- i Remarks by Speaker Colfax. Loyal Men only should Govern a Rescued ,„...,, .. • ._:._ Republic. The Eon. Sfailyler . Celfai,-SPialter of the U. S House of Representatives, was serenaded at Washington on Monday i • night, April 9, by citizens of Indiana,, and aekuowledoeti.the tintiplunetilin'tbe' ollowing,epeech : I have noidoubt that you, like myself, rejoice with exez-eding great joy, and are , prouder to day of being citizens of this, great countr y than , ever before. There, was a time in this land !of ours when sla-, very was regarded -4A- the eorner-stone-or American idstitutions. ' Thank .God that time has paSsed, and we build henceforth _,on a foundation of liberty. [Applause.] To-o.,avutiid& the legislatien of the Amer- icadigtmigress in the great Republic shaped by the geography of a contineut, and washed by the water of the two great oceans of to globe. there is no person rich or po4Algh or bumble; learned or unlearned, who does not live ,in security under the. protection of equal laws. [Ap - .- 1 plant:el It ant, prouder to-day, also, of , the great Union orkanization of which I liiive been a member, than ever before. Its history is nobly writteu iii the history of our unary. I Administrations and Congresses and parties may pass away, but the record which the great party has made will shine with brighter glory on our country's page than any opier in the annals cf our his tory. When the great rebellion broke ant, and When our ship of State rocked in,a fearfull storm and was threatened by a terrible . i i nutinY, thejUniob organiy.ation stood. unfb i nehin<vly by our noble Presi• del; the Inartyredll_nocolo, in his deter wivatiou to crush the conspiracy - and pre serve the b -- overnment intact, and when it was prolphesied to us by false tongues, who at the same time shouted' "no cur• eion," t4t the rebellion could not be subjegated, the.UniOn•loving people of the country, forming into mighty phalanx, deiertnin+l that' it should be i • Wheo iyour armies needed reinfo , ce• "meets, they took voluntarily upon them selves the odium of conscription laws and drafts, 'because they / were necessary for the 'country 1 When the treasury needed to be filltid, they to l ok upon themselves the respousihility and odium of tax taws, that our flag-might be kept flying in the field. They did thlis relying upon *the jstice of their cau e, and went before 11 t i e people and tri mphied. The enact. monis of that great p t t, rty are imperishable. In 18.62; the caps al was disgraced by slavery, but they de l ermined that hence. forth it sihould be ee, and with unwa vering fidelity to principle they placed . upon the, - statute bl,olt that law which never, can be and aver shall be repealed, that in Os -capital Wald be-no slave.-- ,lApplause.l. y In 1863 oar' noble and great-hearted Presidat issued i ihis proclamation of emancipation, string with the battle axet of the Union t tat powerful element of rebblistrength, and the Union party of the country stood IJy him, determined to give that proclam tion-'vitality, as they '.- ilid:by du endorse ent of the people_ ip the winter of 1864 and 1865, when the constitut t ional awe dnieut was proposed in the, JCongress f the United States, banisliii,igslavery f tever frOm the country, as au unclean thing, and declaring that hencefinth and fo ever it should be the home of the freef. thatl great . or anization again and unitedly rallied to its support. and placed that auiendment on the statute book, and if is now the supileme law of the land. .A.gain„,lin this - great year 1866, in the Senate ieliamber and _in the Representa 2 tive Oil,' they have, placed by over wheliii!iig:majoriti .8 that civil rights btlll on your statute bo k l which declares that! every one born n American soil shall) have a !,birthright its an American citizen.l That laW misreprltsented as it has been 1 - by - it,4,ipponeuts - iit congress,. will never! 1;e repaled, and' it . the' year's - that are I ~, coming it will be the proudest recollec-1 'lion itlid the crow ing honor of those men'l who p s tood / up i the national colleens Halt tltey gave to that American Magna oi:lnd:their cord al support. And why should there be objections to a law like I ti t at ?' . Every one bort ablicioves to it tli `tel-ip rOchrd U give bun tiel,„l:i whi*ret;er in this oppre4sed or oltr beld4wherever on the soil of the Re ille.giance, and is it not ty of the -Republic to sit,q,egon ?, , encofortb land a person shall be t ied, or his rights with yranny may shake Its hdeptra.over him the, national .41%1 , ernai4ut far 'Oa he bas but to tura to and the National God protection which the 1 United States has or- Ott. [Applause ] We ked (and I know with he" Alberiean people re• work of_r . eeens . truetion r - Ido not tlink it has g'Te — ss of . th daiued is his r are sometimes what isolieit;iide p,ard it) why th' has;lepadelaye. 'be eh uureaa i tin a • 1 The Preside tpontlisl Cue rebellieu _a, IT delayed.' , t of the United States, between Ithe collapse of d the ,opening of this engaged in the work, in h seemed to him the most Coagess; 'was nail*, and ill, gpg,ti Sur p I , 1 C . ongress teas been en ast, four months in collect tri comparing opinions and e, foundation., of that plan ,n which shall make our is the ages. [Applause.] e already* past years sty of reconstruction. • In , d on the statute book the ting, their policy of recon= :-.ifig;Xestitoony, actin to 1„7,1,1 of r.conitructil Up on they . - :Na imuated a 4 pbl isda. tivy Ala fire{ law lathe. striiiction wn :13 the test oath declar Tbe law 1n , . indthak no man Should he, eligible for any Federal office sittid could not - swear that he bad !not voluntarily borne armlgainst the -Upon and lid not voluntaril given aid and comfort ' o bloody eonspiticy and i treasore—that lair 'iiai well'utidersided by 11 the American pi•ople, South as w.ll as North. No one bxpected that Chet), when the rebellion had its asitnies in. the held against; the Union. any Could corn kneel: . r. 1 lug at the doomsof Congress claipaiog to represent the States of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, South on North Carolina. Florida, or TeXas. But it was believed, that when the rebellion should end, the men who badnsultingly turned their backs on . Congl•ess aid stunned their seats; who bad yilled the Uninn defend ers and theitight' t-i !capture this 'capital, would, with the assurance of other times, demand that ;they _.shoe ld govern the country wfich,they had ineffectually at tempted to ruin, and ithat test oath was placed there as the flatitin.,' , Lsivord at the gate of Eden, to warnisucli men that till there were fruits meet; for ' 'repentance, or bondsl for fUture goo&belieVior, there was no place in these pre.cinetS tor them.— [Cheers] 11 ' Again the policy of reconstruction was indicated by•Cougrese. in, the winter of 1861-65, wll'en it passed nearly ottani trionsly anclvvit honk yeas and nasts, a joint resolUtion that the Vice .r;President, in as sorting the p. L esidenqal yotes,ishould not count the electoral votes of any State that had been engaged in the rebellion. Thatlwas intended to proclaim that until Congress removed ilheir disq.salification by hews resto:rin!7 tll'em to their rights, theylshould4tatid l+k. Cong.ress, has, therefore, by, these two striking enact ments,. indicated its policy of recon stre4tion. 1 , I Bet the Constitution basin s.ill plainer i language de4lare where the responsibil ity 41 reconstruct oul should rest. It has declined that evLry State shall be attar 0, - I dl ' 1, .1 , instep a rep,.blican form of government, landlin .a subseq,bent -section it declares that; Congress shall nave power to make all laws neCessary land proper to carry linto t execution all the powers vested in it, or n any dekrtnient or officer of the ;Go, ernine4 V.['bil was intended to cde stare hat Cbngress is the only law-niak lag, power of this land, and by the Con stitution to Congress) and to it' alone, must we looli for legaliied reconstruction. ' The President of( thh United States, in his proelawOlon last May appointing pro ' visional t igovernors declared that the States which levl lalqn in, rebellion were without civil government. That was a fact as palpable asithe stars when they shine in the ; heaverfs. Aly regret is—for t must spealt plaiily to night—that Con gress was nit at t l i t time called together. I believe it ,Would:dav'e hastened the work of reconstrUction.j ,I.' believe that Con gress and the Pre ident, by his approval oftheir legislatiore,' would have united 1 r last summer on a iiolicy ofreeiristraction which woufd h toave :een acceptable to both i branches °tithe Ge ernment,a,nd in which the South, ; seeing his concurrent action, wOuld have acquiesced. ' , (The CotestiLutios of, the United States declares th l at the 'President, on extraor dnary occasions, latay !convene Congress, aid it Imp ,aitt , .ysitseet . ied to me that last Al,pril was ,in ettra;ordpary eccasion. The president I.if the United States bad been niurdered by, a rebel conspiratory and the Vice President liticl assumed the Presi dential functions_ it:he rebellion had sheen its flag tram ,led in the dust and its 1 armies had surre.dered. It seetned to / tae -that it} i evert here f; was an extraordi -1 nary occasion this Ts one. But the I'residenti , and I J ./ recognize his full coo -1 pkitutionat, authority to decide this ques iion, deenied that! it was not expedient to call Comiess tog -Kier, and went on him- Self with the work / of / reconstruction. J• boll ve he let:acted upon and pro -f ' beeded wt / th that work patriotically, and „hatl l he thought as janl experiment, it would be lwell to-test 'it before Congress reassembl3d. • I am confirmed in this be lief by the messages Which be scut to the bovernori. of', Ftorida and Mississippi. Mating that their restoration would de pend on Conga:et, but 1 do of think it iresulted in - ''developing joy lty at the South. . ‘, [ , -Con,gr , -- ' last convened on the first Monday t. •cenfher last. It could not convene lc: .qs al in Eh :irli {il its, Our' r..! [ L for it had ho powe r to ', 1 • • , ._IIIP - •-", unl; meet um. rep:tiler session, unless Con vened bi t . Primident. It ap einteld i committee to examine the eon itioe; o' the late Confederate States, ar.d it i lwas only one short month ago tliatf it Tie4ived official documents from{ the; Execo ive departtnents, which enabled it to laic w what transpired during the l'Onglreces's )f ;Congress, and now, at last,qt is able iker intelligently with some official knowledge of the situation You wilt ask me, perhaps, what is my policy of recbus i truction ? I will tell you in a very fewtrrds. It is the policy of reconstiluckinn 1 id down by Andrew John -1 son rith suet' emphasis - and - earaestnesgl In his *polies! made to the people be twedn the' , month of June, 1861, and the . - month bf May 186 D. [Cheers len dorse Ins sentiments, proclhimed by him in l Nastayille the night he Was nominated Vice Presidentprid by 14 in the capi tal the day when the news: of the darren der-of Lee's arm , , - was niceiced. .1, en dors& the sentiments uttered by him' to 1 . 4 ,• - yariop .;committpes upon his entering on the 'l.Ziesidensy:l learn those soon mentiAfroto him and cannot unlearn them oew. l ji beltued them. ohen, and I 'be lieve, tn . them still. — They showed his constriactioti. of the Baltimore platform. and higher till, of his, feelings of duty to the country. His radical ipeeches in Tenn ese4 w:'re endorsed by his election, and I stand by 7 those declarations. Yet they can be condensed into. one single seetence, and that is "Loyal wen shall govern a preserved Republic." [Cheers.] I stand by thaf doctrine; the Congress of the United States stands by that doctrine; it will prevail ;and in the policy of, re ,construction which shall be adopted, if we are faithful to ourselves, if wel ate i faithful to the !country. if we are faithful to the brave then who went forth row their pappy hinnes to die for the a lye i . Oen of the country. We will proOlahn in our legislation,• as Andrew Johnson proclaimed at2l*Toh vi,lle, "Loyal men shall govern a preserved Republic." • . . What Parc,. Stephens - Thinks. Mr. Alexander FLStevens, of Geo . tgia, in his testimony before the Congressional committee on the condi.ion of the states lately in rebellion, expressed the opinion that the genOal government had no right' to make any Condition precedent to the readmission of the stales which rcbelled,' • to all th:ie rights and privileges iii Union. He holds that neither Congress' oar the . President had the tight to make . any conditions wi th these states; that their rights to representation, &o , were uninterrupted by their own action, inas much as tht- action was disowned by Congress. The following passar , e from his teitimony, as we'find 'it reported , in the World. gives his opinions ou this itu• portant subject : 'The people of- Georgia, as I have said, would not willingly, I think, do more than they have done for restoration. The only view, id their opinion, that cooly possibly [ justify the war which was carried on by the federal government against them, was the idea of the indissolubleness of the Union ; that those whh held ;be administration fur the time were bonnd to' enforce the execution of [ the laws, and; the maintenance of the integ rity of the UniOn ender the Ccnstitution ; and sinee that waS accomplished, since those who ' had assumed the contrary principle—the right ' of secession sad the reserved sovereignty of the states—had abandoned their cause/ and [ the administrii.tion here was successful in maintaining the idea upon which the war was proclaimed and waged, and the only v.ew on which they supposed it could be justified at ' all, and when that was accomplished, I say the people of Georgia supposed their state ,was iinmedidtely entitled to all her rights tinder the Constitution.j They expected that its soon ns the Confederate cAuSe was aban doned, itnmediately the states would be brought back into their practicAl relations with the governmen tits reviously constituted. That is what they looked to. They expected that the state would immedidtely have their representatives in the House, and they ex pected in gond faith, as loyal men, as the, term is frequently( used—l mean by it, loyal to law and order and to the Constitution—to sup port the government under the Constitution. That *as their feeling." , • Mr. Stephens here does what, as a law yer, he should know he is debarred from doing; the law very justly bolds that no ' man shall take advantage of his own wrong—that is to Say, be cannot protect himself behind a statute he has violated; he must not expect to plead•the flagrancy of his crime as his justification. Mr. Stephens appeals to the Constitutiob, and stands upon his rights, and evidently be lieves that be and the men rately in, re. hellion can there rightfully and isafely stand. Sat if be•pleads the Constitution does be not see that under that instru. went he is only an unhuog traitor ? Does he nut perceive that if we are to go sArictly acdordingto law, the first thing we must do is to arrest Mr. Stephens, and all who aided or abetted the great treason, bring them to itrial at our convenience, and hang them under the very Constitution and law which be pleads ? lie urges that ithe states lost none of their rights by the rebellion. Must true; but the rebels in them—all men who, in any way,' took part in or gave aid and comfortto the rebellion—lost till their rights. They are not "the state," except so far as' ie general government chooses to recognise them; the loyal people, the faithful Unionists of Georgia, those who served in ihe l Union armies, or who, una ble to do that, kept themselves clear from any participation with treason and rebel lion—these only are "the state" in the sense in which Mr. Stephens ; uses the words. i. And if the suffrage were con fined to them alone, if all civil rights bad been taken away from Mr. Stephens and those who with him took part in the re bellion,ltben his theory would be correct —but henshe would not be in Washing ton urging it. . We did not chose to execute the laws upon Mr. Stephens and his confederate traitors'; we prefeired mercy to justice; the American people were content that their government should give to Mr.. Ste phens and other notorious traitors and rebels, not only the lives they had for feited to the laws, but liberty 83 well; not only liberty' but property; not only , prop erty, ,but civil rights ; not only civil rights, bat even political rights: But i surely it is astounding impudence n men so treated, to turn round and lecture fire upon their "constitutional rights.' Their .'constitutional right" is to be hanged; and because we very sensibly •believe hapgidg to be a very poor use to make of so large a number of men, therefore they ere not to forge't that they, are criminals, and, as Nit.. Stephens now does, lecture loyal and patriotio men upon their constitutional duties.. We repeat, if the men who were en aa,,e'ed in the rebellion insist upon their e l onstitntional riolts they do a very im prudent act. Mr.. Stephen's theory of the Unimpaired rights cif the states is T3ry correct; we have asserted it many timei, in - these column- hitt "he is Rot ii.he state; "ttie men, wno with .hitn wont into rghoiion trr not inembeis of-t•the.stotty!; Strictly, tit. legally, or constitutionally— as Mr. Stephens urges legal claims and appeals to justice and 'the COwitittition -44t he state" - of Georgia cotraiste of the men in it who remained faithful , to the Union throughout the late straggle; if we arts, at the biddicig of Mr. Stephens,_ to oomo to strict legal aCtiou, they alone and- node others will either vote or bold officer rep resent or be-represented. We have on several occasions urged that Congress should admit to scats such loyal wen as Colonel Johnson, of Arkan sas ; but it has not occurred to us to ad vocate this enure-upon Mr. Stephens' ex traordi nary theory of the inalienable rights of traitors tq rule, according to their own notion„ \V believed it expedient to eneeulitge the 'Pdi.etion of loyal represent-1 fumes in the southern states, ..by_ the ad- Missionlof finch men. , as.ColonefJohnson ; just as 'we- hold that:the general `govern'- went 'Shook' encourage and reward loy alty in the southern , states, by conferring federal offices only upon men who have been consistently faithful to the Union —;-.llr. F Post. - • A Good Deal for an Englishman to Say A lively writer in Blachwood's Maga zine discoursesshout - the Americab atti tude toward France and Mexico,and after chaneterizing the Monroe.doetrine as an "insufferable piece of insoleot retention." adds : Yet, with all - declare I am all for the Yankee in this Mexican row. It is not the justice of the case I want to think of. It is not whether France has right on her side, and whether this de wand to retire be one of those-mandates a high spirited nation cannot submit to'; my whole eon: deration is limited to the fact-L--here, at least, the bully of Europe has met his match I Here is a young, athletic, daring felloW.ready to go into the ring with that finished pugilist that none of us have the courage to fight, and who, even with gloves on, doubles us 0 in a fashton . far from agreeable. America dares to hold language to France that all Eu rope combined would not utter. 'There's no denying it ; there's no cralif}ing it. If we had . I,:coritinental coalition to-mor row, we could.not venture to say what .A.uterica has :ust said. * * '* * * We would no more provoke the Tuileries by an insolent dispatch than we would go into one : 'of Van Aniburgh's cages and kick the lion. it has become a sort of European subsciiption that France can beat every one, and I am downright grateful to the Americans that they don't believe it " RADIO A TJSM. Radio:than) weans the rejection of what it bui,and preservation of what is good, and it always 'weans the right of the ma jority of the people (o govern: l The end less perpetuation of the Federal Union id the gist of radicalism. - Everything must be subordinate and yield to that. Extorted oaths of allegiance are not worth a cent. They make few men loyal. They, from whOrn they are taken, think with Huth blas,`that- ‘•Fie who imposes an oath breaks it, Not he whe for couviaienee takes it." If the heart is not on the lips the oath is a mockery. Tennessee which is but another name for Unionism —does not desire rebels or their sy.capa thizers to rule the State of Tennessee or the Governweat of the United States. Briefly we have stated what the truly loyaltmen of Tennessee uodestand by the terra Radical. Thus understanding the proper definition of the term, the loyal men of the State have no objection to hay itif, applied to them (what is attempted, tole made <id Imes) the term Radical. There is little in flames or titles "Worth makes the man, The want of it the fellow." A rose by any other name smells as sweet. A pole-cat or conservative by any other name emits' the saint) odor. The attempt is now being wade, by rebels and copperheads, to make treason respectable by applying to its opponents the term radical. In 1861 the men who now de nounce their opponents as 'radicals at tempted to make loyalty odious by de nouncing Union men as Lincolnites and Abolitionists. The failure to crush out loyalty by this method has not been more slanl than will the attempt to do so' by yelping Radical ! Radical ! Redical•! I Several weeks since we proclaimed that the editors of this paper were radicals.— Our,enetnies have been readiOg from this editorial and lending the paper to their neighbors. We doubt not that conserve tives,who take our paper and conserva tives who do not, will be gratified to get another copy reiterating the declaration that we arc radicals. Believing they can alienate the people from Union men by denouncing them as "radicals," they will be thanktul for any evidence to prove that they . belong to what is termed the radical party. "Live or die, sink or swim, survive (or perish, " we plant ourselves on the plat form of the so called radical party of the country. If East Tennessee copperheads who desire to break down the Knoxville Whig, can gather any comfort from the declaration of prfncipleihercin'obbtained they are welcome to it. • Nay, more, tre say to them, in the language of another, if it...be_ desired to call attention , to this fact,l!`Preciaim it, then upon the house tops;' Write ic on every leaf that .trembles in the forest ; make it blaze from the sun at high noon, and shine forth in - the milder' radianee of every star' that bedecks the firmament of God; let it, echo . through they arches of haavere revertercrie flndbilli)io along all the deep g orierof Vett.—H — Brouquiv's Whig. CO 11 -FEE-! '4: '.' .- - fi so.n.pps 3, .v. 4 .1...N.Fix...,Th - e tnost den. k.., Mous and healtlifill fievt:rage knifwn. 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Orovesteen, who Inc had a practical experience - of over thirty years in their 'manufacture, is Wily warranted , in every particular. 1 TUE "GROVESTEEN NANO-FORTE" Received the higheeit award of merit over all others at the Celebrated World's Fair I Where were eihilifted Instruments from the hest makers of London. Paris, Germany, Philadelphia. Galtimore. Roston, and New York ; ,and also at the eltriericati Institute for five successive years the gold and silver medals from both of which can be reeu at lour ware-room., Ily the introduction of !mproreinortis we make a still more perfect Piatio-Fm te, and by manufacturing lamely', with a strictly cash system, are enabled to offer these instruments at ayrice which will pieciucle buriipetttion. Pit • ES. No, 1, Seven Octnvei round corners, Rosewood Plain Case - - No. 2, Seven Octave,- round corners, Itimetti,od 71eary Moulding.— ....... ......... No. 3. Seven Octave, round cornere, Rosevt•ood Louts xrv, style :340 TERMS—Nrt CASH in CiIIIIRIfT FVNDS. Descriptive Circular sent free, 1. HENRY, HARPER. 820 . ARCH S'l7l=l-LET ruii►DEL.rlitlA. Walclies, rillo Gold Jewelry, Solid Silver Ware. and Superior SILVER. !PLATED ii.4llE, at'lte duecd Prices.—March 20,1865 3riro=jw E.REMINCTON & SONS MANVFACTURERS OF 4- REVOLVERS, R IFLES, 33/Xxxsax..c . ) - tee ere Cie.,x-1122.c'ta5s For the United States Servi,ee. 41150, POCKET AND BELT REVOLVERS, REPEATING PISTOLS, RIFLE CANES; REVOLVING RIFLES, Rifle and Shot Gnn Barrels, and Gun Materials,. sold by Gun Dealers and ;he 'Freda generally.' In these days of Housebreaking and Robbery,:very House, Store, Bank, anki Office should have one of Remingtcins' Revolvers. Parties desiring to avail, thel l naelsee of the late int provententsin Pistols; and superior vrorktnan.hip and form,iwill dud all.oe . mblaedlu the new Remingtons' 'Rfyolvers. Circulars containing cuts and (descriptions of our Arms will be furnished upon application. E. REMINGTON 6 - . BONS, Illion, N. Y. Moose & Nicnois, Agents, . , Iy1) • No. 40, Court,land St, New York PACIFIC HOTEL, ;170,172, 174 & 176 GREENVICH ST., ONE SQUARE WF:ST OF BRO/DWAY.) Betwecn Cc i lurilandt and Dey Strats,New York JOEY PATTEN. Jr., Proprietor ;111TE • Pacific Ilotel l is well and widely known to the traveling public. The lo cation is especially suitable to merchants and business men ; it is in close proximity to the business part of the City—is on the high way of Southern and Western travel—and adjacent to all the principal• Railroad and SOamlioat depots. The Pacific has liberal accommodation for over 300 guests ; it is well furnished, and pos iesses every 1 modern imprOvement for the comfort and !entertainment of its inmates. The rooms are spacious and well ventilated ; provided with gas and \ Water ; the attendance is prompt and respectful; and the table is (+onerously - providpd with every delicacy of th season. , , the subscriber, who for the past few years, has been the lessee, is now sole proprietor, and intends to identify-. himself thoroughly with Og interests. of Ilia house. With long experience-es 0, histel.lieeper, be trusts, by moderate ,Oargss and > a . .mAintain the - favorable r4utatiou of the pe el is Hotel. I 'JOIN PATTEN; Jet. WIIZOKM T r 3 BUSINESS COLLECE North-east Corner Tenth and, Chesinut Streets, pi-trEADEI,PIII,A., The most eomple' e and thoroneble srpointed nes. or C. mmerclal College in ihe'country. 'The only onr in the c'ty t 05 , ..4P1nz a Lel,4•lstic e Charter, and the only one In the rini ted Eltste, sigh, Ized to confer Ciegrees .•f rmelt, Moho:nits seriod,.4 to graduates in the Commercial Course under Its ev r _ portte seal by aunt ority of law. Conducted . by gentlemen of liberal education Slut exten.sise experience in busMess,'and quailed advantagra for the thorough theoretieni and practietil education or young m n for the radon, do. ties and employments of bits nese life. • THBOILY AND - PRACTICE COMBINED by a sy,tem of , LiqINES TRAINING ACTUAL 1117.91.15 - 0 ,, . ..- nricinal and pre-inane - 1 - o'y prie , teal, ft:ei ,, g the i t , dentin.the elmrteet time a complete t Into routine, detal/x, cuatorm. and farmg at general. an conducted di the - beet -regulated cunimpr. cial and financial estahhnl•niente. • THEORETICAL ROOK-KEEPING • Upon a new plam with an original expoe'tion f e.h e ~,,dc a eu of account., arranged and published l.r tl,e proprietor of tide Institution ei , tuetvely for hie n use, ea% in a one-h al f the prOf rpiry labor,of hr stu d and owing him a complete kuuwle:dge of the p of the beet acconntante. THE COMMERCIAL COURSE Emanects Book-Z-erping, Commercial zirithme ic, pm• mamhip, Bnainrss Correspondence, mercial. Law, Lectures on Business Affairs, . Conuncreial Custcans, Forms, and Actual Busi— • nen Practice. • SPECIAL BRANCHES. Algel.ra an d the Higher Mathematics, novo. graplty,. Ornamental Penmanship,-Ille .4rl Ddteliug .Counterfeit Money, Enain , tring, Stirveying„ Navigation and relegraphing. TELEGRAPHING The amtngementß fur Telegraphing are far in ad 'ranee of anything of the kind ever offered to the.put,.. lie. A regular Telegraph Line he connect.; with ae Inotitution with twenty branzhoftleve,in carious part. of the ctty, where public lutinette fe tranttact, d. in which rtndants of-this lost notion are permitted to -practices No regniur ottiee praetieecmn beim in any other school of instruction it the counity. wait ot.t widen no one can obtain a position an a practical c;.- er.ftor. Young men areteautioned againg the tlect.l,- tive representations of thuse Who, without any ottc facilities, pretend to teach Teleg,t aphing. PATRONAGE.I Tilts Institotton 11 - now enjoying the largest:pat m aze ever bestowed neon eny - cmtnikarcia) scholoi in Ile State. Over five hundred etnnetitc were to attene mice the find year, and over seven hundred &rev,: the past year. The best class of students may lee,. riably be fuund here, and all Its asseelatieue are fug class. LOCATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS. _ The Institution is located in the tno;t central part of the city, and its accommocations, for extent, tnance and convenience, are - tin, , nrpased. Alt th e moms have been fitted np in the very hest style with nip.tries,o:olllcea or Counting Ilonsee, Telegraph Otlices, Stationery Store, and n regain- BANK OF DEPOSIT AND IF•CE supplied., with finely-einznived lithogrnphie n.,tes used , ‘ a a circulating medium in the Depayttueut of actual Business. TO YOUNG MEN who desire the very hest facilities for n Practical Education for Business, we Atnarautee n course of instruction no where else to be equalled, while tho reruttation - :Ind standing, of the Institution among hushes men make its endorsement the best progspolrt to success wod nftancenient. 111 c.mtempheimr entering nny Commercial "college, are invited to seed for an ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR & CATALOGUE containing - ..complete interior views of the College, and full partizulareof the . couree of ine.tructio: terms, to. L. FAIRBANKS; A.M.. President. T. E. MERCHANT, Supt. of o,Wce Boisineet. ovismlard F U T Z'Sl =ll ilusa ad Cattle Pocks, TER, II EA IT COUGHS, D) TEMPER, 1' ERS, FOUND: LOSS OF APT') TITE AND VIT.' ENERGY, /se. use improves wind, lucre: the appetite—gi a smooth 'a glossy skin-41 transforms ' t miserable iskelt horse. To keepers of Cows this preparation is instal - ONa . —^res the Mastiff .he en proven hy, trial experiment to incarase the Ansa lay of milk Ind cream twenty Pe `mat and' taste the otter firm end SL 7n fattenind' le, it give them tppetite. looter. r hide. and 3 them thrin - Instil diseases of Swine; inch as.Coughs,incers l2 the Lungs, Liver,, ' --- .:.---- : ... ~. . , kc., this articl, I - A - .: .-' . ~,- .H,'.' , ' acts as a specific. ' '. '::- '.' 'lv.' -••=-.. - By putting from , ''' - .:. ••• . one-half a paper : . ... to a paper in a _ g _ barrel of swill the ------- i , -=- --7. ' above diseases ~---- --:-. .. .---=----•,.._----.--• - will be eradicated `'= - -- --,. -- --- or entirely prevented. If given in time, a certain preventive and cure for the Bog, Cholera. Price 25 Cents per Paper, or 5 Papers for SL PREPARED Br S. A.. F'olE_TrrZ R 131T.0., AT THXI2. WHOLESALE DUG AND MEDICINE DEPOT. No. 116 Franklin St., Baltimore, Md. For Sate by Druggists and Storekeepers through out the 'United States. Sold by P, A. STEBBINS & to, ,Couders port, Pa.. . _ IVOU can't believe *hat fine 11 - ARGOS are to be had at ipt. A. FRENCH'S GELtBRATED . TONIC TITTERS RE becoraing the most popular Medieina AIL in circulation for the core Of , LOMA COMPLAECT,i DYSPEPSIA, JACS DIE;DEBISITY OF THE NERVOr B SYSTEM, and WEAKNESS of the STOEACH and DIQESTJTE 011gANS• is Also gaining a great reputation in the •I CURE of DIPTHERIA. Principal Office, Coudersport, Potter Co., Ps OATS 'WANTED aE Highest Caeb i Pr s, delivbeerce ed a -Pntd fo r Tbolt: Oatt the-Store : tios traders - lg.:od io MiSport. liI.S. cotwell. ••• Itiillpurt, .gov. Mk' tf 3 This preparation, long and favorably known, will thor oughly reinvigorate broken-down and low-spirited horse', by strengthening and cleansing the stomach and intes tines. , It is a sure-pre.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers