littshittO Gayttt. PI:MOWED DAILY, BY PENNEDAD, REED d CO., Proprietors. P. D. PENNIMAN% JOSIAH XING. T. P. HOUSTON. N.J.. HEED, Editors and Managers. GAZETTE BUILDING. 10S. 84 AND 86 FIFTH ST. - - OFFICIAL PAPER Of Pittsburgh, , All , _eglkeny and Allegheny 1 Terms—Dafly. Semi . ..Week:v.! Weekly. One-year.... 73 Si mos.. 1.50 100 One year.V.so Single c0py....51.50 One month. 5 copies, each. 1.25 By the week, 15 Three mos 75 10 -.• .• 5.15 (from cattle!.) • and one to Agent. FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1668 THE WEEKLY GAZETTE, 188U49d 04 1 Wed— nesdays and Saturdays, is the best and 'cheap est family newspaper in Pennsylvania. le presents each week forty-eight columns of sol _id reading matter. Terms: Single copy, one year, $1.50; in clubs of five, $1,25 ; in clubs • of ten, $1,15, and one free to the getter' up of the club. Specimen copies sent free to any address. We print on the inside pages of this morn ing's GAZE'rTE Second page--Poetry and Condensed News. Third page—New York Financial Affairs, Markets by Telegraph, Imports, River News, h•e. Sixth page— Home Markets, linance and Trade. Sev enth page—An Interesting Scrap of Local History, Miscellaneous Reading Hatter, Amusement Directory. GOLD closed yesterday in New York at 138 i. IMPEACHMENT. The trial was resumed yesteiday, and, af ter the examination of two witnesses for the prdsecution, the case for the defonse was Inopened by Judge CURTIS, in an argument several hours' duration. Its main points were the denial that Mr. STANTON'S case was covered by the Tenure of Office Law, and the assertion of the right of the Execu tive to construe the law for himself, and con stitutionally to remove officers without Con sulting the Senate. He also maintains that act to be an infringement upon his consti tutional powers, which it'was his duty to resist. The line pf defense thus revealed is in consonance with the general expectation. To what other points it may extend, we are not, at the present writing, informed. A Snocraxat DISASTER is reported to have marked the opening of navigation on the lakes. The steamer Sea Bird was butned on Lake Michigan, early yesterday morning, and it.is supposed that all on board; includ ing some thirty or forty passengers, have perished. THE LATE Maryland Legislature in re vising the school law of the State, abolished the proiision by which the fourth of July - was made a holiday in the schools. The same Legislature has been accused of doing many things which indicated an intense spirit of disloyalty to the Union, but this abolition of the National holiday is doubt less only a proof of equally intense devotion to the cause of popular education. RECENT experience in the financial world has convin&l the public of the existence of a serious error In the Natiomil Banking EMl tem. It is agreed on all sides that the pro vision requiring all tile banks to make up their quarterly statements on a day fixed by , law and known in advance, must invariably result, as it did a few days since; in a very considerable temporary derangement of the money market, for the two or threepreced -ing weeks wine these institutions_ are thus preparing theinselves to make a good ex hibit. It is Proposed to change 'this provis. . ion, reqniring, instead, a statement to be made to the Comptroller, exhibing the con dition of the banks upon any pad day at his discretion. This :you'd obviate the mis chief resulting from the preparation for ar tificial exhibits, and would operate perma nently as a wholesome check upon any im, proper use of the banking privileges. A NEw Ypnx JOIJRNAL having stated that Gen. GRANT was in favor of the im peachment and removal of the President, the statement his been taken by the,Dento cmtic press as an authorized and official exposition of his opinions, and he is accord - "ugly denounced unsparingly, by these con sistent friends of free speech, for what they represent to be an attempt to overawe the , Senate by military power. Unfortunately, however, all their fine writing, its indignant _ eloquence, its vehement protests, its glow ing vindication of the independence of an American Senate, &a., &c., is so , rauel ink shed for nought. Gen. GE-Aarr has made an explicit denial that he had ever authorized the statement as made in the New York pa per. He undoubtedly exercises that• free dom in opinion, and in private conversation with his friends. in behalf of which tho Democratic newspapers have been industri ously defending Mr. Jon:Elms, but, far more discreet and self-contained than the Presidential orator, he reserves all official expression of his sentiments for suitable occasions as they may arise. His denial , the authority of the jburnal in. question to speak for him in that way is well knOwn at the Capital, and has been telegraphed genet-: ally to the press. This does not content his Democratic assailants; they would have him make a formal publication, contradicting that and every other paragraph about him with which the newspaper s abound; The' General has never been in the habit of wast ing powder in that way. THE GREAT MBE of 1845 affords to`the older citizens of Pittsburgh the most pronu nent chronological topic of discussion in the history of this city. The date of its recur rence-, its Precise origin, the state of ti at mosphere, the extent of the destruction and the rapidity with-which the-tire'did ihiSferil• ble worli; thelistricts-Whicli it swept ts influence 'upon:the hhitory:and fortunes of than/tali and' their , neightiere i :the'per. =Dent dad, - dirigAT and hniireetlyi upon the external characteristics of the town,L-all „ . ~. _ _ OFFICE• these points are regularly cliscussid; and 'mingled with the narrationof interesting in cidents of personal experience, quite as often as the annivemary of the greht event, upon this 10th dayL of April, comes around. And the press, with con stant uniformity, marks the return of a day which, twenty-three years ago, was so terribly disastrous to Pittiburgh. We follow thdusual example only so far as to say that, by a lire, which commenced at noon of that dag, near FronLand Perry streets, in the brief space of nine hours, a densely populated and closely improved area of fifty-six acres, being ; over twenty squares of ground in the heart of the city, was, completely swept over and every building destroyed, causing a loss then estimated at nearly four millions of dollars, Twenty three years have since elapsed, and, if you would now see a noble monument to the energy and success of the business men of Pittsburgh, traverse the district once so fear fully devastated, then penetrate into every quarter of the rapidly extending suburbs, and afterwards ascend one of the. grand hills which tower above the confluent streams, and lciok about you. RECONSTRUCTION NOT A FAILURE Arkansas has adopted her Constitution, and her new Legislature, now in session at Little Rack, will send to Washington, be fore the end of the next week, that instru ment for the approval of Congress, together with two Senators to be admitted as soon as the State shall be thus recognized. The South Carolina election commences to-moirow, continuing until the 16th. The Constitution to be submitted resembles that just adopted in Arkansas, in its just, liberal and well guarded provisions for securing all private rights, for the promotion of edu cation and intelligence, and for-the encour agement and protection of a spirit of loyal obedience to the Federal supremacy. But the old rebel element of her population evince no disposition to interest themselves in such a surrender of all the political her esies and class-prejudices which have in other years been peculiarly the boast of her great slave-holding aristocracy. Conse quently, we hear of but one candidate for Governor, Gen. R. K. Scorr, who runs on the Republican ticket, and its success is a matter of absolute certainty. The Louisiana election takes place April 17th and , 18th. A few of the members of the recent Convention have pronounced against the Constitution, and the Conserva tives therefore are encouraged to hope, from the aid of those dissentients, for success in their active opposition to it. But the latest advices are that the instrument will be adop ted, and the Republican ticket, headed by WARMOUTII for Governor, will be elected. Georgia votes on the 20th, the election continuing to the 24th, Col. BULLOCK head ing the. Republican ticket for Governor, and North Carolina votes from the 2-Ist to the 23d, with GoVernor HOLDEN at the head of the Republican nominations, dn these States, the elections will be sharply contest ed by all the rebel-democratic -conservative element, aided to some extent by local causes of discontent • among the Republicans. Great confidence is, however, felt in well informed quarters that the new Constitutions will be adopted and the officers of civil gov ernments under them chosen. We see no reason to dpubt that, by, the 15th of May, we shall see all the machinery of &new civil organizations in the States of Loiiiiiiana and South Carolina completed, and waitingenly the approving sanction of Congxess to set them in motion. If Georgia, North Carolina and Mississippi shall prefer military rule to self goverment; andan en tire exclusion from any Federal rights except that of protection under the'Federallaws, to the fell restoration to all former privileges which is now offered to them upon the just and yet generous conditions prescribed, thek will signify it by,, their votes next -week. But themxperience of Alabama, will teach its proper lesson to - the - rebels'ef these other States; they will perceive that nothing is' gained in the refusal to adopt Constitu tions which may, nevertheless, as in Alabama, be ,subsequently prescribed, for them, as the basis "of provisional governments, to continue until wiser and more patriotic impulses shall control their people. They will not; be; forever Sooner or later, they will accept the inexo rable destiny Which' awaits theni,.the, neces sity of an unconditional suinnissiori. to the power, which subdued, their armed, opposi tion, and which will never stop short Until it ' shall have secured a complete acknowl edgment of the political necessities which must control the solution of• all the remain- , ing difficulties. With three of these States restored, the othere will, sooner or later, .see their interest in following the , example. Each State restored weakens the moral force of the recusant spirit which• animates' the rebels of the States still unreconstructed. In deed the admission of the first of them, Ar kansas, cannot fail of so increasing the pres tige of loyalty and of so Stimulating tie pop tiler, practical appreciation of the higherpo laical and materiel' itliinitages of aetuies , cenctin the paramount and inflexible'' re quirements of the Federalspower,that it is sure to operate most beneficially upon Intel ligent sentiment in all of the other States. Were the Arkansas, in their seats to-day, and the State fully under the gov. , ernment of its recently chosen officers at . Little Rock, the practical aigument - which.it would afford, would conclusively decide all these remaining elections _in the, in4resteof a loyal reconstruction' The situation is embarrassing to politi cians antn..pidefUt one for .pittriots' fn. any, section of the Union But, hfrAT:ver. much it may divide_and distract pane_ sentiment in the Nortli,ike Southern Statesthemselvcs, experience all itsvv,ils - Flti! a bittern, nifold greater. The loyal States recognize the inflexible neceSsity . of a patiel4 Agiligfir ante to their poi* which wIU ncitrebtiii fleger_froin..ita firm - graft,. tiiion :Southern rebellion' in any :‘Pf its.forma • TWs policy Will' be adheieit to.. There is the, Minna es:lic:tsaibility,of its .sbandonment r . neither: tialiT'ear, the next, nor - oi' firs years. t4= benie. ihan.that, the ob. APRIL _lO. 1868 sbriacy of the.Southem people will yield' td the logic of events, and they will return'to their obligations and privileges under the Federal laws, convinced by their interests and in spite of their still lingering and hesi . fitting. pride. - They have for three years awaited the Northern " reaction " which was promised for them by their Democratic brethren. This "reaction" comes in in the shape of an offending Executi veimpeach ed and removed, of a Congress with nearly three-fourths of its members in each House uncompromisingly pledged to the en forcement of a rigid and uncondi tional policy of reconstruction, of a Senate which, by no contingency possi ble under ordinary human calculations, can be otherwise than loyally animated during the entire period of GRAvvr's administra tion, of a House which no politicifin, not even the. blindest- Copperhead, can suppose to be in danger of excbanging its present Republican chaMeter for the control \of the Democracy. Southern •politicians I have watched and waited in vain; nowhere, in the field of Northern politics can the acutest or most hopeful of them discover any sign that the great popular heart beats with impulses less loyal and lesolute than when a million of armed men went marching Ott to rescue the Union from its enemies. There is a limit to all human patience, 'and neither Southern strength nor,pride can endure the trial for five years to come. The day can no longer be very far—dis , tent when the Southern people will per ceive the utter hopelessness of protracted re sistance. They will see that nothing has been gained either by arms or by their passive, sullen refusal to accept the situa tion. They will see that they are no stronger to-clay, either in themselves or in the North ern alliance and sympathy which they have relied on, than In April, 1865. And, seeing this, one State after another, they will yield to the pressure of necessities and return loyally to the Union. A PLEA FOR THE FASHIONABLE A strong tendency exists among many people to decry and depreciate fashionable people. Even Mr. Gonna, in his lecture on "Curiosity," descends to this. Descends, because it shows either gross ignorance or a mean, pitiful spirit of envy or narrow mind edness quite beneath the level of most of that great orator's views. Even some bodies of men, calling themselves Christians, de mean themselves in a •• like manner. Be cause then - choose to hold 'different views of right and wrong, or to live, in a different manner from others; must those others ne cessarily hiss them down ? This was the view of the powers of the Roman, Church during the early days of the reformation; of the. Pagans during the infancy of Christian ity; of the Jews during the last half century of their existence as a nation, and of the Puri tans who fled from blind persecution in Eng land only to themselves' become persecutors in a ten-fold degree in America. In very many cases the people who decry and•defame people of fashion do so only be cause they know their own inability to themselves become so.- . For in all large towns in the civilized world the people of the highest fashion use good language and grammar, as (well as good clothes, and be have themselves decorously and according to the generaoaws of etiquette recognized the world over. But, in fact, fashioqable people need no advocate; they themselves are their olvri vindicators. The history of thcfworld shows very few proininPlit• char acters who, if they did not start as fasluon able people, aid not end as such. What sol diers fought more bravely than the iiarella of the English florae Guards during the" Crimea ? The gallant six hundred at Bala kblva were many of them of, high standing in the gay world. Geo. Washington was a gentlem a n of .fiudflon, who delighted in riding behind six white horses, and iri P send ing out cards printed in England for his evening `receptitins. Many of the nurses and most of the subsistence committees during the late war were ladies of fashion; all of the prominent men and women of America have had more or fess experience 01 fashionable life. Florence Nightingale, Byron, Lafayette,, Goethe, Napoleon, Maria Therese, Gutitavus Adolphus, 'and evert. Julius Caesar and Alexander the Great, were people of fashion; and many of them liiaders of the Ton. With such overwhelm ing facts A-staring him in the .face, it really, seems quite incomprehensible how Mr. GOUGH could join the ranks of the narrow minded and allow his influence to be weak ened by lending himself to so vulgar and absurd a prejudice; and we do not find any such prejudice existing. among learned men, who from choice, and not from inability, keep aloof from fashionable lit e. AN IMPARTIAL VIEW OF IMPEAOII- MENT .We annex from the Washington corres: pondence of the New York Times, a very clear, distinct, and impartial• statement .pf the Position' of the case as it stands at the close of the Managers' testimony. It is the more worthy of oonsideration since the journal in which we find it does not edito rially declare itself partizan; and, has been fact, during ,the progress of the trial, as prompt to censure the RepubliCan party, as any journal, not avowedly Democratic, which has come under,. our notice. tll4 Writer states the case, hilts presentpiultiOn, as •follows: ' "The case as made by the prosecution, though not developing much' dust is'acir; is yet conceded to substantiate all the !indite charges of Abu articles, except, the mitth,.so far as oral and 'record eviftnee can do it. The shier questions are, after all, the ques lions oflaw,, and a ft er all that the' Prosecu tion claimJs admitted by the defense, there still remains the original theory set sp by Mr. Johnson; :that laving, done.: all _these things, he has nevertheless violated no law. As to %the evldence,,i4cs4 safely. be said that the following - points are filly proven, namely; . ,that the President first suspended- .:Mr Stanton under. the, : .Terturel of Oce n act ; that Lb '-recogulied that'act by &informing to it inrepeated in stances. thsthististilittelyremciVeddifs, Stan lotouring, t h e figim d mi of tbe. Senate, --with ('lnt'Atil *VIM ill t r f l i rt / 1 4t) , Act 176% 44 „sr ,Viumula,Psec-: miry *me m *, violatimi tiftbe: 1887. t` Mb.' Themes. acting up , "And now, to leave e,pleasant story, let me say a , word of the Ku—Klux. Every body, by this time, must luiVeleard of the Klan—the Ku—Klux Klan—'lf,. K. , K. Be ware !'—and wondered what it was all about. Ku—Klux, then, is a secret organi zation, of late origin in'the South, having its birth-place in Middle Tennessee, and now spreading like wild-fire all through this country. It Li' in Mississippi, and in Alabama and all over Tennessee, and in Louisian4, and, following Sherman's track iii Georgia, is sweeping do*n through this State into Florida, and out into Virginia, Maryland, and the Carolinas. Wherever a petty- tyrant, or a great one, oppresses the people, there the K. K. K. rears its head, and, wherever there are soldiers' graves the order has a 'Den.' The idea put forth ( is that the dead Confederate rises at midnight, and, forming into the Pale Brigade, rides forth to redress the wrongs inflicted on those for whom- he died.. Dire portents are said to be seen by night, mystic lights and Cloudy forms, and squadrons that go charging by, all in skeleton forms, mount ed on shadowy steeds that move with the speed of the whirlwind and without a sound. The negroes, superstitious at all times, given'over to belief in Obi and conjuration, and the Evil Eye, are in lurge pertdrbation at the K. K. K. This Cuff has met in his midnight rambles a man, and, falling into converse therewith, has suddenly heard his bones, rattle or seen fiery lights in a fleshless head, and, of course, knowing this was Ku- Klux, has fled. And then that Sambo, not to be outdone in trepidation or lying by Cuff, has had his hand shaken at his own cabin door, and found, 'bress de Lor', skel eton fingers left within his palm. 'Ku-. Klux !' if but whispered after nig,htfall, is a sound to scare the Great Enfranchised into fits. Great thrbughout the South is now his fear. And whereas, . once he prowled about at all hours, haunting the Loyal League, and drinking in ,poor, impres— sible, doomed barbarian—the murderous talk ofincendiary &constructionist agents, now he keeps close within doors after sun down. , Mysterious placards appear in pub lic places. Men are pointed out as a probe, ble Grand Cyclops or a possible High White Death, and in the midst of all this super stition and surmise and joking, the fact ap- pears that there is a Ku-Klux-Klan that is growing with the rapidity of a snow-ball rolling in the snow. No man enters, the order but a •true man,' and a true man is one that hates a tyrant. History is full of instances where a people greatly oppressed, and with no present remedy, have had secret organizations arise among them to dispense.a wild justice in those cases where the law's are powerless to either protect or venge. Let the reader turn to Anne •of Giersteirt, book second and accompanying notes, and he will there find an old time original of the Ku-Klux in the German Vehmgericht, or 'Tribunal of the Bounds. As stated, this K. K. order arose in Middle Tennesset3, asection of the State peculiarly oppressed by Brownlow and his myrmid ons, and was, doubtless, originally only in tended as a species, of Regulator organiza , tion for local use—the numberless sepulchers • of brave men slain in the Western cam paigns in those regiops furnishing the hint for the peculiar insignia and phraseology of the Klan. But, sin/ilia sinaiMus., like op pressions elsewhere existing have superin duced a like State of mind4o that in which the Ku-Klux> had its origin in Tennessee, and the Klan has branched out in almost all the other Southern States. How far the or ganization really extends, or what are its entire or ultimate purposes, it is hard to tell,• but in quitting the subject, it may (be said that it appears to meet, with all but univer sal favor, and promises some developments 'ere long of interest. , '‘'When at Augusta it is but a step for yon to leave the State, and in leaving it it is im possible to restrain a sigh over a great com monwealth now given over by a fragmen tary:and misrepresentative Congress into turbulence, apprehension and gloom." , It suits .. a certain, partizan view of cur rent -events •to deny the existence of any 'secret organization in the Southern States, having for its object systematic assaults .upon the property' nd lives of such citizens as :have become, by their avowed Union , 'sentiments, obnoxious to their : rebel neigh bors. But the evidence that such secret ization , does exist," is indisputable, organ . while the treasonable and atrocious nature of its operations has;become so dangerously manifest that it . luis at last 'obtained the -40 wit, cognizance from the military author- We print elsewhere an article freal a well known Democratic,journal, Which Dilly adinits the existence'and Objects of die Ku THAT RECUSANT.. rDIVANE, Dr. Wm, needs mete 'reprhnande Undismayed by the swiA4PPII3 Vlich'tllo:gPlßCP*o/- In*lfas*eriophim,,, be h t i s agat t c,,b e in• gillty preaching in'`BaPtistl 4#441/fO/11:. 'altit'churches. , •Zr.O , ..'..4'.?.‘Wni%M,TW.ZV, • on the order of the President, did attempt to take posse,ssitai of the War Office, and was only prevented from using force in so doing by the intervention of Mr. Stanton's legal proceedings; that he did attempt to ex ercise the functions of the office, in giving orders and signing himself Secretary of War ad- interim; that the speeches made upon the Chicago trip were actually made as reported, whatever shiide of misdemeim or they may establish; and that the Presi dent, in dealing with the Senate, has stead ily maintained that he did not _recognize the Tenure of Office act, while in dealing with appointme is and removals under it, he has tmiformly respected its provisions except in this on instance of the last removal of the Secre ry of War. Whether the Tenure of Office has been violated depends upon a law question. as to whether the act covers Mr. STANTOF'S' case. It does, the prosecu tion will hate no troable in proving its vio lation, as k they have allready proved that for cc inptposos the President conceded it to b vali law, while for others he did not. ~ On is p int, the most elaborate arguments will be mde, and it will be one which the Senators ill End it most difficult to decide, as some o them are on record heretofore to , the effect hat the law did not touch Mr. t ' STANTOW case It will be by a very close vote, if at 1, that a verdict of guilty is ren dered on this article. One of the points which it is understood the defense will attempt to prove, and which they, will maintain - with all their ability, is that in all these acts the President intended'no violation of the law. They all maintain the well known principle of - com mon law, that to prove . a crime the intent must be fully shown. But against this She prosecution will set up the well established fact that in the last removal of Mr. Stanton he did actually violate alaw, on the ground, as he maintains in his answer, that it is no law, having nevertheless repeatedly recog nized its validity by performing various ac tions under it. The matter of intent, there fore, the .3,1 ambers claim is fully established. The charges,of the ninth and tenth articles are among those on which, if on any, a ver dict of not guilty x ill be rendered. THE KU-KLUX-KLAN. A letter from Augusta, Georgia, to the New York World, a Democratic journal, gives the annexed sketch .of this secret or ganization: - CONGRESSIONAL. MESSRS. EDITORS GAZETTE :—The name of A. 31. BROWN, Esq., has been mentioned in connection with. Congressional honors in this district, through your columns. Can you inform many Republicans whether he will accept the nomination if tendered ? No gentleman in the district can rally more friends, nor can any present a fairer political recdrd or better qualities for the positipn. RADICAL REPUBLICAN. [NorE.—We are in the receipt of a num• ber of communications of similar character, advocating Mr.. BROWN for Congress, and would respectfully ask a card from him bearing on the subject.] The Methodist Church on Impeachment. Nothing so significantly proves that pub lic, opinion demands the impeachment and removal of Andrew Johnson from the Presi dential chair as the appeals Ind prayers and resolutions of the great religious bodies. The spirit that prevailed during the war is everywhere revived, and there is not a newspaper, a great divine, or philanthropist, identified with the cause of the country in that great struggle, that does not now invoke speedy action from the Senate. The follow ing report, by the New England tConfer en of the Methodist Episcopal eChurch, at Boston,Massachusetts, was unanimouslyadopte on Saturday last, all the mbmbers rising, amid much enthusiasm: We give thanks to our Lord and Saviour for leading our nation through the blood and fire and vapor of smoke which for four years enshrouded us in a sulphurous canopy. We especially praise His name that in this hour of national agony the greatest crime of history perished from the land. We rejoice that in carrying forward the work of national regeneration the Congress of the United States has been so 'faithful to the will of God in building up our ruined State organizations on the only just and en during foundations of equal and fraternal oneness of man. We deeply regret the constant and vio lent hostility of the President of the United States to the action of: Congress and the will of the people in respect to his duty, and that it has compelled his impeachment for high crimes and misdemeanors before the Senate of the United States. We hereby heartily and solemnly approve of this action of the House of Representa tives, and trust _the honorable Senate and the Chief Justice of the United States in this most important trial will magnify our laws and make them honorable in the eyes of all nations. We cordially approve the action of Ulys ses S. Grant, General of the Army of the United States, in yielding up the keys of his office as Secretary of War ad interim to the regular Secretary immediately on the de cision of the Senate as to the right of occu pancy. We also commend his whole ac tion in this critical history as inspiring con fidence in the Republic, and as showing to all nations that in America her first Generals are obedient to law, in both drawing and sheathing the sword of victory. We most gratefully recognize the sagacity, courage and faithfulness of Hon. Edwin M. Stanton, the Secretary of War. We honor his great services during the war, and those equally valuable which he has rendered in this our last struggle with the slave power. May God preserve him in his high trust un til the rebellion, whether in the White House or in its Southern departments, shall be utterly put down! As our nation has been conducted through this long. perilous and bloody • controversy by the spirit of God through the prayers of thid Church, we request the members of our churches and all Christians to be unwearied in their supplications that the' consummating of the conflict now going forward may be conformed to all its previous , steps, and ob tain for us as a nation, the continued and crowning blessings of God. Resolved, That a copy of this report lie sent to the Secretary of War, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the President of the Senate, and the Chief Justice and General of the Army of the United States. How Connecticut Was Carried The Hartford Courant of April 4th, two days before the election in Connecticut, in dicates the tactics of the Democrats by which the State was canied for the Demo cratic Governor. The charges of frauds in New Haven have been prckved true by the result of the vote there, as well "as by the facts stated by the Courant as follows: "In the Second ward when the Registrars came to sign the list, the Republican, Mr.- Andrews, pointed out a great many bogus names, and demanded that they should be stricken off before ho signed. He offered to.o with the Democratic Registrar to the streets and houses, in which these bogus voters were said to live, and show him there were no such voters there. The Dem ocrat refused to do so. The Republican persisted in refusing to sign until the cor rections were made. He was assaulted. The list was torn awity from him. He was visited by the Democratic Mayor and oth ers who.tried to intimidate him. It was only when.pariers were got ready to enjoin the list from being printed, until it was signed, that.the Democrats yielded and permitted the two Registrars to take the list anclrevise it. The result was that over sixty names were stricken of by the consent of the Democratic Registrar. Of these only four appealed and were restored by the select men." After the. sixty bogus names were struck off the list the Republican Registrar pursued his investigations and found fifty more fraudulent names on the list as made out by the Democrats. To avoid flirther exposure the Democratic Registrar told some of the persons at the houses where inquiries were made concerning the residence of the bo gus voters, that they need answer no ques tions. THE COURTS District Court—Judge Williams. In the case of -Rev. S. Washington vs. Thomas M. Bell, previously reported, the jury found for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,191. ' The first case taken up yesterday was that of Mary Kirkland : vs. Isaac N. Gill. This was an action in dowqr to 'recover plaintiff's portion of the annual rental of houses and land in• Patton township. The Jury found that JOsOph Kirkland did not die siezed of the premises mentioned in the plaintiff's declarktion. •That the - whole an nual value of the said premises is two hun dred dollars,"the third part, of which they found to be slaty' dollars: - • Augustus Haftje rt. D. Ririehart and J. A. Herten. • This was - an action to recover the value of several promissory notes. On trial. - qu a rter geed . ono...Judge Mellon. DE r.urreTioo' ENQulwElsioo. jrnmes riteaun wa4'Placed . on trial on an indictment 'charging him with commit ting. a felonioui assault unon John MeCou- The parties were boarding at Connor,'s, on Hind an evening in February' last McConnell returned from . : kW,. Work, and was about ,retiring to bed. In passing PitAxdnegililOM he saw him (Pitcairn) lying Anion • his bed anittiMMtio therevassomeN tVo,g strange in. his titsuice-l i ns nnizsuallyinggiisii4) .whg e g him utiatftira Muljonnidl taint tatens nd, and turning. rnnzid , eaw..Pifea4* lowing him, having a gator in his . hod. Pitealrn immediately aftliatgadthe pistol,. , -- 1 -- 1 aiming fortunately too hikh, the.ball strik ing the wall above McConnell's head. Pit cairn returned to his rooni and McConnell following him, a scuffle dnsued, in which McConnell was much inbred, Pitcairn en deavoring tokouge out'one of his eyes, in which he might have succeeded but fbr the interferenCe of Mr. Connor, the There keeper had of been no diflip the bliardiulty png reviously, house. and there seemed to be 'no. cause - for the murderous attack. Afte his arrest, Pit cairn expressed regret thht he had failed in his attempt on the Are of McConnell. ~For the defense a nufriberiof witnesses were called, who testified Pitcairn was of un sound mind; although thdy had not known him to be predisposed to *iolence, they had looked upon him as insine for some ten years. His conduct was •described as sing ular. At times he was Moody and silent for hours, declining to Okinverse, and on other occasions he would4uddenly become Merry, laugh immodera ly, and when he did .converse would talk strangely and in coherently of matters entirely irrelevant to the subject of conversation. In speaking about the attempt to shoot; and when ask ed why ho had so acted, he maintained that he had a right to shoot himself, which, he had done, contending that McConnell as sumed his body and that, therefore. the man he had attempted to shoot was James Pitcairn: I Aother testified that the family had for y ars believed him 11. to be insane, and he had b Come so trouble some that it was considered dangerous for him to be at home with! his mother. It was noticed that when "the fit was on him" his eyes assumed a strang , glaring appear ance, were enlarged and 1 dieated unusual excitement. During the . rial the prisoner frequently smiled, seeming amused at the endeavor to establish his thsanity. Of this, however, the evidence left but little, if any, doubt, and the jury retu ed a verdict, of "not guilty by reason o insanity at the time of the commission •of the act." The prisoner was remanded add proper dispo sition will be made of hini. Edward Maher was arraigned on two in dictments for assault - Mid battery, the charges having been prefdrred by Michael Maher, and Ann Maher, lii•otber and sister in-law of the fiefendanti Michael Maher testified that the defendan was of unsound i mind, and that the assaul was committed while he was in an irritab e humor, result ing from his malady. Fro n the demeanor of the defendant in Courtq it was apparent that he was of unsound Ey nd. Verdict not guilty. 1 , Jacob and Louis Seifert it were arraigned on a charge of assault and battery preferred by their father, Jacob *iferth, Sr. The parties reside on a farmin. McClure town ship, and the dispute occurred , about the use of a horse. , j Comm The ease Railroad Coi sion withon Thirty-Elgl male 111b1 _ 6tl), 1808. Another ye. - Society has passed, and as we pause to . look back, its days, weeks and months pass in review be fore us. What is the record? Do we see any fruit of our labors? Havci we _encourage ment to persevere? Did we rely on our own stiength we would surely be discouraged; buti knowing 'there is no power for good equal to the word of God, and that however hi.unble our efforts may appear td men, they Will be approved by Him who notices even tie fall of a spar row, we press on, trusting:that in the end it may be said of each one:Of us, "She hath done what she could." And when we consider 'sour position as merely auxiliary to the dAmerican Bible Society, we feel we do our part in the great work; that in its ( success ul working we can rejoice, feeling that oit contribution helps the great worlti By. the Treasurer's report it will be seen that the collections for this year are fully up to the last. We have made four persons life members and Dr. Hopper, Missionary tdiChina, a life di rector in the American Bible Society. The demand for Bibles in our midst is not as great, owing in some degree to the num ber of similar societies hi the city. We gave out last year seven German Bi bles, eightEriglish, and one Bohemian Bible, one large print Testament 'and Psalms. We have also given twelve Bibles to a Sabbath School at Woods Run, twelve for distribu tion in the Penitentiary, and twenty-two to a clergyman from Virginia, whose congre gation had suffered greatlY'durinig the war. The lives of all our members have been preserved; arid as we enter - upon - another - year's work may it be with lb. new resolvei do more than ever before in the greatwcirk of distributing the •Bibled till the whole' world - shall be evangelized ? .The'following officers were elected: President—Mrs. P. R. Brimot. Vice President—Mrs. Sands. Corresponding Sbcretam-+Mrs.R.. S. Hays. Recording Seeretary--Miss Mary George. Managers—Mrs..Brunot,i'Mrs. Sands, Mrs. Hays Mrs. - Davis, Mrs. Banks, Mrs. Dickey, Mrs Jamison, Mrs. Sawyer,Mrs. Swift, Miss Henderson, Miss I - bitten, Miss Pressly, Mikis George, Milks Nimick, Miss Blackstock, Miss Herron, Miss Thompson. Mrs. E. E. Sawyer, in accounfiwith Ladles' Bible Society, April 6, 1363: To Collections and Subscrlpllbnel $385 63 To Collection at Annual Sermon!. .. 43 92 . -- 29 55 Cit. -S4 By contribution to American Mole Society at sundry times i 1270 00 By cash paid for Bibles and Test4inents 65 69 Balance on hand. .... 93 96 S4V 53 ______......_--- •_. Another . Effo-t. • • o , Some time since we publi hed ai account of a case in which Dr. .1. - 1 B. Herron was prosecutor and A. W. F ter defendant, charged.with obtaining metoines and med ical, service under false ,p etence. It was ~ alleged by the prosecutor that he attended the fatally of the accased fo/ several months and 'furnished drugs and, medicines for which he received no reihuneration, the defendant representing that his father was wealthy and would settle thp bill whenever presented, and upon these ; representations the services were rendered. He further alleges that after waiting same time for his pay he made out his bill and forwarded it to the father at Baltimore, ,irlio repudiated it. He then made the information for false pretence, which for some reason was with drawn. Yesterday he made information before Alderman Humbert:Charging Foster with fraud, in which he ic4uses him, as in the former information , kith fraudulently obtaining medicines and nicalcal cervices. Foster was arrested, and !Liter a hearing held to bail ' for his appearance at Court.' The information was sent u and will prob ably-come _before the GrandlJury to-day. ___ —The billiard nutteh for. ithe champion ship of America and $l,OOO, bet Ween John McDevitt and Melvin Foste r, closed at half; past twelve o'clock, at Chicalgo, Wednesday night. The largest runs wee : Foster, 197; 126,235. McDevitt., '244. 254, 342. On the fifty-ninth inning tho balls, were nearly all. together at the lower left hand corner. Mai ' Devitt caroming upon one, struck the cush ion and apparently passed between the oth er two. He himself appeared to think so, as he turned away.from the table. His um pire, however, claimed that a' count was made, Foster's ,umPirt claiming the oppo site. The referee was'esllled for his decision, ,which he gave in fiwor of McDevitt. 'Upon this Foster put' on his coat and left the room. Not returning , calla were made for a decision upon the game which was ren dered in faVor of McDevitt; ihe score stand ing: McDevitt, 1,268; Foster:4,l62. —The Nevada RePtiblican -State ConvertT Lion met at . Car onyestordAy;pld delegates, to the Chicago convention .were elected. •''' Grant wae,unkiOnously,clusani roithe.neXt • President. Alneoltitioria - wera,adopted `'i crojing to teectuitritalloh'measures of ongress and the impeachmoht. Stowe• Pennsylvania :he entire ses- of the Fe— gheny. April OM