THE DAILY EVENING ' TELKG K APII PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1867. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. DITOBIAIi OPINIONS Of TBK LKADPIO JODBNAXB PPO CCBRKNT TOPICS COMPILED EVEKT PAT FOB TBI EVENING TFLKOBAPH. Indian Affaire. From the K. V. Independent. What we Lear from the Indian Comuiis Blonera does not afford ground of hope for a Bpeody or satisfactory adjustment of the diffi culties in that quarter. This discouragement is not due to any niggardliness, severity, disiu genuousness, or cruelty on the part of the Government; nor to aDy surliness, stupidity, beastliness, or jealousy on the part of the Indians. The Commissioners go from tribe to tribe, with their message of peace and good-wiil, unmolested, respected. They make very handsome speeches; they are profuse and apparently sincere in promises. If the Indians will only he quiet; will move away to new lands, where they need not fear the white men nor the white men them; if they will pursue agriculture and the arts of peace; will plant and reap, and gene rally cultivate the tranquil fig-tree, they shall have whatever they want seeds, utensils, farming implements, civilized cloth ing, and apparatus for domestio life. The Government will be their friend. The Indians, after due silence and smoking, profess, the most amiable sentiments. They are not noisy, or turbulent, or querulous. They will go and look at the new reservations ; they will try on the civilized coats and hats ; they will be very glad to receive the ploughs and the shovels ; they will do their best at tilling the ground. They honor their grandfather, and especially General Harney, who had beaten them and taught them manners. Both sides are unex ceptionably civil ; but nothing comes of it, and nothing is likely to come of it. It is not in the nature of things, perhaps, that anything should come of it. A far better administration of pub lio affairs in the West than we ever have had would probably fail to work out such a solution of the troublesome problem as will satisfy a civilized, much less a Christian people. The truth, as we gather it, seems to be that the Indians have more cause to dread peace than war. For peace to them means banishment from their homes and favorite hunting grounds, and settlement on other lands, possibly as good, but in all probability worse, in their estimate. It means adoption of a strange and uncongenial kind of life uninteresting, dull, and deadening; it means steady labor and thrift, the use of unaccus tomed implements, and the practice of un wonted manners. It means, besides all this, exposure to the same rapacity that has pursued and plundered them hitherto; it means knavery of every description, injury, contempt; it means the non-arrival of funds appropriated for their benefit by the Govern ment; the mysterious sinking of vessels that bring them supplies, and the consequent withholding of the goods as "damaged;" it means barter, in which they always come off second best, and oppression by lawless men, who will cast on the Indians the blame of their own violence, and then call in the aid of Government to punish the savages for defending themselves against their outrages. These are evils of which the Indians have had long and dire ex perience, and under which they have been maddened past bearing. War, on the other hand, is no such dread ful thing to them. They are well mounted, and can all ride. They are well armed, have ammunition, and are good shots. Tiiey light when and as they please, compelling the enemy to conform to their tactics. They have no accoutrements to sp'i.ik of. They can coiue and go at a moment's notice. They require little food, aud that slightly prepared. The Indian wars have always been more disastrous to their foes than to them. The white men squander treasure and life frightfully. Each Indian slain costs about a thousand dollars and some half-dozen Boldiers; and the result is trilling. No war has ever been crushing to them. The white man must make peace at last. Besides, until recently, Uncle Sam's bark has been worse thau his bite. He has threatened so much, and executed so little bragged of the hosts he would send, aud sent so few that the shrewd red men may well doubt whether his power is as great as he would have his "children" think. All this may be very un reasonable, but it is unhappily true. The Government civilizers teachers, farinnrs, schoolmasters have not appeared; and, from the nature of the case, cannot appear iu con siderable numbers, and the Government troops have not been formidable. Bo that neither the policy of peace nor the policy of war has been tried with sufficient foroe to be triumphant. Experienced men say that the best conceiva ble method of dealing with the Indians would be to bring them within the precincts of civili zation, where they can be under the guardian ship and restraint of law: where they will neither molest nor be molested; where their roving propensities must be held in check by social limits, and their rational humanity may be stimulated by social innuences. To be for ver pushing them off into the wilderness is simply to push oil' the whole question of their fate, and leave them indelinitely exposed to precisely the same perils they incur at present. But two obstacles stand in the way of this laudable aud truly Christian proceeding. First is the inveterate passion for the chase, and the ancient practice of hunting their food instead of cultivating it. From time immemorial the Indian has lived on game, lie must have his hunting-grounds; aud hunting-grounds must not only be aloof from the haunts of men, but they must be wide of margin. Here and there a tribe takes reluctantly to agriculture, glean ing a beggarly sustenance from half-tilled soils But agriculture is not natural to the aavaee. He must learn it from the beginning; and he will not learn it well. The whole cause of the present diluculty is the Pacitto Railroad, which cuts through their hunting-grounds, aud drives away their game. This inroad of laborers and engineers they do not like. Thev are not quarrelsome; they are not unreasonable on their principles; but their principles include l.win. The white men will come where the bison happen to be; and they assail the white .nun. There is no reason as yet apparent for thinking that this obstacle is iu the process of removal. . it . .. , Ti.a ntlir difficulty is the tribal orgamza ,i.i.. i maintained everywhere au organization the wild uieu have inherited and i: i ,,,,,-Ur t.imu out of mind. Probably they would not know how to abandon it, if they iv,n lftit it would have to be aban- j.. i u U7i to enter any of the States ,q Tl alWiauce they have been .,.n,,atn,d to render to their chiefs they would be oblige l to pay to the laws. Chiel nubiect would be on ft level in -society. Could they submit to thatf The commis siouers gently hint at these necessities as they Eo about; they speak of the precariousness ol ,viug ty the chase, aud the propriety of living under law; but it may be questioned whether i,much of their counsel is coinpreheiiaea ny their hearers. This presentation of the case is discouraging. But there is no euoouraging view of the case presentable. The at nional authorities wish lor peace sincerely. General Shermau and his offioers desire peace. What glory is to be gained by such a war f But the incessant restlessness will cause incessant fighting till the railroad is built. Then the steady flow of travel, the march of traffic, the sowing of stations preg nant with towns along the line, will decide the question against the Indian, who will disappear with his buffaloes. No "policy" is likely to be snccensfnl with the savages. Policy lias no chance to bear on those scattered tribes. We must all be to a great extent still at the mercy of circumstances, accept ing peace or war as they shall dictate ; peace when we can, war wheu we must. We can, however, do bomething, and we seem to be fairly in the way of doing something, to mitigate the force of circumstances where they threaten to be most cruel, so that paciflo measures may preponderate. There is good promise that henceforth the Government will, to the full extent of its power, Eecure honest dealing on the part of its agents; will see that its contracts are faithfully performed; and will make allowance for the peculiar sufferings of a miserable decaying race. That will be much. It will reach such gentle dispositions as the Indians cherish, and effect what saving of life it can. There is also a good promise that the com manders of troops despatched to quell the rioting favages will be not mere adventurers, but able men, who will do war's work in a way to make the Indians respect as well as fear them. More than this we can scarcely hope for now. But this will finish the task as mercifully as Buch dreadful task can be done, They who yield to the Government persuasions will die erelong from social decay. They who try issues with men like Custer and Sherman will perish more quickly by the bullet. Be tween the two weapons good will and ill will they will soon be wasted away from the continent. Ovations to Grant and Sheridan Grant and Sheridan for the f uture. From the N. Y. Herald. General Sheridan, on his way from Louisiana to Washington, was the subject of a splendid demonstration at every important point on the route; and now again on his way to the West he is receiving in all our great cities ovations of the most brilliant, positive, flattering, and incomprehensible character. In all affairs of this kind, of course the prime movers are the political hucksters the keen fellows who gather around rising men in the hope that they will be remembered by-and-by when offices are to be given out. But in thi3 case the poli ticians have been crowded out of sight by the masses thronging to do honor to a man who has done the State substantial service; and the mean voices of those who bid for office are lost in the grand roar of enthusiasm, paying the people's tribute of admiration to one justly accepted a3 a type 01 all that is noble, gallant, and pure in a patriotio soldier. Sheridan's punlio services are such as to give mm a fall claim to the natiou's warmest gratitude. lie has served with a bold heart aud ready hand. with clear eye and upright soul, in fields where death was everywhere, and in fields that might have had ttill greater terrors to one less ready to repeat the course of Alox axder in disposing of the Gordian knot of political difficulties. It is a pleasant sight, therefore, to see the people so broadly and warmly acknowledging the natiou's debt to her heroic son. But, looked at closely, it will be seen that there is a still deeper significance in all these cheers, receptions, and other mo tes of ex pressing the popular sentiment, taken as a whole, all the ovations from St. Louis to I'liion Square by way of Washington are one tremendous and magnificent endorsement of Grant. They are the general declaration of the country that Grant was right. They are the common recognition of Grant's statesmanship, his administrative ability, his genius to rule, as illustrated in that rare talent of great rulers the perception of men's true powers and the sagacity to put iu every place the mau most fit to fill it. Napoleon Bonaparte permitted Dessaix to win a battle that he had lost, ac cepted strategy from Moreau, made Murat com mander of the cavalry, Talleyrand Minister of Foreign Afiairs, and Foucho ftlimster ot rolice. From lacts like these arose his most wonderful success, add the success ef every great ruler is in proportion to his ability to put men in their proper places. It is the ability to organ ize. It is statesmanship, and that truly prac tical part of it where it comes in contact with facts. Sheridan's position to-day is the evi dence of the degree in which Grant possesses this high quality. When Sheridan first fell under the eye of the great leader, he was a commissaty in Missouri. He might have been a commissary still, with all his rare qualities, if the War Office had had its will. What man ner of man had Stanton in the sort of post to which Grant eventually advanoed Sheridan ? Stanton's man for Sheridan's places was Sigel I In the face of such a fact, is it strange that the war dragged its bloody length through bo many years f But Grant insisted that the Sigels and Butlers should go t the rear, and he kept the Sherldans in front. His persistency in pushing Sheridan gave us Win chester, Cedar Creek, Five Forks, and flually gave us Sheridan at INew Orleans; aud the people, in cheering the hero lor ins achieve ments at all those places, record their judg ment of the great abilities of him who, in his own modest words, "gave Sheridan an opportunity." Another point in these demonstrations is that Sheridan has made himself conspicuous and dear to the popular heart in the unex pected character of a great logical interpreter ot the Oonstltullou, wno, oi 01 nis own sim ple honesty, has said and done mora for the vindication of that instrument man an ine lawyers together. He showed the neoeasity of adherence to the Constitution as all the legalists and hair-splitters in Christendom could not have done between this and dooms day. He went to New Orleans, and in down right earnestness entorced the late Reconstruc tion laws of Congress. He proved ill that way, as it never could have been proved in auy other, the enormity of those laws. He executed them to the literal extremity of their provisions. He did not bear lightly on their offensive points to make theru seem other than they were, aud so commend them to lavor. His simple enforewment nf those laws was the most complete possible vindication of wiu v-udiiuiuou iney defied, lie did not prate of the laws; he executed them, and their effect was seu. He did not apostrophize the Con- ""u"""i ouuweu wuat it was to govern P" v"" ""uiry Without it. In this way to-aay Ue manas up as the foremost friend of the Constitution, and the man who has done more than any other to nhov th people the danger of departure from its prin ciples. Grant and Sheridan, therefore our two greatest practical statesmen Lave exhibited their abilities to some purpose and are a neces sary Dart of the nation's future. It is useless to muddle over the special phases of present party strife. One broad fact only is distinct and beyond doubt; it is that a reaction against the Republican party is felt throughout the land, because that party has abused its power. But aside from the emphasis they give to this reaction, the elections now forthcoming mean but little, and it Is of comparatively small moment which way they go, either in this State or Pennsylvania. What Republican lose Copperheads expect to gain, and that is all there is of the result to the people. Bat the reaction against the Republicans is beguu, and it is for the people, by their own move ment and utterances, to strengthen that, to give it the depth aud force aud impulse that will carry all before it. To do this with effect, the people, so soon as these fall elections are over, must organize the grand campaign of the next Presidency with Grant and Sheri dan the chosen dials and practical statesmen, types of the best qualities of a great people. This is the way that the people must deter mine the future of the nation. These elec tions will determine nothing, though they may exhibit still more clearly the tendency already indicated elsewhere; but by rallying a grand constitutional party around the two great soldiers, the people will determine all. Reconstruction will thus begin directly with the people and in the demolition of parties. Such a reconstruction, guaranteeing that the great results of the war shall not be lost, but that the nation shall not be destroyed by the factions a guarantee that would lie in the very fact of the success of Grant and Sheridan such a reconstruction will be complete and natural, and will establish national peace and safety on sure bases. Up with the standard, then, for Grant and Sheridan ! Something to be Afraid Of. Mom the N. Y. Timet. It is not for a moment to be supposed that the Washington politicians and Wall street speculators who have been thrown into such a terrible panic by the reports about the Maryland militia, have any political or pecir niary ends to subserve by circulating the news that they concoct. We, ourselves, would not underrate the ominous nature of the news, nor would we say that it does not furnish an excellent reason why gold should go to 150 and the Republican candidates be elected. If we were "long" in gold, or if we were a candidate for the popular vote, we might perhaps think the "Maryland militia" a very nice instrument to give our interests a hoist; and as we heard of their procuring grey uniforms, purchasing brass cannon, and indulging in all sorts of warlike antics, we should feel assured, quite assured, that the credit of the nation, as well as the exist ence of the Government, was imperilled; and we should rush to the gold room and buy a million or more at current rates, while at the same time we sent the prospective profits to aid in the election of lieu Wade. For consider what may happen from the Maryland Governor organizing these hosts of untamed militia. It he has put six hundred regiments (or even if it be but six rugimnta of them In the field that is to say, has in scribed their names on foolscap; and if he has purchased for them an entire half-dozen brass Napoleon G-pounder guns, and if they have clothed themselves in Confederate grey, and if they have sworn an oath that they will do their duty on any field where they may be mustered then who can deny that there is good ground for the fear that Governor Swann may order them to inarch upon Washington, garrote Congress, and proclaim Johnson? How can it be positively known that such a formi dable array of militia will not make Bhort work with a few hundred members of Congress and bid defiance even to the million veteran soldiers whom General Grant recently com manded 1 There is assuredly no telling what may take plaon if Wendell Phillips and the Jribune, and Charles Sumner and the Chrom ic, aud other sentinels on the watch-towers ot freedom, fail for a moment to keep an eye on these sanguinary grey coats, and utter their warnings to an imperilled country. We do not wonder that General Grant (or rather, we should say, Maior-General Butler) considers that the whole thing has an "ugly look," and solemnly thinks the loyal Governors should take immediate measures to thwart the first efforts of a body of militia whose prospective doings are enough to terrify even military souls. We think really that, considering the circumstances ot the case the perils to Wash Ington, the perils to Congress, the perils to the eagle, the flag, and the Union that the least any man can think of doing, is to take the six brass guns from these six militia regi- nil nts, and send the entire force to the Dry lortugas, withiieneral liutler to govern them. nil hub s uuiib win vne peace 01 tne coun try ne ueyond disturbance. The Defense of Mexico.! From the W. Y. Tribune. If it is unfortunate for Mexico that she needs defense, it is well that she has Senor Romero for a defender. That gentleman in his speech almost disarms criticism by the frankness and force of his argument, and the sincerity o his friendship for the United States. In the eight years during which he has represented his Government at Washington, Senor Romero has had ample assurance of the good-will of our peopie to tne wexican Republic; he has been enabled to inform his countrymen that as we are ourselves resolved not to interfere with Mexican affairs, so we are resolved that other nations shall not interfere. In ' the letters read at the banquet, General Grant inti mates, and benator Cameron expressly declares, that if the Mexican victory had been much longer delayed, our armies would have helped to win it. Senor Romero knows what the effect of such intervention would have been, and may judge if it is merely a diplomatic boast that we would have helped Mexico, male after help ceased to be desired. Ui has freely admitted that our sympamy wuu tne republic contri buted, iu a great measure, to its triumph. When he returns to Mexico he may safely tell his countrymen that the United States would not permit a second invasion; that we rejoioe in their independence; anu mat all our sym pathies are with their efforts to wstablish pros perity and peace and treedom. He may tell them that among all the natiom 0f the earth Mexico has no friend more trae, more atronir. than the United States, and non that is ready to co as far to make its friendship effective. But there is one thing which h cannot tell them. He cannot say that the sober verdict of our people sustains "the execution of Maxi milian. ' ' ' " We do not desire to reopen the argument unon that ouestion. Senor Koniero has re- viewed in his speech the usurpation of Maxi milian, and without the slightest trace of ill. temper has Bhown its wantonness aud wicked ness. We are willing to admit ail that may be said upon that subject, but it must be ob served that Senor Romero himself admits that Maximilian was not the author, but was oulj the instrument of the- crime. Thn official repre- I sentative of Mexico declares that Maximilian was on the point of leaving Mexico forever; I that he remained there for the avowed purpose of placing the failure of the invasion upon the rrench Government; that it was his intention to have tested the pretenses of his friends that the majority of the Mexicans desired him to remain, by submitting to the vote of the peo- file the question ot a republic or au empire, t these are facts, as the Mexican Minister affirms them to be, then Maximilian was indeed more weak than wicked. He was what Senor Romero pronounces him an automaton. He was equally with Mexico the victim of the ambition of Napoleon. But do the Mexican people pride thumselves upon destroying automatons because they cannot reach the power that moves? Did they shoot the dnpe Maximilian to revenge themselves on his betrayer r we cannot see the courage of this act, aud certainly perceive its want of magnanimity. And we absolutely deny that the safety of Mexico required such a sacrifice. The trench had retired in disgrace; the invaders were everywhere defeated; Mexico had sufficient guarantees that the United States would make another interven tion impossible. It was in the moment of her perfect victory, with the national honor vindi cated, her independence established, and the future doubly secured against European inter ference, that she revenged the wrongs she naa endured not upon the hand that dealt them, but upon the tool it used. Senor Romero has eloquently described the incapacity of Maxi milian to comprehend the situation, and his utter helplessness long before his capture, and the demonstration of the strength of Mexico is anything but a justification of its policy. Had the nation been weak, it might perhaps have executed thi3 poor prisoner as a menace; had it held its real enemy in its power it might justly have punished him; but it was strong enough to be humane, and should have been too proud to put an automaton to death as a satislaction to its wounded honor. The abstract right which the Mexican re public undoubtedly possessed to shoot Maxi milian must not be confounded with the wis dom or necessity of asserting it. Govern ments have the legal power to do many things which civilized nations condemn The execution of captives is among them; and, while we give respectful consideration to the plea which benor Komero has made, we cannot think that the judgment of the nineteenth century will accept it. In shoot ing Maximilian Mexico opposed herself to the spirit of modern civilization. The Fijian kings, when they build a palace, slay a certain number of their subjects, and bury them in the foundations, that the palace may Btand forever. But the republic of Mexico did not need a corpse for its corner stone, or the sacrifice of blood to make holy Its portals. The act, however, is not to be re voked, and it would be wise not to attempt its defense. We prefer to turn from the past to the future, and to look with hope to the en lightened and liberal policy to whioh Senor Romero last night pledged his people. Had that policy been firmly established ten years ago, no foreign power would have dared to in vade Mexico, nor would she need the apology which her statesmen olfer in vain. We ask i mora than to forget her mistake in her glory. There is no American patriotism which is not also sympathy with our sister republic. The Mexican people have proved their greatness and their power, and we believe, with their distinguished Minister,that they will equally prove their capacity for Belt-government and progress. No people has been more bitterly slandered, and none has more completely justified its valor and its intelli gence. Italy. Tribune. From the jv 1' The Italian people continue to protest again.-! the arrest of their greatest and noblest man at the request of a foreign monarch. The out breaks at Naples, Genoa, and Milan have beeu followed by one at Viterbo, which, it appears, has been more serious thau any of the former ones. The idea of being the enslaved teols of France begins to fill the people with an indig nation which alarms the Government. The report that Cialdinl is to follow Ratrzzi as Prime Minister still needs confirmation; if true, it would either indicate that the Government wishes to disown the sentiments of Ratazzi, or make special military preparations for meeting outbreaks. Cialdim is not knowu to have very decided views as a politician. In Parlia ment he has been a general supporter of the Ministerial policy. A singular declaration is made by a semi official paper of the Government, the Opinione of Florence. It Bays that Rome will soon belong to Italy, and that without a violation of treaty. The object of this semi-official statement is obvious; it is to tranquillize the national party by giving a new pledge that the Government, notwithstanding the arrest of Garibaldi, does not abandon the design of securing the annexation of Rome. The Oov- vernmeut is perhaps begging at Paris or Rome for some concessions, for appearance sake, to the popular sentiment; but we regard it as highly improbable that a real annexation of the liternal City has been resolved upon. The excitement which prevails throughout Italy with regard to the recent events natu rally gives rise to the wildest rumors. Thus it was reported last night that there had been au insurrection in Rome, and that the Pope had fled to Civita Vecchia, a city situated on the coast. The news is probably incorrect, and, at all events, needs confirmation. It is, how ever, highly probai le that, sooner or later, an insurrectionary attempt will be made iu Rome, as all the preparations had been made by Garibaldi. Salmon P. Chaee ae "a Great Fluaucler" aud a Candidate for l'ieIUeui. From the Jv". Y. World. General Butler has written another astutet incisive letter in support of his project for paying off the publio debt in legal tender greenbacks. He addresses himself this time to the Tribune, in reply to some sharp denunciations of his plan by that journal. The Tribune furnishes a rejoinder, which occupies more space than the letter; but it ShleS tmtier S points buu ruuu ima vague moral considerations. It is no ade quate reply to General Butler's reasoning to t.M him he "seems deficient in moral sensibility." Such an imputation may be true enough in point of fact; but if the devil himself should make au able argu ment to prove that the debt is not due in coin, he would be unfairly dealt by if his i antagonist, instead of meeting and ex ploding his leanoulng, Bhould hint that he was a great rascal. The Tribune shirks Gene ral Butler's main positiou that the Govern ment has never contracted to pay the princi pal of the five-twenties in coin, aud contends that the Government is morally bound to do better by its creditors than it promised that it must pay "wheat," though it may have only promised "oats." Now it seems to us that the hinge of the controversy is exactly where Butler locates it namely, in the quea- Old Bye Miiskies. TI IIC LA KG EST AND 13EM' STOCK OF F I K E OLD RYE W II I 8 K I C 8 IV THE LKD IS NOW rOS KISSED BY BEKHY S. HANNIS & CO,, I'08. 218 and 220 SOUTH FBONT 5IEEET, W1I OI ir.lv Til F. ft Ali: T4 TI1F. IRADR IK E.OT0 UN VI BT Al VASTAftROVI TEK.-n. Vtoelr Stock of lljre IVhUfciee, IN BOND, enmj.rUoe all the favorite branaa ireMiit d.u""" tliiouah tbe varlona moattia of li,'6, and of thla year, ap t irlY."1- S.i,tr!" ' to arrive a frelTanta Railroad leptl Krrlraton Line Uharf.or at Bouded Warebonees, ae parties may elect. tion whether the Government did, or did not, engage to pay the principal in coin. We have already given our views on this point, and will net repeat them now. There is only one new point in Sutler's last letter, aud that we will try to dispose of at the end of this article. Our purpose is not to confute Butler anew, but to expose Chase. Butler's letter to the Tribune does not de monstrate his main position, but it does de monstrate that the financial policy of Mr. Chase was a muddle and a bungle; demon strates that his policy was so vacillating, in consistent, and self-contradictory, that amid the confusing cross-lights the rights of the public creditors and the obligations of the Government are open to endless questionings, and liable to be tossed hither and thither on a fluctuating sea of uncertainties. The editor of the Trihune stands foremost among Mr. Chase's admirers and eulogists, and the evasive feebleness of his rejoinder to Butlor corroborates the conclusion that Mr. Chase was a financial charlatan. It is susceptible of historical proof that the contradictory loan laws were drafted by the then Secretary of the Treasury. We know this fact from the most authentic source; it was publicly stated by Mr. Hooper, the organ of the Committee of Ways and Means, in the House of Representatives. General Butler is enabled to make out a plausible case, because the various laws are a clashing set of inconsistent enactments, instead of a harmonious system. It is quite true, as General Butler states, that the greenbacks are a tender for everything except Government interest and duties ou imports. The language Inscribed on every greenback means nothing, or it means that the greenbacks must be accepted in payment of the public debt. It is true that there are other enactments inconsistent with this; it. is true that Mr. Chase made promises and held out inducements of quite a contrary tenor; but is a farrago of jostling enactments and pro mises such a financial policy as the country had a right to expect from an able minister of finance ? The fact that he left the door open for such unsettling controversies as have arisen; that he furnished materials for such specious arguments as those advanced by General Butler, must cause his lauded ability as a financier to pass into a total eclipse. How easy it would have been, by a little consideration and foresight, to avoid discus sions whioh tend to shake the publio credit to its foundation t How easy it would have been to furnish argument to the Tribune whioh would have tripped up Butler's heels by a single touch of its toe ! A single additional word inscribed on the greenbacks, the two little words "in coin" transplanted from the ten-forty to the five-twenty loan bill, would have left Butler and those who think with him without a shred of plausible argument. li uenerai isutier's doctrine is as pernicious as the Tribune declares it to be, why was thero not forecast enough to shut the door against it ? The Tribune says: "If every American would say, Wo will pay our public debt to the uttermost hii-thing !'.we might soon fund our debt at 4 per cint. As it is, w e hhall Iovk pay lllty millions per auuurn In extra interest ueeuiiNe of the threat aud dread of virtual rcpiWlutlou. And that llfty millions would pny of our entire debt In less than forty years. We are for reducing both principal find interest so fast as can honestly be dont; and we object to all doiiges tuat suvor of repudiation that they preclude this most do blrod consummation." It is but a day or two since the Tribune praised Mr. Chase as our most accomplished financier since Hamilton. But how could so treat a genius for finance have leit open this j awning gap through which, by the Tribune's own showing, there flows annually fifty mil lions of was'ed treasure, when the insertion of two thort words in the statutes drawn by this smous financier would have shut up this reat Bluice-way lorever ? Why were the ords "in coin" in the ten-forty bill, and not n the five-twenty bill f What could Butler tay for himself, if those words had been in terted instead of being omitted f Their oinis-s-ion, which can be proved to have been by design, and the makiug of the greenbacks a tender for everything except customs duties and Government interest, enable Butler to make out u case so plausible that his views will find a wide acceptance a3 soon as a consideiable contraction of the currency causes the pressure of taxes to be more severely felt. It is for the admirers of Mr. Chase to explain why he left the public credit exposed to such specious and damaging at tacks. If he meant to pay the five-twenties iu coin, why did he not so draw the statute as to leave the point free from doubt f The Tribune would not thou be driven to "Paley's Moral Philosophy" for arguments to supply the ac knowledged silence of the law on a point deemed vital to the publio credit. It is Mr. Chase, not General Butler, that is shaking public confidence; for General Butler is merely exposing Mr. Chase's financial disar rangements. His "system" is a chaos of con tradictions, of which it is as easy to prove one thing as another, according as attention is drawn to one or another of its flashing parts. We could point out other inconsistencies equally gross; but those now exposed will suffice for the present. If Mr. Chase is run lor President, we can promise that his finan cial renown will be pretty thoroughly riddled. It remains to redeem our promise of meet ing General Butler's single new point. He states it with Fpeeious ingenuity as follows: "If the United Hlaiee should uv cuooso to exerclxe iu tight to pay lu. iu (whicu would htin tube wUe, as they are uulaxaltiu, so that their InteieM Is, in fuel, from onu lo turee per eeut. blgherltban blx per. cent to the holder), iu thai case, why should the Government be called Upon to pay In sold or Us qu!vlet In car rel. cy, huy U'i, when anybody tune uu buy tneut Hi 111!? "Why should thetax-payer becalled upon to pny the bolder from 31) lo 10 percent, more, iu oroei to l. deem these bonds. tuu, as they now have iherltibtto do. the cupttalUt la now Will ing to "ell them tor to anybody eine T" This is artful, but it lacks substance. Its fallacy couth ts iu confounding two operations -utiiely dictiuct in their nature. There can be no objection, on tbe score of national honor, to the Government buying its bonis iu the matket, at the market price, like other pur ibaseis. This would tend to enhance, not depreciate their value; inasmuch as it would widen the market and increase tha deuasuil. P.ut paying the bonds is quite a different ope ration. The purchase alluded to can just as well be mde before the expiration of the fiva years as after. General Butler certainly means something different from this, for his whola reasoning goes on the payability of the bonds at the option of the Government. auer me nve years are up. He means, then that they are (or ho talks nonsense), to be paid in some way before the expiration of not permissible, the live years. but permissible afterwards. This of course excludes purchase and includes payment, pro perly so called, in the lirst case, the holder sells or not, as he pleases; his decision dopending on a caiance oi advantages between keeping his bond3 till maturity and drawing the in terest, or taking such a present price as the Government is willing to offer. In the latter case, he has no option at all. The Govern ment gives notice that, on a oertain date, the bonds will be redeemed and the interest stopped. If he does not accept the proffered payment, they become dead, unproductive property. It is this latter case that General Butler is called to meet, but he dexterously evades it by insisting on the dofensibility of the first. It is a false analogy, totally irrelevant (as we hope we have convinced the' reader) to the point in discussion. INSTRUCTION. GREAT NATIONAL TELEGRAPHIC AND COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE, KOS. 809 AKD 811 II1ESNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA. li E MOV A Li To the Fluot College Itoomi In theCltyi Part of the (second, aud the whole of the Third ana Fourth Floors et BANK OF EEPCBLIO BUILDINGS, Nearly Opposite th Continental Hotel. Tbe best orgauized and conducted Business College in the city, Tbe Corps ot Teachers bas no superior. Education lor tbe Counting-room to the shortest possible time consistent with tbe Interests of tbe student. Bend lor circular. 28 Sin JACOB II. TAYLOR. President. A WERICAK CONSERVATORY OP MUSIC, U.- fci. K. coi iiit ot TENTH uud VVALN UT Htreeis. Otlice Hours-lu A. 11. to 12 M and 4 lo 10 P. M. In order to ncrommodate the large number of ap pllrttnla for nuuilsmon as stuiletits at tlie Conserva tory, tbe limited number bus been Increasud to Jim nitiidrrti, and tbe Subscription Books will be kept open nutil all vacancies shall be tilled. JiiHtructio' K at the CIbhs Kooms will positively beiiln on MONDAY, October 7. Pupils' Season Tickcs f.lr tbe Grand Concerts and Wutinees are now reody, and will be Issued with tbe receipt for tuition. Jtiai RUGBV ACAIEAiY, rOU YOUNG MEN ..t tfJ?8,0'8' Ko- 1116 LOCLnT Rtreet, KDWARD CLARKNCJ'. fcMITJl, A. M., Princl.al.-He-opeu bepteniber )6. Pupils prepared tor business or pro feHHional lite, or tor hlirh Binding In college, A tirst-ciasa Primary Department tu separate rf;??lh.tJlrc,i:,ir,,j Wltu ful1 lnloriuatlon, at No. lot Cil hoKDl' Mii, 8 12 2m UXl.AlL HOW, C. m. NEEDLES & CO., j Eleventh and Chesuut Street. HCUSI-FURBISHSKG DRY G3CDS, j Bought t the Becent Depressed Prices. Pblrtlrm. Pillow, Phfeting, and Table Linens. Table 4 'li ths ant) NapkliiH, to match. vyineCli.tb. Doylies, Towels and Towelling. Marseilles uullts auu Toilet Covers, .blanket. Honeycomb, Lancaster. Allendale, Jacquard, and other bpreuds, DOMESTIC WCeLINS AND SHEETINGS, In all qualities aud widths, at tbe lowest rates. 'Moii mi VMI f) LOCKING - CLA88E0 OF THB BL'kT FBEXCH PLATE, In Every Stylo of Frames, ON HAND OR MADE TO ORDKS. NEW ART GALLERY, F. BOLATJD is. CO. 10 2 ImwftiiJpl JVo. C14 AltCII Htreet. R A L T I M ORE f-''X IMPhOVKl) BASE BtJKMNd , ' Sit' ' IKE-PLACE UE4.TER, V . "L-1 ar-5.f, . with ' ' ' " ' ' ,7' b had U hOJowui" and Jtei.ill ot . '.Af Uf - Illi2 No. luw M A UK ri'NW- Pol' BOXES! M OX K sPboX E 3! Franklin Planum Ml I. all kind of 1M . B Mionka and Lap llouiua trade In wrt.n. A '"" her for salt, worked suit custiniier, Ali.vbll and Hard Piun Moorina. iJ. M Will IT Mi, N.K. cor lir ol Ul&aitD Avenue aud VIENNA uu I J