THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 18GG. TilE NEW YOBK TRESS. XD1T0RIAL OPINIONS OP TIIE LEADING JOURNALS UPON CURRENT TOPICS. tOUFlILD iVKBT DAY FOB BVKB.KO TKLSOHAPB. tTh lat Klectlons Their Litnou te tha Alm tulitral Ion. from the Herald. When Loula Napoleon, In his brilliant Italian "canpaifrn of 1869, readied the fumou Austrian Quadrilateral, and discovered there that with a further advance the war must assume propor tions whkh he was not prepared to meet, he wisely sounded a parley, arranged an armistice, and niade a treaty of peace. This is the leson -which the late elections convey to the Adminis tration. This lesson is the crowning result of these elections. They mailt the line of another quadrilateral beyond which it is dangerous to pass. They call . for a parley, an armistice, and a treaty of peace with Congress. President Johncon, In his late campaign through Pennsyl vania Oliio, and Indiana, ou the merits of his controversy with Congress, lett the Constitu tion, from point to point, in the hands of the people, and the people, irom the Schuylkill to the Wabash, have emphatically decided the case in lavcr of too Soutnern restoration plan embodied in the Constitutional amendment of Tnecase, we say, Is decided; for that the elections ol November will run in the same channel as those of September and October, and with a more powertul current, there is no reason to doubt. What, then, Is the course which Piesident Johnson oueht now to pursue In deUrence to tUl overwhelming pressure of Northern public opinion It is tixed that the . next Coneress will hold the restoration ulti matum ot the present Congress, so that in con tinuing his light all the odds will be agaiust him to the end of his term of oillce, and his Administration will hardly take a higuer rani in history than those of poor Pierce and liu chanan. But we regard it as impotable th it a statesman of the srioug prnctical common sense and large expeiicDceof Mr. Johnson can adhere to a line of policy which has mani festly failed bpyond redemption- The coup tfitdt maliciously hinted at in the late Phila delphia gold gambling canard is an ent rely preposterous idea; und yet 0 liO St.ViJ Willi bucu wicked inventions and such unjust suspi cions, it becomes the impciative duty of the President to the country and to himself to place himself at once en rapport with the will cf the people. We pre pleading in behalf ol the Admlnlslra tion. With or without its support, the amend ment must prevail. Mr. Johnson, however, by cordially falling in with it, may btiil secure the lion's, share of the glory of a complete restora tion ol the Union. In this view surely the ap propriate hour ' has at lust come lor a recon ttruction of the Cabinet, a new departure, and a bold and vigorous domestic at.d foreign policy, Includiug the Constitutional amendment, the reformation of our financial system, and a decisive settlement of our outstanding balances against England and Franco. In this inviting field thero is "ample scope and vcr;e enough" , for the highest ambition of an active statesman desiring to leave an enduring pi ark of honor and glory In connection with his nauv?. But the flrt essential step towards the broad and comprehensive domestic and foreign policy thus suggested is a reorganization of the Cabinet. The decline and fall of Cardinal Wolsey from the graces of ''bluff King Hal" wns not more painful than has been the fall of Mr. Seward in the public estimation. From that ill-starred Chicago pilgrimage he has returned as an old man "worn out by the storms of state." re duced to the drivel lings of a mountebank. Humanity in his case requires his release, while sound statesmanship demands a Btsmart in his place in the maintenance and expansion of the Monroe doctrine. Nor is Mr. McCul loch, w ith his limited and technical notions of banking and brokerage, the man competent to . giasp the management of our Qnaucial system as Secretary ol the Treasury. In a word, a new Cabinet, from stem to stern, judiciously . selected, would be a masterly stroke of policv for Mr. Johnson at this crisi. Starting from the initial point of the late elections, and from the apparent public sentiment of the country in refereuce to England and France, the Cabinet adapted to tne enas in view may reactuy Da found. Nor arejthere any other landmarks by which the shoals and breakers of a perilous coast may be avoided than the lichthoues set up In the late elections. Tlie Elections and the Restoration of tlie L'ulon, From the Timet. The result of the recent elections is entitled to very grave consideration in all the States and by all the parties to be affected by it. It announces the verdict of the people upon the great political question which, awaits solution the restoration of the Southern States to their Khare of political power in the general Govern ment; and it establishes the political character of Congress throughout the whole of President Johnson's term of office. It has decided that the Democratic party as such shall not decide when, nor how, that restoration shall take place; and it has also decided, though with less directness and emphasis, that It shall not take place upon the President's policy of ad niitting members from those States into Con gress, as a matter of right, and without condi tions to be imposed by law. It has also de cided that the amendment to the Constitution proposed by Congress ought to be ratified and become valid as part and parcel of that instrument, before this restoration takea place In our judgment the public welfare demands tnai this decision should be accepted, and re spected, by the whole country by the North .aud by the South, and by the President himself, as a final solution of a complicated and perilous r.vuicm. iuc Cyr uecessuy or tne case seems w us a wrong reason lor such a course. It is a decision lrom which there is no appeal. Two jears rrotn no w, it is true, the people may be called upon to review their verdict: but who can ten in wnat dangers and disasters the na tion may be meanwhile involved ? Every dic tate ol safety and every interest of the country demand that the Union should be restored at the earliest possible moment. The South u especially interested in this, because until that is aone it can nave no voice whatever in na tional affairs, and all its material, social, and pecuniary interests must be seriously impaired the President is equally interested in the eame result, becaxise it is the only thing which can give scope to the exercise of the legitimate lunctions of his. high office, and aliord him the political support which he needs. Of the House of Representatives, as now constituted, the Union party has more than two-thirds. The .President is, therefore, powerless to arrest any measure of legislation upon which they rauy be uuinu (luntiinj ttcu lu ueveni nis own tru n r. n n V H 4- it I I- 1 1 . . . 1 1 L - 1 ui-nuuiutui, it luni eijijum oh resniveri mi ia n party measure. The admission of loyal mem bers from the South would aliord a counter poise to mis ascenuaucy, which, without de- BIIUVIUU IUC CIHUII UJHIUIIIT. WO.IWI Tint, in effectual check upon the extreme action of its most reckless members. It may be urged that Congress has no right to exact asfert to the fumend meat as a condition oi representation in Congress. We admit it we do not believe the right exists. But it the people ir.f,.cavnut be carried into any court. The II JiJ . . n. Pwe" to redress tho wrong; h?ra a8,de exiting law. nor force mem- iha f i I "-HuifOUICUl IS HUl pill HltO iot i"rted-ayTj"iiitU "mP'y cted upon, iut feeriea,-a;w it is not easy to see, there fore. "how constitutional objection; can be made i 4 .4 If mnnthnra V(lll ftf .11n.1t art mlbumfi. a lu i:ni.u 11. mi. I...-, u ' ' " , and the people sustain thcui m ho doinc, we do no not see how rilbfr c"Jrts or the president can take cognizance of their action; still less how it can be reverse!. The southern Stales are unquestionably called upon to sacrifice something of both powr and pride, in order to resume their relations to the Federal Government. They are asked to assent to a change In tho basis of representation, which will somewhat diminish their numbers, and to a temporary exclusion from ollice of cer tain claeses of their people In neither case is there anvthlng which, thoy can fairly regard as intended or calculated to humiliate or degrade thrm. It may seem to them un)ust that men who have stood by them in the war against the Government should be put utdcr a ban in olll cial service; but this is one of tho legitimate and usual consequences of failure In such an enteiprlse as they undertook. It was among the risks they encountered. It is no more hu miliating for them to lose political power than to lose property, liberty, and life as a result of dcteat in rebellion against the national autho rity. The whole question with them turns upon considerations of interest their honor and tneir pride are not Involved. Will ttiey lose more than tbev will gain by accepting the amend ment? Will the power and influence they will secure In the national councils be worth to them more or less than that they m.critice in the ctfort to reeain it? These are questions lor themselves to answer, and upon their answers to them their action should depend. Nor will it be wise lor the South to leave out of view the probable consequences of refusing to accept tho amendment as the basis ol resto ration. They cannot doubt that the cllect of reiusal will be to strengthen the radical senti ment which already demands more extreme conditions and threatens the most ultra and destructive meniures. That sentiment is not jet dominant In the Union party, nor will it become so unless it is strengthened again, as it has been hitherto, by unwise action ou the part of tho President and the Southern States. At almost any time during tho last session of Con gress it niiuht have been disarmed and over borne, if the reeiBtenee to the Union party on thepaitof tho President had been less indis criminate and more judicious;, and even as it was, it failed to carry any of its extreme and iolent measures. If the Pi csident and the Southern States will accept the popular decision just pronounced as entitled to respect, and atlord, by judicious and considerate action, a basis lor the more mode rate and di'creet portion of the Union party to act upon, we are confident that ail our difficul ties may yet be overco:p. The people are not reveDceir.i or irrational in their temper or their views." They do not seek or desire the degrada tion of the South, nor do they endorse or approve the wild vagaries and crazy schemes of Butler, Stevens, arid their confederates. But they believe the Constitutional amendment to be essentially just, and its adoption necessary to the peace and safety of the nation. Hostility and bitter resistance may drive them Into more extreme positions, and thus strengthen the faction from which the country at large, and especially the South, has the roost' to fear; an I it cannot possibly change or improve the action of Congress for at h att three yeais 10 come. in r. Johnson Policy and I he American Credit Abroad. From the Tribune. The Biigli?h papers call attention to the fact that American speculators are actively engaged in buying up the 7 per cent, cotton bonds of the Confederacy, and selling United States Five- twenties. They note the fact that the latter have been sold to tha extent of millions fin Europe, while the cotton bonds are bought at an advance ol 1 or 2 per cent, in London, Liver pool, and Manchester. "Possibly," says a cor respondent of the Morning Post, "when our keen cousins have obtained a sufficient amount, the iniquity ot repudiating a loan made by loreigners on the special hypothecation of cot ton win be vet.ementty asserted by the Yankees themselves as aemmuniai to Amtricun creUit, ana ine Donunoiaers win oouuu tneir rights, the more eBoecially as every man in the South. a staled by General Lee lu his evideuc e before the committee ol congress, is desirous ot recog nizing and paying this loan." lie then attempts to explain tlie selling of the live-twenty bond?, upon a theory wliich, however worthless in itself, deserves the atten tion of those business men who think that Cop- perneati pontics are noi tue ioes oi niiancial prosperity, "President Johnson describes the existing radical legislature, which bus usurped the pjwer of Congress, 'as a body called, or which assumed to be, the Congress of the United States, but which Is in fact a Concrress of only puvt of those States.' Now, if this is the true legal defluition ot the present Congress, I have no hefcitation in saying that until the Southern States are restored to Congress, and recognize in Congress the debts thut Coneress, duriiig their exclusion, has contracted, that the f ive-twenty Donas, ana an other debts raised by that Congress, are illegal according to the Constitution of the United States." It is slain thut this whole statement is nil. vanced in the interest of the Enaltsh capitalists who invested their money in the Rebel loans, and have not yet abandoned the hope of getting Bim cui u uacs iiom me unueu states Trea sury. We do not believe that many Americans are stupid enough to buy the itebel cotton bonds, und we know there is not one Anprinnn in a hundred, of respectable business judgment. win uas eum r ive-iwenues irom a aouot ot turir permanent value, We do know, however, that since the close ot the war the bankers and people of England and Germany have steadily and largely bought them, ana we have deeply re gretted that so much of our debt should be allowed to pass into foreign hands. But now it is ingeniously insinuated that the large sales of United States securities in foreign markets is not due to the eagerness of Europeans to purchase, but to the anxiety of Americans to sell. Precisely as the.Rundall Convention caused an advauce in Rebel bonds so the speeches of Andrew Johnson have in spired their holders with new hope. This is the true point which the English papers make that the President, by declariug Congress an illegal and unconstitutional bod v, has given specula tors an opportunity ol shaking the credit of the United States. They have taken his words into the London Exchange and the Bourse, and traded upon them to the possible Inturyof our securities. They have used his policy as the means ot advancing Rebel bonds. No one can deny that the logic in the last paragraph we quoted is sound, however fulse the argument. lfConpress is, indeed, illegal, unconstitu tional; if it had no right to pass the Civil Rights bill; if its ucts do not bind the Rebel States. because they had no part in making them; if tue uepreseutatives of the loyal States are not tongrees aud all this Mr. Johnson averts then iudeed our financial legislation is worth less, and the value of Hnited Slates bonds de penos upon the endorsement of the Rebel States, huropeans who want to pet lid of their Rebel bonds, who would be glad to buy Five-twenties at a low rate, with the certainty of their rise, can find no better means to bear the market than the policy of Andrew Johnson. He has bitterly opposed the (Jonstitutional amendment, of which the fourth section guarantees forever Lut vwiv.iiL(y vi iuc iiaiiiuuai uuudS, find I)er- jn-maiij juuuiuui tuc pajiui'IU OI tue KeOCl debt. The passage of this amendment would, as all his followers know, end at onee all these Rebel and English sliemes to depreciate national secuiities; but, iBtil the people have ratified it and silenced the atrocious calumny that Con gress is not a legal body, we may expect to be threatened with the whole Rebel debt in addi tion to our own, and with pretended doubts of the validity of United States bonds. Mr. John son is doing more to injure American credit abroad hau all the Rebels and speculators com bined; and there is not a man, woman or ehild who holds a Five-twenty or Seven-thirty bond, who does not directly prolit by tho recent triumphs at the tolls. In sustaining Congress and the ConMtutional aujendment,the people have declared that the national debt Is to'bn paid to the last dollar, while of the Rbrl debt not one cant shall ever be re.leenied. Kurope and (lie Eastern tradition. fYom the World. Tlie times have changed sines the cloquenci of Edward Livingston and Henry Clay and Daniel Webster enlisted the sympathies of the American people in behalf of the Insurrection ary Greeks. When Muetapha Pacha now woos tho revolte d Cretans back to their allegiance with strains which mildly echo tho persuasive appeals of Doctor-General Butler to the people of Louisiana, an instinct of consistency may naturally enough restrain American statesmen from hastily advocating the cause of Rebels. What is it I to us now that the "olives of Attica be wasted and the vines of Hamoo tiampled by the Turk?" It is true that Air. Seward's commissioner-extraordinary, Mr. Assistant Secretary of the Navy Fox, has ollcicd the alliance of the bnited States to the Czar over a battery of champagne corks at Moscow; and that Rus sian journalists, taking the will ol Fox for the deed of America, are loudly encouraging tho Pan Hellenist subjects of the Sultan to. rise evcrywheie upon their tyrant, and are threat ening Western Europe with a new crusade of the Greek Cross, in which tho fleets of the American Union shall keep the Bosphorus against the iron clads of France and England, while the monitors of Alexander II perforin the less aiduous but equally honorable task ol protecting "American interests in the Baltic," by defending Cronstadt and St. Petersburg. But so far are tho masses ot the American people from responding to .rs6 noble outcrics of Hellenic patriotism and of Muscovite enthu siasm, niat not even by the news of an Anglo trench interference to prevent the Porte irom ceding an island in the Egcan Sea as a naval station to the United Slates, can we be stimu lated into bestowing fo much attention upon the present aspects ot the "Eastern question" In Europe as its actual and prospective im portance to all civilized Christendom really deserves. For when we find Count BismarK putting it forward as an urgent reason why the Legislature of Prussia should vote ttie Government a loan of sixty millions of tnaier8, mat "tne Eastern question threatens Europe with new and perilous complications," and Prince Gortschakoft posting trora bt. Peters- uurp iuvue rjrences to confer with the Era peror JNapoicon over the magical waters of liiarntz, we may be sure that the Russian cir cular announcing to Europe the emancipation ot the Czar from the treaties ot 18ii6 was haed upon a lull provision of coming contingencies, and that the Eastern question Is indeed even now bringing forth lor the world a season of storm and stress still more prodigious thau the tempest which, rising, a cloud no bier than a man's hand, in little fcchleswig-lloistcin, has iuis j cur uiuKcn in inunacr over all Central Hiurope. It is very likely that the stories now pvnrv where current ot revolt and disaffection among the Christians of Turkey are purposely exag gerated, une oi tne leading journals ot Eng land, indeed, docs not hesitate to tax the Rus sians and Mr. Router with inventing between them pretty much the whole revolution ol the children ot Jupiter in Crete. Mercury, we know. was as end a romancer under his Greek name of Hermes as under his Western title, and St. Paul quotes with approval the Cretan poet who brands bis countrymen as "evil beasts, ' and "always liars." But it needs only a bgniot of revolu tion to disturb a figment of order; and the rule of the Turks in Europe has come to be so entirely a matter ot political expediency and diplo matic skill on the part of tne European 1,'owcru wuicn nave neretoiore naa an in terest in keeping it up, that if France, and Aus tria, and Russia choose to consider European Turkey to be in a state of insurrection, European Turkey, to all intents and purposes, will reallv be in such a state. The heterogeneous character of the Christian populations of European Tur key, by maKing it certain tuat no new, ana preat. and orderly, and respectable Christian State could possibly emerge lrom the dissolution of the Ottoman dominion, has heretofore made it obvious that it the camp of the Turks on the Bosphorus should be broken up, and the suc cessors ot Mahmoud the Victorious should be di iven from the throne which for lour centuries they have bllcd, Russia would have a far better chance than any other Eutopcan power oi ad ministering unon the estate oi aouui-aziz. But the events ot the present year, which have so greatty modified the position of the two tieat German powers, have put a new lace upon things in the East. Prussia, advanced to the firactical leadership of Germany, has both a arger interest than she ever had before, and wields more ample means, tolcurb the develop ment of the igautic empire with which she must henceforth dispute the control of the uaitic !ea. Austria, dehniteiy pressed to tne eastword, and Italy, converted by the acquisi tion of Venetia from the deadly foe into the probable future ally of Austria in the Mediter ranean, Lave r ow a joint interest with France and England in preventing the appearance at Constantinople of a flag which already Hies irom tne mouths ot the iseva to the shores of the Pacific, and lrom the White Sua to the Black. Under these new conditions of the Eastern problem, it is beginning to be as desi rable as it has hrretotore been undesirable for Western and Central Europe, that the anomalous ana provisional situation ot the Christian pro vinces ot xurKey suouia be Drought to an end. For Rusf la a decisive settlement ot the East- cm question in the immediate future pret ty cieuuy means ine detinue aeteat ot all the iuis- siau designs upon ConstantinoDle and the Bos phorus; but Russian statesmen ot the annexa tionist type may very plausibly persuade themselves that if any hope whatever yet remains to Kussia. it must be clutched at once, and while the triple transformation of Italy and Germany and Austria is still in the incipient stages. One ot the points most vital to the success ot Ruesia in the game she bus been so Ions waitiner to nliiv tor the. TurlclHh inheritance. has already oeen snatched from her at the crisis of the recent German war by the far-sighted Fiench sovereign, when the peotle of Moldo-Wallachia were induced by French ugents to elect rnuce t naries ot notion zollern ns their hereditary ruler or Hos- podar : and Prince Charles thus elected was persuaded by a Freuch diplomat to take his carpet-bag and gallop to Bucharest before either the Sultan or the Kaiser or the Czar very clearly knew what had actually been done. By this move not only has a barrier been set up in the face of the Russian vanguard on the Danube, but the ambition Of Austria hiw been turned towards tne isuiKan ana the Bosphorus from the Lower Danube and the Black Sen. anil t h Pan- Hellenic dream of a new Bvzanti IIP nmnirn hua been confronted by perils more direct than tho30 of a Russian protectorate. As no one of the powers directly interested in the future of Euro pean Turkey, therefore, has anything of conse quence to gain by the perpetuation of the sUtc of thiags established in 185U, and as the most BiuuiuuuH anu uneasy oi these powers Prussia, nas everj ining to lose troni a protected and pacific development of the new element- of uuJ" nva.nl' 11 18 aHouether probable both that the "Eastern question" will be rapidly forced into the foreground ot European politics, and that the resource of diplomacy will be found unequal to its solution. IDE IjAht i niLADELPniA Canard if ; evident that the Philadelphia canard about the rrcBident and the AUorney-deueral was con- ,l "m; me iiowara proclamation, for eflect upon the gold market, lint we call the attention of the executive committee of the 41. II .' iMutiuicu rre ui me met mat mis fabrication miiB.icirnrupucu uy tucir agents to all parts of iuu i-uuuirj t-xcepi tue city or Washington where it might have been promptly exposed' iuis matter demands an imnndiatu inveatitfa- iiuii. xue assoc i ui eu rress nns neen pretty Dauiy managed ot late, and this laH offense ougnt to wcure a reiorm. jv, x. ileraia. CUTLERY. TAi,fl.nS "'O'tment of POCKET and SmV ua,V;V.i1'5,,l. KAZOKH, KA- ..... 4 k. ii Till. ,imi lu.'rrL ouionuiH 4 A 4 4--44 4.4. .j.... our.anq, r ! (.;.. at Cutlery Store. No. m oth SlUmi, tlM Inree doom above Walnut FINANCIAL. BANKING HOUSE OP" JayCooke&CP' 112 and 114 So. THIRD BT. FIIILAD'A. Dealers in all Government Securities, OLD 5-Q0 WANTED IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. A LIBERAL DIFFERENCE ALLOWED. Compound Interest Notes Wanted INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSIT. Co lections made. Btockf Boushtand Bold Gnm. aaltslon. j tiltm ppecia pnmaf m ccommodiuo rcservea for ladle. RATIONAL BANK OF THE REPUBLIC, Ncs. 809 and 811 CHESNUT Street. PHILADELPHIA. Tlie late management having relinquished their entire control and Interest In this Bank, the business Is now being conducted under the following entirely NEW MANAGEMENT. DIRECTORS. JOSEPH T BAILEY, Of Bailer & Co., jewellers. EDWARD B. ORNE, Of J. F. A E. B. Orne. Dealers in Caroetinm. NATHAN HILLE8, Piealdent of the Second National Bank. WILLIAM EBVIEN, Of My erg A Eivlcn. Flour Factois. OBGOOD -WELSH, Of 8. & W. Welsh, Commission Merchants. BENJAMIN ROWLAND. Jr., Of B. Rowland, Jr., & Btcthor, Coal Merchants. SAMUEL A. BISPHAM, Of Bamael BlsDham & Bon. Whosale Grocer. WILLIAM II, RllAWN, Late Cashier of the Ce tral National Bank. PRE8IDEST, WILLIAM II. RIIAWN. CABQIEK, JOSEPH P. MUMFORD. Late ot the Philadelphia National Ban. 98 5-20s, 7 3-lOs, ' 1881s, 1040s, DOUCHT AND SOLD. DE HAVEN & BROTHER, Io. 40 SOUTH THIRD ST. ltmrp "TILLIAM PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 30 South THIRD St. Government Securities Bought and Sold August 7.30s, And Old 5-20s, CONVERTED INTO FIVE-TWENTIES OF 18C5, And the new Bonds delivered immediately. CITY LOANS BOUGHT AND SOLD. 9t8m (J. S. SECURITIES. A SPECIALTY. . SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, 16 S. THIRD ST.,, 3 NASSAU ST., PHILADELPHIA. HEW YORK. STOCKS AND GOLD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON. COMMISSION HEBE ASP IK MEW YOBK. 13 1 "Y" ANTED, NOVEMBER COUPONS, FOR WHICH THE HIGHEST PRICE WILL BE PAID, AT JAY COOKE & CO'S., Nos. 112 and 114 S. THIRD St. lostr 5-20 coupons, DUE NOVEMBER 1, BOUGHT BY STERLING, LANE & CO., BANKEB9, 9 6tfCp No. 110 South THIRD Street. nAVIES CROTHEKS, 09 Tinm? STREET. BANKERS AND BROKERS. UT AMD BILL UNITED BTAIE8 B nwiTFTi HTATES lS-10". ALL ISHUJMJ. Kercantll. ad Lo.n.on ColMMIi negotiate SHIRTS, FURNISHING GOODS, & J W. SCOTT & CO., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AKD DSAUERS III MEN'S FURNISHING GOOU8 No. 814 CHESNUT Street, FOVB DOOR8 BI.L0W TIlE "CONTINENTAL, S7ip rBILADKLI-HtA. PATENT SHOULDER-SEAM BHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FCRNI8IlINa STORE. rt.RrK.CT FITTING BI.1RIB AND DKAWEH3 made lrom m. annrrmrnt at Terr ttanrt notice.' ... . . . - r . i - r f - i . rr- i t. k. ir l. i.iil u. tffr.a In lull variety. WINCH KSTJEll & CO., No. 706 CHE8NVT Street 1241 THE BEST FITTING SHIRT IK AMERICA 19 TUB BllOULDER-SEAM PATTERN BMBT, Manufactured by B. EATRE, No. 58 N. SIXTH Street, Philadelphia Trhcre you can find a larfe aortmcntot ' GENTS' rUBNlOHINO GOODS. Clip tbli oat and give ni a call. 917 Ko.UK. 81X111 Street, Philadelphia. SADDLES AND HARNESS. HARNESS. A LARGE LOT OF HEW C. 8. WAGON HAR. HESS, 2, 4, and 6 borne. Also, parts ot HAR KKS8, SADDLES, COLLARS, HALTERS etc, bought at the recent Government Bales to be sold at a ereat sacrifice. Wholesale or RotaiL Tenet Her Kitn our usual assortment ot SADDLERY AND SADD ERT HARDWARE. ' WILLIAM S. HANSELL & SONS, a 1 1 IV. 114 MARKET Street. FERTILIZERS. J3 AUG IPS RAW BONE SUFE R-PHOSPHATE OF LIME. The sreat Fertilizer lor all cron. Quick In Its action end permanent in Its efltcts. tstabiwlied over twelve yenic. , Dealer applied by the canto, direct from the wharl oi ine manuiuciory, on noerai lerius. Manufactured only by B AUG II & S05IS, Office No. 20 South DELAWARR Avenue, 8 4Mivwirp Philadelphia STOVES, RANGES, ETC. QULYER'S NEW PATENT DEEP SAND-JOIIST HOT-AIR FURNACE. RANGES OF ALL. SIZES. ALSO, FHIEGAR'S HEW LOW PRESSCBfi STEAM BEATING APPARATUS. JTOB BALK BY CHARLES WILLIAMS, 6 10 $ Ho. 1182 MARKET STIiEEI, 27 GAS STOVES! 27 THE EAGLE GAS-IIEATINU STOVES WILL HEAT Tour Offices, Parlors, Dining, Sleeping, and Batli-Rooms, AT LESS EXPENSE, LESS TROUBLE, NO DIRT, SMOKiC, OR A8UES. The are all warranted to do the work. Call and see them, at O. W. LOO .HIS', 1U 0 IidJ No. 27 8. BIXTH Street, Philadelphia, Pa. SHIPPING. FOR SALE. TWO PROPELLER mMiml-rZ B1 EAMSIll 1'8, 500 tona each ; two years old ; lui, t in, l.'il leet ; breadth of beam, 26 leet 8 Indies: depth ot lower hold,U net U incues; between docks, 7 feet tt inchest condensing engine cylinders, 36 luetics In bore and Hi In stroke. Freight capacity, tuffO barrels. Copper fastened, and built in ihiiatlelphia by Met bis. William Cramp & sows. In t-p endiu order. For narucu,ars apply to w fl OAIX,GnER No.ZV8N.WllAHVKt.orto WILLIAM F. POTTS, 9 24 lmrp No. 1225 MAKKKT B treat, Pnila. -fift STEAM TO LIVERPOOL CALLING IwLiLLLLat Queenstown The Inmau Line, sailing ixu.i-wtekly, carrying the United states mal s "CITY 1F C'OKK." Wednesday, October 17 'CITY OF BOSTON" Saturday. October lifl "K A Is GA KOO" Wednesday, October 21 "CI1Y OF WASULNGiON" Saturday, October 27 "CITY OF LONiiON" Saturday November 8 and each succeeding haturday and Wednesday, at noon, irom Pier No. 43 North river. kai km of passage By the mall steamer sailing every Saturday. Flist Cabin, Gold ISOiBteerago Curreuoy 34 To London US I To London 40 To Paris 100 j To Paris SO Passage by the Wedneedfy steamers : First cabin, ICO t steerage, 1 35. T ay able In United States cur rency. Passengers a'so forwarded to Havre, Hamburg, Bre txen, etc , at moderate rates. . A Steerage passage Irom Liverpool or Qneenstown, 40, cuirency. fl ickets dan be bouvbt here by persons send infr for their trlends. . , For luriher luioimation apply at the Company i 0 flees. JOHN G. OA IE Axent. g 7 No. 1U WALKLT Street. Phllada. -jr FOR NEW YORK. PHILADEL igffiiaVliri delphia Steam Propeller Company De bnuu.li omimure Lines, via Delaware and Karltan Canal, lesvlngdaiyatl2M. and 6 p. M., connecting with all Northern and Kastcrn lines. For freight, whluh will ibe taken upon aocommodatini terms, acnlr to WILLIAM Jl. BAlltl) & CO., la ' NO 1!2 B. DELAW AKH renne ri'O BHIP CAPTAINS AND OWNERS. THJ 1 undersigned baring leased the KEKHI.NGiOS SCREW lOCK,begs toln'Orm his mentis and thepatroni ot the Dock that be Is i repsred With Increased facilities to accommodate those having vesse. a to be raised oi repaired and being practical ship-carpenter and caulker, wMglve perwnal attention to the vessels en trusted to blot tor repairs. Captains or Agents. Ship Csrpenters, and Machinists navlnft Vessels to repair, are solicited to .call. . HitvTng the agency for the sale of "Wettersteat'i Patent .Metallic Composition" for Copper Paint, for the pieservatlun of Testis' bottoms, for this city, 1 am prs pared to iurnbh thssam. on f.vor.b i" Kensington Screw Dock, US CELA WAKE Avenue, abovs LA. L'lUiLStreot LEGAL NOTICES. T N TIIE ORPHANS' COURT FOR TIIE CITY X AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA. Estate oi ltOBKKI b I LI. KM, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that lieb. cca Ulllen, widow of said decedent, has tiled in said Court an inventory aud appraisement of the poisonal property which she elects to retain under the act of April 14 lttAl. and its sup plements, and that the same will be approved by the Court on i KID AY. the lutlt day of October, A. 1). lSori, unless exceptions be filed thereto JOaLPH C. FF.KO.USON, 10 8 mf 2w Attoruoyjor Widow A B S II A L"7! BALK. lty virtue ot a writ of sale "by the lion. JOH8 CA tlWALADEB, Judge ol' the Diblrlct Court 0( the United States, lu aud lor the Eastern District of l'uuu sy.vaula, to me directed, will be so d at Public ab; to the highest and best bidder, for cah, ut the istor.i ot POWELL, SUGrH A CO , No. 12U North FltON'f street, at 11 o'clock A M, on F HI 1 A V the Mth day 01 October Insta it THKKK 11 AKHF.LS or WHIiKL Also, at the same time and ulace, tne following de scribed proneity, which will remain on the premise at GEOKOE WILSON'S. No. 1H20 AlAKKET.treet I feTILL complete, empty llliOSIlEAOS, FUNNi LS. eto eto 1 arties wishing to purchase can examine the pn purtr on the premibes above-mentioned two duvs previous to tale. P. C. ELLMAKEK V. B. Marshal. E. D of Penusvlvanla Pnii-APELPniA October 10, 1M6D. , I101S t PKIV Y WELLS OWNERS OF PROPERTY The only pis to get Privy Wells cleaned and d s nfected at very low price. A PEYPON Manufacturer of Poudrette 10 1 GOLDSMITHS' BALL, LUJBAM V Street WATCHE9, JEWELrtY ETO. fo Vm GOLD WATCHES. to sojourners in our citv. We call sseclal atttntlon of the folourncrs In oar city to the FINE WATCH AND IIIiVERWaRB K8TABL.ISIIMENT OB W. W. CASSIDY, No. lie South SECOND Street, Who has on hand one of the finest assortments ol Jew eliy, etc. of any in the city. A splendid assortment o SILTIB WARE ALWAYS O HAND. Remember W. W. CASSIDY. 8 ICS No. 12 Soaib SECOND Street UI4V4M0ND DEALER & JEVELER watchkh, jrwelry a aiLVKR ware, ATCHES an J JEWELRY REPAIRED., CTiBBtTnit Bt..Phllv Owing to the decline ot Go d, has made a treat re. auction in price of his large and well assorted stock Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, ' Silverware, Etc! The pnbllo are respectfully Invited to call and examln nr stock before purchasing eisewbere. J i$ G. RUSSELL & CO., No. 22 North SIXTH St., Having Increased their facilities (ot FINK WATCH REPAIRING, Invite the attention of the public. All work warranted for ore year. sjg A full fsortnicnt ol above Roods constantly on hm.d at modetate prices the Musical boxut plariuc from 2 to 10 beautiful Airs. FARE & BROTHER, Importers, Ko. 24 CUEfsNUT STREET. 11 lisiiithsrp lielow Fourth, B0AV3I1N & LEONARD, MANCFA CTCRER8 OF AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Silver and Sllvcr-rialcd Goods, No. 704 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. tJI0 ,n.ant of SILVER or 8n,VKn-PLATEU WAhk. will llud it much . to their advantage to visit our 81 OMS teioie n-oklug iheir purchases. Our long experience in the manuiacture ot tlie above kinds of goods eimblts us to deiT competition. W e kern nn irnnflH hnl thuaa ul.f. u n 4, nrnan CiASS,gll ot our own make, and Mill be sold at reduced prices. glLVER-rLATED WARE. SAMUEL, K. SMYTH, rrsctlcal Fartner of the late nnu or MEAD SM Y'iJJ, would Inform the trade that be has removed tj No. 35 South THIRD Street, Where he wHll continue the maiutacture of 80PE lilOU 8ILVHIPLATLD WAltL ol couble and triple plate, under the nam tof the nimof bMYlU & ADAIR. 221m M "ENRY IIAEIBK' No. 520 ARCII STREET Manufactu and Dealer m Watches Pine Jewelry, Silver-Platecl Ware, AKD 81 Solid Silver-Wttre. KICH JEWELKY JOHN B REN NAN, DEALER IN DIAMONDS, FINE WATCHES, JEWELRT, Etc. Etc Etc 2C Wo. 18 S. EIGHTH 81 KJJBT. flUlada. FOR SALE AND TO RENT. pOR RENT. A VALUABLE STORE, No. 809 CHESNUT STREET, In the National Bank of the Republic Building. B6tl AIPLY ON THE PREMISES. QFF1CES AND. LARGE ROOMS FOR RENT IN THE National Bank of the Ecpnblio Building, Nos. 809 and 81J CHESNUT Street, The Building is supplied tilth Gas, Water, Water Closets, and fiteam beating- Apparatus. The rooms on the third and fourth floors are large (fiOxSO). well llghied, and suitable tor Commercial College, or business of a similar character. Apply at the Banlt. ltf J LARGE, WELL LIGHTED AND VENTILATED ROOM, ON TIIE SECOND FL00U OP THE 'Evening Telegraph" Building, No. 108 South THIRD Street, ' TOEEIST, With or without steam power. Applj in the ollice, first lloor. it WALNUT STHEET I'ltOfH-KTI. 'Ult SnU llirpo Tiwi:llnr lii New How West TWENTY. fjsi Ktrent . mi in In ii Ti ; 00. and t 'M 01 . Also a suae. UICUIUUJ I1UUK), 4.W m..v " ' - w m . ... . IlE CHEAPEST JOB 1'IiINTlNG OFFIOI3, IX rUlL4l)i.Ll UIA, HADDOCK t SOS'S, ' Ho. 618 MARKET Htreet, 9 1 Smrp Entrance on Uecatur street. ... . 11. k;.. Ulu Akl'H Mt 'iS linrri TTEAD.S10-NE9, MONUMtNT.s, ETC. ETC. IAHOE COLLECTION', LOW PRICEH. BEST MARBLE, TWKLFTH STREET, AEOVE RIttotC AVKNUK. tWlui CHlRLKS M.NjiKV WATCHES, JEWELRY, dec. I - : - :. ' I MUSICAL BOXES. j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers