The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 12, 1868, Image 1

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    THE
DAILY - CIAZMX
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&Iie=n_S_HISAPZIS and ZS! "ANIL!
Omi 170.K.M t at,“ ,r4P.12 Oa aregrte„,,
• , ,
rmror Tam 2/111T:
etalailier - •
•Itaaarossr
littsbut 'idts
ItEFEBLICAII STATE TICHEr. •
Fon.MIDITOIS
lIABERieIoWT.
nt,searcres.e tow.
JACOB I': CA Bets. ..
The election in this El to on Tuesday
floyerflor, fly Conflation',
twelie &Matsui - and over three hundred
Representatives, with a Railroad Corn.
fliboloper . and numenvas county and
town. o. National politics have
entine tiMom ly controlled the CIXIIMit, and the
result, open a vote larger thanaer be
fore given in thelitete, Iseseineatly tat
tatantosi.:- Upon a vote of 71,591 In
• 11360. the Republican majority. was 4,483;
• ~ ,o roorautoteef(lB,646, in - 1864; the
ma
joritywee 5,646. The vote of:1860 was
the tamest aver cut in the &ate before
this
week. The Indication' now are
o- - :-Nhat.2thro, total , vote of list TuesdaY '
' reaches at least 78,000, and upon this
vote the Republicans give Ranances at
IPA 0.000 majority, elect - four 'of the
the Councillors, and have some seventy
siejoilty. UM - other- Irreach of • the
1 . 4 1/ 1 4 4 1a(e.- - = _
"The impeachment has been made the
great fame in the amass, and the pop.
litaiest in that question, not len
. ,
than the extraordinary efforts of pollti
ciana, have probably brunight one within
a very few, hundreds of every legal vote
in the Suite In no New England State
• don reirtixan'fieling run higher then in
New Hamiehire. and to none is there a
more intelligent population. The re
snit Is; therafore, a glorious triumph for
the Republicaninterpretatlon of Coma.
tutional and Popular Rights.
I:lisp:itches indicating a Waterloo de;
fest for the friends of "My policy" in
New Riemehlie were received at Nash
*germ on,tte afternoon of
. the election
daki admit) inamediately eainmunica
toed to the. - I 'reSidetot, who., was then
holding a Cabinet - meeting. It Is repor
. led, reseloubt with truth, that the "bum
ble inalvidnal" and lois- adasers were
stunned is by a thunderbolt, and the
meeting: immediately brohe up. Let
them heed the omen
Tate New York Democratic Conven
tion was held yesterdaY at Albany.
members without any ceremony Weir
overboard kir. Pendleton, and declared
Xi. aciunculitheir clutictilor tto Pres!.
dency. Nor was that the strangest pro.
asediug.. The seductive greenback poll
ey which has already catered so largely
into the advance campaign of the De
mocracy wag repudiated in a Sat speech
by kir..l3aymour,anade after his mom- .
inendation for the Presidency, and the
platibrm minted for the Empire State
ingeniously Ignores the fact that any
financial quearloi will enter the forth
" coming Presidential canvass. We have
;already. - predicted- much. The
Democracy thrust for sohtion a
question on the pcople which tickles the
• Weatetn masses an welt as the middle
.cota:drY, but-proves obnoxious to the
-wealthy Ichemers who manipulate at
pleasurerthe machinery of that organics
.tion.. In tatting no action on thei.liond
quention the New York Convention din
played,a*ir of . moral contage, fearing
to meet 1171 F Issuer with honesty and
frankness,. , preterring to tinore it' en.
their rather than lose the prestige It has
already obtained with the masses of 'the
.party ip, the WeaL Thus it Rents that
with the Denzocracy,palatable and di
ipsetthle political food in some quarters
is poIeIMMIS aoG nnpziatable in 'others.
. .
-Tag Itirscumeart &rant. Cortrasnos
was held yesterday at Fhilatielpida and
was lirgely attended. -Frill .reports of
the - proceedings win be found in Our tel
egraph ;rxdumna ~ .The convention
instructed the State delegates to
that - National Convention at Chicago, to
support Gissarr for president and Con•
era for Vice President. The re-nominr
tiuucf Mews: HARTMAN Pr and, Quiz.-
sax, for Auditor General and Burveyer
Gam), Vial a welrdeleived Compli
ant Paid officers ortim contrnoniweilth
whetters faithfully served ths people in
their. respective positions. With -such
leaders anceem at the ballot box in Onto
her !as certain and foregone conclusion.
Tbk Convention was hartnoniona and
ranch. Unanimity of feeling and ientl
meat prevailed.
Nth. Gnow and Gov. WILIMT yester
day withdrew their names - from the can
nu for the . Vice Presidential 'recom
mendation of the State Republican Con
te:MI(111;1/ns leaving the field clear. to
lir. • Guam. . - This wine Iva& very
honorable and praiseworthy in those
rentlemen, as both would have developed
considerable strength had they remained
in the- contest. They preferred that
harmony and unanimity of 'talon Should
- praiall in the ranks Stile }ether
than needs; personal honor or 'advance
ment. Their care for the beet interest&
et the party will be accented as new eTI
: deice fent:Jr Integrity. And worth, and
will be gratefully iemrmbered, 'when
- the proper opportunity Is &Warded, by
the loyal masses of the Commonirealtb.
Tus Moron watebtiress in Kentucky
are.bunting up Itrightly:egabt. There
gnawing signs of. a szteral notation
throeghoirt the State, and, under the
lead of. BAKE; the gallant Republican
:esosalsen for Governor; of Col JALTJOIr,
or Clem., itfonson and of Ron. W. IL
WunneOirs, of Maysville, who bu
lett the Coniservatives in disgust, the
eagle of the Union and of Republican
ism wilt not only deserve but will jet
win sacceas.
ISAIDING Democrat in the Ohio
LegiaLature h said to.bane declared in a
debate on Sattirday last, that be'ootird
rather 'trust , ae Democracy in political
aKttert iJkol. God Would it
be stalnit to 'intimito that thts hank
animal notanitithan expressta the long
cherbhed principle of many of the
*lista of that party _
Tuts Arai number of the Obtain . Ittl
Sisistiny Cltivniek comes to its, • neatly
printed ittid carefully. edited journal,
/Ana Its columns bare a business look,
Thiel augurs favorably for its tlnanclal
:st#Seestk. Begmbllcantsm has a new ad
vocate:and naiad rustaln It as it
.
- -The workmen in tha shops of the
Nashville and Chattimootit Railroad at
are on a sttike. Th9r have
beep receiving heretotbre doable pay for
aR wdrk after lours or on Sunday. An
'order has recently been issued to the
'.effect that the men dull recant only the
muptlar pay for any inch extra laboz
rwazdted from Booth Artier
•
Ica; Itenettice that the cholera le making
terrible ravages in the Argentipe Coo
. itaderattea.:At-Bitezoore.yrormuch
digestion Ls expreesed at the cowardice
the - pbyalciana •and 'people le - flying
-- -troet the cortntrl , ;,. In Cordova the wie
r...thiarlltlalhateeTerlihOtaaka4
'. - VOLUME INXTTIT.
E;=22l
FIRST
MMDNIGI-ELT.
RITE
CONVENTION:
Chant and Coils far Preshlent an
- Vice Prosideat. `
Tpe P.l4iforni Adopted
Pablic_ Debt to be g01d..1c..
cording to" Its Legal
Requirements
_ .
inerdls Hartrailt and Cuipbell
`_ Unanimously Nominated TOT
Auditor General and tar
refer General.
• -..,..
Oketua • Masten tithe rummest essietio
Pkii.xnanraza, March 11, Me&
The State Republican Convention was
called to order at eleven o'clock, in the
Academy of Malin by Col. Frank Jor
dan,. Chairman of the State Executive
Committee, who made an eloquent
speech, referring to past trials and cm ,
twin triumphs in the future.
CoL Wtlllsmll. Mann, of" Philanel
phia,. was elected temporary Clubman.
He also made a speech. He referred to
the New Hampshire election, which
elicited ornhrtriastio cheers, as also did
allusions to.Generul Grant and ex-Gov-
The canal Committee. on Organimtion
end- Resolutions were appolpted.
Hod. .Lemuel Todd, of Carlisle, was
elected • President,and made a speech,
endorsing Congress Mnthiudastic cheers)
and favoring Grant and Curtin for Pres
ident and Vice President,.
thrown roe PRICISIDMIS.
. EL ThicherSwope, of Clearfield, reared,
to notnlizateGrant for Preatdentand Cur
tin forVles President
Mr. Haasell Errett, of Allegheny,
move& to strike out Curtin anti. Insert
Hon. B. P..V7ade.
Mr. John 8. Mann. of Potter, called
for a divialon on the queetlort.
A vote was taken and Gan. Grant de
clared to baihe turaulmona choice for
President ' [Loud cheers.]
• von vim PILICITLDENT.
Mr. McClure moved fore calling of the
roll, each delegate to vote Ms preference
for Vice President. Carried. • .
The roll was called. AndrMr G. Cur
tin remlved one bundredand nine votem
Benjamin P. Wade twenty-two•, Edwin
M. Stanton one.
Mr. Afarahall, 'of Allegheny, 'robed for
Curtin. The rest of the Alleghepy dele
gation, with Maus. Mclntyre and
Marks, of Philadelphia, Wiley, of Lan
caster, Ulmer, of Somerset, IlliFr, of
'Dauphin, Knorr, of Northumberland,
Goodrich, of Bradford, Brower, of Mon
amr, Hallman and Clyde, of Danphin
Pelt, of Somerset, Mann, of Potter, Fra
sier, of York, Gel., of Franklin, and
McCormick, of Tenons°, voted for Ben
. _ .
Effil2iiaMiM;
RIZOLUTION . S.
hir. Cochran; of York, reported reso
lutions from the Committee, strongly
endorsing Grant andCurtin; denouncing
President Johnson; strongly approving
the polity of Congress and Impeachment;
calling. for the payment of the-public
debt according to its legal roquirements;
citing - the Declaration of Independence
tha bests of Republican sentiments;
calling for economy in public expendi
.tares and reduction of taxation; thanking
the soldiers and sailors for their services
and Stanton for his .conrse; calling on
"
Senate to• 'remove President Johnson
epeerlily; approving of a registry Me.
the protection of ruitnralized
rens abroad, and endorsing Governor
'Geary's administration.
I=l
General John 'P., Hartranß, mu;
nominated for Auditor General and Gen
oral J. M. Camplie3l for Surveyor Gen
eral, both tuoudoremely.
INSTIIL=ING DELZOLTIS.
A reanbatlon instruct'ng all delegates
Chicagoto note as a unit for Grant and .
.Curtin
excited discussion. Curtin was
strongly opposed by Mount' Matui of
Potter, Bayne, Marshall, Perryliusee and
Erred of Allegheny, and supported by
Meas.. Swope of Clearfield, Mann of
Philadelphia, and Coehrane. The rote
On the resolution was. yeas ninety.olght,
nays- forty.
The other resolutions were adopted
ansalmously.
Adjourned to arson o'clock p. m.
CIJETIN DELEOATZZI TO Er IMPS TO CIII
cuao.
Previous to adjoursunent this afternoon
Mr. McClure introduced a resolution
thoriztag the ctmir to appoint a am
Ditties of one from each Ccammaahmal
District to report delegates from each to
the Chicago Contention and one elector,
and to Wed Mom already appointad, If
Curtin men; If not, to soled others.
On Ude question a debate came on at
the everting eatsion, and speeches were
made against Itby Mears. Erre; Mann
of Potter, Bayne end McCormick, :and
foe; it by Messrs. McClure and Mann of
Philadelphia. '
The resolution than passed—yeas,
ty:fourtmayir,:forty-seeirm
The Convention then adjourned.
(By Asia:Wed 2 0 .
PmELunazina. March IL—The Re
piihlicua State Convention was called to
osier by_Col...lordin...Cludetasta of the
State - Central C,ammlthee. Wm. B.
Mann, of Philadelphia, prodded tempo
rarily, and woe ano Boded' by. General
Lemuel Todd, of Cumberland county.
The Col:menden pproceeded to ballot aa
a meatus of asoertatniug the preferences
of members ler candidates .for President
and Vice President, and declared for .
Want Inuadmonsly. For Vice Presi
dent, Andrew 4 1 . Curtin received 109,
Et. F. Wood AV, and E. M. Stanton 1.
Hartman and Campbell were mini
monsly nominated tar . areleetlee as
Auditor General and Surveyor General.
The following were chosen electors at
large. C. IdorAson Coates, of Philadel
phnu.Thomas M. Marshall, Pritsbnigh.
The following were amen delegates at
large: Colonel J. W. Forney, James
Orne, of Philadelphia; General. Harry
White, of Indiana; E. Reed flyer, of
Bradford; J. W. Ilenchard, of Lawrence;
Thomas E. Mel:mane, of York; Lion
Bartholomew, otßehpylkill, and Gen.
Wm. Lilly of Carbon.
The folloiring resolutions were adop.
That the great Republican party of
America, without which tho rebellion
against the Government would have
consummated rte division of the Union
sad the perpetuation of hurnanalavery,
with the aid, comfort and full approval
of the present Democratic party, is inthe
fore front of another peril and another
trial. Electing ha candidate for, Presi
dent in 1860, and re-electing him
in : Mt is called upon to
deckle w or all the sacrifi ce s of blood
and - have not only beanie Yalu.
but were simply contributions- for the
restored= .4 bomb under the Influ
ence of a man who , clo th ed with the
conlidenps of his country, is prevented
from overthrowing the Government
solely by tho wise and patrlcelo stand
taken by a losdCongrees,
That we add'out voice to the loud as
In favor of General U.S. Grant as
theßepubUcan candinahafor Friedel/et,
and In so doing feel that wears not inni
ply rehponcting to the wishes of constit
uent'', or belgm to pays portion of the
debt sraows to that great soldier, but
preparing the way for. that substittallal
triumph which, while perpetuating the
Re Itepudlcan= preserres and . peeped-
That ws sarneetly WI upon e !gin
ate of th•
,gutted - States,' sating as a
Court of latottaultatt, to proofed with
gljt fpar flinty or littepth•po sad Malabo
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people of Pennsylvania will stand by
and maintain the Just judgment of the
law.
That the soldiers and RanaPi of the
Anion; who fought and conquered arm
ed rebellion In the field, and stood' true
to the principles which they vindicated
and the flac which floated overthem and
_rem to victory, are entitled to the
undying gratitude of the loyal people,
and as they saved the country by trials,
suffering. andeacrifices, they-have con
siderable claims to thshigtiest honors of
the nation: • "
That we tender our most cordial thanks
to Edwin M. Stanton, for the firmness,
courage - sued -patriotiam with whisk he
hes maintained the majesty of the law
and the rights of the people Against the
attempted invasions of faithless Ex
ecutive and his purchased Instruments.
• That as experience is alike the beat
Instrucler of man and nations, so the ex
perience of the rebellion gives us I 'new
ed confideneeth the pledges and pre
cepts ofthe Declaration of Independence,
and with those as our guiding eters the
Republic= party must always succeed.
That no contract so eloquent could
be
.pretested as that-between the loud
liroiewsiona of Andrew Johnson and
the 'beet patriotlem ottilysses 8.-Grant;
thetas one deals In promisee to deceive,
the other deal. in acts that convince, and
that while Johnson has fallen rapidly
away -from • his many voluntary cove
nantal, Grout has accepted equal jut Lice
and Radical Republicanism as part alike
of eonsciennaand duty. - •
That Die public debt, incurred for the
purpose of preserving the existenced
the nation, is a sacred obligation, binding
the people to Repayment - in the utmost
good faith to the Intl extent of the legal
requirements; that the greatest require
ments of prudence. and judgment ere
still required, and 'Mould, as far
as attainable, be employed at once
to • malt:daft:l - the public fatth
and credit and render the burden
as light as practicable upon the predic
tive industry of the country and the
wegai and pea—eels or labor; that it is
the dictate of a And piney, as well of
grearnst western, teat the domestic
industry the country should be
sustained and protected against • for
eign competition by adequate tariff
laws, and that in whatever particular
the existing lowa on the enabJect are de
fective, they ahenld be amended and
-made elSeient for that purpose, es well
as the purpose of raising revenue for
the Government.
That by the election of Gem Grant to
the Presidency, Olt domestic dissensions
and tedious opposition to the complete
reconstruction of the Union, on the firm
foundations laid by the wise and judi
cious legislation of Coogrees, will be
Immediately suppressed and harmony
and good feeling restored, settled rela
tions of .business established, and the re,
viral and improvement of all disturbed
sources of national wealth and prosper
ity be secured, when it is at once made
manifest that the people of this country
are firmly fixed in their determination
that Ina :fruits of - the late bloody and oh
etinate struggle shall not he lostand that
factions and rebellious resistance to the
laws shall be effectually overthrown,
which attempted to subvert the Govern
ment by savage cruelty, rapine and mar
der.
That Pennsylvania proudly tenders to
the loyal people of the Union [ion. An
drew G.:Curtiu, bet great. war Governor,
and the Behller's friend.
That every American citizen, whether
• by birth or adoption, to entitled to the
protection of the nation and its flax, and
while it is incumbent on 'the flovern
meet to institute neszotiationn for the en
tablishtnent of international law for ex
patriation, recognizing. naturalization
by one nation as terminating the allegi
once dne to another, and conferring all'
rights of citizenship ; it is no be'', its duty
to vindicate Pa people of all classes from
oppression or interference at borne and
abroad when in the legitimate and peace.
ful exercise of legal and personal rights.
That delegates from:Pennsylvania to
the National Republican Convention in
Chicago are instructed to east their
votes as a emit, through its Chairman, in
favor of Grant (or Prmicteqelll4;vtit
ifrirlsml the citoMO of the ismaple of the
State for those positions, and that the
right of .suLoaltulion for absent delecatas
shall be solely with the delegation fpem
the State.
Considerable oppaeltion made to
thalast resolution. The resotutlon were
titan divided and all except the laataclok•
At the evening session a lengthy din
=sedan ensued upon the question of in
strueting the delegation to the Nations
Convention to. rota as a unit for eautti
dates
The electoral ticket seas provided ror,
and the'regvention adjourned aine die at
• Into hour.
NEW HIMPAIRE ELECTIPN
Tam Toga the Largeet Ever Polled la
ae-Elaetad by
Tares 7boasse4 Majority—L*osla.
tare larael7 Repot,llutr.
ZIP Telex - mob to Ma Irttottarztt Oat:eta)
Cogrone. N. R., March • IL—Return.
from one hundred and eternity-five
towns give Harriman, Republican, 22,7:r2;
Sinclair, Democrat, 20,9 , 17. Republican
majority 2,835. 1111 y-eight towns and
small place. remain to bo heard from
which areabout equally Republican and
Democratic. It is probable that Ilarrl
man'. Majority will be' about three
thonsand. The whole rote will prosba
bly exceed seventy-two thousand, the
largest vote ever poll.' in the State. The
Legislature will be largely Republican.
The Republica:melee! fuer out of five
Councillors and nine out of twelve Sen
ators. They have probably about mven
ty majority. Harrlman'it majority. In
somewhat reduced from last year.
Co: man, March IL—Return,, from
one hundred and seventy-eight towns
give Harriman 37,435;
_Sinclair 21,217;
scattering nineteen. Harriman'. plu
rality 3,211. There are fifty-three towns
to hear from which last year stood Har
dman, 4.800; Sinclair, 5.1111. The aggre
gate vote this year will probably reach
lionacca, CONY., March 11.—News
from New Hanomblre, canned greet ex
citement in this city. At midnight, In
spite of the rain. a salute was fired in
honor of the gnomes of the Republicans.
A special from Washington, D. C.,
gays: There Is great rejoicing here
among the Republicans over the remit
of the New Haronehire election, and a
mu - responding despondency among the
Democrats. But few of the littler were
expecting curb a signal triumph for the
Repnbilinin ticket. Yesterday they were
in .high Write, and boldly proclaimed
that the Impeachment movement would
give New Iburipshire to the Democrat..
r.lx.temive preparations bad bead male
for a cerebration here Tuesday night by .
them. Powder had been purchased to
he need freely; handset' memo were en
gaged to aeretuule the leading Democrat.
and - the President. and there wan to have
been a grand old fashioned glorificaticm.
About two o'clock, while the Cabinet
wee In Benton • tat Thomas Florence
received the fl eet dispatched from New
Hampshire, Mating that that State had
hopefeasly Whit the Radicala. lie
ruthed to the House, and disra
warding the deor-keepers, interrupted
the Cabinet meeting with the announce
ment: It canto ILke a thunderbolt to A.
J. and his adviser., end the thibinet
meeting 'ended. As. the fight In Now
fLarapseire was made directly on the
impeachment question by the Radicals,
they maintain that It/dimes coed naively
that the people now demand that it be
pressed through.-
I=l
Conceit/a, N. H., March IL—Corroded
returns from one hundred and eighty
ono towns root np Harriman .1-I,thri. and
Sinclair 31,7 H.
FLOOD IN THE WEST,
IN Corte af-Rweli Islniad—BrUlees.
t1155...411a
1611.1.1. Is SlSlSbancll Ust-teu 3
RIM latent, March 11. -"The Ica
gorged beknst the city ymnarday after
noon,causlng a rapld rise in the rlitir.
At nine o'clock two-thirds of the city
was flooded; and. the people on several
streets were taken from their helixes in
small boats. The Arsenal brid go bag been
carried away, causing alums of fourteen
thousand dollars. Eight Ilat boats , valued
at thirty tbontand dollars, used on the
rhstr Insprovainants;ware carried down
the stream and will 'prove a total lose.
Considerable damage has already been
done In Davenport, lowa.
DAvrarowr, lowa,. Mardi 11.—Tbo
gorge gave way lest night. The river
felLaup idly. and Is now - entirely free
from ice. The bridge of the Hoek Island
and Nellie HalUoad hail been seriously
damage& 'Trains will not be able to
cross for some time.. Ono of the solid
stone piers was carried twenty feet down
•w ,Jorsq, lharsoi
taryihnor!spb to Uto,lPUtsbozr Us ratio
c/aux.., N. J., March 11.—The wbole
Republic= city ticket wail electedyes
lecjay by twenty trisjority.. A•triin of
BIUGIETON. N. J., , ,itoreb 11—Th e rlty
ateaLIDO yesterday waa .cinlod by the
parn9Orata, who gained 142 from Mat
. . , .
FROM WASHINGTON
ISocci.ti pupateik to Pittsburgh 000.110;)
WAsulttototi, Morel] Iltb, 1E1;3.
==!
Messrs. Leiven end Sheridan, two
newspaper reporters, who accompanied
the .Pregident -on his western tour,.have
arrived hero to testify before the im
.pcaehment Managers concerning Ms
speeches.. Other reportem have been
summoned.
• NSPATRIATION QUESTION.
Itfri-, Van Trump, In a speech in the
Ilouse yesterday, favored the amend
ment of the bill from the Committee on
foreign affairs so as to allow American
citizens emigrating to another country
the right to 'declare flair intention and
to make it a matter of record iu the
Federal Courti, to simplify and render
certain the evidence of his expatriation.
Ere was also in favor of providing by
low that such pentane could only again
become citizens of the government in
accordance with the naturalization laws,
like other clone.
MAIL ROUTS TiLLNSYSRED.
The Postoffice Department today or
dered the Baltimore and Washing Len
mails for and from New Orlesue to be
transferred to the route vin Lynchburgii,
Va, the Knoxville and chattaucsiga
Railroad Company _having submitted 6
new schedule and promising sure con
nections in the flaunt. no moils be
tween Now York, Philadelphia and Now
Orleans will continuo on the route via.
Louieville; Ky., until Ow pertormanceo
of the Knoxville rents, under the new
schedule are fairly tested.
.ILOSTAX• TEa6LITOHT.
John 11, Bruce, of dfontsoo, is here
for the purpose of obtaining an enabling
net for the admission of that Territory
into the Union as s State.' lie represents
he has repaired much encouragement
from members, and tastes • Montana
.has sixty-five thousand Inkuibitonts.
nia . osrulAN ISATURALIZLTION TREATY
The Senate Committee of Foreign Re•
lations bad a protracted ditentleion tlria
morning over the Bancreti treaty be
tween the German Confederation and the
United States, relative to the rights of
natnralized American citizens. With
the exception of one - unimportant
amendment. he treaty will be reported
to the Senate rw it came prom the State
Department- .
=I
The Senate in executive eration con
firmed the nomination of J. Boar
Browne as Miniattr to China, and ChM.
K. Tuckeruum as. Minister resident to
Greece.
IMPEACHMENT,
• Cerreispe Ilea alntervis
I•restaent.
far Toturipb b it. Pluaba riEk ilik.sUen]
Raw 'font:, March IL—The Worhrs
correspondent gives the details of an In
tro-slew with Preaiderit Johnson on the
subject or Impeachment, during u bleb
the President stated that he should re
spond to the summons to appear by
counsel, and atter a long consultation
upon the merits and demerit', of the
charges brought against hint, concluded
the interview by saying.
"The managers of impeachment and
others who applaud them are, in • cer
tain acme, Inconsistent. Recalling the
time, on the eve of the rebellion, when I
stood In the Senate almost alone In ln.
slating upon the duty of thoGovsnimPrlt
to uphold the Constitution and the Union
agair.t the traitors who threatened
both, I recall a ' , leas of men In and out of
Cosigns-, who larked courage to defend
ether. Standing on the same platform
that I occupied then, I look around area
see these men bold enough, in 'dace of
their former weakness, to disregard the
cieareat provisions of constitutional law.
After the war Is over, to which they took
none except a wordy part, they hare
irkitVainidali l eeinetinti'aPti
slight a value to be either valiantly de.
Pmded or treated with reverence. I,inoa
-17, it is doctored that I, who lave a.
honestly striven as I know how to ad
minister this Government In accordant,
With the Constitution, shall bo marroleed
along with the ronatitutional prerogatives
of the Presidential ernse to a party norm
atty. Jefferson Davin, the head and
front of the rebellion. is not brought to
trial, yet Congress proposes to try the
President at once, for what kind of of
fense, compared with that of Mr. Davis,
the country and the Senate may, per.
hops, Justly decide."
THE INDIANS
Friedel/ Feeling inalfeeted—harrt
Uwant le lie Withdrawn—Degree
Moneta 2Disitnian.
. . • • •
BY TultimPita the Mllsbury% Basalt/4
ST. Loch, March IL —Ade:rest received
at the 1111ifary Haailqoarters bore from
Fort Laramlo itay: The Indira. who
have corvegated at this posit manifeat a
very friendly feeling, and have come in
for the express rarrpows of meeting the
Peace. Commiasionera with a view of
m a king a treaty with them.. Dr. Mat
thews, Special Indian Agent, who had
an Interview with the Crows and Siena
near Fort Phil. Kearney last month, re
ports them in favor - of p.m with the
white. nod thetul, the most hostile of
the Sioux chiefs, and all of the upper In
dians were them, es route for Laramie,
to meet the Peace COMIXIiIOIOII.
General Sherman has received Imo :no
tions from Washington to withdraw the
'garrisons of forte !Vino, C. G. Smith and
Phil. Kearney as noon as the season will
permit. These troops will be diiitributed
to other hosts, because the Ilse on which
they are of present located is searvels
:lA4, emigrants preferring the, line of the
Missouri river via Fort Benton. They
also prefer to travel by way of the Pacif
ic railroad to its terminus, and therm., by
the old root..
Montana papers contradict tho reports
of the burning of Kennedy's rancho and
die aptum of Mrs. Kennedy and hoc
ebildroo. The report was started by the
appearance of Indians in the vicinity,
and LhOif committing a number at dep
redations. The commanding raker at
Fort Shaw placed a sufficient escort for
Weila Fargo & Co..' crumbee, running
from Helena to Fort Benton, enuring
the sa ety of travel.
Several hundred iietticre of Trinity
Gulch and Prickly Pear Valley have Is.
titheted the Governor of Montana to
furnish them arum and ammunition for
the purpose of defending themselves
against the Indians. Governor Smith
ordered CeL Scribner to proceed' to the
threatened tumidity, and upon investiga
tion to furnish the needed arm. and 3011!
munition to the citizens.
NRIW ORLEANS
Arrest for POMPIIif —Fire at Jackson
two—Too Limo.
=
Niztv GEL/CASS, March 11.—Governor
Baker appeared before United State.
Commissioner Shannon, yesterday, to
answer to the charge of perjury In taking
the' oath of office, and wan released on
giving bonds In two thousand dollant
to appear ate injure day. The a flldavit
making the charge it idgned by Henry
Dennis, "his mark." Dennis Is a negro.
The total loss by the Pre at Jefferson,
Texas, ou the night of the 'il2th uit, fests
up over a million of dolistrk The
Pinenix and ...Etna Insurance Companies
are the principal losers.
Tho City Council last' night adopted
resolutions requesting Gen. • Hancock to
SlMpand tho Laws staying the collection
of back taxes as a mows of improving
the condition of the city finances. •
DARING ROBBERY,
R.prata ■aaaaa/rr Unasked /mum.
1.04 to Dl• Va. awl 11.00000 of
020 000. •
tot Tltetropa to Ito Mitten/KY ttsatitcl
• dt!ICINNA•I7, fey
man, AmericYn Express Messenger on
the Hamilton and Dayton train, due
here at ten o'clock, was knocked norm
.
less while counting his packagoso of
money by . Aonte persona unknown,
who entered the car by—meaus
of false keys after thetrain left Isockland s
'The robber escaped at the next station,
ferrying with huts packs m containing
tto,ooo. The messenger was discovered
In a Weeding and tonmelesit condition by
• brakeman on the train. He to very
aeriounly Injured and now delirionn. Tb
money belonged to "i parties in Indiana
and Illinois.
=I
EMMEMM
Cruntsrrosr, Aar&'lls—The Interest
In the Constitutional Convention has
been transferred to' the::Republican
State Convention which met last night,
to nominatemandidates for State officers.
Both Conventions are In a great measure
Identical and a largo. majority regroes.
The nominating. Convention- sat with .
dose doors, excluding. reporters. It has
transpired:that after a stormy session
depend R. K. Scott, Assitstant Commie.
sioner of the Freedmen's Bureau, was
nominated tor Cov3rnor. The nomina•
*lons are considered equivalent to an
PITTSBURGH, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1868
BIM IDINN,
THREE O'CLOCK A. M
FROM EUROPE
Latest Cable Dispatehe
Debate on the Condition of Ireland
In English House of Commons
Prince of Wa'es visit to Troia ,I
German Naturalization Treaty
Ratified
Alabama Claf tut to Arbi W*l
• at rrus a.
lIT Tides - mph to the Pittstmr[h Gasett-.]
GRRAT BRITAIN.
Tll6 CONDITION OrIin:LAND
LONDON, March 11.—In the House kif
Commons last night, John Fronds Ma
guire, member for Cork, In moving that
the House go Into Committ xo on the state
of Ireland, said, though Ireland was a
part of thu empire, and woo now peaeefttl,
vet the personal liberty orevery man In
that ceuntry was at the mere of splos,
police or government officials, and this
state of things existed when the records
of tho courts showed there were fear curios
of ordinary crime. Ho then quoted sta
tistics of pauperism, emigration am! bat-
cr ovils. Teo country, ho declarod, w
docayinz nud Ite noofilnici despair'. Din
content Ne. a word 1.4v - it:ate to ex
pre. the Mote of feeling. He denied th
correctness or the assertion mode by
Lord Kimberly, that the farm ,
log elect in Ireland were loy
al. The . creche of the put
had made a deep impression upon the
Irish people, and the etTeci of all future
laws should beta obliterate thew bitter re
membrances. The law. in regard to ten
ure of ltmd were defective and operated
disastrously that the means of a ten
ant, whiCh were good two years, ago, are
now worlhiess. He denonuced London
guilds, which hell largo tract, of Irish
land, fir their cruelty to tenant,. Ireland
needed on commissions of Inquiry outhe
established Church. That Church ~asnot
suited to the majority of the people; who
dissented from it. What would the pee.
pie of England think or do, If Dr. Al:in
ning should lay claim and oceilpy the
See of Canterbury? Exeter 1141 r.ould:
revolt, and the teligiene ultraist would
join the ranks of the Fenialk .
Mr. Charles 'Seale, member for Ox•
ford City, regretted Mr. liagrure had
ofTered no plan for the .lution nl . the
question. _ • .•
After speeohes from C. Derby Grinlth,
member for flcvt.ca and Sir Frederick
Hoygste, member from Londonderry,
Lord C:inton moved ;be sdom ion by the
House in Committee of a resolution, in
anostanro as follow.:
That 1.1;o dia nub nt of Iroland I. a
wore(' of tuteluineso to tbn ea'l ,l ".
trp:2n,i,tp, r ia (rallied to nult the
0ei%h..% the peoido; that the present
rhumb, 'who . "' and I and tenor.. oyat..tne
aro tinjant; sod that in thu opipfou of
this Ilougo tho wrohga rlahted
J.llol.oheirno, roombrr for thashol, In
the cou rol of lkt • remark, declared a C.l rze
bldy of thu IrL•11 wrro eyropathisers
with the Foutnoe. Ile milled at leegth
to the utteek made ilium froland by Mr.
lineburk.
Cul May..,i2bieftieoratury f r Irvlankt.
made a long and alple•speerh. Ile ad
mitted great discontent prevailed In Irv
land, bat said it was exelumve!y nonr
!shed by the Irl•h in Amerlga. The
Irish living in Australia'or Csnada felt
no diacriettent, and even In Ireland the
feeling wan confined to the lower classes
nly. Tdore was no prominent Femen
leader,ln Ireland who WILY not aided and
pushed by friends to the United Mates.
fie repelled the charge of English mis
government- The members of the pres
ent gorerunientsa Dublin were nearly
ail Irishmen, and the police force teas
mp.ed onttrelyt of naltrinn. Ile doolci
bat Ireland was governed fur the advan
tage of England. Iler wealth had been
racreased wllbin the last quarter of e
, ntdry. English capital applied to
the development of her • rtrour
nes- uud improvement of her crop•
dltion. The rate cf wag, WWI
low, but it Rai Improving. Thocon-
mumptiou of spirit., which la the best
tentuf the people's material proverity,
we, lueresusing. Thera waa nothing eine
which wouldserve to Indicate the pies.
oration and decay spoken of, except the
positive decrease of crime. Ho advoca
ted the maintenance of the present poll-_
re, but prsimlsed that a bill would soon
be Introduced for the relief of tenants.
.At the conefruslon of Earl 3foye'n
epoecb, the debe a Wloe adjournal till next
Tburaday. -
The /tom...tot Common, tilts evening,
In Com . tnittoe of the Whole, agreed to
port for the peAsege of a bill fhtraluced
by Mr. pladetone for the abolition of
church roles. •
punwr, March ll.—Great preparn•
lions aro being made hero and In other
parts of Ireland for the reception of the
Prince of wale.
Conic, March lA.—The-tried of Captain
Mackay was ooncluilal to-day. Thu
Jury brought in a verdict of not guilty
of the charge of murder.
UM DIX IN LONDON.
LMID9N, Mnrch /I.—General 1)1x,
Amerle.nti Itininder to Franca, tins surly
ml In this city. It in understood ho sill
remain two or titre., works. lints said to
Lo hero on Lushness cohucctod with tho
question of tho Alabama claim,.
1=32112
BICRLIN, 'March 1 1.—The
. treaty ,juat
concluded between: the Neith Berman
Confederation and 'the United States,
providing for the pretectlen of the rights
of naturalized derails, was to-dAy neon
/inanely ratified by the Federal Council.
• It is reported here a prone:milieu has
Wen mule to Lord (Stanley to Rebuilt
the Alabama chines Le the arbitration of
Prussia, end Oaths was willing to 011-
tkriiin the proposition no for Ns itnpplled
to the question of ludemnity, but refused
to submit other points in dispute.
•41 -
ITA LT.
Pomp, March 11.—Oni; hundred Cana
dian '!.uneven who volunteered for the
Papal aorvitio Mayo arrived here.
E=
L.ntaaN. March 11.—ContaIt cloned at
a3ttn; Five-twenties 7116712; /111a0la
Coitrul 894 Eria tat.
Fnarisconv,March S. bonds
7.;i(3,751. . •
Livramoor., March ll.—Colton closed
quiet; • middling uplands lOii With or.
!cam 10/ @IOW. Breadatutte and Pm.
visions quiet and unchanged. Produce
dull. Rusin ie ed. Medium Rosin 134
Id. Turpentine 34s lid. °Jinni unset
tled. •. . •
AturwrAr. 11.—Potroloam id
'tamed to 43 francs t,O centimes.
lisionr*otermpi 11•Jeletr.
till Tolegesph to Do Pittsbargit (Mien.]
.Darnort, March IL—One _ hundred
Runs were fired hero to-iltv In oelebra
non or the painutgo In the House of Rep
resentativea of the bill to repeal the In
ternal revenue lax ou all manufactures.
—At Albany, N. Y.; Monday night, an
affray took place In tween Marten
date and is mistreat', Mary Barrie,
during uldcb be stabbed bar in mayoral
place% inluring ber so severely lbat, bet
recovery la very doubtful. Brundage it
under arrest.
NEW YORK DRIIOCRICY
Seymour Their Choice for
Preeidout.
Mlfiregi of Dlr. Seymour
Appeal to the Bondhilders to Atd
the Detale•atte Party.
NOT GBERNBACKB FOR EOM
The Platforim Adopted
Reymour and the President
Me Twin/reek to tea Plubarati thusttal
At.neter, March 11.—The Democratic
!Stale Cont'ention was called to order by
' Samuel J. Tilden, and blarahallll. Clan!.
lain weal appointed Prenhlent. A com
mittee was appointed to report names for
delegate. to the• National Convention,
who - were Instructed to vote we n unit In
accordance with the will of the majority
thereof The Committee on Resolutions
offered the sumo of Horatio Seymour an
the preference of the Convention for the
Presidency, which woe referred. Sub•
sequently the Convention re/mended to
the request.
• Mr. Seymour c. ill address the Conran
firm, sud it took a reams. .
. ? krimcn OF am scrltOmft.
Upon the reletinembling of the Con
vention Governor Seytuour wan loudly
called for and received with repealed
cheers. After illscuseing other topics,
he spoke at length on the financial queer
lion. While he opposed the national
hank system and favored the taxation of
government bond., ho said: I donna It
my duty to imeak fraukly on the subject
of tho debt. We owe It to our friend,.
In other States to let them know,our
position; no we may net fall into the
fatal error of making a eectlonal
queetinti a part of our National platform.
They would, with justice, reproach ire if
we suffered them to hinder Oslo our bat-' .
tie In thin great Slate, which must he
won or our country Is lost. We have'
lames, enough, with the parry in power,
mr-which we Mink as one trine, to over
whelm It with diegraeo and defeat. We
must not distract our counsels Will,
questions, howeYer.impertant, upon
which there In so much doubt, and which
annum be settled In many years to come.
We trust not thus torn away the public
ruled from the dangers which threaten
the Immediate destruction odour govern.
meet and . the liberty of our people.
Evennow the band of unurpatlen
In stretched out to rob us of our right - a,
and It moot Ito struck down, first of ail.
lViiatever our views may let of the pay
ment of the debt, It will fall, Upon the.
future. Do what we may. a generation
that will _.conie after no will decide ha
mode, and without regard to scything
we cony say. The depressed industry of
the land demands that the lend of taxa
tion ritual be lighter:ed. blur debt le not
due until lines-n yeare from thin
time. How very few et them who
now discuss Win (mention will be Belem
then. If in the ureanwhl.o our country
m well governed. if thorn in oeonomy In
tut affaiN, and the right.. and liberties of
o. i ' l ' a r t r::' w'' 7, 7 t n i , u ,`:, ~,".".',".11 4 ,`Z i.l",f, I _''jf. -
to filly minions, itch one wealth PO l be
toner than doe bled Then thin debt will
reat morn lightly 1111,0 greater man bhrs
and Rename wraith than it Oppreelme the
dler re.sertl Industry and the disheartened
spirit of the people,. We deeply regret
Ina! our 110,11.1 , :111l13,111 141 eensuren In
any quarter; bat we cannot lower our
m o od o rd ; we wail not !aurae Moen who
~,,—. ....,,. 10 tie attpitura. at le. comma
that lion, la , i til In tote, even if we could
stoup to aught I hot in has than-honors.
ble. Eren policy would dictate that the,
great Stale should be held firm and
..tcorlfest in its puaition, if we hope to
Asset our country from the danger. whirl. '
menials it. There Is a perfect accoral In .
the Democratic rank, tut to the raise,
end need of honesty and economy, but,
then' 14 Annie difference of opinion as to
the construction of the (antract with.
pnblieereiltor, tihnie hold it Is right
and in duo to the 'tax peer:, that we
oh• mlil eats what we could by paying
lite. principal °Labe debt in currency; but
tnermailerrate tindrionin Arpin:neat. It
14 a mistake to 411p1111, the interest Mate
leandholters anti to payers are annum
nettle. The fax Is byeriooke I that In
order to make env saving by giving the
bondholder a worthleas paper, we would
I,lngupon oursolve4, disaeter , ,and 'dis
honor, which will! mat a hundred
fohl what we can slave.. It means we
111.1,1 to give to the hiburor for bin toil a
1 hese currency. It means the honor of
our country chill be Married; that our
burdens, shall be kept In uneertaleity mut
confesion: that the laboring man shall
Ruff, by the increased cost of comforts
of life; that - tax payer - ashen he burthened
by a goVernatent proved to la rrupt
nod imbecile by thin very de pt tattoo
of its mon,. .11, H cannot alfordt epecu
late upon tfio nation'. honor at ee fe atilt
a coet. If we come into tow s , there
will be no discredit on our curre cy, no
spraulatlon in paying .ou : bonds
Id -paper. I thank Goil faith
ja
whirl, we all hold as on ' men
sock. to level up, not to ! level
ltia
down. While, therefor*, we ma differ
iin to the eonatruetion of the contract
with the public creditors we ,punt not
confound the pcaltion of Wane nix, thluk
It right top -y paper, but elm bre V
tusks that paper as goal ea gold, Ith tho
{maiden of those who mean to oy no,
any, but who ere destroying th valm
of that paper. That is mputlintlo --
nre not trying to giro paper
holden, but gold and sliver to
pie.
' MET MOCIt ON rtinsinchr JON. in.
Mr. NeytilOttr denounced Cong (or
Its crimes already - done, also for bow, It
Is how perpetrating against the I !males
of the people and judiciary,
OM of
etnangly at:alma th e impeachmeu of the
t l
President, adding: I have no i' intim'
prejudice in favorer:dr. Johnson I have
never seen him. He to not ono I helped
to pivot. In office, nor have foyer dvised
lifin ER. been consulted by him a to his
policy. I know he dubs been cheated and
betrayed by those about 131m,,,l who
plotted hie destruction from the Meet.
But while he has been niost unhappy in
h l
Ids friends, no moo hM beenllo fo Innate
in his enemies. They have giv him
high place In history sot 000 who Offer
ed fir the rights of the An erlean
people, and when be 8 I go .
to his tinal acconnt, and hie Senile
,seok in . clear, tome mid lasting to ins to
!tell that he was a man who lov 41. Ids
l ciuntr - y and was bated by th• rrupt
and treasonable, they have only t.ivtilsel
upon hie tombstone that be was tin
poached by this House of Itsprtenta. '
liven and condemned by this Son e.
Mr. &planer closed with an up al to
~,,,
the boudiniblem to rescue our a untry
from the hands of corrupt and w teful
men. By. no doing they would n t only
bent secure th el r own intermits, but wou Id
gain the good will and gratitudolot the
oppremisi laborers and tax pays Tim
speaker was warmly applauded at the
close.
STENCIL. OF MN. TILDNIf.
Samuel J. Tilden spoke at len Lb, re
viewing the history of the politic par
ties, contending the polity of a Ile•
nublicans has been and is to Impoverish.
the country, centralise pswer, paralyse
industry, multiply taxation and elevate
the negro. while degrading the white
man.
DELEVATEN TO TOE NATIONAL CO VEN
TIONF
Bolos Wolf, from the Commit( , re
ported a full list of delegates tot e Na
-1
Bonet Convention, including the Bow
ing at large : Ifondlo Seymour, S. J. Til
den, Sat:dont B. Church, If. C. hi rphy;
Alternatis —Augustus C. Hand, . NV.
McLean, A. P. longing, Geo. La . •
. Among the District delegates a Bras
ilia Brooks; Wm. M. Tweed, Jl3O Mor
rieney, Em timid B. Mart, W. F. Ben,
Jno. A. Green, E. P. Item, Id hall
.B.: Champlain, Joseph Warren, Wm.
Williams, Augustin. Schell, A. illiaki.y
Mail, Albert Cardona and William Can
shiny.
==!
At the evening nemlon lion. 4, B.
Congo, from the Committee on -111ceolu.
Lions, reported the following: /
'
Tiro Democracy of New*York, assem
bled at this extraordinary Junction of
m t
public affairs to deliberate upon t gob
mon obligations they owe to the Ives
and their fellow citizens in the other
grates ol the. Unlon, and to expres their
hlgu satisfaction that rho represent Ives
from every other State ero to most igaln,
an of old, In the spirit which i ani
mated' the fathers of the Rapid:llc;
to ley anew the fonndstlons of klyil
liberty, tiro I iemocratio MOll2lO, of
this State, with . a unanimity
never before attrpassed, kayo brought to
thin Convention the assnrance of:their
unbending purpose to lay garde all per- '
ionai aspirations and Meal intereste and
devote-Moir entire energies to the T rork
re
befo them , so as to secure as the first
rifcceslty of political and social life, rho
restoration elf the Linton and rwestab
listament of tho Constitution its ti su
preme law of the laud, and to this they
are Impelled by the peculiar exigency of
the terrible peril to which they are
brought, for they find that, by a strove,
siert of the thee-honored policy which
the people of this country established
for the furtherance of their high interost,
Lath Houses of the Congrees of the
United States, by earnest° ye cloletions
of their pledges, infractions of the organic*
law and of the public faith, to encom
pass mere partisan end*, have brought
our people and Institutions to the very
verge of ruin; - they have broken the
resolutions affirmed so. often in the face
of the civilized would ( hat -I he woirlike
measures and energ ies of the govern
ment should be directed only ton - ro
ntomtion of the States unlawfully nought
to be taken out of the Union; they beet.,
atter tapping the life blood of the people
and expending millions of treasure to
aocomph.this end, driven the restored
Staten out, denying their existonw in the
Union, treating them as - subjugated
province*, and as held by right of-con
quest, anti now hold ten • sovereignties
subject to their control and military su.
perviden, and the guaranteed dominion
of an inferior net... they have defiantly
spurned the Constitution au' the organic
law of the land, and tented their
decrees nett- erected their will as
the higher law, to which co-ordinate
deportment* of the trovernment, the Ju
diciary and Executive, are to nod Beget
wanes, and to which the people are.
bound k fetters r fette as thralls of their min
lons to submit - without a murmur;
they have, under theinretence of dimin
ishing the public debt, Imputed heavy
tri buts upon every citiz en, saving always
these who have, riche and on the poorer
theY have Imposed an exorbitant tariff
-Which has driven commerce 'from every
eta; they have paralysed our menu
thetores by their excessive impositions;
they have , Invented the meet
oopressive system of taxation to take
from the Laborer the hope of reward; and
they have tilled the laud will, swarms of
public officials who harrati the poop'le
and eat out their substanoo Co insure
their dotninance to the pending (=Vila;
and to complete tho awful conspiracy to
overthrow thegvivrrnment of our fathers,
they have revolved to depose; tho Presi
dent and install:one of tho chief. ...misfit
rotors in his V e ace, an act: svhich the
Conservative fr num of . Now York de•
dare Lobo withont Justifi cation orplausi
•bio excuse, awl denounce as on outrage
without parallel' in the history of chill
zed government.; By such methods they
avire to, crintplate tiro usurpation which
Will subject:the isiopio of the : North, as
of the South, to military drunination;
for which conveii them to ho enemies to
tho pony, propperity unit liberties of the
republic., stud we invoke" the aid of all
lovers of civil liberty in every Shan to
Joie unto ono grand aud successful eflort
,
to rid the eountry of each , tyranny, ee•
cure the triamph - nf demerMie
.prinel
plea and the rentemtion ; of the perfect
Union of these State". • -
The rewthMons were unanimously
adopted and the'euncention adjourned.
FORTIETH CONGRESS.
To:ttt•Gt to Ile I'lltaburg, Out,
WAtilllN °TON, March.ll, ISt&
SENATE.
A memorial nt citizens of Jo'„fTerse.
mouty, Coloradq, against the
as a State, sr. tabled.
raw2ED."
A bill pataLsl to amend the judiciary
net of 1759. to ri.uthoritte reconis to be
takento the tirtp l ente Court where sults
were brought r lathe to tho ealn-tton
of Internal remuu• after money paid
Into the Trett.surl'.
sus
The Sennt non eenettrrNt I nthe 'louse
amendment diticting the proceeds -oil
aalos of I.ptureillfuld Ithandoned proper
ty I' be paid 111 W the Treasury,. and ap
pointed a cmmitte,,or C.,nferkee. •
=I
The fundiny tail eras taken up -
:Ur. CORUETT 'poke in nppo.,;tion
• Mr. DIXON my, to speak. tioc only
he. thianoial tint: the p ttn,uo.l
.I.Courre..s.
Mr. SHERMAN' made ❑te poittt of or
filer that curb a .peeolcLnul,f slot be pe
mined, but after iatne dimcus.lon n I fl t•
draw the point, , and Mr. I q.XON pro•
herded, arrat¢elnx the /term hlteso party
for it. rota.e airalnet tho :tooth and the
pulley of the Pre , Went.
'rho bill woe laid over.
The , . Prcrldnnt prn trm, appoint-tut S. I
Committee or ennfer,nrn on tin. amend
menu too Itlllinrognnl to Lt.n pruned
or. raptured ands atrantlnm,l prrq.trt.
Meo,n E.lllllllldll F/I,l43ll•lollantlTrnm
.
.. . .
On motion nr ,'-tir. CONNEP.B,
quarter before) four ciell , clc, the tSen•
went Into Czerurivo , 6(llSitill, and
attar adjourned.
HOUSE OP REPnesENTITIvEs
I=l
The Itouw n....n.eoneurrod In th
.antentimenta to the invalid pen , don bill,
and appointed a Cotnntltte& of Confer
I.OISULT OY ALAO•11.11 ILD.TION. •
Ti. SPEAKER prvsented a let
from General Grant, hutting. that 70, , 1
rotas vr,ero cast for, and 1,001 aptimit
Mahan - Ili Constitution.
=9
The Ileums resented the eoneideration
of the Freedmen's Bureau bill, reported
yeaterdivr.
The bltt, which is a Substitute to the
former tall, provides that the net entitled
.. ari act to establish a Bureau fur the re
lief of freedmen and refugees," approved
March 3d, 1921, and the act entitled *fan
act to eentleue in form and amend en
act to establialt a Bureau for the rtlief of
freedmen, refugees and other purposes, "
pass on the Nth of July, 15,6, shalt
continue in force for it term at nun year
front and aner day niftily, in
the year Iflaa, excepting so far as the
same shall los herein modified, and the
Secretary of War in hereby dins:toil to
re•establish said Bureau where Melanie
ha, been wholly.', In part illifeentirmedi
provided, ho shell be flattened the present
asSety ofthe freedmen Muds require it. •
Sm.% 2. II shall be thu duty of the See
rotary of War to discontinue the opera
tions of the bureau in any State, when
ever any State shell be Milk removed to
its constitutloual retrainee to• the Gov
ernment of the United States, Mid shall
be duly represented In the Congreas of
!the United States, unless Rein advising
with the Commissioner ,of the Bureau
and Upon full comparison of the •ondl
lionn of freedmen's entire In curl, States,
the Secretary of War shall he maligned
that the further coutinuarice of the
Bureau alkali lee necessary; provided,
however, that the eiluattlunaldlvislon of
null Bureau Rhein not bo effected or In
any way taterfir.ed with until much State
Khali have made imitable provision for
the education of the children of fretsd
men withlq flab! State.
Sze. 3. Unexpended batsmen' in the
heeds of the Coirunimloner may be ap
plied for the education of freedmen and
refugee' subject to the provisleux of fho
law applicable thereto.'
NN
1)0/14
f' pc°
Sec. 3,oflicera of Veteran Reserve Corps
'or volunteer service now on duty in the
Bureau as Assistant Commissioners,
agents, medical officer*, or other.capa
city, who have been or may be muster
ed out of service, may be retained, where
the same shall be required for the proper
execution of the laws, as officers of the
Bureau. on such duty, and et the same
salary compensation, and ell advances
front the dale of their appointment, as
now provided by law for the respective
grader and duties tat the dates of their
muster out and discharge, and such offi
cers so retained shall have :cape:lively
the same authority end jurisdiction on
now conferred on officers of the Bureau
by the net of Compress, passed theldth
day of July, Ma.
Air. ELIOT spoke in advocacy of the
bill and In defense/ of the Freedmen's
Bureau, in regard to which he void the
public mind had been led astray by the
statements of tho President, in whore
word no reliance was to be placed.
The morning hour expiring, the :bill
went Over till to-morrow.
NON - CONCURTIED
Tho Sonata tunindment to filo nous*
hill to facilitate tha payment of noltilers'
bounties was non-concurnxl In auti a
Committee of Ckutferenco appointed.
ADIII6IsION or ALADAMA.
The Timm took up the hlll for lho lad
Inlaelon of Alabstnn.
•
Mr. FARNS WORTH, member of the
Reconstruction Committee, opened The
debate by a speech In support., contend
ing- that although tee Reconstruction
lama required a mitiority of the register.
ed voters to vote on the Consltutlon, the
State should, nevertheless be admittivi.
First, because that prevision was un
usual nod Improper; tv.dsecond, bemuse
Intimidation wits need to keep voters
from the polls.
Mr. FARNSWORTH alluded to the
statements made In affidavits tri that
effect, whereupon
Mr. WOOD inquired, assuming all the
statements to be true, would It warrant lt
violation of a law of engross.?
Mr. FARNSWORTH replied' In the
affirmative, both for himself and for the
Committee.
Mr. LOAN inquired how the funda
mental condition in the bill, that unlyer
.
sal suffrage should not bo denied or
abridged, could bo i.nforeed?
Mr.7FAIRNS WORTH replied that Ala
bama would come in on that, and would
be bound by it.
Mr. W 001) inquired how Alabama, if
now admitted, and should afterwards
deny or abridge thq right of suffrage on
accounCof coiur, cluld!bo taken oat o r
the Union?!
Mr FARNSWORTH said it wan not
proposed to take Mg out of the Union
again, but Ala tame would be estopped
from going behind!tbe bill for her' ad
ruoisalou.
Mr. LOAN Ingo rod the numbet rf
white votes cast in the Alabama election.
Mr. FAItNS WORTH could notinform
him. Ito stated there were thirty thou
seed white men Int, Alabama In fair an;
curd with the liberty loving people of the
State. -
STEVEN!, 4f Pa„ stated that but
one Unmated man voted against the
Constitution, and they were supposed to
be white men.; • - • !
Mr. LOAN asked what assurance was
'there if ! - Alstroima . kwere 'adnollted, she
.would not, after th next election, be In !
the hands of rebel..
Mr. FARNSWORTH said if was
enough to gallery the Committee that a
very largo majority.mf the people ,of
Alabama were In favor of tho Conatitti-
Ron. He alluded or
is to the Intimida
tion exerced and threats used in the
rebel papera againsti all who voted for It,
' Mr. ROSS inquired whether the' loyal
blacks In Alabama,lwere la the habit of
reading rebel papers? •
Mr. partsswohni replied loyal
blacks were usually as capable of read- -
lag rebel papers, or any other,' as dis
loyal whiten in pi. colleague's dis
trict P
Mr. BOYER Inquired 4/bathe!' nay
witnesses had been examined before the
Committee, or wbeiher the facts stated
did not Cast entirelir on ex parts 'gala
vitt?
Mr. STEVENS; of Pennsylvania, 're
marked that in the i pbscncti: of his col
league [Mr. Farce ninth) three witnesses
hail been examine d. before the Com
mittee. t
Mr. ELDRIDGE otalesequeotly stated
that eo far as the gabliernan (ruin Ken
tucky (Mr. Beck,) had any knowledge,
there were no wltuenses examined. •
Mr. R ERR asked whether Congress
had before, in the admission of a State,
reserved the right to repeal the acts of
each State?
Mr.• FARNSWORTH anggestod that
In the admission of the gentleman's own .
State, (Indlana)conditions had been lm
poied.
Mr. KI:Ril sidmittcd there was a condi
tion imposed In reference to the tatatien
of certain public lands, but any violation
wen to be remedied In the Courts end not I
by another law of Con-Tess . The Speaker I
would boar him teitlmony the Corats
had imolai:tett that riunedy.
Sir. FARNSWORTH' asked where the
Courts eat nntilOrityl •
Mr. KT llll—Theyigot It from the Con
tntion end laws o the United States:
Mr. FARNSWORTH—They got it
from Congress, and if Congress can
clothe the Courts with authority to exe
cute part of the compact, whycannot
Congress do It Itwolff,j
Mr. KERR—It was not a compact. Zr
was simply a condition relating to Pub
lic, Linda, in which the ' , tato of Indiana
never bud any title:!l
Mr. BECK, of Hu, minority of the
Committee on Iloconstraction, took the
door in upp . ..Mon to the bill. Ire dis
claimed ail knowledge of any report
having been submitted Gotha Committee,
and it new' nothing of such a report unti
he e asy it published in the papers this
morning.
' Mr. STEVENS, uflPennsylvania, said
the gentleman from Rentucky bad been
generally very attentive to his duties in
the Committee, and spry polite, but that,
nevertheless, the first thieg that was read
to the Committee wain short report, and
he was very touch alitonlshed to tind it
had ton loam laid this morning on the
desks o f the member*.
Mr..LIERLDURD, Of New York, con
curred with the statement of Mr. Ste
vens, lie recollected reading the report.
Mr. 110.71• inquund when and wher
It was read?
IIUItr.BURD replied it was read
on Saturday night, all the meeting hold
at the Chairman's room.
Mr. dsdared neither ho or 'his
molten:cm (11r. Crooke) bad notice °fan)
such rooming. Ile went on to argue
'against thatall. Ereh admitting, forth°
purpose of argnmontj all the, reconstruc
tion laws were constitutional, ho claim
ed thot under those flaws even the Coo
... Mullen of A labantolhad Leon rejected,
disgui.e as they mlght. .The simple
itu,lion was whethrl Conereas should
tore on the people o Alabama a Con
stitution which errrylwhito man In the
State loathed and abhiorred. Out of sev
enty-llva thousand registered white
vet. many had been tiren fur the Con
venti,n, but not one ;had been cast Tor
the Constitution. There were but one
thousand and tiee svIF votes given, all
- told, and they woresalt egaingt it.. It
smith' be much mor manly for Con
gress to remove the veil, which wan too
transparent for disgurro, and to declare
ConGretA intended to !mid nod treat the
ten Southorn Suites as conquered pros-
moot,, to put them, mrer their former
slaves, and hold them for partisan our
' pos.r until they, should vote
for adding to the behests of Congress.
Why Should this bill be passed non,
as
when, if the sertie were true that a
majority et the votord of Alabama were
In favor of this Constitt , uion, it would be
cent back and voted o again? Was It
became it was . normitary to have two
Alabama Senators 101 vote for the In.-
peaehment of the President? Surely
(Prat would not be avowed. Ito warned
Congress of taw danger of putting too
much power iu the hand. of General
Gran t—a main who had not shrank from
sseri it cing ten, twelve Oct !lay thousand
men in the various battles of the Wilder-
Ira—lest it might turn out that he might
be to Congresswhat Cromwell was to the
Long Parliament. I
Idr. Aft:CELL neat tpuke in support
of the bill.
The bill was then laid oxide temperer.
fly, Me. FAIINSWORTII stating that a
vote would be united LA-morrow.
=3
• The SPEAKER presented a commu—
nication from the Secretary of War. with
letter front Generuip,lcade, thowing
the neeolmity ohm additional appropria
tion to carry out tho rceonstrurgion tett.
Referred to the Cotnellittee on Appropri
ation,.
mil..W.tnititil *minor.
Mr. PAINE introdueed a bill to rein,-
berce Mtlkauwee for expenditures on
the harbor of that city: Referred to the
Committee nn Commeice.
FICTITIOUS noon Ctne craTaTiox.
Mr. VAN WYCK ; f o tho Commit
tee on Retrenchment, eds. a report on
the reported gent:lone destruetiou of
bonds in the Treasury, I which ho asked'
to he laid on the table and printed.
Mr. LOGAN asked tqlzether the report
embraced the testimony?
Mr. VAN WICK. said it did not.. The'l
Committee did net deem it necessary to
incur the expense of Arinting the testi
mony,
Mr. LOGA objected to the reading'
of the roper alms the evidence was
al. presented That evidence
would chow ho was astlfied in making
the statement, uotwitindanding the fact
that tho very evening ;the inquiry was
ordered a telegram had been scut to the
As.clated Picea that his statement was
without foundation. Hs did not intend
to permit env imputation to be made on
his veracity. I
Mr. VAN WICK explained, that hav
ing, In company with Mr. Ladle, called
nu lien. Spinner the saint, evening, and
I ascertained there Wan tio fraud or suspi
cion of fraud In the matter, ho thought
It the duty, notes a memberof the Com-
I'mittee, nor as a niemborof Congress,bnt
arm citizen of the United Stales, to make
the facts known and remove the alarm
and apprehension which the statements
of the gentleman from litho - Ole was cal
culated to produce. Hq proceeded took.
plain In detail how the hilsapprehenslon
had arisen. i • -
A somewhat heated colloquy took place
between Mr. Logan and Mr. Van Wyck,
the former contending that In justice to
him the evidence, which sustained his
stittemout, odiould be published, and the
letter holding that - thel Committee had
only Leon influenced by the public BS.
mt v o e f r l c ie t ou y o ce"
- f
iteuirnoe'.'L'oftrodmee7llll
- to be milled in queellon at all. •
Mr. LAPLIN correlyßated the etide•
ment of Mr. Van Wyek.
Mr. WELKER, a member of the Com•
inittee, disclaimed toy Idea en the part
of the Committee of euppressiog the est
den.. ~
Mr. VAN WYCK said the evidence
would be ready to-morrow morning,
and he did not , want
- Ito report until
'""litC. HALSEY, another member of the
committee, said Le had Just seen the
cleric who reported the ilestlmony, who
Mated he conk not havb it tranacribed
thin evening.
Mr. LOGIN obtained the floor and
defended Ms own positMrh. Ifs declared
Motif the Treasury 'Department veers
charged with anything, O. had tie actor-:I
noye at both ends orals Minitel to choke
n man down or to covert him over with
allure. One would suppese, he said, the
Treasury Deportment - Mate filled with
angels, with the arch-Aug/II Michael at
their head, and that there wan no such.
thing as corruption theM. Ho asked the
Committee on.',Retrenchment to state
Whether or not it had know/edge of the
vol
NUMBER 61
fat that the Treasury Departuient had
redeemed seventy thoueand dollars
otl counterfeit bonds some time aim
which fact had not been made public?
Mr. VAN WYCE said when the ques
tion came up the Inquiry would be an- .
swayed.
Mr. LOGA.N, recurring to the fact In
connection with the certificate of the de
exaction of eighteen millions of bonds,
related the drawl:falai:wee which justified
his, statement, particularly the circum--
stance that one of the clerks who lad
aigned the certificate bad told him be'
supposed It was done to cover ups_ re
ported loss of two millions of hoed.%lle
declared Ms determination to puncture
the, rottenness of that rotten concern the
Treasury Department. and ho notified
the • Committee on Retrenchment he
would give ft enough to do within the
ne*t four weeks, nod he did hot In
tend to be bought..off,', or scared, 'or
driven se; but would do his duty In thq .
face of'all the power of all the Commit ,
Westin earth and heaven. It was a.rot ,
ten lestitotion. 'Re hollered 'Quit 'Lbs.
officials of the Treasury were•defrandlng
the 'Government, not only by the wee of
bonds, but by giving out dleettut pay-;
leg counterfeit bonds and duplicate
bonds, sad yet they found defenders on
bona Addis; firth' asPitakki.X l 44wl 6 -
and call !beer honest men.
Adjourned. '•
Or);,*ataNywitaft);rAm.l
—"rime years ago a man: mined 311.4
ler, cashier of a beak at Jackson, Tenn.;
Was murdered' anWiii bank robbed 'of
five thousand dollars lit gold and about
fifteen hundred dollars m paper money:
The Murder and robbery occurred after
night and the murderer escaped. Tho
affair remalniSl in mystery untlfWalker,
who leas lynched last week in Maury
county, Tennessee, was captured. Just
before he was hanged he confirmed tho
murder and robbery, end stated that he
was Only eighteen years of o, when he
perpetrated the horrible crime. ' I
.
-;-The bill admitting Alabama (says• a
correspondent) will not pass the Senate
until after the Impeschment trill. It Is
contended that Alabama is notableto
protect, loyal people if military support
be token away, unless (hero Is a changsi
In th 6 executive. Arkansas Is loosed
upon a safer State to try the experi
ment end the opportunity tor so doing
will be offered next week.
—Theodore F. Cook, a young man,
I
formerly employed by Evans &Howard, -
tile and are brick manufacturer's, of St.
Lonisj woo brought to that city Irma
Chieugosin a requisition front Governor
Fletcher, charged with having . embat
tled between eight and ten thousand
'Villain from the above named firm.
Cook gave bonds to appear and answer.
—Col. McGsilaway, edltorof the Mem
-phis Avalanche, has been arrested and
Is congaed in -Jell at Memphis under a
warrant 1-eued by Judge Hunter, of Ike
Crimtnal Court, sentencing him to ten
dave ileprisonment and to pay ten dol
l-aril lido for an article in the -Avalanche
relative to the arrest of the local editor
of thab paper.
—The residence of Dr. James Rich
ardsonon the Camminavlllo pike, three
miles IFout Cincinnati, was entered Wed:
nestiayl morning , and robbed of $5, 500 in
United States five-twenty bonds and
three .undred dollars worth of silver
plate. The robbers escaped.
—Th ee-fourths of the town of Joffe:,
son, T X/P,IVAS burned on the 3d lust.
Fifty or sixty stores were destroyed and
seven hundred bales of cotton. Loss,
M 00,000..
—l4+it advice* front Knoxville con
tradict the reported killing of two caval
rymen in Claiborne county. So col
beton *mired. One of the distillers was
arrested; the others escaped. •
—Th‘Annual Conference of the Meth
odist l',, , burch, embracing the States of
Slissou I nod Arkansas, was In session
at St. L uis yesterday.
11aYwood and Carrot counties, Tenn
have rp ne Republican.
Eirleratlen et the Holy Land.
The committee in charge of the Pales-
Lice Exploration Fund continues Its
labors with marked success, by enlist
lug the-services of Captains Warren
and Wilson and Lieutenant Anderson
as civil engineers. More than' 2000
square miles have been accurately sur
veyed, noire than 300 photographs taken,
plans drawn of synagog ues and ancient
building% and In the &sit expedition no
fewer taall 19 slum astronomically fixed.
At present the committee is concentra
ting Its atter:Wen on Jerusalem, the In
tweet In which may be sold to sum up
the interest in all other places. As truly
remarked In the Saturday Review ,"/t is
the Holy City of Jew, of Moslem, and
of eaden alike." With the - two
heights!Zen on the west, and Moriah
Ott the da rt, and with the valley between,
the researches of the Exploration Fund
have Whin as yet principally concerned.
Zion was the city of David, the sits of
the. palaces and tombs or the kings.
Morlabi is the site of the temple, now
occupied by the Mosque -of Omar. The
cyclopean walls es hpurting the temple
have been traced throng t the accumu
late ruins and rubbish ton depth vary
ing front 00 to 90 resit, and the wall Itself
has beep shown to have reached EG to
ISO feet. The whole rock most have
been heneyeembed with aqueducts, cis
terns, channels and passage.% "It Is
semetking to are at last the mighty front'
of the Temple rocks as (be Twelve - saw
it who they marvelled at the great
stones which were still fresh from the
chisel of Herod."'
rgtnunl Telegraphs.
The eisteen of underground telegraph
Ilnes insulated with an asphalt° com
pound hetteedeo-favorabl3- In the Paris
Exhibition, has lately been tried with
highly Satinilietory results by the Royal
Engineers in the yard or thu Brampton
Barracks, at Chatham, England. This
eyatem,l - the invention of Mr. Donald
=sista in laying down a series
or rigid iteetloaa r or rode of *aphelia con
taining I the wires, In trenches in the
earth, its lengths of Iron gas pipe are
laid. These sections we in about twelve
feet lengths, the conducting 'wires pro =
. rudlng ht the ends, and being alternzto
ettailglit and twisted into 4,cc-•
screws In pleading the line,, the
straight buds of see section are
.pushed
Into the rorkacrews•' of the next, and
soon. Toe blow of a hammer upon. the
••rorkserewa' ensures perfect contact,
and when the junction Is tilled In with
melted &plain° perfect Insulation is also
effected.' In this way oderanJolnte may
be Insulated at once. A prominent fea.
tore of this oysteen is that the Insulating
material'', poured in at a temperature
considerably above that of boiling water,
so duet itany moisture settles upon. the
ends of the sections It is driven off In tke
form of steam as soon as the Melted in.
sulator roaches it. The cent of Laying-is
$lOO o mite. .
'
• Tam Worlghts People.
The strike at-Nall River, Massachn
eons, continues, and It le reported that
on March Gththe weavers, to the number
of scrotal hundred, held a meeting at
which the Tonle Union' Commit tees
wore instructed to appoint sub-commit
tees to wait upon - the . manufacturing
agauli,.to make and receive. proposals
with reference to the terms - upon which
they should-return to -work.; Speeches
were made at that, and at an adjourned
meeting ; next day, declaring that they
would adhere to their demand. for an
'across+) 'of their wages to what they
were • to the first of Jr -- -
.o. prior. _,. the Aria January last.
The spinners, who are on a strike, have
aloe held meetings, at which it was re
solved, that, as a body, they would ad
here to their former Intentions, and pro
visions- were made for the , families of
those who were unable to seek employ
ment elsewhere, while those who had no
families I. depending upon them for
support Were advised to leave the city,
and obtain labor wherever It could be
Cttyand Suburban on Fourth
POSe• H
E=
. •
tondo. Muck lath,
IS* at the !evidence of the patents, by
the Rae. H. L, Welting...ahead y tkeite , .;
E. R. deft.. - J. L. MILLIR, and 311,.
MART H., diughtpr arJanies .Und, zp.,•.11
DIED 1
8 1 r1 :37r r s ° , 1 = 4 6 74 Trtary i" 11% ‘ trtAi a oVng
1. James Btederad. Ikea, ellth 'razor
DV..
• Tllchleteral will W V..m b . T. °W .,l-
O X 4 ,113 Shetteld stnrot, Ista
sadetter, in I'aIDLT /T?/..01M at 2.4 i•
fetlock: plead al the Madly At* rerpectioaly,
!alive* to snood. . ' • - • -
• 111.1,2—Ilrew71;1.•WILLL1.11 lIINPS,La Ilw
inb ye... of W.V.. • ,
The Amoral 71111 as plue ham the UM dent°
of Ile foollf. NO. 11. 1102 strut 111/7/1111111,7,.
it 11 °Voce e.; N.,- Undue ewe:acne ALP=
The Mud: et We twellieu ruippolci:llytuUsd
iu lNi x tl x i v in ant . nazi, Malt► itth,
41th y. et hi , ICRUN. the
The :anima erlll ieka tem Ili tete eiellL .
deem:. Caller of Kale inner and Irwin' Wee'.
Laureseeellte, rate Rotuma, UM test., et:10
<Mote. Tke friends et Ike Wall an respect
1111 T laylleui tostteaeleltbokt Witmer melee.
kteCLClaaND—BoddesOr. • at • °make MI.
Fe U free tem. Nu/MILT C.. JecCILZI,
LAMP, bnAb .T.lrn".../ ktl(l4ll4ed. '
•
THE WIEFFrdr. GAZETTE ••.•
:• ' '
' WEDWASiIaT ITO rid.rnalt
• largo toot 4! 'wawa tog • POEM'
IMMO at to 41.• . too.:13o vulgar.'iaaiadht.
luting 11,41sorial4latosi.Nows Or Toitersobar.
Mall,nolo•OloS4Oor YOtior Orr the rozaiir ; ,
&ad tallest ood tokqc nitanl. Ilaracjal and 0044 4 ,
atrolial )(Aries *ports al.aa, br ao3 pop=
Yr dry; No Pi4olet„ Nirrhanio or Mord,:
: Taos WWI tax irszr.S.O . oz.Fterio2: -
Cla
aloe
.1.30b0 1-4413.
„ . ' ..eoooor to lb*: wain.? ai , Suo, • "
oitlooomb. - Lupins to Oita nal be istiao,
Norma T,O TMEO2IIIIOII,4T 000001 0, ITT O •
paver. 1611 ukir imar 'what Mum 7c. 1
*eau woo belie Wiitsegaradition tqra. -- , . 4;
=Man lathy' bettins sail ■ melt. ••• " •
WIT O TE7 TY 1 : 0 00, 1 000040. 00 MT
sr 0, 2000401 a Tito% 10110 minima and* '
Addavuk • :•- • —04.111014114
immtnualL,rxxv.
ItBiDV3MAIOWL:_' - .. : ' ~:I
A LitiLeasigarousosnTA.Kract
No. la lbaria Putsartiii, P.
corirfle. Otottki 4 syCCUllte.l.4)7/1, GSA.. a
evendemallstoisol Funeral 1111.14.14, (.1•0
runcurkmd. r soosubptitte:althii ?Wm.'
Bxraszatcza-24.David. leen, 1). D Srr
K. W. Jacotas., I. D.. •q,"..41,--,x1.,.bw
flusreurlui4 - PrEttum:l7nder:
'6O TAIESEIV.II3IIX UMW EitABLIM,
or 11 .+ 4 ..k/ glift•lbadtglitetrirmisVAXlaibe...
.raw thar,c9rOlN,Rooolll.4ri cot,. • •
Randy .applied lift/tin! 'aid mlriiroa Hew
.604; xato s ui
varying IlvoliltelligliE r l/401).50710m4 fit
ieramat.flearsai•• wad. Cartlases . rpm/AIM: L'
ikw., a tuft fkanrisivr 11 .4 t,
02.4.,...tabuia. • •
•
rtai ruder.
l;lSz'Arb 'At 4:6145i.• -
24=1116. Minima *Wei. (be
lops wa.a a aroit..),keirs slwases Laird .
Dest ta/: nossiii,c4" gait; 14 iikumoet
-'1144 , 4.143 , 41...?iraut , cm5a. rims= •
°the%
Cone m..msymitiolt, ;pails en., MN itaanta
lerigne4 at 2 'uS 4 '..;,)
.1.414=1110.0.41i.."*._%41..
EDWARD.. CZARNISCIEL - LW.
Dirresza. own Su.",
Allegheny. Yetaffie, emenreatl .ntul. other Wt.
.nut astuaraistAtink or ravuM rittptan,
.poddh turotnettintnithett atshotten soda%'
at lowest prices. Bale and „Livery Stables, A
net of rust - streets: antus.,
Bates.; sum, uaus, T.
go= .
WANTS.
.• .
SINGERe.=FIVE
,• BUS .And 'TWO ALTO. SLAGABB for
Choir In ooe of Ole eityrborebex Good ruder.
preferred. Addrui, ANDEBSON, Box 'ld,
Pittsboro, Pe. • • •
WANTPD—AGE Nlll, for WRE
BLUE-CONS; and how Olaf lassid
Fought an 4 Died TO las Union.' With kennel snit
Inehlente In Abe Otis* Eoliell3on. It combos
oTsk UZ , 10 0T.IiRkrinin sad id) Vases. s
the silkiest Ind ebesSest Isar book publisben.
PrlesionlY Can wok TooDY. ThS nubile . ire csn-
Ooned against Info*. works 'nth sAbontsr
title. See thst the trook you boy skintalsts ore: .
iW 0 .1.1105 S , ad - kia . Poesn' Send ror ann.
lara. .114.1.r0u JOWLS BUOTWEILS a CO.; Phil.
Ip7 -A R T E 11.4,11. G
ready' for Cfr "TEE
OF THE WAD. BETWEEN' THE HEATHS; lts
Cams, Chsaseter; eon loci aild By
Roo. A1,...NDL1 STSPIZZ.S. Soot IttrOlt ,
.I.s, with terms ands fell diterlption of the 1
wont idetisa, BATIONAL PUBLISHINO -
ANTED-4%0110 AMEN': B.
. •A sample 'sea Tree, with 'terms; for =7
one Lo clew dally:l la nate hours. Badness
ea Urely new, not and desirable. Can be done
at borne or trivtling:rby both male and tamale.
No allt eisterpried or *imbed. • Address W. R.
CLUDESTYra nel grins:Away. New York. dar,
FOR,, REEK'
FOR ITENT.4iTho Two story
DIVICLLLVG LOUSY.. No. 174 weeder
street, eppaslte Peelfisveriut Cbereb, ustito
lug sleet nom., .I[s see and wets,. Enquire
KT. B. td 7111 b street.' •
FOR • VENT,4l:foem to 'Bent,
suitable for este ar two sentient., on 'Third
Wee t. Addreao u, deur,. Orrice.
-
TO LET—Becioud and Third
S ouns of Wieetiouse No. 17. toner of
First and Smithfield lettere., suitable 'for
or merehendleloi. ISenlfie on thirprOMitell.
TO Mr.7'—Tvee Wore BOOMS in
new bullollnlesow4hlo seense, zest II!dwell
ttruft Atte[hurt 'Wahl dwelllrigs over rub,
with water, bath tool* awl gas. -Lustier rood
for dry good. stwerrykr retail shoe store,' Also
Is tune bolldless, fat& room, soluble for null
hoothr.. Apply 51 Agee or FIIAZIEtt BROS.;
Ohio suttee andAedsielet street. Allesheny.
FOR', BALE.
FOR SAL TR &DING BOAT .
POE 81.1.1r..-711ii Dora 1t In good order,
nod will be aold abesp for arab. laattro or
DA.4IIEL SWOOER, iteal Estate aria Itastraaco
.agent, No. n Nedaral street, : ♦llegbte7.CitT.
oaartoral Coo,. - •
FOR 8/iLIE.RoTiOIi.EN.-140
balance of them lOesivable 'Lots are now of.
fared at prlvate tale; and my one desires!" [One
baluting alias would del well to make a mlectinn.
The village Id lotat.4 ;Sil • I matlibl and healtby
spot. two and a-ltalt mile. from 13barpsborg, • en
the Western Pennavivinala Sell read. which may
ttwangh it. making atilt more valuable and
agrehble. Extensive: . PreParaticne are 1200
making The ccecatiz:j , number of One bans.,
whleb will prove an Oriantetat to the lawn.'
The
remainderof tbese lOU will be sold at wry era
tenable rates and on ;rams exceeding]] ea.].
PILL g OUITTITYLT:tIreaI Lazio sod' hamr
ancel girenta. LawreneOwllleb
FOR SALE.--tionse and Lot Ow
corner of Ifsaltitian and Adams strew;
Batley. • LOt 41 by la foxr.
Home frame, contaled4 7 rooms and send he , .
well imorared. Hoose:nro4Lotmsatelool.l,ne
11 I dwell street. LlMO:coy Cirr. Lot 13 by V
feet: haus frame. =stints ball, an rooms an,
good cellar; tester and:,gas. Also, sevaral steM,
Homes tad Lots in semi location, Inquire old:
13.171311 • CV., Boarek street, war ch.a.u.
Idaneltester.
VOR'SALE—AViiiir, desirable
teree.tory BRIM ,
MDSE. nearly new;
:mused Met front. 'nivel. mantles: gee inn
whet throagneet; bonne mashes seven rooms
sod trashed garret, Xd M El.lt BTRZET, near •-
Wylie; Sinn wart. Pneieselon from AtirLl Yet,
1644. Znouire at the hone. "
Ron SALE-410118ES T
•••• golomality 14.44 owl &I. Stab* oat
too LiaaLrIRMEIMABAT); threw DAPPLk
GRIM HoItSES, 0zi. , .1 lazes mutrotrr.
=EWE: Mayo. DU OS /LASES; two Gary
MAZES; Inn our *a Mostooiti,
twatatit sad' 4/ on 06.12.1Eiti01. -
ROA. BALE—lihe
Bailable to ma WriGna banes; ,we TWO.
lIIMWE WAGON, atiCa doubla fa or Iftr,
I. pa, wady tet•. Earls at Ma PENMEN.-
FOtND.
po ork,—A ro4s .Book. ton:
Salable. small sifts' of money. sras-foood
oil Federal street, Alleg4eby,rs Frtaay, tbelth
lost. Tee omster eati t, l4*e Meese:op ea.llog at
Ito. COHINSON . 42/ST. Athlete*, ' - eatdo._
expenses Day of adrirt Um wee.
WOODRVFF' . B
rATENZISALDLII
B.2I.Ii , OIWETERS
•
lh,. tL l ollovlui = ooo
2d, P taatllt 7 . sa.'sic.- a,-
Claff,apooos..•. ith. •
and gel CD eleactlytlon of tbe
tha el.tanteglent Or than ttarrFut
•GEN:44.t?, - - - 4.6prarr 4 ,--
DuorszaTir.:# iI4RLET.r,
55 TI
-
El3=El3
umar li. t*,j
• • '
Merchant tailor
•-
Car. Penn and: 10; Clair Streair
P 0 010-0911 f. PA
sp z iggo AND 'ATINIMIEfirinn:
H. SMITH, Merchant
The Jest _ t_taed t a least erne. wet
"'n" 1 „.
toote% natterat. sensate.* exttaatrelrier rage
tom trade. whlettlleeardatily Invites
to
and the nubile tee eland:re.- tlauttenta ertll
it edam ap In • lava that 91Zukot stinnesad...
and at a reasonaW. Dtdaln:, • '
U. enrro,Norgiant Tailor,
10.1 et imam Rri atredesall
(21 '. W4BrENCER,
M
ARTISTIC SVRSEGJI AND DENTIST
.VD. 264' Poitis
Artusetax Teeth latadflhznia"
Nese ff441 1, 11t1 1 # 1 4 V .
E
Ma