THE DAILY EVENING TELEGJIAHI PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1867. c THE JTEW YORK PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF TUB LEADING JOURNALS UPON CURRENT TOPICS. COMflLED rVKRT DAT FOB KVKMltO TH.KGRAPH. Protecting Bribery. o- the Tribune. II is only a few weeks since the public learned, with general satisfaction, that a mem ber of the New Jersey Legislature had been ent to ths Stato Prison for bribery. Ho was kuta small rascal, to be sure; Btill, it was a good thing to have any rascal In office pun Inked, were it only to discourage the others. Jli brother lawgivers, however, were not dis posed to leave him to his well-deserved fate; and when petitions for pardon failed, they tronpht in a bill which, under the disguise of an at for the punishment of bribery, would fcavethe effect, if passed, not only to set the convicted criminal at liberty, but to proclaim a reneral amnesty lor all pnst offences of a simi lar nature 1 We doubt II legislative lmpudenco f ver went further than hK Whether timorous consciences hud any inllucnce in deciding the Tote, our readers must, of course, judge for themselves. The bill passed both houMM, and n the 30fh of January was very properly vetoed toy Uovernor Ward. The first, second, and third sections of the bill jS'ibgtantlally re-enaeted the old bribery law, for whiell they were ottered a9 a substitute, with the Important exception that they left un touched a mode of bribery which the Governor justly characterises as "more insidious and dan gerous lhan the direct otlering and acceptance of a gilt" namely, the olienae of giving or with holdine a vote upon one legislative measure in consideration of a vote to be given or withheld upon another. The present law makes this a misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment or fine; the proposed one makes it no offense at all. The fourth section of the vetoed bill allows a iovernor or member of the Senate or Assembly indicted for bribery the privilege of testifying In his own behalf as it men who would perjure themselves once by taking bribes would hesi tate to periure themselves airaiu in order to avoid punishment. The fifth section repeals the fcribery law now in force, and with it "all and every provision of the statute or common law within the purview of" the said enactment. This is not only seiting up a bar to all prose cutions for past otlicial corruption, but is a sweeping abrogation, as Governor Ward says, of all adjudications heretofore made by our Courts, and included in the terms 'common law,' by which bribery as a crime has been expounded or denned.'' This atrocious bill threatens to become a law. having been passed over the Governor's veto bv a vote of 12 to 9, in . the New Jersey Senate. Under its provisions, should it pass both Houses (and this, we are Rlad to say, is still doubtful), a legislator who had taken a bribe last week or last year cannot he punished, because a statute which he had violated will have been repealed. The honor able gentleman who is now pajiug the penalty ef his itching palm in jail might be brought out on habeas corpus and released, because all the iirovittions of the statute of common law touch ing his case would have been set aside. The pffrontery which enabled anybody to offer such a bill or to vote for it is amazing. The Impeachment Scheme The Consti tution and Madison' Opinion. j,Vo"tie Time. Ag w haVe maintained from the beginning, the susp'- 'ion of the President from office is an essential feature of the project of impeachment. The men most active in that project avow with out hesitation that, unless the President can thus he suspended, his impeachment and trial ere of no importance. What they want is to get him out of office, not to punish him for crime. Wendell Phillips stated the other day in Boston that the President must be Impeached not be cause they desired to punish him, but because they "wanted his place." General Butler has eaid in substance the same thing; and as we lave already shown, the leading actors of the impeachment scheme in Congress seek the same ends and are prompted by the same motives. -The whole impeachment scheme is simply a political movement nothing more and nothing Jess. It is weed, not in the interest of justice or of the national safety, but in the interest of a political faction, and for the purpose of clear ing the way for the accomplishment of certain political objects. The President is an "obstacle" jn the way of favorite modes of reconstruction. While he is in office the Southern States cannot lie reduced to territories, nor treated simply as conquered provinces nor can the Supreme Court be swept away or made subservient to the will of a shifting political majority. A two thirds vote cannot be relied on for the accom plishment of these ends even in the present or the next Coneress. For these reasons, the Pre sident must be impeached and suspended. The "obstacle" must be "removed." And unless suspension can take place at ouce, without wait ing for trial and conviction, the impeachment will be useless. Hut the language of the Constitution seems very explicit on this point. It declares that officers impeached shall be removed from office "on trial and conviction," both being clearly required as necessary to removal.' The political advocates of impeachment insist, however, that though he may not be removed until the trial results in conviction, he may be suspended while the trial is going on, and that this will answer all their purposes. Precedents have been quoted from Enelish history to sustain this position, and General Butler, in his Brooklyn speech, urged that if this had been the intent of the Constitution, in clear obedience to English precedents, that document would have contained an explicit provision to that effect. But what is most confidently relied on to support this theory, U a declaration said to have been made by Madison, in the Virginia State Convention, Iield to consider the question of ratifying the Federal Constitution. The pardontnz power, vested in the President, beius under discussion, Colonel Mason spoke in opposition to it and was answered by Madison, who, after urging that it could not be vested elsewhere without encoun tering still greater objections, is reported to iavesaid: "There is one security in tliiscase to which gentlemen may not have adverted; if tlie President be connected, In any suspicious man ner, with any person, and there be grounds to Lelieve be will shelter film, the llouwo of llepre wentatlves may Impeach him; they can remove him If found guilty; they can suspend hint "When BiisDeeteil. and the power will devoivn on the Vice-President. Should he be susneeted also, he may likewise be suspended till "he be Impeached and removed, and the I.egiH Jature may make a temporary appointineut. i'his Is a great security." This passage was cited a few days since by the Washington Chronicle, the special oreau of the impeachment party, and was made the Ibasis of an impassioned appeal for immediate action; and the great authority of Mr. Madison wpon every poiut of constitutional construc tion certainly gave to the movement a degree f Importance it had never before enjoyed. Jtfr. George T. Curtis, however, kuown as au able lawyer and publicist, has shown in are cent letter to the World that it is scarcely credible that Mr. Madisou ever should have expressed such an opinion. It Is found in the debates of the State Conventions, made up by Elliott from newspaper reports, which were never subjected to revision, and were wholly without authority; while this declaration so explicitly contradicts the opinions uniformly expressed by Madison on this very point, as to i Tender it Id the highest degree improbable that he should ever have made it. But even it h Hrl make it. it was for the purpose of evadine an objection urged in debate against a special virnvl sinn of the Constitution: aud an opinion thus uttered is scarcely entitled to great weight a liberate construction of that instrument. But neither Madison's deliberate opinion, nor the intent and purpose of the Constitution on this point, is open to doubt or conjecture. Both are on record in clear and explicit terms. In the Convention which formed the Constitution, after it had been decided that some provision should be made for the impeachment and trial of the President, in cases which should require it, there whs great difference of opinion as to the tribunal by which the trial should be held; and It was only after considerable debate that the existing provision was adopted by which the; House of Representative should impeach and the Senate try. After this Lad beeu decided, and during a revision of the whole, we rind this record made by Madison himself, and pub lished in bis report of the debates: "Mr. Kntledga and Mr. Gouvernour Morris moved 'that persona Impeached oe suspended until they be tried and acquitted.' 'Mr. Madison The President is mndo too de pendent already on the Ijefjlsliituro by the power of one lrartch to try him In consequence of an Impeachment by the other. This inter mediate suspicion will put him In the powor of one branch only. They can, at any moment, in order to mukewny for the function of another who will be more favorable to their views, vote n temporary removal of tho existing Mnelsirnte. "Mr. King concurred in the opposition th the amendment. "On the question to opree to it, the vote was: "Aye Connecticut, South Carolina, Georpla.3. "No New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina 8." This was the action of the Convention which formed the Constitution taken deliberately anil alter debate upon the precise- point In ques tion. There is no room left for inference as to the intent of the Convention, and its action was too explicit to leave any ground or neces sity for construction of its language. The pro position to suspend from office upon impeach ment and beiore trial and crmviction the same now made by Butler, Phillips, and their con federateswas distinctly made and distinctly rejected. Kiht States out of eleven iefused to authorize any such action, and that for the ren sons nssiened by Madison, namely, that it would make the Kxecutive dependent upon oue branch of the Legislature, and enable the House to displace him at any moment, "in order to make way for another person who would be more favorable to their views." If the Convention had acted with specitic reference to the picposed action of the Thirty-ninth Con gress, it could not have met that proposed action by a more distinct and explicit pro hibition. It refused, in the most unmistakable terms, and in the most peremptory manner, to autho rize the very step which Congress is now asked to take. It foresaw the reasons why the attempt would be made, and prohibited it for the very reasons assigned. The object of the proposed removal of Mr. Jobn-on, as avowed by those who are scekinir to effect it, is "to make way for another more favorable to their views;" and it was to prevent their doing anything of the sort that the Convention refused to give them the power desired. It will be very difficult, in tho face of this record, to convince the country that either branch of Coneress has power under the Con stitution to suspend the President upon im peachment, and before his ' trial and convic tion." Nor will the expre-sion ascribed to Mr. Madison in the Virginia State Convention offset his declaration, recorded by himself, in the Convention which framed the Constitution itself. The High Court of Impeachment Under the Constitution. From the Herald. "But tor all that," said Galileo, "the world does move;" and this is the key-note, the great idea upon which this journal was founded and the secret of its success. When, looking carefully at tho drift of events, the pressure of public opinion, and the necessities of the age, we first boldly struck out for a Constitutional amendment abolishing slavery, the proposition was pooh-poohed iu some quarters, denounced in others as involving an overthrow of the Constitution, and was generally classed with "the Pope's bull against the comet." But public opinion was brought to bear by the dis cussion of that amendment uutil it was fixed in the supreme law of the land. In the same way the doubts, the incredulity, and apprehensions which prevailed when wc first broached the saving alternative of Andrew Johnson's im peachment, are rapidly disappearing. Journals of all parties and all sections are joining iu the discussion. The great body of the people, iu having their attention drawn to the Constitu tion, the precedents established, and the teach ings of history, are already disabused of the fal lacy that there is something of that divinity about our President which "hedges iuakiug." and they realize tne tact that, under the powers of the two House? of Congress, his impeachment and displacement are as plain a case as the removal of a village postmaster. It is a necessity iu a constitutional Govern ment that in some department the ultimate sovereignty over an the others shall exist. Ex perience in Eneland established this authority in the Parliament over the King, after many bloody conflicts, lrom 1C25 to 1C88, when, under the Prince of Orange, the subordination of the King, through his Cabinet, to tho Commons, was established. Thus even the great and pow erful Duke of Wellington, as Prime Minister, in comine: into conflict with the ( ominous ou the Reform bill of his day, found himself as powerless as the weakest of his predecessors. His resignation involved the submission of the King to the Commons, the law-making repre sentatives of the people. Our Constitution, framed upon the English model, embraces the English system in the matter of impeachment; but ours is more direct and explicit in subordi nating the President himself to the will of the two Houses. An adverse vote of the Commons displaces the English Ministry, and the King or Queen ap points a new fcet of ministers, in accordance with the vote, aud this ends the conflict. With us the Cabinet is not disturbed by au adverse majority in the Commons or House of Repre sentatives; but the President and Cabinet, in pushing their hostility to a usurpation of tl.. exclusive powers of Congress, may be impeached by the House, and removed on conviction by the Senate. The security of the Constitution against Congress is in the people, aud in their election every two years of a new House of Representatives, with one-third of the Senate by the State Lecislatures. Hence the safety of the sovereign power of the Government in Congress. Nor dees this sovereign power over the President depend upon his conviction by the Senate. An opinion of Madison Is quoted by a Copperhead contem porary to prove that Mr. Johnson cannot be suspended; but we think It proves, if anythiuir. that lie can oe. we nave uau, uuwever, euougu of the constitutional opinions of both Madison and Jefferson iu their State rights heresies and their disastrous couseouences, as developed in tho State rights of sovereignty, secession, and reoeiiion. A temDie war nits wnsncu oui uu those bold heresies inlthe blood of half a milVion ot men. We live in a new age, too, oi common bchools, common sense, railroads, steamships, and telegraphs. We have safely passed the iirst and severest ordeal of a great political revolu tion. Certain great issues have been decided by thai final appeal to the bayonet, aud thei-e issues must now be established iu the Govern ment, or the party charged with this responsi bility must go to pieces. Andrew Jonnsou blocks the way. He must bejrenioved, or Con gress, in the surrender of its nehtful authority, wiu.iaii iuto disgrace; and the Executive, as ho pleases till the neonle can reach nuu, may uc President or Kiuir, as prophesied by Mr. beward. When brought beforcjthe Senate for trial, Mr. Johnson, as the prisoner at the bar before that hlth COUlt. niav he iiur.en.lorl n, Vie nerrnitted nominally to hold his office, as on his parole of honor. He will probablv be nilnwed his parole. In view ot a fehort triul and speedy conviction ins case neea not oce.unv fhn ten or fifteen days. The broad charge of usurpation , and the specifications in reference to his assumptions of the law-makhia nower over the Kebel States, will be ample enough lor all purposes, lucre will be n necessity to lenetben the case, by lueging in his famous off hand Inaugural address m the Senate, or the stump (.peeches of his Chicago pilerimaije, or his excuses for tho New Orleans massacre, or bis appointment of Rebels and Copperheads to Office or his revocation or certain orders of General Sickles, thereby reviving the negro whipplnt-potit and cat-o'-nine-tails of the old North Carolina slave code. On the broad isne of r xecutlve usurpation he may be impeached, tried convictedi and removed within the limit of ten davs. Hot will his removal stir up another civil war or set the Potomac on fire. He will RO off as quietly .as John Tyler went off Iroin the White House, only to find at the dock that even the steamboat had left him. Our belligerent Copperhead organs, therefore, Tusy Btep their senseless clamor; the Manhattan Club may suspend their boxing up ot titles and baskets if c haropagne and crackers and cheese for a military trip to Washington; the Hon. James Brooks may hang up his Chinese war poug; the Hon. Horace Greeley and the Hon. Mr. Raymond, poor, quibbhnjr, timid, trembling political lender on great occasions, may feel easy; the Milhrites may get on their white cot ton robes for the day of judgment; but the Anpel Gabriel will not for some time yet wake up old Oliver Cromwell. With Andrew John son's removal a substitute will be provided: for there are perhaps twenty-five, yea, fifty thou sand men in the United States ready, it called upon, and competent to take his place. Take off the official mantle of Lincoln, and the people see that It Is only "Andy Johnson." The New Reconstruction Bill. From the World. The crude and foolish bill agreed on by the Kceonstriiefion Committee on Wednesday, and carried through its second reading in the House, attests the strong necessity the radicals lcel themselves under of doing something, and the impossibility of their doing anything tbit will help them. They are like a pickerel ierked out of water and flung loose upon the dry land. They flounce and flounder, unable, to "flop" back inlo the element where they were wont to cut tlcir liquid way, and they expend their whole lund of spasmodic enerey to bring them selves to the last gasp. A bill to rcmaud the Southern States back to the custody of martial law is an extreme and desperate expedient, car rying with it a confession that the radicals have no resources of statesmanship, and are inca pable of devising any civil measures to lift them out of the existing dead-lock. In the first place, the production of such a bill is a virtual retreat from the project of im peaching the President. The sole purpose of dividing the South into five military depart ments lor the administration of martial law, vesting the appointment of the five commanders in General Grant, and suspending the writ of habeas corpus, is to thwart and circumvent Pre sident Johnson. If he were out of . oflice, or were expected to be put out of oflice,no such wild plan could be thought of. Such an attempt to sail round the obstructing isthmus of the Ex ecutive Department proves that there is no longer any expectation of digging through it. The only obstacle to Congress governing the South as it pleases, without so extreme a resort as martial law, is the opposition of the Presi dent; and a method which assumes that obsta cle will continue to exist, is an admission that nothing Is expected ot impeachment. It being thus virtually conceded that Mr. Johnson is to remain in office, the question arises whether this bill will suffice to muzzle him. The pivot on which the contemplated martial law is made to turn is General Grant, who is required to designate the officers and superintend the system. But General Grant must remain subordinate to the President, and. like all other officers of the army, subject to bis command. It is not in the power of Con gress to invert this relation, nor to transfer obedience oi the army to any other officer than the President. The Constitution declares that the President "shall be Commander in-Chief of the army and navy, and of the militia when in actual service;" and an authority conferred by the Constitution cannot be revoked by law. The chief command ot the army is authority to direct all its movements, to control all its offi cers, to assign to each of them his duties and exact his obedience. Congress can raise armies, provide for their support, and make rules for their Government; but it can issue no command to any officer, nor interpose any offi cer between the Commander-in-Chief and any portion of the army to interrupt the transmis sion or break the authority of his orders. The idea ot taking General Grant, and a set of offi cers whom he is required to designate, out of tne control ot the president, ana relieving them from their subordination to him as Commander-in-Chief, flies so directly in the teeth of the Constitution that it can never be put in practi cal execution. Anoihcr fatal obiectiou to this scheme is that it suspends the habeas corpus in time of peace. The Constitution declares that "the privilege of tne writ oi naueas corpus snail not be sus' pended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it." At present, there is neither invasion nor rebellion in any part of the country. There is nowhere a single soldier in arms against the Government, nor any refusal bv any citizen to submit to its legal authority. Under such circumstances, a suspicion of the habeas corpus is peremptorily forbidden, and Congress has no power to repeal this or any other part of the Constitution. If this bill passes, it will be null and void from tue Deginuing, and the supreme Court will so declare it. We judse from the proceedings on this bill. yesterday, and from the intimations made by Mr. Stovens. its introducer, that it is to be driven through the House, without aepate, under the pressure ot the previous question. We commend the prudence ot gag ging an discussion ot this monstrosity, for never was there a proposition less fitted to bear the light ot exposure. It ts some r on solution to think that it will prove us lutile as it is abomi nable. So long as we have a fearless President ana an nonest Supreme Court, it can never be OA'nuru, MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. SPECIAL NOTICE. Velvet, bilks. Ribbons, Crapes, Flowers, FeUtUeiR. etc.. Will he ntlnna,! iur, uiaaI,. at a GREAT SACRIFICE, in order to make ! xuuiu loi extensive aiteratloua at the Fashionable Millinery Establishment or MADKUOI8ELLE KKOGII, 11 GtutliBSm No. 0t4 WALHUT Blreefc. SPLEKDI1J OPENING OP FALli AND NTFR BTYLF.H MUM nr a KINDER. 1031 eHtHKI'T U. ....... UklLrlnlllllllt. UlT IMPOkTKR filf TvYL Ji Tie-i- isi) FL0A.K lKlw"iG9- A 1 mo an elegant Stock oi Imported Paper Patterna for Ladieg' and OUlWren'a Iren. Parisian Irea and Cloak alakinn iu aU 1M varieties, l.aulea lurnbUlna Uieir rich and contljr naterlall may, rely on beiufr artistically lilted, and uie.r won nuistiea in the most prompt and eiH' cient manner, at the low. st dobhIdiS at twenty' lonrnourn' notice. Cnttiim and baatiiw. Patterns in aeis. or vy me single pUce, lor merchant aud die niaiers. now ready. 1 v MSin c MRS. R. DILLON, r Nos. 323 and 331 SOUTH Street, Has a handsome assortment of MILT.IMERT. Also, Bilk Velvets, Crapes. Riboona. Mthera. Flowers Frames, etc. Ladles who make their own Bonne W sup- pncu wim uio materials. 7 IS gLATE MANTELS. ELATE WANiELB are cuisurpasnd for Durability JJcaut BtrenKth,anacheann. LA1K M ARTELS and Slat Work Generally, wad io orum, J- B KIMES & CO, 61 Dot. 22tibd 2U8 CUISNL'T Street. WATCHES, JEWELRY ETC G O JEWELERS. s. E. Corner TENTH and CHESNUT. Oreat Itetltiction in Prices DIAMONDS, WATCIIKS, JEW It Lit Y, S1L.VER-VVAUE, BROSZKS. CA3 i PRINCIPLE. Watche and Jewelry Carefully Espalred. Fa tirniar attention paid to manufacturing all articles In N. RULON. aTlnrengaail with KITCHEN A Co., will be mneh pl W1S LADOMUS & CO. 'DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELERS.! WA K IIES, JKn i UlT H1I.YFK WAHR. II .WAICHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED. ,y c . Chestnut 8t., rniia. Have nhanda iie and iplendld assortment or DIAMONDB, WATCHES, JEWELRY, and SI-LVEB-WARE, 0 all kinds and prices. r.rt I,,,!. attention Is rennested toTour larira itnrk n DJAMoN lBt and the extremely low prices. lttftTiAL FKE8EJST8 made of Btarllna nrt fManriani diver, a largo inunmem to select lrom. WATCHES repaired In the heat manner, and war tinted. 5 K4n tilamondsand all Preclons Btones bought for cash. WATCHES, JEWELRY. W. W. CASSIDY. No. SOUTH SECOND STREET Offers an entirely new and most carelu'.ly selected itock oi IAMEK1C.SN AND GENEVA WATCHES, JiWELKY, BILVERW l;r.,an 1 fAJvCY ARTICLES OF EVERT ' DEBCRI TIOS, suitable for u BRIDAL OR L1DAY P11E8EST9. An examination will show my stock to be unsur passed In quality and cheapness. Particular attention paid o repairing. 613 BOWMAN & LONABD, MAJTCFACTUKERa 0-F AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL I) SALES IN Silver and SllYer-Plated floods, No 704 ARCH STREET, I'BILADELTBIA. Those In want ol SILVER or SILVER-PLATED WARE will hnd It mucli to their ttovantage to visit our HI ORE beiore making their uurcbnten. Our long experience in tne manuiucture ot the above kinds ol fcOoiiB iDHlik s ns to dvly competition rVekeepDOeOodabutthobewhlca are of the FIRST CLASS.au l ui own make, and wil Ibe sold at rrdnco prices. (2b, 3. large and small sizes, playing from 2 to 12aJrs,and costing from t5to 1300. Onr assortment comprises auo choice melodies as "Home, Sweet Home 'The Last Rose of Bummer.' "Auld Lang Syne. ' Star Spangled Banner." "My Old Kentucky Home," etc. etc., Besides beautiinl selections from the various Operas. Imported direct, and for sale at moderate prices, by FARR & BROTHER, Importers o Watches, etc, II llsinthr1- Vo. SUChEhNU'l Rt.. below Fourth. ILVER-WARE ton BRIDAL PRESENTS. G. KTJSSELL & CO., No. 23 North SIXTH St., Invite attentlun to thnlr Choice Stock of 80LID SILVER-W AKJ, suitable lor CUKlBTMAfl and BRIDAL i'KLOJtJJia. 13 log HENRY HARPER, INo. GSO ARCH Street, Jl anuiacturer and Dealer In Watches. .l'ine Jewelry, Silvei-l'lnted Ware, AND 81 Solid Silver-Ware. RICH JEWELRY. JOHN BR UN NAN, DEALER IN lIAVIOMS, JEWELRY, FIXE WATCHES, ETC. ETC. ETC. 9 20 Mo. 13 South EIGHTH SL, I'liilndelphlu. MONUMENTS, TO MISS, CRAVE-STONES, ETC. Just completed, a beautiful Variety of ITALIAN MAKBLE MOXUMKNTS, TOM US A.ND UKAVK-STONiW, Will be sold cheap for cash. Work bent to auy part ol the United States. HENHY S. TABU, MARBLE WORKS, 1 f4 Willi! 1 No. 71" ORKKX Street. Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA BURGEONS BAMiAOK LNBT1TUTK, No. 14 M, i"-- 2l'Jii fctreet. above Market. B. O. viiKETT, a jn'tiilrty yenrs' practical experience I' UaraUiee IUl Banjul RUIUlUTru, VI Ull i ivuiimr .,.nt tiraduatlim I'reutuie Trunk, and a Varlet ol others. Surportera, Elastic Stocklngs.guoulaer Braces, CrBlfuet, Duipeuwrics, a iu. (.uiwia ttu acted by Latiy. LEGAL NOTICES. T-E1IKTEKS NOTICE. TO Al.L. CKbDl J.V tr.rs, IKSteew, and fthnr peronn iiit'H"l' Notice l hnrebv given that the toilowliiK named pt sons diu, en the dntea afltxrd to tlietr nuinw, me the a onnen , their AuniliilHuatlon to tlm eslut oi ptroiin riewasnd, uuil Vunrdinna' and True ccV account' w iionr nauit'd are uiKieruiennonou. in ti oiiicn " Rentier lor the Probate of Winn and rratitin It'"'" ' Ailiiilnifttratloll In mm tnrthA Anil IWimifV Of 1'ntia- ' dpiplila) and that the sum will lie prew-nted to the orphans vonrt ot sain nty ami ionm 'r con tlun ami allowanoe. on tbe tli'nl t'RIDAY In Ketn unrV' next at 10 o'clock In tbe momma, at tbe County t'outt House in salacity. Lec. 28, John H. Warder, Administrator ot ANN 28, Lukens 'lboinas, Executor of CUARLES illoMAs, Oeceaseu. Jaints R. Catnubeil, t xecntor Of ARCHIBALD (' aMI JiI' Ll, deceased. 41. Enoch ltcx, Administrator of REUBEN HAAS, deceased : 2!) Aaron . Worthinrtnn, Executor o Ml ' X1LD.V EEIK1USON. deceaneU. 29. Franklin Dotweiler, Administrator or S.VRAII Dfc.TWt.lLEU, deceaHod. 31, James Rots aud amul L McT' etriuge. Exe cutor of WILLIAM McL Al'UHLlN , de ceived. 1861. Jan. 2, Clinton I loyd, Administrator oi J. LISDSAY inAiwr.. iiecenHou. 1, JohaYard Jr., and Charles Yard, Eaocutor, ol CAlllARlMt FLOWERH, decea'cd. 2, Patrick Keen, Administrator ot KDWARD LH'KSuN,'oecew i S, Mary Huulics Administratrix or JOHN C. HVUIIKH, deceawd. , Moses Haker, &ecutor oi LYMAN BAKER, deceawl. 7, Emanuel Rey, Administrator ot JOHN Mo- LKAN, deceased. 8, tarah (iron a in, et al. Executor j of THOM 13 Orahmn deceased. S, Henry J. Williams and Kdward Hhlpiwn, Ex ecutors of ELIZABETH B. UlBatN, de ceased 9, Louisa H. Wells Administratrix of ZEXAS B. YV&LLS, deceased 0. Decree L. Ashuiead, I xecntor of GE0RO12 DlLBKKT. deceased. , Edward Wiseman, Administrator of CATHA K1NE i.AMJASTKK, oeoeased. 9, JU K. Trice, iruste- ol CATUARINK ANN OODt II , under the will of WILLlAd MK1US DITlf. deceased. 19, John j. Craig, Executor ot MARY C. LEWIS, deceased ' 10, Alircd ntlcr, Executor olHEJ)BYE. KURTZ, deceaneri. ' 11, William J. W. Turnell. Executor of ESTHER i:ov KKi'ALr., aeceasen;. 14, James f and Edmund l'ratt, Executors and 'nustecs Ol JAMES D. I'KAfT. deceaxed. ' 14, James D. nnl Edmund Pratt Executors of JAMES D. f RATI', deceased ' 14, tlcorire Hardlntr. Administrator ot JESPER HAKDlMi deceased. ' 14, Victor titiiiiou. Administrator oi FRANCIS KK1ES deceased. ' 15, John Kobinson and Henry McLean, Executory oi a ml jnu.nuiji ia, ucceaseu. 16. Wary Hoi, awav et al. Kxecutoraot WINDLK HOLLA WAY. deceased. 11 16, Jamie!. He wart, Administrator ol'WILLI AM jt.ct,i,tBEi, aeceaseu. ' 17, Adelaide ntccu, Administratrix of JAMES nXEErl, Oeceused. ' 17, Isaac Huys, Administrator of WILLIAM, D, BA 8. deceased. 17, J. 1. Clark. Hare and Horace Dinner, Jr., Execu- lots oi ur.KUMi.Ki liA.ti-., ueceaoc. ' IB, Samuel P. Miller and John F. Co mbn, Exccu tors of JOHN MILL tit. deceased. ' 18, Susanna Woods, Administratrix of BERNARD J. WOOIjis deceased ' 19, Ilunb Sweenv. Administrator of IMILES SWEENY, deceased. ' 22, Jonn H. Sloan, Administrator ot JOUN BAUN, deceased. " i2, Isaiah 11. and Alexander H. VcCaHa. Execu tors ol ALtlX ANDEK McCALLA. deceased. '11, M. Kusai'll Ilia) er and James H. Castle, Execu tors of ELI.Alif. Ill 1 8 HI I'll, ceccavd. " iz, Henry K. Smith, Administrator of nlLLIAU K. Pa ITH. accensed " 23, The Pennsylvania . ompany tor Insurance on Lives, etc., uuardians ot LA1UUSON 8, CUKTIS. late a Minor. " 23, The VeiinsytN aula Company for Insurance on .Lives etc.. 'trustees under tne win ot WIL LI AM J. DIBS, deceased, for MU8AH Id DUBS. " 23, Samuel Welsh, et al , Executors of WILLIAM E BORNER M. D deceased. " 23, John t otiry and Joseph N. Price, Executors ol wtLLtAM Kittit deceased. " 23, Edward Parker, et al., executors of JOSEPH PAKKER. deceased. ' 23, The Pennsylvania Companr for Insurance on L.vo, .etc.. Trusties under the will ol aku K. HlsWAUr, aecoaseo. S3, Adam and Wlliium Strang. Executors of WIL' L1AM 8TKANU. deceased. 2S,John E. We ant. Executor of SAMUEL 'i UCK.KK, deceased. " 24, John Livezey, Executor of PHEBE MAR HHA I.L. deceased " 24, Neill MoOlensey. Executor of R03ANNA BUGlll.S. deceased. " 24, Joseph R. Rhoads, Administrator c. t. a. of JOHN BOYD, deceased. " 24. Joseph Snowden and Charles Williams. Execu tors and 'trustees ot AUUa CAMERON, deceased. " 24, 2Jancy M. and John W. Grlgv, Administrators oi JOHN URIOU. deceased. " 24, Peter A. Keyser et al, Trustees of EL LEU C. CATHi- RWOOD. deceased. " 24, Peter A. Keyser etal, Trustees of JOHN NA9- LEE, deceased, " 24. Joseph Ashtou, Executor and Trustee ot THOMAS ASH ION, deceased. " 24, James 8. tmd Edward Twaddull, Executors and Trustees ol J AMES TWADDELL, deceased. " 24, Clarkson N. and Alired K. Potter, Executors of ALOJSZO POTTER, D D., deceased ' 24, Ssmnel Hood and James E Oowen, Executors oi THOMAS MELLON, deeeased. M 21, Samuel Hood and James K. Oowen. Trustees under the will ot THOMAS MELLO&, de feated. 125f4t w FREDERICK M. ADAMS. ReKlstor. TN THE OEPUANS' COUKT FOR THE CITY X AL. C'OLA'lY OF PH1I.1H.PUIA. vatum m l-at hick kinM 1.1. V. ueceased. The Auditor appointed to audit, settle, and adjust iue accoiull oi jum. ucsLJAaiifl uuu ooicj. Wll L&. nl ,utat. Af I' iTKH K' McNaL1.y di teaed. and to report distribution of tbe balance in the hands or tne occountants. win meei. m uarties Interested lor the Durrtose ot his appointment, on T UKbPAY. February 1'2, 1867. at 4 o'clock P. M. at his office, No. 139 S. FIX TH street, in the City of Phila delphia. WILLIAM A. HUSBAND, 21imw5t Auditor. TN THE ORPI1AN8' COURT FOR THE CITY L AND COUNT Y OF Phi LAHELPHIA. J, Estate of PATRICK McLOUOHLIN, Deceased. MARY McLOUOHLIN, widow of the said decedent, lias filed her petition, with appraisement of property B.1..1.1I in Ha rotjiiiiAi nnilAr the Act ol April 14 1HM. and Supplements, and the same will be approved by the Court on SAT L' RDAY, Febiuary 16, 1HB7, tttlU o'clock A. M.. unless exceptions he n'" CL a RK, 2 1 ftu 4t Attorney lor Petitioner. LUMBER. 4 Qdl-7 -SELECT WHITE PLNE BOARDS XOUl. AKUtLASK. 4-4, 5-i, o-4, a. -ii j, 3, and 4 Inch CHOICE PANEL AND 1st COMMON, IU feet loug. 4-4. .1-4, li-4, 2, 2'a, H, and 4 Inch WHITK I'INE, PANEL 1'ATTKKN PLANK. LA HUE AND HUl'EUIOlt STOCK. ON HAND. H QCm -BUILDING! BUILDING! IOU i . I.UlI.DJ-NtJ JXMHI'.K! LUMBETt! LUMBEH! 4- 4 CAROLINA FUlOltlNti. 5- 41'AHOl.IXA El.OOHlNH. 4-4 M-.LA WAKE ELOOKINO. ft-4 OJ'.LAWAltE FLOdKINCl. WHITK PINK 1'l.OOJtING. ASH FLOOKINU. WALNUT Fi.OiiHINO. Sl'ltUCE FLOOHINO. Kl'Kl' HOAItlW. RAIL PLANK. 1'LASTEJtINO LATH. AND CYPRESS XUUl, SHINGLES, 1.0NII CEDAR SIIINflLES. bilOItT CEDAR hlllNULES, I'finPVR Kill X'UI.KS. J-INK ASSOltAi'MENT EOlt SALE LOW. No. 1 CEDAR LOOS AND POSTS'. No. -jQnl7 LU.MBER FOR UNDERTAKERS! J-OD I . LUMBER FOR UNDERTAKE full RED CEDAR, WALNUT, AND PINK RED CEDAR. WALNUT, AND PINE. Qay albany lumber of all kinds. J-OO I . ALBANY LUMBER OF ALL lilNDS. bKASONKJJ WALNUT. SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR. CHERRY . AND ASII. OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. ROSEWOOD, AND WATNUT VKNEKRS. i QA7 -cigar-box ma lOO l . I IGAK-LOX MANU SPANISH CEDARRON MANUFACTURERS. UFACTUHEllS. HOARDS. H Ol- n -SFRWCE JOIST! SPRUCE JOIST! Ti OM 14 JO tri eei:t long. I iu? 14 TO M FEET LONG. ff'RJoll NOKWA SCANTLING. su 11 22 f.inrp N. SGUni STREET. J C. P E 11 K I 1ST S L.1JM13KU MERCHANT. Successor to R. C'aik, Jr., NO. 324 CHRISTIAN STREET. Constantly on hand, a andrarlid attortment ol tuuuiiJii Luiulcr, 41 SHIPPINU. -W rr KTRAM TO LlVElil'UOL.-C,ALLIN(i Miin- crViy, currying tbe tnlujd tstmca Mil. 4 JTT PKIB" Sf.uintT Fphrnaw 9 K A NOA HOO1' .1 - WaiiuftwlA. 19 till IV i i M II A 1 1 1 l ft U k ., L aI - - " t 1TY OF 1VAsIHNOTO."....K.tnrday. Febroary 2J and earh sncoeediiKsatiirtUy and Wednesday, at noon, lrom Pier Ko. 4torth rivi-r. IU1I or PAMMM1S ' " i. By the mall steamer sailing r? Satnrday , l'avsblein t.nln PavattkA In l'n.n. First Cabin t4 Steerage a;io I o London M , 'lo London D.S -V .A. IP "J Mil.., 0 TsDsste hj the Wertncfiilay steamers! First Cabin, It fteimne, !() Paablem I nitwl Htates ennency. assenanrs alro torwnrded to aavre.Hambura.Bra- Dien, eic, at moderate late. Meerauo rassnce from Liverpool or Queenstown.tirl. enrrency Tickets can be bongut here by persons send ing lor their n lends. For lurtber inii.nnatlon apply at the Comnanv'a Office. JOHN O. DALR, Accnt. ij No. Ill WALNUT Street. Phllada. r' r . m i pnrTTrnv iv nniirt . . i2.rASHAOE TO UROPE by the omv Ameri. cnu i.ine to England and Fiance. Tbe New York and Havre steanisniu UompanT's tirat class mall itcarnshloa AllAdO suO FULTON, bavliiKheen tboroiiKhlv retltti, wil I leave Pier eo ,17. North River, lor Havre, calling at Falmouib, the lollowmg o ays, at noon preclnely : amuu.m.u. a. uaiiskn... .iM'cpnioer ii, iboo, Ai d every 2H dajstherealtcr. PRICES OF PASSAGE, PA 1 ABLE 15 GOLD.' " Flrstrlaaa. i,an Saloon a 100 r irst-ciasa. owet B.loon m Second-clas J jn n exp,rirticed Snrucon onboard. J ho Company will not be r. sponsible for specie or valuables unless bills oi lading, bavins the value ex pressed, arelijued thorcior. . J. J. COM8TOCK. Agent, . , . No. 7 Broadway. New York. JAMFS A WOTTOT. Havre,Ooneral Agentln Europe. LHEKBETTE. K.NE & Co., Agenta.larla. 11 DIRECT LINE TO FRANCE. fl'o MAIL HIEAMaHlPa Dr.TWttll MiOW I i.KIt AND HAVRE, CALLlJiU AT BREST The splendid new vessel of thm favonm rotito for the Continent will sail from Pier No. 40, JSoitu River. PEHEIitE, Dnchesne. VlLLK IDE l'AUI,buimont El ROPE, Lemaue. ST. LAURENT, hccamll. . tRI9B OF ''ANSAGE, IN GOLD. First Cabin, slhii; Second Cabin. l 0 InoiuiUnr' wine. I hese steamers de not carry sieorave pasionKen. Medical attendance tree of charge. Passentiem Intending to land at Brejit can be furnished on board with railroad coupon-tickets, ami their baggairo checked to Paris, at an additional charge of 5 lor lint ana 3 for second cia. t OEOllOE MACKENZIE, Agent, No. 88 Broadway rJCT FOtt NEW YORK. PHILADEL)-at.--ilii i, wim dclnhia Steam Propeller Company De.. spatcU s in. are Lines. vU Delaware and Raritan CaaaL le avlpg dany at I'JM. and P. M.. eonnecUni with all northern and Eastern lines. Forlrelftht, which will betaken upon accommodathu terms, apply to WILLIAM M. ha I Kl CO., . 1 1 Mo. lit. 8. DELAWARE Avenue. iff-frfK TO SHIP CAPTAINS AND OWNERS. Bkltiia. Ihe nuderslitned having leased the KEN fciAGioN BCKEW DOCK, bes to inform his friends ana the patrons of thaDock that he Is prepared with Increased tacllttiea to accommodate those haviiia vessel to be taised or repaired, and being a orantH-at ship-car-penier and cnulker, will g I ve personal attention to the vessels entrusted to bun tor repairs. Captains or Atenln. Sblp-Curpenters, and Machinist laving vessels to repair, aie solicited to call. Haviua the agency for the sale of "Wetterstedt'a Patent Mclailc Composition" lor Copper paint, tor tha preservation of vessela' bottoms, for this cl.y, 1 am pre pared to lurulsh the same on favorable tonus. JOHN H. HAMMtTT, ... . Kensington Screw Dock, 11S DELAWARE Avenue above. Laurel street ff iffft, FOR RICHMOND. NORFOLK, AND iM-itJiiCITY POINT.-The aide-wheel steamship li a 1 ihluB, Captain Alexander Everv Saturday. ALBEMARLE, Captain Bourne Every Wednesday. At 12 M., from Pier No. 16 North River, giving through blile of lading, etc., to all points on the beaboard Rail road and its connection stLrviNOBTON, FOX & CO. ,AgentB, So. 88 Liberty COAL. COAL! COAL! COAL! J. A. WILSON'S (Successor to W. L. Foulk,) LBIIIGII AND SCHUYLKILL FAMILY COAL YARD, No. 1517 CA1L0WHILL St., Phila. Attention Is called to my HONEY BROOK LEHIGH and RE-BHoKEN SCHUYLKILL, both superior and unsmpassed Coal. . Coal ana Preparallons best In the city 92S6oi RB IV. PATRICK & CO., KO. 304 N. BROAD ST.. DEALERS IN LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL COAL HAZLETON, UAHAKOT, EAGLE VEIN, AND RE-BROKES STOVE, Always on hand, under cover, and free from DIRT am BLATE. 8smw6m ROOFING. ROOFI N C. OLD BI1IKCII.K ROOFS, FLAT OR STEEP, OOVEREK WITH CiUTTA PKllCHA bOOtf lAO-rLOI'U, and coated will LIQUID WUI'TA PEJ11UA PAJET, making them perlectly wacer-Broof. LKAIi. (.KAVEIi ROOFS repaired wltA Gutta Percha Paint, aad warranted for five rears. LEAKY hLATE RUOFB eoated with LiqaK Gutta Percha Paint, which beeoanes as hard as sla e. For TIN , COPPER, ZINC, and IKOS ROOFb 'his Paint to the ne pint ultra of ail other pro tection. It terms a perfectly Impervious covering, com pletely lesistB the action ot tbe weather, and cotuil tutes a thorough protection against leaks bv rust or otherwise. Price only trout one to two cents pe square loot. TIN and GRAVEL HOOFING done at the shortest notice. Material constantly on hand and for sale by tot MAMMOTH KOOFINU COMPANY. IILCK.LLSS & EVERETT, 1 21 6m No. 30 GREEN Street. 1rHiaiwtii,. 1 1 t SHINGLE UOOFBfFLAT OK STEEP) COYEKJES ' 'WITH JOHN 'B ENGLISH ROOF1N CLOTH. I nu coaieawitn iivjuiu uui iA rx.ni.ciA maklnu tbem penectly water proof. LEAKY GKlVEL KOOF'5 -epaired with Ontta Percba Paint. andwarrant lor Am years, LEAKY HLA1 ROOFS coated with liquid w hich becomes as hard aa slate. TIN. COPPER. ZINO r IRON coated with Liquid Gotta Percha at small ex. pense. Cost ranging from oue to two cents per square foot. Old Board or bhiugie hoott ten cents per square foot, all complete. Materials constantly on hand anitifut sale by tha PHIIDFLPHIA AND PENNBYLVAallA ROOFINU COMPANY. OEOROK HOBART. 11 m No. 230 North FOURTH Street. INDIA RUBBER GOODS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, ' OF ALL KINDS," FOR JAMIL Y, DRUGGISTS', STATIONEES', OB HAN UP ACTUREKS' USE, ' Can be obtained direct at the MANUFACTORY AOKNCY, No. 708 CHESNUT Street. CUBtomera will nnd it to their advantage to dea bere. . 18 lm HABD KUBBER ARTIFICIAL fJMHM, Anna, Legs, Appliances lor Z . 1 . a.A A, A TUu. I . . - I tranmerred lrom liie In lorm and lit; ..... I1..I,AU. mf.tfi HlIVaKlA a . arw UA Uu,nuja.vuuUn. able, perlrct, and artistio substllutea yet Invented They are approved and v- aaopwsu "j mo vmwu Dwiea uoveru ient and our prlnolpal Harmmu. Patented AuKUBt U. !.! toayM,ftA4tiayl,Jbi. Aodrws ... .. . K1A.BALL CO., . w auva Dtreet,PbuadeiiiUl. PampWetifrce. 'i",au I XSSI W.J