SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. IDITOHIAL OriMORS Of TUB LRADI50 JuPRSALri VFVR CCBBBWT TOPIC" COMPILED VKBT DAT FOB TH 8 KVBNINQ TELKQRaPB. Ci J ptolo k J ofti.e Capitol. Vow Ae A. i'. jyiOune. The Congress oijul euiluiH, it la wll known, has been the frare oi many l-iilliant reputa tions, and must lu uiLtlj hauuted by the ghosts of thousand if j.litto1iiiis, and of tens of tb.on-.an4B if otli !-se..-keM who vet wearllj glide through hall and chamber and vestibule, presenting eighties petitions, aud iuaudibly appealing to invisible couiuiiUs. It baa not, however, bu generally known that Jar below the busy aud bustling scene was a tenantleBB tomb, with a lonesome guardian, who for forty years, by the liht of a solitary gas burner, has vigilantly kept ward over nothing at all, and saved from deseoratiou the awiul emptiness of that expectant vault. This receptable was intended for the bones of the Illustrious Washington, but as they were never brought to It from the family sepulchre at Mount Vernon, we can easily understand how immeasurable must have been the national re.'pect for that mighty memory, since we have paid such honors to a plaoe in whih the Father of his Country, to speak with potential accu racy, might, could, would, or should have been buried. Unfortunately, this method of keeping np a posthumous dignity never came to the ears of our own City Fathers, for If it bad but dote so, we should have had in this metropolis at least six Tombs of Washington, with the most ponderous and expensive mar ble jaws, and with six faithful Democrats maintaining a Blumberless vigil over six imaginary sets of bones. Every year the salaries of these loyal sacristans might have been raised. Every year there might have been fresh appropriations for keeping in good repair these mysterious Bhrines. Alas! It be oomes more and more evident to us, great as we think ourselves in that branch of human knowledge, that we have not yet mastered the elements ef offioe-hol iing, and have but a leeble conception of the inoomputable re sources of jobbery 1 If we aesume that, the keeper of the Wash ington crypt has but done his daty, how re markable his life ! His business could ouly have been to keep some evil-disposed body from getting itself surreptitiously buried in this privileged restiDg-place. lie may, at stated hours, have emerged, de profundi, for the purpose of getting his dinner or drawing his salary; but after any prolonged abandon ment of his post, he might have come back to find an intrusive cadavre ensconced there by forcible entry and detainer, and not to be ejeoted by aot of Congress. Then we should have had the Hon. Mr. Smith rising to a privi leged question, and asking his friend, the honorable Chairman of the Committee on Public Buildings, if he knew anything of the wretch who had got hi die elf buried in the orypt. Then a bill would have been brought in for the immediate exhumation of the intruder. Upon this there would, of course, have been a latitudinoas and a longitudinous debate. Honorable gentlemen would have taken differ ent views of the matter, some of them think ing all resurreutionizing to be unconstitutional, Borne of them calling for the opinion of the Supreme Court, some of them proposing a board of commissioners to superintend the removal, and some of them embracing the op portunity to make speeches upon the tariff and the cnrrency. We are satisfied, if any body had thus got into the crypt, that it would nave taken not less than live years of legisla tion to get it out, to say nothing of the faot taat after such a desecration it would have been impossible, by the liveliest stretch of fanoy, to suppose the genuine and original Washington to be slumbering in the place pre pared for him. The charming fiction would nave faded into prosaic commonplace. The irreverent would have had their jokes; the uraagnnaa would nave howled their eoononit oal protests in either house; the crypt would have been made a coal-hole, or a store-room for publio documents; and the venerable keeper of the crypt, his occupation eone, might have crawled into his old quarters for the last time, and there have expired, with his bead pillowed upon a bundle of General But ler's speeches. ' Whether with or without a foresight of this lamentable consummation, the Ueneral, we , observe, has moved to abolish the solitary in , the cellar. After his forty years of watching, after hla waiting all that time for the arrival of the remains, until his heart has grown sick with hope deferred, we are to discard this ex- , emplary omoer, in whom ' appears The constant service of the antique world." This will never do. We must not thus con firm the adage which declares that republics are ungrateful. We propose the immediate erection in Washington of tombs for every ' President we have ever had. with a particu larly large and handsome one for Mr. Johnson a tomb in which he can stand erect (under ordinary circumstances) and make a speeoh whenever, as Mrs. Gamp says, he is "so dis posed. " And when all these places are ready, let them be confided to the keeping of the old gentleman in the basement, with the promise of a beautiful mausoleum for himself, if he should ever need it 1 Tlie Cohesive Power ol Public riuiiJer." From the N. T. Heru'.a. "The principles of the party, sir," said Randolph of Roanoke, in days long by, "the vrinoiplea of the party are seven the five loaves and the two nshes." "The party of the administration," said Calhoun, on a later occasion. "I am warned, is a cohesive party, So it is, Mr. President; for it is held together by the cohesive power of the publio plunder. . This is the bond of all political parties, and never has the truth of Randolph's pungent remark or Calhonu s been bo forcibly illus trated as in the cohesive character of the party now in power; for never has the publio plunder been so enormous, so lavishly used . or so strong in binding diverse factions, cliques ana rings as in the common cause of the spoils. It is only the old story from Holy Writ that -wuere tue carcass is there will the vultures - be catuertd tocether " Randolph's remark of the seven principles, it we are not mutagen, was applied to the administration of John Quincy Adams, the total expenditures or which civil, Judicial, diplomatic, army, and navy were about thirteen millions a year. Calhoun's anhnriam was applied to the Democratic party, under Van Buren, when all the regular disburse ments of the Government and piokiuea an.l 1 t&lintra nut tocether did not much ex.itwd . thirtv-rlve millions a year; and yet the financial disasters, with the official corruptions and spoliations of Van Daren's administration. 1 Tesnlted In the overwhelming Democratic de feat of 1840: for the "cohesive power of the publio plunder" among the Democratic politi ' clans produoed a general revolt among the people. But what a bagatelle was the sum of the Government expenses of thirty-five or forty millions a year, with no natioual debt and no direct national taxes, UHier Van THE DAIln c-VENINO TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 18G9. Bnred, compared with our present magnlfloent figures of national expenses and stealings of I lonr or five hundred millions a year, with our national debt of twenty-five hundred millions and our direct national taxes of two or three hundred millions I A suggestive oontrast this to the tax-payers of the United States. What a mine ! What abounding plaoers of greenbacks, gold and diamonds, silks, satins, and laces, fine houses, fast women, and fast horses are here for the Treasury rings of manipulators and gamblers in gold, bonds, and Blocks; for the whisky rings, railroad rings, custom house plundering rings, Indian Itureau ring?, and for all the holy alliance of last men and fast women, of law-makers, lftw-breakers, contractors, and lobby-jobbers I llnudreds of millions of money are still in tbete rich placers for the spoilsmen, though hundreds of millions have been taken out aud dividtd among the confederate Treasury rob bers. Here we meet the beast with seven beads and ten horns face to face. Here are the labors of Hercules awaiting the President elect. Here is Bunyan's picture of Christian and Apoll.Ton. Here lies the diflioulty at the threshold between General Grant and the Senate on. the Tenure-ef Office law in any shape you please. But there is no tear that he will lly off at a tangent from the Republi can (Chicago) platform; no fear that he will try the game of Captain Tyler against the financial bills of Congress, or the "policy" of Andy Johnson against the reconstruction laws or negro suffrage. There is no fear that if relieved from the restrictions of the Tenure-of-Office law he will turn honest men out of office in order to put rogues in their places. Nor do we suppoEe that General Blair himself, though he sticks to it, really entertains the absurd tomfoolery that our greatest danger is that General Grant will establish a protec torate or an empire ou the ruins of the repub lic by following the example of Cromwell, or that of Napoleon the First or INapoleon the Third. No tuch fears or doubts as these are enter tained among the radical managers of the Senate. But still they are afraid of General Grant. They are afraid that he really means retrenchment and reform; that he will not un derstand that all such notions are claptrap and humbugs, and are thrown out only as the tub to amuse the whale. And so they intend to hold his removals from office subject to the consent of the Senate. Otherwise, if he were restored to the Executive status of Lincoln he might reduce in a few months scores of thiev ing radical omce-holdHrs, with the hundreds of their outside friends and col federates, to bankruptcy, in breaking up their specula tions. We dare say, for instance, that au in telligent and honest Secretary of the Treasury of Grant's own way of thinking, and free to act, could in six months briug gold down as low, perhaps, as fltteen per cent, premium, and thus save millions upon millions, hun dreds of millions, to the Treasury of the peo ple, by Bimply breaking up the lreasury manipulators and pet brnkeis aud gold gam blers of Wall Etreet. But now many faena tors, with their cousins, ana nephews, and favorites, and sharers of the spoils, would be among the losers r Who can tell r Here, then, the continuance oi the lennre- of-Ollke law has a praoU al meaning: for it may serve to restrain even an nonest secre tary of the Treasury in the use ot the guillo tine, for fear of a rnnipns with the senate But, again, iook at tne wuisxy rings me dealers in contraband whisky. They have a lobby fund far exceeding the capital of the old United States Bank, which turned the country upside down in its death struggle with Gene ral Jackson, a uou, iaiiiiiai, ana ieariess Internal Revenue Commissioner, in General Grant's way of doing business, within a few weeks In overhauling his revenue subordi nates might astonish the country with his uu- ii .- i i Li .i - ii'. : 1 - i : earimsg oi lawless wuiskjt cmoiaia, wiiioay stills, and whisky dealers, But under tne Tenure-of-Office law the President must sub mit bis removals to the Senate, and if Senator John Doe or Richard Roe has a friend thus in danger ha may say to other Senators, "Save my man and I will assist in saving yours;" for has not this plan of operations become a common practice under Andy Johnson in con tinuations and rejections? Is the Senate honest f k Collector Smy the. What, then, can General Grant do under this Tenure-of-Offlce law? Let him do his duty and turn out the rogues wherever he ' . . . . m - 4 . 11. . finds them, submitting nis reasons 10 me Senate, and let the responsible majority of that body play him laise n they aare. xne country will sustain him; the people expeot him to do ms auty, no matter wnere the blow may fall. We are satisfied, too, that he will meet the work before him without flinching, and that herein lie the doubts, fears, and misgivings that shake the faith of the radical camp. General Grant aud the OlUce-Seekers. From the N, T. 2'mt. The scramble for office has begun. Aspi rants are bestirring themselves. Applications for place are in brisk circulation for signa tures. Members of Congress are importuned for their "iniluence," but they are themselves as yet too fearful that they won't have any, to be very active or very profuse even in promises. But the political liive is in com motion, and 1b likely to be kept bo for some little time to come. ' One of the first things General Grant will have to eettle as President, will be whether members of Congress are to make the appoint ments to office lor their respective districts, or nut for this is really what is claimed on their behalf. In form, of course, their claim does not take this shape; they only demand the rieht to recommend but they also de mand that their recommendations shall be accepted as decisive. They hold, in faot if not in form, that it is their right to designate the national officeholders for their districts; that a President or head of department has no right to look elsewhere for advice touching his appointees; and that it is a personal slight, as well us a political wrong, for him to do so. We do not iu the least exaggerate the nature of the claims put forward by members of Con gress in this respect. We know of individual cases in which they have been thus pressed, in which members have thus claimed the right of designating appointments, as belong ing to their positions iu Congress and in the party, and in which they have made the refusal to allow tbem Xo do so ground of political and personal quarrel with the offend ing magnate. That this claim will be made upon General Giant with combined and impetuous vigor we do not doubt. Will it be conceded t It would not be strange if it should. It is an easy way of etcaiing infinite trouble, averting a great deal ot harassing animosity, and satisfying those bustling people who call and probably think themselves the parti. Most Presidents practically have conceded the claim, and have thought themselves happy if allowed tochoose here and there a man for office one in a hun dred or even a thousand to suit themselves. And in this way thev have aeonred for them- selveB what little peaoe and power they have been permitted to enjoy. Will General Grant follow their example ? Will he be content to walk thus in the broad path of safe precedent, nd hand over the most Important of his powers and the most responsible of his duties, In order to rid himself of its perplexities, to the hands of others? If he does he may seoure "peace" for himself, if not for the oountry. If he does not, he may prepare for a fight hotter and more embittered than any he has yet encountered. The power or thus making Kxeoutive ap pointments has come to be altogether the most important of the funotions of the average Congressman. It makes him a great creature with his constituents. It makes him the great local Mogul of his party, the dispenser of pnuuo pap to its Hungry hangers-on. it makes him at once, within his district, the great being who can reward his friends and punish his enemies; and this, with party poli ticians, is the nearest approach to omnipo tence their Imaginations can conceive. Bat they do not always content themselves with these shadowy glories that thus attend upou the power they claim; it has for many a much more direct and tangible value. It is capable of being coined into cash. offioaa are sought throughout the world, including the United Mates, because they are worth some thing, because they bring) in revenue sala ries, perquisites, tickings, "ohanoes;" and for all these solid and substantial things he muat be a very base-minded office-seeker who is not willing to pay. There are members of Congress who put a cash value on the places they prooure for their friends, and who demand its payment in acknowledgment of their pervices for thus procuring them. If General Graut or anybody else supposes that a power of this sort at once so pleasing and so proli table is to be surrendered without a struggle, he mistakes the practical, pushing, and pertinacious character of the American Congressman. Next coines the claim of papers letters of reuommendation signed by thousands of active and inlluential members of "the party" to be deemed conclusive in matters ot appoint ment. All the departments at Washington, all the custom-houseR, post-offices, and other public buildings of the land are crammed full of them. The enterprising applicant usually draws his letter np himself, has it legibly copied, and hires as many persons as he cau afford to carry it around for signatures. It usually asserts that "we the undersigned" have personally known the applicant for the last live, ten, or htty years are intimately acquainted with his life, habits, character, and devotion to the interests of the party, etc. etc., and hearing that he is spoken of as a candidate for such an office, respectfully but urgently request that he may be appointed. The chances are tea t one that not one in ten of those who are avked to sign this letter ever eaw or heard ol ihe applicant, or even knew before that there was such a perssn in existence; yet every one is expected to sign it as a matter ot course, au t as a general thing they do. 1 hey have not the independence to refuse nor the time to explain, and the favor is but a small one, such papers having no weight; so their names go on au.l the thing is ended. This is the way m which such letters of recommendation are usually procured They eay but little, and that little is usually false. 11 does not need much relleotion to show that, as proof of fitness lor office, they are absolutely worthless. Yet appointments are constantly made on the strength of them, and the appointing poiver uses them to excuse what may prove to be a vtiy bad appoiutment on his part. The weakness of the whole thinx is appa rent, and it ought not to bs diiilunit to uproot a practice that has so little to recommend it. Yet it is veri; difficult. A great deal is said to excuse it. It is said to be the only way In which the merits of the application aud the wishes of the party can be made known to the appointing power, who naturally must feel grateful for information which he needs so much. What this mode of making appointments has done for our civil service, we know to our cost. Whether it can be reformed aud im proved we are yet to learn. It is quite oer- tain that the attempt to change it, in any essential respect, will be fiercely and strenu ously resisted by the combined interests which thrive and trolH by It. Aud this is nut one of the many ways in which the country will be brought to a decisive test oi tne question, whether it is governed by the will and for the welfare of the great body of the people, or for the profit and at the pleasure of special cliques and combinations. The Tennessee Conservatives. From the N. T. Tribune. We resently printed a letter to the editor of this journal from several representative men of the Tennessee conservatives, including ex Governor Neil S. Brown and ex-Senator Henry S. Foote. The other signers, though not so widely known, are equally respeoted and in fluential at home. We ask for it the thought ful regard of all who heartily unite in General Grant's aspiration "Let us have Peace." The novel feature in this letter is its full concurrence in the position we proclaimed long ago, that universal amnesty and impar tial suffrage are each desirable and necessary of itself, and not merely as a counterpoise to the other. When we declared, in November, 18GG, that we favored universal amnesty at all events, we did not mean, and did not imagine that we could be supposed to mean, that we would In any case abandon our advocacy of impartial suffrage. We meant only that, if there had never been a slave nor a negro in the land, we should have stood for universal amnesty as wise and beneficent; that we did not propose a dicker, nor support universal amnesty merely because we desired impartial suffrage, but because we deemed it wise and right. The only practical question is that of time. No man who evcu pretends to statesmanship can doubt that enfranchisement is destined to be universal. It is virtually Battled already that the blacks are to vote iu spite of their color. Who believes that a large class of whites are to be left under the ban for ever Those disfranchised for participation in the Rebellion are inevitably superior in intelli gence, in political experience, and even in general ability, to their enfranchised neigh bors. Can the pyramid stand on its apex tor ever? Do we not need whatever capacity we have r Have we not a right to its freest use ? And how can it be eaid that A. or B. is the choice of his district for Congress or of his State for Governor, if a large portion of the people can neither vote nor be voted for? And (in short) since every one who knows anything must know that the removal of the existina disabilities U a question of time only, wbv not settle it at once, and tive peace to the country ? Ihir Own (Jolihvlii Smith. From the Xf. X. World. We have never vet been able to determine the precise measure of obligation which we owe to the people of Kugland for their self- aV.na'crntlnn in irnilttinfl' themselves tO be derived of the counsel and Instruction of that eminently earnest and philosophical po Httf.nl 'nnii 'moral teacher. Mr. Goldwiu Smith, and In consenting to the transfer of that bright and shining light to the shores of this hemisphere, flir. uoiawm omuu is termed in England a "Democrat," and, as w Lave no end of Democrats iu America, to Bend another here, as a special favor, is rather too mu h like adding sweets to the sweet, to sav uotbine of the fact that Knslish "Demo- ww w orats," after landing In America, are gene rally observed to be transformed into the similitude and likeness of red or blaok Ite- Enblioans a change whioh some observers ave attributed, perhaps without suffiolent grounds, to the effeots of the mal de mer, whioh is known to bring many hidden things to light, and which has been observed to change the lily-white complexion of a prima donna to a ghastly bottle-green. Nor have we been greatly aided in the determination of the question of whether England's loss by the migration of Mr. Goldwiu Smith has equalled our gain, by the perusal of an epistle lately addressed by that gentleman to the "Workinemen of Iceland." through, the columns of the Hr.ehivc, a trades-union journal oi London, do far are we from being enlight ened by this letter, that it has befogged us in an entirely new class or speculations arising from the suspicions which it awakens that, had the workingmen aforesaid been a little more democratic in Mr. Goldwiu Smith's ac ceptation of that word he 'would have re mained in their midst to bless them; and that It has only beeu because they were, in his opinion, hopelecsly given over to "beer and bribery," and were willing to be led like voting cattle to the polling-booths by the Plutocracy, who have taken the plaoe of the old aristocracy, that he has forsaken them to come to this happier clime, where beer, when drank at all, is heroically paid for by the consumer, where bribery is wholly unknown, and where it is noto riously much easier for a rich man to pass through the eye of a needle than to be elected to Congresi under any circumstances whatsoever, our legislators being invariably select. d from the laboring classes those en gaged iu that arduous toil; known as "pipe laying" being especially favored our Presi dents always being rail-splitters, tailors, or tanners. It appears that, had there been the slightest hope of bringing about such a state of things as this in England, Mr. Goldwin Smith would have remained there to aid in the work; but that, as the case was a wholly hopeless one, he resolved not to wear out his life in fruitless toil. The recent election in Great Britain, he de clares, so far from being a victory of demo cracy, was only a triumph of money; the House of Commons is more than ever the rich man's club; no wise man can expect any gcod thing to come from such a legisla ture; the extension of the suffrage, from which such mighty results were to How, has placed the Government of the oountry more firmly than ever iu the bauds of the nobles and the rich parvenues; the new elec tors have not only failed to send even a single mt niber of their own class to represent them, but they have permitted the few old members who entertained pronounced democratic opinions to be expelled from their seats. True, Mr. Goldwin Smith thinks that all this was but natural the new electors were like Adam in the garden; the woman tempted him and he did eat; the rich men in England dangled tfce "almighty pound" before the eyes of the newly-enfranchised, and straightway they voted the wrong ticket. The most alarm ing part of the business is that, unlike Adam, they are not ashamed, probably be cause they are not naked, but are newly clad In garments bought with the "h -pun' notes" thiust by kid-gloved fingers into their horny palms. And although the Lord punished alike tne tempter and the tempted, Mr. Goldwin Smith thinks it so entirely in accord with the instincts of English human nature that a poor man should sell his vote to the highest bidder, that he has no words of con demnation for the bribed, and reserves all his wrath for the bribers. Something may possi bly be done, he thinks, by substituting the t aiiot lor open voting, "tne aoontion ot those nests of venality, the small boroughs" (one of which nests, by the way the little bor ough of F'rome elected Mr. Thomas Hughes, the only man who, by any stretch of imagina tion, may be called a workingman's member), and the transfer of the expenses of elections from the candidates to the rates. But, after all this is done, there will be little hope of a reiorm, since "no legislation can alter the charaoter of the people;" and how miserable and venal that character is. Mr. Goldsvin Smith has already explained. Having thus delivered himself on general suljeots, Mr. Goldwin Smith descends to personal themes. He explains why he was not mmseii a candidate at the late election. "Either a Tory or a professing Liberal" no genuine Liberal, of course, would have op posed him would have run against him: and I could not have afforded to fight him with my own money, and I could not have brought myself to accept peouniary aid even from the most generous hands. A man is not bound to ruin himself, muoh less to degrade himself, in Beeking it (a seat in Parliament), and I could not have repre sented the workingmen except on terms oon sistent with their honor and my own." And, moreover, had he been elected to Parliament, be could have done his constituents no good, for "being untrained to debate, I could not have given even a forcible expression to our views." There is no little meat to be f.und in these few kernels. In the first place, even with Mr. Goldwin Smith, it seems to be all a mere matter of money. A seat in Par liament is only to be bought. Could he have "aflbided" the expenditure requisite to buy the necessary number of voters, be does not make it appear that any scruples of principle wonld have stood in his way; as he could not "afford" that expenditure out of his own pocket, and could not bring himself to accept "donations," as Mr. Odger and Mr. Hartwell did, be let the seat go to the deuce, and bonahthis ticket lor Zsew iork. To buy seat at one's own expense, to a man of limited wealth, is "ruin;" to buy one at the expense of others is "degradation;" but for a very wealthy man to buy one out his own pocket is to represent a constituency on terms "con eistent with the honor" of the represented and the reprecentative. It this all be really true, what in the name oi ccminon sense has Mr Goldwiu Smith to complain of? From his premises the c nclusion is inevitable that no one but a rich man or a "degraded man" cau be elected to Parliament and certainly a very moral philosopher like Mr. Goldwin Smith wonld prefer that the legislators of Great Britain should be millionaires rather than miscreants. Un due modesty, reihaps, constrained Mr. Gold' win Smith to a.Buage the agony thst must convulse the breast of Knglaud at the thought of losing him, by asserting that, as he is "untrained to debate," he would have been uselers, Ltianee silent, in Parliament. He is a gentleman of whom a journal which does not adore him has spoken as "one who has received all the culture that Oxford could bet tow, who has studied and written and even spoken upon politics for many years, and who would Lave addressed Parliament with the weight of a justly earned reputation, which would have far outweighed his necessary igno ranee of Parliamentary routine and his inex perience in debate." Moreover, parliamentary orators are made and not born made, too, by tiials, repeated in Bplte of failures, in Parlla ment itself; and if men waited until they ceaEed "to fall below Demosthenes and Cicero" ere they offered themselves for elec tion, there would be the same dearth of legis lators as of swimmers did all boys and girls follow the advioe of that careful parent of whom thus the doggerel runs: "Oh, mother, may I go to ewlm ?" "Ob, yeM you may, rny daughter; liana yonr clothe on a hickory limb; lint don't go near the water." BRANDY, WHISKY, WINE, ETC. Y. p. tji, Y. P. M. Y. P. M, YOUNU'SI PCKH HALT WI11MKT. VOVKU'S PttHK DI ALT W1IISKT, TOUHU'N rVHE HALT WHIRKT, Thrre lit no onontlon relative to the merlin of tli OPlebrntfd Y. P. M. It Is themrf M UKllly or Whlnky, uiKtiufiki-tiirml from the bent Brnln aOordsft bv tbe Philadelphia nmrUPt and It 1 Hold t the low ra of per gallon, orflSS prrqnart, ac me salesrooms, !No. 11 6 2iJ 700 rASSYUKK 110 A II. fULLAUh-LFHIA. OAR STAIR 0 Cl McOALL, Nos. 123 WALNUT and 21 URAiUTE Sts., .EM POSTERS Of llracuies, Wines, ttiu, (Hire Oil, tic. Etc., WHOLESALE DEALERS IX PUKE 11YE WHISKIES, It? BOND AND DUTY PAID. 4 11 HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. MICHAEL MEAGIIER & CO., So. 223 Sonlh SIXTEENTH Sircet, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN I'BOVISIOSN, OlSIKBS, AMU ( t-Ml. ton FAMILY USE. TEKBAriftW ftl6 PER DOZKX. 23? Mt. Vernon H otel, 8 1 Monument street, Baltimore. Elegantly Furnished, with unsurpassed Cuisine. Oil the European Flan, " D. P. MORGAN. MEDICAL. RHEUMATISM, N E U II A. Iu G I A. Warranted Permanently Cored. Warranted Permanently Cored. Without Injury to the System. Without Iodide, Fotassia, or Colchlciun I5y Using Inwardly Only DR. n T L E R ' 8 GREAT RHEUMATIC REMEDY. For Rheumatism and Neuralgia in ail it forms. The only standard, roiiable, positive, Infauibl per tnaneol cure ever discovered. It Is warranted to con tsln nothing hurtful or lojurloun to the system. WARRANTED TO CUBE OR MONEY REFC NDB.D WARRANTED TO CURE OR MONEY REFUNDED Thousands oi Philadelphia returenuea of cures. Pre pared at Ko. 29 SOUTH FOURTH STREET, 822ltulhti BELOW MARKET. GENT.'S FURNISHING GOODS. 11. 8. K. C. Harris' Seamless Kid Gloves. UTEBT PAIS vYABBANTED. fliOLUBIVB AGENTS VO& GENTS' GLOVES l. W. SCOTT & CO.. 27hp HO. 814 CHEaUT BTBEKT, jpATENT SHOULDER. SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORK. PERFECT FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWERS mude Horn measurement at very short notice. All other articles ot GENTLEMEN'S DRESS GOODS in full variety. WINCHESTER & CO., 11 No.7QtCHEeNOr Street. PATENTS. OFFICE FOR PROCURING PATENTS, FORREST BU1LD1.NGS, o. 110 South FOURTH St., Philadelphia, AND MARBLE BCILDINOS, No. 160 BtVK&TH birner, opposlts V. 8. Patent Ollice, WasblLgtou. 1). (J. H. HOWON. Soilollorol Patenia. U. HuV)to;i , Attorney at L . C'ommnnlratlous to be aduresatd to ihe Prlrclp Ouicr Philadelphia. lm STOVES, RANGES, ETC. NOTICE. THE UNDERSIGNED I would call the attention of (be public to bis NEW bclLbEN EAULE El Tbl. I. nn .imreiy ueiv healer. It la so con suuoied a. lo alonce couimeuu itieli tu general (avor, beRjg a combluatton of wrought aid cant Iron, it is very simple In it. conatructiou, aud I. perfectly air Unlit; self-cleaning, havlDKIuo Hues or drum, to be taken out aud cleaned. It la so urrangfd wiiu upright Hues asMo produce a larger amo'int of lieatftcm tbe tame weight of coal tiiau auy furuac. now In Ube, 'ibe bygiomelic condition ot the air us produced by my new arrangement of evaporudon will at ouce de nionitrate that It Is tts only ilot Air Furnace tbM will produce a peret'clly healthy atmonphere. liii'tein want of a complete Heating Apparatus would do we.1 to call aud examine tbe Uoldeo Eagle. t'HAHLKH WILLIAMS, Hos. 1182 and UM MARK ET tiireet. Philadelphia. A large aHortment ol Cooking Ranges, fire-board Htoveo, Low Down Urates, Ventilators, etc, always on hand N. K Jobbing of all kinds promptly done. 6 lo THOMPSON'S LONDON KITCHENER or EUROPEAN RANGE, for fainillea. hotels, or publio Institutions, in TWENTY DIFFER ENT SIZES, AlbO, Philadelphia Ranges, Hot-Air Fnrnaces, Portable Heaters, .Low-down Urates, Flreboard Stoves, Rath Boilers, mew-hole Plates, Rollers, Cooking Htoves, etc,, wholesale and retail, by the manufacturers, retail, iu uimuuim. BHAkpE 4 THoMP80N, U 2wfm6ni No. 2a N. SECOND street GEORGE PLOWMAN. CARPENTER AND BUILDER, REJIOYED Ko; 181 DOCK Street, PHILADELPHIA. "n B N B Z 0 H A tToTM BAG MANUFACTORY. JOHN T. BAILEY. V, K. come M MARKET and WATER Btreeta. Philadelphia. DEALERS IN BAUS AND BAGGING Of every description, fir Grain, Flour, Salt, Super rhosphaU of Urns, Bona Punt, Etc. Large and small GDNN Y Baus oonitantly onluau. tiVM Also, WOOL fcACJUa. " SMIPPINQ. LOBILLABD'B STEAMSHIP LIU 8 FOR NEW YORK. Balling Tuesdays, Thurtdaya. and Batnrdan noon. The winter rate. wuiuu m do taken it SO oenU per too pound. troM, Soenle per foot, or cent per gallon, .hip', option The Llna u now prepared to contract for spring rates lower than by any other root., commencing on Much U,lm. Advance charge, cauea wuvn vu nw, jrreux&t celved t aU time on covered wn.ri. JOHN F. OHL, t IS 6m P6r 1 North Whurvia. N, B- Ktr rates on am.ii tuinre irgn. Plena, etc. f tUll LlVEKl'UUIi AMU OUKKNn It T.fc TlVL fJ I.,.,, a.. Ijn. J . 1 1 ... kiu ai'iMjiuted to .nil as follows: maim y , . v. oteamsn U l of bali imhkk, Saturday, February (. Cl 1 i Or uona, i utmaay. . eoruary v, CITY OF PAKls, i-auirciajr, reoruary in, Ci'lY OF AN1WEKP, featurday, Feoruary to, t.TNA, Tuesday. February x;t. city OF JAlJt DON. Saturday, January DO. aud oach .ucceedlug (Saturday aud alternate Tuesday. at 1 P, M Irom Pier iti. North River. RATES OF PAbSAOE Br TH. Malt tru.SK iiiiJNu icvaay sah'kdai, Payable In Uold. Pnyable lu Currenoy. FIRST CA SI N 1IKI I STEERAUE ........M.A( to London of to LoikIou.,....., i 10 Farls lf. to Paris . j Pass auk by riiic TUKSDAT stkamkh VIA Hi ujtax. ri iter ca hi., HTKUttAef Pa able In Uold. Payable In Currency, Liverpool......... I Llvrptwii , iiullfax 'M ualifnx 1 St, John's, N. t 1 4, I it. John's, N. F i M by Branch itloi.L.rj.... f I y Branch Summer... w Passengers ale Icrwaideu to Jiavir., liamburg, Krs nien, etc, al reduced noes. . Ilcknlscanbe bought here by persons sending for their friends, a moderate rates. rorlurther information apply at the Company's Otlices. JOHN G. DALK, Agent, No. 15 BROADWAY, N. X, Or to O'DOiNNr-LL A FAULK. Agents. No. 411 CiiEsNUTSirett, Philadelphia. ONLY MKKCT LINK.To FRANCR, Aiijj. i.aanKRAL TRANSATLANTIC COMPANY'S AND JlAVllE. CA.LL1NU A V IJUKdT. The splendid i ew vessels ou ibis favorite route for the Continent will tall from Pier No. ovNucth river, as ioiIowh: ST. LA Li RENT Brocande Saturday, Oct. J V1LLE DE PAivJO.. .Suruiout Saturday, Oct. 17 P ERE IRE Duuhesue Saturday, Cot. It PRICE OF PASSAGE In gold (including wluti. 'lo BREST OR HAVRFI, First Cabin HU second Cabin.- M lo PARIS. (Including railway tickets, lurnlsbed on board) First cuUiu. Hj I blcouu ci.biu ..... S3i Tnetse steauiC;. do tot carry eteeiagd pas.eugura, JMediual alteuduuie fiee ol charge. American travellers going to or returning from the continent oi .urope. by taking the ste.mers of lb s line avoid unutceseary rlias from trauait ay English railwajs aud crossing tbe chaunei, besidt. . skviug t.me, truubiu, aud expense. UU.OKUE MACKENZIE, Agent, Np. 5S BUOAL WAY, New Voik. For pnsssge lu Pnlladelpbia, apply at Adams' Exprt'as CouipDy, to II. L LEAF. 1 Hi No. II20CHE3NIJ I' Street. :Ai?J. ANll NllKMII.K Hl h.AMHHIU time, J jToyll FRE1UUT AlU LINE TO Till I SOUTH AND WEST. EVERY SATURDAY, At noon, from FIRST WHARF above 4CARKET '1H ROUGH RATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all polo Id In North aua ooum Carolina, via ea. board Air Dine Raliroad. connect lug at Portsmouth aiid to Lyucubuig, Va.,Teiineaee, aud the West v' Vlxgluia and Tennessee Air Dine and Rloamond'and Danville RAllruaa, u ma9 Freight HaN U WED BUT ONCE, and taken mx WWna RATES THAN AN Y OTHER UN JJ. The regularity, salety, aud cheapueas of this rout. Commend It to the public as the uioit denlrable u dmm for carrying every description of freight, No charge for uonunisslou, drayage, or any axntn Of transfer. Steanishirs loured at lowest rales. Freight received dally. WLLLIAM P. CLYDK A CO.. No. 14 North and South WHARVES. W. P. POKIER, Agent at Richmond and Oil Point. e T, P. CROWELL A CO.. Agent, at Norfolk. 1 1 KTl.lV CVUIH'tO I IKV T; 1. ... aiBndrla. Uuorgutown. aud Waahint..n u. c, vm Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, with con nections at Alexandria from the most dlrent rout, for Li nchunrg, iio-oi, Kuoxvlile, Nashyuie. Daltoa and i&e Southwest. steamer leave regularly every Satnrday at noon" bom t lie brat wharf awe Market street. Freight received dally. ... WM. P. CLYBF, ft CO., No. 14 North and South Wharves. J. B. DAVIDSON, Agent at Ceorgelown. M. ELUillDOto & Co., Agoms at Alexandria, V!r alula. 'ti AaA.rAUiKj DiAAADUAI XJKjM r A iX Y , from first wharf below Market street! DAILY THROUGH IN W HOURS. Goode iorwardedby all the lines going out ot Torsi. North, East, and West, tree ol commission. Freights received at onr nsunl low rates. WILLIAM P..CLY1-E dt CO., Agents, ,.. o. s. WHARVES, Philadelphia; JAMES HAND, Agent. gnt No. ll! WALL Street, corner of South, New York hW3!Ji EOB MEW YORK SWIFT-SUM taMoilaTrauBportatlon Company Despatch a:.u bwlit-sure Lines, via Delaware and Rarllaa Canal, on and after the loth of March, leaving dally al Vi M. and t P, M.i connecting with all Northern and Eastern lines, For freight, which will be taken on accommodating senua, apply hi iiuiaa u uAj.au at w., III No. IDs S. DELAWJ AJUfi A i AventsN GOVERNMENT SALES. gALE OF GOVERNMENT VESSEL. Da PCI Y Quartjikmastkr-Qknkkai.'s Officb. Baltimobk, Md. Jau. 2H, 189. f The United B!ata steamer COLO X EL RUCKER will be otlerea at publio sale at the pi.ri of Baltimore, at 12 o'clock, noun, on WEDNESDAY, February 10 1W. This vessel is a ' ' ..i. ..... . FROPELLER. ol 4l 6-95 tons; length, )aj met; breadth. 22 1 10 feet: feet arrt'11n,'81et; loaded, She has on. direct-acting low-pressure engine (MX 21 Inches) of tu home power, aud one boiler. Ihe hull toot lror, covir.d wltb aj.-ioob white oak aud pine plank. 'Ihe hull and boiler wera omfarsy repulrei n "l'8 of three moussnd All ibe propmr on board tba; rightly bolonn to her outfit win be sold with tne veisel. tmJ 7 ute! eVer' re8i)eo' ud tettdT l0' immediate The right is re.frved lor. ect any and all bid. for cause oeemed sutl.cleiil bj the undersigned Tli vessel la now lyltg at Ihe head of SPRAR'3 A 11 All (lootoiuay stteei), wnere tbesale will taka j place, and Is open to iBBpietlon by those deslrlog to bene Die olddeis. Tern.s Cash In Ccvornment funds on day nfsale STEWART VAN VLIET. . Jl'ut5,yu'"i,nuaHier-a.Jijerlt t and Brtv.t llaJor-UeueralU. a. Army. Jf sto8,13 F CONDEMNED OBD .A.ri S.u.aJLV.,y..t c-P"uneJ Oiduano. and Ord- uo- it r.JJttN LoDA Y . Aunt? A ' , oo cleTVo'b Wld';,v?!"!,Jm'!S BOUJe 01 lUe "'"IP! 2-. Iroo l'auco. Varloua calibres, llfco Field Carrier, and A.iu,ber. 19ii tetiot rtll eiy tiamens. 10.100 pounds fcbul aud bbell. a.i.iuu sMs of Iiiiaiiry Arcoutreuients. McLlellnr t-addlts, 7i0 h rllllirv Saddles. 200 Halters. 7(0 Saddle Blanket. 60. 0 Watering Unol-a. MOO Cavalry Ciirb Bridlf.i. 2H Aitillery 'J racts aud Usui en. Persons wishing ctal!igiis ol th. Stores to be sold can obtain i hem by application to the C hief of Oid carce. al WabljIiiKiou, D. C. or Brevet Colon i s. CRISPIN. Cnitfd stales Army, Purunaslug Otiicar corner of HOUSTON aiidUKMlKlX etr.els, Now York city, or upon application al in Atonal. T, J. RODMAN. Llfuleusnt-loloufl Ordnance, Bievei Brlgadltr Oeutr.i U. s. A , . ..... . , Commanding. Rock island Arsenal, January 23. lata, l w tA7 1317 REMOVED TO mi BELOW 1HK UNITED STATES MINT. UL to. O NEW MUBIU BTORE KO. 1317 CHEbMIT BT.. above TlilKTEENT , v,. I'HILADELPHIA. Muslo rublisherH, and Dealer, in Musical Mef cnandiiwofevery Description. r,.. JOHN MAKHH, WHOLESALE AND HErAIL AGENT THE BEST OOLDlANDBiLVKR WATCHE3 CHKAPEHT IN THK WOULD, ion . ,iN 1317 OHKHNUT BTKEKT, I28tuth.2m in THK JAUBIO HTORB. PRIZES CASHED IN ROVAL HAVANA, X. EENTUCEY, and MISSOURI LOTl'R"c5 Circulars sent and Information given. JOKPn ff: NOTICE. FOK NEW YOBK VIA .PLLWARE AND RARITAN CANAjrl