THE DALLI WWII= sr SAN, BEND t 00, Office,S4 arid 86 711 Th Avenue. roma 1:010. I. P. REED, P. B. PEIIIIiii, T. P. 1009701 NDITONII AND nO:nMM."k TICILIII OP THE DAILY NI *LIU. Der nu' , 111,<Yert by enyyty.rs, pyr. vtek•... arta. 'ORTY-FIRS CONGRESS ENATE : App late J urisdlction of the Sup e Court—Joint Resolutions f Ohio—Western Terminus of the Pacific Rail road—Respect to the Memory of the late Wm. Pitt Fessenden. ROUSE : Meteorological Muer trations—Fandamental Condi tions of the Virginia Recon struction Bill—Memorial of the Colored Labor Convention—The Census Bill-Eulogies on the 2 11 - 40c i nmon late Senator Fessenden. FIRST EDITIOL JUTD.rIGHT. NEWS BY CABLE. Demaineof George Peabody—His East Will andTestament—Eon- Tmegial Conuell--Presents for the Pope—Doings in Dublin— ' Ordered to 'Leave Paris—lite French Empress Regrets Her Inability to Visit the Pope, te ow ilttibirth Guam.) GREAT BRITAIN. "Leterai . . l. _w ;Deems.... _ of the illtolratof the fit. Gin. Peabody, On board the Iron-clad Monarch, took - pleat on Saturday _ last. Although It Was intended that the proceedings should be privately conducted, they Wire attended by an Interesting demon. Welton. of respect. The remains were accompanied to the place of embarkation by Sir. Curtis Sampson, Charles Reads, Wader Motley, J. 8. Morgan and M. liiimerby. They were received at the hack by the municipal authorities of liketemouth, and the officers and marines . r tif,lller Majesty's dap Monarch, and of Afire United Stabile ideatner Plymouth. ~I fer Majesty's ship Duke of Wellington Aired the minutes during the embarks. ~.411016 The ships in the harbor displayed flags at half mist, and dipped their ensigns as the Monarch steamed ' /lout. 1r Oh the arrival of the coffin on board ~ the Monarch, Mr. Motley addressed Cap. CoMtnereld# amimander of the ehlp, as follows: Sir—The President of the Unnat States having been informed of the death of the great philanthropist, the lamented Mr. Peabody, at calm ordered a Ohio from the 'European squadron of `the United States to proceed to the °man try In order to convey his remains to America. Simultaneously Her Majesty, the Queen, being apprised of the sad event, gave orders- that one of Her Ma jesty's ships should be appointed to per form the same office. This double honor from the heads of two great nations to a simple American citizen was, like his bounty to the poor of both nations, quite unprecedented. The President has yielded most cordially to the wish of the Queen, cod the remains of Mr. Peabody are now to be conveyed ammo the Atlantic in the British vessel to his native country to be buried with his kindred, while the, American national vessel will accompany her as a consort on the voyage. All that wee mortal, . therefore, of our lamented friend wan Wier this morning from Westminster Abbey Wheio very rare l y before in his tory did a foreigner of any nation find a sepulchre, whether temporarily or per manently, and has been brought to this pert. As Minister of the Republic at the Court of her Majesty, I have been re quailed by the relatives and executors of Mr. Pentody who are now present, to confide these, his revered remains to your keeping. This duty I have now the honor of fulfilling. Captain Commerell replied: Mr. Mot ley—l accept the sacred trust, air, In the same spirit In which you have confided • it to my cam, and I ensure you that these remains shall be cared for and guarded by me and those around me with jestoui Interest as emceed ration of one whose memory will ever be held dear by the people of my country. The lastwill and testamental the late Mr. George Peabody has not yet been ' .cased for probate at. Dcictors' Commons In this city. The contents of this imoor tant document ere, however. set forth substantially s follows, viz Mr. Pea body's property in England-is set down at under .C 103,000. He bequeaths £6,000 to esch"of the executors; f 150,000 to his London charity, payable within three year", !niter the manner in which he, directs; R fewlegecies of minor amount. to Individuate, sod the balance remain ing to be divided as provided among his relatives in America. The-trustees are Mr. George Peabody Bunnell and two 4 - other nephews, who are made residuary legatees and empowered to settle all the MEW. connected with the property in America, which is estimated as ranging • between 1760,000 and 11,000.000. • Dentme, December 14.—A gfiiiihop in this city was entered last night by per sone unknown, and its owner shot. The - sensoins escaped. Anott i l w rithet. wee entered shortly afte rwards. 'lie': owner was fired at, and a number of pistols taken away. BOHR. Rohs, December IL —The Council meets to-morrow, limply for the purpose of shoodlog to some datailli of organize. hon. The OotatedtLees on Faith, Disedp line, Orders and Eastern. Affairs, are to be formed. These Committees will *Dm prise in all elzhtyisiz member*, who are to be eopointed by vote of the Council. The official nisi of persons allowed to at tend the Council is published. It cine• tales the nemesis! ditrtive caollnels. eleven Patriarchs,' nine hundred and twenty-seven Azehbishors, Bishops and Abbots. and twenty-nine Generals of Religious orders. The Bishops have brought a number of addressee and presents to the Pope, from the faithful In all parte of the world. It le officially stated that -*Poe 18110, the Holy Bee has received 1007,100,000 - francs Bum contrlbuttona of Peter's pence. FRANCE. PAWS. Dmber Paul Angels, a Osprey to thee Spanish Cortes, and • fugitive from Spain, has been ordered to leave Planes. The Empress has written a letter to the Pope expreesing regret at not being able to visit Ills lioLlnesa. I= Menem, December 14.—The Carnets are veer active on the French and Por• tagneise frontiers. MARINE NEWS Lennon. December 14 —The steamers 'France, Nestorian And ,Obio bare in deed out. FINANCIAL MID COMMERCIAL. Lemmas, December 14—Eegaigg„..-00e. sots for money, 92139210 amount s 6 9 .244. American Secuttles .qulat and 'Ma, 89; ltss, 84g; 'Ms, V; Erick 20341 99%; Atlantic and Great West. 2014. Stocks steady. Pasta, December 14.ourse dull at 72f 95e. FRAIIIMPOET, December 14.—Bonds firm at 91,011917‘. Ltvgitroot.,Decemberl 4 . Cotton steady; middling uplands 11%d; Orleans 2.244 sales 10,000 balm. Mambos. ter market steady. California white Wheat as 8d; red western No. 2 8t Ed; winter 81 WWI IDdi receipts during :i d; r o t itdaya, 7,500 quarters, including MA Western Flour 21. ad. Corm No. t Med 28a 9d. Oats 2. 10d. Pink 110 a. Baer 107 s ed. Lard Ma Bd. Cheese 68.. Bacon 60. fid. New uplifts Petro. leum, ls 4d; refined, Is 7%d. Tallow, 45s ad. Lorimer, December M.—Tallow 47a, Sugar firmer at WS afloat. Whale oil, 119... Calcutta linseed. 88s &RPM AL .AErrwERP, December 114.—Petroleum quset sod unchanged. 8RZ31113. December -..l4.—Petroleum is flat. RAnsuno, December 14.—Petroleum Is flat. Revue, December U.—Cotton quiet. Fnerfuvonr, December 14.—11. S. Bonds closed firm but.nulet at 91%. AISTWESP December 14.—Petrolernm dotted nit a amt. INDIANAPOLIS. gyeetlug of the Army of the Cumberland —Arrival of Generals llegley, Baskin and Omens TelegMb to thoPttt.boMbGwett•.l iItDIATI•POLIB, December 14.—The drat meeting of the Army of the Ctun berland wittnettelitilt: the Academy of to-morrow, at two o'clock. COL NO/800 Trassel will make the neeption switch. Generals Negley, Wood and Scribal"' arrived her e ening General Sheridan will be in the morning. =1 • • ---; 4 0ard-A;- - ID 1. - . ... 1.... .., THE 111 BI L .w....._ I GAZETTE • _ , r_r., - _ 4 ----- z. ,s. Idand sloweet admiledal sad Saga 11l A le i I , . -:-. 1 I\7l : " -.. , ..,. • ~, .. ..... • . t . L -1111 k. ZIP" ,I C It ,IC • -.."..,..........., No anew. awaimate c; Natailll iimmoll 1i, ,, attain' IL Tonal 1/6 1 .' • Claw el kw Cteefa wa 1 a —. t.Ama y . L eery ts Walsh.' RaWS'onal to U. POW 1 1 . ay at .valet wa. rmmulan am mow's' to set ea SSW. 1 I= VOL. LXXXIV By Telegraph to the Tlttabargh 6. aetta.) Waaniserron, December 14, 069. SENATE. On motion of Mr. TRUMBULL, the bill relating to the appellate Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court was taken up. Mr. SHERMAN said the bill was en tirely original; that nothing like it had ever before been proposed in the Ameri can Congress, and he hoped It would be laid over until after the holidays. Those who were opposed to it should have the fullest opportunity for preparation. Mr. TRUMBULL remarked that the bill contained no principles not already promulgated time and again by the Su preme Court. He proposed to •urge Its consideration to morrow or the day after. The bill was then laid over. Mr. THURM.AN presented a Joint res olution from the Legislature of Ohio re jecting the proposed Fifteenth Amend ment to the Constitution. Mr. KELLOGG introduced a bill making an appropriation for the removal of obstructions In Bayou Teehe. Re ferred. Mr. TRUMBULL offered a resolution, which was agreed to, Instructing the Committee on Public Lerida to inquire whether the land office In States wherein are no public lands for sale, may not be disparaged with to the benefit of t üblic service. •Mr. DRAKE introduced • Joint resole don extending for two years time the completion of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad. Referred to the Committee on Pacific Railroad.' Mr. COLE introduced a bill to increase the mall steamship service between the United States, Chins and Japan. Re ferred to the Committee on Poatofficee. Also a bill to fix the western terminus of the Pacific Railroad. Referred to the Committee on Pacific Railroad. Mr. HOWARD—a 'resolution, which was agreed to, instructing the Committee on Finance to Inquire and report whether It was not advisable to reduce the pen alties mentioned la the Internal Revenue act of July 20, 1868. Mr. COLE submitted a resolution In structing the Finance Committee to in quire into the expediency of imposing a tax of one dollar a gallon noon all die tilled spirits, and ale* Into the expedien cy of collecting a tax upon all dtatilled spirite by taxing the capacity of stills. At hie request It was laid on the table. Mr. MORRILL, of Mane, announced the death of Wm. Pitt Femenden, late Senator from that State, and delivered an a:maturate eulogy, concludiog by offering the usual resolution of respect to his memory, and that Senators wear crape on the left arm for thirty day.- Meant. Sumner, Trumbull, Anthony, Williams, Morrill, (Vt.,) Cattail, Fatter eith, Davis, Tickers, and Hamlin, fol lowed with tributes to the memory of Ur. Fessenden. The resolutions offered by Mr. Morrill were adopted, and the Senate adjourned. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. A resolution was ddopted calling-on the Secretary of War for Information as to the progress made In the work of im proving and deepening the channel. of the passes of the Mississippi river to the Gulf of Mexico. Bills were Introduced and referred, as follows: By Mr. PROSSER, to define and ex tend the jansdiction and duties of the United States Commissioners' By Mr. PAINE, to authorize the See , rotary of War to pro .V de for taking me teorological observations at the military Mations in the interior of the continent, and for giving notice on the northern hikes and the Atlantic sesbord of tho rep ' preach and force of storms. The bill re cites that the record of marine disasters on the noel bent lakes for 1868-69 chow. that in 1868 there were 1.164 casualties, Involving a loss of the of 621, and of property of 83,114.000, and that in 1e69 there were 1,914 essualtles with a lose of 209 lives and 114.160,000 worth of property: that In 186 ther ree we totally lbst 105 vessels, of B the value of 11,207,300, and that to 1869 there were 128 vessels kat, of the Value of $1,414,800, It recites Author that acientine, obeereetione have already shown that the comae of the storms in the United States is generally term west to east, and have made known their rate of propene VIT the preceding changes of the barometer, and that a large proportion of the 100 of life and Property by marine (theaters on the . northern lakes might be avoided by time• ly notice to marinate of approaching storßy M ms. r. CLARKE : For a grant of land theltepublican Valley Railroad Tel.- . graph Company, and for the disposal of such lands to actual settlers. By Mr. McCREER'f : Making a tern , pomry appropriation for the prosecution of the work for the improvement of the Des Moines Rapids, in the idleslasiPPl river. By Mr. HARPER To limit the Habil ity of ship owners concerning maritime llena. By Ml. SHANKS : For furnishing, at cost of War Department, clothing to , needy and indigent soldiers, sailors end marines In soldiers' homes. Mr. WARD obtained leave to have' printed and recommitted to the Com mittee on Reconstruction a bid pending for the admission of Virginia to repre sentation In Congress upon certain fundamental conditions. The condition , are that the Constitution of Virginia shall never be so amended or changed as to deprive any citizen or class of citizens of the United States of the right to vote in that State who are entitled to vote by the Constitution thereof, now to be re. cognized, or of the right to aft upon Juries, or of the right to an equal par ticipation in school funds and school privileges, as now recognized by each Constitution, provided that any altera tion ( regard ' :Ckmatit milky be made with to the time and place of residence of voters. Mr. SCHENCK presenteda report from the Agent of the Treasury Depart ment In Alaska in relation to the Ms position to be made of the two nu seal. bearing islands, giving the plan by which It is supposed 1660,009 a year can be mmie by the Government from these Wands. Report ordered to be printed rind referred to the Committee on Ways , and Means. Mr. KELLY presented • memorial of the National Colored Labor Convention, praying that the surveyed public lands in the Southern thates may be sub.:livid. ed in tracts of forty acres each, and that any freeman who shall settle on one of said subdivided tracts, and cultivate the same for one year, shall receive • patent for Somme, the title of said lend to be red In the settler and his heirs and to be inalienable for the period of ten years from data of entry, and fur ther that the grants of lands made by the Government to railroad corporations of the Southern States, and forfeited by reason of non compliance with the con ditions annexed to each grant, shall not be revived, but that the lands embrac ed into such lapsed grants be brought within the operatien of the Homestead. (AL. • - President sent a me sage to the goose announcing that be had approved the bill for the removal of political dis abilities from large numbers of persons. The House went into committee of the whole on the emus bill, and dia. muesli= followed on amenemerds offered yesterday by Messrs. Judd and Coburn, providing for the appointment of repm sentatives next AUgait. Mr. Coburn 011idi7 "Warm his eMendmente pat. Judd's wax reje cted by blagalust 96. Air. GARFIELD moved to strike out section 24, which proposed to ris, number of representatives. Rethorigh i It wiser to leave the whole matter of sp. portlonment out of the bill, and let it be reported la another bill, which could Mso provide se to the wanner and time of electing members of Congress. In reply to Mr. Allison, he maid ho proposed to introduce such a bill during the present 'session. Mr. Allison assenting, the see. Lion was then struck out. To section 28, requiring statistics of railroad and canal companies of coast. wise trade. and lake and Inland river navigation, Mr. Garfield proposed to add express, telegraph and life, fire and me. iine insurance companies. In the dis cussion he and Mr. Woodward Minded to the immense profit. of life insurance. the latter calling it one of the most stu pendone frauds ever practised. Mr. INOERSOLL offered en amend meet requiring stailatica from hankers and broker., which wee adopted. Mr. CCiX exprestwd the opinion that the bill wasorerloaried with Inquisitorial requirements which would delay the completion of the census ten years. Mr. COBB, of Wisconsin, offered en amendment to Mr. Ciartleld's, requiring Information of the amount of united States bonds held by corporations and Individuals. Be wished the information theLhope that the Ways and Means rDomuffttes worild„Aerrliielen of taxing the interest thereo •••• Mr. UPSON offered a .136Mituto re quiring information as to United State* bonds held by corpor.tlons, executor., administrators, guardians and trustee., and by individuals. Mr. GARFIELD mid be would be glad to gel that information, but the OSILIBUS Committee had come to the conclusion it would be muless to attempt to get It. It could not be got. Pending the dtecusslon at s quarter past three, a message was received from the Senate, announcing Its proceedings in reference to the death of Senator Feasenden. Eulogise of the late Sena tor were pronounced by Mown. Lynch, Peters, Hale, Stooks, of New York, and Dawes, after which the HOUSE, adjourned. BRIEF TELEGRAMS. —The Wyoming Legislature adjourned aim die on Saturday. The Denver Pacific Railroad is com pleted to Evan's Station. —The steamer City of Parse, from Havre, arrived at New York yesterday. —Hon. Henry M. Waite, formerly Chief Justice of Connecticut, died yes. terday. —The Virginia Urand Lodge of Mamore commenced their amnions at Richmond Monday night. —Neil McLaughlin, who wa• on trial in Philadelphia for complicity In the Brooke' armassination case, was yesterday found guilty. —None of the Spanish gunboats have yet sailed from New lark, though the officers say thirteen of them will leave on Thursday. —Two policemen In New York are charged with having robbed George Wells, a Kentuckian, of 1400, on the night of the 6th. —The buildings at Bevy'. ehip-yard, at Wilmington, Delaware, wore burned on the night of the 12th, tnvolviog • WS. of Sin,ooo to 118,000. —Track-laying on the Denver Pacific Railroad reached Kraus Station no Sat. urday last: It in en - Amble that thin will remain the winter stattun. —Rea. A. R. Toeble, of St. Pi:Uhlmann° Catholic Church, Cincinnati. received from Rome, yesterday, credemials as Bishop of the Diocese of Covington, KT. —The sentence of death nintle.t J•din Be.nd nonraerer of policeman Linedirs, of New York, ban boon affirmed by the Supreme Court, Judge Cardtn disment. I mg. —The sentence of death passed on Ben. Tenebenty, convicted bf murder, In 11‘,1 tog poisoned Ms ells m Wyoming coum ty, bee been commuted to IttlprisonmernA for life. —The Legislature of Alabama has been in session Lenny dem at an espouse of forty lb:amend dollar., MA only eight .bille have peen presentevito the Governor tier approiraL —The °Sewell building, occupied by the First National Bank of Aurora, lodt• ans, was trimmed to the grow td Monday evening. together with the ilyrery stable of Mr. O. Ring', adjacent. —Cornelius C. Donoghue, of Titusville, pa., yesterday obtained a verdict In the Supreme Court of Na. York against the Erie Hallway Company for $30,000 for damages austained at the Meet Rope dis. astir. - —BMerttl. Atwell, of Clyde, 0hi0,.. - witrl~RLer.re:reed ` rell!rvttth doctor on the Loco Shore - ROT ' • yesterday afternoon from leiJS ea re ceived by falling trot/ a Male •twecen Clyde and Freeruont. —The IlaygOto steamer Triumph, for. merry the rottenZ . 7 Atlanta, broke the bed-plate other ndenser, while goons "gown the rigor, at Philadelpnia. on Tuesday, and was ,owed to Cheater, vihereibet will be repaired. —The pork packing season et Indian spoils le hearts...closed, more from the want of currency than the fella:sof hogs. There hot be as many alaughtered ea last reason, but the !superior 'might may make the product about the mane. —A boiler •t Wea•el'• bakery, on Union street, Nashville, exploded yes terday morning, throwing the engineer, Mr. Mahn, some distance. and mangling him dreadfully. The holler wax °Melds the house, and did but little damage to it. —The case of Caldwell, who wan oom- mined for extradition, h. been again before the Canada [burl. Judge Cannot disarmed the motion for the prisoner's discharge. It is said the counsel will ap peal to the Court of the Queen's Bench, at Quebee. —Track.laying on the Elkhorn Valley Railroad commenced at Fremont, Ne braska, on Sated day last. The first ten miles of the road are alreaule , graded. A temporary rile bridge over the Missouri will be built as soon as the ferry boats will be stopped by lee. —Letters from Ireland say d istro bane. are threatened In several quarters and serious collisions are expected. It is reported that the Irishmen In Southwark have determined to nominate Burke, the Fenian, in whose Interest the Clerk enwell daughter wan oommitted. for a meat, which has become recent through Lsyard's appointment to tho Embassy at Madrid. —E Daniels, champion of Massachu setts, and MetalFueter, played two Ei6 at of billiard at Breton on Monday evening. The t was a French carom game of 150 poi te, and wen won by Danish-160 to 1e,4. The second was • game of 760 points on a carom table, and was won by Frmer. The teens was 750 to ea. Foster's highest run, 428; Dan iels' highest, 102. re-A bill has been introduced in the California Legislature entitled an set to establish, and maintain a pollee force for the protection and regulation of a society of Mongolian maidents In that allnd to prevent coolie slavery In Cali forniaf The bill entails the expenses of 11300,000 a year, to he collected from the Chinese. The scheme of robbery and persecution is pronounced unconstitutional. —A special from Omens says: Parties from Lincoln reports Croy. Butler waver ing, whether to cell an extra session of the Nebraska Legbelatureor not. While there is no doubt he is anxious to have the Fifteenth Amendment relined, there is a great pressure against calling an extra "melon by the citizen' south of the Platte, who fear that members north of the Platte, will take tine opportunity to pies measures batieficiel to that section. —On the trial of the case of White against Mattoon, In the Supreme Lburt , yeeterday, Senator Mattoon testified that 1 he had entered into a speculation with 1 the plaintiff for the pumboae of a thou-' ' of Erie stock, he (Mattoon) engaged to afford White the Information obtained by him es a member of the I Legislative Committee on the Central and Erie Railroads, on condition of' receiving one half of the profits of the speculation. Mattoon declined to ans. ' wee several questions regarding the transaction, on the ground that the answers would degrade him. —Distillers from the Third, Fifth and Sixth, Ohio, Fourth and Fifth, Indiana, and Sixth, Kentucky Districts have farmed an association. Twenty-nine firma signed the Oonstitutlon. The name of the society le "Western Die. tillers' Aseochnion," and its object Is to Elthe Interestsof the Oonironeemt, i t e value of product, retain the present law iflEiesible, sndreoommend that Conran legislate to prevent frauda..l A resolution was passed protesting against the change of the fermenting Milli to forty-eight boars, • Also, that the ExecudiveCommlttee lay the result. of the experiment on the stern process of fermentation bolero the OGIUMWODer of Internal Revenue. = PITTSBURGH, WEI)NESDA .)8,13ER 15, 1869. SECOID EMIR FOUR O'CLOCK, 4. 41 rM THE C Indian Peace Fund—Reelguation —Action Delayed—Lillian Pit : , li busters—Wants a Mod titration —Civil Tenure Law—New Judges Postal Telegraph . , 7 Penny iyauia Pig Iron—li • on Bitters—lndia Rubber —lnternational Exposition— The Franking Privilege—Con tested Election Cases. wiaosua W.sangoTort, DeosmRIrTRIWW9. =Ea2 An official statement, Just rendered, shows that of the two millions of dollar. placed at the disposal of the President to maintain peace with and among the Indians, 1366,870 have been expended. Of the balance, one million and a half will be required to pay for sutelstenoe furnished and to be furnished by the Oommtssary Department for feeding the Sioux, Klowss. Commanchea, Apaches, Cheyennes, Arapahoes and others. The residue will be aged for incidental ex. penes and to meet emergencies. THI POSTAL TELEGRAPH. The fart has come out that It was an oversight of the President that the postal telegraph system was not referred to In his annual message. It Is known that the President considers the project feas ible, and that if Judiciously carried out, it must result In general good to the peo ple. He bat had the benefit of argu ment and full etatlatlcs of the practical working of the system In Europe, for. Wished by Minister Wsahbnrpe, who, while s member of the House, two years ago, prepared an elaborate bill for the adoption of the plan. rsaritivLVANlA PIO 1005. A petition, signed by over eight thou. sand citizens of Schuylkill county. vents, againet any reduction of Oft anon articles that coo be produced to this country, was laid before the Ways nod Means Committee on Monday, by Mr. Cake. At least • 'core of new fur n•oee have been erected In Pennsylvania within the last two years, and while their operators claim to be able to do a re munerative business under the present tariff, a reduction of twenty per cent. white the price of gold le receding to par would close half of them, old and new. INDIA BUBOES CARS. In the Supreme Court, to day, the case of the Providence Rubber Company atrainet Charier; Goodyear, executor of Charles Goodyear, deceased, the Union India Rubber Company, and the Pero• nix Ruttier Company, on an appeal from the Ctrcutt Court for the District of Rhode, 'lnland, was taken Up, and will occupy two or three days in the argu ment. Thn case Involves the validity of the extension of the Goodyear patent. THE STAMPS ON BITTNIM The Oommiceioner of I cliental Revenue Liu reaffirmed the decision that when bitten., recognized as medicine agent*, are sold to the original package*, and then rebelled In smaller package. or bot tles, such as are used by retell dealers, both the original and the ams'ler pact, ages must be stamped according to the requirements of the hew. = The followlog telegr.mi woo received he the Eleoretaty of thorb►►y to-day: key Wear, Dee. IL —The Powbattan arrived here last evening tram Nassau with 36 men of the [Allan eapedttton. The Powitattan' uila that ►6ernooo for Phi lad el phis. [Signed.) C. H. Pooh. Rear Adcri'l. .ANTIN TQi ORD6III 110Dtr The Secretary of the Now York Liquor Dealers' Aseociation wea at the office of the Internal Department today, and madman argument before Solicitor Smith and Da .tit enturolsatoner Douglass, • ...Ideation of the recent orders • ironer Delano canoe:tang the use of stand cask. and the require. meat of compoUnders and rag:elders under the laws. I= The Judiciary Committee of the Bonne. on the propodtion of General Butler. have decided to amend the bill hereto fore agreed upon, in committee. fOr the repeal of the Civil Tenure law, so tar as to require that it shall have effect only In future seem end not disturb those al. ready under action. I= There la no longer any doubt among those beat Informed, that the President will withdraw the nomination of Yeo man for Circuit Judge of the Ohio Cir. cult, and the claims of °there're already being canvassed again. It means briba ble now tic* none of the nominations will be acted upon until after the holi day. ACTION POSTPONED. Owing to the , non-receipt of certain printed documents the Committee on Reconstruction base Postponed further conelderallon of the Virginia question until Saturday. The Committee hate taken no action In the ease of Georgia. AZOLISOZD Tits rasseino earemzea. The Postmaster General has notified the Congressional Post Offioe Committee that the North German Confederation has abolished the franking privilege, and renews Ms recommendation that Ma gma do likewise. CONTESTED ELECTION 0•1106 The men of Vanwjck va. Green, or New York, and Commoe va. Foster, of Pennsylvania, were argued before the Committee on Election' Urdu, and then referred to mb committees. RIM= Associate Justice Grier, wrote his letter of resignation on Saturday, but it has not yet been placed In the hands of the President. He proposes it to take affect on the first of February. mr CRP ATIONA L icianarrion The Senate Oommittee of the District of Columbia, to-day, agreed to report • bill to encourage and promote the Inter national exhibition in Wahington, to LSD. GEOROI6 Gen. illorirairm Letter—He will be ■ "nubmimionlin". no Longer—Demo crita Elotorme Him Letter u Haring the Ping of True Pletal—Attempted Awaaatnation of Two Republican Mew. ben. (By Telegraph to tha Pittsburgh te4ette.3 NEW Yong, December 14.—A Tribune special, dated Atlanta, 18th lust., says: General Morgan, • leading Democratic member of tbe Georgia Legislature, has published • rejoinder to Congressman Tilt's letter, in which he says neither the Senate nor the House intended to sub mit the question of the eligibility of col ored members to seats In the Legislature to the Supreme Court. The present Legislature never will reseal negroes, nor will It pass the Fifteenth Amend ment. These are settled facts. For my self, I have been a subuilselonlat as long as I Intend to be, and have gone as far as ' I Intend to go to gratify the unhallowed will and domineering spirit of a corrupt Congress. The Democratic papers quote the above as manly sentiments, and having the ring of true metal. General Morgan nu copies the seat of an expelled negro member. The preen of the SLOP denounce Oen. Terry u an infamous Ilar, and advocate making the State too hot to hold the friends of the Administration. An attempt was made to asessidnate S. A. Darnell and Peter O'Neill, Republl. can members of the LegbeTature, at Ledgeville, a few days Once. County Auditor, In Convention. =I 00LV11111713. 0., Coombe? 14.—There :sae about alsty County Auditors in ow don here, with La Roe Hamilton, Coun ty Chairman. The object of the Con vention to to consider the question re lating to the amassment of real. estate and personal property. State Auditor Goodman addreened the Conveatkm this afternoon. NEW YORK CITY. • __.._ et the flute lan Convention__ Printe.rs Counterfeit Revenue Sale of City Railroad Wtoce. Stamps _ailed Dealers 8, Tcogrma. tbe ussette.l ST. LOVls:l:l7 44 Mber 14.—Tue State COBB MI • Spanish Christian Conran a met this evening and organised by tb s .b..eleCtiork of Rev. Gunboats verse i— The, . • • Nichols, Presideft‘t r iii. several Whereabouts of G d • ~..4eodents and Sec 'logs . The • f 'lr" - '" • • • - lame II the Bounty Bond 5e0)t % „......,0. 88 ve • ;mu . of State, and a tnknown—A Mystery .„• •,', maniber of repreeentatlym of various libing Cleared Up —Gold Sales. evangelical churches In the city. I The City Council fanlight weed the ordinance perfected by aloe committee for the rain of the City's Pacific Railroad Bonds, the Mollerbe advertieed fifteen days and rieterity of $50,00.1 given by the pnraheaera that they will carry out the terms of the purchase. The predicated mock will not bring more than half what hail already been offered for it. Heavy rain has fallen all day. extend ing over a large section of the West and Northwest, and .11 the rivers rising. • •-, .• •••`•-•• ' mid F • a ere br0` , •?.... f1.ta. , .. I— • •• . r' By I eterraph to th&rt, NEW TOELV , • Crnirad r.. Are trot „Orate 63 m- 1331kilmiejt ~.. .irvriCh forging and print Jrfeit revenue stamp ed ohm About Iteo,ooo worth of coun terfeit checks were found on the premi ses of the defendants, who are litho graphers. Seventeen presses, on which the checks were worked off, wereseized. Both of the defendants were held In de fault of $20,000 each for examination. Otto Klertzman, keeper of a retail store In Hoboken, and William Boggs and Robert Parker, aged reenectifelY nineteen and twenty years, were to day brought before Commissioner Osborne on a charge of dealing in counterfeit money. During the latter part of last .week bills on tile Market National Bank, of thin city, were put to circulaucto in Brooklyn. Parker and Bows have no - 'knowledged that they purchased the bills from Klertsman. the pnaonere were Jailed, the hail forizilertarnan being fixed at $15,000, and Boggs and Parker at $3,000 each. Mr. Webster, counsel for the Spanish Government, to day formally moved for the Mombasa! of the libel. against. and the Spanish guffbeitte. The court grent• I ed the metion.lutd•irlitimpable fifteen of the vessels will get'away to-morrow. The greater part of to-day nas occupied in chipping their Chief Engineers___The Spanish Minister was quite actleadoring the day. Tim engineer, link:Aid and coal heavers -Are ordered to report on board early ornVednesday_ It le officbillt ehtrr rt o • Special (.33r5ipudditer ~of -2:nu , Wei* will be ready to send t grew on Thursday. There was • rumor this afternoon that Chief Appraitter, Palmer, had naked a large amount of sugar for alleged under valuation. The detectives have not yet discovered the whereabouts of either Gray or Pratt, the alleged State bounty bond swindlers Eugene Fink, who negotiated some of the loans made by Gray A lb., on altered hoods, le undergoing exatnimition before the Governing Committee of the Stock Exchange. jay Cooke A Co. deny the report that they purchased acme of the altered bonds from Gray. The rumor oh the Street thWafternoon that Gray was arrested in Philadelphia. la probably un founded. It Is repartUglikt Thomas Greenwood, who dluppsered ftOm West Hoboken on the 7thcomtif it yras Murdered and robbed by person whirctursaied from Sew York. It appears Greenwood received from ht. late home in about seven thousand dollars on the day he wan last sae. The Auistant Treasurer mid to day 11.000mon of gold at EM and 1130,000 at 122 28-100. CUBA-11A YTI likirintabing between tre •pant.b True'. .nd tubau Inaurgents—Port as Prince to be Attacked—llaytten Currency at a Braty Motown. {IT Te egraptyto S. Plasterge. Gesette.l Docem Der 14.—Late Intern. germs from (be eastern department Delved, give accounts of several stir mleVas latetr-insweack the troupc.suad inartgenta near Santiago de Cuba, EI Wire and Holguin. TM Spanish man-ar.war label has Wise/ thr New York, taking with her Clew* for twelve of Ma Spanish gunboats Just entapleted. A MinUago, Cube, dispatch stater that • Harden steamer was 'Salted on the mast and taken to that place under sus. {Scion of haying landed arms for the ththeim. The same dispatch ayseeveral handled men of the Valmaseda batimion have arrived. Fighting at Idogote still continues, and some albs Spanish wounded are coming In. Th cholera la decreasing. A St. Hwy's. Hayti, special says the CSC'S are In full poesesion of the north ern pert cf the Island, and are making extensive reparations< o attack Port an Priam- Five steamers belonging to the insurgents are coaling here for the par pose of ining In the attack. Salerno is reported at Petlonville. The Brinell steamer Cherub has arrived, with Mr. Basest, the AMaestiaD tairdstar, on board. Porte n llnce is reported in • wretch ed con One dollar in gold is sell ing for four thousand dollars In Haytlen currency. - - EASSACH USE ITS Municipal Elections In Mks ans Towns of the Mate. (By TeleglOb to (be Pltt•bargh 8087016 December IS.—The vole for Mayor. Hbartleff, 11,253: Baldwin, Dom mime, 4,197; Chase, Labor Reform. lin: Johnum, Temperance. 112 The UV Council will be WWII)" Repabllcen. The °tug JOurßet mentions the ru mored do cation of some 150,000 at the Howard Hidlooal Rank. The defalcation was dlsmirered during the allele mom. Ination of.lba affair. of the bank by a .o,ll"mo:teat Commissioner. The person held apeohtilid)l4l has probably been SD. gaged In 'peculation • long time. The loss will ma effect that:spite of the bank. Edwin Walden, Mama' candidate, was elected Mayor of 141111. W. a Riot, AntiAnnosation to Boa. ton candidate, was elected Mayor of Charlatan! today by four hundred ma jori R obert r a, Republican, was elected Mayor of wburyport Wov.castan. DecembT li fi. Mayor Blake. Republican, was re-elected to-day by • large majority. Doonstenpati. Deo. ht—The fbsrter election replied In the election *Mid. gee, Beenbllcan, hlcyar, ltninbikten COIEINDOLI eh% CHICAGO. Brutal Mialler—lotra State Maims— Meeting or Ticket Agent,. My Sews* to toe Plttstrorgh tiosetto.J CHICAGO, Deo. 14.—0 n Monday night a man named Murphy, living In Owen. tanno, MOM:, wenrto the herniae( a man named Higey, called himout. and with a club beat Im to death. Be also badly beat Mrs. Mickey. Congresslium Hopkins Is worse to-day. lowa has now over three hundred thousand dollars In her treaalry, and does not owe a dollar. A ommatitjon of railroad and steam. lost rasemeger ticket agents assembled at the Sheratan Rouse this fnornlng, the principal linos _being well represented. Charles Follett, of the Ohio and Mink. elppl Railroad. took the Chair, and ham Powell, of the Chicago, Baraneton and guln o Y. acted DB Secretary. The object of the meeting le the revision and di. vision of the routes. The sessions will continuo three 'or Cons days. KENTUCKY. First Balls{ for U. N. Ilegator—No Eldito uom..-UcEreery will be Elected. aly 'remittal.% to the rimesom aosatto.) L0018V123.19, December IL—Otte ballot was bad for United States Senator at Frankfort to-day, without a choke. In the Seim, Stevenson had in. ld 12, Turner 6, Boons 2, Finley (Fop.) 4, Brack 1 In the ,House, Stevenson Malegegry $4, Turner 11; Finley 8, King 8, RiesS,flteck 2. McCreary willprob ably be elected tomorrow , as a tufo:Sy of th e geWoring votes are known to be for him It ts cislined at Frankfort that Steven son got very nsarly his fall strength to day, wolle MoCnierY Will eventually he •1114.02,06 by • line touJority of those numberedamong mattering votes. A party of one hundred armed men took two negroos out of the Richmond (Ky.). Pawl saI:WV night, hung one, whipped the other, and neat him back to JIM. T. LOUIS K I NGSTON The Steamer Estella Springs • Leal— Panic Among the Pa•sengen—She Peaches Purl Safely. By tet4raoa to the Pit:soars. has. tie. , KISOSTOSe, Jamaica, November 30. via Havas, December 14.—The steamer Estella, while sailing from Cape Hayti to Port Au Prince, sprung a leak on the night of November 27th. A large crack was discovered below the waterline, up•tn the discovery of which • panic en sued among the passenger and crew. Else of the passengers, including Mr. Gregg, American Consul at Kingston, escaped In a small boat, and reached San Nicolas. A perfect pandemonium pre vailed; but, by the efforts of the officers, the Estella was kept afl•nst, and reached Molests Nicolas early on Sunday morn ing, where she was met by • schooner, which took her passengers off and brought them to this city, where they arrived this morning. Masonic Grand Lodge of trigtzda. /Br Tetra - raye to the rlttaborsh dassne • I Ricuitonn, Deo. 14.—TheGrand Lodge of Masons of Virginia to-night elected Thos. F74)werut. of Norfolk, Grand Mas ter; Wm. L. Mauls, Deputy Grand Mas ter; Rohl E. Willem, of Lynchburgh, Senior Warden; W. H. Lsmbert,l unlor Warden; Thou. N, Dudley, Richmond, Grand Tre”ortn; Dr. Joo. Door, Rich. mood, Grand Secretary; Win. B. Tan form, GioudestAr, Senior Deaoon; Judge Richard Parker, Junior Deacon. 1.41 e Blown Open •nd Robben Ty.te.r.pe to the Pittshw(hdasetts.) Etadina, N. Y., December 14.—The of fice of the Northern Central Railroad Company wee broken Into hut night, the safe blown open and check! , and drafts to over 11a,000, with about IWO In green back., stolen. The paymaster had ar rived In town the evening previous, w hich was probably known to the bur glars. No olue to the perpetrators. ray moot on the checks and drafts has been stopped. Women %Mirage lu Tenuemee .14 •rage to tee Gazette./ Drat Mb. 14.—in the House to-day a special committee made majority and minority reports, one for and nrainat the tidop lon of a resolution to request the Constitutional Convention to vent the elective franchise to women. Reports, sod neaolutious tabled. )r. arbotrpe--111.11eial Order Nitlx- Hy Telt graph tett the I . lt.ettur h Wart!, • H111,4111,1ti, Dec. 14.—Gut. Geary has withdrawn hie official order for toe execution of lir. Schoeppe pending the action of the Supreme Court. 161 . 1 e Kim B. Dr Totetrattb to the littettur,h Oatent.t I • E.UIII. Devanber 14. —Two tire man. Mderard Firth and Augustus Fire!), wore arrested to-night on sus. Wien of Wing the Erie lire bugs. Great excitement prevails In comm.:mama PrIEOLEUI 314111. garmismhte—small Weitst—Tbe Parker Yield—TM Valuate Region. The 011 City Toner, of Monday, 'aye : OIL PRODUCTION—SMALL WELL.. This, In the production of oil, is em poetically the day of small walla In former years the low price of oil made a well of lees than tea barrels non-paying. Now, • two-barrel well pay., and if the owner or owner. have two or more small wells In the same Immediate neighbor. hood—ao they can be pumped by the same engine—they pay well. As an ex ample of tette kind we would refer to the Haines' wells, on the aide of Cottage BBL Smell wells, after ell, are the best In ceptlye to development, as they are more likely 'to prove permanent and do not create that feverieh excitement that' larger ones do. They place the prolue lion of oil more nearly on a level with other branches of industry. A. • general thing, the production of new wells is Ism then it was formerly. I while we believe the number of dry hales ui proportionally lees. This last may be attributed to two causes: First, develop. meat 1. carried on with more system, and more immediately In the neighbor hood of paying wells: and the seetrud. the wells are now mare thoroughly test ed than formerly. Na well la now con sidered thoroughly tested without being torpedoed, whereas nothing of the kind was formerly thought of. In regard to the decrease In the num ber of large wells, various theorten have been pat forward by operators—such as the theory of .ithe surface water by Its great weight, standing In ab andoned wells, drawing the oil out of its deeper reservoirs," and that of "the escape of gas, on which they claimed depended the action of those wells which were known as flowing." But whatever may be the muse, the fact is evident that small wells are now the rule and large ones the exesptima. And another fast le equally clear, that more paying wells are now had for the number put down than at soy time In the history of the Pennsylvania Oil Raglans. rameuta's tannin°. I The same paper gays : I The oil business at Parker's Landing Metal Intussaing, and from the certainty lof obtaining oil, and the great length and width of belt, it Wile fair to equal as M bar territory in the country. wunin tete last few days an several wells I ha's been eompletod • d commenced yielding oil. The Northwestern lode pendent, published at Lawrenceburg, contains a list of over sixty producing wells, and the daily production of each, amounting In the aggregate to over 1,20 e barrels. Perhaps this estimate Is a little too WA but from the number of wells now being ilalahed and tested, there Is Uttle doubt that before the end of this month the yield will be over 1,600 barrels daily. 011 is six delimit s barrel at the welM This will make an immense revenue. A new well called the Lone Star, on Stump Island, Immediately above the month of the Clarion river, was finished on Friday of last week. On Monday It pumped twenty-four bar rels of oil in twenty-four hours, giving promise of being one of the largest In the region. There are over twenty wells, either drilling or pumping, on the land of Sam uel M. Fox, Esq , on the west side of the Allegheny river, about a half • mile abate the month of the Clarion. The find well finished on this farm is the Palmer well, belonging to the Clarion Borough Oil Oympany. It was torpedoed last Saturday, and when tubed threw out mime ten barrels of oil, it then com menced primping five barrens day, with apreeppeet of increasing to a much higher figure. The Orey Eagle well, on the ado Joining lease, is pumping from twenty. five to thirty barrels a de,. The welion lease No. I is being tested. with •rim peat of proving the largest well I nthe region. Several others will be finished moon. The Alpine well la estimated rui high ma thr=terrels a day. and allows idgna of Worms& This well will prove a paying Investment for ita owners, and we are glad of it. The majority ef ha owners are men engaged in the y rolling mill, who had the nerve to Invest their hard eini imm, and axe ROW reaping Uta fall Daunt& • ' TEX TIDiOUSZ REGION. The ehipmesta from the 'Monte re gion law week were quite hoary, owing to the sadden rise to the river and plat. tuul .upsy of ears. The extent of ter. Tirsrrin that neighborhood is rapidly ceiling the ettentlon of operators. The wells are reported OA not dttnislahiog in prodosidommad some incrsaathg. -- - DM DO it LL'W'S LECTURE The T., Kingdoms—Tee Pope aid 13=3 A respectable audience assembled at Latayaste Hall teat evenin to llston to the lecture of Rev. John Dowling, D D., entitled, "The Kingdom of the Popes Antagonistic to the Kingdom of Chrtet." At a quarter before eight o'clock Rev. illiam M. — Young, D D., introduced the lecturer, who apologized for his failure to appear on Tuesday evening of at woek, nwtng to no aceiiteet on the I=l He did nut appear a prof..ed popery locturnr. Hie mind nad been directed specially to the subject souse yeses ago when Dr. Young, then • stn. dem, was a member of his church, end It was to this perhaps, that be ov;ecilhe invTlatlon to address a Pittsburgh audience. He dbrialmed entirely having any polltiad hiss In discussing the subject. In the Acta of the Apostles it was stated that Paul dwelt two whole year. in hie own hired house In Rome preaching the Kingdom of tI d, and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ. No man then forbade him to preach. It le under Pius IX. II Paul would attempt is now he would not fare ea well, for he would tell them that the Kingdom of Christ Is not temporal but spiritual. Bishop Hughes once said that there was no ruler on earth had so many subject. as the Pope. Plus IX and Car dinal Autonelli would drivi Patti from Home now if be would preacri.hat Obrietja Kingdom is only spirtpial in Urn nature. This the Speaker infelred from- h e Treatment they had given to SO ct of his friends in these late years The Kingdom of Christ differ.. from all other kingdoms In the world. .They shall pies sway, but His will endure forever. The Kingdom of Christ and the 'Poe differ in many resimpta They differ in the motives of their-founders Ambition ie the motive that prompt. the founders of temporal Kingdoms. It was lure n be that prompted Chrint La nd ud His used. The j u n the w sed eapons the pos establishment of Christ's Kingdom are spiritual. In temporal,„ glue dome they are carnal. This was• *mat iliustrsted In the vfiggprof the Pleament me. A Bishop sileir• to tight all heretics and rebels to hie borr. the Pope. Heretic°. ScAtinsuricos . . op myna.. No subject ha. ever been won to Christ's Kingdom by carnal weapons, though some may have been so intimi dated thereby as to enter the Pope's. "Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, with the Lord. They differ in the character and qualifications of their subjects. By natural birth they become subjects of the one; by spiritual birth of the other. In the laws by which thee are governed. In Christ's Kingdom ail the laws emanate from himself is the Kingdom of the Pope, they emanate from the Sovereign Pontiff. The two King dome have nothing common. Peter w.i-o not an earthly monarch. What Pope find claimed an earthly kingdom? When did the usurpation commence? Few Papists couldgivein ulllgent answers to these questions. The Pope has ranked for centuries among the princes of earth. But Christ declared, "My kingdom Is not of this world." Peter would have shrunk, with holy horror, from the very idea of wear. leg an earthly crown. Neither Christ nor Voter pretended to wear one. At what Nsriort thou wee the assumption made? The unholy anion,. It la said, r.dnmenetot in the beginning of the fourth mnturs, under Coustantire, who removed the seal 14 empire rum [tometo By sautmtu or Constantinople. But the temporal power of the Pope recta on • base and clumsy for gery, which in known In his. tory as Conntaolloe's donation. Thin donation WWI to mese the Pope • temporal sovereign. lie believed there wail not • chest or bishop in the city outcold acknowledge thee* donations of Constautinee. were for geries. The author of the forgery is no. known. it watt only brought out about the close of the eighth century In the the reign of Adrian. although the donation ie said to have been made about WI But Grocery IL declared the Severe • Pontiff about/ have nothing to • • with political matters. Bonifaca 11l as declared to be Universal Biehop .7 the Emperor Phoess in 606. The dal of the temporal power le 756. D. red& • its culmination in the time of Hildeb nd or Gregory I VII. The political des in of the papacy were then fully develo Among the dictates of Hildebrand the follneing: The Pope him a right o depose rulers. Hem be Judged by • man. So pow erful was theretway h• exercised that Henry IV, of &Mouthy, crossed the Alps to implore his loagiven • Ireland was donated to Henry 11, of 'gland, on con dition that he would • vent It to popery. TM@ was the origin of a the miseries that priest ruled count t . Here he re lated the circumstance • f Kings leading the Pope's horses, an holding their stirrups. and Henry 11. of England, el. posing his bare should° loth. scourge. At the death of Bo throe VEIL the temporal power oirthe ' .pa begin to de. aline rapialy. Althong declining from that tilde till now, they do not abate In their desire to rule wit an iron rod. A bull of excommunication was tulminat ed against Queen Elisabeth. Pim VII. fulminated one against Napoleon Bona. But he suffered for his temerity, or Napoleon had him arrested. and he wee kept es a prisoner till the Bourbons were restored In 1614. Victor Emmanuel bee auto felt the power of a hull of ex. communication. The kingdom of the Pope is a political rather thane religious eystem. • Popery, it Is mid, has changed. It has not. It is unchangeable. Rome has not abated one iota of her claim; This would be an imknowleagmerit of error that would be derogate to an Infallible church. She is not In nor of the com mon schools, nor oft reading of the Bible within their hal He had been requested to nay some thing about Father Hyacinthe. He we, naturally a grand ' land noble man. He was as eloquent U Henry Ward Beecher. But he was educated a Roman ist. He believes he ears still a Catholic. He had no sympathy with the lionising Hyacinthe had received In this country. He bad galled for Europe and he believed that when he reached home he would become reconciled lc' his Church. Americans erred great ly I n making too much of converts front eery; many of them fall Into German rationalism, and adopt the views OfStraties and Raman. Although Dr. Dowling presented hla points forcibly, he was, nevertheless, re. spectral, and except In one or two ex temporaneous effusion; abstained from everything that won d even savor of harshness. Whilst so eof Ids auditory might not by any m save* with hint. we think none could I offended. His lecture would have eon* far more lin preadve If ho bad so feadlialised self with his man pt asthat he could have allowed It to its the desk. But, altogether, we think I was well received by the respectable au ono; - L 1 1° ; Id 1 re 88 1 so fa Pt lle k • e THE CO HTS. va a ft • • Ktr►patriek. a the case of Bar• Markt Coen.-Jodi TcrsantA, One. 14.-7 bridge vs. McDevitt ported, verdict Inc deli tilled • balance of 24 00 . . Bennis vs. McKehl% Action sgalnst defendant as endorser ion a note drawn by .1. Miller, payable tofi. D. Miller, for 10,000. On trial. TISIAL LIST FORVDITESDAT. 66 Citizens 011 Mink' Co. vs. Hartwell et al. 117 blame va. Same. 60 Jacoby se. Bell dt McGraw. 62 Flanigan vs Gibson. 10 Bedell vs. Palma. R. R. Co. 64 Higley et us. vs. Buff= et al. 60 Mellon va. True cldal. 61 Trunick vs. Jo previously m adam% with a oar- Quarter Ilesidons—Judges Bruce and Collier. TWOIDAY. Dec. 14.—Tne cue of the Commonwealth ye. Thomu Eimehing• previously reported, wu resumed and concluded. Major", after amend bow* deliberation, returned a verdict of not has H Aullll,atchlup, end dir ected pa that the defendant: Ty the costs. The next cue titan up was that toof the Commonwealth ~ H. H. Myers, die• ed for assault and battery. Andrew Me- Cloy, prosecutor. Th e prosecutor. it sp. pews, constructed a bridge or trestle work scram a 'seine on the premises of the defendant, without permledontrozu defendint to do ea Defendant Sodom; the structure -there undertook toludtok It down, when gr. McCloy. the Proseco , tor, interfered, and • nght ensued, in NO. 290. 1 which. It seams, McCloyearne off second i beat. The fury returned a verdict of guilty, and recommended the defendant to the merry of the Court. In the matter of the Insanity of Catha rine Marshall, in which writ de how, tiro inquireado was awarded and inquiet tm hold, the Court found that thessid Csthartne Harahan. now confined In the Western Pennsylvania Hospital at 'Xs mont. is Inland; that she Is in Indigent circumstance' and has &residence to the . villskesetelinton, AlleghenV 6 . . I wae,theTerore. ordered and .. th u e n D tr irecto shai ra l riy of the tbe Poor p.xii .31 5 411 .0 n r. yi 4 'A 7" 1." PI". e,_ - 21 : "M of %bend...W . 4 li 1 tenanee. are and medical a:tenderly. . sea In case of beamth, 41=tisntl . 1111111: 1 1 •'l L. •Vil 1/ pace's of said V de lt. it li ,ii i . i .' - The next ease taken up was that of th e . . likir • ii, t, Commonwealth vs. Ella Oyler. Indleted 41 7, A J T OU —' ihili N. U 1 -7' I ' A fo t r w la arai n le y ged , Pe uta wr t '3 th n e l kocuand dner Pr''''lmlimetiarthe ji.. . __ . . prosecutor In the street and too _.,... home with her, and while there ant l er Ht X" . - 'll =Fr"T •• ea 11ree...1 . rbeillr ole pocketbook containing p 47. Jury r,. : ± : ..' % '" 7 ,21 !' " 1 ...- 7: 7''' Ti"rlt*dwer.'ts""iwhomthr'' w .•:,A7 a. ifS . i . werewoindicCenator larceny:. .r .ttnt arraigned and plead guilty. Centel o . . ~,,„ 4,g t - . ,: ~,,.1.,,,,i la The deferred. The next case taken up.aa teal of tbe b.. ' .."" is ' so ...." 7 6.4 •7 41' Commonwealth vs John Tohr, indicted slums to the department of ill itael for felonious assault and battery. James the Publishers are also largely tadalited WOO H. Meta prosecutor. The prosecutor, It ..,..phorg is the large eines of Asserlase gage appears, redds. in Freeport, and on the *113.h of Aug ust last had been at camp- eras oll l Mo., the vonnot and oldocddllteeinflo meeting near Natrona, when one of the party threw a tin cup at Yam's dog, whereupon defendant made an assault upon the prosecutor with a butcher knife, cutting him on the hand and twice on the knee. Inflicting a painful net not dangerous wound. On trial. TRIAL LIST FOR WEDNESDAY, al. cam. v.. Wm. R. ("rumor. 24.•• Charles Ramsey. 416. Jim. A- McGraw. 24 - Adam Showers. 56. •• . Edward Lyuch. 60. Jacob Baumffier. 62. Wm. Heckert. 311 Wm. C. fderidoth. 83. Charles Frontal, 2 OM& TRIAL LINT TOR THURSDAY. 47. Com, ys. W . J. Robinson, bases. 82 Matty McCracken. 84. " Thomas Bowen. 85. " Chestier' Bo:afield. 92. Thomas Davis 87. Lawrence Ball, 4 mane. 8i• Charles Kerney. Edward Bohnlts.. 115: x. B. S. Roger. " Daniel Jordon. 1 " Patrick Gallagher. 108. 5440 ' • Leonard. 109. lames Lang. Common Plean—Judges Sterrett. TUESDAY, December 14.—The Mee of Johns v. McAhoy, prevtousJ,y reported, L still on trlaL . TRIAL LIST FOR WZDNIVIDAT. No. 288 Little at al. vs. ideAboy. •• 308 Waring vs. •• 308 Waring vs. Loaf's?. •• 309 Rest, Thomas & Co. vs. Kenyon. • • 319 Terereervlriaidenfelser. 818 Elliott & boos vs. Nos 4 '• 317 Barnes va Lindsay et al. •• 318 Smith vs. leteAlvy. " 819 Stewart, vs. Clark & Sumner. " 2r20 Hughes 01 11. Ti. Franey. " 151 Rodgers vs. King et aL " 810 Ckeximonwsalth for rise vs. Miller STATE ITEMS. ERIE city is still annoyed by Incenids ries. MAXT bridges in Clarion county were destroyed by the recent flood. THE recent freshen played ■mash with some of the pipe lines for transporting oil. Ton wife of a shoemaker named Haag, et Williamsport, cut her throat with a razor, last week., while mentally deranged. THE first blast furnace ever erected in Erie city is now hi successful operation, baying been started on Saturday of last week. Gus Roan., convicted of murder at Franklin, in addition to presenting A. R. Richmond, Esq., with a diamond. also rewarded his otter counsel., Capt. C. E. Taylor. of Venango day, to whom he gave a gold watch and chain. Tan Pittsburgh and Ckenellaville rail road contractor. Christian idanftd, Into shot and killed Michael Roach, in an at tempt to arrest him for abusing his (Man tles) family and also for starling horses, was tried for murder in Somerset county, last week, and acquitted. Tim jury in the case of Allen Kay n The Pennsylvania Railroad, at Williams port, found the defendants guilty of "gross negligence," end awarded the plaintiff $llOOO damages. It was the case of a child who had both arms cutoff On the lumber railroad, In 1884 1 / 2 in Wil liamsport. A WADDINGTON dispatch states: Op ponents of the succenful candidates for Circuit Judgeships of the Supreme Court are actively opposing their conlrmatlon. Complaints have been Sled and charges made to the President ',pant Judge Pearrie. ap po inted on the Maryland cir cuit The Radical wing of the Republi can party in Kentucky complain that Hon. George 0. Taman was not their choice, and urge that their claims should have been considered in the selection of a Judge from that State. Charges are made that Mr. McEennan, appointed to the Pennsylvania circuit, In totally - ImM for the position. These complaints and charges are pressed with peg determina tion. The President will consider them, and may possibly withdraw the nomina tions; but there is little doubt entertained that all will eventually be confirmed. —Between four and live thousand men We now emplota In the constraetion of the Indlanapo and St. Louts Ballmed, between Indianapolis and Tetra Manta. The rails have been laid seven nines west of that city. The roadl i tallasted as flat an the hem Is laid. have been raceived from Chart Pans, Mattoon and Shelbyville tor the location of the machine drape. but they wiltprob• ably go to Mattoon, that point being the centre station of the road, with better water facilities. Additional Karam bY Telegraph. New Oateake, December t 5 .- - DoDab aimed easier at 2442410 for middling, Salsa, 51501 receipts, 5394 tabs. Exports to firm, 4706 balsa. Oats 84665 a Hay OZ. New mess tiotk lower at M. lard scams Lima 10350 10 Kost no keg to trualset Other articles Unchanged. Gold 23X. New York eight es:change. yin discount Sterling, fa. Cnacti" Den. lir— In tne afternoon there was but a 12oltsd movement - in grain markets. bcd a dower Doling pea veiled, No 2 soden Wheat lei= at 85c. aunt Dorn doll at 77 ,tic Data, rye and barley nestised, and the plias nominally the mos. At the evening board the markets were tractive. Pro visions quiet and firm. • • Oascautook, Dec. 14.—Bee( cattle—re ceipts 1.095, and the market with sales at y.jc advance; extra W M 16: first quality $13(303,°i; pawn Via ty Itcoo@u,arr, third quality 18,SQ10. Sheep and limbo—receipts 0,358, demand revived and prices to higher; sales extra It 1134008* 1l m:,, - - •11111.R . 11 Irrroorr SirrosiL trrrostmoa.lll.4.l3l. IMP. arTUE ANNUAL ELECTION for IIitETZEN DIIMOTUEB of 1050 Rant. to servo for Met orosalsta 7orr. Ida bo bad 05 1001000001 HOW" Ho. 66 /North /Mau. TISCoDAT. too UM of JAILUSI7, br. team too boon of load 6 lealook F. L. lITILPIELLNISON. Goblet. MAGNOLIA GROVE PLOW WI *&L ILOW GIVIrI 12 per Cent. Tare HIV OBLRINS . Shill Reteive on Thursday' 50 KIIDa 50 Bairrels - DiEob - umsee. ckotte siOds mie. CAU, AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK. 14W01M184;.cP,•_,;, WZI2=EEM 111=1 =I PEINNOLIO I , SIZED & CO., HARPER'S PREIMULL I THE TE•XOOiCALR WlllOlll i iimarmus irause Am. AL no!S h IMMALY WILL% EDIT. 6D.—Thu Mutton. N. As a Literary !cars* lIABIMIII WZ2XLI recognised ws Os may samsgmar vldeli MB see eacceedsd is sislablladlng ma niediallie =I Toe LeitoeialmaterataLlLlMlNll llll TELY .• nentatte one 01 it+ mega ennolonalludeelt: . melee. ereeta ODOR NA130•4111 reit- slca, /lasae, Casnsuem a.a!!L In Ha era, 1 . . 'aviation Motu sessassel ma tom tito•T Asp C7 - W& 3 Cot./.t., the kslbor of ..TM Irmo Is White," ••Itlfislat," ..ILressetsts,• • and 6 .110 Xoss•tosii..: Int:eribari manilas Nile NI each torte:UW.loU. std b I WIZILT treat th•st at 110 glory to th e elate of 111101 Publisttediftikly, math pram 11battalions. The lady arias Dart • Mania number of 111•11PES:11 /413ARell ~..A . r. made aea bar 111arp. -N. r. s / . r.e.... ,- ... RAM2 S B SUB, - A szrawFouT or Fashion, Pleasure aud., bandies. HAMMEL'S ELMS bap galseel ...ono Use oast rsnlel awl sanderfal ay. Moss Is the Li ng. of Jour/mama. and I t rargulsed .ate and most attractlT• fatally paw , ever I. Ls an illnatratsd ottrostelaalot IrsiblOS n in • without rival la VW noattry. iv upaalal utramretnent, Involving igai mrci.oata tr pedals hen of the Bags lansr—Vealaullag.taw nal of fasaloa la ItamovW—lis tuddas.sdataa are aubaubad In ?law Twt sintalleshoulal7 with tLelr •OPnataroot t M. fl nun rad , A largo portion Of OM aAs hat to 4,421 Meek da•Otera to mous...lv. sod suartststsur rssang statter—f.cortu, Poems, SISIMISN.fa SWIM. .ad Iloulµ 11s Zdttorts.l artistes an &JUTS spicy sad sorer mrr top'a of axial Ilearreee. No effort sad to esoesse .111 be roared to par auseatiy Brea. for 015 jearasl Ida 71:1017 trtatt it bss Iron so rsplttli. or villa Ikea well p.elhiftd lirg.kiy, *tt prOdla• InalUilkil.. The meet polestar 111.eathly d She Weald.-8. T. Obersar, The Imet nolathii parsoacil. net la this cease." alone. lehlt I the English Lairomin. , -rx. Pres., PllLSalptilen: BARER'S MMAZINE. lIASIPLIVO lama Arfainandav sasarsdadaa It. Forffett Volor. Its oncoets-illtbatellipaksh_ rivolieS by that of say ohms toontklSPOrlikefal to Larop. or *merles-1m toes 4ao to alas charocuce sod misty of tiloosteltin tilde etastronto of Us !Nadia.= to Nam la far Us !dam at ass cant dts bass Utazary toStellio• slow of Culla nod Amulets *titers: to MI prefarly Illastnaddi afttates afTssyst aid 11- alarastsa; so las drasaptaass, astqadiaallf age papas+ mamma of ltd papers dpsa $ sablesssossda Usi susaaaloal pastnassadds ad sag sp. sad epos carsonl - Soldss, to zloty sad tatemix of to sissefdlrdassad Der psyboonto-to vddik 'assails*. sad ma asallarld aimed. Ir:S: roe moodily 00041100 811.!4. Ilia olosotois op= Ishleb too put oboe of the itsyskino boo dopooded .tin esottoostollo Ib you. tog saufactartastsc sad Us validdsla /1 sla ssaddaat that dials lassalund atititille to CM moats of dm reslasa datatO Sll7 IM MO - • s to oshasoo ores tto !Moon posolontY• aAarrivd Ye62LOL cl.sufas dois tits sa tad Istadrat Dos attt. laisfalliattf aIOsISS _ Wallas ptylodbul lanai a tot 111104 lad coaa, Dees tas malt lima , IS ' S* Mead di 1. Pabllsaars OW walla theptti trus Power • .1.1 us toga eattessid b agar Wad. Tim Pladlshars ded tassaaaser daellidlad israsaad wielding far Os faiscraa aattfaas pan of ass two, 1116 tar bad aassraad Y taafscautrialsata Ida Psd• tdddad ItakfistrodtharatanalThotesMls. TEM FOll ilatPES ' NAGA= WINELY aul UM, marvels k1u17.1211, Onsiesr.4l.4 umumais warn.y. one Yam.. 41.", *Lamm isszku, iopip satsresro itae.zros. natriail gm , I.lr, and IliZll, to me Ca *as rut. 1110.00; at say We ter Mee; avAr to either et nerfeler , !Medial, tarahned boarcksilesusteetes, the dearer MO tar leeezDellarth EMT HARPER k, NEW YORK. HOLIDAY BOOST, CHRISTiKAS PROEMS! ras LARGICIT AND awe 11/31:MXIM V. Elk OLVIIII it OD, DilOorO earms. Mule Illustrated Week' sioe anew , Testes' ate sae .firma. Bowes . 11 tutu- Toyiteett, Sawa esti Mae& Pleia end reset Ittettosets. Diu et, Foetal Beam sea Mew emma:SD add Ma Iskitsres. PlencenA Meese- Cbei Yes es d Bowls. Us Welt Patelesticem • - Please Wiese Monis& uar LIMBS OR GERM Damara a *pianism far air HOLIDAY. carT. Weald exutelap ts sad ma.vAle7 of WaTaIII/a4,in.wi.A.iLliria sad &w -it= wawa taelmost di.rinalsliasSualS4o4 w. G. 3)I7NSEA.TIIII, awsLikasa,omour., L ' ininst Aux"=. . 11 2 112L . 11,410 W 1 W • 411U14/ 1 x • . --zat
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers