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MONDAY, MARCH 21 1870 An Arademy of Mt allo Theatre Minst ' Filth Avonme Theatre! ' tr Kiblo’e Garden Me « Rew York (tre: i ly mpte Theatr: { ‘ Ban Francisco Minstrets. i arney Winn, New York Citas Trospes " Fox ar Masutet Watluete te iat sen Woud’s Museum | The daily circulation of Te BUN during the last werk, which ended on Sturday March 19, waeea fo'lors : Mon av W114. 8O0 Thoreday nt tan | Tuesday PEGE Fridays, $1.00 Weds Hay $0,000 baturaay WOGU0 Aggregate daily civentation last week, B4N,100. Arereve Caily eiventation cur ing the privious week, ending March 12 90,050. ——— Prospects of t sing Bin It is by no means certain what the House fe po'ng to do with the Punding Vill passca it is t been e the intere will Le re rybody if it we can redu en our public debt, that Cony garded as inexcusable by e doos not ke an effort to do it ‘ Yet the present attempt in that line is only a portial Oflicious money-changers from Burope have been trying to foist themselves opon the ‘Treasury as European ayents of the Departinent, and as one means of doing this, they have been plying the Secretary with { communications filled with lying repreeen. tations of what they cen do in Europe in th way of hiring money for our Government at f eheap rates. ‘These intruders will have ' gained a principal object of their efforts, if ; they ean procure authority from the Treas j ary to make the attempts they invite, When they fail todo whut they have undertaken, in placingg our bonds at 4and 4} per cent., they will extr eate themselves by saying that their failure is owing to an adverse change {in the foreign money market for which they are not rexponsible, It is under the ingpiration of these persona that the authority to refund the existing debt is limited in the measure passed by the Benate, so that the Secretary can pay more than these reduced rates on twot! of the debt itis propered to refund. Four hundred willions, therefore, is as much os ean d under the pending bill e objection to the measure in ite present form which the House will consider, Another objection is, that it looks to the ' withdrawal of the greenbacks, and the sub- stitution of bank notes therefor, Whether this is a wise provision or not, it is neverthe- j dees a tact that there is a great partiality in the country for the greenback over every other kindof paper money. ‘This preference is fully chaved by the House ; and whenever the question comes fairly before the country (if It ever shali come) Letween the greenback ond the bank note, the latter will surely go bothe wall, The leading consideration thas goes to furtily this preference is the fact shat while the present volume of preenbacks ip in use, the ptton saves eighteen millions @ dollax a year interest money. This argu seent will be pushed hard against the bill in the House, as it always has been iu times yast Another objectionable feature in the bill fe the appropriation of one hundred and tuirty millions in coin annually tu pay interest on the public debt, and reduce ite principal Now, if we fund the existing interest bear ; ing debt into five per cents, it will require but one hundred millions to pay the inter et, instead @ hundred and thirty millions The bill, therefore, substantially appropriates thirty millions annnally, in coin, toward re ducing the principal of a debt, none ot which is to beeome due under ten years. ‘The propesition to inue the burden some taxation necessary to do this will be met in the Ifouse by # restive and repugnant spirit, It will be held that there is no ne cestity jorthus burdening the public; that the great results of the war for which the debt was incurred really pertain as much to the next as to the present generation ; that pos- terity will be deeply indebted to the present for destroying the cancer of slavery, and ought to help, largely help, in defraying the expense of doing it; and that it is absurd and preposterous for this generation to continue to pile sacrifice on sacrifice, and heap up tax upon tax, for any whimsical or senti mental consideration, or for the weak and Idle purpose of being able to boast what a great example we eet toother nations. These are some of the obstacles the measure is des lined to encounter in the House, as they develop discussions in no ds nd which lees strength in the and in the body it nore omunit entirely in error. The Btate of New York i far from being the only place in the world whore statutes are in force similar to this which Mr. Burt attacka; and there are rail = | road companies in other countries with his tories which eclipse in evil all that worst enemies charge against that great cor poration. We are not willing to let pass unhecded this English solicitor’s tacit, If not avowed, assumption that the wickedness prevailing in our Stato #0 greatly exceeds that existing elsewhere, Let him turn his attention to Lnglish railways and English railway laws for a moment. One of te sections of the law of 1869 which is particularly nseailod by Me, Bune is that whieh provides that one-fifth of the whole number of Directors of the Erie Railway Company shall yo out of office at each an aalelection, But there is not a single rail corporation in any part of Groat Britain whose Leant of dircetors fa not #0 constituted that only a portion of the whole number of the board rotir tthe same time, ‘Tis system ie est nposing from of. shed both by the general and special eta’ Jute, No such thing ie known in England wan annual election of the entire bourd of managemcnt of a railroad, A certain pro portion of vacancies, caused by the expira tion of the (orma of a fixed number of di- rectors, eecar annually and are filled at the yearly olvetions, Certainly the gentleman canvot find his own country precedents for any other system than that which he has just condemned in his epeech before the La: gislative Committee, But it! may be that he regands bis own ideas on the subjcet as wiser than those whch have guided the Britiel Parliament for the last thirty years fu the epactinent of railway laws There are facts concernin taut railroad companics in ¢ which show that even if all al Erie were pro to be true, it has its parallel, and more than one, in the United Kingdom, Within a few years a con troversy arose concerning the mannjremont of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway. An application was made to Vice-Chancellor SrEWant, by one of tho creditors of the Company, for the appointinent of a rece of the property of the road ; and the receivers whom he appointed were the very persons to whose control and acts were attributed the evils to remedy which the suit was broug Under the management of Hops« atfairs of the North British Railwa, runs along the eastern const of Keotland, were so conducted asto render the worthless as an investinent. preferred shares no dividend hes been paid for years, except in one or two cases of DAlyamated stock y but we believe that ap to the present time Erie has not gone so tar as this, ‘There are many other examples; among them the Great Eastern Railway, whose line extends from London through the eastern countice of England, and the Caledonian Rai). way, running from the north of England throuyh central and western Scotland. The administration of both these roads hus ben such as greatly to deprecinty their sock, and the shares of the Caletonian ell ing, short time from 147 to 7, Ue decline beug due solely to the ieanuer in which the Hue was man- veral impor eat ged ageinst Britain on stock nm on the such an extent has the issuing false reports by railroad directors been carried in England, and eo prejudicial have Leen these talse reports to the interests of stockholders and the general public, that Parliament, at its last session, made the ssuing of such reports ia future af It is very evident that good English can find plenty of work in the administrative reform of railw » Where t fered an opportuni th ir ability in that dircetion whieh neither this State nor this country can afford then — Georgin—To Le or Not To Be. ‘The bill now Leing d dat great length in the Senate as tothe terms on which G gin shall be held to be reconstructed, abuse of wyers ey are exereise of t) or. involves inost perplexing questions, ‘Tho apparently closely divided on the points at issue, the practical and vital being whether there shall be a new election next fall, or whether it shail be postponed two years, 80 a8 to give tine to the Republicans to harden themselves into shape more fit to resist the rebel element, ‘The spirit of the great apostle of recession, Rosenr Toons, still acts in Georgia and vivifies her rebel masses. ‘This spirit is tru culent, fierce, and doinineering, It is unable to make open wer on the United States, but everything short of that it stands ready to Tt resiste cmancipation, it resista the eofranchixement of the negroes, it is deter. mined to hold Georgian in the hands of ite white inhabitants, it commits frauds, it plays the ruilion, it persecutes, and it murders. ‘The action of the courts is eympathetic, and the administration of law and justic as the colored people ar it indeed it be not a tragred nate is one fo far ncemed, if. a faree, ‘The question is how to treat this condition of aiiirs, If there is a State which ought to be put under military rule and kept so in definitely, that State Bue the pressure of popular opinion, weakened by pusillanimous + is Georgia. 680 strong an ele iment in thia question, that the reconstruction States without exeeption is tenerally held to be inamediately necessary " velf, will ultimately determine the question 4 of its final passage. ' We think it would be a great improve ; mont to the bill if a part of the thirty millions which it devotes to reducing the prucipal of the interest-Learing, debt were turned aside from this purpose and ap propriated tothe reduction of our volume of Pap TH Money, oF the aecummlation of evin to Accomplish & permanent resumption of speck I payments. At present, notwithstanding the fallin gold, we are in no sense prepared for this event; and if we attempt to accompl s! y it without preparation, as proposed by Mr } Bonen, in January next, or earlier, as pro } pored Ly others, the effort will result in. sig: j nal failure, entailing disastrous consequences \ upon the country, —— The English Railway Lawyer among us, Mr Bir, the English representative of the Erie stockholders in London, bas mado a | long arginacnt before the Railroad Commit i te nate at Albany in favor of @ repeal of the Legislative act of 1869 rela. ting to the Divctors of the Erie Railway Company, ‘This act is popularly known as | the Direetors’ DIM, So far ae the reasontn, f Mr. Bosit's argument is based upon tho i podioney and impropriety of the statute ip question, it may be worthy of attention; but far as he assumes that the man he Erie Railway, and the laws BeFeLO, are remarkably exceptional in Pies uF unparalleled im other Jan, of the State ment of lati or description Ie is wore doubtful whether this polivy in jnat to yal men of the Fouth, whiw and black, and equally as much a question whether it is not 9 suicidal yon the part of the Republicans, looked upon from a mere part pont of view. If we had any advice to give on this subject, we should say t when all these virulent rebellions communi ties have found their way back tuto the Union, the miesion of the Republican party will be virtually ended; wh ifa rebel State or two were kept in quarantine @ While longer, it would be equally good for the general cause of good government in the South, and a nestegg to keep Republicans from runuing to parte unknown, But there isa hurly-burly pressure to yet all the States back, and have the job of reconstruction finished and done with ; #o that our words oftruth and soberness would probably be thrown away if we should undertake to en force them by over so weighty arguments. Energetic folly is ever, in. action, more than & mateh for mild wisdom, Goorgia, then, is to come ia, The question # how? Mr, EpMUND® argued, ia his re reas, Wureday evening. w mini rd Sur ina Gana WILLLAA I AU! ba Gea Dy Nad paid by markable exposition of the case—an exposl- tion ao calm, 80 acute, 80 lucid, as to com. mond universal admiration—that after all is said and done, the government of Georgia, after she is admitted, must depend on the predominant publ opinion of that State. If that is barberous, unjust, lawless, such will be the character of the government. If we are to admit the State and try the experiment of ascerta ning Whether thie be #o,we may 08 1 do it first n# last. The expedient of postponing the trial for two years, by the connivance of the national authority, will avail not at all to improve the results of the experiment, and in the long run will be of small consequence to Union men, He, along with the members of the Judiciary Commit tee generally, is thus in favor of bringing the Stato in at neo, providing for an election noxt autumn, to determine the compt the State politics under reconst is the eff of the BryenaM amendment (eo called) attached to the measure pasted by the How ‘The other side, led by Senators Mowron and Howanp, are in favor of all methods within the bounds of a decent propricty wWiich will head off the rebels and prevent them from regaining pe on of the State. Their Jaw is not of such silky and even tex. tare as that epun by Senator Eowunps, but t is stout and substantial, and held to be quite good enongh for the case, ‘The sym- pathos of all men who desire to see substan. tial justice done, without regard to nice con struct.on of law, which in revolutionary t mes is not alwnys easily applied, is with Messrs. Morton avd Howanrn, Tf the plan we suggest of keeping: Georgia where she is for a fow ars longer is to find no advocetes in a degencrate Congress, th we confers that the next best thing is to keep tho State out of the lands of the rebels as long as possible. Georgia is preéminently the fillibuster State of the South, and the one Likely to make the most mischief herea over the social and polit this great Listorie epoch. ——— The Ficlds and Aiusworth Controversy. That the knaves in the Assembly at Albany have for some years past been regu larly divided into rings of ten and twenty members, exch with its captain, for the pur- pose of levying blackmail upon applicants for legislation, is no secret. No mau who is at all fem Jiar with the transactions of that body can doubt that such rings have been formed and maintained in every Assembly that has existed for the last ten years, tion has not been conti tives of either part licans have alike L ler al transitions of ‘This corrap- 1 to the representa. Demeerats and Repub nm engaged in such infamous conspiracies. But no memler of the House, until hes ever bad the courage to rise in his place and accuse any other member of belong.ng to one of these squads of organized freebooters Mr. Fiennes of New York has charged Mr, AINSWOUTIHE of Saratoga w32: proposing to tell the votes of a com of ten members of the Aseantty acting under his direction. This charge, made fully and specifically, Mr. ALNeworTi denies, aud a competent Com- mittee, with Mr Livriesoun of Oswego, a leading Republican, at its head, has been appointed to investigate the subject. We thall not attempt to decide the question in advance of the Committee's report. But we protest against the absurd attempt to dispose of the matter by wholesale vituperation of the gentleman who bas so boldly and deti antly made this exposure. ‘To axsail his per sonal character, to say that he wae intox en ted wien he spoke now, and no man ever spoke inore cleatly and coher ntly—does not injure Mr. Fietps, and only tends to establish a public belief in the guilt of his antagonist No, too, when the correspendent of the Mir ald writes from Albany that if “a motion to expel Mr. Fittos from the House had been made on Friday, it would have heen adopted by an aluost unanimous vote,” it is dit cult to resist the conclusion that the wound ho Ie 11s Leen inflicted by no random blow —- ‘The following joint resolutions relating to the civil contest in’ the island of Caba were adopted by the L inet, ielature of Tlowaon the Lith In the Senate there wasa mayority of twenty in their favor, und in the House of Representa: tives there were but three dissenting votes: Be it resoterd by the General Aeseratly of the State Tord, Vhat the people of this State tegaré with ep interest and profound. sympathy the wtruggies ot the people of Cuba te realize their independence trom Fnropean domination; and coat they regard with abtorrence the erueities inflicted by the §) niere-ctreatment whieh bristicn, end tinwerthy oF the eivilization prov alike in Europe and American it further resolved, That it Part of the aw of natio relations of tae American worl! that whenever a St by colonigation, bas a governuent, with 1* ebief Jonger condition of dey {and Ite people With reas! hanimity de insist ont Joption of Independent American civil institut such 4 State hax a right Cragsert ite indeoendence, and wetablish & Koveru: ment with American principles. founded on the vol untary action uf its own people Belt further roaleed, That atter son ible Hime ehowind the persist on at euch people for idependence a Jord upon thetr patriot pr ie on 19 become histori applicable to tie cont ov European lapse of a nt determina nen Con rol, an! their ability to inaintain thelr evil organi: gotion against we effort to re-subjogute them dartog euch verted of trial it ithe right and tie davy of United St stes Government to recognize them as belligerent v table the p fo maintain perfect weaityality betw ing pirtica ; ni this Wits Ont affenew to the for pent, ¥ Lica ean dod in ech eetion only are Noi Ge Tight on Whiew wun own und. all jndepeident Americas Koveruments are eof in nthe contend He it finally reolvet, That tn applying these prin chutes to Cut, the tiie lint tuily cone fora tion wt that peltey whteh allows the European vow nd move | the resuhjugath ais Jeo Goverunient at th . 1 han ve Ie diiven ite ou of weather, or tor tell 1 Pr Goverment to ablioh a by wenel the origte Heolred, Teat our Senators in Congecss be ine rected, ‘wud our, Represen sted, 10 tin these principles Int 1 louse ft intluense to seente thee the exec ulive Government; and to pis enolutions 4 thete respective branchew of Ute nt The Republiccns of fowa speak like men with hearts in them; but the Republicans of Congress hast theiv hearts palsied, Mv, Pisit, not 2 ly thought a smart man, is evidently too much for Messrs, Caurenven, Mow rox, Howe, Banus, Bixouast, and all the other progressive statesmen of the two Hou ————— One of the Washington correspondents snugesta that a reason for Gen, Grant's lobby ing on behalf of the Dominican treaty ix that he pt a hundred thousand dollars of the service fund in getting the treaty into its Present state of maturity, and does not like to have the money appear a a total lone. Of te whole sum spent under Gen, seem to hat thou a seer Grants authority in this business, a hundred and. fifty thousand dollars hus nominally been paid to the wutborition of Bt, Domingo am the frst years | the ambassadors—unonthorized by any act of | N, MUNDAY AKCH 21 rent of Samana Bay; but this money cannot have been derived from the secret service fund, The President has but €5,000 a year of secret service money, and that amount can hardly have done more than pay the necessary expenses of Congress—whom Gen, Grant sent out ina ship of war tw St. Domingo, W then was the $150,000 obtained which he has paid over to Bava and his fellow speculators in the guise of Fent, and paid over likewise without any author- ity of law? ‘This is an interesting and pregnant question, and when the possible consequences of developing all its ramifications are considered, We can cusily understand that Mr. Fisn and Gen, Gras must be anxious to avoid any such inquiry by securing the ratification of th — Last year we nominated MANTON MARBLE. for Mayor, because we thought he bad com sense, Since then he has chown himself too silly torun for any office, He hasn't brains enough even to succeed the Hon, Annatan O'M sit. Accordingly the nomination is withdrawn, — Prince Navonnon’s organ in Paris insists upon the withdrawal of th Rome, and the adoption o inst Papal pretensions, This, together with the withdrawal from Vienna | of the Marquis of Pepoli, the Italian Minister, and the ripening of anew French-Austiian alliance, indicates @ marked estrangeiment in the relations of France with Italy, aud a probable coalition of the lattter power with Prussia and Russia in the event of f ere euty. rigorous measures re complications. —<—<—<—_- — Associated Presa telegrama from gtom stated that the public debt of St. mingo was already ascerteined to be six mil lions of dollars, This is a mistake. It is nearly eighteen millions and a half. ——— a ‘The World deeeribes the cowardly arsnult upon Mr W.W. Lenaso on Saturday night as “Winks Avenged," and quotes th extract from tie Spirit of the Times as bearing upon the subject : © no further remarks to make upon this Fresent, Tt will donc tess afford satisfac rascals whom we have been obliged to lowing, at castigate al” one tine or another, but it will give no | fatis'cetion to the Major. The Major Rnows Mit he whl hove fo eile ¢ and, wlavever he may sav, be an that he mn he La wer the joel Very ay camy et them Tike their ll aud at the Major’ Kk. Ibis the ony poortanity that be or they Will ever have togetier over a supp ed alvastage ural that the evemies of Mr. Witkes should represent this mew outragy as a sequel t Leiaxn's attack upon him, and as devised by bin or bis friends; but better evidence than we have yet seen must be produced before that view of the case can be admitted as established, Letayy appears to have been considerably hurt in the encounter, but if itw generally believed that Wickes had set on such an unknown assailant, it would be sufo to say that he bad injured himself more than his antagonist, We don't believe it —-_ A very good appoint; is that of Gen. Gronoe A. Suan of Ulster county as Mar of the Southern District of Mew York. Swarve is amen of character and capacity, in the full vigor of life, and u judicious and skilful puatician, and, we believe, has never given pres: ents to the President. If Gen, Graxt’s appoint. mente in this State had been generally as wise ae that he bas now made, the Repabliean party of New York would not be in its present low e 5 ati The Hon. Henny C. Menpny of Brooklyn A time to report the bill for the repeal of the Conspiracy law from the Senate Judiciary Committee, of w) be is Chairman He has, however, found time to smuggle a bill through the Senate providing for the appoint. ment instead of the election of Police Commis. for Kings county, One of the Senators states his belief that not above five of the Sena tors who voted for the bill on its final passage were awar ly amended unty of their Commissioners, and give shal has not yet fo that it had heen priv so as to rob t people of Kings right to vote for P tt ie tto Hf #t introduced ir The bill as election of the Conimissioners. cussed it fully in finally referred itto d pointy igh MeLavaunas's Ring the provided for ‘The Senat manittes of the Ww Wh Brooklyn to “report complete’? It wos supposed that, in aecoidonee with the general custom, these Sena- tors would morely put the bill into good English, reinrn it to the Senate, Messrs, Meneny nd Pinner, however, killed the election elouse and inserted @ provision giving the local authori ties the appoiiting power, When put upon its tinal parsuve, the bill was read in the usual | mumbling style, and the cheat was not deteeted. As the bill W stands, the Commissioners w be apprintod inthe sume manner ae the Wate Board, Fire De ment, and other Ring Com: missions, so bitterly breaking {which the people of Brooklya have plained in yeurs past. Instead « kivn's chains, Senators Merpny tly clinched an ext What a magnificent Governor Hany ¢ riy would mak Bro and Peauee hay wee ivet Mew — The World's bombastic war on the Ring was like the boy's digging after the woodchuck Tt was out of meat, and wanted the spoils of the city treasury, The Ring didn't think the World worth buying. The cirentation of the World now varies fr 12,000 to 15,000 daily, ‘That of the disreputable Tunes varies from 10,090 to 12,000, ———— Turbot, that fish so well known to European epicures, is now occasionally canght in all quantities on this side of the Atlantic, on the coust of New England, avd seut to the amar. kets of this city, The size of the fish ix, how. ever, small in comparison with that which the European turbot sometimes a twelve toe ius, being from ghtecn inches long, aud trom six to eight wide, though some specimens weigh as ch as twenty supply Nike the mackerel pounds, 1 et us nope that the plentiful, unul, and the of it may ti shad, tl me more Iman, ted Spanish es of its searon —_ What nul is the matter the with overland | from Cali No papers have with snow 4 with | fornia since jast Tuurs there i Mr. Titian ¢ Attorn) under Lincoln's Administration, baving ¢ tary to Gov, Cortin's logat Mr, Kuzene Sehuyler cow and Revel, ba bis This is an Febuyler being ntlenian aud conversant with General th wt Bt of this city, fat heen appointed in selection, My Merary ability angusee Ve Consul Head rebure, M acimiral f tine o Russian —_ emmcut has abolished its con ond, witer haviog continued it dering When it was nothing Duta nucleus for the enemies of the United the present time in what the turd after ainner,’* The Freneb sulate at Ric the ewilw * abolition at call muse —— The Cincinnati Commercial voports thar * Gan- herr Davie las piven another thousvad dollars to the fundy of the Cuban Chartiabie Aid Society 1 that be true, the treamurer of the Society would like | to see the money, Masonie Obi Tn the report name ut We Marshals wil may baa a ve fully top «gE YOrp.muember of Hope 1 “e ‘ contrib the, new ‘d, Vorie Lodge, No,5i0, Las votd #m 0 the same obser y laborious duty to pe ihe error, HE TD tee wliotied, VAN pM WOO, Prinworst Warebouse, 110 Ful uicu'st., Now York, BOKOH, WELL | Bize ant ot te ae tou. wud 18 wud t UNBEAMS. > Te ry ation in that denial, That te véterly 5 y CADE AT, | feronee corer’ The omty citerene ab coc THE CADETSHIP MARKET Deikdclas Onicr of the Knglveer Bureat the pianist, wante to bu e bishop, a ee " CALLED CPON HIM TO EXPLAIN. All the persons cmployed upon ine Sew have DID THE SON, SOUN PF. DRIGGS OF | 4, anor words be pont him a neat itt'e note intl: | ene work, MICHIGAN RECEKIVE $4,000% matin tain thinze were my ne He Hy ict be —Chioago expects to be the most p yuluus city ~ One of the eleraeot the Hi nee of Ropres ves se woago exp A Ke aiaht Stovy—iow J Wat note, and descetbed ft to Fant correiron tet. | 1m tho Unios in 4 Fisted av in the Copper Distrle: an Viner Hea eee oar Drigae adimitin that —If there is anything more ani ying than @ Qua Di atic Buy —Six Mont w Mib> | Yar Dern einan stag offered hin mune Y Ti eo, | Bon-attentive wai er, it 19 4 ton artery ovo, tary Schooling Coste Him 81,000—Did the | wis ic conei-rent with the fair fine of his wlopted | —Ount of forty millions of people in the United Virtuous Driggs Get the Money? Gas tu PC eee en a rast Inet | States, only two hundred wud tity Gowan pay au ine To the Lilitor of The Sur. com tax, The duily Sus of Feb, 7 contained an al. Sin Dernoit, March 16, 1970. B (in Vase Yiwe: at Several town recent Jusion to @ letter once reccivea by Mr. Boutwell | were onzoN CONFIDENCE WOMAN. | cteotio iad Wonka os sapere + of thet during the first sear of his service as a member 0: patel tere seneele the House of Representatives, in which he was ofered | Seene not Pown In the Bit's of the foaton —There is more than wenal 6 ® interest $1,000 for an ufpointment to Weat Point, acccampa Thentre- 0 Daabin ctive on het Way | among thertudents of Ammere: Cou ue ut Us prevent nied by the statement that afterward, when the to the Hoase of Industry: ine ume. list of the yong men who hnd been adttted to tae |g, Prov tha Pasion Teunctions Mares ve | tho Craweow nur, Barbara Ulivk, is not Military Academy was sent tothe War Department, |) 1/0. Vt Ts anorning by te ce | dead, Shee ih execdbyus bodily owlth, ov w coufirmed tho name of the person who had made the affer to | G'tie gay and foctiy woman y tT tmnatie Mr. Boutwell was among them, and thatthe had been | ¥ Lisa de ! UG Jl bel plats Gailait, the w@@kaown Belyion pater, hay or iare the doce on ne intres iBrrencldede i tel by a member of the Ho , Boston Theatre ning, | been elected forvign associate of tae French Academy, y ihat occurred at the Bo ¢ Or a that thie member was eailed upon for ce of Donizetti's Fhe tus as successor of 4 brhen . ‘ 1 plana'ion, and the would-be eadet peremptorily true Soetes oF Walou USE —How can t Koleum be expected, ws is now Ne Ag ay isha) ioeieted pon, (0 Au hestof MOdegrecs F arene dismissed. te for the opora. EM, in eomnany dedi a ' ‘This reference attracted very € attention in | with ano ny state the thertre, geruny- | without expioding? i ; i thls State. ‘The friends of the neverai Revresentatives | ine a eeat in che fansiiy eins ew len, gogn after #6 Sn Ohio murderer, who eve.pet eonsietion atovee inquired, Can tt be that iny Re ato- | {helper orimsnce, from: the wn oa fade, and in- | om 8 of anit, BOW Feruted Uo pay hi impart | tive Is ¢ (this thing!” Euenicions, however, | iniging in a specics of ariicatation that war any. | [0 stv saune rea er nee nee f voll cheatin x Aue plouant 10 the persensecated nearer, | —Kx.tonator Wigtall, tute of the C. 8, A. in were very generally turned in. one direction. Nor sation enliet for tle presence of # pl thing th London, aud won't come home “end \ wore they long in doubt. On the 11th ult, Mr a 'ORer Bemwctt at once proceeded ta ro, | twlklng tm Ledew ant won't come tuter the 4 oxmerber of the Sixth Disiriet of thin Y cage of tie distarbance, 'On ihe way ont | existing state of niin ‘ y ea merober: of the, Bixt: Disiries oi tres the Coclvige worisn disptived cer | <The Prince of Hobeulohe has worn for twenty gehen ea zonian vropersitics, by lev Unt | veare on ils tof! loz a golden bracelet, In fuldiment ofa AN EXPLANATORY LETTER, one of ie dor capers hut foeead | tear one 1 ‘i anny The hoa, #0 sere hu feo re . ‘ ir § Caek whlely Hotathg Dut tHe: wiogt Urxomt necessity | Tr Mrucuia of the onject of Hor Wrst, —The questivas who wrote “Took me to Steep, ever constrains him to underta