7 r AT I J 3 3 fit THE NEW YORK PFIESS. EDITORIAL OriHIONB OF THB tRADIHG JOtTBSALS BPOir CUBKBNT TOPICS COMPILED EVBKt BAT FOB THB EVENING TKhBGHAPH. Itoe Conntrr-nevolntlon Mow Going On ..Irflenun t Large. JVom f7t Jleratd. It will be difficult for tbo future historian or our great civil war, be hia powers of descrip tion what they may, to exaggerate the ilia Tfhieh the war has entailed on all the sections and interests of the Commonwealth. After the rassiona to which that struggle gave birth have died out, it will still be found that a large legacy of misfortune has been left to tuo nation. It is not merely that for upwards of four years war on a more gigantic scale than has ever yet been witnessed raged within our borders; that vast extents of territory were over run and laid waste; that some of our finest cities were levelled with the dust; that trade In all its departments was paralyzed; that our Jlourishing commerce was swept from the ocean; that five or six hundred thousand men fn the one side and on the other proved their devotion or their patriotism with thoir lives; that the bitter anguish of bereavement clothed the nation in mourning; that thou sands of maimed and helpless creatures in all parts of the Union 'continually remind TLB of the severity and iniquity of the Btrugglo; that the miseries of poverty were experienced by thousands and hundreds of thousands among whom formerly plenty reigned; that we are groaning under some three or four thousand millions of debt; that through the maddened passions which that struggle engendered our Chief Magistrate, for no other fault than simply performing his duty, perished by the assassin's hand it is not merely for these reasons, weighty as they are, that the Rebellion is to be deplored. It is to be deplored for other reasons than these, nnd chiefly for this one a reason which hitherto Mas been lost sight of that it has Bown the seeds of future misery and disorder hich centuries of good government and wise legislation will be impotent to destroy. Unless ve admit that civil war had become a neces sity, guilt, grievous guilt, must lie at some door. As we cannot admit the necessity, we Lave no choice but to proclaim the guilt. At whose door, then, are all these miseries to be laidt On whose head is this gigantio evil to be charged ? On whom is that guilt to be mainly fastened T But one answer comes to these questions from all parts of the mighty Worth, and even from many parts, too, of the humbled and Buffering South, and that answer Shapes itself into the name ot one man, and that man is Jefferson Davis. It was his hand that lighted up the flames of civil war a war which has begotten such a brood of miseries to lilmself, to his friends, to the South, to the entire American Union. If political offenses are possible in a republio, if the word treason has any meaning in a self-governing commu nity, and if it is treason to plot and attempt the ruin of our country, then, from the mo ment the first Rebel snot was fired at Fort Bumter, Jefferson Davis stood convicted of the highest political offense known among men. lie played the traitor's part. Suc cessful, he would have reaped the honor. Unsuccessful, he could only count on the traitor's doom. lie was unsuccessful. Not only so he fell into the hands of his enemies. What has followed T llow has this arch Itebel been treated T lias he met the fate to which the English Parliament was bold enough to deliver Charles the First, and to which the French Convention, with equal bold ness, though perhaps with leas justice, doomed Louis the Sixteenth f Nothing of the sort. Will it be credited by future generations of the American people that this author of so much misery, this disturber of peace, this destroyer of human life, this scourge and ruin of his country, has, after two years of imprisonment, at any time during which trial was practicable and easy, been permitted, still untried, to resume hia liberty 1 Yet so it is. Without having undergone even the shadow of a trial, Jefferson Davis is again a free man. Blood has been poured forth in actual torrents, parents have laid their chil dren on the altar of their country, the flower and promise of our young men have perished, suffering untold and inconceivable has been and still is being endured, and for what pur pose f To put down this iniquitous Rebellion and to bring traitors to justice. The Rebellion had been put down; traitors have fallen into our hands; but Justice I we know not where to find her. She has aban doned her native seats, and . where she was wont to be seen in pride and purity and honor, Corruption sits, with bold and un blushing brow. No; the chief traitor has not been punished has not even been tried. Not only so; under the flimsiest and most wretched pretext by which the course of justice was ever averted, aud by the aid of pre tended patriots and purists and would-be philanthropists, he has been set free. We Buffer the entire American people, North and South, suffer because of this man's offenses; but the offender himself escapes with im punity. Such is the condition of things to which the nation has been brought. The condition, cer tainly, is pitiable enough. Who is to blame for it ? It was natural that Jefferson Davis Bhould desire liberty. That he is free is as little his fault as that he has not been tried. Wow, however, that we are rid of him, we have to deal with another class of offenders. Who, we ask, is to blame ? Some say the President; some say Chief Justice Chase; some say Con gress; some say Judge Underwood. The par tisans of ach of these, we understand, are very keen. Of one thing, at least, we are cer tain the blame does not rest with the people. We do not feel disposed to go in for any one of the above-mentioned parties. Whether the blame rests more with the President than with the Judiciary, or more with Congress than with either, we are less certain than that it will be divided among them. It was equally in the power of the President, the Congress, the Judiciary, to force on the trial. All nave failed. . . . , - The people of the United States have been befooled and disgraced in the eyes of the woiAd and by whomf By their acknow iifrl .nit w,tai iiAris. Worse than that, they are being ground down by a system of the most meddling and oppressive taxation Which any nation has ever experienced. For what purpose? To punish treason treason which lias been declared impossible in the fmublio. Bv whom has this declaration beon madat Bv their acknowledged and eleoted heads. We have tried to put the question r.lflarlv before the minds of the American peo ple, knowing, as we do, that the instincts of the Teoile are just and right, and that in the lonir run they will respond to what is true IVe drop the subject for the present by leaving to the consideration of the great publio two questions: First. Who is to blame, for this failure of Justice t Second. Since Justice has tA. since treason is not treason, aud since iva imvA iiaaii Kjearinir uie vieseui, uuiueu w in lm lifiiiefthat treason was treason, is ortb. while bearing It any longer r THE DAILY Shalt Hherldan l lltmortd t lyom the Tribune. A rumor cornea from Washington that Mr. Johnson and his Cabinet have boen discussing the propiiety of removing General Sheridan. No reason is assigned why this gallant officer should be relieved of his command, except that "prominent Louisianlans, both of the Rebel and conservative stamp," have peti tioned for his removal. Mr. Johnson and his Cabinet may as well understand that "prominent Louisiauians of the Rebel and conservative stamp," are Just the very last men in the country who have any business to bo heard in this matter, and that General Sheridan is one of the last men in the country who ought to be sacrificed to please them. We dare say they do not like him. Wo dare say they have no particular affection for the victor of Winchester, and Fisher's Hill, and Cedar Run ; for the man who told the truth so boldly about the New Orleans massacre, and who has exerted him self so zealously, to give New Orleans a loyal City Government and an honest police. But to our mind this is a Btrong reason why he Bhould be retained. General Sheridan faced the Rebels too gallantly in war to fear them in peace. One of his highest recommendations for the position he now holds is that ho has never seemed afraid of losing it. He stands in no dread of Conservatives, cither at New Orleans or at Washington, and fears the Louisiana Rebels as little as he fears the Presi dent. It would gratify the publio to see the names of some of the Rebels and conservatives whose demands for the virtual disgrace of a gallant officer appear to have been heard with such respectful consideration at the White House. They would like to know whethar the list includes John T. Monroe, whom Sheridan re moved from the Mayoralty for notorious and outrageous disloyalty; or Andrew S. Herron, whom he deposed from the District Attorney ship; or Edmund Abell, whom he turned off the bench of the District Court, both for the same reason. They would like to know how many of the Rebel policemen whom he has recently expelled from office, how many of the ruffians whose murdering of inoffensive oolorod Unionists he stigmatized so bravely in his report on the massacre; how many of the still rampant Rebels whose oppression of the freed men he has checked are among those "con servative" petitioners. If General Sheridan has made himself ob noxious to a certain class of the people whom he has to govern, it is only by doing his duty. If the Rebels want him sent away, it is proof enough that the Union men want him to stay. The country feels too grateful tor what he did during the war, and what he has done since, to bear patiently with his unmerited disgrace. The people have no mind that the Confederates whom he whipped in the field should now be permitted to whip him. And, personal con siderations apart, they are too sensible ot the benefit of his administration to Louisiana and to the country at large, to submit to its being changed for a different sort of rule. The ad ministration which attempts to disgrace Gene ral Sheridan, just to please a few men of the Herron and Monroe stamp, will have to face a storm of popular indignation that will sweep it out of office. Stat Sovereignty The Couiolldatton Policy From the Times. Tho phase of radicalism most likely to en gage attention is that which affirms tho abso lute sovereignty of Congress over all matters pertaining to the States. The doctrine pro mulgated by Mr. Sumner, insisted upon by Wendell Phillips, and accepted by journals not always in alliance with the extremists, is that Congress may and should legislate for all the States to the extent that may be necossary for the complete establislunent of its polioy. Negro suffrage, of course, affords the imme diate test. The destruction of the slave sys tem, it is argued, will not be finished until the political and civil equality of the negro is secured throughout the Union. And since many of the States are inimical to the change, w hile others are in no haste to effect it, it is contended that Congress should forthwith ajsert its authority in the premises, and in sure universal negro suffrage by a national enactment. The proposition rests on the ground that the old idea of States Rights is exploded, and that what Congress may do for the freedmen at the South it is bound to do for the blacks in all other States. In pursuance of the same reasoning, the Baltimore radicals appeal to Washington for help to enable them to set aside the action of the Maryland Con vention. From which it would follow, that under the plea of constructing a strong central power for consummating purposes de veloped during the progress of the war, the ultra Radicals are pushing the consolidation policy to a point that involves the overthrow of the control hitherto exercised by the States on questions relating to their internal affairs. There is a glimmering of plausibility, if not of reason, in this manifestation of radical opinion. Logically considered, negro suffrage is now a part of the national policy. Con gress has made it one of the conditions- of reconstruction, and has thus affirmed its desire to obliterate distinctions based upon color or race. It has done this ostensibly on the score of justice, and as a means of contributing to the national safety. And inasmuch as the Government is composed of Northern members, ana is supposes to represent- the Northern will, the in- ference is not extravagant mat mo ynu ciple which the North has thrust upon the South in respect of negro votes, it is prepared to carry out in its own con cerns. To declare that the negro is qualified to govern the South implies a consciousness that the negro is qualiiied to share in the government of the North. There can be no escape from this conclusion except at the expense of consistency. The advocates of consolidation, however, fall into two mis takes, either of which would be fatal to their plan. They assume, in the first place, that negro suffrage at the South is a concession to justice, when in reality it is merely a measure of par tisan expediency. And they take it for granted, in- the next place, that because the States composing the Government build their recon struction policy upon the hypothesis that Federal authority is supreme, therefore these States will not object to the extension of the theory to their own cases. Notldng could be more erroneous as a question of fact or more superficial as a question of reasoning. The circumstances which alone excuse the exercise of Federal authority at the South, desoribe the limit beyond which Congressional action of the imm Lnrni-ter would be rank usurpation. And though the Northern people uphold a sur render of the principle of State sovereignty in its application to the South, they cling as tenaciously as ever to that priuoiple in its HTmllr.Rliim to themselves. . It happens, too, that States which are just now among the strongholds of radicalism are EVENING TELEGRAPH interested in defeating the consolidation polioy. Tennessee and Missouri both olaim to bo intolerant in their loyalty -procrlptive in their patriotism. Each baa availed itself of tho rlghta guaranteed by the Constitution to create tests and impose disabilities, with the view of strengthening the radical party. They have carried out. tho Slate sovereignty principle according to their own notions of expediency. Hie results have been harsh and evil in both instances, but the general princi ple on which they have proceeded, being in entire accord with the recognized understand ing of State rights, has passed unchallenged. Both Stales, then, are standing radical pro tests against the Sumner-Phillips innovation. For if Congress may be properly called upon to force one set of views upon Maryland, why may it not, with equal propriety, be urged to interfere in Tennessee f If it may to day dis franchise Governor Swan's Rebel sympathiz ing fiiends, why may it not to-morrow dis franchise Governor Brownlow'a ruffians and cutthroats, and consign their arms to the State arsenal? Or if it may thrust negro suffrage upon Now York and Connecticut, what is to hinder it from meddling with mat ters over which Governor Fletcher and the radicals of Missouri claim jurisdiction? In Missouri, indeed, the questiou has taken a practical shape. The Jmlgos of its Supremo Court have come into conflict with a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, and in support of their position lay down dicta in regard to the reserved rights of States with a warmth of dogmatism that would have ex torted admiration from Calhoun. The Supreme Court of the United States, it mav be remem bered, not long ago declared the test oath of the Missouri radicals unconstitutional. But tho Supreme Court of Missouri, adjudicating the other day in the Blair-Ridgley case, pro ceeds on the broad ground that while Federal sovereignty is limited and derived, State sovereignty is original and inherent, boing limited only in regard to powers explicitly sur rendered. South Carolina never spoke more strongly on the point than these radical Judges of Missouri, as may be inferred from utterances like this: "Tho Stntes, when they entered the Union, re tained all llieir orlginul power and sovereignty, except such bs wero expressly surrendered to the General Government, or they were ex pre6ly prohibited from exercising. Subject to these exceptions, they are Independent Com iiion wenllhp, and the excluslvo Judges of what Is Just and proper for their own safety, welfare, and happiness." Yet further these exponents of Missouri ideas assert: "Prior to the adoption of the Federal Consti tution, the respective 8 tales possessed un limited and unrestricted sovereliru' v. and re tained tho same ever afterwards, except so far ns they planted certain powers to the Uenoral Government, or prohibited themselves from dolU certain acts. Every State reserved to itnell the exclusive riput of regulating Its own lbtcrnul government aDd police." "Independent commonwealths," almost "unlimited and unrestricted sovereignty," "exclusive judges of what is right and proper for their own safety," "exclusive right of regulating their own government and police." Why, these phrases, true though they be, 60und se oddly coming from radical lips that they form a very suggestive indication of difficulty in the way of the consolidation policy. True, this exposition of the doctrine of State sovereignty is levelled at the Supreme Court of the United States, and is pushed to a de gree which cannot be sustained. It is a case in which the Judges of a State declare their jurisdiction superior to that of the Court of the nation, precisely as was done by the radi cal Judges of Wisconsin . in the days of the Fugitive Slave law. But the whole argument applies with equal cogency to a controversy between a State and Congress, with negro suffrage as the point in dispute. When, therefore, Mr. Sumner brings up his scheme for legislating negro suffrage into all the States, let us not forget that the radical Judges of the Supreme Court of Missouri have proclaimed these States "independent commonwealths," each possessing "the exclusive right of regu lating its own internal "government." The principle, thus applied, is old as the Union, and needed not the indorsation of the Missouri Bench. But its reaffirmation in this connec tion is reasonable, as an answer from radical lips to the most aggressive of radical demandu. Logic by Induction. FYom the Tribune. There is a good deal in analysis; and, a3 clergymen and church-goers know, two or three lines of text may be amplified into seve ral quires of sermon. The account of the riot at Brownsville, Tenn., which we have already printed, concludes as follows: "One of the rioters is reported to have said, early in the day, that he was going to get drunk, and go up to the Court-house and drive off the d d niggers." 1. lie uas going to get drunk. This wo con sider creditable in him. He must have had a sort of soft spot somewhere, either in his heart or his liver, and felt a compunction at the mean work in which he was about to engage. So, like "Lady Macbeth," he took something before he proceeded to business. "That which hath made them drunk hath made me bold," said her ladyship. "I am going to get drunk," said the Brownsville murderer. It would be curious to inquire how much whisky had to do with the great Rebellion; of the little ones which break out here and there, this untrust worthy and irresponsible fluid is, no doubt, a prime constituent element. 2. He was going up to the Court-home. He was going to the very temple of justice to defy the laws, as some Eacriligious scoundrel might break into a church for the purpose of prac tising the profane languago with greater gusto upon the very steps of the pulpit or in the pulpit itself. Abandoned to ISaechus, he held Themis in high contempt, and must needs show it. So he first loaded himself, and then his rifle, and, being both mentally and physi cally cocked and primed, he proceeded. 3. To drive off the d d niggers. This decla ration shows, we must confess, a more con sistent purpose than might have been ex pected from this muddled reformer. What, in the audacious enthusiasm of his cups, he in tended, is simply what a great many gentle men who never drink the extract of rye at all have often proposed to do some of them even offering to annihilate both time and space, and to transport four millions of negroes aforesaid to Africa, where M. du Chaillu says they be long where at this moment, if man had not presumptuously interfered with Divine Provi dence, they would now be hunting gorillas, worshiping idols, and cutting each others' throats. The Brownsville reformer, indeed, under the encouraging influence of his" favorite fluid, went a little too far. His "driving off" seems to have meant the driving of his victims quite away from this terrestrial ball out of the State of Tennessee into the Future State. Such a bold enthusiast should be known by name, as he will be, when twelve men lay their heads together to decide whether he shall be hung or only locked up for life. Meanwhile, he seems to be quite at large; getting drunker, we suppose, than ever, aud most lamentably unreconstructed. PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, Horace Greeley and the Union League Club. Fnm the World. We published yenterday two romarkablo lotters, written by two of our greatest masters of sinewy Englith, when English is used for purposes of invective. One ia a reply by Mr. Greeley to the arraignment of the Union League Club, which is about to haul him over the coals, and probably expel him, for boing a bondsman of Jefferson Davis; the other, a less interesting production, though one of the most vigorous specimens of its author's talent for vituperation, is a letter by Wendell Phillips to the Anti-Slavery Standard, in which he bears down upon Mr. Greeley like a soventy four gun war-frigate. We copy this venomous philippic merely as being the most readable sample wo could offer of the kind of attacks against which the editor of the Tribune ia called to make his defense, and dismiss it without further comment. But Mr. Greeley's rapping answer to the Union League Clab will perhaps bear a more extended notice. The obstreperous hullabaloo which has been raised about Mr. Greeley's ears for his recent visit to Richmond, is a valuable index to the present state of feeling in the Republican party, and is therefore of considerable publio interest. It proves that the dominant spirit of that party is a fervor of inextinguishable vengeance, inconsistent with any peaceful res toration of the Union. It proves that so long as that party is in power, the only relation that can subsist between the North and South is insolent domination on one side and humi liating subjugation on the other. This has leen manifest enough to reflecting men in the substitution of military tyranny for republi can government throughout the South. But this substitution of despotism for democracy has been so disguised by plausible pretexts that the unwary have been misled. The fierce thirst for vengeance which has inspired the policy of Congress has assumed the mask of patriotism, ana it neeuoa some sucn oocasion as haB now arisen to disclose to common ap prehension the actual motives and spirit of the Republican party, vengeance l ven geance I Vengeance ! unforgiving and relent less vengeance, is the animating impulse of the Republicans. J hey are incapable ot any tolerance, even to those who have rendered the party the greatest services, the moment they venture to take a single Btep towards hu manity and conciliation. We infer from the defiant tone of Mr. Greeley's letter that he rather courts than deprecates an expulsion. The language he uses to his accusers is such an outpouring of scorn, such a contemptuous bolittling of their judgment, that if they do not expel him, the public will think they are cowed by his vigor and dare not. "I arraign you," he says, "as narrow-minded blockheads who would like to be useful to a reat and good cause, but don't know how." He cannot very much covet the association of "men whom he thus describes, and they must bo as deficient in spirit as he tells them they are despicable in intellect, if they subside . under such a chastisement Moreover, the grudge between Mr. Greeley and the Club would seem to be of pretty long standing. "They greeted him," he says, "with a broadside of scowls" for articles advocating lenity at the close of the war. When some indiscreet admirer made a present to the Club of his portrait, its President flared up in an abusive speech against its reception. Last fall, they "shouted approval" of a speech against his views by Air. Fesseuden. They take this fresh occasion to pay off old scores; and as they would not reoeive his portrait, he repays the compliment by paint ing theirs. It is, of course, a piece of intermeddling impertinence for a political club to assume an inquisitorial supervision over such parts of tho conduct of a member as neither affect hia honor as a gentleman nor compromise the .political orthodoxy of tho Club. The Union League Club may disapprove of the release of Jefferson Davis on bail; but as wr, Greeley did not admit him to bail, it is difficult to see how the honor of the Club is affected by the release. Over tho Court' and counsel the Club has no jurisdiction, and it would be sheer presumption and imperti nence for them to "rejudge their justice," and sit as a tribunal of revision. But it is the Court, and not Mr. Greeley, that is re sponsible for the prisoner being at large. If Mr. Greeley had not signed the bonds, there were plenty of others who would; and it is difficult to see how the accident that one of the signers happened to belong to the Union League Club makes that body in any way answerable for what was done at Richmond. If they do not propose to punish Mr. Gree ley for what Judge Underwood has done, but for what Mr. Greeley himself has done, it must be either for expressing his opinion that the bailing was proper, or for his belief that Mr. Davis will not abscond. But the opinion in favor of bailing was announced long ago, and if that is what the club are going to call him to account for, their action is tardy and whimsical. They are really proposing to expel Mr. Greeley for the awful crime of be lieving that Jefferson Davis will not run away. If this belief is ill-founded, it is he, not the Club, that will have to pay the forfeit. But whether the belief be ill-founded or well founded, where does the Club get its autho rity to decide that its members shall not entertain it, or shall not risk money on it ? It is a small, pitiful business, and Mr. Gree ley's scornful defiance puts them in a position where they will be compelled to publish them selves as asses if they expel him, or as cowards if they do not. MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. yjO URNI NC MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT 07 MOTJIUNING BOIYINEXS, AT NO. 0a WALNUT STBEET, 8276m MAD'LLE KEOCH.' cf- MliS. It. DILLON, V ko. aa and ssi mouth street, Bm a baudsome assortment of SPRING WILLI NEHY. I utiles', WIhhmi', and Children's Straw and Fancy Bonnets aud Hals of lbs laleat styles. Also, bilks, Velvets, lUbboub, Crapes, Feathers, Flowers, Frames, etc 7 lb fam 6. R O D I NOON No. GIO OIIKSNUT STREET. Is In receipt to-day of an Invoice of HUE CIHIOMOS, ENGRAVINGS, ETC. ETC., - Which are now open for examination. "Peace and War," by G, Dofee," "Last Hose of Bummer," "Cromwell arid Family,'' "Borneo aud Juliet," "Btar ol Belhlhein," are well worthy tbe attention of the admlret s of art, 3 l&j MAY 24, 18G7. SPECIAL NOTICES. tW UNION LCACUH HOUSE, MAY li. 1867. At a meotlnn of tlie Bosrd ot Directors of the CNtON LKAUUK OF rillLADKLPHIA, neld March 12, 1867, tbe following l'resmble and Resolu tions were adopted: Whereas, In a republican form ot Government It Is or the highest Importance that the del' gates or the people, to whom tbe sovereign power Is entrusted, should be so selected as to liuly represent tba body roll tic, and there being no provision ot law whereby tbe people may be organized fur the purpose of such selection, and all parlies having recognised tbe neoes. slty of such organization by the formation of volun tary associations tor this purpose, and Vbereas, There are grave delocts existing nnder the present system of voluntary organization, which it is believed may be corrected by suitable provisions of law; now, therefore, be It Unsolved, By the Beard of Directors of the UNION LEAGUE OF PHILADELPHIA, that the Secretary be and Is hereby directed to offer eleven hundred dol- lnrsln prizes for essays on the legal organization of the people to select candidates for oOlce, the prizes to be as follows, viz.: Tbe sum of Ave hundred dollars far that essay which, in tbe judgment of the Board, shall be first In the order of merit; Three hundred dollars tor the second; Two hundred for tbe third, and One hundred for the fourth. Tbe conditions upon which these prizes are offered are as follows, vis.: First. Ail essays competing for these prizes must be addressed to GEO RUE II. BOKEU, Secretary of the Union League of Philadelphia, and must be received by him before the FIR3T DAY OF JANUARY, 1808, and no communication having the author's name at tached, or with any other indication of origin, wlU be considered. Second. Accompanying every competing essay, the author must enclose his name and address within a sealed envelope, addressed to tbe Secretary of tbe Union League. After the awards have been made, the envelopes accompanying the successful essays shall be opened , and tbe authors notified of the result. Third. All competing essays shall become tbe pro perty of the Union League: but no publication of rejected essays, or tbe names of their authors, shall be made without consent of the authors In writing. By ordor ol the Board ot Directors. UEOUtiE II. HOKEB, 6101m SECRETARY. REPUBLICAN STATE3 CONVENTION. IfARBiHRnnn, April 10, 1867. The "Republican State Convention" will meet at the "If erdio House," iu Willlmsport. on WEUiSESDAY, the 26th day of June next, at 10 o'clock A. M., to nominate a candi date lor Judge of the Supreme Court, and to initiate proper measures for the ensuing Htate canvass. As heretofore, the Convention will be composed of RepreHentittlve and Senatorial Delegates, chosen in the usual way, and equal In number to tbe whole of the benatnrs aud Representatives In the Geueral Assembly, By order of the State Central Committee. f. JORDAN, Chairman. GEOBOK W. HAUKIlsr.KY, I SwrdtarldiL J. Rqklky DumtMsoy. J ""cremries. 520 git irtsr DEPARTMENT OP PUBLIO HIGH-WAYS-OFFICE, No. 104 S. FIFTH Street. Philadelphia. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Pealed Proposals will be received at the Office oMhe Chief CommiHsiouer ot Highways until 12 o'clock M., on lust., for tbe construction of the following Se- w era, viz.. ou the line of Fifteenth street, f rom Rruudy wlue to Green street, thence westward on Green street to felxteenih street, and one 00 tbe line of Third street, from Coutes to Brown street, these to be two feet six Inches in clear diameter. AIho, one of three feet in clear dlnmeter, 011 the Hue ot Huntingdon street, from the connection with the Emerald stieet Sewer to the ust line ol Jasper street, with such inlets and man- iioles as may he directed by the Chief Engineer and iurveyor. The understanding to be that the Contractor shall take Lilts nreuared aealnst the nronortv troutlnc on said sewer to the amount of one dollar aud twenty-five (lents tor each lineal foot of front on each side of tbe street us so much cash paid; the balance, as limited by Ordinance, to be paid by the city; aud the Con tractor will be required to. keep the street and sewer In good .repair lor two years after the sewer la finished. W hen the street Is occupied br a City Passenger Railroad track, the Sewer shall Deconstructed along side ol said track in such manner as not to obstruct or interfere with the sale passiige of cars thereon; and no cliiim for remuneration shall be paid the Contractor uy ineconinauy using Bam iracK, aa spednea In Act of Assembly approved May 8th, 1866. All Bidders are Invited to be present at the time and place or opening the said Proposals. Each proposal will be accompanied by a certificate that a Bond has been tiled In the Law Department as directed by Ordi nance of May i6th, i860. If the Lowest Bidder shall not execute a contract within five days after tbe work Is awarded, he will be deemed as declining, and will be held liable on his bond lor the ultierence between bis bid and the next highest bid. Specifications may be had at tbe Department of Surveys, which will be strictly adhered to. W. W. SMEDLKY, G 23 8t Chief Commissioner of Highways. fST THE OFFICE OF Tho Liverpool, New York, and Phila delphia Steamship Company, "Inman Line," Has been removed from No. Ill WALNUT Street, to NO. 411 CTIESNUT STBEET. 5 82Slrp JOHN G. DALE. Agent. KEPT OFFICE PENNSYLVANIA EAILROAD COMPANY. Philadelphia, May 4, 1867. The Board of Directors have this day declared a semi-annual Dividend of TUHKB PER CENT, on the Capital Stock of the Company, clear of National aud State Tuxes, payable In Cash on and alter May 8. They have also declared an EXTRA DIVIDEND of FIVE PER CENT., based upon prolits earned prior to January 1, 1867, clear ot National and State Taxes, payable In Stock on and alter May an, at its par value of Fifty Dollars per shore the shares for block Dividend to be dated May 1, 1867, Scrip Certihcutes will be issued for fractional parts ot Shures; sttld Scilp will not be entitled to any Inte rest or Dividend, but will be convertible Into block when presented in sums of Fifty Dollurs. Powers of attorney for collection ot Dividends can be had on application at the Otllce of the Couipauy, rio. iuis b. LLLIXIL) rureei. 6 4 iiOt THOMAS T. FIRTH, Treasurer. KZg" TITTSBURG, FORT WAYNE, AND kxiJ ( H XC'AGO RA I LROAD COMPAN Y.UFFDJM OF THE PRESIDENT, Pittsburg. Pa., April 27, 1867. Pursuant to resolution adopted at a meetlug of the Shareholder) and Bondholders ol this Company, held at Pittsburg, March 20, ultimo, notice Is hereby given thai an adjourned meeting ot the Shareholders will be held at P1T1SBUKG. May 25. proximo, ai It M , to consider such detailed estimates as may be sub mitted by the Board of Directors lor additional equip ment uud permanent Improvements to be made to the railway, aud aUo to determine upon tbe question or increasing the capital stock lor Die purpose of raising the necessary means lor paying lor such equipmeut aud Improvements. AMEa g Chairman of Stockholders' Meeting. BlOin . W. CAWS, President. fTJ?r OFFICE OF THE ILLINOIS CEN- TRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, Nkw Youk, May 8. 1867. The Annual Meeting of Die Shareholders of the ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, for the Election of Dlreciors, and the transaction or other buslnehs, will be held at the otllce of the Couipauy. in the City of CHICAGO, on W EDNKSDA Y, the mil day of May, 1MJ7, at 8 o'clock P. M. The Transfer Books of the Company will be closed at the close of business on the 11th lust., aud leopuued ou the 1st day of June next. 10 1st L. A. CAT LIN. Secretary. NOTICE THE NEW ORLEANS RR. PUBLICAN solicits the PntrouuiTH nf nil Inv.l men In the North who have business lnLurMUi i. ih. Soutb. Having been selected by the Clerk of the House of Representatives under tho law of Congress passed March 2, ltu7, as the paper for printing all the Laws and Treaties, aud all the Fedural advurllHe meuts within the btute of Louisiana, it will be the best advertising meulum in the Southwest, reauiilug a larger number ol business men than anv other paper. Address MATliEWrt fc HAMILTON, Con veyauceis. No. 707 bAKBOM Street, or tt. L. BKOWN & CO., New Orleans. Louisiana. 4 2uliu T- NOTICE. 8T. LOUIS, ALTON, AND TERRE HAUTE RAILROAD COMPANY. The Annuul Meeting or the Bondholders and Stock holders ol this Company will bo held at their oillce. In the City of ST. LOUIS, ou MONDAY, the td day of June next, at 8 o'clock In the alternoon ol that d.iv. for the ELECTION of THIRTEEN Dl KKCTORH for the ensuing year, and for the transaction ol auy other LuxiueHs which may be brought heforu them. TbeTrunsferBookBor the Company will be closed on SA1 UHl'A Y. the 4lh day ot May next, aud will be opened ou Tl'KrsDAY.lhv 4lh day ot Juue. Dated bl. Louis, April 'ii, lMi7. J 10Ut By order. II. C. BRYANT, Soc'yj SPECIAL NOTICES. 57" NATIONAL BANK OF TUB KEI'UB. 1C rilII.AriKl.PHlA. Mav 1 um Applications for the unallotted shares In tl.a In crease of the Capital Block of ibis Bank are now being re ce iv to ana me stork delivered. '" JOHF.rilP.MlJMroRri. Cashier. a,H,,!i1.MKETING OF THE KPRINO CHEEK OH cJnYpaN .VY'Lli" BATCIIELOK'3 HAIR DTE.-Tnia Tr spleudld Hair Dye Is the beet In theworlri ?,?,..nly J?na "rfrrl -Marnileas, KMahTe l Na .iT,?0 ow'l.polui.nent. No rldlcu iu i "lufi linn A la.CK ?r 1,rwn. Remedies the Hi elects of heaturi'- 1 !V0ratH" tn lilr. leaving It soll'Jna BAk' Fill 9 5';,"'!!"' to 8l,!"e" WILLIAM. A. aliniiiTi hi iJS ,A.11 o"" re merft Imltat Inns, and York lmcU"r' " w BARCLAY (street. ew 4 61 in w REAL ESTATE SALES. .,'!!Hh.a.t ,ot ' ,Brouud,'wlth the messuage now strfV :.V,,",r'ii,"i".01 .'.e. ,,ort" " Kaci No. 1. All Hint lot of ground, 'with the nnwm nn erected thereon, situate oii the weV TsuleTl KrtiSrtT sou's court (being No. 1), 80 feet north or Ri.ce stVeet containing in Iror.t on Richardson', court, feei i Inches, and extending of thai width in feet 10 Inches! wllh ."!,' ".d 'riv"?K of 'ue pnvlea ai the nor U eu5 of said Richardson s court. "u,a No. 8. J11.1 ,ot of ,ronnd, with the messuare now erected thereon, situate on the west slue of Richard, son's court (being No. z), W leet 8 inches north of Rhus street! containing in front on Riclmrdsou's court si feet inches, aud extending of that widtu 19 leet ia Inches, with the use and privilege of the urlviua an the north end ol .aid Richaidsou a couru No. 4. All that lot of ground, with tbe mnssusge now erected thereon, situate on the west sldeot Richard sun's court (being No. 8). Ill feet 6 Inuhen north of Race street; containing lu frout on Richardson's court 21 leet lu Inches, and extending of thai width ID feet 10 Inches, with the use and privilege of the privies on the north eud of said Richardson's court. No. 5. All that lot of ground, with the messuage thereon ereoted, situate cn the west side of Rluhardsou'a court (being No. 4). 13a feel Inches north of Race st reel: containing In front on Richardson's court? feet 8 Inches, and extending of that width 10 feet 10 Inches, with the use and privilege ot the privies on tbe north end of said Richardson's court. No. 1. Business Stand, 2-siory brick building, Front street, north of Noble. All that lot of ground, will the 2-Biory brick building thereon erected, sltuati on the east side of Front street, 42 leets.1 Inches nortl ofNoblestreet.ln the Eleventh Ward; containing It Irunt ou Frout street Zl leet Inches, aud exleudiui In depth t2 feet. No.Z Lot, corner Ponth and Carbon streets, Twenty-fourfl AVard. All that lot of ground, situate; on the B. Jfl. corner ol South and Carbon streets, lu the Twenty fourth Ward; containing in front on south street rO feet, and extending in uepth along Carbon street 3) IteU No. 8. Two-and-a-half-gtory frame building, Front street, north of Noble.-A 11 that lot of ground, with the two and-a-halt-story frame building thereou erected, situate on tbe east sldeot Front street, in the Eleven tb Ward, 64 feet a4 inches north ot Noble street, thence extending easterly at right angles tti feet; thence ex tending northerly 21 feeit inches; thence extending westerly 62 feet 1, luuh to Front street, and thenca extending southerly along Front street 2a leet aud X No. 2. Ul UU IllVIl lO IUV 1'lUCt) Ul UV((llllllUf, Terms Cash or, at tbe option of the porch sser, twenty per cent, of the purchase money may be paid In cash, and the balance secured by bond aud mort gage of the premises, payable in live years, with In terest at the rale ol six per ceut. per annum, payable semi-annually on the first days of July aud January la each year, with tbe usual stipulation to be Inserted lu said bond and mortgage, that In case ot doiault la payment of interest lor thirty days, the whole princi pal sum shall thereupon become due aud recoverable by law: Provided, That where the lot of ground hereby authoriKed to he sold is unimproved ami vacant, the purchaser, at his option. In lieu of the said mortgage to secure the balance of the purchase money as above mentioned, may have the said balance charged upon tbe ground by ground rent deed or deeds, lu the usual lorm. The said grouud rents thereby created to be paid in equal semi-annual payments on the first ot July and January In each year. And pro vided further, That the purchasers shall pay all ex penses lor dseds, bonds, mortgages, stamps, acknow ledgments, and other expenses In the matter of making the convoauce from the city to the pur chasers. Ste plans at the Auction Rooms. M. THOMAS & SONB, Auctioneers. 4 25 fm 12t Nos. 139 and 141 H. FOURTH Street. PUBLIC SALE CITY PROPERTY M. lllOMAS A SONS. Auctioneers Large and Valuable LOT. N. YV.Corner of TWENTY THIRD arid CHESNUT Streets, fronting also on Twenty-fourth street and Slmes streets, three Valua ble Fronts. Pursuant to ordinances of the Select and Common Councils of the chy of Philadelphia, will be sold at public sale, without reserve, by order ot the Comuiia sloner of City Frouerty, On TUESDAY, May 2M, 1EG7, at 12 o'clock. Noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, All that lot of ground situate on the north aide of Chesnut street, beginning at the northwest corner of '1 wenty-third street, ana ex tend I nit alone said CIimu hut street 2-10 feet to Twenty-fourth street, ami in depth northward 800 feet to a twen tv-four feet street called biiue street. Bounded on the north bv Himu. street, on the east by Twenty-third street, and on tbe soutb by Chesnut street, aud on the west by Twenty fourth street, lately occuoled bv tl.a Pi.ri.i..ii.T- WorUa. 't he above will be divided Into 40Iots,and sold ao cording toa plan that maybe seen at the Auctlo Rooms the purchaser to have tbe privilege of Lutein, four additional lots adjoining each other. Terms 20 per cent, of the purchase money shall bt paid in cash at the time of the delivery ol the deed and the balance may be secured on the premises by mortgage or ground-rent deeds, or may be paid la cash, at the option ot the purchaser. . M. THOMAS A SONS. Auctioneers.- 4 2Cmfl2t Nos. m aud 141 B, FOURTH street. ICE COMPANIES. QIIAIiLES 8. CARPENTER & CO., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ICE DEALERS, AO.717WItI.OW b'L.aBOVE FltANKXIIf PHILADELPHIA. 1&67. AluperlorartlcleolICBattbe fol- I87 lowing ptlces. 8 pounds dally, 60 cents per week. 12 " " 75 cents per week. 16 " i" 90 cents per week. 40 " ' 25 cents per day. 20 " " ,105 per week. Large quantities at tnodtrate rates. Stores, etc., taking less than leveu days, will be charged propor tionally. CHARLES R. CARPEN1ER.-) JOUiN ULENDEMNU. J-Proprietors, JOSEPH M. TRUMAN, Jr., ) 15 IJfmwfl FERTILIZERS. J M M 0 IS I ATED rilOSrHATIl, AN tKNCBPAsKKU FEBTILUEB For Wheat, Corn, Oats, Potatoes. Grass, the Vegetable Garden, FrultTreea, Grape Vines, Etc Elo. This Fertiliser contains Ground Bone and the beat Fertilising Salts. . K ... Price Hi per ton of 2DO0 pounds. For sale by th manufacturers, WILLIAM ELLIS & CO., Chemists, 1 28mwrt No. 724 MARKET Street. HARD RUBBER ARTIFICIAL LlilHH, Arms, Legs, Appliances for ueiormuy, etc. eiu, i um. ir.miurrMt from life In form and UK I are the lightest, most durable, com- toriahlx, periecl, aim srimuu uuon ......a u..t inv,.itiMi 1'hi.v are an- State Goverrimbiil and onr principal Surgeon ... 4.,.,,.ut m Uur . ltfj; May I. tat Address u U IU T.Ii A !:!.. j k iwiTuwI PhlladrlnL' Pamphlets tree. 10 O PUBLIC BALE CITY PBOPPRtv TJIOM AH A HONS. Auctioneers. Bmw J. ?IL i V":, 1 "' l'"ek dwelling, C aTlSSS street, wl.h lour dwellings In the reaT. JTliffi-jdE! Pursuant to ordinances of the Select and rvm,m. PubhclHj,,Pl,::,,V,y.,'f ,'"e'Ph" FwHl b?2?W "a" l ublln Hale, wlthut ri serve, by order Of Conimta. s h.m r of t. ity Property., n TuesdayVMay li lrt o'clock. Noou, at the Philadelphia Exobanie in. o0f'miafei;;hlaa reM 00'""'i "Mr tnli.h.B in front on Rare street, IS reVt 8 Inrl .es and externTlng of that wiuih eg feet, with the tight 2nd privilege Into an is leet 10 Inch wide courl, called 'S.,i''.rBOn ,cou,t'leBll,, "ulhwaid lute Tlhe saUl 3 0 1 FA ff J