THE NEW YORK PRESS. XPITORIAli OPINIONS OF THB LEADING JOURNALS UPON CURRENT TOHL'H COMPIMID EVEKT DAT FOB TUB EVBNINQ TELEGRAPH. The Greatest Wonder of the Age The Kerolullou In the Mouth. From the Herald. The Southern political tour of Senator Wil son, of Massachusetts, inaugurated at Orange Court House, Virginia, on Saturday last, in liis opening speech there to the Macks in be half 'of the Republican party, and continued in his speech Monday evening, to six thousand Americans of African descent, marks a new chapter in the history of our political parties. The Republican leaders are becoming some what anxious as to the drift of the Southern negro vote they have created as a political balance of power; and Senator Wilson is but the pioneer of a host of Republican orators who will soon enter the Southern fields as reapers of this inviting harvest. But it is evi dent, from the letters of our attentive cor respondents in all the Southern States, that the Republicans will not gain this Southern black vote without a struggle; that the saga cious loaders of the ruling Southern white class will make a vigorous light to bring about a iusion of Southern whites and blacks, land owners and laborers, as in a common cause, and that to this end the late Southern white master will not hesitate to meet Lis black fellow-citizens, lately his slaves, on the plat form laid down by Congress the political equality of whites and blacks. Of all the wonders of the niueteentli century the most astounding and the most gratifying is this wonderful revolution universally inau gurated in the South under the decisive re construction laws of Congress. A mighty revolution was effected by the late war for the Union in the total abolition of African slavery; for this was the removal of the foundations upon which the whole superstructure of the social, religious, and political institutions of the late slave States rested. Reconstruction, upon the basis of universal liberty and civil and political equality, thus became inevitable; but from the beginning to the end of Presi dent Johnson's half-way experiments it was made manifest that even for generations to come, so long as there were any reservations of discretion left to the ruling whiteclass of the Rebel States, those States would be held back under the hope of a restoration of the old order of things at least to the extent of a re construction on the old civil and political dis tinctions of race and color. 15ut Congress has solved the problem. From Virginia to Texas there i3 an active, earnest movement among the Southern whites in re cognition of the civil and political equality of the blacks. It is a revolution casting out those fixed ideas of two hundred years' growth those ideas resulting from negro bondage upon which the Federal Constitution was founded, and upon which the Government has been administered for three-quarters of a century. Is not this great revolution in Southern ideas the most remarkable of all the revolutions in the history of mankind ? In the Oriental nations, and in Greece and Rome, the transition from the restraints of slavery to the equalities of freedom was easy, because Blavery was not marked by the enduring badge of color. The same may be said of the emanci pation of the serfs of Russia. Hut American slavery, limited to the negro, and resting upon the religious belief of the negro's divinely appointed subjection as a slave to the white man, is a totally different thing. Still with us, even yet, in nearly all the Northern States, political distinctions against the negro, re sulting from negro slavery in the South, more or less prevail. AU these things considered, we can hardly helieve the reports of our correspondents or the evidence of our senses touching this won derful revolution in Southern ideas. Thus, for example, stands General Wade Hampton, of South Carolina, a disfranchised leader of the Rebellion, pleading the old abolition plea of "liberty, equality, and fraternity" to a meeting of blacks, who only the other day were his absolute slaves, and regarded by himself as divinely placed under his sovereign will and pleasure as their lord and master. Neither suffering nor policy could work such a change single-handed; but where helpless ness, necessity, and sound policy combine, even those old Southern inborn ideas, inherited with a thousand negro slaves ideas which : have survived a four years' disastrous war for the sovereign rights of slavery, are vanquished and dismissed. General Wade Hampton represents the in terests of the Southern landholders against Senator Wilson and the interests of the Re publican party. As the content goes on, the lines dividing the future political parties of the South will begin to appear, and the ten dencies of the negro vote. At present it seems to be drifting to the Republican camp, and under Borne vague notion that confiscation is to crown the work of emancipation, but when this fallacy is dispelled, as it must be, the Southern negro will take a clearer view of his political policy, and will shape his course accordingly. Meantime it will be intensely interesting to watch thy developments of this new political era in the South, and its reaction upon our political parties in the North. Christening Under Dlilicultlea. From the Tribune. How hard it is satisfactorily to name a baby is well enough known to Paterfamilias and his Amiable lady. It is a matter of taste, an affair of diplomacy, a question of euphony, in which the party principally interested has, unfortu nately, no voice, and may be rendered misera ble for life by the baptismal indiscretions of his begetters. As it is with brand-new in fants, so it is with frenhly acquired territory; and we are not at all astonished to hear that Mr. Seward is puzzled to determine by what name to call his glaciers, icebergs, and rock- ribbed acres. Congress will have to settle the matter; hut a recommendation from Mr. Sec retary would co a ereat way with both Houses. A cood name, as the acute Shake speare observes, is an immediate jewel; and however easy it may be to title a hamlet, and to call a house, a bam, a black emith'8 shop, and a grocery, Rome or Athens, Carthage or Palmyra, the naming of a Terri tory ,1s a matter of more difficulty. Voyagers liave frequently bestowed oeocraphical appel lations which are mournfully suggestive, such as Point Famine, Headman's Inland, or Cape Fear; and why would not IiiUy's Hard Bar gain be not only sounuiiig nut sensible I or i.ii..Aifit,a DHSDHir. cuusiueriim mat. nn thermometers will be long enough for practical use tn those realms 01 everuiauug vwmgmr tjo-'b l'aradise? or Orcus, since the North- nieu'B Hell is a cold one ? or something eug .i f living on Beak)' meat and ice-water, ff indeed, there is any water there, even in the hottest eeasoii. We eertainly should ad- THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, vise Mr. Seward to go up and take a private view lefore deciding, were we not approhon stve that he would bo frozen to death before lie could be starved to death, and bo ba sent home harder even than lie is now, to be exhibited in a glass case in the department. He would find an immense field for ingeuuity, the only productive crop probable in those parts, and every facility for making mint juleps except mint and peach brandy, sugar, spoons, and other trifles. In his present botheration, however, we are glad to notice that he has the help of the newspapers, and may yet come out of his trouble with lucky felicity. Some of these journals are all for a Russian name something ending in "ski," and dangerous to unsophisticated American jaws. One editor, of whose monarchical pro- I clivities we are ashamed, proposes to call the desert " after one of the Russian Czars," forgetting that the insult might be made a casus belli, or, at any rate, cost us the good-will of the Muscovite mon arch, whoso wrath might be extreme at finding that, though rid of the property, the fact of his previous ownership was to be historically per petuated. Some are for calling this howling wilderness "Columbia," but besides being a name general to the whole country, the Britishers have their "Columbia," and it would bo cruel by an unnecessary repetition to distract the brains of the school-classes in geography, who, what with British Columbia, and Spanish-American Colombia, and our old established Columbia, and tho District of Columbia, to say nothing of "Hail Columbia," might be Hogged within an inch of their blighted lives for making confusion worse con tounded. No; another Columbia will never do. "Asiaua" has been proposed, and if it could be always pronounced "Ass-iana," this name would have a moral bearing, and might be a useful reminder to future generations with plenty of money, and with a passion for collecting glaciers. "Asiana" is, no doubt, a clumsy piece of verbal joinery; but, per haps, barbarous regions deserve no bet ter than barbarous titles. With respoct to the highly respectable constellation so called, we would offer the name of "Ursa Major," out f compliment to the grizzlies, but as we are not certain that Mr. Seward will not be buying that whole cluster of seven golden stars before he goes out of office, we refrain from urging our amendment. "Terra Incognita" would be good, if it were English, and especially proper, inasmuch as one man swears that the new pur chase is a New-Canaan, with rivers of milk and with mountains of honey, while others aver that the little busy bee could not live in the neighborhood, to say nothing of the fodder loving cow. As we know rather more of Central Africa than we do of this mys terious land, we would postpone the bap tism until we discover what the bantling is like, which will be when Mr. Seward has plodded his weary way up there, and hoisted the American ilag upon the North Pole, to the intense delight of the frisky walrii3 and the meditative whale. Of course, he will make a speech. There will be nobody to hear it except the monsters of the deep, and of the ice-floe; but if St. Anthony preached to the fishes, why should not Mr. Seward hold forth to the bears 1 Being the only inhabitants, he might promise these animals the right of suf frage, upon condition of their not eating him; and as he would not be in very good case after his meanderings, even the hungriest bears might prefer a vote to such victuals. We should; but still it is a matter of taste. With the best intentions in the world, we believe that we have thrown no light upon this tenebrilicous subject. The longer we look at it the darker it grows. There seems to be but one way of settling the matter, and that is to leave the territory altogether alone in its gloomy grandeur and sublime isolation, with the bears growling, and the wolves howl ing, and the icebergs cracking, and the aurora streaming, and Mr. Seward in nine frieze over coats calling the elements to order and pro claiming American sovereignty. Our Gold and Silver Resources Why la Alining Unprofitable! Front the Timet. There are some curious anomalies in the business of mining for the preciou3 metals, and they are admirably illustrated iu Mr. J. Ross Browne's report to the Secretary of the Treasury on the mineral resources of the States and Territories west of the Rocky Mountains. An approximate estimate shows the annual product of the Paoifio slope to be in excess of $100,000,000. California's share of contribution to this aggregate has been, for the last four years, about one-third of the whole amount, although in 1851, when the I vast inilux of prospectors and panners had brought the productiveness of her shallow "diggings" to its culmination, her yield was U5, UOO,O00. Since that time the placers, the source of two-thirds of the gold product, have steadily decreased in profitable working, and although the quartz interest has proportion ably increased and is rapidly bringing itself into a condition of regularity and trustworthi ness, yet the gold product of the State has grown less every year. We had a vivid ex emplification of the importance of our annual gold crop during the commercial and financial crisis in Europe last fall, when, within sixty days, San Francisco exported 12,000,000 in hard gold and silver to sustain American credit and its English holders. Not only so, but there is a striking tact which it is hard to realize, that the product ot precious metals for last year on our W estern coast exceeds all the gold and silver in the JNational lruasury and in all the banks of all the States, although it was less than for many years before. But, notwithstanding the impression of wealth we get from conning over these state ments, the production of all this bullion has not been a source oi much pront to the men whose capital and labor brought it forth. Indeed, the proportion oi caiitornia miners who have acquired fortunes is much less than that of Illinois larmers. mis may to Borne extent, perhaps, be accounted for by the rise r 1 ... I il... .'lt..., ..nit nf tl... it!. ! i real estate in me aiaicn a mo mmauun, but tho same principle holds good in California usen. The internal revenue returns snow that, outside of the cities, the majority of large incomes are rather in the agricultural than the mining districts, and this when the mining interests arj far less pressed upon by taxation umn me ianning. There have be re have been various reasons Ior this strange state of affairs. The most obvious was the unsettled and shitting character of the mining population; and, in its turn, that was pruuutibu not on v bv the abnormal ex citement of gold hunting and the ..mercurial disposition of the adventurers to rush in any direction aftur the merest rumo of a trace of gold, but also by the uncertain tenure by which they held their claims. No man could own his mine except by the imperfeot and shaky title of custom and miners' regulations Hence there was no desire to cultivate or im prove the land, except Just so far as was ab solutely necessary to sustain life and ' to make milliner appliances effective. That difficulty hai been now removed, and the law passed by. Congress last summer will do more for California and the mineral West, by providing good titles and permanent interests among the people, than if it had given them millions of dollars. The other, and perhaps the main obstacles to success in mining, are inherent in the pur suit itself, and will be so long as mining meann "speculation" instead of "business." It is difficult, at the start, to get a really good claim. If the property has been opened and proved, it is held at a "fancy price." If it is undeveloped, its "indications" may be followed by thousand of dollars and years of labor, and prove barren in the end. But look at the numberless mines really rich in precious metal that have come to naught. Of over $70,000,000 of silver extracted from Nevada mines not one third returned to the capitalists whose money bad paiil for the property, the machinery, and the labor, and sustained untold "assess ments." In California it has lieen the same. When the placers began to be left for the more enduring and steady quartz veins, many email but exceedingly rich claims were owned by combinations of two of three partners only. Then the expenses were directly and economically administered, the chances, and, indeed, the motives for peculation were wanting, and a combination of small capital and hard work brought a legitimate return of steady, sure (and often enormous) profit. Then began the company furor. The temporary productiveness of the mines brought about liuge incorporations, vast stock capitals, inflated prices, and ex travagant notions of prospective value. Single "feet" in some few mines, originally costing two or three dollars, paid monthly dividends of from $300 to $.r)00, and commanded prices from $,r00 to $15,000. On the strength of these results, over excitement set in, undue specu lation followed in new and untried mines, wild extravagance was the order of the day among the company officers; splendid offices, costly furniture, expensive "improved" ma chinery, and all the long list of follies brought their natural result. We need not look all the way to California for the effects. We are here in the same plight, and there is many a man who can testify to the truth of the fore going picture. A notable example of it is a well-known mine in Nevada, which, under the cautious and economical management of its four origi nal owners, paid at the rate of $20,000 per month. Of course it must be sold to a com pany. It was thus sold, and the company managed iu two years' time to spend $2!l!l,0iH upon it, to take nothing out, and finally to so wind themselves up that the property passed out of their hands into the control of a lew practical men who were able to buy up its bonds and get the wholo thing into their own power. Within two months after the second change, the sensible administration of the few managers who were directly interested, produced a yield of f(!7,O00 from tho "played out" mine. The fault, generally, is not so much in the mines, then, as iu the miners or rather the mine-owners, who subscribe vast sums of money to be frittered away by incompetence and extravagance, or pocketed by downright peculation. Combined capital is one of the levers of the modern world, but it must be applied to mining, just as to every other en terprise, in a practical, economical, judicious, and business-like manner, or capitalists will find that their money has been worse than wasted, and their falsely named "enterprise" will biing no return. France and Prussia. From the Trimei. We have at length an official statement from the French Government in regand to the ne gotiations with Holland respecting the cession of Luxembourg. On the 8th inst. the Marquis de Moustier, in reply to questions from seve ral deputies, announced in the Corps Lt'gis- latif that the Government had brought to the consideration of this matter "thoughts only of conciliation and peace." France had not raised the question of her own accord. At tracted by the undecided position of Luxem bourg, France made several unofficial commu nications on the subject to Holland, when the Dutch Cabinet indiscreetly let out the secret to Prussia. This gave the question an inter national character, and introduced elements which France would have been glad to keep in the background until the purchase could have been quietly arranged and actually con summated. Prussia answered the revelations of the Dutch Cabinet by an appeal to the treaty of 1831), and thus blocked the little game which the Emperor of France was so quietly playing. Upon this Napoleon assures the world that in casting his eyes upon the convenient Duchy he always kept in view the consent of Holland, the examination of tho treaties of the great powers, and the wishes of the inhabitants of Luxembourg, who were to be allowed the privilege of deciding, by uni versal suff rage, whether they would be sold to France or join the North German Confederacy. As France is Btill willing to abide by these views, and to examine the question in concert with the other great powers, the Marquis de Moustier, speaking for his imperial master, believes that the peace of Europe cannot be disturbed. This is the official view of- the situation. We find, however, that the French papers, as a general rule, see the matter in a less favorable light, and are inclined to regard war as not improbable. La France, admits that the time may come when the Emperor may be compelled to vindicate the national dignity against the obstinate refusal of the German States to grant the guarantees to which France may consider herself entitled. Another journal, which has never favored tho annexation of the Duchy, takes tho same tone. The question, it says, is no longer one of territorial aggrandizement, but one of national .1! 5 T.fl . . 1. i il'..u.l dignity aim lnimence. franco cannot aim to put forward pretensions and renounce them at the bidding of another power. To do bo would be to announce her own downfall from the first rank anion'' nations to a lower position than Spain ever occupied. Having taken a positive staud in regard to Luxem bourg, she must maintain it at all hazards. The Duchy must be evacuated by Prussia, or war must ensue. These are the conclu sions reached bv the Frenth Tinners. UP to our latest dates bv mail, and thev accord with the uncertainty and apprehension felt in the commercial circles of Europe. We have had intimations, by Atlautio Telegraph, of a plan submitted to the consideration of Franco and 1 mania by the other great powers, to secure the peaceful settlement of the question. As Napoleon has signified his willingness to accept the propositions embraced in this plan, t is to be presumed that they afford him faci lities for covering hU retreat from a position where, except for this friendly assistance, he must either fight or surrender. It is appa rent that t rance does not wish to light, and that she will not fight, except for the pw , Bervatiou of her national dignity and hur rank as a . European power. The French oare nothing for Luxembourg.but they care'a great deal for glory and national lienor; 'and if Prussia Bhould. persist in holding on to the Duchy iu the face of Napoleon's represouta- tionsand demands, they will throw themselves into a war with as much enthusiasm as if it were for a chosen cause. Horace Ureelejr Hen. From the World. ' It is rash U infer from the ease with which a roan can walk the tight-rope on his toes that he is competent to edit the works of Lactantius. General Sheridan snatched vio- tory from the jaws of defeat in tho Valley o the Shenandoah, but it does not therefore fol low that he could write a threnody on the death of the late lamented Lincoln fully equal in poetic merit to the ode of Dryden on Alex ander's Feast. It used to be said of the Bos- toniaus that their belief in the capacity of Daniel Webster would have made them acuui- esce in his election to supersede Fanny EUsler as the leaaer oi a uaiict; and it is cer tain that, since the death of tho great expounder of the Constitution, the bnme intelligent citizens have reached the point of thinking that Charles Sumner could have made a better speech than lie in reply to the oration of Colonel Hayne. When we see the Republicans of New York nominat ing the author of the "Potiphar Papers" to a post which would have called out the best powers of Chancellor Kent, and proposing to pair Mr. A. J. II. Dnganne with William M. Evarts in the revision of the fundamental law of a Commonwealth inhabited by four millions of the busiest and most prosperous of the Anglo-American race, we are forcibly reminded of the importance of recalling men to the simple pomological fact that apples do not grow on willow trees nor pears on pumpkin vines. That "some things can be done as well as others" is an ancient and fish-like, but perfectly respect able axiom; yet it is an axiom just as ancient and just as respectable, that it is perilous to call upon the cobbler for work unfamiliar to his last. Here, for example, is Mr. Horace Greeley, whose success as an editor cannot be properly questioned, and whose turnips, we believe, are, iu the average, very fair specimens of the results of genius concen trated upon ruta-baija. But, no longer ago than the 15th of Octolier, lStili, Mr. Horace Greeley dropped his pen and threw away his hoe, and, pluming himself upon some pre sumed faculty of incubation, made his bow to the public in the character of a hen. The nominations of the Republican party for the State Legislature of New York having, at that date, been made, Mr. Horace Greeley came out in the Tribune and declared them a great improvement upon the nominations of previous years. "Some excellent members of the last House," said Horace Greeley, "have declined a re-election; but many good men have been nominated in their stead, while most of the bad eggs in the last House have been set aside by their constituents." We then took the liberty of doubting whether the new-laid eggs over which II. G. thus cackled might not in the end prove to be addled, and, if not unmerchantable, at least unwholesome for consumption by the body politic. Six months have scarcely passed away, and we now behold the same II. G., with erected feathers and clucks of inox pressible indignation, driving into the horse pond of infamy the chickens hatched at Albany out of these identical eggs, over which so much maternal pride was then pre maturely displayed. Of course, nobody is surprised by this save 11. G. himself; but it may be of some use, even to Republican voters, to consider whether it is wise to accept, in a case of so much lasting import ance the ovarian droppings of a hen whose legislative ducklings and goslings have bo dis mally disappointed the expectations of their fond but sligtly fatuous parent. The Coining War. Vom the World. All the indications in Europe point to a war this summer between France and Prussia. The speeches in and out of Parliament, the newspapers, the state of trade, the stock lists,all furnish evidence that the conflict is considered inevitable. Not that the Emperor Napoleon wants to fight; he would avoid it if he could with honor. Personally, he is far from well, his army is not prepared, the French needle guns are not yet ready, and the Exposition is under way; but events will not wait. The French people are in a passion of wounded national vanity, while Prussia is insolent, iw perious, and evidently determined to force a light. Bismark seems to be of opinion that blows from without are essential to the con solidation of tho great German power he has called into being. He insists that France shall not have Luxembourg, his King threatens the French Emperor in a speech from the throue, while the needle-guns swarm on either bank of the Rhine. But if war takes place, what then? On which Bide will victory incline? The event alone can answer these queries. It is only certain that the French Emperor has had a run of ill-luck for the past two years, while fortune has favored his rival. Russia also seems to be uneasy, and not unwilling to take advantage of the Luxembourg imbroglio to seize Constantinople. Some of the news we publish has a look that way. At any rate, 1807 promises to be memorable in the annals of Europe. SPECIAL NOTICES. riv- M'TlCh;. THK STOCKHOLDKKS OP a3- the 1'i-tfsVLVANIA KA1LKUAU COM I'ANY (pursuuiit to adjournment had at their auuual lnet-linK) will meet at Concert Hall, No. llilDC'Hlvl MJThireel, In the City ol 1'hlladelphia. on TUJ--HAV.lhe HOtli day or April, A. D. 1M7, at in o'clock A. 11., and notice m hereby given that at said meeliug liiu Act ol AsHembly, approved March 2'Al, li7. eu titled "Au Act to repeal an act entitled 'A further vuppleuiunt to the act Incorporating the Pennsylvania lvailroud Company, authorising- au Increase ol capital mock and to borrow money.' approved the twenty hiva day of March. A. 1). one thousand eight hundred and Blxly,nlx; and also lo authorize the Pennsylvania hailroad Compuny by this act to increase its capital slock, lo issue bonds and secure tne same oy mort take:'" approved the twenty-second day of March, A. J. Ii7: a proposed Increase thereunder ot the capital sti ck of this Company by auu.uH) shares, aud tne issue ol the same Irom time to time by the Jloanl oi luiectors, and the proposed exercise by the sain l.oatd ot JMrectors of the powers granted by the said act ol Issuing bonds and securing the same by mort eut'es lor the purposes In the said act mentioned ami within the limits therein prescribed, will be subuilues. to the (stockholders lor thei; action iu the premises. l.y order ol the oard o, hitu BMITU. i CI J (secretary. CAMlEN ANI AJlbOY RAILKOAD AND TKANHPUKTATION COMPANY. t.,Z ... u,,v,u:ii. N. J.. March 27, 1HH7. NOTIl'li.-'llMi Annual Meeting ol the block holders ol the Camden and Amboy Jtallroad aud I ransiiurla- on company will be held at the Company's Ol ce. In J rUen own. ouHATUKDAY. the 27ih of April, 1W.7, Jl u o clock M.. lor the election ol seven Ulreclors, lo serve lor the ensuing year. A .-.. , nAY.,.n Secretary ( iry C. u ml A. K. aud T. Co, ire? NATIONAL BANK OF THE REPUBLIC. tSj Piiii.AUKLl'HiA. March U, iw7. in accordance with the provisions ol' the National urrsncy act, and the Articles or Association of this 10. nk It has been determined to Increase the Capital hiii k'of this Bank to una oullUou dollars ($l,ut),o.m), inscriptions lrom stockholders ior thesharns alloltod i,7 tiieui iu the proposed Increase will be payable on 11. seoond day ol May next, and will be rucaived al Lii time prior to that dale. A number of shares will remain to be sold, applications for which will he re. calved Irum persons desirous or becoming Block- nv'urder Of the Board of Directors. i 1&7W JUsi-PU P. MUMFORD, Cashier. ArRIL 21, 1807. SPECIAL NOTICES. MAYOR'S OFFICE, rillliADKLPHlA. April 22, 1SG7. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That all HorseB, Cows, Sheep, or any description of cattle whatsoever, or Hog. Sow, fcbont, Pig, or Goat found going at large in any of the high ways of the city, or In any of the public squares or parks thereof, or upon any unfnclosed field, common, or piece of land therein, will be token up and disposed of as provided by ordinance of March 1,1S."5. !y order of the Mayor. II. a. CLMIIC, 4 23 3t High Constable. J" M A Y O It ' S OFFICE, Philadelphia, April 22, NOTICE IS IIEUEUY GIVEN, That the ordi nance prohibiting the washing of pavements between the hours of 7 A. M. and 7 P. M., from the 1st of May to the 1st of October, will be strictly enforced on and after tho 1st of May, 18(i7. All officers of the police force are directed to prosecute all persons found violating the provisions of the ordlunuco. liy order of the Mayor. II. G. CLAKIC, 4 23 at High Constable. frj5f MEUtArirlLrJ liuuaki cujii-aimx. Phii.aoki riUA, April 15, 1H7. A fneclal Meeting or the (StocKiioiuers will oe neia at the Library on TUKMiAV, the until inst., at 8 o'clock P. M., In order that the Hoard of Managers may submit a report or their action In the purchase ol a new building, and ior otheurncjses. 4 1 5 1 4 1 TiecordniK Secretary pro tern. OFFICE OF THE PHILADELPHIA AND FKANKFOHD PASNKNUKll HAIL- WAY COMPAN Y. No. 24.-.S FHAiNKrOllU HOAI). PlllI ADKI.elllA, April 23, 1H67. All persons who Bre subscribers to or holders of the capital stocK or this Company, and who have not yet paid the sixth Instalment of Five Dollars per share thereon, are herebv notilied that the said sixth In stalment has been" called In, and that they are re quired to pay the same at the above otlice on the loth day ot May next, IKH7. l!y resolution of the Board of Directors. 4 it 121 JACOB BINDKIt, President. jrry- OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL AND NAVIGATION COM ANY. 1'Hll.AliKI l'lllA, April 20,1807. The stated Annual Meetlug ot the Stockholders of this Company will be held at the HO A HI) OF TKADE fcOOMS, north side of CHKHNUT (Street, nOove FIFTH, on TL'KSDAY MuKNINU, the 7th day ot May next, at hall-past 10 o'clock, after which au Elec tion will be held at the same place tor Ollicers ol the Compuny tor the ensuing year. The Election to close at l v, ju. ot tne same uuy. 4 211 HI lAMKS 8. COX, President. fTJ7iT NOTICE. ALL PERSONS ARE CAU-V-S tinned against trusting any body on my ac count from this dule, without my written order. JOSEPH WILLIAMS. 4 22 3t Master or brig Iza. NOTICE. THE STOCKHOLDERS OF Tllli PKNNSYLVAN1A ACADEMY OF THE FINE AH'i'S are requested to call and get their tickets. 4 23 31 frS3F 15ATCHEL01V3 HAIR DYE. THIS bl? splendid Hair Dye Is the best in the world. The only (rvt ana jitrffct le Harmless, Reliable, lu BtautaiieuiiB. No disappointment. No ridiculous tints. Natural Black or Brown. Remedies the ill effects of Mud Jjyit. Invigorates the hulr, leaving it soft aud beamliiil. The genuine is signed WILLIAM A. BATCH ELOK. All others are mere Imitations, aud should be avoided. Hold by all Druggists and Per fumers. Factory, No. U BARCLAY street, New York. 45fuiwJ jKgp WISTAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CI1EKKY, for the cure of Coughs, Ceids, Moarae- mtts. Asthma, Inliucnza, Croup, Whooping Coign, Bron chitis, Predisposition to Consumption, etc., etc, This great remedy is too well known, and Is performing too much good, to make It necesiary to go Into an elabo rate discussion of Its merits. Suffice It to say that it ttill muintnlns Its supremacy in cmiag diseases of tho most obstinate charaoter, aud that all who suffer from tho above complaints, after having tested this remedy, seldom bars occasion to resort to other appliances to insure a perfect icatoration to health. TESTIMONY OF MB. TITER SHAW. Wkst WmFikLD, N. Y., December 10, 1810. Messrs. B. W. Fowle s Bon, Boston Osntlesien : During the winter of 1M8 1 was very mach oat or health, aitllcttd with a severe cough.paln in the aide andLungs, aud a general degression of healtn to such an extent as greatly to alarm myself and friends as to the result. Duitug this time 1 tried several highly recommended remedies with little or no goed result, and bad concluded to try the ellect ol a Southern climate non my health) hut, before carry ing this resolution into ellect, I was induced by the urgent solicitation of yenr agent, Mr Uontlsy.togive Dr. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry a trial. I did so, and to my great joy found Immediate and permaneat relief by the uae of only one bottle, and I am now in as good health as ever. 1 believe your Balsam one or the best remedslos fer Coughs, Colds, and all Lnng Diseases, now In use, and con scientiously recommend It as such. Yours truly, PETER BHAW. Prepared by BETH W. FOWLE A SON, No. IS TRE 110NT Bueel,Boatou. and for aaie by Druggiats generally. A POSITIVE CURE FOIl SCROFULA IN ALL ITS MANIFOLD FORMS. J. W. IIohnor, Esq., of Parkersbarg.Weat Va., writes to Dr. Anders, July 1, lsoti, as follows : "1 sad til Kiinnina .Ulcers when I commenced taking your Iodine Water, and am now entirely cured of ticrel'ula." DE. ASDEKS' IODINE WATEK It a pnre solution of Iodine, wltli-ut a solvent, the most powerful ViluJIzmg Aguut and Uestorativs known. Cir culars tree. J P. DIXsMORE, Fropr!etor,Ne. it DEY Street. New York. Soid by all Druggiais. 1 'M 4 2;i it NEW I'EKt'UaiEI'OliTilK HANDKERCHIEF PHAIiON'S "Night Bloomlnsf Ccreus." PIlAL.ON'S "Night Blooming Ceraus." rilALON'8 "Night Blooming Csreus." PIIALON'S "Nlfiht Blooming Ccreus." PIIALON'S "Night Blooming Cereus." A most exquisite, delicate, and Fragrant Periums, distilled lrom the rare and beautilul llowerlrom ahlcn It takes its name. Man uiactnred only by 618ws PI1ALON SV SON, New York, BEWARE OF C0USTKKKEIT8. , AUK KOU FUALOJI b TAKE AO 0X11311. ROOFING. X O O J? I IS Of. OLD BIHNG1JE KOOF8 (FLAT OR 8TEEP) COVEJi ED WITH JOBN'8 ENOLISH ROOFING CLOTH, And coated with LIQUID OUTTA PERCHA PAINT, making them perleotly water-proof, LEAKY GRAVEL ROOl'W repaired with Uutla Percha Paint, aud warranted ror live years. LEAKY HLATE KoOFtt coaled with liquid which becomes as hard at slate. TIN, COPPER, 21NC, or IRON coated wit Lluuid Outta Percha at small expense. Cool raiigliu, from one to two cents per square loot. Old Board oi nhiugle Roots ten cents per square foot, all complete Wait-rials constantly on hand and lor Bale by tin PHILADELPHIA AND PENNSYLVANIA ROOf. INO COMPANY, GKOROK HO HART, 11 ii Bm No. 2iW N. FOURTH Street, ROOFING, OI.l MIIN4JI.F. ItOOt N.ri.AT OR MTEKf ' t ill I 1111 m 1TA l'KH II A itoor ! l.o'l II, ami coated with l.lHim MUTTS' I'l.ltt MA rAINT, making LUeiu perfectly walei Drool, L1AHY URAVEI. ROOFS repaired with GnU Percha Pami, aud warranted tor five years. l.i;AI4V a, I. AT: KOOtat coated with Llqalt Gotta percha Paint, which beoomes as hard as slats. For TN,C'l'lt ;K,li',aud IKON HUWF& this Paint Is the m vlut ultra of all oilier protection, ll loruis a perlet tly imiHtrvioos covering, completely rental the action of the weather, aud ooustilutea a thorough protection agalust leaks by rust or other wiae, price ouly Iroru one to Iwo cents per suars '"lid and UBAVKL HOOFING dons at. sLoruiei notice. ' Material constantly on hand and for sale by la HANUOllI MOOriNO -OMIANY. IiI.llil.tJkN A KVKKETT, HI em No. 04 UREEN btreet MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. 107 EIGHTH STREET 1Q7 RIDDON STORE. lOVB BOOKS ABOVE ARCH STREET. JULIUS SICIIEL Has Just opened One awiortmont of mEEINERT liOOIw lor Itie eniuliiK Season, consisting of NIHAW IIONNE1M ANU HATS, the latest shapes and styles. ItlltltoKM In all colors, widths, and qualities; the best assortment In the city. Bonnet bilks, Satins, Velvets, and Crapes, all quail ties'and shades, h renoh Flowers, a superb assortment In the la tea novelties. Velvet Klbbons, black and colored, tn all widths and qualities. 1 he best French and New York Bonnet Frames always on hand. Bonnet Ornaments, Bugle Fringes, the handsomest stylus; In fuel, every article used iu making or ulm biIdk a bonnet or bU '1 be above goods are all selected with the best care, and will be.sold at the lowest tuaikel rates to suit the times. JULIUS 8IOIIEL, tkO. 107 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET, M FOUK DOCKS ABOVE ARCH. P. S. No trouble to show goods. 411m AMBER, PEARL, tRIsTAL ANU ;JET TRinniNUM. Z F. P II Y It W1CIIT, AT WORSTED, SOLO FULL ItAPSON'S 41 lm6p TRIMMINGS AND ZEPHYR STORE, S,M.(0I1M:I1 F.1G1ITH AND CIIERRT. No. 726 CHESNUT STREET. We open to-day full and splendidly as- sorted stock ot FRENCH AN1 NEW YORK t it A ill EM BONNET STRAW HATH, STRAW HONNF.TN, ItONNET ItlliaJONft, I'RIIinlSti It lit HONS, VELVET U1UHOMS. IhlLRN, VELVETS, LAt E., ETC. ETC. I'ARItt FLOWER. ANU ORNAMENTS. Allol the latebl and most approved styles, and at the lowest prices. Please give us a call. Country orders promptly and accurately attended to. MEl LiV ROSENHEIM. 829 lm No. TW CHEbNUT street. RflO URNINC MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT 07 MOURNING BONNETS, AT NO. 001 WALNUT STREET. SLTCim MAD'LLE KEOCH. 31 US. II. DILLON, ti OH. S83 AND S31 SOUTH STREET, Has a handsome assortment of SPRING MILLI NERY. ladies', Misses', and Children's straw and Fancy Bonnets and Hats of tua latest Btyles. Also. Silks, Velvets, Ribbons, Crapes, Feathers. Flowers, Frames, etc. 71SJ HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTING. PAINTING. T1TOMAS A. FAUT, DOUSE AND S1N PAINTER. (Late Fahy dt Bro.) No. 31 North THIRD Street, Above Market. OLD BRICK FRONTS done up, and made to look equal to the finest press brick. Samples at the shop. City and country trade solicited. All orders by Post promptly attended to. 4 19 I'm w FERTILIZERS. MO MATED FIIOSPIIATE, AN UNSURPASSED FERTILIZER For Wheat, Corn, Oats, Potatoes, Grass, the Vegetabl Garden, Fruit Trees, Orape Vines, Eta Etc. This Fertiliser contalus Ground Bone and the best Fertilizing balls. Price fio per ton of 2rxx pounds. For sale by ths H)nuiaclurers, WILLIAM ELLIS & CO., Chemists, 1 28m wfj No. 724 MARKET Street. WANTS. (HOf- THE GENUINE BARTLETT CHOpf tJpZU. SEWING MACHINE. Wanted DZlO. Agents, f ISO per month and all expenses paid; to sell the Genuine Bartlelt Sewing Machine. This Machine will do all the work that can be done on any high priced Machine, aud Is lully patented, licensed, aud warranted tor five years. We pay the above wages, or a commission, from which twice that amount cau be made. For circulars aud terms address H. HALL 4 CO., No. 724 CHESNUT Street, 4 61m Philadelphia, Pa. FOR SALE. O FOR SALE THE (JOOD-VV1LL AND Xi Fixtures of the old-established Hotel, Reatau rant, aud Dining Saloons, situate at the Bouthwes corner of CARTER Street and EXCHANGE Place lately of Frederick Lakenieyer, deceaned, and favor ably Known as "Lskemeyers" to all branches of the DiiHinesa community. or lermB.-apply on the pre- Di lies, to Administratrix. FOB SALE THREE-STORY bRICK jJiihouse, No. 66M North T'WE.N l'Y-FIFTIt Street, oeiow Green, eight rooms, with bath, lu good order. Immediate poKSessiou. Price. 1hoii. Apply to 11, L. HA INKS, Conveyancer. 41&il No. 6,10 WALNUT Street. TO RENT. TO RFNT-THE VERY DESIRABLE Furnished Residence sltntuml No. im tiii wh'. jioiKtU Street. lei mantowu. from Juue 1 until the 1st day of Ociober or November. Apply on the premises. 4 20 6t GERMANTOWN A FURNISHED double JiOL'fciK to rent for !- mrmih. r.- iur, having a handsome lawn, with large garden and ubundauce ol lruit. Apply al No. OS TCLPEHOCKKN SLATE MANTELS. SLATE MANTELS are unsurpassed lor Durability B uty, Strength, aud Cheapness. SLATE MANTELS, and Slate Work Geuerallj made to order. J. Ii. KIMES & CO., 8 12 6m Noa 12 and 2128 CHESNDT HLrL. POSTER'S RESTAURANT NO. 181 SOUTH THIRD STREET, OITOSITE GIEAliD BANK, PHILADELPHIA Oystersand VtrU rt r-llhcuis 4 5 Ira T. STEWART BROWN, B.K. Corner of FOURTH and CHESTNUT BT? MANUFACTURE OP TUUNK8, V&LISEa. BAOB, RETICULES, and evel description of Traveling Goods. lalBk aa HAUU kcvslro. BBS)