The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, January 08, 1870, Image 1

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    THE DAILY; WRITE
roman= sr
RKKD a co,
office, 84 and 86 Fifth Avenue.
raga' via
11. ILERD,
P. B. PEINDLU6
I. P. HOTIBTOI,
IDITOns AND raoriseross.
PkMU 0? THAI DAILY.
elletredby c.;,rderi,
17 malloaer yeLr ...... .......
its latstrao GairttL
Pm:mimic at Antwerp 60}r.
U. S. Bonne at Frankfort, 91i
Goin clonal In New York yestenlay
at 122;5,1
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF COUNCIL!.
Yeeterday afternoon the Republican
members of the Councils of the city of
Pittsburgh met in caucus at their cham
bers, and on the first ballot • put, the Gs.
aurain nomination for the position of
official organ of Sim ' For this
mark of esteem and confidence we beg
leave to tender to those gentlemen our
cordial _thanks, and mole especially to
those who took an active part in bringing
about ibis stratifying result. '
W EBBTERIABA.
Ip Curtis' Woof Webster, we And the
following interesting statements: •
!Durink.the moat excltinrperiod of the
debate of 11324, on the tarifkand while
Mr. Webster wu himself speaking in
theMonse on that •subject, be wu sod
denly called upon to prepare for the ar
gnment of the cue of Gal,asa a. Optsn
in the Supreme Court, involebig
the constitutional valtditillsof the laws
of New York. which had granted to
Fulton and Livingston the exellaslve
navigation of all the waters within the
jurisdiction of that state, by vessels im
pelled by steam. The circumstances at.
tending hilt summons into court in this
cause, which was at the Ume quite
.imex.
pechd, are thus detailed:
'in the spring or 1824. Mr. Webster
Was much concerned in the discussan
then goingen in the Rom of Represent
atives at Washington, upon the
One morning he rose very early—earlier
even than was his enaken—to prepare
himself to speak upon IL From long be.
fore daylight till the hour when the Howe
met, he was busy with his brief: When
be was far advanced In 'peaking, a note
'was 'brought to him from the Supreme
Court, informing him that the great cue
of Gibbons es. Ogden would be called on
for argument the next morning. Be was
astounded at the intelligence, for he had
auppoied that •after the tariff question
should have been disposed of, he would
still have len days to prepare himself for
this formhiable conflict In which the
constitutionality of the laws of New
- York, granting a steamboat monopoly of
Sts thie.waters, would be decided. He
brought his speech on the tariff to a con
clusion as speedily as he could and hurried
home to make such preparation for the
great law argument as the shortness of the
notice __would permit. He had then
taken no food since his morning's break
fast—but instead of dining be took a
moderate dose of medicine and went to
bed, and to sleep. ft. ten r. at. he awoke,
called for a bowl ot tea, and without
other refrthhment went immediately to •
work.' To use his cpwn phrase, 'the tapes
had. not been off the papers for more than
a year.' Ho worked all night, and, as lie
has told me more than once, he thought
lie never op' any occasion had so com•
pletely the free use cf ail his faculties.
He hardly felt that he had bodily organs,
so entirely bad his fasting . and the meth •
cine done their work. At nine A. at.,
after eleven hours of continuous intellec
tual effort, his brief was completed. He
sent for the barber and was shaved; he
took a very slight break fast of tea -and
crackers; he looked averhis papal to see
that they were all in order, and tied
'them up—he * read the morning jour
nals, to ammo and change his thoughts,
and then he went into court, and made
that grand argument which, as Judge
Wayne said, above twenty years after
ward, 'retuned every creek and river
every lake and harbor in our country
from the interferenhe of monopolies .
Whatever be may bllve thought of his
powers on)he preceding night, the can't
and the bar acknowledged their whole
force that day. And yet, at the and of
Ave hours, when he ceased speaking, be
could hardly be said to have taken what
would amount to half the refreshments of
a common meal, for above two-and-thirty
hours, and, out of the lhirty-six hours
immediately preceding, he had for thirty.
one been a state of very high Intellec
tual excitement and activity."
• It was Buckminister who first aides" ,
orcd to overcome in the pupil a native
difildence, which will 'stout& any read
er, who now learns, for the first time,
that Daniel Webster could not, when a
boy, make a school deshemation. This
fact, which would scarcely be credlled
on any other testimony than his own,
was recorded by him In his autobiography
thus. •
"I believe I made tolerable progress
in most branches which I attended to
while in this school; but there was one
thing I could not do—l could not make a
defamation. I could-not speak before
tho school. The kind and excellent '
Buckminister sought, especially to per-'
suede me to perform the exercise of deo
lamation like other boys, but I could not
do it. ifil - Cy a piece did I commit to
memory, and recite and rehearse in my
own room over and over again, yet,
when the day came, when the school
collected to hear declamations, when my
name was called, and I saw all eyes turn
' • ed to my seat, I could not raise myself
from it. Sometimes the instructors
C frowned, sometimes they smiled. Mr:
Dnekminisier always pressed and entreat
ed, most winningly, that I would venture, 1
but I could never command sufficient
resolution. When the occasion was over, 1
I went home, and wept bitter tears of
mortification.'
I
Now TIIAT Mr. Mackey has received In
addition to the endorsement of the Mk.
ishisny County Republican Executive
Committee, the approval of the Republi•
ow Legislative Caucus, we trust that the
Imereial will mei, Its fierce invectives
egainst bast gentleman's public character.
A. regard for tbn interests of the party It
claim to represent should certainly sug
gest each s amuse. So fangs Mr. Mackey
fa concerned, the Commercial's opposition
hes been s positive benefit. The public
also have derived at least one advantage
from the Commercial's crusade against
the official career of the State Treasurer.
They have discovered that the Journal In
question Is comparatively powerless in
its Influence upon public opinion.
It is a broken down back, indoor only
-wangler is that the Republican party has
. not long since spewed it out of Its month.
- The announcement in this morning's
Commercial that Mackey will be placed
on probation, will doubtless provoke
xnany o moths. The Commerciare proba
tionary list Is bad enough, and Heaven
deliver any one from being admitted- Into
- membership.—Earning Nail.
IN St. Petersburg the practice of mak-.
lug N:314 Year's calls is very rigidly fol.
lowed, but there is a way in which one
may avoid it, and at the same time hold
his position in society. He has only to
give five Pr ten roubles to some recog.
Mud public charity, and have the dons,
tion acknowledgment in the papers on
New Year's morning. Ha may then stay
at home a; his cue. and his. friends will
take no offense. Every New Year's day
the St Petersburg pspen contain twc or
three columns of the .names of persons
who have Um exempted themselves from
the demands of society. Those who
hold receptions check off their acquaint
ances of theta lists, and everybody is
satisfied. The ladles are saved the trou
ble of receiving calls, and the gentlemen
that of making them.
VIE friends of Attorney General Hoar
o n lg oe,
that he will indat upon a rote
o Cage to the Bens, and if rejected
will reualn in the Cabinet; that toe six
weeks he refused to allow his name to be
used In coneecOon with ate Judgedop.
and only iloally consented at the urgent
peraenal request of the Pecoldent; and the
mica d to confirm Is en attack upon the
President, which, if peastated in, will
• lead to a rupture between him and the
;Henators who vote to reject him.
I • - It
I- '
..==4
,
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A J..
VOL. LXXXV
FIRST EDITION.
XIDXIGHT.
HARRISBURG.
,nnsylvania Legislabm.
SENATE: Ten Thousand Copies
of Goternor's Message - Ordered
—lnvestigation as to the Dis
, position of Public Moneys and
Bonds—Property Rights of
Married Women—The, Death
Penalty' APpropAations•
Charitable Institutions—Asy
lum for Inebriates—lnvestiga
tion of Allegations Against the
Pennsylumia Railroad—The
Contested Elation In Thenti
eth District.
imperial Dispatch to the Pittsburgh 0 sztate. )
H►RBICBIIBO, Jan. 7, 1070.
, SENATE.
The following resolutions were offered
by the gentlemen indicated, and all
passed without Opposition :
By Mr. OSTERHOUT: For five thou
sand copies of-the Governor's message
fOr each House.
By Mr. OLMNISAIit Flxing Thurs.
day next for dies Joint COnvention to
count the Gubernatorial returns.
By Mr. LOWRY: Referring that part
of the Governcir's message relating to the
State Treasury to the Finance Commit
tee, with power of inquiry and authority
to swear the piste Treasurer and other
State officlabt, as to the disposition of
public moneys and bonds.
By Mr. LOWRY: Instructing the
Judiciary Committee to report on the ex
pediency of giving married women all
the property rights of husbands.
By Mr. LOWRY: Instructing the
Judiciary Committee to report on the
expediency of abolishing the devath,pen
ally in Pennsylvania.
By Mr. RUYAN: Referring that part
of the Governor's" message relating to
the recelvel of State appropriations, by
'genteel' charitable institutions without
security.
By Mr. ELENSZEY: Requesting the
' Board of Public Charities to report to
the next Legislature the expediency of
'establishing an Asylum for Inebriates.
By Mr. HOWARD: . Instructing the
Committee authorized by Mr. Lowry's
resolution, to inquire Into the State
Treasury, to push the investigation Into
the Practice of the State Treisnrer for
three years past respecting the use of
bonds and State funds.
Mr. LOWRY warmly supported this,
asserting that the Governor had made no
rash allegations, and We Inuit know if
our hands are need in ill :speculations,
Erie stocks or in the New York gold,
_ .
By Mr. RUTAN: Authorizing the ap.
pointment of a Committee of three to in
quire Into the allegations that the Penn
sylvania ißaliroad Company had nor--
ruPtiY procured legislation for its benefit
and Interfered with haluence In the eke.
Bona by either Home, with power to
send for persons and papers.
By Mr.! ,BROWN: Authorizing tho
purchase of one copy of Pardon's Digest
and Ziegler's Manual for each Senator.
BONETIZET CONTENTED ELECTION.
Mr. WHITE, from the Committee on
the Someriet election case, reported de
claring the prima facie right of Mr. Scull_
to a seat, without prejudicing the right
of Mr. Findley to contest the same.
Pending the discussion of the report,.
adjourned till four o'clock Tuesday.
LOUISIANA.
Ppeelal Message or Governor Warmouth
—Grave Charge Against a Public 001—
cial—Maton Rouge and Vletaburg
Railroad—Repeal of Gambling Laws—
Legislative Business.
(ay Teteem* to the Pitts'harsh Bette.)
Naw Osrswxr, January7.-4ov.
mouth' yesterday sent a special message
to the Legislature, begionlng-: "It
comes my duty to communicate to your
honorable body a grave charge again"
Geo. H. Wyckliff, Auditor of Peddle
A.0031111t11. His offenses against the Con
stitution and laws or the State have
seriously embarrassed the Government,
and rendered it difficult to pay the in
terest on the State bonds. He has been
guilty of numerous acts, involving ex
tortion against . individuals - and against
charitable Institutions of the State; also
involving frauds against the Commie*.
wealth, and collusion with evil disposed
persons to defraud the same. ctc. He
has extorted sums of money from the
creditors of the State, as a condition pre
cedent to the issuance to them of the on
(lndices of ludebtedness, or warrants to
which they wore entitled by law." The ,
Governor goes on to state a number of
cases in which he charges the Auditor
with malfeasance. &c. The message was
referred.
The message to the Legislature con
gratulates them upon the Improved con-
anion of affairs and the good feeling
existing between the people of both'
races. It takes a cheerful view of the
political situation, arid speaks of the
general prosperity or the State. After a'
mama of the material wealth of trie'
State, the Governor says • there is no
need, so far as her ability la concerned,
that her bonds should sell for tea
than their par value. He says that credit i
does not depend alone upon citi e s th at
veiny of the puttee or securities that are
upon the market, or upon the sufficiency
of the arrangements to pay the principal
end Interest as they
- accrue. Both must
be provided for amply, In amount and
surety. In method, a wise use of the
State credit, sustained by faithful °Eileen
is all that is necessary in the present
premises. He attributes the condition
of the bonds to desperate legisla
tion and the • maladministration of
the Auditor of Public Accounts.- Op
the subject of levees, he advises
the ceepsration of the States of
Arkamos, Misstisippl • and Louisiana,
and the general government for the as.
easement of special taxes for levee pur
poses, and favors the encouragementof
the great works of internal imprOve.
meet, public education and immigration.
Hs believes the New Orleans, Mobile
and Chattanooga Railroad, and also the
Ship Island Oanal, will be completed aa
an early day, and recommends the im
mediate repeal of the licensed gambling
law.
Nsw ORLICANII. Jan. 7.—The Baton
Rouge and Vicksburg Railroad Company
was organised yesterday by electing a
Board of Directors, Thomas' - C. Bates
as President, and George W. Cochrane
as Vice President and General Superin.
tendent.
In the Bats Legislature yesterday a
bill repealing the gambling laws was
pawed to attar* raiding. •
A joint resolution was Introduced ap•
pointing a committee to entiertain what
legislation Ii necessary for the relief of
holders of property included In the
clamant Myra Clark . Gaines.
A 10101 root adieu was passed to soixind
reading requesting the Federal Congress
to recognise the belligerent rights of
Cuba.
Naval Dail at Annapolis.
By Telesis°a to the Pittsburgh Gasettr.l
ATIDATOMII, MD., January 7.—The an.
meal ball of the first class of naval cadets
took plane thla evening at old Fort Sev
ern. Among the dlstingulatied persona
prelent wane the Secretary of the Mays
Admiral Porter. boater Drake, Com
mander Worden and the Rllllllllll
NEW YORK CITY. -
The Susquehmana Railroad War
Renewe&--Fanic Among For- .
alp noldera of American Rail
road' Securities—Arrest Sectiritien—Arrest for Al
i. ed Fmnd. _
lily Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Rexene.)
New Tong, January 7, 1570.
RAILROAD WAIL RENEWED.
Tho Albany t Susquehanna Railroad
has broken out emelt, the parties to the
suit whose interests were Injuriously
affected by thi 'l4 . )4tut decisions of Judge
Smith having given notice that they
will move attne special term of the Sit.'
prate Qirt, to be, held at • Albion,
Ceenne county, on the 3d Monday of
. January, to set aside all proceedings
upon
. the judgment of Judge Smith,
and to require Robert L. Banks,
the . receiver, to re-take pos.
sessloit .!of ;the property. The- chief
grounds for the motion ere that thb judg
ment is not a final determination of the
' right of parties in the action; that the
action was entered without due notice to
any of the . parties adversely interested,
and that bye judgment falls to.determtne
the validity of. 9500 shares of stook sub
scribed by Ramsey and others In August,
1860, as also those who were stockhold
ers, entitled to vote. at the election of
September lastonid the validity of the
contracts Made with Groesbeck & Co. for
2400 shares of stock.
The papers were served to-day. The
affidavits are numerous and lengthy.
Among them is one from Jno. H. Martin ,
dale, who charges that the action of Judge
Smith, in refusing, notwithstanding his
promise to the contrary, to, afford the
attorneys of 'the Church (Dreamer oppor
tunity to be beard on settling
the Nets', 'aid his actual settlement
of facts 'with the aid of Mr. Moak. one of
the counsel of the Ramsey directors,
prejudiced the parties represented by
him in the same degree as though such
tiction had been prompted by a theirs to
deceive and, mislead. There are also
affidavits. tartifting, to the service of
orders staying proceedings under the
judgment issued by a Justice of the Su
preme Court.
AMERICA) , RAILROAD alietritlTlElE
A member:of the British
. Parliament,
Daniel Chadwick, addressed the Cham
ber of Commerce yesterday. He comes
to this country as the representative of
British capitalists Interested In Ameri
can railroad interests. He said the
foreign shareholders were under a panic
In regard to their American investments.
They are frightened at injections and
contradictory jurisdiction. He believed
If there there was steadiness in our
railroad management, many English
capitalists would gladly invest here
largely. He had seen the President,
several leading Senators and Governor
' Hoffman, and his suggestion was that
where I leading railroad passes through
several States the Federal and not ,the
State Courts should have jurisdiction.
ALLEGED PEATID.
Yesterday afternoon Benj.. F. Sawyer,.
Mayor of Hudson City, Samuel Rapes
and J. J. Bowman, were arraigned be
fore Justice Leftwich, charged by C. W.
'Campbell, • ,Wall street broker, with
having by fraudulent representations
obtained his signature to papers which
they stated. were merely forms which
would enable them to effect a loan of
sso,coo upon 1115.000 North Carolina
Railroad bonds. Campbell says he did
not reel the papers, trusting to the men.
Ile has shim learned they were hot what
they wereirepresented.
_-• ' '
PACIFIC COAST.
The. Telegraphers' strike The Press
Approve the Course of the Manage
ment—Judicial Appstritiseet.
(IrzTOiegispo '4114 Mtatenror 0 liasatte •)
SAN Fluzgaimco, January 7.—The tele
graphers' strike continues without re
larding the btudness of the company.
The Alla California approves the pod
tion of the management on this .ceast.
The Ihtlielin, after -publishing the stste
ments of both sides. closes g long edito
rial as follows: "We cannot believe the
Eastern operators were correctly inform
ed of the slight cause for the strike in
San Francisco before taking the steps
which three Ws neoessitrepon the com
pany of maintaining its position at all
hazards."
tiov. Haight bas appointed Jackson
Temple of this city Judge of the Su
preme QOlll% TIM Sanderson, resigned.
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
—The remainder of the Spanish
boata sailed from New York quarantine
yesterday.
—The Rawllna Fun Stanton ew York has
reached 350.000. The Fund now
amounts to P 6,000.
.-.The weather was Intensely cold .it
Montreal yesterday, and the river almost
entirely frozen over.
—Seventeen fatal awe of small-pox,
mostly young children, were reported in
New -York during the past week.
—The majority for Jno. Johnson, Dem
ocratic candidate for Mayor of Marini:de,
to thin:en hundred and forty.elght.
—ThiGlen'a Falls (N. Y.) National
Bank was entered by burglars yesterday
morning, and the este blown open and
ga,(100 stolen."
=Governor Chamberlain, of Maine, was
Inaugurated on Thursday. The State of
ficers and a large number of chimes
were present on the occasion.
—Judge Wrn. Johnston, of Washing
ton City, delivered a memorial . eddreaa
on E. M. Stanton, last night, at PILS'a
Hall, Cincinnati, under the endplate of
the bar of Hamilton county.
—The citizens of Buffalo, N.Y., yester
day held a meeting to consider the sub
ject of canal reforms. Fifty delegates
were appointed to attend the Canal Con.
vention at Rochester on the 19th inst.
-Logan No. 2.4abot In New York city
a few dayszunoN Wed Thursday night.
With his latest breath he denied that be
war the murderer of Rodgers, and insist
td that he nevetead any knowledge of
the Murder, or he was amqualntexi
with the perpetrator of It. Dunn, the
man who shot Logan, has not been ar
rested. _
—Much excitement prevails at Balt
Lake City, owing to the recent schism
and proposed Congressional legislation
with reference to polygamy. The Xvert
tog
News (Brigham's organ) is particu
larly severe on Cullom's Utah bill,
which - will, It hopes, if carried out, be
resisted. Brigham also delivered one
of his =et vituperative speeches on the
—Daniel Walsh, who was to have been
hung yesterday, at Chicago. for the mur
der of his wife,Rose Walden, had
hie sentence nconnuted by Gov. Palmer
.to. linpristmlnedit; for life. A dispatch
wen received from Springfield Thursday
afternoon telling the officials to prepare
for his execution, ea the Governor would
not Interfere, but about nine o'clock last
night another dispatch was received an-
nouncing the. commutation. -
Tne
quarrel about the settlement of
the Bowne eatetein New - York city; in.
volving 12,000,000, was before Judge
Cardoso on Thursday, on a motion to
continue . the receivership. Mu
bath Rodman-Bowne, a young lady of
twenty-four summers, who was hepatic!-
, ary under the will, charges that she was
dedranded out of 12110.000 by the fah*
representations of General - ELB. Dur
yea, one of the trustees,
and that the
trustees have Inhonanaged the estate.
Counter charges are made, and another
beneficiary, :fdr. . Balntlel B Duryea,
amnia that be was done out of 550,0u0 in
the division by the craftiness of his ,
young lady cousin. •
—Governor Bowie, of Maryland, In Me
menage to the Legislature, pats the net
funded debt of the State at 112. 692 . 03 & 0 &
Alen offset the State holds stocks and
bonds on which' dividends and interest
are received to tbe , amount of FAS,-
41 8 - 22 , leaving an actual debt of $5,404,-
525.51. The message opposes mixed
sc co l o red suggests thitt tame received_
from tax payers for school pur
poses be devoted to the education of
colored chltdren, and
to
educational
(Rennie!. be extended to Mum by the
State. The enemas, le of g
to reat lengt,
and Is confined principally State mat
ters. In disorienting Lb eFi noenth Amend.
Mont he contends that the question of
suffrage should be left entirely to the
control of the several States,
PITTSBURGH , SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1870.
SECOND EDITIOX.
FOUR O'CLOCK, 4.. M.
THE CAPITAL.
Unottunped Tobacco in Territories
—Cotton Experiment-r-Seeret
Treaty for the Annexation of
St. Domingo— The Santana
Lease—Seaworlbinw of Mont
tors—Order Concerning Dan
gers—Death of _Gen. Mower.
(Dr 'Telegraph to the ritubereh alsette.)
Wasnis OTOS, D.V., Jan; 7;1870.
SEAWORTMINESS OP MONITORS. .
Admiral Poor, whosn.flagehip Severn
conveyed the monitor Dictator to Rey
West, repartee as the result of hie exp.,
rience that monitors 'should not be sent
to sea unless moderate winds and pleas
ant weather can be relied upon.
COTTON EXPRIUMENT. •
.
-COMEIIIII4OT .
it of the U. S. ship
Jamestown writes to the Navy Depart
ment front Mugu's° Island, Sept. Seth,
that an attempt is going to be made by •
company .of Englishmen to grow ask
Island cotton on Wookeva and‘
greet of several thousand awes of land
has been made by the French Govern
ment to certain French citizens in Ta.
hitt, • who temporarily vacated their
claims to the English.
ONsTAmPED TOnACCO.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue
has sent Instructions to the Superliner of
the Division swimming the Indian ter
ritory to eel all tutatamped tobacco"
nunnifactured Rhae. , -Information re
ceived here shows that much leaf tobac
co is taken thither from Arkansas and
other adjacent States and manufactured,
with a 'view to evade Federal taxation,
or it is thought that neutral land is ex
empt
empiby treaty front. buetion: The .th
ternal Revenue law of ' dongreda, how
ever, refers to all the territories. The
tobacco which may. be seised wlll, Ce
brought into Arkaneaa where the oonrts
will mettle the question of jurisdiction.
It is not designed to setae factories, but
only manufactured baba= on which tax
has not been paid.
IST. DOMINGO ANNEXATION.
There is notloubt !hit the President
will send to the Senate, probably on
Monday, • secret message with a treaty
(with° annexation of St. Domingo. The.
surd of one and a half million dol
lars in prop:mkt
ng to he ent be given re for e Re
public, this bei ti expense of
the transaction. The country is to be
annexed as a territory and not as a State,
CONCURRING GAUGERS.
It is proposed - at the Intern Revenue
Bureau to issue theta: al
Intl ons to Supin
e-Mors, requiring them to change .the
xenolith the various distillery districts
once every three months. This It is
thought will aid very materially the
proper prosecution of public business.
tiIt.N.WOWER DEAD.
The War Department has received
telegram from New Orleans, announcing
the death by congestion of the lungs of
Breiet Major General . J. A. Mower, com
manding the Department of Lonislina.
Tux warts* tams&
It Is understood that 1160,000 have al-
ready been paid fur the lease of Samans,
net which the United States now have
lurtaalotion. •
MINNESOTA
The UV"latere—Mmwsge of Gov. Mar.
shalt—lnauguration of Gov. Austin—
His Inaugural Address. - o
(By Telegraph In the IlttAburgh GAA<UA)
CHICAGO, January 7.—Both /IMMO of
the Legislature' of Minnesota met in
the Senate Chamber to-day. A lime
crowd of was In attendance.
Gov. Marshall delivered his sundal
message. He recommend,' that Aye
hundred acres of Internal improvement
land be appropriated to pay old rail
road bonds. lie says there has beenrea
son to apprehend that the hostile . Sioux
would bo incited to war, endangering the
settlements on the American side of the
line, and be has communicated with the
General Government and the military
authorities on the sj ect. he recog
nized funded debt Of ub the State Is three
hundred and fifty thousand' dollars.
After the message was delivered the
new State officers _were sworn in, and
Governor AusUn delivered his inaugural
address: The Governor says on Janu
ary Ist, 18d7, there were only three bun.'
dred and Armin miles of railroad in the
State. Now there are seven hundred, '
and eighty-three miles completed. He
recommends that 'nye - hundred thou
sand 11.71111 of Internal Improvement tenth'
be used to liquidate the old railroad
bonds; but if this Is not done, that an
amendment to the Constitution be sub
mitted to the people, providing that
the lands be disposed of for no purpose
without a direct vote of the people. Ow
ing to the probability of the . Sioux out,
break, arising from the Winnipeg trou
ble, hs recommends that the Legislature
ask the General Government to station
end maintain a military force in the
vicinity of Pembina to protect the settle
ments..
NEW HAMPSHIRE.
Sepia. Sean State Canventtou—senoint
c natant of Governor ntearnesolta.
Sons.
MI Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Elasette.)
CONCORD, January 7.—The Republican
State Convention re.nominsted Governor
SWAPO& by acclamation. A:oommunics
,
tion was received from the Governor de.
alining on account of ill health. A. com
mittee was appointed to request a with
drawal of the declination, who were
successful. Charles P: Gage was pond ,
noted for Railroad Commisaioner.
Resolutions were adopted approving
the course of the Administration; favor.,
ing the abolition of the franking privi,'
lege; urging that the nominal restoration
of the former relations of any State to
the Union' acoomplished by fraud and
in violation of conditions of restoration,
is null and void, as in the case- of Gear•
gin, that Congress is bound to enforce
conditions of reconstruction and
maintain the Republican form of gov
ernment; denotinciog the action of the
New York Legislature in rescinding the
R
of the Fifteenth amendment
as blow aimed at universal suffrage;
commenting on the participellion;ohail
ation f the
Democratic party In the reb
ing the revival of temperance in the
State as an omen of good; pledging sup
port to the industrial classes, and expres
ing regret at the death of Secretary
Stanton.
TENNESSEE.
Legbriatire Proceedings—Bank Snit.
tar remark to tea Pittsburgh Ussettel
NASEIVILLE, • January 7.—The Senate
was noun sesidon today.
The Rome passed an hour reading the
bill authorising tax collectors to receive
In payment of taxes notes of the • genic
of Tennessee Issued prior to they tat of
May, 1881, and' checks for money do
posited in said bank.
Resolutions requesting, the,Tettnealsee
Senators d Representatives In Con.
gross to ai din regulating the mail per-
Vies In this [Rate was adopted. • •
A bill to enable -the Cincinnati, Cum- ,
berland Gap and 'Charleston Railroad
Company to With their Yoad to Paint
Rock passed second reading.
In the Supreme Court today the case
of Ward, Donnegal and others &garnet
the Exchange Sank of Murfreesboro, In.
volvinif a large amount of money, was
taken up. The bank was established
under the free banking system ha no
ncom° and failed. The suit is to recover
Mate brads demented with the Comp•
troller to redeem Its eirculationi
MISSOURL
The Leg!.!attire litatltles the XVIII
emetic:Meet.
(By TeltyrYDP to 4110 PILLAR/OMb tilyatte
ST. Louts, January 7.—Tho Idlesourt
Leighloitlre retitled the .KN'th Amend
ment to day. The vote of the Senate wait
22 to 3: of the Honse, 86 to 34.
The House adopted a resolottou asking
members of Coogretiul to gestalt:a the
In regard to graduated lands. •
NEWS BY 43ABLE.
Governor of New York Held Re.
sponsible for Frand—iraßtowe
and ,Har Byron Slory—Trigo
nometrical Survey of Great
Britain Fend of Epiphany
at. Hadrid—Bietatinahip Idea
in Spain Abandoned—Election
Disturbances—France Amman
. ces a Pacific Polley.
==;=
GREAT BRITAIN
LONDON, January 7.—l Ear Curtis Lamp
son 'has written a letter to the Timm
tidlettling the anti.rePudlation declara
tion WM, annual message of the Gover
nor of tat State of New York. He takes
°mutton Ito remind Governor Hoffman
thatthit It is owing to his action that Fisk
bag control - of the Erie Railroad, and
therefore he 1a responsible for that fraud:
The Pail Nall Gazette . to-day has an
article animadverting severely on Mrs.
Stowe's defence of her "True Story of
Lord Byron's Life."
The trinometrical survey of - the
United Kin go gdom, commenced by Gee.
Roy In 17133, ended title week witle,the
completion of the surreys in Scotland.
=I
MADRID, Jan. 7.—On comodon of the
Feast of Epiphany, yesterday, the Coffee
prOmmied in a body to the Royal Palace
and were received by lewd Baffin°.
Senor Riveras, President of the Cortes,
Made en fiddliest° the Regent. in which
he declared; In the camel of all deputies,
that through unity of action alone could
the victorious revolution be compl eted.
The La rOiiiiCa nays ell Idea o a Dio.
tatorship bee been abandoned.
The Ministers refuse to withdraw their
resignations unless a programme of pol
icy Udell:Moly formed. • •
Election disturbances are reported in
Alicante, Alooy, Hama, and other
points. This city is tranquiL •
FRANCE.
PA8.114, January 7. -.Count D'Arn,
'Minister of Foreign Affairs. has 'Adroit*.
ed a circular to the diplomatic represen
tatives of France at foreign co u rts, an
nouncing that the policy of the French
government will be absolutely pacific.
The Senate was in session today. • M.
011ivier and Count D'Arn„ the new
liters. were were present. Count D'Arn says
the Government would be ready to open
the discussion on the Ecumenical Coun
cil and the relations of France with the
Holy See on the 11th, on commercial
questions on the 13th, and on the domes
tic policy of the empire do the 15th.
CUBA.
HAVANA, JIIIIUIII7 7,41:111 following
==l
The schooner .left Noway on
the 17th of Deoemßlirhaving cleared
for Puerto Plata with a cargo of arms
and &communion. On the 18111 the
schooner Tweed sailed for Jac.ksonville,
having on board sixty Cubans. On the
19th, at sea, the Tweed transferred the
Cubans to the Violin. The British gun
boat lapwing was water the transfer,
and alter it was acoom hed took both
schooners In tow and brought them
back to Nassau.
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
Lennox, January I.—Evesinp.—Con•
sole for money an sa t 9111 CL Ame
rican securitleiratilt
86 % 'Ms. 85%; ten.forties. 84a;: Erie'
17%; Illinois -Central 10.% Atlantic a
Great Western W 4;
PARIS. January 7.—Bourae firmer at
14f 15c.
LITURPOOD, January 7.—Ootton; sales
o s f p ethce week
8 68.00 e balsa: expor
te9,ooo;
31,00 ula mock anw,2 ok ooo ,2 w Am * r B4-
000 la American; market to-day quiet
and steady; upland 11344; Orleans 1l%d;
sales 11,000 bales. Yarns and Fabric. at
Manchester quiet. Wheat; receipts for
three dayia 20,000 quarters, of which
16,000 are American. California :whits
41t791; bd; western winter Ns 94@8r
10d. Flour 221. Corn; No. 2 txdxed2Bs
Bd. Oats 24 9d. Barley ss. Pew 85e.
Pork 105 s. Beef 102 a. Cheese 69a 6d.
Baboon. ela 6d. Tallow 44s lid. Turpen
tine 29s 64. Linaeed Oil £3l tendlon.
Tallow dull at 465 Od. Sugar 405. Cal
cutta Linseed £5B.
HAvrot ' January 7.—Ootton quiet at
'lB7fafloat.
ANTRIM?, January 7.—Petroleum
60341.
At Bremea and Hamburg quiet and
unchanged.
7, Nuarticvour, January 7. Bonds
opened at 91;qr.
UTAH.
Preparatns to Celebrate the Couple.
Con of io the Central Railroad at Balt.
I=
tar Tommie to the PlUsborse ease:tea
Save Lane MIT, January B.—At a
meeting of the City Conseil last night a
Committee was , appointed to make ar
rangements to oelebrate the completion
of the 'Utah Central Railroad. The track
will be finished to the depot grounds on
Saturday night, but the last rail will not
be laid until Monday, and the celebra
tion will take place on that day, oonahn.
la gof a parade of the fire commies,
=flutes. raising of flags throughout the
city, and the asseußilina of the citizens
at the depot to see the last rail laid and
the driving of the hat spike, with much
oeremony. In the evening, there will be
bonfires, fire works. illumination of the
atoms and public buildings, and a grand
complimentary ba ll ot the theatre, gotten
up for the invited guests by_ the -Presi
dent and Directors of theroad.
The DoserstNeses says othe completion
of this road will greatly facilitate an
Increase of oar internal and commercial
relations, and will also draw our matron-
oils into closer relations with the oat/tide
, world and bring thousands of intelligent
reflecting minds In close relations with
us and our system, and help break down
the ignorance, and prejudice abounding
concerning the people nue." •
ST. LOUp.
The • Railroad Litirgi&ori—Cotton Raft
Decided
CBI idemens to is. mamma Ossetia.]
BT. Loma, January . 7.—The Missouri
Boffin Railroad Company flied In the
Circuit Court to-day an answer to the
petition for an intheothni to restrain that
company from operating the Miaow'
River and the Leavenwortb k Ate:S
maSad North Western
de in Ra n a. The answerde
nies generally the allegations of
the petition, and states the original
charter of the company contemplated '
the extension of the rand to the Psollic.
Negotiations are now pending for a rie
newel of leases of the Hansaa roads, and
the meeoy. calm committees appointed
oy the companies interested will be beld
at Jefferson City on Tuesday to adjust
the difficulty.
A suit in the Circuit Court tads',
brought by Mrs. Ames, administrant'
Henryet Ames, against Lewis Benson
Co, - ; of thls city, for any-nine thou
sand dollars, alleod to have leonine& by
neglect of defendants to sell nine hun
dred and twenty bales of cotton when
instructed so to do In hied, was decided
in favor of defendants, they proving the
cotton could not be sold arthe ruling
rates in oonsequenoe of its bad rendition
and poor quality. •
KENTUCKY.
Charter Asked for the Cincinnati and
Chattasoogs litairewl—Ceat Barge
Lest..
Mr 'Alaimo to the Fineman nuetto.i
Lounrcua , n, Jan. 7.—A memorial from
kills Greenwood and ether citizens of
Cin•innati, asking for a charter for the
Cincinnati and Chattanooga - Railroad,
was presented in n a tio n tky JR,
use
today. The Pres of the memo.
rial wu fllowed by • bill grentinir •
charter t o o the road, which Was ordered
minted and referred to the Committee on
Rail road s.
A oosi barge. rained at 13,900, was lost
to-day b=rilting the damat the head
Of the
MEXICO.
Itivolutlinibi Man Lula Potost—The Lee
islaters -Arrested— bettors by the Gov
ernmest—Ex-Secretary eAtteard.
(01 Telegraph to the Pittsburgh earstwo
Ciry OP ;MExico,Jantultry I, rig. Ha
rang, January 7.—General Aguerre. at
the head of some troops of the 3d dills.
4m, has made prisoners of the Governor
and a majority of the members of the
Legislature of San Lola Potosi,
and has called a new election
In that State to fill their places,
On taking possesalon of the cap
ital be made a forced loan of 14, 0 p.
Generale Egnalls and Longo, of the
namedivision9have signed a pronuncia
mento, but it -Is not known whether
they are acting in conjunction
with Aguerre. . Some of the mem
bers of the Legislature of San
Luis Potosi escaped to Metaguato,
where they re-organized, elected Santana
Escandon temporary Governor, and
made application to the Federal Govern
ment -for assistance. On`the 30th ult.
Congress authorized the Governor to
usp 4,000 men of the National Guard to
suppress the revolution. and has ap.
propriated money for the necessary ex
penses.
No further collision is reported at
Puebla. General Alatorre has resigned.
ProUnCiamentos have appeared In Nimes,
Rio Del Norte and Pachuca.
William H. Seward woe at Orizaba. It
is expected he will leave Mexico In the
steamer Cleopatra. which sails from
Vera Cruz on the 10th inst.
Mr. Purbee, an' Englishman was kid
napped, robbed and murdered on the
13th nit at Guanajuato.
INDIANAPOLIS
Democratic Mate. Conventlon—Editorial
Convention—Homicide by a Woman. •
(By Telegraph to the Pittobergh emetic)
/11DIAleATOLIEI, January 7.—The hotels
are crowded with delegates to the Demo-
cratic State Convention which meets
here tomorrow. The contest for Chair-
man of the Convention IP between ax.
Senator Hendricks sad Dr. Fitch. E. S.
&Word, of this city, will . probably be
Chairman of the Central Committee.
The Editorial Convention met again to
day, but transacted very little business
and adjourned.
Wm. Arney was shot and killed at
Wincheiter, Ind., list night by a woman
named Smith. The woman alleges
Arno was attempting to enter her room.
Municipal Row in Newark, N. 4.
[By TOWS;aI to the Pittsburgh Garette. l
NewARK, N. J., January , the'
meeting of the Common Council tanight
there woo an immense crowd, In antic'.
potion of another e ff ort being made to
change the ' city officers.- The Demo
crate, having two majority, nominated a
new list, bat on voting there wan a tie
on each one, the Democratic alderman,
Hagen, voting with the Republicans, and
rhos defeating the resolution. The
Council then adjourned amid intense
excitement, the lobby denouncing Hagen
with cries of "Traitor," and threatening
violence. Hagen withdrew to • private
room, while the crowd shortly die.
appeared.
GENISRAL NEWS.
Timm is a movement on foot to form
an additional county from Westmoreland
and Indiana counties.
Smasvon who has talked with the
President during the last twenty-four
hours, on the subject of a successor to
Mr. Stanton, is of opinion that Judge
Strong, of Pennsylvania, will receive the
appointment.
Tug agent ot the 'United States Express
Company at untingdon, Indiana.
• JAL Lucas, has absconded, tak
ing with him nearly $lO,OOO that hadbeen
delivered to him to be forwarded. Lucas
sustained a good reputation and his con
duct was wholly unexpeetel
'run prospects for the ratification of the
15th Amendment, in Ohio, are brighten
ing. The Batiste has been certain for It
from the first - The House Is the doubt
ful battle ground, but the conviction
grows hourly that the Hamilton county
Republicans wilt not, and conscientiously
can not, assume the responsibility of ar.
raying Ohio permanently Against this
great measure of Justice, necessity and
right..
,
AT a meeting of the stockholders of the
Cleveland tk . Pittsburgh Railway Com
pany, held at Cleveland, the following
Directors for 1870 were elected J. N.
McCullough, Wellsville. G. W. Casa,
Pittsburgh; J. H. Devereaux, [Cleveland;
C. H.. Andrews, Youngstown: Jay
Gould, James Fisk, Jr., Wm. M. Tweed,
Peter B. Sweeney, L. D. Rucker Hugh
Smith, Henry Harley, New York: Thos.
Scott, Philadelphia.
Wnrrrno from Frankfortan-the-]fain,
December lath, a correspondent says : -
"Certain French and English papers
contain a notice of an intended marriage
of Mrs. Abraham Lincoln to a Bade n"
Count, which is one of the basest lies
ever invented and told, and evidently
fabricated to Injure the reputation of the
lady. Since her arrival In Europe—e
short interval exempted—Mrs. Lincoln
has resided in this city in the most quiet,
secluded and unpretending manner. She
occupies a small [apartment in the imme
diate neighborhood of the boarding
school attended by her youngest son,
Tad. She lives In the humblest style,
does not mingle in society, wears mourn.
lug up to the present day, receives no
gentlemen visitors, has never resided in
the Grand Ducky of Baden nor been at
or near the Baden Court, and is entirely
unacquainted with the Count with whom
her name has been associated."
A:Terrlble Cue
JOEfi Tonnxr. of Honesdale, Pa.
Is a man of large estate, and has several
children. About midsummer,
last yrar,
his youngest son, also named John, who
was employed as a clerk for his brother at
Scranton, made his father a visit, the
special object of • which was to prefer a
request to be established in business
This proposition was not favorably enter
tained, and the young man went back to
his occupation. A little time afterwards
ke made his parents another visit. The
morning after his arrival, while the fam
ily—that is, the father,
mother, three
sisters, and John — were seated at break
fast, the mother detected a peculiar bitter
or acrid taste to the coffee, and this before
any other member of the family had par
taken thereof. The result of this discov
ery was that none of the coffee was im
bibed. A chemical analysis disclosed the
presence of a large amount of strychnine
in the sugar. Atter strict interrogation,
John confessed that he put the poison in
the bowl. The culprit was Instantly
pronounced to be insane, and he was
consigned to the Bloomingdale Lunatic
Hospital at New York. It is understood
the physicians of that inetitntion failed to
detect evidences of insanity, and aftei a
little time the young man was taken out
and seat this week on a voyage around
Cape Horn Into the Pacific ocean, in the
hope that the sea would extract from him
his harmful propensities.
Quiet IPravellng
On the 23d of August Jut, Captain
Wm. M. Otis left Brunswick, Me., for
Hong Kong- He passed one day in
New York, and then started by rail for
San Francisco, where he arrived is aev
en days and five hours from New York,
arriving in Ban Francisco - on the night
of the 3lat. At umm of the 4th of Sep.
timber be left that port' the steamer
Japan, for Yokohama, where he rrived
on September 271 h, and left on th a e 29th
for Hong Kong, where he arrived on the
Bth of October. lie spent thirteen day,
In Hong gong and Canton, and left the
former port on the 19th; in the same
steamer, Japan, and arrived at Yokoha
ma on the 28th. Four days were occu
pied In discharging and taking in cargo
and balast, and on November Ist the
steamer sailed for Ban Franchsco, which
port she reached Noviinber 22. On the
23d Captain Otis left an the airs for
home, arriving In Tirunawick December
2 He spent one day in New York upon
his re turn, mul lost two dais by missing
railroad connections. He estimates his
b ure t by water (says the Brunswick Tel.
er ajgo at 13,000 miles, and by mil 7,000
miles. He was traveling in all seventy.
. sem days,
...-w..—.....~n,.....c~xk.:,._-.._'~.i.v..~... S-,h«,t~rSw:~.oeu:SS.a..~::~'..~ - ..a o:i:-...C.,_...{~-.:
OLD LADIES
- - -
The world le notorionsly unjust to its
vetorans, and above all it is unjust to its
ancient females. Everywhere, and from
all time, an old women has been taken to
express the last stage of uselessness and
exhaustion; and while s meeting ot beard.
ed dotards, goes by the name of a corm.
ell of sages, and its.deliberations ,are
respected accordingly, a congregation of
palsied matrons is nothing' but a congre
gation of old women, whose thoughts
and opinions on any subject whatsoever
have no more value than the chattering
of so many magpies. In fact the poor
old ladies have a hard time of it; and if
• we look at it in its,right light, perhaps
nothing proves more thorough the coarse
flavor of the world's esteem respecting
women than this disdain which they ex
cite when they are old. And yet what
charming old ladies one has known at,
times-women quite as charming in - their
own way at seventy as their grand-daugh
ters are at seventeen, and all the
more so because they have no design now
to be charming, because they have given
up the attempt to please for the reaction
of praise, and long since have consented
to become physically old, though they
kayo never drillid into urthersonableness
or neglect. While retaining the intel
lectual vivacity and active sympathies of
maturity, they have added the softness,
the mellowness, the tempering got only
from experience and advancing age;they
are women who hive seen and known
and read a great deal, and who have sup
fared much, but whose sorrows have
neither hardened or soared them-rather
have made them more sympathetic with
the sorrows of others, and pitiful for all
the young. They have lived through and
lived down all their own trials, and have
come out into-peace on the other side;
but 'they remember • the trials of the
fiery passage, and they feel for those
who have still to bear the pressure
of the pain they have overcome.
These are not women much met with in
society; they are of the kind which mostly
stay at home, and let the world come
to them. They have done with the hur
ry and glitter of life, and they no longer
care to carry their tray hairs abroad;
they retain their hold on the affections of
their kind, they take an interest in the
history, the science, the progress of the
day, but they rest tranquil and content
by their own fireside, and they sit to re.
wive, but do not go out to gather. The
fashionable old lady who haunts the
theatres and drawing rooms, bewigged,
befrizzled, painted, ghastly in her vain
attempts to appear young, hideous In her
frenzied clutch at the pleasures melting
from her grasp, desperate in her wild hold
on life that is passing away from her so
rapidly, knowing nothing of the quiet
dignity and happiness of her ancient sis
ter who has been wise enough to renounce
before she lost. In her own house,
where gather a small knot of
men of mind and women of character,
where the young bring their perplexities
and the mature their deeper thoughts,
the dear old lady of -ripe excellence and
loving sympathies and cultivated, intel
lect, hold a better court than is known to
any of these miserable old creatures who
prowl about the gay places of the world,
and wrestle with the young for their
crowns and garlands-those wretched
dtera of womanhood who will not
w old and who cannot become wise.
Site lathe best kind of old lady extant,
answering to tho matron of classic
times-to the Mother in Israel, before
whom the tribes made obeisance in
token of respect • the woman whose
book of life has been well studied and
closely read, and kept clean in all its
,pager - She has been no prude, how
ever, and no mere idealist. She must
have been wife, mother and widow ;
that Is, she must have known many
things of joy and grief, and have the
-sins of life unsealed. However
wise and good she may be, as a spinster
she has had only half a life; and it is the
best half which has been denied her.
How can she tell others, when they come
to her in their troubles. how time and a
healthy life will have wrought with her, if
she has never passed through the same
circumstances ? Theoretic comfort is all
very well, but one word of experience
goes beyond volumes of counsel based on
general principles and a lively imagina
tion. The very dress of old ladies is in
itself a study and a revelation of character.
There are the beautiful old women, who
make themselves like old pictures by a
profusion of soft lace and tender grays;
and the stately old ladles, who affect rich,
minim' silks and sombre velvet; and
there are the original and individual old,
ladies, who dress themselves after
their own kind, like Mrs. Basil
Montagu, - and Miss Jane Porter, and
have a cachet of their own, with which
fashion has nothing to do. And there are
the old women who wear rusty black
stuffs and ugly helmetlike caps ; and
those who affect uniformity and going
with the stream, when the fashion has be
come national; and these have been much
exercised of late with the chignons and
the new bonnets. But Providence is lib
eral, and milliners are fertile in resources.
In fact, in this as In all other sections of
humanity, there are those who are Nau
ru' and wise, and those who are foolish
and unlovely ; those who make the best
of things as they are, and those who make
the went, by treating them as something
they are not; those who extract honey,
and those who find only poison. For in
old age, as in youth, are to be found
beauty, use, grace and value, but in differ•
ent aspects and on another platform alto.
gether ; and the folly is when this differ
ence is not allowed for, or when the poe.
aibilty of these graces is denied and their
utility ignored. • _ _
A Dig Hunt,
A party of Englishmen returned to
Grahamtown, Cape of Good Hope, last •
August, after I hunting expedition of
eighteen months in the Lake Ngami re
gion. They succeeded in bagging eighty.
two elephants, eleven white rhinoceros,
thirty-seven black rhinoceros, six giraffes,
twenty-eight buffaloes, four koodos, nine
oryx, seventeen elands, twenty-one sea
cows, two leopards, ten lops and a host
of smaller. game. Their wagons were
heavily loaded with the tusks, horns,
skins, &c., of these animals. One of the
fft h da d shaoltroy" elrLeAwbommas"Optehers .
;tame, and while dressing it to take it
back to camp his horse ran away. Altai
a long chase the animal was recaptured
and mounted. The rider's subsequent
adventure is thus described: "I reached
the drift and caught a glimpse of my
game, with a lioness and two cubs In
possession, grow"ing fearfully. My horse
had been drtnlt lathe drift as I walked
ro
quietly thng but no sooner did we
reach the side, than, catching the went,
off he started with a mad bound. I man
aged to head him In the right direction,
and turning round, I saw, to, my horror,.
the o ld tidy dose at my heels,
and tearing along like mad. With my
knife I cut the throngs that • held my
koodo relies, and thus lightened, my
horse bounded along more. C - eely. Her
majesty stopped for a second to smell the
skin, but evidently wanting something
more In the French taste (hlppology) she
again gave chase. I held my nag in es
well as I wee able, letting him cone tol
erably close, and then, giving him his
head, gained on her a little. My ride wee
unloaded; but even if it bad been loaded,
I should not have dreamt of firing, u I
should have only enraged her with a
wound . that was not fatal, and what
chance could I have of that when.fteeing
at breakneck pace over ground that was I
rough, stony and in many places con-
ceallog holes of ant-eaters or wild dogs t
I had still four miles to run at least, and
you maybe sure my eyes were strained
to catch a glimmer of a flee in the rapidly ,
declining twilight. At last I saw the
wagon tops over the short shout,nd the
fires bluing, and didn't I and no
mistake," and just as I felt myself secure,
my horse tell with a quivering motion,
and I over his head. I gained tay legs
unhurt, bid my poor horse was dead.
Ilia ovexesertion to save blank or mine
bad cost me dear." •
AT the putry-cook's ball In New York,
last week, a good many of the upper
cruet attended,
NO. 7.
Mrs. Burleigh, in the New Jersey Wo•
man's Suffrage Convention, thus spoke
feelingly and truthfully :
My friends, has it ever occurred to you
what a commentary upon our civilization
are these lost women. and the attitude of
society toward them? A. little child
strays from the home Inclose - re and the
whole community is on the alert to find
the wanderer and restoreit to the mother's
arms. What rejoicings when It Is found,
what tearful sympathy, what heartiness
of congratulation ? There are no harsh
comments upon the poor, tired feet, be
they never so miry, no reprimand for the
"oiled and torn garments, no lack of
kisses for tbe tear stained face. But let
the child be grown to womanhood, let her
be led from the inclosure of morality by
the voice of affection, or driven from it
by the scourge of want—whit happiness
then t Do Christian men and women go
in quest of her ? Do they provide all pos.
Bible help - for her: retUrn, or, if she returns
of her own motion, do they receive her
with such kindness and delicacy as to se•
cure her against wandering' again ? Far
from It. At the first false step sbe is de.
nounced es lost—lost,_ echo friends and
relatives—we disown you; don't ever come
near Its to disgrace us. lost, says society
ledifferently. How bad these girls are ?
And lost—lrretrievably lost—ls the prompt
verdict of conventional morality, while
one and all unite in bolting every' door
between her and respectability. Ah, will
not an account of , these lost ones be re.
(lulled at our hands In the great hereafter.
MONBEIGNBIIII COUBM&II. Bishop of
Angouleme, France, has gone to Rome to
attend the (Ecumenical Council. The
foreign prelates are frequently invited to
take dinner with one of the Cardinals,
and, the other day, Monseigneur Cons
seau found himself In the reception room
of &Cardinal, lathe company of a num
ber of other Bishops, none of whom
wore French. Interrogated concerning
the name of his diocese, he told them in
vain that ho was Bishop of Augoulme,
Bishop of the Chanterg—nobody had
ever heard of them. At last a luminous
ides pained through Monster Coussean's
head. He said :
am Bishop of Cognac I "
"Cognac I" "Cognac repeated in a
chorus the Italian and Spanish Bistipow,
"Ah, that must be &splendid Bishopric!"
"IF you ever think of marrying a
widow, my eon," said an anxious parent
to his heir, "select one whose first hits•
band was hung; that is the only way to
prevent her throwing his memory in your
faze, and making annoying compari
sons." "Even that won't prevent it,"
exclaimed a crusty old bechelor, "she'll
then praise him, and say hanging would
be too good for you."
Itrysiny in trade is shown in the case
of two sausage dealers In Paris, with
shops adjotoing, one of whom has painted
on bls glass window, over a pyramid of
sausages, "AL ten cents a pound; to pay
more is to be robbed;" while the other
pots his sausages into a obelisk, and
paints abode it, "At twelye cents a
pound: to pay less is to be robbed."
Tun opponents to The Legisiaties
Record, propose that a daily Journal of
the proceedings shall be published by the
State printer. They claim that the mem.
hers will be benefited thereby and the
State saved thousands of dollars.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
arREV. EEO. P. HAYS. P 4EI.
TOR, will preach In the CENTRAL
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Allegheny, Mor
log and Is.rentag. nrinlara •st algot— n ll:
UnclPlar."
ar THE FIRST METHODIST
CHURCH, (Railroad titre., near Depot,)
Raw iIitIOUTOR. Pa. S. R. CROWTllll.ll..Pastor.
Rresehing Recur Sannavii, at IUS A. and
7 r. N. Iddle cordially invited.
IgrTRANSUBEITANITIATION.-
Rey. J. G. IVIMI,or 1111bo1s. 1•111
Lecture oa Ws subject ht the ACM,* MY OF
MUM l'olloilltOW (Subdue/ as 11%
o'clock T. U. The public era respectially me
ted to ultetid. beats free. •
1111.18 T EPISCOP AL:
CHURCH, ALLEORENY.— The Lev.
BENJ. V. BitoOKE.ll Church
wl.l officiate at di
vine servleeln thle Church on TO. BORROW at
ha/Bpaet ten o'clock a. Id., and batr- ont. neVen
O'clock r. Y.
a'2ND U. P. culJuca.--un
account of the Illness of Her. Dr. Sloan.
the annual sermon before th at Idles` Missions")
Society of able (lb oreh—annou need for next Bab
bath morning—win be poatponed. No ...arise at
SUS. Colon Pray, Meeting at Va.
REV. WK. M. PAXTON,
P.D.. willpreach (D. V.) In the VIIMr
PRZEDITTIMIAtiI DUCH. corner of Wood
and Ilizth, on !lAD ILATeI MIAMI et*, Januar,
Diti. Hoots of 'melee, 110){ A. fie P. a..
habbith School Sitin P. Y. intension; cortiislly
welcomed. - •
WFIRST CHRISTIAN
CHURCH OF PITTSBURGH,_W,
Gray, P. 0.,. macro @cased!) , lu NENILLT.
HALL, corner of L and Fourth !areas.
acruicoc oven Lord' i berty s Day as ILOX A. M. mad IX
' The public are ourdlally Invited.
•
arrUBLIC LECTURE Al'
the NEW JERUS•LINI catammt. car.
LYof Wood and birth streets. od ISUNDAT
ISNINti. Januar, 9th. lioldett—Tnndnine...
tat Caetences between the Doctrines of the New
Chereb, Itlwedentiorgissi sad those of the so
called unhodni Charches, as pretento4 In the
Doctrine of tee Lord.
rar'IINIVERSAIUST CHlatell,
corner Unlit street and Third Avenue.
Rev. W. N. VAN Dr.%LAN& Muter. Mules
EVuERJTr S UNeDiAY? t
a o uar MI, d Mr. Va
de
M• will deliver the third lettere of the Dow
trl al Series. lintdeet- - Tne Vinare LG."
Beats free and a welcome la ell. • Sunday School
et 9 A. N.
tgr PLYMOUTH CONGREGA
TIONAL CHURCH. Rev. W. T. GlAib•
=WIC, Pastor. Bemees TO MoItROW In ha
ceistor Balk corner of Levock and federal
strrets, at 10% N. Sod Bb. N. Morales
service., Sabbath school annisersars. Andrew.ea
by the Pastor, I , upertntendent sod others.
elneine.by the choir, ilosnett• nodchit . ..*
Subject. of the eventon alsoonr..--"Trltonsh
over etelcultbrs." beats free and nleelecae to
("FIRST CHRISTIAN
MUNICH, comer Bearer street and
Identiromery avenue. Allegbeny CB}, JOSZPH
KlNU,Yestur. Preachlnt TO4IOIIROW.II.ord's
Duo et 30X •• W. and 7 r. r. Battiest of
moraines elmourse—"The Divine Creed."
Matt. 3:17. la the evenlag—"Brools by width
It Is mot Letts eallrely tree and as
th lTr it l. ° Pr. a lt
ching ev ereeng next week
at IS &Mock, by Her. AVM. WAITER. of Ditto.
MRS. STOWE% BOOK.
LADY BYRON 11011410• TED
'A Mem of the Byron Coatratersii. the
beglaolea to the pretest time. Arlin
Bee-her store 01.50
Tr-lila s MIN s HOLY BRAM.
One volese. lthat). ot,h ' WOO
unevoluote, ISmo. paver 516
One volume. 16sao. paves 111
RAPLIZY'S PUTRICAL 1.1116 Or WOMAN.
111.6 u
OUSELLICA RECOLLICTION6 Or A BUOY
11 1 • • I 51.1
OR L IGIN AND DEVELOPN/SNT OF A Rt.
1.16101.16 slcumr. By F. Bar ag Otril , d•
ot ob
fitAitAll.PlTvunT..o, or Yank. fat "
iorm
lITIMMO
B. 13, DAVIS dr. CO.,
uts Liberty Street.
11321:1
OSIERY.
Taney Woolen newts.
Candren'i Vance Woolen natant& .
Children's White W 1.10.1% Cloate.
Chlldren"SWhlta and Taney Woolen-Oslters.
Children's White and I►ne7 Woolen Mittras.
Infants , Woolen llsods, Cape ►ad loot.:
Ladles. and Children'. Underwear.
Gout's. Youth's and loss' Undersalrls ud
Drawer',
AT JADIES pnaLaws
Old Stand Stocking Store
!o. 24 FIFTH AVENIIII.
UPTICK OP ClT_p Z 1101,12 11 PIRO PURPMII. t
llttatraza, Jan: 110. Wow $
•NOTICE.—The assessment toe
Paving and Curbing WYLTZ AO m'
from Cranford atotat to Deanna ., attest, and
Grading Iktaltlltit AVINI3I., from Hobart;
street to ICLOspif lick strut, la non , teall foe
nalintnatloa, and can tot seen at Ills new intll
TIMIDLY. January lith. 1111.nbon "
returned to the City Treuareea aline for *glee.
Hon. H. J. WOOS&
ati
WESTERN DISTRICT OF
Pennsylvania na.
At Pittsburgh, the lU day of January. A.D.
1870.
The undersigned hereby gins akin of Ms an'.
volnonent ea Assignee. of AN1181.0). J. HA'.
GAN. of ?Mahn on. the county of Alleaben.
Cu d
State of Penna., sald own bn been nd yea,. bankrupt a apo els own
panicle, by
JOHNict conn of
BAILILY. Assignee.
Jelhaiha Attarner-at-Law,ll9 Urns street.
THE 1171 MI ammo
I
=I
I=
=:1
Tiaxit
....... et ea
'Cabe.: Iva ..... .....«....
Clair al . . .... 111
• 000 le fanlike& vstaltasen tOOs ism.
pof • 'lab a tea. Inetae&tan an nonaelal
i 0 eet NI Yeats.
Agetram
rsonntstAw, RIMED CO.,
T.:9 O *W t
NEW -
TUP ZAPSST A7/1,111150F
SEW" MAGIAS11111“ POSSMEMII4"
===
=l2
GOOD WORDS,
A YONTHLY 111GAZild OF
Literature, Science, Art and Travel.
PROMISES ILLIJSTRAND,
Edited by Nortuan Naeleod,D.Di
GREAT ATTRACTIONS .1611 IS7I.
Now ninAikr.
THE JANUARY PART.
Couesat as t h e aelf Aobtate• • -
With Twenty-seven - • MwdMklN
L). 44
EM3:I3
A W W !amt. !Tarr. la ?al Arms Ite
“Dorres £arlato." . ••Laaaa2o Snows."
eta. Pm I. Wttb Tarot Illustrations.
TEIZ . A/11.11.0TAXILIS.
♦ LAMM. BY Ms 113 Y. CuG31.14 TIVOGILINf.
Tk. Int .(0 &Wee 01 WOG.
golabedauthor. m
DAYS IX NORTH I3DIA
Br WODIIIAN Y►CLADD. D.D. L MAMMA is
if...MIMI. With SIB Matinslsm.
rf.
• LADY BtOZL •
♦ rAni. Wtlttt is ISIS. . •
DOROTHY •OZ. . •
♦ lizse exuAL sum:. Ry to RROWe 07 ~pOW
IT ALI, HASIMIVID. ,. Put I. _HUI! TIM* B
butratlons. . ,
==:l2l
BT Jsax Ixow.ow. Com ADD IaVISTWO
. TON WOOD. Tim OM of • IMTW of low
Poems 07 tab woll.k.owx nottorni. •
TRIO' COUR MY or TRI VAUDOIS.
The AM of a Berger of Papers Irf Boma= UM%
author of. •Ilahr•Harar," eta. With OM
Illurtratlotts.
TEE CERISTIANITY Or Tlii riutise
AHD or :as rwrbinr.
OF HENRY ALIO iMU O Ciaterbarr
01511 woman.) rsokix, AND now melt
ECM
By "43COD WORDS" CONIKINIIOXXX. L TM.
• NXW CUTLX COLL.I2I. With Mitt Mwax.!
I=3
• DRAMATIC SICZTCE. By the sathat Or. 1.41) 1 r
Glues."
I=
Poix. By Rix. Camor..zs arawin - sON)
lax. With Three Iliutysti - oam.
XII.
TEL TEENCEI arrolwaroat or sr.
=3
By 2% 11.1. Oxus. Illustrated.
....,
By Um HEY. W. ?LIMING lIMVIatIOR. milker Of
"'alma AND WooXINa.” T. Till arm
yi.l or 01.1.711LA111).
SHORT PROSPECTUS FOR 1870.
With the Part for January. 11110„ begthllte4
the Raw votnoe, Messrs. J• B. Ltrintoort
I CO- aerntießee the ymbllcatios of MM. hgrub;
We Monthly, to De, ls nord to lettanortes NMI
Illustration. • goantaPan of the Maid' ea!
•
..(100D WORDB!* V to every reelect afire,
oo.oot of Um hlsheet demh — ltedo.t.lbatu° 4 -
heal horn the mute et the moat able 1.111.1111
Ellielltd. It L. .1311 by far tee meet "'polar
Mastelue teemed Itt that coaatry. heaths oust.-
o 4 the lancet drculetlos aver embed 11 Oar
shellac pertodlcal—a eel:elude* telecom of Ile
latitude mule. The Mangles tithe orgmeee
no sect or pasty. It belts the dm or the coeiale.
tone to reader It a desirable and walconte ytettet
In eves"' hsass WAS. Its contints ars vsztoll, sits,
tertalailng Instractme.
In coonttoll with tbs 'mew *Multi,. ti
mough to my that vitas It hu beliAtlMWsta ,
aloe will coulees to be, altk Odsedattlest. Oet
ii will mall Itself of all the taptemiserMealddi •
expartenee has shame so be dostvahle. 'ROAM. •
met anaagemants have Mee malt Mr Maar , , -
volume. PIII be sem Ir on. ke above Mateata.
There will alas be mask. by may of ibiamr
maps". ahem coat:Mathis. have MLitt ORD,.
WORDS.. to Its high Noslthd“
The ILLUSTRATIONS me roam. 555.55.,
Staved la the Idsbest stsle of art, 554. 6951155
by dlrUsgalsled aril/L. '
TZONS—Tearly submiplbss, SI.Ti. Style
umber, 115 amts. .
ct.pi RATIN—Tao Coates. is *lit- /No
CoVes. 511,15; Tee Modes. What.' 11Meot
Words, with Lloytmott's Idagalt".NlATS; %Mb
Baaday Xs/taloa. $5 50: with Geed Worts lit
the Teelaf • 54.5 0 , ' • • '
BTXCIMAN noxam sub sou sok
maned, to say status. on reastat of U Intl
B. lEPPINCOTT k €O.2P I Vb.
15 and 717 itarket'Ume.
TIIIIADIC
MO
1870. " 1 "'"" 1870. N
Cozadlug House ud Poeketek
Al
KAY & CO MIP Allll4-
65 Wood Shed.
pa:ample
VISITING LIST&
1870.
Yaricras styles. for We DI
KAY & dOMPANY;
65 Wood 151•616,
TFIINTSOWS NEW. NONEA,
"THE HOLY GRAIL,"
PlllOl, wo•.
Pox • mum • IT
"KAY "& COMPANY.
66' Wood Street.,
WATCHES,' SOLD CHAIRS, •
• Jewell ! , Silver Ware,
FANCY GOODS, ft.,
At Snarl r 141444 PURL la; • •
& lizzaraws.
lea yam ; mom= ( , ba?l assimwd
ttriiC= r,
nio =eadlron
. PAX
M...lmtu l iSaratlh i!
; 4 4. 1 7: 16 . 1117 ; 9 : ::7 ;j 71 1:: : ii rd ..„. ‘A P 771 ; 41171= c h?' f. : 1 : A.0.... H ; 7 4
' we' Ads. Wevki, 'Tenth
et.
11
II
EMI
NEI
1870. T