L=Z /CLOSE OF SATURDAY'S PROCEEDINGS.] Honsn.—Mr. Miller (Pa) addressed the House on the question of reconstruction. He did oot agree with the doctrines enunciated on that subject by his colleague (Mr, Ste vens), or by his other colleague (Mr. Wil liams), or by the able gentlemen from Ohio (Mr. Shelia barger); for himself, he held that no rebellious action could force a State out of the Union. The Southern States, not withstanding the rebellion, still remained part and parcel of the Union. He would ac • cord to the rebels no such honor as their be ing successful in taking eleven States out of the Union, or taking one State out. All the action of the Confederate government was a gross violation of right. That government Lad never been admitted into the family of nations. The Federal Government had over those States and their people all its legal rights, as well as the rights of war. Mr. John L. Thomas,4x., (Md.), next ad-- dressed the House on the question of recon struction. He held that Congress had full!' control over the whole subject. The un seemly haste on the -part of the late rebel. - States to be admitted to representation in m Congress on their own terms was only,l equaled by their precipitate action in leav bg the halls of Congress in. 1861. They had then attempted to brealt'up, by force of arms, the, government which they iVotiild '- 'breakup to-morrow by political trickery; if they had the power. His own desire was that the rebel States should have their repre sentatives in Congress; but, at the same . ' time, he was sensible of the duty which he owed to the country, and to those loyal men of the South who had stood true to the -Union in the hour of peril. As he had never • entertained a doubt that the rebellion would be finally firthshed out, and traitors nut& to feel the enormity of their guilt, and although to-day he felt'sadly disappointed that traitors had not met that punishment which their ' crime deserved, stilly he had confidence in the devotion and patriotism of the loyal masses of the people that they would never allow these rebels to dictate the terms on which they should assume their relations to the government. Either they were to be consulted as to what conditions would.best please them, or Congress was to lay down the terms on which they were to be received back. While he denied that any State could be taken out of the Union, yet its government could be so usurped and destroyed as not only to re quire remodeling, but to require a whole new frame-work. It was for Congress to decide, not only whether the State govern ments of the South, having been subverted, have been reconstructed, but to examine and see how they have been reconstructed, and whether they are so reconstructed as to entitle them to representation. These &ales should remain wbere they had remained • for the last four years—in the Union, to be sure, because they had not the power to get out of it; but in the Union divested of their right of representation in Congress, until the masses of the loyal people of the country had so hedged them in with guarantees and safeguards that they could be safely in trusted with that right He believed that the country was on the eve of a revolution as portentous to the next generation as the aecent rebellion had been to this. The very men who had brought on the war of rebel lion were striving to-day to get back to the places they had so ignominiously deserted, in order that they might control the govern ment which they had so impiously striven to overthrow. • He believed that the President had made • a great and sad, and he feared a fatal mis take, in theindiscriminate manner in which he had granted pardons. It was no wonder that the red-handed traitors were such friends to the President's policy, because they saw that that policy was to give them back all their rights as fully, and place them in possession of the government as Theyfull, as before they went into the rebellion. President's policy had done more to make treason respected and traitors heroes than the establishment of an independent confederate government could have done. „Tithe President's policy were carried out, it would not only put the eleven rebel States in the hen& of rebels, but the time would cot be long before rebels would have com plete control of the government in all its departments. It was no wonder that every rebel, from Davis down to every subaltern, jncluding bushwhackers; jayhawkers and guerillas, was an earnest and devoted ad mirer of the President's policy. It was just the policy for them, because it was the only . one they could live by, and the one which they professed through their papers to be ready to die by, He desired to see a con- Si itution al amendment adopted prohibiting ingress from repudiating any part of the Federal debt, and from assuming or paying any part of the confederate debt; for al though there was no fear of such a thing from the present or the next Congress, there was no knowing what might be done if the rebel States were admitted to representa tion in Congress. Mr. Smith (Ky.) was the next to address the House. He proposed, he said, to dis cuss the present condition of the States and country, and the position of the President and of Congress. He said that all secession ordinances were null and void, and all the acts passed by Congress during the four years of war were based upon the ground that these rebel States were not oat of the Union, and could not get out of the Union. It ,did not follow that, because the rebel States were admitted to the right of repre sentation in Congress disloyal representa tives should be allowed to take seats in either House. That had never lien asked by the President or any other loyal man ? What could Congress do contrary to what had been done ? The policy inaugurated by the late President Lincoln, and carried out by President Johnson, under which the Southern States had formed their organiza tion, how was it to be changed, or what was to be made in it ? Mr. Schofield (Pa.) asked if it made any difference whether a man who had been en gaged in the rebellion was admitted as a representative, or a man who had not been engaged in the rebellion, but who would vote exactly as the ex-rebel would vote. Mr. Smith replied that he did not see how that difficulty could ever be avoided. There was nothing in the Constitution or laws by which it could be done. It did not follow that his own district or the district of his very radical friend, Mr. McKee, would hereafter send representatives of their stamp. Because the State of Illinois sent to this House a man who was seven feet eleven inches high, did it follow that the same district would hereafter send a man of the same stature, or of the same strong political views. [Laughter.] What legis- lation could regulate this thing? Mr. Bontwell asked whether the gentle man did not see a difference between can vassing tbepolitical opinions of men elected from loyal States on questions concerning the administration of Government, and re cognizing the right of people, who are at present not represented to be represented until some affirmative action is taken on the part, of the Government. If it was found, as it was found by, the testimony of Alexander H. Stephens and others, that in some of those rebel States nine-tenths of the people denied the right of the Government to exist, were they to beallowed to come to Congress and assert the power of represen tation for the overthrow of the Government Mr. Smith admitted the difference in the two propositions, but he did not see why States in which those conditions did not exist should not be admitted to representa tion..:.,,tMr: andalf(Pa.) askbd Mr. Boutwell whether the'rights of the loyal one-tenth of a State were to - be impaired by the disloyal nine tenths; and whether, that loyal tenth, being taxed,. was notAntitled to representa tion; . " • • t Session. Mr. Boutwell replied that the right of re presentation, whether in the Senate ot in the House, was a right appertaining to the States as States, and that it could be exer cised by the people only through an exist ing and recognized State organization. The State organizations in those eleven States which had once existed in harmony with the organization of the National Govern ment, had by some event or series of events ceased to exist as a matter of fact, because they were not represented in Congress. That was the evidence that they had ceased to exist. When, or why, or how, it was not important to inquire now. Before the right of representation could be again exercised in any of these States, there must be a pre vious recognition of such rights. In the inquiry as to the right of a State to be ro presented, its constitnion must be looked into, and it must be ascertained whether there is such an existing loyal sentiment as would reasonably justify the expectation that the representatives from the State would be loyal. There was no right in the • one-tenth of the people of a State, even though loyal, to be represented in Congress. It was the right of the people of the whole State, when they demonstrated as a whole their loyalty to the Government, to be re .,presented as the people of a State. Mr. Randall (Pa.) remarked that that overturned the doctrines of Mr. Lincoln from beginning to end. Mr. 'Smith having resumed the floor, drifted, to the question of conflict between the President and the Congress. He asked why, if the President had no power to do what he bad done, COngress had not undone it, and done something else that would be better? What was Congress going to do in its place? State governments must exist, and there must be the same sort of ma chinery to, carry them on. But it was said the Southern States must repudiate the rebel debt. That has been done. It was said that they must ratify the constitutional amendment abolishing slavery. That had been done also. Then it was said that they must elect loyal men to Congress. How did Congress know that that had not been done in every instance? Who had tried that question? The Committee on Elections, which was the proper authorityon that sub ject, had said nothing upon it. In exclu ding those States from representation, Con gress was doing a wrong which would result in injury to the Government. Drifting into the Question of the trial of Jeff. Davis he said - that•the President had reserved from pardon five hundred of the leading men of the rebellion, and he asked why Congress had not, by bill or resolution, called for their trial and execution. It was because Congress wanted to dodge the question. Mr. Eldridge inquired whether Mr. Smith supposed that Congress had power to pass laws by which those men could be tried and condemned, or whether they must not by tried under the laws existing at the time the crime was committed? Mr. Smith replied that as a matter of course they must be tried under the laws existing at the time the crime was committed, but Congress could fix the means by which they could be brought to justice. Mr. Eldridge inquired further whether they must not be tried in the districts pre scribed by law? Mr. Smith agreed to that, and said that the districts were as numerous as the men to be tried. They could be tried in Virginia, and all the Southern States, because the courts were re-established. Mr. Broomall (Pa.) asked what additional law was necessary, and what power Con gress had to pass a law for the trial of per- SOBS for crimes committed heretofore? Mr. Eldridge suggested, as an additional question, what the President had to do with it? Mr. Smith said he knew that Congress could not pass an es post facto law, but he could understand very well the effort that was being made by men to avoid by legisla tion or non-legislation the bringing of these men to trial. It was because they knew it would affect the true policy adoptediby Pre. sident Johnson. Mr. Broomall inquired what power Con gress had in the matter. Mr. Smith retorted by asking what power the President had. Mr. Broomall suggested he had the power to execute the existing laws. Mr. Smith said that President Johnson had pursued the policy inaugurated by Pre sident Lincoln, and that Congress would not dare to destroy it, because Congress felt the force and effect of that policy on the coun try, and knew that the great masses of the Union people would sobn rise and maintain it, and that the leaders whro were opposing it would go down and be forgotten and un wept. Mr. Randall (Pa.) suggested that the Pre ' sident had, on the 2d of October, 1865, ad dressed a letter to Chief Justice Chase on the subject, and that the Chief Justice on the 12th of the same month had replied, declin ing to hold such court as had been suggest& by the President, and 'suggesting a trial by military commission. Mr. Shellabarger (Ohio) desired to make a statement in that connection. He said that within a few days past the Attorney General of the United States had stated to him and another gentleman, not in confi dence or privately, that the position taken by the Chief Justice was proper, as the con dition of the country was such as to make a judicial trial, under circumstances, nought else than a mockery. • Mr. Ritter (Ky.) next addressed the House on the question, chietly,of the relative value of slave labor and free labor, contending that slave labor was more profitable to a State, and comparing the productive and property statistics of Ohio and Kentucky, and of Illinois, and Alabama. He subse quently admitted, however, in response to Mr. Kelley, that the statistics he had cited embraced the assessed? value of the slaves. He appealed to Congress, if it did not desire the repudiation of the Federal debt, to stop in its mad career—to cease in its efforts to force its peculiar views on the people of the late slave States. They should imitate the noble examples of the President, and open the doors of Congress to the representatives duly elected. Each State should be left•to control its own internal affairs, subject to the Constitution and laws of the United States. This was the only way in which they could have a restored Union. Mr. Shellabarger next; addressed the House. He reminded it that, some weeks ago he had introduced a resolution request ing the Judiciary Committee to inquire as to whether it was competent, unaer the American Constitution, for Congress to de elate a forfeiture of citizenship by act of law where that citizenship had been volun tarily abandoned by acts of disloyalty. Since that resolution had been adopted he was glad to find that the distinguished gen tleman who occupied the chair of this House had been reflecting on this great question in the same direction to which the resolution pointed. One of the most distinguished lawyers of the House had also introduced a set of resolutions bearing on the same idea, and expressing, with more distinctness, a plan for putting in application that power of the government. He was glad, therefore, to find these and other evidences that the mind of the coun trywas being now directed towards this important practical question, as one of the means which may be resorted to for the purpose of relieving the government from these questions of terrible embaqassment by which it is surrounded. He desired now to direct his remarks to that great question, in the breach between the President and Cobaress touching the method of restoring the States in recent revolt. In the bauses for that breach most men found the occasion for alarm. If, however, any faith could be placed in the most solemn utterances or Congress and of the President, then they did not differ, but did most precisely agree upon one at least of the most important and deci THE DAILY EVENING- BULLETIN; PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 23,1866 sive principles and means for the restoration of those States to power. He solemnly averred ins belief that if the President and Congress had the constitutional right to em ploy the means to which he alluded for the restoration of the States; and if they would in good faith unite to apply and put in force the principle which both professed to hold, the work of reconstruction would be, if not easy, at least ultimately certain and at once secured. That principle was that in all those States the truly loyal should alone have powers of government, either by the holding of office or by the exercise of the elective franchise, and "that the conscious and responsible leaders of the rebellion should. be tried, convicted, and executed." If the loyal people of those States had full control of their government. he saw no rea son why each of those States should not be welcomed to-day to the embraces of the pa rent government with an acclaim of joy al most like that which the angels gave at Beth lehem. Mr. Hale interrupted to ask a question. The drift of the gentleman's argument, he esaid, was to show that Congress migle lawfully enact forfeiture of citizenship as a penalty for having been engaged in rebel lion against the Government. He sub mitted whether there was not another diffi culty in the case, namely: that by an express provision of the Constitution which the gentleman had failed to. notice, the imposition of a new pen alty for any crime whatever committed , before the passage of the act is expressly and directly within the definition of an ex post facto law, and whether it was not there- , by forbidden by the Constitution as effec tually as bills of attainder were forbidden? If Congress might by legislation enact the penalty of lossof citizenship for disloyalty, might it not by the same rules enact any other or different penalty for an offence committed before the passage of the act? Mr. Shellbarger replied that that provi sion of. the Constitution had no application o the matter he was discussing. That pro vision related to the punishment of crime as such, and to the forfeiture of rights in the punishment of crime, whereas what be was considering was an exercise of national sovereignty, not in punishment of crime, but simply in depriving men who by acts of disloyalty had voluntarily renounced their allegiance to their own government, in the right to resume their political powers. He would not have what he said pushed to any other Consequence than the conse quences to which be pushes his argument, namely, that the right of citizenship, being of no national donation, of national defini tion, of national control, was a matter the deprivation of which as a consequence of voluntary surrender of the obligations of citizenship is not an infliction of punish ment for crime, but is simply the declara tion of the sovereign that as they had sur rendered their political franchises th-y should not continue to exercise them. .tie sustained his position also by reference to a provision in the army appropriation bill of 1864, declaring that deserters from the army forfeited all the rights of citizenship, and were forever incapable of holding any office of trust or profit in the United States, or of exercising any right of citizenship, and he asked whether desertion was a higher offence than four years of war against the national existence. The passage of such a law as he suggested would stand as a prac tical assertion of the exercise and applied. lion of the national powers of self-preserva tion for which he contended. Mr. Hale rose and said be did not wish to put himself in the position of the gentle man to whom Goldsmith alluded, "who "thought fof convincing while others thought o dining;" but he would take the privilege of calling the attention of the gentleman who had just made an argu ment which, for elaborateness, learning and fairness, he had seldom heard equaled in the House, to one or two points in it. In regard to the suggestionwhich he (51.r.Hale; had made that this was in the nature of an expostfacto law, he submitted that it was not an answer to - say simply that that sec tion bad nothing to do with the case. It was proposed as a penalty for treason and rebellion that these men should by legisla tion of Congress at this day be deprived ol certain rights. That was, by all legal deti finition, an ex post facto law, and nothine else. He submitted that the act of MI in reference to deserters, and each of the other statues passed by Congress, was prospec tive in its operation, and not retrospectiv, or retroactive. The law in reference to de serters who had deserted was to take effec: if they did not return to their regiments by a day fixed, making the prospective crime of desertion the crime to be punished, nut the past offence. He held the crime of treason in as great detestation and horror::, it was possible for the gentleman to do; bu , he dreaded one thing more than artnei re bellion, more than treason, and that was to see the true, honest, loyal, strong men el We nation, like the gentleman from Ohio, in their zeal to let their condemnation of the crime of treason, override, or seek to override, the plain and palpable provision:, of the Constitution. Ho regretted that he was not prepared, to point out where the gentleman's argument departed from the true constitutional ground, but he would promise himself the pleasure of inakine that effort at as early a day as he conic' obtain the floor, The House then, at half•past five o'clock, adjourned. Me Fight-Hour Law In Massachmetta. BosToic, April 21.--The lower breech vl the Matit , achusetts Legislature, rejected th eight-hour labor bill by a vote of 109 to 52 A NATURAL WATERFALL.—The Cleve land (Ohio) Register says : "A gentlemai, of this city is the happy possessor of 11 bright little daughter six months old. When the child was born the head was entirely devoid of hair, except that portion of the head which, with ladies, is covered by the waterfall, and this portion was covered with a . thick growth of jet-black hair, three inches long, and precisely in the shape of the most approved 'waterfall.' " ORNITHOLOGICAL TRICHINA.—The Erie Dispatch says: "We saw a curious thing a day or two since at Charley Nunn's. A Meadow lark, which had been killed and brought in among some pigeons, was exam ined, and found to be almost exclusively composed of worms, from half an inch to two inches in length. The flesh was com pletely pierced through and through with hundreds of them. Has trichina got among the birds?" • ON FRIDAY, on the Christiansburg and Shelbyville pike, (Kentucky) Turrell, Wal ters, and a number of their old comrades were seen moving toward Shelbyville. This created some excitement, as Turrell soid he was watching for parties, who being sworn for examination as jurors at the re cent trial for murder at Shelbyville, stated that they were satisfied that Turrell should be hung, and says he will kill the last one of them. AT BRANDENBURG, (Kentucky) on Friday afternoon, in an altercation between the brotbers Kendrick and Allen Stanfield, re f,pecting an old partnership, the latter having drawn a pistol, was instantly killed by the former. NEW AIIEEPTCAN • WALNUT street, sleeve Eighth. POWI REIM ATTRACTION. -EVERY EVENING AND ON:WJEDNEsDAy AND BATURDItY .A.IPTER NOONS, THE WONDER—EL NINO EDDIE, Mr. G. W. SMITH and BELLE t' TROUPE, BURLESQUE ETHIOPIAN OPERA. CORPS. Two Grand Ballets, Dramatic Company and Comic Pantomime Troupe. ERBIANIA OECILITSTRd...—PubIio Rehearsslp .J every Saturday afternoon ,at the Musical Ent( Hall, at half-pant three o'clock. Engagements MSC, by addressing GEORGE BASTERT, agent, Dal Mon erey street, between Race and Vine. ocHt4 A BfOliiiMEMi 11%1 ABIVSEBILEATti. .9 r.e '8 c 0 ral AL - LH: st:f.lo =was sniTs To all places of amusement may be had up to 6% o'clock any evening. mh2g-$j fiItOICE BEATS AND ADMISSION TICKETS 1..? can be had at • • THE PROGRAMME OFFICE, 421 CiniSTNUT street, opposite the Post Office, foi the ARCH, CHESTNUT, W TAVITT and ACADEMY OF MUSIC, up to 6 o'clock every evening. 5e19.11 MUSICAL SOIREE ' EVERY EVENING, City Chess and Reading Rooms, a. 16-24 No. 12f 5 CHESTNTIT street Philada. AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC. Corner of BROAD and LOCUST Streets. lessee and Manager W.M. WHEATLEY Doors open at past 7—the overture begins at Ya belore 8. SPECIAL NOTICE. ita - POPULAR PRICES. 514 In order to meet the wishes of many families and patrons, the manager respectfully announces that In consideration of this being " THE LaST WEEK BUT TWO, and positively the FINAL PERFORMANCES IN THIS CITY; OP THE MARVELOUS RAVELS, GABRIEL, FRANLOTS, ANTOINE, YOUNG AMERICA, THE MARTMETTI'S, SIGNORA PE,PITA, MONS. VON HAMIALE, The following bcale of Prices will be adopted: dmisston } nerved 5eat5— „...... .»„, 75 cents Family Circe .2.5 cents MONDAY EVENING, April 23d. 1866 Will be presented, for the drst time, the grand Fairy Pantomime, entitled RAOUL; OR, THE MAGIO STAR. In Fourteen Tableaux. A bounding with wonderful Tricks.Tranaformationa and Hinelone. RAOUL....RA.VEL cOURCL..-- RAVEL BAIdBOLA- YOUNG AMERICA TEES () E PET E YRIE CITY. TOTING .A.NEBIQA., With his new and startling feats, will commence the ptrfc rmance on the THREE FLYING TRAPEZE. To be followedll by the Beautiful Grand Ballet, enti tled the ALCHYIELST. GABRIEL RAVEL.— as— ..FALFA LE AYPARITION....---...SIGNORITA ERMA ELE.ERT ----MONS. VON HA3IME SATITRDAY AFTERNOON, at 2 o'clock, FOURTH GRAND MATINEE. Admission. with Reserved Seats......— .50 cents Feats secured six days in advance at Mr. Trumpler's Music Store, Seventh and Chestnut !streets, and at the Office ct the A cademy from 9 till 4 o'clock. . it NEW EIESTN UT STREET THEATRE, CHESTNUT Street, above TWELFTH. .Doora open at 7. Curtain rises at 7.45. 'MONDAY EVENING. April 2.3, 1888, SECOND WEFT{ . OF • SUCCESSFUL ENG AGEMENT IVIES MAGGIE OF MITCHELL, Who will appear k OR THREE NIGHTS ONLY, In her OBIGENAL AND BEAUTIFUL CONCEPTION or THE PEARL OF i3AVOY, THE PEARL. OF SAVOY, Winch has been pronounced one of the kOST 11bILLIAIsT 131PRESONATIONS of this artiste. It bas cre Led A GENUINE St NS ATION Wherever It has been perforated, and has bad PROLONGED eUCCE. SES At IChlo's Garrltn, New 'York, and AL the Boston Theatre. MISS 3SAGOLF. MITCRFT.T Will be supported by MR. J. W. COLLIER, JOSLE ORTON, And the STRENGTH OF TB E COMPANY. MARIE...._Miss MAGGIE MITCHELL NIsW .IND7IiEXiTIFUL BCE.NERY, __lug I :XPENSIVEdPPOINTMENTS, drc. In *cave prt p.ration. LITTLR BAREFOOT. SATURDAY A_PTEILNOON. A prII GRAND FAMILY MATINEE. Second Matinee performance of Tax FLYING DUTCHMAN. Adm lepton to Evening Perk mance. c. , 50e- and TA.; .1.1.4 , 4uT ISTRENT TEELTRE, N. E. Corner NIZOTH and WALNUT. Begins 14 to tlt, MONDAN M EVENING. April 23, Mr. EDWIN 800 will have the honor lit making his first appearance In Philadelphia for two years. and will give his much. admixed conception and rendition of GTE ELIA... THE MM/A( OF CE, In Shakspeare's Grand Tragedy of teat name.' MR CH AELEs BARRON, who has been especial is engaced to sustain Mr./Mein Booth, will mate his first aepearance as lAU. MR J. IL TA YLOM. A S CASSIO. B raban ti 0.—....— Mr. (,L 11. Griffiths Deseemona— .lll.ss Effie Germol: „ Annie Graham TUEMatik —Stakspeari's beantlfUl Tragedy of NOM tOaND EDWIN 800111 As BOURG. 11 i RS. JOHN DREW'S NEW ARCH STREW' An THEATRE. Begins at to 8 o'clock. FIR,T WF X: OF FLY ELESTE.. F.l.Rzer Him-yr OF THE Ils.it; DUTCHMAN. .M ON DAY, April is, ano E.V.F..itY NIGH r. After careful preparation. TOM new scenery, niacin dr am tit Ty. a ofo n ssee, etc., the great nautical speCtaicalia THE FLYING DUTCHMAN ; on. THE PHANTOM SHIP. VANDERDECKI.N. the tiring Dutchman. Captain of the Phan tow ship_____ ' . __Modal:Le CELEs. t%i For full particular, of scenery, luctcleutaL storm of Ettl Itit) 'I he piece prec.d.-d each craning , by A FAVL.F.T/ E COMEDLETTA -BEN} FIT OF MADAME CELESTE FR2DJS CA )i t 1 ter Is: 1, Set r..NC , S— Corner o al. Broad and Sanswn street...— the Museum et itos :institution, contitinlog the largest Lxdlections In atur •11iittory in the t ruled States, will be open to the pnblic Salon* s and stindays excepted, fitZli 11 n clock, A , entil sunset, during MAY and , !Ste, in order that our cat zens may Feet me better new - minted with its intrinsic value and importance to the cay, end the nevessity of a new hall, wiW acvtannicdatious for the more convenient display arc preservation, es well es future increase of its col tections. kach ticket will admit bte one person during the three months' daily exhibition. and mar be t bmined OT any ruutaber, and also pt the following. Lome() t eralemen : F. BROWN, Df r aggitt,ll. a corner EMI and Chest mrcets. T, 1. ruGH. Bookseller, S. W. corner Sixth and 'J. - hi - strut streets. EVANS, Booksellers, 7'24 Chestau stret t, .1.; YON. BROTHERS & CO, Gan Store, G 25 Mark! mreet El W. PARRISH', Arch F t et. WILLIAM. b. RENZE ug Y, Drug & t.n., Eighth and Mar net streets. JUIiIQ &RLDER, Gun Store, Second and Walnut streets. A.B. TAYLOR, Druggist. 1015 Chestnut street. '..G.CAFF.inE. Druggist, E. corner Broad and - Chestnut r treets. Ass.altD.h6o.. Druggists. Twelfth and Chestnut streas. XrirNo tickets Issued at the door otthe Academy. A SSEhI ELY BunanNus. SIGNOR BLP'Z'S DOT - BLE SPHyNX SIGNOR BLITZ'S DOUBLE S. P.HYNX la still the great attraction at his TEALPLE OF WON. DER& All the best feats, including the I- OPE DANC 1. R, GRAND TURK, CAN &RV BIRDS ane VI NTRILOQUISM. are also given EVERY EVEN. ING at N. and WEDNESDAY anti SATURDAI AFTERNOONS at 3 o'clock. Admission. 25 cents—Children, 15 cents. Reserved Seats, 50 cents. • nth 19 IFILSTA DT'S LAST WORK—"STORM ON THE _IJIROCKY MOUNTAINS:" now on Ex tit hi' ion, by per missit.n of the ortist,tur the benefitofthe"Lincolnlsql• tuition, and coldiers' and Sailors' Orphan toys Home," at Wk.NDI.ROTE, TAY LuR fi BROWN'," ,912. and Sts Chestnut street. For one month only, season tickets, $1; single tickets, 23 cents, Open trope 10 AIM., to in ap2l-Sin _ _ ACADEMY OF PINE A i lti e li e , CHIDSTNOT, &boy tr t. Open from 9 A. M. till 6 P. 111. Benj. Weet's_gr_ertt Picture o CHRIST 'REJECTED. Still on exhibition, HARNESS, SADDLES, 4co IHE OLDEST AND LARGEST SADDLE4s.,r HARNESS Manufacturing Establishment in the Country. LACEY,MEEKER & Co No, 1216 CHESTNUT STREET OFFER OF TEEM OWN MANVFACTEOIE: BUGGY HARNESS, from 422 50 to $l5O LIGHT BABOUCHE from 50 00 to 350 HEAVY do do 75 00 to 500 EXPRESS,BRAE3S MOUNTED HARruchs-27 50 to 90 WAGON and SELF-ADJUSTING 15 00 to 80 STA GE and. TEAM. do" 80 e 0 to ISO LADIES' SADDLE do ' 13.00 to /X GENTS' • do do 300 to 75 Bridles Mountings, Bits, Rosettes, Horse Covers. Brushes Combs, Soaps, Blacking, Ladies' and Gents' Tmvellng and Tourist Saws and Sacks. Lunch Basks , s Dressing and Shirt Osses,Trnuks and Valises. zuhleolm No. 1216 Chestnut Street, T AYES.-100,000 Latba afloat, for sale by E, A. SOU L DER & CO., Dock Street Wharf. MIMI RETAIL DRY QOODII payr , wo:s af;kka suwitht aali,l :,-, 1866. Spring Importation. 1866. A -- :4 , vo , —I I s E M NEEDLE' zii JO! Has Just opened, :! 1,000 PIECES WHITE GOODS, 1; 4 - In PLAIN, FANCPf,'STRIPED PLAID and , 'Z"l Figured Jaconets, Cambrica , Nainsook, Dimi-,4 ties, Swiss, Mull and other Muslim, armpits. .0 ing a most complete stock to which the atten. Pm son of purchasers is solicited as they are of fered at a large REDUCTION from Last SEA- ► '7 SON'S PRICES. 0 I 100 pieces SHIRRED MUSLIMS for Bodies. 4 100 pieces PIQITES in all varieties of style and c ki price from 90c. to alBO. SOO PARIS COFFERED mums, newest 0 styles, of my own importation. ri ,LHIHILLS LIIIN,LSVAHCT-47-276 DASSIMRwi AND COATINGS.—James C E I . A 3r 3 Lee invite the attention of their friends and others to their large and well assorted Spring Stock, in Part coATIN G GOODS, - lack French loth. Co ored Cloths, of all kinds, 'Black TricotCoatings. Fancy French Coatings, Super Silk Mixed Coatings, Tweeds. of every shade and quality. PANTALOON &rue FS. Black French Doeskins, the finest texture, Black French cassirneres, the finest texture. New styles of Fancy Cassimeree. Plain and neat tasks Cassimeres. NM i D eds o in dPlad C C assi m m e r e es . Cords,.Beaverteens and Velveteens. Cassimeres for Snits. all styles. Also, a large assortment of Goods expressly, T .adAded to Boys , wear, for aale cheap. ' JAMES No. 11 North Second at., sign of the Golden Lamb. MIDWIN HALL & CO., 28 South Second street, have 1.1 now open their Spring F Lock of Shawls. Open Centre Broche Shawls. open Centre Square Shawls. Fined Centre Squarer bawls. New Styles of Shawls. Spun Silk Shawls. Llama Wool Shawls. Cashmere Wool Shawls. Long and Square Black Thibet ShaW o w ol lsS hawls. in great va. riety. wholesale and retail. VDWIN BALL CO., 28 South:Second street, are opening daily new goods. Check Silks, Colored Grounds. (heck Silks, White Grounds. Rich - Moire Antiques. Bich Shades Plain Silks. Foulard Silks, rich styles. Silk and Linen Popllins Slack Sliks.of all klnds,for Cloaks. SILKS AT REDUCED PRICE/3. "E`YBE d LANDELL, FOURTH AND ARUELOPICH 1. TO•DAY— IAko YARDS& FOULARDS. AT $1 A YARD. St..EPILLED PLAID ' , ILK% $l. NEAT t•TRIPE SILKS, and VS. PURE WAITE SBE PLANO SHAWLS. RURE 'WHITE BA RFGE SHAWLS. FULL LINE OF SUMMER SHAWLS. BLACK SHAWLS. WHOLESALE and RETAIL. _ _ _ VYRE & LANDELL OP 4.N TO.DAY r.• CRAVE PONi-EES, FOR Br7l P: AIN PONGEE:A. ; FOR SUITS. SUMMER POPLINS, FOR SUITS. FAI=RI , NARLE SPRING DR.F.S7I GOODS. 64 L.wIIT CLOTri SACKING. IX PIN'S GOODS, 1- ROM A UCTIO SUMMER SILKS. AT LUW PRICES. GOOD? FOR FR7EInDS Crepe Mare tz, plain colors. Lenes, in neat plaids and stripes, Melange Crepe a new article, only 37%. .Itacloona Poplin s, plain shade ,, . Crepe Poplins. elk and wool, beautiful, Lau - ns, mat styles and fast c , lors. Main and tlald Lisle Thread Gihgkanas, at 8T0E.113 & WOOD'S.= Arch FINANCIAL P. S. PETERSON dc CO. P. B. PETERSON & CO., 39 South 'Third Street. Stocks, Bonds, &c., &a., Bought and Sold at Board of Brokers. Liberal Premix= paid for COMPOUND INTERIM NOTFE3. Interest allowed on Deposits. 113941 v,C317.0 -4P- 4 ip• - 1 0) , SPECIALTY. Tisi SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO BANKERS AND BROKERS, 16 South Third st., I 3 Nassau street, Philadelphia. I New York. VaMMIN• STOCKS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON 001111:16810N, INTIMEBT ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS, 5-20 7 3-10, COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES wa.NTED. DE HAVEN & BRO., 40 South Third Strout, LOST AND FOUND. LOST OR MISLAID.—PoIicy of Insurance No. 5703 of the MUTUAL ASSURANCE COMPANY for .3,500 issued in the name of 7rlo. E. MITCHELL. Any pr mon finding the same will be suitably rewarded by leaving it with C. H. MUIR H splernimf mei bomb Sixth street. 8111 gr ) ra n d l igg PATENT TIN SIFTER Invaluable for use in all vases where a Strainer or Sieve in required. It will FLOUR, L,.IIASH, APPLE BUCKWHEAT, , BUCKW SQ HEAT, dm., and will Strain A REAL FAMILY CONFORC In the KITCHEN it is the right thing in the right place. No Household would be without It after a sin gle trial. It la the only Sifter now in use that gives satisfac tion. Every Sifter is warranted to give perfect setts faction. I E. SPENOKR, Factory, No, C3O MARKET street, Philads. State and County Rights for Sale on easy terms. Wholesale Trade supplied on reasonable terms. Saroplmsent to any Address on receipt of $1 00. fre29 GEORGE PLOWMAN, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, 232 CARTER STREET And 141 DOCK EMEENT. Xachine Work one. lififorrithtirif IIrOXCLOtI9 'titled to 4vtr-rol LONDON. LAYER RAISINS : WboIe and Holt . boxes best qrtality, London 'Layer Raisins, for sale by J. 31.817E8 188 8. Delaware Avenue. STRAINER. P/m3aravmB,BAtroas, COMPACIiiIEW TIGER GOLD MINING COMPANY OF COLORADO. - : - - • 00 Capital Stock, $500,00 . PAR VALUE OP SHARES, $lO EACH, PRESIDENT, FRANKLIN BUTLER. TREASURER., GEORGE A. ENO. SECRETARY, GEORGE R. BECEETEEL. DIRECTORS, FRANKLIN BUTLER, Liste.O. MEGARGEM. WM. H. FLITCRAFT, GEORGE M. BECHTEL.;, GEO. A. ENO. iJ. HOWE ADAlis, J. HERVEY BRYAN, iGEORGE P. LEWIS, The Mines of this Company compritis 6,600 feet of gold-bearing lodes, near CENTRAL CITY, Colorado., and away VERY RICH. They also own a fuse water power open South Clear Creek, upon which their Nines are located, which they intend rouse for drivh; all their mat pinery, Tne machinery's all ordered,an will be on Its way to the Mines by the first oflia Their Mines are within a short distance of the Eagle. Mining Company, ' which is now PAYING DIVI DENS MIN, The Company expects to pay di vidends by November next, 1866. The Company have reserved working capital or io.ooo shares, a sale. portion of which is now offered tor For particulars and prospectus call at the °Klee of Company, apxt st NO. 716 ARCH STREET. FURNITURE AND B EDDINCI afffirT6Dy---- 0-JEucit' PARLOR SUITES, AT Geo. J. kienkels% Thirteenth and Chestnut Streets, Formerly BC9 and 811 Chestnut Street. anti) w fr m Dti FURN Fru R_E. GOULD & CO.'S rated Furniture Establishment is removed from. d and Race streets to the splendid NEW DEPIZ•r No 37 and 39 N. Second street, (Opposite Christ Church.) Where they purpose selling for one year, at aboup , cost. Elegant Furniture at Fabulously Low Friers. .Also at their Ninth and -Market Streets Branch, where they are selling equally low, being about to en large the pre_mlseei. GOLLD it CO.'S FURNITURE DEPOTS, Nos, 37 and 39 hi-SECOND Street, and Coru sr NINTH and MARI/RT. alnut Chalk ber aud Parlor Either Polished or Oiled. at Geo. J. Thirteenth and Chestnut Streets, Ylrmerly of S(9 and 811 Chestnut Street, aplB-a fr m 13 - T HOUSER EICPBBS.— I have a large stock of every variety of Furniture which I will sell at reduced prices, consisting of PLAIN AND-MARBLE-TOP COTTAGE SUITS. WALNUT CHAMBER SUITS. PARLOR Slum IN VELVET PLUSH, PARLOR SUITS IN HALE CLOTH. PARLOR SUITS IN REPS. Sideboards, i:xtenelon Tables, Wardrobes, Book— cases, le attrsses, Loam es, Cane and W'oodaea:4 Claire, Bedsteads and Tables of every description. - P. P. GUSTINE, _ zahl3-am 31. E. Corner Second and Race streets. SPRING AIATRE 6. REST QUALITY AND STYLE, AND REDDEN:O OF .EvERY DESCRIPTION, J. G. ETUALER. mh77,3ra 9 South SEVENTH Street. A Tell .}.Pi AND SEIIVELdiI "X" plPv - LEWIS . A DOXI:T s - 71 DIAMOND DEALER JEWELER, RCN/IES, MI ELM k SI LVEr. W.1.11E, WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED: / B ° 2 Chestnut St.. Phil a. --JA Owing to the decline of sold, has mada- a gloat reduction in price of his large and well assorted Stock of Diamonds, Wai ches, Jewelry Silverware, Bcc- Tbe public are respectfolly Invited to call and es-- amine our stock before purchaaint; elsewbere. jail tf M.,. HOWARD'S tL v4 ...sM- 111tST-CLASS l?+t"> . AMERICAN' NVATC.EI ES, HAVE THE DEPROVKD Mershon's Patent Regulator. I,:te)* 9l : l r4 l o: l : , i:aooo)ll:FAllßJAlKo4:afArimtVza With Certificates GENTS" FiligNi4llllllo-GOODS. PATENT BROULDER SFAX SHIRT MANUFACTORY, Orders for these celebrated Shirts supplied PromPtV" at brief notice. GENTLEMEN'S Furnishing Goods, Of late styles in Tall variety. WINOHESTER & Go. 706 CHESTNUT. Jeamm%Ma J. W. SCOTT & CO., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AND DEALERS IN Men's Furnishing Goods. No. 814 Chestnut Street.. Four doors below the "Continental," MM==l WALL PAPER. A PER HANGINGS AT RETAIL JOHN H. LONCISTRETH, apiv 6t* Ncwth Third. Street.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers