THE NEW YORK PBES3. IDnOBIAL OPINIONS OF TIIS LEADING JOUBNALS UPON CURRENT TOPICS. COMPILED ITtlT PAY OB BVKNIKO TELEGRAPH. rwcntyS-e Hundred Murders In a Vol. fVotn the Indfvendent. Tlx? following paragraph is floating In the papers, like a frightt'al corpse on a gay and Juisy Htrt-nm: - ".Senator Roberts, of TxaH, paints a hor-t-iblo picture of aDaira in tlmt .State. He Hays that twenty-seven hundred freedmen have l)eeu nuirdered within a year, and the persecu tion of the unfortunate blacks is so fearful that they are praying for a restoration of slavery as a protection against the murderous hate of the leconstructod white Rebels." Who has paused as he read this item to reflect on the state of things which it suggests? Texan had a population at the last census of 620,000; Connecticut of 450,000. Supposing then, instead of Senator Roberts, of Texas, it read that Senator Dixon, of Connecticut, says that twenty-seven hundred Irish laborers have leeu murdered in his State within a year. We could then faintly conceive ot the horror Cf horrors that overwhelmed that State. This Comparison is not ' entirely apposite, for Sena tor Dixon's course shows that ho would liardly make an outcry against such an abomi oi;,n iw i,w il.at lnaketh desolate; as this Is but the legitimate fruit of the policy lie j ..ivnontaa. The. Texan Senator is as much in advance of the Connecticut as his State is Jjchind the lattT's. On this same ratio Massa chusetts should report three times that num l.r murdered in a single year, or over eight thousand of her poor, peaceful, and industrious citizens. Kew York should report nine times, or twenty-live thousand persons murdered! What horror would freeze every soul at such an announcement! Well might the poople, thus driven as sleep to the slaughter, pray for bondage as a protection against such merci less massacre. Think, too, of the harmless conduct of these slaughtered ones. It is another Massacre of the Innocents. They open not their mouths. They give no provocation. They were taken thither by their masters, who now turn upon them and butcher them. They are faithful, Affectionate, laborious, attentive to all the ini jwcious demands of.the dominant and tyranniz ing race, doing all in their power to ward off the terrible fate that hangs over them. Think, too, of the llorods who order or allow this massacre I These white men aud women Surpass the ancient murderer in hate and cruelty, lie ordered but one execution, and that of babes, and for a day. These rage in devilish malice against babe and mother, especially against the fathers and husbands and brothers by whom their scanty pittance of food Is secured. They pursue them not in a single city and for a single day, but from town to town, from plantation to plantation, day and jiight, year after year. Who can tell the agonies that have rent those victims' hearts; the cries and tears that Lave gone up to God from these His bleeding and dying children ? Who can imagine . the Shuddering with which they lie down at night or go out at day ? Every bush is a murderer, livery eye burns coldly and hellishly upon them, livery step they take is into destruc tion. Twenty-seven hundred bodies reft of life by open assassination in a single State, in the circuit of this year of grace the year Which many believed aud yet believe to bo prophesied by Daniel and John as the dawn of the millennium! Twenty-seven hundred souls Sent to cry to God against the famous healing of America's sore, the infamous treachery of America's rulers! Well may General Sheridan declare that he prefers a residence in hnll to One in Texas; for hell has no such slaughter of holy and harmless men and women to add to Its cruelty and curse. Impious as are its fiends', they are, at least, powerless against the innocent. Instantly should Congress proceed to im peach and remove tho President. For till he is removed no loyal life is safe in Texas. Loyal lives perish by the hundreds every month, by Scores every day. Hamilton and Sheridan could make that land as peaceful as Connecti cut in ninety days. Loyal men for rulers, and Government soldiers to uphold them, would Soon scatter all these murderers. Why is not ! fcheridan there? Why does Jolmson say he I Will not interfere again in Southern affairs ex- I Copt to quell riots? and then, as we have seen, I lie only interferes to suppress the more effectu- ; ally the victims of the rioters, and quells the liot by establislung its decrees as law. Why is he allowed to thus defy the Constitution, which declares, by an amendment he has liiuiself endorsed, that freedom shall be guaranteed to the emancipated? Simply bo cause he despises Congress. It may pass lills over his veto; it cannot execute them. It may send committees of exami nation; . it cannot send soldiers for the arrest, aud punishment of the murderers. It may talk; he acts. Until it acts, too, and puts its foot on his neck, murder stalks lod-handed through all the South. Congress xnut cease to prate, and begin to gird up its loins for the greatest work ever set it to do. It cannot turn from it without meet ing greater destruction. The voice of our brothers' blood t ries to us from the ground: how multitudinous, how awful that wail ! Will the nation hear it, and obey the will of God in putting its power into hands that will decree life and lilterty te all its inhabitants i "How long, O Lord, how long ?" these perish ing millions of our brethren cry. Shall we answer, "until the city be wasted without inhabitant, and the houses without man, ami the land be utterly desolate 1" If that is His vision and declaration, bo assured this nation Will not escape His just and terrible displea sure. As for their thousands annually perish ing before the wir, we atoned by our tens of thousands slain during tho war. So this multitude, daily destroyed by the permission, and therefore by the very power of the Gov ernment, that the North, thus chastised, has erected and allows to pxist, will bring upon us further and more dreadful tokens of His Judgment. Take heed, O America! for with what judgment ye judge these murderers ye shall be judged, and what moasure ye meto to these victims and their slaughterers shall be measured to you again ! . fTlj Drift of Congress Tkt Impeach went Party Gaining tiro unit. Trom the ileraia. The heavy vote 113 against 49 by which the WU of Mr. Eliot for the reconstruction of Louisiana has passed the House of Representa tives, is very significant; for it means nothing less than this that all the State Governments 6t up by President Johnson without authority Ironi Congress are to bo pulled down, and that ' every State concerned is to le recon structed from the beginning. TOE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 18G7. This Louisiana bill provisos that the Presi dent, -hy and with tho advico and connt of the Senate, shall appoint for one year a Gov ernor for the State, a man of thoroughly loyal antecedents and character, whoso skirts are entirely free of any Rebel affiliations, and that in the sanio way 'and under the same condi tions, a Provisional Council of nine members shall forthwith lo appointed for the temporary government of the State, including tho ap pointment of subordinate officers, etc.. all of whom are to be subject to the iron-clad oath; that on the first Tuesday in Juno next, under said provisional government, there shall be an election for a regular Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Legislature ; that male citizens of all colors, above the ago of twenty-one, thoroughly loyal, and free from any taint of the RelH-llion,shall have the right to vote, and "none others;" that in October next a conven tion of loyal men shall bo elected to form a new State constitution ; that the State, mean time, shall be placed under the additional pro tection of a military commander, with suffi cient force to maintain order, and that all the proceedings of this provisional and regular State Government and convention shall bo sub ject to the approval of Congress from tho first to the last step required for the restoration of said State to full fellowship in the Union. This bill, therefore, so far as Louisiana is con cerned, utterly overthrows and supersedes the State establishment set up and recognized by President Johnson, and may thus be considered as putting to him the alternative of an abso lute surrender of his policy or the hazards of those ulterior measures impeachment and re moval suggested by Mr. Hanks. Having disposed of this bill, the Houso yes terday resumed the consideration of, and passed, by the equally decisive vote of 10!) to 55, tho bill of Mr. Stevens, from tli Recon struction Committee, providing temporarily for the division of the ten excluded Rebel States into five military districts, and the revival of martial law therein, each district to be under a military commander, ami all to be subject to the general supervision and control of General Grant. The ob jects contemplated arc the maintenance of law and order, the protection of the loyal Southern whites and emancipated blacks in the States concerned, until new civil govern ments even be established by Congress. In support of this measure Mr. Allison, of Iowa, said that tho House had repudiated (in the Louisiana bill) the pretended State Govern ments set np in the South by the President; that if Congress did not now place the control of those States in the hands of loyal men, it would be derelict to its duties and untrue to its pledges; that he did not believe the Presi dent would yield one hair's breadth of his position. His plan was to place Rebels in tho control of those States. Is'or were military governments a new thing to them. They had been under martial law from the collapse of the Rebellion to the 1st of August, lSuli, and from that day to this it has been a sad period for the Union people of the South. Such was the general drift of this discussion on the Re publican side, their so-called conservatives, as the debate progressed, gradually giving way. The Louisiana bill, then, will be the test The vote of the House indicates a nearly un broken front of the Republicans in the Senate upon it. They have no previous questions in that body ; but within four or live days the debate may be exhausted, the minority being only ten or fifteen men. The bill may thus be passed in time to give the President his ten days for consideration within the prescribed .limits of this Congress. Should the measure thus come before him he must sign it, veto it, or, as with the Territorial Suffrage bill, by hold ing it beyond his ten days' limit, permit it to become a law without his signature. We guess that the exception and "the true intent and meaning of the bill" is a veto, which, as it will be equivalent to a reaffirmation of his purpose to adhere to his policy, will inevitably bring upon him the alternative of impeachment. The convplete abandonment of his policy and his surrender to and co-operation with the policy of Congress, or his impeachment and removal from office, is the alternative now presented to Mr. Johnson. The vote upon this Louisiana bill extinguishes the half-way measures sug gested by Messrs. Banks, Bingham, and Ray mond. !Nor is there any other course left to Congress in declaring and assuming its consti tutional rights and powers but to maintain them to the last extremity. The duty and the policy of Congress upon this question of juris diction are as clear as its rights. It was not the "poundage and tonnage" that arrayed tho Long Parliament against Charles the First, but it was the great question of executive usurpa tions of the exclusive powers of Parliament. Upon that issue the maintenance of our Con stitution and its delegated powers depend upon the surrender, resignation, or removal of our present Executive; and upon this issue hangs for some time longer the cohesion or the speedy disintegration of tho party now in power. r The Tariff. From the Tribune. We have steadily refused to meddle with the questions of detail involved in tho pending Tariff bill. Whether this article should be ten per cent, lower or higher is a matter which tho appropriate committees, after hearing both sides, can decide much better than we eould. As a general rule, we favor the introduction of bulky raw materials, like coal, ores, grain, etc., at very low rates, while imposing high duties (Hi manufactures generally. We would impose no duties, save for revenue, on coffee, spices, and other products of climates essen tially different from ours; we would levy far higher duties on teas, silks, etc., because we judge that they may as well bo produced in portions of our own country as where they now are. Europe has borrowed from Asia, and naturalized the production of silk, immensely cheapening the staple thereby; we believe America might and should do likewise. As to wool and Uax, if our manufactures were as extensive and as mature as are those of the British isles, we should incline to favor the admission of these staples free ; but, in the actual condition, we hold it lx'st for all concerned that the production of staples as well as fabrics should be stimulated by protec tive duties. Let us double our number of sheep and treble our Woollen mills, and then we may fairly consider the policy of reducing the duties on wool and woollens. And BO of flax and linens, As to those who cry out against the pending Tariff bill that it is a bill of abominations that it is calculated to destroy our foreign com merce that it is a contrivance to enrich a few great manufacturers to establish or perpetu ate monop6lies, etc. we answer, more re spectfully than they deserve, that these same objections were made, in almost indentical language, to the tariffs of 1828, 1842, and 18111. Now, then, if those tariffs destroyed foreign commerce, built up monopolies, etc. etc., then this will probably do the same ; for It is based on the same principle, operates by uluWlar means, and contemplates tljo same ends, with each and all of them. Again we entreat Congress to act on the tariff question to act decisively and promptly. We cannot each be exactly pleased with all the details of such a measure, and- It in not essential that we should bo. We shall be satisfied with such a tariff as a majority of either House shall consider best adapted to sub Serve and promote tho welfare of the, whole American jeople. The London "Times," the President, and . the Telegraph. From the World. Just about a month ago tho London agent of the Associated Press informed us, -at a con siderable expense, that a Washington letter in the London Timrs of January 10 reported a 'violent assault made by President Johnson upon Congress for its usurpation." We doubted the accuracy of this information at the time, for nothing has been more striking in the American letters of Mr. Jennings, the actual correspondent of the Times in this country, than the writer's moderation of temper, calmness of judgment, and sustained determination to preserve, as far as in him lies, a becoming and statesmanlike impar tiality of tone in describing the events and passing judgment upon tho men of the present crisis. Our regular mails have now brought to us Mr. Jennings' letter of January 10. It was on Tuesday published in these columns, and our readers will agree with us that nothing could have been more unjust or unfounded than the account given of it by the agent of the Asso ciated Press. In his conversation with Mr. Jennings, Presi dent Johnson stated the points at issue be tween Congress and himself not only with great lucidity of expression, but with singular freedom from heat or passion. We doubt whether, even tho Tribune will attempt to deny either that the Congressional majority with which the President lias had to contend represents a real minority of the inhabitants of the United States, or that Messrs. Sumner and Stevens have practically Hung aside the Constitution as their chart in the direction of the national policy. Tho Tribune and its radical friends may think it to be God's will that a minority should coerce a majority by the use of machinery intended for very dif ferent purposes, and that the present inspira tion of Stevens and Sumner should supplant the established scripture of tho Constitution. But "foreign nations and the future age" will, perhaps, be less emphatic on these points. (. ongress and the 1 resident are "making his tory;" and, whatever may be said or done in tho fervor of the passing hour, it is certain that no President will be branded as a "traitor" in history who stands where President John son puts himself upon the written word of the Constitution, and in protest against tho despotism of a minority. The Louisiana Reconstruction BUI. From the Times. The new-born hope of reconciliation be tween Congress and the President has been summarily extinguished. By the passage of Mr. Eliot's bill for reconstructing the civil Government of Louisiana, the House has in dicated its aversion to all overtures for p sace with the Executive, and all plans of com promise as between his own will aud the wishes of tho Southern psople. It has de clared its purpose to set aside tho Constitu tional amendment, and to substitute for a mild measure of restoration harsh and sweep ing measures of reconstruction. It has do cided that the States which have rejected the amendment shall not have an opportunity of reconsidering their verdict, and that the efforts of Southern Governors to induce tho acceptance of modified terms shall bo ignored as of no significance whatever. The vote by which all this has been accomplished forbids expectations of improvement. A close vote may be revised and reversed, but 113 yeas and 48 nays are figures that leave no chance of change. Mr. Eliot's bill embodying the conclusion arrived at by the majority of the New Orleans Investigating Committee sweeps away tho existing Government of Louisiana as a usur pation and a fraud, removes all office-holders, from tho Governor downwards, scatters the Legislature with Cromwellian brusqueness, and deals with the State precisely ashough it were just made subject to the authority of the National Government. The point of conten tion raised by Mr. Stevens has been avoided by Mr. Eliot. He lends no countenance to the territorializing theory, and indulges in no talk about the relative rights of conquerors and conquered. He simply assumes the unlaw fulness and insufficiency of tho existing gov ernmental machinery of the State ; and start ing afresh from the fact that the Relmllion left the State destitute of government, he provides for its reorganization on the extreme radical basis. The President is charged, in conjunction with the Senate, with the appointment of a Provisional Governor and a Provisional Coun cil of nine persons only those being appointed who can take the test oath. In June the loval citizens, exclusively, will elect a Governor, State officers, and niemljers of the Legislature; and in October the same eleHors will choose delegates to a Convention to form a State Con stitution; both elections to be held under regu lations made by the Secretary of War, and the test oath to be throughout the standard of qualification,- whether of electors or of persons elected. Meanwhile a military commander will be appointed to co-operate with tho Pro visional Governor, and exercise a wide dis cretioni'iy authority for the maintenance of peace, and the enforcement of laws ami orders growing out of the provisional jvtyw. This provision of the bill contrasts favorably with Mr. Steven' scheme of military government. Had would liiake the soldier supreme the civilian subordinate. Mr. Eliot recognizes the military power only as an auxiliary, to be em ployed if the necessity arises. The harshness of the measure is apparent in its wholesale proscription and disfranchise ment ot mnetecn-twentieths of the white popu lation of the State. The North Carolina scheme, introduced sometime ago, at tho in stance of ex-Governor Holden and others, was much more conciliatory in this regard. The only disability it imposed applied to the offices and the membership of tho projected Convention, and its only injustice consisted in its failure to enfranchise the colored poople. Mr. Eliot's bill is less liberal and less wise. It is prescriptive after the manner of Tennes see, and will give rise to the heart-burning, the angry controversies, tho bitter, bloody strife which prevail in Tennessee to this hour. In confers the franchise upon the negroes uni versally, while it disfranchises nearly the en tire white population. Practically, therefore, the reorganization of Louisiana will be in trusted to its freedmen; they, and they -Alone, will have the election of legislators, and through the Convention the framing of the uew . Constitution ; the resi dent whites lxiiiir at their mercy in all things political. ' No gift of propheny is noeded to foretell the ronsetpietiees of this policy. It is irritating and daneiou-i to tlv last doer row. and it effect upon the property and business interests of the State will be most disastrous. May we not hope that, in thin respect, thi Senate will amend the bill ? y0 urge amend ment, not in behalf of prominent Relx-ls, for we would have them permanently excluded from all offices of honor and ptnolumniit not with the view of injuring the loyal blacks, for if the alternative )? the unqualified exclu sion or the universal enfram hisenient of thq freedmen, we prefer the latter. But we are convinced that a measure of amnesty wide enough to include that great body of citizens who, though neither promoters nor leaders of the Reliellion, were nevertheless Implioatnd in it, would bo eminently beneficial. With the freedmen enfranchised, there eould bo no danger from Rebel influences; while the ex clusion of the great majority of white citizens from all participation in the Government will bo a source of endless difficulty danger. It is to be .regretted, too, that tho result aimed at the reorganization of civil govern ment on a loyal foundation is, under Mr. Eliot's plan, remote. By postponing th5 holding ef the State Convention until October, the final judgment of Congress upon the claim of the State to representation is put off until the summer of 1808. Two years, in effect, will be consumed in maturing tho process of reconstruction, and during that long interval the State will lie in condition of political chaos. The opposition allege that the object is to ex elude tho State from participation in the next Presidential election. Bo the object what it may, this will undoubtedly be tho consequence of tho measure adopted by the House. And, after all, the plan is experimental. It lays down nothing like a general system under which the reconstruction of the entire South might proceed simultaneously. Upon one point, indeed, it affirms a principle which, once begun, must bo applied to every Southern State. We refer to its repudiation and over throw of existing State organizations, to tho undoing, in fact, of all that the. President has done, and all that has locn done under or in consequence of his action. The position of Louisiana is not exceptional. And after legis lating its Government and Constitution out of existence, the same mile must lie extended to all other'excluded States. Tlu's part of tho programme may be a necessity. Assuredly, however, the existing condition of affairs in the South admitted of some general plan, beginning at the beginning, a Mr. Eliot pro poses but embracing the whole of the ex- !' eluded States within its provisions. We might then nave had early and complete reconstruc tion, instead of an isolated experiment and an indefinite delay. Wo submit that the position of the recon struction question, as shown by Mr. Eliot's bill, is not creditable to the sagacity of the Repub lican majority in Congress. A grander oppor tunity for the exercise of statesmanship this generation will never know. Yet at the ex piration of the second session after the war, wo are but at the threshold of reconstruction, with a policy that is confessedly experimental. At this rate of progress, the time required by Union politicians for the adjustment of the re lations between tho national Government and the States lately in rebellion, will be nearly equal to the time occupied by the Union armies in conquering the Rebels. Our statesmen are evidently not quite up to the mark of our soldiers. DRY GOODS. PEICE & WOOD, N. W. Corner EIGHTH and FILBERT, Have Just opened from Now York auction sii!h.. mui oilier snurces, several Iota of GOODS DELOW GOLD l ltiV r.n, lu dozen 1,1 n en Huckaback Towels. 12lc. l.tuiiobize Huckaback Towels, 2-5, 3i, uud 4.c. J.ttl'e size iShWu Diiiiiask Towels, two. loo tloxeu I.lneu Doylies., ut il, l-37,'a, f 1'50. aud fl 'ii )er dozen. A laiKe assortment ot Linen Nupklus. tZ'iS up to 6 per ilo.en. Linen Bird-Eye for Children's Aprons, 40, 50, 61'f. 75. mi. I 8".'vC.: very cheup. Scotch Diaper by Hie piece, very cheap. l.iueri Huckaback Towelling, 31. 30, aud 40c.; very line (iiuiiily. s-4 Power-Loom Table Linens. 6Sc. per yard. 7-4 Bleached Table Linens, 9uc. per yard. H-4 do, do, do. (1-12 per yard. s-4 Table Llueus, a Job lot, very heavy, l-25 per yard. Linen Table Cloths, Vi yards long, '60. A large assortmeul iSlilrliuK Liueus. Heavy Housewife Linens. Willi K CiOOIM-WlHTK OOODS. Just opened, liiii pieces Sort-Unlsli Camlirlcs, from 25c, up to Wio. per yard, Die balance of an Importer's slock, u Inch was bought nt gold prices bt-vernl lots of While lirllliiints, 20, 25. 2S, 31, 37,'J and 50 cents. Do. do. Nainsook Muslins, 25, 28, 81, 37Ji. and 50 centsvery cheap. lot i elect s Nainsook Pluld Nnslius, huodsome large Plaids, very cheap. W hile aiarsullles ant Piques, STJ', 60c., up to f 1 a yaid. several lots of Victoria Lawns, very cheap. heveial lots of Ladles' Linen Hdkis to sell, 12,';, 15, 18 20, 25, and 28c Geut.V Hdkls, 25. 28, 81, 87M, 45, and 50c. beveral low of Gems' Colored Border Ildkfs, very Cheap. Ladies' Hemstitch Hdkfs. Ladies' Tucked Hdkts, U7.,4l, 50, and 50c. Lace Border Jldkls., 81 els. A liir-e assortment ol Hamburg Edgings, Insert ing, and i'louuclngs, a cheap lot of Dimity Bauds, Lie, Ltc JIVSLIXS! MINI.INS! All the leading makes ot Muslim at the very loesl prices. W illiainsvillp, W'amsiitta, New York Mills, Amos keaK A, Whlllnsvllle, Whitney, and Troutou l'llluw cu.e and wheeling Muslins, American Calicoes aud Ginghams. l'ltlt K A WOOD. Northwest cor. EKillTH and F1LUKHT. N. B. Just opened.50 pieces French Lawns, 20 cents, blit;liily soiled, worth S7',. lu 2Jj LINKNS AND WHITE GOODS, FOR LADIES' WEAIl, AT IMPORTERS PRICES. bome ppecln lots containing MKK) yards ot celebrated makes of FRENCH AND 1BISH LINLNH, Ugl)t medium, Khd heavy. LINEN LAWNS, Bird-eye Diapers. 5-8, -4,r-8, 4-4. I BENCH LINEN LAWNS, for Surplices. LINEN CAMB1UCS aud fciHEAK LINEN LAWNS JW XV II I T UOQU8, Ilotli Plain and Check, OP ENGLISH, FRENCH AND SWISH MAKERS. I'AMBBICH. JACONETS. NAINSOOKS,' Klf.rt BOOK AND MULL MUetLlNS. CAMBUIC DlMlTlrX. HAIR COKD MCSLINS. it)lA TWILL, striped aud plain. Hji'J' FINISH CAMBHIC, all widths. tiBOANDlEsi AND TABLET AN S, for Evening pvTct6iua and Bisnops lawk. I'KHCALEH, M ADA POL A M KS, COTTELLK3. iiil NCH DIMITY. CAMB1UU LONG CLOT1I. i lOVJBED PJUUET AND COKDED PiUUET. Hoods on hand from previous purchases are marked down to correspondingly low pnoea. ALfeO, A SPECIAL LOT OF i000 Nottingham Lac Curtain and Fringed Lace Tidiu, at very reduced price i. 8HEPPARD.VANHARLIKGEN&ARX1SQN. mpoBTBua or , HOUBK-FURNISIHNQ DRY GOODS 14 liuirp KO. 104)9 '1IKM! VT STBEKT, DRY GOODS. J. C. STBAVDR1D0B,.& CD. CLOTHS AND CA.SSIMEHE3. Prices Very Low. Ore at Depression In the Woollen TiftjJc. Fice Kixed Coa'iogf, half price, fcuper Frmch Black Cloths. Biolleyand Zamboni Caasimeree. All-wool Cassinif res for Boys, 75 cents. Good Stout All-wool Cassimerea, 90 cents. Very Heavy All-wool Casstmerea, l 00. Elegant Mixed Caseimeres, (1-25. Mixed Cassimero, for Spring Wear, $125. Fztra Weight, for Business Suits, SI 60. Double Twist Heavy Catsimeres, $175. Very Elegant Cassimeres, $2 00. FLANNELS. WIIMMlOltlKT ri ANNELN, 31 CENTS. ALL-WOOL I I.AKM I K, 33 C'KNTS. A1.L WUOL M IDI) FI,AKM:U, S7 CENTS. HEAVY ttOODWIDEMHAKER.ea CENTS. V A L L A It I) V A L E FLANNELS, ALL WIDTHS. 1 IIALK URKY TWILLED FLANNELS, 31 CENTS. LINEN GOODS. LINEN TOWELS, ftl'30 PER DOZEN. LAIIOE DINKEK NAPKINS, ftVOO FEB DOZEN. 500 DOZEN TOWELS, AT TEST LOW PKICES. 300 DOZEN NAPKINS, AT VEBY LOW PKICES. HAND LolJtt TABLE LINENS, 63 CENTS. CALICOES. 18 CENT ( ALMOIN lOK SPRINO, BEAU TIFUL STYLES. SPKINO STYLE CALICOES, NOW OPEN. WIDE SPK1NU C411NTZES. COTTON GOODS. Still Further E eductions ia WIDE SHEETINGS, PILLOW MULINS,1 NEW YOKK MILLS, WA9ISUTTA, WILLIAMS VILLE. BE CAREFUL TO (JET OUR PRICES BE FORE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE. J. C. STMWBBIDGE & CO. K0BTBWES1 CORXER EIGHTH AND MARKET STS. 1 Iltsmrpii m M. NEEDLE S, No. 1024 CIIESNUT St., Is Celling his Entire Stock, Comprising Every Variety of WHITE G0OD8, LACES, EMBB0IDERIE3, HANDKERCHIEFS, VEILS, EIC. ETC. Al aDd below cost of Importation, prior to removal to GERARD ROW, 212t K. W. Corner ELEVENTH and CHESNUT Sts. No. lu4 CIIESNUT Kireel. E. 171. NEEDLES WILL 0FFES HIS STOCK OF WHITE GOODS, LACES. HDKFS,, VEILS, EBIBBOIDERIES, ETC, IKT1LBAKCII 1, At a' great sacrifice, to Insure Its being closed out prior to removal to N. W. Corner ELEVENTH and CHESNUT laajivj XflNrsail:) Wll 'QXT fC)Q HOOP SKIRTS.. JOO 00 LATEMT BTYLK, JUST OUT O!4o LE FETIT TK IL, for tbe J'roiiiBj(ie,2X TMdsrnllnd rilK CHAMPION TliAiE. lor tha nV.w1.7f !aaJ .nannnnd. ' -win D Kklrts iroijj SM to 4 yaida in plr.,.... """ jyeryUnath ail of our own mk ?,Sm" ! letafi, and warranted to (ilve eath tacUon " a Constantly on haod low-priced Kew York muia Bki. Plain and frail, 2 springs, W cenU, 25 ,,Tmi ai "5l prmu Sl-lOi and 4(1 sif Inns Sl'i3. uuai 1 jBO Hkii urusde to Older, i liettd, sud rvpalred - Call or send lor Circular oi stvte, sixes, and nrleea U anutctoiy iuu haiearootns. ? a Prloe- ho tib AhCil bllet II 1m WILLIAM t. HorauKa. DRY GOODS. 229 VARIES & WARNER, 229 Ho. 229 Ilorth riHITIl Street, Al.ove Kate, WILL Ol'EN TO-AY Auollior Cftt-e WaltliHin Pillow-case Muslin 25 cents; 3 wises eolJ w ilhlu 30 days. Yard-wldo BleaoUct Muslin,, well-known mnlte, 25 cents. a Bleached Muslins, all prices, and as low u tlie lowest. Unbleached Muslim., lowest market prices. One bale 7-8 Domet Manupls. 81 couU. , One bale 4 4 Domct Flannels, 37 cents.' All-wool Flaunt-:, 3.1 cents up. American Delaines, n.-w and choice stylos, American Prints, handsome styles. Black Alpacas, 40, 45, 50, 60, 62 cents, oto. Bird-eye Diaper. J 50, J3D0, &-50, eto. Ltucu Towels, Nrpu ins, Doylies, etc Iiand-loom and uubieaohed Table Linens 50Lcints.efctc!,t mk dotnLr WhUe BalMOralS- 175' Honeycomb and Aihambra Quliu etc Ladies', Gents', and Miw Hosy, 0'Ueft Lancaster Olnghains, 25cents. Canton Flannels, at reduced prices, ladles' and Genu' Merino Vests, reduced BOMETUIKU MiW AND C11EAP EVERY FARIRS & WARNER, 2gjl Kog SO North NINTIlStreet, LEGAL NOTICES Vl AIT. nnnnr .V tors, Lexaice. aud olher n.. in.,... vrjUl" otice Is linrebr aiven that the tl..i,..in ........ sons OW, ou the dmes tiuxtd to their uimeZ iii. .k. accounts ottlielrAuu.liilsii .Hon f fit.".?.! ".'?.. lh" person, dev.ea.ea, and Ouardiun.' and irus e.i acoounu whose names are undirn.eniloned. In omoS? 2.. Ite8lter lor the i lobato ol Win. and crantiB? i?ir!S AdimnUtraUon la and lori0. it? .,,5 'J ouWf deiphlni and that the same wil, be pn-sintod to th Orphans' Court ols,d Chy and toSnii 'or Vnflri.. Uob and allowanw. on the third FMIDAT In b,ti? uLVu7. ta tha a,orn,n"' ov oSK lbt. l;eo 28,JohJ,ABEW.de,,flAdln,nl.tr.tor ol AJCiT " M' '"fiKllill'S.-S!.-"-" 01 CHARTS " 281 ,Bc" tirST010 AECHIBAU " M- A ", A'Ji0'1 '"Hon, ! cutor or HI- M, FrankUn D.-iw irr Adunaii-uator of SABiU lJfc.1 n j.J LJ',H, deceased. " 31, James Ros aud .i.iujI I. McXeirldifs, Kxa cuiors ot WILLIAM MCLAUGHLIN, d.. ceased. ' lwn. dan. 2. Clinton I lyd, Admlnlstrftorot J. LISD3AT c uaiu K, deceaRvd. " i'3o?'tir,,uJih"le, Yrd teuton . .. ?'tjAlIlAKl.a, LOW KRd. deceased. 3, ratnek Be.'.. Administrator ot JSOWAEB J"CivaiJ4i, deceased " I, Mary Hughes Administratrix of J0B.X 0 UUtilJrg, deceased. , aioses Baker, Lxecuior ot LYMAS B.ULEB Oeceaned. ' " Kn?""ei Rev, Administrator ot JOHJT Mo LEAN, Ot censed. 8, Sarah Graliaui ei al, Executor of THOU A3 Grhum deceased. " 8, Henry J. Williams and Edward Shlppen. Ex ecutors ei Jr.LlZAUKIU B. OlBSorf da Ceaard. " 9 Louisa ti. Wei's Administratrix of ZEN'AS n WBLLS.doceawd " 9. Oevrte h. sbnjcad. Executor of GEOHaK (ULbtKi , deceased. """"" " 9, Edward Wiseman Administrator of CATHA. WMD Lt i AS I UK, deceased. 14 9, EH K. JVnce. 'Irustoo ol CAI HARI.VE ANN tltiS.-1!' uniJrla "Wot WILLIAM MUtJt 1ITH, deceived 10, John O. Crul-, Kxecutorot MART C, LEWIS deceased ' 10, Alfred iur, Executor ot HENRT B. KURTZ, deceased. ' II, Wumui J. W. i'urnell. Exocutor of ESTttLR 0.;V tRDALt. uoceastd. It, James 1 and t omuml fratt, Exeoutors and J i ustcos oi J A i t. 8 D j?KA f I , ucceased. " 14, James 1. " un l.dmuud fratt Jiieoutors of JAiifcrt D. fit aT r. decerned " 14, George Hardicit. Administrator 01 JESPEB UAKblNLr deceased. " 14, Victor t.uli.ou Ailmluistraior ol FRANCIS t'KlEd. deceased. ' IS, John Jtoblnsun und Henry McLean, Executor ot JMblL a.0 JUL' IK. deceased. " 16. Mary Ilotmwav ei al. Kxecutura ol WI-NDLE lioLLA WAY, deceased. " 16, Janiesltl. Meuait, administrator of WILLI AM ; ticuucr or i, aeceaseu . 17, Adenine bteen, Administratrix of JAME3 I tift.KN oecuused. ! 17. Tunc lluvs. Aduuuntra or at WILLIAM" It. HA1. deceased. " 17, J. 1 Clark date and Horace Blnney, Jr., Execu toisof Dr. HOh'.'.Ri Ha tK, deoaeg. " 18, Samuel P. Hirer and John F t o mi bs, Execu tors of J ull JulLLf K. deceased. ' 18, Busanns Moods, Adiuiuisu-atrix ot UtBNARD J. Wt0 it, deceased " 19, Hunt) Bxeem Administrator or MIL 13 H WEEMf. cecoased. " i, JouuH.bloan Administrator ot JOHN HAUN, 22, Isaiah It. and Alexander?. McCal'a Execu tors ol' ALkXAjNjVIKK AicCALLA. deoeaoed. ' 22, M. Kussell 'lhajer and James H. Castle, execu tors of 1 LlAliKlh 1 8 1 : H, ueoead il, Henry K. bml h, Administrator oi n 1LLIASC K. MsITH.oeceuawJ " 'it. The Peons-nwi company tor Insurance oa Lives, etc.. Guardians ot LAKRltfOJi f, CU li TIS. late a At inor. " 21, Ice fenm-yn aula Company for Insurance oa . Lives etc i runtees under the wl 1 of WIL LI AM J Dim, deceased, for BU8AM Si. DUBS. 23, t?aniuel Welsh et al , Executors of WILLI A at H HOIUNhit Al l decerned. " 23, John ( oury au.i Joseph N. Price, Kxecutorf of WILLIAM KIT HtN deceased. " 23, Edward Parker, et al , x.xeuutors of JOSKP0 1'AhKl L, deceases. 23, The Pennsy lvania Comptny for Insurance on L ve.i, etc.. trustees under the will ot MAUIA E 8 in tV--.it T. deceased. " 23, Adam and Wtl lam Ktranu. Executors of WIL LIAM 8 i HAU, deceused, " 23. John F. We ant. txecuior of SAMUEL TUCKER, deceased " 24, John LiVLZey, txecutor of PEE BE MAB hUAi.L deceased " 24. Keill McGleutey. Fxecutor Of B03ANKA lICGHI.n decessed. " 24, Joseph B. Khuuds, Administrator . t. a. of JOHN U'iVD, deceased. " 24 Joseph Hnowdeu and Charles Williams. Execu tors and trustees ot ANUU.i CAM o. BUN, dcceabeU. " 24, Kancy i. and John W. Grlg, Administrators oiJOUls GUiGG dectased " 24. Feier A. Kcvrtr et al, t runtees of CLLEV C. tATllKiiUOU dcceaned ' 24 Peter A. Kerser et al, Trustees of JOHN NA3- LKE accessed, " 24 Joseph Athioa, Executor and Trustee ot TUOMAd .-.MHiO.N, deceased. " 24, Jamesi. sul L'dnard iwrf.dell. Executors and Trustees oi J taiKS TWAUUELL deceased. " 24, Clarkson N ai.d lired H Potter Executors of ALO.NZO PO'J'TtB, U V., deceased " 24, Etiminl Hood cuj .lame! E Gowon. jLxecutorf ot l'BOjiAi MKLI.ON, deceased " 24, Samuel Bood and James b. Gowe.i. Trustees under Uio will ot T 110 VI At MLLLOA, de ceased. Ii5f4t FHEDERICK M. ADAMS, Register. TN THE ORPHAN COUKT FOR THE 0IT7 X AND COUNTY OF 1M1J l.AUKLl'Ji IA. ilstate of HAML'EL J. -MARKS, Deceased. 1 lie Auditor upiioii.ieU by the Court to aodit, settle, and adjust the account or Itli.'llAHD M. BATTU1W. 'I rtistee, aptioluivil hv mild Court to inukesale oi real tHtute of said decedent under proeeedins-s lu iiurlitlon, and to report distribution of the balance iu the haniis Oi tbe accouiitunl, will uieel the parnei Interesied for tlie purpose ol Ills a piiiiiiiiH'Iit, OH MONDAY, l-vlmi-ary Id, J"7, at 4 n'dwli P. M , at his oilico, jNo. Hi Koulii FIFTU Slrtet, seco,.il siory.TIn ' el iv of l'lilludelpliltt, BK.NJAMIN O. MA!f. 2 liuwat ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, AJvi) DEALERS 13 Pamts, Tarnishes, auaoils, No! 201 NORTH FOURTH STREET, 1 as 3nl CORNER OK RACK. KIVY WELLS OWNERS OP PROPERTY- The only place to ftet Privy WaUselaaued and 4 a. ntected.tWwprtce. A. PITK0JJ, seal u lac tare el PouAreiui OOLBBMIThH HALL, ii HKAHI ttuvok
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