TATEIN ESS NOT ICE'. IStirldrafirlilleotary Cures COMemsespelOM• pla J. If: Siberia. preprieber of Ochenek's Minorite "PIM Seaweed Tonic, and Mandrake PAU% more than Itarts 4 ae Years ago, was supposed to be in • dill* eon. liil4ll9.llt.sikcere being pulmonary consumPtlon, Which bad Proeteded, as his Merl& and physicians believed, to fie very lastatage. No one thought it poseiblo that be scald live two menthe, When lie , began to use the Byrne Welch new-bests his mime. The result was moat &stem Stan& Ile 'speedily recovered his health; and now, after ---' ll l4obirse Ma -quarter of a century. his constitution ay paean to he as sound al if - h - ohad never experienceda ( ' , flare sickness in his life.' Ile is not only healthy. but earpalent, weighing considerably more than two hundred peasida lb ban since prescribed , the same medicine to *bastards of consumptive patients, and much the greater *umber of them have recovered in like manner. Dr. 8.. Drees Observed that liver complaint and dyspepsia are often concomitants of pulmonary disease. and that gber not unfrequentlYproduce it. has invented two other wassissiami, adapted to p cases in which conaumption In seseplicated with disorders of the stomach and liver. These auxiliary remedies are the Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, the first of which strengthens the coneti. Illation of the patient, and greatly improves the power of el,ogstkm, and the latter removes all obstrnotione from Vetiver, and restores it to a state of healthy activity. Dr.'llehenck is professionally at his principal office, No. $ North Sixth street, corner Commerce. Philadelphia, every Satutdas , where all lettere for advice meet be ad- Sassed. Be is aleo professionally at 'No. 39 Bend street, Now link, every Tuesday, and at Ne. 35 Hanover street, Boe. Um, every Wednesday. Ire gives advice free, but for a Sirongh miaridnation With ids Reioirometer, the peke is 115. Office hour's at each city from 9 A. M to VS.'S Poise of the Pnbnonic Syrup and Seaweed Tonle, each. ell SO per bottle, or 17 60 shelf dozen. Mandrake . Pills SS sate per box. A frill supply - pi Dr, Belionek's Medi nines for sale at all times at his home. Abe, SY all druggists and dealers. It 6444; MEYER'S NEWLY IMPROVED CRES CENT KALE - , OVERSTRUNG PIANOS, SElodged to be the beet. London Prize Medal and Awards in America received. MELODEONS ND HAND PIANOS. Wien IF witin Wareroome. 7/2 Arch at..beL Eighth. EVENING BULLETIN. Saturday, March 28, 1869. Ni lo JOHNSONIS PZKPLEXITY. When the reckless Don Ceesar De Banns was sentenced to death for taking part in a dttel, he was much perplexed to know how to pass the two hours which were to inter vene between his sentence and his execution. The first thought that occurred to him was to send for a confessor and unburden his con science;,but he dismissed that idea with the remark that two years would not be sufficient Ibr the task and it was not worth while for him to make so small a beginning. Then he thought of making his will; but he protested that two minutes would be time enough for that, and so he still found himself with two hours hanging heavy upon his hands. Finally be concluded to make a compromise between contrition for the past and provision for the future by getting gloriously tipsy in the present Mr. Andrew Johnsen, in his various de mands for time in the course of the impeachment trial, constantly brings to mind the case of the eccentric Don. Mrs% he wanted forty days in which to . pre pare-his answer to the Articles of Impeach ment. The Senate gave him tat days, and Sea minutes would have been sufficient; for all he enbstantially says is : "I didn't do any- Miing of the kind ; and what if 1 did ? I had a right to, do it!" Any scolding fish-wife would get up the substance of such an =- ewer, and also put in a characteristic Johnso trim rejoinder to the replication of the Mane aters'of the Impeachment inside of ten min utes. The last demand of the Great Im peached was for thirty days in which to pre pare for trial. The Senate gave him five days, and now, that he has secured it, the time must hang as heavy upon his hands as the two hours of Don Queer rested upon his. How will he employ the _time? In making a confesaion of his official sins of commission and omission, or in the attempt to get up a sufficient defence? Five months would not suffice for that. Would he make his official will? That would be a needless task) for the Senate will arrange all that for him by promptly relieving him of all further pre sidential cares.and giving him permission to retire to Tennessee. Five minutes would have found idtanbery et at as well prepared as five days will find them ready to make a &knee where there is no ground for defence, and where certain conviction and well merited punishment are foregone conclu sions. Perhaps, upon the whole, it would be as well for the doomed President to kill his few remaining days as Don Cmsar De Bszan killed his heavykanging time. We would be sorry to recommend it; but unless his Aaeldency is very much bglied he will need no hint as to how to tide hlmself over present perplexities. Sailors are prone to attack the spirit room when the ship is about going down. Mr. Johnson had the same propensity when the presidential craft was under full head of sail. Wow that Its masts are gone, its rudder un shipped and the leaks are gaining fast upon the cow, it would be no subject for wonder If the soon-to-be-deposed ---p Per would hollow the example of so many of his un derlings in the Internal Revenue Depart ment, who have sought and found comfort among the illicit brewers of rye and mo lames. TILE CONTESTED ELECTION CASE. Every one should read the argument of the Bon. Wm. M. Meredith, delivered on Wednesday last, in the case of the contested election in the Fourth Ward. It is brief, but admirably to the point. Stripping the case of all details, and resting it upon the clearly recognized precedents of this very Court, he demands the rejection of the election divisiona where these gross frauds were perpetrated. He sums up those frauds in a few graphic sentences, condensing the elaborate ar gument of Mr. Mann into a crystalized form, and leaving the case in the hands of the Court as a demand for protection and justice in the name of the whole community. He asserts, what' is undoubtedly true, that all decent men of all parties desire and demand that the ballot-box shall be kept pure. There can be no doubt that it has been dragged down to the lowest depths of degra dation by the, politicians of the Eourth-Ward, and if they should escape the condemnation of the law now, there is little nse of attempting to keep the ballot box pure anywhere in Phil adelphia. The corruption of that infected district must spread its poisonous influences xnpidlp lrrem one Ward to another. What is sow done so easily in.the Fourth Ward will sawn c e si to be diffieult in any other, and • th e Cola* •themeelves will, ere long, come ander the fatalrpower of this political demor , a jk la sk e .; ;The Fourth Ward System will c l od au judgee, and, tben, nothing short of a reroh4kin will bring Philedelphte bank 10 her eld proud , poeition when her judiniary and ballotbnx werernilie pure. .4marnm A iste number of the 'Richmond _Enquirer devotes a two-column leader to a disserta tion upon the aims and objects of this mys terione brotherhood. It pretends to be ig norant of its exact organization and the de -tails of its workings, but it very clearly in dicates that it knows more than it cares to reveal, and that it only reveals what it does for the purpose of gratifying its malignant hate towards the Union and encouraging the South to an attempt to resuscitate the "lost cause." The article seta out with a eulogy of white rebels, and a bitter denuncia tion of the freedmen and Southern whites who stood firm in their loyalty to the Union. Those of the Northern people who do not see the newspapers of the South, and who are consequently ignorant of, their utterances, should occasionally have spread before them such specimen extracts as the following, which we take from the article in question "It is now very evident that this " Km-Klux- Klan" is not a meaningless Alt rry Andrew organi zation, but that under its cap and btlls it hides a purpose as resolute, noble and heroic as that which Brutus concealed beneath the mask of well-dissembled idiotcy. is rapidly organizing wherever the insolent negro, the malignant white traitor to his race and the infamous squatter are plotting to make the South utterly unfit for the rebid .nce of the decent white man. It promises, we hope, to bring into the field for the defence of our lives, lib erty and property hundreds of thousands of those heroic men echo hare been tried and. indurated by the perils, dangers and sufferings of military ser vice " The article throughout teems with expres-. sions of the rankest treason •to the Federal Government and with the strongest appeals to the bad passions of the men who for four years openly sought to destroy the nation. Such ranting and raving would be unworthy of notice, but for the evidence which they afford of the feelings of the ex-rebels of the South, and but for the mischief which flows from such teachings. And these are the men whom Andrew Johnson and the Democratic party of the North would forthwith restore to their forfeited rights and start upon a fresh career of rule or ruin! From the time of the surrender of Lee to the development of the treachery of Andrew Johnson, no such utterances as these came through the organs of Southern opinion. The defeated rebels fully recognized and ac cepted the situation, and however keenly they may have felt the pangs of disappoint ment, they were prepared to yield to inevit able necessity and accept the terms of their conquerors." The false President is clearly responsible for this dangerous re-action, and "Ku-Klux-Klans," and other treasonable organizations and devices follow such teach ings as his as surely as disease and death follow the inhaling of noxious gases. Pos terity will be amazed that the American people of the present era submitted for so long a time to the rule of this bad man, be fore they arose in their majesty and demanded his removal from the office which ha dis graces. ARILIISERIENT HALLS. Complaint is often made of a want of proper ingress and egress for the audiences at' places of public amusement, and in many cases the complaint is well-founded. Too little attention is paid to this important con sideration, and there is probably not a hall in the city, unless we except the Academy of Music and several of the theatres, from which a large audience can be as easily and rapidly dismissed as would be de sirable in any case of sudden emergency. But while there is fault to be found with the construction of the buildings, there is as much fault to be found with the habits of our people in getting out of them. Any one who will watch the process of emptying any one of our large halls will see that the great difficulty and delay is in the au dience itself. Men „ and women stop and stand, and talk, and dawdle in the aisles as if they were at an evening party, or as if they were not quite sure that the performance was over. When the stairs are reached, the feminine portion of the crowd creeps slowly down, with its voluminous and most inap propriate train dragging over two or three steps behind and compelling those who come after to hold back, and so retarding the whole moving mass to a snail's pace. Upon this principle, it is in vain to abuse the halls as if they were the whole, or even the chief; came of the discomfort which is n , ghtly experi enced by the frequenters of almost all places of public amusements. If the people would not dawdle;—if they would only "stand not upon the order of their going, but go at once;" —if ladies would remember that their long dresses are dreadfully in the way, at such times and places;—if the ushers would exert themselves, politely, to keep the ebbing cur rent in motion;—in a word, if people, gen erally, would consider the convenience of those around them a little more, and make a little mare active use of the common sense with which nature has blessed them, it would be found that the difficulty which is now constantly and loudly complained of, would be so far abated as almost to disappear. The streets are now in first-rate condition to receive the attentions of Mr. Contractor Bickley. No trace of ice is left, the last vestige of the great snow storm has disap peared and the all prevailing residuum is mud. Mud in all its varieties is seen on all sides. The substantial article that is piled in great heaps, that is the accumulation of a long and hard winter and that has been kneaded and mixed up by thousands of hoofs and cart wheels, is unpleasantly plentiful. Thin and watery mud, that'is more the accident of the hour than the result of deliberate neglect, is spread about profusely, and pedestrianism with clean shoe-leather is out of the questbn. Now is the time for the application of the -broom the scraper and the fire-plug: - April windiAtilll convert this mud iato dust, the dust will damage oyes, clothing, goods and furniture, and it will then be an • open ques tion whether clouds of dust or piles of mud are the greater nuisance. The present con dition of the streets of the city does no credit Bickley or anybody else who is in any way responsible for, the general diffusion of dirt. The public who pay for having the streets cleaned would like to see some more comprehensive and vigorous efforts made toward the accomplishment of that result. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 28;1868.'' Ilrham3as appears, after al4to have adopt e d the excellent Constitution agreed upon by the late . Convention. Moro th an the re quired ' utumber off votes were oast, and there is a eifficient majority in favor of the new ftmdamental law. , The same machinery was set to work in Arkansas that defeated the new Constitution in Ala bama. The President and his followers used all the influence_they_poasessed, and there were threats against the negroes who should dare to vote against the Constitution. But it has been adopted, and now it is to be ex pected that an election will take place, and that representatives from Arkansas will be re ceived into the Fortieth Congress before the close of the present sessiun. Thus does re construction go on,. unler the Congressional plan, in spite of Andrew Johnson's hostility. Let the other unreconstructed States profit by the examfle of Arkansas. The lower Bowe of Parliament has passed Mr. Gladstone's bill abolishing Church Rates, except among members of the Established Church, throughout the British Islands. It will scarcely go through the House of Peery at present, for the Lords, spiritual and tem poral, are very jealous of their prerogatives and of any innovation upon aristocratic ex clusiveness. But even though the bill fail to become a law, its passage through the popular branch of the British Legislature is a great point gained, and it will stimulate the friends of Reform to exertions that will be crowned with ultimate substantial success. The English people are becoming heartily tired of royalty that has such prominent re prerentatives as the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Edinburgh; they have grown sick of the Tite Barnacles that nobility has fastened upon the government, and they are weary of supporting in luxurious ease ecclesiastics who are is the receipt of enormous revenues for attention to duties that are performed vi cariously. The revenue paid by the county of Lan caster, Penna., to the United States Govern ment, during the year ending June poth, 1667, amounted to $779,486 61. This was exclusive of the sale of stamps and the tax on salaries of Government officers, which would make a large addition to the amount. Al though Lancaster is the home of Buchanan, it Is also the home of Stevens, and it gives rousing Republican majorities. It sent a little army of good soldiers to fight against the rebellion. Those of them that came back continue true to the cause, and the population of Lancaster pays cheerfully its share of the taxes made necessary by the war. There is probably no county, so largely agricultural, that pays, in proportion to its population, a larger share of the annual revenue of the Government. MISS ANNA E.. DICKIN4oI4.—This talented young lady will deliver her first and only lecture of the semen at the Academy of Music next Thurs day evening. The subject of her loch= will be "The Duty of the Hour," a theme which, in view of present complications in the political world, allows her a wide•fleld for the exercise of her peculiar powers. The sale of tickets will com mence at Gould's, No. 923 Chestnut street, on Monday morning. Bunting, able w Co. Auction eere, Nos. 232 and 234 Market street, will hold during next week, by catalogue, the following important sales,viz.: Os MONDAT, March 30, at 10 o'clock. on four months' credit, about 800 lots of French, Saxony. Brit ish and Inala Dry Goods, embracing Paris Broche Grenadines, Percales, Mohairs, Alpacas, Delainee, Scotch Ginghams,Poplins,Reps, ;Black and Colored bilks, Stella Shawls, Linen Shirts and Chemises, Un dershirts, L. C. Handkerchiefs, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts, Trimmings, White Goods, Quilts, Umbrellas, Braids, Buttons, Fans, Ties,soocartons Paris Ribbons; sloo. 400 nieces Monitor Brand Paris All-wool De laines. 61e°, 40 pieces Scotch Girg'tair B. account of under writers. ON TUERDAY, March 31, at 11 o'clock. on four months' crerh., slam& 2,000 ptcktges Botts, Shoes, balmorals, &c. ON TIIUItHbAY, April '2, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit, 'packages and lots of Foreign and Ihanertic Dry Goods, umluding Clothe, Cassimeres, Tricots, Menons, Sittlne.s, Italians, &c. Alro, Dress Goods, Silks, Shawls, LinenQ Shirts and Drawers, Hosiery, Gloves, Hoop and Balmoral Skirts, Sowings, Ties, Umbrellas, &c, Alto, 130 packages Cotton and Woollen Domestics. (IN FRIDAY, April 3, at 11 o'clock, on four months' creni , about 'NO pieces Venetian, Ingrain, Hemp, List, Cottage, and R 1 1 ,2 thirpetintrP..te. Ex tensil e same til Stocks and Real itstate.--7 Manus & Sons advertise for their sale Tues day next, 'valuable bank, railroad, insurance, gas and other t tetchy and desirable loan'; fifteen elegant resi dences, Sixteenth street, and one, No. 2043 Green street; desirable dwellings, ground rents, &c. Sales Apra 7, 11, 21 and 28 will comprise a number of valu able estates, by order of the Orphans' Court, execu tors, trusieis and others. See catslogues, issued to day, and full advertisements on seventh and i/Set pages ~r a , pot e GEAUINE ROMAN SCARFS, For Ladies and Gentlemen. A full line plat received by J. W. SCOIT & CO No. 814 Chestnut Street. ruh:l3 th tarp, ELDER FLOWER ISOAP, H. P. & 0. IL TAYLOB, T \OWNING'S AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOR .1J meading broken ornaments, and other articles of Glass, China. Ivory, Wood, Marble, dm. No heating re. quired of the article to be mended, Or the Cement. Al ways ready for use. Nor sale by JOHN R. DOWNING, Stationer. fe7.tf 189 South Eighth street, two doors ab. Walnut. JOIL. CHUMP. BUILDER. 1781 011.ESTNDT STREET, and 218 LODGE STREET.' Mechanics of every branch required for houeebuilding and fitting promptly fundebed. fetl7 tf in JUNES TEMPLE & CO.. gg SOUTH NINTH STREET, 1111 Have introduced their Spring Styles. and invite tlemen that wieln a fiat combining Beauty, Lightness sue Durability to cell and examine them. - J., T. & Co. manufacture all their bilk Hate. mblatf4p, itWARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and oaey-fltting Orem flats (patented), in all the ap. proved faehione of the eoason, Chestnut etreet, next door to the Poet-oftce. beltilyrP TACK CLAWS MAT DO NOT , `GET LOOSE IN the. handle" (because they aro riveted through the tang) and ti e ordinary kinds, are for Hale d with Car net Strttebere, a variety of Carpet Hammers and a ton ;ft article of Carpet Tanks, by TRUMAN SHAM, No. a:.:5 (Eight Thirty-five) Market Went, below Ninth. L'iuß MARKING BEERY BOXES, MARKET L . Baskets, 'tools, dm. Brands end Stoncils may be had at the LI ardware 'Ore of TRUMAN dr, di - , Ne. igl6 (Light Thirty five) Market area, below Ninth.. BRAN MUFFIN OR WISCONSIN CAKE VANS, AC. corepanied by a printed receipt for making the cake, for sale with a variety et other kinds of cake pane, by TRI;IdAN &13I1AW. de. 886 (Eight Thirtyftve) Market S 2 sioo . L?ni t .i?v AN AN FIRST- City Atortittageo Mortgage ands 6,04, for :sae. tr e tt. JONF,S, mh2BJBlv, Wain it NtroeG IptLACK !LAMA LACE BACQUES, --CEO. W. VOGEL, J., . 1016 Chestnut , street, hes )net received an assort ment of Mark Llama Laco Bacques. Also, an Invoice of very cheap BLACK LLAMA LACE POI -DUES.. mh97,6t• A. FINE LOT OF BANANNAB On Loud at - ' JOHN G. KUIINT.E.E4 Fruit and Confectioner y Store, uab274 ' No. 036 Market etreet. 1.90K11 LOOK II! LOOK: I /I—A 1033.71;niguilleent assortment of Wall Papers and Linen -IN inflow Shades lust in for spring sake; cheap prkes. JoIiNSTON , tI Depot, 'al Spring tiarPen street. N. B.—Skades manufactured. se)4•l9rP. NO. 641 North Ninth Street. CLOTHING. • Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. • Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. • Wanamaker & BroWn'S Opening. Wanamaker & Brown's Opening. bpring Clothing. /a Spring Clothing...bat Spring ClOthing.jo Spring Olothing.mi arrine Tailoring, Goods. girFise Tailoring Goods. Or Pine 'I snoring Goods. erFine Tailoring Goods. SPECIAL CAI:W.—We have the be at stock Gents', Youths', and Boys' Beady-made Clothing, and Cloths, Casbimereb and Vestings for Measured work ever collected in one establishment, and those who make an early choice will be well repaid. Our prices are considera bly lower on many goods. WANAMaKEIL & BROWN, The Largest Establishment, SIXTH and MARKET Streets. LACE C UKTA Mo. SPECIAL NOTICE. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A FULL LINE • OF LACE CURTAINS, AND CORDIALLY INVITE THOSE ABOUT PURCHASING CURTAIN GOODS TO CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOOK, CARRINGTON, DE ZOUCHE & CO., S. E. Cor. Thirteenth and Chestnut Sts. Itrp CONFECTIONERY. RICH CREAM • AND CHOCOLATE CONFECTIONS OF EVERY DELICIOUS FLAVOR THAT HARE AND DELICATE FRLI IS CAN GIVE. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, N o. 1210 Market Street. t.:51-3try JLII7IIIB E K. A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OP BUILDING LUMBER aw HARD WOODS. F. H. WILLIAMS, Saenteenth and Spring Garden StreAs. r Thivo Btu th ftn SBTAIL DRY GOODS. SILKS Y. SILKS RICHEY 2 SHARP & CO. 727 CHESTNUT STREET, OFFER AT POPULAR PRICES A full aebortment of tbeinoet deeinble SILKS. Rich Brown, Node and Steel Taffetas. Heavy Black Gro Grain Silks. Sepal) Black Tapissier Silky. Superb Black Gro de Rhine Silks. Superb Black Taffeta Parislen. Superb Black Gro de BriWantes. A full lice of Elegant Heavy Luatreleca Silks for Salts. , RICKEY SHARP & CO. No. 727 Chestnut Street. w.rpu Walking Suits. Traveling Snits. JOHN W. THOMAS, Nos. 405 and 407 N. Second Street. Just received. a fall Lino of PLAIN AND CIIENE POPLINS. SILK AND WOOL POPLINS, SILK AND LINEN PO PLLIB. ALPACA POPLINS CREPE POPLIAS, PLAIN AS ND CURNE BISHAIRS. K SURGE. NEW GOODS ARRIVING ktAILY. mhYl.2mnas Mourning Goods. NEW SPRING AND , UNSER srom NOW OPEN. LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF "MOURNING BONNETS" IN THE CITY. Myers's Mourning Store, 1113 Chestnut Street, Girard Row, naafi th I tU4310 TITHITE PIQUE. TV Jest opened, 45 pieces of very good Pique, price 42 tents s, Yard ; cheap goods. QUADRUPLE, QUINTUPLE AND ocrupLE PUFFING, Muslin and Linen at the lowest 'prices. • BLACIC LOTTED VEIL NET. Various qualities, from 60 cents, all Silk, to dl 75 per yard, unusually good for the pnce. PLAIN BLACK BRUSSEL NET, Double Ground, varietal qualities. This net is strong, wilt not null out of shape, bias or straight NOTTiNGHAM LACE CUR FATES. NOITINGILAM LACE FOR Cunt/arm, ity the yard. NOTTINGHAM SHORT CURTAIN LACE, to a yard wide, for arrow windows. sash:doors, &c, NOTTINnIIAM LACE Tun Ea. NOTTINGHAM PILLOW LACES, frem S inches to 18 inches; Valance Lace, from 3 cents a yard to 13 cents for the 13inch wide; actually lose than a gold valuation. From the stocker' hand we can fill the, largest orders at once in any dessription of• Nottingham Laces at WORN VS Lace and Embroidery Store, Eighth street, - Fin' t Lace Store above Filbert, west side. T IA EN CENTRE PlEtzs.Fort, HANIJKERCI tIIELPS. 3.4... tine and cheer, at 20 ~ ogother. with . F.kings: Lam end insorttnv to make Hondkorolatlf% at ono•holl snore prlcee, at WORNS. No. W.l North Eighth etroet. TY/IMBURG EDGINGS AND INSARTLNGS, ON I linen and 'muslin. flubbed in Bt. Gall and Glak.gow. on band; the largest quantity and at the lowest market prIVA WHITE corms. Invite spscial aiteution to this stock of White Goods, ninny of Nalich have been purchased at January price Hsi a since which time the_ advance haw been consil erable. WORNE'S Lace and Embroidery Stara No. 35 North !Eighth street. QTOXES itc WOOD. Rd ARCH WI'IMET. OFPFIR thin day p nue of good Black Alpacas, 5", 138'.61X, 713 aLd 41,1;.3tohairs and bummer l'opllna for sults t Suin• Dar • it good ahlce, 11. till 12 and Isl Brown and Oray In variety; Tai lo Linorw, Aapkine and Towele.• a- louvre , aaaottrnent ; I adios' •Ckaskluga, a' full ABE Ortment of dioled stylea; Clotho and Catedinarea. for 11113'a and boya , e nitr, l&1 to Si 25, " Ixotalf RETAIL DAV 4110010Utre E isTyLaws D . :1t1,..5....5.--G05 . .0-D—S WALKING SUITS. Silk Corded Poplins, New Shades. Plain Silk Poplins, New Shadei. Takko Cloths. Honey Comb Pongees. Plain Pongees. Llama Cloths and Mohairs. Wash Poplins. Chenea Mohairs, &e. The opecial attention of ladles It invited to theie:soode. EDWIN HALL & CO., NO. 28 SOUTH SECOND. ST. Ttb2B P 21 ry PLAIN ALPACA POPLINS At 31 Cents. All New and Choice Shade& JUST OPENED. H. STEEL. it SON, Nos. 713 and 715 N, Tenth St. SPRING CHINTZES ,AT REDUCED PRICES. All bonght tkix week. dice the decline In Mew of Chintzes. Spring Chintzes, Fast Colors, at ico. Spring Chintzes, Fast Colors,l2 1-20. Yard-wide Light Chintzes. Choice Styles at 22c. Bleached and Unbleaded Mgni, - All the Best Makes, At Less than Wholesale Prices. H. STEEL & SON. Noa 713 Pnd 715 N. Tenth St 11. STEEL Br, SON AIM NOW CLOSING OUT TUE BALANCE OF THEIR STOGIE OF DARK AMERICAN DELAINE% At 14 Centh. Noe. 713 and 7151. Tenth St. H. STEEL Atr, SOW Have new Open a very complete assortment of Plain Colored Silks, Rich Black Silks, Fine. Dress Goods, New Traveling lllhlares, Ard pe►tvariety of New Stylee of DRESS GOODS, At Very Low Prioee. Noe. 713 and 715 N, Tenth St, 10,000 Yds New Spring Chintzes, PACIFIC, BREAGUE and MEBRIBIA.CK, Very Choice Styles,lse. IL STEEL. & SON, Noe' 713 and 715 N. Tenth St. NEW SPRING GOODS. e aro now receiving our Spring ruPPIY of WHITE GOODS, EMBROIDERIES, and HOSIERY, At Greatly Reduced Prices. New Style Fringed Lice Tidies. " Applique Tidies. " Crochet 'Tidies. Tucked Muslin , Puffed Muslin, Lace Mtu Brilliantes, French Mull, soft Carabrice, Jaconets, Tape Checks, Nainsooks, India Mull, Sheer Lawns, Organdies, Tarletans, White and Colored Piquet* French Percales, Pdadapolanis, Together with a eholocamortmeat of Collars, Cud's, .Sets, Worked. Edgingi, Insertions, Bands, Cambric Ihikfm. HOSIERY. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Arrieon, 14:108 Chestnut Street* rahl9l.otrp OIPENING. NITOOD & BUII3IB, • " (Former.h , Thornhill ea Mum) /208 Chestnut. street, Aie now opening an unusual dne Moe& of dprind Good. Late*, Liuma ISsequoe,liaric Antolnetto Caper. IL:wen:lra ibfatte , Cape; etc:mottos. 'rilmpadOnll l . &a. Into 111 0 : aim assortment of Glovea and Efoeissvfn aditio th carefully eeleeted stook of policy wpm) 0d 09 4 % 1120 Earl , " • norAtti DRY 0074-1119. BILKB, SILKS BILKS, \ BILKS BILKS . S L - K • , . NKAGNIIIIIIVENT NEW STOCK SPRING AND SUMMER ISILIEUI, • BLACK SILKS. $1 NS. BLACK ILKS. $1 lb. BLACK (iI{O GRAINS, $2 CO. ELEGANT C4IRDED 811.$$. $2 BLACK AND WHITE (111kOK 811X13. $1 PLAID BILKs. $2 22. 1 CABE VERY SUPICRIOR PLAIN BILK, ALL TIM 8, AT $2 IA A (Ito,AT BAROAIN. CHOICE 811ADER CORDFD SILKS. BLauf. EIGIURED BILKS. $1 $7. J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO., N. W. cor. Eighth and Market ete. FRENCH. POPLINS, 112PNCH POPLINS, FRENCH PorLINN. WILL OPEN, ID is DAY, ONE VASE FRENCH alilt ,AND WOOL POPLINS, AT $1 H 6, worni sa J, C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO. t N. W. corner Eighth and Market. Will Open This Day,. FORTY ALLWOM MAMA; AT ae. PER YAW. J. C,, STRAWERIDGE & N. W. eor. Eighth and Market. CLOTHS AND OA.SSIMEntiI. ALL•WOOL CASSIMERES, FOE BOYS. Os, • GOOD PANT STUFFS, AT We, HANDSOME CASSIMERES 76, 87c. El EGANT CASSIMEHES..I4. $1 25. ONE OF THE LARGEST 610 C 'OF CASSIVER_FAI AND LAMES' CLOTHS TO S.E. FOUND IN THE CITY. J. C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO., N. W. cor. Eighth and Market. WHITE CLOTHS. MUTE CLOTuS, SCARLET LO T BLUE tun, 8, PCR MUME.66,4I4I,II,IIII,LUREWS-PLACEL J. C; STRAWBBIDGE & CO, N. W. car. Eighth and Market. SPRING DRESS GOOPM, AT 1.15 SPRING DRESS 000DS, AT IS (M. SPRING DRESS 60011)s. AT ; TS. D.REAS GOODS, AT 25 STRAWBRIDGE. INTERESTING NOTICE TO TBE Ladies of Philadelphia and Surrounding Citie&, Extension of our Business AND GRAND OPENING Of an entirely New Rock of MICR, IMLIK GM dB ABM FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS,. No. 920 Chestnut Street, Phihida., Monday, March 23d. In again appearing before our patrons to announce our. embarkation In the more diversified channels 04 a GENERAL DRY GOODS BUSINESS; it would be mere affectation to attempt to represe the gratification we experience at thp sacs OPR which has bith. erto attended our efforts—an exultation whlzh wo trust e shall not be thought vain hi supposing 's participated to by many among our numerous supporters—and we hope that the same energy and tact dbplayed in the paella t he generally reliable quality of our st.ck the happy Judg ment exercised in Its choice,combined with the thoroughly ECONOMIC CHARGES, which we purpoee Anil prevail in eves y department. will give a celebrity to our home unparalleled on thla coalmut. The varions Departments in our new additions will omelet or • THE BILK DEPARTMENT, which will embody in the assortment all grades and quahries of all the celebrated makers, including Bonnet. Belton. Penton, so.. Mack Taffetas, Gros Grain, Gros do Paris, Drap de France, Gros Imjetial. Al,O, Rich Colored Glace Du. capes, Fault de Boles. Yancv and Checked Silks. Thefts good/ hare been penal:Laity selected in the various. European markets by Mr. Ad mom/ whose management the care of this department will be tuatrusted. THE DUPES GOODS DEPA ItTIiPNT will be tinder the direction of MI. David Hughes (of onr firm), who has devoted hi. time and 'mature indement for nearly three months to the selection of his Hack. comprising Plain and Printed Percales, Orgat.dies. Norwich and Irish. Poplins, Itobsire, Silk Taffeta.. Chene Poplins, Colored. Alpacas, Brilliances, Plain and Printed Piques, de., dm. THE HOUSEKEEPING DEPARTMENT.inchItna Irish Linens Lawns.. Napkins , Table Cloths. Brown and White Damasks, Linen Sheetines. all widths, Irish and Scotch Diapers, Quilts, Counterpanes, tinchnictle in. Bleached and Brown:allelic& etlirtings Alto, In White Goods, Cambric& Jaeonetr, Swiss Mulls. Vittoria, Lawns, Shirred Muslin& dre.., dc. Families. Hotel Beepers. Steamboat Builders. ate., are invited to examine into the merits of this Departs:mut, as no pains will be sparod In the selection of the stock, or in the moderate charges fixed for the same, to acquire and secure a prominent and large trade In these geode. THE MOURNING DEPARTMENT will be fully supplied with all the 'eluting and moat desirable fabrics, includ ing also a large variety of the minor details, SO Crape Collars and Veils, Muslin Collate and Setts, Crape and TarLetan Ruches, Sleeves, Mourning Hasulkerchiefe. ate. IHE LACE AND FANCY GOODS. DEPARTMENT will comprise a choke and rare assemblage of real POW. Applique. Thread. Maltese. Guipure, Valenciennes. Cluny. Blond Laces, Edgings and Insertions, Real Lase Collars and Setts, nerd's. Barbee, Coiffures, Crowns. etc, Infants' Embroidered' Robes and Waists, French, Scotch and Hamburg Edgings and Insertions, Ladies. and Ciente Plain and Fancy Handkerchiefs. Puffed Lace Waists, GamPo.Pelerince, Habits.Beribas„ Sleeves. etc. This department will be under the superintendence of Mr. Richard wane, to whom all orders , attitude& will meet with prompt and careful execution. THE SHAWL DEPARTMENT will include all the lead ing styles of Freud , Epgibilt and tierman manufacture lot Summer and Seaside wear; also Brodie. Lone and' Square Shawls. of which c onnec tion ucted assortment will at all times be offered in ith THE CLOAK DEPARTMENT, which, with the fernier.. . will be under the management of Mr. Charles Hall: will always contain our must. elegant and extendoo variety of the latest Paris and London styles as well au acquired manufacture. The ominence we have In this department will be sustained. THE 'HOSIERY AND GLOVE DI PARTNIENT will in. , elude every deecriv bon of French, English, oOrmszt and. Irish 030 6 r i ggon ) manufacture. and will be under the. management of Mr. A. Straohan, who has had a life long experience in these mod!. . . "SHE NI DRESS MAKING DEPARTEIk.7 will be con tinned ender the dtrection of Ilro. Pronto; by whons ; all orders will bee Xecated in the shortest' time and in the highest excellence. _Tile General Direction will be in tho hapda of Mr. W. .Att Wind, to wholualj-coluplaints of, loatfention tj t e, Part of the attgin dn nts. errors intlellwry of merchandise.. or o th er Ryer. Illai Mee. ft is!cspoctf 'thy requested will bo. OUR ALTER ANIONS being now ermpleted. 'we find it IllereevAry, in order to. per f ec t the arrangements of our various departments, to still furtiter duspend business until Monday, March 23d, on •vv yrelt day we purpoie to ix Wu, our Grand Opening at TEN OTLeicH, Cox:ninonding our new enterprise to the. Patrodage Of our friends and the public,. • • - f We row Veryrespeodulig. J W . PROCTOR & CO te.i.&thbri„ SECOND EDITION. .BY TELEGRAPH. LATER CABLE , NEWS. AMERICAk'spumliES FIRMER. TAE COrNTON MARKET. 'W A:~3H~N : C~TQI~, GENENAL HANCOCK'S COMMAND THE PRESIDENT'S DESIGNS. Gen. Emory'e Removal Probable. The Alabama Question. By the Atlantic Cable." Lostuou, March 28, A. M.—Tho steamship Atlanta, from New York March 11, arrived late last night. Cusack, 0349 a% for money and account; American securities firmer and a fraction higher; Erie, 46%; Iliinols Central, 80%; U. S. Five twenties quiet at 720 72 34- LIVERPOOL, March 28, A. M.—Cotton buoyant and excited, with a sharp upward turn in prices. Brisk speculative demand. The sales to-day are estimated at 20,000 bales. Uplands on the spot, 1090.; afloat, 1050;10 1 ,1d. Orleans,lo3<d. Bread stuffs quiet and unchanged. Provisions dull and Steady. Losinox, March 28th, Evening.—U. 8. Five twenties, 72872 X; Erie, 47; Illinois Central,B29 . LIVEIII'OOL, March 28th, , Evening. Cotton slostd active and excited at a further advance; sales 30,000 bales; closing prices, Uplands, .1.0 X; Orleans, 11. Breadetriffa firm and unchanged. Bacon firm at 43a. Naval Mores dull. Aarvr-car, March 28th, Evening.—Petroleum steady at 441. Gen. Hancock's Appointment. gtEr pedal Despatch to the Philadelphia. Evening Botlettal Wssursoron, March 28th.—The President last evsnirg issued an order assigning General Han cock to the command of the Department of the - Atlantic, headquarters in this - city; This move on:the part of • the President bas caused considerable comment in political cir cles this morning, and it Is be lieved to be the first move toward having control of the national troops here in ease he should go so far as to attempt to resist impeachment. The order assigning General Hancock to this new command had not been issued at General Grant's headquarters this morning, but it is expected that it will be done to-day. After General Hancock assumes command General Gordon Granger will be as signed by the President to the command of this District, in place of General Emory; at least Gen. Grant stated this A. M. that he believed that this would be done. . The Alabama SUL Medal Despatch to the Phtlactelphis Evening Etalietin.l WASIIIECGTON, March 'lB.—lmmediately after the reading of the journal in the Rouse to-day, lie Alabama Bill was taken- up, and Mr. Kerr, ,Indiana, took the door in opposition thereto. Gen. Farnsworth, who has charge of the bill, on behalf of the Reeonstruction Committee, stated In reply to the question that it was his intention to obtain a vote on the bill to-day. The Florida Canetitatiou. idlpeeiti/ Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.) WABIIIIIOIISN, March 28.—The Reconstruction Committee, at their meeting this A. M., had be fore them zeveral citizens of Florida, who were examined in relation to the Constitution framed by the recent State Convention. Persons were examined for and against the Constitution. The Impeachment Trial (Special Despatch to the Philadelphia iEventaa Benetittl Wasnuicrrow, March 28.—The Board of Im peachment Managers were not in session to-day. General Butler is still engaged in preparing his argument to open the case next Monday, and ho earpects to occupy the time of the Court during the entire day. From lowa. DES MOINES, March 28.—A meeting of the Directors of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad was held at Davenport yesterday. Several resignations were arcepteit and the va cancies filicd. A majority of the Board now are Illinois and lowa men. The act of the lowa Legislature in regard to the road was accepted and a certificate of acceptance will be filed in the office of the Secretary or State, is this city, this, afternoon. The new members of the Board are not parties to any pending suit, and a majority being competent to transact the business of the Company, without reference to the suits in Now 'fork or elsewhere, it is believed that its affairs will go on smoothly again. From Washington. WASIMOTON, March 28.-01&IA proclamation is made of the Postal Convention , between Ilkt United States and the Colonial Government of Hong Kong. The mails are to be'carried by the direct lines of American packets plying be tween Ban Francisc.o and Song Kong, via Yo kohama, Japan. Weather Vapors. Ararat 28. Thema 9 A. M. Wind Weather. meter. Port Hood, N. W. Clear. 50 Halifax, 8. W. Clear. 40 Portland, N. Clear. 39 Boston, N. E. Clear. 37 New York, N. 1.3. Cloudy. 44 Wilmington, Del., N. E. Cloudy. 44 Washirudon.D.C., N. W. Cloudy. 44 Fortress Monroe,N. W. Cloudy. 40 Richmond, Va., N. Cloudy. 37 Oswego, N. Clear. 4 50 9' Buffalo, N. E. Clear. 49' Pittsburgh, N. Cloudy. 39 Chicago, N. E. Clear. 40 Louisville, N. W. Cloudy. 53 New Orleans, N. E. Clear. o 56 Mobile, N. W. Cloudy. 58 Key West,* N. , Clear. 76 Havana,j . N. Clear. 77 Barometer, *3O-10, f3O-10. , . The Democratic Election Frauds in Pennsylvania. Our readers are aware that a contested election is in progress before a committee of the Senate of Pennsylvania, in which enormous frauds were proved to have been perpetrated bythe Demo trade party. A witness who disclosed his knowledge before the committee was assassinated, and the Legis lature have offered a toward of s3,o(x) for the. apprehension of the murderer. Another feature of extraordinary character was disclosed by the evidence before the committee during the present MichaeTO'lifettra had testified tO hie knowledge of the distribution of large •numbers of fraudu lent naturalization pagers,and had said that $5 OO bad been given him by a Catholic priest to leave the State and not , testify. This statement was, scarcely credited, but the priest alluded to was • blmself brought before the Committee and ad mitted its truth. We give his testintony. Ida as follows: Rev. Thomas•Traey sworni am the priest in charge of the congregation at Clearfield; I did pay Michael O'Meara X5OO beibre this investiga *ion commenced ;it was in his own' house at Clicarfieldi in the evening,• about a week before She trial; In consideration of It he was to leave the State, and to remain absent for three months; Mr. Gorman, the boss of Coign s on the raibtoed gave me the money to give him for that varpotte; I had conversations with the man ,who gave me the money ; no other party, had" knowledge of the transaction that I know of; I had correspondence with Mr. Wallace on the subject of getting him to leave the State; I understand that he was to remain out. until afteethis trial should Nam; Ile Is aired (Mormon; his name is Patrick; he Is the only person that knew of the transaction that I am aware of; he 'was the only one that gave me any money, or authorized me to make the arrangement; Mr. Wallace never - gave — me - any -- money or attheftd me to give any; he said as regards him Self, 'Would not give any, as it was not necessary; I saw O'Oonnon within two weeks, at Clearfield; I know Jas. Collins; have seen him about two months ago; I do not know from whom the money came that Gormon paid me; the Mr. Wallace I mentioned was Senator Wallace, the Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee." Murder did its work 'against one witness. Britgry failed as against the other. Heaven help our Mende In this Senatorial district, who have such agencies contending againgt them. :i'4' i i i : (:►i a /I `~ PORTO RICO. A 3 ova Scotian Crew saved by an Ame rican Brim. HAVANA, March 27, 1868.—The brig Thomas Tway'. has arrived at Mayaguez with the crew of the Cotaam, bound for 'New York, which was lost at sea. jibe brig Thomas Turnll, of New Haven, Conn., and the schooner Cotnam, of Windsor, N. S., are likely the vessels referred to above,—En. IST. DOMINGO. Cabral's Debts Temporarily Outlawed Refugees to Remain In the Comm. hates or Leave the Republic. RAVASA, March `l7,lB6B.—The siege of St. Do minco city has ruined the place. San Carlos has decreed the liabilities of ex-President Cabral to be invalid - until the Legislature discriminate thereon. lle has also prohibited the refugees who are sheltered in the consulates from remaining In the republic. " Generals Moelou and Carlos Baez are expected from Ilayti. MEXICO. The Tehuantepec Railway to be Begun-AI r • of Maxlm►lltenht Late Moister to Home. HAVANA, March 27.—Among the passengers who arrived hem on the the way to Mexico fa Mr. La ECre, president of the Tehuantepec Rail way Company. He gees hence to complete ar rangements for building the road. tenor Ignacio Agnllary Mareche, who repre sented the Mexican empire at Rome from April 17, 1864, until near the end of the empire, Ins been impriFontd at the capital for alleged coin plicity in the late insurrectionary movemente. CRIME. booting Affray in New York. [From the N. I'. Ilk:raid of to-dayj About six o'clock last evening another one of those tragic occurrences, unhappily lately of so frequent happening, resulting from the immode rate use of stronedrink, startled the loiterers about the bar of a liquor store :NJ West street, the particulars being the shooting of one of their number (Charles Norris) by the proprietor of the place, Thomas Fitzpatrick. As Is usually the case, much conflict exists in the statements of theparties possessed of information respecting the circumstances preceding, leading up to as ityrere, the affair, each bearing favorably or adversely to one or the other of the princi pals, according as the sympathy of the narrator inclined. Carefully piecing together the several histories ae related, It is learned that an ill-feel ing had for some time existed between Fitz patrick and Norris, growing, it is said, out of a suspicion entertained on the part of the former that the latter Lad stolen from him, some six months since, the sum of &50; but whether such suspicion had its origin upon good and sufficient grounds does not appear. In consequence thereof, it is further alleged Fitzpatrick bad forbidden Norris to enter his place, but, notwithstanding such prohibition, the latter did so yesterday, accompanied by a friend. Fitzpatrick's friends say a crowd; but this Norris's friend, one Westley hillier, denies, saying that they met the other parties in the store. However this may be, Norris, who was under the influence of liquor when be entered the placedrank several times there, at the solicitation of those who accompanied him or whom he met, and became involved in an altercation with Fitzpatrick. Twice he was put out of the store by the 'Wer t and warned not to return, but per sisted in doing so. Another discrepancy here occurs in the respective statements. It ia alleged on the one side that Norris seized an oyster knife lying on the counter near him and made a pass at Fitzpatrick, while his (Norris's) friend denies that any such incident occurred. Upon the occa sion of Norris entering the store the third time, Fitzpatrick, it is conceded, caught up a revolver, one of small pattern, from a drawer, and point ing it at him threatened to shoot him if he did not instantly retire, immediately returning it to the place whence he had taken it, when, seeing that the threat was disregarded by Norris, be again drew it. using much the same language, but again,at the suggestion of Miller, who leaned over the counter and caught hold of his arm to enforce the advice, put it up. A third time he drew it, and fired, the ball entering the right breast of Norris. Seemingly unsuspicious that any very serious wound had been inflicted, Fitz patrick advised Miller to convey his friend to a surgeon to have him attended to, and upon Mil ler protesting he had no money repeated his ad vice in such manner_ as to induce Miller to essay this teak. They had advanced but a short dis taece, however, when Norris became faint, and meeting Officer McNally, of the Fifth precinct, Miller committed the wounded man to his charge, who thereupon procured a cart and bad him con veyed to the City Hospital. In the meantime, Officer Fulmer, of the same precinct, arrested Fitzpatrick and conveyed him to the station house. Norris was attended at the hospital by Dr. Stnyvesant F. Morris, and at a late hour last night it was learned from him that be was not in a dangerous condition. The bail had apparently entered the right lung and lodged there, but being a small one serious consequences need not necessarily be apprehended, while internal hemorrhage the same time, should hemorrhage take place, the condition of the pa tient would become critical. He was, however, then doing well and in no immediate danger. Captain Petty last night notified the coroner of the occurrence, that he might, if he so desired, hold an ante-mortem examination, Both the Freaks to this affair are Irishtnen. Fitzpatrick is about twenty-eight years of age, is married, but has no family. Norris is about twenty-six, is unmarried, and by occupation a fireman or coal passer. He resides at 76 Greenwich street. Fitzpatrick resides where he, does business, and has hitherto borne a good reputation in his Ward. Another Chicago Tragedy. [From the Chicago Journal or the ;Nth.] A saloon on West Madison street, near the in tersection of Jefferson street, was last night the scene of an encounter between two men, which may prove fatal in its results to ono of them. It appears that a colored man, named Ephraim Mohan, and a' white man, named C. D. C. Wil liams, entered the saloon in company and engaged in a game of cards. They played for some time, and it would seem that fortune favored the 'negro.• The latter baiting pocketed bis winnings and being weary of playleg, rose from the table, intending to leave the saloon. Williams objected to this, and requested him to hive him a chance to win bark some of the money o bad staked. Molson insisted on leaving, how ever. and proceeded toward the door. Williams then called upon a merchants' policeman, teto was present, to arrest Nelson. That officer re fused to do any such thlug, telling -- Williams to do the Job himself. Upon this Williams flew into a terrible passion. Drawing a revolver from his pocket, he cocked and pointed it in sh ine with the retreating form of 3dolson, and' before he konid be prevented by the bystanders bad discharged' the weapon. Molson fell to the floor, bleeding from a wound in his thigh. The bail had penetrated between the main artery and the bane and had inticted a most dangerous wound. Williams's arrest was rat once effected. The is jured man was carried on a stretcher to his home, where Medical aid was summoned. , Today Williams was arraigned tittle Armory. A physician stated that Melon's injuries wore very severe, •in feet might terminate fatally. Should the wounded man not die; amputation of the llm would be ablealuteV unavoldeble. - THE DAIIY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MARCH 28,1868. TIHRD EDITION. FROM WASHINGTON. RECONSTRUCTION IN FLORIDA FROM T. I.OOT_TIS. Storm Along the Pacific Railroad FIRE IN TROY, NEW YORK. WASHINGTOI9, March 28.—The Committee on Reconstruction had before them to-day two sets of delegates from Florida, each presenting a con stitution for that State. One of the delegations is composed in part of Wisconsin men and the other of men from Massachusetts, who are set tle dln Florida. The former have the advantage, as they eabibit a constitution sanctioned by GEM era Meade, and signed by forty-five delegates. The latter object to this constitution on the ground that these delegates signed it because otherwise they could not receive their ply. Mr. Stevens (Pa.) promised Mr. Brooke that he would offer a resolution in the Hottse calling upon Gen. Meade to report all the facts in the ease, in order to relieve the Committee from their embarrassment. The Committee on Elections have placed the Utah contested election case in the bands of Mr. Chandler : one of its members, to prepare a re port in view of all the facts. The friends of Mr. Hooper say that although the allegation was made before the cOmmittee, no proof was produced to show that he had taken an oath as a member of the order of Melebezedie in hostility to the Government of the United States. The fractional currency received from the printing bureau for the week ending to-day, .is $913,500. Amount shipped same period to As sistant Treasurer at New York, $100,000; to As sistant Treasurer at New Orleans, $100,000; United States Depository at Baltimore, $70,000; National banks and others, $167,280. Total $437,280. United States notes forwarded to the Assistant Treasurer at New York, 02,000,000; do., at New Orleans, $50,000 . National Banks and others, 492,179. Total shipment of notes, $2,142.174. The Treasurer of the United States holds in trust as security for National Banking Aesocia lions the following amounts: For circulating notes, $391,643,906; for depo sits of public money, $38,177,950. National Bunk notes issued during the week, $170,700. Total to date, $307,020,091. To be deducted as follows: Mutilated notes returned, $6,783,755; notes of insolvent banks, redeemed and burned, *3B9"o.—leaving in actual circulation at this date, 0299,896,970. Fractional currency redeemed and destroyed during the week, $400,010. , rem ffl Poseur'. ST. 1.01:1. arch 28.—A planing mill, the reeiden,ce o f t T. C. Kelley, and a carpenter shop, with considerable lumber, at Clarksville, were burned on Wednesday. Loss, $15,000; insured for 0,600. Another heavy snow storm occurred along the Union Pacific Railroad on Thursday. Work on the mountain division was suspended on that ac count. General Sherman leaves for Omaha on Mon day to meet the Indian commissioners. Destructive tire. • TROY, N. Y., March 28.—C. D. & D. A. Rous seau's brick planing mill, office, and a large pile of lumber; also, several piles of lumber owned by Bturdevant &Andrews, in West Troy,were burned this morning. The fire is still burning fiercely in the lumber pile of the latter firm, but will proba bly spread no further. Rousseau's loss 18420,000 on the building and lumber, which is insured for $lO,OOO. Bturdevant & Andrews lose $5,000, and are in sured for $15,000. • The fire was the work of an lncendiary. MINNEAPOLIS, March 28.—A fire occurred yes terday which burned the steam mill of Willey Brother, at Bhamplin. Loss 1120,000. NEW YORK, March H.—Arrived, steamships Europe, from Havre, and Union, from Bremen and Southampton. STATE OF THE THERMOMETER TEEM DAY AT '1 HE BULLETIN OFFICE. 10 A. M 48 deg. 12 M.. .40 deg. 2 P. deg. Weather cloudy. Wind Northeast. CITY MORTALITY.-Thu number of interments in the city for the week ending at noon to-day was 311, against 268 the same period last year. Of the whole number 153 were adults and 158 children-80 being under one year of age; 181 were males and 130 females; 95 were boys and 63 girls. The greatest number of deaths occurred in the Twentieth Ward, being 80, and the smallest num ber in the Twenty-eighth Ward, where only one WAS reported. The principal causes of death were: Croup, 6; congestion of the brain, 6; consumption, 61; con vulsions, 15; dropsy, 5; disease of the heart, 8; debility, 12; scarlet fever, 7; typhus fever, .3; ty phoid fever, 10; Inflammation of the brain, 13; inflammation of the lungs, 24; marasmus, 10; old age, 10; palsy, 5, and scrofula, 6. March •[ the British Army for the Illighlands—The troops “All Wello7 QUEEN'A ROTEL, LONDON, March 27, 1868. Dtepatehes.just to hand from the British military expedition In Abysainla report that the entire force, with the exception of a mountain battery and four companies of the Forty-fifth regiment of infantry, had just left Zonla and commenced the march for the highlands •of the country. The army was ingood health and the general sanitaryreport is favorable. The ascent to the highlands of Abyssinia Is regarded here as a very difficult undertaking; but it is understood that General Napler's advance is by the safest and moat easily traversed route—that on the east by Senate and Doganta. The country is repre sented as being very variable in appearance— fertile and extremely barren alternately—and some of the mountain passes formidable. FINAITCLA.L and COMMERCIAL. The Philadelphl Bales at the Made!. - YTRBT 1009 USS-208'65 Jy cp 108;i 500 do small 107 200 Pittsburgh Scrip 70 1000 retina Os war ln rag 1023,s 2000 Pa Gs 3 ser 10934 503 Pa Os 1 series s 5 105 1000 Nunn Os war ln coup 102 2000 Penn B. 2 fue 68 3dys 09 1000 Phil &Sun 78 2ds 79 1000 Read 66 44-80. 9334 2000 Ca&ilion mtnes'B9 96% -8500 Lehigh es goldin its 8914 10000 do do b6O 89% 1500 do do 891 t( 8100 016 v Os new , Its 103 1500 do men 103 11 sh 2d &Rd tiat 5535 9 eh Pei:unlit its 55 - 'unarm! 2000 Bun & Ihrie 7e 103 2000 Cam&Ant 613'89 96% 5000 Lehigh 68 R In 8836 2000,; , do do 58% 200 sh R ' 10,11 200 eh do 1560 10N 96 eh 2d & 8d tIL R • 6634 • OLOOND 1000 17 8 10.100 cp 100 K 8000 Leh Be'B4 6614 1000 sh•Lehion eld In 89% 5000 do b 5 6934 10000 do bswn 6934 I 911 Fenno It 00 . PintantrOPM' 11Olitlirdiit Mardi . 2i—The derma for • =my coattoute very presdna awe cast wime " O"O5°S 2:30 O'Olook. BY TELEGRAPH. From Washington. Ship News. OI.TY BULLETIN. ABYSSINIA. a Money_ Marke 1 . hla Stock isatchahge. 50 eh Mluohill R s 5 5G)4 53 eh Loh Val R eswn 63 200 eh Pbilikllrioß 25'; 100 sh Soh Nay pf 2296 100 eh Itcadß 459" 1800 eh do 2dys&la 451{ 1100 eh do reg&lnt.ls3.( 400 eh do2dalota 451 4 ', 100 eh do 45 81 100 sh do bS&lnt 45.91 200 eh Leh NI, stk bso 261( 100 eh do o 263 leo eh do e3owo 100 eh do blO 2636 200 eh do • Ile c 281 f 200 eh do b3O -26 X 100 sh do cash 201( 100 eh do 1380 shay, 83 eh do 26 . 4 6 100 sh SEIM Canal .15 100 eh - de b3O 1514 80AR1513. 100 eh Pldl&Erieß e] 26 100 eh do 26 100 eh • do b3O 2c3i 100 sh Fulton Coal Crli 100 eh Leh Nay stk 60dys lttur BO 26% 200 sh float 21 its 530 46 7 eh Leh Val R sdys 53 4501111 do 26g 'tai eh .do b3O 26K 100 eh , ' do s6Owa2o)4' , . he emoted 'ender 1(37;15 per cent. The *meant Of meir contile paper offering is mall. but it cannot be negotiated ender 8 012 per eent for the best names. In trade dirties brisinses le dull, but a more animated Mae of aff tire Is looked for after the first proximo, when the tide of mas . renal will again set towards the seaboard. There wee a fair amount of briefness at the Stock Beard this morning, and prices generally were well maintained. In Goveinment•Loans the transactions were light. at yes terdars figures. State Loans and City Loans were Ices firm, with ealesof the new iffellen pf the latter at 1102—a decline of %. Lehigh Gold Loan wan in better request, with eaten at 89,"•i. _ Reading Railroad was .14 higher and closed at 46 II Pennsylvania Railroad wait steady at 66, and Camden and Amboy Railroad at 124; Mine HM Railroad at 5034, Lehigh Valley Railroad at 53; 2934 was bid for Little Schuylkill Railroad; .9 7 3.; for Catawissa Railroad Prefer red ;21.,Uffor Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, and 32 for North Pennsylvania Railroad. In Venal Stocks the tendency was upward. Lehigh . Navigation advanced'{, and Schuylkill Navigation Pre' {erred ;; and Susquehanna 34. Bank and Passenger Railway Shares were inactive. Messrs. De Haven and Brother. No. 40 South Third street, make the following quotations; of the rates of ex. change today. at 1 P. M.: United States Sixes, 1811. 111 @Hat' do. do. 1862, 109341g109. 9 ,‘; do. do., 1884, 107 n ;do.,1881,108,qq108: d0.,435.new,1063 , 00%; do., 1607 new, 107€.19'1U; Fives. 'fen-forties, locesqlocc.; Seven• thirties, :June, i106,14R.106; July, 1f6U03106; Compound Interest notes, June, 166!,19.40; do. do., July, 1861. 19.40; do. do., August, 1864, 19.40; do, do., October, 1814 19.40; December. 1884, 10.40; do. do., May, 1866, 1811834; do. do.. August, 18r8.17(31734; do, do.. September. 1865. 163(316%; do. do.. October. 1866,16(31634; Gold, 1083".4 138%; Silver. 182441134. Smith, Randolph & Co., Bankers, 18 South Third street, quote at 11 o'clock. as follows: Gold, 111834; United States Sixes, 1881, inkginl:: United States Five.twenties, 1863 1003;®1093.1; do. Mt, 10r:0108; do. 1865, 108.4101OEN; do, July, 18135, 106nA106 7 A1 d 0.1867. 107X®107U:Unlyed States Fives, Ten-forties, 1003 , 1®1005,1; United States Seven thirties, second series, 11 rNdel0e3.1; do., do., third " d a l 106%@166N. • Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government Securities, &c., to day, as follows: United States 6'5,1881, 111,%03111%; old IFive4wentles, .10014@,1(4%: - - new Five twenties of 1884. 1077.4108; do. do. 1885, ; Five.tweallsn of July, 100,4"@107; do. do. 1887, 107(4107.4; Ten-forties, 100 X ®100,1;; 7 3-10, June, 1053.1@1053i; do. July, 1053'fA1uePi: Gold, 138;'s. Philadelphia Produce illarket. Sa'maims, March 28.—There is very little demand for Cloventecd, and prices have again declined; sales of 100 bushels fair and good !Pennsylvania at $7 60@$8 00. Timothy ranges from $2 50(42 75 per bushel. Small sales of Flaxseed at $3. The Flour market is firm, but the demand is lees active. and meetly ernfined to the wants of the home consumers. Sales of 1.000 tnrrels, mostly Extra Family, at sll] - 4512 per barrel for Pennsylvania and Ohio, and $lO 6e(41111 75 for 1• orthwestern do. do., including small lets of Superfine at $7 75]?$8 80; Extras at $8 60(419 60. and Fancy We at SlBaSsls. Rye flonr is steady at $8 Fo®sB 75, lie Com Meal no further sales have been reported. The clock of good Wheat is now reduced to a very low figure, and this description Le held firmly at yesterday's quotations. Small sales of Red. at dull 15; White may be quoted at s3@isa 30. Rye is at 411 Eargon 86 for Pennsylvania. Corn is unsteady at the late -advance-; sales of yellow at go 18(0$1 19; 3,000 bushels No. 2 Woot en] mixed at 51 1644.51 a lot of damaged at $l 10, and 10,00 Western in the Elevator, •n secret term]. Oats are firmer; ealrs rf 2,000 bushels Pennsylvania at 85qt0ic, ; the latter an advance. The Now York Money fflorket• (From vsßecal.l • blamer 27.—The gold markset wa weak at the opening this morning, and sales were made at 138'6, but subs •- fluently it gained strenath, and an advance to 1383 s took place, following which, however, it relapsed, and the closing traneactiens were at 1383(. There was considers, Ho pressure to lend gold. and althongh the "short" interest ha e been largely there aaed within the I set fortnight, the borrowing demand was not oriel to the supply. Loans were made at rates varyine from seven to eleven per cent. per annum. and at 2,-82@3-64 per diem for carrying The gross clearings amounted to *35 443.1 Of): the gold balances to 181.7(r3.331. at d the currency hal:weep to $2.5488.3 The epeetil ',nye feeling in the room Is for tr e time being bearish, owing to the dither Ity and cost of carrying Gan, out the un settled condition of affairs at Washington. and the possi- Millis a growing out of the impeachment and trial of the . President operate against any fur her material decline. The stock• market continues dull under the existing condition of local monetary affairs, but it has neverthe less been steady throughout the day. 'I he news from Albany that the Railway . Committee of the Assembly had unanimously reported against the Erie bill. and that the- report had been agreed to by a vote of 83 to 12, • hardly attracted remark in the street, and -its -influence upon the price. of the stock was barely perceptible. The affidavit of -Mr. Jay Gould. which goes to show that.tho Vanderbilt party is as deep in' the mire as the other Fide is in the mud, continues to attract attention, and the street is amused at the criminatton and recrimination in which the rival parties indulge with regard to each other. The claims of the Vpnderbilt party to purity and unselfishness of native in this litigious contest are thrown to the winds by MrGonid's unvarnished narrative, and the animus of the legal proceedingsagainst the Erie party is revealed. It was a stock-jobbing quarrel in the beginning, but it bassinet` assented the magnitude of a railway war. The representatives of the narrow gauge are trying to punish the representatives of the broad gauge, and vice versa, and each side threatens to bankrupt the other. Se that if both are to be believed Messrs. Drew and Vander till will cometo grief and some day will be. begging cop pers in Wall street. In view etthe expanded condition of the banks of this city, en fir le - leans on iiiiiivaY'atid''ruiecellarieottestoCks are concerned, the amendment to Mr. Cattell's bill relat ing to the national bank currency offered by Mr. Cameron in the Senate today was in the right direction, but it was not put in a practical shape. It says:—"Nor shall any hank located in said cities (New York, Boston and Phila delphia) loan to brokers or other persons engaged in stock speculations any portion of their funds:. There is no abatement of stringency in the money mar ket, and up to half-past two this afternoon the supple of loanable funds was as limited as it has been at any time since the present pressure set in: but after that time those who found that they bad secured more than they wanted were lenders, and this imparted an easier feeling to lin rowera. Loans were made at seven per cent. in gold by MOM of the banks, as well as by nearly all the private bankers, but the majority of the former still adhere to the principle of not charging more than' the legal rate in cur( ney. It is not. however. a question of price for 111 , nu' so much as of quantity. The banks here aro still being draWn upon against country bal ances; but at Ch'cap,o on Tuesday exchange on ibis city was very scarce, and some lots aAd from eel to cents t TeMitlM, while in some quarters it was thought that it would soon he necessary to remit , o ur, [i vy. It must, however, the remembered that "reining Day" in various States, will not be until uext W.. dnesday, and that' Preparations for the ststements of the national banks will con tinue throughout the country- until the Saturday fol lowing. Next week is, therefore, not likely to be any better for borrowets than the present one has been, and , an aggravation of the strirgency to borrowore on iniacel lan, ous collateral:: is not improbable. The banks have loaned so much on stocks that they have ne means left for the discount or purchase of commercial pape.T, and their mercantile customers ate complainingaccordinglv. Where commercial paper is negotiated It is either by .perial favorer at usurious rates. 'I here was an improved feeling in the market for government securities, and under a moderate 'nye -tinent demand and some speculative purchases on buyers' options of thirty days at one per rent. above the current quotations prices advance 4 slightly. The Sub-Treasurer is understood to have bought seven-thirty notes to limited extent; but as ho also Fold geld the money market is not likely to expe rience any relief through the operation, and it is claimed that his currency - balance is too small to enable him to do more than he is already doing towards mines ting the prevailing stringency. With the return of a moderate degree of ease governments will be the fret to experience a reaction from their present depression, and in view of the demoralized condition of the railway share market capital is likely to seek them .in preference to other secaritieth At the close the market was strong but dull. I From today's World.l . . . bfensus n—The money market was easier to-day, and the usurious National Banks were not enabled to obtain 7 per cent. in gold. The stock brokeiii were well supplied with money, and generally carried over large balances. The bank managers and money-lenders who have figured, conspicuously ,in charging high rates and fostering the stringency, called In ' all their loans at an early hour this morning in the expectation of creating nu increased demand - yvhich. _would _enable them to obtain stilt"' htg.her rates. The reverse, how ever was the case. The supply from other (mailers wan ample for the wants of borrowers, and when these parties sound that applications for loans were few they tried to lend their surplus and were glad to do so at 7 per i eent. In currency, and some loans were made at 6 per emit. in currency. At aboutB P. Df. money was offered freely 018 to 7 per cent. in currerey. The Assistant 'Treasurer's movements are not calculated to make moijey easier. as be sold about 16500,000 in gold and bought 'Only a small amount of Fevendhirties. The convoy ions of coven thirties were $425000, a symptom that the stringency is Passing away in the public mind. The panic-mongers are ?till talking 'about the extraordinary pinch iu the .money market width will take place to morrow, but as It is ascertained with tolerable certainty that the country banks are already supplied with all the greenbacks they ri quire foitheir quarterly ro exhibit on April 1. there is uo probability of any additional stringency toinorw un less it is engineered by Treasury -Department move ment& which is not likely. The Government heed market was strong throughout the day, and advanced. The attempt to break the market yesterday by forcing sales of the tive-twenty bonds- of 1662 at 109.-; through a- prominent German blotter, in order to start notion that the Germans were selling, signally failed. the price closing at 10e to 109?.(, with tow offering, and 110 bid, buyer 10. The gold marketiranged between 1103; and open ing at 138'4 and closing at 1364 at 3 P. M. 'I he rates paid for carrying were 3 64,10, las 11, 9 and 7 per coat. After the board adjourned sales were made at 138 N to I3Bf. The !Latest Quotations from Now York. [[By TelegraPh.] Smith, Randolph & Co .. Bankers and Brokers, No. 11 South 'Third street, have received the following quota. tions of Stocks from New York: . 61 Anon 28, 1868, 13)6 P.M.—Gold, 138.31f;17. B. 661881. llliy ; do. Salk. lad% 109 3 ,4g110; do. do. likt4.lo7Wr do. do. 18136. 106%0'00i:do. do. July, BM 106.N14107 ; do. do. :July, 1867, 10744107 M t do, fe-10 40. 100 (4100 ( 4; 7als . , ad seriesaloo,l 106%; do. do. ad seri.* 06% 005,;; New York Gears!. ROY,: Rrie.7o%; Beading. 46.81.: !chi. Ran t Southern, Plttstsirgh 91• Rock Island 02;_ North West, common. tri; Do. preferred. 74 , 74 Froeffie Mall, 104%'• Fort-Wavne. 102%. II DTA RUBBER GOODS! ItrADIJCIED PRICES. MARCH 1. 1866. micuiris Bum% INGLIS AND HOBAN ;1, /4 RICHARD LEVICK; No. 708 Chestnut ue. east ut Street. RubberOKen{~ of tae lVeflotul FOURTH EDITION. , X LlUtt Congresa-Second SeliNdOlb WAHIIINGTON, March 28. tia.wair.--The Chair _laid before the Senate a resolution of the Legislature of Ohio, asking Congress to declare that naturalized citizens owe no elk to foreign powers. Referred to the Committee on 'Foreign Affairs. Mr. Rowe (Wis.) presented a memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of Milwaukee, praying that money expended on that harbor lx;refunded. Referred to the Committee on Corn merce. Mr. Edmunds from the Committee of Con ference on the bill to cover into the Treaeniry the proceeds of captured and abandoned property, presented their report which was agreed to. Mr. Patterson (N. H.), from the Committee on the District of Columbia reported formally the bill to incorporate th e Evening Star Newspaper Association. Also, the bill to incorporate the National Life Insurance Company. Mr. Edmunds offered the following resolution, which was adopted: Resolved, That the President of the United States be requested to communicate to the Senate whether he has established or ordered to be es tablished any new military department since the 18t day of August, 1867, and if so what depart ment or departments, and under what statute or other authority. Mr. Davis (Ity.) offered a resolution inquiring of the Secretary of the Treasury, whit amount of U. S. bonds is ontstanding,of each class, with the rate of interest and whet each class was worth in gold at the time they were issued. Mr. Sherman (Ohio) suggested that it would be impossible to give that information at a mo ment's notice, and the resolution was laid over. On motion of Mr. Sherman, the Senate took up the report of the Committee on Conference on the bill to relieve certain manufacturers from the internal tax. Mr. Sherman explained the amendments. Mr. Nye (Nevada) spoke in opposition to the amendment for punishing whisky frauds. He objected to the price being taken asprista facie evidence of guilt on the part of all distillers, the innocent and guilty alike. A foreigner smug gling whisky and selling it at less than the tax could thus suspend all the distilleries in a district after ten days. Distilling was a business at' legitimate as leather-making. The bill now pro ceeded on the hypothesis that all distillers were rascals, whereas the onus) of prOof should be thrown on the assessors until the . guilt was shown. He denied - the right of Congress to stop a legitimate business without evidence. It would not withstand a scrutiny of the Judiciary for one moment. Mr. Frellngbuysen (N. J.) said the effect of the bill would be to close up every distillery in the country, He asktd it such was the intention of the Committee. Mr. Sherman said the intention of the• Co mmittee was to enable the Internal Revenue Com missioners to close up every distillery in the cities. Mr. Nye said the effect would be to deprive the Government of any revenue whatever from whisky, and perhaps to till the pen itenti.sries with revenue officials. The remedy lay in another direction. He understood that a case was In preparation to cover the whole subject, and be submitted that it would be better to -leave the matter until then, instead of establishing a system of spies upon a legitimate business. The bill was oppressive and unjust. Mr. Morrill (Vt.) said that not one-eighth of the whisky paid duty, while the accomplices re ceived more than the Government. It was not altogether uncalled for to suppose that all distil lers were leagued in the fraud. The bill was, however, too stringent. He suggested an amend ment, leaving it in the discretion of the Internal Revenue Commissioner to close up distilleries, instead of mandatory upon him. • Mr. Sherman said it was useless to attempt another Committee of Conference. Mr. Morton (Ind.) objected to the punishment of these frauds, as there were existing laws on the subject. The trouble was that they were not enforced. He had inquired at the Internal Reve nue Department on the 6th of January,and found that there had not been over a dozen persona punished for these crimes up to that time. They might multiply penalties, but until it was made a personal danger to commit such frauds, they could not collect the tax. The cages usually ended in compromises and the payment of fines 'Pm in amount than the tax. Such men cared nothing about the name of fraud., t the evil would never be corrected until 50 or 100 of them had been sent to the penitentiary, in stead of being allowed to settle the matter by compromise with the District Attorney. They should take it out of the power of the Internal Revenue Commissioner, the Secretary of the Treasury, and above all, of the Dis trict Attorney to compromise. The District Attorneys were tempted by the law giving them only $5O for every conviction, but allowing them two per cent. if they obtain ed a suppression of judgment for $20.000 or $30,000. This evil complained of would be increased by the propo sition of the committee. He imputed noi cor ruption upon the Secretary of the "treasury or the Internal Revenue Commissioner, but they had not proper opportu nities, away from the scene of action, to make in vestigation. If the power of compromise were taken away, however, and a few of those com mitting frauds were sent to the penitentiary, an other state of things would' soon be manifest. He read a joint resolution, introduced by him in Januarylast, removing this power of eompromlse, and making it compulsory that criminal proceed ings he carried forward. Mr. Fessenden coincided in the opinion of the Senator in regard to compromises. Is addition, if the Commissioner of• Internal Revenue had not the means al his command to make the investi gations provided for in the bill, he had no sym pathy with those engaged in the business. He thought it evident that it could not be car ried •on honestly with the present price of whisky. Reduction \of taxation might mitigate the frauds somewhat. He, too, believed the present provikion for additional penalties would be found impracticable. Ho called the attention of the Chairman of the Com mittee to the fourth section, and asked whether it did not cover all manufactures, imposing five per cent. on all wholesale manufactures above *5,000. Wilson (Iowa) presented joint re solutions of the lowa Lea's'stun, in reference to the Des Moines rapids canal and swampland sec tions. Mr. Van Horn (Mo.) introduced two bills amendatory of the present naval regulations. Re ferred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. Mr. Pike (Me.) introduced a bill to equalize the grade of the staff corps in the navy. Same re ference. Mr. Judd (ill.) introduced a joint resolution in reference to the rights of United States citizens. Referred to Committee on Foreign Affairs. The House then proceeded to the considera tion of the bill to admit the State of Alabama to representation in Congress. kir. Ashley (Ohio) offered a substitute. Mr. Kerr (Ind.) addressed the House in oppo sition to the bill. He declared that if the State of Alabama were admitted into the Union under the law and with the shackles which the last section imposed upon her, she could never stand up in the family of republics and say that she was the equal of her sister States. She would come in with a brand of degradation and inferiority upon her, made perpetual by the fiat of Congress. And yet they were told that this was to be a Government republican in form. It was a Government which the people of Ala bama despised, which they loathed, which they rejected in every way left to them by military despotism in which to express thole feelings..._ When Alabama was first admitted she had in scribed on her coat of arms the motto "Younger but Equal." In that fnotto was expressed the law of this country—a law most valuable, most vital to the essential nrinciples of equality _of Stateovernment. - But they were told that the reconstruction measures of Congress were for the better government of the rebel States. If- the =literal were not , such solemn ones, that might bff'received as a carica ture. as a bitter and - e - irel wrong in the conduct of Congress. If it were the - duty of Congress to make a Constitution for Alabama, it should make a decent Constitution ; one which would bein fact and truth republican government. But Congress had no such right, and if it should make and force upon Alabama, the most prob able 1060m:tient, It would 0111 notbe a constitu tion republican in spirit and intent. As to the constitution now - Sought to bo imposed on 'Ala bama, if it.were republican, Haynau himself was the very impersonation of a lover of libertY. Mr. Kerr proceeded to criticise in detail the various provisiono of the proposed constitution. '.FIFTH EDITION. 3:15 O'clock. Lennon, March 28.—The case of George Francis Train, who was arrested for debt due an English firm, incident to the street railroad speculation, some years ago, came before the Court of Bankruptcy, at Dublin, a day or o since. Train presented to the two Court a schedule of his assets and liabilities, which the Court re jected as a complete farce, and denounced it•asi "worth less than so much blank paper." Later despatches mention that the"riots at Charleroi, Belgium, haVe again broken out, and the disorder has spread with alarming rapidity to other mining districts in the neighborhood. The authorities have posted troops] and taken other measures to meet every emergency. The trial of the Fenian, General Nagle, whieh was unsuccessfully attempted at Sligo Maize, some time ago, will take place before, the Court of Queen's Bench, In this city, some time in May. MAinio, March 28,—Tbe Government is vig orously excluding all American newspapers ' seiz ing them In the mall or wherever found. Even those addressed to Mr. Hale, the American Min= later, have been suppressed. Mr. Hale bm' pro- tested to the Spanish Government against the outrage. [Sees!al De etch to Phil dlpha Evening 13elletin, by Franklin Telegraph (kunpany.) BOSTON, March 28.—lhere never has been such a general depression of business in Boston as now. Some twelve hundred mechanics who had managed to get through the winter, hoping for a revival of business, have become thoroughly dis couraged, and will leave for California next week. Wasumerrox, March 28. —The Secretary of . War sent to the House to- day a communication from General Meade relative to the recent vote in Alabama on the Constitution, showing that under the law requiring half of the registered voters to cast their votes, the Constitution is not, ratified. He does not favor the immediate ad mission of the State by Congress, but would pre fer 'seeing the Convention reassembled for a revi sion of the Constitution, to be submitkd to the people under the new law. AUCTION SALE • OF CARPETINGS. R. L KNIGHT di EON, being about to remove to their New Store. No. 1222 CHESTNUT Street, will aefl at Ano. lion, in lota to suit purchasers, on MONDAY MORNING. March 80, at 10 o'clock, a large assortment of CARPHT INGS, for Rooms, Stairs and-Halls. at their Old Stand, No. EO7 cHEBTNuT etreet. Catalogues are now ready. and the goods may be examined to•dny. Ito TO THOSE Who Appreciate Good Fitting Garments, ALBRIGHT & HUTTENBRAUCK, 915 Chestnut Street, Can be Depended On. The reputation of JOHN W. ALBRIGHT as a Coat Cutter is without equal. The specialty of RICHARD HIITTENIIBACCR lsPantaloon and Vest Cutting, for which he hue anviable reputation. s a good fitting Garment is the great de iildomtum of the public, they can be fully satisfied by Riv Mintit.sing them a teal. nih FITLER, WBLVER & CO. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY Now IN FULL ()mummy. No. a N. WATER and a N. DBL. ►wmom INDIA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING, STEAM PACK .I trig Hose, ite. Ensineens and dealers will find a fall assortment of Goodyear's Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing Hose, &c., at the Manufacturerie Headquarters. GOODY EA R.S. 918 Chestnutstreet, South side N. B.—We have now on hand a large lot of Gentlemen's, Ladles' and Misses' Gum Beets. Abe, every valeta , and style of Gum Overcoats. NEW GRENOBLE WALNUTS-53 BALES NEW Crop Soft shell Grenoblo Walnuts landing., and for sato by JOS. B. BO:MEE Al CO.. IDS t3outh Do/aWarer avenue. WALNUTS AND ALMONDS.—NEW CROP OREM) V I Me Walnuts and Papa shell Almonds, for sal°y J. B. BIJBSIER & CO.. led dontb Vslawars avaane. b - _....—.. . .... . _ .....__-- . TTA I.IA N V ER..SIICF LLI -100 BOXES FINE 2QUATATT A. ti bite import d and for sale by JOS. B. BUIISIER de ' CO;-.-, 108 Hoptit I solaware avolue. ._. __..........._._ ~_:.„ _ t 1017 Brim (immix SOAP.. 400 LOXES OIMUT:qt T T W into Caatile Soap, landing from botc•rennooTantn,. from Genoa, nod for Endo by JO B. OUSSIER dt , CO 108 South TIPIASCRrIP avenue. CIANNED FRUIT, VEGE,TA HIES, ac x.-1 000'018E3 fresh Canned P , settee ; 500 cases f",,,b , c o, is " ?me Apples: 200 ea ve s fresh Plue APPles. inleo I 1,010 muse Green Corn and Green Peas; aoo ems* heart nem In eons: 200 ewes fresh Green e Gages: 500 avail Uherries. in syrup; 5t 0 eases illsekberrie syretp; 500 eases etnisr., berries, In syrup; 500 sums / ro b war 4 in sox eases Canned Tomatoes* if 600 moss QFstent s Leßers and claws. 500 eases Roost B eef . gotten,. Sou due. or Pfl h ti OBEPH BUSiirSH & BouLDeus Ith'S Boning ZiIdUVIT., , -BOMPaIifj7BILTD. trr and DIU tilecnit. I Aneltpig from etaturvr onufm, end for tale by JOB a; BUSSMR 41 00 4 Agent, a /3044 In; Rntilli btwora ovsmns. • JtatERLAL musts PRONINS d GAM TIN cnnisters anittiumit boxm ink e 454 lamas bY oe ' . B. BUM= di vat lab ono Imre mom BY TELEGRAPHi LATEST CABLE NEWS. CASE OF GEO. FRANCIS TRAIN' FEiO N 1 Et s T ON A General Depression of Business. Mechanics Leaving for California, LATER FROM WAKE:MOTO& THE ALABAMA ELECTION. fly the Atlantic Cable. Fs orra Boston. The late discharges of workmen from the Navy. Yard have caused considerable suffering and s great number of those bound for California are among those once employed by the Government. The counting-room of A. S. & J. Brown, fruit dealers, on State street, was robbed of a large amount of money to-day. The Alabama" Election. AIICTION SALE& C1:0111111ING. 4400 O'Clook.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers