crzzizT or ran rnuss. 7 .11 l nnl.lnm of TnrtlnT Journal Upon Cni-rent Topic-Compiled V.vcry imy forlho Hvenln TelcHritpn. tirr.nv.nr C. WALKKK, OOVEUNOK- w ELECT OF VIKGINIA. Vrom the N. Y. Time. We Rro assured Iy one who bus personally lenown Governor Walker for ninny, that tha notice of bini which wo published in a iccont issue from the Troy. 7 met is in many roRpecU inaccurate, and in hoiiio particulars After griiw"" " ""P- ,, Walker Mwhmi mw m '"B " "; " . -.i i ihn lmr in 1N."4-. In in." ho removed to Owogo, Tioga county New ork, and entered upon the practice of his profon Biou. Ho bekmgod to the , Democratic party ?oen renidont of the county upwards of a tear intend of less than four months as stated 1-V the Troy 2 "', o became the 1) mocratio candidate fuf District Attorney. A vomiff man of but twenty-four or twenty f,vo years of age, of genial manners, and vith a ieinaikally lino presence, ho was very popular with nil who knew him. ISut the ltepul.lican candidate, who was Mr. U'rney, tho present United States District Attorney for tho Eastern District, and not Mr. Hancock, as tho Troy Time erroneously fsuppi .. .iiinlitieq which aduou so iuucd. to Walker's popularity, possessed many advan- Jnr.r.L- nvflf ' which told heavily against WuT cr in the canvass. He was a native of H e county, knew its people well, and bad lx'.st of personal friends in tho Democratic J tV. TlirCO VcnrS pifMUlin iro mm nucn ' d to the sauie oilice as a Whig, while on . t: to ticket the county gave seven bun imocratic majority. Tho point to le !.y tho Democrats was to select a candi t ho could poll the entire Democratic 1, . 1 111. dull v:!e mi. . 'i' e . gainst Tracv. luis waiKor uui, ami ,' running slightly ahead of bis ticket, 'cmntv, liowever, unexpectedly went liv for Fremont, and Walker was, of t . . im1, (icieaieii. 'the defeat was a grievous disappoint im. .. to the ambitious young lawyer," bo cvrL.'.uly did not manifest it by soon after ling his friends in Oswego good-by, and lei .-ving to Chicago, as the llnux intimates, fuv shortly after the election the political riv'dK for office becaino partners iu business, liud for three years did what iu tho country vim deemed a largo and successful business. 15.it tho amount of legal business ft) be traus ncted in a rural county like Tioga was too limited to satisfy the ambition of Mr. Walker, vho, in lMiO, removed to Chicago. From lS.r." to is;) Mr. Walker always acted and Voted with the Democratic party of Tioga county, and if he ever felt he made a mistake Iu uniting his fortunes with that party, we are Bure he never said so to a republican friend, jior to any one else. Nor is it true that iu settling in Chicago he declared himself a lle fublican. In the residential contest of that year bo Vas a Douglas Democrat. On tho breaking out of the war in 1SC.1, he still followed Douglas and gave bis earnest support to the administration. He confined himself, how ever, to the practice of his profession nutil 1 f--L . 1 18G4. when be removed to Norf oik, Va., where lie has since resided. Soon after settling in Norfolk ho united with others in organizing a national bank, of which ho became Presi dent. A Democrat, he was among the very first men in the country to insist upon tho duty of the General Government to extend fiullrae to the neeroes of tho South. As 5ust us ho is magnanimous, the freed- man can have no truer friend, and the adherent of the "lost cause'' no more con siderate and kindly Governor, than Gilbert U. Walker. THE FllENCH INVALID. From the X. Y. Tribune. Europe is a great infirmary, as M. Emile Girardin has just remarked, and we ngree with him that most of the nations are so sick that only liberty will cure them. Italy, through demonstrations in her principal cities, Las beeu faithfully imitating the distempers of France, not to repeat her recent scandal of Parliamentary corruption. Spain has a gov ernment with anarchy growling outside. Austria is only over one of a series of crises which her polyglot empire is bound to un dergo. South Germany has tendencies to liisniark, and antipathies to Rome, which Ilohenlohe is striving to put in logical, and even hostile, array. France, at tho bead of the continental infirmary, has called in her doctors for consultation. She has not only chosen them for herself in part, but sho in ffisfs on a certain form of cure. 15oth schools of political treatment have Jjeen heard, with many advantages of power and prejudice in avor of the worst of them. It was claimed for the Emperor that bo had restored universal suffrage, granted amnesty nd libertv of tho press, and of public meeY ing: tVui' he had abolished capital punishment, fujprisonment for debt, and ameliorated tho penitentiary system; that he had proposed now and good laws on associations, and made an advantageous treaty of commerce; that he had limit at his own cost many cheap lodging houses, and reduced the taxes on small shop keepers; that he has founded co-operative Societies, and charitable banks, and asylums, and soup-kitchens; that he has succored tho poor, provided for sick children, and diffused gratuitous instruction at the capital; and, anally, has beautified Paris. Invalid France replies that her Emperor's charity is cruel, Since she has to pay a hundred fold for all the alms bho gets, besides having to support the immense pensionary system of an empire to pay for soldiers to keep her quiet, and officials to keep her disgusted. Tho em pire absorbs two billions and a half of francs every year, and yet gets into debt. It gives $L'0,(Rm to each of its Councillors, and syiiOOD to each of its Senators; to all of the inipe Tial connection annuities, and since lf02 about ltiO,(M)(),(M!0 to the Church. The Cri mean war cost Franco about .'!(), 0iii,oit) more; the Italian war about !j!7."i,i()() ooo lloiue nearly sjuo.ono.ooo; China fctio.ooo'.ooo; yria $1,1M),)00; and Mexico .f )(, ooo, ooo. fcick France has to spend nearly 18(,hm,mm) on her army every year, and, in short, says one of her most earnest radicals, the empire Las cost in fourteen years, without counting B deficit of four hundred millions, no loss than five, and very nearly six, billions of francs. The general objection to tho empire uuy ve resolved into the fact that it is too expensive and at tho same time of too little ""nil to be paid for with Frenchmen's lives. time purses at one ana tne same These things being understood, there could Jie no mistake an to thA ve.v.liet of tl.a lot elections. Tho Emperor did not fail to catch lis moaning, iim tho process of imperial ouuiiB, mo i-wrwiuony of imperial conces sion, is supposed to be a matter of nice cal culation as to time, tone, aud occasion. After Jalking to bourgeoisie and euros at lieauvais, THE DAILjf EVENING TELEGRAPH, PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, nnd soldiers at Chalons; after whispering with I Prince Napoleon, and reading a public lottor from Duke Persigny; nfter writing to M. Mackau and M. Schneider, meanwhilo fining . 1 .1; i; i I a score OI prosseH aim oireciing Henieueo ngainfit a goodly number of their writers, In cluding Henri Kochefort, the Emperor has approached the ground of surrender. He said that tho empire could not yield to pas sion, but we knew that all bo wauled was a ceremony, with proper discounts of feelings on either side, and then fie Emperor would yield like the usurer of liberties that he is, lending them out with avaricious tact and upon good interest. Hut the least concession which tho Emporor can now make is important. Ho can do no more, say the Imperialists he can do notes, say the Radicals and Liberals than erect the principle of ministerial responsibility. Ac cording to fresh advice by the cable, his ministry have offered their resignations. The Emperor answers them with a shrug, a doubt, and with a certain affectation. "Are you sure, gentlemen, that the country is with yon ?" nnd "Here is n question of dignity winch will not yield to any pressure. Hut tho Emperor is letting himself down grace fully all tho while, if our telegrams are to lie believed, and is only dis turbed in mind to think that ho shall fall off in the estimation of Franco as a model of deportment of deportment under pressure. It is not lor kings to be martyrs, nnd it won't do for thrones set up by prcssuro to yield to it, unless tho descent be a groat deal more gradual than tho rise. We hear that tho imperial ministry has not been dissolved, and that the Emperor's concessions include a choice of ministers from tho legislative body. lr:. t.!..i.. : 1 -i. i jus mnjesiy in a Kurewu politician anu a grave student, but at this moment bis solemn occu pation seems to be the discovery of not what w ill avail to cure Franco so much as what will safely keep her sick. The cure of the diseaso would be tho death of tho Ltnperor. For the matter, His Majesty is tho diseaso. THE CUBAN CAMPAIGN OF LIBERA TION. From the X Y. Herald. Time is calling the roll of events which mark tho decay of Spanish power in America with a rapidity that has no precedent in tho history of the Spanish American colonies. On the 4th day of January of the present year General Dulco arrived alHavana full of high Lope to assume tho command of that import ant colony. Four months before that day an apparently unimportant revolution bad broken out in Yara, which his predecessor had been impotent to suppress, and Cespodes, as tho ruler of free Cuba, was then installed at ayamo. General Dulco arrived when tho Spanish power rejoiced in the full flush of its strength. Its army had not yet been depleted; the great sugar district of tho island was just beginning to harvest its product and pour its wealth into the lap of the colonial power, anl the Spanish population of the cities and the large towns had been recently organized in battalions, filled with enthusiasm and hope. The promises of peace which tho words of Dulce bore to the revolted Cubans were sus tained by the possibilities of a strong and rich administration, which seemed to have full power to enforce its threats and satisfy its vengeance. But six short though eventful months have elapsed since we looked upon this picture, and again we behold the spectacle which at tends the advent of a new Captain-General. The wealth of men and resources which ex isted at tho opening of the year has been lavished, but the enthusiastic hopes of the battalions of Spanish volunteers have not been realized, while the failure of Dulce has com pelled his involuntary return to Spain. Gene ral de Rodas comes to take his place; but Low different is the situation! The revolution has enjoyed a six months' longer lease of life, and life "to an unsupprossed revolution means organization and an increase of power. The army has been depleted till it has ceased to bo the hope and tho reliance of the Government. The harvest has been gathered and all its wealth expended without diminishing the needs of the administration. The enthusi asm of the volunteer battalions has been changed to discord and distrust, and the first act of the new commander is a significant order to the few hundreds of troops lie Las brought with him to march into the great fortress that commands the island capital and hold no intercourse with the volunteers or troops in the city. . Alter this General de Kodas lands and walks in solemn procession tho distance ot a few rods which lie between the lauding place and tho tialace. Not a female face beams upon Lis arrival, and tLe grim and belted vol unteers receive him with a few scanty cheers and an abundance of criticisms upon his bear ing and his supposed intentions, ihey had violated all law in deposing Lis predecessor, and in the four weeks during which they had controlled the government they had learned the urgency ot its needs, and had come to appreciate tLe great fact tLat their hopes could trinmnh onlv through succor from Knnin. Tin is the first instalment of this succor and the depositary of the power of the metropolis, and his words are waueu ior in anxious silence. These aro soon heard, and tbev recognize that the hitherto derided in surrection is now the fearful calamity of civil war, and they express the hope of being able to triumph in the contest, through the brave and disciplined army, and the arinoa volunteers, to whose determined spirit and efforts the salvation of tho island is partly due." Then follow words of unqualified praise of the volunteers, who are declared to "deserve well of their country, and a proclamation to the army and navy, who are exhorted "to be faithful mends ot the volunteers, now your brothers." These words of General de Rodas may be tho words of wisdom, or they may bo those of policy and craft. His position is a precarious and a dangerous one. His policy, he tells us, is embodied in throe words "Spain, justice, honesty;" and ho ex plains these to mean that Spain will find in her patriotism mexhaustiLilo resources to preserve the integrity of her territory, will render an equal administration of justice to tho high offi cial and the artisan, and require honesty and strict economy in every branch of the (roveru luent. All of this appertains purely to the Snanish population and officers, as the Cubans Lave no iart or position in tho colonial ar. raiiL'ements. Of other matters be says little. Reforms are postponed till the end of tho civil war. and this ho will accompnsn at any cost He recognizes the decline of commerce, the nun of industry, the disappearance ol pro perty, and the increasing emigration, which is rapidly diminishing the elements of wealth. If he fails to suppress the revolution through a united and desperate eflort of the voluu teors, in a campaign which must be made as Boon as the rainy season is oast, it will be the final failure. Spain must thou turn to other views, tor which she is already preparing What success General Rodas will meet with we shall soon know; for he must move soon in support of the many harassed garrisons now holding precarious positions in the inte rior of tho island. These must be nartiallv relieved before tho campaign opens, and time wilt soon show what eyents remain in store to mark the closing days of Spanish power in the New World. THE DRAMATIC TEA TOT. rnm the A'. 1'. World. Heboid how great a matter a littlo fire kindlcth! A personal squabble of two un coufipicnous men has swollen, with a few weeks nursing, into an international feud. When a certain Mr. Henderson, tho agent here of an English burlesque trotipo, was as sailed indecently in a sporting paper and as saulted in tne tnearro wnero his troupe was performing, it gave riso to a ten hours' sensa tion among the very small number of hangers- on about theatres and sporting pnpers; and men mo matter would have died out had not Mr. Henderson set systematically to work fanning it, both here and abroad, feodin-j tho llamo with cards and letters, until it now threatens to roast out all those innocent Yan kee critics who never hoard of Henderson nt all. Had this gentleman quietly subsided, nfter Lis excoriation, into Lis unobtrusive sub-manngeriul duties, reserving tho redress of his wrongs for such time and means as are legally furnished in this country quite as promptly as in England, tho vituperation of ins assailant would have remained in ocuouh in its natural seclusion. But being wounded to the quick, and, withal, being clever as the thing goes among managers, he succeoded in creatiua the impression abroad that ho was tho victim of a concerted hostility here to all English actors. hatever small consolation it may be to tho aggrieved Briton, sojourning far away from Bow street and tho ngis of tho Times, to ven tilate himself in this manner, must be cheer fully accorded him; but the result is pecu liarly painful to the forbearing rectitude of the average i ankee critic, who is now accused by heavy English' editorials of carrying a re volver in his pocket and a bowie-knife in his boot-leg to all representations by English actors, and to bo endowed with an irresistible impulse to "gouge" these imported inno cents after the curtain is down, and otherwise cantankerously chaw them up on all occa sions. e hear with sorrow a great deal of ponderous talk, on the other side, of Yankee prejudice nnd the rowdyism of tho press, tho injustice ol criticism, nnd the prosecution of the blondes all of which, it is needless to say, is tho sheerest and most unwarrantable nonsense, hardly emuil to tho article which Britain has furnished to-our boards. As for the animosity of tho American press and people to English actors, it is a pure fig ment of tho perturbed British brain. It long ago became a well-settled conviction in this country that England had no actors, save such as were lent to her by Franco and Ame- - T . " ilea. i leaven knows our managers have turned every stone in the kingdom in thoir search for them. Willi our characteristic generosity, we sent them Baleman, Patti, Kellogg, llorence, Reignolds. Fairclouj;li. Jefferson, Drew, Clarke, Sothern. Oweus, and Mark Smith, and received in return bur- lenquers, clowns, and Hendersons. The feel ing on this side has been one of mild disap pointment and sorrowful remonstrance. Scott- Siddons was treated with a tender considera tion of her British parentage wLich her talents did not warraut. The kindest and most amiable ad vice was bestowed upon Fiddes to induce Ler to learn a profession wliicL slie was not calculated to ndtrn, and Ler British busbaud flew to this country breathing fire and smoke against the manager who only insisted on her leaving the theatre sho was not calculated to benefit. We com miserated Gladstane and Susan Galton and Lucy Rushton as became our hospitality and long suffering. We put up with Marriott iu exchange for Susan Denm, whom we sent to greedy Britons with all her imperfections on her head; and we hid our disappointment at the inequality of the barter. We fattened Lmgard in Lis foolery. V e cast our pearls before Henry Beckett. We actually such was the height to w hich we carried our con sanguineous forbearance we actually tole rated i arnie. But all our magnanimity counts for nothing, it seems, because this injudicious and unfor tunate Henderson has had his nose punched in a personal broil. Little use is there in trying to enlighten the nervous old lady over the water. We may assure her that it is many years since we unscalped unpopular actors on Broadway, and that the sale of tar and feathers at the en trances to English performances has been abolished. She will continue to quote Hen derson, and to asseverate that it eclipses the most extravagant pages of "Martin Chuzzle- wit, and justifies the intemperate attacks ol Arthur Sketchley. Still, as a more soother to the nerves of the few remaining burlesquers in England who are all meditating a descent upon us, and as simple matter of fact, we must be permitted to say that not an English blonde, so tar ns we have heard, nas been rid den on a rail this season. Furthermore, that our critics no longer attend the theatre in their war-paiut or dusty from recent buffalo hunting, and, as a rule, leave their bowie knives in the lobby. Even Mr. Henderson may sleep sweetly o' nights within pistol-shot of the Rowdy journal's office if he but give up letter-writing. There is no danger, ladies. Not tho slightest. We are not incensed. Wo aro sad and sick. DEAN STANLEY ON INTERNATIONAL INTERCOURSE. h'rom the X. Y. World. The sermon which the cable reports to us n uivn been nreaclied on the Fourth of July in London by the Dean of Westminster, Dr. Stanley, would seem to have neen iih.e apples of gold in pictures of silver." It was fitly spoken, for, as the Fourth fell upon a Sunday, the theme naturally passed to the legitimate domain of the pulpit; and it was a word fit to bo spoken, if tho gist of it was, as the telegrams bring it to us, an earnest plea for tolerance and courtesy of speech between England and America. It is aston ishing how much mischief has been done in this world by men's forgetting as public per sonages tho civility which is a part of their nature as private citizens. No decent American ever dreams of insulting an individual Eng lishman because he is an Englishman, and no decent Englishman ever gives an indi vidual American to understand that he expects him to pick his teeth with a bowie-kniie, or sit at dinner in a Panama hat, or expectorate on the carpet, merely because be is an Ameri can. But our public men, both in the press and in the Senate, are extremely given to hurling foul scorn at the "bloated aristocracy of Britain; and, if English statesmen as a rule are less guilty in this particular towards us than aro American statesmen towards England, the English press makes up for their forbearance in the most liberal fashion, lho best American papers discuss English themes more intelligently, we think, and more fairly than American themB are usually discussed by the best English journals. Of course, Dean Stanley's sermon was aimed at his own countrymen chiefly. But its exhortations may profitably be remem bered and applied on our own side of tho water. It does not detract from their value to us, and will hardly impair their good influence in England, that Dean, Stanley is by no means what we know here a4 a politi cal preacher. To Ray that be is one of the finest and ripest scholars of whom the Eng lish Church can boast, and that his place among men of letters is far above the s.ilt., is to say what everybody knows who knows anything either of the English Church or of English letters. But he is a livinur nun of the world (we uso the phrase in its bust sense) ns well as a scholar nnd a man of let ters. He was married a fow years ngo to ono of the sisters of the late Sir Frederick Bruce, a lady whom many travelled Americans know and honor as one of the truest and most intelligent friends whom we possesn in Great Britain; and, as the relations both of Dr. Stanley and of Lis wife with their sove reign are notoriously those of near personal friendship, it may be safely assumed that, in t-electing his theme and the day for treating his themo, the Dean of Westminster was gov erned by political considerations, although of no vulgar or ignoble kind. Tho sermon, in deed, may be taken as a semi-olliciid declara tion that tho highest personage in tho British realm earnestly desires that peace, good-will, and justice may prevail between her people nnd ourselves. The Queen of Great Britain, it is true, cannot control either a single pow erful press or a fragment of a political" party in her own dominions. Sho does not even vote: and, if wo are to believe tho ladies of the luVulution, she is, therefore, but an insig nificant and helpless sort of person. But she is, notwithstanding all this, a genuine power in Britain. Her spirit and her proclivities have a real influence; and it is not a trifling thing that, in this matter of tho existing irri tation between England and America, the spirit of tho English sovereign should be jmt and her proclivities pacific. We doubt, on tho w hole, whether those who are esteemed to be hostile to us in the English world of opinion heed Dean Stanley's admonitions so much as thoso who aro con spicuously "by way of being friendly to ns." So far as America is concerned, tho leading sin of English comment upon us nnd our nfl'nirs is its mce or less consciously super cilious tone, and this is decidedly more pro voking from a professed well-wisher than from an opi n or a probable enemy. Tho foolishness of such a friend, for example, as Mr. Goldwin Smith, who thinks our news papers want "elevation of tone" because they sometimes quiz the hat and boots of II. G., is a good deal harder t beir than the vitu peration of such a thorough foe as Roebuck. 'That a man grown, and a professor at that, who has seen tho plaid trowsers of Lord Brougham and his shocking bad hat shown up in till possible forms in all sorts of British journals ever since ho could read, should bo scandalized when Americans take like liber tics with their own public characters, is insulting, because it implies that, in the professor's judgment, we are a raw and in ferior kind of people for whom there is no escape from solemnity save into malice. Or, when the Jtwei again treats tho Boston Peace Festival as a serious indication that the American people, nfter all, are not so 8nvoge and blood-thirsty as their general ways and manners would lead people to fancy, it is hard to elect between laughing at the absurd ity and Leing vexed by the impertinence. Whnt Dean Stanley seems to have laid to Leal t the fact, namely,- that England and America must henceforth treat each other with the frank courtesy and unreserved jus tice of equals, if they aro to maintain friendly relations at all is a simple thing enough for us. But it is very far from being really and generally apprehended in England. And so we Lope that the Dean's discourse may help to do a real good in England which greatly needs to be done there. Those who would just now be most benefited by it on our side of the Louse, we fear it will hardly touch. Sumner and his associates, having taken up England for a thorough "dressing" from the "highly moral," pedagogic, and pirenetic point of view, will hardly be persiuded to subside into Christians and gentlemen even by a kindly sermon preached in London on the Fourth of July by one of tho chaplains of the grand-daughter of George III. A GOOD SIGN. From the X. Y. Timet. The Leartiness with which the South gene rally joined all other parts of the couutry in the celebration of the national anniversary is an excellent token of the progress made in re viving the national spirit. During the war no such disposition was manifested. Iu fact, one of the very first acts of South Carolina, after her passage of the secession ordinance, was the abrogation of the Fourth of July as a holiday; and every secession ordinance elsewhere was followed by similar action. It was instinctively ap prehended that the national ideas and asso ciations of the Fourth were all counter to tho traitorous work in which they were engaged. It was thus a prime object with them to get rid of the day altogether. Conversely, there can bo but one interpre tation of their present alacrity in greeting the day with the old honor. It adds an other proof that the redeeming agencies have taken a strong hold in the Southern heart, and have already nearly remoulded it to the cast of American citizenship. It is another illustration of the historical fact that there is a peculiar vital principle in Ameri can nationality an essence in the blood that will not die out, and forever esta blishes that, "Once an American, always an American." It is rare that an immigrant from tho Old World is seen who has any attachment to his native land except merely as tho soil that gave him birth. To his original government he is no longer bound by tho least tie of sym pathy. All loyalty to that ho has cast from him forever, nnd has become morally in capable of ever renewing it. But no man who has been born to American citizenship who has once rejoiced in its acknowledged glory as in the sunshine of heaven, can ever forget it or long renounce it. The pride and joy of it have become a part of his person d existence a xeeond nature which cannot be discarded. If, in weakness or folly, it is set at naught for a while, it is sure, in duo tiina, to reassert itself. It is this peculiar iii(ltjni h'ditu of American sentiment that justified the old answer to the secessionists, that even if they should accomplish their end their suc cess would be only temporary, that the di vided couutry would surely come together again. It was this, too, that justified the faith all through the fiercest rage of the war that there was nothing in the malign predic tions of implacable sectional hate and inter minable sectional feuds which would make a restored Union a monstrous counterfeit und a curse instead of a blessing. If there has not yet been time to work out pacification fully, there is no lack of proof that the old spirit is renewing its strength, and is bound to pre vail. BOARDING. T NO. 1131 GIRARD 8TREET MAY BE ohtalndd furnished and out aroiihvd rooma f or lodg. M. Uoml lo, it dtmuhL , 41m JULY 13, 1809. GAS LIGHT FOR THE COUUTRY. 8AFE, RELIABLE, AND ECONOMICAL. PLACED OUTSIDE OF BUILDINGS ! ! FERRIS & CO.'S AUTOMATIC OAS MACHINES !!at6 been In fracceftfal operation for eleven yenm, ani tn all enflfs given nnrfoct Bntifnrtion. The light is much auperior to tlmt of city at much leu coM.. The many acciilcntx nnsinu from tho too of KICKOSKN K and I 'O A b Oil. 1. 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WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. jyjyilS LADOMUS & CO. f DIAMQX9 nR.ll.KKS & JEWELEB3.;i WT(II1:H, JEWF.l.HY AHILVHI WAKK. jl . WATCnEa and JljWtiLiii kL&uu, J Ladies' and Gents' "Watches, AMERICAN AND IMPORTED, Of the most celebrated makers. FINE VEST CHAINS AND LEONTINE3, In 11 and 13 karat. DIAMOND an other. Jewelry of the latest designs. Engagement and Wedding Rings, In 13-karat and coin. bold Silver-Ware for Bridal Presents, Table Cut lery, Plated Warn, etc. 3 275 ESTABLISHED 1823. WATCHES, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, SILVERWARE, and FANCY GOODS. O. W. RUSSELL, NO. 88 N. SIXTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM B. WARNE & CO., Wholesale Dealers In WATCHES AND JEWELRY. S. E. corner SEVENTH and CUESNUT 8treets, 8 25 Second floor, and late of No. 38 S. THIRD St, WINES. H E R MAJESTY CHAMPAGNE. DUNTOri & LUC SO 17, 215 SOUTH FRONT STREET. rriTE ATTENTION OF THE TRADE IS J- solicited to the following very Choice Wines, etc, for Bttlo by DUNTON LUSSON, 118 SOUTH FRONT STRKET. CHAMPAGNES. Agents for hor Majesty, Duo da Montebullo, Cnrta Hleufl, Curia Klanuhe, and (Jliarlus Furre's Grand Vin Kugonie, and Vin Imperial, M. Klne nuin & Co., of Mujudoo, bp&rkling Aloselle and WINES. M AH E IRAS. Old Inland, South Side Rosorve. (SHERRIES. F. Ruilolphe, Amontillado, Topaz, Val lette, Pale and Golden Bar, (Jrown, eto. PORTN. Vinho Velho Real, Valletta, and Grown. CLARETS Promis Aine & (!ie., Montferrand and Bor deaux, Clarets and Snuterno W ines. GIN. "Medor Swan." HRAND1E8. Hennessey, Otard, Dupuy & Co.'s various vintages. 4 6 c ARSTAIRS & McGALL, Noe. 126 WALNUT nd 21 GRANITE StreoU, Importers of BRANDIES, WINES, GIN, OLTVK OIL, ETO., AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS For the sale of PURK OLD RYF, WHEAT, AND BOURBON WHIS KIES. 6 3:14 p ARSTAIRS' OLIVE OIL AN INVOICB V of tne above for sale by C ARSTAIRS ft MrOALL. 6 28 2p Nos. 138 WALNUT and 31 GRANITE Sta. LOOKING CLASSES, ETO. E STABLISUKD 179 5. A. S. ROBINSON. FRENCH TLATE LOOKING-GLASSES, ENGRAVINGS, BEAUTIFUL CUROMOS, PAINTINGS, Manufacturer of all kinds of LOOKING-GLASS, PORTRAIT, AND PICTURE FRAMES. NO. 910 CHESNUT STREET, 3 1 Fifth door above the Continental, Phil a. j" 0ll Si H M I T II, l.OOKINU-Cil AS.S ANU PICTLUK Fad A. UK MANUFACTURE!!., BIBLE AND PRINT PUBLISHER, And Wholesale Dealer In AMERICAN AND FRENCH CLOCKS AND REGU LATORS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Also, Oeneral Agent for the sale of the "Eureka" Patent Condensing Cutfee and Tea Pots something that every family should nave, and by whluu they can save llfty per cent. Trade supplied at a liberal discount. 4 16 3m No. UI8 AIU'II NTHUKT. DR. F. (iIHAKD, VETERINARY SUB GEON. treats all diseases of horses and oattli and all surgical operations, witu emclont aucoiuiiiodatioi for burses, at ui lunriuary, Ho. IfM MA Kb U ALL btroe abtivs Poylr, Uiii JiSl ' CITY ORDINANCES. COMMON COUNCIL OF PHILADELPHIA. Cl.KKK'H OKKI'IR, 1 Piitt.AnRi.rniA. June 2 2. HG'J.f In Record nnce with n Resolution uiiopien ny tne Common Council of the Clly of Philadelphia, on Thtirxilny, tho twenty-fourth day of June, 1)3, the annexed bill, entitled "An ordlnnnce to Authorize a Lomi for the Pay ment of Ground Rents nnd Mortgages," Is hereby published for public luformutlim. r., JOHN ECKSTEIN, Clerk of Common CouueiL AN ORDINANCE To Auihotie a Loan for the Paynien Ground licnta and Moiiituge. Section l. The Select mi l Common Councils of thn City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the Mayor of Philadelphia be anil he is hereliy authorized to bor row, nt not. less tliu.it par, cm the credit or the city, from time to tleie, seven hundred thousand dollars for the payment of ground rents and niorttriiarcs held luriiinst the city, for which Interext not to exceed the rate of six per cent, per annum shall be paid, half yearly, on the first days of January and Juiy, at the otllce of the City Treasurer. The principal of said loan shall be payable and paid at the expiration of thirty years from the date of the same, ami not be fore, without, the consent of the holders thereof; and the certlllcates therefor, In the usual form of the cer tificates of city loint, shall bo Issued In such amounts ns the lenders mny require, but not for any fractional pint of one hundred dollars, or, if required, in amounts of live hundred or one thousand dollars; and It. shall be expressed In said certlllcates that the lonn therein mentioned and the Interest thereof are pByuMe free from all taxes. Section 2. Whenever any loan shall be made by Virtue thereof ; there slmll be, liy force or this ordi nance, annually appropriated out, of the income of the corporate estates, and from the sum raised by taxation, a sum sntllclent to pay the Interest on said certlllcates, and the further sum of three-tenths of one per centum on the par value of such certlllcates so Issued shall be appropriated quarterly out of said Income and taxes to a sinking fund, which fund ii ml its accumulations are hereby especially pledged for the redemption and puymeut of said eertia cates. RKBOT.mON TO rtTM.ISTT A T.OAN RTLT.. Resolved, That the Clerk of Common Council bo authorized to publish in two daily newspapers of this clly, dully for four weeks, the ordinance pre sented to the Common Council on Thursday, June S4, WW, entitled "An Ordinance to Authorize a Loan for the Payment of Ground Rents and Mortjra:rea." And the said Clerk, nt the staled meetlni; of Co iti cils nfter the expiration of four weeks from Mio first day of said publication, shall present, to this Council one of each of said newspapers for every day In which the same, shall have been made. c 2C S-H CARRIAGES. CARRIAGES ! CARRIAGES! WILLIAM . ROGERS, CAXIXIXA&I 23UILD23H, 1009 and 1011 CHESNUT STUEET. Superior Carrlngta of my own manufacture Jbullt for the OF .18 0 0, c,,r-r COMBINING STYLE, DURABILITY, AND ELEGANCE OF FINISH Attention given to repnlrln)?. 41T stuth 3ra Carrlageg Stored and Ingnranoe effected. GARDNER & FLEMING, C A Hit I A Q II BUILDERS, No. 214 South FIFTH Street, BELOW WALNUT. A Large Assortment of New and Second-hand CARRIAGES, INCLUDING Rockaways, Photons, Jenny Linda, Buggies Depot Wagons, Ktc Etc., 3 23 tuths For Sale at Reduced Prices. I ROOFINQ. READY ROOFI This Roofing is adapted to all building. KDDlied to N G. It can b BTEKP OR FLAT ROOFS at oue-half the eipense of tin. It is readily put on old Khinela Hoofs without removing the shingles, fhos avoiding- the damaging of ceilings and furniture while under. uihr itutiirB, ulUKruvuiUMHlJ MUf-JtVJ 1UUK TIN KOOfK WITH WELTON'l I am always prepared to Repair and Paint Roofs at short notice. Also, FAINT FOR HALK by the barsel or gallon, the beet and oheapeet in the market. v A VrfCLTON No- 711 N- NINTH Street, above Ooals, and! 1 171 No. HIS WALNUT Street TO OWNERS, ARCHITECTS, BUILDERS AND ROOFKRfl. Koofs! Yes.yee. Every size and kind, old or new. At No. 643 N. THIRD Street, tho AMR. R1CAN CONCRETE PAINT AND KOO rtJoM PAN V are selling their oelebrnted paint for TIN ROOFS and for preserving all wood and metals. A lao, their solid com plex roof covering, the host ever offered to the public, wit brushes, cans, buckets, etc., for the work. Anti-vermin. 1' ire, and ater proof ; Light, Tight, Durable. No craok ing, pealing, or shrinking. Ne paper, gravel, or heat. Good for all climates. Directions given for work, or good work- H.1,1?."'1'1 pare, promptness, oertauityl One prioal Call! Kiamine! JutU-f! Agents wanted for interior eonntiea. 4i&tf JOSEPH LEEDS, Principal. rpo BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS X We are prepared to furnish English imported ASPHALTI'J ROOHNO FELT In quantities to suit. This rooting was used to oovcr the MFRflTT A KT Jk no 4 29 8m Nos. 617 and bin MINOR Htreet. rvLD GRAVEL ROOFS COVERED OVK with Matie Slate, and warranted for ten years. 8 15Sm IIAMH.lUfl a CUOKPKK, No. 45 8. TENTH Htnet WINDOW GLASS, The anbscribers are umuufuuturing daily, 10,1)00 faet beat quality of A Midi I CATV WINDOW OLAS They are also conttimtiy receiving importations of FRENCH WINDOW GLASS. Rongh Plate and Ribbed Glass, Enamelled, SUineC Eugruved, and Ground il;tra, which they offer at if in market rates, EVANS, SH.AltP & WESTCOATT. nSfl Rm No. ;ih MARKET Street, Phtiada. Vy I R L WORK, GALVANIZED a d IMInted WIRE GUARDS, foi store fronts and wii down, for ractory and watehousa wliidown, lor charohe and cellar windows. IRON and WIRE KAII.INUS, for balconies, oillces, cemetery and gard b ft-m-eg. Liberal allowance umdu to Contractors. Builders and Caipeiiters. Ad orders tilled with promptness and work guurauteeo. Ror.EUT WOOD & CO., 1 8 Rtuthflm No. USfl RIDGE Avenue, Phila. 0 K N K j. c H " N Q'"p J BAO MANUFACTORY, JOHN T. KAIbliV N. K. corner of Al A 1! K KT and WATER Street. I'liilnileliiliiii, DEALER IX UAUS AND BAGGINU Of every dosuriiitinn, for Grain, Hour, bait, Super-Phosphate; of Lime, Bon. Oust, Eto. Tr(t and small GUNNY WAtiS constantly on hand. 8 A.Uo, WOOLSACKS. S . ! i I