THE NEW YORK PRESS. BP1TOTHAL OPINION OF TUB I.KADTHO JOCRSA.IJS CPOH CURRENT TOPICS COMP1LKD KVKRT DAT VOH THE EVENING TEI.KGRATH. Peace Prospects In Knrojtt-A Congress of Soy erclgus. From the Time. Those who are willing to believe in a sign Of enduring peaco may find some gleam of lomfort in the cable telegram published in iLo Times of Sunday. The sovereigns of all the leading European powers and the Sultan of Turkey are to be in Paris at an early day. For what speciQc purpose we shall learn anon. The Exhibition must be an attraction, but it is difficult to see how it should bring to gether such an august company, Just at one particular moment for the date of their appearance in Paris is almost definitely fixed n the despatch. The Emperors of Hussia and Austria, the King of Prussia, and the "sick" sovereign of Turkey are advertised at the Tuileries in about two weeks from Satur day last. The Queen of England's presence was pledged for the Exhibition seme time ago. She is not, however, named in con nection with the present gathering of crowned heads; but the omission may be accidental. Or, if it is not accidental, the meeting may be of none the less political significance. The part which England seems desirous, hereafter, to fill in the settlement of conti nental disputes, ia probably a less ambitious one than might have been supposed, looking to the r6le which Lord Stanley was believed to have played in the Luxembourg drama. The text of the treaty which was the result of the London Conference rather releases the British Government from obligations which have ex isted since the settlement of Vienna, than imposes upon it any new responsibilities. The guarantee for the final disseverance of the German relationships of the Duchy, and for making it a permanent appanage of Holland, Bo far as England is concerned, is not one either of an individual or separate character, but is collective in its nature. If the whole of the tntorvening powers can agree to act, in the event. of future disputes, then England has pledged herself to act. If not, not. There can be nothing clearer than the terms In which Lord Stanley put the case when ques tioned in the Commons as to the work of the Conference. Lord Derby's language in the Upper House was also unambiguous. The Queen's Government, in short, hold them selves, under the. stipulations of the London treaty, to be absolved from pledges of active intervention, which have long been morally binding upon them. Referring to the text of the treaty as quoted by the Marquis de Mous tier, in the French Legislative body, the French Minister very clearly desires it to be understood that, while the formal plea for a Conference on the Luxembourg question was made by the King of Holland, the inspiration of that plea came from the Sovereign of France. In the Minister's speech whether by design or not we cannot say the part taken by the British Secretary and his Royal Mistress in the matter of the Conference is entirely ignored. The friendly intervention Which led to the Conference is credited, in terms as explicit as diplomatio politeness Would permit, to the Grand Duke who pro posed to make merchandise of his province, and to the Imperial capitalist who was ready to bay it. From this development of the situation we gather that it is decidedly agreeable to France that England should be taken at her word, when she disclaims all desire to intervene actively in the future regulation of the politi cal divisions of Europe. And if Lord Stanley and Lord Derby are sincere, as they must be assumed to be, in protesting that the British Government has now its feet clearer of the 'enarl and trammels of continental politics than before the recent Conference, the presence of the Queen at the promised meeting of Sovereigns in Taris would hardly be looked for, even were it in accordance with British constitutional tisages to assign ministerial duty to the sovereign in person. The Queen's direct appeal to her royal relative in Prussia, When the war crisis seemed to have been reached, was a timely, but altogether an extra constitutional act. Its influence vrm more purely personal than political, and was just one of those exceptional acts in the working of responsible government which justify them selves only by results. The meeting of the "four leading sovereigns Of the Continent of Europe with the head and representative of the power whose position gives most cause of uneasiness to day through out Europe, is a fact to which more than ordi nary significance will be attached. It is true, as everybody remembers, that within little more than two years after the first "World's Fair," when the nations seemed to have begun to fraternize in earnest, the war between Rus sia and the Anglo-French allies broke out. J3ut the policy of Western Europe was then controlled by traditions, and by a class of statesmen that have passed away for good. The dread of Russian aggression has no such hold on the English or the French mind as it had fifteen or twenty years ago. A proposal to discuss the real position of the "sick man" would not, to-day, occasion the shout of alarm that it did when the Emperor Nicholas ven tured to open his mind to Sir Hamilton Sey mour. Englishmen and Frenchmen, equally With Austrians and Italians, could sit down and calmly contemplate the whole subject, not only in the light of that most fruitless of all conlliots the Crimean war but in view, as well, of the recent struggles of the Christian , races to release themselves from the rule of the Mussulman. At Paris if the Sultan Should go thither he is sure to hear what the decided opinion of Europe has come to bo on the Cretan insurrection. There, if the East ern question is not brought to a final and per fect solution, it may, at least, be looked at in its plain, naked aspect, and without unduly exciting jealousies of territorial aggrandize ment by any one of the leading powers. Simple Taon-Tlie Iuue Between UrseUy ud th. Republicans. From the SeraUL Greeley justifies the release of JeiT. Davis on .Straw bail, because he has been lying in jail for two years "unindicted for anything but Simple treason." This "simple treason." in the eyes of Greeley, is nothing but a venal transgression, for which two years' imprison ment is sufficient atonement. If coinplicitv in the assassination of President Lincoln one fiinsrle victim out of the hundreds Of illMl sands sacrificed to the Rebellion oould !. Leen established acrainst Jeff. Davis, or if ha could have been held "in any maimer respon sible for the murder or our capiurea soldiers," that would have been altogether a different affair Lut as he was "not even indicted" for those flenses, and only stood charged with "simple treason." Ureeley considers mmaeu iunyjus tided in aidinz to set him free on straw bail and proclaiming to the world his innocence of any serious crime. TIIE DAILY This is precisely the point upon which the great nws of the loyal people of the Union will take issue with Greeley and his stra bail oixration. While very few pcrsous bdieve that Jeff. Davis had an active share in the assassination of President Lincoln, everybody of common sensp, and Greeley among the number, knows that the crime was the natural e fleet of the Rebellion and its exciting appeals to the prejudices and passions of reckless men. Jeff. Davis may not with hia own hands have snatched the food from the starving Union soleiers at Andersonville, Salisbury, and Millen, or shot them down wheu in their despair they cast themselves beyond the "dead lino" of their prison-pens; but as the head of the Relel armies and the ruler of the Con federacy ho had supreme power over his subordinates, and was responsible for the treatment ot his prisoners. If the captured Rebels confined in the loyal States had been left to rot and die by the ten thousand in Northern prisons, would the Copper heads who now pat Greeley on the shoulder and pour sixty thousand dollars' worth of Corporation advertising iuto his lap, have acquitted the Republican President of all responsibility for their murder? The people ' hold that the Rebellion was a great crime, and not a "simple" and venial offense; and out of it grew the heavy sufferings of the nation; the loss of millions of treasure; the desolation of hundreds of thousands of homes; the horrors of the Confederate prison pens; the assassina tion of Lincoln, and all. They are not willing to allow the master spirit of the Rebellion to go unpunished, and the arm of the law to be paralyzed by the special p!ea3 and quibble3 put forth by Jeff. Davis' straw bail. An in cendiary who sets fire to a dwelling does not directly take the live3 of the victims who perish in the flames; but he is nevertheless held responsible for their fate, and suffers the penalty awarded to wilful murder. The cry of the Republican party, and Gree ley among tho rest, has been "punish the Rebel leaders and let the misled masses go." The principal count in their indictment against Andrew Johnson is, that he has shown too much leniency and sympathy towards the leading Rebels. But now Greeley turns round and stultifies his party and justifies Johnson by fawning upon the great head of the Rebel lion, the arch-traitor of all traitors, the auto crat of the treasonable Confederate Govern ment, and securing his release from jail and his escape from punishment. It is for this offense that the Republicans of the West, and of the whole country, indict Horace Greeley as a black sheep in the flock; and all the "narrow-minded blockheads" of the Union League Club cannot release him from the charge on straw bail. Treason lu Civil War. V-om the Tribune. Can a Government which, after a long and arduous struggle, has put down an organized and formidable Rebellion, proceed to try and punish its defeated adversaries as traitors 1 This question is readily answered in the affirmative by ignorance and passion perhaps also by wisdom and calm judgment. Let us inquire ar consider. Unquestionably, a Government may refuse from the nutset to recognize its domestic foes as belligerents, engaged in lawful w ar. It may say to them, as Maximilian did to his Mexican adversaries "You are not warriors, but ban dittibrigands, robbers whom, if captured by my armies, I shall treat as arrested felons." But this is a two-edged sword, as Max. is very likely to discover. The Government which, treats its enemies as felons must orpect to have its adherents so treated by those adver saries to have its soldiers shot or hung when captured, if it shoots and hangs those whom it captures. Whatever rule it acts upon will surely work both ways. On the main question, the doctrine gene rally held by American statesmen aud pub licists prior to 18U0, will be succinctly set forth by Daniel Webster in his address on laying the corner-stone of Bunker Hill Monu ment (June 17, 1825), whereiu he says of the consequences of that memorable combat: The battle of Bunker Hill was attended with the most important e Heels beyond Its Imme diate result ns u military engagement. It crtated at onco a state of open, public war. There could now be no longer u questiou of proceeding against individuals, ns guilty of treason or rebellion. That Xu irful crisis was past. The appeal now lay to the sword; and the only question was, whether the spirit aud Ihe ref-ources of the people would hold out till the object should be accomplished." Bear in mind that our fathers had not even declared their independence on the 17th of June, 1775, when they fought at Bunker Hill; nay, they had not definitively resolved on separation from the mother country. In the eye of British law aud of the law of nations, for that matter they were simply rebels, resisting the authority and the army of their legitimate king. Yet Mr. Webster holds that the naked fact that they resisted in battle array, under the command of their constituted local authorities, precluded any civil proceed ings against them as "individuals guilty of treason or rebellion." Of course, Mr. Webster did not originate this doctrine. He was not tho man to do the like of that. He found it interfused through out our entire Revolutionary history and lite rature. Thus, Chief Justice Marshall, m lits "Life of Washington," relates that, when General Gage, commanding the king's forces in Boston, arrested several eminent Whig civilians and lodged them in jail, along with our captured officers and soldiers, to be dealt with as traitors, Washington remonstrated 'very seriously against this unjustiliable mea- suro" (says Marshall); wuue ueuerai age "retarded the Americans merely as rebels, and treated them as if the great national resist ance they were making on principle was to oe viewed as the act of a few daring and turbulent individuals," and, as such, wrote Gage, "pri soners whose lives are, by the laws of the land, destined to the oord." Washington "at once instituted measures for retaliation, should this violation of public law and of the laws of war be carried into effect, and thereby brought the British General to a recognition ot the just principles of civilized warfare, as enunciated by Vattel and other writers on public law. James .Otis, the Wyclif or John Huss of our Revolution, Alexander Hamilton (in the Fede ralist), and all our Revolutionary publioists of my authority, refer to and quote from Vattel's "Law of Nations" as setting forth the judg ment of the civilized world in accordance with the doctrines of Webster and Washington above cited. Vattel, in his chapter on "Civil War," says: "But what conduct shall the sovereign, ob serve towards the Insurgent? I answer, la eetiernl, such conduct as shall at the name time bo the uioKt miiHonnut to lust lee, and the moit salutary to the Btate. Bubjeots who rise against their prince without cause deserve fcevere punishment: yet, even in this case, on account o the number of the delinquent, clemency become a duty la the sovereign. A civil war breaks the bonds of society and govern ment, or, at least, suspends thoir force and p fieri : it produces in n. noilon two lade- pendent putties, who consider each other as enemies, aud ackuowleiiKe no common J mine. These two parties, therefore, must necessarily EVENING 1 TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY; 1)0 eonnldpred as thenceforward constituting, at least for a limp, tw earate bo lien, two dis tinct soelelie. Though one of the parties may have been to blame In breaking the tint tv of l he Mate and restating tho lawful authority, Ihej are not the less divided in f ict. Besides, whoKhallJurtfietheni? 1 hey alana, therefore, In precisely t lie same predicament as two na tion who engnfte In n cnutest, and, bulnu un able to come to an agreement, liuvo icnonin e to aims. Tills lieititftho ce, 11 Is very evident Hint the. common laws of wur 011111 to bo ob fervrd by boih iiurlles In every civil war. Kor the name reasons which render the observance of t hone maxims a mutter of oblluat Ion between Hlnlenml Klate, It becomes equally, and even more neeessaty In the unhappy circumstances of two licensed pm tics lac erating their com mon country." "Thus there exist in Hie Stale two separate bodlep, who prclend to absolute independence, ami bet ween whom there Is no Juilue. They decide their quarrel by arms (not courts of civil law), and as two ditlcrout nations would do. The obligation to observe the com mon la vin of war towards each ot her i there fore absolute Indispensably tdndlnji on both r'artles, and tlio Fame whloh the law of nature in pi sea on all nations In transactions between Btate and Btate." No Trenton- The National Debt a Na tional Swindle. From the Herald. The voice of the people rises with disap pointment and indignation at the conduct of those w ho favored and have-been instrumental in the escape of the arch traitor, Jeff. Davis. We have rarely witnessed a more general and spontaneous expression of publio sentiment. The release of Davis on straw bail, which is really the abandonment of the chargo of trea son on tho part of the Government and Judi ciary, satisfies no on", except a few uncon verted secessionists. It leaves everything unsettled; it makes the war a farce; it shows that half a million of brave men have been slain for naught, and that three thousand mil lions of national debt, contracted to put down treason and to make it odious, is a swindle. Had Davis been tried and the laws vindicated, had the crime of treason been fixed and de lined, and stamped with that odium which the authorities talked so much about, and which would have made men shudder hereafter at the thought of committing it, the people would not have complained. Then they might have been magnanimous even, and have con sented to Executive clemency to the offenders. But now nothing is settled, and they ask, Is there treason or is there not in this country i All the parties to this infamous fraud upon the public are conscience stricken, or, rather, they are stricken with fear of the consequences to themselves; for it is doubtful if they have any conscience in the matter. Having com mitted the deed, they suddenly wake up to a sense of the evil done, like the assassin Booth, and appeal to the public with all sorts of lame excuses and special pleading. The President pleads want of authority or jurisdiction, and throws the responsibility on Congress and the judiciary. Congress did nothing, and en deavors to throw the responsibility on the lixecutive. Chief Justice Chase, whoso duty it was especially to see that the traitor should be tried, and treason punished, positively re fused to act, and now tries to mako the Dis trict Judge, the pliant Dogberry Underwood, responsible. Lnderwood, acting under in structions from Mr. Chase and the Adminis tration, undoubtedly made a great fuss about the heinous crime of treason, and then let the traitor go on straw bail. Greeley, who, pro tending to represent the loyal North, and the Republican party in particular, went all tho way to Richmond to iulluenee his radical friend, Underwood, and to volunteer bail for tho liberation of the traitor, now makes a pitiful defense of his conduct. Botts, the bitter enemy of Rebels, and of Davis, the chief oub, especially, was another of these volunteer aud uiiualled-lbr bailmen who takes the stand to defend himself before an outraged publio. Well may the people ask, Is there treason or is there not 1 All these radical declaimers against the odiousness and heinousness of treason all those pretended Simon Ture loyaHsts have been made in the end the tools of an able and adroit States'-rights lawyer of this city. Through their weakness and vanity Mr. O'Conor has entrapped them. They placed themselves in a position to be tempted and ruined politically, and he has lured them to destruction. As a lawyer, he has only done his duty for his client. For the escape of the thief Rebel the people will hold Mr. Chase to account, with Greeley and the rest of the radical Chase party who brought the disgrace upon the country. Everywhere the question is asked, Is there treason or is there not ? But what will be the consequence of letting the Rebel chief go without being tried ? How will the peoplo interpret this act ? Will they not argue that if there be no treason the war was in vain and is fruitless ? There is now in the public mind a degree of consternation aud doubt. The action of the Government aud Judiciary has unsettled it. Is there treason or is there not f is the question every one asks. Soon, if we mistake not, the peoplo will in terpret the action of the Government, the Chief Justice, underwood, Oreeley, and ot all the rest, as repudiating treason, and as declaring the war a failure in its results. If so, will they not regard the national debt a national swindle, and repudiate that as readily as the crime of treason has been repudi ated ? They will say naturally enough that they ought not to be burdened with a debt of three thousand millions aud upwards, reckon ing the debt of the States as well as of the General Government, for nothing. They will ask why they should be taxed a hundred and fifty to two hundred millions a year, when they have been cheated in the object and results of the war. Is there treason or is there notf This is the question of the time, before which every other must give way. It involves the security of our Government hereafter and the payment or repudiation of the national debt. -Understanding the action of the Government and the judiciary as viitually declaring there is no such crime as treason, wo should not be sur prised to see, within live years, the debt created by the war repudiated as an imposi tion and a fraud. That, in fact, would be the logical consequence of letting treason go un tried and unpunished. If there be no treason the war was all wrong, and the national debt is a national swindle. The Opinion of the AttorneyGeneral JVgw tlie Tribune. The opinion of the Attorney-General upon the clauses in the Reconstruction acts respect ing the rights to vote and to hold office, has in itself evidence of its necessity; for the ques tions which have arisen needed to be decided by the highest executive authority. Five military commanders might otherwise make five different interpretations of a law which needs to be uniformly enforced in the States in which it is operative. Whether Mr. Stansbory correctly defines the limits of the law is another and important question, not' fully to be exa mined at present. The Attorney-General recites the provisions of the law which affect the right to vote and hold office, aud attempts to dcline those classes who are entitled to registration; the qualifica tions of residence and age are comparatively unimportant. Of chief interest is the extent to w hich taking part in the Rebellion is a dis qualification from voting. Mr. Stansbery elabo rately examines tho meaning of the act whioh excludes officers w ho have taken part in the Rebellion, and decides that officers of the militia aro not included; that the act does not apply to municipal officers, and that with all those who are not strictly State, Judicial, or Executive officers, the uncertain definition, which he contends exists in the law, must be construed in favor of the voter. A vast boiy of officers, ho asserts, are not positively ex cluded by the law. The disqualification has id on the breaking of the oath of offioo is the next subject of the opinion, which is given to this effect that the disqualification is intended to comprehend military as well as civil officers, and to bo more general in application to United States officers than to those of a State. Of more practical import ance is tho next question what acts consti tute the guilt of engaging in rebellion, or of giving romfort or aid to the enemies of the United States ? As these acts are defined, the number of voters is to be restricted or en larged. Mr. Stansbery advances the extra ordinary opinion that the phrase "enemies of the United States" should be strictly confined to what he asserts to be its legal meaning, viz., foreign nations, and that only such as those who gave aid and comfort to Great Bri tain in 1812, and to Mexico in 1847, should be disfranchised under the clause. Yet he is "not quite prepared to say that CoDgress may not havo used it as applicable to the Rebellion." It is well that ho wa3 not quite prepared to make such a decision, for if there is anything clear and unmistakable in the law, it is that Congress meant absolutely the enemies of the United States who fought at Gettysburg and Atlanta, and not by any means those who were de feated forty years ago on the Lakes, or at Monterey and Buena Vista. This meaning cannot be escaped, and the Attorney-General, therefore, gives it weight. It will be seen that he would not include in the disfranchised classes those who were compelled to aid in Rebellion, conscripts, slaves, and officers who, in obedience to de facto governments, were concerned with the administration of law. Purely civil and necessary officers he cannot bring himself tobelieve were meant by Con gress, and upon this point the argument is very full. We cannot say that the Attorney-General has stated his opinion very emphatically, or tersely, though for this he may plead the alleged uncertainty and vagueness of the acts themselves. But the drift of his argument may be summed up to bo, in his own words: "The intent (of the acts) as ex pressed, is to enable the people of each of these States to frame a Coustitution for the btate by the exercise of tho right of suffrage. There are clauses of the act giving tho right by general tdrms of. description to the people generally, and especially to those who have never enjoyed the right before. There are other clauses of the act which, by general terms, take away this right of suffrage from those who have always enjoyed it. The rule of construction as to the clauses which give the right must be liberal, and to them the general terms are not to lie restricted, but to those clauses which derogate from the exist ing right the rule of construction must be strict, that none should be excluded who are not clearly within the letter and intent." With this general construction we are satis fied, but not with the special opinions based upon it. Chase on Underwood. From the World. It is well understood, we believe, that Chiof Justice Chase was indebted for his nomination to the Supreme Bench much more to the fears than to the respect of tho late lamented Mr. Lincoln. To "kick a man upstairs" was long ago pronounced by Sir Robert Walpole a pro foundly wise maxim in political rivalry, aud what he believed ho practised in the case of Tulteney, whom ho extinguished as a com petitor in the Commons by clapping a coronet on him among the Peers. Possibly Mr. Lin coln had never heard of Sir Robert Wal pole's tactics, but he applied them admi rably in the case of Mr. Chase; and it has even been hinted by persons of a comical turn of mind that Mr. Chase has neither enter tained a very lively feeling of gratitude towards the late leader of his party in acknow ledgment of the preferment bestowed upon him, nor hesitated to express upon occasion some pretty trenchant opinions as to the general candor and amenability of the Presi dent to whoso manes, as Dr. Butler persist ently maintains, a mighty nation thought it necessary to sacrifice the life of an innocent woman. But it hardly needs any reference to the political relations between Mr. Chase and Mr. Lincoln to explain the crushing contempt with w hich the former has just "come down" upon another of the latter's judicial ap pointees. If Mr. Lincoln is thought to have made Mr. Chase a Chiof Justice just to get him off the Presidential track, he is believed to have nominated Busteed to the Federal bench in Alabama, and Underwood to the same lench in Virginia, simply to relieve himself from the importunity of two bores. The future historian may perhaps be able to palliate these appointments by revealing the fact that Mr. Lincoln when he made them expected the secession to succeed, and so imagined that as nobody would ever be tried before either Busteed or Underwood, no great harm would be done , by them to persons or property. Account for it as we may, how ever, the nomination of such men to such posts will remain an ineffaceable stigma upon Mr. Lincoln's memory; and since Chief Justice Chase has recently helped to brand this stigma in a little deeper, it is but charitable to him to say that he is roally too good a lawyer to have forborne doing what he has done. In the Supreme Court at Washington Wednesday last, Chief Justice Chase granted a "writ of error" in the case of Joseph Bruin, whose property had been seized and sold under a decree of the District Court of Virginia, "Judge" Underwood presiding. The writ was granted on the fol lowing grounds: First. Thai the District Court condemned and sold the absolute estate of the petitioner in and to I lie property, which judgment it was beyond the power of the Court lo pronounce. (Second. That the condemnation of the pro perty was for treason, of which the party could not be adjudged guilty except by a 11 inl ine of a Jury. Third. That the proceedings were In Adml. rally, when they should have been on the com mon law side of the Court, by information, und not by libel. It is difficult to see what remains of Judge Underwood after such a revision of his judi cial merits as is implied in these "grounds" of the Chief Justice. The question, what shall be done about a monument ia this city to the memory of our martyred President, having been Just now brought forward again, we submit that it will be consonant with jus tice and the truth of history that "Judga" Underwood's decision and Chief Justice Chase's indorsement be insoribed upon the cenotaph. MAY 28, 1807. Altri.TINC, CANTON M ATTINGS, Oil. CLOTH, GREAT TABIKTY. LOWEST CASH miCES. REEVE L. KNIGHT & SON, NO. 87 C1IESNCT NTKEET, (Bekw the Olrard House). SPECIAL NOTICES. UNION LEAGUE HOUSE, MAY IS, 1867, At a meeting of the Board ot Director of ths tNlON LEAGUE OF PHILADELPHIA, held March 12, 1867, the following Preamble and Resold tlons were adopted: Whereas, In a republican form ot government It Is of the highest Importance that the del gates of the people, to whom the sovereign power la entrusted, should be so selected aa to truly represent tlie body rolitlo, and there being no provision ot law whereby the people may be organized for the purpose of such selection, and all parties having recognized the nocs slty of such organization by the formation of volun tary associations lor tnla purpose, aud Whereas, There are grave delects existing under the present system of volunlury organization, which It Is believed may be corrected by suitable provisions of law; now, therefore, be It Resolved, By tbo Beard of Directors of the UNION LEAGUE OF PHILADELPHIA, that the Hecretaty be and Is hereby directed to oiler eleveu hundred dol lars In prizes for essays on the legal organization of the people lo select caudldules for ofhee, the prizes to be as follows, viz.: The sum of five hundred dollars for that essay which, In the judgment of the Board, shall be first In the order of merit; Three hundred dollars tor the second; Two hundred for the third, aud One hundred for the fourth. The conditions upon which these prizes are offered are as follows, viz.: First. All essays competing for these prizes must be addressed to GKORQE H. BOKER, Secretary of the Uulou League of Philadelphia, and must be received by him before the FIRST DAY OF JANUARY, 1S68. and no communication having the author's name au tjched, or with any other Indication of orlglD, will be considered. Second. Accompanying every competing essay, the author tuust enclose his name and address within a Beu'ed envelope, addressed to the Secretary of the Union League. After the awards have been made, the envelopes accompanying the successful essays shall be opened, aud the authors notified of the result. Third. All competing essays shall become the pro perty of the Union League: but no publication of rejected essays, or the names of their authors, shall be made without consent of tbe authors iu writing. By order ot the Board ot Director. tiDOUUE II. BOKER, 5101m SEOKETARV. &3T REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION. IIajipirbuhq, April 10, 1867. The "Republican Stute Convention" will meet at the "Herdlo House," Su WllllumsporC, on WEDNESDAY, the 2th day of unenext.at 10 o'clock A.M., to nominate a candl ate lor Judge of the Supreme Court, and to initiate proper measures for the eusuing State canvass. Aa heretofore, the Convention will be composed of Representative and Senatorial Delegates, chosen lu the usual way, and equal In number to the whole of the Senators aud Representatives In the General Assembly. By order of the State Central Committee. X. jkjuu.ils, uuairman. J. Rohlky Dunolihon, secretaries. B20 3U iggT UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, E. D. OFFICE, NO. 41 WALNUT STHEET, Philadelphia, May S1.18G7. The INTEREST IN GOLD, on the FIRST MORT GAGE BONDS OF THE UNION PACIFIC) RAIL WAY COMPANY, EASTERN DIVISION, DUE JUNE 1, will be paid on presentation of the Coupons therefor, on and alter that date, at the Banking House ot DABXET, HOHGAN A CO., ISO. 63 EXCHANGE PLACE, New York. (Signed) WILLIAM J. PALMER. 8 21 tuth8iut Treasurer. gggn THE OFFICE OF The Liverpool, New York, and Phila delphia Steamship Company, "Inman Line," Bbs been removed from No. Ill WALNUT Street, to NO. 411 CHESXUT STREET. 6 32Mrp JOHN G. DALE. Agent. jr- OFFICE PENNSYLVANIA HAILKOAl ' COMPAN Y. Philadelphia, May 4, 1807. The Board of Directors have this day declared a s nil-annual Dividend of THKEE PER CENT, on (he Cupltul Slock oi the Company, clear of National aud Stale Taxes, payable In C'su on and alter Muy i. They have also declared au EXTRA DIVIDEND of FIVE PER CENT., baxed uuun proiits earned iirior to January 1. lw7, clear ot Nutionai and Hlute Taxes, payable in Slock on and alter May au, at it par value of Filly D. llars per share tuo tshurea for block Hiviitoud to be dated May 1. Isc7. Scrip Cerlidcales will be Issued lor fractional parts oi Shares: sttlu Set Ip will not be entitled 10 any lute red or Dividend, hut will be convertible Into block when presented In bums of Fifty Dollars. Poweraof uitoruey for collecilouof Dividends can be had on application at the OLUce of the Company. No. vws S. TlilRD Street. 6 4iiot. THOMAS T. FIRTTT. Treasu rer. rpr- NOTICE THE NEW "ORLEANS RE- PUUL1CAN solicits the patronage ot all luyal men lu tbe North who have business Interests lu tue South. Having been selected by the Clerk of the House of ltepresenlatlves under the law ot Congress tussed March 2, 1M17, as the paper lor printing ail the uws and '1 reutles, aud all the Federal advertise ments within the Stale ot Louisiana, It will be the best adverllslng meuium In the Southwest, reaching a larger number ol business men than any otner paper. Address MATliKW'H & HAMILTON, Con vej anceis. No. 707 SANbUM Street, or te. L. BltOWN A CO., New Orleans. Louisiana. 4 2a I in frjsr NOT1CE.-ST. LOUIS, ALTON, AND TERRE HAUTE RAILROAD COMPANY. The Annual Meeting of the Bondholders and Stock holders ot this Company will be held at their olllce, In the City of ST, LOUIS, on MONDAY, the 8d day of June next, ai 8 o'clock In the alternoon of that day, fur the ELECTION of THIRTEEN DIRECTORS tor the ensuing year, and lor the transaction ol any other business which may be brought before lliein. The Transler books of ihe Company will be closed on SATURDAY, the 4lb day ot May next, aud will be opened on TUESDAY, the 4lh day of June. Dated St. Louis, April 26, 1SU7. 6 It) ll By order. H. C. BRYANT, Setfy. NATIONAL BANK OF TUE REPUB LIC, Philadelphia, May J, 1867 Applications for the unallotted share In the In crease of the Capital Stock of this Bank are uo w being received and the stock delivered. till JOSEPH P. MUMFORD. Caahler. jrof- THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE s-' Stockholders of theCLAHlON RIVER AND SPRING CHEEK OIL COMPAN Y. will be held at No. 84 North FRONT Street, on WEDNESDAY, May !fl. at 18 o'clock M. S 15 111 Ja Q. R O D I NOON No. OlO OIIEBNUT STREET. Is In receipt to-day of an Invoice of FINE CnEOMOS, ENGRAVINGS, ETC. ETC., Which are now open for examination. "Peace and war.' by u. uoree." "i.aat Rose ot bummer," "Cromwell and Family," "Romeo and Juliet," "Htar ol Pethlehem," are well worthy tha attention of the aomlreis of ark lij ncnovED. OUR BEDDING STORE I REMOVED IUOM IHGOLD 8TAKDTO No. il South NINTH Street. 8 27 B. Im KNIGHT Jk Hon. MILLINERY,' TRIMMINGS, ETC. c, SPRING AND SUMMER FASHIONS OF RON A El N HATS, FLOWER8, FEATHERS, BIBBOBTS, BRIDAL WREATHS, LACES, ORNAMENTS, FRAMES ETC. ETC. ETC NOW OPEN, TUB ABOVE SPLENDID STOCK OF MILLINERY GOODS," AT THE ESTABLISHMENT OF MAD'LLE KEOGH, IMo. 004 WALIXUT St., WHOfrE ELEGANT BHOW ROOMS have already been visited by numeroui purchaser: and eh respect, fully announces that she la constantly receiving NEW STYLES, and selling always at LOW PRICES. MOIMKG MILLLEIiI RECEIVES AT 111 It ESTABLISHMENT MOST SPECIAL ATTENTION, AND THEREFORE SUE OFFERS TUB REST STOCK OF MOUrtJXIlVGr UOIVIVEXjS IN IHE CITY. MAD'LLE KEOGH, " NO. 004 WALNUT STREET. f II thBtu3tn OURNI NC MILLINERY. ALWAY8 ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT 0 MOUItLNIlNG JBOININEXS, AT NO. 994 WALNUT STREET. 827 6m MAD'LLE KEOGH. mr 31 ItS. It. DILLON, tyXOti. BUS AND S31 SOUTH STREET, Has a handsome assortment ot SPRING MLLLX NERY. ladies', Mlxnes', and Children's Htrtw and Fancy Bonutla and iiats of the lutetil bi1ih. Alao, bilks, Velvets, Ribbons, Crapes, Feathers, Flowers, Frames, etc, 7 lflj FURNISHING GOODS, SHIRTS,&C. Ja W M. H OF MANN. NO. NORTH EIGHTH STREET. HOSIERY COODG. A LARGE AbBOKTMENT OF HOSIERY OF ENtJLIKU AND GERMAN UANUFAC'I URllS, For Ladles', Gents', and Children's Wear, LADIES' MERINO AND MERINO UAUZB VENTS. MISSES' MERINO AND MERINO GACAH VESTS. GENTS' MERINO, MERINO GACZE.COT. TON, AND HEAVY ALL-WOOL SUIRTS AND DRAWERS. VOUTI1K' MEKINO COTTON, AND M& R1NO GACStK UlllttS S6tuth J W. SCOTT So CO., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, MEN'S FU11NISI11NQ QOODS. Me. 814 CHESNCT STREET, four doors bllow TWt h.ontinjintam PATENT SHOULDER-SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNaSMINGSTORB FJuttFKCT FlTTlNGIsUlU'lB AND DUAWJUUI made from measurement at very short unc, All other a r licks ot UJB.;rH I I" -M GOODS In full variety, WINCHESTER A CO.. No. 70S CHJOsNUT BlreeC 1111 REMOVAL. 2 E M 0 V A L. A. .Sc II. LliilAMlJItE, Late No. 1012 Cheuuul street, have removed their , FURNITURE AND UPH PLSTERT WAREROOMS Wo No. 1103 ciiKsmu am.. . UP bTAUtt. W3tU