Cool Udb of shell, slug, Bca-sholl warm and sweet. - ~ornpplestmrllrfron the creamybeach, ; Of soft waves singing In each other's bar. ‘ - email wavelets kissing ono another’s feat, i W hcre flaker of foam make music, alow speech Tenderly sad to bear. .<:C Tell me of balf-formcd lltUe brol&n-words » finng by tbo ripples to the sUlTsea-Tibwors _ ‘Hent, sleeping, tideless deeps of sea: r %. th . eT ? UI S ?,°" crs havo voices ltko to birds, That sing full-throated In this world ofoure On each melodious tree.' shall, some other day Tell me of sighingß on the lonelv shore, » otj blr<^B that scream above; *LS??«J!. ol i no 7 °f, ea rth grown weak and gray,- Nor loDglng for the things that come no more, Nor any broken love. " breathing bears another tone, . ? ; » a 5 0061 Currents running under sea, .. bappy laughter of the sunny spray:— t, Ah. nearest thou the words that are thine own, the message that they bear to me, Tho things they seem to say ? it is this—“ The soft bine deep, Which thrills with a heart that knows thee and is kind; - Sighed for thy sorrow, now it laughs with T .thee; . ... i«ove is a secret.which man cannot keep. Hide It from heaven and the heedless wind, • Bat trnstit with tho sea ■ »K|W PUJBI.ICiLTIONB. Messrs. Appleton & Co: publish another novel by Lonisa Mtthlbach, the' embroidereas of history, •which combines in its title two. great riaihes. in German song, Goethe,, and Schiller., The admirers,of Mrs. Milhlbach's method will here find her at her best,moving •with fine abandon in a subject that is tho roughly congenial to her. and ornamenting the facts of biography with an ever-ready and fikillftil fancy. To be sure, her novel “Goethe and Schiller” has, not the attraction of Goethe’s Autobiography; but then it certainly gives a broader picture of the the time, wjth its political cabals, and. a > more ,-*■■■ general, .view of society;- and MraT Milhlbnch is almost, like. Scott in her knack of throwing herself into the spirit of an age and giving her narration the touches that impart probability. We may safely recommend any person who has not ■ leisure to study up the career of the two peets from biographical sources, to peruse this ab sorbing novel, promising that the impression , derived wiU not be a false one. Messrs AP ?;■ pletbir issue the book uniform with the other woTkti'they have published of the author, in containining two columns, plainly ~ done U P hi dark cloth, and embellished with | prodigal illustrations by Gaston Fay. Several ' k of the latter, representing single figures of # women, are improvements, and decidedly at- I tractive. 1 second tome of Appleton's six-volume 4 concentrated library Dickens is now ready 0 consisting of three of the pretty pamphlets known as the plum-pndding issue sewn toee i therm one. This is the most condensed Dickens, in any neat form, we know of, and „is emmently suited to a traveling, sea-side \Or mountain library. ' The plaid-cover pamphlet edition of Waver ley now includes “The Monasteiy. ” These publications of the Messrs. Appleton -may be found on the colters of Claxton Kemsen & flaffelfluger, 819 and 821 Market street \\ | di-sighs' by the old niisixtts .fr i Florence. . BE ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBUKNE. SKctcbcs by ITllcUael Angelo, But in one separate head there is more (' tragic attraction than in these: a womaa’p three times studied, with divine and d htle f care; sketched and re-sketched in *onth and age, beautiful always beyoHd'&'yaire and cruel beyond words; fairer than heaven and more terrible than hell; pale with pride and weary * with wrong-doing. 1,, In one drawing she weare a head-dress of | eastern fashion rather than western, but in , 4 effect made out of the artist’s mind only; j | plaited in the likeness ot closely welded f t scales as of a chrysalid serpent, raised and and rounded in the likeness of a sea ©shelft ;In some inexplicable way all her or ■'( Ornaments seem to partake of her fatal nature, to bear upon them her brand ot beauty fresh from hell; and this through no vulgar mi jctunery of symbolism, no serpentine orother ly Vfslse bestial emblem; the bracelets 6nd rings ..fare innocent enough in shape and workman ,,' ffebip; but in touching her flesh they havebecome ■ infected with deadly and malignant meaning. n 'Broad bracelets divide the shapely splendor ’ Of her arms; over the nakedness of her firm luminous breasts, just below the neck, i " there is passed a band as of metaL Her eyes ■V are full of proud and passionless lust after / gold and blood; her hair,- close and curled, ■*’ seems ready to shudder in sunder and divide into snakes. Her throat full and fresh, round (and hard to the eye as her bosom and arms, . r is erect and stately, the head set firm on it any droop or lift of the chin; her S louth crueller than a tiger’s, colder than a ‘ nake’sand beautiful'beyond a woman’s. She i the deadlier Venus incarnate, for upon earth 'J' "' many names might be found for her: ft \ mmia re-tranßformed, invested now with a If . uller beauty, but divested of all feminine at- I , tributes not native to the snake, —a Lamia jii loveless and unassailable by the sophist, If readier to drain life out of her lover than to I fade for his sake at his side; or the Persian !? Amestris, watching the only breasts on earth I'; more beautiful than her own cut off from her 1 rival’s living bosom; or Cleopatra, not dying . but turning serpent under the serpent’s bite; ' or that queen of the extreme East, who with her husband marked eyery day as it went by 1 some device of a new and wonderful cruelty. In one design, where the cruel and timid face of a king rises behind her, this crowned and cowering head might stand for Ahab’s, and hers for that of Jezebel Another i is in red chalk; - in this the I only* omamen's are ear-rings. In a third 1 the serpentine hair is drawn up into a tuft at I, the crown with two ringlets hanging heavy ) and deadly as small tired snakes. There is a | drawing in the furthest room at the Buonar *®ti Palace which recalls and almost repro- • duces the design of these three. Here also 14, the electnc hair, which looks as though it V' v would hiss and glitter with sparks if once touched, is wound up to a tuft with serpen i’-V -hnAjplaits and involutions; all that remains ;; of It unbound falls m one curl, shaping itself into a snake s -likeness as it unwinds right ; -.against a living snake held to the breast and Oiroat. This is rightly registered as a stud v Cleopatra; but notice has not yet . i been accorded to the subtle and sub lime idea Which transforms her death if by the aspic’s bite 1 iato a meet ing of serpents which recognize and embrace an encounter between the woman aud the , worm of Nile, almost as though this match for death werea monstrous love-match, or eueb a myeticmarriage as that painted in the loveliest passage of tialammbj, between the y, maiden body and the scaly coils ef the ser- i'-'S pent andthe pnesteaß alike made sacred to t&eicooo; so closely do the snakes and-the caress and cling. Of this v Bhakspeare also had a vague add great whea he made Adtony murmur, Where* my serpent of- oldWilc?”. mixing ai foretMte of her death with- the full sweet i!r V ?. r ller ? u PP le and amorous “pride of ; ife.’, For.what indeed is lovelier or more luxuriously loving than a - strong a nd grace ful snake of the nobler kind? “ The Nurf-iaistrcss -of Filippo lilppi. The sketches of Filippo Lippi are exquisite ana few. One above all, of Lucrezia Buti, in her girlhood, as the painter found her at Brato in the convent, is of a beauty so in tolerable that the eyes can neither endure nor abstain.from it without a pleasure acute even to pain which compels them to cease look ings or a desire which, as it compels them to return, relapses into delight Her face is very young, more faultless and fresher than the first forms and colors of morning; her pure,mouth, small and curved, cold and ten der: her eyes, set with an exquisite mastery of drawing in the clear and ; gracious Bh ? w actu al color of brilliant brown in their shapely and lucid pupils,under their chaste and perfect f^ d .L „ e £, ha , lr , ls d ® e P J y dra ,wn backwards from the sweet low brows and smaU rounded cheeks heaped .anti hidden away under a knotted veil, whoseflaps fall on either side of her bnght round throat The world haß changed fpr painters and their Virgins since tjjc school of Angelico had its day and its this study assuredly was not made P.a^t® 1 in the .intervals of More vivid, mote fertile and more WfuaUc than Lippo, the-greatinvention and -“Cu 0220 never produced; a ' For Pure and simple beauty it is > «To^?f£»P l^!LV' U J? Surf)aasal>le: innocent enough but pure by nature, not c through religion/ No creeds have helped to compose the holiness of her beauty 1 and arid ?anctiiiesof women as cetic by accident or abstemious by force have ' rn^S!?i g m eom r n , with - her chastity. She might be as well a virgin chosen of Artemis Mystic passions and fleshless; visions have never taken hold upon her sense of faith. No flower and no animal is more innocent; none more capable of giving and of yielding to the pleasure that gl J®- before the date of her immortal •robably , n ° artist ca P a ble of painting such a thing at all; and in none of his many pamUngS does the stolen nun look : and smile with a more triumphant and serene 1 supremacy of beauty. | Andrea del Sarto and lucrozta. lo praise him would need sweeter and purer speech than this of ours. His art is to me as the Tuscan April in its tetnpemte days - Bnd , clear> bnt ll^ed and kindled by such air and light as fills the fife ,P'° W Dg year with flre - At Florence °^ y can °£ e and tell how great a pamter afid how various he was. There only but surely there, can the influence and nres -B°£ofthe filings of time,on his ,“mortal be Utlde , l ' 6tood i bow ““ch of him was Med or changed, how much of him “*? d n r ot ,. be - Th ey are the first- Imts of lus flowering manhood, when the bright and buoyant genius in Mm had tree play and large delight in its han- SflS hi^ e nmi e of invention was etiii his, and the dramatic sense thp Snw 9tU | ofhfe; the power of ml tion and variety; before the old strength nf sight and of flight had passed from weary wmgandclonitog eye, the old pride and energy of enjoyment had gone om of hand md heart. How She change fell upon him and how it wrought, any one may see who compares Ms later with his earlier work- with the aeries, for instance, of outlines represmm mg the story of St John Baptist in tbi Jeso liiSutUe cloister of Loßealaa l> designs there is such rance of yttllhg power, of fresh passion and imagination, that only by the innate grace can. one recognize the hand of the master whom hitherto we knew by the works of lus I after Hfe, when the gift of grace had survived the gift of invention. This and all other gifts it didl survive; all pleasure of life and power of .? ii 2 d * the conscience of the man, his will, Bis character, his troubles, his triumphs, his sin and honor, heart-break and shame. All these his charm of touch, his sweetness ofesecutioD, his “Elysian beauty,melancholy grace, outlived, and blossomed in their dust, Turn from that cloistral series to those later pictures painted when he was “faultless,” aEd nothing more: and seeing all the growth and all the gain, all the change and all the loss, one to whom the record was un known would feel and foreknow his story and his sorrow. In the cloister, what life and Hilness of growing and strengthening genius .T ifU O / 0113 sense of its growth and tne fair held before it, what dramatic delight in char acter and action! where St. John preaches in lhe wilderness and the few first listeners are gathered together at his feet, old people and poor, soul-stricken, silent,—women with worn, still faces, and a spirit in their tired aged eyes that feeds heartily and hungrily od his words,—all the haggard funereal group filled , from the fountain of his faith with gradual fire and white-heat of soul: or where Salome dancea before Herod, an in carnate figure of music, grave and graceful, light and glad, the song of a bird made flesh, with perfect poise of her sweet aught body from the maiden face to the melo dious feet; no tyrannous or treacherous god dess of deadly beauty,but a Bimple virgin, with the cold charm of girlhood and the mobile charm of childhood; as indifferent and inuo cent when she stands before Herodias, and when she receives the severed head of John with her slender and steady hands; a pure bright animal, knowing nothing of man, and of, hfe, nothing but instinct and and motion. Jn her mother s mature and conscious beauty there is visible the voluptuous will of a harlot Mid a queen; but for herself she has neither nialice nor pity; her beauty is a maiden force of naturCj capable of bloodshed without bloodguiltmess; the kiDg hangs upon the music of her movement, the rhythm of leaping liie in her fair fleet limbs, as one who listens to a tune, Bubdued by the rapture of sound, absorbed in purity of fashion. I know not where the subject has been touched with such fine and keen imagination aa here. The time came when another than Salome was to dance before the eyes of the ; painter; arid she required of him the head of no man, but his own soul; and he paid the forfeit into her hands. With the coming of that time upon him came the change upon his heart and hand, “the work of an imperious whoriek woman.” Those words,.set by the prophet as a brand upon the fallen forehead of the chosen bride, come back to mind as one studies in her husband’s pictures the full calm lineaments, the large and serene beauty of Lucrezia del Fede;: a predominant and pla cid beauty, placid and implacable, not to be pleaded with ox fought against. Voluptuous alwayß and slothful, subtle at times,no doubt, and sweet beyond measure, full of heavy beauty and warm slow grace, her features bear no sign jof possible love or con science Seen side by side with bis clear sad face, hers tells more of the story than any written record, even though two poets of our age have taken it up. In the teverißh and feeble melodrama of Alfred de Mupset there ib no touch of tragedy, hardly a shadow of passionate and piteous truth; in i>lr. Browning s noblest poem,—his noblest it 'SfaJ THE DAILY ETENIHG BPI liETIN—PHILADELPHIA. MONDAY, JULY 27,1868, seems to me,—the whole tragedy is distilled into the right words, tho whole man raised up and re-clothed with flfesh. One point Only ■is but lightly touched upon,—missed it could not be by an eye so sharp and .skinful,—the effect ripon hia art of the poisonous solvent love. How his life was corroded by it arid his soul burnt into dead ashes, we are shown in lull; but we are not shown in full whatas a painter he was before, what as a bairiter he might have been without it This is wbat I think the works of his youth and age, • seen near together,, as at Florence, make manifest to any loving and studious eye. In those latter works, the in evitable! and fatal J figure of the woman recurs with little diversity or change. Shu has grown into his art, and made it even as Herself; rich, monotonous in beauty, calm complete, without heart or spirit. But his has not been always the “low-pulsed forth right craftsman’s hand” it was then. He had started on his way towards another goal than that. Nothing now is left him to live for but his faultless hand and her faultless face,r-still and full, suggestive of no change in the steady, deep-lidded, eyes and. heavy, lovely lips without love or pudency or pity.; ■ Here among, his sketches we flnd. it again ver again the same, crowned and clothed only with the glory ,and the joy and the majesty of the flesh. ' the luxurious and subtle sense which: serves the woman for a soul looks forth arid speaks plainest from those eyes and lips, rifle is sovereign and stately still; r ! there is in her beauty nothing common or unclean. We cannot but see her-for %hat she is; but her majestic face makes no appeal for homage or forgiveness. Above stairs and below I o B oY l i n ? ny ” attempting to embrace his round fat knees with his fat round arms, and laughing with delight in the difficulty,is a more triumphant child than ever painter drew before or sine z.—Fortnightly lUaUbenr Arnold on ci»o Irish Chnrcla i^stubiishmoni. JNOW it; seems plain that the present Church establishment m Ireland is contrary t j reason and justice, in so far as the Church of a very small minority of the people there takes for itselt all the Church property of the Irish people. And one would think that property assigned for the purpose of providing for a people’s religious worship when that worship was one, the State should, when that wort ship is split into several forms, apportion be tween those several forms*.with due regard to circumstances, taking account only of groat differences, which are likely to be lasting,and of considerable communions, which are likely to represent profound and wide-spread religious characteristics ; and overlooking petty differences, which have no se nous reason for lasting, and inconsider able communions, which can hardly be taken to express any broad and necessary re ligigus lineaments of our common nature. This is just in accordance with that maxim about the State which we have more than Once used: the State is of the religion of ail its citizens, without the fanatacism of any of them. Those who deny this either think so poorly of tbe State that they do not like to see religion condescend to touch the State, or they think so poorly of religion that they do not like to see the State condescend to touch religion; but no good statesman will easily think thus unworthily either of the State or of religion, and our statesmen of botu parties were inclined, one may say, t > follow the natural line of the State's duty, and to make in Ireland some fair apportionment of Church property between large and radically divided religious communions in that country. Bat theu it was discovered that in England the national mind, as it is called, is grown averse to endowments lor religion, and will makeno new ones; and though this in itself looks general and solemn enough, yet there were found political philo sophers, like Mr. Baxter and Mr. Chaa. Bux ton, to give it a look of more generality uud more solemnity still, and to elevate, by their dexterous command of powerful aud beanti lul language, this supposed edict of the lish national mind into a sort of formula l ir expressing a great law of religion-, transition and progress for all the world But we, who, having no coherer.: philosophy, must not let ourselves philoso phize, only see that the English Nonconform ists have a great horror of establishments aud endowments for religion, which, they assert, were forbidden by Christ when he said, “Mv kingdom is not of this world;’’ and that, tuv Nonconformists will be delighted to aid states men in disestablishing any church, but u-ii suffer none to be established or endowed it they can help it. Then we see that the Non confoimists make the strength of the libera: majority in the House of Commons, and that therefore, the leading Liberal statesmen, to get the support of the Nonconformists,forsake the notion of fairly apportioning Church proper„y in Ireland among the chief religious com munions, declare that the national mind hat decided against new endowments, and pro pose simply to disestablish and dhendow tlm present establishment in Ireland without establishing or endowing any other. The actual power, in short, by virtue of wnich the Liberal party In the House of Commons i now trying to disestablish the Irish Cuurch is not the power of reason and justice-it is the power of the English Nonconformists' antipathy Jp Church establishments. Clearly it is this; because Liberal statesmen, relyimt on the power of reason and justice to heip them, proposed something quite differen: from what they now propose, and they pro posed what they now propose, and talked ol the decision of the national miud, because they ban to rely on the Englisu Nonconformists. And clearly the Hue “fib Nonconformists are actuated by antipathy to establishments, not by antipathy to the in justice antmrationalily of the present appro prialion of Church property in Ireland- lie cause Mr. Spurgeon, in his eloquent and memorable letter, expressly avowed that h, would sooner leave things as they are in Ire land, that is, he would sooner let the injust-ee -and irrationality of the present -appropriation continue, than do anything to set up the l< man image, that is, than give the Csthmi, . their fair and reasonable share of Chur, il property. Most indisputably, therefore, may affirm that tbe real moving power i, v which the Liberal party are now opor,m:,‘- 'he overthrow of the Irish establishment is the antipathy of the English Nonconformists •y 4 " - —,'T l ** - *V'l**' "••* - i* l * »■■<« i^~->- t >-i»- to Church eßtablißhments. aad not the. sense or JusUce, except eo for as reason and justice mSy be contained in this ' au tiphthy. And thus the matter stands at pro- Now surely we must all :see many incon venlencesln performing the operation of 'ud- evil, the Irish ChUrch establSh ment, way. As was said about industry and treedom and gymnastics, we shall never awaken love and gratitude by this mode of operation; for it is pursued, no t in view of reason and justico and human per fection, and all thaVenkindles the enthusiasm oi men, but it is pursued In view of a certain i stock notion, or fetish/of the Nonconformists, which v proscribes-' Church establishments. And yet, evidently, one of the main benefits ™.“ e 8 Qt £7 operating on the Irish Church is to win the affections of the; .Irish people. Besidos this,.an operation performed ,in virtue oi a mechanical rule, or fetish, like the supposed decision oi the English national mind against e , n . do .7 me J ntB > docß not easily inspire respect in its adversaries, and make their op position ieeble and hardly td be persisted in. as an operation evidently doiie in virtue of reason and justice might FOr reason and justice have in them -something' persuasive and UTesistihlej but a fetish or mechanical maxim, like this of theNonconformlsta.haa in it nothing at all to Conclliate either the affec tions or the understanding; nay, it provokes the counter-employment of other fetishes or mechanical maxims, on the opposite side, by which the confusion and hostility already prevalent are heightened. Only, in, this Tf ay , °u n ,'£? .. ex P lamed the apparition ot such fetishes as are begining to be set. .on the Conservative side against (he fetish of the Nonconformists ihe Constitution in danger! The bul warks of British freedom, menaced! Ihe lamp of the Reformation put out! No Ropery /--and s 6 on. To elevate these against an operation relying on reason arid justice to back it is not so,easy or so tempting to hu man infirmity as to elevate them against an operation relying onthelNoncorifortoists, an f^ a n l ft V to p b “ ri; b f Bt ae]ishmentB to back it; . af . le , r *\Xo Ropery! is ns- rallying cry which touches the human spirit quite os vi tally as A o Church establishments!— that is to say, neither the one nor the other, in themselves touch the human spirit vitally a! nil. Cornhill Magazine. 3 LXIHIIISKINS. Belvioere and Delaware Railroad 00, “EEJLAWAItE WATER GAP.” ui?Hrtyiii^, , ,Ti'? rtho r i ,pccl .'' l accommodation of Pansen. ,/?, spending Sunday' at tho DEIAWarv Jit!,'' Kem-ingtoo Dcnot lor Delaware Water Our, rlailj (h nndoj « excepted) at 7 A. M. and 3J» P M P ««"M W. H. Agtfnt. Old, Reliable and .Popular Rout* BETWEEN NEW YORK AND BOSTON, And the only Direct Route for iVewport, fall River. Taunton, Sew Bedford. 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East and Nortt > and «P.lendld steamers BRISTOL aud PROVI l;L/>CK leave Pier No. 40 North River, foot of .Cana street, ad iominf< Debrar-rtet* street Ferry, Now Voßk, at i l. M., daily, Sundays excepted; connecting with steam boat train at Bristol at 4.50 A, \1„ arriving In Boston at i A* M. In time to connect with all the morning trains fron iFti f , cit £; 7 he nuwt (tcHirable and pleasant route to th> Unite Mountains. fravelerk for that point oan inaJc itirrr.t connections by way of frovidence and Worcester o ! Bouton. Staterooms and Tickets secured at office on Plerh Njew Yobk, _npa, taisj “• ° BKIGQS - ae “’l Manager. jpcot, v F o K CAPE >1 A V - Tt-KSDAYd. THURSDAYS imd 1 L ivl '/\ \ D t 1 'he Kplettdfd now ctemner LA.T>Y OF THE LAICE. Li'jjiaui \\ W, ingrain. leaves Pier 19. above Vint i vcr> TiicHday. Thurndny uud Saturday ut 9 15 a M. und returning leave* Care May on Monday. Wed n' rtUy »td Friday. I' are $l3 L's, including carriago hire P «•! vaut* $1 Co. rteiw'f-ii Tirktt- Carriage hire extra. T Lo Lady o/ the Lake n* a fine ee& boat, has hand ouiu ttatorooiu ntcoinniodationH, and is fitted up will ■mtj thing necerHp.i-7 for the eafety and comfort of pa* G. H. HUDOELL, CALVIN IAOGAttr. Office No. 88 N. Pel. avenue. fuisPSSS fa Opi>OSITI()N COMBI N ED™ iViI&TIOAD & RIVE! .MONOPOLY »tt junir BYLYESTEK will make daUy oxcur •-inD!: to n ilniioKton (Sundays excepted), touching o' ■ heaterand Marcus Hook. Leaving Arch direct whar' •it lu a si . nnd 4 i\,m. Reimuiijt, leave Wilmington, at 7a, if., and 1 p. m. Light height taken. t HOOK, AND WML At 8.90 and 950 A. 4L, ant ,I .' , L i ;'" o ;'ffiV, r ‘ i fa;'FELTON .and ARIEL leave Qhost mit btreetWbnrf (Sundayr excepted) at 8.30 and 950 A 'I-' fLd'd. 6 i u . l ; j . Jl v 'eturulng, leave Wilmington ataw'A M.. 15.60 and 3.00 ). M. Stepping at Choeter . and Uool eacirwiiy. Fare, 10 Cents between all points. 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Parties subscribing through local agents will look to them for their safe delivery .. t F A M ™W r ANb MAP FOR 1868 bus just boon pub. lisped by the Company, giving fuller information than Is poeslbie in an advertisement, respecting the Progress of the Work, the Resources of the Country traversed by the Road, the Means for Construction, and the Value of the Bonds,which will he sent free on application to the Com pany’s offices or to any, of the advertised Agents. • Jf'lo (K)O ®' i2ou ’ 81,000, TO LOAN ON . 01 u • M Ol tenge. • 1. H. MORRIS. —— No. aaoNorth'Tflnth'Btroef ’ No. 8 w illtaiu etroet. New York City. A DVEETIBINQ AGENCY, ! ‘ , GEORGE DEEP is 00., K^™H«. or ? U, l 6w jy a ? er " a * the lowoet rate*. Office. No. 703 Chestnut •treot. second floor, PRESS BUILD. lnG - Doe-tOtthAly POPULAR LOANS. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGTBdNDs^ At 102 and Accrued Interest. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, At 103 and Accrued Interest. Bonds oil hind for Immediate . caUon. reP ° rl8 ’ m ° PS ’ * C '’ fnrnlsl ied npon appll- No. 40 S. Third St. GOLD AND GOLD COUPONS BOUGHT BY P- 8- PETERSON * 00., 39 South Third Street. Jet*, tVr o°mco QUOtationi BtS(loned STOCKS, BONOS. &c, &c„ at 'ho rcrpoctive Boar* del»Sl° ra ° f Now York> I,OBton ' Uoltlmoro and myl6 fanf BROWN, BROTHERS & CO., No. 211 Chestnut Street, Issue Commercial Credits; also, Circular Letters of Credit for Travelers, available in any part of the World. . jeao Bm* 700 MILES OF TUB UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Arc now finished and In active operation. One hundred and sixty miles have been built in the last three months More than twenty thousand men are employed, and this average of forty miles per month will bo continued throughout thoseaaou, making NINE HUNDRED COM PLETED M inEB by January Ist, and it is now probable that the ENTIRE G RAN It LINE TO THE PACIFIC wJll be open for business in leoa No other first-class railroad In the world has been built and equipped so rapidly as the Union Pacific, which runs west from Omaha ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The Unitea States Government makes of this railroad a GREAT NATIONAL WORK, and aids its construction by very liberal grants of money and of lands To further insure the speedy completion of the Bond, the Company are authorized to Lssue their own FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS having thirty years to run. and having interest coupons payable semi-annually at the rate of six por cent, in gold. The principal, as well as interest, is made PAYABLE IN GOLD. The Mortgage Bonds of nearly all other railroads in this country, are payable, principal and interest. In cur rency ; and it is areerted, without Tear ol coutiadiction. that no other i ailroad con paoy in the world, building so great an extent of road, issues bonds of equal value with the First Mortgage Bonds now offered for sale by the Union Pacific Ksilroad Company. The price of these Bonds is now 102 and accrued in tereßt from July 1, In currency. The Company believe that at this price their Bonds are the Safett and Most Profitable Investment in the market, and they confidently expect that they will shortly command a higher premium than any similar oe curity. The Company reserve the eight to advance the price at any time, and will not fill any ordere or receive any subscription on which the money has not boon actually paid at the Company’s office before the time of such advance. bnbecriptlonu will be received in Philadelphia by DE HAVEN & BROTHER, No. 40 S. Third Street, WM. PAINTER & CO., No. 30 S. Third Street. SMITH. RANDOLPH ACO,, 16 South Third Street. And in New York ie Company'* Office, No 20 Ras&au St. AND BY ohn J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, 59 Wall St. And by the Company’s advertised-Agenfs throughout ■ • the United States. pHN J» CISCO, Treasurer, New Yorft,- jy7 tn th s-tfS - July 2L 1868. FEBSONAt. Tiling in A^, BERLINPAINT£DPHOTOQRAPHB~ A. S. ROBINSON, No. 910 CHESTNUT STREET . * Hm just received a superb collection of * Berlin Painted Photographs of- FLOWERS. They, are exquisite acme of art. . T'jji'ralncßß of tint, rndperfeotionof form afri?. ofthe chotuetexotlo flo tve: In* plan sste d ” ° f lhrCOt ‘ lC *’ » wntft^ls or tho album, tho, oro tacqmiarablr bkhtiiEiibii , i fPß«iiHiw« ~iwoiai PATENTSHOULDER REAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY. ?t«*n tot- thew~4»alei>ratoa Bhfatf mmUM inoattt '' Gentfenieift Faralsbiog Cfoodi, Of lata ityloa fa full nSotr, * WINCHJEiSTER & GO., WwxtT oq chestnut. FIHE DRESS SHIRTS- AND GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO. 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia*, Four doors below Continental Hotel! ' ■■■ , 1 tnhlJiw OPES OBOCBBia, mtPOBg, AG, TO FAMILIES Residing in the Rnral Districts* We are prepared, m heretofore, to .apply famine, r/- their country r cslSM, with every deccripUon™ FINE GRotlllES, TEAS, Ao., &o D ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. RICHARD W. FAIRTHORNE & CO .* Dealer Id Tea* and Coffee*, Wo. 1030 BABKEV STHEET.' at m'ottprt^' l of «*• «« «*d'«oia CASES OF SUPERIOR TART f* M F BPll I‘° «*« Fot .itotS M. t. bl ILUN._N._W. comer Arch end Eighth Ytreelj" T oPIIiLiN. N. W. corner Arch «nd F.l.hih JhtL.f 7 “• r - WTOHEI, i JWBmr. AC." VEWIS LADOMUS~&CO' DIAMOJTD DEALERS mauufacturere using a regular quantity. '•* jylgtf • B. - • JOHtt r; rpst UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTENTION 1 - TO- A theiratock of SPk B Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain' CoaL wmch, with tho preparation given by us, we think cannot, be excelled by any other Coah •Uffice, Franklin iffirtitriio Building, No. 15 8. Soventb ■toet. - BINES & BHEAFP, _ jaiO-tf Arch street wharf. Sohavlkul: OHTON'SPINB APPLE- CHEJCSE.—IOO BOXES ON iv OoneJvmnent. Landing and for sale by JOS-«B. BUBSItii “bert* and the pursuit «oS2SSSSt *?« e r»r in,t * 0 ? ot Ibis, principle tho "M;- freely received cmlgiraotufrotn oil ebfp: and dVC tcd tbem wlth tba rignt/of cltlzcn with ** claimed that snch American citizens, )S„„«^L d . es “ nda ? ,s ' aro anbjccts of foreign States, H?? o f° 010 Ro™>nmchtthereof; and ..: ft.J® Necessary to tho matntcnaoc" of pub* *»?JSSSM > ? ft s , S le f? a^ 1 °*» foreign'jiHeglanceebaU bo P r §®pWy*od finally dlaavowcdTthcreforcr.’ * » 7 l t ** e *'**■ «<*' (tc. f That any declaration, Instruc tion' oplDion, 4 or declßloa of any.officer of-this govera mc?nt, which’ don!ei,‘ restricts, impairs, dr questions the right of expatriation, is hereby declared lncoa eistcßt wlth thefandamental,principles of thla gov ernment; _ B*o, 2f That all natnralized citizens of. tho United “talc*, while Ih foreign States, shall bo entitled to. .and shall receive from this, government the same protection ; of person and property that Is accorded to native-born citizens In like situations and clrcnm stances. „ 8*0; 3. That whenever It shall bo made known to the -President th*t any citizen of tho United States has 01 bu liberate or undlrfthe sntborlty of A foreign government, U shall be thedutv -of tlra President forthwith to demand of that govern ment the reasons for snch imprisonment; and. If It appear* to bewrongful end,ln violation ol the rights the President shall forthwith leasenf snch persons, and If the rolease unreasonably delayed orrefaeed. It °* *be President t 6 use snch means, not amounting to acta of war, as ho may think ncces oDrolo ob i?i n M to Cora ”‘ l *- Co^rtofaffi 1 ' 1 ’ ° f Tennessco ’ to ba d “dga of the A Henry M. Watts, of Philadelphia, to bo Minister to B. Storm, of New York, to be Consul at at Havana”" 111118 ’ ° f TcMeBBCC ' to be Consul-General atNAnUs 111 Gerri *b, of New Hampshire, to be Consol Jeremiah Seltzcngcr to be Assessor of Internal Rev «nne. Tenth District of Pennsylvania, L. He Colt to bo Consol at VaJcntia. thePwSn^ ° f Pennfl >' Ivanla * to *mj. Consol at Hlark, of Dllnols, to be Surveyor-General of H. G. Worthington to bo Minister Resident In Urn gnay. biti’ A * of to be Consol at Ta- A. D. Paddock, of Nebraska, to bo Governor of Wyoming. C- P • Roberta, of Indiana, to be Secretary of Wyo- THE FEESIDEHT’S VETO MESSAGE. The following is the President’s veto of the Fr cod men’s Bureau hill: So,ati of (he United Statu: Believing that a bill cnUtlce an act relating to the Frcedmetfa Bnrcan, and providing for Its discontinuance, lnter- £ re *.« II M the appointing power conferred by tbe Constitution upon the Executive, and forother rea aonß which, at this late period of the Besslon, time -will not permit me to state, I herewith return It to the Senate, In which honße It originated, wlthont mv approval. Ahduevv Johnson. Washington, D. C., July 23, 180 8. NOMINATIONS REJECTED. The following were rejected: John L. Dawson, as Minister to Russia. John A. McClernand as Minister to Mexico, s. O. Perrin as Chief Justice of Utah. Ewing Sewrlght nominated for Assessor of Internal Revenue Twenty-first District of Pennsylvania. Noah L. Jeffrtea as Commissioner of Internal Rev enue. nominations sent m. The President to-day sent to the Senate the following nominations for tho new Territory of Wyoming. Governor—A 8. Paddock. becretary-Owmans F. Roberta. Receiver of Public Moners—Geo. A Hawley Regie terof the Land Office—J. W. CaldwelL Surveyor-General—Hiram Latham. SENATE CONFIRMATIONS. Washington, July 86. —The Senate has confirmed the following nominations: B. A. Crawford, to be Collector of Customs at Brazos, Santiago; H. P. Hay, to bo Secretary of Legation at Florence; J. B. Blair, of West Virginia, to bo Minister to Costa Rica; It. P. Harmon, of Ohio, to be Consul to Trinidad; J. Hublcy Ashton, to be Assistant Attorney-Genera of the United Btatee, and Holland Smith, late of Phil' adelphin, to be Deputy Postmaster at San Francisco. The following Is the funding bill as reported to night by the committee of conference, and agreed to by the Senate. The House has not yet acted on it: An act providing for the payment of the national deDt, and for the reduction of the rate of interest thereon. lie it exacted, etc.. That the Secretary of the Treas - ury 1b hereby authorized to Issue coupon or registered bonds of the United States in snch form as he may prescribe, and of denominations of $lOO or any multi ple of that sum, redeemable In coin at the pleasure of the United States, after thirty and forty years, respect ively, and bearing the following rates of Interest, pay able semi-annually In coin, that is to say, the Issue of bonds falling duo In thirty years eha 1 bear Interest at ■IK per cent., and the bonds falling due In forty years shall bear Interest at 4 per cent., which said bonds and the Interest thereon shall be exempt from the payment of all taxes or duties to the United States, other than snch income tax as maybe assessed on other incomes, as well as from taxation lnjany form? by or under State, municipal or local authority, and the said-bonds'shall be exclu sively used for the redemption of, or In exchange for, an equal amount of any of the present outstanding bonds of the United States, known as the. five-twenty bonds, and mav be Issued to an amount In' the aggre gate sufficient to cover the principal of all such five twenty bandstand no more. And be it further enacted. That there Is hereby appropriated, out of the dnties derived from imported goods, the sum of $135,000,000 annually, which sum, during each fiscal year, shall be applied to the payment of the Interest, anato the reduction of the principal qf the pnbllc debt, in each a manner as may be deter mined by the Secretarylof the Treasury,or as Congress may hereafter direct, and such reduction shall be in lieu of the sinking fund contemplated by the fifth sec- ■ lion of the act entitled “An act to authorize the issue of the United States notes, and fbrthe redemption or funding thereof, and lor funding the floating dobt of the United States, 1 ' approved February 25th, 1862. Sectiom 3., That from and after the passage of this act no percentage, deduction, commission or compen sation of any amonnt.-or kind, Bhall be allowed to any person for the sale, negotiation, redemption or ex change of any Donda or securities of the United States, or of any coin or bullion disposed of at the Treasury Department or elsewhere, on acconnt of the United States, and all acta or parts of acts authorizing or permitting, by conatrnction or otherwise, the Sec retary of the Treasury to appoint any agent other than the proper officer of his department, to make such eale, negotiation, redemption or exchange of bouds or securities, are hereby repealed. I N TUB NIGHT EXEOITTIVB SESSION. The light above the dome of tho Capitol, which is placed there only when Congress or either house is in teesion. attracted to-night many spectators to the Senate Chamber. The session was more for 'execu tive than legislative business. The rotunda and all parts of the Senate wing of the Capitol were lighted. Al least a hundred persons, interested In the matter of appointments, were congregated at the main' dyor of the Senate, making freqaent inquiries ot every one who was supposed to know anything about the busi ness in which tbev were severally interested. The President has been duly informed of the action of the Senate last night with regard to appointments. Be to-night nominated to the Senate Alexander Cum mings. of Pennsylvania, to be Commissioner of In ternal Revenue; Simeon M Johnson, to be Assistant Secretary of the Treasury; William N. Wilson,to be ■Collector of Custom |at Now York; Jeremiah S. Spalding to bo Consul at Honolulu. General W. S. Kouecrans to be Minister to Mexico. The Senate went Into Executive session at 9/15. P. M. Itj , SEHATB CONriBJIATIO.NS. THE FUNDING BILL. xlu «omcik: CLOSE aATqRDAT'a JPBOCKKDINGS. Mr. FBEr.iNoniii-ezs c-nled'np the Hpaie bl> amending the act to establish "a'uniform avutem r bonkrnptCT thronßhout the,United tjtates. appSvid Jlnreh-A 1867, which was passed, as follow* • 0 “ Dc it tnacleil, d-c . tnnt the provisions of the second donee, thirty-third sectldn, of said act shad not apply to ciibcs of proceedings In bankruptcy ram lhMteea prior to .Tdnbmy: V- 1669, Sa tho tlmedS™ ztirAz* c,aaec * T all procecdtosi In bankruptcy commence a after January 1. 3609, no discharge shall be granto to a assets shall not bVeonalmflfty™ centumthe claim proved against "to °P,™ which be shall bo liable as the principal debtor unless the assents In writing of a nujorlty ln number and valno . of: bis creoltorv: to “whom ho »h«n u, J’ss°®° | ' ,n J )Ie as principal debtor, and who shall have ; proved their claims, be filed In the case at nr before* * b w“ pp,lcatl ‘ w for discharge.™ rrc. KC *v._ That said act be farmer amended as follows- Presented or defended” In the 14th sec- H° n S? fac * "hall read ‘‘prospented or defended-” 9oor Ph .a“2J^ o^L c,!W S , l t ticMtdrs” InllneC scctlon df the act as printed in the Statutes at Lnrsc nhait read ‘-non-resident cTedltorf-'' that m ■v *?, }?*i' De 89tb section of the net find* that thd jibraae “section l.T* In the 42d section of said act shall read, “section 11 .’’and the FiVh ee „*? r *Ppdspy part thereof In gaming,” in the 44th section of sald acb shall read “or shall spend any part thereof In gSmlng, J and that the words ‘‘with the the phrase * *tb be delivered ITf? 011 «*,> Bee. 'a That registers In' bankruptcy shall bave powm to admln.su* oaths in aU cases a* inrelatfon to all matters in which osths may bo administered by commissioners of clrcnltconrts of me United Stated S?km^^i^n ! '^ ef?ima L t * lK 'a roofof debts to bankruptcy In all. cases,-Bnbjoct tothe revision of such prwrm bytho register and by the court, accord lngto the provisions of said act. : h ra The bill now goes to the President. AGRICULTURAL COLLEGES _?£Trfff "S®. called up the Honso joint resolution rataidlDE the terms of the act donating public lands ® ev fJ al Territories for the establish “S*.. of agricultural colleges to the States lately In rebellion, which was passed. 1 . y m CAPTURE 07 DAVIB. .. J o }' r *> l s2 m .*l I®j«>nuiilttee 1 ®j«>nuiilttee o t conference on the joint resolution relativeto the re ward of 8100,000 ollertd for the eaptnre.Qt Jefferson Havls. made a ro > alU;r s^ ma ‘ remarks/froui Mr Howard nr ßlflK that an equal distribution is made to Llentcn antHcSiond Pritchard and the mw of the rS£th Michigan cavalry, was agreed to. • J roLIT10»L DISiBHUTIBS, called np the House bill for the rc moval of'thei legal and polltiaa I disabilities of Michael Mr h wSi£, oth if r M, w^ lc “J^ a9 ““ended,on motion of v™? cU ,? eB ’ by «Jg,lnserUoa of the names of John nr° i5S,^r > r 1 Kentucky, “od a number of citizens ?Jf and Arkansas, and passed. It eoesto the House tor concurrence/ goesio FTATJONKIIY CONTRACT. KS.SfSSSfoSfffiS* “”“ “ loT actB done during the re belllpn while acting by virtue or under color of hla office, and every defendant in such suit having made full defense thereto, and. having notified the Attor ? y ;% neral o£ United States to appear and do ffod thc same, shall, be.enUtled to the protection pro vided for officers engaged in collecting public revenue Supremo anapl>cal to tbe United Btatea Section two provides that no action shall be main tained in any State or Federal court In the name or in i, ~b r l s , / .o f the Interest of any alien against the Lnlted States or any person on account of acts done or omitted by such person, as an officer or agent of the l nlted States, In the administration of the acts relat ing to the collection of abandoned property, commer cial Intercourse with Insurrectionary States, or anv other acts relating to said States, or to persons and property therein; and this action shall be deemed a oar to all each actions heretofore or hereafter com menced Provided, It shall not be construed to de privo subjects of any government which accords to onr citizens the right to prosecute claims against Its privilege of prosecuting claims against the United States In the Court of Claims, aa now pro vided by law. v Section three declares the true meaning of the act of March 12, ISSB3, to have been that the remedy given In cases of the fedznre of property under the safd act was exclusively a resort to the Court of Claims, and all unite against agents of the Treasory Depart ment and others for property so taken, which have been brought In other Charts, are hereby barred; and in case judmnent be recovered in the Court 01 Clalma It shall be satisfied only by the special anpro priatlon of Congress, unless the proceeds shall have been paid into tbe Treasury. Mr. Flarbib offered a resolution instructing the Committee on Commerce to inquire into the expedi ency of taking measures for the restoration of the levees on the lower Mississippi destroyed daring the war, and report at the next Beseion by bill or other wise-. Adopted* VETO MBSBAGE. The veto message of the President on the bill re lating to the Freedmen’e Bureau, for the reception of which the Executive session had been Interrupted, was taken up, and the bill was passed over the yeas 42, nays 5- -a party vote. A communication from the President was presented transmitting a report of the Board of Naval Officers appointed to select more suitable sites for powder magazines than those now used In th# harbors of New York, Boston, and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Shortly before 6 o'clock the Senate took a recess till 7:80 r bl EVENING SESBION. PUBLIC LAUDS. Mr. Stewart offered a resolntion requesting the Secretary of the Treasury to euspend the execution of his order of the 14th instant restoring to market lands heretofore .withdrawn by him from the Onion Pacific Railroad Company of California, until he can re-examine the matter, antf that he be requested to grant a re hearing. Adopted. MEDICAL STATISTICS. Mr. Cokkuxg offered a re eolation directing that the balance of the appropriation of $60,000 for the preparation of medical and surgical records and medi cal statistics of the Provost Marshal General’s office be devoted to the last named purpose. Adopted. SEAT AND DUMB. Mr. Mobbill read a report from the committee of conference on the bill making an appropriation for the District of Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb. Agreed to. HOUBE SILLS. j The following House bills and joint resolntions were passed: An act amendatory of the act granting public lands to Wisconsin to aid in the construction of railroads. !An act directing the enrolment cf the act in rela tion to taxing distilled spirits and tobacco. An act to amend an act relative to the coolie trade bv American citizens, or on American vessels, forbid ding the trade In Chinese and Japanese coolies A bill granting the right of way to certain compa nies over the military reservation at Fort Leaven worth . A joint resolution directing the Secretary of War to furnish four pieces of cannon and two hundred balls each to the soldiers’ monuments at Pequannock and Patterson, N. J. On motion of Mr. Stewabt, the bill for the relief of William McQarrahsn was tabled. BOUTHERK SENATORS. Mr. Conklino called np the resolution to pay the Senators from Arkansas, Florida, North Carolina, Loalsiana and South Caroline, compensation to bo computed from the commencement of the Fortieth Congress, March, 186 T. Mr. Davis moved to amend by Inserting the dates from which those Btates were recognized entitled to representation as the dates from which compensation should be paid. Mr. Sherman supported the amendment, remindin'” the Senate that under this proposition half a million would be required to pay all the new representatives from the Sonth. Mr. Fbeunghutsen renewed his motion to lay the point of order on the table, which was agreed to. The resolution, as modified by Mr. Davis’ amend ment, was adopted. At 10:15 p. m. the Senate again resnmed executive business. Wash inc ton, July *O. —While the doors were closed on Saturday night at a late hoar the Executive busi ness was Interrupted to pass a bill for the relief of William A. Griffin, which goes to the House. A hill gTantlDg a pension to the widow of the late General Bidwell was amended to include a pension for the widow of the late General passed and goes to the House for concurrence. ’ The bill relating to peonage In Central America and the bill donating a portion of the military reservation at Fort Leavenworth were concurred in. Mr Doolittle Introduced a resolution calling on die Secretary of the Navy for information relative to ;he const! action of the iron-clad monitors Adopted. SUNDAY 'EVENING SESSION. Mr. Sherman presented the credentials of General Warren, Senater elect from Alabama tor the term end ins Match, IS7I. THE DAI session Senate* 3i AJSKBUPTOr. EVEN WO. BUIJ.ETIS-Pii ektren came forward and was sworn to. . • biiRBHAH made a report from the committee of conference on the lancing bill. ~r : !r n C : J ? ,n KTT' n tln> ’it 6< la dc* l ro to dlacoia thero pott, hnt Jlr. bberman rer inded him that t > delay It at the present time would bo to defeat the bill. He explained the provl.lons of.the bill, as amended, pe>Ji)K that it applies to tbo whole of the outstanding nve twenilee. and he regretted to say tnat the coin mut ee had been obliged to recede from the prorlelon legalizing gold contracts. The report of the commit tee was concurred In. PEBSOHAL EXPLANATION. Wr. Henderson look the floor to mike a personal II pin 1131 lor), and sold: Mr. President, a report nlgocd by Benjamin i\ Batler, .and purporting to be by au thority of tho Managers of Impeachment, called the belect Committee,-, baa recently been published by the Bouse of Hcprefentativee.which requires a short no tice at my hande. I have learned that the six gentle men on that committee have had nothing to do with It and even In the absence of such information, I tbem well 'cooukH to acquit clxeoi or all respon sibility In the premises It was my Intention to criti cise this report as its character deserves, but I have abandoned that -lntcntion-flret, because I have no appropriate epithets for it; nnd, secondly. U I had. I conld not, In justice to myselr, or go the body of which lam a member, nao them I waive the im propriety of thellouioof Bcpresentatlvea Instituting an lnveßtigafon Into the character of Senators. I waive the utter Injustice of constituting a committee, for any purpose whatever composed of only one Dolttical pariy-i and especially In an Investigation of this character. Such committees never elclt tbo truth, and their re ports arc entitled to no more credence than ex nart*> exatnlnaiiona usually are. • In this ckae the committee was organized in a mo intenpeexcitementand bitter personal politi cal feeling Whatever may have been the purpose of its organization, all will now admit that ite proceed ings were condncted to one single end. Ostensibly it wnß designed to seek new matter of impeachment against the President The futility of this purpose having soon manifestedtitsel', those having self-re spect withdrew from its proceedings, when tho whole project degenerated into a low, petty work of malice and calumny, disgraceful, not to the author ofthe re port, bnt disgraceful to the character of an American Congress. * forbem- to comment upon the manner in which this thlughes been conducted. If it had been to elicit truth, and not falsehood, I could, bear to be silent for even the casual reader can find nothing in its fortv cight pages of wicked perversion derogatory to me as a man or as a member of this body, unless it be de rogatory to haye entertained, as I did, on the 18th of May last, the thought of resigning my seat in the this, sir, was a matter between me and < m y coDrtHuents. and entirely ontfilde the jurisdiction of the House of Representatives. lamnotnow.-and be, aSbameo of anything connected with this purpose of mine. Thebeetof ussometimesd hestltate &b to what is our duty under a given state of circumstances. Whatever hesitancy-1 may have had resulted from the deliberation of a few moments in reference to m; duty to my constituents, who were supposed to differ with me upon a question of great political concern, and out of regard for what I was assured was their will. • In thlß disgraceful paper, that well known hesi tancy of mine is seized upon and every fact con nected with k knowingly distorted and perverted to accomplish the base purposes of its author. Its at tempt * 10 mate me inconsistent with myself. .ThiaJfl.dopfi-by4estlraony-4aKen r not before- the impeachment managers, nut berorc another commit tee of the House of Representatives. That commit tee was raised to investigate the conduct of the Mis souri members in attempting to influence my vote tor conviction. Before that committee I testified, and the Missouri members also testified This report, tn °rdf r to place me at a disadvantage, draws only upon parts of the testimony of these members, taken m their own defense, and extracts not one w °f d fr° m testimony, which gives a 'ull history of all the correspondence and preceedfnes between us. The members of the lower House were testifying in their own behalf; they were ;he only parries in Interest The proceedings were in the nature of a prosecution against them.' As to the truth of this evidence, I have nothing to say 1 bave never seen the whole of It. This is not the time nor the place to criticise it—it is a matter between oureclv®,which we can settle; bnt,Mr. President,have X net aright to complain that the committee before which my testimony and theirs was taken, should entirely enppress itsown proceedings, and fall to make any report at all, whilst It has furnished to another com mittee, to be incorporated in its report, jupt enough of the statement against me, including those of the parties implicated, to trump up an apparrent incon sistency in my conduct? Is this the mode by which truth is Obtained’ Was tru in this case sought for? If eo, why was not all the evidence furnished and published, and if justice is to be (lone to me, why does not the other committee report? If investigating committees are to be the mere vehicles of calumny and detraction, then this report is a marvelously proper one. If their purpose be to conceal the truth, this is an eminent success. As an evidence of the corrupt purpose in which this report Is conceived, 1 refer Senators to page 19. where, with the usual fullnessef iuuendo and mslnu atlon, is introduced the following note. viz. • Dear Mr. President: The Hendereon matter all right. Lacy has been to eec him with Craig. All right. So says Evurte. „ Truly, Cooper. Mr. Henderson continued his speech at crest leLßtb, going into tho report line by line, and occu pying some hours In his defense. At the conclusion of his remarks some unimportant private bills were passed. Mr. Wilson tried to call np the House joint resolu tion in relation to organizing the mUitta in the States recently In rebellion, bnt Mr. Harlan and Mr. Drake objected, saying that the only thing that conld justify them In holding a session to-night, was the pressing matters for which especially they had met. The Senate then went again into Executive session. House o( Representatives. Mr. Logan, expressing the belief that no agreement wonld ba reached on the Funding bill, reported from the Ways and Means Committee a bill prohibiting the allowance or commissions, &c., for negotiations or ex change of bonds, coin or bullion on account of the 1 nited States, providing that all authority under the existing laws to issue bonds or inlerest-bearing Treas »7.™ les * baU , ce “e immediately, nor to interfere with the conversion of securities into five-twenty tem porary loan, nor the exchange of registered bonds for coupon bonds, hor the issne of subsidy bonds fr*rail road companies, and requiring monthly reports from the Secretary of the Treasury. The bill was passed. A joint reeolQtion exempting all persona from tho penalties and forfeitures imposed by the Internal Rev vnne law passed at this session, for such period of time, notJcßß than twenty days, os will enable persons affected thereby to obtain copies of the law antfnnder staad its provisions, was passed. A resolution requiring payments to be withheld from any tn be of Indians that hold white persons in captivity was passed. Also, a resolution requiring Lient. General Sher man to use the most eflicient means to reclaim from peonage the women and children of the Nftfaioe In mans now held in slavery on the territory adjacent to their homes. Also, a resolution for the appointment cl a com mjttee to inquire and report to the next COn°reas iu relation to Prince Edward's Island; particularly as to the kind and amount of imports and exports, and the views of the Colonial government to enter into " n f particular reciprocity arrangement with tho United States. The (uedentlals of J. W. Clift, C. H. Prince, {N. P. Edwards and Samuel P. Gove, of Georgia, were re ported, and those gentlemen were sworn in. Mr. Hamilton, of Florida, presented a preamble and resolutions for the impeachment of the President, wmch were referred to the Judiciary Committee. The Senate amendments to the bill concerning the rights of Amerioan citizens were concurred in. The select committee on alleged corruptions on the impeachment trial was discharged. The Senate joint resolution direeting tho Secretary of the Treasury, whenever any State is in default in payment of interest or principal of its bonds held by the United States in trust, to retain moneys due to such State from the United States, was referred to the Judiciary Committee. The conference committee on the bill to provide for an American line of mail and passenger steamships between New York and one or more European ports made a report, which was agreed to. The Freedmen’s Bureau bill, which had been vetoed by the President, was passed—yeas 115, nays 23. EVEMINO SZSSION. The Senate bill to extend the revenue laws over Alaska was passed. Also, the Senate joint resolutions appealing to the Tertish government on behalf of the Cretans. ■ The Senate bill to reduce the peace establishment was referred to the Military Committee. Mr. Schenck said that the committee of conference on the funding bill would be able to present a satis fsetory report early on Monday momi ag, Adjourned. WBW PPBIdtIAYIOm. JEST READY—BINGHAM'S LATIN GRAMMAR- S' New Bdltlon.—-A Grammar of the T.atln Language for w®m Be o'School*. With exercises and vocabalanoa by Schoo™ Mh Superintendent of the Bingham The Publishers take pleasure In announcing to Teachers of Education generally, that the* new edition of the above work is now ready, and they Invite a carefnl examination of the swie, and a comparison with other works on the same subject. Copies will be furnished to at low e rateS. daaperlnt6ndo “t* of Schools forthSpurpoX Price 81 60. Published by E. H. BUTLER * CO., 137 South Fourth street. Ana for sale by BootaeUen generally. phaadel P“Jj Lecturea-Anew Coureeof Lectures, as delivered at the New York Museum of Anatomy. embrac-Jim flio «nb 40IV'8{‘“iwbattoliverer; Youthfidaturitj SSi? « Age Ee s e s?Uy reviewed) The canse 3 tedlgeatlon, flatulence and Nervous Diseases accounted . volumes containing theselectnres will be for- Pcrtiei unoble to attend on receipt ol four Ittops, by addressing J. J. Dyer. 8S School street. Bos 52H: - -■ -teiaiva DRANG'S AMERICAN CHROMOS FOR SALE AT BmgsßafegHtagagwg^g CROP ARABIAN DATEB.—IOO MATTS. FINE avenuai br JO3, R B ™® * LADELFHU; MOHDAY jmY 27- 1868: ’" OAg mTBBKS. %&Ss^%*SB££ a & ;C3j&s4dlCtß| PtOdllQtli BnAkflfx. £• Thm itl/1 1..t ...in n I G«slnSyilS» ,, lu ’ , t . ■• 0< 912 Arch street* Aigo, reiliifeh old fixture*. Pipe run at the lowest ratog. U ANKIKK A •'MARSHALL HAVE* A COMPLETR lPor t *b l° BtiMßai f'Oip. GILT and ELECTRO' SILVER-PLATE* ** VANKIKK * BtAESHALVaNo Bitcon. ■p^ 7 TOTHE TRADE PORE V__ ®? c White and Colored' Paints ofotu undoubted parity; in ■ Sponn; 60do. No~i Hi;r l i d ?.'r- 20d .?ii°* or “l° by COCHRAN, RUB? BKIiImL Co,, B North frront street, jy27tf Go ITON.-SW BALES COTTON JN STORE AND TOR _ealcby COCtIEAN, RUSSELL i CO.. a North Front guect ~ - Jy27tf 'W’AVAL STORES.—2CO BBLS, NO.’2 ROSIN: 800 Weddings, Bho 811 u THOMAS CRAIQE & BOS INSURANCE. G L O BE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. NEW YORK. PLOT FBEEMN, President, LOKIiYG (AHDHEWS. > _ JSO, A. BABDEIBEBGH, > **ce-Prest’tl. HEfIBT C. FKEEUAS, Seeretnyy. °ash Assets $1,800,000. ORGANIZED, JPIVJE, 1864. ALL POLICIES NON-BORFEIT ABLE. PBEIIILMB PAYABLE IN CASH. LOSSES PAID IN CASIL It Receives Ho Notes and Gives Hone. By the provision, of Its charter the entire surplus holders, and must be paid to them In 3iT?j en s!‘ or reserved for the» greater Beenrity. Dirt dends are made onthe contribution plan, and paid annul ally, commencing two yeara from the date of the policy. £ 4 in£non^?£ ea< * y two dividends amounting -to 8102,000, an amount never before equaled during the first three years of any company. ‘ PERMITS TO TRA VEL GRANTED WITH OUT EXTRA CHARGE. NO POLICY FEB ' REQUIRED. FEMALE RISKS TAKEN AT THE USUAL PRINTED RATES, NO EXTRA PREMIUM BEING DEMANDED. A pplicatfons for aU kinds of policies, life, ten-year life endowment, terms or endowment taken, and all information cheerfully afforded at the BRANCH OFFICE OF THE COUPANyT NO. 408 WALNU C STREET PHILADELPHIA WM. F. GRIFFITTS, Jr., Manager, Eastern Department of the State of Peanaylyania. Particular attention given to FIRE AND MARINE RISKS, which, m all instances, will be placed in first-class Com. panic* of this city; as well as those of known standing In Nfcw York,New England and Baltimore. ACC ID ENT AX. BISKS, AND INSURANCE ON LIVE carefuUv attended to. in leading Companies of that kind. By strict personal attention to, and prompt despatch of business entrusted to my care, I hope to merit and re, ceive a full Ehare of publicpatronage. WM. F. GRIFFITTS, Jn., No. 46S Walnut Street mh!3-f w tfs T^J)K^Ptm CE mBDEANCE COMPANY OF PHIL Incorporated inlSfl. Charter Perpetual Office, No. 808 Walnut a tree t. , , x CAPITAL $300,002. lniurea agalrust loea or damage by FIRE, on Roma, dtorea and other Buildlnga. limited or perpeluaL and on country*’ 6 * Gooda ' W&rea and Mercbandiie ta toSS S a jt9®®EB PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID - .$421.177 71 , . „ Averted In the following Securities, vC uSted§t^Sov n eSSe?? , £^-. W^*!f^ d :: » Philadelphia City 6 per cent. Loans 7&000 00 Pennsylvania §3,iMoio(X> 6 per cent Loan 81000 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, first and second Mortgages 8&.000 oo I ,'amden and Amboy Railroad Company's 8 per Cent Loan * .«», m Philadetohla and Reading Railroad Confpanrt 0 per Cent Loan. ! LOQOflfi Huntingdon and Broad Top 7 per Cent aiort. r'***Lm l4 r AMO 00 rfi l i? t^.F lr , e i, In ®S I Sf lc ?. Gomt ’“V*s stock. Logo oo Mechanics* Bank Stock 4.000 oc mv, of Pennsylvania Btook 10,000 OO Union Mutual Insurance Coaapany'a Stock..... 880 00 Reliance Insurance Company ofPhlladelphla'i btocK p men m Cash in Bank and on hand...... "'jlV.!..',! 7i837 7# Worth at Par ?j Worth this date at market prices ™ , DXRECTOBS. w!? 1 !®?® 7 ' Thomas H. Moore. nf er £ Bamuel Castner* Samuel Bispham, James T. Yomur. EL L. Carson, Isaac P. Baker, Wm. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman, Benj. W. Tingley, Samuel B. Thomas, inward Biter. TSOMAB C. Hitt, BecmS): ™' GLEYI i>roaidont - December 11887. Jal-tathatf FStaSSPFS?? 0 ® EXCUJSIVELY.-THB PENN. This Company, favorably known to the community for over forty yean, continue. to lniinre againat loaa or dain age by &r& on Pbblie or Private Buildinga, either perma nently or for a limited tlma. Alao, on Farnitnre,BtoeE of and Mercbandlse generally, on liberal term*. Their CapitaL together with a large Borphui Fond, la ii> vaited In a moat careful manner, which enablea them to offer to the inanred an undoubted aecorityln the eaafl of lose. DIBECTOBS. Daniel Smith, Jr., John Deverenx, Alexander Benson, Thomas SmithT Isaac Hazelhnrst, Henry Lewifc Thomas Boblns, , , J. oMngham Fell, Daniel Haddock, Jr. ___ _ _ DANIEL SMITH, Jr., esiflenL WiTiTiisM G. Cbowzll, Secretary. Anthracite inbitkanck company.—c im TER PERPETUAL, uvmrani.-uiKH °®“iNa all WALNUT street, above Third, Phllada. WiUinirare againatLoat or Damage by Eire, on Boll* toga, either peiyetnally or fora limited nme. Household Furniture and Merchandise generally* Albo, Marino Insurance on Venae!* Cargoe* aid Freights Inland of the union Wm. Esher, B, D. Luther. J.E.Baum, Lewie Andenrled, Wm. F. Dean. John B. Blaklston. . John Ketoham. Davis Pearson, John B. HeyL ESHER. President P. DEAN* Vice President ]aS2-tu.tlu-3 WM. WM. Wu. M. BHrrn. Secretary. piUraraBUBANCE COMPAOT, NO, NOI4OS GHESI . ■ fmi,Ant!T.PHn FIBE inbubance exclusively; DIBE CTOES. FrancU N. Back, PhUipß. JajUeeu gmrlM Bldiardion, JohnV. Everman, Edward D. Woodrofl, Bob “ t B f»ibn. Bi l rcKM& nzl,y - 1g29 FgBPgi'UAL. j : v JPRANKjL.i;i>r FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ;; pmLiA.pEt.PHiA,. ; Nos. 435 and ,43? c Chestnut SI , Assets on January 11888; i O9 ! INCOME FOBIM : • 33 > 6E383 - . ~ *>r.. , r , , saaooa . Losses Paid Since .1829 Orel ; • Perpotnal and onLlberal Tern*. rates* “ S'o'wiKh.rrtE. J B.D* {■■■ .£Sfv%®LS*^^ANCKßKfPreritot JJEU Offlee. a E. WAIOTT Btaseta. MAHINEnSffiTOAKCTJ I “ a •» OB E-EHSINSOBANCEa . AHBETB OF THE COMFAMT, lowa, IWWlßE^Bt^'to'POT'ciiViii;^ 201 ' 0 ® 80 84000 “V“" 200,009 B *^° ,Pem^1 °°. 125*000 C®rf'p£iMdphtoßK'pS:ceaL -WBBS „ Lo»d (oiomptfrom i«m n» WBOStotaofNew Jersey Bln Par nmt. '.yg*™ 20,000 Pennsylvatja‘Haih-'o'ad Fiiit Mort : 1,< ?? 00 25,000 l B-WOCO 25.000 vGS^£SS&S^Ss^Xi s «' Per Cent Bondi IP«nti« inf 80.000 'Per ‘pent 0,000 00 7.000 Btateof Par' tbit IS ‘®° 00 lb, ooo 800 shares stock Germantown *Gaa OO Company* Principal and interest guaranteed by the City • of Phlla ' 7»£00 etock' PeirngvivYiniii* R r aVil 161,000 00 61000 100 shares Pennsylvania 20*00 aoJffiS 4 SSffceiphii-imi ao0 “ 00 ■ Southern Mail BteamfihlpCo 15.000 00 201«900 Loans on Bond and Mortgage) tint ______ liens on City Properties -201,400 00 Par gLoa9i( M«ket Valoe «ils for’inrarancei 84000 00 made 3lBllbs r Balance! dne at miumi on MarinePoUdes—Ao erned Interest and other debts due the Company. 43.834- 88 Btock and Scrip of atm dry xiuni> ranee and other Companies, Cash in BaiS?”' mate ' l 3 ‘ ol ’ °° Caih in Drawer.....:.. . •:::-.V.V.V.V Bm ae Cl . ■ 103,81163 DIRECTORS: ,#fcBoT,®o IS O. Hand. Jamea O. Band, >'2. hu _ c, J D f. Samuel E. Stokes. Edmond A. Bo lder* Jamea Traqualr, Joseph a Beal, William CL Ludwie. Theophihu Panldin*. Jacob P. Jonea, W **‘ HnghCrMg, Jamea B. McFarland. Edward Darlington. Joshua P. EyreT John R. Penrose, John D. Taylor. H. Jonea Brooke, ■ Spencer Mcttvalne. Henry Sloan. Henry C. HaUottT Jr.. Jjperpe a Georgo W. Bemadou. TOfllto B. Boulton, JohnJß. Semple, HtSWgh. EdwardLafourcado. D. T. •• Jacob Hiegel. A. B. Bergen « THOMAS a HAND, tredflont HENRY LYlJ^lJl^Becreta£? ,18, VtC ° Preddent msUKy BALL, Ai&tant Secretary. JS&S FIBE ASSOCIATION OF PHELADEL F BA -i-HHac Household Furniture and Merchandfio «HHg gate bT "" totaacuar ot ™*™ iC;^ 1 * Statement of the Asset* of tbs Association January lit, 1868, published In compliance with the nro. visions of on Acs of Assembly of April 6th, 1841,' Bonds and Mortgages on Property m theClty W , O. I,CKaw^^&r mPWri46,& ’ M 80MB AUCnONERBa. '"*■ TraSSy'Vul ?ftS$ ™w«ipu» ExJt££% , BVKHr .S^SSiA •mwwSoti eJltoS ingmS 4oi ps!i,,S w S: l ™l> E ££SH!£ TrxMßAra, gSuuJdimTJSI 'O TmmBDAY! U ' a 8 * 1< ? »* th «. Aactlou 3>SeVB OT ;'; *"F' ®‘ a ®f 01 recelvt, crucial v-trattasi ; MA RRT V “ , Tf^f. t HrAn Cri ,'vV? ExebimVo ITntPl ' MABBLE TOP b *Kh MIRKOEd, ciutnDEUEaa, ,r . „„ . ON'TUESBAV'MORMNO. • ; at the, \njeric:iij ExchnnKQ TTnf«l Third *na Deckßtrecta. the Matblo Tod BrnTMlJ?™ Chandrucra, Doorr, Closets, Ac. " . M“**», May be examined on the moraine of sale atB o'clock. a f o lVo..ifSI7 Monterey streo:. . EEAT -TIOTJSJ'HO I. I I FDKMi ■ URn Mirror rime. May be examined on the moraine of cole, «t 8 o’clock; HANDSb»^M\^%^'«j 0 "room B J n , y3.. atloXo^^ A N i o. i 1 Seventh street, esssn SlS ißSWJ^aassagJssßSSSE* Vi^^Pf!?fa?S l ®PS!P r^to «•«&• Pr«tol*«a.r hr- VfiKY VALUABLE WOOLEN AND ( OT'PiiN ktttt' *m * prasra wllloe » { **' pnrtlculara *•* IT ,HQMikB '' •tnir* H.»»L^S!-B 1 E. ( l? I -yg p 9.N CONSIGNMENT V i .- nSiiSiiwJSSSP? gt Pwentag. attended to on Omar*. H ?7 EiIOL^I®S^Sr RpET3 ’^ SigSSSISIIS ttaFtanlte, can be ex“W a* «*> Arch street lot6«b^TO0 U fieh Haad,!ome Mansion, on Main st» ,i D TERRACE—Handsomo Modem Best WH. THOMPSON A CO..AUCTIONEER3 ’ •CONCERT HALL AbcTION BOOMS‘lau C?Rn TN w? SK?® 4 {“ d °nd,m,CLOVTER streot. order and guaranteed in overy respect Regtdar Sales of, Furniture every WEDNESDAY. Out-door sales promptly attended to. •PUNTING. DPHBORQW dt CO. t ATltTrrnsiF.nna Jj Nos. 222 and 234 MARKET street, corner Battkst Successors to John B, Mvers & Go in™ , , AT PRIVATE SALE h.S. roUfl 4-4 t 0 84 CANTON MATTINGS, of choice 'Y B. SCOTT. Ju. • „ SCOTT'S ART GALLERY. No. 1020 CHESTNUTstreet FMl^nlnMa, M ABTIN BROTHERS, AUCTIONEERS. L. ASHBRIDGE A CO., AUCTIONEERS, ; ~ No. OS MARKET street above Fifth T?STATE OF THOMAS F. MAHER, DECEASED.— betters of Administration upon the 'above estate Snh£.s e^ o ® nt * d A t< Ll£ 6 underel£ied; all ,persons in? dobted to said estate will moke payment, and those hav tratftr fl Xff Ru, U T£ r ! ael l t 40 “• BHARkEY. AdmiSL trator. No. 619 Walnut utreet. JysatmSw* TN THE ORPHANS’ COURTi FOR THE CITY' AND *■ Of FiUaa|l^Ua.—Estate of EMILY ERA. S a^s?f e .Js Th Si A J3 a^?r appointed by the Court to qs^o and .adjust the account of ISRAEL H BON. Executor of EMILY FRALEY, deceased! and to report dutributioQ of the balance'in the hands of w s“«et the parties interested for the por f MONDAYTtho 27th of July*ak thecftfofPMi’adelphia' o ' No - 120 South Sixth etrSet. to 336 t? EDGAR M. CHIPMAN, Auditor M A A E DT^i L^P N T\r?TX, HER NEAT FEIENQ, VB- , rtnuiSJ™ W. WILBON—IN - THE COURT OP ! TERM < lS» P fc EA ,§_ 9 1 PHILADELPHIA. OP MARCU , snffi?? 8, J )o ‘. 19 S’ In^ Divoree-To CHARLESH. WTO. — l Q™£t«* 8 JP 0 v^ e ?£’”®J, E: Take notice that the examiner . - tho to take the testimony of Li -I^P*? 68 will meet for that purpose*^on the • > seventh day of August, A. D. 1868, at 4 o’clock, >. Mllat the office of the andcrslgnodv No. 8,2 d floor of the new > Ph?il e H r oi?i n l ldlD & 101 B i> ut l> Street. In theCitvoT 1 8 *P^ a » when and where you may attend it yovt “feIKSP"- GEO. H. EARLE,* jylPrlsts Attorney pro LibelhXfc. • NJTHF 'fps'r* “ a^r^offt^£ within eald District, who has been adjudged a Santarunt onhiaownFetiiion.hy theJJistriot Court of said dis trict- - WIL VOQDES, Aasignoa. ! To the Creditors of the Bald I i'N THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE ITOITFO I States for the Eastern District of Baniruptey. No. 63-At Philadelphia, July hT Ig» I I he unnerErfinedhorobygives notice appointment as Assignee ot HENRY COMLY. of Phiiadelpliliin tSj co i “. n fr°. f J¥* a< s. ell J la f nd State of Pennaylvhni£ wiihsi said District, whoTras been adjudged a bankrupt, upon his own petition, by the said District Court^^' * JAMES W. DATTA. Assignee, Tn tha t No.l2BSouthßirth Street l o the creditors of said Bankrupt. . iySawSt* I 4‘l’hllirfelpW(L Jniv.iJ.iB6a The undersigned Bata District, who have been adjured Kantefupta, WHS" their own petition, by the District Court of aaidDistrSct. i . ..W$L VO£H>KBwAaaat»ee, - To the Croflitora of eald Banfcrort. j jjjs.w,Bt» T, ettjers,. testamentary, having been granted to: the subscribers upon the relate of JOS STIC ANDRADE.tato of the city of Fhi!adelr>bia,doce»aed.all persons indebted to the same will mate payment, and ... those having claims present them to PETEK MoCALL. 224 South Fourth street. G- D, ROSEN GAR TEN, S. E. corner Sixth and Walnut Executom Or to their attor ney, J. G. HOSENGARTEN, S. E. comer Sixth and Wat. nut streets, JeM.wSk., tfcwiofi i LEGAL NOTICES.