MhMkl II lit KIllnruM II II I 111 IH'MllllWilWIIIIIll THE DAILY EVENING TELKGHAFII PfllLADELPfHA, SATUItDAY, MAY 15, 18G9. rlEINO A Diet for .irriilnl l -.peptic-. Salmi for Small Salaries, A SALVE FOu'bAD CUTS. Th uMt rareMly eompmnuted ""' l"u "P "I'V ftr Family Cue. jiv out M'ltn roic. N I'M l! Kit IX'XXIII. One oftlio "Improved Order of Kctl .Men.'' JinjiroC'l 11 '! M'tn rufhiD into the q?er of the Jndinn Agnt at Omaha villi etes slariifj, and mrrlaims "Want whisky; Injun bit ly snake very bud !" ' Agent "How much dcs thee want?'' 7. ?. J, looking i cm iurh a naeaje) 'Quart'' Agent "Tlicc docs nt want a quart of whisky for a snake bite !" J. 0. of li. M. (excitedly) "Yes, quart; snake Very big." ACADEMY or I IN i: ARTS REVISITED. In mnkiiisr ii second visit to see the pictures in the Academy, we have the example of Words worth, in his poem entitled '-Yarrow Revisited." Eei-iilcs, no art critic can do justice to an cxiii I'ition like the present one in a single paper. There nre bo many pictures worthy of notice, va accouut of ll-e prices asked for them by the rliEts who paiutcd and glazed them, that an liumblc attempt at reproducing them in. our Saturday Art Column will help the artists along. The cuts we herewith ftive are designed for this purpose. The two little gems that attract the most of fond parent- are a couple eketclies by 3. 13. V,rauh, oue called Attention of life x. lit!iM58SCSffS'r Porfrait ofn I.litlo Hoy, nul the other, as a companion picture, - 1'sr, f .'v- H Portrait of a Lit lie These little bits of color were done by Mr. "Waugh iu his earliest years, and, we are in formed, without any previous instruction. From the expression of the countenances, they are evidently brother and sister. This opinion is lmrne out by both of them having but three Hu j;ers each, a circumstance that would have beou overlooked by a less observing artist than Waugli. We must protest, however, against our Artist's adopting the "prc-Raphiiclite," in it is called, In all cases, at the expense of beauty. We consider the figure of the '-Little Girl" in the above picture much depreciated by the extra vagantly distended fckirt und this high-heeled thoes. A little attention to this hint will greatly benefit not only Waugh, but others. The "Little Hoy" is not so faulty in thi?c particulars, as he has neither skirt nor shoes. , 1 - A Deep Cut, by i:. Murnn, p. u. This picture is very natural. The artist, in throwing his feeling into the picture, lias cut it entirely out of the lraiue. It is one of the best renderings of a deep cut we have ever seen on the walls of the Academy, and we venture to say that the Hoosac Tunnel is not a greater bore than these little productions of artistic feeling. We understand that Mr. Moran has several coinui'u tioi!' for the same subject on hand. mm twin rroccttblon of lloil Ccllowx. This is one of the tallest pictures iu the exhi bition. It represents a company of gentlemen turned out for a day of mortur practice at some vl tlic urscuttla. Tlic r'ftivc U try ikuwrul- 111 mm Inp, s they nil aro sure to come to the scaffold eonncr or later. The Villntcc I'oxi.innn, by W. G. Winner. T he drawing of the lamp post is very good, and is of this pattern last ap proved by Council. Tim man 1 gracefully re clining on the post in an attitude of meditation, mid is on the point of throwing up his po-i;lon us a post man. The Old n2 ill nn I lie Ailirnnitiii'k, by Mrs. Charles A. onmicr. Mrs. Summer is funic on a ''mill." This picture has some stri king effects; one of them is right under the potato-masher, which will be damaging to the kissiug-trap. The pose of the dexter mauley of the right is well drawn, and looks as though his opponent would 1e sent to prayers on the next round, which, oi course, would fetch him up groirgy. Tlic coloring of the peeper on the left is good. A IIir.i Sail al Cairo, by J. L. lici-i'iiii'. Well handled, although we notice a defect in the steering apjiaratus. We suppose cxpcrieui-e will correi t that. Wintci' KportM, by Chas. A. Somnier. We are sorry that the artWt has made only one .of the "sports" visible, and but a small part of biiu at that. He has been showiug some of his feats on the lee, and it appears from the picture they are the last things seen. Chnrcoiil Urawiuif, by T. Mornn. Tills drawing Is full of Vigor. The action is quite natural. It is seldom this artist goes into anything like this, but whatever he becomes attacliwd to, he turns out a whole team. In this view he is attached to a go-cart hidcu with charcoal, and we believe his couiiuis 8'oiib in this line will be largely increased as people better appreciate his ekill in this direc tion. The drawing is a little heavy, though, and the aplomh Is faulty. The Jinrroture is good. ScciH- from I.oiijiIi'IIow'm llhtwttllia. By T. Moran. The above is a very fine me chanical drawing of a "dummy Injun," and shows much feeling on the part of the artist. The bunch of cigars Is true to life. The natural grace of the flowing hair is well drawn. The q'f leg is very well done. HiihI i.l .In FiU, Jr. very spai-kling little jiiece. Tim tender touches exhibited in 'his bust are very J!w; lit fact, as one of the employes on the road ex pressed it, "the tender was knocked to flinders." The exhibition this year Is a very successful ,io, and very good. The pictures are not so go od. A Yankee j eddler in his cart, ovcrukin" another of his class, was addres-c l, "H illo what do you curry i" "Drugs and medicines " was the reply. "Go ahead," was tl10 rojohulo'r "I carry gravestones." ' "Tom, why did you uot marry Lucy ?" "Oh, she had a sort of hesitation In her spec-h tind feo I left her." " ' "A hesitation iu her ppcech ! I never heard of that before. Are you not mistaken W "No, not at all; for when I asked if she would have me she hesitated to say yc, niid-so I cut her for uuvtlicr girl," V7 I; I h I 1 GVUUT OF THE MESS. lliwiiii ormiows ot thi itAmnn jornnAis tIOH CCBBF.St TOriPfl COMPILED EVRHT DAf rOB TBI ITlHiad TCLiCRAPH. TI1ETIIIUD MONTH VGKF.UAL CHANT'S AI'MIMSTKATION. f cmn the S. 1'. llrriilL C,We are In the third month of General Grant's adiainlstrittion, and still there are no visible Sinn in the heavens of the dawn of the mil lennium. The General's Inaugural was a good tiling. It gave ncneral sntlM action in rctereiK-e to the Cabinet, and likewise on economy, re trenchment, reform, an lionet pavment o'f the naiiouai ucin, mu iiucenin ninetiiiment, and our Ion ian relations; but Wu-hhnriie, iirt hoW-e as Secretary of Stale, was a riddle, and the gene ral make-up ot the Cabinet, as it now stands, not only pu..les the politicians, but is by all sorts nl men accepted In the lump uh h mvstery past tlndinii out. All that the tiolith-ja'is pVofcss Hi hiiow oi uie aninei is mat V isli in i i I 1 ml :i ' v is a disei) le ot Reward: that I'.outwcll is the in" Miumciit of a faction in Congress; tint tins, ( i. .-well, and Hoar are lucre political inake w!i;hls; that General Kawlins, as Seeretiu v of V.:i, is only the recording clerk of General f-ht riiiall. ami that jroud nhl Mr. idirie. in Hie. Nay, is but the tender tn Admiral I'orter. All in coiints concur iu extolling tho pletv, gentli licss. and amiability of the venerable hne. ami bow, ainr spending a portion .if the. wn k In Washington, under roller's iiistrui tions. k leaves on Saturday to spend bis Suiidav in the More genial Sabbath-day atmosphere oi Phila delphia. 'i he Cabinet, taking all sm-h crilielsiiH with a liberal sprinkliuii ol sail, miti'ht be improved by reconstruction; for, us it i. in the lump, we have no promi-c of ureal things i:i any special department. Nor are there any hopeluf siijns of rclrcmiiinictit and reform in the general division of the spoils. What with his 'impediments of the House and the Senate and the ravenous nut side crowd ot oflice vultures and the Tcnurc-of-Otlice law, here was a tou:;h job. General Grant, however, plunged Into this juul'tol the Wilderness, cxpectini; hard knocks, but resolved to get through. He has got through; but the groans of the wounded arc painful to hear, and through the rank and tile of the Keputilieaii crimps there are weeping and wailing and gnash ing of teeth. To change the figure, this mt. no ble lor the spoils has been iv most disgraceful and demoralizing spectacle, and the prevailing Influences at headquarters do not promise much iuthcwavol retrenchment mid reform. The evils here brought to lijiht may lie. iu the estab lished mid pernicious system of personal re wards for puny services', but still these evils, since General Grant's iniiugtiratimi. have been developed more alarmingly than ever before; for never before lias there been iu this country su-h an exhibition of impudence, rapacity, and shame less wrangling over the public plunder. The results were Inevitable. It is simply im possible to give general satisfaction in pare'lling out the plunder when the olllee-seekers com pared w it h the otliees are as ten to one. Hence the prevailing hue and cry among the Republi can journals over the stupid appointment of this administration, its inuralitude toils friends, and its reckless dhregurd of the claims of tho unlucky beguars, hat in hand, turned empty away. They hae become even scandalous iii their