THE NEW YORK PRESS. nrroEHL OnHWVt Of TH LBADIKO OCRSAW cron cvvm topio oompilrd ktbst DAT K DRa ITKNIHO TSXKOBAPH. . ,' Vb !!" Caldron Very Important ivm V Herald Johnson, Seward, Otterbourg, Sumner,' mo narchical Europe and Seoeasla. What a Mexl can combination troupe I Enter the shade of Maximilian:- Tin timef 'tis time J i rttMUch (Seward) Bound about the cal dron no, In the poloa'd entrails throw. bwe)Ured venom, Bl'C.lngKot, Uoll Itiou nrntl' th' cljann-tl pot. Chorus 0 Neiv Orleani Ring Double, doublo, toll and trouble, Fire born and oalilron bubble.: johntonr-For a charm of powerful trouble, Like a bell-broth boll nod bubble. Aevord Liver of blaspheming Jew (Otter bourg), Sumner Cool It with a baboon's blood; Then the charm Is firm and good. Orand Democratic C'horu Double, double, toll and trouble, Fire burn and caldron bubble. juarn By the pricking of my thumbs, Something wlctttd tbla way ooines. Thus the Mexican broth ia cooking. On the opposite side of the Atlantio we find Austria, France, England, aud Spain throwing all their Influence Into the Government of the United States to urge us on to Mexico. Mr. Sumner, Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, appears to be entirely in the hands of the for eign ministers, who evidently think that great diplomatic games are best played at good dinners. ifcauregara and bis circle In New Orleans, finding the national banks have no more feathers to pluck, are bent on taking possession of Northern Mexioo, while another ring in the same oity have interests that are seriously jeopardized upon the arrival of the Liberal Government In the City of Mexioo providing Mr. Otterbourg, so kindly detailed lor the dirty work of saving his own and others' interests In Mexican jobs, does not protect them by some process similar to that by which he became the agent of the empire in Washington last fall. Congress, it is quite certain, will take up this Mexican problem so soon as they have disposed ot the Reconstruction business. They are little inclined to see Mr. Johnson make Mexico his banner cry, and thereby turn atten tion from the Reconstruction act. Therefore, of all the great topics Mexico scarcely stands second, and, from the gathering influences brought to bear npon the Administration, is daily taking larger proportions. We now see the effects of Mr. Seward's Mexican policy. Every act of his, with reference to that country, has been the prelude of one still more stupid. Instead of a manly, open course, such as be comes a great nation, he has wavered in his imbecility nntil, entirely in the hands of concession jobbers, he lets them foist npon Mexico an imperial Austrian Jew as Minister, who in no sense represents the United States, but rather a certain circle which desires to throw into Mexico as many elements of discord as can be found. Then they may raise the cry, Lo, Mexico cannot govern herself I Know ing that the present Government will not dispose of territory under any circumstances; they now demand Ortega, who, thoroughly unprincipled, would for a small figure move into Yucatan, and sell the balance of the Mexican States; henoe we may see this move strongly agitated from the line of the Rio Grande. It would, however, result in the shooting of Ortega, now a prisoner at Monte rey. The great feature of this Mexican news is that almost the entire Rebel element in the South, through the press and through their old army leaders, are urging an invasion of our neighbor's territory as the great cure for all their political ills. Northern Democrats also are pouring in their petitions to the Adminis tration to make Mexico the party cry, with the hope that the people will rally around it, as they did in the war of 1847. Their point gained, they hope that in the excitement of the contest they may ride into power, and then shape reconstruction as may best please them. This appears to be their latest and most bril liant idea, and there are many powerful aoces aories to aid them. The policy of Franoe ia doubtless to have us take possession of Mexico and recognize the immense war debt that she rolled up there. They care less for Maxi milian than they do for the payment of the imperial bonds of the empire which flood the French market, and which are worthless so long as the Mexican republio exists intact. The Cabinet are not fully agreed as yet on an Aggressive policy. Mr. Stanton, a warm friend of the republio and the Liberal party, is the glorious minority; and to carry out their plans the plotters must have a new War Seoretary. General Grant, too, stands boldly in the way, and the greater part of Congress, also deter mined to give Mexico a chance to govern her self, will make a sturdy fight before they per mit her overturning aud the conquest of her territory. The proper course to pursue towards our sister republio is what we have always advo cated: give her an opportunity to see if she can reduce her revolutionary elements to quiet. At present we have quite enough ou hand to demand all our statesmanship. Were we to enter into this mad Mexican scheme with the sole plea of avenging the death of a royal fili buster, it would be the strangest one upon which a republio ever made war, and would do more to damage republican and liberal senti ments all over the world than we could repair by a century of our moBt progressive labors. Mexico has won her great halt century battle againBt the Church power. She has fought out her religious war as we fought out ours in Europe, and she has overthrown by the vigor of her nationality the European attempt to restore the element of turmoil that lay at the root of every revolution that Mexico has yet Been. Were the United States now to step in and take up the cudgel in favor of obsolete ideas, of a retrograde party, ana 01 monarcni cal Europe, it would be an aot at which all the liberal sentiment of the age might look on and shudder. Amateur Kcpudtailon. Prom the Tribune. General II. D. Washburne, of Indianai wishes the Ilouse of Representatives to resolve that all property should bear its share of the publio burdens; henoe, that the right to tax Government bonds should be reserved in any future funding of our publio debt. Let us consider this as a practical propoai- The Government recently needed very large sums of money hundreds of millions per annum more than it know how to raise except by borrowing. In order to borrow twenty five hundred millions of dollars in three years, it was obliged to offer liberal inducements to lenders. &iug at war for iU existence, there was . chance that it might never be able to pay. War stimulates trade, and mnltlplle. opportunities for speculation aud proflUlk in vestment : hence, most capitalist prefer to THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, keep their funds well In hand, of look ing them up in Jong loans. Yet the mony was borrowed, and the Union saved by means Of it, and erery subsequent month m bwn fruitful in devices for breaking faith, with the lenders. v General Washburne does not propose Ibis; yet his proposition will give aid and comfort to those who do. Ills assertion that money ought not to be borrowed as it was borrowed by our Government during the war, will be paraded by them to oountenanoe if not to justify their demand that an important element of the bargain shall be repudiated by the borrower. The Government i at perfeot liberty to make new loans, subject to National, State, and local taxation, and to pay off its various existing loans aa they fall due in the prooeeds nf ta nnr tflvnblu lnftns. lint it n slmnU fatuity to suppose that this liability to taxa tion will not be understood and considered by the lender. In other words: It is absurd to fancy that, if he ia to he rnnnlmrl tn n - on his bonds, lie will not m.ba ii. Via bis purchases at corresponding rates. Should the taxes amount to he will pay no more for a six per cent, bond than he would for one of five per cent, that Should be Whollv fixpmnl frnm tavnt irtn Tim a subjecting the bonds to taxation would be B.m.!.. 1 1 ." . a - . a .... .... diuh.ij utuug iweniy-uve minions or dollars per annum to the interest of our national debt, for the chanoe of getting twenty millions of it returned to our various general and local treasuries by taxation. What U th nut of that operation f Need another word be said to ex nose th utter baselessness of the assumption that bondholders are a favorer! r.l.asa 1 Da see that they do pay taxes cannot help it? The loans are offered to all; the exemption (or non-exemption) from taxation is an element of their price; and he who buys a non-taxable bond nava bis taXMfl an trnlv na nllmra ir Eays in accepting a lower rate of interest than e would do if his bonds were subject to taxa tion. To tax his bonds is simply to take money out of one pocket in order to put it into another, paying several commissions and taking several risks during the prooess. There is not a single penny to be made by or saved to the taxnavers bv doinir what (lennml Wub. burne suggests, but the contrary; and we trust the people, the Treasury, and Congress will ponder well before giving any countenance to his project. Let us say explicitly that we hold no dollar of Government bonds, and expect to hold none. When lending to the Government was an imperative duty we invested all we could in those bonds; but since peace re turned all those have been sold, and the pro ceeds put to other uses. We will not be even plausibly charged with a regard ;to our perso nal interest in advocating a scrupulous fidelity to the nation's most sacred engagements, made when she hung between life and death. Tennessee Not From the Timet. Model of Reconstructed State. Some of our contemporaries have extolled Tennessee as a pattern to be admired and imi tated by the people of States engaged in the work of reconstruction. "If the States now excluded," it ia said, "will follow Tennessee in disfranchising Rebels, and make their re spective Brownlows the administrators of their affairs and their representatives in Congress, there need be no misgiving as to the prompt recognition of the work performed." Now, we can conceive of no greater cala mity than the multiplication of Tennessees as members of the American Union. Of the whole South, Tennessee is beyond doubt the part in which the least has been done towards genuine reconstruction. It is nominally loyal, of course. It is represented in Congress. It is not included in the region over whioh the provisions of the military government acts extend. And yet what is its condition f Essentially volcanic. Loyal strength is the result not of loyal votes, but of Rebel disfran chisement. Brownlow's authority is contin gent upon the application of the orushing pro cess to the majority of the people. He is as absolute in his sphere as any of the mili tary commanders in theirs, and infinitely more unscrupulous. He makes laws to suit his purposes. He interprets laws acoording to the dictates of his convenience. He tightens the disfranchising screw as often as he finds it necessary, and employs the bayonet when no less pungent weapon will carry his point. The result is that the State he governs ap proaches nearer and nearer to anarchy. No where on the continent, save in hapless Mexico, is life or property less secure, or liberty a more transparent mookery. A con dition of civil war really exists all the time emothered it may be, but liable at any moment to burst forth under the excitement of some sudden difficulty. No other state of things is possible so long as the Urownlow doctrine of reconstruction is allowed to prevail. For a period, perhaps, it had its uses. While the Rebellion lasted, any less rigorous rule might have failed to keep iu check the hostile elements with which the Border States abounded; but there is no pietext for perpetuating in peace the iron- handed administration which was indispen sable amidst the turmoil of war. The country requires the allegiance of all its citizens, but this is possible only when the powers that be cease to heap penalties upon whole classes, and to persecute as outlaws all who refuse to pro nounce their party Shibboleth. Brownlow proceeds on the notion that it is neoessary, day after day, to pile coals of lire upon the heads of the great majority of the people, simply because they decry his acts and seek to thwart Lis ambition. A statesman similarly situated would acknowledge mutual recon ciliation as the stepping-stone to reconstruc tion; he would see that the loyalty of a State can have no efficient guarantee except the attachment of the people; and he would aVoid the fatal blunder of supposing that the eleva tion of his nominees to power is a test of the fitness of the people for the possession of the franchise. In a word, a wise ruler, occupying Brownlow's position, within the period which has elapsed since the close of the Rebellion, would have restored Tennessee to peace, and placed it far on the road to prosperity. Brown ii' ?n 00ntrary, by pursuing a course of which almost fiendish malignity is the chief characteristic, has alienated class from class, driven moderate Unionists into alliance with un repentant Rebels, and forced his State, rich in natural resources, to a condition of despera tion, almost of despair. We are glad to see that the exhaltation of of Tennessee as a model State is deprecated by influential Radical Journals. Missouri has tried the prosciiptive policy thoroughly, and the St. Louis Democrat i8 not disposed to re commend its adoption. "Tennessee," that print remarks, "is not a particularly good pattern for other States. It is not absolutely certain," the Democrat adds, "that the methods adopted by the loyal men there may not fail to seoure their safety." Tua proba bilities point in the other direction. There can be no permanent safety in methods which imply the continued parade of the conqueror's authority. Contracted with the Tennessee system, the recotmtru' Hon policy of Congress U merciful and Just. rUeta itlo, indeed, and Wpotic for a time, but it opens the doors to a milder authority, and tollers inducements to the ac ceptance of conditions by which the Sonth may materially improve its position.' The guarantees It exacts imply no long-continued l.umi iation, and no more radical changes than those which follow logically from the late COlifllct. . i ' ! . , ( . Inetead of commending" Tennessee' as a model to be imitated by the States", or to bo respected in framing the policy of the Repub lic, we submit that it Should be studied as au illustration or the evils and dangers of a ; theory of reconstruction based npon narrow , mindednees and hate. Congress holds in its Lands the power of securing loyal organiza tions throughout the South. For the rest,1 reliance must be placed upon the amended spirit and will of the people, and those are nioro likely to be affected by a generous for bearance, as suggested by Sickles, than by the intolerance and lawless violence which have their official inoarnation in the irreverend Brownlow. Mnxlmlllan and Murat. From the World. The very trite aphorism that history repeats itself is aptly demonstrated when the main points in the career of theso celebrities are taken into consideration, with a vievr of draw ing a parallel. Maximilian certainly occupied a more important position in the pages of his tory than Murat, for the latter can hardly be said to have ever reigned as an independent potentate, being, as he was, the mere satrap of Napoleon, his imperial master. Maximilian, on the contrary, vindicated and maintained the perfect independence of his empire, irrespec tive of the French Emperor. Both attempted to ameliorate the condition of their new sub jects by encouraging agrioulture and industry, improving the publio finances, and mainly by their strenuous efforts to suppress brigandage and civil strife in their respective dominions. Both became the puppets of contending fac tions, and both were deserted in their hour of need by those who lured them on to their de struction. . Caroline, the wile of Murat, was compelled to fly from her husband some months before his death, and the Empress Carlotta was far away when Maximilian's en dearing words to her fell on the ears of his executioners. Murat was as equally reluctant to abandon the pomp of royalty as the Austrian Archduke, as on the 8th of October, 1815, he attempted to arouse the inhabitants of l'izzo in his be half, but they abandoned him; being pursued to the mountains, he fought to the last, but finally fell into the hands of his pursuers, and was taken amid insults to the Castle of Fizzo, where he was summarily condemned to death by a eourt-martial, and shot forthwith in one of the rooms of the castle. Being offered a chair, and a handkerchief to bandage his eyes, he replied, "I have braved death long and often enough to face it with my eyes open and standing." Maximilian found his Fizzo at Queretaro, where, betrayed and friendless, he showed in his death as much of the heroism of the devoted husband as Murat did of the dash ing, brilliant, and fearless soldier. The Future ut Hoyalty. From the Nation, The way in whioh the coronation of the King of Hungary one of the most splendid and im pressive of the ceremonies bequeathed to the modern world by the Middle Ages has just been received by the "European public; the half-astonished, half-amused air with which the press of all countries has described it, sug gest some interesting considerations with re gard to the changes which the political as well as industrial movements of the day are work ing in the prospects of royalty. It has been plain for more than half a century that the permanence and prosperity of kings in Europe depended very much on the success of consti tutional monarchy. But it ia now frnrtrnv conceded that constitutional monarchy is not a success. The only country in which it is be lieved to have succeeded is England, but even there its success has been more apparent than real. Since its establishment there lias been only one monarch of fair ability William III, and he, and Anne, and , the first two Georges, owed the seourity of their thrones not to the fact that they were constitutional monarchs, but that they kept out the Stuarts. George III was a constitutional monarch only in name; George IV reigned by virtue of his father's prestige; so that it may be said that it is only in the case of William IV and Vic toria that the experiment has been fairly tried; and the acutest observers conoede that Victoria is one of the last full-blown monarchs England will employ. In the countries which have been tempted by English example into trying it, it has either failed or shown every sign of failing. All monarchies in the civilized world rest either on the feeling of loyalty or on force. Loyalty is unquestionably a form of supersti tion which the spread of knowledge and the growth of wealth are killing. The king, as he has come down to us from the Middle Ages, is "the Lord's anointed" one of a family chosen by God for the work of governing men. His impulses are all noble; he is incapable of mean ness, or baseness, or falsehood; aud he is blessed with a wisdom far beyond that of other men. He needs counsellors, not because he needs advice, but because he needs U be sup plied with facts. Give him the facts, and such is his power of reasoning that he is sure to reach right conclusions. And not only has he been chosen by God for the work of govern ment, but it is very kind aud considerate of him to do it. Nothing must be exacted of him; the word duty, as indicating obligation of any kind towards his fellow-men, is not to be used with regard to him. Consequently, when he discharges any of the functions of his office, or holds even ordinary intercourse with those around him, he is said to have "deigned" to do this, to have been Vgraciously pleased" to do that. Court etiquette is, in fact, simply the expression of the mediieval feeling of the monarch's quality. It is a mistake to suppose it was deliberately originated for the sake of show or of imposing on the vulgar. It expressed the monarch's own sense, and that of those around him, of the relations in which he stood to the rest of the world, of the immense gulf which sepa rated him from his fellow-beings. Nobody was allowed to ask him a question, or to start a conversation witli him, or to turn his back on him, or sit down or wear a hat iu his presence. Let him be never so stupid, vicious, depraved, cowardly, and selfish, never so plain, in person or diseased in blood or feeble in intellect, he was treated aa a superior being; and for ages the most intelligent and enlightened portion of the population of every European country was taught, and firmly believed, that a man was never so well employed as when devoting all his faculties to the Bervlce of the king not simply of the king and country, but of the kins; personally; ihe kinR with the ivountrn if possible, but the king anyhow. The treat Chatham, y hope "eare face" Bnd trumpet vole bekl tbe Ilouse of Lords , fpell-bound, and who to ail the roRt of the world was a model of imperiousneas, always knelt in trans acting business with George III. and u stirred to the depths of his soul br a look " word of royal approbation. Scions of th proudest houses in Europe MU menial positions in kings' households to this day with infinite satisfaction stand behind their chairs nick tip their pocket-handkerchiefs, help them to diese, and make amusement for them, with a profound sense of the importance and dignity 0 tu8 WOFK . '.,, y i y y . j Now, as long as the tradition of the "dKn., right of kings" was unbroken, and they WM believed to reign by "the grace of God,", and not by charter of the national will, oourt tWiiii were realities; they were acts of worship,,, kind, of dulta, in which the monaroh occupied the place of a saint. But this tradition baa been almost completely broken, and the rever ence which it sheltered is passing awy. U England it is perhaps stronger still thau'ia hl country in Europe, owing partly to tlie I . af-sociation of the sovereign in the popn ar ndnd with order and good government, and to the Smallness of the number of points at winch, the publio comes in contact with him, in I partly to the respect of the Anglo-Saxons for rank a respect so deep and so diflku t of eiadication that it seems inbred. But on the Continent, owing to the numerous pol'tloal cnanges which have been ocourring ever place the French Revolution, as well as to the growth of democratio feeling from other causes, it has been steadily decaying for half a century, and Whether niriiunhv ran uviat ifta. itj .n.n..lua extinction is a problem of which the solution vuuuui uo viiry iar uisiani. 1 .'WV.lll' "IW DHUVJ DC VOl OL, UIUT O at it than the great number of sovereigns who li.vA I , 1 . . 1 . . . uri-u wane w oraer ana pui on ine thronen alnca 17Q0 tl.a i. I . ' .ug . uiamiini umug, 111 many cases, ordinary men, with whom the mililin 1 r .A, .11 , j-uunu uu ueeu peneciiy iamuiar Deiore tueir elevation, and about whom it was therefore impossible to raise any effectual illusion; aud for this the old sovereigns by "divine right," RtTfltloa tt un.r V. n m I. . 1. 1 . The plan which they have adopted of settine up constitutional monarchies, as a mode of slaving ou democracy, has been, we venture iu assen, a temporary preventive only, and nas rendered the ultimate triumph of their greai enemy all the more certain. In other words, the royal houses, such as those of iiapsburg and Romanoff and Brunswick and Savov and Ttomlinn lmtra fo ..1 !, ... I j iuukii '4 buav u lieu tliey succeeded in inducing a discontented or jwiiyuj m accept a new Kinjr or tbeir "'"""'oi wa io reign unaer a cuarter, i ue maue meir own position all the surer, in reality, they weakened it; the force of monarcny lies not, as they foolishly imagine, in the form of royalty, but in the icoiiug vi iuyauy, ana ior a King newly made there can be no lovaltv. Letting the mnri see a "dynasty" founded by a convention of yipuiyuiumiaiies siuing in a carpeted, room, with foolscap and steel pens, and publishing their protocols in the daily papers, is like admitting the faitdtul to see the priests mak ing preparations for a miracle. Within tha present century the world has seen Tom. Dick. and Harry persons whom it had known in tne Btreets in shabby clothes, or short of money, or struggling In crowds crowned and enthroned in Sweden, Belgium, France, Naples, Spain, Holland, Greece, and, last of all, in lucAiu, auu iia been most or uiem turned out an aim 1 J ... ngoju ttuu lepiuceu oy omers. The effect of this on the popular imajrina- muiu jjciuapa jioi nave neon so unfortu nate, if some means could have been devised of withholding from the newly made kings the honors usually paid to the old ones, so as to make a distinction bet wnn grace of Uod and sovereigns by the popular Will: Lnt this WAS inmnq(i!,lu an A mAnll been opposed violently by the legitimists if u,D "uuinoua uau Buggesiea u. i.acn new comer was therefore- received with the same ceremonial, and treated with the same outward deference, as if he had come down from the aarK ages, uut in tnese days people cannot be successfully imposed on in this way. When you take a vonn? man nut nf ia nr.a - O J " v. wvi UAIUO Ann nil hnrrl.rrkntiio na 1 "Nf- , taken, or out of the ranks of the army, as ieiiiituune was xaneu, and put him in a paiace, you cannot, by bowing very low before him. listening in nil n no Solomon who was talking, getting down on imc unco w uiBB uiH nanus, auecting to look on a note from him as a possession Ahiv v. . : i . Bunujr ui ueiug nequeainea to your children, or telling the world that he had that morning "deigned" to eat an egg or been "graciously jm-ttiu iu put, uii ma uoui, or recording as an ..,,... tst la 1 i i., . . ma uuvuig laicen a wane in bis own garden, diffuse round him the tradi tional haze of the old royalty; and what is 6till more serious, you lessen the strength of tbe forms for the older monarchs. No legiti mist, we may be sure, ever laughs over the etiquette of the Tuilenes, without finding his respect for the etiquette of St. James or Sohou brunn diminish, aud without hastening the day wben the old machinery by which the world has so many ages been held in awe will i . .. -1 1 i t i i lobe tin vuiuo tur every uoay. There is, in fact, vn 'asa of persons against U'linm tliM rpfiHHt.K. tpTiilMnniua .r tlm ,n...l...... world tell with more terrible force than against Kings, me great euiuier oi me present day is no longer the dashing warrior like Henry iv or romwen, uusiavus, Montrose, or Rupert, who brought broken squadrons back to tbe charge, and whose warlmt luma o r i - - . -' . i iiiu vtll ried fresh life and courage to every quarter of a stricken field. He is not even "the ma.ii nf destiny," with "cold crey eves." or "star." or famous overcoat, like Napoleon, who used vi ruie niuiig iuo ranss Deiore and after battle, and discharge speeches of burninor eloauenja on bis enthusiastic grenadiers. He is a silent man, hko woitke, who knows half-a-dozen lunnlinirufl DuMnm oi...nlr. 1 j . iuugUb.., B-.Uuu, oj.-an.o m any, is rarely seen, and never recognized on the battle-field. 1 A.... f I - 1 . . . ' uuu uuco iuuoi in uib worK in a business ooat at a writing table at his office, with map3 be fore him and a telegraph at his elbow. So, aiso, iuo juuge wno used to dress like a bishop, immure himself in his own bouse, wnose "gravity" was proverbial, and who was seldom seen in publio except on tbe bench as the high priest vi juoniio, uuw goes gauy into society, and flirts and dances and dines out, and behaves like any other man of his age. Tao clergyman and the doctor have undergone a similar process of disrobing, and now neither expect nor get much of whatever reverence is jmiu. iuivi.6u me eueci oi iorms on tue popular imagination. But then the funeral and the judge and the clergyman aud the u"u7 "v v"' "1C" "fug reai woik in tne world, the results of which every man can see or feel. The king stripped of his crown and jUiy """i miu buuuiu in a common arm chair, is, on the other hand, the most helpless of men. Everybody remembers Thackeray's amusing picture of the contrast between Louis XIV, "got up" for the day and the same per- -, .. In 1.1.1 1 . I - a, . . . . Buunfeo j-u un uigut-uioiues sieppiug into uea. The modern monarch, by the "national will." Jjss in worm at his toilet, anI it knows ex aotl Low bucIi of Lis epleiidor and dignity -j "j w uaiiuuftl ft 111, JULY 13, 1867. Old live WMsi THE LARGEST OLD IN THE L.AND IS NOW POSSESSED Bt ( - HENIIT S. IIANNIS & CO., I . .IIos, -218and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, .wnoerrfaTntMMi!To tub rrt 4ir, iw loti.ok vest ahvantaveocs ' ".. , .' ' ,' " ';''' . ", TEltltS, !md"r-ifi.V.hJ"k,e". ,!r BO"?' "Prt... bradsj pr""l t" rBU vl.i months of letdft.'UO, aud of this r, to Lllr contracts mod for Into to arrtrs t FtunirUtnU Rillrotd Donot. grrtcsso, lap. Mti.rf.o, t Uod. W.r.hou.,,, luX la owes to the rouge-pot, the tailor, the barber, and the dentist. He wields power, to U sure, but only a little, and can only wield Jt through the instrumentality of plain gene rals and statesmen, whom everybody stej in J streets and meets at dinner. "How long the attempt will lie kept up to r alra bim off on the world as a superior being, LSHW. tluett. 11 I"! to say, bit we doubt if in the most civilized countries it T np very much longer. Etiquette .rV V ' , 7 u"mes m form, as In fant, a "chiej magistrate " like our own respected r V ?,f the nati?n' nd m have to work for hlS liV no. f!llt -.nnrr, Via , - - ol .... MO oAymiatja, uu may even be reduced so far as to h stump speeches and attend Masonio celebra tions. The savini? with wbt. h n.o nn-- family are in thn habit nf ai;r, selves, and on which they rest their hope3 of founding a long-lived dynasty "le nremier f -. v. wuau&iuu kUQUl- des rois fnt un soldat heureux" was. they fin now OA M A .11 i ... . . r ocrm iu iorgei, miereo, oi a period In which kings found no difficulty in vtiline themselves in U)VSterV. llneh Hanoi nr Mon.lnlnV. " O i V. U1I4V1U VI inwuurL' was not nnrrrpn nv ananioi ik. Dondents:" he had Tint in litra Hn)ai IbA awiui scrutiny of the editorial eye; his bio- r vv ti t j liUvlul b 11 0 fmjjiijr mo. noi appear in a million "enterpris ing sheets" thn Hnr ifl , throne, and his levees were not thronged by r1"""1" appraising nis ciotues aud furniture.and flnmnfirmtr tdurn with mey naa at borne themselves; he was not ' xrw'"b niku tug biAiugg surrounded by a swarm of mockers and critics, occupied day after day in analyzing his motives, and proving or disproving the neces- Diijr ui uia ciioioiice. AMUSEMENTS. rpiIK TENTH NATIONAL 8J2NGERFEST. MAVV,w1fi0v1NbTIi:R.l!'1':aTAVAI' o" Tlia AUK. BAIUKUAV, Ju'y 1 Arrival or HingHrs, and re- lb? Mayor u4'ouuou(;i isquare, oy biAUAY, July 14 Recreation. AlOiS DA Y. IlllV 11. U.h..F..1 anrf -. Ac ailtniy or Music lu ibe eveuiog. ' 1lJiI)AY. July 16-trise Coucert at Academy of aioolo In liie evening. VKIN1JSDAY. July 17.-G!gantlo Picnic at Wash iDkton Re.re.tand knuel Wolf's Farm. 2HUHfcIAV. July 18,-Uooeor Festival. ro.uu j u ior one pers n lo oe oaa at Trunij.ler's. beveuth and t he-nut; Meyers,' No. 1230 tbesuut (street; Herwlg'a.jj. w. corner Tblrd and and ol the Manayera.Meuibein.apd Committees. 7 out RIERSTADI'8 LAST GREAT PAINTING now on extiibition, , t CAY AND KVKSISO, in tbe SoutheaHt Gallery of tbe "U 0! FOR SMITH'S ISLAND I WH.lf.RTT 1 TI V V fc'Kflht, TH IT. u, i Ti i-mm umTT r., i I, X 2 J I Jer.AVl If ULi TiiJC tiiT Kliift - IU IJU A W T A T71P111I. f B-n respectnilly lutornis herlrleuda aud the publio Rene rally tliat Bhe win open tbe beautiful Inland flexure Urounu known as . r HMITH'B ISLAND, on hr.DAY next, Mays, bbe Invites all to come and enjoy with ber lbs deUghle of tills favorite sum- INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE, N.CCOBNEB FIFTH AND CIIESNCT SJTS Established Nov. i. 1861. Chartered March 14. lseff. BOIIH-HEEPIWC. 1 V...Hn r.m 1 . .... .. . ... evius.i; riuiiiuyru ill lesuiilKUOUSW 1 fhlti a Iwi nllias nlil.d in . - - a . . . i tinn. v. Bl'i)k-kDiniT. Which U tha lAvLKonb lil. T.n OTHER nRAwrnm. tt-rrehpouUeiJce, Fornis.i'ommerolHlJLaw, elc. . InVltCWl tft Vls.tt tha lllsllltnllnn . . n m mm mi rm n rwm mi. rm l.t Ifiu il.n T i. I un i . . . . r l.iL. AlKKCHANT.bfcCrtLMrF. km FURNISHING GOODS, SHIRTS,4C. pRIN0 GAUZE UNDERWEA.lt OF CABTWKIGIIT 1HD Winvrn's CELEBBATEU MAMJl'AlTUBi;. MERINO GAUZE UNDERWEAR In everv vnr Atv of size and style, for Ladles', Gents', and Ohlldreu's wear. HOSIERY. A large assortment of HOSIERV nf Wnt-iith ami German manufacture, In socks, thieo quarter socks aud long hose. GLOVEil, In White, Duff, and fclodo Color. For sale at HOFMANN'S Hosiery Store. tBtuthf NO. MOKTII KU.11TH BlUEKt, J. W. (SCOTT As CO., ftJUIHT MASIl FAmitEBS, AMD DB4LRKS IN MEM'S rilBMslUHO O O I H NO. 814 I'lltsNIlT st'lltRK-r. FOUR DOOIIB BELOW TUB "CONTINENTAL,' PATENT SHOULDER - SEAM M1IIU1 MANUFACTOKV, ANOVKBITLKneN-siUHNIslllllcigfOBE PERFkCT FITTING 1SH1RIS AND DRAWERS Di.de irom nieasurt uient at verv shnrt notice. GOoDBIuruUvar:,i;. ' B 1 "I NO. im L'UHbNDT btroi-L L L 1 A M S. (J K AN I No. M 6. DELAWARK Aveuue, i-hUadelphlS, W. "Baker v. .'. 1 . "'7 " 'f"!' Dunont's Gnnnowr1.r im. .n 1 v. BoHa. and " "uow nvuu """ffl1 COTTON AND FLAX, " BAIL DUCK Alli Pi HT1R. . . . Of ail uuuibera and brands. r ' . .HU y auii lAIVIV AULftV. 4. wu, Fa per Manuiatlurers' Drier hvii, frnm one toaevcu wwv r. A . . 1 u r 1 1 1, r-m 1 1 1 win., no. li 1 1 1 fcr in i..in.i..i 1 11 . r v 1-1 1. r. Xtl tltalAm ix w,. , No.UJONitaAiiey. vies. - , i STOCK HI G AND BEST RY.G 7 OF EM EI G SUMMER RESORTS. SUR F H o U 8 E. ATLANTIO CITY, N. J. Tbe nbovs Houka was opened on the bit of TVKR. For particulars, etc, address 'M. T. MUCH PBOPU1EXOB, . ATLANTIO CITY, N. J. St tf QAPE MAY, CAM IKLASD, SEW lEKIBT. fllnre the close of 1M much enterprise has bean displayed at tbis celebrated aTslIore resort nTS ana; magnltlnt cwe. baVs been e'ed: lbs Hoiels liaveheen reniodelled; a flneTMkvhha wU juals one mile drive, bas beeu luaiiK,,raied"and IrTIil Uio eMfntlal. oi a p.pul.r suoimer lertT'a ui!t) improvenientls Urjely aaullestert. Ibe geographical portion ot ),,e Island Is In Itself aiea at tbe extreme aoutbwn portion of tne HLaia VnU occupying a ueck of laud at tbe TOuUueboSoh. Delaware Bay with tbe AtlantlS S" U hramiS entirely surrounded by salt water, heucs teyorsd Tbi conilnuul bre zea rroui tbe sea. avorsa 0 Tbe blntf furnishes a beautiful view of the Ocean. Delaware Bay. and pltturesqus baclt oountry, taiMnr ln tajeMeulopen distinctly at a distance of slitiS B.lies. 'Ibe beach Is acknowledged lourpawMd other point upon the Atlantic ouasKbelngof isV'b compact sand, which declines so gently to 111? atiU that even a child can bathe with security U: ,At? ?ii'Me "tlrctious is tbe fact that the tfc 01 the Gull btreaui upon this point renders tbe water comparatively warm-a point not lo be overlooked hr persons seeklnir health Irnm h.i.i.. The distance I from fbiiadelubia lodna rlnrt i. i down tL. BayTini bfeltheV'ro'ut; Ths riaSl'u" l5 . travel promise to be of tne most satisfactory oharao- ' ter. Hie Island bss Hotel aud Boardlog-house ac commodallons for about ten thousand persons. Tha leaulng Mulels are ti e Columbia House, with Oeorgs J. Bolton aa proprleK.r, Congress liall. with J. i" Proprietor; and Onitea btates, with West and Miller as proprietors, all under the management of e ni emen who have well-established reputation, as botet men. Slmwsiow lHblu.t.t.t.AA.. .11 . " . EXCHANGE : ATLANTIC HO TE L, CITY. The ssbscrlber, gratelnl lor past favors, tenders thanks to bis patrons and the publio for tbe generous custom glvsn him, and begs leave to say that his bo ubs is now open for tbe season, and ready to re ceive boarders, permanent and transient, on the most moderate terms. The bar will always be suppUed with the choicest of wines, liquors, and cigars, and superior old ale. The tables will be set with the heat tbe market affords. Fishing Hues and tackle always on hand. Stable room on tbe premises. AU the comforts of a home can always be found a the Kxchange, QKOIiGE HAYDAY, 828tuth2m FROPRIKTOR. CONCRLOS HALL, ATIiAKTlC CITT, N. JJ., IM NOW OPEN. This Ilouse has been repainted and rannvntorf ih .ouern improvements added, and in oonsequenoa ugu uues, it oas made the bathing grouuds r to any In tbe city, belna- four than last season. O. W. IIINKIM. Johnston's celebrated Band Is engaged. 27 im UNITED STATES HOTEL, O'ANTIO CITY, N. J., IS NOW OPEN. FOB PARTICULAR, ADDRESS 11KOWN fc WOELPFEB, ATLANTIO CITT, Or No. 827 RICHMOND Street, 610 2m Phlladelphls 12 E RC HA NTS' HOTEL, CAPE ISLAND, N. J. This beautllul and commodious Hotel Is now opeu lor tbe reception of guests. It Is on the main avenue to the Beach, and less than one square from the ocean. WILLIAM 9IASON, Ii PROPRIETOR. WHTE HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITT, N. J. WILLIAM Willi LIIOCME, PROPRIETOR TBAN6IENT AND PEBMANKNT HOARDERS taken on liberal tiruis. No bars. 6 28smwst T HE NATIONAL HOTEL lAuivolUil 11UUHK, ATLANTIC! CITT, N. J Is now open lor permanent gueais, and lor the reoen. lion and eultriulnment of the various excursions ia the luiand. The only hotel iu tlie place ou the Euro pean plan, and a bill of lareof the best aud uioat varied character. . , , CON LEY 4 HOUCRT, " ,m Proprietors. tp v n 1. 1. . .. w OEA BATIllNG NATIONAL HALL, CAPE ID INLAND, JKliel. kuuwn as thw Nalliiual Hull. In nouf ..ai,.i... visitors, 'lerins uioaerale.- Children aud servauui ball price. AARON UARRKTbON, 8 'p Proprietor. CODNTEr BOA UP. A FEW PERSONS CAN be accommodated with good Board and nice airy rooms, near tairviile, Chester county, ten mluutus ride from Railroad btallou. Vat iianinniur. ,ih F. MARTIN, Falrvllle. Chester oountv. 7 w 8Ht Or. No. 710 N. SIXTEENTH bt., Phiia, B Oa R O D I NOON, No. OlO CI1ESNUT STREKT, Is In receipt to-day of an lu voice of FISE CHKOJIOS, ENGEAVINGS, -TC. ETC., Which are now open for lamination. "Peace and War.' tav n. r,... Bummer," -Cromwell and r.TL Juliet." "Btar o Bethl.hem." well woThv'.h entlon of the a.lmlre,. n, lrt W0"h' h sr s ' ATE MAM 3 - T E L S. BLATE MANTELS... .. Beamy, trench, and ZT " lnd;'4t?ord,eiTJi:L8, ua Bl Work General!, li am J'Ji' KIMISS A CO., lUItt lj0i iiaaudjCliEttNUTlWrr, rl.