THE DA1IA EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 18G6. THE NEW YORK PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF LEADING JOURNALS UI'ON CURRENT TOPIC-. COMPILED EVKHT DAY FOR EVENING TELEOKA?". The Raid on the Bureau. From the Tribune. We yesterday printed a roport of the President's Bureau Inspectors, Messrs. Steedman and Fuller, ton, coveihiK the States of South Carolina, Gcor giaand Florida. Altlioiighweeivethts to our read ers as a matter vt news, tvo do not conceal our opinion that the furnishing of such a report to the prc.-w 'or publication Is a gro3s impropriety, and an inexcusable injury to the officers whom 11 assail. Tiio inquisition of Generals Stcedniaa mid Fullerton might bo proper enough, had the President In good faith desired to inform him self concerning this Bureuu. In that cac their report would have been confidential, like the proceedings of u Grand Jury, nnd would have been submitted to the President for h'i private Information. Matters of hearsay misht have been embodied in pitch a roport, and if jlr. Jolin Bon hud deemed them pruve enoujli, he coul 1 have erdercd a court of inquiry, beiore which the oflicers accused would have been heard la their own dciense. If they had been found Ruilty. th?.y would liwve been punished, and their disgrac? have been published to the world. But iu this cu'-e twooiliccts are sent on a spy mission, one of whom is a prominent supporter of that Presi dential policy which assumes that the Bureau ii nuisance, and the other of whom proved liun selt in Louisiana a bitter enemy of the Bureau and of the freedmcn. It there were any doubt about it other .vise, the purpose of their expedi tion inujbt be accurately inferred from tno character of the agents. In pursuance of that tibicct, the peripatetic inspectors ot Mr. Joliu?oti collect tattle ot al! .sorts Irora half-rccon;tructcd Kebela, with whom they associate so exclusively that, as a recent despatch informed us, it was with picat difiiculiy that any Union man could get a hearing from them. To preserve an appearance of Impartiality, they convene m-etip.!TS of the frecdmen, whose pinions and evidence are ignored in their re ports. Imo those reports they crowd the slan ders, the misstatements, the prejudiced versions of tacts, the vuliul lies, which enemies of the Bureau are only too happy to supply. No op portunity is offered for meeting thee charges, or if any form ol investigation is gone through, it is a torm only. Then' this mass of scandal is Bent North in two batches, one oflicial report to the President, and one unofficial to the New York herald; and there stems to be a rac? be tween these two authorities to see which sua!' first pet his account before the public. We need only refer to the report from North Carolina, Bndtftiat which we yesterday printed as evi dence of the accuracy ot this picture. The Nurth Carolina report has been no riddled and silted, and the answer of Gen. Whittlesey to Lis accusers was so complete, that tue Bureau which it was meant to annihilate stands higher than ever in publ:c opinion. The President made a mistake in selecting his instruments. They are perfectly willinr to do the work ex pected ot them, but they have mwle the mis take of exhibiting their willingness too opauly. They lack ability to play the ro? assierned them. We may Biippeat to this urm, that in preparing their next report to? the press, they should en deavor to disguise, if possible, their hatred to the Bureau. They would have done much bit ter had they atlected an interest, in its pros perity, and assumed an air ot regret over such bhort comings as their duty required them to expose. In luture, they should strive to conceal their eagerness to find lault, and their exultation over everv petty peccadillo they succeed in unearth ing. If they are unable to wear such a mask, perhaps their next best resource would be to avow frankly tliat they were sent South to pre pare an indictment acainst the Bureau, and tliit they appear nt th3 bar as prosecuting officers instead of sitting on the bench as fudge.-. If they would avow this, the public would under stand the situation more precise! v. We do not intend to examine the present re port in detail, though it would bo easy to point but its Inconsistencies, and to comment on the animosity it everywhere displays towards the true friends of the freedmen. We leave all that to the oflicers whom it attacks, and we are con tent to leave the report as it stands to the judg ment ot its readers. They will observe m this, as in the other reports from the same source, that every officer who has consulted the interests ot the treedmen is deuouueed. while every oliieer who has exhibited his devotion to the interests ot the Kebels is applauded. These Presidential messengers exhaust their ingenuity in sneers and iniiendoes against General Saxton, whose name is reverenced by the freedmen of South Carolina next to that of Abraham Lincoln. General Saxton spent about lour years on the 8ea Islands. Messrs. Steednian and Fullerton, we believe, spent about four days. From their observations during that period, tliey undertake to pass Judgment on the long career ol an officer whose fidelity to the freed men under his charge no enemy ever ventured to assail, and whose only fault has been that he relused to acquiesce in a policy taut would abandon to the hostility and oppression ot their old masters those whom the Government stood pledged to protect. When the Government lorgot its faith, General Saxton could not Jorget his, and was removed to make way for a more pliant tool, it was inevitable that such a man should be attacked by the e inspectors. They were sent in order that such men as he might be made odious it was equally inevitable that General T llon should be praised. That officer bus won Vis title to approbation by abolishing the Frecdmen's Courts in Georcria, conciliating the planters, prohibiting the colored women of Auguta to strew flowers on the graves of Union Kolaiers, and suppressias The Loyal Georgian, a journal published by the treedmen. He is almost tLe only Bureau officer whose conduct receives the unqualified commendation of Gene rnls Stcedmiu and Fullerton. The European Crisis The Emperor Na poleon's Declaration. From the Ttmtt. Some English jour mils profess to doubt the authenticity of the Emperor Napoleon's reply to Earl Cowley's c.Tort at mediation in the German question, which we printed on Tuesday, and they may be right in eo doing. They cannot, how ever, feel other than persuaded that, whether the reply was utterad or nof, its tone and spirit are precisely what the policy ot the Emperor, so far as it can be predicated, would have led ns to expect. England has, tor several years, shown a disposition studiously to avoid compli cations which might lead to war ivith any other power. Her cuurse on the Danish question was verj marked in i:s illustration of tnis policy. k " ctlell,1.V thought then, or hr r Government tnougnt, timt Ler mission as peacemaker ex tended no wthcr than timt of remonstrance, bhe believed iea (hut Lord Palmorstou's theory ol . couuolhuu Kar0pean public opinion was ?L?"lT.!)0!s,bJe' !' listlit. It was' the same I iV :,llau "'f-f ot IS.'jO. And on w; uuv.uSnraia proved the theoiy to be . ;. '., i " i me to a sudden lerra'. nation, partly because ot ti threatened Inter, veulicn, Chiefly of England, Jn a seoo-dar Potion, 01 Prussia. s,Co thal.Vthe ha's been another w-ai-tHt tor tut, pv0viace of Schleswig and llolstcin. Hure, U0 Mnoland remonslrated, and bi-ou-jut to bear Rl.'rn,, ."nonl force of her orators aad her press. Bm,jie cun. tebt went on, neveTthcless. Tho remonHranCu was unheeded the moral torce was re."koiKi a? of no account. Would it bo surprising it a,j Emperor, setting the two circumstances 3ide b, side, has concluded that, just 113 tho English sympathy with tne Danes ended In mere Uiurei of speech, the Italian intervention really meant no more, and that a new campaign in the inte rest of Italy may be inaugurated with perfect IO-.ci 4hn Tnlt impunity f The statement of the Vienna jour nals tha', Napoleon has said ' "In the year 1809 an1 18:4 England oppod mv propoia s id roieronce lo tho se'tltmunt oi tha Vene tian and ticlilp.iwijj HoMcln qu si ions. Noir Kit land wnntit peace. I also 1osir ptiacwi but ai t tie niot Invorttblo opportunities liavo liera Irittoroil away, and ax tho conflicting lnicresls lufo been per mitted lo rcccli a point at wnioli they inut clnsli, caii)uo lonpor assnmo tho responsibility of events" may be a mistaken one. but if so, it is based upon a true cstimotj of thJ strictest proba bilities. There is little doubt tha 1nipi03-ive have been the asourances of a per.ect entente ardii'e between the present Government of England and France, those assurances bavo been called forth rather more by tho respect which exists between possible combatants and actual nvaU than by the mutual aliection of two neighbor ins peoples. Tho declared policy of toe one in favor ot peace at almost any price must stimu late tl.c other to act with impunity in mailers of trencrnl European interest. The interest felt by Napoleon in the luture of Italy Li the one which is of all others mo-.t powerful over his actions. It is for Italy thnt ho hiu diplomatized, and for which a Fiench nnny wa launched ngaii'st Austria. This protecting love for an ancient people, vboMJ history is full of Minseitiveue-s lo such lovers of antique moderns the author oi the " I.i'e of Cesar,'' may have a double oriiiu. It perhaps has its foundation in tue early dreams ot tho prisoner of Hani of republics where a I'lcsidcncy th mid not only wield an autocratic power, but which phould be euardian of the national faith and the national culture. Tiie restoration of Italy to something like iu ancient gicrics Is no new conception ot enthuias!ic minds; and that the mind ot Napoleon has an intense ly strong, tUouzh concealed, enthusiasm, is well known; nor is tho cstiblnhaient of Fiance as the ruiin? CaMioHcpoivcr of the world a now idea witii Frenchmen. Nor are thu ideas ol a protectorate ot the Koman Ca'hollc Church, unci a simultaneous raisiu? ot Italy to the posi ticr. of a Orst-clas power and strenuous ally of Frm.ce, so ntopian as may appear at first sigh. SiiO)0-in;r, we eay only supposinr, these views to be lust, as iniiicatiiiir the possible aims of the Emperor Napoleon, It is p issible that tha reported reply to Karl Cowley inuicate3 at once a resolve, Hiid n conviction that that resolve can now be carried into execution! The position ot l-.npland is neutrnl, whatever comes ol V, says he in clicct. Hhe has, he affirms, deliberately chosen before to close her eves to wroif'-doinir, and has no li'ihl now to interfere in a nev crisis, lie accepts the situation w'th perfect equanimity. He, too, will not interfere that is to say, he will act in whatever manuer it s -ems to him best to act. Thus, with in ono hand a menace, nnd in tue other a plea of lustiiication, he is supposed U appeal alike to the sword and the opinion of the world. And yet there is hieh authority for the ooi nion thittNupoIeon will not goto war justat pre sen'., nor sanction a war lor Italian unity, to as to leave England in the enviable position ol a neutral. The Action of Congress nnd tha Singular Combination of llondsnien lor Jell. Davis. From the Herald. We notice that the radicals in Congress h ive nt last concluded to assume the responsibility for retaining Jell". Pavis in prison. The pressure became very strong in favor ot his release on bail, and, rearing that the President would yield, Ihey hurriei through a resolution oppos. ing it, and declaring that be should beheld in custody and tried according to law. What law ? lie cannot be tried by court-martial, and if courts refuse to try him now.hoiv do the radicals propo;-e to try him ? Would it not be much b2t ter to adroit him to bail until the question how he is to be tried is settled ? A mini be v of New Yorkers are now at the national capital offering tteir services in this line, nnd it is raid that several Balumoieaus visited Kicbmond at tho opening of Judge Un derwood's court lor tho express purpose of becoming .-'uretics on Jeff. 'a bad bonds, stransa as it nm.v seem, among those irom this city who are anxious Jor this' honor is Horace Grei;loy. Tnis is a very good and cenerous thing on flic Efirt ot our nlghbor. It shows that, what ;ver is enemies ma.y say about him, ho at lcotbos a large heart and is not afraid to be m tgnani mous. As to the other pontlemen, it make3 bnt Utile dillcrence who they are or what the motives may be thai, prompt them to oiler them selves a3 bondsmen. Greeley's name is sufficient for the Government, and hi3 application should be r.ccepted at once, and Da;is be permitted to run at large. It will no doubt somewhat surprise those rural radicals who have beeu in tho habit of swearing by Greeley to learn that he has offered to be one 01 Davis' bondsmen. It i9 so diiferent from the general impression of his character that we do not wonder that the bare mention of the fact has created contideiable surprise. It is more in Weed's line than that ot Greeley; but there is no five per cent, commission to be made by giving bail in this case. Weed, therefore, fails t come forward and leaves the Held open to Greeley, who never considers those rive per cent, pr jilt's but is actuated solely by principle. No person will dispute the fact that Greelev, above all otnevs, is the r ght person to go ba l for Jeff. He advoca'.eel tne riput ot secession when the Kebel lion commenced, and no doubt had some influ ence in deciding the course ot Davis when he withdrew from the United States (senate. It is therefore appro; riate, now that the ex-Conte-derate chief 13 in troubl), that Greeley should come to his rescue: nnd we trust that the Admin istration will act without aiy further delay, aad cive Jeff, his liberty. Greeley will be responsi ble for all the harm that he will do. But the morfaeut he oVains his liberty there is another terious question which Greeley will have to arrange Jeif. Davis is financially and politically a bankrupt. He has nomlns to sup port himself and family. While he re naius at Fortress Monroe Uncle Sam feeds and clothes him, but the moment that he is released on bail he will be obliged to provide for tiie daily ne cessaries of life in some other way. Here tbe liind-hca: ted Greeley can also be of service. When he was trying to negotiate peace with banders and other Rebel commissioners at Niagara Falls, Greeley was willing to pay the South lor all their negroes. Notvlet him apply to the Reconstruction Committee for nu appro priation for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for tho purpose of carryiu? out tnis principle as far as Jell". Davis is conceraed. His netrroes have all been pel ires and his plantation confiscated, and if Greeley can only prevail upon his radical friends m Congress to adopt this idea, Jeff, will be well provided for during the remainder of b's life, and hnve suffi cient to pay his lawyers io defend him, it h' ever come to trial, and still have s jmethius; left for his family. If this cannot bo accomplished, then let Greeley charter a vessel aud send him to the coast of Afr'ca and there take on a carsro of negroes, whieh he can take to South Amevica and soil at a good price. This, It is true, is reviving the slave trade, but only in an excep tional cute, and alter all it will not violate the principles of the radical-, who are no .v, through then- New England ugeut of the Frceilmcn's Uuieau, re-establishing slavery in the South. President Lincoln on the Ilight of the boiUhern SUtes to llepiesentatiou From the World. "Whut fcignilies it what a dead President did or did not tLink V It signifies much, in several respects, but chiefly as exonerating President Johnson from the charge of infidelity to the party that elected him. It may be said that the reconstruction question was not thought of in the Presidential election. Cut it was thought of, nnd was lilted into great prominence by a remarkable manifesto which appeared early in the canvass. We refer to the vigorous invec tive naainet Mr. Lincoln, published soon after 'he adjournment of Congress in IHtlt. and fUhned by Senator Wade und Henry Win'er l)av,i the former Chulrmun of the Senate ami the liutex ot the House Committee on the rebel lious States. Congress had passed reconstruc tion bill, and, adjourning immediately, gve the President no opportunity to vo;o tt. He thereloic toolr the unusual course of publishing a proclamation eettinjr lorlh the reasons why he could not approvo the bill. The tenor of that proclamation shows that Mr. Lincoln entertained viess of reconstruciion nearly identical with those held by President Johnson i and the nloresaid manifesto in deienso ol the vetoed bill anticipates most of tho aisru mcnts embodied in the recent lcpott of the Re construction Committee. An issue was thus raised bet een the Presi dent and Cot prcss, In t ie Presidential election of 18CJ, almost identical w'nh that which exists between Conares? and President Johnson, it war decided in favor of Mr. Lincoln bv his tri umphant election; aud Mr. Johnson, being on the same ticket, may claim that his present poFcy was r-ancfioned in advance by tho party that elected him. The Wadc-Duvls manifesto wound up ns fellows: But ho (President Lincoln) must pnflcrstnnd '.hat our support is of a cau?e, nnd not ol a mnn;t:m; the auibori y ol (,'onercsa is purunimint, and must b(- respected j that iho whole body of tho Union men of ConprcsR will not submit to bo impeached by him ofinsh mid unconstitutional letrlslanon, and it bo wiftits eur mpport lie must conline himself tt Ins cxreutivo cuiio to oLcv nnd oxecuU, and not make tho law to sui'piTM by arms armd Itcbclliuu, and lenve ro itical reorganization to l omrroxa. 11 the Kupportcrs ol the tiovernnient fail to insist on thi", tiicy become icsi onsib 0 lor the u.sui uatious which thoy tuil to rt buko, und arc justiy hub 0 to )lie nidlpiitition 01 thu peep e, who e nvhts and se curity, committed to their kcepinir, thov sacrlilcj J-ttilinn consider tho reiiicrty lor these u,ur;a tlons, and liaviucr louud it, icarlcsely exoculo it. It will be seen that, in t ine, these inculpa tions ore precisely like those launched by Thad. Stevens and hia Reconstruction Com mittee against President Johns u, nnd they nrcpieeiscly identical in substauce. Mr. Lin coln had, without consulting Congress', rc-ir-pnni'ed State Governments iu Louisiana and Arkansas, had cr con rage. i the election ol Sen ators and Representatives to Congress, and had cseitedall his iniiueuee to secure their admis sion to feats, tine ol his proclaimed Toons for disapproving the Reconstruction bill passed by Congress wa.s that it upset what had been t'.one in those States. It will be seen, therefore, that the controversy between the lixecutive and t onercss stood on the same fooling durmsr tne Presidential election of 1804 tha', it does now. He who was elected on the amc ticket with "the martyred Lincoln" inherits not only his oince, Dut uis policy, uis quarrei witn t on gress, and even his mode of resistance, namely, by veto. The proofs that Mr. Line on considered fhe Southern States entitled 10 immediate admission to Congre-s, as soon as they had in pood latth sub milted, are too conclusive lo be conixoverte:! A lew samples will suffice to exhibit their character. In the reply ot President Lincoln to Fernando Wood, in their famous correspondence about pence, the President expressed bimself as loltows: Mv Dear Sir: lour lo!ter oi tiio 8;h, with tho flccon-.piinyintf note 01 sumo uate, was received yoe ihemos: impor'ant pnracr.tnU in iho letter, as I consider, is iu tlicsx.' words: ' On tiio 2S h ol No- . veinber .ust I iu nuviscd by an audioiny wnich f di tsied likely to be well informed, as well as rehab o nnu timlitu ," 1 tint H e botithcin .States would send roprpei-t itives to tho next tonm'ss, providod that a lo'l und celiOrnl iimu-siy should perm it them to do so. ho jtuarautoo or terms were asked for other than the Bwues'y reierrod to " 1 si lonely su.-pect our lntormMion will prove to be (fiotindlrss; ucvertelc :. I thank vou for cum inucicatinu it 10 1110. Undvrst nitini? the pbiasu in the paragiaph above fiotua ' tnn Southern Stales would send represeutulivej to tho next t.oneross" to be substantially iho snino as ilnit "the people of tbe tout ern Mates wouid ccaso rcsi'tnnoo, and would relnaucuinto, submit to, niid maintain tho naiionnl amhimty within tho 1 urns ot such Stat s, under tho Constitution of tno (Jnned States, ' I say that in such enso tho war would ccaso on tho part of the I luted Mates; and that 11, within a reasouab o time, "a lull and eencrai amnesty" wero necessary to eucb end, it would not be withhold. Nothing etin be clearer thnn tbat Mr. Lincoln ciiiisWered the inimetliate lumiision of the Soutnem Ecprcsentativc; as th neewsury an compunimcnt of peace. The reply made, under his direction, to the French otter ot nicdia'ion, is equally unambiguous. In thiit reply, Franca was told tbat the nest peace conference between the North and South was the American Coti prcs; that representatives from the loyal Stites were aliendy there; "'and seats a te nWo tuvitiu 'llie Betiatoro nud Hcprc?ciitn1ivoa of tlH dii- "contente.l party who may ba ron'titutionally "sent there from the Slates involved in toe in surrection." The letter to Mr. Wood was eon fidrntial: but this despatch was immediately published to the world, ad us it WF3 never re traetcd, it was equivalent to a pledare that Southern Representatives should be a Jmitted to Contrrcss whenever the Staes cho-e to rclurn, provided they were cousiitutionallv elected. The right of the President to mnke that pledge rested immediately upon fhe Constitution, which declares each State entitled to two Sena tors and a number of representatives prooor tioned to its population, it required no act ol Congress to authorize this, as il was already or dained by theConstitution. It would, of course, rest with each House to judueof the quantisa tions ot its own members, as it does those of the Senators and Representatives of the lo.al Siatos. We will only add to these testimonies tuo re n aiknble statement made by President Johnson, in his !22d of February spsech, of a conversation he had with Mr. Lincoln, not lou? before his death: "When tho amendment of tho Constifn'ion is adopted by thiee-fuuiths ot tho State?, wo shall luvo an, or pretty iiearly nil, I am in favor ot in amend ing tho Constitution, it theru was 01:0 other adonted. Saial, what is that, Mr. 1'rosldout? ald iie, I , have laboicd to prcirve tais L'utou; I lmve toi ed I lor ycnrj I have been subjected to calumny nnd misrepresentation: vet tny Kreat desiro has boon to prcservo the Cniou 01 these States intact under tiio Constitution as they were before. Uut, said 1. Mr. l'lesideut, what amendment do you reir tD? lie enid he thotiKh'. there would ue an amend men t added to tho Constitu ion which would ouini.al all the states to scad Sonatois and liepreseutniives lo the Congress of tho Uniied Stales yes, comnel theai. The idea was in his nmid that it was a ui t of .lm . 1 1 n . -. n . . . , . . . in 1 , n hrvil? nn tin. . . .... erumtnt bT Mates withdrawiusr their Senators aud Kenreseuiativo from Conirress : aud thercloro ho desired a CouiUtutioual ameudment to coiniiei them to be sent. We seem, by these quotations, to have made out the tollowinc positions: 1. That the riaht of the Southern States to representation is' so plain that Mr. Lireoln, from the bccinuiiia to the end ot his career, never doubted it. and ava'ded timstlf of all suitable occasions to declare it. 2. That Mr. John-on, hr.vins run on the sanio ticket with Mr. Lincoln, iu the nuat ot au onen breach between hiu find Coureis on this very question, has a right to con sit! er iho elec tion its an endorsement of the common policy r.r liimRPirnnd i,ts prvenndidate a;.d pre.'.eeessor. .1. The irmlicnl assaults on Mr. .1 hns n are a back-lmnded method of reviling li;he martyred President." "R0UEHT SHOEMAKER & CO., viicm:sale DUioaiSTS, MANUFACTUllEE1?, DirORTFRS, AND DEALKRS IN lVJnls, Tarnishes and Oils, So. 201 NORTH FOURTH STREET 4 16 3m N. E. CORKER OF RACE DAAEllS WASIIIXG MACHINE IJcnt iu tiio City. IT SAVES TIME, SAVES LABOr, 8 WE 8 CLOTH U. EVEEY FAMILY SUOULD'UAVS ONE. For sale at the Furniture Store ot A8fuu wanted. J 52 So. in MARKKT a'iOJt, SPECIAL NOTICES. PARDEE SCIENTIFIC COURSE IN IAFAYE11K COLLEGE. In addition lo the itmrriil Teutsc of In-traction In linn IitDiirln nt. erf l(.nrcl to 1y a ullantlal bn.ls of litiowlci.f.p ft' 1 c).olnrly cultiitc, tmlon ci.n pureuo 11 t.se l.rarcliPR hl(.U are ccfcnllally prac.U.il aud tMlLti'M- lilNO Civil. TopOFrpfhlcal. rmt Mpcha ricnls MIMMHiind MKT A 1 1 1'Kt.V t Alt'HtlXJ 'II lit', anfltl.e epi'lkailen ot Chcinlalry to AUHIC'L'L 11 Hr ndtfieAKTS. Oleic is a oal.irden nn orportnnl'.v lorpec'nlttn1r Of TI'AIiK lird C''Vlh.K 01 BODl.UN I.VN (.r .M.I - fire 1 lilbl I.OtiY, mill of tholtlSTOKY and IHlinii Nc olourcmintiy. For I lieu arg nrply o 1 ict.lirnt rT rFLL, or to 1 10'. K I 1 OUMUMN. irrk 01 the I'acu ty. Eaptck, Tcr,nfvlvonla Aprli4.lHl0. 6 b) p-r.f" DF.PAHTMKNT OF PUBLIC HIGH-1- WAYS 11fl.ee of hlct CommissToncr, KJIf I U S trccf, west fide, below I liosnut. riiii.Ai'.t.rniA, Juno 11,1833. KOTICf" TO UVillAi iOKS. fpnlcd rroposa 11 will b rccoivon at thin Oflloo nndl 12 o'clock In. nn 1IOMM Y, lHih tnst., Mr the rnnat:-uu tlo'i 01 ihc io lDwlii)f fc wr r, 10 I Imllt 01 brlok "ir cular In torm, nn I with a clear Inside diameter o! two ici't nix ini-hru, r'a. : On Jrl'.iTKon treot. benvoen Thlrlccnih street and west curb line 01 Ontario street t Ithoud Ktroet. between Mncuintli streit and west curb lino ol Kluinc nth Uroet: A ilrrmreet beirxen I'nplnr Rfeet and urn 1 11 nrb line 01 (iirnrd aveiiur Jlrrkflt rlnet. between Fort? tl'Ht and Wj-ominir rtreata wlthRiieii In'et- an 1 manbolps as mor I'O directed l y ttioi hiti Lngincer and biirveAor. Ill' undf rptrndiPK o bo that th cnntrao:or shnll tnkc Mils rreju.red ntiiilnst ilie prop, rtv 1 renting on tho mid newer, totbe miiount of one do tur and twenty live certs lr each lineal tool ol' iront. on en!i side of tne pirtet, as bo much ca' h paid, tlio balance to bo pa'd by the city. All Iiiddem are invited to be present at the tlmo and p ace cl opening the said proposal-;. lech prni.otnl Mill be Becompanled bv a certlllcato that a bond lina been Died in tl" Law Department, as Ciiccled tv or Ununro 01 Mny 2, lH,0. It ibo lowest bidder aiiall not ex"cnte a contrict T. ltl In five days ator tho w ork is atvnrded. ho wl 1 be deem d an di ellniru. and will bo held I'tihte on his bond lor ti e dlf ei ci ce between Ida bid and tho next hinlier bidder. pecitlcntlonn may be had at the Te;nr meat of Sur veys, w Llcb will bo stncilv adhered to. W. w . SMFDl.fci, 0 12 3t Chief ronimlftdnnpi oi iihwav. NOTICK. N AND AFTKR THE lMh iusti.nt Hie I'SI'i EU ST VTKH liOTEb, I OXO M ANcll, '. .1.. wl 1 bo open lor the rr-eeptlun cl VPit irs. UENJAM1J. A. SIlJt.M NKKlt. 6 8 lrn Proilctor. fPJ" BATCH F L O It'S HAIR DYE THE bl 8T IV TIIE WORLD, liairrlrfa reimlile in tamaneoua. Tho on'yperfoct dve Mo dlFapt olnlment no ridiculous tints, but trao to nnu rc.b ack or lirown ULMI1. IS MU M.l WILLIAlt A. BATCHELOIt ALSO, Hetnerntlng Extinct 01 ililiffleum restores, preserve 111 d hranliliea Hie hnr, prerenln ba dntss. So d by nil 1 run.ltls. Factory Ao bl HAKl LAY tt, N. Y. 33. JUST PUB Uv the I'hTslclftns ot tiio L I S II E D- .KW 1UKK AiL.Htl.Al, tbcKir.clletlitditlon 01 their FOIU LF.C TIKES, entitled II1IL0ISOFIIY OF MABItl AOR. To be bed iree. lor lour Flensps b;, nitdiesslng Sccre torr civ Yirk lu;enm of Anntemy. 7 17$ lo. lilt) LbOAUWAY, "cwToik. T l)IHIN(i-KOOM. t. I.AKKMF.iKIt, CAIi'l 1 It's M tv, would respect ul y In orm the l iib'lc bi 1 c lolly 1 hut l e bns !c:t ni thTir undone 10 maKo tb:s I'lnte cciLloituble In everynspeet lor the accoin D tcta.tlcn o: (fuests. He br.s opened a argo and cora n rillons ririr.i-boem in Ihe second s 01 v Ui SIDE- llOAKli is iiirnisbtd tMlh 1 HAKliF.S. W1MKS, n i imii , uc. . tic. 01 mi t.iuuii niivirn. n FINANCIAL. JAY COOKK & CO., No. 114 South THIRD Street, BANKERS AND DEALEBS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES U. S. 03 OF 181. 6 20s, OLD AND HEW. laiOs; CEItlll'ICATKS OF INUEB1EDXE33, 70OII;s, Ut, 2d,and8d Scries. COMPOUND INTEBEST NOTES WANTED. lXltRbSr ALLOWED OX DEIOSM'S. Collections Comnnenon. mado. Stocks Boucltt acd Sola on Special business accommodations LADIES. ro3crved for 6 7 2m II, S, SECURITIES A SPECIALTY. SHITE, RANDOLPH & BANKERS & BROKERS, CO., 16 S. THIRD ST. I'HII.A PELI'Il IA. NASSAU ST. KEW TOKK. STOCKS ANT3 GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, HEKE AND IN KEW YORK. ' 31 S A T I O N A L BAMi OF THE REPUBLIC, Ncs. 809 and 811 CHESNUT Street. (Ornn!zed under the "Jfatlonal Currency Act,' -Match 30, lt)6.) A rfgular BANKING BUSINESS transacted. DErosilS received upon tho most liberal terms. Especial attention given to COLLF.C'I IOSo. 8 7 18t No. 225 LOCK STREET, BANKERS AND UliOKERS, BCT AND SELL f SITED BTATE8 BONDS, U81S, 6 20s, 10 40s. UN l'l ED STATES 7 3-lOs. ALL ISSUKS. C UtTI FIC'ATES OF INDEBTEDNESS A;erctii!l l'ppcrsnd Leans on Co laterals nefotiatcd Stciks Bought ard Sold on C'cn-.imsslon. 1 31 i a ii r e ii, d u eYe Y & C O. HANKERS, 6T0Oi AND EXCHANGE BROKEA?, No. 55 S. TiililD SlllEET, flilLADELi'lHA. Slocks aid Lor.ns touht and sold onCommlesioii Uncurrent Bank Notes, Coin, Etc., bought and sold, special attmticn jiaid to the purchase and sale ol Oil S'ocU. Dt-poBits received, and interest allowed. as per areeniout. 85 3m rpilE EUIST NATIONAL BANK HAS REMOVED DurirK the erection of the new Bank bulldlnu, 1 17 ip No. 0Q5 CHESNUT S'J'REET 520 s-p 1 V E " T W K N T 1 E s- 7"3C8 -SEVEN-THIRTIES WANTED. DE HAVEN & BROTHER, I 7 . No. 40 S. TniKD Sihebt. COAL. o N E T 11 I A L SECUUES YOUIl CUSTOM. WHlTXtl & HAMILTON LEHIGH, SCHUYLKILL, AND BITUMINOUS COAL, yio. m Korth RISIII Sired, Above I'oplnr, rant Ride. 0 2 JAMES O.'BRI E X, DEALER IN LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL. BY TBE CAliOO OR E1NGLK TON. Yard, Bread Street, below Fitzwater. For conctnntly on Land a competent supply of tiio a' ovo pupenor coal, sui noio lor lami.y me, 10 wliich lie culls tho attention of his friends and the rubic cfiierally. Oiders lilt at No. 205 South Flflli rtreet, No. S3 Houfh Seventeenth street, or through Despatch or .Tost OlEce, promptly attended to. A SLPEKXOR QUALITY OF BLACKSMITHS' COAL. (US RENDER'S COAL AND ICE DEPOT, 8. W. COKJ.LB OF HRPAD AKD CALLOWUILL STBLETS, CITcr. ll;e crlcbratid West Lettish Coal Irom the Orinofcdi:iiUiery, Hove, lgi. n 1 Honiomlze 7-j0 Nut 1,1 i. Ml. aim. Hie vorv FUiiorior Hclmylkl 1 Coal, Ircm tLe l.tcvtulnle I oilleiy, Nut size, 6 tU All other sizes fc7li'i ah t cnl warranied ar.d tnkfn back lico of exppnso to tlie BuulioKr. li not ns rcprcEcmcu. Also, 1110 1.0m ior tuua li not lull wtlplit. a It) bin SADDLES AND HARNESS. TIIE OLDEST AM) LARGEST SADDLE AND HARNESS MASU7ACTUEIS0 ESTABLISIlMliXT IN THE . COUSTUY. LACEY, MEEIvEK & CO., No, 1216 CHESNUT STREET, OFF tit OF TDEIU OWN MASTJFACTORE I Bl'CGY HAll.NEt 8, from e2-IW to $10 LIGHT BAKOUCUE do 60 00 to 350 11EAVY do do 75. 0 to 600 EXPIiI6S.BKAS8 MOUMKD IUKKESS 27i0 to 00 WAiON AKD hELF-Arjt'6TI,a 15 HO to SO bl'AGF. ASD1EAM do 31)00 to CO LABItb' SADDLE, do 12 0(1 to 150 GEK'18 do do 8-00 to 75 Bridles. Mountings, BIU, Kofcttn. Homo Covers l:iuet)Cf, Ccmbs, caps, BiacSlFK, Ladies' and Gents Travell'iiK nr.d Tourist Burs nnd tacks, l.unch Baskets Dies lg and Shirt Cases, Trunk? nnd Valises. i 9 6mrp Ko.' llti CIlKbM UT ST. F INE HAEXESS AND SADDLERY. 720 MARKET STREET. 720 Large saleioom contalus a lull stock of good ser viceable MNGLE AND DOUBLE HAKNESS, bast Leather and workmanship, ior city trade, at moderate, prices, and mado to order at pkort notice. .13. P. MOYEIt V: 13IIOS., No. T20 MARKET Street. . B.-uperlorSOLE LEATDEU TKUMvM, for Eu ropean travel. Also, Ladles' French Drcts Trunks. 5 19 lm A II N E S S. A LAKGE LOr OF IJEW U. S. WAGON HAR NESS, 2, 4, and 6 horse. Alto, par's ol HAR NESS, SAfcDI.ES, COLLARS, HALTERS, etc, leught at the rrcent Government sales to bo sold at a ereat sacrifice Whoiesalo or Retail. Tozetlier with our usual assortment of SADDLES Y AND SADDLFRY HARD WARE. WILLIAM S. HANS ELL & SONS, 2 1 Ki 111 MARKET Street. ILLWARD & AVINEBRaXEU. MILLWAKD, D 8 WIMlll-.ENLB, MACHINERY AKD MANUFACTURERS SUPPLIES, No. 118 MARKET. Street, PHILADELPHIA, PA. AOtKTS FOR THU SALE OF Ccttcn and Woollen Machinery, Dealers In Manufacturers' Supplies of evory do. scrlption. Cak Tanned Leather Belting, AKD "MACHINE CARD CLOTHIXa OI best duality and manufacture. 4 25 3mrp T A 15 L I S II E P 17 9 f. A. S. ROBINSON, French iMiUe LooKIng-Clliisses, KSGllAYINCS PAINTINGS, liU.UYLNGS KIC Manufacturer of all kinds of Iooliina-Glase, l'oi'lrnit, rtntl l'ic turo Kruinoa to C)rlor. Ko. 910 CHESNUT STREET.! THIIlD DOOR AEOVE THE CONTI EN I A L, Philadelphia. 3 j WALL PAPERS AND WINDOW SHADS and Illlnds Fine assortment alwnys on hand. A'so Preventive of Damp Wal s In Dwellings. Paper Hangers sent to all parts of the o"'',,,r'A BURTON R2911trp yp. 115 K. FOt'EITl Street, above Arch. ATX l'Al'KU AN1) WINnOW RIIAOKS.- MISCELLANEOUS. JpITLER, WEAVER & CO lA5UFCirBEKS OF Manilla and Tarred Cordage, Cords Twines, Etc., Vo ?J 'crlli 1'ATF.R Htirct and 0 ii Nnrtli HKLAAKE Avenue, I UILADELl IIIA. iDTTIN 11. FlTl.rR, Al tCIIAEL Wl' TBIt, Conpad y Ci.oitita 214 0EOHQE PLOWMAN, caiu'i;nti:ii and huildkih No. 232 CARTER Street And No. 141 DOCK Street. K achitc Wtik ard JllllTi ifittlrt nromnllr .Hrn.1. to i c O It N E X C II A N Q B IUO 11 A N fFACTOH Y, J O II T. BAIL KY A CO. Ko. 113 N. FliOM nd No. 114 N. WATEU Street Pnl sdulnhla. DEALEBS IN B(.8 AAO BAOOIJia in evrrr rirsi'Tliitliin tor Cietn, Flour, 8s t. Miner V honl:sle ot Lim!, Bono- iiukI, Kie. I arte and small Cl'MO' BAtiS cartstantlv on hnj 2 T2 Also. W OOL SACK.-. .!0IINT. Bah.BT. jASirCACiDBll. rp J. Al c G U I G A N, Impcrtcr and Wholesale Dealer it FA NUT GOiiDS, JNOT10M8, EiO, FIiaVOllIiK, FLAGS, Eta! MATCHES AS I) BLACKING, NO. Q HTl'.A'WmvlUtY STREET, First Street 'jjt bectnd befneen Alarkrtand Chcsnut . 1'Uir.lDRl.FHlA. MONUMENTS, TOMB 8, GRAVK-STONKS, Eto. Juit ccniplttrtl. a bcaull ul rariety of ITALIAN MAKBLE M OKU 31 EM TS, TOX1B8, AD KEAVE-STONE3, TV ill bo sold cheap for cash. Worn sent to any part of tho United Stana. liKNIiY S. TAltlt, WAKBLK WUKKg, 1 g I wtr if o. 710 G K KEN Blreet, rhlladelph. MONUMENTS AND GRAVKSTOXES.-IoN lmtid, a lari,e a'sortment of tiravestones, of vaH os clesinns uiiuio ol' the lincrt Italian and American X a rb.ent tLe Warble Works of TF.IMF.TZ, KIDOE Avenue, belaw Eleveuth strce I il tuilisStn J. C P E R K I N LIJMUEU MEIIOIIANT- 8. Successor to Ii. Clark, Jr., . No. 324 C11K1STLLN STREET. Cot 'inr.tlj cn hand a lame and Taxied assortment of Bui rmv Lumber. 6 24 "R K 1 DESiUKG MACHINE WOHKS1 J3 01''F1CK, Ho. 85 . H!Oh l' 8TKEET. PFiT.ADi.rniA. we ars prepared to nil orders to any extent for out well known MAI UISKKT FOR COTTON AND WOOLI.RN KILT A nclvdlng nil recent Improremeuu in Caraloa Bpinnlm. and V iavirip. We Invite the at en tl on ol manalactorers to oar exten sive works Jljl ALFRED JBSKI BO J. L L I A M S . (I It A N T, o. 30 8. DLLAWAliB At. nue, l'hlisdelplil, Dnprnt's Gunpowder, Ho(!ncd Ultra, Charcoal, Etc W. 1 ukerk Co 's ( horrlato. t ocos, and Bnima. Crorker Bros A Co 's Ye.low Jlvtil falietU n, Bolto. anil alls. 24 LEXAXDF.K T CATTKLL & CO. BRODITCE COMMISSION MERCDASTS, Ko. 0 K0HTII WBAUYE3, SO 27 XOltTH WATFtt STREET, l'iilLiDELl'ltlA. 33 AI.EXAKDEtt O. CATTKLL. ELIJAI7 O. CATTELL ' COTTOX AN' D KLAX HAIL DUCK AKD CANVAS, ol all numbera and brand. Tent Annlnir, Trunk, mid W sKou-t'orer Duck. Also Paper Miiiuiiactiircrs' Drier Felts, from one to seven ftel wide; l'auliiis, Belling, Sail Twine, etc JOHN YV. EVEHMAN At Co.. S 65 Ko 1mS JONE3' Alley FURNITURE AND BEDDING. WAL1SUT ClIAMBKIi SUITS, IX OIL OK POLISHED. GEORGE J. HENKELS, THIIiTEKXTH AXD CHESNUT STREETS. s UITS OF WALNUT P4RL0R FUIiNITURE IN OIL OR POLISnED. GEORGE J. liENKELS, THIRTEENTH AND CHESNUT STREETS. guns OF ROSEWOOD CHAMBER FURNITURE. GEORGE J. 1IEXKELS, 6 4 12trpi TIIUITEIXTII AND CHKSNTJT STRI3ETq. FUHNIrl U UN ITU HE. RICHMOND & FOREPAUGII, No. 40 South SEC0MD St., West Side, WAMFACTUREH3 OS" SlTERIOli CABINET FURNITURE, AND UPUOI.STKIIED CJOODS. Pcr'or Suiit In F.'usb, Hops Hair Cloth, eto. luin:-L'ui in liiuint-Kot in, mid t bmubor Suits In Walnut, .Mi.liociiny, tiuk. t lieuut, etc., touether wltu i rmned iiuitniu ns ol tbu above woods, wuku coae very lew. Miou'd ou dci lre enytbfpx In our lic.lt will be to 3 cur ni.YQO;i.k( v eml and isrinlne cur s ock, i'l;ft 1h is liiikeniul ihrif.l tn cun bu louud unj where, and 1'RICKS 'I IIE LliVTtT. LlCI'XIdND & FOREI'A UiTJ, 828 No. 40 Fouih SKCQjl) Btreet g ? II I X (i, BEDSISG CF EVEHY DES CHIP HON, HOI.KSAliK AND HIO'l AI, AD M.'.TEItlALS FOrt TIIE SASiS liESI QUALM Y AND STYLE OF SrUINI? M A T T Ii E S S E S. J. S. FUL'.ER, 4 Haiitl Em Ku. ? S. SliV.FNni Snoot. CTAMl'INO IN COLORS GR.VTIS.-A FINR J fKnit of Enyllsh French end Kcrtnsn . . . . -I1-'" As,) ' v -LOi'h8. ll.e liilfM I ttiih n and I'nris etylo oi VIM'IINU AMI EDDl.Nli CAHDS. A arpo b ock ni fOCKl.T-iiOOK, KMVr?, WUIIlNU-DESK-l. PORTPOLIOH, nd ev ' v descrlrtion 'i Ktatiuuarir ut reasouabi orie WOXOGHAMS EVOIIAVPI). K. HOPKINS A CO.. Ctatlonern sud Card I'm rnvcr. Sltilra No. 913 A UC II Street. I'.'llLADKLJUIIA SDrtli K O N H IIAMIAUh INR'ITUTE. No. 11 N MMTll ttreit. abevo .Mnrk..tll tliHtTT, a:ie.' thirty venrs lractloal experl"uuc marniitm tlm s'til ul uillusiireni ol bis Premium Paieut tiradnat ns 1 rcfcuii) Truss, and a variety of oibers Huiiporu is. t lasno StockliiKS, M-nii'Uer Draces. rrutchc. biiiineorlcs, etc. Ladles' apartments con ducted by a Lady. ' S28S XKUSli fcil'PPOUTERS. UTlAfTES and ail other rtnrelcal fllinllMTinH. nf Ihn ... .... . .V.T . "StVVfVi. .. Z!T Bnvnur roan oi tiers, at No. W Korili HKVl N I'll btrcet. LailU-s attended bv Mia. lr. 1ICCL1.NAC11.VN. alulo depmluieut by a comna. tentsnrcoiu sajJ!vuT Irl.i.la I...1..I...I.. V .'."'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers