, -4 ItOTICES. •• unto pack (*urea by three applik. Viiittio Vtateddt`g Pain Paint. Toted free of charge. Meg Arch treet, , A tlelyn man, tvriting to to frlood, mesa : "My fo) age to Enron° is Indefinitely noatronoil. tc" 4 la ; eve 'discovered the "fountain of tioalth" on , 1114113 cif the Atlantic. 'I brae bottles of tho Pau la). tlyEap hare rescued mo from the leap •of tho %end Dyepepeia." Dyereptice aliould drink fr 1 ap m Ei-GE hle iyantaia4 ' 410411 MEYER'S NEWLY IMPROVED ORES ' VENT SCALE '. ' '_ _ •_. OVERSTRUNG PIANOS, . al.,.sorgiodied , to bathe beet. London Prize Medal mad OpEarde in America ' received.' nimoDEoNs rarEbOND•IdAND PIANOS. __ WES* *eine Wareroome.72slArela et..beL Eighth. ---- EVENING BULLETIN. Saeltitirday• April 'lB, 1888. 11.11 E CONTES TED lELIDOTION CASE. The decision of the Court- of Common , pie in the contested election case was •ielivered this morning. It is in favor of the three' Democratic claimants. ,A issrtion of `the e sionatrous frauds in the Fourth and Tireilty:third Wards are •'Allowed, hut they ' not suflicient of themselves to affect the judge Allison's opinion is in , favor of tiableing out all divisions in which the hatted& kip been' proved, and sending - them laic* to the examiner that ho, may sift out the legalivheat from the fraudulent chaff. .This seems to be the true method of procedure, but 'it la 'overruled by Judges Peirce and liire'wsterrupon grounds which are very ditli- Cult to understand. Each of the judges • itaudtii the right to throw out .whole • dad= divisions, and each does throw -eat' 'certain divisions. But they retain ethers which the same fraudulent • practices seem to have been proved, and as we under stand Judge Brewster, after a hasty perusal etp opinion, these are retained because it 'lksknot been the custom to throw out whole divitdons on account of illegality in the recep tion of votes, and it is held to be of the na ture of a "snap judgment" to throw them • out now. 'The judges who have thus decided this ha portant case are all Republicans, and it can not, therefore, be supposed that any political bias has influenced them in favor of can didates of the opposite party. Their decision, though only that of two out of the four Judges of the Court (Judge Ludlow giving •no opinion), must stand as law, and we have no desire to quarrel with it. 'What its effect will be upon the purity of future elections in this city cannot be for a moment doubted, but that may be the fault of the law and not of the law's interpreters. It must have a direct influence to encourage and increase fraud at the, polls, which is a result to be deplored by all honest and good citizens. Beyond this the community at large has no interest in the decision. The personal and political aspects of the case of little or no importance. The purification of the ballot-box was the great end aimed at and desired. That result seems to have been lost, and a precedent to be established which leaves but little induce ment to Prevent or punish election frauds in the future. • PRESIDENT OR AUTOCRAT. The President's counsel are taking advan tage of the Senate's excessive liberality to set up in defence of their client the theory that his disobedience to law was only committed in order to test the constitutionality of the law. To establish this theory they have tried to prove his intentions by acts and con versations done and held after he had broken the law. It will be a dark day for the coun try when such a plea as this is admitted, for the form of our government must then cease to be republican and become a simple auto cracy. The Constitution gives the President a great controlling power over the acts of Congress in his right of veto. Hasty and injudicious legislation can be and often brut been thus arrested and conected,but with the exerciseof this power, the President's right to interfere' with the operation of the law ceases absolutely. In the case now before the country there are two simple propositions involved, which no sophistry or ingenuity of the President's t learned counsel can possibly obscure or con trovert. The Tenure of Office law, vetoed •by the President and then solemnly ratified and confirmed by more than the Constitu tional majority of Congress, is the law of the laud. This law Andrew Johnson has delibe ltately disregarded, denounced and broken, 'Terrified by the fear of the just punishment of hie crime, he now pretends that he had the right and was only trying to test the validity of the law. If there a single Senator that believes the nincerity, of this,profession, there is certainly not one that believes he had the right to carry such an intention into effect. Until the President of .the United States becomes its autocrat, he cannot cease to be the servant of the law. He has no more right to make' him -self .its judge and master than has the mean est beggar that crawls the streets of Wash- Ingtatt.: This plain, bald proposition has "been plainly and baldly asserted by the Sen ate in its resolution of February 21st, 1868, and •it is an insult to that body to suppose that it will now stultify itself and repudiate its own laws for the sake of fear or favor to ward the man who now grasps at autocratic powers which were never conferred uponhim in this land and never will be. If he had 'the intentkun which he now says that he had, they were unlawful intentions and are no justifica tion. If he was simply determined to force 4119 private and individual construction upon the law, which is undoubtedly the fact, then be *ratty of the crime of which he is charged and must be convicted; or else the &nate must stultify itself, and resign the count* into the hands of a desperately bad :.and vindictive despot. The second proposition involved in the trial is of a different nature, !nit of great im rftgice. It relates to the duty of the Presi- dent of the United states' in his relation to Ibe people at large. Andrew Johnson is ar raigned for his conduct during an offi cial tour through _the counta7,4--con - duet' sogrossly vulgar, violent, undigni- Ace. And blasphemous that the whole riper yet feels the tingle of shame when- Itoter the subject is revived. The truth of the reports of these infamous harangues of the *toident diming his Chicago trip has been :Cortipletely proved by the Managers. Much time was wasted yesterday in attempts to controvert the mass of evidence by which the published reports were verified, but the at- temptvas a signal fluluto, might have been expected. ' It is true that Congress should never have given Andrew Johnson the chance to make these speeches. It is true that he should have been impeached and deposed for his drunken performances of the 4th of March, three years ago. nut, there was then a generous desire to cover up hie shame, and to hope better things for him in the future. How he has abused that mistaken confidence the world now knows, and the Senate is called upon to.declare judg ment upon a series of exhibitions of official indecencies which have int:tided irreparable injury upon the national honor and reputa tion, and brought the office of the President into contempt before the eyes of the common people. This is a very serious charge and the Senate must meet it. The past tolera tions of intoxication ,ainong its own members excite a doubt whether the Senate of the United States considers such conduct as that which Andrew Johnson exhibited dur ing the Chicago trip a misdemeanor. But there is no question in the minds of the people on this subject. They felt then, as they feel now, that they have been humiliated and degraded in the person of their 'Chief Magistrate, and they pronounce him unworthy, "weighed in the balance and found wanting." With •qiese .plain propositions before the Senate, the Senator who failed in his obvious duty would do so at a fearful personal cost. He must impnilch and convict himself before the people, before he can acquit Andrew Johnson. must prove himself unfit to hold his own high office, before he can lend his VIEC to•sustain Andrew Johnson in his. !Hs commonly reported that one or two Senators have been bought up by Johnson's friends, but we shall not believe that there is one such, until his final vote fastens his dis grace upon - him forever. This•is-no pre-judgment of the case. Every fact and every principle involved in the im peachment of Andrew Johnson was as well known to every Republican. Senator before the trial began as it is 'known now, and the man Who is mad enough to change ground under the pressure that is now brought to bear upon him, must make up his mind to sink under that weight of opprobrium and contempt that belongs to him who, through timidity, or personal spite, or sordid interest of any kind,deserts a high principle to which he is openly committed, and fails in a responsibility which he is bound to meet and obey. TIRE PROSPECT ON rule, PLAINS. Last • fall; when the Indian Peace Commis sioners announced that they had effected treaties with most of the savage tribes upon the plains,. and that the active hostilities which characterized the summer had finally ceased, grave doubts were entertained in many quar ters as to the stability of the peace thus ob tained. The Indians had been successful at all points, and• the United States government had not so impressed them with a sense of its power, that they would have yielded unless compelled to do so by some other cause. From the fact that the treaties generally were not concluded until late in the fall; it was re garded as probable that the savages entered into negotiations simply because they could not fight excepting at a disadvantage during the winter months, when food could not be obtained for their horses, and because, by consenting to the proposals of the Commis sioners, they could obtain an armistice during which to recruit for the Spring campaign. It will be remembered that all through the winter of 1866-7, even friendly Indians spoke boldly of the war which was to be inaugu rated "when the grass grew," and these pro mises had a terrible and bloody fulfilment. it seems not unlikely that the fears of an outbreak during the season now opening, will, despite the treaties, be, in a meassire realized. By every mail from the far Wes; we learn of individual cases of outrage on the part of the Indians, and past experience with these barbarians teaches nothing, if it does not demonstrate that these petty acts of lawlessness, are the precursors of an extended system of organized war. This anticipation may not be realized ; we sincerely hope it will not be; but even as good authority as General Sherman sustains the belief that there cannot be enduring peace with the Indiana while they are permitted to remain in contiguity to the routes of travel, subjected to the provocation of bad white men, and exposed to the temptation to rob and plunder. General Sherman holds to the theory advocated by him last summer with partial success, that danger of war will not cease until the Indians east of the Rocky Mountains are collected within the two North and South reservations designated for them, and there subjected to such influences as will lead them to conform to civilized modes of life. The difficulty is to induce the savages to accept this arrangenient; General Sherman thinks it could be accomplished eventually, by refusing annuities and all other favors to those Indians who will not agree, to the plan, while especial kindneis is displayed to those who do accept it. Perhaps this would have the desired effect. At any rate it is worth trying. The Government owes it to the best interests of the country to use its greatest endeavor to settle this Indian question speedily and forever. The treaty business is, at present, little better than a farce, and if, with each recurring summer, we are to have war upon our western frontiers, we may well despair of pushing our civilization to its legitimate extent in that direction during this generation. ABOUT PHILADELPHIA. DIRECTO. RIES. We have before us a copy of Gopsill's Philadelphia City and Business Directory for 18(38-69. It is a formidable and rather un wieldy volume, and it compares with the earlier city directories much as the city itself compares with the Philadelphia of old times. The city bad grown to De a hundred years old before it could boast of a directory, and the first works of the kind, issued; by Captain McPherson and Mr. White, and both published in the same year, were unbound pan:filets of a few score pages, and in point Ofalie they are no more like the Directory of IE6B than child's primer is like a respecta ble family table. Much of this, bulk is due to the advertisements that are plentifully interleaved through the work, THE DAILY EVENING . BULLATIN PHILADELPHIA; SAIURDAY, AYR d that WO liberaily spri Wed in i dl played form through the text, The directory pro per seems to have been prepared with great care, and piobably it is as reliable and as free iron error as any similar work that has preceded it. In addition to the names of citizens and business firms, which occupy 1952 double columned pages, the volume contains a, map of the city, an index and a street index, a business directory and an appendix, in which churches, hospitals, banks, branches of city government, iron and coal companies, secret societies, &c. &c., are conveniently ar ranged. There are some whimsical peculiarities about the names of persons that are illustra ted in each successive edition of a city directory. Thus we find in the volume before us that the universal• Smith family has over 1,900 representatives who figure upon its pages. Of this army of Smiths, 217 rejoice in the name of John, just forty more John Smiths than there were Smiths in all in a Philadelphia directory of sixty years ago. Next to the Smiths in point of numbers come the Browns. No less than 1,100 persons of this popular-hued designa tion have "a local habitation and a name" accorded them in the directory of the current year. The Johnsons loom up 950 strong, and the' Joneses come forward with a proud ag gregate strength of 767. City directories are usually esteemed dry reading; but they are by no means deficient in interest and in a certain value °Weide of their strictly prac tical character. Lippincott 7 s.lnagazine Nor May. Mrs. Rebecca Harding Davis's romance, "Dallas Galbraith," continues to move forward in the resolnte,incisive-style which is the speciality of the writer. A hash of gossipy anecdotes about John Nagle, the artist, by Col. T. Fitzgerald, will be relished by most natives of Philadelphia, where so many of that brilliant portrait-painter's works are preserved. " Valdemar the Happy," by M, E. M. Sangster, is a dramatic ballad, republished in these columns. The ablest article in the num ber is that on the Talmud, by Rev. Louis C. Newmann, D. D., full of study and sugges tiveness; it richly supplements 'the article in the British Quarterly for last October. No one who participates in the least degree in the increasing taste for oriental study can af ford to miss the perusal of this paper. A Succinct and neatly arranged essay upon the means of communication with the Pacific, representing the route by the contemplated railroad as the most commodious connection between Europe and the far east, is by R. T. Colburn. An otherwise racy article •n. "Boston Wit and Humor," by Rev. Walter Mitchell, is defaced by such a sentence is th:s : "Humor belongs to Philadelphia!"—the very accent of country-tavern brag. We shall do the editors of the magazine the kindness to point out whateyer we shall notice in the way 01' this kind of localism, this 'village stolidity, than which nothing does more to give an enter prise the stigma of provinciality. We wish needs to be the purveyor to the literary needs of a nation, not the pottering "tooter". for a single circle. "From the Woods," a poem em bodying the reverie of a poor scholar, is by Paul 13. Mayne. Short sketches, articles, ac., are by C. M. Martin, 0. H. Procter, Kate P. Kereven ("Loyal en Tout"), G. M. Towle and Rosamond Dale Owen. "Our Monthly Gossip" is like a salon which one can drop into with the constan t assurance of hearing pleasant people detailing rare and pointed anecdote. The "Literary Notices" this.month are meagre, reviewing only one solid book—the "Evidences" of Dr. Barnes— and one sensational one, Gail Hamilton's well known "Counter-irritant." As a whole, the number strikes us as being the brightest and best ballasted of any yet, issued, and perhaps the most attractive of all the monllies. Bunting, Durborow dc Co., Auction.' cers, Nos. 132 and 231 Market street, will hold daring next week the following important ealee, by catalogue, ON MONDAY, Aril 20, on four months' credit, at 10 ',:00 lute French Dry Goods, including it large -pecial of of Rich Paris Broehe, Ge,,torwr,,, Pau cy, Delahtes and Thibet Shawls; Veil Dona Maria Grenadines and Baregee, by order of Messrs. 11. BenLequiu k Co. AIR), IN) cases Mohair.), Alpacts iLlid other British Dress Goods Al-0, Welt Parl-5 Palmy Ort,:i Shawls. Kid C I cee, 111(11:1 Gsire Shirts, Balmoral and Boop Skirts, ',lathe Goode, Rib -I,OIIN, (Vint e, TiO:! iG casesParasols, &c. Ulf TersDA April 21, at 10 ti clods. 2,00 packages Boots, Shoes, Brogans, Traveling Bags, ,V,e, nit 'Our Tumults' credit. TIMIND.% V, April 23, on f,itir inouths' credit, ut 11 writ,. pm:hi:god and lots of Foreign :And Do mestic Dry goods, including Cloths, Ca sinnires, 3fcl tons, Tricots, Satinets, Vestlng4, Italians, ,f; r. Also, Linen (goods, Dress Goods. salts, llosllry and (;loves, Shawls, Bahnorals, IliAndlierchlofe, No tions, Sic. Also, 200 packages Cotton and Woolen Doute, , tics. Un FittnAy, April 24, on 4 month',' credit, at II o'clock, Ingrain, Venetian, Heinp, List, Cottage and Rag Carpetings, e4l. MO rolls in/Wings, St-e. Elegant Country beato.—TUonarts tti Sons auvertise for public sale the very elegant country neat and farm of Joseph Swift, Esq., cur. of Old York Road and Fisher's Lane; elegant country sent of A. epaub. Esq.., Oak Lane, near seven driving roads , convenient LO the Chr. Also, the SA NoNY WOOI.IIN 11.11.1.13; elegant residences, .517 South Ninth, Ni,. Mil Locust, S. W. corner Thirty-ninth and Spruce, 1524 Walnut, 1920 West Rittenhouse Squat*, 1225 l;ornee, 2125 Green, and others, stores SOT Chestnut, .839 South Second, &c., &c. See pamphlet catalogues issued to day. For Sales or Stocks, Real Estate, BOONS, FIJILNITUILP:. On. l'AltiTlNfifi, MAtIIIINIARY, `.TEAM ENGINES, PATTI:IC:4F, HAY SOALEP, I.l.4.llTll:titi, &e., ' ace TYLOMIIb & SollS' pamphlet catalogued and auction head. STECK & CO.'S,AND HAINES BROTHERS' Pianoe,and '3lason do liainlin'a Cabinet Organs, valy ut J. E. GOULD'S New Stare, aplS3m,rp No. 923 Chestnut street 'nowMaws AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT. FOR JJ mending 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. For sale by JOHN It. DOWNING, Stationer. fel.tf 188 South Eighth street, two doors ab. Walnut. JOHN CRUMP. BUILDER. 1781 CHESTNUT STREET, and,2l3 LODGE STREET. Mechanics of every branch' required for housebuilding and fitting promptly furnished. fe27 tt JONES TEMPLE & CO., No. SOUTH NOVI STREET,. Have Introduced ,their Spring Stylek, and invite gentlemen that wikh a Hat combining Beauty, Dightneka and Durability to call and examine them. J., T. & Co. manufacture all their Silk Hate. mhlo.tf4P WARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and easy.titting Dyers Date (patented) , in all the ap proved faehiona of the aeazon. Chemhaut etreet. next door to the Poet-olEce. aela-lyrp 4 GONG ON THE MONEY DRAWER OF A TAN. .11. em at Third and Catharine streets, on Saturday, warned the proprietor that there Was som e one tamper. JIM with his cash. Wad in the adjqh,ing rc f r,m, but got out in time to oaten the tapper. Alderman Tittermary committed the wowed." 8o says a morning paper. We have these dratyere for male. PRUNIANI SHAW, Ein (Eight hirty. tive)Market Street, below Ninth. K. 11T LATCIILH, P I.DLOCKS, e E e ° , ntbor - Hardware, for galo at '1 EUMAN BRAVOS, 835 (Eight Thirty•iivu) Market drool, below Ninth. 1033. 1 P.?! ( .1141.21 1 . ) ,V0rt.T.1 - :',3l'j4laill, Pane just in for epilog sales. Linen window shades intinutueVired. plain and gilt. Country trade invited. JOH •el ON'S Depot. 1033 Siring Garden et, bel. Eleventh. sel4.lY 4p HAVANA FILLERS 1114 YEAVOREI) ,VUEL'FA Abajo Finset. by the kilo or lots, HAVANA STEM SMOKING TOBACCO, pure and unscented, .by the barrel. --- HAVANA. ItaGARS, direct importation, usual assort ment., also, remnants under old tarlif, at rates. "MARIAN.% continue, with our,cir tomorY careobe manufacture of our standard Havana Clifford under this favoi ite brand. Ihe imposAbility of neonate lat /3g a seasoned stock with which to promptly fulfill or doo, competted na to suspend advertle-melits, and accept new orders (tor other than sample lots) only for delivery , 'within three and four mouths. , With amincrea.ed brae ; we are overcoming this diffi culty and preparing to execute all orders more promptly. '1 he "Mariana I (ta" (21 varh tier) are sold by principal dealers at reasonable rates and, In most C 4003, with con enterable inducements to buyers by W.( or quantity. !3'l . l;i'l lEN FL-Gl'lPa SoNS, opll 10O1§ No .119 South Front street. Nom TO LADIES,. AND ALL SEIECUAG liO•ZS' ciAarraiNGr On FIRST floor Special Department BOYS' and YOUTHS' CLOTHING, ---- for Children, from 9 years upward, =- GARIBALDI% BIS MARCHS, SCOTCH SULTS, &e.. and for ---Youth have all ---- Sizes. "Boys' Department" shall be what Gentlemen's IS, THE BEST IN PHILADELPHIA. Prices where else. WANAMARER & BROWN, Oak Hall, Buildings, Sixth and Market PUN. gair Entrance for Ladies on Sixth Arcot. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. CLOTHING FOR SPRING. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. All-Wool Cassimere Suits. Ready Made Clothing. Fresh Made and Reduced Prices; Fresh Made and Reduced Prices. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Boys', Boys', Boys' Clothing. Always on hand a carefully selected stock of uncut goods for Men and Boys' wear. Clothing made to order. We make the Boys' trade an especial feature in our business, and parents may rely on procuring at this establishment Boys' Clothing well cut, well made, well trimmed and'dnrable. ROCKHILL & WILSON, ROCKHILL Sa WILSON, ROCKHILL & WILSON. 603 and 805 Chestnut Street. RETAIL DRY GOODS. Laces, Fancy Goods, Hosiery and Parasol Departments now offer, in,their variety slid economical charger, great imincementr to buyerr, J. W. 'PROCTOR & CO , 920 Chestnut Street. MOURNING GOODS. BLACK MOHAIRS, The oolebrated Crown Brand, warranted to retain their color, ,old only by J. W. PROCTOR & CO., 920 Chestnut Street. VERY (HEAP BLACK GRO GRUM, Gro Grain Silks at $1 87. Heavy Corn Gro Grains at In. Fine Oro Glrfli 11A at $2 25, *2 50. *2 75 J. 3 oaf, Gro Grains at 11 $:3 25. 13 50, *4 Satin Face Graine, $4 to *9. Good Black Sitics, with Lustre, $1 25. Plack Sincp, with luFtre. at $1 50 to $l. i;olored hilks, choice color& at $t 87. color, dlke. choice colorei at $2 'olored Si ike, choice colon , . at Itt2 25. loiored bilk!, choice colore, $2 50. JOB LOTS PLHN CORDED SILKS, BLUE, WINE, nom AND BROWN, FP , . worth $3 75 Math Baths, Linen Backs, for Trimmings. 'Lupin's Black Silk nernanies, Coaree and Fine Mesh, 75 ob.. to $4 50 Silk Figured All-Wool Hernanies, At 62y,, worth $l. I. STEEL & SON. Nos 713 and 715 N. Tenth St: SPRING AND SUMMER DRESS GOODS silka in all the new shades ; i'tripes,Checks and Graces. Black Poult de Soles, Gros Grains, Taffetas; also,Cacho- mere de Bolt - , sublime, from $1 75 to $7 60. Bilk Berger, Argentines, Plain French Silk and Irish Poplins ; all colors Corded and Poplin Alpacas, Piques and Percales; French Piques, white, for dresses; aleo, Plain Check Nainsooks, Organdies, Aie. J. W. PROCTOR & CO., 9520 Chestnut Street. • Nvnirrva GOODS. RICH EY SHARP& CO 727 CHESTNUT STREET, Will Open Tansy, and Offer AT POPULAR PRICES, I, Addition to their Former Extensive Stoat a, Full Line or 'HITE GOODS. Orgsndy and Swig s Mulls, Nainsooko, Cambric's, Jaoonets, Bishop Lawns, Eto., Eto., Together With a Large Eitoqk of Piques and Marseilles FOR WALKING WITS. RICKEY, SHARP &CO. No. 727 Chestnut 'Street, PHILADELPHIA. inwerptf KID GLOVES. ' Jouvires, Alo4ndro , o, MOWN 1c ea , etid,Cti~riee'e rembratel makeo.' J. W. PROCTOR'& , CO., 830 Chestnut Strtet, 1 8 68 . KEWAIL Dalt (MODS., HAMRICK dc . COLE; White Marble 'Building, No. 45 NORTH BIGTITH: STREET WILL OFFER ON MONDAY MORNING GREAT AT IILAO IIONS OY WAY OF SEVERAL LOTS OE Plain ' titriped, .IVlixed, and _ t.ihang _Figu.red PARIS FABBIOS Of peculiar elegance, for suite, from 50 cento to $l. EXTUERIELY CHEAP. In brief, we offer, for inspection. one of the most care- fully selected and most complete stooks of DRESS GOODS • Silks,Linenf, Houselteeping Goods Hosiery, loves, do., Sce., That can be found in the city,- and at VERB miODERATE ralozs. HAMRICK 8c COLE, • No. 45 North Eighth Street. P. B.—Real Kid Gloves. all Spring Shades, $1 25. Full regular Mulish Half ilosse,a colt& splB4ltu 2.td Slawis for Spring and Summer. Now open, all the leading styles, from VS to $l5O, J. W. PROCTOR, itt CO., 920 Chestnut Street. WHITE GOODS AND utigNs. N rfT eem We 1 11erte° 3 11 dep;inri e.=3 Invited our Block. J. W. PROCTOR & CO., 920 Chestnut Street. KULP & MACDONALD, No. 1 4 206 Chestnut St. SI aisle and House-furnishing Dry Goode. GREAT BARGAINS IN Embroidered Cloth Piano Covers, A very extensive variety* of Barnsley, trial', French and German Towels, Table Linens, Napkins, etc. French and Barnsley Sheetings, PWow•Case Linens, ill widths. French and Irish shirting Linens. All varieties of White Goods, ke. CARD. The long connection of Mr. KULP with the old and valued firth of J. V. COWELL & SON emboldens him to hope for a *hare of the patronage so liberally extended to that deserving house, and he hopes. by still increased at, tentlon to the wants of their cuitomer., the new firm may establish a reputation second to none in their line of business. sr3 burp '• • LUPIN'S Bt►MSAZtNE, GENUINE. Hirnani. Coarse and Fine Mesh, yard to a yards wide, At Popular Prices. J PROCTOR & PO.l 920 Chestnut Street. W LINEN STORE, IP SS Arch Street* CHEAP LINEN SHEETING& Irish Linen Sheeting, 2 1-4 yards wide, $1 25. Scotch Linen Shootings of every width. Real Barnsley Shootings. Frenoh Shootings. Yarn Bleached bheetings. very durable. Pillow and Bolster Casings, of every width, from 62 cents up. BEAUTIFUL TABLE COVERS We have jut imported an invoice of very handsome Table Covers, all colors, In beautiful deaigne. SPECIAL BARGAINS IN Table Linens, NatAins, Towtliogs, &t. tir We exhibit the largeet midmost varied Linen stock to be found ln the city. GEORGE MILLIKEN, Linen Importer, ,lebber end &tall Dealer. 828 Arch Street. deem W . BARGAINB IN HE&I., BLACK. THREAD LACE fiILiWL/3. GEO. W. VOGEL, No. 1016 Chestnut street, Opened this morning, one ease Real 13194. Thref t Lae.° Shawls. nsmingin_prlceafrom_ $lOO td 13 ,',," dee! bar ga_AßOUT ONE-THIRD LESS THAN THE itIOES bar- F 1 SIIOIIILAR GO ODE AT ANY OTHER 0011 AB IN THE TRADE. Close buyers are invited to examine these Shawls at once. . . nPlB6t re VOLACE LLAMA lAl= POINTEB.IItOIIi Eta i TO As A full assortment of Black Llama Late 1' sites, or best makers,. from irlB to Sea A singlb tiliaw be sold at retail at wholesale prices. GEO. Im W. VOGEL. porter of Lace GOods. sold Mtn* 1 ,16 Ch. • tent street. D 11113400. ROBERT SHOEMAXER & CO, N. E corner Fourth and Race Ste., WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS AND PAINT MANIIPACTUREOS • Offer to the trade or corundum's, Pure White Lead, Zino White, Colored Paints, Varnishes, Oils, Artists , Materials, &o. Agents for the celebrate 1 YIBILLEIIOI I / 4 1 1'1GFIE SNOW•WHITIZINO, .mtrztudoetrrfrrabtigelolltio f t e v r a i u n t eide:Work. PURE PAINTS. 201 and 203- Nortlt Fourth Street, tf Northeaei miter of Race Street. Perftlinery and Toilet Soaps, i4,e64.B4,ttliiisill-xf.,oft, 1868' LOOK WELL , GET SHAVED D HAIR out atKopp'. Saloom flair cut by lintel au hair :cutters. IThaveiana both, SS do. Open Sunday morning. No. 125 Ruining." PIsCARQP,r, 11 161 g " 172001T1-4Nk*Pgr FAMILIES' AND • glass's.— esodsrsigned has oat received a fresh anWir Vats aNali to rnia and paigie win omo hor constsmtly on hand. • P. J JORDAN, 220 Pear street. Below Third and Walnut streets. EMMEN= OFENINQ LADIES' CLOAKS, MANTLES AND SUITS. AGNEW & ENGLISH WILt OPEN On Monday Morning ' . Apfil AT TIIP4R BT9BE SB9 Chestnut Street, AVERY ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF FINE CLOAKS, MANTLES AND SUIT;. Per Spring and,`,Summer Wear, Of the kited importatton.'anctalso of their oyMiliannific- AGNEW & ENGLES Er, 639 Chestnut Street t!3pring and Surniner CLOAKS AND MANTILLAS, HANDSOME WALKING SUITS, Now open in great variety. J. W. PROCTOR & CO. 020 Chestnut Street. x treriiiiiii% IT BAS NO SUPERIOII.—Nete //armn , THE MAY NUMBER LIPPINCOTr3 MAGA.ZINE fIioNTAISca 1. DALLAS GALBRAITH. PAAIt V.. 2. PAIMHNG 111:11OND. .IOHN NEAGLE. 'ME ARTIST. 4. VALDE:4AB THE HAPPY. Tr. A VILLAGE SEHOoL 1N opEuANy. 43. AN AMERH:44N FI HIdOPORT. 7. LOYAL EN TAUT: A. TAL.r. P. THE , TALMI'u COURT OF Til TUILERIES. IS. Mit HU:VACATION WITH TUE PeCtric NI BEYOND_ 11. W ILLIE% wIFE. 12. BOSTONIAN \VITA!. D , 13. FROM THE WOODS. 14. OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP. lw LITREAT ERE UP TUE IM,Y. Fov yak at a/C. the ,t3ook and Netra..Skrea I hp) t., tit's souutrii, 2ehrki Sttblicription, $4 Aildreas J. 0. LIPPINCOTT & CO., Publisher% 715 and 717 !Starnes Street, Plant. •e 10. • zetrp TO CANVA.IiiiSEIELS. AGENTS wanted in every town to eanva,yi ro- Marphall'a great line engraved portrait of GENERAL GRANT. This is the only authentic and satisfactory pot trait of the Commander of our Armies y•zt executed. It is commended in the strongest manner as faithful niceness and as a work of art by Senator Sumner, Mr. Washburne, General ° [toward.. &motor Trumbull and many;others, every way competent to speak With authority on th , 2be points; and Mrs. Grant has Mint Mr. Marshall the following letter WASUINGTON, Feb. 23, .168. Mn. W. E. 31AnstrAm--Dear Mr: I ant d , - lighted with your splendid engraving of my Irv band. I cannot say too mach th its praise. A., a likeness I do not think it could be better, and I shall always prize your elegant gift. Yours, truly, Jut D. GE r. This engraving will be Bold only by subscrip tion, and good canvassers ine wanted to eneagt. in its sale. For terms, address, For the New England States.; TICKNOR MELDS, Boston. For the Middle and Southern States. Ohio and Michigan, TICKNOR 4.t- FIELDS, fib Ilteecker street, blew York. pZT - 2 - 7 - GITtO7 I- TN7III CHOICE ANO EVIHIONABLE CONFECTIONS For Vrewents, PRNPARED BY STEPHEN F. WIEETbiAN, Ni)..l9,loMar4et,Street NEB ciinol4los ' • •A ficainiitecre PRIZE PailFrING French Exhibition' , f 861.. By 7Jo i'ERRAtILT. Su s 21 :11 1 Z mg; 0 4 6 ,6 11 fi mutcooo - ALA by Taft THE BABES b 4 WOODS _,.... by Ma. :BROOK TROUT..by W. M. OM'. Trade supplied. - GOFF 80 Bitsa\, No. SI S Sixth Street, above Chestnut. aplB4 • INDIA. RUBBER GOODS REDUCED PRICES. nu ten 11A0ffin 88L99H8, BM I NJ AND HYDRANFIffe; RICHARD LEVtCK , , No. 708 Chestnut Street. If r U°l3llll{ P bb:er Co. E. liatteriek's Ladies'' Dress Pattersa l / Warranted a tierfeeitlt. For Fade only , at 4 MRS. E. R. WAGNER'S Ladies , Drew Trimm!tig'Store, No. 809 Ar ' oti ' 'Street. apl6lmyp4- MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOAN N' _ED UPON' DIAMONDS{ WATCHES, JEWELR Y, ?LATE, CLOTHING. dro.,At t • ,•, • j_ON &CO !S • _ OLD ESTABWHOI#GAN OFF/ON. Cornor of TA.,4•4 efiVplfrootAs. Belco Lott. tif, N. E. -- THAMONDS.cWATC/lEfg-JENTEI. , RY, GUNS. fOR BALE AT IIEMARICMILy JAW PENN& roh24•lrob TuRNINO CHISELiiAND GOi.FGES, oALLI PE RS AND wooden 'screw cutter. at Tit UM AN dr, i'zIHAVPS, No, 35 (Eat Z birtS•tive) Market Lifted, below Ninth. Staple, Numbery sEcoxoi.'.:-..,:t0iT1.:.q. -, ,,f.., 13) r LAtER CIAI*E NEWS. " financial and Commercial Quotations. 'ice. JEN Ea'ILL4D I►ZAMNT TRIAL. suausTgpso 114 THE HOUSE. TO-DAVE: PORT PROCEEDING 3. ARGUMENT BY.AIANAGER WILSON By the AtlanCre LONDON,AprIIIBo A. M.—Consols unchanged; Vive-twenies, 70%0703‘; Illinois Central, 0534; Me, 46: tnflicPi.,; April 18th, A. M.—Cotton firm, ifith SOme doing. Prices unchanged. Uplands, to attrno 'more active, at 1234 d. The sales to be day will reach 145,000 bales. Breadstufis aro quiet. Lonmq, April 18, Afternoon.—U'nited States Five-twenties quiet and unchanged; Great West ern 343. .Others unchanged. LtvEnroor, April 18th, Afternoon.— Cotton firmer and more active; sales 12.000 bales; Up lands, 12}i; Orleans, 1'2%. Ilreadstuffs unchanged. Pont quiet. Lard firmer and tidvanced to 645. 31 Bacon advanced to 48s. Sugar quiet. ANrwratr, April 18, Afternoon. Petroleum The linjpeachment Trial. tilvetial Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Butletin.l WAsnotyrow, AprillB.—The Democratic mem bers of the Rouse; by filibustering, last evening prevented that body from taking a recces until 11 o'clock this morning, the hour to which the Court adjOurntid. Considerable interest was Manifeated to know how the House could be announced at the bar of the Senate when the hour arrived for it to assemble. When 11 o'clock arrived, however, Speaker Colfax ascended to the Clerk's desk, and giving one rap of his gavel, said, "The hour has arrived to which the Impeachment Court adjourned. Such members us desire to be present cm accom pany the Board of Managers. "All Republican members then fell into line, and went to the bar of the Senate with the Managers. The Democrats were completely chagrined at thus being outwit ted, and none of them accompanied the I4:pub Bean s to the Senate. The advantage of the Senate assembling at It o'cloCk, was evinced when the Court assembled to-day. Nearly every member was in his chair, and the galleries were tilled with the same fashionable audience which occupied them yes terday. I The first business in Com t was the offer of the President's counsel to prove that while the Tenure of Office bill was before the President for approval, he• submitted it to his Cabinet and was. advised by them that It was unconstitutional; that Secretaries Seward and Stanton were dele gated to prepare a message setting forth his ob jections to it. Before the discussion of this point was pro ceeded with, Reverdy Johnson put en interroga tory to the council, whether they offer this testi mony m support of the answer and allegations contained in the President's message, which has been offered in evidence. , Senator Howard alio put a question as to what effect the validity of-the Tenure of Office act has on the case now before the Senate, wishing to know whet position, in that respect they propose to take. air.' Curtis man/0' would prefer to embody their answer to both interrogatories in the argu ment on the pending subject. air. Wilson, in arguing the case on the part of the nianagers read a manuscript speech. He said the laws were expositions of the national wil which could only be made known through the legislature. He said that the Civil Tenure ...bill was directed at the appointing motor of the President to curtail his control of oftikers in the civil service and to provide a way to =site him amenable if he disregarded its decrees. Its effect, If disregarded by the Executive, tended to bring about an hapesehment. He said the responsibility of the. Presideint was a matter which wee exclusively confined to the supervision of the two Houses of Congress, whose judgment •On Ids - fidelitY to his trust can alone shield him freraiMpeachment., Tortlnto &veldt:ma InQavinglon, (sato - Blown Stotion-litouse Crashed alsattliVKWinstatt *Wed. (From tikatiacninatiGixsue of Apra 163 terribleCalamity' happened tin the western part of the, city yeeterdabout noon, resulting in one ',arson' being . killed and three others severely injured. The particulars are as follows: .For a week or two past John IL Romer has been engaged, in erecliw, at the northeast corner of ,liakewell , ! and Riddle -streets a three-story brick ' betiding* for Henry Motder, Immediately adjoining Iv; Small frame cottage owned and occupied by Joa.Rabo. Two stories of the "now building were completed, and the bricklayers had run up the w i eu on The side toward the 'cottage; in the shape • o geble,.to the s height of .about twelve feet above the floor of the second story. • It was nn ',.uppOrted in any ; manner whatever, and about ito cloth a storm coming up, the wind blow it Over, on to the house of Mr: Rabe, crashing it into t i Llinters,innd buryinkbaneath the debris Mrs.ary Rabe, wife ofjosep,h Rabe, and her sister law law, Mrs. Catharine B t aber;:end also two children, of the fOrmnr,'''Alaige crowd "of people ?EMI gathered at the scene of the distuiter, and a ;anunber of men " went to work at once, removing the brick -and- mortar ' for the purpose of getting out the bodies of ' , those Who were in the Louse. Mrs. Mary Rabe was soon extricated, and found to be alive, though very, badly hurt. Her , two children—one only nine' days old, and the other Wee years of age—both girls—were also re c ued "alive, though, the latter was covered up beneath the wreck, for nearly 'half an hour. Both 4 49 very severely injured. The oldest child, at • the time of , the , Catastrophe, was udder the • lumber's bed, 'winch no doubt, Saved its life. babYIRAs In a cradle, near the stove. Mrs. - , Cotharine Rabe was engaged in washing clothes, In the kitchen, and was killed, the heaviest part of the wall having;fallen on that part of the build - Mg. Deceased was a yodng woman, and had not been long married. She resided with her hus band WA house On the same square where the ' accident occurred: iftestruletave Eire Nearly 110Whot*Square la Unitas -- Loss Eertimpkted of $H6,0000 aiei/advtelioll by_mall, of a very disastrous STO - whiosit occurredliVedaseday morning at about •_ - Borough' whole 4 and a dollars issUln,s; )W of Isaac aboin 41 bur rapid lohung DISASTERS• b il sobvs,, The citizens then turned their atten tionAo - doing 'the eltensiVe• Mansion House stablesAn order to proventlhe flames from reaeh ing,the back street, whore, had It extended, half the town wail& haVe been at the mercy of the devouring element. This they success fully ,Secomplished, but the lire was conquered only. When the fuel was exhausted. 'The Mansion House, a large two-story double brick building, was. reduced to ashes and the entire furniture destroyed. The two-story frame building, occu pied by Mounts & Decker, was reduced to ashes, and the personal effects and furniture of Mr. J. S. Mountz, who occupied the upper portion of the house, were not saved. The tobacco estab lishment of David and John Flender was entirely burned, and but little of the stock saved. The saddlery house of John McKay & Co. was destroyed, but most of the stock saved.' The house of William Howe was slightly, injured. The property destroyed all belonged to the heirs Of John N Dagg who ,will sustain a loss approximating $22,000, on which they have an insurance of $6,000. The loss of Mr. George Kirli,r the proprietor of the Mansion House, will reach $2,01)0; partly insured. Messrs. Flender sustained a loss of $700; Mountz & Decker, $1,004; J. S. Mountz. $400.. We regret that the .Mansion House was destroyed, as it was ono of the best managed hotels outside of a city in this section of the State. , Important Arrest in Chicago.•A adelphia Clerk Bobs His Employer said i• Arrested. LFrem the Chicago Republican of the 16th.) A letter was received by General Superintend ant, Rehm, from John Lemon, Chief of the Phila delphia Detective Police, asking that a sharp lookout be kept for a Capt. Fred. Schaffer, who bad robbed his employer of some $2,000. It seems that the Captain was, last December, the confidential clerk of a Col. Kohler, in the "city of Brotherly Love," and who, during a visit to Eu rope, left tbe entire managemen H t of affairs in the bands of the Captain. ardly had Mr. Kohler left the country, before the clerk commenced a series of larcenies, and finally rais ing as large a sum as possible, left the city. He was next heard of in Chicago, and consequently the pollee of this city were notified, and a war rant sent for his arrest when found. It Was in course of time discovered that he had made ap plication, through Charles S. Hotchkiss, Esq., for a pension, basing his claims on the grounds that be bad lost a leg while in the army, and it was by the aid of this important discovery, that his whereabouts became known to the detectives of this city. Detective Charles F. Schuman, of the Superin tendent's staff, was intrusted to work up the case, and yesterday afternoon he was successful in ar reatine, the thieving Captain, although his ill gotten gains had long since been disposed of in a manner best known to himself. Chief Limon, of Philadelphia, was at once notified by telegraph, and Captain Schaffer will soon undoubtedly be - sojourning in the silent pt,incts of Moyamen sin:. The Delaware Peach Crop. (From the Smyrna (Del.) Tlmee.i The cold snap of Sunday night, It is feared, has greatly injured the peach crop. It was gene rally believed that the buds were much] injured previously, especially in orchards away from the river, a, great un.jority of thorn giving evidence of the ITFUCII blight produced by cold and frost. In the "rusks," however, it has been thought that the prospect was good for a fair yield, par ticularly of the Troth variety. But the snow of Sunday night, and the severe cold of Monday morning, has worked destruction, it is thought. It was worse on the trees than any night during the winter, from the fact that the buds. being swollen, were made wet by the snow and then frozen. Our fears are usually magnified on the peach question, but they are by no means ground ss on this occasion. EIIiANCIAL ana COMPIEPCIA.L. The Philadelphia loner Marlce t. S.:lea at the Philadelphia Stock Exchabga. BEFORE t;.121,13.. • 100 eb Leb Nay etk InT 1000 Ekb-' 20E'69 reg 1040' • 11500 City ett sew 1031 i mho do s 5 103',5 1200 do Its 1031‘ 4200 do 2dys 103 X 700 Perms Gel sers he 105 X 2000 Pa Cs 2 sera 10r3e, 5 0 00 Pa 6a 3 senes 109 9000 do 1065; 2000 W Jersey r. Os 90 3000 Lehigh 65'64 8531 Gt4 l o Lehigh Ge Coln In 69 1000 do do bis Its 89 10f'0 Phils.tErie C( 2ds 91 3500 N Penne. it Ss Us 591511 19 eb :Meet' Bk /tS 31:i EWE 510011 S 10-4U9 ct 109 500 Penns 2(1 Eer I'i2! 100 Mils ns 92 150 sh Seb Nay prf 164 100 eh Readß h3O 44 95 eh do its 4334 100 eh . do Tuesday 43.94 100 sh do b 5 431 g 100 eh do 2ds&ln 43.81 SS ramp SSOO City 6s new 103% 35 1, 0 Lehigh 68 gold In b"9,, 1000 busq Canal bds 61 PIIILADELPUIA. Saturday, AprillB.—There is an active demand for Money, but it is fully met at 7®7 it per cent. for call loans, and the limited amount of mercantile pa paper offering on the street is taken at 8@1.9 per cent. The banks are extremely cautious in their loans on fancy e curities, and demanded largo margins. There was a marked reaction in etockm tlitA morning. and a sharp npward turn in prices. Government Loan, were firm, and State Loans were in better request than for eeme time past; the find series sold at 10534 the second do. at 107 X, and the third do. at 1t*7:4109. City Loans were a fraction higher and closed at 103!L(0'.103 , ,,, for the new. and 100@100 , 1, for the old issues. Lehigh Navigation Gold Loanitadvanced to 89. ReadingEallroad was active and closed at 44—an advance of 3.; Pennsylvania Railroad sold at Es'„—an advancelof .34; Catawissa Railroad Preferred at 3O—an advance of IM; Philadelphia and Erie Railroad. 283 d—an advance of 34: Lehigh 'Valley. Railroad at 51.3 i; and Camden and Am. boy Railroad at 12636—a decline of 31. ..Canatiltoclis were better. Lehigh Navigation was firm at M,'—an adjunct; of and Schuylkill Navigation Pre . ferred at 1834—an advance of I. In Bank and Passenger Railroad shares there was a firmer feeling. Smith, ,Randolph & Co.. Bankers. 16 South Third street, quote at 11 o'clock, as follows: Gold. 18834;: United States Sixes. 16431. 11901123 i; United States Five-twenties. 111@1IIM ; d 0.1884, 1093i€41093-i; do. 1865. 1093d@1093;,; do Julv11,191U107"1@i 06 : do. 1867. 108®108 , ‘, ; United States Fives', Ton-forties, 191 - 4@102; United States Seven thirties,;`second :5erie5.106.101.063:;.d0. , do., third series. 10634@10ei. Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government Securities, &c., to &NY. as follows; United States els. 1881, 112@1121f ; old Ma-twenties, .11141111 i; new 'Fivetwentles of 1864 109®1091f; do. do. 1866, 1000410936; 'FivotWentieds of July. 107%® 108 ; do.do. 180. 1677401083 i ; Temforties,loll.f ®1011;^ '78.10, dune, 1063;@10634: 410. July, /0630@1V0 ; Gold. 138%. Messrs. De Haven and Brother, No. 40 South Third street, make the following quotations of the rates of ex. change to.day, - it 1 P. 111,: United States Sixes, 1881, 1113 ®11236; do: do. 1886,110%®11130; do.(do. 1864,109®109y; do., 1865, itg)fogiom d0.. , 65, new, 1073,;@.107;0; dO.. 1867, new, 107 6®1084' Mes,CTeirforties, 10136@162; Seven three-tens, juiM,10001.08*; juts% 1060186.. i; Compound Interest, naafi, spine,`,lB*, 74,40; do. do., July, 1864, 19.40; do. de; Augtuft, ,1564:', 19.40; do, do., October, 1864, 19.40; Deaettil4m, 1864.'1940; do., May, 1E65, 18'ii@l8U,; do. do.. August, 1884173011756: do. do.. September, 1645. 16',1@17ki; doVdth, Okstebers 1865, 163 ®16,'6; Gold, 13536@ 1884; Silver, noigias. Premince ttiariket. Elseettnsv. April 1/1.--ClaserseSd continues dull, at the late deellaersmall eales at 85E.5.0;.6' for Pensylvania and Oldo. ,Thuothy- may. be quoted at $2 22d2 I3IX, and 'lassoed at $2 90 porlmeliel. There is but little Quereitron Bark here, and we con tinue to quote No. I at $5? per ton. The Flour market is vel quietli. le demand being con fined to the wants Of the haat tr e,httt with a continua. tion of light ramie* a r uced stock and relative high, zit:gel; IglVenVit steadily Family maintained; 1,3 tai.atoork.seig' barrels Lancaster connty'at 812; bOU barrels Pennsylvania and Ohio at 6111,68(81:150„*Extra $9(49 75. and Fancy at $13(415. ' Cornmeal Is' unchanged. Rye flour has ad. vanced; sales at 89 25._ 'lb° minima teannuee very bare of Wheat, and' Prices' are steadily maintained; Small 'sales of Red at 122 8510 182 9nand 1,1.00 binthelaKentack.Yat 88 .2:3@l ZS per bushet - }zye is ecarce,and In stead,y, (Sell:slat 81 95 Yellowsc utufettledisistord.oo o bushels at '@l '4 for' and 63.1. tot cetera mixed.. Oats , steady, and sell ' for Pennsylvania. • j ati gB®92c. The NOW Yetis. Olteney . KWh.% ' I• , !Train t‘dreostLlY: Herald.]tlarild . ` Aprill7.—The (dock r . market, after 'opening in a'panig this morning, reacted sh trplv tutder heavrpurehaseil by the bean to cover their abort contracts; =4 • th e demand 11rOnt this source wee stimulated hY Jahn •retiol relative to the hale bill at &the:ay.—The consequence was twit ',before the cse the greater part of, the 'eltortrintereat had bean covere d• and this • element of support Jaavi si tg been . I d a g witadow,..iho tendency of Prices la &gala do ward.. Pa all such 1 • and • demoralized markets go . tbg . moot, ..• 0 rp ••,re t Crts, caused' by the= bears becoming Mena : are inevitable: but aonly • • teas — to " ' lettate a further tm an loon as the "short' , interest is covered The meat decline wail caused by a distrust et the value et • ;:;1' .__.,.4 : ,DAILY E ', V . '•i E ' N' '1 -140 i 4 , U , .• Li: L E ', •! T.;•1.D1"1I„.,..,';:•-:4' '- ffi ''',, LA D •• E I • X • 11 , 1A .,: ,:, 50 , sh Lb 14v6114 '43 15 eh Morris Cnl pi . cf os'.; 10 eh do 04X Beh ('.am & AmR Rir ,, ,„; 1 ell Phlla&Tent R 126 lix) eh Penns R sl4 55 3 ; 120 sli do due bill 56 , ; 4 sh N Pa It .31k,, 4sh LchVal R hi i ' 40th do till i } 10 eh Catawa or 26 200 eh tick Nay lit 1.,1 , ..; 1100 sh Read R b2O 44 1100 eh do 43. N 200 sb 'do 'fast! 43 2110 eh Ocean Oil 2.3-10 IMUiIiM 1 00 Pnila Cs new 55‘vri 103 1000 Alleg Co c 753 91 eh Hazleton Coll 51 100 sh Leh Nv etk b 5 23 1 C rlOO ," eh do 23 4.4: 39 ph do 2.3!e; ph do 23 , 100 eh do 815 BOAUD. IGOOD Leh 6'sGold In 1)6 S 9 2000 do b3O $93,( 35000 do b3O Sy;( the spec ativeshares. which had become greatly inflated in price 111:16 r. the awindl net operations of cltqfi es . and as fairer( arelitill very, innegviineve real Vainest it follows that this &street - ex fro aix 'per. cent. stock. for in stance, in worth 112 by twenty per cent. and so w'thinost of the other speculative railway shares; brit the bull enema of course, try to make believe that black; is white when they talk hf values, Moreover. confidence dei railway property his been shaken by the Libtgation in Erie and neck Itiltind..•and no ono knows n hat the upshot of the struggle between the rival part ea will be. That it has been already productive of great mischief to then ilwaya concerned ie mod ufiable, J n r dto . fo r we m w a a y, e a t u t s r e i d u by a the ok c r e nrail . hiecnt v a c t r i P d o i r n all probability have been replaced by a sound one before this but for the proceedsof the stock sold for the purpose of tCPai , ins OP comph ling the read having been enjoined by he count, for two menthe ogo the superintendent of the company Made a rePert, la which he stated that the Iron , rails had brviren, laminated and worn out, until there was hardly a mile of road where it was ante to run a train at the ordinary missenger speed 'The railway oyetein of the country has long been rotten, but the full extent of its rottenness is reit yet known to the priblic.and thecollapee of the speculative Nibbles blown on the Stock Exchange is only a queetion of time. The gold market hat been very firm to.day, its under tone having been strengthened by the advance in the rates of foreign exchange. The fluctuations were from 1883 .tor 1281 i,:. the cloning 'quotation being 12854@1E1. ' Ihe Purply of coin Was in excess, of the borrowing de mand. and loans were made at 7012 per cent, per annum 5nd1.12@.844 per cent. per diem for carrying. The gross clearings amounted to • $46.210.000,• the gold b stances to *141111.853 and the currency balances to s2.rfit,f,fo. 2 henfoliey marset was very active during the greater past of the day, and the banks almost invariably declined to extend their leaps on speculative collaterals, although they loaned upon government seem - Mee at the leg rate to a limited extent. Their loanable resources are, how ever, hardly greater than they were a month ago, and the retnrn flow of currency from the interior is very slow. It will not be until the prices of the speculative stocks have worked to a'rench lower point that confidence in them as collaterals will be restored. except on very wide insin There are thirty-five millions mote of securities Wall street than there were , not very long since, and meows hile the currency to float them and carry them Atlantic en largely reduced. The experience of Mall should not be lost, and temporary rallies in the stock market should not be mistaken for permanent improvement. After every fall there will be a rally, and after every rally a fall. Government securities were strong during the early part of the day, and prices advanced a fraction. the de-, mend for investment being stimulated by the distrust of VailltM in the market for railway and other speculative stocks. During the afternoon (twilit iona remained steady end at the close they were as subjoined — Registered, 1881, , 112 G ; coupon 1881,112(4112K; Five-twenties, reels. te, ed, 1862, nwitioot • Five.twenties. conpon,lB62. 110f,;(4 111; do., 1864. 109(4109 1 4 ; do.. 1%5. I(eR ig102%; ‘ 10 .• new, Mar, January and Ju y‘ 10734010734; do., 1867. 107I,A108; Ten-Forties. registered. Itil o dilo2; Ten-forties, coupon, 10774A1011; Junebeven-thiftleo, 1003i,"6N106 ,,,. ': July Sevent grihirtiee, lOtlf 10filif ; May compounds. 11814 ; August do., 1173 d; September do., 117; October do.. 11634. The tinb•Treannry bid 103 for seven-thirty, notes, but there were no sellers at this price. and hence it bought operations, while it was not a seller of gold. so that its had no effect upon the money market. In re. ference to the increase of the "balance^ in the Sub. Treartiry yesterday. we may inention that it was not owing mainly to the withdrawal of currency from the banks by gold sales, as many have supposed, but to re ceipts. as here described : " Fractional currency. ... Gold exchange on New Oilcans. Transfers (chicks on banks)... Gold certificates (gold deposit:B) CUENDIM......••• • •• • • • Three per cent. certificates. T0ta1...:........ ..... . ... ....... cri. We give the above as an instance the various causes operating to change the amount of the balance at the dub -Treasury. [From the New York World of Today.] Aerat.l7.--U he morning opened with a very sore feeling , against the Treasury Department, and the matter of holding an "indignation meeting" against the policy of Mr. McCulloch, which had produced the stringency In the re , feu market, was discussed in Influential circles. In the early part of the day loans were made at 7 per cent_ in gold, and and h per cent per day were paid for turn. leg stocks, but after 1 P. M., there wee a marked change and the supply of money offering at seven per cent, in currency was largely in exceas of the demand. The bankers and leading brokers carried over large tint-undo , ed balances. This sudden change in the rocuev market id accompanied by a re+toration et con. lidence ainorg moneylenders and stock-brokers who are katisM d that prices on the Stock Exchange have touched bottom. end that a steady improvement will henceforth take pin.e. eulmie ating during the. summer In the highs p: ices of , the year. The attempt of the steckjobblup panic monger'. and the sensational press they have riled to produce a p ,nlc and Smut. cial CHOl.hae signally failed of FUN:Cie. Assisted by the tremendoue MCI ey Wenn: e engineered by the 111. i ~ 1 the Treater , ' Depf , rt.lnPrit. in "10Ct:IIIt" up greenbacks'. I,s- Fairs of cold and non purchaser of even.thirties, the 1,0:1:3 Iced eve rything in their i or. The Taw ury De. pertinent pressure, the bank pressure to prepare for he qoartcrly statement. land the money.lcriderc' precede by the daily calling in of leans, formed an aggregate of powerful bear influences art kcould not have foiled to produce a most die let one minic.if the business community and \Vail street had been In Nit iLt!” , ...d or a eak ccbdition. The revere strain of limiest three weeks has demonstrated a strength and wealth of resources ethane brokers and business men c inch it i= idle to deny. They ale incnotestible evidence of a 'mind conservative condition of atlairs. They indi mithing In any selli , 1,1MIL:1424)118 to affairs in Europe last 'ear, and in 11.506, with which vv.-Al-meaning but ioorlv.informed paresis have attempted to draw a parallel. Ac a whole. American railroad property is Incle free Item floating debt, cheaper man inveement, and more promising in • regard to receipts and tutu re Prosperity than iteser was before. The strength of the stock unlike, throughout the whole or the recent shirr geney and off its to. create distrust is evidence of the real 'hard pan" market values of railroad property. The foreign exchange market Infirm. and bankers arc not anxious to Mau tinder rates that will cover ship ments of srecic. The supply of cotton hills is light. and neNt month will require larger shipments of speeie to , Ver ren ittance, for the May coupons, aud the usl demand (rem importer& In the Wo kf of Monday. April 13. we stated that "Prime lia r. sixty-dr. v,' sterling bills were firmer at te let.: and the general impression is that tato , will Iro tcf next week by a leading firm that draw, on itti If, t:: s, ttlemeut of mnturingcred its. Tier advanre hoc Lair( indb din the Merit/ of April 13, and to.driv 'cram . d 110 to 110t4 for sixty.day , ter• lire. although no talee for cash were reported above 114v.i to ilo. • The Gold market was string, opening at 15.9!.:. the low. set price of the day, advancing to 13a'.:, and 'closing at rx,l4. at 3 P M. The rates paid for carrying wore 10 3 04, 11, 12, t, a 7. I 22, ti and 4 per cent., and at 2.45 P. M. that After the board adjourned the quotations were stnd at the close 11..1i34 to 138 X, at SP. AL Govern ment sold no gold today. Now York Stock Market. NEW YO PK, April Ik—Stocks Arrow. Chicago and Rock 'Nand, ; Eeadir g, : Canton Company, 47;4; Erie, ; Cleveland and lob do. 112; Cleveland and Pitt , but gh.i..,77 , 4, ; Pittaburgh and Fort Wayne, 101 M; Michiean Central. 112;4 ;,Michigan Southern, Sti, New York Geo. trm, 114; Central, MN; Cumberland Preferred, ; Virginia wa. 49ki; Mimeuri 6'o, IhuDon River, 127; Five-Twerdiez. 1W2., 11P,, ; Do. lrai4, no. lsfs. WO; new isatio, no7N Ten fortieB. lut 7 ?, ; Seven-thh tice. 106;a; Gold. 1946; Money, 7 percent.; change, Ho. Markets by Telegraph. NEW' Yoga, April 18—Cotton firmer. 361,:,Ft31. Flour firm— FSIV'e 6.500 brilt, State, $915(5:i511 25; 241;q14 00, \Vi Orrn. $9 1.1q.911 25; Southein, 5;19 25 , e.515: Califor nia. *l2 76(4;514 50. Wheat firm and advanced 1 cont-- ealee 7,500 bnehela Spring, $.2 56. Corn firm, advanced lc. —bales %%WO bushels. *1 190ii1 22.9% Oats dull —ealca 12.100 buehels at Beef firm. Pork dull at *26 5064 e 26 t 5. Lard, 170:4181‘. Whisky quiet PALrimonk, April 18.—Cotton firm: middling 9,. 30. Flour tirm.in good demand and unchanged. Wheat firm; prime Maryland red, $3 0000$3 10. Corn steady; white, Si 13; Yellow, $1 29 Rye tirm. $2 so. Pros - if-lona quiet hut firm at previotu3 quot.tiow. ci El ;4 1.3 4:11101 101 PORT OF PHILADELPHIA-APRIL 18. WEee Marine Bulletin en inside Page. ARRIVED THIS DAY. Steamer II L Claw, Bet . .. 13 hours from Baltimore, with mdse to-A Grover. Jr. Steamer Decatur, Young. 13 hours from Baltimore, with mils° to R Foster. Schr J C hteShain. Gibbs, Annapolis. Schr C W Locke, Huntley, Boston. Behr Silver Magnet, Dill. Boston. Seim L dt M Reed. Steelman, Boston. Schr Sarah air Edwards, Ireland. Boston. Schr J Bright, Shaw. Boston. Schr Northern Light. Ireland, Providence. Behr C Shaw, Reeves, Newport Behr Eliza & Rebecca, Price, Salem. Schr Clarissa Allen. Hale, Wilmington,Del. Schr Read RR No 12 Rodan, New Raven. Schr It Peterson. Farb, Salem. Behr Minnie K, arsons. Allyn's Point. Schr A Mason. Rose. New York. Scbr Geo Toulon°. Adams, Portland. cx.YA.. :1) THIS DAT. Steamer Brunette, Howe, New York,John F Ohl. Steamer Decatur, Young, Baltimore, Reuben Foster. Steamer Hannah 4S , Sophll4.Teaf. Winton, NC. Collins R Behr T T Tastier, Allen. Charleston, I) Cooper. A Behr Silver Magnet. Dill, Boston, ndended,Norton&Co. Behr L & M Reed, Steelman, Boston, $ll 8 Repplier. Schr Geo Taulane, Adams, Boston, Costner, Stickney Wellington. Behr S J Bright, Shaw. Poston, L Audenried & Co. Bohr C Allen, Hale, New London, do Bahr J P Ames, Turner, Saco, do Behr A Mason. Rose, Salem. do Behr Northern Light, Ireland, Providence, Blakistos, Graeff it Co. Schr C Shaw. Reeves, Boston. do tichr Eliza & Rebecca. Price, Providence, Hammett is Neil, echr R RR No 41, Roden, New Haven, Bards, Keller is Nutting. Bohr J C MoPhain, Gibbs, Washington, Caldwell, Gordon Co. Sch & r Petersen, English, Boston. Tyler & Co. • SlEldiditAAL Steamer Saxon, Boggs. hencNe D at Boston this mending. Steamer City.ot Fels (13r), Kennedy ,, cleared at New York yeaterday for Liverpool. , Steamer filtrate% , (80, Mum, cleared'at New. York yesterday for Glasgow. Steamer Star of the Union, Cooltsey , cleared at New Orleans IStklint. for this port via Havana. • Steamer mariposa. Kimball. irons New Orleans 6th coat. via Chatieston 14tb, at New York yesterday. , Bark &Badman, Perry, entered out it London Sd inst, for this pork Ochre) ii Rly: McAllister; Ann Rambo, Horreakt Jas Beatty; Prices and Stover hence at Richmond 16th inks t. 1 SAAC NA'r FLANS. AUCTIONEER. N. E. CORNER _I. Thltd nod Bprnee streets. only ono square below Ike Enchan t s) ; 11210,080 to loan to tarts, AZ Womb , Oq Almon diver, Mst. wittchesi et! 'MNI 811 ox._ .valne. me ,hoisti • from BA, to 7 ~111. EP , Ratted for the list,lol3y Y ..7'' AdvAlSati A .111111 7 amounts at the loweatmei, ;• • '., , 1172 . _ vmd. Lectartwinew onirie . . .., ‘ inrdelt nt.the Nor Yin • Stumm* of - : . 4 ., gon_ . lotto: Nowt° tivonsultWbot .'I I YOU -sag; iteLlinottood gen - •• , total; . ea , tn , , Thnuuticesz •.. . w , poen*" °MI . 441 bre for.. ' et vol or con ' .. . ' . - tootortof 0 ,Ltrd to parties unablo.to , 'n don rooOlitt' . four iOnokttt ft J. 41 •Ityttr. 611$ &hoot i t - - . falai*. ' • • Tr pecans kindle for siliiJ. B. AbklEid.Btt 'Deism THIRD EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH. FROM WASHINGTON. THE IMPEACHMENT COURT. Mr. Wilson's Argument Continued. The Impeachment. Trial. (Special Deproatch to the Philade. Bveninalietirt.l WASSILNGTON, April 18.—Mr. Wilson discussed the relative powers and duties of the President and Congress under the Constitution, holding that the legislature is the supreme power. Ills rightful means of resistance - to the will of Congress are circumscribed by the veto which• allows him to resist the enactment of laws; beyond that he cannbt go. tie cannot. after they are enacted, either set them aside himself or ad vise others to disregard them. To do so Is to commit a grave misdemeanor; as to the penalty for which, Congress is constituted the only judge. . He may not disregard the laws because his cabinet advise him that they are unconstitu tional. This would make the Executive supreme, if he can secure unanimity through the advice of his cahinet officers. And it this theory that the President' can do no wrong, but, as is the case with the monarch in England, can shield himself behind the advice of his cabinet, it is plain that the proposed evidence cannot be admitted. The argument was delivered with much earnestness, 'an - d was Intently listened to throughout. Mr. Curtis, in replying, said that ho could not sea how the de fi nition of the powers of the differs' out branches of the Government could affect the admissibility of this testimony, which is offered to prove the latent of the President. He is expressly charged in the various articles with intent to resist the law, and to meet these allegations this testimony is offered. In answer to the question of Senator Howard as to whether the constitutionality of the Tenure of Office act is to be determined by the Senate on this trial, he said that that is a question solely for the consideration of the Senate itself. It is not within the province of counsel to say. If Mr. Btanton's case is not within the terms of that law, this question does not come be fore the Senate at all. The object is to show that the President honestly believes the law invalid. Whether he , had committed an infraction of the law or I not, it cannot appear from that alone that he has committed an Impeachable offence and therefore claims the opinions Of the Cabinet officers. In answer to a question of Mr. Johnson Mr. Curtis said that this testimony was considered corroborative of the statements in their answer, though he did not understand the Managers to deny the points of their answer as far as related to the advice the. Cabinet gave to the President. Mr. Williams asked if counsel considered the advice given to the President as to the prepara tion of the veto messages pertinent to show his innocence when violating the act wheti-it became a law. Mr. Curtis announced that they did consider it pertinent,as showing the intent. They hold that the President honestly believes this law uncon stitutional, and in that view, to prove his intent, offer this testimony. Mr. Curtis occupied but a short tine e iu stating his point. Mr. Chase then said that as the unlawful Intent is the subject at which much evidence ou both sidts Is directed, he thinks this litlestion admissi ble to show the intent. The ayes and noes were demanded, and it was ruled that the testimony was not admissible— ayes 20, noes 29. The Republicans voting to ad mit were Anthony, Fessendem Fowler. Grimes, Henderson, Ross, Trumbull,! Van Winkle and Willey. Mr. Sumner did not vote. The action of the Senate in overruling Mr. Chase's decision seemed to take the President's council by surprise. They held a short consul tation, and then kaslied Secretary Welles a ques tion, whether at any time, while the Tenure of Office act was before the President, the subject of Mr. Stanton being within its terms ever came be fore the cabinet. - This being objected to as substantially the same thing as the one just decided, the offer to prove, when committed to writing, was, that at the Cabinet meetings at which Mr. Stanton was present while the Tenure of Office bill was before the President for his decision, the members of Cabinet were asked by the President. and gave their opinions, that the case of Mr. Stanton and the other Secretaries appointed by Mr. Lincoln were not within the restnctione of the act. Mr. Butler objected that this was an attempt to prove the construction of the law, as the other was to prove its unconstitutionality. Both are therefore substantially the same in their nature. Mr. Evarts argued that this did not come with in the previous ruling. Mr. Butler replied that in the President's Mes sage, he says that all his Cabinet officers come within its provisions and he objects to it for that reason, founding his principal arguments against its enactment on that fact. Mr. Evarts argued again that this testimony was admissible and replied that Mr. Butler's statement that the present theory of the President was not the same held by him in his Message. He Bald the qubstion as to whether Mr. Stanton came within the law could not possibly have anything to do with the objections to it on constitutional grounds, while it bad everything to do with the President's subsequent removal of him under several of the alternatives which might be presented to the minds of the Senators in deciding this case. The Chief Justice said he was unable to decide how far the Senate desired their previous reading to govern in this case. He would therefore sub mit it to the Senate. The Senate refused to admit the testimony by a vote of 22 ayes to 26 noes. Messrs. Sheraton and Sprague changing and voting to admit, while Mr. Conkling did not vote. 8200,000 110,000 2.20.000 313.690 3r/1,003 10.000 Kay WItST, April 18.—The schooner Sidney Price, of Wilmington, Del., with a cargo of sugar and molasses, from Zaza, Cuba, for Philadelphia, spring aleak; crew being unable to keep her free of water ran her ashore at Bahia Honde. The cargo will probably be saved. Arrived—Schooners Ridgewood and Minnie Repplier. Weather Report. April 18. Thermo. 9 .4.. M. Wind. .Weather. meter. Plaister Cove, N. N. W. Clear. 51 Halifax, W: Clear. 56 Portland, S. Clear. 51 Boston, W. Clear. 55 New York, S. W. Clear. 50 Washington. N. W Clem.. 6Q Wilmington,Del.,N. W. Clear. 52 Fortress Monroe, N. W. Clear. 68 Richmond, N. W. Clear. 58 New Orleans; N. E. Raining. 66 ' Oswego, W. Cloudy. 39 Buffalo, W. Clear. 38 Pittsburgh, Cloudy. 39 Chicago, ' E. Clear. 40 Louisville, N. Clear. 48 Bt. Louis, , Clear. Havana* Calm Clear. 81 Key Watt E. Ctr on. 81 *Bar., 8a1:4; *Bar. 30.23. Arrival of a Steamier. I , lnv You% April 1804—The otesmohlp Europa, from Ellargow. haelirrivod. Passage al the Erie eafaoed mu. ALaster. April 111.—The Erie Railroad bill has 11 steed the State 119 11 0 - -Yeao• * 1 ;4 1131 4 /2* trfmr EiTA'PE OF THE - l'Et (I 'THUS DAY AT TUE DU _OFPI UP. tO A. 91....."10 des. 12_ Alec' 9 P. M. , ....53 deg. Weatherclots. 91/na9 risnavkvet. , Crtx,hlowrist,rzr..-.Tne number of Interments , o . l k , „4 for ".01rt9., 11d b/ 4 , 00 9 P t 043 71 W tej • %;''OeSPO 444 94*0 ?Am °l' ' 4 , werip etir,:and 102 J.. ~ A , q m o k y r,-144. t AgeL 186 0' ' 4 ; ect . 4 Wtfittferegtrie. ttreedeet Imbiber ot dmdbe occurred in the 0 T*440000 Wirtl9 belog , 2k snit the $O2B/11 eat number in the Seventeent h wad, where two were reported. ' The penelpid tams of death were: Con- PIIII,IB , 88. ATURIJAY, A ,18 2:30 Q'Olook. From Florida. , , Pump o n, b; convuldoe, 5; diocese of the heart, 8; typhoid fever, 4; inflamma,tion I FOUR 1 1 .11 EDITION. ofihe brain, 5; Infllmmatlon of the • lungs, I 17; maraemue, 5; old age,ll; palsy, 4. NEWS BY THE CUBA CABLE CANDIA: , Greek Reports of the Cretan Victories —t bristian Aid to the insurgenta. ATIIF.N4. April 11, by way of Trieste and Lon don, April 17, 1868.—Despatches and news re ports from Crete ,to hand in this city (Athens) state that several fights have taken place lately between the insurgents and the Turkish soldiery. The Cretan revolutionary forces were, it riS said, victorious in most of them. Two steamers bailing from Greek and other Christian ports still land food,' gunpowder, arms and other supplies and munitions of war at the island and embark and take away refugee patriot families. IT ALT. The Bologna Labor Riots Ended—As. soclated 'Hades Meetings Forbidden. Boumua, April 17, 1868.—The serious labor and trade "strike" riots, by which the peace of this city has been fearfully disturbed 'during the past few days, are apparently at an end, ann quiet prevails in the town. A government order has been published which forbids further meetings of the Printers' Asso ciation and the Democratic Union Workingmen's Association. Their headquarters and places of assemblage have been Oohed by the police authorities In each instance. SPAIN• Quiet Restored in Barcelona. QUEEN'S HOTEL, LONDON, April 17, 1868.—The latest advices from Spain report that quiet has been restored In the city of Barcelona. The trade "strike" is ended, and the men peace ful. CuIBA. Sonars to the Prince of Coburg and Due de. Perithievre—Keorganization of the Supreme Court. HAVANA, April 17, 1868.—Last night Captain General Lersundi gave a banquet to the Prince of Coburg and the Due de P.enthlevre. The band on the occasion performed German airs. The trin'ee of Coburg will proceed to Brazil,where he has a brother, Louis Augustus,. who is an admiral in the Brazilian 'bevy, and tnarried to the Princess Leopoldlna, second daughter of the Emperor Don Pedro 11. ,The Due de Penthievre will leave for Europe, where he holds rank as lieutenant in the Portuguese navy. Both princes - are first cousins; the father of the latter and. mother of the former were children of Louts Philippe. At the theatre the princes were seated in the Captain-General's box. Count Balmaseda acted as cicerone to the Princes oh their visit to the fortifications, &c. It is rumored that their visit has some connection with Mexican al 'fairs. (?) A decree had been promulgated ordering the re establishment of the Supreme Court at Puerto Principe, which was suppressed in 1853. The same decree reorganizes the Supreme Court in Eavana and adjacent ports. There is to be one chief justice with eleven associates—live for Puerto Principe and six for Porto Rico, One associate of Puerto • Principe and one or Porto Rico are to be auditors of the War and Navy departments. The Health Board of Matanzas are issuing clear bills to vessels now, as all traces of cholera have disappeared. At Cardenas fires were creating considerable consternation. CUILTAIN PIATEULPI LS. L E. WALRAVEN N 0.719 CHESTNUT STREET, MASONIC HALL. i . nov opening an involve of very flue LACE CURTAINS, OF SPECIAL DESIGNS. ALSO, NOTTINGHAM LACES OF VARIOIIS GRADES. All to be Sold at VeTy Reasonable Rates! TERRIE,S AND REPS: In Solid Colors. as well as Stripes. NEW AND ELEGANT PIANO AND TABLE COVERS AT VERY LOW PEEVES. Window Shades for Spring Trade IN GREAT VARIETY. 44 North Tenth St Bedding and Featber Wareham& Feathers of all onalltiea. Feather Beds, gager. and PUlowa, Bering and Hair Matreamea. Hula and Straw Matressea. Iron Bedateade of glazes. • Tucker's celebrated Spring Reds. Ilowe'e celebrated Spring Cote. Honeycomb Quilts. Lanraeter Quilt& Allnunbra Qurd4a. Imperial Quilt& Germantown quilts, Allendale Quilt& illtrWith as handsome and complete variety , of Marseilles Counterpanes as can be found in the city, of white, pink. and orange colors. gkr.And we keep and sell Blankets as cheap as anybody. Window shades in great variety of pattern at the lowest market Stria% AMOS ITILLBORN, No. 44 N. Tenth Street, below Aroh. mhll•w f to Stmtp NDIA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING. STEAM PAWL I tug Hate, &e. Famineens and dealers will find a full assortment of Goodyear% Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing ROM *C., at the Manufacturer% Headquarters. GOODYEAR'S.' 303 Chestnutstreet. South side N. B.—We have now on band a large lot of 0 antlemen% Ladies' and Mimeo' Gent Boot& Also, every variety ani style of Gum Overcoat& TANNED FRUIT, VEGETABLE°. di 1,000 CASES 'J fresh Canned Peaches; 600 eases free h Canned Pine Apples; 200 cases fresh Pine A les, in ghisst 1.000 cases Green Corn and Green Peas; I I eases fresh Plums in cans; 200 cases fresh Green Gages; 500 cases Cherries, in syrup; sto cases Blackberries., in syrup; 600 cases straw. berries, In syrup; 51. M cases freeh Pears. In syrup; 1,000 cases Capned Tomatoes; 600 cases Oysters, Lobsters and Clams; 600 cases Roast Beef. Mutton, Veal. Soups, dtct, For sale by JOSEPH D. BUBSIF.II & 00.,,108 South Dela. woo avenue. • LNDIGLISII TOu BRUdIIEB.--it LARGE) ASSORT .II.I wont of the wry boot styled and quality. For solo by &men T. Shinn. Broad andapruco titivate. auto:lotto: IaTORTONIS PINE APPLE' ortgEsa—iou BOXES ON I. Conoiroment. 'Loading and for Bale by .703. BESSIE& &,00.. Agents for Norton & Elmer. 108 Boma Delaware &yam°, „ STEdo W GREMBLEI , BUMS NKW bil°adyliaVizZosM i rtrizt ,lr ------ STON BUT. ThaNDS.BOSTOtiliWp,2,7,ll°,, r Nonnst p r . 3.195 k KCOnAllenPi f°2.13°1 sql4 S 4l. ' - --avetniZ:M . t.-.... M a * thik 411)f, , vta k r --- - i w. t ... , 71 .• . t. • .. r *- • - OLiilvi It_str —MiRMR4 too is • _w0:•..,! . 814 r ileis Tann ar 1101 viol Avow. wail BY TELEGRA. LATER FROM WASHINGTON. THE IMPEACHMENT TRIAL. The Impeachment Montinuee tram Tblrd'Eduton.r Some further questions were asked as to whether the subject came up in the Cabinet, and objection being made to the whole subject of the Cabinet meetings as irrelevant, the counsel for the defence , offered to prove that during the period between the(' passagt and, send ing of the Civil Office bill'lo the' rtetsitinnt. and the removalotMr. kitanton, upon oCesteletts when considerations connected with tke public service as affected by that bill came up for; Advice and consideration in the ;Cab stet it was considered between the President' and his Cabinet with proper regard to the, public service, which made.it desirable that upon somil proper ease a judicial determination on, the cohatitution ality of the law should be obtained. Mr. Butler argued this at length, , saying that he understood that the Senate had Whim broad ground that the Cabinet consultatiOnlkno l o not ie brfrught into this nase. Before this last offer was submitted'Hre• Hen derson desired to know whether thePreeident. should he be, convicted, must be removed and may further be disqualified from holding' any of ee of honor or trust, the evidence now offered is not competent to go before the Court In mid get lon of any punishment. Mr. Butler replied that he was instrueted to an swer for the Managers that they did not believe it could be admitted in any event, but it, in =Riga tion,it should be put in after the verdict and before judgment. Before answering farther lie should like to know whether the President's counsel of fered It In mitigation. The ayes andffnays were then called, and the testimony was ruled out by ayes 13, nays 80, The Court, ten minutes before 2 o'clock; took a re cess. From Washington. Wasitmorrox, April 18.—Brevet Colonel 11. G. Gibson, Major fad Artillery, has been tem- Morarily relieved from duty at Fort llreble, aine, and assigned to command at. Fort Adams, Mode Island. - - Brevet Major-General George L llartsnff is temporarily relieved from the Fifth Military Dis trict and ordered to the Department. Brevet Brigadier-General George D. Ruggles has been transferred from the Department of the East to the Department of the Platte. Imporlant Correspondence—Turkey and the United States-01r. Niervard and E. Joy Morris. 'llia following correopondence explains Itself: Lac(tun BEY, TVEK ISIS MINUTE]: AT . WASHINGTON, TO L. SE WARD. SEER ETA RT OF STATE. . . WARLONOTIg. Ftbruary 7. loBB.—Mn. IthicitcrAtty 01' STATE: The Ottoman government haviag recently read your di:loin:die correepondence for the year Ifitli.has been deeply s filleted by the extract from a despatch. (No. 150 1 addreosed to yourself by Mr. Joy Menlo, and which to to be found on page 240, part second, of the publication, above mentioned. • Bin Highness Fund Paella iinfortne me that hie surprise on rending eald deepate h won all the greater owing to ita contrast with the uniformly conrteoua character of the inetructions given to a Minietsr of the United btatee lie government. no well no with the friendly, consider.. lion which characterizes all the official and private in. tercon on of the federal government with 'UM Imperial Ottoman Legation at Witellington. I have taken upon myself to secure the government of his Majeety, the Sultan, that it would be sufficient to bring to your knowledge this unfortunate and regrettable incident. Fictive to accept, Mr. Secretary of State, the renewed afourance of the high consideration with which I have the honor to be, your very humble and obedient servant. • RLACQUF,. w. y SE.WART, TO 7:..101 - MORRIS. CONSTANTLNOMiI. DYPAIIT.MENT or STATE, WAPOONGTON. Feb. 4: 155.3 Str—Tbe '1 urkieh Illinieter bel'e has in a tiestaant and kindly manner directed my attention to your deepatch to thin department. No 150. which appears in the published "Ravels Relating to Foreign A ffaire, part I.1&17." The deepateb in one paper of &series in whicliyou have very I merle given ouch information as you wore able to acquire and much opeettlati One as voubad formed concern. ing the political situation in the gnat. Time le continually changing the views which we take of political tranoac• Rona ut every kind. abroad notices, thew at home. Your obeervatione and epeculatians iutidd Metal:tee may be yin. d by future events.; on the other hand. they may prone more or lees erroneous. It in not now necedaary to review thou. to arcertaita how far they are accurate and reliable. Ido not think that thin part of the deepat7h is liable to just objections on the ground of diplomatic usage. no parer closes. however, with this sentence, namely "In the midst of these embarrassments 'and perils, I re• Bret to bo allied to env that the Sultan gives evident troof of positive mental imbecility and incapacity." This part of the despatch has given pain to the Sultan end ids envirpment. 'Unless thu fact allesed was palms bly established a formal compluint on that ground agaiust this gos eminent. if one were made. would be just and un answerable. Happily. it has already sufficiently ap peared in the papers which have issued from this &Man- T u m k . s a h n Minister F h peec ht h o a t hy o P u re s u i n e a t v o o r n bl e e e statement concern leg the Sultan made no injurious impression upon thin government at the time it was received. lam free h. roefess also that the course of administration which the Turkish government has pursued since that timeline con• elusively vindicated ilte character of the Sultan for an gacity. ability and vigor. Certainly no State ever had lees rennen to complain of bad faith, inattention or want of comity on the part of a foreign government than the I' nited States had° now to complain of the Sultan and his government. It in manliest, therefore, that your statement was made through misconception. rind generous reparation is therefore duo to the Sultan and his government. The misconception was probably the effect of free partisan debates iu the Turkish capital. It inevitably .happens that the wisdom to+ well as character and talents of statesmen and magistrates are misapprehended in PCll2Olll+ of great political commotion end excitement,. The Eastern question atibe timesif your despatch was ezeiting pro found attention throughout all Europe, and especially 50 in tbe Turkish capital. in such cases miscorideption is penalty which falls not less on republican presidents and secretaries than upon imperial rulers and their ministers. It is a renalty which all pay for the grave and responni ble trusts with which they aro charged. I frankly confess that the injustice In the present case is more the fault of this depa. Uncut than your own. It Is not doubted that the despatch wee honestly and sincerely written, and wilth a just expectation that the onservations and reflections, confidentially cotmouni rated for the infwmation of yo calculated`nment. would not he'pliblished in a manner to wound the sensibility of the government to which yen areAceredited. Tbo publication here was the result of accident and would not have been made if duo care and attention had been bestowed. We cannot, however, and we ought not to seek to die pose of the case by dividing responsibility between the department and yourself in regard to the affair. This Government rem eta the error sincerely and with out any reservation, and it will endeavor to see that suchi justice and discourtesy shall not hereafter be repeated. You are authorized and directed to pbtee a copy of this paper in the, hands of his Highness the Minister for Foreign A tfaire, to the end that he may. if he please, lay the same before the Sultan and his Corerutnent: I am. sir, kc , W. 11. ItEWARD . • No. 44 North TENTH Street. below Areb. Military Arrest of an Aill/eTleall Citizen in **ranee. The Paris correspondent of the London Times gays : —A rather extraordinary . cave bae mot been tried before the military tribunal of Bordeaux - . 'The ac Was a young mon of twenty.sevin, in a brilliant position of life. lie had left France at the age of seventeen for the United ts tee, where, by hie effom to, he bad in taloa Mid fortune, and had at last become a naturalized American. ire is now at the bead of a large commercial house in Lonistan a, 'bat hid father having died in. France he has returned deserter, havingme family affairs, and weir arrested the been, during his absence, dranm in couecription. As the naturalization has no retroactive effect, the accused was a French citizen st r the moment win n his military service should bnite comtnenced. fie was sentenced to only six days! iniprironuient. No. 44 North TENTH Street. below Arab. No. 44 North TENTH Eftromt, Mow Arch. of Feiianisna in it.antztlat....DisCOVery Corretivnipideime. • 2tIONTRITAT, April 17. the correspondence which has passed between the ream lodges in New York and Montreal low been' edged by the government, and a grand exodus of prominent Irishmen from Canada to the United States commenced this afternoon In conse quence. Oyer four hundred pervona are implicated in the correepondence with O'Neill and O`Malieny. and the en tire affair will be brought before the'court is Ottawa. it is reported that all international case will be made of it. Ha documents have been diecoyered which tend to show that the murder of Mr. McGee was , plotted in New York and approved of before a committee in Montreal. The St. Lawrence riverjs mien to Quebec. TO THOSE Who Appreciate Good. - flitfig Garment% ALBRIGHT & HUTTENBRMICK, 915 Chestnut Street, Can be Depended l* The reputation of JOIHIN lAN ALleiegroilliT aff a Coat Cutter b3WithOUt equid.' The speclaitY isiciumnE urrrieftiiitAven , ie rEggillOan ap. Veoo , 9301,ig, for !itieh he hai an _aarAbAalerg i ta: Ao a Kew , marmeet is the great de sideratum-J:4 ithiypu _ they eau befulky aatiafled bY aviliglia#l a tut vrotaucititilit — BO XEs chuio accusal *ad. Versolcsul landing era ob Alitomom roe from Genoa, sealer sale by OIL DolniamEtt a 00.. 105 South Delawaso smut" 3:15 O'Clook. ICLOTIIIING.