charge 1a fit this ecene (in a vay not ty the MMs) er | sfother,” and # hy Meautltal snow," are eclioned by the Yeon preferred against him individuclis, but baving | gant Kiet hwapene! in, and wits OMeer Hewett | acection who write "Stns Fly." G vivid recollection of the fwets, and some spre | fit ci tui atier agnod desl of igh! ~Ex-Gov, MeCormick, of Arizona, the present r hension a to the investixations of a certain Com: | in0 iiiting, and verious gyrations very unbecoming | dereeate in Cor has decidod to appoint a “ite ttee, he aske yon for snace to make partial eon: | ju cone of tge fair wen by re 166 caaUtn at WL POL. fusion. ie sete out in tae manner! “in the Munt-deal Court, thin morning, Bme was | 'Uan"’ of hie Territory to a cadetship at Weat Porat *Tnagmach as no specific charge is made againet any | churged with drankenne:s, and her gait havin beer —A fashionable clergyman in Chicago warms « particuine Representative from iy. state, the imped | clearly established by the ofticer, the clerk addres the stoners of nis congratation, that if they don't fe 1 Eine eonrnntion neineic, conyers ac Ly'who | her a tort anecen. the gist of Which wae tat the | peng yhey will goto Urs oace of etoranl uneasiness” 1 ig Henly BAFLY may be; and wet win tha tn ore: | Cont eontences you to the House nf Industry fur the . Commended ine cadet for apport tem often monks, ia uamuads =In Texas the friends of a condemned man 4 tee tart ‘ na TRAE wet , 4 Tueiving trom the expression that dwolt on the wo- | petition fora reprieve on the ground that his hesity ek vou t Duel hie statement Of facts je further ad expected to be incited in the Hist of siipote dranks, | 4 Oo | T shall be content if the facts re mado. abit S$ calig for the amalt eum of and costa, i , rongh the reme channel that the chai : rhe had intimted tint she coult t —The Berliners mourn the death of the decors 4 Those sentences ev Wa fin ntence vf the | tive pamter Prof. Gropius,who more than \any other ' He ensioades Inet it 4 a | Judge cat Je of her. lee J reise contriduted to the embellwbment of the Prussian i aris Won'd kw na halls ait tin nresaod he would 5 ie be) H would by tye eharacterof | Seal, wl An enterprising individual turned an honest i wile meanbers:” ani Af the veryetuiat wus not | suretics sn tne eum 6 penny by rentiaz auger holes @t #2 a peep in m tabi 4 nt As your correspondent feels { through the door that leadeth down to the Tombe | Overlooking the Jail yard, at the Inst I'caueylvanig i some interest in’ the fair fame of the State that Mr. below, a hanging. H Dricas repre wqpted: ¢ nbsrentens ed. as the ene Enle J. Coolidze has been known for a long —Danicl Drew, the founder of Drow Theologi. i Trove to be.and a he avers t Will be | a9 ctoterinns confidence w nd" feat 7 Bahl itent’” if the Inets are made publ nigh the | tive." Sho has slaved her part well, to the er G5] SGmIB Ar, Sb MAS ROR, NEW Serbs, propeees te a same rhannel that the charges were made, ithy pe ivontege of her Uumerous victine, w we the basis of that inetitutton #o as to makeit ¢ ocd to promote the “con it of the gentiom. corntet, in this State, “from the hile of Berkehir complete University, by aiving a supplementary addition of the ficts as | to the etnds of Cape Cod. The woman t avout %& ‘a hale? . ‘ . q Wey are an : Cente of nze, aid her riche meme ie Ete Johnson ‘The Charlton News of March 14 reports TLE RECORDS SLOW THEM TO BR, She belongs’ to F Jorickton, N. B. Atter coming | at “@ whats man who recently martiod a negre v and ag | ts Boston she mansced to natn herecifoiasa tite | watua%, promenaded Meeting eirvet yesterday, whied as the Iropticated adinit theta 10 be, 006 0 | een ae eo et ee ee iencat | Tome, promenaded Meeting sr aman te y Beoves therm to b ant of tue elty of Boston, Ithas been her practic: " The records of the Wer Netariment show that | to eq to the Lest hotels up —Mr. Habicht, the Swedish Consul-General ip minted Poin dets to. West B 4 i. Pac ay and indulge te all tae ot this elty, 18 one of @ dozen candidates for (ae same poet r red B weet. of a oe x hills were presented « Iv | in London. the rash tor the Lon'on Coustiate being at n ‘of Faet Saginaw Rantinces that |e soon ae CoE cot lier “quarter'® | rent in Sweden nett i8to tho United tat 8 No Te liguitated, ats —In the Quaker town of Nantucket there used parca bly failed to make a financial con. | to be a military company called the Nantucket Guarda KLM Lea final result in euch cases war that | (he peat article In the Constitution of which was “In 1. vce tate wis urdered to leuve-—aer buccoge remaining | case of war this Company shall invnediately dispauds a oe prictors of the Parks and M rivor0 Motels have —A negro parson in the Wes', preaching a inate i experienced the confidem this woman, Having | against tho love of money, concluded ts sermon By his indignant attitude and writ “plaved ont" at the public Roucs, +he desiened | vayines «A ally, brethren, you can jutce what VEELING FOR H& GANLEY, toon severd respectable boarding houses, and auc : wi Se Htoepeatng to suset a giationes Wh cceded in (ailing to pay her boar’ bills. bv her nice | Ged thinks of money by the class ot peost the Up iittie geome of being In th relive Kervice.” OQ | it to, of it in course, some boarding-house keepers placed in —The Hon. Mrs. Grey, in her “Journal of « Sewing ceurted? piieit ence in the promises and excuses of th Vieit to Egypt. & ve which, by the way, has been se Hy eriticwed by the Saturday Reviric, Faysot the Saltana, the Sultan's present dominant wife, that woman, There ere instance f suns ranging from $50 10 81 ki ating the nana of John unty 2 Al do Q.-Do you kuow R, Ganley In Howe y where ? ful Wot and ers Have iso ex very alve, aiatinrisaad fae. according 10 ore aad Ppeish taste, but Iv not wdintied at ali io Turkoy, belag or Dettolt, considered too thin.” American laitio, wiio rhine gem in the First Dis. ‘rally by a gracetul absence uf fat, mar cor uently trict. So iuvelligent and shrewd a wan as Sir who would be havelittle chance of beivg udmirod by the Turk Drices could not make euch a mistuke as that, bo | her Address AS This tain pulp eet your correspondent proceeded to interview several | worked tow charm In rom neces, anit, BOERS Wholesule sud jeading merchaats in the liqaor bust | inga happy vow er of language and a fascinating ex Lads of our laud, the flower of youth, eos, Foented wn Jefferson and Woulward avenues, | pression of it, Edie had 10 trenble in getting huto t« Loitering the vext Havana throw Wire} unt cruly stated tLat Wey know Jonn Re Gun, | € nfdence of her" betrk by telling then Bhot down like dogs, becanee, fursocth, ev; that His nother had been fora pumber of years | that she was disappointed in not getting money fron Phe ribbon at thelr throste is Lue ! a reridcst of Detroit; that she Aves Lere now; that | Cuda, ora story Of that sort, and then take ui¥ int The Spaulard will not Brook the blue! they recellewted Hie wa¥ absent from the elty weburt | eof the men. She “beat ove old veutleman a ume the South Ear ont of $5,000. There are ottiers ¥ bo And not a regent of our power e hus Vicia ed or biscktnailed, whose a nee We Marly its hot Hhtning. switt and true! No nattod thane the 4s hoar A blut upon the ocean's bine! ‘The Spaniard will not broog the hiuet AN ORDER TO ENTER West POINT; that they never heord of his having a residence tn the Upter Peninsula; thas he had for severs yeurs part been a Urevellihg salesman for liquor houre-, iartite put he is that when she got dru nemies n talk pretty und had formed many vequaintances tu Detrott, as : Oh, war-ships iu the tropic seas, arn Ocoee evi bea dau Hlest ling with eae impatient crow, Wa AG teehee ai ncelhbe lat ot bertnetene LF probiions ept Strike the bright Maz that flouts the b the cis. copaged In soother }ine of business, whe | § fraulted evs Avid trom its splendor tear te i/ve Groat him’ When introduced to thin genditaen. | State Constable Chapin, at eld, about a yeat The Souniard wil not brvok the bi Lear anpenticd rare krap ttt mabe yeortat peg The woman is now ina position where she can b Yo spirits in your shining crowds, vn Sol wealth aka reap ity. and reriding 4% | gente with by the District Attorney Tht on tele sphere Gods bidil edo. ee i —— x) ——— Call the ir Witla, and cath th ¢ Ie, 17 comes OLT, The Lost Wiaeckle Chitdr Anil ont of henven wash the Ulu | na Te Ganley A Very well, Hey Having seeompanicd the father of the Wybl Hannier Prescott rorr xp, Stace wisouhly Outi. te war tor somethioe | auton Ra Neal Vor ie in teoper Woe aay te z shes a Q—Dit beat any time have anything to do with Wet | the kindaess a a Hero AN NONESD OF FICER RUSICNS. Lcint® A Der mir, We Went there lof a short tue, Out ecottion We lel Ww mt “on o Tur --—.>—— . FUN. Irom the propricturs conductors 0 A Sivguln Story from the Wilde of Ohie~ Newel hy n Des Net Tae vtagal ey pal oe ba ply Dea th aud Gen, Habs ait of Cine ving to do. Me \ we nd worm sempathy for the’ po Io the Baitor of The Sum, #9,10,, eat Herat : man were in turmouy with the in n: Last fall Gen, Thomas L. Young was al ry nf lowed to’ crawfish" outa the Supers iso's office ia Wave noun cuiseh oF ua, tae side af the workin, wid can feel | lower Aa oe a anerer oF for + sorrow und distress. The ar | of the Southern Distriet of Olio, and Mr BB and it nas cost me over one thonsand dollors.* tare Of ewspaper W 1 the heart, | Clarky a friend of Gen, Gron’s, was 95 d to GQ. Are von sure i tid pou thats A.—Yow, repeat: | aia the sucress ah at 1s | Mil bis place, with the instructions to by vd act om “Qe Are yuu willine to lave Nour Lame yoferred such if he had to remove all the reverie of oboe pated RRO. Br L Only. 1 Ai NO OMee he First and Second Ouio Districts. A rat terete et i nals and | rival here be proceeded to investigate on‘ sseertain Src adily Giamloy ane rotitien? ns | : # s¥inpathy ior the Wy | where the fault was, Upon a thoronch tus estization fe nant be nvthing bat sat? ; SET URNELOR MERA Nac RaT Mataretta aaa a he recommende) the removal of the Collectors ot hed DOL had @ brother thay sonetues Weut | BLO, While at) the aL Hea fiom YIN, | Mrerevor, Soon alter it wax ascertained Nat he re nore Shere only anounted y the Now Yor : ° THE PACTS KNOWN SUN, the i Wave peuctrated the | @ested the rem wal of the above Culiortors, ther hess tcte widenne, cic analahert ont tal yhockie and reached wu aiflicted | Was @ conridorable imcrease in (he population of Cantey at West Point erall d. warming their hearts in the suddest hour | Washington city from the Quoen City of the West hiseity, ‘The means bp 1 With practical charity, extend ite influence in an un- i t! ui wissen! ite hth Ged = tl be clouded sky of perpetual prosperity Among the crowd was a corbain Genecal, a brother MAREK Luen tilt ike eltaeh AG. GARKISON of one of the Colivetors. ‘11 ¢ proofs tw aulstant Collector ob Berson cu Supervisor Clirk was then warned by tie Depart Mr. Dilgge feels any - — emt that W ji Was told dit rovert them, be can be put int ero Teunessce Escaped ment that be wus a litte too fut; h he must keep till a lidde—muet not come doxn o& ‘there vellows so bard.” It would not do to break up jaieation with Pes: or the light on the subjec it. From the Cicinnatt Commercial. # ure not written ut random, but siiera care demanded that the whole testimony | the Whiskey Ring so soon, He inust give them & ful investigation of t inthe result is given ony Reman Ged BAL cua testimony ‘ i public th fume channe!,” that Mr, by the Committee should b which wae we bave got some Republicar friends OCCUPYINE nearly two honrs Butier, auring the reading o ‘on the floor, (al wih this me sand bis Iriends we ating for» hy Working up votes in his There wevmed t or. be ynholing mem re, atid Goll Driggs way be th tent THE PACTS TEND 10 SHOW 1, That Jobn R. Ganley wus nominate to Weet ioint by. F. Driggs, Kepre: Siath Distict of Michi an 2 ‘That Jono R. Gavley was not at the tt one in particalar, who i a stockholder ia one of the papers taere.” He is now a Prost tent of a certain baak not twenty-five miles away, interested in Mexiewn bonas. ile aad bis expenses p Westin one year ago fro Vand whiskey. a8 a endet nuwtive of the of his A t the time of his went al most unblush- | The Departmont said : Tt will not do Mr, Clark, Raver had be rb O6 Wee ER: DANTE 08 ery acquittal, A | you will get Hicaard Smith af the Gis (° ‘own oh ig oes ‘ "4 epudlican, or | More shameless arle Was wever | you, and that Mulstead of tie Commercia!. vo. and be rat ie ey was note Republican, or | seen upon Every excuse aul motive | never quite when he coin newcos ett inoney wud pod. us the means of obtain. | Whieh ingennity nnd conmins could devise was mide | . This Waa more than Mr. Clark da gained for, He inthe cppointaante use of, | Tue charms of Lrothertood iu Ereemavonry | does not believe in this way o doing bi wad = mats, Bia toag . were invoked. ani even the pitiable subter a e | be is going to resign and ie colng te request U S61 AY ofl ere OF te ae Dela R ee UNG | that Atuly Johnson would be elected in his pluce | Commissioner, to pol the revenue maiiore. in he AL te cecere ot he Wi re Veins | fhe Wak expelied, was brought to bear to save | hands of Richard enilth of the agile aod Murat H. Ganley wus, p rl bens rom the diskrice whiclt has overwlwined | Haltead of tho Commerchd necate hia proved in Vain, 4 in ‘Traly sours, JOUN It, DOLNEE. f fest arti The galleries were well filed, and the visitors dit | CinciNNaTt, Murely 18, 1970. 6 werediting ihe appoint ortage war | ,,,,, Ne gulleries were well filed, und atruud upcu the Governpient os well av upon the MIT NH ah eRe, aenne Ciweinnati Commerctut (Matstea t's paper) of Himeriet t ahs ‘ pounce 1. Chink's wees 7, That so late as the 11th of Febryary, 1870, the | [leprietien vf their pe Rater hie, gz oaenpnees MIC) . ex-inember imp.ieated, over bie own ishatire'in a | ES cedaanh nstap. and consulted ae y Me Mi eos rition (or pablicuticn ina paper or wide er " ag 7 inde Th Am H ' bas culaion, sdaits the apooiuunont, Nut iy unalie to he principal novelties promis Mare eo how the soit Hue Ot his Sale'ean beatiectea by | Congress Abomt to Make a Territory out of | ine bey TANIA GRE ate bY ‘i ack it New York City, es acey ( Now, Mr. Editor, ff your correspondent is able to Washi ' ‘ayo Tribun and the © Trovaturo” by ee form ahy opinion tpon tarts, Us Theat Ny foot task of | Company, and Mr, Booth's uppenis bro new EIS INCOME YE ABEY We cM fan telat | characters, u GF thie to wy Hega CLGETEE apes Modame ParepaRosa dil the A \y ‘ Suite, ax Wells the city, should vote | Courtesy to wing the y Aga ' vith rat Of their recent performances ' har st N Mie) t ne propos ‘1 Lt ud NOW that ever orllant bo 4 | : on cane W \ by the D. bre taneter bok tis the: teal the coimphment by singing f ‘ | : : Aiton ibe al corn: | Govern. w New York property Loidiers Will take the part of Aevne! nediute | Oh OF A PerEN Ne Propose to purehase irom the City Caupell ay i . Chis pices be Mis military Moiitay he | ¢ he ctv to tie Vintted tutes, The» Mantle shat of Mas 1 1 t e 1 pital Wid then be reniowe tw ry tte i BE Lost Bi . Wachiagton tn New Werk, aan der 4 lan ‘ j 14, “ 1 York would be redneed ¢ od onde 1 the Gow ne und suc en ie 1 teat uipionueyy could ate | gy Phe Wonble would t mmediately Cineinnats Wis lay, ‘ | ever paid even tle money bee tO tue ereduh KK te etme THEhLtG cHHex themselves to the ta hove cusaniinnt at ung min te + it this were so, why Would thot he a PP Nei TEA IN the hovorable memoer in these transaetions | ood thing for te Kederal power this to distribute Me Date Thoth have the iit time of his adopted Stite before hia | Heel in densely populated tortresses, $0 to spenk, Aenea t 4 eves! He may be so obtuse vrehension as to | seatiered all throws the territory of the Calon: tk Old Debts. 4 " think it unsniliod, tor he concludes: his ierter by the | Otler words, combine the imperial ond ihe elyie reat 1 ‘ ’ Penurk: “pome vetter ease than this mast be | crews in ones But here we get ont of our dept the Hitler out ' Workot up to trove the fact ot corruption’. Aeahia | Ad turn tits last proposition. froin Journalisay ek Pea tents t Appointment Wik worth over SLO) it wasdue to | 0 Phlonophy Te itonra id istrict Chat elected the gentleman to the po —— Duty takes a that enabled sim co conten patron; It wae dus HINTS PROM CORRESPONDENTS, ednesday. ‘The at 1 ‘ ulso to the Whone sudrages Le rece ~ ting te was alsa d tie pore ta ve proprictor of 62 East Broatway denies that ular Museum, anew if, viously. 9 it, belor the Re was aware of the character of herman, the coun Ute eveninay iia Republican | terener why was arresied th ier house ci Aube akealing, Bit . Guo tt If-reypeet tomurutain | Mr Jamex Rowen, who was arrested on a charce mire 4s Aue of avsauit and battery. enon that hi we a TwrdttN Wasa ) Phere are several noticeably remarés in this noted | Pelican | He reauesis wauenensron of Judgiiebt Unt ind Opern House, + letter Hie vase ie deended oy tie Cour wemain as en debe te ' inat * Aviator” ¢ Plaine that rest ant J tunel ne sume Hi ies 1 In 168, 1 nominated 9 yo : \ that restaurant and ing H from nay distriet, the srxth S Counter & Dir piace ' Ms " frites ae when gold A bullete wad perl n ) strung keeommuchdagions [rg sil Kids of prodiice ‘have cote shaw Driuy state ie io ot bus diauee shiv alu et Aare ‘ Is Detroit in’ my district ¥” Can he produce one haan at = hie except as ato Jeter trom any deeent- maa im te district recou, dive ta'the'Atroanbiy bill taint Heabie to minke any chaos He mending du wey? He suys further: property. Tah Meare) “Phe ata ry Blanton entivd npon DY a sera 8 AM Civons, Mile. Caraline tet ” the Memoer for wn exvianution HW ulerty witrue, avare | {UPIOVE! Whe shall detvud ay, might OY A bor nike her reappearance, & ! all other ai imiattone aud tosimuations. Per ema micranell Whores forfuit his entire propcets we Barry, bs for Aue Ui we skeive The vericst quibble iu the worl! ! Ww ie aw bold as $ for pot less thuy five vearnet eo ted 8 we Babe Brie | ubercau dudieuce, . + VOM, <Lot ot power aud nani gacauard iv ADIES Vir nL ern Wert | MARAME GONE. fortune Vollor) sie has no | Fa taheasts tas inal ee tnanine Riausutedseese ie at | Upon'a'a byt a AYE eous.. 61 Thom: ® Ladies, we.: wea. i, hee Avugy wb aud © Wa th, UD olgire. * wl Dube