Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1872-05-08 page 1 |
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... ... COLUMBUS. WEDNESDAY, MAY S, 1872. VOL. XXXIII,. xrr ho OHIO STATE JOURNAL H1 up i llJtfh, Vrnrl mihI t'hiipel M. (!OMLY & HMITH: rrin.mtiem ash Hiohitftob. N. (ONLY l',ilHr. "tiii(fisMirTTi:n (litnKi.KY" l whnt the erinni.fi rail liim. Tut'. WcRtbote nliiJfH by the (.eu'winn of the Democratic National Convention, hut tT (ha: quefl&oit U narrowed down toft contest botwwn Ornnt nml Greeley,' the Went hot e will (to for Orcolcv deeiilcdlv. ;. . Tiik Akron Ik-aeon come to un daily market "Please X.' A copy of the State Journal, addrwwd to the Itcncon, lenvcn the Columbia l'oHtotfice regularly, imd if it not received tho fault in elsewhere. t 11. (j., wo take it, very clearly indicate Iiih intention in tin' Tribune of tho fith not to Ik choked off the paper hy fenr thiiigH to "annoy und irritate" may lie, "quoted iih rnming fro,' lK!" f editor." Cleveland and other Ohio piijrK ajf jtmt now engaged in ahstra Min tlw material points of the lht i jn of the Coinriiissioner of ltai1rojK andTele-ip-nhlm. The Hpatk Jejunal puhlinhed thettamo niiitttVrffiilloi' form over four irom advnnee sheet. i "I'd tor tho Democratic; parly Iff tutt mm payx ail ucihh. Motto for the Liberals: I bir final hope Ip Hat despair. Motto for the Republican party : Truth i w impossible to bo coiled by any outward touch an the sunbeam. The Cincinnati Knquircr 41101c wiiti-mentH of the prow on the Cincinnati nominations. Tinier the head of "llcpubli. can proas" it has just three pajHira the loiiiHvillc Coiiunereial, good enough 11c-publicnn for iih; the New York Sun, which in a Standing diNgrucp tojournnl-ism of any kind; and tho Now York Kvcn-ing Port, which in u highly respectable 'Liberal" Free TradeAnti-Adminixtra-tion pajK-r. Thin U what U called independent journalism unrestrained by the fear of of lice. Men and brethren ! we live in nn age of development!) Darwinian and otherwise. Here we have had the New York Tribune talking about IWoilicc .ditoro, und the sin of allowing writers for thepretto lie trammeled by holding office. No winner la honest (ireclcy uciiniiialed for the Presi Honey than u howl U rained along the whole line, charging persecution, heratwe a Trilnine correspondent htn beentlw-miR-ied from the clcrknhip of a Congres-tioual eoinmiltee for tniporting the Cincinnati nominations. The editor of the Cincinnati Commercial, under the weight and gravity of other rare, ban forgotten to wild u a lit ofex-ofliec-hohlerH and othermercenaricH in attendance upon the Liberal Convention. Thin oniiiwion U on; we can l-ai with equanimity, in view of the C unmcreiarH statement that the bargaining politicians were nutucroiiH enough to get entire con trol of the Convention, and make itn notni nation. After nil, jierbapHWo nhould not have been able to publish nit the nnmex without icsuing a nuppleinent. The Cincinnati Kmpiirer wivh: The friendrtof (ieiicral Cox in the Ohio ilelegation probably lo.u the nomination 10 that gentleman by ftlcying thrir pnmr ItHiptlw tw m Men rcpi-esenting the Iowa delegation, twenty-two in number, had a conference with home of the Ohio leaders who have ninee been ho dingunled with the mull. They expressed their deire to vote in the commencement for icneral Cox, but were told by Ohio not to do it, that there wan a belter plan. Thin plan wan 'Mo wait until the Convention was tired out between Jtavln, Trumbull and AdauiH," and then "at the opjtortunc moment Iowa could fpring the name of Governor Cox," when everybody -hould raine a yell and whoopVm-up, and carry Cox through with a whirl. Hut, xay thcKmpiircr, rather endly "It is needles to xay that that time never rainc." No. Meantime Blair and Jlrown appeared upon the wene and eonHiimmaleil the bargain which brought out (Jreeley and ttrnt.. i'ttt.Nr;vrnm. A delegation of gentlemen invaded the StatE .lurns.vi, editorial sanctum yesterday, bearing a large packago wrapped hi yellow oil-eloth. This mysterious pack-utre was solemnly unrolled, in impressive und oppressive fileiiee, and an enormous Tin JMpier developed itself. Mr. J. R St. Clair then stepjs'd forward and delivered Inmsclf substantially as follows: Mil. Kiutoii: I am commissioned on Itelialf of the Grand Junction Kbcncwr South Public Lauo Temierancc and Auxiliary Graham Bread Association to prc -cnt ' you with this Tin Dipper, which is the pattern that has liccti adopted hv the Grand Junction Klwiwier South Public Lane Temperance and Auxiliary lirabam Bread Association for its meetings at the City Park Fountain. The mem hers of the Grand Junction Tern-iterance South Public Klwnoxcr and Graham Bread Lane Auxiliary Association I beg pardon, the name is rather confusing what I meant to say was, that the inemlxTH desire to express their Khenewr to vou no, no. Mr. St. ( lair produced a red baiulaima from tho depths of a genuine old bell-crown Dolly Greeley hat, with a while nap to it like an Angora ran, with which he blew his nose violently and peremptorily, after which he set out again : Gentlemen of the Convention, I have been a member of every Bepubliean ward, i-itv, county and Stato Convention ever held in the city of Columbus, and Mr. Fditor and fellow members of the Graham Klienerer Auxiliary and Tvniwrance llread Pioneers. Beally this name is a little unhandy. Mr. St. Clair blew his hum) with his hat, and put the dipper on his head, then proceeded with his speech, making furtive at tempts to get the hat Into tho pocket of his white overcoat, while he kept extending hia handkerchief with the other hand for tho editor's anvptanee, saying- Be pleased, Sir, to accept this Tin Dipper as a tight slokcn of the Hormo Yard-en which shall rise, Sir, and continue to rlso. like thoPhnmix Hone Company from its ashes, earning us hack to the times, Sir, when Franklin coutuy wna wilderness, be to ro the Pioneer Association had any existence liefnre. Sir, eagerly before tho Franklin CooVingBtovo was Invented, or Graham Bread had I wen turned out by C. P. L. Butler's Bakery in tho little framo where the spice mill now rears its proud form, and rises. Sir, like Graham Bread from its pluenix, to tho end of time, proudly, Sir, proudly,- 1 Mr, St, Clair hero grasped the editor by the haud.iuid prorewW with, great amo-; Hon-" "" - , I cannot let thin (K-eunion purin, Sir, j Wlinoui cxin.aNtiiiK jvy piwent with thews hale, hearty old Ho-neeri who have i miff the roverborulin,? axe whin the giant of the forent were prostrated hy the aturdy stroke, Kir, of tho axe. AVc moy never meet again. We may he called hence. Hut in that Had hour of parting let us rememlwr that I'ro-Cr ami nation in the noiil of huainew, and punctuality In the thief of time. iod Mean you good bye, old fellow, good bye. -Aud Mr. Kfc. flair .retired, Wiping tun eye with a copy tof the Wkly Tribune, after depositing the Dipper on tho editorial table, anil getting hi white hat out of hi pocket In a badly eollapned condition. FRANZ ABT. Ttwtirrtit tier man t'owpoiwr at ib Llederkraux Concert aud III He-replicator tho NarufftrbMiiil. Fniiuilic N. Y. Jt.nitM.mil. Ucrr Franx Abt left the Belvidcre House yerterday to take a drive through Central Park and call u)khi some of Mb German friends, lathe evening he attended tho concert of the Uedcrkraai Society, given at the club house, in Fourth street. Here he wan formally introduced to the society hv tho President, Mr. Louis Kammerer, ntid was received with nil the notion, the members singing the well-known student's song, "Kece (plain Bonam." The concert was one of rare interest, the noloirtu being Messrs. 8. B. and W. F. Mills, R BM-hni, Fred Steins and J. Brandies and a large chorus and orchestra, consisting of tho principal members of the Society. The programme wag as follows: "Symphonic Militairc, No. II," Haydn, orchestra; "Am Traunsce," Thierrot, baritone solo, with ladies, chorus and strinu; Ktudc, for basB-clarinette, Chopin, Herr Bot'hm; Ninety-first Paalm, eighth part, chorus, with organ, Meyerbeer; grand "Duo Hondo," Chopin, 8. B. Mills and W. V. Mills; "Freidrich Kothbart," Jlojler.male chorus aud orchestra; Ouverture to'Mcs- sonda," Spohr, orchestra. After the concert Herr Abt was the recipient of a grand festival at the ( lermania Assembly Booms, in which twentv-two societies of the New York Saengerbund took part. Ihey sang mvonil if Ahl'a lKintilnr oiiartetH ami tinkr, und welcoaif the representative song writer of Germany in the most hospitable manner. The proceedings at tho Germauia Assembly Kooius partook more of the nature ol a "kommeree" than in a regular programme. Herr Abt starts for Washington this morning, and on bis re turn here will be serenaded and eta with all the honors that German enthusiasm is apable of bestowing. Terrible Combat With a Mad Bull. From tlin Tolmlo t'onitncn-ltil. Wo are informed by I. N. Hathaway, of this city, of a fearful contest in Springfield township, in which the lives of two men were in imminent peril. It seems that Mr. John S. Clark, a farmer of that township, is the owncf of a young Durham bull, two years old, which he has raised, and whioh has liecn running with other cattle. n Wednesday last, April t!4, Mr. (.'lark was in the field in which the bull was kept, and saw nothing to attract his attention until he heard a bellowing noise, when, on looking around, he saw the animal coming at him in the most furious and threatening manner. Having no means of defense, and seeing no how in flight, he hoped by grasping the hull's horns to holil mm till Help could come. Tlie miimnl riwhed upon him shaking his head and bellowing most frightfully. Fortunate! v the bull's horns were long and well spread, so that he struck his victim with his head instead of either horn, and knocked him down. Mr. Clark wmght to gmsp the animal's horns, und otherwise resisted his furious assaults until a young man named Cone arrived who seized the bull bv the horns and was soon thrown iato the air, breaking his leg near the knee, but succeeded in getting to a fence in time to eseupe the pursuit of the animal. Mr. Clark soon crawled to the fence and also cscam-d. Both men were removed by neighbors, and are likely to recover in due time. Mr. Clark was badly bruised in different parts of the body, but it is supposed not dangerously. The bull will lc secured and placed in confinement, if possible, and if not, he will lie shot, as he is too dangerous to be at large. He is a fine, promising animal, ami ban licen (pnte a favorite. A Cuu aoo dispattdi says: There is about an equal quantity of profanity and levity hero over the result of tho Cincinnati Convention. Not more than half of the forty-two delegates from Illinois will roto for the ticket. Senator Doolittle and a few other IVmocral, swallow it with wry faces, hut the large majority of IVmocrats repudiato it, and declare they will not vote for two of the most radical Aliolitionints in the Bepubliean party, and demand a Democratic nomination. I'licv are already canvassing for a candi date who will be more conciliatory, and desire to nominate a ticket for which the Liberal Bepubhcans can Tote, such as Adams and Doolittle, or Davis and Cox, in case Greeley withdraws in favor of ( trnnt, as they believe ho will. The more aggrc&stvc Democrats demand a straight nomination, such as Hendricks or G roes-beck. There is no disguising the fact that the (tegular Kepublicans are perfectly satisfied with tlte Cincinnati nominations and platform, and do not believe Grant will lose live States, whether the ticket is withdrawn or not. Mr. Schura's estimate of the hostility of tho Germans seems to bo continued, at least hy tho sentiment of the Chicago Germans. Governor Koerncr, of this State, chairman of delegation, like Judges lload-tv and Matt hows, of Ohio, repudiates the ticket, and declares that It is incomprehensible liow a convention of so many distinguished men could prove such a failure. All the signs in this city indicate that the Democrats will repudiate the ticket, and that it has demoralised and scattered the Bepubliean insurgents. Orn dealers In Western lands will find It profitable to examine the titles to their lauds, for within a short time, It has been discovered that there is scattered all over the Tnlted States, a regularly organized band of men (with a regular outfit of notarial seals, comniisMonH, ami other aj-pliances) who have been carrying on for years the business of dealing in forged titles to Iowa lauds. The Dubuipio Herald says that it could givo the names and residences u men who are regarded as rich and nctublo in their own communities, who are engaged in tho wicked bind-ness of assisting to destroy the titles to untold amounts of lundn lying in Iowa, and this mav hereafter, in many eases, leave the fatherless and widowed with the ehuncu of an almost hoiielcss lawsuit on their hands, instuad of an uiiincumltcred Inheritance, Non-resident owners of real proerly in Iowa are ndvlscd to apply by letter to the recorders of tho dillercnt counties, asking If any changes are apparent upon their records in the chain of their titles, It Wing asserted that "sinco the discovery of these mysterious fraudsa large amount of lands are being held .nn-jtler forged deeds." Prominent officials of the Pennsylvania Kailroad company will meet in Mnnslieid, Ohio, to-day, for tho purpose of selecting tho grounds and locating tho shops of the Mansfield, Cold water and Lako Michigan Uallroad company. The entire line in graded and bridged, tho ties arc alt on the ground, and the iron purchased and on tho wav. The road will, doubtless, be In running order to Toledo by the time of ttio state ratr, in sepiemiwr, wtiicii is tno purpose of the managers. SUPREME COURT OF OHIO. Tuesday, May 7, 1872. Hon. John Welch, Chief JiiHtice, and Hon. William White, Hon. Ixtiikb 1AY, IIoil. tiEORflE W.. McIlvaine and Hon, WaxiAJt I U W Juil.. GENERAL JXM'KET. No. till. The State Bank of Miio- v. Otho H in ton aud wife et al. Appeal from the Common Pleas of Delaware county. Bcserved in the District Court. W'eht, J, Held; 1. The doctrine is well settled that a widow, who, during coverture, joined her husband in a mortgage of realty, whereof lie had inheritable seizin, Is dowable in equity of the surplus moneys arising from a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure against her thereon, which may remain after satisfying the mortgage debt and the proper costs of foreclosure ; but sho jft-dowable of the surpbii only, and not of the entire proceeds, ni housaliffied out of the surplus; her right leing extinguished by the sale, to the extent that the proceeds are appropriated to the satisfaction of the mortgage. 2. Where a husband, with whom his wife joined in u mortgage of realty, in which she bad an inchoate right of dower, disuses of his equity of redemption therein by deed in which she dot not join, and dies after a judicial sale of the mortgaged premises under a decree of foreclosure against them, she is dowable of the surplus moneys resulting therefrom after satisfying the mortgage debt and costs to the extent that her right can l equitably discharged from the portion of such surplus, which shall not previous to its assertion have pawed by final decree from the chancellors control; but if the equity of redemption bo held by several, to Home of whom shall have been distributed their respective jwrtions of the surplus on final decree, without objection interposed, or assertion of right by her, tbev will not le required to refund, nor will contribution Iks enforced ngainst the interests of others which shall not have been so distributed. lecree accordingly and remanded. No. 70. The citv (f Cincinnati v. Groves .F. Penny, f-'rror to the Siisrior Court of Cincinnati. MrliAAiNE, J. Held: 1. Asn general rule, a municipal cor- poration is not liable for Injuries to build- 1 1 ma nn lots abutting uoou streets aud al leys, resulting from the improvement of such streets or alleys, or fronv their appropriation to a public use, provided tin nllieers and agents in making such improvement or appropriation, act within the scojw of their authority, nnd without neuligcncc or malice. 2. If, however, it be shown that the municipal authorities, before the con-rtruclion of such buildings, had so improved or appropriated the street or alley I to public uses, as to indicate fairly aud reusunnblv that no future change or other use would lie required 'v the citv or village, aud the nbutting proprietor, reiving upon such corporate acts as a final ifccision as to the wants of the public, improve his lot in a maimer suitable to the established use, and afterwards his improvements arc injured by a change, or by the appropriation of the street or alley to other uses, the corporation will Is' liable for damages resulting therefrom. I). Butifijtho nature and extent of tbeim-nrovcmcnUf and uses of the street or alley have not been so indicated or defined by the cityorvillage,ahutting proprietors must.at their own peril, improve their lots with reference to such future Hues or changes in the streets us may lie made and adopul by the city or village while acting within the seojK! of its municipal authority. . i. I itclcr the laws ot Him Mate, sewerage is one of the legitimate uses to which the publlcHtruetM und alloy of the city uf Cincinnati may lie appropriated by its municipal authorities. Judgment reversed aud cause remanded. No. 4W. The Slate of Ohio ex rel. William Games v. John W. MH'ann. Application for mandamus, Dv,J. Held: Wbcre.under the olst section of the act of lH6:t, "to provide for the organization, supervision, and maintenance of common schools," as amended in Isi'ri, the proper Boards of Kducation constructed a joint district for the education of colored children out of two contiguous districts for the education of white children, and provided a school for colored children in the joint district equal in every n'specttothose for white children in the other districts, and which schools for each class of children were enuallv commodious: IbhU that the act authorizing such classifica tion, on the basis of color, docs not con travenc the Constitution of the Stale, nor the 14th amendment of the lonndtution of the United States, and that colored children residing in cither of the districts for white children, are not, as of right, en titled to admisHon into the schools for white children. Mandamus rcfuseo. Nn. . Tho Passemrer 11 ail road Co. v. Isaac Young. F.rror to the Superior Court of Cincinnati. White, J. The defendant below was a corporation engaged in oicratiug a street railroad. The plaintiff Mow and his wife having taken seats in one of the defendant's ears as passengers, were by the orders of the conductor incharge of the ear, wrongfully nnd by force ejected therefrom, whereby they were injured Held : 1. That the cororation by placing the conductor in his jmsilion invested him with the implied authority of determining who ought to lie ud m it ted and who excluded from the car, ami for the wrongful exercise of this authority by theeon-duclor the corporation is liable. . . IH11SUT in rvJii"iiiv. mini, tho nets of his servant done in course of his employment; and, when a person is injured thereby, the motive or intention of the servant in doing the act, will not operate to discharge the ma-ter from liability. 4. Under the act of March J'J, 1411, "to amend the act Mating to juries," S, and C.St. 7')",) whenever a neeewuty arises for Miimmoniiiir talesmen, it I the duty of the nonlientlon of either nartv. to issue a venire containing lite names m . persons to serve as jurors, nnd, if one writ j fails to secure tho requisite immlier, to is-1 sue other writs, on like application, until a sufficient number of jnrors is obtained to fill the panel; and when a pnqvr application is overruled and the parly compelled to submit his ease to jurors selected by the Sheriff, it in error for which the judgment will Im reversed. 4. When the Court ordered the Sheriff to summon talesmen to which the defendant objected, and immediately and beforo the Sheriff had taken any stew under the order, applied for a venire under the statute Held : That the application did not come too late. .1 udgment reversed and cause remanded . MOTION IHX'KET. UVX William Hilvus v. The State of Ohio. Motion to take case out of its order granted. Thereupon adjourned until Thursday morning next at 1 o'clock. Hon Charles Hays, of Alabama, in the House on Saturday, delivered a sficceh on j tho financial and political condition of his State, which was verv interesting and to lbeHilnt. I to refuted completely the assertions made by anti-Administration papers that tho Imnilcd debt of his State was over forty millions, and showed that it wan not over five million at (he greatest. He also fihowul "H'mTlnte-liients from tho State Treasurer that the contingent railroad debt of the Statu did not amount to over fourteen millions, which puts to rvt tho untruthful assertions that It amounted to a much larger sum. Tho wheat, In most sections of the country, Is growing finely, and gives promt of an abundant crop, A poor field ol wheat ii an exception, and a curl-oilty .--iXvtoii Journal BY TELEGRAPH to Tin: onio state jot.trxal MANSFIELD. U timed hy 'onl Oil Ktplimlon. :H T.-tfijiitm k. ni jn Shoe .l.lim,il.j Massfiei.h, May 7. About eight o'clock thi evening u widow lady, named Mrs. Anna lrfggett, aud her little child, residing on Second street, were badly burned by the explosion of a coal oil lamp. ALABAMA CLAIMS. Th .ch l urk World ituil Tribune nn Hie INiNhion of Our (Joveni. tiifnt. New Yhik, May ". Thu World this morning, in an article headed "Grant's liesohttu Retreat," snys : "Whether we shall slick to our original ease at Geneva until tlte tribunal passes upon it, or cut and carve that case to suit (treat Britain, is now admitted at Washington entirely to dciiend upon the humor of Far Granville and the GladKhmu government. The stupid complication in the caw, of clean with unclean, sane with insane, Gettysburg nonsense, with serious claims for our denationalized commercial marine, makes this so serious n matter that from certain point 4 of view it Ins come to be fairly doubtful whether a complete abandonment of the treaty is not really the ibing most by us to be desired.'' The Tribune, on the same subject, cays: "We hold our government clearly in the right in refusing to withdraw or'modify Its case al the dictation of an adverse party. In taking this position we do not assert the validity or justice of Undisputed claim, nor affirm' the necessity or wisdom of making it. The former propo-sitiou appeals to the arbitrators, the latter may raiso an Issue between our government and our isjofilc. not U-tuveu them and Great Britain. ' CHICAGO. The Trttntlrr Hnr lt-tuit Oiii:ihn j mill ('(iniirll hi mi. t iih . win, May 7. The Tribune pub-1 I Mie un interview by itn reporter wilh j President Horace F. Clark, of the Fiiion ' Pacific (tompany, with rcfereneo to the! transfer ctmtroversy between Omaha and Council Bluffs. President Clark mv the Villon Pacific nrnd had its eastern terminus on the west bank of the Missouri river in order to facilitate the transfer of passengers and freight. I'pon the completion of the bridge Iown roads, whose, termini were upon (be cast side of tho river, sought to compel the delivery of all freight and patwugcrs ujwn their territory. They refiiKcd to run their trains through to Omaha or permit tliein to be run by any transfer company. The I' moii Pacific hud no legal authority, ami was prohibited by its contracts with Omaha and Douglass county from making transfers on the Iowa side. They therefoiv contracted lemmrarily with ii third party in make the transfers over the bridw. President Clark says it is really a fight between St. Louu and Chicago, unil if the Iowa roads see proper to force traffic from Omaha down the west lde of the river to St. Louis, the In ion Pacific is not responsible for the damage which may i n-iu to Chicago interests. POLITICAL. TeititiH,M'c l tiioernlic Ntiilt 4 'on ten. lion. Nashville, May 7. The Democratic StalcCoiivention assembler, in Nashville on the 1Mb hist. Its object is the nomination of a candidate for Governor, appointment of delegates to the National Convention, aud probably the selection of a Presidential electoral ticket. Interest in the action of the Convention hat greatly Increased since thu Cincinuali Convention. The llanner suggi'ls that tho 4 on vent ion give expression to mi hone) and hearty indorsement of the ticket and platform presented at Cincinnati, lielicvhig the effect upon other Slates will bo salutary. The I nion and American leaves it to the National Convention to determine, after full and free coniicreuee, what action din 1 1 lie taken by the IVmoeralie parly. niHNonrt HepnMlrHii. Sr. LoriH, May ".The Bepubliean State Executive committee has issued a call for County Conventions throughout the Statu for the election of County committees and for the organization of Congressional District committees, with a view- to a thorough organization ot the party for the coming campaign. Iriinltfiiiln l.nlxir t'itnrtiilon. Wn.i.iAMsi'onr, Pa., May 7. The State Labor Convention organized to-dav. liichard Williams was elecled temporary Chairman. Fifty delegates were present, A committee on Hriuanent organization and platform was appointed, and the Convention took a reii-H. Great pressure Is being made in favor of candidates who can he indorwd hy the coining iHuocrni-1c State t (invention. IihIIiiiiii Town fclwilinm. SnEi.nvvn.LE, Ind., May 7. The election in this city to-day resulted In the election of four Bepubliean Cotineilmen, making tho city government Kcpuhlh'ati entire, for the first time. Terkk Hai'TE, Ind., May 7. In the election for Connciliuen in this eiiy today the Itepubliean candidates were elected in every ward. The old Council stood seven Bepiibticans to three I crimen I s. The new Council will be all Ke-publicims. The vote was light. Jreeley In TcitiieMHee. Na.-hville, Tenn.. Mav 7. An enthu siastic inns meeting was held at Chirks- ville. yesterday evening, and the nomination of Greeley and Browiiuuanimouslv ratified. All classes uf citizens participated almost en masse, As far as can he learned the anti-Grant sentiment in Ten-iich favors the Cincinnati nominations. WASHINGTON. THE TAItll'l' nu. I.. Wasiiimiton, May 7. The enacting clause of tho Tariff hill has Into struck out hy the House, In committee of the Whole, by a vote of H" to 7o. HEATH UF EX-JI INIE 1H.NJ.AI'. James Dunlapdlcd yesterday hi Georgetown of niHiplexy. He was formerly one of the judges of the court of this' Dis-trlct.A I'ltUTKaT IIV SOLDI MtMAMtKAIIAIIt. A Holtlli'r' ami HailoiV C'oiivcnlioii wmi licliMion1 Innl nlh'lilt llio lU'lrunHw lMvnv.i...iM ........... ,n.n, . ,,. iinil Army ol llio Urnuuiii'. Jlioir kimiiuM wan In Inkv ui'llim npiinm rvrmln li'i - liitlnii uf ronirrrtf mlW'liiiK Oivir inh-r- ct, imrli.nliirly Iho ititiiiIv i:iw 'I'LL .1..,.. rim- I.-.IMII. "i - v,-; 1. a 'IimIoii In .i.lihm nii.l millnr., wtwlally IImiw ,11WI l,y ivniniil.nr r;;!:"...:"" ,f". iK.lon. .houlil ,,., , irom 'll. 'linu, ..f .l.ill, i.,.,..i .-.i... .....i .i ji proofs, and' ho.id, aklng is'n.ions more IqiillnU', Ihey want an a l.liliou of 20 1st renl. 1 , i'AS T kkep A mki'Iii.'i. A nMirt Is qullc eurreiu thlanflernuoii thai the I'resldent has decided In remove Assistant Secretary of State Hale, ou the ground of his inability to keep diplomatic secrets. It is alleged that quite recently sevoral important State Department secrets, through Hale, have lieconte public, . FOREIGN. Heavy Hood in Australia--400 Persons Drowned. . The HMUilNh Wr-Thr llH.tle til u. vnrro Internal InimlM Trouble In Oeimmrk. Paius, Mav ". It is Mated heie Iliad '"'V ti yettheabaence of such a plank ere is a crisi in the Spanish Cabinet. tSK"0 mnrkb!(N H'M. after all, there is a crisis in the paiui London, May 7. The Times'. special dispatch from Madrid sayn Don Curios lied toward tho French frontier. Marsha Serrano, with bin troop:, is hi pursuit nl tho pretender, ami exjwts to overtake him. MAimiu, May 7. Marshal Serrano has made ollicial report of his engagement with the forces under I ton Carlo in Na-vurre. The Marshal wiyn: After serious resistance hy the insurgents hlstooM hc-cceded in piercing their line and finally anihilating the force, He will now concentrate bin troops in Biscay, and drive ul the insurrectionists from that province, leaving volunteer to pursue Don Carlos, who lied toward Addindes. Carbineers who nro acquainted with the country will pursue what rebel bands that may y'ot remain inNevarro. Insurgents continue to come in and sum-ndcr. Seven hundred and fifty prisoners have arrived at I'amjM'ltinca. Government forces operating against the Insurrectionists are continually lieing reinforced. i;njlani. Lunikix, .May 7. The scwion of the House of Commons last night whs devoted mainly to debate on tho Scotch Kducation bill. A resolution introduced by Mr. Gordon, member for Glasgow trnd Aberdeen 1'niversiiic.s, providing that the Scriptures shall form a part of the instructions In schools. wu carried against Government vote, 210 to 2W. Advices received hereby telegraph from Australia stato that heavy floods, which caused terrible loss of life, occurred in i Melbourne, lour hundred person were ; drowned, and growing crops have licen ; greatly damaged. j It is rumored that several uf the Kurile ' islands, in the North Pacific, nro to be ' leased to the United States. Thes? is-I lands, twenty-five in number, extend from Kainsehatka to Japan. The three southernmost belong to Japan, and the others to Ktwtn. At a reception held lit Windsor Casili yesterday b American I Majcstv. Otieen Victoria, several die- were presented to Her General Jim. Halt of the BriiMi army : is dead. Dr. Isuac Butt, member of Parliament for Limerick, has written a letter on Home Bule. He asks lor the Iri-di an assembly in which home rule can be fully represented, approves tho plan for fraternal union lietwccn Ireland and Kng-land, guaranteeing authority of the Crown, and draws outlines of a Federal Virion which he says will Im a satisfactory settlement of the relations between iiie two countries. IlKNMMlli. ' Cui'ENiiAiiEN, May 7. The action nf tbe police authorities in forbidding mem-Iters of the International Society from holding a meeting in this city hist Sunday, and the suhcucut arrest of the President and Treasurer of the branch here, gaveriae to great excitement among nieml'crs of the 'organization. A lurge numlier gathered in the sirccls and ere-aled considerable alarm by their violent dcnuiiuiationn uf the OoYuriiiilviit. Tbev were finally discnted by the police, ami at present all is quiet. It has hecn deemed prudent, however, to place a military guard uround nil public buildings mid palaces until the excitement has entirely abated. The leading members of the no-ciety in this city will Ih- pin-eculed for high treason. The police un- adopting energetic measures to suppress tiny tumult which may nrie. litAvn:. Pa iiih, May 7. The Mini.-ter m' War to-day laid before tho Asseniby a bill con stituting a court-martial for the trial'of ntlicers censured bv the reinul of the Com mission on Capitulation, Duke le Is iithioii. "nn of Prince Dc .Toinville, is to marry Prince Christine, daughter of Duke Dc MotitH iihicr. Tho Commission on Capitulaiion, in their reK)rl, eeUMitv officers who surrendered the fortified town of Sehlestadt to German troops during the late war. Tho Cornmision praise the olthvr who commanded at Verdun for the gallant defense be made, but blame him for having j subsequently surrendered the town. , IMtlKMA. Hnu.iN, May 7. Bismarck is aain in-ilisjKised, ami his physicians insist on his nbsolute rest, or consequences mayIs-prions . The new fortifications at Sirn-burg nro toenl seven millions sterling. NEW YORK. A UM.D aitiK HAi:. j New YoiiK,May 7. For the at tlmo j days the whole force of I'nitcd States' Deputy Man-haN has been looking for Henry Howard, a rich merchant, who Is , alleged guilty of extensive fraud on Government in the early part of iMiii, A warrant for his arrest was granted byCom-inif-ionvr tsborue, on comphiinl made by one of Supervisor Dutchcnt Assistants. It was thought he would secretly sail for Ktmle Saturday, and that day's steamships were searched without finding him. Hi family took passage in the steamer Bavaria. His name appeared on the pas-sengcr list, hut he could not be found on Isiard when tho vessel sailed. It in he. lieved he took alarm, nnd to evade arrel has escaped from thu country in some other way. Secrecy is maintained in regard 1 to thenatureof his frauds, A Til ISM tN Till: MnitMo.V .,l lt H. I A schism has divided the Mormon ! Church in Williamsburg. Of ilie two hundred members seventeen have declared against polygamy, nnd have, started a , church in the missionary temple. They I have chosen their elders and priests, and I are determined towage a cmsmlc against others who maintain the doctrine of Ivgamv and advocate immigration to ; Ctah.' -in nn:. Wm. lt. Franklin, n promiiienl ih nt-11, and for the past eight or ten yea in n member of the seventh regiment, hanged hiuuelf yesterday morning nt bis ivsi-dence, No. !tl" Sixth avenue, i'nue, business troubles. IIA1.HT1I1AL TO HE IIESEWtli, It was rumored yesterday that Attorney (ti'iii'nil Unrlnw wiih (,'nin cxtniilinulv no- llvo In ciHlMvirhiit In brhiK Jlu v.ir 1 1 II In trial on lliu I'nrimT iluHi-lmt'iil, ii( trlnl of xvliirli n lnlorniiUnl liy lliu cIcuiliol'njiiror.iH wi ll ai iuIutb wlii. li hi1 cxiiitI. lo iw intniu ny nu' tn-w annul . , ".,.,. ( Vf..d ..Mil V M'"' 1 rAliNSTKim os ttmKt: i I'liraimnl lu nolllh'nltun ciwn In-i wt-rli. I 1 i,o llrooklyn inrpontm Mriirli yiilchlny ' - n r, TT .. . L nim ii im ui n. vm an win or t'oiuii ih-ii in n,.,lu to tlnMloninml oi'Hio ivnrluui n. (K ,.0Nv,;N , ,.;. ti. m...i.,h.i .j..,,i i'riw,w I 'mM '!''" !lr"l"'.l' Ami's pre.dillng. the reporl of Ilie till- ""H'-v 'V ."'."n ili'-'""'"!. J'"1"1"'""' '" i" "I' ' Kv 'r.Sliccr.of llaltln.nre, ''''r oppwltion. In It Dr. Ijinnhan reiterates all his elinrges, ; accuses tho cnminltleo wilh emhavoring Is smother nccusnlioiis laid licforo Ihem, I stales that tho cnlniiilltce endeavored In exact a pledge from him not to report his .nseovenes to inc (ieiicral Conference, which he refined, and Mthscquetitly found h inn-elf treated as acriminal instead of a prosecutor. The reading of tho rejrt occupied thanj hours. AMERICAN TEMl'EItANCECOMMIIION. There was a fair attendance to-dav at the anniversary meeting of tho American Temperance Commission, held in Stein-way Hull. Aaron M. Powell pmdded and mule the principal address. Alluding to the Cincinnati Convention ho said it was remarkable that there was not a tcnier-mce plank in the platform, although the chief man placed nuon it was u tomner. ,..MCIivtiiiiitK ion-pun, um second man upon tnc iicKui wa a wmo uibler. An address to the country was ndonted. wlyfj State Legislatures are urged to Uikouclionin favor of total aiMtiucnce, and recommending the appointment of no man to olliee who is not a tenieranee man. Bcsolutions were adopted advising clergymen to substitute water for wine in the communion service, nnd to extend the right band of fellowship only to total abstinence nicn and women. THr iumiios-(ioi;T,n cahk. The litigation between Gordon nnd Jay Gould, in which each party is plaintiff and each defendant, two suits having been brought, came up lieforc Judge Brady this morning. Gordon's counsel taid "that there were three motions one on the suit bv Gordon for un injunction and a re-ceiverof certain stocks and bomU which he claims from Gould; one in the suit by Gould against Gordon, made by Gordon to vacate order of arrest, and a third, a motion bv Gould in another suit to examine ( rordon's purpose in preparing tho complaint. After a little diseupsion it was agreed that all motions should bo heard together. On behalf of Jay Gould, Mr. Hoot read first Gould's affidavit, already published, denying positively the accuracy of averment ol'thirdon's nfiidavit as to transactions between them, that Gordon had with him any transactions in putt nnd calls, etc., etc. A number of very voluminous affidavits were then read, and after some diseusshm (ho court gave Gordon n week to put in his responsive affidavits, when both he and Gould are to Ik prewnt to submit to examination. .MlCEM.ANEUt lj ITEM. Iticluird Andrews, aSwedUh snilor,yes-tcrday fell from the yardarm of the llark Sarah K. Kitigshurv, while off quarantine, and was instantly killed. In tho suit of Mrs. Juliet Kcmwick against her husband for divorce, on the ground of adultery, the latter pleaded in-sanitv nt the time of the commisflion of Ltbc act. The referee reported in favor of granting me application. Smuil pox is increasing; thirty-three new eases were reported to-day. Fourteen of the fifty prisoners sought to lie cleared liceause of the illegality of our old Court of Special Sessions, wererc-H-nlenced to-day by the new court, A Bussian ladv named Frulofl'Hiies the Hudson railroad company for $100,000 for alleged loss of a trunk containing valuable heirlooms. FORTY-SECOND" OONORESS. Flrttt Munition. Washijjoton, May 7, IKHKE. Mr. Dawes, from the committee on Wayh and Means, reported a bill limiting to one per cent, tho expense of issue and reist-uc of loans, legal tender notes, fractional currency, &e. Mr. McCrary, fratn thu committee on Flections, made a report in the Texas eoniesteu election case ot tmluingH against Clark, that the sitting memlvr is not en titled to the scat, ami that liiddings, con testant, is not. Mr. Ileek, from the committee on Ways and Means, reported back Senate hill allowing rebato of tax on whisky destroyed by tins or other casually while in bonded warehouses, with un amendment excepting in cah.es where the tax has been actually paid. Passed. Tho House resumed consideration of Senate amendments to the lVticiency bill. Tho amendment in reference to claims for cotton seized bv tho government after the elo.se of the war, requiring proof of loyally ot claimants, came up nnd gave rise to n long discussion, the committee on Appropriations recommending tion- concurrence aim reporting asuhntitutc for it le4 exacting on claimants. Finally the substitute reported by tho committee on Appropriations for Senate amendment was adopted oy yeas and nays, ns follows : That the Secretary of the Treasury be and ho Is herebv authorized and directed to pay to lawful owners, or their legal reprc-enta lives, of all cotton seized after the uUth of June, lH(i.), hy agent of the government, the net proceeds, without interest, of Kales of said cotton actually paid into the Treasury of the Vnilcd States; provided that receipt thereof shall he taken and received in full satisfaction of all claims against the Fluted States for or on account of the seinirc of on id cotton; and a sufficient sum for such payment is hereby appropriated and the Secretary of tho Treasury is hereby outhor-i.cd to prcscribo rules nnd regulations lor thu ascertainment ut nil decennary fads for the execution hereof. This ended Senate, amendment of the Deficiency bill. The House thru took up nnd disposed of Senate amendments to the Indian Appropriation bill. On motion of Mr, Cox tho President was called upon to furnish any correspondence, during tho Inst and present administration, on the subject of nn extradition treaty wilh Itctgium. Mr. Hazleton of New Jersey, from the committee on Flections, made a nqwrt uii the South Carolina contested election case, that Wallace, sitting member, was en-tilled to the seat. The House then went into committee of tho Whole, Mr. SeoHeld in the chair, on tlte Tariff and Tax bill. Mr. Dawes moved to strike nut the line taxing tea and coffee,, Mr. Kelly, to save time, moved to strike out the enacting clause of the hill. The chairman ruled that Kelly's motion took precedence of the other, and must lie voted upon without delate, and that If the enacting clause were stricken out the committeo would thereupon rise and report thatfat to the House, The uncstion was taken by tellers on Mr. Kelly's motion, ami it wa agreed to by n vote of id to 7 ". The committee thereupon m-e, and the chairman reported Its action In -trikitig out the enacting clause. Mr. Kelly moved that the I louse concur in the action of the committee uf the Whole, nnd that the hill he neoommitted to tho committeo on Ways nnd Means wilh instructions to report back his hill as a substitute, ' Mr. Dawes moved as an amendment that the committee be Instructed to rc- port back a bill wincing rates of duties j to t'd per cent, of present rales, Mr. Kiiiki'lnliiirtrblinr movcil In IlliK'iid Mr. ilaWM'rtntiiPiolaii'liI ly mincing ralp. to so K'r will, of nv'iit rale. Tho iiiwlinii a lint taki'ii nn Mr. Filiki'lnlmrK'. innlinil. Hi'jri'tiil yea. 711, nay llli. Tin1 villi- wan tlH'iitaki'inin Mr. Iiiiwi' innlinil. AgiYvil lo you. Ill, nnva 77. Tin1 1'ill wan then rci'imiinittwl to thu cotoioiltiHi oil Way. ami Mrnn., with In-htriiolii'ii. to rrmrl It haik I'nrlhwilh .11 "WW ("trtiTO! tnlM. ll' vole mi iv ' -in.iufttul wile vcn. II" iiiivk 7. ,, ( h.-'n ii,.n rrimVliil Imrk lliu 1,111m iMrwltxI. ami Ii a. rfforml to i .1,0,,. s h... wi...... i. tk,,, ! ''I'.'"-".'"' Tl. Ili, ib.-ii look n rcc" until 7.1 o'cloi-li, the evening m-s.loll In lc for busl. nes of Um Military conuniltiv. hi:ati:. .Mi. Chandler ell'cwl n resolution for Ihnnppiihitmelit of n select eiitnmlllee to Inquiry whether nny slcnmhimt lines should be subsidized by Government, and it i, nun ii inn- anu to wnat extent. Mr. Kellogg objected, and the resolution went over. At the expiration of the morning hour unfinished business the Postoffieo Appropriation bill was taken up. The pending question was on concurring in theamend-mcnt mado In committee of the Whole increasing the subsidy to the Pacific Mail Steamship lino to $1,000,000 nor nnnnm after expiration of the existing, contract. The amendment was further amended so ns to give Government a right to take vessels in case of war, at a price not greater than its original cost, ana it was concurred in. The striking out of the section nrnbib- iting ex-officials of Government from acting on claim agents ngainst Government, was concurred in. Mr. Fenton offered a substitute iuereas-ing the subsidy for mail service with Brazil to $400,000 per annum forwmi-month-ly service, subject to the same conditions as the Pacific snlHiily. Agreed to. Mr. Casserly oflcred an amendment Increasing the subsidy to'thcSnn Francisco and Australian line toS-HKyH), service to uc ncrm-mommy. Mr. Casserly offered an amendment requiring the Pacific mail line, a a condition of the Increase of subsidy, to continue its line between San Francisco and Mow York by wny of the Isthmus of Panama. Agreed to. Mr. Xvo offered an amendment nnnlv. Ing this condition to any other company which may secure a contract for mail service between Snn Francisco, China nnd Japan. Pending action on this amendment the Senate adjourned. HV NAIL AM) TEI.EUKAl'll. The Slate Kditorial (Joiivontiim will In. held nt Atheim June 13. The .Southern Prcfihvteriali I ioni-nd An- aenihly mcetH nt Kiclimnnd, Vn., the loth. Tho Murvin llouve and o larou livery atnble, at Hed.ilia. Mn.. wnn lillrnrd Mnn. dav. 1'ivc hundred niilliuliK Knln((e iitaiiipa were i'ihiM lnnt wei'k liv the Ijiitiil Slaten. The Ohio Grand I-odgc of Old l'ellown will hold their next nnnual nicetini; in the Dayton Temple, on tho 14th of May. Adiioratch from Havana av seventeen lirolcanional punlilon, of various nationalities, hnvp hern haniKhed from the ltd-nnd.The H'H'li climi of lion. Jerome 1). C'hnf- fee an Congressional delegate from Colorado is regarded as almost eertnin in that Territory. The New York charter has jiassed the House amended so as to nrnnihit nnnm. priations for sectarian schools. It goes hack to the Senate. The regular annual nuKting of the Ohio Medical Association will occur in Ports- ruoutli tho first week in June nexl, nnd remain in session three davs. Xo less thun twelve iron steamships are at present building on tho Delaware, the aggregate cost of which will bo considerably more t ban six millions of dollars. Kngland purchased S1S1,000,000 worth of cotton from thu United Stales lost year, and made a net profit from the articles manufactured from it ofSlfyi,- William Webb, alias lluck, confined in the Kastcrn (l'cnn.) rcniltnti'ary, yesterday morning killed his room mate, Michael Trimbul, by striking him nn Hie head with an iron plate. There is the best authority for saying that if the t-heriff of Cass county, Missouri, fails to perfnrm bis dutv, that the United Htates authorities will' arrest the assassins of Stephens, Klino and Dutro. Mr. J. A. Bell, a farmer living six miles from Ikirtlctts, Tennessee, was waylaid and murdered Monday night while riding home. No clue to 'the murderer. Mr. liell's body was found near his house, partly eaten by hog. Paris is still the mistress of modes and fabricator of fashions. Never w ero shops so full or milliners so bnsv. The theaters are crowded, and Iho Mabillc is ngain tho center of attraction. Diplomatic dinneni are in vogue, but ihc dishes nro tasteless, owing tn the absence of the imperial chtj. The St. holds aud Carnndolct Bridge Company has contracted with a Con necticut rlrm for constructing a bridge acrnsstlie .Mississippi river at Mouth $t ixiiiis, in oc compicicu in two years, at a cost ofalHitit four million dollars. The bridge will bo dnubl-traek railroad, and carriage way. A secial from llichmond states that nothing linn been heard from Stephen Lowry or Andrew Strong since tho murder of Col. Wishart. In North Carolina. Tho same s)ccial brings to lifo again Henry llerry Lowry, chief of the Swamp Angel gang, who has been reported dead for mouths, A number of tho leading Knglish writers presented n mcmoninl to Karl Granville on Saturday, urging a copyright treaty between Kngland and tho I'niled Slates, tlrnnvillo promised careful consideration of the subject. Among Iho signers of tho memorial was Fronde, tho historian, who is about to visit this country on a lecturing tour. The civil engineers of tho Pacific rail-roads state Hint tho rains and the humidity of the plains havo increased during the extension of railroads nnd telegraphs across them. If this is the ease, it mav lie that the mysterious electric iutluence, in which they seem to put faith, but do tint profess to explain, has excrriwil n licnelicial influence. The rapid ndvnnee of American civilization may lie partly judged from the fact that the Western I'nion Telegraph Company during 1871 purchased oyer 14,000 miles of telegraph wire for the no-oossitics of that year. Already 8000 miles havo licen purchased for 1S72, and the prospects arc that over lo.OOO miles will Iw needed to meet the demands of the current year. A distich dated at Tallaha-soo, Hnri-ila, Saturday, 4th, states that tho Scnntc ns a High Court of Impeachment for tho trial of Onveninr Keed had ooliittiil (lint olhcor and discharged him without the examination of a witness, It U'ing well understood that tho charges were malicious and unfounded, Tho votestood 10 to 7. The (iovernor resumed the functions of his nthco that evening. The result give" entire satisfaction. The Fifteenth (lenernl Confm'ni'o of the African Methodist ( hurch of tho I'nlted Slates Is in session in Nnshvillc. lVlcgntes nro in attendance from New Kngland, New York, Pennsylvania, Indiana, California, Alabama, lleorgia, Ar- kiiisii., ninrvianu, floriila, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Kelilueky, Tennessee, Texan anil Virginia! TTOTni,r Tii'.rr.n-flf tudisno. I'nvifO nnd Shorter of Ohio, Wayniiiu of ltalilmore, Campbell of Philadelphia, Ward of California, and Jlrown ot Ihc Dislrlet of Columbia, nro present. Attention, Soldiers! SOI.IUHItS WISI1INII Til MAKK Al' PLICATION for laud wnrrnnty under the late law of Congress, enu do ni br ati-nlylug to or addressing It. P. Wooilniti;' luld Fellows' Temple, Ciiliunbuli, O, letters prnmpllv replied lo. nprlll 1m ADDITIONAL CITY NEWS. III'OIU 4T E ISIUV Tim urlrh Towimhlp Niparnlr Nrbool (. ! ti Nuprrmr Court. The Supieuic Court of Ohio rendered an important decision yesterday, involving the constitutionality of the :)lt section of the School law of 1853, as amended March 11, 1804, providing for the or-ganiiation of separate schools for colored children in this Slate. It was in the caw of "The State of Ohio on the relation of Wm. Games v. The Directors of sub-District No. 0 in Norwich township, Franklin county, Ohio," an application for a mandamus against the Directors of said School District No. 9 to compel them to admit the children of the relator, a colored man, into the school of said district lo he taught wilh the whilo children. It appeared from the petition and answer in tho eaK;, that whilo thu relator, (tames, lived with his family within the territorial limits of sub-District No. II, the Township Hoard of Education had formed a joint District, composed of said District No. 9 Jmd another ndjoining thereto, and established n school for the education of colored children, therein, thu school house being outside of the limits of sub-Diatrict No. 9, but ns ncccsible to the children of relator as the house in District No. 9 was to some of the while children in that District; nnd the school itself u good in every respect as the one for while children, and afiimling nil the advantages and privileges of our common school education. The relator refused to send his children lo tho colons! school, nnd insisted on his right to have Ihcm admitted tn anil Inuirhi in tho other. Tho case was very fully urgucd in the Supremo Court in January last by James Watson, Esq., of this city, for tho relator, and by C. '. Olds, Esq., for the School Directors, and tho decision was annumc-yestcrday by Judge Day nu la-half of Ihc Court. Tho opinion pronounced was u very elaborate one, and worthy of a more extended notice than can bo given this morning. It fully sustains the conslilu-ionality of section 31 of the Common School law of this Stale, and shows that the organization of separate schools for colored children is not in conllict with the provisions of tho llth amendment to the Constitution of tho United States, nor inconsistent with the rights of Garlics, the relator, as a citizen of Ihc United Stales. Tho writ of mandamus was refused, and the gielition of the relator dismissed. ItAII.KOAn MKETIV,. MeelliiK l.osl Mailt In tho Interest or the t'oluinhiiH nml ToledoKnll-ronil-Ooe lliimlreil Tlionsnnil llol-Inrs Nubttrrllieil. A meeting of a few citiu ns of Columbus was held at tho office of Messrs. liartlit & Smith lust evening to consult concerning the building of n railroad from Columbus to Toledo. ly request, Mr. M. M. Grecno gave a concise history of tho enterprise, showing that for tho past four years gentlemen nlong the proposed line of road had been in correspondence with various; public spirited citizens of Columbus, urging the propriety of nt onco building the rond. Mr. Greene told that ho has recently been over the entire line, with a view to nsccrtaing tho probable grades of tho various routes proposed. He had held meclings in a number of the county towns, nt wlueh there wns much good feeling and an earnest purposo to push tho ennstrnction of the road nt once. Mr. (Ireeno concluded by urging prompt action, and expressing Iho belief that on an assumed cost of three and one-half millions the proposed road would ls a paying one. (Iovernor Dennisou urged tho immedi ate organization of a company, to lie called the Columbus nnd Toledo Kailroad company. He stated with much earnestness that the future growth and development of Columbus deended largely upon tho vigor with which her railroad enterprises wero carried forward. After some further discussioii ten of the gentlemen present subscribed SlOO.uOO to the stock of the proposed rond, provided SJOO.OOO shall lie subscribed in Columbus and $200,000 shall bo subscribed in Toledo, in addition to such aid ns may he obtained along the line of tho mail. Ponulnr AniimeiiienlM. To He- IJ.lilor of Um Ohio Ntntc Jniunal : l'lcaso iermit me to sny a few words on this "popular subject nnd Ihc text laki-ll for it. 1. If the text allows dancing, billlard-playlng, card-playing, ,y.c, logically enn-nidered, it also allows murder and ovary other crime, for olwervo tho wonls, "Tn everylliing I hero is a season.'- If t-bey include nno thing tbev include all. 2. Mistake in regard to tho I'liritaii chief idea of life not lieing happy in the world. They held that tho surest nnd only way to true happiness was to oliey liod lovingly and to do all thegnnd they could to humanity, it. We arc not in duty bound to accept Mr. Kexford's idea of happiness ns the criterion. Itut that rule is lo bo tho guide which docs the most good in the world. It is to lie found by tracing ell'ecls back to their causes. Whnt hnvo theso things done? Whnt nro they doing to-dav ? Further, distinguish tliocxtn'mcdillcroiicc lietwei-n Iho two qualities of happiness, the one transient, the other linn nnd enduring.-I. Mr. Kexford's argument is, if I nils, lake not, that theso amusements, viz: dancing, billiards, cards, Arc, uro necessary to tho happiness of individuals. Therefore, they who avoid them nro unhappy, which is also a mistake. Ii. These arc, Ihcrefui-o, of doubtful propriety. Wo are ns Christians in dutv bound to select from tho vnst array o'f nnumnieiils and recreations, tlioso that will not only do us nn harm hut that will prove no evil to others bv our example. II. DIED. Skkos Chi Mnv 7, at his resilience, in Slinili-vlllc, Mr. .Ions W. Sncns. ruii"ral on Tlim-silay, Mnv oih, al U o'ebs-k, Hkikki'-hii Tiii'fday, May 7, at, U u' clock a. 111., ill his resilience, oil Knst Itli li stteel, A. S. liKi-sica, Ksq. Due noliw will licjii)enol' the lime when the funeral will lako place. ' FUNERAL NOTICE. ThslViieral ol M. S, Ttloursutl, son .it' 1 lr. J. II. Tllomp'un, will take place from St. I'ntrick'i 'Uun-li this (Wednesday) morning, May llh, aid 'rloca. Friends of the families nro rr iiiwil m nitend without further notice. NEW ADyErUIMENTS. A MASONIC. J( -U.I. nUKTllKllN" IN (JIIOD ' T ."landing of the Masonic Fratcmitr ire invitril tn nii't-l with l.ncktmiirne UW No. 2:, K. k A. M., at Shailcvillc, on TaittV -lay, the ml, insi.. ut 1 o'clock p. in., lor the .mrjHjse ol' aHemling- tho luueriil of Urn. John V. Seeds. luinSlt Ileal Kslate for Sale or Kxrhangc. rpilllllY HITS !' EAST l'AKK PLACE lf A'lililiim. TYyil LOTS on West Stale street. ONE LOT norihof I'iipiii Shops, will bo sold to suit pnrclmsi-rs. OXK IIOItSK A.NUPHAKTDXOR CAB-RI.UiK will Is- taken as part pay. Also, City Proper! r lo exchange for a Farm. Ii . I. M. 15 IK F. II, 'JS'j i:nt Tom Hired, mays il' Columbus, Ohio. TNOTIO'10. rpilK PFIIl.ll AUK NIJTU'KI) Til AT W.-.1 W. Gunnison, who h is up to this time acted ns solicitor lor this o-'icc, has no longer an v contici-tini! w ilh mo in niivcaiincily. I.'IIAKI.HS J. Illi.sS, General Agent for Ohio of tho Protection i.ife Insurance Co., of Cliiciifro, 111. mnvH It WfCKCE GOODS! Wumiiioi- cason I, Elegant Black Siik Grenadines mill Illiii-kSIIU Mtrlpe. i, titiii: Assoitriir.xr or PLAIN BLACK GRENADINES. ' I'liiiii White Oi'irandics, WHITE STIill'U. IIOK'L MH.LS Of KIIKNCII.HXIJLISII mill AJIEUICAS CHINTZES. Black Si!ks--$l up to $6.50 pr yd. JiiMt Itfcc lYCHl-Aii t:i'gnnl sitnek of JA PAXJ3SE SILKS AT LOW l'llK i:s. l.tirKc'Dfllvcry ol l.inlles' I'ndcrwcar GQLUMBUS SEWER PIPE CO., or.i um n, oiiio. j MANl-FACTUItE iSEWER PIPE Of all sizes ami kinds, from tl to 2 1 inch and of the best quality for strength, ilurnbility and smoothness, and at lowi-st market prices. OIHcc-iVest Side High Street, NEAR UAIL.KO.Vn IM'.I'OT. Wit. WAssAtL.Snp't. II. F. Ukks, President. Jas. A. Wilcox. Sec. S. S. Ilu-KLV, Tress. DlliKCTons II. 1-'. Itccs. 1. Hess, Windsor Atchison, K. Itivk, S. Medbery, James A. Wilcox, andS.S. Itii-kly. Orders ndilressed to tho Company, or the President, or any Director, will" reocive prompt nttcnlioti. Newark null Ohio Itlver Tire Brick Also constantly on band. II. F. Hcc-s, President Coliimlnis Hewc-r Pipo Co.! After a careful examination and thorough test of the Sewer I'iiie made by your Company, I have adopted it fur the 'Wilier Works of this city, as I Imd it equal, if not superior, for strength, durability and finish, to any o( Iho several kinds in Ilie market, which I have heretofore used in constructing water works in other cilies. Truly yours. J. L. WM.SIIURY, Chief Kripini-f-r Water Works, City or Columbus. mnr'J'iivid UNITED STATES TAXES! C'H.lk(toii 3 Omen, 1m. Ukv., Sbvkstii DinTiiirr Onio, CoLi'.Mlit a, Miy 1st, 1 9 2. ) f nil K ANSI' A I. T A K ( ).' I Nt'OM KS OF X tlie your ni I, nml Siici-iul Tuxcf, (lii-cnscs) fur ilie year IKT'2, in ilie Sevciitli Cnllci-iioii Distriri ol' Oliui, urn now m itnd payiiMe, nnd will lie rermviM nl ilie? lullow-iii(r iliurs in frniii Di.Jirii t, Iwlwcfft ilie hours of H o'cliK'k A. ,M. imda o'clock 1', Jl lu wit : I'ltANKLIN' COrNTY AtlliR Collector'! Ollicc, l)cli!er liiiildinK, cur. ttt lugU uud Town Strecis, ('oIiiiiiIhih. M AW.SUN C(H'.TV At tlio Olliee of S. V. Ihirllincff, Oopntr Cullfi-tfr. in London. l.ltKKNK COUNT V At iluiOnii:eot Julin F. rat ton, Depntv Collector, in Xenia. 'LA IlKK UU'NT' Atllie Oilice of Ed. I. Torliert, Dentil,v Collector, in SpriiiKlield. I'aymciit ot the wune is licrcly mpiired iM'tbre THE rJOTII OF MAY, 1873. CHAM. C. WAI.C I TT, Cnjlictorof Int. Itcv., Vih DUt. of Ohio. um,vlltt - The Itulllmiirc,riUslttirt'hiirat-lilca-o Itnihrtiy Coaipiuiy. (Ohio JJtriwn.) fPKN" PKIt ('KNTTM ON TIIK CAPITAL J. cto k of thu "liiiliitnon', I'i tlxtittrpli and Cliirno Kail way Cuiniianv, Ohio Division," huviinr Iktu uulwcrilK'd lhi-n.'to, notice ii liercliy (fiven to tlie fioclihulilcrsnf snid eooi-liany. by the corMtrfitorii ihereuf, that llicro will Ik; u tticclini; of Faid fto-kholdiT9 tor the purpose of chooiitiR' seven Directors for snid Com i tuny, on the '.'-id day u( .Mav, A. D. IriT'J, nt tlieotlice of Walter C. Qinncy, OeneMl Siirerintenilenlof tlu; Central Ohio and Luke Krie Division: of the Hull imoro and Obio Itailroiid Company, in (he City of Columbm, rouniv of Fr.tiiklin and Stale nf Ohio. WILLIAM KKVSKlt, .IdllN K.COW KX. OKOlitJH It. DKNN'IS, WALTKIt C. INCV, .ItUIN CiAltDIMvIt, njirJI .MATIi id CorKirnlora. (Stntesinan nml Disjmicli please C'y.) 13111 iOinos Mlli.M-'ll.K 1D IMITIIL ITAI.r.n IN Foreign and Domestic LIQTJORS, 131 Soulli II lull Nlrorl, Ilas jn't received ii Invpe nwortment of tho very lines t STILL, SPARKLING AND RED WINES. llrnndit'St'ordiuK Cins ami Liquors IX KOTTMCMi'OK FAMILY 1 SE. mav 7 Iw Omi'E ov TUB run t.WAV Co,, V tJ, 1872, J Cm... Cim. ti 1m. Ckst. Kaiuvav ( Cnmiiirs, O., Mny ti, fnilK ANNCAIi MKKTINU OF THE L Htoeklii'hlcrs ot thoiColiimlnis, CliieX'o k linliana Central Unilway C(m nn.rt will 1h held at tlie olliee of tho Company, In thu city ol'Colinnliuii, Ohio, ou Vcdutin.iiy,JiMio jlti, IHT'J, between tlie liuurd of U o clM'k a. in. nnd ;i o'clock p. tn., for tho election of liftceii Directors to serve fur lliu enauinar vear, and mich otbec biidinetniu may couio hefore I lie nieclinn;' Tlielntoki fur tbo transfer of llio enpltnl Hoi.l of the Cmnpnny will he ehied tn Co-lunibiift, ii., nd New Yetk City, nl 1 o'clock p. ni., Mnv 'J4tn, 'H7( nml rcniain ckiod on-til ibo morninir of J ..- Otli, 1872. UUUDON MiA-i'lii, titary. tuny 7
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1872-05-08 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1872-05-08 |
Searchable Date | 1872-05-08 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 10000000036 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1872-05-08 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1872-05-08 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3576.17KB |
Full Text | ... ... COLUMBUS. WEDNESDAY, MAY S, 1872. VOL. XXXIII,. xrr ho OHIO STATE JOURNAL H1 up i llJtfh, Vrnrl mihI t'hiipel M. (!OMLY & HMITH: rrin.mtiem ash Hiohitftob. N. (ONLY l',ilHr. "tiii(fisMirTTi:n (litnKi.KY" l whnt the erinni.fi rail liim. Tut'. WcRtbote nliiJfH by the (.eu'winn of the Democratic National Convention, hut tT (ha: quefl&oit U narrowed down toft contest botwwn Ornnt nml Greeley,' the Went hot e will (to for Orcolcv deeiilcdlv. ;. . Tiik Akron Ik-aeon come to un daily market "Please X.' A copy of the State Journal, addrwwd to the Itcncon, lenvcn the Columbia l'oHtotfice regularly, imd if it not received tho fault in elsewhere. t 11. (j., wo take it, very clearly indicate Iiih intention in tin' Tribune of tho fith not to Ik choked off the paper hy fenr thiiigH to "annoy und irritate" may lie, "quoted iih rnming fro,' lK!" f editor." Cleveland and other Ohio piijrK ajf jtmt now engaged in ahstra Min tlw material points of the lht i jn of the Coinriiissioner of ltai1rojK andTele-ip-nhlm. The Hpatk Jejunal puhlinhed thettamo niiitttVrffiilloi' form over four irom advnnee sheet. i "I'd tor tho Democratic; parly Iff tutt mm payx ail ucihh. Motto for the Liberals: I bir final hope Ip Hat despair. Motto for the Republican party : Truth i w impossible to bo coiled by any outward touch an the sunbeam. The Cincinnati Knquircr 41101c wiiti-mentH of the prow on the Cincinnati nominations. Tinier the head of "llcpubli. can proas" it has just three pajHira the loiiiHvillc Coiiunereial, good enough 11c-publicnn for iih; the New York Sun, which in a Standing diNgrucp tojournnl-ism of any kind; and tho Now York Kvcn-ing Port, which in u highly respectable 'Liberal" Free TradeAnti-Adminixtra-tion pajK-r. Thin U what U called independent journalism unrestrained by the fear of of lice. Men and brethren ! we live in nn age of development!) Darwinian and otherwise. Here we have had the New York Tribune talking about IWoilicc .ditoro, und the sin of allowing writers for thepretto lie trammeled by holding office. No winner la honest (ireclcy uciiniiialed for the Presi Honey than u howl U rained along the whole line, charging persecution, heratwe a Trilnine correspondent htn beentlw-miR-ied from the clcrknhip of a Congres-tioual eoinmiltee for tniporting the Cincinnati nominations. The editor of the Cincinnati Commercial, under the weight and gravity of other rare, ban forgotten to wild u a lit ofex-ofliec-hohlerH and othermercenaricH in attendance upon the Liberal Convention. Thin oniiiwion U on; we can l-ai with equanimity, in view of the C unmcreiarH statement that the bargaining politicians were nutucroiiH enough to get entire con trol of the Convention, and make itn notni nation. After nil, jierbapHWo nhould not have been able to publish nit the nnmex without icsuing a nuppleinent. The Cincinnati Kmpiirer wivh: The friendrtof (ieiicral Cox in the Ohio ilelegation probably lo.u the nomination 10 that gentleman by ftlcying thrir pnmr ItHiptlw tw m Men rcpi-esenting the Iowa delegation, twenty-two in number, had a conference with home of the Ohio leaders who have ninee been ho dingunled with the mull. They expressed their deire to vote in the commencement for icneral Cox, but were told by Ohio not to do it, that there wan a belter plan. Thin plan wan 'Mo wait until the Convention was tired out between Jtavln, Trumbull and AdauiH," and then "at the opjtortunc moment Iowa could fpring the name of Governor Cox," when everybody -hould raine a yell and whoopVm-up, and carry Cox through with a whirl. Hut, xay thcKmpiircr, rather endly "It is needles to xay that that time never rainc." No. Meantime Blair and Jlrown appeared upon the wene and eonHiimmaleil the bargain which brought out (Jreeley and ttrnt.. i'ttt.Nr;vrnm. A delegation of gentlemen invaded the StatE .lurns.vi, editorial sanctum yesterday, bearing a large packago wrapped hi yellow oil-eloth. This mysterious pack-utre was solemnly unrolled, in impressive und oppressive fileiiee, and an enormous Tin JMpier developed itself. Mr. J. R St. Clair then stepjs'd forward and delivered Inmsclf substantially as follows: Mil. Kiutoii: I am commissioned on Itelialf of the Grand Junction Kbcncwr South Public Lauo Temierancc and Auxiliary Graham Bread Association to prc -cnt ' you with this Tin Dipper, which is the pattern that has liccti adopted hv the Grand Junction Klwiwier South Public Lane Temperance and Auxiliary lirabam Bread Association for its meetings at the City Park Fountain. The mem hers of the Grand Junction Tern-iterance South Public Klwnoxcr and Graham Bread Lane Auxiliary Association I beg pardon, the name is rather confusing what I meant to say was, that the inemlxTH desire to express their Khenewr to vou no, no. Mr. St. ( lair produced a red baiulaima from tho depths of a genuine old bell-crown Dolly Greeley hat, with a while nap to it like an Angora ran, with which he blew his nose violently and peremptorily, after which he set out again : Gentlemen of the Convention, I have been a member of every Bepubliean ward, i-itv, county and Stato Convention ever held in the city of Columbus, and Mr. Fditor and fellow members of the Graham Klienerer Auxiliary and Tvniwrance llread Pioneers. Beally this name is a little unhandy. Mr. St. Clair blew his hum) with his hat, and put the dipper on his head, then proceeded with his speech, making furtive at tempts to get the hat Into tho pocket of his white overcoat, while he kept extending hia handkerchief with the other hand for tho editor's anvptanee, saying- Be pleased, Sir, to accept this Tin Dipper as a tight slokcn of the Hormo Yard-en which shall rise, Sir, and continue to rlso. like thoPhnmix Hone Company from its ashes, earning us hack to the times, Sir, when Franklin coutuy wna wilderness, be to ro the Pioneer Association had any existence liefnre. Sir, eagerly before tho Franklin CooVingBtovo was Invented, or Graham Bread had I wen turned out by C. P. L. Butler's Bakery in tho little framo where the spice mill now rears its proud form, and rises. Sir, like Graham Bread from its pluenix, to tho end of time, proudly, Sir, proudly,- 1 Mr, St, Clair hero grasped the editor by the haud.iuid prorewW with, great amo-; Hon-" "" - , I cannot let thin (K-eunion purin, Sir, j Wlinoui cxin.aNtiiiK jvy piwent with thews hale, hearty old Ho-neeri who have i miff the roverborulin,? axe whin the giant of the forent were prostrated hy the aturdy stroke, Kir, of tho axe. AVc moy never meet again. We may he called hence. Hut in that Had hour of parting let us rememlwr that I'ro-Cr ami nation in the noiil of huainew, and punctuality In the thief of time. iod Mean you good bye, old fellow, good bye. -Aud Mr. Kfc. flair .retired, Wiping tun eye with a copy tof the Wkly Tribune, after depositing the Dipper on tho editorial table, anil getting hi white hat out of hi pocket In a badly eollapned condition. FRANZ ABT. Ttwtirrtit tier man t'owpoiwr at ib Llederkraux Concert aud III He-replicator tho NarufftrbMiiil. Fniiuilic N. Y. Jt.nitM.mil. Ucrr Franx Abt left the Belvidcre House yerterday to take a drive through Central Park and call u)khi some of Mb German friends, lathe evening he attended tho concert of the Uedcrkraai Society, given at the club house, in Fourth street. Here he wan formally introduced to the society hv tho President, Mr. Louis Kammerer, ntid was received with nil the notion, the members singing the well-known student's song, "Kece (plain Bonam." The concert was one of rare interest, the noloirtu being Messrs. 8. B. and W. F. Mills, R BM-hni, Fred Steins and J. Brandies and a large chorus and orchestra, consisting of tho principal members of the Society. The programme wag as follows: "Symphonic Militairc, No. II," Haydn, orchestra; "Am Traunsce," Thierrot, baritone solo, with ladies, chorus and strinu; Ktudc, for basB-clarinette, Chopin, Herr Bot'hm; Ninety-first Paalm, eighth part, chorus, with organ, Meyerbeer; grand "Duo Hondo," Chopin, 8. B. Mills and W. V. Mills; "Freidrich Kothbart," Jlojler.male chorus aud orchestra; Ouverture to'Mcs- sonda," Spohr, orchestra. After the concert Herr Abt was the recipient of a grand festival at the ( lermania Assembly Booms, in which twentv-two societies of the New York Saengerbund took part. Ihey sang mvonil if Ahl'a lKintilnr oiiartetH ami tinkr, und welcoaif the representative song writer of Germany in the most hospitable manner. The proceedings at tho Germauia Assembly Kooius partook more of the nature ol a "kommeree" than in a regular programme. Herr Abt starts for Washington this morning, and on bis re turn here will be serenaded and eta with all the honors that German enthusiasm is apable of bestowing. Terrible Combat With a Mad Bull. From tlin Tolmlo t'onitncn-ltil. Wo are informed by I. N. Hathaway, of this city, of a fearful contest in Springfield township, in which the lives of two men were in imminent peril. It seems that Mr. John S. Clark, a farmer of that township, is the owncf of a young Durham bull, two years old, which he has raised, and whioh has liecn running with other cattle. n Wednesday last, April t!4, Mr. (.'lark was in the field in which the bull was kept, and saw nothing to attract his attention until he heard a bellowing noise, when, on looking around, he saw the animal coming at him in the most furious and threatening manner. Having no means of defense, and seeing no how in flight, he hoped by grasping the hull's horns to holil mm till Help could come. Tlie miimnl riwhed upon him shaking his head and bellowing most frightfully. Fortunate! v the bull's horns were long and well spread, so that he struck his victim with his head instead of either horn, and knocked him down. Mr. Clark wmght to gmsp the animal's horns, und otherwise resisted his furious assaults until a young man named Cone arrived who seized the bull bv the horns and was soon thrown iato the air, breaking his leg near the knee, but succeeded in getting to a fence in time to eseupe the pursuit of the animal. Mr. Clark soon crawled to the fence and also cscam-d. Both men were removed by neighbors, and are likely to recover in due time. Mr. Clark was badly bruised in different parts of the body, but it is supposed not dangerously. The bull will lc secured and placed in confinement, if possible, and if not, he will lie shot, as he is too dangerous to be at large. He is a fine, promising animal, ami ban licen (pnte a favorite. A Cuu aoo dispattdi says: There is about an equal quantity of profanity and levity hero over the result of tho Cincinnati Convention. Not more than half of the forty-two delegates from Illinois will roto for the ticket. Senator Doolittle and a few other IVmocral, swallow it with wry faces, hut the large majority of IVmocrats repudiato it, and declare they will not vote for two of the most radical Aliolitionints in the Bepubliean party, and demand a Democratic nomination. I'licv are already canvassing for a candi date who will be more conciliatory, and desire to nominate a ticket for which the Liberal Bepubhcans can Tote, such as Adams and Doolittle, or Davis and Cox, in case Greeley withdraws in favor of ( trnnt, as they believe ho will. The more aggrc&stvc Democrats demand a straight nomination, such as Hendricks or G roes-beck. There is no disguising the fact that the (tegular Kepublicans are perfectly satisfied with tlte Cincinnati nominations and platform, and do not believe Grant will lose live States, whether the ticket is withdrawn or not. Mr. Schura's estimate of the hostility of tho Germans seems to bo continued, at least hy tho sentiment of the Chicago Germans. Governor Koerncr, of this State, chairman of delegation, like Judges lload-tv and Matt hows, of Ohio, repudiates the ticket, and declares that It is incomprehensible liow a convention of so many distinguished men could prove such a failure. All the signs in this city indicate that the Democrats will repudiate the ticket, and that it has demoralised and scattered the Bepubliean insurgents. Orn dealers In Western lands will find It profitable to examine the titles to their lauds, for within a short time, It has been discovered that there is scattered all over the Tnlted States, a regularly organized band of men (with a regular outfit of notarial seals, comniisMonH, ami other aj-pliances) who have been carrying on for years the business of dealing in forged titles to Iowa lauds. The Dubuipio Herald says that it could givo the names and residences u men who are regarded as rich and nctublo in their own communities, who are engaged in tho wicked bind-ness of assisting to destroy the titles to untold amounts of lundn lying in Iowa, and this mav hereafter, in many eases, leave the fatherless and widowed with the ehuncu of an almost hoiielcss lawsuit on their hands, instuad of an uiiincumltcred Inheritance, Non-resident owners of real proerly in Iowa are ndvlscd to apply by letter to the recorders of tho dillercnt counties, asking If any changes are apparent upon their records in the chain of their titles, It Wing asserted that "sinco the discovery of these mysterious fraudsa large amount of lands are being held .nn-jtler forged deeds." Prominent officials of the Pennsylvania Kailroad company will meet in Mnnslieid, Ohio, to-day, for tho purpose of selecting tho grounds and locating tho shops of the Mansfield, Cold water and Lako Michigan Uallroad company. The entire line in graded and bridged, tho ties arc alt on the ground, and the iron purchased and on tho wav. The road will, doubtless, be In running order to Toledo by the time of ttio state ratr, in sepiemiwr, wtiicii is tno purpose of the managers. SUPREME COURT OF OHIO. Tuesday, May 7, 1872. Hon. John Welch, Chief JiiHtice, and Hon. William White, Hon. Ixtiikb 1AY, IIoil. tiEORflE W.. McIlvaine and Hon, WaxiAJt I U W Juil.. GENERAL JXM'KET. No. till. The State Bank of Miio- v. Otho H in ton aud wife et al. Appeal from the Common Pleas of Delaware county. Bcserved in the District Court. W'eht, J, Held; 1. The doctrine is well settled that a widow, who, during coverture, joined her husband in a mortgage of realty, whereof lie had inheritable seizin, Is dowable in equity of the surplus moneys arising from a judicial sale under a decree of foreclosure against her thereon, which may remain after satisfying the mortgage debt and the proper costs of foreclosure ; but sho jft-dowable of the surpbii only, and not of the entire proceeds, ni housaliffied out of the surplus; her right leing extinguished by the sale, to the extent that the proceeds are appropriated to the satisfaction of the mortgage. 2. Where a husband, with whom his wife joined in u mortgage of realty, in which she bad an inchoate right of dower, disuses of his equity of redemption therein by deed in which she dot not join, and dies after a judicial sale of the mortgaged premises under a decree of foreclosure against them, she is dowable of the surplus moneys resulting therefrom after satisfying the mortgage debt and costs to the extent that her right can l equitably discharged from the portion of such surplus, which shall not previous to its assertion have pawed by final decree from the chancellors control; but if the equity of redemption bo held by several, to Home of whom shall have been distributed their respective jwrtions of the surplus on final decree, without objection interposed, or assertion of right by her, tbev will not le required to refund, nor will contribution Iks enforced ngainst the interests of others which shall not have been so distributed. lecree accordingly and remanded. No. 70. The citv (f Cincinnati v. Groves .F. Penny, f-'rror to the Siisrior Court of Cincinnati. MrliAAiNE, J. Held: 1. Asn general rule, a municipal cor- poration is not liable for Injuries to build- 1 1 ma nn lots abutting uoou streets aud al leys, resulting from the improvement of such streets or alleys, or fronv their appropriation to a public use, provided tin nllieers and agents in making such improvement or appropriation, act within the scojw of their authority, nnd without neuligcncc or malice. 2. If, however, it be shown that the municipal authorities, before the con-rtruclion of such buildings, had so improved or appropriated the street or alley I to public uses, as to indicate fairly aud reusunnblv that no future change or other use would lie required 'v the citv or village, aud the nbutting proprietor, reiving upon such corporate acts as a final ifccision as to the wants of the public, improve his lot in a maimer suitable to the established use, and afterwards his improvements arc injured by a change, or by the appropriation of the street or alley to other uses, the corporation will Is' liable for damages resulting therefrom. I). Butifijtho nature and extent of tbeim-nrovcmcnUf and uses of the street or alley have not been so indicated or defined by the cityorvillage,ahutting proprietors must.at their own peril, improve their lots with reference to such future Hues or changes in the streets us may lie made and adopul by the city or village while acting within the seojK! of its municipal authority. . i. I itclcr the laws ot Him Mate, sewerage is one of the legitimate uses to which the publlcHtruetM und alloy of the city uf Cincinnati may lie appropriated by its municipal authorities. Judgment reversed aud cause remanded. No. 4W. The Slate of Ohio ex rel. William Games v. John W. MH'ann. Application for mandamus, Dv,J. Held: Wbcre.under the olst section of the act of lH6:t, "to provide for the organization, supervision, and maintenance of common schools," as amended in Isi'ri, the proper Boards of Kducation constructed a joint district for the education of colored children out of two contiguous districts for the education of white children, and provided a school for colored children in the joint district equal in every n'specttothose for white children in the other districts, and which schools for each class of children were enuallv commodious: IbhU that the act authorizing such classifica tion, on the basis of color, docs not con travenc the Constitution of the Stale, nor the 14th amendment of the lonndtution of the United States, and that colored children residing in cither of the districts for white children, are not, as of right, en titled to admisHon into the schools for white children. Mandamus rcfuseo. Nn. . Tho Passemrer 11 ail road Co. v. Isaac Young. F.rror to the Superior Court of Cincinnati. White, J. The defendant below was a corporation engaged in oicratiug a street railroad. The plaintiff Mow and his wife having taken seats in one of the defendant's ears as passengers, were by the orders of the conductor incharge of the ear, wrongfully nnd by force ejected therefrom, whereby they were injured Held : 1. That the cororation by placing the conductor in his jmsilion invested him with the implied authority of determining who ought to lie ud m it ted and who excluded from the car, ami for the wrongful exercise of this authority by theeon-duclor the corporation is liable. . . IH11SUT in rvJii"iiiv. mini, tho nets of his servant done in course of his employment; and, when a person is injured thereby, the motive or intention of the servant in doing the act, will not operate to discharge the ma-ter from liability. 4. Under the act of March J'J, 1411, "to amend the act Mating to juries," S, and C.St. 7')",) whenever a neeewuty arises for Miimmoniiiir talesmen, it I the duty of the nonlientlon of either nartv. to issue a venire containing lite names m . persons to serve as jurors, nnd, if one writ j fails to secure tho requisite immlier, to is-1 sue other writs, on like application, until a sufficient number of jnrors is obtained to fill the panel; and when a pnqvr application is overruled and the parly compelled to submit his ease to jurors selected by the Sheriff, it in error for which the judgment will Im reversed. 4. When the Court ordered the Sheriff to summon talesmen to which the defendant objected, and immediately and beforo the Sheriff had taken any stew under the order, applied for a venire under the statute Held : That the application did not come too late. .1 udgment reversed and cause remanded . MOTION IHX'KET. UVX William Hilvus v. The State of Ohio. Motion to take case out of its order granted. Thereupon adjourned until Thursday morning next at 1 o'clock. Hon Charles Hays, of Alabama, in the House on Saturday, delivered a sficceh on j tho financial and political condition of his State, which was verv interesting and to lbeHilnt. I to refuted completely the assertions made by anti-Administration papers that tho Imnilcd debt of his State was over forty millions, and showed that it wan not over five million at (he greatest. He also fihowul "H'mTlnte-liients from tho State Treasurer that the contingent railroad debt of the Statu did not amount to over fourteen millions, which puts to rvt tho untruthful assertions that It amounted to a much larger sum. Tho wheat, In most sections of the country, Is growing finely, and gives promt of an abundant crop, A poor field ol wheat ii an exception, and a curl-oilty .--iXvtoii Journal BY TELEGRAPH to Tin: onio state jot.trxal MANSFIELD. U timed hy 'onl Oil Ktplimlon. :H T.-tfijiitm k. ni jn Shoe .l.lim,il.j Massfiei.h, May 7. About eight o'clock thi evening u widow lady, named Mrs. Anna lrfggett, aud her little child, residing on Second street, were badly burned by the explosion of a coal oil lamp. ALABAMA CLAIMS. Th .ch l urk World ituil Tribune nn Hie INiNhion of Our (Joveni. tiifnt. New Yhik, May ". Thu World this morning, in an article headed "Grant's liesohttu Retreat," snys : "Whether we shall slick to our original ease at Geneva until tlte tribunal passes upon it, or cut and carve that case to suit (treat Britain, is now admitted at Washington entirely to dciiend upon the humor of Far Granville and the GladKhmu government. The stupid complication in the caw, of clean with unclean, sane with insane, Gettysburg nonsense, with serious claims for our denationalized commercial marine, makes this so serious n matter that from certain point 4 of view it Ins come to be fairly doubtful whether a complete abandonment of the treaty is not really the ibing most by us to be desired.'' The Tribune, on the same subject, cays: "We hold our government clearly in the right in refusing to withdraw or'modify Its case al the dictation of an adverse party. In taking this position we do not assert the validity or justice of Undisputed claim, nor affirm' the necessity or wisdom of making it. The former propo-sitiou appeals to the arbitrators, the latter may raiso an Issue between our government and our isjofilc. not U-tuveu them and Great Britain. ' CHICAGO. The Trttntlrr Hnr lt-tuit Oiii:ihn j mill ('(iniirll hi mi. t iih . win, May 7. The Tribune pub-1 I Mie un interview by itn reporter wilh j President Horace F. Clark, of the Fiiion ' Pacific (tompany, with rcfereneo to the! transfer ctmtroversy between Omaha and Council Bluffs. President Clark mv the Villon Pacific nrnd had its eastern terminus on the west bank of the Missouri river in order to facilitate the transfer of passengers and freight. I'pon the completion of the bridge Iown roads, whose, termini were upon (be cast side of tho river, sought to compel the delivery of all freight and patwugcrs ujwn their territory. They refiiKcd to run their trains through to Omaha or permit tliein to be run by any transfer company. The I' moii Pacific hud no legal authority, ami was prohibited by its contracts with Omaha and Douglass county from making transfers on the Iowa side. They therefoiv contracted lemmrarily with ii third party in make the transfers over the bridw. President Clark says it is really a fight between St. Louu and Chicago, unil if the Iowa roads see proper to force traffic from Omaha down the west lde of the river to St. Louis, the In ion Pacific is not responsible for the damage which may i n-iu to Chicago interests. POLITICAL. TeititiH,M'c l tiioernlic Ntiilt 4 'on ten. lion. Nashville, May 7. The Democratic StalcCoiivention assembler, in Nashville on the 1Mb hist. Its object is the nomination of a candidate for Governor, appointment of delegates to the National Convention, aud probably the selection of a Presidential electoral ticket. Interest in the action of the Convention hat greatly Increased since thu Cincinuali Convention. The llanner suggi'ls that tho 4 on vent ion give expression to mi hone) and hearty indorsement of the ticket and platform presented at Cincinnati, lielicvhig the effect upon other Slates will bo salutary. The I nion and American leaves it to the National Convention to determine, after full and free coniicreuee, what action din 1 1 lie taken by the IVmoeralie parly. niHNonrt HepnMlrHii. Sr. LoriH, May ".The Bepubliean State Executive committee has issued a call for County Conventions throughout the Statu for the election of County committees and for the organization of Congressional District committees, with a view- to a thorough organization ot the party for the coming campaign. Iriinltfiiiln l.nlxir t'itnrtiilon. Wn.i.iAMsi'onr, Pa., May 7. The State Labor Convention organized to-dav. liichard Williams was elecled temporary Chairman. Fifty delegates were present, A committee on Hriuanent organization and platform was appointed, and the Convention took a reii-H. Great pressure Is being made in favor of candidates who can he indorwd hy the coining iHuocrni-1c State t (invention. IihIIiiiiii Town fclwilinm. SnEi.nvvn.LE, Ind., May 7. The election in this city to-day resulted In the election of four Bepubliean Cotineilmen, making tho city government Kcpuhlh'ati entire, for the first time. Terkk Hai'TE, Ind., May 7. In the election for Connciliuen in this eiiy today the Itepubliean candidates were elected in every ward. The old Council stood seven Bepiibticans to three I crimen I s. The new Council will be all Ke-publicims. The vote was light. Jreeley In TcitiieMHee. Na.-hville, Tenn.. Mav 7. An enthu siastic inns meeting was held at Chirks- ville. yesterday evening, and the nomination of Greeley and Browiiuuanimouslv ratified. All classes uf citizens participated almost en masse, As far as can he learned the anti-Grant sentiment in Ten-iich favors the Cincinnati nominations. WASHINGTON. THE TAItll'l' nu. I.. Wasiiimiton, May 7. The enacting clause of tho Tariff hill has Into struck out hy the House, In committee of the Whole, by a vote of H" to 7o. HEATH UF EX-JI INIE 1H.NJ.AI'. James Dunlapdlcd yesterday hi Georgetown of niHiplexy. He was formerly one of the judges of the court of this' Dis-trlct.A I'ltUTKaT IIV SOLDI MtMAMtKAIIAIIt. A Holtlli'r' ami HailoiV C'oiivcnlioii wmi licliMion1 Innl nlh'lilt llio lU'lrunHw lMvnv.i...iM ........... ,n.n, . ,,. iinil Army ol llio Urnuuiii'. Jlioir kimiiuM wan In Inkv ui'llim npiinm rvrmln li'i - liitlnii uf ronirrrtf mlW'liiiK Oivir inh-r- ct, imrli.nliirly Iho ititiiiIv i:iw 'I'LL .1..,.. rim- I.-.IMII. "i - v,-; 1. a 'IimIoii In .i.lihm nii.l millnr., wtwlally IImiw ,11WI l,y ivniniil.nr r;;!:"...:"" ,f". iK.lon. .houlil ,,., , irom 'll. 'linu, ..f .l.ill, i.,.,..i .-.i... .....i .i ji proofs, and' ho.id, aklng is'n.ions more IqiillnU', Ihey want an a l.liliou of 20 1st renl. 1 , i'AS T kkep A mki'Iii.'i. A nMirt Is qullc eurreiu thlanflernuoii thai the I'resldent has decided In remove Assistant Secretary of State Hale, ou the ground of his inability to keep diplomatic secrets. It is alleged that quite recently sevoral important State Department secrets, through Hale, have lieconte public, . FOREIGN. Heavy Hood in Australia--400 Persons Drowned. . The HMUilNh Wr-Thr llH.tle til u. vnrro Internal InimlM Trouble In Oeimmrk. Paius, Mav ". It is Mated heie Iliad '"'V ti yettheabaence of such a plank ere is a crisi in the Spanish Cabinet. tSK"0 mnrkb!(N H'M. after all, there is a crisis in the paiui London, May 7. The Times'. special dispatch from Madrid sayn Don Curios lied toward tho French frontier. Marsha Serrano, with bin troop:, is hi pursuit nl tho pretender, ami exjwts to overtake him. MAimiu, May 7. Marshal Serrano has made ollicial report of his engagement with the forces under I ton Carlo in Na-vurre. The Marshal wiyn: After serious resistance hy the insurgents hlstooM hc-cceded in piercing their line and finally anihilating the force, He will now concentrate bin troops in Biscay, and drive ul the insurrectionists from that province, leaving volunteer to pursue Don Carlos, who lied toward Addindes. Carbineers who nro acquainted with the country will pursue what rebel bands that may y'ot remain inNevarro. Insurgents continue to come in and sum-ndcr. Seven hundred and fifty prisoners have arrived at I'amjM'ltinca. Government forces operating against the Insurrectionists are continually lieing reinforced. i;njlani. Lunikix, .May 7. The scwion of the House of Commons last night whs devoted mainly to debate on tho Scotch Kducation bill. A resolution introduced by Mr. Gordon, member for Glasgow trnd Aberdeen 1'niversiiic.s, providing that the Scriptures shall form a part of the instructions In schools. wu carried against Government vote, 210 to 2W. Advices received hereby telegraph from Australia stato that heavy floods, which caused terrible loss of life, occurred in i Melbourne, lour hundred person were ; drowned, and growing crops have licen ; greatly damaged. j It is rumored that several uf the Kurile ' islands, in the North Pacific, nro to be ' leased to the United States. Thes? is-I lands, twenty-five in number, extend from Kainsehatka to Japan. The three southernmost belong to Japan, and the others to Ktwtn. At a reception held lit Windsor Casili yesterday b American I Majcstv. Otieen Victoria, several die- were presented to Her General Jim. Halt of the BriiMi army : is dead. Dr. Isuac Butt, member of Parliament for Limerick, has written a letter on Home Bule. He asks lor the Iri-di an assembly in which home rule can be fully represented, approves tho plan for fraternal union lietwccn Ireland and Kng-land, guaranteeing authority of the Crown, and draws outlines of a Federal Virion which he says will Im a satisfactory settlement of the relations between iiie two countries. IlKNMMlli. ' Cui'ENiiAiiEN, May 7. The action nf tbe police authorities in forbidding mem-Iters of the International Society from holding a meeting in this city hist Sunday, and the suhcucut arrest of the President and Treasurer of the branch here, gaveriae to great excitement among nieml'crs of the 'organization. A lurge numlier gathered in the sirccls and ere-aled considerable alarm by their violent dcnuiiuiationn uf the OoYuriiiilviit. Tbev were finally discnted by the police, ami at present all is quiet. It has hecn deemed prudent, however, to place a military guard uround nil public buildings mid palaces until the excitement has entirely abated. The leading members of the no-ciety in this city will Ih- pin-eculed for high treason. The police un- adopting energetic measures to suppress tiny tumult which may nrie. litAvn:. Pa iiih, May 7. The Mini.-ter m' War to-day laid before tho Asseniby a bill con stituting a court-martial for the trial'of ntlicers censured bv the reinul of the Com mission on Capitulation, Duke le Is iithioii. "nn of Prince Dc .Toinville, is to marry Prince Christine, daughter of Duke Dc MotitH iihicr. Tho Commission on Capitulaiion, in their reK)rl, eeUMitv officers who surrendered the fortified town of Sehlestadt to German troops during the late war. Tho Cornmision praise the olthvr who commanded at Verdun for the gallant defense be made, but blame him for having j subsequently surrendered the town. , IMtlKMA. Hnu.iN, May 7. Bismarck is aain in-ilisjKised, ami his physicians insist on his nbsolute rest, or consequences mayIs-prions . The new fortifications at Sirn-burg nro toenl seven millions sterling. NEW YORK. A UM.D aitiK HAi:. j New YoiiK,May 7. For the at tlmo j days the whole force of I'nitcd States' Deputy Man-haN has been looking for Henry Howard, a rich merchant, who Is , alleged guilty of extensive fraud on Government in the early part of iMiii, A warrant for his arrest was granted byCom-inif-ionvr tsborue, on comphiinl made by one of Supervisor Dutchcnt Assistants. It was thought he would secretly sail for Ktmle Saturday, and that day's steamships were searched without finding him. Hi family took passage in the steamer Bavaria. His name appeared on the pas-sengcr list, hut he could not be found on Isiard when tho vessel sailed. It in he. lieved he took alarm, nnd to evade arrel has escaped from thu country in some other way. Secrecy is maintained in regard 1 to thenatureof his frauds, A Til ISM tN Till: MnitMo.V .,l lt H. I A schism has divided the Mormon ! Church in Williamsburg. Of ilie two hundred members seventeen have declared against polygamy, nnd have, started a , church in the missionary temple. They I have chosen their elders and priests, and I are determined towage a cmsmlc against others who maintain the doctrine of Ivgamv and advocate immigration to ; Ctah.' -in nn:. Wm. lt. Franklin, n promiiienl ih nt-11, and for the past eight or ten yea in n member of the seventh regiment, hanged hiuuelf yesterday morning nt bis ivsi-dence, No. !tl" Sixth avenue, i'nue, business troubles. IIA1.HT1I1AL TO HE IIESEWtli, It was rumored yesterday that Attorney (ti'iii'nil Unrlnw wiih (,'nin cxtniilinulv no- llvo In ciHlMvirhiit In brhiK Jlu v.ir 1 1 II In trial on lliu I'nrimT iluHi-lmt'iil, ii( trlnl of xvliirli n lnlorniiUnl liy lliu cIcuiliol'njiiror.iH wi ll ai iuIutb wlii. li hi1 cxiiitI. lo iw intniu ny nu' tn-w annul . , ".,.,. ( Vf..d ..Mil V M'"' 1 rAliNSTKim os ttmKt: i I'liraimnl lu nolllh'nltun ciwn In-i wt-rli. I 1 i,o llrooklyn inrpontm Mriirli yiilchlny ' - n r, TT .. . L nim ii im ui n. vm an win or t'oiuii ih-ii in n,.,lu to tlnMloninml oi'Hio ivnrluui n. (K ,.0Nv,;N , ,.;. ti. m...i.,h.i .j..,,i i'riw,w I 'mM '!''" !lr"l"'.l' Ami's pre.dillng. the reporl of Ilie till- ""H'-v 'V ."'."n ili'-'""'"!. J'"1"1"'""' '" i" "I' ' Kv 'r.Sliccr.of llaltln.nre, ''''r oppwltion. In It Dr. Ijinnhan reiterates all his elinrges, ; accuses tho cnminltleo wilh emhavoring Is smother nccusnlioiis laid licforo Ihem, I stales that tho cnlniiilltce endeavored In exact a pledge from him not to report his .nseovenes to inc (ieiicral Conference, which he refined, and Mthscquetitly found h inn-elf treated as acriminal instead of a prosecutor. The reading of tho rejrt occupied thanj hours. AMERICAN TEMl'EItANCECOMMIIION. There was a fair attendance to-dav at the anniversary meeting of tho American Temperance Commission, held in Stein-way Hull. Aaron M. Powell pmdded and mule the principal address. Alluding to the Cincinnati Convention ho said it was remarkable that there was not a tcnier-mce plank in the platform, although the chief man placed nuon it was u tomner. ,..MCIivtiiiiitK ion-pun, um second man upon tnc iicKui wa a wmo uibler. An address to the country was ndonted. wlyfj State Legislatures are urged to Uikouclionin favor of total aiMtiucnce, and recommending the appointment of no man to olliee who is not a tenieranee man. Bcsolutions were adopted advising clergymen to substitute water for wine in the communion service, nnd to extend the right band of fellowship only to total abstinence nicn and women. THr iumiios-(ioi;T,n cahk. The litigation between Gordon nnd Jay Gould, in which each party is plaintiff and each defendant, two suits having been brought, came up lieforc Judge Brady this morning. Gordon's counsel taid "that there were three motions one on the suit bv Gordon for un injunction and a re-ceiverof certain stocks and bomU which he claims from Gould; one in the suit by Gould against Gordon, made by Gordon to vacate order of arrest, and a third, a motion bv Gould in another suit to examine ( rordon's purpose in preparing tho complaint. After a little diseupsion it was agreed that all motions should bo heard together. On behalf of Jay Gould, Mr. Hoot read first Gould's affidavit, already published, denying positively the accuracy of averment ol'thirdon's nfiidavit as to transactions between them, that Gordon had with him any transactions in putt nnd calls, etc., etc. A number of very voluminous affidavits were then read, and after some diseusshm (ho court gave Gordon n week to put in his responsive affidavits, when both he and Gould are to Ik prewnt to submit to examination. .MlCEM.ANEUt lj ITEM. Iticluird Andrews, aSwedUh snilor,yes-tcrday fell from the yardarm of the llark Sarah K. Kitigshurv, while off quarantine, and was instantly killed. In tho suit of Mrs. Juliet Kcmwick against her husband for divorce, on the ground of adultery, the latter pleaded in-sanitv nt the time of the commisflion of Ltbc act. The referee reported in favor of granting me application. Smuil pox is increasing; thirty-three new eases were reported to-day. Fourteen of the fifty prisoners sought to lie cleared liceause of the illegality of our old Court of Special Sessions, wererc-H-nlenced to-day by the new court, A Bussian ladv named Frulofl'Hiies the Hudson railroad company for $100,000 for alleged loss of a trunk containing valuable heirlooms. FORTY-SECOND" OONORESS. Flrttt Munition. Washijjoton, May 7, IKHKE. Mr. Dawes, from the committee on Wayh and Means, reported a bill limiting to one per cent, tho expense of issue and reist-uc of loans, legal tender notes, fractional currency, &e. Mr. McCrary, fratn thu committee on Flections, made a report in the Texas eoniesteu election case ot tmluingH against Clark, that the sitting memlvr is not en titled to the scat, ami that liiddings, con testant, is not. Mr. Ileek, from the committee on Ways and Means, reported back Senate hill allowing rebato of tax on whisky destroyed by tins or other casually while in bonded warehouses, with un amendment excepting in cah.es where the tax has been actually paid. Passed. Tho House resumed consideration of Senate amendments to the lVticiency bill. Tho amendment in reference to claims for cotton seized bv tho government after the elo.se of the war, requiring proof of loyally ot claimants, came up nnd gave rise to n long discussion, the committee on Appropriations recommending tion- concurrence aim reporting asuhntitutc for it le4 exacting on claimants. Finally the substitute reported by tho committee on Appropriations for Senate amendment was adopted oy yeas and nays, ns follows : That the Secretary of the Treasury be and ho Is herebv authorized and directed to pay to lawful owners, or their legal reprc-enta lives, of all cotton seized after the uUth of June, lH(i.), hy agent of the government, the net proceeds, without interest, of Kales of said cotton actually paid into the Treasury of the Vnilcd States; provided that receipt thereof shall he taken and received in full satisfaction of all claims against the Fluted States for or on account of the seinirc of on id cotton; and a sufficient sum for such payment is hereby appropriated and the Secretary of tho Treasury is hereby outhor-i.cd to prcscribo rules nnd regulations lor thu ascertainment ut nil decennary fads for the execution hereof. This ended Senate, amendment of the Deficiency bill. The House thru took up nnd disposed of Senate amendments to the Indian Appropriation bill. On motion of Mr, Cox tho President was called upon to furnish any correspondence, during tho Inst and present administration, on the subject of nn extradition treaty wilh Itctgium. Mr. Hazleton of New Jersey, from the committee on Flections, made a nqwrt uii the South Carolina contested election case, that Wallace, sitting member, was en-tilled to the seat. The House then went into committee of tho Whole, Mr. SeoHeld in the chair, on tlte Tariff and Tax bill. Mr. Dawes moved to strike nut the line taxing tea and coffee,, Mr. Kelly, to save time, moved to strike out the enacting clause of the hill. The chairman ruled that Kelly's motion took precedence of the other, and must lie voted upon without delate, and that If the enacting clause were stricken out the committeo would thereupon rise and report thatfat to the House, The uncstion was taken by tellers on Mr. Kelly's motion, ami it wa agreed to by n vote of id to 7 ". The committee thereupon m-e, and the chairman reported Its action In -trikitig out the enacting clause. Mr. Kelly moved that the I louse concur in the action of the committee uf the Whole, nnd that the hill he neoommitted to tho committeo on Ways nnd Means wilh instructions to report back his hill as a substitute, ' Mr. Dawes moved as an amendment that the committee be Instructed to rc- port back a bill wincing rates of duties j to t'd per cent, of present rales, Mr. Kiiiki'lnliiirtrblinr movcil In IlliK'iid Mr. ilaWM'rtntiiPiolaii'liI ly mincing ralp. to so K'r will, of nv'iit rale. Tho iiiwlinii a lint taki'ii nn Mr. Filiki'lnlmrK'. innlinil. Hi'jri'tiil yea. 711, nay llli. Tin1 villi- wan tlH'iitaki'inin Mr. Iiiiwi' innlinil. AgiYvil lo you. Ill, nnva 77. Tin1 1'ill wan then rci'imiinittwl to thu cotoioiltiHi oil Way. ami Mrnn., with In-htriiolii'ii. to rrmrl It haik I'nrlhwilh .11 "WW ("trtiTO! tnlM. ll' vole mi iv ' -in.iufttul wile vcn. II" iiiivk 7. ,, ( h.-'n ii,.n rrimVliil Imrk lliu 1,111m iMrwltxI. ami Ii a. rfforml to i .1,0,,. s h... wi...... i. tk,,, ! ''I'.'"-".'"' Tl. Ili, ib.-ii look n rcc" until 7.1 o'cloi-li, the evening m-s.loll In lc for busl. nes of Um Military conuniltiv. hi:ati:. .Mi. Chandler ell'cwl n resolution for Ihnnppiihitmelit of n select eiitnmlllee to Inquiry whether nny slcnmhimt lines should be subsidized by Government, and it i, nun ii inn- anu to wnat extent. Mr. Kellogg objected, and the resolution went over. At the expiration of the morning hour unfinished business the Postoffieo Appropriation bill was taken up. The pending question was on concurring in theamend-mcnt mado In committee of the Whole increasing the subsidy to the Pacific Mail Steamship lino to $1,000,000 nor nnnnm after expiration of the existing, contract. The amendment was further amended so ns to give Government a right to take vessels in case of war, at a price not greater than its original cost, ana it was concurred in. The striking out of the section nrnbib- iting ex-officials of Government from acting on claim agents ngainst Government, was concurred in. Mr. Fenton offered a substitute iuereas-ing the subsidy for mail service with Brazil to $400,000 per annum forwmi-month-ly service, subject to the same conditions as the Pacific snlHiily. Agreed to. Mr. Casserly oflcred an amendment Increasing the subsidy to'thcSnn Francisco and Australian line toS-HKyH), service to uc ncrm-mommy. Mr. Casserly offered an amendment requiring the Pacific mail line, a a condition of the Increase of subsidy, to continue its line between San Francisco and Mow York by wny of the Isthmus of Panama. Agreed to. Mr. Xvo offered an amendment nnnlv. Ing this condition to any other company which may secure a contract for mail service between Snn Francisco, China nnd Japan. Pending action on this amendment the Senate adjourned. HV NAIL AM) TEI.EUKAl'll. The Slate Kditorial (Joiivontiim will In. held nt Atheim June 13. The .Southern Prcfihvteriali I ioni-nd An- aenihly mcetH nt Kiclimnnd, Vn., the loth. Tho Murvin llouve and o larou livery atnble, at Hed.ilia. Mn.. wnn lillrnrd Mnn. dav. 1'ivc hundred niilliuliK Knln((e iitaiiipa were i'ihiM lnnt wei'k liv the Ijiitiil Slaten. The Ohio Grand I-odgc of Old l'ellown will hold their next nnnual nicetini; in the Dayton Temple, on tho 14th of May. Adiioratch from Havana av seventeen lirolcanional punlilon, of various nationalities, hnvp hern haniKhed from the ltd-nnd.The H'H'li climi of lion. Jerome 1). C'hnf- fee an Congressional delegate from Colorado is regarded as almost eertnin in that Territory. The New York charter has jiassed the House amended so as to nrnnihit nnnm. priations for sectarian schools. It goes hack to the Senate. The regular annual nuKting of the Ohio Medical Association will occur in Ports- ruoutli tho first week in June nexl, nnd remain in session three davs. Xo less thun twelve iron steamships are at present building on tho Delaware, the aggregate cost of which will bo considerably more t ban six millions of dollars. Kngland purchased S1S1,000,000 worth of cotton from thu United Stales lost year, and made a net profit from the articles manufactured from it ofSlfyi,- William Webb, alias lluck, confined in the Kastcrn (l'cnn.) rcniltnti'ary, yesterday morning killed his room mate, Michael Trimbul, by striking him nn Hie head with an iron plate. There is the best authority for saying that if the t-heriff of Cass county, Missouri, fails to perfnrm bis dutv, that the United Htates authorities will' arrest the assassins of Stephens, Klino and Dutro. Mr. J. A. Bell, a farmer living six miles from Ikirtlctts, Tennessee, was waylaid and murdered Monday night while riding home. No clue to 'the murderer. Mr. liell's body was found near his house, partly eaten by hog. Paris is still the mistress of modes and fabricator of fashions. Never w ero shops so full or milliners so bnsv. The theaters are crowded, and Iho Mabillc is ngain tho center of attraction. Diplomatic dinneni are in vogue, but ihc dishes nro tasteless, owing tn the absence of the imperial chtj. The St. holds aud Carnndolct Bridge Company has contracted with a Con necticut rlrm for constructing a bridge acrnsstlie .Mississippi river at Mouth $t ixiiiis, in oc compicicu in two years, at a cost ofalHitit four million dollars. The bridge will bo dnubl-traek railroad, and carriage way. A secial from llichmond states that nothing linn been heard from Stephen Lowry or Andrew Strong since tho murder of Col. Wishart. In North Carolina. Tho same s)ccial brings to lifo again Henry llerry Lowry, chief of the Swamp Angel gang, who has been reported dead for mouths, A number of tho leading Knglish writers presented n mcmoninl to Karl Granville on Saturday, urging a copyright treaty between Kngland and tho I'niled Slates, tlrnnvillo promised careful consideration of the subject. Among Iho signers of tho memorial was Fronde, tho historian, who is about to visit this country on a lecturing tour. The civil engineers of tho Pacific rail-roads state Hint tho rains and the humidity of the plains havo increased during the extension of railroads nnd telegraphs across them. If this is the ease, it mav lie that the mysterious electric iutluence, in which they seem to put faith, but do tint profess to explain, has excrriwil n licnelicial influence. The rapid ndvnnee of American civilization may lie partly judged from the fact that the Western I'nion Telegraph Company during 1871 purchased oyer 14,000 miles of telegraph wire for the no-oossitics of that year. Already 8000 miles havo licen purchased for 1S72, and the prospects arc that over lo.OOO miles will Iw needed to meet the demands of the current year. A distich dated at Tallaha-soo, Hnri-ila, Saturday, 4th, states that tho Scnntc ns a High Court of Impeachment for tho trial of Onveninr Keed had ooliittiil (lint olhcor and discharged him without the examination of a witness, It U'ing well understood that tho charges were malicious and unfounded, Tho votestood 10 to 7. The (iovernor resumed the functions of his nthco that evening. The result give" entire satisfaction. The Fifteenth (lenernl Confm'ni'o of the African Methodist ( hurch of tho I'nlted Slates Is in session in Nnshvillc. lVlcgntes nro in attendance from New Kngland, New York, Pennsylvania, Indiana, California, Alabama, lleorgia, Ar- kiiisii., ninrvianu, floriila, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Kelilueky, Tennessee, Texan anil Virginia! TTOTni,r Tii'.rr.n-flf tudisno. I'nvifO nnd Shorter of Ohio, Wayniiiu of ltalilmore, Campbell of Philadelphia, Ward of California, and Jlrown ot Ihc Dislrlet of Columbia, nro present. Attention, Soldiers! SOI.IUHItS WISI1INII Til MAKK Al' PLICATION for laud wnrrnnty under the late law of Congress, enu do ni br ati-nlylug to or addressing It. P. Wooilniti;' luld Fellows' Temple, Ciiliunbuli, O, letters prnmpllv replied lo. nprlll 1m ADDITIONAL CITY NEWS. III'OIU 4T E ISIUV Tim urlrh Towimhlp Niparnlr Nrbool (. ! ti Nuprrmr Court. The Supieuic Court of Ohio rendered an important decision yesterday, involving the constitutionality of the :)lt section of the School law of 1853, as amended March 11, 1804, providing for the or-ganiiation of separate schools for colored children in this Slate. It was in the caw of "The State of Ohio on the relation of Wm. Games v. The Directors of sub-District No. 0 in Norwich township, Franklin county, Ohio," an application for a mandamus against the Directors of said School District No. 9 to compel them to admit the children of the relator, a colored man, into the school of said district lo he taught wilh the whilo children. It appeared from the petition and answer in tho eaK;, that whilo thu relator, (tames, lived with his family within the territorial limits of sub-District No. II, the Township Hoard of Education had formed a joint District, composed of said District No. 9 Jmd another ndjoining thereto, and established n school for the education of colored children, therein, thu school house being outside of the limits of sub-Diatrict No. 9, but ns ncccsible to the children of relator as the house in District No. 9 was to some of the while children in that District; nnd the school itself u good in every respect as the one for while children, and afiimling nil the advantages and privileges of our common school education. The relator refused to send his children lo tho colons! school, nnd insisted on his right to have Ihcm admitted tn anil Inuirhi in tho other. Tho case was very fully urgucd in the Supremo Court in January last by James Watson, Esq., of this city, for tho relator, and by C. '. Olds, Esq., for the School Directors, and tho decision was annumc-yestcrday by Judge Day nu la-half of Ihc Court. Tho opinion pronounced was u very elaborate one, and worthy of a more extended notice than can bo given this morning. It fully sustains the conslilu-ionality of section 31 of the Common School law of this Stale, and shows that the organization of separate schools for colored children is not in conllict with the provisions of tho llth amendment to the Constitution of tho United States, nor inconsistent with the rights of Garlics, the relator, as a citizen of Ihc United Stales. Tho writ of mandamus was refused, and the gielition of the relator dismissed. ItAII.KOAn MKETIV,. MeelliiK l.osl Mailt In tho Interest or the t'oluinhiiH nml ToledoKnll-ronil-Ooe lliimlreil Tlionsnnil llol-Inrs Nubttrrllieil. A meeting of a few citiu ns of Columbus was held at tho office of Messrs. liartlit & Smith lust evening to consult concerning the building of n railroad from Columbus to Toledo. ly request, Mr. M. M. Grecno gave a concise history of tho enterprise, showing that for tho past four years gentlemen nlong the proposed line of road had been in correspondence with various; public spirited citizens of Columbus, urging the propriety of nt onco building the rond. Mr. Greene told that ho has recently been over the entire line, with a view to nsccrtaing tho probable grades of tho various routes proposed. He had held meclings in a number of the county towns, nt wlueh there wns much good feeling and an earnest purposo to push tho ennstrnction of the road nt once. Mr. (Ireeno concluded by urging prompt action, and expressing Iho belief that on an assumed cost of three and one-half millions the proposed road would ls a paying one. (Iovernor Dennisou urged tho immedi ate organization of a company, to lie called the Columbus nnd Toledo Kailroad company. He stated with much earnestness that the future growth and development of Columbus deended largely upon tho vigor with which her railroad enterprises wero carried forward. After some further discussioii ten of the gentlemen present subscribed SlOO.uOO to the stock of the proposed rond, provided SJOO.OOO shall lie subscribed in Columbus and $200,000 shall bo subscribed in Toledo, in addition to such aid ns may he obtained along the line of tho mail. Ponulnr AniimeiiienlM. To He- IJ.lilor of Um Ohio Ntntc Jniunal : l'lcaso iermit me to sny a few words on this "popular subject nnd Ihc text laki-ll for it. 1. If the text allows dancing, billlard-playlng, card-playing, ,y.c, logically enn-nidered, it also allows murder and ovary other crime, for olwervo tho wonls, "Tn everylliing I hero is a season.'- If t-bey include nno thing tbev include all. 2. Mistake in regard to tho I'liritaii chief idea of life not lieing happy in the world. They held that tho surest nnd only way to true happiness was to oliey liod lovingly and to do all thegnnd they could to humanity, it. We arc not in duty bound to accept Mr. Kexford's idea of happiness ns the criterion. Itut that rule is lo bo tho guide which docs the most good in the world. It is to lie found by tracing ell'ecls back to their causes. Whnt hnvo theso things done? Whnt nro they doing to-dav ? Further, distinguish tliocxtn'mcdillcroiicc lietwei-n Iho two qualities of happiness, the one transient, the other linn nnd enduring.-I. Mr. Kexford's argument is, if I nils, lake not, that theso amusements, viz: dancing, billiards, cards, Arc, uro necessary to tho happiness of individuals. Therefore, they who avoid them nro unhappy, which is also a mistake. Ii. These arc, Ihcrefui-o, of doubtful propriety. Wo are ns Christians in dutv bound to select from tho vnst array o'f nnumnieiils and recreations, tlioso that will not only do us nn harm hut that will prove no evil to others bv our example. II. DIED. Skkos Chi Mnv 7, at his resilience, in Slinili-vlllc, Mr. .Ions W. Sncns. ruii"ral on Tlim-silay, Mnv oih, al U o'ebs-k, Hkikki'-hii Tiii'fday, May 7, at, U u' clock a. 111., ill his resilience, oil Knst Itli li stteel, A. S. liKi-sica, Ksq. Due noliw will licjii)enol' the lime when the funeral will lako place. ' FUNERAL NOTICE. ThslViieral ol M. S, Ttloursutl, son .it' 1 lr. J. II. Tllomp'un, will take place from St. I'ntrick'i 'Uun-li this (Wednesday) morning, May llh, aid 'rloca. Friends of the families nro rr iiiwil m nitend without further notice. NEW ADyErUIMENTS. A MASONIC. J( -U.I. nUKTllKllN" IN (JIIOD ' T ."landing of the Masonic Fratcmitr ire invitril tn nii't-l with l.ncktmiirne UW No. 2:, K. k A. M., at Shailcvillc, on TaittV -lay, the ml, insi.. ut 1 o'clock p. in., lor the .mrjHjse ol' aHemling- tho luueriil of Urn. John V. Seeds. luinSlt Ileal Kslate for Sale or Kxrhangc. rpilllllY HITS !' EAST l'AKK PLACE lf A'lililiim. TYyil LOTS on West Stale street. ONE LOT norihof I'iipiii Shops, will bo sold to suit pnrclmsi-rs. OXK IIOItSK A.NUPHAKTDXOR CAB-RI.UiK will Is- taken as part pay. Also, City Proper! r lo exchange for a Farm. Ii . I. M. 15 IK F. II, 'JS'j i:nt Tom Hired, mays il' Columbus, Ohio. TNOTIO'10. rpilK PFIIl.ll AUK NIJTU'KI) Til AT W.-.1 W. Gunnison, who h is up to this time acted ns solicitor lor this o-'icc, has no longer an v contici-tini! w ilh mo in niivcaiincily. I.'IIAKI.HS J. Illi.sS, General Agent for Ohio of tho Protection i.ife Insurance Co., of Cliiciifro, 111. mnvH It WfCKCE GOODS! Wumiiioi- cason I, Elegant Black Siik Grenadines mill Illiii-kSIIU Mtrlpe. i, titiii: Assoitriir.xr or PLAIN BLACK GRENADINES. ' I'liiiii White Oi'irandics, WHITE STIill'U. IIOK'L MH.LS Of KIIKNCII.HXIJLISII mill AJIEUICAS CHINTZES. Black Si!ks--$l up to $6.50 pr yd. JiiMt Itfcc lYCHl-Aii t:i'gnnl sitnek of JA PAXJ3SE SILKS AT LOW l'llK i:s. l.tirKc'Dfllvcry ol l.inlles' I'ndcrwcar GQLUMBUS SEWER PIPE CO., or.i um n, oiiio. j MANl-FACTUItE iSEWER PIPE Of all sizes ami kinds, from tl to 2 1 inch and of the best quality for strength, ilurnbility and smoothness, and at lowi-st market prices. OIHcc-iVest Side High Street, NEAR UAIL.KO.Vn IM'.I'OT. Wit. WAssAtL.Snp't. II. F. Ukks, President. Jas. A. Wilcox. Sec. S. S. Ilu-KLV, Tress. DlliKCTons II. 1-'. Itccs. 1. Hess, Windsor Atchison, K. Itivk, S. Medbery, James A. Wilcox, andS.S. Itii-kly. Orders ndilressed to tho Company, or the President, or any Director, will" reocive prompt nttcnlioti. Newark null Ohio Itlver Tire Brick Also constantly on band. II. F. Hcc-s, President Coliimlnis Hewc-r Pipo Co.! After a careful examination and thorough test of the Sewer I'iiie made by your Company, I have adopted it fur the 'Wilier Works of this city, as I Imd it equal, if not superior, for strength, durability and finish, to any o( Iho several kinds in Ilie market, which I have heretofore used in constructing water works in other cilies. Truly yours. J. L. WM.SIIURY, Chief Kripini-f-r Water Works, City or Columbus. mnr'J'iivid UNITED STATES TAXES! C'H.lk(toii 3 Omen, 1m. Ukv., Sbvkstii DinTiiirr Onio, CoLi'.Mlit a, Miy 1st, 1 9 2. ) f nil K ANSI' A I. T A K ( ).' I Nt'OM KS OF X tlie your ni I, nml Siici-iul Tuxcf, (lii-cnscs) fur ilie year IKT'2, in ilie Sevciitli Cnllci-iioii Distriri ol' Oliui, urn now m itnd payiiMe, nnd will lie rermviM nl ilie? lullow-iii(r iliurs in frniii Di.Jirii t, Iwlwcfft ilie hours of H o'cliK'k A. ,M. imda o'clock 1', Jl lu wit : I'ltANKLIN' COrNTY AtlliR Collector'! Ollicc, l)cli!er liiiildinK, cur. ttt lugU uud Town Strecis, ('oIiiiiiIhih. M AW.SUN C(H'.TV At tlio Olliee of S. V. Ihirllincff, Oopntr Cullfi-tfr. in London. l.ltKKNK COUNT V At iluiOnii:eot Julin F. rat ton, Depntv Collector, in Xenia. 'LA IlKK UU'NT' Atllie Oilice of Ed. I. Torliert, Dentil,v Collector, in SpriiiKlield. I'aymciit ot the wune is licrcly mpiired iM'tbre THE rJOTII OF MAY, 1873. CHAM. C. WAI.C I TT, Cnjlictorof Int. Itcv., Vih DUt. of Ohio. um,vlltt - The Itulllmiirc,riUslttirt'hiirat-lilca-o Itnihrtiy Coaipiuiy. (Ohio JJtriwn.) fPKN" PKIt ('KNTTM ON TIIK CAPITAL J. cto k of thu "liiiliitnon', I'i tlxtittrpli and Cliirno Kail way Cuiniianv, Ohio Division," huviinr Iktu uulwcrilK'd lhi-n.'to, notice ii liercliy (fiven to tlie fioclihulilcrsnf snid eooi-liany. by the corMtrfitorii ihereuf, that llicro will Ik; u tticclini; of Faid fto-kholdiT9 tor the purpose of chooiitiR' seven Directors for snid Com i tuny, on the '.'-id day u( .Mav, A. D. IriT'J, nt tlieotlice of Walter C. Qinncy, OeneMl Siirerintenilenlof tlu; Central Ohio and Luke Krie Division: of the Hull imoro and Obio Itailroiid Company, in (he City of Columbm, rouniv of Fr.tiiklin and Stale nf Ohio. WILLIAM KKVSKlt, .IdllN K.COW KX. OKOlitJH It. DKNN'IS, WALTKIt C. INCV, .ItUIN CiAltDIMvIt, njirJI .MATIi id CorKirnlora. (Stntesinan nml Disjmicli please C'y.) 13111 iOinos Mlli.M-'ll.K 1D IMITIIL ITAI.r.n IN Foreign and Domestic LIQTJORS, 131 Soulli II lull Nlrorl, Ilas jn't received ii Invpe nwortment of tho very lines t STILL, SPARKLING AND RED WINES. llrnndit'St'ordiuK Cins ami Liquors IX KOTTMCMi'OK FAMILY 1 SE. mav 7 Iw Omi'E ov TUB run t.WAV Co,, V tJ, 1872, J Cm... Cim. ti 1m. Ckst. Kaiuvav ( Cnmiiirs, O., Mny ti, fnilK ANNCAIi MKKTINU OF THE L Htoeklii'hlcrs ot thoiColiimlnis, CliieX'o k linliana Central Unilway C(m nn.rt will 1h held at tlie olliee of tho Company, In thu city ol'Colinnliuii, Ohio, ou Vcdutin.iiy,JiMio jlti, IHT'J, between tlie liuurd of U o clM'k a. in. nnd ;i o'clock p. tn., for tho election of liftceii Directors to serve fur lliu enauinar vear, and mich otbec biidinetniu may couio hefore I lie nieclinn;' Tlielntoki fur tbo transfer of llio enpltnl Hoi.l of the Cmnpnny will he ehied tn Co-lunibiift, ii., nd New Yetk City, nl 1 o'clock p. ni., Mnv 'J4tn, 'H7( nml rcniain ckiod on-til ibo morninir of J ..- Otli, 1872. UUUDON MiA-i'lii, titary. tuny 7 |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 10000000036 |
File Name | 0457 |