THE DAliiY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 18G8. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EPITORlAli OPINIONS OF THB LRAMRO JOOBRAL crow chrrknt Tones compiled kvbrt . DAT VOH TU kVKNINa TgLBUHAFU. Do Itiryou Dare! FVom (A JV. Y. IWbune. It appears that there are men still living and moving, and making speeches (on the Blalr-and-Seyiuour Side) who think that the people are to he scared into the rejeotion or Grant and Colfax, tome of the threats whioh reach ns are liardl of u nature to awaken the intensest pnbllo apprehen?ion that, for in stance, of Wade Hampton, who vows and de clares that, If Grunt is eleoted, the plaoes which now know Hampton shall know hlin no more forever I We are not to vote for the man of our choice, beoanBe if we do Hampton will " leave the country" -elope, evade, evaonate I Terhaps there may he here and there a patriot who would not regard this slight diminution of oar population as a tre mendous and insuperable calamity; but the minatory hint is thrown out as if the volun tary exile of Wade Hampton would break all our hearts. Yet this is only one of a large collection of misfortunes with which we are menaced, and from which only the election of Frank lilair to the Vioe 1'reBidency can save ns. Albert Pike roars dieadlul predictions at one end of the land and Mr. Pendleton bleats plaintive responses at the other. We are told, although the llebel banner is buried, that great numbers of ardent spirits know well the place of its sepulchre, and upon the slightest provocation are ready to rally to its resurrection. We are to be shaken to our inmost souls by the pros peot of seme dim but dreadful catastrophe following hard upon a Republican victory. We are to be shocked into a surrender. We are to succumb to the bugbear of another and a bloodier rebellion. Us re, for instance, is the Louisville Journal asking, "if the radicals Should triumph in November, if the White people of the South would quietly submit," and giving it as its opinion that they most certainly would not. "The thought," says this fiery sheet, "is preposterous. It is impious. It is monstrous." "A radical viotory," it wildly cries, "is war. It is war, to whose ravages and terror. imagina tion can set no bounds." And for this rea son, so lucioly, or rather so luridly, set forth by this Blair-aud Seymour editor, a plain, honest man in New York or New England, who has deliberately made np his mind that duty requires him to vote for Grant; who, apart from these threats, thinks a Republican administration demanded by the exigencies of the Union; whose conscience and intellect upon this point coincide, is to revise his deci sion, and abdicate his manhood, and surrender Lis right of private judgment, and, crawling a trembling craven to the polls, is to beg that his voioe and vote may be registered for one man whose political integrity he doubts, and for another man whose personal character he despises 1 If Mr. Pendleton, who has lately been experimenting npon the terrors of the Hast, fancies that the Republicans of Maine and Connecticut are such white-livered animals as this, he thinks more unjustly of them than they think jusily and indignantly of him. This Chinese warfare the horrible mask and the resounding howl makes the back-stab-bings and tue midnight burnings of the Ku Klux Klan appear mildly respectable and com paratively manly. Two things the missionary from the West to the East is certain will follow the election of Grant universal bloodshed and general bankruptcy. We pass over for the present bis financial forebodings; but did Mr. Pendle ton think to scare the stout hearts of the Maine backwoodsmen, who know the rotten lumber of a platform when they see it, by crying out that a Republican victory would bs the destruction and desolation of the land f Did he so under-estimate the shrewd common sense of the Connecticut Republicans, as to dream that they could be turned from their purpose by hi prophetio and vooiferous eloou tion ? by his rhetoric of ruin and his declama tion of deppairf "Do you believe," cried Mr. Pendleton, "that it is possible to maintain peace and Union if you subjugate in these ten States this Caucasian race of ours to be ruled by these brutish slaves f " Now, in the first place, these voting bugbears of Mr. Pendleton are not "slaves," but are free as he is himself; and in the seoond place, all the Blair-and-Seymour orators in the South are solemnly and passionately in voking these "brutish slaves" to vote for the candidates of the New York Conven tion, and deolariog that the votes of the freed men will be and should be so oast. If these confident predictions are fulfilled, we suppose that Mr. Pendleton's beasts will all be changed into perfect beauties 1 This thought probably and providentially occurred to most of the gentleman's Hartford auditors, and prevented them from swooning with apprehensions upon the spot, without waiting for the verification of the wizard's awful words. So he went at them again with something a little more mov ing aud melancholy Still. "The Southern men," he said, "are a Eelf-poase33ed, a self reliant, and a brave people. Tread upon them, and they will watch their opportunity and strike you." Now, "treading upon them," in this speech, cannot possibly mean anything except voting for Grant aud Colfax. The figure suggests the rattlesnake, and it also Suggests the Copperhead. Walk lightly, men of Connecticut 1 Step gingerly, or the rep tile of secession will have you in his veno mous coil 1 Vote for Blair and Seymour, or rebellion will return with seventy times seven thousand devils to driok the lite-blood and to Increase the taxes of Connecticut 1 Perhaps there were those who heard the wails of this Western Jeremiah who remembered the blood of Connecticut already spilled, and the taxes already levied wbioh Connecticut has paid or is still paying. They might have laughed at Mr. Pendleton's depression of spirits; and at any rate they would be pretty sure to laugh at the texts of Scripture and the theological illustrations with whioh the pious gentleman thought it necessary to carnlsh a speech made to Connecticut Puritans, the despised of Southern chivalry 1 They might have answered: "If the el "'.ion of Grant and Col fax is to bring a new rebellion, let it come I" France and the lYacc of Europe. Prom the IV. T. Herald. Day after day our cable and mail news renders it more and more difficult to be love in the continuance of peaoe in Europe. The Vn)l Mnll I'' ..,.11. jtno tYi.i mnal anllivlitunad and cautious of English journals, has at last been oompelled to acknowledge that war is mure than probable before the end of the vear. Napoleon's attention to the armv in creases. In the International Congress of woiklcgmen ai urneHeis vne probability or an early war seems to have monopolized both attention and time. The King of Prussia, in bis tour inrougn me nonueru provinces re oeives addresses, aud speaks out with a blunt nefs which is quite refreshing, although it does not encourage the hopes of peaou. Mean while we find the Biitisu, the Gorman, the Dutch, and the Belgian press full of specula tion in relation to certain movements of the Kuiperor, Laving for their object the esUbluh- roent of a French Zollverein, Holland and I Belgium to te Included. I These various items of news, all connected do not exnausi me aiarmiug rumors current all over the continent. The threatened Franco SpAnfch alliance has already produced A not nnnatnral excitement in Italy. The Italian Government, resigned to its fate, has been quietly going on and somewhat suooexsfully doing its work since the unfortunate affair at Mentana. A oontinuanoe ot the present sys tem of quiet domestlo government, tending as it does towards the development of the re sources of the peninsula, might at no distant day render a solution of the Roman questiou as easy and peaceful as it would be satisfactory to all concerned. The relations which have sprung np between France and Spain have infused new life into the party of action, and Garibaldian threats and Mazzlnl letters and rumored movements of large bodies of men towards the Papal frontier are now filling men's minds all ovr the Italian peninsula? In the event of a war breaking out in the North and a Spanish soldier touching Roman or Italian soil, or a Spanish war ship anchoring in Ita lian waters, Italy would burst into one general blaze of patriotism which nothing but a deluge of blood could quench. So is it in the South. Matters are scarcely less alarming in the East. The Greeks, what ever we may say of their success, are still as full of ambition as ever. The Cretan patriots, in spite of the apparent hopelessness of their caur e, still look iorward to the time when the Greek race, reunited, shall resume their once lofty place in the great family of nations. The Servians and other members of the so called Slavonio family hesitate in deciding npon incorporation with Russia or upon the establishment of a separate Slavonio empire which shall embrace all the non-Greoian Christian subjects of the Porte; while the Poles, the one Slavonio people who detest the idea of incorporation with any Power, long more intensely than ever for their anoient na tional independence. Europe is thus seen to be in a peculiarly combustible condition. It requires but the application of the mutch to produce a general and destructive conllagration. It matters little where the match is applied, whether iu the West, or the South, or the E ist, it is all but absolutely certain that the flames will spread until every nation of the. Continent is wrapped in their ruinous embrace. Suppose, for example, that the forces of France and Prussia were to come into collision on the Rhine, and that Spain were to attempt to gar rison Rome, is it not certain that a war to the death would break out between Italy aud Spain f Is it not just as certain that the Cretan insurgents would feel encourage 1 to make a fresh effort for their independence f Can it be doubted that Greeoe, aud after Greece Russia, would exert themselves to the utmost to fan the flame of rebellion through out the Christian provinces of the Turkish dominions f If Kussia had not already joined Prussia against France Russia would at last have found her opportunity to march on Con stantinople and make good her pretention to be the natural successor of the great Roman empire of the Kant. Supposing England to have refused to fight for Belgium and Holland, would she remain passive and see the iron clads of Russia dominate the Dardanelles ? Great Britain in the fray, where, how, when will the matter end ? Who can answer t The only thing that is certain now is that Euiope is on the eve of a gr at and eerious crisis. "Unconstitutional. Itevolmlonary. and Void.'' From their. Y. Times. Governor Baker, of Indiana, in a discussion with Senator Hendricks, traced the course o( the Democrats from the commencement of the war, with the view of showing that the oppo sition now offered to the reconstruction policy is identical with that which aesailed every measure employed by the national Govern ment in the struggle for its existenoe. The argument now employed to break down the Republican policy for the restoration of the Lnion, is a repetition of that which was strain and again used to sustain the cause ot the Rebellion. The men who now condemn reconstruction as "unconstitutional, revolutionary, aud void," in the same terms denounoed the pur pose to put down the Rebellion by force of arms. That was a pre-eminently unconstitu tional policy, in the opinion of the managers of the New York Convention. They held that, under the Constitution, the States had a right to secede, and that the exeroise of ooercion by the Federal Government to prevent the exer oise of the right, was revolutionary. Accord ing to them, the Government made war upon the Constitution when it undertook the sup pression of the Rebellion. Clinging tenaciously to this doctrine, the Copperheads never neglected a chance of doing all that the rules of Congress allow to obstruct aud embarrass the course of the Government. All the great measures of the war period they attacked in suooession as revolutionary and unconstitutional. The first call for troops was objeoted to on this ground. The enaotment of the test oath, designed to exclude Rebels from oili;e; the amnesty and emancipation proclamations of Mr. Lincoln; the initiatory reconstruction proclamation of. the same 1 resident; and generally all that Mr. Lincoln or Congress did to weaken the Rebels or directly to add vigor to the prosecution of the war enoonntered the active opposition of those who now attack reconstruction, liven the issue of greenbacks, with which the Demociatio party now proposes to pay the londholdeis, was resisted as an infraction of the Constitution. The financial measures which the exigencies of the time necessitated, weie enacted in npita of an opposition akin to that which would plunge the reconstructed States back into anarchy. The plea aud the purpo.se have been the Eame all tLe time. At every step the party of tbe Union was compelled to contest the ground with the politicians who nominated Seymour and lilair. They were not simply indinxrent They were active on the side of tbe enemy; not indeed waiting battle in the open Held, but doing service as aiders and abettors of the enemy at Washington and in the Northern Mates. And thtlr pretense was perpetually the same. Always and every where their at tempts to destroy the Union, by obstructing measures framed for its defense, were paraded as in the cause of the Constitution. The Rebel party, accordiug to their hypothesis was the only constitutional party. The Union party, as they regarded it, never ceased to be revolu tionary, or its policy never otherwise than un constitutional and void. The worthleFsness of this pretended reepeot for tbe Constitution has beeu made more appa rent by the acquiescence of the Democracy in the course of Mr. Johnson. They hurled epithets at Mr. Lincoln's proclamation of re construction, whioh specifically reooguized the control of Congress over the representation; while they gladly aooepted Mr. Johnson's proclamation defining the method of reoon strto'ion and exacting the oaths he imposed. What wa3 revolutionary and unconstitutional in Mr. Lincolu, because done in the interest of the Union, was just and proper in Johnson, because calculated to restore RebeU to autho rity. Such was the difference iu the aim aud teiideroy of the two plans, aud such the dilleieute in their reoeptiou by the party which babbles incessantly about the Consti tution I So is It also with the reconstruction policy of Congress. It has law for its fonnla tiou and the restoration of the Union as its end. But It works " through enfranchised loyalty, with the help of the majority of tin whole people, and iu a manner that gives strength to the Union; and for this reason it is condemned by the Democracy as "revolu tionary, unoonsiitulional, and void." And yet these sticklers for the Constitution desire, by upsetting Congressional reconstruction, to re vive the Johnson Governments, organized atider tbe orders, and after the model of th President, without a particle .f authority either in the Constitution or the law. What is usurpation when done by the people's repre sentatives as against Rebellion in D v.no. :ratii eyes becomes rightful exercise of authority in the Executive, acting in behalf of the Rebels. The dishonesty ol the Democratic zeal in support of the Constitution could have no more fiectlve illustration. The Day of Wrath. From the N. T. Independent. It makes a man hold bis breath to read the accounts of the appalling earthquake which lately ran like a sea-wave up aud down the west coast of South America, overthrowing ten cities and hundreds of towns aud village.; killing probably thirty thousand people, aud maiming an unnumbered multitude besides; destroying ships, houses, churches, and various property, officially valued at thr-e hundred million dollars; and, altogether, cou Ftituting one of tbe most extensive, destruc tive, and awful calamities which have ever befallen the human race. The accounts thus far received are crude and meager, giving rough guesses rather than accurate statements of losses; but all the writers unite in a concurrent testimony to the unparalleled bavoo caused by the earthquake, and to the universal panio among the people. After various premonitory symptoms, the chief shock was felt almost simultaneously throughout all Peru, at about C o'clock P. M., August 16. I he convulsion extended more or less destruotively through forty degrees of latitude or one-ninth part of the earth's cir cumference. The horrible phenomenon took some new shape in each new place, but pre fervtd come general feaiures everywhere. For iiistanoe, reports from widely-distant places mention that the earth opened In regular seams and fissures, emitting clouds of snffo- oatiug dust and gas; aud the fe retired from trethore, to return to It In monntaln-like waves, rolling far inland with iudescribable fury. In many places the atmosphere was so charted with electricity tbat it a man touched his lined to his hair, or to his clothes, sparks would be emitted, liirri llewout oftbetr nests, and sought refuge in the upper air, inakiDg unusual noises iu their flight. B tiling hot water was belohrd up ttiroiigti rifts in dislo cated rocks. Floatiug vapors gave striate colors to the sky. In localities where the eaith was not actually drift it was seen to undulate, as if its t-urface were rising and falling to the motion of internal wavei. The richest cities f the weft coast of South America have been worse than totally de stroyed for their inhabitants have been de stroyed with them. What a drama of an guish was enacted in Callao, in Arica, in Lima, in lbaira, in Quito 1 Whole families crushed to sud fen death uuder their own tumbling roofe I Hosts of mangled survivors left who at this moment are enduriug th3 pro longed agonies of too slow a death I Not far from quarter of a million of people are made houseless and homeless by this cala mity; and tens of thousands of these are suf feiiug for want of clothing and food. It is a case for the whole world's charity. We sincerely hope tbe Government and citi zens of the United States will show a priuoely beneficence toward these ruiue 1 si iter repub lics and their stricken people. Moreover, a scientific commission ought to be formed, with Professor Agasiz at its head, to proceed at once to South America, for the purpose of collecting, without delay, accurate data of this great upheaval, with a view to a thorough Inquiiy into the origin of earthquakes a mys terious problem etui unsolved. A Frank Answer to an Insidious Question. From the N. Y. World. "According to tbe policy thus authoritatively proclaimed, It will be Incumbent ou Mr. Sey mour, if elected, to set usido the new Govern ments as null huU vul.i.uud with the help of the military to disperse tbem and re-estuoil.-h tie order of things which C'ougres.-i nboilsued. This programme Involve tbe forcible destruc tion of Govern me ma organized uuder tne law, and whose validity UougreHg nos reoogntzrd; the overthrow of cotisti'u'ions wHlou li.ve been ratified by a majority of the people; tbe disfranchisement of tbe fre.idmen in defiance of existing Jaw; end the restoration to power of Kehtl leaders lu spile of Uie disability imposed by the fourteenth amendment. "Will l he Wor.a give lis opinion frankly touching the piaoiictu application ot the Blair doctrine as to ire dlBperslou of tbeHiultiern Ooveriiments and the UlsfrHnchUerueuc of the iretdinen by tbe mere oidtr ot a JJ'inouraUu 1'iebldeiit? Will U ezpUiu how 11 jecouclle.i l'H piotebsed respect, for Jaw, end Km okuov ledgnjtni of the da facto nu thorny of tae una (Joeinments. wilu lis support of candidates who are pledged to defy itud violently otfer Ihiow bom ? tVom the Tune. Tnis strain ot remark and request for infor mation proceed upon tbe uuwanuted assump tion that General rilair's letter is a part of the Democratic platform. tut there it no process cf fair reasoning by which it can bu made to appear so. The Democia'io N itioual Conven tion adopted its platlorm before balloting for candidates, and without any expectation that Mr. Seymour would le its nominee lit Presi dent or General Blair for Vice-President. Whatever candidates had beeu nominated, their acceptance would have bound their per sonal honor to the Btipponot the' platform, although it might have conflicted, in some lefpects, with their own deolared views. Gov ernor Seymour, not long before the Convention met, made a noteworthy speech on the payment oi the public debt. Does tbe Time believe, or does anybody believe, that in nominating him t)e Convention indorsed all the views expressed in that speech ? On the contrary, everybody admits that Governor Seymour, by acoeptiug tbe nomination, yielded whatever in his pre vious views did not fully accord with tbe plat form. The same reasoning applies to General Blair. He is bound by precisely the same obli gations of personal honor. If there is anything in bis Bredhead letter inconsistent with the platform, he renounced it in accepting the nomination, just as Mr. Seymour male a si oil Jar renunciation if there was anything iuoou Eistent with the platform in his finanoial fpeech. The candidates of a great political party stand in a representative capacity. Their honor, which forbids them to aooept the homi nation of the patty unless they have previously agreed with it in essentials, binds them to sink minor dillereuoep. Wfca'ever the times may think of the ethics of su jIi matters, it cannot be permitted to make a different rule for the two candidates of the Demooratlo ptrty. Our contemporary must either hold that the Demo cratic party is pledged to ail the previous views of Mr. Seymour, or else admit the party is not pledged to all the views expressed by General Blair previous to his nomluatiou. The 'limes may take which horn of this dilemma it phases, but we thall force it upon one of tbem. In our opinion, tbe contingency oontem plated by General Blair in hi llrodhead letter, is never likely to arise. The example of Georgia demonstrates that everything da sirahle can bo accomplished through the agency of the new State Goverament?. Th Uct that iu the greater part of the South the while citizens ate a majority, and that they monopolize the property, the eduoition, the Booial influence, and the political experience of their rection, proves that, if let alonn, they in mon id 'their' institutions lnto'any form they please. There will be no need of .dippeieiug the new governments by force, be laiihe they oau so eabily be made the agonts of their own reformation. E'luouraged and sup ported by the public opinion of the whole countiy, as the Southern whites will be by the election of the Demooratlo candidates, they 'will have no difficulty in revising the present Constltutloi s by methods so free froja legal question, that no Federal Interference will be possible to thwart, and none necessary to aid them. We are confirmed in this view by the fact that the ingenuity of the Time itself can cleecry no other remedy than a refusal to admit Senators and Representatives from the States which thus transform their govern ments. In an article, on the 11th inst., npon the expulsion of the negroes from the Georgia Legislature the Times bald: "How the wrong may bo remedied is a ques tion we are not tilt-posed to auMwer with toe Knnie degree of coufileace.' It is a difficult and delicate question. The House bait a right to Oicl'le. upou the election aud qu-tllfloalion of tin ueruoem, end mo Bia-'e court ha jurisdic tion over U. Au ad vurae Judgment may be aa noui ced, but tbe prominent u ivoot'es of ex pulhlon nuve announced their luleutlou to dia rtyi.rdlt. They claim to be Judges of law as well as of fact, and will heeU no Opinion or dcrlflon At vertance with their action. Wtuu. I hen, can Congress do? My not t he (Senate and lioti.He, lu turn axtiert their supreme control over elecilona and quallhcHtloim, aud respec tively refuse to admit the Senators aud K sorest-mat ivm whom Uuorgla will send to the next sestiii? Tho Inquiry is not eiirav4ant lu vleir of the taot t h..t Georgia regained lit prtvl. lege ol self government, In part ly ratifying tbe fourteenth amendment.which without tual vole would still belaw. Tue act of raililoatlon, how ever, in the Ucorula Houte, wan carried by tue votes oi the colored members who have beeu expelled es ineligible. II they had no lawful tine to neati they could have uoue to votes: and alter sulking tbem ott'the motion to ratify be come a failure. Interpreting the action of the Ltgitdatute lu rckptcl of the umeudmeut In the 111 1H of its leceul pioueedmg, no special pletd li g would aeeui necessary tojus'lly revision try I'oLitirrm on me ground of fmud. For if what pur or ted to be n ratification was really not tucb, HdmlSHton obtained In reliance upon it whs in lact admission b.v false pretence; and Congretfe may vludlca'elis integrity and punish the fraud by rt fusion to receive the Uei.rla t"-eraior and K present all vex. Trial utep would virtually be a declaration Iba the reconstruc tion ol tuo 8 nth is still tno tmolKte." Now, whatever may be thought of thU remedy in other respects, the 'limes must per ceive that it cannot work when we come to have a Democratic President and House of Representatives. All that Congress could do at the next sest-ion, would be to stultify itself, and make itself a laughing-stock, by expelling the carpet bag members it has just admitted, and covering with derisiou the fleet plauk of the Chicago platform, which congratulates the country on the perfect success of the recon struction policy. But as soon as there is a Democratic Bouse, the Republicans are cheok mated. The joint resolution readmitting tbe States and sanctioning their governments can not be repealed without the concurrence of both Houses; and until it is repealed neither can reluse to admit members .on the ground that there is no valid State Government. The Times must therefore see that its party will be bound, Land and foot, in letters of its own forging. There will be no necessity for de molishing the gallows erected ly Hainan, when he can so easily be hanged on it himself. WANTS. AGENTS WANTED. THE BEST WURK lor Canvassers. Ueud fur Circulars, tree. 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EVERT rAlU WABBAN1ED, EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR GENTS' GLOVES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., 278rp MO. "II C'HEMNVT MTKEET. 218 & 220 S. FRONT ST. 2(8 & 220 S. FRONT ST. dateki shoulder-seam aillBT MAHCEACTOIiT, AND QKNTLEMEN'S FURNISfllNG STOBE, PJ-J FM.T FITTIM f H I K P9 AND tRAvKRS irytHiu. ii.i H-uieuinut a' v-rrsln-rt uniiuu. Ail . il.cc ur Icha ol O NTLKMEN S 1) It IS 8 ot i: h iii full vaii.-iy WliCHEaTKR & CO., Hi No. 7(4 Cii KS UT Street. . OFFER TO TUB TRACK, IN LOTS, - . ; M ' " FINE RYE AiVD BOUUBON WIIISKIES, IX BOD, Of 180S, 1800, 1807, nnd.1808. ; , ' AISO, FEEE FINE LIE AM) EOITUM WHISKIES, ! Of GREAT AGE, ranging from 1804' to 1845. ' ' ' Liberal contract will b entered Into for lou, in bond at Distillery, of thU yoars' raauuNoturr ,v RELIEF ASSOCIATION. WINES, ETC. T I C E. I JAMES CARSTAIR8. JR.. OFFICE OF TIIE MANHATTAN CO-0PE- UAT1TE BELIEF ASSOCIATION, No. 431 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Objkct. Tbe oMect ol this Association Is to seen re a casn payment wliiitn forty days alter the death of ineuibf-r ui as many aol.ara as ttiere are member In tue class to hicn lie ur sue belongs, to tue heirs. ILLUbl HATlOa: Clats "A" has 6LUU male uit-miH-rs. A member ales. The Association j ajs over within forty days 15G0 to the widow or heirs, and the rtmalnluK members forward within thirty days on dollar aud ten cents each to the Association to re imburse H. Falilr g to send this nuui, they lorleli to he Association all money nsld. and the Association supullts a new member to mi the place of the retiring OUe. nnn CljAn.E-o men .nu in.il JjUlt lVf )ltl 1.' IV. Ci.apsks. In Class A ail persona between the ag'S ol 15 aud 20 years; In clars U, all persons between tue sues of 2U aud 26 years: In l.'lsa. C, all peraous be tween me fines oi a ami u years: iii u.ass JJ, an per-ai-ns bt-iweeu tbe as es of mi and 88 years; in ClaisK.atl perHous between the ages of as and 4u years; in Class V, all persons between the agea ot 4U aud 4i years: In class G, all persons between the ages of 44 aud 60 eais; In class H, all persons between ihe ages of 60 and 68 J ears: In class 1 all persons between tue ages of 6d ana su years; iu uiaaa au persous between tee ttges oi mi auu bo years, i ue i i.asis mi wouieu are Him BRii.e as above, itch class IB limited la SiKHI members. Each person pa' s six dollars npon be-i-nnili.tf a n.eniber and one dollar aud ten uanta each time a member ulea belonging to the same class he or she is a memoer or. one dollar noes olrect to tne nirs, ten cents it par for collecting. A member or one cltss cannot bs asiessd ii.i. anlinr If a uiember of another class dies. Kw.h clans Is ludeptndeul, having no connection wltu any other. i o oecouiw uieuiuer it in ueoeH-ary i o pay Mx lipllnrs Into tne treasury at the time of making be application; m pa uue xionar ana leu cents iuio the treasury upou the death of eaoh aud any member of the ciurs to which he or she belongs, a lihin thirty days after date ot notice of such death; to give your Jame. Town.Couuty, htate.Occti nation, etc.; ito a nuUlcai certiorate. Every minister Is Hkcd to act as sgeot, ana will be paid tegular ra's r u M?. circulars win explain runy in regard to mndsand luvtstmeuta. Circulars giving full ex Dia na! ion and blank lorms ol application will he sent, ou rf queetor upou a persoual application at tne odl je of the Association. I KlS l tlWI SIUI VI tlLX.113, K JVcMDRDV, Pield"t. B. T. WXIUHT (President Star Metal Oa.) Vlee-l-reslhent. W. & C A KM. AN (President Stuy veaant Bank), Trea surer, Mi WIS BANDERS. Secretsry. ri. u m aaGaAi I President National Trust Co.) 1). S. DVNCOiiB, No. 8 Pine street. The trust Hinos win oh neiu in irun oy mo . NATIONAL TKUoT COMPANY. No. ion Broxdway, New York. Agents wanted for this city, AawiLLIAM LIPPINOOTT, Gnral Arent, Manhattan co-operative Belief Assocloiion, 9 2 'm No 4:2 WALNUT street. Pounds. Nos. 120 1YALSCT and 21 UKAMTE Sla., IMPORTER OF Braiidics, Wines, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc Etc, AMD COMMISSION MEHOHANT SOR THE BALE OF TUBE OLD EYE, WHEAT, AD BOUR BON WHISKIES. LUMBER. pm H. WILLIAMS, SEVENTEENTH AMI CPBIKQ GARDEN? OFFEBR FOB MAX.K PATTERN LUMBER OF ALL KINDS. EXTRA SEASONED PANEL PLANK. , BUILDING LUMBER OF EVERY DE3CRIP. TION. CAROLINA 4 4 and 5-4 FLOORING, HEMLOCK JOISTS. ALL BIZ KB. CEDAR SHINGLES, CYPRESS BUNCH BHIjf. OLES, PLASTERING; LATH, POSTS, ALSO, FULL LINE OF WALNUT AD OTHER HARD WOODS. LUMBER 'WORKED TO ORDER AT SHORT KWIUH mwma BPRCCEJOldX. ' HAMLOCK. 1868. 1 BQ eiusoHJtJ) CLWAii pink, T7T7T7T CHOICE PATT'KRN flSK. J-UUO BP ANUa.il CEDAR, FOR PAIXERNH FLAGS, BANNERS, ETC. 1868. PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST. FLAUS, BANNERS, TRANSPARENCIES, AND LANTERNS, Campaign Badges, Medals, and Pins, OF BOTH CANDIDATES. Ten different styles sent on receipt ot One Dollar and Fllty Cent. Agents wanted everywhere. Flags in Mnslm, Bunting, and Silk, all sizes, whole sale and retail. Political Clubs fitted out with everything they na require. CALL Otf OR ADDRESS W. F. 8CHEIQLE, No. 49 SOUTH THIRD STREET, t18 tfrp PHILADULPHIA. GOVERNMENT SALES. SALE OP CONDEMNED ORDNANCE AND OttDNANCK HIOKEd, and other articles, at tit. Louis Arseual, bt Louis, Mo. Will be oll'erea for oale, at public anctloa, commencing at 10 o'oioclc A. M., October 6, lnwt, a Jame quautlty of Condemned urtluance Stores, aDd other articles, couslsttug ot Iron cannon, artillery carriages, a..d cannon balls, artillery in pieuients and euui- merits. Carbines, musitela. rlllee, plttols, shot guns, swords,' auu imurta. In tun try and cavalry accoutrements. Horse equipments, consisting ot saddles, bridles, halters, elc. rill.ery harness and parts of horness. Leather, brats, copper, and iron suiap. CaLnou. moitar. musket, and rltli Dowder. and mls- cellaLeousartlcleH. Au oiiporiuuliy will he offered by this sle for towns ana other annoclallons. or Individuals, to pur ( base ktins and can lake which may be usedfor salute t'UipoHes. A catalogue of the articles to ba sold will be fur MHlieo upou application at this Arsenal, or at the OiclimiHe Olliue. Washington JJ, C. Terms cul: ten percent, on the day of the sale aud the remainder when tbe property Is delivered, Ihlrty ilnjs wul be allowed for the removal ot litavy orduancw. !! orner stores will be re qutrtd to be removed within tea days from close oi fBle, Pecking boxes to be paid for at the stated price, to be determined by Iheoouimandingomtier. The olllctr niaklug tbesale reserves tne right lo bid In and suKpend the i-ale whenever the bidding does not cme up to the limit that my be filed by proper nut horuy ci some of the articles, or whenever the Imeiests ol ihe United Stales, In hU opinion, may be Observed b, so doing. f, D. CALLENDER, Brevet Brlgadler-Ueueral U. 8. A Llf nt. Col. oi Ordnance, commanding Arsenal. Et, Louis Arseual, ko,, Aug. HI, lsti. t It 21t CBLIC SALE OP CONDEMNED ORD nauce and Ordnance Store. A large amount ot condemned Ordnance and Ord Dauce bloies will be otlereU lor sale, at Public Auo lloo, at the Rock Island Arsenal, 111111018,00 WKU N JihDAY, the 14th day or October, lHi8,at lo o'clock, A. M. The tollowlbg lint cjmprlses some of the principal articles to be sold Vis,; 26 iron guns, various calibres. mini pounds shot, shell, etc ti'JO held carriages. ii lota of arll'lery harness. H8 carblner, various models. itTd muBkeia and rliles, various models, tub revolvers, various models. 4i',(M lots of Infantry acooutrementa. Sikxi MoClellau saddles, Bono curb bridles. 6oui watering bridles. ... ... . Persons wishing complete lists of the stores to be sold can obtain them by application to the Chief of Ordnauce, at Washington, D. 0., of Brevet Oolonel Crispin, United Btatea Army Porchasing Offloer, cor ner t.f Houiton and ureen a-reeta, New York city, or by direct application lo this Arseual. jjojjMAN, Llentenant-Colonel Ordnance, and Brevet Brtradler-Ueneral U. A. Commanding Beck Island Arsenal, fc-ept. 4. 18118 !lf?L CARPENTER AND BUILDR1. REMOVED To No. 131 BOCK Street, PHILADELPHIA. JOHN CRUMP. . CARPENTER AND BUILDER, snores to. is tontiu mtbeet, am VO. 1783 CII13KVT STBEKT, I3J FHILADEJLPIIIAj 1 Qdii jrLORIDA FLOORIMU. lOOO. FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOORING. VLKU1N1A FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOOiUNbl AtiH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA BTKP BOARDS. RAIL PLANK. 1868. lCftQ WALNUT BD8, AND PLANK 1 Cnn lODO. WALN UT BVti. AND PLaSk." I fillft WALNUT BOARDS. 1 LU'M UNDERTAKERS' LUMBBK 1 rl4ri lODO. UNDiatl'AKERW' LUMBER.' lofifi- Hh.1) CEDAR. a--'WU, WALNUT AND PJNB. I ftttft bliAfciONED POPLAR. 1 nnn lODO. bJLAJiONED CHERRV, 1868. WHITE M'jiW) BOARDS, 1 iiflQ ClOAR BOX MAKERS' lODO. CIGAR BOX MAKEKH' 18fiR BPAJJDiJi CEDAR BOX HOARDS . FOR BALE LOW, IKfM CAROLINA BCANTLING. lOnd LOOO. CAROLINA H. T. bll.Ltt, lODO. NORWAY 8CANTLLNGT KJK-ru 1868. ifify? in MAULE. BROTH FT M No. gSOO BOUTH BtreeL "TJNITED STATiS BUILDERS' MILL," Kos. 24, 26, and 28 S. FLTrEEATII St., PHILADELPHIA. ESLER & BROTHER. ItANUTACauaXBS 09 WOCD MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, STAIR BALU8 TEEB, NEWELL POBTd, GENERAL TURN' ' ING AND SCROLL WORK. ETC. The largest assortment ol WOOD MOULDINGS In this city coDstaDtly on hand s 2m GROCERIES, ETC. gXTRA FINE NEW.MG88 MAOKKKKL IN KITTa. ALBERT . JBOBEIITM, Dealer in Flue Groceries, II 7jrp ELEVENTH and VISE Strests. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOMSRT SnOEMA.KER CO.. N.E. Corner or FOUKTU aud 1UCE Sis., PHILADELPHIA, VHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURER OF Wlule Lead and Colored Faluts, Tottj, Varnishes, Ft. AQENTtt FOR THE CELEBRATED FKLACII Z1KC IMIA'TS, , DEALERS AND CONSUMERS bUPPUED AT LOWEbT PRlCEa FOR CASH. nl6i GAS FIXTURES. GAS V I X T U R R8 , MIBKET, MERRILL & THACKARA No. 718 UUFSiiUT Btreet. wantifactnrers of Gu Fixtures. LamV etc . would call the attention, of the piThllotoitolr laf g'e anj BrSlartmTh.0L,G'1. .Xi if if. hy "'so lutroduce gai-pluin iuio dwellings and poollo bondings, and vgivl r, BAttaa. Ing, altering, and repairing gagplpea. e,ao. All work warranted. r , yj 0 B N IS X C II A N0B rag m an u facto r y . JOHN T. BAILEY A CO., SIUriVID TO Ni E. corner ot Market and WATER Streets. Phllaoei phla. DEALERS IN BAUb AND BAGGING , Of every desrtrlpilou, ftv Orain, Floor, Bait, bu per-Phosphate of Lime, Bon , .... Dust, KU). Large and small OUNN Y Bagh constantly onihaud I"-1 ,Hi WOOL bACKf. ivua T. BAiijtr, Jamjas Cascadbm.