THE DAHjX INNING TELEGRAFII PUIL ADELPHI A . TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 18G3. SriBIT OF TUE PRESS. EDITORIAL OriNIOKS OF THB LKAmHO JOURNALS CPON CDURKN1 T0PIC8 COMPII.SD BVXBT DAT FOB THB BVKMHO TBLBUBAPH. The rivtldi ut's Salary. From the N. Y. Tribune. The New 'i ork Time nrgflB an Inoreme of the nnnal coBnpnation of our Presidents from 12.1,000 to 100,000. It 8aj: "We propoMtd Hotiitj iry pk Unit tlie "alary of the rreblilptu of I hi; Kill ltd Hlatea grionld be advanced lo wiml It wih fifty yeaig atio. Nomi nally, it mantm now bh 11 whh then. Hut In point of fBci mat in lu point of pnroii:iniuK power 825.( 0(1 1m not oue-lmlf, If It he any more tban one-quHrter, a iuU'M at this day aa it hm at the beglunlrjK "f tue country. Take toe oust or living ni'WHiid compare li with what It was then take I tin relation of Income and expendi ture hud compute i hern with what they men erepud it, will at once be apparent that It the i'rei-lderil'e salmy were put at Ko.t'OO when the Government wa founded, It ounht to be en tabliKhe.1, to eay the least, at JlOO.OOU at tue pre sent lime. The existing rale Is no? enough, and has not for yearn been enough, to maintain the Presi dent In a proper manner. Trie President li compelled, by virtue of his position, to incur many expenses that are, more or less, of n public nature; and aa thlr.ua now are, he mutt either ecoiioml.n lu a email way upon thene, or else bi ruuttt lose the HtlvatiUtKes which they are CHlculuied to give to the publio buHlnesa, the ndmluihtratlon, and the couutry. It In cus tomary lor the President, at hie discretion and pleasure, to entertain publicly mem barn ol both houses of Congrefm, the members ol the diplo matic corpo, Important foreign personages and other vlhilors, and, lu fact, many representa tive Individuals whom he would never propose to Invite lo Ms table as a private gentleman. Thene tltlogs subtract very largely frjm the gum thai is intended to go to his own personal support; and, If he were to entertain In any thing ltae the style common to thousands of private citizens in all the great elite of the country, he would not only llnd himself with out a dollar to supply bis own table, but would soon plunge himself largely In debt." Comments by The IVibune, There is much weight in some of the con siderations adduced by the Times, and wa are newise disposed to belittle them. We admit that $100,000 per annnnt now would not bo a higher salary tor onr President in 1801) than $25,000 was during Washington's administra tion, when our total population was but 4,000,000, the demands of the station far less, and the purchasing power of money maoh greater than at present. In short, ' we eon cede, to save time, most of the Times' pre mises. Now hear the other side: The United States owe a gigantio National Debt. The sum of $2,500,000,000, whioh is palpable to all, is supplemented by a pension fist of $25,000,000 per annum, by bounties and claims yet to be adjusted, by annuities to Indiana, eto. etc. We ought to pay not less than $200,000,000 per annum to meet the annual interest and reduue the principal of our debt; while it is not possible to run the Government at a oost (including pensions) of less than $100,000,000 more; making $300, 000,000 in all, whereof nearly half must be raised by internal taxes. Our choice would be to raise $400,000,000 per annum, and pay off the labt fraction of the debt within the next twenty years or less; but we have not been able to make members of Congress regard the matter as we do. Yet we should fearlessly appeal to the people, if a clear issue could be made, in the confident hope that they would vote to be taxed enough to pay off, with fru gal management, at least $100,000,000 of the principal of the debt per aunum. Now, such payment, or any payment at all in reduction of the principal of the debt, in volves stringent taxation. We ask the people to bear such taxation, in order to save their grandchildren from the burden of a huge debt. They cheerfully respond to the appeal. But let them see that their heavy taxes do not insure a reduction of the debt that the money is used np in higher salaries, larger allow ances, eto., eto. aud their shoulders will ache and they become restless under the burden. The Times, we do not forget, proposes that the President's salary alone shall be increased. But that would prove neither just nor practi cable. If the President is to have $100,000 per annum, the Heads of Departments should have not less than $20,000 each: Lay, they should have $30,000. Your Secretary of State must sink into a mere clerk if the President is to give sumptuous weekly dinners, while he must be content with a monthly dole of diplo matic bread and cheese. Bo, measurably.'with the rest. To give the President $100,000 and leave his Cabinet omoers to vegetate on $8000, ' would create