BIISINEM NOTICTES. THE ANXIOUS MOTHER SATISFIED. Nod's sakes ! The worry that I've had • With Josh I can't begin to tell; • ' se's such an awful dressy lad, And clothes has been eo dear this spell. Earl I, 'Ton can't spend cash this wa' My grief: Eve jit andjlt about it, 'Until Josh says the other day, 'Well, ill please us both—don't doubt it— Splendid Knits that "Tower" does keep, And even you will own they're cheap r Our stock of Clothing is The largest and moan complete 411 i i l aG*ll, surpassed by none in 'notarial, style and fit, and sold at prices guaranteed tower than the lowest. TOWER HALL, IRS Market Street, 13XLCINETT do 00. TASTE VARIES. Peris.'quitelately, a Frenchman, , tis said, Made Ms will—then expertly cut off his own head; "She•eleeta of Ms will could be readily seen, Forhis•head was found under a small guillotifit. slo'll be followed, no doubt. by genteel folks of means, Who hereafter will keep amateur guillotines ; Snob "things about houses" will be all the go Ince the rage to buy CLOTHING of •PHILBY & CO. Here the people of moderate means like display, Ihit their taste is to show it in STYLISE{ ARRAY; ,130 they all crowd to PRUITT & Co.'s "Star" to buy The STYLISH Smarm Burrs that enchant every eye. This is the season when all are contemplating a change of their apparel for garments . suitable for Biting wear ; and in the purehase of Clothing as in 'Everything else, all should studytheir interests. We, .therefore say to the public, do not overlook the ad vantages offered by the '•STAR" when about to pur 'chase a Spring !Snit. Our goods were all monewr VEST LOW POE assn., and our stock 13 all fresh, com prising every style of garment now worn; our Cloth ollig• is all of superior cut, make, finish and style, and `our prices are the LOWEST TO nn nap IN PEELLADEL- Tau for CLOTRIEG or . EQUAL Quemrmr, of which fact -all can satisfy themselves by obtaining the prices else- Where before coming to the "STAB." N. B.—We have met received a fresh Invoice of s tylish English. Scotch, French and American Fancy Cassimeres, for our Custom Department, which is onducteil by competent artistes. Call and see us. STAR CLOTHING imemuum, LOW PRICES AND FASHIONABLE GOODS, 609 CHESTNUT STREET. SIGN OF STA_R. PERRY & CO. GBEAT FIDE IN BROADWAY, NEW YORK.. Messrs. Marvin & CP. 265 Broadway. Gray ximltrar: We have just opened the ALUM AND DRY PLASTER SAFE we bought of you a short tune since. It west]] the second story of the bullding,carner of Broadway and Barclay streets,and fell into the eel lar, and it gratifies us very much to be male to say. that INERT BOOK, PAPER AND BANK BILL IS IN GOOD OBDER, very much better than we could have expected after the In. ense heat. We shall want a another and much larger one of the same scat very _soon. Yoms, truly, WM.. A. DROWN a CO. NfcW YoRR, April 7, 1866. A full assortment of the above PERFECTLY DRY AL S WELL AS FIRE-PROOF For sale by MARVIN & CO.. • 1721. CHESTNUT street, Masonic Sent for Tllustrated Catalogue. aplo-m,w.req gmA REDUCTION OF 25 PER Ca'Nl`., or from $125 to $2OO less upon each INSTRU MENT than our REGULAR SCHEDULE PRICES. Desiring to reduce our large stock of superior and highly - improved richly finished seven octave Ruse wood-Pianos, previous to the removal to our new store, Girard Row, No. 1103 Chestnut street, we have con cluded to offer them at the actual cost to manufacture, and at prices equally as low as we sold them before the war These instruments have been awarded the highest premiums at all the principal exhibitions ever held in this country, with numerous testimonials from the tiros t artists in .america and Europe. They are now the kading Pianos, and are sold to all parts of the world. Persona desiring to purchase a first.eutas Piano, at greatly reduced rates, should not fail to avail them selves of this opportunity. Circulars of the rt gular schedule prices, with precise cuts of the styles of our Pianos, can be had at the warerooms, and on applies, *son will be sent by mail. SCHOMACKER & CU , apstMyl Warezooms, No. 1021 Chestnut street. CHICILERING IMGEAND, SQUARE AND lIPRIGHTM PIANOS. lility.six Medals in America and Europe, and sO,OOO instruments in nee. Great Collection of ORGANS and MELODEONS. New Ware Rooms, 914 CHMTNIIT street. ► Mh3-sa,tn.th W. H. DUTTON. EinIINWAY dr. SONS' PIA.NOS M I MAre now acknowledged the best In-M IMETonenta In Europe an well ee America. They are Med in public and private,by the greatest artists grabarope, by TON SULOW, DRIT4I3OHOOK, ..T AMA. and others; in thls country by NM f s N, WOL*SOB.N, etc. F RT l eat t rs or ale only by . . - ' fe64- tf Me Cbentnut stAet. EVENING BULLETIN. TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1866. AN ANNIVERSARY. The EVENING BULLETIN enters, to day on the twentieth year of its exist ence. This is one of the April anniver saries that is especially interesting to its owners. We have the satisfaction of assuring its readers that the paper was never so prosperous as it is now. Not asking for government patronage, we have relied upon the support of our liberal and enlightened citizens, and our confidence has not been misplaced. In a very short time we shall remove to the new building, No. 607 Chestnut street, where we expect to have facilities for making a much better paper. THE CIVIL KWH as BILL The votes required, in the House of Representatives, to pass the Civil Rights bill over the executive veto, were ob tained yesterday, and it is now a law. President Johnson has a right to his opinion, and he may be sincere in the views he has expressed concerning the bill. But we have quite as much respect for a decision made by more than two thirds of each branch of Congress as we have for a decision of his, or of any other one man. Snmming up the individual opinions of the law-making power of the country, on the Civil Rights bill,we have the following: For the bill Against the bill. • 33 15 . 122 41 Senate, House, Executive, Total, . There can be nothing dangerous in a measure thus sustained. On the other - hand there must be a great deal that is meritorious, just and right in it. One hundred and fifty-five sworn and trust worthy members of the Government are •not likely to be mistaken as to the ex - pediency, the justice and the constitu tionality of the Civil Rights bill; and - while conceding to the President and the minority in Congress the right to ex press their opinions, we consider it a `happy fact that the Constitution pro -vides that the wishes of a majority of the people can, on extraordinary occa eions, be carried out by Congre3s,against the individual wishes of the executive. There has now been a fair trial of strength between the President and Congress. It was not a struggle betweeri the President anti the so-called Radi -.tale, for there are not one hundred and fifty-Eve Radicals in Congress. The Civil Rights bill is not a Radical mea sure. lt confers -no right of suffrage. upon -the • negroes , . It gives them :throughout the country exactly such Tights as • they have possessed in -Pennsylvania- since -;1538, and less than they possessed before that year;;; for it was the amended con - ARV** of 1838 that,. deprived colored Alen of the right to vote in this State. The Civil Rights bill simply provides that all people throughout .the country shall be guaranteed such rights as alt people in. Pennsylvania possess. If tkere are defects in the law, they will be dis covered on trial, and they can be re moved. If it is, as the President alleges, unconstitutional, the Supreme Court will declare it so, and it will cease to be a law. The President, from all accounts, is disposed to submit gracefully to the re versal of his decision by Congress; more gracefully, a good deal, than his sud denly converted adMirers and advocates, the ex-rebels of the South and the cop perheads of the North. He must see that when only one Republican in the House sides with him, the opposition cannot be regarded as factious. He can not but have respect for the opinions of the party that elected him, expressed with such remarkable unanimity through their representatives. He had his day of triumph, in the veto of the Freedmen's Bureau bill, and he made the most of it. Accounts are now squared between him and Congress, and we trust he will see that it is the part of expeL diency, as well as of duty, not to make himself the enemy of the legislative branch of the Government. It is to be regretted that the necessity of over ruling his decision should have existed, and it is to be hoped that he will meet, Congress half way, and that their action may be harmonized, so that legislation may be effected that will ensure the peace, security, prosperity, and dignity of the whole nation. AVSTRIA AND PRCSSIA; There are the first mutterings of a war between Austria and Prussia. Each power is moving troops rapidly to, its frontier, and we may hear by the very next arrival of the breaking out of hos tilities. The cause of the trouble is the seizure of Schleswig-Holstein by Prussia. Austria helped to wrest the Duchies from Denmark, with the expectation that they should either be independent German states or that she should derive some political or other advantage from them. But Prussia, guided by the wiliest of living German statesmen, Herr von Bismark, has managed to appropriate them; and Austria considers herself wronged and the ; balance of power likely to be endangered if the grasping, ambitious disposition of Prus sia is not checked. It is possible that the intervention of France or some other power may pre vent a war between Austria and Prussia, and as the peace of all Europe may depend upon it, the other powers will exert themselves in that direction. Italy would probably be soon involved in the war; for she wants Venetia, and the Venetians want to be under Victor Emmanuel. They would try to take advantage of a war between Austria and Prussia, and rise and declare for the King of Italy. Turkey and Russia would be• disturbed also, and France would have some difficulty in keeping out of thetrouble. In former times etch a condition of European affairs as now exists would have caused much excite ment in this country. But the stupen dous events that have occurred on our Own soil since 1860 have made us tole rably indifferent concerning the politics of the old world. Few people have given much consideration to the Austro-Prus sian controversy, and of these few, scarcely any have taken sides with either power. They are, however, rather pleased to find that the powers that de spoiled Denmark are brought into trou ble between themselves in consequence of the act. . THE ANNIVERSARY MONTH. The month of April is remarkable for the number of important events con nected with our national history that have occurred in it. The war of the rebellion began in April when the rebels in Charleston harbor, fired upon the Star of the - West, and , it ended in April, when Grant destroyed Lee's army at Petersburg. It was in April that Richmond, the citadel of the rebel lion, fell into our hands, and it was in April that the crowning tragedy, the sum of all the wickeiness of the rebel lion, was enactekin the murder of our President. We now have to add another marked , step in our history to our April Calendar. The passage of the Civil Rights Bill by an overpowering majority of Congress, over the veto of the President, is an event worthy to be ranked with the events we have already named. Not that it should be re garded as a victory over Andrew John son, but because it is the first real step taken by Congress towards perfecting the noble work begun by Abraham Lincoln for the cause of humanity. It will go down to posterity, a bright jewel in the crown of the brave men of Congress who would rather be with the Right, than with the President; and few of our April anniversaries will fill more important pages in the history yet to be.written of the Uhited States, than t L it at which marks the obliteration of the et national trace of the barbarous it:Lai t Lion of Slavery. , THE PENNSYLVANIA VOTE. It is well to have on permanent record the position taken by our representatives in Congress, on the passage of the Civil Rights Bill. An examination of the vote shows that thirteen Pennsyl vania members voted for and eight against the bill, and that three members were absent. The following is the de tail of the vote:--4yes, Baker, Broom all, Kelley, Lawrence, Mercur,' Miller, Moorhead, Myers ' O'Neill, Scofield, Stevens, Thayer, Wilson. Noes, An cona, Boyer Dawson, Dennison, 'Gloss- - Randall, Strouse. - Absent, Culver, lohnson ' Williams. Williams who supports the pill, paired with Mr. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN TURSPAY, APRIL -1866. 13ingham. Of the other two absentees, Culver is Republican, and Johnson Opposition. A steamship crowded with 1,200 emi grant passengers, and a crew, servants, 4Szc., numbering at least one hundred, sailed on the 28th of March from Liver pool for New York. On the sixth day out, the cholera appeared, and soon there were over one hundred and sixty cases, and over fifty 'deaths. The steamer put into the port of Halifax. This overcrowding of emigrant veMels; at a period when cholera is known to be in the atmosphere, is sure to develop the disease and carry it to this country. Our Government should take some - steps to prevent it. A -visitation of the cholera may be inevitable, but it way be post poned and greatly mitigated by wise precautionary measures. The authorities in all our large cities, especially the sea ports, should move more energetically - than ever in the work of purification. THE NATIONAL MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY is a new corporation, the sub scription books of which are to be opened at the Corn Exchange Rooms, as announced in an advertisement. Among the corporatom are some of our best known leading busi ness men, whose names gife assurance of the success of the institution. JOHN GRUMP_ Rotuma. 1781 OsLESTNIIT STREET and ZS 1.4.1,GE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required Ibr housebulld- Lug and fitting promptly furnished. jas-ems STATIONERY—LETTER, CAP AND - NOTE PAPERS, ENVELOP.E. BLANK BOORe3, and lowest requilai a te t in the Stationery line , selling at the figures S. R. DOWNING' o Stationery Store, mal2-tfrpi Eighth street,two doors above Walnut. ior 0 lISE FURNISHING HARDWARE. Cutlery and Tools may be found at TRUMAN at rHAW'd,No. 835 (Eight Thirty-five) Market Street, below Ninth. IitIVUNCHING SPARS. Crosses, Half Moons and va -1 riot's othfr shaped holes: we have Railroad Con doctors' Pocket Pooches. TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 835 (Eight '1 hirty. five Market street, below Ninth. MBE BLESSINOrk OF THE WASHERWOMAN, or whoever else p , rforms on the wash tub, will be f-e Ted on th head of him who supplied ter with a Patient Clothes Wringer. Their us.-fulness is now be d cavil. your ia ee4 a' trial al owed,and the money ft-lunded if not then satisfied that they will save more Lan .heir cost in time. labor and torn clothes. We keep sel eral patterns,but know those with cog wheels to be the mos: durable. TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 8...;Zi (Eight. Thirty-nve) Mark,tst.eet, below Ninth. 1_866. k! r il A A l tilli C nArOO P N L . E ih s t? . .. a ci al4Ple dyed. Pazo, s put in order. Corner Exchanze Place and Dock street. 13t•] C. HOPP. $2OOOO AND 01 HER SUMS TO LOAN on mortgage. by J. H. MORRIS. P.;...t urtb Tenth s:rent ante-rt• LOR S ALE TW-t!)- - HUNDRED ha A.lth OF C Cambria Iron Company ,tack. Aadr