Richmond Palladium (Weekly), Volume 36, Number 6, 5 April 1866 — Page 2

Richmond PalfadiiM.

. . j Thursday, April 5th, 1866. j 'iu'Jt Connectlcutt Election. The majority for Hawley, the Union! candidate for Governor of Connecticut, j ff .uHlvmiu, just. wu. , elected, Governor Of Rhode Island,, by the Uuiou party of that State. , f ; ;1 MriJelT 'Dati, and A. II. Stephens,. sought an interview with President JoLnson, on Wednesday last; but were disappointed. V: ; ' . ' : e jCnf-Tlie extremists were defeated in St. Ioais.'on the 3d Inst, the oppostUod electing the Railroad Commissioner and Recorder,; by 3.600 majority, eight out of ten Alderman, and fifteen out of twenty del egates.f ! jt" The President's message vetoing the Civil Righto Bill, is published on the first page v The 'message was reviewed in , the Senate on- Wednesday. Senator Trumbull defended the bill at some length. It is still under consideration. JtrW are sorry to learn that the health of Got.' Morton, is not much im-proved-in fact, he is not as well this week as ,he was last, although some bet. ter on "Wednesday last. He is not expected to return home for a conple of week yet. " ' XrTJi majorities in the counties composing the 5th district, at the nomi- i n at i rig election, are as follows, official and reported: , ' For Gray 5 Wayne 814, Union 178, ; Fayette 447; for Julian, Randolph Delaware 800, Henry 500. This ' Mf LLIGAK was. uu jionuaj, I . last the Case was decided in the United j States Supreme Court at Washington. Chief Justice Chase, delivered the opiniont deciding first, that the writ of hubeat corpus Ought to be issued; second, that the prisoners ought to be discharged from custody according to the act of Congress ptissed March 2d, 1863; and third that the Military Commission had no jurisdiction Iegallj' to try and sentence that prisoners. Thus ends the cases of Miligan, Bowles, and Horsey. JtrThe Twelfth Annual Conclave of t he G rand Comniandery of Knights Templar of the State of Indiana met at Indianapolis this week on Tuesday and Wednesday. Seven of the eight subordinate commandery's in the State were fully represented. Sir Havey G. Hazelerigg, , of Lebanon was elected Grand Commander, and Sir Wra. Hacker, of Indianapolis, Grand Recorder. The Grand Conclave adopted a regulation uniform, consisting merely of the lambskin apron, trimmed with black, and the sword. One new charter was granted for a Comniandery at Knightstown. . ,. -i The next meeting of the Grand Con- ( clave will bo held at Shelby ville, in April j next. " From (ba Cincinnati Volksblatt, March 24. Wa hare attentively per-tued I he numerous objectiona urjradby President Johnson in bis veto message against the Civil Rights Bill, and do not hesitate to declare that w And the majority of them well grounded, an) fully indoraa them. The object of the bill is just sod laudable, but the means and the rootle by which the end, via : Protection to the Freed moo, is

sought to be attained, are wrong. Such a concentra- ( t1 from t!e American Union, and that, therefore, t:on of powers.in tha General Government as is con- each Staie onght to remain and constitute in integral tempi a ted by the bill, ia incompatible with our pohti- part of the United States j and ( , - cal organism, and can not be adopted in this couutry, Whkrkas, The people of the several before mentor the attainment area of the noblest ends, j tinned States have, in the manner aforesaid, given

Tbe political life of this nation pulsates through organisms which, in their vital functions, can not be checked without endangering the soundness of the whole. Tbe talk in this country of a " Republic, one and indivisible," of which some of our Radical friends may have dreamed, is pure nonsense. In short, in tha case nnder consideration, the Presi dent ia far more io tha right than Congress. The veto of the Civil Rights Bill must and will not sever him I from the I nion party. If there ia to be a rupture be- 1 tween him and the party, it must ensue in a moment j when he has not tha greater right in bU favor, but the t greater wrong against bim. j For Congress and the President. Henry Ward Beecher lectured tha ether evening in Philadelphia on reconstruction. Wa find room for an extract: President seemed afraid too much tampering would i be done. If tha venerable instrument is upeued, take out of it all that slavery put in and put in all that j slavery kept out, and then shut it up forever. The present basia of representation must come out. Equal citizenship mast be pat is it. Dilatory legislation waa not wiaa yet ba was free to say wa never aeat so many good men to Cougrass as constituted the present Congress. Loud and protracted applause. But there aaver was a time wt en so many good and wise men made so poor a bungle. You should not hara applauded until I had 6n!bJL Applause. , Heretofore, tbe majority of these men had been contestants, and it was fair to aappie they would be novices at making a Government af.er so lon a trial at breaking down that mada by slavery. Tbe kind and patient Mr. laacoln waa cadgeled and whacked by Congress, and he bora it with a patient spirit, reminding him of tome hurses, who merely act when cuddled, as though it was to brush flies off. When they commenced whacking Mr. Johnson, they found a pair of heels through tha dashboard, and they left tbe wagon and took to trees and bashes, crying, "Beist, brute ; but sine then had cudgeled more carefully. Ha took both sides and waa for Mr. Johnson aad Congress also, deeming the question to ba low to do and not what to do. Reconstruction was going on in tbe South, where it mast all ba mada ; yet it was wise to have proper lawn to (fall back a pon. . Frightfully cold weather has prevailed on the Upper Missouri, the mercury sinking to 40 degrees below zero. Much Uistrtag is reported among the Indians in the vicinity of Fort Sully. They are in a starving condition, and the smallpox has also broken oat among them.

PpomSon by the President.

Irtclari Kaled.B I -1 I - i 5 i f J wi,,,,. Ara 2, WnrsiA, By proclamation on the 15th and 19th f Apr?!, one t'lottiao I tjj!4 aontred en.I sixty -one, the rresiU-nt of the lnit?4 5 States, by virtue of h; nnirtr vested in him by the Coosiitatiou sod the laws oVctaTed that the laws of the Cuited Bute were opposed, ajd the.WlPcatioo thereof btroetd in the StateVof Souto Carolina, Georgia, Alabama. Florida, tflop,,werfnUa bosnppresseiby tbe ord.narv course of juiiciaJ prooewlmg, ar by t( powere rested in the JiarstiaU by fr 5 aad . t - - ' i Wnitf!Aa, By another proclamation made on the lth day of. Aagat, in tho same year, io pureaanceof ! V" approve Jmy ."." ilants of Georgia, South, Carolina, Virginia, forth Carolina, T nneee, Alabama, Lonisiaaa, Texas, Ar. karna-i, M5iUsippi an3 RoriJa, eept tlie inhabitanU of that part fifths S.ate of Tirginia lying west of the A1t -irhany Ifountaioi, and to och other parts of tbat Stats' and the5 other Staff before named, as might ma'ntaiB a loyal d!ainn, to the Cnion and th-? Cnntitaflrm. or migfht be fin tirau to time occapied ami emtIted by Mm foroesof the United Sutes engaged ia the diaperifion ol insarfrants, were declared - to be in a atata of inaarrjctlon against the Caited States; and... .' U' . i WherIas, By another proclamation oa the 1st day of July, IS.) J, issued in pursmnca of an act of Congress, apprcre j June TUj, in tiie sanu year, the inanrrBCti'in wa doclaral V be still exiatinfr in the Sutas afiM-enil, wi t) the except im of specified cuun- ; ia Sbe St vtj of Virgiuia ael j. j WuiUteaS, liy anU)ec,prtcUmitiua, maid on the 21 day of April, ,13. in pursuance of the act of Cob -greu of July I3tb, laol, tha exrepiLiui nansad in the proclaajatioQ of August IStb, H31. were reroked, and the iiihahiUnU of the Sutes of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, ToanSKa, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Missisatppi, Florida ani Virginia, except the fnrty-elbt counties of Virginia designated as West Virginia, an 1 the ports of Sew Orleans, Key West, Port R 1 and Beaufort ; and Wiisbeas, By aoother pmelamation, on ttie 1st day of Jnfy, 1S12, issuad in pnnaance of an act of CunfrrpM, approved June 17th of the same year, tbe insorr'?ction iras declarad still existinj; in the States ti'--s in t!i State of Virginia ; and Wbmkkao, By aootln-r proclamttion, made on the of April; 1813, in pm-juanaa of the act of Congress of July 13th, IMl, the exceptions named in the proclamiition of Aaust 18th, 1481, irers fevoked, and the inability ot tb States of U.-orgia, South Carolina Xorth Carotiaa, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Florida and Viraina, except toa l.irij-eigiit toiintitts of Virginia, desifiiia ted s wt Viraitii. an! i -rts of New Orleans. Ke y West, IVrt' U yl and' li.jaufi.rt, in South Carolina, wisn loclaivj tn ba in a stAM or Insurrection against t!u L'nitel Siatiss j aad t Wickkevs, Tiu House of Representatives oi the 22 1 of J tily, Jt . adfptd a resolution in tha words following, viz : lieily -.-l by t!i H iusiof Bjpresen tatives of the Coiir.-iis ot too L'nitai States; That the present depltiralile civil war has boaa forced upon the country by tii; di.sti:iiiuists of the S jutli rq States, now in reb.'lli u aiinst t:iv constitutional Uorerquient, and in arms anuii'l thj capital, that in ti)is national emergency, C-ingress, baoishiusf all feelings of resentmant, will do only its duty to tb3 whole country ; that this war is not wajjad ou our put in any spirit of-oppres. sion, nor for any purp iv of con,uast or subjugation, nor for tfii purpose of overthrowing or intorfrriu with the established iustitut'nns of those States, bu t to miintain an I defend tha supremacy of the Constitution, anl to preserve thA Cuiou irita all its tlinity, and the equality an-l rlghti of the several States nnimnred ; artl as soon as th.-s objects are accomplished the war onght to ccisv ! and WuEBBas, These ri'solntions, though not joint or concurrent, ferm one substantially, they may be regarded as having expressed the sense of Congress upon the subjei"t ti which they relate ; and Whikeas, By my proclamation of the 13th of Jun last, the insurrection in the State of Tennessee was declared to have bee suppressed, and the authority of the (.'cited States therein to be undisputed, and such United States officers as bad been duly commissioned to be in the undisputed exercise of their official functions: and , " , Whekkas, There now exists no organized armed resistance of misguided citizens, nr.r others, to the authority ol the United Stati in the States ot Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisana, Arkansas, Mississippi anJ Florida, and the Inn s can be enforced therein by the proper authority, State er Federal, and the people of the said States are well and loyally disposed, and have conformed, or will conform, in their legislation to the condition of affairs growing out of the amendment to the Constitution of tho United States ; and - Wbsheas, Iu view of the before recited premises, it is the manifest determination of the American people that no S tate of its own will has the right or pow er to go out of or separate itself from, or ba separasatisfactory evidence that they acquiesce in this important revolution of the National Union ; and Whkrkas, His believed to be the fundamental principle of the Government that people who have revolted, and who hare been overcome and subdued, must be dealt with so as to induce tbem virtually to become Iriends, or else these ir ust be held by absolute military pow-t-r, so as to prevent them from ever again doing harm as enemies, which last named policy is abhorpnt to humanity and freedom ; and Whekkas, The Constitution o the United States provides for constitutional communities only as States and not as Territories, and provides no protectorates ; and ::".--'..; Whekkas. Sueh constitutional States must necessarily be, and by the Constitution and laws of the United States are made eqnal and placed on a like footinir, as to poliiical rights, immunities, dienitv and ( power witk tlio sever! States wift which they are united ; and Whsseas. TUe observance of political equality as a principle of riht and justice is wsll calculated fc encouraga t!ie pvople of tho States to be and become more constant and persevering ia their renewed allegiance. ; ind Wuckeas, Staalin armies, military occupation, martial law, unUitary tribunals, and suspension of tile privilege of the writ of habeas corpus, are in time of peace dangerous to the public interest and incompatible with the individual rights of the citizen, contrary to the genius and sp rit of our free institutions and exhaustive of the national resources, and ought not, therefore, sanrtiouvd or allowed, except in case of war, for rwvHitiir invaders of suppressing insurrection f r rebellion ; and Whkrcas. Tha'poHoy of the Gwv-romeot of the United States, from tbe brriiining of tbe insurrection to its final suppression, has been in conformity with tha principles here set forth aad enumerated 5 . Therefore I, Asotekw Johnsox, President of tha Unite-1 Statv do hereby proclaim and declare, that the insurrection which heretofore existed in tbe States ot Georgia, South Carolina. North Carolina, Virginia Louisiana. Alabama, j Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas and Florida, is at au end, ard heocefrrth to ba so re garded.-i " - , : ; p ' ' " In testimony w hereof, I have hereunto et my band. and cause the aeaJ of the United States to be afExed. Dona at the Chy of Washington, on tbe 2d day of April, in the year ot our Lord and of the in dependence of the United Stales of America tbe 90th. Signed, ; -iv.. -! AwDSXW JoHSso. By the President; ; , ? p v " Wm. H Sxw abb. Secretary of Stale, The Government is about to commence tha rebuilding of Fort Sumter." : .

GENERAL NEWS.

ill Naslaniel IMmes one of the most prominent business mea of Pfltsborgh died a few days ago. Lemon juica gargled) is pronounced one cf the reulfiri?s for dtpUierta by a French savan. Marr General 1. S. Negley has snnonneed himself as a Candida t,for ,Conreaa in tbe Twenty -second District of Penn. C A widow of San Francisco has sued Michael Reese, tbe richest man 1a tit at chy, for breach of promise, with daiaiire at flOO.OOfl. He Is an old bachelor. ' " Boiton sells its bouse offal under a contract for i.M per annum; the ashes collected by the city at $3,000, a a.) the street dirt and sweepings for 2,000. A man named King Las been arrested at LrtnisvtHe, who confessed that it was himself and not Payne, who attacked Mr. Secretary Seward last year. The Memphis Post asserts of that city that there is not another of its size in the Union where there are so many drinking saloons. General Spinner holds over f .1l,005 of security for the circulation of National Banks, and over $3a, 800,000 of securities for deposits. Tha oumber of deaths in the United States army daring the rebellion, exclusive of those who died from wounds and other causes after reaching their homes, j amount to 253,000. The Sdma (Ala.) Times says a colored woman left that city, recently, aged one hundred and twentyseven years. Sbe is the mother of fifteen children, having bad triplets three times. The bill to reimburse the State of Pennsylvania for money expended in payment of the militia. eight hundred thousand dollars has passed the U. S. House of Representative by a vote of 85 to 35. As the Times sometime ago announced would soon be tbe ease, Mr. W. D. Howells has taken position as assi&tant editor of the Atlantic Monthly. He is a young nun of much more than ordinary ability. Tbe San Francisco correspondent of the Chicago Times, tinder date of February 19th, says tbe grass is a foot high and the gardens are green with young produce. ,. Hon. Ulysses F. Doubleday, fattier of Maj. General Doubleday, died at Belvidere, III., on the 10th inst. He was formerly a printer and for 20 years editor of the Cayuga County Patriot in New York. A number ot young men of Norristown, Pa., have signed a pledge to abstain from the use of spirituous liquors for one year, on condition that whenever one of their number violates tbe pledge, bis name be published in all the borougb papers. La Pays, a French Canadian paper, says : "Canada by not joining its interests to tlio.se of its rich and powerful neighbors, will be condemned to vegetate miserably under tbe tutelage of a foreign power, and be loaded with taxes, debts; and beggars." Miss Edmonia Lewis, a young lady of" color, has taken a studio in Rome and works as a sculptress. A correspondent says she is tbe only lady of her race in tha United Sutes who has applied herself to the study and practice of sculptural art. The conspirators Spangler, Mudd and O'Laugblin, at last accounts from the Dry Tortugas, were taking their imprisonment very philosophically, and conduct ed themselves so as to get released from the heavy irons they have been wearing. Geo. N. Sanders has been arrested i n London for debt. He owes the little matter of ten thousand pounds sterling, which he contracted on account of the C. S. A. Uis trial has been postponed until the 23d inst. Paper socks are one of tbe newest inventions for which a patent has been obtai ned. No excuse for solid stockings hereafter. Paper shirt bosoms are already made. In the way of paper handkerchiefs, however, tbe Japanese are ahead of us. General Grant has shaved off his whiskers. This will be a s.id move for hira. Nearly all the speciel artists and photographers bad taken him as lie was, and he might expect a cessation of their hostilities, but nc w ho will have thu whole army of them after him again. , - - , : Tbe bakers in Richmond have " consolidated," as seems to be the fashion of tbe day, and the result has been a sudden reduction in the size of loaves. The Examiner says one can easily put a five cent loaf in 'each cheek, and a ten cent loaf in the middle, and then whistle Yankee Doodle without difficulty. Ragged and mutilated currency is redeemed at the United Sutes Treasury in sums of three dollars or over. When you get three dollars worth on hand, put it in small packages, pin a paper band around with your uame, post office address and the amount ; then put iu an envelope and add' ess it to the "Treasury of the United States, Washington, D. C." It goes and returns free of postageOrilla, the celebrated French chemist, being examined as 'expert" on a capital trial, was a-ked by the President whether he could tell what quantity of arsenic was requisite to kill a fly. The doctor re. lied, " Certainly, M. le Presidet tT but I mu-t know beforehand the age of the fly, its sex, its temperament, its condition and habits of body, whether married or single, widow or maiden, widower or bachelor. When satisfied on these points, I can answer your question.' The Chairman of the Committee on printing recently stated iu the House of Representatives that the Government of the United States uses one-thirteenth ot all the printing paper used in the United States, and that the Government expenditure for printing is onetwelfth of the cost of all the printing done iu the United States. In fact, the United States Government is the greatest publishing bouse in the world, and when the Government goes into the paper market to buy it affects the whole trade. One evening last week a singular phenomenon was observable at Pittsburgh. A dense clond seemc-d to ' drop on the city, and instantaneously the bright light I of day was changed to impenetrable darkness. The ! transition was so sudden and unexpected as to cause ! general alarm anl uneasiness among many who look- 1 ed for something more terrible to follow. The city was enveloped in the gloom ab ut five minutes, when tbe cloud vanished and bright daylight appeared. A flash of lightning and an almost inaudible thunder ac- j com pan ied the cloud. Few persons understand what a national depository is. It is a national bank, which, upou the deposit of an amount of securities prescribed by the Treasurer i of tbe United States, lias been authorized as a deposi tory of public moneys, and financial agent of the United States. The securities vary in amount, ac cording to the location of the depository, its capital. and the amount of Government moners like! v at anv time to be in its possession. The minimum amount of security has been fixed at $50,000 in United States bonds ; some depositories hara fnraiahed securities to the amount of $50,000. Two children in Chicago were poisoned by sucking a photograph. Oa the first of Jantiary there were 553 i loimil-ft in i r 'i i-. 1 UV M n rr I Two young Russian women are studving medicine at the university of Zurich, and it is said that they show much aptitude for that profession. The lull fixing the time of manual labor at eight hours a day, has passed both branches of the Ohio State Legislature and is now a iaw. One hnndred and fifty young men were arrested on Snnday last in Philadelphia for lounging on street corners and in front of churches. The Mexican agent in New York City announces that he will pay. in April, interest oa the thirty million Mexican loan in gold. A fine quality of porcelain clay has been discovered in Wilson vonnty, Va , and a company of Baltimore capitalists has been organized to manufacture it into ware. I . .---.' -

An Indianapolis bridegroom paid his marriage fee in bologna sausages.,

W During the far bat tlnrty-foor 1 cietv have received from Professor WU-! ? or r are p ap attar m; lutiowtac in. officers of the Medical Staff of the ar- j - ' r.Iinlinrw i ,. r S ro: 1 ? N my were killed; twentv-fotir were wound- . L&lTHl?rK .nrorUnt for. , Foreign import, .t Xew York for landing ed. and one hundred and sixtv-eisrht i matlon la "? " terrible disease, j March.:

died from disease and accident The disbursements to theTWar Depart ment for the week ending Saturday last, were nearlv: 8S,00J,000 ; to the Navy Department overS4,0l0,0Cs, and Ho "the Interior Departmennfarsy MXr Boston has a citv inspector of milk.That city uses 15,733 gallons of failk a day. Dealers who habitually adulterate their milk are prosecuted. Several were finr l last year whose per centage of water ranged from one third to one half. Vast beds of oysters, equal to those of Chesapeake Bay, have been found in the Golf of California, between Mazatlan and Guaymas, from which California will in futnre be supplied. They are piantea :.. :-. l.. . : i -a n,..Ar.ittenn,i i - ,. 1 . ' ; ' . I f . j Hon. I'ierre Soule has been putin possession 01 ms uiaguiuceiib icmucuic .-m j " C 1 " . ... . r. tn I Esplande street, New Orleans, by order of General Howard. Chief of the Freed man's Bureau This mansion has been , used for two or three years as colored orphan a lum. 4New Orleans now has a population larger by sixty thousand than ever before : Galveston and other Texas cities are full to overflowing, and the. same is said of Memphis, Mobile,' Montgomer", Atlanta, and all the towns of the Southwest., r There are alread3" at least five hnndred applicants for appointments as United States Commissioner to the Paris exposition of 1867, many of them parties interested in machinery and implements which are to be exhibited, and not one in twenty is able to understand or speak a word of the French language. T A mayor of one of the communes in France, lately made the following entry upon his register I, 3Ia3or of , found, yesterday, in the forest of , a man by the name of Rollin, committing an act against the laws. I commanded lain to surrender, whereupon he set up on me, heaped me with insult and contumely, calling me a ragmuffin, an ass, and a precious dolt, and a scarecrow all of which I certify to'be true. " . u (J The second King of Siarrr died in January. It is surmised that he choked to death in trying to pronounce his own name, which was P'ra Bart Somdet P'ra Pawarendr Ramesr Mahiswafesr1 P'ra Pin Klau Chan Yu Una. His remains were deposited in a golden urn, decorated with diamonds, and placed on a particular throne, and after the usual period of lying in state according to the Siamese custom, were buried with great ceremony. A gentleman who has visited the coal mines in Pennsylvania for the purpose of learning why coal cost so much in New York city, writes the result of his observations to the World.' He says the cost of mining one ton of coal is 55 cents; royalty to the owner of the mine, 44.4 ; transportation to canal, 21 ; freight to New York, 81,20; Government tax and weighing, 82; making the total cost of 2.240 pounds of coal at New York, 84.70. The price of a ton, 2,000 pounds, to the consumer is 312,50. The London Economist, of the 24th of February, a very high authority in matters of finance and commerce, has in it an elaborate article he.tded, "The Sound State of American Banking at present," in which our national 6ystem is thoroughly analyzed and exposed for the information of the people of England, a coniparason drawn between it and their own system, and the conclusion candidly and unequivocally stated that the banks of the United States 14 evince amazing solidity ; perhaps no banks in the world on the same scale show as much. ' "Stop Hep." The Zanesville Signal gives the following humorous description of a "free ride " on the cars. A Zanesville man, boinsr ' flat broke," and wanting to go to Columbus, concluded to "brass it," and accordingly took a seat in a car on the Central Ohio Railroad. The Signal thus describes the trip: The train had ' nearly readied Claypool's before the Conductor, whom we will call Jones, had reached our dead head friend in his round of tickets and fares. collecting ' Your ticket, if you please said the Conductor. - Haven't any," said the dead-head. Where are you going ?' inquired the Conductor. ' Columbus,' replied the dead-heal. ' 32,10,' said Jones. Haven't nary a stamp," remarked our dead-head acquaintance. You must pay your fare or get off the train, said the Conductor. 'Stop her," quietly remarked the dead head. The train was stopped, and he was left! or, th'e side of the roa 1, to await, as he j said the next train, on which he succeed- j ed in getting. The same scene trans- j Pised. ending by dead-head telling the V j uca'i-iicau LViiiu buc i ' stop her,' and he being i he side of the road. . - l -z a . . x conductor to asrain left on the Train after train was boarded, and kcu put lam off nearer Columbus. The st train on which he got was that of r - -t t i 1 : . eac la our friend Jones, who was on his return trip from Bellaire to Columbus. Deadhead got on his train at Palaski, and was under full headway before being discovered by the conductor. Going to Columbus again, I j suppose,' remarked Jones. " Haven't been there yet, said deadhead ; ' I can't get to ride more than six miles before they put me off- ,1 don't think Til "get on more than one or two more trains after your'n before Colambus will be the putting ofT place.' ' Well, do yoa think we can carry yon unless yon pay yoar fare ? inquired Jones. 'Stop her,' quietly remarked dead-head. ' . . ' - - Well, I do think,' said Jones, 'of all the brassy individuals II ever met you are rather ahead of them ail. I'll take you there for your infernal impudence, nothing else,' and dead-head waa carried into Columbus on the same train he started on three davs before.

The Rinderpest. 1 j

;The New ITorfc State Agricultural So-1 ? . . . . , - i others, eolored drawings and illastraUons whieh show the whole progress of the j disease, from the first attack to the death ; of the animal " These drawings and the j reports made upon them'are invaluable, and nut this countrv in possession of all . . - - I the information .secured abroad after j the labor of months. Professor Wilson ! reports the disease as wholly incurable, ? and adds that in view of its dangers and j ravages the authorities have prohibited , the importation of all cattle from abroad, j and ordered the killing of all animals I which shall not recover in three weeks after their first attack, as the rapid spread of the disease during this time is sure to result in death. They have also demand- . th a4ir,-P-nrtn nr -11 diaftaaea animals ! from those which are healthy. Notwith- . standing the rapid spread of this disease and its virulence. Professor Wilson states in his letter to the Secretary of the State Agricultural Society, that in two cases out of three which have fallen under his observation, by careful nursing and no other mode of doctoring, the animals recovered, which is very important information. In Wales none of the cattle have been attacked, and few or none in Scotland. The disease known as Pleuromonia, which attacked cattle in the United States some years since, is under complete medical control, and is altogether different from the Rinderpest, though a predisposing cans e to it. The illustrations furnished by Professor Wilson show that the disease is quite a new one in many of his features. If good nursing can cure it why may not proper care be taken to prevent 'its introduction among us ? The whole subject is one of immense importance, and not alone to all cattle raisers, but to all consumers of cattle. The Derangement of Values. In a carefully considered article upon the above subject, the New York Economist of Saturday gives comparison of the current values with those of other daj-s, which are suggestive. It is assumed that by the war the country has lost permanently fully one million of men from the ranks of labor, which correspondingly reduced the number of producers while the consumers have increased. Consequently, as compared with other times, we have a scarcity of commodities, and the inevitable result is the present high prices. The Economist in exhibiting the relation between present prices and those current before the war, quotes twenty-six of the leading articles of produce, giving the average quotations at New York for the year 1859 and the market prices March 9, 18G6, from which it appears that the advance in prices, in currency value, is ninety-four per cent., ! and in gold fifty per cent. This wide j disparity between present and former j values cannot long continue, and it is i argued that if a reduction is not early effected our producers must be exposed to a most damaging competition from abroad in our own markets. A Likely Story, and Probably Untrue. A story has been started that Congress will pass the civil rights bill, and that if President Johnson does not then immediately carry it into execution, he will be impeached ! This is bnt a rehash of the programme of John Minor Botts, in 1842, when John Tyler refused to become the tool of the Whigs, who had taken him up and nominated him as Vice President, well knowing his political antecedents. Botts proposed to impeach him, and while the articles of impeachment were under consideration, to have the Honse adopt "a resolution declaring the President's legal inability to discharge the duties and powers of his office, while his trial was pending in the Senate." This would have made Mr. Mangum their President pro tern, of the Senate, President pro tern, of the United States, and he would have signed the bank bill, the tariff bill, and all other bills to which Mr. Taylor objected on constitutional grounds. Now it is said that while the President is to be declared legally incapable of exercising his functions while under i impeachment, the Cabinet are to "run j ! the machine." Sillv as this programme is mere are ioois who ueneve it, ana there are bad men who wish it migt be true so 1 chronicle lt a3 a part of tue news of the day. Washington CorreL sponaence. The following letter was read from i Thaddeus Stevens, by Mr. Scov ,- , , "L . ew Jersey Senate dnnng his ? TV . ill, of the s speech : Washington, March 29. Hon. James M. Scovill, dec. ; Dear Sir: By all means hnrry up yoar election. Give us a radical like yoarself or nothing. A copperhead is better than a twaddler. fSio-ned THADDEUS STEVENS. The prominent candidates for the position are John P. Stockton, democrat, A. G. Catrel, republican, and probably Scovill himself. -- Au Arithmetical Riddle. Three-fifths of of three-fifths of 5 score, ot 2 sixes divided by 4, I of J of 6 more than 4 threes, j of 8 dozen ; add 8 if yoa please. The initials of these. When joined, yoa will spy A thing which this moment s Is under your eye., . ; - Esow.

How We Go. ; g While Congress it ar sating weeks aad months, the

is.-, ; ;wr. - rrT Ctods .$-.ft;0.f.3a I.M7,SSI fS.2SS.SSl Gen MerbestljM. s.234 133 ?,ihx,&sj 3.032,73 Total l.,t -eekl.T5wkTM s.i.t.'sm 3t.i7 1VT- reported. .'.is.o3: ssj.-a.iaa t?,sti,A4 Since Jan. ist.....$ij,5,79S $29,478.siS ts,9,S5 Cader the competitioa wbtch'tbT.bo' flgurea in-1 ld cmair, begins ta suggee. An exUmair. factor V in Ptttiieii& stnnd Wat Wa know that a onef! storms U Hb! to take utace. CerUm branches in the East maybe making money, but fe" beside, most of tbem are losing . . The Alba or Kriirkrrbocker learns from iood an- ! tiiority that the American Express Company has dej dared a cash dividend of fifty per rent, and a stock j dividend of eighty per cent. j A supposed corpse.while being shaved, in Xorwatk, j Conn., revived. got up ami dressed itself and ordered a postponement of the funeral. r Xew Advertisements. H. C. ELLIOTT, At Stratum's Corner, MANUFACTURES MEN & BOYS CLOTHING, -ano - LADIES' CLOAKS, At About 25 per cent, off of Regular Prices! Cloths, Cassimeres, Jeans, Cottonades, Heavy Tickings, Straw Tickings, Shirting Stripesf Atlantic "A" Sheetings, Merimac Prints, Spragne Prints, Richmond Prints, And, in Short, a well and Careful It Selected Mock of DRY GOODS AND UOTIOliS, At Prices to Suit Customers. H. C. ELLIOTT, P-West of Citizens' Bank. Grand Entertainment. TABLEAUX ITlQ MUSIC! STARR HALL Saturday Evening, for the Benefit of SCmVAETZ'S Cornet Band! Poor open at 7 o'clock; commence at 8. W The Ghost of 'Ike Partington will be there. Go! 26 Town Lots, In the North-East part of the City of Richmond, known as the Woodnntt Addition,' WILL BE SOLD AT AUCTION, OS Thursday, April 12th, 1866. 3rTerms easy, and made known on day of sale. Thomas Woodnctt, Jkssb M. Hctton, , S. R. Wiggins. An Ordinance, To Amend an Ordinance entitled ''As Ordinance Protecting the Pablic against Dangerous Diseases." fcCTIOX 1. Be it ordained by the Common Coun5 eil of the city of Richra )u 1, That Section osa of aaitl Ordinance he amended so as to read as follow : That it shall b, ani hereby is made, the duty of any owner, proprietor or occupant of any bonae in said city, or within half a mile of its corporation line, wherein, any person may have the Small-Fox or any other contagious disease, and of tbe physician in attendance npon any such dUeaae, to report the same aa S'Kin as it U known, or suspected, t be such, to tha President or sonis member of the Board of Health : and in casa of failure to make such report tbe party so uScniag shall, upon conviction theroof, be fined in anv sum not lesS than fire nor more than twenty dollars for each dav's failure to make such report : And it shall be. and hereby is made, the duty of any owner, proprietor, or occupant of any house as aforesaid to place a red fla in a conspicuous place on the premises where it can be seen by all passers by, and if any such persna shall neglect to place such flag aa herein required, the city Marshall shall, as soon as such neglect is known to bim, place such flag as aforesaid, and when such flag- is so placed by any one it shall be continued as aforesaid until all danger of contagion haj passe 1 away anl per miss ma given by tha Board of Health to remove it : and for failto; to place such flr as aforesaid, r for remvinjr it without permission as a for. sail, the party so o6Pn-imK shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in any sum nut less than fire n"r m-re than twenty dollars. Sec. 2. This Ordinance shall be in force from aad after its passage ani publication. JOHS FrXXET, Mayor. Passid anl approved April 3, 1S9. attest. f. P. Kinx, City Clerk. Quarterly Repert, Of the Condition of the Riebnsond National Bank, Indiana, on the moraing of the First Monday of April, Notes and Bills Discounted .$43,500 20 Furniture and Fiiiores 50 Current Expenses and Taiea 1,371 33 Premium on Government Bonda. . ....... b20 fct Remittance and other Cash Items ..' 340 60 Ine from National Banks 28.! IS Due from other Banks aad Banker.. 19,069 M U. S. Bonds, depositek with C. S. Treasurer, tn secti re circulating notes .23 0,009 9 Pa. do. do M,0a M Other C. S. Setraretiea on band 4,0i 00 Lefral Tender notes m---i - $479320 23 Capital SUk paid ia ISO ,00$ 00 Cireatating note received from Comptrellev ani outstanding.. 1 ), no Depoaita - i544 06 Discount, Exchange and Interest 4,874 22 47020 28 I, A.H. Bs. anchabu, Cashier of the Richmond National Bank, do aoiemaly swear that tbe above stats ment ia use. to tbe best of mv knowledge aad belief. A. H. BLANCHARD, Cashier. Sworn and nbscribed before me, this 4th day of April, 1S66. Wi. BLA3K.aABD, Notary Pa bite.

H0 r iP JLi i

PLUMMER S KELLY'S COLUMH.' ,, t -, . 1. A L.I ' . Vi- K Brown's Ilroncliial Trochea, AND Gary's Couh Cure. Barrel's Home Confection a. mu4Constitution Water. . t -andHumbold's CUT. 'i ' Wilson's Headache Pills, . . -..ii'!' . ! , . . ,4 ; i i AND Brandreth's Pills. ,tWYH A ... ill l ;.'tsit .'(! Cf -"Vlf fit -FOR SALE BYPLUMMER & KELLY i SHERIFF'S BY VIRTUK OP A DECREE to ma dirao- ' tel from the Wayne Common Plaaa Court, I will J expose at 1'ublio Sale, at tha Oourt House door in Can-, terville, Wavne county, Indiana, on tbe 14th daof April, 1S8, 'between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M., and 4 o'clock, P. M. on aaid day: tha nndivided inter- i est of Robert Cochran, in tha following described real t esUte, to-wit: Lot No. 33, in that part of tbe City of Richmond, laid out bv Jesse Idea; also, a pieoe of frround lyinjr West of Lota No. 33 aad 3.1, and bounded as follows, to-wit: bepinninf; at tho Jiorth-Eaat corner of Lot No. 34, in aaid part nf aaid city : thence . East to a point on a line with the West side of Marion street, and thence to an alley West of Lot 23 and 33; thence Southwardly alonr said aller to the North tine I of a Lot formerly owned by John li. Huttonj tbeoee ? Westwardly, alone aaid Huttna line, to the East aid . of Lot No. 34; thence North to the place of beginning; ' also, the North half of Lot No. 130, in that part of said city laid ont by John Smith, excepting the ful- i lowing described portion of aaid North half, via: ba- . ginning at tbe North-East corner of aaid Lot No. 130; thence West along an alley iW J-10 feet to Washington street, thence South along Washington street 18 1-10 feet; thence East passing through the center of division wall of the brick hooae on aaid half Lot and parallel with said alley 69 teet; thence Southwardly , 22 2-10 feet to the center of the West wall of a brick ' privy; thence East through the center of said privy six feet to tbe Eaet line of aaid Lot; thence North -parallel with Front street 21 2-10 feet to tbe place of beginning, saving and reserving certain water prir- ' ileges described in a deed from Chritian Buhl to Thornas Hunt, dated October 2Vth, 1852, and recorded io , Book No. 15, pagea 4S4 and 486, ot the Deed Records of aaid County; all of aaid land being aitnated la4 Wayne coanty, Indiana, the same to be Bold aa tha 1 property of Bobert Cochran, to satisfy said Decree in . tavoror Kalpn 31. romeroy, et at, JOHM M. I'AXSON, Sheriff W. C. . , :.-(; 4A pr.C f7,0 a March 20, 166. State of Indiana, Wayne County, S. S. .4 In tbe Wayne ;. , I Common Pleas Court Aksa S. Aisswobth, V Jamk ArsBWOBrn May Term, A. v., 186". J -5 , Divorce, So. 2458. E IT KNOWN, That, on this 12th day of : March, l.lthe above named Plaintiff, by Jaa. 1'errv, her AtUirney, filed in the office of the Clerk at ' the Wavne Common Pleas Conrt her complaint a fir met ; said defendant in tbe above entitled cause, together; with toe affidaritof a competent person that said da- . fendant,Janieg Ainsworth ia not a resident of the State ' of Indiana. - '; Said defendaataaaes A ins worth ia therefore hereby . notified of the filing and pendency of saw! complaint 2int him and that, unless he appears and answers " or demure tiiereto, at the calling of the said cause on ; the second day of the next Term of said Conrt, to ba , begun and heLl at the Coart House in Centreville, oa , the Second Monday of May next, aaid complaint and ' tlie matters and things therein contained and alleged, ! will be taken as true and the aaid cause will be beard and determined in bis absence, i Witness MOSES D.LEESON, aad tho -Seal Seal of said Court, at Centreville, thia ( ) 12th da v of March, lMS. MOSES D. LEESON, Clerk -fS-4-w ptf-$3 5. -- Hollo way & IPa ge , ' Have Jst Received ne n tbe finest and beataswrtments of TABLE GLASS-WARE, , ever bronrht to t! market. Give theag a call they caa sell Goods CUE AP at No. 03, Jfaia-et. i Richmond, March 22. 1866. 4tf , 0600 WANTED! FOB which Real Estate, will be given as aeearity.. ' Asv person, having osonev to loan, at a f-i;r rat -of interest, aad well secured, will please apply at tha Palladium Office, " iautediately. Aprils, ISM. -tf " Iowa Land For Sale. :.js S 44) Arm af CanJ lmd in Rlno-imid Coantr. Iowa, are onVre4 lor Sale, db fair terms, or xae mm- ; deraicned. He win either trade said Land far City ( Pretterty . or aeO the same at a bargain for Cash. Ap ply aeon. , M. D. McCuBA. , April, 1866. 6-tf Important to Farmers ! The Menifor amd Corn-Planter Com- ; .''.- , .,.,4 . ktBeO, s i n s-'f:V'2 if-, t fWsHE VEST Vaehaaa iataaa, for Plaatiac aad Cat' at, uvnaag vora, J Cora. Ta Ae eaa be seea at I. B Gtaaa'a Hardware Saare, So. 60, Main street, Rtchannad, lad. CaB aad axaaaiaa to ixaM-iisieiy. -Sw