T11H DAILY KVKNING TKLEQIUPHPIllLADELPiriAl WEDNESDA F, FEDRUAItY 2, 1870. truxiT or ran rivcss. Editorial Opinions mt th Lenitlnc Jeavnnla Vvom Current Tiic Compiled Every Day for the Brenlna Telemph. THE REPUBLICAN TARTY. Frm th N. T. Sun. It ia the misfortnne of ths Republicans that they have not at the bead of tho adminis tration, in this extraordinary juncture, a statesman with sense, experience, and skill enough to bind these loose and diaintegrating lementa to the standard of the party, by striking out an attractive and inspiring policy for the fntnre. The crisis has not a prece dent in our history, and but two or three an alogies; and to meet it we have a President who ia incapable of appreciating his own in tereats and indifferent to thoie of his party, not a statesman of any sort, nor eren a poli tician, and who has not only had Tery little xperienoe in publio affairs, bat whose know ledge of the transcendently important snb- !eota with which he is called to deal is to the ast degree meagre and unintelligent. Besides, General Grant has not even sought to supply his own painfully manifest defi ciencies by calling to his oounsel the ablest statesmen his party can afford; but, with one or two exceptions, he has selected his advisers from among the commonplace partisans of tho country. Ilarrison, Polk, and Pierce were rather inferior men, though, in respect to proper training for the Presidency, vastly superior to Grant; but they summoned to their Gabinet some of the most eminent statesmen in the ranks of thoir party. Look ing to the promotion of the public weal rather than to the preservation of his per sonal importance, Ilarrison was not unwilling to be overshadowed by Webster and Critten den, nor Polk by Buchanan and Marcy, nor Pierce by Marcy and Guthrie. But Grant takes Ilamilton Fish and George M. Robeson! Ia the present unprecedented crisis, when the political horizon is eurtained with thick clouds, and the old oharta are rolled np and laid away, are General Grant and his Cabinet the men to launch the Republican ship on an untried voyage, and steer it safely over the unexplored and uncertain sea of the future 7 . Turn we then to Congress. Its halls are as replete with talent as they are destitute of friends of the President. And who are the leaders of the Republican party in the two houses t Mr. Sumner dominates the Senate. Vain, oonoeited, arrogant, pompous; holding the wildest doctrines upon international law, and uttering the crudest notions about finance; wont to conceal meagre ideas under a sophomorical amplitude of rhetoric, and smother them under masses of far-fetched, ill-assorted, generally irrelevant, and always useless learning he is the last man who should be intrusted with the guidance of the Republican party in an exigency like the pre sent. He is an incompetent pilot, except when the gale blows strong from the African coast. The wind no longer nits in that quarter, and Mr. Sumner will seriously damage his reputa tion and his party unless he disappears from Eublio view along with the dusky client whom e has served too well. Mr. Butler, regardless of all the proprieties of time and place, has usurped the leadership of the House. Brimming over with brains, audacity, and ambition; never in his element exoept when fomenting a quarrel with dis tinguished members of his own party, whom he rules on the principle of "your purse or your life;" always eager to jump into other people's business, as Mr. Dawes keenly ex pressed it; aspiring to play the role of Thad ileus Stevens in the House, with an intensely pro-slavery reoord behind him ; coveting Henry Wilson's seat in the Senate, with his Weather eye peering far out to sea in search of the Presidency Mr. Butler, with the helm la his hand, is the very pilot to run the Re publican party high and dry upon the shore. ,. Though the signs are ominous, there is no need that the Republican party should suffer shipwreck. ' But with an incapable, inexpe rienced, irresolute President, surrounded by a' feeble and disoordant Cabinet, and relying upon the support of an unfriendly Congress, its danger' is extreme. If the ' party , would escape the fate which is surely impending, it must demand an immediate reoonstruetion of the Cabinet, compelling incompetency to give place to capaoity, while at the same time de posing Mr. Sumner and Mr. Butler from positions which they are peculiarly unfitted : to mi. v";;-- ' ' Oh for a pilot to weather the storm ! t i-. - PRESIDENT AND PRINCE. romthtir. 71 World. , It ia sad to read the criticisms of Republi-i -can journals and their edifying Washington " correspondents on the errors of commission and omission, chiefly omission, on the part of our President in bis treatment of Prince Arthur... , - . , - In , one quarter there is an outcry on ac count of asserted ill-breeding of the Presii 'dent, that, after indicating the hour when and the place where . he would ' receive tho , Prince, no one was ' ready at the appointed time when, promptly at the minute, the latter arrived, accompanied by tbe British Minister and the Governor of . his Royal Highness but the Secretary of State; who was compelled to act as messenger or usher to go and remind the President, with his attendant Dent and Badeau, that the royal guest had arrived. The critics say i and in that 'they are right that, having un-l dertaken in a ceremonious way to receive; ) Prince Arthur at a prearranged hour, General Grant should have kept his appointment, ' punctiun tempoi-is, and been at tho reception room door to greet his royal visitor at the threshold. Such would have been the polite and significant attention of the Quoen if she had arranged an audience with President Grant at Windsor Castle or Buckingham Palace. On such an occasion Lord Claren don would not have been compelled, as was Mr. Fish in respect to the President, to in ' form her Majesty that her distinguished visL-.- tor awaited her presence. Probably, however, President Grant thought it would tend to im press the youthful Prince with a proper sense of the dignity of an American President and the grandeur of American institutions to keep bis Highness waiting a reasonable time. Pre sident Washington would not have taken that view of the subject. -" - From another quarter comes sharp censure that the President did not return the visit of the Prince. These censors say that Grant having entered upon relations with the son of the Queen, not simply as a well-bred young , jngiisiiman, but as a member of the reigning family of Great Britain, he should have done what the accepted European rules of propriety in such cases require, which is to immediately i repay the royal visit; and in that the carpers are correct. If Prince Arthur had thus paid bis respeoU to thO iunperor or the French. . ' and boon received as a member of royalty. the latter would, they say, in all probability ,., have returned me vuut on toe same uay. " !''. A third set of Republican critics ara dis- Ested that their pet President should have oliuod to accept the invitation of the Bri tish Minister to meet the Prince at dinner. I They insist that, after the way in which I Grant began with Prince Arthur, both offi cial duty and proper regard to the estal- i t:..i l ...l.. .1 - - v. I ufluw luiee m trwibe ueiutuuuy uuuoi nuuu circumstances required him to thus honor the royal visitor. And this was the more necessary inasmuch as President Grant has, first of all the Presidents, adopted the habit of dining about Washington wherever in vited, which habit he has reoently carried to the extent of dining at Welcher's, notwith standing his ignoble repulse from that restau rant last summer, when in pursuit of a break fast. Still a fourth olasa of cavillers at the hono rable founder of the new regime of Grants and Dents insist that, if he could accept Mr. Thornton's invitation to meet the Prince at a ball, he oould certainly havo found reasons to warrant an acceptance of an invitation of the Minister to meet his royal visitor at a dinner. But these "loil" cavillers fail to take into ac count how much our beloved and brilliant Chief Magistrate prides himself on those dancing faculties he exercised so much last summer at Long Branch and elsewhere. At dinner, where the head is put in requisition for conversational purposes, he may be awk ward and even glum; but put him in a ball room, where heels are to be displayed, and he asks no odds of royalty. "Circumstances," our Republican fault-finders must see, "alter cases." Devotion of the President to the saltatory art, our dissatisfied and staid Re publicans must see, has pervaded the whole court circle in Washington; and inspired vene rable Cabinet ministers and noble matrons in obedience to his example "To com and trip It as yon go, 9a the light fantaaUo to," in honor of the worthy son of his royal mother. Our dear countrymen, on whose fault-findings we are commenting, expect too much. President Grant has not been an idle loiterer in the bedizened saloons of royalty, but in rather different saloons ia the far West, to wards the setting sun. He has never had ne cessity or occasion to inform himself as to the etiquette of European courts, nor has any one around him, except possibly the cherished Badeau, who flourished for a few weeks in London as second secretary of the American legation. His has been the tented field, or the simple, hearty, and unceremonious fes tivities of dear Galena. Fighting and dancing are his strong points; and as he could not win a battle in sight and honor of the Prinoe, he cheerf ally did the other thing, and did it well. Let any Englishman dare impugn the dancing of our President! TOE CURRENCY AND THE DEBT. Fram ths N. T. Trmee. On two important questions Congress did good service on Monday. The House voted down Mr. Ingersoll's proposition to instruct the Committee on Banking and Currency to report back his bill authorizing an uncondi tional increase of national bank currency. And it rejected, by a strict party vote, the resolu tion of the Democratic McNeely affirming ths right to redeem the five-twenties in green backs. Inflation and repudiation were both unequivocally condemned. The Senate, too, defeated with equal decisiveness Mr. Chand ler's amendment to the currency bill in creasing the bank circulation to the extent of a hundred millions. Neither chamber showed inflationists any mercy. We do not accept the rej oction of Mr. In gersoll's resolution as any indication of a dis position to maintain intact the present xtatm of the currency. The vote certainly leaves scanty comfort for the inflationists, and none for those who would precipitate the action of the Banking Committee on a subject requir ing the most cautious scrutiny of the various schemes that have been propounded. But there are good reasons for believing that the demand of the West and South for a partial redistribution of the bank circulation will be in some shape conceded, and that the Trea sury suggestion for the redemption of the three per cent, certificates will be adopted. The latter measure , is obviously de sirable on the ground of economy. And the justice of the call of the South and West for a larger proportion of local circulation is equally, apparent. . The danger is that the expediency of recognizing their reasonable claims may be made the pre text for swelling the volume of . currency, and so removing! further oil the day of re sumption. , As the alternative of what, thus considered, would be an unmitigated evil, the redistribution ' policy challenges favor able attention, it has its drawbacks, unques tionably; it would inconvenience for a time some of our Eastern communities, but the choice seems to be between this course and the more objectionable oourse which leads to inflation. Out of the same circumstance grows the strongest argument for postponing the enactment of a free banking law. -. All these matters are before the Senate' la debate, and . before the Banking Committee of the House, which is entitled to all the time that is required fer an exhaustive examination of the . currency question in its , varied bear ingu. Delay is of much less moment than judicious action. Hasty legislation,' even the nremature attention of an ill-considered reuo- lution, would inflict damage upon the credit and business of the country. The one thing essential is the development of something like system, founded upon sound and consistent principles, a system that RbttH avert .sectional discontent bv natUfvincr the reasonable wants of States now almost Uestituto of local cur . - V rency, and at the same time lay the founda tion of practical effort in the direction of BtWAilA MniriiAAnta A W nft'j-mfr ff 4VtisS ItafllVA j;ojuicun4 llJ v.n k via icy aaojviax w will be inadequate which does not make pro vision for redemption by the banks concur rently with resumption by tho .National uov ernment. j Those are reasons for resisting every attempt to force immature or partial plans, as well as for rejocting the mischievous policy favored by Messrs. Ingeisoll and Chana ler. ' ' . i ; i Nor is the most unceremonious treatment undeserved by Mr. MoNeely and his Democratic friends, who, while pretending to desire the maintenance of the publio faith, lose no op portunity of assailing it. The allegation that the five-twenties are payable in greenbacks is a mere revival ot the rendleton dootrine, which is not disguised by the plea that "the national debt should be paid in strict oompli- pudiatora always say. They are for "strict compliance with the contract," if it be inter preted favorably to partial repudiation- not otherwise. The frequency with which the proposal has been put forward in the House since the opening of the session, and the fact that while a few Democrats talk against it, the main body of the party either help it with their votes or abstain from voting, prove con clusively ths insincerity of Democratic pro testations with regard to the debt. . The De mocrats are enemies of the publio faith, and tbe country may thank them for not a little pf the embarrassment and loss which attend Im paired credit. nThe decisive vote on Monday shows that their power to do mischief U not great. But the mere attempt is worth remem bering as evidduce of the responsibilities which still attach to the Rej '.',lioan party as the guardian of the honor and interests of the republic IMPARTIAL SUFFRAGE AND THE POLITICAL FUTURE. ram ths If. T. Trthun. So Ions as there was hope that the fifteenth amendment to the Federal Constitution might be defeated, the Democratic politicians fought it with malignant desperation. At length, the handwriting on the wall can no longer be ignored nor misinterpreted, and they begin to scrutinize the toad's head with resolute intent to discover or invent the requisite jewel. The Louisville Courier-Journal (for example), which has been conspicuous in the anti-negro crusade, now says: "Every one of the Southern Mates reconstructed under the fifteenth amendment will fall Into the hands of the Democratic part, and the Kenunll- caos cannot risk a dlviiton In the North. On suf frage they can hold together not on any other pro position concerning the neirro. 8 u (Trace belDir set tled, leaves the ultras nothing- to do but to agitate ior social equality, wnn;u cannot oe made to wort as a political Instrument. Besides, the disappear ance of the negro qnestion as a live and progressiva element in oar pontics win Clear tbe Held for new divisions and combinations upon financial topics, from whleh the Democrats have everything to hope. So that tbe jubilation In radical circles over the fif teenth amendment la pure effervescence, and amonnts to nothing at all. A very few months of universal so (Trade will develop ths truth of this most thoroughly." Otmmenu by th Tribunt. Supposing the above to be true or even half true what madness has ruled the Demo cratic councils for the last three or four years ! Just think of the mountains of insult and scorn heaped upon the blaoks by the De mocrats in our late State Constitutional Con vention, clenched by a solid Democratic vote at the polls last fall denying the right of suf frage to any but comparatively rich blaoks. Then consider the recent foolish baste of our Democratic magnates to rescind the ratifica tion of the fifteenth amendment by our last Legislature, and the cheers with which that vote was hailed by tbeDemocratio Legislature of Kentucky. This Democratic withdrawal of our State's ratification was carried by the votes of Senators and Assemblymen who knew that they defied the will of their constituents in so voting knew that they were elected by corruption and fraud, favored by apathy and heedlessness on the part of many Republicans, wno tanoied that no gTeat national issue was involved in that election. The Senators from the Saratoga, Clinton, Oneida. Dutchess, and Chenango Districts, the Assemblymen from warren, uiinton, acnuyier, Steuben, Otsego, Fulton, Saratoga, and several other counties, well know that they abused the power con fided to them in thus voting. And all for what ? Where is the net profit of the per formance t We are reminded by it of the African who listened, as he supposed, to a sermon from Whitefleld, and was moved by it to violent physical demonstrations of peni tence and conviction, but was astounded, soon afterwards, by the assurance that he had not heard YVniteheld at all that the famous revi valist was taken suddenly ill, and another had to supply his plaoe. "Then (said he) this nigger has rolled his new clothes in the dirt for nothing." bo long as Demooracy, in the partisan sense, means a denial of the neorro's humanity. and means little else, the blacks are com pelled to be Republicans. To vote otherwise is to confess themselves baser than their worst enemies ever declared them. A few may be constrained to do it, just as an Irish peasant sometimes votes for his landlord's candidate against the champion of his race and his faith; but there is no deoeption in either case. The vote represents the voter's bread and butter, not his convictions nor his wishes. Thus the States of Georgia and Louisiana were carried for Seymour and Blair in 18G8 by constraint and terrorism by co ercing thousands ot biacKs to vote against themselves and terrorizing thousands more into avoiding the polls. . The electors who cost the vote of those States represented the weakness, the poverty, the dependence, the cowardice ot those thousands; there was no belief on any side that they represented any thing more. Ot course, the Democrats will change their tactics directly. They have fought impartial suff rage to the bitter end; they will stop fight ing it when the fifteenth amendment shall have become a part of the Federal Constitu tion, because to tight it longer will be suioide. They cannot rationally expect to carry South era States as they carried Georgia and Louis iana in 18G3. Tbe blacks, as a class, have be come more intelligent and more independent; and each intervening year we see them less abject and more intent on vindicating their political rights, wealth and social prestige may control some of them; but the immense majority will vote for no champion of gov ernment by caste. We expect to see the Democratic politicians striving to make up for lost time by extra ordinary efforts to ingratiate themselves with their late chattels. They will insist that the past has been a muddle and a misconception, which should be utterly sponged out and for gotten that they never meant to resist negro enfranchisement, but only the domination of the canting, lying, thieving, psalm-singing Yankees and carpet-baggers. They will get up barbecues, invite the blacks to take their choice of tables, and harangue thorn on the recollections of their common boyhood, with its pranks and games, and appeal to their Southern nativity, sympathies, and prejudices, A Texas lawyer, who had fought zealously for secession, remarked in 18i;." that it at first came a little awkward for men of his stamp to address negro juries; but they very soon caught tbe knack, and opened with "Fellow citizens ana ueniiemen 01 tne Jury, as though they had never addressed a jury which was not black. Human nature has a wonder ful facility of adapting itself to circumstances. And the Democrats will make their wa with the negroes, though not so fast as they seem to imagine. The blacks forget easily; but then they have more to forget than any people ever had before; and some part of ft is very recent ana very loouumy aggravating, With regard to much ' of their recent treat ment by the sham Democracy, they will be moved to inquire, in the words of a fading ditty, "1 ssppose II was right to dissemble your love ; . Uut, wby did you kick me down stairs?" while their wooers, disappointed and dis gusted with their ill success, will often be provoked iato temporary unconsciousness of the. necessities of their position, and will swear that they have done fishing for nigger voles, and shall henceforth strike but boldly for the good old Democratic principle of ",A White Man's Government." This will set things baok for a season; but they will think better of it, on cool reflection, and return to the ungrateful task of converting the negroeB to Democracy ultimately with fair success. "One touch of nature makes the whole world kin and a mutual fond ness .for whisky and iubacoo will do much to bring these disoordant elements , into a state of assimilation if not of absolute fu sion. The one thing indispensable to success in this arduous enterprise is patient, invin cible perseverance. Should it miscarry, Jit will be through an error akin to the Dutch man's, who wss stagger! by the BiblioU account of Elisha's making tho axe to swim. "Do you thinn, be asked his spiritual guide, "that oould make an axe swim?" "Cer tainly, if you had nndoubting faith," was the correct reply. "I wm faith I here goes!" was the prompt rejoinder: and awav flew the axe into the lake, where it sank like a stone. "There I resumed the triumphant exoeri- menter; "it has gone straight to the bottom, and J knetrit would." Too much must not be expeoted from that sort of faith. GOVERNMENT BY NEGROES. ' Fnm tin roll Matt QaiotU. la the Interest both of historT and of poli tical scioace, it is much to be wished that more were known of the nature and eff eots of tho system of government whioh is on its trial in the Southern States of America. The experiment is without precedent, and is of vast importance whether it succeeds or fails; nut mere m u aimost entire want or authen tic information as to the faots. The most careful examination of the Amerioan news papers fails to produoe any effect on the mind exoept absolute distrust of their stats ments about the South. If the Democratic writers are to be believed, the system im posed by ths reconstruction laws has no parallel for cruelty and folly. Men of the same race and education, and mainly of ths same historical traditions, as their Northern masters, are said to be under the heel of debauched and illiterate savages, guided by a handful of white scoundrels who had made the back-slums of the great Northern cities too hot to hold them. The pictures of the ourts of justice and legislative halls of the South which these journals give are the coun terpart of the scenes whioh are enacted hers by Ethiopian serenaders and Christy Minstrels. Black men in absurd dresses are perpetually taiaing ungrammaucai nonsense interspersed with idiotio jokes. But the story of the Re publican press may be described as the direot contradiction of these statements in every single particular. It represents the South as governed upon tne most approved constitu tional models, by a population of primitive innocence led by virtuous political mission aries. Schools and churches are said to be rising everywhere; and the material wealth of ths country, daily increased by the labors of a rapidly multiplying peasant proprietary, is alleged to be steadily rising to the standard which it touched before the war. The sole drawback on all this moral and material pros perity is said to be the terrorism exercised by white conspirators united in secret socie ties with grotesque names. There is evidently on both sides a settled practice of inventing or distorting lacis, wnicn is not nkeiy to be abandoned until party beats have oooled down much more than they seem likely to do for the present, we may add that the few British travellers who have visited and written on ths Southern States since 1865 have added but little to our information. Their interest seems to have still centred on the war of se cession, and they were apparently only anx ious to pick up facts confirmatory of their theories as to the past. This scarcity of trustworthy information is the more provoking because it has become dear that the Congress of the United States is not trying gevernmentby negroes as a merely temporary arrangement. The act which it has just passed for the settlement of the affairs of Georgia shows that it intends to watch continuously over its system of reconstruc tion, and to insist on it being applied in its integrity whenever it is accidentally or totally deranged, ueorgia hart complied with all the requirements of the general Recon struction law, and military government had. therefore, theoretically, come to an end. But tne .Legislature elected for the State oon tained a majority of white men, and their first step was to disallow tbe election of all the negroes who had been returned. There was some sort of legal pretext for this vio lent and ul-iudged step, but its legality was doubted, and the constitutional point was referred to the courts of justice, which de cided against the expulsion of the colored men. The negroes would, therefore, have been probably allowed to : take their seats. But this did not satisfy Congress, which seems to have speedily made up its mind that measures of far severer repression were required for the whites of Georgia. The new Act of Congress directs that the Georgia Legislature shall reassemble exactly in the condition in whioh it found itself before the expulsion of the negroes; that nobody's eleotion shall be disallowed for reasons of race or color; that all persons re turned shall take an oath denying in language of minute precision that during the war they gave assistance of any sort to the secession ist Government of the State otherwise "than under physical compulsion," and that tbe Federal (and not the btate; courts shall enter tain prosecutions for perjury in falsely swear ing to this effect. If it had been generally understood that the North did not intend at any time to relax its grasp upon the South, there would have been , nothing very wonderful in this measure, . consider ing what the conduct of the Georgia State Legislature had been. But its formidable charaoter arises from the contrary assump tion having been made, and from its having been supposed that, when the general Recon struction