THE DAlLi EVENING TELEGRAFII PIIJLADELPIIIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1868. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. tDTTORIAL OFIKIOltS OP TBR LEAP1NO JOURNALS UPON CCKRBBT TOPICB COMPILKD EVERT PAT FOB THB EVEN IN (J TELKQBAFd. General Grant Searching for a Cabinet. yVom the If. T. Berald. The cabinet-making clique.? of the Repub lican party are bubily at work all over the eouDtry fratuiDg a Cabinet lor General Grant. It it aiuQsiDg to wituuas the activity and ex citement the discussion of the subject oooa Biona in the Republican papers. The Chicago organ, supposed to be speaking e.t caike.drt, ts up one man one day and another man the tiext. The last trotted out was the Hon. lien Wade for Postmaster-General. 15 ut no mat ter who may be at the top of the heap as the Western man fnr the Cabinet at any time, the inevitable Washburre always turns up. As or 15en Wade being made Postmaster ieneral, the idea is preposterous. He is a good man Enough; but Horace Greeley is already on the Clate for that place. Other Western cliques put in claims for General Sohenck, Senator (Sherman, General Rawlins, Representative Wilson, and a score of others for any position that may be open; therefore there will be no difficulty in General Grant selecting his entire Cabinet from the West if he be so minded. Then, again, there are a Stanton clique, with leadquarters in Washington; Sumner and Wilson cliques, with headquarters in .Boston; the New York quadruple cliques, answering alike for the Noith, South, East, and West, and ready to take the entire job of cabinet making for the new administration at a heavy disoouut. Of course there are, besides the above, the Pennsylvania high tariff clique, the l)own Hast shipping clique, the bondholders' Clique, the l'acilio Railroad or California Clique, the army and navy clique which is a Strong one the annexation or filibustering clique, and we do not know how many more, all ready to push before General Grant a repre sentative man for a place in his Cabinet. Meanwhile, like Diogenes with his lantern Jn search of an honest man, General Grant goes quietly on a tour of inspection in search of Cabinet material. He writes no letters ask ing the views of this or that personage upon political measures, but makes a personal re connoissance for himself. He leaves Wash ington, reaches Philadelphia, and after meet ing Macalester, of the line old revolutionary Scotch stock, takes a social bite of haggis with Jiis Scotch friends of the St. Andrew's Society, Rnd finally drives with his friend, General Jiucker, to the latter's private residence in JWeBt Philadelphia. He arrives in New York and goes to the private residence of Mr. John C. Hamilton, a descendant of the fine old Hamilton family of the Revolution, especially famous for its original notions about finance. He Reaches liostou, and makes Mr. Charles Francis 'dams, another descendant of one of the fine Old families of the Revolution, his confidential communicant. He gives a public reception at the St. James; but the drawing-room doors of the learned, the opnlent, the aristocratio of the Hub 11 y open as if by magio to welcome Ihe hero. Old Harvard gravely nods its wel come, Bunker Hill Monument cheerily bows a greeting, and the Cradle of Liberty rocks with a Hew joy at his approach. Here he will ascer tain all that New England expects, and a little Snore, at the hands of his administration. He jnay have a talk with Sumner; but according to the Chicago oracle the interview will be Snore "polite than friendly." Returning if the original programme be carried out Gene Jal Grant will call upon General Burnside, in 2'rovidence, and hold a friendly chat with his old oomrade, in common with other Rhode Islanders of dietiuction; for Rhode Island, email as it is, has always been famed for its 3Jien of talent, wealth, and inlluence. Thus by personal iu.-pejtion and conversa tion, by a practical reuonnoissance of the tvhole field, will General Grant ascertain who are the best men for the position of Cabinet advisers, whose ideas (upon ilnanoe particu larly) agree with his own, and who may be Willing to carry out his own decided views and policy. In this tour we pray that General Urant may be more successful than poor old Diogenes was when searching for an ho nest man, and find, what the country has sadly needed for many years, an honest Ca Jiuet. Lincoln Monument. From "Erich'' I'omeroy's N. Y. Democrat. We notice in the papers that some ambi tious architect has at last planned a monu ment for the renowned President who shulllsd oil' this mortal coil at Washington, and who tvas, for political ellect, carted like a side Chow from the City of Magnificent Distances to Lis final home at Springfield, 111. The cost of the monument is to be two hundred thousand dollars, and several years are to elapse before the same will be completed, nnder the super intending care of the genius who has designed the same. If ever a man deserved a monument it was Iiincoln. He erected all over this land, from Maine to the Gulf of Mexico, monuments to Lis oupidity, imbecility, inefficiency, and des potism, and it is very fitting that his dupes and victims that the American people, who Buffered so much from his hands and by his life should mill further bleed for the erection of a tower, like that proposed in the days of ISabel, to commemorate not his virtues, but the wrongs he iuilicted upon his unhappy country. Presuming that there are many panels upon the aforesaid monument, we would suggest to the committee which hai the matter in charge a few designs which jnay have escaped the mind of the one who planned the same. We would suggest on one panel a picture of a divided country which was once at peace and prosperous divided by the abolition party through its interference with constitu tional rights. On another a picture of the States, the provinces, or despotisms now ex isting in the South, under the iron heel of Grant and the Rump Congress, Which wars upon the people of the subdued section, not Xor the benefit of the country, but for the en richment of the bondholders of New Eugland, Who are day by day boasting that they hold as their slaves the poor white men of the Korth, South, aud West. We would suggest as a design for another panel the enormous national debt created, not to save the country, but to carry on the mur derous crusade for cotton and negroes, for the Leuefitof Lincoln's pets and hirelings the ofisoourlngs of creation, the picked-up Lumanities from the tan-vaults, gutters, (tIsods, saloons, and groggeries of the land. Ve would suggest as nuother pauel a picture representing the blaying of soldiers in the Bouth in the raids for cotton, mules, and household goods, for the benefit of the homes of the loyal and Chrlotian churches of the re ligions in the North. On another panel we would represent the immortal Lincoln with his legs crossed, pok ing bia fingers into the ribs of staid aud stolid fttatesmen, as he endeavored to impress them With a sense of his genius in the line of telling jiasty, smutty, vulgar stories, the goad people, the pious people, the children of the land, all being taught to look up to him, the Snost vulgar and profane of all, as a pattern f Rim for theiu to copy after. Oa another pauel we should represent the pulpit orators of the land; a procession of long-haired, whining- I fnced. uplifting-eyes, white-chokered gentry, who have been set apart and ordained to preach Christ, and Him crucified, but who, like Beecher and other clerical hypocrites of the country, forsake the cause of Christ for that of the nigger; who think more of politics than religion; and who turn the temples dedi cated to the worship of Almighty God into caucus-rooms and political pothouses. On another pauel we would picture the bondholders who pay no taxes, who ride in their elegant carriages, who sleep in their ele gant homes, who drink costly wines, who occupy front seats at the opera, and who live on the money wrung by radical taxation from the hontst laborers of the laud, no matter whether they be black or white, native or foreign bom. On another panel it would be a good idea to place pictures of the Freed uien's Bureau and of the lazy blacks of the South, who are not capable of supporting themselves, but who must be fed at the ex pense of the laborers of the North, and yet who, by radical legislation, are male law makers of the country, and for whom the entire energies of the nation for the past ten years have been exerted. On another pauel we would represent the profits made by the plough-holders of the laud after they have been ribbed for the benefit of the bondholders, the negroes, the standing army, the speculators, and the contractors, who grow rich as radicalism grows strong. This panel would be the smallest of .the lot, for the profits made by these people, after paying for the support of the ouej who fatten upon their earnings, would be so little that it would hardly be worth a pauel at all. On another panel should be a picture of Lincoln riding over a battle-field, and asking Marshal Lamon to 6ing him "Dan Tucker," or some other song, that the cries of the wounded sol diers might rot penetrate his ears, for there is nothing like being jolly an I joyful at all times and under all circumstauces I On another panel a representation of Mrs. Lincoln selling her old clothes at auction. On another pauel we should have some drunken members of the "God and morality" party in council at at Willard's Hotel. Or we should have a picture of Hir.ira teaching the aborigines of the Pacifia their letters; or a picture of the black scoundrels of Tennessee, at the instigation of Browuiow, murdering inoffensive woman and children there. Hurry up the monument; built it high and build it quickly, if you will only have it erected in such mauuer as will convey to coming generations the exact character of the so-called martyr; if you will only give us his true history; if you will only, on that monument, tell just what kind of a man he was, and how much misery he has brought upon this country, we will contribute as libe rally to the same as auy man in all the laud. Let the monument be put up. Let its base be broad as the ruin he has wrought. Let it be made of the skulls of those he caused to be slain in the crusade for cotton and negroes; but do not let it be stained with the iears of those who weep in suffering over acts by him and his minions committed. Do not let it be disgraced with a representation of Seward tinkling bis little bell, and sending innocent men to the bas tiles of the laud, for that is a bfrt on our national fame we would rather should be forgotten than re membered. And on the top of the monu ment, should its top ever be built, in the place of liberty weeping, put the bust ot some noble wench, some diiaky damsel of Ethiopia, whose charms have such weight with the fol lowers of radicalism, that coming generations may know who and what the American public worshipped for so many years, and at suoli cost. And there, right beside Lincoln's monu ment, let the haters of oppression and lovers of liberty erect a plain marble shaft, on which shall lie engraved the name of Johu Wilkes Booth on one side, and on the other a picture of Lis heart-broken mother kneeling in prayer, supplicating the government of Lin coln lor the body ot her son. Election Frauds Ret urns by the Electoral Colleges. From the 2V. Y. Times. An impression prevails in many quarters that when the lists made out by each body of electors of the vote for President and Vice President are opened by the President of the Senate, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, it is competent for the two houses thus convened to reject the vote of any State if a case of fraud in the election sufficient to change the result is made to ap pear. It has been suggested, in order to bring up this question before the two houses, that the Grant electors in this Sta'e assemble, on the assumption that the actual legal vote was in their favor, and transmit their list to the President of the Senate, so that with the two before them, the Senate and House of Repre sentatives may reject both, and proceed to an investigation of the alleged frauds. But as the time fixed by law for the completion of the duties of the Electoral College expired on Tuesday, this part of the plan must fail. There are abundant reasons why the other must fail. An inspection of the twelfth article of the first amendment to the Constitution of the United States will clearly show that the two Houses thus convened are merely a ministerial body. In the shape in which they are thus required to meet, they are shorn of all legisla tive functions, and are not endowed with any of a judicial character. Their duty is thus defined: "The President of the Senate shall. In the pre sence of the Senate aud House of Kireseota lives, open ell the eertlUoates, aud Uie vote Khali then be. counted. XUe person navlng ttio greatest number of votes shall be the l'resl. dent, If such u umber be a majority of ine Whole number of electors appointed," etc But it is alleged that fraud vitiates every thing, and consequently that the Seymour electoral vote is vol I, and should have no ell'tct given to it by the body which is to count. The answer is manifest that the regularity of the election is to be assumed until the con trary is made to appear in the manner pro vided by law. The remedy is ample, but it must be pursued in time, and within the jurisdiction of the State in which the fraud is alleged. The Constitution of the United States bestows this authority on the several States, and gives none whatever to the General Gov ernment or any of its departments. The second section of the second artiole provides that "each State shall appoint, in such manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors, equal," eto. The only power devolved upon Congress over the matter is contained in the fourth section of that article, as follows: "The Congress may determine the time of choosing the electors and lbs day on wnlott they Khali give tbelr votes, which dny shall be the same throughout the U oiled Stales." The significance of this nakedness in be stowing authority upon Congress will readily appear from an inspection of the clause declar ing the mode in which Senators and Repre sentatives may be elected. Nation 4 of artiole 1 provides "That the time, places, and manner of hol.i lr) election for Heualors and KeoreaeuUtl vea hhall be prescribed In each mate by the Legls lutuie thereof, but the Congress may ut auy lime byluw make or alter nuon regulations, except iiu lotnepfusoof choosing rJmtUois," In this division of power it thus appears that although Congress may alter the State regulations as to the time ami manner of hold ing elections for Senators, and as to the timts, places, and manner of holding elections for Rep resentatives, it can determiue only the time of chooMng Presidential electors and the day on which they shall give their votss, the latter to be uniform. Under these respective clauses Congress has fixed the lime for choosing Sena tors, and the time for choosing electors, and the day on which they are to assemble throughout the Union to cast their votes. That day, this year, is the Weduosd ly which has jnst expired. The f.iot that Congress has abstained from doing more than to fix the time, of choosing the electors and the day on which they are to give their votes, is to be ex plained only on the assumption that the m ia tur of choosing electors is devolved upon the States, to the exclusion of Congressional power, in the clause which declares that ''eaoh State shall appoint, in such mauuer as the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors," eto. The exercise by Congress of jurisdiction over the rebellious States, fouuled upon the war power a jurisdiction which supposes a forfeiture of every constitutional right and privilege, aud claims authority for prescribing the time, mode, and mauuer by which, in advance of their readmission, they shall exercise the right of suffrage is not to be confounded with the power of Congress with respect to States which have maintains! unbroken their true relation to the Union. The exercise of the extreme powers which arise from a state of war have no doubt led many to suppose that they may us resorted to during a state of acknowledged peace. The mere statement of the case is all that is re quired to correct this error. On an examination of the National Consti tution the theory is supported that the whole subject of suffrage aud its exercise, so far as concerns the Presidential election, is devolve! wholly upon the several States. South Caro lina, at one time, appoiuted its electors by legislative ballot. New York provides in her State legislation for the precise mode of their election, for the mode of gathering the re turns of local boards first, in some locality convenient to several counties, and finally at Albany, and when and how the Bjard of State Canvassers shall proceed to ascertain the final result. The Secretary of Stateis then, with out delay, to furnish each elector appearing by the returns ot the Board of Canvassers to be elected, with a certificate to that effect, armed with which the elector enters the Electoral College. The Board of Canvassers met last week au! concluded their labors, aud thereupon the Secretary of State issued his certificate to each member appearing to have been elected. The Electoral College met and acted iu pracise ac cordance with the power conferred. They were authorized to organize on Tuesday and to fill aty vacancies in their number, and to ballot on Wednesday. These duties having been performed, no power can now recall into existence the Board of Canvassers such are the frequent decision in this State or the Electoral College. The result mint now be deemed the voice of this State, incapabls of beinf; reversed by auy authority whatever. The question may then be asked, Is there no redress for the gross frauds which unques tionably gave to the Seymour electoral ticket its preponderance f The answer is this, that the courts of this State, and those alone, are authorized to correct such frauds when their power is invoked in time. It was competent for them to order, oa proof of such frauds duly made, the issue by the Secretary of State of certifu ites to the Grant eldotors, under which they might have assembled on Tuesday. But as the theory of the creation of such a body supposes the exercise by its members of disoretmu in casting taeir ballots, it would be impossible to give the vote of this State for General Grant, except by the action of an electoral college appointed by the State. They would be deemed thus appointed if the State Judiciary had ordered the cer tificate of appointment issued by the Secre tary ot State to be withheld from the Sey mour electors and given to those of General Grant. As General Grant will be pronounced elected on the strength of precisely such certificates, in form, as were issued by the State electors of New York, the foundation of his authority should not be disturbed by the action of the Senate and House of Representatives when they assemble in their ministerial capacity to count the votes. If they should reject any of the certificates issued duly by a recognized State, on an allegation of fraud in the election, it would amount to a clear violation of the Constitution. In a case like that of the Dorr rebellion, if the de facto Government and the Dorr govern ment had both voted and sent forward certifi eates, it would unquestionably be proper to reject one of them and act upon the other. The two houses would be bound to recognize the State Government which the General Gov ernment recognized as the trne one. This case furnishes, however, no precedent for not counting the Seymour vote in this State, however strongly they may be tainted with the frauds in election districts which are so generally charged and believed. As the time between a Presidential eleotion and the action of the Electoral College is only four weeks, it will unquestionably be expedi ent that every State should prescribe a sum mary mode of correcting frauds. If frauds caw be committed with ease, and their correc tion is difficult and uncertain, our State elec tions will prove that the system, in whole or in part, is a failure such as will expose the whole structure which rests upon it to ulti mate ruin. The subject is too momentous not to engage the most deliberate attention. General Ciraut's "Foreign Folley." Prom the N. Y. World. The J imes had a leader, a few days since, setting forth the great advantages which would accrue to the country from the probable for eign policy of General Grant. So far-fetched a topic of encomium has a supplementive look, and tends rather to belittle General Grant by suggesting his deficiencies than to exalt him in the estimation of reasonable men. It is dressing him out in "a tawdry laced suit of qualifications Which nature never intended him to wear." A man who has given so little spontaneous attention to domestic politics of course docs not possess a statesman's knowledge of foreign affairs. As to other nations standing in greater awe of na in consequence of General Graut being Presi dent, it is the sheerest flattery. His skill as a soldier would avail us more if he were to remain General of the Army than in his new position; his civil duties as President preventing his taking active command, if a war should occur during his administration. We are quite secure against a foreign war for a long period to come, unless we should be the aggressors, and clearly in the wrong. Oar security does not lie in General Grant's pres tige as a soldier, but iu the prestige and moral effect of our success in the late war, which was conducted on so great a scale, and furnished such a signal demonstration of our stupendous resources and military energy. The heioio resistance of the South ha a na tional value in this respect as well as the in domitable vigor aud vast resources of the North, since both would be available in a foreign war. The great military abilities of Oeneral Lee would be as much at our Servian as those of the Union generals K?eii Setum- and tue notorious a :hieveuieuti of the Alaliaiut aie valuable as a national reoolle itiou, m'-.-cLievous as they were as a fait. If two or three could ibllict such hideout destruction, and frighten the commerce of a great nation from the seas, what would whole lleets of sue1! cruisers not accomplish f fleets which we could build in our own parts, and let loo; upon the commerce of au enemy. No matter who might be President for the next four years, we should be in no danger of a deuial of justice by foreign nations. And beside, it will not be for General Grant, but for Congress, to dt-cide whether the country shall engage iu war or remain at peace. In managing our foreign relations, General Graut will be wholly dependent upon his Sec retary of State; and it is of gret importance that this officer should be wisely selected. Whtn the appointment is announoed, the qualifications should be so preeminent and acknowledged, that nobody would think of In quiring why it was male. If Graut offers this position to the fittest man in the Repub lican party, it will be given to Charles Francis Adams; but we have no reason to expect so suitable a choice. The appointment oi Mr. Adams would be wise in every view. The firmness, high au! quick sense of national honor, and masterly ability which he ex hibited in the most trying anil important diplomatic post during the war, have given him a recognized rank among the first states men of the world. Moreover, his appointment would have a tranquillizing effect upou our domestic differences. Although Mr. Adams has bef n a steady Republican, he is respected by the Democratic party aud by the South. We are sorry that we cannot hope for so fit a Selection. While we do not expect so good an ap pointment as Mr. Adams, we trust tb.it we are not to have so bad a one as Mr. Sumner. Mr. Sumner's knowledge of foreign politics is respectable enough to suggest his name In such a connection. He has been for a long time the chairman of the Senate Committee of Foreign Affairs; he has a considerable acquaint ance with the publio men of Europe; is conversant with diplomatic usages; has a turn for research which would stand him iu good stead in the questions which a Secretary of State has occasion to investigate. But he is a wan of great ostentation and deficient judgment; a bigot, a pedant, a prater, a political fanavic, with a chronic sorenets and touchiness which make Lim hate the South as a dog in the agonies of hydrophobia hates water. To place hini at the head of the Cabinet would look as if General Graut took an unmanly pleasure iu irritating and humiliating the South. We trust that the country has a gvtara'i'.ee against such an iulliction in the natural incompatibility between such a temper as Suurjer aud that of General Grant. The pompous arrogance aud ostentatious display of this wer.ly rhetorician should naturally be unpalatable, if jiot dis gusting, to a cool, sedate, unpr,-teudinjr mn of action, a Later of parade au! rigmarole, like General Grant. It wa-; Sumuer who stood np in the Senate and denounced General Giant's report on the condition of the South as a piece of dishonest "whit-wishing." We are pretty safe against the calamity of his being made Secretary of State. The range of selection for this ofli'e ii so narrow among Republicans with any recog nize 1 qualifications to till it, that we cau hardly ignore Mr. Seward 'as a possible Selec tion. His retantiou would have at least this advantage, that it could not be construed as manifesting au unfriendly feeling towards the South. Mr. Seward's large acquaintance with our domestic politics and public men would be of great service to a President so inexperi enced as General Grant, owing to the fact that he diplomatically smoothed over General Grant's conduct in the matter which raised a question of veracity between hini and Presi dent Johnson. But it is ea3y, on the other band, to discover many reasons why Mr. Seward is not likely to be retained. II '3 only c' ance, if he has any, lies in the conflicting llvalfhips of inferior competitors. He may possibly be retained because no other man really qualified for the duties of the office is strongly enough pressed to make it difficult for General Grant to set aside his claims. If Mr. Seward should be kept a few mouths be cause General Grant does not sea his way clear to a fit appointment, he would have a pretty secure hold npon the office afterwards. Our Mayor-Fleet. From the 27. T. World. Now that the World and the Democrats who read and are influenced by the World have elected Mr. A. Oakey Hall as Mayor of this city for the coming year, and as we are thus directly responsible for Mr. Hall and his offi cial conduct, the Mayor-elect must understand that he is thus put npon his very best beha vior, unless he would compromise us as well as himself. We candidly say at the outset that Mr. Hall will bring to the oflije many qualities that admirably fit him for the posi. tion, or we certainly should not have sup ported and elected him. He is a man of vast versatility, and his previous occupations have given him an insight into the needs and con cerns of the whole city. We expeot that he will put this experience to practical use. For what we have done for him we reasonably look for something in return, and as we are responsible for Mr. Hall, we trust that he will feel the full responsibility of both the position in which we have placed him and the position in which he places us. To begin, then: Now that the election is over there can be no harm in stating that the city owes the rascally radical commissions which hamper and fairly fetter us to no one man more than to A. Oakey Hall. He did hia best to bring these locusts upon us to eat up our substance. To be sure, it was in the days when he was an old line or other line Whig; but the sins of youth can be repented in age, and if Mr. Hall will but display one-half the energy in getting rid of the commissions that he did in creating them, he will do something in the way of atonement for the past. Next, Mr. Hall must keep a sharp eye upon the frauds which the radicals, with little basis but with great effect, charge upon the Demo cracy of the city. The new Mayor must un derstand that every job which comes np in the City Council is not merely an assault upon the treasury, but an attack npon the Demo cratic party. The politics and the party which preponderate in this city must, be preserved In their purity. The monopoly of fraud should be left to the commissions, the revenue collectors, the assessors, and the radical Federal officials generally. The whole coun try looks to New York for the standard of Deinooratio purity, and in the past it has not looked in vain; the future of the Domooratio party throughout the country depends upon the preservation of this purity, and Mayor elect Hall must see to it that none of his friends or Lis enemies are permitted to sully that purity. The World and the good oitf zeDs who elected Mr. Hall will stand by him in his war against corrnption in any form or from any quarter. In Lis new position Mr. Hall oan help us to get rid of the corrupt commissions; he can do something towards giving us oleau streets; he cau assist in devising a new system of wharves aud piers; be cau push foVward the bridge schemes to Brooklyn and lloboken; he cau aid 218 & 220 S. FRONT ST. 4 A 218 220 S. FROST ST OFFER TO THB TRADB, IN LOTS, FIXE II YE AM) BOUllUOK WHISKIES, K BOXD, Oi 13, 107, and 1808. ALSO, FREE FINE ME AAD BOlltBOA WHISKIES, Of GREAT AGE, ranging from 18G4 to 1845.; Liberal contract will b entered Into for lota. In bond at DlstlUtT?, of ltd years' maua.'scltnel in forwarding the under and over ground rail ways; and in all the needed improvements which will keep our population on the islaul to assist in paying taxes. With oar en'ire population on the pround, no futu-e Depew can deplete our census. Mr. Hall can do much in advancing all these measures, aud thus in advancing the growth and prosperity of the Ljrtropolis. But these things imply concentration au! work. Mr. Hall will have no trne to devote to the editorship of small wejkly papers, which are no credit to the city, citaiuly uoue to a Mayor, and which rely for charity aud support upon city advertising, just as the Anti-kHaur;) Standard holds out its hands an! its basket to Africa for coli boilei chickens. Mr. Hall must abandon puns and pantomime, aud leave conundrums to Anne Dickinson and the Bryants. 'Hnmpty-Dumpty" will do well enough for a District Attorney, but a Mayor should turn his talents and energy to higher efforts. Poor puns must give place to purity in the pary, and small paper3 to great works. The World and the Demo3rats who elected Mr. Hall expect him to assist them in making this city as much a mo lei in political management as it is superior to the rural regions in educational advantages. If Mr. Hall is as wise as he is reputed to be witty, he Will heed these words. BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC Y, p- iw- Y. P. M. Y. P. r.i, TOCKU'S Pl'RE 91 ALT WHISK X, TOlT' 11' Hi JIAU W1IINKY. TlltKM N I'l Ki: 31 ALT WIIIMKY. Tbtre In no question relative to the aierttn if the ccKbraUd Y. V M. It la the must qunllty of WtilsKy, n hhufaclured from tbe ochi isrulu atfurcled bv the Pnuadeiplila market, and It In Hold at tbe low ra'.euf Id p r gallon, or 1123 per quart, at tbemtlHiirooms, Ao. 700 1 ASSY US K IIOA1), 11 V2t5 PHIl.a.ljKL.FHtA. " WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC "vEYUS LADOMUS & CO nnunvn 9VIITPQ tr TV.WVI.iri!Rl WATCHES, JKHFI.IU A81M KII WAUK. II . WATCHES and JEWELSY EEPAIEED. J Jto2chestnut St., Phibv Watches, Diamonds, ii;4P Jewelry, Solid Silver & Plated Ware. weddingKings. We have for a loog time made a specialty of Solid 18-Karat Fine Gold Wedding and Engagement Rings, And In order to supply Immediate wants, we keep A FULL ABbOBTMJCNT OF BIZEd always on hand. F ABR A BROTH BR j MAKERS, 11 llamtbrp1 Ko. 824 CHEBNUT 8t below Ponrth. FRENCH CLOCKS. a. W. RUSSELL, Ko. 22 KOKTII SIXTH STKEET, Importer and Dealer In FINE WATCHES, JifiW ELKY, AKD 61LVEH-WA11E, offers tbe largo, assortment of L52l FRENCH CLOCKS In Pblladeipula, Wholesale and Retail. CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, ETC. 1808. clotiijiouse. 18G8. STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER W!ota to keep before the public the fact tbat they aim to keep tbe Urgent and most varied stock of all dtscrlpiloiiB ot CLOTHS TO BE FOUWi) IN PHILADELPHIA. MEN'S C0ATINO3 AND CASSIMERES, UOUl)S t'OU BUVH WEAR. LADIEB' CLOAK IN Kin OF EVn.lt V KIND, Always on baud, STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER UESTUIL CLOTH HOUSE, C'OK.EIUIITII AND HABKKT STREETS), I PHILADELPHIA. CHROMO-LITHOGRAPHS. " REGAL DESSERT." A new and beautiful Chromo-Lltbograph, ttftw painting by J. W. Peyer, Just received by A. S. 11 OK INS ON, No. 10 CHEBNUT Street, Who baa Just received new chromos, NJlW engravings, JEW FRENCH PHOTOGRAPHS, NEW DRESDEN EN A U. ELS LOOKING GLASSES, Eto. 8 lb J FREE GALLERY. yyiRE GUARDS, roil KTOBE FKANTK, ASTLVmS, 1'AC lOUIKH, ETC. Patent Wire Ral)lng.;iron Bedsteads, Ornamenta Wire Work, Taper Makers' Wires, and. every variety of Wire Work, manufactured by fll. WALKFR A SONS, t saw! No. 11 North MIX III street JOHN CRUMP, CARPENTER AND BUILDER, fcboM Ko. 213 I.OIHir.St reel, aud No. 1733 lllXSAUT Street, PHILADELPHIA. QAR STAIRS A ftlcCALL Pi OS. 12(f WaLSUT and 21 tiKAMTE St. IMPORTERS OF Brandies, lYiucs, Uln, OHre Oil, Etc. EtcJ AND J COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE SALE OP I vrtiv. m i) uvi wuvkt .. ..rJ ----- nuiiAl) Al IS liHJ IliiX II It.' I I I k vi it jiioniLj, I 1I 3ONOMA WINE CO LIP ATI Established for the sale of Puro California Vines. This Company o'ler lor sale pure California Wines.! r. - Ml I-KUV, A.M.1.LK.V .t rst'.tTEi.. AND 1TIIK (JliAI'H IIRlvnv Wkitkll.1.1 In rn..i a... .... I.. TU hrlTirff, .111 gram). " uul lue P1"" Jultfe of the Depot. No. ?: HMVK !Strot, rilladelnhla COOTS AND SHOES. L A D I E S' SHOES. NEW STOKE. HENRY WIRE M A W, MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF LADIES' HOOTS AX1 SHOES, Ko. 118 South TlIIIITEEATil Street, S. IV. Corner Sixth and Uuttomvood Sts. PHILADELPHIA. AND 487 Eleventh Street, Washington, d. c., Has cpenud bla EMXiANT NEW STORE, No. 118 South TlilRlEEN ill tetreet, between Uhesnut and Walnut streets; wlm a large assortment ot the FINEST QUALITY OF LADIES ROOTS AND buvao, ui uis own manufacture. Also, JUST RECEIVED JiROil PARIS, large assortment of Ladles' Boots, Shoes, and Slippers, Made expressly to order by tbs bant and most cele brated n.auulacuutis, 1171inrp 62T2rp HAVG ALTERED AND ENLARGED MI fetore, No. iiou is. NINTH atrewt, 1 luvile atuTn. lion to my lucreabwl stock (of my own mnufai.ijrJ.i of One LuOl to, bliuEet. UAlTElis, Etc oi tbeUteat etyiis, and at ine lowtwt prlct. , lam ERNEST BOPP. FURNISHING GOODS, SH1BTS,&Q H. 8. K. C. ' Harris' Seamless Kid Gloves. ETEBX PAIB WABBAKIED, EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR GENTS' GLOVES. W. SCOTT tit CO., nn. an cmkmmut btkuct. pATEHI 6 HOULJJEU.SEAM SUlllT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PERFECT FITT1NU SHIRTS AND DRAWERS made tioui measurement at very short notice. All otber aruclfH ol UENTLEMEN'S DRE8U WINCHESTER & CO., 111 No. 7im CD-EASi UT Street. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. J-OUEKT SHOEMAKER & CO., N.E. Corner or i OVJETH and KiCE Sts., PHILADELPHIA , WHOLESALE DRUCCIST8. IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS Or White Lead and Colored Faints, Putty Varnishes, lite. AGENTS FOR THB CELEBRATED FBESCJI ZLC 1MLTS. DEALERS AND CONSUMERS SUPPLIED A LOWEST PRICES FOR CASH. tm STOVES, RANGES, ETC. x. SOTICE.-TUE UNDERSIGNED 2 would call tbe attention of tbe public to but .X NEW iLIJiiN KAULE FURNACU. - Till. Is au eutirelv uuw liuair. Itinn nn. Sliucted as to at once couiiueud it.ell to general (vor. being a comblnatlou ol wrougbt a. U cast Iron. Ills Very aln-ple lu us coumructiuu, .Ld U perfectly alr HKlt; .eu-cleaulug. baviugiuo 1 1 pes or drums to be taken out and tit aued. It li so ai rauged Wllti upright Hue. as to produce a larger amount of beat from iba sauj. weight or coal linu any furnace now louse. Tbe bygii'iuetlo condition ot Hie air us produced by my new arrai gemtut oi evaporation will at onoe di nionttrale thai It is ti e only ilut Air Furuaoe tbat will produce a pereiully beanuy ainiiwphere. Ii oseiu waiitoi a Complete iie.tlug Apparatus would do well to call and examine tbe Uoldun Eagia CHaKIWH WILLIAMS, Nos. 1182 auu 1131 MARKET Street A large assortment ol Cooking RaEg.yKreboard onbind0" V0Yta 0rle8' Ventilator, etc., aiwa,. N. il. Jobbing of all kirn's promptly done. 6 io THOWKSON'S LONDON KITCIIENEIi. i v. .e. j im cai- aamuc, r,r luintlle. mitels, or l ubllc InsuiullouB. iu TWENTY uJFFEtt. -KN'l' bl.Kb. A II.O. rillail,.li, hla ltuiwu J lot-Air Furuacee, Portable Heaters. Low-down! tiratts, Flrebourd Sieves, JBalb Rollers, feiew-hola Plates, toilers, louklLg Moves,, eu) wholesale and retail, by tbe manuluciuiers, .,, tilARPE A THOMPSON, 11 2Swrmm js, Mtl Ni SECOND Street) DB. KINKEL1N, AFTER A RE9IDENCH nd practice ol thirty year, at tbe Northwest corner oil bird .Dd I'ulii" eireu, bas lately re v2TnHf.,;i,!ilLJ::,L!VKi:l'11 street, between MAR Win superiority lu tbe prompt and perfect cur of fell recent, cbronlo, local, aud oonntli utlunal airuo tlnns ol a special nature, Is proverbial. Disease, of tne nkln, aiiperlug In a hnndrwd dtfr rVrenl forms, totally eraiiloaied: mental and ptivHlcal weak nxtui, aud all nervous deblltiln -teut!llcll d uwMn.uy ueatod, bUlue Uotus iivia g A. hi 0 F bu