2 THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1870, 8FZRXX Or TZZX3 PRESS. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. MK. W. L. GARRISON AND THE TIE- OAN WAR. From th Toledo Made. We Lave a Ligh respeot for William Lloyd Garrison. Ho has rendered good norvice in the long strangle for slavery. He has a cour age, an energy, nnd a pormntency which in a good cause made him a formidable and effec tive champion. But ho has made some er rors and advocated some egregious absur dities in his time; some of which, we are glad to say, he practically abandoned. For a long time he advocated peace and non-resiat-anoe principles, but was compelled at last to support the war for the Union as the sure way of ending slavery, the destruction of which was the chief end of his life. He for a long time denounced the Constitution, and the Union of States whioh was founded upon it, as a "league with death, and a covenant with hell," and declared that the "only possi ble exodus of the American slaves from the houRe of bondage" was over the ruins of the churches and the Government of the United States. But the historic sequel shows that slavery found its end in the maintenance of the Constitution and the per petuity of the Union, and not through their destruction. It ended by means of stern, cruel, bloody war, whioh Garrison and some of his impracticable associates contended was as wicked as slavery itself. Garrison was never weary of quoting O'Connell's declara tion, that "No human revolution was worth the shedding of a single drop of human blood." The words "Agitate! Agitate!! Agitate ! ! !" were the ram's horns to be em ployed to overthrow the Jerioho of slavery. But words, however mighty they seemed to the Boston reformer, were as empty air until the engines of war overturned and demolished the bastile of oppression. Until the sword was drawn and used, all of Garri son's wordy denunciations of slavery were ineffective, and instead of helping the slave, increased the rigor of his servitude and multiplied the tortures of his condition. The slave to-day en 1 ova freedom and en franchisement through tear, through blood shed, and through the authority of the Con stitution, and by means of the permanency of the Union of the States. Praotically, all the dootnnes uttered by Garrison have been re. futed and condemned by the events of time, Such a lesson should have the effect of teaching him a very little modesty, to be exercised when fulminating his thunders of dsnunciation against more practical men than himself. The sword of Sheridan did more, practi cally, to end slavery than all the theories and wordy invectives of mere philanthropists acainst slavery. Philosophers are wall enough in their time and in their way, but men of exeoutive and practical turn of mind can not allow the world to be run down to perdition in order to allow them to test the power of their abstraction, bheridan was sent out West to protect the settlers on the plains from murder, arson, rape, theft, and every other crime and outrage committed on them by the ruthless and conscienceless savages of the plains. It might have been a good thing to have sent Lloyd Garrison, but the people whose lives, persons and property were in danger were afraid that he might find it as dimcult to teach the riesana the philosophy of the Ten Commandments and the golden rule, as ne touna it in ism to convince Boston lawyers of the iniquity of the fugitive slave law. Ihe suHerers from in dian cruelties could not afford to wait for the operations of non-resistant doctrines to give them relief. Sheridan does not understand Quaker methods of warfare against evil. Their way may be the bent, but he would be the wrong man to bring savages into conformity to moral and civil law through their methods, Philanthropists bad the world before them savage Picgans included, to convert to right eousness and peace, but have failed to reach said Piegans so far. in its dire necessity the Government ordered- Sheridan to protect peaceable settlers by all the means in his power, just as it previously told him to crush the ltebellion. lie has done uis worn, and done it well. But Lloyd Garrison thinks he has been cruel and barbarous, and has re sorted to a "horrible mode of retaliation." He proceeds to arraign Sheridan as a monster. We protest against allowing the sentimental ity of absurdly impracticable men to prej u dice the Americun people against the men whose energy and common sense are the pro tection of the exposed communities of the West. Sheridan is an executive man one of deeds, and not of words. Garriaon is ex actly his opposite, and is therefore not quali fied to condemn with oracular positiveness one whose severely direct and practical meth ods he cau neither understand nor appreciate. The Piegans Are the murderous land pirates of the webt. If they are not to bo allowed to scalp, burn, ravihb, and steal iu endless im punity, the puuishmout which Sheridan visited upon them was mercy iu its highest sense, as well as justice. In dealing with savages so sunken, devilish-, and hopeless, stern, decisive, bloody war is the only resort. Death is the only punishment they can be made to fear. When it becomes a choice betweon talcing tho lite of a bloody, savage pirate, and exposing to death, and a fate often far worse, far belter people, we say let tho criminal die. It the innocent suffer with the guilty we cannot help it, for that is true in all wars, and will be so as long as wars take place in tho world. In the interest of the cause of peace and humanity, would it not be well for Mr. Gar rison to demonstrate the power of peace and non-resistant principles by undertaking a mission to what is left of the Piegans, and other marauders of the Plains. If two hun dred and fifty years of next to fruitless effort by both Trotestant and Cathoho missionaries to civilize these savages be not enough to deter him, seeing that tho destruction of slavery is complete, should Garrison not call for volunteers to help him civilize and make peaceable men out of tho Piegans? Sheridan will agree not to interpose a single bayonet between him and tue object of his philan thropio regard. Ihough they slay and eat him, Sheridan will stand out of the way. But until the savage and slaveholder alike agree to let other men have ail tue rictus wlitoU they claim for themselves, such sternly executive men as Phil Sheridan are among the most necessary and useful philanthropists of the time and of the world. THE CONNECTICUT ELECTION. From the K. Y. bun. The result of the Connecticut eleotion is significant and instructive. It was a square, fair fight, and the Democrats have carried their Governor and the rest of their State ' ticket by about 1000 majority. Through the inexcusable delays and general stupidity of . General Grant s administration the Ilepuwi csns were unable to sot tho fifteenth amend ment in operation, and thus obtain negro otes enough to have turned the aoale. This unfortunate result was, however, fully coun terbalanced by the discouragement diffused through the ranks of the Demooraoy by tho New Hampshire election. By means of the labor reform defection in that State, the Democratic candidate for Governor received about 7000 less votes than the Republican candidate. We repeat, thon, that the con test in Connecticut was a fair trial of strength between the two parties. Monday was a stormy day, and the Republicans tell us that this was the cause of their defeat, lint tue same heavens that lowered on the Republi cans frowned on the Democrats; and tue former cannot escape from the legitimate de ductions flowing from their overthrow by dodging behind a snow-storm. Governor Lnglish was a strong candidate. lie is rich and respectable. When in Con gress he supported all the war measures of President Lincoln, and he yoted for the abo lition of slavery in the District of Columbia. And though the convention whioh nominated him passed a stupid resolution about Cuban independence, and sharply cntioized tne moae by which the ratification of the fifteenth amendment had been secured, Governor Eng lish, in his carefully-prepared response to the nomination, took a step in advance of the convention on the uuban question, ana never alluded to its foolish utterances about the amendment. In so doing, he showed his good sense, and, with a fair war record behind him, by this sign he conquered. This is tne nrst real victory wmcn tne Democrats have achieved since General Grant assumed the Presidential office. Connecti cut, though not invariably, has generally been a Republican State from the time when the party was organized. But if the Demo cracy hope, even hope, to carry the next Pre sidential election, they must not merely win over Republican States like Connecticut, but must so use their triumphs as to hold them by a tenacious grasp. And this ia the task now committed to the bands of Uovernor Eng lish. Governor Seymour carried New York in 18G2, beating so strong a candidate as General Wadsworth; but he so conducted ,his administration as to be defeated when pre sented for re-election in 1804. He allowed the Copperheads to load him, and the people seized the first opportunity to pronounce judgment against him. His defeat for Gov ernor in 1804 largely contributed to his sig nal overthrow as a Presidential candidate in 1808. Let Governor English take warning from the lessons of history; and let him be assured that if he allows Copperheadism to thrust out its horns, or hands his State over to the corruptionists during his brief term, Connecticut will enter up a verdict against him in April, 1871; unless, like the great Tweed, in the recent Tammany contest, he shows the white feather, and running away from tha fight, buys up a sufficient number of his opponents afterwards. As the average of Presidents now run, Gov ernor English, if he will follow the advice of the Sun, and hold his own, and get re-elected in 1871, will become a formidable Demo cratic competitor for the Presidential nomina tion in 1872. Pendleton, Packer, and Hoff man are already counted out of the canvass. Governor English's most dangerous rivai, as the case now stands, is Senator Hendricks. He made a happy hit in his New Orleans speech, wherein he counselled the Democracy to accept all the results of the war and the policy of reconstruction, including the thir teenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth amendment:. Let English countercheck him in his message to the Legislature by covering all of Hen dricks' ground on these subjects, by marking out a bold policy in regard to Cuba, and by some sensible utterances on finance, taxa tion, and economy in national affairs. He will then prove himself to be a statesman, and will become the leader of his party in the Northeastern States. The defeat of so worthy and popular a man as Governor Jewell is a severe rebuke to General Grant's administration. It indicates a turn in the drift of the tide. The sensible Republicans should now demand a change of the Cabinet, and inform General Grant that unless ho conducts affairs on a more liberal and enlightened scale, many other Republican States will follow the example set by Con necticut. NAMES, CHRISTIAN AND nEATHEN. From the If. T. Tribune. Thomas Paine (not Common-Sense Thomas, but a Massachusetts verse-writer of the olden time), being disgusted with the doings of the other and doubting Thomas, petitioned the Legislature to give him a Christian name; and he was called and known, and in his time grew quite famous, as Robert Treat Paine, Jr. We would suggest some legislation of this kind in behalf of the Cherokee Indians. Those semi-aboriginal gentlemen have lately had occasion to present a couple of numerously signed petitions to Congress; and the names thereunto appended show that, in the Chero kee Nation, the art of baptism is still im perfectly understood. Some of these "poor Indians ' have, it is true, very respectable and civilized and thorouchly Yankee names. "Eze kiel Tucker," for instance, has a veritable Yankee flavor; "Looney McLane" is a good Irish, as "Thomas Carlyle" is a good Scotch name; "Benjamin Pisk" is eminently sugges tive of Cape Co1; and there is even a "Georgo Fox" to welcome the Quaker Com missioners when they visit the (Jnerokees. There is an individual who is named and signs himself simply "Wilson," in honor, we conjecture, of the Massachusetts Senator; there is another who names himself, in a sin gularly indefinite way, as "John;" there is another who goes further, and writes him self "John Pigeon;" we find, also, the roman tically historical name of "Hildebrand;" but what shall we say to the ornitbologico-zoolo-gical name of "Pig-Eaglo ?" What man of taste was it who gave to an innooont savage the name of "Edgar Poe Harris ?" But some of the names appended to this petition are sufficiently mysterious. There is one cabalistio child of the forest who simply writes himself "Six" there is another who vaunts himself as "John Large;" "0. Six killer" is a most homicidal autograph, highly suggestive of scalps; and "Ezekiol," we fancy, must be the prophet of the tribe. There is a "John Mixedwater," who probably mixes the water with something Htrouger; there is a "War Sort," who may be one of the military sort; and there is a man named with Dorio simplicity "Dry," and who is probably a kins man of Mr. Mixedwater. "Ground Hog" is (suggestive of Charles Lamb's nnfortuuate farce of "Mr. II." "David Israel" fitly repre sents the old dispensation; "Rattling Gourd" ought certainly to be a Member of Congress, and "Johnson Goodmoney" might give us, were he in Washington, some valuable no tions about the currency. There are several signers named "Grease," connected remotely perhaps with the Down East family of "Slicks," and by a singular coincidence a warrior named "Fodder" and another named "Grilts" sign in cloBe conjunction, being speedily followed by "Alexander Johnny cuke," while, by another coincidence, "John Love" and "George Moonshine" are in simi lar contiguity, and not far after Mr. Moon shine, very appropriately follows "Moses Glory." The signature of "Best Quality," to conclude, is sug gestive of all the perfection of whioh human, or at any rate Indian nature, is sus ceptible. It is pretty evident that most of these names have been bestowed upon their bearers by unprincipled pale faces, more in tent upon their jokes than upon the euphony of the Cherokee direotory. Is it probable that any Cherokeo would, of his own motion, call himself "Charles Potatoe?" or "Monse?" or "Spoon?" or "Root Curly Hard?" or "High?" or "Hog Shooter?" or "Drum Fish ?" Would he be any more likely than other Indiana to christen himself "ililde brand," "Zaohary Taylor," or "Edgar Poe?" And how would any white man like to be designated by his fellow-citizens as "Long Ears?" We are pleased to notice, however, that there are some proud Cherokees who refuse to be gammoned, and who still call themselves by the resounding and vernacular names of their ancestors. Thus we find attached to the petition sonorous titles worthy to fill the trumpet of fame: "Tee-Soo-Yar-Kee," and " Cah-lur-nur-hus-Ku;" " Hee-Lur-tas-Kee," and the highly unpronounceable "Cu-lee-skee-jah-nohter." Perhaps it would not do to ask for a literal translation of these curious and polysyllobio names; for "Neve-geo-munan-coo-wa" may mean nothing more re spectable and impressive than "Grub Worm," which is the English name of one of the signers. But sound is something, as all who have read "The Song of Hiawatha" very well know. To hear a man and a brother called "Jack Paunch" shocks our benevolent sensi bilities; but if the abdominal protuberance were expressed in the Cherokee language, it would be different and better. If the Chero kee is to have an English name, there is no reason for giving one which is mean or ridiculous. A TLEA FOR LOWER RATES OF DUTY ON SILK GOODS. From the X. 1. World. It is a mistake to suppose there is anything new in the contrivances by which the re cently discovered Custom House silk frauds of Wolf, May, and others were perpetrated. Those same contrivance?" have been time and again resorted to since the era of enormous rates of protective dutieB on imports. The trick is this: Under our system ad valorem duties are assessed on tho foreign, not home value. This value is determined and re ported to the collector by the appraisers, who bear the same legal relation to the former that assessors do to Collectors of In ternal Revenue. To provide for suoh de termination and report of value, the import must, by order of collector, be sent from importing vessel to tho appraisers' stores. The law provides that an entry must be made, and lodged with the collector, by the owner of the merchandise, accom panied by the invoice, of which latter the former is in chief part a transcript. To secure a correct entry, the 07th section of the statute of 1799 punishes with confiscation of the goods, if, on examination of the pack ages, it is found they differ in their contents from the entry paper; that is, if the merchan dise is entered by a false denomination. If an importer in his entry paper calls silk hose cotton hose, with intent to save duty thereon, the lav confiscates the package. An importer enters fifty cases of cotton hose, and desig nates them in his entry paper by their vari ous shipping marks, from 1 to CO, and de clares the foreign value thereof, the rate of duty chargeable thereon, and the total amount. To obviate the necessity of sending each case to the appraisers, the law has provided that at least one caso in ten shall be desig nated by the collector, on the invoice, te be sent to the appraisers, and the result in practice is that till recently the collector has rarely designated more than one in ten to be opened and examined. In fact, in this port it is impracticable to inspect a greater pro portion, as a general rule. When the de signation is thus made, those packages indi cated are sent from the vessel to the ap praisers, and the remainder go into ware house, or are taken by the importer, under his penal bond and a deposit of estimated duties. Now, right here comes in the trick. Of the fifty cases, five would, under the rule, be opened by the appraisers. Suppose, then, that the fifty packages, instead of being all cotton hose, paying say thirty-five per cent, duty, as entered, are thirty of them silk hose, chargeable with sixty per centum, and the ten containing cotton go to the appraisers. Of course, silk hose are thereby imported as cotton hose, and the importer does a "big thing. In the ordinary course of business the col lector might, by pure luck, designate ths cotton packages, or he might indicate half and half. That is possible. But in the pre sent assumed frauds the broker swears that he asked the deputy collector to call for an appraiser's return on cortain specified cases, and sometimes it was done and sometimes not ?one, and when not done the broker would take the papers to deliver to the next official in routine, but, instead of so deliver ing, would destroy them, await or make another invoice, and then try again till the desired cases were designated. There is no pretense or any evidence in the present cases that the deputy collector was bribed or paid, but thut the broker by falsely representing that since there were difforent grades of cot ton goods, for example, on the invoice, the indicated packages should be sent to the appraisers in order to have a fair examination of the whole importation. Since the first development of this trans action tho collector has, we learn, ordered his deputies to send all the packages to the appraisers, whenever the person making entry indicates which of them he desires to be opened. The point of this last exposure is the use lessneBS and immorality of existing rates of duty; uselessness, because frauds, impossi ble of prevention, as was blockade-breaking during the Kebellion, maue nigu rates pro ductive of less revenue than would be low rates, which would not offer such temptations to smugglers and cheats generally; and im morality, because the present tariff by its temptations to dishonesty is demoralizing importers, Custom House ofUeialH, manufao turers, Congress, and consumers alike. The present rate of duty on a staple article like black piece silks is sixty per centum in gold, and whut is the consequence? Ask any honest dealer in this city, aud he will say that he cannot and does not purchase abroad and import, for the reason that he can buy cheaper here. This is a universal fact. Blaok piece silks are salable everywhere. Thoyare as mar ketable as gold. Hence, on aooount of the high rates of duty, they come in illegitimately across the Texas border, through the South ern ports, over the Canada border, as well as under the eyes and nose of Collector Grin nell. There are a plenty of men of pecuniary responsibility who will contract to deliver them on the counter of a New York dealer for a percentage far below the rates, of duty thereon. So It is with most of staple artiolei of great value on which tho high protective ratps of duty are imposed. Moral Abandon forever existing rates of duty. POOR IRELAND ! Prom the S. T. Time. The more we consider Mr. Gladstone's bill for "preserving the peace" in Ireland, the deeper becomes our conviction tnat it is a mensnre which cannot fail to aggravate the sufferings of the Irish people, and to render the ancient differences between England and Ireland perfectly hopeless of adjustment. The Irish people may well say, "If this ia what we are to get from a liberal govern ment, the sooner ae fall under the compara tively gentle rule of the Tories the better." Let us look into one or two of the provisions, as expounded by the rail Mall Gazette which heartily approves of the bill and only grumbles because it was not introduced before. Resident magistrates and county inspectors are to have warrants placed in their hands authorizing them to search any man's house for arms at all hours of the day or night. If A has a grudge against B, he has only to give the nearest magistrate a hint that the said B has arms in his possession, or that he has written a threatening lotter. B's premises may then be ransacked, and if a pistol is found, or a scrap of writing which seems to connect him with threatening letters, he may be sent to prison and kept to hard labor for two years, in tne time of the h rench Revo lution, when any man who was declared "sus pect" was torn away from his family and sent to prison, greater wrongs were not possible than under the system of espionage thus esta blished by Air. uiaostone. If a man is found walking out of doors after dark in proclaimed districts he may be ar rested. "If he can show no lawful purpose or excuse in being abroad at night he may be imprisoned for six months." Thus if a man went out to smoke a pipe with his neighbor he might expiate tne crime by six months imprisonment. Inns may be closed at sunset by the police, and "suspicious strangers lodged in jail People had better be careful how they go travelling in Ireland for some time to come, Newspapers which give offense to the Govern ment are not to be prosecuted according to the ordinary forms of law, but the police are empowered to walk into the office, seize the type and machinery, turn out the editors, and lock the premises up. No such despotio mea sure has been attempted in any "free coun try for many a long day. If a witness is summoned before a magis. trate, and cannot or will not give evidence, he may be summarily committed to prison for six months. Why not revive the peine Jort et dure at once i It would have been quite worthy of the general character of this bill. Persons accused under most of the provisions of the act will have no right to demand a trial by jury, but may bo sent to jail by the justices off-hand. There were always plenty of "sneaking spies" in Ireland who were only too ready to turn round and "inform" upon any one against whom they had a spite. Henceforth this class will have their hands quite full. As blood-money is to be paid to the informer the game will be lucrative in itself, and afford the opportunity for wreaking private malice, Thus, once more is Ireland to be handed over to base-hearted smos and relentless nolice. Men are to be brought up for a hurried trial. and deprived of their liberty under the influ ence of panic or a desire to "please the Goy ernment." What can we look for but sorrow and disaster from a law which sanctions all these cruel outrages? Mr. Gladstone has made a false step which ought to result in his ruin, as it will assuredly leave an everlasting stain upon cis reputation. SPECIAL NOTICES. ggy- TREGO'S TEABERRY TOOTH WASH. It la tha moat pleasant, cheapest and best dontifrice ext&n l. warramea tree from injurious ingredient. 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FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROOF SAFE STOKE NO. 63 SOUTH FOURTH STREET, 3U A f aw doon abora Ohaannt it, Phlla OROOERIES ANP PROVISIONS. lYf I O II A K L MEAGHER & CO., Ho. S23 South SIXTEENTH Street, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In PROVISIONS, OYBTER8 AND TKB"API8. Blafiar a iutra uanuea uuiin, ' - " PKAB. -mm PKAOHE8. Maryland Oannrd TOMATOKg, IUuaUanu4 APAbAUU& orrv ORDINANCES. COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADEL PHIA. Clerk's Officr, ) PniLAPBi.rniA, March 25, 1870. ) In accordance with a resolution adopted by the Common Council of the City of Philadel phia on Thursday, the twenty-fourth day of March, 1870, tho annexed bill, entitled "An Ordinance to authorize a loan for the erection of a bridge across the river tfchuylklll at fair mount," la hereby published for public infor mation. JOHN ECKSTKIZH, Clerk of Common Council. ANT ORDINANCE To Authorize a Loan for the Erection of a Bridge across the River Schuylkill at Fair mount. Sect on l. The (Select and common councils of the city of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Mayor of 1'niiaiieipD.ia be ana uo is nereoy au thorized to borrow, at not less tnan par, on tue credit of the city corporation, from time to time, such sums of money as may be necessary to pay lor tne construction ana erection oi a bridge over the river Schuylkill at Fairmount, not exceeding in the whole the rum of seven hundred thousand dollars, for which interest not to exceed the rate of six per cent, per au- num shall be paid, half-yearly, on the first days of January and July, at the office of the City Treasurer. The principal of said loan shall he payable and paid at the expiration of thirty years from the date of the same, and not before, without the consent of the holders thereof; and certlll- catcs therefor, in the usual form of certificates of city loan, shall be Issued In such amounts as the lenders may require, but not for any frac tional part of one hundred dollars, or, if re- nnired. in amounts oi nve nunarea or one iuou sand dollars; and it shall be expressed in said certificates that the said loan therein mentioned. and the interest thereof, are payable free from all taxes. Section 2. Whenever any loan shall be made by virtue thereof, there shall be, by forco of this ordinance, annually appropriated, out of the Income of the corporato estates ana irotn tue sum raised by taxation, a sum sufficient to pay the interest on said certificates; and tne tur thcr sum of three-tenths of one per centum on the par value of such certificates so issued, shall be annroDrlated Quarterly out of said In come and taxes to a sinklnir fund, which fund and its accumulations are hereby especially pledged for the redemption and payment of said certlllcaies. TESOLUTION TO PUBLISH A LOAN X, BILL. Resolved. That the Clerk of Common Coun cil be authorized to publish in two daily news- naners of this city, dally for two weeks, the ordinance presented to the Common Council on Thursday, March 24, 1870, entitled "An ordi nance to authorize a loan lor tne erection oi u bridge across tho river 8chuylklll at fair- mount." And the said clerk, at tho stated meet ing of Councils, after the expiration of four weeks from the first day of said publication, shall present to this Council one of each of said newspapers for every day in which the some shall be made. 3 2U 2 It COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADELPHIA. J Clehk'8 Office, Philadelphia. Feb. 4, 1870. In accordance with a Resolution adopted by the Common Council of the City of Philadel phia, on Thursday, the third day of February, law, tne annexed bin, entitiea "an ordinance To create a loan for the building of a bridge over the River Schuylkill, at South street. and for the payment of ground rents and mortgages," is hereby published for public in formation. JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk of Common Council. ORDINANCE TO CREATE A LOAN OVER THE RIVER SCHUYLKILL ATSOUTII STKEET, AND FOR THE PAYMENT OF GROUND RENTS AND MORTGAGES. Section 1. The Select and Common Councils of tbe City of Philadelphia do ordain. That tbe Mayor of Philadelphia be and he ia hereby auinorizea to Dorrow, at not less tnan par, on the credit of the city, from time to time, ooe million live nunarea thousand dollars, to be ap plied as follows, viz.: First. For tho building of a bridge over the River Schuylkill at South street, eight hundred thousand dollars. Second. For the payment of ground rents and mort gages, 6even hundred thousand dollars, for which interest not to exceed the rate of six per cent, per annum shall bo paid half yearly on the first days of January and July, at the ofllco of tho City Treasure! mo principal oi tne saia loan shall be payable aud paid at the expiration of thirty years Irom the date oi the same, ana not before, without the consent of the holders there f; and the certificates therefor, in the usual form of the certificates ot the City Loan, shall be Issued In such amounts as tbe lenders may require, but not for any fractional part of one liunured or ODe thousand dollars; and it shall be expressed lu said certificates that the loan therein mentioned. and the Interest thereof, are payable free from all taxes. Section 2. Whenever any loan shall bo made by virtue thereof, there shall be, by force of this ordinance, annually appropriated out of the income of the corporato estates, and from the sum raised by taxation, a sum eullicient to pay the interest on said certificates; and the further sum of three-tenths of one per centum on the par value of such certificates so issued shall be appropriated quarterly out of said in come and taxes to a sinking fund, which fund and its accumulations are hereby especially pledged for the redemption and payment of said certlllcaies. RESOLUTION BILL. TO PUBLISH A LOAN Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Council be authorized to puilifh in two dally news papers of this city, daily for four weeks, tho ordinance prcsemea to i;oninion (jouncii on Thursday, February 3, 1870, entitled "An ordi nance to create a loan lor tue building ot a bridire over the river Schuylkill, at South street. and for tbe payment of ground-rents aud mort gages." And tne said nerk. at tne stated meet- lug of Councils after said publication, shall pre sent to this Council one of each of said news papers for every day in which the same shall f. o.o t.non r.,nrl, S Oil. WATCHES. JEWELRY. ETO. WILLIAM B. WARNK & CO Wholenal Dralem in Tl. .-.T WATUHK8 AJ.D JKVlKLRV. STK. oorner BKVKNTU and GHKtiNUT Btreet H 1K1 iseuonn noor. ana law oi no. Bt B. rni nu ou CLOCKS, TOWER CLOCKS. MARISLIC clocks. bronze clocks. cou0ou oi.o0ks. Vienna regulators. AMKRIOAN CLOCKS. No. 22 NOllTH SIXTH STUKET. CKINT.'W furnishing qoods. pATENT SHO UL.DKK-SMAW BHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STOIUl PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DKAWEI S inurie rvom measurement at very short notice. All other article! of tilOvl'LiUlEN 'ti DRESS GOODS In full variety. 19 WINCHESTER ft CO., No. Tut CUBNUT titroet. PAPER HANQIN08. LOOK I LOOK 1 1 LOOK 1 1 1 WALL PAPERS and Linen Window Bbade Manufactured, th eheapost In th eity.at JOHNBTON'H Depot, No. m SPRING GARDEN Btreet, below Eleventh. Uraoob, No, Itf iHDItBAL btrt, Camden, w Jaraay. m 6HIPPINCU IMPORTANT NOTICE TO SHIPPERS. Parties having freight on steamship FROMBV TBEU8, for CHARLESTON, 8. O., will take notice that the freight Is transferred to stumer A OH ILLB3, for SAVANNAH, to be reshlpped from there to points of destination. Insurance should be transferred from the Prome thcus to the Achilles. SOUDER & ADAMS, AGENTS. 4T LORILLARD'S STEAMS III? USB FOB YORK re now receiving freight M S cent prr 100 pounds. 3 rrnts per loot, or 1-9 rent per gallon, hl option. Kitrm rates on mull pack Iron, metals, ato. No receipt or bill of lading signed for lees than SO oaota. Tha Una would call attention of merchant generally to tha fact that hereafter tha regular ahippera by this lino will be charged only 10 cent per 100 lbs., or 4 osnte pot foot, during tha winter aeaaona. For farther particular! applj to JOHIf F. ohl. 8 285 PIER 19. NORTH WHARVES. Taw j i iai tnr uul A. ri u & MBOTTirirNa'Pouritt y . ti -. , V r n vvvtvuv.;-.. . .. f L 1 .7. .1 w . . . . u iiinu uiJOV OI Mil i'JXDtauDtn ara .nnni n tA n a. 4 1 At fcwJ rluiL Iowa:- Uit.j of lxD0on, batnrriar, April In, 1 P. M. (Jity of Paltim.ire, via Halifax, Tnoeday, April 19, 8 A. If. Oily of Vv aubmslon, Saturday, April 28. la Noon. And aaoh nnceedin Kattinl.. am. Thui. KATR8 OF PAS8AGH. BY TTTK MAD, rtiiheb uiuxn kvkrt aATTmniv. Pavabla in (inlrl. 1M. in WTI) ,1 . LI I lu . .u, i emn- - I i . ' . v n jl unjjin,, , ...... .biiiu i oi r,r.nAun To Iondon 15 To 1-ondoo ' in To Paria 116 To Pari ..a a raSHAOB BT TUB IUUDAZ ITXAMKB, VIA HAMTAX FtllBT CABIN. 0TKKRAOB. PaMhla in linlA Pinhl. l ! Liverpool tW IJTHrpool .. Halifax i) HaiifaT.....;.;";;";,r5 Bt. John's, It. P., St. John'a, N. P., j ij crancD at earner....) tif Kranch 8tamer....( PaenenKersalso forwards to liana. Hinhnn. Knm. to., at reduced ratoa. Ticket can be bonatit hare at mod era t rat br Deraona wlKhina to erad for their frienda. " f or farther particular apt"? attn Jompaoj'a Offloa Or to O'DONNFLL ft PaM,7&&J' 46 Ho. 408 OHKBNUT Street. Phlia"pljja. 5T!. . PHILADELPHIA, RICHMOND, frCS1' NOHFOLK BTKAM8HIP LINH. IgXTTHROUKH PRRIUHT AIB UNBJTO iKASEO PA0IIL1IK8 AND RKDUOED RATES Steamer lean It VI IT IV ic iiui TmiRK Ivl '5 KlMOWD MONDAYS anf TUKDAYS. ' nd NOBIfl'K TUESDAYS aid 8A- da?.UUU ' UdIn" ,,ge,1 18 0'olock-on man; THROUGH RATES to all point In Worth inri R-u Carolina, ria Beaboard At, llZ. ulSJLTZ. "If?? Portsmouth, and to Lrnobbarr. Va., Tenneeaee. and th RATI TH ANDAN Y OraKRNri Uke 1,0 WKB tranafer oomnuanon, oraiga, or anj xpna of hteamanip insure at lowest rata. Freight recoived daily. Stat Room aooommodatlomi for pasaramra. rsONLY DIRECT LLNE to FRANCE fefeJH? OKWERAI, TRANSATLANTIC! SW COMPANY'S ivkllNNKW YORK ANn hTubo ...Yil . MAIL STKAMHHIPH BRKST wAjjAjmuA, The anlendld new tanuIi on tVtim f i . . S2.W,riU from PiM W. North riT. PRIOR nrr Pigiina In gold (InoIndlnK wine), " . 'l0 OR HAVRF. First Cabin $1401 Second (.),! n . a, .. T. PARIS. vam niuuin railway tiraeta, furnished on board 1 Blrst Cabin 8146 I Second Cbin ." ' 1 hose steamers do not carry steerage paaseaaera. " Medical attendance free of ehanreT 88 American traVAllnni .nirt. t n n, Mittnilna f 4h tmunt of Kurepe, by taking the steamers of this Unatrali unnecessary risks from transit by K.anlish railwaystai crossing th ohannal, besides saving time, trouble, and . For passage In Pbiladaiphia, apply at Adams Rxpre. Company, to h l I.KAir I8M No. 820 OHK8NITT sfi FOR NEW YORK via Delaware and Rnritan Oanal Ihe btuum Propellers of the Linn ili Ing on the Hth inst., leaving Daily nsual" in Kouuii irt in KMk.fnUK HOPR8. Goods forwarded by all the lines going out dt New York .....!, i.oooi oomuiission. Freight received at low ratoa WILLI A M P. CLYDK A CO., Agent. JAMF.8 HAND. 1 Av.no. No. 1I WALL btreet. New York. 8 44 FOR NEW YORK. tSWH'TSUR K TKANSPORTATIOM COM PA NY. DF.8PATOH AND bWIFTSTJRB LINES Leaving daily at 12 M. and 6 P. M. Tb Steam Pionellora nf thia Mmi.inf will MAmmAn. loading on the Hth oi March. J hreuKh in twenty-four hour. Coods forwarded to any point free of commissions. Freiuhts taken on aooommodating terma. Appiy to WILLIAM M. BAIRD A CO., Agent, No. laa bouth DKLAWAKK Arena. C4 NEW EXPRESS LINK TO Alexandria, Georgetown, and Washington, D. '- V.. via Chesapeake and Delaware (lnl. rit h DUUUPVtlUDBlt. Am.ni1ri.rH,nilh.n,n.t jliHU, s Lincllburg. Hriatnl. Knmnll. K.hiil .. Boutbwest. ' ' Steamers leav rognlarly every Saturday at noon from the nrst wharf above Market street. i.'' u . : j : i .. VIVJut nviiTW UI1J WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO, . No. 14 North and South wbarva. HYDE A TYLER. Auanta. l. iiuo..-., ar ELDKIDGK CO., Agent at Alexandria. tip AORIOULTURALi BUI ST' 8 WARRANTED GARDEN JSItKI8. Tho Heeds we offer are exoluslvolr tuoaeof our own growth, and will bo found fur superior to thos generally sold by dealers. Market gardeners and privato taniilies, to whom reliable seeds are of th utuuut iu portative, should obtain their smmlift" from milKI K KKKI) V A ItMltOH, Nos. P22nnd H34 MARKKT Ktreet. above Nin'h. Call or send for Itiiixt's Garden Manual and Price List for 1H7U, which containa 120 uuirea of useful information to country residents. 8 17 lin ft AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS AND OARDKN TOOLS. Ploughs, Hsrrows. Oultiva toia, peed bowers, Churns, Garden and Field Rullors, Lawn Mowera, Railroad aud Garden Wheelbarrows; Hav. btraw, and Fodder Cuttera, all at reduced prices. (Jail and examine our stock ROBERT BUIST, Jk.. BKKD WARKHOU8K, 8 17 lm Wo. 923 and tK4 MARKET Btreet. THE PHILADELPHIA LAWN MOWER. J-Tliis is the most improved hand machine made, audia just the article needed by all who have grass to out. It can be operated by a lady without fatigue. Pric2af and every Mower warranted. Bold by ROBKRT BTJI8T, Jn., BKKD WARKHOUbE, 817 1 rn No. P22 and H24 MARKET btreet PERSONAL.. NOTICE. APPLICATION WILL BE MADE to Ibe City Treaaurer for new eertHuatea for the fol. it wing City six pe cent, loans, free from all taxes: Corliticsta No. I9.UU3, Loan No. 84, dtud November 9, r 67, tFtu,otJO. CfTtiti'cuts No. 2848, New Loan, dated November S3. lt7, IWiU. Certiticat No. 10,331, Liabilities, dated November 26. 1? 87. HKX). Cvrtiiii ate No. 19,333, Municipal Loan, dated November 2i, Ib17, KhjO. Certificate No. 640, Wator Loan, dated May 8, 1868, $1000. CnrtUioat No. i,14o, Park Loan, dated April 2, lnoil, HiOll. 187 thUin Pi EINQ AND SOOURINQ. JOSEPH W O T T E T. KLKVE DK PARIS, " FRENCH STEAM DYKING AND BOOURINQ. On any kind of Wearing Apparel, for Ladies, (ion te, and Children. Patent ayaratua for btratubing Past trum on to firs Inohe. 4 Pirn