accusations; for they say that the favors of the administration are bought and sold, that Hilts of houses and lots, and horses and car riages, and books and hats, and boots and shoes, find a cordial welcome at headquarters; and these accusers ask us in del ision. what can you expect of an ndniinintriition w liicli Invites "ap proaches that were repulsed even by John Tyler, Fillmore, and Andy Johnson ? In relation to all such cbartres, we hold that custom gives an excuse to General Grant, and that the beggarly and contemptible stinginess of the Government to its faithful servants whose services cannot be measured by dollars and cents is an excuse lor the custom ot private suuserip tions and Individual otleriniis in such cases. The British Government rewarded Wellington in princely gifts of honors, money, and rich estates, while for services incalculably greater and more important than those of the great Duke. General Grant, ii poor man, receives from his Govern ment a military promotion, with its penpiHites, which hardly meet his proper expenses. Some of his fcllow'-citizcns patriotically step in to his relief, and lie receives their offerings. They make his mind easy touching his private affair -, and thus he may more largely devote his energies to his public duties. We may admire the re markable example of that sterling soldier, Gene ral George II. Thomas, iu refusing all such pri vate recognition of his great achievements, from the yiJ't of a mansion to the gift of it ser vice of silver; but tho fashion runs the other way, and General Grant has only followed the fashion. He is a practical man, and. moreover, he lias doubtless acted upon the idea that it would be squeamish to decline a gift really useful, the acceptance of which is regarded as a compliment by t lie giver. 13ut, absolving the ('resident upon tlico mat ters, the question still recurs, what is the pro mise of his administration ? He has given us nothing yet but his inaugural, his Cabinet, and his general division of the spoils, upon which to form a judgment. Judging from these things, the promise is not, very bright. He lias reduced to practice the radieafdoctrinC of "equal rights," regardless of race or color; for his appointments cover all shades of race and color, from the Cau casian to the undiluted African. He has also practically recognized women's rights iu the appointment of a good lot of patriotic women as post musters. And so it turns out, w hile the Ke y nblican journals par exeelleuee have become in some eases as bad as the Copperheads in their lliugs and denunciations of the President, that Wendell Phillips, Fred Douglass, and the women's rights women sing his praises and crown him with (lowers. This marks the con summation of a great revolution; but what next 't Our too sanguine expectations have sub sided. Saiadiu silting in the White Houc, ami, while loungingly smoking his cigar, discussing the claims of Tom, Dick, and Harry for the con sulate of Chincliowfoo. or the Post Oiliee at Jones' Crossroads, Is a disappointment. Nor docs it satisfy us to hear that while General Grant proposes to do nothing for the present on the Alabama claims, Cuba, St. Domingo, or Mexico, bis private opinions on each and all of these subjects are those of Young America. Piiblio acts are what wo want, not prisulo opinions. To sum upin the third mouth of an adminis tration with four years before it for the develop ment of a policy, "if but little is promise J but, little can be rca'sonabjy expected. The promise, however, upon one manliest deficiency, is not encouraging. We reler to the deiiciency in the administration In the sagacity to grasp, and the energy lor decisive action, demanded I v the crisis in reference to our domestic and foreign iiftairs. We must have retrenchment and reform on a grand scale iu our domestic alfiirs or a vigorous foreign policy of expansion from this administration, or in the elections for the next the short method of removing our present burden of taxes and deU will work another political revolution. How important, then, the question, Will this administration be a failure 'i THE TPvEASUKY FIIJM! Fiiun the X. 1'. Tribune, The Kspre-KH of Thursday evening had a de patch squarely asserting that Mr. Uontwell had just told a correspondent that ho would not can cel the bonds he is buying "for fear that ho may "want, at a future period, to sell them as cur rency, llut several despatches were received on Thursday which flatly contradict this, and give assurances that the bonds now purchased will in no case be reissued, but will bo so stamped und punched as to prevent tho possibility ot their clandestine return to circulation, and that, thus stumped, they will be held as n sinking fund, hi express accordance with the act of February One despatch adds that ho expects soon to be ablo to redeem bonds at a more ranld rate than fl,Kio,(iM) per week; and tUat ho does not purpose to keep on hand a larger surplus of gold than is required for the uafe conduct of the finances. 1 We need not Kay , that this is as we have nlwnys hoped It would tc, though we wee otherwise advised by our own correspondent. It seemed to us essentially incredible that Mr. poutwell should betray the timidity or vacilla tion which was implied in the report that he expected or apprehended that ho might bo obliged or induced to resell these redeemed bonds. Tlic current revenue of the Govern ment Is eertainly much over :WO,loo.o0 per annum; the current expenditures, including interest on the debt, cannot exceed 2V),(HH).(XX). With nidi n prospect, why sho. ild a surplus of t lCl,t(K.(M ( be retained in tho Treasury? Nay, w hy should any considerable 3 part of It bo longer hoarded? Does any one imagine; that our revenue is about to "break or lie broken down ? or that our expenses will soon be largely augmented? If not, why lose the .!),0()(i,oo per annum that we should save by paying oil SPHi.t'tKi.t'OO of our live-twenties whereon the option to pay lias matured? So long as wo can buy ut still better rales, of course Ictus buy; but, when no more bonds can be had at less than specie par, let us pay off so long as the Treasury holds a disposable dollar. We don't object to Inning up the three percent, legal tenders whenever that shall he deemed advisa ble: it is not our fault that the Secretary is for bidden to buy up nivenhacks: we only say buy something so long as we have coin on hand that we may saicly spare, or bo long as wo have a" dima on deposit in any bank. We are too poor to lend money to banus without in terest while we are paying fcUO.iKH.OiN) per an num of interest on our debt. And every dollar ol g,,d held useless in the Treasury tends to make uohi scarce out. of the 't reasury, and so aggravate that disparity between greenbacks mid specie which the oracles of the gold gam blers allect to deplore. I Mice more we congratulate the country on the laiest advices from Washington. We shail soon be reducing the Interest on our debt. 1IIF. "TKIBOL" KETKACTS. F vi y. Tribune. l is impossible to doubt any longer that women have the right to vote, tor the scenes at Ncinway Hall on Thursday proved that they can be just as disorderly as any legislature or poli tical convention of men." The opponents of fcnmle stillrage have always argued that the ladies arc loo relined, too delicate, to mingle iu the lough atlairs of men, aud have refined them the ballot as a careful mother refuses her inhml a razor for a plaything. We fancied tin y mikiht hurt themselves at the polls; but it was an idle lear, and they haw taken great pains to remove it. With a dipiom w-y which cannot be too much admired, their tirst uet iu their great convention has been to show that they are as competent us we are to get up o row" ai d break up a meeting iu confusion. As this Convention was called to discuss c ital rights, the ladies resolved to discuss everything else. First, they debated George Francis Train; then long speeches; then the relative merits of New York and Chicago, reporters; then the question of color; then free love; then capital mid labor; then industrial schools; and uooii what other subjects they would have enlightened tlic world, hud not the meeting adjourned sud denly, it is impossible to imagine. Hut when the man with the map began to give ids views upon the contraction ol the currency, and Mrs. Vernon showed how, by tho help of celestial kites, tlic whole Convention could ascend to heaven, Miss Anthony, "with her voice raised to the highest key," unfortunately declared an ad journment, liy this untimely decision the ladies were prevented lrom utterly ''tinting tiie theory that they arc too imtcli Hue angels to behave themselves like l.ien. A few more conventions like this and the ladies will not merely bo allowed to vote, but compelled to vote. An act of Congress will bo solemnly passed, declaring that women have such extraordinary capacity tor mismanagement that they can no longer be spared from public life. It will be insisted that they are just as lit to throw inkstanks as any Common Councilman, and might possibly waste the public money as well as Mr. Mattooti. They have showu that, they can he as tumultuous iis'u Democratic mass meeting, and eclipse all our orators in the art of speaking at once. Those who hcaljl the storms of hisses on Thursday, are willing to ewc.ir that they were to the feeble attempts of men as u, cyclone is to a zephyr. Those who saw how Mr. liurlelgh was put down and kept down, no longer doubt that the ladies need not be afraid to vote ev en in the Fourth ward or in Mackerel vllle. I'pon the idea of their superior refinement and angelic gentleness tho ladies cannot much longer escape from public duties. It is to be feared that men have been basely deceived for many thousands of years, and "that we have been" unjustly compelled to assume the whole weight of burdens that t lie women should have helped us to bear. We demand, therefore, that these conventions shall be continued, and the great fact that woman Is not man's superior fully demonstrated to the world. LOPEZ REDIVIVL'S. ' lit the X. Y. 'Timet), President Lopez is holding a strong position in the interior, with nine thousand men ami ioily guns. The allies are "preparing" to attack him". Such Is the intelligence from the seat of war in Paraguay, through P.raxilian channels, and it Is exactly what might have been antici pated from the "course ol the Paraguayan war since its commencement. Lopez is periodically "defeated," his strongholds are "destroyed," his forces arc "annihilated," and he himself appears as a fugitive," accompanied only by a lew "stragglers." A few weeks generally elapse utter the receipt of intelligence to this effect, during which every one expects by every mail to hear ot the capitulation of Lopez and the establish ment of the Provisional Government so long talked of by the allies. Hut utter long de lay, it becomes manliest that there is i hitch somevv licic. And then, with unvarying regu larity, there comes 11 despatch announcing that Lopez has reup eared at some point where lie was least expected, with a force vv hich ass'-.m-Ing the correctness ol liraziliau statistics nf his losses can only consist t resuscitated Para guayan corpse, and that the allica are about to cotnnii lice a gi cat cani a'uu instead of inaugu rating a Provisional Government. These have been the regularly recurring phases of Kio Janeiro war news lor years past. And a far as wc can yet see. they may still repeat themselves over agai'l. Lopez uitli nine thousand lucu and forty guns in the interior is as povvertiil as he was witli tvt ice that force wiUiln range of the lira ziliau iron-chids. And if ever there was a doubt as to the (letermiii it'on of tho 1' a'-.igua yaus to rally round I.opcz to the I a.-t man. and die in defense of his cause, it must have been dirpcllod by this time. Tlic extraordinary hold which he posscsi-es oil the devotion ot tlmt singular 1. ice ha- ab-eadv I ecu tested siitlieu'iwly to -Uiiw how liille likeldiood there is ol it being li.,i.-eucd even by the exticniitvol n vcr c. Time, howovcr, must iihiiiiiiU ly brim; mailers to a crisis. W e luiiv hear once or twiee again of the destruction lint reappearance ol the Paraguayan army, but it iiiiiiiot be veiy long before the war conies 10 one ot thc only two possible, tenuinailons -tlio extern. inaliou of the Paraguayan race or the al iiniioninctit of the contest by the All.es. SI .MNEitAMJ PEACE. Fri.tn the X. Y. WvrUt. Thai Mr. Charles Sumner has succeeded In , making the. calamity of vvur between England and America more probable than It has for a I long time been, by arousing In England a fecliu" ' of hostility to this country nearly or quite a" 1 latter us has ever been felt iu'thls country ! towards England, Is quite certain. It is hardly less certain, we opine, that this was the last iliing in the world which Mr. Sumner f iueied himself to be doing when he wrought out hi.-, elaborate fustian about the moral responsibility of England for the protraction of our civil war. It was said, and not more sternly than truly, ami not only ot but to iv charlatan in literature w ho Is quite the jcerot Mr. Sumner as a charlatan iu oratory we mean, ol course, Mr. Hancrolt that he had proved himscll tube "incapable of com prehending the teellngs which are uroiw;d iu the bieust of an honorabh) ni 1:1 by a charge of personal cowardice." Mr. George Schuyler said and printed this of Mr. Jlaucroft, and -proved the justice of tho thing ho said and printed. It Is juht us true of Mr. Sumner that he is Incanah In tif entilnr,.. I Leading the feeling which ur aroused iu tho hre ast of a man of plrit by nn attempt to dic tate to him his moral and" his manners. It Is natural enough that Englishmen, ftee-'m in Mr. Sumner the olllelal head of the Committee 0:1 roreign Kclutioiis of the I'nit'vl Slates Soiab and one of the recognized leaders of the party which the people of this country rhoso to put into power again at the l ist Presidential cfe -tion, should take bis utterances to be the c-lu-ession of the dominant seutimcut of Amerlei. It is equally natural that, finding those utter ances to be iiisuflerably insolent In tone, they shot-Id inter that the Atnericaii people desire to provoke and insult Great HilU'iin. 'I his, we need not say, the American people do not de:,lre to do. It is not tl;c cxtrav iignnee. as til -y esteem it. of the, clninis made upon F.ngland in this pre pos:e:ous sjn-cch, so much tn the tone In which thofe demands are made, who h has stirred iIk passu 11s of the llritisli people so profoundly. Ex'ravagui.t claims may be del ated at I -a'-. Moral impertinence makes debate a humiliation. Could we believe tluit Mr. Sumner was conscious of tin! moral impertinence of his harum. u 1 ah-mt the Alabama claims, that he really meant, to be morally ini ertinent to England, we might, think woie than wc now do of his disposition, hut we ihould certainly think better oi his abilities. A man teav 1 e a statesman, even if he be a ut.m;- licuded one, w ho deliberately sets about 111 iking 11 war possible betwe en two nation., or two sec tions of a nation, a'.uoir; men. Meie-cliikull ill I this vi ry tl in .- in ids iniluem-c tii ou the foreign I i.'i. y of Pu-sia before Hie Crimean war; Thiers tried to do this in hi- iidlu -nee upon the f -ig.i polity of l-'iame iu IS-iO. liussia sui'leretl feav'ully from the sucees of the one; Pr ince ha; pily escaped suffering by the failure of the other, litu both were iih 11 apable of a policy, men who cou'd proportion their means to their etuis, and will the end deliberately when tlcy set about (lehbcr.itely using the means. It is our calalniiV that a con.-pieiious American State shot, hi keep i;i so conspicuous -i place as that which Mr. Sumner occupies in the ecu;iiu a man w lio is incapable of all this. The fool of the Serif aire scattered lii cbraud- tii.il dentil, lh''iik ing it sport. Mr. Sumner sows dragon's teeth, thinking them to he merely llovcrs of rhetoric. That he is ti person destitute of coherent and steady convictions appears very clearly from ltis action it) regard to that question of peace, of which, for a long time, he assumed to be tie-, Hpccial organ ami advocate in this country. It Is hardly more than twenty years since Mr. Stunner shocked and startled lioston on a Fourth of July bv getting tip in Fancuil Hall to insnlt the memory of the alriots of the Levolufioii by sweeping denun ciations of war in all its forms as "organized brutality" and murder on a colos-al scale. It is in t yet twenty years since he caused his name to be published abroad as a leading American delegate to the tirst "Congress of luiversal l'eaic," held in Paris, llcfore he did the. e things he had expended a great deal of labor tin uccess fully on an attempt to rouse the Cnitcd States to war on the questions involved iu tho famous '-(Juintupie Treaty" concemi.ig the shivctvade. Since he did "these things he has expended, alas! how much labor, and alas! how succcsi-tully! upon an attempt to plunge the meiicun people Into the horrors of the blood iest iiiieruccine war ever waged In modem times wiilim the borders of a civilized nation. To suppose Mr. Sunnier to lie 11 man of g?nuine intellectual force a virile person understanding what he says, and measuring the scope of his language would be to suppose 1 1 tin one of the worst, most hypocritical, anil most sanguinary of men. We believe this would be to do hini lc.-s than justice morally, and far more than jus tice intellectually. I'ni.uestionably, his name will go dowu into history as that of the man v ho. more than any other public man of bin time, contributed to fun into u blaze of hatred the alienation of feeling caused by a diversity of interest anil of policy between the Northern and the Southern people of this country. Unquestionably, too, should England and America come to blows upon the Alabama qnestion. or upon any other question, history will fasten uj on Mr. Su'umer the charge of having gangrened, by bis licentious ami vitu perative 'rhetoric, English dissatisfaction with American pretensions into English resentment of American arrogance. Yet liohouy was more noxious than Mr. Sumner when lie first entered ti e Senate to secure social recognition from and establish social relations witii the representa tives of the Southern people; and never was a mini more anin.cd than he when he found those representatives disinclined to cordially entreat the person w ho daily berated them and their, coindiuieiits as assassins of liberty, slave-drivers. und traders iu human blood. And through, nit his whole career Mr. Sumner lias manifested an almost morbid thirst for the applause and admi ration of the better classes of that English peo ple by whom he has now succeeded in getting himself reci gnizct' as ihe ideal enemy of tho loitish lion the iucaruutv, Elijah Fog ram of the New World. The truth about Mr. Simmer we take to have been once plainly, though good-naturedly, told him to his face by an eminent foreign diplomat r.ow no loni-cr living. According to a well known habit f his, Mr. Sumner had asked this gi iitlenian bis opinion of a recent "effort" iu the Senate. "Frankly." responded the diplomat, who was much too indolent as well as too honef-t to be at the pains of diplomatizing in sueii a case "frankly, Mr. Sumner. I think your speech, detestable. I think most oi your recent sticoches (h testable. Personally, I consider you (pardon me lor the candor I show) a very kind-hearted, w cl!-iiiteii(ioiicd man. Hut your speeches will .cniisc you to bo regarded lu history as a sor.t of Couthon, or St. Jiist, or Marat. I can't h-lp thinking the reason is that you don't appreciate the force of words." Speeches made to prove to a British audience, I y citations front Polybins, Ta -itus, Don tjuix ole, and Ovid's "Metamorphoses," that every ov, ncr of slaves must necessarily tie a caput ii';?,iin, or to demonstrate to a listening Senate in secret session that England's encouragement of the Hchcl bcll'gercncy had brought her in debtor to us "bv equity" to the amount of half the national dt lit, are for Mr. S'.ttiiiter mere el erelsis in rhetoric. They are something more to the people who hear tlietn. and who consider words to be not counters but coin. Sumner spt liking on the one theme helped to make every Southerner believe the North a laud breaking lorth only death and ruin to him ami tohls. Sumner speaking on the other is doing a like work in Et gland. lint the philanthropy of Massachusetts kept him nt the one work till the land was drenched v it h fraternal blood. Will it keep him .ut the other till tho ccau also shall ho shaken W illi ihe thunders of battle between the two foremost liavttl pioneers of commerce and of civilization? FIRENUBURCLARPROOFSAFE FIRE. SKATING KINK. FHIE. BTILL ANCTIir.lt ORE. IRE AT VICTOltY 1 Oft WATSON'S SA1KS. Mm I a. J. WATSiON A .SON :- (iKNTi t vi us. vu h.id una of yonr well-known nn j cole-liiittt-d l-'irrriMif Stiles, with ilu insiilo door improve ment, in tlif lira that (leslreyct Him l'llihi.toleluu ,SK.itin ltink on 'I Iiii.mIi li.j.-lit the '."'til instuttt. I'hu u.ifo v, is ex- i.n-u to 1111 illicit!! In-lit, inu'linj ulf tho biufcH ku ilw unit plnti'. On i uintt tho nilu, wu found all our b k, 1111 in), mi I l Met in putluet con.liiiuu, iiliJ.tuouruiu.it eutuiitvlioii. Yours, rnnnei-t fully, J. W. POST. I lnli.iti h.l.iu, April :i, l;i. New Si.i t cri-ully roiliu-otl pr'coK, lower ttiatiolso-Ktii-ro. Aho, at- t iul cMt! Si I'onit-liiiiiit Safus. J WATSON ,t SON, (Cf lutd Kram & Wu'wm), No. U A. FOL'KTII Siro't, 6 6 ItiMi.'ll? Tm o itimtw i.liovn ell'-n 1' ' roof. V. Ij. M A I S E II, M INI'VACTI'KKH OK FIRE ANb l)UI((lLAK-rH(OF SAFES, LOttbMni:, UK.I.I -IIANOKH A Nl UUALh.ll tM LLiLDlMi JiAKUVNAKB, , tj Ni. HACK Street. ab TO T 1 1 E FI I:I.1C.-THE FINEST AND fj larrot tmrinxol ' l-atw Mylua of lloofa, TA "an. "a. ai.4 HMt lot U d. Uoya cau La fc41 JCRNK8T KOPP'8 lrita I'-.BtahliMiinent, iifm Ha 1U0 N. K IN X U buovL REFRIGERATORS. ! CCIIOOEKY'S MEW I'ATKNT SELF' J VtSril.ATtKfl AMr.HlCAfi REFRIGERATOR. Ct'W!'-"" .i is r -. . -vx,-5 Xft ; J 1 irj fl 'A i 1 J t r r 1 V f '""'. - 1 ata. .. i.J L Otv.JCii..-. IS '1I1K P.I-.ST AND ONLY PKIiFKoi' 8KLF VENTII AT1NO l liLsi.HV lilt In tlie WOULD! Anl s ill ket siieti ni t ieles us V'jrt,thlo, l-Vults, Veals, 0111111', I'l-li, Milk, l!mr, etc. era, loiurer, lili r. ui.il e..ili '-, with kss lee, tli.iil uuy oilier licl 1 iterator ii"W lu use. . B. S. FaknSOZJ CL CD., f t Mnium -::ii Duck ST., I'lilf AMiLi'lllA. t! A V E 11 Y 8 1 A T E .N f cMi.i v7) tHXtxa-nooH V.'ater-Coolcr and Hcfrisrcrator. Tliin artu-lf ttiisnt.mk for ic nn I wntrK of ron, ena-nii-li-d, tii ri'iiiii-.l mi siii-li a tii.inm.r hh to o ot itn r-mnieUnil iri.n chainl'Pi'. Lot It Im'iiijt i-ov-i,.. wit 1 imi urn nnenfiil wttl uut (Mm, ; iii tit" i-ti tmhi r, 1. 111 u -r, nit'k, 1111 I nt.n 'r priivi nu ni ciin lie k- pt oo,l mid mioi-t ; tlri .a? in ilio watr-fiiiik is not -.iistiMt, lt.it 1 .aii ni. r ni all (iiii.,.hiI w iier (or drink ing iuriinn r.M In .1. jioriuiMty triMi Ovin ttitt I iH-.aol' zino, i-rt-.iiy oiIhm-h'i! stiiiu-i, tlu.r nn in tiny wny tin d-trini'Mitjil tnlirtilth; und 10 this nrri-!(i ii IntiMi'iod inr t.tio tlitiin-i-onni, iis wippi ttiton'li-iirii t .'i!y uivl oouv,nliit., anil it rantiot t'nit to rtH-oitiin, ii-l Uit'li to nil li.mi.-kMoiiors ana usi'lul an woll nn nn nftiitnn(-il imoch ot lin-nirorn. Vop. it and 4 amsnl on Ii-h und aunwor tuu ptirpomja of s.iio Liblos in dining niim. Y. o n nnlai-'iiro f' nr ;7.i-a: Noh. 1, 3, . and 4 hililinit rospi'i'tivoly 2. 4. S. and H RalUitm. No. 1 in nmnlk ami 19 suit ntd. only for v-iv -lu.-ill ini-.iihos. or for milk and bntter. N-i. 4 for l-'iyo fii"iiii( i, boui-din-L-jtisoa, eto. Noa. 2 an.l 3 nro inti'Mm-dii.io ci.i'H. 'l in y can In- li.ul of r.ny roiioU8itlo fiiinisliing xtoro, or ot tltu niunuluctuiois. SAVI-IKV A. CO., Uos. 6'4 and tilil MAitKl-.r Stroot, AN I Cornm SontU FRONT and KF.K1 Rtrot, (10 1m Plnladi-lphia. TERRA COTTA WORKS. QLuCC'EssTEU TElilvA COTTA VO it K.3. DIXEY & CO. PTIWE AND OFFICII - 0. U'i OUTII biXTIl 8TUEET, , ABOVE ARt-n, ritlLADKLnilA, NAM'FALTfHKHS OP DOl'LLE OLAZKD VITUIFIED dhain rirrj.s, With Branches, Ik-uls, yieeves, Trnps, e;c. DItAIMXl TIT E, PAVEMENT TILfi, TLAIN AM) OKNAMEXTAL CHIMNEY TOPS, HOT-AIlt FLVE3, HOPPEIIS, OAItDEN VASES, STATUARY, ETC. owxEirs, nriLUERs, and contravTors Will cor.titilt their lt;tercsts ty gtving us a call. Having 11 large supply of all kliulu constantly on hand, uiul delivered ut the uliortcst uettee. Kcsrectfully soliciting your orders, we are, yours, BStf DIXEY A CO. PATENTS. QFl ICEFOlt rilOCUItIKO PATENTS, FORREST BUILDINGS, NO. 119 S. 1'OUKTII STRT3ET, PI1ILA., And Marble Buildings, No. di SEVENTH Street, opposite U. S.. Patent OlEuo, Wasliirgton, 1). c. II. HOVVSON, Solicitor of Patent! C. 1IOWSON, Attorney at Law. Communications to be adOiessed to the Principal Oltlce, Philadelphia. 5 1 lm pA t EHT OFFIC e"s K. W. Corner FOURTH and CHESNUTj (Kntruiice ou FOUIiTH Street). rr.Aiicirj s. rAszomus, " SOLICITOR OF PATENTS. Patents procured for Inventions in the United States mid Foreign Count ties, and all business relating to the Ftiino promptly transacted. Call or Bend for elr. vulars ou Patents. Open till 8 o'clock every evening. 8 6 sintti jj A T E N T O F 1' I 0 E. PATENTS PROCURED IN THE UNITED STATES AND EL'ltOPK. Inventors wishing to take out Letters Patent for New Inventions arc udvised to consult with U. 11. EVANS, N. V. corner FOURTH aud WALNUT Streets, Philadelphia, whose facilities for prosecuting cafes before the Patent Otllcu are uuMirpa.-t.scd by any other uireiicy. Circulars containing full iuforma tii.11 to inventors can bo had ou application. Models made bccifclly. V. II. EVA.S, 8 4thstu! N. V. t:or. FOLKTH and 1VALN UT. jiATENTS PKOCUllED IN THE UNITED STATES AND EUltOrE. I1DWA11D IJliOWiN, SOLICITOR OF PATENTS, No. 811 WALNUT Struct. 8 13 smthSm AGRICULTURAL. 5 EARLY VALENTINE, YELLOW 81 X 2ls. Wccka, Mohawk, China Red Kye, Cranberry Busa hi. nn' Also, l.urgu l.uua, Un.n." W x, Uuluu Oi. Kuiftt be.na. etc. ,o. HA(. WKTIIKRII.L CO.. 417 niiw lmrp No. Bud MAltlvKf Ktront. rr ' 1SEE 1 )S.-A itlH'.N EES. FARM E US, AND otlins ivlitiiuuy want pure and toliablo hoeds of out uviii urowlii. can he tiuiiiitiod at Ko'd (irowera and liuatom, 4 17fmwlmrp , No. t)o& MAlttKl' blroot. Ki-nd fur dewripliTC prlco list; fTi " EXTRA EARLY," CARTER'S eTRsT IvJ--! Crnii. 'lom Thumb, lan O'Hourku, Oh unpion of F.nulHiid, KuKtuio l.iua Iinponiil, Karly WasUiugtou. luil Alarrow, ami all ollior viii-ietn-a of Pons. UAUKKU. WKI'HKHIt.l, CO., 4 17 uniw lmrp No. Boo MAHKIOT Streets rVEALEY YORK, EAHLY"VINNIN(r. atadt, Ir(ro Uruiiitioad, and flat Thituh Cabbage -I1.11K Km 1 let. i:.irly Kod Turnip; I'.irly Olivtmlmped Uait" ih: I.onjc Oatma-e and Km Iv Horn Carrot, Painnip, Huiu nai-li, elu- H ACKl'lt, WKTHKHIl.L c6.p 4 17 einw lmrp No. 6U5 AIARKK1' Street. FIlll-ADELFlliA KASi'IiEUKY, JUCL'N. IA, Aitricnlturiat, and other Strawberry; Lawtou Flai kbi rry J'lunla; ilartford, Couuord, and olnor (iraua Vino. J oraaleby T. 8. 4 O. K. i 1 K't'Olif. It, ?i? Oelanoo. N. J. IMPRO VEMENT IN TRUNKS All Trunks now nuide at TJTE "GREAT CENTRAL" TRUNK DEPOT, Have fillllOllH' Putont. Rnfi.tv lluon and Ttoltu tvht.l. securely fasU-ii tho trunk on both ends with heavy liolts, und in the centre with the ordiuury lock. Posi tively uo extra charge. GREAT CENTRAL TRUNK DEPOT. IV. W. Cor, Neveutk Ac lienut Htm. TRAVELLF.RS NOTICKPurchaae your trunks, with hlmons'Trlple Fastening, heavy bolts; nofeur lock breaking, at the Central. 8 18 3m No. 701 CUESNUT Street. r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers