THE DAILi EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 18C8. SPIRIT OF TEE PRESS. EDITORIAL OriSIOBS OF THI LRADIM JOCKNALf OPOK CDBBEHT T0PIC6 COMPILBD ITBBT DAT FOR TBI BTBHINd TBLHOBAPH. The English Election From the N. Y. Tribune. The Liberals bare carried the English eleo tions. Mr. QladdtouH will go into the nw Parliament with a majority ot 150. We pre sume that the first Btrp of the party will be to deolare a want of ooufi lenos in the Ministry. Mr. Disraeli will resign, mid we shall have Mr. Gladstone in oUloe shortly after Christmas. VVe congratulate the Literal party of Ktiglaul upon this result. The triumph of (ieneral Grant would have linen luooiupM without the triumph of the Liberal party iu Eujjlaui, under CUaJstoDe and Bright. The writer of the cable depaichfiS .from London makes some speculations upou the new Ministry. lie tears that the Liberals will l)e weakened by their great strength; that there will be dissension iu the part; aul that upon any test question all'notin the reform of representation on the dtsextablisU mnt of the liit-U C'burcli, there will be a new "Cave of Adullaui." We thiuk the fate ol the Adullamites of th last Parliament will prevent any secession tinier the new MiuU try. The defeat of Mr. Konbuok is esp-oially fclgnifloant. This geutletuau repreeuiel the Uncertain wing of the Liberal party aud tue anti-American, lie has for mauy years brien the member from Slu(lio;d. II is a powerful man in his way, with Mrong individuality, and has always appeared to be exceedingly popular with hi people. His defeat is grati fying to Americaus as being a rebuke oa the patt of Englishmen for his insolent aud offen sive references to the United States. There is a story of au intrigue on the pirt of the old Whig families to lorm a conserva tive ministry under the premiership of the Earl of Granville. We hardly think this will be attempted. The Karl of Granville is a moderate politician, and has no claim to dis tinction beyond his family aud his olass. Con nected with the families of Devonshire and of Sutherland, his house a joung brauoh of an Old Whig line, Karl Granville has been sim ply au active, industrious, moderate politician, lie was Secretary of State for Foreign AlTiirs under Lo.d Russell, afterwards Lord Presi dent of the Council, and then Chancellor of the Dachy of Lancaster. lie has taken no prominent part in politics, and has made no impression upon Kokand. The only class that would be gratified by his elevation to the premiership is that of those rich aud ambitious Whigs who have so long been the real enemies of Rutoruj, white preteuding to foe the representatives of Liberty. Karl Kus rell belonged to thu claas, while, iu addition to his connections, he was a pronounced Libe ral and had taken advanced ground on nearly every question of Ilei'o'rm. The administra tion of Lord Ruxsell was unpopular. Although he had brilliant men around him, and his Cabinet contained Matexmen who possessed the confidence of the Britibh people, his coro net weighed npon him, and he wa-i looked upon with distiut by the Kaglish Liberal party. Ilia ministry fell almost trout its own weakness, although it ha 1 a majority in Par liament. We think the Liberals will make no auoh mistake now. What the country wauts is a ministry with the representative man at its head. It seleots Mr. Gladstone as the ablest and most advanced exponent of LiVral priuci ples. It will be eoutent with nobody else. We do not Bee how there nan be compromise. It would jar upon the English sense of fair play to see Mr. Gladstone kept from the Pre miership merely to make way lor it representa tive of an old Whig family. Something of this kind was attempted when Lord D-irby re signed. The old Tories were opposed to the elevation of a "par emu" like Disraeli to the Presidency of a Cabinet composed ot digni taries and gentlemen. Rut England said: "This man has fought the battle; he has beea the champion of the Tory party through many a bitter contest; he has bw?n Lord Derby's. Lieutenant, and now that the leader has falleu we in.