THE DAlr EVENING TELEGRAPII PHILADELPHIA, TIIU11SDAY, AUGUST 13, V1S08. spirit or THE PRESS. JOORSAM) BPOR CURBMT TOPICIV COMPILKD BVRBT BAT FOB THB BVBMSO TKLBORAPH. Afraid of Restoration. from the Boston 7tt, The radical writers handle the restoration question only an party pettifoggers. Mr. Lin coin osed precisely the tight phrase when he nnotinced the problem to be the restoration Of the people of the Sout hern 8tates to their former I elation" to the Union: and he initiated the movement which waa sure to provide a Bolution of it by framing the provisional Gov ernment for North Caroliua hich his Bnooea eor in office faithfully copied. The object of restoration, then, is aimply to bring back-. ot a pan, but the whole of-the people of the South to their true relations to the Union. None bnt partisans would dream of or desire anything lees than this, and none but cow ard leaders would bo far take counsel of their fears as to run to the opposite extreme of BuWhe radical leaders have been almost religiously careful not to employ the signifi cant term restoration at all; they have used reconstruction in its stead, llow can the autonomy of a great Union of States be re constructed, save by the consenting aotion of every one of them ? It notoriously cannot. And hence the steps taken to reoonstruot after such a violent fashion are legitimately revolutionary. Thaddeua Stevens confessed that they were, and declared that all who took a part in the passage of these several reconstruction laws Knew mem w ue um Bide of the Constitution" that is revolution ary. The work of restoration is easy in deed, by the side of the arbitrary legisla tion entered upon by Congress. The entire tody of the people of the South showed them Belves ready for it, and received the enoo miums of General Grant, Senator Morton, and other radicals for their excellent dispositions. The Union might have been restored by De cember, 18G5; instead of that, we see to-day that to the three States of the South Vir ginia, Mississippi, and Texas to which the amendments to the Constitution were duly submitted as to integral States in the Union, Congress has forbidden the casting of an eleo toral vote for President in the election to be held this fall. This is enough to show where all the opposition to restoration lies. Three States, that are ready to testify to their oba dience to the organic law by complying with its requirements in voting for President as Well as on a Constitutional amendment, are threatened with a severe penalty if they dare to infract a law of Congress by ex ercising the highest prerogative nuder the supreme law 1 It is held up by the radioal press as a stigma on the patriotism of the great party of the Union that it should have admitted to its National Convention leading Southern men who were actively engaged in the war againBt the Union. On the contrary, it is to ba re garded as the proof of the ability and fitness of that party alone to restore the long-lost fraternity of the sections. A Slate is such, Hot by reason solely of its territorial area and its physical resources, but of its men; and these men who are aUudnd to are among the most intelligent and influential of the en-, tire . Southern population. Radicalism, we know, is trying the vain experiment of setting up the inferior and the degraded in place of the 'Superior: last as it is crying out fur peace while discussing a plan for arming one race in the south against me otuer. dm tne good sense and large views of the American people will not suiter themselves to be con fused by the pettifogging of such partisans To restore the South, the intelligence of the South must by some means be won over. The radicals are of too bigoted and malicious a temper to be equal to such a task, and the Democrats have demonstrated for their part that' it can be successfully accomplished, for the strengthening of all the national bonds. It ia perfectly natural that the radical jour nals should 6narl at them for this, and betray their envious hatred by charging the success ful party with sympathy for the old plans of the Southern people. The dominant party bad ' such an opportunity onoe to practise magnanimity as no political party ever ea Joyed before.- It might have bound the Southern population to its cause forever. But . It was not born for great and generous things. It would to-day a thousand times rather have a fragmentary Union, to be deplored of all patriots and men who love rational liberty, than adit that the Democrats had anything to do with fighting the battles of the Union, or came in for the least share of honor and praise for the grand accomplishments of our common arms. Therein it exposes its real charaoter. In its very accusations of its opponents it unwit tingly publishes itself. llow, pray, would it have . these leading men of the Sonth dealt with f Shall they be perpetually disfran chised, which is - practically Mr. Sumner's thirty -year proposal t What kind of peace and fraternity should we have, with the best minds of one-third of the population of the couatry forbidden to interest themselves in public affairs ? ' What would , the States thus deflowered and palsied amount to? Let as not deceive ourselves by thinking that the Infliction of such a pen lty would not reaot with a terrible fatal ty on ourselves. Barka Bays, "liberty is a good to be improved, not an evil to be lessened. It is not only a pri vate: blessing of the first order, but the vital spring and energy of the State itself, which lias just so much life and vigor as there is liberty in it." We have a class of statesmen sow, however, who fancy that they can im prove en the standard principles and axioms. They bold to restraints, and not to freedom; nominally that freedom may take no hurt, but- really that they may themselves secure all the advantage. ' The country looks at these things just as they are, and not as they are distorted and discolored by the ingenuity of radioal malioe, about to be foiled of its favorite purpose. What the American people demand is the Bpeedy and perfect iraternization of the whole country. If Rebel oflioera ar ready to return to tneir oia allegiance, men one great end of the war has teen gained. As for assorting and placing a population in the South for poli tical purposes, it never oau be done and the oouatry will not wait to see it attempted Wkjft it wants and impatiently desires is pre cisely what it sees is being rapidly and seo- cesitully accomplished by the great constitu tional party or. the Union. A Trjlng Time for Taminaiij Tho ToMI. cftl Kins and the l'lizo Ring. From the Jy. y. Jieraia. Tafcmany is in trouble. Following the bent M tne people 01 an countries in the present y, it wild Indiana are ripe (or revolution CTedyfor a change. They have got Jnt0 U)r vV quarters in an aristocratio neighbor hoc lurrounded by musio balls, a grand op. rU'a ocicjtxwh, a circus, a new hotel and any Lc' of first-class shoddy boarding-housa, r-d tSry miss the old Pewter Mug and the J 'ck rlum lager beer saloons of Frauklin and lorth William streets. ' With their change of CtIon baa come a corresponding disturbance jd. thtfir sentiments towards their old leaders. Seven or eight month Ago, in the freneral ami I charter elections, the Tain man v machine was" I all powerful, bore down every opposition, and carried its candidates into omje by unprece dented majorities. It obtained control of the judiciary, the Legislature, the several elective city departments, the Boards of Su pervisors, Aldermen and Counoilmen, and succeeded in placing one of its principal workers on the Police Commission. It wiped out Mozart, swallowed up the Union Democ racy, and laid the ghost of the Citizens' Asso ciation. One might have supposed that Tarn many, from the sweeping character of its vio toiies last fall, was booked for a long career of at solute power over the affairs of the city of New York. But it begins to show symp toms thus early of a decline more sudden than its recent rise. Miles O'Reilly has departed, and the friendship which with true Irish gene rosity he had terdered to his old enemy after giving him a tremendous whipping is lost for ever. Comptroller Connolly, who heads the Finance Department, while smooth and easy with bis associate leaders, is, as usual, pre pared to take care of himself before any other organization. McLean, the gallant Street Commissioner, gives neither force nor weak ness to any party, being a sort of negative political quantity, with excellent social quali fications. Fernando Wood, having pocketed his leases and abandoned his outside opposi tion, is more to be feared than ever. In the midst of all this the unsettled, dis satisfied element inside the Tammany organi zation is working and working, and boding mischief. It will concentrate in opposition to the nomination of UofTman for Governor, to which the leaders are pledged, and will accept any candidate, from Uuiialo to iirooklyu. in order to defeat him. This inside revolution will be headed by Sheriff James O'Brien, one of the pluckiest, most influential, and efficient of the Tammany braves, and will count in its ranks such Democrats a3 Aldermau Mike Norton, Coroner Flynn, and any number of active politicians from the First Ward to Mackerelville. The worst of the business is that the prize ring has separated from the political ring at the very moment when shoulder bitters are in demand and bruisers are beyond price. John Morrissey, who two years ago forced the nomi nation of lloflman and demanded and received for himself the position of Congressman, now deserts the Tammany leaders and Deinouratio candidates, bets his money heavily on Grant, the great General, and Colfax, the great Know Nothing, and avows his determination to beat Hoffman in the State Convention. Under these circumstances there is only one course for the Tammany leaders to pur sue. They must at ouue look round for some young prize lighter from the o' her side of the water, with good muscle and lots of pluck, enlist him in their cause and pit hiin against Morrissey. It is important that they should have the prize ring on their side. Jem Ward would do if he were younger aud an Irishman instead or. an uugiishuiau. liai as that champion is ineligible, and as such bogus fighters as Ileenau and Coburn are out of the queBtion, they must take O' Baldwin, the Irish giant, or some other Hibernian bruiser, into their pay. They can soon Ot him for office. for Morrissey himself was only naturalized a few weeks before his election to Congress Then if they can pacify. Sheriff O'Brien and will pay their honest debts, which at present they neglect to do, tliey may yet hrklge over the next election and extend their term of power another year, "Who arc for l'cuee 1 from the N. Y. Tribune. General Grant and his supporters are labor ing assiduously to heal the wounds inflicted on our oountry by a parricidal Rebellion and a devastating civil war. They do not propose to do this by surrendering everything to the Rebels and making them lords paramount. They demand that the loyal people of our whole oountry not a part, but all of them shall be placed on as good a footing as the Rebels, and henceforth enjoy equal advantages and opportunities, rights and privileges, with those who squandered one million huuiau lives and five billions of property in a despe rate struggle to divide and destroy the Union. Is that unreasonable f The Rebels are disfranchised in two States only Tennessee and Missouri not by Con gress, nor by Federal authority in any form, but by the loyal people in those Status. If this be right, Andrew Johnson, above all other men, deserves the credit of it; if it be wrong, be should bear the blame. It was he who gave out the watchword "Loyal men, white or black, shall rule America." Xt was he who managed the first election in that State at which Rebels were not allowed to vote. lie thus carried the State for Lincoln and himself in 18C4; but Congress did not count her vote I The Rebels of Tennessee and Missouri want to vote. . We want them enfranchised. But from unmistakable indications, we infer that, if they were this day restored to the : fullest rights of oitizenBhip, they would , use their power to disfranchise the blacks of Tennessee, and perpetuate the vassalage of those of Mis souri. If they will unite with us in favoring universal amnesty and impartial suffrage, we are quite sure that both will be speedily car ried. . But, so long as they demand enfran chisement in order that they may disfranchise thousands who were never Rebels, is it a won der that they excite little sympathy f In the reoently reconstructed States a very Small fraotion of the Rebels are disfranchised. Congrers decreed that bo many of them as bad taken a solemn oath of fidelity to the Constitu tion in order to enjoy the honors and emolu ments of publio station, and had voluntarily, deliberately violated that oath by aiding the Rebellion, bbould not vote until the restriction should be legally abolished. The radioals of Alabama and Georgia have just enfranchised the disfranchised Rebels of those States; the other States will follow as fast as they can safely do so. Governor Soott has strongly recommended this course in South Carolina, and the Legislature will doubtless coincide with hiin, if the Rebels will behave so that they can. , The World insults the friends of nniversal amnesty as follows- "Nothing Very 'favorable can be said of the efficacy or the deathbed repentance; but the consclcnoe whloh is aroused by the terror of such a situation nevertheless takes a Juster view of the misdeeds of liie departing ainner than he ever acknowledged in the vigor of health aud hope. The Hopublljan party Is lu that dlalreasiug sltnatlou, and la trying the ertecls of a too tardy repeutanoe of tulnm which It committed withouiootnpunclloa when it thought It had a stroug bold upon Ufa. Xua foregoing paragraphs, commenting on aud commending the notion of the Alabama Legis lature In removing political disabilities from white citizens, are a complete aotcuowludg weut that those disabilities ought not to have been Imposed. For what Is the ground on wulch the Ulfcfranohlsement ha bueu defended? Why, thattheHoutbern leuders.were so disaffected and disloyal that they eouid not safely be trusted to exercise political rights. If the reason was eood. the disabilities should have been con. tmued until there was evidence of a bettor state of mind. - But the radical organs dally de clare that the Hebel leaders are growing con stantly worse and worse thai, their attitude is bolder. Is more reckless, contumacious, aud de riant, at the present lime than It has been be' f'r since the close of the war. . Aud ynt ihla la liie time selected for the removal of the dim billuett no often declared to bo an IndiNpensable precaution agalust Kebel Influence! If the cur mm nunc! accounts of the Houtbern temper are correct, tUi precaution -was i never necessary aa at this moment. ao Either dlsfranchlRement an1 dlsiMll'l" were- - never - tieeeaaary, or It la ab mrd to remove them no- -tint, 1. if tbr oe a iy truth In the radio! re pre mitnUou. of tu " aeut condition of the Suuihorn inlad. Tn U ftudden rerqoval, no noon nfier they wir I n powd, Is an extorted ounfwHhjii i Lninoeof main pillar ot tue r 1 1 -i 1 twill.. w t roitn fiom Ibe beginning. The Tribune' euo iralu'iis on the llberalliy ( luti Alaiiimi L elmaMir are preposteronn. Thn .nrpl-b Lenl-laturf are uiere puppuU of ih4 Noriuern rwdio.ln. Tie dlRabllltlea are remoter! rtpi ue i he Tlepublt can leaders have beenme frightened, Ttiey dr not encounter lhn Julnmeni of tun people upjii their policy in all tn-tiieon l-f irmity," - - Commute by the Tribune. The views and Inculcations of this journal touching amnesty aud enfranchisement should ly this time be well knou. We have been petting them forth persistently for more than three years. With General Grant's conUaut efforts in the same direction, the publio is also familiar. And no man can well be ignorant of the fact that the disabilities imposed on thn prominent Rebels by Congress were intended to be temporary, and tob removed so soon as they could be with safety. But the Rebels are as defiint and maltguant at ever, urges the World. That is, unhappily, too true; and hence the failure of the late ef fort to enfranchise them In Tennessee. We wish they would let us help them out of their bobble; but if they choose an opposite oourse, we must submit. Yet it by no means follows from the fact in sisted on by The World that they muit rman disfranchised. If General Grant were thij day elected, their claws would be cut so that they might be turned loose without fear. And whenever his election shall have been insured by the popnlar vote of November 3 ensuing, we confidently trust that they can be enfran chised without danger.- Frauk-lilair's revolu tion will then be exploded; so will all their dreams of upsetting the new btate Govern ments, driving out the "carpet-baggers," and reducing the blacks to serfdom. Congress, by a two-thiids vote, may legally remove their disabilities. We are sure it may safely do so whenever Grant's election is assured. If they insist on keeping themselves disfranchised as long as may be, very well.' The Democrats in the next Congress cannot possibly have power to remove thwr disabilities; the Republicans ill have. Will thv take counsel of their sente or their malignity f "Democratic Doctrine for Workliijineiu" From the A'. Y. World. "It appe .is 1 1 ho oi o of t in fa d :i en hI V o tllnts Dl thrt Denioe: atlc lti y. '-lal, vil li Dg men eball volemi lm li t ni, loy -rs iMinmau i; arjdlbal.il any umiIiI: fj tun m itj.U'M tu have a political intnd of hin mri!, lie mid i fa lauil y HhHll bo BtHrved Thu Wad llruiip'i n, ivuo helped matte tho I). m .ci .i'i, nl.n lonn. said the other day lu what trie World praises hs a spiech which "doe h."uio- ( i lie mrlom character," "let us not employ In tnoftrure any one, white or bluett, who ulves his aid to tbe Republican pan v. "This plunk of theD-rii Mr.: 'iO platf-inn wo I'd considerably simplify fl.cil.iiR. Suppose a Democratic capl'uliit'. vin..loys a hundred or two hundred m'-n; thy have only, 11 seems, according to he present D uno cratlo doctrine, to numbly a-ik their innster for whom he wishes them to vole, and be has only to put his bauds in his pickeiH, pull our, tne ticket he happens to f ivnr, and distribute It to them. "Vote that or siHrve." Is his gentle and persnaelve lantunte to what, a f iend of Wade Hampton's, also a great Democratic lit? ht, Mr Hammond, used to o 1 1 1 the "mudsills of society." New York Evening Post- We have nothing to Bay to the captious spirit which snaps at an isolated expression of one publio man, and holds a whole party responsible for his haste or indiscretion. But the advice attributed to Wade Hampton sug gests some it-Unctions whiau we take this opportunity to lay before tne publio. The fact that such advice is given and will perhaps be acted upon, is one of the most con vincing proofs of the mischievous conse quences of the radical policy in the South. It proves that in one of the lairest and most fruitful sections of the country enterprise is paralyzed and the supply of labor is in excess of the means for its profitable em ployment. In a thriving and prosperous community, where great publio and innu inerable private undertakings are in pro gress, and computing with one another lor hands to carry them on, no class of citizens are more independent than the laboring population. it one man will not employ theru, hundreds of others are glad of their services. Employers who are growing rich by the prosecution'of their business cannot afford to have it brought to a stand. They will at tach less importance to the political opinions of laborers than to a full and constant supply of their labor. . in a prosperous community. an attempt to control the votes of the working olaBBes by threatening them with loss of em ployment, would be despised and laughed at The advice' given by General liauiptou is a melancholy aud distressing proof of the abject condition of the Southern laborers, aud of -the stagnation of (southern business, under the hideous misrule of the Republican party. The natural capacity ot the (south to give full employment to all its laborers h prove ! (.among other things) by the enormous in crease in the price of slaves previous to the war. The raising of the Southern staples, construction of the Southern railroad'), and growth of the Southern towns- made the competition bo brisk for the limited 'supply of labor, that, lu the eatn net s of employers to secure as much as they ueedeii,: t hey were constantly oyer-bidding ou another aud rnnnirg up its pi ice. When slavery was abolished, the 6am oau-ea ouhi to have pioduced similar eflcis. luntcad of com peting lor the lite seivic- or laborers, em ployers should have competed' with equal activity tor their aoi-.ual, r lueir monthly, or their daily service. There was much ot this kind, of competition .ev-u uuder the slave Bjstem. Nothing was more ootumou than for the owners of slaves to lure thr-tu out for wages, and they never failed to Hud re.uiuu rative employment. It is all the fame to a Southern employer whether be pays hij;h wags to the laborer , hiuibelt or o niti-t otuer mau who claims to own him.- WU-u slavery lell. industry ought to have goue on all the same; and the wages system wm bmter Biiitea thau the clave system to a community so itnpove risked as the couth was altr au exhausting war. if the demand lor labor had been a great as before, the freed mn would have rapidly crown to a coudiuon of in Idpnudeunu by the competition of their services. But after four years of ireedom they are in so de ... ... . . , .. gmuea a state mat euipioyuiem is rather a boon to them thau a heuttit to those who fur hifch it; while in every pio.peruus aud well governed community it is d rcutly the reverse Iso Northern employer would da'e utter such a threat as that tnad" by Wnln Hampton; for be would punish nobody but hinnelf by put ting it into execution Ha would stop his own profits; his haudi would imuiu'llately find other employers. Now, what is the rafon that the tabor sup ply in the South i i in exccsH of the effective demand for it? It is owin? eutirely to the absurd and oppressive noli. iy of the lUdluals They have kept the Bouth in so unsettled aud attracted a state as to blight ail enterprise and to Convert iuto discontented spoutiuir po liticians men who would be otherwise enaed in repairing their broken fortunes. . Though hot little property bus .been confiscated, the pieuace which has been held over tun prinot pal property owners has been soaroely less mischievous thau aitnal confiscation. The prolonged exception of men of pro perty from the benefit of an amnesty ope rated as a flaw in their title, so tut they could give no security for the lonoi which they needed to set the machinery of production in full operation. Tiie oiif necessity of a ieetiou of country so exhausted, was a large influx of foreign oapital. The vengeful policy of the Republican party for bade cautious capitalists to risk their moony without security in a oornmanity that was kept in a state of turmoil and disturbance, and held in the iron grip of military despot ism. The future of the Sonth wan too uncertain.' under this provoking experi ment, for the men of prudence to embark in any enterprise which looked to dis tant returns. The consequence is, that the South has been enlisting merely from baud to mouth, and all its greater interests continue to lie prostrate. It was for the common ad vantage of all sections that the war should have been forgotten an peedily as possible by the absorption of all the best business talent of the South in industrial recuperation. If proper encouragement had been given for Southern activity to have taken this direction, and things had been put upon such a footing that oapital would have flowed in, to be employed in great material enterprises, the demand for Tabor would have bo outrun the supply that every thrifty Ireedman would have been on the sure road to independence. '15ut in that case," It may be said, "the negroes would not now have been in possession of the ballot." True, they woutd not; nor can we see that the ballot is of any advan tage to a class who cannot vote with indepen dence. But the elective franohlse would have come to thn negroes in time as a oonsequence o! the thnlt aud prosperity of the South, lu the competition for their labor, the different States would have bid against each other by offering politioal advantages, just as our Western btates did in their competition for immigrant settlers when they made voters of unnaturalized aliens. The laboring clashes can have influence only when the demand for their services is so great as to make them in dependent of their employers. Ihe ability to give au independent vote is the most important qualification for the suffrage. The laboring classes are not exalted but degraded by a nominal t ossessiou of the privilege when their condition is so abject that their employ ers can coutrol their votes. The first care of those who wished well to the negroes should have bten to have made them sharers in the mateiial prosperity of the South; bnt a labor ing population can thrive only when their employers are prosperous. The life of industry is the rivalry ot profitable undertakings the kind of rivalry thit can never have place in au impoverished and unsettled community where credit Is blighted aud enterprise pros trated by the uncertainty that hangs over the future. Whenever the material prosperity of the South lieglns to be built up on a stable foui da iou, and its magnificent resources are in 1 e full course of development, the demand for labor will bo far exceed the supply that the fieednn-n like the workingmen who engage in the frequent labor strikes in the JNortn will te more likely to dictate terms to their employers than to suffer any oppression at thei:' bauds. The Southern Opposition What Is its Auture'i From the Ar. Y. Times. 'ihe Northern Demooratio press, having mutilated or suppressed the extravagant uttei antes of their Southern allies, e fleet sur prise at the ditgust they have called forth. liibtsd of meeting fairly aud squarely the irtuea raiced by Lobb, Wade Hampton, bun men, and others ot that sort, the Northern friends of Seymour and Blair refuse to see in the Rebel declarations anything more than teatonable opposition. H is an old trick this of hiding the real thing, and then con founding things that are different. It is played now by ignoring all that is objection able in the Kebel displays, and treating them as legitimate resistance to ' an obnoxious policy. The Philadelphia Age for instance, asbumes an indignant air, thus: "We demand oi tue,e Nortuei u presses which object to Boutt. enters seeking redress of thoir u lontcs through the ballot, wuether ttiey desire to establish lu the Houtb any kind or form of govt rnmect in wblon tuls mode of redress shall e niuittei? uecuuee this la what it cornea to. Ji.vciy oppoemonio tne radical ticket, accord. lug to i nil leal lueas, la support ot Hebel due. trine. 'Jo deny that the wuite race auould be held in subjection to the black, Is au opposition to me rumens, ana inererore tne tuoel doc trine: therefore anybody who holds It should not, be permitted to vote, aud auy body who does vol- lor it, voles witn tne iteoeia. liut it la a oootjlne peculiar neither to the North nor the Niutp. xt la couimou to all white men. Keool ,lc!ing, ihtn, that tne whole oi oar theory of g'tvei unieiik ib loupuea on mis ngci oi tiny part oi the country to uige by means of elections; wha'ever ibey may, righily or wrongly, believe to oe tneir rums: rcoiieoiiog, too. that it was not. becaUKe the Mouth struggled to maintain ct 1 1 hiii riiiwu. nut because it sought to main. it.ln them by foice, we abk what It is Hampton kii ruiotM. ii.rtiua wutu it" lotfuuuob but BUO civb ox seymour, ana Jtsiair with his own WlHPtB." , , - If the Southern opposition were confined to the lair exercise of lawful and peaceable means, we should have nothing to say against it, except on the ground ot its own merits. riuuu au opposition, however zealously con ducted, would not furnish a valid reason for impugning the loyalty or the objects of its pro- u.i.ieiij. Any form of government under which this incde ot obtaining redress might be dis coiiioged, . or branded .as an offense, ' would deseive all the cenoure of the A tie and its fiieitds. " ' ' ' 1 '' 1 ' '" : - ve nave recently shown, however, on 'no Jti-r. authority than that ot the Charleston Altrcury, that the newly formed governments Miu.lt oi the largest liberty to their opponents. No ibstacle U offered to those who are in opposition;- no autboiity invoked, to. restrain or lm 111m their endeavors. The opposition' is, in truth, at once bo free and bo powerful that the me re boasttul of the Kebel prints claim for it a certainty of sncceBS in at least three ol the reconstructed States.:. No stronger proof oould be had , of the absolute freedom of opinion and action which properly belongs to republican government But with this lawful opposition the South ei extremists whom the -doe undertakes to dt fend are noC eatihllrd. They do not merely aim at out-voting the Republican party, they threaten that it black votes . determine the result, it shall not be respected. They de not limit their advocacy of change te the ohan uels and ageucieB which the constitutions of the several States provide; they dehounoe theFe cobbtitutiojis, and the Governments or ganised under them, as unworthy of respect, and threaten them with a violent overthrow if the Demooratio ticket be eleoted. They do not propose to overcome the evils attendant upon the sudden and universal enfranchise ment of the blacks by the means which sups-, rior intelligence and property ooufer; they' dt clare, on the ooutrary, that white votes alone tball settle the oontest between the candi dates, and that negro enfranchisement shall cease. They contend, generally, after the manner of frank Blair's letter, that the new governments have no claim to the obedience' or bopport of the whites, and that the first outy oi a Demouiatiu president will be to de- 'loy them by Federal force. Carrying out this principle, Wade Hampton has maintained that the black votes fehall not be included in the count, and that M a majority of whites are for Seymour, be shall be installed in the 213 & 220 S. FRONT ST. OFFER TO THB PIKE KIE AM) BOURBON WniSRIES, L BOT, OT lt-OC5t l-0, lOT, nud 1808. t . A1S FlilE USE LIE AND BOIKBOX WHISKIES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from to 1845. Liberal contract will be entered Into for lota, tnbond at Dlstillary.ofthla yearn' msnuuetur.', White House laws and bayonets to the con trary notwithstanding. This being the general charaoter of the Southern opposition, we are warranted in de nouncing it as an embodiment of Hebel doc trine. The name would be as nothing if it were not earned by those to whom it is ap- plhd. They winoe under it because its appli cation is deserved. For opposition of the kind we have de scribed cannot be confounded with that to which the country was formerly accustomed, or with that which now manifests its power nnder the parliamentary system of hulaud. Opposition whiob is entitled to consideration is uniformly carried on within limits defined ... . . ... . i by the laws. This maices war upon vue iano themselves, and Is therefore revolution. gOAOMA WOE COMPANY. Established for the sale ot rCHECALirtlBMi WISE. Tbls Couiparjy oner lor sale pore California Wines. W111K CLAHKP, BliUHKf, MUSCATEL. AKUHXICA, CHAJiFAGNE, . PUHE OBAl'K UK ANDY roltale auo retail. 'l of their on grnwlrg, aud wairtmted to contain not tdog but Ibe pure J alee of lite "'lit'cl Vo. u BANK street, Phllsflelph'a. HaHN & QUAlN, AgeuUi 84lTirp JAMES CAR8TA1RS, JR., Kos. 12C WALNUT aud 21 URANITE St?., IMPORTER OF Brandies, Wines, Uin, Olive Oil, Etc. Etc., AMD COMMISSION MEROHAMT, ton THE SALE OF PURE OLD RYE, WHEAT, AND DOUR- DON WHISKIES. 4 112 FLAGS, BANNERS, ETC. 1868. PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST FLAUS, DANGERS, TRANSPARENCIES, AND LANTERN'S, . Campaign Badges, Medals, and Pins, OF BOTH CANDIDATES. 'J en different itylee. sent on receipt of One Dollar and Fifty Cenw. Aceots wanted everywhere. Fiass In llDslm, Banting, and Bilk, all slzea, whole, ale and retail. Political Clnba fitted out with everything they m require. ' ' GALL ON OB ADDKEBS . ' ' .' ' 1 .' W. F. 8CHEIOLE, No. 49 SOUTH THIRD STREET, ilti Uirp PHXLAPBLPH IA. INSTRUCTION. gTBVEN8PALB INSTITUTE, BOARDING SCHOOL fOR YOUNG T.ATtnp term Board, Tuition, ate per acholaatlc year, S0t . . : ' : NO EXTRAS. . utrcnlara at Meaara, Fairbanks dk Xwlng'a, No, TU UHE8NUT Street; also at Meeara. T, B. Peterson Brother', So. 808 OHEH2IUT Street, ' Addresa, personally or by note, ' , K FOSTEB BBOWNK, Prlnotpai, lfl l thmtl i . Sooth Amboy. N, X OHESNCT STREET FEMALE SEMINARY V P. PHILADELPHIA. in ii aunismx ana mihs diliatb will reopen tbelr BoardlDK and Day Hchool (Thlny-s tveuih beaaiou), Heuleinber Id, at No. Ml Uheatiut ilrrth Particulars bom circulars, 1 10 to lo l PAINTED PHOTOS. A NEW THIN Q IN ABT. BKBLTN PAINTED PHOTOS, ; J A. S. ROBINSON, No. 910 CHESNUT Street, Has Jnst received a superb collection ot B KB LIN PAINTED PHOTOGRAPHS OF I FLOWERS. ' They are exquisite gems of art, rivalling la beauty, naturalness ot tint, and perfection of form a great variety of the choicest ezotlo flowering plants. They are mounted on boards of three sizes, and sold from 26 cents lo W and at each. For framing and the album they are Incomparably beautlfuL 8 16 I CARRIAGES. GARDNER & FLEMING! CAIiniAQK BUIL.DKUS, 0. 21 SOUTH FIFTH STREET, BFXOW WALNUT, j , , : , : . ! An awortmnt I NEW AND SECOND-HAND CARRI-'-OES always 00 hand at 'REAbONABLX eaiutM. . sBfinwfca j DYEING, . SCOURING, ETC. F R EN OH STEAM H O O U I N o. ALtniDYLL, MARX & CO.3 ' ' .... . ' '. i ; . KO. It SOUTH BLCVERTB TOT AKB i si HACH m-rnmrntt - fiu mn 218 & 220 S. FRONT ST. 4 & CO TRADE, IN ' LOTS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. JEWELRY I JEWELRY! S. E. Corner Tcuth and Chcsnut. NEW STOKE. NEW GOODS. WRICCIN8 & CO., (Formerly WrlnKlns A Warden. Fltth and Clieenntl Invite Bttfutiou lu tltetr f.ew Jewelry eture, a K. cor ner '1NTH ant I'H UHNUT Htrema. "i Wears now nrppnrnl. with our Kxtennfve Stock. to Oflor MR KAT 1N1UI:KM KNTS to bnyerH, WATCH KH ot the niont relobrated nitvkers, JEW. K.LltY, ann f-lI.VKR WAKE, always the latest de alpDH BIKl npfit qnnl lllen. Miindn especially riextirned for BRIDAL PRESENTS, rprnriilur attention given to the Repairing ol WATCH La AND JKWtLKV. l mwt WHIGQIN8 & CO., S. K. Corner Tenth and Cnesnut Streets, tms LAD0HUS & ccC 'DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELERS.) WITCHKS, JEWELRY A Hll.TKB WAKk. .WATCHES and JEWELET EEPAIRED. Would Invite particular attention to their lares and elegant assortment of LADIES' AND GENTS' WATCHES of Ame-lean and Foreign Makers of thelUntst Quality. In&oldandbliverratra. H " A vsrle'y of Independent Becond, for horse latest styles, la li (imint. Ladled' and Gents' CHAINS ol and 18 ku BTTTON AND EYELET STUDS tn great variety newest patterns. SOLID SILVERWARE for Bridal presents; Plated -ware, etc itrpainug aoue in the beet manner. and warw 8'HP ranted. FINE WATCHES. We keep always on hand an assortment of LADIES' AND GENTS' "FINB WATCHES' Of the best American and Foreign Makers, all war. ranted to glvecomplete satlsiaetlon, and at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. FAR It ft BROTHER, Importers ot Watches, Jewelry, Musical Boxes, etc U Usmtbgrp No. 824 UHE9NUT St., below Fourth. Kspfdal attention given to repairing Watches and Musical Boies by FIRST-CLASS workmen. SPECIAL NOTICE. UNTIL SEPTEMBER 1, 1868, I WILL CLOSE DAILY AT 5 P. M. . W. RUSSELL, Impci ter and Dealer In French Clocks, Watches Fine Jewelry, and Sliver Ware, Ko. 22 NorUi SIXTH Street, ES26 PHILA DELPHI A. MILLINERY. M R S. R. DILLON, NO. BUS AND S33 SOUTH STREET, Has a large assortment ot MILLINERY. Ladles', Misses', and Children's Silk Velvet, Felt Straw and Fancy Bonnets and llata ot the lates styles. Also, bilks, Velvets, Ribbons, Crapes Feathers, Flowers, Frames, etc, etc, wholesale and retail. 8192 ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETC. B K B I C K & SONS' . SOUTH WARK FOUNDRY, . No. 490 WASHINGTON AVENUE, Philadelphia, WILLIAM WRIGHT'S i PATENT VARIAHr.w ; CUT OF STEAM-ENGINE, Regulated by the Governor, MERRICK'S SAFETY HOISTING MACHINE. Patented June, 1888. ............ . DaVID JOY'S , PA1KNT VALVKLKsS STEAM HAMMER. ' ' D. M. WESTON'S PATENT SELF-CENTERING, SELF-BALANCING CENTRIFUGAL SUGAR-DRAINING MACHINE ' AMD HYDRO EXTRACTOR, ' For Cotton or Wuoileu Atauufaoimexs. 7 lOmwf ly itfpfa , PENH STEAM. ENGINE AND sSJlT ' h it aOii.Js.lt WUHKo.-NKAFIi0 4 LEVY. ii...LiiaL AND TlifcOKUTIUAL KNUiHiKKH MACHINIST. BUILEM-MAKiaw, .BbA.UK.1 sMl'i'lio, aua iOLJSOKiOS, havlug lor many jean jeeu In successful opwailou, and beau exclusively ugutced la building aud repairing Marine aud River fcOKluee, high aud low-prMMure, Iron Roller., Water tanks. Propellers, etc etc., respectfully otter ibelr tervices to ihe publio as belug fully prepared lo con traoi for engluee of all sues, Marine, River, aud Mtaliouary; having seis of patterns of different sises are prepared lo execute onlers wlin quick despatch, fe.very deecrlpilou of pattern-making made at tue shortest notice. High aud Low-prestnre Flue Tubular and Cylinder Hollers, oi the best Pennsylva nia charcoal Irou. Forglnge of all sizes and kinds iron aud Brass Castings of all desorlptloua. Holi Turning. Scr-w Cutting, and all other work connected with the above biislBfBH. Drawings and aueeineatlona for all work done at IbetsietoUshnient tree of charge, and work guaran- The subscribers have ample wharf-dock room rot repairs of boats, where I hey can He In perfect safetv aud are provided with shears, blocks, fails, etui aui! fox raising heavy or light weights. I . " John p. ckvy, REACH and PALM-hUt Streets. J.VAUeHB! HKBBIOK, WIUJAM B, MUBICOX OODTHWAKK joniv a. cop. rUUAUBf. . . . FIFTH AND KJ W ASHINUTON StreeM, ! , ,! PHlLADKLPHIa, . , . r-..,TM'KiUtK BOS. ' t ' DINGINUKKH AND MACHINISTS," manufacture lilgh and Lew prewture Steam Engines for Lund, Rivtr, aud Marine bervioe. Rollers, Gasometers, 'latins, Irou Boats, eta, ' (Jastlngs ut all kinds, either Irou or branR. ' Iron Frame Roots for Gas Work, Workshops, ana Railroad btatloas. etc. Retorts aud tias Machinery, ot the latest and most Improved construction, Kvery description of Plantation Machinery, also Sugar, Saw, aud Urlst Mills, Vacuum Paun, OH Steam Trains, Defecators, Filters, Pumping, Ku. glues, etc. bole Agents for N. Btlleux's Patent Sngar Boiling Apparatus, Nesmytn's Patent Hteaiu Hammer, ana .Asptnwell A VSoomey's Patent Ceutrllkgai tiugar Dialling Macblute. 8' , COTTON' AN P Fi.AX, SAIL DUOK AND OINVAA. , Ot all numbers aud brands. Tent, Awning, Trnuk, and Wukou Oover Duck. Also Paper Manufacturers' Drlor Felts from one to t ssveial (est witluj l'aitlli g. Belling. Kali Twine, etc, r' JuiiN V, f.VKRMAN A CO.,' ' No. lug JUNES' Alier .