THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 18G7. sfimt OF THE PRESS. editorial on ions or thi iBAsnra journals iron ocum topics compiled evibt . PAT FOB TBI ITBHIKO TBX.BOSA.FH. Ilsrsctael V. Jthaion on Ileconitrnctlon. From the N. Y. Tribune. The Hon. Herschel V. Johnson, of Georgia, Tvho waa the Douglas candidate for Vioe-rrosl-dent in 18G0, and a Unionist thereafter until he hecame a secessionist, recent. sent as a rather long expose of the political situation, as viewed from an ex-Confederate standpoint. We printed his manifesto verbatim, with com ments much shorter than itself, lie couie3 fcack upon us in a letter which fills four full col umns in close type, and would much more than cover this page in our editorial type. IVe would like to answer it, hut Mr. Johnson allows us no room. "Some take all, but ho leaves none." We are compelled, therefore, to rest content with restating a few important facts which he ignores or defies. I. Mr. Johnson asserts that Congres3 de layed for two long years to mature and present any plan of reconstruction. He is mistaken. Congress presented a plan near the close of its very first session after Lee's and Johnson's sur render; and the next Republican State Con vention of this State publicly pledged our sup port to the admission of each and every Stave which should accept it. None of them except Teeneseee did accept it, or has yet done so; so another plan had to be devised and proposed. Was that the fault of Congress ? Suppose the present plan is in like manner rejected; must the Republicans bear the blame ! II. Mr. Johnson asserts that the class for which he speaks are ready to treat the blacks justly, and even kindly. We will admit that he thinks so. But he thought they did the Same when they held those blacks in slavery; and refused to take the oath of a Christian Bishop, if Mack, against the most worthless reprobate, if white. They say hell is paved with good intentions. But Governor J'ease Says at least one hundred negroes have been feloniously killed by whites in Texas alone under the sway of the Johnsonian State autho rities, and not one of these white murderers has been punished by the Throckmorton rule. We have lor years been printing corresponding accounts from all the unrepresented States. Herschel V. Johnson will not deny that some negroes have been killed by white3 iu the South since April, 18o'5. How many of the murderers have been brought to justice by the State authorities ? This is a matter of simple fact. And we assert that not one white man In every twenty who have killed negroes in the South since Lee's surrender ha3 been brought to justice by those to whom Mr, Johnson thinks it very hard that those States ana their blacks should not be surrendered by Congress. III. Mr. Johnson says there are eicht mil lions of whites and but four millions of blacks in the South. Both figures are about right. Of the whites, there may be one hundred thousand not more disfranchised by Con gress as prominent Rebels. Say that these represent half a million of people call it a million, if you will leaving but seven mil lions of enfranchised whites to four millions of blacks. The. whites own nearly all the laud and other property; more than half of theul are educated, while the adult blacks are gene rally ignorant; the whites are certainly not inferior in intellect, while far superior iu social position. Now, says Mr. Johnson, to intrust political poer to these seveu millions of enfranchised whites and four millions of blacks is to hand the South over to negro domina;ion, subjugate the white race, endanger property, order, everything ! Surely, a man wUo knows whether four is or is not more than seveu much more one who has run for Vice-I'resi-deut ought to know better than to put forth such glaring absurdity as this. The immigra tion to the South is heavy, and almost exclu sively white; there are no negro lawyers, negro doutois, and few negro merchants; almost every ehraent of power i3 in the hands of the whites. To affect to fear black domina-' tion under such circumstances is either hypo critical or pusillanimous we mean, it looks like that. We shall next hear that the dogs of the South have held a meeting and resolved to ask protection against the bloody sheep, who threaten to eat them up. Yet Mr. John son's letter rings the changes on this mon strous assumption. IV. Mr. Johnson urges that the blacks are generally ignorant. That, we presume, is so. But blacks did not make tlie laws which pun ished as felony the teaching of one of their number to read; .and, siuce they have bien allowed to learn, they have evinced general aptitude and eagerness to do so. Let us en courage and help them to grow in knowledge and wisdom; bearing, meantime, with their constantly decreasing ignorance. V. We most empheti tally deny that there is any quarrel between the "two sections," or their people. There is a faction at the South Which still mourns "the Lost CAuse," and refuses to be comforted. It has a very large body of sympathizers at the North. There is not in all regions over which Mr. Jefferson Davis once presided a single county wherein go large a portion of the inhabitants are in po litical accord with Mr. H. V. Johnson and his teachings as iu this very city of New York. Do let us discard misleading phrases, and talk to the point. . There is but one living po litical question: "Shall the blaoks, or shall they not, be henceforth regarded as human lieings, with rights and feelings which whites re bound to respect ?" Whoever answers, Yes, they shall," belongs to our party, aether he live in Boston or Shreveport; whoever answers, "No," belongs to the other ?arty. We long since said: "Let all vote !" 'be Republicans will be ready .to say it quite as soon aithe Democrats, North or South, will. Let ns scorn all disguises and talk right to the point. Mr. Johnson might have spared his words, if he had not needed them to conceal his ideas. VI. As to the right and wrong of secession aud coercion what we said iu IStJO what Congress resolved in 1801 what were Mr. Calhoun's theories of government and whether Mr. Johnson, being a Unionist, was jtlstilied in lighting to subvert the Uniou because others whether the States iu revolt were in or out of the Union, etc. etc we caunot make room to disouss them with Mr. Johnson. "Let th dead bury their dead." If any one chooses to see what we have to say on these and kindred themes," he will find it compressed into a very few chapters of '.'The American Conflict." That we do not see these matters 1 1, much Mr. Johnson's spectacles is very true; but can lurther controversy help the matter f We do surely hold that the South ern even if you count out the blacks dil not secede from the Union, though a violent, Lrow-beating, aristocratic faction assumed to do so ; we hold that this faction, without right or reason, made war ou the I'nin ,! imt. li and rfonml v thrashed bv it. a 4 was deserved: and we hold that the result is juoit auspicious, to tlie perwaiwitf wU bains of both North and South. Mr- Johnson, we regret to see, Btill gropes iu the thipk darkness of the past though the day in its fullness has oome and insists on keeping his eyelids as tightly closed as possible. If what he fanoiea he sees were really so, slavery is not yet abolished, and every negro should be reclaimed and pet to work by his old master, to said negro's infinite comfort and blessing. But the universo still rolls onward, and we can afford to leave Mr. Johnson's obstinate misconcep tions to be corrected by the resistless march of events. "The stars in their courses" still dhine, and light comes to each of us, quite in dependent ot his will. President Johnson In the Present Crisis. From the JV. Y. Herald. A golden opportunity is now before Presi dent Johnson to make himself the undisputed master of the political situation aud his admin istration a positive power in the laud. If he has any pluck, any sagacity, any clearness of vision in perceiving the advantages of his present position, he will readily uuderstaud what is required of him to reach these advan tages and to turn thorn to good account. The great central States, through the voices of l'ennsylvania and Ohio, have spokeu on this radical ultimatum of universal negro suffrage and negro supremacy, and it has thus become manifest to all eyes that we are on the verge of one of the greatest of revolutions iu the annals of our political parties. Mr. Johuson may now do much to give cohesion and direc tion to this new upribing of public opinion, and a complete reconstruction of his Cabinet is the first essential to meet the demands of this crisis. In beginning a new- administration with an lid Cabinet, Mr. Johnson undertook a very difficult task; but in attempting, fro'm time to time, to adapt this old Cabinet to a new order of things, by patching a patch here and a patch there, it was "love's labor lost" an experiment not only profitless, but bo fruitful oi disasters that he may be thankful it has not cost him his official head. But if, in an official sense, he haa escaped the last misfortune of Charle3 the First or Louis the Sixteenth, it is because his mistakes have served the pur poses of his adversaries, and they have profited by them. Now, with their own heavy budget of blunders, condemned by the popular voice of the Northern States as far as they have ex pressed themselves, Mr. Johnson may turn the tables upon the bullied and astounded radicals, aud identify his name, his policy, and his ad ministration with the great majority of the loyal masses of the loyal North. To this end he needs a new Cabinet, begin ning with the State Department. Retirement would not now be an act of cruelty to Air. Seward, but an act of kinduess. He has out lived his day of usefulness in public life. He belongs to an age and generation, to a political system of dogmas aud idea3, that have passed away. The best that his faithful, good man Friday can now do for him is to glorify him at the expense of Mrs. Lincoln, and in mean and scandalous tattle about her little bills us lady of the White House. To get rid, therefore, of the master, in order to be relieved of his mau, would be of itself a good move on the part of the President; but much higher and larger considerations call imperiously for a new Sec retary of State. The same broad and general reasons, to a greater or less extent, apply to all the other members of the existing Cabinet, including old Mr. Welles and his ring ot spoilsmen under the care of Mr. Fox. We understand that Mr. Johnson has been meditating for some time past upon such a stroke of policy; and it Las been intimated to us from well iu formed sources at Washington that he will, in all probability, under the enouragomeu s of these late elections, proceed, without fur ther delay, to active measures. Let him da so; but let him, iu the reconstruction of his Cabinet against the implacable radicals, be careful to avoid the other extreme of incurable Copperheads, llo wants no such official ad visers about him as either of the two Sey mours, or the two Woods, or Mayor Hoffman, Vonrhees or Vallaudigham. Suoh dead weights would soon sink Mr. Johnson beyond the reach of a resurrection. He wants men thoroughly identified with the Union cause iu the war men of whom the loyal masses of the North are justly proud, and yet men who are not committed to tke revolutionary schemes of radical fanaticism not visionary, but clear headed men such men, if you please, as Grant, Thomas, Sheridan, Hancock, Farragut, and l'oiter. in the intermediate course thus suggested, Mr. Johnson may now do a great work in fusing the conservative Union men of both panics into the victorious party of lSu'S, leav ing Northern radicals, fanatics, and Copper heads, and all the disturbing factions of the lay, North and bouth, high and dry, like the driftwood left on both sides of a great river from a heavy Hood. VVe may say, too, that it the revolutionary programme of the laat two sessions of Congress stands condemned by the people, the constitutional amendment upon which the elections of last year were contested stands emphatically endorsed. A Cabinet, therefore, and a message to Congress, framed upon this issue, and especially upon the suf frage settlement embraced in said amendment, would make at once a diversion in both Houses of Congress as fatal to the radicals as it would be advantageous to the Administration in se curing the legislative balance of power. Mr. Johnson will do well to understand that the people have not been following him, or lighting his battles in these late elections, but that they have been pronouncing judgment against the vicious negro schemes of radical fanaticism, as they pronounced a year ago in favor of the fair and acceptable scheme of Congress which the radical leaders in their inllated folly aud self conceit abandoned. The Flection and the President. from the iV. Y. Times. The Esjirrss has the following as a special despatch from Washington: Washington, Oct. 9. A couforeuoe oflead li'K Democratic politicians has boon requested by the President, with tue view (us Is supposed unci believed) to t lie formation or a new Cabi net. Mnj or Hoil'man aud Governor Seymour, ft' our .Stute, are expected to taue a part lu tlio conference, buying been written to fur that pur- The result of the elections yesterday hussatlKiled the Executive that his hour fur ucl ion n i on the subject of a new Cabinet has unhed." ' It is not easy to see what the result of the elections has to do either with the President or his Cabinet. That result has not boou brought about by anything dono by either nor is it a protest against anything which either has done. if the Democratio party thoo3Q3 now to take the responsibility of the Administration, it may be well enough for the President to give them the Cabinet. But with the Civil Office bill, and the Senate composed as it is and must be for some years to come, it is not easy to Boe how they have muck to gain thereby. Other despatches indicate a much more 1 jtodcrnte ,owibhj estimate by Uo I'mi- dent of the real meaning of the late elections. Instead of seeing in them any popular de mand for (lie elevation of the Democratio party to power, he is Baid to regard them as showing only an "evident reaction against extreme radicalism -n Pennsylvania, where it has been the most rampant and violent, and openly threatened revolution;" and to have expressed the hope that they "will have the effect to check the ultra policy hitherto forced upon Congress by the crack of the radical whip." This is reasonable and just. The despatch to the Express robably indicates the wishes, rather than the knowledge, of that journal and of those for whom it speaks. The Kxtraordlnary Counter-Uevolutlon. I'rom the N. Y. Herald. We are hurrying onward to our political Niagara; Copperhead?, radicals, and all the fanatical elements are sweeping down the rapids. Up to the time that Congress passed the Constitutional amendment, and including that action, the people were satisfied. But when Congress, mistaking the will of the nation, loi.es its balance upon its giddy sum mit of power, then it is proper that the people should again rise and assert their will. The people, watching with intense interest the restoration of their social and progressive welfare, eee no hope unless they draw the curb upon the power they have invested with authority. Tbe situation is easy of analysis; for, with all the finely woven radical theories of black and white equality, we want to see those practical results which demonstrate that our legislative action has ben productive of good. Search where we may, we can find no evidences of good results; the attempt to reconstruct the South has gone on from bad to worse, until the ten unreslored States drag like a dead weight upon the progress of the nation. Here, in the great republic of the nineteenth century, we go back for precedents in government, and Cud that the Roman system is the only one to which we can adapt ourselves. Thus it is an open acknow ledgment that our territorial extension im poses upon us the necessity of a great central lorce, governing, through a pro-cou3Ular or ganization, all the States that can iu any way make a healthy opposition to its power, i ins principle once well rooted, it takes no pro phetic brain to predict the succeeding phases which attended the same system in Rome. Our people are too sensible to let the power slip out of their hands so quickly. The elec tions in California and Maine denoted the fact that the people were beginning to reasom over the mad acts ot a Congress as well as of an Lxtcutive that could not understand their de sires. The two States named were enly the pretace to the telling rebuke which we are now giving to our unworthy rulers. Pennsylvania and Ohio, potent in the lists, wheel into line, and add their voices to the general outory against misgovernmeat. New York, soon to come to the tnal by vote, will doubtless follow the example set by the former States. The whole country, iu fact, is tired of this crushing process of recoustruction, which weighs with equally destructive power upon both iNortu. and bouth. The War ren Hastings rule of India may have suited tbat country; the Reman provincial system may have been adapted to the ignorance of two thousand years ago; but those were carfes where force placed pressure on ignoranoe. Intelligence cannot and will not bear such rule. There have not been men wnuting iu the radi cal party to recoguize that their power wa3 but short-lived unless they could throw some great ignoi anteleu ent into the existing intelli gence of the country. This element, the necro, they have seized upon and have, by super human exertions, Hunted him to tuo stirlaoe. Less buoyant than the elements around him, he can only be held up until his owu specific gravity overcomes our power to sustain him. J hat tailing, ho must sink to the level to which hia talent fits him, and from which, little by little gaming light, he may rise by his own intrinsic value. To cling to the negro we must Bink to his level; by doing which we shall not elevate him but debase ourselves. It has taken some time for the people to ap preciate these facts, but that they now are luuy alive to them is undoubted. I he v see that they Lave been deceived by the political demagogues who have held the negro up as the main element in our revolution when he was only a minor issue. The revulsion of feeling, we regret to say, will, for the moment, be unfortunate for the black man; but this is the fault of his fanatical friends, who have forced him upward to a point where he cannot balance himselt. The action of the radical party has not been the creation of a civilization for the negro, but an attempt to turn the white race back to a barbarism which we have been trying to shake off", and from which we have been emerging for more than twenty centuries. It must be undtrstood that our people are awakened at last, and are little inclined to march in retreat. Tbe elections of Ohio and Pennsyi vania fully demonstrate i. Let it not be bud posed, however, that these elections denote a victory for the old Democratio party, whose principles, as shown by the Rebellion, were ruie or ruin." it snows, on the contrary, that the Republican element of the countrv. tired and disgusted with the radical pro- griunuje, nave, lor tue moment, stepped aside to give rebuke to their leaders, aud show them that the intelligence of the United States is not willing to accept a rule that canuot stand the analysis of common sense. There is a mighty conservative power quietly holding itself in reserve and watching our poli tical fortunes. It is awaiting th next Presidential election, and when the moment comes to strike it will deal a tBrribl blow: Democrat, radical, Copperhead, and fanatic will go down before it. A President totally unfitted to appreciate the demands made upon him will disappear, and a Congress that has made a party lootball of the nati nn will also be deposed to give place to the best men of the country the true conservative element of real statesmanship. Pnnylvanla-Ohlo-NCw York. From the 2V. V U',-,i The news from Pennsylvania which we pub lished Wednesday confirmed our vnitations: that which we publish this morning from Ohio fills the measure of our hopes. The people of both these States have cast the maiority of their votes for the candidates of the Democracy So say our latest despatches from Ohio, and they cannot be far wrong. At the worst our victory is all but overwhelmicar. Bevonl all question, too, will the people of the Empire State in November roll up a majority, doub ling, yes, trebling, their joint majorities. Six millions of people have eooken. Tn these the lour millions of New York will join their voice, and this is their response to Maine and tahloriila "Ho Jura answers from her loUy peaks 1-U'k lu UlU ioi hum Aim. uliu . ..II in, liur nlnilll. New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio; the first the Umpire Ftate, and the second aud third of all the States of the Union: the three 11; the foremost tliTee in all the arts and victories of peace and weightiest in war; the annual products of whose industry is double that of any other three aad more various; Whose garnered wealth surpasses that of any six or their Bister Mates; whose commerce on our inland seas and upon all oceans surpasses the commerce of all it is these three States which now are thundering, with the voice of their ten millions of people, an indignant, unanimous veto upon the proceedings aud the policy of the party in power. It is inch time lor a voice so potent to make itself heard. Our Bons were led by thousands to fruitless slaughter yet it wa3 dumb. Heaping up, to mortgage the industry and abridge the joys of ourselves and our children aud our children's children, rose a mountain of debt yet it was dumb. Two years of peace, which tailed to restore the Union, were added to the four years of war which failed, and like those years were spt-nt by shameless partisans in plans to prolong their hold upon power they had usurped power prostituted to the stirring up anew of stule which had ended; prostituted to the imposition of a military despotism upon ten sovereicn Stales; prostituted to the crush ing down of an already conquered people our brethren, our kinsmen and to the lifting up into sole supremacy there of an ignorant, de graded race; prostituted to the crippling of Northern industry by reckless taxes and mon strous "protective" tariffs, and to the throt tling of Southern industry by the denial ot order and law under which it might ere this have well revived; prostituted to the denial of any reconstruction laws for months, and then to the framing of such as would longest post pone their pretended purpose, anl then to the heaping of obstructions, restrictions, and pen alties UDon these vet still it was dumb. Lone suflerinsr and patient, indeed, witu their servants have the Northern people been. High time indeed was it that the puissant voice3 of these their masters should be heard, saying as Pennsylvania and Ohio have said, aud New YorTc will say: "Let strife cease; let peace prevail; let law revive; let the Union live." WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC, Qm B. KITCHEN, JEWELER, S.E. Corner TENTH and OIESNL'T EEAT BEBECTION IN PRICES. DIANOSIIN, WATtlirS, JEWELBY, SILVER-WARE, BRONZES. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. WATCHES AND JEWELRY BEFULLY RE PA IKED. 1'artlcular attention paid to Manufacturing all arti cles In onr line. 1821 thsni FINE WATCHES. W e keep always on hand an assortment ut LADIES' AND CENTS' "EI NEE WATCHES' Of the beat American and Foreign Makers, all war ranted to give complete saiisiacuou, ana at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. FARR & BROTHER, Importers of Watches, Jewelry, Musical Boxes, etc. 11 llBuittolrp Nu. 824 CHKHNUT St., below Fourth, Fspeclal attention glvfn to repairing Watches and Musical lioies by F1KST- CL ASH workmen. gEWIS LADGIYIUS & CO., DI11R10KD DEALERS AND JEWELLERS, is. mu cn.i;sr UT htiiuiict, W'oeld Invite the attention or purchasers to tholr, large stcck of CENTS' AA'I LADIES' IVATl'EIEM, Just received, of the fljest European makers. Independent quarter, econd, aud seli-windiug, In gold Mju sliver cuhhh Also, AMKRIC'AN WATCHES ol all sizes. Diamond (-els, lus.HtwclK, Kinirs, etc.i Coral, Msluohlte, Gurnet, and Etruscan Hots, In Ermi variety, 15 IMP SOLID KIIA'KRWABK of all kinds, Including a large assoi tmeut suitable lor Urldal Pre - enls. k WATCHES, JLVYELKi. W. W. OASSIDy, Hi). 13 bOUTH SECOND STREET, oners an entirely new and most carefully selected static ot AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES, JEWELRY, 8ILVER-WARE, AND FANCY ARTICLES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. auitable FOB BRIDAL OB IIOLIDAX PBCSENIS. An examination will show my stock to be onani paused In quality aud cheapr eus. Particular attention paid to repnlrlng, SIR C. RUSSELL & CO.,0 No. Tl SOUTH BIIIH STItEET, OFriB ONE OF THE LABUEMT STOCKS OF FINE FRENCH CLOCKS, OF THEIR OWN IHPOBTATION, IN TUB CITY. 5 26J AMERICAN WATCHES, iTbe best In the world, sold at Factory Price. C. & A. PEQUICNOT. MANUFACTURERS OF WATCH CASES, No. 13 Bouth SIXTH Street 8 8 Manufactory. Ab. 22. ft FIFTH Street, s TliRLINGt SILVER WARE MANUFACTORY NO. 411 LOt 1ST ST BEET. GEOUGE B II iVIfc P, Patentee of the Ball and Cube patterns, manufactures every description of tine STERLING SILVKIV WARE, and offers for sale, wholesale and retail, a choice assortment of rich and beautiful goods of new styles at low prices. 9 26 3m J. M. SHARP. A. ROBERTS. INSTRUCTION. A M ERIC AN CONSERVATORY OF 'MUSIC,. 2. southeast corner HON lit and WA4NU1' mis. ihere are vacancies, day and evenliiK. lor begin nurs and advanced pupils, lor Piauo, Cabinet Organ, Vocal Music, Harmony, Violin. Mute, Horn. etc. fcubscrlpnou to the OUCUJi-slRAL CLASS for ainuteurs ;".v;:;;',vv; ' '.l biibscrlptiou lor Study ol EI.OlJUi lON . 6iK) Pupils will be received every day this week aud uexU Olllce hours, 8 A. M. to Ml', hi. Iiiblrucilou will boKin Oct. 7. Oct 14. and Oct. 21. N 11 -Students ol Vocal Munc are entitled to In btructlon lu Elocution wlihouteitra charge. lu 1 lt RUGBY ACADEMY, FOR YOUNU MEN and Hoys, No. HIS LOCUST Street, EDWAKl LLAKfcf.CE SMITH. A. M.. Triuclpa .-Ue-opeu seiueuiher IS. Pupils prepared lor business or pro feshloual IHe, or lor high standing lu coIIoku. A Ur8t-c!as Primary Departuieut lu snparaU mollis. Circulars, with full inlorniatlon, at No. cU C 1 1 hwNUI1 Street. li 2'n UN1VKBSIIY OF PENNSYLVANIA, WKl'lCAL DEl'AR'l M kNT KnlD HKSSION. 1M7-BS. 'J he regular Lectures ol this School will cum tnence'on MONHAY, October Mill, and continue Uutll the 1st of filuich, i'ee for the lull cour.e. tun. It. K. Rt xi K US. M. Tl.. 19 ; c( JLoau Muawal I-'mOwuI, QldMyemiislries. THE LARGEST AND BEST STOCK OF FINE OLD RYE V7 H I C IC I C C IN THE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY HENItY S. HANNIS & CO., Nob. 218 and 220 SOUTH nxOIiT STREET, trno OFFEbTllEBANETO TBE TRADE I.OTH ON YKRT ADVANTAUKOUB TERM. Vhelr Stock of fir Whiskies, IN BOND, ot.-irirlsei rn.ll trta h.i. &. Liberal contracts wnA for lots to arrlv at Pa,lTanla Railroad Ban rrlcsso Ll Vt barf, or at Hoad.d Warehouse., as paVtlea majr alict. ,p FINANCIAL. BANKING HOUSE OX' jAYCooiE&p. US and 114 So. THIRD ST. PIIILAP'A. Dealers in all Government Boouritior, OLD S-20a WANT Li L IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW! A L1BEBAL DIFFEBEN t'E ALLOWED, Compound Interest Notes Wanted IKTEBE&T ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. Collection made. Btoolu bought and sold on Commission. Special boslnesa accommodation1 reserved lor adles. ri) 34 3m NORTH MlSSOUltl BAILUOAD FIRST MORTGAGE SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. Having purchased $000,000 ot the FIBUT MOST OAGE COUPON BON DH OF THE NORTH MLS. SOUKI BALLKOAD COM PAN Y.BEAiUNUSKVEN FEB CENT INTEREST, having go year to run, we are now prepared to sell the same at tbe low late o And the accrued Interest! rom this date, tu as paying tbe Investor over 8 per cent. Interest, which Is pays, ble semi-annually. This Loan Is secured by a First Mortgage upon the Company's Kallroad, 171 miles already constructed aud In running truer, and 62 miles additlonul to b coiuiileted by the brsl ol October next, extending from tbe city ol bi. Louis Into Noruiern and Central Mis souri. l ull particulars will be given on application to either ol the undersigned. E. W. CLABK A CO. JAY IDUHK A CO. hUtXIL A CO. r. B. Parties holding oilier securities, aud wlshlni to change Vhtiu lor this Loan, can do so at tbe markei rules. v 1 61m N ATION AL MM OF THE REPUBLIC, COO and 811 CHESNUT STItEET, PHILADELPHIA, CAPITAL., tMwiiMMinmtMmiMHiMMMti .S1,00,00! DIRECTORS. Joseph T. Bailey, Nathan Hlllea, lieu), Ron land, Jr., bamuel A, lilsphaiu, Edward H. Orue, William Ervlen, Osgood Welsh, Frederick A, Hoyt, Wm, Hi Rhawn. WM. H. SHAWN, President, JjoU Oathier of the Central ffalional an JOB. F. MUMFORD Cashier, B 121 Lot oftht Philadelphia Mtiional Ban': 7 3-lOs, all sxaxtiias, CONVERTED INTO l lA E-TWE IS Tl ES. KOKDH DEUVEBKD IMMEDIATELY. DE HAYEN & BKOTHEB, 102 rp MO. H. NIBD STREET. ya 8. SECURITIES A SPECIALTY. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO BARKERS AND BROKERS, HO.lt TUIBD BTMNO. t WAMSAIJ ST., raxLASBuraiA. I xw tobx Orders for Stocks and Cold executed in Plula delvhia and New York. Hi FERTILIZERS. jM MO MATED rilOSPUATE, AH ENKEBPAMNED FEBTILIZEB For Wheat, Corn, Oats Potatoes.Qrasa, tbe VegetabU Gardea, Fruit Trees, Grape Vines, Etc Etc. TMb Fertility contains Ground Bone and the bee Fertilising balm. Price tuo p. too 0f 9000 pound. For sale by UK ivwuilatslururs, WILLIAM ELLIS CO., Chemists, llSuxvH Pa 721 MAIUC KT Lircu' LOG EC INC- GLASSES OF TUB BM FKIXCII PLATE, In Ev!ty Stylo of Frames, ON 1 L.JD OR MADE TO ORDER. NEW ART GALLERY, F. BO LAND & CO., 10 2 lmwfni3i No. C14 AllCU (Street. CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, ETC. 1867. fall. 1867! ! JUST RECEIVED, NEW STYLES FANCY. CASSIMERES AND COATINGS. In addition to our nnnsually large line of good adapted to , MKK'8 AND BOTH' WEAK. 3I0ifj:iS, CLOTHIER & LEWIS, CLOTH JOBBEKS, g 24 6m M. 19 AMD I H. rOEBTH ST. Q L O A !C I N C S. We call particular attention to a large assortmen ot very desli able styles LADIES' CLOAKINGM, Just received Irom New "fork auction sales, In add Ion to tbe B1LVLR FOX, MAMO.ND, HYDK PaKK, and many other leading makes. MUKKSS CLOTIIIKK & LEWIS, CLOTH HOUSE, . 8 24 6m RON, 10 AND SI H. FOUBTII ST. BOOTS AND SHOES. REDUCTION IN PRICES. FRFNCH CALF LOUBLK 60LE BOOTS, Firs Juallty,l2'(0. FBJ.CU CALF SINGLE SOLE BOOTS, Fin Mualliy.tlO-.O FBtNCH CALF DOUBLE BOLE BOOTS, Second Quality, (in 00. FBLNCH CALF SINGLE SOLE BOOTS, Second Quality, 19X0. BOYS' I-INE BOOTS AND SHOES At very low prices, BARTLETT, HO. 83 SOUTH SIXTH STBEET, 17rP ABOVE CHE3NUT. REMOVAL. J E M O V A L. C. W. A. TKUEIFLEli HAS REfcCVED HIS MUSIC STCHE FBOJM SEVENTH AND OHESNPT STS. TO Mo. 926 CHESNUT STREET t 12tfrr) PHILADELPHIA. UlKsKh Uuw. E. M. NEEDLES & CO., Kleventh and Chesnut Street. HCl'St-FURKISHIKG DRY GOMS, Bought at the Beoent Depressed Prices. Phlrtlnfir. Pillow, Fhietlng, and Table Lluens. Tablet lulus aud Napkins, to match. ViiieC'loihH.loyllnt, Towels aud Towelling. Alarsfclilen (Jul lis aud Toilet Covers. a t H i, ... 1 .. w c, U ni U, DOMESTIC MUSLINS AND 8HEETINUS, In all qualities and widths, at the lowest rates. Ann nivxit) W ILLIAM 8. GRANT, NO. S3 S. DH.LAWAKK. Avenue, Phlladulphla, Djipont's (;uti powder, Ueliued Nitre, rharooal. HJ. W. Buker A Co.'s t'hocoluto, O coa. aud r,' Cricicr Urns. & Cu'S Yellow Alslal bUe..tblyf Bolis, and txui.ii Obi
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