THE NEW YORK MESS. JDITORIAt OnWIOKS OF TBI LKAPINO JOCRSAI EPOH COBliKKT TOPICS OOMFILF.D BVBBT DAT FOB TBI BTBSIKO TKLEOBAPH. Sectional Relations-Practical Progress of IlecoustrncUon. 'JVom the Tinwt. In Judging of the progress of reconstruction, Ve are accurtoroed to consider the subject with too exclusive reference to the formal action required bv the tortus of the law. lijr that action, of course, the time and form of South ern reconstruction will necessarily be gov erned. The law prescribes conditions and provides the power to apply them, and the Jaith of Congress and of the Republican party Is pledged to abide by thom as the only condi tions of restoratioh. In this sense their para mount importance justifies the care with which each' succeeding step of the military com manders is watched, and the anxious scrutiny tvhich Is bestowed upon every fresh manifesta tion of local opinion. And yet the law cannot reach more than the form and technicalities of reconstruction. It rnay insure regularity and in a manner com pleteness; it may provide the stipulated guar antees lor futuie ptaco and l7alt7i and ma7 thus do all that was contemplated by legisla tion to make reconstruction Just, safe, and effectual. After all, however, the essence of true unity and safety must be sought in other directions, and must be promoted by other mTMiriiH. 1 'The letter killeth. the BDirit riveth life." Behind the law, and beyond the sphere I of its influence, lies the feeling of tne people, hlch alone will afford the measure of success or the evidence of failure of the Congressional plan. For all genuine purposes of the Union, it is essential that the great majority of the Southern people be converted Bod in spirit conciliated, with a view to the roestablishmont of sectional harmony, and the cultivation of those friendly relations which Imply a commu nity of sentiment and interest. Otherwise, reconstruction will bring back elements of dis cord and a renewal of contests which every Unionist desires to render impossible. It is from this point of view that the crimi Xial' folly of those who are inventing new demands and forging fresh fetters for the South becomes apparent. That course were Tvell enough if the understood policy of the country were to treat the Southern States as conquered provinces for an indefinite period. It would be perfectly in accordance with a fiolfoy designated to foster irritation by pro onging an era of coercion. Inasmuch, how ever, as this policy has been in effect repudi ated by Congress, and is most assuredly repu diated by the country, the result to be aimed at is the promotion of reconstruction under the law, with no further exercise of coer cion than may be absolutely needful. How juuch is needful, and how it will be applied, are questions which each Military Commander Kust in a great degree determine for himself; this fact being always remembered, that the exercise of undue authority, or the gratuitous display of military rule, is calculated to im pede that real work of reconstruction which is to be measured by the temper of the people. We have the testimony of competent and Slot over-friendly witnesses, that the disposi tion manifested at the South Is indicative of a Snore thorough and gratifying change than might at first sight appear probable. Of the formal progress of reconstruction we learn from official sources, and it is nearly all that could be desired. Of the practical and abiding progress which is measured by the current of popular sentiment, Senator Wilson and J udge jCelley speak, after enjoying ample opportuni ties f observation; and they testify that the great body of the Southern people return to the Union, not sullenly and reluctantly, but ith a heartiness that implies a sincere accept ance of the situation. They realize the terrible blunder of the Rebellion, and honestly accept the conditions which precede restoration. We infer from the reported remarks of Messrs. "Wilson and Kelley that, in their Judgment, the real reconstruction of opinion, as distinguished from technical reconstruction in obedience to the law, is progressing satisfactorily. This change is undoubtedly strengthened by the pressure of material interest and by the growing acquaintance with Northern men. 5'he South has learned that rebellion is ruin, and it is rapidly learning that recovery from xuin can be attained only through the Union. Its people feel that the North is able and will ing to relieve them from the distress which overshadows them, and that nothing hinders their approach to prosperity but the obstaolea which stand between them and reconstruction. The response to appeals for Southern Telief has helped to produce this altered feel ing. It has shown that the North is neither tiarsh nor ungenerous, and we believe the Charleston Mercury when it states that the circumstance is appreciated by the South. The needs of industry and business in that Section are exerting an influence yet more powerful. Its people see that the money they lack is idle because of its abundance at the North, and they see also that Northern capi talists are ready to assist them the moment a restored , Union becomes an accomplished fact. A conscious identity of interest is, there fore, spreading at the South, and its influence promises to be more potent, because more universal, than that of the politicians. Even now it is bringing forth good fruit. Virginia, the Carolinaa, Alabama, and other States, find themselves the theatre of shrewd observation and practical inquiry which promise to be the prelude to an influx of capital and enterprise. They discover that the means and the will are waiting to develop their vast mineral resources, to people their farming lands with workers, and to turn to profitable account the magnifi cent water power, in the possession of which the South is superior to all other portions of the country. In a word, tuey are linaing out the available worth of the resources which Were never more than fractionally profitable Tinder Blave-labor, but which will insure pros perity so soon as the removal of political dif ficulties shall make the interests of North and South in all respects identical. This increasing personal inter-communication produces a corresponding effect upon the minds of a largv and influential class at the Js'orth. From several States, especially from Virginia, we hear of parties of capitalists search ing for investments, and amazed at the oppor tunities which meet them on every hand. Northern farmers, too, are buying lands freely in Virginia and North Carolina, and the Stream seems likely to swell into a torrent ere many months paB over. For it is found that the indifl'erente, not to say hostility, which immediately after the war deterred Northern immigration, has passed away, and that in stead of coldness an unaffected friendship is anifested towards Northern settlers. The ei'ent is naturally beneflical. Each section l gins to understand that it has misjudged the o' her, and that only the politicians now ob fct ,-uct the friendly relations which will con ti ibnte so quickly aud so largely to the pros peiity of both. THE DAILY Thl Presidency and Oeneral Orant Popular Arlloa and the tnron1 ttlnnal pnrranrirr of the Politician tne Urt Necessities. From the Herald. Our citizens should immediately, by a grand, universal, resolute expression, put. General Grant before the country as their choice for l'resldent. He is the man whose name should stand against the World with the American people. Tried in the terrible ordoal of a war that would have carried to irretrievable ruin any Government but our own, the nation was sifted through and through for its best men; and to the last trial this mau alone stood so well all tests, that his qualities and achieve ment have needed no other assertion or de fense than the perusal of those great chapters of our history in which his name is the domi nant word. Rising from absolute obscurity, from the unchronioled ranks of the masses, from the sympathy and fellowship of the ster ling common people stepping from beside his wagon-load of wood on the Missouri roads to the first place in the marshalled genius and prowess of the greatest people of the age neither the wondrous figures of fable nor the remarkable characters of history supply adequate parallels to his career. Besides his story the stories of Theseus, Iloratius, and Cincinnatus become tame and puerile; Cresar's battles and victories were small to his. lie carried the country success folly through a contest more tremendous than that which destroyed the power and empire of the first Napoleon. Nor did patriotism and modesty show with more splendor and purity in the career of Washington than they will shine in the history of the soldier who, hav ing done so much, has given the most indu bitable evidence that it was all done for the country that the glory of his actions was never stained by a thought of advantage to himself at the expense of freedom. Shall we so far wrong oursolves, do violence to our history, and swindle posterity, as to put any other man than this at the head of the nation f We cannot answer for what will happen if the people wait for the party pettifog gers or show any unwillingness to dance attend ance on ringleaders, lobbymen, jobbers, and other vermin of our political system. Conven tions should not be given time to open their mouths on this great topic, either on the one hand to scandalise the nation by opposition in favor of some other candidate, or to come between the people and their great leader, to cheat them of the chance of honoring him, and to galvanize the convention system into a new life by the credit of this act. Conventions are the packed juries of our history. Stauding be fore the world with the pretense of hearing and trying impartially the great issues of the time, it is notorious that their verdict is always made up in advance, and we have had too much evidence that it is as a rule atrociously and shamefully wrong. Shall we suffer Grant's chance to take his natural place at the head of the nation to stand upon the action of a packed jury a deliberately prepared cheat? Shall we suffer the one grand opportunity to pacify the nation by giving it a head who can com mand the respect of all sections, to be dis gracefully traded away in the barter for small offices? If we would not, the people must ig nore the politicians, and move themselves; and the movement should begin with the people of this city, the national metropolis, the vital starting point of the great actions of the country, whether for defense in war or de velopment in peace. No one can positively say how the South stands on the Presidency. It is so full of the imperative necessities of social reconstruction that it has no disposition or time for discus sions of less obvious interest to itself, however important, and will hence follow in the course that may be distinctly marked as the will of the mass of the Northern people. This is, perhaps, the condition of the Southern white vote. Undoubtedly the negro is iu the bauds of the party that has made him the most ex travagant promises, and that must not be trusted with the destiny of the nation. We must not stand to be swayed by any indications drawn from thepossible control of the nigger vote. That is the only oppo sition that can be raised in the South to a bold expression of the Northern people, made in the interests of peace, harmony, and honest reconstruction. Grant is the one man whose election will give North and South confidence and faith in the future, and will insure to the country that permanent tran quillity which is now the real want. He is the man for the occasion. His elevation will be the logical end of the war, will destroy fao- tion, will gather around the Government all the elements of our national strength, and, by invigorating our foreign polioy with something of the spirit that put down the Rebellion, will enable us to take our proper position as one of the leading powers of the earth. Let the people, directed by the substantial men of the city, take steps to initiate this real movement for the nomination of General Grant. Now is the time. Let New York declare her will, and the country will echo the utterance with one magnificent acclamation. Co-operation Is Pear. torn the Tribune. Our old adversary, chattel slavery, now in the last hours of an ill-spent life, is probably entitled to the honor of having been the ear liest form of systematic, daily, plodding indus try. Outside of the Garden of Eden, man was first a hunter and fisher. As population multiplied and game grew scarce, he gradually became a wandering shepherd and grazier; not till after famine and war had supplied the thrifty and powerful with slaves did any give their days to constant toil never till then was the construction of pyramids practicable. Man learned to labor regularly only when he must. Work for wages slowly succeeded; aud, with all its faults, was and is an immense improve ment. The laborer for wages is measurably free; he has a choice of pursuits and of em ployers ; he has some voice in fixing the com pensation of his service ; his wife and children are his, and not another's ; he has the stimu lus of hope of the knowledge that he may, by skill, industry, andjmgality, improve his condition and give his children a better start in life than his own. He Is, in the average, a far more intelligent, efficient worker than a slave ever can be. But the wages system has this radical vice it does not adequately interest the laborer in the perfection of his work. To get through the day, the week, the mouth, the year, with as little exertion, as little fatigue, as may be to get the most money for the least work possible such is too often the sum of the laborer's aspiration. Let the demand for his service become intense, he is quite likely to "strike," and refuse to work furthor unless at far higher wages. A month or two of Indus trial paralysis and sterility follows; and, whether the "strike" succeeds or fails, the in cidental loss of wealth to the community is vast and irrecoverable. The relation of em ployer to Journeyman is, in important respects, antagonistic Inoradicaldy so. No matter which EVENING TELEG R APH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, party is In the right and, quite commonly, neither is wholly exclusively bo both are heavy losers by their collision, and the wholo community along with them. Thus the re cent pudtllerB1 strike in the iron works of l'ittsburg threw out of work thousands who were willing and eager to go on at the wages offered; but, in the absence of the puddlers, they could do nothing. If iron rises in price, the masters postpone, so long as may be, any increase of wapes; if it falls in pi ice. the workers, in like ppirit, refuse to work at lower wages no matter whether "the bosses" are making money at current prices or not. So Iron-making is arrested, and the works suffered to decay when they ought to bo kept steadily going. Last winter the iron-moulders of Albany and Troy were idle for weeks, because no one would pay them what they thought their services were worth. But the cooperative moulders kept steadily at work throughout, and earned f700O more than 1(M) each when other foundries were closed, other moulders idle and running behindhand. That f 7000 was clearly so much added to the national wealth by co operation. Now let us suppose the whole business of making iron were prosecuted by cooperation after the pattern of the Yankee whaler dis patched to the d'acifio for oil and bone. Let us suppose the iron produced to be theoreti cally divided into a thousand parts, whereof it is mutually stipulated that the ore shall have a specified number the coal or wood so many, the manager or engineer so many, and so on till every person and thing employed or used in producing the iron should have a stipulated share. Henceforth, every one who contributes either labor or materials to wards that production knows that it is his nterest that the iron shall be good, and that t 6hall command when sold a full price. And, if the market price should fall, he does not "strike" nor exact wages too high to be paid; he goes right on with his work. and receives without a murmr his share of the proceeds. He is not so blind as to imagine that he can earn as many dollars per week when bar iron sells for $50 as he could when it was worth $80; but he knows that bar iron can hardly fail to be worth more than the cost of materials, so that there will always be some recompense for his labor, besides the probability that, if iron rules too low this month, it is pretty euro to be higher before the close of the next. Judge Kelley forcibly reminded the South rons, during his late speaking tour, that whereas, under their old system, they were accustomed to put forth frantic exertions to arrest and recover any old, rheumatic negro wiio ran away, they let millions of dollars' worth of water-power run away daily, and never even attempted to profit by it, as they easily might have done. We presume the loss to our country daring the last year from strikes and fruitless searches for employment must have amounted to many, many millions. Were labor organized on the basis of coopera tion, all this would be saved and added to the national wealth. How long must we wait for so desirable a consummation ? The Disgrace of Victory. LYom the Tribune. That war is an evil is admitted, but it is often forgotten that it is also a disgrace. That with all their civilization and Christianity, nations commonly, and as a matter of course, decide their disputes by brutal force, and per vert railroads, telegraphs, mechanical skill, and modern ingenuity to aid the destruction of life, is simply a disgrace to the intelligence of the human race. Seriously considered, the needle-gun and the monitor are more truly marvels of man's stupidity than of his genius. A gun that sends half-a-dozen souls to the other world in a minute, and makes half-a-dozen families miserable; torpedoes that blow stately fleets into fragments; discipline that converts a harmless mob of men into a terrible column of invaders; bullets that explode in the body these are inventions not one particle less shameful to man than the poisoned arrow of the Indian or the bloody war-club of the Fiji. In the forms of civilization they conceal the spirit of barbarism. When we flatter ourselves That we are better than our fathers, that England and France and the United States stand on a higher grade than Assyria or Per sia or Rome, a proclamation of war makes ronio comment on the boast. Caesar and Alexander are repeated by Napoleon and Bis mark. A year or two ago we were threat ened with a war with England about the Ala bama claims; that is, two great nations, speak ing one language and professing one religion, were about cutting each Other's throats in a quarrel about a few ships. Iu what respect is such a clumsy attempt to settle a dispute bet ter than a fight of two savages for a string of beads, or of two dogs for a bone? Perhaps the bone is of no use to the dog, as the Ala bama claims are comparatively unimportant to us, and in both cases the fight is for the right. That is very good we honor the brave cur who defends his well-gnawed bone, and in the same degoee honor the nation which defend its right; but, so long as we fight, we stand on the same level with other lighting animals, and, in modesty, should not affect too great a superiority. Hamilton and Burr were to the ants and beetles as angels are to monkeys, yet, when they fought their duel at Hoboken, they found no better way to settle their dis pute than the ants and beetles have employed from immemorial time. But now, when one man fights another, it is held in civilized countries an offense against society. The Courts are open to decide all questions, and the solitary case in which mur der is lawful is that where it is committed in self-defense against an outlaw. We can shoot the burglar or the assassin without dauger of the gallows, but two gentlemen who quarrel in Wall street over a gold speculation cannot safely disturb the peaceful process of stock gambling by a campaign on the curb-stone. The Courts are open, we say. Have you been cheated by your grocer, betrayed by your tenant, ruined by your best friend, your domestio peace destroyed, your wife run off with, your hat knocked over your eyes, your pocket picked, your house robbed iu each and every case the law will redress the wrong. You must not fight it out with your enemy and so far, at least, we have made slight pro gress from the utterly barbario ages when Cadis, Patriarchs, and Judges of tly Civil and Criminal Courts were unknown. We have discovered that the wrong that may be done by arbitrament is less than the good that it insures. Disinterested society decides the quarrel between man and man, aud the general moderation of humanity meliorates the just or unjust indignation of individuals. But for nations no such rule practically exists. It is true that the common sense of Governments frequently interposes to prevent wars, a striking instance of which was the effect of the late London Conference, when Prussia and France, with swords half drawn, were pacificed for a time by the remonstrances of the other great powers of Europe. So the moderation of England aud the United States resulted iu keeping the Alabama question from the rude deoisiou of the army mi navy and referring it to arbitration. But these are ex ci ptional eases. Generally, when nations quarrel, either the big country bullies the littl one into submission, cr they go to war, and in this respect Great Britain is no letter than Afghanistan, America as bad as Dahomey. It must not bo supposed that we consider all wars unnecessary. On the contrary, we admit the necessity of such a war as that the United States has just ended, and assert that to have made peace with the Rebellion would have been to betray mankind. But what a disgrace and shame that such necessity oan Lei We do wrongly when, as monuments of victory, we erect statues of great generals placidly seated on raging steeds, like calm upon tempest: we should rather place upon tall columns effigies of wooden-leg ?ed veterans and of women prostrated in grief. Of patriotism or courage we may be proud, but not of war in itself. It is more shameful now than of old, for now its brutality, and cruelty, and clumsi ness are brought into terrible contrast with the splendid civilization and superb moral and social development of the modern era. The race has so far raised itself that great thoughts and principles are almost nature to the child of the nineteenth century, which were abso lutely unknown to the sages of Greece and Rome. But we fight on the grand scale still. There is no world's court of appeal to which the fierce disputes of nations may be carried. The Prospects Abraad. From the World. "Agglomerations," to use the word which the Emperor of the French substitutes for the long-favored term of "nationalities" bid fair to become the universal law of political organism. With the unification of Italy and of Germany small States have been almost entirely erased from the map of Europe, and an immense stride has been made towards the realization of the doctrines, based partly on ethnological theory, partly on patriotio ex altation, which Kossuth, Mazzini, and the advanced school of reformers in general, so zealously proclaim to be the sole means of political regeneration and social advance ment. At the antipodes. Australia is growing up into one of the future great empires of the earth. On this side of the Atlantic, the cen tripetal and centrifugal forces, which since the close ot the Revolutionary war have been struggling with more or less intensity, have linaliy met in a death-grapple, and so com plete has been the victory of the one as to render it doubtful whether our governmental orbit has not been completely changed, and t that we are not doomed to terminate our career in the central fire of despotism. How ever this may be, the principle of aggregation is in America, as in the rest of tbe world, triumphant over the tendency to division aud to contracted labrics of government. Thus far the victory of "nationality" has not been productive ot those fruits of univer sal brotherhood and beatitude which have been predicted. The great changes of territo rial distribution have been effected by the time-honored method of arms, not by moral suasion or the preachings of republican exiles. Consequently, the new nationalities have taken the shape of military monarchies. The exertion of force has rendered it more difficult to keep the ways of peace in future. Alarm at the display of newly awakened powers agi tates jealous potentates, and causes additional exertions to increase military efflcienoy. The first result of German unity is to convert France into an arsenal and a camp. , The great nation, of which Frederick said, were he the King, not a gun should be fired in Europe without his consent, cannot tamely resign the European hegemony to this king dom of yesterday. Hence, on the one side somewhat ostentatious reports of the marvellous performances of the Chassepot gun and the copper field piece, while the other, not less significantly, points to the attested efficiency of the needle gun and the contemplated application of its principles to artillery. France is sanguine of repeating Jena,and Prussia, fresh from Sadowa, dreams of Rosbach and Waterloo, whioh the Berliners regard as no less a victory of Blucher than of Wellington. With such ideas floating about in the heads of two nations, and worse still, of two great armies, a bloody trial of strength can Jiardly be avoided at a more re mote period, notwithstanding the adjustment of the Luxembourg question. In a logical extension of the ideas of "na tionality" fertile causes of quarrel are to be found when occasion suits. Doubtful and obscure as the whole question of race is to oae who reflects how inextricably blended are the successive waves of migration and of conquest; how various, and even how antagonistic, are provinces of the same nominal nationality; w hat opposite characteristics mark the Lom bard and the Sicilian, the Andalusiau and the Catalonian, the Tyrolese and the Hanoverian, no faltering hesitation will arrest the progress of an iron-willed statesman like Bismark, or prevent his marching straight on to the fulfil ment of his work, until the fatherland embraces all the regions where the Teutonic speech is heard. Holland and Denmark, niay, when the time is ripe, be brought into the fold in virtue of common origin and similar language. The same plea will serve France for incorporating Belgium, while the insatiable appetite of Russia will demand the provinces to which the Sclavonic tongue or the Greek religion gives her a claim of affinity. Under these legitimate consequences of the principle of nationality and of races, there are seeds enough of future warB to explain the ardor with whioh kings and kaisers are arming, and to justify an indefi nite postponement of the millennium. In whatever way the trial of strength may end, there is little prospect of any increase of rational freedom. A continuance or even in crease of gigantio armaments, and a constant state of hostile watchfulness, are not likely to be favorable to internal reform or constitu tional education. Should Prussia overcome Fiance in the wager of battle, and succeed in fusing the whole German-speaking people into one compact and manageable power, she will, with her admirable martial organization, and probable future maritime development, become undoubtedly the most formidable of European States. The remarkable vigor of her growth, and the elan with which she has seized her present positon, seem to indioate the upward couise of one of those great States which have at different periods overshadowed the rest of Europe, and provoked coalitions to restrain their inordinate ambition. All the great powers have had alliances formed against them. The House of Austria, both in its Spanish and German branches, was thought dangerous to national independence, aud both Henry of Navarre and Richelieu strove to form a general combination against it. France under Louis XIV aud Napoleon, Great Britain in our Revolution, and Russia in the Crimean war, have had to contend with the united forces of jealous rivals. Prussia, wielding the power of the mediieval German empire, and guided by the genius of Bismark and Von Moltke, may well appear formidable enough to call forth a new coalition. In the old days, when the balance of power was carefully watched, the small States acted JUNE 11, 1867. 1 HE LARGEST. AND BEST STOCK OF FIWE OLD RYE WHISKIES IN THE LAND IS NOW TOSSESSI P BY SHEW BY S. HARSftJiS & CO., Nos. 218 and 220 EOTJTH FRONT STREET, WHOOrrmTllEIAMETO THE TltAOE.IK LOTH, OX Vl.HX ADVANTAUEOIT TKimaj. Their Ptoclt of lly Whiskies, IN BOND, csmprliti ill lh. f.. - eilant, a fed runs llMoagh the -various months ot lHOS.'VO. and bran ptiml iliu. ' "" hia year, up ta Liberal contracts made for lots in arrive at Pennsylvania R.ti... Krilc. son Line V barf, or at Bonded Warehouses, as p.,11 "m.",itl Pt, Carpetings, Canton Mattings, Oil Cbtlr. Grdat Variety, Lowest Cash Prices. B15EVE L. KNIGHT & SON, NO. 807 CIIKMK.TJT STBKliT, (Belt w the Glrard House). as buffers to prevent collisions, or as auxilia ries in war to the great powers. Holland was then an important ally, and even Savoy, under the skilful diplomacy of her dukes, was not only courted, but derived such accretions of power as to become the germ of the kingdom of Italy. Now that so few small independen cies are left, and that military science demands so great an expenditure, and wields suoh enor mous masses as are compatible with the re sources of a first-class power only, the small bits of independent territory can scarcely hope for better things than to form part of the spoil of the victor in the great contests of the mili tary giants who, by their own expansion, are brought face to face. Altogether, with the various questions ready to ripen into war; with the tranquillity of France dependent on the life of a single man; with the people of half the continent, and even of England, in a semi-revolutionary condition; with the Governments intent only on repres sion, or studying the most feasible mode of trebling their armies, Europe cannot be said to present a hopeful promise. If at home we are exempt from many of these evils, the European may console himself by reflecting that even in war he does not pay as high taxes as the citizen of the model republio in time of peace; that he is not foroed to buy their goods lor the emolument of rich manufacturers; and that if the conscription seizes him, it id against a foreign enemy that he is marched, not hounded on by spoil-seeking demagogues against his own countrymen. In the economy of the world, if we look closely, we find a good many marks of a compensatory system. SPECIAL NOTICES. tST UNION LEAGUE HOUSE. MAT IS, 1867. At a meeting of the Board ot Directors of the CNION LKAODK OF PHILADELPHIA, held Murcb 12, 1867, tbe following Preamble and Reeolu tions were adopted: Whereas. In a republican form ot government It Is of tbe highest Importance that tbe delegates of the people, to whom tbe sovereign power Is entrusted, should tee so selected as to tiuiy represent tbe body politic, and there belug no provision ot law whereby the people may be organized for the purpose of suoh selection, and all parties having recognized the neces sity of such organization by tbe formation of volun tary associations tor this purpose, and Whereas, There are grave detects existing nnder tbe present system ot voluntary organization, which 11 is believed may be corrected by suitable provisions ol law; now, therefore, be It Resolved, By the Board of Directors ot the UNION LEAQTJUOF PHILADELPHIA, that the Secretary be and Is hereby directed to oiler eleven hundred dol lars In prizes for essays on the legal organization of tbe people to select candidates for oUlce, the prizes to be as follows, viz.: Tbe sum of five hundred dollars for that essay which, In tbe Judgment of the Board, shall be first In the order of merit; 4 Three hundred dollars for tbe second; Two hundred for tbe third, and One hundred for the fourth. The coudltlous upon which these prizes offered are as follows, viz.: 1'irat. All essays competing for these prizes mcst be aUdreB&ed to QKUHOK II. BOKKR, Secretary of the Union League of Philadelphia, and must oe received by blm before the FIIWT PAY OF JAjNUAKY, iw and to Communication having tbe author's name at tached, or with any other Indication of origin, will be considered. Second. Accompanying every competing essay, the author must enclose his naiue aud address wubln a sealed envelope, addressed to the becretary of the Union League. After the awards have been made, the envelopes accompanying the successful essays shall be opened, and the authors notitlod of the result. Third. All competing essays shall become the pro perty of the- Union League; but no publication of rejected essays, or tbe names of their authors, shall be made without consent of tne authors in writing. By order ol the Board ot Directors, CiCOUUtl 11. UUKEB, 6161m SKCHHTARY. K2T EE PUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION Hakbthhuho. April IS. 1887. The "Kenabllcan Htult? Convention" will meet at tbe "Herdio House," lu WllUumsporl. on Vt KDMusDAY, the 2th day of June next, at IU o'clock A. M., to nominate a candi date lor Juuge of tbe Hupreme Court, aud to initiate proper measures fur the ensuing Mate cauvass. As bereioiore, the Convention will be composed of Keireneuiutlve aud beuatorial Delegates, cuoaeu In the usual wuy, and equal lu number to the whole of Hie benulors aud BeprosentaUves In tbe Uenural Assembly. By order of tbe State Central Committee. ' F. JOKDAN, Chairman. J. Bom-icy DiiNuiiHoN, "ecretanes. 20 8it fcgr UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, E. D. OFFICE, ISO. 411 WALNUT STBEET, t PiixLADKLPHlA, May 21, 1867. The INTEREST IN GOLD, on the FIRST MORT GAGE BONDU OF TUK UNION PACIFIC RAIL WAY COMPANY, KAOTKRN DIVISION, DUK JUNE 1, will be paid on premutation of the Coupons therefor, on and alter that date, at tbe Banking House ol DABNET, HonUAN CO., No. 63 iXCHANOE PLACE, New York. (Signed) WILLIAM J. PALMER, 1 21 tullislot Treasurer. irjSf N O T I C K.-kS ELECTION OP Dliecmrs of the CHKHNLT HILL ORE COM I'AN Y will be held at No. fa WALMJIJ bind. l'hllaUelibiu, ou the 17th June, lsti7, at H 6su:t P. R. PYNE, bocretary 1 REMOVED. OUR BEDDING STORE IS HF.ttOVED FBOn THE OLD STAND TO No. 11 South NINTH Street. 6 27 V. I.. KMUIIT ot SOW, SPECIAL NOTICES. PjkT OFFICK OF THE MAtOtt Of THE Cily ol 1'biladelphlM, June s, im. F1VK HUNDKKU DOLLARrt RKWARD. Whereas, Colonel WILLIAM RIODLK.a respeota ble citizen 01 Philadelphia, was brula ly beatn by ae'-eral 1 ersons, on tbe 7th of May la t, at the bouse of William Ovens, Twentieth street, below Pine, la tbe Seventh Ward of this city, in consequence whereol he has since died, be it known that, In pursu ance of the Resolution or ibe Councils or Philadel phia, approved this date, the sum of five hundred dollars will be paid lor the arrest and oonvlctlon of the murderer, or murderers of Colonel William Riddle, and or tbe accessories to his murder, and of the perons In any way encased In tbe attack, made upon him, which resulted In his death. HBAi.1 MORTON MoMICHAEL. t Mayor of Philadelphia. frsf- OFFICE OF THE PHILADELPHIA OA a WORKS. Junk 1. 1867. 1 Proposals will be received at this ofllce. No. f8. Sli-Vi-NTH street, until noon of the 1st day ot July, for Ibe sale 10 the Trustees ot tbe Philadelphia Uaa Works of tbe Stock In tbe Oermantown, Richmond, Manyunk, and t-outhwaik and Moyainenslug Oaa Companies, to be used as Investments lor the Blak U'gKuod ot said Companies. Mlm B-fcNJAflUN a RILBT. Cashier. 1 STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. THE5 ,r FABMJLRb' AN1 MtCHANICtt' NATIONAL BAii, . . PHii.ADRi.PHrA, Msy 88, 1807. A General Meeting or the stockholders of The Farmers' and Mechanics' National Bank or Phila dephlawlll be held at tbe BAN KINU HOUSE, on SATURDAY, tbe Wlh day of June next, at twelve o'clolk, noon, lor Ibe purpose of taking luto consider ation and deciding upon amendments ol the Third and Filth of the Articles of Association of the said Bank. By order of the Board of Directors. 8MtJ2 W. RUSHTON, J B,. Cashier. MtW PUBLICATIONS. A KEY TO THE UPT ACT. THE BANKRUPT ACT. I'rlnted from tho Official Copy, Annotated, Digested, and provided with a copious Index, Tor tbe easy and convenient reference of tbe Legal Profession; fend of Business Men. By G. MORGAN ELDItlDGE, of tbe Pblladel pbla Bar. Octavo, paper covers, price 60 cents; clotb, L A most perfect, complete, and comprehensive work, embodying all that it is essential to knew on tbls all engrossing subject. It Is well worthy tbe careful study ot every citizen of tbe United States, and the more so from tbe faot tbat la certain cases power Is given tbe creditor to lorce bis debtor Into Involuntary baakrnptoy. Bent to any address, postuge paid, on receipt of price, by JOHN E. FOTTEK & CO., PUBLISHERS, NOS. 611 AND 017 bJANSOH HTKEET, 6 80tbstul2t Philadelphia. " TX7 OMAN'S WOBK IN THE CIVIL WAR." 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