The New York Herald Newspaper, March 30, 1869, Page 3

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NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1869—TRIPLE SHEET. _ 3 oa ~ <4 rn y the Confederate during CONGRESS. him the power to cispiace an officer during the | decrees of the United States District Court in Loutal- Seamntoan fwhuh apie and touching tes | 28 FORTY-FIRST Teens, auld to devolve its. Guties on @ person of | auain the cases of the British vessels Valante, Bel THE SING SING RIOT. pra an allyl pcs ump a ‘Of the Benate?. By no. meana, It expressly confers | “hy Me Baw pep.) of Mase. peals Bedy Convict Hoary : a First Session. no means. sy Mr. Bawks, ) ar Inquest of the ‘The building which these lades provided for orphan that power by aathonzing im tgsuapepd ah acer frouh cobaniar suis Of tie United Giles in torcien prose Ratan hy BH. Leckweeé~Evl- ® | children’ et’ Charleston wes badly damaged by (he SENATE. to time to act intls place “unth the end of the next | By Mr. Panmtss, (rep.) of N. Y.—To perpetuate tes- | dence. against the Keeper, Sullivan, *, Canaan seseprek, 600 & fe 00: hs prpone ok neqharins = pean aeemign Or fae beaate, This fe all be poeen G0, 3 Ge a po oe ames Pieces ote ¥—To The inquest on the body of the convict Henry the | °" ‘placing thetr asylum hat they appeal to ‘ASaNGtoN, March lon ne, fawn Mi pmeey ey Mov i semmiate O'Neil, alias Charles H. Lockwood, who wes shot by Continued = TIness of bounty and gratitude of the nation, It is beheved | | The Senate met at twelve o'clock, the Vico Prest- | Fore Reposiet, tam, then, we eee een consti | On iemtor ca poais; alec to reguimteovement of | one of the Sing Sing State Prison keepers, was held President. their appeal will be heard am! responded to by Con- | dent in the chatr. tation and the bmctice of tue government ever ve | the harbor of Port On! XN. ¥. yesterday before Coroner Flynn and a jury. It will gress before adjournment. PENNSYLVANIA AND SOUTH CAROLINA RATIVY THE | avy President. The only of the Tenure of | By Mr. Parng, of Wis.—For the improvement | }, bered the ‘of the deceased was Pir sveth Otiee act as atmended 1s to put the old officers back of Mik ‘Kenosha, | D¢ remembered that the body > The Central Pacific Railioad Company—Tart i J of | after the sesslen ts tm case the Senate given to his friends in this city for interment, and Response by the Vice Fresideut of the Com- 1¢ VIOR PRESIDENT submitted joint resolutions of | refuse to corfirm a nomination, or by not} By Mr. ScHENoK, (rep.) of Ohio—To the first | that the Board of Health authorities refused to honor THE TENURE OF OFFICE LAW | >= the Legisiatures of Pennsylvania and South Carolina | refusing to co.ccr in hie suspension. | With | seclion of an act relating to appeals to the Supreme certificate of death as made out the . ratifying the fifteenth amendment preposed to the | OUt the. law the ofice must remain vacant; | Court, the of death as out by one of Within an hour after the! passage of the House with the law theold officer would go back. Which | By Mr. Bowen, (rep.) of §. C.—Ay priating Sing Sing oMcials and referred the case to the Coro- oS Bees resolution directing the Conmittee on the Pacific | Constitution, s rue ee Dene Antereste—that the offices once $2,000 to the Slaten Our Lady of Chareston, - | ner, The Westchester Coroner yesterday made @ Rallroad to investigate certan matters affecting ‘he | 44 suuwan, (rep.) of Mass., presented the petition | Senate should, after a failure of 3 whole session Lo prisoners during the late ware Gamend fir the body, bat he demand wie 6 aaeae unheeded. There was quite a gathering of spectators at the Coroner’s office during the inquisition. It wili be seen by the evidence given below that the deceased was not only unarmed when shot down, but begged piteously for his life when the keeper aimed the pis- tol at him. Central Pacific Railroad Company, the following let- agree on @ successor, become vacant, or that the ry LUTION The Senate Refuses to Recede from nema of the Society of Friends of Richmond, Va., asking | #Tee on 8 sucomior, become yacant, amirmauvely | _ Mr, mrvomax, "eth ot Chin eaieas Wirasoladien: ter was placed in the hands )f the chairman of that 7 for an appropriation of $50,000 for the erection of | disapproved of by the Senate, should go back which was adopted, reciting that Its Amendments. committee:— ‘an asylum for colored 2, it 1800, a few hours before xr) ‘dissolution of the late " administration, bonds Wasumioron, March 20, 1860. | “ur. Haun, (rep.) of Me, presented the petition | Pains of the senure of Ofiee act ak amended DY svat ‘ToHen, Wi. 4. WaEaies, Hhatrman of the Ropes of Folly B. t ny guking @ penwion in consequence | the Senate. “Why should not ‘als two houses agres | were my order” of resldent.Johuson prepafea tor on ‘When, practically, President under | issue },000 of ti were actually issued Sin— | respectfully reques that a meeting of your | tionary war. Referred to the Commlti¢e on Revolu- I, ail the Towers ever oxercleed i any of his pre- | the Central Paciie allroad of California, oa account Committee on the Pacific hailroad:— services in the Revolu- A Conference Committee commie econ fi rege ne moment tionary Pr lecessors? and he has them in an Eagemmoned of the alleged construc certain of The following is the evidence:— Demanded. the duties im} upon itoy the resolution of THE MICHIGAN INDIANS. form. Nobody ran doubt the authority Congres that railroad; that it 1s aliged in certain proofs on JACOB STORMS SWORN. . House thia ee ‘pferring to the issue | Mt Howamp, (rep) of Mich., presented several | by law to authorize the suspension of an officer | file in the jreasury Department that the lines of road | {reside at Tarrytown; | am the wreasurer of Sleepy bg : > bl F Genral Pacific Railroad Pg ey Li under its quent ‘as the power to fix | on wenicn Se ce Were issued were hastily, wrong- | Aoliow Cemetery; on last Thursday morning a week Company of Coltornis. 1 Sather request the abthor: |: saione the attention of the 1 Depart- the 2 thas a are t between the two | the terior, & ory that the elas of work done aid. Sa | wae. canve weer ars nes Nerang Oe eee m coming to oon; he said one of my otlier 80! hea been watching some men at im Why, then, of that resolution and ali ¢her persons willing to WMemodelling of the Judiciary System | assume the responsibility of he charges insinuated ia ment to tho umportance of having the Indians in | houses, and so much feeling in the country? I am | not exceed $10,000 per mule, though certified to be George, f nit the stable, whom he supposed were horse thieves: pream! reto uired rege! pursuaded thatit arises from the action of mischief, | worth $20,000, and that if such allegations were in the House. btivi raiser At ae Ah, cl a JOINT RESOLUTIONS REPORTED. makers and persons who desire to stir up animosity | the government is liable to be injured and defrauded, this was about five o’clock in the morning; he said Ae nce teal anata mates ene Te ener, ce) of Mass., from the Committee | between the two branches of Congress and the Ex- | unless the bonds so issuedgwere recovered and can- | to thonght the men meant to steal’ horses; aifecting the Central PuciteCompany as infamously Pee einid the ay of ealisted mat at the meat wishes to fot wate to ftaelt Durtors above tne Hoese fereate of ‘he “Cnited'S tat taken to protect the in- | one of” the two brothers took @ revolver false, and demand that the tuthors thereof shall be | Tate untit the goth of June, 1870, and it was taken of Representatives or the Executive, ‘The consti- | Committee on the Pacific Railroad to mead ne | 834 one went in on one side of the barn, and the other on the other, but could not find them; nent bs dressed tn . Probabilities of an Early Ad- ne thelr statements or | yp and passed. ans Paty lution, which was | tution has made its advice and consent necessary to | mediately the circumstances attend! told me he thought the men were ling the issue of dropp! the army officers | the appointment of officers, and he wi 80 | United States bonds to the Central Pacific Railroad, thes: hat he thot here were three, journment of Congress. aeseaincnemimeiehd hE Te abgent Yritiot leave, ee legisiave us to render, that ‘advice and. con- | Sud to recommend such uction ug. it sey deste i Soa thes naan’ De andt hs eonaas eamcn Shot : Vice President Centra Pacific Railroad Go. . HOWARD, from ittee on the Pacific | sent unnecessary. It makes war on the constitution | portant,iwith leave to send for persons and papers | kept going in and coming out of the woods so that Railroad, reported gating @ joint resolution | and not on any power assumed by the Senate which | and fo examine penn cn oath. o1 ‘The Central and Union ?acific Railronds to | granting the mght of way the construction - does not bel: toit, If the two houses will ap- Mr. MUNGEN, (dem. io, offered a resolution | Heqtor, confused: st breakfast he told me woe that had not entered the barn as he lay close by the door; railroad from @ point at or near Po! roach this subject in a spirit of harmony, as I | for printing 2,000 copies of the latest edition of Lan- “ WASHINGTON, March 29, 1869, Unite at Qrden. Ty the Gesotae Ucraetins: 4 p 5 fdition of Lan- | T went up in the woods m: but could see no per- . lieve they will, and not with a desire | man’s Dictionary of C Laid on the table. . Continued Indisposition of the President—He | The Senate Committee on te Pacific Railroad at THE USURY LAWS OP THR DISTRICT. to “get ‘up’ antagonism, "there can” bono | . Mr. GaxPiEcb, (rep.) of Onio, offered @ resolution | $00 Before golng Into, the woods, 1 went into the fa Unable to Receive Visitors or Transact | their session to-day decide that the Central and Mr. VICKERS, (dem.) of et reported, from the | dimcuity in coming to anagreement. All the friends | to convert the old hall of Representatives into com- | put found BD pe a not having heard ‘about pb stig Union Pacific companies should unite their roads at | Committee on the District of Columbia, a bill to | of the administration desire to remove any obstacles | filttee rooms. Laid on the table. the riot, and not being sure about the men in ri gia in | Ogden, it being the opinion if the committee that amend the usury laws of the District of Columbia, that may exist ag to its faithful and efficient con- | Mr. ScHENCK offered a resolution assigning the | prisoners’ dress, we concluded to leave the e President is still suffering with neuralgia in » LOANING. THE PUBLIC MONEY. duct of public affairs; and let there be no strife be- | room of the House Post Otiice to the Comayttee of | matter a secret and watch the barn at ‘his face and was not in bis office at all to-day. He | this arrangement will satiafyand materially benefit Mr. SPRAGUE, (rep.) of R. I., moved to refer to the | tween us, but an honest effort to uphold and sustain | Ways and Means, the room of the Committee on night; about two o'clock a man came riding we directions early this morning that nobody | both companies, Committee on Appropriations the bill introduced | the administration which the people have chosen in ‘Appropriations to House Post Office, and the room along and told one of my men about the 2 of Claas ‘admitted, and Senators, Representatives | Reorganizing the Judical System—Judges BE Det the cine to provide for loaning the | its endeavors to enforce the laws and to secure | of the Committee of Ways and Means to the Com- | five prisoners, and that one of them had ki a 1 public money, He thought that committee pecull- Dee » prosperity and happiness to the people. © mittee on Appropriations. Laid on the tabie. r. ‘and even Cabinet Ministers calied in vain. Anap-| of the Supreme Bench io be Retired at the | arly well quaiifled to deal with it, and premiened Sak lonron, (rep.) of Ind., sald he would vote to | | Mr. MoRGaX, (em.) of Oblo, offered a resolution 1 ert le Bact trite dy lbp So rg 1 e Senator Caleb, one of my sons, came along, and I said, if the members of the committee should pass favor- | recede. from Llinois had summed up | instructing the Committee of Ways and Means to re- Jaleb, pointment had been made yesterday with a delega- Age of Seventy Years. ably upon this bill their names and memories would | the merits of this bill “Caleb, those men George saw were no doubt the $ on one point—that in cases | port a bill to exempt salt, tea, co: sugar, matches . tor of gentlemen from Montana who had someim-| The substitute tor the Senae billto reorganize the | be transmitted to posterity in letters of gold and | where the President should suspend an officer and | and tobacco from federal taxation, and. imposing @ pronars they have got fe the Barus, ou go Dome, Portant communications to make in relation to Mon- | Judictal system of the Unitel States, which passed | statues of brass. nominate a successor and the Senate should re- | tax of two and a half per cent m gold on all bonds | and search for them thoroughly;? [ stayed in the tana affairs, and the delegation was to call afew | the House to-day, “difers onlyfrom the Senate billin | The motion was agreed to. fuse to confirm that successor. This law would | heretofore issued or that may hereafter be issued by | feild till six o'clock; then 1 came home and found “ that itretires the Justices of tie Supreme Court from BILLS INTRODUCED AND REFERRED. Prevent the vacancy which would otherwise | the United States government. Laid on the table— my family very much frightened at George’s coming minutes before three o’clock, but the President left iP) Mr. DRAKE, fred loot Mo., introduced @ bill to} occur on the ‘adjournment of the Senate | Yeas 104, nays 40, the yeas being all repubilcans and | {fo the revolver: just at \hat moment an old gentle- ‘word that he would be unable to see them. active duty when they reaih the age of seventy | establish the office of Solicitor and Naval Judge Ad- ' by reinstating the old mecumbent. But the | the nays all democrats. man named Wildey came from the barn aud told Tho Senate Refusce to Recede trom tts | Jeers. The subsite was dgended by General But | Kiva? CquersNeferred to tne Committee on | st wan that in shi rempect sheen, would beat; | itt Seuexcx moved fo mumpend, the rule ihat ne | me” tat ture. Wate some prisoner rly ineffectual ause, oug! would put | might offer a concurrent resolution for a joint select Amendment to the Bill Repealing the Ten- | !¢t in a speech which Is highy spoken of to-night, Mr. BAW xan, (rep) of S. C., introduced a bill pre- tok the old incumbent immedigtely upon the ad- | committee on ordnance. The rules were not sus- = Cg oat ieee wae , foe ure of Office Act—A Committee of Confer. | 20t only for its argument bit for the knowledge it | scribing an oath of office to be taken by persons who | journment of the Senate, it would leave the Presi- | pended. as the two. boys had in the meantime ence Appointed. evinced of the duties of thejudges of the Supreme pane oe eres seen Be, Who ‘are not | dent free to suspend him without delay. The | + UNFINISHED BUSINESS, found two prisoners, they locked the doors after Gea ieaemen ante Court. Itis thought the Semte will concur in the ce A ee nth amendment, Referred | Senator from Illinois had asked him (Mr. Morton) the The House eee. prnceeans to the business on the | them and went up in the mow; one of them took a on everlasting Tenure of Office ‘to the Commii on Judiciary. other day whether he had not confidence enough in | Speaker’s table and disposed thereof as follows:— istol and the other a pitchfork, and one of them ‘Jaw ended for the present this afternoon in the ap- | House proposition. Eur MODOMALY BOD: oe peers yr President Grant to belleve tisk ho ‘woud oe syalt Bid, Senate concurrent resolution for a joint com- | jumped on something and exclaued, “Cale, there's leans of power, and the advocates of consisting of the Senate Committee on Con- DY ‘be one of pointment of Messrs. Trumbull, Edmunds and The SupremeCourt. Island Canal Company ‘an4. of the Hous Oonmnittes on something soft here |” and it turned out to be on and iting the t Of Wi good | tenge! Grimes as a Committee of Conference on the In the Supreme Court of tht United States to-day, | to said company. Helerred to e Gommaltsce om ag ah ee in. iene aim. aonunts, define the number, duties and compen- Dart of the Senate. The motion to recede | On motion of Hon. L. Trumbill, Lesver L. Bond, of | Commerce. ‘ culty was that it would impose no but | sation of the employés of both houses. Concurred : itted to prac! Mr. WILSON introduced 4 bill $o remove the politt- | merely moral restraint, and therefore would | in on motion of Mr. Allison, received, ‘contrary to expectation, the votes | lilinols, was admitted to pracice as an attorney and | oa) disabilities of Judge Alexander Rives, of Vir-| bo” urtert lt bad Pres- Senate concurrent resol ef only twelve republicans, which, together | Counsellor of this court. Onmotion of Hon. B. C. ginie. "Referred to tue Committee on Political Disa- dent, "Why? tien “should not the, Senate ‘re: | comumifios on tue condition of the, Seats Chaniser ywith the eight democrats, made a show of twenty | Cook, George U. Campbell, oj Illinois, was admitted jules. : cede? Why struggle for the shadow, when | and hall of the House of Representatives, the neat- against thirty-seven, Fourteen Senators who were | to practice as an attorney md counsellor of this ‘At this point pos oe eR Ae PeIeRe the substance had fied? There was another ground | ing, ventilation, acoustic properties of the same, the prisoners; the prison on arriving at the bare, acted tabultdaaiys Eo ewdmen found in the that it was d—d strange that th money were caught, while the one who had was not; ee memet ome ®@ pair CB pee Hg ve the man were after escaped, dala that if the man had ever been in the Pt} hitherto counted upon in favor of repeal went for | court. House announ its non-concarrence in the action Tecireioed teens eee officer Ping *Gnn seman bin to amend the judiciary system of | wag still there; it was then agreed that the the conference, which was but another way of yoting | _ No. 117. William Ward et a,, plaintiff in Lal vs. aay Senate on the bill to repeal the Tenure of OMice | time? ‘That would depend upon circumstances. It | the United . barn should be wat $ person in the ‘against repeal. Garrett Davis spoke for tue demo- heats pop nd Pa — = - eee ons a! gang a Cenient: )of mu, sainaiins er rae be naene say that when an Fgad Le Mr. BINGHAM, oot the ey ics on the Judi- could have. at ord, an rats, and was unusually brief, scarcely taking an | tice Field delivered the opinion ‘ofthe Court ‘afMrmi ing insist upon its amen ments, and ask for acommittes should the r 7 be free to steal or pik other be mien ie ai ES as HIS or al ee astt that forned > Me oa wayne mo hour to state his twenty first view of: the case. a) of the sald Circut Court in this cause, conten. ) of Tow: z ee to misconduct in office until the next seasionof Con- | Mr. POLAND, (rep.) of vo offered an amendment | tioned while he was concealed; I guess he heard me ‘Trambull again stated that tf people would only take | "Wo, gs, White's Bank of Bittlo, appellant vs. the | recede, “> $0 dr, Brasoue sald fust dhe Tenure of Omics law ia | Berens oe wate of Con Te, he Me taeTing of | aay that 1a pal al the hay Out and Td. get him; L the trouble to look carefully at the Senate amend- roceeds of the schooner Ribert Emmett, Robert Mr. Davis, (dem.) of Ky., read a constitutional ar- | substance and shadow was wrong and mischievous Tiere such participated in the trials below. oa Mer) ‘up, Isawa ma. dreased in white ment’ nothing could be found therein objectionable ith, claimant.— Ap] fran the Circuit Court of | gument in support of the atter motion. be repealed, ‘The bill, Babetiate and amendment were debated } holding up both his Bands; he called out, “Captain, @r unconstitutional. Morton asked where was the the Untted States for the Norhern District of New mae the expiration of the morning hour the unfin- lowaRD again declared himself opposed | by Messrs. Bingham, Poland, Lawrence, Woodward, } I'll surrender to you; I ‘See it’s no use, I can't get eof reining te shadow of law the substance | dhe Sour fovrsne ihe deane ofc ml treat | Gurney aus postponed Heme be a” aary “aaorton® of” the | and Saynara "ins ‘wing pint af dscumten | RULE Ristg Waheed ara cient ‘had been already extracted. Mr. Sprague made a Court in this canse with cost, and remanding the eg re of Office act might be considered, true constitutional doctrine on the sub- | were @ provision in the substitute which allows tor tne other ‘until he aia down beside me, and all few of his cl ex cause tothe said Circuit Oowt with directions to ', TRUMBULL spoke in support: ject of appointment to and removal from office. | judges to resign after serving a ce} number of | the time he kept hus hands held tp, as if to show haracteristic remarks, expressing dis- | enter a aecree for the appellaxt in conformity to the | insist, as follows:—As much m: because been broadly claim ears Densto1 mimis- | that ge! Bg ge ores Hoy gust with the action of Senators and warning them | opinion of this Court. 29g sigs vails as tothe President’s powers in P col of Mr, ee on the eapenctasent dons ae icone ‘and. Boggs noi, offered by Mr. | haus oes said to hin, er Ww aa opal the < Of the fate of Oharles'I.,s chapter from whose un- | No. 126. Jesse Riddiesbargr, plaintif’, in error, | and removal of officers under the constitution, I pro- | trial that the 1 rer under the consti- pad pemeri oh he aid he had crawied and got up happy history he read from David Hi H ys. the Hartford Fire Insuraice Company of Hart- briefly, to inquire what tution to make appoinsments and removals, not only Mr. Kern, (dem.) of Ind., moved to amend the | the scuttle , and that he did not lie ame. Howard: | tora, —The argument « this cause was con- | Constitution {teelf in the absence the Feoees, but even 4 the seasion of the | supstitute the for retiring judges he oth 3 I then asked inaisted on supporting the Senate amendments on the | tinued by Mr. Hu! of counsel for the defendant mae por were under the lat ; an should now repeal the Ten- | sevent ave dana soveuts years. Hin otters tun other tteo men were; h © said My SDs score of principle, high and mighty principle, of | in error, and concluded by Mr Hughes, of counsel, peat fo 2 passes of the Tehure ure of Ofice act (for the violation of which the Presi- , the discussion hay closed, the House | had taken them away; I told him I meant the other which he wonld fain give people the impression he the plaintif in jr. years ago, ow they would be affected by ‘upon trial) 1t would thereby give | proceeded to vote on the bill and amendments. two, and he replied that thev had left “up above erro! eA * In six cases—-The United States against respect- | amendment of the Tenure of Office act . the living personification. Howe followed suit in | ively Taeodore Adams, Albert ki Moury, Bepinel J. by the Senate. It had argued that the a Mr. Hows, (rep.) of Wis, ‘made a long argument witeate nina. The amendment 2 peculiar fonathan P. Burton, Oliver ffery way, which consists in a spasmo- the (gud ae and that uch as the totion di in of constitutionality and wisdom | Poland was rejected by a vote of 40 to 72, the yeas | ing me, Mr. Williamson, the constable of Tarrytown, ‘ 3 aS that | of the Tenure of Omice act, and in favor of and nays " the prisoner turn and hold dio style of Jerking cence chan. ar ae ‘Tho Alaska Purchase Investigation. gene eagonel power shall be vested in a Presi- | it unmoaified seen ine metae book. Veen es are tee was then passed by a vote peed % cry out, ‘On Obatlle, ‘Charlie mignthed apes. ,Pomeroy erage Bia 2 ‘The evidence in the Alaska investigation, though sahed ‘oe fo poy) seaee Shccepedy fot, FOMEROY, (rep.) of Kan. was willing to vote $9 to nays $0. The vote was, with a few excey for God's sake don’s shoot me—Dve surrendered to aid pesviscias, itnied sapbels nt he néped the | %eBtto the Government Printng Omice in the latter Shioers at Wal, except’ Wacre’ ine constitation ois tunes oft malty of hs pola fends although "The substitute provides that the 8 waice O'Neil was sea daw tas wo Reapers ‘commtttee would not turn out like ress Part of the Fortieth Congress has never made its ng A soe te a on that o® Bi he, womae yaater va sno he law nepeaied. ors shall hereafter consist of the Chief J coming up; Sullivan at oe time had a pistol in his and leave matters worse than they found them. be appearance, and yet there isno particular rash of gzeretie of tuinpowor bythe President Bo far from Senate over at ea to and pay ovals from hand; ‘wale, ve stood up amid many cries of ‘Questio! business at the printing office just now. There isan | the grant of executive authority to office was derived not directly from the constitu. pored ts Ny ante nr Kom ete se | impression abroad that the testimony will be kept | think I°do mot speck tan Sironaly wine tion, but from a law enacted by both houses of Con- for repeal, and made his speech soméwhat sensa- | >®Ck until all remembrance of the subject has died der the ‘os Sa ha sae ae eer tee ne tional by repeatedly asserting that the Tenure of | °° Winstons ‘aici vo Office law was enacted by a party to keep friends of ‘The Comptroller of the Currency has had prepared that party in office. Then the vote was recorded Sullivan and e other Kicked with the blank forms for national bank reports under the law, aoe ed De Fes. Se ne eens ee acae eatin Wies: ecm yp bus she reports has not yet been 3 crea oethpala Merten Peah son, the took hold of one of, them to Conference on the Re= | made; ‘s been no intimations as to Stockton, » ThurmaD, restrain them; O'Neil offered no resistance what- Lang tae of Ofice Act. _ -- 1 wiht precise 18 Mtaten@nte will be called for, are—Mi ‘a ever, but acted ae quietiy. as a, child Rave Senators Trumbull, Edmunds Grimes co ig = =, Oomaree, or Gattell, Conkling, Oragits done; after tney had’ him they im get the Senate Commi Cott m- {or as to whether the banks will be required Ramunds ber" Hamil Harris, ‘and dress he having only e watt leaped gereny cutee urn tng | % Teport at some day in the future dating Ra Seber: Behurt, Weotts Spencer, Bux: es tert & tc waken ts Tenureef OMce act. The kil: upon the | trom the call made by the Comptroller or from some pay amar, hice Ser ® Willese Wiles Ft, A ee had not up to the | time previous to that date. ‘The motion to insist and ask a committee of con- walle fe time of adjourament been inormed of the action of Patnaued ference was then to. eee eS ibod wae fanning; ode of (hous Fepleds , “ Senator Chandler, of Michigan, was informed by At half-past Seat Wea neta wees Sato dnc “That's where I kicked you you son of a b——, you - Sent to the Senate. telegraph to-day of the death of his father-in-law, seasion and soon after adjourned. ain’t shot there;” Sullivan and Manning then took i=4 = J z : E 5 5 2 a ‘The President tic, afternoon sent the following and started for home this evening. ‘the Senate:—George First peat them why they were ‘without looking feces rated an gy chang jana oe HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. for the other met; tasked i. Wilfamson f an ofcer ner. Also the following to rsp GRANT'S WASHINGTON HOUSE,’ WASHINGTON, March 29, 1860, PA na wie eal it was murder;” the 0, We Madison, Wis.; William C. Cowley, BILLS INTRODUCED. went ‘and after going about thirty Kasicheaer 3 George M. Yard, Oakland, Oai.; | How the Money was Ralsed to Purchase It. | if"'ne “Kanect snroing en ieee wither {5 | Under the call of States bilis and joint resolutions A I Bi re enh os Ro ; B. Cockern, WasHINaToN, March 29, 1869. } consent of the Senate or of @ law of Congress, | were introduced ’and referred as follows:— . Lubner's; the urred about, EXoanpbel bine dames Cunning Lig Joht | mere nas existed grave doubt aa to who orig | ft is plain phe, could Rot remove. one, for until | By Mr. BorLER, (rep,) of Mass.—For the relief of tix o'clock tm the Boo silk | Ma, DL; W: ” Mshchester, Hillstoro, fil. Also | nated and carried out the idea to purchase a house fence the power ya ooo "5 Said to be incident to | Frederick Howe, in reference to a patent; also au- tenis rey ey ee ng H.Osmpbell, marshall for the Northern | here in 1865 for General Grant. It appears that Mr. | the power of appointment and to depend upon it, | thorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to collect ee vient a ma piryeiclan of Bing Sing Prices t kndw moths Dust ot Higois? alfved Meacham, Superintend- th years continue to hold ithout filing of O'Nell’s having been ‘ant of Indian Atairs for ‘Oregon; ‘Wella ‘Tones, a8- Stewart wasmot the omginator of the scheme, and | because without an aj tment there can be no re- | internal revenue now due and uncollected by reason the President shall appoint an ada- | moi when I arrived at the prison; I found thai at an 8. moval. Congress from time to time vested the " tional judge same court, shall Tecel pistol shot om the left side of the sessor of internal revenue of the Twelfth district of | at its commencement did what he could to dis- | President alone, the courts of law and the heads of | °% false and frandulent returns; also to incorporate = same = g ae the came duties a poanenens 1 ol ta ty one or the offictals that Ohio; H. E. Meeklenberg, collector of internal reve- | courage it at a meeting of the gentlemen composing | departments, ig me authority of the appointment | @ national land com , for fof tgs eo? for | receive the same Compensation as the judge then | O'Neil ‘had been taken at » nue for the Ninth district of Pennsylvania; Wm. R. | wnat was known as the Grant Reception Committee. Of interior oMicets: but without, such law it is ob. | imaierante and in the late slaveholding | ‘cting, and shall, in connection with or in the ab- eceaged he was in the hospital; when I visited sence of Oentian, collector of internal revenue for the Sec- lous that he would have, no such authority. It must | States. ‘associ tf. pearance of who re- See ee eae ee aches ee aanceass | Onteber or Wevevaber, 1600, cad iv Stewact wan | PesDuarya te every careful reader of the clause of | — BY Mtr. Jexoxs, (rep.) of R. L-—To repeal certain | Scrived by law, and suai on. the death oF retire: | celved a evere Hayeieal shock; I' though that he internal revenue the Second district of Alabama; | October or November, 1865, and Mr. Stewart was | the constitution I have quoted, that the Presi-| provisions in ap) ion bills ve to the | ment of the semlor judge, ume the judge of that | would recover, but jaundice, as a result of some Francis Widmer, collector of internal revenne of | chairman of the mecting. The following is a short gL pees Eee eee eee exe, (rep) ef N. Co pay toyat citi. | Ur mental and physical shock set in, acoslerated, sup; Alabama. \mself point‘ body . DOCKER’ | 1. Cm" loyal i. CUSTOM HOUSE JERSEY CITY. ed by injury to the liver, and after First Assiotant Postmaster (ienerals account of the move, and for the accuracy of the | omce, because the va declares zens in the States late im rebellion for services 12] wr, mooum wepyof Ne dn presented a petition of | had” ne’ hopes ‘of hls. recovery; "from. that Genags: Haute ok ; H ho nomti by the Presi- | #atements refer to any of the gentlemen who were | that, that power can 0! by | taking the States census in 1860. th nants and citizens of Jersey | time he continued to sink until’ the morn- dent today to be First Assistant Postmaster Gene- | PFesent at the Meeting. Among them were Marshall | the, consent of somebo without agine epeeramat erthell propery Re Puymsuan’e te; aie Werte | Sty and, Hoboken Hora Cuntom House tn Jerscy | ing of the goth, when he died; 1 made no, ex: ral, was formerly Clerk of the Maryland Court of | Roberts, A. B. Darling, Mr. Vermliye and George | Sr'the constivution intended that, the efloes should, | removal of obstractions from the Roadoke’ river in GAT, 500 to make Moboken. ana’ Jersey City's. pore | sere aul date MONA GE ONE SoS Appeal partner of Postmas Opayke:— be filled, and being once filled the question arises | North Carol! ‘or THE 7 inion death was a wy george an A. R. Corbin, of West Twenty-seventh street, | how are the Persons once appointed to be got rid of | By Mr. W: (rep.) of 8. C.—To suthorize | "HEF OF MOCOMEARY. ea or mene in camera iam peritoneal in- Grenewen, if they prove ineMictent or unfaithful? consti- | the settlement of Secounta; also to enable | wr. oy Of Pa., introduced a bill forthe | fammation of the liver: it was not deemed neces- Nominations Confirmed by the Senate. sold his house in Washington to General Grant. Mr. | tution in terms makesno provision for thi, Another | the Secretary of the Treasury to contract with Fisk | Mf, OVEtt» (rep) Lea. mugonnced & Ant fen ine | ty to bother about the coroner because the friends ‘The Senate, in executive session, this afternoon | A- R- Eno was one of the witnesses to the execution | clause of the constitution gives the President power | & Mills for a grow of statuary for the south wing | pany, Referred to the Committee on Ciaims. of the deceased wanted the body and were very confirmed the ominstions:— of the deed, and noticed the whole amount of the | ¢0 Mill up all vacancies which may happen Garing ie. of the Capito The House then, at thirty-flve minutes past four, | anxious to take it away. following B hi 93, 000 left receas of the Senate by granting commissions whic! Mr. LAWRENCE, (rep.) of Uhio—To punish thé | sajourned. CHARLES WILLIAMSON SWORN. H. E, Muhlenburg, collector of internal revenue of | Purchase money ($30,000) was left on mortgage for ® | shall expire at the end of their next session. This | crime of holding office in violation of the constitu- etmepempengniennerimestie I am constable of Tarrytown; I met George the Ninth district of Pennsylvania; E. M. Hayes, | term of years, but with the privfiege of payment at filling up of vacancies is not an intment, be- | tion; also in relation to trust funds; also to preserve Storms and his brother taking the two mea they had Wis.; Alfred B. Meacham, | any time. A few days after the execution of the | Cause the previous clause of the constitution | the purity of elections in the Territories. AUCTION SALE OF BOOKS. caught to the depot; when the train came along tendent§of Indian Agire for Oregon, vice J. had providea that appointments could only be By Mr. JULIAN, (rep.) of Ind.—To declare forfeited a Manning and Sulltgan got off and on seeing the prison- won ; Captains Thomas H. ste. | 1eed the Grant Reception Committee met at the | made by the ede 4 consent of the | to the United States certain lands in Lo : ‘ f to the other, “Come vens, Thomas ‘H. Patterson and Edward. {Nichols | Fifth Avenue Hotel. At this meeting Mr. Eno men- | Senate. ‘The Senate has nothing to do with thees | granted for railroad purposes. Yesterday » moderate number of literary'men and | €Fs oe, Of them ee sere age fellows couie from”? to take their former positions on the n, mater; | tioned the circumstance of the purchase of the house a rary fillings up. They are not communicated By Mr. SHANKS, (rep.) of Ind.—Providing the man- | dealers in books attended the sale at the rooms of | we were all afraid to go up tothe top of the highest James T. Armstrong, now o. yedred | and the mortgage given for the whole amount of the the | Senate, or need not be; but when the Senate | ner of ratifying constitutional amendments by the Bangs, Merwin & Co., 694 and 696 Broadway, of the | mow for fear that Owe, tf concealed there, might to be captain in the navy on the active list, to ge money to several gentlemen then present. | meets at its next session the President sends to it a | several States; also for the app of sur. f the iu of the late Judge Gi shoot us in detail, as we had reason to believe that he take rank next to Captain Fabius Stanley. Each one to whom he mentioned the circum- | nomination of some person to fili the vacancy which | plus, waste and condemned the District | frst portion of the library ate Judge Greene, | would from the character of the man; we then ‘The New York Collector of Customs. stance expressed a willingness to pay $1,000 | happened during the recess, and this may be the | of Columbia to the establishment " or ward the ent of the mort- | person fgg) commissioned or some other | for freedmen, to become self-sus' ‘The Commissioner of Customs to-day sent to New Rage. Mr. Eno took lown the names of | person, the nomination is made without refer. | which the art of labor will be tar dent of Providence, R. I. where we had gone, in conversation with Mr. York & blank bond for Moses H. Grinnell, in order | the several gentlemen to whom e, spoke until | ence to'the fact whether the vacancy has Deen tem. | poor: also for furnishing ePtifcial limbs, kc. tp Come Was Sermorty & veniden ce, FR. I. | storms, for a few minutes, when we heard one of that it may be executed while his commission as | ‘@ amount they expressed a we; to sub- | porarily filled or not, Under this power to Mill ap | discharged soldiers and seamen whenever 3 | and a diligent collector of works referring to early | the horses in the barn snort; “I wonder what makes seribe had amounted to about $14), ae r the or- Facancles which ray happen—that is, by chance or | also for furnishing clothing to inmates of all legally | American history, the Revolutionary period, and of | ¢i:at horse snort,” said one of the keepers, and we Collector of the Port is being prepared. This was ganization of the meeting Mr4igho Tose and said | without expectation—a practice had obtained by | established soldiers’ homes in the several States; biications connected with his native State. The | 4i) started to the barn to see what was up; while Gone to save time, as the new collector desires to it had casually come to 548 knowl that | maintaining vacancies during the recess and fil- | also to suspend the oyster tonnage tax im Virginia. Rorary is in these respects singularly varied | was telling the captain who the two men take possession of his office on the ist proximo. Goneral Grant had recently pui Mhased & house for them up by tem) commissions to | By Mr. Jupp, (rep.) of Iil.—To regulate the method | and ‘extensive. The collection of pamphiets | heard O'Neil cry out from the top of the mow, 10 i pre- labor school | of Cleveland, Ohio, which fills a catalogue of 500 | tended to go away and walked off south of the barn; pages and numbers about 20,000 volumes. The de- | Captain Storms was there at tuat time; we ~_ iy porary the sum of $30,000, and that hi lim- | expire at the end the next session of | of converting gold into cui a resents @ great variety of subjects, and embraces a 1 r to you;” the captain re} Cowra A ire atte trnceay” | Scout ne aaa mene peerage | negates er, Me, nee, catcars oer | ola Se pete rtm nme Prom | Rete, 9 ccenenel chat crease | meres shag coe dove ay me '. of the and) mot its close, to issue another ie . the iking he kept his hands up above head, I sup- At the urgent solicitation of Secretary Boutwell and that he thought that it would pérhape temporary commission. “it this practice were to ve | _ By Mr. FINEELNMURG, (rep.) of Mo.—Releasing the | gaged attention ‘at the Close of the last and early pose 0 show. that he was nol-armat; there ® more substantial mark of tude Gen- | tolerated it would render the constitutional provi- | Claim of the United States on the city of St. Lous. part of this century, in respect to which 4, fur- | Was nothing in his hands; in sliding down George A. Halsey, formerly member of Congress | eral Grant to raise by individual suDécription | sion requiring the assent of the Senate to appoint- By Mr..ASPRR, (rep.) of Mo.—To create & port of:| nish, in some cases, the views of prominent writers. | the mow he held his hands by his side, as from New Jersey, bas decided to accept the position | sufficient money to pay off this mort, ; that | ments entirely nugatory, as it would allow the | entry and delivery at St. J Mo.; also making | The almanacs are a rare and curious collection. ‘They | if to keep his drawers on, unill he touched of Register of the Treasury. It is probable his nomi. | %@ had already mentioned the subject seve- | President to keep the offices filled the whole time by | an appropriation for a Custom House at St. Joseph, | inciude the New nd and Rhode Island Almanac | the oor; 1 then put my hand on_ his y ral gentlemen, and they ail thought as he temporary commissions immediately after | Mo. from 1763 to 1867; the American for 1727, by F, Leeds, | snouider and to!d him he had to go with me; he re- nation will be sent to the Senate to-morrow. This | (Mr. Eno) did. Mr. Stewart op) the pro- | the ment of the session. This abuse was By Mr. VAN HORN, (rep.) of Mo.—To provide for | printed ana sold by Andrew Bradford, of Phila- | pied, “All right;’’ just at that time Sullivan and fs the first instance under the present administra- ponte and said that “it was not for | carried tosuch an extent that in 1863, during Mr. | the consolidation of indian tribes and to organize & | delphia; Poor Richard's Improved, for 1746, printed Rant came up; they could have heard and I sup- tion wherein an office has been literally forced on a | (04 “ta furnish the money, but for Congress;" | Lincoln’s administration, Congress passed a law to | system of ment in the Indian Territory. asd sold by Benjamin Franklin; Old Boston alma | pose did hear all ‘that took piace between O'Neill and that Comhs8s should do for General Grant as the | withhold all from ns commissioned to in! RRY, ae pe Mich.—Resolutions of the Dace for various years in the last century. The depart- | me: while O'Neil was up his shirt I heard a man. British Parliament had done for the Duke of Wel- | fill vacancies after adjourned, which va- | Michigan Legislature reference to the harbor at | ment of American poetry forms the special feature Of | pisio shot benind me; Sullivan must have been Early Adjournment of Congress. Ungton; to which it was replied that Congress | cancies existed while the Senate was in seasion. | the mouth of the ‘and a ship canal be- | the library and consists of an assortment of superior | ghout five feet from the deceased; I couldn't tell who works, with a great many by authors whose names | req the shot, for both ey ey Sullivan had pis- hose jo not id not do such @ thing; that tt could not estab- | (12 Statute, 646.) Assuming that under that authority | tween Lakes Erie and le The House Committee on Appropriations, having | jisn such a precedent, aud further, that putting tie | fe ‘ait vacant ha 4a (rep. ands a rin, Mr. STRICKLAN! of Mich.—Like resolu- | are not found in Alliboue, and wi writings had " finished up ali the business before it, authorized its | matter of on Congress waa but evading the subject: | the ‘recesa ‘of the’ Scusto ‘the ‘Preaident has | tions in reference to the harbor at the’ mowh of the | oni Ctronsient popuiaricy, so macter how’ inaif. | tien thelr bands: I do not think that the Drisoner ve as much as | the right, under the constitution and in | Sheboygan river, and @ railroad from Green Bay to | ferent were their productions, it Lay they were | ater being shot, “Charlie, ‘don't chairman to-day to report a resolution viding for | Then Mr. Stewart said he would an adjournment of Congress a: Sonabary rete any other man for the object; i o) would the absence of any statue to the contrary, | Menomonee county. allowed a inacollection which mcluded the | his hands at the same time in an imploring manner; $10,000 if any other man would. no accepted; | to make vacancies by removal for the purpose ot By Mr. Lovenripa! ) of lowa—To = works of = aay Bryant, pace and other ik he si to the because he ‘The majority of the members of the House aro | said he would give $10,000; that he had the names temporarily fillt ‘hem which, I insist, ly a o & system of schools tor the District of Columbia eminent American authors. English and modern tonene his life would be safe; O'Neil told me on anxious to get away, and when the Tenure of Omice | Of gentiemen wi 10, would give $10,000 more, and that, | sion of the meaning of the word “happen,” ex- | serve as a model for similar institutions throughout | American literature lag tg cata- | going up in the Ww: that that was the reason act ts disposed of nothing of pressing importance re- with Mr. Stewart's $10,000, the whole amount of | tent of the President's power before the passage of | the Union. He moved its reference to a select com- | 1 and adds to the q veness of the | why he surrend to Mr. Storms; when he $30,000 was already subscribed. Mr. Stewart then | the Tenure of Office act would be to remove a per- | mittee, The prices reali on ag Get 81] fell the two Keepers stood over him with Mains tobedone. A few members, under General | ‘backed out squarely, and said he would only sub- | son from office and temporarily fill it till the end of Mr, BRooxs, (dem:) of N. Y., moved its reference | sharp discernment of the merits of various thete pistols aimed at his head; it was then that Butler's lead, want to remain to watch the senate, | scribe $10,000 on condition that $100,000 was to | the next session of the Senate. When the Senate | to the Commi! on the ‘District of Columbia. | writers in the estimation of the — and of the | ONeill cried out to them not to shoot; 1 begged but they are so numerically smatt that | PC resed.” It was perhaps thought that sb | refused to consent to a new nomination the office | Aj to, value attached to oid or scarce The Ameri- | them not to kill bim; I saw one of them they sees rats” any "saromtat “opontion | Tac" sini” rota "hal” dnt | Reeetimenicenen recs it eaten | |B KeOPERIR Mam NUTTY Ory ot | SMELT, ble nae petri eee | Sete tebe as ne tare to an early adjournment, It is known | falled. Mr. Eno did not aban the scheme | under the constitution ana consistently with ite true the Homestead bill.” ni following is’& ist of some of the principal books {Engen on The fi to raise this $30,000; Hut as he was about to sail for | spirit and mean’ 1 cer dat the By Mr. SARGENT, —" it the ex- | sold and the sums they realized:—Account of the that the President would like to wave | Burope handed ihe hames he had already secured to | recess and whereby crests weacancy, aud then Ail ie | terminailon of fuctesring acimai fe kiskas also | Interment of the Remaige of 11,000 American sea | Sah et Congress adjourn as soon as possible. The various | General D. Butterfield, and as an inducement to him | by granting a commission to expire at the end of bo Bruvacs 6 SORpCrsey Gorecamment (or Alsaee) also | men, Soldiers and Citizens who fell victims to the | Onell, “I shot to aboliah . | to undertake to obtain the subscriptions promised to | the next sessi the Treasut, ities of the British—New York, 12mo. tre Mann Soret. co tenn au cating any action on the bill fe- | Te Weecastble, tor. tue atireace bevwrees whee sub. | Caption’ area’ “cnuieae” Whee. the, next, session ~ ropataadlaji sap YT | Sheep, €2; The Actor--being pasmages'in une lives of | caduitnadsntan” ferred to them, because there is no hope of them de ved sad the co and of New York, scriptions were recel the sum of $90,000, | tinue on till the end of the followii Mr. A: 1, (dem.) of Cal.—Granting lands for some contemporaries— it get over it being called for reports, Everything now looks like | should General Butterfleld not succeed in obtaining joasics, and #0 on as long as he lenses, canal for oth couforais, 1846, $2; Addison’s Works, London, 1761, $16; The | » chair and an early adjournment. that amount. Mr. Eno salled for Bu in Novem- | I assume that before the passage of the Tenure of ert JOHNSON, Kaen.) of Cal.. a land | Al Spy_ in Founeyivanie—Falledelyn 1787, ‘The inquest was Appropriation to the Sisters ir, 1866, At that time the aubsoript to the fund | Office act, and if it were how repeal |, all offices | ai in ‘aleo granting lands for canal # Poor Richard’s Improved manac, OF | eleven A. M. of Charity of | amounted to only about $23,000, and_ instructions temporarily Alied by the President during the recess | for navigation and ion purposes in California, Saunders, for 1748, Printed and sold by Charleston. were left from him to see tirat & sum sufficient to of must necessarily vacant at the By Mr. Kan.—Resolution of | B. Franklin, Father Abrabam’s Almanac, W. remain A bill maging a gratuity of off the mortgage on Grant's house was subscril adjournment of the Senate. this is not de- | the Kansas the sale absent oar Taiyo Mere, of Charen, Cy wan ito: | ai riaameunicrannaar aeons | Rane, Nature abn a race, inw treats | hgrneeWodovo neta ann ab ante. | th @nced in the House to-day and referred to a commit- the required amount. General Butterfield suc- | as ‘an absurdiey, abd surely He cowid never have been Revhda for w reltroad s the Central Pacific road ‘Rraaiord, Paiadelphia, 1727, $3 26; The Colum. bench, tee. The appropriation is proposed as a proper re- | Ceeded in obtaining the $30,000 subscription, and | intended that officers should in to the Co! river. : ; Boston Book, 1837, Oy ha' tied being Por the erection Foryant Eibergo ; ‘eo ” 4 1809, 86 cents; » “ls count or Of the care ventowed by thin plows sister. | Tommuntit ¢100,000 oF $105,000 waa Falged, aNd’ the | Oftce metehere sone ey runout ovoned ame tohine he ive Poems, "win ‘llastrations, Phindelphi, | fore they” are ba hood on the Union prisoners of war who were hold | amount hasded to General’ Grant . suionded by the Senate, aitect it! Does it , Mr. Haus, (iep.) of Me--To carry into effect the | 1841, #8 nea.” :

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