-itit upon his taking command." Mr. Disraeli was made Prruiier of England by the English people. They prevented his sacrifice to intrigue, and they will do the same with Mr. Gladstone when the time comes to form a Liberal Ministry. It is not without regret that we see so few representatives of the working classes iu Par liament. The cable correspondent says that these candidates "failed for want of money and organization." We fear that iu Eoglaud, as in some parts of Auierioa, the workingmeu have been blind to their true interests, that they have been governed by whims aud pas sions, that they have failed to do for their owu Welfare what wisdom would suggest. Still, the mistake of to-day is the profit of to-mor-iow. The woikiDgmen are new to the fran ihi&e; they have not yet learned to appreciate its value; but in a very few years they will come to know their power and make it ielt. The Fortress Monroe Experiments Our Ortlnaiiec and our Torts. From the N. Y. Timet. On Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of la.it Week, a brief course ot "experimental firing" was conducted at Fortress Mouroe, under the direotion of the United Stales Engineer De partment, with several army oiAsera "a-tsiat-ing." Ou Saturday the "Hoard" closed up its labors, and, as the report goes, apparently satisfied with their labors, lett f r the North." Precisely what these experiments were de signed to Bbow (unless that a g'od many of our forts can be kutvked to pietvs by modern artillery, which was Very well known before), it is difficult to surmise. Nor, probably, Shall we ever discover. For it id somewhat noteworthy that the ordoauo trials conducted from time to time a: Fortress M;i.oe ire rarely desorited in detad far the bUglU of the people, in official reports. Why is thisf Ii it because the eng' user ofiloera think no b-m-fit on result from making known the progress of their experi mental studies beyond their owu lluiUed circle f In England, the custom Is otherwise. There, the famous Suoeburyness experiments are not only conducted iu view of a largd number of all sorts aud classes of wituenses, civio, military, aud scientific, but full olfici.il details of every part aud p trool of theui are promptly made out aud published by the highest authorities for the beneti: of Parliv ineut and the people. Iu this way, both the experiments and tbe expeiim-oW rua the gauntlet of national ciii icism aud oine.in-s they profit by suggestion. Hern, ou tbe q u- trary, few participate iu the expeiJuioijts ex cepl in order to admire, and tlia r-port of au day's doings is mxngre enough, by comparison with the Eujjl'sh the fuliey-t beiiig nsuallv that of some unprofessional spectator, pel hap i a press reporter. However, we do not ataavs lose a (treat deal from this Style of toniluoMuir orduauce experiments, riuce it is seldom difficult to forecast their Issue, from tuo Kuotvu results . of irtvious practice; and it is only now and then as, tor instance, when IU!) pouuds of powder were at last put into the 15 inch gun) that they attract attention by th-dr import ance. Take, for example, these last experi. mental firings. The first day's operations were I against targets oom posed of granite and ooa- I erete, with a thin plate of iron iu front. It blinrilil h.t-dlv tiftva KftAti riiffinnlt in nrrt,rnnitf. cate tne result oi practising against suuu tar gets with the artillery there employed with full oharges. Very naturally, the targets were knocked to pieces. The second and third day's prant'oe, at least as reported, excite similar reflections. We are told that operations, on the former day, "were not resumed till nearly noin, a tbe Board were engaged in oonsultatiou upou the results effected the day before." To stronger targets then fired at were also com posed of stone-work, brick, and concrete, with iron plates in front, strongly supported by wronght-iron pillars. Did it require experi ment to believe that such guos, with full charges or even the service artillery of other powers would break up these structures at once, and render any guns behind them in operative f We are told at length of the enormous de struction effected by each shot, "smashing, " "demolishing," "orauking," or "ruiuiug" whatever it touched. We see one stiot "crumbling the masonry for some two or threa feet in thickness entirely to pieous;" aul another "ploughing its way cleau through the stone-work, and knocking large pieces far to tbe rear." Rolls are riven, embrasures broken up, targets riddled like sieves. Put to what end? What was this done to prove f What was the object to be accom plished f And what is now kuown that was not known befon f We are told that "the trial was highly satisfactory to all parties." Rat, how "satisfactory T" As being just what all had expected, aud therefore not disagreeably disappointing any one t We may perhaps agree that no difierent issue of the experiments could have been looked for, and that therefore uobody was disappointed. Rut, in that oase, what becomes of the iron veneering devised for our masonry forts 1 The practical value of ordnance experiments undoubtedly depends on their relatiou to the main point sought to be proved or disproved by them. Was the object of these firings to aeoertain the power of our guns, or the strength of our forts f If both a gun-party and a target-party were present, conteudiug, as is customary, one against the other, the result could hardly have equalled the expec tations of both. We have been lately told by the Chief of the Engineer Corps, that the pro tection of granite by iron plates should be made the subject of deliberate investigation and experiment. If this be a part of the ex periment so alluded to, it can hardly be satis factory to those who had faith in those targets, at leat. As to the cuns, we oaunot discover that anything new has been demonstrated re garding them. Usually the gun-men and the target-men, iu experiments with national ordnance, are op- pored, each in a iriendly and fruitful ri valry striving to outdo the other. Rut iu the experiments at Fortress Monroe there is no evidence of such professional competition. The gun-men never put large charges into their own gnus so long as tbey can help it, if we may fairly judge from experiments hitherto, and that, of course, suits the target men exactly. We write about this subject the more plainly and seriously (though, of course from tbe public, not tbe professional point of view) because the problem of national defense is a very grave one with all powers, aud we wish to know exactly what we can rely upon. As to these experiments, as has already been in timated, we do cot consider tbem to have established anything unsuspected. The Politicians alter WranU From the It. Y. Herald. Tne commencement of every new national administration in the United States is like the opening of a new spring. Aa with the balmy airs, refreshing thowers, and warm sunshine of April the birds begin to chirp and twitter acd sing, Lopping from branch to brauoh, milling their leathers and searching for niate lial with which to build their nests, so with tbe advent of a new dispenser of patronage the politicians commence to make themselves heard, and put on all manner of airs in their tflorts to secure comfortable quarters and plenty ol lood lor the next tour years. The first indication we had of the approaohiug change of weather in the politioal world, after the lrost of disappointment had nipped the hopes of the Blair lamily in the bud, was fur nibbed in the neisy chattering of the Wash burne breed in the West, and now the chorus is taken up and swelled by the sparrows, robins, and swallows all over the country, until it is made evident that spring has opened in earnefct, and that every political bird calcu lates npon the enjoyment of the sunshine of the new administration, and hopes to be able to feather his own nest in fine style. The politicians are after General Grant in eat nest now that the time for his inauguration draws near; and as the whisky riugi, with their piunder of one hundred million dollars a J ear, are just now a power among the poli ticians, it iullows that the organs and leaders of tbcee rings play a prominent part in the attempt to capture the new President. In this city we have four distinct divisions of these atpiring combinations one under the management of Greeley aud Compauy, another iin by Raymond and Company, a third repre-ftiitt-d by Dana and Compauy, aud a fourth wiih Thin low Weed at its head all of theiu tuger to take Grant under their special care aid to instruct him how to dispense the patronage of four hundred million dol lars a year for the Lett interest of the country aud of his patiiotio advisers Greeley and Compauy have experienced tome serious drawbacks iu the inisfor tunes of Callicott aud his particular ting, iu the original opposition ina le by them to the nomination of Grant for the Presideuoy, ai-d in the breaking down of the Feuton party in the State. Rut they Lope, with Rutler in CongreBS aud Greeley at the organ, to bully Grant into a recognition of their valuable ser vices, and they will make a desperate effort to name tbe next United States Senator aud to del at Morgan, iu order to impress the Presi dent tlt-ct with a wholesotce idea of their tirength and influence with the Republican party in New York. Raymond aud Company embrace the whisky ring of the antl impeach ers, and as they have succeeded in humbug ging or frightening Andy Johusou into U 'n iuterferenoe with the revenue frauds, aud have manugtd to keep themselves iu tilice during Lis entire term without getting into the btate PiUon, they believe themselves smart enough to pull the Wooll.ty over Grant's eyes and to iheure for themselves a new lease of power ai.d plunder. Dana and Company represeut Morgan, the Coukliugs, aud the old Tammany builoing pool of three or four hundred thou sand dollars. Tbey seek to out between the other two factions aud to carry off' the oyster while their neighbors are quarrelling over the shells. They make their point ou Morgan, audtiustto his advancement to the Cabiuet tor success and for the good, fat, substautial profits ot Government cilices. All these poli ticians are juct now very busy birds, aud are bulging their owu praises at a great rate, aud eiideavoiiug to attract li rant's attention to the bii htuess and beauty ot their plumage. The Thurlow Weed combination, however, comes out in a more impressive mauuer than any of the rest, and bids fair to take the rags off all the other bushes. The whisky ring organ at the national oapital, evidently Intend! to make so tremendous an impressiou on the President elect that all efforts to supplant Weed will be in vain, and nothing will be left to General Grant but to capitulate aul oimi down like Colonel Scott's ooon. Thurlow Weed enters upon the soene fresh from Earope, renovated, rejuvenated, and vigorous, with a tremendous appetite and an improved diges tlon, ready to swallow Grant aud every bo ly else, aud to dispense the federal patronage for the next four years with that priuoely air attained by the experience of a lifetime as thi reiguing king of the lobby. We are assured that in his renewed Uase of life Weed has cast his skin, as snakes are known to do, aa I oomes out slicker aud cleauer thau ever. II (seven willing to smoke the p'pe of peace with Greeley, and might le induced to oousent to confer upon Feuton a small consulship or au inferior revenue ofH -e. All he wants is to hi auowea to bestow upon ueuer.it Uraut the benefit of his large experience, saetcitv. au l patriotism, and to mauage with his well- Known business tact the brokerage of four hundred milliou dollars a year. Wa.I1 tcu liifiru lm ftmilkt ttaS flunaral ftpant will read the biography of Thurlow Weed with a ori.ftt. Huul nl ultuiilinii and ititurf tn , , MV wv ... V. " ' V U.V.Q.TW. Ill) have no doubt, too, that after be has read it he . :nl: l.l;. i , . . . win i'gui nis cigar, get iuio nia nuggy, trot ou nn tin. rni.l af liia n.iinl rr u i f atiil tunt mtu. 1 his mind the question whether it will be au uvnuiage iu me uouuiry lo place tue aiuiinis tratlnn of the OiiVMrmiiHnf. tir tlia nuvt fm years in the experienced hands of the great .11.... I.,l.l.rl , 7 ... I... 1.. . . I niuftu idv. t uqu uo uas luuy uia'ie up liia fiiinrl nnnn t1ii.j (timm-funf imint liu ariil probably Bend lor Thurlow Weed aud 'jjnuuy V.i .1 I. u:, j .i - . lyi'io, auu lok tueui Aun uis uereruii ua'.iou. We hone their natience aud Hereon v will Ut them until that time arrives. The National Dropsy. From the N. Y. WorUt. We had supposed that with the production npon this earthly scene of the late lion. Isaao Newton, Commissioner of Agriculture, nature had done her worst iu the way of making bores. To call a parsou a lool was loug ago decided in one of the Year-books (was it a dream, or did Mr. Evarts, in 'his speech at the dinner given iu his honor, cite the story as from the Year-book ?) not to be actionable, since a parson might be noue the worse par son lor being a fool. To call a Commissioner of Agriculture, nov at rest trom the turmoil and the turuips of earth, a bore, can hardly be thougLt ill-usage of the dead, since Lord Maoaulay is declared by Mrs. Har riet Reecber Stowe to have assured her "that, if he were ia seareh of a safd guaidian for an orphan of good estate, he would look up the most notorious bore iu the neighborhood." Tbe moral excellencies which, according to the orced of Lord Macau lay, must have adorned the soul of our late commissioner, may possibly have failed to shield his bucolic ghost from the indignation of the greater ghost whose name he bore; for the immortal astronomer had a sharp, not to say fehrewish temper while he dwelt below the stars; aud si 7111 porwn maiuhm i.cus, we don't believe he cau nave seen with com placency his shining name bedimmed by the wolds without kuowletige oi his American namesake. Rut wherever the ghost of Com missioner Newton may be, and ia whatever case, we desire to do him juoticei lie was, iu truth, the saddest bore ot his times; but a sadder bore than be Uai arisen to succeed him. That is, if the Tribune may be believed. For the Tribune gives us what purports to be a fjnopsis of the forthcoming "Annual Report" ot Mr. Commissioner of Agriculture Capron, and if this syuopsis iu auy wise in dicates the real character ot the-said "Anuu.il Report," it must certainly as far trausceud the mod tedious efforts of the late and, intel lectually speaking, uulauiented Newton, as the heavens are high above the earth, aul the Apollo Relvidere more bsautiful thau the martyred Lincoln. Capron, the tribune assure us, capers through a "lull volume of twtlve hundred pages," wuh "thirty-seven lull-page illustrations." Iu this aiunle tome he has fouud room not ouly lor Lis own "Report," and lor the "reports of the heads of bureaus," but also for about "twenty-five papers on different subjects from the pens of writers who dwell iu various sec tions of the country." It is really appalling to think of the "vast aud various misinfor mation" which Capron has, in all human pro bability, thus contrived to put togetuer for the further addling of Congressional pates, which certainly needed no suoh perturbation. One of Caprou's contributors, weareiutormed, has been good enough to write a treatise "On ramie, or Chinese grass, containing m history of experimental teat in tin Liritiih Colunits re&uliing from tiuir jeal ousy of this country, aud au account of the efforts that have been made by the Agricultu ral Department in the same direction. " The italics here are our own, and we shall be grate ful to anybody who will tell us how the "history of experimental test" coucerus agri culture, or iu what way the "British colonies result Irom jealousy ot this couurtry," or, in fact, anything at ail about the mailer. An other tiiwhd of Capron enlightens us about a singular agricultural product described as "the goat-antelope ot the Rocky Moun tain." Rut this may be a misprint for "cantelope," aud may promise us a new variety of that delectable melon. A third shows farmers how "to manufacture goat- lleece fur commercial purposes," information which we in i; nt have supplied could with more propriety be addressed to wool-sniuuers. "tieorue llusmau, ot Missouri, has a loug paper on wine and wine-making; aud Edwaid A. Samuels, ot Rostou, one ou the val-ie of birds to larms;" which latter articie we de voutly hope may prove to be a prose transla tion ot Mr. Longfellow's poem ou the same subject. "Mrs. Ellen S. Tupper, of Iowa, au enthusiastic worker with honey-bees, has au ailicle ou bee-keeping in winter. " "One of the department officers has a very readable aiticle on industrial colleges," aud other arti cles treat of Southern agriculture, rice culture, Southern frui s, orange aud citron culture, and similar topics not hereloore common in such reports," while "blill other articles relate te irrigation by a citiz-u of Arizoua, liquid ma ij tiling from New York, farmers' clubs from Wisconsin, model farm-buildings, Pennsylva nia butter," etc. btc. Arlioua is a desperately dry lanl, so dry that even Gmeral llallrok tuouht it dry, which is a fiiht!ul thing to Bay of it; and if Arizona can Le "irrigated," eveu "by a citi zen," it is matter of tuaukfuluess. Rut is it not horrible that Caprou, not content with emptying live or six bundled pages of himself upon us, should call together a cauous of all his friends ami acquaintances aud empty them also upon us ? According this synopsis of. his woik, Caprou has constituted hinuelf the editor of a monstrous anuual magaziue, which the country is to pay for gst'.iug up aud publishing, without the remotest chauoe of ever getting back so much as a sixpence for it in the way ot sales or of subscriptions. Christopher North used to say that every unpaid contributor was, by the force of the term, au ass. Whatever other points of resemblance there may be between that useful beast of burden aud Commissioner Caprou's coutributors, we may be perfectly certain that they are not "unpaid." Nor, we may be snre, does Capron pay them. Thse twenty-five papers on "different subjeoW, from the pens of writers who dwell in different parts of the country," will be paid for out of the National Treasury. Capron and Caprou's "heads of bureaus" will be paid for out of tu National Treasury. Some Ralioal orouy of Capron's in Cengress, who for his own part would rather be burnt at the stake thau real through Capron's twelve hundred page?, will get up and move the House that live or tea or fifteen or twenty thousand copies of "Capron's Report" be struck off, to be paid for out of the National Treasury. Whereby we perceive that Capron Is not only a bre, but worse. He is au unuatural, morbid, toons tro as bore. For he is a tuiug immoral as well af intolerable; an imposition as well as an inlliotiou. If the papers whlih he publishes at the national expeuse are worth publishing, the country is full of agricultural papers aud magazines wherein, a'ter being honestly paid tor, they oan be properly pub lished, properly circulated, honestly bought, and read by those who have reasons for read ing them. We shall next have the Secretary of War paying for treat'ees outhe Krupp guu, and publishing translations of Jomiui's "Art of War" iu his aunual report, au l the In liau Commissioner issuing au elaborate edition of Cooper's "Last of the Mohicans" or Camp bell's "Gertrude of Wyoming." Rut the whole thing is of one piec?. Cap'on is the direct outcome of the whole radical theory and practice of government. Radical ism is essentially hydrocephalus. It is a dropsy of the nation's head, water on the brain of the State. It swamps the Govern ment with sn pet fluous offices, au l sti nks the people's life-blood iu taxes to maiutalu thorn. Capron and Caprou's dropsisal book are but incidents aud illustrations of the nation's sore disease. Cabinet Officers. From the N. Y. Tribwte. It is pleasing to learn that the volunteer patiiots who continue to shower advice upon Gwneral Grant by the mail-bag full, have found two emineutly conservative citizens worthy of his sehuiiou for Cabiuet trusts. With a view to tbe capture of the Democracy, it is suggFSted that their two conspicuous aud trusted leaders, Horatio Seymour and Robert E. Lee, should be called to the head of depart ments. General Graut is assured that, if he will only do this, he oan have the ent'uusiastio support of the party that didn't eleot him. We venture to suggest that a cheaper bargain can le driven. Lee's appointment alone will be enough to draw over the whole lot. Spot Them. rom 'Urick" Fomtroy't iV. Y. Democrat. It is Eaid that certain professed Democrats iu Indiana are becoming "soft" ou Grant, as th-y have been on Andy Johnson. Between Johnson and the "whisky ring" they have not known where they belonged, and whom they served. They are the same parties who sold out the Democracy of the West at the Democratic National Convention here last July. Now they are ready to affiliate with the moderate Jacobins, if they can retain Federal office by it. Let them be followed up and opposed. Y. P. M. Y. P. M. Y. P. YOVKO'S PI ltK Mlr WI1IMKT. jVUVAW'S I'llbE JIA.I.T WllbHY, tel AU M PIBi: MALT W1I1KKY. Tin r 18 noquetiiiuu telalive to tne merits of the celfebraud . V M. Ills ilieniKbi. quality of vVulsgy, D.KMifkitinrtsd Iruiu tue. litst iaiu 0oiUea bv toe Pliiluoe plila mark el uixl lllnao.d at me low ru t ol liper KkllOD, orl 5 ptr quart, at, tne salenroouis, AO. J00 TASSlUMv ItOAU, 11 8 2i 1 I'Hli.AiiKtrfHIA. T II G R B A T BUBAL CKMETERV, Is-OUJST MOBiAH, embracing an area of one huud.ed and fifty-five acres, aud coiuprlalug every varl-ty of scenery, la by lur the larHt aud most beauiUul or all the ceiueie. rUs near I'u.laJelplila. A8 tae tide ol Improvement tends northward, MOUNT 11 Old AH, by geographical position, Is FOB VJER BAt'K iltOM. INTRUSION OR DI3- TL'RiiAlSt'K BV Ot-ENINU Otf BTBSUfM. aud will never be hedged in and surrounde-l by huiise. lactorlea, or etuer Improvements, Uie Inevi table fate of oiner ceuieter.ai northward or centrally At convenient dlsuuce from tbe city, readily ac cbs blu by u excellent road aud by tne streetcars ot Ibe Darby faxuuhicet Hallway, Mount Morluti, by Its unditturbed quiet, fu:His. tne solemn purpose 01 Ita dedication as a last resting place of trie dead. fru .nneral service bere la uvtr lnleriupted by tbe Blirlil wnia.le of tbe locomotive, nor the seusibliUltw ol friends or vUitors BuockeU by lueruan and rattle of loiig trains of panslug Irelgbt or cual cars, aa must ot necessity be tbe case lu otbei bunl-pli;e8, now ealabllnbea or prujecu-u, ou tbe immediate Hue of sieaiu railroads, or lliroiigb tbe grounds ot wbicb Bucb railroads run. Jutt uow the bues of Au uiou Hugo wlib gurgeous uolora aud lutlulle variety tun tillage ol tbe various groups o' flue old loreat trees accruing tbe margin of tbe etivam wbicu nieaujeia tbioufeli tbe grounds, nuX ailtls so great a c 11 arm to Ibe attractions ol toe place. C'burcbes of aU tne principal Pro'.estant denonilna lions live here porcbaeed nectloug of grouud lor tue use 01 their cougrt-gai lous, aud more iuun auven tbousanU taoitltes bave givtu in 8 great itural Cuiuo Ur; Ibe preference ovrau oilier. L'l lice 1'iis of auy mas dMreU may B ill hi hd u-:on application at me Lodge, at tue euiraucu of tbe eeu-tltiy, or hi tne H a-cu Ollice, touu Mutual lu sun nee Builuiui;, Mo. Wl CHli-i. U 1' htreei, up stairs, wlu ro ui.y Information will b? g v,-u by iu it lui Ui OllOi; CO.N iN KLL, Secretary. lmu T. W I L S O N, l'LliliHU AND OAS FITTER, Xo. S A'orlli fcEVKSTII Street, PHUATJELPII'A. lllmwitmr w IRC GUAR D S, lillt feTUltll riteSIN, AIYLIJlNt FAC lUftltft,, KTV. Patent VIr Bulling llron Bids' eads, Ornamenta Wire Work. Paper Mali em' Wires, aud every variety ot Wire Woik, manutaciur.d by 91. WALUrB A NONS, S mwi No, It oriU slim B.wt. Dli. KINKELIN, AFTER 1 RESIDENCE and prat-'lice of llitrty years at tne iMoribweat corner of Tbird and Uulo" birevla, bas lately re moved 10 bvutb KLilVKMTU bireet, between MAB K t.T nd VH tOsK V t. Hit superiority In the prom ot aud perfect onre ol all rn-eul, cbronlc, local, und constitutional afleo Hers of axpeoial uauire, In proverbial. U, semen of the fkin, appearing Iu hundred dlt f rent form. totally eradloau d; menial ami pliylol wikknmi and all nervous debilities soiHuiincaliy aud suocoMiuUy treated, OUloe hours from A ia 0 8P.M. 218 220 S. FRONT ST. 4 218 & 220 j S. FRONT STj CO OFFER TO TUB TRADB, IN LOTS, FIIVE RYE AM) B0UKB0N WHISKIES, D BOMJ Ol lOi5, lt?, 1807, anct I8O8. AIS(, FRI.E FI1VE ME AAD B0CRB0X WHISKIES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from to.lS45.; Liberal contractu will bo en'ore-t into for loM, n bond at Distillery, of this 7ara raaTtTtrnctnrel MEDICAL. TZ I1KXJM A.rJCI MM, W K U K IOIA. Warranted Permanent Ij Cured. Warranted Permanently Cured. Without Injury to the System. Without Iodide, Folussin, or Colchicum I5y Usinjr Inwardly Only DR. FITLER'S GREAT RHEUMATIC REMEDY, For Rheumatism and Neuralgia in all its forms. Ibe only slai dnrd, reliable, positive, Infallible per manent cure ever discovered. It Is warrauted to con tain nothing burtful or Injurious to tbe system. WAIIHANTKDIOCGRE ORWONEV KKKUSDM) WAkKANTKDlOCURKOB UONE7 RKf'CNuEU TbousaDds oi Philadelphia references of cares. Pre pared at J.O. 29 SOUTH FOURTH STREET, 822stulbtf BELOW" MARKET. GAS FIXTURES, ETC. CORNEUU3 & BAKER, MANUFACTURERS OF GAS FIXTURES, LAHrS, RKOXZES, LAiMEILNS, ETC. ETC. STOKE, f!o. 710 CHESNUT Street. MANUAFOTOltV, Wo. 821 CH2RRY Street. 11 17 tutbslmrp PHILADELPHIA. PAPER HANGINGS, ETC. ALL PAPERS. HENRY S. MATLACK, Kos. 11 and 13 Kortli RU'TU Street, PHIUtDBLPIIIA, IMPORTER AND SEALER IN F 11 E N O II AND AMERICAN WALL PAPERS. ALL ORDBBS PERSONALLY ATTENDED TO. Competent workmea sent to all parts of tbe oonn try. Work fifcoted at city prices. 9l5nthsma CHINA, GLASSWARE, ETC. (jjllOUrS AND STATUETTES. TYNDALC & MITCHELL, Ao. 707 CIIESXUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, OFFER A FjNE ASSORTMENT OF IMPORTED BRONZES, at f9 28 mwfamrp VERY LOW PRICES. WINDOW BLINDS AND SHADES. LIN D 8 8 H A D C 3. B. J. WILLIAMS & SOSS, Ho, 1C AOIiTU BIXTU STREET, LAKbEsT MANUFACTURERS, AND fcELL LOW PRIU1", BLINDB palntfd and trluimed, biOKJL BUADKs wade, and lettered 929vth2m flTRNlSHlNU GOODS, SHIRTS,&C Ha 8. Ka C Harris' Seamless Kid Gloves. KVEUl fAIU WAUBAHTED, KSCLUUIVK AUKMH POR QENTH' OLQVK8. J. W. SCOTT A CO., MO. I4 CMKMAUT atlltkKT. JATENT BliOULDER-SEAM SU1RT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PKltFKUT I'llTUG BH1H1M AND DKAWEitd iukot lioui Uifu-unnjei t t viy bort notics. All otiit-r bril;i8 ul UliM'Ll'.MliiN'o DRESS OOui-is lu full vnriety. WINCHESTER & CO., Us ino. 7i'scaK5AUrbireBt TRUSSES. 'ti 'tb.i:L!!.Y'8 HABD KUUUIiU XBUS3, No. lJ tjAl-jsL'T oiret. Ibis Truss our ru iij appilfcd U1 cur. .ud reuiiu wllb ease tbe uuxA dillit-uli ruowrBi ! Htmu, llgbl, baity, s.te. od ot,niforlbir, uKl c bulbing, flwt.-d to form, never rosLs, bruikt, sons, becoiues Hu.or, or moves froul (Jiucfc. No sir.pi'liiB, U.rd Itut.oer Abdoinlu.l Hup. porter, by winch ibe Juoibers, Liorpuleut, .ud L.diM sutlerlus wllb Fern. la weak now, will bad relief sud uerox i ii)'ort! very llgtit, nml, kud elleoliitil. Pile Iusirnnienis otouliiHr Kr&ces, JCuwilo HtockluKS fo wek limbs buieiitotik, etc, Ai.o, l.ige stock bn Leibei Iriuaui, bftif uaoi pclce. Ldj 1 bos. HWwfM BRANDY, 'WHISKY, WINE, ETC QAR 8TAIR0 ft McCALL, Kos. 12C WALNUT aud 21 WKAiMTE StsJ . IMPORTERS OF Urnnfllcp, Wines, Uln, OIlTe Oil, Etc EtcJ AND COMMISSION M Kit OH ANT FOR THE BALE OF 1'UKE OLD BYE, WHEAT, AAD DOUKs BOX WlllSKlEjgj U J BOUTS AND SHOES. LAD ICS 8 H O C 8 NEW STORE. HENRY W I R E M A Nj MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF 1ADIES' HOOTS Atfl SHOES,' Ko. 118 South WI1KTLEMU Street, S. IT. Corner Sixth and Buttojwood Ste., PHILADELPHIA. AND 487 Elevenlh Street, Washington, D. C, B.s cpened Ms KLKOANT NEW 8TORK, No. 118 Soutb lUlltltKN IU Hueet, be.ween Ouesaut and WklnuistreeH w lib. a Urge assorlnibnt ot tba FiNJifcT QUALITY WF LADIK;' BOOfd AND fcUOi.0, of bis own luanuracture. Also, JUT lUiCJi.IVD 4IVOM PARIS, a lkrga Rbsortaieiil of Ladies' Doots, SJioes, and Slippers, Made expressly to order by ibe best and most oele- braied iL.nul.oinrers, 11 7 lairp HAT1&G ALTERED AN1) ENLARQ8.D MI btutv, No. iuu Bi. NINTH SUvol, 1 luvile iia lion to luy lucretiueu slock (of my own oia-iufaeiuret of bne BlHCl H, bilOKo. UAITKaCI, Jitc.. of tne Utost 18 8m KRNK8T POPP. CARPETINGS. NEW ARRIVALS. Opening Dally, "Wiltons, Tel yets, Brussels, oil cjLoxiit-f, mro. IOiEYE L. KNIGHT & SON, 1222 Chesuut Street. 1868. FALL, 1863. "GLEN EC1I0 MILLS." M'CALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN MANDFACTUEERS AND IMPORTERS OF CARPET I N G S. Wholesale and Retail Warehouse, No. 509 CHESNUT 8TREET. 8 wfuasm Opposite Independence HalL Ja T. DELACROIX, IMPORTER AND DKAXKR IK CARPETINGS Mattings, Oil CIoUis, Eags, Etc., Wholesale and Retail. WAREHOUSE, No. 37 South SECOND St.. 1 12 tlutbSmBp Above Cbesnul, Pbllndelpbla. DRUGS, FAINTS, ETC. J-OBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., N. E. Corner of FOtlMH aud RACE St& PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IM PORTKR8 AND MAN UFAOTUR&EH OF hlle Lead and Colored 1'ulnts, rottj YaiTiIslieH, Etc AGF-NTd FOR THB CKLF, BR AT2UJ- FKEALI1 ZINC TALS'l'S. DKJ LEKH ASD CX)NitJMKR8 BCPPUKD Al LOWItST PRIeHJS FOR OAJaH. CORN X0HANa kAO MAMUFAtn'OKY. JOHN T. UAlLJtr N, K. corner oi Al KKk.T ud waTKU Street, PbiitMtfipbi.. CKALiKH IN 11AOO .ND BAGK4INU (f evry dfcrlpon, for Grain, Floor, Bait, BuiMr-Pb.npbaie of Lima, Bona l UBt, JCIO. Large and small OtTNM Y BAGS constantly onThan itzi I AUo. avotii. haoKh. WILLIAM S. IRWIN. A gen i ' OUTCALT B PATKNT X LASTIO JOINT IRON ROOF CLAPKE'S TATKNT ADJUSTIBLH H0R3B fllOli CAi-Kfc), rail and e.nni,is. oilirfH-KKKU ttirwt, below TeatU, and No. 40 LlbllARY bireet. luxslMirp
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers