2 ST1IU T OF THE PRESS. BDIIOMAl oFIM .'iM v "H f.KMiINO JU'KNAl.i PfV" flPkhKM n'ICl CO1PH,P KVKRV 'AT H'lK THK FVKH.Nfl TF.I.RIJIIAPH. The l'reriilriit mii.-t s! til Lave Wvn mivaiieiii.: "ml Mjouch. Too many white rt'trvntinjr t''n havtr long War ..i..i,mJ. The rivKi'ieiit means wrtr be it, tbt'U, ami (Jul H't-ed ti,,J ''K1'1 1 Nearly five nienths Binn the regular fusion of Congre?s wan adjonri.H.l. The winter had A .nirrVCOIlteat With t lit I'lOflidoll . There were thrw jwrtlM:-l. The Deinouralio fragment, whwh pave the President undivided allegiance. 2. The moderate R-pnMioaiis 1 who trnHting in his honor, endeavored to make his duty bo plain, and hia responsibilities b j ezi and limited, that he could not escape them. They hoped that the nation might te reconstructed without violent appeals to thn law. 3. The earrient aud extreme Republican who folt that we could not reconstruct the country without the impeachment of the President. The counsels of the moderate Republicans prevailed. They carried the Reconstruction bill. With the aid of one of thete parties they prevented impeachment. This was accomplished by the assurance that the President, having protested against the action of Congress, would coutent himself to have the law quietly carried into execution. He appointed generals in com mand of the military districts who were most acceptable to the country. In the case of General Sheridan, at least, we know that some of these appointments were made against his own judgment, and in deference to the wishes of Congress. The Senate and House adjourned. It was felt that the virtual ac quiescence of the President would make an extra session unnecessary. Summer would see the States reconstructed. Universal suf frage would be tested. The States would gradually drift back into the Union. When Mr. McPherson called the roll of the Ilouse in December, all the States would answer, and once more a full American Congress would sit in an American Capitol. Then came the first crime. This law of Re construction, duly considered and well ap proved, was assailed by Mr. Stanbery. We give Mr. Stanbery the credit of beiug an able lawyer and upright man. But the President wanted an opinion that was not upright, aud in an evil hour his Attorney -General wrote it. Ingenious and subtle, the couutry did not fail to see that it was a fraud, aud that the Presi dent, in inviting its publication, was rti.-monest. It cut the heart oat of the Military bill. Re construction was brought to a dead lock. The opinion, to use the figure of General Sheridan, was a broad, macadamized road to fraud and perjury, and the Southern States wore thrown into chaos. Congress was hurriedly assem bled. A bill was passed which even the sub tlety of Mr. Stanbery could not misconstrue. The extreme Republicans contended that even this would not do, and that to have Recon . strnction, the President should be impeached. The counsels of such men as Mr. Pessenden and Mr. Wilson, Mr. Colfax and Mr. Sherman, prevailed. It was held that with a law thus plainly written the President would walk di rectly, and the South would be restored. This assurance, indeed, was given by men who claimed to speak for the President, Congress believed it, and again adjourned over until winter. Now comes the second crime. Stanbery cannot explain the law. Blue is so palpably blue that there is no making eveu the Presi dent believe it to be grey. The President has ' the best part of a year before him. Since he cannot nullify the law, he persecutes his ministers. Stanton is stricken down. The "War Secretary, who has been retained two years for his disagreeable qualities, is re moved for his virtues. Because of the only quality which the Republican party honors in Stanton, he is disgraced. Then comes Sheri dan. This glorious soldier simply performs a soldier's duty, lie executes the law in its true spirit. He does the work which the country expeots him to do, and is dismissed. A few days pass, aud Sickles is removed for loyal devotion to Congress and the country. A Tammany Democrat is placed in New Or leans, while a soldier without a record goes to Charleston. In a few days Pope will be ordered back to the Indian country, to assist Sheridan in guarding sutlers' posts and bag rage trains. Grant has served the President's turn in removing Stanton, and his Excellency is impatient already, calling the General of our armies "A radiual spy and traitor." He will no doubt speedily be asked to retire in favor of Steedman or Black. That Christian gentleman and soldier, Howard, who ha3 shown in his high plaoe the philanthropy and piety of the great name he bears, is written upon the slate of degradation. Holt will followand with these men every soldier or civilian who will not aid the President in his treason. Where will this end ? The President means war. The country must stand and tight, or be defeated. We believe anything possible , of Mr. Johnson. His administration is a record of deception, cunning, disloyalty antagonism to the best interests of the coun try. He has made the administration of Buchanan respectable by showing a degrada tion to which even Mr. Buchanan could not Sink. He has betrayed his party ; he has betrayed his friends ; he has betrayed his country. Nothing is left of his administra tion but a few miserable jobbers like those who hang around him, and a few wretched politioal adventurers like Black. The men . who accepted contumely for his cause, like Seward, and Randall, and Welles, he is impa tient to drive out of his Cabinet. The savage of Sahara is not insensible to the obligations of friendship; but even this no longer remains with Mr. Johnson. We admonish the people to prepare for a Stern and high responsibility. It is nearly a hundred days until Congress meets. Till then we are powerless. We can only bow to this dreadful tyranny. The President appealed to the country in his last message. We join him In the appeal. Let our friends organize every where. Let us make the canvass upon the infamy of Mr. Johnson's administration, aud Laving defeated him at the ballot-box, we can prepare, through our representatives, to consider the best course to be taken to punish him for his crimes against the sovereign will of the American people. The President and tl I-aw-ProgrtM of me uoDuicii From the N. Y. Timet. Some of the Democratlo defenders of Mr. Johnson object to the degree of importance whloh is attached to the suspension of a Cabi net officer and the removal of distrlot com manders. In ordinary ciroumstanoes the ob jection would be well founded. Suspension and removal would then be mere personal BUttera, whloh the President wight xnaulpu THE DAILY EVENING T EL EG It API! PHTL late without hindranofl or criticism. At pre Felit the case in far different. And the course of ! President challenge sciutiny ant chu Mire, because avowedly undm taken iu pursu ance of a policy itKoi.istio to Congress and the wished ol the country. Mr. Joliimt'ii, indeed, ha left no room for niitPiehendinKl'is position, or the purpose , ofbiH Hcts. He lias convinced tho most Iu creduloti of his determination to renew at all hnzitrrirtthe contest with Congress, and to avail himself of the powers which its forbear ance ban lelt iu hii hands to obstruct its plans und embarrass its work of reconstruction. This fact it is which invests with siguiticance bU present line of action. St.inton, bheridati, Sickles all have been set aside a-3 so many obMHoles to the will of the Executive. Pope and Howard are to sulfer for the same reason. The Cabinet is to be reorgauized on a Demo cratic basis in pursuance of the same general scbenie. The intent, is unmistakable. Mr. Johnson proposes to do what he can to defeat the aims of Congress. These personal changes are him ply incidental to his policy, aud are important as illustrations of the dishonesty, tho bad faith, the utter lack of prudeuce aud principle which characterize his course. Henceforward the issues of the contest can neither lie concealed nor misrepresented. Though Mr. Johnson swear by the Constitu tion every hour of the day, the country will understand that his professed zeal for the klter of the organic law is a pretext intended to hide the pro Rebel proclivities of his policy. Hit- appeals to the Constitution are identical in spirit and purpose with' those to be found in the mouth of every unreconstructed Rebel in the South. Both make use of the term as the groundwork of their demands for uncon ditional admission and their opposition to the measures of Congress. The same species of hypocrisy leads Mr. Johnson to atlect a readi ness to carry out the Reconstruction law. The trick is too transparent to mislead anybody. For, if he desire to enfore the law iu its inte grity, why does he find it necessary to remove officials whose only offense is their faithful and intelligent administration of the law, as interpreted by its authors f If he desire to uphold the law, why visit with his disapproval those in whose judgment and fidelity Congress and the country repose im plicit confidence ? The most ingenious etophistry will tail to break the force of these inquiries as they spring up spontaneously in the minds of the people. Nor will the most dexterous special pleading modify or avert the real issue, wniun now is bnalltbe Republican party, sustained by the represented States, control the work of reconstruction, or shall it be seized with impunity by Mr. Johnson, who is neither trusted nor respected by either of the great parties, and whose instigators, Asso ciates, and agents are known to be in alliance with the unreconstructed element of the boutu T This is the issue as it is seen by the country, and for all its consequences Mr. Johnson must be prepared. It is a contest which only folly and recklessness could have provoked, nut having been begun by Mr. Johnson, in spite of remonstrances, entreaties, and warnings, we apprehend that it must proceed to the bit ter end. Who shall be master of the situa tion Mr. Johnson, no longer possessing any real representative authority, or Congress, speaking for the people f The latest pretensions set up by Mr. John son add to the complications of the conflict. His defiance of Congress is but a renewal of a quarrel from which he was believed to have retreated. It is now evident, however, that he is not only prepared to circumvent the law, and so prevent reconstruction on the conditions prescribed by Congress, but that he is also resolved to quarrel with any officer, whatever be his station, who dares to dis charge his duty. The two orders which we printed yesterday are an insult to General Grant, and an invasion of the authority with which the law explicitly invests him. In his original order in connection with the removal of Sheridan, General Thomas was instructed to "continue to execute all orders he may find in force in the Fifth Military District at the time f his assuming command of it, unless authorized by the General of the army to annul, alter, or modify them." This assertion of the General's absolute authority in the premises is in exaot accordance with the provisions of the Supplementary act passed during the recent session. By the orders we published yesterday, the President usurps this authority, and of his own will and pleasure, in direct violation of the law, undertakes to instruct Generals Hancock and Canbv as to their duties in their respective departments. As instructed by Mr. Johnson, the successors of Sheridan and Sickles may "annul, alter or modify" their orders and proceedings, without waiting for the instructions of General Grant. Such, at least, is the tendency of Mr. John son's mandates, and we are bound to suppose that he Las contemplated the result to w hich they lead. Under this aspect of the question it is not possible for General Grant long to remain pas sive. It is bad enough that his views in regard to the exigencies of the military ser vice are disregarded, as they are by the re moval of General Hancock from his present field. But can General Grant be a party to orders at variance with his own, and with the law of which he is the administrator f Can he surrender his undivided authority to in stinct the District Commanders, and to revise, reverse, or confirm their action ? Can he even impliedly sanction the illegal pretensions of the 1 resident, or respect orders which contra vene ine law r ir not, it is manifest that General Grant will cradnallv b the conflict, the further develrmmunr nf Will be awaited with profound anxiety. At no period since the termination of the war have aiiium uru an appearance so suggestive of aiuiuuuy ana uanger. Development of the Political StrusffU From the 2f. Y. Berald. The black wave that has so long threatened us is losing its force. It must soon break into foam if the President only dares to meet the issue like a statesman. We care little for color we leave that for a banner-cry. We go deeper than the skin, and demand that the foundations of our Government rest upon educated brain. The nation fairly staggers to-day under its load of ignorance ; and well may we lament the new burden imposed nr. it by the faction which raises its flag aloft and cries party first 1 country afterwards I In the West they already open the contest for a con solidation or pomioal power and a seizing of on tuo iicuiciiw ui oneupiu m me uovernment. Mr. Wade, in a speech that loses all force bv its yaiiuouug w jguuraiioe ana blasphemy, opens nis wineries upon tne dread reaction which he sees advancing with a steady but irresistible march. Senator Sherman, more lugiuot, raijw mm lauiiy points In his arga mom, ionows, 10 garnish, if possible, the speech of Mr. Wade. Both of these Senators btana on me umo field, where, facing them, stand Pendleton and Vallandigham. Mr. Pen dleton, now disposed to aooept the fact that some questions have been decided in the war, is shaping himself to the stern logic of the losition; and though he has done much to sink dm deep, in loyal eyes, during the struggle for rational existence, he may yet do much to I biunioidze the contending elements. For Val- laiinMhxni we have little hope; he ha the blHck blindness, and Is as radical in hia views as are the radical KepublicRiia iu theirs. With him the war ban nettled nothing. Nor he nor the extienie radicals can ever rc.icb a point where the ration can balance itself. Top-ed ubout as we are iu this politioal gale, we turn to the man whose baud is at the helm. From him we expect reform. The tide has reached its Hood. We have cursed the poor negro by too rapidly elevating him, and iu the coming reaction he will soon curse us. We have done all this for political purposes. In the emancipation of the black we have gone so far that we threaten to enslave the white; all this to the grievous injury of both. The attack and defense of the one absorbing color have given birth to two great attempts at a dictatoiidiip one by Mr. Johnson, one by Congress. The former was defeated by the latter; the latter must now be defeated by the former. This done, the battling political forces will come to mutual concession and unity of action. The country may then take a rapid march to union, peace, and a brilliaut future. First, however, must lie swept aside the divi sion of executive power as Congress tried to arrange it in the five military dictatorships. In his determination that he will defend his biamhof the Government, Andrew Johnson is right; and the nation, in its cooler moments, must thank hi in. Sheridan broke loose from executive control from the control of his military commander. He is removed. It is a splendid lespon of discipline to the army. General Sickles, forgetting in partisan feeling his military duty, disobeys the orders ef his superior officer, and thus destroys the great principle that fcives an army force. It is right that an example should be made of him. The President has done the country service in removing him. Would that throughout the whole machinery of government the same rigid discipline were infused I The nation, now almost breathless, might breathe free aeain. Woe to North as well as South if these States are to be cut into irresponsible military dictatorships. When Congress makes a law in accordance with our Oonstitu tion, they hand it to the Executive power and say, "there it is; execute it." ere he, overridden by military officers, to prove un worthy the trust, then well might Congress imptach him. Let him sweep away fifty district commanders, until he finds a set who can understand that they are responsible to the Lxecutive the Jixecutive to Congress Now of the Cabinet. The country has long enough groaned under its pressure. We want men of more enlarged views true statesmen statesmen who lorget, in the general good. all party feeling; and who, in every State of the Union, will rebuild the dying hopes which have flattered the nation. We want men who will lead in the great reaction which is march ing to the salvation of our people. Relieve us from this madness about the negro, who must take hia place in the ratio of his ability, and, in common with all our people, work out his own salvation, as brain light brings power. Now is the grand moment lor the President to settle the question which has been so badly managed that it threatens ur national exist ence. There now remains but one sword that can cut the knot. Once cut, there will be swept away the military dictatorships and the wave of ignorance that threaten our repub licanism. Let Mr. Johnson prepare to deal the blow; but first a new Cabinet then strike; and let that stioke be universal amnesty amnesty to the black, amnesty to the white. Impeachment. From the X. Y. Tribune. We have not been of those who see no safety for the nation except in the impeachment of the President. We have held that only the gravest and most pressing of dangers would justify a resort to bo extraordinary a remedy as the removal of a Chief Magistrate from office. We believe that we have had the senti ment of a large majority of the people with us in this matter; but it is useless to deny that Mr. Johnson is doing his best to change that sentiment, and that many prominent men are now earnestly in favor of his removal who were a month ago as strenuously opposed to it. Suppose the impeachment party prevails: let us see what course will be pursued. The offenses for which an officer may be impeached are "treason, bribery, and other high crimes and misdemeanors." High crimes ana misdemeanors are not defined by the Con stitution, and in determining what they are recourse must he had to Parliamentary prac tice and the common law. Of course, the range of offenses embraced under them is pretty comprehensive ; and it may be said, in uriei, that many crimes not easily dennauie oy law, and many of a purely political character, are neia to be included ; and that in none oi the cases of impeachment which have thus far been tried in the United States, except that of Judge Humphreys of Tennessee, who was convicted of treason in 18G2, have aD" of the cnarges rested upon statutable offenses. The charges must be presented by the House of Representatives, and tried by the Senate. Any member of the House may initiate pro ceedings, either by offering a resolution of accusation or moving the appointment of a committee of inquiry. If the House adopt the resolution, a committee is appointed to pro ceed to the bar of the Senate, and demand that that body shall take order for the appearauoe of the accused to answer to the articles of im peachment which the House will present in proper time. The House, then, having agreed upon the articles, forwards them to the Senate by the hands of a committee; the Senate ap points a day for the trial, and process is served by the Sergeant-at-Arms. When the President is tried, the Constitution provides that the Chief Justice shall preside. On the day as signed, the Senate resolves itself into a court of impeachment; the Senators are solemnly sworn4 to do impartial justice according to the Constitution and laws of the United States ; the managers appointed by the Ilouse to oonduct the proseoution in. its behalf attend, and the accused is summoned to appear and plead. If he does not answer either in person or by attorney, the case pro ceeds ex parte. Both sides may be heard by counsel. The accused is entitled to a copy or the charges, and must lie allowed time to pre pare an answer. The Ilouse of Representa tives may then file a replication to the answer, and after that a day is assigned for the trial. Ihe subsequent proceedings are conduotea substantially as in ordinary courts. e managers open the case, the witnesses are then examined, under the usual rules of evi dence, and both sides are fully heard w argument. . , When Associate Justice Chase, of the United Mates Supreme Court was impeached ior official Tn'm,m,rii,,. in ien ia Kenate Cham ber was elaborately fitted up for the accommo dation of spectators. The trial lasted nearly Jour weeks, the hut seven days being occupied in arguments. At the close, the Senate votes JPon each of the charges separately, two-th rda i"hg required to convict. If the accused W fOUnd limit. 41, a. Kol 41va 41. TllllllshUieUt, Which CAimot tn(l further thail removal from office, and disqualification to hold any A D ELPI1 1 A , THURSDAY, pince or trust, nonor, or emolument under the United States. Of ' course, there. Is no anneal from the verdict, nor can the President exert his pat dotting power to remit the penalty. ' An attempt was made by John Minor Botts and others to obtain the impeachment of Presi dent Tyler in 1843, but the Houbo of Repre- pentatives refused by a large majority even to appoint a committee ol inquiry. Indeed, im- eai nmeuts beiore the United States Seriate ave been extremely rare, there havinir been only six, we believe, in our whole history. and in only two of these was a conviction obtained. Funning the Kmbtri of Dlicord. From the N. Y. H'orM. The radical leaders are aware that, by the reaction now going on in the publio mind, the ground is slipping from under them, and that they are destined to lose largely in the elections this fall, which they regard as a bad omen for their party in the Presidential contest next year. They were fortunate last year in the New Orleans riot, and in tho maladroit invectives of Presi dent Johnson during his Western tour. Had it not been for these fresh incentives to agitation, the elections last autumn would have been carried by the conservatives in most of the States. Many Republicans of great credit and estimation in their paity stood ready to indorse, and several did indorse, the policy of 1'resident Johnson. Mr. Beecher wrote the ablest, most studied, and most statesmanlike letter that ever came from his pen, in support of the President's policy. The livening 1'osl expressed the strongest approbation of that letter, and declared again and again that the mission of the Republican party was substantially ended. Mr. Raymond and his paper, the Times, were for a brief period still and zealous in their opposition to a Congressional policy far more moderate than that which has since been adopted. The rea son of the country was on the side of concilia Hon, and it was oniy wnen its passions were reinflamed that the radicals regained the ground which they had been losing in the tern iiorary lull oi excitement. The experience of the radicals has taught them not merely their experience last year, but all their experience since the formation of their party that fierce and overboiling agitation is the only temper of the publi mind favorable to their success. A single year of unbroken calm would end the Repub lican party. The Tribune understands this. and rails at the following extravagant rate, in the hope of reviving the agitation which has been dying away, to the great advantage of conservatism, since the adjournment of Con gress: Especially are the extraordinary powers con feriru by t outruns ou the Military (jomman dere at tbe South to 'o t ranslerreU to the hands of 'conrervaiivea' of caste and neero-hate to tbe very ul mo-1. All tne still vast patronage of ine executive is to ne wielded in aid or resist ance to any sucti reconstruction as Congress purposed, ana s tsneri.iau, i nomas, sickles, l'ope. ami iriowara, were laboring to elleoc. Governor Hewwrd will resign the Slate De, partment probably in tho course of next week, We juuge that McCulloch and Randall must alHOgn. Grant will be bowed out of tne War Umce so noon as another can do the work re quired of the Incumbent, and an unequivocal Copi erbead Cabinet will be made up. Tbeae changes will be made, not necesnarily beoaune Governor ueward or Ueneral Grant la hostile. but because neither ot them can be expected to ro so iar nor worn so Dearuiy in tne direction meditated as such men an Steedman, Jere. 8. Milieu, riiu Montgomery uiair will readily do. Ana it is neia mat nair-nearted wont is lnade qiiHie to tne emergency. "The end hoped for is a political revolution in tbe North and a rejection of tbe conditions of restoration prescribed by Congress in theHouth. Mr. Johnson's backstairs counsellors doubtless assuie him that, if the whole patronage of the Government is transferred to Democratic hands. they will therebv be enabled to overbear last year's moderate Republican majorities in New lork. jNew jersey, Pennsylvania, etc.. aud thus secure a Republican defeat iu the Presidential contest next year. Meantime, reconstruction is to be postponed or defeated at the South, with Intent to take advantage of the expected Democratic triumph next year, aud so, while enfranchising the Rebels, remand tbe blacks to perpetual serfdom if not actual slavery. "Much appears to be tbe programme of tbe new struggle which Mr. Johnson has opened with the superscdure of Stanton by Grant at tbe War Ollice. That it will be fierce and vehe ment, few will doubt; but let us all firmly re solve that H shiill be marked by no bloodsned, but that all shall implicitly abide the delibe rate judgment of the people.'' Since the removal of Sheridan, the Tribune has had frequent articles, by the evidence of style clearly from its chief editor, in this strain of vituperative extravagance. They are not based upon any evidence, but only upon the wishes ef the editor, and the supposed neces sities of his party. As these fictions and chimeras are judged to be serviceable, the reality would of course be of still greater ad vantage, inasmuch 83 the reality could not be denied and exploded. The Republicans need topics of exasperation, and do not scruple to invent what they fail to find. It might not be quite courteous to say that the above-quoted invective of the Tribune is a string of knavish falsehoods; we will, there fore, call them conscious fictions. The "still vast patronage of the Executive" is a myth, and the Tribune knows it to be so. Since the Tenure of Office bill the President can re move no civil officer who has been confirmed by the Senate, without the consent of the Senate to the removal. The Executive patronage is, therefore, next to nothing. That the President is using such patronage as he has to resist the Reconstruction laws Is also an assertion without evidence, made in hardy defiance of truth. Instead of vague, reckless charges thrown out at random, let the Tribune name the section, clause, or provision of the Reconstruction acts which the President is attempting to resist. It is only in one single point that the President comes in contact with those acts at all, and that is in the assignment of commanders to execute them. Has he neglected to do this f We suppose that not even the Tribune will have the hardihood to say that he has, but it might as well say that as to make other assertions equally ground less. It is the law, not the President, which tells the commanders what to do when they are once appointed. General Thomas was the President's choice for the Fifth District. Is General Thomas a "Copperhead?" Is he incapable of understanding the law? Would he be indisposed to obey it? The same self answering questions might be asked about General Hancock and General Canby. They are soldiers of great merit and distinction; upright, loyal, firm; honored and trusted by the whole country. What a reckless, unscru pulous libeller must that journalist be who affects to believe that the appointment of suoh men to execute a law is a means of resisting and defeating its operationl We do not know whether Mr. Black, Mr. Blair, and General Steedman are to go into the Cabinet or not; but if President Johnson pro poses to appoint them, or men like them, it is safe to assume that he has not made a confi dant of the editor of the Tribune. What moral right has that sheet to invent such news, and, on the strength of so gratuitous a fabrication, anaign the President for what he has net done t And even if he should bring these gen tlemen into his Cabinet, pray what clause of the Reconstruction acts would be thureby vio- AUGUST 29, 1867. Old My e Wliislties Q11B UAH G EST AND BEST STOCK OF, FINE OLD RYE W H I G EC I E 0 IK TIIE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY ' 1 ' B ENHY S. H ANN IS & CO., Nos. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, WIIO ei'1'F.KTIIE SAME TO IIIK TRADE IN LOTS OK Tt.HT ADVANTAHCOri TERM. --,iVr-0k of.iBy Wlil.uua,IM BUID, eomprltH all the favor It bra. irt,."!L1. ."''iil" 1!,"d toarrlTeat PiMirlVMlt Railroad DanaC Krrit.o tli Vharf.or at Bonded YY.rahot.aaa, partite mar alact. UW lated f What has the Cabinet to do with a i law the execution of which is devolved by I - mo u.o iibwiii vuiuuisuaers aua the Ueneral of the Army, who are protected by law from all interference with the discharge ui ineir uuues by any of the civil officers of the Government f Another of the Tribune' bugbears, conceived in a spirit of wanton cal umny, is a pretended purpose, by Mr. John son and the Democrats, to "remand the blacks to perpetual serfdom, if not virtual slavery." Such reckless libels are a kind of political weapons which an honest man should scorn to use. The Tribune winds up with a piece of sni velling cant as contemptible as its libels are unfounded and venomous. "Let us all firmly resolve," whines this calumniator, 'that the struggle shall be marked by no bloodshed." Woodshed ! What occasion is there for this kind of talk t What does the Tribune mean f lias it resolved, like ribald old lirownlow, to stir up the fiendish pas sions of its party to such cutthroat inten sity that they will thirst for the blood of their opponents, and need the Tribune's dis suasiveuess from red-handed carnage f The Tribune knows full well that the principles of its party tend to bloodshed and fratricidal slaughter; its canting on this subject is a con fession. AMUSEMENTS. WALNUT 8TREET THEATRE K.K. corner of KIKTU and WALNUl'btreela. Begins at 8 o'clock. '1H1S AND EVERY EVKNINO. Shakespeare's Fairy Spectacle, In Hve acts, of A WIDSliWMKR JSlUUT'S llltKAM. with iu unrlvulleiV bceuery, jfanorama. Costumes, Accoutrements triple TRANSFORMATION SCENE, etc., the whole constituting a UNIFORMITY OF EXCELLENCE never equalled in tte production of litis flay. Chairs secured three days Iu advance. 8 13 jEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE, ELEVENTH STREET, ABOVE CHESNDT. THE FAHII.T RESORT OPEN FOR TBE SEASON, MONltAT EVtNIJifi, AlUUNT 86, CARNCROSS & DIXEV'S MINSTRELS, THE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD, IN TBEI8 HBAND ETHIOPIAN SOIREES. For particulars see future advertlsemeuts. J. L. CARNCROSS, Manager. R. F. BIMPPON. Treasurer. 8 lOtf CONCERT HALL CDESNDT STREET, above Twelfth. Positively LAST WEKK of tbe GREAT LINCOLN MKMORIAL TABLEAUX DESCRIPTIVE LECTURE aud READINGS, by S. K. MUKLOCH, Ksq. Admission, 26 cts. Reserved seats, to cents. Cilice open Ironi 9 to 3. Matinee on Saturday afternoon at it o'clock. 8 26 6t ASSEMBLY BUILDING S. MR. ALF. BURNETT. MR. ALF, BURNETT. TIIE RKNOWNKD HUMORIST, THE RENOWNED HUMORIST, in ins couiic rorirauures. Commencing MONDAY EVENING, September 2. Tickets 60 cents. Children 2a cents. 28 HOI FOR FllITH'S ISLAND! FRESH AIR -BEAUTIFUL SCENKRY HEALTHFUL EX ERCltvK THK BATH-ENTERTAJNMENTO? THK BEST KIND. MRS. MARY LAKEMEYER respectfully informs her lrlends and the public gene rally, that she will open the beautiful Island Pleasure Ground known SMITH'S ISLAND, od SUNDAY next, May 5. hbe invites all to come and enjoy with her the delights of this favorite suui- mr resort. 4 80 LI EXCURSIONS. THE SPLENDID NEW IRON Steamer EDWIN FORRHS V. Cantaln J?. uibobIiuw, leaves forTacunv, Beveriy, Burlington, Bristol, l loieuce, Robblus' Wharf, Floldsboro', aud Lenves 2d Pier ab. Arcb. j tenion. ' Leaves South Trenton. Saturday, Ai.24, 7 A.M. Monday, 26. 9 " Tuesday, " 27, 10 ' Wedn'Bd'y." 8, 10 ' Thursday, " 2!, II Friday, " , 12 " Saturday. " 81, 12 30 P.M. Saturday, Aug. 24, 11 A. M, Monday. 28, IP. M. Tuesday, 14 Wednesd'y," Thursday, " Frluay, 27, 28, Sit, 80, a a 8 ' ' Saturday, si, 4 Fare to Trenton, 40 cents each way. Intermediate places, 26 cents each way. Excursion, 40ceuls. 8 21 lm THE LAST TRIP OF THE SEA SON TO CAPE MAY. The floe new bieuuiri ft. M. ELTON will make her last trip for the Reason on SATURDAY, August 81, leav ing CHESNUT Street w barf at 10 o'clock; and le mming, leave Cape May on MONDAY. Fare to Cape May, f2'50, including carriage hire. Excursion tickets, f.i, including carriage hire. should the weather prove favorable, the FELTON will cross over to the Breakwater, to give the pas sengers a fine view ot that celebrated work. 8 27 4t FAKES TO WILMINGTON, 15 cents: cnesier or hook, iu cents. ou aud alter MONDAY. July 8. the steamer ARIEL will leave CHEHNUT Street wharf at 9'4ft A. M. and 8-46 P. M . Returning, leaves Wilmington at -45 A. iL. and 12-46 P. M. Fare to Wilmington, 15 cents; excursion tickets, IS ceil le. Fare to Cheater or Hook. 10 cents. 8 27 6t F-IT"S DAILY EXCURSIONS TO WIL. timii m rr mington, Del. The steamer ELIZA IiAtuJk will leave DOCK Street Wharf dally at IDA. M. and 4 P. M. Returning, leave MARKET Street Wharf, Wilmington, at 7 A. M. and 1 P. M. Fare for the round trlp........-......,M...5ii cents Single ticket -...................80 cents Cheater and Marcus Hook .......20 cents tor further particulars, apply on hoard. 7 22tf i w. BURNS. Captain, PRESERVING CANS AND JARS. FRUIT JARS. PROTECTOR FRUIT JARS. They are made Air-tight with Certainty and Ease. Art Rapidly Opened Without Injury to the Cover. Each Cover flta all the Jars. Manufacturers and Patentees F. A J. BODIHE, I 22 thslalm NO. MS ft. FRONT STREET. HLATE MANTEL S. SLATE MANTELS arc unsurpassed tor Durability Beauty, trength, aud Cheapness. ; SLATE MANTELS, and Slat Work GeueraU 1 taaile to order, ) J. B. KIM 10 8 db CO., I 12 em Nos &126 aud !D CUJLdN UT aUrsM 1 MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. MRS. R. DILLON, NOS. 8S AND 831 SOCT1T STREET, Has a handsome assortment of SPRINO MILLI MKV, Ladles', Misses', and Children's Straw and Fascr Bonnets and Hautot the latest styles. AIm. Mlks, Velvets, Rlubons, Crapes, Feathers. J'owers. Frames elo. - g igj ftflO URNI NC MILLINERY. ALWAYS ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OI MOTJ1I1NIING BONNETS, AT NO. 004 WA1.NCT STREET. gg MAD'LLE KEOCH. GROCERIES, ETC. SUPERIOR VINECARS. GENUINE FRENCH Willi E WINE AND rCRE OLD CIBEB TINEOARS, FOR BALE BY i JAMES B. WEBB, 14 Corner WALNUT and EIGHTH Sta. 2EW NO. 1 MACKEREL, IN KITT8, JUST BECEITBD. AIXEBT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, 11 7Jrp Coraer ELEVENTH and VINE Sta. HARDWARE, CUTLERY, ETC. gTANDBRIDGE, BARE, & CO., UPOBTBBB OF AND DIALBBB ES FOREIGN AND AMERICAN HARDWARE. NO. 18S1 MARKET STBEET, Offer for sale a large stock ot Ilardwnre and Cutlery, TOGETHER WITH 1000 KEGS NAILS AT REDUCED PRICES. I7thsta f CUTLERY. A fine assortment of POCKET and TABLK CUTLKRY, RAZORM, RAZOH BTROPS, ladikh SOLS SOMS. PAPKR AND TAILOItM SHIRKS, ETC.. L. V. HKLMOLD'S Cutlery Store, No. 135 South TENTH Street, 11 Three doors above Walnut, 9 STOVES, RANGES, ETC. QULVER'S NEW PATENT DEEP SAND-JOINT HOT-AIR FURNACE. BANUES OF ALIi SIZES. Also, Phtlegar's New Low Pressure Steam Heating Apparatus. For saie by CHARLES WIUIAHIi Bllj No. 118 MARKET Street, THOMPSON'S LONDON KITCHENER; OR EUROPEAN RANUE, for Families, Ho tels, or Public Institutions, In TWENTY DIF FERENT SIZES. Also.PhliadelDblaRanres. Ti ot-A Ir Furnaces, Portable 11 eaters, Lowdowu Urates, Fireboard Stoves, Batb Boilers, buewbole Plates. Boilers, Cooking Stoves, etc, wholesale and retail, by the manufacturers. SHARPE A THOMSON, 527stuth6in No. 809 N. SECOND Street. HOOP SKIRTS. COQ HOOP BKIBT8, AOQ "OWN MAKE." OZO UX-O HOPKINS' PRICKS REDUCED! II I affords us much pleasure to announce to oai numerous patrons and tiie public, that tn conse quence t fa slight decline In Itoop Skirt material, together with our lucreased facilities fur manufac turing, and a strli t adherence to BUYINU and SELLING for CASH, wo aie enabled to overall our JUSTLY CELEBRATED HOOP SKIRTS at RE DUCED PRICES. And our Skirts will always, a berelolore, be found In every rexixtct more desirable, and really cheaper tban any single or double spr.ug Hoop skirt iu tiie market, while our assortment Is ntiequalled. A lso, constantly receiving from New York and thf Eastern States full lines ol lew priced Skirts, at very low prices; among which Is a lot of Piaiu SkirUat tbe following rate.; 16 springs, 66c.; 2i spritim, fiAC; ii springs, 75c gu springs, hue; 86 springs, Hoc; and 4a 'wSrui made to order, altered, and repaired. Whole ale and retail, at tLe Pli!';lphla Hoop Skirt Eia corluni. No. tCitf ARCH fJ 'ft, below Seventh. lOftm rp YvijLLlAM T. HOPKINS. FURNISHING GOODS, SHIBTS,&0. JEIUNO GAUZE UNDERWEAR OF CART WRIGHT AND WlKfEB'I CELEBRATED MANUFACTCBE. . MERINO GAUZE UNDERWEAR In every variety of site and style, for Ladles', Gents', and Children's: Wear, HOSIERY. A large assortment ol HOSIERY ot English and German manufacture, in sucks, three-quarter gookfl and long nose. C1LOVES, In White, Buff, and Mode Color. For gale at IIOFMANN'S Hosiery Store, Mtuths NO. NOBTII EIOIITII STBEET. J. W. SCOTT &s CO., SHIBT MANUFACTURERS, AMD SXAL1CKS XBJ MEN'S rUBNlSUINO OOODS NO. 1 CHESNUT STBEET. FOUE POORS BELOW TILE 'CONTINENTAL,' Z7rp yBUlAJJLF IU. PATENT SHOULDER-SEAM SIIIBT MANUFACTORY, ANDGENTaVEMEN'S FUBNIMHINO STOKB PERFECT FITT1NU SHIRTS AND DRAWERS nale lroiu measurement at Very short noi ice. All other arui'iM oi UENTLEMEN tt DRESS GOODS In lull variety. WINCHESTER COf 1 IU No. 70 CHESNUT Street.
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