THE KEW YOEK PEESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF THE LEADING JOURNALS UrON CURRENT TOPICS. COMPILED EVKBT DAT FOB EVIMNQ TRtKOHAPH. The PreMent and the Restoration tlties- Vntn thu Timm. On the aronoral prlncltl( that "whr-rn ther la smoko there la Ore," we niayaume that the Hosting rumont toucntng the President and the policy to be" pressed upon the Sooth are not entirely destitute of foundation. There may be a good aeai of Ruess-work In the despatches rctHvcd from Washington upon this subject; and oououess there Is more or less exaggeration, fltill, a substratum of fact remains, sufficient to show that the President is not indifferent to the recent manifestations of Northern opinion, or to the obligations which the present aspect of me country imposes upon mm. Thl. at anv ratn. la n ident no longer reposes hope in the purposes or , ,y-",",.'u1''u party, xne eiec- lions nave dispelled, whatever delusions loud boastinpr may have fostered, and have proved the innDiiity ot tne party to render him the she ntest service. The support upon which for some months past he Las seemed disposed to rely has tailed him most signally, and he finds himself fare to face with a controlling Republi can majority in Congress lor the reniHind5r of uid iajaiu. Ain wujiiiuu oniHo anu nis llip-lonir respect lor tne popular will could hardly allow tti... (A liatnn in th. T... . r at. I . tion that he tbould defy Coneress. and rhrr.w himselt upon the houth and ' its Democratic iriuuus iur suiruiu m uarry mm mroueh the crisis. He has evidently and for the country's sake and his own, most happily discarded these """! nu iu mo circumstance we mm we discover evidence of his resolve to re consider his position in relation to Oomrress anii hta rluliAa 1m l . 1- - c-i . 1 -, v The reported determination to oush no fur flint" ill A huainnaa rt' namAnim. .t! , . -- icuiuiiuB uiiice-noiaers because of their opposition to the views ol the .EiAi-vuuvc, id uuwuie Hisrn oi altered purposes -r, - - 'VO.iuus CAIfcieU IOr thinking that the country might be induced to nmnniinna a n.llAt I .. . . . iwumi iu m mvor, we contended for the fullet latitude to the President in the matter or removals. Hm right to remove lor la: ij icaeuiiB, oi wnicn ne snou a be the iudee -Kv.u, .UUufiu tuuswauiea more tnan once to protest against the blunders perpetrated 7 ui .. V j " pH"iuiaicuiB. 11 IS DOS' flinln that A niaonunrtr t' ika i . . r. . he has been led in the selection of Copperheads as the successors of radicals, have contributed to the change which Washineton correspondents report, lie this as it may, it is satisfactory to if now mat thf nnlino nf ramAi,inn o: - - ----- j "-"""iub wmuo-uuiuers without other cause than that of opinion is to be " pursisience in it could only serve to add bitterness to the controversy with Congress, and to provoke the adoption of re- iHJioiury measures, so we hope that its abandon ment arises from a desire to avoid further and in the circumstances, useless quarrels with' me party dominant In Congress. If this is the uiu ire, ii merits recognition as a peace oil'ering which the victorious party may well afford More important, however, than tho question and the light in which the decision of the States rnnnnn....1 1 r . . . . iriOTuwu iu wntitss is ronsiuerea oy fresi. dent Johnson. His opposition to the Constitu tho all but universal support given to it by the V - wu.iu cicuuuu.t uave Deen noiu. rience it is not surprising that within the last tn Av he has been knwn to have had the subject wiBiutumn, uiu w nave neia inter views with prominent mpn of tho Republican party. Whether these consultations -a.c ku 10 Hoy aecmed modification of his views, or point to the probability ot any cotu- v ui ouuuu wuen congress snail re assemble, is for the moment-. pnmnnr.Hi. i material. Much is pained when one in the Pre sident's position, and with his hahmiai ikmi. so far recedes as to admit the expeJiency of rPVIflinO Ilia AnnnlttDinnn a . f .......hwuwuoiulsjjuu reviewing availa ble forniB of compromise. The misfortune of j u . wuh, inaiwun each eucceedine debate, and with every new measure, the breach v.nj.u ,yuiii;iess auu me iresident was ren dered wider aud deeper. And it will be grati fying to barn that when Congress shall aain meet, the President will have made up his mind tO aCauie?RP. ill tiio mncnl mir... i) n try's verdict, and his readiness to adapt his own views In respect of restoration to the purposes committed. l W the eoverniDS stalea afe We Yle n2 expectation that this course on the . v. vd nraiucui win ieaa mm to a formal approval of the amendment in its nrpsont h no Ihe refusal of the South to ratify it, and the ftrr thai tl,l. B.r i i . n . . - u ili9 ruiusai me ten states out of the Union will be sustained by three States in the Union, may, In his judgment, be sufficient to warrant the promulgation of other terms of ad mission. He may plead that, since thirteen otatea reject the amendment, it ft An hnvA nn (Constitutional validity, and that the question jv.vit imiold, ouau rPBioraiion oeindetmitely . Oft ronHtmrtoH The Preeident will evince both prudence and Ufisrnnitxr If Iia rAiinloa art v Lto4Amnn . fiinpnnmPTit nn it in with anmn rlaKniu i tion in regard to another amendment, in its ouvtc cnuuuj Bwcputuie wi mo country, rne feouth errs in its blunt, unconciliatory rejection of the terms now proposed. It looks like defi ance, and defiance trora conquered States is what tho conquering States are not likely to endure. In the same way. and tor simikir reasons, the President would commit a fatal mistake u be were simpiy to step aside, with mo nnuuuo ui j'ansivH speciaior . 89 Dutwecn the North Ad South. With the South and the Executive both unyielding, Congress would Oh put ujwn its mettle, and either the present amendment, or another amendment ot a more sweeping character, would be engrafted upon the Constitution. Toe time is not distant when the Pacific Railroad will bring three, four, or even five new States into the Union. Or, if delay be deemed inexpedient, the doctrine may fce acted upon that the States now reprofented are the only Stales whose approval is necessary to adapt the Constitution to tho results of the war wnicti they prosecuted successfully. Issues of this nature we would gladly see avoided. And the only sure method of avoiding them is to settle the qupstion of restoration as early as possible, aod in conformity with the objects which the Union sentiment of the country has made its own. It is with reference to these features of the question that the ultered purposes ascribed to the President possess special significance. He " rP?euted as inclined to favor a plan ef qualified negro suffrage for the South as the best available form of guarantee, and with this, it is said, he would associate a nearly complete aranesiy. One siatement is, that he contem plates an amnesty proclamation: but we trust that this is mere conjecture. He should con sider his actual Work concerning restoration ended, and should neither grant individual par dons nor encourage thoushta of amnesty pend ing the action of Congress. To that body of right belongs ad furthet authority in the pre mises.' All that the President can properly do is to propound the eugeestions which occur to hint, and to exert bis influence to lndce the acceptance by the South ot the terms which Conana, after further deliberation, may f-nally propohe. If the President will consent to retrace hla steps a little, and to take counsel ot the convic tions be claimed befote bla unfortunate rupture with Cppgrekg, it will not be difficult for him to present a plan which will command the respect we balipve ah the sanction of the great ma jority ot the American people. He has In other circumstance definitely committed himself to Impartial suffrage, and to the revision of the THE DAILT EVENING TELEGRAFIT. -TIIlLADELrillA, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER, 20, 18C6. Danes ot representation and taxation. Why not . ,,ijviiiiiuii3 tu u. ii iu u i vers nn aps he has. at onp lime nr iintho ikni.-.. , . , - , -..-, ., Kuiuuiug null Til HHP' A nlflll nnifirnstinit r.nollfl 7 Irage, with intelligence or property as the test to oe annlied Federal extinction , of the Rebel debt-the inviolability v UiVU wuiii, mm n imievrr meaiarcB may ul utwroi j iu But;unj io imp ireoilmpn th full fmitfi nf nniRnrlnatinn u. - .....it..tA wiiu-ii Auoiew lonnflon mieht ofTer with per fect COIIBlPtcncv. nnrl wifh nAr4ano nf atnn- -rf V nun 1 Vfllll J v lo tliese feafure miaht be added a aaallfled SIniV5? yJ ,imiting tbe disabilitiea imported by tbe third POOt inn ef tha nrnannt nmpndiriPnt it the small class of KonUirrn Dollticiana who were iue artnal. ofllcial, and recognized pro tUClVtUulllUUt coming MessaRe would do much towards aofien- CYl riTi tr 1Kb fumnni anrl o rM n At' OnvmH n would be a wise and not uneTaccful recognition o( the determination avowed hv ihp iuu isoriu. uiiu ou imraiii wnicn he might with cronriety urge UDon thp nonnin nf i, !. i . -j ..ii; i , . .t"-"f-. t Th m.e, necllne, nnd pii of the Demo a. n a. w WW UHL Cftmjaa IVatlt -rtwj ie Herald. Ihe handwriting ou the wall hfl hnan t4- w . -"-UU lUtt l - prcted in tho recent elections, and it reads like wie lerriDie edict against Bclshazzar, that the iuuiocranc nartv has hppn htpIj.,. i oaiances and lound wanting, and ihot u ti.. - iv.p,iji-u iu ill; dom is turned over to tho Mpw .n,i pa,nn' It is the conclusion of one of the great chapters "i ur political mstory, covering all the vicissi tudes of parties. Dlatforms. HtlH nnlitifiana all , t 1 Jf an uur political agitations of sects, nationalities sections ana lactions, and all our measures of prepress and development, and our domestic - v.,vii . ou miricu warn, since tne hrst election Of fjpnprnl .ILcnn I J io.io . U101 Thfi I'lpplinn nl 1U9A .1.1 iics naving Decome "all Republicans and all . -. UU ov, uciwBuu jaccson. , : t uu iij, icamung iu ttie v v i v (j vi aunu a uv i. M I rinnqn nr unn.nAi.. tivea. From tW S .T -,r' "1ul- gain and sale against the supporters of Adams k i "i j Kiory oi tne battle of . k"' " . V.X , '"uuiiiHuiana z . v.. jo ani.auuu oi me arirt- ng political elements of the country around GeneraJJackson which resulted in his tirst e!ee- tion. Tho Morn ,,r X n-i .. " . t , . r vmeaus," too, was VT J i t 7. ' . ""i vuiucy Auams, as the dOn Of tho nricinnl IpuHo ,,f ..i t John Adams, was identified as the embodiment v. o.ktu mm ocuiwun laws ana the Hartford K.v- u..rv.in,iuiiii3 in me war oi wvi: and thllR. to tllP plppllnn nf Mo.m v . oia divisions operated in markiug the lines of . . - .... vr. mm liu tail UUIfU. I. 1 1 " HI ijjc iic w (minus. The Jacksonian party, however, was without IJ! i. "nV 'ii u ciuciionoi "Uld h npn nnimv until ihn Ai...i... . . ... . .n,i-ijr, iu mot, as tue cnampion ot the war onaiiim, mo oiu uuuea states uauic and against lis nowpr in nnlififol nnrKiinfinn nn i nrlfltioia mnnAiw.lfi irt. iu.. .1 " u.Wuum-ij, niiu tut uvorcarow ot tne Dailk JucVflnn nnrlnrfrnir o nam i. With thft "nnl: hQnl-.o'J u 1 " dividing the Treasury gold some thirty odd mi Inna nmnniv ikam I. . .1 . J .... "uft uioiu v.-i ii in ui-juHiiorieH. rne paper money inflation of 1835-36 iollowed, and iuuu unum i h imniPTinmia nnunmni under Van Buren, of 1837, which swept the j jw-Tw iu iMu, wiui tne resiniess sweep of a popular tornado. This tM-uiiua- icvoiuuou, nowever, aid not revolu lionize van uuren's Sub-Treasury system: but it 1 1 Frill 17 n I Thp I l(ininfiroiii n n ..I. ..u i irom the financial to tne slavery question, under flip 5snili-hnrn Polliniin ! ui mi- pariy, its jjuwcnui euemy, jacKson, Demg now out of the " muici i-riireuieni at mo uermitage. in -Iflnmiru 1QAA I I . .. . IV. . . J ' n:ioinw(ii3 wp were aner- warnfl InlnrmpH a toott rin,,,inn.ii i. . Air. Clay and Mr. Van Buren, that, as they were to ww ofsaiusi, couu viua iu mm year's elec tion, they would both take ground aejainst the keep tnat dangerous slavery issue out of the -mMw.vvm. v ACAOCi BU H5 111 CUUVU38. At an eventa, wnen in February, as wp rnmpm rwr if rliAir wnv-n cnn u . subicct, there was a remarkable coincidence of nrtittinm In n vi r-i r . r ! . n .UA m 1. i vp.uvu m viipuDiuuu iu me xcaoa auueine oe tween Clay and Van Buren. But the Southern Democratic leaders broke up this arrangement at their Baltimore Convention, a few months later, in enf Jicing for the first time their famous two-thirds rule, in order to overcome Van Buren's pledged majority. Thus Van Buren aud nis policy oi ignoring or postponing tue Texas annexation BChomH Wprp nnat. nairln Kir n.a Southern Democratic leaders, and Polk was nominated, pledged to tho annoxation, with all its hazards of a war with Mexico. From this bold and startling movement lor the addition of an cmpice at the expense of a irnn wur 10 tne noumern pro-siavery balance of power in Congress, began the real decline and fall ot the Democratic party. Polk was elected, the Mexican war Iollowed the Texas annexa- tion, the treaty of peace brought into the Union Annv fininlpo linnn thn lluiolnn C ... 1 . 1 i. the slavery question Van Buren had his revencc in llnlnntinn . It a 1 Inn a : - . . . uciiriiiiup, iuc ciuuuabii; uuriy 111 ibib oy nis iniip.npnrlpnt. lVpa Hnll mnuciniant 'in, .. the first staggering blow to the party Irom the ouu-Dimciy riruitjuis ui me jxortn. it rained, however, in 1862, and almost swept the field on Clay's great compromise measures of 1850, and it might have held the Government to this day uu vui: (inivj luiurciuuinra. uut lis bouttieril leaders. Mason, Jeff. Davis, Slldell and compauy, bent upon a Southern Confederacy, cajoled poor Douelas and coerced poor Pierce into the repeal of the old Missouri Compromise, and tho Kan- Btt uuruer war on slavery, oia John Brown poor old Buchanan, the DemocraticConvenon! rupture of the party, Abraham Lincoln, the ltphpllion. thp PhlPUCTIl I'iinvnnfiin llio . --, --- - n wU . u vivu, aiiuuifo- siou of the Rebellion, the conflict between Pre- Biaent jommon ana Congress,, and the late ter- nuc cit-cuuuR, icii ine rest oi tne story. Thus, in its desperate struggles to retain the Government or to destroy the Government by the strong arm of Southern slavery, the great Democratic party was tirst cripplPd, then divided, and is now destroyed. Its first dis astrous step was the ousting of Van Buren on the Texas question, and its Ian was in still adhering to its traitors of the South against the overwhelming popular voice of the vic torious Norm. And now what comes next t Tbe reconstruction of the scattered materials of the arty on some new issues or an out-and-out new organization, name and all. The leaders and organs of the Northern rump are bee In ning to agitate a scheme to out-radical tho radicals: but already their dissension upon the propositions indicate that general dissolu tion which followpd the collapse ot the old Whig party of 1852. The Demooratic elements are adrift, and it will take some lime and con siderable agitation and beating about hither and thither to puc them into a new form as a party lor the future. Meantime the Republi cans have it all their own way; and may, if they are prudent, hold the Government for twenty years to come. Terms of Reconstruction Letter from O. A. JLirowuHon. From the Tribune. To the Editor of the N. T. Tribune Sir: If I understand your platform, you propose to con cede universal amnesty, or pardon, to all en gaged In the late Rebellion, in exchange for im partial suflraee; that is, in exchange for fran chise based on no distinction of race, caste, or complexion. This, it is most likely, the Demo cratic party are nearly prepared to accept, instead of the Coustitutioual Amendment pro posed by Congress; and the South soon will be. I have no objections to either Impartial suf frage, or to universal amnesty for the people sruilty only of rebellion, as you very well know; tut will ou permit me to ask, if you propose to establish impartial suffrage by an act of Coneress, by a Constitutional amendment, or by the act ot the several state Legislatures or Conventions? and, second, whether you give up all constitutional guarantees against the as sumption by Congress of the Confederate rfphi ai.d the repudiation of the Nationnl -ik.- ' In rrcrftrrl tn rh firol I tun., 1,1 . . ' . .. V 10V. h. if irtr1. nd each r.r.rl-ri'r.r" " not be ii" vy ,'"ru' "BB aumoritv to IpHh. late on the subject. A mending tho Con VuUon so as to give the nni hnrii tX n onsiiiution mar Ihp tWnnt. nf "gress wouia ho ,,Tk..::' ..." rl"Y -"system, destroy ;r vHu.,u,uiu ucmppn ine statp. Bnj .v, 1 ininn im r..i 1 . . " tralirat on of tha invn,in..i.i " VL ircneral ijn.0rn-T'"i,"J:",.7i P.owpr in the completeFrevmutiont,e thuKgffi COlintrv. Tn Im.. tl. .ki..u "u."on 01 ,u? sutlrage to" the" VeveVal sTat' a Zof n,;Vu'T,"i'",l""J''"ura"? ;o-day. and re 1" c.u,OIV Bn'' Promoit to-morrow all ?D:,'Zr " u u,mcn lro' voting, and X . '"r . . wuue racn alone. It seems ? ",e-'he"'. thai Impartial sutlrage. as a condi- wuu prccenent to restoration, is extPedini?lv unstnicomnnliltP. nnrt wnnl.i i J?-h,caF' Tirnvo n.,oTn;- n-h-..r '"'t. .".' "ce. eitlier should be" diRtinXti, nr?roe9. citizens of the United 1STp.. .k"""".' ki Din. f ."' V"V oevfiui a ,cn v tiiuniiuuize tnem tn their own wsv and time according to their own wisdom and . udgnu-nt. or not. an thp i..,i, iU In re?Hrd tn thp oppnnH ii... i 1 ,' an ample guarantee that 'Congress KaPl n"r reniirliutp ihp N.ntinn..i . Comedcrate debt" You doubiless rS?2i5f jou would have the guarantee In impartial suf- - .T. . "'-" v ma, nuuariiai Bn . rn?e.nHU ''b" Just as good as no guarantoe at nil: and it is probably the same belief that lnrillCPS spvnrnl lln vour n nt form. Tim rrtm f .V um. ardly be changed in a single locality by the Cn.if nI!C,hK,,'t;nu'n,t0, e emancipated Klavesf You talk of the trepdinen as constituting a larae por tion o tho icya people ot the South: but, once iuvj n iii lovai or us diWojalas the dominant white class, and no more so. It seems to me arrant nonsense to talk about The loyalty or disloyalty of people. . - - u.uvm, nuuuart; ior penera- liona bepn hold In nl . ... -...j, uu Tvtiv, uve veais I rntp ai'f UPTrbadr a col'n,try domicile. As a rule, if we judge from all past experience, the colored npnii p if nnirarw.hion,i m;n . rt vu. .uiiimou, iyiu VOCPBCCnra- ing to the advice ol their former masters, or the tiiominant class in their respective States. Poor, ignorant, without social position, and without any political training, or political habits, they cannot expect to be independent voters, ann f hn nnlo n,,n0i,n t i. j i . .. . ia-:ii .u . i , j uuvmivu iu ud uei; uca IS, W ill thPV IbLb tho nHui'nu J I..1I . i. ... ' ti T-.i; v "ivriiu lunuw me uirec tiondthe politicians of the South or the roll- uuiuns oi tne Pvorth r 1 do not in nnv onnan fnnon ...l.n& i . . J ... "j vimc TV nut is imien negro sutlruee. or the abolition of all political distinction between white mpn aud black or colored men; but I protect against regarding tbe entrauchisement of the freed men ai anv CUarnr.tPP thnf Ihp nulin.ul l.t ...;n t. "J puoiated or that the Confederate debt will not va XT nuouau oi your piatiorra, Mr. KdltOr. SPPm in ma h .!, 1 ue assuiuea. ine adODtlon of tnnr ntnttnrm dnr,linn . . . . 'yu"."" . "C . Yi "UUt :l nof.Vv Mnh? cally repudiated. Graut universal amnesty, if 4 Lr.. JJ " . . UKUUUS uave empnuu- ju win; x woum, n it naa aepeuded on me, eianted it in June. lfifiS inr hpphi-p h. guarantees first. The ten States that eneaged in the Rebellion lost by their rebellion their status and rl 'hts and immundipi: na Rtnloa in fha nnn. u...i- xueir saKe, aud lor the sake of the Union, it is . . .. j . v vuivu, uul iur ytrsuauie mat ihey oe restored as States in the Union, on a footing of equality with the other HtfltPfl. AS Rnnn na tinaciKfo inm-r.,, i cided, not that they should give guarantees, but that the Union should, prior to their restora tion. Pf-tuhlih PPftoitl .m..att.,.t4n 1 , - Vv-.w.u vvuniiiuuuuai guaran ties for llselt against the probability of a future rebellion, whether North or South. East or West. For this nnrnnap it Vine ! . i. constitutional amendment, which several States nave aireauy ratined, wnicn the loyal people in their late election have manifestly approved find urhiph nHur.ro oil tl,n ct.... ..ln.1 ' .... ' the Constitutional amendment Is not perfect, but it is the best Coneress could devise. Let that be ratified by three-fourth- of the twentv- 81X Statfs in Ihp TTut nn on.l tliA.. 1..I . I. "'"""i "u .u(rix 1LI IUL LA - States rcoruanize under the amended Constitu- iioii, ana resume their vacant seats in the Union. Tho HitinliTIni. ...... I.. 1 x T . v, ui.-uuiiu(; VIPUOIT 111 1 11 IT UllllTIll 1 111C 1 1 L X WOUld t-trike out If 11 InnkPrl tn thnlimt Wphnllinn alnnp: hilt, it lnnt a tn thp tntin-p uo nioll aa In Ilia past, and is, perhaps, wi6e and just. Let the ex States reconstruct themselves under an enabliag act of Coneress, and come back; then you may safely grant universal amnesty, and Congress can remove, by a two-thirds vote of "both Houses, the disability imposed, aud the last traces of the Rebellion be obliterated. Impartial Buli'iage will soon follow, and without marring the symmetry of our National Constitution. At any rate, let the Constitutional amendment be Insisted on, and let not the public mind be dis tracted by any substitute, whether more or les lavorable to the negro. I have the honor to be jour obedient servant, 0. A. Brownson. fclizabeth, N. J.. November 13, 18Cti. hemarks by the Tribune. I. Mr. Brownson queries whether we would have impartial suffrage established by the States, by Congress, or by Constitutional amend ment. We answer, by them all. We should greatly prefer that tho good work would begin with the States, North and South; but we do not propose to stand on ceremony. We hold it the true and vital interest of each State to be just to her own people, and especially to her laboring class. If only lor her own sake, and without reference to anything but itself, we hold that impartial suffrage should be promptly adopted by each State, as a means of satisfying her hitherto degraded population, and making them contented members of the body politic, ready and proud to do and dare in its defense! Wa . k . ... ; . "ui nuiii iu ste inipaitiai sutirae pre sented to tho South ou the point of a con queror's sword. If the South were (o-dav an independent na lion, with her blacks free we believe her wiser statesmen would insist' ou their enfranchisement as a means of i, Cfeasine her national strength, security, and mauSS? Mr. Brownson thinks impartial suffrage Si be conceded to subserve a present pnd n i withdrawn when that end had been .ui? We decidedly think otherw.se; but! since here is a possibility of this, and the oar'e ponsiK is a source ot uneasiness, weakness, and oerii when every consideration demands tue secur nig of tranquillity and contentment, eToeciallv at ihe South, wo insist that impart al tVi.rtrn be im beaded in the Federal CoutUuuon ffi will be tbe end of the controversy 1Uttt 2. Mr. Brownson objects that mu would mar the symmetry ot our Federal system w answer tnat this objection comes too late It was urged-ana with great speclousuesg-aJalnst the amendment abolishing slavery throughout the Union. It was. undoubtedly, the rulothat each State should hx couclunvely the status ot her own people. It i so no longer The liberties of every American citizen are now covered by the panoply ot the Federal Constitu tion. The amendment we propose would have maried the symmetry of the Constitution as it was; it is needed to perlecl the symmetry nt th Constitution as it is. ' 3. Mr. Brownson thinks that we shall ulti mately attain impartial sullrage if the pending Constitutional amendment is adopted. 8o do we. He is also favoruble to universal amnesty and evidently thinks that not very distant! Hete, again, we aree with him. So far as we ditler, ii Ib maitilv because it seems to us most important that the countiy should be harmo nized, the rights ol all classes established aud secured, and all the States in Congress at the earliest possible day. A grand, beneficent end is In view; and we propose to go straight to it at onee. and have peace. The South needs hundreds of milllous' worth of food, Imple ments, animals, Iraetals, etc. etc., to enable her to rebuild all her waste plaices, employ all her labor, and make a great crop next year. And her prosperity is as essential to the North on to herself. There Is no interest of either sec- tion which Is not also the true ii.terest of the other. Now, then, sinoo It is plain that the blacks are at last to be enfranchised, and that the Southern whites are to be relieved of their disabilities incurred by the Rebellion, we pro pose lo march direotly and quicklv to the end plainly in view, and thus save the country from several years more of turmoil, social anarchy disorganized industry, and treneral unthrift and wietcbedness. And though we expect opposi tion from both extremes, we are confident that a majority oi the American people. North and South alike, concur in this view, and that their number H rapilly increasing. 4. Mr. Brownson insists on that clause of the pending amendment wnicti pnarautces the National and proscribes thejtebel dpbt. Mainly because we wUh to leave no seeds of. future s nte, we concur in this. So we think that clause of the pending amendment which asserts t he proper citizenship ol all our countrymen shou d be maint-d. It may cot be PRso'utlal: but it can-do no harm, and will add to the general feeling of security and peace.' The whole land pet-ds rest from strile and agitation. riii inwlnt,a8; mosi wlse1' uitcrwoven the Civil Rights bill Into her ov,n code. Other States are preparing to follow. Let us have an end of all controversy concerning negroes aud their lights, so as to be ready to bo about oar business. If negroei are idle, thpy must go hungry and ragged; ir they steal, they must be punished nut as negroes, but as men. It tbev have not yet learned that "freedom rueansltree dom to work," the winter lust coming on will teach tbem with a good many others-thut w holesome lesson. 6. Mr. Brownson and we are not so far anirt h",'?ni' to think aud It is the same with the North and the South. Let us simply give our common sense and better feelings fair play, and we shall soon come to a substantial agree ment. Mr. B.'s abstractions would have pre vented the abolition or, at least, the prohibi JJ"" slavery; but abstractions did not save the Union. The Political From the World. Dead. Lock-It Outcome. The Democratic party. North and Smith hni.i iue aey oi toe political situation. They are con scious of their strength, of their rpsnnnaiwut,. and their duty. The political dead-lock will be terminated by the Democratic Dartv. not hv congress, not by the Republican nart. not i the North. The North is able to t-outh irom representation in Congress. It Is impotent to govern the South after its own ncsires. Nothing but self government is pos sible in these United States: and for Hip Nnrth to govern the South, whether bv military dnmi. cation, by territorial rule, pr indirectly through iue imposition oi Constitutional amendmpnt is ruin io ine nartv rtmi iindwi.L it m. . Republican nartv lino hppn vi, .!..... i. . J ""--"I.. IH.ia II, illC 1 iaie elections in most ot the Northern SLatpa f H,, l,... ,1 !....:." , . """""U 3UICS. "T r. " v ' Ii'-IUIIUUB iu iuk S l.",' - "1" .. uuya""'lge 11 ! It IS f 10 tpe Thirty-ninth Congress I ii"-B, uuu tne r ornetu. it is ah h m nmr I 1 llll Cflnua If nnn I . i . . .. , ..-v .v ,uu icniMaie to us neart s muv.ui. ui wun wuat result ? it can accom plish everj thing except what it desires: to bend the South to its will by protracted denial of their representative rights, or by changes in the Federal Constitution. That way its nWn ruin lies; this way its path is hedged bvthirtepn Mates, more than one-fourth the number ever likely to lorm the Union. The Republican party control the maphinery by which States may be lawlessly excluded Irom Congress, and every hour that exclusion is prolonged under mines their own btrencth. The Democratic party control the machinery by which Constitu tional amendments are defeated. Besides the ten excluded States which, led y Geomia will rcluse assent to the Rump's endmeuts,' and alone sullice to defeat them, Kentucky, Mary laud, and Delaware, States always loyal will join in giving them their coup de grace. The political situation is therefore a complete dead-lock. This dead-lock, we repeat, cannot be terminated by the North, nor by the South nor by the Republican party. Sections are im potent, aud sectional parties are Impotent, in a situation like this. The dead-lock will be termi nated by a political party, tor it is a polit cal struggle; by a nationnl party, for the coutest in cludes all parts of the nation; by the Demo cratic party North and South, which is the only national party; by means ot a compromise iouncled on mutual concessions, siuce each of the iorces at dead-lock has a complete check mate upon tbe other; by a compromise pro-poi-ed by the South, because the one-sided, un guaranteed, partisan proposal of tne North has been or if ill be rejected by nearly one-half the People of theNoith aud all the people of the South; by a compromise acceptable to a maionty ot the people ol the South, and to a majority ot the people of the North, the Derao tiatiCiparty, namel3( which will thus and theu, a the only national party, as the only Union party, as the free-trade, touud currency, and state-iulits party, recover its natural majority thioughout the Unitea States. J Ibat the Democratic party of the North and south thus hold the key to the political situa tion is perceived by their lately victorious opponents. It is betrayed in their absurdly clamorous cries, reiterated after every failure to materially oimiuish its formidable strength at the North, that the Democratic party is shat !i is "'without a mission," is deud." It is disclosed In their own failure to ""1"r"r,BUUU1 auviuing save tue fading passions Ot P.l VI I U tl 1' It . , . ; ' 7i... ' j " -uuiroBCu, mis consciousness n.d v nvatChaRd umoVau Given to the nation m,n, .y4 e Dmocrtlc purty of the North and iT i!r- i""""su even oy tne oreans of the ?ni'u,'&can- Pa", in. their vigilance to watch iu ubbvmo a iscuss, sometimes to mis- Ot Dpmnpri.tln nnim.. . 