2 SPIRIT OF THE FRESS. Buitokul omiosa of hr i.eamro journals mON COHttRSt ToriOS LOMPILI5D FTBHT DAT FOR THB KTESINTJ TEuKOBAPH. JIil!iul Kiiimoro. From they. Y. 'lyilnme. A vry piyBteriouH aui thrilling qnetton ban recuutljr agitatml tun iiioul world; and, although w ciuiiiot at, pt. rrul sen how its au BWt oau jioasiblj all'-ct, the rull of the 1're Biiien lial canvas, y-t, lor the pake of fair play, we aie williug u t-tatn all whioli we oau learn upon the extiitinc topio. It fa pretly ctrtaiu, we Wlit-ve, that, Mr Millard Fillmora is at prt-aent lfinliun tue iiiflnnune of his veue rable name to tl caue of IJI.iir aud Seymour, nor dons this in th lat a-ttouiaU ns, lor, with his ofien-avoived opinions, we do not see why Mr. Fillmore should Lot naturally gravitate luto that bIourIi, though h has Buoh a pro pensity for ehittmtf hiit p )liiioal quarters that any tew party Htartiug bwtween this time aud the elect ion, nu I olleriug hi in a sominatioa for tin 1'rfMdeuoy, would piobahly secure his pithless co-opera-tioii. It may he cou.illrreii, however, as set tled that for the presnut Mr. Millard Fillmore is upon the Hide of liUir and Seymour a fact which is of more importance to him than it is to the puMio in gi-iiMi-al or the Ddinocratto party in particular. Tuh, however, Is a trilla. The main question D'iw is whtUr Mr. Fill more "has the gout f" Tin World recently as$ertel that he lia it drealrully. The sim journal now assorts that he never had it at all I He "is one of Jhe most abstemious of men." Ilis father was "oue of the most ab stemious of men." Very abstemious men, it is true, point-time? dohave thegoutj ithaseven heen known to ulllict old ladies, jind this fact may have given rioe to the rumor respecting Mr. Fillmore, whirl), we are pleased to hear, is without the least iouudaUou. It may niak-t Very little difl'oreiioe to maukiud whether Mr. Fillmore has the gout or not, but it mikes a great difference to tlia. geutlemin himself; lor to join the Blair aud Seymour party must, tinder any circuiu-taucs, lie a great trial of Lis Btomauh, aud when that oran becomes enfeebled, the gout is apt to ily to it with the most disastrous result. The country, how ever, may now dis ni-a i's apprehensions. It has Leen suggested, it is true, that Mr. Fill more may have rheumatism, a complaint so like the gout that ci,e is oi'teutimes mistaken for the other. If the Bufltlo Courier cm honejtly as-sure u that Air. Fillmore is en tirely tree Irom rlii-um-itisui, and can truth fully add that he has no symptoms of lum bago, society at lare, we have reason to be lieve, will expeiit-ncH ui) 1 ui mediate and tre n.tLdtua rtlief. The I'.iriy f Franl. From the ClUcuyo J'ost. The so-called, but, lal.-My called, Democratic) party is the party tbat most favors the labor ing man, is it ? It is the party above all others, that, according to its own claim, is the party of labor against, capital. We think the claim is a fraud, a cheat, a swindle, a lie; bat let ns see the tacts: Labor in the South is mostly done by black men. The black men are, indeed, the labor ing men of the S nuh'TU country. When one has a job to do, he says "I will go aud get so many hands," meaning, of course, bo many pairs of black hands, each pair having a body, a head, a pair ot eyes, aud au immortal soul attached; and in the weuse of the country so truly is the black man the laboring mau, he means lio'.hing else. The black tuau, with this soul, the3e legs, these hands, aud this bo fy was formerly a sUr0t hlnvery ia a oaralctu hjr trlluU io mma cheated, or rather, as we pre'er the word, was robbu!, of all the proceeds of his labor, except that he had a peck of meal aud three pouu Is of bacon a week, and oue pair of shoes, oue hat and two suits ot poor clothes a year, worth in all peihaps fifty dollars, as the gross result of his endless toil. The war aud the conse quent proclamation of emancipation put an eud to slavery; and what is the con dition of the black man now, and what is his relation to the Democratic party f .As soon as this laborer became free, did that party hold to him auy such speooh as this: "Oh, brother, how shall we aid you? You, poor you, ignorant you, low in the social scale you, oppressed by tyranny you, struggliug against the hard forces of this world you, formerly owned by capital you, with uothiDg to begin with houseless, laud less, unprotected, friendless you, a man as we are men-you, with a soul and a hereafter you, come hither under our protection. We will tenderly care for your iutirmilies. We will forgive your ignorauce aa we know what caused it. Come, learn, improve. These are your rights as men; take and wisely use them. Meanwhile our icis is over you. VVhotio op presses you attacks us f " To have said this would have been Democratic. And Demo cracy ia the application of Christianity te the all airs of State. But, did the falsely called Democratic party do this, or auy ot these things t On the contrary, it showed the bar sliti. 'ttr its bastardy iu iis acts. It was, as might, from its winking at blavery, have been expected, quite another aong thai this party sung. See what it did iu Mississippi: "l'ou nigger," eaid the Democrats, "you working mgger, you black, loud smelling, ignorant, aud barbarous nigger there is your place; take it. There is helotiBiu, peonage, serfdom all that slavery asked for with none of the ameliorations it conferred 1 Yon shall own no laud. You thaU have no civil rights. Your oath b1hU not be regarded. You shall be a thing under our fee. You aud your chil dren stall be apprenticed as we choose. Your wages Bball be at our discrcti n. You shall have no schools. Iguoraut you are, aud igno rant you shall remain. Lriw you are, aud you Bhall not be raised up. You are brutalized, and we will bru alizn you still more!" This was what Micsisipji said; other Southern States repented the formula, aud all the De mocracy of the North cried, Amen I Yret this party is Democratic, aud the Republicans are radical aud destructive ! But we need not go back for instances. The day and its hihtory areauluVient. At this hour, what does the South want ? Slavery f She knows tLat that is impossible; but she would Lave the Learest appioach that can be made the Mack m-n as toilers and the white race as e i) j overs the black man as a laborer for such poor pay a3 his white employers will give hiuu, and the whites as the recipients ot the fruit ot Lis toil. If tdavery was a pytem of pay, the system now striven for is oue of half pay or part pay. Iu either case, robbery is what is sought robbery by the foims of the law. Having the laboiiug man beneath their feet, will not the iuReunity of the Southerner do the rebt ? If they may not Lave all the laborers' wages, may they not Lave a part ? llow cruel in the Republicans to insist upon the obtervauce of that ltw whiuU biuds all communities together the laborer U worthy Of his Lire a full day's wag-8 for au honest day's work. For striving tor th's law, and its application to every man on who.n thj t li iliw Of the flag falls, the LVpuhli i.ins are on tenilied. Yt t our opp'tiiHii'.rt lUn tlje l'tb uing man's party are Di inoni is. Is it u t t i .n thht ctitaiu political definitions Wiio rci-.u '( A 'cw Padlcnl Organ. From the N. T. World. New York is at last to have a real represent ative organ of the genuine Radioal party. The lending men of this party, of whom it may be f aid, as it was of the farmer's horse, that they are "rum ones to look at but rare ones to go," have for some time past been very restive under the dnll conservative weight imposed upon them by the moral cowardice aud ego tistical carnal-tnindedness of the Tribune. They feel that the imminent defeat and disso lution of the old Republican party mast ba largely attributed to the halting and uuosrUiu leadership cf that journal. O.ie af'.er another II. G. Lafl denied all the vital aud exacting ai tides of the radical faith. He has op-nly abandoned the saving grace of Free L ve, either under the influence of some mysterious riren whose raine occasionally appears in the "Personal" column of the liera'd, or out of a low and wretched subservi ency to the prejudices of the fashionable circles into which the 'J'libnne has been en deavoring to make its way since the Uuiou League got into Madison avenue, aul the "blockheads" once more receive the "scare crow" into their favor. II. J. is supposed to Lave become possessed of a few Unit-d States bonds, and it is to this circumstance that the real radicals impute Lis recent aud ostentatious repudiation, also, of another pacred principle of their creed, the "cimiuu nity of goods," of which for years he hal been the trusted and truculent advocate. Fre quently, too, of late, the Tribune has been obterved to uee profane language of a Port which would eeeiu to iulicate that the editor is willing to wink at the narrow aud soul de grading dogma ot the existence of a Supreme Br-ing. Facts liko these Lave naturally excited a profound disgust in eveiy well-regulated radi cal niind, and those who still hope to achieve the final aud complete annihilation of the moral Blavery involved in the ideas of a mono gamio union between the sexes, aud of a cou fctilutional union between S ates, have for some time been looking abroad over the coun try for a more trustworthy opponent of the spirit of progress aud of the genuine radical temper. "Auractious," said Fourier, under the calm and convicting gazs of whose ifcjurtd ghost the guilty taoo even of II. (i. must sometimes blanch byonl its native pallor "attractions are piopoitional to d'S- tmies." The hour having come the man has come with it, aud with the man the news paper I That well-known and truly representative radical, the Hon. Smelli'ougus l'oldoodie, who fire years Ago was a type-setter iu tin olli :e of the bkowhegan Cutumuunt, hut who is now the prosperous propiietur of the most widely circulated political weekly in the world, the Crosstowu Itutlirul, published at Crosstowu, iu Florida, has made up his mind to establish in New York, a real, ringing, snorting, slash ing, smiling, cursing, swearing, stamping, lirBt-clafs daily radical newspaper. No mush aud milk-eating, sentimentalizing, turnip planting, prize strawberry touting sardines will be employed iu the compilation, composi tion, and distribution of the New York Hom iny llaukul. The Honorable Theophilus Cal licott, pardoned out for the purpose by Governor Feu'.on, will take charge of its financial column, and the Honorable Aaron Alpeoria Bradley, of Georgia, Sing-Sing, aud B ston, will he associated wi'h the iucisive and irresistible Smellfunj-as in the political direc tion of the jonrnal. All that the Tribune tquiims away from and dodges, the HaJiml will boldly and idoquently advocate. It will give voice to the deep and hitherto uunttered aspirations which a tyrannical society has thus far repressed in i,he bosoms ot the thousauds oi tiue and ptactical radicals upon whom the gas- perambulating policeman are now s altered to throw their talse and sickly glare. Th"se profoundly micuudei stood victims of the faith that is in them, theBe to whom Free Love is a leality, and the community of goods a creed to live by, have never yet enjoyed their just share in the counsels, though they have greatly contributed to the success, of the radical party. They held up the right arm of Stanton during the darkest hours of the great rebellion, and history alone will oue day do justice to their services iu the detection of "disloyalty" and the suppression of that licentious freedom of individual opinion whioh was the life of Copperheadism. The Tribune Las bttn willing to profit by their sacrifices, but never to recognize their rights a3 a great organized influence in the party. AH this the Honorable Siuelll'ungus l'oldoodle will see put to rights. Those whose bold and lusty souls, chafing tinder the insolence of the chu'ohes, the brutality of bankers, and the contumely of the policeman's club, the Tribune has had no power to comfort with its wishy-washy drib tdings from the pap-boats, and the panada-pots of the Union League Club, will now be male glad by the glowing utterances of Foldoodle. l'oldoodle means to force the fighting, l'ol doodle will speak up for universal miscegena tion at the South, and for the abolition of matrimony at the Noith; for confiscating the estates of Rebels, and for carving up thd bloated opulence of the few into the jovial com petence oi the many, l'oldoodle will demand the suppression of the pulpit, and the simulta neous erection of the guillotiue for the venders of lager-beer, for Democratic editors, and for all who wear clean shirts. For our own part we need not say that we look forward with much compla euoy to this coming event iu New Y'ork journalism. If there is one thing we like rather than another, it is a straight forward and bold antagonist. To us Smell fungus' political principles are detestable, but we Lonor his pluck and his enterprise ama zingly, l'oldoodle as a radical will be the right man in the right place. Behind him will rally all the real constituents of the radical force, all who Late their fellow-creatures aud de spise them; all who rejoice iu profanity aud in violence, the lawless aud the iguoraut, the soLtups who make the popularity of such as Butler, and the noodles who make the repu tation of such as Sumner. Welcome, then, to l'oldoodle, aud let the Tribune make way for the real radical organ 1 The Democratic Appeal to the rocket. i'Vcm the N. Y. Timn. There cau be lo objection to the earnest ress or fiequeiicy with which Democratic orators appeal to the pockets ot the people iu favor of reduced taxation aud economy in ex penditures. The public mind has Leen so debauched by habits of personal extravaganoe, that even dull times may have compensating advantages in their tendency to necessitate thiilt. And the unavoidable iavishness of the war period so diverted the attorn ion of parties from, the wise frugality which beat befits republican government, that all just criticism iu the direction of diminished outlay deserves to be weh oiutd. Only it should be just, or the pretended remedy will bo worse than the disease. Aid the prevalent Democratic criticism does not Lappeti to be jut. It is not Lonest or candid. It perverts some facts and suppresses otbeis, rendering it impossible, with the d:tt furnished, to form a coned estimate of the caee wiiii which legislator an 1 statesmeu are required to detJ. 10 Veil Mr. I'elid li'toil IS not vLtlly exempt from tbe vijc of Lis par'. Iu Lis speech at Portland, ths other day, he arraigned the entire polloy of Congress as too costly to be endured by the country, and pre ferred in detail a long list of charges: You might loso your liberty, for human on dormice hnows no limit; but you cannot buy more limn you can piy for, aud you cannot pay more than the exiorilons of tne tax-qatiierer CHUSfiuerze out of a mi Her 1 ok people Freed met 'a bureaus, military commlHloun, military B"Vtri)menln, Hie mipoi t of ten Muue (iovern lnenis, couhI itutli nm BineiHl cuniH, neicro euf lrege, end cnrpeH)agern ere pretty ei pensive luxoi n-H. And when they lnln wltb lhen Idle hands, nhort crops, no home iiinrketH for our Western product!, and nu articles for 10 astern siilpN to curry t otnpr nations, t hey are more x pensive Ktln; and when you suoerad ! to l hese tilings Plxh larilis nuJ hUU tuxes no n icerUiu nippiv of wo k, n iiittti pric for nil iu nee 'skii iUh ot llle, low price lor labor, and n Increese In llir hours of Ih.0 r, then ihene luxuries come to ho ho expensive that they are lioe'.Uer lu nilerdde." Had Mr. Pendleton desired to enlist the in telligence rather than the iguorane of his bearers, he would havfj supplemented his enntueration of items with the statement thit a Republican Congress has wiped out several of them. Thus the Freedmeu's Bureau will cease to exist, except as an educational agency, after the first of January next. Mili tary Commissions and Military Governments Lave already come to au end in seven of the ten Southern States, and will be withdrawn from the remaining three so soon as they comply with the conditions of restoration. As for the Constitutional amendment, negro suffrage, and "carpet b.sggers," they have no proper connection with the expenditure except as incidents of reconstruction, the value of which must be taken into consideration when discussing the question of cost. It is not surprising that the Copperheads who assail every feature of reconstruction, aud demand for Rebel leaders instant and un conditional restoration to tbe councils of the republic, object to expenditures incurred ou the reconstruction accouut. They were equally opposed to expenditures on account of the war. Could Mr, Pendletou be brought to the confessional, he would be constraiued to ac knowledge that in his opinion the means em ployed to put down the Rebellion were alike extravagant and unconstitutional. The whole expense of the war was, from his poiut of view, a "pretty expensive luxury." It is the Bams with reconstruction. As he sees the matter, every dollar spent in reorganizing the Rebel States on a broad and loyal basis is a dollar wasted. He would have thell-bel regi ments march triiunphaitly bank to power, under white men's governments, with the freedmen rondt inned to einl inferiority and political bondage. HaltLi) been allowed, of cour.-'e outlay tor recoustruo'iou would hare been unnecessary. Obvliiiflv, however, :riy criticism of expen diture which ignores the object iuteu ted to bs effected is mere demsgoguisiu. It is super-Ccii-.l, tricky, aud discreditable. The oouutry submitted cheerfully to the coat of the war, and having sustained Congress in its policy of reconstruction, mnst be prepared to pay its price. These are questions of principle, into which figures do not properly enter. They come in when we proceed to discuss the capa city end integrity of thx Republican party, as the paity responsible for the money aspect of measures resulting from the war. Tie best evidence of the financial capacity of Ihe party, aud of the confidence feh in its integtity, is furnished by the record of loans regoiiattd, aud by the general absence of business disaster during and since the war. To the test afforded by four years' terrible ex perience, Republican may appeal for an answer to those who taunt them with finan cial feebleness or recklessness. In regard to what has since occurred, the point to be de cided is whether the measures of Congress Lave been maiked by waste. Have the high. BtaiKlar.ld of t.jtpwoditur produced by the war and the condition of the curreucy beeu kept up unnecessarily r Has practicable retrenchment been neglec'ed, and extravagauce wautonly persisted in ? Has there been no large reduc tion of appropriations? no earnest attempt to lessen taxation ? These are really the qs tions to be answered, and they are the ques tions which Mr. Pendleton disingenuously keeps out of fight. The truth is, however, that with all its short-comings, Congress has pushed forward the woik of economy with a result which only needs to be known to establish the Republi can title to popular favor. The last session was especially preductive ot amendment. The aggregate appropriations for ordinary expenses were reduced from $1411,000,000 to t'.ll.OOO.OOO. And internal taxes were abol ished which yielded upward of 61(57,000,000. These two fucts are alone sufficient to prove that there is no fondness for expensive luxu ries no neglect of the great duty which de volves on the party iu power as the stewards of the people. As Mr. Sherman has well re marked, where appropriations for local im provements, or other purposes not impera tively necessary, have been carried, it Las been with the Lelp of Democratic votes. Another fact which Mr. Pendleton will Lave difficulty in neutralizing pertains to the origi nal responsibility for the debt and taxation of which he dow complains. Both proceed from tiie war. And the war was a national struggle lor existence, which was jeopardized by a re bellion for which the Democracy is responsi ble. If the popular pocket is to be appealed to, then, as fairly it may be, it should be against the Democratic paity not iu its favor. So also iu regard to the p ilioy of that prty OU the subject Of leuouhtruotiou. Reduced appropriations and reduced taxation are possi ble only on the Fuppobitiou that the Govern ment has outlived its peril, aud that the peace of the country will not be again disturbed The Democratic plau, however, covers mea sures which, by reviving fierce and dangerous coi llicts, will render retrenchment tuipossihle, embarrass the public credit, and necessitate moie taxation to meet the iocr-asci expendi tures which trouble !ilwas biiugs. It the people would save lnouev, and re-tore as. quit kly as possible an era of prosp-ri'.y, thiiy n, ust pr serve the G jvrninoni from The bauds of the Dtmocralic patty. The lTudu ai r.;rcc. From the HichmMul lii.ui:U Our local columns give a full account of the radical ratification 'uree of yesterday, gotteu np by the Military Governor of tUe uaie aud Lis associate "carpet-baoia." Huiiuicuu was revenged for (he atliont put upuu him by the utterly dispirited at:d contemptible pro cession under the "carpet-baggers." The white allies of the bau.bocz'ed negroes, never appealing to much advantage iu associa'.iou with them iu public, had an unusually haug dog look; and even the negroes ctught the inlection of shtnno, which they are hardly ever kuown to sutler from. Tuh hue should Lavemovtd to the dead march, for a more impressive indication of a dead party we never witnessed. hat a farce I A long Hue of negroes mauhed out to be addrnfied on the politics ol the day, about which they are piofouudly igiorantl Would that the Northern people could Lave witnessed the grotesque ail ur au i the hypocritical formalities ot the few white men iu sashes, on horseback, and m oirriaj-e, xiiai s Lai lin;i iieio s to a place of po'iMcal dis cussion I It w;im a disgrace to the country and Jif e in which V live. The ni'jjtoeii wne taken in hand by hypo crites and fanatics immediately after tho war. Large colored meetings were held (whua the whites could not meet), and they mora a l-die?s-d by office-limiting adventurers an I im ported preachers, and every artifice employe I to put H em against their old ina-U-rs, au 1 renlly their tme friends. Not only this, but filled with old conceits of the part they were to pl.iy iu the world, they went to drilling, making right hideous with their drum ining acd claogor and ' clamor until that bitter radical General Terry saw tuat order aud Security were so seriously im perilled that h had to put a Stop to it'. This was when the whites were disarmed au I under the sharpest surveillance of military power. Tbe meetings continued, aud the agUa'ors industiioiisly pohouedth ear of the negro. The work was complete. The negro lei.-ue l all the slang of the rat i! fanatic as well as the Lyponitinal Radical. When there was not a man iu arms, not a token of resistance auy where, these negroes, In their meetings, were calling the whites all "rebels," claiming their lands, aud working submissively for their new masters, the carpet-baggers and scalawags. The result was there was a negro party iu Virginia, which elected white incompetents and scamps aud ignorant negroes to make our laws. The issue was forced upon the whites, and it is till the issue. Our deirest rights aud most Impnrtaut interests depeuil u; m it. It is a question even beyoud mere Radi calism. It is a question of haviag any g v eri nieiit fit to call a government of having any order, security, aud prosperity. This is tbe true state of the issue in Vir ginia. It is for white people to consider aud choose sides. But that maa who sides against his own white race upou such a divi sion must be assuming Lis status for life. Parties miy change aud men may change, but the hue ot politics now put on by meu who desert their race can never be eltaced nyver be wsshed out. The farce of yesferday was well It was cheering it wore a doomed aspect, and fore shadowed the near approach of the end of the abominable mockery of politics and govern ment with which we Lave been so fearfully crushed. The Election In Maine. From the Ronton Post. On the 1-lth of September will occur the election which is really to be the opening guu of the fall campaigu. Maine casts her vote for local officers, and will speak out at the ballot-box that independent miud which has of late bk en manifesting itself iu imuieuse gath erings of the people to listeu to Democratic orators. The Pemocrats of .Maine are a sturdy, detei mined, and au invincible party, lull ot fight and faith. They keep their poise, every man among them, ou the footing of their con victions alone. They do not shift their opi nions as mariners shift their sails, to catch the wind of popular feeling not the most reliable coum ellor wheu serious matters demand souud judgment alon-; but l o d fast the principle thiol. ghout, to whose plaiu rule they uuiliuch iogly reduce their conduct. Iu a single year, by their persistency of eilbrt they reduced au oppositioa majority from 117,(587 in ltjlld, to 11.G14 iu 18(57. It they begin to do as well this year, although there are not such local causes to help them as last year, every vestige of radicalism will be wipud out of the Stale. Mr. Pillsbury is as popular a nominee lor the Gubernatorial office (s any man that could be taken from his side; and he ought to come very close upou au election. We of course expect more Irom Maine than Vermont in the way of reducing radical majorities. It tliH ftiuoere outhuai atjui which followed Mr. Pendleton wherever he went bespeaks the calm convictions of the people of Maine aud there is not the slightest reason to question it the radical majority of last year will be very substantially reduced in September. This will impart wouderful vigor to the canvass on the Democratic side, in the other States whose elec'ions are to follow. The energy shown iu Maiue at this time will inspire her sister States with like energy iu a much greater degree. This being the signal gnu ot the conflict, its echoes will be sure to reveibtrate everywhere; aud if they spepk for Union and tne Constitution, the event will be the certain prelude of a general victory. The three speeches of Mr. Pendletou havo been preductive of great good in the State; aud those of the gentlemen accompanying him have aided visibly iu arousing a wide enthu siasm for the cause iu whose behalf they were made. They Lave presented such au array of fact and argument to the people as to Lave left a deep impression; aud the ball is still rolling on. All the enthusiasm in Maiue appears on the Democratic side. Radicalism is dull end dead no meetings, no speaking, no visible hopefulness, no faith. Trie same apathy which the 7 'ribune laments iu Pennsyl vania, Ohio,and ludiaua,shows itselfiu the radi cal party in Maine. It signifies that it is about to enter into its rebt let us Lope, to trouble the country no more. Montana, Oregon, Nebraska, Idaho, and glorious Kentucky with the flies of consti tutional freedom burning ho brightly on the Lills ot these States, the meu of Maine may see ullected the general joy which a victory for the Union on their owu soil would kindle anew. Let Maine emulate New Hampshire. Let Ler plate Lerself abreast with Connecti cut. Let the line of regenerated States be gin with the farthest east, aud extend to the gates of the Pacific. Let Maiue clasp bauds in victory with California. She may not be piepared to give the country a full victory yet, but she is capable of turning out gaius so spleudid that all the moral effect of a vic tory will be secured. And we confidently expect that the will do it on the 14. h of Sep- ttUiier. PAINTED PHOTOS. A NEW THING IN A II I,- BKRLIN PAINTED PHOfOd, A. S. ROBINSON, Ko 9 0 CHKS3NUT Street, 1! an lust received a aiit'orb collectlun of Ba.flX.IK VAISTEU PHOTUURAPHsi Olf FX.OWBHH. Xtiey are exqulMie geuio ot rt, rivalling to beauty, iii.turuiueB of tint, kuC perfection o' firm a ereat vi.rlety ot tbe choicest exotic lowering pUnts. TUey (ire OM.umut on boards of three hud Hold frooj & ent to 13 a.1 i eacti. 1 or tr.tuiluu ami the album the; are Incomparably U-.'UULllUl 8 ..& F I R L A IM ? till n t i L A fi Y' BO 0 ( S A F ti C . L . M A I 8 E R , l N I'FACTl'HKH OF I'll Ml ! MRE AD MJlUlLdh-PKOOs' sMf ES, lAXii. .-li'J II, tfi:u.-Ji A.u:it. A.-D IJJaleu l.N W lL.Ul.Mi 11.1IUIWAIO-, a;; tso 44 hack atrei u O U N . X C H A N (i E J llAU AlAtvL'i'AdOl.i. J O li Is T. J1AULY A GU KKMOVLO TO Cv, J . fciner ot M l,likr at, id Vt'ATKR ireotii 1 tllf Oi-ltiUlifc. ijKAl.KltS. IN j .lli.- - iSt) IHi-IUI.VJ ( it vi ry l . If i i,:. t r 'jj. I:., I luar. Ski l, t-n'i er l'te l.u-e of 'Ice, It cie IHi-i. I.ie Mui f ,n,c mm. II Ol'N s V Ha (!- s-is.ttitlv o i li.iml I ! Ac-., V. ,Jl4 V 1( M V 'I'. JUH.i JaAIKM t'AM'AOk'N, 213 & 220 S. FRONT ST. liAArA- A, OFFER TO TUB TRADE, IN LOTS, I ILE It Y E AM) BOURBON WHISKIES, U B9.YD, Of 1WOO, 1H07, mill 1808. llilE 11 KE ME AKD BUIKE0S WHISKIES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from to 1845. Liberal oontrou will be entered Luto for lots, In bond at Distillery, of this years' mannfiv-tim.l FLAGS, BANNERS, ETC. 1868. PrtLGIDfiTIAL CONTEST. ' FIAL'S, UAX2SEKS, TRANSPARENCIES, AND LANTERNS, Campaign liatlgcs, Medals, and Tins, OF BOTH CANDIDATE Ten tJltrrpnt ttyles sent on receipt ol Oue Dollar fciitl i'lily Lento. Ageuta wanted everywhere. t'lnn In Mnaliu Buuilu, and Ellit, all Sizes, whole- aie and re' all. Political Clubs II tied oat with everrtblng t'uey ia require. CAUj ON OB ADDRESS V. F. SCHEISLO, Ko. 49 SOUTH THIRD STREET, tW Ulp PHILADELPHIA. SEWING MACHINES. 1" H E CHEAT AJXEKICAN COMBINATION liUTTON-UOLE UVEKSEA3ILNU AND SEViNG MACHINE, Its Tvcudcrful ropnlnrif j Conclusive Proct ol' its Urcat Merit. The loot ease lu the demand for this valuable .Uerbiut- has heou TKNFUL.D Uuricg the lual Beven ;m,i.Uj! of Its Orstf ear before tbe public. ililn grand and surprlblnu success U unprecedented iu th history ol hewing Machined, and we ieol full; x-arruuted lu claiming that IT HA Pi4 EJilTAI Being absolutely the best FAMILY MACHINE IN THE WORLD, And intrinsically the cheapest, for It Is really two Aifcchhiee combined In one. cold at the S. W. Cor. of ELEVENTH and CUESNUi: PHILADELP IA 5 80 ituthtf DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. Corner of FOURTH and RACE Sts., PHILADELPHIA, ' WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. llflTOKTEIta AND MANUFACTURERS Off While Lead rind Colored Taints, Tuttj, Yaruislics, Elc. AQFNTiS FOR THE CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINC TAINTS. DEALERS AND CON?UMER3 SUPPLIED AT LOWKBT PRICES FOR CASH. fi 18 1 INTERNAL REVENUE. piilNCIPAL DEPOT FOU THE SALE OF UNITED STATES REVENUE STAMPS, 2fo. 301 C11ESNUT STREET:. CENTRAL DErOT, Ho. 1C3 S. FIFTH STKEEr, PHILADELPHIA, (Oiie doer below Chosnut street), ESTABLISHED A. D. 18C2. Oar Btcclr. core. prises all tbe deuomiuiUlona prliited by Ihv Govtmrotnt. All okdkks filled and forwarded by Mail ch Expkeiss, lMMtniATiiLi vl'os kjs till !', a luuuer ol ureal linpurtuiice. Dinfis ou P'lllaJoliilila Post O.U09, Oreen b; ckH, RLd Nullouul U ink Noteti' l'eCt;lvej la merit. The following rates ol comuiUylou aie allowed: Ou t20 Two PKR CKST. 1 kom 820 to 8100 Four vilu. cknt. FroiuSliO upwards, Four anuaualfi'kucekt Tbe couimiduioii la payable la Btataps. All orders, etc., bUoulJ be addressed to feTAMP AGENCY, No. SCI CUESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Orders received for Stamped Ctiwks, Drafts Receipts, ism-Heads, blc, and tne best rates o cijiuiuibblou allowed. We have constantly on hand I Nil ED STATES POSTAGE STAMPS OF ALL KINDS, AND STAMPED EN VI LOPE3. QCORCE PLOW MAW. CARPbNTE1; AND LUILDKi, P.K MOVED To Kc. 131 DOCK Mrccl, P I LA L'ELPHI A. 213 S 221) S. FP.OHT ST. CO WINES, ETC. SONOMA m IGMPAH. Established for the sateol IT1CK CALIFORNIA WIJtF.1. Thin CuiLpntiy oner lor sale pure CiUurni Wlnea WflllE, CLAKV.T, CaTAWBA. fX)K''. bliKHU, MU-CATFL, ANUELICA, Ol AMf ACNE. AND PUBE GPAPE BRANDT, wl-olef-alp aim ruia I. ail t ttr o n (trnwli-g and warraiatd to cuDiaia umliliis but tne pure Jillco ut iua 'Tis&ix? ,mrp JAMES CARSTAIRS, JR., Kos. 126 1YALMT aud 21 GRAMTE Sts., IM POSTER CP Uraiidics, AYincs, UIu, Olive Oil, Etc Etc., COMMISSION MERCHANT, IOR TUB BALK OF rUKB OLD KYE, WHEAT, AAD B0UK DOM WHISKIES. t , LUMBER. FT, II. WILLIAMS, slilnteektii fi?4ij wm OFfEHS FOB SALE PATTERN LUMBER OP ALL KINDS. EXTRA REASONED PANEL PLANJC. BtlLDINQ LUMBER Oi? EVERY DE8CEIP. TION. CAROLINA 4-4 and S 4 ILOOIUN0. H Ell LOCK JOJfcTd. ALL 61ZE8. CI' I'AR bUINGLEH, CVPREtS BUNCU SHIN GLES, FLAfcTERINU LATH, POSTd, ALSO, A FULL LINE OF WA1MTASD OTHER 1IAKD WOODS. LUMBER WORKED TO ORliER AT SHORT 1868. SPRUCE JOIST. BRUCil Joiof. iliiAiLOCK. UiLMLOCii.. 1868. 1 tit'.Q BitahONED CLEAR ilrjit i rw. caoioit rAH'.njy fji? AUUO Kill) CEDAR. ixJ 1 PfQ I'LORIIA ELOORlNfJ lOU'J. ilAUUL-A JtLOOtlliNU, CJAltOLiAA HXHjiHSsu. V1RUIA1A ELOOKIJNU. DELAWARE ELUOiLlAuI ASJ1 I-LOOW1JSU. WAi.JNIji J-LUOK1KO. TlMtLlVA bTEV EOAKllP. RAIL PLAN Ji, ' 186a LOb6. Y ALA i; T ISJjci. AKj PLANK,' 1868. WALNUT PLAJK. lOUd. UNDER lAEEiUv LUMliiS: 188l ki.lt CElXArt. uw WALNUT A.M1 PTNK. LOUO. bfc.A&UAEL CHERRY, 106o. WHITE OAK PLAiNK AND BOARDH HIUAORV. ' I HtiA CJAR BOX MAEEits tti1 AN iJsxx C'Ei AK iio itOAitDs," " ........ i.Uff, tCL-O. OA ;iulina ii. t. bihui. loOO. NORWAY tLAISTJSuK f,KfM I JiDAK bJtllNULEa. IfJl- . ... . - -r ill A1AULE. Hint I H kti . 4. Nu. iiaou fcOl l li i-ir4t T. V. GAL YIN & CO.. LUL.EER CCKKISSION MERCHANTS. ISllACLjlJiAXOA STliEET WllAlii1, BELOW SLOAVS MILLS, (da i-ALMCD), PHILADELPHIA, AOKNTb FOR SOUTHERN AND EASTEdN Maau. tuLturtT.urYELi.ovV lull Or'iiUOiliTlJiUEH wnuiL-kie raua. Gci.vci..U!f M any nt-cal!uioit. tut,u Al I. OP HHltll H ILL ItKltKLIVKftlSD ATI AY PAI.1 "fur. IT Hi.OtlyiXY. KITED ST.Tl'S CU1LDERS' MIUv N08. fiSLERt MiO., PtiOPMETORS. Alw.y on nanu, ujuMhoJ tl.e BeatHuaauiiMl Lambat al low in ice., WOOD MOULDINGS, BRACK SIB, BALUaTEila NtWf Is, JBalus'.ra, Bracreta, and Wood Moutaiau WOt'D WOULDiNticJ, RRACU.ETS. BALUoTERd AND NEWEL. Walnut and Ath Hand Ralilnt. S, , and 4 lnoha, BUTTERNUT, tiHE'iNCT, AND WALNUT fcOULlilNCS to ord CUI CARRIAGES. GARDNER & FLEMING CARRIAGE BUILDKU3, KO. 214 E0UT11 FIFTH STREET, BELOW WALNUT. An awiortment of NEW AND SECOND-HAND CAT.RIAGES alwayi on hand at REASONABLE PlUChii tmwiiiu COTTON AND Fi.AX. bAlL Dli'K AND CANVAS, Ot all iiuiutit aud iirmid., Tent, Awnii'K. Trnnk. au l Unjnu Covur Djuk A)i-i l'i l" r Mi'iiii'M-niierV l)r:dr l l" Irom iiu M BeVfik.1 Ktl Wlitti l'u'ill . Ili'l'ii K H ill 1'wi ue, eto. JOHN A, I'VH'M N Ci). S CJ No, Ul!i J t-NEti' Aim 1 toueiuiiiiy rfM-.viii aua ou liaiid hi our wharf .-.OLlRERN EH.OiNti. hCiN 1L1NO. I4H1N. OLE!-, EaoTKRW LAlll.,, PICKETS BED-SLaIM L'iAAUA i-LAAk AND UUAHJJo, A.KU HA(i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers