6 THE DAILY E VNG TELEGKAHI PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 18C8. LITERATURE. UliVIKW OF N1W 1JOOK8. Horntno wtt Lkavkh. A Poem. 'Illnmi Mted by Jeu Lee. Pabllhed by l)aflldld Aihuead. ., This is it holiday volume, gotten tip in ft ftjle of tleganoe that is in the highest degree reditable to the pnblither. A graoaful little poem of only four six-line stanzas is made the tnbjvct of the illnminator'a art, and the gold and colors whioh adorn the pages will make this ft most attractive addition to ft parlor tablf, and ft most acceptable gift for the Christmas season, now near at hand. Jean Lee, who haa made a speoialty of this branch fart, will be remembered as the illuminator Of the ,'BeatitaeB,,, published by Prang of Boston last year. Tli proaout BerldJ of illa . minations are equally hamldome. The verse3 are printed on thick oari-board, aui the book la boand iu attraoiive style. . Madams db Dracprr. By Mrs. C. Jnltlo. Tut-liBUed by LeypMdt & Halt F.r sale by J. U. Lippin.'.itt & Co. aui Claxton, llsin trn & llallf 111 nger. Mrs. Junkin'a previous works Were deser Tedly praised, and hr l'djobe of To day," in particular, was rtogniznd as haying quit ties indicative of a high order of tabnt in the anlhor. Ecarcely less interesting than that Story is "Madame de Bupru," jmt iisuel by Messrs. Lypoldt & Llolt; ant we fdel a3 tnred that it will reorive a cordial wolc me from lovers of high-toned fiction. Lira. Jen kin writes FreDch stories like a ParUlau, but withont the nauaeoua sentimentality anl pra. rifocy which det'act from the tneriU of some of the beat French writing of thU class. She understands the philosophy of the French social system thoroughly; and the following extract is not less suggestive because it was sot incited by a French woman: "W tipn Kronen w mn of y ela or aa say c m'ennuie, you rimy hauWti bopa of uy kind 11 h I'titari'ti utr. Tue eunnl of t in t'ru of thirty lew a linr tn wbti O.itnve H'miiilot ua aes tint cite ttiHlof a y.iinn lu ly of N Atntilti's h$-3 to n nmrrl'ige wnoi e Umro is n dt'; lo lit oo w U wben tdere Is no foriiiue. It is a miifjriu ie fur French w.iinen t'i:u iliey live ni outlet ' for tlit'ir iniontH or activity. They nrahe lne'l In by xuca ens'oms itMtuti iinin-trrU'd wom ta of mven urt-liih'-und twunly tris us Halo liberty SB when bti" vvmh t.uv'ul.'eu sun council rmil wkiut tier English pioM'ypo miy re-3. a:m oanuot vl-lt r ko a day' J uirucy uno itpn roned tsi e ni iv not a much hs walk in roui her native idwu niu ic. TUcre are h'rdiuii Iuott'CiH wli(, mil cm s.ieiiu!4 CIouuciI'n If mil fit. fir Iht-lr (tHUKtiters to ch, ha.vj .uitinl thetiiKtlvcn brcau.ni int-y cniil'l not letvetuKir t'autiMerH f ,r an Hour. A l-iouou yodd lady is niardcil gu-irduteud." From Clax'.on, Reuisen Sc IlafTelfiager we have received The llighifal Heir, a drama In. five acts, by Lord Lyttou, pab'.iihei by Harper & Brothers. This drama was rewrit ten a number of years ajo, from an earlier play by the same author, entitled The Sea Captain, the first idea of which was suggested liy astrikiDg situation in a novel by Alexandre Dumas ( Le Capitaine Paul "). The liiyhtful JJeir is not equal to Richelieu as a piece of literary work, and it is iuferior to thj Lady of Lyons and Money as an acting drama. The plot, however, is well developed, anl it has a number of strong sensation scenes whioh might make it popular on the stage, and we wonder that some of our managers have not made efforts to produoe it. Messrs. Dick & Fitzgerald publish "Ami. tenr Theatricals and Fairy Tale Dramas," by Miss S. A. Frost, and "Comic Rotations ani Humorous Dialogues," edited by Jerome Ban ton. The first named of these little volume is an attempt to furnish amateurs with a number of interesting and effective pleoes suitable for parlor representation, and whioh will not make too large demands in the way of soenery, costumes, and properties. The titles of the dramas are "Mr. John Smith," 'The Young Amazon," "Wooing Under D.f flcnlties," "Bolts and Bars," "All's Well that Euds Well," "Cinderella; or, The Little Glass Slipper," "Beauty and the Baast," and "Blue Beard." The other work consists of a variety of oomio recitations in prose and poetry, amusing dialogues, burlesque scenes, eccentric orations and stamp speeches, hu morous interludes, and laughable faroes. The Works are nicely gotten np with illuminated covers, and they ought to afford an infinite amount of entertainment to the stage-struck juveniles of both sexes. Once a Month is the title of an Attrac tive little magazine, the first number of which Las just been issued by T. S. Arthur & Sons. The size a lGmo. of ninety-six pages is novel, 'and convenient for slipping in the pocket. It is proposed to give, in addition to original artioles by writers of reputation, selec tions of interest from the best English periodi cals. Once a Month is neat, compact, and, if we mistake not, will prove extremely popular. SloanU Architectural Review for De cember, published by Claxton, Remsen & Ilaffelflnger, has, as usual, a varied and inte resting table of contents. The high standard f the previous numbers is maintained, and we are pleased to believe that the magazine Is appreciated by architects, builders, and others interested in the subjects of whioh it treats. Feaunts are plenty in Texas. Milwaukee is down with smallpox. One man in Illinois owns 25,000 acres in Cborn. New Orleans has an epidemio of oolds in the Lead. Etenbenville, Ohio; elects its postmaster ty ballot. Wales is twenty-seven and whiskered like ft Fandonr. General Longstreet will winter at Lynoh fcurg, Virginia. Wild ducks are 1 25 ft pair in New Or leans, which, considering how plenty they ' argues poor shooting on the part of the haulers. A Milwaukee German shot himself last wetk because a remittance failed to reach Lim. It came the day after, in time to pay for his funeral. Fox-hunting has set in in F.ngland,' and already one lord and two or three gentlemen have ridden into eternity over a fence that was a Uw inches too high. TUB ENGLISH ELECTIONS. George W. Smiley writes to the Ne w York Tribune from London, Nov. 21, as follows: the TorieB amuse their minds by calling Mr. Bright the minority member for Birming ham. It is true he came in at the foot of the poll. Under the Liberal arrangements for so olstribnting the Liberal majority as to secure all three members with only two votes, it was necessary that all personal preferences should be saorihoed. Otherwise, the anxiety to rote fur Mr. Bright would have endangered the re turn of one of his colleagues. In fact, esoh elector received from the Liberal Committee an election card with the names of the two candidates for whom he was desired to poll. It was meant that the three Liberals should receive as nearly as possible an equal vote. To secure exact equality in a constituency of 40,000 was obviously impossible. It is evident that some of the friends of the other two can didates voted without regard to the committee piogr&mme, fearing, no doubt, that ome of Mr. Bright's liieuds would be doing the psiue thing. For this or some other reason Meesrs. Dixon and Munta were fonn i early in the day to be running ahead of Mr. Bright. Jiy noon their vote was considerably larger than his, and at tho same time it had become evident that there was not the slightest daug r of the defeat of either of the three. Tue lowest Liberal vote whs nearly twice tue high est Tory, in this state of thiugs the j nut Liberal Committee, who had always maut that Mr. Bright tho'ild head tho poll, arranged to redistribute a portion of tue votes not already cast, so as to carry Mr. Bright luto his proper position. Mr. Bright himself nega tived this plan, desiring that no change should be made for any per son nl reason, but that the original scheme should be left to its natural working, and be adhered to till the end. The poll stood at the elo.-ie, Dixon, 15 0JS; Muatz, 14.G14; Bright, 14,601. The leading Tory had fc700. Mr. Bright may well be content with a nominal majority of about three times that number. None the less is his willingness to stand last an illustration of his usual unselfish ness in politics. Confronted by such a majority, the Torie3 have fallen back on their old taciijs, and are bupy in fomenting dimension in the rank of their opponents. Despairing of auother Cave, or any political ii-ue, they would provoke a personal content for the leadership of the Libei al party. Lord Granville is to be set up against Mr. Gluddtoue. A report has got so far this morning as the newnpupers tliat upon Mr. Disraeli's resign I'.tion he will advise the Queen to Feud for Lord Granville to form a Cabinet. No doubt the Queen has a right to exercise a choice. Ko d jubt Mr. Disraeli is capable of launching ,-uioh a l'artuian bhatt as he retires. No douh', even, there i.-i a sootiim of the Liberal pnrty, the f.issil Vui(ri aui especially tho Wuigs of hiu raulc, wuo view Mr. Gladstone's leadership with ill-ditfgni::ed dislike, aui who wotill re joice to pupplaut t'.ie commoner by one of the blue-blood nob li'y like Lord Grauville, who unites h&lf a-cUztn great names iu his single percOD. But though Mr. Disraeli ad vise, and the Queen invite, and eveu though which I do not believe Lord Granville should be bo carried away by ambition as to attempt to form a Cabinet, the scheme would miscarry instantly and utterly. This House is chosen on a pledge of loyalty to Mr. Gladstone, and it dare not defy its constituents by tolerating the accession of a Grauviile ministry to ollije. With the Blouse itselt rests the final decision, but neither do I believe any Liberal statesman of high position would at this momeut taice oilic from Lord Granville. Be the merits of that nobleman what they may and they are many he is not the man whom the people of Fngland have resolved to have for their l'riuae Minister. Statesmen and politicians of all grades have lately learned a le-tson iu reaped to the supremacy of the popular will, aud they are not going to commit buicide to please the Cavendishes and Levison-Gowers, or all the Whig families that for the last tnirty years have played with tire and burnt their nugers. Mr. Gladstone and no other is to be Premier. The number of leading men defeated on bjth sides is extraordinary the Liberals sutl'ering thus far muoh more heavily than the Tories. Not less than a dozen very able aud promiueut men who were in the last House wilt not be in the next, or at any rate not when it opens. The numerical majority of the Liberals goes on increasing day by day, but they have to monrn the overthrow of at least six of their very foremost leaders, including four who ex pected seats in the next Cabinet as a matter of course. It looks as if the new constUueuoies liktd able men nojbetter than they liked radi cals. At any rate the new House will be a much weaker body of men than the old. To begin with the Tories, both the law offi cers of the Government have been beaten. The Attorney-General, Sir John Karslake, contested Exeter with Mr. Coleridge, who will probably hold the eame office in the coming Liberal administration. It was a close fight, and Sir John is defeated by only 99 in a total of 4543 votes, or indeed by only 28 votes less than his other Liberal opponent, Mr. Bjw ring. The Solicitor-General, Mr. Baggaliay, was beaten at Hereford by 32 votes, wntoh he carried at the last eleotion by 11. But the Government will have no particular need for law officers during the brief period of its ex istence. The other Tory lawyers fare no better than their official chiefs. Mr. E. K. Karslake, in Colchester, shares the fate of his brother. Mr. Garth, Mr. Uuddlestone, and Mr. Gitfard are all beaten. Outside ot the legal profession, the Tories lose the Earl of Dalkeith in Edinburghshire a Tory seat for generations who may not be a. man of great ability, but is son to the Dnke of Buocleuch. With him they lose Lord Claud Hamilton for Londonderry, who is also a Dnke's son, the Marquis of Aberoorn having lately been promoted to the higher grade. These two defeats to two dacal sons the Liberals regard with satisfaction as an equivalent for the disaster to the Marquis of llartington, bnt I suspeot they would be glai to surrender even a third seat conld they but win back North Lancashire and the lost pres tige of the Cavendishes. Perhaps Sir George Bowyer, just beaten for Duudalk, ought to be Set down as a Tory loss. He was nominally a Liberal, bnt one of the men who manifested their devotion to Liberal principles by voting Steadily to keep Disraeli in cilice. His fanati cal Roman Catholicism has given him more notoriety than his abilities alone wonld have earned for him. He was a kind of counter balance to Whalley, and it was a favorite joke in the House to get the two by the ears on some controversial topic. Returned formerly withont a contest, he id beaten now in a Libe ral constituency which, like Stroud and many another, will have nothing to do with people who dwell in Caves. Two Liberals ran against Lim; Sir George is lowest of the three. Of the Liberals who looked to olfioe, the latest and most conspicuous victim is the Mar quis of Hartington, who, in Palmerston's Gov ernment, was first a Lord of the Admiralty, then Under-Secretary for War, and finally, in the Russell Ministry, Seoretary for War, and member of the Cabinet. His contest for North Lancashire was a social and political oontestat once. There are two seats, there were two Tory candidates, and in the Liberal interest Loid llartington alone. The Tories were Cvlonel WUhqq Patten, Seoretary fob Ireland, and the Hon. F. A. 8tanley, youngest son of Lord Derby, whose estates and revenues in the connty are of princely extent. The Mir quia of Uartlogton is the eldest son of the great Duke of Devonshire, the head of the Cavendishes, as Lord Derby is the head of the Stanleys. It was a fair struggle between those two great houses, who alike lavished upon this contest all their hereditary influeuoe of land, social position, personal renowd, aud wealth. They say the profusion with whioh money was f-pent on both sides recalls the best days of bribery. Soores of thousands of pounds were laid out quite how they were laid out I sup pore those who know best will be least likely to tell. The triumph of the Stanleys was sig nal. Lord Hartington begau and ended at the bottom of the pell, and was beaten by more thsn 1200 majority. The figures were Stanley, Cfc84; Patten, 0733; Hartington, 6508. A detailed history of this contest would be a most instructive account of bribery, intimi dation, and violenoe. The defeats Marquis must be well remembered in New York. He is that youthful aristocrat who, duriug the war, illustrated his good breediug by entering a ball-room wearing a Confederate rosette iu his buttonhole. The incident will serve to remind you how small was the sympathy we got in those dajs from the great Wiig fami'ies of England, who were then begin ning to call themselves Liberal. Perhaps it is cruel to remember such a prank, of which I hoje his lordship has growu wise enough to be athamed. His ability is very considerable, and is the special form of adiuiuUtratlve ability such as i-T wanted iu the War Ollice Lord Hartington i " among the strongest men cf bis party. As he cannot be ppared from the Cabinet on account of his immense family itllu-Dce, if for no other reason a seat is sure to be found for him somewhere. In the centre of England the family are still strong enough f pite of two Reform acts to send four or five of the "sacred Cavendishes" to Par liament. Next to Lord llartington and in everything but rank his superior comes Mr. Miluer Gibson, one of the veteran leaders ot the Anti Corn Law League, and one of its most noted orators. He was then member for Manchester. When Peel went out iu 184li, Lord John Russell made Mr. Gilson Vice-President of the Board of Trade. He sat sixteen yean for Manchester, during ten of which he had John Bright for colleague, and they were rejected together by that constituency in 1857 for tha Same reason their opposition, to the Crimean war. Mr. Gio.-on theu fouLcl a seat at Ashton-under-I.yne, aud has held it till now, when lie iinds himself niot-t unexpectedly defeated by a Tory, a Mr. Mellor, by I'll votes. He was returned at the laet election without n crntest. The whole com lituonuy was then . it 007; on Wednesday there were 4ll(j votes actually cast, and this is one of the places where the Reform bill Brew- to hava dug deep enough to get at that Tory "residuum" which Mr. Bright dreaded, and the expecta tion of which was one of the arguments that Mr. Dirraeli employed in educating his party to adopt household suffrage. Following Mr. Gibnou's in importance is the defeat of Mr Bruce the Right Hon. Henry Austin for Mertbyr Tydvil. Mr. Bruce was Under-Secretary for the Home Department from 1SG2 to 18U4, aud has held other offices; is distinguished till more as an educational reformer. Iu tho new Miuistry he was ex peoted to be, perhap', at the head of his old department, or to take the new office of Minis ter for Education, when that ehall be esta blished. Local causes are sa'd to have de feated him, aud he stands actually last of the three candidates, all Liberals. The constitu ency is fo numerous aud important that the last Reform act gave it an additional member, so Mr. Bruce, who was returned before with out opposition, has the raortifica'ion of se-ing two men of his own party, neither of them eminent, preferred to himself. It was ex pected, when his defeat became kuowo, that one of the two Liberal candidates for the county of Glamorganshire would withdraw in his favor; but they both declined. But a seat will doubtless be found for him some where. The fourth defeated Ministerial expectant is Mr. Uortuian, one of the original AiullaiuUe-t, who has since made his peace with Mr. Glad Ftoi.e, and whose undoubted ability maiked him out for cilice. But he i-A away from Stroud, Lis old eeat, weeks before the election, and appeared In Falkirk to contest that borough with Mr. Merry, a Liberal, much better known on the turf than in the. House, where his voice is never heard. In Falkirk the nomination took place on Thursday, aud the Sherill' declared the show of hands so even that he could not decide between them, so both candidates demanded a poll. But at 3 o'clock of the same day Mr. Horsmau's heart failed him, and he withdrew from the contest. The truth is that though Mr. Gladstone has forgiven Mr. Horsman, his party have not. The most genuine professions of repentance do not always avail. Major Anson was an other of the maloontents who went into the Cave a man of note in his profession, and of some also in politics; a younger son of the Earl of Lichfield, aud one of the heroes of the Lucknow defense. He sat for LicLlield in Staffordshire, where the influence of his family is great. Of the two seats which that borough possessed, the reform act abolished one, aud the other goes to Colonel Dyott, a Tory apparently from lukewarmness on the part of the Liberals. Major Anson does not at all belong in a list of defeated office-holders in expectancy he crept into this paragraph as au Adullamite only. There remains Mr. Lawson, who was Irish Attorney-Ueneral under Lord Russell, and who represented in the last Parliament about the smallest of the ridiculously small boroughs that still oumber the ground. Port arliugton gives Mr. Lawson but 51 votes; his successful Tory competitor, Mr. Darner, L:n 08. It seeds no propbetio gift to predict that Portarllngton will come to grief in the very next Reform act an act sure to be passed in lbU9, for several purposes. Mr. Bernal Onboine's defeat must be reckoned among the Liberal disaiuers, although he stood for Nottingham rather as an inde pendent than a party candidate. Of his genu ine liberalism, and even radicalism, on aoun great questions there can be no doubt. II-), too, is one of the men whose defeat sensibly diminishes the intellectual strength of the new House. It is the fashion to talk of Bernal Os borne as only a jester. His wit, and still more his fun and hearty Joviality of humor, are undeniable, but there are very solid quali ties underneath. Everybody orowded to hear Lis speeohes, and read them next morning in the papers. He oould supply all the good things there are in Punch weekly without feeling the lose which is not saying muoh. What beaten candidate ever made a ppeech of such overflowing pood-hnmor and hilarity as Mr. Osborne's at Nottingham f He described air Robert Clinton as the real workingmen's can didate, and of the successful Tory, Colonel Wright, Mr. Osborne said: "I don't kuow that if he had other principles yon could have a better man." And be went en: "I don't like bin principles, bat be has avne thlng about Dim tUal i do like I like Hie wife. (Koara of lauitbter, amid wbloH tue aoeaker tmok randa with Mrs. Wright.) From the mo uifritwben I saw two of tue handsoineitt, two of ti e besi, two of tbe moat wtnnlnif women In Ureal llrliatn enter luto ttiia oou et. In the shape of Lady CUllon euee)aud airs. Wrlgut, I wrote lo my wife and said, 'tl. li all U. V. with me.' (Great Imigtilor.) Gonllmnea, we tis-tr sonnet I'ltm of bribery rU election. I aocum you. Mm. WrlKlit, of bttvirK won people oy the wnchery of your smile; I annne yon, fi'idy C Ullon. of linvirg mmie your liusoaud wtiat be is by your winning WBys and your charitable band. (ApplRiise.) Tbniiicti beaten I nn not dirfimct d; I Imve been defeated by two women, wbom I could not Hud me equals of. (tieueived appiautie.)" i There is more in the same unequalled man ner, and then, while admitting his dafeat could not have been averted, Mr. Osborne read a lecture to the electors of Nottingham on bribery, which his audienoe hailed with criea of "That's true," bnt which the local press, for some reason, does not venture to report. He was offered in the morning 50 votes for 60 shillings, and again, half an hour before the polls closed, 2C0 votes of men wht had stood out for a sovereign apiece. Probably Mr. Osborne was not expected to take office with the new administration, though his ability and long service entitle him to a place if he wanted it. But the House Itself will hardly be oontent that he f-bonld not be one of its members, lie Las been in Parliament ever since 1811, and I bore may go back for some constituency whhh Las better taste than Nottingham. I jJ Mr. Lowe ia returned for Loudon Univer sity without a content, and thereupon hai de livered an address which I wl.th I bai tiun to di.icui-p, but must pa-s without a word. Ue is thus far the Ohf Adullamite who Las wonau unchallenged success, and, like all the others who Lave not been beaten outright unless Bouverie be an exception saved his seat by renouncing his pcditioal heresies at any rate, by abandoning his policy of insubordination. I thiiA 1 have dealt with the I ave pretty fully in former letters, but in addition to re ciiFants therein mentioned, Sir E. Watkinhas been be a' en at Stutkfort, and Mr. Marsh re tired from Salibbury without a contest. Mr. Lsing, like Mr. Wa'kin, attempted a secoud movement on Mr. Gladstone's Hank in the Irish Church struggle. He sat last session for the Wi. k District, in Scotland, without a contest. Now he Las one Liberal and one Tory against him, and his fortunes are believed to be desperate. The. defeat of the Tories is nowhere more signal than among the ultra-l'rotestaut con stituencies of Ireland. The headquarters of Protestant ascendancy, the chosen home of Orangeitm, rejects the Btlf-styled champions Of tbe Protestant cause. Ulster is liberal. Its capital, Belfast, defeats both Ministerial can didates, sending Mr. Johnsouof Ballykilbeg, a Tory who goes for disestablishment, aud Mr. McClure, who is a Liberal. Londonderry was a town not less etrongly Tory and Orange to the backbone, but Londonderry is the tcene of I. old Claud Hamilton's defeat, and super sedes the son of the Lord Lientenaut by a radical Liberal. Newry aud Carricklergus, both in Ulster, and both Tory at the last eleo tion, return Liberal members to the next Houe. Elrtwhere in Ireland the popular verdict is the eame. Galway returns two Liberals, a gain of one; the city of Cork of course re-elected Mr. Maguire and his colleague Mr. Murpby, whose loyalty to the Liberal party was never ques tioned. Of the members thus far chosen throughout the icland, which awaits its eman cipation from ecclesiastical rule, 38 are Liberal and 12 Tory. Official in II Hence, landlord in timidation, and the violence which iu too many cafes has been employed without stint or concealment, have not all together suffi ted to secure one-third of the Irish seats for the Tories. The Protestant minority of Irelaud will give but email help to Mr. Disraeli iu re fibting the overthrow of the Protestant Chuioh monopoly. In Scotland, the most intensely Protestaut of countries, indifference to the danger of its cberif bed creed teeius still more stolid. Tae Scotch burghs are unanimous, their members Liberal to a man, and of tbe counties there are but four where family influence or politi cal tradition has proved stroug enough to secure the choice of a Tory. Dumbartonshire, Invernersehire, Wigtonshire, aud one other, which at the moment I forget, hang out their flags as Tory strongholds. Agaiust this for lorn Lope of political bigotry the Liberals marshal a phalanx of 36 members, and there are reinforcements yet to come. The counties have thus far done better for the Liberals than the Liberals themselves ex pected North Lancashire being their only gieat disaster. They return so generally mere local landowners that county ooutests have not much more than a numerical in terest outside their own limits. Huntingdon shire reelects without a contest Lord Robert Montague, whose envy of Aruerioa is so great that in a speech last session he annexed Buffalo to Canada, and then doubled his blunder by Bending a Biitish consul there after he had made it a colonial town. North Leicestershire sends Lord John Manners, whose nnhappy couplet about arts and learn ing, and the old nobility, ought to be in Bart lett's "Familiar Quotations," but is not. Lord John has vindicated the greatness of the old nobility by keeping a board fence for a year and a half about Hyde Park, to punish the Reformers for having upset the old railings. In East Surrey there was a contest of some interest to Americans. Mr. Charles Buxton, son of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, was bitterly assailed, as Mr. Mill had been, for his share in the prosecution of the Jamaica murderer, Eyre. The Tories, in fact, made a dead set on the district, but they were handsomely beaten, Mr. Buxton having about 400 majority over his highest opponent three times as much as he had at the last election. He might be more radical than he is, consider ing his name; nor need the Tories owe him any special grudge on acoount of the Eyre businees, for he withdrew, I am sorry to say, from tbe Jamaica Committee when they decided to indict Eyre for murder. Mr. Buxton is an able legislator, with a clear head, aud students of English politics will find in Lis book, "Ideal of the Day," a better collection of ourrent arguments on controverted points thau exists in any other shape bo convenient aud compact. His father, the baronet, was beaten at Kings Lynn, for which he sat jointly with Lord Stanley, and I suppose will not go bauk to the HouEe. BLANK BOOKS. QLANK BOOKS. WILLIAM M. CHRISTY, lilank Book Muuufucturcr, Stationer and l'rlntcr, No. 127 South THIRD Street. LEDGERS, DAY BOOKS, CASH BOOK3, ETC., ON HAND OR MADE TO ORDER. A large assortment of Foreign and Domestic Stationery constantly on band. rubluber of SMITH'S CALCULATIONS OF IB 12 PROOF OP LIQUOUS. (12 liuth tl33lrp INSURANCE COMPANIES. OFFICE OF THE DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE COMPANY. PHILADELrm A, November II, 1S6S. , Tbe following statement of the aSalra of the Com Pdj laioblisbedla conformity with provision of IU Cnarter: PREMIUMS RECEIVED From November 1, 1WT7, to Ootooer 81. 1R(W. On Marine and Inland Klnka ..W0. I ifl 71 On Fire Klbks. .... 14.V2U5U8 IU 18,711 0 Prmiumx on Pollctes not marked off Nov. l,lt7 406 815 71 l,8.i5,W6l PREMIUM8 M RKED OFF An Mrntil from xsov. 1. ls7, to OjI. !U. 188S. On Marine and Iuland Rinks 7IH.H.5 77 On Fire ltUUs . Iis.;u7 li . til.l)iU49 Interest dnrlng the same period Sal Vhkce, eto.......... K)7 1!H82 LOSSES, EXPENSES, ETC., 1'uua'ta 31 Duiliig I ue J cur an auove. !rlij) aim itiiaud XSuvIku- tiou I.OHft-N 9121.052 7 Flr IxiHHtK Vi IK") 87 heintu l'rcrniuuii . Ml Ml 02 ltclturtihuM 30.10(161 AKmcy (JiiHruea. Adverda- fug, Priming, He u 60,588 C3 Tait-H Uol'ed Biwkh, tswtte and M nnloipal TitxeB 41.Wj 89 Expenses !l tMi 05 J710.8J37 31 ASSETS OF TUE COJIPAIW November 1, 1808. U. B. 6 per cent. Loan, 10 40. $208 500-00 U. B. per cuut. L.mu, issl... 1M BOO 00 U. B- 0 per cm I. Loan (lur 1'acltto Kallruud) 60,000 00 Blatuul l'tuu 1 vim la 0 ptr cent. Lonn 211,375 00 t'liy ol flillaUulpIilu tl pur cent, XiOau (exempt fiuux lax) 128,501 CO Stale of Mew Jersey t) pur cent. Lioan 61.500 00 I'mubjivanla Ilaiirouil Int MorlKiiue U per crnl. VoliiU 20.200 Oil MormatjeBperceut.. Honda 21,000 00 W'csifin Piuu'a Kiiiiruiid Mortgage 6 per rent. Bond (I'tnn'a lUlhoud fcuur- sutfc) 29,025-00 SI Hie nl Xeiincsee 5 per cent. Loan 21,000 00 S'uie ol l'tnneMte ti per ctuU L.mu 5,031-23 Oei niHUlown Uhi (Jotupt.ny; principal and in eietii icuar. HLiut-d by uieCliy ol i'Ul- lailelphla, 3i0 amire m. clc 15,000 00 l'tnn.j Ivuula lUllioHd Com. puny, 2110 aiiai t e Mock 11,303 00 .Nurtn IVuuuy lvanl Kull- roitd Corupuuy, loo aUarce flock 8.300 00 FhllHUtlpliln aud WoulUc-ia Mall SleauiHlilp Company, 8U t-harea B'ock 15,000 00 I.oi H on Bond nud Mort- gaxe, nist liens on Cuy I'ropmies 207,000'00 J2f0,0('0 ji'U.tHH) 60.000 200.000 125,000 60.000 20,000 25.0C0 25,000 30.0C0 7.0C0 15,000 10.0CO 5.000 20.000 H 2C7.9C0 $J ,119,00 Tar Mnrket value, Sl.liW.3ii 23 Cost, $l,0U3.li01'2U. Renl Esiaie 36.000 00 Bllla KeuelvaOle lur iuuur- enceatuude 322.1S8 01 Balances due at Agt-uciea I'reniiunibuu M.iiiuu foil' cus, Accrued luieiext.uiJit oilier tieota due the Com pany 40,178-88 Stock and bcilp ot Wunuiy CorpiirattcDH, t3loti. Im Il lumed value 1,81300 tatti iu Rtiik SHU 160 i 8 Caen in Drawer 414 05 . . 116,563 73 S1.U47.SH7K0 PATENTED PINTS SCOURED i ND klKKTCIIKU from 1 to I looLna, t HnUh .Frencn Him ljUg nd Bponnnc, Ho. M lHX Bit a&4 Ho. m AACJC tMf etl. f M IP PBri.ADFLPniA, November U, 18)8. Tbe Boa'd ot MreoUum liave l Ida duy declared a CASH DlVJDKND ol TEN PKU UHXT OQ the CAPITAL BIOCK.and H1X PKllCHiNT. Imortalon the BCltlP of tbe Cuuipauy, payable oo and after tbe lat December pioxlmo, lree of JN'atloual and biale Taxes. Tbeybavn a so dec;arrd a BCBIP DIVIDEND of THIRTY PEK CEN'l.oa tlie EAHNEO I'KEM IDAld for tbe year euuli.g Ouiouer 81, low, ceriliiuates or wblcb will be msued lo tbe parlies entitled to tbe same, on and after tbe 1st December proximo, free of National Ld (Stale Taxes. Tbey bave ordered, aUo, tbat tbe HCBIP CEKTIFI. CATKS OF Pi.OFlTdot tbe Company, for tbe year ending October 81. lbt4, be redeemed In CASH, at tbe Olbce of tbe Company, on and after 1st December proximo, all lmeieai ibereon to cease on tbat date. JM By a provision ol tbe Cbarter, all C'ertillcaies of fecrlp noi presented for redemption wilbln Ave years after public uotice tbat tbey will be redeemed, suad be forfeited arid cancelled cm the Mookt of Ue Oumpany, MfJTA'o certificate of profits Unied under iii. My (A Act of JncorporalUm, ' no certiicule thatl ittue un ett cluitntd within two year after live .declaration of the dividend ulwreof it U evidence," TboruasC. Band. ..... . , Jauiea C. iiand, 'llieoplllus t auidlttf, Jubepb H. btl, Bu(jU ti.a tc, JuLu is. Peurose, Jacob t. Joues, J an.cn liaquair, Euwa d DaiuuKton, ii. Jones torooae. Jm. ti. Metalloid, Kuwtra Lu uriuue, Jotbua X, jLjre. Ji.Uii.und A. Souder. eaiuuei E. blokes, lleuijr bioau, W lillaiu U l.udw!g, ueoiiceU helper , Heuiy U Dai.eu, Jr., Jobo 1. iayior. UeiTKe vV. Ut-ruardou, William fat iiouilou, Jacob itlrifel, bpeucer M'livaln. Jobu ii. beuipiu. .Pitta., A. B. JJeiaer, do 11. '1'. .Mur.ti. Hi. THOMAb ii. WANir JuHft C. DAVl-s, Vlce-Piesldeut. HENRV IYLbUKN.btoieiaiy. llEJXitY BaLU Assuiaut becretary. 11121m 129"-CHA11TEK PE11PETUAL. rranlilln Tire-Insurance Co. vtT A-AlAAAAtAAAA-AAa OFFICE! Aos. 435 and 43? UlESA'UT STHE12T, At:-r on jam uah r i, lsesi CAPITAL. . .. aAtfOtOOtt'OO AA.HU.Ji 6UJWLVH l.inH H BttBJtTTUU W.A.1MI. US CO at E iOU Jdj au.euu-aa aau.ootfue. aii hincb is:! tvxai fe 600,000. Pcrpetnal and 'irempoiary Poucie on Laberal Terms DIKEC10K8. f barles N. Banoket, Ueo.ge Fain. Tobias Yi iuer , bauioel (-.rani, btor, W iticbardA. CUA KLKH V riicui , Lvwin, M.D 'I bomaa bparas, William o. urant. ilAMUAit. frelrtonl. UAUnv is lAii&a, viovrreaiuent. JAB. W. Ill cA 1.1.1b I'KK, beoieiarr pro leui. Eicepl at Lejtlutl .n, Eeduoay, ibJa Company has no Antuum West of Pumduik. VH TaSUBANGJS C011PAMY NORTE AMER10A, No. 232 WALNUT BTKKKT, PUILADA. IJSUOKl'UKATED ITVi. CllAKIEtt I'Ktti'KTUAl Alarlue, liiluud, aud Jllro liuurauve, ABBKTB JANDARY 1, 1868, - 2,001.2d6-7a 10,000,000 LoHoes Paid In Cash blnoa it Organisation. SIB1H.TOBA Artbnr G. Coffln, Uwirga L. HarrisoB. bamuol W. Jouea, ( barlea 'lay lor, Ambrvse Wbilo, WillUm Wefeb, Hrliard D Wood, H. Morris Wain, John Maann. Citable Piatt Hecretary. WILLIAM miKBl.KK. Harrmburf, Pa-, Centra At iil ot Ujktal of pttjinaylvaui. I)b4 Francis R Cone. K ward II. Trotter, Kdwaid b. tiara e, T. Cliarliun Hour, A'fred I) Ifwsup, John P. While, ZmuIs a Madeira. INSURANCE COMPAQ PHCEMX lNr?UlAClfi CO. J?Hli.ADELlllA. i lliCUHruaA'lXU iKiM-CHARTKR P o. xti W AL al biiett, uppoaue m llils Company lusurts iruut iOaa of da on liberal terms, on bolluiLx, mvrobantf eic, lor limped peiuda, aad periuauei. Ii ss by depmlt 01 priiuuiS. $ '1 be C mpauy has been iu acllveooere than HXl V l KAHa, during wuion a. been piomplly aejuaied and nal I, i uiaav . v , John I. TlOdK, Ad tl. Man. iy, Jobli '1, Lewis, W 11 lam b. Uiant, Hubert W. Learning, li. uiaik Wbaiiuu. Lautei.ee Lewis, Jr. Lavid Lwl(j Ba Jauiiu l-.i TuOlUM M . f A. it. McHi AVdo. o d Oa ba.uuvl Alio. l- tl. Noi John k. w DciiEuaat Bail car. WlLtoX. ntcreiaiy. ,1 FINE IMiL'RAM'E EaCLUeW i 1-iNPIi.VillA Fll. -. iltolf 1-A K lui'i i pKiaivO JBio-CbaiU!r 5IU VvALutl eu.tl,i-.i.i,e luuepeu' 'lb in vouit any, fav. lab.y known to in Air over lony )mn, o .111I111.W. 10 Insure or damage by Ore 011 P.. bdo o' I'riTi1 ntlier peru ai,nuy or f. r a I'm I d Hl Fui nHiire blocks ol UH.tla, and Merer raliy. Ou lll eiai lru s, . lliilriai bal.toKeUi.rwi'ba Urae IS luve..lec In ihe moil CMeim maiu.er, ti 1 m 10 oiler 10 tbe uuuieu au undoubi tbe case 01 lot 1 , DIE .! . f Daniel bunth, Jr., . J ha fK-vf Al. xaiiUe.- rii soD, lli .j.aj 1kau iiaxl. buiat. - Jl-niy .r TUi.maxltou.il". I J.uiuiDai liANIl I. .i I1 ir 1.' 3 STRICTLY MU FRCVIECNT LIFE AKD TH OF rhlLAllt.Li'HlA. OFFICE, No. Ill M. FillHi'U lrulK.d lu iiiomoie bUiA 41.111 uitmoera 01 tbe M-uiJrrY of rui end flnmt rinks nl anv clbun auuvoieii. 1-ul.tles laauuk uuo- appioveu p ans, a! TaieA. , PrilrJent, eiuril. 14. ellPr.1CV VlCa-Presldeut, W'tuilll C. LiDMa1 ACUM.y. HlVVl,.! Tbe adTantftgea bOeitd b tbls Uuiul excelled J LOS DON. r.STAm.IMlF.D ISO.t. Pald.cp Capital aud Accnmalatod 00,0 0 0,0 0 0 IN G 11 4 8m. Bo. 107 fciurb TblBD St WATCHES, JEWELRY, jE.vm LADOMUS & CO f DIAMOXD DEALERS & JTSWE) wvrnies, jk.wfi.uv abii.vkii waii .WATCHES and JEWELEY EEPAI J02 Chontnnt St., PhlUJ Watches, U4p Solid Silver & Plated ESTABLISHED 18 wATClIEf, JH.wn.Lhy. CLOCKS. B.LVR WABK. an FANC Ci TV 77 TTQ.QWT. T. No. 22 KOKTli SIXTH ST . B2b PIIILADI STEAMBOAT LINES PnjTT-N PUILADlCLPUIA AS1 sWarJHmja ti u bleamooai Liue. Tub; Lo-W 1A rOBUtoT leavea AHCll aireet 1 Treuion, stopping at Tacony, lorreedall BurllUKlOU. Brlauil. Fluri.nu R.l. 1 ItllA L. 1 1 I 1 1 TV Ul.. 11 111. Leave Aicb btreet Wbarl Leavea boatb baiurday, A, to. 6, doi 't go -.aturday JJ c. Monday, 7, 7 A.... Moudav, " lueanay, " 8, 8 A M I'ueaday, " WeU'day, , U A.J1 Wea day, 1 tiursaay, " lu. U AM i buisday, " FrluaV. " 11. lu A M Prlilav. Fare to Trenton, 40 cents eacb way; lui IJiautsa, au ceuw. rjrrCTlK OPPOSITIOH TO TB 3 KAIl.RO A I) A i i bieamer JOMJN BYLVK-TKR Will nl excoislons to WilmliiKion (buudays except lna at LbeaLer and Mur-niia Hunk. 1u.uk Bueet w lia f at 9 15 A. M end -ao P. 1l i wimiliif..,! at 7 A. M. and 12 80 P. J Light freight taken. .met . Ia W. . rAKZLb FOKKEW YOHK-SWI SWOTS-!' hiMia Tr" " "-- .n Company 1 a u Bwiiioure Lines, via Delaware anf Canal, oo aud after foe 15lb of March, leavli 12 At. and a P. M connecting with all Hon K astern lines, For irelifbt, which will be takenTTfl aocorf terms, apply W WILLI A H M, HAIKU. J U WO. lSi 8. DJCLAWA&E j MEDICAL. I Me i N E U R A. L G Warranted rcrniancntlj Cure Warranted reruiuiieutly Cur Withont Injury to the Systec Witltout Iodide, l'otassia, or Go! liy Ubiiig Junardly Only j DR. FITLER'j GKEAT RHEUMATIC BEI For Rheumatism and Neuralgia in all i fbeonly statddrd, reliable, positive, Infaf m auen t cure ever dlacoveroiL It Is warrant tain nothing hurtful or Injurious to ibe sysl WARBANTKDlO00XEOKOKY Bull WA RBANTKD 'I O C'l'Rh. OK WOXKT Ha.j Tbousandx ol Philadelphia retoreuces of ai pared at Ko. 29 SOUTH FOURTH STRI 822stuihtl BELOW Ml CARPETINUS. J T. DELAOnC IUrORTER AND DKALKB 1M CARPETIN Mattings, OU CioUis, Kugs, Et Wholqsalo and Rci WAKKUOUeS, No. 37 South SECOND 1 13 stulbaniGp Above Chesnat, PhJlxd