The New York Herald Newspaper, January 14, 1869, Page 8

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4 8 _ NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1869.—TRIPLE SHEET. ne ive Loan, however. to the boner | and isa lawyer, Has been Surrogate and Indge of LANDLORD AND TENANT. THE . UNITED STATES GENATE: sot" make 9 hoary Nate fort Warren county, and in 1800 was elected to the For. n er ‘The aspirants for the mantic of ae of euipe Soren ‘Pho; Bench Declining te Enforce the Preseut ity Sleciton does ‘nok occur ane week nextitas JOHN B, ‘NEW HAMPSHIRE, REPRESENT competes Tented 900 erent Law te - "Fhe Approaching Elections to United States | idle te speculate upon who will or who will not be TAO BONNE CAROLTEA. Write of Bjectment from the Court of the successful man, there are so many slips between | _ This cornet segmer bale Dam New eral Hesslens or the Marine Vourt—How the Senatershipe, tneowp caren Haimpsbire, where he edited the Herald of Prewni =e p Be ‘Whoo. . 2S ww, | eufaie, iat delightful aneet did not offer sumicient a moronree ae bent of the office of Deere ‘Tpen, nme B took as i they would be = estes een eine be eee Tie pedo, City Judge, Gunning 8. Bedford, Jr., in announcing and Tip,” although somew! q |. determination it tertain applications ——— ‘elects a successor to Hon, Wiliam M. Stewart. | (am of peace he was sent to North Caroiina ag a tax under what are famiberly known to the ‘The folowing ts a copy of the act approved July bay ae ee wp INCOMING SENATE Se erred prnnent be i, yagi de few Ary searedin seamen gl pres nr at 25, 1863, prescribing the mode of electing United nt a sieht new 5 slzsedy clectes Sv0 Oe by an 6 ae nen polos ae pat osc noaseeceaien cal Tame esse are ‘wamanae, of Vermont ad Sa" Oat, will not represent ‘North Carolina in the roe | beams’ Senay ment nee one person for Senator in ng ae Ee tan has else JAMES A. GARFIELD, OF OHIO, general. The many hardships resulting from the tate, and the name of the per- chosen to ‘sucosod. 4. ‘&. Welch, kewise @ | | General Garfield is « native of Obio; » graduate bates 2 iy tically sna ogi son voted for, who aball have ® majority in the repuican Governor of of He College, Massachusetts, and alawyer by - 3 pre oltre inte jraal of each howe by tue sent or | Sepubut penonen ciod i. Genneaton tn | Brier ef the Oe Bate Beatie i tose At the peared voce aoa pares fe a a ico a democrat. On the Outbreak of the rebellion he entered the service as condemnation, ana unmerous efforts have been made ventana ua the Journal. “Ay twelve wcloog me- | panteue, tou Allen G. TRMrIaD ieee eae | Cond csi e asaler ean ‘oveaa Heat iecied for the repeal or, modification of the more rigorous miaia of ihe day lowing ib ‘which proceed- Wade, repunldans and Casserly, also & to ‘in 1862 but before taking his seat was ‘ceajures of teas ing? ery of the two, houses shall ‘convene 1m joins | {a> .200.take he eens of Zohn, Conness, of Oallfor. ct be ine batt of Chlcamangs.” He fasre: ‘The statute was enacted for the purpose of atford- Smembiy, and the journal of each Wouse shall | 2% 2,Tepunlioan. wittaan sy Wye, bate ‘to the Thirty-ninth and Fortieth ing to owners of property a summary method of re- ee a the law should opera‘. Ste Oe ae tie ot ah oe democrats. 80 Se new clectione jodi member fr agh ctr of One, covering possession of thelr premises where the | if itis mis misfortune 10 be, poor, strain & point to non mech, perbin Aual bo Somered, Sie Seas Samety, co republicans, 35 comocrata. tenant has neglected or omitted to pay the rent due | hel mp, and if he then falle be Me a8 gress Ben Wade lives iis district. It is currently re- that a 1g considered there several pegs sub) en : OF continues to old ‘possession of the premises after | fulicot for commueranion, tori down. Ive received u aajorty of the Yoiee 10 tae House, | SKETCHES OF THE FORTY-SEVES JACOBINS | Poticr nan a walle man. t use Shall have failed to take of the owner or agent. fn respect to the officers a fg an required by tuis ac, the joint. aavembiy abal atloensenes (2: A native of Oonnectioun, educated in New York by whom this “remedy” may be administered the BROOKLYN CITY then hg Heney ef apices y ceased 2 Ry pon gen tag ng re mg of this law 1s not quite so clear as it might be. pre es sae ae preeer avfag 2 majority of et ene vores of | The folowing sketches are those of the forty-seven | State, for several Years, Mr. Harding, frat bleswod It provides that the delinquent, lessee “may be re- TSE COURTS. ‘said: joint assembly, a majority of all the members | Tadical Representatives” tm Congress who voted | ook to ale. He manngek ferme tnt moved from such premises by any judge of, the ehectes to both Pieper Liang mpegs against repealing the Tenure of Ofice bill:— Bible toe (fren y-five sonra. 6 ramen se selene county courts of the county,” w#c., “orin the city of UNITED STATES COMMISSIONERS’ COURT. (fon shall receive such piajority om tue trst day the | | OAMSS ANI OF MASON OTT in State Legislature (1648-0 and 30). He then engaged Now York ty the Mayor, Recorder and Justice of the _ Passing Counterfelt Money. SD MERRION. eS SS Eweiye Ce, Oe Agena Serving his third term in Con- | in the management of railroada; entered the Union Marine Court, or any one of the justices of Relics Constante lenak + j@ian of each ‘succeeding day during the session of | greas, He was dorm in Eastport, Bristol county, | army in 1963, became a colonel and brigadier gene- county, | trict courta of the city .of New York,” &c. The | ome‘ examination of Lewis Reese, whe was af- she Saaaniesare Sad, 280 ab least one vole untill @ | Yi: and Is manufacturer by profession. For | Tal, Served with distinction boyy valu heed Secrion 2. And be it further enacted, That when- | two years he was@ member of the Executive Council | ») 1866, Mr. Harding was an roy retire at the ever, on the meeting of the Legislature of any State, | of ms native State, and in 1866 was a delegate to the | election for Congressmen last year. ‘The ligat of @ vacancy shail exist in the representation of such Philadelphia Loyalists’ Convention, which met to | bis countenance will no more siiine in the halls of sg i BEE H a F chapter 189, page 828, modl- | roctoq on the 4th inst..and brought before the Com- z : : il Fe : 5 i 3 : : I i terms, when President Fillmore appointed 4g BB ‘State in the Senate of the United 5 Said Legisla- the House of Representatives, fater to Brazil, On his retura he e1 € vely | district in which the premises are situated | i. 4 young man of about twenty-three, and @ clog’ ) SarerenAll penned Sp. ca anene Hy afer the | slorify radicalism andexalt carpet-baggiag. WILLIAM HIGBY, OF CALIFORNIA. ater ETvay business ‘Ou the outareak of the Te- | and revokes te j ion over the entire city Od che Heh Oe Sena ao 1k commencement aiid organization of 1t8 session, to SAMUSL 3 ARNEL, OF emUUEbEE. bar, Highy int aaiive of New York was educated jariag sot dancer by profesai uary, bellion he entered the Union beef serving 28 @ | which they formerly possessed. ‘The act of the appeared on the examination, he went into several to Congress and ‘served, ann prt gree ye Legislature of 1860 creating the ofice of City Judge | p| in Remsen street, E. D., called for after a desperate contest, he defeated Mr. Vallan< for the city of New York provides that the incum- Vietay! and yey ora Pome. 2a ten ham by 475 majority. Mr. Schenck has been a pro! bent shall hold oMfice for four years, and that all pele hye oe on ies elect @ person to fill such vacancy in the manner Derein ye oS for the election of a Senator fora | . THis noble Roman, thatcan’t trust Grant, was born | 12 Vermont and is a lawryee by profeesion. a ‘ern a af a va shall occur during the ses- | in that “Switzerland of America” East Tennessee, apa ne rl ae member of the State poe “3 Legislature, then on the bee de His grandfather was a Revolutionary soldier, and he | Senate in 1862 and Representative ‘oar ph ae in Legisiatare shall have been or; and the Congress in 1863. He was re-elected hent politician for many years and, although not & ‘ ‘hall have notice cf such vacancy. 1 be setae pion recent rebellion. | His | iss6. ‘Last year the nominating convention ignored | man of extraordinary ability, some in- | judictal powers vested by law in the Recorder are | time a few viously and is exceedingly well Ph i te en — sme align 1 ge Abaegp eager lens eae his caims io 40 pave eee cont any ouger, see Representatives. He is very | conferred upon the City Judge, and he is required Seen ee te ji ged nay ermy, an return for patriotic sacrifices was consequent ‘iliam Higby ceases a - | radical cB. ti pot pene bigest ai egy earn elected a member of the Tennessee Legislature, and gresaman Text March. Of such is the kingdom cf jess JonN Fc aUANER, OF RINDIANA, ag 2 Hiergyg Pasgee oer : ay and one of the personé to whom tt Was, o offered in-! the President of the United States, which certiticate | im1865 advocated the passage of the constitutional | PNG |. oy paooe istanps to indiana Wwinle a our nd thers studied Law, He | not sboush the oMce of Recorder, which | W ho arrested Lewis, who thereupon threw Laie shath be countersigned by tbe Secretary of State of | amendment. Those lucky mortals who are allowed Providence (the city of that name in Rhode Js- | was a member of the State Legislature in 1858-4, and | 1, ‘Whether, therefore, the law ae was amcove tried to the State. to-vote in Tennessee elected him to the Thirty-ninth land) 4 she place where Mr. ‘Jenckes, was born tn 1 1800 was elected a Representative ve Otoarese, ana Lphpaacreit ck Clay Jeaae decauok a an piaked UP. a Litt oo ea aol pong hag ‘The Senatorial Candidates, ‘and inflicted him upon the Fortieth Congress. Mr. | aner studying law, his profession ‘until | eltion he visited the battie ‘eld of Bull Run as & | ily appear, inasmuch as the statute governing the | Stroy the olll. Reese was held to awalt the notion of MAINE. Arnell isa “regular stunner” when he makesia speech pon fed lod ngs Sy Ce rpeog of in lat bi epee ted peagccnin . i oon “‘gispossess process,” enacted prior to the creation | ‘22 beret tS Pay ons Authough Mr. Hamlin bas received @ majority of | denouncing rebels and others who do not agree with | Sigh Congress: He Hos Servet two years longer, a ite precipita. He also served. on the staf of | of his ofice, provides that its powers “may” be ad- | Assistant District Attorney Parris for the govern one in the republican caucus as- their candidate for him, being # member elect to the Forty first Congress. Ge Fremont until December, 1861, when here- | ministered by the Recorder, while the act of 1850 | ment the United States Senate, it appears that, according harnacebea iirordide herrea WILLIAM B. KELSEY, OF XEW YORK, sumed his seat, | Mr. Shanks was Te eleo.04 Gavng | Vests in the Olty Judge all judicial powers vested in try count. ‘This distinguished individual is @ veteran ofice- ong the multitudinous lawyers whom Provi- last and will, consequently, serv to the Portland Argus (democratic), the friends of holder. We are unable to state where ‘‘ne saw the Pa Rene wisdom permitted to vote Fe Oe ee Fidaaral Geantesdannistr acne the Recorder and clothes him also with the concur- aaa, Mr. Morrill claim that they yet hold the power to + that General Grant should not have the power of SAMUEL SHELLABARGER, OF OHIO. rent exercise of all judicial duties imposed on him, Dangerous light,” but first hear of him in Monroe, Mich., where | rem, obnoxious at his will and ‘This gentleman is.a native of and a lawver. a ” Before Judge Barnard. vent the election of Mr. Hamlin, and loving er ‘The authority, being “Judicial,” ts necessarily, ac- = ‘ are reso- | nis young idea was taughthow to shoot, He turned | pleasure is the Hon. W. H. Kelsey, one of the rural | In 1852-3 he was a member of the State , Q Henry Gerdes ve. Wittams Hawwk.—The @efendant Jatcly determined to do it, They treatetne caucus as resentatives from this State. He was born at ‘and was elected a Representative to the Thirty- | cording to the usual interpretation of that term, a a nullity, because it adjourned fingiiy, or rather ais- | OP Dext 12 Calilornia as a district attorney, next a8 | Evens “in “ima, after becoming and | seventh Congress. He did not serve in the next | qiscrenonary power. is@ milkman snd the plaintid's grocer. Out of this J : member of the Assembly, then as a State Senator, | District A of Livi mn county ( he | house, but was re-elected im 1864 and in 1866. in connection with | Telationship between the two parties s quarrel arose solved, without completing its of selecting® | ang finally as State Treasurer. Panting for “iresh | was elected tothe Tulney fourth and ‘Thirty-Afth | ‘yhis 1s his last ‘another radical having been | _ One thing, however, is certain in connection in November last, in which the milkman’s dipper was candidate. They hold that the matter stands pre- fields and pastures new,’ he carpet-bagged to Nevada, | Congresses. He then gave way to another member, | chosen to represent his district. the question, and that Ig that the exercise of the | brought into service and thrown at pe ‘Ciscly as if no cancus had been held, and that bat in 1866, when he was elected to the WILLIAM B. STOKES, OF TENNESSER. power of granting these warrants of dispossesston ts | ficting a severe and injury. ie jury re- and that infant State, with s lack of discretion so | Yortieth ‘and re-elected to the Forty-first, Itis@ singular fact of the eight members from Seems oa a that he | tamed a verdict for the plainclit of $216, upon every principle of fairness and of party dis- | characteristic of youth, sent him to the Thirty-ninth BETHNGL M. KITCHEN, OF WEST VIRGINIA. ‘Tennessee five voted against the Tenure | Within the scope Drerogstives, ent Decisi YVapuine tey are at perfect Uberty to vote for Mr. | ang Fortieth Congresses. Not having been returned Me, Ritchenwas hocm teste Hendley aa0 30 9 of OMice law. The subject of this is @ native | has declined to use it, although it is well known that Morrill for Senator when the time for going into the vee : farmer by cocupanon, He was a memeer af the | cf 2° Carolina, outhasived. in. the mountains | were no ao disposed he mightderive « handsome an. | Before Judge Barnard, vp | Sithe DEXt Congress, "however, he is not likely to | ‘Virginia in 1961-2; was to of Kast ‘Tennessee the greater portion of ‘To ell kn: Jones vs. Doyle—Moiton for 9 new trial dented. election ‘arrives. On the other hand, Mr. Hamilln’s | give tne President elect much trouble. in 180s, Dut was not admitted to hiseeat. He |inis ie. He bas been a Repreventative | Nua Tevenuothererom. Townshend a wellknown | “ill” i Maree DA TS Ct Trienda haye equally the power to prevent the suc- JRMV MAKER, OF ILIANOIS. Became a member of pase i cd and Senator in ray ta ree of pene inet ed eae ae Se reeitice Devceoatngs in: a furray sg tig Je * eeae‘of Mr. Morrill, and if both parties remain stub-} yr, Raxer io a native of Kentucky and citizen of | ‘etn Conarese ans 11880, The testof deeds being those ae ees, the rebeliion broke sut he fret | fediction ofthe Clty Guage of New. York.’ is | Guedeke oe, Laney et al.—Bond suMcient to nold vory ‘phere is no telling when the contest will end. } minis, in which Stavé he nas practised law for quite | done in secret, Mr. Kitchen may have clandestinely | announced his purpose of Joining it. Subsequentiy | is unusual for the Mayor or Recorder of New York | the defendant. MASSACHUSETTA. of Hi ‘elected ber to | done somet We of his name; but its com- | he recanted, became a devoted loyalist and served | city to exercise this jurisdiction, and we are not | McMorrow vs. Gill.—Case reopened on payment OF gon, Chartes ‘Sumner will probably succed him. | * DUmbet of yours. | He was ® member to | hission ts unkhown to the world. ‘Last year his | fi ie Umion army, In 1860 he was elected hepre- | aware that any City Judge of that city has ever ex- | referee's fees and ten dollars costs, re La s the Thirty-ninth and Fortieth Congresses, but having | constituents elected another man to fill his piace. } sentative tothe -ninth Congress and has since | ercised this jurisfiction.” But Townshend wrote this | Brady vs, Reilly.—New trial granted; costs 10 abide gelf in this State, as we hear of no opposition to | been mercilessly slaughtered, or having deciined a | Thus the Forty-firat Congress will be without a | held his seat. “Lash fall he was jre-clected, to nerve | some Years ago, and if he probosad writing e sup- | the event, unless the delendant within ten days of him, itchen. term Le ir. | plement mod! re- servi order plain! NEW York. renomination, Re will retire next March, and the | KIMEM a a, ayy, oF XEW YORK. foe the arm Sucing te ceived bat a eaived eduoe: | pease exe meaning ofthe last ventence above quoted, | Beljord vs, fondant discharged trom the ‘The contest in this Staté grows hot and hea House of Representatives that knew lum for four Lee, Berkshire county, juced this. distin- | tion when young, and his oratory is not as ornate | Prior to. Jt ford’s Socession to his present order of arrest. tg years shall know him yo more forever. guished man in 1823. He ts not a lawyer, beng en- | ag that of Mr. Sumner. But his eloquence is electric office the jurisdiction to was Moran v8. The Fourth Avenue Commissioner and ‘The principal cand.dates for the repubiican nomina- aU -ERATEY, OP 0110. aged in the manufacture of paper. In 1857 the | in its effect. It convuises and astounds the audience. | exercised in the court over which he now presides, | 47other.—If on trial the action is maintained against ‘téon are Senater Morgan, the present incumbent, ex- egrennrnd Rekate of New York, to which he removed in | Mr, Stokes uses plain language, sometimes remark- | and wasf owing to certain ciroumatances, but one, the other is entitled to have the action dis- Governor Fenton and Marshall 0. Roberts. Some of | _ This gentleman is a native of Sandusky city, Ohio, | 1344, was graced with his presence; in 1864 the ‘His denunciations of rebels are awful | source of Unjust by the fact | missed, with costs, i and a banker by profession. He was a Presidentia) | Thirty-ninth him, and in 1866 he to to. He has made his mark before, andgin a | that it was enforcement in an imperfect manner Butterworth vs. Clute.—Order of arrest. vacated, ‘te republican papers, the Troy Whig for exampie, 1800. Soon after the rebellion broke out | gteeted the Being a member contest with Genera! Grant he will make tt agala. of one of the most ‘and oppressive laws on | with leave to the defendant to serve answer within hints that it might we well to introduce some third | *l¢ctor mm rn elect to the Forty-tirst Congress it is hard to predict’| Mr. Stokes aspirea to a seat in the United statute book of this ‘The chief reason why | five days. man after the style of the Pennsylvania caucus, and | De entered the Union army, distinguished himself in | what his future will be. it was doubly unjust was that, owing to the fact | Gough vs, MoCartny.—Motion denied, with ten and even! became @ bri HORACE MAYNARD, OP TENNESSEE. -AFFE, OF NEBRASKA. art battles that the criminal business of Court of | dollars cost. mominate him. Our Albany correspondence will of volunteers, In 1864 he retired from the ag then th pram det nagenendls “ot sce geern Mr. Paffe is @ native of Indiana and s lawyer. Genera! Eoamioas being verz oxtaetve and absorb- | Hurteau vs, Robbins.—Decision for the plaintif, Turmush the latest particulars in regard to the Senato- aronnerd the lent elect to the confidence of loyal men. | afver a brief residence in Illinois he emigrated to pe age mephe aggeerns es City J he could — mia ca ntie, ; rego , stig eee oe memmminett aan, po cco In 1860 ne: as clecsed to pn ejectment wae they aired ‘THS DAY. Pat ow teeny 4 unexpired term C. Hamil Terri w COURT CALEROAR— ‘Asa itte ontalde matter pertinent to the election | HHOXPIned. Vor of ©: © hn ne aes net | Roca aot wish the ‘Teuure of Office law the Territoriet Council, and tn lead raised a regi | Sd deserved. | This class of fice in hot ranked | _ ScrREMR Couan—CmoUrT.—Nos. 49, 5, 0 to 70 in- of United States Senator from this State we copy by Mr. Maynard is @ professor of mathematics and & | ment of caval! ‘and did good service Yery high in the legal ion, and is termed | clusive, $1 to 87 inclusive, 40 and 47. fhe foljowing trom the Richmond Whig of the 11th | ‘Ue Bext Congress. lawyer. He has held numerous State offices in Ten. | Indians. “In 16eshue was elected the presenta. | “petty.” The courts view It ae “petty” business, JOHN FP. BENJAMIN, OF MISSOURI. neasee and was 8 member of the Thirty- ‘Thirty. | tive from the State of Nebraska, and last fall was of the fact that it may be made to yie! ‘Smstant:— eaeilawe'tn sixth and Thirty-seventh Congresses. the | re-elected for the term ending March, 1871. nich emoluments in fees. The “fees,” therefore, are BROOKLYN INTELLIGENCE. “ has arrived!” was the cry that rang ergireomie ray 4 ve and highly loyal policy of | repeition he Temained loyal to bd eg me and JOHN TRIMBLE, OF TENNESSEE. the only circumstance which, in the dim vision of Albany @ few days since. No sooner were | disfranchising some 6,000 voters in the Eighth dis- | was driven from his home by the ‘is. On the re- One of the members of Congress from Ten- | cupidity, are not “petty.” That it has been exer- giad tidings spread abroad than the natural in- | trict of Missouri bas sent Mr. Benjamin to Congress Tarn af peace he was elected 0 ‘the Thirty-ninth, re- | neasee who holt thelr seats by Means of the most | cised in the Court of General Sessions isa matter be. | TH® RECENT WILLIAMSBURG STABBING AFFRAY.— ‘Aerrogetory was on every Na he brought his for two terms already and elected him to the elected to the Fortieth and is a member elect of the | shameful system of ever known | yond cavil and incontrov: 3 and that it has been | Terence Nugent, the bartender who was stubbed on r angen ged present Senator from Forty- if a hoe The term “eagie”’ has been | js the subject of the He was born in | exercised as a source of emolument, rather than as Monday ‘at the liquor store corner of Grand rYork, and & re-election. Ex-Governor | frst Congress. He was born in Onondago county, to him because when he makeg aspeeeh he | Tennessee during the year 1812 He is @ the medium of soquiring judicial emi. | and seventh streets, B. ‘Nathaniel Mills, was Fenton 1s his principal competitor. This gentieman York, lived three years in Texas; went to | “soars.” lawyer, and has held numerous offices, naving | nence or may be readily . Of all | reported to be pth Be | t. Mills io still avas al onthe Held with his trunks om nand. in 1848 and engaged in the practice of law. DEXNIS MICARTRY, OF KEW YORK... | been Atvornoy General for the Heshailie. diaries; a neh Femgual te GaeeUSeTEMTEET met locked up in the Fourth street house. ; ‘Gided by the weight of metal. Cache oh bednodkr In 1851 hie became @legisiator, in 1866 a Presidential om facturer of salt. Jt is not known whether he pene atau bantane puinos offices. He Temained then the exeaatien of tne provisions ot sole Jaw. id ccreanandencas attesantatemnn teres juen have been mentioned as candidates, among | elector and in 1861 # Union soldier. He rose to the tame ae Ad og oe recent vole. to the government daring the re! While ma business any court mi last residence iia ‘vis, No. 370 them Judge Davis Mr. Gris 5 after 1846 he was member of the Si Assembly and in pointed Attorney for Middle | necessarily be of @ very painful ‘nature, this ’ they were ‘fount ‘wanting “in | FARK of Ueutenant colonel snd then resigned to be- | it5 Mayor of ‘ie has aise held “other ewsce by Mr. Lincoln, but in 1004. In | view of the matter is tempered by the fuct that | Paclde street, was entered by burglars and robbed of the one essential, and quietly dropped. But as it | Come @ provost marshal. He was a delegate to the | local . McCarthy was first elected 0 is the interest of members of e Baltimore Convention in 1864 and was soon after ne ory caue meter ie meen ae serve for two value of $125. The police were Many rich candidates as possi bur thal Os Hoberta: anotines tall Hionanine tae tele at, | elected to Congress, It will console all loyal hearts Tennessee x 1866 he was elected to Co! and on the it 1 not #0 embarrassing to form a duty | Plate and s coat, amounting in the to the 4 “* eee: but for epaeatinl sen ‘Upson, position through been en- ‘one of the most quiet Representatives in he House— ‘This is the ay ‘term Mr. is of offence. But in nine-tenths of the | sons the affair a secret from the press. tered forthe plate. He 1s Mr. Grecies’s condidate, to know that this anti-Granter is no relative of Judah | go quiet, in fact, that itis doubtful if many persons | another radical having been elected to represent his |‘ cases where process of ejectment is invoked its force INCENDIARY Firg.—Between two and three o’ciock = te arg to be less notoriousiy we " P. Benjamin, the ex-rebel Secretary of State. were gh mde Ee yee district. He isa uaere of Connecticut me lived = Jaen against gl m bere pas gy yesterday morning # building in Fourth street, be- is competitors and’ disposed to bleed freely for the JACOB BENTON, OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, On the Ath of November, 1a53, Samuel McKee | Michigan since 184s, Holting Seve was clecieda | amenable to the law, In general they are the vic- | tween North Sixth and North Seventh, F. D., was th Congress honor and giory of his country. All the rivais are Mr. Benton was born in Vermont and 1s a lawyer. | was born in Kentucky. His early life was spent in and re- } tins of a misforti and that misfortune, poverty, | ‘fired by incendiaries and damaged to the amount of; $e eee He moved to New Hampshire in 1843; has been a | Working on a farm, going to schovul and , me ae representative to the Thi elected to the "rutrty-ntath Fortieth Congresses. | has, with more ible truth than humor, ‘The butiding is the property of the city. The ‘until the contest is ended. The su: wilj have 2 lat Upson ‘any reputation asa mem- | been pronounced by many a crime, At least -_ a joly time member of the State Legislature; was a delegate to | in'tne Union army, was taken Prisoner and’ lan- | per, sad is probably one of tis louse Kuown of public | It in too many instances to the commission | Sr." aud the upper portion be the Pouce ed es = bem me the Chicago Convention in 1800, and is now finishing a in Lapoy Prison for ee eae In | men in the country. of oe and ring cen the rye and = Republican a ‘There seems no doubt that the democratic term in % i was elected a Representative Thirty- OF NEW YORK. ness which should only pertain to crime w' ' equces in this State 2 g pypepe tartan ninth Congress, and in 1867 was deveated This makes the seventh’ and last sketch of New | crime itself has not been committed. No'one can | SALE OF HoRses By Tire UNITED Stars MAR- Stockton, who, 1t will John remembered, was summa- THOMAS SOLES, OF ARKANSAS. D. Young by some 1,500 majority. ba ‘suc. pn =iuosene ——_ Soc ocd ren On the 16th of July, 1837, the first cries of an infant ee eon te on the id that seal carry Mr. u migh been” heard arm 7 ex-Contederates _v‘ ‘oung, Prt oh ine i pier “om proshow penvag that if even he was not legally elect PENNSYLVANIA. Johuson county, sas. Those cries arose from | he ought to have been, turned Young out and The republicans in the Legisiature of this State | Thomas Boles. He is # lawyer by profession; was | McKee in. He was u delegate to the “Loyalist ( York members who virtually voted a ee of course for a moment Lowe that a landiord is | suat.—Yesterday the horses owned by R. D. Bogart incoming administration. Mr. compensati is a native of Herkimer County amd is a lawyer by | premises, and it would be idie to assume that be. | Werte #0ld at anotion by Marshal Dalion. Bogart, it veen District At h he should walt a certain time to Trill be remembered, was paymesterrs clerk in the of Allegheny county, and in 1864 was | give the debtor tenant an o| — to pay the pel Yard, and absconded with about $12,000 be- elected & Representative to Bince » as & stretch of soon eer oe i tee ‘The horses were ap- have come together, gentle as cooing dot and eri i Vention” in 1866. been lected at th saeco make all rich iandlords poor themseives, at $2, Paymaster Clark, of the Navy fixed upon Jonn Scott, formerly & tenner boy ana | DePaty 8 sae Daypety Cink of thie Tel comnty ULYSSES MERCUR, OF PENNSYLVANIA. pace ad 9 pg carpe ne oe ge Forty. Pare, wabappily. the persons st Yard, purchased the stecas for $000.” bow a respectable lawyer in Hunterdon county, as | Court in 1869-60, During the rebellion he was loyal | yp. Mercur is a native of Pennsylvania and a their candidate to represent the Keystone State in | to the government and @ captain in the Uniouarmy. | lawyer by profession. His first political Do gong the Senate in place of Mr. Buckalew. Of course he | He became an Arkansas judge in 1865 and @ Repre- | was as Presidential elector in 1360. In October, 1861, will be elected, as the democrats have necessarily | sentative to Cong ress in 1865. Mr. Boles 1s @ member | he was elecied a Judge of the Thirteenth ‘judicial The again: ‘ 5 was | whom this rigorous law is.oftenest enforced, not ATTEMPT AT SUICIDE.—Mary Brown, a stewardess, actively in raising ing State Sem any, copes ot ime law itself or of those who employed on board the brig M lying at the troops under pointment of the Governor. He | execute it simply becanse the poor are least wrciad pete nd fs another of the very litle Known members of the | able to a ang peony obligation. ‘They are the | Empire Stores, near the Fulton ferry, attempted to put in a plea of nolo contendere, of that smail band of patriots popularly known at | district of Pennsylvania for a term of ten years, but class who earn who are oftener out of i to her existence yesterday ‘The Huntingdon (Pa.) Gtode, published in Mr. | home as “scaluwags.” uf resigned in Tsea to. become Representative tome | am |ARTIN WELERBR, OF OHIO. employment and who rarely have @ reserve seilieviag tity of oj fsg opin ample Scot's home, gives this gratifying assurance of the HENRY P. MH. BROMWELL, OF ILLINOIS, Thirty-ninth Congress. He was re-electea m 1866, Mr. Welker was born tn Obi0 during the year 1819, | fand which they can rely for maintenance for berm ~ new United States Seuator from Cy hed Among the anti-repeal-the-Tenure-of-Oifice-bili | and isa member elect to the Forty-tirst Congress. | When a you man he am even, and landlords, in common with other med “When Hon. John Scott takes @seat in the United | names ts that of this Representative. He is a son of | Thus Ulysses Mercur has chance to harass bis | pursuits, but subsequently studied law and | men, like to trust them in debt for the | procured, when, by the aid of the stomach pump, States Senate it will be @ public notice to dishonest | “My Maryland,” and was born in 1823. In 1826, after | great nainesake for at least two years (I. P.) was admitted to the bar. He was Clerk of Treason that under ordi y | she was She itof danger, Ni speculators: hangme around Washington to leave. | a residence of seven years in Ohio, he went WILLIAM MOORE, OF NEW JERSBY. of Common Pleas from 1846 to 1851; # | seldom earn more than en to live upon. | Was assigned fc President Grant will waut the heip of just such men | with his father to Iilinois, there obialned a good The life of Mr. Moore has been a busy one. Heis a | judge of the Common Pleas 1861 Taking these facts into consid PLYMOUTH CHURCH BeTuet.—The sixth of the as Scott, and it would be something in the pocketa | education and was admitted to the bar in 186s, | nattveof Pennsylvania and the recipient of @ com- during the following was he it nature of the law, it is not to be won- Wednesday evening series of entertainments was of the people if there could be several more Scotts | Being of a sanguinary cast of mind he founded at | mon school education. His busmess pursuits have Lieutenant Governor of ‘onto ing a dered at that Ju Bedford shrinks from its exe- elected from other States."’ Vandalia @ new! which Yon been varied. At one time a farm laborer, at another ion upon the expiration of his term. Dur- | cution, |, burying all thought of the measure of | @iven last evening at the bethel of Plymouth church, DELAWARE. Steam and Fire, which he edited from to | clerking th a country store; then engaged im mer- | ing the rebellion he served asa judge advocate gen- recompense, contents himself with the | which latter has become one of Brooklyn’s most In regard to the successor of Hon. J. A. Bayard, | 1864. It grew rusty and fell to pieces irom lack of | cantile pursuits in Atlantic’ county, New Jersey, | eral on the staff of the Governor of Uilo, and was Eoporebis salary pertaini to his position. Had snecessful institutions, and was so numerously at- from Delaware, in the Senate, the Wilmington | fuel. Mr. Bromwell has Sete 8 eae (1853), | Dext agent of the Weymouth iron Works; sabse- | giso Assistant Adjutant General of the for | he chosen to transact this he had both the ‘expramed the. opinion ‘a ‘day ot "two ago | Gougress: a 1860 Mewes neclecten Dut tances | Sones oo ne acer hl of chews Pursue he | some te. iting Donen em cris | putting! boa iho’ ground tuat the heey? | swag ftom the door, bitea,caable to. Obtain edie as Te- rear ave become eligible orn 5 > upon vy , iat Mr. Thomas F. Bayard would be e | his constituents Kindiy reiicved him the harassing for he was twtce elected a Judge of the Court of pp Rg on Hee case Canora: menmenee Priminal business of his court demande all his atten- ane herp the piikcarg ‘ee na howce of the party for the ions Sena Guties of a Representative. Common Fleas of Allantic county. His fame having | pansaMIn fr. WHITTEMORK, OF MASSACHUSETTS, RR- | tion, he states that he does not intend to issue these great gor the long term commencing 5 next. Thi BALPH P. BCCKLAND, OF OHIO, spread he was, in 1866, el & member to Con- PRESENTING SOUTH CAROLINA. odious warrants. ay? this occasion was under Magnan yeppears now not to be #0 |. His friends are Mr. Buckland was born in Massachusetts in 1812, | gress, and m 1868 was honored by a re-election. ‘This meorruptible patriot was born in Massa- bi Judge Curtis, of the Marine Court, in a . Charles C. Thomas, who was ably veoniident he has twenty out of the twenty-eight | during which same year his parents removed to | JAMES KENNEDY MOOKUEAD, OF PENNSYLVANTA. 1s, OF @ teacher of the Gospel. | letter in the HexaLy warmiy endorsed | Mrs. Marie, soprano; ‘Treadway, contralto; Mr.* mocratic members committed to him, but the | Ohio, He was educated at Kenyon College and was The unkinaest cut of all was when Mr. M pormenge eH Macke of tos vebeiaen this holy man, | the action of Judge Bedford, and also respesttally oe ‘Lockwood, tenor; Mr. F. Stein, ee ae nds of Hon. J. A. Nicholson, member of the | admitted to the bar m 1437. ie was @ member of | Voted not to repeal the Tenure of (ifice bill. He, in @ spirit of mart; decided ‘and In a dignified wanner informed the bar he, | @. W. Warren, organist. The programme em! wer House at Washington from this district, claim | the Ohio State Senate from 1856 to 1480. He served | like the President elect, was a tanner in his youth. the ted regione “of Hout, Gerol 80 himeerf. had since his accession to the bench | several choice selections of oe Fo it he will be elected and now has a majority com- an te and next as a brigadier Leaving leather alone he took to ditching; became @ | {ni civilization and virtue should burst upon dispossess process, and did not intend now to f lads. ‘Thou art so near,” as rendered by Lock. | 4 to him. At auy rate, they Goctary that with ai the While in the fea was | canal contractor and originates a canal the inhabitants of the Palmetto State. In | do so. Wood, was a very fine offort on the part of that gen- Sho votes of two repul ‘an Senators he cap e ine. in he wo ty of an agent of the Freedmen’s Bureau ‘The Jaw which both of these gentiemen have thus fleman and won for him an encore, Won't you Mr Bayard. r and took an active part i tleman went among the heathens of | declined to participate in the enforcement of will pom Mn “The Hunted,’ “Come in MARYLAND the navigation of the Monongahela river; the ‘South aua there prayed eternal happiness and | now revert to channel in which it more | and shut door, ry yh ee bably re-elect Mr. McVickers te fill the unex- ; the Cais Cotten? tory; was an tant general and fire, brimstone and | certainly belongs, and w! it will have ali the | raptarovaly received by the was pire term of Mr. Reverdy Jonnsgn. burg. to be a member of Congress when | of volunteers, fi president of several tele- tion to the Ww ‘The with an | attention it require? District are composed for the greater of wi Vn 9 INDLABA. i his present term expires. ee mye In 1859 Mi. Moorhead was elected | acuteness far superior to that ever 6: by the | numerous enough for the transaction of all ‘Home to our Mountains,” “Simon, the id A to Hon. Thomas A. Hendricks, demo- JOHN CHARLES CHURCHILL, OF NEW YorK. the of ere in which he has of Massachusetts, discovered 80 this business, and it will not interfere there with | and the “Three Fishe: 4 oy ‘Treadway, were also te be chosen, and, of course, he wil) be a re- This member of Congress, from one of the rural | served ever since, pou the expiration of the pre- | of in this traly ae other interests. It is a civil ‘and the dis | well recetved. r. I, it of the ! bi Tn regard to the successttl candidate the | districts of Sarat, is @ native of Ciinton county. | sent Congress he retires to private life. sanctified A ry elected him @ member of the Bethel, is j prond of the success which has met indiamspolls Journal (republican) says:—*“The con- | He was educated in Vermont, and So lewyer. ir. DANIEL J. MORRELL, OF PENNSYLVANTA, Delighted with his success in legislative ‘with considerable rigor, and | Churchill has been District Attorney for Oswe, The past history of Mr. Morrell is very barcen. He | halis, the y have re-elected the reverend we are to know that but little baa hlood has county and County Judge of the same county. Was born in oat received @ common school eda- tleman, who will doubtless lose no ty thelr friendes saniene gna ** | maubergen Go tnePeciyte. ere USMS | cation, removed ser Conaia hicfcouneen mantan menst te Geried Gece | wpacaave ot wag it — pf mercantile pursuits until 1955, when rt rebela must be buried di ive th imi ap- MICHIGAN. ‘COLUMBUS DELANO, OF OBIO. fiSame an trou manumcsarer ai Joaustera tn tamtntn CURIONI Cp ts Seams NOD sly wishen | pears to be a law very much At Variance with ana |. Yesterday Alderman Bergen, President of tho \ Hon. Zachariah Chandier, tne present tncumbent, Heo og ee Choreh | serving in his town council he does not appear they all were. This is the history of a carpet-bag- | entirely re; two general tenor | Board, completed his list of standing committees mi W ine oatinds a () ine received the nemiya- wi > ene Aang eee = ynorad to a when s pare ae oe oMce until 16096, Fame he was glected | ger, Selah ! of Amperioan CF ars rincipies. - It K for 1869 and filed them in the City Clerk's omice. ican , sean a becam: eth Congress. Mr. Morrell w: LUSION. @ legal in fite u peop! rs WISCONSEN. famous as 9 criminal lawyer. In 1844 he was elected | last October for aucther term, pea? tomerk, tha b— Nviniamm vne Gon. | They are as follows:— ark, that of the forty-seven | ® hardship as severe as that which PF hy ost thamtaatoon, on the record as | queror ‘subjected the Saxons, to whon he depopu- On Law.—Aldermen Fisher, Canningham, Whit- abnoe m General Grant’s coming ad- | lated whole villages in the South of England, and | ing, Whitney and Willard. ministration nearly one half cease to be members | made the “New Forest? where their homes had on Finances.— Aldermen Cunningham, Hathaway, A\Suecessor to Ton, James R. Doolittle (elected | to the Twenty-ninth Tn 1860 was a dele. JAMES MULLING, OF TENNES repikblican, bat now classified with the democrais) is | gate tu the chi ‘Contention; bi When tn the course of human evens a great man to be\ Chosen. He will, no doubt, be astraight out | missary General of Ohio, He w: appears in the world we pay homage to his genins. repubi ican, und the horoscope indicates that Matt a8 1D 1863, re elected in 1864, and reat is Mullins! A native of ‘tennessee, county Congress pirat erms been, The motive, however, was different, one be- | Totans, Whiting'and McGroarty. Cul ter will be the man, although it pa? 4? by General George W. ‘whose success- | sheriff and colonel of militia, he first vecame distin- fg poner Spin gdm ey ing the act of an at it Monarch, who wished to On Opening ‘streets.--Aidermien Willard, Hatha- to select some one else. Cadw: fully contested. Mr. Delano lives in a — 48 @ devoted Unionist who fed from the —___— secure a royal ke aed ground, and the otner | way, Totans, Campbell and Keating. i js also in the for the nomination, } district that has become | dem: loodthirsty rebels into the Union lines. He SALE CF AUTOGRAPHS. that of a modern ae holder in the | | On Assesements.—Aldermen Totans, Fisher, Fine- and, a8 Ae is ove of the big “Double-you's,” he may | he will not give General it any & stair officer, participaing tm seve — New World, who desires the rightful possession | hout, Armfeld and Whituey, . be suecedsfal, na any ae RL F- pen! aioe tame rj that he ae teat Goan eett J Pann ney om : Onn 4nd Grin-visaged = war A collection of autographs, belonging to the late | of his own premises. a fe Co pene At 3 cirourig, Caney an = Aldermen Nolan, Thorn, abl e ” y mn omices, 00! er wrin: ‘ont Mullins returned » Oo jt, id Pari later «i ie es of 0 m™ we and Keatin, Aly ase fi fe aistanee | it of—further than that | #n extensive farmer and banker, to civil life. He was a delegate to the Rasnvinte oR “4 ou water « Drainaye,-sAldormen Finehout, which were the oe ~~ docu- | an act also emulatory of t of the On M 0 acessary for a Weatern man w wear JACOB U. BLA, OF NEW HAMPSHIRE. Stave Convention in 1865 and the same year became Patt Bet Pkg letters from Dabos, histo. | Norman Duke, with the exception that he evicted ees Stryker and Nolan ood clothe td fmke @ good Senator, nor to hea Mr. Fi is 9 native ofthe Granite State. A jeurnal- | Speaker of the Tennessee House of Keprosentatives: rian ‘who was born at Beauvais in 1070 | his own tenaniry to make a ducal preserv9 of their On kal Aldermen Guok, Armfield, Kich- poet leeton w & good Representative. | iat by profession, he fell from hia hi estate whea | In 1867 he was elected to the Fortieth Congress and | and ee in 1742, which realized $116; three letters | farms, while W: unhonsed those who Were not | ards, Coffey and Willard, ihe Legisiatude of does not meet until | he became a politician. He filed quite a number of | soon became noted for his orsturical powers, whieh | from Daniel Blsevier, the olebrated Dutoh t ra- | his tenants but Were subjects by conquest, And On Public Lands and hutidings,—Aldermen Whit- next week. $ Oifces under the State government; was Upited | are simply tremendous. An tngratefal conven it, Who was born in 1626 and died in 1640, for | sursly no one can ignorance of the terrible ex- ney. Stryker, Guok, Keating Coffey. MINBESOTA. States Marsiial from 1861 to 1866. During the follow- | tion, ignoring Mullivs, pot up another candidate , $30; sixty-seven letters from the celebrated Wngiish | tent of mine luced in ireland even at this di in Supplies and Bepenses of rement?.—Aldor- Hore the fight te hot an@ farioas between the fon. | ing year he was elected to the Fortieth Con and | last fall, who got beaten y @ democrat. Of course ticsophes John Locke, born in 1632 and died in | by the @: from their homes of thousan meu Clancy, Whiting, Elliott, Hathaway and Camp- Alexander Han , the pl itimeumbent, and ex- | Licavel only knows what his future fate will be. this traly great man wil not be a Representative | 1704, for $383; sixty-two letters from J. J. Rousweaa | year.y of unfortnnate tenants of the “nobility | bell. Representative iguuting irae , Who ainis to dis- JOUN PF, FARNSWORTH, OF TLLINOTS. after next March; but if Grant does not acy as N® | to the Countess d’Epinay, 1754 to 1758, for $253; the | Ana ‘landed gentry” because they happen to On Schools, Arta ant Setences, and truant Jace Kameey and decupy hi feat himself. Porn in the township of bat Lower Canada, | wishes won't Teuiessee ring witn bis eloquence, TO | “Mémoires of the Countess WEpmay,” original | be a few paltry pounds im arrears to a | some—Aldermon MoGroariy, Stryker, Pinchout, \ e chances are agkinet Donuelly, for the reason | March 27, 1820; removed with bis father to the West { his credit be it said that Mr. Mullins can outtalk any | manuseript, for $149. titled landlord whose income is, perhaps, | Guck and, Totans, that be hae le Dimaself condpiewous in @ hand to | when wi A id was self-educated; adopted the pro- | member of the Honse and can say jess im more aoe Sa Jarger than that Of most of the European sovereigns, On er and Gas,—Aidertien Clancy, Trayias, hand con ith BB Wasudgrae, Grant's right | fession of law, and, having settied in Iinoia, was fv than any man in the United states, He is @ D¥ATH OF A FRERDMAN 110 YRane O1D.— In tae Old World sittiar enactments to this New Eiliott, Comey and omy 2 pand finan. elected a Hepresentative from that State to the Thir- | devoted patriot, hating rebels unto the third and | Winashoro, some day jast week, Cicero } York proces® of nt have been the means of on vy and Water ltiqhts.—Aldermen Coffey, wiseorn, ty fifth Congress, serving as a meraber of the Com- | fourth generations with @ pious antmonity, native African, Le osed to have been 110 years old. | ruitiplying Ae houtands the harrowing scenes | Thorn, , Richards and Campbell. i There is a triangular eoteat in tule State for the | mittee on Revolntionary Pensions. He was re-elected | JOSkPH P. NEWSHAM, OF SOMEWHERE, kerRmeEWe | He rowyined unui death with his former owyer, Mr. | of whove families marte homeless through the rigor of on Printing,—-Alderien Campbell, Whiting, Rich- puccessor#hip to Mr. Henderson, if he is to be #uc- | to the Thirty-eixth Congress, and im 1862 to the Thir- IN@ LOUISIANA J.B. Bite ‘t. He said some time ago that freeiom | what may be per se justice; but justice, even Genes ards, Nolan and Pinenout. peeved at all, end he is Itkciy’to ye, The well | ty-eighth Congress, serving = the Commitiee on ‘The biographers failed to discover Mr. } had not "ade a fool of him, aa it had in tie cave of | iaudably swift in many cases, might be made to fold On Rules and Fleciion Returns, Aldermen Whit known Germap radical red repubi , “ari Sohurz, itary Affaire. In 1561 he to part in the war for | Newsfam’s native place. He shone asa memper of | most for he had been free before, and waa | her we and sweep with Jews vigorous fight | ney, Fisher, Cunningham, Travise and Willard. js the most prominent candidate nd what the | the Uolon as @ colonels of unteers, and was te- | the Logisiana Keconstruction Convention in 186% | born 7 Africa, During the lags year (1808) of | where the punishment she awards may be in Salartes, ae, idermen MeGroarty, Thorn, mate Tehew called the “ damned ow contributed | elected to the Thirty-ninth aud Fortieth, and is a | rose to meridian as a member of the Fortieth Con | his iife, by Unceasing industry to t day of his | leas merited. An irish bow with @ | Guck, Hathaway and Campbell. rgely to keep Misaourl ia the Union it i. \ottm- | Membe-elect to the Forty Congress, gress and sinks to rest next March. May he sleep | death, he mate two bales of cotton, doing all of the | shanty and a pigsty; a sorrowing hand and wife, On Publle Dok Aldermen Nolan, Stryker, probable r patriotism may be rewarded y the OWANGE FRAKISS, OF NEW YORK. sweetly in political Oblivion! hoting ie! aiso twenty bushel of corn— | leading or carrying jrom the shanty a brood of ehil- Eliott, Whiting and ¢ ys bho!ce of churz, essentially their exert OVE ‘This stern checker of Presideztia: patronage ie a SYDNEY PRAWAM, OF MAINE. more, ti werefore, many younger meh in Uieir | dren; sundry Ofliciais aasuming possession of tho On Governmont P iy ana Claims,—Alderinen tian, to ty sun position of United States senanm | alive of New York, ie was educated in Vermont, Mr, Perbaim 9 @ native of Maine, ana is a farmer prime, Winnsiowo (8. CG) Neiwar wretched dowicile, hick was a “home” withal. aud | Richards, Thora, Biliott, Fisher aod Guck,

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