2 THE DAILY iSVJ&NIHG TELEOKAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 0, 1870. gfxiixx or Tiin rziss3. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day tor the Evening Telegraph. SOME CONSIDERATION'S FOR TROTE3- TAN T CON TItO VlillSI VLIS IS. From the N. Y. Xatwn. The controversy about tbo Uiblo ia the schools i rapidly Hprmfliii. Ia this State- it promiHcs to furnish, before, very lung, one of the moRt exciting political insuoa we hare ever had, owing to ttio unHcrupuluusness dis played by the Gutholics in obtaining from the Albany Legislature largo votes of money amounting in the present year to half a mil lion of dollars for the snpport of their schools. Their success in this sort of operation, too, not unnaturally renders them loss disposed than ever to aid thoir Protestant neighbors in the discovery of a worfua vivendi on the nchool question. They do not care whether Bible-reading in the publio schools is aban doned, and, indeed, show some signs of being as much opposed to it as the High Trotostant party, who consider the JJible-reading one of the most important parts of the Bchool curri culum. As long as the Riblo is road at the opening of the school exercises, and is read for the reasons assigned by Judge Storer in the recent decision of the Superior Court in Cincinnati, and by some Protestant clergy, the priests have an argument in favor of separate Catholic schools such as nothing else could furnish them. All the good which, according to the Protectant view, a Catholic child gets by listening to the Scriptures is, according to the Catholic view, so much poison; and, the more eager Protestants show themselves for its administration, the more frantic aro Catholics bound to become in escaping from it. The reason, too, is obvious it is drawn from the very constitution of the Catholic Church. She is, on the Catholic theory, the sole teacher of truth. Nothing which reaches the soul through any other channel, however respectable, is instruction in righteousness. She knows nothing of morals apart from dogma. She recognizes no man as good who is not a good Catholic The Bible is a good book in the hands of a priest, expounding it in the manner directed by the Church; in the hands of a layman, and, above all, of a heretic layman, it is nothing but a snare and stumbling-block. There are some Protestunts, we are sorry to say, into whose heads it seems impossible to hammer a proper comprehension of the Catho lic position on this subject, and who, never theless, as might be expected, insist on taking a heated and active part in the pending con troversy, and never open their lips without making a settlement of it more difficult and more remote. They talk of the Bible as if it occupied the same position in Catholic that it occupies in Protestant theology, and as if the differences between the two churches were simply differences of interpetration the fact being that the Catholics do not and never have acknowledged it as a final authority, or as the sole basis of the claims of their Church to the respect and obedience of Christendom. All they draw from it is corroborative evidence as to the cor rectness of the Church's own account of its origin and history. For instance, Christ's well-known declaration to Peter, so often cited in support of the supremacy of the .Roman See, they treat simply as a corrobo ration of what has "always, everywhere, and by all" been received and acknowledged as Catholic truth, or, in other words, of ecclesiastical tradition. It is this dis tinction which gives an air of positive self-stultification to a large number of the arguments in favor of com pulsory Bible-reading in the schools, which one hears both from the platform and the bench and the press. Nobody has a right to attack a position, or, at all events, nobody can attack it with success, without under standing it. It is melancholy to listen, as one has nowadays sometimes, to a long string of reasons for not yielding to the Catholic view, every one of which helps to confirm the Catholic in his view the Catholio being the only person who needs to be convinced, or who is giving any trouble. The very first thing to be done by Protest ants before engaging in the warfare which is now apparently before them, is to strengthen the one weak point in their own case, a' i that is the removal from the State education of the one feature which prevents it being really and truly secular education simply. It must be remembered that it is not enough that Protestants should acknowledge that the common-school education is simply secular; Catholics must acknowledge it; and Catholics eannot be expected to acknowledge it, on the Protestants' own showing, as long as Bible-reading forms part of it. The very tenacity with which Protestants cling to it they justify on the ground that it is religious instruction, and, of course, religious instruc tion of a Protestant complexion; without it, Judge Storer says the children would be "left without a God in the world;' or, in other words, without a religious creed. The whole system of school instruction should be such that no sent c-.m say that it contains anything likely to help to spread the tenets of any other sect. It will, doubtless, still be said that schools in which no religion is taught are '"godless schools," but this we canuot help; for the "godlessnoss" of schools all sects have a ready remedy by teaching reli gion at homo, or by clerical instrumentality out of school hours. If a system of this kind does not satisfy all, nothing will. No nearer approach to a satisfactory system of state education can ever, in the existing con dition of the human mind, be made; and when wo have got it into work ing order, we have the consolation of knowing that it cannot bo assailed by any argument which does not touch its very exist ence; that, in short, there is no pretence or deception about it. The second thing ProtestantjThnve to do, if they mean to bring this controversy to a rea sonable and satisfactory settlement within the lifetime of the present generation, is to avoid talking of und treating Catholics as nece.isarily enemies of free government, and their religion as incompatible with true alle giance to tbo State in which they livj. One hears a good deal of this just now from the pulpit os well as from the platform, and it is both misleading and inexpedient. Nothing can be more absurd, for instance, as well as unfair, than Mr. J iep worth's performance in citing the Pope's Encycli cal and the appended Syllabus by way of proving that Catholics are not likely to be good citizens, or aro likely to Lear divided allegiance, or, in case or a con- ilict of authority, to side with the Pope rather than with the American Government. All that tho Encyclical proves, in the eyes of the best observers, is what the proceedings at the (Ecumenical Council are proving every day, that the Pope is a very simple-minded and somewhat fanatical old monk, in the hands of very bad advisofs, composed, in the main, of Koman Jesuits. The anxiety the wobt enlightened Catholics fool about his compels due rot to thoir fear that be will I reduce the Catholic world to slavery, but to I their fear that he will alienate the Catholio world from religion itself. Nothing can be more preposterous than the assumption that any government is afraid that tho Syllabus will weaken its authority, though many Ca tholio governments do fear that it may com plicate their rolatious with tho Catholio clergy, already mado very troublosomo by the process of secularization through which even the most bigoted Catholic States are passing before eur eyes. In no countries is the Papal authority so weak at this moment as in Ca tholic countries countries which the Pops has had for ages at his feet. If the Syl labus be a laughing-stock in Prance and Austria and Bavaria, and even in Spain, and the greatest Catholio theolo gians of the European continent make light of Papal pretensions, it is a little too bad to have it usod as a red rag in American pulpits to rouse the Protestant bull into fury. Tho Cutholic laity have never in any country, or in any age, accepted the ecclesiastical mea sure either of the province of tho church or of the dues of the state, and they are not likely to make a beginning in the United States. But there is one striking example in history perhaps the most awful of all the lessons his tory has to offer of the folly of treating Catholics as if they did believe all the worst and wildest doctrines that could be dug out by controversialists from the ponderous tomes of Catholio theologians and canonists, and that is Ireland. Ireland is what sho is to-day becauso Protestant England has persisted for two centuries in legislating for her on the hypothesis that everything tho Pope said, I rub. Catholics believed, and that any order he chose to issuo they would surely execute. We all see the result; pleasant and successful, is it not ? Ve do not believe that a true and satisfac tory reconciliation of the Catholic Church, as its doctors define it, with modern society will ever be effected. This reconciliation is a dream in which many great Catholics of recent times, from Lammeuais to Montalem bertand Father I lyacinthe.have sought refuge from distressing internal doubts and cju flicts; but one has only to read even a mode rate statemont of tho church's claims, and take even an imperfect view of the condition of modern States, to feel that a dream it must forever remain. Tho relations of the Catholic clergy to the state must always be, as they are now, marked by hostility and aggressiveness on the one side and suspicion on the other; but this furnishes no excusa for attempts to drive the Catholic laity into thoir arms, by pretending to re card them as beiug in all things the humble and submissive sheop tho priests would like to have thorn The wuy tho Catholic Church gets along in modern Booiety is by letting tho laymen manage politics pretty much as they please; and the only true and statesmanlike course for American Protestants to adopt in dealing with the Catholic laymen is to treat them us men like ourselves, permeated like ns by tho modern spirit, treading the solid ground of utility in dealing with secular affairs, ready to argue and open to conviction, and not as a parcel of devotees, led by the hand by the monks. fed on legends, and requiring to be followed to the polls by a spiritual diroctor. e say this on the supposition that no Trotestant gentleman has ns yet discovered any short and speedy method of getting rid of the Catholics, and that we have to live with and make the best of about x, 000,000 of them, who, if not educated or attached to the Government somehow, are pretty certain to furnish a considerable supply of robbers and murderers, and a disturbing element in our politics of no mean power. But, if anybody has hit on any plan of rooting them out be fore the next Presidential election, of course we are willing to see it tried, provided it be not too inhuman or treacherous, or does not involve tho slaughter of young children. These can, of course, be saved and brought up in the common schools as indomitable Protestants. LIBERTY OF THE PRESS. From the rail Mall Gazette. The only part of tho Irish Peace Preserva tion bill which has met with general disfavor, even from Irish members, is the part which gives the Government summary powers to suppress seditious newspapers; and the stric tures on this provision are the only hostile criticisms which are at all likely to command assent even from the most advanced section of English Liberals. They are bo far from commanding any such assent from us that we believe that without this power the Irish executive would be totally unable to cope with so enormous an evil as the seditious journalism of Ireland; but there is an air of plausibility about the considerations opposed to restraining the Irish press which make it worth while to state with some detail why we attach no weight to them. Mr. Maguire laid some stress on the argu ment supposed to be derivable from the analogy of France. It is true that the French Government, even before the late changes, deliberately divested thomsolves of a power similar to that with which tho Irish Government now ask Parliament to in vest them. But Mr. Maguire left out the important fact that the now discarded system was bv no means a temporary one. Tho French Government did not suppress papers as an avowed act of self-preservation. Had they done nothing more than this, and had they been able to prove that no measure short of this would answer the end, tho course they took would so far have been justified. But there must be something radically wrong in a constitution which can only be kept alive by the habitual use of such extremely strong medicines, and the great vice of the French press law was that it had nothing to mark that it was not designed to be permanent. A second differ ence between the powers entrusted to tho Executive in the two cases consists in the absence from the French system of any proper definition of the offenses against which it was directed. No doubt it is not easy, even in England, to give an off-hand descrip tion of the crime of treason. But in prac tice the line between political criticism and sedition is drawn with sulUcicut distinctness, whereas in France, until lately, it was not drawn at all. Articles which in England would be classed among attacks moro or less pungent upon tho members of the Cabinet, counted in France as attempts to bring tho Government into hatred und contempt. Tho law of which the Cuurrier da J)imauche, for example, was the victim, was as differ ent from that now proposed for Irelaud as tho articles in tho Irishman J.ire from the writings ofM Prevost-Poradol. And oven if thejl ronuh law had been exclusively applicable to c:isos of treason or sedition tho limitation would have been worthless, for tho simple reason that there would have been no meuus of vin dicating it when it was transgressed. There is nothing in France answering to the right of action for daniBges which is given by the Peace bill to every aggrieved newspaper pro prietor. There is no ground for doubting that this provibiou will constitute a purfoctly adequate protection for all such journalists as deserve to be protected. Treasonable writing is in practice very easily soparablo from the strongest writing that is not trea sonable. It nisy not bo bo in oonntries whioh are not under constitutional povernment. becauso in these to attack the system of rule is to attack tho person of the ruler. But among ourselves there in a perfeotly appreciable difference between attacking this or that law, or agitating for this or that chnnge, and advocating treason. The sedi tious press of Ireland has never attempted to keep within any well-drawn line. It has scorned the idea of caution and accustomed its readers from the beginning to the very strongest possible meats. Exhortations to throw off the English yoke and easy lessons in Insurrectionary wanare have been its staple teaching all along. That tho clause which gives its proprietary a right of action by way of redress for annihilation will remain a dead letter is likely enough; but it will remain so, not because there is any difficulty in getting damages when the Government has made a mistake, but because the charac ter of the condemned journals will bo bo un mistakable that nooffroutery will be equal to tho task of establishing thoir loyalty. Another objection alleged against this part of the bill is that it ruins tho innocent printers and lets the guilty writers escape. But in political offenses, even more than in any others, the primary end of punish ment is the safety of tho community. We have never very much respect for the thin-end-of-the-wedge style of argument, and in this case it seems to be more than ordi narily destitute of force. If the press were a declining power in this country, with eneinios and rivuls rising up around it and threatening to supersede its influence, there might be some excuse for such fears. But, instead of this, the press is daily arrogating to itsolf more and more the functions which were formerly discharged by Parliament, by the Church, and by tho law courts. Newspapers have become a necessary of modern life, and those who provide them have all the strength which belongs to tho exclusive possessors of a commodity in universal demand. But if there nre any timid souls ivho still look on a free press as a precarious blessing that may be snatched from them at any mo ment, we commend two considera tions to their notice. Tho worst enomy of journalism is the man who would substitute insurrection for discussion. Amid the din of civil strife newspapers as well as laws are necessarily silent. If the Govern ment cherished a secret desire to p'lt a bridle upon English journalism, their true policy would be to let n certain socliou of Irish journulism have its own way, and bring about the end for which it labors. Further, it must be re-.aembered that the seditious press of Ireland differs from most of its predecessors in that or auy other coun try, in beiDg a preacher of murder, not of rebellion of murder which cannot even be dignified with the name of political assassination. By common consent a newspaper which attacks private charac ter loses the immunities with which it is invested so long as it restricts itself to the region of public aff airs. The lives of indivi duals are, to say the least, not less sacred than their characters: and even the fanatics who maintain that the tyrannicide should go unpunished will hardly assert the same liberty for the preachers of agrarian massacre. Peruana the best argument tor the press clauses of the Peace Preservation bill is that tho journalists who will suffer under them have already forsaken their colling to become the panders of private revenge. A WAIL OF GENUINE AGONY. I'mm ths Lexington (Jb.) Caucasian. Down! Down!! Down!!! During the whole nine years ot radical rule: lhe proudest, freest, most enlightened, prosperous, and hnppy nation on the globe in 1300. The low est, basest, poorost, most utterly brutalized and enslaved in 1870! Cotton-field niggers legislating for the descendants of the Wash ington, Randolphs, Hamptons, and Lees! A Pennsylvania nigger befouling the seat of Piokensand Pinckney, on the Supreme Bench of South Carolina! A niggor barber scrawling his boorish X mark to the legislative enact ments of Louisiana, as Lieutenant Governor, and President of the State Senate! A nigger cabin boy signing the commissions of Con gressmen, Sheriff's, and Circuit Judges, as Secretary of State of Mississippi! And a thievish nigger preacher grinning and comb ing his lousy wool in the place once filled by the hero, statesman, and patriot, Jefferson Davis, in the United States Sonate,-so called, whilst a leprous, ulcer-eaten Senator and ex Governor congratulates his associate black guards and the country on the change! God of the ruined and the desolate ! Was ever a people so fallen before ? Men of the North! Men of tho South! Americans! Countrymen ! Fellow slaves ! Awake ! Arise ! Shuke off' your lethargy, and face tho Truth ! Givo the hellions who've wrought tho horrid change a little longer lease of power, ond no Gabriel in all the wide universe, though ho should split his mighty tooter, can ever sound a blast power ful enough to rescue us from the tenfold politicul death and damnation to which we're doomed ! Cease your dastardly truckling and yielding to the death-doserviug conspira tors who have usurped the Government ! Cease your infamous temporizing, your cring ing and your fawning ! Set your face, like stubborn steel, jigaiiisi them and all thoir ac cursed silu rues! Remeiuber that they nre your enemies the enemies of the republic enemies of the Constitution sworn foes of liberty foes of God, and of common humanity! Encourag ing them, "conciliating" them, is tampering with your own destruction! They must be overthrown, annihilated, or you, we, and our country are eternally undone ! CLOSE THE BOOKS! From the X. Y. Tribune. Yesterday, the colored men of our city cele brate, by a procession, followed by a publio meeting, the completion of the good work of their emancipation by the ratification of the fifteenth amendment to the Federal Consti tution. Ve ardently trust that All may unite in the fervent hope that tho rights won for tho black race may be so exercuod as to benefit not themselves onjy, but our whole people. To-day, the American Anti-Slavery Society which has fought tho battle of uni versal freedom bravely, if not always wisely, fur the last forty years meets to disband its orgnnizntion, in testimony that its warfare is accomplished. Seldom has so small a body contended so persistently, unflinchingly, for so great a truth; seldom has a cause which, ut the outset, seemed to ordinary vision so hopeless, achieved such unqualified triumph in the lifetime of its first apostles. 1 hat triumph is of moment not alone ia our country. It tolls the knell of human bondage throughout tho civilized world. For the second time the truth is to be established, and enforced thut a Christian can neither originate nor prolong the hereditary eusluVe u:eut of any race of men. It way take a few moro years to banish the last vestigos of human chattelhood from tropical A mortal; but t he end is no longer doubtful nor remote. Tho'fiawn of the next century will irradiate no slave-hut in Christendom. For what has been achieved, as also for its fruits not yet realized, lot universal thanks givings ascend to God. The Millennium is not here, and not likely soon to bo. Injustice, oppression, and tyranny fraud, prolligacy, ond misery still darken the earth. Sensu d ity aud iniquity abound. Corruption and prodigality profane the high places of the land. Abject poverty and brutal ignorance aro still the lot of millions, even in this boasted land of freedom and opportunity. Yet it is very much to have established firmly the principle that the law is no good man's enemy, but the friend of every .virtuous eff ort. If the State is yet uniblo to lift all men up, it no longer holds any down. The child born to-morrow in the most squalid hovel may yet become Presidont of the United States. And now is the time to seal our great tri umph by enacting and proclaiming universal amnesty. Our civil war virtually closed with Lee's surrender five years ago. No armed force has marched or fired a shot under the flag of the Southern Confederacy since May, W". There are bad men who still commit outrages; there is not, and for years has not been, any open, embodied resistance to the Federal authority and laws. It is high time that every one were officially assured that no penalty still imponds over him for anything done or threatened in the interest and under the flag of the Rebellion. We ought for our own sakes to idontify universal amnesty with impartial suffrage. We ought to make one the complement of the other, so that they should henceforth have a common vitality, a common longevity. We ought to bo able to say, "The edifice is crowned; the work is complete; henceforth, woe to him who recklessly disturbs and im perils it ! There aro still heart-burnings at the South, There are men who lament the fall of the Confederacy, and do not lovo the flag of tho Union. Proscription aud disfranchisement ore the aliment whereon their morbid feel ings subsist. They are (in effect) patents of nobility in the eyes of a class respectable in numbers and strong in social position. To say of a bouthron, "lie canuot vote: he is for bidden to hold office," is to invest him with a peculiar and often envied distinction. His children tako up tho quarrel which a mis taken policy fastens .upon him; they are trained to hate the Government which brands him as unworthy the rights of a citizen, nnd to detest the race with whose enfranchise ment his proscription is in their minds idea tined. we can never nave genuine peace while we still hold many thousands as virtual prisoners of war. Let us close tho contest! Let those who are grandly triumphant be wisely magnani mous. Let us shut the temple of Janus, and proclaim to all mankind that we have for gotten that we were lately enemies and remember only that we' were formerly brethren. Lot us fill the ranks of loyalty by etlacing all pretext tor lurther disloyalty, Let the world rejoicingly note that, as the blood of no prostrate foe stains our triumph, no vindictive feeling lingers in our hearts that we conquered, not for a party, a caste, a section, but for all humanity. Let us have Peace ! A TILT AT TILTON. From the X. Y. World. The cause of woman suffrage is not likely to Butter tor want of champions, i irst there was the original "Equal Rights Association, sanctified by the membership of Miss An thony and Mrs. Stanton. Then some bilious and blighted women of Boston and New Jer sey, being envious, it would appear, of the just pre-eminence of these two champions, held a convention to moke a now association at Cloveland far, as they fondly dreamed, from the malign influence of Miss Anthony and the too-persuasive lips of Mrs. Stan ton. But, alas, at a critical conjunc ture entered to them, thus tranquilly laying snares for nor authority, busan, aud proclaimed her love for them and her irrepressible intention of adhoring to them for better, for worse, one would never, never desert Mr. Micawber. But tho convention passed her by and elected Mr, Beecher to preside over their separate coun cils. This aroused the anger, it would ap pear, of Mr. Theodore Tilton, whose paper, the Jitdijioidcnt, used formerly to be floated by its reports of tho sermons of Mr. Beecher, which were all at once withdrawn from it, and it has since picked up a precarious exist ence by "illustrations" awful to regard, which have converted it into a sort of reli gious flush paper, having all the pi quancy without the impiety of the secular article. But Mr. Beecher has never been be loved by the Independent since he withdrew his eloquence from it, and it was naturally objectiouublo to its editor that Mr. Beecher should come- in at the eleventh hour and overshadow him, who had borne the bur den and heat of the day in the female suffrage field. The tmouldering discontent of Mr. Tilton has broken out into, first a call, next a convention, and now, finally, an association of which tho excellent projector is at last the President, having subordinate offices with out number. Tho laborers, truly, are plen teous, tint the harvest is "few." SPECIAL NOTICES. M U. W A N A M A K E R inv ton tbe httle gentlemen, tog-other wifi tlieir parents or (.utrdiuns, to vii.it his establishment on SATURDAY, APRIL i, St Kb ch tim j U ero will be an KXlimiTION OF 1119 BEAUTIFUL SPRING STOCK FASHIONALIC CI.'J'IV INU YOU T II S AND U O Y S, Kos. m and KO CHESSUT Btreot, 1'ISKST CLOTHING JCSTAULISIIMKNT. Ladies buying Bovs from live to liftoen years of age to clotho shou'd form tbo acquaintance of our "Youths' De partment," where they can Und all the latest and best things la Boys' wear. tf JAMES E. MURDpCII WILL RED, in hi. superb style, choice seliiutionsfr m the Kiblo, Rbakespuaro. Uickeus. and others, at the MEMORIAL li UKt, 11, corner of Si HO AD aud MASTER SlreuU, ou MMAY EVHNlNti, April 11. Tickets, W cents. Reserved soots, 7ii eeuts. For sale at Gould's, No. ;heDiit street, and at the Church in the evouing, frum ti to If o'uluvk. 4 It SI SPECIAL. NOTICES. AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC. THE STAR COURSE OF LECTURES. 6UPPLK.MKMTARY I.KOTURK. BY HISS OUVF, LOCAN, Oo 8ATURDAY AFTFRNOON, April It). Subject (bjr rp(aot)-"QIR!.8." Admission, 60 oents. Referred Seats, 35 cent extra. Ticket far sale at Gould's Piano Rooms. No. P23 OIIH8- NL'T' btreet. Doors opon ut 3 o'clock P. M. ; Lecture at 8 P. M. CARL HKNTZ'8 PARLOR ORCHKSTRA will perform choice musical selections previous ti the Ijoctnro. s u SENATOR REVELS AT HORTICULTURAL HALL, On THURSDAY EVENING, April 14. Subject -"THR TRESS." Admission liesurved Heats. . . M cents. ...fill conts eatra. The lulo of Secured Boats will eomnioiice on MONDAY MORNING, THE 11th INST., AT 0 O'CLOCK, AT GOULD'S PIANO ROOMS, 48tf No. M3 CUES NUT Rtreit, jj- ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS, SO. 1026 OHK8NUT STREET. SHERIDAN'S RIDE, GREAT LIKE SIZE PAINTING. BY THE TOET-ARTIST. T. BUCHANAN READ, SIXTH WEEK OF THE EXHIBITION. READING OF THE POEM TWIOK A DAY. M. JOSEPHINE WARREN will recite each day, at 4 P. M. and A P. M., In front of the canvas, the poem of 'SHERIDAN' RIDE." 14 4tf (JHHOMOS of the Paintinfr (30x36 inches), 810. Admission 25 cents Including t he entire valuable collection of tho Aoadmny. upen irom a. jn. toer, m ana iroru y;$ to iu r. m. jy- OFFICE OF THE FRANKLIN FIRE IN- PHII.ADEI.PniA. AdHI 4. 187(1. At a meeting of the Board o' DlrnctorB of this (Join- pnny. held this day, a ftorui annnnl dividend of MX PKti ( H NT. and an extra dividend of TEN PS. II CENT, wore declared on the CHintal stock, payable to the stoukholdnra or their legal representatives on and after the 14th inst., Clear or ail taxes. 4 4 lot .T. W. MCALLISTER, Secretary. ngy NOTICE IS HEREBY (ilVEN TO THE subscribers to the Capital Stock of "THE PICK. PLK'S BANK" that a meeting will be held at No. 144 S. SIXTH Street, on THURSDAY, tlie Mil day of May next, at iu o clock A. m.. lor me purpose o organizing saiu UftDK IDU U1QCHHK oincero mm uirecitirn, I), ii. McGINLEY, CHARLES A. MILLER, R. I. HAROLtY, 4 2t M5 J. B. WALKER. fgvr TREGO'S TEA13ERRY TOOTHWASII It is tho most pleasant, cheapest and best dentifrice extant, warraniea troe rrom ipjunous ingredient. It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth! Invigorates and Soothes the Gams! Purities and Perfumes the Hreatbl Prevent a Accumulation of Tartar! Cleanses and Purities Artincial Teeth' Is a Superior Article for Children! Bold by all druggists and dentists. A. M WILSON. Dniuirist. Proprietor. 8 3 IPm Cor. NINTH AND FILBERT bts., Philadelphia, jfp2r '0 CURE, NO PAY. FORREST'S JUNIPER TAR For Coughs. Croup, Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Slitting of Blood, and Lung Diseases. Immediate relief and posi tive cure.or price refunded. Sold by FRENCH, RICH ARDS 4 CO., TENTH and M ARKET, and A.M. WIL SON NINTH and FIL B E RT8 treets. 4 2stnth:)5t egy WAR D A LE O. MCALLISTER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. No.2il BROADWAY, New York. HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING Toeih with fresh Nitrous-Oxide Gas. Absolutely no pain. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, formerly operator at tbe Colton Dental Rooms, devotes his entire practice to the painless extraction of teeth. Olfice, No. UU WALNUT Street. 1 263 y- QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, London and Liverpool. CAPITAL, t,WU,m). SABINE, ALLEN A DULLFS. Agents, 25 FIFTH and WALNUT btreots. CLOTHINQ. OPENING EXERCISES. G Igantlc Stock of Spring Garments : ! G II E A T J)alment for April In Every Variety!! Jvery style of Fashionable Spring Ciottilng! ! Ybundant opportunity to buy cheap ! ! fJVll all yonr friends of the omrjzrjG Jny of opening our Hplendid fcprtng Stock. Ample store of Piece Goods In the Custom A Department. iV. ou are Invited to the Opening, AT THE tSREAT 1SK0WN HALL, WHICH IS WILE OPEN, and Ol'ZS ALL DAY, AT 603 ax1 605 CUESNUT Street. WESTON & BROTHER, TAILORS, S W. Ccmer NINTH and ASCII Sts., rtitLADELPIJIA. A full aBsoTtnieut of the most approved styles for HTKING AND SUMMER WEAK, NOW IN S7CIIK. A elTiTJtll UAIJMKNT AT A REASONABLE VUU-ff. 4 1 .liurp MANTLES AND SHAWLS. irJD.A SMAV7LG. Io. E1G :SB:v3'T Street, Will Open S'hsrsflay looming, A LOT OP IKDBA SHAWLS AT MUCn LOWER TRICES THAN FORMERLY, AND LESS THAN GOLD COST, T4 C 2iu FURNITURE, ETC FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE YAR ERO ORIS . No. 45 SOUTH SECOND STREET, KA6T BLUE. ABO VIE OHESNUT. UfU PHILADELPHIA. Illiiiliisii FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE THE LAST GREAT FIRE IX 44AI.VIJRTOX. Icri-lnK'A Ha fen All Right In Uvcry In til nee. FULL P A II T I C U L A It S. NUMBER ONE. Galvf.kton. Texas, March 1, Messrs. IlfrtniNfl, Farhf.i. A Rhkrman. Now Yorx:- Iear Sirs: - It gives us pleasure to srfj our testimonial as to the Fire-proof qualities of your Safes to tho man which yon have already. OUR PATENT CHAMPION SAFE, which wo nor. chased from yon thtrteon years ago, was opened on tho morning after the fire (which ocourrod on tho nig at of February Sit, destroying some of our finest briok build ings), to OUR ENTIRE SATISFACTION, our hooks an papers oelng in almost as good condition as when they were placed therein, notwithstanding the Intense heat to which the Safo bad been subjected. Tbe locks answered readily to tho keys. Respectfully, etc, SHACKELFORD, BROWN A CO. NUMBER TWO. (Sai.vfhton, Texas, March 1, 1ST. Messrs. Hr.nniNfi, Fakiif.l 4 Shkiimas, New York: Dear Sirs: Tbe lire which occurred during tho night of Uio 2:id ultimo destroyed the brick building in which wo kad our office. The Safe In onr use was one of yonr PATENT CHAM. PIONS, so justly celebrated ; it fell from the second story on its face, among Coal Oil and Turpentine which was still bnrning when we ondortook to open it THIRTY SIX HOURS after the Ore ; It had. therefore, during that time been subjected to a most INTENSE HEAT; mach to our surprise, we opened it with the key and found onr books, papers, etc., in REMARKABLY GOOD ORDER. We arc satisfied from tho test to whioh our Safo was pit tlistYOUR PATENT SAFES ARE PREFER ABLR TO ALL OTHERS for resisting the action of Fire. Respectfully yours, BURNETT WALL. NUMBE'l TTIKEK. Gai.vf.hton, Texss, March 1, 1870. Messrs. Ukiihino, Fadhel A Shkrma.v. New York: Gentltmen: Another very largo and destructive lire visited our Island Oily on Wednesday night, February 2.1, reducing to asiies several of our largest business houses. Onoof your PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, containing onr books, papers, and other valuables. Including a Gold Watch, remained in the ruins until yesterday afternoon, FIVE DAYS ASTER THE 1 IRK, before wo bod it opened. We found the contents in EXCELLENT CON DITION. The (Treat beat to which your Safes have boon subjected, and their wonderful victories over t!ie fiery fiend in both of these late very largo fires, fully entitle them to tho confidence of tho business publio as SURE AND PERFECT PROTECTION for the preservation of books and valuables in any tire. Truly yours. COOK i WOODYILLK. Also, within the past thirty days, at the GREAT FIliES IN NEWARK, N. J., (JALKSBI RCJ, ILL., TO WAN DA, PA., AND RACINE, WIS, HERRING S SAFES HAVK TRIUMPHED Where others have failed. FARREL, HERRING A- CO., Philadelphia. HERRING CO., Chicago. 14 9 sth2l. FARRKL. HERRING .V CO., New Orleans. HERRING, FARREL A SHERMAN, No. r.l BROADWAY, corner of Murray street, New York. BOOTS AND SHOES. I3ARTLETT, No. 33 SOUTH SIXTH STREET, Ever thankful for the patronage extended heretofore, and desirous of lurther favors, bega announce his SPRING STYLES OF 1300 XS and SHOES for Gents' and Boys' wear. A large assortment of CUSTOM-MADS GOODS, made on his improved Lasts, which are unrivalled for comfort and beauty, enables him to furnish a ready fit at all times. 1 13 thstuD3l pm C H A 8. E l C H E L, Fashionable Boot and Shoo MANUFACTURER, Io. SOl'ortU UKiiHTII Htreet, Jl 19 linrpFltSlujeaboT Philada. GROCERIES, ETC. 1609. " AREAKTED GENUINE OLD Government Java Coffee, Koatcl every day. at 40 cents per pountl, at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South KtCO.Mr 817thsta BKLOW OHKSNUT 8TRKKT. REFRIGERATORS. YJ -ALL REFRIGERATORS ALWAYS RELIABLE. The suhscrihar guarantees the make and finish of his SUPERIOR REFRIGKRATOK equal in ever rospoct to his former makes. The thousands sold and now ia nse testify to their superior qualifications. For sila whoksalo an retail at the Manufactory, No. KU5 C11ERR Y htreot, aliov Third. Alto, W. F. NICKEL'S Patent Combination ala, boor, and liquor cooler and refrigerator. 8 21thtuWt GKORGK W. NICKELS. FKurrvAL k. iiKu.. hkwiion NKarni l'LKl.VAL i:. ie:l,l, fc CO., DKAtEoa iit Lehigh and Schuylkill Coal, UK POT: No. U28 North NINTH Street, I 71 West Elite, below Master. l!rsnch OfHce. No. W RICHMOND Street. pUKE LEHIGH AM) SCHUYLKILL FAM ILY, FACTORY. AND BITUMINOUS OOALS. Large Block always on band. Bontbeust corner TUIRTEKNTII and WfLLOWStreeU U lH4m W. W. A O. D. HAINK8. HATS AND CAPS. f?T WARBliRTON'S IMPROVED VEKTI- iTfl latort and esny-fittinR Dress Hats (patented), la ( ll. e improved fkxhiousof thesoawui. CUvUT Ktrnel Bart (Icm tn t.ha Fnst OfSna U lk rot STEAMBOAT LINES. STEAMER S. If. KKLTON, FOR T-r,"n iL.uiaijiu, uni'MVil, and HODh.. rr.I eiininirneinir luu.inat, r:l 11, Ituvinic I initial' hi i'i!f whart at ll) A. M. aud :t fill 1'. M. Kcturn inir, h aving Vt'iliiiiim tun at 6'50 A. M. and lH'ni) 1'. AI. l'r to Wilmington, o.nts; to Choutor or lln.ik. It ci'uts. 4 8 n 'pii (iKeatT wedding rc.:u) diot. TJcwStylo Wedding- Irrvitatioii LOW PRICKS. R. KOSKINS & CO Stationers, Bogravera, Steam Power miitera, DlWi H. 1 Allt'll Htreet. I '