Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, April 28, 1868, Image 2
• . . • • , . . . ~ . , ..•• , . , • .. , • ._ . . . • . _ • THE DAILY. EVENING ISULLB III TIN PLADELPIIIA . ' TUESDAY, APRIL 28 ,1868. . 2 . , ••„....,....--•_____________— ............ — _____ _ ClutlftPlElTlNGlas &43. - • NEW latitalaiCATlONS. Mr. John Torrey Morse's "Expatriation and ordinance of 'B7, they at•once expressed their Blebs, the orthodox ancestress go' Abnainlati ---_,. April, Naturalization:" • Thirteen literary works are preference for mine. I ihen informed . them . royalty , Kassa, for such. , is . the Emperor o real .. . . , Tut NORTH AMERICAN' BRYIEW, , of my arrangement with Vinton and Wilmot, , name, soon distinguished himselfpy his bravery h . . very ably reviewed in the "Critical Notices' inrad talent for war, and on the death et Is- 1222 CHESTNUT STREET. 1222, . No. ectix.-The opening article is a descrip- the policy of which they concurred. elude be acquired the governinent of - the pro-Sion by Dr. Dalton of the Metrop the close. It was then arranged' 'olittin Board at among the whole vines of Kwara Ile soon enlarged his dominions This superb number is varied, rich and group, consisting, perhaps, of ten or twelve, by the conquest of adjacent provinces, and at - .., •. . , of Health, of New York, and its operations pact. It amply vindicates our national that each and all of us should, at the•proper length, after having experienced varying for- Special '-Notice. Within the last two years, or since the crea - eau scholarship. The _North American Re- time, endeavor to get thefluor; and if either lanes, be defeated Ali Rae, of Amhara, whose tion of the Health Law of 1866, I,lp to a of us other than Wilmot, 'should be . first palpably supenior 'to any like , . daughter he had previously married, and effected the conquest of that province. The element ot Having completed our removal to Now Store, N0.12:4 recent period Americans, with their exulta - view is recognized hy-the chairman, the floor should rot , i which . ni . tion in space and their sense of a World enterprise undertaken with the vehicle of the b , . , , , e yielded to Wilmot, and he should offer the a on, is so sing any blended in Theo- CHEM Nu Street, we are now ready to offer. at lowed cash prices, a new stock of handsome I proviso. At the same time, Wilmot, who dorus s character, is shown by the prayer which he publicly offered up after his victory, and CARPETINGS, before them "where to choose," have ignored English language. ao. - which is as follows: "I praise Thee, 0 God, that the fact that populations were crowding and ' TILE W.LItIOP PROVISO. OIL CLOTHS, heaping around their ports, with all the suf- j specially exhorted to vigilance-and promp- ; Thenehas manifested Thy goodness to a poor sin- MAIPTINGS, Letter of Judge Brinkerhoff, of Ohio I Wilde This arrangement was carried out, ! ner like me. 'Whom Thou humblest is humbied, focating inertia of continental eentralizations. to heuator WitSoll• I and, as I had conjectered, Wilmot was rec- ; sad whom Thou exteltest is exalted. Thiue is the With an other kinds of goods in our line of business. 'Their very liberty, with its careless contempt ISLANsrielm, Ohio, April 1, 1.68.-Ifort. 1 ognized by the chair. power find !dory, forever and ever." Being now Installed at Gondar us Ras of Am . Of prevision, aggravated the evil to a worse H. Wilson.-DE.ku Sot: Your note of the , The vote was taken by tellers; and every , barn.a rank which carried with it the nominal REEVE L. KNIGHT & SON . , , then European neglect; long after France :Slit ult., inclosing a slip cut from the New , man of every party from the free ° States, ex- , allegiance' of the whole of Ab3ttsinlit, K:tssa sent 4 no Britain ba d pg d g i y perce i ve d th e K a_ York n Sun, on the authorship of the INi ‘ iniot Copt John. A. McCiernand, of fllinois, and ;to chore tribute from Guide, Prince of Tigre. 1222 Chestnut Street. • 1222. rroviso, and requesting a statement of my ;perhaps his colleague, rieklin, voted for the,,.. This hi to refused, he marched with an :Hilly ... cbief, and were combating it with the very recollection in regard to the matter, is before proviso, and it was carried in committee by against him, and, haying - defmated him in the. Mit- • B l''' _ ....._ an overwhelming majority. _tie of Deraskie, he had himself crowned as Neg,tis 11 111,11 1 i PS AND WINDOW SHADES. instinct of self-preservation, our govern- C. • : Ttirodorus, or King of Kings of Ethiopia. We ----- — went lay supine, absorbed in other difficul- Before proceeding to comply with your When the bill was reported to the House assumption of the name of Theodorns appears ties, and let the ulcer grow. Two. years request, allow me to say a word or two . re- and the yeas and nays were called on its to have been mad,' 111 COMPMIChcat of an ancient B. J, WILLIAMS & SONS, since, however, the aforesaid Health - Law ]alive to the article in the Sun. The idea is passage, a very few others from the free prophecy that an Emperor of that name would - there put forth that the Wilmot Proviso States, and all of the few members from Ken- raise the kingdom of Abyssinia to an unprece- lei NORTH SIXTH S rREET, took shape, covering a Sanitary District com_ - • originated at a dinner party of New VOrk lucky, who had voted for the proviso in cum- ilt tiled pitch of Loa fitness. Lie then atttelted the LARCIEST MANUFACTURERS OF • posed of Is - eva York City, Brooklyn, and Ballihtirners, at which John Van Boren, mitten, ci•rize , /i4n - a, with the hon,srable aria • si , ono Gallas, a Nialionicdan tribe between Am- . hurl and Stem, and defeated them in a battle, in Vt.t net i an 1131incls several tributary counties, and providing for Samuel .J. Tilden, a Western member distinguished if William P. votich tin i t King Adam% Bille t -was Blain. ',... a Health Board furnished with large discre- of Congress of the name of Howe, 'rborna:3on, of the Leuisville District, who. . 11 , ( "' ' 'himself'of :wims had thus made master AND 4ttiOn; and with the first terrors of a cholera and others, . were present; and this I believe, still lives, a faithful enemy of the whole of Abyssinia with the 'exception of I WINDOW SI-lADES. dinner patsy is said to have taken human slavery., to the end. But the 11111, , Shoa, whieh had lent; been virtually an iudepend summer the Commissioners threw themselves into efficient action. After examining with place in 'INIT. Nowe 150 w as 0 • the Wilmot Proy . , with to proviso, passed the House by ahi rge cut State. Against this kingdom he nowdireeted err SELL AT TIIE LOWEST PRICES. '_.a[r majority, and went to the Senate. rliere it his arms, and soon suceeedett in completely Snit- Edwin getedred, Curtain Cornices, Shade Trimmings much ,Care the existing sanitary conditioh of lif.,/troduced in Committee of the Whole of the house of Representatives on the Bth of Au- wits taken up on the morning of the lir.it of jugating it, thus reuniting under his sWay tile and Eixtbrm, Picture Tassels and 110 d. Store Shades, and the metro delis and discovering the miserable gust, 18-16; and there was not then a member August, and John Davis Senator from Olas- whole ot llt so lorig disunited provinces of AbYS- Lettet leg. Plain blinder! of Maude, Bell Pelle, 4:c ,Flt, - - , Dr . Congre ss, , state of things which Dalton depicts of from the West or elsewhere, 0 nthia. His next project wits to drive the Turks atm th mth :at --- from their possession on the coast, and thus to in the first ball= )art of his paper, the name of Bowe. 1 - See House 'Jo u r na l , what innuences, God lore ws, spoke and ob- acquire for Abyssinia an outlet on the ited Sea the First Session, Twentyinth . Congress, P. stinately persisted iu speaking against time an adventeee which thut countr had nut ma , Board commenced a spirited fight with the a a ' ' ' ' ' ' y I — 1,83.] As the proviso was intro uce ontil the moment fixed byjuint resolution for ecered since Massowah was taken by the Turks In mar aria. The first cholera victim had been Committee of the Whole, and there added to the adjournment of the two Houses arrived, the sixteenth century. This, however, he was Mourning Good s. - an eccuparit of a large tenement house in a a pendirg bill by way of amendment, and as and thus the bill and its proviso were lost for never in a position to attempt. His conquered provinces revolted, and the cruel element in his NEW ISPRING AND SUTEIIER STOCK - notoriously insalubrious condition, audits im- no journal is kept of proceedings in such thatsessionof Congress. . character which soon developed Itself so alienated NOW OPEN. mediate evacuation by order of the Commis- Committee, and the results of the action of • From the above statement you will see that his subjects that they gradually fell away from LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF sinners, and its prompt cleansing and disin- the Committee alone are reported to the the 'idea of attaching a prohibitory proviso to him until now he seems to hold little territory oe- " TVIOU.RNING . BONNETS" House, it does not appeae by whom the pro - the bill, as an amendment to which it was of- yond that In the immediate neighborhood of De , faction, had the cheering result of entire im- vise was offered. It was, in fact, however, fared. arose simultaneously in the minds of bra Tabor,, which he has made his capital. IN , THE CITY. munity throughout the season, although the offered by Mr. Wilmot, of' Pennsylvania, several members, and that lam entitled to no Theodorus appears to be a man of great talent, • • Myers's Mourning Store, occupants were only excluded for a few days , under the circumstances hereafter to be men- very great, and no exclusive credit. My draft , courage and energy,. with a singular power of and over others. Mr. , Dutton, who SaW 1113 Chestnut Itreet, Girard Row. • The practical application of. disinfectants was tioned. What may have occurred at a New of the proviso happened to be adopted by the corm him in 1863 thusdescribes h "ills appear . , im :. soon reduced to a general system by means 0f 1847,1,0f course, do York dinner party, in - nails to o ttharnl not know; but l'am as well satisfied as I can Mr. Wilmot never contemplated any such dling stature, and possessed of a well knit, but • telegraphy, theco-operationof thepolice de , - • ' - be of anything that the idea of such a proviso i measure at that particular time, until I sag- not over powerful frame, conveying more the partment, and a corps of trained workman, originated among members of the House of I gested it to him. But he is entitled to the idea of being tough and wiry then of a strong D. M. LANE, who could generally be thrown upon any Representatives, in August,lBl 6 , and not out- credit of having offered it when requested, physical development. His complexion is dark, CARRIAGE BUILDER, Al l it. given point within an hour from' the time side of that body. , \ and of having faithfully adhered to its prinei-I approaching to black, but he hail nothing . of the respectfully invitee attention to his large etock of finished negro about him. Ills features are altogether Carriagee; also, orders taken for Carriages of ever, when the complaint was forwarded from the Byoreference to the House Journal you will I pies ever afterward. those of a European. His head is well formed, • description. at station -house. The infected building was pre- see that the proviso was attached by way Ofl have thus given you a hurried statement arid his hair is arranged in large plaits extend- . MANUFACTORY AND WAREROOMS. 6432, 5434 and 3436 MARKET street, amendment to a pending bill appropriating of my recollections in respect to the subject ing back from the forehead; His forehead is Three squares westf re amendment ben giladerpl a ria. ja2s-tu th slid moval of the tenants. Nothing was to be car- tiatlons for peace with Mexico. During the ceived, I was on the eve of starting on my black, full of fire, qck and piercing. His --........-------. ried out but the clothes actually worn. The . progress of the. war we had already acquired Spring tour of circuit duty, and I have Cu) nose ha's a little of the Roman about it, being . nE axe &A.. windows and chimneys were closed, and military possession of New Mexico and Cali- time to copy or recast what I have said. I elightly arched and pointed. His mouth IS perfect, and the smile which during the DR. HARTMAN'S chlorine or sulphurous acid gas set free. in . . fornia, and it was everywhere well under- append a fat simile of the original draft of conversation continually played itpon it, was ex- BEEF. IRON AND BRANDY, and stood that these were to be retained by the my proviso, as nearly as Jean make one, quantity in the chambers successively. The .,• • (tellingly agreeable, I may say faschiating. He AUertain Cnre for Consumption and all Diseases of the United States as permanent acquisitions, am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, has very little mustache or beard. His manlier Lunge or Bronchial Tutto , . house thus filled with gas being left undis- The representatives of the slaveholding inter ' JA FOB, BRINKERHOEF. in peculiarly pleasant, gTacious, and even polite, Laboratory No. 151.2 South FIFTEENTH Street. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY di COWDEN, turbed for eight or twelve hours, the tenants rest in Congress confidently calculated that , • ........._____. and his general expressiotheyen when his features • Old ARCII Street. 'were finally admitted. In this way, with the these would eventually become slaveholding I The Assassination or Mr. McGee - were at rest, was one of intelligence and bencvo- ROBERT SHOEMAKER di C 0.4 FOURTH and RACE Streets, oriental's Conversation with iumpyile. knee. On the whole, the physiognomist could fe2l4mll General Agents. ease of finished system, the encroachment of politi 1 strength of States, and so add to thecaThe MontreaLpapers publish reports of me find no trace of fierce passion save in the light- that interest; while on the other hand. many cholera was prevented. In 1867 new and en- • conversation between Whelan and Doyle, rung glance of his eyes. I watched for the keen --_, ~, ~,-;-.-,, ~, , ‘,---,,., , .„7,, ---- ,"irm 7 Democrats from the free States feared that who occupied adjoining cells in the jail in shot of light coming from them at times, and re- ao i slea ' nixc - the ' Teoth s .' " (ieetraing Inl j nial s c i iila which in larged powers were given to the Board, ane this would be the case, but were determined, 1 fleeted upon -what he could be capable of, but feet them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feela Ott h ' ' • ' d b awa, on t e lath inst., as it is reporte y • 1 felt of fragrance artd perfect cleanbucee in the mouth. It m ay • a tenement-house law passed which is in- if possible, to prevent it. Prominent among I Detective Cullen and a prisoner named Hess, il,e3 - did not strike me as. treacherous eye . .. tended to establish on a permanent basis im - the latter were Hale, of New Hampshire; that he could act savagely under irritation." He who overheard it. After speaking of persons recommend ft while ev, ! the aroma n and d m eternyenes, will provements which would otherwise have been Hamlin, of Maine; Preston King, Rathbun,day, that,at take occasion to remark sob eaue :a ot li t r e De r n y tis o t t , :s phy l e v i LcLm.wa o th rist. trt he had seen in the court-room on that g d us consumes avast quantity is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the ots Jenkins and Grover of New York; Dilliug- ~„ , "It'll blo ody hard - • but temporary. .. ii Deßill said to :go of arracky, he is no drunkard; that is, I have certain wassbes formerly In vogue. of Vermont and Wilmot, of Pennsyl- • ham, , , , Prof. E. P. Evans's account of the preeentwith me; I'll either swing or get penitentiary . never beard of him being overcome whit drinia th rr o n e u n c.nt_D n entis o rs, aminted with the constituents of vania. And, as for myself; I was conscioustaut a, advocate ße une, it contains nothing te for life; I don't care. I'm prepared for Ile always stops at a certain point." Prevent ita tuarestrained emplx . )yettent. Made only by • state of Pompeian discovery is a succinct of having rendered myself, by my course on , JAMES F. SHINN, Apothecary, , the worst. Turner swore bloody hard against - compilation of the annals of the enterprise; the question of the annexation of Texas 1 Important Whisky Seizure in (lin. Broa4 and Spruce streets. . 7 I me ; swore we were all bloody Feutaus. cinnati. For sale by Drasitota generally. and Inspecting Professor Fiorelli's history and somewhat-notorious for zeal, if not fbr (Its- Fred. Brawn, D. L. Stackhonge. 1 There were fourteen witnesses examined :he ' !From th e Cincinnati Theca, of the 2•ItIsl Robert C. Davis, journal, in Latin and Italian, and the French, (action, in favor of the policy of limiting the swore that he was an Englishman." 1 liareard dr Co., Geo. C. Bower. English and German works of Monnicr, Dr. further extension of slavery. 1 Doyle-" You're in a bad fix." . About halt-past two o'clock this morning, as 1 ) . /i- Kne env y ,a i Lieutenant Biernbaum and Sergeant Bercsford C. a . Ir. N;•edl, Ghee. Shivers. S. M. McCottim, • As for Mr. Wilmot, he, up to the time 'of I — T. J Iluaba t jd, B. C. Bunting, Dyer and Overbeck, are laid under contribu- "I don't' d d e _ ' were Making their olliCial rormds detected IN WM- care a-n ; all 1 . the introduction of the Proviso, was not gene- i peed upon is a good jury." sonic men unloading a lot whisky from the mme rim th, Chas IL Eberle. tion to make up this synopsis, which is the rally known among the members of the ' • Edward Parrith canal-boat Thomas Blackburn. Placing a guard Wm. B. Webb, ' James N. Marks. Doyle often said-What will haopen to , E. Bringhuret dif Co. best, latest and most readable that we House as being in favor of this policy; but I I • over the boat, the officer , cent for As=lstmt James L Binpham. Djott a Co., me : What will become of me? They can a, •d Q. '•! t'' • ' t, • ,- - ' II 'h .4 Co mbs, know of. bad more than once conversed with him on A vnlk ...dates ...s;tnnor Anger, w.... 0, In int: name yl t „ i f, " ' H. C. Blairs Sons. , u() nothing to me. -c '1 WIVPI% wveth dr. Bro. of the United Staten, took possession of the boat Mr. Charles Eliot No .tenths acting editor the subject, and knew that he felt and thought . ! Whelan answered him nothing would hap-I an d some 4(1(1 barrels of whisky, the whole being _________ ...__ ___ NEW ruimicAirrorrs. , as I did in regard to it. In addition-to this, . „_. Inserts two contributions, a bomb and a bub- 1 pen to sum, as they could prove nothing valued at about eno,ooo. The seizure was one he had become a favorite among Southern . • of the most important ever made in this section, ble. The first is his essay on "Religion " , members, for the reason that he was the only 1 agsmst him. . Do •I ' 1 I '1 d • 3 e sari - wish you i never one it, and ri fleets the highest praise on the officers for THE. GALAXY 'wherein he presents the modern idea of lib- member from Pennsylvania, of either party .the Ekillful manner in which they man ' l and 1 wish you'd never come near me that • • eged the Is now the mod Brilliant. Entertaining and Attractive erty as scattering the old edifice of respectand who had voted for the bill, then recently night, , affair. .._2______...... ..fts E ,aziLe published in this country. authority which is the church; his slighter ar- passed, largely reducing protective duties cm ' Whelan said-I would not have come near Crops in inarylana. May Number Now Ready. tide is a page of graceful platitude about the im p orts ' . you only I was drunk. Wl . = ta. Cambridge (Dorchester County) Newel 1 het. In thi• number 14 commenced a , nee story by the mom rondo. Novelist in thin coontry•3l MOON H At :- The session of Congress was about to close, The incessant rains have greatly rut trded (Mr visit of Mr. Dickens. D( I I' I' ' sy e--, im, m sorry ior you ; the whole LA ND. Rutter of "Alone "" I • - ''''' ' _, II dorm 1 ath," • ..,enienrs," farmers in their spring work. Plowing . is ithoont etc., esihd , the 'Bth of August htul, arrived, and under a I world will knoW it. - Mr. Charles Francis Adams, Jr., in his ' joint resolution already passed, the two I . ~, , entirety suspended, the soil being too Wet to ad- 4, REECIEIDALLIEI.. I ' , ! iN motor-Yes, I'm a great fellow ; I shot mit of any kind of culture. Many kinds of early Tlit, store will be elegantly Illustrated. es chapter ou ' . "Boston " completes his theme, Houses were to adjourn at noon on the Mu. . 7 • that fellow : have you here, and here lam vegetables which usually yield a tine profit to Id. The GALAXY 1110 W Contains , tatty per ce n t. more prophesying the return of commercial lie- The President bad sent in a special message i myself, which inakesehree of us. , those eng,agtd in izrowito . them for market, are, matter than heretofore. tivity to that beautiful harbor. His paper is asking the appropriation above alluded to. Du le asked him what he said-at the same I not vet planted. Very few of the f . 4 ult. the most elegantly illustrated. Magazine •,,ih -armers have timed it this country. 'Eat h hat /her will hay, four ' ele • • The messace was referred to a committee • the most immediately practical ill the volume, a • ' throe witness (Detective Cullen) turned round ' • - finished seeding their oats, and before the Anil is tent (till pugrd Rtter tions, on H i nted comer - which was then absent trom the House aud I lit, mu resume work, it will be too late in the Sea ' - . ' N1.1111E12: and appears to say the lest word in the argu- to Hess, bowing his head to call attention to . I. 1 10. redoes !MSS; A Story. By Harriet Pre , - engaged in its consideration. It was easy to , , son for the oats to mature. The fruit was not eiitt :spore d. the welds, on (Is. rnent. His plea is of the most reasonable, foresee that a bill in accordance with the ree-, sf rii•uSte injured by the late cold spell. 11. Di. it MIL LIU:, A IRES. Whelen repeated the same, using 1 being simply for enlarged discussion, and the commendations of' the message would soon be-- iv. Cl EMEN'I INA 111:•41"416/DE A Story, By E. again ".I. him • • these w ords :. shot like a dog. You're I Lunincit,-. ntroduction of some 'definite system and , introduced and pushed through the House with here ~ here. . igen I tutor. ;I ni l'm a great fellow; my name 1 MAULE, BROTHER & CO. V. Tlr r SoLDIER STATESMAN. • VI: TT, r; MI-GrtiMAiiE Ti) 3IECCA. By Aii, E. D. policy which shall adjust American com- , all the promptitude which a huge Democratic . will go down to posterity." ' I moo , r. ; majority and the force of party discipline,. I ) - l I . p merce according to the natural geogra:phical , • , 03 e-. me . un, lam sorry for,you. I 1868. SPRUCE JOIST. ,'.li ve ~9.05 :ALAI) WA ( ERS. By E. (I. Stedman. land could common( ; that an appropriationseheco :HOST. 1868 1111. 81.Lciii.A..,... ~..t.,,,,,, 1.. h. and IIL By Ma• advantages of' our great storing-places. lof money to negotiate a peace, with Mexico, WI a - -I(lidnotcare ` ' f ' , re at, - - --, only or ' entti - ce: dorsi% riou Harland. ' my, poor mother. Home( a K. - IX. IA Milts AN 1 / 'rum ceito:. lly It G. White. "Whatever is attempted "he concludes "let meant the purchase of Mexican territory for . • DEMUR K. A. FIVE lEAMi IN ,IA PAN. ile in D. B. Simmons. 7 7 . 1)0y le Ettid-Is she alive? ireethe K. • XI. STEVEN Lsi'ARENCE, YECISIAN. By Mrs. it be attempted knowingly and systemati- 1 , the benefit of the slaveholding interest. ' - Whelan-Yes; and my brother is in prison, LA h(: E. ivr )OK. Edwards. cally, in obedience to some natural law, and i IZanderthese eircumetances havin a consult ' . -- , a '• too. . LA mit: STOUIt. XII. 'lll, (I A 1., IX Y MISCELLANY-Short aud Bright acd with no, one, I set down and drew up the . I WI f . 1 lII.AVILE, natural - 1m az co., Aril, les. XIII. DIU ET. WOOD. By Philip Quillbet, in response to some acknowledged demand. . Doy e- nit or ? 2.500 sour ii STREET. proviso in the exact language in which it now ! '• x iv. ili l• RATIEE ART, etc., et e. "Quotation and Originality" is a collection: I Whelan-ifenitinisne for tiring the police 18 , - , - Fl 0101,1,• FDA MING Üb. FLOIZIDA' FLJORIis6: - 'c't .it v• Ni ß: I .11. Be' Ihe Editor. 'lBbo l'ill'e :11, ante ; ri , f per year. Now is the time to Sub • appears on page 1,283 of the journal, tel 1: •• .1 ' T 11 - eh I'l Ol WM fi ' it a no colt. ,LINA Ft 0011150. . nerd,. of the wise saws and modern instances which l in in the draft, as nearly as I could Croat 4111 f "" 11l u °ll- ' rc au • g tawny my mother Lad-what a tine lot al vn,.I.NIA ELOoItING, Iwo• have accumulated in the commonplace -book ; memory, the language of the prohibitory. DELAWARE 11.00 RIND. Three copies er nt tor a year to , rae ader , on fol' 10 1/1) ' ' boys. One thing, they were fond of Ireland. 1 Alt ri.otatiNo. humph , copy eint on receipt o• 15 cents. of Ralph Waldo Emerson, since his last dis- 1 clause of the ordinance of 1787 for the goy- Dee was shot at the firing of the police bar- ' WALNUT ELOOItrIG. SHELDON & COMPANY ,_ I FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. ape:: Or stu :It . Nr, , ..ns !ind 500 liroadivay, N. burthening. It is by no means in his best ' ernment of the territory northwest of the . I - Ohio river, with such additions 33 seemed ne- , lack, one is in prison for the same, and I in RAIL PLANK. writing; it is more disjointed than is usual • nere. • Whelan then sung, a couple of songs, ' 1 t t c,..! WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. I eel-Fiery to adapt it to the purpose :timed at. 1868 1 , tyr itEaDY-ItiNGDAM's LATIN GRAMMAR-- even with him; but it is such a crude mass of ' II ''completed thel- ft I first.took 't itl, mg ( I,t , 1 , - and there WIS a long silence. .u. - I ' .a..e. WALNVT BoA RDS AI I) PLANK. . 'WALNUT BOARDS. • e.l Nell' Edition.--A Grammar (d the Latin Laughago for the I he , t edam], WM; exert:lnt , cud vocabularies by Doylo called him, saying, 1 do not know WALNUT PLANK. half-digested rumination as could be found ;with its interlineations and erasures, at once ! NV Minor Meehan), . Al., Superintendent of the Bingham what they'll do with me. : •. &heel. IQi ; , :, - 4 i UNDEIVI AKERS' LUMBER. under the tongue of no other man living. to Samuel T. Vincent, of Ohio, one of the . , Whelan anstaared- aou are all right, my JA-)uk_.-• 1 .; N 01:111 AKERS' LUMBER. 1868 • The Publishere take pleaeure In annooncing to Teachers Professor Lowell contributes, iu a stVle as I 1 . leaders of the Whig 1 arty on the floor se me bo.,. RED CEDAR. • and trir lido of Education generally, that the new edition .) They can do nothing to you. Taey WALNUT AND PINE. of the above work is now ready, and they invite a careful House Having read it he asked if the examivatinn of the same. and a comparison with other parabolic and florid as that of his original, • a may keep you a week or perhaps a fortnight. . members on my side of the House would LH. 1 wish 1 •1868. .•,• .0, •''DPOPLAR, , 1I Ab .I. -10.T.0, Is elks on the Fame nubject. Copies will bo furnished to a rich meditation, on Shakespeare. It is I eis sweet; was as sa t e as you. EASON ED CHERRY. 1.011001. Teachers llnd Superiutendeute of Schools for thin purpose support that. answered that sonic of them. A*ll. at low rates. crammed full (Anew observations and old would. He then advised me to be on the I Whelan said they have traced me step by . WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARD?. Price 5 , 1 50. • i step ever since 1 mine into the country; HICKORY. Publiehed by E. 11. BUTLER Zir, CO., ones put forth with the elasticity of new. He alert, and when the bill came iu, and was re- ! 137 South Fourth Wed, bloodythingl every stirs again the troubled question of Hamlet's ferred to the Committee on the Whole, to get . 1860. CIGAR BOX MAKERS. . And for sate by 13oolisellers generally. aMil traced it; 'it all came out in the court I: d 0- ay; SPANISH cIIDAR BOX lemons. 'insanity. His amiable weakness in• the floor and oiler it. I said to him "No, I ...,., . doing . . , • that O'Reilly is a-- - ; I thought I'd faint FOR SALE LOW. . Lecturee.-A nes. Deane ei Lectures, fit delivered at the am not theanan to offer a• 1 am suspected of: ' New York Museum of A intt only, embracing Me t he this we should pass over were it not that he , • ' when Turner Came up, but I bore it up like i ()foe; CAROLINA' SCANTLING. 1868. Jec.,,:Dow to live and what to live for; Youth, Maturity i oeing opposed to it, and the floor will not , pm.. CAROLINA 11. T. SILLS. and Old Ago; Manhood generally reviewed; The cause of shares it with the whole world of commenta- i iol a man • there was not the slightest sign on -I , I pro ra ybe awarded to me. But Wihnot, NORWAY SCANTLING. indigestion, fistulruce and Nerveue.ni4easers accounted tors, whom some infection from the mania- you know, is the favorite of the Southern me. LARGE ASSOItTiMENT. for. Pocket volumee containing theentectures will bla for. Doyle-Ale he's the last man I over 1868. cEDAtt silt n GLES. warded to parties unable to attend ,on , ocelpt of four stamps, by addressing J. J. Dyer, 65 &him' street, Bog play attacks in common on this eternal members, and he can get the floor when I 1868 thought they'd bring up; so he'll get the re- -L. CEDAR SHINGLE'S. • ton. . ,i -; iota tyt theme: all Seem to have their eyes sealed to cannot; and he, I know, is all right, for I wag., CYPRESS SHINGLES. reasYL'HING LATH. VOOKII, BOUGHT, SOLD AND EXCHANGED AT the fact that abakespeare, who in his master- have talked with him. He is the mall to W helan-He will,but his evidence amounts CHESTNUT PLANK AND BOARDS. Es. ,JAMES BARR'S. 1105 Market axon. Phil's. , felii•ls oiler it." Of course, no one then knew tragedy even oftener than elsewhere lays down to nothing-all he knows is what Was said •186 b. stesoNoo oLSielti;.usiii:.---1-8-68. POC - liE 1•71140 - 11.11 iii. PORTEDIONNIJES.dai whom t he Speaker would select as Chairman SEASONED CLEAR PINE. his little hints and portrait-sketches for the of the Committee on the Whole;1 but it was the and done in Montreal, but what's to come is elooast PATTERN PINE. authentic view of things, has furnished his taken for granted that he would be some one worst. All I depend upon is a good SPANIciI CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. I LORIDA RED CEDAR. offlilfft/Zgor ! ealo s jury. D1A111,..E, BIRO mutt et 0 '" l liffl hero with a speech that sets the moot point- under the pro-slavery influences. Concur- e, Ar. it. helan said-during the time the above 2.500 SOUTH STREET. -- Of was intended so-in a light as clear as ring in my suggestions, Mr. Vinton volua- conversation —_______ g •_ ()Witte( -s 0 tn, lou and me leered to inform the members of his ploy heaven. Hamlet, just before his death, in a . - . - ' must quit telling about what you know. You PFIEL AN & BUCK.NELLI ' - Pocket Books, from the North of what was going on, and to I 4 moment of unquestioned sanity, declares that rally them to the vote when it cause. I then , understand those might be listening a. , Portemonntes, , Op , • 4 os I he is at times punished with a sore distraction, took the proviso to Mr. Wilmot, and re- • around. • Twenty-third and Chestnut Sts, ,e, o Clgar Cases, •-, o li o i Doyle--All right. 'LARGE STOCK OF asr ~,, _ . Portfolios, I V' • that certain rudenesses offered to Laertes were quested him to read it. Having done 80, he .: "ii, a, I There was a long silence and a talk about WALNUT, A3ll AND POPLAR. i'i 441 i Dressing Cases, e ,3 iii. involuntary, the effect of his madness, and as said, "Well, those are my sentiments." 1 - 1 indifferent matters. Then Doyle called to . ALL TII.IIatNESSEs,CLEAN AND DRY. , cj c4 if i Rankers' CAM • a • a i.. FINE LOT WALNUT VENEERS. ••• - responded, "I know it. And now will you ' • injurious to himself as to the recipient; that iri I • . , him mad asked what would his (Doyle'sThoor CEAAR, CYPRESS AND WHIFF: PINE SHINGLES. oiler that as an amendment to the special ap- • SEASONED LUMBER, Rosewood ' ' Ladles' & Gents' • owe ,. such a case his madness 13 poor Hamlet's 1 • • bill ,• • . • wile and children do? • MICHIGAN, C ANADA AND ooraNSYLVANIA, A propriationnow concocting la commit- I WI el id-The 're all right: r ' I' an sa ,y lou ll get ALL SIZES AND QUALITIES. a Satchels and V ;, and Gents , • enemy, and that he disclaims, in "this pre- ( tee, .at the propel' time when the bill , . FLOORING AND HEAVY CAROLINA TIMBER. Mahogany S Travelling Bags, e• Dressing • tience," from any purposed evil to "his bro- comes in?" Ile replied, "I have no objee- . ~. 1 out in a few days. They have your pension SPRUCE:AND HE'SILOCK JOiST. • Writing . • .s. ' if' you're gent. BUILDING LUMBER OF ALL KINDS. - Desire. :' In all styles, il , MBE>, thee" This elaborate declaration, in the high tions," and copied my draft, and returned to Doyle mii(l- No; they'll lose it. . mbesent •.. , • me the orieinal now before me. I then passed' solemnity of his last hour, wee never intended t IN helan-W e are four married men. in to it, group of members standing together, A GENERAL ASSORTMENT ,NAVAL STORES. Doyle-Who? for courtly fibbing; and only needs to be engaged in earnest and exciting cenversation, OF ' --- "S BARREIR NO. 1 AND PAT coupled with his warning of intended dissinin- amid joined them. Among them certainly : - ' Whelan-Euriolit has three or four child- "Retail; ieo boucle Comm ten ; Murphy hes t No; you have two; I have BUILDING LUMBER „ 1. In 'Mord mull - No. SS No t lation to the soldierS, to define the fact that were Rathbun, Preston King and Hamlin; noire. .ap: Shakespeare meant to delineate such a coin- and Grover, Hale, :Jenkins and Dillingham, ! Doyle said-You're the best off.. L. • Ord perhaps others, were probably with--; plication US. Ills myriad-faculty would best Whelan - Yes the 11 • !HARD WOODS. ~ , 0 woman can scratch them ; but of this I am not so certain. I , . . enjoy-the actor finally overborne by his part, then found that not myselfalonehad b 1 for herself. I saved Cullen's life one time. A . Le° a ' ; ! fellow had him re vered at fifteen yard s .. H. , - F H • . WILLIANIR ~:. 'and infected with real touches of the insanity wink in the matter. Some of them,also, had , be at first assumed. - drawn up an amendment which they pro- ,Sketch or'! heodore, king of aina4istitirt. o', * t than d s in , tven eat pr g Garden Streete, ..... . Other studious pa pe rs are Mr. Cabot's on posed to offer to the expected bill, anet they I The Emperor Theodore, Mr. Dutton tells us 1 showed me what they had written. I showed • ' TrilreS Btu th sm was twin about 1820 in the province of Kwara, - '. -eriefax,..., ;lege] Prof. Whitney's plea for fresher ito the wes tof Viliell is situate( Lake Tzana,'and ' ' di CO, An.. - .-.......:7------___ ' them the proviso which I had drawn, and COPAIITNERSIIIPS. methods than the oriental ones in studying f orhis uncle wits Governor. His mother 110ARDIING. some reason, probably because mine was of which Vedic literature, Mr. Raphael Pumpelly's was, according to some, of low extraction; but, 331-11LADEL FEBRUARY ler Ma More brief, and conformed more closely to accordingshe'of ' d ~ .t: Me. J. H. Butler (brother of E. H.'Butler) is a part. to others, WAS good birth, ttn - , review of "Western Policy in China," and the language of the prohibitory clause of the could even trace her descent from the Queers of nor i n lb m train and after this . date. review a CO , .. - ----- e' AL STO It Itti.--176 BARRELS NO. I AND PALE Nll,•ein ; .l.lkl ham le No. 2 Roeln ; 100 barrels Common FORIII ; HO barrels Wilminron Pitch. In 'dor° and for ride by COUIRAN, lICI3SELL • di. CO.. NO: '*2- th Freer f beet. Nortf • 011. r.— 1,1100 tig.S. W. SRERM OIL; .. LOCO GALS. Bleached W. Whole Oil; I,kou golB. !tacked Whale C 111; 1.200 hatural Winter lit halo hilt 4. ... , 0 hbls NO.I Lard 1.11. in rtere and for sale by COCHRAN, RUSSELL a CQ... No. 2'2 hOT t h Front greet. . . • ap2l..tf "Ijt,WItER.--GUNNINCI AND 131.-A—STING POWligli, 1 . F,. Fl?. FFF, American Sportinit Kentucky Me, ,Duck Shooting and the various lauds 01.thill VOwdor, coriptivnily on - hand -and for sale .by tiOCIAPI, RA RUB sim m t . co, ‘ A gin & foe Kapanowder Co ap27tf QtiMMER BOARDING:—FILICRBILE ROOMS, WITH 1.7 board, now vacant at MU Locust street, West Phila. delptda. oPZlna• NIETAIL DR GOODS. E. M. NEEDLES & CO.t. 11.01 Chestnut Rt., Call eroded attention to their largo invoices of SPRING GOODS, In new and desirable deolims, which they offer at grit? , A that cannot fail to give oatinfactiou, connoting of Laces and Lace Goods, Veils and Veil Material in Colors, White Goods anti Embroideries, Handkerchiefs, &0., &0., Linens and House• Furnishing Dry Goode, In Great Variety. Ladles will find It to their advantage to call and cs. amino our largo stock of Piques and Material for White Waists.. E. M. NEEDLES & CO. JOMANI HERS, NO. 810 ARCII STREET. ,, ,GREAI' . BARGAINS FROM AIITE lICTIt Goons PS IN WI Id:Anatol and Pique. , for $ eta. Plaid Nainirook, fAcente. Stripe BINIAII Mu.lin, 213 et,. French Marlin two yda" wide. 60 de. French Tucked Miniln for %Valeta. Lama Lace Pointer. hargaint. Marie Antoinette Fichua. Lama rare ol Coven , . Colored Trinim g llambarg Edginga and Imam Mad. choice deflate, abou' half the cort of Importation. ap lm; T ARCH": 81 OCR: OF gig LTB, VERY CHEAP. IA Honeycomb Quitta, from 81 75 up. Allendale QQuilts, }IOU) $3l 50 up. Lanearter ttuiPa. from 81 til up. Jacquard Quilt , ,of %irfoil]. patternr. Marmillex quiltr, at 85. 84. $7. BF, $8 and $lO, Smuc of there are beautiful patterns and vtfry fino quality. J bey have been bought lately, a... 4 I am offering thew Von low, OrRANVILLE 11. HAINES, 1013 Market street, above 'tenth. MEW Cl lENFA STYLES /iF FANCY SILKS. S'fRIPE SILKS. . PLAID SITIO PLAIN SILK'S tOltl+ED SILKS. SUPERIffit BLACK SILK'S. EVENING EIMING ADA'S, EDWIN HALL it CD.. swab Second etrv.q. 3 7- 00 C IY'ZEN HEN! mE.vs . riTeit • IiANDKER. CHlEFS—Pnrchseed at A uctlon,—lX and 2 inch Hein., 15 and LO. worth 1 5 and $1; I,;ti and 2 inch lion., 52it andls. worth al and el 25; 2 and 3 inch Hem-, $1 and el i 5, worth ei 50 and 6 . 3. Gents' Hemmed Stitched Handkerchief..., only el The above suod* are the cheareat ever offere d by un. STOKES is Arch Iftzeet. QPRING DREs3 Goons. s_i We Ott today WO plerce Mozambrquifte, at b 4 cent, per yard. CUP-WEN Eat ‘IJ4IOA RT & lIKO . ZAK,P, - 464), 4&2 an 1414 North drannd etreet. 1r E OFFER TODAY ONE IWNDRYAD Co , ,k;• Spring (.'n,rdincree, to thedf urn and light colon!, trona GO to hi, ccrat 'pc: yard CI:RWEN STODDAPJF d: BRO.. Noe. 4AP. 4b2 nvd 5.;),1 North Secoudrtrpet. GROCERIES" LIQUORS. &V. Fresh Spiced Salmon, Fresh Mackerel in Cans, New Smoked Salmon, Mess Mackerel in Kitts_, ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Deafer in Fine Groceries, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. - Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. ra.sristrams. reAc3lE4, PEKES. FRENCH 1•E.1 • tdUSIIROOM.d. GREESVALN, at JAMES It. WEBB'S, Ift2e S. E. corner WALNUT and EJWITLI Streets. [ ret -t. • b 4 "<e`ii,Y J c)‘k• \, COLGATE & CO.'S Fragrant Vollet Soap.). are prepared by skllletl workinVlN from the best: materials. and rare known as the srAnin- AIM 'by dealers and customers. BURLINGTON! BURLINGTON! herring! Herring! Genuine, a I'. MitcholVe agentl4 for rale of name. KN111(111'011`litt TIAVIS` CELEBRATED DIAMOND BRAND (UN cinnati Elam first consignment of tho gown. just ro• caved and for onto at MUSTY'S Egad End Grocery, Noy 118 South Second Street. • - IeREBIIPEACIIE B FOR PIES, IN Mb. CANS AT 2% .I cents Der can, Green Coro, Tomatoes, Peas, aleci French Peas and Musbrooms, in No and for COUSTYI3 East End Grocery. No. 118 Routh Socotra street. NEW BONELESS MACKEREL, YAMS 017T1.11 Bloaters t Sraced Salmon, Mem and No. 1 Mackerel for sale at COUBTY'S East End Grocery. N 0.1113 South Second Street. EST INDIA HONEY AND OLD FASHIONM VT Sugar House Molasses by the gallon, at °DUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 119 South Second Street. (1110 ICE OLIVE 100 doz. OF SUPSEIOR QUALI- Jty of Sweet Oil of own importation, Just receiveit , and for sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery. No. 111 South Second street. A 1 4 MERIA GRAPEB.-1.00 REGB ALMERIA GRAPES. Joh- in larg bylue and of ettperfor quality, In store. and for rale M. F. BPILLIN. N. W. corner Eighth arid' Arch etreeta. -• • pEINCEBB ALMONDIL—NEW CROP PRINCESS PA. _p_erehellAlmon le lust received and for ode by M. V. BPI - 1...L1N. N. W. cor. Arch and Eighth street& DAISINB I k RAISINS I 1-2*o wrfoi,, HALF AND) quarter boxes of Delano Grown Raisins, the bee fruit in the market, for sale by M. F. BPS,N. W. cor. Arch and Eighth streets. WATOIENES. J ' Di Oil/114AM l imns LADorii us & Co. buxom) DEALERS 41 JEWELERS. WATCHE JEW tz INF. it JEWEL ERS. WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED, IL__ 802 Choßtrnut St., Philala.iii4 ,)! Would Malta the attention of purchasers to their !aryl Mock of GENTS' AND LADIES' WC S 9 Jug received,of the finest European malterajndependent. Quarter Second, and Self , winding ; in Qold and Silver Cases. Alw, American Watches of all sizes. Diamond Sot, Pinsjituds, Rings,ctie. Coral,Malachlto. Garnet and EtruscanSete In great variety. Solid Silverware of all kinds, including a large assort ment suitable for Bridal Presents. fire 4846 0 : 25 V 1 6 7 $2O 000 AND $lO,OOO TO 'MAN FOR FIVE erty. street. Apply to y k ar lt o . ofll J l o l' N " E ig d a , g jonvoyapcor. 592 Walnut _ . 25._0(10. k1 11) 115 OW WANTED ON MORTGAGE Flrsalasge l eVitie:s 3 . " Apply propa t ties, centrally katu Men. f 42 Walnut kraal. to E. E. JONE 3. a1)25-Btil EW TURKEY PRUNES LANDING Delaware SALE AA by J. B BUBBIER & C0..108 South avenue Sold everyvvhoto. my2l•tudtlh•ly; THE IM P.I4A 0 H MENT TRIAL. CLOSE OF YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS. SPEICCEI 01' MON THOMAS WIMIAMS. ' Mr. WILLIAMS, of Pennsylvania, another of the managers, followed Mr. Stevensin a speech' which he read from manuscript. Mr. President and Senators of the United States : Not used to the conflict of the forum, I appear in your presence to. day in obedience to command of the Representativee of the American people, -under a sense of responsibility which I nave never felt before. The august tribunal where judges are the elect of mighty provinces, the presence at your bar of the representatives of a domain that rivals in extent the dominions of the Caesars, and of a etvillzatiog that transcends any that the wo id has ever seen—to de mand judgment on the high delinquent whom they have arraigned in name of the American peoylc for high crimes and misdemeanors against the state, the dignity of the Celle quill, himself a king. .in every thing but the pomp, parephernalin, and inheritance of royalty, to there Crowded galleries anti, more than all, that greater world outside. which stands on tip-t le, as it strains its cars to catch from the electric messenger the first tidings of a verdict which is either to fiend a thrill of joy throughout an afflicted land, or to rack it over with the throes of anarchy and the convulsions of deepair -all remind me of the colossal proportions of the issue you are assembled to try. I cannot but remember, too, that the scene before me is without an example or a parallel in human his tory. Kings, it is true, have been uncrowned, and royal heads have Whin upon the scaffold. but in two instances only, as I think have the formalities of law been involved to give a coloring of order and justice to the bloody tragedy. It is only in a free land that a constitutional tribunal has been charged for the first time with the sublime task of vindicating an out raged law sgauiat the highest of its ministers, and passing judgment upon the question whether the ruler of a Union steal be strapped under the law, and without shock or violence of the power which he has abused, This great occasion was not sought by us. The world bears the repress ntatives of the people witness that they did not come here for light and transient causes, but for the reason only that the issue has been forced upon them by a long series of bold assumptions of power on the part of the Executive. following each other with almost the blazing and blinding continuity of the lightning of the tropics, and culminating at last in mortal charge which, in the defense of their • constitutional power as a branch of the American Congress, and as faithful reminds over the liberties of the people, it was impossible for them to decline. With the open defiance of the legislative will they are left, of course, with no alternative but to abdicate, or rule and vindicate the right to make law and see that it was obeyed. • He proceeded to state that the matter now presented for the decision of the Senate was not a quarrel be tween two officers, but an issue between the Execu tive and the American people. He, too, would ask, Who is Andrew Joheatony and would answer the ques tion in a different manner from the Piceidenes ceun cil. He then intimated that Johnson's opposition to eticeesion in the Senate was, perhaps, prompted by a doubt whether the step was advisable at that particu lar time; but however that might be, he would con sider him as he la now- and has been since he came into power. Mr. Williams held that the master key to all his conduct. as President, was a desire to favor and up hold traltore, and to force the rebel States into the 'Union on his own plan, against the expressed will of Congress and the leyai people, and went on to recite a great number of acts of the President, which he claimed were usurpations and offenses. explainable only on the above supposition. The culmination of this long series of usurpations, violations of his oath of office arid indecencies, was his attempt to displace Mr. Stanton in contempt of the tenure-of-office act. Ile said ii wanted one drop more to make a cup of - forbearance over flow, one other act that ehoa'd reach theeensorium of the nation, and make eyen teose et ho might be plow to comprehend a principle, under stand that further forbearance was ruin to ns all, and that eel was done in the attempt to seize. by force or stratagem that department of the government through , welch itt armies were controlled It was but a logi cal oternence of what had gone before the great pur eo92. /t did not rise, perhaps, beyond the height of many of the crimes by,which it was ushered in. But its meaning corral not be mistaken. It was an act that emote upon the ear of the nation in such a way is to render it impeisalble that it could be either concealed, disparaged or excused as were the muffled blows of the pick-axe that had been attend,' under mining the 'bastions of the Republic. It has been beard and felt through all our wide domain like the re verberation of the guns , that opened their iron throats upon our flag at Sumter, and it has stirred the loyal heart of the people again with the electrical power that 'lifted it' to the height of the sublimest issue that ever led a martyr to the stake or a patriot to the battle field. That people is here to-day, through its repre sentative*, on your floor, and in your galleries, in the persons alike of the veterans who have been scarred by the iron bail of battle, and of the mothers and wives and daughters of those win have died that the Republic might live, as well as of the commission ex ponents of the public will, to demand the reward of their toile, the consummation of their triumph—the award of a nation's justice upon the high ofeender. And now as to the immediate issue which I propose to disuse only in its constitutional and legal aspect. 'The great crime of Andrew Johnson, as already re marked, running tbroueD, all his administration, is that be has violated his oath of office and his constitu tional dirties, by obstruction and infraction of the Con etit neon and the laws. and an endeavor to set up his own will against that of the law-making power, with a view to a settled and persistent purpose of forcing the rebel States into Congress on his own terms, in the Interest of the traitors and in defiance of the will of the loyal people of the United States. The specific offenses charged here, which are but the culminating lame and only the last of a long series of usurpations, are of an unlawful attempt to remove the rigatful Sec retary of War, and sueetitnte in his place a creature of his own, without the advice and consent of the Senate, althougb then in session: a conspiracy to hin der and prevent him from resurnink or holding the said office after the refusal of the Senate to concur in tale seepenaion; and to seize. tar e and pos sess the property of the United States in raid department; an attempt to debauch an officer of the army from hie allegiance by incul cating insubordination to the law in furtherance of the same object, the attempt to set aside the rightful au thority of Congress, and to bring it into public odium and contempt, and to encourage resistance to its laws by the open and public delivery of indecent harangues, impeaching its acts and purposes, and full of threats and menaces against it and the laws enacted by it, to the great scandal and degradation of his own high office as President, and the devising and contriving of unlaw ful means to prevent the execution of the tenure-sae office, army appropriation, and reconstruction acts of March 2, 1867. To allow these, which relates to the attempted removal of the Secretary of War, the an swer ire First, that the case of Mr. Stanton is not within the meaning of the first section of the tenure-of-office act; second, that if it be, the act is unconstitutional and void, so far as it undertakes to abridge the power claimed by him of removing, at anyand all times, all executive officers, for causes to bejudged of by him self alone, as well as of suspending them indefinitely at his sovereign will and pleasure; and third, that whether the act be constitutional or otherwise, it was his rightess he claims it. to have been his purpose, to olsobey and violate it, with a view to the settlement of the question of its validity biee judiciary of the United States. And first as to the question whether the present Secretary of War was intended to be comprehended within the first section of that act referred to. The defendant Insists that he was not, for the reason that he derived his commission from Mr . Lincoln, and not being removes] on hie accession continued by reason thereof to hold the office and administer its duties at his pleasure only, without at any time having received any appointment from himself. Maiming, as I un derstand, either that under the proviso to the drat sec tion of this act the case was not provided for, pr that by force of its express language his office was deter mined by the expiration of the first term of the Pres!. • dent who appointed him. The body or enacting clause of this section provides that every person then hold ing any civil office who had been appointed thereto by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, or who should be thereafter appointed to any such office, should be entitled to hold until a successor is ap pointed in the like manner. ' It is therefore that its general object was to provide for all cases either then existing or to happen in the future. Mr. Williams then discussed the proviso which it was allege° excluded Mr. Stanton from its • operation. He had himself suggested that amend meat. and explained its meaning in the committee of • conference, and he had never dreamed that such a construction would be put upon it. As read by the President's counsel, it would be contrary to the par poee of the bill. Air. Stanton's case was certainly meant to lie covered, if it was not the original cause of its introduction. He claimed that the principles • of the Constitution required the proviso to oe con strued itethe light of the purpose of the law,and hold that the objection that Mr. Stanton did not come within its effect, because not formally appointed by Mr. Johnson, might be termed a quibble. At this point the Senate took a recess. On reassembling, at three o'clock, Mr. WILLIAMS • considered the defense set up "that the law is uncon stitutional, which he characterized as a defiance and • challenge to Congress. He continned,but let us see what there is in the Con stitution to warrant these extravagant pretensions or to prevent the wane of a law to restore the practice of this government to the true theory of that in strument. The case may be stated, as I think, ana lytically and synoptically, thus: The first great fact to be observed is that, while the Constitution enumer ates sundry offices, and provides the manner of ap pointtnent in those cases, as well as in all others to be created jay law, it prescribes no tenure except that of good behavior in the case of the judge, and is entirely silent on the 'subject of removal by any other process than that of impeachment. From this the inferences are— First. That the tenure of good belittelor - being sub stantially equivalent to that for life, the office must in all other casea be determinable at the will of some de partment of the government, unless limited" by law, which is, however, bat anothei name- for the will of the law-maker himself, and this is settled by authority. Second. That the power of removal at will being an implied ono, only I 8 to be conferred to those cases wbero the tenure is not ascertained by law, the right of removal in any other form than by the process of impeachment depending entirely on the hypothesis of a will, of which the essential condition always is that it to free to act Without responAlbility. Third. That the power of removal being implied as anecessity of State, to secure the cependence of th), officer on the government, is not to be extended by o peirnesion CO as to take bun out of the centre) or the Legislature and make him dependent On the will of the BUCBtINI3. The next point is, that the President is, by the terms of the Constituti 11, to nominate, and by awl with rho advice and consent of the Senate "app kite to all nicer., end that wit hidit the concurrence be np points to none, except when authotazed by Congress; and this may he described by the rule of the Consti tution. The' exceptions are: First, That in the cases of inferior officers, the Congress may lodge this power with the President alone. or with the (musts or beads of depertman's; and, second, That to cases of money happening during the recess of the S. nate he may not appoint, but fill them up by granting com missions to expire and at the end of the next Beset Al of that body, froin which it appears: First, That the President cannot, as already. stated. in any case appoint alone. without the express au thority of Congress, and then only in the case of in- Tenor officers. Secuna, That the power to supply even an acci dental vacancy was only to continue until the Senate wee in a condition to be consulted, and to advise and act upon the case; and, Third, As a corollary from these two propositions, that if the power to remove in cases where the tenure is indefinite, be as it is solemnly conceded by the Sa ps( sae Court of the I'Llited States —ln re &flan, 13 Pet.—an incident to the power to appoint, it belongs to the President and Senate, and not to the President alone. As it was bold in that case to 1)0 in the judge who Riede the appointment, the argument upon which this implied a merely infantile power, not of filling op, but of making a vacancy during the recess, which 18 now claimed to extend to the making of a vacancy at any time, has been defended, is, First, The possible necessity for the exercise of such a power during the recess of the Senate. Second. That the power of removal is a purely ex - ecutive function, which, passed by the general grant in the first section of the second article of the Consti tution would have carried the power to appoint if tin provided for, and is to to considered in him in all cases wherein it has not been expressly denied. or lodged in other hands; while the association of the Senate, the same not being an executive body. is an' exception to the general principle, and seems to he taken strictly, so as not to extend thereto. Third. That it is essential to the President. as the responsible head of the government, charged by his oath with the execution of the same, that he stionld control his own anbordinatee by making their tenure of office to depend upon his will, so as to make a unit of the administration. • The answer to the first of these propo.itions is that there is no necessity for the exercise of the power dur ing the recess, becaase the case supposed may be pro vided for by Congress, ae it has been by the act now in question, under the express constitutional au thority, to mass all laws which shall be necessary or proter for carrying into execution all powers vested in the government or in any department thereof. A power which, by the way, is very strongly claimed by one of the President's counsel to be art tntplied one To the second the answer is, that whether an execa• tive power or not depends on the structure of the government, or, in other words; on what the Consti tution makes it that the clause in question tabut a disturbance. That if all 'executive power is in the President, then by parity of reason all legislative power is in Congress without reference to the Cons i tutiisre that the Senate is not only associated with the President in the general appointing pswerr, but that the power itself may be withdrawn by bon grees almost entirely from both under the provision in regard to inferior 4silicers, which would involve a repugnancy to the general grant relied on, if the power be an executive one; that If the provision had been made for appointments in the Constitution the power to supply the omission would have resulted to the law Maker under' the authority Put quoted to make alt laws that might be necessary or proper for carrying into execution all power vested in the government or any department thereof which carries with it the power to create all offices. and that moreover the power of removal in the only case wherein it is re ferred to, is made a j , rdicial one. To the third the :Insect. is: First. That however natural it may be fur the President, after an unchecked career of usurpa tion for three long years, derive: which he has need his eabordinates generally as the sissyish ministere of his will, and dealt with the affairs of thie nation as if he had been its master, also as well as theirs, greatly mistakes and magnifies his office, as has been already shown in the fact that, under the Constitution, he may be stripped= at any time by Congress of nearly the whole of the appoint ing power, and. second, that the responsibility of the President is to be graduated by, and can only be com mensurate with, the pdaver that is assigned to him, that the obligation imposed on him is to take care that the laws are faithfully executed.and not his will, which is so strangely assumed to be the only law of the exalted functionary who surround him, and that it is not only not essential to the performance of this duty, under the law that beads of departments should be the mere passive instru ments of his will. but the very contrary. Upon this brief statement of the argument, it would seem as if there could be nb reasonable doubt as to the meaning of the Constitution. Be then discussed the judicial authorities cited by the Presidents counsel, arguing that they afforded no countenance to his views, but Settled the points that Congress may fix the tenure-of-office so as to prevent removals by the President, and that his power to re move, eo far as it existed, was one implied from his yowl r to appoint. Against the legislative construction which was ad duced in support of the President's theory on this subject, he cited passages from the Federalist, from Webster's and Calhonnta speeches, and from the writ ings of Kent and Story, to show that the interpreta tion put on the Constitution by Congress in 1769 was erroneous, and worthy of reversal. He also called, attention'to the fact that the laws referred to were passed by a very small majority in the House, and in the Senate only by the vote of the Vice-President, who had a direct interest in their passage. Be then said: But admitting the act of 1769 to im part in its extent all that it is claimed to have de cided, it is further insisted that :his untoward pre cedent has been ripened into unalterable law, by a long and fininterrupted practice in conformity with it. If it were even true as stated, there would be nothing marvelous in the fact thatet had been followed by caber legislation of a kindred character It is not to be doubted that a general opinion did prevail foe many years that all the officers of the government not otherwise provided for in the Constitution, ought to be held at will, for the obvious reason among others, that it rendered the process of removal easy, by mak ing an impeachment unnecessary. The only question in dispute was, In whose hands this power could be moat appropriately lodged. It so happened, however, that the first of oar Pres idents brought with him into the office an elevation of character that placed him above all suspicion, and as sured to him a confidence so unbounded that it would nave been considered entirely Bate to vest him with unlimited command. and it was but natnral, as it was certainly highly convenient, that the exercise of that will which was to determine the life of the eificer, should be lodged with him. It is so lodged; but is there anything remarkable in the fact that the prece dent, having been set, should have been followed up in' the practice of the government? It would have been still more remarkable if it hod been otherwise. It was a question of patronage and power, of reward ing friends and punishing enemies. A succeesful candidate for the Presidency was always sure to bring in with him a majority of the popular branch at least, -along with a host of hungry folio were, flushed with their victory and hungering after spoils. Was it expected that they should abridge his power to reward his friends, or air their own virtue by self denying ordinances? That wonld have been too much for men and politicians too. Not Though the wisest statesmen of the country had realized and deplored for forty years, at least, the great vice which had been gnawing into the very entrails of the State •and threatened to corrupt it in all its members, there was no remedy left but the intervention of that Providence which has purified the heart of the nation through ;he blood of its children, and cast down the man who but yesterday might have stood against the world, so low that with all his royal patronage there are none left— no I think not one—so poor as to do him reverence. It is true, however, that the precedent of the Con gress of 1769 has been !followed invariably and with out interruption since thattime. The history of our Legislature allows not only repeated instances where the tenure-of-office act has been so precisely defined, as to take the case entirely out of the control of the Ifixecutive, but some in which even the power of re =Wl itself has been eubstantiallyexercteed by Con. gress, as one would suppose It might reasonably be, where it creates and may destroy, makes and may make, even the subject of controversy itself. The act of 1801, already referred to in connection with the case of Morbury vs. Madison, assigning a tenure of five years absolutely to the officer involves a manifest departure from it. The several acts of August 14, 1848, March 3, 1649, September, 1850, and May 3, 1853,•providing for the appointment of judges in the Territories of Oregon, Minnesota, New Mexico, Kansas, and Neoraaka, and fixing the term of office at four years, absolutely, are all within the same category. The act of 25th of February, 1863, followed by that of June 3, 1864, establishing the office of Con • troller of the Currency, defining his term and making him irremovable, except by and with the advice and conseht of the Senate, and upon reasons to be shown, is another of the same description. The act of March 8, 1865, which authorizes any military or naval officer who has been dismissed by the authority of the President. to demand a trial by court marital, and which, in default of its allowance. within six months, of a sentence of dismissal or death, voids the order of the Bxecntive; and the act of July 13, 1866: which provides that no officer, in time of peace, shall be dismissed, except in pursu. once of a court martial, or both. Exatgples of the like deviation of the strongest kind, for the double reason that the President is under the Constitution, the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy of tho United States, and none but civil officers are amendable to the process of im peachment, and that the officer dianottged is absolute ly restored, awakened into now life, and raised tp his feet by the omnipotent act of the legislative power. Ave lastly, the aci of 15th of May. 1820, which dis missed by wholeeale a very large and important class of officers, at periods specially indicated therein, not only fixed the tenure proapectivoly but involves a clear ' exercise of the power of removal itself on the part of the legislature. 'Further development in the same direction would no doubt reward the diligence of the more pains-tab:- THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1868. kg Inquirer. That, however,Would only be a work superogation. Enough has been stibwri to demon ' strafe b. yond denial that the uractice relied on Flat been anythitne hint uniform. To establish even a lib eral Custom or pi oscription,,the element of citable- I yis as important its tnat of time. Aul , break in that coral) mt.!, by an adverre entry, or ova) a 'oath:nal them would arrest thd How of a estate of limitation aestt at the rightful owner of a tenement. '- An interiuution of the, enjoyment Would be equally fatal to a prescription; but are we to he told mutt a case which, in this vt“w, wo •ld not even be sufficient to e''tat / 141 comimaltion for tithes, or a trifling ease- Int nt latween itidlvain els; 101 snflicient Co raise a pre set iptlon against a constitution-11 right, or to abrogate the fundamental law of a nation, end t e ltipprecia b e inberit:r.nce of Its peopii P rhe vt , ry stateme it of the proposition would seem to furnish its own refaa lion. Shortly after 4 o'clock Senator Afoanti.t, of. Ver unlit, moved to adjourn the court, roacing t mo tion by saying that he was informed that Mr . Manager Widiams was, frr.m illness, unable to COTlChide remarks this evening. The motion was m teed to, and the Court ad journed • The chair having been resumed by the President • pro %in., Devoid messages from the President In an swer to re solutions of inquiry. were sent in rind re• furred, and the benate.then adjourned. • Philadelphia Bann Statement. The following is the weekly statement of tne Phila delphia Banks, made up on Monday afternoon, which presents the following aggregates: Capital Stack. ... .. Loans and 52,812,6 /3 Specie 6n9 Due from other Bauks..... 5,124,114 Due to other Banke Devwitit Ctreulation U. S. Legal Tender and Demand Notes 14,951,106 Clearings.••—••......... .................. .36,304,305 Balance.— . 3,157,062 The following statement shows the condition of the Banks of Philadelphia, at various times during the last few •Kionths: _ . 1867. Loans. Specie. Circalatlon.lleposits. Tan. 1.....52,312,825 903,633 10,388,820 41,308,327 Feb. 4.....52,551,130 814,564 10,430,893 39,592,713 Mar. 4.....51,979,173 826,873 10,581,800 39,367,388 April 1....50,780,306 603,148 10,631,532 34,150,285 May 6....53,054,267 386.053 10,630,695 37,574,050 June 1. . ..52,747,308 334,393 10,631,132 31,332,144 July 1....52,533,962 365,181 10,641,311 36,616.847 Aug. 5....53,427,840 302,055 10,6.35,925 53,094,543 Sept. 2....53,734,687 307,658 10,625,356 38,323,354 Oct. 7....53.041,100 258,303 10 621,921 34.857,405 Nov. 4....52,584,071 273,590 10,640,820 33,601,001 Dec. 2....51,213.435 216,071 10,646,819 34,817,955 1369. fan. 6.....52,002,304 235.912 10,639,003 33,621,274 3....52 6114.919 248,673 10,633,915 37,922,297 2....52,459,753 211.365 .10.6.30,484 35,799,314 April 6....52,202,234 215,835 10,642,670 31,278,119 • 13_ _52.2.56,949_ 250,240 10,640 923 34,255,671 The followintt is a detailed statement of the brlt3i ne,t, of the Philadelphia I:i:caring, Bence for the past week, furnished by G. E. Arnold, Esq., Maninzer: Clearin:rs. Balances. April 20 $6 091.133 06 $517,350 SS " 21.... ....... ...... 6 616,217 07 667,47.1 10 9,619,011 23 403,235 IT " 13... .......... .... 6,546,116 26 651,095 91 5,G2'.+,925 94 1102,698 63 6,123,287 (16 076,407 42 PASSENGERS. ARRIVED. In tamer Star the rnon, from New Orleans— 'lr MeNeary. Ulle Danfield. From flayana —Urn Jamen, L.l Dmine, N Sherman. Londaht, But Barl.)w, ; 'raven. Mi.:. Craven, Mies Craven, Wm L Donnell,Jno ; Hough and Wilt% J J Corning, Mr Vander .v ..3 b MaVitb. IMP RTATIE Nb• Reported for the t' Q hiladelonia Evening Bulletin. VIHPOOI,--Ship Michigan. Whclan-163 casks soda ROI E.o tes bichg powder„ Yarnall Trimble; 25 crates hie Wlll G Peirce; 4.0 do Burge:is & (loddard; 1 case ese Wet h; 6 ck” chains and 6 loose chainr J It A rio bruter ; 1 cask linseed oil Saiolz & Janenty.ky 406 ki,-(-1 rail.. Naylor & Co; 21 casks soda ash S & J Dallett; 4 ors lump salt bOU sacks tine salt A Kerr & Itro; 31 balsa ..,tron rags 50 tee incise 300 ryr lits tobacco pipes 370 bag tin ldate , 02 low ran scrap iron order; 136 tea soda ash 14 W Chin chnian et Son; 16 eke s.4ela ash 34 tea blchg powder hbla soda crlstals II Karsten; 1 cam lebox le hhds hoer order; 275 bblr soda crystal= 0 S 'lnner & Co: 701 .nrl fine salt 4ou do c otra do 3000 do C3IIIIII NI do Jl4 1i zley & Co_ _ FUN IDAD—Brig C. A Conan.Conan--57U hhds molasees teN do t 5 W W el_•h. 'I.OV CHI FATS OF OCEAN UT EJLIMILJEFILF. . To ARRIVE . earn mom ' FOB DATB L.Alitinpa I iverpool..Nesv Y0rk....: ....APril 8 ity of Cork Liverpoal...New York.. ..... ...April 11 Vi ha de PariA., ..... ....Brest...New York... . ..... April 11 Siberia hiverpool..N York via 13oston.April 14 flermonn..... .SoLtham uton..Ne w York... .. ..... April 14 ( 'iiy of Baltimore ..LlYerpool .. tie w Y0rk.......... April 15 .14v a.................Liverp001..19e vi . York April IC 8e110na........... .... London. :New Y0rk..........April l 9 YOT k...... Southampton. -New York —April 21 City of liwton. Y0rk..........April 22 ........ Liverpool..:lew Y0rk..........April 22 P,0tia........... ..NewYOric..Liverpool.... April "9 MinneEota .........New York..LiverpooL.... ...... April Li 9 A 1epp0.............New York ..Liverpool...:. ...... April 'AO 1 i el i111tD11...........N0w York..l3retoen.... April iio F ode ...............New York ..Havana. ..........April au Ariz0na............New Y0rk...A5pinwa11...........N1ay l s.'ille de ?aria New York..liavre Mar S Fr tnee........ ..... New York ..Liverpool.... .. .. .... May S t •ity of Cork New York..Liverp'lvlalialifax.May 2 I 0wa........ ...... „New York..Glaegow May S Virginia.... Now York.. Liverpool - May S ( 'its of Ualtimore.New Y0rk..Liverp001............Mity 2 Atalanta ...........New Y0rk..L0nd0n......... ..... May S l'er , q I e .............New Y0rk..havra......... ..... .May S A nOritin Portland ..Liverpool... . ....... May 2 Fu1t0n......... New York..Aeuinwall. May 5 (ietruiuda New York.. Hamburg May S .IhV 6 ..... .. . .. . . . New York.. Liverpool May 3 United Kingdom.. New Y0rk..G1img0w......, ..... .May 6 Siberia...... .....New York ..Liverpool... ........Mae 7 BOARD OF' TRA.D. P C. W:V.OICON. f. PRICE WR i HERTLL, MoirruLY Commrrrna. WASHINGTON BUTCHER. cr RIBEZ. 6 10 I SUN VIET% 650 I HIGH ATEI3. tr; ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Steamer Star of the Union. Cookeey, from New Orleans via Bavaria E.M. days, with cotton, eugar..te. to rhila. delphia and 8 outhern Mail Steameldp Co. steamer Aries. Howe% 48 bonne from Bocton, with mdre and nneeengere to II Winror k Co. In the bay St, miler '‘ Mean, Morrieon. 34 houre from New York, ith mdee to W M Baird ik Co. Steamer Hunter, Bogor!, lid hoard from Providence, ith tudoe to D S Steteon 8.; Co. Bark Luigi (Bali, Greg, from •London via Plymouth 'loch IS, with nudge to Henry Kareten. Brig G A Conan. Conan, 14 days from Trinidad., with n' olnereo to S W Welch. Schr Capper Heft t hoe, JO days from Norfolk, with ehingloo to 'l' P Galvin & Co. Schr Sarah Warren, Connell, 1 day from Magnolia, Del with grain to .Itl, , J Bewley k Co. rlrlir Sallie yell, oy, Marion, 1 day front New Caetle, i 8•1. with grain to Jao ltarratt. Schr Olivia Fox, 1 day from Odeoort: DeL with grain to L Bewley ,e Co. Seim S C Fithian, Tuft, 1 day from Port Depoeit, with grain to else L Bewley L Co. , orlir Boxer. Palmer, I day from ',chicle, Del. with grain 1. Beat ley Co. Schr T Chace, Lanceville. Schr ,J Truman, Gibbs, New Bedford. helm .1 Ford, Danicle, Waehington. Tug Thoe Jeffercon, Allen, from Baltimore, with a tow of bargee to P Clyde Co. CLEARED YESTERDAY. roamer Ann Eli;e.ltirlarde.WoWlOrk, W P Clyde&Co. steamer S Shriver, Dounis, Baltimore, A Crove.l, Jr. Brig Edith. Putnam, Cardenas, Warren ez Gregg. Brig Abby Edon, Orcutt, Matanzas, Mershon ez Mod. S• hr W %I Wilson, ltzown, Providence, JIM lionunvl, .Ir. Srhr Sarah, Cobb, New Bedford, do Schr 11 M ight. Elsner, Now London, do !ig Thee Jefferson, Allen, for Baltimore, with a tow of bargee. %V P Clyde kt• Co, Cljde, Duncan, do do rig Chesapeake, Merehon, do do MEMORANDA. Steamer Roman. Baker, hence at Boston yesterday. Steamer Plum er, Catharme, hence at Wilmington, N&. ccdurday. Steamer Siberia, Ilockley, at Boston yesterday from Liver' 00l 14th inst. hark Oscar (Dan), Kielsetli, 111 days from Amoy, with tear, at New York yesterday. Bark Crowningshield, Boott, from Buenos Ayres., at Boston 26th inst. Brig Faying Cloud, Pile. hence for Cork, was signalized 11th inst lat. 44 O. lon bl 08. Brig Abby Thrtzton, Allen. henco at Norfolk lid inst. Schr C Loma', Sntlith, cleared at Portland 24th instant for this port. Scbre T Alburger, Corson. and Thor T Tasker, hence at Charleston yesterday. Schr' E B Wheaton. and Jessie, hence at Savannah yesterday. Schre Redondo, Whitmore, and C 8 Camtairs, Price, hence at Salem 19th inert Schr C S Ed cards, Corson, cleared at Wilmington, NC. 625th inst. for this port. &Ina Quickstep, and Margt Powell, hence at New Lou• don 2311 inst. • &Mr. L Q C Wishart, at Savannah yesterday from Boil en. Schr M Reinhart, Hand, sailed from Salem 54th lmtant for this port Bohr E L Marts, Marts, hence at Savannah 2211 lust, Scbr Chas B Mee balm while beating up the Delaware on Friday, about 1 PM, loaded with coal, with run into and sunk by the itch!' E Biuui. keen in thirty beet water between (Mester and Marcus Hook. 'lntelligence from film/ghee. by telegram dated March 11th, announces that the ship Mary k room, with coal, from Cardiff'. has been totally wrecked. Thin Celestial Emnire, Taylor..from New York, put into Falmouth 12th ult leaky. Behr Pawnee. Weaver, from Norfolk for Now York, with Abutter. put hack nth, leaking badly. • 805. EXCELSIOR I HESSLER-dt HARRECIPS 805. N 0.805 RACE ST,ItEET, YbILADELPIIIA. 'laving opened with a now and fruit etock of HATS and CAM we guarantee to Bell as low as any other thet ciass store in the city. rarticular attention called tp our 65 00 WILK HATS Silk Hats at Manufacturers' Prices. A general assortment of GENTS' FURNISHING • Goong Constantly on Land, ap9 a ttt tun 52,959,750 222,229 10,610,479 33,960,052 .59,512,623 201,699 10,6411 212 31,767,990 ii,36.304.350 74 $3,167,062 01 LiverPool..New TO DEPART. or:11;411:1Di n n.44iA PORT OF PIIILADELPHIA—ArnaL MARINE MISCELLANY. 4irifinfi; NOTICI6II. sue AN EXAMINATION 'OF CANDIDATES volt certificates of qualifications for Principals of Grain mar and 1 helateilled Schools', and for fiaolatant Toachera of Grammar. r ecOndady and Primary Sehook will bo held' at, the Zane Street School ..tionae, „above Seventh ktreet, on'lltU. SDAY and' FRIDAY, May 14th and 15th, at I F. M. Precieely. No applicant under 17 yearn of ass a 11l lie exalPlttl. No p anon being a pupil of a Piddle Sc hoof of thiBoity ahall ho examined, unless npou Oertith cafe of the lttncipal of lila or her achool. aettiug forth that in the jotlgne fit of smelt Print ip the applicant in ytil ldi, d for ex umiuotion, 'which tertilleate Oval be de porited With of the Board of Conttollers the day pre-t'h'an to the ,x t ,,,,h,,,ti 0n of qu ,, tiOns t". ill ho prepared for applicanta, on, for thme doof ring tirtMclana certificates, and another for thorn f.pply tog for certificates of the aecoud, third, or tom th clew. First-^L• tto certificated will be awarded to flir,oe having no average of 75 Appilcanh failing to receive 75 for thin t, but ohm ildnif 53 or f/Ver. Will he :ivearded certificates for ineq al. of Uffelork•ild Schools. An average of 75 is loquirid for tier conci.el Celliti• CI, C. Au average of r. 5. and under t 5 for a third.claa4 cer. tilt, ato. An o', loge of 55, and tinder 65, for a fourtit claed cerf order of the Committee on Qualiffoafiono of Tea aero. it, W. lIALLIIVI,LL, apsl '25 25 nay] r, 612 14 secretary. UN 'ft D STATE 4 frt.:TURN/1U REVENUE. DEPU. Ty COLLWI'DICS FIFTH WS- Th.ICT, PENA SI L\ AN IA April fllpt. Ptiq NOtice in hereby elven lo the owners of the following dor of Mod pi over. v, re zed and taken for violation of the nitod State. fleYenne Laws, that they may make claim for the 101111, on or b. fore 'rut 61.)A Y . May 19th, Mks: February 96--One copper still and worm, front l're:nont attett. nPi it copper Ftill complete, from 1257 Sorrell Mt. April 3—One Popper etill conplet. , from 1259 Sorrell et. Aprils--TWO --Tro ',lurch, of W fr0m,1153 William of, April cone!' etill and worm, from 1616 Mel% ale etreet. _ r,474 631 31,767,290 10,610,312 Apt G— One tin rtIII, cothplete, from 1523 Mullen street A prb 8 One renp. r etill, trom tSt9 c:ilmon Area. April 20— SI% rbruer itllle, from various plur.es. 11106. S. IQ'. LK Kt I;euuty Collector, 81,21 to 21` Filth District, Penney's-unlit. MANDAN MINING COMPANY.—TII ANN': .S.L meeting of the kilockhohlere of the Mandan Mining company wnt be held at the office of the Company, No. 1724 WALNIrr etreet, Philadelphia, oit Tilt) Y, the 20th clay of May. lee?t, for the election of Direetore and inmate:don of other businees. R. A. HOOPES. Secretary. PLIII.AIPELPIII A, April NU, ISM. np27 troy2Bl f wisp. OFFICE OF CITY TREASURER, PIMADEL' I.IIIA. April 24. 144, 1 1 liiOTICF. —Holders of matured Cite Loan, and also Lean falling due let day of July. 1f G 9, are requested to present melt' Certificates at tht. olbee for. redemption. Int. rent will be allowed on Loan falling duo July, 1809, to time of payment. JU.I. PElit6oL, apt? CU City Treasurer. ~, E TNA MINING COMPANY.—TIIE ANNUAL Waling of the Stockholders of the ./Etna Mining Company will be M.ld at the office of the Company, Nn. 24 Walnut t•treet. Philadelphia. on TUESDAY. the Nth day of May. Issbri. at LI e d ck, M.,Tor the election of Di. rectcre, and transaction of other ImEineFs. B. A. HOOPES, Secretary. L'iIILADELPIDA. April ap27trny'2o for - OFFICE CATAWISSA 3 ,11,11.0 AD CuMII'ANY. NO. 4`14 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. April 11,15x:9. The Annual Election for President and Directors et this Company hillheheld on moNDAY. the fourth day of May, RCP, between the hours of 12 31. and 2 P. M. EDWARD JOHNSON, tipl-Ltn,fr to xny4 :iecretar y. ver , lion CrIMPANY.—THE ANNUAL ELcC• Hon of Directors and a Treasurer of the Library Company of Philadelphia trill be held at the Library..,a MiII . ..PAY. the 4th day of May next. at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, when the 'areaeure, will attend to receive the annul pa) In ent , 4• As there are several shares on which fines are due, the owners of them or their representatives are hereby noti fied that they a ill he torleited, agreeably to the charter and laws of the Company, unless the arrear 4 are paid oaf on the 4th day of May, or Within ten days thereafter. . WILLIAM E. WHITMAN, neer, Wry. N. Ti.--No books will be given out or received on that afternoon; :tpl4,th,th.,a to my 4; OFFICE or THE 1 tFEICAN FIRE RANCE 'SWAN , No. aid WalnutAtreet. A general . acting of the ..tocknohle 8 to the American Fire .Insurance Company lot held. agree.ibly to chart on MONDAY, the fourth ow; of 31ay next, at twelve ....clock. M. The annual 'election for Directors will take place imme. diattly thereafter. (42.3th,}4,t0,tray31 A. C. L. CRAWFORI). Seery. ter STOCK.IIOI,,DEP.:,-' NWPICE.--A MID , TING ()i the Stockholdero of the Germantown Pai.ectiger ituiler ay Company will be held at their office on WED. :til›DAl", Apt it '2:d11,1 , /,, , t, at 4 P.M., to take into coneide. ration the propriety of increafing the nornhor of the Board t f Manxgere. In punmance of a enordernent to an act of AeaeintAy. approved.the 3d day of April. 1861 By order of the Board of Managere. arab th a tu7t• 40SE1'1.1b1SGERLY, Secretary. -(Feb E ELMIRA AND WILLIAM SPOriT RdL. P.OAD COMPANY. PI VAL NUT STKEE P. PHILADELPHIA. April U, . The annual election for. Preaident Managera of arta C , Aupany will be held on MONDAY, the Fourh day of May, rttki, at 12 o'clock, M. LEWIS P. GEIGER aptltu,th,e,to m 4: Secretary. NOTICE.—THE ANNUAL MEETING OF Stockholdere of the Barclay Coal Company will be held at their °thee. No. 154 south Fourth street. on MUN• DAY, May 4th next, at 12 .o'clock 51., to elect ollicere to verve the exthuing year. HARVEY SHAW, aplB-e,tu,th,tiny4; Secretary. noe- DIVIDEND NOTICE—OCEAN OIL CONIPANY: •"'"' —A Dividend of One Per Cult. ha. been declared, payable on and after May let uext. clear of taxee. Bocke close •25th, 3 P. M. ; open )1 av DAVID BOYD, .rn.. ftra1,'?..4.25,25X() 50 Treasurer. sews— OFFICE OF TILE PIIII.A.DF.LPIIIA AND TRENTON RAILROAD COMPANY, No.'s South 'Delaware Avenue. PHILADELPHIA, April '24, 19ia Notice is hereby given that the bonds of the Philadel phia and Trenton Railroad Company falling due ou the lot of Al:ty next, will then be paid ou presentation of said bonds at this office, with interest to that date. Aud Eutiett le also given that the interest on all bonds so falling due will cease on the Ist day of May aforesaid. By order of the Board of Directors. ap!Mtinytii J. PARKER NORRIS, Treasurer, ak i Th.. OFFICE OF THE AMYGDALOID MINING """ COMPANY ()FLAKE SUPERIOR. No. M 4 WM, N LT btreet. PnILADEI.I.III.f. April 1568. Notice ii! hereby given that en tnetalment of FIFTY ,5t.)) CENTS, on each and every eharo of the Capital Stock of It e AMI GDALOID MINING COMPANY, of 1,11, Superior. will be due and payable at the °thee of c Company, No. Walnut etreet, on or before MON. I 'AY, May 4‘b. with interet. added after that date. order - of the board M. 11. HOFFMAN, ap24 t myss 'freaeurer. trope- NION GHENT CEMETERY NOTICE.—THE annual meeting of the Lot 1-Wldt:to in "The Menu r,.ent Cemetery of Philadelphia," and an election for riCCTEI to F,erve the clewing Year, will be held at the of the Fire Aeociation. North strat, wext of Fifth, on MONDAY AFTERNOON, May 4th next, at 4 o'clock. 31,1'3 tiny 4: E. TAYLOR, Secretary. Is;OTICE.—TIIE ANNUAL MEETING Of:STOCK holders of the Tioga Improvement Commiiit for the of officers to rem, the ensuing year, will be held t No. 15 Philadelphia Exchange, on TUESDAY, May sth, :03 to ray% GEO. IL COLKET, Secretary:- igc,ve , VULCAN mINING COMPANY (OF MICELI. °"*" flAN).—The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders the Vulcan Mining Company will he held at the ()dice the Company, No. :C4 Walnut etreet. Philadelphia, on 111 L I:SDAY, the 14th day of May. 1668, at 12 o'clock M., f,,r the election of Directors, and mina:lotion of other ,eouct.e. B. A. HOOVES, Secretary. Po ILA 1 , 73.1 , 111 A, April 13th, leriti. apl3tmyl43 c•FFICE OF THE LEHIGH ZINC CO., NO. 333 WALNUT STREET. u I LAI , EIIIIIA, April 20,1803. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of the Lehigh Cinc Votepany will he held at the company's office, on •,'‘'EDNESDA Y. MA' tth, pros., at 12 o'clock IL for the po,e of electing coven Directors to eerve during the en- Lin, year, and for the transaction of other business. GORDON MONCES, ap3l4-nivtil • Treasurer. - OFFICE OF THE FREEDOM IRON AND Si EEL COMPANY. - - rIII LAM:I.I , IIIA, April 20, 18t18. A special meeting of the Stockholders of' the FREEDOM tPoN AND dl EEL COMPANY will be held at the ot?ice of the Cciiipauy, No. T.. 10 South Third street, on Cl - ESDAY, the fifth of May next, at 12 o'clock, M., for tie purpose of taking action on the acceptance of the pro %Huns of the Act of Asoombly, approved the 13th Mat.. :,11,1 on the adoption of bydawo. CHARLES 'WESTON Jo., ap3l tmY5-5 Secretary. OFIICE OF THE LEHIGH. COAL AND NAVL CATION COMPANY, PutLADELPIIIA., April •24), The Annual Meeting of the B,ock holdere of tniß Com. pony will be held at the BOARD OF TRADE ROOMS, north side of Chestnut etreet, above Fifth, on TlTE6 t my .11 oRNINO. the sth day of May next. at half-paet tett e , elot k. After which au election will he held at the same idate for President and Board of Manngere, to nerve for the ensuing year, the election to clone at I P. M. of the F:11111, day, • • •• 'E.'. W. CLARK., aptll•Buys4 President. stier GOOD bPRING RAILROAD COMPANY.— Pumartni.ott rit. April 11. 1868. n o Annual Meeting of.,the Stockholders of this Com. Patty, and an election for President and nix managers to nen e for he ensuing. year and until others shall be elected, will be held at the &hen of t he Philadelphia, and Reading Railroad Company, No. 2,0 south Fourth street, on MuNDAY, the' 4th day of May next, at 11}6 o'clock A. M. solltrny4 WM. H. WEBS, Secretary. • NORTHERN LIBERTIES AND PENN TOWN. • SHIP RAILROAD CuM PA N Y. Pnitaimifuta, April 11 1868. The annual meeting of the Stockholders of this coin. puny,, and an election for officers to serve for the ensuing year,nd until others shall be elected, will be held at the office of the Philadelphia and Reading. Railroad Com. puny, No. South Fourth street. on MONDAY, the 4th day of May next, at 11 o'clock A. M. t tuy4 WM. IL WEBB, Secretary. mew- SCHUYLKILL AND BMW „V-',.4.ffNNA RAIL • ROAD COMPANY. °Moo 227.-3outh Fourth 1.8!38. The annual meeting of the StockhoLdere of Dila Com pany, and an election for President and aix Managers, n ill take place at the Office of the Company on DION DAY, the 4th day of May next, at 12 o'clock M. aplltmy4 WM. H. WEBB. becretarY. PARTIES WISHING TO PURCHASE TERRITORY for ono of the beet inventions of the day, eau do so at price', that will pay them richly. Don't fall to see it at the Allegheny House, 014 Market street, Philadelphia. Inquire for J. H. JILLSON, ' tipaiitt BOOTS AND SHOES. 1 000 SEWED AND PEGGED SHOES, AT ail .5 per pair; half the; oriental coot. UURWEN STODDART & BRO., at& 450, 452 . and 454 North Second otrooh • AVOTIOI9 INJUUNI• DLIN'IIIIO. DlAticvlskAN R tAt.. ALSITIONEEtts LA Non. 282 and SU MARKET Mime. corner Bank street SUCCESSORS TO JOHN D MYERS ds CO LARGE-SPECIAL SALE ti WOOLENS AND T 1A klx 0 GoODS, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. April 29, at le o'clock. on 'four monthz' crodit..by order of Meeara.LF,liM lER It P.DS. !Mr - For particulars ace display adver tieetnent. LARGE P(MI'l ?ALE OF BRMI3II.FRENCH GERMAN AND DOMESTIC .DRY MOODS. ON Ran MONTHS' CREDIT. ON TIIURBDAY MORNING. Ap ;11 110, at 10 o'clock. oniblasing about 1.200 Packages and I ota Staple and FUMY Articles . LARGE PERRY PTORY BALE OF FOREIGN AND nom EsTic DRY GOODS. NOTlCF.—lnclueed In our ante of THURSDAY, April I:0, will be found in part the lc Rowing, viz.: WWI; STICs. Balsa bleached and blown Muellua and Mills do. white and ecarip.t all wool and Owner FPtnnols, Caliet Rentneky and other Jean., Miners' Flannelm. do. Blue Checks, Ti k Deninal, Bb•ipeB. Onnaburg4. do. Bileelaa, Corset Jeans. I.tuingA, Paddings. d o. ay :,neheater and I onur. , tic Cottenadcd. do. Satiuete, CaPßirflell , O, Tweeds, Kemp+, Prima. • LIN P.N_Dry Case= 13leael.ed and brown Table Cloths and Dainaukui To w do. Shirting and Sheeting 'Anew', Diaper. Napkins. do. Ituriapm, BleY and Mantle Linen=. do. Cra,ll.l)ovlieF, Ito lands. plain end fancy Drills. ERCII ANT TA 11. OM` HOODS. Pieces black and colored all %vat) I ann Union Clothe, Crol gel+. do. French Doeskins, Fancy Casslineres and Coat• do. Melton.. Tricots, Silk Mtxtm•se, Satin de Chines, fAIO PIECES ITALIAN cLoTits. SU) pieces Loudon black Italian Clothe, tine to superfine. Is CAsEd POPLIN ALPACAS. Fine to beet quality imported, for city trade, of a cele brated make. llltEnS GOODS. SILKS AND SEIAWLS. Fleece Paris Delaines. Pop Hue, Grenadines. Bavages. do. Black and Colored Alohairis, scotch Gingham, Limos. do. Percales Piques, Jacenets. Lawns. Fancy Plaids. do. Black and Colored Silks. Snatvle. Silk and Cloth Cloaks -ALSO Full Linea L. C. and Cotton lidkfe., Balmoral and Hoop Skit IN, Ties. Full lines Hosiery and Gloves. Quilts, White Goods. Suspend era. ult lines Traveling and Under Shirts and Elmtvers, Umbrellas, &e. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETINGS, &c. ON FRIDAY MORNING. Marl at 11 o'clock, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT. about 2W pieces Ingrain s Venetian. List, Hemp. Cottage and Eag Carpeting!. LARGE PEREMPTORY BALE OF FRENCH AND' OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS, dm ON MONDAY MoRNING. May 4, nt Ili o'clock, ON FuUR MONTHS' CREDIT, POO lots of French, India. German and British Dry Goods THOMAS COM BIRCH MISSION M & SON, AUCTIONEERS AND ERUTS, No, 1110 CLIESTNIAT street. Rear Entrance 1107 !anion' street. HOUSEHOLD FL RNITuRE .9F EVERY DESCRIP ION RECEIVED ON (ONSIGNMENT. Soles of Furniture at Dwellings attented to on the mold rca:mnable toms. Side at No. 1317 Chestnut street. OCK AND FIXTU tn. OE A (tRYoTATION STORE, SHONA' aSES LEASE OF bTo”E. Etc. • ON 'ls' EDNESDAY and THURSDAY EVENINGS. A mil tt9 and 3e, at o'clock. at r o. 1317 Chestnut street, will be cote. the entire clock f Fine Stationery,• corn. pro,ins a large areortnientef better and Note caper. with Itny..lopee of every de - cription. Fine Pocket Cutlery, Portenonnaiea and Fancy uoode. Alen,the chow C31(1 , , Furniture, Fixtures, Awning, to gether with lease for two years of etoro. SALE OF OLD ITALIAN PAINTINGS. 11% TItCRSDAY MORNING. April 10, at 10 o'clock, at We auction store, No. 1110 Chek tuu• etrect, will be sold— A Collection of over ono hundred Paintings. having been collected within tho lent year from 'endow inonao• term- and convcutn, suppreeeed by the Italian govern. meat. Cataleguesl will ha ready on Monday, when the Paint. inga will be open for exhibition. Sale nt No. 1110 Chestnut street. SUPERIOR IiOUSEGOLD FURNITURE, PIANO FORTES. CARPETS, MIRRORS, CIiINA. CJT GLAt.S. PAINI INOS, kc ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 9 o'clock. at the auction store, No. 1110 Chestnut erect, will be cold— A large aaeortinent of superior Parlor, Chamber, and ninlns room Furniture, from families declining house keeping. =l===l= HOUSEHOLD FURNaIRE, CARPI...T.4, LARGE 1111 h t•ORS, PAINTANGS, EtRoi4ZES, MAILULE DUST, "&c. ON TUESDAY MORNING. . - May 5. at 10 o'clock. at No. 181 South Third street, will be sold the Furniture of a family declining housekeeping. t atalognea can be had at the unction store on Saturday. The Furniture can be examined at 8 o'clock on the morning of sale. Sale at No. 947 North -Twelfth street. HO LSE HOLD I' KNIT4II{4:, CIA SPE dze On W N ESDAY !SOHN]. 0, May 6, at 10 o'clock, at No. 947 North Twelfth street, will be sold the furniture of a family leaving the city, comprising reps parlor suite; Brussels, ingrain and 'Vene tian carpets; solid walnut and chestnut chamber sititts; also, the dining room and kitchen furniture. The furniture can be examined after 8 o'clock on the morning of tale. BY_BARRITT & CO.. AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION nousE, No. MO MARKET etreet, corner of BANK street. Caf , l) advent, d. on conEieuments without extra chart. PEREMPIOEY SALE OF MO LOIS STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS. ON WEDNESDAY !MORNING. April 29, at 10 o'clock, cOrnp - rielngevery variety of staple and fancy Dry Goode, Drees Goode. &c., suitable for Spring trade. Also, 6PECIAL SALE, or CLOTHING. • Comprising a large stock of first-class goods, viz--Coate, Pante, Vests, Suite, itc., manufactured for a tiret-class re tail trade Also, stock of Clothe, Ca•simeres, &c. SPECIAL SALE OF STRAW GOODS. ON THURSDAY MORNING, April 30, coninienciug at 10 o'clock, comp: fixing a largo assortment of Men's and Boys' Coburg. Leghorn and 3lottled Hats, Caps. &c. Also, Shaker floods: dm. Also, the balance of stock of a otraw Goods Jobbing Houle. UIMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF ELEGANT STEEL ENGRAVINGS, IN WALNUT AND GILT FhAMES. ON THURSDAY MORNINti. April 30, at 13 o'clock, 40 elegant Engravings. Marriage of Pocohontas. Perils of our Forefathers , . home f om the War. My Chi'd. My Child. They a•e Saved. Washington'e Courtship and Marriage. BY B. SCOTT, JIL SUoTT'S ART GALLERY, • No. IWO CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia. SPECIAL SALE OF MODERN PAINTINGS. ON MONDAY and TUE3DAY EVENINGS. April 21 and 28, at ;;,' before 8 o'clock, wilt be sold with' out reserve, a collection Of Modern Pahatings,all elegantly framed. Included in the above sale will be found "The Maniac," by Robert Street, deceased. We would call the attention of connoisseurs to it • MR. GEORGE C. RENK JIFFS LARGt SPECIAL Sale of Mantel and Pier Mirrors. Looking Gin:i.e.% &c. Mr George Renkand, who is now making extensive improvements on his premises, and entirely remodeling his estabd,hment. is compelled to offer his entire stock-of Mantel and Pier Mirrors, Looking Glasses, Pier, Bracket and &qua Tables. all expressly manufactured for Me st , ro trade, and in splendid order. at nubile auction. The solo will take place at Scott's Art Gallery, No. MO Chestnut street. ON MONDAY MORNING, • ' May 4, at 10 o'clock. MR. AARON SHAW'S PRIVATE COLLECTION OF HI( i.cLnss MODERN PP:BURIES To take place at Scott'a Art Gallery, 1020 Chectnut et., on the ev ninge of WEDNESDAY, May 6, and TkiIIRS. DAY. May 7, at 15 beforo b o'clock. Particulars hereafter. lIV H. C ekl i i4 ° ll A di LE O A titn?Plit E gg.. 1219 CHESTNUT street and 1219 and 12'21 CLOVER street. CA RD.— IV° take pleasure in informing the public that our FURNITURE BALEs are confined strictly to entirely NEV and FIRST CLASS FURNITURE. ali in perfect order and guaranteed in every raiment. Regular Sales of Furniture ovary WEDNESDAY. Out-door aided promptly attended to. SALE OF SUPERIOR NEW AND FIRST-CLASS HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. &c. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. April 29, 1800. at 10 o'clock. at the Concert Hall Auction Rooms, will be sold, a very desirable assortment of tiounebold Fuilifture comprising—Antique and modern Parlor Suite, in French satin brocatelle, plush, haircloth, terry. and repo, in oil and varnished ; Bediiteadn, Humana and . 1 Vaubstande, in Elizabethan, Grecian' Antique and other stylus; Cabinet, Sewing, Dining, Studio Reclining, Reception and Ilan Chairs; Piano titooln, Encretoires, Armoh en,11,1 unto Racks, elegantly carved Sideboards, com. bination Card and Work 1 abler, Turkish Chairs, marble top Etegeres, Whatnots, Library and Secretary Book. ardrobee, Commodes, marble top Centre Tables, kxtennion Tables, pillar, French and turned loge, Library Tables, Hanging and Standing Hat Racke. Also, au invoice of pure curled hair, straw, sea grave and Hair Mutraceac, Spring and Hair Pallantern, -- - MBE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT, S. E, I corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, articles 014. Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plato , and on all articles of value, for any leng.th of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold limiting Case Double Bottom and Open Face English, American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Levine Watches; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches: Fine Silver Hunt lug Case and Open Faoe English, American and Swiss Patent Lever and Levine Watches ' , Double Case Engliih Quartier and other Watches: Ladles. Fancy Watches; Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; Studs, &cc. ; Fine Gold Chains, Bracelets,. Scarf Pins; Breastpins' ; Finger Rings:Pencil Cares and Jewelry generally. FOB BALE.—A large land valuable Fireproof Chest, suitable for a Jeweler; cost $650. Also, several lota In South Camden. Fifth and Chestnut treats. DANIS & HARVEY. AUCTIONEERS. Late with M. Thomas & Sone. Store No. 421 WALNUT Street. FURNITURE SALES at the Store every TUESDAY. SALES AT ItLS' IDENOEIS will receive particular attention. QTEAM FLOUR MILLS AND WHARF PROPERTY 1...7 at BALTIMORE, MD, Pllbnliber will offer for sale ,on the promb3es on TOP} , SPAY, April DU, IBM, at 4 o'clock P. M., the cele brated Stili r roperty known as ' - •AIII3OIT , S,U ITY BLOCK FLOUR MILLS," One of the ruost complete Milling establishments in Oho country, of capacity tor WO to 350 barrels a day. Also. for leave, for a termof years; a valuable. wharf property adjoining the mill. . , . For further particulate see isnltinnore , papers. ',Sun. American or trotto, , S. B. GVER; Auctioneer. EaP 9l-33 * 27 . 28 40 . ' c anlamre ;treat. 41U0Irlitorli RALINS M THOMAS !lc SONS, AUCTIONEERS, Noo tEI and 191 South FOURTH street, SALES OF STOURS AND SEAL ESTATE. l'ublic sales at tho Philadelphia Exchange EVERY TI ESDAY, at i 2 o'clock. liandbilh of each property issued separately, ill addition to which we publish, On the Saturday previous' to each sale, one thousand catalogues in pamphlet foriu giv ng full destiiptions of all the proporty to be sold On the t uLLO WINO TUESDAY, and a List of Real Estate at Private Salo. , W Lour Sales are also advertised in the following. 'we openers: NOr.TII aMaawOAN, 1 . 11E88,' LEDGME4.I.AgOAL INTIMLIGEN01:11.- iNQUIRKIC AGE, EVE:NINO 130/... I. V.Y.NINO Tr.LEGAAeIi, &EIU ASI DF:MOCILAT, it'' Furniture bales at the Auction Store EVERY t.t.URSDAY. Bales at residences receive esnectal attention, REAL ES VATF. SALE, MAY 5. VERY ELEOA I COUNTRY tie:AT and FARM, 55' scree. known as "Woodfield," cm no. York Road and I.lshei'm 1ane,224 Werd—liandeomo Mansion and out buildings. one-ball a mile from Pennsylvani• Railroad Station—re.bidrticu of Joseph Swift, Erg. See photo i taw]. . Peremptory SaIo.—VERY ELEGANT FOUR-STORY PIC'I 01, "lONli. ftESI, 'EN. E, a _No Colt Locust street, imiehed in a, superior mannbr nd has all the modern c rivi•niences o feet front Verempto , v SaIe—VERY ELEGANT COUNTRY RE SIDE:, E.. n. IV. corner of Thirty ninth and cipre,ca Lot n o by 150 feet, LARGE and VA LUABLE LOT, adjoining the aboi , a-- Ito by ISO feet, 1 rnetee,' e.nIe—LARGE and VALUABLE FOUR ST, •R 1 BRICK ItEI3IDENCE. with side yard . No. 1524 W :duet 11 —35 feet t runt. Has the modern conveniences. inn Ii d r Estate- V Eft)... VALUABLE LOT, Sixteenth ot. brio a W: Lnrt . See l'lnn • VAI.LI/Iln./ {SCRIM:BB STArm—VT . IEY ELEGANT FOGA BTOM PluT , U Slur% E TOR., No. Sufi Cheicuut 25 feet front, 178 feet deep. Irnmer! iato P0.1801 4 8101l• M bale- V) , miirgt•aur st 29th Wo , d P.Nir*GME MODERN It 131Dflts CO. No. Ifel West Hirt et) ti ieSquare--13fettfr 111, 115 feat deep. FOLR-BT..ItY BRICK IttElliiklblCE, No, 313 South Fit th rt , below Splice. _ _ DEdIILiDLE SCONE DWELLING and Large Lot N. E. corner of Ton whip Lille Bead and Tioga at.. 18th Ward :3011.5* feet front. . . Ext, , ut.rw . TlittEE-S'rORY BRIGE kI.SIDENUE,'N9. i bpruce et. 11:u the modern'eott vonkne, MODERN RESIDENCE. Queen of., N. E. of Waynei Germ nitto wn-85 by 16e feet HANDS. IMF; MoDE.N.N TIIREKS'fORI BRICK HI DFN CE, No ",2.5 Green t. -20 feet front, ,O 3 feet do 4 BRICK and FRANC , : DWELLdS(IB, NO3. 1322 aad 1321 Bedford at.— 32 feet front. Executom , eremptory dale—Erdate of 1: elven Clark, dee'cL—Bramess bTANII-4 b'RAME DIV 3,1.1.1N05, Noe.; 814 and 016 Spring (iarden at., adjoining Wathington.\ THREE-STORY BRICE DWELLINGS, Nos. 404 and 403 South Twenty-third et., below Nue. Peremptorc Sole-2 VALUABLE LOTS. L and Erie avenue. 23d Vard. MODERN I'llitEESToity POINTED STONE REM DE.NOE, corner of Gbeltenham avenue and Wayne avenue, 23d Word. Sale at No. 316 South Eleventh street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, tiltUariELS AND IN GRAIN CARPKIS, CHINA AND GLASE3WARF, do. ON WEDNE4DAY A pril 29. at dU o'cleck, at No. 316 coin Eleventh street. the entire Hoilaehold Furniture, including SarlimDiuing• room and Iliumber Furniture, brtwela Ingrain and other Carpets., Matresece, Bede and bedding, China aud Glitiativare, Kitchen Ettimila &c. Slay be examined on the morning of sale at 8 o'clock SOO No. 1817 North street. SUPERInIt NI FINE CARPETS, &c ON WEDNESDAY AFTSII.NOON. April 29, at 2 o'clock. nt No. 1819 Nortlt area', (between allst e find Coate. );enne' ior Walnut Parlor and Cham ber k urbiture, Oak' DlninK-room Furniture. Cottage Chamber Suite fine tarpote, Kitchen Uteneile. ettc. May be aeon early on the morning of sale 1 area Salo at Non. 189 and 141 South Fourth street. HANDSOME WALNCIT4DUsEOOI,O FURNITURE, 1. BEN oh PLATE MIRRoRS, sCIOOM ICKI R PIANO CASES.z, St P, LANDM tFES, BOOK BEDS' BcOOLN“ CHINA AND GI ASSTVAhE, HA.NDSOME' BRUSSELS AND t,THER DAhPETS. ON THURSDAY MORNING. - - - - At 9 o'clock, at the auction rooms, by catalogue. El very larse and exec lent useortment ot superior House luau Furniture, including cults handsome Walnut Par .or Furniture, covered unix one plush, reps and hair cloth, tine French Plate Mirrors 2 superior Resestood iBllO Forte& made by Schomacker; handsome Walnut Chamber Suiw, tine Bateau., Bede and Bedding. times rqr suite Lthrar. and Di ing room Furniture, Walnut fiord case, large end superior Bookcases, walnut and oak Desks and °ince Furniture, tine Double Barreled Gun, Stoves. (Mina and Glassware handsome Velvet, Brue oelo. Imperial and ob or l4l.rpets, Also, 2 superior Milkiest Boxoe,B airs. SUPERIOR FIR c.PR OF SAFES. Superior Fireproof Safe, made by Farrel & Herring. Superior Fireproof safe, made by Evsne & Watson. 1 wo superkr Fireproof Safes made by Lillie. Catalocues ready and the goods arranged._ for examina tion on Wednesday. SALE OF VALUABLE AND ELEGANT BOOKS - - _ On THURSDAY and Friday •AFTI 7 ,RNOONS, April 30th and Slay lot, at 4 lock. A collection of choice and elegant books, including British Routs, 130 vole.. halt call Applotou's Encyclo pedia, 22 vols., half cull; Bulwer's Novels, 20 vols., full coif ; Quincev's orks, 22 vols., half calf Froimart's ObromciesAvith illuminations:five editions of Shakepeare, Peek, Alec, superior Maynard rifle, enginver'e level, with eland. May be examined Wednesday previous to sale. Executors' Bale at No, Xll South Third street. . - . . El tate of Clamor Frederick klagadorn..decotused. VALUABLE OIL% PAINTINGS, CHOICE meiona STAT tiA NY, k INE BRONZES, Rica ORNAMEN TAL GOODS. &o ON FRIDAY MORNING. - . - - - May 1, at ID o'clock, at No. 321 South Third street, by a collection of very Valuable Oil Paintings,. including Judith and Holofernes, by Itchiel; Christ Leay. hut Jerusalem. (on pore. lair) by Kaulbach; Reldel'a duo Priestess and other fine bjects,by Miller achonbacb. Bowel, Birkel, Birch, Web‘r, J. B. Martin, lan kiss, Wilmot ach, and other celebrated artists; Marine Sta.. teary by idtein.hauser, Thorwalden and othera l arge bronze statue of Apollino, Groups : Figures, Busts, State ettes, tine Steel Engravings, rare and scarce; valuable and cw ions models, richly decorated and Bohemian Out Ohms. Ornaments, Fancy Goods, &e. Catalogues ready ten days previous to sale. SUPERIOI irmu . spgQ4D FURNITURE, FINE BRUSSELS CARPETS. Ac. Ms SATURDAY MORNING. May', at 10 o'clock, at No. 821 south Third street, by order of Execetors. superior Mahogany Parlor and Chant" bsr Furniture, fine Brussels Carpets, Hair and iipring atruses. t,xtenelon Dining Table, ntoves, May be examined early on the morning of sale. Sale at the Coaquanock Naudain etreet. above Twentieth 'erect. ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. May 2. at 2 o'clock precisely, at the Coaquanock NaLdain erect, above Twentieth street, and below Loin , and street the valuable Cotton Machinery including— Fifty 1, 2 and 3 Shuttle Looms, made by Jenks, roon and wood; Cloth Beams, Woolen ileele, Size Trough, Dyeing Frame, Splitting Machine, arc. May be czar:tuned early on the morning of gale, with catalogues Salo No. 1832 Eno street HANDSOME WALNUT FLJRN t .URE, ROSEWOOD MAY , T EL AND PIER MIRRORS. HAND— SOME A XMINSTER AND BRUSSELS CARPETS. &c. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. - _ May G at No. le:31 Pine street, op catalogue, the entire Furneture, includlug—ilandrome Walnut Parlor Flunk tine, superior Chamber fLL d Yining room eUrniture, Rom wood Nano Forte, tine French Plate Mantel and Pier Mirrors, large Regulating Llock, handeome uxutinater. Engli h &needs Carreto, China, Glare, Hair Matremegy kitchen Furniture, &c. May ho eeen early on the morning of gale. J TAMES A. FREEMAN, AUCT. 4 WA I L NoALNUT street, REAL ESTATE BALE, APRIL MI. This Sale, on WEDNESDAY, at 13 o'clock. noon, at the Exchange, will include tho following— REID DENt.E. A0.7e3 CALLOWHILL; ST.—The hand route Residence with back buildings, stable and coach houeo on Willow et.; 23 feet front by about 153 feet deep.. being 41 feet on Willow et. Has all the conveniences. Orphans' Court Sate— Estate of Abraham IL Alburgen, deo , d. No. 219 LAFAYETTE ST.—A threeitory brick hones, 16' by fit fee , . @2el ground rent. Orphans' Court Notate pi John Ilavertu, deed. GERMAN rOWN.—A pointed stone twin residence, Tulpoliocken et, between Adams and Green 0•8„; jot 315 ii b' 210 feet. Orphans' Court Sale—Estate /'hontae grooks,dee'd. LINDEN ST.—A three story brick house, above Green Ht.. 15 by 75 feet. Same Estate. ADJOINING,—DweIIing No. 37 Linden at.. same'de- scriptien. Same Estate. QUEEN ST.— A three story brick twin house, 30 by 15454. Same Estate. 1011, — CATALOGUES NOW READY Sale No. 1008 Cherry Street. NEAT lIOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, 'CARPETS, SO FAS, M TABLES, WI ON WEDNESDAY ORNING, At 10 o'clock, will be sold at public sale. at No. lOW Cherry [greet, the neat Doupelyild Ftirultnro, Brussels aau ingrain Careers, Sofas. Table, Kitchen Utensils, &c, SALE OF HORSES AND CARRIAGES. ON TkIURSDAY MORNINU. At It) o'clock. will 'Wool& at Mr. Han). H. Stnekert's Stables. Fifth street, between. Green and Coates, the Stock of a large Livery Stable, including•line Carriages. Horses Harness, bluighs, de. itW Catalogues now ready. Salo No. 325 N. Sixth street ' NEAT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, HAIR SEAT SOFAS, CABFRTS, BEDDING. CHINAWARE, ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 11 o'clock, will be sold, at No. 325 N. Sixth street, the Hotochold Furniture, including Sofro. carpets Tales, Ili , dding, China, Moment,. Ritcaou UtClatlile, C. Irlf" Mau to examined with eatatootee on the morning 11l sale, AT PRIVATE SAGE. BURLINGTON.—A handsome Mansion, ou Main at. lot M by 700 feet. WOODLAND TERRACE—handsome Modern Resi dence. T L. ASIIBRIDGE & CO AUCTIONEERS, No. 605 MARKET street. above Filth.; LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF BOOTS, 13110E8 AND HATS. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. • April 28. at it o'clock. we will sell by catalognik itaitet 1000 cases Roots and Shoes, embracing a fin° rapid of first class city at d Eastern made goods;to which the attention of the trade le called. . CD. Mot; LEES & COtt • • - . _JAIME/3801W TO MoOLELLAND dt GO.An No. 6003 MA, street. LARGE BALE OF BOOM. 13110E8.`BROGANS. DALMOR,ALS. dtmi We will sell for caelt EVERY M.ONDAIrituiTITORI3- DAY MORNING. at ten o'clock. .k *vie ot e go rt m eut ae Men's, Women's, Misses' and Uhildron's wear; Loth City and Eastern manufacture. :..&palm , TISATH HOTS% • 80Ii0OLEY1 MOVSTAIN STRING*. li c ee r „L,. Opout 150. June t# terms! reduOelt . For ptitt route, Z etc.. addreiC , • ,• , ty, 4111AZ,Stilik, ayNth t o 4 1 /11 ' • L"Pricw"