6 GENERAL GRANT. BT T11B RBV. H. KAPAt, D. D. like the rent of the nation and thewotld, T have studied General lrant, and woald be lad to give others the r.- tilts of oar tbluking. Th Great Captain, with U hie childlike sUa plio't and freedom from pretension-, la a sotne irhat mysterioaa character. TUe contrast lu tween the grandear of his life an! the modest of his deportment utterly mislead i tome people and confaans others. Oa his act ing aide, he 1m immenHe; on hia talking Bile, Yery small. True greatness mast flul exprei tton, and when grand deeds have given it Btterauc.e, only profound DHtnres will under stand them: for the masses of wen, and epe ially for the ilnllow, the hero must expUm himtelf in worda. Hut each an explanation la weakness; it reveal egotism, an 1 there, ore, In the highest greatness fs well-uigh impossi ble. Grant will never write essays on his own ampaigna, nor make speeches to illmtrite the glory of hfs own careor. Posterity must Btndy and history understand htm. Tufa absenoe of Bpeeoh in Grant Is hardly whit men call reticeuoe. Il-nloenoe, as usually understood, carriea with a touch of art, anl is consoious of an ulterior aim. A splendid etstesman may be an orator of rare eloqtinnno, and yet may be noted for retioenoe. With him, it is cultivated as an element of strength. He ia never silent for the want of something to say. On the contrary, he holds bjuli, and drowns, in the silence of hia owu mini, a thousand brilliancies, because he knows that much talk, even if fine, would mako him com mon. Speech is his trade; it ia the sub it vice and form of his deeds; there must, therefore, be nothiBg little to disparage what is great, but, as it were, a field of Blleuce, iu wuiou line words shall be Bet in gorgeous clump. In Grant there is a reticence which is a thinj of nature. It is reticence of word, of face, of action. It can hardly be said that he is care ful about his words; but if he be, tlie deeper truth is that nature was careful iu planning Lim. lie never makes a striking remark, either in pnblio or in private, in his letters or in conversation, and he can well afford to be without ambition in that direction. The dis position to shine in this upbore is a Had d. fjct in some otherwise great uieu. The time spent in getting ready for a pun or a bon mot is thrown away on a littleness, and the wish to be fine in talk is itself a weakness. The ab sence of this in Grant has, no doubt, damp ened his popularity, for the fine sayings of n pnblio man are the wiudows through whioh the people suppose they look in upon his in terior life. ilauy passages in Webster's apeechefi, and msny wily sentences of llnnry Clay and of President Lincoln, appear to be of this sort. They are the ilowera that grow Out of the fissures in the greit rock, or they are the magnetism that makes the adamant attractive. In Grant the rock is solid anl bare, and tli3 attraction is a recondito element, Strongly felt only by kindred sonls. This is one reason why politicians have not been more drawn to him. Especially djes this ho:d of many distinguished radicals. It was not to be expected that such men as Horace Greeley ami Wendell Phillips, and others of their sort, who.-e trade has been in sharp talk, should become enthusiastic for Grant. They had stirred up the nation with tongue and pen; their powerful eloquence, clothing their honest testimony against slavery, had been in the highest degree effec tive, and when their talk had culminated in a successful war, they naturally sought a dis tinctly pronounced man for a political leader. Grant was not ready with a speech, or a letter, and they looked upon hiui r olJly. Such una Lave followed, not led public opinion in Grant's support. This reticence of the Great Captain extends to hia appearanoe, to his face, to his gait, and, indeed, to his whole manner. In Skiarunn, a tall, wiry, mercurial man, with an unquiet face, whose every lineament is iustiuot with restless thought, the people see tlmlr passions reflooteJ, ana snare the wild en thusiasm before them. Sheridan, too, has aa Inspiring person, The popular idea paints bim as a great rider, ever mounted aud llyin; the enemy on the wing before him; the tire iu bis eye; the hot blood burning in hia cheeks; and the wild rallying cry ringing from his lips a very picture ot valorous, during, irre sistible, daehing, patriotic force. Tiw thought of him brings a hurrah into the throat. Not so Grant. lls very person looks silent. Hound, compact, shoit, his step equable aud grave, hia eye steal)', its lire lying deeper than the crowd sees, aud yet certainly there, though in the coal rather than the blaze, his forehead not high; hisbsard rigid, his unler jaw piotrudiug, and giving a sort of hardness to his expression, and that expression a kiud of quiet, modest protest against speech the people must fall back upon history for en thusiasm, and shout rather upon conviction and a sense of duty than from impulse. But even in the sphere of action, we see in Grant the same reticence, the same severe self-restraint, though unconscious here as else where, he is soiutenton one thing that the rest ia ignored or perhaps utterly forgotten. Here bis reticence, which may look like a defect elsewhere, becomes the minister of genuine strength a power of concentration. It grows into a form of devotion to his country, so com plete aa to become almost impersonal. A striking example of this reticence in action occurred in the writer's own preseuoe during the war. I happened, on a certain day, to be in the hall of the House of Representatives in Washington, and, hearing my own name called, I turned anl saw Mr. O dell, of Brook lyn. He was with General Grant, who had been summoned from the vicinity of Richmond to give testimony before the Committee on the Conduct of the War. To my great sur prise, he stated that this was tin first tirns ha bad ever visited the Capitol. He had been to Washington a nnmber of times, on business with the President and the War Department, but kad never been iu the Capitol until called there as a witness. The fact wa3 a most sin gular one. The man whose fame wa3 filling the civilized world, about whom Congress was talking by the hour day alter day, who at that moment was making a most wonderful epoch in history, had ofttn been to Washington, bat bad never entered the Capitol till now, and even now only because called to the spot on the business of the country. This seemed to os a most striking instance of retinenoe in action, and utter silencing of all demands of curiosity and pleasure a power of keeping the eye shut to all but one thing. Another and moat beautiful example of the Same thing is.seen in the u..at Captain's treat ment of Sherman, when the "avernment found it necessary to revoke the terms fu0n to the Rebel General Johnston at the time of bis surrender. Grant was despatched to North Carolina to set aside what his brave but mis taken lieutenant had done. He was now lifted by suocess into the foremost position of the World His steady foot had lust trodden out the last epark of the mightiest rebellion on record. If anything In the world could have dated him and jarred hia equanimity, this muet have done it. But he was perfeotly Serene. As he had been magnanimous toward the enemy, so now he was generons and fra ternal toward his fellow-soldier. He did, In deed, the needful thing, but hid hia own hand and did It by Sherman himself. A different sort i vhitor would lure aotd ia a different TITE DAILY EjlnWG TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FK1DAY, OCTOBER 30, 18C8. spirit, arid, catching fire from thepub'io in liq uation, or feigning to do so, would have tdicwii his own personality iu the matter, and humiliated the noble but miejulgiog soldier. Still another