THE DAli.Y EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, , TUESDAY, OCTOBEIl (5, 1368. SriRIT OF THE TRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF TD8 LRADINO JOURNALS UPOK CUKR8KT TOPICS -COM PILKD EVKKT DAT FOB THI BVSRIHO TBLROBAPE. OmcUl Figures v. Dclmar's Guesses- From the Jf, Y. 2ibune. There are some guus which we have read of whloh prove more dangerous at the breeoh than at the muzzle. The Duuiocracr will find, before the get through with him, that Mr. Alexander Delinar, "Director of the Bareau of Statistics, " li one of this kind of guns. 80 far from avoiding any issue which thU learned pundit has raided, we advise all Republicans to serve tip Delmar hot, Del mar cold, and Del mar on the half-shell, ad libitum to the Democracy until after eleotiun. '- 1 Mr. Delmar has been very unfortunate in Belecting as a time for the publication of his grand financial expose the last .week, of a quarter of the fiscal year; for this quarter pats us in possession of some actual facts which cannot be either ignored or denied, and gives, also, some very unmistakable indications of what we may expect, in the way of revenue, from the remaining three quarters of the year. Fact No. 1. The receipts, in gold, for cus toms at the port of New York for the months of July, August, and September, the first Juarter of the present fiscal year, were 3!,219,438, gold. The estimated reoe'pts for the rest of the ports for the same time were $14,780,502 making a probable total of gold receipts for the first quarter of the present fiscal year of 150,000,000. How much does this look like the falling off of. customs receipts, prophesied by Delmar and the Demooraoy, to $150,000,000? fact io. 2. - The receipts for customs at the port of New York for the month of Sep tember just closed were the largest in the history of the United States. Treasury the next largest having been in August, 1855, the year when the receipts from customs exceeded $179,000,000. ., Faot No. 3. The reoeipts from internal rere nae for the first quarter of the present fiscal year were $40,050,891-91. If the receipts in tr&ns (u for the month of September were Inoluded, the receipts for the quarter would probably be in exonss of $45,000,000. Thus, for example, the collections from distilled spirits for the month of September in the Thirty-second District of New York, amounting to $595,000, were not included in the quarter's returns above given. In view of these facts, how about a revenue of only $122,000,000 from Internal sources for the current year, which Delmar and his backers assert is all that can be expeoted r Faot No. 4. Mr. Delmar, in order to sustain hla false pretense that the internal revenue for the current fiscal year would be only $122,000,000, assumes the aggregate reoeipts from distilled spirits for the current year at $13,000,000. Now the aotual total collections from . this souroe . from 234 districts in the month of July,, and from 204 districts in AuguBt, were as? follows: July, $1,944,-173-80; August, $2,882,500-27; total, $4 826,. 674-07; or at the rate of $28,000,000 per annum. 'And nothing, furthermore, in the future is more certain than that when the new law relative to the collection of the tax on distilled spirits by means of stamps goes into operation in November, the revenue from this source will be further augmented. Faot No. 5. The revenue from fermented liquors for the fisoal year 1866-7 was $5,819, 345; veraoious Mr. Delmar places it for the current year at $5,600,000. The aotual total collections from 234 districts in July from this souroe was $637,338 26, and from 204 districts in August, $497,127-47, making a total for two months of $1,134,465-73, or at the rate of $6,806,794-38. Fact No. 6. Delmar, in his estimate of reve nue for the current year, plaoes the revenue from "bank circulation, dividends, and de posits" at $1,800,000. The total collections from this source frem 334 districts in July, and from 204 distriots in August, were $904, 213 05; and from banks and bankers during the same period from the same distriots the total oollectionB were $634,891-51. We appeal to every fair-minded man if, in view of these facts, this pretended exhibit ef the national finapces, manufactured by Dl mar for the Democracy, is not really ludi- crous f We are anxious to see how those brilliant Democratic Journals which have in dorsed the accuraoy of this "Direotor of Statistics" propose to wriggle out of this fix In which they have thus placed themselves. They may, and probably will, deny the truth of the statements we have submitted, but it is f no use. They are official; we have the official statement before us; and we challenge contradiction from any respeotable quarter. And now one word for the three eminent merchants of New York-Messrs. Henry Grln nell, Royal Phelps, and Wilson O. Hunt, who intentionally or otherwise have oontrived to connect their names with this disgraceful and false publication of Alexander Delmar. While the Republican party is using every effort to promote economy, to reduoe taxes, and to establish the credit of the country, you have shown yourselves willing to employ the ser vices of one whose inoompetenoy and untrust worthiness has heretofore been almost univer sally acknowledged by all parties; whose writings a Democratio Secretary has been compelled to suppress by publio order; and whom both branches of Congress, without op position from a single member, were oompelled to legislate out of oifioe for his ridiculous con duct. And for what have you done this ? Simply that you might aid in striking a blow at the credit of the country, in depredating the price of United States bonds, in patting op the price of gold, and in adding another element to the distrust in the minds of foreign bondholders, who will attach more weight to the presence of your names in oonneotion with Delmar'a statements than anything which those statements may contain. - Aooes- sories before the fact, you stand equally guilty before the country with the prinoipal in this Shameless undertaking. . . . Ghosts and Mud. From the N. T. World. Will not some able Republican, before the present canvass Is over, make lust one strong, effective speech in behalf of hts party, its policy and its future. Caa nothing be said by any of them worth the attention of think ine. reasoning men? It would be a satisfac tion to the World and other Democratio jour nals to print such a speech. Oar columns are open. What we cannot meet fairly and squarely shall go to oar readers, and have its full weight with them. But we are tired of replying to arguments which are but the pre tense of argument. They give ns no sense of opposition. Fighting ghosts is tedious baal ness: and. besides, the ghosts of war and re Tolution which the radicals have tried to con jure up, were so thin and impalpable even to the obliquest vision that they hare vanished already in general derision. The hurling of ordure, too, as we must think the epithets of "traitor," "rebel," eto.. to be, is really not the sort of thing which persuade reflecting men to oonQde the Clovern ment again to men who have only themselves . to blame if they have not punished traitors for their treason and Rebels for Rebellion. Vet this is all which our radical contempt- raries think fit to found their pretensions to I votes upon. Ghosts and mud I Is there no radical living on this continent , to-day who has anything to say for his party worth a olean and decent man's while to hear, worth an intelligent man's while to consider the reply to ? Must we have ghosts and mad till the end of the chapter ? , For Heaven's sake, gentlemen, do not let our political annals be disgraced by the death of your great party in the fading of a shadow and the dying oat of a stenoh. ' . A Contemptible Campaign. From the iV. T. World. , The Republican campaign thus far has been discreditable to the intelligence aud to the earnestness of a great political party, It has been .a defensive campaign, of course, but it has not for a moment reached the vigor of the oflenso-defenslve. The issues in debate conoern the government of the country for the next four years. The Republicans discuss with great em phasis those which were timely before the last lour years. Having all but accomplished a revo lution in the structure of the Government; hav ing made it cease to be as a government of the people, through a great part of its jurisdiction, they have the effrontery to debate our restora tion to ancient laws and liberties as if that were a question of revolution I The pretense is ridiculous, but it has served well to bring out and define the intensity of the hatred anl disgust of liberty-loving and law-abiding men for the despotic and destructive Reconstruction legislation with which their rulers have been defacing and deforming the structure of oar free Government. There has been no statesmanlike polioy threading the warp and woof of the last four years' legislation. No statesmanlike defense of that policy therefore is possible now when it is before the people for the first time to receive judgment of life or death. The policy which has guided and determined the re construction legislation has been a partisan polioy, a polioy to perpetuate the party power of Republicans at whatever expense to the prosperity of the people, at whatever damage to the organic structure of the Government. This explains the feebleness and the intellec tual inferiority of the Republican campaign. Fatrioti&m Stronger than Partisanship. From the N. Y. Times. , ; The imposing demonstration of which Philadelphia has been the scene, is one of the many indications of the moral force which is at work in behalf of the Republican party. That is not an ordinary political movement which brings together vast masses of men who have proved their patriotism on the battle-field, and who come from several States to testify to the peril which threatens the cause they served. Partisan management may do much. It may collect a crowd at any given point, may organize processions and pass re-, solutions. But something else is needed to develop the display of which we recently heard from Indianapolis, and which has now, been repeated in Philadelphia. Bat for the prevalence of strong oonvictions, and an un alterable purpose as their result, such gather ings wonm De impossioie. . . The feeling at wort is axm to that which the first cannon shot in Charleston harbor awakened in 1861. Its souroe is deeper than partisanship ever goes. It has nothing to do with selfish considerations with considera tions of convenience or cost, or personal or, politioal advantage. It is an instinctive sense of national danger, and an instinctive reaolve to avert the danger and destroy its cause, at whatever cost. The feeling which organized armies and conquered the Rebellion is pre cisely the same feeling which now animates the organized Boys in Blue throughout the country. They are not willing to see their work nndone. They recognize the old Rebel enemy under the Democratic flag, and they are resolved that he shall not carry off the trophies or victory. The character of the canvass everywhere in the North and West proves that the eleotiou of Grant will be the produot of a great patriotic uprising, which mere partisans can neither create nor resist. The question to be deoided has reached the popular heart in a shape that admits not or parley, bhau the battle lor the Union, waged on a basis of loyalty, be con summated or reversed? Shall those who saved the nation, or those who assailed its life, dictate the terms of peace ? The arts of the Demecratlo party have failed to conceal the real issue to be determined. The people, true to their Instincts and the Union, discerned in the New York Convention proof of a conspi racy in the interest of Rebellion, and they in tend, by the election of Grant, to orush it eflectnally. . Return to Tower. Petersburg ( Va.) Index. , What the ghost of Duncan was to the guilty and conscience-tortured Macbeth, the ghost of the Rebellion is to the radicals: "it will not down." There is nothing, aooording to them, whioh they so much dread as the return of the Kebels to power. If by Rebels they mean Democrats, there is nothing more sure than that the apprehension will be verified. Sooner er later the Democrats must get control of the Government, and should it be tempted to abase its powers, the radicals will find that in the despotic features whioh they have en grafted on it, they will have bequeathed to the Demooraoy a weapon of fearful power to turn against the inventors. Bat it proposes to do no suoh thing. Instead ol following the example of the radical party in exhausting all of its force, in the perpetuation of past feuds and revenge for bygone auluiojl tles, it will effect an immediate disarmament of all the powers and the passions hostile to the universal peaee, harmony, and prosperity of the conntry. It will disband the Freed men's Bureau, and thus save an immense amount of money to the nation, which is now not only uselessly but perniciously spent. It will disband the whole army ot officials who now form an unholy alliance and league to gether to rob the treasury and electioneer for Grant. It will nullify the fatal power of the bondholders, whioh starves the poor man and Midas-like turns the bread, which should feed his little ones and the garments which Bhould clothe them into gold, to satisfy their insatia able and gTeedy and nndjust demand. It will close the chasm of sectional hate which yawns between the States a chasm which Radicalism Li ever widening and deep ening. It will apply the antlseptio of publlo eoo nomy to the body politic, now bleeding at every pore to glut the leeches who fatten on its life-blood. . - - It will sweep. from offloe all the base wretobes who owe their place to perjury. It will clear 'the temple of jostioe. of those degraded beings who officiate at its altars, and conceal beneath the ermine and sacred insignia of their power and their priestly office the incarnation of Ignorance, villainy, and lies. - . , It will do all this and more, not by vio lence or for revenge, bat by the exercise of its just constitutional powers and for the restoration of peace and good-will among the peeple and honesty and competency among its servants. Radical Tactics. From the Charletton ( O.) Mercury. An experience of over three years has nucU us tolerably familiar with the practices of radi cal journalists, especially as regards the chronicling of event in the S ath that have, or may be-supposed to have, a political bear ing; .. aud i unfortunately almost everything that happens here is made to subserve some political purpose. If it is a riet, it is forth with pronounoed a "Rebel outrage," without the slightest reference to the facts or cirou in stances of the case. If a negro is shot while in the very aot of house-breaking or corn stealing, it is at once . heralded as another fiendish atrocity by' the K. K. K. But if a Southern white man is killed, the faot is not deemed . worth reoording. If a Southern Democrat makes a speech, his utterances are at once stamped as "rebellious" and "trea sonable," his language is reproduced in a garbled form, and not unfreqnently words and phrases are attributed to him which he never tittered. This has been bo frequently exposed, that we need adduce no proof to sub stantiate our assertion. ' The most recent instance we have met of the ready method of the radicals with unpalatable Southern facts is the cold shoulder they have given to a recent despatch from New Orleans, announcing that "the Senate installed another negro, not eleoted as a Senator, in plaoe of Reuben White (white) eleoted, but deolared ineligible," eto. We published the despatoh on the 26th isst. .The Philadelphia Inquirer (radical) prints the following heading to the despatch: "A Seymour and Blair despatoh for effect." Now the Inquirer of course can know nothiDg of the truth or falsity of the despatoh; and certainly there is nothing in the word ing of it that to an unbiassed mind could cast a doubt upon either its genuineness or authen ticity; and yet simply because it announces an event disagreeable to radical ears, it must at once be branded . as a Democratio fabrica tion. What can we expeot from a people in structed by suoh teachers ? , It would be interesting to know whether the Inquirer headed the news from Atlanta, some weeks ago, ' about the ' expulsion of the negroes from the Legislature, on aooount of ineligibility, with the words, "A Grant-Colfax despatch negroes ineligible to offloe under the Constitution of Georgia." " Oh no, that was a "tenible Rebel outrage." Such is radloal fair ness and consistency. . The Cost. . v From the National Intelligencer. . We have no time to enter upon the study of the cost to the people of this country to main tain radicalism. It would be a great error to suppose that radicalism is of recent birth and growth. . Like the "Canada thistle," it is an old weed, which nothing can eradicate but the most careful husbandry. We have never been without it for a day in New England. It legis lated pretty nearly every innocent amusement Into a crime more than a hundred and fifty years ago. It made witches, and then hang them. It made anti-Masonry. It made spirit ualism, that sort of "thistle" which disap pears lor loDg years, and comes np sgaln as green, fresh, and exacting as ever; the witoh returns to us as a spiritualist.. Whether spiritualist, or Puritan, or fanatic, it is all the same. Unquestionably, the latter form has proven to us the most expensive. We main tain that New England fanaticism is properly chargeable with the Rebellion. It now costs the people of this country to maintain 'the army and navy fally double what it ought, and would have cost them to carry on the Government fifty years ago, had they never been onrsed with the foul spirit of Puritanism, or radicalism, or fanatioism. Fifty years ago we had a national debt of a hundred millions of dollars,' more or less, whioh we talked a good deal about. Now we raise in one year four times the amount of the publlo debt a half century ago. It costs us more money to support the military establishment in 1868-69 than would have paid off the na tional debt in 1820. All this we pat down against Puritanism, or radicalism. We have seen enough of these "Canada thistles" to know that where they flourish there can be no other production. It is per fectly safe, then, to say that we mast give up the rule of radicalism, or give up all idea of maintaining a free system of laws. This prin ciple is well understood by. the best English thinkers. It is admitted in that country that the free polity of England is upheld only by the solid Saxon element which has ever con stituted the guiding power of the British nation. Puritanism in a party is a mere gar ment a sort of external form of goodness, an adroit use of the musoles of the face to pro duce a ' sanotimonlous expression, really to conoeal a wily or malevolent purpose. It is a costly garb, indeed, which covers a hard taskmaster upon the labor of the country. Puritanism has undertaken the care, eleva tion, and enfranchisement of the negroes. We put upon record our prediction and we print it here for future reference that the negro race has never before enoountered so great a misfortune. It may well warn and alarm them that their benefactors have no meroy for the white people of the South, no more than for the plain white laborer of the North. That is quite enough to teach them that in seeking the good of the blacks those nominal guardians have ulterior, selfish ends alone to accomplish. If it shall cost the poor negroes anything like what it has cost the law-abiding and justice-loving people of the North to maintain Puritanism or radicalism, they will have occa sion enough to groan under the load they bear. Another Calumny on Grant Nailed. From their. T. Commercial Advertiser. The World, in its correspondence, made the aocusation of draokennesa against General Grant. Wendell Phillips and the Independent made a like charge. The World, however, attempted to throw the odium off itself, and constantly asserted the responsibility of its associate maligners for the charge. Now that it has good proof of the . falsity ef the accusa tion, it says it "can afford to be generous to General Urant,". and proceeds to leoture the "radioal defamers" as if it had no hand in the origination or the circulation of the calumny. Tee charge or Wendell Phillips was deliber ately made, ueneral Urant, he said, was drunk in the streets of Washington on a San day morning. Now, what was at the base of this infamous statement ? A writer in the Ration, signing himself "A Thoughtful Tee totaler," thus exposes the Phillips falsehood: 'A friend of mine whose name I do not iilve because I have lust now no means of communi cating with him in order to get bis leave to do so long resident in Washington, and respected there, a strong ltepnbllcan, and a person whose means ol gelling Information are of the very beet kind, heard the aiory within not very many hour after It was Uild. He at onoe asked the Barrator of It tor hla authority, and the name of two ladles well known to him, and known to the radicals, were given to him. F ireet, by the way, was, If I remember, the soene .of the alleged exhibition. My friend Imme diately called on the ladles to Inquire into the troth of the story. What thy said to him was In suustacioe this: They were walking down F street on their way to obnroh on tue morning In question, and met Gen. Urant, who waH on the oilier aide of the way, and was evi dently going to Ueneral Dent's. Tney observed nothiDg peculiar In his look, or walk,orrunner until he reached General Dent's door, and thea he seemed very uncertain whether to go Into the General's house or the next one, and lr eoit-;e secords seemed to be pandering the ques tion In his mind. Finally, he selected the right bouse. The ladles heard, the next day, that 6n the day belore, She-Irian, who was Intheolty for a day or two, had been Invited to a brenk feat, at which Grant was, of course, present, and 1I1 at there bad been a good (leal of wine drank. When this was told them they couneou-d the fact of hla dubiety as to the donr with trie fact of bis bavins beau at a, wine break fast, fetid aald so, bnl did not hnae any charge of drunkenness on anylblDg which .try had seen, nor Indeed make such a charge at all." 'And that is alL' A man hesitates before a street door, and he -is "drunk." The writer, adds the further explanation: ' "General Dent had on that Sunday morning been living la the house above mentioned some four or five weeks. Ill one of block of four or five houses very nmoh like each other. Gene ral Grant, it is probable, had been Inside the house once or twloe, and no more, since Gene ral Dent had taken It, and did not woll know whioh bell to pull, so he stooped and looked; possibly, read a door-plate or two." 1 And this miserable lie of the virago of the rostrum, echoed by the World, and reduced to an engraving by the Democrat, has only this lame leg to stand upon and move withal. The World tries to cast the blame, as we have said, on its associate slanderers. It refers to the Independent, of January 31, 1808, to the Tribune, of April 8, and to Wen dell Phillips, May 29, as the utterers of the slander. Now mark how plain a tale shall put him down. On the 17th of January, two weeks before the Independent spoke, a double leaded despatch from Washington in the World contained these words: Further concealment of or charitable dalli ance with the reputation of this latter orUoer (Grant) would now be absurd. If anything is certain which, though it may not be publicly admitted from hla own Hps, Is yet distinctly stated here at the capital by his most Intimate friends, and even boaxted of by radioal Congress men, It Is certain that Ulysses 8. Grant, Ueneral, Is thorn of his hitherto mysterious prestige, and bound not to kick against the traces to which he is harnessed at last, while the bab bling tongues that are never motionless In Washington asoribe to a convivial propensity, for which great commanders mentioned in his tory were remarkable, the neglect of General Grant to meet his engagement on Monday with President Johnson." Three days later the charge was repeated under the mild euphuism, "Grant was too much confused to remember much." A few weeks later, the World was referring to these charges as having originated elsewhere, and aotually denied its own statements. Now it calls Phil lips and the rest vile slanderers, and assumes a virtue to which it has no claim. Who oan place any confidence hereafter, if any one has possessed it heretofore, in those who will malign publio or private oharaoter thus shame FLAGS, BANNERS, ETC. 1868. PRESIDENTIAL CONTE3T. i FLAGS, U AA A EES, TRANSPARENCIES, AAD LANTERAS, Campaign Badges, Medals, and Pins, OF BOTH CANDIDATES. Ten different styles sent on reoelDt of One Doiiai and Fifty Cents. Agents wanted everywhere. v Flags In Manila, Bunting, and Silk, all sixes, whole sale aud retail Political Olnbs Ailed out with everything they m moire. CALL ON OR ADDRESS W. F. 8CHEIOLE. Ho. 40 SOUTH TH1EW STREET, l tfrp PHILADELPHIA. SEWING MACHINES. f-HC GREAT AIIEBICAH COHBIIf ATIOK BUTTOA'-IIOLE 0YERSE1MING AND SEWING MACHINE, Its wonderful Popularity Conclusive Proot . of itdUrcat Merit. irk liMwaaia In ilia r1aman4 sVia Ikl. t..i.i. A uivt tutv a-asi wuv uouiauiv iut vaiia T tUUJkUlBJ Machine has been TKMFOLD daring the last seven months of lis first year before the anblla This grand and surprising snocess Is unprecedented In the history ol Sewing Machines, and we feel folly In nlnlmlno Ihar IT HAM HO EQUAL, Being abiolateiy the best FAMILY MACHINE IN THE WORLD, ' ',' J And intrinsically the cheapest, for It la really two Machines oomhlned lit one. Bold at the S. W. Cor. of ELEYEATU and CUESAUH PHILADELPHIA rtMstnthtf MILLINERY GOODS. TIOIITII STREET RIBBON STORE, No. 107 N. EIGHTH STREET, Fonr doors above AltCH Street. I have now open for the ; FALL AND WINTER SEASON, A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF BONNET RIBBONS, VELVETS, TRIMMING RIBBONS, BATINS, SATIN RIBBONS, ! VELVET RIBBONS, LACES, FLOWERS. FEATHERS, To which I would kindly call the attention of tlie ladles. JULIUS SICHEL, No. 107 N. EIGHTH Street. ,r. B. No trouble to show goods. 9 22 taths SILKS, CRAPES, . HATS, BONNETS, ' FRAMES Si. AMERICAN ALOE. MESCAL TON 10 AND DIUBETIO. ic- ad eminent wruor says of it: 'And really tta a patient owes some tuanlti to a doctor who restores mm wun nectar, .uoiq ana fragrant, lu .taud ofraiuluH hi. turoat and ll&vliiv hi. in. trrlur with the bitters sucked by soar-Is lupertxl roots iroin vixtuiHu .una. li-f.0 a buttle! Biz for 17 50. : iiowuuopalhlo I'harniacy for sale. Orn evenings. 10 2 No. 121)1 1UDU a Avenue. TITLE Us WEAVER & CO.. MANTJTAOTBRKBJS OW MANILLA AND TARRED CORD AOS, CORDS J TWINES, ETC., . : . Ho. (8 North WATEB Street, ana No, U North DXLA WARD Avenue, , ' , ' FHH.APBI.PHIA. '' KDWIBT H, PlTLBM, MlOHAKb WBAVHK, UwaAD V. GLOTWUh HI 218 & 220 S. FRONT ST. 4 r 218 & 220 i S. FBOHT ST. j & c o EILDON fcEMINARY (LATE LISWOOD 11 ALL), opiolie the Yora Koad Station, North l'enns)lvaul ltallroad, seven miles Irom Pnlladel py?" .. - . . ine rnnenin HMiMon or Miss UAiirl'H Meiect Boarding Buhool for Young Ladles will oommenne at the above beautiful and healthfal sltuatlou, Bepteru ner id, low. Increased accommodations having been obtained by change ot reldnce. tbere are a few vacancies. which may be rilled by early application to tlie 1'rln- i-ival, bnoemaaeriown tr. v., nouiaomery uounty, Pa. Circulars, and every information regarding the school, given at the Uflice ot JAY COOKhJ a (JO., .nuuKvm, jao.jut b. itiLLiv eireei, iriuaueipuia.or as above. a is 2m 1 . .. OFFER TO THE TRADE, IN, LOTS, , ' .' . i . i FINE RYE AM B OH U B 0 N W II IS K IE & LT BOADlj J805,' 1800,1807, and 1808. - ALSO, FREE FIXE LIE AND ' BOFBBOX ! -WUISRILS, j Of GREAT AGE, ranging from 1SG4 to '1845. - Liberal contract will be entered Into for lots, in bond at Distillery, of this years' manafaotnrsj . EDUCATIONAL. WINES, ETC. ST. FKANCIS' COLLEUR. IN CAUE OP FranciHcau Brothers LORRITt). - limn una Uuiinty, a four miles from CreHS.tn. Cliarterel In IB&tr, Wltn privilege of Conlurriug degrees. Location, the moHt healthy In tbetHai, the Allegheny Moan tains being proverbial lor pure water, bracing air, aud picturesque sceuory. tcutilamlo year ceaiiueuces iut ol f eptember aud ends 29ili of June. Land Purveying apparatus furnlHhed grails. Hludenis admitted from eight yean to manbood. Board and tuition, payable in auvaura, tiuu per session, uiassicai ana niouern languages extra, iu. ' hett-renoes Klght Rev. Bishop Wood, Philadel phia; Kight Rev. Bishop Uonieueo, Plitaburg; and Kev. T. b. Reynolda, Lorelto. Mualo (piano aud uite of Instrument), 026. 8 181m pTAMILTON INSTITUIE DAI AND BOARD- leg-Bchooi for YouDg- Ladies, No. ssio chesnut Street, Philadelphia, will reopen on MONDAY, Sep tember 7, 1868, For terms, eto,, apply to 8 f " PHILIP A. CREOAR, A. M Principal. JANE M. ' IIARPER WILL REOPEN HEB (School tor Boys and Girls, No. lra CUK8JN0T Btreet, September (ninth month) list. At plication for edmketon caa be made at the room oi the 17th and 18th, from 10 to U o'clock, or alter the school oommeuces. 9 18 lm MISS ELIZA W. 6MITH'S FRENCH AND KNULlbit BOAKUiJSli AND BOd-OOL iUtt YOUAU LAlMrJs, No. Vtl bPRCCE Street, will reopen on MOMUA Y, September 14. 8 t tw TUE MISSES JOHNSTON'S BOAUDINQ and Day Hcnool lor Young Ladles, No. 1827 bfRLOJi; btreet, will reopen (D, v.) bepteraber li, mx, .. . . tax MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. ' AMERICAN CONSERVATORY OP MUSIC H. K. comer TUN 111 and WALNUT oireeta. uii Quarter will commence MONDAY, Octooer 12 Names ot new pupils mu.ioe entered this weelc.10 4 ft ISS JENNIE T. BECK, TEACHER OP PIANO-FORTE, No. 748 FLORIDA Btreet, between Eleventh and Twelfth. below Fltiwater. ' 94 ' IO. P. BON DINE LLA, TE4CHER OP SING- s 1NU. Private lesaons and classes. Reaideniw. No. 808 H. TH1KTKKNTU Street. aitlbn JIANO.-MR. V. VON AMSBERO HAS RE sumed his lessons, No. 2M south iftth St. 9161m BALLAD AND SIGHT 8INGING. T. BISHOP, NO. 83 B, N1N JCi'KENTH. Be 9 281m DRUGS, PAINTS, ETO. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N.E. Corner or FOURTH and RACE g&, PHILADELPHIA, ' WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MANTJFACTTJRKRa OW Whit Lead and Colored Paints, Fottj, Yarnlshes, Etc. AGENTS TOR THX CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. DEALERS AUD CONSUMERS SUPPLIED AT LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. 8Ut STOVES, RANGES, ETC. NOTICE. THE UNDERSIGNED wonld call attention of the pnolio to his NEW OOLDJtN JCAULU FDKNAOB. This Is an entirely new heater. It Is so con structed as to at once commend llseli to genera) favor, belB a a combination of wrought and cast iron. Ill very simple In Its construction, and Is perfectly au tight; self-cleaning, having no pipes or drams te bt taken out and cleaned. Ills so arranged with upright hues as to produce a larger amount of heat from the same weight of coal t-. any furnace now In use, The hygrometrlo condition of the air as produoed bj my new arrangement of evaporation will at once de monstrate that it Is the only Hot Air Furnace thai will produoe a perfectly healthy atmosphere. Those In want of a complete Heating Apparatus wonld do well to Call and examine the tiolden ttagle WtH7, OUARLKH WILLIAMJ4, . . , , ., , Kos. 1133 and 1184 MARKKT Hlreet. , , Philadelphia. A large assortment of Cooking Ranges, iflre-boart Ptovea, Low Down erates, Ventilators, eto., alway on hand. N. B. Jobbing of all kinds promptly done. loi GROCERIES, ETC. TDURE WHITE WINE & CIDER VINEOAR GREEN GINGER, MUSTARD BEED, BPICE9. ETC. All the requisites for Preserving and PlcsUing pur- PC,e ' ALBERT C. MO BERTH, Peale In Fine Groceries, 11 7jrp Cor. ELEVENTH and VINE Streets. CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHS. A REGAL DESSERT." A new and beautiful Chromo-Llthograpb, after a painting by J. W. Peyer, Juit received by A. S. ROB INS OX, No. 910 CHE8NUT Street, i Wbo has Just reoelved NEW OHROMOB, . NA-W ENGRAVINGS. NiW FRENCH PHOTOGRAPHS. NEW DR&SDEN ENAM.EL8, LOOKING Q LASSES, Etc .TT I ib FREE GALLERY. BOARDING. VTO. 1121 GIRAKD BTREET, CEHTRALLY located, within twe squares of the Continental andGlrard House An nn famished SECOND-STORY FRONT ROOM, with flrst-olass Board, . Vacancies lot Gentlemen and Table Boarders. . . Reference required. 811 CORN JCXOHANO BA0 MAJfCFAOTOKY. JOHN J. BAILEY Oa, l IISUVSD TO N, E. corner ot Makkkt aud WATER Streets, Philadelphia. . , DEALERS IN RAUS AND BAGGING; Of every dust-rlpilon, fur Grain, Flour, Bait, Supr-phuhate of Lime, Bone , l)ut. Etc. Large and small OUNN y bags constantly onpiand 241 Also, WOOL BACKS, umi T, Bsn.ar. , itum C.sosoasti QAR STA IRS A McCALL, ' Kos. 120 WALNUT and 21 GRANITE Ste i IMPORTERS OF Brandies, Wines, Gin, Ollre Oil, Etc Etc, COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE BALE OF rUEE OLD BTE, WIIEATj AND B0CK- BON WHISKIES. , f LUMBER. 186a ttPRUUB. joist. BPRTJCB JoloT. HEMLOUK. 1868.' 1868. SEASSfiUS: lfiKfl PINK bp an Ian iHAf jSaawq 1 iiiifi JTLOKLL lIlAMJtUHU. VIRGINIA FLOOKJLNu? DEL A WAKE FLOORING! , ASH FLOORIN'1 WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. BALL PLANKT 1868. 1868.wAiScuTi:LtSI: 1868L lfttQ UNDERTAKERS' LU It hK R -TTTTTT lOOO. UNDERTAKERS' LUi?! lfiflR RED CEDAR. W'VU WALNUT AND PINE. v 1868. ' 186a- ; , , ; WHITE OAKHPlgg AND BOARDS ,:. ,186a 1 D'O i riMA R ROT 1U . TTTi i... AOOO. CIGAR BOX MAKKtS BPANIBn CEDAR BOX BOARDS." FOR SALE 1DW ""l lfififl CAROLINA SCANTLING. 1 orT AODO. . CAROLINA H. T. SILIA 1868. NORWAY RliAKTTtif AUtAJ. - a. ai. jr, i , , 186&' 0TpdraleV - 186a ,llr;., , brothek T. P. GALVIN & CO.,'. LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS i S1UCK1MAX0H STI ' BELOW SLOArs mills.::; ' ' (se-CAiijCD), , PHILADELPHIA; AGENTS FOR SOUTHERN AND EASTERN w. factur.rs of YELLOW PjlNE and KU. TI M R ?5 BOARDS, etc.. shall bs ha, py tontoh o75?5 wt.oiwu.le rates, deliverable at any eobesslble port? 1 Constantly receiving and on hand at n,,r dOUTUERN FLOOlUNU. SCANT LINO sTi i? A Eli OF WHICH WIIX BE DEUTXBKD AT AMY PABTOFTHK C1TT PaOMirrTvw "-JNITED STATiS BUILDEBS' MILL," Nos. 24, 2G, and 28 S. FIFTEENTH St., PHILADELPHIA, , ESLER & BROTHER,! fNuTAOTuaKa oy WOOD MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, STAIR BALUS TEBS, NEWELL POSTS, GENERAL TURN ING AMD SCROLL WORK. ETC. The largest assortment of WOOD JtODLDINQB la this city constantly on hand. 8 1 2m ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETC, ' PEXB fciTEAil JtNULNB ANA i BOILER WI)KKrt-NK. Ui u T tT.T SMITHS, ana FOUNDERS, having tor nTauy ieJ , oeen in successful operation, and been exclualvalj 1 ngaaed la building and repairing Marine aai RIvm " tbugUieshlgh audlow-preasiure. Iron Boilers, Wa3 Tanks, Propellers, eto. etc.. respectfully . .ZZH v ervices to the public as being fully prepared to con- uract tor engines of all slses, Marine, River, and etatiouary; having seis of patterns uf different aiaea are prepared to execute orders wlih quick deaoaiuta ' Every description of pattern-making made at th. tnortest notice. High and Low-pressure Plna ' lubular and Cylinder Rollers, Ol the best Pennsylva- ' ola charcoal Iron. Forglngs of all sixes and kinds. Uon end Brass Caatlugs of all descriptions. Roll ' rurcliig. Screw Cutung, and aUelherworkoonneoMd llh the above business. Drawings and specifications for all work done at ihesstahllshment free of charge, and work guaraa leeo. The subscribers have ample wharf-dock room km' repairs ol boaia, where they oan lie In perfect safetv and are provided wuh shears, blocks, lalls. eta. atn mm. m. n hot, v r ...... . ,.4 811 AOOB O.N1T A U-rn- BEACH and PALMER Streets. ,. vaush MkjuucKj wixooak h. tutamio SOTJTnWARK FOUKDSY. FIFTH AXD WASHINGTON Bueela. ' PHiunjici.nrrA. MERR1(JK SONS, PENGIN EERtt AND MACHINISTS, manufacture Hiah and Low Preoeur. bteara Enrlnss tor Land, Rlv.r, and Marine Service. Boilers, staaouietrs, Tanks, Iron Boats, eto, Casilngs of all kinds, either Iron or brass. Iron Eram. Roots for Gas Work, Workshops, and Railroad Stations, etc, Reiorut and Gas Machinery, of tha latest and moat Improved construction. Every description of Plantation Machinery, aiae dugar, Saw, and Grist Mills, Vacuum Pans, Oil Steam Trains, Defecators, Filters, pumping, Xa gines, eto. . Sole Agent, tor N. Bllleox's Patent Bngar Boiling Apparatus, Nesmyth's Paleat Steam Hammer, aud Asplnwall A.noolsey'e Patent Cenlrlfugai Sugar Draining Machines, . f iui LEGAL NOTICES. . TN THE 1H8TRICT COURT OP THB X UNITED STATES FOR THE EASTERN DIS TRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. IN BANERUPTCY, At Phlladelpula, September 21, ires. The ondt-rslKoeu hereby gives notice of his appoint ment asABSigue of P. P. FOY, of Philadelphia, In the county of Philadelphia and Stale of 1'eun fcylvaula. within said JKislrlot, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt upon his own petlllou, by the District Court ol said District. E. COOPER RHAPLEY, Atslfsee,' ' . No. IW S. FIFTH Street. ' To the creditors of said bankrupt. j tutt OTTON AND FlAX," ' T" . SAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, ' Of all numbers and brands,'. Tent, Awning, Trunk, aud Wagon Covet Duck Also Paper Mauulacturera' Drlor Felts, from one to aeveiai teet wiue; r-auiiTis sriuDg. nail Twine, eu ' ' Ko. ins JONES7 Alia TXT. I.LLIAM 8. ORAM T, . VY com miuhion merchant, N. 8. DELAWAKE A veuue, Philadelphia, . i.KNT FOB Itupnnt's Gnnpowrter, Rnrloed Nitre, Charcoal, Eto, W. linker Co. 'a Chocolate Coco, and Sroua. Crocker, Rrr,& Cc'i Yellow Mstal y:eahlnr. Bolls and NalW, iM