , , ,, , , , , 0 4 1 to the ~1,10p,t. The Ai' h‘.1...
The engagement with the garrison ni Mantes
Is declared to have heron on ly a few Voile) , \llex di-Jordon. Air 4.r.lie, moved to post
fired toy the outposts on each side inlfie Ihe Ma With the tit tit l'ilorldla) In 'recce,-
The Austrians continue to make incursions b er.
from the Vettetim frontier Into Italian torn- g p f ro , ra . , ..1,1,, s 0 rote ~,,, 1 , 0 ~,0 , ..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
tory, on the right hank of the Mingle. They : the nil,.mg hour expiled, one tint, bill to se-
have also burnt several bravo , on the Adize • , otte the •,....oty con,truction .p 2 the Northern
To-dav the Mahan Dacesta regiment of Um. j 1 ,,,,4,. 1 , 0 ,,,,,,, , ,, „.,,,,, taken 0,,,
1 Mr sticrtuatt spoke tatopimaition to sue bill.
here ilea an engagement won three hundred
A estrion Hussars at Medal. The II mom, ..ellk oath had ulritady rne• iVett forty-severs I
were 4144 pi n -seal with a loss of fifteen prima's 'trillions of acres of Intel on promise to Mad
alit twenty horses. One Anstetan officer wan . she road for that. It now mined Government I
Liken prh , oner 1.1.1 another klliosl. , o eh e It uric lontotreo awl twentydrie Ls iL
isms Dye hundred and crwenty-one thousand
Faust's.—The I:oll.logiclatif closes/1 on Slit '
9111., .x hundred Millets In the insufficient boeurl-
rirril, July 3.—The Elmo.. remains firm ty of one-half the Moils. a Inch they received
Renters closed at 03f. cnc. or Me. higher than ,„ 0 ,. 0 , , „ 0, bill, In 0 0,00
~, ..i , „,.,,,0 0, ,k
yesterolay.' lortn, wan debated ill the House, anti voted I
tiPAlN.—Public order remains endistur'ssol In down by a heavy majortty It was framed !
Madrid and the province. tr
The ball eststl"g 1 with a speelal view of evading a rule of the
the Government extraordinary powers was I Rom., reeturing rallalls appropriating money
passed. to lie referred to a committee It would be
Madrid, July 3.—The Chamber of Deputies iragged from the speaker's table, nail prostml
passed yesterday the 1,111 for the subversion of through the Boman. The passage of such In
the constitut tonal gietrantees brought for- Mi. this would impair the public confidence
ward I , v Marshal I Pls. , . 151•11. in tine credit of the Government. Congress
I 1 esor 4 itY,—Th , . , Elth ,,, Pn , body line voted , bad been altogether too willing to embark In
two, hundred Limes:tea tiories"for the relief of I ouch an eliterpri,,t
the wounded Three hundred Iltingarlan 1 Without action on the ball, We Senate we et
Magnoles will entice awl °Willi a corps of (~... I into eicieutlve session, and emu after tut-' I
yo t iry. iota, thousand sournital soldiers bad Jemmied.
arrived at P esti, HOUSE.
, i.ar."• .lily ''' ; T ” 3 ", “*.ee n de Asir 7 , , ' , ) ,....., ' 1 Tim lion, resumed, us the linslness In the
rollers /ro: 01 gala ,oil ~ S alty preynooos I 0 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, r 00 . 00 ,,,,,,,,..„ 100 0 , , 1 , 0, se ... 1
" " Ie " e 'l"the4 the Pr " ."4"' ' '' ' '''''' ' . , ,at , toilr .i a ' orthurixo the construation 01
at liturehengrate, Turrue and Noul.i.
Midges over the Nlisnossfpril for railroad par'
TM, La Posies tills evening stays W e be
lieve we aro able to state that Gm Austrians 1 Pn• "" nand quest.. being toe en
,00 ,,, ~,,,, ?„,,,,,,,, in ~,,,,,,i,io rm ,l„, i ,,,,.,, t, , , ,. • amendment reported from the ostollicl/ona-
S mimeo. reserving Lite right to Congroas to
otos. cause the removal of all obstruetions to the
keels, Jule 2.—AL the eerenion les held on the ,
, fluty igation of We river that may bemused by
c'r'is'''" of the l ''''' °I. SL fetes', the Pe " re- such In Mae, tin inot sills of Mr. A Illson, an
newood tits prole. against the annexation to
,„ itmentltuent was agreed to, antitori xing the eon-
I ta l Y of th e P e "" "e' feri.e"lY ""
I°e ' - ' strum lon L,f a aralbso across the Missouri elver I
the States of We Chn re h .
n„,c . / . 0 .,, , ,, ,
~,,,!, ~ _ ,,5 , ,,,,,,,,, r , f , 101 ,,,,,,, t. ,,,,A. 1 at Kansas 1.111. v. lire Ally offered an amend-
plans In this town yesterday, being ollreetyti , i ~ ,. , . , ! , pi tt, , l tt e et h il l 'il ni t .,, g , ol : l ll o o ll 4,e, b ig . e ro arst t.d ti . se d l it r ilt i t s- ....
against. the Jews. The populace destro)ei
way of Wu Celled SUL., nrovlolml it amt. not
their synagogues. Many Jews took reluge at
I teeter lolly obstrect navigation.
Lino Austrian Consul/4e.
Mr. Washlnnrite, of Illinois, malted Mr. Alley
r " Ili "'" , ''" New ' erkl areieee" „„,,,, Ll • I . to accept a modification Itt the shape 01 a pr..
on tire fonrth. , also, that tiro bill shall not interfere with ally
LAT.. , ,I , LIVHIII.OOI.. law suit now pending in any weft in refer-
LiVeßront, Jody s.—Ersoortif,s.—A great hat- men to that bridge, mud that the section 'haft
ale took place eta the 311 near Loamy's, result- r not take effect until Ms bridge shall be Made
ing In the Prussians obtaining a great and : to conform Ito width of drew to that. required '
140t1411411.43 Victory. The Pressmen took 14,u0u ' In other bridges referred to 11l the act.
permitter, There were llat losses in killed ' Me. Alloy declined to accept lt , or to yield to
, avid wounded, but 110 estimate in given of the . the amendment beteg efferent.
, number. Tim Au:ill - Inn. , sent 111 a ling tai! Mn, Washburn° protruded against this as
1 truce. one of the most iMpOrtant Monterireit of the
Aststrin has agreed to mile Venetia to We Iron feeling, envoi vein the Interest of eighty
1 Kroner - or Napoleon and accept him medial ion. ,
p r ey millio of people. Being forced through under
Napoleon Immediately rommunleatonl wltit the rious •inestlon, he appealed to the
1 We belligerent, ' Judgment, the honesty end fairness of the
' The Parte Mondeur 01 the sth snakes the fol- Moreno whether IL would confine the discuss
lowing announcement : Ant important event ' :don Of thlngraVe matter to a single hone.
hall Jaen. occurreol. After having MLitt 1.11.113eil Mr, Alley said that he was quite willing to
the honor ef his anus in Italy, the Empr,or of , lthiellna the question thoroughly, but at this
Anntrin, conenrrtug In the Mena expres,sed le period of the session tie could not consent to
the Etraperortapoleott's Muse of J lino 11th, I Imre the time of the Mouse taken up In this
1 to Ills Mime r of Foreign Affelis, cosies Ills' mutter. Me would allow ten inii4uttie 11 , 9 I , "
notra to the French Ember or, and nevem, Ills I gentleman from Minsourt, (Mr. liogaMy and
mediation for the conclusion of peace. The i WO oils alas to the avail
from 111 111018,
I Emperor Nalterieon hastened to respond to 1 (Ste. W.lthurtle.)
the summons, and immmllately communicate ! Mr. Mogan expressed saretufticully his won- I
eil with the Kings of Prussia end Italy, in 1 (Joyful obligation to We geutlensan from Mass-
order to obtain an armistice. I twbutiette for giving ten minutes to discuss a 1
The Artstrian Field Marshal, N - on Galilee., 1 ..swore of such Incalculable Importance to' .
arrived at the Prussian headquarters, at , his coustittlents and the temple of the Wmd. I
itorlts, near taltachen, on the es toting of the , The ordlnai ttttt of 111157 required the Mississippi
4th, with a flag of Lreee.l river Will It, tribtstanes to he forever free Will 1
Thu battle of July 31, near Ludo:rem wes 'at unobstructed to all rho people of the United
great affair. It resulted In the eompiete de- ' States, and now the gentleman from Muss.,
feat of the Austrians. The Prussia. were l chest:Ma Oar. Ally) Came here at the bidding
osommanoled by the King In person. They m I
et and by penulretion of the great monopolies of
the Austrians under lienedok litttWeell klOt'll , . I (to. country to destroy that navigation and '
and Koniggrats. Thu battle Ittstool twelve , ' take away from the people their right as OW
hours, nottll 10 o'clock A. 5,i eon to the free navigation of the greatest I
The battle was favorable to the Austrians, I river le the world, while In (Mr. Mogan) and
h u t after thst hour the advantagesn ere wlth , and others were condescendingly allowed Lon
the Prussians, ut twin Welook e, a. After an I Min ilienLO present their argument:snail:lst thin
obstinate dote.su the rt . U.t11.11,6 earriml by I measure. Thone great monopolies have their
sterns the strong poeition of the Austrians, I agents, oil this floor; they have their Mlorested I
alter whash the Austrians were quickly driven 1 stinekholdens here to vote on this measure;
out - of other positions, and by seven r. n., the , they lions then . feed uttoreeys hero to voteon I
Austrians were In full retreat to Rotriggratz. ! 1.151 s measure to rob the people of the west of '
The AuStrinne wore lit a complete rout. The tussle great God-given right to navigate freely
road was strewn with baggag - n - which they the great Mississippi river.
throw away. Nile number kiilod and wound- Mr. Ihmtwell rose to a question of order. ax
ed on moth sides was great. but owitig the ex- miming to the words last spoken, and requir-.
tent of the battle-field it bail hot yet been as- Ing Well] to he taken' down and read at the
carmine:it Clerk's illaik. .
ruledatte halm to have captured, up to . The Speaker decided that the worn t
ds excep
th T e b e e ve r ning of the Itti, fourteen thousand dn. ' rid to were ont of order as being a reflection
wounded prisoners, one hundred and alsteen ' 51010 tnmehors of the Mouse.
cannon and several flags. Three Austrian , Mr. Randall, of Pennsylvania, suggested
A rch
Dukes are
and Pr rep ince Nudisorted woun eha ded. Princee
th teensat the
reala question WILY whether the Mato.
tenstein gas rin s e wrue.
taken prisoners.] Mr. Wimhburne disclaimed Wry What to anylierteMlFestltieS, commander Of an AUstrion , anything improper, and he would not have
corps. Iced a leg. General Collilthume was made any such reduction If a debate had tome
shot in t, -e had, and Colonel Bender and um- had.
other staff officer were killed. , Air. itontwed interrupted, and claimed the I
The London news of tho sth says: The end- House tilt ! 114 1 :1:11 L4l know SA: Wallet the gentb, I
dueness and magnitude of the Austrian cm. I mar . aeed u, what he said. or i ts it. j
larnity are too oyertxlWering for any man to . 01 r Hogan Vail he preferred, the words
speculate on We pOssible tonaetliteneen ma the ! were clearly not proper, to withdraw them. ,
the destinies of We ALUM.... EuttAre. With Mr. Bor
er urged that that W& not a sa w
the exeeptiOu of a few fortresses of ' flelent retraction, and wonted to kno
no more avail 113 ."torn warfare (0 whether . the gri t t io le o Mun Mogen) meant to ,
stay the triumphant prog ess of u victorious inaintiti b his o i
1
army Chau I".lefstarit and Tarumgratx hove . T nyele P eold he thought the gentleman
proved to be, Benedek huts nothing In his from MillsOuri had done all that the House
rear th at open country;• nothing between him qu Lred, and moved that he he allowed to pro.
and the capital but a Vest sruoOth battlt-fleld, reed to order. The .alien was etyma to.
when, the cannon, the cavalry and the dread Mr. Banks claimed as thejourna would show
needle
The
of the Prussians will have free the words that . Were ruled QM, of order, it.
play. The austtions have done enough for should eteo show the retreetion.• , •
the honor of their arum They must now pro- The Speaker, referring to thereto on the snb
vide tor the safety et the states, and this can . pot, decided that that was net reassured by
hardly be done by prolonged realstanee. The ' the rule.
Meat Intentions names in the Empire aro 1 Mr. Ashley, of Ohio,wanted
toe gentlerrum
among the def.' and wounded. ' from Dinerourt to be required mpn what
Tim King of Frussin is in temp,
end the ; ho eitid about railroad eisrotitltt!Mblrlog
Emperor .at Austria is not very for trom , feed attorneys On the hour.' - ,
Itonodelt. I The epenber ruled that the MW) hialpassed
The Doily Naos ;Mows the Abe Freestane from the matter and given...the genblenian
riot only gained the bottles, but da l
es , front Bilssoun pertnisidon tit proced,rorMet•
advantage of inn - tarot tunXirtance. Th./ , 11. r. Ashley moved so , reconsider that vine.
have oencenfrated o ht corps
of
their army, I The , ntotton VMS letd . Mll the table, and Mr.
can pour -doltm on the enemy with arm- i Hogan prOceeded wlUthie eV:MOM:IL get:ailed
. . .
PITTSBURGH. MONDAY, JULY 16, 1866.
the attention of the liosse to the feet that In
'Ka, the registered tonnage of steamers of the
MlaeLstppt river anal its tributaries' was it'12,144
watt; that there were nine lumatred anal ten
stattnetneugaged In that tory Mallon, covering
~,,,,,yuyAhlrti million dollars, and that its coin-
Merge WM equal to the whole foreign eon,
merge cif_tlie United States.
Mr. Alley said that the argument of the
gentleman from Missouri was more to the
general merits of the hill, than to the sea-eine
amemlnient. The only difference between
this bridge and the other brfilges promised to
be authorized wits that the width 1.1 the
draws of the Clinton bridge was not of equal
u nit
that requited by the others, I wing
IZ3 fent in the clear. It bail been In
:trident for eighteen 'months, and was a struc
ture of Most substantial character, imilt In
the most substantial manner. The proposi
tion was Simply that that bridge Imhttriareal
post road. The tremble about It wan that it
Interfered in the rivalry between St. Louis
and Glucago, the liridge being of advantage to
Chicago. The city of Galena was somewhat
In the predicament of St. lords, rind anybody
who had served in the house with members
from Lihnois, so long as he (Mr. Alley) bad
served, knew very well that measures which
did not. bring any toll to his mill. and by his
mill he meant the city of Galena, never de
-1
rival
'tltiLssellittirn'rvi't).'...a.tj the
tll''
I, L l ' o ' l.. '
.. called the tee,
Homan tunnies, ,sting the Wit (art ol
hi+ rie
j Th. Ord,. 01/1014..1, to lot%
I down and Mail from the a
srantker overruled the point of Ot taus , hot
dormloy the word, °Mende,
Kr. IN aelthorno deatretl to he heard on that
point, hot the Speaker ruled that the ntattor
won not debatable.
Mr. alter come feather remarkn,
yiel.l.sl halt :to hoer of his time to Mr, Wash-
Mime, of who denounced the amend
ment 11l regent to the n ton bridge non most
oetrageous measure. These railroad comps=
ate, wanted to sum hp tin! Mississippi river,
tel to make all the commerce of the meintry
Olen cry t) Own. If they dAM that great
end inalestiC highway of commerce, then they
amold mist- Liddr rat, fur trnesportnt 1011 tw
mica as they elm., The ltoek L...lartil bridge
boil must.] Id live years, front ISA to lie
loss of six.tysfonr steamers of the value of tw,,
mnlllonn of dollars, an,! many rafts of loads.,
Mr. Price rose and deelared that although
he 11 , 7,1 within sight of Meg Island bridge,
be hint never hentsl of wore than three boats
hog lawn wracked. The Id.ldernglit about
mixty.four heals bur log been wrecked there
ens noes to horn.
Mr. (I.llbll I or, or Iltinotx, remarked that
he thought it might be maw 1.0 the gentleman
Irom lawn, but he would prove It in the book he
hail before him, awl by the report of the Com
mittee of lingineers, appointed by the War
Department eeetteal years ago to examine into
the question of the ftrwk Inland bridge.
Mr. ILarding sent he eonenrred with the
views of hio otillengne, Mr. Wwshburne, in en.
gurd 10 the Clinimi
11 Is e
anti Int itepee It
would not be legulized in this The quea
iron WOO takes and the amendment was I-flee
ted by yeas al, anal nnywia.
Mr:llogun 11140Ved to lay the bill :mil amend
'uvula on the table. which ales negatived
101 l 'A ILA thvn
I=l
Tile House tweed...dist In the consideration of
the report of the select Committee in the
C1L , 43 of the breach of privilege etiargedagalnst
Mr Rosseau in fix:mulling Mr. (irttinell for
woople spoken in debate.
The Committee. after reviewing the ease at
ennebleruble length, report they are of the
opinion, that in ateetulthig Mr. terinnell on or
one I of words simken to debate, and for We
c
ttek one le.lge.l purr..., of .lisgraeing 1111 e as
1111,11:11 . 1 tint - Wm-, tilel I hereby depriving
Imo of nts. tool lust lia II uenire no al pew.,
as it member, that Sir Ito omen c.0.:1i1t...1 an
Inexcusable bread, of the privileges of this
House. a. , • ell as 01 lite iambic represented by
Mr. ormnell, tor t. loch no prof °cation Or •
J.-Wit:talon can lw pleaded, nail w bleb inerlLs
the st rongreLcomleion at ton In the imam of the
Ilnnsr in Ire pow. Th.• con 1111114, then revised
the rharge of cowardice Insole again.. Mr. Roe.
an. whi.'ll they foetid untenable, but deny
that th ts testified Mr, Roes,. in Ills course.
They lino e fore recommend the House to e,
pre-. Its dleapprobation et the per- • I re
flection of Mr Urig lien npon the charucter of
Itoeseatt a+ a viola , 101 l of the onlete of the
House 11,1 a breach ot privilege The 0..1-
,11111er alwt rweoottn i ... led
e,
e arrived 1., Me express purpose
of ores ntl tut interference. be In - might before
We Oar of the House tool heid etildeet to Its
eel. rs. The Committer further urge rigid
adherents. to the l tiles of the Hoes.• relative
to pet ...weld'os an debate. The Committee
close I helr lengthy report will, resol talons se
follows
Redetrel, Thal the Wm. Lovell H. Itosm•aid,
idepw , entat eve from Kentucky, by 1.3"1111.11 ,
111/g an armatticupon the perwan of tile H0n..1.
IL Grinnell. a Representative from the Stale
of lowa. for words spoken In debate. Ims Justly
forfeited hie privilege* as It menatair of this ,
Holier, and Is hereby expelled.
Rranfrest. That the poreonal reflections made •
by Mr. ..rintit'prewentittive scum the
Mute of down,t .nno of the Mouse, upon •
the ammeter Mr. Rossean, a Represent..
live from We *tate of Kentucky, Were a Vio
- of the rules regulating debate and the
prlviinges of its members founded thereon,
end It the ill wi
swpi.Val of Ike House.
Rewired, Thal Chas lye Pennybaker, of Ken
tucky,regby, oil Kent ocky, and J no. 0.
M c Graw. o f s hy their pr.tinee and (ntrtl
rlpettOti in u premed it al.! nasault by lion. M t.
Itoseettu, of henturtey, on Hun. fed r. l;rinlinll.
of lowa, Oil newient of words pipOltilli In debate,
to wit to It the pen..., If not the liven, of Mein
liers of tills House were imperilled, were
guilty of iolatlon of its priv lieges, and they
are horeti) 0, dereil to tic brought to the rof
as House to answer our thou' contempt. oba f Its
dvileges.
I slii e. wt
IL P. Sr Aca.ollio,
S. I'. FSAXYW
M. Itonael.L TEI}I,II.
VIP., Or Tait MINORITY.
The ondersigned concur with the majority
of the Committee In holding that General 110.
"Call, In his ILSSaIIIt noon Mr. Grinnell, was
guilty of a violation of the privileges of this
llouse, for which there was 3irstiflcation,
nut considering the provocation received by
t.evieral ILISOMMitI, the wanton and unjust im
putations east 111,00 his military charecter and
services, the failure of the lions° to protect
hint from an assault unwarnintable in itself
and a violation of them privileges ot She House,
and the absence of any intention to Inflict se
vere bodily Injury upon Mr. Grinnell, they are
of opinion that expulsion Is a punishment
more severe than justice or the public inter
est requires. They, therefore, recommend the
adoptionof the following nulistituto for the
lint of the series reported by the majority of
the Committee
r wheel, That the Lion. Lovell li. itosseau
be summonmi to the bar of the Donne, and
be there v iolati o n prman by the Speak
er tot theof the rights and privil
eges of the House, of which he was guilty) in
the personal mimelt committed by him
upon the H0n..1. It Grinnell, for words spoken
In debate.
In recommending the adoption of the other
resolutionn reported by the Committee, the
undersigned hilly concur.
(Signed) Baser J. ciao sotto,
Jour lioriss.
Mr. Wilson moved rt point of order on the
second rest - did lon he maintained that an the
lion se Irwin negSeeted to rill Mr. Grinnell to
account winu the oineetional words are spo
ken, It could not now take action against him.
The spetiker - delivered s. long opinion, and
tinnily ruled the resolution In order.
Mr. Spalding, of onto, opened the debate.
Ho advocated the expulsion Of r.
sp o ke
ldetto
as (In eznanple, at the same time M
he in
the tern's Of the patriotism and lira
very of tied gentleman, but the more elevated '
the eharticter of Mr. Itosseau.the greater the
necessity of indicting punishment. the
(Spaulding) WORIII do violence to his eon
..elence by voting for myth ins less than
expulsion
Mr. Spalding was several times interrupted
by questions from other gentlemen.
Messrs. Eldridge anti Johnson contended
that the (loose hall no jurisdiction overjtiie
outnldo parties totem.) in the second resolu
tion. They had not been notified that they
were charged with an offense, and bed not en
joyed the privilege of producing or cross-ex
am in bigwi L11{11506.
Mr. little offered the following as an [Mend
wont for the first resolution of the Commit
tee:
Re/aired, That the House, while expressing
its nuqualifitel condemnation unit reprotatien
of the practise of personal reflections and to.
marks on the floor of the House, reflecting on
the character of members, and also of acts of
violence towards members on any provocation
of words, however severe and uninerited, and
while expressly tuisertitm ILK power and au
thority to protect the privileges of its mem
bers, both an respectn portion and character,
yet ender all Um elm:eaten.es of the case,
deems It inexpedient to take any further ac
t n o g n ,
o on
tae a ma c te ng f
I p l ri . v L i o e v ge ll
FnLwOSeendt
and lion. J. li. Grinnell.
Mr. Hal yielded to 0 motion to [adjourn,
when Mr. Nielack, from rho Committee on
Appropriations, reported. tile hill to provide
for and regulate the coumenaution of Henn
tors, ltopresenturrees Itrld Delegates in Con
green. Read twice, ordered to lie printed, and
Imstponed till Wetineaday next. 1110 bill
the compenatition al eight thousand dollars
(or each Congress, and mileage at the rate of
lon cents per Mile.. The President of the Sun
ate in to nave the name compensation as the
Vire President of the United Suites, anti the
Speaker Is I.' bare double the 0001pcnsation of
Members, except as to mileage. shish is tri b e
the same. In cane of the death of a
atem,
his representatives are Di receive the rate
of four thousand dollars per annum from the
date of rho commencement of Congritss up to
the time of death, and his successor la to be
paid from that day. The bib in to apply to
the members of tine pretend Congress (rein the
4th of Maroh. 1800, except an V..." .a ff'.
Mr. !Monahan/or, from the Special Commit
tee on the charges against Mr. Cookies g, re
pgorted in part with the tiestirtiony and the ar
ents acume, vime the ta
ble rn and orderedn:l which
to be printedlaid. The. on
report
orn pletely exonerates Mr. Conkling and
Lenient In General Fry's letter
ihwraentree. Ittfonuded tn fact, but Malleatisly
T : hue d t
brands
at Bk adjourned. .
Flustielal Excitement—Alleged Bank
Frauds—Arrests Slade.
NOW Yotrs, July 11.—Much exeltetannt ex
ists In . final:caul circles, canted by alleged
frandlo In connection with the North Haver
Bank of Itobokea. it is said worthless notes,
bonds dc., have been takes to the bank and
deposited, for which certificates of deposit,
bearing
inteteat, were . .recal ved.
~gatat these
certificate sot 'ClegOsit - Inirchairdt" have; treett
madder real estateitterchandize; de, !Labia.
city slid vedette 'lurid of the country-.lris
thought , Walletreetili flooded with. this gaper..
George W. Chadwick', who Is suppostal.tobe
Vion:PreSident of the bank, has been arrested
and committed. Samuel Jackson vas also ar
rested as an neeoundlee, • '
uliffinel•Coniirovfiteptions" . Stirroodored
b7.1110:20111.
gam,. Jai 14.,are
bttensii in
niii lo be:
MUM bait for Ifea(l•Centro Givens ni Ire anit,
of Sfinifattoorrenderod.,hini.ol.ol , into
thirhatide iirti4Ooni3tiablei And tho Utak Cen
tre ana cotomittedto 'jail. Mr. Serum& atm
fora"debt of it"
141) 41 we: k lielfziu:lii; :II t, A
Additional Local Ida on Third Page
RAPE AND MURDER
A Negro Girl Decoyed, Out
raged and ;Murdered.
HER BODY DISCOVERED
Cl()roiter's
ARREST OF SUSPECTED PARTIES
If ;01 14111111INt he true., there ham been
eollllitt.i near the linautaful v Malin of Se
w ickley, On the Fort Wayne Railroad, olnie 1. •i
o ern tl.. c•lin one ot the nenit
dee , - 1. • n , mating litre In n
nee, er stained •
MIME
tin Monday night Mu, car,,h,", F or ,.
young negress ithont 1111141 e, y..urn td age,
and rather prepossessing in appearance, spent
the evening in e patty with another colored I
girl engaged in the family of Mr Shield,
close by Edgewood station. When um
there site broke her apron string, and having
a pair of selasors, site wrapped them un In t lie
apron and took tier ilepnri ore for home, the
rMlidence of Air. Nevin, adjacent to ShieltlW.
This setts about ten o'clock at night. The girl
left wit h out any company, and Wei her scissors
and apron were found upon the kitchen table
of her home, It is presumed that allo had re
turned and entered the house. The next
morning Caroline was nowhere to be foetal,
1,11110110 active smirch and inquiry was made
for her. No person seemed to attach unfelt
Important, inn the mysterious disappearance,
save Mrs. Nevis, who stated that she had
heard on the night till, gut disappeared aft
heartrending shriek of a female, followed by
another hardly audible. On Wednesday last,
further search was made for the girl, bat to no
trail, and Olin dillappeanuice excited no more
attention. Little did they think that the
corpse of the faithful eervant girl WI LS within
a stone's throw of their residence, beaten by
the murderers In the waters of Sewickley
creek.
OOKOVIOIT OP PUP 11001
At shout half-past eight o'clock Saturday
morning, two men, empanel on the railroad
as track repairers, discovered near Edgewoai
station the dead body of the Missing colored
girl, lying in the Little Sewickley Creek--a
stream at tills point not more than fifteen feet
wide anti two or three feet deep. The rail
road track here rum. on a second bank, about
twenty feet above the meek bottom. Although
not more than an hundred feet from the truck.
the body hail evidently been In the water sev
eral 11,ys, as It was much swollen, tleColllrOtlett
tool very offensive. 'fle discovery was an
nounced to the• authorities ot Sewickley, anti
Coroner Clawson of this city was notified to
hold an inquest.
The Coroner lintnedlately visited the scene
of the tragedy, and pro.•eedaal to hold en in-
quest.
The body hail not bona touched since its duo
very, and made a horrible appearance lying
litwater of the :reek, which haul.
Iv covered the remain. It lay On the broad
of the hack the face upt tithed to the hot sun,
while myriads of flies and other musette
swarmed about it. We don't wonder the
young Englishman who made the discovery
ws frightened at the spectacle, for a more
dis a gusting one could not be well Imagined.
The limbs, cos erect with the moo:tinsel a light
dross, were wide apart, stiff anti rigid, white
the atlas, the hands being wide open, were
raised upwards, as If In the frenzy of a last
struggle The tongue itrotruded from the
mouth all Inch or two, while the upper part of
the betty wits greatly swollen. lint here it had
lain for six days, tAtott.ruls of railway pas
, seogers whirling past every few itomrs, happi
ly nuconselons of the iirrors concealed a car's
length from their seats.
Ropes were procured and the eOritile With
drawn up this steep hank and laud upon the
green sward. A hrother—her only near rola.
Live living—ant apart tile hank the picture of
i misery and de...datum.
re C COTIONER'S JURY.
The &Mowing citizens zero then empanel
oil as a COMlleet , ry :
Houston. 4. Samuel Saley
5 E. Reno.
U. James Reno.
1. Thouum
2.. James ISIIII
:I. 11. B. Wallace
After tieing sworn in sight of the corpse the
follow Leg WallinOrly Wan addueekt t •
Alotrandor Hampton, sworn—Abont half
past eight o'clock this morning I was at work
repairing the road. Having had occasion to
go dean to the bank I discovered the corpse
the creek. I was much frightened and im
mediately ran dark to the reed and !Informal
Jahn Nosh, who was working with me, of the
discovery. We gave Information to Others
and returned to the creek and discovered the
--' • • •
. .
corpse he that of n negro woman. Saw no
trneke or loot prints on the grass or eand; did
not look for any We did Out close the creek,
',Or were we within ten pants of the corpse.
John Smelt, 'worn—This witness eorrobora-
led the testingon y of the foregoing witness
=SI
Louisla blurry, sworn.—The deceasea Caro
line Ford, came to the house where I am em
ployed on last Monday night about half past.
seven o'clock. She staid till within five min
nines of ten o'clock, and then started to go
home. This was the last I saw or heard of her
till the following Wednesday, when I heard
that she hod disappeared, gone away and not
returned on Monday night- A pair of scissors
and an apron which she had at our house that
night was found next morning at the house
where she had been employed, That Monday
evening Wm. Dabney and Benjamin Ford
(colored i spent the evening with as, but both
left before Caroline started logo home. twott
Russell was also at the house ' where he is em
ployed, while they were there, hot he staid
with me after she left, and after 1 had gath
red up the washing and put away the silver
he lett to go to bed. He sleeps over the stable,
away from the Louse. He could easily have
gone out without my hearing. Ills bed showed
i next morning that he had slept In it, it being
tossed up. aimed is a joking fellow, and had
said that he was going to marry Caroline anti
all the girls in the neighborhood. Caroline
was in the habit of °emotionally going out with
Scott Russell and William Dabney, but stidom
kept coin puny with tier cousin Benjamin Ford.
Un Wednesday, leaked Arehey I..tai if he had
seen her, and he said no. Dabney said he!
disappearance was very singular and strange.
George Moriatt (colored) sworn—This wit
neas testified only to the ',mod character of the
deceased. She had been on "mod terms with
the fellows. She hail told him on the Saturday
previous to her death that scott Russell was
going to wed her on the following night after
preaching.
The testimony here rested. It will be ob
served that nothing Important has thus far
been adduced, and that the affair is deeply en
shrouded In mystery.
TnrOnr Or THIS SilllitOnl.
That the girl came to her death by violence,
anti that. her body was dragged to the creek
whit a view of secreting it, cannot be doubted.
home persons who viewed the body stated
they discovered evidence on the arum of rough
usage, but on this point the physicans can
only clOternlinO, LOW It is tiOUnGttil, Owing to
the condition of the body, whether their in
,vestigation will be definite on that point. The
opinion at Sewickley is that the girl was en
ticed from her home by One or more persons,
violated. and then murdered.
The creek was unusually high at the time,
anti the MUraererS Sought to conceal the evi
dence of crime by casting the body into its
waters, hoping that it would wash into the
tilde river . When discovered there were but
a few inches of water In the creek, and upon
the opposite margin were the footprints of
two persous plainly visible In the soft sand.
On the bank was a hole shaped out as though
designed for a grave. Now it strikes us forci
bly that the murderers revisited the creek
after the water had receded, and contempla
ted burying the corpse. Perhaps on the very
clay of the discovery they had been with the
Body of their victim endeavo
thesering the better
were
to
conceal It. Certainly footprints
made after the corpse had been placed in the
Creek. as 010 water had been several feet
' above where they were but a day Or two before
the discovery of the body. Un the trampled
' grass leading to whore the body was mood, a
' few articles were picked up which may possi
: lily serve as a else to the murderer.
-- -- --- ---- --
AnnaSTICD ON SUSPICION.
Bayer Morrison, of Allegheny, on receiving
Cho i n tmogence of the discovery of the body,
scut down to Scwlcklos a special °Meer to
" work up ^ the facts. The officer, on the in
formation of a citizen of Sewickley, arrested
four emoted men, viz Scott Russell, Benja
min Ford, icemen to Caroline) William pab
soy and Archibald Lee. The three first named,
It will be remembered, spent Monday evening
vnth Caroline and Louisa Murray, at the bow.
or Air. Shields. Yard and Dabney loft the
house before Caroline, and Russell, to whom
she was engaged to be married, slept in the
boost, Of Lee we beard nOthinc• there
seems to be no evidence against the men ar
rested further than their being with the rout ,
tiered girl the evening she disappeared. May
or Morrison committed them to Jail to await
the finding of the Coroner's Jury, which will
reassemble at Edgewood this morning at Moe
o'clock. Drs. McCurdy and Dickson made a
post-mortem examination of the corpse on
Saturday afternoon.
Return Slateb.—The return match of "Our
National Game" of Base Ball was played be
tween a picked nine of the H ygeia and Cres
cent clubs, at the grounds of the latter, In
La.-vera:vitt°. Both clubs made excellent
scores, and after an exalting and well eon.
teeted game, victory, once more rested , S tth
the Crescent. The Hygeia boys, although de
feated, are full of pluck, and are determined
to fight it out on the one line all summer, till
they turn the scalceol success. They are rap
idly Improving, and Fake, patience and
sweet oil be worth an lug, they wilt eventu
ally be champions o the State. They Play
match • with the Canonsburg club next week.
Our invitatiOn has not yet come round, but
the matter are proverbial (longol and
the will not remain neglected.
.Ntalsaneee,-011ver ideClmtock was before
Alderman Motrow, on Saturday. for violating
a - city. ordinance by allowing Me , wagon to
toped in the street.. He wee discharged- on
payment of costs. Stxeul. Comeittedoner Flinn
was the prosecutor.
Philip Mad also before the Sarin meg.
- letrate.on Saturday, charged by-the , same;; for
maintaining .a nuisance on'-hiarpremises, in
the Second.ward. iyastbaed $3 and costs;
wideli he paid antlWas Mathew&
„„. • .
JellOA 16 ilefanitiprllve
bail Ma lifollisterwain'On Ballwin% commill.-
unliipilerinan - Taylqr,Ao Ammer or an -nl
lega assanitlisig'baiiery", -- James A.,
~•4
ll'
Stabbing Affair 11 the Western Peni
tentiary—A Superintendent Attacked
by a Prisoner.
A stabbing affair of a serious character oc
curred In the Western Penitentiary On Satur
day morning under the following circumstan
ces: Some two weeks since la prisoner named
James Mackerel requested the Superinten
dent of the shoe department, Mr. Hugh Wel
kinstiaw, under whom he was working, to ask
Warden Campbell for some favor ho was .le
sirens of obtaining. Walk - trishaw did as re
quested, but the Warden Informed him that
nothing Could be done in Mackerel's ease un
til the Board of Managers would pay their an
nual visit to the institution, which would be
in a few weeks. Walkinshaw failed to com
municate the result of hi Interview with
the Warden to Mackerel, who, naturally
enough, thought that he had failed to
do anything In the premises and was very in
dignant at what he considered a want of feel
ing or sympathy for his situation. Without
any knowledge of the ill-feeling his neglect
bad created against him In the bosom of Mack
erell. lie entered his cell on Saturday
ro-t tor th.• Of Inspecting some
flu 11.1 ansde the eraminatlon and was
about to depart when Mackerels sprang be._
ts •so him and the door and stated that he I
was goine to have revenge for the shabby
trick tb -.pert etendent had played him
bwomlng alarmed (or his safety
told him to let blin pass out or he would have I
him punished, whereupon Mackerell drew a I
shoe-knife from is pocket and stabbed Walk-'
inshnw twice In the (nee, indicting a wound
on either cheek some three Inches In length,.
and also a gash across the abdomen. Some of
HIP prison guards hearmg the scuttle,
hastened to`the aid of the superintendent,
anti conveyed line to the Warden's office,
where Ills inturi,-s received proper ~ .urgical
treatment, while ,` :ere!' was tibm.rmed, and
by order of It:. tampbell consigned to the
lierffeeont% to
o a u w n r cl i s t , w 9 ITIcI7, t u b l o t ti o gli t itl S tAT,Tr.;
not necessarily fatal. Mackerel' hits been an
occupant of the prison for nearly four yearn,
having been convicted on three charges 01
larceny and sentenced to eight yours Impris-
Ontnent. lie has, therefore, half of Ills tine
s
to serve. He had entertained strong hopes of
pardon, but his conduct on Saturtiny will
doubtless render all efforts at reprieve abor
tive, if It does not add to his imprisonment
half a dozen years.
Shot DenA
At Phillipsburg, Centre - county, a day
two since, two brothers by the name of Cam{
bell, who had but a short time ago been lion
nimbly discharged from the army, had been o.
a spree and were conducting things as they
pleased, breaking windows, and otherwise
acting disorderly. Complaint being made,
constable by the name of Barr, near Cent r,,
Ball, Centre county, attempted to arrest then
on Monday, June 2. - an, and while In the act of
doing so, oue of the young meu shot him, from
the effect of which he died almost instantly.
The murderer made LOA escape and was traced'
to Osceola. The house in which he was se
creted was 131.1170131111. Ki, and as the principal
,
•
detective was ascending the stairs, the mur
derer Jumped dot of a window, crymg "don't
shoot.," to the parties outside. They thinking
he was going to surrender, brought down their
revolvers, while he, taking advantage of their
so doing, discharged his revolver among
them, one of the shots taking effect in the
shoulder of Mr. Harphimi, Of TyrOtittould in
the confusion .he murderer again escaped;
but Justice overtook him and he was brought
to by a shot in the shoulder, and was taken to
the Bellefonte Jail. Re Is quite a young man
and is apparently not over twenty-two Scars
of age; Is rather small and line looking, and
expresses much sorrow for what he has done.
A Charity plc Ale.
On Thursday next, at McFarland's Grove,
ear Oakland, will be held a grand charity
lc sic to which all are cordially invited. It
is to be held under the auspices of the Melen
and gentlemen of the society of St. Vincent de
Paul and arrangements of the most Liberal
and extensive character are being made to no.
cure to all who may attend a rare gala day of
mirth and musk.
•• . . .
Yew benevolent associations In this commu
nity are as worthy of support and encourage
ment, as the society of St. Vincent de Paul.
In a quiet, unostentatious manner they ex
pend every year thousands of dollars in eas
ing for the poor, alleviating their distresses
and attending to their temporal wants. Nor
do they pause in the errand of mercy bemuse
of color or creed; but acknowledgingtall as
God's own pool, mete out charity to all with
willing hands and ehristlan hearts. Every
body is now afforded an opportunity of con
tributing to the worthy poor or the city, and
We trust everybody will embrace the clown.
tunny, and that the woods and wilds of McEnr
land'a Grove will be crowded with visitors
EMMMaiMME
Nal[elide—Coroner . . Inquest.
dd man named George Espey Walters
Mod suicide by drowning himself in the
Monongahela river, about three o'clock yes
terday afternoon. The deceased, whole about
seventy-seven years of age, had been partially
Insane for Some tame, and a few weeks since
procured a pass or permit to the county poor
house. His friends, who are in good circum
stances, prevailed upon him to give up this
Idea, and for a tame they thought he had re
covered altogether from the malady. Yester
day, however, he allowed Mimeo( encash - teas,
and leaving his home on Denman street, in
Birmingham, a little after three, ho pro
ceeded immediately to the river, and leaped
in. Some young men, who were bat a short
way off at the time, ran to his assistance, and
afterconsiderabletrouble succeeded in ta kingi
him from the water. After reaching [hurdlers
every effort was made to resuscitate him, but
all without avail. Coroner Clawson was sum-
EMI
•••.• • . - - -
awned, and held an inquest, when the Jury re
turned as verdict in accordance with the facts-
Bounway—Men DaJnred
Sunday evening George Deakers and John
Martin were returning from is drive in the
suburbs, and whilst turning into Wood street
from Liberty the horse attached to the buggy
took a sadden start, causing Dessert, who
was driving, to fall forward over the dash
btard to the ground, the wheels of the vehicle
passing over him. The horse continued
his course along Stood street and turned into
Fifth and when nearing the nrick piles in the
vicinity of the Theatre, Martin, who had re
muffled in the bump . , leaped out Imckward,
his beau striking the ground. Deakers re
ceived very severe but not dangerous Injuries,
and Martin escaped with a slight contusion.
The horse was checked at the junction of
Grant and Fifth streets, and taken to the stable
of the owner, Mr. John McKeon. The buggy
was not damaged. the horse having steered
clear of obstructions.
Maser resides in
Allegheny city, and on Saturday came to this
city With horse and wagon which he left
standing at a store door on Penn street, in the
ath ward, while he entered the store to make
some purchases. in his absence, ayoung man
named William Freeman broke one of the
shafts of the wagon. lie was arrested and
brought before Alderman Taylor, charged
with malicious mischief. Maser not being dis
posed to prosecute, , the prisoner was dis
charged on giving ball to have .the wagon
properly repaired.
Re-nrreeted.—John Downier, In the em
ploy of the Oakland Passenger Railway Com
pany as driver, was re-arrested on Saturday
and will be committed this morning to answer
for an aggravated assault and battery upon
Patrick lieeson, who, It is alleged, ho struck
on the head with a steno on the Fourth of
July. The second arrest was made for the
reason that Neeson was pronounced In a pre
carious condition from the injury received,
being delirious and attacked with cox:WM.Blone.
We learn that he was somewhat hotter last
evening.
ol Firm.—it will belleas by refer
ence to our advertising columns that the firm
of O'Neill & Anderson, proprietors of the tia
cecra steam Job prinUng . ofece, has been dis.
solved. The bUBLDLOSB will hereafter be con
ducted under the firm of Errett & Anderson.
We are pleased to learn that Mr. D. B. Fergu
son will he kept In the entre as general bail
111e68 manager, nod as everybody knows him,
no word of commendation Is necessary from
us. lie is gentlemanly, obliging and fair deal
ing. We wish the new firm success.
Wonldtelt Stoop to tionquer.—Anna Wcrr
maid was before Justlee Ammon, yesterday,
charged with surety or the peace on oath of
Mary Beck. The parties are residents of Mast
Birmingham, end sawn to have been enjoying
themselves of late In wordy conflicts la
which both parties are alleged to have slander
ed the character of the other. There being
no threataof violence mod, and Mary refusing
to stoop so low as to acknowledge that she
reared Anna. the amused wee discharged and
Mary ordered to pay the oosts.
Fell from n Root—Probable Fatal Ac
eldent.—About three o'clock, on Saturday at,
a realdant of Pitt township, named
Reuben Twain, fell from the roof of his dwell
ing, a distance of thirty feet, to the ground, tn
luring himself to etch an extent that his rc
eovery is considered doubtful. At, the
tuna of the accident he was ensued repair`
mg the roof which had been l eaking badly,
and while creeping along the conductor, he
missed his footing and fell 113 stated.,
Accidental Drew lad named
Henry O'Neil, aged about seven yea!, was
Flaying about some boats at the point, on
Saturday, and missing his footing, be fell into
the river, and was drowned. The body was
found a short time after,ancs conveyed to the
home of his mother, No. 17 Penn street,
where Coroner Clawson held an inquest. A.
verdict of accidental death was rendered.
. .
Charged with laremay.:—Bilebael SnMein'
mado Information sgainet:Patriek.Conlmbe r r.
fore Alderman Taylor, on Saturday tr Lw ao2
larceny of 1111 overcoat hem the
house of the latter, in 'Spring Whey; Fiff.
Conlon was arrested, but'the evidence being
..unicaent to warrant further proseentlon,he
was discharged.
Foot LaletretL—William Stafford, an em
rdoyeeln, Hemphill , * machine 'works in the
YirM ward. had his fbot Injared on Saturday
while at Work;:by an iron plate which ho was
assisting to place on a truck falling , upon it.
was taken to his home on Mulbery alley,
where he' received the attentions of a phy
atelan.'
Biette:Ceeeteittieel.—Cbeilee B. Stele, the
'alaynr ot - David - Roberta, valved a bearing,
and was; on Saturday, - committed by tho
Mara for trial on a ottani: at murder.
THEWEEKLY GAZETTE
TWO =IONS ISSUED.
OF WEDNESDAYS • AND SATIIRDAYS.
The edition Is forwarded wnlcb wN rusell the sub
scribers /0011.111“ u the mail rim
1
!SING LE COrIES, VCTR INS
HAL el 80
OLO BS OF •• 1165
01-111tb OPT?N AND 111
THE INTERNATIONAL SCULLING MATCH.
Hamill Easily Beaten I
By the arrival or the Neva Scotian. which
oft Liverpool on the sth, we have news of the
esnit of the International availing raves oa
he Ith awl sth Instant. It appears that 11am-
t sun binaan In both t n thr wound
tine raspy. We shall have full part iculars in
few days.
Another "Hull Run" Ontrage—A Ran
Wantonly Attacked by Rowdies and
Cruelly Illenten—No Arrests.
Yesterday afternoon about. five o'clock an
outrage of the most unwarrantahic and un
provoked character occurred at the corner of
High and Webster street In the Third ward,
or what is better known as the Roll gun dis
t rlct. The following are the facts as we
hktrned them. A resident of Allegheny City,
named Michael O'Neil, name to this city yes.
terday after dinner for the porpcsie of
spending the day with his brother-in-law,who
lives on Tunnel street, between Webster and
Wylie. In company with:lde relative lie star
ted for home about five o'clock, but' when at
tile turner ol High and .tretister streets they
met two eolored men, who reimarked'as tite r
were passing i•thait liquor wits very scarce.
O'Neil made setriofocidar remark in r sponse,
when a young man named "Christy" Bradford,
who with sortie friends was standing by,earne
forward and asked O'Neil how In , wouid like
to kiss a nigger I: I wouldn't like to kiss you
or a nigger either, was the answer, which had
scarcely 'beau-given, when Bruiltord struck
O'Neil a tremendous blow in the mouth with
a siiing-eliot;knoicking him down. While the
blood gushed from his mouth and ears in a
copious stream, completely dyeing
. his pertiOn Mel clothing In bleed.
As soon as O'Neil fell, Daniel
neCarthy, :mother "rough," J (Mined on his
II , Nell'Ki fart., burying the heels of his boots
fn the nosh and yenning the Mood to s ring
orth afresh. Although quite A number of
persons witnessed the outrage tieing PerPe
tratsid,not one interfered end It. was not Until
liraitford and Met.e.rthr ilecanipcd, which
tliey did as soon as IneCartlir had
perfortned his share In the tt: twit. tout
O'Neil was taken up and earned to
Dr. Dounelly`ii °dice where he laid tilisensi-
Ihie for alm.it two hours. After his injuries
hail been dressed he was taker, to his brother
in-law's on Tunnell street. tee untie him a
visit Late last night and found him suffering
acutely, the physician having bet faint hopes
of his recovery. Strange to state no arrests
have as yet been made.
New Confidence tiame—A Countryman
in Bad Company.
A countryman named Thomas Scanlon itp
peart,l before Alderman Taylor, on Saturday,
and after being duly sworn made the follow
ing statement: Living bul. it short distance
from the city be very frequently pays our cor
poration a visit, and on such nee:is:one fre
quently becomes what le known In common
parlance as "tight." He usually stops at a
tavern on Penn street, in the Fifth ward,
whom he Invariably meets on obliging friend
named Michael McGovern, who is in habit of
extracting Scanlon's pocket Ismk from him
and returning it to blur when the latter be
comes sober enough to take eare of it. seen
lon noticed, however, that the pocket book
was always lighter when at nits returned than
when taken, but desiring to :.void env quarrel
'he refrained from speaking of this to
McGovern. but determined that his wal
let should not leave his person again.
On Friday he come back to the city, and after
drinking rather freely about town, proceeded
about ten o'olook•to his lodgings, where he
met McGovern and a companion. McGovern
seeing that Scanlon was intoxicated, asked
him for hispockethook, stating that he would
keep it safe for,him until morning. The kind
ly proffer was declined, and Sean lon stretched
:himself on a bench in the saloon for the pur
pose of taking a sleep. lie had not lain long,
however y until he felt some one at ills pock
ets, and springing up, caught McGovern
mid the Stronger going out of the room with
,hismonery. After some trouble he succeeded
'du getting iris 11101.1 back. Warrants were
'issued for the arrest of McGovern and the
companion.
-
Assault mud llataary.—Adum Meddler ap
peared before Alderman Lybeb on Saturday.
and made oath ugamat. John Newcomb fur as
ult battery. Adam stated that Nl3 wcomb
called him a d—n DuLefituan In its own
- -• • • . _
house,. and used other offensive language to
him, threatening to kick the sonrkreat 'mad
oll" him. To this Adam retorted by litteill.r tug
Dutchman was the superior of the Celtic
•John, whereupon the latter dealt Adele at se
rem blow In the face, Causin , the claret to
flow profusely. A a anatit was /.8111.14 for the
arrest of the accused.
Severely Injured by a IFlorse.—Saturday
evening about half past seven o'clock, Samuel
Montgomery, forty-rive years of age, was se
verely injured by a horse at lohnston's stable,
on Canal street, while ongusrld In drenching
him with water. Too animal became vicious
under the ablutions, knocked Mr. Montgome
ry down and trumplea upon his bend, terribly
lacetuting his scalp, but fortunately not in
juring the skull. Drs. Berger and be Ward at
tended to Montglomery'r , snjuries. Ills family
resides in Washington county.
rerßODai.—Our friend 1. Ellison Downes,
Esq., has assumed an ellhortal chair In the
sanctum of the Ebensburg Sentinel. Lie was
formerly editor of the Arrow roust belnocrEd,
at Kittanning. Mr. Downes Is a young man or
rare editorial ability and business tact, and,
under his u•ansgensent, we copeut bo see the
Oentinel greatly improved.
Special Cantion.—Alm Wan.low , s mouth
ing Syrup has become so popular that varioun
parties have nut out articles calling them lire.
Winelow , a. Please take notice that the Mre.
Winslow of the Soothing dyrup is nut connect
ed with any other article. lyiLdSw
From California.
Fnestaiwo. utv 't.—The first stage on
the new route between Chicego, California
and lduhat, came through In three days. It
is tielleved that the Idaho° trade, heretofore
conducted via the Columbia River w nil, by
this route, bo brought to California direct.
The uncertainty about the tariff, unsettles
the market for imported goods. There is a
fair demand for Wheat at tall figures. Extra
Flour, $6,25 her barrel. Arrived, the ships
Ivanhoe; Merriman and Samuel U. Glover;
Monition Brothers, New York. The latter re
ports George Thompson Damon, of Now Ma
ven, drowned at see.
Fire at Concord, it. 11.
c0,001u., N. 11., July lire broke out
here last evening Which destroyed Ford &
lilmbalPs extensive Iron foundery, with the
outbuildings; It. F. Dunkleu S. Co,',. large ma
chine shops, will three dwelling hoaxes. The
loss ot o o o otoo to 4W,eue, loss than half of
which was Insured.
Ship Afthore
Texas, July I&—The brig Olga•
from New York with ice, hay and tar, wont
ashore while in charge of a pilot last evening,
and 1 a total lona, rho Bremen bark Fatima,
with lek paalengors, all in health, ban Joel ar
rived.
Plusalelpal Difficsity Metaled
PHILADELPHIA, July IC—Judge Allison de
cided this idternoon that Major David P. Wea
ver, Democrat, was legally emoted City Com
missioner, over John Givens Republican, at
the election last October, by fifty majority.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS,
-----
CEMETERIG—The
, beau WO "reod's-acre,” the largest suburban
I .place of sepulchre, except one, in this coltUtY.
uar e , l ben_Brighwo ro:d. immediately north lot
-
fc L , ' ,ln h ar . „Al s g t mbto","„•l,ifoje,Jr.'ket.f,WV,n'Zil?,'
isbeny City.
FAIRMAN & SAMSON.
UN DEBT A KERB
N 0.196 Smithfield St., cor. 7th,
(Entrance frotrideventh direet.)
L.S)
AND 133 3A.NDLJSK2 CNBEET, •
111. li •
ALEX.. AIKEN,
trzoloasTayrAuErnxi.,
No ea Fourth street, Pittsburgh, Pa. COFFINS of
all kinds, CRAPES, GRAWILO, sod ever. description
of Funeral Furmanleg Coons tormaneo. Soorus
upends y and ulaht, Rearseand Carrlawes furulthed.
RETIDENCie—Rev., David Kerr. it.,. /It.
W. Jacobus, D.D., Thomas seethe, Esq., Jacob
Miler. Rea.
DUNSEATH & CO.,
EIG Wirtaa. 19-trepot.
C=EMM
Fine Watches,
CLOCKS, JEWELRY,
Silver cud Silver Plated Ware.'_
o n sit zv i v i a l. lalao Q ie v. cylais or GOLD
Ws Our Mock and or prnxs • jar
LADIES' AND Gums
NATII2 I PC3ErE,
ALL STYLES' 2
AT 43111.111ATLYAIE'DIKIED PRICES,
AT
_,MI7 - 3Mpia T. VA73:I43Enr9SEI
. WYLIE ST.. NEAR. FIPTIL,
•
- votetar.Ar
-•
cio To
HAS LETT & CO.'S,
ows szuntriELD STREET.
RIZ SZNNEWIVIS OLD STAND
HAULER, CLOSE & CO.,
Practical Furniture Illanalacturers,
COR. PENN AND WAYNE STREETS,
Latest %tyke of F URNITURE clamantly on hand
3e2SiellS
ei.:
11
.~..,. ~ ..~, ~ _a,: w.
.