iiwki hi in" THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPII PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, . AUGUST 2G,,18T0. p BrmiT or thh runes. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journal upon Current Topic Compiled Every Dav for the Evening Telegraph. THE CHINESE MASSACRES. From tk K. Y. World. It would be wholly unbecoming, in the presence of the horrible details from China, i to claim any credit for s resolute persistence : in the distrust of the niisohievoas nonsense generated, it would seem, thronghoat the world .by the Burlingame imposture. We i dismiss all thoughts of the kind now that we ( are convinced there is an end to it, at onoe and forever. Let Mr. Frank Moore, who, gossip tells us, is writing Mr. Bnrlingaine'a biography, give over his work, or put to it a 1 concluding chapter to tell that all the quackery of which poor Mr. Burlingame was the hero, and the gullible people of Amerioa the victims, has oowe to bloody fruition, in murder and mutilation and outrage, which tbe pen refuses to chronicle or the tongue ' to utter. Even Boston will not buy the book unless it tells this ghastly truth. If one tithe of the : reported outrages be true, then all that is loft of the Embassy, wherever it is Mr. McOleary - Brown and Ohin Kang and Sun Chia Ku had better go homeward through Borne by-trays for fear of summary justice; and Mrs. Bur lingame would do well to refund her pension, and Mr. Sumner pause before he realms the Chinese surplus We are not Bure that even the oordwaining pulse of the North Adams ' capitalist will not quicken when he reads of the "six boxes of the charred bones of the Sisters of Mercy" being sent down the Pei-ho like so muoh freight; or this, which, as a touching specimen, we select from a mass of horrors: "One of the sisters, named Loutza (an English girl, well known In Shanghai as a devoted and faith ful friend of the Chinese, and for years a patient toller in Anglo-China hospitals and schools), escaped from the Mission when it was attacked, clad in Chi nese garments. She obtained refuge In the house of a rice merchant, where she remained four hours; - hut upon attempting to escape to the settlement stio was betrayed by her European shoes and set upon by a crowd which in a few minutes numbered hun dreds. She was most shockingly abused and suf fered Indignities at the hands of the savages which make the heart sick. All and more than her com panions had suffered was she compelled to undergo hefore death released her. Iler body floated down the river on Wednesday a bruised and sickening witness of her cruel death." This is in 1870; and yet it was but yester day a pretentious jurist and eminently un successful soldier, General Halleok, at the San Francisco banquet, sneered at Mr. John Quincy Adams' doctrine (the only sound one, and which was reiterated with emphasis by Lord Palmerston years afterwards), that the rules of Christian and civilized diplomaoy are not always applicable to intercourse with heathen and barbarous people; and poor, credulous Mr. Martin fanoied China was socially revolutionized by virtue of a bad translation of "Wheaton's International Law," made more morally efficacious by Dana's stolen notes; and ex-Consul Kiernan raved in the Herald; and Mr. Burlingame, with all the flourish of postprandial eloquenoe, told ns here, there, and everywhere, and foolish people believed him, that China meant and was fit to come into tho brotherhood of nations. "She meant peace and good-will and unification with the whole human race." This was less than two years ago; and now we find the offi cial authorities of this new civilization assert ing, and the gentle-hearted race believing, that foreigners oome to China and reside there for the purpose of "kidnapping young boys and girls, killing them, digging out their eyes, mutilating their persons, stewing portions of their body in a huge cauldron, and packing in tin cans; after whioh they shipped them to Europe and Amerioa for medicinal purposes, the preparation being a pure panacea for baffling diseases." But we are drifting with a current of thought which, for the present, it would be better to avoid. What we and the whole world have to do is to measure and face the awful actuality as it presents itself. The first impulse is a sort of dim hope that the narrative whioh comes to us may be ex aggerated; but ' there is transient consola tion in this when we read the address of the Protestant missionaries and foreign residents at Shanghai , to the French Consul-General, attested by responsible signatures of great weight.' Putting asi.de the English signers, who that ' knows anything of . China, be he a believer or a doubter as to mis sionary enterprise, will hesitate to place implicit confidence in such men as Robert Nelson, and Edward W. Syle -gentlemen not merely devoted to the cause to which they have consecrated their lives, but fond of the Chinese, and ultra-Protestant in their theo logical views? r The other American signers are not so well known to ns, but all, no doubt, are trustworthy; and when they ask "full reparation for the past," they mean what they say. We do not know precisely the extent of outrages upon Americans; nor is it very material, as their escape from a general crusade against foreigners was purely accidental; and we rejoice to see that the nearest place of refuge to the surviving fugitives from Tien-tain was an armed mer chant vessel with an American commander, though probably flying the English flag. By this complicated outrage every treaty with the Western powers has been violated, in cluding Mr. Burlingame's supplementary arti cles, for protection to this very class of victims is in all specifically stipulated. The attitude of the Western plenipotentiaries at the capital in, to say the least of it, very awkward, and news from them will be anxiously expeci?d. The last intelligence we had of our Mr. Low was of his giving Prince Hung a patent-lever watch, and re ceiving in return a piece of trumpery silk. He is now a sort of hostage at Pekin, look ing, we imagine, at his own timepieoe with some solicitude. Ru&aia and France are the nations most directly involved, and though European com plications may hold their band for a time, the blow which justice demands on these brutal barbarians will fall heavily. There is a dis engaged French squadron in the Eastern seas and a military force quite adequate in Cochin China. PetropaulovBki is not far off, and Russia need not and will not pause. England will, of course, guard her commercial inte rests wisely, and with a proper selfishness; and tbe United States will do what the saga city of the President prompts and the means which a radical Congress put at the com mand of the Secretary of the Navy will Eermit. As it is, our correspondents lame how justly we don't pretend to say Admiral Rowan (the same officer who refused boats to the Oneida) for keeping all his squad ron at Hong Kong, where he expects to be relieved AdmiralRogers is on his way there; but, inasmuch as it took him five months to go from New York to Rio Janeiro, there will be time for the complete extirpation of all Americana in Cathay before he drops his anchor in the shadow of the Victoria peak. The conspicuous wisdom of our New Jersey Secretary and Admiral Porter' showed itself marvellously in the selection of the naval craft for Asiatic service. . He has soot them the Colorado, a sixty-gun frigate, drawing at least twenty-two feet of water, and there is not a port or anchorage where she can float, from the Bogne forts to the Chinese walL Such is the administrative impotence with which, at a crisis, this great nation is afflicted. At home and abroad, it is all alike. GERMANY AND EUROPE. Fiom the Lrndim Saturday Revirii). The success with which Germany has opened the campaign has naturally given rise to speculations and suggestions of every possible kind as to the consequenoes, remote or immediate, of Germany establishing an incontestable superiority over France. The Journal Officiet had even gone so far as to publish a manifesto addressed to all the nations of Europe, showing how very dan gerous to each might be the triumph of bo unscrupulous and rapacious a power as Ger many. While there is yet time to give effec tual aid, the Journal Ojjiiiel entreats the countries now neutral to stand by France, tbe champion ef European independence. What is asked is, in plain language, that Western Europe should form a coalition not against France, but in her favor. Perhaps no effect of the reverses the French army has sustained is more curious than this. Here is the organ of the French Government, within a month of a war undertaken in lightness of heart to teaoh the Prussians manners and to show the world the prowess of the French army, crying out in hopeless panic to the world that these Prussians are too great and strong for any one power to contend against, and that all who want to be safe from them must unite to put them dowB. The Germans inspire the officials of the Third Napoleon with some thing of the same terror with whioh the vast ambition and colossal strength of the First Napoleon inspired the courts and peoples in his neighborhood. A vision is conjured up of a German empire making the Baltio a Ger man lake. The expression which the French have on their own behalf delighted so much to apply to the Mediterranean is to be applied by the Germans, in their horrible presump tion, to the sea that washes their northern shores. But this would never content the Emperor of Germany, for the French mind perceives that this would be the new title of the King of Prussia; and while it is the most harmless and natural thing in the world that France should have an Emperor, it reveals an almost superhuman insolence in the Ger mans that they also should have an Emperor to rule over them. The whole tone of the Journal Officiel in this respect is perfectly artless and sincere, and is thoroughly Frenoh. That France .should domineer over her neighbors is quite in keeping with the proper order of things, and can give offence to no one. But that Germany should talk as France has been in the habit of talk ing, and should act as France has boasted of wishing and intending to act, is truly awful. There is no end to the dreadful fancies that such a thought suggests. The Emperor of Germany will want Holland, he will want Venice, he will want Trieste. He will bar gain with Russia, and in return for ample compensation will plant the Czar at Constantinople. He will in fact play the part which Napoleon played with bo much relish at Tilsit. To prevent such a catastrophe France asks for aid from those who would most suffer at the hands of a too triumphant Germany; and it may perhaps be worth while for the neutral nations to ask themselves how far these fears are imaginary, and whether, if the Germans succeeded in inflicting further defeats on France, the interests of European peace would be seriously endangered. It is impossible for us in England to regard Europe from the same point of view, in whioh the French regard it. To as the strength and power of Germany have a value which the French, against whom we wish they should be in some measure direoted, cannot be ex pected to ' appreciate. It is for the great good of Europe, and, as we believe, to the real advantage of France itself, that there should be a neighbor of France strong enough and resolute enough to ease France of some thing of its restless ambition, its tall talk, and its tendency to relieve the weariness of its home politics by interfering with every one outside its borders. A nation that is a prey to revolutions, to adventurers, and to military despotism, and that avowedly looks on war as a last stake which its gamblers throw when they are hard pressed, is a constant source of peril to Europe. It is not wholesome for Europe that there should be in it a country the Prime Minister of which rushes into a totally unjustifiable war with lightness of heart. When we have said thus much we have said all that we have to Bay against France. ' That . France should be really humiliated, crippled, and powerless, would be a state of things in every way deplorable and very nnwelcome to England. The French have forced on the war, and they must take the chances of the war they have provoked; but France bleeding and prostrate is a spec tacle which Englishmen will regard with the most unfeigned reluctarf All that is wanted is that trance 6houLTearn the lesson it so much needed, that it must leave Ger many alone. But will the Germans be content to be left alone, or will they use their victories, if they continue to win them, in a spirit of arrogance and insolence, and so as to menace Europe V The Frenoh say that they will, and they have, it appears, not only said this in a general way, but they have pressed some neutral States, and more parti cularly Austria, Italy, and Denmark, with the argument that to join France promptly and openly is their last chance of independenoe. Would a wise Austrian or Italian admit the force of this argument, or not ? Is the suc cess of Germany a danger to Europe ? Of all the political questions of the day, this is perhaps the one it is most desirable to answer aright. No prudent person, would give other than a guarded answer. Success quiokly cor rupts the heart of man, and no one can speak positively as to the effect on Germany of finding itself quickly and indis putably victorious. But, so far as it is pos sible to form an opinion now, it may be said that the Journal OJftciel is wrong, and that its error consists in speaking of Germans as if they were Frenchmen. Everything tends to show that all the Germans want is Ger many for the Germans. They do not want to dictate to their neighbors, or to take the ter ritory of their neighbors, or to inoorporate aliens such as Belgians and Dutchmen in Germany. They only ask that Germany may be left altogether alone, to manage its own concerns, and to bind together its several parts in that degree and kind of nnity which may best suit them. No one can speak confidently as to the effects of military success on a people; but there is at any rate a very strong presump tion against the notion that Germany will become an aggressive power. That Count Bismarck has often talked as if bo would readily consent to see small States like Belgium sacrificed in order to carry out the projects of great power like Frac ai Prussia it doubtless true. But it must be remembered that none of the projects of Count Bisinftrok with regard to foreign nations have ever attained anything like detinitenesa, nor have they ever received the sanction of the King. The difference between France and Germany in this respect is very striking. It is tbe bead of France who for years has been striving to tear up old treaties, and to propagate new ideas, very often to the great advantage of the world. It is not in his hour of misfortune - that we ought to forget that Italy owes its very existence to the Emperor of the French. But still he has been plotting against the established order of things for twenty years, and his people have looked very kindly on his plotting. The Journal Officiel makes the fundamental mis take, in our opinion, of looking on Germans as if they were Frenchmen. The reply to its arguments is to be found in the experience of any one accustomed to mix with the natives of the two countries. Even the' most tern peratejand modest Frenchmen are imbued with the ideas of territorial aggrandizoment and foreign conquest. They are actuated un consciously by memories of the old Napoleon dajs, and speak as if they had been robbed of all the territory which Napoleon wou and failed to keep. Such a spirit is unknown in Germany. The Germans want all Germany to be united, but they want nothing more. A war of spoliation would be totally ab horrent to German feelings. The moral sentiment of the Germans is against wronging and bullying and preying on adjacent nations. The war with Denmark may be thought a proof to the contrary; but the Germans at least believed they were tho roughly in tbe right, that the Duchies were German, and had . been ill-treated by a foreigner, and that they were only .roclaim iDg their own when they took away the Duchies from Denmark. But, in any case, isolated nets may mislead us. What we rest upon is the character of tho German people, which is orderly and honest and sober, and averse to military despotism and the fatigues and dangers of unnecessary war. The German army is admirably organized, and, as has just been shown, can strike swift and strong blows outside German territory. But it is essentially a defensive army, and those who compose it will not readily under take war unless to protect themselves. It was with the utmost reluctance that the Germans went into the present war, and their only object at present seems to be to show, that they are not to be invaded with impunity. The Germans may of course become intoxi cated with success, but there is no symptom whatever at present that this will be the case, and they deserve fully that their past history and their national character should at least do this much for them, that neutral nations should look on their successes without jealousy or alarm. THE MODERN NEWSPAPER. Prom the Kttrark A dver titter. The publication by the N. Y. Tribune of four columns of a graphic account of a battle fought in France last Thursday, is one. of the notable inoidents of modern jour nalism. It involved, first, the sending of a man with brains, eyes, education, and courage to the field. He must also have enough of social position and polite address to secure kindly treatment and fair opportunity to observe what is going on. Ilia day's work done, he must telegraph to his principal at London, and he again to the home office in New York. The exploit oost some thousands of dollars, but was so well executed that Americans are better in formed as to the real events and results of the battle of Gravelotte than are the in habitants of Berlin, Paris, or London. The same triumph ' was achieved by the Herald in the Abyssinian war; and while the Tribune has a good right to glorify itself, the other great dailies of New York are not without their laurels in this matter of the Franoo Piussian war. Whatever of failure attaches to them arises from the. mistake of suppos ing that Paris would be the centre of news, when, to use a very bad and yet expressive word, it "eventuated" that Paris has been for days cut off from communication with the fnncipal field of action, and that such intel igence as came to the Government could not be safely communicated to the people. But the least successful of our New York contemporaries has far exceeded the press of London, which, free as it is and supplied with ample brain and wealth, has not dared to invest in news to any extent that would be deemed enterprising in a prominent Ame rican newspaper. It has contented itself with what is called official news, and we need only the experience of our own war to know that private enterprise is more likely to tell the troth than any statement coming from sources which are deeply Interested fn the result. The authorities are compelled to be reticent if not absolutely economical in their use of truth. Paris would have been a whirlwind last Saturday had our despatches, all of which have been verified since, been placarded in its streets. ' The Paris des patches in the New York Times of recent issues 6how that even a keen-soented and capable correspondent was kept in compul sory ignorance of the real Btate of affairs at the front. The modern paper is curiously enough re turning to the original conception of its duty, which is simply to inform its readers of pass ing events and to explain them from day to day, not with authority or leadership, but with that weight of influence which may ap pertain to intelligent discussion. The editor need not be a lecturer. His personality is of small account to most of the thousands whom he addresses, but if in his writings he shows a ready comprehension of affairs and a decent power of legic, he may be presumed to be a quicker and better judge as te what has really happened than another man of equal intelligence who is absorbed in his private business. The facts he relates carry with them their own logic, and need only comment and illustra tion. Tbe fairer the tone adopted, the calmer and less personal the language employed, the stronger will be the control it exercises upon publio opinioB. The power of a newspaper does not rest in self-assertion, certainly not in the filthy use of personalities now aban doned by all respectable sheets, and only maintained by struggling bankrupt establish ments seeking to attract a notice they do not deserve, or stupidly by fellows who nave no business to claim a place in a learned pro fession. , The tendency of journalism is toward the entire absorption of tie individual in the paper. Who knows, and how few care, who wrote the magnificent battle-pictnre in the TSibvne of Tuesddy morning r Even Horaoe Greeley, with his immense power of self, assertion and the' many ear-marks whioh dis tinguish his peculiar style, gets credit for hundreds of articles written by others, and the gentleman who controls the policy and news business of the Tribune very rarely sees bis canie in print. The finished scholar and accomplished writer who is the author of most of . the perversely cogent "leaders" in the HW it aUolutely unknown, to fame, except as be enjoys a professional reputation, a repute among Journalists who are good i'ndea of their own class, whioh doea him iigh honor, atd with Which we presume him to be content. Only the snobs and underlings enjoy a publicity which is necessarily a mere noto riety. No good journal oan allow its fame to rest upon the personal fortunes of any man, and as a compensation to the Journalist he is, by all honorable men,- spared those deroga tory personal allusions whioh he would not himself apply to others and which cannot by any possibility weaken though they may strengthen the intrinsic force of the argu ment he presents. This is a sound theory of his position. Mr. Raymond's idea and America has known no abler journalist was that a newspaper represents not so much its editor as tbe aggregate mind of its readers. If they are pure-minded and intelligent, bo must be his conduct of the paper. If they are vulgar and ignorant he will be vile and personal. The rule will be found to hold good. A WORD ABOUT PLATFORMS. From the S. T. World. Within the ensuing month many State and more Congressional district conventions will be held by Democrats; and eaoh, in accord ance with usage, will promulgate a declara tion of principles. It concerns the welfare and sure ss of the party that these platforms be wisely drawn, and it may not be amiss for Democrat a to bestow some reflection before hand on the points it is proper to introduce in such declaration?. In the two last Presidential elections the Democratic party has been defeated by mala droit platforms. In its aim and purpose, a political platform is an electioneering mani festo a dooume&t intended, first, to hold the party together on a basis whioh all its mem bers can accept, and, secondly, to furnish an easy bridge on which citizens outside of the organization can oome over and strengthen it by reinforcements. The tune should ' there fore le pitched in a low key. The declara tion should contain nothing to which the whole party cannot readily assent, otherwise it obstructs the first of these objects; and it should not attempt to drive the wedge blunt end foremost, or it will repel instead of win ning proselytes. The Democratic national platforms of 1864 and 18G8 fatally erred in both these particu lars. They were not broad enough even for the pruty, and contained no room for prose lytes. The anti-war plank of the platform of 18G4 was felt to be so damaging that the can didate virtually abjured it in his letter ac cepting the nomination. There wan a self stultifying incongruity in nominating a dis tinguished and popular general on an anti war platform. In 18G8 the platform and the candidate were also out of harmony. Gov ernor Seymour had, within the preceding three months, made vigorous speeches against the greenback theory, and yet he was placed on a platform endorsing it. The platform was in direct collision with the avowed opinions of the candidate. But a more funda mental objection to it was that it was too narrow for any party to stand on that ex pected within the ensuing five months to be a majority. There was at that time no majo rity that accepted its principles, and no pro bability that such a majority could be created previous to the election. The Republican party has generally man aged these matters more adroitly and suooess fully. Instead of avowing all they wished te accomplish, and all they hoped their party would ultimately grow to, they have been careful to insert the sharp end of the wedge, well knowing that if it could not be driven to the but in that way it could not at all. They declared at first that they only aimed to exclude slavery from the Territories; but they ended by abolishing it in the States. When they were soliciting support for aboli tion, they disclaimed any intention of mak ing voters of the freedmen; but they never theless gave them the suffrage as soon as they were strong enough. In their last national platform they declared that the regulation of the elective franchise in the loyal States belonged to the people of those ' States; but .; as soon as they had carried tbe election they undertook to regulate it in all the States by Federal autho rity. If they had begun where they left off, they never could have had any success, nor even have formed a party capable of making a figure in politics. When publio opinion is set moving even so feebly in any direction, its natural tendency is to go on. A party in the flush of success may do things which would have shocked many of its own mem bers in an earlier stage. 1 When a train of cars is 6tarted from the station the utmost foroe of tbe engine can give it only a slow motion at first, but its velocity increases by a continued application of the same power, and in a short time it goes shooting "forward on its track at the rate of forty or fifty miles an hour. In politics success propagates itself and breeds new successes. A party in power may safely do things on which it could not have ventured without rnin so long as it was a candidate for publio favor. " The children of this world are wiser in their generation than the children of light." Tbe Democratto platform builders may learn something from the history of the Republi can party during the period while it was rising to power and gradually developing its policy. During that period its platforms were always accommodated to those who marched with the rear; but it always turned out that the rear Boon passed the position lately occupied by the advance, and the pro gress of the party was en and on. "It is the first step that costs. " When men are deliber ating whether they will act with a different party, the way needs to be smoothed; but after the old connection has been broken, a series of political victories in whioh they have participated has more effect than argument in opening their minds. We hope the Democratic platforms this year will be broad enough for the whole party to stand upon, with some room for new-oomers. We may safely trust to the tendency of victorious parties to advance to the full length of their principles when they are fairly on the march. SHEPHERD AND SnEEP. from tK4 K. T. Tribune. Tte beautiful language of 'the Scripture which characterizes tbe itaity as a shepherd leading his flock, has been applied to the pastors of Congregational churches. In the ast, tbe sheep, we are told, really follow the shepherd in our modern eooiesiastical ar rangements, the individual who carries the crook walks behind, and if the rams and ewes of the society do not like his driving, they turn about and drive him. To drop all meta phor, we do not know anything more mourn ful than the spectacle of a clergyman badgered and worried by those to whom he is appointed as a teacher of truth. It is such an absurd solecism. It is such a ridiculous perversity. It is such a droll putting of the oart before tie horse. As we gaze upon it we follow the example of the Widow of F.pbesus. We laugh with one eye and we weep with the other. We are alive to the distressing charaoter of tbe fw; but, in ppits of oursolves, we cannot help giggling at the fun. 1 ; A Boone of a kind which has become not uncommon upon this continent occurred in the Church of the Atonement, in Chicago, on Sunday, the 14th instant. It is the misfor tune of the Rev. Dr. Thayer, the shepherd of this church, to have a chronio quarrel with that part of the flock called vestrymen. He is aconsed of making "ill-timed ' and unnecessary remarks in his sermons. H Nor does the church under his ministry "grow" as it should, to the great detriment of the treasury. Wherefore the vestrymen held a meeting and voted to ask Dr. Thayer to resign; and, should he refuse to do so, to turn him out. . Although not officially sorved with Ibis document, Dr. Thayer obtained a copy of it, and on the aforesaid Sunday, in full congregation, he expressed bis mind, which was not a pacifio or complimentary mind, of the aforesaid vestrymen. Tbe ac count before us Bays that he was "pale with rage;" but can we imagine a gentle shepherd thus disregarding the Arcadian simplicities of his oalling ? Dr. Thayer, in substanoe, said that he did not believe that a majority of the eheep wished bint to resign; and, not to put too fine a point upon it, he wouldn't. It was then that the vestrymen rose to do battle, and Buoh a bloating never was heard in the fold before. Some were for having a vote at once taken on the subject, and some declared that euch a course would be 'illegal and revo lutionary." Large numbers of people sprung to their feet. Dozens were gesticulating and talking together. Some swore (so to speak) that there should be a vote. Others affirmed that there should not. "The church," says the report of the affair, "was filled with noise and confusion. " There was hesitation in some faces, and wrath in others. Alto gether, it was quite a carnal scene, and what might have happened we tremble to think (possibly manslaughter) if one of the Vestry men, who bears the strong and strident name of Stridiron, had not, with admirable pres ence of mind, ordered everybody to leave the sacred edifice. He gpake and was obeyed. The ferocious altercation was renewed upon the sidewalk, and then the whole flock went home to the subduing pasturage of their Sun day dinners, to allay by their pleasant nib blings, and by either still or strong waters, the partisan fervors of this extraordinary oc casion. What will come of all this we do not know; but should there be an actual physical contest, we shall try to chronicle the fearful fact. It has been generally conceded, in ell ages of Christianity, that "Brethren Bhould dwell together in unity;" but, somehow, in all ages they have Badly failed to do so; and church quarrels were never more common than at the present time. Being ourselves, although secular, great lovers of peace and harmony (when the same oan be maintained without compromising principle), we wish that the fact were otherwise; and it does not lessen our regret to observe that more than a moiety of chnrsh squabbles seem to be about things which are not of the least con sequence. . A REPUBLIC FOR GERMANY. From the A'. F. Times- . The successes of the German armies in the present war may undoubtedly tend to increase the popularity of the House of Ilohenzollern for a time; but there can scarcely be any doubt that a republio, and not an empire, is the form of government towards which the people are gravitating. It is impossible that united Germany can long remain subject to a monarch who still clings to the prinoiple which cost Charles I his life. . The German iieople are now too powerful to be held in eading strings,' and the degree of culture which exists among them is too high to admit of a repetition of those despotic measures which Count Bismarck has so often put in force. Count Bismarck has, indeed, been made ' an instrument for the accomplishment of " a great,' "v jrk, but his usefulness i will have ' passed away with the close of the1 present 'war. From that time the German people will have freed themselves from external enemies, and they will be enabled to apply their undivided energies to the task of constructing a govern ' ment calculated to develop the liberal ideas i which really animate the nation. The war has not only paralyzed the only formidable foe which stood in the way of Germany, but it has obliterated sectional differences. The grand idea of "unity" was never, so fully realized by our own people as during and after our late war, and the sense of danger to Germany has had a similar effect upon the minds of the German people. ' They see plainly enough that their own political dif ferences are unimportant compared with the necessity of presenting an unbroken front to the world. They will .soon see that in a re publio lies .their surest guarantee of future proHperity and power, and it is not too muoh to hope that Austria will one day form an in tegral part of that republic, . . - t i : In that case, the two greatest Governments in the world will challenge admiration as the direct work of the people's hands. , Under a republic, there need be soaroely any limit to the progress of Germany. No one can doubt that bhe would at any time be prepared to repel assaults from without. Republics always know how to defend themselves. The existence of tbe House of Ilohenzollern is now an anachronism. It is the indomitable spirit of a great nation which has waged the present arduous contest, not the genius of a king or his adviser. Whatever may be the plans of Bismarck, we do not believe that the German people intend this war to be one of aggrandizement or spoliation. The only want "Germany for the Germans," to cause it to be under stood by the world, once for all, thtt Ger many must not be put up as a prize for Im- Eerial or political gamblers. Bismarck's am ition has thus far exceeded that of his countrymen, and the war will probably teach him that with the accomplishment of Ger man unity the great bulk of tbe people will be fully satisfied. As a Minister, he is still far from being universally popular as the fact that he has been obliged to suppress bixty-seven newspapers in North Germany, for making disagreeable comments, suffi ciently attests. ."I have no love for the . preaching old drill-sergeant who is called , King of Prussia," writes a German to a foreign journal, "or for the audacious conspirator who pulls his wires. TLU conspirator and his rival conspirator, Louis Bonaparte, stand in my affections pretty much on a par. Both play their own game, and are obstacles to better things. X em a republican. . I desire a republic for every country in Europe. I believe no coun try of Europe is so fitted to be a republio as Germany." That is the true idea, and it will govern the future of politics in Germany. Under a republic the nation itself, and not kings or ministers, would reap the advan tages of the vat sacrifices it has made. Let us hope that the present generation will wit ness tiia displacement both of the Hohenrol krns and the Ilapoburg. . , . WnO RULES THIS COUNTRY f, FVtn tkt K. r: Bun. ! On Saturday last the steamer F1orida,"for merly United States steamer Penguin, wa seized by the United State Marshal for thig district, on the charge of violating the neu trality laws. A the Marshal is merely tho executive of competently issued mandates, and as the Hon. Hamilton Fish dearei oa Monday last, at his country-seat at Garrisons, that he knew nothing of the seizure until he read an account of it in that morning's paper, the order of seizure must have issued from one of the Davises -either from the Assistant Secretary of State, of Boston and Erie fame, or from Noah Davis, of McFarland trial notoriety. , , The ' order of seizure was made on . the complaint of the Spanish Mtoister at Wash ington and the Spanish Consul at this port, and said complaint was based upon the affidavit of a person "who," as the Dwtriot Attorney states, "does not wish his name to appear. At the time of seizure the vessel was being loaded with merchandise for Vera Cms by General Darr. Of course the Spanish Minis ter chose to Bnspeot that Bhe was loading arms for tbe Cuban patriots. We know that the decision of the Washington Cabinet last October was that the shipment of arms and munitions of war from our ports was not prohibited to either party to the Cuban Strug, gle, and that the question of the duty of this Government to interfere could arise only when "an expedition of armed men or armed , vessels, or of vessels fitted and prepared and intended for naval warfare, is started in an y oi our ports. isotn tne l'resident and the Secretary have in public documents not only j stated that the representatives of the Cuban j patriots had the right to ship arms to Cuba, bat have even, in not very measured terms, inculpated the Junta of this city tor not shipping them in a manner by whioh the neutrality laws were not violated. As the Florida was not an "armed vessel," and as Bhe was not "being fitted, prepared, or in tended for naval warfare," her seizure was illegal. The case, however, is far worse. By the faots it appears that Don Lopez Roberts may call upon any member of the bootblaok brigade "who does not wish his name to ap pear," get him for five dollars to sign an affi davit, and on the strength of it without being obliged to furnish any security for damages should the charges not be substan tiated binder any vessel from leaving any port in the United States. If this be so it is time our merchants were , ' awRie of it. SPECIAL NOTICES. fey- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN . 7 application will be made at the next meeting or tne uenerai Assembly or the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, la accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled TUK STATU OF PENNSYLVANIA ' BANK.to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of five hundred thousand dollars, with the right to , ncreaae the same to tea mlllllon do.'ara. CS- BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYE. THIS SPLKN "w did Hair lve U the best in the world, the only true and perfect Dye. Harmless Reliable Instan taneousno disappointment no ridiculous tints "Doet not contain Lead nor any I'iUUie Potion to in jure the Hair or Spttem." Invigorates the Hair and , leaves It soft and beautiful ; Black or Brown. . Sold by all Druggists and dealers. Applied at the Factory, Ko. 16 BOND Street, New York. 14 gr mwft ' jJvV- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ' application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for tbe incorporation of a Bank, la accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled TUB KEYSTONE STATE BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capita! of two hun- . dred and fifty thousand dollars, with the right to increase the same to five hundred thousand dollars. . s , . :- i. ..i. i . jy- TREGO'S TEABERRT TOOTHWASH. ' It is the most pleasant, cheapest and beat dentlf rloe extant. Warranted free from Injurious ingredients. It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth I Invigorates and Soothes the Gumal Purines and Perfumes the Breath I , . Prevents Accumulation ef Tartar t i Cleanses and Purines AotiaclalTeeUiI j . , i la a Superior Article for Child rent i , ; Sold by all dmggistt and dentists. ;-."-. A. M. WILSON, Dragglat, Proprietor, 8 8 10m Cor. NINTH AND FILBERT Sta, Plillada. ( w- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AM application will be made at the next meeting " of the General Assembly of the Common wealth of ' Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, in ac- " cordance with tbe laws of the Commonwealth, to be . entitled TBE ANTHRACITE BAN K, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of Ave hundred thoa eand dollars, with the right to increase the same to two million dollars. - JOT" TUJE UNION FIRS EXTINGUISHES , COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA' 1 ' Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire. , I Extinguisher. Always Reliable. . .. . r i i D. T. GAGS, esotf No. 118 MARKET St., General Agent. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN . application will be made at the next meeting or the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled TUK IRON BANK, to be located at Phi ladelphia, with a capital of one hundred thousand ' dollars, with the right to Increase the same to one rotilion dollars. HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING Tetb with freah Nitrou-Oiid Ou Absolut! bo ptin. Dr. . K. TtiOMAS, (ormwly operator at tu Oolton Dental Booma, devotes hi entire practice to the paiclea xuaotion of teeth, CiEoe, No. VU WALMJ f BtraeU igy- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEJl THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, la accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to e entitled TUK SOUTUWARK BANKING COMPANY, to be located at Philadelphia, with a' capital of one hundred thousand dollars, with the tight to increase tne game to one million doiiara. , "whisky, wine, etc.- QAR8TAIRS & IMcCALL, No. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite 8ta. IMPORTKRS Of Brandies, Winet, Gin, Olive OU, Eta., WHOLKSAXB DliUBS IH ' PURE RYE WHI8KIE0. lil BOHP AND TAX FArD. IBtpt ., -7IL!.IAM ANDERoON A CO., DEALERS IM Fine Whiskies, . ,, No. 14fl North SECOND Street, ' ' Philadelphia, - QENTi'8 FURNISHING 00008,"" p AT KMT ailO UL.D Kli-aR AM SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. ' PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWERS made from measurement at very short notice. ' " All other articles ot GENTLEMEN'S DRK33 1fuiTU . .. ...I. ... .... uwxjo uiiuu Taiu'ij, i . i WINCHESTER k CO , . 1H NO. T0 CUKisNUT Street ' ' FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF OARg f r'lj jot the late Ira ot KVA1IS A WATSON.! FIRK AND BUBOLAR-PROOP , H A. J? Yu ST O il IS. , No. 53 BOUTH FOURTH STREET,4 A few Owon tlx pasat rtu!a 'X i