THE DAM EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 13G3. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. JDIT0H1AL OPINIOM OF TBI LKADINfl JO0BNAM BrON COBBItNt TOPIC8 COMPILED KVBRY BAT FOB TBI BVBNINO TELKOBAPH. JMhiMer Johnson's Reception by Disraeli l'nipiTM of our Diplomacy iu Engkiuil. Prom the N. Y. Herald. Minister Reverdy Johnson, after enjoying a Very cordial and rt-ppeetful reception from the JCuglibL. people at Southampton and in Loudon, liaa had a personal interview with Premier Disraeli in audience at llut-beudn. The time for the presentation of the new envoy of the United States to Quoen Victoria was arranged on that occasion, and there is little doubt bat that Mr. Johnson read to the head of the 3ritieh Cabinet a rough draft of the address Which he intends to deliver to her Majesty, and that Mr. Disraeli intimated to our repre sentative the tenor and tone of the reply of the Court. This instant and satisfactory pro gress, this talkiug over the eitua'ion in a friendly way, is not only complimentary to the .American nation, but shows forth the estimate Which has been formed in Kugland of Mr. Johnson's talent, probity, and character as a j'Ublie man and gentleman. in the present aspect of our relations with Great Dntain Minister J-hnson is the 'right man in the right place," and, biiug so, his path has been made easy and his way clear to the throne from the very commencement. Oar Fpecial correspondent in Loudon intimates, indeed, in his letter published iu the Herald yesterday, that busings of a very delicate and interebiing character had been transacted Juetweeu the two statesmen even before the Special meeting at llughenden, ftui that th troublesome and jiei(lf xing Court breezier question has already been disposed of an 1 will DO longer pr-Fet a source of embarrassment to our Minister in bis t-oiuuiuniuatioua with the sovereign of Kugland. Mr. Johnson, aware of the worries aud delicate perplexities vLiuli occurred to the late (ieneral Hjott, the deceafed ex-President Buchanan, as well as to ex-Miimter Adam., by means of pantaloons and "unavoidable circumstances," availed Jjimself no doubt of the occasion to submit to Jilr. Disraeli that at a moment when all Kug land was tn dnhubille owing to the extraor dinary heat of the weather, and when in the law courts judges and lawyers had trenched on the constitution by throwing off their huge Wigs of horse hair, aud found that they pos sessed just as much brains without them as jjefore, the British people would come to be Regarded as a very "stilf-necked generation" should they stand too rigidly on an "old clo' " form of etiquette with the more juvenile branch of the Anglo-Saxon race, so that Pre jnier Disraeli, who is not personally given so juuoh to the use of "purple aud line linen" as Were mauy of his distiuguished ancestors, con sented to take the court breeches, shad-bellied Vest, and gilt-Hipped coat Irom the "peg" in our case and lay them "on the shelf" for a next customer. Oar London correspondent assures vu that the matter has been dispose! f in such an effectual way that Minister John eon may, if he so chouse, appear at Jiaoking liam Palace in a shooting jacket a step of democratic revolutionism which we are quite certain will never enter his head. It is a great national privilege to enjoy the Tight, however, and after such a graceful con cession on the part of Mr. Disraeli it is very likely that Mr. Johnson aud himself will Shortly meet again at Htighenden and figure Bp the Alabama claims bill, the Premier draw ing a draft on the Treasury for the amount, and our Minister 'exchanging a receipt duly Btamped. There is no need of arbitration iu the matter. England can take her tim and Land the cash to Mr. Johnson, in plain citizen dress, when convenient. The Elections in Venn out anil Maine. From the N. Y. Times. In this country where publio opinion, inde pendently expressed, has so great weight, the importance of the elections to be soon held in Veimont and Maine cannot be over-estimated. In this respect Vermont has an extraordinary advantage. She Hies the first cannon of the campaign. As we have formerly shown, the Kentucky elections were subject to conditions which entirely deprive them of value as an Indication of public opinion. There is an absolute reign of terror in that State, growing out of the prejudice against both negroes and Union men, which deterred large numbers of Republicans from voting. Bat for this fact, the result of the election would not have dif fered substantially from that of 1SUU. It is fortunate, then, that the first free expression of popular opinion is to come from the Green Mountain State. Through and through that State is for Urant and Colfax. Only let the full vote be polled, and the Republican ma jority ought to reach, if it does not exceed, that of 1SGG, which amounted to nearly twenty-three thousand. INo Republican should stay from the polls because it is only a State election, and because it is impossible for the Democrats to win. Let him remember that every vote lost by the Republicans in September and October is so much lost in the weight of publio opinion on the side of General Grant. Vermont will inlluence Maine, and the wave from those two States will How over Iowa, Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania in October. The momentum and effect of that wave will be measured by the Republican majorities given in these early elections. There is every reafon why Vermont and Maine should maintain the positian held by them in liSO'G, aud we believe they will do it. Let no voter allow himself to be diverted by the side issues which Democrats are urging BO strongly, because they dare not face the one great question which is involved iu the campaign. The charges of financial corrup tion aud of heavy taxation should be hurled liuck against the assailants. We are to take the (lleusive, aud not the defensive. When a Republican voter is asked to account for reve Due frauds, let him reply that these have grown out of the quarrel between Congress and a refractory President a quarrel which was perpetuated by the attitude of the Ddino cratio party. If he is asked to accouut for the burden of an immense national debt, let him charge the responsibility of that burden upon the party which forced the war and made the debt a necessity. If negro supremacy is thrown in his face let him deny the existeLce ot such an element in our poli tics, and point to the late Mississippi election as the basis of his denial; and let him, more over, charge against his opponents that they, by their factious opposition to an amendment which left suffiag to the States, made the negro vote a necessity of any possible restora tion. If he Is told that the Republican party has been to any degree surrendered to extreme radical leadership, let hiiu deny the surrender, and point to the nomination of General Grant for President as the surest indication of a libe ral and conservative policy. Let hlin, more over, attack the Democrats on the grouui of their extreme policy, thown both in their plat form and their candidates, as well as la the Dublit-hed speeches and letters oi their nomi nee for Vice-President, and of their paroled Confederate friends in the South. Krery Ilepublican voter in Vermout and iltdne may also remember that tho reaction of last year against the Congressional policy ha' I no more fubstantial meaning or foroe than thn I reaction (equal in decree aud amount) which was exhibited in lb(!3, after Lincoln's E.mu- cipatiou Proclamation. The latter did not then pave the Democratic party from humili ating defeat in 18C4; the former will do them no more service this fall. The Republican party must hold its position fpmly, and move without hesitation or any consciousness of weakness upon the enemy's works. Its victory now is as neoessary to the salvation of the republio as it was in lS'M. Then, under General Grant as a military leader, we proposed to conquer the Rebellion, instead of surrendering to it; now, under the same leader, we propose to secure perfect peace and reconciliation. J rant's Resignation. From the Washington National Intelligencer. The Radical organs generally maintain a guarded silence in reference to Grant's resig nation from the army in 1854. The Chronicle, however, has attempted, with most ludicrous feebleness, not to answer, but to evade the questions as to the reason why the "man with a dozen aud a half lives' left a captaincy in the regular army for the position of common la borer in a tan-yard. The Chronicle quibbles about his Laving become a "cotninwu" la borer. Well, concede that he was au "un common" laborer. All this, however, is au avoidance of the main question, which is, "Why did Grant resign ?" All that the Chronicle can Bay upon this point is the following: "Iu regmd so the'teirlbledtssraco' alluded to the qucutlou occurs wbellier, if iiU ofleuce Im.l, been to lerrlblu, Urant would have been ullowed to resign' Would he not rather Iihvb been m verely punished and dishonorably dismissed? Military law ih not quite ho lenient bh to allow Hucb 'terrible ofleiiHcs' as the Intelligencer ttould have us believe he had coimuii.ied logo unpunished; and it will be remembered that at tlmi time Grant's rank was only that ot captain, hihI llml he could Dot have commanded any auch powerful influence as might have Hecnred birn from punishment bad be deserved It." This may be to the Chronicle a most clear p.nd intelligible explanation of why Grant did rer ign; but few will be able to see wherein the explanation consists. The question is not whether he ought to have been allowed to re sign, but why, aud for what reason, and undr what circumstances did he leave the army in 1854? It is certainly a plain, unequivocal question, and the Chronicle's silly attempt to dodge it only serves to show that there is something about the answer to be concealed, 6orne terrible plague spot in the character of the many-lived hero that not one of his life makers has dared to touch. If the question had been asked previous to the Chicago nomination, it might have been answered by Theodore Tilton, or Wendell Phillips, or Anna Dickinson, who boast of more than ordinary independence in daring to speak out and bear testimony against wrong doing; but even their vaunted independence in speaking of Grant has dwin dled into abject subservience since the Chi cago Convention set him, like the "Old Man of the Sea," astride of the neck of the ralical part', to ride to death. The silence of all the other radical journals, and radical life-makers, and radical song-writers and radical stump speakers, only render more prominently ridiculous the very feeble attempt of the Chronicle, to divert attention from the realquestiou, which still remains unanswered "Why did Grant leave the army in lfc54?" Tlie Old Jsmiu Over Again. FromthtN. 3 Tribune. learly as the American people loved peacie many of them feared that the war would end too soon. There were periods in the Rebellion when peace would have been a greater curie than a score of battles fought on Northern soil, and the capture of a dozen Northern cities. Better that the Rebtd 11 ag had U tated in 1S(J3 over the old State House iu Philadel phia, whertiu the first Congress declared American independence, than that the armis tice had been granted which the Democratic party urged and the Rebel Government desired. Better, far better, that the war were raging now, with Grant still before Rich mond, and Sherman at Atlanta, than that the people of the North had indorsed the declaration of the Democratic party in 1S0'4, that the war was a iailure, aud compromise with traitors a necessity. Peace hath her blessings, and war, even in the noblest cause, cannot be other than a giant evil; bat false peace comes sometimes to a nation, crowned with thorns and robed in shame, offering short respite as the price of long misery, and perpetuating the strife which she pretends to end. Bloodshed is not the worst of evils. It is better that men should die than that principles should be destroyed. For such reasons many of us feared that peace would come too soon. After Bull Ruu the whole North repudiated the idea with indigna tion; the Union could not treat with victo rious Rebellion. As the war grew older men trusted that victory would not come till Mav ery had been abolished. Long before May, 1805, the loyal men of the United States were resolved that the Rebellion should be utterly crushed, and that the' elements of treason should be extirpated. When Lee surrendered to Grant we thought that the Rebellion was ended. Is it ended ? No. From all parts of the South and from many men in the North oomes the assurance that the war lor the Union ended too soon. Their voices tell us that Mo Chilian's weary and costly delays were not blunders; that Grant made an error when he closed up the war in the West, and forced the fighting in Virginia; that Sherman should have waited at Atlauta, and delayed for another year his triumphant march to the sea. Those magnificent combinations, by which the supe rior strength of the Union was brought to bear upon every point of resistance simultaneously, were fatal mistakes. We are taught every day that the war should have been indefinitely prolonged; that the Rebellion should have been crushed inch by inch, till its leaders had died in battle or lied from the country; till its armies had dwindled into bands of robbers; till it had been driven into the woods and swamps, to starve and perish where the negro had starved and perished in the days when rebellion was only an uplifted menace in that insulting hand which slavery shook in the face of the republio. Victory was as prema ture, we are assured, in ltG5 as it would have been in 18U2. Nothing was decided by the war, if we may trust the defiance now hurled at us by the South. It has gone back to lb GO, and proposes to begin over again. But there is a difference. Iu 1SG0 the country was warned that Rebellion would fol low the election of a Republican President, in lbOS Rebellion is promised iu case of a Republican defeat. The election of Seymour and Blair is to be the sigual of another war. The Rebels of the South have made it un mistakably clear that they intend that a De mocratic victory Ehall pay them for what they lost at Vitksburg, and Gettysburg, aud Rich mond. The loot cause of the South is found tipain, and lives in the Demoora'io party. The Rebellion declares that Grant did not subdue it, and that it is ready to flht again. Lat ua Lear it speak. Fjauk Blajr promises revolution If he ia elected. Robert Toombs declares that "the lUwuaUuvtiou acts are null aud void, aad shll not s'and. The grinning akelet.on thV, have been set up in their midst as legislvor shall be ousted by Frank Blair, whom oar prty hs expressly appointet for that par pose." .Said Howell Cobb: "In war wedrew trie swrd, and bade them defl nee; (u pea i we gather up th maahood of the f'outh, and raising the binner o' coustitutl nal equality, and ga'hering around it the good men of the Worth, as well as te Houth, we uul lu'.o their teeth the same d Dau and bid ihe.n c"nie on to the struggle. We are r.aiy for it, if you are." Albert I'.k calls upon th jouug nun of the Hon'h to snvar that the Stuqut-Lanna and Ohio shall be like rivers of fire, which no Northern Hun fchall attempt to cross and live. "Secession is no', deal," says Governor Wise; "it is more alive to d j than ever. I support Blair because he promises re volution." J. M. Ramsey of Georgia declares that the true men of the South are reaiy to rally once more uuder the Rebel ilar "aud try th issue at the cartridge-box," and promises that there are men in the North who will led their battalions. "If are successful in the ap proaching contest," says the Mobile Tribune, "we shall gain all that we lost iu the 'Lost Cause.' " "The country is by far too large to remain very long under one Government," saya the Memphis Appc-a', "and the day will come when the South will be indepon lnt." "By the election of Sey mour and Blair," saya Governor Varna, of North Carolina, "all that the Confederacy fought for will be won." The Mobile T. ibnna declares that "the great Democratio party will rise in ita might, and the dagger of Brutus may aid in accomplishing our redemption from radical rule, ruin, and usurpation." "Thre are many Democrats at the North who believe," asserts the Mobile Itc.yhter, "that the counter-revolution will not be complete without more blood-lettiDg;" and the Richmond inquirer adds, "The white men of the Southern States have seen the day when they could use the ballet, and, if God in his anger permit the necessity to arise, they will use it again." "With the skull and cross-bones of the 'Lost Cause' before us," cries the Meridian (Miss.) Mercury, "we will swear that this ia a white man's (rovernmeut. We must make the negro understand we are the men we were when we held him in abject bondage." "G-neral Blair at the head of th militia will be a match for General Grant at the head of the regular army," boasts Oeneral Kwiug. The Georgia Democratio Convention declared: " There might once have been a necessity for the Rebels of Georgia to submit to the military authori ties, but there is none now. The Democratic chivalry of the North are marching to our rescue." This is enough. We m'ght fill columns with such shn'eks and yells of Rebellion, the echoes of Ihiil, but every day swells the evi dence that the Southern lealers repudiate the surrender of Lee, aud repay with plans of a new war the generosity which saved them from the gallows. Whether it hi right or wrong that treason deserves death, it is cer tain that the people of the North did not per mit that question to be raised; in their magna nimity they put it asi'le, and require! of traitors no indemnity for the past, imposed uo punishment for their crimes, but denuuled only security for the future. It wa3 pea je for which we longed, and are we now to learn that we were wrong in seeking to establish peace in the spirit of mercy rather than in that which demands au eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth f We must believe so, if we can believe Frank Blair, Wade Hampton, Howell Cobb, the leaders of the Democratic party North and South, and thu unanimous voice of the Rebel press. Iu lt(,U au 1 lsbl these id-mticil threats were made by tho same men, but the patriotic masses could not credit their sincerity, till the attack upon Sumter proved that the South was iu deadly earnest. It is the duty of the American p-op!e to profit by that terrible ex perience. We are warned by the Democratic party itself that its triumph means war; that it intends that Blair aud Seymour shall esta blinh the principles of the Confederacy. That wainiug it would be criminal folly to despise. It is Grant who represents iu this contest the great cause which he represented in the war, and only by his election cau peao and order be preserved and permanently established. The Snljihiir Springs Rumors. From the N. Y. World. General Rosecraus, the new Minister to Mexico, defers his departure until the season is a little further advanced, prudently avoiding exposure to the deadly climate of Vera Cruz, while the dog-star ehoots down pestilence. While thus waiting, he makes a visit to Sulphur Springs, the fashionable wateiine place ot Virginia, where some dis ticguibhed, and more undistinguished citizens . i . cj .1. - : ; .. 1 . i . pressive summer heat. A circumstance so natural, and seemingly so trivial, as this visit i ui ueuerni xiuseuiaua tu iuo ouipuur ojinjgs, has filled the air with rumors which magnify his visit into the importance of a mission. The newspapers are filled with accounts more or less imaginative, of a long political conference between General Rosecraus aud General Lee, of a political conference not quite so long, bat of the same tenor, between General Rosecraus and Alexander 11. H. Stuart, another iu 11 aeutial citizen of Virginia, and of a detention of General Rosecraus for further political consul tations with other leading Southerners with a view to some sort of au addrers, to be signed by the chief men of the South, particularly the officers ef the late Confederate army, setting forth their views of the political situation. These rumors are of little account; and yet they suggest a possibility of usefulness which ought not perhaps to be entirely overlooked. Such an address as has beeu hiuted at, setting forth, with the manly frankness which belongs to the Southern character, what consequences of the late unhappy war the Southern people do and what they do not accept, might have a bbuelicial inlluence. It would help confute the calumnies which are the chief electioneer ing resource of the radicals. A few indiscreet expiessions, uttered by one or two men who formerly had borne prominence in Southern politics, are constantly paraded iu the radi cal press S3 expresfcing the deliberate views of the South. Men like Governor Wise, who ha3 always been regarded as somewhat erratic and hair-brained, or Mr. Toombs, who never weighs his words but blurts out the most de fiant thiDgs that occur to an ardent, haughty wind iu heat of a public speech, cauuot with any candor be regarded as representing the sentiments of the South. The mas of no community is erratic or hot-headed. How ever they may be amused by the vivacity of that kind of men, their oau sober viewa are more truly expressed by cooler and more dis passionate speakers. Spouters who are quaiut and extravagant easily catch publio attention, and when they make slips, their words are caught at by political opponents, and unfairly held up as expressing the sentiments of th party with which they act. If the warm ex pressions to which we allude do not (as we are sure they cannot) represent the views of the great mass of the Southern people, au autboiitative exponi'.ion of their actual seuti n.ents would do good. OI course, the Southern people do not be lieve that "the lust uau" would be regained by the tdection of tho Democratic candidates. If Vy "the lost cause" be meant either the rifcht of eeoession or the re-establishm-nt of slavery. The South fought for a severance of the Union for Independence. It fought with a heroism which does honor to Southern man hood, and won the admiration of the world. The "cause" namely, independence which was then "lost," was lost beyond all hops ol redemption. The South fought fir indepen dence to save slavery, and one li as irretrieva bly lost as the other. When, therefore, one or two erratic men In the South vtpor about recoveripg the lost cause, they talk quite at random, neither expressing any intelligible meaning of their own, nor any expectatiou of the Southern people. Sue h extravagance is lifted into notice only by the calumnious use made of it in the Northern press. If eu. h an address bhould be issued as is bruited to be iu preparation, it ought to be numerously signed. There should appear appended to it the name of a maority of the most distinguished officers on the Southern side in the late war, and of the ablest civilian who exert a controlling influence ever South ern public opinion.. These men are competeut to speak for the South. They understand the Southern people too well to mistake their views; whatever pledges thoy give will be kpt by the great and chivalrous community who recognize their leadership. 1 he most stupendous and absurd mistake ever made by a party pretending to states manship, was the attempt of the Republicans to reorganize the South without the co opra tiou of the natural leaders of the people. There are fifty men in the South who con trol its public opinion aud its political action. They are men of character, of per sonal honor, aud individual inlluence, meu incapable of forfeiting their word, aud whose publio engagements would be respited by those over whom they exert the ascend ancy due to superior abilities. Instead of using the inlluence of these men to re-establish and cement the Union, the Republican party put them under political ostracism a blunder which has cost the country hundreds of millions of dollars, and three years of dis content and turmoil. Such men caunot be deprived of inlluence. The publio opiniou which they control is a current to be rowed against if you attempt to force a policy to which they do not consent, and especially if you attempt to force a policy by which they are ostracised and degraded. When hostilities terminate between Gov ernments foreign to each other, the trausition frcm war to peace is immed'ate and perfect. Armies are safely disbanded, because each Government is recoguized as having power to bind aud control its own people. This Baves a long and burdensome afterpiece of quasi hohtilities. When our civil war ended the Confederate Government went out of existence; but the circumstances nevertheless admitted ot the same complete settlement as iu the case of a foreign war. Nobody doubted that the terms of surrender agreed to by Lee and Johnson would be faithfully kept by the Southern eoldiera. These war-woru veterans were ready to fight or lay down their arms, according to the judgment of 'their trusted commanders. Grant aud Sherman would not have made a more fatal, a more preposterous blunder if they had disdained and ignored the Southern generals and attempted to make peace without them, than the Republican party has in disdaining and ostracising the Southern statesmen and political leaders. In its vain and futile attempt to extinguish their inlluence, it has been obliged to keep up war expenses in time of peace; beeu obliged to overspread the South with armies to superin tend the erection of governments which will fall to pieces in every State as soon as military protection is withdrawn. No policy can be permanently successful in which the leaders of Southern opinion do not co-operate. Under Republican management the country will never reach tranquillity. The Democratic party can guarantee pence not the peaoe of the bayonet, but of consent and good-will because the De mocratio party can pacify the South through the inlluence of its leading men. Nobody doubts this; but a great many weak-minded meu in the North fear that the Southern leaders will consent to nothing reasonable. An address, signed by the proper persons, Set ting forth explicitly what the South is willing to regard as settled against further disturb ance as the result of the late war, might allay groundless apprehensions, aud make the De mocratio majority so large that everybody would recognize the Presidential election as a Ural settlement. PAINTED PHOTOS. NEW THING IN ABI, BEBLIN PAINTED PHOTOS, A. S. ROBINSON, No 910 CHK3NUT Btreet, Has Just received a superb collection of BERLIN PAINTED PKOTOUaAPHS OF FLOWERS. They are exquisite gem of art, rivalling ta beauty, naturalness of tint, and perfection o1 form a great variety of the choicest exotic flowering plants. 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PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST. i1 1 it 'i! tMwrna n-iuvtiiiDrvniuu AMD LAMKKAS, Campaign Uatlgcs, SIctlals, ami Pins, OF BOTH CANDIDATE. Ten (llfTcrent styles sent on receipt of One Dullsr and Fifty Cents. Agtrnts wanted everywhere. ilbki in MnallD, Bunting, aud HUlt, all s!e.i, whole sale aud leiAll. Political Clubs fitted out wlta everything they ax require. GALL ON OR ADDI.EB8 VV. Fa &CHEIDLE, No. 4U SOUTH THIRD STREET, C18 UIP PHILADELPHIA. SEWING MACHINES. Y H E GREAT A0IF.I1ICAJK COMBINATION BUTTONHOLE OYEKSEAMLXGt AND SEWING MACHINE, Us noudcrfiil Popularity Conclusive Prool of its Urcat Merit, Tne Increase in the demand for this valuable ilut lilnt has been TENFOLD during the last seven uiimthb of iu Ural year before tlie public This grand and surprising suocsos is unprecedented In the limtory of Bowing Macnlues, and vre leel fully warranted in claiming that IT II AS NO EUUAL, Being absolutely the best FAMILY MACHINE IN THE WORLD, And Intrinsically the cheapest, for It Is really two Machines combined la one, Sold at the S. W. Cor. of ELEVENTH and CHES'UE PHIL ADKLP HI A, 5 80 ituthti DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., X.E. Corner or FOUHTU and KACE Sts., PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF lYuito Lead and Colored Taints, Tatty, Varnishes, Etc. AGENTS FOR TBS CELEBRATED PKECH ZLNC TAUNTS. DEJLERS AND CONSUMERS SUPPLIED AT LOWKBT PRICES FOR CASH. 18 1 INTERNAL REVENUE. p K 1 S C I P A L DEPOT FOR THE SALE OF UNITED STATES REVENUE STAMPS, No. 30 CHEdNUT STREET. CENTRAL DEPOT, No. 103 S. FIFTH STUEET, PHILADELPHIA, (Que door below Cuesnut street), ESTABLISHED A. D. 18G2. Oar stock comprises all tlie denominations printed by the Government. All okdeks filled and forwarded by Mail fit Express, immediately uvox bk c tiiT, u matter or gteitt Importance. Drafts on Philadelphia Post Ofllce, Green becks, and National Bjtnk Notes received In im j went. Tne following rates of com allusion are allowed: On 20 Two PER OKST. From 820 to 8100 Four run cunt. FromSK'O upwards, Four and An alvpekcbmc The commission Is payable ia stamps. All order, etc., should be addressed to STAMP AGENCY, No. 801 CUESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Orders received for Stamped Checks, Draf's Receipts, lilll-Heads, etc., aud the best rates o commission allowed, We have constantly on band UNITED STATES POSTAGE STAMPS OF ALL KINDS, AND STAMPED ENVELOPES. QEOnCE PLOW ill AN. CARPENTER AND BUILDER, REMOVED To No. 131 DOCK Street, PHILADELPHIA. 213 229 S. FRONT ST. WINES, ETC. SONOMA V,TVE COHPAXY. Established fur thp sa'e ot I'tHK V tl ltllKXIt WINKS. This Coir.pauy utltr ior finle pure California Wlnon WJITK. CLAUtO, CTAWBA, tVH'. ttiiKtitv, w uhw not.. AiUlu.KA. CHAaitfaUNE. AND PIKE GBAPK BRANDY wliclrm! bho r"iail, ml of tholr o n growing and wairfttuu h couittiui.o.lilag but tne iiurejuluo ul tue 'ilgcASSff1 W, lmrp J AMES CARSTAIrtG, JR., Sos. 120 WALNUT and 21 IMMTE Sis., IMPORTER OF UranOies, Wines, uin, Olive Oil, Elc. Etc., AND COMMISSION M1SUOHA.NT, OR THE 8ALK OP I'l'KE OLD KYI', WHEAT, AND HOUR. HON' WHISKIES. 4 j LUMBER. F. W I L L I A M S, SEVLNTEEftTH Aftu W.m GARDEN onxsi roE SALE PATTERN LUMBER OF ALL KINDS. EiTKA SEASOMO) PANIL PLANK. BUILDINQ LUilBtlt ojf KVRY DE3CRIP. TION. CAROLINA 41 and S 4 r LOOKING. HEMLOCK JOINTS, ALL SIZES. CEDAR 6IIIA.ULFB, CYPRKtS BUNCH SHIN. GLEH, PLASlitKINO LATH, POST:, AL90, A FULL LINE OF WALUTA.D OTIIEIi HARD WOODS. LUtlBER WORKED TO ORLER AT SHORT NOTICE. 7 27 luwlim 1868. 6PRUCK JOIST. bPjKOCiii JoioX, AiitJiiLOcK.. HJlMLOCK. 1868. 1808. SSAlSSffiSftSffiS- 1868 Uaol Cis. i-A'i A'i,KN PINK A-UlJ. SPANiteli CEDAR, tOH PA'lTKHNa Rh.lt CEDAR? Ai!Hai lQi'Q FLORIDA FLOORING. 1. ibtO. FLORIDA PLOORiSu 1 fifR CAROLINA ALUOK1n5. A-'"0. ViRUlNiA FLUUllLNu. DELAWARE Pi.OOKlJSPI AMiL ELOOR1NU. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA hTKP HOARDS. IWMtt WALNUT RDS. AND PLANK ttrn lODO. WALN UT RDB. AND PlInk" 1868. WALNUT HOARDS. " WALNUT PLANE. 1868. fcBfiaat 186a RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PrNB. 1 Qr bEABONED POPLAR. ToTTn lODO. bEABONED CHERRY. 1868 WHITE OAKPigvK AND BOARDS. 1 RtiQ CIAR BOX. MAKERS' 1 n.rt lOOO. CIOAR LUX AlAEERS' 186ft bPANlttxi. CEDAR JlOi. BOARDS FOR BALE LOW. ' lQftQ CAROLINA bCANTLING. inrij AOUO. oakuliaa h. t. biLui loOO. NORWAY SCANTLING Iftftft CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 O'O lOOO. Pi PREoasH IN OLE8. looS , MAULE, BROTHER & VO II . No. Soup SOUTH street. LUMBER Cir.MISSION MERCHANTS, bHACKAJiAXOA STREET WHARF, BELOW SLOArs MILLS, (BCAIXKD), PHILADELPHIA, AGENTS FOR SOUTHERN AND EASTERN Maun. f,,?0' fE "UBPRUCElTMREa BOARDS, KC, mi b yy Ui iuruka orUertM wuoiehkle riuw. flelivemhle m Buy acta slbiu port. CouBlunlly rfCt.viUK and on baud ai our wharf EOU'lHERN FLUOttlNw. WJaTiu"u bhi GLfcf, EASTERN La I UsPlcEEIrt Bm5-HLaVs fc-PRUCK. HEMLOCK. SELECT MICHIGAN AAilJ CANADA PLANK AN1 BOAKD AND HAO. MA'lCObHlP.KNKiUS. 81 .Hufl ah. or wnu'ii will nr. deliyebgo AT ANY l,AHTl,Hnt:lmm)ipUYi UNITED gTATEb BC1LDKKS' MILL, N08. 84, i. and M B. FITEaNTH blreek ESLERjr JtiHu., PROPRIETORS. Alwayt on band, niaaeot the Beat. Seasoned Lumbal at low prlcoa, . .9?..?? iD""8' Ba t'KKTS, BALU8TES8 Newels, Balusters, Brackets, and Wood Mooidlno. . yVVJi.wli1'ItS'4b' SKAUa-aTS. BALUbTERJ AND N EW E1&. Walnut aud Asa Haul Railing. 8, Hi, and i lnobes, BUTTERNUT, CREfclNUT, AND WALNUT HOULDINUS to ordet U CARRIAGES. gjgjyi GARDNER & FLEMING CAlilUAQK BUlLDKItS, No. 214 SOUTH FIFTH STREET, BKLOW WALNUT. An auortnient of AND SECOND-HAND CARRIAGES ap.vai ou iinud at REASONABLE PRIOEb. t fi fiuw6ia CWi'ON AND VuAX, J BAIL DUi'K AND CAN V AH. Ol ml numbers aud brands. Tent, AwnlnK. Trunk, mid W hl'ou i fiver Duck A H.o I'lipi r Mfi:n"ii iiiipi'!'' !)-!( Ft lis Irom own til aevt'ial tool mut ; I'''1! p. Hrltlnc Hull Twine, eto, JOii.N V. EVKKM.W CK, it No. m Jones' Aiiey
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers