The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, April 01, 1870, Image 1

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    THE DAILY GFA SITE:
Tyson= NT
PENMAN. ED & CO.,
Ca. Sixth tune sad Smithfield ;Mut.
r.,B.Atimeimme, JOSIAH MI,
P, P. 110UPPOIN,
I. P. 2.IMD,
IDITORS MW rnoraizTom.
I=
By mall, per Tear
Dellcctt4 try canters, per week
M WIC) 1 17 MI .
- - GAZETTE
Has, Remolied to The
NEW BUILDING:
Cor. 6th Arcane and Smithfield Street
STATE I rEss.
Loarrro has thedyptheria badly.
Bass ball is reviving in the Interior.
KONTOOKEZT wants• new poor holm.
In cost a New York dog $4OO to bite s
little girl.
An otter was captured last week near
Wsynesbrirg. . _
A rant of Mercer county steers weigh
together 6800 pounds.
Twins are only three prisoners in the
Lawrence county Jail.
FAME LATIONSRS in Chester county
isms bad their wages ataterlaily cut
'down.
Tux Allentown wider works coat
$104,000 and yield a net annual profit of
;11,000.
A. urns bOy was strangled by wine
caterpasing comrades who were playing
banging. •
HMVITISODON negro refused to take
food or medidne while sick. De went
mace the sod:
Tan Delaware fishermen ere all ready
for the shad season, end shad have already
begun to run.
A messes similar to the whooping
rough - is 'sending - many little ones to
heaven in Huntiugdan. amnty.
UrczoirrowN has 68 widows, 80 old
batchelors, 20 widow= and any quantity
of pretty maidens - and clever young
men.
Tawas Is a man confined at the Allen
town Jail who has read the Bible through
twenty-throe time, drying the lest two
years.
hmout. attempted to butt locomotive
off Um track of the . Lebanon Valley Ran •
road, the other da y, mad he died 3u the
attempt.
ILizoinaraDox 001F2ITY -has very peer.
grisly increased the School Superintend
ent's salary fifty cents per year, making
# $800.50.
' 70161 JAYE% the present court crier of
Berke county, If he lives until the first of
April, will have occupied the position
Arty years.
ALBERT Conan*, of Hollidaysburg, a
brakeman one freight train, between Al
toona sad Harrisburg, had his leg broken
the other day.
AL IMMO YAM in Eldred township,
Warren county, drank a pint of forty rod
whisky at one swallow. He won't drink
arty more—he's dead.
Iris and that II 0n..11. b. Johnson, of
Maadvflie, has been tendered a United -
States Judgeship :in Colorado, but do.
clines the appointment.
- LAST week, in Greene county, James
Barnes, of Cloollofik l 4 aged eighty-two,
and Mrs. Lantz, of Dotyaburg, aged
sixty-five, were married.
'Pus Bonberdellers of Clenfield have
lost SSO,CM by the allures of Eagle A.
Co., Chesapeake City, Maryland. and an
equal amount from
Phililure of R. Wa in
Wright A Bro., of delphia.
Tun Forest .Bcpublican states that Mr.
E. Clapp, of President: tun been offered
$200,000 for two hundred acres of land
in the vidnity of Triumph, upon which
a seventy barrel oil well was struck last
week,
Istronsurrox is wanted of Mary Ise,
bel Moore, -formerly living in the Wilily
of Boyd Onreine. of Washington,
Pa. She left there en denly on the 141 h
of hut Wont or, and has not since been
heard of.
Finn scans are scarce in Bucks
county, and the prevailing rates by the
year range between $2OO and $240
with board furnished. By the month for
summer work men - got Roof $3O to $25
with board. -
Mss. NARY- ZOIJ 4s, one of 'he oldest
reddents of the vicinity of Pottetown,
died in Pottagrove townaltipon Thursday
last, in her 0241 year. ' Her husband,
G Zoller, died al sot four years ago,
6=l
• A' curve COLD -of Ebensburg has
bean dead for nearly a week and yet the
body is warm and life-like. Phsicians
. pronotmce the child dead. bat of y coarse
the funeral will be de'ayed until the mat
ter Is beyond doubt.
has BERIGAILT, • the poisoner of her
husband. in Butler county, who was
found guilty of murder in the first degree
and sentenced to be•
executed, has been
glued in Dirmont, • jury haying decided
that she was insane.
Now Toni papers give an account of
a man In Queen's minty, in that State,
who was seised w itk hydrophobia, and it
becoming impossible to relieve him, '
sow frond mourn io comae AO death
birmakrinolibx bower* Pation • bec"
Ox last Saturday Mr. Geo r Bowser, of
Kittanning township, while riding with
his daughter in a buggy, remarked to her
that the buggy was upsetting, and then
fell therefrom dead. Heart disease, we
andentand, was the clume-of hl sudden
death.
AT a recent meeting of the Executive
Committee of, the Penosylvaniadgrietd.
Omar Society. 'at Harrisburg, - It e res re •
solved that the next State Fair held on
the 27th, 28th, 29th and 80th of ptem.
bar neat The place for holding' the Fair
has not yet been designated.
'AIMS L. TYSON.' foreman of the
Philadelphia Pow office, died dile week
pf inflammation of the heart. He was
formerly -.foreman of the Washington
Ohnoticie, and for the past seven or eight
yearshe has beettioreman of the Philadel-
Wing.Prot., lie 'erred biz apprenticeship
Jefferson Deeierras oaks, of
Mr. Tyson wu 42 years of
. Owe of the blended old sea biscuits
ftout the barrel which 'company of hun•
py soldiers rejected on the ground that
they were marked "B. 0.," is in the
poseemdon of Henry Jordan, of Ede. It
was nialaufacinfed• Hattimore la 1838,
sod apparently is good for a century or
two more. A knife makes no more IM-
Wagon on It than it would on a brick.
Too Pottsville Miner's Journal ry
' ports that • horrible accident occurred at
the Kohl-noon Colliery of R. Heckscher
& Co., Shenandoah City. Tuesday morn •
which resulted in - the death of four
mea. The men went down the shaft a
dlstanoe - of from two hundred and fifty
to three hundred feet, to- work In the
'amain& The water; from the pump,
which it seems etiolating badly, splashed
over them extinguishing their lights,
when the men. six in all, again got Into
the huge bueket for the purpose of going
up. and when about eddy feet on their
way, from the yid:ling of the buckets it
la .apposed, the nom .bemime dizzy and
four of the cumber, named Edwin
Enna, Bury Champion, Wilbelim Zim
merman and Abel Ebb, let loose and
„ were predpitated to the bottom of the,
ihaft. Two of the men were Instantly
;killed and the other two expired shortly
after being tonight to the top of the
shaft. Two of the men are Germans, one
• an Kaglistunan and the other a Welsh
mea. - The two remaining men clung to
the bucket and reached the top of the
shaft la safety. An Inquest was held In
the afternoon and a verdict rendered In
itecordance with the above facet--exon
erating the -engineer and all others from
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FR
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VOL. TAXXXV.
FIRST
EMIR
Jtiri - D i riGHT.
MEI=
HA.RRISBURU.
Peonsylvallil Legislature.
SENATE: Proles - ling Against the
Proposed Air Line Through the
State—Bill Concerning Sinking
Fund, Payment of Interest and
Purchase of Loans Passed—
Pension Commissioner- The
Responsibility for Non-reform
in Treasury. ROUSE : Sharp
Practice in Legislation—Varie
ty of Bills Considered and Dis
posed Of. -
lanrclel Dl•patch to the Fltt.burgh Gault.]
HARRDDIURO, March 31, 1070.
SENATE.
THE AIR LINE ROAD.
The joint 'resolution protesting against
the parsage by Congress of the bill for au
air line railroad through Pennsylvania
from Washington to New York, was re
ported favorably.
THE SINKING FUND, AM
ML BILLINOFBLT, from the Com.
mittee on Finance, reported a consult'.
Ideation from the Commiaalonera of the
Sinking Fond, with a bill providing sub
, Mentally, first, that hereafter whenever
the receipts of the State Treasury, ex
clualve of the sinking fund, shall not be
sufficient to pay the current ana ordina
ry expenses of the government, it shall
be lawful for the State Treasurer to de.
vote such fonds as may be in the sinking
fund, other than those placed there by -
the Constitution, to the payment of BIM
expenses; second, that the State Treas.
carer shall conform to the decision of the
Supreme Court of the United States, re
quiring the payment of interest on the
State debt contracted prior to 1662 in
r gold, as the supremo law of` the land,
anything in the lows of Pennsylvania to
the contrary notwithstanding: third,
that the Commissioners of the Sinking
Fend' be required to purchase 'for
redemption such amounts of State
hare or.
.certificates of Indebtedness as
the condition of the sinking fund may
•purchasing such loans as
Brit fall due as far as practicable.
Passed finally—yeas 26, nays 2, namely,
Mears. Davis and Howard.
PENSION bonallastotorn. •
A bill from the House was reported
favorably, creating 'Thomas Nicholson
Commissioner of Pensions at a salary of
13,000. with amendments reducing the
salary to 12,000 and the term to one year.
URFA:Ft:ITEM LANDS.
The bill staying proceedings against un
talented lands was passed.
111LIS isr,proDuer.n.
Mr. RUTAN: Supplement to the elec
tlon laws and providing for the protec
tion of colored voters.
Mr. LOWRY: Resolutions to abolish
the Military Academy 51 West Point and.,
Naval Academy at Annapolis, and sub,
ethane In lieu thereof a system or mili
tia and naval education at various
agricultural colleges and public high
schools. [Asking Congress to do ao.l
Mr. RATAN: Incorporating Block'
aortae Iron Mining Roadway Company,
Beaver bounty. Parsee.
Mr. NAGLE: Authorising railroad
companies to give voting power to bond
holders.
I=l
Mr. RUTAN offered a resolution fixing
the special session thin evening to
consider the Treesury bill. He believed
the people of tho whole Commonwealth
demanded prompt action on the ones
Don, and while it was; evident to him no
bill could psis, be wanted the responsi
bility to rest where It belonged. The
resolution was defeated, the Democrats
voting nay and the Republicans aye.
- Mr. BILLINGFELT voted no, because
he wanted to be present at the discus.
don, but would necessarily be absent to
night on Joint conference on the Appro.
priation bill.
Mr. WHITE then moved a epoclal atta
lion for Monday night. Agreed to. .
STEAM POWER 024 PASSZAGIER RAILWAY.
Mr. HOWARD called up the House
bill authorizing the Cltltens Passenger
Railway to use steam. Passed.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
=
Mr. ELLIOTT read a concurrent reso
lution that the transcribing clerk return
to the House the bill relating to the clean
ing of streets and market houses in Phil
adelphia, representing that the bill was
placed In the hands of the Senatein a
different shape from that to which It
posed the Howe.
The SPEAKER remarked that it we
benming a examen thing to make euch
charger. . .
2dx. ELLIOTT said the charges were
neierthetees true.. •
. _
Tho resolution was agreed to
NOT USCOMIIDICRICD.
Mr. BROWN moved to reconsider the
bill to incorprate the Bear Creek 011
and Pipe Compaay. Disagreed to.
BILL PASEIZIN
The bill relative to appeals from the .
Supreme Court passed.
POMTPONED.
The bill exempting personal property
of feeble minded and Idiotic persons from
all taxation, If not exceeding 12,000, was
postponed. .
Mr. STONE: called np the bill to pro•
vide for a geological survey of the State.
Poetj 'med.
The bill from the Senate authorising
the Judges of chill courts to commit or
bold to ball persons guilty of perjury in
cases tried before them, was also poet
ported.
I DEFEATED. •
The bill from the Sanate changing the
punishment of Sunday liquor selling
from fine and Imprisonment to flue or
Imprisonment, was defeated.
The bill from the Senate taxing for
eign Insurance companies three and half
per cent In lien of 000 annual license
fee, was defeated.
=I
Mr. MoOP.EARY Offered resolutions
rehlive to the death of General Thome%
Passed unanimeusly.
ICl=2
The supplemeat to the act creating a
Board of Erection of a City Hall In
Pittsburgh was passed•
The supplement for the Peoples Pass•
eager Hallway, Pittsburgh, was passed•
Mr. BROWN bad the Allegheny Tim
ber Inspector bill indefinitely postponed
and killed.
SAN FRANCISCO.
The Remains of General Tnomas Ivor
warded Bast—Meeting of Military and
Naval Officers. . • •
(Br Telegraph Witte rittaboret Gasett...) •
Sari Pairicusco, March 51.—The re•
maim of. General Thome, under the
escort of Colonel Willard, a commis.
Mooed officer and thirteen men, were
fbrwarded Bast this morning. Minute
guns were fired en the departure of the
dy for Oakland.
Afteithe Impressive funeral memo•
nits at the Lick Boum, yesterday, Bish
op Hip officiating, a meeting of military
and naval officers of this city wee held,
Chairman General Allen. Commodore
'Middleton was instcted to address
letter to Mrs. Thom ru as, expressing th e
deep regret of the army and navy on this
coast at the death of the General, and
conveying in behalf of theoffloers sincere
condolence In her affliction. It wee aleo
decided that tlie oflicerslndlvidually and
informally should attend the remain
from San Francisoo to Oakland.
Anangements are perfected by which
the body goes direct to Troy, N. cm ,
the following roads: Central and Union
Shore and
and fdissouri, Lshe
Shore and Michigan Sonthern, and New
York Central.
FORTY-FIRST CONGIIRSS.
(SECOND SESSION.)
SENATE : Texas Senators Sworn
In—Proposed Survey of James
and Kanawha Rivers and Tribu
taries—The Case of Senator
Elect Ames. ROUSE : Admit
sion of Texas Represent atives—
An Undignified, Disgraceful
Wrangle Over One of Them—
General Debate on the Tariff
Bill Closed.
relrimpli to the rittelmigb ti•tel.te.l
WASIIMOTON, March 31, 1670.
SENATE.
Upon the oomilueion of the reading of
the Journal a discussion ensued In regard
to the correction thereof, proposed by
Mr. TRUMBULL, so as to show that he
had moved to open the doors to have the
President's - message, relative to the
Fifteenth Amendment, read to open
session. •
Mr. DRAMS presented the credentials
of Morgan U. Hamilton and J. W. Flana
gan as Monitors elect from - Texas, the
former for the term ending March 4th,
1171, end the letter for the term ending
March 4th, 1675. He asked that the
gentlemen be sworn into °floe.
The credentials were read at the re.
quest of Mr. THIIItSIAN, snd the Serie.
tors took the oath and seats on the
Republican side of the Senate. • •
The ilotme joint reeolutiou of sym-
pathy and respect for the memory of
lien. Thomas wee passed.
Mr. SCOTT presented a memorial from
the citizens of Allegheny oonnty, Pa., for
an entire abrogation of the income tax..
The bill allowing retired army officers
to be assigned to daty at Soldiers' Homes
was plaited.
Mr. COLE introduced a bill author's.
log tne establishment of ocean mall
steamship service between the United
I States and Australia. Referred.
Mr. PATTERSON Introduced a bill to
establish a 'Tuitional Institute of arts and
sciences In Washington. •
Mr. WILLEY offered a resolution di
recting inquiry •by the Committee on
Commerce into • the expediency of cans.
_ . .
tog a survey And examination, under the
directiou of the War Department, of the
. _
line of water communication between
the tide water on the James river and
the Ohio river at-the mouth of the Great
Kanawha, by way of the James and
Kanawha rivers and tributaries, with
the view to ascertaining the practicabili
ty and utility of such water communica
tion as may be required for the transpOr
tattoo of military eupplica in time of war
and to meet the commercial mementos
of the lid isslielppl valley, with liberty to
report by bill or otherwise. Adopted.
Mr. RICK introduced a bill granting
lauds to the Kansas City sod Memphis
Railroad Company.
At one o'clock the case of Gemmel
Ames, as Realtor elect from Missieeippl.
came up in order, and. Mr. VICKERS
argued that the alleged dealaratirm by
General Arden to become a. citizen of
Mississippi did not amount to anything,
as no voluntary act on his part could be
shown to make the intention valid.
Adjourned without action.
HOUSE pe REPRESENTATIVIN..
The bill reported yesterday by Mr.
Arnell, from the Committee on Educe
(lon and Labor, relative to the Bureau of
Education end dlsoontleaing the Freed
moo's Bureau. wee taken up, -
Mr. McNEELEY, member name Com
mittee, opposed the bill. Be Intimated
that the manager of the Freedmen's
Bureau had made a nice property 'Teen
baton with the fends of he Bureau, that
the House had constantly refused to
adopt a resolution offered by Mr. Rogers,
requiring an accotnt of -the disposal of
the fonds, and charged that the rebi ob
ject or the bill was to cover ap the Freed.
comes Bureau and let it escape from ex
amination by confounding it with the
Bureau of Education.
The bill was further deceased by
Mews. Dockery, Shanks, Axtell, Hoar
and other members till the close of the
morning hoar, when, discusalon being
closed,
Mr. BENJAMIN moved to lay It on
' the table.
Rejected-63 against 92, and the bill
went over till the next morning hone.
- Mr. PAINE, from Election Commit
' tee, reported the credentials of members
elect from Texas were regular end that
' they were priviefeeie entitled to pleats.
Mr. BUTLER, of Maw,. was opposed to
the 'wearing ofedr. (loamy, one of the
members elect, and [engirt° the House
various afildavita accusing Idat of
Iwhipping negro soldier" while he was it
captain in the United State, army, and
of having boasted that he bribed a negro
to swear falsely before the military com•
mission which triad him.
Mr. VAN TRUMP asked whether the
affidavits were ex . pert.e. -
Mr. BUTLER &drain& they were.
Mr. VAN TRUMP submitted they
should not be need to affect the judgment
of the House. •
Mr. SHANKS moved to refer . the.,
charges against Mr. Connor to the Q,
mitten on Elections.
Mr. STEVENSON, member of the
Committee on Elections, defended the
report of the Committee and charged
that the objection made to Mr. Connor
was that he alone of the delegation was a
Democrat—a had Texan boy. That might
be all true. He did not expect to see any
very high specimen of Christian gen•
tlemen sent up hers from Texas, but
what bad they to do with that. How did
that effect Mr. Connor's right to a sae.':
The member from bleasaahnsetts,• who
charged that riernon, On affidavits, with
subornation of perjury, had. himself ete,,
fended a member of the House for a
greater...crime. It was le his judgment a
farce and worse. It was a base partisan
proceeding and as such he denounced It.
I . "Good for you," from a Democratic
member.)
Mr. ORTH denounced the proceeding
against Mr. Connor as moat preposterous.
Ile was • native of Indiana, had entered
the army and served continuously until
I the close of the war, and then hod been
appointed captain la the regular army, in
which he had served till the time be bad
accepted the nomination es a candidate
for Congress In Texas. Against) his
loyalty.the breath of suspicion could not
be brought. Captain Connor was charged
with being severe to his soldiers. If
that was a disqualification, other mem
bent of the House might be ousted. It,
might exclude those who were attempt - '
log to exclude this young man from
his seat, Ho was sorry Captain Connor
came here the only Democratic. "carpet
bagger" In ()entrees. Affidavits read
frotn newspapers were unworthy the at- I
minion of the House and-he hoped tho
House would prompt . ly say go.
Mr. DAWES said this was the Bret
time an objection had been made to
swearing in a member elect because I
of
unbecoming or improper conduct while
he was note member. While be (Mr.
ILiaises) was Chairmen of the Committee
, on Elections, statement' and affidavits
had been received as to the criminal
conduct of a member from New York,
and the Committee had directed him to
return them to the persons sending them,
with notice that it, was a nuestlon be.
tween the member. and hie constituents,
and If they choose to be represented by
the gentleman it wee their own business
and•not the business of the Committee
on Elections, or of the House. -
Mr. BUTLER said he would not reply
to the denunciation of his eloquent and
impulsive friend from Ohio, (Mr. Steven
eon), that thin was &partisan proceeding,
because with a majority three-fourth ,
In the House one Democrat more or less
wan of no consequence. Hilted believed I
it his duty to bring to the attention of
the House the four affidavits he had read
of officers and noncommissioned offi-1
are, swearing to what Captain Connor
had said at a public meeting, where he
advocated his election on the ground that I
hie negro soldiers and
he had whipped
bribed them to commit perjury.
Mr. GARFIELD asked If It would be
ale to establish a rule of Inquiry Into I
the character of speeches made by candi
dates for Congress?
• Mr. BUTLER replied Ids proposition
was, the House could inquire into
into. thing that °Debt ,to be inquired into.
(Laughter. I
fdr,,bTEVENSON—Iwould like to ask
the gentleman one question.
Mr. BUTLER—No, sir, I cannot yield
to you at all.
InfornisH
Mr. STEVENSON—I want
tio Mr. BUTLER—I have nit time to give
you all you want. (Lang 00
Mr. STEVENsON—I do _ of believe the
MEM
PITTSBURGH,
- -
gentleman is oompeteut to inform the
Hanes.
Mr. EHTLER—Then why 'at& me?
(Laughter.) •
Mr. STEVEIk.IBOS--Itecawso I believed
• you would refuse. •
Mr. BUTLER. went on to say he had
brought the affidavits to the attention
of Capt. Connor, and he had sold be was
. not responsible for what he had said in
a political speech to get vette.
The discussion, which at times became
quite heated. was further carried on by
Messrs. Ingersoll, Shanks and Butler,
of
Mass., against the right of Connor t o a
seat; and by Messrs. Hale, Stevenson,
Poland, Schenck and Banks in favor
of it.
Mr. SHANKS said he had Undo sent
Connor as a cadet to the Naval Academy
and bd • had been dismissed for titter
worthlessness. •
11 - .§TE'VENSON alluded to the fact
that the control of the subject had been
taken from the Com:nine. on ;Elections
by the gentleman who generally took
charge of every thing. Acoordlng to
the argument of that gentleman (But
ler) If any body brought to the Houma
cc park% affldavite, taken In Virginia,
New Orleans or Texas, making charges
against a member, be would have to •be
eluded from his Mat and tried on the
charges. Ile had beard some of the
meat outrageous charges mode against
sundry members of the House. Ile did
not believe them. lie did not believe
shy member teid over taken a minister
of the Gospel and °hien ed him In a ch aln
gang of waitron and made them all work
together like slaves. lie did not believe
any member of the House had carried
away the treasure of a whole cltyl
[Laughter.] It was false, If any body
said It. He for also would spurn with con.
tempt the man who would ask the House
such a question.• But if the House tried
. thisquestion, It would have to try that.
• Mr: BUTLER—WiII the gentleman let
ma say—
Mr. BTEVENSON—No, otr; I believe
In lex toliouis.
Mr. BITILEI . I—That fo; l gria you live
minntea; you *lll not give we any.
Mr. STEV.ENSOW—The gentleman
robbed the Committee on Electlotus of its
whole time and gave back nye minutes.
(Laughter.)
Finally the dlsansalon closed.
The motion of Mr. Shanks was rejected
and the four Texas member. were
In. Their names. are W. T. Clark,
Connor, E. Begetter and 9. W. Whit.
more.
On motion of Mr. ORTEI, Mr. Conner
WAX allowed ten minutes for personal
explanation, in which he attributed the
opposition of Mr. Shanks to the fact that
hie (Mr. Connor's) father had been a
prominent opponent to that gentleman
In the convention that nominated him
for Congress, and that, he (Mr. Shanks)
supposed he owned him because be had
nominated hlm to the'lraval Academy.
As to Mr. Butler, he said that with all
that gentleman's talent and ability he
bad been forcibly impressed to-lay with
the oonviotioo Out be (Mr. Butler) had
missed hie calling and that he would
have made a much better character foe
himself In the profession of . low comm.'
diem
•
The SPEAKER rendndad the gentle.
man fromTexam that his language was
not parliamentary.
Mr. BUTLER, (diadainfally,)-06, he
don't know any natier... (Laughter.)
Mr. CONIN.:OIt=-1 withdraw It.
. _
Mr. EIELANES reenacktd the member
from Texan had UM told the House Le
was turned out of the Navel Academy
for utter worthlessness, and again added
he wan worthless. -
The SPEAKER reminded Mr. Shanks
that the gentleman from Term wee now
a member of the Mouse, and, that to.
marks in reference to him. Which were
in order an hour ago, were not In seder
now.
Mr. SHANKS—I Wog the pardolt elite
House, beet not of thetintleman.
The Houle then — Went Into Com '
Latium of the Whole on the tariff bill and
was addremed in support of It by M.
SEHENCE, Chairmen of the Comtattteo
on Waya and Keane. He congratulated
the House on the aiming of the Mamie.
Om which bad been too general on gen.
*realties In general and not particular
enough on particulars in particular. He
ridiculed the lasso( free widow' &myth,
as ateuthat of applying to the EnSardo
Stelae, with Its great extent of country
and variet.y.of
.whleh.bad been appliedtoillien lamigniti.
cant parts of the earth as England,
France, Belgium or Germany. They
might as well undertake to lit the &pea.
ref of • great; luaty, growing youth
in full prime and vigor of life
and of large nature, to a de
crepit; worn.- out,. dwarfish old, man.
The bin had been called the • Schenck
bill, and he bad • been' held re.
aponsible for everything In It that was
not fair. If the COMmittee bad wanted
to get no • bill which would .be sallefac.
tory to' each Member. It would never
re3rt a bill. here were loan
tariff T
things 10 . . which had hot met h
approval and 'which he :Would' vote
agalcon4 For instance be had bodzi;for
coming down twenty per cent. ow the
duty en coal. but the majority of the
Committee was not of the same opinion,
and therefore the bill had been reported
without any =ointment on the subject.
but leaving the..duty ea It now
etude. -Ile had noticedthat every
roan who had anything to - protect was
quite willing to have that protested, but
wag willing. to fall in .with the cry of
freetrade Is to everything sloe. He
-understood it to be the intention of some'
members to More to recommit the bill
or strike out the enacting clause. He
reminded the Howie that the effect of not
passing the bill would be to leave the
law en It nerw Maur* and to which the
inn • great reduction. The
bill, If puned, would find a saving of
t 32,994,411 In taxation of importations
of Loa yew, though It would not lessen
the revenue that amount,. because of the
Increased consumption which would
result from the reduction of duly. If
the bill were recommitted, the Commit
tee might vary the articles on which
reduction had been made, tea, sugar,
craw, spiou etc., but would hardly rec.
ommend a reduction greater in amount.
having due reference to the public debt
and public credit. The Committee bad
set out with considering how much It
could probably spars from tne customs
revenue and had fixed thorium at twenty
ralUkins.• A- close calculation, however,
showed that on importations last year
the reduction recommended amounted
BAsnearly twenty-three millions.
• awl" deel bad been said about
Iron, he would state frankly be never bad I
had the slightest desire to increase the
tariff on various manufactures of iron,
nor has the Committee done so In this
bill. The Cluounlttee had merely chaos
ed the cluelfication. Somethings might
be apparently higher and some. were
lower, but the purpose of the Committee
had begat(' make the thane more specific
and to improve the classitioation, but to
keep the general average at about what
It now was. and not by any paeans to ad
vance It. The chitty on pig iron was re-'
duoed from nine to seven dollars a ton.
He repelled the charges that the pend
ing bill would bo prejudicial to *grim!.
turalleta, and said there had never been
a tariff bill proposed that looked so much
to agrlemitural Interests. • The tariff was
raised on flax and tow and flax seed, on
career beans and hides and all raw ma-
Leda that could be produced In the
country, 'spinal every Influence brought
to bear by 'manufacturers of oil end
leather. He therefore denounced the
crocodile tears of those who had been ex
pressing is 3 much sympathy for dinners.
He criticised the project of tariff sag
gated by • the American free 'trade
league and said It most hate had Its Pa'
teruity in England, because it did net I
propose to tax the wines and silks of '
France and the products of Glormany and
Belgium. He had no objection to Great
Britain,- which was a great nation, but
he Pretested against her making •
tarin for the United States.
In conclusion ho said that real practical
debate would take place on the details of
the bill, and in that thing would come
up first tomorrow in Committee on
the bill, he would Invite them all to tea.
(Laughter.),
The Cononitiett rose.
Mr. LOGAN introduced, at the request
of a friend, a bill to Incorporate the Irish
Colonisation Society. Referred to Com
mittee on_ Public Lands.
Mr. STEVENSON introduoid • resolu
tion oflitilry, 'Miller to that Introduced
by M. Willey la the Senate, relative IA
the practicabWty of the James Itiver and
Kanawha - Canal. Adopted.
—At Chicago, yesterday morning, Gus.
Lave Blackman broke into the bagnio of
Madame Ferris. rushed into a room ea
copied by one of tne women and fired •
revolver at bar head. The ball did not
enter her skull and she was not seriously
injured. Blackman made his escape
from the house, bat was afterwards se.
cured. • His motive could net be sur
mised, as the woman declared she never
had men him previously.
MAY, APRIL 1, 1870.
SECOAD EDITIOIL
FOUR OPCZOCK,„!..RI
THE CAPITAL.
Funeral of Gen. Thomas-=Na-
Donal Bank Delegation—Appli
cation for Reopening of Legal
l'ehder Decision--Cuban Bonds
—Enforcing the Amendment—
Irish Colonization—The Cur
rency question.
(B)' Telegraph eV the rtataburgh Gazette.)
WASHINGTON, March SI, 11170.
The President, watt Gerieral Sherman,
will attend the funeral of Gen. Thomas
at Troy. Several members of toe Cabi-
net will also attend with other (Hain
g unshed °Mends, Including Elenaions and
membtra of Ooogrea•.
The ewitopi reeelpte hist week amount
•d to 48;452,065.
The National Bank delegation was
before the Committee on. Ways and
Means and presented a mane of statinni
cal information to ahow the bad effect on
National Hanks ahould the Funding
bill become, a law. Secretary. Boutwell.
was present. .
TUE LECIAL TXVIDiIt DECISION.
In the Supreme Court to•dey Attorney
leneral Hoar made a brief argument to
show why the legal tender decision
should be reopened. Lie wan not insen•
elide to the groat weight of the Judiciary,
its public reputation and its claims to the
confidence of the country, but a snore
Important decision In stn consequences,
both public and private, waif never before
=unoed. The statute on which it was
wax palmed by a large majority
In lir'logresa, approved by the President,.
and having all forma of law. Attention
had been called in both Houses to Its
. -
constitutionality. There was this weight
of authority to begitry. rith, and besides
It wu a law, substautially acquiesced In
by the people, for solely eight years,
And on which millions upon mil
lions of dollars/ in contracts had'
been settled. The aatrite •eo far
as be wail aware, with one excep
tion, had been, bald constitutional
by. every State tribunal. But at
a time when by law this court con
aimed of nine members (there were
seven only on the bench, there being
two vacancies,) the question was decided
here by four ironed three judges. The
Its
therefore Mood, reducing it to
waence, that uPon the political
opinion of a single man the case
wax adjudicated. ;He suggested It
should not ba left to a single man to
decide upon the whole conatltutional
power affecting legßdation ()reach impor
tant ohs:actors He premed the re-open
ing of the question, because It concerned
the greet maw of private Interests, but
mote especially becaribe It seemed to him
to Involve a fundanieptal principle, vim
the lumen of. the Government. Ho de
sired again to preeenth, when the bench
was full, that they may forever settle
what the law should be.
Such cases of moonableration were by
no mama without example. In the CUM of
McCulloch re Stale of Maryland,
the Court, after the opinion was pro-
nounced, allowed th wuole quashes to
be reopened and rea It seemed to
him it would be ter all parties
concerned If thethe legal
tender caw could •
Mr. James M. Carlisle tanned, saying
the •ttornav Uouend had analyzed and
dl.paragingly erltici.64 the Court, be•
cause, as ha had remarked, the question
was decided by the vote of a single
Judge. However that might
whibe, it we*
the Jndgment of the court ch bad
been pronounced
in that cue. What
now was le became of the highest Judi
cial tribunal in the laud, if opinion. were
to be reopened and reargued because
of a small majority - deciding the
question. Whatever might bo the
majority, It wee nevertheless the
opinion of.. the Coed. What had
they to do with theprevious actions of the
Odurt. He then referred to the feet that
the case of Hoffman and Griswold, one
of the tank cases Involving principles
applicable to another party, bad been
postponed from one time to another for
the purpose of argument, showing they
had all been carefully end elaborately
considered.
The Court said - they would take the
matter under advisement.
ourarr Bonne.
Disclosures made In the investigation
as to the distribution of Cuban bonds In
hue community, show that it is instiga
ted by agents' and hired emiatariee of the
Spanish Government. These agents, one
an ex.member of Congress, offered to
purchase Cuban bonds, and in two in
stances where they had bargained
for the purchase of Mere thousand dol
lar, have, with various pretext., taken
but a email amount. , The es-member
has been acting as a detective, and de.
coyed several of his former friends Into
the snare. For his services ho hu alrea
dy received $1,330, and la to receive a
large contingent reward In cue the
scheme encased& The scheme Is to
break the force of Cuban sympathy in
Congress, one of the means to that end
being to make It appear that it was pur
chased by Cuban bonds.
' • nivonturio
In view or the ratification of the F
teenth Amendment and anticipating op.
position In some quarters, Senator Mot.
ton will Introduce In a day or two a bill
defining more clearly the rights of
negroes under the general suffrage laws
of the - United States. In some States,
like Kentucky, for instance, the laws
sling to the old order of things. In that
States negro cannot be a witness. Thi■
fact, be said, will Interfere with the
negro In proving his residence and age,
or any other qualification we isfej. assure
him in tho benefit of the Fifteenth
Amendment. Mr. Morton has already
bestowed much labor on the bill, and It
Is said, when completed, will be very par
! (actin all Its details. .
HUSE OOLONIZLTION.
Gemmel Logan intends Introducing Ina
few day' a bill Inoorporating the Irish
National Colonisation Association. The
managers comprise some of the leading
wealthy and influential Irishmen in
ovary city in the Union. The principal
object of the bill Is to names the surplus
Irish from the overcrowded cities in tho
East and plans them on farms ea well as
to provide means of transportation ibr;the
the poorer classei .of those daily ar.
riving from Europe. It also provides
for the eetablishment of loan alms and
emigration agents In tho different cities
on the seaboard. -
, THIN CURIMIUTAU/DITION.
• The flanking and Chrienoy Committee
have decided not to report the bill In•
creasing the atirrenoy :50,000,000, as
ordered by the House, until alter the
funding bill is disposed of.
BICIIIOND, VA.
The Mayoralty Inkiestlon Cue—En.
&Ming get Melded Uncetuattuttonal.
ter Telegraph to the THlstrorich Clksette.)
RICHMOND, Mama 9t.—Judge Under
wood to-day granted an Injunction : re.
straining Ellison from acting al Mayer.
He also refused an optimal, on the ground
that the Injunction was temporary, it be.
log to continue only till the next term.
Ellison's counsel gave notice of an
Intention to disobey the order of the
Court In order to cause the arrest of Elli
son and bring Idioms before the Supreme
Court on a watt of habeas corpus.
The Judge ill Ida decision declares the
Enabling act, passed by the Legislature,
unconstitntional.which decision affects
nearly all the afters of the State.
Consolidation of Northwestern Rallroada.
( B y Tee k mph to the psttabo rib Us letto.)
CIIIOAO O I March 31.—The St. Paul
Pram of tbill MOrnitlig 1111110011 COO that the
nov ,th i ttoos for paw time pending
between the Lake Superior and !Meals
sippl and St. Paul and Sioux. City rail.
roads for a lease of the latter to the
former, have been completed, the con.
validation to take place Ju1y,"1871.. One
Of the results of the agreement is that
.lay Cooke .tUo. undertake the Immedl•
ate oompletion of the Sioux City, one
hundred and sorenty.five miles, while
the old road hi to build from Garden
City, its, present Centaurus, to James
City. This will unite the Union pacific
Railroad with tee Lake Superior.
TR I:- MORMONS. '
Remonstrance Against the tinily.° Pe-
lygamy Hill—The Plural Marriage
Doctrine Enunciated.
By 'telegraph to the rill/Atwell Gazette.)
SALT LAxv, March 31-10 tho rnaad
meeting held today tho following re-
monstrance was adopted
To the honorable Senate and if euer of
Representative, of the United States in
Congress Assembled Gunri.ghtsrr—lt
is with no ordinary concern that wo have
heard ar the rdisnage by the gonna of
Representatives of House bill o.
entitled "A bill to aid the execution of
the laws in Utah, and for other per.
posts," couunouly known as the Cullom
bill, egainst:whlch we desire to enter our
earnest, ungualined protest, and appeal
against its passage by the Senate or the
United States, and for tel reconekleration
by tile IiOURO of Representatives. We are
sure you will bear with us while we pre
sent for your consideration come of our
cameos why the bill should nol become
a law
Gentlemen]of the &nate nod !ionic of
Representatives: Of the one hundred
and fifty thousand estimated population
of the Territory-of Utah It is well known
that all except from Bye to ten thousand
are Members of the Church of Jesus
Christ, Latter Thiy Sainte, usually called
Mormons. These are easetitlally the peo
ple. of this Territory. They have settled
It, reclaimed the desert waste, mil•
posted, subdued the Indiana, opened
means of comettunlcatlon, made roads,
built - cities, towns, settlements, east,
lished government, encouraged educe.
time, and brought lute being a nevi State
to add a lustre to the national galaxy of
your glorious Union, and we, the ample
who have done thin, are bellevera 111 the
principle of plural marriageor polygamy,
not simply es promoting. social religion
and a preventive of many evils which
aill.ct our land, but as a- princi
ple revealed by God, underlying
our every hope of ultimate salve.
lion and happiness in heaven. We
believe in the pro-existence of the spirits
of men; that God I. the author of our
being; that marriage .1d ordained as the
legitimate source by which mankind
of tains an experience in his probation
on the earth; that the marriage reletlou
sales and extends throughout eternity,
and that without It no man :an attain to
sanitation in the celestial kinfdlOm of
God.
The revelation commanding the prin
ciple. of plural marriage Was given by
God, through Joseph Smith, to the
Church of Janie Christ, Latter Dry
Saints. In the first paragraph hi the,
following language:
"Behold, I reveal unto you. a neer'and
everlasting covenant, and if ye hoed not
that covenant, then are ye damned, for
no One can reject this covenant an d be
permitted to enter heavenly glory."
With this language before um we can
not view plural marriages in any other
light than in the vital principle of our re.
liglon. fat re;igion appear in the eyes
in others as it may, to us It la a divine
demand of equal- force with any ever
given by the Creator of the world to His
children in the flesh.
The Bible confessedly stands in our
nation as the foundation on which lawn
are based. It is the foundation on which
our ideas of right and wrong are drawn,
and it gives shape and force to our moral
ity. Yet it sustains plural Marriage and
In no Instance doralt condemn that Insti
tution.
Not only having, therefore, a revela
tion front Clod in the belief end practice
of th is principle obligatory upon us, we
have the warrant of the holy script urns
and the exempla of prophets and
righteottemen, shorn Ged loved, honor
ed and blessed.
And It should be borneAO mind, that
when tide principle was promulgated,
and the people of this-terrltory entered
upon Its powder., it was net a crime.
Hod revealed to us lila divine word as
contained in the Bible, which we had
I. been taught to venerate and regard as
holy and upheld it, and there was no law
applicable to us nicking our belief or
practice of it 'criminal. It Is crime In
this territory to-day only as the law of
1862, passed long yearn after our adoption '
of this principle a• part of oar religious '
faith, makes it such. The law of 11162 Is
now a -fact. One proacriptlon ' gives
strength to another. What yesterday
was opinion Is liable to day to be le,w.
It is for this reason we earnestly, fee •
pecifully remonstrate and protest against ,
the passage of the bill now before the
honorable Senate, feeling assured that
while It cannot acoMnplish any possible
good, It May result 1p a great amorost of
misery. It give. n& alternative but the
cruel one dr - rejecting Ged's command
and abjuring our religion, or disobeying
the. authority of t the Government
we desire to honor and respect. It is in
direct violation of the tint amendment of
the Constitution, which declares that
CongreasChall make no law respecting
en establishment of religion or prohibit-
ing the free exercise thereof. It robs our
priesthood of their erection and Heaven
bestowed powers, and gives them I.
justices of the Supreme Oaprt, justice.
of the peace and priests whose suthority
we cannot recognise. by empowering
I such as tea only ones to celebrate mar
' flags. As well might he law prescribe
who shall baptize for remission of sins,
or laying on of bands fur the reception
of the Holy Ghost. It encourages forni
cation and adultery, for all such mar
, rinses would be deemed Invalid and
without any reared or binding force
by our community, and those thus netted
together would, according to their belief
and religious convictions, be living In a
condition of habitual adultery, which
would bring the holy relation bf mar
-1 rlage into disrepute, destroy the safe
! guards of chastity and virtue. It is un
ostentatious' In that it is la direct opposl.
Ilion to section nine, article' one, of the
Constitution, which provides that "no
bill of attainder of ex post lento law
shall be passed." It destroys the
right trial by jury, providing for im
panelling jurors composed of indivld
' stale recognized as enemies of the as
°used and of foreigners to the district
where a case under it is to be tried, while
the sixth amendment to the Ooroffitution
provides that "in all - criminal prosecu
tions the accused shall enjoy the right
of speedy public trial by an impartial
jury of the State or district wherein the
crime has - been committed." It is con.
trarrto the eighth amendment of the
Constitution, which provides that "ex•
evasive fines shall not be imposed, nor
cruel unusual punishments inflicted."
It violates' the eighth section of Sr.l
Mile one of the Constitution, which
provides " that Congress shall establish
a uniform rule of naturalization through
out the United States," in that it pro
vides In section fifty-seventh a. new,
unheard of and special rule, applkiable‘
to the territory of Utah. It in unrepub.
lican In that in section tenth It please
men on unequal ground, by giro
, one portion of the citizens 'nape
'Son privileges to others because of
their belief. It strips us, in sections 17th
and :oath, of the land we have reclaimed
from barrenness and which we have paid
the government for, also of all possessory
rights to which weans entitled as waders.
it authorizes, by section 14th, the send
ing of criminals Into distant military
camps and prisons. It is moat unjust,
unconstitutional and proscriptive, in that
It disfranchises and proscribes America°_
citizens for no set but simply believ
ing In plurality of wives,
which
the bill styles "polygamy, bigamy,
or corionanage, ' even if they
never practiced or designed to practice
It. It offers a premium for prostitution
and corruption. In that it requires, in
sections eleventh and twelfth, husbands
and wives to violate the holiest vows
they can make and voluntarily bastardize
their own children. Section twentritrat
declares mastless to be ti civil contract,
names MTh** who alone shall solemnize
the rite, when our faith expressly holds
It as the most sacred ordinance, which
can only be administered by those hold
ing authority from Heaven, thus com
pelling us to discriminate In favor of
officers appointed by the Government
and against officers authorized by Al
mighty God. .It takes away the right
conscience and deprives us of an ordi
nance upon the correct administration of
which our happiness and eternal salvation
depend. It net only subverts religious
liberty, bt in sections 16th and 19th
violates every principal of civil liberty
and true republicanism, in that it bestows
upon Governors ',authority to govern
idle and prison', remove their wardens
and keepers, to appoint and remove pros
bate jUdges,justiees of the peace, Judges
of all elections, notaries Raja
and sheriffs. clothing one- man with
despOtio and in this republic Un
heard of powers. It thus deprives
people of all votes in the government of
the territory, reduces them to abject
vassalage, mutes a dangerous, irrespon
sible and eentrallzed despotism, from
which there is no appeal, and leaves
their lives, liberties and every human
right subject to the caprice of one man,
and that man selected and sent here from
afar. It proposea.in sections eleventh,
twelfth and seventeenth • to . panieh
American citizens, ncit for wrongs , Mit
for acts sanctioned by God and practiced
by his most favored servants, requiring
them to call those had men whom lOod
chose for his oracles and delegated to
honor,and even to omit reflections on the
ancestry of the SavioUr himself. It strikes
at the foundation of all republican
government, In that it dictates opin
ions and belief, preseribets what
shall and what shall not be believed
by citizens, and Maumee to decide on the
validity of the revelations from Almighty
God, the anther of existence. It disor
ganizes and reduces to a chaotic condi
tion every precinct, city and minty in
the Territory of Utah and substi
, tutes no adequate organization. It
subverts by summary . process neat
ly every law . on our stature
book. It violated the faith of the United
States, In that it breaks the original
contract made with the people of this
territory in the organic law, who ware
at the time that compact was made re
ceived es cit Mens from the Mexican
territory and known to be believers in
the doctrines in the Unurch of Jesus
Christ, Latter Day Sainte.'
We also wish your honorable bodies to
understand that the Legislature of this
Territory has never passed any law affect.
ing the primary disposal of soil. but
only gdop.ed regulations for controlling
our claims and pcsseolons, upon
which improvements to the amount of
millions of dollars have been made.
This bill In section 213th repeals the law
,of the territory containing said regula
tions, thereby leaving us nu legal pro
tection for our herd earned possessions
and accumulated labor of over, twenty
years, and exposing us to the mercy of
land speculators and vampires.
Gentlemen of the Senate and Ileums
of Itspresentaslvest, this bill which would
deprive us of religious liberty and every
political right worth having, is not di
rected againet the people of Utah as men
and women, but against their-holy re
ligion. Eighteen years ago, and ten
years before the passage of the anti-
Polygamy act of 1062, one of oar
leading men, Eider Orson Pratt, was ex
pressly deputised and sent to Waehlng
ton to publish and lecture on the princi
ple of plural marriage as practiced by us. -
kle lectured frequently ih that and other
clues,_ publishing a paper for a-length
of time, In which he established by
elaborate and convincing arguments the
divinity of .the revelation commanding
plural marriage, given through the
prophet Joseph Smith, and that doctrine
was sanctioned and endorsed by the
highest Biblical authority for ten years
before the passage of the act of 1e62.
The principle was widely preached
throughout the Union and the . world,
and was universally known and recogni
zed as the principle of our holyfaith.
We are thus explicit In medtio rang
thLs fact to show that patriarchal mar
riage has long been understood to be a
cardinal principle of our religion ;and
we would respectfully mention also, in
this connection, that while hundreds of
leading elders have been in the eastern
States and Wastangton, not one of them
has been cited to appear a. • witness
before the Committee on Territories to
prove thin principle Is part of our religion,
gentlemen well knowing that if
that were established the proposed
law would then be null and veld,
because of Its :unconstitutionality.
What we have done to enhance the
glory of our- country by pioneering,
opening up and making inhabitable.a
vest western region, is before the nation
and should receive a nation's thanks, not
a proscriptive edict to rob ns of every
right worth possessing and of the
very soil we have reclaimed
and then purchased from the Gov
ernment. -Before this soil - was Uni
ted Mates Ignitor" me..settled It, and
live hundred of oar- beet men responded
to the call of the Government In a war
with. Mexico and sweated in adding to'
the national domain. When we were
received into the Union our re.
ligton was known. Our early. olt .
cars, inelliding our find Govern
or, were nearly all Mormons, for
there were few others to elect from.
We were treated as citizens possessing
equal rights and. the original bond of
agreement between the United States
Government and the people inhabiting
this territory, conferred upon us the
right of self government in the came
degree ea le enjoyed by other territories
In the Union.
(The remainder of the memorial
reached us at. too late anhour for put •
steation this norning.)
MARINE DISASTER.
Mishap to an Ocean steamer—Rescue of
Passenger—Suffered Lose of the Ves
sel with Officers and Crew.
Shy Telsgesph to the iltlaborit) °steno.)
Nzw 'Vona, March El. The steam
fruiter Camilla, which arrived here yes.
terday, having on board the passengers
of the steamship Venezuelan, of the
West India and 'Pacific Steamship Com
pany of Liverpool, who were transferred
to the Camille on the 16th of March, in
the latitude thirty-three and thirty de
grees north, longitude forty-four and ten
degrees west, or about 1,600 miles from
New York, and between three hundred
and tour hundred miles to the westward
of the Azores, brings the-following par
ticulars of thodleaster: The Venezuelan is
a fine iron-screw steamer; of one hundred
and sixty tone register, with engine. of
two hundred horse power, Is brig-rigged,
and plies on the line between Liverpool
and Aspinwall, touching at several of
the West India blends, and at the ports
on the Spanish main coast. She sailed
from Liverpool on tho sth of March
with a fall cargo of general me?.
chandler), £OOO in specie, the malls,
thirteen passengers, and a crew of
forty - six persons, bound to the
West Indies. From the date of sailing
she experienced fresh gales: but on the
12th she encountered very heavy weath
er, which continued until the 15th, when
■he broke down at eight and a hall
o.olook in* the morning. It wee blowing
a moderate gale with a heavy creel , sea
running, and without any warning or
shock the rudder dropped off. At the
same Umo the stern post broke offi leav
ing a large hole in the veesePs aide.
Water rushed Into the after store room,
and In fifteen minutes after it was full.
Measures word taken at once to c3nfine
the water in the after compartment.
FortnicatelY, next day the CUrnilla hove
In sight and took on board the passen
gers. The Captain and 'all the officers
and thirty-six of the crew of the Vene
zuelan remained with the ship. Ina few
hours after the ships parted company a
‘heavy gale set in, and the Captain of the
,Camilla fears that the Venezuelan amid
'not, In her crippled condition, weather
it. There lea strong feeling-among the
passengers 4110 that the Venezuelan did
not Melly. the gate of the 16th and 17th
Irate. -
==
When the German atearrehlp Hansa
was about to leave the Hoboken dock on
Haturday she sprung a leak, In eons°•
guano° of some defective plates. Her
OArito wetransferred to the Delilahland.
The Hansa Is reparlng.
CHIcI9O.
• •
Arrangements for Memorial . Service to
the Liter General Thomas—Order to
Army of tbe•Cumberland Society.
(er Toseraos to the Pltlebttreh umeete.i
ontmoo, March 31.—The Committee
appointed yesterday to make the or
rangements for a memorial service to
the late General Thomas met to-day at
General Sheridan's headquartere. Gen.
Sheridan stated that the President of the
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Rail-.'
road had tendered the Committee such
cars on that road m they might need to
most the remains at Omaha and for con
veying them to Troy, New York.
A motion was adopted that the pastors
of all churches In this city be requested
to deliver sermons before their various
congregations next Sunday on the life
and public services of the deceased. It
was also resolved that a public memorial
addresa be delivered on the evening of
the dayon which the funeral obsequies
shall be held in Troy.
Lieutenant General Sheridan. es Senior
Vice President of the Army of the Cum
build:id, bee promulgated an official
order announcing the dsath of General
Thomas and requesting that the nand
badge of mournieg be worn by members
of the Society for thirtY days.
BUVVALo, Yards 81,—Cattle: receipts
Of 2.590; the market la
_iptet, heavy and
steady at s
...hang ed wijnick Sheep; sales of MO hea
la li d.
ght sup-
Hogs
ply and quiet at 4Madno ter wooled.
NO. 78.
NEW
ADI7ERTISEDIENTS
7 JP]Eii-bIEINr
GOLD LOAN,
FREE OF U. S. TAX
BURLINGTON,
CEDAR RAPIDS,
and MINNESOTA
RAILROAD CO'S
First Norigage
50 YEAR BONDS
With Interest, in GOld,
neluded from November 1, at 95
J. EMAIL TIIOXPSON, Philadelphia
CHARLES L. FROST, New York..
Tirane frauds are payable. principal and inter
est, In Coln, at Few York or Landon; the Inter.
yet being payable in tiny and November.
They are convertible Into stock; and are pre.
meted by a liberal Sinking Pend.
"They art issued upon the nayaral nettle= of
the road only ate the name arc completed and in
successful °penal..
' They are guaranteed notonly by a Millen anon
the outtre property and tranehlmor the Company
but &ICI by non entrant .earnluga, and an •Mtl'o
commerce on the route of the road, and bays not
to depend for their arcuy.ty neon a tragic which
the road Itself Is expected to create •
. . .
Over Three Millions Dollars have beeelhiready
expended on the road.
light? three Diller or road are already comple
ted sod equipped. mad .how lame eanalugm 004
the remainder of the Ilne 16 procreeslig rapidly
toward eomolellop.
-• . •
The Rate of lowa- through which thie road
runs, Is one of the richest agricultural sections
of America. and Its immense yield of agricultu.
rat 'products. create a emissivp demand for the
construction of Me rood.
' Ihe road also rune through the fertile and
growing litate of Minnesota. It traverses the
most enterprising and growing portion of the
West. and forms the ehortmt of the grant trust
lines In direct communication wilt New Toth.
Chicago and lit. Louis.
Having thoroughly Investigated ail the cOndi
lions affecting the seeaslty of these Fonds. we
reef petaled In giving them an unqualified in
dorsement. as a Ilreteclest and thormighlY safe
investment. as secure as atiOrentreleAl Bondman,
pethibly be. and paying nearly 50 peicent =Old
interest than PlvevTwentles.
All markete:do tecuriti• r at their fall price,
tree of ermunlesicth and express charges, received
on payment. Pamphlets and Yaps tarnished on
application. •
HENRY. CLEWS & CO.
Financial Agents of the Company,
No. 32 WALL STREET
Messrs. S. McOLEAN & CO
No. 57 Fourth Avenue,
M. 4 M: Ni7IONAL DANN BUILDING
=I
Bankers and dealers In all lauds of (Weeny:mat
Mate, Connty, 0.17. Railroad sad other
mlacellarieonn securities.
Marta drawn direct on England, 'tenni' and
Pentland and principal chits or Europe. Collet-,
tiona 1111.11il nit over the ...try. Caimans and
Europe. interest allowed on time depoelta. and
everything to boldness attended to with ilb
aridity and dispatch!
-1111 - ui
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO,
Of New York.
139 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
risiNcirm. WICATISRES:
Orditniry whole Lite. Policies Aubotarrsty
NOs-VORPI IT ABLE from payment of Scut
annual Premien,
Speval i maniac NON-YORTIITAELR OT
two annual pay merit. All policies .NCirNT T.
MILS far mum' camel, and AItrOLUTELY IN
CONTEnTABLE after two animal premiums.
AU restrictions you TRAVEL and itir:if ORECE
removed atiO no penal. nudged. No ACCw-
IMLATION OF INTERIM r on Loans or Or
Premiums. and NO INCREASE of annual
P hu
on any clam of policies. Dividends on
he P AOC HE:MITE PLAN. alsomanthe GUAR
ANTEE INTEREST plan. NO NOTRlsrequired
on
LOAN mil there. la NO ACCUMULATION
OF INTEREST charged upon .he mime. roil
cies become ISEL.7-6106TAININE/ in about at
teen y • ems, and t h erea ft er viel.l an locums •0
the Policy bolder. Ulu, term and endowment
pondes are issued; also. Summitse intemeLimil'
ties and annuities.
COMMENCEMENT ZUSINEUS of ills CO M
MT: TUU, 0 0 0 0 071 . %tr tga l I It. t
amount insured. 411,500.01/0; moo .01 of pre-
mints. 8330,000,
Mewl, Ratite Agent. 'lranted'averlarbere
Western Plan
WM. A. FULLER. Manager.
trr.M 78 Fourth Ave.. gattsbargh. pa.
OriPica or Ton•Strohn or ALLIGUONT .
CITIOnOta CI, April let, 1870..'
T N F'IIRBIIANCE OF THE 21st
&TO.. 01 • n Aet ralatlat to Alleh r henT mita
tn. /approved the let day of May, 1861. and of
the amendment to said emit., appeared the
70th day II Much, 1866. I do •herehy She ...-
Mee that the Doptlestes for tie mend Ward..
/Soren atm and Townships will be open. sad I will
be meg. &red to receive the
County, State, Poor Work House and
Improvement Taxes for 1870,
On and after the let day of MAY, 1570.
Bald MIMI can be paid at this once until the let
day of Auguat with • ded•etion of FIVE PER
CENT: for prompt payment to ail Der... PaYhtlf
the whole amount of their Wise.
There will he no deduction allowed daring the
month of August. There will be
TEN PER CENT. ADDED
•
To all taxes remaining unpaid on the IS 4.1 in
15aptember, 11170.
3. T. DEANISTON,
apt:A ll:dar Treasurer et Allegheny Co
CO—PARTNERSHIP.
•QOBEett H. CWT bas this day been admitted
as a member of oar firm. =
H. BIBBY 'di Oa.
I=
EM'S/1.137-ASELED 11211
gnat Want..ALagat HIODT..I.OIIT. L• al T.
RIGBY, OUST & C0.,-
No. 189 LIBERTY ST
Wholesale and Retail Dealers and Jobbers In
ODIN A. DU EL c.NliWkale, ULAtid and SILVIS
YLATMD WARIL:
The attention of all requiring eooeste the shove
Hue, It directed to our dtock. ItopMed dinette
from the lt Kuropeau merit•ts me ar
toteivimr be fresh and desirable,ln e
lot at abovelt..
Koala apt 043
A TrEISTION,
FARMERS AND GARDNIMRS
Specie Paymeate Hemmed
SILVER
=I
W. W. KNOX'S
Agricultural Kr. Scud 130112150
.M3=M=
•li'aff-AViz4));CODS*I 4 4 I 4I
ED. BLRKF% Proprietor
Cm. Pena Et. and l Rh, formerly old Cu.
alarm
nAZOIIfh
And all lands of Cutlery ground at
JAMB MOWN'!,
apt lie Wood Stmt.
u ta n'E TACKLE.
F
.
I have just mtred a complete moortment
of th e above good.. =Wooing a mat aww ie of
all the latest dose. lo them . The follow
er. Of haws Waltos 11l do well to call and es
matzo my amortment and Ink.. .
' . /Alain SOWN.
_eh'
BAMBOO POLES.
•
I have a hill aeunaient or Bamboo Pale..
with or without st.. also with net buds ua
koaliker elik a fail Liu of hickory. Wool
lama , reod. home of Lie *bore are of •M 7
harlot artielo. /or W. 01
JA 101/11.
opt 114 Woolairoaa•
THE WEEKLY GAZETTE
TIM BEER AID OBEAPEST
COmmersial and Family Newspaper
PUBLISHED IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA.
No farmer. allookkanta. or merchant, mo 11.1 ne
walkout. It. •
=
Single soboerlbers.,
Cl* of live
Clobs of Sok
A copy li tbonhbod dostoissosll toms setter
op ot • tolab often. rootmatters no ropotstoil
tO Set rot 001111tf. Address.
PENNIMAN, REED & co-7
=EI
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
iron'' , or THE'
CONDITION OF TILE
Merchants and Manufacturers National
Bank,
Of rlttaboargh, at the close of toteluese, Marol
2110.11170.
RESOURCE:J. .
Loam , mal Discounts 11 1111.1199 33
Overdrafts 4.11193
D. S. Bonds to secure Circulation 409,000 Du
U. S. Honda and tionsritles on hand, 10,999 I• 11
tither Uwe/m.llomb and Bortg's. 11.141 11
Due from RodeeMing and he- •
serve Asen,••• 39,11 , 1 Ho
Due from other AationstPa.ks... /4.49117
line from other nunlis Bankers. /5.3 91 OS
nankin, Down • 110.949 1)
3.11113
Current. -k . .1 z
Taxml•alft 41.120 uti
Cash Items luchidln
r. c e,,,,,,„ 1,.. g , u.P. , ..• • 0,0 40 um
Bills of mbar ' N i tt h Uo *C ti l lf B th afk ki s °U"•• . 41 17 3: 6 5 . 0 4 0 4 . 4 . '!?!
ittlis of Mate Basks.— ._—,. ,
Yrsctloust Currency . ' iincl . u . r . G"
°°
Nickels! '—.. . . . .....•. .......... ~.g , .16,010 111
Legal Tender-I:ski 240,007 OU
•$,090,y30 UT
Ma=
4" soo.odo 00
1132.431 01
0.1r.4 47
49/1511 27
1091
capital Rock paid 1
Surplus Fond
Discount.
Znehannes'
intereet
National Hank inictilsUon ont•
standlni
Individual 1100111 U --
314,06 U
00
318,06 u Me
Dividends nnPnid 3,4x100
Doe to Nat West Bant• 41.64* rot
Doe to other Banks end Banters 4,00601
1101.0914,339 47
STATE OY YEE NSTLVAtiI A. l ,3,:
COUI.ITV Or •LIM.111.1i•
I JOUN SCOTT. Jo—CA.ld.. of , he ?demean , .
any MlLMltheturers National Sauk of Ylltaberic%
do aolemalge of
that the above otatement
true to tie at Of jtarAalit4,..4l
•
.131 b •W11 1' .471/. "*"' W J.X. IrIV/Vel Pl.' l "
.Notary fool.
•
(lorreel—Atte.t:
B. I. BOLLYAN,
ROUT. 11. nw art. ilircetors.
HTEWAILT McEIS. i re.
R EPORT
OY TIIE CONDITION Or THE
GERMAN NATIONAL BANK
01' Pittsburgh
At the close or buslnesi, March 3441.
BEBOURCES. I.
Loan/land Dlseounts g 536.121 0 , 1 I.
overdraDe ran? 57 t.
U. 3.ltonds to Secure Circelat . n. 506.1510 Ott
Due from Redeemleg sod Ito.
77.777
17 ...
serve Agents
Due from other Natio.' Bunks 13.503 24 '..
Doe from colter Banks 411atkers.. • 5.625 47 1:
Banking b0tt1e23,259 IS t..
Paraded. sod Fixture. ' II ISO If. ,I
Current Exoeuses...... ......... ... 5,0901 If. ..i
Taxes Pull . 5.121 .8 ;.•
Premium.. _ 044 52
Cheeks and other Cash Items ' 43.315 Oil
Exchanges for Clearing Hortse..... 22.602 7*
fr M ac o ous tb . Curre n t 1 Raeuttd.teg.
1.200 Uh
Nickel.)
Specie
Legal Tender Note.
3 Per Cent. Certificates,
=I
•
LIABILITIES.
Capital Stock. paid In
Surplus Fund
Discount
Excitants
Prods and Loss
NaDonsi Bank Circulation out
standing SSIS,OOO 00
Individual DePosit. 4E14746 03
Due to National Banks 41.4.4117
Due to other
Ra t s
an 51.1165 73
No Di and Blllaidiscountod....... 10.55111 3t/
.1 5150,000 00
. 71.000 00
5114 311:1. -
. 6,4551 uti
633 51
g1,175./1116 10
STATE. OF PIGHNnYLVANIA ,
COMITIr Of AL,ltOnirlY,
103EP O.I.AURENT, Cashier of tho Gentian
National Bank of Intiebergh, threoleranly armor
that the above statement Is true to the bettor Iny
knowledge
L/LURENT, Cashier.
Sworn to aed subscribed before me MO.110:Li
-
darer Marsh, 1810. B.
Peter) rustle.
C' T. c t7II . OII7Y.INUICR ,
PA411. , 1100 US. . ...00ne1f 0 A ,
REPORT OF THE
=
PEOPLES' NATIONAL BANK
Of Pitt sburitb, •
At ;be close of i,osluess liereh 94{•.1NT0. ^
132==
.
Loans and 'Discounts ' 9 93114 il 34 .
Orerdrails. ... 6434 04 ' i
U. s. no.a . ; iO :Z.O;;; ........... • • • _1
uo. ioo,oeo oo
puke omega. Bonds and 'NM- - •
D f u u e from Redeeming and 1k- ' sceso 75
Besse Agnate., 136.379 93 ,
Due from other National Bank.. 90,003 011
Dee treenotberßsukssue Beek., 13,647.....T.1....—..
Bankluis Honk 93.614 54
Varlet.. and PLaturea. 3.091 4.
.. . .
'razes _
Prete' ,
Cerh I
c
rractl.
Three ref t..Certleelt
eh es,
FEE
I=!
Carnal Kock paid In
ear pins 'nun.
Ithrenont
National Beak Clrentatlon
Inalvldnal Deposita
Una to National Bantu....
STAVE or ritiItIiTLVANCA. •
yotleTT or Al.thoßiNT. Su" . '
I. Tftrt OXLIN Y. ttilltDON, Catletr of the
proves. Nations! Bask of Plttsbenth.do etlehet-
IF swear that the abort statement Is tree, to the
beat of my hoowledF. Mre d l
• M . UUitD IN, Cublev.
8.21111t0 and sat Ker bed beraremie taU 30Lti day
Mara, 15 TU.
.701. SNOWDZN, Notarfrabtle.
arg'137."112:. •
JOHN W. cHALYANT,} Directors
B. F. JONES.
LETTERS
DCMALMAN •
T. IST OF
IMF IN B
SIC
A
Arboßaei '
Aroogastillslll
AllesJae
A be M John
e 7
A llll•triMg 1.1
AMU Jas
Beane" Alex
SennettliraCar
Ends Patrick
Il ßee rake e lroollrslb Miss /CM
Baltleti ■ 0
Bob!
Annie. Jos
Barrie@ Jr
Best Bee
C
Caristla Alex
Chspla ells.
CecalnYleVlo •
CrlaerJ
cealleellissLyj
Curt
Mrs
we
Clerk El A
Canalashemße
Copelase Wes
Curlew,. Joe
YMber Wm
rgurtmarneWH
mlihi Km
Torbm Wm C
Irlach Wm Jr
ooorl DevldJ
Mem* , • CO
Ho Thor
m s er lielparr
/W
.
Hatrima am I
HICIMILII im
rers/Illz .I.lls
/ones J
James las
IJobamon Albert
Healine's Ala
Karasmaabligh
i Kasamr•erlthz
Wailers Meer.
Link llitasbmat•
Landoll/02M
llDebt 11 hao 0
IVornnJ D
Morsarklas Tni
WWII! Jut
Mye
slet rs T onrem
Mrs I. Ilea
Massios YIuL
m.ggss
M• rat
MeTort JtS
YFILLLIP
Daell
Mole Prato&
ihmAldwan Woo
Dlson t
Dine M orns 814887
Dane Morns .1
DeenstB Jabs
CH.A.N D ELIERS,
• Brackets, Pendants,
AND
FIXTURES OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS
For Gas or OiL. •
We.* .ow readying our IiPIUNO FROCK OF
YEMPUBSS of the Lunt and Finest Deer.
from Ito st Liable. einteletag over 100 D er
eat Whole.!. an le Mug at VIDO
Pltlela, and Retail.
WELDON & KELLY,
Plumbers askd Goa illttrs,
147 WOOD ITIIBBT, sear Filt► beau:
oar Orders an Plumbing, Ore and unga.,, int,
tieg 9,43.0,1 V attended made'
pITTISBILIEGH
BANN FOR SAVING&
TO. 41 YOUITH AVlttfUt.'MTOßEfitell.
CHAILTILBID DC MY.
011thr DAILY from 9 to 4 Wciaret t
SATUKDAY SYZNIND, from Kay_ ...LE SS;
yeah. let, from to ti Welcooltomm.r.
vataber lat 1s
Bay t, 6to
potd at the rate of eta per Oent.. free.. •••• — • — in
If not withdrawn componade aeral.annaarb..
January and 1•10. Hoots of 11 46 ...""
• =d1r1=1,—.3...
ELI;7IM, iAt
6. oradley. r ji
rahomitiaao.
litmlett. Joao leboorta.
ee.Josona. •
Ohrtttopher noir. tto • vo
D. W. a .A. sews:
CANE rovcs.
I ties. ••sw essorUesst of Owe Poles tar&
mer mot less year. tellah f ate. at • very low
potties staatfos should prase early, .0 u
to lassos their orders being 11. d.
JAW CIS SOWN.
IWI Wood Sweet.
rtt.rMi h iss .
by auksl/11 '
II
SI 60
I 35
. 115
1331111
.
9 0411 40
74.10 s au
mow rut tt
•
) ,
.4) L. ,
1b.1.10t/
0,324,08)II 30
st,ocio,ooo 00
. 110.000 00
111,341 St
. 000 000 00
443.16 1.4
346 0
71
2,320.052 30
REMAIN
.IIIOE April
XeMarelfflal X
noWliklas .no
MaoUlla* A
!Yealton Xrs
o•Conao• Was
Geseas Geo W
rott Chas
platorlos bltsaJ
P erm. r W
6a04 C
Hassell John
Reed Jes.
Malan H W
reb aaMmb
MMAim
.ea.
.
aid de II Miss r
swerrwu.
ImitA
T
Taylor D
Taylor itobt
T as lin D
obs
Wallace WmM
Watiecorsllat'
Wilson DI (col)
Watson Jos
Welsh Matthew
Woe& Wm
=VC