_--....4 ......7--,...-.7.----.- 4 ......,,, lt , . i & ~.. .. - k __. TS r _ l • N • - 1 ~. k „e. • , 't ' ' ' Ili . t .. • "4 ...,...., ''' •S - 4 :!: ..,.... w * 4 - . •k . 4' t .‘ 1 ._ • _ 4 * 4 -. i ~.., AP •s-!' ...-*"" * f 1 . 1 4° -•*' .- * 4 •a \k4tiimefe ,t- 4., l'A ...,..,-:...,....--.. .-, ...." 4* , t,.. ---- .7 - --.-_f_ - : - _--___ - _- _--, %. _ •.. •mg \... .....- -'---. -...--:-• 4' c ... . . ._.....,.,:... .s. -..- , %-- . •• , * , 4 . vk....5....- _ _ .....-i? - _ - _ - ---- - z, ---7 77 - -----._ - - , . f_4 ' ' 1 0% 4 --- --- - --=-,- - r - --, - -- BY GEORGE BERGNER. pail g Ceitgrapil ` 411. ;OPINION OF 'TECE RON. JOHN J. PEARSON, Overruling the motion fora new trial, in the case of P. Bill, convicted of embezzlement at the last term of the Court of Quarter Ses . .sicms —with the sentence of the, Court—delivered Monday, February 22, 1864. Commonwealth) No. 1, of Nov. session, 1863. vs. }- Indictment for embezzle-1 F. P. ) ment. The defendant having been indicted and convicted under the 107th section of the penal code, for embezzeling the money of the Phila delphia and Reading railroad company, in whose employment it is averred he was as a conductor, a motion has been made for a new trial on account of misdirection of the court in matter of law, and also in arrest of. judgment for defects in the indietinent We will, for the greater convenience, dispose of the last question first. lt is complained in the reasons filed that no distinct act of em bezzlement is charged—that no ownership in the money alleged to have been embezzeled is averred, and more than one offence is laid in, the same count. In addition, our attention has been directed to certain other alleged defects on the argument. Our act of Assembly is measurably framed from the 7th and Bth George the 4th; but is rather broader in its provisions than the British statute, which speaks of "clerks and servants or per, sons employed, in the capacity of clerks or servants," whilst our act says, "any clerk, servant or other person in the employment of another." Both provide, in almost the same words, for proceeding against the pa.itY for any distinct acts of embezzlement, not ex-, ceeding three in number, which may have been committed within six months of each other. We may, therefore, look with confi dence to . the precedents adopted - in. Great , Britain as our guide for framing indictments, under our act which is comparatively new. i The pleader appears to have almost literally followed the form to be found in Wharton's criminal precedents, with the single excep tion of laying three distinct acts of .embezzle *Ment, committed pu., different -days, in the .same count. This is considered ea an irreg ularity, in Regina vs. Purchase, 10. and Man. 617, cited in 3d Arch. C. P. 447-5 in notes. It was also held in-'Rex vs. 'Williams:6 'C. and P. 626, that where there is but one count, aildithe prisoner received different sums on different days, the 'prosecutor must elect some one sum, and confine himself to that, - *+lid could not give evidence of money receiv ed on other days. Archibold, who probably furnishes the best criminal precedents to be found at the present day, gives the - form of each of the additional counts, so . 'to em brace all of the three (Efferent times of em bezzlement in one indictment. It is certain . •b, ziuch safer to follow such ft glliae:illan to atterep.' t e frame new precedents. The legal ma • via t api rita Ales with great force in criminal cases est tutissima, and the pleader , always runs grea „` risk when he, departs_ fro_ni the trodden path any, attempts tasave tabor by a near cut,., Iteisevera: distinct offences are Jo' thrown intoson'e - count, it likely to create jal:de t .;especially when, ae here, the de -.lltis charged with receiving ,gt gross sum lire& di*s, instead of stating the amount - eivedon'each day: The precise sum which came to his hand in any one day need not be proved, nor need the prosecution describe or prove the kind of money, but it should be averred, as directed by-the statute, that each day laid was within six months after the pre ceeding day on which an. act' of embezzle ment is charged, and• such appears to be the precedents and decisions. R. vs. Purchase, Car,i,M. 617, R. , Npolm, 2 Car. & H. 620. It is a general rule that every indictment upon a statute must state all such facts and circum stances as constitute the statutory offence, and bring the party within its pro Visions. 1 Chitty's cram. law 281, 2 & 3—Ed. of 1841; and by the common law4is not sufficient to use the words of the statute merely, but there must be proper description of the character of the per son, and of the crime committed, laid- with suitable averments of time, place, &0. The 11th section of the second part of the Penal Code declares, in regard to this subject, that "every indictment shall be deemed and ad= judged sufficient and good in law which_ charges the crime substantially in the lan guage of the act of Assembly, prohibiting the crime, and prescribing the punishment." This provision was certainly intended to do away with part of the particularity of decskiption previously held necessary. The statute is reme dial, and should be so 'construed as to avoid the inconvenience formerly , existing, and ad vance the remedy provided by the Legislature. This indictment avers that ..the.defendant was employed as a conductor to the -Philadelphia and Reading H. E. Co., and did.,:hYiiitue of his employment, and while he was So oniploygd, " receive and take into his possession. - " , certain .ether moneys, to wit: one thousand dollars. for* and in the name, and on account of the said Philadelphia and Reading H.R. Co., and the money so received fraudulently and felo niously did embezzle and'convert to his own use. It then goes on to aver that the defend-. ant, the said money, the property ofthe Phil adelphia andßeading R. ItCo. t from the said company feloniously did steal, S;e:::- Now, these averments aro in the very langiiage of the act of Assembly, which speaks of clerks, servants, or other person in the employment of another, by - virtue of such employment re keiving and taking into their possession any ohattel, money, for or in the name, or or the account of such master or employer, ana`fraudulently embezzlhig the same, or any part thereof, &c. I am - unable to see how , the fact of em bezzlin3 and converting the-money by the de fendant, or its ownership 'by the company, could be more clearly and dist f indtly averred. The indictment also conforms in ibis particu lar to the precedents to be foundinArchibold, Wharton and other form bookaaThe 88th sec.' of the second part of the penal code relating to embezzlement, also provides that if the em. bezzlemerit be of money; no particular kind need be described, nor need any partietaar amount be proved. Vie conside'r the, owner ship of the money well laid, and, if necessa: t 7, the averments of employment, ownership, k,c., in the second count can be called in. aid of those in the third. Chitty, in work on 1, . criminal law, vol. • p 205, 'says, "although every count should appear upontheof it to charge the defendant with a &din face. of: , . . fence, yet one count may refer to matter in another count so as to avoid unnecessary rep etition, &c., and although the first count should be defective, or rejected by the grand jury, this circumstance will not vitiate the residue," and we may safely add that it can be referred to for such purposes, although aban • aimed on the trial. That 'count very fully and particularly desMibes the employment of the defendant, by the railroad company, the character of the emploYment; and his receipt of the money by virtue thereof, and the ownership of the money. But it has been suggested on the argument that a conductor on a railroad train does not come. within the act of Assembly; that he is not such an em ployee as is therein described, and we are re ferred to 2 Met., 343, where it is held that an auctioneer is not within the Massachusetts act; to 11 Met., 64, which decides thatthe collector of bills for a newspaper is not embraced by its .provisions, and to 5 Denio, in which it is set tled by the Supreme Court of New York, that a constable employed to collect bills, if volun- Mrily by the debtors, and to sue them when not so paid, is not embraced by the laws Of' that State. It must be borne in mind that our statute is differently worded from those of either of the States mentioned. They speak of 'clerk' or servant, ours of "clerk, servant, or other person in the employ of another;" and we all know that the conductor of a railroad train is a persop. in .the employ-of the company, which is almost daily held responsible for his acts or negligencei. I should have no more considered an auctioneer as the clerk or ser vant of the man who sends goods to his room to be sold, than is an attorney at law who holds himself out as a collector to all who choose to employ him; or a commission mer chant who professes to sell for any one•who consigns him goods. The soundness of the casein 11 Metcalf is very questionable, as it is in, direct conflict with two decisions under the English statute, R. & Ry. 198, 3 Stark. N. P., cases 70, in both of which it was held that an agent, employed by many firms to -travel the country and make collections, was a clerk or servant who might be convicted of embez zlement, and even when the embezzlement charged' was by an employee who was to have a certain percentage on the sales, though not a partner, it was held that he was a servant within the statute. 3 Arch. C. Pl. 449, 2in note. I haie, therefore, no doubt that a con ducter of a railroad train is a person emplOyed by another within our act of Assembly, and as such may be . guilty of embezzling the funds of the company; and also, that the employ ment, the ownership, of the money, and the felonious embezzlement thereof, are all suffi ciently and properly laid in this indictment, :when we:look into both counts. But the two exceptions already referred to—the blending of three days in one count, and laying a joint receipt of the' money on those three days, and the failure to aver that the embezzlement of the money reeeived on each day occurred within six months of the time laid for the offence of the preceding day, are fatal, unless the defect is cured by the act of Assembly. rite eleventh section of the second part of the penal code,already recited, in part, provides: "Every objeetiCin to airy ~..afAt.n atait for . any__ formai defect, apparent on -the face - Inereot, shall be taken by demurrer, or on motion to quash such indictment; before the jury shall be sworn, and not _afterwards." We cannot doubt but that the object of the commission ers who-framed, and the Legislature who passed this law, was to get rid of the formal defeets orhnhiari3roceedings, which had long been considered by the'ablest writers on jurisprudence 'a blemish and shameful defect in the criminal laws of the country; "that justice was entangled in a net of form," giving just ground for the criticism of Montesque, "that laws are like cobwebs, tha, smelt flies are caught, but the great ones break through." It was no longer to be endured dig after a full trial on the merits a party should be heard on formal defects, apparent on the face of the indictment, which if taken before, would have been amended on motion, or :a new bill sent before, the, grand jury. The whole spirit of the code evinces a determination to do away with 'technicalities' in criminal trials, and reach the substance of the. case; and it is the duty - of the courts to carry the Legislative in tention into effect. 'Hence is given the au thority to amend the indictment when any formal" defect is pointed' out, or to make it correspond - with the evidence, whether oral or _written, when there is a material variance; to lay the ownership of parties differently from thatheretofore allowed, and so in many other essential particulars. If the defects referred to in the presentindictmentare merely formal, it 'is too late" to take them. • If substantial, the defendant is still in time. The substantial rights of a defendant are to I be so fully apprised of the offence with which [-he is charged as to enable him to meet it by evidence, and to have the crime so clearly described•that whether acquitted or convicted, the charge never can be brought against him a second time. The defendant has as full notice that he is charged with three distinct acts of embezlement, when the , indictment states that the acts were committed on the 17th, the 22d and 24th days of September, 1863, as though they had been laid in three several;: saints. Laying the money as re cSfred on all three of the days, instead of stating the amount received on each day, is to him wholly unimportant; as the Statute provides that the Common Wealth need not make proof of-the amount, -or kind of, money which he embezzled on any day or tbne, and the failure to aver that the sums were embez zled within six months of each other, is in the present ease, mere form, as the days of the respective receipts are stated, and the in dictment was preferred to, and found by the grand jury, within three months, from the date of the receipt. We are of the opinion that all of these defects are merely formal, and are cured by the act of Assembly, when not objected to in a preliminary stage of the proceeding, by demurrer or on a motion to quash the indictment; therefore the judgment cannot be arrested. The next question for our consideration relates to the alleged mis direction of the jury by the court, upon the trial. We instructed them that if Friji was employed either -try or for the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company as a conductor on its trains, was paid a portion of Ms wages, either directly by that company, or Indirectly through settlement with the connecting coin panies--byvirtae of his employment, received the money belonging to the Philadelphia and Reading company, and by the terms of his contract. was bound to account for, and pay i , ler'tei it the morieyreceived on its road, he pioperly be considered a person in the employ of that company," and if he em bezzled its money could be convicted of the offence. That the proper test of being in the employ of another was the contract of hiring,, which could be done directly, or through the' I HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 24, 1864 'agency of another, the obligation to pay, or actual payment of wages, and the right to dis charge the party from service in case of mis behavior or neglect of duty. Mr. Nicol's, called by the Commonwealth, testified in sub stance, that four distinct companies owned the railroad from this place to New York; it was agreed that the New Jersey, Philadel phia and Reading companies should each lint nish a train; conductor, baggage master an brakesmart, the wages of these employees were to be paid by each company in proportion to the distance traveled over its road, and settled by monthly statements between the companies; the money received for each road, was, by the regulations furnished the conductors, to be paid over to the clerk of the proper company daily.. It was agreed that each.company was to :appoint a conductor, an& the wages were to be paid pro rata, according to the distance passed over each road. Hill was appointed a conductor by the New Jersey company, and bl that arrangement he became a conductor on the Philadelphia and Reading railroad, and was paid by them through monthly statements' as agreed. The various conductors did not remain on any, particular train, but Mr. Wing, appointed by the Philadelphia and. Reading company, and Mr. Hill changed trains to suit their con.- Anience. Mr. Sterns, the superintendent of the New Jersey road, called by, the defendant, states the arrangement between the four companies as to trains, conductors, tte., mainly as proved by Mr. Nicolls ; says in substance that their company appointed and paid Hill, but received the proportion of his wages from the Phila.- - delphia and Reading and the other compa nie,s.,. He with instructed to carry out the or ders of each company, and to pay to each the money received on its road, and to make four separate reports. He was to Ray over to the Philadelphia and Reading company the money received on its road, and carry out its instruc tions. It was by the authority of the .Phila delphia and Reading company that he . re ceived any fare on that road.. It could have put him, off that company's road, if itthought proper, but not off the New Jersey road. In another part of his evidence the 'witness stated that the Philadelphia and Reading company, had no right to discharge Mr. Hill from its road ;he was not in its employ. He (the witness) could not see how it would - get clear of him, except by breaking up the ar rangement. But again he stated that if found dishonest or careless, that company could have put him off its end or part of the road, if it thought proper, and it had to pay itspor tion of Hill's wages. We called the attention of the jury particularly to the statements of this witness, and pointed out its contradic tions, not that we supposed there was, any in tention to misstate the facts, but the 'Nvitness undertook to draw legal deductions, and was not consistent therein. We then stated to the jury that if the Philadelphia and Reading company neither hired the defendant nor paid him, or was bound to pa y his wages and had no power to discharge him for dishbilesty or carelessness, he was not in its employ, with in the meaning of the act of Assemby, and altbAligh.he_w 9 , ekt- 1 --renaiv4 tif - mat company, denied its re niched false statements thereof, it was not money received - belonging to his master or employer by virtue of such employment; but if the arrangement was as stated by Mr. Nicolls, he might properly be considered in the employ of that company, and could be guilty of embezzling its money. Were we right in that instruction? Bishop, in his work on criminal law, vol. 2, s. 288, lays down the general principle that "a person may be the servant or clerk of a particular individual or corporation, though the appointing power is in another ;"and again, "the servant or clerk need not have received a formal appointment in fact, and certainly none need be-proved, if only he has been per mitted to ad, .and has acted in that capacity, and this is shown." The authorities cited fully sustain the principle—see 1 Moody, 434, 25 Eng. Law and E., 579, 23 L. J. N. S. M. C., 110, 18Jur., 408, 24Eng. L. and. E., 568, 6 Car. and P., 606, 1 Moody, 474, Cox and M., 178, 1 Car. and P., 457. It matters not how the clerk or servant may be appointed; he may be clerk for . one though appointed by an other. 8 Car. and P., 174. ' In Reg. vs. Batty, 2 Moody 258, it is said in general terms, "the wages made the prisoner a servant,''-' though the wages are only to be considered in connection with other circum stances. The mode of payment, or probably whether the person is to be paid at all or not, has no controlling effect on the question whether he is a servant, clerk or the like, if only it does not operate to place him in some relation incompatible with this ; such, for in stance, as to make him a partner; 2 Bishop; C. L. L, 289. In Regina vs. Bayley, 37 Eng. Law and E., we have the case of four railroad companies which had one • common depot. They employed a committee to attend to the business thereof, or conducted thereat, who employed the servants. A package came by one company, a servant delivered it as was his duty, but-embezzled a pOrtion orthe receipts, held that he might , be indicted for embezzling the funds of that company, or it might be laid as the funds of the committee. He was the servant hired by the one, but forlhe joint benefit of all the companies, and bound to render a proper account of the funds received from each, pro hace vice; he was , the servant of each." It has also been held that where a servant is employed 'by a firm, he is so far to be considered - the Servant of the individual partners, as to be capable of embezzling the property of the one of them, waken' the pro visions of the statute, 3 Starkie 70, 8 Car. and P. 742, he may be the servant of many per sons at the same time. Rus. By. 198, Reg. vs. Batty, 2 Moody, 257. Applying these principles to the case before us, we think that they abundantly prove that where the party charged with embezzlement, was at the time of committing the act, in the actual employ ment of the person or corporation whose pro perty was embeezted, it matters not whether he was hired by that person or not, so that he was employed for him, and by virtue of such employment received the money. If the New Jersey company, employed the defendant for the benefit of all these four companies, his wages were paid by them, he was to receive the money of each, and to pay it over to the company for which it was received, he was to all legal intents and purposes in its employs pro haee vice, and could, as to it, be guilty of embezzlement. After receiving its wages and paying over its funds for some two years, the, defendant is too late to say that he is not in its employment. We have no doubt that if any one had been injured in person or pro perty on the Philadelphia and Reading Rail road through the carelessness of Mr. Hill, whilst conducting his train, that company would have been held responsible, and we do not believe that it would have had any remedy over against the New Jersey Railroad com pany; and further, if Hill had been injured or killed whilst on this road, through the care lessness of the Philadelphia and Reading com pany, he or his representatives would have been without redress,, as he would have been accounted an -employee of that company. This is entirely unlike the ease reported in 5 13arnwell' and Cre,swells47 ' where the owner of i 'a - earrag e fired Horses' froma livery Man, who senthis own servant to drive them, and it was held that the owner of the carriage was not accountable 'for the' carelessness" of of the driver, by which another horse was injured, as the driver was not in his employ, nor un der his eontrol. We have carefully examined : the whole class of cases referred to in the English and American reports, where it is held that the party is not accountable for em bezzlement, either because he was not a clerk or servant, being a public officer, and em ployed as such, or not the servant, or in the employmentof the person whose property was embezzled, or engaged for the particular oc casion, and out of the course of his ordinary duties, and consider that "the- present ease is plainly distinguishable iron)! them. • This de fendant was, as we conceive, in the. employ of the Philadelphia and Reading company, though hired by another for it, in common with the other oompanies..that it was part of his duty, and in the very nature of his employment, to receive the money of this company, and therefore he comes within the letter and intention of the statute. We conceive that his case is covered by that class of decisions which hold that a person may be the clerk or servant of one, though appointed by another, and is stronger than that of Rex vs. Beacall, 1 C. Jc P. 457, where it was held that ifa person was employed as the servantuf a corporation, he might be guilty of embezzle ment, though not duly appointed. The great object of these statutes is to protect employ ers against the dishonesty of their employees, who receive money into their hands and fraud ulently secrete and embezzle, instead of pay ing it over ; and were intended to cover all such dishonest cases -of fraud as do not amount to larceny ; for if the money be once in the possession, either actual or-construct ive, of the employer, it is larceny in the ser vant to abstract it. And in construing this law we must endeavor to prevent the mischief against which, it was most especially aimed. It is greatly to be regretted that in passing our act of Assembly, the code commissioners had not adopted a provision, to be found in the statutes of New" York and Massachusetts, bringing cases within the penalty where an employer received ""any money, goods; rights in action, or valuable security or effects what ever belonging to any other person, winch shall have come into his possession or under his care by virtue of such employment." It wordd have covered a whole class of cases over which the English courts have been. much perplexed, embracing all of those where tk clerk or servant, by virtue of his employ- Plant, received and afterwards embezzled the property of third persons, entrusted to them— as packages sent by mail carriers, railroad Jrsi, and üblie or private messages of ri•lntactr" ' e . .e.nleyer.iguder these statutes, the courts of mos . (' Mates nave construed the law to cover every case of goods received by virtue of the employment of a hired clerk, servant or employee, belong ing to any other than the person so employed, Whether-of the Master or another (see 15 Wend, 147, 2 Metcalf, 343, 346.) And had our act been so worded, the question pre sented in this case never could have arisen— it would have been tee plain for argument. After the most careful consideration Of the subject, we are satisfied that the instruction given 'to the jury was correct; and that tri bunal decided according to the weight of evi dence---that the defen.dantwas, at the time of committing the offence charged, in the em ployment of the Philadelphia *and Reading Railroad Company. Consequently this mo tion, . both for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, must be overruled, and judgment rendered in favor of the Commonwealth on the verdict. JOHN J. PEARSON, President Judge. 2111 ANNOUNCEMENT OE SENTENCE After the delivery of the above opinion, the District Attorney, A. J. Herr, moved that sentence .be announced, whereupon his Honor addressed the prisoner, - viz: F. P. Hill:—You have been indicted, and after a full, fair, and impartial trial, convicted of feloniously embezzling the money of your employer, the Philadelphia and Reading Rail road Company. The law of the land treats this crime as one of the deepest dye. It is in many of its fea tures worse than ordinary larceny, for besides dishonestly converting the property of another to you" own use, it is a gross breach of trust, thereby destroying the c'onfidence that man should have in his fellow man. ' Locks and bolts and vigilance may gdard against the depredations of the thief, but how shall the owner protect himself against the plundering propensities of the man whom he employs to guard his treasures and transact his business? Thereis but too much reason to believe that this course of, plunder by railroad con ductors, ticket agents, and other employees, has been, in many parts of the United States, reduced to a regular system, and the thefts from railroad companies may -be computed by thousands and, hundreds of thousands, The demoralization arising from the avidity for unlawful gain does not stop here, but seems to permeate almost every portion of society, from the high and confidential offi cers of the Government, down through army and navy contractors, to the pettyest clerk that attends a dry goods or grocery store, or the bar of a tavern or restaurant. Strict scruplous and conscientious honesty may be considered the exception, and not the rule. It therefore behooves the judicial tribinuilsi of the country, charged as they are to a great extent with the conservation of the public morals, to promptly and impartially punish every one who is proved before them to have participated in this great private and public wrong. This duty we shall certainly per form in every case of a conviction on clear evidence. We have pondered greatly over your case on account of the high and unex ceptional character which you have establish ed. We have given you the benefit of every doubt arising therefrom, but have been forced to the conclusion that if the number of detec tives who have testified were on.the cars un der your care at the times stated, and you collected fares from them, as you were bound to do, that you made ,a false return of the money received, and feloniously embezzled a portion of the fare. Behaving as we do, that your course as a conductor on the New ..Teraey road must, for the bat twelve years, have been generally fair and honest, else jou would not have obtained the confidence of your employers and the community in which you lived, yet, we must deplore that in an evil hour you yielded to the sin which was so generally besetting - your brethren on the“Thiladelphia and Reading railroad, and commenced the - system of petty plunder which was proved on the trial; thus not only itrieiting the good name previously aCquirect, but bringing .on yourself punish- ment; and on .your family indelible disgrace. We have most carefully; examined and con sidered every legal objection raised in your behalf, both-tei the charge of the court, and the 'hiding of the pry az to the , character of your em ployment ; and also as to the validity of-the ndictment, and haye arrived at the conclusion i that there is not , even a well founded technicalrerror in the.proceeding. You are not to suppose for a moment that we are about to make you a victim to deter otheri by the terror of the example in order to put a stop to this general system of private plunder. On the contrary, we, as individu als, deeply commiserate your situation, and believe you leas guilty than very many others who have' hitherto escaped detection; but our sense of 'linty and. the high responsibility thrown on.na: by official situation, will Rer reit us to indulge in our , private sympathies; we are obliged to pronounce upon your crime a sentence commensurate with its enormity. The sentence of the law, as pronounced by the court, is that you pay a fine of one hun dred dollars to the Commonwealth, the costs of prosecution, and to undergo imprisonment in the Eastern penitentiary at solitary con finement at labor for the period of one year. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. 1:454;i0:i0F.1 , 304.•4:4 , .*)"7=ci0)t;11.1:r....y:40 , 4):7.1;“ 4 LM!adLlDEL...2Lialtga TIMBIJAY, February 23, 1804 The House met at o'clock, and Spent the evening in the discussion of the resolution relative to the non-payment to disloyal citi zens of damages by the rebel raids. Messrs. BO'rElt and ALLEUIC spoke, and the House adjoufned. 339 ZeienrctpQ. FROM WASHINGTON. OPENING OF TIM PATENT OFFICE FAIR Capture of. Rebel Letters, Sm. . WILS.EatinTOII, Feb. 23 OFENDIO OF TES PATENT OFFICE FAIR. At the opening'of the Patent Office fair last night, after Mr. Ohittenden had delivered his speech, Major B. B. French road a patriotic poem, which was loudly appittuded. Loud calls then being fin: President Lincoln; he stepped forward and _said that he appeared before the audience to apologize for not speaking rather - than to'-speak He thought that the committee had practised a little frauCon him, for they did not intimate, when they called to see him in the morning, that they expected him to speak ; therefore he had come before the audience totally unpre pared to say anything; that was taking one at a great disadvantage; after the eloquent speech of Mt.Chittenden and the poem of Mr. French, there was great objection to his saying, any thing, for necessarily, in consequence of his position, everything went into print. [Laugh ter and applause.] If le made any mistakes it might do both hi self and the nation harm. [Applause.] It was very difficult to say sen sible things. [Laughter ] He therefore hoped that the audience - would excuse him from expressing his desire that the charitable enterprise in which they were engaged might be abundantly successful. *[Applause.],, CAPTURE OF REBEL ITETTERS, RC Capt. Scheetz's detectives have lately fer reted out several lots of rebel letters. The vigilance of this corps has made epistolary communications with rebeldom quite perilous. By their activity they have also captured quite a quantitY of contraband goods in seve ral different places. We understand they have found that a member of the Mar3dand Legislature, who lives in Southern Maryland, has secreted a quantity of arms, ammunition and rebel flags, ke. lOWA STATE CONVENTION. Renomination of President Lincoln Ree,om mended. Nx Yong, Feb. 23 A special dispatch from Des Moines, lowa, says that the Union State Convention to day, by a large majority,,passed resolutions instructing: their delegates to the National Union Con.vention to vote-for the re-nomina tion of President Lincoln. Another special dispatch from Indianapolis says that the Union Convention to-day will be enthusiastic on the re-election of Lincoln, and will direct the delegates to vote for him. Gov. MortOn will be re-nominated for the Governorship by acclamation. MARKETS BY - TELEGRAPH. l'iiir..uminnA, Feb. 23. But little movement in breadstriffs; flour dull, and 1,000 bbls. Penna. and western ex tra family sold at $7 25®7 50 and fincy at $8 50®9, the receipts are very small; Rye flour steady at $6 25; in corn meal, nothing doing; fair demand for wheat, and 4,000 bush. red sold at $1 65, and small lots white at $1 75®1 95; small sales rye at $1 30; yellow corn comes forward slowly, and is in de mand at $1 12; oats steady at 86c: 2,000 bush. malt sold at $1 70®1 73; provisions held firmly, sales mess pork at $23, hams in pickle at 13ic and. lard at 144 e in bbls and tierces, and 16c in kegs; petroleum is quiet at 281 291 e for crude, 45®46 for refined in bond and 530540 for free; whisky held firm at 92®94c in bbls. and 90c in drudge. NEW Yoim, Feb. 23 Cotton is quiet at 79c. Flour dull and de clined 5c ; sales of 8,000 bbls at $6 25@6 35 for State, S 7 20®7 40 for Ohio, and $8 for Southern. Wheat dull and nominally lower _mow° spring $1 56®1 58, Milwankie club $1 57®1 59, and red $1 65®1 68. Corn —sales of 41,000 bushelg at $1: 27i0.1 28. Pork steady—mess $23 50023 75. Lard steady and urichauged. Whisky nominal and unobanged. PRICE TWO CENTS. FROM TENNESSEE. 12,000 Bales of Hay Destroyed by Fire. Lioss 0.-eoo,ooo. Capture of a Rebel Mail, $200,- 000 in Money, Cotton, Horses, Mules, Wagons, etc. 300 REBELS BAGGED. LATER FROM NEW ORLEANS, The steamer Graham, from Memphis, with dates of yesterday, has -arrived. She brings ninety bales of cotton for St, Louis. Twelve thousand bales of bay were burned at Memphis on the evening of the 20th. The hay was valued at $200,000, and belongs to Goff, Cochrane & Co. Another account says it had been delivered to the Government. The gunboat Conestoga, ten miles below the month of Red, river, recently captured four rebel officers, two of them colonels, while attempting to cross the river with a large rebel mail, $200,000 •in New Orleans money, thirty bales of cotton and a number of mules, horses and wagons. _ The property was de livered to the quartermaster at Natchez. The prisoners were retained on board the gunboat Manly. 300 rebels have been captured in the neigh borhood of Helena and sent to Nashville, by General Buford, during the past month. The steamer Olive Branch from New Orleans, with dates to the 15th, has arrived. She brings 91 bales of cotton and a large lot of sugar and molasses for St. Louis. She also has the 2d Illinois cavalry, Col. Mudd, who have re enlisted as veterans. From Fort Monroe. FoRT MoNßoy., Feb. 22 Washington's birthday *as duly celebrated to-day in this Department by the firing of a salute from the battery and the - United states frigate Minnesota. The English and Russian frigates lying in Hamptonitoads also honored the day with salutes. A review of the troops inside of Fort Monroe also took place. General Butler returned this morning from Point Lookout, where he has been on busi ness for the last two days. The flag-of-truce steamer New York arrived this afternoon from City Point. She was de tained some time by ice in the James river. Ebenezer Paine, a citizen of Norfolk, was committed to jail yesterday for attempting to run the blockade. Michael Heely and Wil liam Kennedy, charged with desertion, es coped from Norfolk jail on Saturday night. A rebel prisoner of war, named- :Tones, has also escaped from Fort Norfolk. The Priate Tuscaloosa. Seized by the British .&tithoritics. Tim ititrk John Gilpin, which arrived at this port to-day, brings dates from Cape To*n. to December 31st. She reports that the rebel pirate Tuscaloosa had beeLseized by the British authorities at the Cape for violation of the neutrality laws, in landing a portion of her captured cargo on that coast. The Tuscaloosa put into Simon's Bay on December 26th, to obtain supplies and re paint. Shortly after dropping her anchor, bir Baldwin" Walter despatched a boarding party who seized the vessel under the author ity of the British Government. The Tuscaloosa was in command of Lieut. - Lowe, who had returned to Simon's Bay after a three months' cruise, during which, out of nearly one hundred vessels, she met only one 'United States ship. In the meantime she had been ordered away from a Bralilian port, in consequence of which her crew were placed upon short al lowance. 'After the seizure of the vessel, Lieut. Lowe lodged a formal protest against the proceed ing and went to Cape Town to consult with legal advisers. Mr. Graham, the 11. S. consul, had also lodged a claim against the vessel in behalf of her former owners, ,and it was thought that the question raised as to the legality of her condemnation by Captain Semmes,who claims to constitute a prize court by authority from the rebel Government, will have to be argued before and decided by Sir the Admiralty Court. [The pirate Tuscaloosa was forinerly the bark Conrad of Philadelphia.] Loss of the Bohemian—Statement of One of the PaseertgerS. From a passenger, who came up onboatNo. 5, I learn that he was standing on deck at the time the accident occurred. They had passed the buoy, and the passengers wee just re marking that it was a pilot boat coming oat, when the ship struck. The boats were got out safely, with the exception of No.j, which was swamped. No. 5 took aboard . all she could hold, including several who hadjumped into the water. Being unable to find a land ing place, she was lowed up the harbor. She contained mostly cabin passengers, and some steerage passengers, whose names I did not learn, with the exception of a Mr. Brown. XXXVIlith Congress—First Session. WASHINGTON, Feb. 23, 1863 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. The House resumed the consideration of the bill to establish a Bureau for Freedmen's Affairs. Mr. Kelley . (Pa.) advocated the bill and pressed its immediate passage to meet the exigencies which have arisen under the pre sent war. PINE APPLE CHEESE—Norton s ce!e bratea, at, [ado] WE DOCK. Js, kea etATSUPS AND SAUCES, of the moat sn v parlor and choice brands, Just received and for sale by ' [r e m] ON. DOCK, Jx, & co. DlatilAlt MUSTARD, the best' imported, just reeeived and for sale by febl SPDLDOOK;IR., tc Ca RANGES! O.IIANGES!--A large lot of O superior Oranges, and Melly Havana, for sale in any quantitYat 1an 29 1 BOER Kosititga. SMOKED SALMON. -FINE kNE SMOKED SALMON, jui3t received at, feb3 dam), Feb. 22 BoErrox, Feb. 23 POETI.MO, Feb. 23 W. DOCIC, J&, & 00