THE DAILY EVENING TEIEGHAPD. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 186G. THE J?EW YOEK TEESS. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals Upon the Most Import" ant 1 epics of the Hour. COMPILED VST BAT FOB XTKHIKQ TM.SOBAPH. Conferees and the Piestdent-A Policy ol . Conciliation AecesMuy. From tht Timet. For the Bake of the country and the bonor and ,rcll-bcln(t of the Republican party, , it is to be hoped that the statements In circulation pur porting to Indicate the plans, and purposes of dlrcrs members of either branch of Conpresa laTe no foundation i ouUlde the minds of .their Authors. If bnlt of them were: true, there would be reasons tor anticipating another revolution as a not Improbable contingency, i in''1 All tliwe stories assume the exL"rtence of a ferco, imilacable, continuous hostility be .tween the Prepident and the malorlty In Con rre. . 1'hey Impute to the President a dis position to act tne usurper, and to his anta gonists a modest and unambitious but Arm determination to ballle him by every means at their command. It is taken for granted that le will practically refuse to execute t be pro f islons ot the Civil Rights bill, aud Impeach jnent is threatened as a coiifequence. Prepara tions for a struggle are represented as already In progress the President reiving upon the white soldiers, while the necro troops are to be etnplojed ai;alntt him. And Cotimess, It Is said, instead ol aJj ouruing. will constitute itself a suit ot permai.ent Committee ol Safety, whose prime duty will , be to thwurt evor.vthiug tho 1'revident may attempt to do, and carry out the views ol its leaders wltb unwavering firmness. We look upon these statements as the inven tions of sensation-mongers, aud as sucU, unwor thy of seiious spt-ciBc denial. Tho only circum stance which Invests them, or any of them, with importance suliicient to lustily notico, Is their publication, with more or lei-s dinpuise, in the colun. us of journals which strenuously sup port the aims of Messrs. Stevens and Sumner. Of course, we do not propose to make these gentlemen responsible tor the sayings ot news papers over which they cannot have direct control. But we mention It as a fact pregnant with mischief, that the papers which are trying to prejudice tho Pi evident by representing him as unmindful of his duty, and which are advo cating his impeachment to prevent the consum mation of Ijis policy, belong exclusively to the extreme portion ol the press. How, whethpr in a party or national sense, nothing can be more injurious than adherence to the course thus begun. The spirit It exhibits Is funatical, tyrannical, traitorous. It would entail disgrace, disaster, destruction upon the Union putty. And it would bring upon the country strife and sullering, if not a renewal of civil wur. Senator Lane, of Kansas, no doubt greatly exaggerated when he said that "the Republican party is crumbling to pieces." But there is just enough ol truth in the remark to commend it to the careiul consideration of every man who re gards the mission of that party as yet unfulfilled. Under almost any circumstances, a party cannot but sutler lrotn settled hostility to a President elected in its nan.e. The iujury is greater when, as in the raso of President Johnson, the charges of inconsistency attach to a section in Congress and not to the Executive. The ground upon which he was elected he occupies still. His Cabinet advisers are the advisers selected by his predecessor. The principles upon which the war was conducted, the purpose for which It was wsered, have been, and to this day are, the prin ciples and purpose ol his administration. When, therefore, he is assailed by extreme men, it is because they drag into the party issues ot which the great body of its members never dreamed, or give prominence to view which the party, as a party, never sanctioned; and In either event the party sutlers. All talk of its " crumbling to pieces" 1b premature. But that it has been seri ously weakened by the occurrences of the last lour montbs is undeniable; aud equally certain is it that the differences between Congress and the President, it j.erblsU d in and made wider, will result in the " crumbling" of which the Eausps Senator has spoken. Other interests, however, than those of party, demand the abatement of hostility,' as towards the President, and the adoption ot a policy fitted to restore peace and confidence to the country. We may well be proud ot the manner in which the finances, the industry, and the trade of the country pssscd through an ordeal that would have entailed bankruptcy and distress upon the richest nations of the Old World. But we must not thence infer that we may safely postpone attention to the financial and industrial pro blems which remain as ,the unadjusted legacies ol the war. W e have no desire to play the part of alarmists. We think, Indat-d, that in these problems, complicated and difficult tnough they be. there is no danger which wise legislation and prndent administration may not muter mil y miticate; ' But our safety depends unon vigi lance, and the prompt application of the neces sary cnecks aud remedies; and these asaln call for calm, non-partisan effort on tho floor of Congress. . In the absence of this all interests aie imperilled. Dulnees begotten of uncertainty and caution culminating in fear are the charac teristics of the great financial and mercantile centres. Every day devoted to tne partisan struggle makes matters worse. Everv fresh sign ol bitterness, every new token of difficulty. awakens apprehensions in the world of trade and money, and strengthens the popular feeling in iavor 01 a conservative poncy. On every ground, then, the cultivation of a conciliatory temper by Congress is greatly to be aesirea. it is expedient; politically and na tionnlly: politically, it those who claim to be Republicans would prevent the Republican party lrom Deing weakened: nationally, it we would repress ectionalism, restore confidence to trade, and lighten the burdens under which luoustry suuers. iso greater calamity tan happen than the development of the distrust and discontent that must follow a continuance ot the struggle now going on at Washington. There must be modtiHtion and forbearance on all tides or there will be ruin. Having carried their point in regard to the Civil Rights bill, will not the waionty in Con- ftess now lorego trials of strength with the 'resident, and ubo their power to foster peace. ann 10 promote measures of which tho Industry and commerce of the country Btand in urgent ueeu r Equalizing Bounties. From the Tribune. ' We receive a good many letters from persons who say they have been soldiers, and who do not like our opposition to the schemes submitted to Congress under the guise of equalizing bounties among the soldiers who have served in the late war. Most of these we have not even read completely, because ot the bad maimers and impertinence betrayed by the writers; and we certainly shall not publish any henceforth of which the authors know no better than to couch their missives In terms of insult What we have to say to them all may be "briefly summed up thus: 1. Not one of the bills submitted to Congress aocs wnat iney an proles to attempt that is, equalize counties.' general Wilson's is a case in point, lie proposes to iwnre all bounties paid oy btates or minor localities, or by Individuals. WhysoT It a soldier has tcceived a bounty train his State, county, or township, or been paid one by an individual, why should not that be considered, hs much as tnoueh it had been tiaid lrom the Federal Treasury f If anv nna can answer this question- civilly we should like to hear from him. '2. To pay an additional sura to every soldier, Tinner preutusn 01 eqrni.zimi; uounties, u a naked fraud. The man who enlisted in 1864 or 'C5, and received then a liberal bounty, bas no right to a ituthcr gratuity under this false preteuse. 3. We should be very glad to aclst In paying $100, or even $200 ench to all soldiers who en listed without bounty or gratuity from any qnru ter, served three years or over, until honfrbly discharged, recelvitu no bounty at all save the $100 paid when mustered out. This, we beliove. would be wmo approximation to "equalizing bounties;" and it is as ir ns we think our over taxed teoplo and heavily indebted Government should be asked to go, save in providing lor the disabled in battle and the orphans or' those who gave their lives lor their country; and for these we will go as far as any one ran reasonably ak. But to bankrupt our overburdened Treasury by paying bounties to hnle men who have already received $300 and over in bounties or as substi tutes, or who served less than two jears, we are not willing. ' j " ' - ; . . , , The Excluded Siates. . From the Daily Kcw$. " ' ' k ' When the right of secession first, .became the Bubjectof general public discussion, one of -the most effective popular arguments usod, against It, by those who are now supporting the policy Of Phillips, Bumner; and Stevens, was that .the, concession, to a State, ef the right to' secede from the Union, necossarily involved the con-, cession, to a maiority of the States, of tho right to expel a State. And this latter proposition was considered so outrageous that no ono waa found bold enough to defend it. Yet these very same men. having, under the pretext for it is simply a pretext, and a very shallow one at that of p'rosecutinr a war for maintaining the in tcprity of the Union, succeeded in establishing their own party : in power, now adopt as good, sound, cons itutional doctrine the very dogoia they pretended to 'be eneaged in suppresing.' Kor, it these two propositions are correlative, so' that the grantirg of one involves the grant ing of both, then the action of the radicals, In excluding eleven States from tho Union, justifies the action of tho seocstonlsts in at tempting to withdraw the same States from the Union. If Mc&erj. Bumner and Stevens huve the right to expel eleven States, then Messrs. Davis and Stephens had an equal right to w Undraw the same States. . There Is no escape from the dilemma. The eleven States which formed tho Southern Confederacy are either in the Union cr lbcy are not. it they are in the Union, then the action of the radical Congress In excluding them lrom representation is not only without ripbt, but in defiance of their own professed principles. It is wholly lawless and revolutionary. On the other hand, it the Southern States nre oiit of tho Union, tben the Union is not one and Indivisible, and the war wtilc-h was waged professedly to maintain the integrity of the Urn on, wa. in Inct, a mere war ot Bggiandizi ment and conquest, bom ol the spirit ot lust, waged in the spirit ot cruelty ; aud now, as to its results, in the spirit of oppression. It was, in short, a sham, a gigantic sham, the most gigantic of all ibe shams of this aae of gigantic shams. And its sole purpoi-e waa that an oligarchy of politicians mitrht seize upon tbe liberties of tho country, while ano her oligarchy ol shoddy manufacturers, contractors, and place men might piunuer it at tneir ease. Oh 1 for a !ortv-iar.-on power to chant 3 by pralee, ilypocrisyl , The Loan Bill -Progress ot Coriect Views on the Questions ol Curicncy end Na tional Finances. From the Herald. We published in yesterday 'a Herald, interest ing extracts lrom prominent (ouruals in the country on the subject of the Loan bill, and ou the questions of currency aud national finance. The newspapers lrom which we . quote represent all parties, and do not look upon the matter in a partisan point of view. " They are published. too, lor the most part, in tbe great Interior cities and industrial ana commercial centres ot tne country, and therefore the views they express are entitled to consideration, A short time ago these questions were little understood, and consequently not much was saip about them. The opinions expressed were very crude, were approached timidly, and gene rally were in lavor of largely contracting the currency. The writers jumped at conclusions without reason, and without understanding the subject. , But time ana common sense nave pro duced a change. The press begins to see the truth of wbat we have asserted all along that any sudden and large contraction of the cur rency would produce widespread disaster to the whole community and paralyze tne finances of tbe Government. Some of the opinions and argunj- its of the journals referred to are not altogether sound, but the general tenor of them shows that light is breaking upon the public, and that considerable progress has been made within a tew months towards correct views. People will not fail to notice that while nearly all tbe press in this city advocates imme diate resumption of specie- payments, and tbe most visional y theories about tho currency and national finances, that of the great commercial and industrial centres ot the country, aud par ticularly of the West, begins to see the danger of such a policy. The reason ot this course on the part ol the press here, and of a different course on the part of the country press, is plain. This is the centre ol stock joDtung, et the bondhold ers, and of all those who expect to be be nefited by forcing specie payments. They look only to a rapid 1 appreciation of the b nds they hold. If they could sud denly contract tbe currency, and thus bring Mieir securities to par in gold, they would immediately be twenty-five to thirty per cent, richer than they are now. The people would be so much poorer, and tbe burden ot the (iovernment increased, it is true; but what is that to them? This is the secret ot the course which the organs of the bondholders here are pursuing. . The newspapers ot such cities as Chicago and Cincinnati represent dlirereut inte rests. Thev look more to the welfare of the fnimers. the manulucturers, the laborers, and all thepreat industrial pursuits of the country. in tact, they neein to see tne struggle now com mencing upon the questions of currency and notional finance is between the bondholders on or.e hand, and tbe Industry of the country on tbe other. From present appearances the amended Loan bill ot the House will pass the Senate in its present lorm, or with immaterial alterations piohuDiy as it is, in mat case ine people win be sutistied. They will feel Bate as ljng as they know it will not be in the power ot the Secre tary ot the Treasurv. or anybody else, to dis- artunge present values ana tne opeiations ot trade. With this guarantee or security we shall go on In our career ol development and prosperity: the cnirency will continue to ap proximate, as it has Deen approximating, a goia standard, and Dy the time Oongress win meet again next December we shall gain a fund of uteiui experience and lniormation to guide us intheluture. We all want to return to speoie paymeuts; but we must not pluuge tho country into bankruptcy aud the Government into financial embairassmcnts by dointr this sud denly. This, in truth, would only delay specie payments. The only wise course is to let the laws of trade and nature operate a thev are operating to bring about this desirable object. The expression ol public opinion throuirh the piss will have weight, doubtless, with the Senate; and as the Loun bill is in no respect a party measure, we may expect to see it passed in jih present ioiiu, or, at least, WWU out little aiu ration. Is the Rump a Congress ? From the World. The weaker any cord is the less it will bear to be stretched. If a Congress constituted like the present Rump designed to have its authority sus pected, it could proceed by no surer method than the passage of a glaringly unconstitutional law over the President's veto. k So longao it con fined itself to ordinary and necessary legislation, and passed no laws tor which it had not somo color ol competency, the country deemed it more ptudent not to raise the question of author rity, tilts reasonauie nets men umuing lorce, they had nevertheless better bo acquiesced In, a a subsequent congress can give tuein the t'OU' firma'lon of a legal sanction. But when the Rump breaks dow n nil the cheeks and counter poiu's tor restraining abures of the lecislaiivo power, to pass oyer tb yco a la plainly rep ig ntint to tbe Constitution, it fhplhnwcs a scrutiny ot its pretensions 10 pnw laws at hH. It the Rump is a Congress, its proceedings on the veto arc regular In point of lorm, although the bill conflxts with tho constitution. Con press, as well a tho Presidnnt, is entitled to Its own judgnicnt on coub. itutional questions. The. ilahtol the two Houses to rcpa.'s a b 11 is just as contestable as that ol the President to Inter pose his veto. Neither the repassing of the bill, nor its unconstitutioiialiti , Impairs the leeisla five authority ot Congress. It is presumed by the Conr-titutlon itscK, that unconstitutional laws itin) somoilmes pass, and a regular reo eay is provided In the authority ol the Supremo Court to declare such laws null. But it is only uenvine authority that will bear being u.us stretched to - the utmost without danger of breaking. The composliron of Concress is preftMoed In the Constitution. ,The Constitution declares that Congress shall consist of a Senate and a Uouso ot Representatives. "Tlif Senate of the United tHali.", we quote the latiguaae ol the instrument. ' thai consiM of two btnakvt from iDoft- Mate." Have we any tuch Senate? An there "two Senators lrom each State ?" There is a similar provision m relation to the House of Representatives; but. as the same reasoning will, in tho" main, apply to both House, it will snflice to discuss the lesal'tv of one. We take the Senate in preitrence, because that is the branch which has alr ady passed tho Civil Rithts btU over the' veto. ' It is tlear, on the nure reading of the woitlfl, that we have no sith Seuate as is provided lor in the Constitu tion ol the United States. We have no Senate consisting ol two "Senators from each State." A lull Senate consists oi teventv-two members; tne- Lfnip Senate, even when all the seats are tilled, cons sts ot only ntty. It may be suid, and truly said, that tho pre sence ol every member of the Senate is not necessary to give validity to its proceedings. Tbe Coiiilitut,ou itself provides that a majority ot fhe Senators shall lorm a quorum. But the same Constitution presumes that the absences are voluntary. If a State fails to elect, or its Senators fail to atter.d, that is quite a different thing lrom the exclusion of States lrom their Tcpi emulation. So careiul is thu Constitution that every Stut' miy be represented, that if a vacancy occurs In the recess ol a Statu Leutala ture, the Governor U empowered to make a temporary appointment until the Legislature meets. 1"he Constitution exempts the members of both Houses from ericit during their attend ance, ai d In going- and returning from Concress. These provisions evince the solicitude of tbe Constitution that States shall be deprived ot their rcpref tntation by nothing except sickness, death, or voluntary failure to elect, Tmiiiug to another part of the Constitution, we find that the mc.st emphatic of all its pro visions is a prohibition to exclude States lrom their rcpiesentatiou in the. Senate. Everything else in ti.e Constitution is open to alteration by th" amending power; this ahi..e is guarded from chiiigc by the power which can make all other changes. "No State, without Hi consent, shall be deprived ol its equal suffrage in the Seuiate." It is absuid.to say tl at Congress may do, at its own discrct on or capiice, what not even the amending power may ever dure attempt. Let us iiippose that three-l.jurtli9 ot the States shot. Id oveistep the limits bv which the Consti tuticn has, in this one particular, hem mod in the amending power, aud should go through tho form ol reducing the Senate fiom seventy-tjvo numbers to titty, bv depriving the twenty-two smallest Statys of one Senator each, without their confent. Would a Seuate thu constituted be a legnl body ? Would laws pajsed by it have any bind ng obligation? Assuredly not. It would be as clear a ense of revolution as it is loesiblc to suppose. What the remedy would be, is another aud more diflicult question. But there can be no doubt at ail thaf such a pre tended amendment, H acted on tn the organiza tion of the Senate, would overthrow the Consti tution. But if not even the amending power can take away half of the representation of a State in tbe Senate, how can it be supposed that Congress, the mere creature of the Constitution, can take away the whole of lc? ., r Admit that tho eleven excluded mcmbersof the Union are States, and their right to representa tion is legally irresistible. They hold it directly from the Constitution. Unless congress - has power to put States out of the Union, when they are once 1n it, their claim to their seats cannot be successfully controverted. Even if Congress possessed this power, the States would retain their Federal nghte until the power, had been dulv exercised. It requires a regular law, ap proved by the President or passed over his veto, lo admit a State; and it would require the same to expel one, if expulsion w ere constitutionally posible. Hamilton wrote (in 1802): "The creation ol a new State has been very perti nently mentioned as a decisive instance ot power in a legislature to do a thing, which, being done, is irrevocable.'! It being impossible to put a State out ot the Union, it is impossible to divest it ot its right to representation. Being a State, it is entitled to tae two-Seuators ot which not vcu the amending power can deprive it with out its consent. Congress was a valid legislature during the war, because, although the same States were unrepresented, it was. by their own choice. They sent no members to either House. If any of the Rebel States had sent representatives, thtv would have been nroDerlv exo.lnrleri. on pertectly intelligible grounds, ti they brought no credentials, the Houses in which they 1 . . . i 1 , L a . . ciaimea scuis coma nave ucstowca on mem no notice. If they brought credentials, it would have beeu the duty of the two Houses to exa mine them. Suppose the applicant to have been a Senator: the Seuate would necessarily have rejected him on the ground that the pretended legislature, by which he claimed to have been elected, had not sworn to support the Constitu tion ol the United States aciualiticution without which no department of the federal Government could leccgnize it as a legislature at all. A lie pretentative from any ot those States would have been reiected ou grounds equally clear and butlicient. ;But no such objection can be raised acnintt the present applicants: and If it ' could. it is a point to be determined by JnvcsligHtiou of their credentials, , . , . ,. The. veto power, as Hamilton remarked, is given to tbe President us a check on legislative encroachment. The distribution of powers in tbe Constitution, he said, was Intended "to establish between them such mutual relations ol authority as will make one a check unon another, and enablp , them reclprocully to resist encroachments, and confine one another within their proper spheres." Thia end. he said, is (in one lespect) accomplished '.'by the qualified negative of the Executive on acts of the two Houses of Congress. Tho authors of the Fede ralist took great pains to prove (No. 48) that "it is againbt tho enterprising ambition of the legislative department that the people ought to indulge all their jealousy, and exhaust all their precautions." The check on Congress provided in the veto isnullilied and abolished Dy the exclusion of seven States. Had those ' States been renre scnted. their Senators would have voted to bus tain the veto. Add their twenty two Senators to the fifteen who did so vote, and include Mr Stockton, who waa expelled for tiartv reasons. and Mr. Dixon, who would have voted had he not known that his vote would oe or no avail. and the vote would have stood thirty three to thnty-nlne. instead of thirty-three to fifteen, In a full Senate, the Republicans, bo tar from being utile to pass tbe bill over tbe veto, could not have passed it at all. The veto has been overr.dden bv a minority of those entitled to vote over it. But it is as clear as awvthinor in the Constitution, that it was never Intended that a minority ot the Senators should exert this power. When authority was given to two-thirds to pass a bill over the veto, the iramers ot the Constitution .meant two-tnirds of those who cbooBe to bo present, of a Senate consisting of. "two Senator from each State." We have no constitutional Senate when a minority of tbe Senators can thwart the veto. - - The whole system of checks and bilances has gone into unhingement. The authors of the Fftltrnlist (No. ii'l) said, tu discussing the Senate. that "the equal vote allowed to each State is at ouce a constitutional recognition of tho portion remalnini in the individual Instrument for preservlnu tt'nt rf'i(!tiary flovorogiify" The, two Houses fepro- M titiiig ono tlie Stutd sovti ignt(ej the oilier the populntloh told by nebibers, aie a rontil il checu on each ether, lor pi curving, by thir ltirieperdent nction, the rielits ol the people at 1 the rights ot the Stntes. "No law'or resolu tion," ays the FrdtTaUrt, "can be pased with out the concurrence, first, ol a majority of the recple, and then ot a rraiordyof the Stales." lhe lights ol the States bcii:tr In greater danger, are Guarded in the Constitution with greater trull! hpfirp tho ttrnvtalon nttttm ftmtfcl nr.n. setitiitlon in the teuate beyond the reach of the amending power. Py the censti of 1800, the twelve most popu Ions 'Maim-had 20lr)24,(i3 lnliiibitafifs, and all the other States toeethet 10,fi2;i,954. Two-thirds ot the Senate m1gt, then, represent only one! third of tho population; but th s minority fcouUl pais no law, becHiise in the IIou:e the populous States have a weirht proportionate to their nunn ber. The Government is so organized that the rli'h'ft of the maiority-ate protected by then1 nnmbf tn In the House,' and thos of the minor lty by the equality of the States In the Senate, The preponderance ol physical strength being on tbe side of the majoiify, their rihU are less caieftilly gummed; while the equal repre sentation of the States in the Senate is made the most sacred feature of the Constitution the one feature too sacred to be ever 'changed or trenched upon so long as the Govern ment shall stand. But, by a total perversion ot our whole, governmental system, the oarriers 1 ara'iist the oppression ot the minority and. iipa'mt the oppression of the majority are alike' broken down. Both a majority of the people Hiid a majority of the Bta'f ft approve the policy ot the T res cent i and yet, by the ifconstitn ttcnnl exclusion of their representatives,, the Preident's veto can be overboruo by both Homes ot ConeresK ., Assured. thi is not the system our fathers intended to establish. The Constitution is evtsoeratd, and all its vital p.rts taken out. The veto po er is annihilated oy ti 's illegal eviesion of representatives who would mako it effective: the Government Is ntr- vi.tvu luiv fill I'lJKHi lu n Ull U IUI3 lUllJ.'lliy rule the majority ; mid tho equal suifrace of the btates in the senate, which even tho amending power cannot touch, is abolished by the mere entree of the Kumn which calls itself the Congress ol the United States - SPECIAL NOTICES. DEPARTMENT OP STREET CLEANIrt. ' ' EST ' Ofllco No. 272 fl. TTtTCtD Stiwt, .I'liILiDhLriil. ApiUJ, IBv6.J NOTICE IS IIERKBY. OtVfcN that the Con raoWM will btgln APRIL 9 to tuke np the A3tlS oqcas wook, as lol one; . KOBTH OF MARKET STKKET. MONDAY Stli Sth and pith Wards. - HJESDa Y-llth, 12th, and lth Wards. ' Wl PMCSOAT-iath 14th. 13th, and 2Ctn Wardj. TnT BSD A Y l?th . Wth, 19tb, and 25.U Wards. , i.i 60UTII OJf -liABhvlfir STRi-ET. From south side ot Market street to north tide of Washington avenue, and from Broad street to ths river Delaware, ni follow: ' MOSDAY. Iwtilftn .street, east side, to Tenta strett. 1 L'EsDAY Ten'h street to Eighth street. VVEDM' SD AY Eighth B roetto Sixth street TllTJliSDAY-Slxth street to Fourth street. FKlDATf Fourth stroct to Second ;rtot SAICIDAY Second street to Delaware avenue. i WF8T OF TWELFTH bTREET. , . ' '. MOBDAY Twelfth street to- eaiit aide of Broad, from south side ot Market street to north side of Wash ington avenue Inclusive. . ' : ' ' ' '.. TUESDAY Weat aide of Broad to Sixteenth street. south aide of Market to north side of South street, in cluclvo. . . ' ' - i WEDUESD AY Sixteenth - street to Eighteenth snect. ' ' .' TJiCRSDAY Eighteenth street to Twentieth Street. FE 1 DAY Twentieth street to Twenty-second Street. 1 SATURDAY Twenty-second street to river Schuyl kill. ., - TUX RSDAY South aide of Washington avenue from river Delav are to Droaa street, and all south of Wash Ington avenue, arid west side of 'Broad street, south side ol South street to Washington avenue. Citizens will take noilce that ashes will not be per mitted to remain on the sidewalks or streets, except on tbe dsysspeoifled. and for each offense of this kind the penalty of the law win be promptly enforced, Notice of any neglect to remove the ashes on the days named can be sent throuuh the Pott Office to this De partment. Office, No. 872 B. THIHD Street. v. ' GEORGE F. GORDON, 4 9 St ' ; Chief inspector of Htreeta. fTTSr WEST PHILADELPHIA INSTITUTE, TU1R1Y-NINTH, above MARKET Street Lecture on TUESDAY EVES1NO. April 10, atso'clook, l.y 'roiem-or f AliiMA nuviJuo. Sutiject-lllE OLaUEKS. lo be illustrated witn Ex FOR HIE BENEFIT OK" THE NIGHT SCHOOL. Tickets lor tbe Course, il. Single tic kois, 25 vents. Fnrnle et ho L1HH RY ROOMS OF THE lNVrT- Tt 'l F, at MARKS' DKVU 1-TORB. COOMBE'd DRUG STORK, and by any ot the Board oiManftgvrs. 41 3t KJ CAMDEN AND AM BOY RAILROAD AKD URAK.-PORTATION COMPANY'S OFFICE, BoupKNTOww . March as. 18. j,OTlt xr.. 1 no .Annum jjieeiinir or me niocKuoiflprs oi tbe ('AfliDrr. aj ajihui kailiiuak au TBAKSI-OKTATION OMPANY wlil be Leld at the ompanv'a 11 ce in liOUDl.MilWN.oa 8A1URDAY, the Ustli ot prll, lftib, at 12 o'clock M., tor the election oi fevt n Directors, to nerve lor tne ensuing year. i SU t4 iH am l j- i, i. i.muj. oecroiary, IKT5T NEW LONDON COPPER ' MINING I- COMPANY. Ths Annn.,i Meptlriffof Stockholders 'or Flection ol Directors to serve ine ensuing year, win oe ueia ..ja.niiAAV & x ( t 1 4 It tLe Office of the resiilfnt " ' At 11 A. M. slM0Np0KT 4 3 ft - ' ' ' - Seoietary. OFFICE OF THE VAN DUSGN OIL COM PAHY, No. firt WALK UT Strout. A mretlraof the Stocklio.ilern ot tbe Van DUEN I'im.ADl-.lJ'HLA. JUHruu zy I TOO. OIL.! OMI'a NY will be neld at the OMco of tlie oiu naoy on HON 1) AY. the lMh oi April. lRoti, at3X o'clock P. M.. to act on ihc pmpoaulon lonu'ess upon each share of fie l ai'ltnl Mock oi paiu i ompiinv tne sum ot live t NTH. Py order of ine Honrd oi iMrpctors, 1 yixwftu-u' n. u. hci)uwii,l, eecretary. ftTTf OFFICE OK TUB PHILADELPHIA la1 ASD tflFRMY RUN PKTROl El'M COM pik V.Ho Mi w ALMJT htrttt. Room o. 20. n hi- Iiireciora have this day declare! a second dividend ot OM. l'l li -1 VI uqual to two and a ball cents per chare, lor t tie n on ill oi March, imvao e on the mil lUMi. - I lie trnllbtci uuuib . 141 V1UBV AJJlik IU,IIUUVUUU P liiladcliihla. Atrli 4. 1K16. K.I- lIAJAtlULU, PUt--irt.fi IV. 4 ir irn'jr- A piiibiulouioal. vilw of mai;-. t-A-y , BlACfci l ontainlng near y 800 pagea, and Imk fine liBit. and tngruvliiLSol me ahuiouiv ol Uiellviumu Or;. mm In a htate ol Uti.ltci aim 1)1M), wlib a Truuiiae rUlB, JIB I'VIJiuiauiu ' u.ibvucwb uhiu wo mlv n ith tiit- Author's I inoi Treatment tLe only rational and auccena ul mode ot euro, a nliown It lhe mort ot cutca tr.-aiKl. A rrutblul advmer to the n'arrltd and tboi-e conteniplatlng niarrluge. who enti tain COUbie oi ineir vudimi ouiiumuu ami tree 01 rittatBke t(' RUT Buurrno. m rccipv ui to ixilin ill mump or Dt ftiil cunency by BddreReliin; Dr. LA C UOIX No. 31 Ji A1D1N l aue, AIDui y.N Y. 1 lit tinwior may uu cuiiFUiit;u uuuii nu n mo uibdmci hiiiiD vlikt hi tiook treats ellln-r f J-i(Wi or by mail, it a n.filu lnea ent l" uuy imrt ol tUe world. 118 buj JUST PUBLISHED By the fliyniclana of tbe tbe Muotieth Edition oi tl.elr 1TUUB LECTUliEM, entitled- . . lo be had frt. or lour tamps, by atturesaini Heerelai New York Museum of Anatoniy, 117 It No.sla MKOADWAY.JNew York. , iKTSr BATCH KLOR'S II A I It DIE. , T11F BI ST IN THE W OULD. , . Uaimleps renaniB in-tuntaitfoud. The oniypenecj dye. o uljappolntinent. no ridiculous tinu, but true to nature, b aek or brown Gr.M;iJk. 18 bltiALD WILUAM A. BATCHELOB. AI.so, Degenerating Fxtiact or Mlliifleura reatorea, preserves rii-il LeautUlea th hajr. prrventa Iia'dneas. So d by all Iiruvfeli- factory lo, BaKCLaY tl, V. Yj 8j avr DINIKU-ROOM V. LAKEMEYER, CAK'n ll'al Al ay, would re?pect:ul y luionu the I'ublle gruiially ihat he haa icitnotb'ng antloneto make th:a place cooilottable In every rrupeet lr the aocoio nioriatlon ol gueata. He lias opened a large and eoiiv iriiulous Dlullig-Hoom In the second s ory Ilia HUI! . j'(iABl Ih luriilahc-d wilh 1 HAKOlj'.S. WINKS, i-1 ot sovereignty States, and an I I! .lit t FECIAL NOTICES. HKADQUARTER9 N A.TIONAL UNION ry tl.VD, So. UUS I I1K8NUT tTRET. (' i I Pim.AriBn.rniA., April 4, IMS. COI0HEL FAMrEl. B. TUOMA.A, ADC of the Ia'nfve'll'f, Military Pepaimtr ?enna3 Wama, bssttircted this Club lor the diurl uhon of the annua reports of bis office tor 'be years 164 snd 1869. They certain, tn two bound vo umee, the complete roster rf ail ibf ccmmlnalonk tanned to the offlcera of P -nnayl-ivaTla Volnn.cera, fiom Decimber 1, 1861 to December 1.IK5 These valuable documents will be presented, on per sonal tppllcat'on, to the brave offloers of our Pennsyl vania rrilirn nts rr to the families o such ss have talien In tbearrvlce of tbetr country... When request Is made to lav them mailed. tblity-fle cent inuslba paid to cover the cost of poitage. r Tbe newseaperprers of the city give their aid In this HoodWO'k by the sratuhous tnatrtlon af Uls oard. Snd tbe lame action is reapectlulty suggested to all ths ntwepaipcra al the State. . t , - , JOHN K. a DDK'S.. 4tl2t ' -Chairman. FINANCIAL. JAY COOKE & 0 O., No. 114 S. THIHD STREET, ' , BANKERS, , . DEALKKS. IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES tVS. & OF 1881,' i 6-SOs, CLD AND NEW, lOiOni CPR1UICA1 KS OF TS DVBTEDNKSS, '. 7 t9 OTEs, Ut, 2d, &! 3d feerics. Compound ixiebesi a'otjcs waxted. IMERKST ALLOWED OS DEPOSII8. Collections made; ttocks BotiKbt and Bo'd o Coin mixtion. t-ltciol tutiLees cctmniodatioos reserved la LA L Its. 1 bii ADH.rHiA, February, 1866. 2 78m JJt. S. SEC 11 U IT FES. A SPECIAL T Y. SITli, EAKL01PH tS CO., ' BARKERS & BROKERS, 16 S. THIRD ST. 3 NASSAU ST. PHltADKLI'HIA. NEW TOttK. STOCKS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD 0JV COMMISSI OX !. 1 tm ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. 31 I ) A VIES I JI JOTlIlllS, Ho. 225 DOCK STREET, BANKERS AND BROKERS. BOY AXD SILL CMTED STATES BONDS. IfSls, 6-20s, M 40a. CMTED STATES 1 1-lOa. ALL IHHUK8. CFET1FICATE8 OF. INDEBTEDNESS ' Uercsmlie Paper and Loans on Co laterals negotiate! Stocks Bought and Sold on Commisalon. - 1 31 1 JJARTER, D TJRNEY & CO BANKERS, STOCK AND EXCHANGE BROKERS, No. 85 8. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Stocks and Loans bouplit and sold on Commission Eneunent Bank Notes, Coin, Kto., boURht and sold, t-tecial attention paid to the purchase and salo of Oil Stocks. Deposits received, and interest allowed as per agreement, - 86 8m THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK HAS REMOVED During tbe erection of the new Bank building, ' 117p N 3O0 CliESNUT STREET 5 9()S.-FIYE-TWENTIES. 730s SEVEN-THIRTIES, WANTED, DE HAVEN & BROTHER, l-T No. 40 . TB1KD STKEET. JIEAD & SMYTH, MANUFAC1URKKS OF FINE SILVER-PLATED WARE, No. 810 CHESNTJT Street, PHILADELPHIA. 1 tf EAR-ADMIRAL NAVY TOBACCO KKAK-ADMIRAL AVX TOBACCO. -REAR-ADMIRAL NAVY T0B4CT0. BLACK-FAT ASD SUGAR-CUBED. , BLACK-FAT AKD BVJUAR-Cl BED. BLACK-FAT AND 8UOAB-CUBLD. BE8T IS THE WOBLD. BEBT IH TBE WORLD. BEST IS 1I1E WORLD. FKFE FROM 8TE118, FREE FUOM BTEMS. FREE FROM BTiMS DEAN, No. 413 CIIESSUT Street, General Dealer In Tobacco, Cigars. Ipes, Ito , has tbe tolo Agency for the above Celebrated , Nary Tobacco. FORTY OFFICES TO BENT, in the United States Hotel Building. Apply at DEANS Tobacco and Cigar Store, 3 28 Imrp No. H ClIKeNUT Street Tf EMOYALI REMOVAL! OLD DRIVERS' ICE COMPANY, BEHOVED FROM N. W. CORNER SIXTEEN TB AND BACE, TO Broad Street, Above. Hace,' East Side Orders reapeetfully solicited, and promptly attended to at the lowest market rates, i . ' JJESS, J0DNS0N dayis."'; 1 OLD DBIVERSMCE COMPANY.' "u "' ' The undersigned, feeling exceedlns- thankful to Tils many Inenda and cuatomern for their very liberal ptron age extended to bun during the last seventeen rears, aud having o'd blsentlre tntt-iext to "' 1 IESK. Hk, JOUNBOH DAV18, .t Takea pleaeure tu reuoniHirotlm tuom to bla foraiej. pa rona as tbev are gt-otieuMiu ol well knoo lniaarliTt and will uiiooubb-diy lualiitnln tha reuatutlon of ilia OLD LBIVflli'ICE COMTASt.tnd In every war act o as to vive riHire RaiiKiBcuuu iv iuu mar aiuu:y ravoi tlitu with their euaiou ' "A BROWN. i.H i . I '! n v.'. I K , L.lt. ' ' i..it kf il ;ml'-n ... n I .- 1 , " Ol i ,. I It '.I' ,, .'0-1 It .ji-i.l DRY GOODS, 'a, . '- W FOUETH AND AEOH, ? HAVE THEiR SECOND OPENING OF SPRING GOODS, Till 3 MORNING. : -t:.y.l 2fEnf GRENADINES. NEW FOULARDS. : NEW, DRES8 GOODS NEW SACK CLOTHS. CRAPE PONGEES. SPLENDID BILES. C4 8 thsta t: CIlLhMJT HTBFPV. iieee. Spring Importation. 18C8. E.M. NTKEDL.ES. HAS JLSrOPBNKD , 1C00 riLCES WniTE G00C3, In TLA!, f M'T. vmiTED rLAID1 and ; Ilpurvd .taconets famhrlcs Nnlnanok , 1'imltn-a, hwlaa. Mull, mid iher linn comprining ' a n oft c liiplcio 'KirK, to w. i fi the attpmlon ot purclian-rx l f i.'riicd, as thiy arc oflero l at ' a 'arie BhDUC'lIO.N worn last SBAftOlt'S ' BBICIU). lion pieces pniP':FD MU'L VS Tor BodlM 100 pieces HviV R li. all varie;in ol styles Slid I price rcinttr to si -60. - . i SOffAKlb t.o IMitl) KIKT8, newest styles. . oi my own lmputtutlun. il 'hkiV v (j!at8 Msnulsctory l.i. teH ARCH Street, hove t-ix h Sin t, Lol atiulphla. -W lo exile and Retail. Our efsortment ni,l,rcoa all tho new and desirable ft vita m:i sire, cl oiry icuglh and size walat tor Liidlia MiHara and I I (Iron. 'lhieot -Olh f'HA HAKE'' arcaajwnor In Un th are outcll-t f lo aiv ctLer fckltt niud, and wan anted to live aatialaction. , . , c ftirty n.at:e io iti.-- pucrfu ano rcpaircq. n . MISCELLANEOUS. w 1 L E T & B B 0 T n E B .. IVPORTFRS AND DltAI.FTtS ' 1 HAVANA t'lt.Alc AS V WK 1W H ' UM PIPES. N. W. Cor. Llull I II aud WALNUT Htru.ts. We of er tbe tlneat I!anna Clears at prices Oram 20 to 30 ierc nt. below ibe regular rates. , Also, the ci'lcbiatu ' LONE JAC K" SVOKINO TOBACCO, which is tar superior to any yet brought before tbe public. Wofo of Lone Jack? "SEEK NO FUBTllLlt. KtlK No BETTER CAN BB a-OUND." 1153m QEOKGE PLOWMAN, CAKPENTKH AND BtJTI.DERJ No. 232 CARTER Street And Nr..; 141 DOCK Street, . Machlno Woik and MUlwrlghtlog promptly attended w aar EEVENUE STAMPS, REVENUE STAMPS Hr.VLN.UE STAMPS, , Or all description Of all descriptions. Always on hand, Alwava on hand. AT FT.OBENCE B1WINO Jf ACHI sy Co.'S OFKICH AT FLORENCE BLWING 3M t HINE CO.'tJ OFFICE , No tUBCHKhNUT Kreet, No. riiOCBKINGT Street, One door boli.w Seventh street. One door be ow Seventh street. Tb mot 'Iberal dlvcouni ailoweo -The most liberal discount allowed. MONUMENTS, TOMB S, GRAVK-8TONES1 Eta Jnet eompleted, noauti'ni variety ot nALlAJJ UAIiBLk MONUMENTS, , TOMBS, AND GEAVE-8TONES, Ul he sold ebeap tor eash. Work sent to any part of the United Staeee. - HENUY 8. TAIIR. MARBLE WORKS, , ' 1 24wtn- Wo. 710 KKK Btreet. FhUadelphla. VITLE K WEAVER, & CO., MAM; AC1XBER8 OF Manilla and Tarred Cordage, Cords Twines, Etc., No M North WATEB Street and No. 82 North OHmWaBE Avunue, rinLatiBLruiA. ' I dwin H. Fitmk, Alien ail Wcavxb, tOMilP F. CtOTlllKB 1 214 5 J O. PERKINS, LUMBlill MEKOHANT-' Snoetasor to E. Clark, Jr., ' No. 824 ClIKLSTIAN STREET. 1 Constantly on banu largo and varied assortment of Building Lumber. 6 24 $ . CORN R X O H A N O E BAG MANUFACTORY". JOHN T 11 A 1 L f . Y O O., So. IH FRONT and No. 114 N. WATER btreet, -1 ul ada.phia DEALERS 1 DAiib AtD BAGGIKO or every doccilptlon. for Ciatn, Flour, Bat. superphosphate of Lime, Bdne Duat, Etc. Larte and small CI1 .NY BAUS ranstantly on band. iS) Alao WOOL BACKS, John T. Bailiy. Jam Kg Cascaded. JESTAUKAXT , i ON THE KlIliOPEAN PLAN Flneit old and new Al.KS.atS cents per gloss. GOOD ONE-DIME KaTINO BAB. ' lhe choicest Liquors always on hand. ' No. 633 CBEnNUT STKKET. 3 10 m BEN BY BECKLB, Manager. OTTON AKD l'LAX H1L DUCK AND CANVAS, Tent Awning. Trunk and Wagon-t over Duck. Alao, ri,i-r lianuiactiircrs' I rier Fi-Uh from one to aevau vi an nuwoera ana Dranaa. lcet wide: Paulina. Letting, Sail Twine, ete. JOt.N W. EV1.UMAN A Co.. its No. Hi3 JOKES' Alley. WILLIAM S . O It A N T. t'OWWIi-KlOW MKRrHANT. No. 8a S, DI.LA WABC Avtuue, Philadelphia A (11)11 ton - 1 i Duprnt's Ounpowder, Ki tloed Nitre, Charcoal, Kto. ' W. Baker A Co 'a Chocolate, ( ooo, and Uroiua Crocker Bros. & to ' Yeilow itol bhaaihlng, Bolta, andNallg. ...... . M . ALEXANDER O. CATTELL' A 00' PB0DUCB COAlMIrtSIOS MEBCQAJSTa,', . H. ...... . Ho. it NUHTI1 WBARVK6, .. , ; , . . ALISASSKB fl. CATTKUv , . ELLIAB O. CATTU,. CONT1XENTAL HOTEL HAIB; DKESSIKGi" v . , , , .XbTABLibilMlCNT '.' 1 " " . , . PETEB SIEGFRIED, " ' ' Mim " .,' ' Proprietor. - nrHE STAMP AGENCY, ' NO. 301 CITRSNrT J J.TRKV1, ABOVE TUIBD WILL CONTINUED AS III RKTOFOHE. STAMPS ot KVKTDEHOBIPTIOTf CONST AWTtT OM BAND, A D IN AX AUUVNT U iy I MM i.-j V L ll .1. '. 1.1 I-- I ,1, ,1 i- 1 :H J : M.I I ..; ' 4 nil ! -' lui U. . v,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers