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4 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1%, 1872.—TRIPLE SHEKT. their gall tm. biter cruslty, the penaltee he pags | taing ‘and laying the disappointments to somebod; oR. constellation of denth- | ©Btablished of a conference digerent Cc QO N G R E s s rs, Son a helene hla aNd ait on. Re eamaean at |, ing and cafoting, tal puting om. andprom. | ith teldofice put once? A radtent consallaion.of denlh: | Titnisters of the colony, and had declated that there THREE OF BERGH’S BULLIES. | Eee ee Pee mactoudekoe oak cichy of Rie eitel chiee: || ake” neue ‘and exp) and manguvring inde- | usurped the declare war. A vleut Planned and | Ohurch was not such as a Onristian could comma- 7: % : ical ang pm Fiksons 5 fatlaably, SS mel or a time. L~} these | waged war upon Week and 1d peo} A Presicent | nicate with, Inasmuch a8 it received iis snthority Inst of Hamanity of a Hae wore Toespvuse him is to oar ihe vengeance mid the bel of the | hover las long, sad’ whens inelt. paifoaase te cov they | Relned,t0 eusct the Fugitive Slave law of ‘sto, anda Frei. | trom the Church England, which ho condemned. Meesyne Iontqnediag Ge most virulent ne {nthe land. Presses and emar | are gone, to. “it was «good saying of a frenciinan that | samt sgned it. A President connived as the overthrow of 8@ | Atter thus he vere Tounteions of thé | mane Seclety—A Respectable Citizen Beaten Senator Conkling’s Charge on the | ft Wi7'hahee iste, wna bin, atl le | Be ri appsina saa foes mates ny alge enemiee SUeeotaas errant ond sesahs te, Dlentalavery in resend Stato and denying the Christian character of the || Almost to Jelly—Bergh Tries to Bribe the years has Lee y against detraction aad defeat” Forty | @ otne reno ‘Guapouse ollces ia | faut And (his Ministers signed the Ostend manifesto. 4 | hutch, he Turllang were, of course compelled | Beaten Man with ‘‘Hush-Money”—Tho Case D at Lo en aeCUre, ‘a! ybservation of most m ~ “Que-Term” Amendment, —_| {iss Hawrstioorseseafot'ewryening adie | eataatyehat anteen an pMacoratn ict | wine he teh ‘hane actngeg''ay Gua iat | tay that in’ ee» Chitiad’agseis™ the | to De Lald Before the Grand Jury Ter nt fatiack, TI rp both par- ‘ith 7 ‘d wi * | women shou! velled, a custom which never hi Morrow. Hout ware tho bosses’ of bis buckler who could’ 4 Kove that without an ofloe. to. bestow, rom frat to last, he ge unquestionably been to the Phgrima troublesome | fore the Grand Jury the papers in the case of Patrick Be District Attorney Garvin will to-morrow lay be against them. Then Ponld hare been, comparatively S790 from assault, W and he hoped no exception would be taken by | Baxter agaiust three of Mr. Bergh’s oMcers. who are SUM R> (ion dashed against deon the eftect of his oflice-giving ? Men. who have enjoyed any of bis.collengues if hegala there waranill a tow ag 2 NER’S RESPONSE leven daghaon, ab the ws find abused his favor, have uraed fend im the natant More of that sort left in the Stave: (Laughter), charged with having, on the evening of the 5th of Ys ing more. “outa” lion and envenomed detection, iho has forgotten the ttl, | arrayed against hin, aud the Seciniee is svkom fred wih cant : paarning to Mr. Boneh whe re oy te aug, on: October last, most cruelly beaten the wy yyemaped 16 then of men and presses who assail the lent now ypocritical outcry, because those who office do ni ‘turnedanen out of ollice too and put in sup; ‘of bis ad- irked, 1 The circumstances of the affair were at the time But the man assailed was again one in whom the le be- | stop vor id thinking f abi ere: there?” (Mr, Buvler . Lively Scene in the House Over the Hieved Soe litte and Bena sare wer Hie tnglite Preatdont, ‘The hiet ‘ammunition of the democrals onribguatie when toa ia oa Hae cd a eartotia ihe “some at all, continued aaa acy Occurrence published in ihe H@RaLD, and may be pare r. Lincoln ; General Momory of Roger Williams. ministre. | party of late has been furnit by mongers of the wretched | greatest man has known, when politic factionista | none of iny colleagues will take exception to that!” | summed up briefly. On the evening named, @s tion with the third year now ; com) Juckson'sthird | slang about federal oflice-hold fling political result . 3 P i2 bd * hs Uta; compare the third year of any adminiatration | as it the Deople had tot the sease ‘and eoursge aua numbers pitlees vatoem . of tetoncntueieh em hip. kos eee eased ky puiarge upon and entorce the | about eight o'clock, Baxter, who ls ® truckman, Was ‘sahington's, and | ia strong withthe | to resent a proper inter- | Abraham Lineoln, with sublime fortitude and pat.ence, did pressed by him as © Feal cause o' standing at the corner of Thirty-flith street and ood results, in | Just | ference of anybody, whether oflce-holder or candidate. This | all things, and then stood. A martyr to traducers and med- | DAnIshinent of Williams, to whom he conceded all — = oe parany PR oral ; oy epecies of fs nee had conten test, ul Agere Pr diers in fe, a Bert to assassins in his death, he did the virtues and high traits of character claimed for | Fifth avenue, when Bergh’s three agents approached: 5 ween’ ¢ * tomtan razen rous - poets him. as thin, fet this time is chosen to launch an | rislon. Could "the public eye pleroe all the holy garbe pul | Roncatstinttag ty ONE and, received in a re-slcction the ® carriage that was slowly passing (one of tne sl Mr. EaMkS undertook to reaffirm what he had Ben Butler Defending the Dlenve for Preaktente of ba Beceem auecam they | only the foes of the ProstJont, who, do not and dare not ist | colu’s service and blasted the ‘nation’s ‘hopes: death, | already suid, and which, he sald, was aupportea by | Horses attached to which being mauned) and pe- v a resoluts nstitutional amendments, | history; but he denied that he Di: di Nigh rily ordered the driver to detach the horses Casion. “I would say something, also, of the merits of this | Dr. Johnson's saying, that “Patriotim fe the last refuge of « | may Raat the hopee at the aa ee Ba ae ae Soar oe oe ie aoe ae RIGED”) TeMRNRS onde measure without regard to time, There ie food for thought | scoundrel.” Could the people know all the malignant virt a est imputation against the Pilgrims, ariver quietly remon- Puritans, yey ery aremaesito ites .% cy Aiperh it in pot on a busy Nas culty oa ae eakcran ln rh — only archer whose bow will do the work. Critics and op- ‘The discussion gtiracted much attention in the and take them home, The ariver quietly reve fort . leat saggeaiivo where it isalent than where t mpeake. ts | And powér, they would think ine beak rm tve 008 | Wawa sand foibles they ner ted, ber tha eer oat Ge Stage House, and, after Mr. Banks had finishea his re- | strated, asking what he should do with the carriage, ‘a scheme to fetter the peopie permanently in their free ry 's cynic— ment of the natioi ith the unyleldi rrr rhs marks, members from the de! Bide then late and there bei no one to watcn SENATE Pap Gad ino eaeaareee te far eeath he ceeecane cae | aaume smparoncnaging ite aoe i daring nis abou, To this Porgh's omar re Before we come to the wisdom of this something may be sald | No, Mr. President, ie an hat, having favors to bestow {avgrleftl memory wn De Srarondenh donde wal lize hborhood of Mr. Eames to hear what he had to | rheq. «it migt go to hell forall they cared,” or words WasunvoroN, Jan. 11, 1812, | of tie propriety of Congress ting this and suggesting | {# an advantage is odds | fate moldered in forgotton graven, and wien hur epitepbe | 88¥, 88 he poke too indistinctly tobe heard at any | totmar eece. baxter, Who had been looking on as tery. fusion, "Bet ' noth! ith him who has disappointed no one, an him tance. “If you deny,” “the Yankee’s MF, ‘YROMBULL, (r6p.) Of IL, presented a large | feacntiivos that they ancl mot be chosen aaocond mse. Ga | whose Denehie are already-datriouted, and who'‘has disap. | DAY® Vanished uiterly, the wit amen the proceedings, then ‘remarked that If the oifloers als he ttle to his I i “ number of petitions from-several of the States for | the contrary, Senators and Representatives, wilie holding | pointed several every time he has obliged one, ‘But again, | _ Mr. SUMNRR—I shall not undertake now to follow bo ae Ay Satake fAgnt with you at ouco, {sisted on detaching vhe horses it wane Ly Mga— fast to their’ re- tigtbiltty. are to invite the people to dis- | is f no value in high pl the Senator in his elaborate speech; nor at any or not.” "(Laughtei case.’ The three men then deliberately pon ‘the reduction of the tariff to a strictly revenue basis, geanty somebody el oa es pat somebody i 18 oan who time shali I undertake any reply to the insinuations ‘Mr. Cox, rere Of N. Y., addressed the Speaker, Paste and ware him with ort: clus ate and especially for the repeal of the protective | may plock the way to lhe one elevation, to winich Senators | It? fe not en uprig Pee does Milon he Nas 8 freely sirown in WS | and the audience immediately moved over to the | Uiaty ms thighs aud lege, beng braised almost to duties on trom, ‘coal aud salt. ‘Tne petitions, ho | hemor this, it it "be awkward should aot dever Congress | cuir? It Les shal PEED, bare Maine tiie eae tae thas democratic sie of the House. | He poked fan at the | jojy, Baxter was them taken by the police to the Said, Were signed by avout 7,000 of the leading men | {6 7rer it Peter ee eee tines, Were, Ho other way ‘ime. hed | simply discharged & conscientious duty as a Sena- | Memory of the Puritans and eulog! at of Roger | hearest.avation house, with him his three assatl- \ 0 to get it before the country. But there is another way. Two | some or other, af plaaatiga et tor. Taking counsel of experience, Ae the | Williams, whose statue he hailed ‘ standing pro- . f the Ei ort wht ‘zine for constitutional amendment vided. Tuey | down by taulte. was. the ants; but fortunately Mr. Carlyle, of the “Home perpen ares Ree woe tay bo initiated by Gongream but they oad not be, Here the’ predominanoe of "the South testimony of the best minds of our republfc, I have bs pe i autloterance Aad iN ‘aon PS Made Hotel,” in Greenwich street, who had seen the = — Binion ra OF article tive of the Constitution of the Ualted | ee errs cotinued, her” publig men’ in piace, | Zeit it a duty togive vo the Senate an opportunity of | rentiveyy listening t0 Mr. Cox and enjeying hus | Prutal ousisught irom the beginuing, accompanied Messrs. Hamilo, Wilson and Schurz presented | "Pc. crese, whenever two-thirds of both Houses shall | and did not cuange trom man 10 man. Southern ‘Bi | deciding upon the question now before it. 18ay | joxes, moved back to his own seat, and next en- | ‘He party, and at ouce informed the police ui - similar petitions, deem it ueceasary, shall proposo amendments to this Von- | and Representatives were in and again, and | taking Counsel of experience, and does not experi- gaged the ationtion of the Hougo, the audlenco dastardl eer i detaul, offering also to be a wit- returned agal tieation. therefore and thereby they acquired the practice, the | @ce confirm the conclusion at which I favo . u ‘Mr, SUMNER, (rep.) of Mass., presented a petition | *Hiuilon.” way; but there 4a another, a8 tollowa:— Knowledge “ata the ezperisos Guin, mate’ therm ore, | atrived?. ia it not sustained by. the best authoriiies beat 3 Sp A Be, Shuabniadt thee akas mane agents were subsequently taken before Justice Of the Radical Reform Club of Philadelphia for wo- “Or, on the application of the Legisiatures of two-thirds of | matcnes for the new men who came, one after another, from | Of this republic? Who: in our history has arrayed acter of the Puritans, Aliuding to the re. Couiter, ut the Yorkville Police Court, and, on the men sutfrage; also petitions of colored citizens for | ‘*e States, shall Calla convention for proposing amendinenta,”” | the North. Fos the duties of » Senator or a. Bepipecaigtive Rumself on the side wuich the Senator irom New | markof Mr, Cox that the Pilgrims had intendea | 1th of November, were held in ball to answer the ue ‘ot the Supplemonvary Olvil Rights ills 12 view of this: wen inearia a vosting fi Reoeente Prondent. pany oF arp io i tre) age tt bing Se a ork represents to-day? What eminent statesman | to land ‘on Manhattan i nd, buc naa, | charge of a felonious assault. Owing to the fact thas 44 wi ingress, power ad: joretio! in either has placed his name on the question against the | p, ‘a dispensation of 2 ‘ad, | the first cases presented to the Grand Jury are lsiatures, eq Bills were introduced and referred as follows:— this behalf, it would seem that Co! isnot the appropri- | than mortal man was ever blessed with. { make no argu- Provide By Mr. CARPENTER, (rep.) of Wis., authorizing | ate sponsor ofan amendment, sparing Senators and’ Repre- | ment against rotation in office. Far from it people | Hames of Andrew Jackson, Heury Clay and Benla-'| vagsaonusaus Bay, Ne sald te would stop Always what are known ag “prison cases,” OF those the West Wisconsin Railway Company to construct | sentatives, but hithing the President. amendment, | will insist, and I think they should inaist, that ‘ll who hold’| min. Wade? Who is the statesman? Iknow him | tor moment 0 contemplate. what wourd | 4 Which the accused are not: *ouv? on ball, the and maintain @ railroad bridge across Lake St, | Procee:ling from the States, would have a certain fitness and | political office aball lay down their commissions et frequent ‘hot. Do you know him, sir? The Senator from | nave peen the change in Manhattan Island if | P4Persin this complaint fave been up to this de- Croix, at Liudson, Wis. decorum, which cannot be imparted to it by those who cling | Intervals. If the man whose term expires has been faithful |"New York opposes these llustrious characters, but the Pligrims had stopped there. (Laughter.) Mignt layed. The following letter, tu connection with) the to thet ri f re-election, rh them- id ful may be elected 01 ain; am Hy Mr. Coue, (rep.) Of Cal.—To ‘abolish coinage | seiveabe Premieniial aspiroas, I we think the au pect of Sut he must iny hu commission at the teat of | £2 his opposition he mistakes the whole foundation | ne not pont to Massachusetts and to Manhattan as | C8 19 of interest; needs “overhaulln ed i 7 2 { the argument, ‘The object is to guard against temp- Bie - charges; also bilis providing for the segregation Of | second terms of oilice over! 7 we | those who gra © nation and the | ‘1 specimens on the side of a Puritan commonwealth | T0,78# Eprror or Tux HzRaup: ublic. lauds, snd defn! the rights of persons | “deem {t necessary,” in th rds of the consti- | people of the States the staff in ther own hands, | ‘ation; to see that the President shall not be placed d on the ove! ol we! The bearer is Mr. Baxter, a very respectable and good Poituag opon'them ee tution, to propose amendments, with that view, fetus | and thie {e all that fe 0 f, competing with ‘ail otuers, | 12 position Where he may be tempted to uso nis | worda to characterize Ia (Langheeey Tae eee | many a turniiore cariman in this eliy for Tmany, your.” He O1 ture our thoughts ‘diy. Let us try to see oursclves as | one who has alr served ina 6 is in selected for wers improperly. The argument Of the Senator ~f has accom on Appropririgns: reporiod” the Toney Ae numttee | thors see ua,” Do aot Senators. an wel aa vfrenidenia need | thn one Read jsompiaiy tt perfodies Lexpitaiions of public From New York says ‘let hum be tempted.) "Nay, it igvery’ hat iney” were ght, mealous, devoled be: | coonomy. | He tv's, good citizen, In. all respects ol fered = wit u from i | trusts will not dily abandoned, saw aman di 445 Gadiuional for the expenses 3 Fresndents be tempted co, eibeme aad "tut ylay | truth, should. not ‘be. overlooked. is civil service reform, 1 | ,auderstand him, he goes further, and says that tne | others who di them were wrong, hs men and Landled very To as Presidents betemptedto scheme and inti f “i 01 fame ot} ts of th €r lieve any system will be stranded which attempts to ke: pI they only asked the otuers to go aw: irom | 48a mere nder, remarked aloud that it was a “hi br, Suc, el AMC gaked ands, | Cheat nett noun ed empty wana | Seupmema arr gee ouean once | uly CUNY aA Ucn, tase AGMMN TT | Wen. ughtr|—and, Who ke, hte dit ‘aot | Sth atta Be maciaietg Mcehey ae e a blot } | ander ion or mn iclary nures, u . tom nal become Deoasaanys cto cet SDPFODEB: | tirtsrlacet “itera sot: tuo spirsions i eof equal rights. | assault on constitutional liberty. It is by restriction | Moy uaa besu only troublesoine to tnos@-wirg incer, | these ree men have been indicted by the Grand Jury and ‘Mr. Davis, (aem.) of Ky., selzed the opportunity Presidency been fruitful sources of mischief af other stages : bad bee eso! i088! ‘Tho selection of pudiio agente ought, te be sbso! y_within | upon the people, assured by constitutional law, that | fore smtt tin C) where the Pugri aresoon to be tried. Berxh's secretary has tried hard to denounce the whole work of reconstruction and | Bourbisiory? Have not passionate discords, unseemly | public control. Fhe te true from the highest oficial to the Iberty ho pape, ed, What is the great object of | 42red With them aud who camo wnera the Pulgrims | buy Mr, Baxter of with money, io save uhe exposure to the ry contentions, cruel enmittes, pernicious disturbances and bad | man or woman who 4 to be and where tne others ic, but that thing can’t be done with Mr. Baxter, andke in the ight | civilized government but liberty regulated by law, 4 the Ku Klux outrages and all the other | { i f eee [3 gu! xy 1aW, | had no right to be—(laughter)—and the result liad | 18 bound to have a civil as well as a criminal prosecutions disturbances to the Southern States upon the inter | tee other heise ot Gases! te wor ee to vU ne | Hose ony ike solvers, the, gtler Where, the mail Werty under’ the safeguards of, the consiitution? | neon Seek The dare Caetgy, devotion to duty and | And hesaya it would uave made no" difference "who wt Wage > ference of the federal government in their affairs, ice have. Fgatered in Congress, and who doce not kuow | full control when we ask the people 0 forswear aap eeeeia eranmane woule. vertarow Meine sell-reliance which had brought them to the New thelr seal: and conrege ap 0 such, i assed, ‘of the wrong, justice, false ac- 0 employ as @ ‘agent 01 uy pl ahd Roane pea Nhe bad. pastioan of | have tHed and wom they like, ‘The ‘suthor of thoamend: | they were @ ‘restraint’ upon the’ people, | World had learned the ideas of men over the whole You will do me a favor te TH PRESIDENTIAL QUESTION—MR, OONKLING’s | CUStons and suspicion: bad passions, the abut *: country, until now there was trom sea to sea the | just itsten to Mr. Buxter’ om SPKECH ON THR ONE THRM PRINCIPLE. Buble ues te needlons, bur tul auitations which would | ment ormg bare rolled of 4o,muph on cemion as on | Can that argument find sanstion? Ie inot on its | Puritag government of Massacnnsotta, He claimed | Zealots’ monoaniae, Bergh fast Mr. UONKLING, (rep.) Of N- Xe Gailed Mp tite joint | have been candidates for the Presidency or candidates for | array of noved names, We have proambled before us four Oh eta ot a eS ee Coemmmen yA | besides that tue same exclusiveness which charac. | nuisance to our citizens, “Yotirs, respectfully, Ly Freguintions introduced by Mr, Sumner, proposing @ | re-election. History speaks no uncertain voice in this re- | Americans and one Frenchman, wi 19} operated upon by dit- | fi ted Oy tO the. a tae ie ead be ene calcu: | terized the Puritans was exhibited to-day in the JOSIAB OAK Sonata onal amanament 0 Mane aoeyice as, Preal- | Soetconamiue ete tee eater eat | Lea celta ts torts urectandsr amet. at's | mont aot of ten, bus of law. But the Senator | Crest Sut Lake, Valley, wnere, tne ‘Congress and stalrcase, o} jential ho) catombs of can: mn . . ‘denn iho. Unie porary oeeelr DEO | didates have bech offered up here, but none have gonehence | remedy for particular evils. it in-an error to suppose that | Would make tt @ government of men. 1 know no | People of the United States were insisting that) wR, BERGH AND THE SOOIETY FOR THB Swe od to the Presidential chair, I call the attention of friends | all those thus named expressed approval of such a provision | better indication of the progress of civilization and mattained. PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS, 4 be — h getting to be a crus » pressed around me to this fact, It is long since @ man who sald | as we have here without addition or qualification. General | than the manner in which men have gradually come Mr, PaRetoENT—We have entered an era of reform— | “niger? lected President ; a t Sackeon, for i coupled i , Mr, NIBLACK, (dem.) of Ind., took exception to : change as ‘eon made in the ‘civil service, It will i | a Meuator could be elected. Preaivent. Of all who huyo tried | thataa t may, much ight be sald of the (enueacen the Ine Pitnin ts gphere of the jaw. At frst there | the phraseology of the resolution in the sentence, | TO THE EDITOR oF THE HERALD:— trust, be real and useful. It will be vain if it does not cure | it I think mot one ever ‘performed the feat of pass- | consistencies, the downright contradictions which history and executive | power | «hat this work of art 1s accepted inthe name of | Under the provisions of an act of the Legislature is i be We chief evius it 1s meant to remedy, Place hunt ing from this Chamber to the chair of State, Men have | records in connection with some of these declarations. large, but as civilization increases executive | tne nation,” and suggested that the proper phrase- ‘the State this Society is’ empowered. to prevens doife ployment ia set above rrivaie oconpation Bouslen Burneres aa" cletione” Wee cousiiaeactas aot | ot, Tks. caretulye” gathered’ autkoray "otis | Ponted. Now: sie. iny_object in preparing. ta. | SOY Would De, ‘im the mame of the people of tue | OF Tan Tan? Me Bosley roby uanocossary cruelty though for the honest end competent public employment is | been in’ the way; the trouble has been with the power | valuable to prove ow — vasi he “authority amendment is to bring the executive power of the United states,” and he moved to amend tin thas | Any an he . xSeries ei poorest field of American exertion, Public aye d_| behind and above the constitution—the people. Iwarn my | the other way. collected ‘sayings show us that | repubiic within the domain of coustitutional law, to Togpeck. might be inflicted upon animals. The provisions timo taxed by applicaate for olice. io, this way their wera. | Treen trom Nevada, Vermont and, Rhove Iajand that they | the cone term principle) has from timo to time been pre | the end ‘that it suall not fall under a temptation | j,MF- BECK, (dem) of Ky. suggested sarcastically | aro unquestionably necessary aud meet with a very - | must re i ite wor! ey wi mi ersuasive voices have Uy bess has been impaired and they have been much belied, too, | be Pr dente. ‘Their staying will not prejudice them with | summoned people ‘aud'Uongress to consider it, ‘It has not ane all Cerrnierreaees ited fr vernictous. ‘Mr. ELDRIDGE, (dem.) of Wis,, suggested that Mr, | general approbation, and under the presidency of [Pao ne arty secgpecnteorpe pen’ Sept bape hall vote for them all the same—but there isa hot- | slumbered in forgetfulness, but has been periodically can. | Tn te proamblo of the resolution there 18 a 8uM- | Niniack’s amendment corresponded. exactly with | Mr, Bergh this Sdotety has effected many beneflotal mie eruoue ie Oke” Wa ae te in the Senate which breeds candidates for tue | vassed at such times as its champions deemed most likely to | Mary of the ground on which I place the “one-term” | the constitution—“the people of the United States.” Teo. Fvesldest «hak been’ ’’maie’ ine’ object at: | Preseney, but makes them past bearing and kills them off | invost wih interest. 1s has been more ban once presented | principle. ie 4 Habis ‘Mr. HoAR, (tep.) Of Mags., trusted that the House | #24 desirable results, and so long as bis labors are Goes aasault, because he would not yield to demands some- | cand ea tor the Presidency, but it breeds many lusty, | ing provisions, What has been ite fate ingress bas | published aad ae beri apt ett da would pause De gee. atri from a, resolution the | restricted within legitimate and reasonable bounds a Sordid and vile toucniog “patronage; and the purest ful candidates for ‘re-election to the Senate, | never approved it, The nation bas condemned Fepeateaiy, Bevan Wade, ol Uno, in D ver, 1866, 4 assertion that this country 1s 4 nation, he will receive the approbation of his fellow citi- PRbuS Administrator has been exposed to suspicion of abus- | Unies we amend the constitution and pre- | Fifteen Presidents have been elected, and nearly half of them ‘ade, hilo, jecember, 1860, In #UD-| Mr, NIBLACK aenied that mis purpose was an at- . soup Siecnatee vt: bell Cunabtaay ig the sppotebas, power for personal ends. Theseevils, | veot it, the time may come when scheming candi- | have been re-elected. Death spared President Harrison but | Port of the “oue-term’’ principle, and, in conclusion, tack upon what gentlemen mignt please to call tne | 269% which bis zealous discharge wi among others, nave cursed the public service, and the pro- | dates ‘will be breeded, candidates who would | one month and President Taylor but sixteen months, These | 8aid:— nationality of the Unived States. Nothing of that 80 irequently elicited, lt seems, however, that Sbange ts not worth trying unless it goes tar to uproot | use legislation, who would clutch at anything and stick at | two must be deducted from those in whose case the question Without going into argoment, but merely sug | go, involved in Tt e tl f | Bas, 1 some cases, assumed to himself a latitude polation oma patronage ata Tarofitane Thehond and | ReatWit'ai forget ounelees wha ‘sasine cut tong | reacted ie ead Sa eu orn‘ to Yo omtica"Suotr of | SCaune, te, great Importance of the measure, I | Dhrageoiogy. The word “nation” appearod.to him | 424 extent of authority that many of out ieizeng jn about. amo! i in A frontof the change the bestowal of piace no | the perils of second terms, The term of Senators six years count. Thus we havo twelve citizens raised to the Presidency rbd eh ies for several years seem tO | oy having a sort of schoolmaster or pedagogue | 29 Dot consider him warranted in the disci is to make longer hinge on the will of the appointing oower. in oth tt by: the votes of the a 10 that the great defect in : Of, and ior the following reasons:—it 18 not to be woran; we ate about to. try tho witttraqal of poiltioal pate | tsthe'Leguatarceet, put <vingle Stakes tie Praatdcct aa: | agcons timer Was itis ine-ackion of the jeopheoraatinar | Our systom at which this proposition Js aimed | SW8Bg about tt which Hofatted for tne seas and | eutertained that the endctors of the law referred S ronten from polities. The effect and chief merit claimed | swers to tl hole people, Executive chair holds but | Presidents, despite the people, usurp or snatch a second | #hould be remedied. Such has been the condition ‘Days. The vote was taken, and resulted, yeas 78, | M£tendea to avply its provisions to the Killing tb babelped or hare ty. hopoa of Years 9 fea gis or lane | Conbitncr’s Fas'srasiesan tye Rat iad tea masyteaeme | Hisstin ait wads Waleed Dia he pele mates Reeseae | Coantetles generally this government that 1. Uas | Raye 115--mno democrats all voting yoo, aid tuo ro- | Ame suY More wlan It did of the KALE OC oBttle, mer. enate, on the o i ° : 7 ; of fy In the presence of this transition and facing Dereon Saher ante nto oe go out at’a tine, ead thus | did rr PI en almost a hopeless task to engralt the measure swine, domestic fowls or vermin; and ye! tl holders re-elect them? Did th - ubdlicans all voting nay. The jot resolution was iton the threshold, = motion Is made to amend the constitu: | every newcomer anda two-tuirdeot the body alresdy versed | Presidents outwit: the People Te the ure ot maraecond-term | upon the Constitution, but now there is an opporwu~ | Pion paused. 4 to himsel{ to construe the law to empower him to ps + kf nity, and I believe every man is sensible that the ‘WES: prevent the shooting of pigeons irom & tral teld vet the amendment velouge to the reformat withont | fiyite gales, if Jt be sald that Senators and Representa. | they win and Keep, public favor by herr Adelity and by the | Correotion of this evil ought to be promptly applied. Banting Seromapltngdbeiet nt deen bphetoe ad thereoy classifying this act With the torture theamen ‘ment the reform ia, nothing, The amendment is | case unlike the Presideht, answer that | were the people's work they are als recorded verdicts of the | | On motion of Mr. WILSON the further considera- | SPPOmNNEET Oy Oe Stats ‘Government of Louisiana, | °#l¥es,dog and cock fignis—the harnessing aud designed to do away with an alleged wrong of the old o— the distinction is without solid difference. Senators | people against pooner ged tried and faith(ul servants, The tion of the joint resolution was postponed. Messrs, COUGHLAN, (rep.) of Cal, and Mr, KE: use of lea and lame horses, &c., &c. of appointments, and wearetoli thas in dismissing tae old | act upon nominations by the President, and Sen- | are six solemn verdicts against the present measure. 8h: At half-past three o’clock the Senate went into mod P.) * , KERR, | “it the Legislature had proposed to include the system itsoif, and founding » new and diferent system, we | tors and Representatives, In respect of their States | we, Prvroeed amendme! ‘aatem that the experience | executive session and soon after adjourned till (dem.) of Ind., objec killing of game under the provisions of an act to a re 5 e | asthation, oa Orne to et ad ee Gistriote, have's direst part + psolecsions for ofice. | These | of | iy yom, has. shown its needy If so Dew tae of our | Monday. The House then, at half-past three o'clock, ad- | prevent ‘cruelty to animals the inference » al . teen epecalty desigoed to remove. Under usages aud | Larus tse what toca tod cringe taste The wrojeek iat | Wen ace in “oeie. of, experience, mit he pres: journed. Je Biss is clear that it would go have ex- place na of the past President, it 1s said, might aid bis | propose to the people to imbed in the fundamental law, be- with peri! and. corroa! HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. re-election by ‘the bad use of patronage—this is the argu- \d theirreach, exce| backward constitutional id= lencies such os the past never knew? ‘Traitors an : ‘H. RSON ISONING. mustruction of the extent of operation of the x ner edicts maelves. The scheme is to | slaroholders form ° ma WASHINGTON, Jan, 11, 1872. THE PATERSON POISO: @. act to be defined by the Society it was creat ment; and now, when we are in the act of shutting out or | ment, a veto and: ict ves. fencing in patronage, so that it cannot be thu: we are | narrow the circle ftom which tae people may choose their | dogma a tenet Ptr Aare Whe therefore, Bergh assumes to hi say that the President never shall be re-elected f trate. It it strike certain nai ity and disbeli Mr. Exy, (dem.) of N. ¥., presented a memorial of son 5e hae. Shell We are in the act of providing that Presidenia shall | from the fst trom which the President may be taken, Whom | evamonstuey Si . “4 Livble Garrabrunt and Van Winkle Rogext | under’ tno cover of bis Susitty, to luvertere with the fonialto the people ot | 145 Women residing at the Working Women’s Home, |“ Fudicted (or the Deliberate Murder of Rauq| shooting ol pigeous froma trap or any other lke yn bad , and told that z ot be re-elected by bad means, and we are as part | is it proposed to strike off?’ Is it proposed to disqualify those | hamper tree agency. Sets aoot aa pe encanto to al othak ae 4 Slavery, and a of the same act we must provide that Presidents shall not be | wno, from incapacity, ignorance, vice, treason or alliance | the pate, re-cloct Presidents or not, aa they please, natu- | in Elizabeth street, New York, in favor of reserv- re-elected od means, W' Le ws rally ‘are in the act of rooung out | Wit foralgn P lic enemies, would disgrace the e corner stones in such & structure. The Mi som F, Burronghs—Tholr Arraignment and_| game, ne puts lumeelf in the position of declaring ivilty to second Presidential | Presidenes or eutanger the ‘county P*ROt ACA 8 | Goutry constitution, so-caliod Rat ths provision: ont | ing public lands for acvual settlers, Plea—To Be Tricd in April. = | Statthe killing of game of all kinds but. pigeons at least hares: must not leavo re-eligibility | were so proposed the measdre woul Mr. KELLEY, (rep.) of Pa., presented a petition of Grand J tthe Pat Cor may be lawiul; thata person may tawiully shoot Hiution, even after ite alleged evil has | less, Tt might, to be sure, be deemed a reflectio “BEOTION L—The executive power shall be vested T; ‘The Grand Jury of the Paterson Court yesterday q bron taken away. ive are about tripping a thazet the oue | on opliar viride and thialigence to oreaume chat hema: | na President of the Confederate Stace of Amorica, He | the Philadelphia Board of Trade and merchants, | morning brought into Court true bills of indictment | PiTds of all cther descriptions, leaving the wounded Sanding objection to it, and we are told that the thing itself | jority would ever pick out tor chief ruler man of known | and the Vico President shail hold their oflices for the term of | for improvement of the lights m Delaware Bay inst Elizabeth Garrabrant and Van Winkle = y I food; that must not exist after the objection is gone. This seems very | gross uniitness. it might be sald that if the ruleof ama- | six. Aut the, President shall not, be re-eligible.""—Con- a BE a trom inability to seek or obtain food; that Bob-a- odd. A common mind sees it all the other way. To me, the | jority be safe or tolerable at all it can be trusted upon such federate Statutes-at-Large, LP 17. an ver. Bogert for the deliberate murder of Ransom F, | links and like birds of song i J be trapped and two things seem not only distinct, Lut opposite. er seem uestion, and it might be added that if one office needs The first and last offspring of this clause was Jefferson Mr. Epwakps, (rep.) of Ark., referring to the re. bh 4 caged; that monkeys may be loin-fettered, made to Bae 60 MOTORS LOUNGE A Allin coceerttas the’ resets hae vo mher guloct shoud. Ge sheltered, tloo. *Iser tae a Ree eee eae ieee ee ee arenas | port presénted on Toeaday from the Ku Klux Com. | Pere Both were arraigned yesterday after- | Gane’ and wear pantaloons; that eagles, parrots other. we were e1 ged tn eople ofices sho put mea- ve r single ou ness \- my Aa the use of Fe- | Sure before us is not levelled at the unfit nor at the doubtful, | now urged upon us; bens and crows may be caged and kept to amuse: chil Of appointments, 1 could ace the fitness and por was our only approach to sforeor | mittee, reflecting on himself and Senator Clayton, ¢ og real ed, belonging to that aystem. | but at th {it and most Its aim and object is | dained one-term President. The nt and action of the J Libbie Garrabrant was brought into Court first, | dren; that fishes may be netted, eel when Bar oben wis cite tringita tan new eysteenl Go wot too the | Wetsciuda tancetcitcted aaa eit viata gals tien Gepscinn | nation conttren the wledees, of tht alder of our ‘conauitu. | of Arkansas, denounced the testimony taken as be- gone t | clive’ animals and fowls emasculated; that = boy fectly calm before 4 of a constitutional abathema aimed at departp, In the f ice reform, we aré asked toadvioe | tion. The question of elignbility to successive was and stood unmoved and peri may ‘kill @ pigeon upon a tree: women may Sones anlahed with the old ayatem, and superseded ‘and | the nation to tie ita hat ie saalnat ener availing _iielr of the | fully argued fn the nnaltational enre jon, and Row, afiet a aT heH Ihe ronort “was MeescHte Eecwoaig | the crowded court room wnile the serious | wring the necks of chickens, yet that a sportsman preven ‘new, em arther . hose! . rien Teas Metion, cerieinly not wo'roquire acon warring on reason in | Presidents, han ‘scquited himself so° well ss, to | be added to the discussions then, It isnot too much to-aay | have asked for @ committee of investigation. He | charge of murder was read to her, ‘The indiot- Peer RTS Mats Be Ba} other respec's, It may be urged thatin spite of the change | pi the of his choice, and to con- | thatthe “one-term principie,” with » term of four years | was content, however, co leave the matter with the | ment is for wilful and deliberate murder, with malice ences are conclusive that elther Mr. Bergh is inca- just begun, @ remnant of patronage will still remain. This | vince bis countrymen that he is still the best | and an election by the people, would have commanded al- | Qommittee of Klections. nizing the inconsistency of his true; bul to deny, that the new measures will shield the | and safest guardian of the trust. | We areto disable nobody | most no support in the conatiiutional convention. The op: | My, TOWNSEND, (dem.) of N. Y., introduced a bill | Sorethought, by the administering of ten grains of | pable of recognlaing the lncot wy Ol posl- body of the public service, 1s to discredit and desert re- | but the one man, who, from time to time, may re-ellgibility showed Itself when it was proposed | for the gale of useless vessels and other materials in | afsenic, on the 7th day of vecember, 1871, whereby | tion in this matter of pigeon shooting or shat he form in advance, and to brand it as a failure, Again, it mnost bt the presidential term seven years and to vest the | 91 d the construction of twenty ne id seeks a claim to ephemeral notoriety, If the first ecem: ‘blow in the face of civil 8: vice retorm t ght of such ion 4 he common af cf the President is, Con: as and it subsided ee eaeren e cons 'y Rew ved | ana wherefrom Burroughs died from its effects on | position is his he 18 unsuited for his office; if rom ie ae fe re is ie meaning and ¢! ol ie e term ren: he jon ~4 4 jocesai! four yeurs. “Removals only for cause," “tenures depends | amendment, It must be idle and inoperative as to all Presi | was committed to the people. iven the seven years’ term, | Mr, MAYNARD, (rep.) of Tonn., offered a resolution | tbe 11th day of December ‘following. Tne only | other, he has vory su ally and very decid liained his desire, and we accord to Bim all ing on good behavior" “retaining in place those woo do | dents who do not specially commend themselves to the peo- | and the legislative elaction together. furnished nu arguments | in reference to the improvement of the Tennessee | point in doubt seemed to be the manner in which | Sttaini nenviable note! their duty"—these are the trite aud 1 catoh-words of | ple. Tt could be a bar only to those who must crippled ‘against See tintant stron, Soma soar ines 8 maloriy, or | River. Adopted, the arsenic was administered to Burroughs, to éciat of his very unenviable notoriety. Sar cat aiier coon an ciuew, Uedeiea bo haa ices | STMAEURE TA te teat on fbn eae rf ges te Arguments were verg cogent. Itwas salis with stores | . MI CONGRR, (rep.) of Mich., trom the Committee | Sova which there were four counts to thet indict. ery a ¥ ud O rt) ic 7 hae ch public hom it will f de which could not be salasal that if Con; t on Commerce, reported a bill to construct a ship E ERGH AND TRE PIGEON: al ity. these reasons, 01 others, the pro- and sa) ey shi nol im. seo! ‘Os eo of Con; and thi i, “4g Oe et Eee Posed alteration of the constitution sceme quite tuéalled for | out mé man “whom” the, people would uot ‘choose; | he would thus be dependent, the poison may have been sdministered—4, ¢,, ‘in 4 3 , and the creature of Congress . , (rep.) of Mat | s0 uncalled for that we pause to ask why itis | 11 could never, even by accident, visit any man Merally. 3 have here notes of debatesin the Convention of jarorinn ates eporved | ‘soll hs emmena tie @ manner unknown,” “in a liquid,” “m a rice oun Papen ot as Tikes: Son's tial canvass 18 upon us, and tne dominant | whom the “people would ‘not “choose; ite | whole | 74% set down by Mr, Madiaon, and I read some passages | Ocsg of August 16, 180% and July 28, 1806, authoriz. | pudding,” “in food,” &c. [From the Spirit o Does tive fact throw any light upon the porieut- |. Soong Us taken” Por mnsderen, auch sbisckicn wight well by | the attention of the Senate, en ee | Commend them to | ing protection to he given to citizens of the United |" tippie pleaded “not guilty’ to the indictment in | ‘The President of the Association for the Prevem . Does this fact throw a woul . For madmen, 8 el rentable, and the" sole. resolution P before | forged, ‘they might be prudent for ehldren, but iecems odd | ‘The clause relating to the Executive belog under considera | StAlgs wiio may discover deposits of guano, ex- | , Cin unmoved manner, and was then removed to | Won of Cruelty to Animals has again been mantfeat ? jie must be blind, indeed, who does not see | to try to put them on a tree people fit to govern themseives. | tion— tending the benetit of its provisions to the widows, * * KI fanaticism and his contempt for in this proposed amendment. a device, a eight, an | When people or States hold out their hands and ask Congress ‘JAMES WILSON (Pennsylynnia) moved that the blank for | heirs, executors or administrators of discoverers | jail. ing his reckless fan: mpi ection of Os- | to putsuch manacles on them the work will go more bravely durati : FR ae oa ram 4] aan Seavgreers, deere: who shalt have died befure perfecting proot of dis. Yun Winkle Bogert, Libby’s lover, was then ar. | tc laws of the land, No reasonable man thinks i covery or fully complying with the provisions of 1 ble to shoot 8 {rol nn’ Penomwey moved Lar asteayeg.ce Provided for, | tho act, and also extending tue tume for removing | Talgued on a similar indictment. He also bore him. | 80¥ more objectional ‘oot pigeons irom a trap “ROGER SHERMAN was for three years and against the | the guano to ten years from 1867, instead of five | self coolly, but wasa little more nervous than Lib- | twenty-one yards from the gun than iv ts to shoot expedient to agect the trite ut ostrite it 0. We are reminded that apolitical party, now no more, posure. It wears a veil of breambie and a fig-leaf of beney- | aectared tn favor at electing its candidates but once. This olent postponement, It tries ty hide its real self under the | was a resolution in a party platform, made for a campal, words:— A revenue or a protective tariff, a national bank, a Sub- amendment shall not take effect until after the 4th of | sury, the annexation of Texas, have aiso, from tUme to time, | doctrine of rotntion, as throwing out of office the men best | years, a3 p ” ane ag | quail or grouse over a dog. When Mr. Bergh says tio lly called to these words, _W! th pear petty ring ooh wings: inthe conetivation® Pert ee gaeetion bole on tne oets; ‘To be ineligible a sccond , Mr, BANES explained the objects of the bill, say. | teers ray Of tan aaiens eee that plecon shooting 13 not now opamp ya ea especially called to these wo u uel Pn yt Mrs, e + ‘ ate they tor? Why tit if pleut ol fy ¥ pote fiseting and chat +A (seven years being the proposed term, a ing that it reierred specially to the case of Mrs. land he states that which is notoriously untoun ere! They pretend to gh 7 aa Parker, Whose deceased husband had discovered Mayor S. Tuttle has been retained as counsel for | in tact. There is more pigeon shooting in Englana Melecsuiess “or. the, skill the, LOUsHON (New Jessey) moved to atrixe out thls | ing guino islands in the Paciile Ocean, trom Which | riyyts Garrabrant, and Colonel AB, Woodrutt for | How than ever there Wad bolore, No English judge = ws 2 i a 4 ay SHERMAN Sescnts Some. 0) re bg ea no Sor heen canons ai a Van Winkle Bogert. Judge Bedie announced that [Oa bog pened creeper ph mmngenee lor forthe prevent, No orinary Yorecast descried the need | term. There are ills, no doubt. Tt is the infirmity of | | “GOUVRRNEUR MORRIS (Pennsylvania) espoused the mo- r. DAWES, (rep.) Of Mass, asked where the | : the English have @ yery $1 nod Of teeen, delerring ‘wore, No vcommon sauaicty to. | ceruly srinence that lamredients of evil mingle 10 every. | tion, Tbe toeligibility proposed by whe clatse asi stood | ssiendsmore Ce hy e owing to the lateness of the term, these cases coul ie dealing with judges. who yenture to pian i thrusting at the present Exect rd tended to destroy the it motive f ut belnavior, the be ‘ Rot be tried. until the April term of the Court, and, | detain irom thrusting at the preseut Executive strove thus | thing. That evil can be found in a method Or @ process | tended to y the great motive to good behavior, im, | dit, BANKS Sald that they were In the Pacific | in order to provide against possible. dificaity, he | Make constructive crimes. Pigeon shooting 18 a Tespite or reprieve Une whether inost to admire political parties guileléssness or the skill, Hon remains. We {ngenuousness or the ingenuity which contrived sueba mercy | come from the President being eligible to constitu: selves aissolve, but are referred to the 10 trip the flying feet OC a const.cuttonal aime ou Weel ving. ‘The practical question ts, can {tbe ointment, It was saying to him, 2 “Oh Beaty etoue wens tonal ainens proves \iwje of nosbtn gpa cont tes igea? * | Ocean, but he could not now state thew exact lati- | qirected ihe Sherlif to empanel a jury of one hun- | Ofence whatever against ee bt ot Naw fro grate pains, ‘The nationa’ cur in leas than | ghould be preserved de: he evil it, may have us try. 0 reinstate the words "to be ineligi- | tude and longitude. The records were tile in the | Gred good mion for the April tein; ‘This probably | I Mr. Bergh intended, when he wen exis- bailf @ year, ani the eirction and most mea, | the prosent way. One argum the | ble the seound time,’ State Department, The two principal islands were | nag the Burroughs murder excitement in rsom | lature to try and give it that construction, he went in thetr loose and jess hebit, woud no have stop] to | President will ‘and devote his time during bis “GOUVERNEUR MORtIS—What efectwiil this have? Inthe.| known as Jounson’s Island and Ayer’s Island, Jou before that body and obtained an act under false until it is taken up by the Courts at the April torm. that a coustilational aucndineat wach has made no | first term to be re-elected, and therefore it should be mace | first place it will destroy the great incitement to merit pub- | Mr, SARGENT, (rep.) of Cal., said that the petition retences, It is igh time now that the people of : ny PI in half @ century, tight suiiealy escape from Com- | impossible for him to be re-elected. One criticism uy this | lic esteem by taking away the hove of being rewarded bya } > at % A somewhat unusual thing occurred yesterday N kK should ‘tad out Wether they live under ow, and Wain eucwogh the logs. stires of three quae: | argument ta, at” it te so more irae, relatively, ‘of the one / Feappoluiment. Ty may give a dangerous turn to one of the ares aie se Canton and inet nd Eavoons morning in regard to this case. "On Monsby it ve- SO ee cocded: at caehulreee saving wonda, however, we might h en capt tn ats | Hee coe Mo noble ant Wunrous scuons Shorne | Diereport had been made. Among other things 1 | CaMme Known to, the Grand suey Saat ti iow with | the courts, or are subject to the Brahminical notions Spreading | itke ire on m prairie, a” furor Tor | argument ‘The President will exert bimaselt to ba chosen « | civil road tu gl ry and be may De Hed so aeek it by the had been shown that Mrs. Parkers husband had | Pismo Gatraprant im the fall, and got from her tho | nd rabid assumptions of Mr. Bergh. Here ts he a amendment might have swept the country, an: cond time, How will ne exert himself? Will heexert | sword. In tbe nit place, it wilt tei t him to make the | during his lifetime sold: all his interests im the | confession that Bogert admaiste: the poison to prosecuting a Crusade against haruiless recreations when the convention was ready vo nominate’ and |imsei b: meglecting and vioiating bis duty? ace of time allotted to him to accumu- | islands in question to a guano company, Which had Burroughs which caused his deat. Bogert not yet | With as much fanaticisin as Peter the Hermit and lect, the candilate ‘might bare \een Woy shoud het Dose the road to publi favor | late wealth and provide for hie friende, In the third place, ft | been ever since in possession of and worked the | hey arrested the Grand Jury wished It to be kept | a8 much stupidity as his ass. If ne does not change or Me MO fhe. forethought of | lie In the direction of faithlcssness 2 public ares is | will prodnes ison the io es ar ee islands, The question had been also examjned py citer Bogert could be arrested. William | is method uf proceeaings there wil soon be am 80 far, all is well; bu: only fo far. in | Pele Este pr prea crating. What, and e ablished character of favorite 5 rate. will ee the State Department, aud the rights oi the company Nelson, the local editor of the Press, was ace end to the Society, which in its proper province f alt spite of ihe care of the scrive, in spite of | then, would seem fo be hls politic. course, Hittin, no higher |’ vail over respect for the forms of the coi ion. had been soiemaly rec . cordingly summoned before the Grand Jury | does a vast amount of good, for people will not sud- insight of the statesman and the foresight of the prophet, | tuo motives of @ Chief Magistrate ‘emulous to continue i his | “RUFUS KiNG, of Massachusette, did ike the ineligt- Mr. BANKS denied that it was the onject of the | Snq commanded to say nothing about il oe Has Feeenuy practised aR en 3 Fr. in that day's issue, which was promised. Warne a4 to noble and fli itigan electioncering document suil, This was unavolaabie, | piace? “Corruption wins not more than honesty.” One | biilty, Me thought there was great force in the remark of | Dill to give to any claimant rights belonging to fit was to be brought po tore 8 ot -%., Le ty Ct would suppome that ambition to be rechosen an V4 Mr. Sherman that he who bas proved himself most ft for an Anotier person. itonly Save to the heirs the rights | 4 similar request was made of the other local | Sensivie people, state how, in plain ter: ras the “one-term princip! at could not | sibility of gratifying it would bea high incentive, prompting | office ought not to be exeiuded by the constitution from hold- | Which the discoverer himself possessed. 8 t te | that when Mr, Bergh again attempts to Introd There was the rub, and. there was | lofty and c ‘a n. The surest way to be Presi- | ingit, He would therefore prefer any other reasonable journal, the Guardian, The latter withheld the also. If the American people in | dent again in to be thereat deat. "It thie 1 90 how cam | plan thas could be substituied. He was much disposi Mr, SHELLABARGER, (rep.) of Ohio, insisted on | hatter from publication that day, but the Press | into the grounds of any gentioman or associa 5 fu their respective su now | the wish to exalt himself in. public estimation depress his | to think that in such cases the people at large would choose | the samé view, that tne bill only passed the rights published the whoie thing, 1m despite of the promise | 1 order to intericro, Cid oe a of epee: ngs oneverm dogma, how can they stuliify | stan‘ard of action? How can it fail to be a spur to good | wisely. of the discoverer to bis heirs. made to withhold i} The Grand Jury yesterday | kick up a row, it will bo the duty 6 manager to sod straightway trample on the donne & Qudeavor? The truth of this argument lies deep in every “Mr. PATERSON’S (New Jersey) ideas nearly coincided, he Mr. Porrer, (dem.) of N, Y., Said that, as a mem- masle @ presentmen' ‘ainst Nelson for hig violat- | keep him out, and if he seeks to effect an entry by electing @ President for a secopd term? Such will baman heart, Every soldier Ja the baie of hfe fogis it, Be | said, witp those of Mr. Ki ber of the Committee on Commerce of last Congress, | ing hig promise in such @ manner, cohstruing the | force let force be used to repel him. He must be every man 1 wi the time comes. In spite, therefore, of the | be yer, doctor, mechanic or “Mr, SPRAIGHT and Mr. W1L1.1AMBON moved to in- % eople of New York are not t/ Uhdelret prop hion thst rhe amencoea! srateutetecomes | peor srt, doing well ior those. who em oy Jui ia | aert egven fastand of four years for the term ofthe Pred! ho tad made, an adverse report on, ane pill | casetato a aort of “comempt of ‘gourt,” and we:| augue that the people of Nem Tancies, Dut ] before the le can warn ro ik de rt I) take full . contidenc assed by the Senate for the relief r3, ‘as Seelepedld pikes canvsen’ \ndeca i te aicioere the sebekees Romar jconteence and promotion. The Christian eX. Hampshire, Virginia and North Carolina yotea | Parker, Mit cited the opinion of A otto fou ivan secure ake Beet the citizens, every one of them as good as he, And that tue e ig Crause ne putin at ail—it only rouses | and pupisuments rest upon the truth that are encou- | “Aye.” Massachusetts, necticut, New Jersey, Penn- | General Black, that nobody had any right to tho Judge took the papers, stating that he would take those who direct and govern the police — aa fish oven aed fepore ce sopeny.» World winiatml | foetingeton eon onde bare atte et | Sige Dat NAFTA EU Caren ear ee a ae ae uou hus right tig moved | {heamaCiee Unier aavisementaba determine what ac; | be UCN, Sati thelt omens. and ie ; et aM 0) ” eileve’taae:graveiy yuitioy ol! uke time when he amend: | ligencerby which ttey arc tore ceagee eRRTora oe sae inte jot. Madizon comments on this proceeding in «note as fo! Fe raeadihene thatnotitee hrthegctshal beac | onto take. It Is g somewhat angwiar case, and | O° iryy out the vagaries of tis. well-meaning DUE ment effect Ui! after a date, before which no tion outweighed tn t Na Ce hod e matter dl} Sould expect a wise amendment to ve ratided, was only aaiy | objections to a second erm, Trosts aas ay ee ee | OMe sneltgibfity would have followed (though st would | tO impair or affect the rights of any assignee or dis. | Brings the matter ditscny Ue CO eS Ce over te | utterly mistaken gentleman. His doings are on & iy sugeest @ 2 be set ua to rid the affair of the appearance of personality, in | doubt whether the incentive atord, - i fall) th longati coverer or to revive rights already passed upon aud hat matter they shail pub. | Par With those of Don Quixote when he set the wi Bi Guise cunts poset | Wears watadiy ina maamtase gee | SRS non oe aus iat gorda oncom nas (eI AL MaNRERMDE eae object ce | ropage el by Presidente to secure their jec- Tt apy from the del & popular election and a dir. WILLARD supported the bill. made several other present- ape red Th SL el wne ot THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH, ¢ no effect on the ap; ening. eth but only on sub | tion. There is iess force in this now than heretotore, be- rm of but four years was regarded as the provision to go Mr. SARGENT Offered an amendment, which Mr. te it elections, purpose would have been | ¢ use of the Incoming change in the Civil Berviee; but with re-eligibility, and that an election by the Legislature ments, among which ined by deferrin, roduction of the amendment tronage will remain, and that eed ‘cearne Potter accepted, as @ substitute for lis owa and wanna and Western Ratiroad for gross care- au Moe teas aot 1 Tuo Senator frown Massa | a Sxamine thin. “are nor be pe Pe ER A proviitos, ana Shoes Which was adopted, providing that noting con- Jeasness in allowing The recent collision near Garret Rapid Enlargement a ihe and Suddem usette bas ecte, c- | to find out the dishonest use of patro 3 hort term, was substituted f ained in the bill showid be he! a rights eman Was killed and an en- nse. cession to the Wey et not betier to trust that thove guilty of bau oreeees | Puce diechor with & single. long term. Lite or no weet i ‘! Mountain, whereby @ fr heap rey terms there has been but one occasion, vetore will b ‘when the proposition he now brings forward could not have | swoop, considered on fle merits, without even the ap of being almed at any individnal. Wheo Mr. secoud nomination was approaching. h & proposition, bad been 0 doubt nave been | pb asm thrust at him. i-xcepting that one occasion | KE ittle or no weight | Of discoverers or any assignment by discoverers u ct J ‘\ y ey stern lactions 10 emade agninat ailow{ng Deretorore recoguized by the yovertinens, ane DUT aor jatally injured. The Grand Jury could not | i+ tour o'clock yosterday the Westorn Unton Tele lace the responsibility, but was satisfied there was detectes than to condemn {a advance, i t any ob; Broad- Trini | the people to re-slest a President whose: termé was Only Tous a8 80 amended Was passed, Diyolessness somewhere. ‘The same road Was aiso | graph Company, occupying buildings’ 145 ‘gt Presidents, good and bad alike? Why not trust in | the people to re-elect a the popmfiar intelligence and honesty, and let each Presid years. succeeded in mak- | be tried on bis own merits, instead of deciding all c from the following extracts from Mr, Mr. BUTLER, (rep.) of Mass., from the Committee | Hregentod for obstructing public travel by allowing | way and 86 and 88 Liberty aureety before trial? Besives, can you prevent « man's Inte biog, nena Lid Me Abs . on Revision of the Laws, reporied a bill jurther to Paine to stand a long white on the crossings of the ing an almost entire change tn vhe location of thetr ing that there is one thing be cannot hn? bs Teguiate the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme cee owen ere iY reach? Tr the’ Mr, Mason was {or seven years atleast, and for prohibit. | Tex @ appr i highway. operating rooms in this city, in a time so briet as r for himself in one respect, best exped: ih for preventit court and vevent delays therein, Ordered to be a fear could hardly be found during the last “thiry. | docs it follow that he will hot exert it for smebody eine, of | thiercer Pe ruize compliance on ine aiie of the Loyisiature | printed ana recommites, The bill. increases. tho not to excite remark at theends of any of the hum- pine years, when the proposition might not have | for himeelf in sdme other respect ! Would no oue-term -d unfit characters afd a temptation on the side of the Keatee of the minimum amount of suits which BRICKLAYERS’ CONVENTION. he f telegraphic wires now located in almost Prom “Yackson {0 Lincola, ‘neither parig,” except | gf tne Navy or Ubiel dalices oF enaton ererwrea goa, | Executive to Intrigue with We Legislatare for a reappolu | may ye appealed to the Supreme Court from $2,000 meer qvede Gousiderable village, town ond city here in one case, has renominated a President, or seriously | Presidents bave wanted. lesser places; ex-Preside cdr. BEDY oD was for a triehntal eleotion, and for an in- | C0 $6,000 aud makes other rules in reference to ap- : wai tel 4m-| and abroad, ‘This, move remarkable ‘secompiish. thought of doing so. Such an innovation could have been | been Representatives and justices of the peace, W eliginlitty after @ of nine years. peais {rom Territorial Courts and in criminal pro- | A Committee to to Legistatare ment W: better understood : exnvassed without personality during the preseutadministra- | preve intrigues and schemes with such an “iMr. Genuy—if the Baeeutivers 10 b¢ elected by the Legis. ceedings, Reference to the Eight-Hour Law. known that the ayerage number of mem tom, at any me Lefore antagouisms cropped out and be- | amendment? It would invite combinations, No | lature be cervaiuly ought mot tobe re-eiigible, This would The liouse then took up the Senate joint resolu- 1, 1872 sages bandied daily in the company’s build- sere Prints ee presehe Eaecutve, Bah Mac Hone | witesce agua Mela ee iaeadeee fot" fast aan | ARS in ebcluaiy dependant tion giving the thanks of Congross to. ine Governor AubANY, N. You Jan. 1, 1612 | S808 yore. ig 2,000, ‘This Humber was, fle Er ach tow, Laviog heralded. for aided to bring avout nape FWisoN—It seems to be the unanimous sense that ig of Hhode {sland for the statue Of Koger | As-the Brioklayers’ Convention to-day a commit. | 14 here, 1 O08 coms previonsly occupled xecutive eoks in ig election, with a promise, perhaps, ould not be appomted by the Legisiature, | 404 peop! de- ve “ Et ‘ { in the Old hall of the House of space to Manipulate with the erm, and called ‘she big guar of the Senaior, It is | of the auccession, fuck, oaula Sonate agi a “geet ‘endered ineligibles second time, He perceived | Williams to be setup in th tee of five was appointed to wait on the Legislature | arrorded suilcient space to mani ate tite secure P @ that the ides was gaining ground of an election | Representatives. ask for the enforcement of the Hight-our law. | spatch desired; and, i ing, the ofh urgent reasons prompt it. Init designed | cies and make appointments in the interest of the outgoin, mediatel; " Mr. & (rep.) of R. L., pronounced a eulogy | and Ly ce! ol + House fora telegraph build! U to tne country the idea that special Sbjnetioasta a | incumbent us & new web of sordid motives would be Tuesday, September? 17 ine committee of eleven re | on Muerte aud Peantes of Roger Wiliams, A resolution was adopted recommending Mere- tee oe eho old burlding was brought into use, and objections new oa¢ Urgent, exist in the present | woven late our syatert, In many of the Stat Sherif jorted in favor of choosing the President by popular election Mr. BANKS thought 1t due to himself and the State | ain woore, President ot the National Union, for | tne change was compieted yesterday. On this floor, Side been epecta! prociiuted of ate, or te, deemed bocce: | know the cctoertea actigp Aad evasinne to wh oh thls tena, | Leplataucrer ag hed rong cr leaving the choles 10 th national | of Massachusetts to traverse some of the statements " of the Bureau of | and in the other operating departments in ane sary 0 10 means 60° unusual defeat | and the ouse with which one negee halt Fears, Nures #8 had been proposed, and making the termfour | Faue hy Mr, Eames in reiorence to the banisnment | the position of Commissioner putding, there are between two hundred and fity © gandidate who cannot be defeated other. | selecting tl if they themselves w by Labor established by Congress. .d persons etaployed, Beneath the Fr. BURMAN sald the object of this clause of the report | of Roger Williams from the colony of Massachusetts, ¢ Union No. 9, of | and three hundre nd wisest The country will constrne roceedin, ve Presidents | to getrid of th ‘attached to the ed that the question of soul liberty or rel. ‘A motion to revoke charter of } which they operate the machines, ai With unerring discernment, ‘The advooates of the candi i they will be watched; Dut set Tode of ‘erection by the Ie ity rue ae Sheer | cious liberty nado f New York, was relerred to the Judletary Committee, | floor upon winch OM Nee hate of te door Below, re, and to render the Exeo- ies liberty = entered into ae, one Ay e a rai ro ive the reasons of | nishinent. @ causes were, A m and for we know not who or what, | ulive independent of tue Logi nd bisown. The ps ‘of in ms denied the title of the people to their Py from it ale oases desperate remedies and | and how would the public eye know where to wurn or who to OUVENEOR MORRIS aa Boole irsatenbets aster el eh depths and shoais of cal- toh? I have been assuming, for the sake of thi - | th Ht the suspension Beaupre curt oats Naa aeagmange oars | Gans, al giacet ae Romie tatanake | Laitaneeefer gubeapeowen sop bomen, zane | Aah at Sahil” Machete ‘could’ weg | gf tne members unite charges aroumrensmot | Wea Contec "an tpaetuete ata de iy ae some stem to take fnew xt was ) in the polsoned armory of rancor has been pied, | whole theory that political Patronage makes ries | required ay thet mode i order toteanee ReteeRetSee ne” | yaltd oF Just tile to lands except derived | Referrod to a special committer, a4 1 ho nota | partment, and, with the advantages gained by the pot ‘of elvlized and wat warfare bave | strong. 11 doesnot. I have for years been What ie in our annals to falsify these ademas of | from the Inatans. Of course the Puritans could not Union No. 4, of New LC ag I ‘Of Albany, for | addition of an'entire floor to the operating space, tt what must be the hold of # candidateon | many who hear me must been convin gr, Sathera! Why shoud we oe up the "ad ways? Have | admit the denial of the tiie to thejr lands made in responsible for dues to Umion No. Shy yelling ‘card. is premised that in the city department alone there Teapect of bis the last ures of weak: error Pr ron 008 shout & tea the time Overthrow is ty'conuitditonsi "amendment! hag be ‘whole minds to the wort ave weanghe: toe ortaes ‘gainestivery and fusion Yoay bave & pablis manner, and which ed te rights | Samictng Michaot Mack withoat awravelll2g Cire. | WP Very guin OC Tully teu Mees tn v4 i ars! tea ted of ‘and t ‘and rf ‘not the firet magisi “ " . re I. © | not only of the colony, but of individuals, Mr. Wil- The following K delivery. ‘whi betred. lealtuay and bedied intrtaae bat re mlnged i ere ing of patronage’ and plunder i -) eval ‘end- San pry sere ring ccna iat wa Have tilue pans also oppowed vigorously the custom then | James 1. kirby; Vica President William O'briea, : Mr. CUMISKY presented @ charge against Union thousand insulated wires are Iai Ho oF Brook Ds LOr vila for the. Bec | ome All possible. points and for almost, all posaible con