1. '' , . V,3ttuH .viidcui. lug ieiiT.arivic nut f iih t.KAA ao.oUr.Z- ""wu, lOUl'lU ar.u oouto, m 7 l,a,"mt:t expressing, organlzius, and mould - J uum uihu tor I n 1 H political pacibeatiou. llllL lie HRIIfi.rr.ptnrv On. i ..1 .. . a weste;u democratic journal, the Chi lines, and &n kiLafprti tha u,. t.. r.. L " - mu iivdiuii j. uxt. nave u.-i.uj-c,, mm uiuiier teutativeiv rather than positively, by negstives rather than affir matives. Whereuyon follows a chorus of hulla- .1V1U au tJlc xvepuoucan press, as if the ..-v...iwo1iin,i eapiuuea to atoms and UOfd KVIIilla linitii. .Un..4 ' .w wjoiaiiitiuK uouui some novel herenv L , T our VVe8tern contemporary "Will the nennlp In tlm serve to ihemselves their constitutional -itrht tn r;""" me quimui ttuou oi electors and tho eligibility of Derions to hold office" (both pro posed to be taken away irom the people of the several States and given to Congress, by the Rump amendments), "a power they have rh?ht. fully exercised from the origin of the Govern ment to the preent time, or will they yield up that power to tbe possession of a can tralized oligarchy in the National Capitol? l hese are the opposiug propositions from which there is no escape. There is uo other alterua- "The people of Massachusetts have ever stead fastly refused to allow the Southern and West ern Mates to regulute, or in any way to inter" fpre with their lot al institutions and policies They established impartial suffrage when the people In every other State were almost unani mously opposed to it, They had the right to do so, and, in exerclslmr that right, neither the people m any other State nor the General Gov. eminent had any right to interfere. This right ihe people of Massachusetts will never peace lul'y yield. It is a right which belongs equally to the people of Illinois, ol South Carolina and of every other State ot the republic. It U this f'pht which the radical advocates of centraliza tion propose to take away from the people of the States and transfer to the ceatral Govern ment, in that resiect cbaneina our Government system Irom a republio of States to a centralized decpotlsm." ' We tail to perceive here a political apoca 'JP8e. Unless we dream, this is cardinal, con stitutional, democratic doctrine a terse reitera tion of the argument with which Mr. Curtia opened the late campaign in tnis State, and dealt one of the heaviest blows to the Rump amendments, which amendments assail this doctrine on every side. Th Chicago limei goes on to recommend a State convention ia Illinois, for the establish-1 ment of Imtiarttal suffrage there "by the blgliMt ami ;ouly authority whioti his a rieht tofsiablish It the people of the State;" thus piviiigapraotlcal exruiidlflcafcon of its aound Stftte-richt doctrine. . , TheJ lime expresses the further opinion that ' there la no other way in which the people of the several States can avert this blow, aimed at their dearest rights, but by proceeding without delay to exercise these rights, as Massachusetla has done, by the eMabliBhmpnt ot impartial suffrage." This opinion of the Timet, ho wever is Mibject to its own remark in a preceding para graph : ' Tbe representatives ol South Carolina or ot Massachusetts may understand, and doubt less do understand, tbe waiits and interehtj of the people of their own State btterthsn the irpiesentidives of Illinois or California know them;" aud Is subject also to the criticism that neither New York nor South Carolina, nor Georgia nor Illinois, I1119 to fear or to avert any blow from any quarter against tbe State right to control suffrage whilst thirteen u more than Hiia.lnn.lk .-.. ...... V"' -luui IU VI uiij-uiie. , When Dogberry commanded his constables to linmiiNilianif IImII . . n . . ... ...... If nnn n.1,AJ wuiiii 1H.11U i 1 vadium turu. it una ttiiveil biui, "How if they will not stop," and the reply ot Doeberry was, "Then let them go in God's name." However, iudged not harshly as the ex pedient ot political cowardice to save State rints by voluntary surrpuder ot them, but Indeed tul.lv aa a - n . f I ' 1- 1 ...!!.: 1 l .. to the homogeneous and enlightened people of a iiuuid i-iiiw, iiii ireuiiiuieiinauou oi impartial Butlraee to the people of Illinois aeems to us sagacious and prudent, ami in the d rection 01 democratic freedom and equality; but of that tne people of Illinois will judge for them selves. The Boston Post, too, which has perceive! tho bcnetiis ot ImpartiHl suffrage in Massachusetts, "bused on citizenship, taxation, and a certain dpgree of intelligence." "would be clad to see it adopted by every State In the Union," because a rule or that sort is too flruily fixed in justice and equality to be shaken." "But adoption Is another matter from enforce ment. We are at perfect liberty to discuss this matter within those limits by which our own political power is bounded; and we may set forth aa noble illustration of our oonvictiona as a local example will admit; but it is not "llowed lis to combine in Congress to compel other States to follow that example, though, it were the perfection of reason in Itself and the ne plus ultra of justice and morality." Had the Republican press before tho elections only siven currency, as we repeatedly and in vain challcneed them to do, to such arguments as these tor the Democratic doctrine of a State's rlgbt to control its suffrage, such arguments as these againnt tbe Rump's amendments, which propose to bribe and bully and control the States in their exercise of luis light, such illus trations as these ot fidelity to tho spirit as well as the letter ol our constitutional obligations, one towards another, then possibly those elec tions might have had a diOercnt result It Is fortunate that they now circulate widely in such unwonted place, both because it is a leaven of truth among the Republican masses, and because it piepares the way lor the final plan of pacification, which they help to form, and with which the Democratic party will unclose our political dead-lock aud open our political future. We desire to be excused for adducing fur ther evidence that tbe Democratic party North and South hold the key to tne political future, in the manner in which our own contributions to the result have been received by the Repub lican press. They have not, indeed, been wel comed with joyful acclamations, such as salute tho birth or the entrance ot an heir-apparent upon the sovereignty ol his .dominions; nor heralded as the preliminary fissures of a coming cataclysm; they seem rather to have won their way to geueral assent. Last week we remarked : "When the Southern orates have all rejected the amendment as tney certainly will and have thereby demonstrated that they are masters of tne situation so far as that measure is coiceined, we trust they will, by some method of joint action, make a counter proposition. Tho possibility of their doing this could m no way be bo completely frustrated as by the blustering, threatening tone of the Times and Mcening font, which keep telling the people pi the 8oth that it they do not ratify the pend ing amendment they will be lorccd to submit to ROI11P I h 1 n C7 a nrnnl ilnul wnvL. ri i.k.u ..v . trviou. vOu- cessions may ba offered which could never be exionea; ana we nope that lustcad ot Intruding further impertinpnt advice, backed- by insoleu't and Irritating threats, the Republicans may temper their barren victory with moderation, and allow the South a little interval for calm reflection and spontaneous action." We need point to. no stronger proof of the position of the Democratic party than the fact that tbe New Kcrk Times now has ceased its minatory language, contemplates now the sum mary rejection of the Constitutional imnnrf. meilt. and sn tnr frnm Ihroiliiniiii. ik. u...i. . - . nvmut lilt ovum with "something a great deal worse," awaits its vviuiiivji yiuijusiwuu. w un respectful patience It Bfl J 8 Kr. Ui..,..wU, uvnurn. iue bouth febould not content itself with a summary -.uv. puuivnuoi, buiiuu rejection ot ine UOnstltU tionai amendment. I( tha f unacceptable, it should suggest others." -Presently the Republican party will learn that neither the Slate richt m HfiH-imiiarnmanl the right of representation in Congress, will the Democratic party ot the South or the North permit to ue regaraeti as anything less than a rikht. or sutler tn he mnrin the i, h;t ...... ol any trade, negotiation, compromise, or con- npOQ.n.i nkal.ua. lut..., . .. i . vi-Do.vu tt uuia III. tt uttb (U7t Ut) I O 111 D TO IU l.SC (1 and what can be conceded it will be time euougn to state wnen tne Rump Congress per ceives the present dead-lock, and desires release ffATIi . 4 VUJ ilyit SPECIAL NOTICES. OFFICK OF THE LEHIGH COAL tTK ict t a. i , niUlihU UIA, AUUM'tV. 1U, iif 5 S.ckhoWei!.of tompBuy re lien-by noUUed TUbt t-06 11 oarn n i a nauAM v..;. ;ip.,..i.,.it " , l"'1 f ereom wLo (ilmil appear aa. Btocklioidui on Ue JDOOKB til TllMf nn.tiuiiu r Il.t. lj i i utter Uiu clodUiKOi trttUBiera, at 3 P. M. ot tliacdar thi privi.eiie or fculMcriug wt Dew -ock ; a 5i?t loSJ iKiuntoioneMiareot new atock. lor every live ebaraa Ihe ubcrlptlun book, will open on MONDAY. Hen "Ud 108 on 8A1CK1AY. December 1, law fsinjent will be considered dus .inn. I inn Kn. ... HBtHiient oi iiti per ceui , cr trn Uoii.ni pemhare, uiiMt bfi tlHIil nt. .Im tlniA n. mihaAHhln- n . f...i r . . ', -r - v .un,iiuiuK, uv uuiuuca mar ue paid iroui tiuie to time, at the option ot UieuLcrlbeni, beiore the lat 01 ovem0er. 1867. On all payment, including tl.e aloreaald lusUtlnienl, made beiore tbe lat o l June, Jou7. dmcuuut Hill be aliowto at me rate ol per cent, per annual, enoun al paymenta made between tnat date and tue huot oveulbe,lB,Ulteet will be chanted at (be eunie rate. A ll mock not paid up n lull bj the lat ot November. 1H07. will be lorteited to ilie use ol the t ounpanr. Cor tincatca lor tbe new atock wili not be iaaued until aite r J uno 1 Jbb7. and aald atuok, a paid up in lull, will he en tu.ed to tne It oveuber dividend ol 1H67, nut to no earlier dividend BOLOA10.N Bili-l-llKKI), 8 3D Tiea,-urer ftC53 OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL pHii.AUKLi'diA, November 15 1SG6. The Stockholder ot ihla Company, wnose names ap- fienmd na tii:h nn thulr bonka in tl,a it.h ti tember iaat. at I P.M., are heieby notified that tbe pi.Tiictfv .u iuivmiu. iw ur tt awvB at par. on the tertna Si:Hf.i'o",."K2itUy,0J8' wal PhontbeUt ii iu ui i . cuLumun BUEftlEKD, Treasurer. fm9?jyrkmk RAILROAD COM- PAN Y THKAMIIUm'4 liklla. " J NOTICE TO bXoCKUOLUEHS. ..TniBn7J.iPLD'.I!h.X f".0 eml; 1! n.!ii0,D,"y' ole,r ot National aud Uteie Ui I V"01 ttet Kovemoet SO lHo . .. i'.. . - . . 'wiuj iur. cuiieoiinK aiviueuu " lhl BueiV ofllc0' tha Company. Ho- IW8 a. ill aft THOMAS T. FIRTH, Ireanurer. if" BATCH B LOR' 8 HAIR DTE s r THR kKHT in Tii v urnur.n Barm less reliable.- tnatantuneon. 1 he only perteet dye. No disaupolnlraeut, no ridiculous Mats, but true to nature, black or brown. T (iEMJINE is SIGNED WILttAM A- DATCHELOB. Pegeeeratiog F atrect 01 U uiefleurs restore .preserves na Uautoit. (he bair. prevenia balibietia. bold by all DrungiAia. Factorf Mo l BABCLAV St.. N. V. MS SPECIAL NOTICES. rST'. 0FK1CB OF THE DKLAWARF. UVIVAV HAFP.TV IWtlBAKCK OUMPAUT. ' ISI UKI'OKATKO IM.V r""-nRLruiA. November II. ISrt. Tbe lolltw1nc Btatenivntot the aflaJieolthe (torn, paoy ih pubUabed In ooaiormlty tilth provision ot iu I barter t lUtniiuma receive) irom November 1 186. to OC.IollfT Jl, lHt,! m,iou, On Marine and lnl ind tlnkl., Sbfll'TIS M On lire riaka m 6:n Hi l'remlomnon VoUclea not marked off No. vrniber 1, 1865. YKXUtl l.tl9,lC-H rr em I ii ma marked off aa earned November 1, MA. lo October 31, lSi'itii On Varine and Inluiiu rlaks. tSM.IW T. vii r ire naas ix.vti 11 1,121-M .j.t-it. uurina luo 01.111V rnriim nai ; vagca.ctc 81,711 SB lomea, expenses, etc, during tbe rear aa above i , iarine aud lu.and Navigation r. a-TMUm iieturn pieiiuumg... 40 820-79 Be lUHuranrMi -. . ,.. nuiti K Sf.T.. hai,ee, advertiaing, pnnOng etc. Jaaea-lintiedhtateaux m pre' nt lima tiril ui...... ... I.ipeuse 16 S70K 14,07111 678.IT9-M This in exclusive of.th amount reaerTod for taxea "mm. (hvidtnua and uroOta. w aaee e ABSfcTS OK THE OOMPAMV November 1, IK'4 ' 100 000 United Btaiea Five Per Cent. Loan, 1H71 eiuatwia 120.C00 Vnlted htatea 81x rer Centl ' Loan, lssl ltt-na4e 200,000 United Siatoi 7 J-1U Per Cent .Loan, IreaaiiM Hotea lILSM oa 12S.00O Ctly oi rblladolphia blx Ver I,www ' en- Lou lexeinptal 1G6JS&14Q M.000 bUte oi lennaylvanla blx Per tent. Loan., St TOAOa 46 000 btateot l etn.yivania tlve Per Cent. Loan Mm-ea 40,000 btate ot New Jeiaey tU Per Cent Loan AO th na 20 00) Peunnylvania RaUroad JVrit ' . Mormaaeslx ferl.ent Bonda M.sMM 2 9 000 reniiavivanla Hatlroad heoond o. MortKf'4t Ver t ent bonds SLXWM 2i,000 Weatern Vennayivanla Railroad Ni Per I cot Honda i fenuatl vania Balnoad guarantee).... 90TSO-M SO 000 Btate ot looaaaee five Per t ent, loon UnMa 7,000 State of lenneasee blx Per Cent. Loan a j aaa aa IS 000 3 0 hUn res Stock Uermanlown Oaa t ompanr. principal aud ' Interest guaranteed by' tbe trj, ,J,tJi, ot" Philadelphia U0M 0 7.150 143 e bares Btook 1'eunaylvanla , JAVr??.f,oP.9niPnT : 8 K8-M Df u,uw iw muni nioca norm rennsyl- v- vania Ualiroad t'ompaar ias04i 20.0(0 80 bbaie. 8took Phi ade ph-aand Houtliern ilall oteamsuip t ompany MJMt M 19SJW0 Loans on Honda and Mortgage, Urat Uoua on City pro pert.... 195,90ft-M 1,045,060 Per. Cost, tl 030,552 05 Hnal Vatutn "kt. VaL 11,070 1 4) 75 Bll a Receivable for' Iniuranoea made , Balances due at A geocle'e" Pre' miuros on Marine Pollclea Accrued Interest and ether di bu due tbe Company Scrip and otock or sundry Insu K?J?J.5nd0,her tympanies, SM73-M. Estimated value.... C ash In Bank 41.10128 36,000 t6.ni 98 vu ia urawer 447 m 41.M9-00 l07Htt This being a new enterprise. the market vain. the par Is assumed aa xt, , . - PiiiLADBu-niA, November 14 18S. CASH wrnJi'rf60. U1'8 "V declared a 7 a iT?.1Vii?.,?.NJ) ?f AIFLHIJ"! CKNT. oa the the Mf'IiiP . .k. 7i- " u ""tiKSI' Interest Ota tne nt UIP ot the Company, payable on and after the l-Me?.et,D,bor t0,Lia" of aUoi" wd iu TWENTY PER CENT, on the KAKNED PitKkilirMit Eiihe-'L?,,d,nJF Oolo SI. W9 cfrtifleatis tt wb!ch wai be Issued to the parties entitled Vthesame Md'sSa'eT.es.18' DocenibM P'oxuno, Ire. oi'atlVnli 182. be ledeemea In CAn , it th6mdV ol the c'on!! pany. on and alter 1st l.ecembe, proxlmo, aJl into?M thereon to Aenuinn ihtri. " """OS - - w.,uv.UM ui (IIUI1IB MNUW UIIUOI- 3 IJT ACtOt Incorporaiion. "no certiflcate shall issue unices eulmed Thomas C. Band, John (J. Davis, Kamund A.Houder, Theonlilliia VmMin. DIBBOTOB8. Samuel E. Stokes. Henty Sloan. Willi. a xt . . .. , 7 WO, Kdward Darling toe? ti. Jones Urooke. hllw.nl r - . . . ' John U. Penrose. lames J raquair, lienrv fl 1111. tt Tm James C. lisnd, William C. Ludwlg, Jonenh H. Seal, George O. Leiper, Hlluli flralir Jacob P. Jones, Jumm H lilrir!.i, Joshua P. Eyre, opeuoor ni ell value. oll? Hi 8enl'tPIl)Brg, Jobu D. Taylor, THOMAS 1 ' ' . Haaar LTI.BBKJ.,8e;ryDAV,3 vi ''tfSftL, CORN EXCHAW(,E NATIONAL BANK. T,, , . . ' Philadbij-bia, October 18. 18St 1 he Vice-President 01 the lteuk. Al.xandeV VVhuSea. U bcrt.Cr.' FresldcuTiuS 10 17 ALKtANDEB Q. CATTELL, President. aSr By the Physicians ot the t , XEVV YOitK MUSEUM, tte Ninetieth Edition 01 their tOUULECXUBES, eutiUed ' , PHILOSOPHT Or MARRIAGE, 1 o be bad lite, lor four stamps, by Mdreeslna Secre te i.v New Yorkiuseum ol Aua-emy, 6 Ho- 618 1 KOAUVVAT, New Tork. NEW PUBLICATIONS. fARIGN tURLAriD'S NEW E00X. KCNNTBANK. IJy the author ol "Alone," "Haa bands and Homes," etc. ' 12m o. LLLlliOVEN'o LEITtKS. Translated by Lady Wallace. 2 vols. 16 mo. liIQLOW PAPEB8. Second serlf. limo. , MELODIES FOB CHILDHOOD. Wlia highly colored lllustratioBB. 12niO. THE ST Alt OF TBE CUCBCH and tbe World at the Final Outbreak ol Ivll, ;oud IleveJailon ofantl Cbrlst, bis Dcslructlcn at tbe eecond Coming of Chi 1st. and tbe 1'iberipg in ol ti e ilibennlum. By Ber. J. O. Gregory, al.'A.. with an Appendix by Mrs. A- P. Jolifle. Price, I-25. For sale by JAMES S. CLAXTON, (Successor o William H. 4 Alfred WartleoJ 11 101m No. 1214 C 8 E8 NUT Street. LETTER C OP Y-BOOKS, 300 pages, fl-50. LETTER COI'I-BOOKS, 000 pages, f00. LETTER COPY-BOOKS, 1000 ymgmt, fJ'OQ. FADER'S rKWCICS, T9 cents a Doun, ENVELOPES, tl'3S per thousand, It. IIOSKIAIS dk,' COH j ULANK BOOK UAMTFACTUBEB8, STATI0NXBS AKDCABD ENOBATEKS, 286aip No. 913 AECH Street. CHEAPEST PRINTIKQ IN PHILADELPHIA at inn . "Evening Telegraph" Steam Job Printing Boobu No. IO8 South TfUltD Htreet, mcomi Tor. Even description ot Plain and Ornamental PrfntiOf executed viiUi neatuea aud duapatoU, mt urprisiovly low prices. , I HADDOCK SOW, Proprietors, 14lmr Late ol tip. 618 UaltKKT Mtred. Qir OUlH STREET, MP'ANCONX Ol V pays the big bent price tor Lad'' aod (.eote Csvst off Clotblu". o. l HOUXHSjireet b re twbm. . . . 64 .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers