The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 11, 1868, Image 5

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    tts litturgt Gaytte
WEDNESDAY. 3LARCIL 11,1868
TIME lIIIPEACICUIENT TRIAL.
'pha Senate having yak:Play notified
the -
House of its-readiness to proceed
with the trial of the President, it is ex
parted that the managers will take in the
Articles to day, I nwhich ease the Senate
Wilitomorrow resolve WWI - into a High
Coot - of - Impeachment . And . lane its
summon to the President to appear at
its bar on day to -be fixed, either -in
persona by Cotmari, and antiwar ter*
articles exhibited. -When he shall bane
appeared in obedience to the summons,
attain - a plea ,of "guilty," or "not
guilty," a day vitill then be designated
for the cammencement of the trial, which,
)2 1 =4,4
.when so begun, will proceed from day
to day - until Its on. The gam.
nines will pro ly be putted forthwith,
akd the appearance.day may be fixed for
tOmorrow, pmt, after a plea is mita . .
a reasonable period will lie allowed to
the President for * preparation oft is
defense. The commencement of the
should not therefore be looked far be re
the next week.' i
Two additional articles ;were yes e 7
reported "t y the Managers to the age
end adopted,—one being se that,
the tame .as - proposed on Mon ay by
Gen. Boman in the Houle by yof
- amendment and then rej . and
'the other anew article, said to be wn
"cep by Judge BINGHAM. These cles
'charge the President with design g and
intending to set aside therightfal an-
Wei* and powers of Congress, by
bringing it into contempt, and by 1111.
pairing and destroying the regard and
respect in which the legislative power
should be held by the people. These
two new articles. specifying Hr. lona
aos's public speeches in support of. the
charges, differ only in this, that the first
cites his public declarations at Washing
ton, August 18th, 1868, at - Cleveland,
September ttd, and' at Bt. Louis, Septem
ber Bth, while the other confines the case
to the Washington speech alone:
is a very great miatake to suppose
that, Id adding the two inbsequent Arti
cles of Impeachment, based upon the
Pnesident's inflammatory and resole-
tionary speeches of I 866„ the House
Lave beme - governed by- any apprehen•
elms as to the ininflleiency of the Srtt•
elm previously adopted. It his simply
recognized and conceded the universal
public demand. Now that the lnuddess
-for - two years threatened is at last taken
in hand, that thormigh work *lull be
- made of It—that not only his meat and
confessed violation' of law shall be
charged against_the offender, but that
ids - what official career of Brecafire
invidious and encroachments, his
warfare ufmn the constitutional rights of
the law-making power, and his arrozant
surd despotic refuel to yield . to 'the will
— of t loyal people for the enforcement - of
- law In the rebel States, and for the abut
, lute gemuity of all-the rights Which it
'colt font years of agonising trial to es
tablish a title to—all these crimes U.
InetTated :And eat clearly forth in
the light of his own incenatary and
treasonable proclamations of-war .. against
Oonyeas—shall also now be presented
againat him for judgment. We believe
thatbauffil be found guilty anti dismissed
from the high office which he has so
misused - long before the Court reaches i,
these two articles in its verdict, bat d
*lll dually pronounce, nron them, not
only that ANDBZW Jonsson has viola
ted specified lams, but that he hats been
for nearly three years the great obstacle
in the way -of Union antkPeace, end
shall be dealt with accortgreat t That
Is what the additions to-thinent
Mun,-an:tAcen neildlienT4 -- er fear,
- - that Cenr terinikklildgit
- pose, or doubtialrof its tuna.
' • Ms. icorstionie-liX Indifferent'Erstl
.tsined.by some ccui Cabinet officers,
his "privy connidirirs," as he roysily
anti item . _ Mr. Seward, whose can
- legidently conscientious state
. ;rezte=acts relative to the umbrae.
" between the President and
eenerod ;Want, as to the continued oc
capalqinthe War Mee, less anything
but a cordial endorsee:eta of Mr.
...Tokesan's opinions or allegations, is
Crimpletely unknown to public rumor or
commentary in the stirring events teach
bare since followed so rapidly. He
... does nothing, says nothing, aid eri.
• dental' wishes to be considered , en en-
Inown quantity in the lasing game to
-which the President his committed lam.
— welt. And now, still later, Mr. McCal
. loch has felt it to be his duty to direct
certain details connected with the Neir
Tcar. tbutom Haase, contrary to the ex
- : press directions of mil Executive. 'The
• lilecretary of the Treasury ill ails, in .the
Ilght of egress meats; to discover and
t••• Mow the proper pahof hisratclaidaty,
noWager yielding his own discretion to
he simple will of Mrs. Perry's friend in
a high pure. When the President was
informed that Mr. McCallech had Chas,
• disregarded We Whims Mt to the matter
at New Tort,:!'My God 1" he exclaim
-- ea, "is there no one itentresti". This;
one by one; his few famasimd.personal
adherents are de sertin g him. • •••
ME
. Bons Rum Must; iiswarsrisut
manifest concern-lest the 011 Ice Tenure
Act, after the cbuiturdnation of impeach:
=tent, shall be. found en easbansannent.
• lire do not :Alum in this auliciptition.
By the eaves* tame of the Constitution
lbe Senate is made to - participate in the
s oointing power. IF .is authorized to
gave "advice beforehand, and 'ten
ant.* iaccimal. if it shall see proper,
in the case of eruy reascorit or appoint
.
- meat A. strong tendency has prevailed
01'11114y yearn to Ignore ills eighth:l
prereptive of the Smell ; to make the
Praddent an imperial menu* elected
foi I term of years; and wreaks all
Pacemen under the Gerimment depend
upon blend for continuance or promo
., lion: - It , is !IMu to:get bacillar:a this
._ dangerous ground IP the solid Dads of
"Bepublicauldeas and habits.
No rowore is more certainly in the
Constitution tan that of impeachnumt.
of the gredest needs of the Itepab
'tic fore fell generidion Du been snob
1 An exhibition, of this tailed Power as
1 -- would curb the despotic tendencies - in=
ereasingly manifested in the Execitire
Iflepartswest. That arm of the Pavan
' matt bee steadily encroached on the
other two, seeking to absorb an anth
1 'ty into ibscif. reptddican institutions
11"_'are to be maintained among us: if the
rights of tho people to, regalia& petdie
- .-. 48-sirs are • to be censured; - those - en
• creachmenis
.mest be ao -decidedly le
i . beaked as to pot an end , to them. A
f president-impeached- and deposed, 'ell
mike all Presidents, for a long yaws%
. keep tithe's legitnnats spher e. - .
. -
IN
.."'...T. cinnaiwere
i '-- TEN , A 311, ....—.___- - - me y , ig ei t u y by the
' - "Needed to th e 7-' were ' wended tid' the
-Pr *gist 11/° ees. The fem•
1 ' ' et ebe Iteptesentall ro
otoo.
to
tato!,
bodY
mem b ve , who i.
remained in
43cullic the Pfeethtitien"" :17.
, . :vex! i s
... th e b i n of th e -
slily
liieir Sesta '' s so reCOVOZO t1;....f,„,„,,a.
1 • '.)tfiii.i.fit,,, iiodwung. —f jagiCe
r ~ ' TeilMititUft° g h os t *nut 0 - , -
t ' of the /55 edem a - by Pro,'
- t 'gee
the Irre
e r of
5 1 ' inowil .th
____.,..-4- by the
te sad eum."'''''' snotty Yee"
elm em ment - fornted l 7
~
~
...._....
~. -. on ton
notbiog eZrePt I .=
- ..eriir e pure .Srta 't;
.r, "pediesdbin' bus& dilk7g •
.., ~,r,-, at
_........,,,,,.. bat
wooing'
1 ..,•,-,,
...,4, 41 , o r ‘,......
of in t:
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4 i ~ • -,. .1;y Wili think betMs
70 ittaid lba.
' :,...,‘ Ile - retied IsPee
._
4 ''
''
-- .;74 ith"thlOthd regalarhY.
::In is instinettss ea edifytot to Ito-
two pactimm ucur yetiementl intumievi r is tuai inotel Ism ,
'4~ Wipe shod awn! bs : sga dr
quiti iiM siolc ac Out in
a Ilumgh lise;! iintitsed Auf ;ailed as s "shun" intst s
/.
tabliessi Slits Oararatdian, held ftshw• Hilate.". TM sostbmcmk of , petal
:day, tor Grant snd -Wade, far Prodded °plan ME , edded, md, with des:Wm
- A4Tios Proshhat.
facility. thoThmoshiftod with
, _
I
~= =l,
TEE RER ARSICLEA
It In said that when Judge Onus was
impeached in 1904 the article on which
he came so near being convicted was
that wherein he wee accused of making
a disgraceful harangue, which the Arti
cle declared was "highly censurable in
any person, but peculiarly indecent and
unbecoming in one occupying a high ' I
official position." The Article - against
Mr. Joassox, reported from the mana
gers by Oen. Mariam, and accepted by
the:abuse on Tuesday, adoptsthephnuse
elegy we have quoted, evidently taking
the CRUZ Article an a precedent.
huts from the Washington, Cleveland
and Si. Lends speeches are cited as the
buts of the Article and the intent is
charged thereby to bring -the legislative
power into disgrace, impairing the pop
ular respect and exciting the popular
odium and resentment. This article
was adopted against twelve Republican
votes in the negative.
The Shuman article refers to the Pres
ident's speech of August 113th, 1866. at
Washington, which affirmed Congress
te be a Congress of only a part of the
States, and as not hillyenthorized to ex
lithe legislative power, to his effort, -
pursuant to the declarations of that
Breech, on the 21st of. February, 1808,
to prevent Secretary Stanton from re.
suuming the duties of the War Office,
andittivreby to prevent the execution of
the TenurcotOffice act, to his unlawful
contriving and devising of means to pre
vent the execution of the Act of March
Id, 1807, regulating the transmiulon of
military, orders to the army, end to pre
vent the execution of the Reoustruction
Act of the core Wit mentioned date,
and charges that therein the President
was guilty of a high misdemeanor in
• office.
In the Washington speech of August
18, 1886, shove referred to, the Pred
dent, replying to Xe. RIRTIDT JOlnt
sox. who in behalf of a Committee had
presented to him the resolutions of the
Philadelphia Contention, thus spoke of
Reoonatruction, of his own part therein,
and of the =Mk Congress then ex
isting:
"ds the work progrered, ae reconcd,
istion seemed to be Wing place and the.'
country becoming united, we found a
disturbing and moving element opposing I
m. • • • We bare seen hanging,
upon the verge of the Government as it
were, a body called, or which Lammed
to be the Congress of the United States;
in fact, a Congress of only part of the
States. We have seen this. Congren
assume and pretend to be for union
whoa Its every step and act tended to
perpetrate duration and make a dirrap-
Oen of the BMW inevitable, Witham of
promoting reconcUiation and harmony.
Its legislation Us partaken of the char
elm of penalties, retaliation and re. l
range. This km been the course and
the policy of - one department of your
Grommet& The humble individual
who is now addressing roe stands a rep.
resentativeof another t of the
Government. • • • • We hare
seenlrougreisgradindly merreach step
by step upon Constitutional rights and
violate, day alter day and month after
month, the fundimental principles of
the Government. We have loan a Corr
greys that seemed to forget that there
was a Constitution and that there was a
limit to the sphere and scope of legisth
tion. We have seen a Congress in 1,
minority assume to exercise powers, i
which, if allowed to be carried out.
'would ;
?Walt in despotism or monarchy
itself. * • , • • When I lookwi
my mind's eye upon that collection ot
Winans (the Philadelphia Conrentfon )
and mina it with the collection o
gentlemen who are m o re destroy the
antetty„,l regard %tr Ass important
than
than-say Ceara:Wen that has sat, at
least siscel7B7."
Whairlither ;oaths of Gus remit* '
Ible speediiiip be arpedillj relied upon
by the Managers to sustain that Article;
we are, of course, unable to say. The
whole tenor and edect of the harangue
is in consonance with the spirit , of the
passages we have quoted; but geneesl4
more guarded In language. From hi
first word to his last, the speechauibear
no other construction, and mint bath
teen expressly intended to exdte popu l T
dissatisfaction with the law-making
power, and tothflanie it if possible into
an open resbtance. Fmgettbig all the
other arbitrary and tyrannical words oi
deeds of this bad men, taking up only
the Washington speech and learning
for the first time, from its declarations,
denmiciations and innendoes, the state
or political stabs in the country at that
moment, no fairmaded and intelligent
reader could mid being shock
ed and appalled at. the: .thiegilr
to public liberty as dePicted , b);
the speaker if his wards were, to te!bs.
Rayed, or eorrespondtheY inesnmal by
the reckless and revelMionary smile
upon the cause of Palk Liberty, Loyal
ty Piths Union and three itntional Leg
islation whlrA it. way was.- And its
perusal to 7 ilay, , ,lin thertight of the
President's wbolefriardnidiste career,
ath'imtmore indimiantly stir up the
patriot's heart against a Chief idagistrsie
who Wildhavederadthis to' belie and
denounce rite supreme legalities power
of the people, than, at that day, in ill
our mioartabilles and anxieties as we re
alined the dangers of the crisis, did every
lola man m the land execrate the trai
tor who sought in the subversion of lsw
tii promote the ends of his own wicked
ambition. ~ I
- of, patriotic indignation
Coned expression erszywhers in the ,
loyal BMWS. In the press, in the WV
public meetings which were biltalllll
hold, and in all the talk of printe citi
zem, the dates. ISSUIVAIODS and this
senible-iumdeptheins of the President
Was simperingly denounced. Carew
journal faithfolly eipressed the pididc
apprehension anif prophetically Indi
cated the Ware 'danger and the raper
remedy; then, in the Gnaw, of Aar.
nth 90th, 1868, an Wide written in the
'very ` Eminent when the =people were
almost stunned by Anramw Jormvion's
wicked audacity, concluded with these
words' "This man has power, Wings
impeached, for two years and rpwarits.
Into what ferthar enellloll he [will
planis, it is unsafe to predict. Bat,
Judging him Itom the put, even sober
minded people have ream to look upon
the future with apprehension and
alarm" And, from that day to 0'15,1
[ theiplain duty. and the imperative scabs.
lay for Impeachment has Wen ramp
I nixed and turd by many thooglad and
lemma& rands of the Republic. The
first resolution offered in Cowin in
favor or Gm proceeding was .presented
try Xe. Loot, of Jawed, on the Rh of
Jasugidernming, bat Falco; like all sub
secant prePodlidds of the same char
acter until the present, to rewire therm
pronl of thilloase.
Now, it last, the work or crashing a
rebellion: fa arms will be mined by
pesedol pooddialm under tba Gonad
. mien and lawss to ports usurpation and
e treason from timid& places et the Bide.
in The Gruel Inquest of the people lthre
by settled upon their InaMserd and It ris
sly yesterday presented to the Rena* Alter
all. a few pr eillaw7 fbrms,,the trial will
dice be - Commenced and prosecuted te its con
ed*. dada. And mbakrrer Use reads may
/or Of be; giritt be set/dewed in by a people
yeirs, which We ad yed Lanai So disobey the
IMPLY WO aria • isaltr ale disobedience In
lepl4-74 any dtimes, tbildabsidar tbe brmsst.
. •
GA
ff_ TllO ,
; v t
PITTSBURG p - 44
WEABILITY OF OUR GOVERNMENT
When wewe have considered the f.te of ,
ancient republic and the growing evils t,
of our own, as oar cities have increased
in numbers, wealth and vice, we have
sometimes for a moment doubted the
permanency of our cherished form of
govezrunent. The advantages may far
exceed the disadvantages, but the igno
rance, erimeomscrunulcms character of
many party leaders, ready at any time
to resort to the worst means and endan
ger the dearest interests of one country
to secure their success, the willingness
of our best citizens to be led and to vote
for the men designated by a few =bi
doss and often ignorant and tinprincl
pied persons, have compelled us to see
some dark spots In what we have been
taught to regard as unclouded bright
ness.
The past few years have tested our
government in new and unexpected
ways. Heretofore we bad enjoyed
smooth and sate aces, for the navigation
of which our great chart amply pre
timed us. We bad encountered no gales
or breakers to test the strength of our
bark. The power and grandeur eildb
lied as we have moved steadily and
firmly and succelurfally on through anion
birmidable civil war, in which the slave
illgarcl!y, well combined with large
numbers of Northern sympathizers, a
navy scattered, an army largely con
trolled trY Southern men--awarinwhiCh
mre marshalled the largest armies ever
own, with the most formidable en
gines—have been the height of the Sub
lime. Difficulties not autleapated and
not provided for by the Constitution had
ha be met,
Then curio the saddest stroke taking
off our mat and good leader, iroloat
tandem oar pliant skip a angle point
root bar corm. To provide for the
up war debt, equitably to put on the
tax, the least to cripple trade, and to
to tore the "erring sisters" to the great
family, involved great difficulties. And
too, had to be done with an officer
at the bead of the Government, Ignorant,
Mlf-willed, melons, and a traitor to all
late dearest interests of the land. And
mow, our loyal Congress. having long
held firmly to the issue of the war, to a
form of reconstruction which would save
I = from shame and from a lou of all the
expenditure of treasure and blood poured
out, haire impeached the head of the na
tion, who wished to surrender all , we
'have at such gnat court gained, to render
himself a despot, who despised the rep
resentatiyee of the people and sought to
swerve to his treasonable purposes , the
generals of the army.
And although 'swats are marching on
limpidly to the removal from his high
place of this man, despised by all par
ties, whose rule was commenced in
drunkenness and continued In 'madness
and rage, after the first few days all is
calm and the prase of the nation is set
thug down to Its accustomed place.
This lion= firmness, this steady ad
herence to the right, this diaieganr of
Men of whatever position if wrong, this
encountering and overcoming of diflicut
ties of the greatest magnitude, watched
by enemies eager to witness ruin rather
,than the success of the friends of free
dom, give assurance that fare are
groundless; that we shall outride safely
the gale, and when refitted, we abaft be
able to maintain the great principles of
onr gaiernment for ages. Without
[ commotion, without bloodshed, the
President will,.we believe, be removed
' from ofSce and sent back to private life,
where only the disgrace of an Arnold
awaits his memory. In the events 'of
these few years his history is without' a
SODTEI NOT AFRICA/11=D.
Let our Democratic friends posse's
their souls in patient comfort; the South
ern States, although containing a popu
lation of free citizens not more than
one-ballot whom are white, are st ill very
far hom being Africanized. The white
race even now largely predominates
in the control of public affairs, and could
easily wield s still greater influence if it
would abandon Its foolish , and danger
ous policy of non-action under the laws
of Congress. In Virginia less limn one
fourth of the Convention are colored
men; in North Carolina less than one
ninthtta ILissiuipplias thin onetenth;
Linishirm they have a majority; in
Meals they are one-fourth; in Georgia
leaShattonesiermth; in Ahbama
atriums" lees than onotilfteenth,
'IMAM South Carolina they are about
Mita There is but cue Southern Con
=Akin which they actually control, and
m all the rest their minority Is surpris-;
Inky small. And as, by the Constitu
tion, Senators require nine years and
Represmtatives riven years of dtisen
ship, at lota two years yet must elapse
before the white race can be deprived of
its exclusive tenancy of the Congress.
tonal Halls. .
Wrrs its. the firices gasconade of
Mesas 8110011, WOODWeED &
their protests and indignant deflate.
&Bona of the Badicaldesigns "to over
throw the government," to "destroy the
temple of our liberties' &c., &c, it is
well enough to understand that they are
merely talking for lemenmbe, and really
have no anxieties in.the matter, except
to improve all the current chances fa
making a little pattlzan capital. In
point of fact, they not. only regard the
impeachment, and Its result in the con-
notion and removal of the Executive, at
settled things, but incline to regard them
as really beneficial to the !aerate of
their own party. A President, with no
party of his own, whose immense
°facial patronage already threatens to I
demoralize the Democratic organizttlon
but has utterly failed to affect the Itepub•
Ilan ranks, a man whom they dare not
take up ass. candidate, but who, if neg•
lected, could and no doubt would ember.
ram their whole campaign, Is, for all
practical noes to them, better out of the'
way Dian r.maining In his once.
Hence they hare no hesitation, private
ly, at Washington and elsewhere, in ex-
Whiting their real sentiments. For ex
ample, In thellouse, when the two addl•
tional articles were presented and after
the adoption of the Ord one, a corres
pondent says : •
Mr. Bingham presented an article,
which be said Lad theunanimous sup
port of the managers, end called the pre
stone question, Mesas Brooke: and
Eldridge :got up a emend laugh on in.
ovaries as to whether It was Important
enough to print. Ur. Bader went over
and heldolplle levee with these and
other Democrats, hi which there was an
Immense amount of good humor visible,
and while the voting was In progress
Mr, Eldridgemed some of the rent went
la gh. dors to Xr. - Blagluaa's seat lend had
- The fading which prompts this
conduct of the opposition cr out In
lankrections, and Batt part Democrats
of reel sympathy the
ban with Yr. Johnson: , As yet, not
one on the floor, since Impeachment te•
erne the earnest thing ft now is, has
Impremed the House wlth the idea that
he was m reality •- friend of the Pc. - '
us ; I dem..
Tun PmMosul= Pm; regarding
the eonaimmnan of the Cannelloni°
Balirced as not only t certainty but al
most in actomtdished fact, predicts that
its asultrtrunoll will cat oft from Pills
Molds a large portten of its present
Weston trade. Id:dawn! seek the sum
"short road to the sea,': and urges that
a drainage m injurious be "headed off," '
by the ounstroution of ;anther line from
tionnalleTile outward,. "Ma Somereet
and Bedford to Clunobandnilith, and
srldchi• prolonged fa time,through
BettYlharft. toed offer sn ezeedhigly
dind and inanshle rutdo from;
burgh 10 our port."
MEDICAL COLLEGES min. WoxtEN
A Medical College for women has
! been organized at Cleveland, under very
ifavorable auspices. The Board of
Trustees is - composed principally of
women, Mrs. C. A. Swabs, M. D:, be- .
Lug President, and it the close of its •
first term, or course of lectures, a few
days since, several degrees were con.
ferred, all of them honorary but one.
That only a single graduate should thus
bare acquired a degree to readily ac
counted for from the fact that the project
for the establishment of the College it
self was not entertained until late last
autumn, and * was then ' suggested and
carried into effect, in consequence of
1 the refusal of one of the ether three
Medical Colleges of that city to receive
the female student who has now the
honor of receiving the first degree in
this new College. It is stated In the
Cleveland journals that ample arrange
ments lea° been made for the next
winter's course, under able professors;
a hospital is likely to be added, and a
large attendance of students is confi
dently expected.
We regard this Movement at Cleve
land as a significant mark of the pro
gress of social knowledge in the Inter
protatiotrof individual duty, and in Its
application to meet the needs of suffer
ing humanity. The tendency 'at the
age Is toward the elimination of specific
truths -from the results of social ex
perience, and to their practical applica
tion in all the business of the world.
We are no longer content with vague'
generalities, but are mere and more daily
led to analyze the heretofore ac
cepted ideas which hive controlled
society in Its divisions of labor and re
. spensibility, rejecting as unsound all
; those which will not bear the closest and
i mast absolute practical develptpuent, but
i adopting and utilizing inch as bear the
I test.
This constitutes an enlightened prog
ress, and whether it concerns political
or individual obligations, is equally sus
tained by intelligent reason and by the 1 1
imperative demands of social interest.
At this dsy we mere and more claim
and exercise the largest liberty oil
thought and of action. We are coming
daily to clearer view, of the broad
chum between liberty and license, and
the temptations to aim it is teemed, as
all our social energies are given • fuller
play and a wider scope In the legitimate I
geld. We revere old institutions, estab
tithed things, but it is only after we are
quite sawed that they are based upon
truth and carried up by the plumbline ;
while no social wrong, political ,
lice, or individual error can look at this
day to any amount of lime-honored
usage for its protection from scriany or
coademnition.
In this spirit we welcenie the move
ment at Cleveland, es we have hereto
fore cordially accepted movements else
where, in our own country and abroad,
for the restoration of woman to her equal
+tweets:3A social duties, privileges and
responsibilities as, by her physical and l i
mental constitation, she may be qnall
ded to ammo. Of these, none can be
assigned to her, for her equal participa
tion at least, with a more undeniable fit
nese, than the great work of ministering
to the physical needs of sufering ha
manity. - And it should rather be for her I
to say whether, In all that concerns the
care and cue of the ailments of her sex,
she would admit our own even to a share
la the duty. I
The progress of enlightened sentiment
upon this subject to very satisfactorily
stated by Rae-per's Weekly in the , an
nexed paragraph:
“Notwithatanding the meet deter
mined tetebli:y to the demands of the
Aga for female physicians, Man Killion.
ter their educational preparation for
professional responsibilitiee are rapidly
multiplying. the ball first began tw
gum,* in the United States, nod now a
female medical college Is In succetsful
operation In old fogy medical London,
where the favored monepolLtara of physic
sod surgery were resolved to keep out
all new Ideas in their line by acts of
Parliament. But, alas ! the too-wells of
opposition have melted away, and even
inituasia a woman has graduated with
high medics! honors. Female playsi
rMa are. increasing rapidly, and their
mirk= are sought for by their own sex,
ail they shoed be, with thankful hemts
'or much balm in Gilead."
AN IMPEACHMENT TRIAL.
CoL Berms, in a note, in his abridg.
meat of the Congressional Debates, thus
describes the manner in which the &n
-ate Chamber was prepared for the trial
of Judge Cause :
"The Brute Chualrer was fitted up in
a style of appropriate elegance. Benches,
covered with crimson on each side, and
in a line with the chair of the President,
were assigned to the members 'of the
Senate. On the right and In front of the
chair a box was assigned' to the =n
and on the left a similar box to
man
agers.
Chase and his ccomeel, and chairs
allotted to such friends as he might in.
umbra& The redden of the floor was
occapled with chairs for the SCCOMITIO
datioa of the members of the House of
Representatives, and with boxes for the
ert=of the foreign ministers, and
military officers of the United
States. On the right and left of the
chair, at the termination of the benches
of the dumber, of the Doom boxes were
assigned to stenographers The perma
nent gallery was allotted to the indis
criminate ambition of spectators Be
low this gallery, and above the door of
the House, a new gallery was raised,
and fitted up with peculiar elegance, lu
te, o m i t =
i lufly for the exclusive
of balm. Bat this feature
of the arrangement, made by the Vice
Pmsident, was at an early period of the
trial abandoned, it baying been found
impossible to separate the semi At the
termination of this gallery, ou each ode,
boxes were s assigned to - ladies
Witched to the facilitesp.W..elly
of public char.
actors The preeenrathrn of order was
devolved on the Marshal of the Violeta
of Columbia, who was assisted by a
number of depetaes."
THE consplnAcir Aar
The Act of July 81, 1861, entitled as
above, upon which some of the Articles
of Impeachment against Xt. Johnson
are founded, nose aefollows :
"Be a *netted by the &mate asuf/Teuse
of Roprountaion of the United ealeo of
.daserie4 in Cosigns , assembled, That II
two or more pe n within any Suite or
Territory of the United shall con
spire together to overthrow or to put
down, or to destroy byArroe.States
thegovero.
meat of the United States, or to levy
war spinet the United States; or by
force thriven; hinder, or delay the ex
ecution of say law of the United States;
or by force to seize, take or possess any
property of the United Statesageinst the
will or contrary to the authority of the
'United States; or by form or intimida
tion, or threat to prevent any person
from accepting or holding any office, or
trust, or place of confideace under ths
United Stater, each and every penal: so
offending daft - be gouty ora 'tithed's%
and won conviction *roof In any Dis
trict or Circuft Conn of the United
States, having judsdiction thereof, or
District or Supreme Court of any Tent.
, tory of the United States having
fiction thereof ,, thereof, thall be putdthed ft by a
doe of not less than five hundred doftne
nor more than one thousand dolls"; or
by imprisonment, with or without-hard
labor as the Court "shall determine, for
a period not ley than de month', nor
gr iter then ea years; or by bath such
Inc and Imprisonment."
- -
Tan New York Tana thus alludes to
the baseless insinuation' of. Democratic
Journals that Mier .Itunloo Chase will
use ids parental end official Innuerossto
series great offender:
urg e far se the Weald/mile' interests of
Kr. Chile us concerned, there le no
sactilloa* we would not maki, no test of
fiitostehlp we would not staidly undergo.
Nothing would puffy us Rom then to
ant the treat lades and gateman of the
Reoublisanparty—ourcantaln and cider,
and dearly-traded frland.;-eleraud to
the Presidential_ aloe, Bather, bow
ever, than here peat act of justice
arrested, s now salachlevotte
ro t jhttrMe I nd
mps:peer mrta/ned in the
disgraces, we would moo Ns.
non he
!we's Presidential' canvass: drifting
among the laeberp of the Polar Ihra."
I.TTSBURGIL W EDN ES I*Y.
EPHEMERIS
• —Bishop Stevens is 'convalescent. •
—The Southern rice l crop is large.
—ltaly la tlueatened with civil war.
—Maryland killed the eight hour law.
—Abbott is to do Grant up to history.
—Mining is reviving at' Central City.
—Brown, the founder of .Omaha, Is
dead.
The Idaho Chinese ere Ln.desiltn
Augusta (141 e. - has had En earth
quake.
--Chase, it is said, does not want ;the
Presidency.
—Gold has been discovered in Frank
lin, Georgia.
—Gen. Joe Hooker is recovering his
health at Rome.
• •
—Cotton growers are rejmcing at the
advance . in the staple.
—The Southern Indiana tobacco . crop
now ready for market.
—The National Cemetery at Null-
Title Is nearly completed.
—The rolling mllls of Chattanooga
(Tenn.) are all in operation. •
—The recent sleet destroyed hundreds
of fruit trees in this•seetion.
—Mwschneelt■ has ER7•three thou
sand more women than men. . •
—New Albany has a religions revival
It needed something of that sort.
—Not a stick or stone marks tha last
resting place of old Zsch Taylor.
—The Mobile and Ohio Railroad is to
be supplied with rails from England.
—Qelncy, 111., has a colored woman
one hundred and thirty-five years old.
—Philadelphia is frill 'of young men
from the country seeking employment.
—Buffalo has a young scapegrace,
thirteen, married, drunken and a wife
beater.
—The New Albany Journal lays that
"mercy to, Johnson is mushy to the
State.":
—The Date creek bridge on the Delon
Pacific road is 2000 feat long and 211
feet high.
—Pendleton will ma inCependent for
the Presidency if the Democrats fall to
nominate him.
—Mobile has siz Andrew Jolizisons
who voted at the last municipal election.
We pity Mobile.
—Dan Bice holds a pew bievery
'church of Girard. He takes a multitude
of wayslo get to heaven.
—Africa has a Sing with three hand
red wives and seven hundred fldren,
and both still increasing..
—Gen. Sherman said in Cincinnati
recently, "Gen. Grant is rig t, sir; Gen.
Grant Is right in this matter:"
—Four hundred thousand pounds
sterling are distributed yearly as prise
money at the race courses in England.
—A bald journalist in a neighboring
, city afers one thousand dollars for a tale
so tragical sato make his hair stead on
end.
•
—Gm Chambers, of Louisville, bad
a daughter presented to him last week
on his eorentyfoanh birthday. Some
thing to be proud of.
—Boston has a French male modiste
who fits ladles with garments at a fasb
ioaibk e■tabllebmeal. The
hub is progressive. •
—lt is disputed whether the rich Mar
cus mines belong to Colorado or brew
Mexico, a difference *rising from the
want of a defined parallel: I .
—At a meeting of returned meddlers
held in Baltimore resolutions sustaining
Mr. Johnson were passed. We premme
they were confederates.
—Brooklyn_ plckpockets operate at
fanerala While hot tears are streaming
over the cheeks of the mourners, they
steel the contents albeit . pockets.
—The State t3euate of lowa has paged
Intl admitting womrn to practice at the
ben We !Mould like to here a fair wa.
man plead our cue were wo on trial.
—A landlady In Ettiffslo left a large
°nuns to a young gentleman boarder,
because he newer 'aid her victuals were
( wretched, her butter strong or. her tea
weak.
—A perpetual motion has been produ-:
red by a Mr. Wright, of Petersburg,
Pa., so a paper of that place grimly de=
clam. Us was eleven years in muter=
log the difficulty.
—A philosopher his divided human
beings into two dames, benefactors and
maletactors. should hate said la=
borers and loafers. To the one we owe
all that is maid, to the other all that is
eviL What the one does the other on.
does.
—A new plow, hav!ng ale iron blades
instead of a share, his been Inyented in
Sin Francisco. The blades dip into the
ground as they revolve, and not , only
turn and pulverize the earth, but also
serve to aid in propelling the machine.
This plow can be driven either by steam
or horse power, 'and will trench a strip
from six to eight feet wide. Very nice
on paper.
splendid new Chinese theatre was
dedicated recently in Ban Francisco.
Incense was burned proftisely; the lead
ing characters of the histrionic drams,'
in gorgeous costume, were on the Stage;
smoke was blown against the four walls,
representing the four quarters of the '
globe, from whence . intelligence is In.
yoked, and other ceremonies were per
formed; the whole closing-with the be
heading of a cock and a grand display
of fireworks.
—lmpeachment is the order of the day.
Congress impsaches Johnson, , Massa
alumna tbnetenabet Governor for veto
ing the Constabulary, West Virginia
brings Judge Hindman to trial for ad•.
mining, free of the Iron clad oath, rebel
attorneys to practice law; and the Board
of Aldermen of New Yink want Goy.
Fenton arraigned for not enforcing a law
regulating New York City affairs.
—This lathe latest item of fashionable
gossip from Miclugani—"Mr. ldh•quah
vreh-bow-you is engaged to Miss Mis
qesh-quet-o-que, daughter of Ne-be
nah-ah-nsh-quot-way-be, the - mighty
bunter; Mr. Mali-ksh-da-weh-bo-yon
ti the dark.eyed Miss Mah-kah-da-qiui;
Mr. An-ne-ne-wali-bo-you to the belle
of the forest, MisiSlh-que-wah-be-you;
and Mr. Kish-ke-ne-7e-ka-jah-shin to
the chick-we-nauch, Mils Ah-qua-ke
ehe-Won-n-que."
—Edwin Forrest is worth $700,000;
Barney •050,000; Edwin
Booth, $110,000; laggie Mitchell, 11110..
000; W. J. Florence, 4100,000; John
Brougham, $75,000; 'J. E.- Murdoch,
$41,000; J. E. Owens, $120,0004 Joseph
Jefferson, $75,000; F. B. Cluinfran, $75,.
000; J. IL Sackett, 1150,000;
Western, $140,000; . 3. Lester Wallack,
$150,000; 'Mrs. John. Drew, $30,000;
Clark*, $150,000; Lanni Keene,
$150,000;
„Edwin Adams, $21, 0 0 1 1; Mrs.
D. P. Bowan, $21,000; Win. Wheatley,
$200,000; U. L. Diarenport, $35,000;
P. T. Barnum, 11.100,000. , .
—The design of, the proposed Ails.
dolphin Lincoln . monument has - been
adopted. It is the - work of Randolph
Rogere,.the American sculptor, at Rome,
This dime is in • sitting posture, and
will be nine feet high, and the pedestal,
of granite, fourteen feet hiss. ,In his
lett bend Mr. Lincoln holds the Ewan-
citation Finclamation, and In his right
the pen withwhich be has ltiat jived it.
The 'upper side panels of the pedestal
will be decorated with the arms of the
United Biala:Cm the
,use tide, and those
'of the. City of Philadelphia on the other,
' bronze, the cornen - being supported
with Roman pima, also In bronco. On
the lower. earners 01 the pedestal • ire
four American eagles supportingiestoons l
of laurel, aI bronze., The bronze
'work is - to r be n escorted at the Royal
' Foundry, et Umiak: The whole cost
of the monument will be about $lO 000,
of which the Association has some VA-
EMMMI
Weedett kshittlpaine impesliment.
We find in the Cincinnati S cene the
annexed reporter Mr. Phillips' positions
I on the impeschme4 question, u listed
4
lin his Imbue hi. city on Monday
I evening: '' .
1 "One of Viejo said this morn
, fug that th coehl t see why I should
speak on t; that I knew no
more "bold it anybody else. I
don't pretend to;:iit it is the duty of all
to contnlene what little we can to the
general trewled This is the necessi
ty of the tau; that we have got either
by law, solitary or 'civil, to let in upon
the Bentham great orces of the elements
of the nineteenth tory. Mr. John
son's crime is that set himself to de
feat this ~ peee. From the first trio.
meet bin land and nd were felt in the
Government, he ertook to turn back
this great, p of the nation. - -My
wish to. iapeach him toaught is not
technical, t bees the man, by either
e i ki
his consc ien ce or, Ate.iverseneas bad set I
himself un epee tically to save th e
South front the fr of the war, and
the necessity of the epoch In which we
live. Every sing act, since the Baer'
mer of 1863 poktta that (Unction. -He
undertook; with° authority, to restore
all the ;seemly_ I the South into its'
hands. He would ulld up Its strong
holds by myligt It 1 the capital which
he could poem= . Be undertook to
anticipate Ooegre ' m e n rng to' the
iw.
front exaollythe el 't: which Mobs
lion 'puts H the rear. i - Disregarding
the state*, he • ita Governors and
otherhigNediedals [men IncOalpelent :to
take the oath of evilly. He then el
-4
lowed th vin of unarms's- sod ha
tred of - mall t white metes
wreak , i ,eiro the Delon
whites, .Mr ldackneeicindite
the werk l yeed he let loose the mil.
mere at wOr s, the bkiodat Mee&
phis, and t • "tmbldsliing mender 0f
four
, z l l.,
hundred =off= g men In General
Thema District, • and two thousand
men of Terns.
He has, :been i peached 'for a single
legal tecklcal o use, and the article
in year paper to w Ich I referred, welch
undertakes to arras no my right to speak.
about impeschmen , goes on with great
ignorance to state tno matter how
foolish the Preald nt was, he could not
be arraigned for hl follies, weaknesses
or error } Re t hive committed
some great flag t malignant act.
There was never greater
misunder
stemilmeof the na eof impeachment.
Never more forget Inns of the fact that
imeeacherent is th set of reserved sov
ereigut,y of a nett n, stepping outside
of all luilaws, 'cited by no precedent,
responsible to no lodge, bound to give
no warning, at liberty to violate every
2
legislative pon d You can not be
Indicted for an act bleb the statute has
not preeksaly wa ed yen of. Ent- the
nation leaves heel at no such mercy in
regard AD its executive dithers.
.
Anything which, the Judgment of the
people,nakes an ' ocuUre Magistrate
unfit:fat his place, no matter whether
the law has warn er . him of it or not, it
is the hew which t people make in the
emergermy. and t emergency makes
the lad . An Exec dye not indictable
for bile follies and weaknesses ! Sup
pose ClklefJuatice Ohne becomes idiotic,
are wain leave hlm Chlet /notice while
he Urn 1 You imteach him by a hi
, burial mg solemn so o Senate, declaring
' that hie is unfit for his' office. &wows
the Prudent bee n en incapable from
, delirem tremens I pplatisej, shall we
, refer him to a jury tif doctors t But no
lif he does a thing at renders him per .
Tent' and unlit to ischarge his duties:
if ors brain softens; f habit/unlit him; if
he tureethe White 0111,41100 a brothel,
I and disgraces the n lion; if he doe" any
thing th at makes th , magistrate unfit te
the eyes of the pee e to execute the m
id
, cred trust commit d i m him, thetAthe
' sovereign people, peachmeat, re
serve the power._ respective of enact
ments, to sit in judgment upon him. A
New Hampshire -j 'dee was Impeached
in the beginning of the nation for loose
morals, and reams d from th e bench.
Impeachment is the refuge of the coin- I
moo sense of the on, which In the
moment of diOlcult says In the mea
&
trate, you ought to TC known by your
common sense, an '. your moral sense,
that this has unfit you for your o ff ice.
I do not care wheth r Johnson has slip
ped on a statute o not: Its evident
that far over tweet ,four months, either 1
from mental or mot I incapacity, he has
been unable to put smell in line with
the great public zi any, and therefore
be ought to go up. ( Applause.) I am ,
no great friend of Republican party.
(Laughter.) I do 't think they have
, acted with column ate wisdom on thla
I occasion. It weal have been infinite
n ti
wisdom if, whe f - he swung dis. I
gracefully around , the circle, and
• the indignation of the people
attended him, the -. had for that de- I
eland him unfit for e great o ff ice. If,,
when stained with e blood of New Or-
I leans, they had arra ened him for that ;
' if, when be linden ,k to throw snide ,
your great national licy by bringing
forward the old le era of the South,
through his protium on of the pardon-
hog power; If the wi om of the House
of Representatives h undertaken in its
own undoubted nig h to arraign him on
technical grounds , they would have been 1
t
sustained In it. Wel are not wi th out a
precedent for it: t en, in 1681), th e
object of the Digits people was to get
rid of James If, a la ge -section of the
people said he. was Catholic and we
cannot trait him; mi ther section said he
bas introduced troo p' to crush the peo
ple
of England; an t er, he has Fail
tuted his judiciary; • other , that iso has
gone to France, and nested his place.
The question mesa h w to reconcile all
these various char a ; How shall we
make one tangible acctundlon out of
them all! They re ' teed. without tat
tling anything that t e' throne was va
cant, whether by ace dent, by crime, by
heedlessness, or by stake, and being
vacant, they filled it. Jest so with that
awe Saxon sort of statesmanship, Con
gress has undertaken to arraign John
son.
The Journal here, of which I spoke,
asks the question as if the simple act of
the removal of Stanton was the ground
I
of impeachment. S ppm° a man enters
your chamber at nig t, and you shoot
tilm. and when arr !geed, you should
ask, would you sh t a man for enter.
hug your chamber? ; Yes; if he enters
though a closed doo and with a pistol
in his hand. Ills e tering the door is
the simple act that cis the long category
of wrong-doing. (ingress would not
impeach Johnson f the simple thine •
ton of the law If it had not been for his
coarse; showing ' intent to put at
naught the wish of omen, and of the
masses of the poop]lt was the long
series of acts that proceeded the final
denouement.
_
'Mr kkonthe .
The following is 1
datory reconstructi :
both Houses of Co I
was scat to the Pre c
tore: .
"An act roppleme r Lry to an act to pro
tide for the um efficient government
of the Rebel Ste passed March 8,
1867, and to facilitate their restora
tion.
"Sac. 1. That beraller any election
authorized by the Set passed. March 88d,
1867, entitled An t supplementary to
an act to provide f th e more efficient
government of the rebel States,' passed
March Id, 1867, dto facilitate their
ndention, shall decided by • insjor ,
i e
Rye( the votes ac ally cast, and at th e
election in which the question of' the
adoption or rejeeti nAff any constitution
is submitted, any non duly registered
In the State may veto In the election dia
' trait where he offra to vote, when he
has resided Rani for the ten days next
t o
preceding each el on, upon presents
thin of his ccaliti to of registration, his ,
affidavit, or other theannory evidence,
under such regulations as the district
I commanders may Prescribe.. _
"Sec. 2.. And to 17 further - omega;
That the Constft4lonal Convention of
I any of the States Mentioned' In the acts
to which this Is amendatory. may pea
-1 vide that et the Urne of Toting upon the
sit/cation of the;oonstitution the reels.
Used voters may Vote also for , members
of the House of "rpreafrataUves of the
I
rutted Suites, an for all elective offices.'
1 provided for by ,he said constitution,
I and at the same election the officers who
i ncr.
shall make the u rn of the votes, cut
'on th e ratitleatio or rejection of the oon
-1 Attrition shall en to and certify th e
, Totes cast for me bars of Congress."
JUTIOZ Bram Inn PUSIDIXT:
, .
A. Washington correspondent rays:
I Judge Black Is ' edited with being the
' Prealdent's chic . adviser, but .he had
, been out of to for a week previous.
Furthermore, I ' not help giving you
I judge Black 's o a sta tement of the re
leans between r. Johnson and him-
Isla Talking Ith• a leading Senator 1
about the mat Gee day, he said, as I
I hear : "The pa 'talk Aleut me nabs ,
President's l' ad viser.. That's all
humbug; he se ds for me sometimes,
hot be rarely fob ows my advice • if he
did he wouldn't such * d---dfool of
himself 00 0 t -
. Elections.
he text of the 101111:1-
. 11 ' bill, as It paned
greu hat week, and
tdent for big signs-
" A Chapter on toebriatok"
The statistics of the institutions for
the care and reformation of inebriates
show that dissipation ie increasing to an
alarming extent throughout the country.
The evil is by no means confined to the
large cities; but has spread its baneful
-influence, since the close of the war, to
towns, villages and handets. Old-men
who have been exemplary members of
society Sir half a century hue fallen
victims to the fell -destroyer, while
youths in their teens become Meer" and
drunkards before . reaching their ma
jority. Om own city affords a deplore
ble example of excessiv e drinking, and
we are constrained to believe 'that it is
Increasing in all climes ot society.
Nearly all the mite crimes committed
in this State during the past year an be
traced directlT or indirectly to the use
of Intoxicating liquors.
The poisonous quality of liquor now
being manufactured and sold by saloons
has greatly increased the affliction known
as "delirium %redeem" A. three dare
spree in this age is sufficient to put a
• Man in such a frame of mind that
neither his own life or the lives of others'
are safe in his presence. From the an
nual report of the physician of the
Washington House; of Chicago, for
1867, we glean some very impressive
facts: ,
In that institution there have been 45,
cases of delirium tremens treated during
the year, - out of which II 'have required
active medical treatment. Many inhere
have hadno dellrain tremens, but have
offered froze varlets' other morbid con
diticms' consequent' Upon the use if at+
cohollo stimulants, , each at
dropsy, (general and local), wenn* and
one taco of mental disorder amounting
There has bebit bit e
eliegtlk, fiat •30setili:Cdnillehgesi
who has an interesting NeWlot
admitted on the 87th day of June in the
active stage of dellrum tremens, and
died on' the 10th from unemic convul
sions. There wu suppression of trine
front the day of his' admission and per.
tial suppression for some time previous.
His eyes were congested. The entire
surface of the body presented a bloated
appearance amounting to general dropsy
of the cellular time. He was raving
and wakeful, and; all means, failed to
procure sleep or rest. He could not, or
would not, take noeriihment, and died a
most horrible death in cenvulsione.
The next day after a post mortem ex.
unination was made in the presence
of a large manner of • the inmates
of the Home, who were permitted
to witness tho examination, that
they might, with their own eyes, see the
destructive erects of alcohol on the hu
man system which, although silent,
was a most impressive lecture.
• The heart was found to be large, its
walls thin and soft; an unusual amount
of serum was found la the pericardium
and pleura; the lungs were engorged
with blood; the liver was found enlarged,
'iodinated, and friable, being easily bro
ken down or torn, presenting the ap
pearance of what is called a "whisky
liver;" the stomach was partially Ailed
with a dark 'grim:nig -fluid; but the meet
interesting feature of the case was that
the mucus membrane was highly in
tided and softened, presentingthe char
acteristic appearance of a• drunkard's
stomach. as given, by Dr. Sewell, in his
plater showing the condition of this
membrane from the moderate drinker to
the confirmed drunkard.
This stomach corresponded most per
fectly with that of the confirmed drank
ard. The kidneys were found changed
in their structure; by what is called fatty
degeneration, so that they w ere Amble
to perform their natural reactions, hence
the, retention in the bleed of the poison
one elements of the trine, which acted
sea direct poison on the brain, resulting
in convulsions and death-
This case weal regarded as incurable
at the time of Me admission- He bad
good care and close attention. A num
ber of vitalist cases have been treated at
the Home during the year, but have re
covered, though none had progressed so
fu sable.
Another case li worthy of special men.
Uon, that of J. F., who had no delirium
tremens, but suffered from general
dropsy, tensed by an impale/label con
dition of the blood. He was kept quiet;
' tonics, iron-and diuretics were given, to•
getter with a nourishing diet, and his
recovery wu rapid and permanent.
The general treatment in causer de-
lirium tremens has been mainly the same
as list year.. Petlente, on admission,
have been bthed, and kept clean_ 111
constipation existed, as it generally does,
a mild cathartic or laxative was admin.
littered. The urinary secretions were
carefully watched, since much of the
nervous disturbance is caused by the
tetnntion in the blood of the poisonous
eldeenta or the urine. To relieve zest
lesineu and sleeplessness, the bromide
of potassium, indores varying from 10 to
40 grains every three hours, was the
most applicable and effectual. One Pa-
tient, who had had many sieges of de.
,Ilrum tremens, wee so promptly relieved
by this medicine Cut he exclaimed "that
Is the best medicine in the world—there
was never each another."
No alcoholic stimulants have been al.
lowed at the Home. Ali stimulantahave
been withdrawnat once, and the small •
amount of death compared with the
whole number treated gives very flatter-
big succus. Notwithstanding there are
many who recommend the tapering off
plan, the ple a" most the "sud
den Jerk is the successful
and shoed I be adopted by all institutions
designed for the reformation of the inc.
briate.--Leuistnife Courier'.
The Behar-illakees Seldom Mules.
The greataecret In batter•making,
seem; econdata In attending to the fo
lowing polnU , -
•
Ist. Securing rich, clean, healthy
milk—milk obtained on rich old pastures,
free of weeds.
W. Betting the milk in a moist, un
tainted atmosphere, and keeping Stan
even temperature while the cream is
'34. Proper managementin churning.
4th. .Washing oat the buttermilk
thoroughly, and working so &snot to in.
Jun the grain.
nth. Thorough and even incorpmn,
pa
don of the salt, and cking in oaken
tubs, tight, clean and well made.
Cleanliness in all the operations, is of
inoperative neeasity.
Judgment and experience In manipu
lating the cream end working the butter
must of noun bo used.— Millard:
points on a Goon lituren.—A. cot - -
respondent of the Country Gentleman
says: "In selecting a milker look well
to the udder. Before milking It should
, be wide and broad, not hanging down
like • auk, and hard and shiny, nearly
destitute of hair, and what there is
should be soft, flue and bright. After
milking, the udder should be soft and
apparently • skin bag. lf, after much
log, the udder is hard and fhll, it shows
that it ip flesh, not milk, that distends
it."
Another correspondent says: "For •
cow that leaks her milk ad y, l place a
little elastic gum ring around each teat.
Ton an cut a set out of an old cast.
away rubber shoe—coat nothing—no
harm to the cow, and will save in a sea
, son several dollars worth of milk."
• Tim cant.' dispatches announce the
death of the: young King of Bavaria,
Lents IL, which occurred at the Royal
Palace in Munich on last Friday. The
event must have been sudden, as there
had been. no previous mention of his
- Illness King Louis was • born. August
.25th, 1845, no Abet ho was less than
twenty-three years 01d... He had reigned
hardly four years, -having succeeded to
his father, King Mlxintilisn IL,, on the
10th of March, 1804. He was a hand
some loolOug young Man; but of delicate
physical organisation. He never show
ed any aptness for politics, • but was de
voted to music, The King is succeeded
by his brother . , Otho, born Sprit 27th,
1848. Their mother, tbe Queen Dover
ger, was a daughter of the late - Prince
'William, el Prussia, and la a woman of
One inudligence„ and of character - sopa
rior to that of either husband or eons.
,Ono has taken steps; . through her
Legislature, to solve the difficult problem.
of a woman'aright to become the allenee
of property. Tne legislation they pro
pose authorises a transfer directly nom
the husband to the wife. The armpo.
cations that have grown out of the many
ettemptsin this country to
ft
through
the . common.law hardehlOn relative to
married weenies property have become
quite formidable eventolawYerL Tank
firs by melt to Women under eoverture
have to bo hedged. about_by so many
rum* or made by such troublesoite
=Mum and withal are frequently the
cover for so _ =eh fraud that . every
lawyer, at-legt," will . rejoice ist seeing
all disabillpos of this kind remove d,
red women, wankel or 'single, enjoy
ing the min e property rights as men.,
.. , .
sn
It* taxmen., thick also; d breed ,
en of lechlgas, will holds &its' Oon.
Tootle* at Panels, onthelOdtof Mar*
'1848:: They snow% to remise much ben
eat from the issstasg:: „ . 0 .. 0 . •
ESTABLISHED IX 1786.
Naffr•se ie the esetbern armee.
There are but five of the Northern
States, and these five are New Eogfand
States, which make no distinction le the
right of suffrage, on account of color.
MAINZ gives the right of suffrage in
every male citizen of the United States
who has. resided in the State three
months, excepting pauper., personstm
der guardianship, and Indians not taxed.
New limmungns admits as electors
"every male inhabitant," excepting
paupers, and rations excused from pay
ing taxes at their own request.
VERMONT gives the ballot hi "every
man" twenty-one years old, who has re.
aided ono year in the State. I •
klatatcauserms admits every, Male
citizen twenty-one years old, excepting
paupers and - personstaider guardianship;
but no remit can vote or be eligible to
office who is not able to read the Con
stitution or 'write his name.
'aone Isnasn gives to'- the - ballot to
every male citizen of fall age, -one year
in the State,- six months in the tow;
and.who owns real estate worth $134, or
renting $7 per year ; end to every natter
male citizen, twenty-one Years old, ;two
' years in the State, -Biz months inl the
town, duly registered, who has paid $1
• tax or Mine militia service within the
year. I
Coirsigcnctri gives the ballot to 'all
white citizens of full age who have re
aided one year in the State, and , six
month, in the town. Negroes who were
free men (it any such survive) ati.the
adoption of the State Constitution in
1818 may vote. - The question of nem°
suffrage waa settenitted to the PeOMe
October 9, 1865.; whole vote, 00,708 . ;
majority against, 41,272. '
New YoniC=every'imle citizen of full
'Age; temdaye acitizen,- one yeartal the
iiltstmdbgeitlontitS , be the
4alterdratxthadieltlint- . „EhnnOniegfro:
can vote enlist he has . .been three Year*
a citizen of thelitate, and for one year
the owner of a freehold worth $250 over
incembrances, end on which he has paid
a tax, The new Constitution propome
Ito abolish these qualifications end to
establah an equal right of mama,
epective of color.
Ngw Jazsgv—"every white male gill:
zen' of fall age. resident one year in
the State, and live months in the county,
, excepting paupers, idiots, insane persons
and persons convicted of crimes ceded- ,
lag them from being witticiem.
PZIINITLYANIL—every white freeman
resident one year In the State mull ten
days in the, district.
Oino-avery white male citizen of fall
age resident one year in the' State. Ne
gro garage wee submitted to the people
in 1867, with the following result: for,
216,987;.againat, 255,340; the majority
against, 38,353.
Wisconarn admits every white citizen
of Lull age; persons of Indian blood,de-;
elated citizens by act of Congreasind
civilized citizens of Indian descent:llnd
the amendment to the State Constitution
to strike out the word "white" was re
jected to November, 1865, by 8,059 me--
Minassova—the same as Wisconsin
with regard to white citizens, ended.
mill Indians certified by District Court
to be fit for citizenship. In November,
1853, the State rejected negro suffrage
by 2,000 majority, and again in 1867 by
1.208 majority. .
Oazoon--every white 'citizen of full
age, six months resident in the State,
and every alien of full age, resident one
year in the United States, but "no negro,
Chinaman, or mulatto."
Imarana—every white male citizen of
the United States, resident one, year in
the State, but"nonegroor mulatto shall
have the'rlght of suffrage." -
Micntaart—every white male citizen
of full age, and to merviivilized male -
Indian not belonging to any tribe. I
MT6Bolllll—the Constitation of 1865
excludes blacks from voting.'
Itartiorsiseery white male citizen of
fell age resident one year in the State. -
Sasisas—every kite male citizen
adult, resident six months in the State.
The question of negro suffrage was pre
sented in 1867, and in a total vote of 99,-
204., was rejected by a majority of 8.938.
CALIYORNIA every white male
United Suites citizen(Or of Mexico, who
elected to become a citizen under the
treaty oftleeretaro), of fall age;
Chinaman, negro, or mulatto can vote.
NEVADA—Iair similar to that of
Oregon. . I
WITAT VIRGINIA -40 es not permit
negroes to vote.
Congress passed a bill enfranchising
mimes in the District of Columbia,
December 14th, 1966. in Senate, 22 yeas,
II nays; in Noose, 126 yeas, 46 nays;
President Johnson vetoed bill January
7th, 1867; same day Senate repassed the
bill, yeas, 20, nays 10, and that:form:by
113 yeas to 2S nays,when the bill became
a law. May 15; 1666, House passed a
bill that "there shall be no denial of
the elective franchise to citizens of the
United States became of race or color,
and ell persons shall bo equal before the
law,"—to amend the organic acts of the
Territories of Nebraska, Colorado, Da
mns, Montana, Washington; Idaho, Ati
zuns, Utah and New Mexico. The vote
was 70 yeas to 43 nays. January 10,
1667; the Senate adopted a substitute ' '
that there should be no denial of the
elective franchise "on account of rase,
color,- or previous condition of servi,
lode" in any of the United States now
or hereafter to be organized. The bill
was missed by 24yeas to 8 nays, end in
the Home, same day, yeas 104, and nays
38. • This bill became a law by failure of
the President to sign the bill, or return
It with veto, within ten days after Its
presentation.—.Y. Tr. World.
Apropos to the statement now going
the rounds of the prey to the effect that
Alex. H. Stephens gives out that ."only
in the last extremity was hi drawn into
the rebellion, and that even then ',he
Identified himself with it only that he
might further the cause of the Union,"
we republish the following pleasant little
abstract from a speech made some ten
years ago in the House of Represents,
tires against the Kansas bill.. Said Er.
Stephens:
"Well, gentlemen, you make a good
deal of clamor on the Nebraska massive,
bet it don't alarm us at all. We have
got used to that kind of talk. You have
threatened before, but have never per.
' formed. Yon have always cooed in, and
you will again. You ore a mooning,
vaitelisered set. Of course you will 'op
pose; we expect that; but we don't care
for your opposition, You will rail, but
we don't care for your railing. Yon will
hiss, but so do adders. We expect it of
adders, and expect it of . you. Toni are
like the devils that wer e pitched over the
Lttlements of Heaven into Hell. 'They
set up a howl of discomfiture, and 'sown'
yen. Bat their filo was sealed, and so
is yours. Tou must submit tothe ioke,
but don't chafe, gentlemen; welityli got
you in our power. You- tried to drive
us to the wall in 1816, bat times are
changed. You went a 'tooling, and
have come home fleeced. Don't be so
impudent as to complain. You will only
be slopped in the fare Don't right.
You will only be lashed into obedience."
Good, loyal, , innocent Mr. Stephens
• DILRALKA.
Pr essay mew was,
Irtstek Is the maiden I lore beet •
Twenty are awe bussing reeked MO: • -
.Thine In their milk-white arms re
semmeme. .
Siently—ret t feel no rest!
One hath showered her blank locks &mem;
1 . 4111 kneel on the mouse before me,
Castle* forth curb beams of blne '
That Pm eltrostl-01 throtsgh and threekh.
Ascohusl llods I What can, I do I
Whtett must nom beet?
•'• " '
Ten ine—lab amore gentlylake Inn.
swum ono, In thy warm white, gratin •
Tail mg—wriloh will weer fortako
Through sllltra'a ilia and harm t ' i.
anatla whowr blood ratgaatlug
grout that forehead crowned with mute T
Ltc aho whoa* tmla• beatiog
gal agolnot pay nuartual oldat
What up all throe things botldol •• I . -
Strong my doubts, grow—atroug, had
Quick/ glowgnitwertO
if lu r n t i a l u i sAt 7=l long" r, ; ,
•
—Charles T. James. one of the alleged
murderers el losopla Clark, In Worsester,
?dam. on Friday, the :Nth ult., was cap
tured Providenck Rhode Island, and •
token to Worcester; NIM hundred doi
larn a watch and diamond pin, Clark's
property , were found In his possession.
He mid the affair seas planned by his ne.
complies. The plan was to Smiler and
rob Clark. then destroy all evidence o
the murder by burning the building. `l t
was well known that w ith aly osr.
sled a huge coin of ntoney him, and
wore valuable diamonds. Hebei a Pro
alone acquaintance with James, and
charitsblypsod bills - during the raw
dayothey were waiting to - murder hint.
The deed was done. with a small broad:
axe; which they Carried to Clark's morn
in is cost. , James - atimeted'Ciark's at,
tentlon, while Charlos,..the nooompllce,
((who has steboon arrested.) stepped
Clark, and atrnek • him mortal
blow.l Very ,valuable pensanal .effacts
were overlooked_ by. the Dallldererl.
Clark's 'Metres. Mitered the room soon
after thelnurderritst•Piti entered,
ib•
tits had/ gallkiagoalasur. .'Charles Is
twentrAvro ill age, and below the
commOK~'of intellect' James
thirty-MONS. of agailMs loot the sight
of the laftsdipihnd wicked look. lle
Is said to bellae a who Polamed the
celebrated g , horse ludla Rubber.
114tOdssa, . •
OHIO ITIltdS
Jobaaoa of Letdown, box parr
Ohs.s+4 the Ohio Logic, Lancaster, Dar
ing $6.,200.
—Tao Hocking &n 1 0.1 says: An ex
ololastion of fruit buds shows that they
are, se yet, uninjured by the frost or
cold. •
—The Mt. Vernon Republican says
that the wheat crop in that vicinity looks
well. The snow lies Gins far Mien - it
protection, and it now looks green.
—The Belmont Cfireadde, having Its
faith strengthened by the recent passage
ot letters between Gen. Grant and the
:President, new de dares in favor of Giant
-for the ' Presidency. .
.
—One night last week the house of
Rev: Dr. Nelson, of Galileo, was entered
by burglars and smite silver aprons and
Jewelry were stolen. No due to the per
, :prtraters boo been fend.
r —The Clinton Republican is Informed
, that the fruit bode, including peaches,
'''.are. thus far, safeand sound in ; that. peg.
of the State: and are represented to be so
generally throughout' the country.
—The Salem (Columbiana bounty) lie
'publican nays: Farmer' inform as-that
the snow in the, country them far is pro
tecting the grain admirably, and if the
spring is at all favorable fur country
will be blamed with's plenteous harvest.;
—The Mansfield Herald says: We'
learn that anion steroid Jerdon, living
near Loudonville, drankn pint Of '
key and pepper one day last week, to'
break an attack of fever and ague, with.
which he Was troubled. He - seficeeded
In breaking it, but at tho some time died,
from the groomer tire dose, living but a
short time alter drinking the whiskey..
—The Madison County Union say s: ; ,
We understand that our fellow oitizart,,
Mal. Richard Cowling, has °Toted to
donate to the State his fine farm tying
Just mats( London, on the West-Seger-,
eon' Aim, eta , eondition thatAt shall be
MoSli OSLO& Alf Mungiata ,A.Pie . tamer,
College. Thofarm is one °Me nnestrn,
the country, containing shoal 300 wrest'
.is worth not less than $140,000. , 80 muni
ficent on offer as this of Major C. lots
rarely been made to any institution Of
-The Bacilli:a Journal says r Oa
Thursday Lust. as the. lady, aged 65, of
Mr. John Grose, living about four . miles
erosion the Middletown road, was-walk.
broke
en her nec k o f
slipped and fell and
broke the neck of her thigh bone. Few,
'rimy, fractures of the human frame are
more serrlouS than this. a' young person
se Word seldom recovers within half
year, and the chances are vary faint in 4
deed that a lady so advanced in Years.
afflicted - with such a serious accident,
will ever wholly recover.
—The Guernsey Tuna says; .On Suni
day, the 11th Inst., near Gibson's ntation,
this. county, • men named Balton Shot'
.himself. .through the bead, causing
most instant death. It Is not known
whether it was done iculdemtally or an
set reset destruction. lie remarked t 4
his wile, as shs . went oat to milk th.
cows, that hews' going to shoot a rat,
rabbit, (she did not understand which.)
and after being out a short time hoar'
the re.d , of the gun and Immediately
returned to the house, where she found
him In the agonies of death.
WEST VIRGINIA ITEM
—The Shepherdatown Begieter, speak!
of Col. J. E. Schley, of Jefferson county
se a candidate for next Governor.
—The Union Deautersays that "a good,
loyal and eapablemale teacher" la want
ed at New Creek, and will be paid libe-
—The Berkeley. Vision has 'a 'Leong ar•
tide defending Senator Chaplin again at
-the elsuideniof the Charlestown Spirit of
Jefferson rebel.
—A revival in the M. P. Church at
Newburgh; Preston county, under the
charge of Roe . F. A. Day, has resulted
in over fifty converts.
0. M. Begone has purchased
two_parcels of Ins tract of land known as
the "Rich Woods." adjoining Morgan':
town, at $47,50 per cure. -
—One hundred acres of land (withord
fence° or improvements,) one alie from
Charlestown. Jefferson county, were stsid
a few days since for s9oan ears.
—The Preston County Coal Company
at Austin, under the superintendence of
M. L. Schaffer, is shipping 100 tons of
coal per day and the Orrell Company at
Newberry from 75 to 100 tone daily.
• —We are glad to learn fromtheCiarks.
burg Telegraph that It is more prosper
one now than it has ever been before.
The Telegraph is a good paper, and de
serves &generous Hopped from toe Union
people of Harrison county. -
—The Fourth Semi-Anneal Session of
the Teachers' Association of Mononsulia
, will be held at the Hall of
coun ty West 'Virginia Agricultural College the
In
Morgantown, on Friday and Sakirday
13tH and /4th of March, 1263.
—The residence of Daniel Sutton,
about two miles east of Martinsburg,
was burned down on Sunday •morning
(rd.) Very few =tides of frunalture
were saved. Supposed to have caught
from a due running lu the upper story.
—A Mrs. Heeetan. of Austin, Preston
county, has recently gladdened the bout
of her hnshand, Mr. Patrick Hessian, by
the presentation of three boys. the en
tire' crop weighing twenty and one half
('-'O5) pound.. kindles:slants doing weU.
—Dr. Brock, of Morgiudown, ls deliv
ering a course of free lectures in the M.
E. Church of that place. The subject of
his last lecture was "What we eat and
drink." It would be a grftt. advantage
to the Public if phyrricians generally
would adopt this practice.
—Au interesting revival is progressing
In the NL E. Church at Chirksburgh. A
protracted meeting is also in progress In
the Southern Methodist Church, and
quite an interest awekonod during a
week's evening services in the Presby
terian Church at the same place. •
—WilliamSbriner, white driving a tiro
horse testa along the "narrows" beldw
Welleburgh ow - Tuesday morning last,
hod the misfortune to have lhe -whole
establishment go over the riVer bank:
One. of the horses was killed, and the
other crippled, .betides other dantage
• • • ••
—Martinsbarg and vicinity seem to be
Erected with a chronic attack of -burg
lary. The Vh.ee nye that on Saturday
-..1,) some thieving, hungry Igulludreiu,
broke open the smoke-house of Robert
Biown, about three miles west of that
place and carried ofr all 'of his' Mimi;
They were tracked to town, bin no clue
to the bacon could be found. .
--Gem. S. D. Ram% through the Me
dium of a card in the Parkernburg Times
preemie hie "kind regards' to the-Par:
kernburg Mill Company for euing.”blin
I for a balance on" his ',lumber soonunt"
during hie "temporary sbeenon in Wheel
log at the • instance of Parkersburg.!'
Rather a novel proceeding, it ukrtkokus
—the card, not the suit.
A Tikwittiartiaso-ii etwurtar - satire
a treesete suture owl , ••" "•••'
On Saturday night last a burglar en
tered the Western Female College at Ox
ford, Ohio. is frequent burglarious
visits bad been made • during the Post
few weeks, two of the teachers Itild lu
wait to trap' the thief. They permitted
him to get up stabs when they - repaired
to the Superintudent's house, some die:.
fence oll; and secured help to capture
the burglar. Armed with• revolver;
the Principal, Mr. Lyons, and b man
named Butler accompanied. She &IS to
the college. The lights In the hallo were
turned on, and search was made for the
intruder.- The men asoended'Aor the
third dory in the main building, while
the Principal remained on the dust Boor,
and three teachers went to the third: by
way of the stain. in thawing:a; The ,
forces surrounded the, intruder, UM.
pletely. Ho either dot having eeno
menced operations, or hearing footsteps
of coming doom, was In. the main hall,
and in the darkness, ran Widest Mr.
Butler, who was unarmed. With a pre
facing- oath the burglar • exclaimed,
"Where am I," then turned and walked
towards Mr.-Lyons, who =ld,' referig
to Mr. Butler, "Henry; is that yofoP
Receiving no reply, . Mr. cited
"halt ! and surrender. or I will shoot !"
Noherd was given to this:, and Mr. L:flred.
The:burglar dal alma forwardi - Ut
the banisters la frees of Mr. L., bowed
over them, and bounded doWn the stairs
Mr. 1., who followed him all the time,
demanded him to hales etopi surrender!
throw up arms! do., Noah-option was
paid to this and no reply given,tili down
n the that Hoer; where th e blinder hay.
lag failed to open the fronXdoen.rustbed
into theparier, saying with another Nab,
"pet me alone or I'll IrM - yeretr Me.-L.
Bred as Ma wan was luting the. parlor
and entering the ball, through which he
ran, throwing a settee idler him to tut
wade the progrees of thole in pariah.
Ileuuedout et the holland down: WI
huh gaits into the baeunent te the outer
door, south wing. Mr. L. need once
neer the ttip''df those staire,vand' tidal
while the man was unbolting. the door,'
which was the Bret Omit he bad oppor,
trinity to rum with any . exectisela. - No
shot misfired without previous demand
to IX surrender, and 100. lad Was
fired! as he wee opening the door.
flee t and apparemilieecepedun
. hwrd.. • Subsequently tracks were
: follow ed and led to Ida tl.! body;idostt
one hundred-I , AS from the bowie. ;. Ile
proved tohest Artaleruth -.muscular , ne,
gro,unknown inthatneighborhowl. He
hi
wu ou t lined. tudthe o.blet contents et
pockithirdittistetett of s bperbmtai.,
,rsio:ltaptilkapg ' about. three,: dollars,
somoluyek - hiserew driver end *few,-
'matched. Illabilehletronsers were gowed[
varieweilltia 'bap; containing what:lw
evidently,bettetwed to-be charms. Mb&
fi r ing ar e t e t att triers but they las-t
-hued n n obit , no manifestations:
of fright, And g- no sereemti,
coroner'e Itirtilindered a verdict .oh
"served thatuxplxright,7- ' •
S=M=l3==3VM
POETICAL.
Tlll. sTassr.
• ," I •!saixr mtnn.:l7.
I groin Cuseire negastae.i
Under thelaniplights, Aleut to
the street, , •
Delicate, lair, and MOP teeentY,
Therecsta lies • ••
Yace:sta the skies,
Starvedaa death In • city of plenty.
et...nest ire;all Wet tartan and *woe:.
littedreee beet noon telly and pleasure.
11 ttrottc4.4 no plenty. time andlekum.
Le It urn oetipeed °MIA'S Mie.loa below,
TO t.seti3hverriog and raise We lowly.
Monty,uemo,'to show
Thu :le low at,tu• 64 4 holy.
flouted <01.M.-c1..161.1 brow,
Dtheate leatturca—looltat them now.
look et, her Hoc onee they could smile; •
Rys—weir: neversaarethey ettealliescule.
eeess ,
5 7:11u..4 . 15t briar:to nn
the vallittleet We.
She hen Mend, let ns hope and tout,
eesewin it higher and hope
And yet, clasphoot all u
Joy of wme heart she mast have been...-
Some fondhenather, plondof the task.
etoteaed to anger each dslaly curl;
Some valarather hes bowed W oak.
A bluenig for hes. hie dultalt glYl. •
Huta WWI*, as we look et her there,
Oral thopinderness, layer en=
it. •
Lonely Watching and sore h
the agony,bumbiwbeark, _ _
Joyeand eorrows, boom Ws fear..
kreatled: and traffered Welter dear - make.
Fumy wilt 'Metiers boas* Lear,
Out whert:theWeettelna breezes blow.
Ins hoU , thsso sullen streets, fonnurme
mammy weltptatura *lonely hesith.
And ext sWed ample dead to mirth
KSaged bootee, broken , sod IMS•
JihelllthiaDeside•bed tO prat
Or lying Senakeo*alghte to hark.
and
rorttedtitgir IWL
Mno9°°l'e- in If ! r di ?
A holkni , eseled IMO= with vieed feet.
Better they never know
. • Sheleheas they chuishal sO ;
Idedeth.ta night, lone idol low,
Hob , inthentract.
• _ TOR ROCILII PROPHECY.
pusi,vrimoo woos.
ail Wrote us Iles the edy;
ttlep•St UntOtho - 3711104 - •
•Alt Wore us ts the day., •
•• • N t and!lark son arty behind.
Its angels a, •
-
I. leM sad dowers sod coolest ma.
szt umlaut story told
• ThMi a slowing propheeM •
tllaspliiPsyleitect MY." • _ •
In the passion* tame and lauo,,
Innotimos ham mitt& ears;
.210 , rost Eden me shall Mot.
Wtja' the moult," ran both dted. •
Troll and beau Una' and sound.
rtmli All earthunattlied,
r:Y04.. 1401 .""* U " an 3 °P4'...
qa. Fro ti thii sisals lasolarar
"Allalstarbtnir Soros shatllSet •
'auyjaor toils nor hope goal MAY , .
ltslmotortot unity. -..
=I
thO arr,
Circitagaroautt my Lady's goals frame,
Widod Over sword! gloioal, yea gld.O l
the
Rhea. trrga ha m% .and., _Whim
r in :dumb
.I d =d sway to tub the rate irratight
ergl
alas th Vito hbarti atrtdrgla hard to
The wll atedlore it bore my 141 y
How I fq ~ ufattErilled tbS ., mina'of her dorm
Bat I Wive fait ahatibiti da
11.11ROOt" WILII DI r, and a m
/Ms aogithol mg =al womdst a ti
euo ro Vag
gisg= b
Wh4)Or bright eyes, era trembling tato
Ytiamsylranla .
.
Fred% the Thro , wnli
the icafiwii,g , itotna- I-.
- —olhis now of dull sale,' at 1M.40 to
*l5O Per band at Titusville and it 112.75
at Olt Pity. ' ' ''. ' ' •
—A 'atIZED of Pleasantville was 'bidet
the otkir night by a diunken. humidor.
,
The todi did not take effect..
—ltil'e reported that hfurphy's Theatre.
buildilp3it Fithole is to be removed to
ShaMprg some time next !ping. '
—TileAckerman refinery at Gregg's
, is to
Switclibe enlarged to a producing
,
capar4 y of five hundred barrelsi of re
fined nil per week.
—The' eieltembiC"arcesinned la the
vicinffir Of Pleneruitville, by the striking
of . thir ITUrrionial Welt,' is dying ord.
The 1411 continues to produce abut one
I hundfed laurels per day. . ,
.
-....The town whit* has sprung up on
' the Tillman Farm, • between Sheinberg
and /Uhlman, on Upper 'Cherry RUA,
has bebn named °Beckon city - in honor
of 'hiti Backus, one of the 0M1:18271 of the
enew Iron tank of • twenty-four
thomihni barrein capacity is Who erected
at Miller Farm. Operations will ho corn
menctid as soon ns the weather - will per- ,
mit. 11 1/ i sta , nk into be owned by Cleve
landiirtlee—Adeer was killed on the track of the
Oil Clty and Fithole Branch Railway, on
Saturday afternoon. The deer started to
crossfihe track Jost as the train was nom
. Ir
tug., animal was hit to the ehonidor .
It: l fs un
by OM engine and nay killed. • ",
—tire Henderson rm, situated a few .• .•
rodsgeoutn of the brug wolla cm . • .
Lim* Cherry Run, ato be thoroughly .. ,
cortege during the next six months: --
Somirftwo . oy three engines - for putting
dowiiiwells are now on the ground, and ..
one l t two more will be in positionin a e '.
..Regions:
liontd We clip.
--.
~.
, Pire gee - from the burning well on
the Allegheny river; about three miles - ...
nortkor Scrub Grams Station, Is Will in
.flames. .The well was strueb about two . . •
years:ago and the gas tuts been burning _ ,
oroisince. Within the past six months .. - ..- .
the . tbas been's perceptible decrease in . . .
' -
the OISIMe of gee and risme, and it now ~ '
-ii
ri but roar or five feet above the our- •
, fitcoAf the ground.
I d
. —The Eric irstrA says a fire oc-
cririe -at the Un ited States Express
I
°Mesh l'ithoiNvn Sattuday, which but
for Itti likely discovery would have re- ; .:
wilted In a serious conflagration. It was
carogd by the spilling or a quantity of ~'.
henget:fa in the sexed story, which ran ,-
thrtrugh cracks In the floor catching fire
frothe stove below. , •
,
.-,,, e engine boom of the Getty well. ~
on Sennahoff Ellilcaught firs on Sztur..
daY,:mornlng last. about throe o'clock; -
andkwas entirely destroyed. The Ices .. '
wastuiroall. - The fire originated tem a
nabbed match Doing-brought into con-- • . -
treat with a qu antity of crude oil that . •
Raritan late te tirehox of the engine .. ;
withoutthe engineer being= aware of it. -,
It *stated' that the person who ill the • :
match in the engine house wee somewhat .„ - f
ernsiclard by the explosion of the cll.` ,
1 . -"
' -The bland in the Allegheny River at ' .-.
thouth of Oil Creek, ea wllleh'retto
one hf the abutments or the long bridge -:
is 10d, distippsering under the action-o ff -
thy: river current.. Same five or . Six
year. a ago it embraced . several acres:
There was a fine grove upon it and it
sorsa at- that , time a general retort for
sublimer plumbs puttee.. The grove has '-.
been carried away picemeal by freshets, -
and but a few square rods of by.
and
griNel now mark-the eput,- and iris pre. • -.-'
thews.' that if the spring frealtetsheuld be , .
heavy not a vestige of the inland will -
The Allegheny river Is now frozen
to greater depth than at any other time .
Lre,severel years._ The ice is very imild, \.,
rid In some placeeit Is from eighteen
hitherto two feet In thickness... -The hi- . '
habitants living along the river have de- - -
cared inurplice of tbebwt quality of lee . -',
friipreservatiett; and they are - now aux- -..-
howdy awaiting the breakup, as it it =7
Ph - Mated that if It comes Suddenly, con-,
idfierable Injury will lie done to bridges
Wit other property,' front thatinuanally '.,..
large amount of ice that will force ha
Way down stream. Daring the breahloP.
et - December laid there -was a moderate
TRW and thetas was thin, but more than - ,
chemillion dollars . worth or property '• I
was lost or destroyed 'along the river
from:Warren Le Errilentoni - At-present .'
therein scarcely asmneh --property' in
nt ' .•''''.
denser tre a break rip in the sumo dire
tills. Its there wriest that timer, , but the
amount Ls' WIIP considerable, and the
Warners end repreunitatives of It should„ .---„,--
ik. to its safety while thereiethne.
11-beat' weeks: curious -gas wept/Wien - ---
citounel at e drilling well hear Enter-', - 1,
Oho; which' for the extraordinary force
displayed* probably.leltliontapir.
iti the annals of dri ll ing walla. .0 ..''
Clomi have been going on on thli - we lifor .' ''.
Setae time pract.'and the wereefitestertrock. ~.
It
Z i regehed, shoat tin , leap...
thatthe Wolf fell in V. 104
tiltuhle heavily oli the Walk 'Wrath,
irig into aurevlce widow '' ripitarpt , „:,
nehtity, of ges.lual
~ , s ' The gas
sashed ontof the w St bled, ta m lITII.Xi.
Ming ebund;leticUthe dilllegand the erw , ....
We t
a n
bogrtkviainlty.of! the - '....i'.1'
ll on nut. Thiry, .
o lian t ethed . .tp - "a".
b
isle dfirtene* idled. . . t0p.. . 6
0 to
iherirlyttig pipasealgteretWell ' ..e:
" 4 . , thrlllnl - •lIP ' the: derrick- '• " ',-
The Jos coil . aii-4iround ,
Well and engine wratinititOld
lb. thy So therm ' t el with a
Ft- tbakwart eard. one eremite r.-i- - -.
t. - The - engine house and derrick
ught firethwathesapliefort lied Were
ttire,
LY deesoyed, -Uwe are, inatanies
re,oord,wherd in drilling Wells! gas ..i
gains 'or cregkee have' bleu - enddrely
•&.eri; haiglind,tlW: teals here . been • !.....
rnr,,.,,„. well, ; bat we think then , . .
le der find time that the =eh of tam..
weltutd wilihrierlt Ibileato even *neglects *1,,,
Who drlvingulmto soy notifingof threw- -..„-
Piri. t .'n l . l6 ! l ,Y ' 3 .Y t v fll l ew -fk, - 4,1 -' i
Ott Or twelve yeas .of age bra
l'betnayroonindtted.a.voteler . .. l
tram:4 l / 4 . She
encored tbe sere ce of • et there to
Jett flab or a lllftq boy Ave yes* D id;
hod she cOnehnol• vteent,srereton.:-L
, toward the,
.011 d. One d ay its OM Innt':'
broken; no one toed vapertenhowont
*bother oeceidonlbeboy had
pits enttenteretttreetlytn consequence- "
1
StUkthe girl win not eniptetaL -Deter.,
infuser , tor goCibt of lay: and int. -
iket i pt Smat warden, she aimed the poor
boy, to wallow A quantity Of sulphate of
canna - whirr kAredlito - latmedistely.
11.,.*::idtleittiter,ot the dedittv stetted
trueteion,tpd-4t neekal_elteliktnehne
MO.
:PrOred • violent poilon had, been
ed lnfteretk3
'teonielateri the girl
Inte-et ontec.-arrestei,q l . s babe the only -
potion thaceol4,hsve done- it. T.
tier, the uturderet ofJobn Seek.;
iiiat; - • wee taken Voile' the ,Colligttee, V, -
'sell etc TeeetvenlabC
eouteasedc
Z a er,Te b e;ire n teilrb g r . „ii - .... t v
dier from SoutAPsiolftte, -
- • ,
MEI
' : I
I 1
1 , 1