more iDjustioe and heatt-burning than it would cure, uur diplomatic salaries, also, would nave to be increased. We are among those who believe that a very considerable reduction of salaries, emoluments, and allowances is practicable and desirable. We hold that the cost of collecting our revenue, for instance, is greater than it need or should be. We may not be able to point precisely to the leaks which should be stopped; but we expect much, though we have promised little, from General Grant's administration in the way of retrenchment and reform. But sup pose we begin by quadrupling the President's salary, will not the demand for retrenchment be paralyzed? Will not every subordinate feel and say that it is mean to pare down his $200 or $;00 per mouth, while we put up the President's allowance from $.'5,000 to $100,000. per anrum r Tbe President is poorly paid. We would gladly see him more liberally dealt with There is oue, and but one, way in which this can be doue without paralyzing the effort which should be earnestly made to retrench the eost of running the Government. That way lUs through a resumption of specie pay incuts. SnfTrase aud tlie States. From the N. T. Time. The Fourteenth amendment, as General Kawlina in his Galena speech remarked "places the all-important question of oitiaeuv ship be von a the caprice ol btates or the vary lng decisions oi courts, ana corrects gross miscononptions regarding tue rignti of oiti gens." By this new provision of the Const! tution citizenship is nationalized, in a more comprehensive sens than previously pre railed; tbe States being now for the first time forbidden to "make or enforce any law whioh shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens." Prom the operation of this amendment suf frage is exempted. Tue States may continue to impose other than penal disfranchisement upon citizens, but at the cost of a proportion ate reduction in the basis of representation. Arbitrary disfranchisement, resting on race or oolor, is thus made politically nnprotitable to the States enautiug it. Aside from the pay ment of this penalty, the States retain full control over tbe conditions of voting within their boundaries. If any farther change is made allectiug it, they, or three-fourths of them, must give their consent, as it cau ouly be done by amending the Constitution. Shall consent be sought, then, to au amend ment nationalizing suffrage on an ltnpartUl bbU f Shall the States be asked to surrender .their exclusive authority over the subject, to abandon coullicting regulations in regard to it, and to become parties to a constitutional mea sure vesting the whole, absolutely, in Cou greffl? The que-tiou Is oue whioh the oountry will soon be called to consider. The fact that J comes up only in this ebp ial'd'ej a de cided gain on the part of mora moderate Rt- I publicans. The right of .Congress, by a mere 1 legislative act, to establish uniformity of suf frage throughout the union Das, until re cently, been affirmed by thosa who demanded its exercise in behalf of colored citizens every where. That this pretension is now taoitly surrendered, and that those who urged it join in tbe proposition to seek tha end desired by an amendment to the Constitution, is a olr cumstanoa that augurs well for the final settle ment of the subject. At least, it proves that a vexatious agitation is to be avoided, and that the propriety of providing for the relin quirhment of a cherished States' right, aud its transfer to the National Government, is a mat ter to be discussed on its merits, and to be tffected, if at all, in the constitutional way. Nationality of suffrage would seem to be the logical corollary of nationalized citizenship. If the citizen of one State is, under the Constitu tion, a citizen of all the States, should not his relation to the franchise be everywhere the same ? If be is eligible to vote in South Caro lina, ought he not also to be eligible subjeot to be qualifications as to duration of residence in New Yoikf And if in New York, why not in Missouri? To declare otherwise is practically to curtail citizenship, and to allow States to raise obstacles to the harmonious woiking of the principle implied in the 11 ret section of the Fourteenth amendment. Yet this discrepancy does now exist. There are mauy thousands of citizens voting in South Caroliua who would be disfranchised by the law of New York; and thousands in New York who, living in Missouri, would by a local statute be de prived of the franchise. If for no other pur pose than to establish uniformity as to tha conditions of voting, much may ba said in be half of Congressional action which shall briug the question under the consideration of tha State Legislatures. Jiut there Is a question of right which must come up in the same conneetion. The nation has thrown the gates of citizenship wide open to the colored