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TEEMS
DAILY, WEEKLY, AND SUNDAY
I'lIVC^TTI HUH -
ALFREdTrT CALHOUN,
Proprietor.
Twelve months, in advance $8 00
Six months, “ 4 00
Three months, “ 2 ()( >
One mouth, “ 75c.
(Vbxblt Enquirer, ono year 2 00
Sunday Enquijikr, one year 2 50
Sunday and Weekly Enquiiikr to
gether, one year.. •" 00
AdvcrlUliiK: Kates.
?.|Uar<*.
1 Week, Dully, * j) jjjj
1 Month, *• *
The above is with the privilege or a change
very tltroo months. For yearly carila a liberal »Ub-
oimt will be tnude.
Tho Weekly rates will invariably lo ono-tbird
rtho Dully.
When mi advertisement is changed more than
, nco in three months the advertiser will ho chnrg-
„1 with the cost or composition. Forolgu udver-
isers must puv ns do thoso at home.
j —Several temperance meetings were
| hold at Worcester, Massachusetts, yester-
j dnv. The clergymen of all the denomi-
! nations met for consultation. A resolu
tion whs adopted expressing sympathy
with any movement that tends to stop the
sales of liquor, hut the present movement
is not endorsed.
—A game of billiards of GOO poiuts,
French carom, for $2,000, was played in
New York Tuesday night, between Cy-
rille, Dion and Maurice Daly, at Tatnany
Hall. Daly run out in the 07th inniug,
Dion scoring 5+7. Highest runs—Dion,
05, 81 and 20 ; Daly, 01, 45 and 212—tho
largest single run ever made in a game of
that kind.
WASHINGTON.
<on<;ri.ssio\al.
ttennte.
Washington, March 4.—The Senate
considered tho liquor traffic, and the
commission on the transportation ques
tion. No action.
Carpenter beat Cameron, who wished
to push the Centennial Bill, aud after a
hearing the Louisiana Election Bill wan
SI IT FOR 8200 000 LIBIjL. reud. West asked Senator Carpeutor, if
he proposed to follow up his speech by a
motion to refer. Carpenter replied that
1 he was well aware of the fact that tho
i Senator from Louisiana wanted to Rpeak,
UFOItUA NEWS.
—The Constitution still pronounces tho
claim of Camp to a portion of the Atlan
ta city lots a hoax, and denies that Camp
b*'i'ii to Atlanta at all.
•A i, i - > in Lumpkin eats nil tho clitck-
tlrnt an catch. Probably ho gob
bles up the roosters because he doesn’t
like their spurs, and tho hens because
they cluck too often.
—Tho United Stutos Court for the
Northern District of Georgia opened in
Atlanta on Monday. Judge Erskiue pro-
sided. Eleven white men and three ue-
grota were sworn ns petit jurors for the
term.
Tho Fort Valley Minor says that Air.
W. A. Wiggins, of its place, lately ap
pointed Internal Keveuue Storekeeper ju
tho Fourth District of Georgia, is a wor
thy man and will make u good and faith
ful officer.
—The Herald tells of two young men
who wont from Atlanta to Augusta to light
a duel, but when they arrived at tho last
uied city, the chulleuger withdrew tho
challenge on the ground of his being a
married man, and tho other party readily
Hicqniesood. Who can say, now, that
|thero is no advantage in boiug married?
—A young man, whoso clothing was all
marked “Dykemau, tailor, Kimball House,
Atlanta, Georgia,” was arrested in Lon
don, England, a few days ago, for forging
a check, lie gave his name ns W. H.
itanlou, o^respondent of the New Yoik
Herald. That’s the way tho Herald puts
article with sensational heading.
But perhaps it is a cuto way of advertising
Dyke man.
-Tho Mayor of Lumpkin, Gn., last
week imposed fines on a number of p>
for shooting robins within tho iucor-
oratiou. Ho lined the hoys and lawyers
mo dollar ouch, aud “grown up persons’’
dollars. “Leastwise” that's tho way
;ho Independent makes it appear in its
separate reports of tho tines. Per-
aps iho lawyers got oft' so lightly because
t is their duly to make war on robbing in
ill plncos aud at all times.
—Gniues Chisolm obtained a writ of
\abeas corpus from Judge Cowart of tho
Jity Court of Atlanta, on Monday, and
ho application for bail under tho writ
ms to have been tried yesterday. The
Jerald understood that now ovidenco fa-
orable to Chisolm—showing that Bedell
lad made threats against him, and thut
'edell had a pistol and was about to lire
-hen Chisolm shot him—would bo iulro-
oed.
ALA1IA.11 A NEWS.
Tho city sexton of Montgomery re
torts interments of 12 whites ami GO
•lacks in the cemoteries of thut city for
la mouth of February.
—Quito a number of horses and mules,
lortgugod by “all cotton” planters, were
ild at auction in Montgomery on Tues.
. iy and brought rather hotter prices than
iuoh stock bus lately been selling for.
—Tho Mougomory Hexes of yesterday
cfers to a rumor, current on tho streets
n Tuesday, that ouo of the local bank-
ig institutions of its city was unable to
doom its paper. It did not Ray which
Mr*. Unities* fliarKCi vs. Judge Hit'
roll—Wlint the New York World
Says About It.
Washington, March 4.—Mrs. Gaines !
has sued Caleb Cushing for $200,(MM) Li
bel. In a dispatch in the Sunday New
Orleans papers tho word “she quotes”
was made “he quotes." Tho following
funny thing is from *the New York World
in regard to Mrs. Gaines' charges. “The
writer yesterday called on Mr. Cushing
and asked him what he thought the quasi
charges brought by Mrs. Gaines against
Judgo Durell. Mr. Cushing said that his
position as counsel in tho case prevented
him from revealing professional secrets,
but lie felt at liberty to state that ho knew
of nothing in Durall's conduct, in relation
to Mrs Gaines that was dishonorable, or
at all unbefitting an upright Judge. He
wondered that any importance had been
placed in Airs. Gaines’ statement. It was
take that she had any money in her
control, and all her story amounted to was
Stone, who had money, told Mrs.
Gniues, who h id no money, that unless
they put their purses together and give
Judge Durell the money which neithor
of them had, Mrs. G. would lose her case.
They did not attempt the rather
impossible feat. There was no proof
that, if they hud ottered a bribe to Judgo
Duiell, that he would have taken it; aud
Mrs. Gaines won her case, despite Stone's
prognostications, that bribery was the
sine qua non of her doiug so. Clearly,
according to Mrs. Gaines’ story, the only
guilty person in tho matter was Stone,
who proposed purchasing justico and
suborning tho judioial ermine.
Mrs. Games’ reasoning which induced
her to briug the churges she had made
against Durell, was a specimen of wo
man's logic. Stone told her to bribe Du
iell. If sbo had been in a position to
take Stone’s advice, which she was not,
Durell would have fallen like auother
Adam, to the temptation of another Eve.
Tho only pussiblo sequitur, of course,was
that Durell was oven more guilty of mal-
feazanoe in office, from the very fact that
bo did not take a bribo, which was never
ottered him, than ho would have been had
ho accepted ono. As to the alleged state
ment of Mrs. Gaines that ho (Mr. Cush
ing) had also advisod her to bribe Judge
Durell, it is an entire fabrication. He
never thought it nocossary, nor contem
plated any such arrangement ; und ho
cortninly would never have advised her to
put, wlnit sho did not possess, where it
would do tho raoxt good.
NVboa asked whether ho had been, or
would be, summoned as a witness in tho
impeachment of Judge Durell, Mr. Cush
ing expressed grout alarm at tho prospect
of taking tho two days journey to Wash
ington, but comforted himself with the
atsuraueo that, as his testimony would bo
iu favor of tho Judgo, those who wore
conducting tho impeachment would tuko
good euro that he was kept out of the way.
STIUlSilS AND RIOTS.
KTIUK1NU WOlt It 11 LX OX THE
tlKUTIX'U LIMA
Journal that Gen. Warner, tho President
’»') tons of iron la-»t week, which
Doit.* 1 u clear profit of $15 per ton. and
yet h.-i 1 tho iron lower than it could bo
ought North.
A so.uup, whom the Alabamian calls
the mo.ine.it sue ik in the world.” broke
into tue Episcopal Church in Greenville
st week, and stole all tho valuables he
‘uld carry off. Ho ought to bo arrested
recogui
—A Gne little boy of ton yews, named
lussell St. J. Parker, was scalded to
•Jiitb in Mobile, on Saturday last, by the
contents of a boiling soap kettle, which
i nn against while at play, overturned
nn l f«-ll in tho slippery aud soothing
inpouud.
and ho would not deprive him of tho
privilege.
The motion of Carpenter to lay aside
all pending orders aud take up the Lou
isiana bill, wail agreed to.
Carpenter said he proposed to go di
rectly to business, and not waste the time
of tbo Souato iu any glowing speech.
He would repeat nothing he had said on
former occasions, but would endeavor to
single out matters iu oonneotion with tho
Louisiana case, upon which both himself
and the Senator from Indiana agreed, aud
would endeavor to show that all the cir
cumstances required tho passngo of tho
bill proposed by him.
He roviowed the election returns, and
said it was clearly shown that McEnery
had received 1,000 majority, though he
did not hold the election was a fuir one.
As Congress had already authorized an
investigation into Louisiana nft’airs, it
seemed to him as if it had gone so far in
those matters, that it must proceed and
settle them.
Ho referred to the argument of the
Senator from ludiana, Morton, ns to tho
Supreme Court of the State having decid
ed in favor of Kellogg, and said the testi
mony before tho Senate Committee show
ed such a state of fruud os would set aside
tho decision of any tribunal.
Senator Morton, from the Committee
on Privileges and Elections, iu his report
in regard to the Presidential election iu
Louisiana, had staled that the Lynch
board, in making the count and declaring
the election of electors, had no legal ex
istence upon which it could count votes.
The Senator had shown that no validity
attached to the action of the Lynch board
in the count for Presidential electors,and
both Houses of Congress actod upon that
report. Senator Morton now claimed
that tho Supreme Court of the State had
decided that the Lynch board was tho le
gal board, but he (Carpenter) callod at
tention to tho fact that tho decision was
made before the report of tho Senator
from ludiana, above referred to. He
(Curpeuter) regretted that Senator Mor
ton was not in his seat to-day, and ho
would pass from that branch of his ar-
gument.
IIow would Congress look bofore the
country, after deciding that the election
was void as to the Presidential election,
but legal as to Stute officials ! Tho Sena
tor (Morton) having led tho Senate
through tho first phase, now seeks to load
it in a eouuter movement. The Supremo
Court of Louisiana was a part of tho
State Govormnoui, and when Congress
was to impure whether the government of
that State was republican or not, the Su
preme Court could no more settle it than
the Logisluturo could. That power was
vested exclusively iu Congress.
Again, the question was not a judicial
ono at all, but a political one, and must
be determined by tho political department
of the Government. The Supreme Court
! of the United States couldu’t settlo it,
and a decision of tho Supremo Court of
not to kuow that tho President had no
such power.
Carpenter said ono of the greatest
pleasures of his life was to add to his
storo of information, and ho would listen
as a faithful disciple at tho feet of his
master, when tho Seuator from Now Jer
sey would undertake to show him that,
under tho Constitution, tho President, of
his own volition, and without a proper
record from tho State, could determiue
that nn insurrection existed in n State,
aud proceed to put it down. A court of
justice could not deoide a case between
the Sonator and himself of $200, without
a record. NVhy ? Because it was a court
of record, and had a seal, and cortaiuiy
tho United States was a court of
record. The mere cry by telegraph to tho
President “Como and help us,” was not
sufficient for his interference. Ho (Car-
pontor) believed that, if the Federal
troops were withdrawn from Louisiana,
Kellogg’s government would not stand.
There were two questions involved as to
the passage of this bill: first, have wo
the power to pass it? second, tho expedi
ency of passing it. Tho Constitution pro
vides that each State shall have a
republican form of government, aud
one of the first requisites of a
republican form of Government, is
that its offices shall bo filled by persons
just emerged from a civil war, would it bo
safe to say to them, when you hold your
elections noxt Fall, get in by fraud or any
way; there is no power to put you out.
What greater license could be given to
tho lawlessness of tho land? That ele
ment would say, if that is your game wo
wo will play it. They would place it un
der tho sanction of Congress. Such no
tion in tho present condition of some of
tho Southern States, would bo tho most
dangerous thing that could l>u said. The
Senator from ludiana (Morton) had said
pass this bill, and thorn would bo blood
shod inLouisiana.Hesnidthe Republicans
woro all iu favor of Kellogg,and tho respec
table Democrats were all in favor of him.
If thoy are who is to cause the blood
shed; ho could be olectod fairly nnd Con
gress sustain him iu his high offico. Tho
speech of tho Seuator (Morton) about
bloodshed, excoodod anything ho (Car
penter) had heard sinoo ho loft tho
nursory.
It reminded him of tho old song, “Foe,
fi, fo, fum ; I smell tho blood of an Eug-
mun!’’ Blood, blood, blood, blood! ho
said four times. Did tho Senator expect
to inilueuce the Semite by nny such ar
gument ? There would bo no blood shed
by another election. Tho Government
could enforce it by tbo army and navy if
necessary. If not, this nation had better
, , , „„ , furl its baunor, and put its utt’airs into
elected by the people, ihe power of | th<J httnd , o(
a roceiver.
Congress was derived from tho constitu- |
lion, not from tho tumults in Louisiana,
or tho frauds of Durroll, or tho Lyuoh
Board, nnd he asked every Seuator
within his hearing, if Congress had not
tbo power to give tbo people of that
State what they had been oheatod out of,
viz. : Tho right to elect tboir own officers?
Should our government be overthrown,
it would bo by tbo steady encroachment
of Congress. Wo should see at all times
that each Stute had a republican form of
government, or any Senator declaring
thut Congress bad not the power to inter
fere now, would doclure to Kellogg aud
bis followers, “you can repeat this thing
iu 1871, in 188b or iu 1884, Congress has
no power to set it right.”
It Congress had no authority to inter
fere, then tho McEnery government could
sot itself also by force. Violence was as
good a title os fraud, aud a little more
manly. When a man skulks bououth the
soiled robes of a Federal judge, ho has
not tho muuliuosR of ouo who goes out
with sword iu hand lo maintain his posi
tion,
There was no question in his mind as
to tbo power of Congross to take up tho
constitution of any State, and declare
whether or not it was Republican iu form.
The power of Congress was supreme.
Ferry, of Conn., said he must differ , , . ,
, , ... f i question should bo settled
from tho gentleman os to tho power of | 1 ^ .
Congross.
Carpenter said he was sorry tho Senator
would stand in his place aud virtually say,
if Kellogg aud his friends joined bauds
and detiod tho people of tho State for fifty
years, Congross could not itilorfero. Did
he moan to say if a band of ruffians should
seize tho State, that Congress could not
then interfere ?
Ferry said ho meant to say that, under
our system of government, there is within
the State a remedy for usurpation of gov
ernment, or elso a republican form of i Thurman Raid ho also desired
erty to go out of its usual course to do
cido it.
MAItKETS.
Mr. Justico Millor delivered tho opiu- ! ,IY TKIiK( JIt,li*|| TO EX'Ul'III Lie.
nhiiitftou Item*. Money nnd Slock Market*.
ras issued this morning fori London, March 4.—Consols 02^n92j.
Congressman Potman, of New fives 4 jj. Erie 42^.
Wnnhiutcloit Henan.
A warrant
tho arrest of
Alabama, for assault with intont to kill
Senator Boutwcll lias dyspepsia uml
sore eyes.
Senator Edmunds' physicians recom
mend a Southern tour.
Chiof Justico Waite was seated to-day,
after taking the iron-clad oath.
Congressman Pelham was privately ar-
reutod to-day, taken beforo Judgo Snell,
aud gavo local bail in $5,000 to appear on
Saturday next to answor a warrant sworn
out by the younger Busteed.
Tho now Postmaster of Atlautu (Bard)
had an interview with the Presidout to-
j, March 4.—Routes GbfaOOc.
Nkw York, March 4.—Stocks active
ami lower. Money 3. Gobi 11 J. Ex
change—long 484), short 488. Govern
ments dull nnd lower. State bonds quiet
ami nominal.
Nkw York, March 4.—Money easy at
Dill; exchange 484; gold 11‘a); govern
ments active aud lower; Status‘uniat nnd
nominal.
■■rovlnion Markets.
Nkw York, March 4— Flour dull nnd
unchanged. Wheat quiet and steady.
Corn quiet aud firm. Pork firm, $15.75a
15.80. Lard steady-stoaiu b,). Freights
firm.
Louisville, March 4.—Flour quiet ami
unchanged. Corn quiot aud uuuhnuged.
^ Provisions quiet nnd weak. Pork $14.50.
Mutter. In U H.I.I. U „ crm should,™ tij, oloor rib 81, clear 8;
8po< Ini to Atlanta Herald.] I,nrd !l|. Whiskoy Htl.J.
Wah,unotoN) March it.-Tho IS,mi light cu.oun.Ai., March (.-Floor dull and
unchanged. Corn dull at 58n(52. Pork
Carpenter thou road from aspoech in ado
by Kellogg in tho Senate iu 1808, iu
which ho said that all tho people of
the Stute wauted was a fuir election, nnd
whenever any thiof was in offico under
the gtiiso of being a Republican, ho should
be put out. Tho people wauled a fuir
election, oven if it bo by Federal Intoifer-
In concluding his argument, Carpenter
said Congress was in a predicament where
it could not stop. Louisiana has but one
Scnutor hero, and tbe Constitution says
she should huvo two. Tho Senator from
New Jersey, Frelinghnyseu, hud suid he
would not vote to scut Pincbbaek, and by
that ho declared there would be no Repub-
| Mean government in Louisinua. By seat
ing Pinchback, the Senate would have to
recognize Kellogg. By seating McMillan,
it would taavo rocogni/.nd McEnery ; but
by refusing to seat either, it doolarcd
there had been no eloctiun there. Was it
wise to adjourn this troublesome question
iuto tbo troubles of a Presidential elec
tion ? It was not possible that there
would bo the same uuuuimity (hen that
thorn was last timo, for as ho scanned
tho p. 1 itic.nl horizon he tlimight he could
see more than one candidate, and it was
not improbable that the vote of Louisi
ana might change tho whole thing. The
nnd put
out of tho way, as it was neither wiso nor
prudent to Adjourn it. lie had no per
sonal feeling in the mutter, his rolutioitH
with Kellogg having been of the most
friendly character, lint bo wanted tbo
Congress of tho United Slates to do its
duty, ami order an honest eloc.tion, so
that people could have their choice.
Freliughuysou said lie desired to speak
ou tho subject, but yielded to Cameron,
who movod that the Seuuie proceed with
the consideration of the Centennial bill.
speak
government is a total failure. | on tho Louisiana affairs, and hoped the
Carpenter said, suppose tho people of I Centennial would go over till to-morrow.
Connecticut should declare they would f Conkling said the Senator from Penn-
have a monarchy ; that thoy were sick sylvania, Cameron, was uuxious to got
aud tired of republican government: and 1 away, and it was due to him to take up
that their Governor and Legislature | and Uisposo of the Coutuimi d lull to-day
should romain in offico for life, would ! if possible.
Congress then hnve power to iuterforo ? ; Cameron’s motion to take up the Con-
Ferry said tboro was a remedy for that. ; teuniul bill was agreed to.
Where tho wholo poople of a Stute pre
ferred a monarchical govern men t, it was
entirely n different thing. Ho heartily
concurred with Senator Carpenter th„'t i if " went to lha! ou the
The ponding motion being t-• refer it t*
the Committee on Appropiintious, Tlmr
man spoke against referring the bill, am
commenced in the Houuto early this morn
ing aud closed at live tills oveuiug by an
overwhelming victory for Idaho. Tho
vote on confirmation stood, yeas 32, nays
17.
Caiuoron, Logan, Carpenter and Gor
don, made speeches for Bard, and Ramsey
and Jonos, contra.
Freetuuu opened tho tight with a piece
of Farrow artillery, a printed slip contain
ing editorials from the Ac in Era while it
was on the Democratic line. Numerous
dispatches from Farrow. Romulus Moore,
auci “sieh" like, were read, but to no
avail, l’ho Bard of Idaho is jubilant, but
eool. He intimates that the heads of the
present employees in tbe Atlanta post-
office must be rolled iu thu basket.
He called to-night oil Grant, Stephens
and Gordon, and thanked them for tho
stand taken in hiH behalf.
Bard’s friends are now moving on the
breast a m ks of t lie ring,and tho President
to-day stated, if by implication, that Far
row could be connected with the rockless
expenditures of malfeasance, he would in
stantly remove him. Ho remarked that
the pluu of lus administration was to have
all the offices administered with honesty
and iutogiily, and that rings, thieves nnd
plunderers should receive punishment.
it is believed that Dawson A. Walker
will be nominated for tho Fuitnd States
District Attorney.
Robb is mysteriously visiting Grant.
Adkin's sculp seems to bo what he wants.
It is safe to say that soveral changes
will be made in Georgia very soon.
Stephens is not so well to night.
FOREIGN' INTELLIGENCE.
X’OVA MOTIA.
Halifax, March 5. Last Saturday, sev
en more bodies of tho victims killed by
the colliery explosion, were recovered
from No. I slope. Homo of tho bodies
were at once identified by tho widows
aud friends of the dead. Tho llesli on the
bodios wus much shrivelled, but tho cloth
ing, lmir and boards, were quite natural,
and not at all burned.
AL'STIIIA.
Vienna, March •(. -DoL’huinhorii is
here in perfect health.
NIMIA.
Madrid, March 4. —Tbo aggressive
movement of the Curlists has served to
arotiHo the feeling on thu part of tho peo
ple to the aid of tlm government, and
by all means in their power to crush tho in
surrection. Contributions of money and
clothing arc pouring in, and all theatres
iu this city have given pmformauces in
aid of the cause. Telegrams have been
received from the Provincial authorities,
offering moral nnd material supp.rt,
Tho latest advices forum Bilboa teporl
no ohaugn in tho situation. Tho (Jurlists
keep up their bombardment. About 2(H)
sin l's are thrown into Ihe city daily.
EX'LILA X l>.
London, March 4 - Dr. Forbes Win
slow, a well known medic
good demand at $14 50. Lard firm,
at 8]a8| for steam; 8^184 for kettle. Ba
con firm, at (5) tor shoulders; 8|a8j) for
clear rib sidou; 8$ for clear sides. Whis
key strong at 1)0.
Cotton Markets.
New York, March 4.—Cotton quiot nnd
Grin; sales 2020 hides ; uplands .
Orleans 10).
Futures opened ns follows : March I. ,
Il5-u; ; April 15 17-52u2l-52 ; M..\ 11 .
lGulG 5 52 ; Juno 1«• 4>1A ; July 10;,'.
Nkw Y’ork, March 4.—Not receipts
125(1, gross 8704.
Futures closed steady; sales 21, -'O
bales, ns follows : March 15ja9-52; A1 •»1
15 0-1 (inID-52; May 10 l-Hjft 1-1(1; Jt, ..
1(5 7-Ida 15-52; July 1(5 23-52..?.
L'ottou quiet and tirineY; sales 8055, >.|
lUja}.
Liverpool, March l — p. m.—Cotton
dull and unchanged ; Rules 12,000 bale ,
including 2,000 for spo. uUtn ii and . \
port.
Hales of Orleans, nothing below low
middlings, shipped March and Apiil, 8.1.
Later.- Of the nab s to-day 7000 bales
wore American. Hales of uplands, noth
ing below good ordinary, deliverable May
and Juno, 7 11-1(5.
Liverpool, March I, p. m.— Hales ol
Uplands, nothing below good ordinary,
shipped February and March, 74*1; do*.,
do., deliverable in April and May, 7§d;
sales of Orleans, nothing below low mid
tilings, shipped in February, 8d; do., do .
deliverable in May aud June, 8d.
Savannah, March 4. — Cotton nom
inal; net receipts 1,911 halos; exports to
Great Britain 2584; continent (550; halts
1141.
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA.
A Masonic M Gift Concert 1
10,000 Prizes to be Given Away,
Amountln^ to $250,000, nil in t'urmir).
XII IS I’nt.’rpri*'* l» ruuiliitli*.! b> tlm M A SON If
Lt AHUt I \TION OK NoiiFOl.l
licrily "( Urn Vir^inu I egimIuI.i.. («.l
In* |)lirju»IMt u( raiHlii;
<11 ]...
II... MASONIC TMII'LK,
I Mui< l
IuiniIiij, Ihe 5th of )luj, IN74,
nml in. fin tlmr p.Mlp<>a«'iimnl in ^uar.nti'«
LIHi’ OF 111KTS.
Oim (Irani! Caali (lift
One (Iriunl Call. Uift
Him lln.n l ' 'iu.lt Colt
Onn <1 raii'l (
r.iinl Pi.«h (L'l
.'.tali Hi(m. '
'.•lel Total, le.UU'J OittB, nil cnoli .. . tiiAJ.f
1mI.i Ti.-U.ta, f/»; Half Tick oft, Cli
—II TlrkPla Tnr V> •: Tlrkot*. f<.r U""
IIIRK(JlOKS ANIl ADVISORY HOARD
In. I, liopor, Praanl*in(; .lulln II (L>i|>i.
,n.f. i; .1 a Hi' , 1 l.i'ift!., Dali , II Tnyl-.i. *■
j Louisiana was not entitled to u moment’s | the Htnto government of Louisiana
New Yolk, March 4.—Tho laborers ou ' consideration. Tho Court had never at
Brooklyn Reservoir Works, aud Homo- j tempted to decide tho question directly,
stead, L. I., have struck for increased but all it did say in effect was thnt tho
wages. More than half are Italians, who j Lynch Board was the legal Board,|but uev- I
are willing to work at the old rate. Tho
Irish nml German laborers assuulted nnd
drove the Italians off. and many were in
jured. The steam shovels, and other ma
chinery was broken. The po'iee sent to
quell ino disturbance woro assaulted and,
j for a time, driven off. Alter shooting one
—George Everson, from the Teoumsoh rioter, tho ringleaders were captured, and
Furnace, l«H« lUo Montgomery 1 u , e others dispersed.
ihe Munufactuiing Company of Glou
cester, N J.. discharged 700 men, Tues
day, who asked for higher wages. The
men, accompanied by their wives nnd
children, surrounded the residence of the
huperiutoudoot, at which thoy hurled mis-
s les of every description, nnd threatened
to tiro the mill, but were finally dispersed
and thou—released 0 „.
z mce. That’s what tho law of that State '
by tho police, after a severe struggle, i
which iniuv heads were broken.
tbo root and branch of usurpati.
could not agreo ns lo remedies.
Carpenter said in a debate of this kind
the position of fighting in tho ,
open hold, against an ambuscade. The
gent had his views, blit would not lot
them out. If ho 1ms a plan, why not let
it be known? Ho (Carpenter; was like
MoCullen in ono thing—not wedded to
any particular plan. [Laughter, j Jf tho
Seuutor had u pluu, i.ud it was better
than the ono ho (Carpenter) proposed, ho
was ready to support it, as soon as the
Sonata would remove the seal of confi
dence from it.
said whether that Board acted honest
ly or corruptly.
Tho Senator from Indiana (Morton) 1
had rested his caso upon two points of
a. - '* u uu, “ u k nu “»' ’—■* ehincr\ was broken. The no ice sent to the decision of tho State Supreme Court,
■ Do ran against while at play, overturned • ., , , nn .i the reeounition of the Kellogg gov-
*’• Wl in lh0 “««>“•>• Bnd t00lbiu « I * "" r ° “ 88 " ’ erom60 , by llm President of tbo Foiled
States. On a former occnsion im (Car-i
porter) had stated that a proper case had ‘
■T, U<i ?- ,' Var T’. tha 1 r a,C ‘ 0n ' 1 ' Ihe Mumifactming Company of Glon- “ever l*eeu hnide out for live President's ’
!•»() tons of iron la-»t week, which _ v , , , , action, and tho Senator from Indiana got
on his high horse to illustrate his fidelity j
to tho Administration—a thing eutirely
unnecessary for him to bolster himself |
up in Executive favor
nouncing somebody else —
ing short. Suppose General Grant! ,a 3' ,n(l '
did misconstrue a statute ? Did it make 1 troo l ,s * nl ,<
; him a worse man? Not at all, aud ho j e< ^ >0 ^ nou rMll ‘ '•
t ^ „ I (Carpenter; protested against tho Senator < HflI°ulty. J ho Hupi.
i iki; IX UOSTOX’. ^ Morton, declaring that there had been
Boston, March 4.—A tiro broke out nu attack upon the President, when ho
Lis tirst shot the breech-pin of thiTpuii— | U<is morning in tho Eastern Railroad (Oarpentor) pointed out a misconstrue*
a cheap hiugle-l)tirr .1 shot gun—bl.-> out I freight sheds, in East Boston. Loss will tion of a statute. Such justices as Mans-
m on lho Lead wi i: such $120,000, of which tho Eastern | ff e ld, Story aud Marshal would sit and j (,oveI
stftre Ills skull ami mangle | llai | road | OKSeH nr0 $60,000, upon which ; i iaten f or days to an argument to show ' cou,d not * bocanH ° l oJerhl b
dtu'stuiiding would be (tmt there should be
an i ppropriu!ion for thu celebration, and
this ho opposed on the ground that Con
gress had no power under the ('oiisiitii-
tion to vote money for such purpose.
Adjourned.
llou«c.
'I tio Cheap Transportation I ill was de
bated without any remit.
C)GK|HMl(‘
Hav
CtllA.
Iteported It 11 led
Mai cli I
i tho
-day
— V little boy, NY.liter Engrain, neci-
lent oily shot himself with a gun, near j
last Saturday. When making
and stnick him on tho head
ferocJ us lo tract
his face in a dreadful
which he died shortly afterwards,
Niritt5.ni; corn
Washington, March 4 — T’l
long ponding Bar tom oyer caw
which it was oxpoctod would i
excise laws iu many States,
disjiosed of by a Supremo Court opinion,
of which tho following is (tie substance:
l Miial and ordinary legislation of States
Tbo Senator (Ferry; concurred with : r6f , u | llt j„ K m - prohibiting tbo sulc of iu-
toxioutiug liipiors raises no question,
under the Constitution of llie United
usurped by JCel.ogg and upheld ^*y * HtutoH, prior to the Fourtoeiith Aiuuud-
ustaiuod at this hour by i mont of lhat instrument, as to tho
1 ho wunl- right to sell such liquors. Not ono of
I ed to know what remedy there wins for the privileges and iuimtinites of the
difficulty. Tho Supremo Court of tho Clt j zen9 of tho United States, whhby
J State is in tho conspiracy with Kellogg, that amendment States are forbidden to
and would not inaugurate any govern- nbridgo. But if a caso wore presented in
I meat for reform. The Legislature was in which a person owning liquor or other
j the conspiracy, and it would not do so. property at the time the law was pussod
ernuient would not, and tho people by a Stato abolishing or prohibiting any
•ties,reporting thut. I
has been killed by some
San Qiiecntoii battalion
said th it his body was I
ago de Cuba, where it ■
after which it was limit'd
govor
cut at all,
The liciilior
London, March 2. Saintt h were filed
im Saturday iu several places on the ic*
ceipt ol the news of the \eidict ui the
Tichboriie case. At Waidour, Wiltshire,
>i e .imoii burst, nnd several persons were
killed and wouiidod.
Some Democratic journala duplure the
veuliet and deuounee Clii'il Justice Cock*
burn lor nufairnoss in his conduct of tho
trial, and quote against him the criu :isms
of t’.aleb Lushing,
THE BEGT ADVICE
the (
i in let rat ini
from
TELEGRAPH !<’ XOTI5N.
they have no insurance. A train of tw
I ty loaded freight cars wore burned. Tho
, loss may exceed this amount, as it is very
‘ difficult to estimate the value of the
Railroad difficulties "• th f ro ight destroyed. A largo building, com
posed of brick aud wood, was thoroughly
gutted. The fire was caused
br liking of a carbov «f vitrol.
—The Ei
its employees have Leon adjusted,
trains are running regul »rly.
—Rev. Jacob Knapp, the famous uni-
Vers 'tl preacher, died at Rockford, 111.,
yesterday ; aged 74.
—The failure ot' Chailos Zap Da, cuttou
ftinl commission merchant, of New Or
leans, is reported, stating tho exchange
buyers lose $125,000. N.» cotton shipped
covering the hills drawn.
1 ho womens’ temperance crusade iu
Chicago has been virtually itb md. ued.
the
WEATHER.
'jilbiUUt'A.—For the South Atlantic ! States, except Senator FrolinRhuy
them whoro they woro iu error, while a
Justice of tho J'cace would knock you
down for suggesting that ho may have '
erred.
Ho (Carpenter; denied that ho had made
, any attack upou tho President.
Referring to tho argument of tho Sena- i
tor fiom Now Jersey, Frelinghnyseu, as
I to tho power of tho President to act in
I putting down insurrection, when ho was
satisfied himsolf that it existed, Carpenter
said thoro was but ono man iu the I'uitod
8t itos northwest and north winds, gouer-
* v *n before it had taken ».i v definite ally clear weather and falling tomporaturo.
bum. At a mooting of tlie ladi •■* inter- For the Gulf States, east of the Mississip-
o&tcd in the cause to-day. s.iiue of the
most promiuant movers iu the matter nn-
“OQneod their intouti<
attempt
Tennessee and lower Ohio valley,
and
7vi7g up tui *»
j paitly cloudy weather.
entertained such an opinion, and that was
Andrew Johnson. He maintained that
ho was tbo United States ; that ho was tho give it to infants,
power to interpret the Constitution.
Frelinghuyson said the Senator i Cnr-
levelled at ttem. Tho powers of tho
Federal Government were sovoroign, ex
cept as limited by tiie Constitution, as
thoso of tho C'/.ur of RusGu. Congress
could declare war tomorrow against any
uatiou, with or witlio;
tax tho last dollar from the pockets of tho
people, or establish female suffrage, and
put women in tho m my. 'J h-* great ar
gument made iu the Press, particularly,
wus tho inexpediency of ordering a now
eloctiou, on the ground that it would tie a
dangerous precedent; liut it was not sound
logic. Calomel was a dangerous medi
cine, nnd ns well might it bo said that be
cause doctors gave it to grown men they
at the
probable effect of Congress saying it could
do nothing. Look at the present condi-
sale of it,it would bo a very grave question
as to whether such law would not be in
consistent with the provisions of that
amendment which forbids a Stute to de
prive any citizen of life, liberty or prop
erty without due process of law,
It could Beforo tho Court attempts to pre
sent that question. It fails to do it,
huHcnuse tho pica, which is taken as
true, does not stato iu duo form and by
positive allegation tho time when defend
ant becarao the ownnr ot tho liquor sold.
I.lcvcn liidimis Killed.
•San Antonio, Feb. 28. It is now fully
ascertained that eleven Indiana nnd one
squaw woro killed in the recent light oil
the doiiblo fork of the Brazos. Lieuten
ant Tumor, of the Tenth Cavalry, one of
tho party, narrowly escaped death. He
had a cartridge in his right po
was split by an arrow.
DP. TUTT’S HAiR DYE
which
SUIT NKWS
New Yoi.h, March I.
Mu
los
Second—Because tL
that this is a made up
opinion of this Court
tutional questi
of lacks necessary to ru
ithoi
(cord satisfies us
j to obtuin the
\ grave cousli-
t the existence
i that question,
the Supreme
from Hamburg lor New York, en
countered terrific gul.", nil 1 becoming
leaking put back to South Hampton. Tho
steamship Mozol, which left South Hamp
ton yesterday, took the Silesia s mulls,
ami her pUHttougor* w.II go forward by tin*
Thuriugu.
New Ouli
demand; middlings
80 expoi to Gn
4,800—laht evening
Mai
of tho Stato to which the writ of
is directed has not considered tho
penter’s) information was very limited, ^ tion of these Southern States. Jluviug question, this Court will i