THE PAIL a 'mVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1863. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS, jDtTORIAIi OPIHIOHB OF THB IKADmO JOURIfAM UPON OCRB-SHT TOPICS OOMP1LKD KVKKT SAT FOB TH1 BVBHIHO TBLKOKAPH. The New Cabinet. From the iV. Y. Time. " j General Grant ia receiving a plentiful stock of advice as to tke oouopoxition of LU Cabinet from Journalists and politician! who labored Itrenuoiihly to prevent Lis election, lie la too (eligible a man to disregard good counsel, JUether proceeding from enemies or friends, ut the value of suggestions inay be esti mated, presumptively, hj the charaoter for gagaoity of those who make thetn. And as the Denioorats hate wretchedly mismanaged their own concerns, and both in the selection of nominees and the conduct of the campaign Lave evinced the most consummate folly, it Is probable that General Grant will not con Cider them peculiarly qualified to aet as his advisers. Success may take warning from failure, but it is scarcely likely to make fail ure a confidential friend. The qualities displayed by General Grant as a soldier all'ord the beat possible guaraute as Well of the judgmnnt as of the independence which may be looked for in the formation of Lis administration. Not the least of the causes of his military prestige was the saga cious estimate of character w hich enabled him to single out the best men uuder his com mand, and to assign them to the duties for Which they were beat fitted. No paltry jealousy hindered him from putting strong men oa the toad to distinction; no petty favoritism im pelled him toTltt incompetence over distin guished ability. He thought only of the great object to be attained, and in his devo tion to duty looked always for the most effec tive available assistance. It is reasraably certain that in the selection of a Cabinet the same discrimination will save him from the pitfalls that would have environed almost any other l'resident. He is a good judge of charaoter. His method of estimating men leaves little Lope for charlatanry, and none for notorious nalitness. His contempt for the low arts of the professional politician, and his freedom from the entagling alliances which are too often the price of high office, are cir cumstances greatly in his favor. lie will be at liberty to assign to the several departments men whose antecedents inspire confidence in their Integiity, and whose capacity for administra tive labor has been satisfactorily proved. Ilia own position, moreover, will no doubt enable him to gather about him some to whom, ordi narily, Cabinet uilices form no temptation. More than mere politicians will be willing to co-operate with him in fulfilling the hopes and expectations awakened by his election. And yet it is absurd to suppose that Gene Tal Graat, ia Lis choioe of Cabinet officers, will travel beyond the boundaries of the Re publican party. Violent partisanship we do not look for at his Lands. Nevertheless, Le is Republican President, made suoh despite Democratic opposition; and this Cabinet must possess the confidence of the party that sup ported him, not of the party by whom he wa3 assailed. The pretentions of cliques Le may, and doubtless will, value at their proper rate; but to the general and understood withes of the Republican party, as a whole, he should, and we are quite sure Le will, aooord un grudging respect. One of the prime condi tions of Lis usefulness is the . recstablishment of Larmony between the Executive and Con gress, and this will be impossible unless the nominations for responsible offices commend themselves to the majority by a known identi fication with the principles and purposes of the Republican organization. If those of the Democrats who profess anxiety for the success and wel'are of General Grant as President are really honest in their utterances, we recommerd them to employ their influence in moderating the ranoor of their own party, and in substituting fair play for the factious opposition which Republican measures have almost uniformly encountered. They cannot Lope to construct a Seymour Cabinet with Grant as President. But they may help to abate the bitterness of partisan ship, to purify the working of the Govern ment, and to hasten the restoration of lasting peace by the adoption of a moderate and prac tical course. They Lave it in their power, especially in the Souih, to oontribute to the return of national harmony and prosperity. The possibility, or even the promise of these eerviaes, will not, however, entitle them to any share in the administration of the Gov ernment. The country looks for a Cabinet in Whose aims it may repose entire confidence: and the standard by which General Grant's advisers fill in part be judged, is their rela tion to the party wli0e principles and policy Lave just achieved so signal triumph. Grant's Characteristics. 1 JFiom they, Y. Commercial Advertiser. When General Grant, in a private letter to Lis father, written while Le was yet achieving Lis reputation in the West, modestly stated that it was his highest ambition to be equal to anything mat mignt te expected or niin, ne seems to bave unconsciously epitomized the traits that have won for him the confidence of Lis countrymen and the respect of the world. In all the trying relations in which he Las been placed, Le Las never once fallen short of achieving all that could . Lave been reasonably expected of him... He seems to Lave always Bet himself to the porformanee of the nearest duty without a particle of the Belf-seeking that has proved the bane of so many of our generals and politicians. While others were planning future honors and aggrandizement as the oonsequenoe of certain acts, General Grant Kepi closely to me work on hand, and left the morrow to take care of itself. He. also pos sessed a rare intuition of character that alwavs led Lim to select the right mau for the right work. Of all his generals there is not one Who did not prove himself worthv , of Lis leader; none who proved unequal to the duty Intrusted to Lim. Judging the future by the past, there is every reason to anticipate that in the new position to which General Grant Las been elected Le will prove equal to all that is ex pected of Lim by Lis countrymen. Even the Democrats, while yet smarting under the sense of defeat, freely express their confidence In the Integrity and ability of the President elect. That he will couduut his administration with a due regard to the interests and prlvl leees of all classes, and with a strict economy. Is what is now expected of Lim by the Ame rican people, and that Le will realize those anticipations there is every reason to hope JSlnce the days of Washington there never was a President who was less indebted to the poli ticians and more indebted to the people. He owes everything to the masses; nothing to faction, liven the Southerners concede his honesty and admire his magnanimity as they iave good reason to do and anticipate that lfn rniiifv will be liberal and srenerous. That General Grant will hold the lines with. a firm Laud maybe conillently anticipated Under Lis cduiinistration the United Btate3 Will be respected abroad. At home, ordtjr and protection of life aud property iu all paiU of the country will be strictly enforced, thus establishing the foundations, of. a reuowid yroppeiity. TLe South will be made to un derstand once fot all tLat the Constitution I enforces duties as well as confers privileges. I In fine, Le will render the United States more democratic than ever before, by establishing equal rights and universal liberty of thought, action, and speech as the irrevocable princi ples of the Republic TheVolc. From Erick romtroy't Democrat. There Is little doubt that the full returns from the different States, and counting in Vircinia. Mississippi, and Texas, which were not allowed to vote, will show not only heavy gains to the Democracy, as we intimated on Saturday, uui a popular majority lor our ticket, and a grand army of two millions aud a half of men, still in the field, and ready to struggle right on, with the same heroic spirit as in the past, for the restoration oi free government and white supremacy over all this land. Then, in addition, there is to be taken into the account the disfranchisement of white oitizens iu many of the States, which lu Ten nessee and Missouri is heavy, but we think not as great as has been stated by some of the papers in the other Southern States. This habit of making figures lie, which so con spicuously prevails in certain journals, indi cates very bad political and personal morals, and does great harm to the party whljli is in any way made responsible for it. Jhe election returns were badly "doctored" in the late canvass by a certain mercenary, prostituted sheet, falsely claiming to be Demo cratic, whose statements were so wild and reckless as to seriously rellect upon the char acter of the party, and impair confidence in even fair and honest Democratic authority. Upon the question of the extent of the dis franchisement in the South we bave no defi nite information. It is bad enough in all con science, when the truth is stated, and the case requires no exaggeration to show either Jaco bin villainy or the strength of the white man's party In this country, in lennessee we be lieve it is about ninety thousand. Why does any fool want to lie it up to 114,867? The very fact that somebody is so particular as to bring the numbers down to tens and units, to which minuteness nobody has any knowledge, shows on the face of the statement that it is a fabrication. Missouri is put down at ninety five thousand. Though it is enormous in that State, we Lave an impression that this is an exaggeration. Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia are given a total disfran chisement of il21.3")0 white voters. We think this is overstated. In Arkansas every man before Le is allowed to vote is obliged to swear that Le believes in negro equality, which ex eludes nearly the whole white population, unless they swear falsely, and we think there is some approach to this in Alabama; and in West Virginia there is a snametui poiitiaai ostracism; but we do not understand that there is a very large disfranchisement in the other four States named. We wish some fiind in each of the Southern States would give ns accurate information in this matter, that we may publish reliable statements.. JJut what shall we say of a statement pur porting to show the opposition strength, which first claims that the Democrats would have got 17,1)00 had an elecMon been held there, and then adds to that 07,8b disfranchised persons, making a grand total of lUj,b4'J f Aud this in the tace of the fact that no question arises, aud ne line can be drawn, between persons who are and those who are not disfranchised, the whole State being disfranchised and under military rule. The incorrectness and absurdity of this way of getting at the fasts appear when it is Been that the wnole vote ot , lireckinridge, Bell, Douglas, and Lincoln, in ItioO, was only 107,223 28,62(J less than it is claimed that the Democratic vote alone would now be. And since then West Virginia, which cast 33,5!)0 votes in 18(54, has been torn from the Old Dominion. Taking this out, it would reduoe the whole vote of what remains of Virginia to 131,704. Now this political' bum mer has the folly to put forth a statement that Virginia would Lave given, if permitted to vote, 04,145 more Democratic votes than the whole vote which the same part of Vir ginia cast in 1800. He treats Mississippi aud Texas in the same way, first counting the whole vote, which Le claims, and then adding an arbitrary number a disfranchised, when all are disfranchised alike. Democrats, as much as any class of citizens, are interested in exposing and denouncing such a blunder ing, reckless puppy, for they, more than any body, are injured by suoh false and ridloulous statements being put forth apparently in their behalf. ... ,,. reconstruction iu Sequence. " ' Prom the If. Y. World. . Florida is in revolution. Less in popula tion than our Seventeenth ward, . it is . in mechanism and management a State, and now exhibits the cheerful spectacle of two would be Governors, and one Legislature declared illegal by the Executive elected, who Las been "impeached" 'by the "law-making power on such charges as "lying," "selling commissions,' "robbing the treasury," and several other kindred felonies.i Compliments pass down there, aud the Carpet-bagger-in-chief retorts by declaring the , I'impMching'-' body extinct because more than a quorum Lave constitutionally vacated, their seats , by accepting contemporaneous appointments to other oilioes. At last accounts the President of the Senate' had proclaimed the Gov ernor deposed pending impeachment, and Lad sought to assume the powers of state ' himself, in which attempt he Lad been substantially told by the Gov ernor de facto to seek a zone yet more tropical than even lhe land of flowers. .So each declares Llmself ruler and simultaneously summons the negro militia to his side. Ta neither of whom da the colored troops, though they undoubtedly fought nobly, seem anxious to ilock) . while oa the f urious factions the dis franchised virtue and brain of the State look with the complacency of indifference where with the wife regarded the traditional war be tween her husband and the bear. - New, as to this rare, radiant, and racy wrangle, of course nobody cares whether carpet-b8gger Reed kill carpet-bagger Gleason, or oarpet-bagger Gleuson kill carpet-bagger Reed, er each carpet-bagger do kill the other carpet-bagger, but it rellect s in . serious and oomio colors, withal, the hideous monstrosity and toreaniing farce which this system of Con gressional reconstruction works out when left to the crucial test of time, and to the simple charge of the scoundrels whom disfranchise ment and bayonets, as , negative and positive exercises, Lave lifted to the chairs of power. Florida sets rolling a ball by which the whole of the inverted pyramids dancing on apexes in the South, aud called governments, will be bowled over, and before long, by the simple operation of natural laws that bring capacity and honesty to the surface, affairs will flow in regular channels. The falling out of the rogues will be the completion of the proverb. The Kilkenny oat oontest now in progress in the least will spread through all of the enslaved States; Scalawags aud oarpat-bajj-geis in strife-for preuMhiut and spoils hae beguu a-oiulliot whiUu:m but una wnun oom are powerless , for further , mischief,. TMr mutual fjeeds breed mutual hates, Lave ouU luinatrd in real struggle, and will finish ivU as tUettually as the euako did LU latUuid when, putting Lis tail in Lis mouth, Le swallowed Limself out of sight. This is what the World foresaw and fore told. All we asked for reconstruction wai Let it alone., Heboid the result! It works out its own confusion with fear aril trem bling. It oannot stand. It totters from in trinsic rottenness and internal dissension. It falls not by violence, but, as the falne knight in "Ivanhoe," "its own sins strike it dead." Various farms may and do mark and make it ruin. In Florida it is dissension. In Loui siana the swinish negroes bave turned on those who cast before them the pearls of franchise, and rend them. Wurinouth and company now bask fer safety in the shadow of General Rouspcan's coat tail, and the conservatives keep poriptaral coals of fire on the heads of those who sometimes played fantastic tricks of state. In Alabama and Georgia and Arkansan, and in North and Santh Carolina, conclusive conservative majorities, or great conservative gains, stamp out the illusions and repair the wastes wrought within the recent years by rioters and renegades in the name of liberty and equality. Every such success de monstrates the failure of reconstruction. It marks a change of sentiment, aud the o'Jeot of the Congressional system was to make over sovereign States into radical rotten-boroughs forever. This is reconstruction la sequence. Whftt fraud formed, fraud is wrecking. What the bayonet propped up, the ballot is burying in the duat, and there is a dramatic retribution in the process. The negro, iu whose sole behoof these corporate abortions were insti tuted, in one way or another subverts the plans of thoi-e who traded on his credulity to work their own success over the prosperity of Lis lonppflt and truest friends. After tLis we can see the answer to "Let us have peace." After this we can see what is the "success of the Congressional system of reconstruction" on which the Chicago plat form congratulated the country, and of which the late election of a minority President has been proclaimed as a ratification. No, gentlemen, your house was built upon the sand. The rains are descending and the floods are come which beat upon that house. It will fall, and great will be the fall of it. Two Civil Wars at Once The Oyster auil Other Spoils. From the N. T. World. Old Abe was of opinion that it was best to have one war at a time, aud permitted the nation to endure at the hands ot England the insult and outrage of the Alabama business rather than violate so tale a rule. Hence the .destruction of our commerce and our temper and terrible loss of tiini in reading Seward's despatches, to say nothing of the vexation of Reverdy Johnson, and his apologies to that famous old invalid, the British liou, for our bad behavior. Now we are tnre than half ready to convict Old Abe of a too timid spirit, of a too great fearfulness of war; for here we Lave actually doubled Old Abe's allowanoe without evident damage. We have two wars on hand, raging in full fury, either as bad as the Dorr war in Rhode Islund, or the anti-rent war up the Hudson, or the whisky war in Pennsylvania, or Peter Stuyvesaut's dreadful war with the Delaware men, or any other of the famous wars of history two such wars, and we are none the worse for them, or not much the worse. Except for a little tightness in the money market down in Wall stieet, a tendency to speculation, aud panic iu all sorts of fancy priuted paper, an unusual extrava gance in the style of ladies' dresses at the opera, and the appearance of notes from G. W. 11. in the papers, we might almost fancy that there was as profound a peace in the land as we all hope there will be when Grant takes hold. Yet there is a dreadful war on the Chesa peake waters between the Virginians aud the Marylanders. From the character of the com batants this war evidently is no trille. We all know how the Virginians fight. Haven't we heard of the Army of Northern Virginia, and Stonewall Jackson, and Goveruor Wise, aud Magruder, and Lee, and all the other sous of the mother of States aud of statesmen, who, though she has fately been looked upon as no better than she ought to be, is a stout old girl nevertheless ? Ve ' know that the Virginians will fight at least while they pre serve that fine sensibility of oharacter that makes the fear of being laughed at forranning away more terrible than the fear of an enemy in front. We also know that the Marylandars will fight. We know the history of the Balti more , streets. Moreover, we have heard of the Maryland line.. Whether it is only a common chalk line, or whether it is a first cou.sin to the equator, or whether it is ' the line with which they catch the Spanish - mackerel . they have at Guy's, is a point of no importance. whatever. We have heard that this line, like "Sjloa Shingle's" grandfather, "fit into the Revolu tion," and we have no doubt it "fit" better than Nihil did, for there good material in it. It was composed of two regiments of infantry, all Irishmen. ; Thus there is no doubt that the Marylanders will tight and the Virginians will fight if there Is an object worthy of their prowess iu dispute, and the object in this case is the oyster 1 They will fight, of course. Whowould not fight for , Lis oysters ? ' Now tLat ' nigger-breeding as a business is done with, now that the soil of Virginia is so ex ' Lausted for tobaooo that the best districts lardly give a crop, and now that, as always, it takes labor to raise wheat, the oyster ia Virginia's bottom dollar her last souroe of wealth; so she will fight in this war with all the chivalry of her spirit first, because the object is her beloved oyster; next, because it is the last resource of her sons in making money. Maryland, therefore, is not going to Lave an easy time on the Chesapeake. The other war is in Florida, and is trivial to the oyster war. It is a war of the politicians about the plunder. We Lave no great respect for the Florida fighters themselves. They threshed little Hay once, Old Abe's secretary, pretty badly; bnt as Hay was not of mo oh account on the field of slaughter, they are en titled to no honor for the achievement. But this Florida war has a more serious aspeot when we remember that all the combatants of Loth sides went from Massachusetts. Massa chmetts will fight terribly when the spoils are in danger; so there may be some bloody noses yet. It seems the Legislature Las found out that the Governor Las got a better bold on the State purse than they Lave, and that Le "lies" (that being radical for a diiferenoe of opinion); so they Lave impeached Lim. He in return has impeached all the members in Lis way Las declared tLeir seats, vacant under the Constitution because they Leld other offices. The war will give ns a fine view of the way government is carried on in a reconstructed .State, unless (which fortune forfend I) the par ties, finding each other's power, make peace ion a fair distribution of the spoils. . , j Democracy and Election Frauds. Fi om ttu N. Y. H ibune. j The Sun sees fit to fay of the efforts to dn jteot and expose the enormous frauds by which our late election was vitiated, and' the eleo jtoral voter of 1 our riute giveu to candidates Rejected by a great majority of our ieyal roterc, that " ' . '.(-". "It. is certain, that -the rms of tierm'vitf, j)i mncia'M ii utU.ui) JtoimbllauiiwiU Uu.rU!y ru)ovi ol lUe t'cltcuuii tit men frauds, und condign punlshmont will Join In lnfllotlng upuu lueirBuinnrn," -Comments by the Tribune. Nearlr thirty years ago, we did our best at Albany in aid of the firtt suooessful effort to pass an act for the protectlou of the rights of lepal voters through their registration. The abuse of illegal voting was llagrant, though not then nearly as enormous as now (our city being but a village in comparison with its present magnitude); yet, acoording to our best recollection, not one Demoorat, whether in or out of the Legislature, gave the effort any support or oounteuauce whatever. Aud, though the act thus passed unquestionably prevented much illegal voting while it ex irted, it was repealed by a strict party vote in the first succeediug Democratic Legifdatnre. ; From that day to this, we have steadily aud earnestly labored to have the laws of this and of every State so amended as to secure to every lgal voter his right of suffrage a right utterly eubverted and destroyed wherever per sons who are not legal voters are enabled to vote with impunity, and where persons who may or may not be voters are enabled to vote many times at one eleotion. And we cannot call to mind a single instance whereiu a mem ber of the Demooratio party, in sympathy an 1 geod standing with the regular organization of that party, has practically eviuoei any desire that efficient measures should bs taken to render illegal voting impossible. Duriug these thirty years laws have been eriaoted in several States, intended aud calcu lated to prevent illegal voting no ona of thtm, so far as we can recollect, by a Demo cratic Legislature. And, in every instance of the passage of such a law, where the Demo cratic party has succeeded to power, it haj made haste to repeal the act. The Legislature of New Jersey oho3en In 1S00, was Republican in both branches, au i it enacted a registry law. The Legislature chosen last fall was Democratic in both branches, and it made haste to repeal that law, by passing its bill over Governor Ward's veto. The last Legislature of Pennsylvania, being Republican, passed a Registry aot. The Su preme Court of that State proceeded to nullify it as unconstitutional. The ruling spirit of that Court is George Sharsweod, who was last year reelected by the very frauds which thU Registry act was intended and calculated to preclude I The Democrats of Conneottout in 18G7 elected and last spring reelected James English Governor we believe by fraudulent votes. As these frauds are necessarily coufiued mainly to the densely peopled communities the cuies and most populous villages it is morally im possible to lect by them a Legislature; so that of Connecticut, like that just chosen in our State, was Republican. That Legislature proceed d to frame and pass a carefully con sidered act to prevent illegal voting. Governor English promptly vetoed it, urging objections to certain important clauses. The Legislature repassed it over his veto, a clear majority of either House suilioing for the purpose. The aot, thus become a law, having been sent to the Democratic Secretary of State's ofl'ue for official record there, it was soon discovered that the most vital clauses those specially objeoted to by Governor English had some how been erased from it ! The Legislature restored them, again passed it, and sent it to the Secretary's office; when lo 1 it appeared that one of the vital clauses aforesaid hai again been somehow erased and the aot stands thus emasculated to this day. Yet, mutilated as it has been by some villain's Land, we believe what is left of it saved the State to her legal voters and to Grant and Colfax. Mii.d that this is no question between two different modes of obtaiuiug an end mutually desired. We do not complain that the Demo crats choose another mode than that proposed by us for achieving the desired end we assert that they propose and support no serious im pediment whatevef to illegal voting in cities. In a rural township, where every one knows every one, each claimant of the right of suf frage challenges the scrutiny of scores who know Low Le will vote, some of whom favor the adverse ticket; but, in a great oity like this, thousands know nothing of their next door neighbor, and thirty to fifty thousand persons annually present themselves at the polls who are utterly unknown to any pre sent but those whose partisan bias will be gratified, -while their personal ends will be tserved, by these" persons voting early and often the more the better. If there be, indeed, Lone3t Domoorats who would gladly see illegal voting prevented, Low happens it that none of them ever blunder into a Legislature f If there be suah in this oity, whether adheringto Tammany or Mozart, will the tun will be good enough to acquaint ns at least with their names f If John T. Hoffman, or William M. Tweed, or Peter B. Sweeny, or. George G. Barnard, or John H. McCuld, or even A. 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Without Injury to llio System. Without Iodide, Totassla, or Colclileum liy Uslus Inwardly Daly DR. FITLER'S GIIEA.T RHEUMATIC KE3IEDT, For Rheumatism and Heuralyia in all its forms. The only standard, reliable, positive, Infallible per- niaDi'iit core ever discovered. It Is warranted to oon tain nothing bnrtful or Injnrlons to the system. WAItKANiGDlO CUKE OR MONEY KEFU3DB.D Wi KBANTKBI'O (JURE OH UOSKT REFUNDED Thnnnands ot Philadelphia references of cures. Pre pared at No. 2'J SOUTH FOURTH STREET, 8 22stulhtl BELO W MARKET. CARPETINGS. J. T. DELACROIX. IMPORTER AND DEALER IM CARPETINGS Mattings, Oil Cloths, Rugs, Etc, V7 ho I'osale and Retail. WAREHOUSE, No. 37 South SECOND St.. 912.tutb8m5p Above Cheannt, Philadelphia, PAPER HANGINGS, ETC. WALL HENRY PAPERS. S. MATLACK, Kos. 11 aud 13 North NINTH Street, PHILADELPHIA, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN FliENOH AND AMERICAN WALL PAPERS. ALL OB DEES PERSONALLY ATTENDED TO. Competent workmen sent to all parts of the ooan try. Mork executed at city prices. 18 tnthssna WINDOW BLINDS AND SHADES. L I N DS SHADES. li. J. WILLIAMS & SONS, M. 1G NORTH SIXTH STREET, LAKGEaT MANUFACTURERS, AND BELL LOW PRICES. BLINDS painted and trimmed, STORK KHADES made, and lettered 829nthB2m DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. ROBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., K.E. Corner or FOURTH and RACE Sis., PHILADELPHIA, , , ' . , WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MAN UFAOTDRERS Of , White Lead aud Colored Paints; rutty, Yaralshes, Etc. AGENTS FOR THB CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINC PAINTS. PK.ALEBS AND CONSUMERS LOWL8T PRICES FOR CASH. SUPPLIED At eiat ; CHROIVIO-LITHOGRAPHS. "A REGAL DESSERT." A new and beautiful Chromo-Lithograph, sifter a lUiUug by J. W. Peyer, uat reoelved by A. S. 11 Oil INN ON, So. 810 CHEHNUT Street, Who has Juat received NEW OHROMOa, , NEW EMiRAVINGS. , , NEW JTKENCH PHOTOGRAPHS, NEW DRESDEN ENAMELS LOOKING Q LASSES, Etc. M FREE OALLERY. COPARTNERSHIPS. DISSOLUTION OK PARTNERSHIP TUB pannt-rbliip utruioluru fxismig uotweeu the uu oriai.n d and JAM. UAMCALtKN, und.r the name ot UA1LK it JAHOAUh.N, UkvIdr been dliwulved by the otaih oi Mr C'aHuad.u, all per.ou. Indtrned to ba d tli in uie irquwiitta to niuke lui.nedUw payui.nl, mid iIioh. havluK claim. .gaiuHt huIU Urtu m ur.ui theui forbttutuitnt. JOHN T. BAILEY, Surviving partnur or Bailey & CawsaUvn. JOHN T. BAILEY will contlnu. the B AO BUSI NhthHt oc ilti tttttud, N. K. otiruur of MA hK KV and W A'l'JiK tetreeta. Pullartwlplila 116 iiumtl' BOARDING. 1121 GIKAKD STREET, CENTRALIX located, wlttiin two square, of Uie uoiiilneutal andtilrard Houst An nnfurntahed ' ;' SKC'OND-STORY FRONT ROOM, With rlrst.cl.M Hoard. Yacaucles fur OHntlemen and Table Boarders. ' v' lifi rente rfqulrtdJ - 1 " 1 911 QOTTON Kna lOftlVllMIToml 91 UniviTU m. 4 IMPOBTEHS OF Kratdicp, Wines, Uln, Olive Oil, Lie. EtcJ AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE BALE OF j PUKE OLD EYE, WHEAT, AND BOUIfe IWNWHISK1ES. t j ins ura74cmp7lnmes. 1 29-..ClIARTEl. PEllTUTUAlj Franklin Fire Insurance Co! fF PlULAWtU'lia, OFFICE: Aos. 455 and 437 CUESXCT KTOkpt ASSETS OH JANI7ABT 1. 1868, t-'"''''-".....M..... 400,00-04 INCOME FOR Hi SdU ,000-00. i LUNAKM PAID blXf 'R l&u.t ..... . CM lR5S.COO,000. Perpetual and Temporary Pollolea on Liberal Terms DIRECTORS, Obarlcs N. Banckec. Uiorge Falea, UNSETTLED CLAIM B. TublM. W afctior. batuuul Uraut, beorte W. .Richards. luaau Lea, Allreti iliier. ifrai.cla W. iewla. jr D 'luomuaUnaricB. ' VtllllulllR jrunt jiiahx,b.i a, UANCKER. President JAB. W. 11CALJUIS1.K. btMtretarv t,r,i .,, Except at Lexington, Eentuoj,.mu Coaiuanv h.a i S U K A N 0 ojt COIIPAN NORTH AMERICA. No. 2'62 WALJN'UT BTKKET, WLILADA. INCORPORATED 17W. CDARTER PERPET0AX Marine, Inland, una tire Iusnrauoe. assets January i, lm, - $2,ooi,2j6-72 10,000,000 looses Paid in Casa Slaoe ita Organization. J DiRitt-Toaa. Arinnr u. uoinn, George L. Harrison. Joan A. Brown, l b arte, 'laylur, Ambrose While, William WeiNh, Idrliard 1). Wood, b. Morris Wain. John Mason. ('HARI.KS Pi.ATl becieuirv. WILLIAM liUEULl-.H, .tiarrisbura-. p-. Centra Agent for tne bite oi Pemibj lvama. 1 gTRICTLY i mucin K. IAim. ard it, Trotter. Edward 14. Clarke, T. Cliarltou Henry, Allied D.Jeobup, John P. White, Louis 0. Madeira, COFFIN, President. MUTUAL. PRCVIOENT LIFE AND TRUST CO. OF PHILADELPHIA. orncE, Ho. in 8..i'ocKm stkejet. Organised to promote LIFE INSURANCE amon members ot the BOCIETV OF FKIENDa. Good risks of any claa. accepted. Policies laaned upon approved plans, at the lowest Tate.. President, BAMTJEL R. BHIPLET. Vice-President, William c. lonustreth. Actuary, ROWLAND PARRY. The advantages oUtrtd by thl. Company are xcelled DMCEN1A LNBBKAACii X PHILADELPHIA. COUPAA? or INCORPORATED 1H CHARTER PERPETITjit No. SJM WALNUT toireet, opposite the JHIxch .rutST liui iwcupauy insure. uu iue. or aaxnae by on Uberal term, on building., merchandise. farnltnM etc., for limited periods, ana permanently on build. U. a. Uabony, Jnkn 1'. I.Mwik. WllUaui b. tirant, Kobfrt W. Learning, D. Clark Wharton. Law rune. Lawls. Jr. tuim ht ditnCMll. rtf ir.milttmii. The Company ha. boen in active operation lor mora than bliTY i Xn Rb. during whtwi Mi lowM faa! been promptly aajiuiod aud paid. nmKUruiw. JohnL. Hodge, David Lewis, iteniamiu jutting, Tuoutaa H. Power., A. R. McHenry, Edmund Caaililon, .-iauiuel Wilcox, in, jr. i L.ewii kj. ixurria. JOHN R. wdubiuuik. President. BaMWL Wrxcox. HwimJ . lubl 1 INSURANCE t. This Company, favorably kuown to the oommumt for over tony years, ouutiuuea to Insure against lone or damage iy Are on Public or Private Buildings, rltber permanently or for a lhnl'ed time. Also oa Furniture block, of Goods, and Merchandise gene rally, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together wl'h a large Burplu. Fund, la Invested In the most oaretul manner, which enables them to offer to the luaurea au undoubted security In the ease or tons. inwi"y TpiBE INSURAjNX'E EXCLUS1VELY-TIIH X' f i.nni LV4iui riitn. ijnmu kawujI COM p ANY Incorporated UOb Charter Perpetual N 510 W ALNUT bireel, opposite Independence bquare J.ihn DnverenT. Thomas ciuuh, Henrv 1 aivIu. J. UlUlngUau Fell, ck.Jr. sMITh. jB..presiaent. Danlnl Smith. Jr..' Alexander Benson, It-aac Ma.lehurst, I'l ih. Ujthtna. lianlel Hadd ck DANIKI, SMI' WM. e. CROW ELL. beorelary. pirEKIAL F1KE "iSSHRAKCE COII'AJIY LOMDON. E&TAULISIIEI ISOi. Paid-up Capital and Accumulated Funds, S0,O O 0,0 O O I N COLD. rni:vo.sT a ini:itKi?.ii, AtToiits, 1H 8m. No 107 Etiuiii TuIBD street, Phlla. ' TRUSSES. t.t-t i i ll, - ,n I, . i rmnun nmivu tX Dtr.Lti oiiAjiu iiuAU laoaa, . N( . 1.7 i lMObMi birn t. "i hi. Iras our. rirtiy as pil' d will cure aud rciuiu with ease the luo dlUicuH rupture; attvkv. ut'u, litbt, ea, kale, aud ft'Uifoiiabit. unt-d tL iMtUiiu. .tii'.r.d to form, never tiiBU, break., sol b-cuii i i:uiur, or muve. from, place. 3No elrupplii, hard I. J.oer Abdomlual Bup porter, by w hicn the ioihe'0. Cipulwit, and Ladle ut)rlug with Peinele wHiti wlil rind relief and feiicttsupori: vny hfr-l t, u'N'l. aud eil.-ciuMl, pile uhirA:Vbis bheiiKi-r jrn;. ii, Hnnio btocLliurt fo WWklUtU fit.f ii-'rn o. irr- f.ock be. Lea'tiei rtrt'te., lialf ui Brvov Iavla ai en. oon. - , . i. AND F I.AX, BAIL DUVR AND CANVAS, - ' Of all numbers and uiundo: .Tent, Awning, Trims, aua Vtimou (.over Dutk , Ali.o Pi.pt i tiiiurai:turtir' l'rlor Feiie fromoun. several tctt wiut; Panil g. HdHng. Hall Twine, etc,' . . JOHN W. VKtUHlN AW., ' H0.KWJO.tth.ii' Alley A l.TT'ANT)I..n 0. ATXBUL CO., n Ai i' :i :i.i an i '4. ?C iNOlll H WiJ AKVtS ' Ko. MMITH VA'1'KH TltEliT, I'l-UI.AOai iillA. fo.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers