THE DAILY EVENING TELEGIiAPII. PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20'; 18G7. THE NEW YORK PI1ESG. gDITOKIAL OPTKtOKf" OF THE I.FADINO JoritXALS EFOH CCBKENT TOPIO CtlMl'IMil) KVKKY DAT FOR THK BVKMNO TKI.KOKAI'H. The Snpilc",entN' Itcrit tuctlou nui 'i'h Pruijuct lu ilia Souili, Prom the Herald. .As Hip Supplementary Southorn llwonstruo lion bill, substantially in tho form in which it ban panned the Senate, will doubtless hoou be proclaimed a law of the land, veto or no veto, we may briefly restate its leading fea tures: First, before the 1st day of .September next, the commanding general over each of the live military districts into which the ten excluded States are divided, nhall causo a registration to bo made of the authorized voters, white and black, under a specified oath of loyalty, ju each county or parish of his district. (Second, upon at least thirty days' notice those military commanders respectively shall cause an election to bo held by tho registered voters for delegates to a reorganizing State conven tion, and for or against such a convention, provided that sm h a convention shall not be held unless a majority of all tho registered TOters shall have voted on the question, yea Or nay, of holding such convention. Third, when a convention shall havo thus Iteen ordered by a majority of the voters, the commanding general, after overlooking tho returns, in proclaiming the result shall, withiu sixty days from the election, call the convention together, "and said convention, wlieu organized, shall first determine by a Tote whether it shall or shall not proceed to frame a new ltate Constitution, according to the terms of Congress, and if the vote be In the affirmative the convention shall then pro wed to the work." Next, when a new con stitution shall have been framed, it shall be Submitted for ratification, on thirty days' .notice, to the registered voters representing the people. Next, with the constitution thus latilied, it shall be submitted to Congress, and if accepted by the two houses, as in conformity with the conditions laid down, the State con cerned shall be declared entitled to a restora tion to Congress, etc. The bill further pro Tides that all these provisional elections are to be by ballot. Now, what is tho prospect of Southern resto ration under this Supplementary bill and the Original law of March 2 f lu the first place comes the most difficult part of the work the Separation of the nheep from the goats in the registration of voters; for those Rebels ex cluded by the pending Constitutional amend ment from office, subject to a two-thirds vote of Congress, are excluded from the ballot-box in these reorganizing elections. The military commanders are allowed all the interval to the last day of August to appoint their registering places and subordinate officers, to prepare their plans, rules, and books, and to make their registrations. But we think that all this work may be easily done by the drst of June. Then thirty days' notice for the election of a convention will bring that election on the first f July. Then, assuming that the whole interval of sixty days allowed will pass before tho con vention elected and ordered shall assemble, it will bring us round to the 1st of September with the full organization of the Convention, let us say next that it will occupy a month in framing a State Constitution under the terms of Congress; and as another mouth will then pass before a ratification can be had from the people, this ratification will carry us to the 1st of November. Meantime, under the act of March 2, a State Legislature must be elected, and it must ratify the pending Con stitutional amendment, and this amendment must be declared part of the Federal Consti tution before any one of the outside States can be restored. But all these conditions may be fulfilled in season for the regular meeting of Congress in December next, if the Presi dent of the United States, his commandiug district generals and official subordinates, and the ruling politicians and white people of the ten States concerned, will only act harmo niously together in view of tho great deside ratum of a restoration to Congress as soon as possible. We expect before next March to announce to the world the complete re-establishment of the Union on the new basis of universal liberty and civil equality, with the restoration of every Rebel State to Congress. The President has manifested in his appointment of his live district military commanders Scholield, bickleSj'Thomas, Ord, and Sheridan his pur pose to execute these laws of Congress faith fully; and from the Southern civil experience and good services of each of these officers, we are satisfied that they will carry out these laws as quietly and kindly as possible to the people of the several Status concerned. Whe ther, therefore, the ten excluded States shall or shall not have a voice in this Congress, and in the election of the next and our next President, will depend upon the course of the ruling white class of each of the States directly concerned; and that class, though to some extent aisfrauchised in this work of recon struction, we are gratified to believe, is rapidly coming round to the wise policy of a prompt and faithful compliance with the terui3 of Congress. The prospect, therefore, of Southern resto ration is good; and the encouraging indica tions we are daily receiving from Virginia and all the way through to Texas warrant the belief of immense advantages to all those States in the way of Northern capital and enterprise in view of large crops, even this year, of corn, tobacoo, cotton, rice, and sugar. Cheerful Submission to manifest destiny will surely bring to the South, in advance of Southern restoration, those great essentials of financial confidence in the development of Southern industry wealth and prosperity. The Constitution, ami the Chsueei Wrought by th Revolution. From the Times. Our correspondent, "A Veteran Observer," In a letter published in Monday's Times, drew attention to the changes in the construction of the Constitution whUiu the Rebellion has brought about. lie ooncedes that the Consti tution of the United States is not now what it Was believed and held to be ten or even five years ago. "The Constitution," he says, 'must be construed to meet the wants of the people; hence it is practically changed accord lug to the ideas and wants of the day." This . may be perfectly true. But it is equivalent to saying that the Constitution is sham; that our syBtem of constitutional government is a failure, and that "the wants f thA TeoDle." the "ideas and wants of tua day " constitute the only fundamental law of the land. England has just such a Constitu tion as that. The opinion of Parliament, the rotes of the House of Commoas, the will and vanta vf the people, constitute the "ua - written Constitution'' by which England is governed. Our Government is tending to precisely that result. Our Constitution in its theory was intended- to bo the supreme law limiting and restraining the action of the Government in every department, and puttini checks and restrictions upon the wants, wishes, and will of the people whenever they should transcend its provisions. This is the theory of our form of government. This is tin? only object and use of a written Constitu tion. When it ceases to serve that end when it ceases to interpose a barrier to popu lar passion or to regulate and control the action of Congress, or the Executive, or the Judiciary, it ceases to perform the practical duty for which it was ordained. Our correspondent says these are not changes in the Constitution, but only in tho construction put upon its provisions. Either this is a distinction without a difference or else the Constitution is too vague and unmean ing in its terms to have any practical meaning wniuever. jne onsuiuuou says, for ex ample, that "the writ Of habeas corpus shall ( not he suspended except when, in case of in- 1 vasion or rebellion, the public safety may re- ; quire it." Congress has just authorized tho ! huspension of tho writ in ten States. There ! is no invasion, there is no rebellion, and the public salety does not require it; yet tha i writ is suspended all the same. Is this a I mere difference of construction? There is no room for any such difference. The language j is just and clear and explicit as it is possible ! for language to be. There is not a shadow of doubt as to its meaning. There is only one "construction" of it possible; the suspension ! of that writ is absolutely prohibited except in one specified case; that case has not occurred, i and yet tho writ is suspended. What this means is just this: The Constitution ad hoc has leen repealed, abolished, annulled, by act of Congress. Precisely the same thing is true of other ! portions of the fundamental law. It declares that "no State shall be deprived of its equal ! representation iu the Senate, without its own ! consent." But ten States are thus deprived of all representation, in either House of Congress, , not only without their consent, but against t their earnest and indignant protest. Is this a i difference of "construction t" Nobody pre tends anything of the kind. Congress claims that the Constitution never contemplated such a state of things as now exists, and that there fore this prohibition has no effect. But this is sheer nonsense. The Constitution provides for every case that can arise, and for every state of things that run exist. Its language is general, and its binding force is absolute and universal. The plea cited means simply that Congress may dispense with tho Constitution whenever it pleases, provided the people will sustain it iu so doing. In other words, the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, except when tho will of the people sustains Congress in overriding and overruling it. Tin n it becomes simply so much waste paper. ''Everything done by Congress to suppress the Rebellion," says our correspondent, "is found in tho Constitution, and more would have been found if necessary." Unquestion ably ! But this is only a roundabout way of saying that the will of Congress became the supreme law of tho land, and the provisions and prohibitions of the Constitution vanished in its presence. Congress did whatever it deemed necessary to be done and it continues to do so down to the present hour. The Re construction bill of the last session was, in nearly every one of its provisions, in clear and flagrant violation of the Constitution as in tended by its frame rs, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, as maintained by every de partment of the Government hitherto, and as expresseil in its clear and explicit language. Yet that bill is the law of the land, and as j such will be enforced because it embodies the will of the nation, which has become a "higher law" than tho Constitution, and as such will I control not only its construction, but its appli- ! cation to tho practical government of the ! country. ' We may just as well look this matter in the faco. It is quite useless to ignore the plain j and palpable fact that the Rebellion and the : war have revolutionized our Government. We ! are not living now under the Constitution of j 11SU, but under an unwritten Constitution ' which represents the national will as em- j bodied iu the act of Congress. The limita tions of the old Constitution have ceased to have binding force. Congress exercises power J never conferred upon it, and denies to States : rights expressly reserved to them by the Cou- i stitution. And it does so with perfect impu- nity, because there is no authority to overrule or reverse its action. Tho President ii power less, because two-thirds of Congress is against him. The Supreme Court is powerless, be cause the case cannot come up for its action, and even if it should the Court has no meanB of enforcing its decrees. The people are with out remedy, because ten States are not allowed any voiie in the matter, and the remainder sustain the usurped authority. We are living under a de facto Government a Government resting on force, and on the will of the people who wield it; but an actual Government never theless. President Johnson attempted at the outset of his administration to carry on the Govern ment under the Constitution of the United States as it existed before the war, respecting all its limitations and restrictions of power, conceding to States all the rights it guaran teed, and carrying on the Government within the channels and upon the grooves which it provides. The attempt proved a failure. The popular resentment against the Rebellion, the sense of exultation at the victory achieved over it, the demand for guarantees, for new liberties, larger powers, and more permanent sectional and party control, were too strong to be resisted. The war had wrought a revolu tion in public sentiment, which in its turn wrought a corresponding revolution in the practical administration of the Government. Congress represents that revolution to-day, and acts under its inspiration and in the exer cise of power which it confers. This is the actual state of publio affairs. It is perhaps wiser to adjust our publio action to it than to waste strength ana time in con tending against it. There certainly is but one tribunal remaining to which an appeal can be taken. The people may possibly reverse their own action, and decide to stand by the Con stitution, rather than the revolution by which it has been for the time supplanted. We shall know whether they will or not after the Presidential election of 1808. Until then, at all events, we must live under the de facto Government which now holds possession of supreme power. Kr South Carolina.. From the Tribune, 1 The tidings we printed yesterday from the capital of South Carolina are caloulated to astonish the Rip Van Winkles of the North. A gteai meeting of the people has been held preliminary to a reconstruction of the State under the reoent act of Congress, and such eminent chiefs of the late oligarchy as General I Wade Hampton have fraternized heartily with ' 1 most capable and trusted negroes; the lending whites and blacks vying with each other in expressions of mutual confidence and good-will. The whites concede to the blacks every light which they claim tor themselves; while the blacks take the lead in asking Con gress to repeal all disabling and disfranchising acts, so as to allow the State to command the services of the ablest and most trusted citi zens. In short, South Carolina has already taken her stand on the tru', broad, generous national platform ol universal amnesty with im paitial suffrage, and will soon be in Congress, shaming the obstinate owls of the Middle and Western States out of their lingering preju duesnnd affectations of prejudice against a recognition of the inalienable rights of man. Such is the natural, beneficent operation of the Reconstruction act of Congress, so fiercely denounced by the President and by the Cop perhead Congressmen and journals as an act "to organize hell" in the South, to destroy liberty, and to whelm the whole land in an archy and military depotism. So far as wo can now see, every ex-Rebel Stato but Texas will promptly and cordially reorganize on the basis pioposed by Congress, and have its dele gation ready to take seats iu Congress before the close of this year. What patriot heart does not swell with gratitude and joy at the prospect? Close of the Nrfrrophlllst Cycle In Our Politic. Vom the World. It is certain that the next Presidential elec tion cannot be carried on the negro question. By the passage of tho Supplementary Recon struction bill that issue will be taken outof na tional politics. There may, indeed, be a pretense of maintaining what has been done, and prevent ing its overthrow; but as there is no proba bility of its overthrow being attempted, that would be an idle issue. These two things can easily be make to appear: 1. That nothing further can be attempted in behalf of the negro. 2. That the franchises acquired by him will not be revoked. First, then, in regard to the possibility of doing more for the negro. If a stick of timber lies prone upon the ground, you may raise one end of it, and bring it nearer and nearer to a perpendicular, until it stands vertical; but any further application of force in the same direction only tends to prostration on the other side. In the same way, they who elevate the negro under pretense of lighting the battle of human equality, can do no more for him by political action than to make him the political equal of the white. If they attempt to raise him higher, they reintroduce the inequality between diitereiit races against which they have always been protesting. By the recent legislation, the negro is raised as high as he can be put by any other action than his own. By the abolition of slavery he was elevated to the rank of a freeman; by the Civil Rights bill he gained equal advantages of person and property, and equal protection in the courts; and now, finally, ho is raised to full political equality. If imagination were tortured to find anything more that could be done for him in the removal of disabilities, imagination would be incapable of the task. Nothing more is possible. Certain it is, there fore, that the negrophilists can present no new affirmative issues. Unless, then, there is to be an agitation for repeal, the rights of the negro can never again be an issue in our national politics. This brings us to our second position, that the franchises now conferred on the negro can never be revoked. The desirability ot revoking them is not the question which we discuss, but the possibility. If our Government were so constituted that revolutions in public opinion could immediately take effect in reversing past legislation, the question might be dillerent. But the six years' tenure of the United States Senators is an impassable barrier to the sudden repeal of the new law. With every Northern State at present in possession of the Republicans, some time is required for changing the political character of the State Legislatures, which elect the Senators. Until this is accomplished, the Senate will remain, as now, overwhelmingly Republican. But when the Senatorial changes begin, they can proceed but slowly, owing to the lng terms of the Senators. There is, therefore, no possibility of a repeal of the Reconstruction act until it has accom plished all the mischief of which it is capable. Agitation for its repeal would be political folly, because the Southern States cannot, and will not, stand unorganized and unrepresented until a repeal could be effected. Nothing is more certain than that the Southern States will be reconstructed on the basis of that act; and the negroes once admitted to the suffrage, can never afterwards be excluded, inasmuch as their own votes would have to be counted on the question of exclusion. Neither the Democratic party, nor any other party of practical men in their senses, will go into the next Presidential election with the repeal of the Reconstruction act as their leading issue. But if the next Presidential election does not turn upon that issue, it is certain that no subsequent one can. We may accordingly regard the negro question as settled. There being, then, nothing further to agi tato for in behalf of the negro, and no pros pect of any agitation to deprive him of what he has gained, our national politics can no longer revolve around him as their centre, which ought to be considered as a happy rid dance, if we could but lay out of view the enormous and appalling cost at which it has oeen purchased, liut it is childish to cry over spilt milk; and as to the negro vote, we have no doubt that it will be controlled by the Southern whites. It is certainly some relief to think that the negro can no "longer be tho pivot of our politics. To accomplish the emancipation of the negro, we have burdened the nation with a colossal debt, impoverished and Wggared one half of the country ; we have deranged our currency, subverted our Constitution, cor rupted tie public morals, clothed hundreds of thousands of families in mourning and maimed hundreds of thousands of surviving citizens ; we have created famine priceB for food, have turned our trading classes and banking insti tutions into cliques of speculators ; we have destroyed our shipping interest, and, worse than all, have filled tho hearts of our people with rancorous and malignant passions, aud poisoned the whole social and political at mosphere. If the negro has been elevated, the white laborer has been depressed half-way to meet him. For what is the essence of slavery ? .What but this, that one man works and another takes from him the fruit of his labor? Before the war, all that the white laborer earned was Ids own ; now, half of it is wrested from him by the Government. It is with difficulty that he can feed and clothe his family ; but food and clothing are what the Southern slaves never wanted. The white laborer's children go ragged aud shoeless to meet the cost of emancipating the negroes. The price must be paid to the uttermost farthing, and our politics must turn, for many years to come, on questions connected with the just distribution of the burden. ! Up to this time, the burdeu Las been appor- tioncd in glaring disregard of justice. The manufacturers, speculators, and money dealers prow rich, and the industrious poor are still further impoverished. A. the nation as a whole is immensely poorer than it was before, and certain classes immensely richer, it is evident that those whom tho times are oin idling really bear no share of the public buidrus. The manufacturers, to be sure, have paid their three per cent, tax; but they have added a hundred and fifty per cent, to the juice of their goods, so that their taxes are returned to them, fitly times over, by tin1 coiisiimei-s. The boavy real estate owners have paid their ten per cent, income tax; but they have added two hundred per cent, to their rents, so that their taxes are returned to them, forty times over, by their tenants. The holders of Government securities are not taxed at all, and the intciest on those securities, with the expense and waste of collection, is paid by the labor of the country. From com miserating the hardships of the negro, the laboring people will presently come to lament their own; and the emancipation of the white man will soon become the rallying cry in our politics. Now that the negro question is dead, let us waste no time over tho carcass, but promptly (dear the decks for the new issue. MEDICAL. Sold ty all dniRpMa at (1 per bottle. I'KlM'IfAL DI VOT, K HOMER'S, Wo. 4(mCJlEHNUT Street, Philadelphia, Pa, CONSUMPTION CURED. USE IIASTINQ'S COMPOUND SYIIUP OF NAPTHA fcOLD BY UVOTI A CO., AUKXTS, No. 2.TJ North SECOND Ktre , Mm LEGAL NOTICES. 7i THK ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY I AMD COUNTY UF PHILADELPHIA hHiutd ol Mi CLlNTUiK. MINORS The Auditor appointed ty Hie Cuni t to audit, settle anil uiijuHt the account ui u. r. cormimu, juiij., uimi' (liun ol Auiitt, James, Juhi), llelcnii 11., Caroline M. litioriieu.. Klizubeih is. tind Win. J). Mct'llntock M luors, and to rt'port distribution of Hie tiuluiice la tlie hamlH ol the uccountitnt, win meet the purties In lert'sttd fur the uiiruoee of his uupolniinenlou TUKB DAY, M arch M. lMti", ttt lour (4) o'clock, 1. M., at liis otlice, Io. 4i WulDut street, iu the city or l'hllu delDhia. 3:15 tu w5t W. D. BAKEH, Audltor.S TN THK ORPHANS' CoURT FOR THE CITY X AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA. 1-iilHieol WILLIAM KITCHEN. Deceased. The Auditor tiiniouited by the Court to uuilit, settle, and adiuat the iiccount of JOHN CONKY and ,IOl.l'll N. P1UCK, Executors, ami to report uiS' mbution of the hulunce iu the hands of the uccouut- unt, will meet the parties interested for the purpose ol his appointment, on MONDAY, March 2.5, 1 167, at 11 o clock A. M., at his ollice. No. iVi WALNUT Street, in the city of Philadelphia. 8 ir tuiwol W. JJ. 11AKKR, Auditor, TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITV L AMD COUNTY Or PHILADELPHIA. Estate of AMOS C. MAKWEKU'M, Deceased. The Auditor appointed by the Court to distribute the fund In Court In the said estate arlstng Irotu sale ol real estate of decedent, Kill uieet the parlies in terested lor the purpose of his appointment, on TUES DAY. March ihi, at u o ciouk a. ju at ins wmce, No. 4(C WALNUT blreet, In the city ol Philadelphia, : 15 f row si w. D. isAJvii.it, Auuuor, FERTILIZERS. gAUCH'S RAW BONE S17PEB-F1IOMPUATE OF LIJIE. The great Fertilizer for all crops. Quick In Its action, aud permaueut lu Its e Heels. Established over twelve years. Dealers supplied by the carRO, direct from the wharf ot lue ojanuiaeiory, oo iiuerai terms, ilauulaciured ouly by BAUGH & SONS, ;Office No. 20 South DELAWARE Avenue, 8 4Hmw Philadelphia, MO MATED PHOSPHATE, AN I'NSV KlASr.I FERTILIZER For Wheat, Corn, Oats, Potatoes, Orasa, the Vegetable Garden, Fruit Trees, Grape Vlues, Etc. Etc This Fertilizer contains Ground Bone and the best Fertilizing baits. Price '.u per ton of 2U0O pounds. For sale by the manufacturers, WILLIAM ELLIS fc CO., Chemists, lllimwfj No. TH MARKET Street. gTRENCH STEAM SCOURING. ALBEDYLL, MARX fit CO., HO. 18 SOUTH EIJEVESTH STREET AND HO. BIO BA'E NTItKKT. 3 1 mwf U O Ifc I S T AND Preserver of Natural Flowers, A.H.POWELL. No. 725 AUCH 'Street, Below Eighth BooouetsWrtstbe. Bttkett, Pyramid of Cot r.ow fBIUh)haterurtUi)vu. law ...rA. . Jl "It., ""! '''a .X X h. uOj ;'"'! Jo "4 FINANCIAL. PENNSYLVANIA STATE LOAN. rnorosALS for a loan OF $23,000,000. AN ACT 10 CRKATE A LOAN FOE THE REDEKTn.05 07 THE OVERDUE BONDS OF THE CODt&IOWWEALTH. Whereas, The bonds of the Commouwealtrj and certftiu certificates of Indebted nts, amounting to TVVKNTY-TUHEK MILLIONS OK DOLLAHS, have bevu overdue and unpaid for some time pnt; And whereas. It 1b deslrnble that the dame should be paid, and withdrawn from the market; therefore, (Section I. xfe U enaeiea oy me arntur utki yioi Of JirjH-esenUUivts oj the Unnmunweullh of JJenn sulvunia in Oenerat Asemblj met, and it is hereby enacted bi the autliorUu of th same. That the Governor, Audltor-Oinerul, and Htate Trea surer be, and are hereby, authorized and em powered lo Borrow, on tne mini oi tue tjoiu inotiweulth, in bucIi amount and with such notice (not less than forty days) as they may deem mont expedient for the interest of the HlHtu, twenty-three millions of dollars, and issue certificates oi loan or oonus oi me vajiu nion wealt h for the same, bearing Interest at a rate not exceedlnpt six per centum per annum payable semi-annually, on the 1st of Februiuy and 1st of August, in the city of l'hiladelphiu; which certificates of loan or lHnds shall not be subject to any taxation whatever, for Htate, municipal, or local purposes, anu hiihu ue paya ble as follows, namely: Five ml 11 Ions of dollars payable at any time after live years, and within ten years; eight millions of dollars paya ble at any time after ten years, and withiu fif teen years; and ten millions of dollars at any time alter fifteen years, and within twenty-ttve years; and shall be signed by tne Governor and htate Treasurer, and countersiened by the Auditor-General, and registered In the books of the Auditor-General, and to oe transferable on the books of the Commonwealth, at the Farmers' and Mechanics' National Bank ol Philadelphia; the proceeds of the whole of which; loan, including premiums, etcetera, received on the same, shall be applied to the payment of the bonds and certificates of in debtedness of the Commonwealth. Hectlon 2. The bids for the said loan shall be opened In the presence of the Govei nor, Auditor-General, and .State Treasurer, and awarded to the highest bidder: iTovidea, Tiial no certin cale hereby authorized to be issued shall be negotiated for less than Its par value, Section 3. '1 he bonds oi the State and certifi cates of indebtedness, now overdue, shall he receivable in payment ot the said loan, under such regulations as the Governor, Auditor General, ami State Treasurer may prescribe: and every bidder for the loan now authorized to be issued, shall state lu his bid whether the snme is payable In cash or In the bonds, or certificates of Indebtedness of the Common wealth. Section 4. That all trustees, executors, admin Istrators, guardians, agents, treasurers, com mittees, or other persons, holding, In a fidu ciary capacity, bonds or certificates of indebt edness of the Slate or moneys, are hereby authorised to bid for the loan hereby authorized to be Issued, and to surrender the bonds or certificates of loan held by them at the time of making such bid, and to receive the bonds authorized to be issued by this act. Section 5. Any person or persons standing In the fiduciary capacity stated in the fourth seo tion of this act, who may desire to Invest money In their hands for the benefit of the trust, may, without any order of court, invest the same in the bonds authorized to be Issued by this act, at a rale of premium not exceed ing twenty per centum. Section o. That from and after tho passage of this act, all the bonds of this Commonwealth shall be paid off In the order of their maturity. Section 7. That all loans of this Common wealth, not yet due, shall be exempt from State, municipal, or local taxation, after the interest due February 1st, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven, shall have been paid. Section 8. That all existing laws, or portions thereof, inconsistent herewith, are hereby re- Peale1, JOHN P. GLASS, Speaker of the House of .Representatives. L. W. HALL, Speaker of the Senate. Approved the second day of February, one thoiibaud eight hundred and sixty-seven. JOHN W. GEARY. In accordance with the provisions of the above act of Assembly, sealed proposals will be received at the Ollice of the State Treasurer In the city of Harrlsburg, Pennsylvania, until 12 o'clock M., of the 1st day of April, A. I). Isti7, to be endorsed as follows: "Proposals for Penn sylvania Slate Loan," Treasury Department, Harrlsburg, Pennsylvania. United Slates or America. Bids will be received for 16,000,000, reimbursa ble In five years and payable in ten years; JS.OI'O.OOO.reimbursableinten years, and payable iu fifteen years; and 810,000,000, reimbursable In fifteen years and payable in twenty-rlve years. The rate of interest to be either live or six per cent, per annum, which must be explicitly stated In the bid, and the bids most advanta geous to the State will be accepted. No bid for less than par will be considered. The bonds will be Issued in sums of 850, and such higher sums as desired by the loaners, to be free irom State, local, and municipal taxes. The overdue bonds of the Commonwealth or Pennsylvania will be received at par la pay. ment of this loan, but bidders must slate whether they Intend to pay in cash or la the verdue loans aforesaid. ... No distinction will be made between bidders paying in cash or overuue loans. JOHN W. GEARY, Governor of Pennsylvania. JOHN F. HARTRANFT, Auditor-General W. H. KEMBLE, State Treasurer. N B: No newspaper publishing the above, unless authorized, will receive pay. ZT 7 3-lOs, ALL SERIES, CONVKRTBD INTO Five-Twenties of 1865, JANUARY AND JULY. WITHOUT CHARGE. BONDS DELIVERED JWWKDIATBIT. DE HAVEN &BROTHER, 10 2UPU Ko.40 SOUTH THIRD St, AUGUST SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES. CON TESTED WITHOUT CUABUE INTO THE NEW HVE-TWENTT GOLD INTEUEST BONDS. Large Bonds delivered at once. Small Bonds fur Dished m soon received from Wuulngton. JAY COOKE & CO.. IIU N, lit h, TUIBO MTUEET. FINANCIAL. f-Jw six per CENT. KKOIIrTEIlHD L.OAN Of THE I-HUGU COAL AM) h'AVlGATiON CQJ in is7. INTI REST PAY A ELF. QUARTERLY, FliFKOF TJNITK1 STATKS AND bTATE TAXES HUt MAI.K AT THE OFF1CK OF THE COM TAN Y, NO. 18 NOUTll NEl'OKD HTBEKT. This LOAN IgRPcured by a Firm Mortgage on t'omrany'e Railroad, ronMructcd, and to be Co strucied, extpndhiff from the southern boundary e the borough ofMnucli Chiuilc to the Delaware River at Eauton: Including tlnMr bridge acrons the said river row In process of construction, together with all the Company's rights, liberties, and franchises appertain ing to tlie snld llalJroiid and Bridge. Copies or the mcirlgMge n.ay be had on appllcatlo , at the Ollice of the Company. SOLOMON HI1F.P1IF.RI, 8 28tf TRKASURER. Oir- JayCooke&G). 112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A. Dealers in all Government Securities OLD 5-2 Os WANTED IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. A tllll BAL DIEFEBENCE ALLOWED Compound Interest Kotcs Wanted, IK1KBMT ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. i Collections miide. Stocks bought and soil oa Commission. Special business accommodations reservd for ladles. 12 24 Snip P. S. PETERSON & CO.. I No. 39 S. TIIIItr Street 60VEBN9IENT SECVBITIES Of ' ALL HINDIS, AND STOCKS, BONDS, ETC. BOUGHT AKD BOLD AT THB j ' ' Philadelphia and New York Boardi of Broken. COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES WANTED r DRAFTS ojt NEW YOBS Always for sale In sums to unit purchaser. I"! JO lira 7 3'IOS. SEVEN - THIRTY NOTES CONTESTED WITHOUT 1 HA HUE INTO THE NEW C - S O s. BONDS DELIVERED AT ONCE. COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES wante ai dtgudst market rales. , WM. PAINTER & CO., 12 VMm NO. 36 SOUTH THIRD ST, f IRST-CLASS SEVEN PEICENT. BONOS. North Missouri First Mortgage Seren Per Cent Bonds for tale at 8 5. AH Information cheerfully given. JAY COOKE & CO., BAHKEBS, No. 114 South THIRD St, 1 21 lm RATIONAL BANK OF THE REPUBLIOJ Nos. 809 aud 811 CIIIMJT Street, PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL, $300.000 FULL PAID. DIRECTORS Jos. T. Pulley, IWilllam Ervlen, KUw. B. Orne. OHgood Welsh, Ntttlmu lillles.lB. Rowland, Jr., Sam'l A. Blapham. l iml A. Hoyt, Wiu. H. Kuawn, PRESIDENT, WILLIAM H. KHAWN, CANHIEB, JOSEPH P. MUMFORD. 1 SI tm REMOVAL. DEEEB & REARS REMOVED TO NO. 4 PRUNE! fsiret't.-DREKtt & BEAKS, former! oi Uoldsuiltli's Hull, Library street, huve removed t No. 412 PRUNE btreei. between Fourth aud Pile streets, where they will continue their Manufactory of Gold Chain, Bracelets, etc. In every variety. Also the sale of tine Gold, bilver, and Copper, Old tiold and bilver bought. January l.jsw. l l3m CUTLERY, ETC. CUTLERY. A fine aMort ment of POCKKT and TA 11LK C'UTLttKY, HAZOK.H. HA- plTiLlt AND TAILORS' bHEARa, ETC.. at rM L. V. ifKLMOLD'S Cheap Store, No. isu South TENTH street, 11 Three doors above Walnut. CALIFORNIA WINE CO. WINES, From the Vineyards of Sonoma, Los Angelos, and Wapa Counties, Calllornia, consisting of the following: WINE BITTEBS, AI''AJ 1IIHKY, UOIIi, jaiNC'ATF.L, 1 ATA U lit, , IXAHIT, JPOKT, UBANDT, CHAMPAGNE. These WINES are warranted to be the pnre Juice ot the grape, unsurpassed by any In the market, and ar highly recommended lor Medicinal aud Family pur poses. For sale by E. L. CAUFFMAN. AGENT, NO. SI NOUTII rOUBTH STBEET, UwsUt PHILADELPHIA.