srznzT or ran mess. Udllorlnl Opinion f thtt iitln Jonrnnls t'pon Current Tonlrw -Compiled Kvery lnv for the Kvrolo Telegraph. GKANT. "rnm the X. Y. World. For a grnpbio description of l'roHidont Jraut and Lin doingH commend n to his first id chief defender. Wendell Phillips' pen tf not linlf ho grnpuic. in tuo very defense lepreeating criticism of him, there is as keen, penetrating, nud truthful an exposition of the real facts in his official career an one cares to Bee: "In the nbseneo of nn.y substantial (rrotinds fur controversy, It kcciiih to lie rrjruidi'cl us Hit; lit ami jiropcr tlilMR to tlnj? the 1'rcHlileiif footsteps wher ever he (joes, to belittle- his cmploymenta, to rlv lilin t lie appearance of beliiy; hubltiTally Hiirrotunlert ninl ctijrroHsed with trilling or equivocal coinpunv, with consulting his personal ease to the neglect of Ills public duties, and In general to bo a man who really has no comprehension of the. great Interests committed to his charge. . . . "They are trying to belittle and degrade the T're Bldetit by publishing stories and gossip from which rvery gentleman, and a l'resident more than iinv Other person, Is entitled to exemption. And what will come of It? The public, the country, will not judge Hie President by the number of horses he driven, by the number of cigars he smokes, by the places he frequents during the heats of summer, bv the number of days or weeks ho remains In or out of Washington, or by the cla9 of people who get ac cess to Iiia presence as a means of getting their Humes Into the newspapers. These ure matters about which the great body of the nation are indif ferent. They wisli to kuow, and are willing to wait a proper time to learn, how the President Is attend ing to their business, having no particular curiosity 1o know how he attends to his own. Now, what has this Idle, cigar-smoking horse-Jockey of a l'resident accomplished during the brief five mouths that lie has had such control of the Government as Congress accorded to lilm V" There is no use endeavoring to give em phasis to certain expressions in this inc-i-fcive indictment. It in all emphatic. The effect of the printed inculpation is as impressive- as a painted picture. It is, in fact, "Grant taking the reins!" It brings up in one view the whole of his brief Presi dential career. We are reminded that he lias appointed more relatives and family connections to office, nnd in a briefer time, and that he has selected more men for prominent public stations on account tf pecuniary gifts and favors or hospi- alities extended to him, than did ever Rny other President; that he has accepted Inore presents and indirectly solicited more, while in office, than any other man in Ame rica; that he made, in the public estimation, more admitted blunders in forming his Cabi net than all the Presidents did, with their Cabinet advisers, from Washington downfhow far down?) to himself. That he is an "idle, cigar-smoking horse-jockey ' the Worlif forbears to say, however truthful others may think the description. There is no doubt that Grant has absented himso'f from "Washington, and proposes during the coming Weeks to absent himself, more than has any of his predecessors in office in- the same space of time. This may be accounted for on the ground of his superior knowledge of public business or by the diminished amount and consequence of that business since the days of Jefferson, Jackson, Van Buren, Polk, and Fillmore, by the greater frailty of his physical constitution, or by the increased insalubrity of the Washington atmosphere. No President ever before permitted heads of departments to be away from their official duties, at the begin ning of an administration, in such numbers. A majority of them are to-day absent from Washington, and the Government is now in the hands of chief clerks, the subordinates of subordinates, each "acting on his own hook." Useful reforms may be accomplished in the absence of these legal chiefs, but, if so, it only demonstrates how useless is their presence. In the earlier and better days to the republic, the President would as soon think of asking of a candidate for office a gift of a hundred dollars as to habitually travel on public conveyances and be entertained in taverns as a deadhead. But now, with the example set before them, we take it, all the subordinates in Washington will vex railway and steamboat officials for free passes and coax tavern-keepers into free feeds. Like master, like man ! Every revenue or other official who smokes expensive cigars or drives valuable trotters will plead that they were gifts by admiring tax-payers, who could not resist making such a manifestation of ap probation of official energy and fidelity. Washington would have frowned on such a Btate of things; but what of him? If Grant be right in liis ideas of the needs of the Presi dential office, then all his predecessors who deemed it their bounden duty to vigilantly overlook and direct the administration of fede ral affairs from the watch-tower of the White House shunning neither inconvenience nor fatigue, setting an example to all below them of fidelity to the public service were in error. Under the existing administration, not "eternal vigilance is the price of liberty" and good government, but eternal idling at places of fashionable resort. Au unsophis ticated person would say that, if Grant found no executive business to do in Washington, his time could be profitably spent in looking a little into the statute- . books, of which he has repeatedly mani fested such deplorable ignorance, and especially in the matter of the appointment of Mr. A. T. Stewart. But such a one has . no idea of the modern style of carrying on the government of u great people. States manlike ideas, in these times, come not from patient study of the records left behind by those who have gone before us in the pathway of civil administration, nor from profound reflection on what legislation the country needs to sustain and improve its prosperity. There is now an easy road for those to travel who aspire to be known in his'.ory as wise and beneficent rulers of which Napoleon III Bismark, Von Benst, and Gladstone never dreamed till the advent of Grant. We agree with the Tina that, among the people, the inquiry at last conies to this: Is Grant neglecting their interest or his duty? When engaged in the investigation of this point, they will regard it as "the lit and pro per theory to dog the President's footsteps wherever he goes," in order to show whether he habitually surrounds himself "with trifling or equivocal company," whether he selfishly consults chiefly his own ease, and whether he manifests a "comprehension of the great in terests committed to his charge." The peo ple will inquire into "the number of horses he drives," and how he acquired them; the "number of cigars he smokes," and in what manner obtained: the character of the places he frequents, nnd in what manner of houses he is most at home. The great body of the nation is not "indifferent" about such things in their Chief Magistrate, provided, in their opinion, tue topics throw light on tne 111- quiry how he discharges his public duties. Men are known by the company they keep ! It is iu vain to complain or protest against this manner of criticism in a republio like ours. As well attempt to repress the inquiry of a religious congregation as to the personal habitH of their clergyman whether he visits pluces in their opinion improper. Jackson THE PAIL f EVENING . TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY", Van Buren, Tolk, Tierco, and Buchanan en dured the same kind of criticism as Grant now gets, nnd tenfold worse. That poured out by the Whigs on Jackson and the Kepub licans on Pierce was, in comparison with that now visited on Grant, as vitriol to rose-water. Nothing in the lives of those two Democratic Presidents had immunity from newspaper discussion and popular scrutiny. The asser tions of the opposition then were downright falsehoods, and known to bo-such when ut tered; but in respect to Grant, the effort of his friends is to shelter him from the truth. We repeat that the Republican press cannot prevent the ninsses of the people from scruti nizing nnd weighing the acts of commission or omission by President Grant, public and private, to the end of deciding whether ho is or is not discharging his public duties and his social obligations, including the mainte nance of a proper dignity nnd totie of char acter, as becomes the President of the United States. BOKUOWING TROUBLE. From the X. Y. I'irnen. A very learned but rather nervous man, by the tiamo of Malthus, once wrote a book to show that, at the rnte the population of the world was multiplying, we should soon be obliged to eat each other for the want of something better to eat: that the world could not produco food enough to support its in habitants. People, however, became reas sured somehow imnn fli discontinue their old hulit of multiplyiugand Kiumim mo en, oo, not long ago, it was apprehended that, at, .- - w "'ll. nuic should be completely deluged by the pauper j'wjmuuiiuh oi iicnuui, and our country ren dered intolerable as a rcsidem pie. Just as we were yettinc to regard thnt road to ruin as a m-ettv Ion a nna ,,r are tried with the menaced iTinnlntir.n f country by the refuse population of China. " "y oo a comiort to tnose who are dis turbed bv tliesfi flrmr.lionoi,no on,l ...1, , L ' ciuia uunu faith in the Divine government has become uuouiwu, iu kuow mat me laws ot emigra tion are very much like the laws which regu late any other kind of commerce, and that the demand and the supply of labor will always bear a certain ami rnmilnr i-,.,i.f;. to each other. Evidence of this pertinent to our present purpose is just presented by the English Commissioners nf T'.mirrvnt ; their report for the year H(iS. They repre sent mat tne relative emigration from the United Kingdom has been ranidlv falling off, while its apparent magnitude has onlv been kept up by the hordes of foreigners', Germans, Danes, Swedes, etc., who laud at Hull, and proceed by railroad to Liverpool on their way to America. The Irish emigra tion, they state, has fallen from lli,:!!)i iu lSbato l4'.M.. in lSiiti, or nearly fiftv nor cent. The decrease the commissioners repre sent to be due, and no doubt correctly, to xne graiiuany improving material condition of the people of lrelnnd. Emirvrntion lina ri.l the country of many unproductive consumers; it has reduced to a considerable extent the competition for labor bv reducing the amount of it. while a more bene ficent system of home legislation has tended otherwise to render their country more attractive to tnem. ho we see that the most pronounced tendency to migration that was ever known, that which has prevailed in Ire land for some years, is subject to the same general laws as every other kind of coin merce, and is gradually curing itself. May we not expect that the emigration from China will be just as submissive to the same great laws, and that by the time we have enough of them, they, like the Irish, will havehad enough of us? THE TLAY OF CHANCE IN FRANCE. From the I'all Mall Gazette. "When we speak of the prospects of sovl ereigns nnd governmental systems in our own day, a sound common logic, associated with a good knowledge of facts, suffices to lead us to conclusions more or less correct. But when we speak of the prospects of a people we should be far more circumspect: for, among other things, there is a very arbi trary element constantly working in the course of human affairs which must never be left out of consideration. It may suit histo rians to find in their researches an explana tion for everv event tlv lmvo tn ,lQOl ,.;n. and to describe these events as existing in mun uucessaiy connection mat the credulous reader thinks the laws of history act constantly without aberration, and that all of them are perfectly well known to modern writers. But no rea sonable contemporary has the necessity orthe right to follow the historian's example, espe cially when he has to deal with France. The alternate plaudits and cursings to which that nation has exposed herself for nearly a cen- ieu oilier countries to wholesale verdicts which have neither the merit of truth nor of political utility. They have no utility, for they can neither improve nor help a peo ple. They have not the merit of truth, for to say of a people that it is not fit for liberty, as some do, or to sav that it is essentially revolutionary and never contented by anything, as others do, is to say nothing whatever: and tosay uothiii" is not to say the truth. Moreover, hardly any country in Europe has the right to pronounce upon the capabilities oi the French people as citizens taken as a whole lor if there is one nation which can boast of greater political liberty, there is cer tainly not one that has arrived' at a greater mdepnndence of individual life. And as taking all in all, it does not matter much what kind of trammels stop the natural develop ment of a man whether they be political, re ligious, or social -it would be hardly true to say ol a contemporary Frenchman that he is, generally speaking, ia a worse position than a cmteniporaryciti-nd' any other country. It we hud as we do sometimes, that the license ot t rench life is too great, it is ob vious that there can be no want of individual independence: and us the chief aim of politi- ,S ,0 "l,lt ""W'aVnco to the individual we are bound to say that a people which has arrived at individual free be V vlT Tas 1,olitical freodo 't I Si Lf UU "'"mly eied in its pui suits in science, literature, and other do--artments of liie.the development of which mphes a considerable share of liberty it has been always advancing so as to l o constantly ,Ztft? rth7,n,lti, we are obliged to add that it must be a very clever people too. And seeing that a skilful and clover people is in constant trouble about its govern mental at! airs, we are naturally led to th. q;u;s,ion-What is the reason J ?.Uto However some future philosophical histo rian may reply to this question, we at present can only say that the answer must beS in those seemingly irregular combinations of events which constitute what is called the play of chance. Although circumstances have shaped the Ireneh revolution differently from all the other religious and political revolutions of Europe, it is reasonable to believe that if that revolution hud been stopped by RUy other I man than the first Napoleon, France woul t have gone forward quietly developing a spirit of government in acc ordance with the real wants of the country. The man, however, who killed the revolution deemed too greit to himself as well as to his people to admit of any control. His military genius was so in dispensable in the great struggle of the demo cratic and aristocratic principles, that to buy the services of this genius at the price of present liberty seemed to be not only a highly advantageous bargain but a tho roughly patriotic deed. And it would h ive been so, perhaps, if Napoleon had been the only son of Letizia Raniolino, and if Mie had been able to develop iu her children the consciousness that there is greater merit in serving an idea than in serving a person or a name. He was not. however, the only sou, and the notions ho possessed wore just the reverse of those which were wante!. ' To glorify the name of Bonaparte became the chief business of France. His numerous brothers and sisters wanted thrones; and the struggle of a democratic republic against the principles of an nristocratical nnd monarchi cal world was changed into the fight of an upstart family with all that history had worked out. and men had learned almost to worship, under the names of legitimacy and divine right. Such a contest would not have been of long duration if the mar vellous abilities of its leader had not been supported by some sophistical formula1 powerful enough to command the mind of a whole nation. Blind as the people may have been, they would soon have seen the truth, had it not been artfully hidden under some vital principle of the 'age. And the great and long-continued success of Napoleon is to be attributed far more to his personifica tion of democracy dressed in purple, than either to his genius or the absence of talent and skill in his adversaries. The subsequent progress of this principle it is which regulates political events iu France for the most part. Bequeathed by the revo lution, established by Napoleon, and con stantly strengthened by the natural course of things during our century, this principle pro duced within fifty years more changes of gov ernmental systems in France than other na tions have seen during the whole of their ex istence. We disapprove it as a bad thing for France herself, we dislike it as a very trou blesome thing for Europe, but we very sel dom take the pains to look for explanations of the fact. Should we attempt the search, and make it iu a somewhat abstract, inde pendent way, we should find that all the poli tical changes iu Fiance since 1H14 were a natural result of the circum stance that that country arrived at the development of democracy before it arrived at political liberty; and tliat the safe course for nations seems to bo the reverse one L c, that a free people democratizes itself, not that a democratic one secures its freedom. If France had been happy enough to meet, dur ing the nine capital changes it has undergone since 1811, a single ruler able to understand the fact and willing to remedy the evil, in the first place by pointing it out, and in the second by a frank grant of the whole stock of liberal institutions which the age has worked out, that man would have been blessed dur ing his life, and at his death would probably have been canonized. None of them, how ever, were able to do so. They came accom panied by the ghost of divine right, which long before had perished on the scaf fold, or with old arbitrary tendencies buttoned up iu a plain bourgeois overcoat, and therefore destitute even of the attractions of external splendor. Another came with bills drawn upon the old Bank of Glory which had long ago stopped payment, without any means of his own to pay those bills, and with a name which could do much only in case it were thoroughly uncompromised. Even the best intentioned men of thoso who' came to power private men who had no other right to it than the choice of Paris, won by a reputa tion for high integrity and wisdom did not assume authority without selfish views, though of a better kind. Each of them wanted to put in practice some cherished theory which he had partly invented himself, partly bor rowed from his friends theories which might have seemed good to a small knot of studious men in a garret, but of which the mass of the people needed no more than a very brief ex perience. The enthusiastical theorists could not hold the power they had gained for more than a few weeks. Under such frequont changes of govern mental principles, as well as of governmental forms, no citizen can achieve a satisfactory political education. He is kept in a constant whirl of ideas and sensations, which leave him no time for deep and quiet consideration. Constantly engaged in getting rid of what he does not wunt, of what has proved unsatis factory, he has no sufficient time to consider and decide upon what he does want. Mean while, practical and private life imperatively requires its share of attention, and the man finishes by resigning all care for politics ask ing only one thing: "Don't tell me some old story which I know, and for the telling of which I have already paid." And as there is hardly a single story which ho lias not heard, to satisfy Yiim becomes a difficult thing. Possible variations can be found only in the form of telling; and by-and-by the form becomes the capital consideration. Everything begins to be judged, not according to its real value, but according to some accidental impressions it has made. The last prorogation of the Corps Legislatif would not have provoked so much discontent if it had not been communi cated to the deputies out of M. Schneider's carriage window. Nobody seems inclined to dwell upon the question whether the proro gation is constitutional, necessary, or practi cally advisable, but everybody talk about the way in which the measure was announced; every one speaks of the impossibility of such a thing in England: quite forgetting that it is impossible in this country not because an English Minister would be' unable to speak from a carriage window, but because members of Parliament would not run to the window of his carriage. All this is quite natural; and though Napo loon III had the best intentions in the world he would neither be trusted by the French people nor could he content them. To go wrong would be a trifling matter if it were sufficient not to persist in error to bo dis charged of all the consequences of the past. Napoleon will have to answer now not only for his own misdoings, and for all the conse quences of the system ho reintroduced and has maintained, but for a variety of faults committed by others when ho was living at Ham, in New York, or King street, St. James' Siiunrp. Things which in other countries might have passed unnoticed, even such things perhaps as might have made a favora ble impression at another time, will bo scruti nized now with all the JJabseiice of modera tion Jto which a passionate people must be inclined when circumstances have made the mass of it democratio without making it free when the course of its cultivation has developed its wit at the expense of its thoughtfulness. The present stato of things would not bo bo melancholy if there were nuj reasonable hopo that i,n overthrowing J the personal governiaen of Napo- j Icon. the French would find amongst themselves ths necess iry material for building i up something of their own. But unhappily the prospect of this is very small; and the immediate future will be mainly govcrneA by the same play of chnnce which seems to have regulated all the affairs of France for the last eighty year?. To-moirow perhaps some M cond-rate liarbouilleur will hit upon a happy word a lucky idea and he will immediately become an important person. Frenchmen have already hundreds of names to push for ward, yet the last election returned only a few members in the Left Centre, and n very few iu the Left who can be considered as pre n'Hting the elements required for the forma tion of a new government of substantial character. And the age of the great .'t part of these deputies is already very advanced, while the rest of the chamber is composed of humble servants of Imperialism, or of contemporary celebrities perfectly tit to make up the "faits divers" in a radical newspaper, or even to de liver witty speeches, but certainly not fit for serious employment in n civilized State. Just now this last named section of the Chamber seems inclined to devote its attention chielly to personal quarrels between its members; and though the spectacle is certainly not a pleasing or a hopeful one.it may be just as well for Franco that it begins early. But bad as the position must be, there must be a way out of it. On a future occasion we may ven ture to speculate as to the least disadvan tageous direction of escape. SPAIN AND Cl'BA. From the X. Y. Tribune. The desperation of Spain, evidenced by General Prim's appearance in Paris, probably in search of a king, recurs to us a text for grieving. Every mail, every day's telegram from Europe conveys the same monotone of Spanish trouble and failure. The state of the country is deplorable, writes one corre spondent from Madrid; robberies and mur ders are frequent, according to another. Ban dits enter villages, and kill their guards; the high roads leading to Madrid have become infested; the Carlists have reappeared at the side of the robber; and now the cable brings word that affairs could not be worse, since the people are malcontent and the treasury ia empty. What bankruptcy means in this junc ture may be calculated from the fact that the admitted deficit of the Regency finances is fifty millions of dollars over and above an enormous debt. Here, then, is the practical summing up of Spanish vulnerability and weakness. The self abnegation of Marshal Serrano iu refusing the 8400,000 voted him by the Cortes is commend able, if truly reported, but it is only a drop in the bucket of the national poverty, and is ill accompanied by the heavy and wasteful ex penditure of his administration. The estimated income of the Regency is less than 1 10,000,000 on paper, and its expenses fir.7,."i00,000. With these terms of bankruptcy the Cuban finances sort wonderfully. "There is necessary for actual expenses," says tho Captain-General in our news of yesterday, "$."i,r0!t,()0i); our returns will not amount to more than :'!i,0)0,000," so that there is a confessed deficit of 11!, 000,000, at the back of which are the demoralized and almost calamitous finances of the Spanish Bank, which counts a circulation of !:i(),000,000 against two millions and a half of specie and other assets in tho way of Government debt, now. worthless. In other respects tho situations iu Spain and Cuba compare. Volunteers lately me naced Madrid as they have threatened Ha vana. Highwaymen iu Cuba are availing themselves of a general disorder to assassinate and steal. On neither side of the battle have rage and hate died out. The late seditious disturbances among the negro soldiers in Havana, tho recommeodation of General Puello to evacuate Puerto Principe, and the disheartened report of General Lesca, as given in our news yesterday, all bear upon the hopelessness of the Spanish cause, which it would seem that nothing but an insane pride of possession, or a mad fear of popular ven geance, can stimulate to extremer despera tion. Mexicans have some reason to say that the bandits have made their country Spanish; Spain and Cuba may have cause in turn to deplore that they are being Mexicanized. With Spain it is now a question of a king, for it has been always tho fate of regencies to fail. Some illusion must be set up for tho gratification of a fevered and miserable peo ple. With Cuba it is a question of time. How long will Spain waste her money upon ruin, and wreck her pride upon a shadow ? GAS LIGHT FOR THE COUNTRY. SAFE, RELIABLE, AND ECONOMICAL. PLACED OUTSIDE OF BUILDINGS!! FERRIS & CO.'S AUTOMATIC OAS MACHINES Hat been In (ncoeasfal operation for eleven yean, and in all caBei given perfect eatitiiHotion. The liiit ismuuh uperior to that of oity R&s, at much lean coat. The many gccidunts firiniDK from the use of KKKOSKNE and COAL OIL LA.Ml'K and woiihloea gaa machines ahould in duce pereous to adopt a safe, economical, and aatiHfao tory light The simplicity of our machine, its alow motion, lis superiority over all others on account of its KKVOLV INU evaporator, which takes up all the carbon from the material, and the fact that it will run for yeurs without cost for repairs, recommend it above all others in the market. Tne machine can be seen in operation at our Office, where explanations and references will he given. KKKKIS A CO., 6 ltnths Sm2pl No. 327 OHKSNTJT Street, Philada. Uest quality of GAbOLINK alwuvs on hand. LOOKING CLASSES, ETC. E STABLISUED 179 5. As S. ROBINSON. FRENCH PLATE LOOKINU-GLAS3E3, ENGKAVINGS, BEAUTIFUL CIIR0M0S, PAOTINGS, Manufacturer of all kinds of LOOKING-GLASS, PORTRAIT, AND PICTURE FRAMES. NO. 910 CIIESNUT STREET, 8 15 Fifth door above the Continental, Pnila. A LEX ANDER (i. CATTE L L & CO PKOIH'OK COMMISSION MFKUUA.NT& ' Ho. liis fcOHTIt WUAKVKS No. 27 NORTH WATKR STREET. I'HH.ADKId'UlA. AM 9 AXEXANDEB O OitlU-U KLUaS OaXl'LU. AUGUST 11, 1800. SUMMER RESOR I 3 ATLANTIC' V I T V. UNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Now Open for lit Krrrntton of Humk. HASSLFR'S BANP, on1-r tee direction of Hlmon llaasler, is nmiacad lor Ihgwim. Perwns wlr!itn to en.Me room will aDply to GKORUK FRKEMAN, Saiirintonr1nt, ATI.AN HO OITY, or 1IKOWN WOEL1TEK, ft 6 2m No. "-.7 K1''HV.N1 Strnn, P!iii-i'!elphta O U R F H o u i s e, ATL UxTIC Oil Y, N. J., will nr. open i ntii. si:i'ti;.mii:u j!. TKll.MS MODKRA l K. For rooms, terms, 4c, address THOMAS FARLEY, Proprietor. Carl Bcntz' Parlor Orchestra has beoa ea(?Ked for the f eoson. J J in y H E WHITE MOUSE, AT ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., locnted on Massachusetts avenue, is now opon for th9 re ception of visitors. The bathing oppmite the bouse is rNHUIll'AHSKn, AND THK HATHIIU ARK KEl'lTIlE I'BOM DANC1KR HT THE "SAFETY FLOATS" ENCLOSING TUE BATiirsa grounds I Apply to 7 2fmwim WILLIAM WMITEHOITSE. 17 X C II A N O E HOTEL, U ATLANTIC CITY, GKOROK HAYDAY, Proprietor. I'.ll.'lO. 7 l i'.jv i i. Having enlnrped the Hotel, nnd beautified it with a Munsard roof, the Proprietor takes pleasure in announcing that he has opened the sumo for tho season of lo!. In re turning thanks to the publio for past patrsnarfe, he re spectfully solicits a continuance of the same, pledging himself to furnish all his Hoarders with all the accommo dations of a First -class Hotel. Old stock Ale and choice Liquors and Wines served upon call. o - OUST VERNON COTTAGE ALBERT BROTHERS, Proprietor. A rood Dinner, good Liquor, and a good bed for all ot my lriends. Remember MOUNT VERNON COTTAOK. 7 17-lui ATLANTIC OITY. T IGIITIIOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC XA CITY. JONAH WOOTTON. Proprietor. Tho most doiunahie location on the islaud, bein; the nearest point to the surf, tiuosts for the house will louve the cars at the United States Hotel, ft o Bar. 7 U"m ATACY HOUSE, MASSACHUSETTS AVE- I'l. ME, ATLANTIC CITY. N. .)., kaops open th ou tire year. Situated near the B EST HATHIN'O ; iargf airv looms; furnished throughout with spring beds. Terms, $15 to $1S per wuek. 6 23 6w UEOHGE H. MAOY, Proprietor. o II N M E Z'3 INLET HOUSE, ATLANTIC OITY, NEW JERSEY. Purest brands of Liquors. 7 2 2m n ADDON HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, FOOT of NORTH CAROLINA Avenue, near thebeach.a u: uuusu just umaueu, is uuvt upuu. 7 21m SAMUEL P. HUNT, Proprietor. "TJENNIS COTTAGE. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Enlarged to double its former capacity, is now open for the reception of guests. JOSEPH U. BORTON. 8 2 lm Propnetor. VirAVERLY HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., corner ATLANTIC and DELAWARE Ave nues, opposite the United States Hotel. To those seeking comfort and pleasure this house has, in its delighttui shiii'.e and eligible location, advantages seldom fouud on the seashore. M. J. JOY, Proprietress. SANK nOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. corner of ATLANTIC and CONNK0TIUCT Ave mies, is now open, enlarged and improved. One of the plensantest locations on the island. 6 24 lm LEWIS REPP, Proprietor. TVARD HOUSE. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J (Pennsylvania Avenue, betwoen Atlantic and Aro tic,) is now open for the reception of guests. T. V. WATSON, Proprietor. pONGRESS HALL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., J GEORGE W. HINKLE, Proprietor. Now opea for the season. It has been thoroughly renovated and put into complete ordor. In connoution with tho bathing there are new bath-houses, and Captain W. Tell Street's lite limis and buoys introduced for the especial use of the boarders. WINES. R MAJESTY CHAMPAGNE. TJUXffTOCT & XiUSSON, 215 SOUTH FliONT STREET. rpiIE ATTENTION OF THE TRADE IS X solicited to the following very Choice Wines, etc. for Bate by DUNTON A LUSSON, 5 SOUTH FRONT STREET. CHAMPAGNES. Agents for her Majesty, Dno de Montehello, Carte Hleue, Carte Blanche, and Charles Farre's Grand Vin Eugenie, and Vin Imperial, M. Klee man & Co., t( JUayence, bparkling Moselle and KU1NK WINES. M A DEIRAS. -Old Island, Sonth Side Reserve. KHFKRIES. F. Rudoipbe, Amontillado, Topaz, Val. lette, Pale and Golden Bar, Crown, etc PORTS. Vinho Yelho Real, Vallette, and Grown. CLAR ETS Promis Aine & (!ie., MunUerrand and Bor deaux, Clarets and Sauterne Wines. GIN. "M rrier Swan." BRANDIES. Hennessey, Otard, Dupny & Oo.'s various vintages. 4 5 Q A 11 S T A 1 11 S & McITaL L, Nos. Hi WALNUT and 21 GRANITE Streets, Importers of BRANDIES, WINES, GIN, OLIVE OIL, ETO., AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS For the sale of PURE OLD RYE, WHEAT, AND BOURBON WHIS. K1ES. 6 220 pAKSTAIRS OLIVE OIL-AN INVOICE v of the above for sale by .o. . , OARSTAIRS 4 MrOALL, S 28 2p! Nos. 120 WALN UT and 21 GRANITE S a. 1115. -H O P K I N S' HOOP-SKIRT AND CORSET MA.NTJ FACl ORY AND SALESROOMS, No. 1115 CEESNTJT STREET. Our CHAMPION SKIRTS jbetter and cheaper than all others. 1V to 60 springs, K5o. to $2 'JS. Our Keyctone Skirts, 20 to lit) springs, o'.'i. to $14U; New York made Skirts, from 2(1 to 40 springs, 45 to 75c. R. Werlvy Corsets, 42'5, $3'iu, $t jo. Beckul Corsets, from $1 to $7. Thcmton's "Glove-tilting" Corsets, from $2'2o to If 3. Mrs. Moody's patent self-adjusting alidomiunl support ing Corsets, from if U to $" highly recommended by phj bicuns, and should be einnrned by every laity, Over 4J other varieties of Corsets, from 75c. to ij'.' jil. Skirts and Corsets made to order, altered au.l repaired. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 7 3 3m WILLIAM T. HOPKINS. JJARGH, F ARR ELL & WARHEN DLLVLEI.S IN FAPEUS OF ALL KINDS, KO. C31 CIIESNUT STREET AND KO. 624 JAYNE STREET, T 5m PHILADELPHIA. c COTTON SAIL DUCK AND CANVAS. of all numbers and brands. Tent, Awning, Trunk. and W&iion-cover Duck. Also, Paper MauuiacturrtrJ I'ner re. is, Itvm thirty to seventy-six iuches widei Pauhns, Beiliug, Sail Twine, etc. . .lOIIN W. F.VPRMAN, 5J ho. l.'S OUl'KUU Street tUity Siuxm). SUMMER RESORTS. CAPE ?1 V. SEWEllS POINT FISH HOUSE. Cold Spring Iakt, Cape M.y, N. J. PLEASURK AMi FlMltVU lt'tAtS T'l 111::' I I.., L . . . - . 1 . - . . ... a.,,, .vt,, ivsii.T, '31 s .f-T" SI S.Hin ll li;. Jill 1 TOf let at tent i n paid .. i'.;. j;hs of lii.iing parties aoJ visitors to tho luUt 'iMri'r W men, Liquors, Oiin, e.c.'of ;:n c:uic.'t br;in Is. U. V. KAWCETT, 7 1 ,aj rr.oi'ittEros COLUMBIA HOUSE. CAuE MAY, N. J. WILL UlCCKt I'K (,' Ttt .. ,f ft,r JIT.SB VK Extensive aiternt:,...-! ai a intxna, adde ito tas Rro.i; a.lvantt.jre 1. i..,-,,;',,., win, u th cjk.mna pncsses, lu cotisivuehc r the ton le:, y ot C l,e May lmprovtMiiei). ,, elu M ,(, pro.,lta, patrons more than '"illiiiiry B itlifacrtou. For Koon.9, etc., u i ir-s Or.ORCE J. ItOLTON, I'HOi'KIUTuii, or (Opposite the Stockton Hota;, CAI'K MAY, N.J. ..A,?Wrrlm0nt,'Wi"1 """ J. " these splsnd, Jlym tion at the Cottages to U. w. FAWCKTT 1 ropri dor. S E A J1 A T II I N q NATIONAL HALL Th . i PA P1- l AY t'Vrv; N J -li AAKOX ARRHTSON, Proprietor. CAcapk M ayT'n-UE- JACKSON STKElx. noenWa ers. WM lmt u. llEuCIIANT3' HOTEL. CAPE M VY I .h- lh"""'iKhtfol!y located hotel is NOW OPIfV votVM. kV. !M2m WILLIAM MASON. Proprietor. CHEIIMAN HOUSE. CAPE "TY r" od eligible rooms can now bo h id t 6 " lXlFFOJSc&., Proprietor,. PARKINSON HALL. HUGHES STREET - lm JOHN Mc.MAKIN, Proprietor. 0AIEMAY AUOLPII PROSKAUER OF ' HINUTO-NnjUsoS PHILADELPHIA HOUSE. CAPE MT N J -i- is now open for the reception f p ,,esu. Address T A PIERRE HOUSE, CAPE MAY. N J season. deaatfol;l"tei hotel is now open for the J. WIKNKR, Proprietor. pAPE MAY-UOAISDIXG AT McCALLVS J Cottage, LAFAYKTTK Street. Addros, ?Iht! Mrs. CJ. CLAY rpREMONT HOUSE, CORNER FRANKLIN X and WASHINGTON Streets, Cspe May, N J wm PZyLthe U y,u.1&olP."?y 15 to Per week. ' iU 2m HUMPH HKY llUouKa, Proprietor. NEW PUBLICATIONS. " gUREAU VER ITA8 (FRENCH LLOYDS). INTERNATIONAL REGISTER FOB CLASSIFICATION OF VESSELS. THK RFGISTER VITRITAS, containing the Olssel Dcation of Vessels surveyed in the Continental, Ilritisb and American ports, for the year li9, is FOR SALS by the Agents in New York. ALF MFHIAN A OO., 4M No. 4i KXCUANOK PLAOH. V ELL'S " rcpuim izncircLorsDiA, A DICTIONARY OF UXIVEUSAL KNOWLEDGE, T. ELLWOOD ZELL, Publisher, Nos. 17 ami 19 South SIXTH Street, C27s3m PHILADELPHIA. T II I L O SOPHY O F M A R R I A G E. X A New Course of Lectures, as delivered at the New York Museum of Anatomy, embracing the subject:" How to Live, and What to Live tor; Youth, Maturity, and Old Age; Manhood Generally Reviewed ; Tne Caiise of Indigestion: Flatulence and Nervous Diseases Aooounted i-or: oiarnage ruuosopuicaliy Considered, etc. eto. Pocket voluHisa containing these Leotnres will be fori IttY va' J?v '-P'V1!, receipt of lid cents, by addressing W. A. LhARY, Ju., 8. K. corner of FIFTH and WALNUT btreets, Philadelphia. 8 is LUMBER. 18G9 SPRUCE JOIST. BPRUCK JOIST. 11 KM LOOK. HEMLOCK. 1869 1Sfi0 SEASONED CLEAR PINE. 1QO lOUt SKASONKl) Cf.KAR PINK lOOy otw CHOICK PATTKRN PINK SPANISH CK.DAK, FOR PAT1KRNS KK,t CKDAR, 1869 FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 QpA FLORIDA FLOOINO. loOt vsnui.iAi ruHJKlAU, VIRGINIA FLOORIM1. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. . WALNUT I-LOURING. FLOK1DA Si'i:p HOARDS. . RAIL PLANK. 1 fQ WALNUT BD3. AND PLANK. 1 QfA OUV WALNUT HDS. AND PLANK. lOOii WALNL T .HOARDS. w f , WALNLT PLANK. 1fiQ UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 1Q(l( XOVJO UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 1001 KK1 CKDAR. WALNUT AND PINK. 1869 SEASONED POPLAR. (SEASONED CHERRY. 1869 WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS HICKORY. A Sll 1 fih'Q CIOMl BOX MAKERS' 1 Qnfi 10UV ' Cl(. R HOX M AKERS' lOO J SPANISH CEDAR UOX BOARDS. FOR SALE LOW. IfifiQ CAROLINA SCANTLING. 1Qr0 lOOJ CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. lOUiJ NOil Vv AY bCANT'LIXG. 1869 CEDAR MIINGLES. 1 OA OYriiKSf, SHINGLES. lOby M.'.LLF, BROTHER A io 115 No. aj aOUTH Strait. I AN EL PLA2K. ALL THIPIfVpVatFa' i- 1 COMMON i !, .,:: W oi,u un. 4 YFM "a'n'd '. P 'lS0- ,v . bPKUCE JOIST, A LI. SI.K8 l M PI Wl-V?" K S ''. ALL SIFS. tv.k V-AILHi.i. LATH A SPECIALTY. IB on, 11 ; K ENTU .n j STII Strs. I U M 11 K 1! V N I) K U CO V E R ALWAYS DRY. Walnut, White I'lt.c, Yellow Pine, Spruce, nera lock, Hilngles, etc., ulwayu on lminl at low rates. WATSON A Cil LUNG HAM, - 8 No- 02 lHMONIHtjJsm wanl. T)R. KINKEL1N CAN BE CONSULTED t
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