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BATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1872. ments To day. Academy of Musto heatee A Sheey in Welle Clothing. Howery Theatre The Sheet nder of Lynn, 0 Minatrela 08) liroudway Bt. James Theatre Tony Pastor's Opera Mouse Cowle Panto The Vohew Fainily. Wallaok’s Theatre mmodation of up-town residents, adver- tieemente for Tae SUN Will he recelved at our regular Fates at the pp-tow ‘ond atrect, unetion advertisement off roadway and Sixth OS West Twenty-third atrcot, opposite from SA. M. to 8 P.M, Graud Opera Ho The Charter. Gov. HorrMan has distinguished himself ows. They have uniformly been “based on sound political princly have received, n# they have merited, the pyblic approval. ter for this city which has just gone through the Tagisiature cannot, we It is revolutionary tn its scheme of cumulative voting, and of doubtful constitutionality. nature of this scheme issuch that it ought not to be allowed to go into effect, especially im the government of a million of people, until it has been passed upon and ap- proved by a Constitutional Convention. In many other respects it is clumsy and v Manageable, opening wide the door to endless confusion and corruption in the administration of our affairs, tures, it is true, but these ar small importance compured with the evils and dangers it contains. What Gov. Horrman will do with this charter wedo not know; but if he should veto it he will conf great city for which its people be grateful. think, be justified, ee Seen = a A AAI CAE It bas some 2 TN A: @ boon upon this ————_ What was Robeson’s Motive ing the Secors? When Senator Trumovi, in speech at the Cooper Institute Rongson for already paid only vindicated the course and endorsed the conclusions of this journal, but made one of the most telling points in a ‘as full of them, elation as this, and in the » of the scathing comments of one of the leading statesmen and jurists of the country, it would become those who at- wash Roveson to study they have speech that v of such a rv In the face tempt to whit A-sworn officer of a Department who de Liberately ignores the obi oath of offive and wilfully violates the law in order to get at the public mone have had some other reason than blind ig- ure of his office and the constitutional limitations that were intend- ed to guard its power from abus lieve Roneson to be ignorant cnough and thoroughly untitted that he fills; other reason to violate a law of the land and cloth himself with the functions which Cong: itself alone possesses, it be that he had a contingent interest in the large sums of money thus il paid to the Secous? or who were to have their der? Or had a Christinas present been given to that days before norance of the ORS Fe PET but there in t have been daring thus nnn ena What was it? hare in this plun- aetna mysterious daring acts and that of the most To put forward the that he “so const law” will not answer. in the study of constitut imperative character. al law would Benator TrumuULE well puts it: was no law directing him to appoint the nvyened, as th ler the former Secretary ; does it of his own volition, and he Not only so, but thout any appropria- board that h done in 18 A a A NE ORE TEE TE pays this 89 he pays this $93,000 v tion to pay it. The Constitution de that the money shall be paid out of the Treasury in pursuance of the ap What authority was appropriated in 0) besides, 1860-70 for work Why, an officer mi 93,000 out of as well have wsury without particular money only violated the paying the money, but in tak such purpose. A Huge Job f appears to be no doubt that job for vobbin Tndiis located in the Indian’ der the benevolent pr a government fulted in complet ast Mr, Lown of Kansas, of the Committee on Indian Affairs, introduced in the House of Representative derstood, is intended as a compromi substitute for the vides that the President shall be authorized to enter into ne Mndian tribes in the Mdian eountry of the State of of their lands the Porvitory, un- which, it is un- Oklahoma bill, een ore ee ee ee re er otlation with the several assignment of of a sutlle to the sale for the der of the hinds Dill also propose invited to to the ostaliishment of nmentin the Tndian country at as early a day as practi grecment made in is not to be ship, with ayiew binding until nuvified by und has generally been commended by the pre the committee the measures propose 4 Di to De utterly indefensible. The truth ja that no mo The various bills that have been liced in aid of the project have bold violation of solemn treaty stipulations, « wholesale copie cation of property belonging to the Indians for the benefit of organized bands of land- grabl The fact that it was endeavored to conceal the dishonest design under the mask of benevolence does not improve the Aspect of the case, There is no need of any haste in legislat- ing for the Indians of the proposed Terri- tory. They are doing well on their own ground, and are progressing steadily, though slowly, in civilization. And if there were no other causes for congratulation in the defeat of the schemers who have been plotting to acquire their lands, it would be some satisfaction to know that there is one portion of our territory that is withheld, for the present at least, from the grusp of the greedy land monopolists Who are seck- ing to absorb the whole of the national domain, Nothing better for the coun- try could happen than to have the Indian Territory remain in its present condition for the next half century at least, ———— Robesonts Ninetysthree Thousand Dole lars as a New Year's Gift. One of the singular circumstances in Secretary Roverson’s payment of $93,000 to the Szcors upon a claim which had al- ready been paid in full under a special act of Congress, is that this illegal payment was made on New Year's Day. The claim Lud been pending before him more than three months, aud the award of the unau- thorized board of his own subordinates upon which he pretends to have acted in making the illegal payment had long been in his hands; tut though he had doubtless agreed to take the money out of the Trea- lad not yet presumed to do it. What, then, was the reason which made Ropsson, at alate hour on the last day of the year 1869, imperatively, peremptortly order the vouchers for this illegal payment to be made out and delivered the next morning, New Year's Day? The only posi- tive light on this subject is derived from the evidence which by pertinacious cross- questfoning he forced ex-Secretary WELLES to give on Saturday evening last. The questions and answers in this part of Mr. Weu.rs's examination are so remarkable that we copy them here from the original report: Tonesox— Now, I want to know whether you said anything i that leiter lo Mr. DANA) about anybody receiving a Chrisunas: present—the Seere- tary ora lady? r. WELLES—Since you choose to go Into that, I wii state just what L know about It. T heard about the extraordinary clreumstances under which that money was paid, Ronyson~ That is not answering my question, Mr. WELLES choose to answer it in this way. Teertainly think Thave some rights bere, au not the accused per Ronson Wel in your own way, Mr. Weups—I learned that the requisition for the m y Was called for on the Slat of Decem= Der: that the order from you caine after the clerks had left; that it was a pressing, Impera- tive order, that it was made out the next morning—New Yeus’s day. J aiso heard sume- thing about a lady who either received a present or who exerted some influence ; but Lam mot tnelinedt to go into that subject, and 1 think YOU WOULD NOT DESIRE TO MAVE’ ME, According to this evidence thus pro- duced by Secretary Roneson himself, th idewis that on Christmas Day a present had been made toa lady who was able to ex- ert iniluence with the Secretary, and that accordingly he issued the order on the evening of Dec. 31, requiring the requisi- tion to be made on New Year's Day. In regard to the umgunt of the alleged Christmas present, respecting which Re N dragged forth the testimony, it is no- Where specifically stated, but it must have been something handsome to be responded to by a New Year's present of so large an amount as $95,000, drawn from the Treas- ury in violation of law, The Rich Man’s Charter. The charter passed by ‘the Legislature distranchises at the next election probably one-half of the poorer class of voters, The election law requires a voter to have lived ten days in his election precinct and thirty days in his ward, ‘The election this year is to be held on May 21, On May 1 a very large number of vuters will change their residences, The greater part of these will lose their yotes, unless the election law is amended. A man may move across the street, and thus be de- prived of his franchise, Our wealthy citizens will not suffer, for they own their own houses, and do not change their residences, Those robbed of their yotes will be the mechanics and workingimen. They change their residences nearly every year. They are the men who elected Joun T, Horrman Governor. They look to him to veto the charter; and in case he refuses, they look to the Legislature to change th ection law, The officers elected this spring select some Commissioners whose terms of office are six years, It would seem that the framers of this new charter intended te prevent the workingmen from having a voice in the selection of the most important city oMeers, —— We Alt Suffer. None of us, rich or poor, ave exempt from the risk of inoculation with conta- gious dised » so long as our city is made a great triturating mortar for the pulveriza- tion of the abominable filth that is left to putrefy in our streets, The ash barrels und garbage boxes, car- vied through the city at all hours of the day, containing as they do clothes tilled with contagion from sick rooms and pu- trescent matter in all stages of decay, scat- ter their contents in the wind wherever they pass along, and the infecting poison is brought to every door, This city inust be made eles some, band whole —— Tn the efforts made by the Mormons and thelr adherents to procure the admission of Utah Into the Union as the State of Deseret, it appears that gross fulsifeation of census sta- tistics hos been resorted to, At the thine the con Of 1810 was taken the population of the itory was only about 87,000, ‘The Mormons Jatm tt 20,000 Inhabl- 8.8 growth of about 0,000 within two years, Salt Lake Zrivune says that this Incr Was secured by counting horses and mules as Lng largely upon probable increrse of Lanilies, ‘The Increase of Balt Lake City ts put at 6155 for a year and a half past, which, the Trine shows, is manifestly an ex- travazant exauveration of the facts The recent earthquake whlch was so severely felt in California disturbed a vast extent of country, and manifested its force far from land inthe Pacife ocean, A severe shock was felt in the city of Mexico onthe 28th of Mareh, the same day on which the great shock in Call- fornia occurred. A slight shock was felt at Paducah, Ky. on the same day, but that may have been merely a voine dence, Hut the indl- tit contains about ase citizens, and by reckc lops of the great carthauake e been directly traced from near the Oregon b feron the north to the elty of Mexico on the south nearly fourteen hundied miles; and from Wine nemuecea on the eest, Which is four hundred and sixty-two iles from San Francisco on the Central Tacifle Rallroad, to the — Pacitie ocean, and even further; for vessels out at sea report t ors off the coast of California greatly agitated, [tis almost imposst ble te eonveive the tremendous energy of the e THE SUN, SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1872. THE JERSEY RAILWAY WAR CHANCELLOR ZABRISKIF ENJOIN- ING THE PRENNSYLVANIANS. erted to disturb #0 vast an extent of the surface of the earth. A letter published in the San Francisco Bulletin at at Lone Pine the shocks continued three days, numbering probably seven thousand in all; and that the whole valley was moved During the nights continuous re- ose of artillery were henrd, followed At the date of the UBA'S WRONGS IN PARLIAMENT, | theKo-Kinx Kian, the objects of which we ere, Lo deprive colo Denouneing the Spanish ne—The Chief Objcot of the Tne of Slavery. In the House of Com- mons this evening, Mr. Thomas Hughes, member for Frome, moved an address to the Queen, pray- | ing her to urge upon the Spanish Government the prompt fulfliment of ite tre: 80 long neglected, in regard to slavery and the slave trade tn the island of € port of hie motion, Mr, Hughes noticed and progress of the war in Cuba, and onnection with the slavery questlon, d strongly upon lamation of THE COLORED METHODIST THE CLERGY WARNED AG AINSTONG OF TEER BRETHREN, ‘olored children were taught, and wkin to hat of slavery Nations were organi Joeal law inettectual to they deatred to ind had rende classes whom that they had perpetrate reds Uf erities of mii id that withenmen Lowvor, April 19. The Jorseymen Rushing Acros the Lines and Undoing the Peunay Work A Question of Tim The Perth Amboy and Elizabeth Rail- watt from Ellzabeth= port to Perth Amboy, croseing the Raritan river necting with the Long Jobo Taylor Johnston, President of the Central Railroad of New Jersoy, was the ruling spirit of the enterprise. bridge across the Raritan was inchided in the franchise, The New Jersey Railroad has a track The Newark Chorch Litivnt'o tempting tot nich were unpunished ; fly tentity in cou Riciibers werp placed by tremblinge of th letter, March 41, the disturbances had pot ceased at that point. Judge McK iver Jed that stun The third session of the Annunl Coufore ence of the A. M. ny of San Francisoo hae ) apecches are not a mark able commodity. Some months ago the law firm of Ovenroy & Henney of Sor brought an action against the California Pacifle Ratlroad Company to rr Ing the passage Supervisors of that near Perth Amboy, ov TUB TRIAL OF Branch road, oom Melted to Teare—A Demand | Histon Joseph F or a Verdict of Mare Case Prods A charter for a after which th wished to warn the First DegreeTh ¢ dary Towday, mterday morni trict Attorney Morris began his apeceh in behalf of Fanny Hyde, who ts on trial in Bi the killing of George Watson was thronged, and for five hours the ¢ counsellor held the audience spell-hound, quently during the delivery of his speech th prisoner, the Jury, and many of the apect In his opening he he styled the atroctous pre the Captain-Goneral, and condemned the ruth- Jess and savage manner in white been carried on Rey, Jacov Thomas said he othren of a to Win. A. Butler. around the church yesterday,’ and will probably be here othren in conversat 000 for procur- by the Board aunty favorable tothe tasue the war had on the part of the 8 of Burope, called hired for a war While Spain was ut her troops into Cuba, that island was hor mendicant refugees into the adja- Ainerica had inst the polley of Spain, in and other pow: king and prying said Mr, Thomeagy trying to en of the Camden Pennsylvania Central Ratlroad has a loase of the New Jersey road and the Cam- den and Amboy road, A bridge across the Rar- itan anda track from the bridge to the leased would give them a@ se mintinication betw New York and Philadeiphia, and would do away with the time-losing and expensive tra New York freizht to and from South Amboy at If the Central road, or Partios in its favor, secured the bridge, it is easy to see that they might etther bring the Pennsyl- vunia folks to an arrangement for a connection would give the Central road what they . a through ronte to Phila- 0 from Bliza- of, the ownlng of the bridge might enable the Central people to effect 4 profitable arrangement with the Pennsylvania the last-named road could ac- quire a right of way to run trains across the bridge to their connecting track at Perth Amboy. ‘The opposition of the Pennsylvania road has from the start. and Amboy that it was their duty to vote on the railroad company's aide of the question, The case recently came to trial, and resulted cision adverse to th the decision of t that it was the privilege and duty of ¢ to such of his The court room extermination, against whieh rable Lo warn Mr. CLT was ac it colenios of Gre alroady protested qe ved that Great Hrit Join in the protest. Lughor declared that 8 the aboliion of slavery, and refused to consitn= mate {tonly.on account of the supposed inter- | ndenoy of Cuba. nber for Northamp' of Mr. Huhe sourt, the Judge remarked | Now Jerwey re line of continu were In tears, result of the verdict upon th and when he remarked to the jury, pointing to “Sholl this young girl live or die?” the relatives of Mrs. Hyde all bowed their heads, of the prisoner burst into snaed of dian; in he was apport iny nughis hi ave impart Huded to the yner's future, ny untrymen as may ain really dosired » In respect to public affairs, and itshould not be permitted that this privi- Jege should be degraded to a hired advocacy. A gingtp apecch is aspectos of Intellectual exer- cise Lis Worth of which cannot be estimated in oy by Scourt, A politioal speech Is legally presumed to be mete for the benefit of the peus ple who hear it, and not Cor the benefit of the person whose peouniary interests or Individual ambition may be advanced by it, Presumption can be et soned, it would be unsafe tend a meeting of Ms uniess he was prepared to choke off in, the middle of his apecch every budding De- MOSTHENES who attempt blage, and who afterward might be disposed to present his claim for compensation, Asuccessful candidate for office might be har rassed with suits from every person who had spoken in his favor; for when an act has been done with a party's consent, and haa proved of benefit to him, the promise to pay what It Is reasonably worth is implied. Judge McKim. stitey Is evidently a wise and upright magistrate, He eald that it was a hig health to full ty Mr. Thomas said c had iasembled to Histon to a minister prompted tin to Gil it at any risk, and failure merited the re . Charles Gilpin, mi the last-named place and the stepmoth toars and wept for several minutes, Judgo Morris py facts connect in the testime should have Cuba was the abdjit “l of action proposed in this mc ality, friendly to Spain, hnot opposed ti that he hnd visited the ish able front {eeoval observation to deny’ the éte= Ky which bad been sp propriety of reth ion was thore- ded, recarttulating the d with tho tragedy, ag browght out And contended that the n<sieed woman was not & murderess, The theory ¢ porary Insanity, he urged, had been He agreed with the proposition of tod with but twa wt Chon presented the following have not now, name Cuba, and was delphia, for the Central has a bethport to New Yo PRACTICE CHAKGRD, chased of News Uf the lattor ertainod, the Court rea- He hinted at the and we couetter the way jon unfalr and unchristtat island of Jae remembrance of every gen- der in the first degree’ J a number of prox He then spoke sub- bo le@al, moral, or Chirietia political friends 34,00 Ieent, moral. or Curitian the mates th the freogulariiy pond, where * Not Guilty,” an tlemah present int Sandon, member for Liverpool, aup- motion. He said that he too hud eon In Cuba, and was able, as an eye-witness, to testify to the atrocities detatled by the h orable member for Frome, doubt that the of the Spaniard Mr. Fowler, meniber for for Rarnataple, spoke in kupp jon. Sir Charles W right to the aan eaary stepe to ‘aud publish to t Set edmumitted by th stantially as follows : AN APPRAT POR A LIFE. We stand here to plead in behalf of econrged Lo madness, to addrews the nesem- Morar. Thomas, James, and J ground that while the colored people had Deena gulled out of the church by There could be no poodle of Cuba detested the rule and Mr, Cave, been energet why thelr stren Tt may be aske tis opposition? Might they not build another bridge? The reply is, that one bridge ts an obstruction. be much more objectionable, and to obtain charter for a second bridge the first might be very dificult and very expen- y "we read tn the ¢ (4, and all through the Old aud New Tc Dis pronounced against 1 saloons and to the lo es What brought them 1 will boar that t the libertine. aon of thelr gud fact remialued that It was Ho to the gil’ legally in possession Two, of course, would wilald follywed in op- w leayon and never pormit thernse!s use his own words, culled again church spoken of has passed cial embarras’ their quict he ylum and ask PPinally,, Viscount Bay with Mr. Hughes in his effort to this matter, © lowe proximity to 1a, while «ympathizing i pressed grave do f pressing the Government had already done m ard sufferings of the Cubans and tho hardships of slavery Inthe Spanish colonies, pe ready to do More as soon as the insurrection afforded the Hughes withdrew his motion, bts of the pro- He said the THE BRGINNING OF THE FIOnT. Some months ago, the Pennsylvania road ap- Injunction on the buildin bride, which was granted in the United District Court at Trenton. porary Injunction expired without ita being made permanent, and the Pennsylvania road now asks preme Court of the United States for an road crosses th road betweon Perth Amboy and \ about a mile from either place, The Pennayl- yanta road wants that portion of the road lyin ction and the river. it would do ‘them without @ bridge cannot be It looks aa though the: bridge solely to defeat the possession of the road they must recede Present porition of hostility to the bridge, In order to complete their connection. ones, President of th and Filizabethport road, Gissatistled with t ledictions heaped oh the man, The namie way not b committed no nore Hor leas a crime than be, THIRST FOR Bi} Speaking of Detective Langan’s testi sald: mitigate the tn the property and hold it for them until ciey quidate their Indebtednes THE COLORED MEN DECLIVED. Lord bought the p taking a deed in his ow of the Cent (white), and until within a short time the white aud colored congregat ping in the same chureh. ‘Th were iinpressed wi It is known that Gov, Parmer of Mlinois ie for the Cincinnati movement ; but we learn that it fe also a fact that of the other members of the State Government only one supports GRANT, while all the rest go with the Governor, The time of the tem- suppression of th er opportuntt fat on the stand 1 could «4 y, but instead of Of the gold that has Been lay ishiy expended ti eo New Jersey REVOLUTION IN MEXICO, n Laud my assoolate implored |) ether there was ony trath In this, a No, there if not The Tammany Ring bad tte New York Court House, and the Ring at Washington bas ite Government building at Charleston, South Carolina. ‘This building was commenced shortly before the breaking out of the war, but little was done upon It, and it Is ye {t has cost between seven and eight millions, the greater part of which has been expended since of Grant's Administrat ominittes on Appropriations have de- pther hundred thousand Hd seem but Just red members f thatthe cuureb control of the paster, the Kev, John A Rebellion In Yuce ernment Troops—Juurez Clingivg to bin race of the Gove | Tepliedto our appeal, between the Ju disproved her statemen was like unto her slater there reated near the priso not marked with pallor, and it is suid th H. L! Sweares,who, according to Col. Tayle in collusion with ‘the Rey. Willi f ‘Chureh, this vity, large stims of money ti now opposed the ew ppposed the | Cry o Mextco, April 7.—A rebellion has broken out In the State of Yucatan, and one thousand troops hay to subdue it, of Yucatan arrivedjat V ‘wore bouyaut will: health— unfiniehed, though been sent from here ‘The Governor and other officials ora Crug on the 4th inst, ity of Merida ts in poosession of the revolu- * heaped upon Fanny Hyde, AN APPRAL TO PARENTS, you who have children construction which they bad u Perth Amboy have become ginal arrangement m: F obedience aud cided to appropriate ai for the building, though it w to the people who pay the taxes t should be instituted into the expenditure of the Immense sums previously appropriate @ money at the disposal of the Ring. wer What her te unanimously. f her disporttion dines; and when you have told tie Uh obnston w cont and butid the road, — & I to have sun ‘The rebellion te again important in the Sierm 4 and the States of Chiapas and Tabas- overnment troops have been defeated by Generals Negrete and Me Gen. Corella was sent to pursue the reyolution- ists at Saltillo, but be returned to San Luis Po- ¢ any explanation, s broken out in Nuevo Jarnet (coloredof tl chureh, was introduced t or which It took « re sension Bishop Clit would be an ¢ Merence in Ch 8 reports Of th Presbyterian unewd Chat th ple should build th e that no impr f motive is attributed to Col. Jones, and that he is held in high esteem, THE RIVAL SURVEYS, Meanwhile Mr. building of the road, At Perth posing parties are kn: the Pennsylvantas,” yours; tell them how. hn Ne, dune i toni without gi A counter revolution | under Garcia Melo, who has. se » then prosent= charged wily «i ‘What they think should be done with her, URY IN TEARS, Here many of the jury and spectators were vise J solve buried thelr faces in their fs to hide their tea yther sobbed arkable legal poi in the case of MARLOW, the Jamestown mur- derer, who was to have been hanged a few but obtalned a stay of proceedings, the Supreme rs that a Sunday intervened during the trial and after the evidence was order of the Court the Jury were stody of oMe ntracted forthe Deacon G. ML Order has been Uy States of Guanaju entes, and Durango f Agua Calic sumed her soveral Hutionary Governor of San Li en defeated, loosing SW bors A few days a speak on the subject, and hi At thoroughly do: wiled to order, he exclaime ted to any re Gf the committe moments tir juicted them by has dawned upe oe LLG paint roard contracted for thi junction to th The Centrals n work on this se their survey Tennsylvania The Pennsylvania survey Banken of ex, and the State river, two and a half Hore they come Hrother Itobinson ob= Lion as well as others, dA curse ts hang! male 40 as Lo ‘To her wunt sh er I members arose and kept together in the permitted them to attend the Baptist c opportunity not to be neglected by the clergyman who and he pro- sermon having practical application to the case whieh the jury eration, taking for his text the pase unto me BAKABBAS; now Ba- During his disc Oaxaca, wile making @ connection, and they made President Juarez, said the rebellion Was crus to his dictatorial powers and asks for a When quest Views on sending President Ju vt care'to cultivate hh European Governiuents. amend the Constitutic be the President ! Committee ou in favor of ex! dictatorship: indefinitely Juarez Wishes to resign th t permit him until has been provided the Minister of F Lion will be the nt of Mexico. Juarez will deliver the country States before pe to Congress, Whey know that road, the ec . fl off of the Central me the road b; P UPROAT IN A Chuy the F PANSY HYDE fed in THe SUN ticipated, but no collis oo Crowell of Perth Ambo abouts, but there hw The Central nm He said bis Congre dinuch dilieuls Woman is pot guilty of ¢ritie Yor with hie reualier in iyselt are laboring for tie ho Wil Teta ie AMA MliKiERL quenthtn: pane atayr Warez has asked ren no need of troops. A have quictly worked east the Pennsylvania men west of the Wack, WANTED, SPILES, d the scone yeaterds 1 the Central people at work and said one of the workman, bridge ‘meu feel heerful, and the only thing they ask for out at the end’ of the line of epiles which have been driven Is “more spiles.” survey of the disputed section, to do whi ted a tract of country wh the line, he found Hthough Hot amembor ofthe chu: er, according to Une dd gentleman, was ¢ KAUBAS was a robber.” the minister said, “S think Tam pleading for merey fc being tried for his life in this village, , for L believe the man’s hands are recking with blood; also, his wife's and her mother's reeking with blood, carefully examined the evidence, and from that the man now ins on the 1th of Ap his successor with the Pui ances, says the which was on the Juarez adiinist THE PINAL APPEAL. hd peten wes For the sake of God and His merete the first Sunday th ed her rest, and she By your'expecta. counsel very naturally assumes that It was not fair to his client thay the jury should h preached to in such a strain, and he has obtained the stay of proceedings on that ground, read the notice, mug the congregation, w, will be the he successor of Juarez ip the l’resi- most attractive. that Oppienmen ty God blew you, od dives you, poor pastor, atic teat vernment have Feceived no When the applause whieh. ¢ nof his address bad surt adjourned to to'el itis expected, will the ted Mr. Morris The barber rey United States Minister uch right to talk in chureh set of stakes call In following Mircurt., Esq, a y Republican lawyer of Bridgeton, N. J., has writ- ScovEL, declaring pathy with the Clucinnat! movement “Commencing with the removal says Mr. MITCHELL “ the ex: and removal of Mr. SUMNER, the San Domingo project, the support given to the villainies per- Southern people by corrupt ruption Ubrough all vernment, t n temporarily deposited No attacks have 4 Cru Railroad for two protecting it. nereasing Kener re ure acquiring wealth, raternize with the be given to the i ing state of the soil, which bi formed was peculiar to New Jersey fed with a wet be yt overmuch, been made on the V Thompson gay THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE. \ poverty of t ‘ong the in but the Govern ‘Twelve members of € ranks of the revolutioniat Mr. Moriny,” utive Interference Along the line were several places where the Centrals had worked before the Pennsylvanians A mile from the riyor the first ylvanians was en drove them ¢ Proved agatust Kebeson, church expostulated with him, but he beeame enraged, and had a right to speak wad would do so spite of wniyth puntered, and nt Whatever was gving and hewing At noon the erved on the parties or & Co. built wey claimed to have lost submitted toa this Hoard was Tt has been proved thi THE PRENCH ARMS INVESTIGATION, officlals, the wide-spread « the departments of the ¢ cutive usurpations, the centralizing te and the subordination of the elvil to the mili- tary, the destruction of American commerce, the squandering of the public lands to enrich gigantic corporations, and a Presidential despotism that ainple in our history, all conspire to make reflecting men pause und ask themselves, ot tine to halt The Associated Pre lin was Examined, but Fails to Give bis Testimony. . Wastuinoron, April 9.—The Senate Arms mimittee to-day r of the Colt Arms Company d hint as to his fe ing the exchange of ( a day; that was ail. ing injunction w in the Pennsylvania inte! NNSYLVANIA WAKNED OFF JPRSRY SOIT. Jersey to Alfred W. J tnard L. Arwol iwiey, thelr and euch of th lueers, coutracte that the report « Haters aryl that body * cleaning out the Four or tive of thi desperation of the that this sum, if ac should be tn full satisfac: tion of all claim on their part avainst the nent concerning the cepted by Secor barber show Lore, MILOPBEY sy . bervanth, laborers, clulming, or pretending to act by sof the Perth Y, And thelr agente, ofiver, reterris pointed out Would have thrown the disty He Was at last tos frou the wine guns, the Gov n supplied with superior He was exat And Elizabethport Hatlroad ( ey then Waite ech represented 10 Us 1d to Remingte rt of the Perth Atuboy bid to Remiugy tlength by Senator Schur nection of ¢ this and othe pald forthe new Kune only referred the The International Congress on the Pre- sion of Crime will meet in that Secor ought to te-and tey have tately oficers with passed into the hand returned them ind Of one of the reed that the act ates, Great Brita German Empire, vitzerland, and Holla be represented, and other countries are reported forming committecs first aim of the gathering will be to obtain a other matters, fomitinge with othe to be paid Sieh But there of delegates, Mr. Hanlin, Ch only uwatied a comm uuie Freastiry not To this end each coun- presented will furnish a view ol Institutions, me very Interesting data n Siberia and other pe Y i William Rell, Glibert cir and Gach coudsellrs | ote Is supponed thats ay he looked for fi AGAINST TINE CHEREH guished friend Chambrun. of prison reform paper in which he “preliminary imprisonment is a 1 from considerations of Signor F, Canvos, the sons at Rome, has also written a masterly review of the entire fleld of criminal sand prison tr review goes back to the dark days befe TOR EMANUEL is not stated, amount of Information on all nnected with prison diselpline and th onof crime will be collected by the € ted than he erferiug with tt that the Zion Chu ary evil Impos to te contract hereto Whot is Proved neninst Robe soelal security tor-General of F Patrick Brady, ond fro the Work wich has Brady and his GRANT'S KUCKLUX MESSAGE. delivered ini Parting South Car r Military Rule he dolng of any thiug in or about Its constra ‘Also frow selling, assigning, trans hypotheuating or in'any way. oF, ane Unt any of the eupltal stock of sald rullront « vraily’ oF ilieqully rring, pledging dent down Ww that he iis, wi W astiinaTon, transmitted the f ninformed t bt that a larg ined Chat they would be lowing mesvage to the House In answer to th NEYLVANIANS WAITING ORDENS. «for the National Guard has m thing bat approval, and is pretty ¢ Assembly, itl is danger of its bi press of legisiation, The necessity of teac pech-loaders wi in thelr hands is patent nting to the differs iain to pass he differ reported that there smothered in the line to the bose tae BiH atid Sonal exailuation to rep nnsylvantans enjoyed ug for se much a day coh the State is of « copy of the Ins ruoved a body of uitable groun: ously Abuyed and 2 on Hor compe in marksmanship TACK Ak ATAUO & cite Senator Penny { Willsee that it Is not nelectod, law without unnecessary besan muy Veieuds # Ming must be done, it with a gusto und charge of the bi but becomes uudseereey by oatha which they are t They have dy men at work east of the v's Moutily retains its place as the most lar, instructive, and entertaining of United States teats by which pr Wit they Drond, Will be found worthy of ite re ation given by opie Altogether at Vammany Is continued, Mg account of Mr. And of the mills, titerary tnstitute, elu and schools whieh heve m vald determine, py fs with then Pennsylvanians they are right, and expres tthe Centrals out in Perth Am The Shacks xcellent quality, of course “LE willrake tine to detarnuine At the requ Many promincat members oper Tnatitnte on y har been recetved tn this ¢ ening next, on the qu nday conptebent with Chris | f the Lord ® Dat Litt lives by the disuac¢