The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 12, 1868, Image 5

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    ttle Vittshrgij ealsits
inunizstier, FEBRUARY, 12,18x,8:
THE PETROLEUM JOB
List year a bill.was brought into the
legislature to authorize and direct — the
orrcrior to appoint an Inspector of
Clila. Neither the. owners of oil wells,
um • the refiners, nor the 'dealers in
410.11, 'here . or elsewhere, . asked • for
the creation .o Inch an causer. On
the part err onsumers of oils, wheth•
'or in this Commonwealth, in other Stites
of the Union, or in foreign , countries,
there was no demand fur an Inspector
ship, and no deaire . for one. Persona
summed in the trade, - and the general
public, were sealed • abandantly , No
afield* was experienced at Antwerp or
other ports in Eurorie in negotiating the
wale, In advance o ' delivery, of large
invoices, on the rzotation or establish:
ed brands and trade marks, and not the
slightest desire was Mai:Cl anywhere
1 ,
for additional en Ittces as to cluzi ,l 7
. or quantity.. In , there 'were ninny
Indications that a lit Wind, even by an
Ilemolited °Meteor aid interfere, far a
canaideratle period at least, with a cop.
• Okla of the trade with which all part ..
-i - ware content. .. _ . .
From whence, then, came this sUeni
Itrklentiy; one or More
wo capacity for starting and pushing a
cesidolly a liminess of Ida or their ow •
win anxious to make a living, and
good deal besides, b - y - Slit - idly levying
tax, los their especial benefit, and for ..
other coneeiuble end, on the twines'
either people.... • -
The combleeilLremonstrances of al
the dealers in oils were so sharp, the
membeie of the Legialstive bcdies were
\ametralilid• to • give heed thereto, and
-the plunshinng enterprise failed.
,Boon after the opening or the present
istesdon a berm from Philadelphia sought
en interview with the - Preeldent of . the
Benale, disclosed Mhioitliat the experi
ment 'was to herepested, and -begged
fhaithe bit? when presented, might be
"referred to rho COmudttea on Corpora
tions._ L. reference .more illegitimate
Wald scarcely be imagined.: • It was not
pmprised to create a new corporation or
to deal with an old one, bet,to provide
Ibillunippoinbrient `of: tin Inspottor.
The hill , irent, as woo -proper, to the
Judiciary Committee- Genend;and was
by that Committee reported to the Sem
ate m : about twenty-four hours. Who
mired for this bill? Nobody- but tue
borer.' Ro Telco went np from the con
itonti# of oil for Itii and none from the
producers and dealere Gls anybody
marvelled? The hill as read In place;
and - sereperted by the Committee, pro
posed to levy taxes to the amount of one
iniadreCtinitusixid -donate annually-on
theta iisiao for' the benefit of the borer!
end.his.atsiocietes. That wan the milk:
in the"cocoanut; mad the Committee
made hot Motel* report the bill so that
it might he Put on Its passage before the
man •ftting whom this. large amount of
plunder 'war *to bewrenclied, amid
APP - 404 or ibe design. ;
NI:1110.20PS wan intelligence: of the la. 1
iroduCtion of the bill spread Over the
Eltsto 4, there was s multaneous
noonement on the part of o il_ &arrs td
defeat it. Committees of them from thl4
eitr; - .ll4deilphia . and elsewhere, eel
paired at once- to Harrisburg; to make
Yuma their objections. The dolegn
tiara in the tiro Rouses rite Aliegl
ancirldhsdeiphia, in view of facts an
anal aerations within their own knowir .
- edge, promoted a united front 'againa
thebilL. They knew Is would , be Mit
. es slo tail:edit cities, tending pOwerfol
- to drive the whole, exl}orf trade out of
. the ate, . aid concentrate it..at Near
York and Baltimore.
I lhis would coil.
pel the immigration ce of consid •
able numbers of experienced, able and
metal admen; and the removal with
these ot their accumulated capital, an
, wail tether business ADA and energ4.
It weettatural to suppose, In - View of
this condition of fame, that the bip
would-be thrown out; hut -that,dld MA
happen. • ..The Itest terms the dealers' '
could obtiii was a 'amine] redaction of
'•.-losPector's Nes,tollve. thousand .dollars
e year and an exempting. of oils in bond
from Inspection.. With this the delleM
went. constraked to be' content,. It
wernie should come uponth 'em. .
Who =fronted the deekra,'deman
lug the passage -.of the bill ? Nobody.
Only the borer stood behind, quistlyeri-
Einentlig his gum .e the bit' origin
- &Winced the swindle was too manifest
end 2isliTant,..after a iirralation -of tile
tads, to:pcnnit any body. seriously Ito
• defend it Ara hence the abatements.
By what -precautions the Inspecto's
- entratunenta are . to be erectly gat r e d
aid determined so as not to exceed • - re
i t
thousand dollars' par, we donot el -
17 rs. In'all probahility, whatever a
• law may provide, his income would be
rude to greasy exceed the amount si
ded.", Indeed,. MO thlii lt safe to
limitation-would te r
„i l ia
that. the mitation would be allege
iniperatlier, and that the only te t te
. clause is that which'exempta oils in d
from leapectien. • But if ells sent I+l
may go tadminected, why not let the
. Muller quantity that staysbehin , be
exempt likewise! or, if It is and eat
pale throagi,the process of inspect on,
let It not be till the people ask for it In
stead* 1 speculator In legialation.
' . We: do not like the bill, even with the
arandmems engrafted upon it. There
is no popidir demand for this Inspector
ship. . 21ot One citizen has asked fort it;
and not &china will who understands
the OWL - The creation of fat places, at
theeipense.of buguess men, simply to
have comfortable ;daces. to put drones
Into, who
and
to go to work et come
each] and prOdeative employment, Ile al
- shame and disgrace, The partitioning of
- - sada men OA industrious and enterpris-
Int people, without their consent, and
undercolor et law, is a matter that calls
fir th e interpesition of ambler prerta
tlve of the Governor , if it shell be per
. slated In, Governor GLUT UM l ialit
the chance of doing an excellent thing,
and of adding to lila claims upon thew's
- alicie. of the people Of. the Common
wealth; if he approves of this hill, either
in its original shape or to the faint to
which It has been reduced. I .
Ia ansaticrtort with, the antic paten
complehona eliCoimaavilio Rai lout,
ilord:big a 'din:et communication De
Wean this eitY'find Baltimore, it is de
satabg: of mention that. Messrs. A.
Schnimeher Co. iintioance -- thrt the
North German Lloyd - will put on two
screw steamships of twenty-fiveliondred
tons tenthen and seven hundrediherse
poWer etieb,: - which will nate menhir
ntontbly,'Bips hereafter between Bald
win and Bredien. The drat vessel will
leave - Bremen . ..on the let of Msrell, next,
tskink her departure froatßaltire. eon
her return voyere on the Ist of - prll.
Woo steamers will touched tiota amp
ton gads and*cangs
-.Tzta friends;of three gentia
n= in 'Pennsylvania are striving to
obtain fo r t themthe endoriement the
itepubbelm. State. r-the
- Presidential nominatio n y the
National Convention.' Theze Gun
' 7 .OIIOw and Gitiatr.. tla understood
Marla two latter consent, to •witat is
thus done lia.theii bellar,.lllllo tie for
mer remains passive, bidding himself at
'liberty to `eat ultimately as either' his
own feelings or:the• good of the party
Anti s.
7 1 = Bonito Pinanofrepert MeFferted
wit tin a feirdaph daisy pus far
it attributabie to the desire expressed by
theimenibera that . their Sal=
Innen— The - pm-Ansi opirdoe.- - in the
genizeitteati to favor of a lets ride
of in
'.
tams ; say net to tics= - four or fan and
entilattper. Mat: in ataxy ; scheme ler
fading the national debt in long boas:
L . VOL-HALE
A CONVMiTION PROPOSED
.
1 Mr. MAx.x, of Potter county, hes In—!
froduced into the House of Representa- 1
Lives at Harrisburg. a joint resolution i
Submittiiii the question of holding a
Convention to revise the Constitution to
the people at the electlm to be held net ,
October. Of course, this resolution does'.
not contain a scheme of amendments,
desirable or undesirable. Such embodi
inent would be out of place in a proposi
tion of thissort. Only the naked ques
tioni>presented of allowing the people,.
through representatives chosen for that
special purpose, to alter or modify the
organic law under which they live.
This question will not necessarily in
volve any other; nor is it probably that
'it could be made to assume a party char
i
oder; .If the Convention should be do
, eldest upon, It is now likely some of the
Changes submitted would become mat
ters of party contention; but even this
result could hr measurably avoided by
[
appointing a special election for the
stilleation or rejection of the instrument,
either_as a whole or in separate sections.
Probably every thoughtful man in the
poaimonwealth would be glad to have
he Censtitation changed in one or more
.articular. It la reasonable to presume
at if a Convention should be halo pub.
ic opinion, as to changes, would be
onnd in a somewhat chaotic condition,
ut a decided majority would concur
demanding tunentiments on certain
.cad..
Whether the present is a suitable time
o take up this matter may well be de
bated in view of results developed else
itere. We have fallen upon a impel
smeary epoch as to ideas; and hence
!there la no small amount of Incertitude
'and ferment It seems to no that the
period appipriate to discussion hes not
yet been exhausted, and that to precipi
tate a verdict on either of several points
would at best be to consume time and
means to no avail, and might throw td
thnate consummation still-farther into
the future. We apprehend this lithe
View the Legislature will adopt,, and
upon which its action will be bared.
We do not make these stiggestions be
cause we are anzicres to escape respon
sibility on any of the points likely to
arise in a revision of the Constitution;
but because we fear a Convention called
at this hme Would tarnish another Inas
tration of the maxim, "the more haste,
the less speed." When . discussion shall
have done its work, and public opinion
shall have more nearly 'crystalized; we
shall rejoice to have a Constitutional
Convention summoned.
TILE CIVIL COIIE.
Last year Mr. Davto DZIMICKOOS, of
Meadville, Mr. MeCr...ar Maim, of Bed
ford, and Mr. WLEAIL .McVinaii; of
Chester, were appointed Commisaioners
to revise the Civil Code of Penneylva ,
*via. The duty *algae,' to them, they
have performed in pert, and transmitted
the result to the Legialature in the form
of nine distinct bills, respectively on
Corporations, General Pleading, Deeds
sad Mortgages, Evidence, IntMest,
Landlord and Tenant, Statute of Limi
tation, Highways and Bridges, lad Poor
Laws.
In addition to the general importance
of baying these bills reported so early
in the session as to allow the =Plait
consideration to be given to them, there
exists a special reason in the tact that
bills ire before one or the other of the
tionses relating to some of the emitters
presided for In the labors of the Com-
..*asioners. -- For instance, a Free Rail
road bill la pending in each Honse, and
the Commissioners in their bill on Car.
porstions have oovered thes.une groUnd,
providing for freedom of eonalructidato
as large on extent as is thought dMira
ale, and at the same time impOsing re
strictions and ebeditions necessary to
guard bath private and coporale right;
so far u lUble tote improperlytreneli ed
-upon by new enterprises.
Some topics, as the reudatiou of beak
ing, the Commissioners have nn( yet
concluded their lahoraspon. •
'• The bills reported by these gentlemen
trill necessarily: receive a large mesonre
Of attention from the members of the
legal profession througbOut the State;
and if this body shall be tolerably well
melted in qualm as to the merits or dr .
smelts-.of the. codification, their judg—
Anent will doubtleis be accepted by the
Legislature as of very high, perhaps as
of conclusive authority. If, however,
that Judgment shall be divided about
equally, it nosy be inferred that the
proposed codification will fail.
Tax Harrisburg Telegraph, with ap
parent serionmeiw, expresses 1131.0215 h.
MUMS thlitibb 7141pUbUCIIII journals of this
city have not broken out into unntess
nred laudation of the Legislature on ac
count of the restoration of the Connelle-
Tllle charter. We cannot help suspect
log the solemnity is simulated, end that
beneath the *wormed gravity there lurks
the le= of jolliest waggery. •
The Legitimist . ° took ewer the' char
alMinst I w and equity—not through
misapprehension, but - because it was
paid to do the lob. Year after! year
It refused to make restitution, because it
was purchmed to withhold justlisi. At
last the power or the Supreme ,Court
was invoked, and tho ,ludges
money ordered tho restoration. When
the Legislature could not help !titer, it
gave bock the franchises is wrongfully
tookfront us. - • •
If a real should plunder from can
contemporary a . valuable . . puree; should
persist, in spite of the Meet earnest re- '
monstrance' and solictatione, in keeping
it; and the aid of the police should be'
sought and obtained toenforce recovery;
and thus the reclamation should
. be ac•
omm4adma, wanld_hatbaxa.s. l . - tida
03
..!rtitt',progs of Allegheny, in common I
with its whole population, have mired
their hats in piofound respect to the Su
preme Ceint. They thank the Leglila
tun for nothing, touching this matter.
All along there have been members of
the Ligislatun , who- were actuated by a
nice seas& of haaor—a supreme regar d
for justice-1u all their actions relati ve
to the ConnellavUle bill; neither the
press, nor the people of thia connty, have
been wanting in-respect-lot s theme hon
orabte gentlemen. Faithful among the
faithless, they have - warm placei incur
gratitude, which will never cool.
Tao President hes been talking with
various individuals as to what he will do
about the Alabama claims. If their to
spectlve representations DIU be credited
he was not careful to 1:110 the same lan
guage, or to eoniey the same impres•
don, to thew different persons. One of
his fallings, as a public man, is that be
talks too much. and remembers too - lit•
tle, On each occasion, what he said
previously. 11.01Weia furiously he may
talk . conetrning the claims In question,
there is no probability that be, will do
any of the tcnible things he Du threat
fns syzacrx of Mr. G. W, :Wood.
•
ward, on th e currency questions, finds
considerable tierc:rustic endorsement In
Pecussyleania, notzlthunanding the •ier•
eletent efforts of demagogues of his
party to debaudh
. thele foTiowCrs Into
demanding a prolonged erect hnedeern-,
nNOpopor money..
• ..
FRom. th4lOtif!r or the Itepubllbi ix press
throughout the State, we coueltlihl that
thecoming State Conveutictia will re
nmxtbutte, Getty : Ilartrinft for Auditor
G4meral, and Kr. Campbell for Surveyor
Gmemli'altrost =Squibs by ecelmaa,
PIT'CSBURGE
===!
The Trustees and Aupellatemient of
the State Lunatic 13osritat of Perinsyl.
yards, located at Harrisburg, have pre. i .
rented their annual rep l irt to the Gov.
enter of the Commonwealth. "Oa pe—
rusing it, we fled that the institution has !
been dying us the otter lerine public
asyluronshave been, as much good
dimensions scill allow: that the number'
"of patients ruder treatment has been
larger than the Luildings sere Inteaded . !
to uccuimmodatc, lad that the expertise&
of the year have been : heavier than the!
appropriations made by the Ligialatures.".
Oa the fast of Jachry, 1e6:„ there
were 3"_7 patients ie tee he:pital, lel: of
whom were msles. and' 146 females; 570
were aimitted . during'the year, of whom
99 were males and 71 females; 95 males
and 62 females -were discharged duriug
the year. Of this number 51 were rue
tornd, 59 improved, 55 were stationary,
and 34. died.' Oa the 31st of Decemher,
-.-- -
18G7. l 8 melee and IS females remain
ed In the hospital. There was a decided
lector° la the nutnl,r of patients treat
ed during the year, and the wards of the
hospital have been crowded. Early in
the EIIIIIMer the ' pressure was so gieat
that the Board was forced to refuse ad
mission to an save rectint cases of basun
ity4ad they have ntiver yet been able
to recall that order, Or do they see any
prospect of being able to do so daring
the coming year. • .
Knowing as we do the extremely
crowded state oF Mil:no:ft, and finding
now that the State ;hospital is in the
same condition, we iiaink•that the Leg
islature should extui - ine into this thing,
and provide amply for all these, the most
&Minted of the citizens of the Commo
nwealth.
Notwithstanding the crowded state of
the wards, however; the health of, the
whole household at this hospital his
been remarkably -good, cod we fled of
the 34 deaths during the year, 19 were
catuied by Vic exhauation of chronic
manic; 4 by exhauttion of acute mania;
1 by injuries from another patient; 1 by
injuries from a riilroad train; 5 by dia.
ease of the brain, and 4 by disease of
the Icings.
The braidings have_ been somewhat
creased daring the year, and a great
improvementeffected in the arrangement
of the interior; (Luther improvements,
however, are delaVed until other lap
.
oropriations render them possible. These
facts Ive glean front' the two reports, but
the re oat of Dr. Crewen, the &perils.
tendent, is too able to admit of much
cartel:Mg. The author himself is one
of the greatest anti:polities on thLs sub
ject now living, and 'has written a dig
nified, exhaustive :and clear, report, not
only on the state of the hospital, but
also referring to route of-the causes af
the rapid tiscrease In the number of lu
natics. -Many of his statements are
facts which are absolutely startling, but'
none the less true; and Dr. Curwert de
serves the thanks of the people: of the
State for thus clearly and forclblyhting.
ing them to the' notice of their' leg.
!slalom
Tea continuance ofthe cold weather
tied general acts City of labor combine
to keep hundreds of persons in this
neighborhood in poverty and want.
The office of the 'Guardians of. the Poor
is daily thronged with applicants for re
lief of all saes, sizes and conditions, and
with the scanty means at their disposal
the gentlemen Laving charge of the die
tribotien find it impossible to fusbitially r I
assist any of the unfortunate paupers.
They afford in nearly every case tempo
racy
relief, and In caws: where the alp I
plicants era feeble dr oid, they are com
mitted to the Poor nous; which is at
the present time uncomfortably crowd
ed. The private associations for the re
lief of the poor are .heavily taxed, but
through admirable management and
wire discrimination, hate succeeded in
performing a vast amount of good to
wards their suffering fellow mem I lt lea
' fact worthy of nets that a large percen
tage of our paupers come from the neigh
boring country districts seeking employ
ment.: They ere able-bodied and will-
tog, but our labor market is over-stock
' ed,.aml they cannot - obtain anything to
do in the way of work, and ID the lone
liness of a great city, without 'friend§ or
acquaintanciss, and what is worse, with
.
out money, they are forced to go from
• door to door seeking atria. )Ye say to
our country friends to remain -at home
land not flock into the city for employ
ment, as our own mechanics and labor
ers, who are well known and capable,
lare Idle in hieareds; and can barely ana
-1 tsin themselves It is better to stay on
I alarm without work to do than to rush
unto an overcrowded city, without so.
quaintanceor money, id the vela hope
i of obtaining remunerative employment.
mennsa of the House at Harrieburg
has' exhibited his zeal for the worthy
gentlemen who hold offices lathe several
counties, by proposing to increase their
emoluments twenty per cent. -While
wages in all other departments are going
backwards, this advance movement will
not. do. 'When patriots cannot be found
to serve the .people, on the present male
of pay, it will do to offer higher induce.
ments; - but so long m fifty applicmits
regularly appear for every office to be
filled, higher pay in not to be thought of.
IT IS WELLYROICIthat most of the Na
Urinal Burka have considerable amount'
tammted In gemernment bonds beiond
what are deposited in the Tremmry
Deortmeat usecurlty for their notes In
circulation. Kr. Henderson, of Missoun,
hal reported to the Senate a bill author
: izinn any hank to deposit the 'b3nds it
bolds altd_rectileetilityper cent. cline
FOramortut to circulating notes; which
i pill enable them to double their pint
on that portion of their investment
_ •_
• _
As THE PCBLIC ITTeIItICP darinxJllll.
nary were not sufficient to meet tbe'enr
rent demands on the Treasury by twen
ty millions of dollars, tbe prospect In
not brilliant fore reduction of taxes.
.
llsalnne of tti• ltonoirDer.o"...t.
• The whom° number of 'claims , reuelved
during the month of January; original
and incietme, In the Pension °Mee, of
widows fie., 1;07; or 'invalids 1,006
total, 2,7 r/., :lumberer ejsims, admitted
originat and increase, of 'widows, : dc.,
2,851; or invalids ; IC29—total; 8,671.
Number of claims reicted, original and
increase, of widows, ha, 3t4; of Invalids,
1.037—t01a1,1,413. The total number of
claims di/posed or during the month
was 0,8'34. The number or loiters writ
ten woe (tin:niers sent, 1/,70. In
the bounty land division, 161 warrant/1n(
1 160-ecreiveneti wens Issued; 6, of 120 sera;
1, of Nlarrar.' The total numberof woo
-1 roolu-famed 10119 rovpig 211560
slier Or application received,
Ili. :Number or totters writ in wax 01•41.
Circulars:wilt, 3711. Claims suspended,
711/. In the division Of navy-claim.. 31
original and increase applitattions sr o
received. Number of claims i salniittml,
1 original and4neremte, of widows, ,to., 16;
lof lnvnlids, 20—total. 42. liutuber of
claims Mieeted, original and inereene, of
j widows, ,to., 7; of invalids, Lte-totel.
The total number of claim , disports' of
wax b 4„.. The number of .written
was 2032 Circulars sent. ; • , •
Centred Padno: lialtral: itends
===
.The macs ofthe "First 3fortgage Bonds
of the Central Pacific; Railroad 'Comps
,
ny halm recently been so rapid and az
tenaive that the fail amount which the
,Cotr.pany had propesed to eell at the
original price of i 5 and interest, has been
,marketed, and the price has been ad
'tweed to pal and accrued interest. .
The proOMsUf the road, the prosper
ow, oenddion of the Compsns'a affairs,
their ahtnitiant cash resources, and high
credit, would seem to fully Justify the
advance in the micro of their lotrat bf orb
gage Bonds, and to afford a sunicient
guaguarantee of an active demand at the ad
,
•
EPHEMERIS
—The dog tex in Vermont yields that' Nv ,„ 1 , :',,0n0 ' , t ruing
State a tax of $lO,OOO. S. L jorit,4 thj year
—flow:urea Is rapidly being dere.pe-:
toted by the terrible ravages of the e voys that l John
cholera. - !I% IloifJoin non e;:rtainly be the licit
'
week there were:ll9 diniiis 1) , t Prraideilt.
Padadelpiila, and of theae 0 were from ' i- i• 31)rtori l'eto
lung disease. will r , tr,n in: 5,1,f in pulitanv.t the
T. Stewart bar , beet $. 1 . 000 use of tka body,
-nivary
dilation to the Bethany ktisEion t n :0..g14t ta,kl Jncusly last
of 'Philadelphia. .• - • ilial, , polador. of To!e.io, Ohio, is geld
ChePter of the Society ' , hewn es war:y noc.tifth It is
the Knights of Pythias is to be cEtub- • now u t ,-. xrds ot . GO,OOO.
!irked la New York.
honoiable and libeial:mots ito eleitice lit Chi-
Packer wants to be oar next President : There is no Lhance
on a Democratic platform. n d certainty) .
—Arkeneas gets up jasteliont as ninny Rol g r Que. - a of the Society
aseassinationsof Union men now-a days Love n0.010,d a :OulAc of infant
as she didbefore or during the war. uhn ore tinc,l in a unmoor similar
—The Southern Relief Association is to IE4 NI Nyhtilt the Sitimeee• twins are
very active in its work of forwarding
provisions to the sufferers in the S. .uth. —T coy ,w4jo,s hp. 4,, b e an to te . off
—lsaac Maser, Rabbi Lf ,the Penn. of th e cr a ck of ;he Mehile and Ohio
game Synagogue in Philadelphia, died end ow.- thouc..nd em loyees
on Saturday morning, aged sixty two (11,11•Arcil mow th, work-shop of the
ycara.' , cOmpouy. •
petredeum refiners have spoiled, I since li,othort evidently cannot
with their emptying and refuse, tie' afford to ',.. di: coo ~1 f,i, very I
drinking water of oar neighbors of the ; Lis lisnceo, wt., 10,3 our lad t
Forrest City. i 11.111):1,; coo it, Viconl.l ale is t.
r
—Margaret Anspach wee convicted on 1 a pretty Prin,tt in Italy, .
Saturday, in Philadelphia, of murder In 1 —A New York TrUstteccorresl
the second degree in ceasing the death 1 is - dreadfully blocked 1 at the
of her babe: which death by itangiui must
- • - • .
--Brother Brice, s: member of a loJi4Ol suggeo•ls that de.
in the Island of deny is said to be the ! heavy shock 01 , cicdricitY WOUI
tilhiSi 1312,0011111 t aroN. Be is almost 1 identaueons ar.itiiain less.
eight feet high.—lt is stated; on reliable au hazily,
- -A young man aged twenty-four hoe I itat superior iron ore; yieldiug thirty-.
recently married a woman. aged forty--.three per cent. or pure' metal, has been
two, who was his foster-mother and wet I foiled on Mr."l:Aillt:e I land, on Bailey
nurse in Danielle. I Rao, three :mica fearerionesta } T illage.
—Tho victims of the famine In Algeria I This .!redly up the 411e;;;Icpy, about
are so numerous that they are thrown 1 lUe miles from l'itishurith. 1
promiscuously into trenches as the deed I —Au rxehunge in it ove:come by the
, euuouneemcrit that out
on a battle:field are -buried. 1
cif eight hundred
—The present Legislature of Ohio, o „,,1 eighty ~,,,„, m1 t ,.1 b,, l io go i ng
knowing that its chances and lime ere l. in Fenton: ,'llliiiif the last thirty years
few and abort, is going quickly through I ham two bundred end fiWty Were females
Its laws inserting the word.white. 1 11i,... •It ~outs -who wouldn't be' afr
—The moat rapldpromotlon on inCellidnia!e. We riniEy cent ,Say,lllll . C6B it be
in the British army to that of Molar i Sawn Ar.e,ony, Aeusi : Diekins?n, Gail
General Carey, C. 8., who twenty-three I II million and a few of that sore
years ago reteived his conieniesiun as I • ---b'eutherners ,till cherish the ides I
c :meet. 1 .
. :: [hot One ii ty their worthies u t eii t ei will
• ;
Napoleon's boy will be tWelve years i IL, e t per; et ileestiecinif i tolltberntri do,
old in March. Ilia chances of iucceed-.1 'c is ehowe le the fulK;winer i Ltem the
lug his father for any length of tune on : Men.phia A e•ilobe ..... ”' A 1, toieeet
the thrtine of France seem to be very ,le.ige yesterday pli.! St 7.00 in Coaled
slight.. . erate money for two Need s of bead
—A. :Newark, N. J., firm of brewers I chews. Tho day may tome when he
in reported to hare purchased /8,1)00, I aLil Uhl out that he has lost 15(9 by
000 worth of salt. The beer of the firm, i tbe trAns..etiou...
itts hoped, will be better after Milt enor- : —A trctutte‘ l "m re' , i , n l 6 gulag .9 1, in
i encusouthey. ' : the Methodist tleammoutions 1 . 11 lief's
-Lord Brougham has at lam. sec- : denial s. le one chapel titer in one
combed. He bas been deprived of Mel ceieuing twonlyiyoung people Mel their
0;41 of his limbs, and be can no Ringer I server c.:i wuriixd open that llileY arose
articulate, yet his mind is es clear Kull red sit:Jetted ehriel. "what shall, Ido to
robrutt, aoperemtly, ea ever.' 11, liv,i." In some of the other houses
:
wnrshlo ii reelect more thorough and
—On Tuesday imonileg last Matthew i rr
. Flynn was arrested in Kansas City, Mo.: , i , icit oat P,Olmn..y more hating in its
Be to charged with the slight offense of : t :nets, to going en.
killing two negrots end wounding a 1 -.-Doimme has , utartlln; tschst, who
third at Fort Hays some time lut:lle- I Lae ire cold, tieeerc with 'thick be
comber. i serums • hirer , -If by cfutchieg sleepieg
-The Mexican banker, Jeekee, le, so , ,itiores by the throu-... An this treatment
rays J' ji,a,,p, m i ew , lie ge , in p a i r , f or , ..-s.oeretity torakees the weeper l s, and tie
'be p or ro ft of bringing seat eg e tirt th e : i.,..t . e.b0q I, ha urtivition ore, 10.10 weft,
French Governinenefor the payment of ! white Vat , , li , th ,, b (tto'ttAt where be
thirteen millionrof franca. We wish Lc ; gr. ,,,,,,,, " .".. a.,.t'. when shrouds are
may get it.: : •i u s lem;cr tulhi,..,...th'e. ite unto think,)
_F or years no dal ~,,,,ic e ,pp,iot, I , UV: etT,Ct '.ll uoytoing but pit:emit. '
cunt has closed so mach dissatisfaction
.1r given rise to so much newspaper dis
cussion in England as has that of tr.
rhoriston, the new Minister to the
United bitsteL
lletroit is slid to be the largest rut
suerket to this country. The amount of
that iort . of wealth which reaches that
city during the year is immense. Ledp•
eig, in Germany, is the greatest fur mar
tet to the world.
—The family of Mr. Boyle, residing
In Cincinnati, wu poisoned with arsenic
which was mixed' with some food last
week. Nobody died fed= its effects i.; , c...11.urrtn , .. , 1.e., rn•tsburo.,i, ten.:
however, and the perpetrator of the deed ; • NEW V.ne, I'ett 3. Per:.
h thus far unknown.. A mang ..ar tan! ti . ,ti oos or , lifik•ti.don to I
One of the ancient Balm:views coo. ! '.. tr. l "t tin* N" . "rk•
, : i ..'"'-'.'lvd ) I
merited leap year, end was a little more i ' l "" e "' h '''' , •wi '" tort " " rr " . ' , en `'.... !
,ruitrai than rnighuiaways , p 1.., ; V..lea Day for rxhibstitig . t ili.Ellred tea at ' t
The lady had the privilege of prom sing iI 4 i''' ' '' I ` . ' i " "'" Ar '" 1113. ' '•
marriage, but the unfortunate nun woe 1 '. ." ''' '''" th " q''''' '' l 6° '• 1
• , -,,,,,1 . 14 " t.. ,
n 1., I,:lte attea i.m. 'the!
sot allowed to refuse. •
. 1 , 12.
porti.d
0ry.,..
soya
.‘ i partt e a :err a 1. , +111:111 by lba came 01
4 I
10... it,rea na•A her .I,lglaar, ttn<l. a mantile i
thirty-five men from BozemanC.l 44 " 4 ~,‘ ”l, , of Mo I.:E“ , n. Th.• t...ttintuny le 1
eleven hone thieves en the Yellowstone' , I,lta roatirk.,ll , toll v,,,,e4 o. , tnt to i
valley, returned the horses to the °ernes% ; ;•ruc, th. , . We,• p...,p1e vreroi nalmateli 1
and accounted for the thieves by saying .. , y 0r:,..i.., or Eel i4l , w, bYlbtuatlan, and
that they had "gone to States." ; t t.at tww ,, ,,r ai ,z,l;n4 tb. , ir cumluet '
—lilies Arabella Bemused was making .' ;'',:`i„: ‘ ` ; ,' ; `,`;;:;';',. l '„r - . % „ 10 ,;...`r 5 ,".. 1 T.j.`,T, ' ',7, 1 b 7
a bed In her home in - LULUS Ctty last i ma10...T. .1, t. gt, ,, r ' at:•l ' ma:.,, lvnn . "sumo; i
week, when she shook to the !co: a pis 1 - yl , 1 :- t'" , :; ,, •-- ; , n'i -.Prtint4a e ,. „ntiet.ty I
tel which was lying under the bolster. 1 ~...; r t t,.. J ,..,,'.i,t.. ' ‘,:;;, a h i. :F .R. 1 . : 0 [;,;7 ' , ' ;, - ,, c ;. t i
In felting, its load was discharged .end , t , b ,- 1 t. 1,, fia . t bolt entail gl ImOrvpar i
entered into her person.. She died sea'. ''''''' '-''' ta '''''''' 1" delude! '"""'°" '
..km, ta L.A., Le.. lalasrim: under
morning. ; the imprvat-n tl,:.t by the... 4 pereonol
—They are endently up to the times ' '''.l• .'"r; •-' !;,:••• "^r.' amply rlindP l W
.• •• •ao', '1.,...1 t. , ,E.111n front It all
In Oregon, and wo should say it to a ‘ l i : ' ;ift., L i.. ' ;e.a.•i .:11,ara,.taa,.. It la clear
good place for marriagable pzesone to It a ,-....... ~1 r., - ightta mart lity. Allaa
S tO. In kleriou county, in that Suite, I s ''''''''.
,"' dA " 4L ' r • ''' 4 rn b 'l "
ninety•one marriage licenses were tuned , ~....2".„„T,:.6"1 aw l ur P rq'''''"g . 'l'-
di if journal.. 1i OW many EPadilro ate tialtre tha t the
during the first three days of January. , • , ..
—Edward EdWards, en old citizen of , j'.;`,`,, h ,."' Y ',,, t " t. '"' r '" 4 iw " I ' l l T° '"
Cincinnati, and punier on the Alabama ; ~tyf Paine , "+
tl.L.. ' -":‘ 2.i y iL :::i . .. i' ti 1 1 ' ... " : 4 ' t '' I
ll fiy n men
at the time of Its nab= with the Lear. i _'rid 'yr.." .at ,10 w 0 at a fauqnst, to
serge, was murdered last month near r„ t " h ",:`i ; „_'.," . .,';': „'„ h , ;"',.7"., t ; ""V... in :" lg*d .,_
Vlckaberg by a colored man who robbed I won to met.h ........::: ` ,4. - ir 4, / al n- at " .ethl
e..tniw,..t pretty Much of the
Wm of all his clothing and everything i ;%-a. " ,: " ;; l' l l :c . tanvo phllmsoptiervi. the Moir
he had about Ls person. . , !IWO I. Wng-tp,ilded neirithallate, tha
—Mme. XlralUOU, the Prioceis mini-; fr- , drenwonr,. free thinkerfl„, and each
i ? . :..h , er ,,, ,, , n r. 1 ,, 1 i vi1i
i t . hnt in a , elty like °tun
Mott. is abs If now entitled to becalled,
Is attracting much attention and syrups- ' Nrg, prooorTion . 2!;ir i;e t ruTE:& be a r nd 4 i f
thy In Vienna, where she la now real& , ',l,‘l',"'"',.'"lltY svero meat ilitlirnOttr....
ingot the requester the Emperor, who , of - th t e " 3.r.;,14 1 .:t 43 YZ::; n t ' t r lT ik 3 n7tA ' re7ten .(l , '
has granted her a very liberal pension, , tit,. #.l r I.f ,•!!. i. sn 1:1. I, To ot-laoloot , l,.tho
. —New London intends to squelch , ' t.r v i ',„, 1 '',',„7 1 „..;;;,!, - , a -w-r '"',.'',.'.• rho WY'
are host arOWU to Our
New Bedford completely some day In i (h.rmatt tr,n.ie. 'lie toa- 0., and the
resf.nose, giolifust Toot
tho 'whale businees.. Five vessels are i rr h ", d''
fitting out there hirthe Greenland whale I Cr ' ftt',..it 'L t - e ' e t , t d " „TrLt r .i l ife t:lu Alee rr e e rft h li n s ' en th , ":
fisheries, and many more writ to forth- 1 sdit •ttber "iit'l ,l d. •
coming Just • as soon as the supply of l
petroleum gives out.
, _
—James Lose Is to be hung on Friday 1 , , ~ ___...--._
next, near Maysville, my., 'for commit - i ' l.4ll "" i rtst`r7.l74ror il l.. '
tong a rape open a prang girl. If egg• i otei.d‘l'vrtt , tr . t , ..•• 1.1,,,
tal punishment is righteous, if legal mar l i . , LIMA, .I.oM:it
40 , Is politic end proper, then th e crime I
~. " I "' "`.. i ' l ` t `i f th " r '"
h: , .. nor muntry ii et pre{
for which the Mee MTh la to Ale, should, I
as undies is nihrder, be punished with i to
may i ' '' tut"re4l"4 t"
3.°
I know aliat MINK have been
death hi weerl Part of the had. . ' I int rodu , tion of eivilibetiou
—l " , eme Pomona enPreee nerinise et the too,t remote d:rtrleta oft
slanpf the pi's. which Hr. Sinner boo Thu report nib to tho Set
seen gt to offer Mr. Bryan& for hli three ' tiavy by Captain Mariano
poems. Three thousand dollars does I cau, command, of to curt
seem pretty extensive, but then Mr. Ban- I of tit., ban tot ..f the. Upper
ner paid e:10,000 for Norwood, which did ~furore lui , lately been pub
, mudyhown film!. tho country
al
nothave much in It, that amounted to
anything at all, as a single elan:sof 31r. i T, ik „'„ it r,.‘, 1 ,,„7, 1 , 1 . 1 ' t`
..„It,T,' ", ',.`kl i t.?„
r l, ` ';
Dryant's is sure to have. , ti m e Nit-trove...he estodahot I
—A wealthy gentleman has perrhatted , t i l ,',..,'' : ' 1 ,,,T4."" i f,',", t ,',,',""", t
a eery elegant house In New :York, j i 0 i41,,i,a ' ;,,,,? J t..,;, , ,;:0 '" ii
which is asperity finished and furnish , V r`'e" whist, thl.PrOvi. ,
ed. The cost has been, nearly g100,60n, ..1,',`;11,1',',.,",11:10h.r:1.;:rt''11i....;,r li
all,
and he purposes presenting It" to. his 1 .if the 11xii,hiii , .] n.murifs te
1
daughter. as a surprise on her 'return , Ltrh:,i"do'.o", It. 11. bait
from a wedding trip Which " she is now '. vittecTi ittr. ' el . f n e ° l . t its v. Tit i t ' t '
snaking. The surripse may' not hi so i rurtlillg to bl. blaWlurnt Lb
platten& to the young husband, who will i, "f,,,11,7;',..'",,::?,1,.°,`', g" i d :I'd
1
&mato meet the enoranou expeniis of I which d; tbsy tieli,7 ‘ .. ) ;:'; ' . - ni t f. l •
living .in each a hone. in New - York ' syh° giro tb'o tt7dt..
it nive , t in ..:change. 'tl„
City. . for an hour and n hair , h
—A man In , Wheeling drove lila ;.ittm„at, „nth ht. Hutt rise.
wife and child out of doors Into the cold ,
]own I" rho "h ad " "f ..."
night or FridaY last. The two outer- , I t l',''; l `, l r , ' L, ' , ' . l iU t t i t r , ' ,Til, n ,r ‘ u r i,
Inflates were awakened by his threats'. e" , ' l . /Wring thong ji
of shooting them, and It was bat with i :: 1 ':;.` 0 ,, k . O ',,` .. ;TY . I „T i g;; l :',,, n h iti
dim:silty dud they.
escaped Into the i eleatly the abundance tll
street, and even.tlum With sto other pro. ' 1. ‘ , " .1. Th. Captain win d
.teCtloll against the bleak winter winds 1 ,f,',;, r , t t.' e :',T, " ,ll‘"r i n ,„,,t,',.,, e " 4 1% . 1
than flimsy- night img.,,,, could .ec ur d_ gutne of a raver:thin reeh
A friendly neighbor offered them shelter ' rrr„S„,j4,,T,,il;,ith,," „1,:1uv,.%
and clothing ,' and. they thus escaped ; and nit curie of froth caw
imixit fro=to datht sakough , hey bad , ar:rivold la Lilltrt, iu hrderi
traveled worst squares before they '-'"u'et ,n cu 'N'
ext.ittion. and brought W reached the weleemscrefage. We have a d ,„ 1 , 1 ,1,4,„ ,U tuen
,
heard, is yet,
done to punish, or as some would say, appears , that me Capta in
to reform the brute who was the atlth , jr OILIC,IO orlon to retttrn to
of all this stetreting, country,. .
PITTSBURGII, ESDAY. FEBRUARY 1868"
EPHEMERIS
Y.r.v York poiticlan
- . I to: :rxr.ia, t0. , (4:: of Piss is said to
in a very riiiri , ,zi tooditio• sod like.
} . to fs:', ..i.orti. It is net ecomlly
',town thy., the 0, ,to many 0 her lean.
siie tom - Lit. In Loilark, one r thefour
.ree coca at Ocinitiny, there i not one
•iiiser which is not ntore or le . inclined
iriini the porlirroili.e.inr, sad nt•arly eve
ry el.areh la the tuna Las tieri of these
:rook.: nor , :i tioiyitiog to thiii l
Sky..
—.,....------- -- - . .
NEW YORK LEI' ER.
Oi.vork t '....d) •plottOOlioi•
Tom nal goo Nupp.r—fbe
PERU
.1 42_2_1:ii 111 'As
'FFAKI -
=E
With this question begins a long , and i
t ie
, elaborate article in the Quarterly mew, I
to which greater currency has be riven
I by i - s insertion in Lltieille Livi g Aee.
I.. The subject, attractive even. in the. Ma
sanity in which it bits been so long
throated, is presented by the reviewer
in such a shape no to Celia'. the ellen , i 'a
of ail thoog'ittul realers..lPsradexical
as it may stem, thofe, never was, he tells
. us, a book at once mire universillyatig•
lected and more universally talked of
than the Talmud. He expresses hit firm '
belief that numbers still held with that
erudite Capuchin friar, Beeriest' Bey
senses, that the Talmud ie- not a bask,
Mita man. The work ia,i iu fad', the
body of law (Corpus Atli) Of Judaism
I "nn encyclopaedia of jii3 ., r, civil' and
penal, ectlesiastical and haternetional,
human and Diviee." Its origin dates
from the return from the lßsbylenish
captivity—"one of the most Mysterious
and mementoes periods In the history of
humanity la . - that brief space of the
exile,' from which a previously
reckless, lawless ' populace return
ed ae ' a bled of Puritans. The
Jewish people began now to press around
the scanty records of their faith and his
tory with L a fierce and passionate love.
These gar de documents were gradually
formed Into a amen, which became the
immediate' centre of their lives and ac
lions. I Tire activity in expounding and
Investigating gradually begat a science,
that assumed the very widest dimen
sions.,, Its technical name—"Midrash"
—ls already contained in the 13 Rik of
Cluonicles, and in the authorised vur
stone lit rendered by the word "story,"
Tberq had sprung it p Innumerattle modes
of "searching the Scriptures." : The
i c,
Talmud is the storehouse of "Ilidrub,"
in its wider sense and lash it branches.
Meaning in • the first hasten nothing
but "Study and learning." t next in.
dicated a special method of "1 arising,"
or niftier arguing; and finally t beam
the came of the great Corpus • Atli,
of Jndainu. The. Talmud is .conir,
p 'sad of two parts—the legal and the
legendary—MniAnali and lionera - -the
oue the product of thought, tuveatign
lien and careful comparleoe, and the
other the creations of fancy and imagi
nation, mixed with feeling and tumor.
IThe Pentateuch remains in all CAWS the
'.background and latent source of the
Mishnah as the immutable, divinely-
Oren Censtitution, the teritten - low; in
contradistinction to which is the gu.h•
nab, together with the Gemara, the oral
or unwritten law." Tao ever-growing
wants of the Jewish' Commonwealth re
quired new !awe 'sod regulations at every
aura, and modifications of old laws as
seen in the softening Gown of the severe
laws of the Pentateuch. The whoa
praxes of the development of the law
was in the hands of the Peribes,`wire,
la-extrinsic to the New Testament, sat is
the seat of Moses lJneir time ranges
from the return from Bsbylon down to
the .Grece-tirian\ - tpersecutioes, (220
B. .0 ) Their f duty abate all
was to preserve ; the sacred text,
and they hod also to instruct the people
hi - preach in the synagogue, to tench in
the scholia. After the Scribes came the
mg for
death
worry
zliderit
torture
.use to
h by e
Iro In-
Learners or Repeaters, called also Mss'er
Builders from 2r.0 . B. C. to 820 A. Li
"ln this period fail the Rua-Aiwa:a R.:v
olution,- this Birth of Christ. the di:
struction of the'. Temple by Titus, the
heal destruction of Jerusalem, and the
total expatriation of the Jews." The
legal labors that belonged to this period
were never seriously interrupted. Tbe
highest heal inse:ably, the !louse - of
Judgment was known as the Sanhedrin.
Whenever the Now' Testamentmentions
. •
the priests, the elites s sod the sa.ribes to.
; gather, It means the gicat'Sonbedzin.
'rheros were two lesser ones. Law in the
Old and espectaliy in the -New Testa
mint ';;"d ue ; much wider meaning
ilia that which is commonly given to
it. It '`stands for all and every know
ledge, since all and every knowledge
won requisite for the undemanding of
it," and hence to become& member of
the Sanhedrin rtquircti an extensive tic
quaintance with existing literature and
science- --The banhe-rins formed the
crowns and highest consummation or the
-schools and academies, which were
spread throughout liaelength and breadth
of t h u lend eighty-4Elsta before Chrial
Education lied in tact been tuadn.corn
. puttory. An ex-lied place arse. oho
; given to work In connection with kern
; nag. Worthy of all notice are the nu
merons points of con tact 'between the New
Testament and Talmud. “Auch - terms 1
so 'redemption,' , ibaptistu,' ;
; salvation,' ' 'regeneration.'
lof Ilan,' Soa of God.' 'kingtioai of
Heaven,' were noI, •as we are . apt to
I think, . invented • by Christianity, but
I were honsehold words of talmadial
Judaism In whiclijtoristlanity gave
higher meaning." Thin general tharac
j :et cf the penal vide of the Talmud Is
I humino in the extreme. Of the "Idea
-1 itudah" jor legendary tied imaginative
; part o f the Talmud, we have no room to
speak. The work of reducing the bulk
of ordinances, injunctions, prohibitions,
precepts, win attempted at three
diQer
eat periods, bat was only accomplished
j the last time by dehuda, the Vairit, 200
A. D.
/steel foritanilraaa rurprwe '
A ‘rritrr in the Phil:o.4oth% BO le
rdrongir urge. the eviler.' adoption
this country of st7el rails on railroad,
With philis.q.bleal.ui.W.y he shows tie
seat ran. would prove die im.t' prevent
lees knOWlla;,- - ainst, accidents, inssinnOh
us steel loot tensile. eitvnfth dorible that
of iron. and tranavemo strength I equally
great when properly - adapted for railway
uses: and an it,is a„hatrusgriwottr metal not,
liable, like trytitcl be effectod by : ex
tremes of terniOrsture. 4 prat quobra
of steel I a,IJ unit readily' heal at . ~. .0,
angle, or sn ft earn ilouble up mid without
fracture in !retry weerner; although it 0.-
quire" a far greater. prtetatire than Inin In
:raiding. The enduring ;oddities of Mr
steel rag/ &We already hero shown in Eng
lund fa be .obey twentylobt If renter 't Man
iron. The first awl of the steel, Nitre,-
. eq being - double that of iron, proyents
many railway romp...ie. from layjpg It
. on the main line of their twit*, aid it is
I yet deemed good polies• by many tools
to OuntinUer the ova of Iron rails with all
their risks, And AL AM average life .lonlv
' eve inn, rather than go to the extwo;t .
I of a first Ned of double the iron in put
t nog down steel, which has el ready been
proved to outwear; twenty Iron. Could
I siorkAaldere be contented to build their
.r.wda for vattertty, there fano - doubt steel
i would quickly come into very general
ass as en interest nevount at 6 percent.,
I aided to the tint cunt of Iron rails at to
' day's prices, with a re-rolling every five
I years for a bemired otifel of track, would
' In a century make the gross coot of the
Iron track V.. 9,000,000, whilst the steel
would let but. e110,50e,000, provided it en
• demi twenty times lotions as Iron. How
notch - would he saved by the use cif steel It
the rotting:stook acconut, and in freedom
from ev..d.lents and romfortof premmeers,
it would be diflleMrto astininto.
Not only, however mustier employ steel
rails, solid steel Croat., steel :vales, steel
wheels, steel boiler pietist and shall tires
I have also heroine a nocesalty. Thu meal
. th e iuestion in ono already definitey
•I se, and although only A few - years
have elapsed sines . their introduction,
' iron tires are dinned n forgotten thing its
railway uses. After ' broken tells, -per
haps no more fruitful PAWN" of accident
exude on our express traius than broken
• wheel wages, - It i.e too much to expert
' of cant-Iron that It shalt stand the In
creased strain wideb the neeelernWl Mo
. tamer . passenger trait. constantly de,
manila of it under hli - varlet ions of tem
perature. Only ' &LW-sled wheal,' or
' wrought-Iran wheein,:with cast steel fire;
can be expected to 'bear the. continued
• ntraln which the rapid motion of the tan
too often places Upnn the wheels. Scarce
ly less Imperiled Is thq use of east-steel
• alien, width are now becoming so gen.
ways. Sofidertst-stecl frogs or crossings
t I are t i ' th t a ly Lso l lig ‘ e . d u ia; tr a;y d ,, , : tie w n i m i l t m h og h t ro ll ::: : :: ll ,7 7 ll l l .rg t ont :l is t l y n
I
- used In II:mope for some years., As no
C
tartpermanent way revolve.
mi
1 her tine than teh frog., awltehes d
a crocslngs, the adveintage of making Mono
o of ono piece of tiotill, toughened toot-.teal
alit be easily perceived.
=TM
VISOIIATI2.ITY..-4110 ROY. F. U. Evr
wax once a jourtiligt, but roforined
became an Ephicepal minister. Ho has
pursued that vocation earnestly and suc
oessfully, both in it tompUral and spirit
ual some. Qf what Mr. Ftwer might
havo been, had his ambition led him In
a difterant direction, sumo hiss to given
by his lecture [Mil speeches on Becalm.
matters since save -mint: to the minis
try.- Three years ago, in an oration on
Washingtoista birthday; ha atom' opin
ions and sentiments evincing qualities
or great sagacity snit familiarity with
ststormft., - Quite rocemtly 110 lam shown
himself an adept as a naturalist, Froal
a lecture recently delivered by him on
the. Darwinian theory, we tsko a. mug
pelvis sentence:
"home psoplo may flippantly declare
that they do net choose to accepts theory
which glvett,tbem a monkey forma an
cestor, tint Maw same 'persons have al
ways 'mime . oledged a creed which as
cribed their sari& to. s lump of mad,
and, of the two, Which is limo least ob-
Joctlonatile ,
—Tbe Bradford County (Pa.) Republl
ran ennvention ha, passed resolution,
roommates:Bawl:Cant for President arid
Galuaha Grow for lace president.
,tar,lN nod ,
'eel.
111.1* Method of I 101111
iyublte
rAtriA learllll4.
' Way - t , a Vl,aOrtia
liztalitz
rvf ,rnl, in tbe trlav, r.
anal po . .ll)liojplm.s.s P r ixte
pnn•lciit ur....the Si • Li.
.
A eta rtts.;
at,
,
grows ,41111.° (.1111111S1:,
pUIIIIO.. eXpErill)i'lll !a/c
I bat:: to Viilii, a fey.. : igir.....go, 4,1 alt.
ICW 11,11,..1 11.0'111 , 1 i v :,,,,.. 9'.-,1.-r.
du Melhay i. i .d M.ir•ie.tl,. 1... j.1.11. , , , fy
ii:_l. etrol produced' IV' the aeii' , :Vitie
jtel,4. , lelei wen: ore. Alt, and :I ^ ie..
idoooo.orthi, surround : l ig ern ,il, tr.ti ex-
Periment pio,;o1o. gr . ',• stireroa. vi.b,g,
pa•-
led in competition :tit juxtapoNttioo '
with Ile a . tight, 160 o il ra.,lll.tileil W..
burnerabeduoi jit , t what Ii: , 7.t10tr.1-11,4
rornter daye, would ii, liolitle,llie former.
Ti.• new miii•leyl eruisiatit amply ill
1 , ,, ,, 11ri112 Ult) ~ oflll+it:e t..,1j1bt1,1:011 of
the ordil;:li,1; 1.11,..1ry1'r :ffiplica!i , m of
oxypen. . The nitiiply a communicah,l
by a small tube in the &litre of the oral-.
nary g.ia ligly; •atel thel,elf,t, as ...,tiuta.
tea by the , photo enet.M. I. to prod., a
!had .sixty,llllws tia i 1 unity o f 0,,, iw.
din Iry nrlars: i.i •11111:41011. ill
dt:o l, - t.. 1. 1
liy the jiCigot a.-t or all pre-ent,
it will bn, neet...aar• that 111.• tie
minima power atiouldpe, utoiletatod and
dujirivoil or its . toii -' ilaralirn - elfeets by
being oieoieil throng - 1i ground .t.r motored
gluons, ultonlil the toethialrente illtOColle
111011 11,1 e. _ Nol, thorn, is nothing. Very
torch 111 till' filet or a v•lry lirilliaqi light
being pmiliterd by a !nipple or oxygen.
hut then lti 41u so, lies 0,0011 found a eery'
expensive prows, entfroly entitle gen
eral a poi:ration. • 'Clio ilio_tat id Ifeasre.
Motbay 11 illareeliel ei Ile they line.•
de enverod ilia 1110.11 n e t ' . ellacting tliim at
a very cheap rate. • Tlk‘y proettro their
'•
/
.Ygett front the rout nematmosphere.
How ...by what mean , they do this is
their norm. But they •lat•ii siteeeeiled
1 in prontiring it at kneh p. lot.. th.it their
oxygen coat.. theta only 72 runtime , tile
1 ruble meter, or about ti filth of the usual
Icant. Their calettlatishl, therefore, is
I tied throe cubic metersof ordinary gun
Owa four anima tuctern4f oxygen,rost,ng
together ottlya,ouinitiotratirs, will give
I touch light as ISO e i
l i
s lia . , meters of or
dinary 'gxe,of the ea no of hi fr.inee.
Thehauteur° la that, with experience
we 1110 y 111iW light 01.1 . Adreels three or
r 1 111,
fou 1 11,..n1 , 1 11:11{y 111 11:11r t i l.lo Ox•
over. rcvoni
i - ront of th,
Fatterpr.ftwe.
have de riy e3m0.1 ureic
. .
rvuonithinj of being the ino , t guidable
ra•ro of neuple on the-(;no of tho gkd.e.
IVhile , Ihov Ilk° to ha thin; their noitth•
- Gong they ,Call good 4untoreily 14:41111.1 a
larite goau r litY of ithr3ivd. hum Imp:inv.
Tills toevuliarity of, ttio ' Bonotiln Iniadeeel
,T.tls elinsa of s.htirpel who ir, kuon on
every oirannon to Falco ; undue advantage
. . .
ft [ht. alto Palette ur,penhaps,the,opiality
id their nelghbora. Ti r• grand swindles
under, the caption of "(fill Enterprlsia,"
notwithsta!ndlog the foil that alarge pro-
p.maion of tilepeople boy° been again and
~alt •W.,lfittiLett. Lel theta, arc .tit I I
11 , •uri$11intt tunt ;reeve attrat, an to the 1
W.:Ak. 1111701,( "It:. hove dollara to in
i
I o few Y...rk tl Ml' are; trri. Or
firma ea gigged in Otis „
prole* of lir tory
lvt 'aingtilur to say all utak° it pay
hnstidwnnely.. On Saturday, Or. "Mr-r
-clients' end Bankers' lc:rand Presenta
tion Sellettie. - 3tho fraud advertised by.
Clark, War...stee - Co.,iWiei again bolero
111,0.1,0. 1)LIWIllig. M M. De. Forest, of
Ltrooklyn.! had porch sed tickets. Ile
reinnved a mate trout the swindlFre, in
m
° I
f. rming hi that il. had drown
watek wOrtlt .S3OO, a ,II Inviting him
to wall rind receive i :t. Ile nailed,'
ATM was rrsiu,sted to 'wire:(.slo. 2dr,
Ire 1 , ". wanted to see' he Withh. It non
handed tn. him. /In .posketed It wail
walked stWoy. but w arrested for theft
and taken brio re ILeatine Ikon:hog, whtt
addend Idat.to enter 1 format enrnplaint
h4airdit Clark. P. - el.'s:or A. (n.r,,,,,,riud
‘tig. 'rink ho dal, and; tho Janitor issued
a
warrant (or tarn,rent nf the firm_
On this wirrhut (linar* Elias, the head of
the. .alllettll, atitt lorTer.4.l..eterks were
IPthe•li ititt, eushisly and held far exaan-•
taation.... l
Anothe naltel"The,Ca-uperative Gold
•aiol Silver r,,,,, Si. lung asatviation,'-
i.'snatr.l at- 11th roleirtay, promises Inr
51'U to &4re titurporlatiou .. to which
tt
point nt[ statto , ;, A :, kell'O 11//11.,,,,,,;,ci..
!I. li t VrtiC,l;ly ;wren of land 'locationnot Awed') and i , nor MtSrt,llloll3 MAI. of
I the eider:lrian. ,Latour reader , , it there
I Ire any *ly, rnuo;li i to listen to three
1 magniti,ent thieves., inntrare.nf investing.
'
. ria/eirearble Ttespn.
We liavii - before Ili R ropy o f tho P.,
i tr
Iburghl iiivrtE, to w l hieli it i., net rortil
in foci black type thatlthero hod been in i .
tellig . irtleal Its,ited i . ink Europe inside i
4 o noel s; for:MOIL: Ttl..t paper wan :
.
printeil niPaio tifir yoato. ado. In iitrando
e int erist We pilbl kb the followin; wleob
we find it the 'Folegniritt Journal of Feb I
man; Isti Al it early' hour thin morn-
our, the 1, - reos .if the Western Union Tel.
.graph U. Mpaerftrettr Sirs Yonne , ten to
Vloister tore, Cahn Betou.anti Ilia wire.,
of nab N w •Vork, , Nowlint itilond, gild
1.11 , 10t1 tologroproColnpany, from I'LlLei-
1
tor Corte to lieafr.t 2entent, were onn-
alerted. tindi a brisk, ,invernotion eom- ,
tnettortyetnoen the o two eiintinontal ,
entrernf . Cum pli in Ti to wore then pr t
ell tietw ' n Sin Fran loon and Valentin,
I rebind/ *lieu tho lat i ttr atitionneed that
II U.l-1...t.r.1• Rd+ lust then lying nierived
from London illreet.L This was said at
- .+t A. it., VIIICUtIA !me, Feb. i'd. At
rotrl a. m{.. V3ll2l.ltirt time, the London
11
.0.0.84ta tW.A.I started 1 from Valentin for
San Frani:turn puset ttlimoub New York
at ilia'. X. a., New York time; was r0c...1t...4
c...It . ..4 in Sin Franili,ien at I e. no.,
San li . rte.rienioni time, an. 11, and wan. at
nue., irk nowlekted—ithe whole preteen
inrupyttig two nil titan actual time, and
lb. 'illatienee trovers i about 11,0.0 miles.
I mmedjittely iirler :The tmnsuitailion of
the Itlellittit. rererris Po i , des operator at
San Fra m word Sent an eighty ord met
a/44'0,h> l 12.171 , 1C011te1t In thy..e minutes,
whlrh the openttor. at Haar. .'s Content
reliontedrli.ten in t 4 ", filltlUt., and fifty
,t,ortgi,.l lA:fiance al,init :,,Ipipo roller,
A nisei
W4llei Mr. Dicta.,"
1.1 was retnlifig ill
-,wu dog in at!end
daruting awl din
71r Washington
tAi tho sensation .
t.tells the following
urrsd in Vermont
Wa.1111,03n, a (nil g
uve.,l*kod violent! 31,
turbineilln , audience,
rkron4c In refacing!
•rea Itounr
striticut vbittlt oee
tUnte yttart cent •
Rev. Iktr. 1)..0 ven ,able and forcible
naptiunti, of H . Ikd , wan in tho hab
it or frequently rouslili; and callillf: the
ttperial attention of 11,. tpiarers lo what
ho wan uviug. and along , the; reguler
atteudnuta of the elkyrelt wan - a. Lnrte
Neetfoundland dna-, who .frequently
plantnellhitnaoleupool Lln.-hintl‘quar, ern
frorttlof the 'unlit; au& looltad the
minister .tionritly n , the) f. tee. - Coder
theme lircum%iitto , ,,. 1,710 (I.tbttittlt the
roverond geotleutso )spoke out an {notify
and.
In d t'4"goUt.ttill, tw to wake till the
elute era "lien, Pt MI idea for you
I stint tt.ou to toko Ithld c.f its Solo,, it I'
Instantly the clog iteratived sLitaraoual
applietiou., and brollo out with tt ring;
hog bow-wow! Tlin whole oongrean-,
lion, **eh the desecin,, found it ne ditli
enit, to 'nur ~ ,Itter and return to
anbttr rizens
Ito wattle reel:IV:II by
at haunt c.
EMI
In bui4nivis. V Durit4t the 'past year lk
large number of inaisea wore pat up in
that.elly, and Re+ tliangla. there will I t o
uo dothand for el r FaPrO 10.1111 Or
Ohio aprin , 'which cannot cane
fly hr "Stiatild Um &tannins!,
lion it t to nivett 'any mot," capital in
btdldl ;, a large number of nric4layers,
atom% ninon'., r.arpentara. and Ihbororx
will b . a thrown out jif ettiploynOnt.and
^irk now 11011100.
fei . ;e - dito seek.....
—_
—Ai Brussels letter to a radii papei
cantatas autolligetale which will create a
prattaand esnotlanau necrount of the pain-
MI elateranstanemaenuer tell 'With it_ 'Elan
Empress Carlotta lima a few days Niel:
informed by their Majesties the icing
add Queen of the poll:tans or the Amok-
Mg Catastrophe of '(,Attoretaro.. Til Q B rit
mmla ',
oimeat of the E resat was to utter a
cry of. anguish; wh eh was immediately
rolloared by 0 trete or. N u ,. Thou, ro.
numlilat all the tiratutem of her elnaraet
ter, bet Mojesly bi.clullo calm; she ab
seryad that for soinertinte poi Abe h a d
nuapOetitt that it 4re:a.t calamity' mint
have, taken place. . . She at ruse re
quested is hare !miturvlng - preirichtd
!or hoe. The (pima. of Pm Belgians' has
sltmra•alan;olletaatl?. withhtr.
u 4,, :uil,,r,cruel(
lOW thirst lie without injury In . her
, health. ' 1_
..
*lows) • (heeler e nv„
un -f Mr. Well,, Of
~„r d, i nto a Idler Or
Ocrcrely scalded his
4 scow kind of Oil wits
Co - sufferer. placed in
4,A-tads untalmr it
a shoelaces • over the
'ttilow. Acton screamed
lako•was of tin-
S.:l esroulenhott 4-rt
eery Ihet the sienna
tiat the buff, back
d, Indeed, so severe
t;tst lic .dicd. in' I, few
is who score. called
let the tniztal cllnisp
are lota produced a pon
in; which bed ignited
—Tbqlnel
that it little boy, en
Marengo. felt ha c k}
hot !water and
ehonidere: end that
applied :1121t1 the littl
bed Shortly vitt
won, , rubbed n:1 hie
the little fn :
plicsaudY, and 0111 , 1
log trent the bed.
aultOd in tho 111..1;4
warp on tiro, and
wort
went Ills I tifurlee
h6udn. • r lynicla
gave the opinion tll
plitlti to tliellratboi
taueons contbuntioi
tbeVhetlts.-
is hapeles4iy
iuiridgz
tbat ha einem mere,
tied by his eervants.
lir, it clear and AC.
tins recently dictated
dimpbl et which will be
iitle, "Lurppe in lege."
:•-;ldoratildForri
od, dno botple.
but, must, be tor„1
Bls mind, howaven
tile as ayor, Ho
to Ws adjutant a 'lO
banal uuden. tbo
FORTIETH CONGRESS
=I
Fobrit,try 6,
lit CII Ant laid before the Seuato
invicorial rf tho Arkanmaa Convontion„
4Pttintr, forth that as tho State °Ricers nro
,11.11.,1 OM° g.werutnent, and per,—
can , 10. ..t+, Conytaition in
ha au iluirired to appoint um ult . ...airs.
Ti: f“rreil to the Judiciary Conitnittc,
1 1 , 1,0 were pre:witted fir the re-
Jll real of the Baran rte. - jute, and for
hal or `the ;truly mud incr .
The latter Nva• fr. on the citizens of Green
B ky. :c..}..ing that a portion of the money
thus saved be applied to the lin proveiMmt
of toe itcrlccr at oho mouthor Green river..
It. ferred to the lionimittee tin Ficanoot
Mes..rs. SIIIiIUI AN -aml 11F.NDER
SON reported favorably from the Coln-
Ani , Lee their rests:olre bilis, and gave
liana, they would call thorn up on noon
es the eetutstruie ion .lelkno was closet!.
31 r. Ileudursoii s bill repeals the limi
ttations of the N.utinntil Banking Low In
r..mird to the Innotnit of the circulation
of National Bathe. lr allowatiny honk
ing its.,ociation depositing with thoTreas
titer Stales the necessary
sectiriti.-s, to innrio National bank cur
rency not exceeding eighty percent 6?
the par value of the lontlnlio
prorldinl;Nvln.lieo . r the amount of United
States titles otrculating notes of
N4ta.tial banks Combined shall be in ex
et.cc 01 notch hundred dollars,
the 'Prea-ure la:authorized to withdraw
nod esulvel as rapidly as possitie the
I7ititod Suites notes to the extent of such
exrew ...ad 11,1%1101, Amount of United
State. initei.Mili.landing shall be.red tired
to Iwo iitiodrckt and tiny millions.
Th.. c•aa,nitt,o mu I , ,nanee reported a
stiboithte tor Mr. Sherman's 1.111, Intro
dte-ed diecrunlier 17th, provilling as fol
lows: The Secretary of the Treasury in
authorized to issue hoods bearing inter
est et rive per cent. -mid principal and
Interest payable in coin, and due in forty
years, but redeemable in ten years, to au
indount sufficient to cover all outstand
ing oblieations of the United States,.
other than live per taint. borals,and m bo
exchanged for obligations or disposed of
otterwiw at not less than par,
awl said bonds or
used
thereof
to Ice exclusively used for the redemp
ti in or. iti exchange of existing securi
l'alted States bonds to be issued
shall be grows as the consolidated debt
or ihp United Statue, and shall be exempt
from all taxation by State or local Cu. thorities, and the ,name with interest
thereon and int:vine therefrom nhail bo
exempt from paYment oUisil taxes or
411411.14 PI the rnitell State. other than
such income tax as may be' arse aned on
other income.., and in conalderation of
the red uctiths of the rate of interest there
shall
be appropriated out of Import du
ties an amount equal to 064 per cent. on
bonds leaned, which shall be applied to
the purchases or payment of the national
debt. In addition to the stuns neceasery
1., pay .the interest and maturing
I, tweed debt of the United States,
t!c•re Iv appropriated cut of the Tress
ore a stint which, including nab! Interest
aa. i maturing debt, and the one per cent
se afortvaid, shall amount to one Min-'
drill and thlrtv-five millionsoannually,
which into absll be applied to the reduc
tion of Lho debt. In ben of the sinking
hind contempleted by the act of Febru
ary I:sth, IStig, tire-twenty bonds shall,
aier the eat:drat:on of dye yearn from.
date, at the option of the holders, be ex
changed for new bonds, end sucks int are
(ClitOMltiAo shall ho presented fur
ezehange 'before the Ilrat of November
next. and 110 t thereafter, and the residue
tent later than six months alter the ex
piration of the nee years from date, for'
.clul money of the United State., and
tau new bonds are to be exchangeable
r each other when presented to the
reaSurer, unless the amount, of United
Status notes outstanding shall be equal
to lour hundred millions, or unless the
United States shall have resumed pay-,
Lit In rain for their note. -The last
ttalion provides that any contracts here
aesr specially made in coin shall belegal
and valid, and maw be enforced :accord,
lug to the termi. Bahl contracts.;
Mr. TrtIrNIBULL presented a petition
eef e gored citizens of Nerth Carolina aet
takc'ficrth their miserable conditibn and
...king to be sent to Liberia. Referred
to t'omtnittee on Finance.
'file joint resolution relative to lands
grameti to nillnaul companies In
unlit W:rwel,11,111 W. taken up and
pa•st.i - with the 'pending amendment
041r1Ptiog Its provinions to the chartered
and prnjectad lines from Fon...Ds Lac,
%Vi.oll‘,ll, to West Kariava, Michigan,
and Marquette, Michigan t 4 certain
solute in tbo name State. . .
Nis DAVIS otferod n resolution 'oak Mg,
At aiditiou u. the information heretofore
:liked I rem - the Secretory of War, what
amounts hail been fetid to broken or
xzetila by the War Department for
,h 1 chaiterwl or employed by the De
pnrtment since the 4th of March, 1861,
wills names and dates.
Mr. litiWARD objecting, the 'resolu-
Goo laid over. -
Oa motion ofMr. 'HOWARD the bill to
nrant old to the Central Branch of the
L;nion Pacille Railroad was taken up.
Mr. 9ti tiliM.-15 opposed the extend
loLt sinstidies further than under the
exi.tien laws. Ile had nn doubt bin that
the eastern division of that road wbuld
'eventually extend to Row Mexico, when
the firmer. of the country wisre Ina bet-
ter condition.
After further donate by Meaiiiit. MOR
RILL and HOWARD Biondi want over,
at the expiration of the morning hour:
Mr. FRELINGIIHYSEN offered a
resolution to instruct the Committee on
Naval Affairs to report in regardte pro
viding eatable localities to replace that
nsed for Oovernuient suagazineil near
Now York. and:Jersey City.
Mr. DRAKE spoke in support of the
supplementary reconstruotion bill.-
Mr. 11Alti.A.btaltied the floor at
the kslnclusion of Mr. DRAKE'S ro
te:irks, but yielded to allow Mr. HOW
ARD again to rail up the' bill in regard
to thnieentral Branch of the Eaton Pa ,
eine Ealiroad. •
The motion was carried sixteen to
thirteen—but Mr. FESSENDEN said
Mr. Johnson, who hail the floor on the
confect, was not prevent, and moved an
executive seSsion, which motion *ma
iosqnsraly with:lnm],
r. SUMNER moved to postpone the
bill and take up the joint resolution au
! the Secretary of the 'Say). to
rend one or more naval . officers to the
1 Havre Maratimenbibltion to represent
rho United States, which carried. •
i CONNE , ....ie' amendment, providing
against any attending expense, was
adopted after a lengthy debate and the
rembiLion vest adopted by a vote of
; tw•nty•inie against nine.
Adjourned.
WANDUNGTON, Februnry 5,156 T.
HOUSE OF REPRE.73ENTATIW3.
VOW' DITINO SOUTH Rita RAILROAD LANDS
—TILE lIILt. PAMED.
Tho !Inn," proceeded to the considers- •
ram of the Littforfeited to the
United States i—rtain leads granted to ald
in the construetion of railroads in Ala
bama, Missiralp 1, Louteirma and Flor
ida
• The amendment of Mr..ARNELL,
exempt from ferret! ure lands of the
Nashville end Decatur Railroad was
aimed td. Yeas 87, nays 58.
Mr. TABOR Moved to table the bill.
It elected—sixty-eight to eighty-tour. •
The !intendment of Mr. PILE, to ex
cept the lauds of the Alabama and Ten
' ncasee River Railroad Company, was
' not agreed to.'
'rho bill then passed—yeas eighty-six,
I nays seventy-threw.
• EXPATRIATION atLL
TEE
•rpttem. on
ISM=
. 'rho lletwo proceeded to the conslderai
ton of the bill reported from the Cora
untie° on - Forolp Affairs concerning the
rights of American citizens in foreign.
States. , .
Mr. JUDD continued his sprechin cric
laintit of the bill, cud mad some extracts,
from letters' recolvenl by him this morn
ing
from Germans in the weal, askingl
Nvlry tbe bill made any distinction be
tween native and adopted citizens. The
raxlition math; in the bill of persons;
ramping from Conscription actually or-1
demi would, be mid, subject to arrest
nail conscription all Germans, returning,
to their country who had einigitted whorl
under twentipthrce years of ago. 'The ,
' protswed i:areas in thel ;wend sectinn,ll
dieter reprisals, Mr. Judd considered es,
'a most remarkable provision in this very ; '
steadier hill. As is means of redressing,
w mugs, the proposition wean farce. As a'
mode of punishment r ia was barbarlsro.i
It was itt variance with ulltlitcprinciples,
1 rtvoznizeil by modern civilired govern-I
1 omits No ono could believe that any,
1 European government would fall to,
i Melte such meecurity of any of Its sub -I
1 Janis a cause fur .ituniediate war. ' lii
would ant even make the excuse *hick
the Emperor of Abyssinia had for his'
j seizure Ott Englishmen, for, ho charged,
; them with being conspirators. Taking"
the bill 'altogether, it did not adrancei
one stop towards a practical, remedy for
tiro' grievances of naturalized citizens;
Ile did not believe any specific aet of
legislation by statute was the, form ist
'wide!, to meet this question. * cough's's
toilolli a rni..3 at:extent declaration of what
the low of the country Ls as to the perfect
equality of native born and natumil
bat cirveuri, eligibility to therresidency
•beifig .the ,only exception, and of whnt ;
the. Government prepdsea to do In me
of refusid to abide by such declaration!,
The decku - ation which he proporesiwonld
embrace the following; ~ .
l'irsi—That the government 9 c the
lininsl States was established on the
principle that every Individual has ari '
inalienable right to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of [zippiness, and tlintas a Mean,
necessary to secure that right, express
rower pi establish tt uniform mien( nat.
n roll zatirnawas vested lu Congress by the
Constitution., - .• i'
Second—That - since . I; ta b that,Consiltn-
LlOnal power had boon exercised by Con"-
grew, '
Titird . -=That by the Constitlatlon and
laws of the, United State! no distlnctitin
ESTABLISIIED IN 1786..
is made bet warn thiirichte of citizenship
hdong,ng to native born citizens and to
natural ire,' citiren , , or lit the protoetien
dli• than from the i:evernitient, the soli
tary dis , inetton that.the Prtnident
tint•t. be native horn. . " •
naturalization leers
of the United Pales, in !once since 1514
regal to nn oath of obluratitat of
sold that hence the principles
aed illo•tritIO of the English erinitmin
aw, :out ail ~ther,,,eolitio:tite• doetri
and erirdapleadax the subjeet, ' lrave been
ntroli...bed itiiirt the jurssdiction of the.
Unite i Slab,
egaiest any exit:tool of
rtlilat‘ry f.r - oth, ur duty ullteh
the C,;il.st St tee government should
I.r..uset hs native horn free:,; it
is fu afford u.sl,tance and
rest 's to raturahved
o'..rtn —That the no:main:ration laws Id(
United riraz...s f Sot part of itsnitionr
al . :111,1 1101iti,11 ill .force for
nearly three pi ,ttein of a century, and
that all foreign govi.rinnentit are eltatne
a bk. with trews thrreaiand nequi , seenee
thereto,which cannot now he euntri'ver
ted with her reord, to the rights and
dignity of the United Stalin. ,
rendi— Recites the abandorn tent
Sill, ISL . . by Great Britain of its c xim
of right to impress 'as seatnen, not rid
.:iti4PllS, I the United States.
E;rrh.th —Thal the protection ofnatural
ized citizens ali,nd cannot be trusted
exelti•Avely to the Executive Depart
' merit, hut slsonld be enforced by impera-
Li velar,
Ninth—That ralizrsl eitizens,claw,•
tol with crime its a foreign laud, aro en
titled to the protection of the United
Stales to the talent that it shall see ths,t
the ]owns of elicit country WO fairly Und
limuirtially administered without melt,
Wee;
Tenth—That the Utility] Statee govern-.
inent is bound to ate that no -United
Stat. 3 citizeu in tried or punished with
in a fort.icia jurk.lictinit for acts done
or words uttered within the United
Suitt, or In any other couni_ry except
that wherein the pro.cc titian Is Matitirted.
Eloyenth—That it is the duty of the
golnriament of the United Staten to de
mand the immediate discharge and Xe
lease of all citizens restrained of ' their
liberty iu violation of the Drlnetplet4 thus
declared,] and Just 'reparation for the
wrong any citizen 1164 suffered, and that
the Executive Department be instrimied
to carry oat those doctrines and enforce
those rights, and to report to COngress
airy refuyat or neglect on the part of any
foreign government to recognize the Ile
tumid no made. • •
la conclityiJ>n, and in reply to seine
olmervatlons of Mr. Prityn. he bald Ihe
mi. for Congrers saying that curb end
such rights eaisted,tuni that they aheidd
hu I,hserved by those nations %VAL which
Die United States deal. ' • j j
The ilowe proceeded to the coneldera
tine of the bill concerning the riglitri of
American citizens in foreign States.
Mr. Cll.\ LEH. addreastai the House
in critietsin or the bill, liking It to a ICl
et.rim. The title Of the bill, he said. was
the roar, and the bill itself was the fall—
n lid great was the fall thereof.' • '!
' Messrs. Bo Elt and WOODalso made
remarks; and the bill then went Orpr to
the Morning hour of Tuesday. •
Mr. ItLAINE, from theApproprintion
Committee. reported the Army Appro
priation bill, autountiog io.thirly.three
millione. It e. - ,ntaina a provision for the
gradual reduction of the army until the
military force Ls reduced to twenty-live
re,titnents •,f infantry, &even regiments
of euvslry anal live regiments of 'artil
lery. Ito new eentiniesion shall be is-.
-owl in any regiment, except to W.f.
Point =dots and Second Lieutenant.,
The Secretary of War is. directed to con
' selulate regiments as rapidly as lira ie.
goirements of the public service anal re
daction in number of officers will per,
mit until the foregoing minimum , is
reached. Tire provision in not to. Ibe
cocatrued to deprive any officer in ann
. mission of promotion that may be open
to him by the•oecurrenoe of vacancies
iimei;cllll:i superior. in rank. Such pro
motions, however, are to be always made
so as to ficilltato and not obstruct the
consolidation of regiments.. - I
Mr. BLAINE ' explained briefly the
itrmsof the bill, recapitulating as fol
lows: For navy, 1.118,000,000, compared
with an average annual cost of over
. :41:1.000,000 in geld under Bucluman'e id
ministration; executive, legialatlra. rind '
- indichil expenses, $17,000,000; Poi:Lefties
Departthent, e4,(8)0,010; Consular and
Diplomatic expense., M 25,000; Ordnutee
Department, s3,ooo,ooo;West Point
Academy;S3.ooo,oiXt; mi.cMlaricions ex
pense., eiteoo,ooo—making an aggregate
of SO.Oeu,ooo, con - leered with $76,000,000
in gold for like osmoses of the Govern
ment during the first year of Suchen-
Stia administration. To. these ordinary
expenses were to be added r.. 0.000,000 for
pension., g2. - ,,000,00ct for bounties,
and
el:atootyoo for interest on public debt; 1
imaking an aggregate of expenditure! of
T-1'5,000,000 forthe year.:
1 I This amount, Mr.. BLAINE stated, i
1 , , oath' be greatly roduce.l in f utureyears,
when bounties Would :not have to, ho
paid, when the army list would belre-
lured, end pen: dons curtailed, as would
[ he rapidly from various ewers. :
1 Mr. ROSS enquired why the expenses'
of the: Government had net been reduced
three years ago, and why economy had
been postponed until the election. were
' 'near at hand and the dominant Dirty
Were seeking a now lease of power? - I
I Mr: BL - AINE said he did not propose
to enter upon a discussion now—that die--
cession could be had in Conamittoe °t i the
r i re e idll was referred to the'Commthee
pt the Wholo on the State of the Union
and made the special order for thel3the
-IThe flou.o.ln Committee of the Whole,
M r. WILSON, of lowa, in the Chair, re
sumed the consideration of tho. Military
'Academy Appropriation Bill.
Mr. ELDRIDGE malitlisi the amend
ment pending at udjohrnmentyeaterday,
:by making it read, "and provided far
thee, that no part of the mithey appropri
ited by this act shall ho paid 'or applied
Flo pay or . nubsiMence of any but white
Icaciefe . . .I .
[ The amendment wee rejected by IS
to 70.1 '
landlSome other amendments were offered
to
rejected and the bill was laid aside
to be reported to the House. ,
The Committee -then took op, asl the
il spacial order, the'bill making appr
,prl-
Ilations fur legislative, executive and j udt
ictal expenses of the Government Hay-
Mg been read at length the Committee
:I rase and the 'incise proceeded tOthe Pon-,
:1 alder:nom of the West Point bill. 1
Mr. WASIURNE, of Glide's, [who
Il had reported t e bill, made en argument
I: against the amendment adopted by' the
Committee yesterday , on motion otlMr.
t Schenck, striking on the item of 04,000
1 for the expenses of the Board efVlsitons
to the Academy. Ile contended that the
Item, being based upon a law, and the
President being required under that law
to appaint a Board of \lgnore, it :was
the duty of Congress to make an apPro
prlation, and he enpported his argument
by the remark that it would be foolish •
to deprive the Incomingadmlnistration,
which would bend the aide of loyalty,.
• of the right, to appoints Board of Vial
tors to the Military Academy.' Speak
ing of the services Of the Went Point in
atitut
:wares
said' its - fame would lire as.
lqug toe es of Grant, Sherman, :
Sheri an and Thomas were cherished - byo
the AkierlMlpeorde. •—' I
Mr. Logics , wfuloadmltting the claim:.
on behalf of the Academy, suggested It 4
had also been' the ..nureing mother of:,
Leos, lleatirecardsand Stewart.. I • I
-:fir.WASIIBURNI: remarked that if
be had not been confining his retriarki c :
to the rtgular branch el the army, and- .
If •he .: had touched on the - yolunteer
brench, he would hare paid hlscolleuguo -
~ (Mr, Logan) a high oonthilment. (Liingth'7
to • . I.'
j - Mr, LOGAN protested .howaa not 10/.
1 l og for a compliment, but he did not
favor the plan of bringing, in the narnai:
of gentlemen for' theArarpose eflerdeet
cluing on a bill that LIM no. reference 14.,
them.' •ic. -
The amendment was rejected' and the
Item restored.
The bill then passed. • - ' -',
The House ngaln went Into Coratnittee
of the Whole on the legislative .eXecub
sic,, and . judicial appropriation b i ll. .:.
Mr. IN ASIIBURNE, whoreported th
4 ,
bill, stated sonic. of Its principal *Ant. '
The ninettutapprapriathil for the Corm '
fiscal year wag $20,682,&11.. The es te:
mates for the next llama year, as receivell
from different Deportniersta of the, I.
' Go i c
in
ement. amounted to .$23,13301 3',110A • b
0
the Courmltice on Appropriations hil
I
reduced the amount down to ¢17,217, i
The sem, appropriated were as folint
Legislative, $2,204,024; Public Penne 1 ,
$1,271,7'20; Library of Congress, 0.40,0014
Court of Chains Slile,9oo; Executive 14.
pillatient, f54,te.t.1; State: Dopertmeni,
$L90,700; Treasury Department,'sl,P3Oet
Int; Internal Revenne.oo.ooo,o oo ; GePei't
mesit of Interior, gilt= Surveyor Ger{o
oral rind Clerks, 67I,000; War Depar t: ment, 6 5. 1,:-°D; Soy Department: Str...:;-
1,f33; Post, Gilled Departmenk . A 170,0 SO4 '
Deportment of Agriculture,. SH43,7iti;
UM cillitaicalllsit and Blanche:a, gs...Vei
407; Itidependein Troacctiry; 140,200; Tel;
riterialfloYernments,g2,so,ooo; joidati,
111 ,Sty). Tend, 517.117.450.. ~ .1 le .
I Mr. WASUBURNE wenton to haYthe
Committee on • Anpratirlattone Isrmild
I have all the appropriation hills reported'
as goon as possible, and be thought that
If the House was diligent:it hold hrfee
&lithe:co hind sent tothc Senatebetbre the
bit at April. By needing them Itotie
Senate thwi early het could Beene. 'ett
~,n
why Congress eonld not get through till
Its Muslims end •adjoura at Ithe furthest
by the middle of May.
.1 . i p i c .
A - !mother—ln limo for :the Chinago
Convention. -, -, I . _I . •
„gl
• Mr. WAliiiii .::
lnlZ'aces, le lthle Ter
the Chicago Convention. - - " i'' • ,-.
The Committee pravedid to consider
the bill by sections...The:tint Itons,.:thr
. componsatlini or mileage or NOriathen,
gave rise to n rrtnningilLseneelon,lnirke.
log , the. question .: of, the -inlrepeirt.ta-:
Lion of Sonatura. and •- Members, Iklie,
t w enty per. cent, 'illedvatten'to - COTIONI. ..;
sloes!' employes, and -, the *kola qlkee.:
tine of economy and 'extreVagattee.
Without getting past. this Beattie i
Committed' rse, and' the , Holten'. 'd..
i •ve
PDXTICAL.
•
.--: .
',-.- )r inrs oasis. ital.Liclt.
IWltilion in Ist and novnt beforu Pat.
Ibbe.l.l,
Stir ras that._ no ~• te. , 'who.. atrange,
control lin oelsrlho terms . ..a force I'
•
Dlterts tat, nectli, :0 the pnlr. .
Aol ol.la the v - ...veA of oce:111 roil
_. .. '
•
El
.. - .
iii tauir appn:ntora cou6r• , •
gn,,,,,,11.0 t...r.1 In° t t' that lo:11.1
Tjark .e , nt, of 4,11,1.11,...d to lb" wind
.oil r•LOy to 11. lae Lrt wine-ie.
. _
.. .
~. ,
Tltnni, at ory nt Ae. l',l , lni y CM , . . I
Ili t • c t,
c 14 Nils na.nlnn In Innbre.,Ct I
1:11a: wln , the itn, trat vlert.
An:l t.:O -, 1 it:,....”,.., ~ , a, n.niill%.
in X. , .ne....•s CAttnin entn, 41twaril, . .
AthaMil • , : 1, ,i,,3l.,P,ry'd P 1,11 I -, pn t
.I.ltl . I -...., •-,,,,,, lo 1', , . , 1
Mick' ~ ;. Wt . ..., in to s 1.1: 0n1e1 ,. .
1.11,.:., • ... : o.r a•parte . l I , n , I
Tr.§..--ta4,•) . a •
1-M!,. 11114:
~,,,,rtre4,l pAti, ,rtit
'14.1 I th , t10xer,41,01ch.?!..4,4 sai,
e.rerveitelirl
tell; ri , tex.l .
inn eV,: far hortrat . tr •
.4.ti-tt no muculle,i.le);;;. e.ef bee In tears.
.1.c.,1.3:11 0 ;,, - or &Dart.; . t•ars..
•
aletanee, our let tv g9re
LT-t tonere nee Ilve
A ,'"et. it. et 01etr.eY 4 ;
e.ll ; 11.:19 , 1.15 . 3 •
Mete tb.ept-51. 111 •
Pe:Abell el Ine tuirro , ;meet not rd`;
Vii"ee•ale tbe sorrnte trawl our rteee, " •
Ati..l Let , 0 the grtcfal the stelae. wid 11015.
Tlit to lione.l our departed
i.
Ti;III`. VC hen one ow l ,ean drntra—
IV ht.n cone. plt I.:wt.-de w plore:. .
NC, With./ 11,1 tor moment alms
hid Inortsle leN.nt Ile worth to par,. -
M' hen It rotorna on morn.
t ton x n an/clang look w - r. enbt.
WWI food re trot. nn Lours long U.9t .For that. Ming besot r.ve.
Tb.o Tat mots' defo,d TOOTS.
—Frokt Houra at /lone
TO'
•
DT CRAII.L.S.S orhaora.
X., social friend, I love then .
, I a learned dorgoz , s
hy
And w elm:Werap rt
me la h othe delight r Monde 413pe1,
.
Slott though they tell, watt phi...lora,
mare are earner petts'd I
uld remy, with Mast. strong, .
...They're ablle - theYl.l.. •
Alld eft, mild friend to me thou art
A monitor, though nth!:
Tnen speakost a .1./glltito 1.21. Y
rgrli/Itiltl.l'.l:"ltg;it,gAll:, :who gives
Xo noaleosa every. day, • - • •
'3:vendor of who. vatene lives ' •
d hen he has tooted away.
(f hen in the lonely event.; hour.
Attended by but thee,
1',.0 history , . varied page l pore,.
Hansa feta inthlne I see. .
rift thY ahowY noMPIIt
Then broake and falls away, ' ,
rtrace how mighty realm) thud " thee,
T.Tbus tumbled to deCa.Y. • '
while, like tiler, earttOg master born,
And smoke and fume around.
.P.l then, like then, to slits turn,
4And mingle with the around.
tile's but alaaladroltly -
G:And Ilme e a rl y raVse'breallll
'pat late o weikehold,, : :
~, t ilvos all to deaty -dnath. .
_Prom 1 - egehe.4 fringe to„monarebbs robe;
;.;0110 common doom paged; •
ftweetfialurt. woeke, the swelling glebe,
.; , 31tiet all burn out at last.. • - •
and what Is ho who smokes thee. nowt—
- • •
A Mtlo - entering heap,
That soot:L.lllmM. to tato most DOW,
With thee to dust mutt sltep.
1:1‘ though ley ashes Oowuw.tet
Thy essence rolls on high
Who., When toy bedy roast 110 low,
lily soul shalt ele}vo the sky.
nal) A BEAutireL ransitnii.•.;; • '"
•
Ur .1011111 oopassr 11.1.3 Z.
,I L 'lsoce. a arolle-.1 see It yet • . •
moment, ore the train wee etartlog I
Law strange to tell tire ceireely,Ulet,
;.ntl yell felt q, yang at parting ! -
You—alaa that tho while • • •
/ alone who am confam.ng—
Wtat thought was lurking In yodr ladle
tc.quite beyond my tomple guerilOg. •• • •
I only knovr thou beamtol rays •. •
evoke in strung,' emotion,
Widen, basking in their warmer blaze,
„ear/moan:4kt tlndie tO devotion.
An I ninny beut taunch es this,
smiling lips' alter s ed from duty,, ,
tie e not In raLitiiOn'll davit anyee—
Wrecked on the coral recta of Ileatity
gill t0..114 wed theicam'a awilL
"Inatbore sway my charming atrangeri
Tak her—Gal Meta her I—out a( sight, •
g , dnal me, ae quickly, out of danger .•
• IT enhtilim 1,177100 N. •-•-, •
PAat ornament! ben bDY lath) ,
IS Tied the enowy deterof toy fair !
0. could 1 learn thy nine coercive'
44, An thm her %lagers, lad. tier
heart: • • .
Ea',tern dilOorns llke Oleo cvm entie, •
Ev.l from her briettur oye.s.srlth bums
litr can titoir mightiest monarch's power •
Srilarge an empire aa ray enamel . .. 3 bind.
03 nook% thy form thyfond m lrM: wear,
m •
Thy very anes+. nhould hall annnar.o ' •
BlicileSS love thy endless rocmd anonld
.
.tail my heart, fleralllg, for . Liu dlarnoad.
glow.
TII 011;ALNIH IC TB ZS,
Tie mantlesdarkling In the boy. . •
The suture dimly mark. It. more;
Yi.n.bel with strange rtheume,loarabdiOY.
• .„1V bleb At our later I.llo,nre born.
TDO boy springs o:lightening . tbo MAn.
•Yrollm, at times. ea Teen before, • '
ZAK.; guy sod ss Lid, as once be ran,
Ilreathes the freebie or day. of sore.
• u: • •
Itirppy rhotroy to Man the thow,bt. •
..I..tappy the man In.boyhke play; •
Gott.. unto heart forever Wrought;
;:0 or earliest and our latest:day t•-•
—6,oe nark.beight tree. trOle
Oilman th e eorMOgoelth by
the oil;
'De drep•hued fruit:riga shade. the buds—
. The Mollies white hold the gold.
—Lippincott's Ilagathsa.
•
The Zegines Da4 In Fula
Paris correspondent glees a curious
Oen' tint ofa scen ct Paris (Mires. Year'S •
Fray. The principal sight the peon:tens.
ears on the fashionable boulevards and -
k`vermen saw was interminable strings of
ileggsrs, that lined the former on both
eides. There are but two days in the
pcar on which street begging in allowed .
1.11 Paris. .one le the ; 15th of August, the
F.mperor's fete day, and the otherthelist • '
fif January. On these; days of license,,,•••
isawever, mendleityls carried on to an
patent th ati is not surpassed oven by the ` -
begging on holidays In Berne and Na- -
;lee.,, I never saw such anextubitiOn at
meal nd feigned human misery, 4 that •
which, forced itself on my observation
berry direetion on yesterday. .
It seemed, indeed as though all the
oneLlegged, blind, Lan* and -
..eformed pestle of • both sexes and all •
•bgea from the whole of France had, been •
pinpned upon the pavement of her esp.,
pal. Some begged .singly, others In
;troupe. Some sung, Some prayed, Willka.
;others recited the stereotyped begging -
Rihrases at the tap of their veices. , Some
blood, same kneeled, and agaiii Many
'bthers were stretched out at full lengtbi
iwrapped in raga, on the sidewalks., On
!the Boulevard des Palletise dozen gretros
"were lying aloalefthe walls of the houses,
tanisist Inger old MAI or women surround
l'ed by three, four, and oven six cid-
;siren, Including babies, all pale-dirty,"
El ragged, and presenting together a:.
nnost pitiful aspect. Blest of three beg-,::
,gars had brought all earls of squeaking
:and squealing instruments into - monied- •
Lion to attract the attention of the - pnblio. -
Besides the native contingent mendi-,
cants, there were ewarrua efllttle Italian
ti bagger boys and girls with violins; gala ...
inars, Antes and harps,. monkeye and. '
...•;marmote, who clung like hors to the
passers by until they bad, by sheer • per.
t saliency, succeeded In levying a tribute
upon them. • Altogether, the wed sights.
g famished the iibiseinpive proof thattuidsr
4 the brilliant aurfaco.or Paris st great deal
=•• of human Enemy Ls bidden. • - .
In !•catch of ei 41atall MOM.
A..grelsa- appearing ke olits,'on his 1t
visit to Elocton. obaraced a alga wrir
atore lb= ‘'Wbollwale and "Entail
Store." lie worked 1..1112 way through
the crowd of ladlei until be tuned ens of
the who wen exbiblting Inane ac
Males to a young lady, when be .broks
"oat:
. • .
• mister . , 4 robo's Mom beret •-•
"ho proprietor has just stepped out;
, .
Nell, is this n retailing starer •
"Yes, sir, a wholeciala wad recall et6re."
..Gness you understand.your trader'
"Oh, yes,” replied the clerk.wrappinc,
up a brindle for his ens +puler, "what can
I do for your , •
"Well, as the cold weatlier is owning
on Ithought I mout Its. well cocno sun
KIN° you a Job." ' - • • :
w"I don't understand yon, mu,"
tho clerk, who began tp think the. fellow
pad got in the wrong Ida. •
'..iriactly so; well; I'll tell' inn." . • .
"Explain what you mean, nly friend,-
Said the cleric, ea beams ban produce
bundle from under 14is coot,
"Well, as Issid beta ithenoldivelauXr.
Is coming on. and lllioughtl wil,ght as, .
oil ho for it. 'nine mighty near
treaczln t`other winter I tell you T.
•
".1 hops you wilt 11 itio what yeal r
want, so I maygerre 3 ou.ll ' -
' "Certainly, squire a rtainly; ralways .
do buaincas In n hurry and Just as can&
na the old mote: Tri 1 !et you, I want
4 , cm to retail thane old .phartelof m
anima down abotat 14 the kneas, kw* X
don't wear drawers," ;. • -.
Tho client can ha imagined, but m th&.
novelist,. say, can't loa described. •
.; Paul F. 'Nicholson,for ;A. long .
tlmo the eery competent. cli*latic .
of tlocfrortd, is about to; start-"a new: : -
paper,. called the Town-sod Cnicstry.; This'
is to be eepeolally a dramatic paper, but 6
attentionwill be pall litoiature-Ond.
.
come grace of atylo and rhetoric will be
employed to the diactieelontlf. " amuse.. talents". to toplet lbut nrecrdlaaril,y,treat;
ed withutbre regard for-looseness thaw.
for finial:l./of opeoch. lir. Nicholson flnui
engaged licorps of good writers, and hba; .
, own tact cml importune° will combine!
their fenetloorrvTporly.': , ; • , ;
emit, Mirilster of the -North
German- Confederacy, Eintertulned,cra
Monday evening a committee or Tending.
German ei tlz.ne, who called to °car
late him.on Yds. having pram,
credentials and .been_ received bY the
President as the plenipotentiary 'of more
than WAY millions or- Ceramic* •.
~--B-Peoklue, of Shirley Brooke the
• Booden. American' , says:' a - world.,
whets cleave -, nien,are sometimes. ill
natured andsoodtempsrel men acs often
very 'livid, itleplessont• to encounter*
toughing philosopher who - Fs closer In
matit, ways, me :oak:. or tura= With
nOC_ , _
II
11
M