law had been nteraiiy complied with, the reconstructed Southern States would be left to themselves, and their publio acts submitted for allowance or disallowance to the law courts exclusively. It. must now be assumed that if. the experiment tried in the South fails anywhere to give the results ex1 peoted by the Republicans, the Congress of the United States, so long as that party is dominant in it, will interfere to correct the miscarriage. Except in the case of the United States, there has been great uniformity in the history of the suppression of rebellions in modern times. - First, there has been severe and often sanguinary "punishment inflioted on the chiefs of the revolt: then bos sue ceeded a period during which the successful empire has enforced strict obedienoe to itself from its subjugated dependency; and finally has come a 6trong desire, growing some times out of policy, sometimes out of a sense of justice, and sometimes out of mere emotion, to win its affections, or at all events its voluntary aoquiosoence in aooom plished facta. England is just at present feeling an almost passionate wish to be recon ciled to Ireland and to be beloved by the natives of India; Austria has done her best to come to terms with Hungary, and there are signs that the sufferings of Poland are beginning to cause oisoomiort ana oompunc tion even in Russia. The United States seem destined to an experience of a different kind On the morrow of the conquest their treat ment of the Southern leaders was marked by a gentleness which will always be remembered to their Honor. inu in ine next stage oi tueir relations with tbe South, the necessity for combining despotio rule with something like the forms of local self-government forced them to adopt a policy which has more than made up for their abstinenoes from blood shed. Nobody whose intelligence has not been impaired by the habit of repeating formulas about universal suffrage can doubt that the punishment inflicted on the South ern whites is far the severest whioh one com munity has ever inflioted on another. England governed Ireland through a minority which the mass of the Celtio population, how ever it might hste, never dreamed of de spising; the United States rule tbe South through a majority of negroes, contempt for whom was almost a religion with the planter before the attempt at sooession. We are not considering whether the punishment was deserved, or whether the Northern States oould possibly help inflicting it; we merely say that, after the capacity of the negro for im provement has been rated as highly as pos sible, and after all possible deductions have been made fer the credibility of the stories published by the Democratic press, the fact remains that government of white men by colored ex-slaves is the aoutest form of moral torture which has ever been applied to a community. How unfortunate it naa been that the punishment of the South has taken this shape the United States are not likely to feel until the time comes (and it will certainly come; when the people of the North will be animated with the strongest wish to be re conciled to even the most obstinate zealots of secession. We should be sorry to lay down that the United States would have done well to shed blood like water in the first moments of triumph if only they could have devised some less de grading contrivance for ths provisional government of the South. Yet it is quite cer tain that bloodshed is easily forgotten: per sonal outrage with the greatost difficulty. ihe Hungarian nobles appear to nave for given the Emperor Franois Joseph for his wholesale executions of their brethren; but nobody can fail to see that the "irreconcila bility" of some of the most eminent of French politicians is greatly due to recollections of the personal dishonor to which they were sub jected on the memorable morning of the coup d'etat. At the present moment we are well aware that nothing seems less important to the great majority of the Northern people than that the experiment which they are try. ing in the South causes excessive discomfort to a parcel of conquered Rebels; but they will probably hereafter view this experiment with other eyes when there comes the inevitable waking to sympathy and pity, and when, much about the same time, it appears that the negroes, who are the instruments of punish ment, have become not only a Southern but a Northern power, weighing heavily in the scale whenever a national decision has to be taken. SPECIAL NOTICES. f- OFFICE OF WELLS, FARGO & COM PANY, No. 84 BROADWAY, NKW YORK, De- MDbir 3f, 1868. Notice ia hereby siren, tht the Tranafer Book of Well, Farcro A Company will be CLOSED on tbelittbdny of JANUARY, 1870, at I o'clock P. M , to enable the Company to ascertain who are owner of the rtock of tbe old Ten Million Capital. Ill owner of that tock will be entitled to participate in the dititributioa of aatots provided for by tbe acroement with the Faoiflo Express Company. Tbe Transfer Books will be openod on the 22d day of JANUARY, at 10 o'clock A. M., after whioh time the $5,000,000 new stock will be delivered. Notice is also Riven that tbe Transfer Books of tbla Com- any will be CLOSED on tbe 2bth day of JANUARY. 1870, at 8 o'clock P. M., for Ihe purpose of holdinc the annual KLKUTIOH OF D1RKOTOUS of tbis Company. Tbe books will be KK-OPENED on the 7th day of FEB RUARY, at IS o'clock A. M. 12 SUM GEORGE K. OTI8, Secretary. f2f- OFFICE PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY. PHTt.AriEi.rHiA, Jan. 25, 17. NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. The Annual Meeting ef tbe Stockholders of this Com pany will be held on TUESDAY, tbe 15th day ef Febmary, 1K71I, at 10 o'clock A. M., at the Hall of tbe Assembly Buildings. 8. W. corner of TENTH and Oil EH NUT Streota, Philadelphia, The Annual Elootion for Directors will be held on MONDAY, the 7th dity of March, 1870, at tho Office ot tho Company, No. 228 8. THIRD Street. 12S3w JOSEPH LESLEY, Secretary- mv- OFFICE OF THE FREEDOM IRON Btreet. The annnal meetinr of Ihe stockholders' of tbeVltHE- DOM IRON AND MTEKL COMPANY will be held at the OSice of the Company, No. 230 South THIRD Street, 1)1.(1. JI..Ki. TUITLUni V T. ..K D IliA -. lA o'clock M., when an Eleotion will be held for Thirteen Directors to serve for the ensuing rear. Tbe Transfer Books will be closed for fifteen days prior to tne nay oi saia election. 1 141 unsitLcn nnnmiii )!., oeorewry. mgg OFFICE OF TIIE BELVIDERE MANTJ. ISKi.vwunB. W. J.. Deo. 8. 1SH0. Notice Is hereby Riven to tbe stockholders of She BEL VIDEKE M A N U PAOTUR1NG CO M CAN Y respectively, that katawnienU amountin to SIXTY PER CENTUM of the capital stock of said company have been made and payment of tbe same called for on or before tbe eighth duy of February. A. D. 1870, and that payment of snob, a proportion of all sums of money by tbem suhsoribed is cauea ior ana aemanaea irotn uiem oa or DMore in sua time. By order of the Board of Director. 12 28 tiw 8. b H; RRERD, Secretary. Efcf OFFICE OF ST. NICIIOLAS COAL Philadelphia. .Tan. S3. 1870. ' Notice is hereby riven that the Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of the Kb Nicholas Coal Company will be bold at tbis Office on MONDAY, Feb. 7, at li o oiock m. An Election for a Board of Director will be held at the same time and place. 128 8t R. JOHNSTON, Secretary OFFICE OF TIIE LEHIGH COAL AND Tukahub't Department, ) TO.. ...... ...... i .. .. ci i iuta r I niifAyMiriiiAtUBiiutiij 11 " " ! Certificates of ihe Mortsaue Loan of this OomDnnV. dueAlnrcb 1, 187U, will be uid to holder thereof, or their legal representatives, ou presentation at tbis oinoe on ana alter mut uiue, iroin wuion time interne wiu ovale. o. otlltr tiitttu. 1 111 tnMrfiafc IW.mhi. j3 PHILADELPHIA AND READING RalLf KOAD CO., Omce, No. SSI a. FOUR I'H Street. Philadelphia, Deo. 22, 1849. ' DIVIDEND NOTICE. The Transfer Books of tbe Company will beolosed on FRIDAY, tbe 31st instant, and reopened oa TUESDAY January 11, 1870. ' ' A dividend of FIVE PER CENT, ha beensdeoUred on the Preferred and Common Stock, clear of National anil Btate taxes, payable in OABil, on and after January 17, 1870, to the holders thereof a they shall stand registered on the books of the Company on tbe Slut instant. Ail payable at this office. AU order for dividend must be witnessed end stumped. . 8. BRADFORD, 12 22 6Ut Treasurer. s- PHILADELPHIA AND TRENTON ROI.ROAD COMPANY Onice, No. 2M SOUTH untiAwaua Avenue. Philadelphia. January 19. 1870. The Direct ors Iisto ttiiu day dvvlared a semi annual dividend of f I V K rKH UKH i . upon the capital stock of the Company, clear of taxes, from tha nrotite of tbe six months ending Ieeniber 81, 1M4), payable on and alter l-etiiuary i proximo, wnou uie transier books will be re- cpeueo. 120 lit J. PARKER NORRIB, Treasurer.' BjKy CONNELLSVILLE GAS COAL COM PANY. I PHILADKLHIA. .TinnirrM. 1870. The Annual Meeting of the stockholders of tbe CON' KL,1.H V11.LK UAB COMl'ANY wul be neui ai their office. No. ai4' WALNUT Hlnint. on MONDAY February 7, 1870, at 12 o'clock M., to elect nv Directors to serve ior lue ensuing year. I lahnwitot NORTON JOHNBOM, Secretary1. sgy NOTICE TO SHIPPERjB, THE CHESAPEAKE AND DELAWARE OAnIl will be closed, for repairs to a lock, on MONDAY MORN ING, tbe 7th of February, lbTO, and opened for navigation in a few days thereafter, due notice of which will Do given HENUY V. LESLEY, Secretary. Philadelphia, Jan. 27, 1870. 1 27 dtiat lv'cin TREASURER'S OFFICE, PKlLAnv.Li'inA, Feb. 1, 1870. Warrants registered In 1868 or im to No. fAMM) wilt, be paid on presentation at this ollioe, interest oeasing frvtn date. duu.ru r. mauuiui, 1 1 J City Treasuror. w,;v- TI1K PARI I AM tJEWING MA.UHINE Company's New Fauiil Bewirg Machines si nwet emphatically pronounned to l that great lei,iderainiii so loug and uniiousiy looked for, in which all the essential oypenect 0IiEBf 0T 8trMt. BPEOtAL. NOTIOE8. gy- COLD WEATHER IXJKo- NOT !HAf nr ntiRUM ine flvm erT uing nnion i n tf OONATH ULYI.IKRINR TABLET OF S X.I1M KWsua OI.YOKRINR. Its doily nee makes the skin deUoaeelf oft and beautiful, bold by all rtrngsiste. K. t. A. WRimir, 1 4t BailWtlllKillfUf Bmwt f3T COLTON DENTAL ASSOCIATION onpniwi mi anivwrneTio nee ot Ni l RllllRDXII.'K. OR LAIJGITTNfl OAK. And devote their whole tun and practio to extracting teeth without iHitn. tiffos vlltH I'M snrt WALNUT Htraee. 11 n) ggy- DR. F. K, THOMAS, THE 1JVTB OPE- rator nf the Colton Iental A esowiatioa, i bow th ewfy (m in Philadelphia who devotes bin entire wme aH r notice to eitraetlng teeth, absolutely without paia. be resh nitrons eilde gaa. rfW ell WALNUT H. IW 1ST QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANT, Ajuxiii'r ei.u iji t ivnruuiA - i OAPITALl JXOUO,!'). BABLNK, ALLEN A IMJLLF3. Arenta, m MITUtMWAIJtUTIIVI j5j- H. T. II ELM BOLD, ; DRUGGIST, while engaged in tbe drni hustuwt, discovered ths ior mode of nreosrinff V mid K.xtruitji. Hu bann established upward nf NINETEEN YEARN, and in order to satisfy the most skeptical appends tbe following riuis Tne LARGEST MANUFACTURING CHEMIST IN THE WORLD. I am acquainted with Mr. II. T. H BLMROLD. He nr. copied the drag store opnstos my residnuee, sad waa sucoessful in conducting the businee where oaken had not been einallyso before him. I bar been favorably Impreseea wila nis ensrsnter at d estprprtm. Fran or I'dwubs A Whhihtsas, ManufaoturinffCbeini sis. Ninth and Brown etreets, Philadelphia. 11 M vt li.i.i am wniuii ruin, Nov. IB, WA. flgy WAGER $5000. In thtl Tifinftr T ftrivflrlMi AnrfinnatM nf ArtrM nf' on WMlnMiltr aad Batnrdsy of each week. I will wager the sum of that there ia no physioian or druggist in the United States whe can produce such evidence of cures in diseases of tha manner, aioneys, ana gravel. 1 II St J5ST NINETEEN TEARS. H. T. ITFLMROLD'B KXTRAOT RITCHff baa been established. Tbe oertilioatee of cures are hereao! contradiction. They will be advertised in this paper from time to time. Write any of the patient, should you doubt atatementa. 1 SI ft OBSERVE THAT TnE FAC-8IMLLE of my Ittt sn4 Ohemloal Warehoesn la on tha wrapper of each bottle, aad signed H. T. UKI.MHOLD. beware of Begua Buohus, made by Bogus Druggiftta an J old under fictitious name. 1 tl It IS?- WAGER $5000. , Not thst I Ilka the Idea- hnfc that unam,nilalJ like the matter tested, whether HKI.MKDIii'H Hirnun baa effected more curse than any physician or medioinea in snob diseases as it is roommndd, no matter by wb or whom made. I 31 It jjgy- T E 8 T 5 0 0 0. , 1 have advertised my nrAnutlnii ' TTtrr.unnr.ri BUCHU, as car for diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, Gravel, Dropsy, ate. I give the public enrtenoeof imi uierita in cemnoates wnion win do aavertlsed In tni paper Wednesday and Saturday ot eaoh week. will wager above torn that there is no medicine prepared fee these diseases that baa effected the number of cures. , , , it- T. UK.LMBULU, lrugist. lM3t No. 604 Broadway, NewTfork. BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYETHE sat n (As uorld doe not contain lead no vitriol poisons to paralyse the system or nmdnn Hn&th mm perfectly harmlnu reliable inManlnnrovt. Avoid tae vsuntea ana aeiustve preparations boasting virtue they do not possees, if yon would escape the danger. Tha geuuiue W. A. Batobelor's Hair Dye hat thirty years' nn (oii'.m to uphold its integrity. Sold by Druggists. Applies! at No. 16 BOND Street. N. Y. 117 mwf WINES AND LIQUORS. ill er majesty; 1 CHAMPAGNE. j DUUTON &. LTJSSOn. 215 SOUTH FEONT STIiEET. s J THE ATTENTION OF THE TRADE M for !e by"1 'ollowin vary Choio Wine, ato DUNTON i LUBSON, ' 2IS SOUTH FRONT STREET. CHAMPAGNES. Agent for her Majesty, Due da Montebello, Carte Bleae, Carta Blanche, and Charle Zaire's Grand Vin Eugenie, and Yu Imperial, M. Klae man A Co.,of Mayenoe, Sparkling Moselle and BULKS W LIS Ko. MADEIRAS. Old Island, South Side Reserve. SHERRIES. F. Kndolphe, Amontillado, Top, Vai lotto, Pale and Golden Bar, Ci own, eto. PORTS.-Vinho Velho Real, Vallot to, and Crown. CLARETS. I'romis Aine A Cie., Montf errand and Bay. deanx. Clarets and Sautrn Wine GIN. "Meder Swan." ' BRANDIES. Hennessey, Otard, Dnpay A Ob.' varieu Vintage. .... QAESTAI11S fc MoOAIiL, Noa. 128 WALNUT and 21 GRANITE 8treeU. Importers of BRANDIES, WINES, GIN, OLIVE OIL. ETC.. " AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS . ' 1 For the sale of PURE OLD RYE, WHEAT, AND BOURBON WHrS KIK8. !LM- CAE STAIRS' OLIVE OIL AN INVOICE of tha above for aal by OARSTAIRS MnOALL, ' ' 8 2py No. 186 WALNUT and 81 GRANITE 8U. w ILL! AM ANDERSON & CO., DEALERS 1 ia awa muoxiea, - . o. I North BOOOND Street, . QENT.'S FURNISHING GOODS. . p AT EN T SHOULDER-SEAM 8HJRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DBA WERT made from meMinrenient at very short notloe. All other articles ot GENTLEMEN'S DBJB3 GOODS in full variety. . . . WINCHESTER A CO., . 11 No. 706 WJ SNUT Street, H LIDAY i. i. ' FOB J '' ' " V-i GENTLEMEN.,' : J. VV. SCOTT & CO., No. 814 CHESNTJT Street, Philadelphia, BSTSrp our doors below Continental Hotet . . or ... ' , THE nOLT BIBLE. ' FAMILY, PULTIT, AND PHOTOGRAPH BIBLES, j rwit ... WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS. ALSO, PRESENTATION BIBLES FOK t CHUKCDE8, .;, CLERGYMEN, SOCIETIES AND ' ' , TEACHERS, ETC , New and tuperb assortment, bound In Rich Levant Turkey Morocco, Taueled and Crunmoutal Designs, equal to the Loudon and Oxford editions, at leas thaa half their prieee. No. 126 CHE8N0T Street. STRBNGTH, BEAUTY, CHEAPNESS COMBINE! ' HARDING'S PATENT CHAIN-BACK FII0T0G11APII ALBUMS. For Wedding, Holiday, or Birthday Presents, these Albums are particularly adapted. i The book trade, and dealers in fancy articles, writ find the most extuiitlve assortment of Photograph Albums In the country, and superior to any hereto fore , made. For great strength, durability, and cheapness, Harding's Patent Chain-buck Albums are unrivalled. Purchasers will Ilnl It greatly to their advantage to examine these bow Hues or goods be fore nutkUig op their orders for stock. . Also, a large and epleudld aasortruent of oevr stylos of Photograph Albums made lu the usual uiitnuer. No. 3ifd C'UKsNUr Btreet, . . I'UUadelpala. lit