race. It has, in effect, declared that distinctions based on oolor, in their opera tions affecting political rights and privileges, areupjustand inexpedient. On this ground it has forced negro suffrage on the South; and in at least ten of the Southern States those who most loudly protested against it iu the first instance now announce their acceptance of it and their readiness to work under it. If the Deinoorats of Georgia and South Caro lina are not afraid of enfranchised colored citizens, though they are there politically powerful, can .Northern Kepublicans obleot to their enfranchisement in States where they form but a fraotion of the population? Their citizenship being conceded, is it proper to brand them as uufit to vote solely because of the color of their f-kiu ? An 1 if it is Lutu safe and desirable to blot out the distinction ori ginating in slavery and maintained by an irrational prejudice, does not a constitutional amendment afford the best means of aooom plisbing the object ? A liberal policy dictates tne change iu tue interest of disfranchised whites as well as of disfranchised blacks. In the reconstructed States the number of the former is inconsider able, and even these are limited to one or two of the States recently restored. Bat in Mis souri and Tennessee the class is very large. By transferring the suffrage question from the States to the General Government, therefore, irritating remnants of the Rebellion may be removed, and the foundations of representa tive power laid as broadly as the most exact ing demands of justice could require. The Republican party is pledged to this policy, so tar as It applies to disabilities imposed on whites on account of the Rebellion, and the propriety of carrying It out without unneces tary delay is a question that cnust escape the attention of Congress. This particular form of disability, however, cau be reached oply by the proposed amendment of tha Con stitution, which may thus commend itself to the. friendly attention of the Legislatures, both North and South (jlcucrnl Grant's Election Tho Prospect lor wie icieaiea ueiuocracy.. From the!?. Y. Herald. In tha election of General Grant the Demo cratic party has suffered a heavy defeat. In the Ootober elections they fought with tha resolution, activity, and tenacity of General Lee in his efforts to hold intact his lines around Petersburg; but after the loss of Penn sylvania and Indiana the Ueraocrauo rank and file, like Lee when driven from his entreneh ments, seemed only intent npon saving their shattered columns from annihilation. The managers of the Tammany Seymour and Blair Convention bad presumed too much upon the apparent political reaotion of lobv, as in 1863-64 they presumed too much upon the popular manifestations of 1862. In each case, in falling back upon the extreme Copperhead ideis that the war was a failure, and that tha "Union as it was" must be reestablished, the Demociacy undertook the hopeless battle of the Bourbons. Where are they now ? From their decisive defeat, and from all the ciroumstances of their position, they will be compelled to east about for a new line of departure aud a reorgamza tion, not upon the dead issues of the past, but upon the living issues of the present time Their fatal mistake in the late cauvass was that they made it the fight of the ex-Rebels of tbe South against the reconstruction laws of Congress. The JNortheru Uemooratio mana gers in this were too fast iu submitting to the demands of the Southern delegates ot the uou vention, most of whom had been among the leaders of the "lest cause." Thuj, iu the Tammany platform the declaration that the reconstruction laws of Congress were 'uncon stitutional, revolutionary, null aud void," we had, only in other word-", the repetition of the Chicago platform of lsbi, that the war was a failure, and that we must have peace upon any terms acceptable to the ex-Confederate party of tbe South. In the face of this bold and revolutionary issue all the outrageous doings for the last four years of a radical Con gress, and all the vast schedule of corruptions, blunders, frauds, wastages, aud profligate ex penditures of the party in power were eclipsed and became secondary questions in the cam paign. Iu a word, the Tammany Convention took the very ground desired Jay the Kepub Brans, and the result is the overwhelmiug eleotion of Grant aud Colfax and another Re publican Congress of more than two-thirds in the Senate and within a dozen changes or so oi a two-thirds vote in the House. We may safely assume, then, that tha Southern reconstruction system adopted by Congress, subject to the Constitutional amendment, article fourteen, will stand. Geue ral Grant, in his famous oorrespondenoe of last February with President Johnson, which broke the note of Chase as tbe radical favorite, has, on the War Department Imbroglio, left upon record his position upon reconstruction, lie will, President, reooguize the existing laws, and whatever modifications ha may recom mend in reference to tha unreconstructed States will doubtless rest upon the Constitu tional amendment aforesaid. That amend ment, among other things, proclaims all per sons born or naturalized in tha United States citizens thereof and of the States in whioh they reside on a footing of olvil equality; that suf frage and representation shall go together, as each State for itself may choose; that oartatn artles guilty of rebellion against the United for office, subject to a two-thirds vote of each bouse of Congress; and that Congress shall have power by appropriate legislation to en force the provisions of this article. Thus lu tha reconstructed as well as in thennreoia st r no ted Southern States, and lu New York as well as in South Carolina or Texas, Congress has the power to enforoe this amendment; and wa dara say that in tha interval to tha 4th of March next a law will be passed for carry ing into effect throughout the United States the provisions of said amendment. coma new amendment has been hinted at embracing a uniform universal 'manhood suf frage; but meanwhile the auiendmeut officially proclaimed, we may assume, will be carried into effect. In this view tho question of re construction may be considered as settled, however unpalatable to the extreme radicals may be the provision of this amendment four teen, which gives to each State tha discretion of a universal or restricted snlirage, subject oily with a restriction of the ballot to a cor responding restriction in counting the people for representation in Congress and in the Pre sidential Electoral College. What, then, be comes the future programme of the Democra tic party ? Not a useless war against amend ment fourteen, under which they may very soon recover all the Southern States, but a recognition of fixed facts and a new departure against the financial blunders and excesses of the dominant party, and in favor of a positive and olearly defined system of retrenchment and reform. This will do for the present; but under tha inooming administration new issues will cer tainly spring up, which iu their Rotation may aHoid a fine opportunity to the Democrats to cut in between the contending Republican factions and carry off the balance of power. At all events, the first important necessity de volving upon the Democratic leaders is the abandonment of the dead issues, and a recog nition of this fixed fact, that the "Constitution as it was," "the Union as it was," and State sovereignty as it was, are among tha wrecks of tbe deluge. Thoge Yiiieluud Women. From "Iirick" Tomer oy's N. Y. Democrat. They voted. Yts they did. And they have told of it. They have sent the canvass to the newspapers, aud want to be counted in. Put 'em in. 1 hey 11 do for a certain kind of political arithmetic. They go to swell the aggregate when a fellow wants to get up biz figures. It i3 no worse than to first count the whole adult white male population of a State, aud then assume that one-half are disfranchised, and alter counting them in once as a part of the whole, then add them in again uuder a dis tinct head. In this way a State which has in all only 200,000 adult white males can easily be shown to have 300,000 of the same class who ought to vote. This kind of political arithmetic is of all things conceivable the most charming. It is fully worthy of the imaginative gentleman who wrote up the 'ialbowB of the Mincio " for poor Raymond one night, and has furnished the Uerald a part &tP.t ea :R'l '. dlfsftanchlsed and disqualified rich theme, for these dozen years, when it wanted to ba a little malicious on the Jimas. And Raymond has borne it like a martyr, saying never a word. iiut revenons u nos mouton. Let us return to these women. They have succeeded, to a certain degree, in unsextDg themselves, and they are probably mightily set up by it They, no doubt, thiuK they must now wear the breeches, at least half the time, putting the petticoats on to their husbands, aud leaving them at home to tend babies, wash the dishes. bike bread, etc, while they go out on to the streets and into the shops, talking politics, and advocating woman emancipation. They say nifgers vote, and why shouldn't they ? The poor deluded dears I don't they think thtinseives any better than niggers? Must they do things because niggers do them ? We are afraid they haven't well considered the bearing of this question. They might do things which would "be very shocking. We fear they would b come dreadfully filthy and vile, if they were to follow out this argument to its logical result. But, seriously, what an unwomanly feeling this is, which prompts our female humans to aspire to positions which God and nature never intended them to oooupy never fitted them for. Those who thus step out of their appropriate sphere are exceptionable, ill-organized beings, at war with the God that made them, and striving to trample on His laws, as revealed in His holy word aud stamped upon their mental, physical, aud moral organizations. Tha trouble with these few restless spirits is, that they want to be mn. But they can't be. They are women. God made them so, and thus they have got to remain to tha end of their days. Then let them ba content to be women. If they will get rid of this monomania and become true women, they can, in a good, virtuous, legiti mate way, become the mothers of men, and mould their character, and In that way influ ence and gnide society to a far greater and more beneficial extent than by unsexing them selves and pitching into politics. A nice thing it would ba to see our wives and daugh ters on the stump, wrangling on politics in public places, electioneering in a hot cauvass, aud yelling and squalling and pulling and hauling at tha polls on election day. This morbid desire to do in tociety and iu publio affairs all that men do, shows that these misguided women do not reooguize any distinction between the duties and spheres of men and women. Confound and destroy this distinction, and society would lose its chief charm, domeBtio life its order, harmony, and happiness, and the cause of morals receive tha severest blow ever yet inflicted upon it. Where would this kind of thing end, if encouraged and made to prevail ? There are dinerent classes of duties in life, to one of which man is adapted, and to the other woman. They cannot change places withoat the whole order of society being broken up. They cannot mix np and perform those duties indiscriminately and promiscuously, without producing great disorder and bringing on fear ful evils. The kind of spirit manifested by these women will in tha end lead them to regard it as degrading, and unworthy of such bright ethereal beings, to wear woman's erown as wives and mothers. Good graoious 1 Won't we be in a bad fix when it comes to that? Hold on, now, this won't do. This kind of thing must be stopped. The good old mothers oi Israel used to regard it as a bless ing, and tha highest glory of their lex, to be come tha mothers of men. And, remember, tue --jewels oi tue iamous uoinan moiuer, "the mother of tbe Graoohl." Tut I tut I Let's hear no more of this. Be women. Be good. What do these people want ? Are they not treated with all the respect that mortal could wish ? Are they not tha objects of chivalrous courtesy f Art they not loved and cherished in the domeBtio circle, and cared for with tha utmost tenderness ? Does not man toil and struggle for them far mora than for himself? Are not the laws just and liberal toward them, and is not every amelioration granted that is nteded for their protection? What mora would they have if they be just-minded, true women ? That they are not satisfied with all this shows that they are mlsoreatloni that they are Yearning for a masouliuity which nature Las denied them. They are euoouraged in it by a set of crazy theorizers and morbid senti mentalists, who are destitute of common sense, and whose minds are inoapable of maklug just discriminations. We suspect that when these people get exhausted upon the negro question, they will g in strong on tha women. Tha current seems to be turning iu that direction. Tue Jacobin pulpit is ready to give the thing a lilt. That fellow who, the Sunday before election, pretended that he was abont his "Father's butiuesB," in preach ing politics, and trying to put breeches on to women, has set the movement on foot. This question will soon be in politics. The Jacobins are preparing for it. It is the Jacobin wonitn who are going Into it. We have no fear of its spreading among Democratic women, or that many deoent women of any class will become iufected by it. But those Vineland women have got it bad. Just look at the vote If 2 in all 4 lemooratio, 188 Republican. The woman that reports tha result is very careful to state that four colored women voted "all for Grant." That's right, and we are glad that so mauy of the rest of these foolish women voted "for Grant." We would not have it otherwise for one of the World's political tables. To be sure, they did not vote at tht men's pell, and their votes were not embraced in tha legal canvass. But no matter. They voted. And they voted in the same rooms where tha men did. Don't they think it was very womanly ? Of course they do, for they have told all about it in the newspapers. Poor deluded creatures, much we pity you. The Little Came. From the T. X. World. The latest phase of tha little game is to keep the two-thirds. As matters now stand the radicals are soma ten or twelve short of a two-thirds in the Forty-first Congress. To do away with this overplus of Democrats aud thereby put the ring in Grant's nose, should the General prove restive, is a prime object, and this is the way they mean to do it. Imprimis, the word has gone out from Wash ington and waked into galvanic life a certain select decoction, five in number, of that learned body that, from the antecedents of its membership, was known as the Mississippi Chain-gang Convention. ibis decoction, styled committee, has all of a sudden dis covered that the negro constitution was not, after all, defeated in Mississippi by 76" 2D votes, as officially reported by the district commander, but seven strong anti-constitution counties being thrown out was carried. Where fore the said quintriple crew, in a rescript dated the third of this month, announce that the affair has been "duly ratified and adopted," and divers carpet-bag and negro gentry eleoted as State officers and to Congress. These latter resurrections being - five in number, it follows that, on the adoption of this manifesto by Congress, as it will be adopted, the trooly loil will add at one fell blow five brand-new carpet-bag votes to their depleted ranks. Fur ther than this, it has been ascertained, as a Washington special to tha foU is good enough to tell us, that there was such "Kebel terror ism" in Louisiana as kept the loil negroes, who made bread and meat for the Confederate armies when they could not have been forced so to do, from the polls. This means, ot course, that a sufficient number of affidavits at $ apiece have been prepared to make a good basis for casting out the five Louisiana Demo cratic Congressmen elect, whereby it but re mains for the loil to oust two, or, at mo3t, three more Democrats to get their two-thirds. This is soon done, as it is now being "ascer tained" that in Georgia there was also a ter rorism which lost the State to Grant. This done, out go seven Georgia Democrats, and voilA ! tha two-thirds. Then let Let-us-have-peace wag his head Johnsonizingly at us if he dare, and we, unto whom is given tha fulness of tha earth, not forgetting the two-thirds, will show him on which side of the hedge shines the sun. What a little gama it is, to ba sure. 213 & 220 S. FRONT ST. Y. P. M. Y. P. F.I. Y. P. rp II GREAT BUBAL CEMETERY1, liOUNT MORI A II, 4 4 5 ! 218 220 jS. tWM ST. 4- CO' OFFflR TO THB TRADB, M L0T3, FINE II Y E AM) llOUItliOIV WHISKIES, YS R9D Ol 1C, 18(H), ltsWy, find liitr. ALSO, FKEE HIKE KVE AMD E0UK1M WHISKIES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from to 145.; Liberal contracts will be entered into for lota, in bond at Dlauuery.of tula years' raanuractura FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOFSAFES I BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. piRE-PftOOF SAFES. $ 10,000 In Money, valuable Books and l'apcrs iMTrectlj prcseryed through the lire of July 20, 1808, at Dare's lhtnot, South Carolina, in one or MARVIN'S SA LS, owned by if 50,000 feet of Lnmbor destroyed In onr I'lauiii? SHU In Brooklyn, May 15, 1808. All our Money, Tapers, aud Books, saved in excellent order in a MAUVLVS SAFE Ahuii and Drj riasler. S11EAKM1X BROS. Both of the above were YEltY SEVERE IES1S. AR STAIRS & KlcCALX, Kos. 12C WALNUT and 21 UIIAMTE Stst LMPOBTEK8 OF Brandies, Wines, Uln, Olive Oil, Etc Etc, AND COMMISSION MKKOHANTS JOB THE SAXK OF PUKE OLD RYE, WHEAT, AAD BOCK- BPS WHISKIES. x YOCNG'S PURE 9fA.LT WHISKY. YOUNU'M PUBK MALT WHIDKY, TOCSU S I'VBE HALT WHISKY. There i no question relative to tne merits or the celubr&ud Y. P M. It In the mrfsi Quality of Wbleky. Difcuufamured from tbe best grain afforded br tbe Hbilade.pbla tuarael. sua it is sola at tbe low late oi f) per gallon, orin& ptr quart, at me salesrooms, Ko. 700 TASSIUMC 110 AD, HBJpj FHUiADKL.r'HIA. w OUXCALT B R WIN JOINT I PERFECT SAFE. MARTIN'S CUH03IE IRON SriLEIUCAL BURGLAR SAFE Cannot be Sledged ! Cannot be Wedged I Cannot be Drilled 1 A1 CALL AND 8KB THEM, etjWlt-TlVA, (J1KUULAU. OR 8JNO fOIi CO- MARVIN & CO., 1721 CUESTSUTSTh (Masonic Hall), L'blla., 1'RLNCIPAL WAREHOUSES, UBOADWAT, MEW TOBK, 108 BANK fcTBEKT, l'LEVLAKD And (or sale by onr Agent In tbe brouibnut the United Mtau. O., principal oltla 831 ui4flm embracing an' area ol one hundred and fifty-five acres, and comprising every varl- ly of scenery, Is by far tbe largest and most beautiful of all tbe ceaiete rlts utar Philadelphia, As tke tide of improvement tends northward, MOUMT UOBIAH, by geographical position, la FOREVER BAFK FltOH INTRUSION OR DI8- TUitBAME 11 V ONIONING Of STKKKTd, ai.d mill uevt-r be budged la and surrounded by hcusus. laciorleJi, or other Improvements, the luevl table fate of other ceuieleriej northward or centrally bliuHUd. At a convenient distance from tbe city, readily as- CftM'ble by au excelleut road aud by the street cars of tbe Jtarby Passenger Railway, Aluiiiil Morlah, by Its uuulsturbed quiet, fu.dls tue solemn purpose ol Its dedication as a last res. log place of tne dead. Iso .uueral service here la evtr luleriupted by the sbrlll wbl;le of tbe lueomotlva, nor the sensibilizes ot friends or visitors shocked by the rush and rattle of long trains of passing freight or ooal cars, as must ot necessity be tbe case la other burial-places, now esubllitbed or projected, on the Immediate line of steam railroads, or through the grounds ot which such railroads run. Just now tbe hues of Autumn tinge with gorgeous colors aud lulinlte variety the fi liage ot tbe various groups ot tlue old forebl tre-s adorning tbe margin of the stream which rueaudeia through tbe grounds, aud adds so great a charm to the attractions of tbe place. Churches of all tne principal Pro'.estant denumlna tlons have here purchased sections of ground for tue use ol their congregations, and more tiiun seven thousand lamllleB bave given this great Rural Ceuie. tery tbe preference overall others. Clolcelois of any size desired may s ill be hsd npon application at tbe Lodge, at the entrance of the leiiitlery, nr at the Branch Oulce, Pena Mutual In surtuue Building, No. 921 CUEtiNUr Street, up stairs. where Dy Information will be given by 10 at lm G aoilOK CONU KLL, Secretary. fjARQUETTEI ' MARQUETTE I Another letter from the great fire at Marquette, HKUKJKti'b WAFE8 preuerve their contents where Bates oi other maaera fail 1 Hakouhii, Michigan, July 20, 186S. Mnsri Herrinu dc (Jo. , . .. . UtMLSUIkt vlu memo uiu, uv euiire uusiness portion oi our town was destroyed by lire, our care, wniCU Was OUe UI JUUI iunuuiii..uiu, nm Buujejt lu an intense neat, uui viuyw. ivovu nueiuait) w tuv seveie test, it lay wi tne rviw uwr-ur, uuy. sun when laaen out, from it. pperuue nue uuutiue covering being burn.d through in many piaceai, aud lu view ol the fact that several other sates previously taken out were entirely destroyed, it was a gret surprise to us to find tbe contents legible aud la good condition. ...,, KaAM tieVerai uruirn iu ' - " uima seut you which Is the best prool ot this man satisfac tory test, and of the coundenou of this community la ygifr tafe.. ''ffi'fss smith. HERRING'S PATENT BANKERS' CHAMPION a Attn, made ot wrougbt iron and steel, aud the Patent Fraukllulte, or "Spiegel Jfcisen, tue oeat re sistant to burglars' drills or cutttug instruments ever manufactured. niiiuiiiu miun. Indies' luwelrv. eto. etc., both Dlaln and In imitation of handsome pieces of furniture. ilfcRKIKU'tt PATJSMT SAl-'Jtti, tbe Champion Safe for the past twkntY'Smvjcm yjcaum; tbe viotof at the W obw a 1'aih, London; the WoKfco e Fain, few YOIK; the jtxro.lTioi uiinuini, rarm, U' INN HB l THM WAUKH Of 80.IIUU JT MANCN at the recent international contest in Paris, are made and sold ouly by the undersigned aud our authorised ni. T5 i TlllT'T TTT?nTl TV1 ft, ft lAnAXih. uuaiuiiu a, vv.f PHILADELPHIA. HERRING, FARRKL fc BHJtKMAN, Mew York. HERRING A CO., Chicago. HERRING, FAHRJtL & SHttRMAN, ( 2wfm8rurp Mew Orleans. E lit h. MAIS MANTjyACTUBRB OF tIRh AND BUEGLAH-PKOOF SAFES, LOCKoMlTH, BELL-HANGER. AND DEALER a4 UVUaVHSU UAKUWAKS, Ibl No. 484 RACK Street. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., X.E. Corner of F0EBTH and RICE Sta., PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUCCI3T8. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF White Lead aud Colored Taints, Fatty Yurnieihes, Etc AGENTS FOR THB CELEBRATES FUraCll ZDIC PALM'S. DKALKtlb AND CONSUMERS LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. SUPPLIED AT 181 IRON HOR9E- ILLIAM S. I Agent PATENT JiLASTIC ROOF aud CLARKE'S PATENT A DJUSriBLE Call and sen samnles. unices HKKU bueet, below Tenth, and No. 408 LIBRARY Bireet. lu at 1 m rp iKES HOUSE, IIARBISUUBG PENNSYLVANIA. The Dndenlgned having leased the aujve popular and well-luown bouse, which has baeu thoronguly I ei aired and greatly Improved, aa well as entirely riiiiii,Hii..ii thmuutiout with elegant new fiiriiiturv. InclodluK all the appointments ot a tirst-class Hole), will be retrly lor the reception of guests ou aud after the lftlb of Novemoe. ioe. ., 10 i lm THOMAS FARLEY. Proprietor. LEXANDEK O. C ATT KLL A CO. PRODUCE UOMMII-titUH At r.KUMAN la, to. no jxuuin wxiajve No. 27 NORTH WATF.R RTRKET, PHILADELPHIA. tt UXANPBH h.CATTKLJa flUUAH CATTKIA STOVES, RANGES, ETC KOTICB. THE U X I) E R S I O X B D would call tbe attention of the public to bis nn. w tiubunn tiiiLnt uttWAUK. This Is in entirely new heater. It Is sj cm- structed as to at once coruiuei.d It tell to general favor, being a Citutjlnallon ol wrought a.d cant Iron. Ills very slnjple In its couxiructluu, ai.d la periecily air ligbl; at'lf-cleanlug having uo I lpes or drums to be taken out aud cleaned. It is so arranged witu upright Hues as to produce a larger amo'iut of heat from tne same weight ol coal thau any furunce now In use, Tue bygiometlu couultlou ol the air us produced oy my new arrangement ol evaporation Will at oooe de uiontlrale that It is tie ouly Hot Air Furuace that will pnUute a pereirtly healthy atmusphere. Mi one la wantol a complete He. Hug Apparatus would do well to call aud eiamlne the Gulden Eazle, C1UHLKS WILLIAMS, NOB. 1182 anu 1134 MARK HT Street, Philadelphia. A large rssortment ol Cooking Racges. Vlre-board Stoves, Low Down Grates, Ventilators, etc., always on band, N. !. lobbing of all kinds promptly done. 8 10 TRUSSES. BOOTS AND SHOES. L A D I E 8' SHOES. "12 "BEELIY'S HARD RUBBER TRUSS, Wi No. 1847 CftKMNUT Street. This Trass cor rec tly applied will oure and retain with ease the uoal dlUh ult ruptnie; always clean, light, easy, sale, and oumfortable, used in bathing, titled to form, neve rueut, breaks, soils, becomes Umber, or moves from place. No strapping, bard Rubber Abdominal Hup porter, by which the Mothers, Corpulent, and Ladies) suiierliig with Female weakness, will rind relief anal ptirfect support: very Ugbt, neat, and edeotuaJU Pile InstrumenU hhoulder Brace, Klaatlo Blockings fo weak limbs, Suspensions, eto. ALsu, larve stock be LaiLb Trusses, bail usual price. LaUylu aiuta, noe, . ltviwoa NEW STOKE. H ENRY WIRE M A N. - -, MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF LAD I US' HOOTS ANI SHOES, Ko. 118 South T1I11ITEMH Street, S. W. Corner Sixth and Bultonwood sts., PHILADELPHIA. AND 487 Eleventh Street, Washington, D. C., Has rpened bis El KG ANT NEW STORE, No. 118 South THIRTEENTH stieet. be'.ween Chesnnt and Walnut streets: with a large asRortment ot the FINEST QUALITY OF LADlKs' BOOTd AND bHOEH, of bis own manufacture. Also, JUST assortment of RECEIVED FROM PARIS, a large Ladies' Boots, Shoes, and Slippers, Made expressly to order by ihe braled manulacturers. best And mestoele- 11 7 lmrp HAVING ALTERED AND ENLARGED Mr Store, No. 2M N. NINTH street, 1 Invite atten tion to my increased stock (of my own manufacture) of tine BOOT S, S HOES, u AlTEus, Etc., of the latest styl'B, and at tbe lowest prices. 816 8m ERNEST SO PP. CARRIAGES. QARR IAGES. Notice Is respectfully given to customers and others desirlig CARRIAGES of ihe MAN U F A O T U It E OF WM. D. ROGERS, OF OHESNUT STitKKT, soon as possible, to insure To tbe place their orders as ir completion for ibe DRIVING SEASON OF 18G9. CARRIAGES REPAIRED In the most neat and expeditions manner. v CARRIAGE) STORED and Insnrance effected. WM. D. ROGERS, Kos. 1009 and 1011 CHESXUT Street, U8fmw2m PHILADELPHIA. cgfrfe GARDXEIt & FLEMING, CARRIAGE BUILDERS. Xo. 311 South FIFTH Street, BELOW WA1NUT. An assortment of NEW AND SECOND HAND CARRIAGES always ou baud at REASONABLE Pit 1 CEH. 1 8 fmwtfni ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETC, ffitt tUtta STEAM ENGiNH AND f-11 lk ' -1 BOILER WOKK3.-NEAF1E ft LEVY riuLnULAKi) THEORETICAL ENGINEERS.' MACHINlbTb, BOILKR-MAKEilS, BLACK SMITHto, and FOUNDERS, having tor many year been In successful operation, anu been vxoliulval engaged la building and repairing Marine and River Engines, high aud low-pressure, Iron Boilers, Water Tanks, Propellers, etc etc., respectfully Oder their services to the public as being fully prepared to con tract for engine of all slsea, Marine. River, and Stationary; having seis of patterns of different siaee are prepared to execute orders with quick despatch. Every description of pattern-making made at the shortest notice. High and Low-press nre Fine Tubular and Cylinder Boilers, oi tue best Pennsylva nia charcoal Iron, Forgings of all size aud kinds Iron and Brat. CaKtluga of all descriptions. Rod Turning, Screw Cutting, and all ether work oonneotael with the above business. ' Drawings and specltlctlons for all work done at the establishment free of charge, and work fuaraa. The subscribers bave ample wharf-dock room ana are uf boats, where they can lie lu perfect safety Drovldpd with shears, blocks, falls, atn. for raising heavy or light wetghta. HI John p. ciiivv. BEACH aud PA HI EK Streeta. X. VACeHK MfBalCX, WILLIAM H, hIJUBJOV FIFTH ASE QOUTIUVAKK rOUJUDItr. fH I LA i Ki.PB I A, MER1UCK A SONS, .KNGINEEita AND MACHINISTS, manufacture High and Low Pressure bttam Engines for Land, Rlvr, and Marine Service. Boilers, Uaoometers, Tanks, Irou Boats), eta Castings of all kinds, either Iron or bras. Iron Frame Roolk for tias Work, Workshops, ant Railroad Stations, elc. Ketone and Oas Machinery, ot the latest And mos Improved constrnctlou. Every description of Plantation Machinery, also Sugar, Saw, and Orlst Mills, Vacuum Pans, OU Bieuni Train, Defecators, Filters, Pumping, lu glnea, etc Sole Agents for N. BUlenx's PAteat Sngar Boiling Apparatus, Ncsmyth's Patent ttteani Hanuaur, aua Asplnwall Woolaey's Patent CeulrUugal Mugag Draining Machines. J ire guards; FOB ITOBB rilWNTS, AITLVlt.1, fAC lOltlKM, KTC. Patent Wire Railing ;iron Bedsteads, Ornament Wire Work .Paper Makers' Wires, aud every variety oi Wire Woik.inauufacuirid by a. WALKER NOXM, mwlj No, 11 North S1K1II Street,