THE DAB,! EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA , SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 18G8. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EDITORIAL OriNIOKS OF THR LR4DIS0 JOCBSALU BPOM CCBEBHt TOPICB COMP1LBD BVIBY DAT FOB TH1 KTBNlMd TBLBOBAFB. The President JBlccU From the London Spectator The New York 7n6n published three days before the rrtilniil election A Very note worthy contribution, occupying rther more than five ooluinua of Bmall type. It ia ft col lection of the speeches, letter., general orders, and sayings absolutely known to hare pro ceeded fro in General Grant sinoe his appoint ment to the command of an army in the field, that is, since the siege of Vioktburg. The collection includes every speech, all orders of any importance, all letters bearing upon publio policy, and every saying absolutely authentic, and one of the most remarkable facts about it is that the whole can be read through in an hour. The terrible publloity to which American politicians are oondemned to submit publicity as of life under a burniug-glasa is producing the oonsequenoe of any other tyranny, an unnatural reticence as to opinions, concealed by the ma jority under a cloud of words, and by Oeneral Grant under a studious Bilenoe, or a grimly humorous diversion of the talk to the merits of the last new trotter, lie does not care about trotters particularly, but ha "talks trotters," just as Walpola "talked women," as a subjfol interesting to all men, but uncon nected with political issues. Every now and then, however, he has been compelled to break silence, sometimes almost involuntarily, and bis utterances, when read together, let a flood of light on his character and policy. As General Grant will be for four years premier of the United States, our readers may possibly be interested in revelations at least as impor tant to this country as the ideas of the Em peror Napoleon. First and foremost, then, General Grant is fixedly determined that slavery in all its forms ehall remain ended, that free labor with all its consequenoes ehall be the rule of the Union from Maine to Florida. lie is no abolitionist, eeems never to have been clear that slavery was a crime, though he entertained no South ern feeling, intimates for the negro as little liking as dislike, ami expressly avows that it was a hard task to him to contemplate negro Suffrage as a necessity. It Is as statesman and American that he is clear the system must end -end completely and for ever; that the negro must be recognized ollioially and socially, not only as a man, but as an American citizen. The progress of his mind upon this point Is very curious. lie wrote to Brigadier Parke, while lying before Vicksburg, "Use the negroes and everj thing within your command to the best advantage" not, be it noted, every person. This distinction pro ceeded, however, from no contempt for the black race, such as many generals at that time did not hesitate to express. "I expeot," be writes in January, 1862, "the commanders especially to exert themselves in carrying out the policy of the Administration, not only in organizing colored regiments and rendering them efficient, but also in removing prejudice against them," a prejudice which within his command rapidly disappeared. Even before this General Grant had issued stern orders for the protection of colored soldiers, inform ing General Halleck in particular that "it was the duty of Union generals to give the same protection to colored troops that they do to any other troops" in the service of the United States; and one year later be wrote to General Butter that no distinction whatever should be made in the exchange ot White and colored prisoners If regularly en rolled in the army, lie had, moreover, even then, ISO' 2, made up his mind on the political side of the matter, for he wrote on August 30 to the lion. E L. Wasbburne in these em phatio teirus: "I never was an abolitionist, not even what could be called anti-slavery; but I try to judge fairly and honestly, and it became patent to my mind, early in the Rebellion, that the North aud South could sever live at peace with eaoh other except as one nation, aiid that without slavery. As anxious as I am to see peace established, I Would not therefore be willing to see any Settlement until this question is forever set tled." This was written, be it remembered, before Vicksburg had fallen, when it seemed to Weak men as if the North must make some concession if peace was ever to be secured. The General himself thought they must yield Borne points, but not this, and by lSb'6 his xnind had ripened till he was prepared to ad mit the negro not only to freedom as a reward for State service, not only to freedom as a man, but te equality as a citizen. "I never," be said, "could have believed that I should favor giving negroes the right to vote, but that seems to me the only solution of our diffi culties." Upon this, the main point of the whole dis pute between American parties, no opinion could be more clear; and it is the opinion of a man slow to receive new impressions, not specially philanthropic, not perhaps inclined even vow te demand more than justice for the oppressed, but immovably fixed to secure that. We can quite conceive General Grant vetoing a bill to give negroes land for nothing, while hanging whites who robbed them of land purci-ased with their own savings. Color is to him no recommendation, but also no difqualiikation, the only true attitude of ruind of the ruler of a parti-colored State. Upon subsidiary points the President eleot is equally clear and decisive, and his policy is Eerhaps best explained in a sentence from is letter accepting the nomination by the Chicago Couveniion: ' In times like the present it is impossible, or at least emi nently improper, to lay down a policy to be adhered to, right or wrong, through an ad ministration of four years. New political issues not foreseeu are constantly arieiDg, the view of the public ou oil ones are constautly changing, aod a purely administrative oilier should always be left free to excute the will of the people. I always have reepeoted that will, and always ehall." This ilea inoessantly crops out in his letters and seems nearly allied with the grand peculiarity of his mind, a love of order and subordination. A inai suggestion was made during the Atalanta campaign to place Sherman above Grant; and Sherman, always loyal, wrote to his chief re pudiating tu plan. Grant replied, "l,f you are pnt above me 1 shall always obey you, just as you always have me." Only those who know the tenacity of soldiers about super session can adtqnately comprehend the serene simplicity ot this reply, and only those who know now politics are ingrained In prominent Americans can appreciate the let ter to Mr. Chase affirming that "no theory of my own will ever stand in the way oi-ray executing in good faith any order I may re ceive from those in authority over me." lie retards "the people" as his ultimate oom manding officer, and asks only that their orders be intelligible and consistent. This love of disoipline is tempered with ereat inr soual kindliness to inferiors, a feelinir best illustrated perhaps by his absolute ref.isal to break four or five officers who had behaved badly, or rather stupidly, in an early aTir. They had never, said the (ieueral, been uo.l--r fire before, and they had learned their lessun; and be positively declined even to report them. "Bah I" said Nelson, on a somewhat I similar ocoasion, "boys will duck. I did, till I I fonnd it was useless;" and General Grant teems to be of the earn temper, a tern par , . . -1 f f t . f.L. A 1U1 ........ not aiwrya iucuubibicuv mm wsriiuie vru. ness. There is bat one instance of humor, ia the popular sense, reported in this colleotlon, though many of the orders are pervaded by a soldierlike direotness whioh is almost humor, and It illustrates the latent sternness in the General's character. It was needful in 180-4 to clear, or rather desolate, the Shenandoah Valley, whence the enemy was drawiog large supplies, and Grant informed his young Gene ral of Cavalry, Sheridan, "the valley must be so cleared that crows flying over it will for the season have to carry their own rations" a remaik that might have oome from Cromwell in Ireland. I'recieely the same spirit is mani fested in his intercourse with the supply branches of the Army, and in his geueral views upon economy. lie early perodived the jobbing which is the curse of all operations in free States, and took peremptory measures to pnt a stop to it, cancelling every oontraot not made by himself, abolishing the contract system in favor of direct purchases, sternly rebuking his own father for asking favors, and finally suggesting to Halleck that "all fraudulent contractors should be im pressed into the ranks, or, still better, gun boat service, where they could have nochanoe of deserting." One of these days, in some hour of extremity, produced maioly by tole rated frauds, we shall establish a sterner law than that, and carry it out, too, with the ap probation of all men. The years during which President Grant oocupies the White House will clearly not be "good times" for peculators, or for disobedient officials, or for persons who violently disturb the publio peace. It is a real relief, amidst the perpetual talk of State rights, President Johnson's Demo cratic proclamations, and, we must a Id, half hearted Republican proposals, to come across an opinion as statesmanlike as this. In January, 1867, General Grant recorded the following deliberate opinion on the state of affairs in Texas : "la my opinion, the great number of murders of Union men and freed men in Texas, not only as a rule unpunished, but uninves tigated, constitute practically a state of insur rection; and, believing it to be the province and duty of every good government to afford pioteotion to the lives, liberties, and property of her citizens, I would recommend the decla ration of martial law in Texas to secure these ends. The necessity for governing any por tion of our territory by martial law is to be deplored. If resorted to, it should be limited in its authority, and sboul l leave all local authorities and civil tribunals free and unob structed until they prove their iuelliciency or nnwillingness to pertorin their duties. Martial law would give security, or comparatively so, to all classes of citizens, without regad to race, color, or political opinions, and should be continued until society was capable of pro tecting itself, or until the State is returned to its full relation with the Union. The application of martial law to one of these States would be a warning to all, and, if necessary, could ' be extended to others." It will come to that at last, and every day's delay does but exasperate the evil. As we have maintained from the first, the States which will mt allow order to be restored must be governed temporarily as India is governed, by a government essentially military, which permits any human being of any color to say what he likes and do what he likes within the laws, but enforces the laws with the bayonet. Any native ir European may talk any treason he pleases in the town hall of Calcutta, and no oue will punish; bat if he interferes with any rights of any other British subject, white or colored, his whole following, or his whole nation, could not save him from arrest aud punishment. Unswerving justice is the basia of order: there is no justice either in Texas or in London if the civil officers of the law can be defied by armed force, and the next President of the United States, it is clear, does not intend they should be. We only wish we could be as certain of the next Premier. General Grant comes out in these letters, and orders, and no, not speeches sayings, a soldier politician of the best sort, a man gen tle, kindly, and considerate, but with a vein of wrath in him, a man who surveys politics as he would a valley, without seeing every tree, but missing no strategic point, a soldier who is aware that there must be foroe some where to keep society together, but a poli tician who is determined that that foroe shall be the law, framed and modified by the repre sentatives of the people. We oongrUulate the United States on a Premier who dislikes waste, even when the wasteful support his party, and will pnt down murderers even when they plead the sovereign rights of States. The Mississippi li)unatchlng. From ( iV. Y. Worid. The little game in Mississippi is really rich. The excavations go ahead of those at Pompeii. Not satisfied with merely discovering that the negro constitution was not defeated by 7629 majority, but some 18,000 votes being thrown out oarricd, the exhnmators have dug up a full set of bogus Congressmen for the Fortieth Congress. The reader will per ceive that this is the Fortieth and not the Forty-first Congress that we say. Contem poraneously with the wonderful resurrection of the negro constitution, it was stated in these columns that a cluster of carpet-bag Congressmen for the region beginning with the term of General Graut had been lugged out of the bowels of nowhere, but it has only been by latest advices from the seat of dig ging that we receive information of a black draught for the Congressional session of next month. This draucht is thus medicated, the first and fourth simples having been roots dead beats that formerly boiled in the pot of the negro convention: First District Charles II. Townsend. Second District T. N. Martin. Third District Charles A. Sullivan. Fourth District George C. McKee. Fifth District-L. W. Perce. Digging is still in progress, and, pending further resurections, attention is invited to that clause of the "constitution," under which these co-heirs with Lazarus seek Con gress, that makes suffrage in Mississippi a matter of opinion, this: "I, , do solemnly swear (or affirm), in the presenos of Almighty God that I admit the civil and political equality of all men, so iflp me God." (Art. vii, seo. 3, resurrected c ju st it ut ion.) - Our Position In Paraguay. From the IT. Y. World. It is very agreeable to learn, by "an unoffi cial letter" from Hear-Admiral Davis, dated not from the waters of Paraguay, but from those of Brazil, that England and Franoe have sot been insulted by the Diotator Lopez. It will be still more agreeable to learn from General MoMahon, oar new Minister to Para guay, vbtn he reaches that country, that the United States, which have been insulted by the Dictator Lopez, have exacted full repara tion f i oui him for that insult, it is diiuuult to decide whether our diplomatic ageuts or our naval officers iu that part of the world have done moht in the last few months to vex the nu'h n's sell-respect. Secretary Reward, who ooiLbints the tereue jollity of Mark Tapley with the bland confldenoe of Mloawber, allows it to be understood that he is charmed with the behavior of Minister Washburn. Unoffljial Americans reading Minister Washburn's own accounts of bis own behavior can only hope that hie pitiable want of foroe in the presence of Lopez may have resulted from nothing worse than a general debility of nature. Yet even this forlorn bops it is hard to cherish - when we find Rear Admiral Davis denying, by im plication, what Minister Washburn explloltly asserts, and assuring us that there is not and never has been any great harm in Lopez. Washburn exouses his desertion of American interests and of American citizens, hU fail are to stand by the honor of bta position and his fl'Ki by representing Lopez as a kind of ogre whom neither conscience binds nor Vattel and Puffendorf can awe. Davis avers that "the effort made to condemn Lopez by denuncia tory exclamations is now gradually dying away" I Meanwhile, is it or is it not true that two Amerioan citizens, entitled to the proteotlon of our Minister and of our flag, have been tor tured and, it may be, put to death in the prisons of Paraguay T A subordinate of Rear-Admiral Davis, Com mander Kirkland, who conveyed Minister Washbnrn out of the den of this alleged ogre Lopez, writes home that while he was so conveying Mr. Washburn he went on shore to see Lopez, at the latter's invitation, dined with him very eosily, and received from him a great deal of civility I We are not sure that this is not, on the whole, the moat extraor dinary contribution yet made to the history of this most soandalous muddle. Here is an American naval officer who is carrying an American Minister out of the olutohes of a despot by whom that Minister's life has been menaced, the nation whioh he represents in sulted, and two of its citizens brutally and illegally seized and flung into prison, yet who, leaving the fugitive Minister on board his ship, goes ashore to hob-nob with the despot I We submit that, in any conceivable aspeot of the case, it is impossible to consider this conduct of Commander Kirkland oreditable either to his instincts as au Ameri can or to his intelligence as an officer. He either believed Mr. Washburn's story about his treatment at Asuncion, or he did not be lieve it. If he believed it, no words can be too sharp to stigmatize, no penalty within the rules of the service teo severe to punish, his conduct in holding friendly intercourse with Lopez. If he did not believe it, it was ex tremely nnbeooming for him, a3 an offloer wealing the American uniform, to put himself into relations with Lopez which said to the latter, as plainly as the plainest words could have said it,. "I think my country has dis graced herself by sending you such a minister ah Waihburn, and it affords me pleasure to let you know that I think so before I take him away." We devoutly trust that General MoMahon may bring to this deplorable business the common sense, the high spirit, and the tact which so far seem to have been conspicuously absent from all "meddling and making" in it by the official representatives of our Gov ernment and of the national honor. Tour Alabama Claim "Two to One You Don't UeWt." From the W. Y. Herald. We are somewhat amused at the version given by our Washington correspondent of the arrangement made lor the settlement of our Alabama claims with England. ' If this be the trne text of the basis upon which we are to arrange our difficulties, it reminds us of the meaning of the three balls hung up in front of the pawnbrokers'hops, indicating, when you place anything In pawn, "two to one you don't get it." Two English Commissioners to one from the United States that's cool, and can only come from the fertile brain of such a pro found statesmen as . a. beward. We are somewhat tired of this English love making of Mr. Reverdy Johnson. He is in every way disgracing us. His diplomatic dinners mean the payment of the Eoglish rebel cotton bondholders' debt, and it is fer this that we see the English privateer builders embracing the American Minister at the Court of St. James. Oar Alabama claims should first be presented for payment to the United States Government. The bill should then be forwarded to England for payment, and if this be refused we have the means close at hand to fully indemnify ourselves. What we waut, however, is not cash, but an apology for the war waged indirectly against us by England during our struggle for national existenoe. Of money we have plenty, but muoh as we have we can ill afford to allow England to launoh her piratical vessels upon our commerce, playing the part of Algiers, whenever we have any national trouble. General Sheridan's Report. From the If. Y. Time. The report of General Sheridan on the con duct of all'airs in the Indian Department, de picts more clearly the horrors ot war than any document which we remember to have rea i since the Rebellion began. Its whole tone and manner continually remind one of Sherman's forcible expressions: "War is cruelty you cannot refine it." And the most painful part of it is not the plain, unvarnished, and brief narrative of massacres, but the explanation of how contacting authorities and speculating officials deluded trusting settlers to their ruin, and betrayed the deep-laid plans of the mili tary. The cruelty of the Indians is oversha dowed by the more inhuman, though, perhaps, less culpable, deceit of the Iudiau agents and Peace Commis&ioticrs. "All coufideuce is de stroyed. The people had had some degree of secuiity from the assurance! of the Peace Ccwu.i8i-ioi.er3, and many of them have met a horrible fate iu consequence." The faithless ness of the ignoraut ludiaus is forgotten, when we read Stieiidau'd description of the result of the xnicmauageuientof our more unscrupulous agents. The ninety-two dead ludiaus, slain since the war reopened, are forgotten when we relied that eighty-six whites have been sacri ficed by the same mismanagement. 'TiitroHie too imtnv nuiseri In the pie, too many eium to he bubserved end too mucb money to be mud ), unU U is the lulere.st of the nation uml huniKijllv Id mil tm end to thin ln liuinHii farce. The 1. -ace Commission and the Indian Department, and tlie mil limy aud the Indiana, im.ke a 'bulky learn.' rua pub'iu Treasury la depleted, end lni.oreul pcoplo mur dered iu. the quiidrtiimnlar inaiiiigeriient, In which Ihe publlu Treasury uud the unarmed st tilers are the greatest bufYorera." It is the most horrible feature of all wars, that not the actual combatants, but the inno cent, trusting, and deluded uon-partioipants, must suffer inntt. General Sheridan's report is a powerful pro test against the longer contiunanoe of a sys tem of Indian warfare and Indian government which is opposed to all the interests of the West, and in violation of all reason as well as humanity. For years we have disbursed, through dishonest agents, immense tributes to insignificant tribes, in order to secure a peace we had no reliance upon; and as an additional security of this distrusted peace, have maintained at enormous expense a large army, totally inoapable.by reason of its peculiar organization and equipment, of carrying on au effective offensive campaign, or of defend ing ai y other Rettlers than those located im mediately under the guus of the established tot ts and posU. No part of oar generally con temptible civil service has been so badly managed as our Indian affairs; aod sinoe the army must oocupy the disputed country, and rince only foroe will keep the Iudians in con trol, It is high time the civil department sur rendered the duty It cannot perform to the department to which it naturally belongs. General Grant knows the true value of the opinions of such practical men as Sherman and Sheridan, and he will not be long la in augurating this much needed reform. Jeff. Davis in a New Hole. From 1A r. X. HeralO. It is known that Jeff. Davis has professed to be pious for some time past, and it is said his piety inoreased in proportion to the waning fortunes of the Rebel cause. We now begin to see the fruits of his Scripture studies. He has been leoturing in England on Jerusalem, and is very anxious to have tbart ancient oity explored. He flattered his audience by Bay ing that Englishmen were peculiarly fitted for the task of exploring Jerusalem, but we do not know why they are so. The Rebel chief is preparing to become an Englishman, perhaps, and may be trying to leotnre himself into the heart of John Bull. The British had a great regard for him at one time, bat, he being a fallen hero, their affection has pro bably declined. Hiving sympathized with him in bis "lost cause," they might make up a purse to send him to Jerusalem, there to end his days and atone for bis sins at the foot of the Holy Sepulchre. Tlio Organists After Orant. From the JV". Y. Herald. The Republican organists are after Grant. It Is whispered that Thurlow Weed is about to purohase the Washington whisky ring organ, with the object of making it the official mouth piece of the new administration, and the carious biography of the old lobby fox whioh appeared in the columns of that journal a few days ago gives eolor to the rumor. Report assoolates Raymond with the venture, and his positive denial of its truth is calculated rather to strengthen its reliability. At all events, the gosBip has terribly alarmed Greeley, who comes out with an open bid for the position, and offers his Washington bureau to Grant for all the purposes of a party organ. We incline to the belief that General Grant will bu his own organist, and that Weed, Raymond, Greeley, and all the rest of the political adven turers will be puzzled to find out what tune he inttnds to play. Newspapers in Schools. Frmn Oie iV. X. Tribune, ' It is said but bow shall we believe it f that the school officers of Philadelphia have resolved to substitute newspapers for the reading books now used in the public schools, and that many intelligent people approve of the plan. It is claimed that suoh a coarse of study would interest and improve the youth ful mind, which is apt to grow weary of the history of wars that ended hundreds of years ago, and of kings whose tombs are unknown. "Congressional debates, State affairs, wars and their causes, accidents, floods, and lires, great publio improvements," we are told, "are sub-, jeots npon which the youthful mind will feed much more profitably than npon beautiful orations or pathetio fancy writing." This is hard on Cicero and Irving, bat very good for Marble and Brick Pomeroy. In Philadelphia, where all the newspaper men are graduates of the High School, and write English with an elegance that would have astounded Addison, no doubt this expe riment would be a brilliant success. Pupils in the grammar tchools would find opportu nity for profound meditation in the local re ports of some of those journals, while the younger children in the primary scheols would be delighted with the simple Saxon of Mr. "Occasional's" letters to the Press. But we have some little doubt of the propriety of introducing the New York newspapers into our city schools. It would be impossible to expect the World, and the Herald, aud the Democrat to print expurgated editions daily for the use of sohools and academies, beoause an expurgated edition of one of these journals wonld often be a blank sheet. Yet, if they should not be carefully pruned, bigoted and Kftrrow-minded parents might object to sending their children to the sohools in which they were used. How would it do for the bead boy or girl in the reading flats of a publio school to take up the Merald and read for the information of the other scholars the following: "If the young lady in a blue dress, in a Filth avenue stage, who winked at the gentleman with a black moustache last Monday, wishes to make his acquaintance, she will address N. B."f Or how would this do for the youthful mind to feed npenf "Answer Some iron says (to whom f because of ): 'Good for the hinkey pinckies 1' and gratefully rejoices." Turning to the editorial page of the World, the youthful mind, naturally interested in sugar, would read: "Strength of mind dis dains the aid of sugar, and milk is for babes, in the welfare of which the strong-minded female takes no interest, having long ago de voted her own mammary glands to the process otacetiflcation invoked by 'Lady Macbeth.' But there oau be no real discussion of the question of woman-suffrage without copious tea." Pass ing to the JJtrnocrat, the youthful mind wonld learn the theological reasons for believing that Abraham Lincoln is now bathing in fire and brimstone. The Express would inform - the student of ethnology that the nigger is a kind of mrnkey, found wild in Africa, and tamed in America. And in what a terrible distress wonld be the boy fond of bis arithmetic, if such a boy there be, to read the World on the Presidential election, aud to learn that six sixes are seven hundred thousaud nines, aud that eighty-eight vulgar fractious are de ducted tiotn, or added to, or multiplied by, seven thousand square decimals, Seymour has a popular majority of six millions, and Demo cratic principles will triumph. Such reading us this would certainly inform the youthful mind, but would not a little ignorance be as wellf 218 & 220 S. FRONT ST. Y. p- Y. P. M. Y. P. Mo YOUNG'S PI' HE MILT tVHISXT. 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ALSO, FREE FIRE RYE A1VD BOIRBQX YnilSKlES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from to Liberal contract will be entered into for lota, in bond at Distillery, of thia yrs roanafaolnrsj MEDICAL. MM! RIIEUMATIriM, N E U It A. T..GrIA. Warranted Permanently Cured. Warranted Permanently Cured. Without Injury to the System. Without Iodide, Fotassla, or Colclilcum Uj Using Inwardly Only DR. FITLER'S GREAT RHEUMATIC REMEDY, For Rheumatism and Neuralgia in all Us forms. The only standard, reliable, poalUre, Infallible per. maoent care ever discovered. Ii U warranted, to eon tain nothing bnrtful or Injnrlona to (be system. W ABB ANTKD TO OURS OR MONEY REFUND VD WARBANTKDTOCURKOH MOSET REFUNDED Thousands ot Philadelphia references of cures. Pre pared at So. 29 SOUTH FOURTH STREET, 8 22stulhtf BELOW MARKET. I BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. ' Q A. R STAIR 8 A (VI cC ALL. W09. 126 WA1.MT and 21 URAMTE Sts ! raPOBTEBS or 1 ; Brandies, Wines, Uln, Ollre Oil, Etc Etc ; 1110 , COMMISSION MERCHANTS ! . JOB THE BAXK OP rUBE OLD RYE, WHEAT, AAD C0UK j HOjjJYHlSKlES. t nt BOOTS AND SHOES. GAS FIXTURES, ETC. CORNELIUS & BAKER, MANUFACTURERS or (US FIXTURES, LAMl'S, BRO.NZES, LAKTERS, ETC. ETC. STORE, Ho. 7IO CHESHUT Street. MANUAFOTOHY, No. 021 CHERRY Street, 11 IT tuthslmrp PHILADELPHIA. PAPER HANGINGS, ETC. ALL PAPERS. HENRY S. HATLA.CK, Kos. 11 and 13 Jiorth SLTH Street, PHILADELPHIA, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN FRENCH AND AMERIOAN WALL PAPERS. ALL ORDERS PERSONALLY ATTENDED TO. Competent workmea sent to all parts of the conn try. Work executed at city prices. 915 luth3tq CHINA, GLASSWARE, ETC. y ROUPS AND STATUETTES. TYfJDALE & MITCHELL, Xo. 707 CIIESXUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, OFFER A FiNE ASSORTMENT OF IMPORTED BRONZES, . at 9 28 mwfSinrp VERY LOW PRICES. WINDOW BLINDS AND SHADES. Q L I N D 8 3 HADES. B. J. WILLIAMS & SQAS, JVo. 1G N011TU SIXTH STUEET, LAl'.bKbT MANUFACTURERS, AND HELL LOW PRIUES. a BLINDH painted and trimmed. blOllK KHADKel made, and lettered C29ntbIm FURNISHING GOODS, SHIRTS.&C H. 8. K. C. Harris' Seamless Kid Glovos. BTEBl rAltt W All It ANTED. KXCLUB4VK AUEmtJ FOR OENTU GLOVES. J. W. SCOTT A CO., 6 278rp MO. l CJUEMWOT MlltKKT. DAT EN X " B 11 0 U LDBR-8EAM SMUT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PtRFEO'l' FITTING 811IRT8 AND DRAWERS uifcuu lioiu uicasurt nieiil at very .liorl noilcu, Ail Jli.tr itrtldt. uf UENTLEMEN'd DRES3 0uOlb iu full variety. WINCHESTER & CO., 11 2 iSo. 7wt CllEiN UP direct. c EOnCE PLOWMAN, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, L A D I E 8 SHOES. NEW STORE. HENRY WIREMAN, MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OP 1ADIES' ROOTS AX1 SHOES, Ko. 118 Sculh X1IIKTEEMII Street, S. W. Corner Sixth aud Buttonvt ood Sis., PHILADELPHIA. AND 487 Eleventh (Street, Washington, 1). fj.. Baa tpened bis ELEGANT NEW STORE, No. 118 Booth 1 111 Rl ken Til bueet, between Ouesnut aud Walnui streets; with a large assortment ot the FlNifcT QUALITY F LADIES BOOTS AND fcHOKjs, ofhls own manufacture. Also. JUST RECEIVED jr ROM PARIS, a Urge assortment ol Ladies' Boots, Shoes, nnd Slippers, Hade expressly to order by me best and most cele braied nianulaotarera, 11 f imrp AVISO ALTERED AND ENLARGED MI blure, io. 'idU A. NINTH street, 1 luvite atiwu uon to my Increuned stock (of my own manufacture! ot tine bom is, blioKM. UAlTEnH, Juo.. of tne latest styi's, and at Uae lowest prices. 18sm ERNEST BOPP. CARPETINGS. Ja T. DELACROIX, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN O A II P E T I N Q S Mattings, Oil Cloths, Bugs, Etc, Wholesale and Retail. WAREHOUSE, No. 37 South SECOND St.. S 12 Stutb8m5p Above Obesnnt, Philadelphia. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOBERT SHOEMAKER & CO., Pi. E. Corner or FOURTH and RACE Sis., PHILADELPHIA, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. IMPORTERS AND MAN UFAOTURERS Ot White Lead and Colored Paints, Battj Yarnishes, Etc AGENTS FOB THE CELEBRATED FBEAC1I ZISC PALMS. DEALERS AND CONSUMERS SUPPLIED AX LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. 61ft LL3I0VED TO o. 134 BOCK Stroot, v U PHILADELPHIA pOTTOX ANI FLAX. 1 SAIL DL'l'IC AND CANVAS, w oj all numbers aud brands. Tent Awnlnir. Trunk, aud Wtui'iu tkiver Duok. AIho. Paper Miiiii"ttier ' lrlor l'IU, from on to several leet YtW: Paulina, H-lting sil I wlu,eto, ut e " JOHN W. KVKHMAN & OO., No. loe JONEa' Alio, (J1HB GREAT It URAL CEMETERY, feOUNT MORIAU, embracing an area of one hundred and fifty-live acres, and comprising every varl-ty ot scenery, is by iter the largest aud most bdauilful of all tne cemeta. rks near PuiladeipUla. As IU tide et Improvement tends northward, WOUNT MORIAU, by seuKrapblcul position.. Is FOREVER SAFE PRO 34 lNT&UblON OK DIS TURBANCE RY OrEaiNU OP BTRKEM, and will never be hedged la aud surrounded, by bouitei, factories, or etuer Improvements, the l.uevl table fate of other temeier.ej northward or oeutrally situated. At a convenient distance from the city, readily ac cessible by an azuelleut road and by the street cars of tbe Darby Pauseoger Railway, Mount Uorlah, by Its undisturbed quiet, fu. His. the soleuin purpoie ot Its dedication as a last resilog-plaue of toe dead. No luneral service bere la ever luteriuoted by the shrill whli.le of the locomotive, nor the seusiblifiles ot friends or visitors shocked by the ruau and rattle of long trains of passiog freight or coal cars, as must ot necessity be Ihe case In other burial-places, now established or projected, ou the Immediate line of ateam railroads, or through the grounds ot which suoh railroads ruu. Just now tbe hues of Autumn tiuge with gurgeous colors aud ludQlle variety the ' tillage ot the various groups of line old forest tree adorulug the margin of the stream which meanders through tbe grounds, and adds so grsal charm to the attractions of the place. Churches of all the urinolpal Protestant denomlna- tlous have here purchased aectluua of ground for the ' uee ol their oongregatlooa, aud more than seven thousand families have given this great Rural Ceme. Ury tbe preiereuc over all others. Clolcelois of auy size desired may a.lll be had upon application at the Lodge, at tue eutrauoe of the cemetery, or at the BraLCh Office, Peun Mutual In' suisute Building, No. 921 CUEsIs'Ul' Street, up stairs, where auy Information will bs given by iU -ia lid UkUilOK CPA NELL, Beoretary. DB. KINKELIN, AFTEB A KKSIDESC1 and practice ot thirty years at the North weat corner of Third and l'uhv ot reels, has lately re biov -d to tu uih KLt. VKCiTH btreet, betweeu MAR KET ud Vh KbN U 1. HlmiH'urlorlLj in the prompt and perfect cure of ail rtceot, cbronic, local, and constitutional affeo tlef.s ot a r-peclal uamre. Is prowarolal. Diaeaae of the klniparilkl In a hundred fllK fnreut forms, totally eradlca'fd; menial ani pliynlcal Wt-akneaa, and all nervouA debilities sc'euiillcal'v and aucoeanXuilr ueald. 0111 ue Lour irozu I A. M OS P.M.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers