THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAFII PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1807. 2 SPlMT OF TlW rilESS. BUJTOKIAL OPISIOHB OF TH JOUKHALB PPOR OTRBENT TOPICS OOMPILKD BVB8I PAT FOB TBI BTBNINO TELKOBAFR. Sheridan and Grant. JVow the N. Y. Tribune. The President, who or more than a year Las notoriously desired to remove General Sheri dan from command in the South, but dared not do It, has at last found Lis opportunity. Sheridan is deposed punished disgraced for euoh splendid service to the nation as no other soldier has had a chance to perform since" the end of the war. Upon no other of the District CoYnmanders in the South, im portant as their duties were, was Buch a weighty responsibility imposed. He was eivon the command of the two most disloyal of the Rebel States; even South Carolina has her 100,000 freedmen to make the State loyal by a majority not to be overoome. But even Loui siana and Texas have been preeminent in dis loyalty; outside of the large cities, Texas has been the hell of freedmen and the paradise of guerillas, while the whole State of Virginia 1 has not given the Government as much treuble as the single city of New Or leans. Sheridan was sent in May, 1865, straight from the battle-field to these btates 'With an insufficient military force, and with the Rebel government of Throckmor ton and the corrupt government of Wells against him, he was required to enforce justice, and with the President of the United States for his bitter personal foe, he was expected to give satisfaction to the ooun try. The war which ended for Sherman and Grant when Lee surrendered, has never ended for him. From the day he took command his administration has been one long struggle with Rebels in his department and the friends of Rebels in Washington. There is not another man in the country who has had as hard work to do, no one who has met such savage oppo sition, and not one who has done better work. That Is his crime. lie did too well. When Andrew Johnson was justifying massacre, Sheridan was putting it down ; when John son was declaring Congress a body of trai tors and the Union men of Louisiana guilty of murder, Sheridan obeyed Con gress and put the blame of the New Orleans riot on the authorities of the city. When he found a man in office protect ing traitors, permitting outrages on loyal citizens, and preventing reconstruction, he removed that man. Throckmorton, and Wells, and Monroe, and Ilerron, and A bell were justly removed. Does not Grant think go f Are not all loyal men agreed upon it ? Yet with what moderation has Sheridan acted in all things 1 Whom has he imprisoned f what tyrannical laws has he imposed f Never was there a military ruler with so much reason to use foroe who has used so little; the mag nanimity and prudenoe of his administration have equalled its boldness and justioe, and his endeavors have wholly been to reorganize the States under his command, that their loyal citizens might rebuild their governments and restore them to the Union upon the basis which Congress had determined. These things he has done, and for these Andrew Johnson turns him out of his command. General Sheridan leaves that command with an unstained record, and the confidence of his countrymen in his ability is far greater now than even at the close of the war. But the manner of his removal moves the heart of the nation with regret. When General Grant accepted the purely civil office of the Secretary of War, it was hoped that his presence in the Cabinet would in some measure restrain Mr. Johnson's violence. Mr. Stanton had held back the President's arm from strik ing down our trusted servants, and we deemed that Grant's vast influence would at least be as potent. All this was idle hope. That Grant opposed Sheridan's removal we do not doubt; in the President's hands now, it is said, is a written argument or protest from Grant. From his directions to General Thomas to continue to execute all orders now in force in the Fifth District till authorized by the General of the Army to change them, we are disposed to hope that General Grant thinks that Sheridan has done his duty. Yet this, if it be so, but adds to the sorrow of his friends. If he has lost his confidence in Sheridan, if he disapproved of his acts, then we could respect the part be lias taken in this national shame, though deplor ing his difference with the people. But at once to oppose this removal, and to order it to believe this and do that this is an unac countable position for the General of our Armies. We do not know what there is in General Grant's duty or in the President's authority that should compel him to aocept a civil office to become the instrument of Andrew Johnson's policy. That instrument, which Edwin M. Stanton refused to become, which no power of the President could make him, Grant is. We judge by the facts. For one year Andrew Johnson contemplated the insult to the nation of removing the soldier who of all our soldiers best represents its prin ciples, but dared not, could not while Air, Stanton was in the Cabinet. On Aueu3t 12, Mr. Stanton is removed; on August 12, General Grant aocepts his place; on August 19, General Sheridan is removed. Why, this is logic 1 One little week after General Grant becomes the Secretary of War, Sheridan is disgraced. How ia the conclusion to be avoided, that the President sought and found in General Grant the means by which he might break down Sheridan, and with him the spirit of the people f Bitterly, indeed, have the loyal men been deceived who thought that General Grant might have said to an apostate Pros dent: "If I become a part of an admin istration which every patriot despises, and take at your hands this civil office, which I have as much right to refuse as that of Postmaster-General or Postmaster, I do so on this condition: You shall respect the loyal principle of the nation you shall not remove Sheri dan." But as General Grant did not say this the President took him into his Cabinet, and dictated to him the order by which Sheridan is dishonored and the people threatened and defied. We say dishonored, because his removal is mienaea as a aiBgrace ana a punishment. It matters not where he is sent, or who is his successor, lie is deliberately excelled from the command of the Fifth Military District for daring to protect loyal citizens and put down traitors, and we have not even the poor conso lation of holding the President alone respon sible. . Xb Progress or tha New Movement at Waabluftton I'm lie in oval or BU.rl dan. From the N. Y. Herald. ; The removal of General Sheridan from the Fifth Military District, and hia transfer to Mis BourL will no doubt be received with a great outcry by the radical portion of the Republl can party press. 1 But in this last movement, as In the first grand coup by which Stanton was deposed from the War Department, Presi dent Johnson, with a great deal of shrewdness and BngitcUjr, Las effectually lieaded off all attempts to create a popular excitement over Lis acts, or to confer upon Sheridan the valua: Lie crown of a martyr. In appointing General Thomas to the command in Louisiana, as in BBBicninar Grant to the duties of the War De partment, the President satisfies the country that his object is rather to give harmony and efficiency to the work of reconstruction than to embarrass its progress. The well-known sentiments of the new commander, his recog nized fidelity to the reconstruction policy ap- Jiroved by the loyal States, his valuable mili ary services, and his admitted civil qualifica tions, will induce the people to acquiesoe as readily in the removal ot bherwan as tney uia in the deposition of Stanton. That the President has lull legal power ana constitutional right for the course he ha3 seen fit to adopt, no one but the most unreasonable partisan will deny. There will, however, no doubt, be an honest difference ot opinion as to the expediency of making: any chance at all in the military government of Louisiana. Some will argue that the prompt policy of Phil Sheridan was needed to hold In check the men who figured in the negro massacre of New Orleans; while others will contend that the prejudice excited against him in the dis trict, whether just or unjust, was a serious obstruction to the work of reconstruction, and that his apparent restlessness under authority was calculated to prevent that harmony in the administration so necessary to efficient action. The appointment of General Thomas at least proves that there is to be no stoppage of the work of reconstruction in Louisiana, and in sures the faithful and energetio enforcement ef the law of Congress, free from the embarrass ments inseparable from personal mistrust and petty squabbling. As such the people, outside the politicians, will accept it; and they will be well satisfied if the new era just commencing at Washington shall have the effect to place distinctly before the country the issue be tween a fair and honorable reconstruction and a reconstruction that seeks to keep the Union perpetually broken, unless it can be reunited with an Africanized South, and a negro balance of power in the councils of the natiou. Colored Official. From the W. Y. Timet. If the moral nature of office-holders could be painted on their outaides, no doubt many of the high seats of dignity in the land would grow black with the color of their occupants. Most politicians, could they be brought to confess their life's manatuvrlngs as frankly as Rousseau did his littleness, would lament much sacrifice of principle and loss of self- respect in the struggles of the career which lias lilted tliem to place. 1 here are lew pa rents who after such a revelation would not prefer for their sons some quiet and obsoure pursuit, rather than the cares and humilia tions of an office-seeker's dependent existence. Why then should the race that has just been raised to manhood be stimulated to risk all manhood is worth in the scramble for the re wards of party, instead of being taught that their happiness and respectability depend on acquiring habits of self-control, and on the practice or patient industry r W ny, except to appease the morbid vanity ot their great mis- leader, and to give Phillips occasion for boast ing that he did his worst to unfit them for their real duties by firing their ignorauce with the hope of impossible distinctions ? This arch-agitator, respecting nothing but his own craving for notoriety, is doing the people he pretends to befriend a very serious mischief. The blacks have been made citizens before they are fit for the responsibilities of electors. It is the very deviltry of dema gogism to flatter them with the chimera that they are fit to take part in governing others. All among them of the least intelligence can see that the mass of the well-to-do white popu lation owe their prosperity to industrious labor, and win any advancement by the aid of education. These are the lessons which any one who is really their friend would seek to impress on them. He who invites them to plunge into the excitement of political strife, and cheats their credulous helplessness with the hope of its empty prizes, deserves, as this Phillips has often before deserved, the curses of the republic. That Warwick of the blacks would make a negro Vice-President, because we should thus show to the world that his people stand in social equality with our own. If, as it is said, this pitiless egotist would die contented after seeing one of them in that office, the nation might afford to pay that price to be rid of him, were it not that it better understands the duties it owes that race, and means to shun his example by con sulting both reason and conscience in dealing with them. It is a mistake to suppose there is any logi cal connection between the right to vote and the right if it be not an abuse of terms to call it so to hold office. Aa the Federal law now stands, any sane, unconvicted man of twenty-one may vote. We have chosen to ignore intelligence as a test of the elector's fit ness, and have thereby taken upon ourselves a great risk and a grievous burden. But it is absurd tfi conclude from this that we have done away with intelligence as a ground of fitness to be elected, let this 13 the logical basis of the demand made. Put this or that man on the ticket for the second office in the country, we are told, not because he is a fit man as well as a black one, but first because he is black, or blackish, and next because be may be fit. Turn the color argument the other way. What wouia be saia oi a nomination made because the favored man i3 white, leav ing hi3 qualities a secondary reason f These retitrcss reformers wouia nave us go back to the original meaning of the word "candidate," . only substituting their own barbarous coinage oi --ingram. iu colored population has been put on an equality with the white. A3 10 noiaing omce, wuu right has the white man ever had ? J ust this, and no more: the right to the free exercise of his toil and talents, if he have them, by which he may build up a character lor nonesiy ana ability, and induce the community to confide in him enough to reward him with the tem porary authority of omoe, in me irusi mat, me duties it imposes will be well discharged. That is all the black man Has gainea in wis re- Rpect by emancipation. Let him Bet about the work with a will. Nothing else than the accomplishment of it can entitle him to present himself for the suffrages of his fel- low-oitizens far less will they tolerate nis preposterous claim, founded on color, to a right which they have never had that of gov erning them before he has proved his ability to govern himself. There are local offioes, re quiring a low grade of capacity, whioh the negro may very possibly soon fit himself for. We see no objection to his aspiring to them, though we believe he would be far better and happier out of politios. But to thrust forward at once one of a lower raoe, who cannot possi bly have had Omurtnn;.a ,milHit training in pnblio affairs, and the knowledge of men, to fill a high post which very few in deed, alter a life-long exhibition of capacity Uv rouwuu uevouou, are deemed to deserve, is the very Sublimity of immidxnno I The leading men of the oolored race them oelves make no Buch unreasonable claim. They understand their situation, and have no purpose to be made the cat's-paws of politi cians. As one of their number, Major Delany,' who, in his 1 experience as a volunteer, learned something of self-diHcipliue and of men, very sensibly Bays in a letter on the Bubject: "Let colored men be satisfied to take things like other men in their natural course and time, preparing themselves in every particular for local municipal positions, and they may expect to attain some others in time." ' Neither would the election of a negro as Vice-President make him or prove him to be the social equal of the white man. Social equality is an unnatural and impossible state. No right can be pleaded for it, nor can any force conquer it, nor any law impose it. It has no relation to political equality, nor does it rest upon that unprivileged right to make Lis way in the world, which every citizen may claim in common with every other. No man, of any color, can assert his right to be with another at the polls, or in the theatre, or the cars, as authority for claiming to be helped to his soup, or to marry his daughter. Social distinctions spring from natural diversities, and are maintained by sympathies of feelings, of tastes, and pursuits. Put a dozen men and women of dill'erent characters together on a desert island, and in a week social dis tinctions would have marked them apart. Can any reform reduce these inborn individualities to a Hat level of com monplace f Radicalism here brings up against an impassable barrier, for it cannot new create human nature. But it will make the attempt, since there is no more rest for it than for the miserable spirits who in Dante's Hell are whirled about forever among contending winds. It will attack in dividual preferences and the natural right to choose one's own associates; as it has attacked individual taste by sumptuary laws, and individual conscience by prohibitory ones. And the attack will be treated as it will deserve to be, as the presumption of brutal Insolence. The European Situation Napoleon and vrancls Joiipn. From the JV. Y. Herald. Our despatches from Salzburg by the At lantio cable, dated on Tuesday at noon, and in the evening, report that Napoleon held a long conference with Baron Beust, the Prime Min ister of Austria, and subsequently had a pri vate interview with the Emperor Francis Joseph. The imperial and official meetings resulted in the establishment of a "good un derstanding" between trance and Austria but, as we are informed at the latest moment, "no treaty has been made." Just as we learned the issue of what may be regarded as a personal application by the French Emperor to the chief of the Hapsburgs for a diplomatic alliance, we received a cable telegram from Vienna, stating that the official journals published in that city on Tuesday de clared that "the peace of Germany is now secured" a very ominous declaration for im perial France, and one which leads to the in ference that Austria, even after all her humilia tions in the late war with Prussia, imagines that her material interests lie more in the direction of the policy of young Germany, as reconstructed, than in pledging herself to up hold a system of French diplomacy whioh, perhaps, she would not in the end be permitted to clearly comprehend. , . In the days of his poverty and exile Louis .Napoleon did not believe that muoh good could come from the meeting of crowned heads, asserting that monarchs may be deceived by them. The Emperor of the French may have persuaded himself into a different opinion, lie must, however, excuse us and many who are, doubtless, of our way of thinking, if it is maintained that the opi nions of Louis Napoleon in this particular are to be preferred to the opinions of the Emperor of the French. In plain terms, we augur no good and foresee nothing but trouble to Aus tria, to France, to Europe from this imperial interview. What is to come out of it T A direct answer to this question might be dangerous. Without condescending to minute particulars, it may be said, with a tolerable amount of safety, that it bodes no good. Napoleon is not particularly interested in the prosperity of Austria. Napo leon is only interested in the prosperity of France. If alliance with Austria, or if the adoption by Austria of any particular line of policy, would subserve the interests of France, Napoleon, we may rest assured, exerted him self to make this alliance good or to induce Austria to adopt this line of policy, and his failure deals another heavy blow to his pres tige, which he may endeavor to avenge. There is a man of hard feeling and of iron will who stands behind Francis Joseph, and without whom Francis Joseph cannot act. Baron von Beust is at the present moment the virtual ruler of Austria, and it may be found that he has been quite a match, in their own favorite line, for either Napoleon or Bismark. Aus tria's future salvation depends not upon war, but upon peace. Her finances are low; her energies are exhausted. Time and rest toiler are, in present circumstances, equal to money and strength, von iieust knows this sees it, and sees it clearly; and not all the cunning of the imperial "Wephistopheles" will blind him to the truth. Napoleon has been rather out witted by a German. It will be strange if he has been outwitted, used, and defeated again by Austria. The complete results of this balz burg conference will be eagerly and iinpa tiently awaited. Stret-Pi caching. From the N. Y. Church Union. It is a question of vital and growing interest how the masses of our cities shall be made to hear the Gospel. There are not churches enough to hold them. In this city, upon a given Sabbath, should all our ohurch edifices be filled, there would be left outside hundreds of thousands of our citizens. Besides, if church accommodations were adequate, the great multitudes could not be induced to enter them. The surging throng heed not the sounding bell and the opened door of the sanctuary. We know of no way of reaching them by the voice of the livine preacher, ex cept by the inauguration of religious services upon the streets and nnrilin narks. They must be shot upon the wing. The religious wants of inese masses appeal . to our united utmsteu dom for relief. We must give the Gospel in some way to these imnerilled men and women. Jesus cares for them, and so must we. He has died that they might live, and shall we reluse to tell them the clad newB t A startling thought is it, that these multitudes are going down to temporal and eternal ruin without any adeauate method rwrinc made to save tbem I If they all go to hell, somebody else besides themselves will be at fault aa well aa they. From our loyalty to Christ and our relationship to man, we owe them the Gospel we owe It, too, because we have it to impart Qod has given thia Gospel to us not only to save us. but that we maybe ita depositaries for others. For what other f Jlxose only whom can handily vearhf Those only who are on " me saiiiB nuciai, pians wun ust Those only who can pay pew-rent, or who can be induced to come into our free!seataf Think it not. We are to hold this precious (JoRnel for tint crowd who are fast tramping on towards death. neoreani are we to our high behest if we do not magnify our mission, and compel them to bear the Gospel. In English cities, and in English small towns as well.- Btreet-preacWni? is common. On a Sabbath afternoon in Lou don, for instance, in its densely populated dis tricts, ont-aoor services are numerously held. The audiences are large and attentive. Great good is known to result from these efforts to reach the moving crowds. Morning services, too, are common. Rev. Newman Hall is in the habit of fre quently preaching at a very early hour on Sabbath, morning, in front of Surrey Chapel, to the populace that never can be induced to go inside. Prayer meetings, too, are frequently held upon the streets on sabbath evenings. Theatres, popular halls, and market-places are seized upon there by earnest men for preach ing purposes, lo these places the great un washed throng will come to hear the Uos- pel. In good earnest and in fidelity to the Master, and from love to souls, we in this country must thus set about giving the Gospel to the hosts of the street. With us, out-of-door preaching haa been brought into disrepute somewhat by the attempt on the part of a few eccentric and half-crazed men and women to harangue the people upon religious subjects. These have excited prejudices against the general subject of street-preaching. Rows and dis turbances have often taken place when such persons have attempted to speak. Police have been obliged to interpose. The result haa been to discourage this mode of evangelization, and to depreciate street religious services. But our pastors and our churches should take up this important subject, redeem it from its disrepute, and place it on a basis aud surround the movement by influences which shall bring it into popular favor. Vast good may be done by a well and gene rally inaugurated street-preaching movement in all our cities. Without it, these great multitudes that flow through our highways like mighty rivers must be lost. On every Sunday afternoon, from the Battery to the Central Park, from the North to the East river, should men be stationed on the busiest thoroughfares to preach Christ to the moving bodies oi people. All over this territory de scribed should there be preaching places. tifty ministers would not be too many to occupy this field at once. No, no. A hun dred would be too few. We mean that this B needed work should be entered upon by our ! best and most talented pastors. Let such men as Adams and Prentis, Dix and Tyng, Veruiilye and Ganse, Pax- ton and Murray, Williams and Wes ton, Foster and Durbin, Beecher and Thompson, and many more we need not name, stand upon the public streets and lift up their voices in the name of their God to the perishing multitudes who now never hear them tell of Jesus; and street-preaching would be redeemed irom prejudice in this city, and thousands ot men and women would be re deemed from death and hell. Why cannot this be done r is it not right r Is it not de manded by the fearful exigencies of the case ? is it not practicable r Far better for these ministers to turn themselves into the streets for their second service than to keep battering away at the same hard ened but respectable sinners within their churches, Sabbath after Sabbath, and year atter year. We send money and men to evan gelize the heathen. All right. But shall we let the heathen of our own streets perish? lhat we employ here and there a missionary, and send out tract-distributors will not meet the case. These agencies are well, and de manded. God blesses them. But these are not enough.' The perishing masses need to hear the Gospel from Btrong, living men. Let the men of might, men who can speak with authority, go where the multitudes do congre gate, and preach to them the unsearchable riches of Christ. The Order for the Removal of Sheridan.. V om the If. Y. World. The controversy as to General Grant's poli tics which has sprung up in the Republican press since his acceptance of the War Depart ment, will cause the order removing General Sheridan to be scanned with close attention. We are not a party to the controversy H e have no other interest than to ascertain for ourselves and communicate to our readers the uncolored truth. The dispute about Gene ral Grant's politics grows out of the wish of some Republicans, and the ODDOsition bv others, to his nomination by their party for ' . A "r l'resident. If his politics were not somewhat equivocal, no such dispute could arise; and we apprehend that nothing can be gleaned from this order to relieve his position from am biguity. It is not by a fact chipped off hero, and another fact chipped off there, and put to gether Dy ine wishes oi interested parties, that any trustworthy conclusion can be reached. It is only by viewincr General Grant's recent acts as a whole that they can be justly interpreted. The weightiest cir cumstance of all is his consent to facilitate the removal of Secretary Stanton by accept ing olhce aa his successor. This fact, taken alone, would warrant the inference that Gene ral Grant's politics dill'er in no essential re spect from those of President Johnson. But while his acceptance of the War Department cannot but be regarded as an act friendly to the President, it seems olear, from his other acts, that General Grant seeks to avoid any Close identification with Mr. Johnson's policy, or rather, perhaps, with his energetio warmth of feeling. He does not consent to be merged into the administration as an undistinguishable part and parcel of it. He seeks, rather, to preserve hia separate individuality, and to have his acta judged by their intrinsio char acter, regardless whether they tally either with the administration or the party opposed to it. In the exercise of this self-poised inde pendence, General Grant's course ia such that both parties find in it something to approve ana Bomeunne to recrret. In the order removinsr Sheridan he is care ful to have it understood that he proceeds by the direction of the President. But the re sponsibility being vested by law in the Presi dent, it is entirely suitable that it should be fixed where it belongs. The formality with which uie resident's order la oonied will be interpreted, we suppose justly, as an implica tion by General Grant that he doea not anvrove of the removal. Why, then, doea he consent to be the instrument or us execution f lie could resign aa Secretary of War. if he chose, without any personal detriment, amid the universal huzzas oi the Kenublican party. Why did he not 1 It was because his opposi tion to the removal reBted on personal, ot public grounds. Sheridan ia hia attached friend, bound to him by soldierly ties and recollections, and by mutual contributions to each other's military fame. But while Genera S 'JJIE LARGEST OLD F I N E IN T1IE LAKD IS II E N HI S. HANNIS & i i. 1 ; Nos. 218 , and 220 SOUTH FRONT WHO OFFER TIIK SAME TO THE TRADE IN LOTS ON VERT ADVANTAGEOUS 7 TERMS. .......... ., . . , Their Stock of Rye Whiskies, lit BOKO, tomprliM all the favorite bread, extant, and runs through tha various monthi at lHflS .'Aft. and nrihi. preicnt d late. Liberal contract! mad for lot to arrive at Pennsylvania Railroad Krrlcaeon Line M barf, or at Bonded Warehonaee, aa partlea may elect. - Grant admires Sheridan aa a soldier, President jonnson detests him as a politician; and as General Grant believes that no publio interest will suffer by his removal, he consents to be its instrument, recotmizine the richt of the President to his personal preference in a mat ter where the law clothes him alone with authority. Nothing can be inferred as to General Grant'8 politics from a reluctanoe which rests on personal, and not political rounds. We suppose the Republican journals will be likely to fix on the fifth section of the order ts furnishing evidence of political opposition. 11 is in these words: "Fifth. Malor-Geoeral Q. H. Thomna will con. tltiue to execute all orders be mav find In force in the Fifth Military District at the time of his assuming command of It, nnloHg authorized by (be General of the Army to annul, alter, or modify tbem." , That is to say, all General Sheridan's orders will remain in force, notwithstanding hia re moval, and General Thomas is forbidden to make the slightest chancre in any of them. unless authorized by the General of the Army. l his, so tar from provme that General Grant had any political objection to the removal of Sheridan, proves the reverse. It shows that the execution of bhendan's ordera is not de pendent on hia retention in command; and, therefore, that General Grant opposed the re moval only on personal grounds. it would be an unwarrantable inference from this section of the order, that nothing done by General Sheridan ia to undergo any modification. General Thomas being new to that command, and General Grant having the ultimate responsibility for the mode of exe cuting the Reconstruction acts, General Grant reserves to himself the exclusive power of judging what orders of General Sheri dan it may be expedient to alter. The faot that bheridan is ordered to report in person to General Grant at Washington, before going West, is significant. If General Grant intended to continue all bhendan's orders in force with out modification, there would be no necessity for this circuitous route and a personal con sultation in Washington. General Grant ap parently wishes to learn from Sheridan all the facts and particulars which led to the issue of certain orders, that he may proceed intelli gently, and with a full knowledge of the reasons on both sides, in such revisions or revocations of Sheridan's orders aa he may hereafter make. It ia not that none of General Sheridan's orders are to be modified or re voked; but that they are not to be revoked without due examination by General Grant himself, and that Sheridan is to have a hearing as wen as those who ieei aggrieved by certain of his orders. Considering that General Grant is acting in all this within the authority con ferred on him by law, nobody oan very well complain; and the course he seems to have prescribed to himself tenda rather to harmony than to help either side triumph over the other. AMUSEMENTS. WALNUT STREET THEATRE N. K corner of MNTU and WALNUT Blreels. Begins uto o'clock. 1 HIS AND EVERY EVENING, Bbukesptare's Fairy Spectacle, In five ants, of A lUliiBUIlimr.H XNlUliT'B DKKAM, with Ita unrivalled Kcenery. Panorama. Costumes. Accoutre icentH. triple 1 KAribf UKJuATIUN oCtNE, etc, tlie whole conHiltuting a UalFOKMlTY OF EXCELLENCE never equalled In t tie production of this Flay. IHam aecurea mree uayn in auvance. 8 19 JSEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE, ELEVENTH BTKEET, ABOVE CHESNUT. THE FAMILY BEIOBI OPEN FOB THE SEASON, MONDAY BYENINO, AUGUST 86, CARNCROSS & DIXEY'S MINSTRELS, THE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD, IN THEItt RAND KTHlOriAN HOI BEEN. For particulara see future advertisements. J. L. CARNCROSS, Manager. R. F. EIMPBON. Treasurer. ltf CONCERT HALL CHESNUT STREET, above Twelfth. Tne Great LINCOLN MK luoHlAL TA11LEAUX will open on Thursday Evening, AukusI 22, lor a short lime only. Tuese pulntniKS have been exhibited wlih signal success throughout the Eastern btates and tiritisu Provinces. They are Iriuu the pencil of OEOKCiE W UNDKK I.lCli, Esq. H. K. MUKDUCH. Esq., delivers the debcrlpllve Lecture, lulerspersed with choice 25 eta. Reserved seats, BO cents.. Doors open at 7. Commence at, s. &ailnee on t-aiurilny afternoon at S o'clock. Admission, lU cut. Children, 16 cte. 8 214t HO! FOK SMITH'S ISLAND I FKESH AIR BEAUTIFUL hCEN ER Y HEALTHFUL FX EliC lbK THE RATH-EN TERTALN MEN TOJC THE EbT KIND. HUB. MARY LAEEMEYER respectfully informs her I r lends aud the public gene rally, thai she will open the beautiful Inland Pleasure Ground known as SMITH'S ISLAND, on SUNDAY next, May 6. tshe invites all to come and enjoy with her the delight oX this favorite sum pier reaort. HOti " STOVES, RANGES, ETC. QULVER'S NEW PATENT VEEP BAHP-JfOIKT HOT-AIR FURNACE. BAHUEl E A 1.1. HEM, Also, Phllegar i New Low Pressure Steam Heatla Apparatus. For sate by CUABLES WIUXABM, e 10J No, 1181 MARKET Street, THOMPSON'S LONDON KITCHENER: OR EUROPEAN RANGE, tor Families, Ho- lels, or Public lusiliuuous, in iwiiu i nit- tft, U if. NT HIV. EH. A Ino. Philadelphia Ranirea. B ot-Alr Furnaces. Portable Heaters, Lowdowa Gralea, Flreboard Steves, Rath Boiler. Stewhola Plates. Boilers. Cooking Stovea.etc wholesale aud retail, by the manufacturers. SHARPK A THOMSON, KWRimliHn. No. i N. SKXXNlMireet. J COAL. B. MIDDLETON CO., DEALERS IN UAHLE1GH LEHIGH and KAMLU VEIr COAL. Kept dry under cover. Prepared exprwwly for family use. Yard, no. iz WASHING lOtf Avenue. Oihce, No. 611, WALK UT Street, m i ....... . K . . -AND 'BEST STOCK - OF R Y E 7 H I O K I E 0 NOW POSSESSED BY ' . V. . CO.. STREET, ' .3 ? -! Dapot, WATCHES JEWELRY, ETC. QARD TO PUDLIC. Ilia ondersltrned wnuld call the attention of tha ' trade, an well aa th public, to the large and superlot t Stock of . KTEBLINO HIVEB AND PI.ATKD-TV AKA1 To b fonnd at their manufactory, Mo. S South THIRD Street, and at the Wareroom, No. im CHkHNUT Street, ' These roods are all ot their own manufacture. At ' Hr.bUVni is a practical workman, their PLATED . and SILVER-WaRE la superior lo amy la tha kuarket, HaTlnar furnished some of tha larrest hotola In ' the country when be was the practical partner of the late Arm known as Mead &smytb,ihe goods can be seen In daily use, and will recommend themselves, at the following hotels: , OIRARU HOllhB. Philadelphia. LA PIERRE HOUSE, Philadelphia, . AbfiLANi) HOUiK, Philadelphia. . 1 ST. I'HAKIiKH HOTEL Pittsburg. UNITED STATKH HOTEL, Atlantic City, H. J. NATIONAL HOTEL, 'Washington, IX O, Althouoh we keep constantly on hand larf and varied stock ot the above goods, when desired they . may be made to order of any given pattern, at short ' notice. . NSfYTH it A1U1K, 1 ZTlbatugmrpi Manufactory. No. 86 ai HIKUBt. U areroom. Mo. 1126 CHKHNUT tttreet. Qm D. KITCHEN, JEWELER. S. E. Corner TENTH and CHESNUT. ! BEAT BEDCCTIOH IN PBICEA. DIAHONM, WATCIIBI, . JEWELBY, HlLTER-WARE, BBOHZDI, ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. WATCHES AND JEWELRY CAREFULLY RB PAIRED. 1 Particular attention paid to Manufacturing all artt Clea In oor line. f 2l thsm LEWIS LA DOM US & CO., PUmond Dealers avnd Jewellers, NO. 80S CHESNUT STM PUILADELPHIA . Would Invite the attention ot purchaser to their large and handsome assortment of DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JKWEJLBT, ULVEB-WABB, ETC. ETC ICE PITCHERS In great variety. A large assortment or small STUDS, tot eyela holes. Just received. , WATCHES repaired guaranteed. In the best manner, and 5 IMP r Ve keep always on hand an assortment of INDIES' AND (BENTS' "FINE! WATCHES' Ofthe best American and Foreign Makers, all war ranted to give complete satisfaction, aud at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, FAItR & BROTHER, Importera of Watches, Jewelry, Musical Roxes. etc 11 Hsmthlrp No. 824 CHESNUT St., below Fourth, Especial attention given to repairing Watches and Musical Boxes by FIRST-CLAM T workmen. WATCHES, JEWELBY, sssassa w. w. OAssmv NO. 18 sOltn SECOND STREET, BtockorneIltirel,, eW Dd mw,t selected AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES. JEWELRY, Dii,vn-naK,, AS1) FANCY ARTICLES EVERY DESCRIPTION, suitable 01 FOB BBIDAL OB IIOLIPAY PBESENTfl An examination will show my stock to be nnsnr passed In quality aud cheapness. oe unsw Particular attention paid to repairing. g ig G. RUSSELL & CO., av. AUKTII SIXTH STREET, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN FINE WATCHES, FRENCH CLOCKS, OOI.D JEWELBY, AND 82l SOEID SILVER-WARE. HENRY HARPER, lo. oyu a ll OH Street Manufacturer and Dealer In WATCHES, FINE JEWELRY, SILVER-PLATED WARE, AND SOLIU SILVER-W ABB. AMERICAN WATf!Tlwa THE REST IN THE WORLD. " t, - . -,.!!?. ctory prices by WATCH CASE M AN LTF A OT UR B R S. , No. 18 South (SIXTH Street. 8 8 Manufactory, No. Zi (South FIFTH Street. The uttaUion ot tltaUrt u culled to our taroe tUxJc. MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. cgjMRS. R. DILLON. NOS, ttS AND 831 SOUTH STREET, Halt "v? handonje Mortment of SPRING MILII Ladles', Misses', and Children's Straw and Fancy Bonneu. and Hat. or the latest styles. T iowgrs,bFramee.Vto.U'' to'"M' 5 pO U R N I N MILLINERY. .LWAYS QN HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF fcXOTJIllNlNG BONNETS, AT NO. 994 WALNUT STREET. Biffem MAD'LLE KEOCH. PKIVY WELL8-0WHEUS Of PHOPEItTX i ,Thn7 Pioe to get Privy Wells cteauea as umlnftxied at very low prloes. Manufacturer of Pi.mtrMi.ie, II0 ; GOLDSMITH'S UALL, LihilA.it i tuvtoV 1 FINE WATCHES. Y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers