Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, July 10, 1867, Image 3

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    JEIIISINESS NOTICE'S.
_Alpaca or, d o ,`
Liam and Durk Whit( a 114;
White and ~1( Is.
•
White and ivatioi ,
White )larscai , s
Linen Dustin , - lartn• n,softlo , Rt.
AU kinds, $t Ors and ~ i re 4 r f :iv aunt ,. Goo d, u , nera ii
• lialfdnazi &fawn BENNETT & CO.,
.a}l,l_, TOWER lIALL,
&LIU •?/+ 4 . bIB MARKET STREET,
. Pnir..knntrunk,
An d NO Broadway. New York.
MEYER'S NEWLY IMPROVED CRESCENT
SCALE
OVERSTRUNG PIANOS_,
IM
a*knowledged to be the beet. London Prize Medal and
est
SFAI A ONDMA.ND PIANOS ip_ Amriaeceived. MELODEONS
ada-m.weatrn, WareroOtne, 722 Arch et.. below Eighth.
EVEN IN BULLETIN.
Wednesday, July 10, 1801.
Or Persons leaving the city for the sum
mer, and Wishing to have the Ey - Immo Bill,
urrm sent to them, will please send their ad
dress to the office. Price, by mail, 75 cents
month.
THE GERMAN, SINGING FESTIVAL.
Philadelphia will give a cordial welcome to
a great body ofGerman invaders which is ex
pected to arrive on Saturday next. They are
coming, with merry hearts and melodious
voices, from all parts of the Eastern and Mid :
dl . States, and even from the Dominion of
Canada. They have no political or pecu
niary object in view; but they come simply
to sing and .be merry, and to renew their
pledges of love for the Fatherland and its
customs, especially for the pleasant custom
of cultivating music.
The German settlers in America are among
our best citizens, and their love for music and
devotion to its study are especially to be com
mended; for they alone,
.of our adopted citi 7
zens, strive to cultivate that art by co-opera
tive n measures.. °They haVe ceased to be
subjects of Emperors, Kings, Grand Dukes
and Electors across the Ocean; but they have .
not, in swearing rtillegianee to the United
States, forsworn their love for the most re
fining.Of the arts. Theypreserve the Memory /
of the Fatherland eVer fresh, by perpetuating
its songs; and, happily for this country, they
become so faithful to its constitution and laWs,
that they'd() not engage in quixotic schemes
forrevolutionizin - g jhe lands. they have left.
No one has ever heard of any Germans in Ame
rica engaging in enterprises corresponding to
Fentanik or filibustering. In coming to
America, they have become wholly Ame
rican. They cherish, however, the language
and the music of the country they have left,
and devoting themselves to honest industry,.
they are able to send to the Germans of
Germany such reports of prosperity, that
they make all those of moderate means
anxious to come and participate in the good
fortune and the freedom that belong to all
honestand industrious people in the United
States.
The Tenth ...Tational Stengerfest of .the Ger
4man singing societies promises at least to
equal any that have preceded it. The Ger
man residents of Philadelphia, who compose
so large a part of its population, are making
every preparation for the entertainment of the
thousands that are expected from abroad.
The programme of the festival, which is to be
continued for live days, has been widely ad
vertised, : and the committees having it in
charge are exerting themselveS so that it
may be carried out with credit to the city.
In the concourse of Germans that. will as
semble in Philadelphia in a few days, there
will be men from the banks of the
Rhine, the :Neckar,. the Mosel, the Danube,
the Elbe, the Spree, the Weser; men from the
vallies and lakes ot• Switzerland and the
Tyrol; men who have been oppres,scd?Subjects
of great Kaisers and Kings, or equally Op-
Pressed subjects of those pettier despots of the
little dukedoms and principalities, who had
nothing but lineage on which to establish a
claim to oppress and tax them. Gathering
here,.on the shores of the Delaware' and
Schuylkill, as free and independent citizens
of a great Republic, they do right
in reviving all the pleasantest customs
of their native land. They may
still, after forswearing their allegiance to em
perm. or king, be faithful to the divine art of
music; may still preserve the songs of Mozart,
Beethoven, \Veber, Mendelssohn, Kreutzer
and,the scores of other composers who-have
made German inusic the best in the world.
.If they could nationalize music as they have
themselves become. nationalized, and if our
People of American, English; Scotch and Irish
.birth could be persuaded to join with them in
cultivating it, we should all be a better and a
„happier people. These singing festivals have
a tendency in this direction, and Philadel
phians. should do all in their poWer to make it
a success in every way, and especially to
make the sojourn of the strangers agreeable.
TARE. WORK OF CONGRESS.
If there was any ground to blame the
Thirty-ninth Congress for making slow pro
gress in the work of reconstruction, the
Fortieth Congress cannot be. Ibund fault with
for any such delay. In less than a week from
the beginning of the summer 4ession, the
House has perfected and passed a bill for the
government of the conquered States, which
sets aside the objections of Mr. Johnson and
his Attorney-General and clothes the military
commanders with full powers to protect and
punish until the States lately in rebellion are
rehabilitated in their original positions in the
plete .ith share of the work to-day, and so
provide for the adjournment of Umgres with
in the next ten days.
The debate in the House yesterday was all they can for their labor. No reasonable
conducted by Messrs. Stevens and Bingham person will deny this assumption; but
on the Republican side, and Messrs. Brooks, . let us suppose a case. Suppose that a'.
Wood and F.lde.dge on the part of the opposi- 7 party of merchants and spectffittors
tion. " Mr. Brooks favored the House with au, should conspire to put up the necessaries of
immense tirade, which was an amusing life ibid should deMand exorbitant prices for
blendinc of the tine classics with the regular their commodities. Then suppose that the
Old slang of Taunt-way Hall. Mr. Brooks is workmen should send to Cuba for their
fond of the claosic's, and Tikes, to let people sugar, to Laguayra for their Coffee and to
know that he has been to Europe. He worked • China or Japan for their tea, and thus
Marathoh and Thermopyhe into his speeches procure those articles at a reasonably cost.
very much as he served up "the Pantheon And then suppose that the merchants and
the Parthenon and the 'hundred-gated Speculators should hold an indignation meet-
Thebes'at-the great Childs Banquet, when Mg and "oppose and earnestly protest against
he compared our neighbor's line building to all organtatil purchased importations of tea,
these architectural. celebrities. The elegmt coffee and sugar, seconded by consumers, for
gentleman from the Eighth District of 4 the 'impose of overstocking the grocery mar-
York waxeel - terribly severe upon Sheri , '•la ket any one locality, &c., ttc."
, od - Siekles - , - one - of - whom - he - reemornen-----'te—T—Such-a-protestivould- be „met with -shouts-
President to despatch to MassLiclius , of derision, and yet it is precisely the 'ground
tie other try Walrmia. The fling at, taken by the discontented iron-workers of
chusetts was rather ungrateful, so soon after
Mr. Johnson's wonderful visit to Boston. ' He
threatened Congress with the wrath of the
President, and declaied that
"If he was de President of dose United States,"
he would resist the attempt of Congress to en
force its law. Mr. Brooks considered the
majority of the American 'people worse than
the Tartars, Austrians or the 'Duke of Alva,
and' rambled on in this strain until he blew
himself out of breath and resigned the floor to
Fernando Wood'. With the exception of the
classics, World's speech was a pretty close
repetition of Mr. Brooks's, with the addition
of a grosS mis-statement of facts as to the
condition of the South under the present sys
tem.' De wound up his speech with the
assertion that
"Your military satraps are among them; the
peopTh have no rights; the uegroes can butcher
them, and do butcher them. White females are
left at the mercy of the brutality of their former
slaves, while if a white man inflicts the least per
sonal punishment on a negro it is sent abroad to
the country and used as'argument for further op
pression and further injuries."
Mr. Bingham surprised his friends by ac
cepting twenty minutes of time from Mr..
Stevens and making a sharp speech in defence'
of the bill. He has manifested such a bitter
antagonism to everything with which Mr.
Stevens is prominently connected, that it was
doubted whether he would even vote for the
bill. He is entitled to credit for the brilliant
way in whin he demolished the elegant
clasSical allusions of Mr. Brooks and de
fended the bill against the assaults of its
enemies. Mr. Eldridge followed in a speech
of ten minutes, containing nothing approach•L
ing the character of an original•idea.
The debate was closed by a powerful ar
gument from the veteran Stevens. His mas
terly definition of , the, real position ..of. the
rebel States as conquered territory, and of the
powers of Congress growing out of that po
sition cannot. be successfully gainsaid. He
claims the absolute independence of Congress
in the work of reconstruction, and asserts
that tlie "Confederate States are our property:
their citizens are our subjects. Their lives
and their liberties are subject to the supreme
will of this body, always controlled by the
laws of nations; - the laws Of war and the laws
of humanity." Such a foundation as thiS can
be understood by every man, woman and
child„in America. It strips the whole ques
tion bare Of impediment and difficulty and
leaves a cl&ir field upon which to work out
the regeneration and reconstruction of the
South. Mr.' Stevens states his points boldly
and concisely, and there can be no doubt
that his general views, as expressed yester
day; will meet a cordial response from the
mass of the Northern people. Neither he
nor they have been carried away by the
"sickly humanities" of Messrs. Greeley and
Gerrit Smith, and he sees that there is to true
mercy apart from true justice, and no healing
for the Southern body-politic until its wounds
and sores have.. been probed to the very
bottom.
The House endorsed - Mi. — Stevens Ly the
passage of his bill by a vote which will make
the Presidential veto a barren form ; and it is
to be hoped that Mr. Johnson will now be
satisfied to withdraw from his insane med
dling with the work of reconstruction, and
leave it, where it belongs of .right, in the
hands of the People's representatives in Con
gress.
DOG.IIN.THEOT ANGER'S :116
Some of the measures adopted by bodies of
striking workmen throughout the country,
are so monstrously absurd that it is hard to
believe that they arc not intended for broad
burlesques or practical jokes, rather than as
serious acts and solemn utterances. An in
stance of this occurred on Saturday night at
a Strikers' Meeting in Allegheny City, in this
State. In the Pittsburgh Iron Works the
workmen are on a strike for wages which the
proprietors do not feel authorized to pay.
The latter have taken steps to supply the places
of the disaffected by bringing men from
abroad, and the old hands held a meeting on
Saturday night to protest against this .action.
Resolutions were adopted, declar
ing among other things -that "the
workingmen of Alleghany county do
not, object to the ordinary free immigration of
laborers to the United States, from any coun
try on the globe, yet do oppose, and hereby
earnestly do protest a'gainst all organized pur
chased importationsEF of laborers, seconded by
manufacturers, ter the putpose of overstock
ing the labor market of any one locality, feel
ing as they do that such importations'are hos
tile to all just rights and interests of home
labor, resulting at the Same time injuriously
to the imported laborers themselves, and in
evitably leading to pauperism and crime."
This is about as complete a case of dog-in
the-mangerism as was ever exhibited. They
will not work themselves and they solemnly
protest against others being allowed to do
' what they refuse to do. The disaffected
class of mechanics and laborers are
the most jealous men aliVe in respect
to their own rights; but they are so full of
devotion to the interests of Number One, that
they entirely lose sight of the fact that Nia
bet Two also has some rights that Number One
should be bound to. respect. A pet grievance
with these unhappy mortals is the fact that
merchants regulate their prices according to
the demand for their commodities, and take
advantage of seasons of scarcity to enhance
sonahly that if the merchant or the specula-
for has the right to avail- himself of the
market, they too have the same right to get
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.---PHILADELPFITA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1867.
Pittsburgh. It is much fo r be regretted t,uat,
working men are so prone to allow them
selves to .b..! led into folly by selfish dema
gogues, who find their interest in keeping
alive a spirit of discontent among . operatives
and a feeling of antagonism between capital
and labor. .
SIMIAtER . TIinvEL.-- . -There is no scenery in
America more exquisitely beautiful 'than the
hills and valleyS of Pennsylvania, and tourists
who undergo the expense and discomfort of
a long journey to distant parts of the country
'merely for the sake of scenery are either igno
rant or unwise. For grand mountain views,
of course the Alleghanies stand unrivalled,
but in the quieter loveliness of hills and val
leys and beautiful streams, the Lehigh and
Wyoming valleys are unsurpassed in any sec
tion of the country. The upper • waters of
the Lehigh, and the whole-range of the Wyo
ming Valley present a succession of the most
exquisite - panoramas,' and now that they
have been opened to travelers by an easy
access, their beauties, which have been
monopolized by the few, are beginning
to be known and enjoyed by the public
generally. The railroad connections begin
ning with the North Pennsylvania road and
continued over the Lehigh Valley road, and
its extensions, furnish a most comfortable and
rapid route to this picturesque region. There
is now no change of cars between Philadel
phia and — Wllkesbarre, and at - all the-promi
nent points along the line the traveler has an
advantage, not always to be enjoyed by rail
way tourists, of excellent hotels,' furnished
with all the appliances, either for the hasty
railroad meal, or' tor the accommodation of
those who wish to travel more leisurely and
spend a portion of their time at. the various
interesting points on the road.
• The mystery in which the inmu•diate cause
of the Fort2Kearney massacre has been in
volved has at length been dispelled, and the
solution is of
,precisely the character
that might have been. expected. An' order
was issued establishing military posts upon - .
the Indian reservations—set apart especially
for their use—without their consent being.
obtained. • - As.:the .troops: approaelred, the
Indians became alarmed and deserted their
'villages, fearing that they would be . - ;gain
treated as they were by Captain Chivington,
the history of whose barbarous treachery we
related a few days ago. It was in c*onse
quence of this really needless alarm, that the
troops at Fort Phil. Kearney were attacked;
they had been deceived once, perhaps a dozen
times, under the same circumstances, and it
was not in savage nature, nor would it have
been in civilized nature, tO submit quietly
again to wholesale butchery. The sad truth
is, that the responsibility for this Indian war
rests upon the whites, and Capt. Chivington
is just as guilty,morally, of the murder of the
Fort Phil. Kearney garrison,as if he had slain
the soldiers with his own hand........
Itis_stated very positively in some of the
Democratic journals, that Matthew F. Maury,
late of the rebel navy, is seeking, with some
hope of success, to obtain a professorship in
General Lee's college; in Virginia, This
man's treasonable conduct towards the Go
vernment was particularly base, for to it he
owed name, position - and reputation. He
has not yet been pardoned, but he probably
understands the situation well enough to
know that he ~will be readily thrgiven if
be comes back to teach the Southern youth
the blessedness' of the Copperhead faith.
This, the ,utter , worthlessue6s of oaths, and
the excellen . of treason, he is probably bet ,
ter fitted to teach than any of ,, the branches
of learning in which he obtained Ids earlier
fame, which, as has been amply proved, was
unjustly awarded. With Lee, Maury, and a
few more renegade United States officers in
structing the Southern youth, fidelity to oaths
and devotion to country will not unlikely be
regarded as among the least desirable virtues
with the next generation in the South.
The new island which was said
. to have
been discovered on the Pacific coast, off the
mouth of the Columbia river, seems to have
a very unsubstantial sort of an existence.
Either it sinks occasionally beneath the sea,
or it is a second isle of Delos, and floats about
among the Cyclades of the-Pacific with every
change of wind and tide. Quite a number of
enterprising Californians have gone out in
search of it, with the intention of preempting
the available land upon it, but after prolonged
search they proclaim their inability to find it.
If it is a floating island, the best thing we can
do is to have it secured to the mainland as
soon as it is round, for it manifestly belongs
to us, and we do not need even Attorney-
General Stanberry's opinion to know that no
portion of the United Stateti has a right to be
floating about on its own responsibility. To
acknowledge it, even under such circum
stances; would be a practical admission .of the
truth of the doctrine of recession.
The present healthy condition of this city
furnishes a subject for general congratula
tion: Although no sanitary measures of any
importance have been instituted, and the
etreets are in a filthy condition, the mortality
last week was but 21;6 against 324 during the
same period last year. There is reason to
believe that we shall escape the visitation of
any epidemic diseaSe this season, notwith
standing general expectation to the contrary,
Trornintirretire - ts exercised - at tug (plum me
station, and the Board of ifealth is careful in
the performance of its duties. But this agreea
ble condition of things does not excuse the
negligence of street, contractors, and they
should be compelled to remove the filth that
offends the senses in nearly all our thorough
fares.
1n unr - Ya
Mr. Seward, in his anxiety to prove that a
prophet is not without honor save iu his own
country .
proved conclusive ly thatlirophets
are not likely to be honored anywhere unless
they are of .a reliable character. Prom the
Paris papers we learn that prior to 31axi
nallian's execution, the Secretary telegraphed
to Vienna the story that the AtpA r j au P r i n c e
was exiled, and would start at once for
Europe. This prediction proved no more
wiled. than his ninety days prophecies in
regard to the war. It would probably be
more beneficial to himself and the word at
large;-iEhe:wsnthl expend 'his time now in
trying to atone for the past, instead rif making
wild plics4ei , at future.
Another murderer was translated direct to
heaven.by way. or the gallows, qn Friday
last. A ruffian who had butchered an ac
quaintance in . cold blood was banged at New
Brunswick for his .crime, and, he went to the
scaffold with, that sania entire confidence
that he was secure of a place in the regions
of bliss, that has distinguished the outgoings
of most condemned murderers of late years.
Men and women who have led blameless
lives die with prayers upon their lips and
with an earnest hope tbr salvation. Wicked
murderers, who would repeat their crimes,
were they set at liberty, are taught' to
believe that if,. in their extremity, they pro
fess faith and repentance their salvation
is assured, and they go to the gallows
with more confidence than is felt by those
who have never seriously sinned. There is
something blasphemous and shocking in these
apotheoses of murder, and the reverend clergy
may well question themselves whether, in en
couraging- this belief in a certain short cut to
heaven, they are not encouraging frissia crimes
upon the part Of men who care but little for
the rope, in comparison to their dread of what
may be in store for them in the world to
come.
Thad. Stevens, in his speech in Congress
yestenitiy, upon the supplemented Recon—
struction bill, expressed very decided ap
"proval Of the "heroic execution of murderers
and pirates . " by the Mexican government.
His remarks were greeffd with Icisses - from
the Democratic side of the House. The
Democracy have grown tender upon the
subject of the execution of murderers and
pirates. They well know that Jeff. Davis,
Raphael Semmes, and many others of their
old friends and allies would have hit the dust
lung ago, had the Glivernthent of the United
States been as firm in the execution of the
laws as Wilco haS been in imposing puni,sh
merit upon State offinelers. It is the of l idea
• that
, Nn rogue e'er-telt the halter draw
NV i th.gotht opinion of tliu law."
Tiwre ,is one thi»g thr which the De
tno.racy car mvor )rgive the present
dominant party in - Mexico. They arc ole
termincd that it 'shall- lie a RePhbile.
anism and copperheadism have no
more in common with each Other than
slavery and freedom or Mormonism and
moralitY have. .
The Imperial family of Austria have had'
another distressing eyent: which is mysteri
ously mentioned in the Paris' ..11(i,toria! Di
pl(,hotlique; from which we translate : "The
Vienna journals lately reported that one of the
ladies in waiting on the Empress Charlotte
(Maximilian's widow) had beep found blunt
ingin her chamber in the palace of Miramar.
A letter we have received from Trieste, from
a person in whom we hive the highest con
fidence, says the lady in qUestion, who was
reall tic service of the Empress of Mex
ico, did.not commit suicide, but that she was .
taken to Vienna Under an escort of police:
hlt appears tlffit - therelEagain.st - her - a - terrible
;
accusation, the nature of which our corres
pondent indicates ; but on thiS point we think
proper to maintain the greatest reserve, until
the judicial inquiry permits us to express a
a judgment founded on facts." •
It may be regarded as a rather surprisimr,
fact that Professor Eastman, an astronomer
engaged at the National Observatory iu
Washington, is wholly ignorant of tix fact
that the festival of Easter is regulated by the
full moon. lle testified to this effect yester
day, during the Surratt trial. knowledge
oldie science of astronomy • does not neces
smily include aoiluaintatice• with this fact;
but it would naturally be supposed that every
educated man is familiar with the laws which
fix the time, not only of the great Christian
festival, but of the more ancient Jewish
Passover.
A.SIEItICAN CE3IENT, FOR
J_J mending broken ornaments, and other artirlee of
(Ilan.. China, Ivory. Wood, Marble, ite. No heating re
quired of the article to be mended, or the Cement. Al.
wage ready for nee. For eale
_ JOHN It. DOWNING, Stationer,
feiti
19 South Eighth street, two doors ab. Walnut.
EWSPAPER ADVERTISING.—JOY, COE & CO.,
A- 1 Agents for the B 171.1471 IN and Newspaper Preee of the
whole country, have removed from Fifth.and Chestnut to
144 South Sixth street, second door above Walnut.
kithut U p E
Buil H ings SIXT etre,
New 1 et,Ph it a
ork delphia . ,
Buildings , , iyl7-lyrn
FRE
NCII CIICITATENG LIBRARY,
PAUL E. GIRARD, - -- •
French Bookrell, - T, Stationer and Engraver,
.20`..: South Eleventh mtreet. -
ItlrNoto paper and lonvelopea promptly and - neatly
PialliP.,d. my3l-31,-1v
..,
si THEO. 11. 314.1 ALLA„
AT HIS OLD 1-STABLISIIED,
HAT AND CAI' EMPORIUM; • Z
jaletlrD FYI 4 Chestnut Arco.
jaNEW STYLES FOR WARM: WEATIIER.—x
The Panama and Mackinaw Hata. together with a
neat variety of Straw Hata, selling at low prices,
by TRIED. H. NiI:ALLA.
AT HIS OLD-ESTABUSIIED
HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM,
je.s-tliT§ Kli CIIESTNUT‘STRE43%
•
IL\VA ItIiC,RTON'S PROVED, gtiTILATED
and eaey•fittiug Drees Itata (patented), In all the op
proved to,hiona of the k!eueon. Glicatnnt street, next
door to the l'oat.oftiee. ael;ilyrp
H. P. & C. H. 'TAYLOR.,
PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS,
Wit North Ninth 'Arcot.
AI:LEA ISLE IRON SCREW CLAMPS FOR
in Cabinet Molten!, Joinen , and other Mechanics—six
size iu stock at TRUMAN & SHAW'S, No. El 5 (Eight
Thirty,five) Market etroet, below Ninth.
WHEN YOU WANT CHEAT' AND GOOD PHOTO
VT graphs, kIiIMER'S Gallery, Socond street, above
Gruen, is the i)nee to resort to. Ono Porcelain, six Garda
or one large Picture $l. • ,
VOR CRACKING Oi!„ CANDIES, 'ME CANDY Olt
Sugar-Nippere 1, ill hi) I,,und very convenient for eon,
feetloncro. We abio have Wire Fruit ibirket4,
Small Scoop, Syrup Ketil,qi, etc. TRU
MAN & SHAW, No. e. 1.5 (Eight Thirty-live) Market street,
below Ninth. -
'PORCELAIN PICU
TRES ONLY. $l, ATL F. R
lEI.
.1 MEWS Oa 624 Arch street. Velvet and other
elves on hand. •Uall and examincrepechnens.
Vex,Serpr,T l:Box Chitele, Croe . 6'
\V heele, Bnin and Butler Tnett‘rn, 'gap Borers, Bond
Dr.vere, Spigeta, faucet,. and Mehispri (lateA, Ynrd and
Anne Sticke, Bettlee, and Weighte. by TItUIAN
SHAW, No. 8 . 35 (Eight Thirty-lire) Marlcet oitreet. below
REIMIZffME
1 4 1RAMES, OF EVERY RIND A ND sTyLu ON ILAN!)
I and mad., to order. A fine variety of 'Photograph
Frames; .Nloldinge, ahm, of every kind, tor square framed
of 110) sue, at REDI Kit & t O. H, iPI Arch street.
N . °TICE—MR. GEOH(IE A SP A
RINGMN, 701 WA f,
nut atreet, intd opened a ReAtaurant, gannet:fed with
IL Whole: ale and Retail \Vint Establishment. Flue toot.
ere ought not to fail to give him a call. iYIO.BO
4.2!FOLEN— A1101:1"1111: 01.' JUNE, WITH .t.
1 ,1 Deed and other nape] e, No. 33,146 Polley of luonronce,
in I.la. 1 rtenklm 111. , ,0nw..e 4,:0mp.u.Q.• of
A reward will be given for the return of then) to -
MICHAEL McNANIAItA,
Saturday Evening Post,
jylo - w,f , lt 3W Walnut Htteet.
'PLAID FRENCH ORGAN DV MUSLIN, ERY SMALL,
email. medium, large 11,/ill very large plaide, at a re.
cloyed price. hy tho piece or van],
WIDE WHITE' NETS, PI/It MOSQUIPW.,
vmperior quality, 90iuchra wide, •IS rents c yard.
Si)110. do. 48
'l' 0.. 100 do. • l',ll
110. 1(8 d,0.. 5L do.
Allowance of f, per cent. to pltrelnuiere of picco. Ono
lot of 1.0 incheo w Ide. at :;?,bi by the piece.
WIIITE PIQUE, 31, 50,15, lob continue to ,•ell
at the rcauccd pricer' of the earlic- r•en,on, notwith.
,tcnding the great itfiVIIIICC'(,I tho •,rtnight.
SOFT Olt 1 til IA MULL—Would Call attention to a lot
of 40.eent no very dump Rood..
IMITATION TI CIiED SIAN, SW D?rt, for bodioo
— cte:Tdorely rCoonlang_TuckcdAludin,.so,outel per_yan-Li
50 per cent 01 r , cent preen, at ,
Loen toil Embroider, store,
• 'lq P *l , . Eir.6olstrcct.
THE PHILADELPHIA EXPOSITION
SUMMER CLOTHING.
Cars run direct to -
W ANAMAK ER & BROWN'S
Oak Hall Building,
Largest Clothing House in the City.
Whole Block on the Cor. of Sixth and
Market Streets.
1101 CHESTNUT STREET
TO THE LADIES.
LINEN CAMBRICS.
PRINTED FOR DRESSES.
WHITE FOIL BODIES.
Vane go4le arc essential for tionno , !r Wear,
and we arc now selling the balance of our Im
portation at a
Great SAcritke,
E. M. NEEDLES & CO,
N. W. Cot% llth ant] Chestnut Sts.,
:11.11N3,51T1C) I
REMOVAL.
E. S. JAFFRA.Y (Sr, CO.
lii cto inform theirfri. niM I. tlmt they have
removrd their place of tim , jim,i from
6OS Cher4tritut Street,
Cl' STAIRS
g f..;reater facilitke for
thrir mtock will be'ron-id , rubly lurrt.w.rd
rinua (.I,cartmetite.
P..ll,,,erited by S. SToRy
EFFERVESCING GRANULAR SALTS
CITRATE OF nu S lA.
SISSINGEN,
sEmizrz,
SARATOGA, die,
There. Salt& Id popular in England, are prepared at the
Laboratory of .
CHARLES ELLIR, SON A . CO.,
Office and Store, corner Market and Seventh.
I — Trade supplfalli ber JeW4MrP—
IMPROVED
PATENT L9 1 N STEAM
• HOT WATER APPARATUS,
FOR WARMING AND VENTILATING WITH PURE
• EXTERNAL MR.
UNION STEAM AND WATER HEATING CO.,
JAMES P. WOOD tic CO.,
4IS. FOURTH street
D. M. FELTIVIILL, Stip% • ja3.3ut
INDIA RUBBER GOODS,
No. 708 Chestnut Street.
MANUFACTURERS AGENCY.
•
Vulcanized Machina Belting, Steam Packing. Car
Springc, Noce, Boote, Shoer, Vulcanite .I,,welry, prngigisti
and Stationer's articlee, and every de,icrivtion of nubbin
Goods, Wholesale and Retail, at lowed factory prices.
RICHARD LEVICK.
anfl-6mrpli
rum, WEAVER a CO.
NEW CORDAGE FACTORY
NOW IN FULL OPERATION.
No. 23 N. WATER and 2:3 N. DEL. avenue
1a22
IOTTON-100 BALES CLEAN STAINED corrON,
V Bake "Fair," lauding Iron, Steamer, mai for eale by
WM. GREINER,
jy1.0.5q Chethiut street,
51 THE PROTECTIVE FRUIT JAR. 251
2
w;,vrant.,l air-tight. t
• ' • TIN PRESERVING CANS.-
UPRIGHT REFRIGERATORS, (Schu , ,ley'm Patent.)
PATENT IGE KING REFRIGERATORS.
WATER-COOLERS AI)N . ICE-CREAM FREEZERS.
A-hue article of NURSERY REriti“EitATt.9
GEM PEA-SHELLERS.
CHAMPION CLoTHES-W RI SORES. •
' PATENT CLOTH ES.DRYERS.
DORTY'S PATENT Cl.' )TIIF.S-WASII PR, the greatest
inrcntion of the (10%. Thi4 machine will eave time 718
well ae labor. WM. R. KERNS'
Holve F:lrniphing Store,
Open in the evening. . North Ninth ?treet.
251 251
Ducßorrs LOW WATER
.DETECTOR IS AN INVARIABLE
INDICATOR OF APPROACHING
DANGER FROM LOW WATER
IN STEAM BOILER'S.
Price TOO 00 applied.
AUG. S. BATTLES, 24 N. Sixth street,
e 7 tf rp Sole Agent for Pennsylvania.
WHITMAN'S COMMERCIAL AND BREAKFAST
Chocolates.—The great and pouular Chocolates for
table use. hotels and restaurants should use
them. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, Manufacturer, No.
1210 Market street. . jel944d4p,
600 • RIFFITII & PAGE, 600
REFRIGERATOnS
•
jef.M tf Southwest Corner Sixth and Arch.
71, AliKING"V$11111 INDELIBLE INK, EMBROIDER.
ing, Braiding, Stamping, &c.
M. A. TORItY,
800 Filbert Ft 1.1114.
TEILA GLASSES. - • '
Fine Opera UlitFties, made by M. Sardon, of feria:
orien - z as C. W. A. TR UMPLER,
0e20.4p - tf Seventh and Chetanut atmetg.
PATENTED .—PANTS CLEANSED AND STRETCHED
from ono to five inches for 51 00, at MOTTET'S, 289
South N nth 'street, and 786 Race street. laPlB-BmrP4
ISAAC NAT}IANS, AUCTIEKEEft,R.i i :. CORN ER
Third and Spruce atreete, only one agoare below the
Extbange, 824000 to loan In large or small amounts, on
diamondo, ellver plate, watehev, jewelry end
I C
i 7
of
value. Office hours from 8 A. M. till 7 P. M. d e - nit&
fished for the last forty yeare. Advances made in large
amounts at the lowest market rates. -- JaBtl rp
.0 TRAVELING CLOCKS, CONVENIENT FOR
moons going thec n t a Ar itTtEß. importem
jelatf rp Chth street,
below 4th.
F•OR SALE—GIAStS CROP AT POINT BREEZE
Park.
L-41411F-: Apply to Uute.gecper at Park
TELE COOLEST SPOT IN TILE Vi
cinity of the city in Lilo tweeter Point. Dottie
leave foot of Sodth street. daily, every
era of au hour. Faro 10 colas._ m310:811'10
three•quartei
----
tegiaierdtle.tAoll\oiriatlr A P
l in E tY lt aila r tv ij o i l l j ' o E t Z
. opouth streeh daily , every throe-quarters of of
au hour. Fare 10 cents. inyoo.3m4p
MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON
eI%DIANIONDS, WATCHES, JEWELIty, PLATE,
CLOTHING, (th., at
JONIN di CO.
• . OLD .ESTABLIBIIED LOAN OFFICE,
. • Corner of Third and GRAM 'Areas,
• M m
Below Lobard.
N. B.,—DIAMONDS, WATCHEF3, JDWE
~~ne!f.r , ex
/lOLA. RKABLE )
"'Et S rt. "V.IE 11)
PRAIRIE GAME AND MEATS
FRESH IN VOICE .11:ST ED.. VED,
Cianpriring
Grouse, Pigeon, Duck, Snipe, Wild Pigeon,.
Wild Duck, Teal Duck, Venison, Sweet Dread‘
Duck with Olives, Plover, Chickens, :Turkey,
Wild),,Capon with Jelly, Sausage with Truf
fles, Pheasant, Partridge, English Hare
Quail, AC. 4 i31 •
Prepared as Pates, Roasted, Broiled, Pa
[Mote and Compote.
SIMON COLTON & CLARKE,
S.' W. Corner Broad and Walnut..
Trthl-f,m,cv-tin)
CHICKERING PIANOS.
. First Premium.
GRAND GOLD MEDAL
Has been awarded
CHICKERING & SONS
• at the •
PARIS EXPOSITION i -1867.
W. H. DUTTON,
914 Chestnut Street.
)3 , 1. , ;t m«• 414 ^ _
ROSEWOOD CHAMBER.
PARLOR FURNITURE.
GEO. J. HENKELS, LACY & CO.,
Thirteenth and Chestnut Streets.
5,14 Liu rp:
PATENT WIRE WORK
FOR RAILINGS, STORE FRONTS.
GCARDS, PARTITIONS, te.
COAL scREEN6,,FOI;RISRINIT.I; 14'31tr.8. &c.
Af.andachucd.by . . .
M. WALKER Sc SONS,
fer,(Lia4pS No. 11 NL:lb Path Street.
FAMILY FLOUR.
1, Im rt :
Every Barrel Warranted.
J. EDWARD ADDICKS.
Ciao of L Knowlee& Co.)
1230 MARKET STREET.
spit) atalp
ROOMS CARPETED
FURNISHED' COMPLETE,
BBOWEiG FURNITURE. TO BEST ADVANTAq E lon
PRICES REDUCED.
GEO. J. HENKELS, LACY &,CO.,
Thirteenth and Chestnut Stm.
el4 -lm rpt
WILLIAM B. CARLIME.
CARLILE, dc JOY,
House and Sign Painters and Glaziers,
No. 437 Arch Street, Philadelphia.
Glazing and Jobbing attended to with ircinictnek , a and
despatch. Give us seal ai 4 tt•hi;
OF
WALNUT CHAMBER FURNITURE.
GEO.J.HENKELS,LICY & CO.,
13th and Chestnut Streets.
jel4 Im rp§
PEIRCE'S STONE SURFACE,
AN ANTI-OXIDIZER, •
FOR COATING IRON RAILINGS BOILERS AND IRON
WORK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS; ALSO OIL
• • TANKS. ACID TANKS. dm.
Thin surface has been put to the mort revere Chemlea
test, and has been proved to react all change or. decompo
sition. As an Anti-Oxidizer It Ilion° equal; never cracker
or scales off. kiln coil Led with thie eurface will Cot cor
rode, even In salt watel7 Manufactured by
I. NEWTON PEIRCE & CO., •
No. 427 North Eleventh Street.
409-t.m.w,srurP
rrnom.ztt.s wiEi3l3,
FORKS OF SECOND AND CHRISTIAN STREETS.
DAZED, FRESH, SALT AND PACKLNG HAY,
BALED, WHEAT, OAT AND BYE STRAW,
' FOR
SHIPPING AND CITY USE.
tnsBi w6rrirP
LIFE, GROVVTII AND BEAUTY.-
'London" , Gray Hair Color The only Restorer"
"London" Hair Color Restorer"'
"Loudon" Hair Hair Color Infallible Restorer"'
"London" Hair Color Restorer"'
"London" RESTORED Hair Color Hair Restorer"'
"London" Hair Color Restorer"
"Loudon" without Hair Color Restora. Restorer"'
"London" Hair Color Restorer"
"London" Dyeing. Hair Color tive. Restorer"'
It is the only known Restorer of Color and perfect Bair
Dressing combined. Delicately perfumed.
"Loudon" -Does Hair Color RODISWee• Restorer"
-- 9:orition. ----------- ` - ' - 1. -
"London" not Hair Color all Restorer"'
"Loudon" hair Color Restorer"'
"London" Stain Hair Color Dandruff Restorer"'
"London" Hair Cohn. llieetorer"-
"London"
,or Boil Hair Color and 4. ltestorssr"‘
"London" Hair Color Restores"'
"London" Anything. Hair Color Itching. Restorer"'
MAKES THE LIAM sorr, GLOSSY AND LUXURIANT.
K Eire Tux SCALP OLEAN. COOL AND LIEALTISY.
"London Hair Color Restorer"-
"London Cures all Hair Color It will Restorer."'
"Loudon , Hair Color Restorer."'
"London Diseases Hair Color prevent Restorer."'
"London Hair Color Restorer.",
"London of the Hair Color the hair Restorer."
"London Hair Cosor Restorer,"
"London Scalp. Hair Color from .Restorer."
"London Hair Color . Restorer."
"Lowlor. Hair Color Fulling. Restorer."'
No washing or preparation before or after its use; OP
plied by the hand or soft brush.
Only 76 cents a bottle. Sold at - DR. swAYr..s,
330 N. Sixth streetotbove Vine,
le2CewsLissrnmP-tf And all Druggists and Variety Storm
---
jy9-3tri §
------
( . ~. .4 ~ , , T. STEWART BROWN,
I:L- 1 h. ~; d EI.E. Corner of
' ' ' FOURTH and CHESTNUT STB.
1 1 "1" mortmAcTuitra OP
TRUNKS, VALISES, a11i?4, 1 4 16 suitable for Europe=
(Formerly at 708 CHESTNUT ST.)
JONES TEMPLE & CO.
iIAH AF A sVNVTE27V R B
I 12 Irave introduced their
• — SUMMER -CASSMERE_HAT)3._
—thoroughly ventilated. mylltd§
SUITS
FOR BALE BY
PURCHASERS.
.111AURICE JOY..
S UIT t3
(Succemor to Wm. F.llughee.)
SECOND EDITION.
BY TELVAIRAPH.
LATEST BY TUE CABLE.
)financial and Commercial „Quotations.
FROM . CAPE ISLAND.
The First Hop of the Season.
LATE FROM WASHINGTON.
Official Demand for Santa Anna.
FROM FORTRESS MONROE.
WATERSPOUT AT THE CAPES.
The Armamessie Steamers.
Heavy Robbery at Whitehaven.
Icy Atlantic Telegraph.
NOON It I.: PORT.
,--te-v-,„. . . . .
LONDON, July 10, Noon.—COn6olS for money,
94 1 g.
U:'
S. Five-twenties 73
Eric Railroad '-!,(
Illinois Central 0,,,._
FRANKFORT, July 10.-1:. S. Five-twenties,
LIVERPOOL, ntly 10, Noon.—Cotton heavy and
quiet; sales to-day about +4,000 bales.
Middling Cplanda, 10'; , ,',d.; Middling Orleans
10 16-16 d.
Breadstuff's are quiet. Corn
tides unaltered.
QPEEIis‘TOWN . ; July 11/, Noon.—The steamer
Nebraska, front New York June 2‘2th, arrived
here at 11 A. M.
Lo:soos, JOY In. g Y. M.—Consols and Five-
Twenties are firmer -.rime the opening, and' one
tlxteenth itigher. Illinois Central and Erie K. It.
unehanged. •
Liven] JUL, July In. g P. M. - -Cotton 1, firmer.
and tlir. dellhirld hclter but price ttrf.luneh.ingial.
'the sales will.ri:achl.i.oolll,:ilt,' • -
The other markets are WI bull( alt,_!ra
From Cape I%land.
tSpfdal Dcrpatcli to t 1:1:1C-t in.
C A ;qr . I. LAND , 1i , 1;7.--Tht.: first hop of
the season came off last evening at the - Columbia
House, and was a decided success. about one
hundred ladies .were present, making a brilliant
appearance in the handsome dining-room and
porticoes. The music was furnished by Hassler's
fland,and the dancing was kept ap to a late hour.
Amnng the disting - uished personages present
were the members of :he Delawate Yacht Club
Navy',
A severe northeast gale set in yesterday after
noon, and this morning the steamer Felton was
obliged to take her passengers from the Island in
boats. About fifteen eastern-bound reels are
at anchor in front of the Island, delayed by the
gale, which is still bloWing fresh. The thermome
ter, is sixty-nine and the Weather clear.
From Ali'awhingto,rs.
(Specie Derpatch to the Evening Bulletin, by Ilan.on's
Independent News AttencY.l
WAtiiiINGTON t July IO.—A lively (I , (:ussion — is
expected in the House today on the question of
:in adjourned session in October„ In order to
arraign the President on gounds of Impeach
ment.
The Secretary of the Navy has just issued orders
to the U. S. war steamer Susquehanna to proceed
to Mexico at once, and demand the person of
Santa Anna, *Allying, ou the ground that the law'
of nations was violated when lie was forcibly
taken from a United .States vessel.
Front Fortre , ..% Monroe.
F01:11: Mosaoc, July B.—The brig Rabboni
arrived to-day from Atarella, West Indies, with
guana for orders. She reports having spoken
on the Ist inst., in lat. :lip', long. 75, schooner Ada
Wiswell, from Boston for St. Kitts, in distress,
having broken her foreniasthead. She was
making for Nassau, and probably reached there
on the 3d inst.
The pilot boat Coquette reported to-day hav
ing seen a large water spout at the Capes, which,
after traveling several miles on the water, swept
ashore and disappeared in the distance. A small
water spout wns also seen in flanipton Roads,
this afternoon, during the prevalence of a squall,
but it did not approaelithe land.
The Annamessie line of steamers touched here
for the first time to-day." The company has made
this a permanent arrangement, in order to ac
commodate the farmers on the Peninsula in ship
ping truck to Philadelphia and New York.
During the recent:Rallroad Convention in Nor
folk a schedule Was adjusted so' that the com
pany's steamers could make through connes-
Lions with the Baltimore, Wilmington and Phila
delphia and the Camden and Amboy' Railroads.
Passengers from the South now leaving Norfolk
at 11 o'clock A. M. arrive in New York at 5 o'clock
next morning, commodious sleeping cars, with
out change, being exclusively used. U. Phoebus,
Esq., has been appointed agent at this point for
the line. .
Wed—U. S. gunlioat Estrella, from Pensacola
for New York.
'Wavy Robbery at Virbatehwven.
MArcu CHUNK, Pa., July 10.—The Lehigh Coal
and Navigation Company's office, at Whitehaven,
was robbed last night of 00,000 in notes and
$2,000 in U. S. bonds. The property belonged to
individuals, and was placed in the vaults for safe
keeping. A reward of $5,000 is offered for the
arrest of the thieves and recovery of the money.
From Havana.
HAVANA, July •ith.—The bark Ocean Home
was not sold on July let, Mr. Seward's
request being complied with. The reported
revolution at Porto Rico was simply a revolt
suppreSsed, the leaders being executed. It
is reported that a cargo of slaves was rceently,
landed.
Each vessel arriving after July 21st will be
a 1 : a x w — -
iiriarTzJi - Tur
stated in the manifest
Sugar le active at 8„ reals per arrobe for No
Dutch Standard.
Fire in Massachusetts.
Woncnsmn, Maus., July 10.—The South Wor
cester wire mill,belonging to;Washburne & Moen,
was partially burned this morning. The loss Is
nearly covered by insurance.
• The principal works of Alio corporation are
located In another part of the city, and are un
harmed. The fire will not prevent the prompt
execution of all orders.
Largo Shipment of Specie.
tspeclal Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin by
Dasson's Independent News Agency.]
NEw Yon u., July 10.—The steamer Russia
tailed for Europe to-day with $1,441.,000 in specie..
The Gold Market.
ifteciai to the Philadelphia Eveninglielletin by 11E11350EN
Independent News Money.]
NEW Yorot, .Tulylo.—The Gold Market Is very
steady at 138%.
Financial and Commercial.
raPedal Deenateh to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin
t k y fictriewe Independent New Agency.)
Raw ronx,July lb.—The following are the latest
synotations for stocks and gold at the New
York Stock Board today: United States 6s, 1881,
11034:9110!4' ; United ' States Flve-twcrities,
1862, ll13;,g112 ; ditto, 1864, 101%0103Y;
ditto,lB6s, 109i011109%; ditto, Jan. and July,lQBk
@lOB3 ;'l i en-forties, 102Y,@102;4; Seven-thirties,
Ist series, 108, 1 4:0108;4": 24 and 3d, 106'i.,'6 . 9107 , 4;
N. Y. Central, 105%0105M; Erie, 6344A6934: Erie
Preferred, 76 ; Hudson, 103M041 , 09 1 / 4 Read
ing, 105XiM(0105i/„; Mich. Sonthern, 833,003 1 ),<;
Mich. Central, 110;40110%; illlnciiB 123V0124;
Cincinnati and Pittsbnrgh,92Y,o 9 3; Cleveland and
Toledo, 12034(0120M Rock Island, 97%6:997 i g;
Northwest Common, 45X(015 , X; Northwest
Preferred, 6754067%;. Pacific Mail, 140%'
(8142 R ,; Atlantic Mail, 107 1 ,110107 X; Canton,
98%049; Cumberland, 404 i0;:f Quicksilver,
83/,(03:i9; Wayne, 100, - 7100R,.; Maripm,a, 'll
@,11%; Western Union Telegraph, 499V41934
Boston Water Power. 22 , X,0224; Terre Haute,
-520 - 55; Toledo and Wabash, 513 -,;(4513 4 '; Chicago
and Alton, 1136_014; do. Preferred, 114 , a/115; Ohio
and Mississippi Certificates, 2703 , 27?4. Market
strong.
fir 'orroppon (knee of the A YAW' nted Pre.q..l
Njw YoitH, July 10th.—Cotton dull; 26% cents:
for Middling Uplands. 'Flour active, and 100'20
cents. higher; sales of 100,000 bhls; State 6 9 1 )58
II; Ohio, 4110 406412 75; Western, e 6 90042 30;
Southern, is 9 50(415 75. Wheat, 3q5 cents.
higher; sales of 10,000 bushels
No. 1 at e 2 50; California, ' $303 05;
Corn firm; sales of 3,000 buslels; mixed Western,'
(Rapti 0. Oats lc. higher; Sidea of •93,000
bushels; Western, 83085 c. Rye quiet at •e 1 40.
Provisions quiet. Pork firm; new Mess, i 22 20.
Whisky quiet.
QT An BEBmo:is—Judge' Peirce.—The case
of Charles 8. Johnson, charged with forgery, 18
still. before the Court, the Commonwealth not
having concluded its testimony. A peculiar fee.-
ture in the trial is the absence of the deed to
which It is alleged that the defendant forged the
eignatnre of ldr. Harper, the owner of the pro
perty. At one stage of the case the Common
wealth called upon the defendant to produce the
deed, but in answer to the demand he swore that
- it had passed from his posseesion and control.
STATE OF THE THERMOMETER THIS DAY AT
THE BULLETIN OFFICE.
10 A. M.... 75 deg. 12 M.... 76 deg. 2l'. M.... 77 deg.
Weather clear. Wind Northwest.
-other ar
Er•EN - y tir CLOTHING. —Win. (len the r WAS
before Alderman Fiteh, this morning% charged
with the larceny of clothirr4, the property of
Martin Moran. It irs albzed that last week
(4:zither broke a window in the - house of Mr.
Moran, at Fraithlin and Thompson streets. and
took the clothing out of a w.irdrobe ,chick WA3
close by the window. The aeem-e , l was (q):11-
tit d for a further heariir:;„
\I'.I.WELI, fm.v. , 11 r)e-tin..4 qf;
the Af:fifltiify of Mu:4v -off
from MI appearance, Mid::to he on, of very un
ili,ual interest. Tho. , e who have heard Den
ham and hall will want to hear their farewell ad
&cries. The adnih , , , ion tl-ket:i are to be L. I grit
tuitotAy at Ashrnead F.v.m..3, 7:21 Ci1 , 51.1111t
Etna. _
PA I N 14: r e areff.w , perstions nioro pain
ful than (lacing teeth. A '2t7l.e of Itower'9 Infant
Cordial rnbbed upon the tiurns of tee7ll.lu..t Infanta la a
"ood Hx)tlier.
A BE.AUTIFtt CI)MPLF:Tvios and a f,oft EMOOth
Akin by uping WrighrB Aleatatui Tablet of
solidified glycerine. Order of your drig,gie.
WARRANTED TO CURIE OR TUNF. MoNET RE
rtroDEn. Dr. Filler's Rheumatic Remaly has
eared 4,000 cases of Rheumatism, Neuralgia awl Gout
in this city. Prepared at 29 South Fourth street.
8P NA Fms for Constipation anel.fiabitual Cos
tivenesa. Depot, Sixth and Vine. Fifty cents a box.
Brersow's SoisPa.—Elder Flower, Turtle .01.1,
Glycerine, Lettuce, Sunflower Musk, Ro=e, &c.
&towns:4 & BEOVIITB., Importers,
Y 3 South Eighth street.
" NEEDLES ' COMPOUND CAMPHOR TEOCHES—
REMEDY For. AI.I. BoWrI„ Coin. INTS
CRAMPF, DIARP.II.W.A AND DYSt:s7 C ,,, 11:01.,
•1-1. CIIOL.ELA SAMPToME. •
For eake by DrufrgiFts, 50c. a Box. Made and Pa
tented by Needlete, at Twelfth and Itate. • .
Davocaerst Surrnnzas and Fancy Goods.
- SNOWDZN Bawl-ant, Importers,
23 South Eighth st:cet.
GOLD Weirrsa).
.~ "
FINANCIAL and CO] RCERCIAL
Bales' at , the Philadelphia Stock Exchange,
aZYORE ISOAICD6.
900 eh St Nlch Coal
Masi BOARD.
*CA* City 15s new 2 100 !
1000
2100 do 100 50 ph . .7sle , h Bk 31
1000 Pittsb'g 514 111, , ..0 100 .9h Read R blO 53
10000 Cam at Bur It 6e 1 100 rh N PA• It •••',
lots 65 I 2.4 ? , h Penult R. It 6 52?„:
PEntaLnzt..rats, V.Aneq.day, July.lo.
The abundance and cheapness of capital causes a
steadily increasing demand for Government 7..ean, and
they are looking up. The speculative shares were not
so active at the Stock Board this morning, and the
"bull" influence, which a few days ago_earried every
thing before it, has lost its sway. The edosing figures
for Government Loans were 1103,;q11034' fur the
Coupon 6's, 'Bl ; 111%0412 for the Five-twenties, '62;
10SWak10S3¢ for the Policy; 102% for the Ten-forties:,
109?,A109X, for the '64's; 109q,109, , ,, for the *CZ's, and
1073,®1073¢ for the June and July Seven-thirties.
State and City Loans were steady and firm, the new
lactic of the latter - sold at 100. Reading Railroad
closed steady at 527„tii) 53. Pennsylvania Railroad sold
at 527,1(353, and North Pennsylvania Railroad at 36-
the latter an advance. Clatawissa Railroad Preferred
was very feeble and closed 27% bid. Camden and
Amboy Railroad closed at 130,,,*; Little Schuylkill
Railroad at 11l ; Mine 11111' Railroad at 66 , „'; Elmira
Railroad, Preferred at 42; the Cr nion stock at ;
Philadelphia sad Erie Railroad at b?,, and Northern
Central Railroad at 43. In Bank shares the only sale
was of Mechanics' at 31. Canal stocks were . heavy.
46 was bid for , Lehigh Navigation; 30% for Schuyl
kill Navigation Preferred ;19'% for the Common stock ;
57 for Delaware Division, and 16% for
,Susquehanna.
Passenger Railway shares were dull.
Smith, Randolph ct, Co., Bankers, 15 South Third
street, quote at 11 o'clock, as! follows: "1, ;
United States 1681 Bonds, 110%01101; ; United States
6-20's, 1662, 1113%(.112; 5-20's, 1664. 109,;(4109;4;
6-20's, 1665, 109;0%10910; 5-20's, July, 180, 1 06 '4'4
108;%;5-2 0 e, July, 1807, 16,1f@.168%; United States
10-40's, 102%®1023¢; United States 7-30's, Ist series,
101335®108 1 4 ; 7-30's, 2d Perks, 10710a10734; 3d series;
1071;@1073¢; Compounds, December, 1864, 117.
Messrs. De Raven Brother, No. 40 South Third
street, make the following quotations of the rates of
exchange to-day,at 1 P.M: American Gold 138%@188%',,
Silver-Quarters and halves, 191;!®133; Compound
Interest Notes-June, 1864, 19.40; duly, 1864, 19;
August, 1864, 183,; Oct., 1661, 17%; Dec. 1864,
16%; May, 1865,164; August, 1865, 153; ; September,
1865; 15; October, 1865,14%.
Jay Cooke at.. Co. quote Government securities, Jtc.,
tiLr-tlig„tusle_aini.ted States G' 1881,110!0®1103,1881,110i,;@1103,1
Old 5-20 ~,Bonds, 111%@112; New 5=20 Bonds,
169,1(43‘109X ; 6-20 Bonds, 1866, 109?A1099; 5-20
Bonds Ju1y,1865,19830®10836 ; 5-20 Bonds, 1867, MSS@
108%; 10-40 Bonds, 1021(®1023em 73-10 August, 10Sie"
®USN ; 7 3-10, June, 107,y0107%' ; 7 3-10, July, ling
@107%; Gold (at 11 o'clock), 138,,5g1a9.
WKDIIIDAY, July 10.—There is no change in Quer
citron Bark. A small sale of No. lat $42 V ton.
There is but little inquiry for Cottiin. Small sales
of middling Upland at '26 cents. New Orleans at 27
cents,and samples at 23X cents.
There is no vitality *hi the Flour market, but. thd
higher grades of Spring and winter Wheat extra fami
lies are remarkably scarce and this description com
mands extreme prices, while oilier kinds aro drooping.
The demand is light and confined to the wants of tbe
home consumers at sB® $8 50 49 barrel for Super
fine, extras at s9®s9 60, Northwestern extra family
at $9 76(411 50; Penna. and Ohio do. do. at $10(4512 50,
and fancy at $14016 60. Rye .Flour is steady at $7.
In Corn Meal nothing doing.
The market is very bare of good Wheat and this is
the only description wanted. Sales of 800 bushels
Common and good old Red at $2 30®2 77X V bushel:
Rye Is steady at $1 60. Corn is scarce and in good re
quest. Sales of 0,000 bushels yellow at $1 14(41 16— 2
an advance. .Oats are again higher and 2,000 bushels'
Panne. sold at 81/®9O cents. • -
h_ Whiay—PriCee arc POI/1W ally unchanged.
TEM COURTS.
CITY BULLETIN.
Ds luvicw BBOTEME,
No. 40 S .nth Third street.
Philadelphia. Ntaxkets.
THE DAILY EVENING BITIJITIN.- - 411Itit fiELPHI A ; INEDNFSDAY, - JULY 10. 1867.
FIFTH .- EDITION
BY TELEGRAPH.
FIB OT AT lE' X CO.
THE TRIAL OF MAXIMILIAN.
Eloquent Appeal by His Counsel.
Tile Tridi Ot
NEW ORI,J,;AN9, July IQ.—The Brownsville Ran
chero, of tlk 4th Inbt., publishes the prbeeedings
of the Court-martial that tried Maximilian and
his Generals. • .
The court was composed of a Lieut.:Colonel,
acting as President, six Captains, and the Judge
Advocate, Lieut.-Colonel Manuel Aspieroz.
The prisoners were tried separately. In each
case they presented a plea denying the jurisdic
tion of the court, and protesting against the re
fusal of the right of appeal.
Maximilian was confined to his bed when his
case was called, his trial being the last. He was
ably defended by Senor Eulalco Ortega, who
refuted the charges of usurpation and
cruelty, and said the law of October
3d was made when Maximilian was
cheated into the belief that Juarez had abandoned
the territory, And that one of the articles of that
law was dictated by the French commander-in
chief. Ile said. moreover, that the law was only
intended as a terror, as there had never been a'
petition for pardon presented, but it was can
celed. He eaniestly asked the members of
the court, in the name of civilization and of his
tory, Whicli *will judge of the, terrible—deeds
done this day, as the defenders of the second in
dependence of Mexico, to save the good name of
the country in the eyes of coming generatio4s.
They will forever applaud it as the crowning of
the greatest of victories and the gre:itest of
pardons. Amongst the accusations against Ma
ximilian were the following: For attempting to
Oolong the war,' by the decree of Marsh
Rating a regency in the case of his death in the
eon:in:4 . t ties.
Jesus ..N1..nt1 . .1 Vasquez, one of 3.laxitnilian's
hiq If
you condemn the Archduke to dr.atil. I 11%
uneasy about a coalition in Lutorn, o r di. ;
attitnth; that 7,e 'Chited States ., may . tz.3sl.lrnu
towards the llepullic. I „have contiilenee
in the I.iber:•l armies that h•tre rooted out" the
Frer.ell fiont the toil, but I fear the :wirer al ri2-
pr:o.ach that will fall upon oar country as an
anathernl. more than even the 6entenec of death.
beeausr , of the nullity of the prueeedin;z:i of ti:;
court.
The Court cm;uricznevtl ct 8 A. M. ';u the
anti went into Eei,ion on the evening of
the I;th. and dirisolved at 10 o'eloek the ~:lrue
night.
Front, Canada.
)fount:A 1...1 Illy 14.—The Liezlten•tul-Goyerry , •
of Quoie(2 )11F, r nt for the Hon. M. Gotellott
to form a 31inistry. M. (Junction at first de
clined, but subsequently consented to accept the
task.
Write for the election will he issued about
A.u4tyt
I. E. WALRAITENv
MASONIC HALL,
719 Chestnut Street,
lIAS NOW OPEN A FLLL LBE OF
LACE CURTAINS,
From the best Manufactories;
Nottingham Lace Curtains,
OF VERY BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS
MOSQUITO INT_FArs,
WHITE AND 1 COLORS. WITH THE MOST AP
PROVED FIXTURES.
WINDOW SHADES,
A Large AssOrtment.
ALL OFFERED .AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES.
NATIONAL'
BANK OF THE. REPUBLIC?
Elf! AND ell CHESTNUT STREET.
CAPITAL, - - $1,000,000.
mr.te - rons:
Joseph T. Bailey, -I Samuel A. Bisphani,!Ossood Webb,
Nathan Bilks, Edward B. Once, Frederic Ailoyt
Beni. Rowland 1Wh).11.
WM. FL BRAWN, President. .
Late Cashier cLI the Central National Bank.
JOB. P. MUMFORD, Cashier,)
-.mYalti 60 Late at the PhitadelphiaL.Vational Bank.
OR SALE—PER SCI-100NER SABINO FROM CU
L raco, 1W tons Braslletto wood, tons Fustic,
barrels Pali and 37 barrels sugar. Apply to WORK IfAlq
& CC., 12.3 Walnut street. uiys3-tf
KIEW PF.AJANS. , ---10 BARRELS NEW CROP TEXAS
.01 Pecans landing, ex-steamship Star of the Union, and
for sale-by ..i. B. BUSSIER CO.. WS South ,llelaware
avenue,
ROMMN'S ME} ILA.—LIALF AN OUNCE F TllB
4.. X tract will make a pint of excellent Beef Tane i a
few minutes. Alwaya on hand and for eale by JOSEPH
- -
.......
Bla ND LAYER RAISIN ;3. WTIOLES
have , nand Quarter boxes of thin n pledid fruit, landing
and for este by JOS. B. BOSSIER • SI CO., 108 South Dam
warn avenlio
NEW TURKEY PRUNES, CURRANTS, dte.--New
Turkey Prunes, qualityymy fine; New Crop Currants,
Orange and Lemon .Peel, New Malaga Lemons , landing
and for ealo by JOB. B. BUBBLER ds CO. NS South Del
aware avenue.
BCINVB BOSTON BISCUIT.—BOND'S BOSTON BU
ter and Milk Biscuit, landing_ from steamer Normin
and for sale by JOB. B. BUSSIER dr, CO.. Agents for Bond
KM South Delaware Avenue.
-- • n inn BOXES GE..").
'lotrii7 ^ r CASTILE SOAP.-100 BOXES GEN - 17NE
TY White Castile Soap, landing from Brig Pennkylvania
from Genoa , any}fer sale by JOE, B. BUSS ER CO„ 10
Booth I)macvare avenue.
IIIIOICESWEETOIL.OF OUR OWN IMPORTATION,
V boneless Sardines, genuine Stilten Cheese, Spiced An
chovies, Barham in 6 lb stone iiil2, for sale at
COUSTY'S 'East End Grc,o:ry.N ,, .llS Smith Second street.
PRESERVED TAMARINDS. —2O KEGS MAR.
tj4l rS e dlin a ga d . Tamarinds in
..niqty
J. B. BUSF
TALIAN VERMICELLI.-100 BOXES VINE QUAL
white imported and for aaln by JOS. B. SUMER
Sonth Delaware avenue.
a W.. 108 S 4
ESTATE OF JAMES DURNELL, DECEASED.—LET
tens of Administration having been granted to the un
dersigned upon tho above Estate. all persona indebted to
the memo %al please make • prompt payment, and thew°
havingAdalses pre...antihero, without delay, to CATHA-
RINE P. DURR ELL, corner Ninth and Race streets, Ad
miniPtratrix, or to her .Attorney, EDWIN 7. CHASE. No.
Walnut etrect. • je2l th ft*
O'Clock.
Embracing tllO Neweet Deeigne.
THIRD EDITION.
BY TELEGRAPH.
LATER FROM WASHINGTON.
The Trial of Surratt Continued,
PROCEEDINGS T.N CONGRESS.
Cruelties to UlllOll Prisoners.
An Investigation tobeMade
The Sterrritt Trial.
WasuiNozoN, July 10.—The trial of John TI.
Surratt was resumed this morning, 'Messrs. Car
rington, Piet repont and Wilson,Jor the prosecu
tion, and Messrs. Merrick and Bradley, Sr. and.
Jr., for the defence, The nrisonei was brought
into Court at 10 o'clock A. M., and the Court
was opened and the jurorit called at 10.15 A. M. ' -
Thomas J. Raybold, swOrn—The witness lives
at No. 61 North "Howard street, Baltimore, and
was at Ford's Theatre on the 14th of April, 1865;
had charge of the front of the theatre, and was
also in charge of the boxes, and saw Mr. James
R. Ford give a ticket for the President's family
that night to a messenger; the main door leading
from the vestibule to the theatre was closed by
the witness, who locked it about nine o'clock
A. M. On that day, and placed the key in his
money drawer; Mr. Lutz called afterwards to go
to the theatre; the witness unlocked the door,
and let him pass In; it remained open a few
minutes and was then locked, and the key again
put away; the doors leading to the stage were air
Hastened -- on -- the -- inside; --- the — -witness - had
charge of the auditorium, and the private
boxes were in bad condition; they were
injured during I Mrs. Bowers's .engagement.
The witness went to box eight to show a
gentleman in; the door was locked, and an usher
had the key; the witne4 broke the door open to
allow the gentleman to go in; the.witness was in
front of the theatre several times in the evening
of the assassination; was not out between the
second and third acts; the witness directed a
black mai, to ea, to the room and' get thechair
and place it in the ho.t.
' . The 'iv ituese id:terse:ads saw the chair in the
box: there was a sofa, a small arm-chair, and a
reeking-ebnir in . the box; the rocl ne ing-eliair had
-Io- roekers, and was placedsheli ad the door;
the witucs , nev,r saw Lire prison r at the bar
beforc• the on ter-door leading to tle • boxes never
bad a lock or fastening on it. •
Cross-eliinnined by Mr. Pierrepont.—The wit
me-s‘ never sawthe box;--luit saw the hole in the
wall; the screws were in - the keeper hanging on
the door: the rehearsal commenced about'elevon
o'clock: it was customary to call rehearsals at
.:even o'clock; the rehearsal did not commence
at ten o'clock: the witness came to the theatre
that morning between eight and nine o'clock ;
did not state before the Conspiracy Commission
that the rehearsal commenced at ten o'clock ;
the witness: , saw the rehearsal going on
:it fifteen minutes past eleven ; thought
it tool: about three hours_: went to his dinner
about four o'clock that afternoon ; was
about the theatre until - that - time, and
the witness's entice required him to be in the
ottiee: witness was on the stage after rehearsal;
did not kniw how often the scenes were pushed
in and out during rehearsal; the first scene
ww, about twenty feet from the foot-lights; there
was hut one door to enter the theatre
during the play; alter the play was over, four
doors were opened, but one docir was used for an -
entr;nee- the stage entrance was on the south of
. ,
.the theatre: witness first' left, the theatre in the
morning, to go to the ,s'tor offiee; took an adver
tisentent to the ,`:tar,aud returned from the office
Ini Media fay; the witness - wars; von netted 7 With - the ,
theatre more than a year; witness commanded a
company during the rebellion, and was with
General Pope in the Valley; he was taken hom •
sick after the battle of Cedar Mountain.
133 Mr. Bradley--The witness was not on th,
rebel side in the war.
Dr. Wm. 0. Baldwin, sworn—The witness watr, ,
a medical officer, daring the rebelliemin theLinited'
States army; knew John Lee who was a detective
at the Provost Marshal's office; knew his reputa
tion as being bad among the people arond the
office; the witness would not believe him On is
oath.
Cross-examined not remember twho
heard speak ill of Lee; it was a common report
about theoffiee; there were a large number of
clerks and detectives about the office.
John H. Wise sworn—witness knew JOhn Lee;•
never heard his reputation for truth and veracity
questioned.
By Mr. Carrington—The witness was an officer
here and well acquainted in the city.
By Mr. Merrick—During the pursuit of the
men charged with the assassination, did you
meet Lee iu the lower part of lqaryland ?
Question—Did he tell you he did not know
John 11. Surratt, and had never seen him,?,
The question was ruled out by the Court.
V. B. Munson, sworn.—The witness is a clerk
in the War Department; knew John Lee; his rep
utation as a man of truth is bad, add would not
believe his oath in a ease of life and death.
Cross-examined—Witness is a clerk in the same
Department with Mr. Calvert, who testified yes
terday; never talked much with Calvert about Lee;
witness's business during the war was to pay re
wards for the apprehension of deserters; he saw
Lee frequently at the Department; witness would
believe him in trivial matters perhaps, 'bnt not in
serious business; in general business the witness
would belieVe him if there was no inducement for
_
him to speak falsely.
[Continued in the next Edition.]
Congress—Adjournell Session.
HotsE.—On motion of Mr. Dawes (Mass.), the
time for taking testimony in the Kentucky cog
tested election case was extended to the Ist of
December next.
Mr. Dawes haVing withdrawn his objection- to
the request of Mr. Waslibprn to be excused from
further service on the Committee on Elections,
Mr. Washburn was excused.
Mr. Shanks (Intl.) asked leave to offer a pre
amble and set of resolutions, reciting that there
has not been any thorough and systematic inves
tigation of the treatment of Union prisoners of
war by the Confederate Ooverument and people,
and that it is important that such in
vestigation shall - be had and a record
thereof made; and resolving - that a select
committee of five be appointed to make such
investigation, and record the facts - , and report the
same at the House at any time, with such recom
mendation as may seem proper; with power to
send for persons and papers, to appoint a clerk
and stenographer, and to report au act of grace
and amnesty for witnesses who may be i•lpli
eated.
Mr. Wood (N. Y.) objected to the introduction
of the resolutions.
Mr. Shanks Moved to suspend the rules.
Mr. Stevens (Pa.) inquired of Mr. Shanks
whether the investigation should not be referred
to the select committee appointed last Monday,
on motion of Mr. Butler, in reference to the.a.§-
sassmatren cat - 4)11%1 - u: --•-
Mr. Shanks' ought not, as that conunittee had
already as much business as it could attend to.
The question on suspending the rules was taken
by yeas and nays, and resulted—Yeas 79, guys
3 . 8. So the rules were suspended and the resolu
tions Introduced.
Mr. Dawes called attention to the resolution
promising grace and atnuesty, and which was
copied from that offered the other by Mr.
Butler. It attempted to pledge the faith of the
government not only that no person shall have
used against him the evidence that he may give
beforo`ta Committee, but that he shall not be
tried at all on any evidence from any sourer.
Mr. Shanks admitted that the resOlittion was
faulty, and said he would withdraw it. .
Mr. Spalding (Ohio) argued that the subject
should be referred to Mr. Butler's select com
mittee, expressing his opposition to the appoint
ment of's() many select committees.
QUAKER SWEET CORN-25 I.IARRF_S - JUST RE
0 calved and for sale by JOSEPH B. BIMDAR do 40..
1013 South Delaware avenue.
IELPERIAL FRENCH PRU 1.11014.--50 , MBES De
re anti f may oxes, Imported and, for tele y
JOE "H . 4; CO. l eie eolith Delaware Avenue.
WALNOTS 'AND" ALMONDS: NEW 13ROP DNS
*Ole Web:nits and Paw Shell Almond* tonal) bY.TI
BUSKER drGO., 108 S. Delaware owe, •
2:15 O'Cnocil*...'
WAsinNaroN, July 10
FOURTH EDITION
BY TELEGRAPH.
LATEST FROM WASHINGTON.
Reconstruction in the Senate,
Opposition to the House Bill.
FROM THE PLAINS.
A Randle Robbed by Soldiers.
Starr. ates Trial Continued.
Latest Neon' Washingtolt.
Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin,
by IlayE..on'u Independent 7.sielva Agency.]
WASIIINGXON. July 1.0.—1 t is generally under
stood that motion for an October session, of
Congress, for,the consideration of the impeach
ment report, will be made to-day in the House by
Representative Boutwell.
Prominent Senators say that the Senate will
not concur with the Stevens Reconstruction act,
but will insist upon the adoption of its own bill.
124:( O:s7D DE4.l'.iTcll.]
WASHINGTON, July 10.—The Senate is still de
bating the Reconstruction question. It is not
probable that a vote will be taken to-day, as
many Senators desire to express their views. ,
From the Plains.
ST. Lours, July lo.—An Omaha despatch
says that on
.Sathrday morning some soldiers
from - Tort Larame went toTtatTeify Ttab'elfe, fIVC
miles distant, demanded whisky, and being re
fused, threatened to burn the ,ranehe.. A second
demand being refused, the soldiers attacked the
storekeeper, and one of their number was
shot. The soldiers then formed in line and tired
several shots at the ranche.
Subsequently. the Provost Marshal, with
_fifty
soldiers, arrested the occupants of the ranche,
and tool: the safe and desk out of the building.
The safe was afterwards robbed, and the ranche
burned by the soldiers. The proprietor estimates
his loss, at Pi<, tio,ooo. A court-martial at Fort
Laramie was inquiring into the matter.
Indian depredations are again reported on the
Platte. river.
Lieutenant Kidder and a guide, WhO left Fort
S4 - alg - wick oh the '29th ult. with despatches for
Oen. Custtir, 'have not been heard from, and fears
are entertained for their safety. •
The Murratt
rContinip.(l train Third tiltion.l
By Mr. Merrick—lf the witness was to be held
responsible for the truth or falsehood of what Lee
said, whether under oath or not, the witness
wonid not believe him.
Samuel L. Orne, sworn—Lives in Prince
George county; I am a farmer and trader; the
witness knows John F. Tibbets; his reputation is
very bad for truth and veracity; the witness
knows him front a boy: would not believe
his oath; Tibbets first was on the Southern
side and afterwards on the Union side; the
witness tried during the war to keep between
both parties.
Cross-examined—The witness don't know
whom he has heard speak ill of him, except the
witness's brother; since he was grown up. he
never had a good character; he was never spoken
of as a good man, and never heard him called a
gentleman; he owed the witness's brother
George money, which he refused to•pay.
By Mr. Bradley—The witness can't remember
individuals' names who spoke of him before the
war, but his character was bad generally in the
community, The witness-testified-at -ffie-cOrtspi
reey trial. The witness then testified concerning a
Mr. Thomas. The witness heard the names of the
conspirators who were being tried. The witness
-testified against the character of Mr. Thomas.
Wm. J. "Watson, sworn—The witness resides
in Prince George county; the witness knows
John F. Tibbets; his father is the witness's near
est neighbor; . the witness has always lived in
that vicinity; the witness is not his unele;
he has heard that the witness's grandmother and
iTibbets's great-grandmother were cousins, but
,on'tknow anything about that; Tibbets never
old the witness that Mrs. Surratt would give
$l,OOO to any one who would kill Lincoln; the
witness had a conversation with Tibbets about
Mrs. Surratt last April; it was in regard to the
quarrel going on in the House of Representa
tives between Mr. Butler and Mr. Bingham; he
took sides with Mr. Butler,that Mrs. Surratt was
innocent.
By Mr. Merrick—Do you know Tibbets's char
ade'?
Witness—l had rather be excused from an
swering.
Cross-examined—The witness testified at the
Conspiracy trial; Tibbets never called the witness
uncle; some few called witness uncle, on ac
count of witness's age. Witness took Mr. Bing
ham's side in the conversation with Tibbets, and
held that Mrs. Surratt was guilty. Witness thinks
so new.
By Mr.Merrick—Do you know Tibbets's chews
ter for truth and veracity?
Witness—l do not wish to say. His father is
my intimate friend and a good man. He is my
near nelghbor.
Mr. Merrick—Answer the 'inestion.
• Witness—l must say his character is bad for
truth and veracity,
B. J. Naylor, sworn—The witness lives in
Prince George' county; lives near Mr. Watson;
witness is a farmer; _knows John F. Tibbets; hie
father lives near witness; John F.Tibbets's charac
ter is bad iu that neighborhood; the witness
would not believe him on his oath; 'would not be
lieve anything lie would say.
George E. Orme sworn—The witness lives in
Oquesco district, 'Prince George's county; has
lived there nearly all his life; .John F. Tibbets was
raised near there; witness knows him; his char
acter for truth Is bad; witness would not believe
him on his oath.
Cross-examined—Tibbets has dealt with the
witness: he has-owed witnessmoney, and witness
cot it through law; witness talked about Tibbets
in the neighborhood; Tibbets was in the war;
the witness was opposed to secession, and also
to coercion; did not like to see flatting; Tibbets
learned the blaeltsmithing trade of his father;
witness was not in either army. He was opposed
to the fighting, and believes the troubles of the
country could have been better settled without
fighting.
By Mr. Bradley—His chameter was the same in
the neihborhood before the war; he kept doing
bad things all the time; he got money out of
•
various people by falsehood.
By Mr. Pierrepont—Tibbets shoed witness's
horses, and when witness and he Wet they were
friendly as brothers up to last falloliere was no
ill-feeling between us;' when we would' meet at
the Post-office there was no difficulty bet Ween us.
The Court took the usual recess of half an hour
From Canada.
MoNrim.tr., July 10.-The Hon. D'Arcy McGee,
at a largo meeting, cave an explanation, showing
that the tames:, co cave
existed between him
A resolution was passed, recording the convie:.
tlon of the meeting that tor grave reasons,national
and Finternational, it' is Most advisable that'
Mr. McGee should have a scat in the Cabinet of
the New Dominion.
Thelmrials here last week rose to the alarming
number of 144.
An altercation took place at Quebec yesterday
between an officer of the gunboat Aurora and
the commander of the American steamer Haze.
The officer requested the commander to take
down his flag and the American flatly refused.
It is supposed that there has been some breach of
marine etiquette on the part of the. American
commander.,,
From New Orleans.
•
NEW Ont.Eexs, July 10.
Madame Juayez and Indy, numbering fifteen
persons, arrived here last night and left this
evening for Vera Cruz . on board the revenue
cutter Wilderness; Captain Freeman. They will
have slender accommodations, the vessel not
being adapted for passengers.
"Pecw Drowaggivirtt w *vriztylateon 17'
Nrw YoB x, Julylo, 2 P. M.—Gold to quoted
at 188 X.
. - -
-3:00 O'Clocic.
Cengiress—Adjourned 'SeNsion.
WAsinswroN, July 10..
SENATE.—lmmediatelv after the rending of the
journal, Mr. Sumner '(Maas.) inured that the
Senate proceed to the consideration of his reso
lution to rescind the resolution of Friday last.
Mr. Sumner, speaking on his motion, said the'
resolution of Friday was adopted Under a rhisap
prehensiOn.
Mr. Trumbull (Ill.) raised a question of order,
that discussion was out of order until the• Senate
decided to take up the resolution.
The Chair decided Mr. Sumner in order, and he
proceeded with his remarks, stating that the re
solution of Friday was adopted under a ntisun
derstanding of a precedent quoted from Mr.-
Clay, In the' Twenty-seventh Congress, and read
ing from the -'lobe to establish his position, ho
showed that nt the session, alluded to one hour
was given each day, for the consideration of mis
cellaneous business. • • •
Mr. Fessenden (Me.) denied that the action of
the Senate on Friday was based on the precedent
quoted by Mr. Sumner. It would be seen that in
all The opposition to the resolution of Mr. Clay,
there was nothing urged against its unconstitu
tionality. It,was a mere matter of business, as '
to the propriety
of which each Senator must de
ride for himself. He did not believe that the
Senate voted under, any misapprehension on
Friday,. but that each member knew precisely
what lie was voting upon. :-
Mr. Sumner resumed the floor in favor of his
resolution, and after further remarks from him
the Senate, refused to take up theresolutiOn.
On motion of Mr. Trumbull, the Reconstruction
bill, which was under discussion yesterday, was
taken up.
Mr. Howard (Mich.) took the. floor. He was
glad,phe said, that the Senate had proceeded at
this early moment to the consideration of this bill.
The peculiar views taken by the Attorney-Gene
ral of the United States on the Reconstruction acts
of Congress and the apprehension of the mem
bers of this body, at least a majority of them,
that the President of the United States, in =the
execution of these acts -may or will be governed
by the \eonclusions at which his legal
adviser bas arrived, has doubtless been • the
great cause for the reassembling of Congress on
_(Mr. Howard)- proposed-to
ask the indulgence of the Senate a few minutes,
in reviewing some of the arguments of the
Attorney-General, respecting the meaning and
intent of the acts of reconstruction already in
in existence.
flloysz--Coutitmed from Third F.dition.3
• Mr. - Shanks - demanded the' previous question
on the adoption of the resolution. The previous
question was seconded:
'The joint resolution authorizing the appoint
ment of the committee was addopted. Yeas,loo;
nays 28.
The second rresolution, authorizing the com
mittee. to send for persons and papers, was adop
ted without a division. The third resolution,
annoiipcing grace and amnesty to witnesses im
plicated in the assassination, and which had not
been withdrawn, but simply modified by Mr.
Shanhs, was rejected—Yeas 77, nays 74.
The preamble was then agreed to, after being
modified.
CITY
SEntol's AtclitENT.—A German, named Edward
Steinberger, was run over by a wagon nt Second
and Arch streets about nine o'clock this morning,
and was severely injured. He was taken to the
Hospital. .
PuEss CIA7U.—The stated meeting of the Press
Club of Philadelphia will be held this afternoon at
four o'clock.
Philadelphia Stock Exchange..
110ARDS. -
$3OOO U S 5-20 s '65 1000 Snsq Bds '1360 65
•
coup July 108: , ,; 1000 do
1000 do • 10SX 100 eh Read R '820'52.04
2900 S 7 9-10 s Jc 107.4 100 sh do Et3o 59;"
500 do July 107 1 4; 100 sh do 50.91
1000 II S 5-208 '64 6 sh Cam&Am R c 1904'
coup c 100, 1 - 4 " SO eh. Leh Val rt. C&P 57 , .;
500 City Gs old 953.( I 20 sh Penna R 52 7 1,
200 do gas 05k1100 sh Cataw pf b 5 20%
1000 Elmira It Is 92,6 i 12 sh N Peuna R 3d
4000 Hunt & Broad 1100 sh Sch Nay prf 800 01.6'
- Top corris 30 -1- 100 eh — do -- M S 1
BECIOND 110A.11.D.
$5OO US 10-405 cp 102.4.1 2sh Ken'gton bk 110 , s,
2000 Pa R2d mgt Os 947,i'1200 sh Cataw pf 28%
1000 Phil&Erie 2ds 92ki1300 sh McKean&Elk b 5 4
101 eh Penna R 621 'llOO sh Hestonv'e R 12
77 eh do Its 524 74
1 50 sh Mach Bk 31
- -
THE UNDERSIGNED
HAVE PURCHASED THE
• NEW SIX PER' CENT.
REGISTERED LOAN
OF THE
Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company,
DUE'IN 1897.
INTEREST PAYABLE. QUARTERLY,
FREE OF 011ITED STATES AND STATE TOLES,
AND OFFER IT FOR SALE AT THE LOW PRICE OF
NINETY-TWO,
And Accrued Interest • from May
This LOAN is secured
by a
fir d m tg r tf age 'on the Coin,
Fe a giV t iloi ir rt l lisi o e n o s aki l eri c a d blirindary e of e t ° g 3 ta l ai t e #3 4 e :l
Mauch Chunk to the Delaware River at Easton.ineinding
their bridge across the said river now inprocess of con
struction, together with all the Companrs rights, liber
ties .and franchises appertaining to theaaid Railroad and
Bridge.
Copies of the mortgage ma e i th e rad thepplication at the
office of the Company, or to of undersigned.
DuExiss. a CO.
E. W. CLARK Qc CO.
JAY COOKE CO.
W. H. NEWBOLD, SON at AERTSEN,
jeffitf
NEW STATE LOAN.
THE,:NEW SIX PER CENT.
STATE LOAN,
FREE FROM ALL
State, County and Municipal Taxation,
WILL BE FURNISHED
IN. SUMS TO 'SUIT,
rt - Arruttuvii - cA;i= "
JAY COOKE& C 0.,,
DREXEL &
E. W. CLARK &CO.
b E.l2t ISA
7-30'S,
JUNE, JULY AND AU GUST,
bONVERTED INT°
5-20'S
WIT OUT. CHARGE.
live.liventies Delivered at One.
rat,EX.Era I se, cp.,
84 South Third Street.