illustration of this sublime rott er nee in action was afljrded by a personal conversation bewween the Great Captain and the wiiterof thin article soon after the close of the wr. Among otbr things said, we ahked the General the question: "How did you feel during the dreadful days of the bat tleB of the Wilderness, when your men were lulling iu such vast numbers, and the grouni before you was contested with such stubborn new f" Alter a panse, the sole answer wa-: "I felt that we hud to go to Richmond." The reply seemed to ignore philosophy, if not generalship, and yet it contained the quintes sence of both philosophy aud generalship. It proved that he had fixed, bnyond the possi bility of chanpe or of doubt, tlie aim anl eni of the campaign; that there was no provision for failure, nor conception of its possibility, and that all parts of tne campaign, all plans, all means were poitioiu of the one pathway to Ri hniond. That this wonderful power of self-abnega-lion, atd of excluding from hia mind all but tho one great object, l.iy at the root of Grant's BuccesB, wo do nut doubt. We admit he ia ft military gniiiue one of the most darin,' and profound of all his'ory. His military learn ing may be inferior to McUlellan's, and to that of fifty others; but it is the characteristic of genius to transcend the schools, anl to go Mralght to its mark, in ignorance or in con tempt of the old pui lis. Without attempting to tit-tine that Bnbt.Io something called gni, which hides itself in the very tissue of its own creations, in the case of Grant it is clear to us that his genius wrought in the overthrow of the Rebellion by meaui of his power of self restraint and concentration. The essential condition of the succena of his genius was that he should resolutely shut out everything ex trantous aud sink himself bo deeply in his own thoughts and abide so steadily in them, that his whole plan, with the various aspects and possibilities of the situation, might be come, not a transient vhdou, but, aa it were, a picture iu oil, in which he foresaw what he and we afterward saw. This peculiar power revealed itself in other forms, quite as essential as the power itself. Kvery citizen knows only too well how the cause of the Union suffered in thi early part of the war from dissensions among the chiefs of the armies. Some of the generals seemed quite as hostile to their brother officers a3 to the Rebels themselves. Many a battle was lost by this contemptible littleuess. No chief had as yet appeared whose genius was com niaiulirg or whose spirit was assimilatiug. A man was wanting Urge enough to see that one brain, however graud, was not Sullicient for the terrible emergency; a mau with insight into men sullicient to enable Lim to make the brst selection of comuiMiilers; a nun uot afraid to chouse the best, when they weie found, leBt they should be malts; and, in a word, a una genrirom enough, and wngm'tio one ugh, and powerful enough to fuse into unity with himself, an 1 arouud himself, and one with auother, the commanders so selected. Grant precisely met this want. He harmonized and uuited the military intellect of the nation. Under him and Sherman aud Thomas and Sheridan, and their numerous .v a able subordinates, the campaign became one. Grant gave the outline hia mind aud luai t inspired it but gene rous and confiding scope was given to the iu dividuality of euch of his lieutenants. Be tween him and his chief captains, history records no shadow of jealousy, no moment even of coldness. He found the heads of the army iu a deadly wrangle, and made them a harmonious family; ami, to this day, he and Sherman tind Thomas and Shand.in are united like "Damon" aud "Pythias." As their uum is one, so their hearts are one. During their campaign, there came a time when Grant was camnl!! ,tn H ""' neiore ivicnmond, and hia patience was even more wonderful than his successes. Tnere ho Bat during the long winter, and the nation wat died end waited in breathless suaperse. To many he seemed to have reached the end of hia string and to be doiug nothing but Euioke. Sherman was marching from Tennes see to the ocean. AtUuca, Savaunah, Charles ton fell; the world reouuded with Sliermau's renown. He wus said to be greater than (rant. Thomas was winning laurels in the West, and Sheridan was appropriating the hearts of the people by his exploits in the valloy of the Shenaudo.h. Whut a terrible thing it is to an ambitious soldier to be forgoU ten 1 to stand on the loftiest eminence of cooi maud, aud yet to see his laurels gliding, in pop ular estimation, from his own brows to those of his lieutenants 1 There are generald we kuow of who, iu Grant's position at that time, would have gone stark mad. They would have rushed down South and snatched the reins of the war-chariot from Sherman, or taken possession of SheiiJan's charger in the Valley, or of Thomas' position in the West, or all three by turns, so aa to have their names in print, aud to keep in advance of their too aspiring and too successful subordinates. Bat there eat Grant before Richmond, not green or livid with jealousy, but radiant with joy. Sherman and Sheridan and Thomas were his own boys; their victories belonged to the firm, and the grateful praises of the people, falling on the heads of hia generals, were beautifully completed by those of the man sitting idle before Richmoud. But the Gret Captain was in at the death. Appomattox, with Grant pre siding, finished the lining climax of victories, and the long pursued game fell at la3t into the beg of the chief hunter. The war has now been over for several years, and Grant, the sort of stuff out of whom the Old World civilizations make emperors and autocrats, still continues oue of the most moilest and simple of men. Indeed, it might be doubted whether a thorough examination of our whole population would not result in declaring Grant to be the most notable exam ple of modesty in the nation. .And now, deficient ns Grant may be in the lighter elements of popularity, it is clear that he possesses all tlie nobler and profounder attributes of strength. If his words have only in a few instances pael into the talk of the people, his great deeds have slowly but cer tainly reached and mastered tl-ieir heart and their judgment. The qualities that made hi:n the great soldier of the age, that united the jarring elements of military rule, are such as tit men wisely and calmly to leal and to govern in any and every Hphere of public life. EDUCATIONAL. J-J'l.TON INSTITDIE DA AND BOARD-Ing-Bchool tor You-, Ladles, 170. 8810 t'lliunuT Btreet, Philadelphia, win reopen on MONDAY, Sep. tember 7, Mi. For term, eio apply to 8 21U PHILIP A. CRKQAlt, A. M Principal. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION. JyIS JENNIE T. BECK, TEACHER OP PIANOFORTE, No. 7 IS FLORIDA Bireet, betweea Eleventh acd 1 wwltth. below FIUwtr. 1 4 BALLAD AND SIGHT 8UC.ING.-T. JUfcJiUi', KO. S3 IS, fJLM Jl H(. V 21 ui DRY GOOD3. LAN K E T FLANNEL ESTABLISHMENT. KEW FALL (JOWDS. All detrrlrtlons of the best mskot UK3HKINK. ABLE JI.ANNFI.S, as IICW Ella KXOIIHU PATENT. Ith'AL WK1.HK AND HAXONY. VAI.Ii A BDVA IiK AND iiOM KT, fcllAKKlt llOTII WHIT K AND PLAU) AND HHtNTKI) OMCKA, UlLUKUl'd Of Jilt A, uilojlors. Domestic, White, Ketl and Grey Heaviest L'ngUsIi and American CANTON FLANNELS. ALSO, SUPERIOR QUALITY BLANKETS All-Wool aLd Kxira widths, tor boil family uxe. MKDIUM BLANKE1H, For Hotels, and Public Inolltnttoac. fit IB AND CBADLE BIJiKKTS, MIEITAKD, VAN IIAKL1NGEN d AIUUSON, r:o. loos cKcsrauT street, 10 21 wfmlOtrp PHIt.ADTCLIMU . eilukeivs nam axon Pio. OSG ARCH STREET. SEVERAL CHEAP LOTS Of T0V,L', TOWELlMiiS 1?Y THE YAKU, TABLE MKE.VS, LI. MEN UAMHiMU inEES. The largest slccfc or LINEN (MODS in the City. 0 30 wfm Q 17 A 11 D OPENING or LYONS A WD GERTJAH MANTILLA VELVETS, rurchoredai TWENTY I'M CSXT. LK33 THAN KKt-ULAll f"HK'lv:,ftu4 iifiVrlag at the saaiu dis count. ELACU AM) COLORED VELVETEENS, In great variety, at prices that cannot be undersold. NOW ON EXHIBITION, A mugtittlcent and extensive stock ot PA1.IS AND CEKMAN DHCSS GOODS. In all popular and novel textures. Prices guurauteed less tuati our competitor. A JSl'ENDID DISPLAY OF SHAWLS IN ALL GKAD1 8, Comprising Taisler, Cualnlfttne, Brooha, Ulnnki", klv, die , at Mcelroy & ccs, ISO. 4 and U North EIGHTH Street, 10J8 wruriwrp AliOVE MARKET. mm. JOSEPH H, THGRNLSY Would respet't'ul'y prpsrnt his claims for n Rbnra oi jmb.lc patroutge by oli'erlcg the lollowhij indue Hi ems, viz.: An Attractive Slock. A Splendid Assortment. Trices l'ut Down to tho Loweist Notcl?. SPECIAL ATTENTION INVITED TO Paisley Shawls, liroehc Shawls. Silks and Dress Goods. Dhiiikets and Flannels. Cloths aud Cassliucres. MNKKR. W'lI.TH, PIANO and TABLE COVER;. IbKilUo, COltSiEiH. E'iU. E'IC. JOSEPH H. THORKLEy. K.E.l'or. EIGHTH aud Sl'KLXG GAIiDEN, 8 26 3ui6p PHILADELPHIA. I10U SE -F Uil.X ItllINU G 00D3 11 KEN DAMAtSKK, L1NKN IjnUF.lIXUj, JiAMASK 'iOWEUs AKI) TuWELINUW. NAl iil.M AND LOl L ES IN EVERY VAK1U1 Y. Together win, our lttie Block of DOHEUTIC MUSLINS, CitiSH, ETC. Jens w. mmn Kcs. 405 and 407 N. SECOND St., ' 8 2 rn PI II LADELPai A. "JO ' CO UN THY WERCUaTkTS. We have now In store a very lurge and varied ai Dortnitnt of LADIES' OLOAKING3. By calliDg on ns yon can not only aee all the styles In vogue, but be supplied lu quautltlei to suit at the lowest wholesale runs. Comparison ot stock and I rlcei with any wholesale bouie sullclied, bampUssent by mall when desired, STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER CENTRAL EMPOIMUM, COB.KICIUT1I AMI XIABHET MTBEKT8, 8 24 tm PHILADELPHIA. DRY GOODS. BLACK OLOAKIKQS. BLACK CLOAKING S. BLACK CLOAK IN OS. COOPER & CONARD, S. E. Cor. NINTH aud MARKET, By bentcwlnt anil ua earn In selecting thtlr always large stock of these goods, have eo on exhibition n tmexcPt!otikbly perfect stock, at U'irxcpptianaOly low prices. They Invite an examination. BLACK MOSCOWH, BIA'1C CTIINOUILLA, BLACK VKLOUE8. BLACK CMHIOU3, BLACK ASTKACHANM, BLACK DOE8KIN8. BLACK BILK VKLVErtJ, BLACK VELVETEENS. 9 iSfalHSiprp jjo ritoriiiBTous of HOTELS; BOARDmG-HOUSES 8 H I P P I N C. We have a special Wholesale Depnrttnent for sup plying LIMtfi AND Aj)TTOX HHEKUNG, TOW ELtH, CAPKlKl, fcUJNOLE BjD AND BEltTU MiAKK t.Te, and oilier gou purtlcuUrly nujpicd to your nauls. All the above kinds ot OOVDi mde np at short nut li e If deslrod, SI RAW BRIDGE & CLOTHIER, t'ENTHAL miY GOODS STOKE, COR, KIUIITH All SIABKET HTBEtTS. CHINA, GLASSWARE, ETC. (QREAT INDUCEMENTS TO CASH IJUIEItS. 1 1 0 XJ E 1 C hi 2Li 1 13 LI S VI;1 iind M. greatly to thtlr advantage to purchase CHINA, GLASS, tvto C O 3X JI O IN ,AV ; IS y C'F 1YKDALE & MITCHELL, Ko. 707 CHE3NUT Street, 9 28 nnvfamrp PHILADELPHIA, riHE AMD BURGLAR PROOF SAFE3 pi RE-PR OOF SAFES. $1C,C00 In Money, raliiAblo Uooks n?id Taiiers perfect Ij iireserved tliron&h tJic lire of July 20, 18C8, at Dove's Depot, houtli Caiolina, iu cue or SIAUVLN'i SAEES, oniicd by DE LUCUE Ss DOVE. 50,0G0 feet tf Lumber destroyed in onr riaiiing Mill iu Itrooklyn, May 15, 1SGS. All our Money, l'upero, aud Hooks, saved in excellent order in a MAIl YIN'S SAEU Alum and Dry i'lubter. SUEAHMAN DROS. Koth of the above were VEIiY SEVEJIB lEb'lS. A PERFECT SAFE. MARVIN'S CJIH03IE IKON SriIEBICAL BTJKGLAB SATE Cannot bo Sledged 1 Cannot be hedged! Cannot bo Drilled 1 CALL AND SEK THEM, OB BESD FOR Dffi. BlJiirTlV ClKCULAit. MARVIN & CO., I'liLNCirAL 1721 CHESTNUT ST., WAEE110USES, f (Masonic Hall), Tlilla., S03 UKOAUIVAT,NW TOUU, 10!) it A Pi H. MlIiKlVr, IXKVEiaM), oH Aud for itale by our Agents lu the principal oitio tlirouahnot inn t lilted btaenrt. BjllniAiBiu AilQUETTCI MARQUETTE! Ancthcr letter from th? great Ure at Marquottn, BlililurvCVeJ BAFiS j.r-afrvo inulr conteuts whi te buieB oi oihet ua'.ers fah I M AiiuUki i t, Michlgau, July '40, IVA, Js.M Jlirrivu a; U. lu'iLi.uuNi-Uu the 11th tilt., the entire bunluo-s poruou o our lo. u was Ufnli'u eau hre. Oar .uIh, UIU1 CIIR'U! lour mnl.Ulm-lUIU. l HUOJiCilu nu h.Ui Lt huttt, hut pmva u.ieil adL-ijualu lu ill bevi-ie lent. i l"U l"e ''" juinunt day, unj vtl fu tkkeu i ut iruiu us tiiharuncu (tnu muMo uv. r u Li iiiu uuruiil lh r uu i.i la uiauy pi.tcus, uu I lu Mew ui m.. tact lui-t brvwiul Ltliur antra t tiiiun mkiii out wrn niiuiely Umiitijt-d, n wuh a ttru.t bni-ri6fc to us to hud tin- couiouu ltiola aud lu twtl COIiilUlllll. eivfial orders lor new lain have alr)..1y bono Bern, uii, wincii la tiji' U.HI piool 01 tub luun 8utiiii lory K.-.1, una 01 U.i' loniii fiico ut tun coiuiuauuy in l our ti-lca. iii-niittiluny uii, HKnP.I?TO'3 PiTFKi UiNKKRS' CHAMl'IO-N HAfhc, uitiuu i t VMuustil Iruu uad HUivl, aud Hit 1-niMi'l t runliliiille, or "i-li'ii''! Jinf u," t i bu.H ro siHiuiit l ouiijiurs' drills or cuuiuif lusiruuiouts ever manuf. i:un t-U. LWiLLU lluCSE hAFKH, lor silver plain, Vi-.iimiile iu,tiu. lauieB1 Jewelry, elo etc., bovh plaiu aiid In luiiikiiiuu ol liniuiboii.o piecea ol luraliurd. IlKtUUMi'tt IM'l'KwT hiit'J,a, tho 4 haiplon thle lur th pust TWkMTY-HiLVUN Vicakh; tbo viulr bl tlie i.Ll 8 i aiu, Leiiuou; IheouLU H Faih, frcw Yoik; me i.xroMiiuN L'NivitHh.i.i.ic, iuri.i, UUd W1NKKB II K THiL WAUKU (l iW.l.OU JTaANCH at the lecenl liiteiuutlouai ciiu.tut lu fuil. r luaduaud .old only by tho uodeislkued ai.d our authorized annua, FARREL. HERRING & CO., PHILADKI-f HIA, BE1UUNO, FAIUtkL fit bUt llMAN, Vork. n ERRING A CO., OnlcagO. J7 ERRING, i AHHitL 4 HHUIlnAN, tZwfmanirp MwwUrlunua. C. L. KAISER, MANtTfACTCBEB OW JflRfci AND liUUGLAU-PROOF SAFES, LOCielllTH, BELL-HANGER. AND DKALEB lii JBVLLULNU 11AKUWAHM1, IM iVft Hi SLAVE 8Ure. W0D HANGINGS. rjUK MAONIFICBNT NUW R OMS it TUB WOOD HANGING COMPANY, K. 1111 CHI ISMT STIiEET, Are now open, where thf j are prepared to respond to all oidois at the shortest nonce Tho puuUu are Invltrd to rsli slid examine the benutifnl tfl"cts ol wood hamhm iu WILL DECORATIONS, And (ret correct and reliable Information In rm ere tee to Its adaptation, cost, aud all partloulnrs ripe ning thesanio. SSmwinuirp PArEO HANGINGS, ETC. yi A L L PAPER Q. WK AUK NOW ItMAILINU OVIi I M W E 3N S K W T O C IS OF PAPER HANGINGS, lOIt HAL.L.ST, PARLORS, llto. NEW GOODS connteutly cooilni In, and llrst-clftl workmen sent to any part of ihe c mntry, HOWELL & BOURSE, Corrcr of FOURTII and HABUBT Mlmw2ru PHILADELPHIA. SHIPPING. 5v LORILLARD'B STKAMSUIP LIN3 ""f o r mew y o r k. From ana after tlila oaie, tuo ri ot iteisut by this lloe mill be ten cento per ID1) lbs. " ibe&vy goods; four cents per foot, measurement; oue cunt per gallon lur liquids, ship's option. One of tne fcttnRi-rn of this Line will leave every IuHiUy, 'i hunday, aud Salar oy, Goods riolvtd at all tiiuea nn covered piers All goods forwaided by Ktiw rlt beut free o clirge, except curtate. For lurmer luiormulhin, apply on the pier to 8 'in CUX JuHNFjOHL, :v Vull LIVLVIU'OUL Al yUKKKd- TUW.-luiiiBu Line ol Mail miu..iiiir. ku puii. led to bull mm lulio'.vn; 1.11 OK iiUbiUA, oiuruy, Ooiober 81. CI t V OF c'uJi (Via UniitaA), 'iuenday, Nov. 3, t.l 1 Y OJf' Nltt fc.Hl, buiartiav, Aovemoer7. tll Ob" PAttts, Saiiiruay, Woveiuoer It. K'l MA ( via llnlnui', 1 uebuay. Aovoiuber 17. CUV OJ!" x AjakjOM Omurday, Iov. 21. ai u each biii ceenii.K bu.iuu ami alternate Tuesday. ai 1 P, M , Irom Pier 15, iSuriu l.lver. hA'lKd Ol'' tAtliAUK 11 V DIM MAIL BTKAMKU 6AIL1.SH KVKBY KA1IIKLAY, Payable m Uuid. Pu aole iu Currency, ii r.fcT ca oij tioiisi'ii,i!,K.iuis; t w to Lomiuti H'M u l.oiiiiou in to pnria, li. I i' Paris 4 FAhKAOb; KY 1IIK TLitfllAV STKAMlitt VIA H.AHXXX. HnT CAIil.V, bl KliHvKIC, Pu tule lu Gold, PayHble lu Currency. Liverpool t ILIvt rpool .... (3 Huiiihx A 'lahiax 1 bl. Julio's, W. t i . pi. Joint's, N. P. I o,. by Uraocii i-leuui.-r.... J I y liraneu bieniuer... Pu.iijei Kers iub U rvse.rduu lo llnvia, iiamburg, ilr mei), etc., m ruiluced inles. 'l u'keis oan be buuiciit here by perilous sending for tbtir irieuuH, at uinutim e rales ir lunlier liiloiuiailou apply at the Couipuny s Otlires. Jut! M O. DALE, Asent, No. 15 B ROADWAY. N. Y. Or to o'DOiN r till & tAVhli, AfeHuw, Ko. 411 CJJKojN U 1 Htrett, Pnllauelphla, ftLW KXPUEsS LIKE TO AL.LX. tWiima anuria, ieotboiown, aua Wauhingtou u . , iu ciiesr.peu&ti anu lietawere t.i,il :.u ouu neutiuiia at AieAituti r ia fiom tne inoui uteci ruiu lor L uohourg, irit'.oi, Knozvlue, iauhvllle, la;ton aud the bouiii tat. bteauierti leave rexulnily every Baturday at noon from Die tUtt v-hri vti Alumni street, i ielgutroceWfed diiy. , . WM. P. CLYDiC A CO., Mo, 14 Norm na rt.uan viuarves, J. H. DAVIDSON, Agent ut Citoretuwn. W. iJl.DlliUUti. & Co., A;euia at Albxaudrla, Vlr gii. la. 1 1 JSUIlCiC-FOlt KEW YORK, VIA J.v. : a- rill I.. W A Km. AUilAllITAN bAl' llOO bllLAMiUlA'l' LUAIPAMV The bveam Propellers of mm Hue reavo DAIL7 troiu hril whurl tietow Mamot sireuv. TlllvOUUH liS i ituu'KS. Ooodr .orwarueu by all tho lines guiug ontof No V Ynrh. lii.riu, Kasi, auu W eal, liee oi couiniuuluu, Itrelhls received at our usuul luv rules. WILLIAM P. OLlf DK & OO., AgeatS. . u WaAJtVJh.'S, Philadeipiila. J A MI'S HAMi, Agent. ae! ISO. IPJ WALL bireet, corner of houlh, New Yori - Pllll.ADifiJLnnA, K1CHMON0 AND AU.KOLli. blu-AfilaHlP I.i.mi,' liii.ULjU FltJUGili' Altl LlNiii TO TllK to C lli N 1) V h fs 1'. .VKKY WATUilDAY, At noon, from iiltftT WilAUJi' above MARSiX VfiliOUGH KATES and THROUGH RECKIPia to ah poiiitu iu Korih euu i-ou.u Carolina, via brv boirU .lr Line Raiiroud, conuecilUii at forwujomb anil to Lyuchimig, Va., Teuueiisee, and the Vv'ei.t. va VlfKiinu auu ieuutasee Air Llue aud lllonmond and Dauviue Kalirouu, krvfcm 11AMILEB BUT OWCHC, and taken at LOVt i.K B&'J ht THAN ANY OI iljilU L The regularity, bbteiy, and ohoapueiiii of this route commeiia It lo the pontic as tun iuomi neslrable me dium lor carrying eveiy uescriptiou ot freight. xso uharge lor oommisslon, dray age, or any expense 01 transier. hteaiushlps Innnred at lowest rates. A'rUght rooelvkd dully, WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., No. H M rili Slid boiuh WHAKViiS. W. P. POIVili.lt, Ageut at loumoud aud Ouy Point. 1 P. CRO WELL A CO.. A jeuts at Norfolk. e 1 STEAMBOAT LINES. KaPZ:?J rillLADlOLPlIIA AND THEN. srtdi-6-vssgiLa ti.u Bieitmooai Liuu. Tue sieambot ii-xi.s roiklllCsT leaves Altl. II Street Wharf, tor lieniou, sioppUig at Tacoty, Torresdle, Mevorl", iiurlli giuu, ijxlutol, iioreuco, Kobolus' Wharf, aud White illll. Leaves Aich fctreet Wharf Leavt-s South Trenton, baiurilay, Oct. (4, 7 A.ft, Saturday, Ouu m, 11 A.M bunduy, OoU iti, to UurliiiKtou, Lrimol, aud lour cenikle liuillugi. leaves arcu street wliurl l, 8 A.M. and i P. hi ; ItaveB iirlolm at ii 'i A. M. aud 4'il. il. .Dummy, vict ', n luonuay, uci,, "id, y& m 'luef.cay,, " WeO'Uuy, 1 liuruuay, irioay. 'i. 9 A M in. III A.JU 211 10 A Ai tl), II A.M lliend..y. ' 27. 1 P.RI 'Veil dny, ' 2.t, 'i P.M Ihuisday, " it, 2 P.M t'iiday, so, g ! M Pare to Trenlun. 40 ctuui each wnv: liiuirmediaL,, places, 25 cents. 4 n . firF-W yuu Vi ILMINtSToN, oaESTEJJ, .Ir'y'- ANO lluoiv.-ifare, iuoouas. Ii.xcuc- 'luo ttu.n Ahlhh leavts vjHKSNUT Htreot v uarf at t 4j A. ti., aud returning leaves VVllum,;. ton at 2 P. ii. i-xcnrsiou HtkdtH, 16 cents. Tiu si-uiuir o. oi. il-iiUiN leaves CilJaJsNUl' btrcet V harl al M P Lf paij', locjuls. 10 1 i jrEK,om,s,TION T0 TlE com. a .1 mi.- ajU "In fc.u railroad a.nu itia Bieau.er JOHN B YLVKTKR will make daily excuihloiis to WiluiiiiKtou (auiii.aysexovV-ai, '0 Ing at chesier and ruaicus llm.k. t..og A.lAl Light Iralgbls taken. IZstf L.W. KCRWU, Oa'itk,n; r.n". 1'aily ExcuusiOiy'sT'riia sVi-ir-1--' maaba "plei.am t train cat JOa A. WA u-ii-r. ,tuit. CJtfcu i' oirect Wnarf, Pnilui'.a,, at S o'clock and 8 o'clock p. a., for BurliUbiou and rlrlhtol, touoiil;.g al Hi', irton. Torre .Caie, Andalusia, and Ueverly. Reiurulng, leaves Bilstol as 1 0 clock A, hi. and i P. Hi. rare, lis cents each way: Kxcnrslon to cut. lltl F AirA FOR NEW YORK SWIFT-SUBB bjs. 1' 1. 11 i.TriiiiMiiiirtm ii n Company iuspatch a u oa i.l Biire l ines, via Delaware hd" Rarliuu Canal, on and after tne lRiii of M arch, leAviug dally at 12 m. siid 6 P, hi,, oonnectiug with all northern and Kaslern lines, . Pnr irelKhi, which will be taken on accommodating terms, apply to WILLIA at W. MIRU A CO., Ill Vo. Hi ti. DKLA VyAlUi; Avenue. miNTING00MS EAST INDIA TELEGRAPH TUE EAST INDIA TELEGRAPH COMPA Tills Company Iiato an cxcIusItc to laj SUBMARINE CADLEt PROM Canton to Tien-Ts T2E BrTAPORT OF FEKIM), CONiNECTIKO ALL THE FORTS ON ASIATIC COAST, Whose foreign commerce amounts tc I One Thousand Millions Annua This Company Is chartered by tlie Leg' ture of the State of New York, with a 1 CAPITAL. OF 5,000,00d SHAKES, flOO EACH. A limited nnubcr or shares are ottered at each, payable 810 each, ei5 November 1. bala; In u-omhly Instalments of 82 50 per share. THB IKQUIRIES FOR THIS SJTOCK ARB S VERY ACTIVE, AKD TUB BOARD OF H KEClORilJibTRUCT Ua TO SAY IT M4.y! HE WI1I1DKAWN ATAHYTIMK, AD THAT IMONJS WILL BE OFFERBD ON THE ADOVE 1'EUMS AFTER KOVEilBliB20 NEXT. For Circular!!, Maps, and full iarormatll apply to DREXEL & CO., No. 84 South TllIIlU SU'CCt, ruiLtdcIplif To duly authorized Banks and Bankers tbroogno! Pen us; lvaula. aud at tne OFFICE OF THE COMPANY, Nos. 23 and 25 NAE3AU STUEE 8 29 NEW YOBK, FLAGS, BANNERS, ETC. 1868. PRESIDENTIAL COKTE8T1 t'flir.palgn Badges, Medals, and rins, OF BOTH CANDLDATiCa, Ten different ttylos aont and Flity ceuw. Ageoie warned everywhere, 1 FIkki in Mnsua, Buutlufc and SlUc, ail lUm, whole t&le and rniall. i Political Ulnha Httwl nr.i with i..,ki.. I ' ' ww&jwMiUH hUVX M rti'iulre. CALL ON OR ADDRE8U W. F. 8CHEIQLE. Ko. 49 SOUTH 1U1KU STIiLET, JP PHILADKLPHIA. KOCP SKIRTS. NEW FAJL BTYLEa LA PAS lElt, r.d u 0iner desirable styles and dvtv ol our ' CaXEBR A TEL CHAMPION SKIRTS, lor iBOitn, l. icbib, auU ililiuiou, counUti-.ily unntl. au u,aUb to i ruer i-nrtebt tmori.neui in tliOjilV auu eutolhliy auaiitLd tot lUel cluaa trade. CoiEibl COiBJtTdl CXJ1WKT8I BeiaiilLg at Tery low prices. Onr assortment la coiuiie b. vu.oraiiig i nooisun'i Uiove Piitlug, la nil nmdm, iruu M it K vO'aiu; beobt-l't buperloc PrtliCU Wiv.utuierta, irotu lu itSo; upe ) lor V tiirb ot) liArnl ujaUb Lkjroeui, Iri ui si cen. lo (rnio, 111 kimiK i.a cinnUr nor; Alaaaine Foy'i Cuibbl ekirt cnip riA, at VI AU, Aii-O. iim. A'uoav'B Paiuki feelt-AdJUKtlne Abdom US1 C'orbeit,; woiuu fviry ladv unouia exainluo. I urnei Citu-pa. itoib i. (jir. Wliolfeaiu ana Keiali Mauuiactory and Galearooui o AUCli BirufcU WM, T. HOPKINS, 0 0 B N KXCUANOB RAO MANiiFACTOKY. JOHN T. 11AILKY dl CO., BbMOVKO TO N, E. corner oi 11 kaJli and WATER Streeta. Phl.aduiphla. PEALEP.8 IN ItAUa tND BAOOINQ Of every ft. oortpUou, for Grain, Floor, Bait, feuiwr-Pboounate ot time, Rons .. lut, Kto. I.nree and imall GTJNjn y Bau oonatantly onlhand m Ala0' WOOi, BACKS. iunit T. Biilkt Jam bh CUacumuti DB. KINKELIN, AFTF.B A RK9IDEJ3C1 and practice of thirty years at tlie Nonn west corner of llilrd aud Unlo atreeia, lias lately re niovwi tonwuih KLH.VENTH Btreet, between aLAU KET and CHEKKUT. Ills superiority In the prompt and perfect core ol all rtcent, chronic, local, and constitutional alfoo tleoi of aspi-clal oatnre. Is proverbial. Diseases of the skin, appearing In a hundred dl feront forms, totally eradicated: mental and physical wraknM, and all nervous debilities sowuilfloaUy and sunceosiiOly ureated, O&loa itoun froui M OlP.lt.