two man. policynew...hasty glance, the ooy rushed across the street to tue residence of ms oia...

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jf^'&: 8 DOUBLE EXECUTION. | Two Negroes Hanged in Hillsborough, V. C., (or the Murder of a White Man. ~ The Crime mid Confession of One of the Murderers.ShoclCnj Scene* In the JTaii.Bungliuy Work of the Hangman. niLLssoi-oucu, Orange County, N. C., \ April 1. 1870. ) Two more condemned fe'ons have expiated a torrlhlecrttne on the hungiuati'a scaffold, and have awinlly verified the truth of the Sonpturtrl injunction "Veujeauce is miue. anil 1 will repay, sal'h tue Lord." TI not nwiltly, reiribut-.ou follows nrely the criminal who Is guilty of ahetdlu^ tne b'.ood or a lellow man, and though rnoutln, souiettmea years may elapse, Justice invariably overuses the murderer and the scaffold ciairus us vicilru. There are icw if any in Hie blackened list of murders where such coo.ueii and ue iberatiou of purpose were evinced, or wnere>uch a barbarous refinemeni of cruelly and atrocity was practised, as in the murder of Martm V. Blaloolc, a young vrUito oian, by two iiejroc, named To-u Vouug and Bon Cuun. Christmas night Usr, when humanity wiould specially abstain from the commission of evil deeds, as the one selected by these demons to carry Into execution the ioui purpose they had resolved upon, and on the succeedlng sundar morning the citizens hore w<io start.ed aud horrttled by the discovery of a iiendijii minder, taedeep damuacton of which has caicely a parallel. ns riRST niscovRtiT as made by a negro boy, who had been In ihe hab't of performing several menial duties for young Binlock, the victim. Furly ou that Habbata morning, as was usual, the negro proceeded to the room ol liiuiock (which was situated m tue rear of a grocery and bar, in wbictt lie oilkuated), and ou Ills way the negro was met lj two other negroes, wao told him tnat eomettilog was wrong at the storo. Blalock had retired at a late liojr the mgut previous, after his uuuKroua filetids had takeu ttn-lr leave, aud that was die la-t time ho was steu ultve; nor was there any appieumaion iettj>/ottner niinseir or means, as bo was a young mail 01 amiable dlapoatttou, good cnuracter and popular lu the community. A ieniblo late was, however, iu store ior Vim that Christmas night, or rather £ab. batti morn. tViiea the negro boy reached the house be found the shutters of a buck window partially open, and loukln.r with mo grayish lignt ol the hour ke saw tue body of Ulaiock lying ou tue floor, surrounded, as ho thougnt. by a pool of cither blood or water, be could hoi then ten which. Startled by his hasty glance, the ooy rushed across the street to tue residence of ms oia master, Squire MurdocK, who iriluout ceremony he at ouce woke up, exclaiming, "Git up, boss! Qlt up on your feet, bossl Mr.-dilutee* is lying dead ou de floor ob his room." Hardly believing the taie ot the boy, though sufliaentiy alarmed that something ot a serious nature had occurred, Mr. ton.dock, with all possib.e speed, proceeded to iho scone, ami so aorritlud was tie by toe spectacle that met his s.ght, that he lost no time w lu voillug tue town neb.a custom usual lu tue ' oaili for tue putpose ot alarming the clitzeus and calling tueai together whenever orouiusfaiices 01 uu extraorniuuiY natare aeuunled. Tins very so >:i biought »large nun mum surprised crowd to the s, ot. THK-flLbN'OSUOT, KMI-E ANO UAI.'lkK. An entrance 10 the room was soon effected, and lu ft body the citizens went tu. Here they beheld, in it its sickening horror, the evidence 01 a barbarous ftuo broody aee-J btieicned oil ti.e floor near the centre of the r< otu was the corpse 01 Mamn Ulaiock, tue ghusuy and uiutuated (futures Upturned, the kk w»c across anu iobii:x an me right ana rue urius extcuocd near each ede. ') ue u (tut clothe m wnicti tne body was arrayed wero torn uud bl .oily, lu the mouth it pillow cuau Dad been smiled to stule cue Cjii.it cues of the mummed man tor help or mercy, aim tins, naif saturated with nlood, protruded irom tne jaws now rail tu death's co d einbruce. The throat eras severed from e .r to ear by two deep and jawgt'J auaties us if t.>e instrument used was a du and uneven blade. Ai'ouu ( liiu neck was also lasveoea tigntly a rope. wlilcU led to the beuef mat atrangu.atiun was ut first attempted; but. failing id tain, tne murderers Dud resorted to otinr aud nmre effective mya Us oi despatching tneir victim. Tne lelt/tenip e eas entirely crushed in by the blow ot home Ur ivy weapon, which leit a port ion of die bruin exposed to the view, ( here were some fllteun or twenty woonus ot various aiuus, but mostly a abs. aboat tuc lace and neck. Tne eyeballs wcte no turned and the cavities c.ose to the nose were bled with clots pi congealed uiacs bioou. Lower down o.t the meant were a number ot stabs, evidently made oy a knife, aaa with the bloody pillowcase sucking out 01 the mourn, tuc brain ootni-j troin he liaciuied temple, the matted hair, i ue Bashed lace mid cnesi, the tightened rope on the neck an I the pool of mood on tne four, a more iiH'lcimr or ri:iollinir anectiirtn iiiiiiint well lie riln. tared, INd'l Itl'MENTS OF DFATIT, In the storeroom, Lclnud the counter, one of the murderous niscruureatfl was discovered, it was a Bui*.! cogwheel, weighing about one and a naif pounds, Mita a ho c m the centre, through which a had uecu Lied. From the inueuiatioug on the murdered man's forencal tt was speedily sscerlaiueu mat tuis nai o.-eu used eifectiveiy as a smugshot, the rope round uic i.ecv. to il me work it had Coue: but too Ktnie the murderers had earned oT vita theui. due object of the murderers was evidently Bonrr.tiY. They had trained an entrance byknock'ng at the. barroom door at some hour alter mhtniuut, under the pica of wanting a driuk. Tne young man arose aim admittei theui woen, it Is supposed, they couple ted their bloouy work. As a precautionary matter ti.ey closed the doors and ir.ndow shutters. Tne watch, ehuiu. Kuiie a..d otucr articles belonging to Biuiock were theirappropriated. rue till or me store, coiitiiuiug abou! $iio in citriency, aud n stumi <|uantity of silver uuo coin were also taken; ami these, with several ui ticks ol small value, comprised tnc booty, wun which tnej co iipc3.ru.etl tiieuisjives lor the awlul tragedy tiiey nad comwutteU. TUE MI HOE. KUS. Busplcion soon attached to l.on fiunn, Tom lountr and j. e Lutteriough. negroes, who had been seen lurking In the vicinity of maioek's smre on (lie nnrot t ie deed was coiumitled. lhev had mysteriously disappeared lrum the neighborhood immediately aiter tt.e tragedy, ana trie e v.deuce hi Hie inquest at Oi.co justified .t magistrate in issuing warnuus lor their an est. Uunu waaim-sted ati.reensboro, Voting was captured at ox turd la ti.iiiivllic county, auu Lutteriuugh in tola vicinity. Iney were uil railroad bands and tiaa been wording in diis section of t'.ie country for a ccuddenioie period. Tiny wero imJuiSwiicd lure uad the trial loo* p.ace on tne it a of ebruary last. CONVICTED AND SENTENCED. The evidence waa main y circumstantial hot thoroughly conclusive. A portion oi the stolen in mey was found in me possession oi Guuu iiud loumr, among li a Lcriv.au coin winch was rare ami peculiarly marked "lo ihaier," easily identified as nie property or lflniooii by ni|xny of the citizens of Millsborough. The watch, wiiu tilaocii'n lunula, was »uo discovered in a waichuiaWcr'* hiiop at Uendersou, where Young lud left it to be repaired; hlood tutus. those damning evidences oi glint, were iound ou ilieir person .and iiilngettier a chain so remarkable «s to convince tne moat exacting and doiiuUul. Luiterlot'idt cou d not be so < lesny coniicctcd with mo murder us rue others, and the proof be ng lacking in ins case lie was acquitted. lloMi doling and liunn received neiiiemor death una comparative composure. Young, who is ft mulatto, turned ashy paie when the Judge said to him. "Mny tlod nave mercy on your soul, you, iinii showed no tueccy." Gumi was apparent y unmoved WQeu ms awlul doom waa pronoJiifed. TKKKOK AND KKPKNTANCE OF YOfVO. AB tlie (lay upon wmcn uie uioucaimn witii ito were to expiate their crime approached, Young, who was ttie principal character in the tr.vteay, bepan iff repoui, and ne exhibited tuc strongest symptoms ot contrition that lirx negr<> nature was caj>u>«i» of. lie prayed incessantly, sometimes breaking Into the wildest lamentations imaginable Hiakiug the moat tervont ami heartren Jing appeals 10 ins Maker tor forgiveness, uttered with a desperation ami Intensity that were sometimes ng on I .ling to witness. The ghastiy lorm of the murdered man seemed present to bun in his sleeping and waking hours, ami at times tie wouid exciann, in accents of titter despair, "(in, l.o.u! save in<i! torgtve me, forgive nie i see htm now looking ai me Frequently lie seemed to lie lomiled, so fearful wero lit" thoughts. and, lute a limited down criminal of Istiruaciite, he dreaded 10 encounter the face of any living human being. believing everybody 10 be an avenger, and that every man a hand was against * mm. tiir coNnrcT of orsN is raiMos. flutin, bis companion tn guilt, wag quite differently fleeted, lie was suffering from a Jcarlul disease, And, as he lay on bis wretched pallet, groaning with tue pangs, he rather Reeinod to long for the moment tinit would put an end to his miserable existence. When spoken|to he replied la monosyllables. but morosely uud sullenly refused to say nj thing concerning the murder. VISIT TO THE CONPBMNKD MFtC. This morning I visited the condemned men In Jail, artrt lotiurt th- m oonflncd in an upper dungeon. wlilch wax rnefclug with a foul atencli, loutosomo enough to engender disease. (t was the pecuii.tr xlor or tUe negro, mtcnsUnd br ilitli. and wade intolerable, even lor a lew moments, l>jr lis comoiuatiou of enamel hoime and putrlfled smell that was In rrible and sickening. How Hibso wretciiex existed !u health. or bow itIs ibov were not prostrated witti disease, M irulv wonderfnL From mo inmates of tli« Jail l learned that two or throe ue^ro women . cue of tnetu e ce,ntr, and now under sentence of deam.were for a considerable period confined iu ttic sumo ceil wuii the blue* NEW YOJ murderer*, where the most Immoral and beaarr ertiu b bad u»oa piece. Tbe women now ocennv auotbei uuimeou In common wiU> three meie necro criminal*. wm re, 1 am iold. tnej exerclee and praetwe tnoir lecoeroue dealre* without aov restraint whatever. To Much an extent waa thin oarrieu that one of t lie women. a handsome mulatto, had to ne taken from the dungeon ami kept in a pasaiwe war for the want of a more eecure place of couilnelflAltL AFPRAKANCI OF TOR MU'OMKRS. it the command of a guard toung came to the Me of His tfuD"«un nearest the light, and through < au aperture a gitmDde woe obtained of avtllanous < aud horrible set of feature*, which were marked ] with ail the beastly and savagecharacteristics of the > negro. The lutge aud Hut forehead receded back ftotn < trie erenrows almost to the crown of the bead: ' the nose where It Joined the eyebrows, was flat 1 und indistinct, and the nostiKs Immensely large, covering u eicat space 01 utc face and reaching down on the up mr tip. The eyes were small, black aud piercing with a malignant expression, and the mouth extended lroiu jaw to Jaw, with Hps that nere thick and protruding. Gunn lay on his pallet In the last stages of horrible Olseaso, and so weak aud utteri v prostrate as to be unable to stand up. A in ore revolting spectacle can scarcely be Imagined. TITB BCAFVOLP. There Is no Jail yard and In conformity with the law, requiring executions to be private, the scaffold, or the affair Intended for such, was fitted up wltluu the Jan, in one 01 the lower rooms, about twelve or lourteeu feet square, and not moro ihan ten feet nigh. In front of a window hung a small platform, five feet long and two and a hair met wide, which worked on an axle fitted In two posts on either side the window ana close to tne wall. I bis pliutorm, elevated to a level, w ts unout four feet from the floor, while above were two Iron rings fastened in the celdng. This drop was supported by a itneo prop, which worked bv a hinge in the centre, aud when let drop gave a fall oi three met. CONFESSION OF YOUNfl. The following la ncarlr a verbatim report of a con- lessiou inaue by Vouujf a few day* since;. 'Ike .plan to murder lllalock w«8 concocted on Saturlny morning, December 25, 1Mb Thin was the unUorstandln betaeui me and t.unn, and I thlnlt Isham Councils knew of It before I did. Joe Lulterloh know nothing about It mom thau the child unborn. I p-(-pared the cogwheel at Inhnm Conn cils' house about twelve o'clock Saturday for the purpose of uslnc It 011 IS alock ihil night. We wore tobaro ao.ue together to ! Hlock'l room ilpit id lit; but by some mistake wo Old not go together, but mot there about eleven 1*. M., and between that Tiour and twelve we entered the room through the ooor torether. HIaloek o; eneJ the door for ua, and tvas un<lcr tho Influence of d iimr, and alter he lind let ua lu he lay down on his bed In the back root .. I ihe.-i mads the titlark, and when I struck the first b ow with tb* cogwheel Die only words he sutd were, ' Uh. Lord I John, lift ins up I' 1 dotiu know who he meant when he addressed "John." I then struck him «cv ral times with the cogwheel, and in his death atriij^J;!-- I o fell from tho bed to the door, sud I beat his brains out Wo then cut Uls throat with the pocket knife, aud stuffed the pit ow case In his mouth. In the meantime tfiitin pttl the tope tn-nund his neck an I fastened It tiuhUy. I did most of the bloody work, (limn did the holding, wiule I dealt the blows and used the knife. There was a lamp burnfn;; (intfl alter we killed 11.alock. We search, d his pockets, hut found no money. Wc then went Into the Ilouur room and fonn 1 the tin bo* with the cash, papers, ,*;c. 1 took the box find li.inn a decanter of whlskev. 1 mil out inn lamp, and, alter locking the do.w, we want out throiljh the window of the back room and cloned It after u*. It took tn about thirty mlnutci to kill BUIock. I think that (lunn had an no lerataoding wltb a third party, hut I don't know. Wc w. nt to the depot that night and 1 took the train for Kalelgb. CBOWD3 TO WITNESS THE KXEOITTION. Though tt was publicly known tiiut the execution would take place in the jail, bidden from view, y c a la rye crowd assembled to wi uess it. At one P. M. too j til door was besieged by trie mass, eager to gam admission; but mis tne Hucnff sternly refused, and the moo became sihl more persistent. The windows botn in trout and rear of the Jail were mso thronged, uuu most violent tussles tor eligible places to obtain a look through the bars ensued. Those whose professional business required their presence In tne lull were excluded by the mob, which kept up a deateuing roaring and yelling and hooting that were disgraceful. THK CUI.rniTS ON THE SCAFl'OT.D. About flair-past one o'clock P. M. the condemned were conducted Irciin their dungeon, with ropes and mack caps attached to their necks. Young walked firmly down trie flight of steps, but Guuu. who was exceedingly feeble, had to be assisted by two negro attendants. Tuey both ascended the scaffold and took seats In chairs, wneu a very Impressive prayer was ma le by a clergyman, both the condemned men joining with him. i his being ended, a scries of cross-examinations as to the murder was commenced by parties around tne trapdoor. Young, whose eyes were half closed seemed to be engaged la prayer, aua Judging irom the evasive replies he made to questions propounded, b.s mind was evidently waudcring. As the fatal hour n uied bo.n the wretched men bes.m a wild. Incoherent naif song, half prayer, peculiar to negroes, and they steadily kept this up to the latest moment, relimug to be Interrupted by Mr. Aticv, father ot the murdered man, who desired to ask them some questions. TUB I.AST ROFNE. At two P. M. the Sheriff ascended the scaffold and read th® death neriLeuca of both, which could so irontr oe near.I Let ween tliu pravors ana supplications of ttie condemned within and the din and tumult of me mob wltnout. This ceremony concluded, tlio ropes were attached to 1110 rln-cs In the coiling aoovo. The tegs of born were pinioned at the ankles, and black c,ip3 were put over the forehead, obscuring vision to all earthly things. At Uve minutes nasi two the drop lelt and the murderers were Htrimgitnt violently In the air. Neither oi the no«3ei was properly adjusted, and the hangiiiji'i Knots, when ttio ropes reached toelr utmost tension, slipped to the back of tlieneuKs ot both. Vouuflr ieli only ubout a foot, and as hCBwung to and fro his limbs were convulsively urawn up au i his struggles were fearful. (lutin feu nearly two feet, and in consequence of his enfeebled condition nis satTerings were not so Intense as Young's. After a few spasmodic k cits his struggle ccaced, aud his soul was In tue pre-ence oi his Makur. Young continued to jerk convulsively tor a number of minutes, perhaps live, when he, too, became still, and both were at the bar of internal Justice. Tue execution was a badly bungled atlUir front beginning to end, and showed the necessity 01 hating an experienced hangman in such cures. The tortures ot the wretches were terrible, whicii might have been avoided tf a proper scaffold had t heen erected anil :i hangman eminovad who knew how to do las woiit. Alter banging nearly lurly < in mutes tun bod lag wero cut ciotvn uud piacca m i colli us already prepared for tiiein. < CUBAN ITEM 3. The New VorK correspondent of the rrt>ma very laboriously b rives. in tns letter published In Hie issue ot the v6Ut nltimo, to rcoreaent the Cuban cau.-vo i>h utterly de..d in the United States, ami gives a btiresque account of the arrival hero of General Cespecies. He quotes ttie Hisiui.d's turicturea on tup polic. of our government ami exults in the belief tnat the latter will do nothing but maintain a neutrality. denying Spain oniy wnat she doe* not want, and depriving tno Cubans of evoiy shallow of assistance. Tim Pmisn. of tli o e.?il of V a roll (riven a column of slatenieiiie setting lorth (lie pains "and penalties Inflicted by the Baez government upon numbers of ofllcuii and civilians who had refused to vote iu lavor oJ tho annexation of »!. Domingo fo tho United Suite*. AtCicntuesroa, Don Bias Podrluue/, was killed on the -»>(! oi J ar. ti !u the private bathhouse of Don Antonio Ornce i»,v a custom home oiltoer whom he had endeavored to prevent lrom entering the batus while some .adics wore in them. The atfair caused intense excitement, as the victim was greatly respected. The deuth of a prominent merchant, Don Joaquin M tu/ano j oupulveda, at Santiago de Cuba, la aunoanced. , The material necessary for the eatablishmoat of the telegraph stations from Day amy to Ji^uaui had arrived at Manzauillo. Tno niaria «p ci>,n.rttcpo.i u the name or h new Journal published in the Spanish Interest at Cienluego.c it is slmi'ar In sizo and appearance to the Gaixta of Havana. On the l?ta of March the Festival of St. Joseph ami the Virgin wits celebrated with the solcmnny due to one of the most important holidays of tho \ ItUlUlli; 111 111 >111 I U J U UI»I U1I133 Ul /lUVdllO. Tuo Havana paper*, o^io and all. continue to predict the early collapse of the patriot cause in Cuba, aiul report irom various sections hitherto Insurgent the return of the inhabitants to complete tranquil* lily ana tuetr resumption of field labor. The only particulars, nowever, adduced to sustain this view relate to the tnovemonia to and fro of auauisn detachments the capture of women and children and the tueiciless execution of Cuban prisoners. ke;y west. A ItiiliiDof Terror.Atteiupied AmuMliintlnn*. A .Hon Stubbed and Then Thrown OfT a Wharf.T«»o ihoath of Castaunn to bo Arengod. Kf.y Wbst, March si, 1870. The savage malignity of the Spanish volunteers seems not to have abated one Iota wince the kllUnit or Castafion; and what was at first considered an unfounded rumor of a certain number of Spanish volunteers delegated to coine to Key West to avenge the death of Cnstailon now proves to be u paturul reality. For the last few days the Cubans have been holding a fair, the proceeds to go to '-Suffering Cuba." The hall lot ixnng large enough whoretn tho fair was held, a temporary frame work wits erected adjoining, whlco was covered with canvas. Among the many who thronged the place was one Edward Hotells, with two ladies, sitting at one sido engaged in conversation. To the astonishment or those who witnessed the act, the canvas was ripped open and n tare peered in through the opening, behind Hoteiu. Tho back or the seat was somew fiat In the way. Another hole was quickly in a do and a knlJe thrust through a', the heart of Bote ,1a. Fortunately his arm protected him. The knife entered the arm a little above toe elbow, creating a serious, nut. It la thought, not dangerous wound. The wouldbe assassin escaped, and to that joyous assemblage another tragedy wus prevented. 'The wouuded man was proiopily cared for by bis many mends. Seiior Botella beiug u brother ol tne suopoaed murderer of C'ustHdou. who is now iringlu Jail tu this city, proves conclusively that tuc blow was not utruck at random, but lutcuded lur tin heart ot htm whose relationship, unfortunately, made him tho shlulug mark lor tipantsh vengeance. Last nlgnt. at about luif-past ten o'clock, a Cuban by tne nam - of J'luciuo 1 s.iuloudo.sometimes called Morales Lew as, from ku roeeinbloacs to Lemus. ItK HERALD, SATURDAY. irtwie at the wharf tnokin? for the steamer Cube, lourly expected fro n tlavana. win suddenly a* utuiled ana stabbed by two bpauiard*. woo thro punned hiui oir me wear/ into the water, aod mors* tfler began throwing Urge pieces of coal at hint to nake sure of ole destruotion. Fortunately. the night wing very dare, and Ysnuiendo being a good swimner. ne succeeded lu making nu escape. Ysauteujo was intending to go to New York per the Cobs to oln an expedition supposed to be fitting out for Cuba irora that point. 1 improve the present opportunity to awrare yon :hut the Cubans at Key West are remarkably quiet ind wed behaved, and withal lodustrioua. Tuer wish not to create any diauiroance or oe impliosted u further trouble; but from what I have learued ;hey leei that ir the present pioseeutlou still con.ttvuesin Key West "forbearance (with theui) wul won eease to be a virtue." PURITY OF ELECTIONS. The Ooreramrnt so the Reerwe. The following bill, entitled "A bill to prevent and ; mntsb election fiands," was introduced in the donate if thsa ITmtdirt Mtolna nn tha QUih nf MAPc.h hv Mr. ?ons tng, who asked, and by unanimous consent obatned. leave to briny tn tbe bill. It was read twice, i eierred to toe Committee on the judiciary and or- Jered to be printed:. 1 Be It enacted by the Senate and Tlonso of Representatives of tbe United States oi America In Conyreni usaeuioled, That If at any election lor rcpie- tentative or delegate ta the Couareas oi Uio United Hates, or for electors of President and Vice President af Hie United Mates, or ior inspectors, canvassers, 1 [io i clerks or other election oillcera who may or mall he or are chosen to act and serve, or whose lerui of cilice msy or shall include or cover the time ji unr sucii election kr representative or delegate ' m two Congress of trie United States. or for electors if Prcsnieui and Vice President of the United States, toy person sha 1 knowingly personate and vote or iiteujpt to vote m tne name of any other person, i whether living, dead or fictitious; or tote < noro than once at the same election for any i laudidato for ihe same oiilce, or vote at a place where he may not be lawmily entitled to vote; jv vote without having a lawful right to voie; or do < my uniawtul act to secure a right or un opportunity to vote for himself or any other person; or by force, tin eat. menace, Inliiiiidaliou. bribery, reward, j jr offer or promise thereof, or otherwise unlawfully j irereut any qualified voter of any Hiate of the ,iii .^Yiioa nf a fiw»rif!L or f»f nnv Terrifnpv thufAof. Iroui freely exercising tiie right of suffrage, or by toy such uic.t.-is uuiuoe auy voter to roiuse or exer- . Cb e such right; or compel or induce, t,y any sitcit { neaus or otherwise, auy oillcer or uu election. ? lu any suc't state or Territory, 10 receive a vote; | rout a person not legally qualified or entitled to 1 /ote; or intericro In any manner w=tli any oillcer of »atd elections In tne aiscfiargo of his dut.es; or by ( uiv o. sucti means or otherwise Induce auy otllcur )f au election or oillcer wbose Uu.y It la to ascor- 1 am, uunounco or declare the result of auy such siection, or give or muse any certificate, document it evidence m relation thereto, to violate or refuse l to comply wita his duty or auy law regulating tne i Utriie; or, bciug an ollloer of au election, neglect or reluse to perform auy duty required of bun ay lav. >r violate any duty imposed by law, or do any act lnauiiiorlzed oy law relating to or affecting any tucu election, or tne result tbcreol; or aid, couu- . set. procure or aiivtse auy such voter, person or )dicer to do auy act hereby mado a crime, >r to omit to no any duty tue omission of < whlcU is hereby made a cruue, or attempt to ilo 10. every such person shad bo deemed guilty ol a iruuo. and shall lor sucu orluie be lloule to indictment lu any conic ol lUe Untied .States of competent 1 inrlsdtcUon, ami od conviction thereof shall be puu- ' shed by a fine not cxcecdtug $30J, or by lmprtsouneat »or a term uot exceeding three yours, or both, a me discretion of the court, and shall pay the costs >f prosec.mou. j Sjsc. t. dud belt further enacted, That if auy re- {lstutiou ol voters lot uu election for representative >r delcaate tu the Congress of the United States, ir for elcctora of President and Vice President >r tr.-a United .states, or for insnoetors. can- rassers, pou cteras or other election ofllcers viio tnay, or shall be. or aro chosen to ice or serve, or whose lerui or odlce may or ahull riciude «r cover the timo of any such election lor epreseutatlve or delegate iu Uic Congress ot toe .'mtud Btutea, or lor electors ot President uml ' rice President or the United btates, any per- tou shall knowingly personate and register, 01- ' ttteuipt to Ngtousf, m tuc uauic ol any other jcrsou. whether living, dead or IIcallous, or regis;er, or attempt to register, at a place whore be shall ioc bo lawfully emitted to register; or register, or uteuipt to legiiter, hot having a luwlul right solo jo, or do any uulawtul act to secure registration lor ininacir or any other person; or 0v force. threat, niejacc, intimidation, bribery, reward or oaer 01 promise .huicoi, or otherwise unlUwiuuy preteui or hinder tuy person having a lawful right to register irout inly exercising such rigut; or compel, or induce. by my such means or othet wtae, any oUlcer or regwt ra- nou to admit to registration uuy person hot legsny mailed thereto; or interfere in any manner with tuvodhe. of registraiioa in the discharge of ms l luitc.s; or by any such means, or otnorwiae, induce any oillccr ol registration to violate or refuse to joinply with his duty, or any Jaw regulating the tauio; or, being an 0dicer ol registration, neglect or cruse to perioral auv duty rujuired or hlui oy law, j jr violate auy fluty imposed by law, or ho mi. net. niiniulonl<e law. reliuinir ui. nr tifeetiug such rcgmtrallon; or uid, counsel, projure or aa.iso auy surU voier, poison or jihcer, to oo auy net hereby made u crime, or to omit any liei, I lie nuiis-iion of Which is hereey made I crime, every such person shall be deemed guilty )1 it crime, a ;<1 htm.i bo liable to luaic'uiciit au 1 puiiistiiucut therefor, as provided in lUo Jir.,t section »i tins act, for persona guilty ot uu.' of the crimes itiere.u specified. Bko. 3. Aiia be tt further enacted, That if any pcriOii shall by force, threat, menace, liiiuuiitatioa, or jtuertvise, unlawfully prevent auv citizen or c.nzeus iroin assembling in public meeting to troely discuss, >r hoar discussed, the claims or merits of auy camlllain for me ouice of Prcaidoiit or Vice President or hector Cliereoi. cr i.epie-ioututive or delegate iu coufress, o" of any oillour of tno go vein meal of tne lln.ted State, or the laws or measures of Congress, ir any measure exist,ng, penning, or proposcu, electing tuc government ot rite United states, or uuy lupariiiieut or odl tr thereof; or if any person s.mll uy auv much means breaa up, disperse or uiolcsi any men asscmotage. or molest any citizen in or of aucti assemblage. every person so ottendiug slum be ileeuied guilty ot a crime, and stiali be liable to indictment in,,I punishment therefor, as provided in ttie Titsi section ot tuts art for persons guilty ot auy oi toe ct lined tiicreln .-perilled. » ifOVBL LAUilir. A Han Reamed from Drowning ot tic ,lcr* City 1'cn y Iliiujn a 8uit tor ^13,0(10 lhwagcsi On the evening of the 3d of January la-t, about two minutes post rcvi u o'clock, wiion the lerr.v boat hail moved away from the bridge at tfio Coriiaudt Biieet terry, a man named Lyons, residing in Washington street, Now York, deliberate! v walked overboard from the brlugo ifml would have been drowned had not the bridge-tender, Thomas i'oblu, and another or the employes rescued Mm. tie was very thankful to the ir.ca for saving 1119 life, but when he returned home and ruminated on the mailer for a row weeks a bright thought struck bun. Ho caught cold from the bath, as wa9 <t«ute natural, considering the severe weather just then, and was confined to the house for some weeks, us uo alleges. Jto then employed a lawyer, who instituted proceedings against the ferry company tor flii,000 damages. In hn affidavit ho makes tho extraordinary siateinc it tun* there were no lights on the bridge ami mat one ot the employes pushed luni in. The case is under investigation ny me lorry company, and the evidence tuus fur reflects great credit on Tooin, the bridge tender, wno has been instrumental in saving six Uvea within as many months at the ferry, and in some ca ea he receives only armse tor iih reward. m no nibiuucu uiu me rescued party offer lUua even one dollar. Tne lesson to he derived from the preRcnt ease, pliould a jury award damages, la tliat it is mac.'i better lor ilio ferry company tiiat a man would be aiiowed to drown, putting aside the question of huinanity or tne priceless gilt of human lite. There would, in sue'u n case, be no suit brought, and. as uead men tell no tales, the cinuloyOs would not ho accused of throwing a man In lor mere diversion. Tins Is certainty a carious sample of gratitude. It is analagoiis to the case of tne man mentioned tu "Uurran's Recollections" who liad his eve hooked out bv a man who was in tne act oi saving htm from drowning, but who was rewarded with a prosecution for the loss of tao eye. Trt- BS3G.UYN LAWYER'S* 11 ST. LG'JI?. [From tho St. Louis Tlmos, March 23.] Ti<s<r. i;ni"hi. votLoivtav travelled n. ),>ncr rlistnnon in iHe palii ot prog less by issuing a license as a inactlilug la.vycr or tnc ur. Louis bar to Alius L. Hsrltalo, a student or the St. Loubi Law School. Tins, we are protiy reliably Informed, is the first instance of this hind that li.u occurred lu this country. wntch is undoubtedly tbo most progressive of all civIIIzcd nations lu the treatment of the woman question. Tito Missouri feoiule suffragists should certainly tato cncuuraiomcnt in the success of their coiaborer. Miss haritaio Is a native of r.rooxiyn, X. T..wim Miss hates-and is a woman or more than ordinary ability. Two years a,fo, after having rend Biackstone and other elementary law books, sue made application lor admission as a stndeut at Columbia college. New York, where she was peremptorily retuaed. Nothing daunted, however, she catno out West and settled in St. Louis, w here she was admitted witnouidifficulty to tho Hi. Louis Law Hchoul. For eighteen montus she had oeen atsiuuously devoting her energies to toe study oi the science, and her ie:low students all agree in declaring her by far the brightest member or ilia class. Tnat there la no question of her ability wiut shown yesterday at the examination, where she promptly and correctly answered every question propounded to her. Judge Knight, although overdowiug with gallantry, gave the lady no quarter, l lie most abstruse and erudite questions were propounded to the appiicaut, but not once did the wise Judge catch the lair student tripping. Miss Uarkalo Is about twenty-two years of age, of buxom fltruia, aunaoio and rostii> mieiligeui uco Mid a large and exprcaaive eye. (ruin la a injure of aiteecli.aue lias two.) ;>hc la now a matuuer of ibe ht. Louie bur, ami coneideraliie interest la mauiieated to n itiic .a uer maidou ettai t APRIL 2, JL870.-TRIPLE THE PUBLIC DEBT. The April Statement Compared with That of 1 Last Month and with the April Statement of 1869. The forlowtng statement or the public debt on the lit nf inrll ham mat hwn liaaM. comnare the figures witb those given in the corresponding month last jeer:. Df.1T BEARING INTEREST IN COIN. April 1, 1869. April 1, 1870. Five per cent bonas $221,989,300 92Ji.os9.30i) BlX per Cent Ootids 1,886.277,350 1,880,352,800 Total bear'g coin int.. $2,107,876,050 $2,107,942,100 DKRT BEARING CLRRKNCY 1 SIBBEST. Throe per cent cert's... $5i.oo5,ooo 945,565 000 Navjr Pension Fuud 14,000,000 14,000.000 Total bear'g cur'y int. $68,005,000 $50,566,000 Matured debt not paid.. 6,003,403 3,014,330 DEBT HEARING NO INTEREST. 1 trotted stated notes.... $.,50,0>5.154 9353.100,021 Fractional currency 3fl,fl75.iri« 30,508.07# Uuia cerutlcates 21,072,600 88,848,600 Total bear'g no Int... $114,413,483 $484,520,200 KBCU'ITUI.ATION. Debt bearing coin mt...$2,107,870,050 92,107,012,100 Debt beating cur'jr int... 08.00s,000 80,400.000 Debt bearing no Ml 414,413.485 434,528,200 Matured debt not puld.. c,003,433 3,014,:'.30 Total $2,500,898,538 92,800,947,037 BoUdslU I'ttUllo Hit 00,852,520 64,457,320 Grand total 92,003 700,808 92,070,404,95 7 AMOUNT IN TREASURY. Cola $104,203,305 $105,413,740 Jnrrency 0,802,028 7,472,7.9 ilushiij lund, coin lut. bunas una accrued interest thereou . 30.047.C42 Jtiifcr purchased bunds*. . 73,161.605 Total in Treasury $111,000,983 9218,115.782 Debt less cash tu Tress.. 2,542,744.805 2,452,289,175 Jxroito ot the national uebt b nee April 1, 1809 990,455,020 VARIATIONS FROM LAST YEAR. Increase. Decrease. lebt bearing coin Interest.. $65,450 . Jebt bearing currency mt.. . fo,010,000 lent bearing no Interest...20,112,715 . oamrcii, not paid . 2,039, ut 1 The following table compares the April Htatemeut * >f the public debt Willi tiij previous otic made on < be 1st of March, 1S70;. » DEBT BEARISH COIN INTKHR9T. ' j/n/v h i, ihio. April i, i dve per cerr bonds $221,589,5 kj $221,.'»«9.000 . six per eeut bonds i,83o,55o,303 l,63«,352.soo j Tolal bearing coin Inf.$2,107,937,860 $2,107,912,lot) > DEBT BEAliINU CURRENCY INTEREST. . rhree per ct. certificates. $45,565,000 $45,665,000 Suvy pension fund 14,000.000 I4,uoo,ooo j Total bearing enr'y In. $50,681,000 $59,665,uoo Idlliured Uot pllld 3,97.J,!40 3,014,530 DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. J rnltofl States UOtes..,.. $358,109,673 $356.100,021 Fiacuonal currency.... 39,9>o,o:!9 a«,r-6S,o7i) Liold certificates. 44,362,840 ss,b43.6oO .... Total beating no Int.. $440,442,851 $454,530,200 R ERA TITC I. ATION. Debt bearing coin int...{2,107,937.«50 $2,107,042,100 new. bearing cur'cy int. 69,658,000 69,605,000 Debt bearing 110 interest 440,442 851 481,528,200 Matured debt uot paid.. 3,972,348 3,914,388 Total $2,811,010,847 $2,005,947,637 Bonds 10 Faciflo Kit. Co. 04,457,320 04,467,820 Grand Totid *.2,670,808,173 $2,010,404,957 AMOUNT IN TREASURY. Com $102,400,730 $105,413,745 Currency 10,280,285 7.472,729 iinKmg Fund 27.SV8.529 30,047.042 IKUer pure-bused bonds. 72,782,703 75,181,085 TotnltnTreasury $213,310,318 $218,116,782 Doot le^s cash inTrehsy $2,403,02;,W5 $2,462,289,176 'Decrease of the national i debt siaoo Mar. l, 18.u $10,733,880 VAIUATIOKS 1110U LAST MOSTU. Increase. Decrease. Debt bean nit coin Interest... $4,4>0 Debt bearing currency int .. 8,059,340 Debt bearing no interest . $5,016,657 naturaldeot not pai<l . oi.oo; In this statcnieut no mention Is mads or accrued interest, and the bonds issued to tho Pacific Railroad Company are calculated as part of the public debt. According to tne report of Secretary Boutwell, wbo adds nocrucu Interest and ignores tbo bonds issued to that road, the total debt exhibits a decrease during the past month amounting to $5,786,319. The debt of tho United States, less cash in the rrcasury, <v»a as annexed at the undermentioned dates:. March 4,1801. 109,180,956 Ang. 1, 1868. $2,623,534,410 July 1. 1591.. H8.498.670 Sept. 1,1813..2,535,014,313 July 1,1882.. 602,921,404 Oct. 1. 1888.. 2,634.843,713 July 1,1863. .1,093,404,000 Nov. 1,1868..2 627,120,632 July 1.1864..1.721,847,ir,4 Dec. 1, 1863..2.539.031.844 July 31, 1865..2.757,253,275 Jan. 1, 1809. .2.640,707.2JI -,ept. 1,1883. .2,757,039,671 >Cb. 1, 1889. .2,666,205,658 Jan. 1, I860. .2.7111,861.6 16 March I. 1869.2.645 836,904 Aug. 1, I860. .2,633,029.278 April 1,1*63..2,642,711,896 Jan. 1, 1867..2.541 325,172 May 1, 1869..2,629,158.205 April 1,1887..2,623,428,073 Jntia 1, 1819. .2.521.625,6 V2 July 1, 1667..2.611.800,013 July 1, 1S89.. 2.603,160,773 Oct. 1, 1807. .2 496,277,443 Aug. 1,1609. .2,608,708,633 NOV. 1,1887..2,401,604,460 Sept. 1, 1869. .2 493,008.032 Jan. 1, 1863. .2,608.125,6 >0 Oct. 1, I860. .2,485,693 695 lob. 1. 1888..2.6-27,815,373 N'OV. 1, 1860. .2.460,511,773 March 1.1863.2 510,820.623 Dec. 1, 1800. .2.473.237,102 April i.ibjs..2,oiw.au cost gan. 1, lino..2,402.«i»,781 Mav 1, 1863..2,500.528,627 Feb. 1, 1S70. .2,475,714.275 June 1, 1808. .2,510,245,886 March 1,1870.2,48:1.027,855 Jul* I, 1808..2,601,915,11)2 April 1, 1870.2,452,280,176 lLOU'i)¥l>n IS BSOORilf. Attack by Utifllitiin on I ho Police. ine police of the Forty-third precinct were roughly hnndlcd again last night by the South Brooklyn rowdies. It appears that a man named Patrick Kennedy, who was intoxicated, was nctlug In a disorderly manner in Court street, near Hamilton avenue, when o/tlccr McKeuna attempted to tal;o him Into custody. O/ilccr Donahue, who happened to bo In the neighborhood at the ttinp, assisted McKenua in making tho arrest Hetoro they could get away with their prsonnr a number of rowdies made a combined assault ou-tlie officers, using rucks, atones, ltricss nud other miasllos. nrttcer McKemia received a severe blow on me back with a stone, while officer Donahue had his ahoulrtor ncar.y dislocated wiih a brick. Olllcer Steadman, of me Forty-third precinct, and ofllcor Utter, of the Forty-eiRhth, hoarlujt of tlie airrar, went to ihc assistance of their febow oiRcers, and the contest appeared for n time to be pretty even. Finally ti.o rowdms left the field and the prisoner Kennedy In tne possession of the police. Nearly all the officers bad their uniforms ntorc or lews torn, and olllcer Donahue lost his shield. Kennedy was taken to tue elation house and locked up to answer. HCY/ THE ERIE RAILROAD STOCK IS HcLD. Aliunv, JIarch 30, ib;o. To tor Editoh op the IIekald:. In reply to the nrtic'.o in your issue of this morning, permit mo to Inform jou that I own r>,0M shares of Lrle stock, and am authorized by holders m Kng- land, wko are intended to the extent of $2,0(>0,0^0, to protest against the "protection" scheme of Raphael A Co. Tho only tiling winch Is "too thm" about this 1* the insinuation tuat tho "Erie wizards" had »onicthmg to uo with my appointment »h representative of tnis stock. From what 1 know ol tUa gentlemen rcicried to 1 am convinced tucy aro much too acute to report to any such contemptible rune as that hinted at la your article. The interest I rcpn sent is ns distinct front that of the Una managers a i it is from that ol Air. Ura l's clients. uito. cKoioa. 5IIEMTIFIC ITEMt A new safety buoy has been tried at Toulon. Franco. It is of the ordmary iife-buoy form nntl contains a composition of caleluin, which ignites as it is thrown into the sea. and burns the more bright!y the morn it is tossed bv the wavc$. Yet ilio llama will nut incommode the person clinging to tne buoy. Dr. Jnles Delbet has been named Knight of tho I,egion or nunorof France, In lecompcuse for hi* interesting sclontiUc researches durtug a uiksioa into Abu Mmor. Tho new therapeutic agent, chloral, which we own to the united efforts or Dr. Deuiarquay and Dr. Liebrcicb, appears to be an excellent remedy lor that distressing affection, whooping-cough. The Agricultural Society of Franco lias announced a prtzo of 3,000 francs, la 1872, to the proposer or the most efficacious rneacs of destroying the white worm and cockchafers. Professor Tyndarfl has succeeded in lsreltlng a diamond In oxygen by the concentrated rays of tne electric light. He has no doubt of bis anility to Ignite it by the purely mvisible rays froui the same source. In order to encourage the observation of comets the Imperial Academy of Vienna offers etght so n medals ror the discovery of as many comet, during tue next tnree years. M. Pruleux, tn a paper "On tho Effects of Frost upon Plants," ftas shown that if the thaw is oou- UU^iUU g&uuuunj inu nui »i»u;o 11. Leoormnnd has shown, from ft study or the scu.pUires. mat tn Egypt, during the time of the shepherd Kings, three disiuicts^ucies o' gaxftdt were hoiuesucftioa. SHEET. THE COMING WOMAN. Victoria 0. Woodhull, the Balmoral Broker, to Baoe for the White Houeo.What She firm ..4 vrv.i av. «ir..u rr«. nw cuiu nuitt auo nVII V uu.XJJDI Views on Home and Foreign PolicyNew Ideas on Government 44 Duoad Street, Kkw Vokk,\ Alurch till, 1870. f To titb Emton OK tub Hetum>:. The disorganized coudltlon of parties in tlie TTnlted States at the present time affords a favorable opportunity for a review or the political Bltuatioa and for comment on tbe issues which arc lllceiy to oome up for settlement in the Presidential election In Ihtj. An I happen to be the most prominent representative of the only unrepresented class In the republic, and perhaps the most practical exponent of the principles or equality, I request ttie favor of bclug permitted to aUure.-w the public through the medium of ibe IIniur.D. While others of my sex devoted theuieeives to a crusade against the lows that shackle the women of the conntry, 1 asserted my Individual Independence; while others prayed for the good time coming, 1 worked for It; while others argued the equality .or woman wlth'man, I proved [toy successfully engaging in business: while others wuiiht to show that there was no valid reason why woman should be treated socially and politically us a being inferior to man, I boldly enierod the arena of politics ana business uud exercised tUo rights I already possessed. I therefore claim the rigut to ipeak for the unenfranchised women of the country, mi bc'lcvingas 1 do that there will be KOliK FKliAi.fi OFFICi'IXOK' >i:itS Til AN' FEXAI.fi VOTERS or some tlmo to come, and that the prejudices that at ill extst in the popular mliut against women In public life will soon disappear, 1 now announce uiyuclt is a rurulKl.itH for the Presidency. latu ciuito well iwaro that la assuming juration I shall evoke uore lhllculo than enthusiasm at the outset. Hut ins is an epoch of sudden changes ami startltog mrprlses, W liat may appear absurd to-day will issume a serious aspect to morrow. I am content o watt until my claim for recognition as a caudtlaio shall receive (lie ealin consIJerauon of the press ind the public. 'J he blacks were catt'e la istto; a icgro now s is In JelT Itavis' seat in the United States Senate. Tlio sentiment of tho country was, iven In lsea, spainst niyro s"iTrttze;now me negro's iglit to vot» is acknow.edged by a majority ot too s.atcs, and will soon be recognized by toe eonstUutlou of the United Mates, let those, therefore, who ridiculed me negro's claim to exercise the rlirht to "lue, liberty an I the pursuit ot happiness," and lived to see hiui vote and hold high public offices, ridicule the aspirations of fnc women or the country liter equality with tne blacks as much as tuey please, lacy cannot roll back the rising lido of reform. That great governmental changes were to follow the enfranchisement 01 the nogro l have lung loreieeu. W hile the curao of slavery covered me laud progress was enctuiluod, hut wcieu it was swept away m the torrent of war ttio voleo of justice was heard, aud it became evident that tticbist weak harrier agaiust complete political uitd social equu.ity must Boon Rivm way. AH that has been eaut au-J written hitherto til support of EQUALITY FOli WO-'RV has had its proi<cr eiteot on the public mind, just as the antl-stavery speeches before secession weie eiTeclve; but a candidate and a pulley are required to prove It. Lincoln's election snowed the »treiig h or the leelmg against the peculiar institution; tiiy candidacy foriue Presidency will. I coniidontiy ex poet, develop the fact that tnc principle.* oi equal rights for ail have taken deep root. J'ne advocates of political equality lor wo.nan have, beside* a respect able kuuwn strength. a groat undercurrent of unexpressed power, which u only awaiting a lit opporitinily to snow Itself, ity iho general aud decided test I propose wo shall he able to understand tho woman question aright, or at least aluli ha\e done much toward presenting THE ISSUE INVOLVED in proper shape. 1 cialin to possess the strength auu courage in he the subject of that test atul hnxt forward conildently to a triumphant i*suo of tue canvass. The present position of political ptirlie* is anoma- IUUi7. A lieJ iiiQ UWk UIOJ'IIVM M,f WliJ ; .....,.r.vw oi i>oltu> or economy. PuliiiuU yreaciiers paw tuu air; ihi.ro is no live issue up 'or discussion. Tiie on v seemingly dmlucuve feature upon wutcu nconipieta and weil defined diversion exists is on tiie dean issue of uejfi o equality, and tills Is to me p >11 ileal leaders A HARP OP A THOUSAND STRING*. 3 i\o mtuor questions of llie liour«do not ipfert partiei us sutii, and no wo.l deJued division of sentiment exista. A'uivat nanou.it question .s wuued to prevent a descent into pure sectionalism. Hie siuipie issue wnetlier women anould no. nave politics! equauty vr.m me negro is uie only one to »e tried, ami none more important is likely to arise ijtsforo tlm Presidential etccnou. l.ut uo.ide tu t question of equality olliers oi Ricat magnitude a.e neCMMurtiy included. The platform iiiat is to succeed in (lie com ma elect ton innsc cuuacuts tiie peneral principles of KNUUnTRNSD JrallCE ANI> KCONOHV. A complete reform la our system oi prison d'e.tlpllua. Iiaviau specially in view me weliare 01 tlie families oi criuiiiiais, wliose inn >r slioual not lie 1 'St to lueiii; me rearipii ieinsjii of vac system ami control ot internal Improvements; tno adoption 01 6ome better means lor carina lor the lieiplo«s and indigent; the cstabiiBliioeut of Mtrictly mutant and reciproeai relations witii all foreifr.i Powers who will untie to l<ettor Hie condition of the productive class, ami li'.o adoption oi anon principle! an siiuli reojauiie ttiU class as TUB TKBJt WEAI.T3 OP THE CoCNl KY and plve it a mat position beside capital, tius Introducing u praotii al plan lor universal government. tiieee important changes can oni> be expected lo follow a coiapiote departure from Uie beamo track* 01 political parties and their inartilnery; and Has, i ltciiovc, mj canvass of li7r will eiVee-t. l'titti the people are atcit ot tue present ailmtaist.ration is u proposition, i inuik, n.ai <:oiw not icouire t.« Kn flrarntifl* imr Q4 1 livt.VA n.iW ll cl**Cl«!0 i Rt.tiirt attain.-1 iu conttnuauce furanoiuer term ol four years, and oifemi myself « . a catidnlaie 101* the Presidential succession, » tew preliminary observations on the general management of OtTit HOMK AM) I-OK til UN POLICY will not l>c out oi place. Tue aUinniisiiAllon of Ueaerai brunt, men, has nccu n failure from tue beginuni);; wens, vacillating and d.Uoient in Moral coinage, U commands neither me respect nor admiration of lorefrfu lowers nor receiver uie uetivo support of Us parly. Tlie general tnainigejiieiibof our loielgu and domealic affairs does not seem fo iuq to ha.o risen to tne dignity of a policy, tliongn It oc allowed to nave been consistent in lis various parts. It has bean destitute of tutu decision and lirmi.ess tiutt characterize tno victoiious aduicr wlioisnow President. a decided l!u..au pol.cy woaui not omy have settled at once lite inevitable destiny of ..uiit island, ouc wouM also nave glvmi republican eeniime.it in upatu an impetus, etrea itheaod ilia South American repuhlica and executed a heMtay Ii1aeucc m Mexico ami Cannon. Put lnatcad of tins wo Uavo to tumult to the consequences of A POLICY Oi' COWAllMCB. American citizens abroad are tuurdeiod by .".puitRh t'muir'j.ll^. *>111 I VI.IIMII'I HI lll-llltV I, Hill ii. s 1111graced. Tins is unworthy ol llio ^mcricaa nation, mid itiepoop.e will hold (front accountable. A -ilaut who never siwii'1 his Hiroogth is limner leafed nor respected. On me important ipiesUoaa or m.xanon, me tariff nun mo puoilc debt, tne administration aceum to Have no seined policy. i'a.vnnun, w hether lor the support of mo govenimeot or too pajincut ol the debt, saoui'l mali cases be general and never special. -No special interest, nor several special interests, should ue Hugled out to nils; am ho extra proportion or tuxartou. And in regaid to ibo tantr tlie sdiue principle should be eniorcod. Wuetner me public debt be a blessing or a curse, it exists. Created to save me tepublic, it must be paid strictly according to both me spirit and Hie Af tlm l.nrf I'nt Miarfl 13 t»/\ lnlinPilhllP CriPlU. nty for payilia it off. By a proper policy its payment might lie nu le to extoii'l through a hundred yean, for even beyond unit time will tue beneSts ita creation pro lueed be icit and appreciated. la older countries toe pressure ol national debt becomes a bouuer < -barge and n mora mighty btiivleu every succeeding year, out with us tho very reverse is the case, The development or our magniaccnt resources a-til reader tho gradual payment ot our HiUei/ieduaM easy of accomplishment. Abb OTItEll QrK3IIOS3. whether or a foreign or uomedic nature, stand HI us frated by the Cuban policy of toe administration. A iioul, flint ana, withui, consistent national policy. ii not at ull iiuios strictly within the conservative hunts or internaiioual law will always command in< respect aud support or tue people. with the view <>t taitlng the people into my confl dence I have ifrrttieii several papers on govern menial questions of importance arid will suborn tlipin in due iliue. For the present the foregoini must aufllre. I anticipate criucisin; but howcvei unfavorable His coinuiont this letter may evoke trust that iny sincerity will not be called lu question I nave ueuocrateiy auu ui hit uvtii accuru piscsc lnvSctc bofore tlic people ad a candidate 'or wo t'reai dencv of we United staton, anil uaving tbe mean* courage, crier®y nna streugW necessary toe tue rac< intend to coutest it to We close. V1CTOHU C. WOODHUI.L. »womi 13 com. ." Lectm by Lllllua 8. Etlecrton-Tbe Horati Basbnell Side of tho Woman's QucstlonRadonese of a Prominent Revolutionist. To a numerous, UueUment, and deeply tntereatei audience Miss I All inn S. Kdo-erton delivered a lector last niiilfi, in ibe hall of the Cooper Jnstltuto, 01 "Woman is Coming." If Miss Etfgci ton may be re garded aa the "Coming Woman,*' or the promts of what the "Coming Woman" may l>e ex petted to be, then the intellectual and physics future condition of woman will be vary man tone todeed. Mm rngtmn n not a "woman*! rt*h"\a' woman. Her lecture wan replete wuu beaitfijr, ear. ne»t, common eenee, satirical telle about tbeinnata power posscaaed t>r women lor the reform of all tlMt octal and domestic anoyances ano ho loudly com* plttine ot. au I which Mtsa Ko^oriou la of au opinion iiie baiiot box in the haunt ot woman wonlu not auuliulate. me lecturer Uuca uoi advocate uul veical auinape either to mau or woman, obo tbiuks a iitneea to vou» more important (itu.ii thp 11 ni vp rani it.v nf vauiht g 4i. 1 " « "«T» »l»l III* » curse of democratic countries was uie eienoating milling *4 pjity. Bo suoug was tins i/arty feeling that it hud iiccn t-ald by a Now fork man that iT Tammany nominated the devil Hansen the detno- v crats would vole for aim. Tue areua or poiiuoe wa» uuiiaittd for woman, because her nervous organization gave her affections au uu luo away over her in. J teuect, aud she would necessarily be Isr loo parti* sau 10 oe impartial. , on the waut of woman's fldeuty to her sisterhood Miss fcdgaiiou was withenn<*iy severe, and in a. passage m wnicn sbe was greaiy appiaaded she sulu "the misfortunes and iuju«tiee of wouau would not be mo enormous or ao iiard to bear did tnev find more Mends in their own sex." A denunciation ot the persecution by wuinea of giris whohail been Liutrnwi.l anil lae ciimliiuma ol all iiffsuna ou me part of trio betrayer was graphically given ana was well received. y The moral ana dura cutis power of women to TP* dress the grievances of wuicn she computus and " tiio Hta ciucut or the prool iu.it lucre was uo real autagoniain between the sexes to require special " legulanou, uud a statement 01 the power that written possessed by her otvu moral lurce a* exetv cited ut uoiuc, and wtuch olio u i < mi itujrty to exercise in rhe two great depai'iuuuU for toe mould* lug of puone opuuou, tuc ex. ani the puiplt, re* i ceived t.ic demonstrative appiovui ot the audience. In healthy, high toned, nob.e ihouget of tins kind lliitt lecture ahuunded, una it was delivered with couHiueraote grace end heartfelt fo. vor. luat it wae too practical, too rational and too near the reality o< Hie lor many of those who were pro-out, who were uinihtf lights of the "aoiosia" and the li roiutioH, was mure man could be expected; out that wbica was expected or women wa r set Uie.meiv a up ug models for other wonn-u suoul 1 be iliat they auould beiiuve themselves with propriety when be> lore ibe pubiie. Mrs. Hu lock w.io is a great' revm ' lutiomst." rose from licr seat he;ore the leo ure was more man two-thirds through, a id audibly said, "1 won't may any longer to uuai that loo.." BXLLES OF im: BILLOT* (ioiuir for the Kternor Sox. Monthly BI««tlo| of the Petticoat Sullrugist..Another sums . In the Meld, mid Bloro YVnil toil. The usual monthly meeticg of mo Woman suffrage Association took place yesterday anernoou at thrcg o'clock, I>r. Ualleck, a hou ( e.i ut speclmeu of mas* I culmity, presiding. About seventy-live ladles weri I present, four of whom were comoly to look upon. r I jTresolution sympathizing with one ur. Susan j | smith, or me liuaner c ty," wao. it appears, refused irom principle to pay me >oio or aay oiner tax i to mo government while -he was remsed the pnvl> lego or Voting. was passed. Too ro. o.ution a.so in* c'uded say other woman who wouu go aad do likewise. i A committee, consisting or Mus Norrts, Mrs, Hal- % leek, Airs, i'oaipklns, Airs, l'ooio and Mrs. Tucker, was appointed to act as delegates to tae May Cud- veuilo ui woman's budrage uercieos to be bold ia f tau city. tor first aourrs4 was made by Mrs. Matty A. uxv.s, of Jersey, wlie I spoke at length on the imuieuso cuvautagos to lha couutry at large should her sex oe permitted to take I holdot the tiuy symbol ol cnueusu.p aud drop It its I the oallot box. Sue cowbaed iue oujecuoas made to tbc 03itC3 of the ballot on .110 score that the polls J huci court loom were u.ide ironie mcaituos tor any respectable woman, and Hiie drew a i.mviuic picture of the positron in wmcb tue ta lea oues U uer sex, Ilester Vaughn, unuug others, louud tueiaselves with uoue but bur id mea ou tue jury. When onco woman was ea raacuised troin tue convenuouailtics or society sod aad itooi above ~ piu money the republic cou.d oe .-.ale. As she baa been the acknowledged ga.raun of bume wuy [ saould sue not be also of toe State t Under her in- *r Queues tue polls might be Uaasterred from the bar- room to tue cuarcu. * . Tue UiiiiHUAN wanted to know* in an excited ^ mauuer, what aid rnau know uOout woman except ^ aa m fiiCdli^A hiiiMl )> Mp i'«u ( U iiiiliWiriliiii AXtdir.t iroiu m morning paper, wutcii gave a giowtug tie* } ncripilnn ul u nolle o( the natiou Mrs. bi.AKK, who was gotten up in the extreme ot la luou. with a jaunt# lui.o hut nestling among tier favett cutis, suggested teat there snoutd oe "city , mothers" as we.l us "on/ tamers ' uu ter the now r* Charter. Mrs. LEc .trrr, a brunette, with a profusion of long ringlets nnd a sort 01 admiral's uniform, next a iUrer.-ioit me mooting on tuu momentous question 01 women smriuge. f.» 'iiij meeting iuca ad ouinol. THE HOLY LANQ. 4 1'iitu't of the Faiuino iu Jerusalem"* v 'J A letter lifts beou received in boadon fro!.1^ /$ Anglican Bishop of Jerusalem, winch corrobC .e» too statement made on litis puintul subject by 81^ Moses jiontctiore. Tlte Bishop In ms loiter ears:. A sinaii donkey's load of water costs # J, to thq * 15 poor Jews, n iiose family Income is is. id. per wcek.*^ t Many Moments ana nominal Christians are in ttio*. j sattie position. What Is most dread ul to conteip* 1 plute is ihe laot that the spring's near Jer.ua ein ar« drying up. But there is another more terrtbia ca'a stlil. Tim locusts are spread over iha .», mountains of JncUti and .--inu la, in the valley of, Jordan, and m tne plum of sJnarou an I Galilee. bav« lug come to lay t/ielr eggs, wttieit will oe hutooeit . 1 belore tne harvest; and as t'uy Araos say that eucti 1 couple la 's 2)9 eggs, countlcis mtd.o is will appear Icut, tig every green thmj. po-scmlng the g'rcaaa, and I tuus preventing grass growing ior the cattle. Ilf.iL i-Siilir, lil IbFliilSt | New York City. Hrooms rt, *"s« tvt aid PIS 49x50, house an 1 lot $11,000 . Jackson H, KosVJ, 7-1 nun 70 ....13,003 h'.UioW ut, x », lit! ft * of llirln*t<ui at, lo.4\8/.M 14,950 Moure a; hi Water St., 11 o oorner, IS.ItAl. ................ 3.',0O Sinful* tt, Mo 15, 05x100.1, bosun aujliot..., 0,1X10 IH.U IX, > C»X ft !' A"'.. 11', UV :' liliu »Ui ...« ». <S-II' -V ,, notl> it, 11 /. 131.10 ft w of b'.h uv. 2i>l58.4 8.03J ,# 43d »t, No *51 West), 26x100.4 No m. [ 42d 8 8.117 ft tv of viadixon av. Stx.PO. >, houmi nod loMfi.nml I i 4rtth at, II 8| 12-j ft e or Ut av. 27.(1x75. 17,500 1»4 47th it, lift ft e of 10th av, 20x1td. 6 1J.0IW J V 40tii it, n s, 2C-i e of fith av, 10.8x100.5 22,600 fitst it, n 8. ft w of S'.U av. 0 *1 U.9'Vxtoo.b .l.oOO I Mid it, I 8. 406 It w of 6tti av, 22x10 .5 38,000 , Mill at, u 8, 20 "> it o .1 <th av. 20xt'.v! 5 IIU.OOO I 7'it il *ti 4-.U av, n * cor, 40xi02 2 1 n I 71»; it, u it'.1 0 of 4111 av.40x11.2 2 J J I 115lli at, 0 0, (1 o of 1 at nv, t'oxlut'.lti won 1 4 Madieon a*, <v 0, and 661U it. 11 0. t- I'etxUi'. . ' H'"1!® \ j ! av au 6.''! :t stvco.iiO:. U-'.f-xVl1 32,1:09 j I 2! av. w v, 4 ft 1 to iof 10th bt, » 5.1x11/0,2.,. Sunt Shi ftV, I It'flil I-', 46 .107x1(1/ I 4lli »v, vv a, 67.;. it, » * corner, ilki.7-,t:iid...-rv2 So,.00 i.TtABt..< ajtcoai.Bf). nremwteh 0t. No 182. it-ifc, 5 jrraix,jut year.. 609 Id pv, No l.1 I, it.'ro and basement, S',j yearn, per year 600 ^ S I nr. No l,4"4, ivore and flrrt lloor, 5 vnan, "jusr year.. I,0o0 I liitti av, No 10 yean, por ymr 1,203 I 8lu a -, Mo coml hw, yean. per year 1,(49 I Kivinatoii ia, Si1 hi, 8 yean, per 1 ear bxt Kiu«M f outtiy. URinHil.VM. ' H rbaunrcy 8t, n a, 255 ft *v of Lew * av, 40x103, 2 h and 1.10,008 Conie.vea 0t, * 0, 6u0 It a of Eversrcati av, 26x2 0. 8,1)00 Court it, n 0, 'v.: it 0 of Llvlu. Moo at, 'Cx'JS.O 20.itVI lia'licy ct, n «, lOtl ft e of Tn npkini av Cycled 8.1091 « l.oiirn rr at, e 0. -<0 l'l u of l'uwml ft. 0x77 8,»">»> x Marion it « Sdi'to of lie' ( a/, £'M«'U 'i^fiOa'x.and «t, e *, 3J"> ft s of M"sci oi« it, _6x nd......... 118 yn'i!-r 1' 11 0,216 ft w of >'rai>.:IIts av, 20x100, May, Iftrt'i 8,008 game property .. ....v:.".',;,":. * ,MH52 | SobolB* at, n a. 1100 ft a of Union «r, 25x1011 15,3.6, Siata *!. an, I'll fi a of Power* »t. - xHI, li and1 8,5 0' Wnhvorth »i, \v k, 1ml tt w of Dokal'o «», 2SU1C1 8,000 t£a.rr<n at, * a, 3'5 ft« of Schanret t!y *v, It \Vx.65.7... 4,&U Warren at, a *, 887.(i ft e of Schunaet.nly av, 112.6x255.7.. 4,608 Wood (no at, n \/ «, 150 ft n a of Btuiiivric* nv, 15x100.. 8 0 North 2d at, a v 125 ft u of I.eonai'dit, 24xldu, h aud I. 6,259 a «t, », 110-ft w of 7th av, 82>.:H 26.000 North 4th bi, n a. 125 w of 4th r.t, 2<Hluil, h and I t Smith Plli und Sub »i». a w corner. 4 x7j 8,,,Q9 f Soitth 7th at, n b, 805.2 ft a of 3d ri, :Mxl0 to South 6th at, xUl.H ...19,700 luth at, n a, .97.1H ft e of 7th av, 1 in*'» block, b and a.. 1,590-L lKth at, a tv a, 170 ft a < of 7th nv, »0x74, h and 1 1,125 4('th at, e a, it'll ft a of fid nr, 25x100.2 700^B Clasaon ar, e a, 237.8 ft n of Hyrt." ar. 50x.'l S.PSflf^B Franklin nv, it a, 80 ft a of Lafayette ar, '_'u.v74 <,<XiO lUrrlaoB nv. n a, luo ft o of Liocuxt at, ItOxluO 609 ^B Siarcy * tv a, f > ft n of Hooper »t, 44xltHI 8,tiO0ft^B Martin av, n a,'1 It. w ot Yhroop nv. 20x10 t 7,2.iie Schenectady av uni Sackc.tl at, it e corner, 255.7x300.1* ^B 2 50.10x37(1 Wyokofl' t>v, e a, Ifl ft n of Fulton av. 25x101 2,900 ^B Wytlit av, a .v a, 40 flnwof H'llaon at, 20 <70. h an J lot S.miil ^B 1 tj 1 \i t O i ut Ihiitvluai O. 5i I ftil 3.500 1 Jvwt* County* J. NKWAXtU. Uonjrers ft, a a, !W ft of Kerry at, 5*5*10* ) Congics.1 Hr* a, SC' I t c of Ferry at, - \M,< ( 1 *" Ferry at, n a, adjoining Mcltonuld property, S 33-100 acree KJ.POtT Rait Varied ft. n s, J Kane to W W Wbitty, 4i HxlOO... 60.UK> Market at, adjolnluj (larthwail'a property, 80.(1x134... .21,(KID Mulberry an t Ktnooy at», e corner, 0**119 80,0,3 Orange el, r a, adjoining van tiee«, Jr'a, 96x (10 6,MO reiuipyiram* ar ami Km met at, ae corner, 25tl00...... 1,600 rennsylranta av anil Aattr at, a < corner, 25il(K 0,600 Koeerille at', tr a. 3/5 ft n o: Kuaa/'x ,1 x 4 7, fl) Thoinaa at, a a, 2 9 ft e of Anilin fit. 16.11x103.3 2,3 0 1'lana el, a e, adjoining Kay re property, 10.9x51.6 4,500 OUANUK. Park and New ate, corner, 66*4 <i4'ix*x"0 600 Kaaex at, ,v a, 3 0 ft n of Main it, 62tl.il 10,1)00 IX ads on Coonty, N. J. PkBaST CITT. North 4tb at. n a. 137 ft w of Mootnuutb at, 4<xM 1 North 5th ct, u a, 85 ft m of Monmouth at, l*>x20.i*lt|0*.> 6,884 North jth at, n a, 66ft W Of Monmouth at, i>x#r ) . 1IOKOKBN. Lot 84, block 43, Collar eatata «... 8,01© IIKIUiKN. Floe al, a, «0 ft a w of Lafajrctio at, 30*68. P0© Waehiaglou ar, a a, lot 57, Uouhl e»Ut«, X/xloO.......... 1,000 ' INCIPBNT3 AiTBNDINO TITB ISIPK Or TBI AMINO* . n .* «AJ MIIUA 8 ontltaMnff HOT ritUUI/AH -J IIQIC niie>i|Miiiv i* in the ante-room of me White House when the mcs-M . sage auu proclamation were signed, bslf of tfcftM * number, However, being newspaper men. An at*H e tactrtof a Washington newspaper cogged the Prest-H [i dent for tbe pen witn which tlie documents wersH signed, sud It was handed to turn. A venerable oMM * gentleman who was in the crowa cried out whel^H e toe announcement was made turn the negroes conldM now vote everywhere, "Well, gentlemen, vou'll allH , be d.d sorry for tun," The speaker was {lent, Sr.,H 1 the latber-ni law of the President..(KtiaAmyfow J cvn etp'jndtitoe Lotion Herald, uaroti jtk

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Page 1: Two Man. PolicyNew...hasty glance, the ooy rushed across the street to tue residence of ms oia master, Squire MurdocK, who iriluoutceremonyheat oucewoke up, exclaiming, "Gitup, boss!

jf^'&:8

DOUBLE EXECUTION. |Two Negroes Hanged in Hillsborough, V. C., (or

the Murder of a White Man.~

The Crime mid Confession of One of theMurderers.ShoclCnj Scene* In

the JTaii.Bungliuy Workof the Hangman.

niLLssoi-oucu, Orange County, N. C., \April 1. 1870. )

Two more condemned fe'ons have expiated a torrlhlecrttneon the hungiuati'a scaffold, and haveawinlly verified the truth of the Sonpturtrl injunction"Veujeauce is miue. anil 1 will repay, sal'htue Lord." TI not nwiltly, reiribut-.ou followsnrely the criminal who Is guilty of ahetdlu^ tne

b'.ood or a lellow man, and though rnoutln, souiettmeayears may elapse, Justice invariably overusesthe murderer and the scaffold ciairus us vicilru.There are icw if any in Hie blackened list of murderswhere such coo.ueii and ue iberatiou of purposewere evinced, or wnere>uch a barbarous refinemeniof cruelly and atrocity was practised, as in the

murder of Martm V. Blaloolc, a young vrUito oian,by two iiejroc, named To-u Vouug and Bon Cuun.Christmas night Usr, when humanity wiould speciallyabstain from the commission of evil deeds,as the one selected by these demons to carry Into

execution the ioui purpose they had resolved upon,and on the succeedlng sundar morning the citizenshore w<io start.ed aud horrttled by the discovery ofa iiendijii minder, taedeep damuacton of which hascaicely a parallel.

ns riRST niscovRtiTas made by a negro boy, who had been In ihe hab't

of performing several menial duties for young Binlock,the victim. Furly ou that Habbata morning,as was usual, the negro proceeded to the room olliiuiock (which was situated m tue rear of a groceryand bar, in wbictt lie oilkuated), and ou Ills way thenegro was met lj two other negroes, wao told himtnat eomettilog was wrong at the storo. Blalockhad retired at a late liojr the mgut previous, afterhis uuuKroua filetids had takeu ttn-lr leave, aud thatwas die la-t time ho was steu ultve; nor was thereany appieumaion iettj>/ottner niinseir or means,as bo was a young mail 01 amiable dlapoatttou,good cnuracter and popular lu thecommunity. A ieniblo late was, however,iu store ior Vim that Christmas night, or rather £ab.batti morn. tViiea the negro boy reached the housebe found the shutters of a buck window partiallyopen, and loukln.r with mo grayish lignt ol the hourke saw tue body of Ulaiock lying ou tue floor, surrounded,as ho thougnt. by a pool of cither blood orwater, be could hoi then ten which. Startled by hishasty glance, the ooy rushed across the street to tueresidence of ms oia master, Squire MurdocK, whoiriluout ceremony he at ouce woke up, exclaiming,"Git up, boss! Qlt up on your feet, bossl Mr.-dilutee*is lying dead ou de floor ob his room." Hardlybelieving the taie ot the boy, though sufliaentiyalarmed that something ot a serious nature hadoccurred, Mr. ton.dock, with all possib.e speed,proceeded to iho scone, ami so aorritlud was tie bytoe spectacle that met his s.ght, that he lost no time

w lu voillug tue town neb.a custom usual lu tue ' oailifor tue putpose ot alarming the clitzeus and callingtueai together whenever orouiusfaiices 01 uu extraorniuuiYnatare aeuunled. Tins very so >:i biought»large nun mum surprised crowd to the s, ot.

THK-flLbN'OSUOT, KMI-E ANO UAI.'lkK.An entrance 10 the room was soon effected, and lu

ft body the citizens went tu. Here they beheld, init its sickening horror, the evidence 01 a barbarous

ftuo broody aee-J btieicned oil ti.e floor near thecentre of the r< otu was the corpse 01 Mamn Ulaiock,tue ghusuy and uiutuated (futures Upturned, thekk w»c across anu iobii:x an me right ana rue uriusextcuocd near each ede. ') ue u (tut clothe m wnictitne body was arrayed wero torn uud bl .oily, lu themouth it pillow cuau Dad been smiled to stule cueCjii.it cues of the mummed man tor help or mercy,aim tins, naif saturated with nlood, protruded iromtne jaws now rail tu death's co d einbruce. Thethroat eras severed from e .r to ear by two deep andjawgt'J auaties us if t.>e instrument used was a duand uneven blade. Ai'ouu ( liiu neck was also lasveoeatigntly a rope. wlilcU led to the beuef matatrangu.atiun was ut first attempted; but. failing idtain, tne murderers Dud resorted to otinr aud nmreeffective myaUs oi despatching tneir victim. Tnelelt/tenip e eas entirely crushed in by the blow othome Ur ivy weapon, which leit a port ion of diebruin exposed to the view, ( here were some fllteunor twenty woonus ot various aiuus, but mostlya abs. aboat tuc lace and neck. Tne eyeballs wctenoturned and the cavities c.ose to the nose werebled with clots pi congealed uiacs bioou. Lowerdown o.t the meant were a number ot stabs, evidentlymade oy a knife, aaa with the bloody pillowcasesucking out 01 the mourn, tuc brain ootni-jtroin he liaciuied temple, the matted hair, i ueBashed lace mid cnesi, the tightened rope on theneck an I the pool of mood on tne four, a moreiiH'lcimr or ri:iollinir anectiirtn iiiiiiint well lie riln.

tared,INd'l Itl'MENTS OF DFATIT,

In the storeroom, Lclnud the counter, one of themurderous niscruureatfl was discovered, it was aBui*.! cogwheel, weighing about one and a naifpounds, Mita a ho c m the centre, through which a

had uecu Lied. From the inueuiatioug on themurdered man's forencal tt was speedily sscerlaiueumat tuis nai o.-eu used eifectiveiy as a smugshot,the rope round uic i.ecv. to il me work it hadCoue: but too Ktnie the murderers had earned oTvita theui. due object of the murderers was evidently

Bonrr.tiY.They had trained an entrance byknock'ng at the.

barroom door at some hour alter mhtniuut, underthe pica of wanting a driuk. Tne young man aroseaim admittei theui woen, it Is supposed, they coupleted their bloouy work. As a precautionary matterti.ey closed the doors and ir.ndow shutters. Tnewatch, ehuiu. Kuiie a..d otucr articles belonging toBiuiock were theirappropriated. rue till or me store,coiitiiuiug abou! $iio in citriency, aud n stumi <|uantityof silver uuo coin were also taken; ami these,with several ui ticks ol small value, comprised tncbooty, wun which tnej co iipc3.ru.etl tiieuisjives lorthe awlul tragedy tiiey nad comwutteU.

TUE MI HOE. KUS.Busplcion soon attached to l.on fiunn, Tom lountr

and j. e Lutteriough. negroes, who had been seenlurking In the vicinity of maioek's smre on (lie nnrott ie deed was coiumitled. lhev had mysteriouslydisappeared lrum the neighborhood immediatelyaiter tt.e tragedy, ana trie ev.deuce hi Hie inquest atOi.co justified .t magistrate in issuing warnuus lortheir an est. Uunu waaim-sted ati.reensboro, Votingwas captured at ox turd la ti.iiiivllic county, auuLutteriuugh in tola vicinity. Iney were uil railroadbands and tiaa been wording in diis section of t'.iecountry for a ccuddenioie period. Tiny wero imJuiSwiicdlure uad the trial loo* p.ace on tne it a ofebruary last.

CONVICTED AND SENTENCED.The evidence waa main y circumstantial hot thoroughlyconclusive. A portion oi the stolen in mey

was found in me possession oi Guuu iiud loumr,among li a Lcriv.au coin winch was rare ami peculiarlymarked "lo ihaier," easily identified as nieproperty or lflniooii by ni|xny of the citizens of Millsborough.The watch, wiiu tilaocii'n lunula, was»uo discovered in a waichuiaWcr'* hiiop at Uendersou,where Young lud left it to be repaired; hloodtutus. those damning evidences oi glint, were

iound ou ilieir person .and iiilngettier a chain soremarkable «s to convince tne moat exacting anddoiiuUul. Luiterlot'idt cou d not be so < lesny coniicctcdwith mo murder us rue others, and the proofbe ng lacking in ins case lie was acquitted. lloMidoling and liunn received neiiiemor death unacomparative composure. Young, who is ft mulatto,turned ashy paie when the Judge said to him. "Mnytlod nave mercy on your soul, you, iinii showed notueccy." Gumi was apparent y unmoved WQeu msawlul doom waa pronoJiifed.

TKKKOK AND KKPKNTANCE OF YOfVO.AB tlie (lay upon wmcn uie uioucaimn witii ito

were to expiate their crime approached, Young,who was ttie principal character in the tr.vteay, bepaniff repoui, and ne exhibited tuc strongest symptomsot contrition that lirx negr<> nature was caj>u>«i»of. lie prayed incessantly, sometimes breakingInto the wildest lamentations imaginable Hiakiugthe moat tervont ami heartren Jing appeals 10 insMaker tor forgiveness, uttered with a desperationami Intensity that were sometimes ngon I.ling towitness. The ghastiy lorm of the murdered manseemed present to bun in his sleeping and wakinghours, ami at times tie wouid exciann, in accents oftitter despair, "(in, l.o.u! save in<i! torgtve me,forgive nie i see htm now looking ai me Frequentlylie seemed to lie lomiled, so fearful werolit" thoughts. and, lute a limited down criminal ofIstiruaciite, he dreaded 10 encounter the face of anyliving human being. believing everybody 10 be anavenger, and that every man a hand was against

* mm.tiir coNnrcT of orsN is raiMos.

flutin, bis companion tn guilt, wag quite differentlyfleeted, lie was suffering from a Jcarlul disease,

And, as he lay on bis wretched pallet, groaningwith tue pangs, he rather Reeinod to long for themoment tinit would put an end to his miserable existence.When spoken|to he replied la monosyllables.but morosely uud sullenly refused to saynj thing concerning the murder.

VISIT TO THE CONPBMNKD MFtC.This morning I visited the condemned men In Jail,

artrt lotiurt th- m oonflncd in an upper dungeon.wlilch wax rnefclug with a foul atencli, loutosomoenough to engender disease. (t was the pecuii.trxlor or tUe negro, mtcnsUnd br ilitli. and wade intolerable,even lor a lew moments, l>jr lis comoiuatiouof enamel hoime and putrlfled smell that wasIn rrible and sickening. How Hibso wretciiex existed!u health. or bow itIs ibov were not prostrated wittidisease, M irulv wonderfnL From mo inmates oftli« Jail l learned that two or throe ue^ro women.cue of tnetu e ce,ntr, and now under sentenceof deam.were for a considerable periodconfined iu ttic sumo ceil wuii the blue*

NEW YOJmurderer*, where the most Immoral and beaarrertiu b bad u»oa piece. Tbe women now ocennvauotbei uuimeou In common wiU> three meie necrocriminal*. wm re, 1 am iold. tnej exerclee and praetwetnoir lecoeroue dealre* without aov restraintwhatever. To Much an extent waa thin oarrieu thatone of t lie women. a handsome mulatto, had to netaken from the dungeon ami kept in a pasaiwe warfor the want of a more eecure place of couilnelflAltL

AFPRAKANCI OF TOR MU'OMKRS.it the command of a guard toung came to theMe of His tfuD"«un nearest the light, and through <

au aperture a gitmDde woe obtained of avtllanous <aud horrible set of feature*, which were marked ]with ail the beastly and savagecharacteristics of the >negro. The lutge aud Hut forehead receded back ftotn <trie erenrows almost to the crown of the bead: 'the nose where It Joined the eyebrows, was flat 1und indistinct, and the nostiKs Immensely large,covering u eicat space 01 utc face and reachingdown on the up mr tip. The eyes were small, blackaud piercing with a malignant expression, and themouth extended lroiu jaw to Jaw, with Hps thatnere thick and protruding. Gunn lay on his palletIn the last stages of horrible Olseaso, and so weakaud utteri v prostrate as to be unable to stand up.A in ore revolting spectacle can scarcely be Imagined.

TITB BCAFVOLP.There Is no Jail yard and In conformity with the

law, requiring executions to be private, the scaffold,or the affair Intended for such, was fitted up wltluuthe Jan, in one 01 the lower rooms, about twelveor lourteeu feet square, and not moroihan ten feet nigh. In front of a windowhung a small platform, five feetlong and two and a hair met wide, which worked onan axle fitted In two posts on either side the windowana close to tne wall. I bis pliutorm, elevatedto a level, w ts unout four feet from the floor, whileabove were two Iron rings fastened in the celdng.This drop was supported by a itneo prop, whichworked bv a hinge in the centre, aud when let dropgave a fall oi three met.

CONFESSION OF YOUNfl.The following la ncarlr a verbatim report of a con-

lessiou inaue by Vouujf a few day* since;.'Ike .plan to murder lllalock w«8 concocted on Saturlny

morning, December 25, 1Mb Thin was the unUorstandlnbetaeui me and t.unn, and I thlnlt Isham Councils knew ofIt before I did. Joe Lulterloh know nothing about It momthau the child unborn. I p-(-pared the cogwheel at Inhnm Conncils' house about twelve o'clock Saturday for the purpose ofuslnc It 011 IS alock ihil night. We wore tobaro ao.ue togetherto ! Hlock'l room ilpit id lit; but by some mistake wo Old notgo together, but mot there about eleven 1*. M., and betweenthat Tiour and twelve we entered the room through the ooortorether. HIaloek o; eneJ the door for ua, and tvas un<lcr thoInfluence of d iimr, and alter he lind let ua lu helay down on his bed In the back root .. I ihe.-i mads the titlark,and when I struck the first b ow with tb* cogwheel Dieonly words he sutd were, ' Uh. Lord I John, lift ins up I' 1dotiu know who he meant when he addressed "John." Ithen struck him «cv ral times with the cogwheel, and in hisdeath atriij^J;!-- I o fell from tho bed to the door, sud I beat hisbrains out Wo then cut Uls throat with the pocket knife,aud stuffed the pit ow case In his mouth. In the meantimetfiitin pttl the tope tn-nund his neck an I fastened It tiuhUy. Idid most of the bloody work, (limn did the holding,wiule I dealt the blows and used the knife. There wasa lamp burnfn;; (intfl alter we killed 11.alock. We search, dhis pockets, hut found no money. Wc then went Into theIlouur room and fonn 1 the tin bo* with the cash, papers, ,*;c.1 took the box find li.inn a decanter of whlskev. 1 mil outinn lamp, and, alter locking the do.w, we want out throiljhthe window of the back room and cloned It after u*. It tooktn about thirty mlnutci to kill BUIock. I think that (lunnhad an no lerataoding wltb a third party, hut I don't know.Wc w. nt to the depot that night and 1 took the train forKalelgb.

CBOWD3 TO WITNESS THE KXEOITTION.Though tt was publicly known tiiut the execution

would take place in the jail, bidden from view, y ca la rye crowd assembled to wi uess it. At one P. M.too j til door was besieged by trie mass, eager togam admission; but mis tne Hucnff sternly refused,and the moo became sihl more persistent. Thewindows botn in trout and rear of the Jail were msothronged, uuu most violent tussles tor eligible placesto obtain a look through the bars ensued. Thosewhose professional business required their presenceIn tne lull were excluded by the mob, which kept upa deateuing roaring and yelling and hooting thatwere disgraceful.

THK CUI.rniTS ON THE SCAFl'OT.D.About flair-past one o'clock P. M. the condemned

were conducted Irciin their dungeon, with ropes andmack caps attached to their necks. Young walkedfirmly down trie flight of steps, but Guuu. who wasexceedingly feeble, had to be assisted by two negroattendants. Tuey both ascended the scaffold andtook seats In chairs, wneu a very Impressive prayerwas ma le by a clergyman, both the condemned menjoining with him. i his being ended, a scries ofcross-examinations as to the murder was commencedby parties around tne trapdoor. Young, whose eyeswere half closed seemed to be engaged la prayer, auaJudging irom the evasive replies he made to questionspropounded, b.s mind was evidently waudcring.As the fatal hour n uied bo.n the wretched men bes.ma wild. Incoherent naif song, half prayer, peculiarto negroes, and they steadily kept this up to thelatest moment, relimug to be Interrupted by Mr.Aticv, father ot the murdered man, who desired toask them some questions.

TUB I.AST ROFNE.At two P. M. the Sheriff ascended the scaffold and

read th® death neriLeuca of both, which could so irontroe near.I Letween tliu pravors ana supplications ofttie condemned within and the din and tumult of memob wltnout. This ceremony concluded, tlio ropeswere attached to 1110 rln-cs In the coiling aoovo.The tegs of born were pinioned at theankles, and black c,ip3 were put overthe forehead, obscuring vision to all earthly things.At Uve minutes nasi two the drop lelt and the murdererswere Htrimgitnt violently In the air. Neitheroi the no«3ei was properly adjusted, and the hangiiiji'iKnots, when ttio ropes reached toelr utmosttension, slipped to the back of tlieneuKs ot both.Vouuflr ieli only ubout a foot, and as hCBwung to andfro his limbs were convulsively urawn up au i hisstruggles were fearful. (lutin feu nearly two feet,and in consequence of his enfeebled condition nissatTerings were not so Intense as Young's. After afew spasmodic k cits his struggle ccaced, aud hissoul was In tue pre-ence oi his Makur. Young continuedto jerk convulsively tor a number of minutes,perhaps live, when he, too, became still, and bothwere at the bar of internal Justice.Tue execution was a badly bungled atlUir front

beginning to end, and showed the necessity 01hating an experienced hangman in such cures.The tortures ot the wretches were terrible, whiciimight have been avoided tf a proper scaffold had theen erected anil :i hangman eminovad who knewhow to do las woiit. Alter banging nearly lurly <inmutes tun bod lag wero cut ciotvn uud piacca m icollius already prepared for tiiein. <

CUBAN ITEM 3.

The New VorK correspondent of the rrt>ma verylaboriously b rives. in tns letter published In Hieissue ot the v6Ut nltimo, to rcoreaent the Cubancau.-vo i>h utterly de..d in the United States, ami givesa btiresque account of the arrival hero of GeneralCespecies. He quotes ttie Hisiui.d's turicturea on tuppolic. of our government ami exults in the belieftnat the latter will do nothing but maintain a neutrality.denying Spain oniy wnat she doe* not want,and depriving tno Cubans of evoiy shallow ofassistance.Tim Pmisn. of tli o e.?il of Va roll (riven a column of

slatenieiiie setting lorth (lie pains"and penaltiesInflicted by the Baez government upon numbers ofofllcuii and civilians who had refused to vote iulavor oJ tho annexation of »!. Domingo fo thoUnited Suite*.AtCicntuesroa, Don Bias Podrluue/, was killed on

the -»>(! oi J ar. ti !u the private bathhouse of DonAntonio Ornce i»,v a custom home oiltoer whom hehad endeavored to prevent lrom entering the batuswhile some .adics wore in them. The atfair causedintense excitement, as the victim was greatly respected.The deuth of a prominent merchant, Don Joaquin

M tu/ano j oupulveda, at Santiago de Cuba, la aunoanced.,

The material necessary for the eatablishmoat ofthe telegraph stations from Day amy to Ji^uaui hadarrived at Manzauillo.Tno niaria «p ci>,n.rttcpo.i u the name or h new

Journal published in the Spanish Interest at Cienluego.cit is slmi'ar In sizo and appearance to theGaixta of Havana.On the l?ta of March the Festival of St. Joseph

ami the Virgin wits celebrated with the solcmnnydue to one of the most important holidays of tho\ ItUlUlli; J» 111 111 >111 I U J U UI»I U1I133 Ul /lUVdllO.

Tuo Havana paper*, o^io and all. continue to predictthe early collapse of the patriot cause in Cuba,aiul report irom various sections hitherto Insurgentthe return of the inhabitants to complete tranquil*lily ana tuetr resumption of field labor. The onlyparticulars, nowever, adduced to sustain this viewrelate to the tnovemonia to and fro of auauisn detachmentsthe capture of women and children andthe tueiciless execution of Cuban prisoners.

ke;y west.

A ItiiliiDof Terror.Atteiupied AmuMliintlnn*.A .Hon Stubbed and Then Thrown OfT a

Wharf.T«»o ihoath of Castaunn to boArengod.

Kf.y Wbst, March si, 1870.The savage malignity of the Spanish volunteers

seems not to have abated one Iota wince the kllUnitor Castafion; and what was at first considered an

unfounded rumor of a certain number of Spanishvolunteers delegated to coine to Key West to avengethe death of Cnstailon now proves to be u paturulreality. For the last few days the Cubans have beenholding a fair, the proceeds to go to '-SufferingCuba." The hall lot ixnng large enough whoretntho fair was held, a temporary frame work witserected adjoining, whlco was covered with canvas.Among the many who thronged the place was oneEdward Hotells, with two ladies, sitting at one sidoengaged in conversation. To the astonishment orthose who witnessed the act, the canvas was rippedopen and n tare peered in through the opening, behindHoteiu. Tho back or the seat was somew fiatIn the way. Another hole was quickly in ado and aknlJe thrust through a', the heart of Bote ,1a. Fortunatelyhis arm protected him. The knife enteredthe arm a little above toe elbow, creating a serious,nut. It la thought, not dangerous wound. The wouldbeassassin escaped, and to that joyous assemblageanother tragedy wus prevented. 'The wouuded manwas proiopily cared for by bis many mends. SeiiorBotella beiug u brother ol tne suopoaed murderer ofC'ustHdou. who is now iringlu Jail tu this city, provesconclusively that tuc blow was not utruck at random,but lutcuded lur tin heart ot htm whose relationship,unfortunately, made him tho shlulug marklor tipantsh vengeance.

Last nlgnt. at about luif-past ten o'clock, a Cubanby tne nam - of J'luciuo 1 s.iuloudo.sometimes calledMorales Lew as, from ku roeeinbloacs to Lemus.

ItK HERALD, SATURDAY.irtwie at the wharf tnokin? for the steamer Cube,lourly expected fro n tlavana. win suddenly a*utuiled ana stabbed by two bpauiard*. woo thropunned hiui oir me wear/ into the water, aod mors*tfler began throwing Urge pieces of coal at hint tonake sure of ole destruotion. Fortunately. the nightwing very dare, and Ysnuiendo being a good swimner.ne succeeded lu making nu escape. Ysauteujowas intending to go to New York per the Cobs tooln an expedition supposed to be fitting out forCuba irora that point.

1 improve the present opportunity to awrare yon:hut the Cubans at Key West are remarkably quietind wed behaved, and withal lodustrioua. Tuerwish not to create any diauiroance or oe impliostedu further trouble; but from what I have learued;hey leei that ir the present pioseeutlou still con.ttvuesinKey West "forbearance (with theui) wulwon eease to be a virtue."

PURITY OF ELECTIONS.The Ooreramrnt so the Reerwe.

The following bill, entitled "A bill to prevent and ;mntsb election fiands," was introduced in the donateif thsa ITmtdirt Mtolna nn tha QUih nf MAPc.h hv Mr.

?ons tng, who asked, and by unanimous consent obatned.leave to briny tn tbe bill. It was read twice, ieierred to toe Committee on the judiciary and or-Jered to be printed:.1Be It enacted by the Senate and Tlonso of Representativesof tbe United States oi America In Conyreniusaeuioled, That If at any election lor rcpie-

tentative or delegate ta the Couareas oi Uio UnitedHates, or for electors of President and Vice Presidentaf Hie United Mates, or ior inspectors, canvassers, 1

[io i clerks or other election oillcera who may ormall he or are chosen to act and serve, or whoselerui of cilice msy or shall include or cover the timeji unr sucii election kr representative or delegate '

m two Congress of trie United States. or for electorsif Prcsnieui and Vice President of the United States,toy person sha 1 knowingly personate and vote oriiteujpt to vote m tne name of any other person, iwhether living, dead or fictitious; or tote <noro than once at the same election for any ilaudidato for ihe same oiilce, or vote at a placewhere he may not be lawmily entitled to vote;jv vote without having a lawful right to voie; or do <my uniawtul act to secure a right or un opportunityto vote for himself or any other person; or byforce, tin eat. menace, Inliiiiidaliou. bribery, reward, jjr offer or promise thereof, or otherwise unlawfully jirereut any qualified voter of any Hiate of the,iii .^Yiioa nf a fiw»rif!L or f»f nnv Terrifnpv thufAof.Iroui freely exercising tiie right of suffrage, or bytoy such uic.t.-is uuiuoe auy voter to roiuse or exer- .

Cb e such right; or compel or induce, t,y any sitcit {neaus or otherwise, auy oillcer or uu election. ?lu any suc't state or Territory, 10 receive a vote; |rout a person not legally qualified or entitled to 1

/ote; or intericro In any manner w=tli any oillcer of»atd elections In tne aiscfiargo of his dut.es; or by (uiv o. sucti means or otherwise Induce auy otllcur)f au election or oillcer wbose Uu.y It la to ascor- 1

am, uunounco or declare the result of auy suchsiection, or give or muse any certificate, documentit evidence m relation thereto, to violate or refuse lto comply wita his duty or auy law regulating tne iUtriie; or, bciug an ollloer of au election, neglect orreluse to perform auy duty required of bun ay lav.>r violate any duty imposed by law, or do any actlnauiiiorlzed oy law relating to or affecting any

tucuelection, or tne result tbcreol; or aid, couu- .

set. procure or aiivtse auy such voter, person or)dicer to do auy act hereby mado a crime,>r to omit to no any duty tue omission of <

whlcU is hereby made a cruue, or attempt to ilo10. every such person shad bo deemed guilty ol airuuo. and shall lor sucu orluie be lloule to indictmentlu any conic ol lUe Untied .States of competent 1inrlsdtcUon, ami od conviction thereof shall be puu- 'shed by a fine not cxcecdtug $30J, or by lmprtsouneat»or a term uot exceeding three yours, or both,a me discretion of the court, and shall pay the costs>f prosec.mou. jSjsc. t. dud belt further enacted, That if auy re-

{lstutiou ol voters lot uu election for representative>r delcaate tu the Congress of the United States,ir for elcctora of President and Vice President>r tr.-a United .states, or for insnoetors. can-rassers, pou cteras or other election ofllcersviio tnay, or shall be. or aro chosen toice or serve, or whose lerui or odlce may or ahullriciude «r cover the timo of any such election lorepreseutatlve or delegate iu Uic Congress ot toe.'mtud Btutea, or lor electors ot President uml '

rice President or the United btates, any per-tou shall knowingly personate and register, 01- '

ttteuipt to Ngtousf, m tuc uauic ol any otherjcrsou. whether living, dead or IIcallous, or regis;er,or attempt to register, at a place whore be shallioc bo lawfully emitted to register; or register, oruteuipt to legiiter, hot having a luwlul right solojo, or do any uulawtul act to secure registration lorininacir or any other person; or 0v force. threat, niejacc,intimidation, bribery, reward or oaer 01 promise.huicoi, or otherwise unlUwiuuy preteui or hindertuy person having a lawful right to register iroutinly exercising such rigut; or compel, or induce. bymy such means or othet wtae, any oUlcer or regwt ra-nou to admit to registration uuy person hot legsnymailed thereto; or interfere in any manner withtuvodhe. of registraiioa in the discharge of ms lluitc.s; or by any such means, or otnorwiae, induceany oillccr ol registration to violate or refuse tojoinply with his duty, or any Jaw regulating thetauio; or, being an 0dicer ol registration, neglect orcruse to perioral auv duty rujuired or hlui oy law, jjr violate auy fluty imposed by law, or homi. net. niiniulonl<e law. reliuinir ui. nr

tifeetiug such rcgmtrallon; or uid, counsel, projureor aa.iso auy surU voier, poison orjihcer, to oo auy net hereby made u crime, or toomit any liei, I lie nuiis-iion of Which is hereey madeI crime, every such person shall be deemed guilty)1 it crime, a ;<1 htm.i bo liable to luaic'uiciit au 1puiiistiiucut therefor, as provided in lUo Jir.,t section»i tins act, for persona guilty ot uu.' of the crimesitiere.u specified.Bko. 3. Aiia be tt further enacted, That if any pcriOiishall by force, threat, menace, liiiuuiitatioa, or

jtuertvise, unlawfully prevent auv citizen or c.nzeusiroin assembling in public meeting to troely discuss,>r hoar discussed, the claims or merits of auy camlllainfor me ouice of Prcaidoiit or Vice President orhector Cliereoi. cr i.epie-ioututive or delegate iu coufress,o" of any oillour of tno goveinmeal of tnelln.ted State, or the laws or measures of Congress,ir any measure exist,ng, penning, or proposcu, electingtuc government ot rite United states, or uuylupariiiieut or odl tr thereof; or if any person s.mlluy auv much means breaa up, disperse or uiolcsi anymen asscmotage. or molest any citizen in or of auctiassemblage. every person so ottendiug slum beileeuied guilty ot a crime, and stiali be liable to indictmentin,,I punishment therefor, as provided inttie Titsi section ot tuts art for persons guilty ot auyoi toe ct lined tiicreln .-perilled.

» ifOVBL LAUilir.

A Han Reamed from Drowning ot tic ,lcr*City 1'cn y Iliiujn a 8uit tor ^13,0(10

lhwagcsiOn the evening of the 3d of January la-t, about

two minutes post rcvi u o'clock, wiion the lerr.v boathail moved away from the bridge at tfio CoriiaudtBiieet terry, a man named Lyons, residing in

Washington street, Now York, deliberate! v walkedoverboard from the brlugo ifml would havebeen drowned had not the bridge-tender, Thomasi'oblu, and another or the employes rescuedMm. tie was very thankful to the ir.ca for saving1119 life, but when he returned home and ruminatedon the mailer for a row weeks a bright thoughtstruck bun. Ho caught cold from the bath, as wa9

<t«ute natural, considering the severe weather justthen, and was confined to the house for some weeks,us uo alleges. Jto then employed a lawyer, who institutedproceedings against the ferry company torflii,000 damages. In hn affidavit ho makes tho extraordinarysiateinc it tun* there were no lights onthe bridge ami mat one ot the employes pushed luniin. The case is under investigation ny me lorrycompany, and the evidence tuus fur reflects greatcredit on Tooin, the bridge tender, wno has been instrumentalin saving six Uvea within as manymonths at the ferry, and in some ca ea he receivesonly armse tor iih reward. m no nibiuucu uiu merescued party offer lUua even one dollar.Tne lesson to he derived from the preRcnt ease,

pliould a jury award damages, la tliat it is mac.'ibetter lor ilio ferry company tiiat a man would beaiiowed to drown, putting aside the question of huinanityor tne priceless gilt of human lite. Therewould, in sue'u n case, be no suit brought, and. asuead men tell no tales, the cinuloyOs would not hoaccused of throwing a man In lor mere diversion.Tins Is certainty a carious sample of gratitude. Itis analagoiis to the case of tne man mentioned tu"Uurran's Recollections" who liad his eve hookedout bv a man who was in tne act oi saving htm fromdrowning, but who was rewarded with a prosecutionfor the loss of tao eye.

Trt- BS3G.UYN LAWYER'S* 11 ST. LG'JI?.[From tho St. Louis Tlmos, March 23.]

Ti<s<r. i;ni"hi. votLoivtav travelled n. ),>ncr rlistnnonin iHe palii ot progless by issuing a license as ainactlilug la.vycr or tnc ur. Louis bar to Alius L.Hsrltalo, a student or the St. Loubi Law School.Tins, we are protiy reliably Informed, is the firstinstance of this hind that li.u occurred lu this country.wntch is undoubtedly tbo most progressive ofall civIIIzcd nations lu the treatment of the womanquestion. Tito Missouri feoiule suffragists shouldcertainly tato cncuuraiomcnt in the success of theircoiaborer.Miss haritaio Is a native of r.rooxiyn, X. T..n»

wim Miss hates-and is a woman or more than ordinaryability. Two years a,fo, after having rendBiackstone and other elementary law books, suemade application lor admission as a stndeut at Columbiacollege. New York, where she was peremptorilyretuaed. Nothing daunted, however, she catnoout West and settled in St. Louis, w here she was admittedwitnouidifficulty to tho Hi. Louis Law Hchoul.For eighteen montus she had oeen atsiuuously devotingher energies to toe study oi the science, andher ie:low students all agree in declaring her by farthe brightest member or ilia class. Tnat there la noquestion of her ability wiut shown yesterday at theexamination, where she promptly and correctly answeredevery question propounded to her. JudgeKnight, although overdowiug with gallantry, gavethe lady no quarter, l lie most abstruse and eruditequestions were propounded to the appiicaut, but notonce did the wise Judge catch the lair student tripping.Miss Uarkalo Is about twenty-two years of age, ofbuxom fltruia, aunaoio and rostii> mieiligeui uco

Mid a large and exprcaaive eye. (ruin la a injure ofaiteecli.aue lias two.) ;>hc la now a matuuer of ibeht. Louie bur, ami coneideraliie interest la mauiieatedto n itiic .a uer maidou ettai t

APRIL 2, JL870.-TRIPLETHE PUBLIC DEBT.

The April Statement Compared with That of 1

Last Month and with the AprilStatement of 1869.

The forlowtng statement or the public debt on thelit nf inrll ham mat hwn liaaM. W« comnare the

figures witb those given in the corresponding monthlast jeer:.

Df.1T BEARING INTEREST IN COIN.April 1, 1869. April 1, 1870.

Five per cent bonas $221,989,300 92Ji.os9.30i)BlX per Cent Ootids 1,886.277,350 1,880,352,800Total bear'g coin int.. $2,107,876,050 $2,107,942,100

DKRT BEARING CLRRKNCY 1 SIBBEST.Throe per cent cert's... $5i.oo5,ooo 945,565 000Navjr Pension Fuud 14,000,000 14,000.000

Total bear'g cur'y int. $68,005,000 $50,566,000Matured debt not paid.. 6,003,403 3,014,330

DEBT HEARING NO INTEREST. 1trotted stated notes.... $.,50,0>5.154 9353.100,021Fractional currency 3fl,fl75.iri« 30,508.07#Uuia cerutlcates 21,072,600 88,848,600

Total bear'g no Int... $114,413,483 $484,520,200KBCU'ITUI.ATION.

Debt bearing coin mt...$2,107,870,050 92,107,012,100Debt beating cur'jr int... 08.00s,000 80,400.000Debt bearing no Ml 414,413.485 434,528,200Matured debt not puld.. c,003,433 3,014,:'.30

Total $2,500,898,538 92,800,947,037BoUdslU I'ttUllo Hit 00,852,520 64,457,320

Grand total 92,003 700,808 92,070,404,95 7AMOUNT IN TREASURY.

Cola $104,203,305 $105,413,740Jnrrency 0,802,028 7,472,7.9ilushiij lund, coin lut.bunas una accrued interestthereou . 30.047.C42

Jtiifcr purchased bunds*. . 73,161.605Total in Treasury $111,000,983 9218,115.782

Debt less cash tu Tress.. 2,542,744.805 2,452,289,175Jxroito ot the national uebt b neeApril 1,1809 990,455,020

VARIATIONS FROM LAST YEAR.Increase. Decrease.

lebt bearing coin Interest.. $65,450 .

Jebt bearing currency mt.. . fo,010,000lent bearing no Interest...20,112,715 .

oamrcii, not paid . 2,039, ut 1

The following table compares the April Htatemeut *

>f the public debt Willi tiij previous otic made on <

be 1st of March, 1S70;. »DEBT BEARISH COIN INTKHR9T. '

j/n/v h i, ihio. April i, idve per cerr bonds $221,589,5 kj $221,.'»«9.000 .

six per eeut bonds i,83o,55o,303 l,63«,352.soo j

Tolal bearing coin Inf.$2,107,937,860 $2,107,912,lot) >

DEBT BEAliINU CURRENCY INTEREST. .

rhree per ct. certificates. $45,565,000 $45,665,000Suvy pension fund 14,000.000 I4,uoo,ooo jTotal bearing enr'y In. $50,681,000 $59,665,uoo

Idlliured Uot pllld 3,97.J,!40 3,014,530DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. J

rnltofl States UOtes..,.. $358,109,673 $356.100,021Fiacuonal currency.... 39,9>o,o:!9 a«,r-6S,o7i)Liold certificates. 44,362,840 ss,b43.6oO

....

Total beating no Int.. $440,442,851 $454,530,200RERATITC I. ATION.

Debt bearing coin int...{2,107,937.«50 $2,107,042,100new. bearing cur'cy int. 69,658,000 69,605,000Debt bearing 110 interest 440,442 851 481,528,200Matured debt uot paid.. 3,972,348 3,914,388

Total $2,811,010,847 $2,005,947,637Bonds 10 Faciflo Kit. Co. 04,457,320 04,467,820

Grand Totid *.2,670,808,173 $2,010,404,957AMOUNT IN TREASURY.

Com $102,400,730 $105,413,745Currency 10,280,285 7.472,729iinKmg Fund 27.SV8.529 30,047.042IKUer pure-bused bonds. 72,782,703 75,181,085TotnltnTreasury $213,310,318 $218,116,782

Doot le^s cash inTrehsy $2,403,02;,W5 $2,462,289,176'Decrease of the national idebt siaoo Mar. l, 18.u $10,733,880

VAIUATIOKS 1110U LAST MOSTU.Increase. Decrease.

Debt bean nit coin Interest... $4,4>0Debt bearing currency int .. 8,059,340Debt bearing no interest . $5,016,657naturaldeot not pai<l . oi.oo;

In this statcnieut no mention Is mads or accruedinterest, and the bonds issued to tho Pacific RailroadCompany are calculated as part of the public debt.According to tne report of Secretary Boutwell, wboadds nocrucu Interest and ignores tbo bonds issuedto that road, the total debt exhibits a decrease duringthe past month amounting to $5,786,319.The debt of tho United States, less cash in the

rrcasury, <v»a as annexed at the undermentioneddates:.March 4,1801. 109,180,956 Ang. 1, 1868. $2,623,534,410July 1. 1591.. H8.498.670 Sept. 1,1813..2,535,014,313July 1,1882.. 602,921,404 Oct. 1. 1888.. 2,634.843,713July 1,1863. .1,093,404,000 Nov. 1,1868..2 627,120,632July 1.1864..1.721,847,ir,4 Dec. 1, 1863..2.539.031.844July 31, 1865..2.757,253,275 Jan. 1, 1809. .2.640,707.2JI-,ept. 1,1883. .2,757,039,671 >Cb. 1, 1889. .2,666,205,658Jan. 1, I860. .2.7111,861.6 16 March I. 1869.2.645 836,904Aug. 1, I860. .2,633,029.278 April 1,1*63..2,642,711,896Jan. 1, 1867..2.541 325,172 May 1, 1869..2,629,158.205April 1,1887..2,623,428,073 Jntia 1, 1819. .2.521.625,6 V2July 1, 1667..2.611.800,013 July 1, 1S89.. 2.603,160,773Oct. 1, 1807. .2 496,277,443 Aug. 1,1609. .2,608,708,633NOV. 1,1887..2,401,604,460 Sept. 1, 1869. .2 493,008.032Jan. 1, 1863. .2,608.125,6 >0 Oct. 1, I860. .2,485,693 695lob. 1. 1888..2.6-27,815,373 N'OV. 1, 1860. .2.460,511,773March 1.1863.2 510,820.623 Dec. 1, 1800. .2.473.237,102April i.ibjs..2,oiw.au cost gan. 1, lino..2,402.«i»,781Mav 1, 1863..2,500.528,627 Feb. 1, 1S70. .2,475,714.275June 1, 1808. .2,510,245,886 March 1,1870.2,48:1.027,855Jul* I, 1808..2,601,915,11)2 April 1, 1870.2,452,280,176

lLOU'i)¥l>n IS BSOORilf.

Attack by Utifllitiin on I ho Police.ine police of the Forty-third precinct were

roughly hnndlcd again last night by the SouthBrooklyn rowdies. It appears that a man namedPatrick Kennedy, who was intoxicated, was nctlugIn a disorderly manner in Court street, near Hamiltonavenue, when o/tlccr McKeuna attempted total;o him Into custody. O/ilccr Donahue, whohappened to bo In the neighborhood at thettinp, assisted McKenua in making tho arrestHetoro they could get away with their prsonnr anumber of rowdies made a combined assault ou-tlieofficers, using rucks, atones, ltricss nud othermiasllos. nrttcer McKemia received a severe blowon me back with a stone, while officer Donahuehad his ahoulrtor ncar.y dislocatedwiih a brick. Olllcer Steadman, of meForty-third precinct, and ofllcor Utter, of theForty-eiRhth, hoarlujt of tlie airrar, went to ihc assistanceof their febow oiRcers, and the contest appearedfor n time to be pretty even. Finally ti.orowdms left the field and the prisoner Kennedy Intne possession of the police. Nearly all the officersbad their uniforms ntorc or lews torn, and olllcerDonahue lost his shield. Kennedy was taken to tueelation house and locked up to answer.

HCY/ THE ERIE RAILROAD STOCK IS HcLD.Aliunv, JIarch 30, ib;o.

To tor Editoh op the IIekald:.In reply to the nrtic'.o in your issue of this morning,

permit mo to Inform jou that I own r>,0M shares ofLrle stock, and am authorized by holders m Kng-land, wko are intended to the extent of $2,0(>0,0^0,to protest against the "protection" scheme ofRaphael A Co. Tho only tiling winch Is "too thm"about this 1* the insinuation tuat tho "Erie wizards"had »onicthmg to uo with my appointment »h representativeof tnis stock. From what 1 know ol tUagentlemen rcicried to 1 am convinced tucy aromuch too acute to report to any such contemptiblerune as that hinted at la your article. The interestI rcpn sent is ns distinct front that of the Una managersa i it is from that ol Air. Ura l's clients.

uito. cKoioa.

5IIEMTIFIC ITEMtA new safety buoy has been tried at Toulon.

Franco. It is of the ordmary iife-buoy form nntlcontains a composition of caleluin, which ignites asit is thrown into the sea. and burns the more bright!ythe morn it is tossed bv the wavc$. Yet ilio llamawill nut incommode the person clinging to tnebuoy.Dr. Jnles Delbet has been named Knight of tho

I,egion or nunorof France, In lecompcuse for hi*interesting sclontiUc researches durtug a uiksioainto Abu Mmor.Tho new therapeutic agent, chloral, which we

own to the united efforts or Dr. Deuiarquay and Dr.Liebrcicb, appears to be an excellent remedy lorthat distressing affection, whooping-cough.The Agricultural Society of Franco lias announced

a prtzo of 3,000 francs, la 1872, to the proposer or themost efficacious rneacs of destroying the whiteworm and cockchafers.Professor Tyndarfl has succeeded in lsreltlng a diamondIn oxygen by the concentrated rays of tne

electric light. He has no doubt of bis anility toIgnite it by the purely mvisible rays froui the samesource.In order to encourage the observation of comets

the Imperial Academy of Vienna offers etght so nmedals ror the discovery of as many comet, duringtue next tnree years.M. Pruleux, tn a paper "On tho Effects of Frost

upon Plants," ftas shown that if the thaw is oou-UU^iUU g&uuuunj inu nui »i»u;o

11. Leoormnnd has shown, from ft study or thescu.pUires. mat tn Egypt, during the time of theshepherd Kings, three disiuicts^ucies o' gaxftdt werehoiuesucftioa.

SHEET.THE COMING WOMAN.

Victoria 0. Woodhull, the Balmoral Broker,to Baoe for the White Houeo.What Shefirm ..4 vrv.i av. «ir..u rr«.nw cuiu nuitt auo nVII V uu.XJJDI

Views on Home and Foreign PolicyNewIdeas on Government

44 Duoad Street, Kkw Vokk,\Alurch till, 1870. f

To titb Emton OK tub Hetum>:.The disorganized coudltlon of parties in tlie TTnlted

States at the present time affords a favorable opportunityfor a review or the political Bltuatioa and forcomment on tbe issues which arc lllceiy to oome upfor settlement in the Presidential election In Ihtj.An I happen to be the most prominent representativeof the only unrepresented class In the republic,and perhaps the most practical exponent of theprinciples or equality, I request ttie favor of bclugpermitted to aUure.-w the public through the mediumof ibe IIniur.D. While others of my sex devotedtheuieeives to a crusade against the lows thatshackle the women of the conntry, 1 asserted myIndividual Independence; while others prayed forthe good time coming, 1 worked for It; while othersargued the equality .or woman wlth'man, I proved[toy successfully engaging in business: while otherswuiiht to show that there was no valid reason whywoman should be treated socially and politically usa being inferior to man, I boldly enierod the arenaof politics ana business uud exercised tUo rights Ialready possessed. I therefore claim the rigut to

ipeak for the unenfranchised women of the country,mi bc'lcvingas 1 do that there will beKOliK FKliAi.fi OFFICi'IXOK' >i:itS Til AN' FEXAI.fi

VOTERSor some tlmo to come, and that the prejudices thatat ill extst in the popular mliut against women In publiclife will soon disappear, 1 now announce uiyucltis a rurulKl.itH for the Presidency. latu ciuito welliwaro that la assuming juration I shall evokeuore lhllculo than enthusiasm at the outset. Hutins is an epoch of sudden changes ami startltogmrprlses, W liat may appear absurd to-day willissume a serious aspect to morrow. I am contento watt until my claim for recognition as a caudtlaioshall receive (lie ealin consIJerauon of the pressind the public. 'J he blacks were catt'e la istto; a

icgro now s is In JelT Itavis' seat in the UnitedStates Senate. Tlio sentiment of tho country was,iven In lsea, spainst niyro s"iTrttze;now me negro'siglit to vot» is acknow.edged by a majority ot toos.atcs, and will soon be recognized by toe eonstUutlouof the United Mates, let those, therefore, whoridiculed me negro's claim to exercise the rlirht to"lue, liberty an I the pursuit ot happiness," andlived to see hiui vote and hold high public offices,ridicule the aspirations of fnc women or the countryliter equality with tne blacks as much as tueyplease, lacy cannot roll back the rising lido of reform.That great governmental changes were to follow

the enfranchisement 01 the nogro l have lung loreieeu.W hile the curao of slavery covered me laudprogress was enctuiluod, hut wcieu it was sweptaway m the torrent of war ttio voleo of justice washeard, aud it became evident that tticbist weak harrieragaiust complete political uitd social equu.itymust Boon Rivm way. AH that has been eaut au-Jwritten hitherto til support of

EQUALITY FOli WO-'RVhas had its proi<cr eiteot on the public mind, just asthe antl-stavery speeches before secession weieeiTeclve; but a candidate and a pulley are requiredto prove It. Lincoln's election snowed the »treiig hor the leelmg against the peculiar institution; tiiycandidacy foriue Presidency will. I coniidontiy expoet, develop the fact that tnc principle.* oi equalrights for ail have taken deep root. J'ne advocatesof political equality lor wo.nan have, beside* arespect able kuuwn strength. a groat undercurrentof unexpressed power, which u only awaiting a litopporitinily to snow Itself, ity iho general auddecided test I propose wo shall he able to understandtho woman question aright, or at least aluliha\e done much toward presenting

THE ISSUE INVOLVEDin proper shape. 1 cialin to possess the strengthauu courage in he the subject of that test atul hnxtforward conildently to a triumphant i*suo of tuecanvass.The present position of political ptirlie* is anoma-

IUUi7. A lieJ iiiQ UWk UIOJ'IIVM M,f WliJ ; .....,.r.vw

oi i>oltu> or economy. PuliiiuU yreaciiers paw tuuair; ihi.ro is no live issue up 'or discussion. Tiie on vseemingly dmlucuve feature upon wutcu nconipietaand weil defined diversion exists is on tiie deanissue of uejfi o equality, and tills Is to me p >11 ilealleaders

A HARP OP A THOUSAND STRING*.3 i\o mtuor questions of llie liour«do not ipfert partieius sutii, and no wo.l deJued division of sentimentexista. A'uivat nanou.it question .s wuued

to prevent a descent into pure sectionalism. Hiesiuipie issue wnetlier women anould no. nave politics!equauty vr.m me negro is uie only one to »etried, ami none more important is likely to arise ijtsforotlm Presidential etccnou. l.ut uo.ide tu t questionof equality olliers oi Ricat magnitude a.e neCMMurtiyincluded. The platform iiiat is to succeedin (lie com ma elect ton innsc cuuacuts tiie peneralprinciples of

KNUUnTRNSD JrallCE ANI> KCONOHV.A complete reform la our system oi prison d'e.tlpllua.Iiaviau specially in view me weliare 01 tlie

families oi criuiiiiais, wliose inn >r slioual not lie1 'St to lueiii; me rearipii ieinsjii of vac system amicontrol ot internal Improvements; tno adoption 016ome better means lor carina lor the lieiplo«s andindigent; the cstabiiBliioeut of Mtrictly mutant andreciproeai relations witii all foreifr.i Powers who willuntie to l<ettor Hie condition of the productive class,ami li'.o adoption oi anon principle! an siiuli reojauiiettiU class as

TUB TKBJt WEAI.T3 OP THE CoCNl KYand plve it a mat position beside capital, tius Introducingu praotii al plan lor universal government.tiieee important changes can oni> be expected lofollow a coiapiote departure from Uie beamo track*01 political parties and their inartilnery; and Has, iltciiovc, mj canvass of li7r will eiVee-t.

l'titti the people are atcit ot tue present ailmtaist.rationis u proposition, i inuik, n.ai <:oiw not icouiret.« Kn flrarntifl* imr Q4 1 livt.VA n.iW ll cl**Cl«!0 iRt.tiirt attain.-1 iu conttnuauce furanoiuer term olfour years, and oifemi myself « . a catidnlaie101* the Presidential succession, » tew preliminaryobservations on the general management of

OtTit HOMK AM) I-OK tilUN POLICYwill not l>c out oi place. Tue aUinniisiiAllon ofUeaerai brunt, men, has nccu n failure from tue beginuni);;wens, vacillating and d.Uoient in Moralcoinage, U commands neither me respect nor admirationof lorefrfu lowers nor receiver uie uetivo supportof Us parly. Tlie general tnainigejiieiibof ourloielgu and domealic affairs does not seem fo iuq toha.o risen to tne dignity of a policy, tliongn It ocallowed to nave been consistent in lis various parts.It has bean destitute of tutu decision and lirmi.esstiutt characterize tno victoiious aduicr wlioisnowPresident. a decided l!u..au pol.cy woaui not omyhave settled at once lite inevitable destiny of ..uiitisland, ouc wouM also nave glvmi republican eeniime.itin upatu an impetus, etrea itheaod ilia SouthAmerican repuhlica and executed a heMtay Ii1aeuccm Mexico ami Cannon. Put lnatcad of tinswo Uavo to tumult to the consequences of

A POLICY Oi' COWAllMCB.American citizens abroad are tuurdeiod by .".puitRht'muir'j.ll^. *>111 I VI.IIMII'I HI lll-llltV I, Hill ii. s 1111graced.Tins is unworthy ol llio ^mcricaa nation,mid itiepoop.e will hold (front accountable. A -ilautwho never siwii'1 his Hiroogth is limner leafednor respected. On me important ipiesUoaa or m.xanon,me tariff nun mo puoilc debt, tne administrationaceum to Have no seined policy. i'a.vnnun,w hether lor the support of mo govenimeot or toopajincut ol the debt, saoui'l mali cases be generaland never special. -No special interest, nor severalspecial interests, should ue Hugled out to nils;am hoextra proportion or tuxartou. And in regaid to ibotantr tlie sdiue principle should be eniorcod. Wuetnerme public debt be a blessing or a curse, itexists. Created to save me tepublic, it must bepaid strictly according to both me spirit and Hie

Af tlm l.nrf I'nt Miarfl 13 t»/\ lnlinPilhllP CriPlU.

nty for payilia it off. By a proper policy its paymentmight lie nu le to extoii'l through a hundredyean, for even beyond unit time will tue beneSts itacreation pro lueed be icit and appreciated. la oldercountries toe pressure ol national debt becomes abouuer <-barge and n mora mighty btiivleu every succeedingyear, out with us tho very reverse is the case,The development or our magniaccnt resources a-tilreader tho gradual payment ot our HiUei/ieduaMeasy of accomplishment.

Abb OTItEll QrK3IIOS3.whether or a foreign or uomedic nature, stand HI usfrated by the Cuban policy of toe administration. Aiioul, flint ana, withui, consistent national policy. iinot at ull iiuios strictly within the conservativehunts or internaiioual law will always command in<respect aud support or tue people.with the view <>t taitlng the people into my confl

dence I have ifrrttieii several papers on governmenial questions of importance arid will suborntlipin in due iliue. For the present the foregoinimust aufllre. I anticipate criucisin; but howcveiunfavorable His coinuiont this letter may evoketrust that iny sincerity will not be called lu questionI nave ueuocrateiy auu ui hit uvtii accuru piscsclnvSctc bofore tlic people ad a candidate 'or wo t'reaidencv of we United staton, anil uaving tbe mean*courage, crier®y nna streugW necessary toe tue rac<intend to coutest it to We close.

V1CTOHU C. WOODHUI.L.

»womi 13 com. ."

Lectm by Lllllua 8. Etlecrton-Tbe HoratiBasbnell Side of tho Woman's QucstlonRadoneseof a Prominent Revolutionist.To a numerous, UueUment, and deeply tntereatei

audience Miss I All inn S. Kdo-erton delivered a lectorlast niiilfi, in ibe hall of the Cooper Jnstltuto, 01

"Woman is Coming." If Miss Etfgci ton may be re

garded aa the "Coming Woman,*' or the promtsof what the "Coming Woman" may l>e ex

petted to be, then the intellectual and physicsfuture condition of woman will be vary man tone

todeed. Mm rngtmn n not a "woman*! rt*h"\a'woman. Her lecture wan replete wuu beaitfijr, ear.ne»t, common eenee, satirical telle about tbeinnatapower posscaaed t>r women lor the reform of all tlMtoctal and domestic anoyances ano ho loudly com*

plttine ot. au I which Mtsa Ko^oriou la of au opinioniiie baiiot box in the haunt ot woman wonlu notauuliulate. me lecturer Uuca uoi advocate uulveical auinape either to mau or woman, obotbiuks a iitneea to vou» more important(itu.ii thp 11 nivprani it.v nf vauiht g4i. 1" « "«T» »l»l III* »

curse of democratic countries was uie eienoatingmilling *4 pjity. Bo suoug was tins i/arty feelingthat it hud iiccn t-ald by a Now fork man that iTTammany nominated the devil Hansen the detno- vcrats would vole for aim. Tue areua or poiiuoe wa»uuiiaittd for woman, because her nervous organizationgave her affections au uu luo away over her in. Jteuect, aud she would necessarily be Isr loo parti*sau 10 oe impartial.

, on the waut of woman's fldeuty to her sisterhoodMiss fcdgaiiou was withenn<*iy severe, and in a.passage m wnicn sbe was greaiy appiaaded shesulu "the misfortunes and iuju«tiee of wouauwould not be mo enormous or ao iiard to bear didtnev find more Mends in their own sex." A denunciationot the persecution by wuinea of giris whohailbeen Liutrnwi.l anil lae ciimliiuma ol all iiffsunaou me part of trio betrayer was graphically givenana was well received. yThe moral ana duracutis power of women to TP*

dress the grievances of wuicn she computus and "

tiio Hta ciucut or the prool iu.it lucre was uo realautagoniain between the sexes to require special "

legulanou, uud a statement 01 the power thatwritten possessed by her otvu moral lurce a* exetvcited ut uoiuc, and wtuch olio u i < mi itujrty to exercisein rhe two great depai'iuuuU for toe mould*lug of puone opuuou, tuc j« ex. ani the puiplt, re* iceived t.ic demonstrative appiovui ot the audience.

In healthy, high toned, nob.e ihouget of tins kindlliitt lecture ahuunded, una it was delivered withcouHiueraote grace end heartfelt fo. vor. luat it waetoo practical, too rational and too near the reality o<Hie lor many of those who were pro-out, who wereuinihtf lights of the "aoiosia" and the li roiutioH,was mure man could be expected; out that wbicawas expected or women wa r set Uie.meiv a up ugmodels for other wonn-u suoul 1 be iliat theyauould beiiuve themselves with propriety when be>lore ibe pubiie. Mrs. Hu lock w.io is a great' revm '

lutiomst." rose from licr seat he;ore the leo ure wasmore man two-thirds through, a id audibly said, "1won't may any longer to uuai that loo.."

BXLLES OF im: BILLOT*

(ioiuir for the Kternor Sox.Monthly BI««tlo|of the Petticoat Sullrugist..Another sums .

In the Meld, mid Bloro YVniltoil.The usual monthly meeticg of mo Woman suffrage

Association took place yesterday anernoou at thrcgo'clock, I>r. Ualleck, a hou ( e.i ut speclmeu of mas* Iculmity, presiding. About seventy-live ladles weri Ipresent, four of whom were comoly to look upon. r IjTresolution sympathizing with one ur. Susan j |

smith, or me liuaner c ty," wao. it appears, refusedirom principle to pay me >oio or aay oiner tax ito mo government while -he was remsed the pnvl>lego or Voting. was passed. Too ro. o.ution a.so in*c'uded say other woman who wouu go aad do likewise.iA committee, consisting or Mus Norrts, Mrs, Hal- %

leek, Airs, i'oaipklns, Airs, l'ooio and Mrs. Tucker,was appointed to act as delegates to tae May Cud-

veuilouui woman's budrage uercieos to be bold ia ftau city.

tor first aourrs4was made by Mrs. Matty A. uxv.s, of Jersey, wlie Ispoke at length on the imuieuso cuvautagos to lhacouutry at large should her sex oe permitted to take Iholdot the tiuy symbol ol cnueusu.p aud drop It its Ithe oallot box. Sue cowbaed iue oujecuoas madeto tbc 03itC3 of the ballot on .110 score that the polls Jhuci court loom were u.ide ironie mcaituos tor anyrespectable woman, and Hiie drew a i.mviuic pictureof the positron in wmcb tue ta lea oues U uersex, Ilester Vaughn, unuug others, louud tueiaselveswith uoue but bur id mea ou tue jury.When onco woman was ea raacuised troin tueconvenuouailtics or society sod aad itooi above ~

piu money the republic cou.d oe .-.ale. As she baabeen the acknowledged ga.raun of bume wuy [saould sue not be also of toe State t Under her in- *rQueues tue polls might be Uaasterred from the bar-room to tue cuarcu. *

.

Tue UiiiiHUAN wanted to know* in an excited ^mauuer, what aid rnau know uOout woman except ^aa m fiiCdli^A hiiiMl )> Mp i'«u ( U iiiiliWiriliiii AXtdir.tiroiu m morning paper, wutcii gave a giowtug tie* }ncripilnn ul u nolle o( the natiou

Mrs. bi.AKK, who was gotten up in the extreme otla luou. with a jaunt# lui.o hut nestling among tierfavett cutis, suggested teat there snoutd oe "city ,

mothers" as we.l us "on/ tamers ' uu ter the now r*Charter.Mrs. LEc .trrr, a brunette, with a profusion of

long ringlets nnd a sort 01 admiral's uniform, nextaiUrer.-ioit me mooting on tuu momentous question

01 women smriuge. f.»'iiij meeting iuca ad ouinol.

THE HOLY LANQ.4

1'iitu't of the Faiuino iu Jerusalem"* v 'JA letter lifts beou received in boadon fro!.1^ /$

Anglican Bishop of Jerusalem, winch corrobC .e»too statement made on litis puintul subject by 81^Moses jiontctiore. Tlte Bishop In ms loiter ears:.A sinaii donkey's load of water costs # J, to thq

* 15

poor Jews, n iiose family Income is is. id. per wcek.*^ tMany Moments ana nominal Christians are in ttio*. jsattie position. What Is most dread ul to conteip* 1plute is ihe laot that the spring's near Jer.ua ein ar«drying up. But there is another more terrtbia

ca'auntystlil. Tim locusts are spread over iha .»,mountains of JncUti and .--inu la, in the valley of,Jordan, and m tne plum of sJnarou an I Galilee. bav«lug come to lay t/ielr eggs, wttieit will oe hutooeit . 1belore tne harvest; and as t'uy Araos say that eucti 1couple la 's 2)9 eggs, countlcis mtd.o is will appear Icut,tig every green thmj. po-scmlng the g'rcaaa, and Ituus preventing grass growing ior the cattle.

Ilf.iL i-Siilir, lil IbFliilSt

|New York City.Hrooms rt, *"s« tvt aid PIS 49x50, house an 1 lot $11,000 .

Jackson H, KosVJ, 7-1 nun 70 ....13,003h'.UioW ut, x », lit! ft * of llirln*t<ui at, lo.4\8/.M 14,950Moure a; hi Water St., 11 o oorner, IS.ItAl. ................ 3.',0OSinful* tt, Mo 15, 05x100.1, bosun aujliot..., 0,1X10IH.U IX, > C»X ft !' A"'.. 11', UV :' liliu »Ui ...« ». <S-II' -V ,,

notl> it, 11 /. 131.10 ft w of b'.h uv. 2i>l58.4 8.03J ,#43d »t, No *51 West), 26x100.4 No m. [42d 8 8.117 ft tv of viadixon av. Stx.PO. >, houmi nod loMfi.nml I i4rtth at, II 8| 12-j ft e or Ut av. 27.(1x75. 17,500 1»447th it, lift ft e of 10th av, 20x1td.6 1J.0IWJV40tii it, n s, 2C-i e of fith av, 10.8x100.5 22,600fitst it, n 8. ft w of S'.U av. 0 *1 U.9'Vxtoo.b .l.oOO IMid it, I 8. 406 It w of 6tti av, 22x10 .5 38,000 ,

Mill at, u 8, 20 "> it o .1 <th av. 20xt'.v! 5 IIU.OOO I7'it il *ti 4-.U av, n * cor, 40xi02 2 1 e« n I71»; it, u it'.1 0 of 4111 av.40x11.2 2 J J I115lli at, 0 0, (1 o of 1 at nv, t'oxlut'.lti won 1 4Madieon a*, <v 0, and 661U it. 11 0. t- I'etxUi'. . ' H'"1!® \j ! av au 6.''! :t stvco.iiO:. U-'.f-xVl1 32,1:09 j I2! av. w v, 4 ft 1 to iof 10th bt, » 5.1x11/0,2.,. SuntShi ftV, I It'flil I-', 46 .107x1(1/ I4lli »v, vv a, 67.;. it, » * corner, ilki.7-,t:iid...-rv2 So,.00

i.TtABt..< ajtcoai.Bf).nremwteh 0t. No 182. it-ifc, 5 jrraix,jut year.. 609Id pv, No l.1 I, it.'ro and basement, S',j yearn, per year 600 ^S I nr. No l,4"4, ivore and flrrt lloor, 5 vnan, "jusr year.. I,0o0 Iliitti av, No '» 10 yean, por ymr1,203 I8lu a -, Mo coml hw, yean. per year 1,(49 IKivinatoii ia, Si1 hi, 8 yean, per 1 ear bxt

Kiu«M f outtiy.URinHil.VM. ' H

rbaunrcy 8t, n a, 255 ft *v of Lew * av, 40x103, 2 h and 1.10,008Conie.vea 0t, * 0, 6u0 It a of Eversrcati av, 26x2 0. 8,1)00Court it, n 0, 'v.: it 0 of Llvlu. Moo at, 'Cx'JS.O 20.itVIlia'licy ct, n «, lOtl ft e of Tn npkini av Cycled 8.1091 «l.oiirn rr at, e 0. -<0 l'l u of l'uwml ft. 0x77 8,»">»> x

Marion it « Sdi'to of lie' ( a/, £'M«'U 'i^fiOa'x.and«t, e *, 3J"> ft s of M"sci oi« it, _6x nd......... 118yn'i!-r 1' 11 0,216 ft w of >'rai>.:IIts av, 20x100, May,Iftrt'i 8,008

game property .. ....v:.".',;,":. * ,MH52 |SobolB* at, n a. 1100 ft a of Union «r, 25x1011 15,3.6,Siata *!. an, I'll fi a of Power* »t. - xHI, li and1 8,5 0'Wnhvorth »i, \v k, 1ml tt w of Dokal'o «», 2SU1C1 8,000t£a.rr<n at, * a, 3'5 ft« of Schanret t!y *v, It \Vx.65.7... 4,&UWarren at, a *, 887.(i ft e of Schunaet.nly av, 112.6x255.7.. 4,608Wood (no at, n \/ «, 150 ft n a of Btuiiivric* nv, 15x100.. 8 0North 2d at, a v 125 ft u of I.eonai'dit, 24xldu, h aud I. 6,259a «t, », 110-ft w of 7th av, 82>.:H 26.000North 4th bi, n a. 125 w of 4th r.t, 2<Hluil, h and I tSmith Plli und Sub »i». a w corner. 4 x7j 8,,,Q9 fSoitth 7th at, n b, 805.2 ft a of 3d ri, :Mxl0 to South6th at, xUl.H ...19,700

luth at, n a, .97.1H ft e of 7th av, 1 in*'» block, b and a.. 1,590-LlKth at, a tv a, 170 ft a < of 7th nv, »0x74, h and 1 1,1254('th at, e a, it'll ft a of fid nr, 25x100.2 700^BClasaon ar, e a, 237.8 ft n of Hyrt." ar. 50x.'l S.PSflf^BFranklin nv, it a, 80 ft a of Lafayette ar, '_'u.v74 <,<XiOlUrrlaoB nv. n a, luo ft o of Liocuxt at, ItOxluO 609 ^BSiarcy * tv a, f > ft n of Hooper »t, 44xltHI 8,tiO0ft^BMartin av, n a,'1 It. w ot Yhroop nv. 20x10 t 7,2.iieSchenectady av uni Sackc.tl at, it e corner, 255.7x300.1* ^B

2 50.10x37(1Wyokofl' t>v, e a, Ifl ft n of Fulton av. 25x101 2,900 ^BWytlit av, a .v a, 40 flnwof H'llaon at, 20 <70. h anJ lot S.miil ^B1 tj 1 \i t O i ut Ihiitvluai O. 5i I ftil 3.500

1 Jvwt* County* J.NKWAXtU.

Uonjrers ft, a a, !W ft of Kerry at, 5*5*10* )Congics.1 Hr* a, SC' I t c of Ferry at, - \M,< ( 1 *"

Ferry at, n a, adjoining Mcltonuld property, S 33-100acree KJ.POtT

Rait Varied ft. n s, J Kane to W W Wbitty, 4i HxlOO... 60.UK>Market at, adjolnluj (larthwail'a property, 80.(1x134... .21,(KIDMulberry an t Ktnooy at», e corner, 0**119 80,0,3Orange el, r a, adjoining van tiee«, Jr'a, 96x (10 6,MOreiuipyiram* ar ami Kmmet at, a e corner, 25tl00...... 1,600rennsylranta av anil Aattr at, a < corner, 25il(K 0,600Koeerille at', tr a. 3/5 ft n o: Kuaa/'x ,1 x 4 7, fl)Thoinaa at, a a, 2 9 ft e of Anilin fit. 16.11x103.3 2,3 01'lana el, a e, adjoining Kayre property, 10.9x51.6 4,500

OUANUK.Park and New ate, corner, 66*4 <i4'ix*x"0 600Kaaex at, ,v a, 3 0 ft n of Main it, 62tl.il 10,1)00

IXadson Coonty, N. J.PkBaST CITT.

North 4tb at. n a. 137 ft w of Mootnuutb at, 4<xM 1North 5th ct, u a, 85 ft m of Monmouth at, l*>x20.i*lt|0*.> 6,884North jth at, n a, 66ft W Of Monmouth at, i>x#r )

. 1IOKOKBN.Lot 84, block 43, Collar eatata «... 8,01©

IIKIUiKN.Floe al, a, «0 ft a w of Lafajrctio at, 30*68. P0©Waehiaglou ar, a a, lot 57, Uouhl e»Ut«, X/xloO.......... 1,000

' INCIPBNT3 AiTBNDINO TITB ISIPK Or TBI AMINO*. n .* «AJ MIIUA 8 ontltaMnff

HOT ritUUI/AH -J IIQIC niie>i|Miiiv i*

in the ante-room of me White House when the mcs-M. sage auu proclamation were signed, bslf of tfcftM* number, However, being newspaper men. An at*He tactrtof a Washington newspaper cogged the Prest-H[i dent for tbe pen witn which tlie documents wersH

signed, sud It was handed to turn. A venerable oMM* gentleman who was in the crowa cried out whel^He toe announcement was made turn the negroes conldM

now vote everywhere, "Well, gentlemen, vou'll allH, be d.d sorry for tun," The speaker was {lent, Sr.,H1 the latber-ni law of the President..(KtiaAmyfowJ cvn etp'jndtitoe Lotion Herald, uaroti jtk