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if yi , ww of these men for life, He must do nothing against their interests or wishes, and he ey ee. Dee, must do their bidding, whatever it may be, ait . Sun, or they will bid him go back into prison. } He Shitawe fw ATL Poor Yeukes! though out of jail he is not 1 free. Tis! is no bouger bound; but bis DAY, OCTOBER 5, _ | tongue is chained, and he dare not tell the | ‘ truth, Te hasa pardon which leaves him Cavum with a rope and a noose to his neck, which ' Aitute . J any one of a dozen masters may at any ie Theatr ' Niaucee time pull. If he was to be pardoned, a Gaavicy Whe veo eruthoeandcvar, | COWnvIght, unconditional pardon w Dan Try unt's Minatrete ve been much more creditable ¢ Dry Pook Ctr Vo eR Governor, although it might not have i Fmereun's Californie Minetrela='P)Uesivar. S408 Tanawored, at all, the purposes for which a Grand Mati pardon was wanted Steinway Mall | a Concerts, Me Again, let uslook at this wonderful con- pit auet bh sebbbi tbs “— dition in another point of view. If it was heap Paate vate Meee | HOt designed as a lasting terror, to hang Union Square Th over Yrnkes's head, then, most assuredly, Wosn's i pb bontn dle a it was the grossest possible insult to. those itrechtbenletestcle? Nectht he i . | who applicd to the Executive for the par- “!don, Just look at it: Gov. Geary inserts in the document a condition that if any money has been paid for it then it shall be void. i; Paid to whom? ‘The Governor himself granted it, and he certainly, from necessity, knows that no money has been paid to him, What then? cs he grant this most tnportant pardon Raanive Marver, oth #4 Dad at the solicitation of auch notortous scouns Anvanroawent . ee records a grave suspicion that they have pen: vets | Verily, however unwilling we may be te For the a . nivore | PUL Upon tl tions of this pardon the t ; | construction that they were inserted to en rat 8 | slave ¥ t mmion sense Is shocked at ahaa ¢ : a t mpt to a 1 to them any other t ws " j "W 4 | cau ® from A.M. to S330 ey t we, ns they have The I f 1 M 1 t » the citizens Pennsylvanians, Go Home and Votet]} oe Wa Diswianon sins t 5 i t Alexander T. Stewart. her v has always been ele ty and Great Deficit in Mr. Boutwells i since t \ IA ut State h Accounts. abd Mt party in October and | gone of the Grant papers inform us = sree story of a deficit in Mr, Bour- ' an ihe accounts is about to be re- " ~ eect in the Presidential election. went in Oct ry caunot be revived, for it has ‘ bert Set ei nother than lively and startling acterwind . s t was first brought before the pub: ate : Louth The fact was originally revealed by thot : dees nm Gon, PLEASONTON in an appeal to the Sen Pounsyivania in the Presidential yea is iftee His Wishenston droin Off T ip eye eh * 7 x a : t By rs | ry pete : by 1 ASUNTON Used the upright ex nt of 1 govert : ‘ eae Inia, | ¢ hGRORGE 8. Rortwett, Secretary of the Trea or Whether HARTRANET, the t r \ f uy it of fraud, emb nt, and tl ates | f il’ feaved mach tled of the st 4 hall elect ‘ te nae s. Bb ve If there a nds of re Le peueae aetna, diital Hevenue enemies of corruption, now in or around this city who are entitled to vote in Penn- circumstance that Mr. Boutwrnt's ¢ fylvania next Tues them to | accounts were in this unsatisfact ute return thither 1 8 for Gen, PLEASONTON made known to th Cuanies R. Be $3 ene | President Appears by the subjoined ex- Bae Ww t MY] tracts t Bats ¢ t “Tt ts clal io hy the under d that « goingt r h th atriotic | ¢ lt 1 At stewar | 1 lefalent v h Gon, Prrason- Other Peeul the Pardon of | y B fe y Yer He Can eturned to | yania,t Haw Hin Prison at y Time. r f of that the} n of A Tr. Y Ea, Jr. If} t For iC 4 Mr. Beokanew ‘ sare t punished, that of which | 1 the f s resolution in the h v i y ty, 1 had] ! v 1 1 to merit con- | « at the reqnes t ® No ul reason | f 1 w n 1 accepted by the appr « D sense commt 1{ ¥ y 5 t urged, | ° per of ¢ his t t This resolution was unanimously adopt 1 oe t forward, pu y, to ot ed; but the very next mor Senator tain | CoNKLinG of New York, having apparently 1 f n wl been informed that there was great danger ‘ 1 except ' in © in his place in the Senate and be inferred from circumstances moved that it should be rescinded, He been supplied by other parties tha » | was told that it had already been sent to a tthe; rot, nnot, | the Pr nt; and then he moved that the ther 1 1 judgment and | Presic requested to return it, and con n on the the community | this was agreed to, that reasons are of a character that | This deficit in the stamp account has would not bear public scrutiny and the | Dever been made good, How much it ac light of day, tually is cannot now be known, During sover all that had previously oce | the adininistration of President Jouxson curred, it certainly was a strange circum. | Secretary MeCcLLocn employed a trust- stance that those who bore the pardon to | Worthy clerk for nine months in making the prison should have waited at the cell | up this account, and he made the deficit 4 of the prisoner along time—as they did, | about sfx milli f dollars. Last winter according to r own accou efore | @ great deal of labor was spent upon it in delivering th lon to the couvi the Treasury Department, and after every= What was going on between thing had been done the deficit still ap- them during ail that time? Was peared to bea nanda half gotiation? W they striking a bargain Those who have been accustomed to with Yenkrs as to whi lid say | praise Gen, Grant's Adininistration on ac- after his liberation abc Loom. | count of its management of the Treasury plivity of oth ‘And was | ave probably not aware that this large « the pardou to be delivered only in case he | ficit for which Mr, Bovrwex is directly would agre ublish such @ statement | Tr lo exists, and has existed for as he has since published? And was the But whenever a change in the Ad- pl to publish such a statement mad nistration makes it possible to set on & condition precedent to the delivery of | foota faithful Investigation of the Treasury t urdon 1 would the pardon have | Department it will be impossible for all haan ratios t itive and cane | the laudators of official incompetence and f 1d not been come | dish ty any longer to deny the fact plied , that the stamy n sold, and that 1 that ver’ n varyir ion and a half t st neq te ix milli ceived for them M € vwry ha tition } y 1 have en, The First Cholec eople for M 7 } ola BEThanid 7 Alexander T, Stewart. ? pa “On | The Desperation of the Administration 1 Y 1 ri to Party. ‘ | tion of the A 1 party than | I srations for the most extensive f 1 at that vote a | 1 t vote The ] m | delphia by t 1 v id | Last year w York ' f any sor \ only register t r red, of or concerns | In » two years previous, when hen th tobe] Twrep had full control of the city of no nnd the frauds at the polls were unparal t t recites, iy 1, the registration stood as follows: In und 1" 1870, 142,660; in 1869, 160,709, "The ula just tu } nin which |] tionof New ¥ k in 1860 waa 805,051; in he y wvict Yous placed! | 1509 it was certainly 900,000, Yet the city If, at any t his ¢ of Philadelphia, with 230,000 less inhabit $ ! u than the city of New York pI 1 to c 1 with | in 1869, now re rs over @ thousand ud who have really « 1) 1ore voters, The Philadelphia registrat Tdon-On Vomight pay to | shows that the Grant party t dollar 1 t rrun the polls with f { i h ho had performed in| t It is known that rey 1 from t ' t the | 1 wded to Philadelphia by th void Vy | m this cit Theve is i r we se eto} 1s . in Now York ay t But I 1 t I t where fraud ty ss - J yo his cropped out ja Pemusylyauia | | Tho Titusville Presa de ares that there have been from 600 to 800 fraudulent regis- trations in that city. In the wistration has in tober from 464 to 8 3; ina one ward alone ased since Inst Oc- iother from 282 to ad ina third from 49 to6e7, The Press says that it is impossible that Titusville | shoul voters during the last twelve months, Th same startling increase in registration i+ 1 have gained ove noticed in Reading, West« Lancaste bersburg, Alt re proof by the Pennsyl from pear 80,000 In deave tylvania, that your hy ani the Harris: t, Erie, and ott ona, Pittel y rg, Columbi rone thousand Chester, ) Cham purgh, Willi hoste r points, There is clear lored voters h ad from Washingto Pre District of Columbia alone. Ap- ave been shipped for use in 2,000 have gone nocs indicate that the Grant party intend to poll at least 20,000 and very likely fraudulent votes Pennsylvania on Tuesday next. Indiana, Senator ing to outdo Negro voters ported from Forty Mitch ville, there by a Capt. Brows In this city a larg visors in each Assembly District are to Gina coptic tion ¢ in clu r 1 t ipon bein -four Kentuck colored men arrived ell, Ind. on Oct Ky, They made no seeret of their business, They claimed to have been sent najo marshals, wi ts thi GinayT ime Ls wil urge of Grant super Whether frau Al end in sof ou in Penn: inst Choice of the I aden 'T. Stow in the State of Morton is en- Cameron in Penn- are being im- by hundreds, 1 2% from Louis- f Madison street, between East and Floyd streets, Lot ville, They were to be distributed over the lower part of the State for the purpose of voting the Gravy ticket, In n- npolis, on Oct. 3, seventy-five col 1 omen were met by a Libs eral scout, who to be nonugent of ¢ A 1 tm tothe Lit iu tarters, Ther O08, 1 i that t a fellow 1 ‘ators, owned that they had been set i} nist t I 1 te ti . | t 1 their purp and implicating Win. Davin, an tant United Stites Mar- shal, in the busi “. There is no CAMERON, nO N State to engineer the movement. Probabl | Grant's friends think themselves strong enough to carry the State without frauds on the ballot box, rity of the supers 1 scarcely nex nm. In many eb 1t xclusively visorsar h great measure perations now Duncan Good—Stewart Better. The strongest argument advanced in sup- port of Mr, Duxeaw is that his election would improve the credit of the city, So it would; but Mr. Srewant’s would i prove it more ud, New York is looked upon as Mr. Srewant is known all over civilized world as a heavy, sound ¢ talist. 1 Mayor of New York V help American credit ever It is no disy \ t DeNean to The FROM p togot dig People for Mayorg Alcxauder T. Stewart. The Mel s Ring has been tl curse of T It) 1 with t i and ta it. Tt - Hgure d for the McLavonis t id Theratoen thay toned as to win should by and ask a favor of. Lyon, CC un whom ni) i Troy no politleta liticlan wou Hundred, Such @ man ts Cnannes L He has already been mentioned in mmittee of 0; idate, but the man n. He should bea 1 dare to approach He 1s a good law- yer, and there is no staln upon his character, He would command the support of all citizen eet of party, I to the Eastern D withou ut re 1 he nomination be t, Where Mr. LYON resides, and where the McLave IN candidate does not reside, Let the oppesition unite upon such man as Mr. Lye nd he can be « ed by an rwhelming majorit The Fi 1oive of the People for Mayor Aloxaader T, Stewart. The English papers are filled with nts of the annual autumn manwuyres of tb British troc ulars, Volunteers, and militia, There have reviews and sham fights on a grand scale, and all England has been agog over the movements of the defenders of the c ntry A corres} and thinks tl Alexander into condition atisfaction The First C1 China is ¢ It t Th Th kelet oftrut hinit, Thename pf JAMES DUGAN P,Y, JonpaN, on the World the ag eutle t of the Daily News ts lost in ad- tifthe red ¢ 1 put tledr t f th all those wh clr friends { ice of the 1 St eady have 1 Of JONANNA GEHAN ng of the regu ata once got fal ks Into lt, “they ther troops In Bus ree of y revard (or for Mayor ting a navy, In fact a fleet of tw manned and of- not aword rot the fa scamp named eal who hnposed nt of the exe- Ad the Tribune the story of the wreck of the Albion, and folsted upon the people the horrible account of the ope. rations of Barnacle Bill, all of which were false, onDan’s fl have repeatedly appeared tn the Disrey Times, and he ts now the exclu sive property e brutal British editor of that concern, The Fir v Mayor Mr, Cra from his a nthe I 1 Stato ¢ t his neighbors in Dundee, Yat the | {the day, His apecch t fail t One of the havpiest v r y Mr, Bene in and taker must b The First € the prese Bent second Hne fiver no advants The First ¢ A You te }1 hi self pu 4 whe Id doint curat the fir Fredericksbu: ] mine expt | entitles him t t i y year to Th view of th | Presidency. @ Atlantic and P this offort was a foroible comparison of the ncou= sations recently brought agait udge BARNARD, with the Infinitely worse charges more conclusively established against President Grant, who as a profe t Senator W D fonal gift pe admitted to stand beyond the reach of rivalry, a of cor ine, les of road will be enterprive which Is bu from any Credit Mobiller, and bids fair to carry through {ts magnificent work of providing new and prosperous homes for ten millions of people, without cheatin ment or the stockhok hole texa The Soldiers of th rwer to retlect Ge nd of the fact that he ts a eandi- of the P »ple fe Alexander T. Stowart. We ars informed that before the close of on the cars of the Northern Pa- dh opids ve viceourt | Ration of the cifle Railroad un through to th lo Railroad will run through t ally quiet thd pee river, a distance of 46 Hero the rond will strike a line of na ‘ort Renton, a thousand miles we communicating with the minir Teglons of Montana and the Interior About four hundred miles westward n the navigable waters of the Columbia be- gin, and this Hok bridged over, there will be a miles from Lak minunteation be . On the western completed th ding the roy of the People fe der T. Stewart. GEN. SLOCUM TO GEN. BURNSIDE, War Not Vet in the Pict rs out of a dollar, oy Mayor: ri e Superior, |" vigation to tward, and nd farming continent from Port tween the side sixty- is fall. The ad derives « Govern. | © Mayor: | 8 t tion, Mr. Allen, Who | soners in that crowd that IT now remember exc bly conducts the prosecution in connection | And College, Kelly was the only one wno, sno with the Publle Prosecutor, was called away to | farm "they were talkin loudly among thems New York to-day, and Mr. Chamberlin was | Wve waleine rapiay.. When Kelly teked me Inzle-handed, But he has made out a good | gun [told him twas notat howe. “Law one man come 4 frei between 7and So'clock, He was talking to Mr day's work, conclusively fastening gullty com | \iitimny.dohncrnentyand Lewis Streeter, Tt Was 8 lictty upon another of the prisoners, John | man who boarded tatiellroy's. | Hits name w ' nnity,, Lwent home then and raw nor heard nothing Kelly, one of the bosses, who has up to this | finnity. went Mummoned to serve on the ( ing ime been luoked upon as an innocent party. hury aNdidentify otuers Who were In the crowd, Henry Hoppock, a farmer residing two tiles | but Tdon't know their names, ‘ Undor Ore | east of Patenburg, a litte beyond Mrs, Carter's, ainiued—f ave tived at Patenburs, 19 years, Damaging Eviden Hy, David Colleges « ® on ouseJo unon the Way. citement, examination, w! added to as the tacts a ohn ERE Wit Amoug th K nd the fe a nam: room, and spends the rest of his time ¢ oring to Impress upon the country people that he is not a coward. is heightened by the fact that an election Sheriff In this county occurs simultaneously | fit they hn with the Presidential who was among th that went to Mra. Carter's; he « hd of tie Carter lane, and that when he gv rioters conti NBURG MASSACRE | ti IDENTIFICATION OF THE MEN WIO | « MINK RLOTEES, re Auninat the Accused toh Hatchors at Mra, Carte elly Tried to Borrow Correspondence of The Bun. Fisminoton, N. J., Oot, 4—The exami- ies to render t ble town a sce cus for the gatherin ple from miles about. F lie Prosecutor le Ills anxiety on this account | tn th 16 first of the citizens t ad Fiaaty over do ratnutes, Refore Tot home the negroes Were going down the ratiroa below tne tunph Hot wures Mtemight not have beet quite 9 Up heveral niglite, aud had to be up the uext Cincsay how many, f have had nvorsatlon with nytoiy who auld ne wea th Uwe riot or dwn th hoart wih ny mother. “There, ara but three of us ve | the family-—my mother, Janea MeNulty, and myaelt at kill his EI of ex- | plo ofthe | wal rty ile the number fa being daily | for of The fussy Sheriff twice aday | oh marches his boys, as he calls the prisoners, back and forth between the jail and the Grand Jury Croseexaty he «ame y ai Kelly, the walking boss an hour after T heard th ft The fir Don't k en ‘earl that, Twa T heard d. Lwent right to ved agatn, tisha I ved at 1 al pr ut th sworn, and told a strai or fifty witnesses already subpoenaed still await | y08,Sunay gentlemen ¢ thr ent on t + mild m t story in a he Of the pris one of the three Lece here going toward the white. men must ty feet have been over, one parsed along the road beside and Twas not a t night, aw hin Saw games f iat @ wan | THE MAN WHOM JOUN KELLY ASKED FOR A GUN, Allen of Patenburg, a ma railroad, building Patenburg, was $ follow was standing by my along, and one of them asked Mm T think It was about o'clock tn the morn. in Kelly i nich Who asked me for '® gut Tea the ero t Carter, farm ve. The ow anding by the feve ay- | Kelly and the two men, with him, who spok and for | inthe crowd. I ka, were over In the mldat of the er fron the crowd and came up to me. Taaw three gune Crowd. besides grubbing-hoe handles, hammers vid College, the n what was going ed him out of b his breakfast. set, [saw none 1 saw 1 naked Wy visited the sec f the riot, and who extracted / " from the prisoners, was the wart rte T have t witne is nora ided as fol On Sune the ) about | Mela j i ; € ir rete I went over t Py Tin the dl " h a 1 an organizations, and do ali in ow a | n to Migs. Carter's house, a » cross-examinat sah cel ted re.¢ 7 conducted by Mr. Bird ht thal rredto my mind on A y 1 ‘ t th, ev it Kun, at Roan i 1 baad prune A in Kast Tennessee ip a p ‘ hes i fn front of Petersburg, wh a HEM PRISONER IDENTIPTED. THE POSITIONS OF COL m " 1 of loft n a COR 1, hav T h guns * ned to Forder us tothe front Pa 1 ask f 1 | 1, Da ge Wa perm u pre 1 t srabast, Patt Motor: t w etill bs ‘ some he election of n. Grant to the say. on oath, that he was wit kK dow A ary » ioe, | Kelly Is t y what 1 had ud ft agatn until L wan ed to in the force of t it Lay’, BAND KELLY. za tday. Parked t. There were sume few, but he was well and b on, em= There hundred of them, They tte only @ to Mie, pped out date for reclection, there are probably some men Teturned; frou the Gallagher boarding slanty fn the country Who doubt fis Gruth. If, how ath uf the Carter about a quarterot a | Willlam [, Allen, a son 5 ever, we were to add to. the saying the provis re Was Ateers killed a het t was called. William sa that the pen should be handled by aGreeley and Mero shanties a mouth 0 anes his body | tad, about fifteen years of ave. the sword by a Burnside, all doubters would dis- | J4¥ less than » hundred yards from the lane: hed 1 | ward promptly when called, ar ry | appear. You and I, General, know full well that | Dyin suanillng he could pave ae wor the wine i | ina straightforward, manly Way that challenged Wille we were in the Held dgbting for, the Union | cae within two or Uaree Kuudred yards of uy buiide | belief | Mr. Greeley was wielding in behalf of the same wiere twa: : On the morning of the rlot I was down between Aaron ealise.n weapon far more powerful ‘ xaniluation—Z had no f MeCoy. 1] gtrreter's a I tis store. Tsaw the mob pass used by cither of us. We know, too, tha ba it had for that | at bor Were avout 1 of y after we had sheathed o rds he kep H nen about it. | There wer pasted within f tix feet of we. They. w fight, and continued it yo, Ing about w t ¥ Brined with guns, pick bai axes, haminers, rs is a ‘ nw { ‘ Tion'e . When at { ur we wi | Give thea i sight { the field f you Monday ant 8 Tuesday fol: | Thad seen and heard of the crowd. When I wa 2 fy ¥. they mie Kou for al Tkoow. My | the prisoner, and his ny, Win, Steliroy, aud Idress to which f have | & is Across the Fallvond cut fro the negro shai | Pratik Sciitoy.. Uaaw some of the’ persoga there tat 1 POE die teal antler Gerine sone de THE DEFENCE BEGINS TO SQUINM. Breatsa Wont know thelr uainvs. ‘Umm aataava that t ntrary, I feel thas very many of them unite | Mr, Bird asked if It was intended to connect | father ate breakfast at the same time L did. He had with me ta the hope that this polltical campaign, | this testimony with the prisoners now here been away W Wand got back. Twas up to t in which you seem to have assumed the position |” District Attorney Chamberlain—Not at all; 1 | tunuel twice that toraing, both tines after breakfast, of under, may prove to you and to the | have another object in view Taw father there, but he did not go with me there, troops of your command another Fredericks- | Mr, Bird—Then L submit it 1s a great hardship | The boy got a little confused under the rigid H.W. SLOCUM. | to these prisoners. These men are arraigned | and ad Tossed ng of Mr. Bird, After here and demand an examination, Itis hardly | a little retlection he corrected his statement, —— fair to go fishing around for evidence against | Twas up to the tunnel before breakfast, T went up The First Choice of the People for M other parsons and keep these men in custody there ou toy way home from my eistere,’ My father rst Choice of the People for May iberlain—We are the Judges of how | came arouud that way f the cow tur Alexander T, Stewart. Ipr our own testimony, and pro- | ahd be aud Crateley and M “ “ - ——_ i putit in in our own way. The dimeul. | together, That was before we had br Iwas Fsitte ae tes that Ile In our way are clear to all, We shall | eee pda _ A Little Comte Sones CE ETS Ce ares Adjourned until 9 o'clock to-morrow morning, ae a fet emente |” Mr. Hird—We merely raise the point now, and — é elve notice that if this Mshing for testimony is] ‘The First Choice of the People Arn" Oh de mater be?’ ¢ First Choice of the People for Mayor continued we shall be compelled to interpose 0 ) Time stip af the Boe toeracy, Py eet By RYE patho fo iatery Alexander T, Stewart. Nothing [hate Mke hard.Osted demoeracy, The witness was further questioned regarding —— My delicate phelinks have had a bad shock you see the riot, but persisted in her Ignorance of every THE MEEK-LYED CAMELS, Father can't run at the body and everything. She was final inissed - without getting anything of importance from ; Cnonvs—On dear, what can the matter be ? rh Two Boston Ladies Visit Ce Park ear, what ter be? A KNOW-NOTHING Noss. They Admire tts Beaution aud Especially Ou dear, how could I Mutter be? Janes Dempaey f the bosses in chase the Animals-The Camels Reciprocates Father can't run at the polls of a gang of colored laborers at the tunuel, was | On Wednesday two ladies from Boston Once Hiram I thought was a monster of wicked RYO E AR eLeRe ied ie visited Central Park, ‘They strolled on the Mall, Now for such a wise ruler kind Heaven I always bless, | avakenst re : bores 88 | admired * Auld Lang Syne," took a ride on the r vu I've turned every infant can quickly guese= tof the fre at uh Nticy.t of out to the | lake, and confessed tha Park was a worthy Father can’t run at the polls Ke . * y indeed | rival of the great Boston ( In fact, if it A silly old letter he wrote when he thought he'd ren and were ch : hundecd | Was only located in Loston they were not cer tea Marina (unre the Gaara te ert er on We the F company of tain but {t would excel the pride of the Hub, 1 " ace very quickly w pick has As . sere Ln eieue. | ‘Phen they went to the arsenal to see the animals. ather can’t run at the f \ ‘ prin ; Miss Richardson, who ts a dashing brunette, Tilva do ine Qusk Ce Adoatiag takiallon Ba LSE Ad Wise DEER HARGIS, (el) | wore a loveof ahat trimmed with the rarest of ; ne Bi earda follow by n nn Bt gutumn flowers and gras Thoy admired the | f 1 such old fogivs to r | sta We advised t : Carter the bears, the eag and then they Qui t tua cut toward i“ y 1 1 sho 4 1 to ¢ ate to her ) 1 i Ned SHOT IN CENTRAL PAL | ‘ ’ l ¥ | - | ' \ 1 fait | th | ; 4 Deposition of a Dying Man In hukets | | ja y Wh persons, an unt of | SHother gang of W , ! t | Sy i tall 1 1h THR MAN WHO P THROVAN THE KIOT loners ' horrid tel r WM dhe of r | ployed at the tunel, a y f ted M , noe f | ye nt only hid follows : erekou | aOR his Mand -on tie ou of hy Hef tots What I sa I Ch tt H ) kilfo wid. wa wtf ¢ flue th Mier its ‘ ok tft t t the t it f peu Iver any heard ‘ I got A Dueliat Sentenced, t with Twas 1 1 ny wis shantion wiil bea im La ‘ Hin That ten att My ek Peed | Re and titven w —— Folbed me ¢ p it 14 \ t i Neds At culver tr Park | t lf when 1 niet th ‘ ; daw from Wat owas d ' HEAD A wont, » new stl t Hy 1 tarted 1 A lor Ts plowaaty k vw yidia to Il THE Ye corder Hackett for the hi ET RIAL OF TWEED & CO, P STARS OF THE BAR REFoRD RECORDER WACKET?, Cou ator rt of General Se Not Extine euish ay had been down by Re-» aring of arguments or the motion of the District Attorney for tho sions to minutes before 11 John Graham's staggered Into the ¢ of thi urt room behind a1 tain of law books. He was soon follow W. Vv lerte nderpoel, Will n, John Graham artlett, Willard Bartlett, Aa 1 Edelsten, ex-Jud and John M. This army of New York's best lawyer rounded a large pile of law books, and en| into a seemingly deep study ¢ While thus engaged they wero Interry by the arri grossman at lar; al of the secession ¢ accompanied by Ju ddidate for€ Ring cases from the General Ses« the Oyer and 'Terminer. About e sur. thes, tod > Gare vin, Wheeler H. Peckham, Henry L. Clintong and the Hon. Edward Underhill, “Hats off im court!” announced the entrance of tho Ro« corder, who. mounted the bench, and promptly asked the District Atturuey whether Le wag ready. * BPECIAT, PRIVILEUES FOR 4 GREAT CLIENT, “Tf your Honor please,” said Judge Gary made a motion the other day for the trans these cases from this court to the Oyer a min trial. ‘The statute gives your the powe fer." District At lying, right before Kocorder—Had you not better single affec othe with regard to the ¢ r, beyond question, to order such r argument Fire is the cage of me. Twill » Wat case will t re: fon in tthe cases of Ingersoll, Tw 1 persons agains’ whou sli » been four dhe would make 1 rial Judge Garvin—T have outioned that because your Houor sald you would THE CO} REPUREICAN SINPT Tohn ¢ 1: This tt willed motions which are intended t re slinple and republican in. our wa el for the. defendants will proceed it with the usigos and ru ' like this should be presented to the Cour supported by a sworn statement Graham read the following affidavit: ndeimente pending againse lin. in this Cour € John Ge i and» thers, t 1 Court, of Hi tor trial t That the wild ave uted to rae part of woat Have allt with he 1 Mr. you have to say Wa. Ht. ¢ ham the aMdavit would arties that stood in the same ca Cook. He added: “I'd like t Judge Garvin JUDGE GARVIN'S REAS } y r hw I t , t {M Hall the transfer of that ca f them t r less ¢ Hall, and must invol neetion with his act the Mayor ixed up say whether tu If fr mmitted of tt tor de dlctaantas lt that t ud ferred, aud another of which Lf SQUARE I you, Mr. Graham, You ref cave of Mayor tia arcally. For iat reason [de do with’ the Ulal of the eharg v Dutt have. uo doubt that it Lw fan tues tore his frlead t would judge tue parttally weit | ver known Inore auxtous than {_am to try. these cases my opinion, cat be more odfous than tha vula'have bien peaking for over wix ois alt Nw be brought up wien Weure on. the eve uf miexcitt ahd upurtant ‘evection, Hut L have. «duty to per f T Wil perform ity without regard” ta fcudante for the. retoval of the casd to the Court of Oyer aud Termnere cided that untose the eansent of they District Attorney. should be fied thg \ttorueyy you can show aly reasou why wit ids which made o L t ’ thecase should be trauaterred the order will be 1usdey auduot otherwise, John Graham —The statute of 18 this Court a court of Jail deliv a level with the Court of Oyer and Tern this exception—that the Judges in that are inexperienced in criminal taw, as i by the frequent instances in which their ments have been reversed by the ( peals: Recorder Hackett—I quite agree wi conclusions, Your points are on recor hi Grabam (warmly) They. sele ri to indict usin, the foreman Jury being the Attorney-Ge court. THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL CHECKMA Recorder (to Judge Garvin) Lam w any further reasons you may ha: Judge Garvin (astunisled)—X at present tecorder Hackett uth Tremain looked dumbfounded, nted t ‘ held a consultat Judge ¢ able to cull any con The Pe Want A. Ty scewa ail 1 Mr. A. 'T AL ‘i i ‘ Hor 1 \ ' A { wi The Man tor Mayor fayor~a wan that docs not want