Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1872-01-16, MORNING EDITION page 1 |
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: ) 1 1. J ;7 VOL. XXXIII. COLUMBUS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1872. NO. 14. bio Ill HI 3:UO O'Cloolc A. M. ouAdviktiii;iu will I'lonnc o.witvo Unit nil nd-TertHemenU nro inserted In both the Morning and Ereniiif( edit I ohm or tho Htatb Joubmal, mate tiff It Itiflitmpurntily Itio ,nat Ailvtu-tHng medium in Ctntrnl Ohio. NOTES AND COMMENTS. Tun editor of the SteubonviU Herald Ihiukfl Marie Twain' lecture wiw " a melancholy attemt at wit." Nevertheless he "doe not condemn but pity his rivnl 'over the way, who took dinner with Mnrlc and enjoyed his humor, and accompanied hi in on a vIhU to "nn inatittttloii of learn ing," which the editor prudently refrains from mentioning by name (That i mix- inem.) We have no objection to saying that the Institution wn the Stcubonville Female Semlnury, whero Mark made an addrcMt to a coiiKrcfcntioii of gurgling flweetncM nuflioient to drive a man out of bin mind. There are wime people who, out of regard for their own safety, ought not lo hear Mark Twain people with no more appreciation of humor, than a donkey ha of high art. If such - pcrftotw were content to put the blame where it belongs and modcxtly din. claim any knowledge of the fine point of humor, there would bo no discredit to them. Hut when they attempt to depreciate the lecturer becauw of their own deficiency, they exhibit not only stupidity but ill-nature, and make tlicmwlvw projH . er objects for commiseration. It linn always been a wonder and a delight to tin, that men are constantly to be found in attendance at the Opera, who vent tremendous sarcasniH upon the finest of music, and take pride in professing that the really enjoy Old Pan Tucker a great deal better all the timo in delicious unconsciousness that they are simply exKsii)g a lack of cultivation and tate rather discreditable to one who win himself up m a critic. In the same way, it Is mu lining to find a man stolidly sit through a lecture full of the most exquisite touches of humor, all the lime "waiting for the facta" to come In. Wc don't expect to Iw believed don't ask to be believed but it U nevertheless true, that a gentleman of eoimdernlile culture, of splendid business sagacity and achievements, listened to Mark Twain's lecture here without a smile disturbing his countenance, and criticised tho leeluro severely as "greatly exaggerated in its statements, if it did not reach to the verge of downright lying" ! Tub article upon the "Prevention of Small Pox" was prepared for the Statu .lot RNAi. by Dr. K. K. Fullerton to whom we desire to make nj-ediil acknowledgment, for the concise and at the same timo thorough treatment of the many chief points of interest. The article should receive all the consideration which this professional sanction entitles it to. It is not only interesting to the general reader, but a valuable reminder to the medical profession. W'r haven thoughtful criticism upon rr. Holland's lecture, nil essay upon an agricultural topic by Col. Iunis, and other valuable matter laid over, to nppcar as soon as room can lie found. Ma j ou W. I). Bicieiiam, of the Dayton Journal, was in the city yestcrdav. Wh observe that many writers are holding out the idea that the United States Navy Is notoriously inefficient, especially In the face of a strong proscct of war with Spain, They pronounce It a griey-ouh spectacle, and are not moderate in their attacks .ixn the Oovcmment for letting our navy dwindle Into such insignificance. This Is nn excellent way to j eneourago the Spanish Government In the j belief that the United Stales nre totally ! unprepared to cope with her "Invincible 1 Armada." Not many years since this same stric of fault-finders concerned themselves much : about the magnitude of our navy, nnd ! Insisted with undue pcrvcrscncss that it i was nn overgrown elephant on our hands. 1 It was accordingly reduced to a peace footing with a promptness that some men in authority severely condemned. This was done on the supposition that the Government could create a nnvy on demand,' as H did at the breaking out of tho- re-;bellion. The fact must have 1ccu patent lo thinking people, however, that the so-called Confederate States, of America were In the Mime boat with the Mother Government, os respects nn armed flotilla. They lmd to construct nnd equipiien-goinginen-of-wnr ns well as we, and were ready to defend their southern const cities fidly as i quick as we were prepared to commence bombarding. But we need not be alarmed. Our, w ar vessels ore not so few and feeble as at the beginning of the Southern rel tell ion, after n long period of pencu with nil tho world. The foreign power that opens hostilities on them will find metnl In them, although they may require additional itrength to endure prolonged active service. If, however, wo were as Illy prepared at this time to meet tho powerful navy of any Kurojican nation as we were In 18(10. we might feel a little more disposed to hesitnle -Wore demanding reparation for Insulted honor. Just what our present dispute with Spain will terminate In, nobody can foretell. Great conflicts have grown out of less causes than the diplomatic hitch thnt exists between our Government nnd the Spanish authorities. The American steamer Florida, on tho 1 1th of December, off the port of St. Thomas, was followed nnd fired upon by the Spanish war vessel Ynscn Nuet do Ilallmn ; was Irannled by Spanish oillcers, who in an olVeiii.lv manner examined her piers and cargo, This (rent men t was rcjwaled on tho 21th of December, off tho port of Nassau, by tho Spanish gun Unit Dlslouridnr, as appears from the sworn statement of George Mitchell, Master of the Florida. It is for this meddling thnt the President is roimrt- cd to hnvo Imperatively demanded of Spain "cxplnnntlon, upology nnd full sat-Isfnctlon." Will Spain give It ? Hereby most likely hangs peace or war ; whichever she chooses. . If, ns Is claimed by some writers, the privilege of arresting, visiting nnd searching ncutrnUhlps Is Accorded to Mligcr-enti by diplomatic, regulations, in order to a seer In in whether the neutral ling covers a disguised enemy or conceals war material, then our Government has no right jit all to complain of the conduct of S.iain toward the Florida. But If Spain is not fortified behind a generally recognized privilege of thUcharacter, of course the assault upon the honor of our Hag must be resented, and the rights of American residents of Cuba maintained, even at a liberal sacrifice of blood and treasure. A war with Spain could but result eventually In the acquisition of Cuba and Porto Rico, rich with tropical fruits, to the United Btaten, and thereby enable iis to gain a footing In the West India Islands secure for all time. Wr will have the General Assembly with us again to-day, and we suppose one of the first things that will be brought up by the Democrats, after tho majority of the members have straggled In from home, (where they have, made provision for the next three weeks for Betsey and the baby, and the old brimlle cow and calf,) will bo a protest against the action of the Senatorial joint convention last week, which they will ask leave to spread upon, the journal of cither House, At least such was their agreement on adjourning the other day. Neither branch of the Legislature has any power to refuse any member or members the privilege of entering a protest on the journal against any action thnt may have been taken by cither branch separate ly, so long as such branch does not impugn tho motives of the majority in the proceeding objected to. But when the House or Senate In separate session comes to amending the journal of the joint convention, It takes upon itself authority that In nowise belongs to It. Whatever dispo sition the Senate may make of. the forth coming protest, the probability Is that the Republicans of the House will positively refuse to entertain It, on the simple ground that the journal of the joint convention cannot be altered or amended except by the joint convention itself. Nothing Is clearer to oar mind than that this posi tion Is the only trnnblc one that can bo taken. We would suggest to the Republicans, however, that in order to gratify our vixenish opponents a resolution might be ndoptcd calling both Houses together again to let them change their votes till the utmost relief Is attuined. It could not have the least bearing upon the election of John Sherman, but would afford the vacillating gentlemen a great deal of solace. WASHINGTONLKTTER. Wariiisotox, Jan. 12, 1872. CONGRESSMEN. Sometimes a man is made a fool of by being sent to Congress, but not often. On the contrary it is frequently the school which develops him into a better and abler man than he was before ho came here. The attrition with minds fully equal to his own, and in some cases superior to his own, brings out nil the qualities which would have lain uncultivated at his country home where, perhaps, ho was the best man in tho locality. So that probably it might be well to modify my statement by saying thnt the utter fool sent to Congress rcinnins a fool, while one with any redeeming qualities whatever, is mnde a Irelter man by coming here. At the same timo I would regret exceedingly if the pcopla should tako to extending the useful no of Congress as a fool's reformatory, and insist on sending any more of these gentry here lhan come by the usual process of vile caucuses, .and detestable wire-pulling, which, liko tho small-pox, is a prevailing disorder in the next district always. But tho majority of our Congressmen may be summed up, and are summed up ns "good fellows." That is only one interpretation of the term. I mean thnt they usually have no"dem nonsense" about them ; don't assume anv pro digious importance ; do their work honestly and in a proper spirit of providing for the future in the way of a re-election as all good Congressmen do; they are pleasant, agreeable, accommodating (with franks nnd things, you know) and gentlemanly.Spite of all exertions to get along without, one Is driven to declaring in order to cut off debate and facilitate matters, that they are precisely liko a lot of bnya in a select boarding school. You find your natty, trim, polite and gentlemanly boy, who 1ms never known anything else. Often he stands at the head of his class nnd club, but more frequently maintains a respectable medium position, and averages well. He Is reliable, and can alwavs be counted nn by "his side." Then you have the big, lubberly, molasses candy eating ruffian, who bullies little boys until some day he makes a mistake in tho boy and gets licked, and blubbers like a calf, lie never knows anything nnd is only useful as an awful example to parents. You alsqflnd the sharp, cunning, quick little Arab, who somehow or other always wins more marbles than any other fellow in school. He gets out of whalings as easy ns he wins marbles. He faces you down occasionally with an air of confidence that dozes you a little, and may-hap sends you Into a brown study; ho seems so innocent that for tho life of you, you can't tell whether he Is really honestly mistaken or "devilish sly." He Is also useful to his side, but not valuable to tho community at large. You can find too the good boy that you read about in the Sunday School literature. He Is demure as a cat, and at tho devotional exercises Is so evidently truly pious, that you sigh regretfully that your mother's earnest, loving care had not resulted in Mcurlng in Jer aon anch a model, You quite reverence him, and involuntarily apenk to him in a milder lone tltnn you .nnc toward tbc other bnya and nH)lugzo abjectly when you happen to run against him in play, and grow light-hearted at liin aweet rc;ly. Some day, though, you catch hint in a mean, Utile trick, ao contemptible that cvon the big cnlf nor the llttlo marble winner would be guilty of it, and then, confound you, you hnvo lout all faith in good bora, and bring up your own children with a aort of contempt for them which may bo all right and may not. Then you have the long, thin, bony, big headed, thin skulled fellow, who waa born to work and reason, ond when lie gets up In "Society," you nudge tho newcomer that aoincthing profound i to come. Ho auataina tho reputation of the whole cloas on hit bowed shoulders, and la popular with everybody except tho hoy who ranka next to him. 1 Ie la useful also to the teacher aa a model, and when you present that tyrant with a new ferrule, the thin hoy with tho big head makca tlte speech with Latin and Greek enough in it lo aatiafy the moat exacting. The boy that can play ball beat, swim beat, excel In foot-racea, and jump- ing, and in short, the one who leads out of doors and brings up the rear in-door is also here. The thin lwy beljot him through his lessons, and everybody likes him. He always comes out strong when the big lubber attempts to tyrannize over some little fellow who has just come In. He is useful for that purpose, and because he injects a stream of bluff, hearty manliness in the make up of the school. These Congressmen look and act more like school Itoytt when they file between two tellers in front of the Speaker's desk. when voting, than at any other time. The scene was always ludicrous to me, and the desire to get into the crowd and pinch, tickle and push Is almost irresistible, They quarrel, like boys,' and like boys usually do not speak to each other forn day or two, when they make up again, be come the best friends in the world, and lay low for a chance to pay off the score. Sometimes, however, like boys occasionally do, they refuse to make up and carry the stiffest kind of a front in the presence of each other. This Is of course always the case when they have nothing to "get mad at." Ben. Butler and Sunset "Cox enjoy each other's society hugely, and frequently they get together andUlk confidentially, and tell good stories and laugh, and altogether there never could be two associates to all appearances more agreeable. Some day when he gets a chance Rutlcr will shriek out some bitter, hurling sarcasms at Cox, and the first time Butler is off his guard he will be most wofully fly-bitten. When a member speaks, if he is one of t he old reliable ones, whose flood of wonts never contain an idea, nobody except tho official reporter pays any attention to him. He rolls out his periods, and saws the air, deals in pathos and fiery denunciation, pleads, cajoles nnd satirizes, all to tin-hearing ears and unseeing eyes, his breth ren write letters, read papers, gather in crowds and talk, go nut for lunch, smoke in the coat rooms or stretch out on a sofa to sleep. Once in n while one will raise his head aKd look wonderingly at the ora tor as much as to say, "See here, old fel low, arc you never going to get through ?" To sec one of these men at such a time is comical. He rave to the empty air. How a man can manage to talk any length of time under such circumstances, mmm my comprehension, lint they doit. Thev turn on the draft and roar away without apinrent mental effort. Hut when a member gets up who Is in tho habit of saying something when he speaks tbc scene is different. The little knots of convemt- tionaliids break up nnd arc attentive, the letter writers cease their toil and lean back, to lis ten, newspaper are (Implied, and as the speaker decreases in warmth and Interest tho others leave their desks and eniwd around him, till soutetimw the whole hody Is jammed up in one corner of the room. The official reporter leaves his (tak mid works his way through, the crowd till begets under tho sjteaker's nose, where ho slings hi hook and eye mysteries like lightning' After the speech Is over things return to their ordinary condition. It mnkes no difference though the orator has n voice like a Stentor, tho man who sits only three seats from him, leaves his seat and moves nearer. In an animated debate there is always great fun. Jokes, puns, retorts, repartee and sarcasms fly about like shil-lalehs at Donyhrook. Tho (ilobc don't have them, and the press reports, nlwnys poor affairs , fails to include them. One must be ou the floor to get all the fun. Pen i) ex Nil. Lieutenant Governor Mueller and tho Democratic Press. From (litiClevelnnri Horli. The Herman portion of our voting pop ulation will, of course, Iw intensely delighted with the course pursued by the Democratic press toward Lieutenant Gov ernor Mueller. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, Columbus Statesman and Cincinnati Enquirer, have numerous slurs upon his nationalityandexercisetheir ingenuity in manufacturing gross burlesques of his remarks in tho joint convention. The pretended "reports" are whnllv dissimilnr. showing them to he mere ebullitions of spite. As sjrCcimen bricks to show the Germans how tho Democracy thnt nro-1 fessed so much love for them nnd have been making desperate efforts to seduce them into combination with them, treated the general choice of the Germans of Ohio when he would not 1 their tool, we give the following from the Knquirer, purporting to l Lieutenant Governor Mueller's remarks when endeavoring to quiet uieaisuirDance: "Shknti.kmkss: I b-h no more inder- aided in dose election vor dem Zcnador nor vat none ufe do resd life von vnsn't. I was here for to mako llrcsidend. uud I vill do shust so good as I never did fen vou don't mako anv more nnuui all lc dime. I am shat mor' lindriodic den vou all vas." Also this, when the vote was final Iv an nounced : "Shentlehkx: John Sherman he, has seventy-dree vote, dat oder feller he have seventy vote. I dercfore declare John Sherman he Ik elected do next bres-ident from Ohio in de Congress for six years from do fort of March, eighteen hunt-red and seventv-dree. Now vo goes to tinner." The hnnuiirr applies to tho Lieutenant Governor such terms as "poor stupid " 'stupid fifru re-head," "screech-owl." ''su perannuated becr-jerker," "the mule," "poor usurper," "siectncled Teutonic embodiment of stupid I tv." The Statesman follows in tho same hue, nnd leaves it to bo settled whether Mr. .Mueller is "fool or knave.1' Tho Plain Dealer snvs he is "cither an ass or a fool," and parodies his remarks after the fashion of its Columbus and Cincinnati cotcmporaries. iow we wium me jJcmocrntic journals, in their disappointment nnd wrath, have made a great mistnke. They havo opened the eyes ot the Germans to the estimation in which they are really held by tho Democracy, who havo been dallying with them In pursuance of tho "passive vli-cy." Tho moment a German refuse to become their tool he Is hen tod with vile abuse, ridiculed for his nativity, and his langungo burlesqued. Lieutenant Governor Mueller is a gentleman of intelligence nnd culture, and tho shameful course of tho Democratic press of Ohio In villifv-ing and ridiculing him hccnum his Kn-gHsh is not as fluent and correct ns thnt of one who knows no other langungc, will scarcely commend them to tho tutor of tho Germans, to whom tho nomination ((f Mr. Mueller was eminently NiiUi'uciorv. nnd who voted for him with enihiislastlc unanimity. Memhkiw of the Uginlaturu elect United Ktntoi Hcuators. The elwlors of a county elect tho legiMlntor. When an elector gives his vote forn legislator his duly and privilege in tho miitler cense. There Is no rectifying mistakes; no opportunity for changing the vote. When the legislator so elected ensU his vote for United Htates Senator, he In liko manner has performed his duty and exhausted his privilege. If tho legislator can recall his Tote for Senator, why not the elector recall bin ballot for legislator if ha can identify It to tho aatisfactlon of the hido?..'.. Innd irrafrf. BY TELEGRAPH. TO THK OHIO STATE JOURNAL. Night Dispatches. CINCINNATI. SAIK oF Siuox opkiia tu kkth. Mii t ' nuito Jnurnn). Cincinnati, Jan, lo. The sale commenced to-day for the Nilsson opera season, recommencing Monday, tho 20th of January. Tho rush for tickets was great, nnd in n few hours four thousand dollars were received a signal proof of the Impression mnde here by the StrakoHch Opera Company when here lntt week. CATACAZY. 4'auwe or the 4'iMtlnoNtt Bf Iwpfn Rn In ana the I niirxl N tales-. Alexia not to Heturn to WaNhlnjrton. New Yoiik, January 15. A Berlin letter stales that the German Government received a circular from GortschakofT relative to somo incidents arising from the recall of ( atneazy. This letter is said to havo been necessary from tho following circumstances: The American Minister Kramer, during dinner at the housoof the German Minister nt Copenhagen, promised nnding n letter from the American Government explanatory of the Catacazy uffair, but the Russian .Minister refut-cd to listen, and the German Minister said such a letter must not be read in his house. Subsequently Kramer went to each Minister in Copenhagen and read tho letter to them indi vidually, they of course rejHirting it to their governments. The Uussian Cabinet feels vexed over the affair, nnd rumors nre ntbmt in Ilerliu that a coolness Itctwecn Uusriin and the United States has arisen therefrom. Tlic same litter statin that advices from St. Petersburg represent that the Euieror and nil society there consider Alexis slighted by President Grant not returning his visit, and tho Knijitmr will not allow Alexis to return lo Washington. WASHINGTON. i IMrK.l IIMENT. Washington, Jan. .'. Tho iwtitiou referred to thelloiisu Judiciary committee asking the preparation iifnrtic.es ofim-euchincnt against Judge l'leld, of the United Slates Supreme Court, nnd Judge Hoffman, of the California District Court, is simply n revival of ono brought forward two years ago by n debarred lawver of San Traiicisco, which expired with the last Congress, no action whatever having been taken on it bv the Judiciary com-mittce, ns the general charges were entirely unsupported by proofs and secitieations. AI'I'ltoriilATIOX. Tlic committee ou Appropriations ex-wvt to reiort the LegUntivc, Executive and Judiciarv Appropriation bill to 1k House ou Wednesday next, and others will soon follow. Ai TIVITY AT Till. NAVY YAltP. The I'nitcd Slates vessels Frolic, Tallapoosa, Mav Flower ami ;Constellalion are. undergoing repairs at l'he Nvv Yard. nominations Tho President sent the following noin-innlioiiH to tho Senate to-day: J, H. Wing, Keceiver of Public Moiiovs, Bayfield, Wisconsin; Registers of" Wul Oflice, Charles S. ISenrr, Springfield, Illinois; N. Ilaldwin, Council ltlufl's, Iowa; Assessor Internal Revenue, D. C. Lamb, Third Wisconsin District; Collector Internal Revenue, Clark Center, Ninth Ohio District. THE l,m.U TENHEK HE) .lotos. Justice Strong delivered the opinion of Hie Mipremo l ourt to-dny, declaring the legal Under act constitutional. Justice Hrndley rend n lentrthv opinion concur. Hug in the conclusions of Justice Strong. The Chief Justice nnd Jhhi.cpx rtifl'nnl and Field, all dissenting Justices, except Justice Nelson, who was not present, read dissenting opinions, setting forth at great length tho minority views, with which the country Is familiar, as havintr lncn the opinion of tho Court in former decisions ot ttic legal tender question. OlttlKItA TO (IKS. EM Kit Y. Orders were telotrraohnd fmni ilm U'nr Department lo General Kmerv at New Or ftfinx tiwlay, inntmctinQ; him tint in bring tntnm into Iho cilv unlaw tmrlir . pn ortlum from Wuhinf;tnn, nnd up tn three nVlnok lliia aftprntmii nn onli'r. In lliae cuVt linil boin nent him. NEW YORK. TilCUYKR A.NIl TKIIMINi:il(lK.lMi JC UV. Xkw Yuiik, Jan. 13. The Grand Jury of Oyer nml Terminer, niiirlulinfrlhey are an Illegal Ixxly, aiiliel In JuiIko liifira-ham fur n di-hnrKe. They were eimn-aeled lu finish hiiincti on liatnl, ami not enniDienee new work. It la reirleil thai the Oyer ami Terminer (iniml Jury ileeiileil not tneonllnuc liiveitipUiun inln clinic npiiiiKl Judge Ilarnnrd, whleli .land nver fur Hie next Grand Jury. TAMMAXV. It inRiwerted lliattho Tammany General committee have paid no rent furyean.anii thnt pmierly Itelmifrim; in the awiety waa reuinved from the building, Utr whieh lcfr.ll redrew will be ae-light. HM.lM.-ruX OS THK DKCLIXl:. There were eitbtr-tlirec cane of Hlnall-pox Inut week, und twenty dealha. The malaily la dccrcaninR In llrnoklrn, where there were lifty-aix eaxea, mrniniit eighty-nine the previima week. There have hern fifty thouoand vaceinaliniiH in Hnxiklvn in two niontliH. M1.4Clbl4.ANfc(lt- ITKMH, Tho ltmulnn fleet will not Mil for I'en-.aeolu until next week, or later. The retrial of Ihu Jumel will cnac la ael fur Thumlny. Major John A. Pull, u, former well known cxprciwimn, died nt Tarrytown Hnndav. .Miuiam Van ltimklrk, the nlleinil alair-tloniHt, waa dixelmnivd frniu ciiittoily In ltrooklyn, tlic evidence being inHtilhVicnt to hold' her. All agent of Iklmont, who called lo aa-ccrlain progi-cm in the completion of holida for money adrnnccd lo tho city aome time aineej waa informed by the County Auditor that nn additional million would 1 ready thia week. To-day an iiiMino man climlied up the new Franklin atatue in Printing lion Spiare, and drawing out a knil'e began In cut to pleccii the American Hag which en-vclntiea thcHtatuc prcvloiiato unveiling on 'ilmilay next. The man wa armlcd, CHICAGO. A ItKMONHTIIA'NliN AtUINuT IHTAIILIHll-1 Nil VlllV, LIMITS, CiiicAun, January 1 J. l i1m.-iim if tho North Side, inoKily (lermniw nnd Kcandl-nnvinns, lo the nmnU'r of two or Ihreo thotiMand, inahed In prtHifsion this evening to the city buildings to protest agnliiHt tlic passage of an ordinance eslnb-Hulling tholimits of the city as fire limits. TheycarriiHllmiiHpnrpiielc nnd Imnneni, with device expressing In Inugnnge more forcible limn elegant their feelings oti the proposed prohibiiion of the erection of Thev denounced the ordinance as crush out the poor nn cflort to for the benefit ot tno ricii. Mr. . i. .Hissing, alitor of the Slants Zcitung, addressed ddresscd the crowd, advising them to disporso und assuring them that he had the promise of Aiuermen tnnt the orninanco should not pass. The crowd pressed into tho Council Chamber and were so demonstrative that the Council hastily adjourned, the Aldermen making their way out as best they could. The excitement is intense ono part of tho citizens foreseeing great injury to business if n good lire ordinance is not passed, and tho other being determined to havo their own houses. FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. Flnit Mennlon. iiorNK. W'AsnrNOToK, January IS. VarioiiK bill were Introduced and re-ferred.A bill waa Introduced by Mr. Butler of Mamacliuaetta for the removal of legal political dfaabilitiea incurred during tho late rebellion, provided that the act aliall not enable any pcraon to maintain clainia or right, againat the Government, except the name accrued before thollth of April, 1801, mnd aubacquent to the Oth of April, 18o5 ; bIho, to repeal aoreral tenure of oflice acta. By Mr. Smith For Iho conatrui ilon of a national railroad between .New York and Chicago. Ily Mr. Mercer To odinlt tea and coffee after July next. Hy Mr. Neglcy For the an If of the QunrtermaMer'n department at I'itlnbufg, and the erection ot a civtom honwc nnd marine hospital there; nlo, for tho improvement of the Ohio nnd Monnngnliela rivera. Hy Mr. Stcvcnuon For a comnlete water highway from tide water on the Janiea river lo tlic Ohio at the mouth of the Knnnwha. liy Mr. Vaughn To authorize the con- alruction of a bridge over tlic Mix-i-fippl at Memphk Hy Mr. Not i of cw lork l or I lie purchne of a bunt of the lute Hear Admiral Farragut, to lie placed in the Capitol.Hv Mr. Clarke of New York To nni- vide currency, in coin and paper, of equal ond uniform value thronghuut the I'liitcd States. ' llv Mr. Hereford For lockinir and darning the ( Ireat Kanawha river In Went 1 trginm. llv Mr. Tuffo To nbo -h the office of Nmierintcmlciit of Indian Affairs Mr. Pierce, from thecoDuuittceon Kdu. cation nnd I.abor, rcortcd n bill to e-tablixh an educational fund and to npplv the procecdx of Iho public laoiU lo Iho education of the coplc. lleconiinittcd. Mr, Halo'a hill of lam Monday, in reference to aliiM and uliip building, wax debated for ten niiuutosnnd went over without action. Mr, Ilawa of MaacluuctM nsked leave to offer a rexolution for the appointment of a aelect comniitlco of live lo impure into the origin and character of the dillicultie between tho Government ami official of Ixjui-iniin and United Slate olliclal in that State, and to rcort the paino lo the Houio with aueli rccnnnnclidalionn nit it may deem exiedicnt, the committee to have power to Head forperHonn nnd pnKrx, Him io mi in tv nioiingion oreiK'ivlierc. Mr. Kerr objected. Mr. Dowea moved lo upcnd the rules nnd ndopt the resolution --wax I I I, nava SM. Mr. Acker of lVnnylvnmn aked leave to introduce a bill to remove all legal ami iolitieal dimbilitic, and Hi grant gciuwal amncHtv. Mr. lllckcy objected. Mr. Acker moved to Hiticml the rulea and pasa tho bill. The Houno refined to annp-'nd tho rules ond pass the bill vcas 1( If, navaM, not two-tbirdx. Mr. llnwes ihcn introduced a hill cn-ocling that from and after its parage all political disabilities incurred' under and by virtue of the third section of the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution, nre removed. Tlic rules were not sns-pcndcd and tho bill was not parsed vcas l.'ll, naya 70, less than two-think Another amnesty bill, being tile one passed bv the House last session nnd now pending in the Seunlc, was introduced bv Mr Hale and passed yeas 170, navs 111. It is the same os was passed bv the House last session, and excepts members of Congress nnd officers of the nrmv and navv who joined tho rebellion. Mr. Cox offered o resolution calling for unpublished eorrcsiondencc relating to the release of V. G. Ilalpine, a Fenian prisoner. Adopted. Adjourned. MEXVTK. Mr. Goldthwaiteof Alabama was sworn In. Severn! petitions wre presented. Air. (oie prescnuti n pdHon from Chinese dealers on the Pacilic const for a reduction of ta rift' on rice. . Tho Vice President said pet i lion from foreigners should bo received nt the State IVpnrtnient. Tho question was taken, however, and the pen linn referred. Mr. Ken ion presented a uiition from Hon. George It. Seidell and over one thousand other citizens of Kocliestci-, praying for a reduction of the tar i li to a revenue basis, and especially for the removal of duties upon nli, coal and pig-iron.Mr. Kdmumls prcrenlcd llurlv-lwo petition., from crmout forn njteitl of theduty on salt. Mr. ('handler, from the committee on Commerce, reported, without amendment, the hill to promote the con.-tr net ion of tho Cincinnati and Southern railway, being the bill Introduced by Mr. Sherman hint Mnrrh, outhorir-ing (invnwootl, liishop, iioo)er, Hcidelbach and Ferguson, ns trusters, to construct nnd maintain a rail-mad lietwecn Cincinnati, Ohio, nnd Chnt-tanoogn, Tennessee. Mr. Klnir ofTcml a joint tvsolullon directing the Ku-Kluxcommittce to inquire Into ntl'airs in Iouisinnn. Mr. 11 ward objected, so ii went over. At o'clock Mr.Sumuvr'ssupplemeiitn-ry Civil Nights hil came up, when he addressed the Senate. He said thulslavcry, in a disguised and modi lied form, still ex-exlsted, In sofarnscolored people were denied equal rights, and must be alio! ixhedlte-fori' the great work would liecouiplctc. He reviewed the hanMiiiM nnd iutlinilics sull'ereil hy tho colored )coplc, ami cilcil the eminent en of Frederick Dniiglaia and I.ieutennnt (ioveruor Dium. llode-nieil that equal rights before tlie law wns a question of wK'inl equality. Kquntily In nil InstllutlonH created or nntigniml hy law was not n quolion uf society. S pa rate hotels ami conveyances were hut nrtiticial suhstitules for eipmlity. The substitute Is invariably nn interior nrlh le. He ritcfl the old Fnirlihli law nn lhi anb. jectofinnsnr holds, which Were hound to receive all persons without distinction, nnd decisions in this country KiiNtaiuing the san io principle, which iimlies with equnl form to puhlio eonwv mires, com mon schools, tlioalvrs, Ac. lie dwelt at length on the snbloct of tin! Ho sc hools. giving illustrations of Ihe lumldiis iin-s)tHil on coin red children hy their exclusion. Ho dec I nml I lint hv the decree iiguinst slavery all Kmhnncc of nsilogv for pn'judice sguiii-t color wis removed. In conclusion, Mra Suminr rcHreltnl l tint the rrci(lcut in Ills mcsHigc lavont) amnesty, while he said nollting of ihe din. abilities hill tried nn iho colored peiipte; hul look courage when ho (huglit (hut tho promised gciierifily in rebel ituild not fail loauicken (he setiliment of justice which he now invokiil. I Ie diseliilm wl any mntitncnt of pcrnual hostility to-wnnl thoH' who assniltil the npublle', hut while willing to he p'Mlo uiih fonuer vneniles, he could nol forget his duly to his fellow citixens, while niul Mock, who h(onI hy the republic. Then were strong rensona'why Oils mensure of justice q Uio eidored race should be united with amnesty, csiwcintly since the latler la pressed; and elenrly, between the two pre-eminence frame buildings. should be accorded to that fur eoual j rights of all. Mr. Vickers followed. Ho said he would not undertake to answer Mr. i Slimner's snpccll nil hi animlorimntiiri? ' civil rights hill, because it required no argument to demonstrate the irrosH un constitutionality of that measure. He then rend n long argument in favor of the landing general amnesty bill. At the conclusion "of : Mr'. Vieker's seeeh, the Senate went into Executive Vsslon, and soon after adjourned. MURDER. H run- t'hopH life Wile's lie ml lo llecs). Sr. l'Al l., Jan. lo. John Beover, who scpnratcd from his wife a year ago and has since threatened her life several limes, executed the fiendish deed at St. Cloud, Minn., Saturday night. Ho wont to her house, drove tho children oul, soiled his wife by the hair, dragged her into a lack room, anil literal I v cut her head to pieces with a hatchet. When orrcsted he made no resistance. IIo said he had come there to kill her, ond had done it. stTlouis. IH KL AI.KXIS MJ.MMONU) lluMK. ' Sr, Irortrf, Jan. lo. It in rpporetnl llint tlii hunting trip of the Duke Alexin will prolmhly be cut flhorl, nnd he and li in party Mum to thin city to await order of the Czar. It in known that within the pant 24 hours Admiral I'aissct received official advice that the relations between the two Governments are threatened with disruption, ami it may be advisable to return shortly to KurojH'. Hence he was advised to fjel hack tn this city as scedlly n- possible THK TICflllORNE CAfK, Lusdox, Jan. 15. Tho hearing of the Tichborne case was resumed to-day. Sir John Duke Coleridge 0(cned for the defense. He said the testimony- they pro-(mscd to olier would show that the claimant was a conspirator, perjurer, forger, in facta common impostor and villain, and that liaigcut and Carter, his accomplices, were unscrupulous rogues and eoncoctors of this HtUendoiis imHwlure. Tho speech of the distinguished eounsel was received hy the crowded Court House witli applnuxe, which was immediately suppress!, A MONMTKH CANON, made in an American foundry fur the TnrkMi government, has arrival at Top-hane, the arnenal of Constantinople. . J.'I("lMKNT TO I'll. JEXSEH. A movement is on foot to raise mil-scriptinns for a monument to Dr. Jcnner, discoverer of vitcci nation, nt Ills birth place. litVOKCK CArtKH, Xkw Yoiik, Jan. 1'). A Wurld special, dated Ixtndon, Jan. J. sa,vs t It is reported that the Mordaunt divorce case will soon Iw rc-owiiod, with the I'rinoe of Wales as correspondent. Another divorce ease has been llled, on the trial of which the Duko of Kdinhurgh will appear as cornvixwdcnt. NI'AIV .Maiuiio, Jan. The fnrmer I'niuii-it Ministers have resolved to support Hcnor Hagarta in the Cortes. Deputies to the Cortes will meet on the l!lst,nnd the senion opens on the lilM. The Ministry have unanimously resolved not to remove Count Yalmascda from lluvana. ITALY. Home, Jan. 15. Tho convenion adopt ?il hv ing international l olograph Congress haa ixva aigneil anil tho delegate gone home. The Italian Parliament rcaMemhlcx in thi city to-morrow. postaTTci; r r exc v. "Urhii u'l.ynn hud no witch to put on. he seo,,Mt mil it turnip nnd miule lion a (tnr. All.) he colrlifd u lln rrickct and pill him nilliin, i li : Tliey'ill Hi. nk il Is il.-kin." says llrwn li'Lyiin." Mninc wauls more rallroails. Kentucky wanta to sell more mules. Missouri wants the National Capital. . Miotic Island wanla more elhow-rooni. Canada wanta a canal from lake lo lake. Virginia wanta the income tai repealed. Indiana wants the divorce law amend-oil.Ohio wanla the growth of forests fostered.Louisiana wauls her entire I-eifislatiire hung. llie ilellairo Independent mv: At a meeting of Iho stockholders of llie Implement anil Machine Works last Saturday, It was decided lo Increase the capital stock of Iho company SlU.OOO, olio half the increase tn be taken by present stockholders. Moat of this amount haa already liecn taken. Tho farmers nf the surrounding country arc expected to tako Iho other half. II has heen assumed that tlic production of copiwr on Uko 8uierlor would be about 100 lorn lean thia year than last. According to tho estimate thU 1, ml,. tiiKe, nml tiieitcheieney will nol l much over II") tons. Tho total amount produced in 1870 Was 1(1 IH.1 Inn. .n.l I,. IK,1 111,0711 tons, being almnt lfn tons less for tin's year. The moneyed value of the copior nml iron product of Ukc Superior ir joii is nooiit 2iiy,ooo,oou. The total priHluct of the Iron mines of Ijiko Suiier-lor fur Iho past year will reach nearly 1,0011,000 net tons of ore, while the mako ot charcoal pig-iron will In over 40,000 tons, . I'p at Klmlra, Michigan, a merchant attended a donation party for tlie benelil of a village minister. Wishing lo apicar lllieral the merchant took a castor which was valued nt!l anil giarknl It $12, lima helping tn swell the amount of hiailnun-tlon. On the day following, the minister having olmervod that tho easier was innrked Mi, and believing it toooxa'nslve for his use, ndumed It to the merchant, remarking that he did not feel ablu In keep an cxien,ve a castor, ami would like to exchango It for aonielhing which would lie more serviceable to his family. Of course the merchant could not decline ao reasonable a proiosltlon, but he evidently felt that It waa his ox that was being gored, aa tho minister look the entire $12 in choice groceries, leaving the S I casior In their atcad. t'nelc Peter, who nourished In the inoiiuminH of Vermont as a liowe dealer, was niHul tiKin the oilier dny by an amateur of "npilne" who was in acarch of sonietlllng last. The result la told aa follows! "There," said t'nelc l'oier, point-1 ing to an animal in the meadow before tho I house. "There, sir, la an animal who would trot her mile in two ininuica and seventeen seconds were It nol for one thing." "Indeed!" "Yen," coiillnucil i I'nele Peter, "she is four years old this sprira, Is lu good condiilon, liaikt well, is a lirst rale mare, and she could go a mile In two scvcnlccn If II was not for one i thing." "Well, what Is It?" "That mare," rcslllnisl the llU'lfl.V. "I. III llV.i.t. MP..- M I good piece of iniierty. Shu haa' a heavy main, a swncn tall, trots fair, and yet there Is one thing only why ahe can't trot her mile In two tultiutea'and seventeen seconds." "What, in conscience, Is It then?" rrieil the amateur. "The distance Is ton great (or the lime," wai the old wag's reply. There is story found in on exchange, n.'OWlllU llltloCUIS IHO most imaginative works of fiction. It came out in the course of a recent trial before tho courts in Illinois. A young man persuades a friend, under the plea uf rapid money-making, to go with him to Texas. After arrival in lira distant State, he, to possess himself of his friend's moiiev, kills and robs him. He then returns to Illinois, pays court to the sister of his victim, nml linally marries her, being dressed in u suit of the murdered man. Suspicion is aroused at the prolonged dlsaiincarance of the friend. 'Iho drover is tracked, arrested. 1 u,,u iv low ni;.uia; CUllfClVnoiC gHCI 01 llie family, one member of which he has murdered and another married, is taken back to Toxas, where a chain of circumstantial evidence encircles him. He is proved tlte criminal, nnd awaits in prison his final punishment. Here l good material for a sensation drcnia. The town of Bristol, In Tcmuwe and Virginia, with a population of three thou sand, In an nimmiilv anions: towns. The place Incntcil in two Stales, and the Ktate line passes near the center of the main street, the rnpucs nnd lawless know 1 whore it is to an inch. This line used to I be deeply venerated, and in former vearw It wo.il.1 have been cn11HioVrcd a yniplon. of the decny of the Ncpublio for a' Tenncs-eo constable to cross the street on to the sidewalk, on the sacred sod of Virginia, and arrest n criminal, ilut the line is not now regarded with muh tender veneration. When a man kills another and step over the line for protection the odicers step after him and fetch him lack; killing is, conjepicnlly, not so opular ns formerly. Kach side' of the line lias n separate Mayor and Hoard of Alderman, and regulates its own a Hairs in the sense contemplated by the Constitution. There are two papers published, one on cachxidc of the line. Kach side uIpo has its schools and churches, but there Is not a dangerous nunirKT of cither of these. BUSINESS NOTICES, Throw In Rrintorcemriil. The Citadel of Lilt- Un a Mute of siege all through the year. 1ml i.t never more rlosely invested than in mid-winter. The liver is usually somewhat torpid, and the l-owels more or less constipated at this season, and dysjieiwa often n&iuucs its mo-t apfmnated form in cold and wet vealhcr. hi short, the sluggish system seems inclined to intermit or shirk some of its most important duties under the influence of a low temperature, and require whole.oine slimulutiun. The spur required U Ihwteltcrs Stomach Hitter.", the only medicine which quickens thcadiimof the secretive organs, and brings out the latent vitality of the syMem, without creating any febrile symptoms, or the slightest nervuuscx-ellcment.The great cgetaMe Tonic is not recom- consumption imu nun ocing Kit on to ihe eoncoctors of prejsiratioHs which can not byauv jMissibility reach the lung; but as a Bjwcilic lor the. ronstittitlonal and iiliysicnl weiiknesH, which invite pulmonary dUW.it U literally intiillilile. The most insidious and tcrril'lc enemy of human life is not ti-ease Itself, but Ihe' weakness w hich nllunls it an oiportunity to gain n lirm Imld of (he vital system. ' KcmeinlM!r thnt .Stamina, Vital Knergv the life principle, or whatever you may choose to call the reidalpiit power which I it lies against tho causes of disease nnd death, is the fjrand mfyfuard of health. It is the garrison of the human fortress and when it waxes weak, the truo poliey Is to throw in reinforcements, in other' words, when such an emergency oecuw, commence a course of Hosteller's liittcrs. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A MASONIC. tjrT Stated Commu nicaliun of Magno- Min Lodge No. L'O, F. Jfc A. M litis (TuePdav) evening, .liinnnrv h, 1R72, nt 7 I ocloek. 11. O'KANK, JSec'v. NOTICE. ritllKHK WILL UK A MEKTIXl! TO OH-X giuiine Iho t'apitii Iltiihliug antl Loan Aaaociation helil tit the ollicc of the Home Inauraneo Co., aorth room Opera Block, this (Tuesday) evening, nt 7 S' o'clecl;. Snljsrrilcrs lo ..Im-k and otlicrs inlcrcatcd are retocteil tontleml. jnnlO.lt J'OIt WALK. I I IT Xtl. 17. CHAM I'll IN S Sfll-IIIVI.S- 1 J loo, noi , northwprii corner Ithli St. and K. I'olilic Lane. Lot No. 1H. Chamiioii'itilwUviiiioa, sooth. wfsi corner Town SI. ami K. PuWic Lane. Lot No. Ill, f hnmpioii'R publh isinn. and ailinining No. 18 oa Ihe west. lot No. 3ti, Cliaiiitiion'aioilwliviDioil.tiorlh. west corner Town M. and K. I'nlilie Lane. Lola 30, :tl, nnd part of 'SI, in same, south' west cor. J'niiikliii Ave. and K. l'nltlic Lane. In-lot iviti, nnrtliu-el corner ltnnid and Fourth Sts. ' Lois 21 and McKlvnin's addition, next end Itii h St., south side. 51 feet 4 in, from, north side of Mound St., Iielween llith nml Third Sis. janliWw (iKO. M. I'AIISIIXS. OFKICK OHIO I'l R.NITrilE CO., I CoM-Mncs. 0., Jnn. llth, 1H7'.. ) rplIK AXNT.M, MKETIXO OF THK X Slockholden nf ihe Ohio Kurniliire Comanav will lie held at their olliee Monday. 2'it Jnntmrr, from two to five o'clock I'. M- for therlrillon of Directors and for anv htinrs that mav lie hronpht oefore Ihe meeting. W.'L. lUdllKS, Treaa. Jam .' .It Ci.ut;usi, CoLiunt-a, Cincinnati K IMOANAFOLIS ItAILWAV, I'i.i:vuanii, O, January 8th, in' I IMVIDI-NnOFTIIIinEANOA HALF i.V wr cent, free of I'nitcd States tax, has In-cii dci-lnrwl liy this Compnnv, parable on and alter FVUniary 1st. -1H72. Stork holder n-gis(errd at New York will lie paid at the Tniied State Trust (..'otnimnv of New lork, Xo. 4H, W all street. The Transfer hooks will be closed on the evening of January loth, and rcociied lel-rniiry jd. Hv unlerof the Hoanl of Oireetors KO. IT. Rl'SSKLL. i-JH Treaiurcr. IRON FENCINGr Kailiiig,Grating,fcc. HV I'ATEXTHIOXKKXCElSrilEA-P-1VL er. more sulistnutial, more orna-meiilal, more practical, nnd in every resiiect a great improvement on nnv other lenco lhat has over lawn milile. 'l ira ginient ennsiita in intersiiij; laitween the unnels of lenco n IhMt lirUuig l'ml, in lliell' ornaiminlol and atnnig, which allows fur the expansion nml conlnicllon, lo which nil Iron lowing ii subject llmt Iving llie cnuso of so mnliv eriHikcil fences anil ttnmnnngenlilc emes Ones, more I mini mi "puni,, Itiiliial InlrlliKllIU lliiniiir liiilciit. eipcvliillv IIioho itllo huvo lieralaleil III the Mfime. Martisi Hiirnn. im'I.i 264 Fourth Si, Cnliimliua. .i o i : Una Ihe Xolilest Liltle thing ul his N"13"W PLACE, No. 25 East Rich Street, rfli.rff.iiiN. "WHICH I tcc'.!tcoilly RISK TO EXPLAIN.' J. L. PIIXSBURY, Practical Hydraulic Ennineer. Ilecenlly Chief 'diolnror of Columbus Cilv Water Works, hisoicneil an ollicc nl No, r.llSt Male SlnTt. unit will Tumuli lun. I rP '""""""'"' K"i,""ll'a lor ciiualruetiiig v... .. n..-, in,iHn nmT K. i.-uv, (isa-r- vnlrort'onihinntion s stems, nml cuuiputn-Hons Tor ileveloilng ninl ei'onomitliig water power, and ilclgns fur Irrigntion, Htalnagr and Sewerage works. ODica houri: lo a. m. lo 4 p. m. jnnl eod:im FALL AND WINTER STYLES I IX MILLINERY GOODS, jest itecKlvxn at Hunt Town Street. Miss Liaiia Sciixwuca cnlla attention to her largo nnd beautiful atock of the above gisxls, selected with (wclal reference to this s.'Jn.v'ni'r'i"1' .P"liil or Kelt and hmin lints made a socially. Also just re- " s1 onv ui nun sivie XXAXXl QOOSB. M.lMJpACTflTlV. Halwick's Improved Curved Yoke Shirts, mnde to o;Jr at B8 East Town afreet, by 11. h. Smith. These are tho best and easiest lilting Shirts oll'ereil lo tho public, all porta being properly proportioned. They arc cut in tho most skillful manner and made with llie greatest possible rare. Satisfaction giiKniniccu, A No Drrm nml Clonk Mulling, oelll-eoilly MANTELS & GRATES. - Tni'ffiTmti.i.u OijlMHIH MAXTEL & (.RATE COMPANY Altli MAKIMJ AM. SJKKS OT IAKHI,:iZi:i MAXTEIJS, Initialing Xature Truthfullv, aind Producing ork Inferior to None in llie Country. All 01 RAVORK WARRATED. JAVCH II I.TOS, Aent. X. II. A large Mock of Beautiful Garden anil Cemetery ao, jii received, of oeweat patlern. CHEAP! CHEAP I WALL PAPER. .Vow is the time to liuv , vnnr Wall I'niwr, nl Otlll I'Pllowsi' Iln'llilliiK. K. I1A1LEV. SI lOAYCANEW SII.KHaml WOODKX CASES, of all sii,J. ilnnjicr than ever sold in Ihe ritv. Ollll I CIIOHH' HllildillK. K. IIA1LKV. n m s i llll.T. 1IOIIEMIAX and WALXI'T I'll A MKSmmle loonier. Oilil I rlloHH' lliillding. K. IIAILEV. OSBORN, KERSHAW & CO., Ilavo received an elegant line of m;h i'anhioxaiii.i: I) It K H H ROO 1 HI In Ulnck and Colored Caahmerea, Diagona Scrgui, Snttecna, Valerian t'lolhs. Pop. litis. Henrietta Cloths, Empress Cloths, Merinos, .Mohaire and Alfsicns. . New Nlrlpril Nhaw la amlMrarla. Hew VelvvU and Velvelena, New Illnrlt nnd Colored Hllho, Jfew Woolen UoodN, New CnrpefM. Mew Window Nhnde ond artalna, OStllOKX, KCltMIAVV oV t O. eisi COMMERCIAL BANK, No. loo N. in tt.i Nt., (Seaaionfl'B Block). COLUMBUS, 0. OUANOE JOHNHON". F.C.HKSHIONH, J. A. JKFFHKV, I'popriktohh. Pay Interest on Deposits, Buy and Sell Gold and Silver, liovernment lioniin, nnd all first claw Kecuritien. iNHne l'nHNnir Ticket To and from all tho principal ports In Eu-row, wll Urakth pa v able in Gold, on all tho principal cities and towna in Europe and do a (ienrral llaukinft Bnnincfw. Collleetionn receive prompt attention. HITKIN'S PAKKER HOUSE Botrps, Pronounced delicious hy all who have tried them. Consisting of iiorit TIUTI.K, Jl I.IK.WI TOJIATO, OKHA Axnpr.A. FOIt SALE BY Goo. K'Uonnld Jto Co. augfl - ATT ION XIOJVX USE FLELSt'HMAXX & (O.'S PltKMIIIM Compressed Yeast And have no more trouble with Sour Bread ana nous. FOR Sll.l: AT ALL URIM'KRIKN, CKXTItAI, DEPOT: No. 17 East Rich St, Cftlumbus, 0, KR IMEIt A ( , Nolo Agent dert-im THE GREAT FRENCH REMEDY. nKLAHAUKK'M NrMIM' VilA.H. Prejiarwl by (laraneiere k Pupont, Xo. 214 Hue Loralmnl, I'arin, ami highly rreom- meuueti hy iho enure Meuieal Faenlly of Franco, Are (lie very ltert remedy in nil Mines of jwrmiitorriHea, or Seminal Vicaknef Mdiily, Daily or Premature Ktnittiona; Sox-nal WeakiieM or iiiipotenrv; Weak new ari-inc from ferret I Inlut and Sexual Kxeemeti; Helaxatiiin of the (lenital Urgnnx; Wenk Sjinnj "Lime" or "Itrick-dnat ' deposits in tho I rinet Milky Dwliarpt, Ar.t and all the (tlinntlv train of Hymptoms arising lhm OvrniHMir Kxiwei Thuy mro when all other remedies fail, lrJelH iir Rox, Sent hy mail, ernrelynealrd from all ol-wnatinn, hy ineloninK price to tint Sol t.ciK'ml Aciit for Anieriea, Jdli MOSK8, 1H t'orilniult Plroet, New Vork. Pamphlet of Advice 1i in each )ox, or will l sent free to unv addreM. IIIIYAX'N I'l LHOSIKJ WAFERM, Are unlitiling in the cure uf Coughs, Colda, Aslhina, llrimrhilis, Sore Throat,iloarse-ni-ss, llillli'iilt Breathing, Inrlpcnt Consumiv-liou ami lliseasesof tho Lungs. Thev havo no laste nl' inciliritie, and any child will tako them. Thousands hnvo liecu restored to health that had before despaired. Testimony given in hundreds of cnno. A single dose relieves In Tun Murrai. Ask for 1IRV- AN S IT LMON1C WAFERS. Price Id i-enls. Sent bv mail Air M ei'nts, l Aihlress .loll HOSES, III Corilauill Sireel, New Vork. 1 v 1 1 en Aw NATIONAL , Insurance Company, Oril.iOII, Mulue. Capilnl immiii to lie increased) ...ftSopoon I Asmts Nov. 1st, IHI.over 417,7.10 I l.osa in I'lilcago, tiiuler '... M.ooo AI.I.IIIER BHON. nenernl Agenla, 10 Pine St., New York. J. .t'Iltl'l)l, Local Agent, nor2M-wAs?m Colnnilwa, O. !Tbe Jourtml haa the largrit cirriilalinn of any daily In Central tdiio. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ATTORXEYN. K. CLAY UR1UGS, Attorney at Law and N'i,l...v U..I.U. In. O Hilfh St. KoFciHl atlali ..'!.. ... '"(and Couroranciag. : SHIELDS, Attorney at Low. Removed to No. 18 Socio High street. E. L. 1W1TT. Attorney at Law and Solicitor of Patents, 85 South iligh street, folumhus, Ohio. OKO. K. XASII, Attorney at Law. Office, No. 09 South High alrect, Amooa building. utsuH.iiiSbiisir C1IAS. 0. FIELDS. Book-bimler and Blnnk-book Manufaeturor. lampletwork and Periodicals bound lo order at short notice. IM, m and till Xorth High street. HOOHM ANB HTATIO.IEB V. COMI.V & SMITH, Stationers and Dealers In Envelopes, genuine ill' Si. fre"rhWjWni! ami "oiiviinj Inlut all kinds ot Paiswanli Healing Vni. tor. Cliaiicl nnd High Sla., 2d dour from Q.IIU.smA.l BKMTAI HA XT. steiexsox.Ti,(1(7k7o" Amboa Iliillding, dealers In Foreign Fmlla, Toya, e. Ovsiers, Fish and (iaino of nit DRY UOOIM. OSBORX, KERSHAW ivi, " Sueceamra to J. I). ,hmn k Co., 142 8. Highi St. ( arpets. Alminsler, Slelton, Vel-vet, Bniaaeat m addition to what is already JtW KLBY A.M ATI HIM. Wholeialo and Retail dealers in Watches. t In ks and Jewelry. Xo. 71. S. High atreet. HEIISIIISEII k ADAMS I.umber Mcrchanu, dealer! In all' kin.ls o Worked Horing, Lumlier, Lalli, 4c, corner I" '"K mm " out sireela. JOn.V SELTZER CO ilT'iT Fi'0, SKimm Son' Organs .nd?it,S'SMrC"1 ,"t"'"'. NCWNPAPKHN. OHIO STATE JOIIItXAL Hmly, Tri-Weekly and Weekly, the bmt news, business and family parai and the best Advertising Medium in tlie Slte. fl.Hllllim AMI UKtL II A Si U KUN. F. II ALLEV t StlX, nealcre in Lead Pipe ami Sheet Lead, Bathaa atreet' "u" UowLS '' 'i'hiril MACHINERY. tANE & BODLEY John and Water Hla., OITOI3NnxrATI, O., ' UANl'PACTCnK STATIONARY AND PORTABLE NTEAM EKGINEei, Boilers and Mill Work, Circular Saw Mills, with Solid Iron Frames, Wrought Iron llcad-Ulocka and Friction Feed. LATH AND SHI.VOI.E MACIIISKS, Wood Working Muclilncry, SHAFTING, Hangers, Pulleys and Couplings, SAFETY POWER ELEVATORN' Our Designs, Patcrna, Tools, nud Facilities are the most CoiniIto nnd l:xt-uslv i..."l!'.1"n"7' 'nnbllnir us to iirodnce the BEST W OIllv at tho LOWEST I'ltll'B. Illustrated Uataloguea anil Prices furnl free on Application to LAXE AND BODLKY. nov 0 dliawtw'itam Gnu OOLTJMDTJS MACHINE CO. roM'HniN,oino. Portable and Stationary , STEAM ENGINES. rnnllnani, Nharilugn. Pnlleja, Bollrn, Mill IJenrlna; nnd sfnehlnery, EnicliiC' FnntHi. TrlpHaawm, Inprovcd Clnular and Mulay VW IVXXXjZjS. Also, every description of HotorlH, IMpe, and C'rhIIiikh r'or Poal oil and Oaa Worki. MACHINE CO. D. H.KOYCE JAS. tl, PlM.l.lNd .I'lMililivT k Srr'r. TnRaat'RKii Manufacturers of Pulltiya. Nhnrtlnar. llnnireni. limpioved Brnah Trtnitntna Harbin. una .Hsileable Iront'lamiM. We also make to order Iron FeneM,Urllnar. Awning Irana : lloll., ate. Keen On hand STEAM IH'AftKQ anA .11 kinds of BRASS WORK. WORKHOX WATER NTRI.l.T. Between North and Last Streets, nljB rOLl'Mni'S,OHI 0 FOt'NDRY Si MACHINE SHOP. L. B. DA VIES, HASl'KACTrRKBOF PORTABLE AND STATIONARY ENGINES, . ntOWH'IlT AStn I'lRI't TAR RAW. INK MACHINE!,. ALCOTT, or BROOM HANDLE LATHES, Threaeing Machines, Mowon and Reapers, Iron Vaults and Safes, Sugar Mills, Mill Works, Braaa and Iron Caslingallorso Pow era, Orating and Fencing, Ac, Ac, Ac All Kindt of Repairing at Short Notice 11UOAD 11TKKKT, i (Corner of State Avenue,) fPHIMBPS, OfllO. ClUai.KH AMIIOS. B, I.SU1TII ' niAHLES AMIIOS & C0-roi.rffiiiK, onto, MAarrAiTraaaa or Iloavy OaiatiriBe) For Railroads, Rolling Mills and Rlait Fur-nocca, also, Uachmery and Caitingf. Afrrirtiltural and Machinery . CASTINGS, Pattern! Made to Order; FOUNDRY al Ihe tool of TnWNBTRKET (Ilia old Uill Foundry).
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1872-01-16, MORNING EDITION |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1872-01-16 |
Searchable Date | 1872-01-16 |
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), 1872-01-16, MORNING EDITION page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1872-01-16 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3565.77KB |
Full Text | : ) 1 1. J ;7 VOL. XXXIII. COLUMBUS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1872. NO. 14. bio Ill HI 3:UO O'Cloolc A. M. ouAdviktiii;iu will I'lonnc o.witvo Unit nil nd-TertHemenU nro inserted In both the Morning and Ereniiif( edit I ohm or tho Htatb Joubmal, mate tiff It Itiflitmpurntily Itio ,nat Ailvtu-tHng medium in Ctntrnl Ohio. NOTES AND COMMENTS. Tun editor of the SteubonviU Herald Ihiukfl Marie Twain' lecture wiw " a melancholy attemt at wit." Nevertheless he "doe not condemn but pity his rivnl 'over the way, who took dinner with Mnrlc and enjoyed his humor, and accompanied hi in on a vIhU to "nn inatittttloii of learn ing," which the editor prudently refrains from mentioning by name (That i mix- inem.) We have no objection to saying that the Institution wn the Stcubonville Female Semlnury, whero Mark made an addrcMt to a coiiKrcfcntioii of gurgling flweetncM nuflioient to drive a man out of bin mind. There are wime people who, out of regard for their own safety, ought not lo hear Mark Twain people with no more appreciation of humor, than a donkey ha of high art. If such - pcrftotw were content to put the blame where it belongs and modcxtly din. claim any knowledge of the fine point of humor, there would bo no discredit to them. Hut when they attempt to depreciate the lecturer becauw of their own deficiency, they exhibit not only stupidity but ill-nature, and make tlicmwlvw projH . er objects for commiseration. It linn always been a wonder and a delight to tin, that men are constantly to be found in attendance at the Opera, who vent tremendous sarcasniH upon the finest of music, and take pride in professing that the really enjoy Old Pan Tucker a great deal better all the timo in delicious unconsciousness that they are simply exKsii)g a lack of cultivation and tate rather discreditable to one who win himself up m a critic. In the same way, it Is mu lining to find a man stolidly sit through a lecture full of the most exquisite touches of humor, all the lime "waiting for the facta" to come In. Wc don't expect to Iw believed don't ask to be believed but it U nevertheless true, that a gentleman of eoimdernlile culture, of splendid business sagacity and achievements, listened to Mark Twain's lecture here without a smile disturbing his countenance, and criticised tho leeluro severely as "greatly exaggerated in its statements, if it did not reach to the verge of downright lying" ! Tub article upon the "Prevention of Small Pox" was prepared for the Statu .lot RNAi. by Dr. K. K. Fullerton to whom we desire to make nj-ediil acknowledgment, for the concise and at the same timo thorough treatment of the many chief points of interest. The article should receive all the consideration which this professional sanction entitles it to. It is not only interesting to the general reader, but a valuable reminder to the medical profession. W'r haven thoughtful criticism upon rr. Holland's lecture, nil essay upon an agricultural topic by Col. Iunis, and other valuable matter laid over, to nppcar as soon as room can lie found. Ma j ou W. I). Bicieiiam, of the Dayton Journal, was in the city yestcrdav. Wh observe that many writers are holding out the idea that the United States Navy Is notoriously inefficient, especially In the face of a strong proscct of war with Spain, They pronounce It a griey-ouh spectacle, and are not moderate in their attacks .ixn the Oovcmment for letting our navy dwindle Into such insignificance. This Is nn excellent way to j eneourago the Spanish Government In the j belief that the United Stales nre totally ! unprepared to cope with her "Invincible 1 Armada." Not many years since this same stric of fault-finders concerned themselves much : about the magnitude of our navy, nnd ! Insisted with undue pcrvcrscncss that it i was nn overgrown elephant on our hands. 1 It was accordingly reduced to a peace footing with a promptness that some men in authority severely condemned. This was done on the supposition that the Government could create a nnvy on demand,' as H did at the breaking out of tho- re-;bellion. The fact must have 1ccu patent lo thinking people, however, that the so-called Confederate States, of America were In the Mime boat with the Mother Government, os respects nn armed flotilla. They lmd to construct nnd equipiien-goinginen-of-wnr ns well as we, and were ready to defend their southern const cities fidly as i quick as we were prepared to commence bombarding. But we need not be alarmed. Our, w ar vessels ore not so few and feeble as at the beginning of the Southern rel tell ion, after n long period of pencu with nil tho world. The foreign power that opens hostilities on them will find metnl In them, although they may require additional itrength to endure prolonged active service. If, however, wo were as Illy prepared at this time to meet tho powerful navy of any Kurojican nation as we were In 18(10. we might feel a little more disposed to hesitnle -Wore demanding reparation for Insulted honor. Just what our present dispute with Spain will terminate In, nobody can foretell. Great conflicts have grown out of less causes than the diplomatic hitch thnt exists between our Government nnd the Spanish authorities. The American steamer Florida, on tho 1 1th of December, off the port of St. Thomas, was followed nnd fired upon by the Spanish war vessel Ynscn Nuet do Ilallmn ; was Irannled by Spanish oillcers, who in an olVeiii.lv manner examined her piers and cargo, This (rent men t was rcjwaled on tho 21th of December, off tho port of Nassau, by tho Spanish gun Unit Dlslouridnr, as appears from the sworn statement of George Mitchell, Master of the Florida. It is for this meddling thnt the President is roimrt- cd to hnvo Imperatively demanded of Spain "cxplnnntlon, upology nnd full sat-Isfnctlon." Will Spain give It ? Hereby most likely hangs peace or war ; whichever she chooses. . If, ns Is claimed by some writers, the privilege of arresting, visiting nnd searching ncutrnUhlps Is Accorded to Mligcr-enti by diplomatic, regulations, in order to a seer In in whether the neutral ling covers a disguised enemy or conceals war material, then our Government has no right jit all to complain of the conduct of S.iain toward the Florida. But If Spain is not fortified behind a generally recognized privilege of thUcharacter, of course the assault upon the honor of our Hag must be resented, and the rights of American residents of Cuba maintained, even at a liberal sacrifice of blood and treasure. A war with Spain could but result eventually In the acquisition of Cuba and Porto Rico, rich with tropical fruits, to the United Btaten, and thereby enable iis to gain a footing In the West India Islands secure for all time. Wr will have the General Assembly with us again to-day, and we suppose one of the first things that will be brought up by the Democrats, after tho majority of the members have straggled In from home, (where they have, made provision for the next three weeks for Betsey and the baby, and the old brimlle cow and calf,) will bo a protest against the action of the Senatorial joint convention last week, which they will ask leave to spread upon, the journal of cither House, At least such was their agreement on adjourning the other day. Neither branch of the Legislature has any power to refuse any member or members the privilege of entering a protest on the journal against any action thnt may have been taken by cither branch separate ly, so long as such branch does not impugn tho motives of the majority in the proceeding objected to. But when the House or Senate In separate session comes to amending the journal of the joint convention, It takes upon itself authority that In nowise belongs to It. Whatever dispo sition the Senate may make of. the forth coming protest, the probability Is that the Republicans of the House will positively refuse to entertain It, on the simple ground that the journal of the joint convention cannot be altered or amended except by the joint convention itself. Nothing Is clearer to oar mind than that this posi tion Is the only trnnblc one that can bo taken. We would suggest to the Republicans, however, that in order to gratify our vixenish opponents a resolution might be ndoptcd calling both Houses together again to let them change their votes till the utmost relief Is attuined. It could not have the least bearing upon the election of John Sherman, but would afford the vacillating gentlemen a great deal of solace. WASHINGTONLKTTER. Wariiisotox, Jan. 12, 1872. CONGRESSMEN. Sometimes a man is made a fool of by being sent to Congress, but not often. On the contrary it is frequently the school which develops him into a better and abler man than he was before ho came here. The attrition with minds fully equal to his own, and in some cases superior to his own, brings out nil the qualities which would have lain uncultivated at his country home where, perhaps, ho was the best man in tho locality. So that probably it might be well to modify my statement by saying thnt the utter fool sent to Congress rcinnins a fool, while one with any redeeming qualities whatever, is mnde a Irelter man by coming here. At the same timo I would regret exceedingly if the pcopla should tako to extending the useful no of Congress as a fool's reformatory, and insist on sending any more of these gentry here lhan come by the usual process of vile caucuses, .and detestable wire-pulling, which, liko tho small-pox, is a prevailing disorder in the next district always. But tho majority of our Congressmen may be summed up, and are summed up ns "good fellows." That is only one interpretation of the term. I mean thnt they usually have no"dem nonsense" about them ; don't assume anv pro digious importance ; do their work honestly and in a proper spirit of providing for the future in the way of a re-election as all good Congressmen do; they are pleasant, agreeable, accommodating (with franks nnd things, you know) and gentlemanly.Spite of all exertions to get along without, one Is driven to declaring in order to cut off debate and facilitate matters, that they are precisely liko a lot of bnya in a select boarding school. You find your natty, trim, polite and gentlemanly boy, who 1ms never known anything else. Often he stands at the head of his class nnd club, but more frequently maintains a respectable medium position, and averages well. He Is reliable, and can alwavs be counted nn by "his side." Then you have the big, lubberly, molasses candy eating ruffian, who bullies little boys until some day he makes a mistake in tho boy and gets licked, and blubbers like a calf, lie never knows anything nnd is only useful as an awful example to parents. You alsqflnd the sharp, cunning, quick little Arab, who somehow or other always wins more marbles than any other fellow in school. He gets out of whalings as easy ns he wins marbles. He faces you down occasionally with an air of confidence that dozes you a little, and may-hap sends you Into a brown study; ho seems so innocent that for tho life of you, you can't tell whether he Is really honestly mistaken or "devilish sly." He Is also useful to his side, but not valuable to tho community at large. You can find too the good boy that you read about in the Sunday School literature. He Is demure as a cat, and at tho devotional exercises Is so evidently truly pious, that you sigh regretfully that your mother's earnest, loving care had not resulted in Mcurlng in Jer aon anch a model, You quite reverence him, and involuntarily apenk to him in a milder lone tltnn you .nnc toward tbc other bnya and nH)lugzo abjectly when you happen to run against him in play, and grow light-hearted at liin aweet rc;ly. Some day, though, you catch hint in a mean, Utile trick, ao contemptible that cvon the big cnlf nor the llttlo marble winner would be guilty of it, and then, confound you, you hnvo lout all faith in good bora, and bring up your own children with a aort of contempt for them which may bo all right and may not. Then you have the long, thin, bony, big headed, thin skulled fellow, who waa born to work and reason, ond when lie gets up In "Society," you nudge tho newcomer that aoincthing profound i to come. Ho auataina tho reputation of the whole cloas on hit bowed shoulders, and la popular with everybody except tho hoy who ranka next to him. 1 Ie la useful also to the teacher aa a model, and when you present that tyrant with a new ferrule, the thin hoy with tho big head makca tlte speech with Latin and Greek enough in it lo aatiafy the moat exacting. The boy that can play ball beat, swim beat, excel In foot-racea, and jump- ing, and in short, the one who leads out of doors and brings up the rear in-door is also here. The thin lwy beljot him through his lessons, and everybody likes him. He always comes out strong when the big lubber attempts to tyrannize over some little fellow who has just come In. He is useful for that purpose, and because he injects a stream of bluff, hearty manliness in the make up of the school. These Congressmen look and act more like school Itoytt when they file between two tellers in front of the Speaker's desk. when voting, than at any other time. The scene was always ludicrous to me, and the desire to get into the crowd and pinch, tickle and push Is almost irresistible, They quarrel, like boys,' and like boys usually do not speak to each other forn day or two, when they make up again, be come the best friends in the world, and lay low for a chance to pay off the score. Sometimes, however, like boys occasionally do, they refuse to make up and carry the stiffest kind of a front in the presence of each other. This Is of course always the case when they have nothing to "get mad at." Ben. Butler and Sunset "Cox enjoy each other's society hugely, and frequently they get together andUlk confidentially, and tell good stories and laugh, and altogether there never could be two associates to all appearances more agreeable. Some day when he gets a chance Rutlcr will shriek out some bitter, hurling sarcasms at Cox, and the first time Butler is off his guard he will be most wofully fly-bitten. When a member speaks, if he is one of t he old reliable ones, whose flood of wonts never contain an idea, nobody except tho official reporter pays any attention to him. He rolls out his periods, and saws the air, deals in pathos and fiery denunciation, pleads, cajoles nnd satirizes, all to tin-hearing ears and unseeing eyes, his breth ren write letters, read papers, gather in crowds and talk, go nut for lunch, smoke in the coat rooms or stretch out on a sofa to sleep. Once in n while one will raise his head aKd look wonderingly at the ora tor as much as to say, "See here, old fel low, arc you never going to get through ?" To sec one of these men at such a time is comical. He rave to the empty air. How a man can manage to talk any length of time under such circumstances, mmm my comprehension, lint they doit. Thev turn on the draft and roar away without apinrent mental effort. Hut when a member gets up who Is in tho habit of saying something when he speaks tbc scene is different. The little knots of convemt- tionaliids break up nnd arc attentive, the letter writers cease their toil and lean back, to lis ten, newspaper are (Implied, and as the speaker decreases in warmth and Interest tho others leave their desks and eniwd around him, till soutetimw the whole hody Is jammed up in one corner of the room. The official reporter leaves his (tak mid works his way through, the crowd till begets under tho sjteaker's nose, where ho slings hi hook and eye mysteries like lightning' After the speech Is over things return to their ordinary condition. It mnkes no difference though the orator has n voice like a Stentor, tho man who sits only three seats from him, leaves his seat and moves nearer. In an animated debate there is always great fun. Jokes, puns, retorts, repartee and sarcasms fly about like shil-lalehs at Donyhrook. Tho (ilobc don't have them, and the press reports, nlwnys poor affairs , fails to include them. One must be ou the floor to get all the fun. Pen i) ex Nil. Lieutenant Governor Mueller and tho Democratic Press. From (litiClevelnnri Horli. The Herman portion of our voting pop ulation will, of course, Iw intensely delighted with the course pursued by the Democratic press toward Lieutenant Gov ernor Mueller. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, Columbus Statesman and Cincinnati Enquirer, have numerous slurs upon his nationalityandexercisetheir ingenuity in manufacturing gross burlesques of his remarks in tho joint convention. The pretended "reports" are whnllv dissimilnr. showing them to he mere ebullitions of spite. As sjrCcimen bricks to show the Germans how tho Democracy thnt nro-1 fessed so much love for them nnd have been making desperate efforts to seduce them into combination with them, treated the general choice of the Germans of Ohio when he would not 1 their tool, we give the following from the Knquirer, purporting to l Lieutenant Governor Mueller's remarks when endeavoring to quiet uieaisuirDance: "Shknti.kmkss: I b-h no more inder- aided in dose election vor dem Zcnador nor vat none ufe do resd life von vnsn't. I was here for to mako llrcsidend. uud I vill do shust so good as I never did fen vou don't mako anv more nnuui all lc dime. I am shat mor' lindriodic den vou all vas." Also this, when the vote was final Iv an nounced : "Shentlehkx: John Sherman he, has seventy-dree vote, dat oder feller he have seventy vote. I dercfore declare John Sherman he Ik elected do next bres-ident from Ohio in de Congress for six years from do fort of March, eighteen hunt-red and seventv-dree. Now vo goes to tinner." The hnnuiirr applies to tho Lieutenant Governor such terms as "poor stupid " 'stupid fifru re-head," "screech-owl." ''su perannuated becr-jerker," "the mule," "poor usurper," "siectncled Teutonic embodiment of stupid I tv." The Statesman follows in tho same hue, nnd leaves it to bo settled whether Mr. .Mueller is "fool or knave.1' Tho Plain Dealer snvs he is "cither an ass or a fool," and parodies his remarks after the fashion of its Columbus and Cincinnati cotcmporaries. iow we wium me jJcmocrntic journals, in their disappointment nnd wrath, have made a great mistnke. They havo opened the eyes ot the Germans to the estimation in which they are really held by tho Democracy, who havo been dallying with them In pursuance of tho "passive vli-cy." Tho moment a German refuse to become their tool he Is hen tod with vile abuse, ridiculed for his nativity, and his langungo burlesqued. Lieutenant Governor Mueller is a gentleman of intelligence nnd culture, and tho shameful course of tho Democratic press of Ohio In villifv-ing and ridiculing him hccnum his Kn-gHsh is not as fluent and correct ns thnt of one who knows no other langungc, will scarcely commend them to tho tutor of tho Germans, to whom tho nomination ((f Mr. Mueller was eminently NiiUi'uciorv. nnd who voted for him with enihiislastlc unanimity. Memhkiw of the Uginlaturu elect United Ktntoi Hcuators. The elwlors of a county elect tho legiMlntor. When an elector gives his vote forn legislator his duly and privilege in tho miitler cense. There Is no rectifying mistakes; no opportunity for changing the vote. When the legislator so elected ensU his vote for United Htates Senator, he In liko manner has performed his duty and exhausted his privilege. If tho legislator can recall his Tote for Senator, why not the elector recall bin ballot for legislator if ha can identify It to tho aatisfactlon of the hido?..'.. Innd irrafrf. BY TELEGRAPH. TO THK OHIO STATE JOURNAL. Night Dispatches. CINCINNATI. SAIK oF Siuox opkiia tu kkth. Mii t ' nuito Jnurnn). Cincinnati, Jan, lo. The sale commenced to-day for the Nilsson opera season, recommencing Monday, tho 20th of January. Tho rush for tickets was great, nnd in n few hours four thousand dollars were received a signal proof of the Impression mnde here by the StrakoHch Opera Company when here lntt week. CATACAZY. 4'auwe or the 4'iMtlnoNtt Bf Iwpfn Rn In ana the I niirxl N tales-. Alexia not to Heturn to WaNhlnjrton. New Yoiik, January 15. A Berlin letter stales that the German Government received a circular from GortschakofT relative to somo incidents arising from the recall of ( atneazy. This letter is said to havo been necessary from tho following circumstances: The American Minister Kramer, during dinner at the housoof the German Minister nt Copenhagen, promised nnding n letter from the American Government explanatory of the Catacazy uffair, but the Russian .Minister refut-cd to listen, and the German Minister said such a letter must not be read in his house. Subsequently Kramer went to each Minister in Copenhagen and read tho letter to them indi vidually, they of course rejHirting it to their governments. The Uussian Cabinet feels vexed over the affair, nnd rumors nre ntbmt in Ilerliu that a coolness Itctwecn Uusriin and the United States has arisen therefrom. Tlic same litter statin that advices from St. Petersburg represent that the Euieror and nil society there consider Alexis slighted by President Grant not returning his visit, and tho Knijitmr will not allow Alexis to return lo Washington. WASHINGTON. i IMrK.l IIMENT. Washington, Jan. .'. Tho iwtitiou referred to thelloiisu Judiciary committee asking the preparation iifnrtic.es ofim-euchincnt against Judge l'leld, of the United Slates Supreme Court, nnd Judge Hoffman, of the California District Court, is simply n revival of ono brought forward two years ago by n debarred lawver of San Traiicisco, which expired with the last Congress, no action whatever having been taken on it bv the Judiciary com-mittce, ns the general charges were entirely unsupported by proofs and secitieations. AI'I'ltoriilATIOX. Tlic committee ou Appropriations ex-wvt to reiort the LegUntivc, Executive and Judiciarv Appropriation bill to 1k House ou Wednesday next, and others will soon follow. Ai TIVITY AT Till. NAVY YAltP. The I'nitcd Slates vessels Frolic, Tallapoosa, Mav Flower ami ;Constellalion are. undergoing repairs at l'he Nvv Yard. nominations Tho President sent the following noin-innlioiiH to tho Senate to-day: J, H. Wing, Keceiver of Public Moiiovs, Bayfield, Wisconsin; Registers of" Wul Oflice, Charles S. ISenrr, Springfield, Illinois; N. Ilaldwin, Council ltlufl's, Iowa; Assessor Internal Revenue, D. C. Lamb, Third Wisconsin District; Collector Internal Revenue, Clark Center, Ninth Ohio District. THE l,m.U TENHEK HE) .lotos. Justice Strong delivered the opinion of Hie Mipremo l ourt to-dny, declaring the legal Under act constitutional. Justice Hrndley rend n lentrthv opinion concur. Hug in the conclusions of Justice Strong. The Chief Justice nnd Jhhi.cpx rtifl'nnl and Field, all dissenting Justices, except Justice Nelson, who was not present, read dissenting opinions, setting forth at great length tho minority views, with which the country Is familiar, as havintr lncn the opinion of tho Court in former decisions ot ttic legal tender question. OlttlKItA TO (IKS. EM Kit Y. Orders were telotrraohnd fmni ilm U'nr Department lo General Kmerv at New Or ftfinx tiwlay, inntmctinQ; him tint in bring tntnm into Iho cilv unlaw tmrlir . pn ortlum from Wuhinf;tnn, nnd up tn three nVlnok lliia aftprntmii nn onli'r. In lliae cuVt linil boin nent him. NEW YORK. TilCUYKR A.NIl TKIIMINi:il(lK.lMi JC UV. Xkw Yuiik, Jan. 13. The Grand Jury of Oyer nml Terminer, niiirlulinfrlhey are an Illegal Ixxly, aiiliel In JuiIko liifira-ham fur n di-hnrKe. They were eimn-aeled lu finish hiiincti on liatnl, ami not enniDienee new work. It la reirleil thai the Oyer ami Terminer (iniml Jury ileeiileil not tneonllnuc liiveitipUiun inln clinic npiiiiKl Judge Ilarnnrd, whleli .land nver fur Hie next Grand Jury. TAMMAXV. It inRiwerted lliattho Tammany General committee have paid no rent furyean.anii thnt pmierly Itelmifrim; in the awiety waa reuinved from the building, Utr whieh lcfr.ll redrew will be ae-light. HM.lM.-ruX OS THK DKCLIXl:. There were eitbtr-tlirec cane of Hlnall-pox Inut week, und twenty dealha. The malaily la dccrcaninR In llrnoklrn, where there were lifty-aix eaxea, mrniniit eighty-nine the previima week. There have hern fifty thouoand vaceinaliniiH in Hnxiklvn in two niontliH. M1.4Clbl4.ANfc(lt- ITKMH, Tho ltmulnn fleet will not Mil for I'en-.aeolu until next week, or later. The retrial of Ihu Jumel will cnac la ael fur Thumlny. Major John A. Pull, u, former well known cxprciwimn, died nt Tarrytown Hnndav. .Miuiam Van ltimklrk, the nlleinil alair-tloniHt, waa dixelmnivd frniu ciiittoily In ltrooklyn, tlic evidence being inHtilhVicnt to hold' her. All agent of Iklmont, who called lo aa-ccrlain progi-cm in the completion of holida for money adrnnccd lo tho city aome time aineej waa informed by the County Auditor that nn additional million would 1 ready thia week. To-day an iiiMino man climlied up the new Franklin atatue in Printing lion Spiare, and drawing out a knil'e began In cut to pleccii the American Hag which en-vclntiea thcHtatuc prcvloiiato unveiling on 'ilmilay next. The man wa armlcd, CHICAGO. A ItKMONHTIIA'NliN AtUINuT IHTAIILIHll-1 Nil VlllV, LIMITS, CiiicAun, January 1 J. l i1m.-iim if tho North Side, inoKily (lermniw nnd Kcandl-nnvinns, lo the nmnU'r of two or Ihreo thotiMand, inahed In prtHifsion this evening to the city buildings to protest agnliiHt tlic passage of an ordinance eslnb-Hulling tholimits of the city as fire limits. TheycarriiHllmiiHpnrpiielc nnd Imnneni, with device expressing In Inugnnge more forcible limn elegant their feelings oti the proposed prohibiiion of the erection of Thev denounced the ordinance as crush out the poor nn cflort to for the benefit ot tno ricii. Mr. . i. .Hissing, alitor of the Slants Zcitung, addressed ddresscd the crowd, advising them to disporso und assuring them that he had the promise of Aiuermen tnnt the orninanco should not pass. The crowd pressed into tho Council Chamber and were so demonstrative that the Council hastily adjourned, the Aldermen making their way out as best they could. The excitement is intense ono part of tho citizens foreseeing great injury to business if n good lire ordinance is not passed, and tho other being determined to havo their own houses. FORTY-SECOND CONGRESS. Flnit Mennlon. iiorNK. W'AsnrNOToK, January IS. VarioiiK bill were Introduced and re-ferred.A bill waa Introduced by Mr. Butler of Mamacliuaetta for the removal of legal political dfaabilitiea incurred during tho late rebellion, provided that the act aliall not enable any pcraon to maintain clainia or right, againat the Government, except the name accrued before thollth of April, 1801, mnd aubacquent to the Oth of April, 18o5 ; bIho, to repeal aoreral tenure of oflice acta. By Mr. Smith For Iho conatrui ilon of a national railroad between .New York and Chicago. Ily Mr. Mercer To odinlt tea and coffee after July next. Hy Mr. Neglcy For the an If of the QunrtermaMer'n department at I'itlnbufg, and the erection ot a civtom honwc nnd marine hospital there; nlo, for tho improvement of the Ohio nnd Monnngnliela rivera. Hy Mr. Stcvcnuon For a comnlete water highway from tide water on the Janiea river lo tlic Ohio at the mouth of the Knnnwha. liy Mr. Vaughn To authorize the con- alruction of a bridge over tlic Mix-i-fippl at Memphk Hy Mr. Not i of cw lork l or I lie purchne of a bunt of the lute Hear Admiral Farragut, to lie placed in the Capitol.Hv Mr. Clarke of New York To nni- vide currency, in coin and paper, of equal ond uniform value thronghuut the I'liitcd States. ' llv Mr. Hereford For lockinir and darning the ( Ireat Kanawha river In Went 1 trginm. llv Mr. Tuffo To nbo -h the office of Nmierintcmlciit of Indian Affairs Mr. Pierce, from thecoDuuittceon Kdu. cation nnd I.abor, rcortcd n bill to e-tablixh an educational fund and to npplv the procecdx of Iho public laoiU lo Iho education of the coplc. lleconiinittcd. Mr, Halo'a hill of lam Monday, in reference to aliiM and uliip building, wax debated for ten niiuutosnnd went over without action. Mr, Ilawa of MaacluuctM nsked leave to offer a rexolution for the appointment of a aelect comniitlco of live lo impure into the origin and character of the dillicultie between tho Government ami official of Ixjui-iniin and United Slate olliclal in that State, and to rcort the paino lo the Houio with aueli rccnnnnclidalionn nit it may deem exiedicnt, the committee to have power to Head forperHonn nnd pnKrx, Him io mi in tv nioiingion oreiK'ivlierc. Mr. Kerr objected. Mr. Dowea moved lo upcnd the rules nnd ndopt the resolution --wax I I I, nava SM. Mr. Acker of lVnnylvnmn aked leave to introduce a bill to remove all legal ami iolitieal dimbilitic, and Hi grant gciuwal amncHtv. Mr. lllckcy objected. Mr. Acker moved to Hiticml the rulea and pasa tho bill. The Houno refined to annp-'nd tho rules ond pass the bill vcas 1( If, navaM, not two-tbirdx. Mr. llnwes ihcn introduced a hill cn-ocling that from and after its parage all political disabilities incurred' under and by virtue of the third section of the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution, nre removed. Tlic rules were not sns-pcndcd and tho bill was not parsed vcas l.'ll, naya 70, less than two-think Another amnesty bill, being tile one passed bv the House last session nnd now pending in the Seunlc, was introduced bv Mr Hale and passed yeas 170, navs 111. It is the same os was passed bv the House last session, and excepts members of Congress nnd officers of the nrmv and navv who joined tho rebellion. Mr. Cox offered o resolution calling for unpublished eorrcsiondencc relating to the release of V. G. Ilalpine, a Fenian prisoner. Adopted. Adjourned. MEXVTK. Mr. Goldthwaiteof Alabama was sworn In. Severn! petitions wre presented. Air. (oie prescnuti n pdHon from Chinese dealers on the Pacilic const for a reduction of ta rift' on rice. . Tho Vice President said pet i lion from foreigners should bo received nt the State IVpnrtnient. Tho question was taken, however, and the pen linn referred. Mr. Ken ion presented a uiition from Hon. George It. Seidell and over one thousand other citizens of Kocliestci-, praying for a reduction of the tar i li to a revenue basis, and especially for the removal of duties upon nli, coal and pig-iron.Mr. Kdmumls prcrenlcd llurlv-lwo petition., from crmout forn njteitl of theduty on salt. Mr. ('handler, from the committee on Commerce, reported, without amendment, the hill to promote the con.-tr net ion of tho Cincinnati and Southern railway, being the bill Introduced by Mr. Sherman hint Mnrrh, outhorir-ing (invnwootl, liishop, iioo)er, Hcidelbach and Ferguson, ns trusters, to construct nnd maintain a rail-mad lietwecn Cincinnati, Ohio, nnd Chnt-tanoogn, Tennessee. Mr. Klnir ofTcml a joint tvsolullon directing the Ku-Kluxcommittce to inquire Into ntl'airs in Iouisinnn. Mr. 11 ward objected, so ii went over. At o'clock Mr.Sumuvr'ssupplemeiitn-ry Civil Nights hil came up, when he addressed the Senate. He said thulslavcry, in a disguised and modi lied form, still ex-exlsted, In sofarnscolored people were denied equal rights, and must be alio! ixhedlte-fori' the great work would liecouiplctc. He reviewed the hanMiiiM nnd iutlinilics sull'ereil hy tho colored )coplc, ami cilcil the eminent en of Frederick Dniiglaia and I.ieutennnt (ioveruor Dium. llode-nieil that equal rights before tlie law wns a question of wK'inl equality. Kquntily In nil InstllutlonH created or nntigniml hy law was not n quolion uf society. S pa rate hotels ami conveyances were hut nrtiticial suhstitules for eipmlity. The substitute Is invariably nn interior nrlh le. He ritcfl the old Fnirlihli law nn lhi anb. jectofinnsnr holds, which Were hound to receive all persons without distinction, nnd decisions in this country KiiNtaiuing the san io principle, which iimlies with equnl form to puhlio eonwv mires, com mon schools, tlioalvrs, Ac. lie dwelt at length on the snbloct of tin! Ho sc hools. giving illustrations of Ihe lumldiis iin-s)tHil on coin red children hy their exclusion. Ho dec I nml I lint hv the decree iiguinst slavery all Kmhnncc of nsilogv for pn'judice sguiii-t color wis removed. In conclusion, Mra Suminr rcHreltnl l tint the rrci(lcut in Ills mcsHigc lavont) amnesty, while he said nollting of ihe din. abilities hill tried nn iho colored peiipte; hul look courage when ho (huglit (hut tho promised gciierifily in rebel ituild not fail loauicken (he setiliment of justice which he now invokiil. I Ie diseliilm wl any mntitncnt of pcrnual hostility to-wnnl thoH' who assniltil the npublle', hut while willing to he p'Mlo uiih fonuer vneniles, he could nol forget his duly to his fellow citixens, while niul Mock, who h(onI hy the republic. Then were strong rensona'why Oils mensure of justice q Uio eidored race should be united with amnesty, csiwcintly since the latler la pressed; and elenrly, between the two pre-eminence frame buildings. should be accorded to that fur eoual j rights of all. Mr. Vickers followed. Ho said he would not undertake to answer Mr. i Slimner's snpccll nil hi animlorimntiiri? ' civil rights hill, because it required no argument to demonstrate the irrosH un constitutionality of that measure. He then rend n long argument in favor of the landing general amnesty bill. At the conclusion "of : Mr'. Vieker's seeeh, the Senate went into Executive Vsslon, and soon after adjourned. MURDER. H run- t'hopH life Wile's lie ml lo llecs). Sr. l'Al l., Jan. lo. John Beover, who scpnratcd from his wife a year ago and has since threatened her life several limes, executed the fiendish deed at St. Cloud, Minn., Saturday night. Ho wont to her house, drove tho children oul, soiled his wife by the hair, dragged her into a lack room, anil literal I v cut her head to pieces with a hatchet. When orrcsted he made no resistance. IIo said he had come there to kill her, ond had done it. stTlouis. IH KL AI.KXIS MJ.MMONU) lluMK. ' Sr, Irortrf, Jan. lo. It in rpporetnl llint tlii hunting trip of the Duke Alexin will prolmhly be cut flhorl, nnd he and li in party Mum to thin city to await order of the Czar. It in known that within the pant 24 hours Admiral I'aissct received official advice that the relations between the two Governments are threatened with disruption, ami it may be advisable to return shortly to KurojH'. Hence he was advised to fjel hack tn this city as scedlly n- possible THK TICflllORNE CAfK, Lusdox, Jan. 15. Tho hearing of the Tichborne case was resumed to-day. Sir John Duke Coleridge 0(cned for the defense. He said the testimony- they pro-(mscd to olier would show that the claimant was a conspirator, perjurer, forger, in facta common impostor and villain, and that liaigcut and Carter, his accomplices, were unscrupulous rogues and eoncoctors of this HtUendoiis imHwlure. Tho speech of the distinguished eounsel was received hy the crowded Court House witli applnuxe, which was immediately suppress!, A MONMTKH CANON, made in an American foundry fur the TnrkMi government, has arrival at Top-hane, the arnenal of Constantinople. . J.'I("lMKNT TO I'll. JEXSEH. A movement is on foot to raise mil-scriptinns for a monument to Dr. Jcnner, discoverer of vitcci nation, nt Ills birth place. litVOKCK CArtKH, Xkw Yoiik, Jan. 1'). A Wurld special, dated Ixtndon, Jan. J. sa,vs t It is reported that the Mordaunt divorce case will soon Iw rc-owiiod, with the I'rinoe of Wales as correspondent. Another divorce ease has been llled, on the trial of which the Duko of Kdinhurgh will appear as cornvixwdcnt. NI'AIV .Maiuiio, Jan. The fnrmer I'niuii-it Ministers have resolved to support Hcnor Hagarta in the Cortes. Deputies to the Cortes will meet on the l!lst,nnd the senion opens on the lilM. The Ministry have unanimously resolved not to remove Count Yalmascda from lluvana. ITALY. Home, Jan. 15. Tho convenion adopt ?il hv ing international l olograph Congress haa ixva aigneil anil tho delegate gone home. The Italian Parliament rcaMemhlcx in thi city to-morrow. postaTTci; r r exc v. "Urhii u'l.ynn hud no witch to put on. he seo,,Mt mil it turnip nnd miule lion a (tnr. All.) he colrlifd u lln rrickct and pill him nilliin, i li : Tliey'ill Hi. nk il Is il.-kin." says llrwn li'Lyiin." Mninc wauls more rallroails. Kentucky wanta to sell more mules. Missouri wants the National Capital. . Miotic Island wanla more elhow-rooni. Canada wanta a canal from lake lo lake. Virginia wanta the income tai repealed. Indiana wants the divorce law amend-oil.Ohio wanla the growth of forests fostered.Louisiana wauls her entire I-eifislatiire hung. llie ilellairo Independent mv: At a meeting of Iho stockholders of llie Implement anil Machine Works last Saturday, It was decided lo Increase the capital stock of Iho company SlU.OOO, olio half the increase tn be taken by present stockholders. Moat of this amount haa already liecn taken. Tho farmers nf the surrounding country arc expected to tako Iho other half. II has heen assumed that tlic production of copiwr on Uko 8uierlor would be about 100 lorn lean thia year than last. According to tho estimate thU 1, ml,. tiiKe, nml tiieitcheieney will nol l much over II") tons. Tho total amount produced in 1870 Was 1(1 IH.1 Inn. .n.l I,. IK,1 111,0711 tons, being almnt lfn tons less for tin's year. The moneyed value of the copior nml iron product of Ukc Superior ir joii is nooiit 2iiy,ooo,oou. The total priHluct of the Iron mines of Ijiko Suiier-lor fur Iho past year will reach nearly 1,0011,000 net tons of ore, while the mako ot charcoal pig-iron will In over 40,000 tons, . I'p at Klmlra, Michigan, a merchant attended a donation party for tlie benelil of a village minister. Wishing lo apicar lllieral the merchant took a castor which was valued nt!l anil giarknl It $12, lima helping tn swell the amount of hiailnun-tlon. On the day following, the minister having olmervod that tho easier was innrked Mi, and believing it toooxa'nslve for his use, ndumed It to the merchant, remarking that he did not feel ablu In keep an cxien,ve a castor, ami would like to exchango It for aonielhing which would lie more serviceable to his family. Of course the merchant could not decline ao reasonable a proiosltlon, but he evidently felt that It waa his ox that was being gored, aa tho minister look the entire $12 in choice groceries, leaving the S I casior In their atcad. t'nelc Peter, who nourished In the inoiiuminH of Vermont as a liowe dealer, was niHul tiKin the oilier dny by an amateur of "npilne" who was in acarch of sonietlllng last. The result la told aa follows! "There," said t'nelc l'oier, point-1 ing to an animal in the meadow before tho I house. "There, sir, la an animal who would trot her mile in two ininuica and seventeen seconds were It nol for one thing." "Indeed!" "Yen," coiillnucil i I'nele Peter, "she is four years old this sprira, Is lu good condiilon, liaikt well, is a lirst rale mare, and she could go a mile In two scvcnlccn If II was not for one i thing." "Well, what Is It?" "That mare," rcslllnisl the llU'lfl.V. "I. III llV.i.t. MP..- M I good piece of iniierty. Shu haa' a heavy main, a swncn tall, trots fair, and yet there Is one thing only why ahe can't trot her mile In two tultiutea'and seventeen seconds." "What, in conscience, Is It then?" rrieil the amateur. "The distance Is ton great (or the lime," wai the old wag's reply. There is story found in on exchange, n.'OWlllU llltloCUIS IHO most imaginative works of fiction. It came out in the course of a recent trial before tho courts in Illinois. A young man persuades a friend, under the plea uf rapid money-making, to go with him to Texas. After arrival in lira distant State, he, to possess himself of his friend's moiiev, kills and robs him. He then returns to Illinois, pays court to the sister of his victim, nml linally marries her, being dressed in u suit of the murdered man. Suspicion is aroused at the prolonged dlsaiincarance of the friend. 'Iho drover is tracked, arrested. 1 u,,u iv low ni;.uia; CUllfClVnoiC gHCI 01 llie family, one member of which he has murdered and another married, is taken back to Toxas, where a chain of circumstantial evidence encircles him. He is proved tlte criminal, nnd awaits in prison his final punishment. Here l good material for a sensation drcnia. The town of Bristol, In Tcmuwe and Virginia, with a population of three thou sand, In an nimmiilv anions: towns. The place Incntcil in two Stales, and the Ktate line passes near the center of the main street, the rnpucs nnd lawless know 1 whore it is to an inch. This line used to I be deeply venerated, and in former vearw It wo.il.1 have been cn11HioVrcd a yniplon. of the decny of the Ncpublio for a' Tenncs-eo constable to cross the street on to the sidewalk, on the sacred sod of Virginia, and arrest n criminal, ilut the line is not now regarded with muh tender veneration. When a man kills another and step over the line for protection the odicers step after him and fetch him lack; killing is, conjepicnlly, not so opular ns formerly. Kach side' of the line lias n separate Mayor and Hoard of Alderman, and regulates its own a Hairs in the sense contemplated by the Constitution. There are two papers published, one on cachxidc of the line. Kach side uIpo has its schools and churches, but there Is not a dangerous nunirKT of cither of these. BUSINESS NOTICES, Throw In Rrintorcemriil. The Citadel of Lilt- Un a Mute of siege all through the year. 1ml i.t never more rlosely invested than in mid-winter. The liver is usually somewhat torpid, and the l-owels more or less constipated at this season, and dysjieiwa often n&iuucs its mo-t apfmnated form in cold and wet vealhcr. hi short, the sluggish system seems inclined to intermit or shirk some of its most important duties under the influence of a low temperature, and require whole.oine slimulutiun. The spur required U Ihwteltcrs Stomach Hitter.", the only medicine which quickens thcadiimof the secretive organs, and brings out the latent vitality of the syMem, without creating any febrile symptoms, or the slightest nervuuscx-ellcment.The great cgetaMe Tonic is not recom- consumption imu nun ocing Kit on to ihe eoncoctors of prejsiratioHs which can not byauv jMissibility reach the lung; but as a Bjwcilic lor the. ronstittitlonal and iiliysicnl weiiknesH, which invite pulmonary dUW.it U literally intiillilile. The most insidious and tcrril'lc enemy of human life is not ti-ease Itself, but Ihe' weakness w hich nllunls it an oiportunity to gain n lirm Imld of (he vital system. ' KcmeinlM!r thnt .Stamina, Vital Knergv the life principle, or whatever you may choose to call the reidalpiit power which I it lies against tho causes of disease nnd death, is the fjrand mfyfuard of health. It is the garrison of the human fortress and when it waxes weak, the truo poliey Is to throw in reinforcements, in other' words, when such an emergency oecuw, commence a course of Hosteller's liittcrs. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A MASONIC. tjrT Stated Commu nicaliun of Magno- Min Lodge No. L'O, F. Jfc A. M litis (TuePdav) evening, .liinnnrv h, 1R72, nt 7 I ocloek. 11. O'KANK, JSec'v. NOTICE. ritllKHK WILL UK A MEKTIXl! TO OH-X giuiine Iho t'apitii Iltiihliug antl Loan Aaaociation helil tit the ollicc of the Home Inauraneo Co., aorth room Opera Block, this (Tuesday) evening, nt 7 S' o'clecl;. Snljsrrilcrs lo ..Im-k and otlicrs inlcrcatcd are retocteil tontleml. jnnlO.lt J'OIt WALK. I I IT Xtl. 17. CHAM I'll IN S Sfll-IIIVI.S- 1 J loo, noi , northwprii corner Ithli St. and K. I'olilic Lane. Lot No. 1H. Chamiioii'itilwUviiiioa, sooth. wfsi corner Town SI. ami K. PuWic Lane. Lot No. Ill, f hnmpioii'R publh isinn. and ailinining No. 18 oa Ihe west. lot No. 3ti, Cliaiiitiion'aioilwliviDioil.tiorlh. west corner Town M. and K. I'nlilie Lane. Lola 30, :tl, nnd part of 'SI, in same, south' west cor. J'niiikliii Ave. and K. l'nltlic Lane. In-lot iviti, nnrtliu-el corner ltnnid and Fourth Sts. ' Lois 21 and McKlvnin's addition, next end Itii h St., south side. 51 feet 4 in, from, north side of Mound St., Iielween llith nml Third Sis. janliWw (iKO. M. I'AIISIIXS. OFKICK OHIO I'l R.NITrilE CO., I CoM-Mncs. 0., Jnn. llth, 1H7'.. ) rplIK AXNT.M, MKETIXO OF THK X Slockholden nf ihe Ohio Kurniliire Comanav will lie held at their olliee Monday. 2'it Jnntmrr, from two to five o'clock I'. M- for therlrillon of Directors and for anv htinrs that mav lie hronpht oefore Ihe meeting. W.'L. lUdllKS, Treaa. Jam .' .It Ci.ut;usi, CoLiunt-a, Cincinnati K IMOANAFOLIS ItAILWAV, I'i.i:vuanii, O, January 8th, in' I IMVIDI-NnOFTIIIinEANOA HALF i.V wr cent, free of I'nitcd States tax, has In-cii dci-lnrwl liy this Compnnv, parable on and alter FVUniary 1st. -1H72. Stork holder n-gis(errd at New York will lie paid at the Tniied State Trust (..'otnimnv of New lork, Xo. 4H, W all street. The Transfer hooks will be closed on the evening of January loth, and rcociied lel-rniiry jd. Hv unlerof the Hoanl of Oireetors KO. IT. Rl'SSKLL. i-JH Treaiurcr. IRON FENCINGr Kailiiig,Grating,fcc. HV I'ATEXTHIOXKKXCElSrilEA-P-1VL er. more sulistnutial, more orna-meiilal, more practical, nnd in every resiiect a great improvement on nnv other lenco lhat has over lawn milile. 'l ira ginient ennsiita in intersiiij; laitween the unnels of lenco n IhMt lirUuig l'ml, in lliell' ornaiminlol and atnnig, which allows fur the expansion nml conlnicllon, lo which nil Iron lowing ii subject llmt Iving llie cnuso of so mnliv eriHikcil fences anil ttnmnnngenlilc emes Ones, more I mini mi "puni,, Itiiliial InlrlliKllIU lliiniiir liiilciit. eipcvliillv IIioho itllo huvo lieralaleil III the Mfime. Martisi Hiirnn. im'I.i 264 Fourth Si, Cnliimliua. .i o i : Una Ihe Xolilest Liltle thing ul his N"13"W PLACE, No. 25 East Rich Street, rfli.rff.iiiN. "WHICH I tcc'.!tcoilly RISK TO EXPLAIN.' J. L. PIIXSBURY, Practical Hydraulic Ennineer. Ilecenlly Chief 'diolnror of Columbus Cilv Water Works, hisoicneil an ollicc nl No, r.llSt Male SlnTt. unit will Tumuli lun. I rP '""""""'"' K"i,""ll'a lor ciiualruetiiig v... .. n..-, in,iHn nmT K. i.-uv, (isa-r- vnlrort'onihinntion s stems, nml cuuiputn-Hons Tor ileveloilng ninl ei'onomitliig water power, and ilclgns fur Irrigntion, Htalnagr and Sewerage works. ODica houri: lo a. m. lo 4 p. m. jnnl eod:im FALL AND WINTER STYLES I IX MILLINERY GOODS, jest itecKlvxn at Hunt Town Street. Miss Liaiia Sciixwuca cnlla attention to her largo nnd beautiful atock of the above gisxls, selected with (wclal reference to this s.'Jn.v'ni'r'i"1' .P"liil or Kelt and hmin lints made a socially. Also just re- " s1 onv ui nun sivie XXAXXl QOOSB. M.lMJpACTflTlV. Halwick's Improved Curved Yoke Shirts, mnde to o;Jr at B8 East Town afreet, by 11. h. Smith. These are tho best and easiest lilting Shirts oll'ereil lo tho public, all porta being properly proportioned. They arc cut in tho most skillful manner and made with llie greatest possible rare. Satisfaction giiKniniccu, A No Drrm nml Clonk Mulling, oelll-eoilly MANTELS & GRATES. - Tni'ffiTmti.i.u OijlMHIH MAXTEL & (.RATE COMPANY Altli MAKIMJ AM. SJKKS OT IAKHI,:iZi:i MAXTEIJS, Initialing Xature Truthfullv, aind Producing ork Inferior to None in llie Country. All 01 RAVORK WARRATED. JAVCH II I.TOS, Aent. X. II. A large Mock of Beautiful Garden anil Cemetery ao, jii received, of oeweat patlern. CHEAP! CHEAP I WALL PAPER. .Vow is the time to liuv , vnnr Wall I'niwr, nl Otlll I'Pllowsi' Iln'llilliiK. K. I1A1LEV. SI lOAYCANEW SII.KHaml WOODKX CASES, of all sii,J. ilnnjicr than ever sold in Ihe ritv. Ollll I CIIOHH' HllildillK. K. IIA1LKV. n m s i llll.T. 1IOIIEMIAX and WALXI'T I'll A MKSmmle loonier. Oilil I rlloHH' lliillding. K. IIAILEV. OSBORN, KERSHAW & CO., Ilavo received an elegant line of m;h i'anhioxaiii.i: I) It K H H ROO 1 HI In Ulnck and Colored Caahmerea, Diagona Scrgui, Snttecna, Valerian t'lolhs. Pop. litis. Henrietta Cloths, Empress Cloths, Merinos, .Mohaire and Alfsicns. . New Nlrlpril Nhaw la amlMrarla. Hew VelvvU and Velvelena, New Illnrlt nnd Colored Hllho, Jfew Woolen UoodN, New CnrpefM. Mew Window Nhnde ond artalna, OStllOKX, KCltMIAVV oV t O. eisi COMMERCIAL BANK, No. loo N. in tt.i Nt., (Seaaionfl'B Block). COLUMBUS, 0. OUANOE JOHNHON". F.C.HKSHIONH, J. A. JKFFHKV, I'popriktohh. Pay Interest on Deposits, Buy and Sell Gold and Silver, liovernment lioniin, nnd all first claw Kecuritien. iNHne l'nHNnir Ticket To and from all tho principal ports In Eu-row, wll Urakth pa v able in Gold, on all tho principal cities and towna in Europe and do a (ienrral llaukinft Bnnincfw. Collleetionn receive prompt attention. HITKIN'S PAKKER HOUSE Botrps, Pronounced delicious hy all who have tried them. Consisting of iiorit TIUTI.K, Jl I.IK.WI TOJIATO, OKHA Axnpr.A. FOIt SALE BY Goo. K'Uonnld Jto Co. augfl - ATT ION XIOJVX USE FLELSt'HMAXX & (O.'S PltKMIIIM Compressed Yeast And have no more trouble with Sour Bread ana nous. FOR Sll.l: AT ALL URIM'KRIKN, CKXTItAI, DEPOT: No. 17 East Rich St, Cftlumbus, 0, KR IMEIt A ( , Nolo Agent dert-im THE GREAT FRENCH REMEDY. nKLAHAUKK'M NrMIM' VilA.H. Prejiarwl by (laraneiere k Pupont, Xo. 214 Hue Loralmnl, I'arin, ami highly rreom- meuueti hy iho enure Meuieal Faenlly of Franco, Are (lie very ltert remedy in nil Mines of jwrmiitorriHea, or Seminal Vicaknef Mdiily, Daily or Premature Ktnittiona; Sox-nal WeakiieM or iiiipotenrv; Weak new ari-inc from ferret I Inlut and Sexual Kxeemeti; Helaxatiiin of the (lenital Urgnnx; Wenk Sjinnj "Lime" or "Itrick-dnat ' deposits in tho I rinet Milky Dwliarpt, Ar.t and all the (tlinntlv train of Hymptoms arising lhm OvrniHMir Kxiwei Thuy mro when all other remedies fail, lrJelH iir Rox, Sent hy mail, ernrelynealrd from all ol-wnatinn, hy ineloninK price to tint Sol t.ciK'ml Aciit for Anieriea, Jdli MOSK8, 1H t'orilniult Plroet, New Vork. Pamphlet of Advice 1i in each )ox, or will l sent free to unv addreM. IIIIYAX'N I'l LHOSIKJ WAFERM, Are unlitiling in the cure uf Coughs, Colda, Aslhina, llrimrhilis, Sore Throat,iloarse-ni-ss, llillli'iilt Breathing, Inrlpcnt Consumiv-liou ami lliseasesof tho Lungs. Thev havo no laste nl' inciliritie, and any child will tako them. Thousands hnvo liecu restored to health that had before despaired. Testimony given in hundreds of cnno. A single dose relieves In Tun Murrai. Ask for 1IRV- AN S IT LMON1C WAFERS. Price Id i-enls. Sent bv mail Air M ei'nts, l Aihlress .loll HOSES, III Corilauill Sireel, New Vork. 1 v 1 1 en Aw NATIONAL , Insurance Company, Oril.iOII, Mulue. Capilnl immiii to lie increased) ...ftSopoon I Asmts Nov. 1st, IHI.over 417,7.10 I l.osa in I'lilcago, tiiuler '... M.ooo AI.I.IIIER BHON. nenernl Agenla, 10 Pine St., New York. J. .t'Iltl'l)l, Local Agent, nor2M-wAs?m Colnnilwa, O. !Tbe Jourtml haa the largrit cirriilalinn of any daily In Central tdiio. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ATTORXEYN. K. CLAY UR1UGS, Attorney at Law and N'i,l...v U..I.U. In. O Hilfh St. KoFciHl atlali ..'!.. ... '"(and Couroranciag. : SHIELDS, Attorney at Low. Removed to No. 18 Socio High street. E. L. 1W1TT. Attorney at Law and Solicitor of Patents, 85 South iligh street, folumhus, Ohio. OKO. K. XASII, Attorney at Law. Office, No. 09 South High alrect, Amooa building. utsuH.iiiSbiisir C1IAS. 0. FIELDS. Book-bimler and Blnnk-book Manufaeturor. lampletwork and Periodicals bound lo order at short notice. IM, m and till Xorth High street. HOOHM ANB HTATIO.IEB V. COMI.V & SMITH, Stationers and Dealers In Envelopes, genuine ill' Si. fre"rhWjWni! ami "oiiviinj Inlut all kinds ot Paiswanli Healing Vni. tor. Cliaiicl nnd High Sla., 2d dour from Q.IIU.smA.l BKMTAI HA XT. steiexsox.Ti,(1(7k7o" Amboa Iliillding, dealers In Foreign Fmlla, Toya, e. Ovsiers, Fish and (iaino of nit DRY UOOIM. OSBORX, KERSHAW ivi, " Sueceamra to J. I). ,hmn k Co., 142 8. Highi St. ( arpets. Alminsler, Slelton, Vel-vet, Bniaaeat m addition to what is already JtW KLBY A.M ATI HIM. Wholeialo and Retail dealers in Watches. t In ks and Jewelry. Xo. 71. S. High atreet. HEIISIIISEII k ADAMS I.umber Mcrchanu, dealer! In all' kin.ls o Worked Horing, Lumlier, Lalli, 4c, corner I" '"K mm " out sireela. JOn.V SELTZER CO ilT'iT Fi'0, SKimm Son' Organs .nd?it,S'SMrC"1 ,"t"'"'. NCWNPAPKHN. OHIO STATE JOIIItXAL Hmly, Tri-Weekly and Weekly, the bmt news, business and family parai and the best Advertising Medium in tlie Slte. fl.Hllllim AMI UKtL II A Si U KUN. F. II ALLEV t StlX, nealcre in Lead Pipe ami Sheet Lead, Bathaa atreet' "u" UowLS '' 'i'hiril MACHINERY. tANE & BODLEY John and Water Hla., OITOI3NnxrATI, O., ' UANl'PACTCnK STATIONARY AND PORTABLE NTEAM EKGINEei, Boilers and Mill Work, Circular Saw Mills, with Solid Iron Frames, Wrought Iron llcad-Ulocka and Friction Feed. LATH AND SHI.VOI.E MACIIISKS, Wood Working Muclilncry, SHAFTING, Hangers, Pulleys and Couplings, SAFETY POWER ELEVATORN' Our Designs, Patcrna, Tools, nud Facilities are the most CoiniIto nnd l:xt-uslv i..."l!'.1"n"7' 'nnbllnir us to iirodnce the BEST W OIllv at tho LOWEST I'ltll'B. Illustrated Uataloguea anil Prices furnl free on Application to LAXE AND BODLKY. nov 0 dliawtw'itam Gnu OOLTJMDTJS MACHINE CO. roM'HniN,oino. Portable and Stationary , STEAM ENGINES. rnnllnani, Nharilugn. Pnlleja, Bollrn, Mill IJenrlna; nnd sfnehlnery, EnicliiC' FnntHi. TrlpHaawm, Inprovcd Clnular and Mulay VW IVXXXjZjS. Also, every description of HotorlH, IMpe, and C'rhIIiikh r'or Poal oil and Oaa Worki. MACHINE CO. D. H.KOYCE JAS. tl, PlM.l.lNd .I'lMililivT k Srr'r. TnRaat'RKii Manufacturers of Pulltiya. Nhnrtlnar. llnnireni. limpioved Brnah Trtnitntna Harbin. una .Hsileable Iront'lamiM. We also make to order Iron FeneM,Urllnar. Awning Irana : lloll., ate. Keen On hand STEAM IH'AftKQ anA .11 kinds of BRASS WORK. WORKHOX WATER NTRI.l.T. Between North and Last Streets, nljB rOLl'Mni'S,OHI 0 FOt'NDRY Si MACHINE SHOP. L. B. DA VIES, HASl'KACTrRKBOF PORTABLE AND STATIONARY ENGINES, . ntOWH'IlT AStn I'lRI't TAR RAW. INK MACHINE!,. ALCOTT, or BROOM HANDLE LATHES, Threaeing Machines, Mowon and Reapers, Iron Vaults and Safes, Sugar Mills, Mill Works, Braaa and Iron Caslingallorso Pow era, Orating and Fencing, Ac, Ac, Ac All Kindt of Repairing at Short Notice 11UOAD 11TKKKT, i (Corner of State Avenue,) fPHIMBPS, OfllO. ClUai.KH AMIIOS. B, I.SU1TII ' niAHLES AMIIOS & C0-roi.rffiiiK, onto, MAarrAiTraaaa or Iloavy OaiatiriBe) For Railroads, Rolling Mills and Rlait Fur-nocca, also, Uachmery and Caitingf. Afrrirtiltural and Machinery . CASTINGS, Pattern! Made to Order; FOUNDRY al Ihe tool of TnWNBTRKET (Ilia old Uill Foundry). |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 10000000036 |
File Name | 0067 |