SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIOKa OF TF1R IBADIHO JOURNALS tPOH COBRKNT TOPICft COMPILKD ETBBT DAT FOB THE EVEN'INO TKLBQRAPH. Utncral Grant ami CouRrm, From the N. Y. tribune. The Times, which is now one of the most conservative-radical, Copperhead Republican, Democratic- papers we have, and manages to oppose and support all inuii aud measures with marvellous consistency, says of . General Grant's acceptance ot the War Office: "ThronRh mniiy channels I(. will l erted that ueue ine can lndicntes and count that nrocei . r.. m urAii ral Orant hn tint aiiowe "'' . . ,,,,. on toleave Ztot aiaenum between Con VlZf? the Kxecu live HPr tKe ptan roenf"rcement. The Copperhead conn iTXrsof Mr. Johnson will derive no succor from General Oraul." ' Here are certain statements of fact which iwe challenge In the kindest spirit: I. When has General Oraut ever departed from what is called "his habitual rettcenoe" to sustain Congress, or in any way to critioize the President ? II. When the President began his attack upon the policy of Congress, did he not send General Grant down South to make a report which could be used to neutralize the effect of the exhaustive and able report of General Bchurzt Was not the report of General Grant effectively used against the polioy of Congress f HI. Did not President Johnson state In a letter recently printed in these columns, and written by a trustworthy gentleman, that he had never doubted that General Grant was a supporter of his policy f IV. In the very crisis of the Presidential Struggle with Congress, did not Grant aoooin pany the President on his electioneering trip f Some of his apologists have said, whisperingly, he did it by official command. Has anybody ever seen the order f If the order oompelled him to make the trip, did it also compel him to visit the White House and stand at the side of the President while he cried over the Phila delphia Convention ? V. And now, when Mr. Stanton, rightly con struing a law of Congress to mean that his office is not in the hands of the President, dis tinctly states that he will make an issue with the President and fall back upon Congress, do we not see General Grant step in, "accept" the office, and by this "acceptance" so completely disarm Mr. Stanton that he retires ? Does not every reasonable person know that had Gene ral Grant declined the appointment which being a civil office, he had a right to decline the President would not have succeeded in removing the War Secretary ? Is it not well understood that General Grant is keeping warm this place until some conservative may be found to take it f We are not complaining of General Grant. He has a right to his opinions. He may honestly sustain the President just as other people honestly oppose him. It is a difference of opinion which does not in the least detract from his renown as a soldier nor from his pa triotism and fidelity as a citizen. But we do most decidedly object to the attempt of the Times to make him a radical when there is no written or spoken word that we have ever seen or heard to justify the assertion, and while all his acts, and the acts of his loudest friends, lead to a contrary inference. The friends of Grant are not so dishonest. The -Herald, until last week extremely radi cal, hoists the name of Grant as Pre sident, with Lee of Virginia as Vice-Presi dent, and is now furious in its assaults upon Congress and its howls over what it pleasantly oalls "nigger supremacy" in the South. This we understand. It is logical. The Herald is probably as well informed as the Times, and it openly claims General Grant as its ally. The World writes a Jong article to show that, in entering the War Office, General Grant 'acted of his own free choice, and was not !coeroed by the compulsive stringency of mili tary discipline." Grant himself notiued Stan ton of his "acceptance." The word is plain enough to all men. As we have said, we are not blaming Gene ral Grant. We are really defending him. If he means to be considered a supporter of Con gress, he is great enough, and frank enough, aud he has ink and paper enough to make that support apparent. We are bound to con sider him not a supporter until better in formed. We shall be happy to find we are mistaken, but we do not waut to be cheated by the Times, nor to assent to the proposition that two and two make five when we know they make four. If General Grant thinks enough of the votes of the radicals to permit his friends to support him as a radical candi date, he will certainly pay us the compliment of telling ua what we are to vote for. We honor him enough to feel that if he comes upon our platform he means to stay there and to abide by it faithfully. His New York friends are not upon that platform. They are as far away as they were last summer when they ar ranged the Philadelphia Convention. It is suspicious that the men who arranged that Convention are now the busiest in "arranging" Grant. The lima and the 1 'out are as loud -now as they were then, and they follow the ame taotios. They claimed to be Republican, to act in the interest of the Republican party, and above all to represent the majority of that party as distinct from a fragment of seditious radicals. Their Philadelphia Convention was a success, the party was a success, the ad dress was a success, the resolutions were "wonderfully successful, the tears of John eon were the most successful demonstra tion In history, if we except a kiss once bestowed by a conservative apostle; but when the election came, the fragment of radicals 6wept the country, and these successful and ambitious partisans were glad enough to be allowed to return to line without being shot as deserters. Shakespeare tells us that treason iis but trusted like 'the fox; and so we trust these people. They are inherently treache rous, bad, anti-Republican. They tried to destroy us last year by the patronage and strength of Andrew Johnston's administration. They are trying the same game now with the dazzling and illustrious name of Orant. We bow before that name so far as it represents valor and patriotism, skill in the field, mode ration in oounoil, and genius triumphant in a .oirnr two since we bowed to the name of Andrew Johnson as the representa tive of self-denying loyalty, war against treason, and clamorous devotion to radlcal iam But far above these names, as high as the stars, aud to us guiding stars, we see cer tain principles, whose life is eternal, and whose sacoesa ia more important to this people than Srof mere men We follow them am who- must lead the way. 11 consideration, of availability, of personal i t i.W ucr tli interest or that, are temptations to desert, and mean mischief. iaiu.V. . ,imH- record is not as cle We ear as innnd urlf.tl his bp ,.r. . vn I . r r. 7 - - - - - --ft - qur-nuy r. , v - f,,rtanalolv Uluii. -' " " ' " ...... ,i tS .a We follow no leader who does not THE DAILY" EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, tell us Which way he Intends to travel. Above all things, we have as a party been too terri bly iucgled to run the risk again. Therefore we challenge the btatement of the that General Grant supports Congress, and demand the evidence. Th, Tables Tnru.d-Who the Conorer Conspirators Heally Are. Iromthetf. Y. Time. L ..... . , The effort recently attempted in the interest of the President, to crush the radioal advo- cates Of lmpeacnnieni, auu uivtirv uiwuuuu from the crusade he has inaugurated against j the promoters of reconstruction, has proved ' worse than a failure. The ridiculous aspect of the affair became apparent when the garbled i nature of the statement prepared by the As- i pistant Attorney-General was brought to light. The point of that statement was, that radical j members of Congress were in iutiinate relations i with the convicted perjurer, Conover, whom it j was alleged they proposed to use against the , President. That was the story sent to the country under the direct sanotion of Mr. John son. Few, probably, attached credenco to un supported assertions on such a subject from such a source. The dishonesty of the docu ment was realized when it beoame known that while concocting charges against opponents of the President, other documents on file In the offices of the Government implicating certain of his Democratic friends in a move ment to obtain the pardon of Conover, had been passed over. The exposure not only convicted the Assistant Attorney-General of gross unfairness in the compilation of what purported to be a semi-official statement, but fixed upon Messrs. Rogers, Radford, Niblaok, Eldridge, Le Blond, Latham, notable Demo crats, the odium originally intended for Messrs. Ashley and Butler. The matter has not' ended here. The motive of Mr. Rodgers and his Democratio associates in seeking the pardon of Conover was more than suspected to be a desire to strengthen a movement then and still in progress for ob taining the removal of Judge Holt from his Josition as chief of the Bureau of Military ustice. Next to Mr. Stanton, Judge Holt enjoys the distinction of being the man best hated by the enemies of the Union; and Cono ver was relied upon as a witness available for damaging Judge Holt's official character, and justifying the President in taking the Bureau into his own care. That done, certain records involving the loyal standing of prominent Democrats would pass under the control of some one less likely to be troublesome than J udge Holt. Much is done towards revealing the history and mystery of this movement by the series of extraordinary affidavits which we published yesterday. We commend them to the careful study of all who would comprehend the in famy of intrigues, promoted by supporters of the President, with the four-fold purpose of serving him, damaging Judge Holt, helping Jeff. Davis, and securing the pardon ot Cono ver. It will be seen that Messrs. Ben. Wood and Roger A. Pryor, in active conjunction with Conover, last summer undertook the manufacture of affidavits designed to fasten upon Judge Holt the charge of suborning witnesses. Individuals were asked, for pe cuniary considerations, to commit per jury for the furtherance of these ends. They were hired, or were invited to be come hired, to state on oath a succession of acknowledged lies, on the ground that by perjury alone could the Bureau of Military Justice be overcome. With these hired per jurers as witnesses, Messrs. Wood and Pryor, acting apparently for others as well as for themselves, proposed to beat down Judge Holt and hasten the liberation of Jeff. Davis and the pardon of Conover. In one instanoe, money was paid and reoeived in this connec tion; in omer instances, ior reasons assignea, the overtures failed. But the essential fact of the conspiracy, with false swearing as it weapon, is apparently placed beyond dispute by the affidavits now published. Others of a similar character are on record in more than one department of the Government. These are enough, however, to explain the reckless criminality with whioh war is waged upon prominent officers of the Government whose bnbending loyalty has marked them out for attack and removal. Had the plot now ex posed succeeded, Judge Holt would have been suspended, on pretexts acquired by perjury. The American Fleet In Chinese Water -Avenging National Insults. From the N. Y. Timet. There is always difficulty in dealing with weak Governments, whether the issues in volved are of a commercial or political char acter. We have found this true in treating with the Nicaraguan Government; still oftener true in trying to keep the Mexican authorities to their word. We shall probably gain yet fur ther experience, and perhaps experience of an equally unpleasant kind, in the East. We have thought ourselves exceedingly fortunate in former years that England and France had a monopoly of the business of declaring periodi cally a war against the Imperial or the Pro vincial authorities of China and Japan for a violation of solemn treaty obligations for harboring pirates and for permitting such subordinates as Commissioner Veh (of famous renown) to insult their flags. It was possible in those days for us to hear with complacency of the stolidity of a Chinese Governor, who confounded the bombardment of some mise rable fishing hamlet with a salute fired in his own honor, and who laughed at the expense to which the "foreign devils" had put them Belves in the performance of the ceremony. But this is now all changed, or certainly will be changed. When the exigencies of the war rendered it impossible for us to be repre sented by a naval force in the Chinese seas, we had the opportunity of seeing how readily that fact was taken advantage of to insult our flag. Now that we have a strong fleet in Chinese waters, we shall probably find use for it; or at least we ahall have as legitimate oc casion for using it as ever France or England had. The news from the East, by way of London, announces the oommencment of a job the completion of which is very likely to lie in the remote future. Shanghae advices say that a portion of our squadron is at work off the Island of Formosa, that the authorities there refuge either satisfaction or apology for the murder of the erew of the barque Rover by the pirates that are harbored in the place. Two men-of-war are eneaced the Hartford and the Wyoming. The demand made by the officer in command, for the surrender of the murderers, appears to have been treated with contempt. On the appearanon of the attacking foroe, the people of the island put themselves in attitude of defense. As a pre liminary to the fight the shore was shelled for a considerable distance. Subsequently a landing was effected, and a fight ensued, said to have been of five hours duration. Our men fought well, and fought evidently under the disadvantage of extreme and overpowering heat. One ortioer, lieute nant Elide!! Mackenzie, was Bhot, ami died of his wonuus, ana tit nigui the remount) ef tue force was withdrawn. The success of the operation is not very clearly established, although the necessity for the demonstration is not likely to be questioned. The trouble is that piracy in Chiimse waturs is wiuked at, if not directly encouraged, by the local authori ties both on the islands aud on the mainland. There is never any responsibility admitted for whatever crimes are committed, and it will take time to remedy this, evun if our fleet should be quadrupled to-morrow. ; The advantage of makiug a hostile demon tration such as tbis Formosa affair lies chielly,, if not exclusively, in the fact, that it conveys to the, more responsible of the Chinese and Japanese authorities the only sort of intima tion they are likely, for some time at least,' to understand, that we do not mean to be trifled with in the matter of harboring pirates, or anything else. Our commerce with the East is growing at a pace which demands all the protection that ran be afforded to it. The cost will not be a trille. But it must be borne, or we must be content to step back and take a second commercial position. Gradually, as regular intercourse is opened up by our great Pacific mail line, we shall be able to measure the nature of the risks to which our commerce may be subjected. We shall know whether the enforcement of treaty obligations will in volve us in any other than the ordinary ex penditures of maintaining conventions else where. There seems to be a fair ohanoe for a fair commercial reciprocity with both Japan and China. With the Japanese authorities we have already made as much progress, con jointly with England, France, and the Govern ment of the Netherlands, as we could have reasonably anticipated. But we have to be prepared for an occasional warlike demonstra tion like that reported from Formosa. Irregularities In the Treasury Depart mcut. From the 2V. Y. Herald. We have had in our hands for several days astounding statements of gross irregularities, to use the mildest term, in the Treasury De partment, as well as various extraots from .evidence confirmatory of these, which has been suppressed. These statements and extraots are of such a character that we have hesitated to publish them, though we fear there is too much reason to believe they are true in whole or pact. It appears that some of these irregu larities' and believed deficiencies in the Trea sury have existed for some time. It is re ported that Mr. Chase left the Department in a very unsatisfactory conditton; that Mr. Fes- senden, his successor, made investigations and took testimony as to the reported deliciencies and frauds, and that investigations have been made since. All this evidence has been sup pressed. What has become of it? Why was it covered up so silently and mysteriously? It is asserted, and documents before us go to show, that the amount involved in these irregularities swells up to the enormous sum of several hundred millions. One portion of the evidence shows between two and three hundred millions, and another over fifty millions; and it is believed these sums fall far short of the total amount. This is a part of the secret history of the Treasury Department during the last few years; but it has been made known lately that the frauds upon the Government in whisky, petroleum, and tobacco fall little short of a hundred mil lions. This is an alarming state of things. Why does not the President look into these matters and bring out the evidence 1 Why does not Mr. MuCulloch, who is a member of the Church, a saint, a great financier, and in favor of resuming specie payment, probe these frauds to the bottom, aud spread the facts before the public ? We fear there is too much truth in the startling extracts of suppressed evidence to which we have referred. Let us have more light. The bondholders will be nervous and the people will not be satisfied until we know the facts. Thi Issue of the Pay Are we to be Gov erned by a Negro IJalance of Power t rrom the N. Y. Herald. The unprofitable conflict between the Presi dent and Congress has at last brought before the American people one of the most extraor dinary and momentous issues ever presented as a governmental measure in any country since the Goddess of Reason was set up in Paris in the place of the Christian religion. This issue is presented in the radical pro gramme of Southern reconstruction, and it is simply this shall the country be governed hereafter at Washington through a negro political balance of power ? For seventy years with a lucid interval here and there, we were governed by an impious and insolent Southern oligarchy of three hundred thousand negro slaveholders. Finding, at length, that their balance of power .had slipped through their fingers, those three hundred thousand slave holders plunged the late so-called Confederate States headlong into a bloody rebellion, from which they emerged, after four years of tena cious and desperate fighting, utterly shorn of slavery aud all its political advantages. This old Southern oligarchy has thus ceased to exist, and the places which knew it shall know it no more forever. But here the ques tion arises, Is the great North prepared for another Southern balance of power, which it is proposed shall be tiven to five hundred thousand negro voters, just released from the moral darkness and degradations of Southern slavery ? This is the great issue of the day; and how are we to meet it ? After General Grant, at the head of eleven hundred and fifty thousand Union soldiers in the field, had given the deci sive blow to the Slaveholders' Rebellion at Ap pomattox Court House, the work of Southern reconstruction might have been satisfactorily accemplithed within six months had our Fede- . ral t authorities, President and Congress, been governed uy purely patriotic, considerations. But with the collapse of the Rebellion Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee, through Abraham Lin coln's assassination, became President of the United States; and unfortunately, from the very first day of his promotion, Mr. Johnson proved himself unequal and fearfully incom petent to grasp the duties and the advantages of his position. Otherwise, his first aot after taking his oath of office would have been a proclamation calling Congress together. This done, an agreement between President and Congress, with the meeting of the two Houses, upon a plan of Southern reconstruction and restoration, including a qualified negro suf frage, would have been easy and it would have been conclusive. ' But, unduly inflated with foolish notions of his own wisdom aud capabilities, Mr. Johnson began by assuming the functions of the law making power, and so with the first regular meeting of Congress after his promotion to the White House the ourtain was lifted on the old conflict between King and Parliament revived, with all our modern improvements. Bo far in this conflict Mr. Johnson has been ballled and heated from point to point, until his polioy has been reduced to the issue between a rigid and a liberal execution of the laws of Congress "only this and nothing more." He wants a liberal application of the laws; and to this end his late Secretary or War baa been suspended, and we havt been given to understand that eome other Cabinet chaoses and the removal of several, if not all, of the live military commanders iu the South will proba Wy fol ow, and before the larme of many days. But what will this signify f At first we were inclined to the opinion that the radioal pro gramme might In this way be flanked and I i r ; i. '""King a nttitj deeper into the uiiucuiiy.we una tuut it can be reached only by the people through Congress. The difficulty really lies in this reconstruction programme of CongrpFS, the inevitable tendencies f( which are to negro supremacy in the ten Southern States concerned, and to a 'negro balauce of power in our national affairs. " In this reconstruction programme the Re publican party, as represented by Congress, has been faithless to its professions and its pledges, and it has betrayed the confidence and disappointed the just expectations of the loyal States. No such dangerous and despe rate party experiment as this of Southern reconstruction on the basis of Southern negro supremacy was ever demanded by the popular voice of the North, before or since the sur render of Lre. But unless these existing re construction laws of Congress are reached through Congress itself, we tear that the Presi dent cannot divert them from negro supremacy without bringing upon himself the fate of Staiiton. What we want, then, is such a pre 9 sure fioni the people of the North upon Con gret-s, in our coming tall elections, as will C( nipel the two Houses to reconstruct their uieasuies of reconstruction, so far. at least, as to give ttie .southern whites fair play, as against the blacks, in this important business of rebuilding the political and social State institutions of these ten excluded Southern States. Surely, at least upun this issue of the supremacy of negro minorities over white majorities in the South, the puhlio pulse may be effectively touched in the North, and upon this question even the present radical Congress may, through our approaching fall elections Negro Government In the South. From the If. Y. World. The fact that many even of the whites who would be permitted do not register, while the blacks all register and are all radioals, deter mines in advance the character of the recon struoted State Governments. They will , be completely under the control of the negroes Whether their officers are black or white will make little difference, since they will be an swerable to black constituencies; but probably the greater portion of them will be black. That such governments will run into great abuses is as certain as it is that they will be formed; and their abuses will inevitably lead to a great political reaction. Ihe natural disgust of the proscribed whites at upstart negro domination would prevent the success of such governments, even if they nemetrated no bad legislation. It is not in human nature that the white population of the .south should patiently submit to be gov erned by their former slaves, even if the freed mey could govern well. Negro equality would be distasteful enough; but negro superiority wui not re tolerated except by compulsion The impossibility of the negroes eoverninc well does not result merely from the pride of race, or prejudice of race, which will cause their ascendancy to be detested, but also from the relative situation of the two races in respect to the property of the South. , When the Government, that Is, the taxing power, represents the poverty of the com munity, and not its property, there will be a constant tendency to rob property of its rights. As taxes will not be felt by the negroes who impoFe them, they will be voted liberally; and as the property-holders will not be repre sented, they will have no power to call reck less and wasteful legislators to aocount. Heavy taxation and a full treasury leads natu rally to squandering prodigality; and surely the negroes have had no training which will preserve them from the corruption into w hich white rulers so easily fall when beset by temptation and opportunity. It is probable, therefore, that the negro governments, being under none of the restraints exerted by tax paying constituencies, will be among the most wasteful and corrupt that ever existed. This will not result from the fact that the rulers are negroes, but from the fact that they are men. No race of men could be trusted under similar circumstances, When the government which lays taxes is not elected by nor responsible to that part of the community which pays taxes, those who tax will be corrupt, aud they who are taxed will be oppressed. It would not be otherwise if both belonged to the same race; and the evil will probably be aggravated by the insolent contempt of the negroes for those whom they lately served as staves, hut now govern as rulers. As the negroes will have full power to rob and oppress their late masters uuder the forms of law, it is easy to foresee the pretexts under which their extortions will be practised. The predominant idea of negro legislation in the South will be, that the property of the South has been created by uncompensated negro labor, and belongs of right to those by whose sweat it was produced. The negroes will uni versally entertain this idea, and will urge it in justification of every attempt to perpetrate robbery under the name of taxation. The negroes will not only exercise all the powers and shirk all the burdens of government, but they will make extravagant expenditures for their schools, their churches, their hospitals, and for all kinds of charitable institutions; and they will moreover change the tenure of real estate so as to render it worthless to its white owners, and make it the easy prey of negro rapacity. That things will take this course is as cer tain as it is that there is human nature in man. And equally certain it is, that this kind of oppression will provoke resistance aud re taliation, and that nothing but military intimi dation can prevent the outbreak of a bloody and exterminating war of races. The Last Fautasttc Trick, fYom th N, T. Independent. The political situation is interesting. Any conjuncture of affairs whioh revives the hope of the President's Impeachment is welcome. The suspension of Mr. Stanton and the removal of General Sheridan are two contingencies which we have great hope will prove sufficient to incite an easy-going and amiable Congress to the stern duty of deposing the traitor of the White House. The American people and their representa tives in Congress sometimes do a great publio aot from the highest motives; but not often certainly not always. All the great measures of liberty which have made illustrious our political history of the last few years were prompted more by time-serving expediency than by moral duty. The Rebellion was con quered not 80 much through the great virtue of the North as through the over-iiendishness of the South. The Federal cause needed to be goaded to victory by the plottlngs of Jefferson Davis; by the disaster of Bull Run; by the slaughter of Fort Pillow; and by the horrors of Auderf onville. How wonderful is that con. AUGUST 10,1867. ' alii: FINE LAHGEST AND OLD R Y IN THE LAND IS H EN11T S. 1IANN IS T&; CO.. 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A few more tricks, a little more treason, an added spioe of f atanio malice in the President, and the thing will be done I So we reutter Mrs. Browning's l rayer, "Give more madness, Lord 1" The impeachment ought to have been ao- omplished long ago. The President has held Lis office a year too long already. Shall he be i ermitted to hold it to the end of his term f From the time of the first plain proof of his surrender to the Rebels, we have demanded. and shall continue to demand, that this Aaron Burr, this Benedict Arnold, this Andrew Johnson shall be put out of the way of injuring a Government which he first dis graced, then betrayed, and would willingly destroy. The most hopeful sign of the time3 now on everybody's lips is that if the President uses the bowstring upon Mr. Stanton and General Sheridan, he shall himself be strangled with it. But was not the President's measure of iniquity long ago full, pressed down, and shaken together? Must the ereat reneeade add new outrages to the old in order to earn his title to decaiitationf What has hereto fore been and what is now the one and only obstacle to a peaceiui ana speedy reconstruo tion of the Union? Nothing under heaven but the treachery, malignity, and baseness of Andrew Johnson. He has been long the chief enemy oi ine repuDno. vvny, tnen, la ha suf fered to remain its Chief Magistrate ? If anybody is to be removed, let it not be Mr. Stanton; let it not be General Sheridan; let it be Andrew Johnson Cencrress oueht not to have adiourned. leaving the field clear for this brigand to carry on war against the Kepublic. Mr. Johnson is a bold, bad man, and needs to be watched not only with eyes, but with votes, and with arms, it is only because he nas so miserable a minority of accomplices that he has not already overthrown the Republic We ask again for a general utterance of the popular voice in a spontaneous demand for the Presi dent's impeachment and deposition from office. ' 1 ' FURNISHING GOODS, SH1RTS,&C. pm HOFFMANN, J R.. NO. 8S5 ABCTI STREET, FURNISHING GOODS, (lit te G. A. Hoffman, formerly W. W. Knight,) i FIKE SHIRTS AND WRAPPERS. HOMIER Y AND OXOVES SILK, LAMBS' WOOL AND MERINO SSfmwum ' VNDEBCLOTIimrfi. J. W. SCOTT Ac CO., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AND 1KLKK8 IN MEN'S FVBKUUIXO flOODi NO. 814 CI1E!N(JT Ml BEET. FOUR DOOKS B1XOW TOE "COWTLNENTAIV t 271 TP ' PHILADELPHIA. p A T E 1NT T SMOULDER - SEAM SIIIBT MANUFACTORY, ANDGENTLEMEM'S FUBKIMHIN& STORE PKRFKCT FITTING BHJRT8 AND DRAWERS nideiruui meaeurmient til very abort notice. All other articles ol UJbJSTI.K.M K.N 'B DRKS8 GOO-Lfc in lull variety. . , WINCHESTER A CO., U1 No. 708 CHEteNUT Street HOOP SKIRTS. t'OQ HOOP SKIRTS, "OWN MAKE." 628 JiJ HOPKINS' 1 sffords og niucli plewture to announce to our numerous patrons aud U.e publio, ibttt In conn qtitJiK-e if a slight decline In lioop Skirt material together with our lnuteaned facilities for manufac turing, and a strict adherence to BUY1NU aud biLLiINU for GAbli, we are enabled to Oder all our JLiblXY CJlXKi-MATJO) OOP bKlRTS at RJC DICKD 1'KltKH. Aud our bklrU will alwayij, as heretutore, be found lu every respect more demrahle, and really cheaper than any siugle or double spring iloop bklrt In tfie market, while our assurlmeut hi unequalled. AIbo, constantly receiving from New York and the Earner n States lull lien ol low priced bkiris, at very low prices; among which Is a lot of flaiu Skirts at the following rales; 15 springs, 65c.; 20 spring, 6jc; 25 springs, 75c.; bu springs, bac.; US springs, 96c; aud 40 springs, luii, Skirts made to order, altered, and repaired. 'Whole sale aud retail, at tte Philadelphia Hoop bklrt Kill porlum, No. b2h ARCH Street, below Seventh. a iu 8m rp whILiam t. Hopkins. FKll ftH ft h. 1 J I J( 1 1' 1 J ! I! GAS FIXTURES. CALL AND BCY YOUB GA9 FIXTURES Uuiu the mumifucturcrs. VANKiRK A MARSHA IX, No. 812 A KCU btreet. VAN KIRK & MARSHALL, No. 912 ARGH street, manufacture and keep all styles or Uai Fix lures and Chandeliers; also relinlsli olu fixtures. VANKIRK & MARSHALL HAVE A COM plete stock of Chandeliers, Brackets, Portable Planda, and Bronzes, at No. Wi ARCH Street. VANKIRK & MARSHALL, No. 012 ARCH Street, give esneclal attention to tilting up Churches, Publio Halls, aud lJwelllugs. Ptfic hum at IHlCI,OWI KUTHH. GOLD, GILT, AND ELECTRO SILVB plated Gas Fixtures, at VANKIRK dt MA bll A l.L S, No. 012 ARCH Street. All work ituaranteed to give satlsfaci Ion. Xono1)! first-class workmen employed. 8 VMiw mwl3U STOVES, RANGES, ETC. QULVER'S NEW PATENT PEEP SAND-JOINT HOT-AIIt FURNACE. BANtiES OF All SUES. ; Also, PhllsKar's New Low Pressure Steam HeaUnc Apparatus. Fur saia by . i , CHARLES WILLIAMS, ' U No, 11H MAKKKT Htreei, COAL. B. MIUDI.FTON" & CO., PRALERS IN" 71 A It I. H Hill I.I.HICill and KAiil li' iti jm (OAT. Kept dry under cover. Prepared exnre-tslv fur family . Yard, No. 1Z.'S WAHUAKOTON Aveuue. . OtUvs, No. Oil WALK Street, J tl , 7- - - "13E&T-- KTOJK- OFJ- E V il I S K I E G NOW POSSESSED Br LEGAL NOTICES. REGISTER'S, NOTICE. TO ALL CREDI tors, Legatees, and other persons Interested: r0llce is nereny given iuhi wie loiiuwinir nameq persons did. on the dales sillied to their names, file the accounts ot their Administration to the eniatos of those poisons deceased, aud Ouardlans' and Trustee' hc nnntx whose names are undermentioned. In the olttot' of the BeglHter for the Probate ot Wills and Oraiiilne Letters of Administration, In and for the lily and County of Philadelphia; and tbattnestine will ne presented to ine uriiusus uuuri vi saia ciif and county tor conllrinaiiou and allowance, on the third B1IAY Iu August next, at 10 o'clock la the niornlug, at the Couuu Court House In said city, June 18, Ji'ieph it. Fisher, Executor of ELIZA COPK, deceased. " , 28, Cliai les N. Brigs and Thomas C. Lott, Kxe Ctilors ol UhOKUK W . JAiT, deceased. . " IS, George W. Meever et al. Rxecutors and Trus tees of KOBKKT S. JOHNSON, deceased. , 29, Henry IMaule and Joseph K Kay, lutecutor .. , ol HANNAH D. KAY. deceased. 29, John B. Sievensou, Kxecutor and Trustee of , AUOtJSTiNJi; , kTJCV&NBON, , Jr., de ceased , July 2, Joseph mock and Henry Kramer, xecutert " E, ThoDias Neilsun and Constant (Julllou. Kxe . . cutors ol UuBAjtT NKliON. deceased. " 6, Francis B. Bliuuk and Inaac H. Dletrlcn. Kxe. culors of Its A AC BHUNK,deoeaed. " 8, Edward Wartmau and Thomas O. Jones. Guardians ot MAR LYNCH, late MAR V DKUM. late mini rs. ' 1 9. W illiam L. Boyer, kxecutor of WILLIAM! BO V Kit, deceased. " 9, Caroline L. tilentz (late Scherer), Admlnlo. tratrlx of JOHN SCHEKKK, aeceased. " 10, Ann QiiIod, (late Bird), Administratrix of BBIUUKT KKK, deceaeed. ' 10, Sarah H. Alherion, Guardian of JAMES LOOAN IIS UK ft (laiea minor). " 10, Sarah H. Alherion. Guardian ot MAUD 1SHKB (late a minor). " 11, Samuel J. Buney, Ouardlan of WALTER KCK KL,. a minor. " 11, 8. J. Gather etal., Executor of ANN OAR 1SKK, deceased. " 11, William Sin ng, Administrator of OAKRICK MALLKBV, d eceased, " 11, Catherine s. Wonderly, Executrix of ED MUND S1IOTW KI.L, deceased. " 11, Edward B. shotwell and Joseph Bcattergood, Executors ol CATHERINE SUEPPAJUK deceased. " 12, Thomas T. Mason and William K. Hemphill. . Kxecuuirs of ALKX ANUKit 11. J ULIAN. deceased. " IS. John U. Curtis, Administrator of ELIZA- BETH V. CURTIS, deceased. " 13, Kobm Thomas, Administrator of JACOB ' JONES, deceased. ' 13, C. Willing Llttell, Executor of MART L. Wr ATT H. deceased " 18, James 1. Kalston, Administrator ot JAMES L. WILLIAMS, deceased. 11 13, John H. Campbell. Executor of JOSEPH 8. MEOABA, deceased. " 16, Rebecca W. and Joseph Bancroft, Executors Of WILLIAM BANCROFT, deceased. " IB, Arundlus Tiers, Administrator of AKUNGIU8 TIERS, Jr., deceased. , " 16, Joseph King. Administrator of CATHARINE WALSH, deceased. ... H 17, Joseph N. Piersol, Administrator d. b. n.C. La. , ol WILLIAM P. DEWKES, deceased. ' 18, Alexander Januey, Administrator of LYDIA O. JANNEY, deceased. " SO, John Clare, Jr.. Administrator Of WILLIAM CLAKK, deceased. " 20, James Campbell et al,, Executors and Trustees of HUGH 0'IXNNELL,deceased. . " 20, John Blehlo et al Executors in accoont fas Trustees for M. M. COCK, ELIZABETH BKOWN and SUSAN DILL Kit), under the will of WILLIAM RIEHLE, deceased. " 22, George 8. Schively, Administrator d.b. n.c, t. a. of ANN 8UU1VELY, deceased. " 22, George B. Sbively. Administrator d. b. n. O. t. a. ot JOHN bCHIVELY, deceased. " 22, George b. Wchlvely, Administrator d. b. n. o. t. a. of WILLIAM SCHIVELY. deceased. " 22, Georse S. Schlvely, Trustee of JULYANN SCHIVELY, under the wlllsof WILLIAM. JOHN, aud ANN SCHIVELY, deceased. " 22, Georges. Schlvely, Executor of JULYANN SOHIVKL. deceased. " 22, Sarah Crawford et al., Kxecutors of SAMUEL H. CRA WKOBD. deceased. "iuu " iS, Edward E. Warner, Administrator d. b. n. o. t. a. of LYDIA PICKFORD, deceased. " 23, Thomas Seabrook, Kxecutor of HARRIET POLLA RD, deceased. " 23. Jacob Good, Executor of WILLIAM and JACOB RITTENHOUSE, deceased. " 23, Ellau Carver and Stephen Parsons, Admlnls- trators of JOHN E. CARVER, deceased. " 24, Robert Kwlne, etal., Executors ot JOHN V. CO WALL, deceased. 24, Gideon and Nauman Keyser, Executors of SAMUEL KEVSER, deceased. " 24, Daniel Curiislou, Administrator of JOHN McNA HB, deceased, ". 21, Thomas H Powers, Guardian of CAROLINE PARK, lute a minor. " 24, Wililnm (4. Smith, Guardian of ANNA U. o .n ESTHER COLTR1N, late minors. 23, Still we'l K filslu p. Executor of WILLIAM WATSON, deceased. H 26, Joseph B. Andrews, Executor of REBECCA ANDREWS, deceased. " 25, Ebenezer Maxwell, Executor of HUGH SMITH, deceased. " 25, A. E, .and Henry P. Borle, Trustees of ELIZA KEATiNG, deceased. " 25, Frederick and Chsrlotie A. Brown, Executors of FREDERICK BROWN, deceased, " 25, Deborah Holden, Administratrix of ELI HOLDVN, deceased. 7 26f4t FREDERICK. M. ADAMS, Register. s ALE OF RAILROAD PROPERTY ADD FBANCUISES. Notice hereby given that by virtue of a decree of the Supreme Court ot Pennsylvania, we will expose to sale at Publio A uctlon, AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXCUASGE, In the City of Philadelphia, State of Pennsylvania on the - 1STII DAY OF OCTOBEB, A. D. 1867, t 12 o'clock, noon, of that day, all and Singular the RAILROADS AND RAILWAYS. LANDS. TRACKS. LIN Kg, RAILS, CROSSTI toj. CHAIRS, SPIKES, FROGS, SWITCHES, and other INTERESTS, and all and every other property aud estate, real, personal, aud mixed, of, belonging or appertaining to the RENO OIL CREEK AND PI11IOLK RAILWAY COMPANY, and bll the cor porate rights, franrhines, and privileges of, or belong lug u the saU Company, together with all and singu lar the Locomotives aud other Engines, Tenders Cars, Machinery, Tools, Materiuls, aud Implements! as well as materials lor constructing, repairing re plaining, using aud operating said Railroad aud Rail way. All of which said properly is situate In Ve nango County, in ihesiateof Pennsylvania, and beltie the same property, rights, privileges, and franchises which said Company, by ludeuliire ot niortaave dated the 2d day of May, A. D. lauo, and duly recorded la the olllce of the Recorder ot Deeds of Venanva County aforesaid, lu Mortgage Book No. 2. nairefria 6ic.. on the 4th i day of June, A. D. im, srauied and couveyed to the undersigned John s. Sauxade ir truct. to secure certain bonds iherelu mentioned. And which the said Compauy ey Indenture ot morfc "J" 1 1 k 'I '1 , ' . u ul"y recorded In theolliol tinned. This sale wlllbe made undS, eudli "pESS fi - VikfL . ,y lue aM supreme liouri d. T. .uri teo' Pennsylvania, ou the lid day of July, A. ."hm 'i nlS C i U8e. jeuJI," ' uulty in said court, ftpou a SK : ,,, .'.V " u '""n a. fcauzade, Trustee, ..Hf ?u m Company, and the said Morris K. jessup ana William j Urr ,ii..,.,i...... . -..TZ Inter alia, for a a-nil ,.?.'" '"N ua ionSwsfi' ' ,eru,B ud confli'OM of ale will bias nil'ti' nr,t'Wt'l premises will be sold In one tidderlor cash """Ck- oU to the highest aud best Second. Flve'per cent, of tbe purchase money shall De paid to tte uuderslgued at the time of the sale by the purchaser, and he muse also sign tbe terms and 4'oudltlons of sale, otherwise, the said premises will he Immediately resold. Third. T he balance ot tbe purchase money shall be Paid to the undersigned, at tjiu Banking House ot Drexel & Co., No. H S. T hird street, Philadel phia, wlihlu thuvy days from aud after the day of sale. ' WILLIAM J BARR. Trustee i. ; Juiiiv is. SAL'iiADK, Truaiee. ' PBlT.Ar.TI VHIA. JulV S. 1KH7. 7 Sturtnl itturt. n iw in 'jlp, v a i r nun rtiuni? ur WAY. MATERIA 1S. HOUSES, BUILDINGS, SHOPS. PIERS, WHARVES, ERKt TIONS, FENCES. WALLS, F1X1UKK3. DEPOTS. RIGHTS A Nil Baldwin MongVge"Book"No. Teia'ou th( 9lb W of AprlF. A. D. im, grailled and conveyed W Morns K. Jesnup. aud the undersigned William J, Barr. in trust ui secnm ...n-,.. vr, .u " . ' H I hi, Thomas dte-o.ss. Auctioneers. 1 . j- ... ... 1 , I '. ..I ; U' ..,'......1 ,.. ,'y4il .