THE NEW YORK PJIESS. DITOBTAt OHIHONB OF THB LEA.DIN8 JOCBNALB tPOK CPBKKKT TOPICS COMPILED EVKBT PAT FOB IH KVBNIMO TBLKOBJUPH. Thl Hork of ttaa Special Stiilon. From the Times. The Chloago Tribune, like Its namesake of Ihis city, has unreservedly acknowledged the progress made towards reconstruction at the Bouth, and the disposition evinoed by the Southern people to comply with all the re quirements of the law. It has from time to time published, as from its special correspond ents and friends, ample evidence upon both these points; and it has used them in opposi tion to the demands of the extreme faction for confiscation and other penalties antecedent to the restoration of the excluded States. Never theless, our Chicago contemporary permits the anger excited by the President's adoption of the Attorney-General's conclusions to override its previously expressed views, and to make the reasBembUng of Congress a pretext for en tering upon new and in the meantime unneces sary work. Its tone and aims may be gathered from a couple of paragraphs which we take from an article on the subject: "Since an extra session has been rendered nececsary by the attempt of the President to reinvigorate bis pocket Governments In the Kebel blates, we are of the opinion that the very first act of Congress should be to abolish those bogus Governments altogether. To be Bure, CoDgress has already declared them to be illegal;' but that does not avail agalntit the ob Ktlnate determination of the Administration to nullify the law; for we find it solemnly deolared ty the Attorney-General that these so-called Governments, wuloh. Congress has declared Ille gal, are actually legal, and that the civil ollloers whom Congress Intended to be entirely subor dinate to the military arm, are superior to it; that the military commanders and forces In the South are. In fact, only auxiliary to the civil power; and that John T. Monroe has a right to command General Sbeildan, and Gene ral Bheridan has no right to Interfere with John T. Monroe. "To abolish these Governments 1b the un doubted right of Congress. If Andrew Johnson shall attempt to lesltt or nullify such an act, through the legal quibbles and sophistry of Btanbery, or otherwise, then It will be the hnnnrfjin Hut nf rnirrpKfi ta 1 mnpflih him ftnd remove blm from oOlce for that offense. Nor Will Congress hesitate to pursue such a course, nor will the people fall fully to sustain them In It. The very suspicion that the President in tends to Interfere with reconstruction has already aroused a feeling In the country in tensely hostile to him. Let him once meddle With reconstruction In clear violation of law, and the unanimous cry of the people will be, OIT with his olllcial head !'" We have quoted enough to show the ten dency of a proceeding which doubtless origi nated in the President's desire to befriend the South. Now, as from the first, his attempts to thwart the intentions of Congress, and so to lighten the disabilities it has imposed, only add to the difficulties of the position, and in tensify the bitterness of the contest to which he is a party. This further experience waa not needed to exemplify the cruelty to the Southern people of those who in their name wage indiscriminate war upon the policy of the dominant Dartv. Inludging of the work called for at the hands of Congress, it is desirable to note correctly the facts which form the ground of accusation against the President up to the present time. The Executive's action has been confined to the Attorney-General's opinion in regard to the business of registration and the definition of the classes disfranchised. The circular of instructions"issued from the War Department relates exclusively to this branch of the sub ject. The opinion of the law officer as to the relative authority of the local eivil power and the military commander, and the action of the latter in respect of removals and appoint ments, has not yet been adopted by the Execu tive. There is a probability, after all, that the determination on which the Chicago jour nalist bases his argument may not be pro nounced. It is but a possibility, we fear, Binoe all the information received from Wash ington indicates that the District Commanders will be notified that the removing and appoint ing power is not vested in them, whether the particular instances in which it has been exer cised be acted upon or not. Let it not be forgotten, however, that though the President nullifies the spirit of the law, and to a certain extent frustrates the intent of Congress, he does it in obedienoe to the nterpretation furnished by the Attorney General. This interpretation was not obliga tory on him, nor will it excuse him in the Judgment of the Republican party. But he assumes it to be a legal rendering of the Re construction law, and acts upon it on the plea that he is bound by his oath of office to ad minister the law as he understands it. There is no necessity for going behind the plea of the President, and challenging its honesty. Until the publication of the Attorney-General's opinions, the feeling had been universal that the President's administration of the law was marked by good faith. Cer tainly he neither obtruded his views upon the military commanders, nor impeded the opera tion of their plans. Their discretionary autho rity has been unlimited, and their exercise of it has suffered no hindrance from him. If he interferes now, it is because he is advised that they have misconstrued the law. The advice proceeds on merely technical reason ing, and on hypotheses which are not seldom absurd. But it implies no resistance to the law; only an unfortunate perhaps an obsti nate misunderstanding of the letter arising from a disregard of the spirit in which Con gress legislated. Evidently, then, all the requirements of the case will be met by a declaratory enactment, Betting forth the will of Congress, both as to disfranohisementjand the power of the Gene rals, ia terms so plain and emphatio that Mr. Btanbery may no longer find room for doubt, nor the President for interference. Mr. Stan nary interprets the scope of the disfranchising clauses and the duties of the registers more loosely than Congress intended. He over looks the manifest denial of legitimacy to the civil governments of the South, their reduc tion to a provisional status, and the temporary upremaoy of the soldier, and professes to dis cover in the law evidence that the latter is not Invested with powers which Pope, Sheridan, and Sickles have exercised. Well, there is no Insuperable difficulty in either case. No new ground is touched, that it should be inoum bent on Congress to raise fresh issues, or to legislate more specifically in reference to the existing Southern Governments. Only let the purpose of the law be made so manifest that neither the President nor the Attorney-General can any further misunderstand it. The work of reconstruction will then go forward as it has thus far gone satisfactorily. The Oonerals will be practically absolute in their epliere, and the Southern people will be spared the disturbing influences which legis lation of the kind suggested by the Chicago Tribune would inevitably entail. This view appears to be entertained by Mr. Bchenck, the Chairman of the Executive Con gressional Committee. In his circular to members, urging their attendance at Wash ington on the 3d of July, he adduces as THE DAILY- EVENING ' TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, reason Hie necessity for "some declaratory act oft the subject of reconstruction." The same purpose was incorporated in his speech as Chairman of the Ohio Republican State Convention, and it is also embodied in the resolutions of the Iowa Republican Con vention. As an act of justice to the South, more . If ,it were refrao- should not be attempted, tory, unyielding, luxolent, Bome jnstiflcation might be found for widening the operation of the law. The opposite state of things being acknowledged on the testimony of radical Re publicans, it would indeed be unjust to con vert a special session held to counteract Exe cutive action into an opportunity of creating fresh punishments for the South. To teach Mr. Stanbery the meaning of the law, and to tell Mr. Johnson that Congress chooses to be its own interpreter, may be expedient and even necessary. But the errors or short comings of either or both afford no reason for reopening the whole question, and add ing to the difficulties of a people who are confessedly complying with the law in good faith. Their penalties are sufficiently severe, without making them suffer for the sins of the Executive. Chase on Rebellion From the Tribune. Chief Justice Chase delivered at Raleigh, N. C, on the 17th, an opinion, in the case of Shortridge & Co. vs. Macon, which declares and defines the law of the land on a very im portant question arising out of our late civil war. The plaintiffs were Pennsylvanians, the defendant a North Carolinian, but whether personally a Rebel or not, we are not advised, and it is not essential. He owed Shortridge & Co. a debt, and had given a note therefor; but this note, during the ascendancy of the Rebellion in North Carolina, he was obliged to pay into the Confederate treasury, whether willingly or not. We may safely presume that he did it willingly, as the fact that he owed the note might otherwise have been concealed. Suffice it that he owed money to Shortridge & Co., which he paid to the Confederacy and took its discharge from the debt, considering that the end of the matter. But Shortridge & Co. could not see the matter in that light; so after the Rebellion collapsed, they brought suit against Macon in the United States District Court, where Judge Chase has just decided that Macon must pay hi.? debt, and that his Confederate discharge from it isn't worth a rush, though it would have been if the Rebellion had succeeded, so that Campbell or Sharkey had now been holding Confederate District Court at Raleigh for the trial of this case. All this is simple common sense, and the Chief Justice's statement of the facts and the law is signally lucid and forcible. If any reinforcement were needed, the consideration that Rebellion is not quite a "A New Way to Pay Old Debts" would afford it. We know that a very general and severe pressure of debt at the South in 18G0 was one of the main incitements to secession. Thousands, goaded to madness by the pressure of their liabilities to the North, said "Civil war cannot make our situation less endurable than it is" and rushed in. Now let it be established that an insurgent population could discharge their in debtedness to their loyal creditors in the way Macon supposed he had paid his debt, and we may have rebellions fomented on purpose to square off debts, and given up when that end is achieved. That won't do. But the Chief Justice sees fit, without obvious necessity, to argue as follows: " Courts have no policy. They can only de clare the law. On wbut sound principle, th in, call we tar judicially that the levying of war ceases to be treason when the war becomes formidable f that, though war levied by ten or a thousand men is certainly treason. It Is no longer such when levied by ten thousand or one million ? that the armed attempts of a few, attended by no serious danger to the Union, and suppressed by slight exertion of I tie public force, come unquestionably within the constitutional definition ; but attempts by a vast combination, controlling several States, putting great armies Into the field, menacing with imminent peril the very life of the Ue- fiubllc, and demanding immense eilbrts and mmecse expenditures of treasure and blood for their defeat and suDoression. swell beyond the boundaries of the definition, and become Innocent in the proportion ofthelr enormity." Answer. The Chief Justice here overlooks the very grave difference between a Govern ment based avowedly on the right of the peo ple to modify or radically change their political institutions, and one founded on the doctrine of divine right or legitiinacyas are the Old World monarchies. In the view of this doo trine, the more formidable the rebellion the greater the crime; so that to have four-fifths of the people in sympathy with the rebels would only aggravate the wickedness of their outbreak. But in a republic based on popular consent, the case is bravely altered. Here the conspi racy of a few argues a culpable design to sub ject the many to despotic sway; not so the arousing of millions, "a vast combination con trolling several States, putting great armies into the field," etc. etc. Such a rallying of millions implies either the existence of real grievances to be repressed, or the sincere though .mistaken conviction that they have wrongs that they can only right by the sword. And this is why our earlier statesmen, down to and including Webster, have held a doctrine regarding formidable insurrections which seems to us the opposite of that above enunciated by the Chief Justice. But it is said. "If the disaffected are so numerous, they may peacefully secure a re dress of their grievances." Generally they may; yet not always. If our Revolutionary fathers had been fairly represented in the British Parliament, they could not have there obtained justice; if Ireland were allowed her fair quota of members of Parliament (we be lieve she has it now), she would Btill be sub jected to oppression. A fair and full vote of the British people would not have given our fathers the independence they demanded; such a vote in Spain would not have permitted the separation of' Portugal; such a vote in the British kingdoms to day would not do Ireland justice, though the time is coming when it will. We cannot deem it necessary to repudiate the axioms which underlie the righteous struggle of our fathers for independence in order to demonstrate the wrong of the Southern Rebellion. We hold that Rebellion to have been impelled by slavery by the hateful spirit of caste by a conspiracy to degrade and depress labor a conspiracy essentially anti-popular and aristocratic, and which was obliged to plunge the country into civil war in order to secure for itself that ascendancy over the South which it could not gain by argu ment in peace. There never was a day, prior to the bombardment of Fort Sumter, when a majority even of the Southern whites desired a dissolution of the Union. The clash of arms was precipitated expressly to "fire the Southern heart," and thus give the Confederacy a hold on the masses which it had hitherto failed to acquire. It is easy to prove that inaugurated bv South Carolina in 1800 the most causeless and unjustifiable of rebellions; but it is neither necesfiarv or wise to maintain that twelve mil lions of people in the Southern States have no right to be governed otherwise than as twenty millions in other States may see lit. J ha New Mexlran Mlnlitir, From th lit raid. ' . We published yesterday a defense of Mr. Otterbourg by a friend of his, who disolaims the report that the newly appointed . Mexican Minister ever made any attempt to have the empire of Mexico recognized. It is not our intention to make misstatements of any kind, and mavhap, in the hurry of the telegram, mistakes crept into it; if so, jt is to be regretted. The appointment, however, of Mr. Otterbourg is, at this junctnre of Mexican affairs, most inopportune, and Mr, Seward could not have made a worse blunder. The naming of Mr. Campbell was sufficiently unfortunate. This is the worst blow yet struck at our Mexican affairs, and threatens to throw them into an even worse condition than they were before. With all reppect to Mr. Otterbourg's pri vate character as a citizen, he is the last man who should have reoeived the appointment. He is a foreigner, speaks the Spanish language imperfectly, and even the language of the country he is to represent is not iluently at his command. Had the appointment been for some other country we could not have complained; for we know that Mr. Seward is little disposed to have as a foreign minister any one who dares to think for himself, and who 1b other than a mereolerk of the State Department.. The present appoint ment is nothing but ruin to our Mexican inte rests, and Mr. Otterbourg can only show his good sense by refusing a commission which the Senate cannot ratify if they have the slightest respect for our relations with our sister repub lic. At this delicate point in Mexican affairs, when a Minister has to grasp and shape the policy of our Government for the next century, we want one of our best, our ablest men. We want a man, moreover, who stands high with the Mexican people one whom they can re spect, and whose dignity of character and per sonal attributes will enable him to handle the great questions that are to arise in our Mexi can contact. The Liberal Government, although spurred almost to desperation by the demands of the nation to shoot Maximilian, have risked being overturned by the popular clamor, and, at our request, have retained him a prisoner, evidently awaiting the arrival of a proper Minister from the United States to confer with us relative to the fate of the royal filibuster. The first thanks we give them for acceding to our request is a gross insult, by the appointment of a man for whom they have but little respect, who cannot represent us as we should be represented, who speaks neither our language nor theirs, who understands nothing of the great questions which are wait ing for settlement, who can only damage American interests throughout Mexico, who will not receive from the Mexican people that honor due to our national representative, and who can only, in fact, misrepresent the United States. We already have a sufficient number of ministers abroad to damage our contact and commerce with other countries more than the next ten administrations can repair; but this last act of the State Department, in reference to a country that requires one of our ablest men, is worse than all the rest combined. Mr. Seward must have experienced an unusual scintillation of genius when he made this ap pointment. If the brain of the United States Senate is hit by the same spark, truly we shall despair of the nation. Rational Bank Monopoly and Corrup tlom. From the Herald. Our exposures of the rottenness and corrup tion of the national banks have had the double effect of arousing public indignation against the infamous system, and of alarming the monopolists connected with it. This system has been weighed in the balance and found wanting found to be full of corruption and oppression, and those interested in it see their doom, like Belshazzar of old, in the hand writing on the wall. In their alarm for the fate of their monopoly, they are preparing to head off exposures and the growing disgust of the people by a combined effort to buy up Congress. We have been informed that a cir cular, emanatincr from a New York national banking house, has been sent to the national banks throughout the country, assessing them one-sixteentn or one per cent, on their capital for this corruption fund to buy up members of Congress, with a view to defeat opposition and perpetuate their monopoly. This is just what we might expect. Such corrupt institutions can only exist, if they can exist at all, through corruption of the national legislature. The amount proposed to be raised for this purpose ia probably only the nucleus of a larger corruption fund, for the banks can afford to spend many millions in this way. We have little faith in the integrity or patriotism of many members of the present Congress, and have no doubt that they can be bought. What the price of some may be we cannot tell ten thousand dollars or a hun dred thousand but whatever it may be, the banks have ample means, and no scruples about using them. Besides, a great many members are interested in the banks as mana gers, stockholders, or directors of them, or in the ready accommodation they get from them to secure their favor and votes. Then that fourth estate of the republic, the Washington lobby, which the banks have been using for some time past, will be largely subsidized through1 the corruption fund. But we give the monopolists warning that all their money, schemes, and appliances will be of no avail. Their fate is fixed. They cannot buy the independent press, and it will continue to pour hot shot into their rotten institutions till they are Bunk under the waves of popular indignation. They may buy up Congressmen, subsidize the lobby, rally capi talists to their support, and enter into politi cal combinations with Chief Justice Chase, or other Presidential aspirants and wire pullers, but common sense will prevail. The honest and industrious masses must see and feel the evils of this monstrous and oppres sive monopoly, and will demand its speedy destruction. Every day or two we have to record the col lapse of some national bank. The system has only been in operation two or three years, and already about twenty banks nave collapsed. Latterly they have been going under more rapidly than at Urst. it required a little time, but not long, as we have seen, to develop their character and condition. The last smash heard of was that of the National Bank of Vicks- burg, which occurred only a few days ago Just before that banks at New Orleans, Mem t)his. and other tiarta of the oountrv broke. We need not enumerate all these failures or the bad character of some of them. The public is familiar with the facts. Prom the astounding and reliable disclosures made by the special correspondent of the Herald in the West, we may expect to hear soon of a goneral crash in that part of the country. Several of the banks there have been driven to the last extremity to meet the aemand for even a portion of the Government funds deposited with them. It Is known that generally they have been specu lating very extensively in grain, flour, and other provisions buying up everything they could get now oi ior tue purpose of forestall ing and controlling the markets. This was tho real cause of the high price of Hour and provision, for there was plenty In the West. Thev have been using the people's money deposited with thom by the Treasury Department, and the currency, which rightly belongs to the people, but which the Govern ment has giveu to them, for raising the price of the neoessaries of life. The working mil lions of our people have been paying for flour and other things a hundred per cent, or up wards more than they should have paid, be cause the national bank monopolists forestalled the markets. But these speculators of the national banks have overreached themselves. With large stocks on hand and with the pros pect of an abundant crop everywhere, the price has fallen, and continues to fall, in spite of them. The consequence is they are embar rassed and on the verge of bankruptcy. They are struggling desperately, as our correspond ent has shown, to keep their heads above water, but, if we mistake not, a good many of them must soon sink. We have heard the rumbling of the storm which must burst over them before long. All this shows that great monopolies, fos tered by the Government, only create reckless speculation. The more privileges they have, and the more they make, the more extrava gant,oppressive,and reckless they become. The national banks have a clear gift of twenty mil lions a year in profits on their currency, every dollar of which belongs to the people, and should be husbanded by the Government, be sides other enormous privileges, swelling their income to an incredible amount to an amount approaching, perhaps, a hundred millions a year yet with all this many of them are on the brink of bankruptcy. There is reason to fear that, through the shortsighted stupidity of Mr. McCulloch in trusting to these rotten institutions, the Gov vernment will soon find its deposits swept away by the coming storm. It is highly pro bable, too, that the crash will be so general that Mr. Spinner will not be able to realize enough from the securities deposited with him to pay the note-holders, and that the Govern ment may have to make them good if it should be able. Talk of repudiation t Why, we may be nearer that than many imagine, look ing at the condition of these national banks, at the increasing burdens of the Government, and at the declining revenue. One of the first things Congress should do on assembling in July should be to institute a thorough in vestigation into the condition and working of the national banks. It will not take long to find out the monstrous evils connected with them. In fact, we can furnish the evidence. Then let the act creating them be repealed at once, and the whole luminous system be swept away. The Approaching Dilemma of tb a Radi cal 1'arly. From the World. Once upon a time a California hunter trapped an enormous bear. The trap proved iuseoure, and the hunter, who had left his gun at a dis tance, conceived the novel idea of laying hold with all his might, and keeping the animal a prisoner until he became tired out or starved to death. The hunter himself was rather fatigued by this process of starving the bear, and, being at length surrounded by several other bears, was compelled to let go and re treat. As the imprisoned bear immediately burst out and joined his kindred in a simulta neous rush upon the enemy, the result of the struggle may be imagined. Thaddeus Stevens and his men, who have got the Southern bruin in a similarly uncer tain trap, and who have about all they can do in attending to their prisoner, had better take warning from this little anecdote, and either choke the victim finally and quick, or loose their grip in time. There are sundry menacing growls around the horizon certain long- neglected dangers, hovering, like beasts of prey, upon our borders and in our very midst. An Indian war, which, if these careful keepers had not been employing the whole strength and means of the country in the oppressive torture of the Reconstruction act, might have been long ago prevented, is actually waged throughout the West. The condition of Mexico, and the growing oontempt of the Mexioans for the American Government as at present carried on, are mortifying and alarming symptoms. The interests of hundreds of American citizens in that country are being jeopardized if not ruined by the anarchy that has followed the success of the so-called Liberal arms. The Isthmus of Panama, a transit for an immense American commerce, is the prospective prize of British gold; while the construction of the Pacifio Railroad, upon which this nation relies as a rival and profitable transit for the treat trade between Europe and the East, is hindered and made costlier by the savage outbreak in our distant territories. As the Indian riot has got to be quelled; as Mr. Seward is understood to be anxious to reconstruct Mexico; and as American interests must be attended to in the tropics as well as among the snows of Sitka, it is pertinent to consider how the sinews are being now ex hausted which are to cope with these porten tous evtls. Hie expenses of military reoon at ruction in the South are sufficient in them selves to constantly increase the national debt More than $10,000,000 will be needed to de fray the cost of mere registration. Probably tfLO.UOO.OOO will not suffice lor the Froedman's Bureau business. General Sickles asserts that $500,000 is required to execute the Re construction acts in the Carolinas alone The expenses of the military establishment almost defy calculation; but as the bulk ol the army is quartered in the South, some idea may be had from reference to the expenditures of the War Department last year, which were &2o4,64!),701. The support of starving white people in many Southern States is an additional drain upon the national treasury and the purses of citizens. Aside from the cost of maintaining this monstrous tyranny which is at work under the guidanoe and in the selfish political interest of the radical leaders, it is scarcely necessary to revert to the other enormous internal ex penses of the country which have raised our taxes to a high-water mark, and which are now to be doubled by a barbarous war. The radicals will either be compelled to let co the captive they have caged, and face the evils they have brought upon the couutrv. or be utterly devoured by the dis asters which are impending, and the public opinion they have so long and so per3istently set at naught. ftu 8, ROBI NGOFJ, No. lO Gil ISSN UT STREET. Ia In receipt to-day of an Invoice of FINE CHR0M0S, ENGRAVINGS, ETC. ETC., Wbicb are now open for examination. "Peace and War,' by G. Doree," "Last Rose a bummer," "Cromwell and Family," "Borneo and Juliet," "ritar ot BetbU-heiu," are well worthy t:, a attention of the admirer of art lij JUNE 25, 1867. a HE 1ABGEST AND . BEST FINE OLD RYE WHISKIE IN THE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY HENRY S. HANNIS' & Nos. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, miO Or Fill THE SAME TO THE TRADE, 1ST LOTS, ON TERT ADVANTAGEOUS TER7IH. y Tlxlr Stock of Kfl Whiskies, IN BOND, compel lire all th favorite timnrfa "ini V" teUn thlot,8hl " moathi of JfeOt,'00, and of this year, upto Liberal tontiacta made for lota toairlveet PinnirlTinla RHlroid Danat KiirUskon Elite Vbif,or at Bonded Warehouses, as pattlea may sleet. "' Carpetings, Canton Mattings, Oil Cloths. Great Variety, Lowest Cash Prices. BEEVE L. KNIGHT St SON, HO. 807 11IESNUT STREET, (Below tbe Glrard House). WATCHES JEWELRY, ETC. 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EVERY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ONE. Fortune to be made In every State. Call aud see oneot them. Can be manufactured very low. ', " STATE RIGHTS FOR SALE BJ j holla wn .t mims, eioim no. 'V-ow i''Vrr. E S T C O TJ & CrOilCE. pmiir; Wilson co 1 V VoJTKB AS DKALkBS UK CvrHJI RIFLES. CRICKET, AND HANK BALL IMPLEMENTS, u TACKLE. SKATES, CROQUET ARCHERY, ETC NO. 40 lUlANUT STREET 3k tlltm music STOCK. OP . i ncriovED. OUIl BEDDING STORE IS BEHOVED FROM THE OLD STAND TO No. 11 South NINTH Street. 27 B. Im KNIGHT A SON. INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE' N. E. COBNEB FIFTH AND CHESNUT STS Established Nov. i, 1861. Chartered March 14, 1885. BOOK-KEEPINO. Course of Instruction unequalled, consisting of prao. Ileal methods actually employed In leading bouses 1 this and other cities, as Illustrated in Fairbanks' Book-keeping, which ia the text-book ol this Institu tion, OTHER BRANCHES. Telegraphing, CammerclBl Calculations, Business and Ornamental Writing, the Higher Mathematics, Correspondence, Forms, CommerclalLaw, etc , XOUNtt MEN Invited to visit the Institution &nt inilira n (ham. selves of lis superior appointments. Circulars onap. piicaiion. l t AiKUAJNJiB, A. M., President. HOOP SKIRTS. fiOQ HOOP SKIRTS, OQ JjO HOPKINS' "OWN MAKE." OZlCi PRICKS RKUUOEDIII It afforOs us much pleannre to announce to out numerous patrons and tue public, that in conse quence of a slight decline in Uuop Bklrt material, together with our Increased facilities for ruauafuo i",?!0"! JiP2 "' adherence to BUYING and ,.r,1v,f?r,?,A,15H',;e.a,eenable1 10 offer all our iVSSH? KLKBRATEU HOOP fcKIKT at RE JUCi.D PKICKS. And our (jklrts will always, aa beretolore, be found In every respect more desirable, and really cheaper tban any single or double sprlna; Hoop bklrtln the market, while our assortment U unequalled. Also, constantly receiving from New York and tbe Eastern States full lUes ol low priced Hlclrts, at very low prices; among which ia a lot of Plain Hklrls at the following rates; 16 springs, 55c; 20 springs, e&o.; springs, 75c ; So springs, 850.; US springs, Vic: and springs, il-00. bklrts made to order, altered, and repaired. Wbol sale and retail, at ifce Philadelphia Hoop feklrt En porlum, No. tC8 ARCH Street, below Seventh. 6 10 8m rp WILLIAM T. HOPKINS NtW PUBLICATIONS. -A KEY TO THE BAlSITiXJI?T ACT, I THE BANKRUPT ACT. I Printed from the Official Copy, Annotated; Digested, and provided wltb a ooploua Index, Legal Profession and of Business Men. B O. MORGAN ELDRIDGE, of the Philadel phia Bar. Octavo, paper covers, prloe 50 cents, cloth, L A most perfect, complete, and eornprehenslv work, embodying all that 1 la essential to knew on this all engrossing subject. It is well worthy the careful study of every citizen of the United Stales, and the more so from tbe fact that la certain cases power Is given the creditor to lorce bis debtor luto involuntary bankruptcy. Bent to any address, postage paid, on receipt of prloe, by JOHN E. POTTER fc CO., PUBLISHERS, I NO. CI I AND 917 SANSOM KTBEET. 5 30 thstu!2t PhlladelDhla. No. 1101 U HKdNUT (Street. E. 171. NEEDLES & CO., ST W. Cor. Eleventh and Chesnut, OFFER AT A G It EAT SACRIFICE WHITE FRENCH BRILLIANTES. Ladles who have used THESE GOODS will I not full to appreciate them at the prices, 5, 80, 35 Cents. leoJlfl XflKTBSHf) I0II "OS JOHN CRUMP, OAItPENTEIl AND BUILDEIV kUOrli NO. tlS LODGE STREET, AND K 1788 tllEajNVT allttEIi X0 2t PUILADELPU Hi CO.A I