The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 29, 1868, Image 6

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.. Kr . PQffi~ AiT'cY
rElanit CO,
LT faxertunnimo,
Es*:*i**ra4xh„..,t,.
..•
TUN&
Jam,
Starr Costs. pervisroor Ma.
F:r . 211
Ty.: or more Isopirrk i Ofir,ollftelti sad
c.o. Uri" So 114
• '" ' W:. .` l.l TilOW /Kalif; '.'
bYO/.144 aiElt.1 7 «:11111'
1111.01.1.. i• . 1.1.X11: ..11111.006 } '
.0 1 °01 1 * /6"lo,4o,rlfat'Agiata.
edTUIiDiH FS~VdRY, ~
_'lB6B.
THE draterldethern.a..
Veer alace-Ineddint 191011191,- Ill.'
verged from the potis Of• duty to beim
/18 c°"t3ilWaie.°ollo4SlVietell re.
iolted Bniesliahrritebilitiefthe-44a
loyal peripleted tha 8011111, hilt hill beel .
justly liable to trapeichteett. Oragiuir
knew its die% but yhea maid to te
non in titetpreennes4enic*s sleddiri
and weakener diiinelhatde ii. them
_treme. The Peteldeent oiitideg tinted
ralted to 4 gait ifielbridion sad *down
at his feet, twas-enumrsered is ilhl withal
and arrogant coed; ad with keen do.
wavily 'euttieced - Irrary Oppenality to
Insult lthet:rett of Ma x hayal 1
peoqle, el Felt tei to Wow din tato ihe
facia or the leadetiof the UMWy afar
at theWecitttailleA. '
iirort.deor 53.
den from tdadrat - accericnasortei office,
he halt rialted I, paddatenaciesantei
mate tdathibt;trnniejf loofa, the - - ,mi.
stitattona tioelaiorproviting,thr lei.
pie with protection avant the tyranay,
bitittr
arrocancis and deapotine of Ike Cant
.Eancittere aliceld he wiped ad, herds
tray wilt tom again afford sa conapat
of a Pleiddent so Signora/ defoltatid
.. ..drieditoof 00' thri' ruin of Ile Oatorii
,auno. red.people over wheat Upsides.
le monde ledemandef, and Congeum
can. no longer Mica the responsibility cf
dadiee with filridfarrecai, 24 pre.
suroptient end aridadtp seat becandied
at care by litisddainit,,,floi bides
,the
past net years he has tear sztaYed
„ against hi. country *thew a Mamints
- :ettideiiiit daiosituLl:Litim prb. ,
:-be eattsfootedly solowittad those who
' fallow' afaii,:aa4rundier_tbit *pal it*
' the President shirr inhi; :rrhetheetthe
. !suet dull Insult• - end Maw Ate odier
.:' - with hopanity, dui sat laud! sp ha, a
wonarabloamiloo Mail than Pfadd., -
`"
'lig Over the of aseptic gwestc.
ANDll.llXJoPll4'lleowhMtilllbelsti
• tau:united =mord of the Noway ;, , t
-' W ar daeaaat ataltrba Ili: lt la taloica
. coisiiiirrecy witithaleing name of op-,
" poeltionto Cloacae cad the. loyal peo
ple', followid sines Ifinpliiiiaidig of his
- adothilstrarion-,hlis duct,coorea/cps
able; unlawful'and liimestunassa ale to
la fa:Salute strtabrigergyotedit thr tin-
Pascal:l -0 a Malt ', aara: 2 4 l •4_, . th
_alihaie.eeiated, r" lir%
rens - put, but s it =now cumulative
proof forthKiessioicaho ' necessity of
• PriariPt sal 2 1* 4 1; 16 Paarlaiatt la
;rizidicatingitaiinneviren 'additive&
in& the Jag Vigliti of ,he km**, No
rm. shodfillikit twee and atintr•44
:The seal of General Taoxaitti do the
. , diming 4:4 It:in:weed,: osteoz.ley maim
- lag to toponiede Mt Steams ::m the
War "Defaftitatitia/ell l3 be e 901002, 1 4 -:
• bls za anotaniesid, bit be niisopneetrii
, - ids OWD.V00:10/, UM 11/1111re of rho pr.'
gm . to Mblat 41l All/41lild by the Pres:
ideas, tad the obbidento rends rad i on
hie:sags dna= ..Thveifice-of Ilecrit,
tolatitai ' Sark - beieiddealta sloerase
at rdithirs.hatia inoontally ddl lard
I:alitical ift its character. ''Ea Yana can
bo enigma tin:a.,ln ;rand at Islit4 •
soldier entployed In the military tusueb
of the Goreitubaerd, buronly nee ciliate
occupy-14i pdielydell dation. Bence.
brazed toms, iato efere as a soldier
what lie conceives do has military . ordor
friiin he siondor, akar, is eitogether
The asaironeet of Gem. Tiosus to
the War Office clearly' dentenuardi' n the
impropriety of - designating any 101=1
5 - 4 mil/taX7 serf SO a ei'lll *Ma;
and particularly that one. SobertoillF
nil: has tweets selectir4 a soldier; tot
the place to take tbo_cflotr bolding ,et,
idgheetrask is the.army. - Silt long si
this rule metaled no at sueedic
grailitwu stiblectsdro thi e reintlicatior.
ate:lag placed-virtually ander the that
.. rnandof ate 'of' Wader rook. rieo.
Guam., Liza Gia. - iihruiscso, sue a. , T
the Major donenda of the Amy, bi i tht
prevent isesiginaent,, mien nada ths
" _ comits. eilot a toosayfats. a itutoitia
) dablllll,l2lllilllihrAlly, Ala at ukitfri,
\ 'll2ir ' vicasuai oir2 - multoi ,-aloofp4m
would', lat , barelsoo more p positive ,
'bad a corporator the army been poi it
loomm,ild over the setae stilitary .64ree.
j.
The dil pectinated •
eyeis out of
confounding the civil with - the Salthary
"'fcestea - : - '-- 7 -' - -
- Tinireareattgiaditafias of rink imoep
mere etthatte„ - oar being equal to any
attic'. Hargastnalifaladlif Willa lola
ablp.of the Wax Department--e pearl)
. . polidaal station-a paion of - as high
t __patio - mit la Plastids '?* 'datiaesa af -
I''llfrtttrs-ollbrait ter the' Juba• oe bini'o;
' and subardix
,tdtort whack iced III•ot
the, Oar" arsa-of..tho CiereeindiliTii
but to select (Sr• the position
men _holding ashorttleare" Year eekbe '
' regarded fi no Oa liehethea Sun iv.
tenth:ea limit its tnuatanteapis
dors. • This, lihdaralhe Wee - able xs.
"eager take* by 'the - Belitteal°fi r ths
tritcy,Tlearhi* roetheir urtmet be
' come ani alniele: dada ' policy, , . 10
- , .en-opoestet With : bins to ids atterepito
the zeprasisouttees of the
humilisur , ~ -
s*e aid the Penal; ' - -
Iva fatelyinistahle that lir. Joao,
4,, ,li thetwee', rebelliee mated the
• law* which, be MC btaalusatad> 10 4 ht
primarily so to amends himself Into
the pommel:lll'i, ieia no= of the Dim
. crate as to swore the Preridearlalatrat;
nation hem their llatiattal oternionten.
. Win* and Inadiottit daring the , but
year of-their nisporttes adakei etsatt
Inhered under the deaden that Eta an
' attauuxia frii PrsOsid.4,- EN-than
t Unlashing? the Data 'MI pea
• -
of : there, teatimes ,note ''p en
- ortnigemeins, while- at ths.)Ortort de.'
- spisici their irseehary red Use :sad by
- . Itilad dig*aaili 6 i l n.. , :Y.;diaillC.. They
- , foloolit eoaraelsat ant peolhatae to to
-01114.041:400theil.)7; exempt 'knee
, -- menlatesilloi ies.ba - regitiet„la as
Warmer triopresaaaliellut ilsomsecds
aaan played alma ..4 41 Jaiiikin of
- .'7iliti-Y Jaansas itanthiat iloa a
supped tatty. oiler. have Lead-
eiria. ?re - :ill mibitina" him with
, 'pinkie they. sew moat 'Co=Rem
•:. Bat while rhuessuchls-Adrip tafeedele
it I. seretthaissAustit,ohesrreihst the
- . conduct ef-tharredihtat,in the Perdee.
- `us' cider' creaSfaittilloo;iir seemliest
wideiess iiircir4l /*dot An& fiaare :aA e .
- - berm oluttgoir irldr his whole own
,-: of actioistsca his aeaidwtat edeolow
~to the Proldencr. if zation fi
ducts.otta have dew "Vast falls ease
. - totrbora'auff gives aiineal *velar.
moat* m0i10a6 , 14:11.1 ,4 1 , 4 1 * oe sad
Arrilitea. ilfhtlathe Ilssaeasts may
applaud the dhplay - of his peculiar 11110.
.11/Igdell so ilea Si they -operate only to
.. - thrdapalivadags et Ugh. reeogentael op,
- - Tpeeenbalte to abositddlist *sots the
•
world. Wad they would elm* to the
lteadiaft.9( 6 4fr." 2 . I*i% and dos.
met aided whit for the period. of. Sour ,
l'troalala•ir 38Idar " ' i f h•
---" .: ' ,!rif-dile*thefOre.rt ',. .!.. ''
-
ixar:*
* . . -, ‘ilii oeskin 4° ,
. 41 . mu a Gen.,
- late for - eoal!peetbm .
iii.... ,.,...., v
-. rtieo*-.:*;:/ltaq,9112,,, "ii= um
~t 4i.d:- . ..iiil:glat,F.m..v
nominadon-will be mamma
HISCOECEPTION OP IMPEACH-
approluncsion maga Lo. many minds
that - the Hour of ReptcaantatiTen
in its moans action intpoactung
• t Jonarsott,_ - resits entire
first - hmt mini: - - on- - kb -intent
eiiitV:iiiT4rx Pi*** W
, -,471X - Oie — wEVlUWipatr 'Wine
1114 *lose lives where not Ilved in
rwiterritirpnisreroetly-irva. peoples :
:ate remte the WierWwr"bnltek lep,rtal
hero, .acadiati -p; sago.. The, "Wm .of
re Whoieve 4 W 4
ZigaWakth o c o Pdtlet - et Ike Piesi4 l 4
WWI ATllFlakilectadon
cz=l
lierptaithenent, , to _turn
o vieibir • -
ea= •firear u. Tine.- spetairles,
train seegtbinstnr,Will.. not
,ortlf
item-of ids dedinineney, bet' ,
eothekiteinglithigh complain basin:en
lialetret he
Thbnypisiiensisni td,Witicii4e4sCrel
'Mime eggsouttilso; to -be ie ' shi.in;
"thet:Preeldeat himself and bisect:ode
id*** ::114 redsindensisolfid
bind his reelpneidoCinti
IntselsedtheiOsagressiond inoteltr,
ihlCh indtged Er. •iiinsson todzingirm .
be - ji4e
t.titaat : VW
ittetnirConnteipostillz4zurgort. - ind. if
ngenviiii'heirier of the ratan 'upon,-
:.tentife' DM" Weald
Witn ,Wao4 M 1 a
to rest. In this he • lit tetally mditaken.
Ittgewl4.l4intyasch.= ,
arrogation:
et haw-'mould. bo. sTrily . ,cues
*las; either of which, duly supportedby
proof WoUld : be sollierOlt . rot blit'een
damnation. :Is irtiiim nab/.
Atheism the wrottgfelatertneretyof the'
Ottit4i.7W. r dl49 l o!M. !!'",tl 3 *.
Mai& VOW coattenneer
sitternhfr sentediintien,r; : tert: the ,whole
of i~ series or
stretching through more than elle jar.;
lad by which he Us sought to set up
his own will solute thet of the nation
..tekiFrench the Jamie ,:of eietoiy we..
In' ant:7; hotly contested husle.deldc
didieg the rebellion from tlui blow's O
nto vieistricin defenders of thts national
Stetwiustiphole them en; the heads of
kitt4 3 lo l3 iitart:
'rhastrare many single , items ; hi late
lengcsintovni . of Offenses which aught
sitoiO;luteneiddre l o l tibiYi
tine, audit jeudicehati been doneinpon
!Brie the Preset's:lli anti hrt had bete
iniitieititiettlidligriiited and Vegreded;
tha ionlict of paterity. , , Weald, esinfOrw:
tit Prigteentatthere Cain, Erste,
plea iin,nOt . wanting:e of
lloraputstudiens is
,which theleeds of
. crered Siicettite Chiefs hare'beek
iiiiheldoeV;LiacOnbied with.
elinhatt et' the- taphlation—tat me' 1
Dicniswia 4adaida hlet o y no mates
mina nay beide tarty. &Maio or) pre.
fillenttora;dareitto:day to , atiret" up in
At z tftChtatie ategghtenel - wort)
out watt.= the slightecatainaa of thee:,
bkeltettem
. ;cl, deny that the] beneficial
o _rtiatilgjai:o 4, o o F, - far
antrum tair andeattaietth all . the ehlerly
041**60 threetepaiente l of poutr
1 ea thsooiii zoaoy
Among the 'greatest seeds of the
'peoplaitftLlehoer t me:
stie!r, ,fidefeth:
are did not let Int
'tlespotlia 7 s gotertuneet itibstant!
13'41 6 / a nds of. ale coati for : ptvictit,••
set terra , of • stare—bat that-they :
foaad 203adiak titurtuo l 4itantizi6•
thelsortmektag pow*: to the Siallto find
Sit* of llomientelfrese trot a
pitieViittiO Filial* of the
iketfiderethidt. of the States ho
thodigititto,6l eatbotity of the Loyal
Owego of : the people.: Et:
Bzirt2n:vmL p!ou:tAriepartadas.smyi*ii
this 7:114 - iOsap ,or es vaned Bata
4W:sea Ida; fai Marl yam.
. Mho was his aemal coateo-:
don or .aiantfaxt/onal Fork*
Temdeactty. nyzapathrdng
with 'the - Mfestdmeat- 3mM:it -from
id~tactai. - rig* denener
.:ld ;mntit In: Meant to affirm that tbin
wsmilni-Damearstic and Cammtive
Interprendlcaint tha Corirdration, then
Inicart gananlization wan atitatly car-
MM. The Dementia party fs nenne:
inal Omagh and.thinugh .with the
that the - Preaident In . -with
inneviritires. thli 'ammo
ndu:7 ;TIM of Ida authority the-.. Co-
Admirers :‘Befabllettai • unitectiorebly
tiountr- TM:a n strong and =Door
aelot public Opinion Ist.fhst direction
s!trink . nsrOft b? l °°: l °°° . or t°P-sbOrOli
contested by-the item di_adiptie of Jut.
ibeechrecot es }monied in the Conethu-
Trta - PtiscromeT . declares that is big
recent ittemotit
. to eject' Jr.l Surto"
WI hit/talc& was to Wei ihe;ThliflitY,ot
iho Tonere of Offlee Act ettepplicabk,
to•the.iitsti'_of thei gawk*, sad hi.,
other bohien'of pwitkes =der the
GirrerstauroVbeftsts the Supnone Cottrf
for itialshe proposed ti*-
.e9a4;444 17 forcing lir. Siairrox to
iostitutlog proceeding or to hors pro.
camlbrptomotareed mak= the
ftomfof whit gourd to luusbltheit
tram Mkt by all latryers of astablabed.
sepotatian Wit the Suprema Court , has
oatyippolkur,not origlarl'lMlidiMion;
thit.l4that mita cannot yroYerly 'be
ariairomMibtfori it, bat only ooma up
121:144eill from Gouda belaw—itis II other
laMalmor, ro_in Altbr. Y e;Preeident '
. .
, -
PT.POIM tO nabdel the pourers and
inurklng tztaehhharj of the Courts hr nit
tanpsll47, inurapelitnig 11 to discard the
irini:Atta*: old Mu! hennitablej: pm.
ardente behind it, and adrrunrer to altar
and siteusaions rulings, frequently with
&sneer *lin ow dignity ind.hinfol
nesi, triaging tf istn ditsts collation with
the War making iOW./ of th 6 61 °Y ; erit
rolinN sad expossinyr do people to an the
eitti,lnelderat to stouter surroinuou
ore to tomboy sad smutted 17
saMertititi: r •.-
- . .
00XWIll• by an eacountiting rote,
las soled- frontal 'on the resolution
fastaischlrnt the Preddent,. 9dcult:i
dled In the.prople a:hope thatth day of
Jima retdbuth
• e it at'band. Hatters
.or*aril:butoini
abatis, and, while no maitre bu nt.
dwell be made, it h of 'vast moment to
the bintrat Interests of the conntry that
the .trtal shoild - proated with no un
deessessy delay to the end. The inns
utwortant
s quenites to be decided In id
rinse laminator, the Prestiltnt shall tq
pnewitted to-hold and *nebula the dra ,
Aies.o hi.
the
or rumen suspendeit
aurthit th e prientedbitts 40 4 hbii.
canines will hardly hesitate topsail ihe
billpendlng.whkh pa:hicks fee Ins sine
hantedistely after .anust, and
until loch time as the Senate • shill barn
rhuisted indffeitent orri the hnpesele
. il f.AZ - .
lainingos , .
pad.
Iltnisttertpts Its secompitsh Warm",
by the ca.plapiliti of t tixd, - Irts income
wa_diond Olt :the sit with
Which hi wakes his wltsetkra. aims,
iaa Atiiitant ,Eientast .I'hantss for his
IniftwomteS to ansitemil the beiests
Pongees*, the Fontana bhoniered - etre:
gionly: In selecting's min 'Of Wadi"
:Twills sad 'deloiti. OI initiate, the
?subplot! expand himself to deist luld'
inirobitt title welt fn . shwas. This: he :
Tepfftid LOW to parody. for taints]:
Irwin it is: too ists ibt lam to make
eidsg,4lo,4:-.
,
:Tmatamitib nom forobthing -to ti
Ibsen Inarketa an artleJa of iron folly
/qualm the ihdiglelle*, - mIIIMI ~Is ini
pcmudi Imo rite tionattry: at a cont In gold
of >itt7:three donna Par mar and which
modem the proportkm of. ..Murano*
itommitz falba mania of . making Bet
Mina goat. Tbr Iron la: kunui;
deal Oar; mountain or,. the Camber:.
'Mid Mum, nesir . Greanvilie. .11 isOodir..
oda* tbr mut; and z ir 111111e4 111402i11161
l ON F'd 1 0 ',11 0 1e48 01 611a1 4..
SUSI Illikialp;;;N **101 ; for
sedan PisPoitiOli!lls7 Inaba:dom.
WASHINGTON
The siewsiewss:whin segetastchiy sole
brides * 181 th muse Terisry of the birth
of IbiliimatsiWixth‘d, noble ratsiot sad
statesann, Gioia' Wvonawron. It is
-curia with it Atherater
freedom` dwells soma -power, and ,
ehallaiigeu iespecint 'Whosoever lies
444 4 - l aoo ol °i o kialta4 * of*
lemoitt itta iiiieddisszt fuer :of GMTk
erimerd. :The aseitusery-ters
Idris -1 01i 'utatez:in - : one pea
__ .; the
diortiti_ of the Oman, - of.- r un mut:sm.
the'-West In Um mums of th e lust'
PrOddiet:tierre:luthe'iptount :smoke;
renetindkieniat' witch kieitiOnk
WAWA. . ead...the
. prople
-united br MIS ecatunon bond of patriot.-
jind usthe principes for
uhintililatieredin Ate3o eleablieb.•
whrotitiantei egitia4 40' the Ant
and last Chief Sseendives of oar cools
try appestna this madtersary. Wen:
jtmares determined,:'Petiketie.
AA ; 4; 1 :,' hide!' no iitexese at bwt_
bat:that of hIinOOPIBIAII conetry,inbonxt,
test =Mimeo: of-het:toe might %email
and An IndependMUSS - r,ruist with: - the
::** 4 4.o lll 4iati;
milidietivesteLreeeledeaery, - pnibuleg
the altleeder nwcptWtr . -holds cedlow-
Int the - -lee - ride Lef'dtsoord; Vesting they
may ripen into. ,the Anal destruction of
onzOnvernmeett drebitioasand unitive,
hir-embraeen - the eye 'of mu astionsi
boilchiTioforeetpitatri iotds sadiestat:
the ispreientatltea ,;: af _the ' . prtilotlp
tresses..gs iirridriful litiwtge sow mine
ti Mier bosnanpettr the- tweed the
iiixe . :Akbitek will ALA totheee
'eMzion7 lite. thumb: ides surrounded
by an odium worthy the wickedness and
monstrosity of his public acts. •
LITATZ COXVIIIrri9S.
Eica,John & Its= sad 11.-11.13traig,
et Dsiirddis toasty, Tim befit appolsted
istjtesitiSiottitive' deleotes to t k .
Csolysation, sod 64 Con
vozdtost oxnattredli the solatolon ot J.
; 11 - treteriots coatity,is the Sen•
stolid delegate. ,
1"SO afkipaosb.:rioted to TOEO
lbs H.- Williams is iLdistato to the
Woo VOnstation, • sad Olna,
sb?4-IS lati l2 .i l4 t 6 the tame.'
ADA J6EIikSCCUIIty N4pCLOISc2III maTO
recommended James. T. Atclunlin, far
Stalin*UN tad Mut X.-Pi:n*llnm anal
101iiir...11(ndor for lloprenentathe dale.
Bute Contention: John 31-
Thump= liras recocimended for dal&
aiiata to thn:lfational Convention. Dr.
• Drawford wna "recataniendad far
Eleci;i34,.:l4iiirActions ' t giaan for
;Ann Meschstounty Committee nun=
the itth,, end elected' nervous to the
State Convention, end niuutiosotaiy In
thent for, Giant. and cants.
Maim A. , Mnn, of "Mtneireille,
Sid C. Motet*, Of Claihnstile, were
jays:44 MOOnientsgiit dcl£jatei, and D-
V iithentas,. of West MitMisenn,'Sens ,
tonal delegate to Ike' State Convention.
.= The
,Rijaddleau . Calmaitta.of Cam.
Aditiadpatddy Is la lust a the woad
91701.011 .91141010, 1,0 0/11104:11010g140° to
thi.Oista sad liattosal Ckanaatioa.
las I.,aliumee etsulty' Iteptddloam
Lariagtded . with:calla tc i,e4et B. J.
• Bareseaisttre, Aid P. C.
Flasknr,. Esq., Ileastanal delegates to
Usrl3tate *instates. - I
Tits &ptlhlieiis of the Ilessatit
Xlengattedcatal Dlattlet elect Dela.
- gates sixths State Ceeaveatien 1211 Tues.
hen
naiad quite a hrems by appointing dela
gates to the Smite andafational Couren.
dole batted of milling a maiming to do
eo '4****l7 of uio Committee hen
seceded and has calisd nutetimge, so that
in all probability there will be two ems
Hof delegates. -
Lair Rooms was elected repro.
Wittindys - delegate to the State Context.
slam bj:the Republican. Committee of
Uniteittintinty, and melons Coagremion.
l and Senatorial en:denten =were ap
pointed. 4.0 were instrucM,dfor Guns
A meeting of the Canty Committee
of Womanised . county (one. of the
tallest meetings held for years) appotat
ed 4. /1.4 lacuna and D. -W. Saarrocn
renreiseatatin delegates, and J. 1
Looax. Senatorial deka:atm, instrumml
for arLAHT and GROW-11=1.11120011 for
Giwic—iisid Mr. alum la. decidedly a
*radii' 1 4 Weemoulwd.
, .
Tets Pitteburgh orinsierris' t ! in Its
leableue editorial yeaterlay, chow to ay:
'-'"Ttr tire tes fatly come when policy
end prtneiple trate In repoort of the be
Wand for use 'relieve of Andrew John
son frowthe Presidenttal ale; accord
ing 'to the forms of the Constituthrn, and
ferries/we *Wel We as ' snanitast 'as
any that ever appeakrbte men'sseasen"
Tbsijoinile, in cmenem - itai 'good
many other; diviners In the! We act of
the President anifirdeet groend for his
impeirelareat bet they never had their
ayes opined to Ids errirsind misdeeds,
white J&-use !Jointed liatoPulla to ISM
his Aspenition.- The Predrkna deserves
vonfibinent now no more-them she has
done tar many months put, ettetongh the
o,l oelie.. to fo 6lll 4ase maybe regard
ed se clearer tad awe apparent
-Trak refits of the fieriste to admit
into that baiiThhip R. Thomas, who
was sent thither to teptesent Maryland,
his' Melded "much _excitement in that
State, !Dm oansersative members of the
Legislature threats/Lb re-sleet hlm and
send hitiftwokto hammer at the doors
qrpae Bente With a written' threat in
hie iriebet to the effect that Ida raceme
will rertdationise hieryland ud bring
her into orrolict with the national au
thorities if his lest be spin denied him.
in'tbe disposition eg nu ease the &nate
actedwahnly and dispasekmatein &edit°,
4 . 4eisu prom 427 . Nuns will induce that
reeds from Its
Wei And Many llamalimns who hare
held beck and feared to alike 011ie
eowarihreL.of antieryat4m, load who
trembled at the word itagmehmemt, sa;
Aries at tho Radical TiOW Of that pm
tlim, ',sod sheutlei u Lind u any for the
ionatue.._ We marvel not so much at
the Elmo la option thee bays ender-
Wone as ate:the lon thbe or matted in
deft
,journej - termer* - a - oelitethis
which we . the riettely,twe years
ilsemedisteet to the most careless obl
ferret • The President bad no mut to
nut eta maks Miser known' to the
profile sad his last eat wia no more
tlry impeachment _Qum. seasforgoer
Mx: •itiooze. to the Hodes .of attar.
dealt baps. which throlbly
teittiods to of
-Sue tpoorles ,ozsda at
thetbeithoilzi oftt4 hats ,wsz totooldog
Ilosceratio: dd. to. the • Oootodttaqt.
'no protidzdi were Mir. kept, Inas.
ions id 06_ donzottioot&Moiled
teiohdoe relie4 is the
Booth sad hold Wilt sympattdortifs the
Itottli 7 ttuz Wands of lojalty.
Ir.?:Vithoddtazed ipdziog °Nit mums
eduads prettiiaoasb lo .1 1 epoch, but Sa
win that - tto. maisoo. Um already
- itolsent h titer awri lrfaillealicia, and at
*liquid" ire eldoioilag An' the 4ixac6;
Mont* thitlioomoon easy.
Tat .lesaprmisoe clean& of misty
will be 'tutted to.lesoethat Gen. Grant
lastblieted to she use Of eo latoukatiag
beverage*, and -he ever' j' seise of the
ward s abstinent,. mat,. TMe
rtaterigat be emir or rellable euthaiity,
tonsil %U° malicioFs 'Ahlebood atuted tor
his mattes, that he was an habitual
&max&
Tit De si*atiq Itatiolalththrentloa
will , newt la the city of New • York,
li4th.- 7 -Pfea the eeevlextee of the
alto te:thipeentend prepthetthee
it Peodicith4l Would be
theme ourbosa.
PTITSBURGH WEEKLY GAZETTE : SATURDA Y . FEBRUARY 29, 1868
RECIIGIOI7S MIZaMGENCE.
The Ashmase,.'Oongregatinieill papar,
in an eilGoriii snlitledi "Reform of the
Theatre," usaines that'll's drama Waal
essentially wrong, u to the poetical
vio - Pcfron - i cielfas - Weronyvvvistoragti.
the stage. Nor is actiwirlliereuty
_NFU. rude r
_t 4 tTEa_iii
-a
certain extent an War, throwing bim.
self intrithe 'chaise - erlieUrteteran
us are before Wm, and by modulation
of tone 'Mantled expresitienirt feature,
end' often also virtue, diking the
reading, life-like. The same -maybe .
Uld'etf a good • utary•teller: 'll.' rogues
!'drama witnessed does -not; necessarily I
involve wrong any . more than s drums I
read. lecontenda that' none of - these
things alone L the theitriOsor is it all
thitn' pi together, The theatre. is
an established inatitutibn,, i and, we speak
of "the theatre" Put is we speak of
"Us •iths.' Chitich," . "the.
State" These until:tulle:ire liberal,
and a step 'beyond the vlel of strictly •
evangelical Christiana, who
. 4hink 'that
the beople of God should -- not awnings
"leasvappearsoce of 1944" and any
defence of the siemeni9 Which Minetitnte
"the theatre" is in encinrigetnent to
evil doing. It, however, assigns miring
arguments against thisinetitntion. The
ord ' represents i perrainelftPlay•
hones for nightly' 'exhibitions, profes
sional male and 'ferule ; actors, • and a
variety of tragic . and 'wade Plays
mita to all degrees, 'of intelligence and
taste . Because the 'Maitre almost' la
rk:lady; 'carriei with It by 0011:1121 . 011u.
sedation, late het* piatoptble piety,
frirobty and dress, profane language,
indelicate costumes and alltuddiui, actors
actresses of ' ;Mee -
inh' audiences' that, even 'the
70.eilchinictgo„ u , 911:49 (some}'
elitichen have said to - tfielr memberi.
"The theatre 11 rio • plate in which tho
disc:tide of chug should he seen."
Again, the members of worldly and god
lcu hOnseholds and the Jamaica of
drinking saloons, gambitrig hells and
brothels, end themselves at home
the theatre," . . and ire nonstant
pamons, therefotecantenas that the
tips= Is one thing, and the thestreqpite
=Other. It thinks - that a torn . moral ,
eittextididrig Yet histruc6e theatre could
cot be supported. dimuseseerna which
ittwids* . I vast outlay Must • 'appeal for
aupport to the multitude, sod must 'cater
to the popular . , taste: The iesult Is the
wire downward giade from Hamlet to
the Mich CiOok: The only hoPe . it
Wait bp , which the theatre, might be
elented,would be the cadmium% Of
cinobj a find sudicieut to payexpensei,
Mid am' place nuder rigid mica:
buice all . playa •
• . •
The tnsl of Bete 13- 7,1 Tyng, J ardor,
tar preaching in a j Methodiat Episcopal
Church he New Jetwe7, 'gill resumed on
the /Oth s New Tort city. The final
demainn will.not be reached for some
days We, howejer,.aLnde to the use
to glee the argument of the cenuel for
the . Ciirrelt, and for the defendant, which
will &ITO . oar Madera' an idea of UM'
palate at biome. klz..lngan ' - Ma behalf
of the Churah, arataaded that Mr. Tyng
had atolated the Mimi of the Church,
Ant la preaching anywhere 'within the
corporate limits -of New Brunswick
win* the prawn of tlai Eptscopal rec
tors, and. woad, is conducting the an
t= without conforming in all respects
to theritnal of tha Prayer Book. Mr.
Parker, on behalf of defeadant argued,
that the offense consisted In, simplj
.proaching the Gospel Ina
,Methodist
Church, where moms of hie pa riahoners
were bunporarily attending service. He
Sexed that the question wu whether in
preaching he had . violated a canon of
Ma Church. He showed by historic ref
erences that the estabbsidng
the coma wee to pnruniielarious rival
ries between the rectors of neighboring
parishes, and not to preclude the holding
of onasional Denims by clergymen
from fibroid: The elder Dr. Tyng in
his testimony armed that ''proteds of
redden ministers of the Church an so
entirely ertra-canonical that he bad
cent heard of them prevailing among
regular and wellmstructed mintsume.^.^
A protracted =sang of nausea]
in
terestban prevailed dam Hew. Tear's
night, stßirepeon asapel.lL E. Church,
in Duquesne Imeough,antil within some
dm dace, during width time one hund
red and six persons have professed con
version. Tee meeting has been dlacon.
tinned became the health of the pastor,
derv. -David Her, gave way under the
heavy labor, and for the want of
torrid kip. This minister is a may sec
cued one in such meetings, and Mu
long resided he sids city and immediate
According to a correspondent of the
Natukrist Baptist, Connecticut, is con
sidered "bud soil" for Rage4l4l, but
there are • noble band of pious,
aalight
e>sae;.lard-working ministers in that
State, who are nuking steady sad rea• .
pectable progress.
The Joint Connstirfire appointed by the
two Presbyterian General Ametublies of
ism &tßt: Loafs, NI, on the 'subject of
re-union of the Old zed New Basal
branches of the Presbyterian Church,'
will meet at the Rooms of the Presbyte
risa Baird of Pahlkition,PhlUdelphia,.
on Member Parch 4th ant.
,Bishop Benjamin B. Sank of Ken
tucky, now presiding bishop of the
Episcopal Chinch in the United Elated,
on pacts/1y rescuing the documents and.
accepting the ditties . ntlttired by bla
seniority, stated that. he was ymobably
the last "one who would on that ground
become presiding blahop. Bishop Smith
is slow Churchman.
,The Yecii llea•t Amos'.
of New York city, , tibw numbers two
thousand members. 'ho hundred and
.thirty thousand dollars hate bees sub,
scribed towards erecting anew'building
for lie headquarters.
Dr; Whittle, lien the indepoutsu
las: netelested u Bishop of the Mates
of. Virginia by jusi one more *Use bus
m•jetity of the clergy in the. Council of
Munk, elected by just one mem' *sus
s bare majority of the lay TOM of Yir
gligs,nonfamed by a majority of just
one of the ittandng Committal, and hie
consecration ban just been consented to
by tie' hunt msjority to the 'None of
alshopa, ihsto of whom ear that If . they
had known at the tiIIIIN what they now
know, would hinenjected him ,
'• pus Coagregstiaut church at Way
zata* Ohio, has bom visited 'with an
interesting and powerful mini As
many as ilfly or tiny hate OM forward
tor "Yen The work ls nag . said to
be sgreadirignnelghboring churches. .
The Chicage ' ilk's/Juni Union has
settled the question of admitting those
who profess the flweadenbotglen
,by Mktpting articla of It the ap.
pliant can subscribe to theme necks he
Is idsatod; if he aunot, lie ;excludes
Lea week a Coaveatlon of the Zola
coiled CluothesNassictotsetts was
held Irritators. . Dumber of lidereiV
lag sulleets wara dimmed, promhteat,
sad one excltlia tha tinned dlseassicto,
was ccuratraiag the employstwat of
'essagellsta by the elittreh. ''Moat of the
spWkera appeared to be afraid' that
ersageltwa -would create excitement,
Nr.' Morgan, of Ohelset,'howeyer,
upraised hls belle Mit if the Weslerr
hid Dot lose empowered by the Cher&
to urge as essagelhat, 'the Ifethodlat
aelitualeadost would =Ter hose wasted,
&edam thought that the woadedul prop
patty of that denomination was dm to
the Libros of evaagellsts:. -
At the centennial celebration of the
North Mara!, la Ntrlttaunort,
the &viler fact-was stated to the his.
Wit of tltsi ClturchOind abstaes of its
pastimaread on tan Occasion, that at one
time dating the nevolatkon the salary of
the peitot weiralsed to atofioo, and jet
tbe recant rieclareatisi In. consequence,
edge depreciation of the crarrery be
was on the rage of narration.
miiirSirriii s nil TIES
Gen. ' Moortilad bteringdeelincdto serre...
At *KO the ',`"Thei..tiehirim
ter' rnigent th&Repallicansef Rae ben,
greasionol District Thomas Howard,
his
tmccesertr; and tugivo sumo mavens why
TtotitattlitritieilW.4l.. - 46. ?.13 - thee
9nitplas . c6.l4 Liganklitied to talthe..gltum
with honer to himself and credit to hip
constituents. -In" the second place ho la
one ratheieldgstinembern .
limn . party, in this county, and Jaded
In t. tint - --organizstlon, and hut
been from. the start ene of the meet effec
tive . sapportars.
h f true, straight for
ward 'Republican Principles ; "and he Is
well known, not only - trithisominty, but
throughout the Smelts one ohm, ablest
public speakers. When from year. to
• yearlho caudldates of pur.,party have
-hem nsorlosted. the . people. have called
-open gamin support and &lend them,
and. aid lig the triumph of Republican
ptincfpli,
hie alwayscliaterfully'res.
„fi a : d l 4 l. l n t atrUtilti7 herev im called.
powd
upon him by his party, awl others here
toftrre boa* enjoyed the rewards: - '..
la it not reasonable, mid lrecontang the
'enagruiralcally ;of -otir 'tarty,' ..144 Mr.
Howard; who hail no faithfully earned,
now to pay him the compliment of the
coormseeromil nomination?
A Prwhientialelectlon - is now just up
on no, and who have we more capable of
being Our standard bearer in this county
and defending our principles against all
comers. than. Mr. Howard?. Shall we
nominates cindidate and thin be com
pellod to cell feria Marshall.' Howard,
Kirkpatrick and other. to defend him
from tits acid tiesoulta of the
eneniYT 'We want n Maks who can • de
bate and defend our volitinul princlnles
en the romp or In Congress, and If we
can - ger amen whet also combines the
Mberqnalltimulous of integrity, sobriety,
industry, and gememicompetency for the
place, why should'uoi our party avail it
self of theservleee of such? t •
Mr. Howard has been a resident of
Pittsburgh. for the last Mid" years, and
during that lime has been actively end
sucempaolly engaged' , in an •bancrable
profeasion. 110 is ton able lawyer
and conversant not wily with the cur
rata polltichl queatens,"bta -also with
• the fundamental principles on Which out
government rests, will be conceded by
rhos. ancinaluted -with him. That be is
in all rwpeets folly competent no ono
will deny. His integrity is unquestioned
and the friends of temperance will newer
have occasion to blush • for want of so
briety. we know that b is thoroughly
convereent with tbegritat manufacturing
and mining interests of our ou.omunity,
and. no man will go farther In National.
loch's/Ann to. give. aueguate protection
to those interests—
Tie hudneas 'men of ?Mirror:l2;lmi
the people generally of this • Congres
sional District, caw safely met upon the
ability, Integrity out industry at Mr.
Howard to representlhem in Cotigress.
ligrentacas.
helesee and the Usefat AVM
(r rem the estate. et thae.y
—Some Preoch' chemists have dlscos ,
entre way., of itterraatng the Ilghtiog
flamer aural[ eyttoderof maguitste.
holier of gas st ty.fold, wiz., by putting tu
This erfeete a say' eg of hyo.atzt ha of the
tba year ISCia. more than° ton
million tool of iron area were submitted
to - the Baton of tire in - six hundred and
thirteen blast furnaces, and from them
we obtained about four million mid a
half tons of pig iron.
--limed° found In Idinneeota bite been
tasted by the Government geologists at
Wadtingten, .and pronouutied to be
equal, if not superior. to any In the
trotted States, and fail, equal to Runt=
granite, known u the best building
material In Europe.
—tileatenant Colonel Weyde, a Russian
bldeer, boa invaded an apparatus for
throwing light on objects under water.
It la net espeuive. ,A. very important
nee et this invention is, that •it enables
the officers of a altip-of-vrar to dtscover
any submarine mines or terpedoes flunk
under. It by the enemy.
—At Neufchatel, in Switzerland, Is an
observsdary organized on an extensive
scale, and Drovided.with the vary flueet
Instruments. lipides purely aolentitlo
moults, it renders ilairlattg6 Kervl.l to
chronometer makers by enabling them
to produce .warclars which , are evert - day
becoming more perfect.
—AD artier= boring In, the Vicinity
of Geneva to a depth of 734 fact, and an
elm - talon of 1,6443 feet r boi, the NS level,
showed the incream to heat at the tete of
ene degree Fohrenho t for every 55 Iwo,
while another at Meudoff, In Lorca,
been, which penetrated to a depth et
2.391 feet, gave a result of one degree
Fahrenheit to every 57 feet.
nianufarturo of aringa for mu
sical instruments has been carried on
from time Immarnarlalwane of the
small sit:ages in the Abrorsi,:aad at the
prevent time the !impolite* pry:Meese
maintain their superiority in 1./coproduc
tion of that article The strings MUM.
factored' in. Italy are noted for their
Stryogib, tea ..pommy, tuWisooy, and
clearness nt tons - .
—A. proem for the extract ion of Lodi.
go from rage dyed with that aubettarkee
boo taLely copritred. The rage are tirst
aiturated withawralcoolutlon of mantle
cede, then platsd in a holler with a dou
ble bottom, and exposed !eremite time ut,
etwins at forty-ttve pectoda pressure.
The Indigo to toe rage is reduced, and
may be washed out. It may afterward
toe precipitated ft >m the soda aolutlon
and rocesered Ina state equal to the beet
commercial• sort,
—lmola a product f the Eastinales, and
exudes from es eralspecles onsets upon
tneir betels punctured by an tusks. In
the resinous sabotance which flows sat
this insect forms cells forth* reception of
its eggs. The color of the resinene mat.
tar la due to the luxe. The parent, niter
laying her eggs. becomss n sort, of sw at
tlsaue, containing a quantity of hematitei
rod liquid. As the yenag feed upon this
they become of the same hue, elm tinge
their cells more or Iwo with aro mute
color. This crimson color I. partly solu
ble in water, and has hewn eztonalcoly
used as a dye. Th• crimeons of Grose*
and PIMP nod the almost imperishable
rods of the Brussels and Flenanth school
of artists, wereo boned from this swore,.
,The natives use a mixture of lac ' Mom,
and tam rind water as a crimson dye for
Mk or cotton cloths.
aveu«,.~r~ r.isw.
.
The art of painting probably entrains
led In Apelles. the Titian nt Ens age, who
united the. Meta adoring :and sensual
charms of the lonhto with the acontlec
severity of the 81mina schooL lie
snot contemporsneoue with Alexander,
andante alone allowed to paint the
ple-
Lure at rheum& cong.ierar. lie was a
native of Ephesus, studied under Pam-
Phtlius of Amphipolls, and when be had
waned reputation he went terellovon and
took lessons from Melsethies. no spent
the beat part of hie II& at the -Court of
Phillip and Alexander, and painted
many portraits of these great men and
of their generals. No excelled In tar
traits, and labored so aseldootudy to per
fect himself in drawing. that. be never
spent a day without practising. -Ho made
great Improvement in the , mechanical
port of his and- also -.ores the drat
who covered his picture with a thin var
nish, both to preserve it and bring out
the colors lie Invented ivory black.
dleglngulabbig excellence , was
grace,"that . artless. balance of me.
bon Lind repose, springing from
character, founded on propriety, wideb
neither • falls short of the demands nor
overleaps the modesty of nature." His
great contemporaries may hove equalled
him In perspectisqulricenrsey, end tintrb;
but, be •added a,grasiot conception and
refinement of taste which placed conception
by the general cannon of ancient au
thors, nt.the heed of ell the painters of
the world. Ilia . greatest work was bin
Ventre - Attadyomene, or Venus rising
out of the des, In' •whlar female great
*mope:verified. The, drops of
water from her heir formed a trfulaparent
veld over her form. .It test one hundred
Wentz, madman painted for Lbe Temple
of X.sculaplus at Cc's, , and afterwards
placed by Augustus in the tempts which
he dedicated to Julius Caviar. The lower
pa ri of it becoming intend, noon. could
bp found to repair it. Nor was . there an
artist who - coutd complete an unfiulehed
picture -which ho left:. He was a man
who courted crithdon, and who was en
vious& the time of rivals. He wan o
great admirer and friend of Protogenes
of Rhodes, who was hie, equal In llnlsh,
but.whe neverknew, las
.Apelics did,
when to clew correctlng.—Dr. Lord',
Old•Rommt
=
.
I The „Yale . Courant earn. "We have
bad tho pleasure of mediae a letter from
a young , Ninsrlean in broaden,.. Ger
many, received- by one of the senior
clam. It oentaira the following refer
once to Cleveland, of 1867, which is quite
Interesting: ...Jiff friend.. M., Y, and
cze ir ehgi..4o last forrowly a lwathoQ
man at Yale, and a -very powerful fat. -
low—were at a restaurant on Saturday
night, M., whets not yet quite uti id
German ouidoms,.-came in and • rem
, insured playing billiards with his hat on.
Te Proftssor of French In the Poiytpch
nie-Instltute inade acme remarits on the
Subject to the Professor of English In the
came histitutlon. The Englishman de.
fended hi., and, sta the dispute stow het,
thought Litman Insulted, end slapped
the Frenchman in the face: Immediate ,
ly all the. Germans in the zoom, tan of
them, pitched on the NngthiliProfiewer,
mid began Pounding him and abating
him out ef the room. .Cleveland and the
other two t=ta to the rescue, In order to
see teleplay and to prevent the English.
man emus being put out of the room.
The•Germmurhave nut the drat idea of
boxing; They ratty their kande over
their heads and strike downward. The
consequent» wee that tba, three kimati
cane whipped the ten Thatehmon, and
stopped the quarrel. Nobody wee
hurt much, but the Eatillahnian told hie
clan the next day • that be bad s had
headache, end wapiti not be able to sive
a very long lesson." • .
.
mare at the r Treasurer of Loan
county, 'Diem,. Wu robbed by burglar.
on the alata, or the 7th Inst. of $17,000.
The burglars names are IL C. atone and
T. W. /Lorton ' for whose apprehenslon
one thousand dollars reward Is offered,
and one thousand dollars for the recov
ery of the money.
FARIS, GARDEN AND HoUSEHOLD,
-:,lappttepogar Maple TAMIMI
2 Tears ago, when the country was
new, it" was no object to protect the
maple, fur the!foresta were bread, and
sugar trees were growiegl thickly through
a. greet portion of thim. They , fell
.
with other trees, until tee woodman's
ate convertelliacres of forests into tills-
We fields, leaving in too many cases but
a small nook of vroodiand upon the farm.
Foie few years' past it has been noticed
that maple trees are dying but faster than
others. - Where-but a short lime 'ago
thousands wore need for anger making,
but hundredeatand to-day. The cruse
of this can be attttbuted to nothing but
the severe mode practiced In tapping;
The old plan of boxing witn an , axe
was abandoned, and one supposed - to be
less injurious ndopted; but since tapping
with the bit hat been erne:deed, maple
trees-have tiled faster than over before.
'When an inciiion is Made into the sap
wood mily, itjwill heal up, but when
made deeper itnever Will, end all the
adjacent parts wi'l did, sad often decay.
Now, in proof of this ' let any farmer
examine two insoles that have been tap
' Tied for a dozen or morn years—one with
the bit and the oth..r with an axe or
gouge—the ems by thp latter not made
beyond the sop flowing 'wood. The
inner wood of, the former and much of
the terrace Will be fodod dead, while the
!it has ci t efficient other, where efficient time for
healing, will - be found to have formed a
perfect gnarlyso lough and sound that it
will be next to impos ible to split a log
of it, stove-wood lengt . A.n.)ther proof
of this may be made by noting the differ
ence in the deciease of maples in differ
ent sugar orchards where the two modes
have been practiced.
Trees tappid receiving the least injury
are most profitable, for the reason that
the greater portion of sap flaw' from the
wood near the bark. When a tree Is
tapped with a hit, the polio stops' up the
beat dewing grains. When an incision
Is made with a large auger or gouge,
more grates ere opened, add of course a
greater !loyal of sap obudeed. It is a
fact, however, that when trees are tap
ped in this way, tha,wind dries up the
wood sooner than when a bit is used,
but this is eselly prevented by frequent
freshing over. Many farmers have,
within a few years pas:, need sheet Iron
'piles and a large auger, and have found
them profitable and less injurious to the
tree then any other kind.
The spouns are made by Cutting sheet-
Iron stripe terojnelicawide end ten or
twelve inches Tong, bent hollow, and one
end ground sharp. An auger emend
onetourth inches In size Is used for tap
ping, the linie not being bored over
three eights , of an inch deep, and the
spite delved into . the bare beneath the
cut with a fquare•faced mallet. When
fresbing over, an anger is used' each
time oneeighth of an inch larger than
the one before it, and the incision made
but a aliaving deeper. The spite will
nut have to he removed to do tide.
If a faimer has not on hand tin, differ
ent used suffers, and doee not wish to be
to the expense of purchasing them, it
two inch gouge may be made to answer
every purpose. ,
It should be ground
thin and very sharp, and the cut merle
with it 'theist two inches hank and not
over one-hilf an inch deep. The gouge
may be taken along when gathering sap,
and an tren requiring it freshed in halt
a minute's time by taking ofil a thin
shaving., are other advantages in
this mode of tapping, snide from the
preservation of the trees; mere sugar
can be made, for a greater lion , of asp
can be obtained, and colon sustained by
leakage, as ;Ironed the common wood
spite.---Ohio /former.
It is cruithimary among taxmen, after
haying,. to; , mow the alders and other
brush in their pastures and other fields,
and we believe that most are misled
that alders . cannot thus be destroyed,
and that gribbing up, or the use of the
plow, are the only sure remedies. It
has been laitlthat it olden are cut clean
and close in'. the month of November,
their roots will generally die; we see in
clined to believe holm some facts in our
own experience, that. this is true where
they grow ;thick and consequently are
'not en deep . rooted—on
. accoant of the
ground undar'thein being mulched with
their leaves and shaded. We Dave cut
alders nearly annually, 'on the same
ground, fuf.janne thirty years, with lit
tle success in destroying them. . Instead
of the scythe, we haveadopted he prac
tice, when there is a dry time in the
spring. before the gross starts, where .
the Drusll.l)s very thick, of burning.
them. If the wind la strong sad fa the
right directioe, and the leaves and rub-
Nab dry they may be swept off clean
with great dispatch.. It is thorough
and rapid,l and the burning mates
emus= Work ler the bole, who kindle
op or scatter the fire as needed, Ur order
to mate ere.s work and carry a luge
sweep before the wind.
For severalyears in some of our low
lauds what the alder, are very thick
and large, we have been in the habit of
cutting throe for fire weed, from the mid
dle of October until the second week in
Devember,, , tind whenever we hare done
thie late, and cut them clue, we have
observed that the roots have generally
died., Thie l is the only way and time, in
our experience,' in which alders • fiave
beseldestroyed or materially crippled by
cuttleg. .1.
Around cultivated dells and in mead.
swain brush should bo cut close anent.
ally. Where this is done the labor of
keeping the ; breath crippled to but little
trouble. It' improve* very much the
appearance of the dolds and relieves
them from the injurious recto of rank
tall brush. Mowers are shy about put
deg their gums scythes into the bush.
Therefemore always haves good sharp
brush Beythe tot the purpose of trim
ming out the young. brush beside the
fences, at the tame we cut the grass. If
not done then, this important matter is
often forgotten or neglected.—Mains
Farmer. 1-
Rattiest: Mims tor
These doors are far superior to the
old fashioned -doors, which revolve on
hinges. Tiny are opeled and closed by
means of a rail and several small Iron
tracks *mutely attached to the top, and
ere so constructed as not only to clime
the door efNmeally against t h e ingreu
of rein, seem sod cold air, but to the
very durable and in every respect, all
cleat Large doors are formed by one
inch matched boards, placed perpen
dicularly. and chimed by match straps of
the saute Ina diagonal direction, or from
corner to corner on both sides. These
- strips aro so', put on as to represent the
aheatleg often seen on fine hotients, be
ing about six inches in width, and cov
ering the entire steams It will be seen
at once that three thickness of matched
boards, securely nailed and thoroughly
painted, besides being so hang
as to ?;obviate effectually all
possibility of " nagging, Se • in the
case with &ors of ordinary construction
and workmanship when Mal in 'the
usual way, must secure an , article of
groat etnoteOpy, mut of an almost indes
tructible charaCter. The labor of open
ing and closing these doors may be per
formed by the merest boy, audits windy
weather they are not slamming and en
dangering not only their own fastening@
and !Lames; but the lives, also, of all
by whom they are approached. Theold
Sudden of placing the trucks at the bot
tom is anything but desirable, as the
former is liable to become clogge d by
snow end ice; but when it Is placed at
the top, no obstruction can possibly In
tervene from this source; the deo:glides
easily along the rail, and never requires
to be formal' open by , 0111131 strength.
Small door i r tlemps, sheds, out-bones'
and other Labutidliitthere eOttinnic
led in a similar way.- They aro much
cheaper than panel doors, to which they
are preferable for all purposes where
strength and ararequired.-4
Almeria Ginveasitnen TeLgraph:
The lair:bottom* et Aillieultais.
What must be the 'feelings of hat pi,
nees and contentment of the man who.
br skillful turning to ;sooner account his
intimate knowledge of the peculiarities
of his land, his succeeded without im
creased application of labor or capital,'
in gaining from it a permanent increase
of predncer ?For such a result is not
only a persomil advantage to himself, but
a most Imporftnt benefit conferred upon
all manMitd: now"paltry and Wig
alticant, do elk our discoveries and in
'tentless appear, compared to what Is in
the power- of the agriculturist to
All our advance in aria and sciences
arnof no avail in increasing the condi.
don of human existence; and though a
small fraction: of society may, try their
means, begainers in intellectual coley.
went, the lead of misery weighing upon
the greed; mass of people remains the
lame. A hungry man sail not for
preaching, and a child that is to learn
anything • et , School most not be sent
there with an maptyntemsch. - ...1 -
Every. step' In advances, lworever,
made by agriculture, t serves to alleviate
the sufferings 'and troubles of mankind,
snit° make the human mind scurceptitie
and capable Of appreciating the goal
aixd the beautilkl teat art and science
present to us: Improvements in sari
culture constitute the only solid founds.
don for further progress In all other
branches of knowledge—Liddy.
I
A subtcribir would like to know
thrones au) Maine Fanner If horse m 4
mire, where straw is need far bedding,
would be a goottainicir for young apple• !
treee..: _ ;
Notir—Tbauftaterial spoken of above
Will make - 1111 excellent mulch, and we
wish it might be more generally used for
the putties° than 'it is. For newly set
tress-a-mulch of some sort, either the
above. - straw, chip dirt or forest leaves,
should invariably. be reed, as it will
more than pay the expense twice over
lb thiibiliefit It will be to the tree. d.
mulch of some land not only serves as
an excellent protection against the ill
effects of midsuitnner droughts, which
often prove of—great Injury to' newly
planted treee, bat it is also s good substi
tute for mellow culture in Situations un
favorable for fruit trees, or in places
where good cultivation cannot be se
cured. •
L.
The following table of pounds of va
rious articles to make a basbel, may be
of Interest to some of oar readers:
Wheat--. 65 pounds to the brothel; corn
shelled, 56 pounds; corn on the cob, 70
pounds; rya, 56 pounds; oats, 22 pounds;
barley, 46 pounds; blckwheat, 52
pounds; Irish potatoe4oo pounds; on
ions, 513 pounds; beans, 60 pounds; bran,
20 pounds. ' clover, seed, 70 pounds; tim
othy seed, 42 pounds; hemp seed, 45
pounds; bluegrass seed, 14 pounds; dried
peaches, 83 pounds; flax seed, 58 pound r;
castor beans, 46 pounds; dried apples, 24
pounds; coal, 65 pounds.
Evergr.as.
Dwarf evergreens, planted in tubs or
boxes, wheie, dining the - past summer,
verbenas, geraniums, &c., have fre,,ely
bloomed, help to • give a cheerful and
pleasing character to a portion of the
garden or lawn that otherwise would
present a barren and unsightly feature.
The evergreeno, if not wanted in spring
to plant oat elsewhere, may be kept in
the tubs in the back yard, or mused in
and around and among groups or stately
trots.. • '
Or ttu. ifittstnirsti w.astte
"/....%.3r NIGHT."
`Z ' T J. w. r, ,
Last n.ght lest steno and drank,
Perhaps, a plat-ot brand V,
I won Into a elnadner sank
And dreamed that I. was Andy.
And that the devil name In gut.
• Or honorealsh and splendor—
Tnlngs wh i c h a man should not despl.o.
Nor shcruld the softer gender.
for what are we to this Inert file
. . .
Without a name or cation I
'Only fit for sect • strafe
As payed this ..TeAce nation..
He these you evil possess.
If you but 110 ray orders. 1
Too shall be libag. yon shall distress
Your fore within these borders,
Awl you will end aids, great and email,
To act while you are thinking •
But you he sure ont-do them all •
ty et
fcti ' lltinlt 6 d
art. y otr mind groat hattt
While they but knee
their
level ;
The mind that even to Wart his might
•As once It be te the davit"
I nroteleed thee and there to do—
111 melba of "Thin." or Moorhead—
Whet War he nuked, swear block and blue
-Ageless each hinleg
H. tett me then, W ..1 soon !turned
t
Out.doore my foecto standing,
And Dade them go where sulpbur burned,
"Or .y Other landing,"
But am there was who ant demur .
Another broke hie prontee,
In emit, of them I old transfer
Tho keen to Tbemse.
Bat Jost abbot the time I had
All things ad l'ennlit !Me them,
A Inter of "Ueda" lead byThad."
Mak tttl mY gene eptke Mem.
I them heyo to learlmy toes •
Would soon trepeach fay doing,
go drank erste to drown usT
Before .0 SUM] renewing.
And quickly ran my fate to tett
TO Nick, but to proyoke me ,
Ha leashed, and hid me go to--.3we1l
With him, WIN. Peggy, woke m.
Mb...41r to drink you are Inclined,
Or wleh far /met a bright nubble
I would advise you cell to mind
Poor Andy, and Me trouble. •
rTIr!) .T
From a .work reoently published In
England, the annexed extract on the
buoyancy of the waters and the appear
once of the Dead Sea is taken: Though
In breadth not exceeding. ten miles,, the
Dead Sr. seems Istundleas to the eye
when looking from the north to the
south, and the murmur of the waves as
they break , on the hint-etrewu shores.
Mother with the lines of drill-wood and
fregmeute of bitumen on the beach, give
to its waters a resemblance of the ocean.
Curious to experieure the sithatioth of
swimming in ao curlews a ma, I pat the
teeth to refloat, tie:cones.. of the extreme
buoyancy fort in it, sod I was quickly
convinced that there was no exaggera
tion in whet I Lad had heard. I found
tbe water almost tepid, and so strong
that the chief dfilloulty was to keep
sufficiently eubmorgegh. the feat darting
up in the stoat every vigorous stroke.
When Boating. half the body rose above
the surface, ' and, with a ,pillow, one
might bare slept upon the water. After
a time the xtreogehetts of the sensation in
time measure disappeared, and on
spwroachiag the chore -I caredemly
dropped my feet to walk out—when rot
as If a bladder had been attached to each
heel, they flew upwards. The simply!'
to recover :opted sent my head doers;
the bitter and today stuff,' front 'which
I hitherto guarded my bead, now rushed
tam my mouth, eyekears and new. and
for ono horrible moment the only doubt
had was whether I was to be drowned
or poisoned. Coming to the surface,
however, I swam to laud, making no
further attempt to walk on dead water,
which, lam inclined to believe, is armpit
mpcsalble.
I
Position of the English-Language.
If the English is not entitled to all the
exaggerated encominmaarkicharesocue
timerrheaped upon It. if It has no right
to be met at the head of all languages,
liens: or extinct, it is at leant worthy of
all our torn and admiration, and will
not be found unequal to anything which
the future &ball 'require ,of it—even
should ilrouttnamuns make it the lead
tog tongue of civilized imunsuity. For
what it is to become.every Individual
who employs It share in the responsi
bility. The character of n. language la
not determined by the-rules of gram
marians and lexicographer., but by the
usage of the community, by the voice
and opinion Ofeptakers end bearers; and
this works moat naturally and effective-
Iv when it works moat unconsciously.
4:tear and manly thought, and direct and
Itheritated onpresation, every .writer and
speaker can aim at; nod, by so doing, can
peribrm Ms part in the perfecting of hie
mother-tongua.—lineny' a , Language,
andi/ce Study of Languages.
Ifmr Gel-Moarrens.—Withln tour or
flee yearn, M. Houma. has excited the
attention of the French Academy con
siderably by an account of an enormous
cephalopod• men by .Lieut. fleapit,
about forty inagum north of Tara-sire.
It le weld Whitecap:reared thlrt7 or forty
feet in length, having a soh, gelatinous
body, like an immense Mao, about two
yards wide fa the widest part, and our
rouuded by eery strong arms or tentacim
After being abet at and harpooned, .a
rope was pawned round the' body of the
creature, but the rope out the flesh, and
only the posterior part of the body was
captured, Llaut. - Bouyer'wan afraid to
let t h e nailer. pursue the remainder of
the monster In the best lest Its long
ventricles, armed with .reekent, might
enable It to ;swamp them all. It is said
that the ilshermenof the Canary Islands
often meetiettli similar creature., about
two yards long. - M. Milne Edirards
speaks of numerous instarthet of mon
ster cephalopods belocrsem, all not of
the earn. epecles, and he thinks there are
many kinds of teem In the depths of the
sea, which fei exceedth bulkanT known
invertebrate " ' .
Pirrra ant Gasastart Masstausa—A.
nowly-discoveredlater of rear tbeGrea
la notegolngthe roundortheßnalritdonst
nate. In thievery chariot gristle epistle
Peter informs Otto of his °mailers that
ho hu heard that Idly the courtier's,
brothereriebeskt morry iforeign nutmeat,
end that_ be perfectly understands his
towns for making such 4 choice, the
inhabitants of Russia being less civilized
and lees polite than thou of other coun
tries. Ho has hurl that the courtier has
forbidden hli brother to contract the
meditated radon; but his Majesty} not
only permits lk be positively onlere
He oven goes a atop further, and com
mands the courtier, :whose' faitilly'hure
such a taste for forign alliances, as soon
as he has married his brother to the
foreign lady to marry, his slater to ti
foreign gentleman. • -
Tux Rrossuso-Pwormr--A portion of
the Jearneymen tellers of Philadelphia
are 04 a strike upon a , disputo about
wages with some of their employers.
The Lewiston Ammo? says, the Maine
lumberman this whiter are getting out
large numbers . or lo gs , Thu Rhode
Island Locomotive Werke,. located at
Providence,, hays recently remised
orders fur twenty-four locomottww,
niusleett having: been ordered' for the
Union Pactlio Railroad, smiths remain
der for WOMISICI made. The gloss busi
ness on Rape Os& la drill. There has
beets a strike at the Cope Cod ..works on
account of set tasks for theworkmen,
but some of them hare'rettirned to work.
The BoWen and Sandwich Combany hes*
dicharged ISOMe lamds, and reduced the
wages el others 13 per cent.
EVIIIII3II Dace WOO a YOURO LADS.
—Three Warta of pink, crape eel onto
very email plate, the:border of each
Oda eta to small *canape armoring to
the riddle of the plaits. Body
: formed
of throe plaited bands, the upperone to
ing small icallope round the top. A
scarf of pink satin round the waist, and
fatesedtogether half wap down the aide
of the skirt by a pink daisy, a smaller
one.beingit the waist at thee.
other aid
:--Commtsalcnier Willie a," of the Gener
al Land. Office; haw luttlast Interview
with a prominent officer of the,Cansdian
Government, who holds a WO orrice from
the crown In relation to the publio
lands Tar ante in Kansan' Thla.gentle
man Mated that, eas Ids moodou to .
resign bin office and lend bin soisnarnee
to orgarderia colony of Canadians, with •
view. to settling its the southern pus of
—Madison , county; lowa. bait - °Ter
00,01:* &map, and the woolen zontat
Lanett has manntaetnnal 40,000 pounds
of weel produced by them. -
War Secretary
President Deposes Stanton.
Gen. L. Thomas Appointed
in His Stead.
Stanton Will Not Surrender.
AWordy Altercation
Grant tppcarisoatheScene
Gen. Thomas Finally Retires.
Interview with the r.re.4lclent
ity T6le.staptt to tt c.l'lltstot;h
WAStrittOT&N, Feb. :Net, 1563
THE iiik:CP.ETSET 4L - E.ITLON.
The President to-day /lent an Execu
tive Mcsasgo to tho Sooate, stating that on
the tweltlivor August, last, under author
ity vested In him by tho Constittitlon of
the United States, he suspended Eau-In
Stanton Seorotory orWar, mad
vow by the samo authority, ho bad 11-
inOVOEI Mr.. Stantolo, and, appointed in
lola place, ad .ittATint, Adjutant Lien
oral Lordly.) Thomas. The President
encloses the communications to .I , loesrs,
Stanton and Themes.
The Speaker laid before the liouic to
day the following oirrespondence:
WAR DEPLUTIIIINT, 1
WAIRSINGTOR CITY, Feb. 21, 12 , 48.1
Sta—General Thomas has hat dotty
ared to me a copy of the enclosed order,
which you will please communicate to.
the House of Representatives. -
Your obedient servant,
EDWIN M. STANTON,
Secretary of War.
To 1100. Schuyler Colfax,. Spouker of
the. Rouse of. Representatives.
EXECUTIVE MAXXIO.X. ll
Wasnitcoros, D. C., 1eb. , 21, 1868.
•
Sin-By ,virtue of the power and an;
thorty vested In me as President by the
Constitution and laws of the United
States, you aro hereby removed from
office as Secretary of. A ar, and your
functions an such will terminate upon
the receipt of this communication. You
will transfer to Brevet Mai. General L.
Thomas, Adjutant General of the Army,
who has this day been authorised to Oct
as Secretary of War ad interns, all re
cords, 'wake, panes and other public
property now in your c tislody a nd charge.
Respectfully yours,
•
Aso new Joussux, President.
To Hon. Edwin 3f. Stanton, -Washing
toe, D. C.
• WASHING:IIi:INi February 22, M&S.
Thu galleries of the House were dense
ly crowded to-day, and hundr4ds were
unable to gain admittance. Nearly it
not all dhe Senators were on the door, In-
clinling Mr. Wade, who was supplied
with a scat near the Hpeaker. Strict
!cation - was paid .to the reading of. the I
Impeachment report, and the Interest In
the debate continued apparently unaba- I
teal until recess. Tim galleries to-night
were again crowded, and many visitors
were here from neighboring Mile. , There
seems hn question. from wise: can ho as
certained of the views of Republicans,
that the House will pars the impeach
ment ;violation by a majority. TIM ae•
tion of several of Mem is only now in
doubt.
Much excitement was occasioned
throughout the city this morning, owing
to the arreat of General Lorenzo Thomas
on affidavit by Secretary Stanton. At
seven o'clock General Pile delivered to
Healing, Marshal of the District el'
Coluintia, the following warrant:
tisrirso Syseri or Annetcr, Dhaka of
Colombia: To Dowd d Deeding. MEL Mar
ano! for she Thririef of CotsdnUa. /WWI
FC. Chruer. Chief /noire of Ow /Suprema Court
mIM OtUrsa Cohan/As. Licroby Com
mend you to arrest Loree so Tim saas,of the
mid Dlrtritt; forthwith, and that you bare
the sell Lorenzo Thomas before ma at the
Chamber 01 the meta Boort rue Churl, In the
City of Washington, forthwith, to answer
tho charge of a high misdemeanor, la.
that en the tint day of Febraury. 150.5.
lo the District of Columbia, lie did
nnLw
tnlly accept thauppointment of the office of
fleuretery of War. ad interim, and din then
and theta onlawfrilly bold and exercise.-
and attempt to hold and Inman the said
office, contrary to the provitiong of the act
entitled en sae regulating the Leonora of
oertela 0011 ultra, punted Mara 24.1157.
Anil hereof fall not but to tanked. return.
Glyn under my head and real or the Mild
Chart thin rid day of Fehrow y, 1505.
eider Jitstled'of this Soprano Court 01 the
District or 4.7.31titab1a..
=!===l
Chief .7 nethut Carter wu in tbanntere at
the City HMI, to which piece Oen. Therm.
b(013110t under arra.
'The following is the return 01 the Mar•
ehal on the warrant '
Wesnumruot CATV,l•Gruary
within writ ammo to bend at seven o'clOck
S. k., 11.1,4 wee setced by rne on the seta
Loren. Thou.o et eight&dock', .d
I now return this ...Mend tiling him beton,
C1,16(.1.110." Carter at nine o'clock a.. ea of
to-day. Perin S. 00017.10,
U. B.llarthal.Dlemanot at Columbia.
The Solloiruag ;la ainnerit of The Hon.
h. If, - Stanton, on which the writ was Le.
coed
lb the How 'David M auler; Mk/ Area:a 01
AA Supreme Court:
Comm ledwin N. Stanton, of the City Of
Watbrogton.la the eeitt District, upon oath,'
sera that on the 11st Yebruary, A. D.,
are L74117.:11i1 . bt.dr."1/4 i iltte`l34l*:
meet of War. under and ar e to the
Comtitution and laws of the Caned State,.
teat he bed prior tosaid tint day of Feb.
teary. A. 1103 . been it nly - nominated and
Verigrd to
the t" lirrlsl4%,7.? l . '' f ' Vir of
the President of the United States, and that
his mail nomluination bad Memenbralthea
Is duo form of law tothe Sthalb of the Del
i red Stamm, and hit aid noraltuttlen had
been duly resented U. and oen firmed by and
with the advioe of the Senate, aratthe said
i ce, Stanton had dilly accepted timid
office, and iteran and suhscrthed to all the
mine required by lew upon blainduotton
IMO geld ogles; and was in the actual pre
*melon of odd sane sail performing thane- .
tie. thereof b e said gist any of February. A.
D.
be e, and be neverresuthetisaidollise
been legally ithatiseed therefrom;
one
be Claims that be does now legally hold said -
oglee and m entitled to all the rights. prim-
Imre and power thereof. And the said Ed
ina Station, an oath, further steam thet
on the City 210Xday orreltrusry,.e. p. had.
,
in the City of Washington, - aforesaid, An
drew Johnson, President .1 the United
States, =Wetted Woad an order In writing
leader his hand, with the file endoMpaee
of removin • bleu the said haste 11. Stan
ton, from th e seld - ogle. of - Secretary
of War. -end authorizing. and erapow,
ering Lorenzo Thomas
Ad
Getters]
Of tee Army of the United States, roaster
:Secretary Of War ad Overlie.. and directing
i rim s the mid Thomas, to
e mettely enter
Pent the discharge Of th iltdlml Portein-.
lag to that calm; and your amass farther
Mates thecae . mid pretenned - .order of
removal of him froutthe said omen of gee.
• rotary of Wavle wholly illegal sad void.
ranmat: stry to the exss provislone Of
ct deli pasted by t he n Congress Of the
Unitedatatim, On the 9AI day of March A.D.
1101. entit led, wan act regain/mg the tenure
of certain civil othersin and your arrant on
oath. farther Metes that too =ld_ Lorenzo .
Thomas did on said gist day or February.
A. Dalian, accept the said pretended op.
troluonent of Secretary of Wile
panterim.
end on the ear. day left with d' sot
a copy or the geld pretender order of the
President, removing you ralllant ea Secrete:
ry of. War, and appointing said 'Lorene,"
Thomas Storetary of War of interma . mnti.
dell by the mid LorensoTbomes, under hie
.
' • own hand as Secretary of-War ad interim.
and on the said :let day of February. A. D.
tenil, la the City of Washlogunt, aforesaid..
' delivered to your 'Merit the said pretended
order of Andrus Johnson to the said
•
.Amt to
Thomas, with Intent to cense year
aMant to deliver to Elm; the held Thomas,
all the rounds, NOM.. pt
llnemiitad other
public property now In nis, the affieett'h
mottselY, and charge na - Senretery of -Wert
• and your same further edam*. On oath.
that ha to le formed and helleves.that the
WAS Thomas had, In geld City of Wanting-
Um and District aforesaid. exerclsms or.
attempted to eat:Mae' the duties of Seers--
tart' of tsar. sad to Issue orders no ,etteht
the your efilsot Is alto Informed end be.
thorax that the said Lorenzo Thomas diem
. oat and tereetens that ho will forcibly re
move your complainant Hem the braiding
and apartments of Inn Secretary of War, so
the War Department, end forcibly. rote the
possession. and control ' thereof. -surer
the staid . pretended npedintment .by
the .President at. the Untied. States
,
as Secretary of War ad interne. Awl
year &Mint - that ,the appoint
.ll=4ll7Ort'lllcdn enTl ft etelf r o ' r ' n ' T ttl C dtilTot
ot - Reeretaryof War la wholly tosauthorle ,
end dielfel. cad that the raid Thome.,
I hystecepting such , ' appal:fro:rd. and there
l'greft7stseillittfur rrr ' or r ist n ta i r e.
fifth section'of theism. ahem relented to.
I
mad Larceny hat bimodality of hlya minds-.
meaner, nod subjected himself troth s pain.
and g•eriss premoted In.Lbe section:
against any person cononitting nett of
home: Whereupam your sillant. prejel Wet
a warrant may tin Issued astalntst.the mad
Lorenzo Thomas, and that - Mr - may there.
upon be arrested and brought before your
Honor, and thereupon, that Do may be dealt
with urnollog to low and jostle°, as in
snob csal • •
Inns 11. WI, draw:
!Sworn and enteeribed before me the list
depot February, A, Alms . . •
D. IC. Cherish, • • •
Sworn and subscribed befi..4; eqe - try
blanton, nt tee rely of re aehlterttel,
In the Disnetet of Columbia. this 11%.1 nay or
February, IBC& ,:
liemeral , Thoram waareleased en ball, nee
cording to the following: bond t -
•. •
Damao erases' Awseroa, Dreratcr
VOLMans, to wit t De It -remembered that
on 0.941 day of Fate - earn In the" ear Or
our ,Dsrd, ISM, before the•Ghtor Justice or
the euPrente Courier the District or• Vol.
amble, personally appeared . General That.
E. & £llspon and bleorge.ll., 111611, •and soy,
orally ammerrimbred themselves to owe tho'
Wilted States of Areerlen, • Gatfnto ma
the said :Lemma Thomas. to the earn of
&SAN and the sant E. A. Edams and Beer
0 e
U. to the MUM of 113 OM 009, ba 009
pectively of thlor bedlee, ttood• 11111 Cl Chat.
tele, Welt sell ten meet and for thous.
of the Dabbed Metes, It Um sall.l..orenso
MOMS* &ball rank. deranit 111 the parlor
tri,noe et the condition undetwnttee. - "
- The coadttlem of the aisme rerocerolheoMf
IS such, that if the shoveriamod.i.orenso
Thomas appear before. Ine. 'ciao 'of the
ionizes of the • enpremo Dean of tbe Dire.
triebot •Washingtoo.ln the *ma
District. on Itormay, the ,tilth Amt., &CV/ -
o'clock a. s.„ then the *bore written. recap. Misuse shall be 'void, 'and otherwise Ite•
main la rah force and virtue.
AilknoWledgod before om
D. H. Castvrair,
,
9111, Tuts Tot=
HERALD'S ODREESSONIXENT
The • ttortetixindott of tbo Tart,
bail an Istarvieu Wll,ll aaldent
donna= late on Friday ' rtU Fr gTo"to
the tumoral of - Seciretan. titanic*. The
ocautapciadent remarks& Shat.tha country ,
lOW alitlittiolt hi its action. Vas Znaldsgy
smllod and tnqulrad..Wall, ywilat 40 talf
people sayl I suppose they ay. anyny,asay,
bnt I nave only dOne.na.t.ltsalAntsrmaneill
upon long ago.
correopoodont—••rne removal. then in
not in pursuance of a recent dotorratuatiork
on sour van. Mr. PrEmlllfor."
The Yroildent.--.Not at aU. sir. The too.
nlo seem to have mistaken my course al
together In this muter, I never had but
one determutationontheanhjeett bed theme
noted meretally, prudeatty sad moderaselyv
Nutmeat have been toselow about-ramp,
'let X b r g . b .S e t a a r k tOonf , h to u p t e ancohtn because
/ feared
d he ad u d twthing (Mgne -mtgh Md o l .
Nothing that body - mild attempt or
carryout 'Wald ihtlottd enter anthrlse me.
I know they &remid:de ot doing tutything.
.delayed doll action _Solely to let
the country see and understand the post.
floe of Mr. Stanton. .We drat intimated o
him that ` we etordd Wm himto witbdratr
from our PrfsvCOnneils he did tint take the
hint.. We thentespeeteskaitit to Miami he
reflaSed. We then enspended hint under
theconstitutional power Whit% we have to
suspend or remove a member of our Cab!,
net. The act of suspension wall also not in
conflict wtth the tenure ofotllooolll, tryouts
we did not, therefore. recognise Its coast* .
tutionailty. Arra natter Of courtesy, we
sent reasanatOr our action ;to the Senate*
That body en:tended not td consider those
teaeene eeMMeut, and *seemed toreinstate
Mr. Stanton In omen. Well, we waited.
Munr; Mr. Mouton wouleiseetlieproptietY
of resigning himself. Generals Sherman
and Grant offered to go to Stan= and rt.
guest him to rattan. We thought mover
today to order the removal of Mr. Stantcm,
and to appoint Gen. Thomas Secretary OS
Wm ortlatirea. This Le the whole story.'
Carreepoodent—wWas this step dismissed
in the Cabinet Uonnell, Mr. President to
The President—.No, fir, not precisely;
• gonortiPpOlfeywlie agreed upon some time
nun, and the removal to-day Is In accordance
therewith. I have Joist received a copy of
the r.olotlon adopted by the alienate Lev
night In the Executive newton..
torre.pondeut—wWhat.willtne Senate do,
Mr. rresideut. under that resolution, if you
still Insist neon having Gen. Thrones ash as
Secretary Wisteria.
The Preeident—"l don't see that they can
do anything. The rest:dollen itself Is the
end ol the matter so far es the Senate Is
concerned, unless the limas presents art.t.
cies of impeach moot and the beanie under
takes to try the Executive, and resolves
deed( tato a high court et impeachment..
Convispoodent—wDo you. think . Grogram
reall rata attempt hopeaohntent, Mr. Pre..
picot
The President--wldon , t know,lndiseo, nor
do I care. It. would make very little cliff.-
.
ence to ma.
• • • •• •
•The'correspOndene here asked What the
President would do In the event of the pee.
sage of Mr. Edmond.. bill of suspension,
to which toe President answered entistam•
Melly ••011, 1 would not obey the law, If
they attempted to enspend ma Taal.. is
oicarly nnoonstilatlonaL There is anoint
molest It which you gentlemen of the Press'
teem altogether to have overioOked. The
bill of Senator LI amide to Suspend me,
needing a trial; would mitlaribteMy be an
cc puffed. law, so far as MY ease would be
concerned. Sachs law IS declared nnten
saltuttenal • q the very language of, the
Constlttmon itself'. My °none , we will
Sublime. Is the removal of Mr. Stanton.
That Loo accomplished foot. der law pr.
se ribi n g penalty tor that act would •be es
p Wt./arta, sod therein.° I.oolntitlllloll
a
Mow, therefore. one n lireati legally pauk
bill of snail a character 11
The correspondent then remarked that
cordite Radicals might agree that-peals.
Mace la keeping Mr. Stanton out of nfilee t
altar the Senate had declared its removal
contrary to law. and attar the proposed
passage of Mr. Edumnrig , suspension bill.
werne be bringing the question out of the
operation of an crpeatjhato
The Preeldent replied that that could not
alter the ease, as the offence chsrged wank"
sWI be the removal of Mr. Stanton—an act
performed before the passage of the pro
/. =Pig to an inquiry, u to whether the
President had area General Thorns slues
the interview of the latter win Mr. Stan.
ton. the President smd "MN. arid pro.
angled to state what. according to toe In.
formation. had occurred at that Interview:
.General. Thomas," he said, ...salted aeon
Mr. Stanton =id nhowol to him the Presi
dent., order mom! of Mr. Manton and op
pointing him (General T h omas) as Secre
tary of War ad interim. Mr. Stanton road
the - order and sated .Thomas whether he
would heohligel to vacate the ofiloo forth.
with. Thomas Said his Inetrnetions teem to
assume control Iromellately. .Mr. Stanton
then said that he would Mete have Unto to
arrange and take away.hts %tapers and doc
uments. •To this request General Thomas
replied that a considerable time would be
ediowed fur each purpose. No time, how
ever. was tined for Mr. Manton to Mush his
The President raps
to egPregeed
utter indifferenoe co
n to went course Con
gress might adopt a the hapeaeliereee
dueldlon, and in
.tarer • tO a "parttorr ree.
mark of your comapontlent that the Prost
oent might sleep imundly mate of the
threatening freperiebioent., 0010,1sugh
lax think my slumbers will Da '
much disturbed by this fear. I than Mans
aonndly and awake =trestle:L. • .
TAN WAS 0771 e MATIZADAT DORNING—
aaaaa 7now.le AND"XL STANTON—AN
♦LSI6OATI.OI. .
There were present atSocretarY etasstotee
hillee this morning Papresentativel
head. And Kelly, of Pennsylrati Ms Van flora
end Van VV). ek. of New York; Dodge, of
lomat - Aimee, of tlasseohnsettu Kr. Freemen
Glut'. or 3ow.Tork, and tuinember Colum
bus Delano. of 0010.
About 11,MA. st. Gene rat Lorena° Thomaa
having Jut born Weasel on lull by Indite
Carter, presented himself at the door and
told Mr. Stanton he would Like to see hlm.
Mr. Stanton request.] hen 10 proceed
with anytning he had Lousy.. hen
come
Thomu remarked that be had
come to discharge the duties of Secretary
of War ad lanterns, haring been ordered to
do so by the Prealdut of the United Stare.
- 11 r. Stanton replied he emild do ne, such
thew, and ordered him to bu room to pet,
form els duties as adjutant amoral. •
.air. Thomas replied he had eten,ordered
by the President t Intend e d ecretary of. War
ad interior. and he to do it._
Mr. Stanton nate replied he sholthr not,
ud again ordered him to ha own room,
and dos led the pacer of the
p resident to
make any such order. ' •
. .
Thomas old he Kanld not ept that he
hould obey the orders of the President,
ItrW.treit
Mr. Stanton remarked, an Secretary of
War, I order you to repair to , your own
plaeoas dOjulanSGanessa. - ..;
Mr. Thomas—l shall not do so.
r Mr. Stanton—Then you twayatay Shiro as
'long as you please, if the romtdont orders
You, Dot you cannot act as Seern i tary of
Gas. Thomas—l 'bin not as Secretary . of
. .
Gen. Thomsen than withdrew Into a soma
oPlicet M. beteg Gen. Sehrtrees room..
Mr. a tauten lutinellatelg followed Alm.
After some conversation Mr. Stanton said
—Thee you Maim to be here as Secretary of
Warend refuse to ores my orClend
Gen: moms, -- I do. M nr. I shu iequire
the mails for tee wsrDepart...nkto be do
livered to me, and shall transact all the
bottoms of the War Department. • •
At thin pitinture Genet-at Grant and aid
tame ta.'
el en. Grant sEd, playfully, to lir: g Lamb=
—Friend, I amsurprisea to and you here.
I toliPmed yen sfotila st WM , hilteltidorf
tors for protection. . • .
after. long convereation with Monett J.
Walker al Thomas 1= his office. it
Is reported Walker's advice to bleu vas to
remain - passive. •• To carry out all orders of
the President: but to welt tee sedan of the
Gores and a nt to foielbly eject Mr. Stanton.
General Grant tookno part In she contral
varsy between Ito. Stanton and General
Thomas. Allsr•Gmiral Thomas the
friends of ltr.StaraternaLso left. , •
Alter leering tine War Deportment Glen.
Thousaa, In oinnoany with Itobt.J4Walter,
went to Gen. licaotl headquarters. thence
to I her White Mime. where bewas admitted
sithoutdelay.. Attorney General Stanbert7l
ecretary Waite, and IL I. gentiery were
loosest at the interview. ,Gen.; Thrones
conversed at some length with the Prod.
dent 'string an' account of Ida Interview
with' .11r.• Stanton, The. ertableint than
withdrew to his ilbrary with 'Mr. Stalbery,
wham a private Onnsultatioa , was had. In
a short time the Preside= reappeared and
wrote not some order, vitt* way borne
away by tied. Moor& It was rumored this
waitapereommay order to Ms Suntan to
withdraw farthwah from the War OlDee. -- •
TII. TRIACAS ON
, .
.T11024'0. Tort Tribute, leader of to-mor
row wlll say: uYbe President MU assumed
the tesoonalbUtty of brealdua • law:
arms must asamne the' responstbillty. of
tmpceoblosbllD.. :Tot todoso, 14 the naos
of the flagrant and insol.byroceedings, Is
to bsosmo a partner intnournas.' Lt. #no
time to ceimuder .the party influenoe of lob
pewthmout—of tin effect' OOOO Presidential
candidates, We , woalff matter aim Os He.
publiont puny. candidates and all. driven
into the desert of Arablettnant bars
ne • o Inbs them
ihg mbl uy. m ue an o t nsoleX we rrom /s
onougo long • as 160 President
stood wittla the pale of the law. but now,
Ohio De promises to bathe Ifineentlys, Leff
festive uid Judicial power; when hound=
to decide which laws COUITeSiI 9157-pose
sod snot nets ore' oonstitutlimal..to hesi
tate a moment , la ealmitial.",
.
.001r1114L. 1TC111 , ,111%1111111111r
. ,LIGALT SO APPLY.. /01.51115. 111011kAlli,„
The Aar York 21.nue Wallington' Matial
tam Mr. Santa ha retained Don: Mathew,
D. pampa, a WM, to appear in the eta
against tan. Thomas:and it is probable
attorney Generallitatberry artilbethreeted,
b.y the ?maiden% to appear for Oa. Thomas,
is addition Wilma: Itradayeod Ilieniek,
Mr. - Santos rambled to the oflioa of the
Mar Department Saturday nteftat and Pon.
to rbaulin there: Until he 'cm safely
. .
' - 1t! lielloved the Supreme COart will be
ToPPolind to on Monday, ott belntlf Of Oen.
Thomne for relief.
•. • .
Anenat Delmont and 'other menthe,* of
the Democratic National Committee were
imtertalned bE the Presiden t at the delegate
:WmurasaroF, February Ma.
, The elty continues in a Mato of fever
. . ..„
lab excitement ovring to the pending im
, ~
peachnient Of. the Preeldent,,and every
body_ who takes en interest In pliblle af
.
fairs Is anxiously awaiting new devilry
, . .
moot:. In the absence of facts, rumors
gain Currency; and from timeto time as
Iheykre'exploded new ones are invent
, ed to take their places, each - as the al
leged'arrest of:Gen.. Grant:: AIL there
excite, but do not satisfy the constant de
mand at the hotels and In Congressional
circles and elsewhere for the latest Intel
-rho kixecuthe Manalon woo visited In
the Wane , of the day_ by Secretary 13e
"sad, Adjutant General Thomas, ova a
number pf.Dernoccatio members of Con-
Republican 'Senator" -' and '' Repro
aenulixes, including Mende. Conkilng,
Chandler, Thayer, Wade, Morgan, Judd,
Farnsworth, Logan and - Boutwell, re ,
paired to the •,. War - 'Department,
It Is, reliably ascertained . that
the conversation between' them anti
i t
the Secretary War, being iatt pending
polities!: tont . led te 'a comparison of
notes, - whlch I no doubt In dude minds
that on the I rsechnient ;question the
-Itegittdicium wid act us a unit. It eras
not known to them that even bne mem•
bar would Inner. and ~ d esert his
forty," and:. their' general ' impress-'
Am, was' 4tanthe ' , President • will
not, only.. be- impeached, . but. Die d
eenvlctediand'removed from Office with-
In 00licit ten' days. ' The'ground they
take is that the Republicarta cannot now
avoid the.; bette which they say the
President bee forced' on teem, and that
having taken the Mel stop they meat
prosecute Um work : to _a speedy'
conclusion: Nothing woe said about
the' employment - of troop" by .
.opponents , of the :President, -No' one
present qould anti 'haste any, oventwhltl,
would render It necessary, especially as
they thought thePtisident ectild not ob
tatnamilltary (*recta sustain him. These
gentlemen, who had conversations with
Mr. Stanton' nave assurance' that 'they
would stand by him to thelast,- having
no doubt or the snot eta of their is tame..-_
,Tbere math earnestness and detr
rishattlon elpreWhid by *all the ltepubU'
tam rwho converse noon the aultioct.
Their speeches In the Douse may pa re,
prided as.evidenoe of the feeling wideh
. griaorally'provalls among she members
antler Marin rolagrroe:tertgritijft
thrEfouse of Itspresentativec i"..--- ,
*rotary Stanton has not left the War
DePartmere sinew last Friday, his Con-.
'
gr 01 3 ,11 Wel* baling urged him t e
r sin therefor fibiasou. Meainirier.
oehtemplates golughome after the Hones
1
pall have Impeached . the-Preaideat,:ba
1 thpbellat among them is that, the. latter
,wlil thus be shorn of his ' moral,
linguence and will make no affeettrto
Tts" The purpose of CnagletWetbeee
a hority they say will be supporterbY
Gan. Grant under the law, the fiffetkilli
°Silo Executive being saspandoffirtbf
fett pendiag trial.
4i.ejor General Emory, who' oaes,
ds the Department at _Waehingtee,
lts said by Republicans .will 'gibbet
Idabel( to the immediate orders oaly-of
dal , General of the Army, and not to than
rulthe President. The guard at the War
.Department has been doutiladri,-..W.
Cetr, of General Emery's staff, remained
there hurt night by order • of. Gangs;
G h ' e t. Presitlent; is in recelpi.o4l4ate
sti . telegrams giving-him aunt:mar of .
attprobstiort and support, and - Relmbli-, ,
mots are constantly being, eneourageOn
a limner rummer to uatalterlngly Axe- I
cute the work they have andertakefti ,
!the President to-day directed appErw•
( St
ti to be made to the Court to-morrow
r , a mandamus or foo tcariunio; with
a : law of making Mr. Stanton ahaW tin
t, and by whet authority, he, retains
priemesion of the War Department: „.
ff. ha mesmgo which Cot Moot* sating
Private Secretary to the Prosidea*, ber
ried to the Senate yesterday, bat Watt we
vtlatod, from tlaliveriag, ening to Ms
early adjournment of that body,. Vatithe
adjamstion. of Ron. Thomas EwlegkEir.,
°Ohio, as Socintaryof War. 111.4 tope.
will be mat to the Senstoto-mbrrow. -
iit Is tasted that Attorney General Stan
betiY. Judge Black, and Charles O'Con
dr, Lag., will defend the President I:o
-gle the Semite. • • •-
Tkmpeaclugezit!
Tjiplespeacbmentßeiotillios SNpt
ra by afore than a Tao-
Thirds Vote:
6 Ayes • 47 Na*;
0 1. 7 ase Pitt Baran Quetta)
Waaninovori,l'obrilary2l,l
nousr. OF REpntsEzrrealvES.
".fho House was called tO Order , it ten
otelecti, and Mr. ASHLE`fimeitteiiiif
nith in exceedingly bliterimpeechtiant
arech, and closed by imylog: I' charge
Andrew Johnson, in addition...Mita - Via
firi" which ha is now to he triedorittilinr
rnptly using the veto power and pardon
itvg power; with having lllegullydiapered
of public omperty, and interferingvith
dim lawful election* ottids couptmand
tkilleving that Andrew Johnson higullty
df this and more, I Think If la our Miry,'-
Or the sanity of American -I.natHattfona
and for those who come after us. to yin.
dlcate the majesty of the law. Foibles,
sons I give myvote tortivaigit; pug on
*lal for high crimes andmiademsanira,
Andrew Johnson, acting PaTddi . ol - pt th e
Cnited Skate. ' '
'resident not
i. followed, declaring' thalthe
not only violates' the Mare o
rice law 4 but had exercised txtwerann.
'arranteol by the Constitution =diem'.
phir. BOYER spoke against the remain.
Om), saying the House wee ; de
from receiving charges alreadt
dpon. He- didn't believe the 'people
trontd sustain this new proceeding,
!hick be characterized as revolutionary,
end proclaimed that t'., hiw had not been
tM.olated bemuse Stanton was not ap
nted by Johnson. , - • T
, x. KELSEY supported the resoltnicm.
to the appointment of Stanton, Joint-
Ms was merely VkatPresident,neting aa
resident, therefore there was no {erne
in Mr. Boyer'. print. He argued that
the case of- impeachment was a criminal
lase, and the Court must have thejectie.
diction of the person of the criminal, end
esontrol Ids movements.' The - criminal,
therefore, has no power to peribetn Ida
Celina function& Ifs argued thinpolnt
la some length.
ofr. CAKE advocated impostelusion.
He believed the publics ml .d• was - ready
f.tr the event. Messrs. BEAMA,N, '
end
PRICE followal on the same side.
At half-past fear o'clock THADDEUS
HTEV.ENS arme to close the debate,
timid thegrestest excitement. Mr.l3te
aans stood at the Speakers' desk; and
ienta about to commence his rentmka
. Mr. 131:Min/Of moved to extiMil' the
time allowed to Mr. Stevens to one bear.
instantly a half:dozen Dementia- ob.
jetted. .
i A motion was made to miler=
ere was every disposition
,to fillibaster, when, in compliance with
,the universal request of tho Republicans,
Mr. SINGH/1.3f *lthdrew his moths&
i.. Mr. STEVENS asked permisaleta to
;have his remarks read, as his voice could
2.. This was alluded, and Hon. Edward
MoPhruson, Clerk of the House, read
Mr. Stevens' spre.h, amid arose Aden.
, - •
...Ther question . was- thencalled u oaths
impeachment resolution, arui Dumpy
Uvotie of ONE EUNDRED AND 8 V
iENTY-3rY AYES to FORTY,SEVEN
TAllleoa,' Ode.°la, _
- .Anderson, H g, Paters, , •
Atnell -
"Hl[Oy, '
(Har4 lllll . • - Ella. • .
..a.ebley, (0.1 Homer. • Plante."'
, "Poland,
(Ift
Hlabl.lll )Palflo7.'
, Haid win, - oboard W TsPi7ee.•".
.HwHhnrd,. Backe,
Oteanian,
-Beatty. Legereoll.: daarger.
:Benton. Jeocka ScimarJr,
ill Ingham, Judd, Bcbolleld.
dname, _ „Pdelwg,
Kei/r, 8.111113
dioutwell. - Kelsey •
Ketcham, SUMMON..
Hroccuali, eltarkwastba,
Inuckland,_.; . Stevens, K. B.
jElutler. -Lawrence (Pa y4tevau.l"a,
t a . w e te i nee (0 . ,M r lr . r„,
tharke, (ieni,)Losa; Tagbor, , c 4
, Clarke, (O.) Lam, - Trowbridge. -
, v or . b, Lougiutage,• ,- Twine/tau,
kiebarn, ' • Lyucn, ••
.11pada,,
' O w n . Hallam Vas Mrcum,
'Owned!, Macon...: L r. VsaMoa, N.l"
dionole. 11Cartity; ..Vas Wdidri
Cullu, McClurg, - Ward; .
Do dge .... Marcs, ,
'Hodge. . wrahtrunw,
I. I K
11
D " : 0 a fj g U r d
IMll.4"N'' . . • .My
ers, WII• WIIe
oa,Ohi o.
o.
Newoomb,. • Milian, -Ps.
eig 7 ," Nano, _ Wiadow,
iglelda. Woodbrdge,
Grandly; 'Orth..
140 d the Sped/ear—M.
. .
thaws., • Gram,
Virciberlett. Nt.boblosa
, axust,' Sousse, - Plettebta
'lrar '" tts, , ' riTraltrajth n t
4:tate n r, u .../lompltroor, Ana*
Sorer, Jobtutoo, Shitrosves,
0340010. • .1012011,• •' 5 l•Witti”
beer, bar, along
RALI•O7ICuOtt. • ' • - Taber.
Phonates, 9tarshali, Trhahlio:tl74
..hiOrtago,
McCullough
MaCorscOok. Van Allkto.•
!CM, , "VataTranip.
heis t Mortm,..
rler u e .v. aner. '
ange lteerstele7. ' - WoodwZra -47
it Th 9 aunouneement of theretuitelidt
edd no mantfretation, but the finatense
endlence which bad fink the' galleries
end corridors all the day.-grdelallildin
need dem than
girth o ti f 4 it i a t 'o w riteal nutrtber.v, . one
tarrrvrafs9r moved to re
consider the vote "
it which ihe'reeolu
waa agreed to, 'and rderniented to
lay, the, motion to- reconsider. ,ow the
table. The latter motlcanal to,
The parllamen,tary - modoefsdakisigli de
.filelon Tare. ,.
b.Mr. STEVENS', of - Pernaiylminiii, then
- Moved the foliowtng mulatto= - •
Itesolord, That a committee-at-two.
Ae appointed to go,theSenate,end at the
bar thereof, in the name ereof , of the 'Hiitise of
Uooresentattres and of allthe pee* if
the United-States, to impeach :Alamo .
Johnson, Preshltittot Cho United States,
er high crimes and intederneanors
LA WM* and acquaint the Senate that th
Flonao of 'Representatives; will: In due
time exhibit, particular articles - Of, im
peachment against bun and =die good
Mourne, andthat. the Ocimmittee do de-
Mend that the Senate take order for the
appeerance of Bald Andrew Johnson to
Fromm said - impeachment.
Resolced. That a contmitteemd% seven
he appointed to prepare „end
bles of impeachment - against - And r
ew
Urnsoa; Prostchmt of Six United.Statee,
With power to send for .persons, pipers
and records, and to take testimony under
is The Muacreratle members atiampted to
inert to tillibustanna, but were cat olt"
alter an ineffectual eloct s , by &motion to
e es p ee d the ruhocat, se to 'briny the
UOll5O Immediately to a vote on lhe no.
num wire p;iipendad, And the
resolutions wore adopted —yes*" one
hundred and: twenty...four,: nay' forty
' I+ The SPEAKER dien . eneenne;i4 the
pro committee; as follow,:'
Committee of meta. announce to the
Senate the action of the roue-4detian.
Stevens, of Perannylvatill, and Bingham,
Committee of perm to prepare nett
, des of hopooehment,:geeen..BOLltlf ell,
gas:Diehl:mute, Stevens. - Pnatsylinuils,"
Utogham. Ohio, .W 1115031- lowa,
lilnela,Aullan, /Indians, said 7Te174 .11 , ; 71 . 4
t
The Iletiselhetti'et teritrity , Astinkte
:rist als. o'clock; toklonmed, with the fat
letter, which . was' want by the
?resident to Seczetary, Maiden,' _and
Which has not heratOforibeen ptabllibed:
.t-%E.TeClLtite `Minsion, , WarliwymPOPeb.
2iis,-Ede: By virtue of Ibl power. nod
Authority vested In me, pa President, by
the Constitution and laws of thii United
States, you are hereby removed Maio the
t it r d bscle yo_int=t ea it ° will
I,t of
4aat . nate upon she receipt - Of thheiom-
Oitioleettoa. ,- You will irstrafor to Brevet
Shaw 1300111111 Unnue..7..bemps.,,,AdJu-
Wet Gate& of - the Army, who Ms day
hap born Authoristal•end • testprattetei to
sans BectiAluT of War ad tateron, all
rffiOrtdo; books, point 'and other public,
property now, la your cltaWdlt,aad
Bespecifu lly, ye • -
Jo o'c
Tn the Heat. E. Id.‘ Sultrort•-Waabiog.