The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, May 06, 1868, Image 1

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CM
IE
VOLUME 11;XXXIII.
FIRST EIIITIOX.
TIPTE.ILITE O'CLOCIE '11X:
FORTIETH .CONORESS.
Tfie Att,SPIRt• ..?!.:41 1 ,1r4C 1 4-
zuent—ikanager Bingham Pro.
, .
s
Ceeds., ''..... - .lari ill his. —
Deleinielriaoriabaie-LWitilapeillk
an Hour To-DaY• •
t
; (By. Telegraph to - the Pittsiwriett Gaze tt.3
I _ WASHINGTON, *ay 5, , 110.
Senater 'CAMERON moteeti;lnVitelhe
'i,members of the Medical -Convention now
1 ' in keislonin the city tOgeate in the gallery
without tickets, : ' E
hey numbered
1 •
about two hundred. • , ' ,
Serteter, DRAKE objected. ,; ~
I
The motion was distigreed 'to.'
- Mr. BINGHAM rammed his argument.
' s After recepitulatinghis_mcomentes.
;
terday,„ . :: .be ; , took --, up,- the, lineation
whether'. - or-;;; not - it' is - necessary
I in ' this case to Proye the . evil in
tent. He read from the records of English
4 State trials to show such proof is not need;
ed. He would not argue the point at any
length, beednae , it was: plainly • settled by
4 common law and the practice of centuries.
i The arguments of counsel. on this question
wereperulleand unfit to be uttered in the
! presence of the Senate.
I He theoreferred to ;the question of the
power of • the President to fill vacancies
created byhimself during the session of
the and insisted the'fact of the ulti
mate connection of the power of appoint
ment, with that of removal had heenstud
-1 ion,illY ketit out of sight by the counsel
posing him, and went on to argue with ref
! erence to all the provisions bearing on the
1 subject that the richt to appoint Cabinet
1 officers without the consent of the Senate
.was no where granted to the President by
• 1 the Constitution. It could not be merely
I filled as a vacancy by a temporary appoint
, ment, for his letter of authority , appointed
' General loran inde fi nite time. To
' show that it was not among the President's
implied powers under the Constitution to
vacate and fill offices with the consent of
the . ' &nate, he read from writings of
Hamilton end Webster. He further main
tained that the speeches of Mr.Sherinan and
other Senators mere not susceptible of the
. meaning put on -them byt the • opposing , I counsel. in regard to the .debate of 1780,
i he contended, .too much -.Weight Was
' given to the utterances of nerd
] zan - debate at :Ithe time, but he
. , argued the power .of.Temoval granted
' I the Presided - Ain - 1M Irani veatricted - bv +rub,.
. •1 sequent legislation„„, He. held that :Preai
. I dent, Adir.o.is removed . Mr. 'Pickering before
;. ,1 the Senatemee , •on• h en the same day,.
and the re • • • -•• ::• •,.••• •,• .‘ He eaked-ot
1 what availm,ould.s:,;' -,'' ' J ti,• sion,ef .the
j Constitutiofiliird ', • , ; .1" . • • tedlil VA
. , cancies during?. recess q- 1 41#1 . •Senate to the
hone i of.'oeminfrecloPm-140likti".0:a the; 1 0t.
:. „gtordwir
of, the tresi the Pro 4-,
-'
1., dent could create vaeinehis atV•veretestof
will during
, n theseselou of the Senate?... ,
.• 1 Mi. Bingham challenged the citation of '
-:.... any law or seellert of the Constittitzionivhich ri
; - Would limit the terms of the officers thus
appointed by the President by such' ap
,,i pointments. -.Tle,ceuld keep men in office
• •1 at his pleasure, without regard to the Con
.;4 stitution on the subject. And on the quer
tiori.of• what are the limitations of Ertecu
.-4 tivfpower, Mr. Ilinghain 'cited numerous
••
-1 authorities and qiroted from speeches 0f
•...i Webster. With regard to the President's
1 defense, ''. that, he, • sought .- to - test the
f. validity '• IA the: Tenure-ofitiffice •law, !
i
-he asserted there has never been a
clear unegaivocal decision of the Su
. 'preme -Cane against the constitution-
. ality of a - law of Congress, and held it
. was only.a bbld 'pretense of the President
to take upon himself . the responsibility
which the Court itself-had-never assumed.
Thb presumption Vas altogether in favor of
'• the law's validity. To-admit his possession • i
•,, of a discretionary and: judicial prerogative ,i
would be to olothe the creature with power I
: ' superior .to the power which created him,
and would enable . liiin at pleasure to defy 1
• the will of the people. the Constitution and 1
. ' Alludingtoki expression of Mr. Evicts, he
' denied hating - . claimed the omnipotence of
. Congress. He regarded.that body, 'equally
,„*. with the • President; the servant of the pco -
't . Pie; but neither Congress nor the Judiciary
areanswerable to the Exeeutive. He would
-., make no further answer to the clamor of
... the learned 'gentleman on this point, but,
must, repel the' .charges against the House
, of RepresentatiVes, as having brought and
' o A impeachment in party luite,lind
„AR aPtletltiffertusintilkfiexpreestid• an
, _ opioion on the subject-which they were af
terwards to judge,: It - Was" their duty to
; exlVettl. that opinion , for, they were to try ,
:•. thl t7 ,Preirldent •in an entirely - different ea
:n.!. He therliecited . the three lams which the
.-. President-Was 'charged:With having viola
'••• ted;7oalming It had -, been 'already shown
~.. thatviliree violations were 'offences. He
~, quoted Kent that nuiTadinhaistration in• of
lice was also ground:for iMpeachrnent. He
.:. held•that It was entirely immaterial wheth
er a lft'llit a cl 14 1 0 efeil 4
feal 14) 2 44_ . :intill
'..•*.tr Wei:acts , form :, an in ctunent. -Ever
chilclknewhisoffertee wasais aemraptton of
•Poitrtir to judge of gieiviaidity.of laws for '
himself, :and to-Obey them 0r..• not- at his
measure and it was PCI:too much to:di Y a
holder piece of eilrenterY was teterbefbr e .
• • known.- - Re held that , the elabOrate • argu
'merit kfftiredoninieli . that. the fit*--
of sa. 414 ~ iiat 'zek:the. act -- 0f..1.788,
a d ne ntiedit . - :ta thy pOirer ,of • the I , resi:, .
I dent tO tletAlWite - the , . tettirre-of•Oigeo r l and i
that the ebb ect was not determin
ed by .. cons 0 1 14 0 4 F. IProvisicank,,,an ,
k
• ' then
_proceede to, comment
was
the ad 1
r of 1807. in order - to she* •it was clear and
4 expliett in , itaterms. ' ' , Referring to p se nator
• ' ShermtuesPßVll l P i t he i v AC° l2 "
lt sent to thcfremoir 6 a ab net cofficer who
•.1 should be so destitute honor as to refuse to.
!ii when requested hy' the,Stmate,Mt.
~11 zing sale the'rewarliAras natural at.
that time. for clrcumst.agem,.. b i a t i lk om , _ .
• ," developed the malignitkrind dingerousr,
1,1 Motions of,thenFrod,,4lo4o:4l l ll 4 :llllmthe ex
.'A pressieri.-.1344?1"AP84 - the- Itonsfm t of the.
' --" Renate . wasp eeettfkAT.-410 Me: 4011.bted
. C.i l • 'tat "dr. - Stantm
thot,,,time, , . , . 1- came
• at " 4C — .),120 reirisions , of '. the act. -The:
• Preside nt -ivit . iii' P o.. not; 1 fbr '' h e ; hiol''lteknowr ., l
•' , Zi iedgedstif tell by suspeptliplig.r., swoon ,
'q under the act. Now, how liFthe tio4rerdf .1
I susgnsion given him?yea_ 'encircling .]
tlA lrt
II „,, m aildeVarilrerre*ed lir` • from
i's 4 "'
eg s qf tkm Act and „excuse
1 , .1
w th as e
111 ough r tot . 6tiVerlip' is villainy;
4'4 b o ld the,, president was reprehensible
-- He ,
i for having fanu led i l iE rs g r ie to l l ;
"6 by ttui ad to 're t,
rID v ifi di gilt t •
,7=4,. 'Wing ° firm exercising his d QS. r .
ti :! an itlhlß POfilitthe:S o 4 llo toctrecless; launed
~ -1
On may. Mr. • Til lt m c
.."•:;-.... the Preel
' It' h ad • Pllgr ik ma the cluirges con
dotsua - . '1"
•:'...; ' the ..I,' k 3 i ••• , ,.1 ;. .. r.''
N.', eie l og .!..
..z.,
.. v t iii„.,.... Alii..
° !•- irtil e -°"".4 4,43.1 :•i;:',•: ilz g....t . '''
)7
,
,
; - •
/MnaMil
ing tribute to the public services, character
and virtues of, that 1 calumniated officer,
,v,tio had been Myt4r.ji -""' I ' ' ' 11t ' e
faithleitlignisot
. ..L" : 4
C., __ --- . 4
adorn and ennoble human nature had 'no'
superior in any Yet thl&diatinguish.
ed patribt had been removed 'without a col
'arable okr3fise;ifi'vitolitieritt . law, 9 -te - itt!oitiiY
the pe onalenmity of the President.
Mr. 1 , • . Mil' *as Igsji lot bEf'4l )l 4l to
agree • o' o 61;tonnsei in orfelaillit of' law,
namely that an unconstitutional law was
no law; bat insisted' it cannotbeeonsidered,
unconstitutional :until it has been so pro
notinebtin e prop" rheay'..' , He' Would, also
• kertitB that evil intent is to be presainged
from evil acts; but the President's evil in
tention was, not Merely- a matter. ot pre
sumptiom‘but of emifession. 2 -To'ithourthis,
Mr. Binghanvead from the President's let..
ter to Gen. Grant. in which he says, "You
know that it -was 4ny_purpose Itto prevent
Mr. Stanton from resuming the - duties of
the office of Secretary of War," and he
- claimed further that , every one not stutajd
or insane must see, if - Mr.- Stanton had
'been kept out of his office, he never could
:have got into the Court, and a decision
, could never haVe•- • been`:'obtained by the
' , President. The defence that he wanted to
obtain a quo warranto was mere babble in
the 'ears of the Senate. He' asked' why,lfo
the - Pretsident's 'purpose in all he did' was
- to secure a declaim of the Supreme
Court, he- did not_ institute the , pro
ceedings? It was becau s e it was imposSible
for him to do so, as be knew it would bo
from the beginning. He then read from
Greenleaf to chow or 4gresiderit ontisttbe
held tiespensible- for What; With ordinary
intelligence, he must have seen would
be the consequence of his tetions. In
reply to the defence that the act was not
consummated; he said it had been. long
settled-that - the attempt to commit a uns--
demeanor was itself an indictable misde
ineanor, in support of which proposition
he cited - legalauthorityr: - He IdEfoTheldAhat
anv offence'-under= .the- common Llaw-! was
indictable in the District of Columbia, ac-
cording to the laws of 1801 and 1831. Ac
cording to the Tenure-of-Office law it made
the removal of Mr. Stanton and 'the ap
pointment of Gen. Thomas a misdemeanor,
and no intelligent man could ,deny they
were impeachable offences.
The only otlestion.whiehremained.te he—
considered was the constitutionality of that
law. He might simply say that was a
closed question. To acknowledge nowthat
the Tenure-of-Office act, which, after. lone
discussion had been passed and again passed
over the
on
crvirtq anti , again ap
proved on robing.* 22d; uncoristittiflonal,
will be for the Senate to deny its decision
three times made and. to confess that it is
the guilty party worthy of laroVeldlitkietifi,
Mr. Bingham then referred - to his own
course and that of the majority of his party
in opposing ipmeaquntsut ungi %was una
voidable—until the
"God
made him
mad whom they had to destrok. ,,
In regard to the defence tossed on the
practipe of the Government durpig eighty
years,-,he,_ - Idenied . thst , isupko practice was
contrary to the , spirieW 'the 'Tenure-of-
Office law, but claimed that the actibf 1789
' and /Maud sulasstquent years • „Af r t.
and assumed' ttioal , power of =.t..:_ • , to- ,
regulate the entire subj ect. In regard. to
the declarations of -theereildent,.-which,
ntri
ccoay to allitriesAtigiod ,-.,.., . .aw,.l
dimed - liiii, -
'were all made after thefset; yet haat:ismer
sorry they 811.0:nicurrW' in. 0.4 9 71 n g0- thi ''
President'atirojustifiatO pur p o s e - ..- '-- '
Mr. Bingham then took up the charges
of conspiracy and argued that the joint ac
don of , the President .Md.,Gtonefal„ThjillaS
was indictable '
tinder the commutes act...of
1661, but said that the indictment • of Gen.
Thomas would be useless until a ft er the
President's impeachment and conviction,
43
_ ince the latter would Minify it c the use
of his pardoning. power- ,jn- th 'Wrests
of justice then, the conviction o the Presi
dent was demanded. If it were urged this
was a small offence. He, reminded
the Senators - I h st.tlit yLurprei rietogranted
the pardonini poWer. He then reviewed '
the evidence of General Thomas, and claim
ed to show therefrom that he and the Pres
ident had conspired together in reference
to various matters concerning army move
ments and appropriations, but the confer
ence had decided to let these matters rest
until they should see whether, am acquittal
would not give theni a better chance °fine
-1 cess. '
Mr-Bingham at this point stated it would
take him an hdur t merelolinilM, and the
Senate and Court both adjourned at 405.
, ‹. - 4 3
HOUSE -OE4I,
-EPRESM'CRAIiIrI
The, -SPE.AKEII- announced. the rje*•ti,
Coin:nitre/it? investigate ;sir. liVaslibutvOia ,
charges against Mr. Donnelly . as Messrs.
Banks, Thomas, Maynard, Griswold, Poi
land, Blair,
(Miehigan,) Beck, Da its and
Woodward. . -, • , i
Mr. BUTLER offered 'a resolution that
the Committee also enquire into the allega
tions of Mr....BROOKS on; p•iday,,_redative,
to Mr. Butler. i- • .'. I ~,......- dei. .1 v i i'J
•• Mr. BROOKS would not object to the re
ception of the resolution,:if he tbuld move
an amendment extending the,limit of,- the
investigation.
Mr. DAW-ES replied he emlidlireisent ibis'
. .
proposition as a separate i niatker.,,,...,
- The House then proceeded to the Crenate.
Upon. re-assembling- - Mr., KERR intro
duced a bill amendatory of the Pension act
of 1864, authorizing . pensions granted -,lii.
certain cases to date from the 'discharge or
deatb of the soldier. Referred::,,. -. •
Mr. DONNELLY, og leap?, introduced a
4)111 to arillit /Midi Ibrlherelionitrifetion of a
- yallrona fr,om Tay,lpes Falls via St. Cloud
to
. the Western bounditry of the State., „„" ,
There being no objection, Mr. BROCKS:
stated his reasons for objecting to the rest).
lution offered by hiyt.Dpwps- I Art 1 3.9, 11 10
another dalegatiori -b y ' Mr. Butler, Which
involved agm:4km,, of,,y4aietty between
and that ttiiitibM, vheald he in
sestigated viz: That in relation to the New
York Ezpress: 'He read a letteffrOm4i. T:,
'Clarke, denying the truth of Mr. Butler's
statement, tmd saidifrt, he matter Of 8600,000
On gold was to be investigated it was neces
sary to *folloW it With an' InVestfgation' of
the whole New Orleans Military , Depart...
mut. , • ';' - • • ' . •,, , ' ',--;'
Mr. DAWES said he'offered the resoln. ,
tion at the itiplcst _of his colfeel 'Mk'
Butler, on whose character forl'hftrritithe
remarks of the gentleman ., from new Yor,k
reflected, and not that he belleitethore
mks sufllcientground in the icluire f ibril,.
- vestigationl . ,- ' ' '' -.._
o
31 riaBLDRIDORdesired T., make, some_
suggesdona before the Muse should detek;'
BEy.r.T o b ilbated ' ~. .., . J bijt m ine IWpon the refoluiimt,..o Mr. •
SPE&
froma KKR 'resented a briefraessage,
, .
..
~
pen Wzi ' . '' , '-- ' t ' ii',,.- ' to , • ft ~
elative for piat ed , 2 ' ', -8 - 1 1 m - '
-to which which t. . , - .r
In Siiiirli Carolina an A r k amu yin 4
eluded the constitutimbi 'lM'' di * * ' ''
tell
, jfleferred to Committe 3o , l (Kw Sta .
Mr. 'BRO9KB , asked
nstruction.
. 411"ra- ir la ti tillt e li .... llti Hopp e g a bit : 143114 th ° 07 d l: iil : ;
eyed ge mi nt ! It;
DA
n ;
r 8 8 for
Tule tolconsider he - would
t: The House he'
t, t ,',"*T o tflantr,c.4 ~
Dawes' ' ietablutionmbmpret Xr t
Mr. Brooks to oftret, 4 1 1 4:44rw
directs t4it PA / g. 4 - 4 4 4 4 0 - °t here ' hi hilien
,the , reptutt,cf lipeigai Com..t/ o t _
or Gen. , ~.:I,,.ttzt 4i1371444edrri5i,
y , a g, by' dent-Unman sad'
4.3
'Secretor „ itin'ta Oveditiitatif:Aot nam
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_
' , The AggnaltennieddbaMPMulv*te*.
ton and ordered the main question.
I MrS-SRECK *sited of the Phan tithethtii
tionthe j resolution should be adopte4 relative
the-MbuiPpro'pilatiodof-galsi it"-SeMld-be
mpetent to inquire into the misOPPrgloria
of spo'ons and 'ot her plate, , provided the
aerial be 'Silver? - ;- - *.• • - • .'-••
The. SkEAKER, replied that the inquiry ;
Was not parßilmentary. •
~ ~
Mr. DAWES'•refoolntidif wildigreedio. i •
Mr. CARAT rose to aquespeu of ; j0r#11,, , !
elege and '
offered "the following : Wlterceia_;:
the House in thezttsith artielenf of' - -
Ment charged Andrew Johnson..with, kigh
misdeMeaner in 'office lii making intiiinper:t
ate, violent and scandalous haran es, in
-1 decerol l mr,uffktf-MigilD
-fore 2.
Res oll l 6 l4:;i l Ef4g-thetothafit.llMll t eavi
Friday, turday and - lionday, a eet,-
001 R 13 4,rpV0 2a ito Mire
thelarb et ft era Ifiriatding
the ten h article from the High Court.
The SPEAKER ruled it was not a goes.
Lion of ' Otiiril eUlt&" Present rdnili brit'
wcrald be if t helentlernmi had moi , e Mitt
ttie Managers withdraw any! article of
impe.schrnent,r --,
'Mr.: CAREY ffed hie'reioltitionso is
to request, the, ~ a gers to. Withdraw the
tenth artiele: • • - •
"Mr. giCOFE,ll..Rßaskyte4-tyag4Hrn s whigh
was'earrie,d.
,
uadrennial Conferenee ofthe MethofOst
Episiopal'Church.
[By Teligraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.)
CHICAGO. MaY s.—The Conference, Wi4l4 ,
called to order by Rev. Bishop Clark. Re
ligious services were conducted by Rev.
Dr. FerriS, of New York. • ••-• -
CENTENAIIX.COMILITTyp R.F.4"0 . 11W. '
The report of the Central Centemtry. Com—
mittee shows that while the General Con
ference 0f'1864 felt authorlaid to ask but
fdr $2,000,000, the ag gr egate amount receiv
ed is found to be e-W,662.16,, Of which
"amount tbli Cincinnati Conference contrib.
uted 5400,084'.77' the. Central 'Ohio 8114,76R,-
r j
09, the -Ohio eonferen 1258,472.62, the
North Ohio' Conference 269,000.
EIP/SCOPA ADDRESS. , •
At ten o'clock 'shop Simpson proceeded
read the Episcopal address. The ad=
dress opens with an invocation of the
DivinendesAng Web therffresOtatiK*A
the iChfireff in General - Conference assem-,
Ming, and a brief kilneicato the intmiea. Of 1
their assembling *VI% .bedinning Of they -{
second century. of the Church in America, '
and at the clvepf;thegrepterivikwar, pro
vpked by slaF,. .it lattl per
co %
1 v
slave States, the address contained full in
formation and recommended the adraltislon
of their delegates...
'The theinbership of the Church in the
South is now five hundred and fifty min
isters and 1/7,000 members. The Increase
of the membership of the''chnrch - at large
was found to be greater during the last
four yearslhan in any former ~quadrennial
period. The total number. of ehurehes at
present is 11,121, and their value $35,5&5,439;
and the number of communicants over one
million. • - - ‘• - •
- The address reviewed the educational in
terests pf the denomination, representing
them in a highly flourishing cendition t es.
pecially those) devoted tO the theological
training of candidates for the' ministry.
The publishing hitere4tri of the church had
been greatly prospered during the last, four
years, thalricreasedtsales having been far
greater than in any former , period.
The contributions to ' the Missiorutry
cause during
,the last quadrennial period
amount to nearlsitliree , millioneoftdollars,
and yet such are the increasing demands
of this great work that the treasury is now
in debt. The Mission fields were all in a
highly satisfactory condition and in the
'most of them encouraging progress was
being made, especially in India, China and
Germany. -
The addresaniferredito - - the organization
of the Church Extansion Society since the
.last ~General Conference; and represented
it as being in a very promising condition. •
The Bishops were deeply Impressed with
the importance of a thorough revision of
the boundary lino:ea-1W Confarefide, con=
forming them more generally to State lines:
On the subject of lay representation the
address was exceedingly brief, merely sng
gesting that the subject would come before
the Conference throtigh = petitions Me
morials, and expressing the opinion that
itsnLimrtanceAentimplecLeayePaLeMllllL,
eridion.
I The reikdini , 4 ) - { tiii" , -a4iiiioti -'occupied
farty-five minutes tind vra4l,lstened to with
•marked attention by' the Conference and
very large audience. The Conference or
dered that eight thousand copies - of the ad
dress be printed and the various ; portions
of it were referred to appropriate Commit
ees.' n:: •
ORDER OF unsMEss.
After the reading of the address the order
,of business was-taken , up, beingthe recep
tion of petitions, memorials, die., of which
a !very great
. niiiinher were 'presented fbr
14 delegation, many against it, and others
Ant a great variety of denominational snb..
Prof. WiPifirt lB ,,Ar PeliWaret As iltrfedl
a renOlaticitternienting thetßidliop minij
nannicate to the Conference their sugges
-tiona in regarMazriarrauging th3bounda
zits of the.rinifetetrefl2- I, Referrede
fr.glll4eniglCilleinPf4elT9r.ed..a re
ntl t the 'bob agents' to fur
amopy of all our periodicals tomending
rooms and. ptilAolijorariet oluiplcou
dltions. _Referred:- " •
Rev. Mr: Caruthers, of Brie Conference,
Pmstated Petkiicril tail amend
'. lug toe diseipliiie that - the Bikihop7,shall be
-elect§d,f9T 1924Vflrii‘f
into bilibe *I hod on".° -
The Chsir unnonpoed the. following po
dia comMitfeeepreViontly Ordered: •
ibstoral Address—Messrs. G. Peck, Ow
Holliday, 'Nast; Lanahat; Loiiy and'
Thayer t~3
Nate offie Corinery—Messiv.` u imrd,
iradAo(soti, AliO
erns. --ct I_l'4 A ,--
• van Or k- -- 24 usterkt — '
Seandma or e ceur, Bun-.
ter, Baker, ArnohliTerinlintr, PeSSOWlatuf
,Chafes.
Temperance—Magensmr. =Laney. lid wAr d e
Ives, &snarl/ . Js-Ceßbed•bn flib l biy,:a".
iAnterteun y
-fie ciffrori,
UgukKtrarrb , °VIM, EdbinsoiklitnuW,
auld-Besing. " • -
America and
Fore Chrkiaffikrodo„....
Messrs. Dabln i BannWoer,,,!Tiniartel
nett, Pillsbury , . C o l 'end Doughtrty,„
midenary,Report—meguselrerriffiEddy;
Etwipi'l'orittig and ,W4day• ' •
•:.?;-•-•" ••'t.
&*42.:.504 3:,&"40.
• '•••- .
..•- • . s
" ,
===
METHODISM
I . i i i •
I «11 -1ila! ..x., rit) i
'140://eitikfilt -Meuse
and the Minist .
iChnrell 4isk on..
tiy TAl4ropti to tb e,Vittqburql
GR
•.I., t IRLIA ENT DRIL IipTISTRY AND
'kite 0 AVON/I.
8 ' 1•+64 ,0 3 , Nt , 7 4 ' 4 . 4 Y affialit*:-11
ade ifof Commons to-flight‘Mr. f
"rokhrre4 to,Atitk Duk e.44kßiclunondls, r
j'Ams in - tht - Lotihs t the
queen left it to the Ministry to di lye
1 • • limmutiwh%ver tipay froh l IHlec
.1 4 1 0_ 5 60.1.0.14 1 0.tivas #
lit left the Ministry at
,liberty,to deal , th
. f4ses widet 11#e net yiwitriien. He ed
-fgr an explssollol,l4ffaligt 'istittelpient and
et4ntradicted the made r insthe,qopmons
1:1fr the Premiere= -fr , =
Mr.
D'lsrael),4u,anewer,, 844412E0 was
nb discreparicfliatween l thh — statements
Made in the two Houses. He had offered
Iresign; bufthe offer was ideclined: His
a
vice to the Queen was to dissolve the
rlghining wh i entlifetate::=4l3Jisine.le.i3er-•
• mail. This was Without' any reference t o .
thenew, constitnences; but 'if the work of
the House was soon' con:Tided; new
Rouse would \ be ele4e4 by-them.
jsir Stsifford Nortinzke Said the" minority
haduo intention tolneratce•the House. -
}Mr. D'lraeli. again rising. said the right .
to dissolvekwas only. -reserved •in ease the
issue on the Irish church was pressed.
;Other's spoke when the debate ended.
FAS
FRANCE.
TURCO-AILBETAN QUEST7OI,7
Panes, May .Evening.—LafTh rmation
from St. PeterOurg is to the-effect that
Baron De Tallyrand Perigorio, French ent
voy, -bas had consultation with Prince
Gortscliakoff umYn the subject of Inediatirni
`by FeSitce and Ressia in the Taco-Cretan
quest:on.
DIPLOMATIC DINNER.
Rama, May 5-Evening.—Baron Budberg,
Aussrmi Ambassador to France, gave
gtsrutilinner thtts evente.g to thea:nvoysig
viriowerszepresented at the CourtAif
'thearias. SienerapMx, United Statei
was among thsguesta.
cratneAl4 v. •
1 - 7.,..2 1 A SPECK oi
'Lcwaas,
Hogs' A - States flawl e ss;
ciase the Ear
lortraui Ul4
4441144,!
is "'quiet, lint
steady; Five-Twenties, '7714@77;, 5 4; Minot!!
Central, 93%; FAle, 46%.
FRANKFORT, -May
Twenties firm at
Plin?, May 5 7r Ecening.—Bourse firmer
Bente% 60 francs, 42 centimes.
LIVERPOOL Nay -5---Ercning.--Cotton .a
shade easier, quotations are unal
tered; sales 8,806 bales: >yroyisions withont
change. *ltreatistuffs quiet and unchanged..
,Produce—Petroleum firm; ls. 4d,forstand
ard white; spirits Petroleum declined to Sci.
per gallon. Stigar quiet' at P:eliiions pries;
ANTIVEUP, May' o—Eucirin,p.—Petroleurn
closed at 44% francs.
. .
ltepu~blYtcari`"Co','nccatio $ i
(By Telegraiih to ttic EMU:by:Witt Gazeite.)
RICLUMOND O , gay .s.—Cbaries H. %Porter,.
of Norfolk, was - nominated for. Congress
from this district by the Republican Dis.
trict Ooriviintion to-day. ii,wewpastedlt e ,..
publicans figure up the complexion of the
State ConVaptidia loznierrow as Tijfitiwai
Wells '114; Hunnicutt 30, Hawldfurat 40,
`Unknown 20. - Welts it is believed will be
nominated on the fLest ballot. :About two
hundred delegates have arrived.
iticiuto:sli, May s.—At a 'caucus td.night
of about forty members of the State• Con
vention, it was agreed to support Welles
for Governor, J. Clements,• of Portsmouth,
fox-Lientenant Governor, and T. G.- Bow
den_for Attorney General. •
Arrested for Fenlanism. -1;;
(By Telegraph to Pittsburgh Pilietto 3 - -
TolloisT9, gay 6.--The, parties arOsted
yesterday are Pairibkatirrh3;pUblisher and
editor of the him Canadian and President
of the Hibernian SocietyP,Xon- OriErPilel
tavern keeper and Mareta ortir tuber-
Man Society,
,Jolupmni +,Secretary, and' Ed.
Hines, printer, on a charge of Penitinism.
4 , her arrests in-the neghborhood and in
western towns arb to be made. Suspicious
characters are leaving, tor. the States, and
-iconakterablo..:.excitetrient,—.lo,-nuinifested
''t lr 9 n .gl ll .tiVl e l4Vor3 •=....?!1ii.'-) a':?i:tj.;:
New Hampshire Remit Ham ethlwention. •
.
trip Telegraph to Clurrittaherktithaegtehlli ,
torment), May s.—The Republican Qm
vention selected full /* A GA -de/egates to
the Chicago OiniVentidn,litabidingsnt large
Wm. E. Chandler, John H. Bailey, E. M.
Tepliff PbutesoJl 7Faulknor.i Itesolu
tiOnsittvormg Grant for President and the
impegqhment of Johnson were Ekdopted. -
Dispatche&were• recoived from 7
and Washburne to the effect that the re-
Moval of Johnson , was certido.-
Fat Cattle Seized at Buffalo.
tßv Telegraph to the Pittsburgh 4:fizette.7,
BUFFALO, May 5;•:-Thet Ilnited StateS an- 4
thoritles seized, one bondred and seventeen
head of fat .cattle yesterday, at Interna
tionalrerry, which bad been imported by
•
Philadelphia dealisi'himf-TOrOfito - and iti
, Olond At one-half of their real value: ' t
' James Grahani;, 'a wall-kis:Nu ticket
agentwas I W4V ool ***Tti am AltilVill
Suite rrisob for o ur years or forgery. ,. •
i (.- ; , River. and ' , lllt a:Aber. .
[By iFillgestil) Oilitatbhrdittiazdiaiir 1
. •
Doutvwxtlat t - , May ';51,-River ' 1 stationary
with. 'a tglit 1130 C two ineketi 1* the °alai;
WeadllGlMlliara ,r4. , ' , ....a...........
Sr. I,ol 4faiftrt.4‘ ji m .
_IR eNtEdrind
eilse
ri CINCINNATI *l3l litelth.l f a i r l y 1
st •
.i.
' • New •-yori,:itbriiitiltagp nig ilrelittilt:i
Vetehztratka to the R,l4l7,Ciasette:3 ,
i AL l3 vßfilt s ;.÷: 0 Xolmbilean Sale
getee to the Chuisno ' nvention met here
today and adopted. 'resolutions that ' , Mier
will veto for Grind; at i Wio
too t zno,,lt
- r
, .., ..
s I ' ' ' T---- i
. - 3111 q4 6,1 44410,WW-A b t e-1413 "
; ' Telegraula to the Pittsburgh Gasette.3 • •
Baikal: 00 / 1 bl Mit t May 4.;-A i he3 4 *l4b__Ur : '
can ConventioxLig toe, h~
°nose
-Gen, Georgor; ftipley and Wentn
.Vortb delegdeb - to - uze Chieast. Convention:.
dtliel Wirt illedUctit $161141110„&19- 1
onivihakOi4D4takiiiilgilveit
L. 11 ,
the 3 Fie
• VV4l3llll4titirtiN; 1114• 6;1868."
•
f C4)somunn
L
, ' .
it • a
—the Irish
ftitelii . 'is #1;963,2
378,2014114 debt') beating) innetiev it fkr~
eat; 1 2 2 / 3 0,M,gild; IrJ (=pt.°.
rented for . ..payrnentwg7,oos,2l3B:64;: -debt
bearing nnijniernari g407:1 1 5N.M. 9 4. , Total.
del?b , . 2 9W
. , .
04 1 V: 9 .! 3 ? itAmMut:4olXrPi.-
-ttry.: Coin, slo6,9o9 . oss;„cprreney f f4,2l7,-,
338 82'. ' Durinis tliezigorith the thibt Vituide
"
crehi(ed 12,10(1,710ituid;therUlanCto iii . the
Treasury- ; increased:ta6,s74.l49,:l'udtking• a
i
decrease n the * tad debt of, $18,1380,880.80.
• • I NDIAN , • , r, • •
PEACE' C0313 1* 14"1 .... -
A dispateh gearetAry 'the 'bate
irior frorrilhe Tridfan , Peace Coniudiskoi, —
dated Fort Lawrence, May 2d, ll:porta - the ,
arrival of three head Chiefs . of the .Chet•
manes, and - that a full delegation of 3101n
tain Crowaand Arrapithoeo will be there in .
a few daya, - . - • • , • • •
. • •
Ig;ME
', •NE . D/9AL CQNV,ENTIAN. - ,
The Aineiican '36tidical Association met.
to-day, Dr. $. D. Gross, of, Philadelphia; in
the chair: Aboiit , foru. Jituidred and" fifty
delegates are present. The .Coriventioti
:mains in session until 'Friday. , ,
. .
-7:Jeremiah-Baroque, a - - prominent meni.
ber of the New York Bar, diecloTi Monday
—All but one-of tthe'-pilsoners in the jail
at Franklin t Vermont, escaped ,on_ Friday.
night last.
--Comnuinder Bigely, of 'the Navy a
native of Kentucky - , died at Philadelphia
Lewis Lebering,.a.resident of Buffalo,
was by a street car in Louisville,
Ky., on Monday. . .
--Gov. Fenton; of New York, ihes signed
the bill requiring: the • Central 'to
forward freight by river .veisals..
—The strikers - at Prospect. park, Breok
lyn, were dispersed by . the police yester
day, to prevent an - aniacipated riot
Mary MaCarl, aged sisteeni.' committed
suicide in Memphis, on •Mondv
. night, by
taking, morphine. Cause unknoWn.
_
=A 'negro" chicken thief; 'mined Shitde -
Pnlk; was shot in Memphis bye policeman,
on Monday night, while _attempting to es,-
-7-Charles.McClain,.ofPhiladelPliia,'starte ..
on.the 18th from .Trenton; on a Se a
Bates tour.-to milklthg" So
States: T 3r.
—Chatles Beeker; ivdetectivsePf Newark.
N. J., iacbargeekwitlibetur r initili6jte I
-celut ib Tigje , "% 4 l , l jki4ititle4 ll 4; 4 4W-
T7l ;. was
largelylri debt to friends, or money spent
'in gambling. . ,
Crimfois firm.
Q fora
.
*L - Mayor:Heffinim, of New York, _ will at
tend-theinanguiaticrn of Gov: English, to
come off to-day, with an escort of a portion
of the - Seventy-first. regiment.. -
—The tritle work at the Erie Ratlway
Depot in Jersey city' gave way yesterday;
letting a locomotive into the river . - - The
engineer, M'Colt, and fireman, Carhart,
were' drowned:
man named Yowell, an agent of the
;American Express Company at Ladoxa
Station, Indiana, absconded on Monday - list
with several thousand dollars of the.-Com
pany's money.
—At the SeCond regular meetingl.of_ the
women's club, at New York„oin :Monday,
inaugurative remarks were made .the
"President, Miss Alice Cary,:irtil presided
for the first time. • ' - • _ -
—The Young lithit'kehristian Association
-of New, York.refulsed the gift of five thou
sand dollars included in the tax levy of
--that city by the Legislature as opposed to
the voluntary. christian system.
—A Havana letter reports an unprovoked
assault upon the American Consul, General
La Tientrie,
by the Havana Shipping Mas
ter, Senor Grarcias; who was arrested' and
will undoubtedly lose lus.position.
—The National Manufacturers' Associa-.
toil have issued'a call for the first annual
meeting at Cleireland, Ohio, ou the 27th
inst., to hear the report of the crunnijttee
sent to Washington, and to take fiction upon
other matters of importance.
—The case of- Desgrove, driven Sway
from Nashville in
. 1861 - by a Vigilance Com
mittee, which he sues for damages, came
up at, Nashville yesterday-, and the testi
mony was heard. =lt will be argued to-day;
Desgrove resides in Brooklyn, N. Y. -
—The Mississippi. Central Railroad has
'been leased to a party of eastern capitalists,
of which H. S. McCombs, of Wilmington;
Del., is the head. ilt is understood Colonel
Sam. Tate of the Memphis , and ,•Charlm
ton Railroad; has been tendered the Presi
dency. • -
- —ln the United States . Circuit Court' at
St. Louis, yesterday, John. Copper was sen
tenced 'to three years in the penitentiary for
passing counterfeit 'Money. In the same
Court a suit brought by the United States
againt - Adems Express CompenY,__feY non
delivery of $12 , 560; Is pending. The' Com-
Pau/ admits receiving the= money but eon
tends it was delivered.
-:-A Pen= Convention, at Woilmster,
Mass., on Monday, was I=gely attended.
Several regiments Minted their • services,
and fifty , thousand dollars were subscribed
for "expenses. An address to the Verdant;
was'adopted' stating that Irerantt will have
to be yescued by-force of arnis f and - resolu,
tions were adopted representuw assassin* :
tion' as covkirdly; and denounding the mur
der of McGee.
—Benz W. T. Dodge, Legrand Cannon
EL G. Marqutmd,.o. JO!, Pi Grant. ',M.
Rhinelander and B. Arent,. of New
York, who are WO:Mated in the Muddy
coal minas, have/Arrived at St« Lon* and
will Iren Mountain and Pilot Knob.to
'the iron formations in that region
,Obtain information In regard to , recent'
experiments in , making iron froM?Mlseouri.
ere t with Illinois coal.
There was quite an excitement in the -
Coif:fells M Baltimore on Monday evening,
owing to the fact that the three disgraced
nd expelled members refused to. leave
their seats because they were not turned'
out by a unaulnious vote.- Thd were then
lexPelied unanimously ,
_ amt e ected, from
-the ' - hall' emits& 'great confusion. - After
wards Vonnelhl voted that the till Vinod of
the Irievtifiating,CommiAtee Pe published
.
--The polimdifficultybr Louisville, icy.,
is not yet pointed. At 47 nmetitlit of me
Geneital Co)4tell t Monday
Vnance: WasoanotaiTracing all
police
•ftattens in the ben oft
. 0 Superintendent.
The City Attorney is insitructed to maka,
With' the attorney' for the Pelice Board a
Stated case , wherein WI nemesel'plead- i
shall heal:ranged in SIAM effretibiele,
ana liberality;with a viesirl,appfly„
land final settlement or the quan,
ißluEr NEWS rthis:
NUM 107
.1 1 11=3.. •
l c —Engineers arrived 44 lea Yerk, les
terday, to tbstitimber
;--The jf ryin tiiia iiiinilcide:trialt at
Albany, N.Y.,, retired.yesterthiy ;ingrown -
and were outat.a ,late hour last night.
—Eightetin qui were: poisoned 'AY
`arsenic admin Ajnjootl i at,ll, _boarding
house at New Cr ea= 00, y. None
are dead. however;the'e t partaken
having been too large.- - •
palviston, Texas yesterdsv,' Judge
tfatrous opened tho-Vnited Statse• District- 1
Court; and - delivered a charge sustainigg.... ll
the constitutionality of the Civil Rights -
bill,,and holditigthiit freedmen are citizens,
not by virtue of Congressional enactment, : , ; _
but by. Constitutional law, befog born;-on
. -
I BRIEF NMrl_
—The official report of the Board of -t
-Health of Cincinrati of the' deathii that,
city for the Month of April states the num- •
her. was 322, four of which were'caused•bY
the etpleilon - of therummer Magnolia;'nine--
'teen from small pox and two sffiehles• -Dr.
Clendinnen has been reelected health
offioerfor the - reissuing year. - • .; -
—Judge Trigg, of the Nashillie Conti; )
• his ; , ; rendered a,;' partial' :decision in the
cane ottileKeptucky, stockholders in t h e
Nushvniemid Noithwesternitallr6ad Com.
usuies-3 . 110 sustained the law ranthorising
elspoiii ntmerit r
:-.new • • .• , Yek., but det )
clams of ; the. re. null, arid
voi iaid -- thir re69l • ' was alike f& -
sponsible tO the fitide and Cdiripny.i T.Tro u re- , •
other points he was not satisfied of.-th9)4-..tir
risdicfionof the Court, and asked S further •
argument. ' • t •
• • g
BOARD -OF CONTROL.; [
Regular Meeting—Reports of Local Wards
—Teathere Recommended—The .
nation of Teachers, ac. • '
The Boarder SehOol bontrollers or Al l y
gheny City.held a regular monthlyrn' eet-•
ing on Tuesday evening, at eight o'Ol.ock,
in the : Common ,Counell Chambeis,', City
Building •
in the absence of the ,President, ou mo-. ,
tion Rev. t; E. Swift presided. R. B.:Pran-_
. _
cis Se9ietary. - • •
The meeting opened With pkaVer . WlleV.
S. F. Crowther.- • ' "
At the call cf the roll the followingmetu--
bers answered .to their names Messrs. „-
Barr, "Brown, John K. - Boyle, Birk - 6r;
Decked,* Crewther, Dunlap,. Eattna_,-Traxi
cis, : Ground, Kollcbck, Kimball,
Lea, Lockhart, Mussler,,McCanee, Pitcairn*,
Parke, Swift, Shea, Torrence, Trimble, Wal-'
ton; - Young, Ales.; Yotufg, Robert: ,= - • •
Minutes rend and approved.
itephrts froth . the' different Lottaßoardi
;were receistshShoiiing:the solioolS tO bein
it flourishing condition, and in: Linemen} In
the aVerage attendance.
The Second Ward Board recommended
the employment of additional. *chore
gt 'orth.
-of Prof. , : C. -A. Uhetii i tgrtw r
451-fiebsprl• and-ele
ief Daritlyta,serveAn his plage to
%belied:of tins -1 . 04 a,.; Alpo the ..'eleotiOn of,
100..:Tairrsi tifigait- to tillthevataney -1
bivehined bp i the resignation of. Mae 14...
Parry in ` the Prhitary Rooms ofa Rouse
No. 5. , ,
The reports were,aceepted and ordered: to
bolded.
Mr. Eaton read the report of the Com:-
mittee on Colored Schools, which 'shoWed
the average attendance to, be decieasing,.lL
caused no doubt by the opening of Avery_
College. The CoMmittee also reported bills . .
amounting to $7,75 for. expenditures con
nected with the schools, for the, payment of .5
of which warrans were ordered to l:te
drawn.
: Mr. Francis offered the following resolu ,-
tion:
Resolved, That the Chairmen of the Stan
ding Committees form a special ,Cortim.ittee
to compile rules for thegovernmentorthe
Board,,nnd to define , the duties of the. Stan_
ding Committees. •
After being discussed, the reselution wale
adopted. -
Mr. John Brown, Jr., thought there,
should be some uniform "method of '-
endorsing teachers certificates, and
therefore moved that the Board of Control..l
deem it unnecessary to examine teachers
when granting professional certitleates ex-'"''
cept on history, as required by law.l
. Quite a lengthy debate here ensued, say._
eral of the members disagreeing in regard ,
to the law of granting tesehers certificates.
Idr, Brown 'then moved that. the;; County q
Superintendent; Mr. Dotithett who was 2,
present, be heard on the'subjebt,
The motion being-agreed to; • _ --
Mr. Don.thett came forward and - gave;a , )3
lengthy, but definite and explanatory state-.,;
ment •of the law' regard krthe natter."}
After which, Mr. Barr moved that'thereso
lution be presented in. riting. - ) r
Mr. Drown then' - presented - it as follows:„
Resolved,-That it .is the Sense this '
Board that County Superintendent be
not compelled .to toye a generat
runination to teachers applying Or perma
nent certificates.
• The reap atialli as read, watt adoptedo -, i..i1.i
lat..Fiancas presented thetamteit report,
of the Board bf Controbif Pablid SehoOls
St. Louis, which was'reteivedandßled.:
-On motion, adjourned. • • • '••
. •
►
united , stateg:nhtwet'conrtiu)oe Me-` -
• : ,candless. ' :A
Court met atter) : o'clock .Tnesdaty morttu_AA'La
ixg. The grand,jliTOTS Were ep t lo/1, - , auq a_
quorum anaiming,,D. Sa{74l.6Y, rU st l:A•trait eci
selected as ibmo*. The CiSitt
the-usual ebarge,"and• the' jury ratirefryoA
• commence Muduests.: ,
, There being no case ready for trial_thee-- 1 , 1
traverse jurors were
. discharged till W,Ol-
nesday morning: •• • • • 0 - 5
In the Bankruptcy .branoh,
of Lockport, Thalami countYt, against whaturt.,
's_petitiortin bankruptcy haw beettfiled'bi.
Wm. Maher Esq., of • Elairsvilky was a&,,.
judged a bankru tby the Court, on motion. : ;)
of H. W. Wier,
,of
lug creditors; : `
o„ awe of Hood Ikmbright ,
Martin, was . • continued at. WI!), 4 3 5, 1 k,
spondent.
The case of Frisbee vs. Thomas 4aditfoiii%
tinned, by consent, until Thursga, mom )
- ..(
PetittaniFfoi• final disc h arge w ere flied by
B..snyderof Someraet 0001:Anima 4...F.,,k: 41 1
Multon, Xittanning ! ArinStri4Ogemant v
• Petitions for' adjudication efpr,
Joseph C, liolnift;- o f : . Willbuttotiort, "f ll
genie county, and Perditumd ,:!
Snyder county. ,
• ,- • ,
Bantle Market. - ' 1 - ' , I IT ' .
(ay Televalt to tio4'Plitildtesb Gosettea - 1 ,-, i I , Q •
BUIPPAL 9r biikY 5 . — P/oar , -13pring highei 1 ,
;ales *ere made at 111,0,75a11. Wheat qnlet; „- )
sales boat ' load 'No.' 2'-elibiligo
,attintt. lit " '
2,25. , Oorlt better midst/PIPET lade n . erkoo.--
bush atll ,in store, 06tscA. 4114,713,1,,t1
Wee 78,900 buswesten,i, ter`arefie,' at '
25,000 'do,* on *pot% at "Alio. ° Rye 'me ' I l
Barley inactive., Beedadiillaannehangedi
Pork ad. i lanced , 69a "fi e 1a. , 120 . on 4 tl:4 -~ii
to New York Redelpta:— eyeteat, 7,020, b la; '
torn;;18,50/ do; *W4124000 dm kin*, 40,000-,
tiblih kj i R I4 ..ER-V l 47lTheelt, ./22^, - bnab; , :l ;
corn, mi,eou do; oats, 142,000 do. ' '
==
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