TUB DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER C, 1868. PUILIIHED EVERT IFTERIOBI (SOSTBATS HOBFTmX), AT TBB XVKNINa TELEGRAPH BUILDING, JTO. B. THIRD BTRMMT. Frloe, Three Cents pr Copy (Double Sheet), ar Eighteen Cents per Ww, payable to the Carrier u( Mailed to Subscribers oat of the city et Nine Dollars per Annum. One Dollar and Fifty fJenta for Two Months, Invariably In advance for the period rdered. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 18G8. The Effect of the Supreme Court Case on the Election. Tbb attitude which the Supreme Court oases in referenoe to the naturalization of foreigners by that tribunal has assumed within the last two days, has transformed what was the private suit of patrlotio and high-minded oitizens into State case. The private relators and their counsel still continue, as it is eminently proper that they should; but the Attorney-General, with his staff, now appear as offloers of the Commonwealth, and demand in the name ot the Commonwealth that the wrong done her honest citizens should be atoned for. It will be seen in the proceedings that, at the instauoe of the Attorney-General, a rule was asked for, on a number of representative admissions, for the parties to come into Court and showoause why their certificates shall not be cancelled and all the prooeediog in their cases vaoated Under the pircumstanees of the case we enter tain no doubt but that the preparatory rule to show oause will be granted, and the matter then heard before a full benoh. In oase suoh proceeding should take plaoe, and in view also of the testimony offered in the Court against the Prothonotary, the question arises, "What will be the duty of offloers of eleotion in regard to the reoeption of the votes of men who come to them on these certificates ?" To great extent the necessity of d'oiding will not occur. The faot that the matter is under going a judicial investigation, and that there is every probability that punish ment will be meted out to the per jurers, will deter a very large proportion of the new citizens from attempting to ezeroise .their basely acquired right, and they will stay away from the polls. There can be no doubt but that they will argue thus: "By going to vote we run great risks and get little or no compensation What is ten dollars from the Demooratlo Executive Committee compared with arrest and imprisonment f We would net steal for $ 10 If the ohanoeB of detection were good. Why, then, run a risk in this case ?" And by thi eminently sensible line of reasoning, they wil1 pocket their papers and stay at home. Bul there will be a number, however, who will no act in this manner a number who will come to the polls and attempt to vote. What is the duty of the effioers ? We do not speak with the assurance of lawyers, but we speak from the grounds of oommon sense, and after taking a view of the probable consequences, when we say that those judges should refase to reoeive the votes of these men if they are challenged. If they are not chal lenged, of course there oan be no grounds for refusal; if they are, then the officers could say, with great foroe, "The Court does not know its own seal, the Prothonotary does not know his own hand writing, they confesB that there are forgeries of an unknown and possibly unlimited num ber out. We cannot ba expsoted to kaow, from our comparatively ignorant standpoint, what the experts in the offloe do not know. Therefore, newly admitted oitizens, prove the signature and seal to be genuine. The harden of proof .rests with you." Tufa, we hope, will be the course of the officers of election, and if it is the oourse we cannot but believe that'they will be sustained, both morally and legally, when the case is ultimately deoided. The Astonishment of the Democracy Tbb Age is whistling hard to keep its ooarage up, and this morning it assures its readers that they "have already conquered the enemy in this city. The radicals give np the con test here, and have not the slightest hope of electing a single candidate on their ticket.'' This is a very good speoimen of the game of brag, and there is nothing like putting on a bold faee to hide a quaking heart, when mat ters look most desperate. Never before, since the breaking out of the Rebellion, have the issues between the Demooracy and the loyal portion of the country been more dearly de fined than they are now. The Demoorats threw away their last chances of victory by the nomination of S.ymour and Blair and by giving themselves up body and Boul to the Rebels. If they ever had any hopes of suooess, the naturalization frauds whioh we have been instrumental In ex posing will be sufficient to open the eyes of all honest men who might be disposed under ordinary olroumstanoes to side with them; and they know as well as we do that the game is np. The vile abuse and slander whioh have been heaped upon General Tyndale by our Copperhead contemporaries show how weak they know their oause to be, when it be comes necessary to descend to suoh ribaldry. The fact is that the Demooraoy is in a worse way than it has ever been before. All the best men, who have seemed to hesitate daring the past four year as to whioh party they ought to affiliate with, have turned their backs on the party of treason, treachery, and fraud, and many lite-long Demoorats, who ad hered to the party during the entire oontlnu anoe of the Rebellion, have become disgusted with the low condition to which it has now fallen, and they are leaving it as rats leave the einklng ship. The Age this morning exclaims, with an affectation of oonfldenoe which, under all the ciroumstanoes, is quite creditable, "Demoorats of Pennsylvania, we send you good cheer Philadelphia will astonish you on Tuesday next 1" And the Age is quite right In this opinion, for Philadelphia will astonish the De mooraoy not only of Pennsylvania "but of the whole United States by the majority that will be rolled np for Ileotor Tyndale and the other candidates on the Republican tloket. The Agt knows that its party has not the ghost of a chance, and that nothing would astonish the Demoorats more than a victory for their party on Tuesday next. But there is no such lnok in the cards, and the eleotion of General Tyndale and the whole Republican city ticket next week will only be a sample of what Philadelphia and Pennsylva nia will do for Grant and Colfax in November. "As Pennsylvania goes so goes the Union;' and if the Demoorats are not astounded at their fast approaohing defeats, it will only be beoause they are too thick-headed to read the signs of the times. General Tyndale. As soon as any of the slanderous Demooratlo sheets published in this city had the effrontery to attempt to establish the truth of the bare faced falsehoods concerning General Ileotor Tyndale, to which they have been giving oar renoy of late, they have been utterly discom fited. In proof of this we submit the follow ing correspondence to our readers: Philaprlphi a, October 5. General Hector Tyndale. lear Sir: Having seen In the Sunday Mercury of yeBterday a repetition of the story that you had saiof John lirown was a hot ter man than Jesus Christ, and the authority of Messrs. Georgo W. Child" and Furnian Sheppard being, by iminuation, given for the report, we have since then called personally on Messrs. Child and Sheppard, and have received from both of those gentlemen a prompt, full, and explicit denial that any such declaration was ever made by you in their presence, or that they had ever, in any way, autho rized the use of their name in that oonnootion. Both gentlemen, moreover, did you the Justice to eay that they did not believe the story, and con sidered It an unworthy electioneering trick to injure you. Yours truly, Jambs T. Mitchell, Mo. 430 Walnut street. John McLadohlin, No. 7 12 Market street. Philaoklfbia, Octocer S, 1863. To the Editor o The Evening Telegraph. Sir: So long as the slanders upon myself, In vented by my political enemies, were contlned to anonymous or irresponsible sources, I took no no tice of them; but now that the names of two re spectable gentlemen have, unknown to themselves, been connected with those slanders, I here brand all the irreligious and vulgar assertions that have been made, as attributable to me, as groundless, mali cious and base falsehoods. Doth the gentlemen alluded to above have been seen by friends, and both have unqualifiedly and wholly denied any knowledge whatever of the as sertions to which their names had been attached by indirection; and both have dono me the justice to say that they did not believe such statements made against me, looking upon them as political squibs. I state here, as a final answer to all assertions of the kind, that I am not an atheist, never have been, nor can be. I never compared, or dreamed of comparing, John Brown with the Great Founder of Christianity. I am not a member of any church, but I am not an irreligious man, as all my personal friends will attest. Very respectfully, your friend, llKCTOa TTNDALg, One of the points made by John Qainoy Adams in his speech at the Academy of Mtuio is reported as follows: "You are now getting up an embittered feel ing In the South, arousing a hatred which, during the war, there was no Idea of creating. The feeling is becoming more bitter day by day, and you are teaching tboae people the words which they will some day say, 'anything la more endurable than this.' " The Amerioan people have learned to appre ciate suoh miserable misrepresentations of the real feeling of the rampant Rebels at their true value. The idea of "arousing their ha tred" is ridioulous. They hate all forms of freedom and all true freemen now as they have hated them for years. - Whatever loyal men may do, they must count upon the hatred of the champions of the Confederacy as a ne cessary evil; and the only praotioal question remaining is, whether these baffled conspira tors shall have an opportunity to vent their venom upon the Union men in their vicinity and upon the whole nation, if they gain ascendancy through the eleotion of Seymour and Blair. Gknebal McClbllah informs his politiow associates that he has the highest respeot for the services General Grant has rendered the oountry. A new rebuke is thus given to the infamous efforts of desperate partisans to stea from the brow of the savior of the republio his well-earned laurels. The World may con tinue to publish ridiculously long essays de signed to prove that the leader of the national armies deserves no credit for vanquishing the forces of the Rebellion; but General MoClel lan's military knowledge and experlenoe ad' monlsh him that Fort Donelson and Vioks burg were not captured by lucky aooldents, and that the surrender at Appomattox Court House could only have been made to a com plete master of the art of war. Tbb Debt and thi Wealth of thi Peo ple The national debt Is enormous, but when brought Into olose comparison with the wealth of the people, lta proportions sink: Into Insig nificance. Judge Kelley, la a recent able ad dress, said: "The people of this country now number 40.000.000, and you divide f 2,000,000,000, the sum of our bonded Indebtedness, by 40,000, 000, and you have fifty dollars as eaoh citizen's portion of the bonded debt of the United 8 la tea. Why, If the people of this country who own more than f 1000 eaoh, dear of the world, were to determine to pay the debt before the first of next January, and each contribute his portion, no man would realize on that day that be bad parted with any of his possessions. 1 leave the current labor of the oountry out of the caloula , tion; I exolude the crop of tbe year, whether It come from the labor of tbe agriculturist, the minor or the mechanic, the fisherman or the salloi; I regard merely the realized wealth, tbe taxable property of tbe oountry. that of which tbe oensus properly takes account. Were less than one year's Interest , upon this contributed, not only would tbe whole debt be extinguished, bu 1 there would be a balance In the Treasury so large as to puzzle the people and statesmen of the country how to make a wise disposition of the surplus funds of tbe Government. In order to settle this question we must asoertaln what the realized wealth of the oountry amounts to. and to do this we must look fairly at faots. What' my fellow-cltlzens, do you believe to be the ag gregate wealth of tbe American people not the property of the Government, not the more than one million and a quarter of square miles of territory upon which State governments have not yet been organized bat ttie property owned and held by individual citizens of the United States T At the oensus reports show, It wea. In 179. tttta.77.l7-92( iu imii had readied 17,135,71:0,228; and In ltwo, aa wag . shown to the Superintendent of the Census by individual returns of real and personal estate, private property had reaohed the sum Of I19,0f9.ir,fl.289 being an Increase of 170 per cent, within ten years. Now, fellow-citizens, the law of tbe aggregation of property is that It aug ments In a steadily Increasing ratio. The In crease upon the 17 .000,000,000 of 1850 was not 17 per cent.; In 1851 was at a rnuoh smaller rate, and at a greater rate In 1859. Wealth, like the snow-ball, accumulates, gathers volume and momentum as It rolls forward, and In the last year of that decade the Increase was at a rate much higher than 20 per cent., and at that rate begun this decade, of whioh eight years have pasted. Mo fair statistician, If governed exclu sively by the laws or statistics, would estimate the rate of lnorease from 1800 to the present day at less than 170 per cent. And add 170 per cent, to the 119,089,100.289 of I860, aid you have considerably over 151,000.000,000. Six per cent, on this amount would be considerably over $8,060,000,000, so that If those who owned f 1000 clear of tbe world would give on eaoh suoh dear and unembarrassed $1000 four-tenths of one year's Income, at six per cent , the entire debt would be paid off. Now, gentlemen, would the man who 1 worth $100,000 be ruined by fore going two-thirds of one year's Interest T Would tbe man who Is worth $50,000 be ruined by fore going two-thirds of one year's Interest T Would the man who owns but a single $1000, over and above the results of bis labor and his business, feel that he was ruined If, on the first of next year, he should find that bis tenant bad cheated him out of $10, or that some oompany in which he had Invested his $1000 had from purely temporary reasons paid him but $20 In stead of $60 dividend. Yet this operation would, as I have said, extinguish within the year 1808 the debt of er whioh the Demooracy groan. That it Is a burden Is unfortunately true. Bui, Mr -Seymour, It la not for yon and your friends, Its authors, to reproach the Republican party with its existence." The Classesatthe Academy of Fine Arts In comparison with tbe advantages afforded by tbe European academies, schools of art, and great publlo galleries, the facilities for the pro motion of artlstlo studies In the United Slates are oertalnly of the most meagre description. The disadvantages under which art students labor In this country oan onlvbe fully appre ciated by those who have had practical experi ence In the matter; for in most of the large European cities there are long established and thoroughly organized academies, under gov ernment patronage, supported out of the publlo treasury, and provided with the best models A regular routine of study Is prescribed under the superintendence of skilled lnstraotors. Competition Is exalted by offering valuable prizes, for proflclenoy. Galleries, the walls of which are lined with the best works of the great masters, are open to the copyist free ot expense; and, In addition to all this, the student Is sur rounded by an art atmosphere whioh stimulates him to exertion, so that he cannot help taking art In through the pores, as it were, after the manner of "Joey Ladle," whose cutlole beoame saturated by the exhalations of his wine vaults. The American artist, on the contrary, Is almost from the commencement of his studies thrown upon his own resources, and he Is obliged to pick up information by his own unaided efforts, In .the best way he can. The consequence Is that While many Amerioan pic tures show Indications of the highest order or talent, they are thrown completely in the shade by European works often commonplaoe and trivial In subject, but superior In every way as regards drawing and execution. A governmental art school in the United States Is, for a number of reasons, we think, scarcely to be expeoted or desired, and any thing that la done In the way of promoting art education and In cultivating a taste for the fine arts will, in tbe future as In the past, depend upon the efforts and liberality of private olti zenp. We hope that before many years suffl. dent publlo Interest will be excited In this sub Ject to have established In all our large olties free academies of art, provided with all the necessary appliances for a complete and systematlo art education. The dlreotors of our Pennsylvania Aoademy have the desire and the Intention to make that Institution such a school as we have Indicated, and one of their principal reasons for moving at this time In tbe matter ol a new building is to afford In creased facilities for the students, and thus to be able to carry out one ol tbe principal ends of their focndatlon. To make the Aoademy what ltoughttobehe oountenanoo and libe ral support oi me puollo at large will be neces sary; and It Is with a view of exciting some Interest in the subject that we now allude to It In this manner. In the meantime, however, tbe Academy offers advantages to the professional artist as well as the student that are not to be despised because they are not equal to those which are obtainable on tbe other side of the Atlantlo and most of our artist would be better painters and modellers If they availed themselves of the facilities for study already provided more fre quently than they do. The regular classes at the Academy have now commenced for the season under more favor able auspices than usual. The services of Mr. C. S. Bchussele have been seoured, and he will be In attendance three times a week In the afternoon, and once a week In tbe even ing, to direct and overlook the labors of the students of the antique class. He will also at tend at the beginning and ending of eaoh pose of tbe life model. Mr. Sohussele received bis own art eduoatlon In the best European schools; he has had a large experlenoe aa an artist, and there is perhaps no person In tbe United States better qualified to give Instruction In all the principles and praotloea of his profession. The engagement of this gentleman Is a step In the right direction, and art students should make all possible use of the opportunities whioh his attendance In the class-rooms of the Aoademy will afford them. The classes at the Aoademy oommenoed their leeslons on last Thursday evening, and they will continue during the fall winter, and spring until the end of April. The antique gal. lery will be lighted on the Tuesdays, Thurs days, and Saturdays of eaoh week, and the life class room on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Frl. days. The antique gallery la open to students In the day-time all the year round, and those who are sufficiently advanced oan obtain per. mils to oopy any of the piotures belonging to the Academy. On every Saturday evening, until February 20, Dr. A. R. Thomas will deliver lectures on tbe anatomy of the human form, to be amply Illustrated by plates, outs.mannlklas and dissections. These lectures, which are of the utmost Importance to the student, will com mence at 8 o'clock on each evening, and will be open to all the members of tbe different "lasses and to artists generally free of charge. The only expense In which attendanoe at any of the classes Involves the student la the prloe ot the materials which he uses, and this Is so trifling that It can be no obstaole to any one, no matter bow limited his means may be. Persons who desire to obtain tickets of admission to any of the olasses can do so by applying to Mr. Joseph Johns, the Curator of the Aoademy or Flue Arts, and that gentleman will give all neoessary Information. The antique nailery of the Aoademy oontalns easts of the most celebrated works of ancient art, and amateurs who have no Intention of be coming professional artists can find no better way ot passing some of their winter evenings with pleasure and profit to themselves than by studying these masterpieces. Suoh praotloe will Improve and cultivate the taste, and will enable tbe amateur to enjoy the best forms of art with the critical eye of con nolssenr; and the surpassing beauty, grace, and majesty of suoh works as the"Vcnnsof Milo," the,aApolloBelvldere," the "Dying Gladiator," the "Laoooon," and others will grow upon the student the oflener that he contemplates them, until they are absorbed In tbe mind and beoome portions of himself. Even then he will see something new to admire, and a fresh point of view or a particular ar rangement of light and sbade will bring out undiscovered graces which will make the familiar work appear like a new revelation of beauty. SPECIAL NOTICES. jrf- FOR THE BUMMEK. ro PREVENT a-- Sunburn, Freckles, and keep me skin while and beautllul one WKIGtHT'S A LOON ATKl) (4LY t'EKIN E 1 A BLKT OF SOLIDIFIED ULYOEKI N K. It Is del Iclously fragrant, transparent, and superb as a tnl et snap. Bold by all I-gt;lsis. K. . A. WB1GMT. No. 6?4 CHBHNUT Htreet. 34J fggf- CRITTENDEN'S COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, No. 1ST CHESTNUT Street, corner of SEVENTH. Established 1814. ' Inoirpora'el I83S. PRACTICAL BUSINESS EDUCATION. The accnmnUtnfl advantage wblcb over TWENTY-FOUR YE4H8 bave felven in, nil tbe Improvements recently Introduced, render tbe In struction at tbis Institution unequalled. BOOK-KEEPING! In all its branches, PENMANSHIP, Plain and Ornamental, COMMERCIAL ARITHMETIC, BUSINESS PRACTICE, ETC. Separate Instruction. Students received at any time, and bu limited to let boars. Diplomas awardtd on graduation. DAY AND EVENING INSTRUCTION. Circulars may be obtained at the College. Tbe Crittenden Oommerolal Arithmetic 'and Butf ness Manual lor sale. Price, li-jQ, 10 2 fstnat REV. W. MOBLEY PUNSHOH, M. A., the eloquent Engllsborator,and representative from tbe British Wesleyan Conference to the late General Conference of tbe M. K. church, will deliver two lectures In tbe ACADEMY OF MUSIC, On FRIDAY EVENING, October It, Subject "Daniel In Babylon." And on MONDAY EVENING, October IS. Subject '"Florence and ber Memories." . Reserved seats In Parquet and Parquet Circle, 1-B0. Reserved seats In'Balcony and Family Circle and Stage tickets. 1 each. Tbe sale of ticket, will commence on TUESDAY MORNING, October 6, at a o'clock, at the M.1 Book Room, No. leis ARCH Street. 10 1 8t PHILADELPHIA UNIVERSITY OP MEDICINE AND SURGERY. NINTH and LOCUST Htreela. Introductory Lecture, WEDNES DAY EVENING, October 7, at.Vi o'clock. Puysl clans. Students and tbe public are Invited. Tbe regnlar Fall ana Winter Session commences oa ifiURSDAY MORNING at 10 e'clock. A few per netual BchOla ships for sale very cheap. Apply at the UNIVERSITY, or at Professor PAINE's Private Offloe. No. M3ARCII Street, between tbe hours or i and 4P.M. 10 tit rS?" UNIVERSITY OP PENNSYLVANIA MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, ONE HUNDRED AND THIRD 8E38IO S 186S-S9. Tbe regular Lectures of th! School will commence on MONDAY, October 12, and oC!"lnus uattl tbe 1st of March, Fee for the lull course, fw" . . R. E. ROliERS M. D.. 10 S6t Dean Medical FuL"ty. THE BUBLINOTON COUNTY AGRL a3 CULTURAL tiOCIKTY will bold It Twenty, sei.ond Annual Exhibition, at MOUNT HOLLY, on TUESDAY and WKDNKBDA Y, October Sand 7. Qrs will leave MaUKaT Ferry (upper side) at 7. 0, and iQ A. M., and 1, 8-au. ana B-au P. M. lOiSi 3f ELLIS' IKOX BITTEB3. BY THE use of these Bitters ycu enrich the olood and give strength to the whole system. Tonlo and pa latable. No, 603 ARCH Street and No. 4 1 B. EIGHTH: Street lOSstnthlm prtSF- AMERICAN HOUSE, BOSTON. THE l2? J, KGEBT FIRST CLABa HOTEL IN NEW ENGLAND Vertical Raliwas; Apartment with Batblng and Water conveniences connecting. Bil liard Halls, Telegraph Office, and Cafe. 7 Stnthsam LB WIS RICE a SON. Proprietors. POLITICAL. POLITICAL. UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. AUDITOR OBNKBAIi. GENERAL JOHN F. HARTRANFT. BCBVBYOR GBNBHAL. GENERAL JACOB M. CAMPBELL. CITY TICKET. MAYOR. GENERAL HECTOR TYNDALE BKCBIVBB 07 TAXBS. RICHARD PELTZ. CITY CONTBOLLBR, SAMUEL P. HANCOCK. CITT COMMISSIONER. MAJOR ALEXANDER MoCUEN. FROTBON OT ART OF COURT OF COMMON PLBAS. CAPTAIN RICHARD DONAGAN. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. CHARLES GIBBONS. CITY SOLICITOR. THOMAS J. WORRELL. PRESIDENT JODOB OF TBB DISTRICT COURT. J. I. CLARK HARK. ASBO&ATB JUDOK OF THB DISTRICT COURT. M. BUSHELL THAYER. CONORBSS. First District BENJAMIN L. BERRY. Sececd DlBtjrlot CJHARLKS O'NEILL. Third District LEONARD MYKHH, Fourth District WILLIAM D. JkKLLEY. Fifth District CALEB N. TAYLOR. 8TATB BBNAT0R8. Second District A. WILSON HKNZEY ' Fourth District OKORGE CON NELL. BBPBBSBNTATIVBS. First District DAVID FOY, tecoi d District ROB KRT U. TITTERMABY, Third Dlktrlct WILLIAM P. HAMM. Fourth DlKlrlct 9EORUE W. MYERS, Jr. Filth DlBtrloi JOREPH T. THOMAS, tilth DlBtrlcl t OL. CHARLhS KLEOKNER, Seveutb District JAM KM 8UBER4. Eighth District J A MEM V. HTOKKS. Ninth District CAP J FRANK LOOO. Tenia D'strlo: COL. K LIB HA W. DAVIS. Kleventh District WILLI AM M. BUNN. T'welitb Dlstrlc ALEXANDER ADA IRE. Thirteenth District ENOd U. KENNKR. Fourteenth District JOH N CLOUD. 10 1 t Fifteenth District J A U.KH UOWATK. Sixteenth District COL. MARSHALL O. HONG. Seventeenth District COT . JOHN CLARK!. Eighteenth District OA PT. ROBERT HERVKY. jgigy- STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA CITY of Philadelphia, I'enonally appeared before me. an Aldormau iu and for too above nainod city, Colonul Cliarloa Klcekner, a renldout of the Hiitli Ward of the city of Philadelphia, who, being by me rworn in due form of law, duth depowi aud ay that on the morning of October U, 1868, he waa arreated upon a warrant iuued bv Alilor mau John A. Hurley, upon the complaint of a man repre senting himat'lf to be Franklin 11. Ilart, a resident of tho Philadelphia Almalionae, charging him with having at tempted tocolouiie the Sixth Ward of the city of Phila delphia, aud that he ha. no acquaintance with the .aid Ilart, never having rccullocted aeuing him before; but be verily U-liuve. that .aid party u procured and paid for tills eervice to injure thia deponeut, iu the aame manner a. vouchor, have been procured lu naturalisations before the Supreme Court of the htato of Pennsylvania, Eaateru Dutiict. CHARLES KLECKNER. Bworn and iubacrlbed before me this Sd day of October, A. D. WOe, SAMUEL P. JONES, Ja. State of Penn.vlvanla, City of Philadelphia. M.-Joiph N. Chamber, being duly .worn according to law, depose, aud .avs, that he is acquainted with the peraou who, un der the unmo of Franklin 11. Hart preferred a charge of conapiraey agaiust Colonel Charles Kleckner, of the Uixth Ward, and others ; that said individual is a brother of this deponent; that the proper name of saia individual giving tho name of Frankliu II. Hart, is Franklin Decatur Chambers; deponent was with the said Frankliu 1. Chambers, alias Hart, on the days and at the time and places he has testified befure Alderman Hurley, aud knows that the atutciueuts made by said Kraukliu D. Chambers, alias Hart, are untrue aud unfounded. JOSEPH N. CHAMBERS. UNION LEAGUE MEETINGS AT CONCERT ML WAYNE McVEIGII, Esq., Will address our fellow-cltisens This, Tuesday Evening, 6th instant, At 8 o'clock, The Ladles are especially Invited. It Sworn to aud mbtctltod before me this Jth dav of Oc tober, A. D, IbOS. DAVID BEITLEU, Aldoruia. gggT JOHN HICKMAN, AT TBI ACADEMY OF MUSIC, WEDNESDAY EVENING. OCTOBER 17. AT EIGHT O'CLOCK. At ths special request of a larga number of promt Bent Republicans of our city, this earnest and DIS TINGUISHED STATESMAN wilt deliver an ad drrss on tbe questions Involved la it e present politi cal contest, at the time and place named. NONE SHOULD FAIL TO ATTEND. Tickets free; to be bad tally at the Academy, be tween tbe hours of 10 and 11; also at the office of the iVft, Beventh street, below Cbesnnt; offloe of the JUommg Pott, Seventh street, above Chesnut; Callea der's, corner of Third and Walnut; Needles', corner ot Twelfth and Race; National Union Club, No, 1105 Oheenut street, and at the Union League. 10 1 4t Beats reserved tor ladles. ' HEADQUARTERS REPUBLICAN INVINCIBLES. ORDER No. 15. , I. The Club will assemble and form on THURS DAY, October 8, IMS. at North Pennsylvania Rail road Depot, at 6-30 o'clock P. M., to attend the GRAND DEMONSTRATION at Jenktntown, Pa. Tbe tialn will leave the Depot at T o'clock precisely IT. Tickets for the round trip Twenty-five Cents to be had at Headquarters after I P, M. of Thursday) 8th Inst, III. Torches will be furnished at the Depot. By order of BENJAMIN L. TAYLOR, Chief Marshal. , BaT?oy,AMl'UptM"n'' 10 t gggp GRANT, COLFAX, AND KELLEY. REPUBLICAN MASS MEETING, Fourth Con gressional Dlstrlot.on TUESDAY EVENING!, October 0, 1808. at BROAD and PARRISH atreeta. All citizens are Invited to attend. Tbe meeting will be addressed by Hod, Wk, D. Kbllbt, Chris. Kneass, Esq., CoJ. J. W. Fc-bfey, At W H8ZBr, Esq. By order ol the Committee. JOHN O. BUTLER, 10 6 2t Chairman Committee on Meetings. trr" NINTH WARD REPUBLICAN AS80- CIATION. A meeting of the Ninth Ward Republican Associa tion will be held on TUESDAY KVWtlNU, October , 1H68, at 7 o'clock, at tbe Hall, MARKET and MER RICK. Streets. All Republicans ot the ward Invited. W. S. HTOKLKY, President. John L. Hill. op.a.-.i, W. H. Holm as, J oecrewnes. M52t t THIRTEENTH WARD. A MEETINd oftbeURANT AND LOLfaXOLIIH nfih. 1b'rteemh ward .will be held on THIS (Tuesday) EVENING, at 8 o'clock, at the Northeast corner of NINTH and SPRING GARDEN Streets. S. RIDGWAT KENNEDY, Esq., and Others, Will address the meeting. All are lnvlied. E. H. ill'LER, President. Jam es W. Ba tbb, Secretary, j t SOLDIEBS'AKD SAILOBS'COJiTETIOX. Come, Soldiers I Come, Bailors! Come, clever civilians I Come, brave men and true men, By thousands and millions I For sailors and soldiers Declare thtlr Intention, - These days of October, : To meet la convention. - Come on, and be happy, This time Of Elbotion; Come, see oar line garments, And make your selection. We've Just what 1 wanted For soldiers or sailors; Try BOOKHILL4 WIL90N, THE PEOPLE'S GREAT TAILORS ! To make a long story short, let us add, that we wl 1 be glad to see the soldier, tbe sailor, the merchant the preaoher, tbe schoolmaster, tbe provision dealer, the .batcher, the baker, the candlestick maker, and everybody else who needs good clothing to wear In this present autumnal election time. CHEAP I GOOD 1 1 ELEGANT 1 1 1 ROCKHILL A WILSON GREAT BROWN-STONE II ALL, Nob. 603 &nd 60S CILESXUT STREET, U4p PHILADELPHIA. GROCERIES, ETC. SIMON COLTON & CLARKE Invite the attention of Families returning to the city, and the Publlo generally, to their FINE STOCK of FRESH tO AS, COFFEES, AND GENERAL ASHORTMENT OF CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES, Which they offer at the lowest oath prloea at retail and at wholesale rj riots by the package.; 8. TfY Corner IiEOAD and WALNUT SU , 6 1 tnths l PHILADELPHIA. , JpIRST PREMIUM AWARDED AT THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE FAIR. 1861, FOR AZURENE. 10 1 tuthi8t a J. TELL A BROTHER, Wholesale Agents for the State of Pennsylvania. TEAFNE89 EVFRY INSTRUMENT THAT X-J eoieno aad skill have Invented to aaalat the bearing in every degree of dealoeea; also, Ku'pira torsj alio, Craudall's Patent Crutches, suiierior to any others In uae, at P, MADEIRA'S. No. it H TJUiTlt street, below Cheaau vwk INSURANCE COMPANIES. ? Office r the reoplo's Fir Insurance Co. 837 and S39 DOCK Street. Philadelphia, Ootobet l, im. A subscription, book to Increase the oaplta tock of the People'a Fire Insurance Compan; of Philadelphia, Incorporated by an aot of th Legislature of the Bute of Pennsylvania, ar proved the 15th of March, 1859, has been openes thia day at the oflloe of the Company, Nos. 23 and 230 Dook street, Philadelphia, and those In' terested In the progress of home Insurance aw respectfully Invited to subscribe, f Tho People's Insurance Company, whioh ha been In actual existence for the transaction ol business daring the last three years, has, nndef tha management of Mr. O. Paul, Its present President, already succeeded In the establish ment of fine, well-paying home business, anrj nothing U needed but a larger capital to make the Company a flral-elass one. Mr. Paul has an experience of fifteen years in this and olhet States of the Union in tbe fire insurance busU ness, and adding thereto the handsome busJ ness already established by the People's Insu ranee Company, it may safely be stated that It will be an excellent Investment for subscribers to the stock, especially as a number of reliable1 home fire Insurance oompaules are badly j """" " owno, Business oeing ready for them In abundance. Q. PAUL, President. F. Haomkyer, Secretary. BANK REPORTS. SIXTEENTH QUARTERLY REPORT OF TDK GIKABD NATIONAL BANK. Pnn.ADsr.pniA, Ootober 8, 188$. RESOURCES. Loans and Discount, . s),6M,M0 11 D. 8. Bonds to secure olrcu- lation, .... 700,000 0 U. S. Bonds to secure Dep9 slu, . . 100,000 00 fS.48130 11 Due from National Banks, s)31,3J Due from other Banks, - 46,1M 14 Legal Tender Notes, I fix MS M Exchanges Clearing Rouse, W1.S48 61 National Bank Notes, . . 11333 08 State Bank Notes, 443 08 Specie, .... ni0M tl Cash Items, ... 28,497 40 sM,0MI! Total, 1, 6OT.TH M 8,482.331 44 LIABILITIES. Capital, . . . 1,000,000 08 Surplus, ... 400,0000 Discount and Interest, Profit and Loss, less Xzpenses, 114,571 22 Unpaid Dividends, Circulation, Doposita, United States Deposits, Due to National Banks, Due to other Banks, -Due Bills outstanding, 088,496 00 1,990,783 7T 54.4S2 11 160,730 34 80,812 78 92,188 SI -91.014.571 21 42, U 4 Total, ocS -338,449 21 5,481,3f 44 W. L. SCnAFFEB, Cashier. TENTH QUARTERLY REPORT OP THB WATIOHAL BANK OF THB RKPUBLIO. Philadelphia, Oot. 8, ISM. RESOURCES. Loans and DUoountsM..,..M..i,i7J,84 8 U. 8. Bonds deposited with Treasurer of V. B a e ae Bonds On hand..., ,, Beal Estate (productive)-...- Legal-Tender Notes, Coin, and Certificates......-................. National Bank Notes............ Fractional Currency and etamps. Pi emlums.................... Due from other Banks..., Expenses and Taxes... BOO 000 00 141,000 00 182,121' 10-tl'9t9, 108 Ot 897.604-00 11,4.7 DO 16 043-80 9.9J6 04 288.M158 728,944-06 28.448-88 Total 2 696.498 42 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Circulation.... Deposits.... Profit and Lots.... .11,000,000 -08 . 417,60000 1,208 448 98 75,554 44 Total.. HHWHW4 H a. safsjae.1 12,896,496-42 10 6tu'bs6t JOSEPH P. MUM FORD, Cashier, 1 UARTERLY REPORT OF THB COMMON- WUALTxt NATIONAL BANK. OOTOBSB 6. 1868. RESOURCES. ' Loans and Dlioonnte..... ....... 8738.976-18 U. to. Bonds with Treasurer, to se cure circulation........ 25.000 00 u. B. Bonds oa band....,.... il,3.ti oa Legal-Tender Notes.. 290.SH9-00 U. b. s per cent. Certificates..... 80 ouo 09 Fractional Currency. l 261-86 National Balk Notts ...... 82,t8T 09 87I.81-8J Kxchaugee to Clearing House this A. Bl .. 130.946 87 Due by Bank and Banktrs. 67,M21 Keal Estate. Fixtures, etc.... 12 72159 Current Kxpnes.. 10 M ttl U. 8. Taxer.......... 6 686-42 t-ah Items.....- ... .. 2D,u 17 .6797S tl.OU 281 M 62v.eoo-oe 60.000-06 U.1M-W LiAHiT.rTin:3. Capital fltocfr Surplus Fund.-........ M Dihoi uni and Iuleret... Circulation Outstanding.- fil'i Hi oo Deposits .....,... 9U6.W710 Due to Banks and Bankets.- 61.2 H0-05 nu.ausi 11 6tS,28f96 It H. O. YOUNG, Cashier. FOR SALE. $? DESIRABLE COUNTRY RESIDENCB (T -at Roxborough, within walking distance ol-A two stations on tbe Norrlatown Railroad, and about . i la anllee from tbe city. Lot, TO teet front. House about 36 feet square, with a baok building. Well bull6, and furnished throughout. Parlor, library, dining, room, and kitchen on the first floor and plaua 10 feet wide on two sides. Five (61 good sleeplDg-rooas oa second floir, with bath-room, not and cold water, it bo, Thia liesldaoc. Is la a very lieaUey oouutry, and com mending a n e view over tbe valley of the Wlasable. kon. Price, mH)0. Immediate possession. Additional ground adjoin ing can be purchased, If desired, 8. WAGNER, J 10 6tntb3t No. 83 r. THIRD (street, wpvt PTTil.ADR1.pni A nnnou GrkT sale, south ol Market s.reet. Easy terras, Prloe. 16 6 St WII.t.Tam r wim No 39,16 CHK8NUT Street. NEW PUBLICATIONS. TBE ENGLISH BOOKSTORR A large stcck ot English editions of BtHiks la every department of Literature, particularly hianflard Books In plain and Uae bindings. Elegantly Illustrated Werks, cbolce copies. . Books on Natural History and the Si.-lenoee, Children's Books, a charming collection. The store having cbaoged proprietors, a large bto. Snrilon of (be slock will be cloeed out at VE V HE iUCED 1'BICHS, to make room for new stock oonilug ln Iroiu the rtoent auction sales in New York, 10 f WO. lit BAHSUU Sl liKS i. ' PIANOS. 910!irjp BTfinnriv A RfNR nttaXm square and aprlyft Pianos, at BLABlUil Io. lone CHEflMUT tttrees. SlU CHIOKBRINQ GrantL liiareand TJprlh8 nnTTO'N'si. No. 814 CHKmNDI Street, , BTBCK & CO.9 AND HAIHES IBHOTH ICRS' PIANOS, end MAeMJJ M LMLIN'b CABINET OKUANii. only at ssQlmtp J. E. OOULD'H New Store. No, m CliEtlNUT Hues.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers