THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1870. criniT or txxh mxms. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. '.THE PROSPECT OF THE WAU. Prom the S. F. World. We bave no definite intelligence either of the operations going on in the famous district of Ardennes and the Ar gonnes or of the progress of the Frnssian armies towards Talis. All manner of tales reach ns from the headquarters of armies which, as we know, permit no news to be sent forth from their linos, and orer the wires of telegraphs which, as we know, are absolutely Controlled by one or another of the contend ing Governments. It is worse than idle to base either criticism or speculation upon such information as alone it id in the power of the most active and capable representatives of the press to accumulate from the scenes of waste and woe which all the able-bodied men of the two foremost nations of Continental Europe are now devoting all their energies to create. Reasoning from what we -know positively of the conditions of military success or failure, of the resources of the two hostile powers, and of the disposition of the now neutral States of Europe, we may, however, with some degree of confidence assert it to be growing daily more and more certain that this abominable war will last much longer, cover a much wider area of desolation, and inflict upon both the parties to it vastly more suffering and disaster than either of them, or, for the matter of that, the rest of the world contemplating them, four short weeks ago imagined. We ought, perhaps, to ex cept the Emperor Napoleon, whom it is just now so easy to vituperate and so fash ionable to disparage that it is almost an act of moral courage to say that he is the only conspicuous publio man of either side who went into the conflict believing and asserting openly that it would be both "long and ex hauBting." It is true that he expected the war to be fought out upon German rather than upon French soil, and that he paid his antagonists, therefore, the tribute of antici pating from them a resistance in defense of their homes and their altars as determined and as obstinate as that which they are now destined to encounter from the invaded empire of France. It is probable, likewise, that he looked forward to a neutral attitude on the part of the South German govern ments, which would doubtless have facilitated the progress of Frenoh arms in North Ger many, without, however, much diminishing, if at all, the persistency of the North German resistance. But these miscalcula tions cannot deprive the Emperor of the credit, such as it is, of fully estimating the gravity of the prospect which opened before him when the bugles blew their first rallying blasts on the banks of the blue Moselle. On the side of the Germans, after it became clear that France was suffering the initiative of the attack to slip away from her, other illusions unquestionably took posses sion of the leaders' minds. It has been quite evident throughout the campaign of which a decisive act is even now passing in one of the most famous battle regions of Western Europe, that the Prussian com manders have been pressing forward to Paris under a notion that the appear ance ef their armies before that mag nificent capital must be the signal of a grefft popular cataclysm in which the ad ministrative system of France would go by the board. Ail the signs of the time con spire to demonstrate the fatuity of this notion, and to make it plain that the Prus sians are laboring under a misconception of the political aspects of the present war in France at least as profound as the Emperor Napoleon's misconception of its political aspects in South Germany. If the Emperor exaggerated the significance in a great war crisis of the deep and genuine anti-Prussian, liberal, and progressive movement in Ger many, the Prussian princes, who alone now control the action of Germany, as surely ex aggerate the significance in a similar crisis of the equally deep and genuine anti-imperialist and anti-bureaucratis movement in France. That King William should fall into such a mistake as this is natural enough; nor is it unnatural that Count Bismarck should share his blunder, for Count Bismarck has dealt during his remarkable career with a people much less practised in self-government than the French, and much more patient than the French of misgovernment. To bring the people of Germany to such demonstrations of hostility against a Government like that of Prussia as France during the last year has made against the government of Napoleon III. it would be necessary that the Govern ment should have inflicted what we may call the actual cautery of oppression upon the people. And when a German State is brought to such demonstrations it is not far from vehement armed revolution. This was true of France a generation ago. We do not be lieve it to be true of France to-day. If it is not true of France to-day, it will be found, should the Prussians reach Paris and invest the city, that, instead of attaining the climax and consummation of their victories in a brilliant and satisfactory peace, they will be confronted with the ominous and dismal prospect of a war only just begun, and likely to be protracted long beyond the period through which it will be possible for the existing system of German and Prussian administration comfortably and successfully to conduct it. What was said by the ablest of Prussian writers on the war of 180(, that "disaster in the field was due to errors in the cabinet, was perfectly true of the ronfc of Austria, and not of the Austrian army only, at Koniggratz. The same thing seems to have been expected and to be now expected by Prussia to be true of France. If it proves to be false in regard to France, it is clear that it will prove to be true in regard to Prussia herself. Political misconceptions of the actual condition of France threaten now to counterbalance, in deciding the future of this dreadful contest, the advantages won by Prussia up to the present moment through the perfection and accuracy of her military organization. PAltlS. I'rom the K. T. Tribune. The oatbreak of revolution in Paris has been prevented partly by the energetio mea sures or the military Directory, partly by the practical resignation of power by the absent Emperor, and partly by the pervading desire among the people to offer a great show of re sistance, if not a lively defense, against the foreign invader. Republicans as well as Orleanists, the Extreme Left and the old Legitimists, bave joined hands with the Im perialiaU in a common effort to justify l'rench patriotism and courage during period of general peril. While we hear of I fee energetio w.y in which the old politician M. Thiers, is instructing the military com manders about the defence of Paris, we also hear that the lied Republican Gambetta has raised ten thousand workingmen to take part in the struggle on the ramparts. It is true we have beard that General lrocnu was on bad terms with the Minister of War. the Prefect of Police, and the Empress Recent: but we have, at the same time, seen him working with immense fervor at the business of raising troops, executing spies, strengthening the fortifications, expelling German residents, garnering munitions ana supplies, imprisoning "dangerous characters," issuing proclamations, and preparing to re ceive the advancing enemy. laris( on the whole, looks rather resolute; and if it fail to make a vigorous defense against the army of the Crown Trince, it will not be be cause the commanders and newspapers have not done their best to get the excitable popu lation into fighting condition. We have no doubt, however, that if the control of an airs had been given wholly to one capable man, instead of being divided among half a dozen men, and if the newspapers, instead of being frenzied and noisy, had been strong and self- possessed, the chances of the city holding out for a few days would have been even better than they appear at present. We earnestly hope there will be no neces sity for the bombardment of Paris. It would be utter folJy in lrocnu to compel tne tier- mans to take this step or even to enter upon a serious siege of the city. If the r rench armies in the field are routed, if the regular and organized military power of the empire is broken, it is folly to suppose that Paris can hold out for any length of time, or that the trench Government can derive any ad vantage by exposing its population to the horrors of siege, bombardment, or assault. Trochu would be justified, perhaps, in mak ing a determined military defense of bis fortified lines with the troops under his com mand; but when, as a strategist, he saw the impossibility of maintaining his position, ho would have justifiable ground for capitula tion. In the case of a capitulation in this way there would inevitably be a revolution before the German troops entered the city. It would be policy in the German commander to per mit this, or at least to permit the establish ment of a new Government with which nego tiations could be carried on. The Im perialist party might even then make an effort, though it would seem that with the destruction of the military power of the empire its political pretensions would disappear. The Orleanists will doubtless make an attempt to seize the reins; but we have seen no signs of the growth of any Orleans or monarchical party during the weeks in which they have been trying to call such a party into existence. One thing must be remembered: It would be Paris which, in the first instance, would have the power of organizing and establishing the new Government. Paris, as we have learned from repeated votes, in anti-imperialist and anti-monarchical. Paris is liberal and re publican. THE EMPEROR IN FAILURE. From the London Spectator. One would give a good deal for a single hour's insight into the dreams of the dejected ruler and commander who, whatever his nominal position at Metz, is well known to be in no state of health for any large amount of active exertion. It is apparently true that he still keeps the name of Commander-in-Chief, which he has done so much to make a name of reproach; but even in the hourly expectation of his last trial in that capacity, and with the enemy within a few miles of bis great fortress, the Emperor's physical condition must compel him to leave almost everything to his subordinates in command, and must secure for him in this supreme crisis far more than can be palatable of those hours of reverie which have been the feeders at once of his power and weakness, the secrets of his achieve ments and his failures, of his political cun ning and his military catastrophes. It would be worth a great many biographies of great men to have the chronicle of a single hour of this certainly not great, but very singular, man's reflections. M. Louis Blanc records that when he visited him in the prison at Ilam, Louis Napoleon, while attempting to detail the particulars of his failure at Boulogne, faltered, "struggled a moment to repress a sob, and burst into tears so to some extent verifying what the most enthu siastic of his supporters, Mrs. Gordon, had said of him, 'II me fait l'effet d'une femme.'" We quote this not to prove that the Emperor, feeble as he has often been, deficient in courage, (for against this, despite Mr. King lake, there seems to us the most irrefragable historical evidence); but to show that his temperament is precisely of that bro ailing kind which enhances ten fold the misery of failure, and accumulates before its owner's imagination the riches of the stake for which he had played, and the minutest details of the ruin and ignominy involved in its loss. For, Weissenburg, Woerth, and r orbacb, with all the miscalcu lation and shame they involve, can leave a dejected dreamer like the Emperor, conscious of complete inability to do anything himse'f towards preventing their natural sequel in a general defeat of his dispirited foroes, little glimpse of hope how little, be himself be trayed in the utter despair of that fatal ad mission to France, "l'out pent se retablir," which is jnst equivalent to a physician say ing, "While there is life there is hope." It is impossible to pity the murderer of French liberty and the successful poisoner of European morality, when he is but just beginning to taste the full bit terness of the fruit he has sown; but it is hardly possible to conceive, we think, of a state of mind which, were it not m the strictest sense the harvest of the thinker's own bad deeds, would more dispose to pity, than that which must haunt the Emperor in the many hours of evil omen during which M. Nelaton's orders and his own conscious feebleness compel him to hold csmmnne with himself. Next Monday is his fete day, and a day about which he has always been wont to be superstitious, as if it were a day of destiny. The slow-footed hours will this year have given him ample time for gloomy memories and still blacker anticipations. Without pretending to divine the course of thought in one of the most inscrutable minds of our generation, it is quite worth while to conceive as distinctly as we can what trains of political reflection are likely to be to him at the present moment most inevitable and most intolerable, for the Emperor is, in fact, the impersonation of a political system, and of a political system not without a showy and seductive side. Yet now, with an exhaustion both of illness and failure upon him, which must aggravate, of course, that permanent deficiency in vis and physical impulse to ac tion which has made him the most hesitating aad balf-hearted of great adventurers, he must feel as if be had never really planned a great and resolute action, but only slyly plotted what he might do if fortune and accomplices concurred. I bave succeeded,' he must think, 'only when I pitted myself against institutions with as little life or vigor in them as myself. I succeeded against the ltepublio only when the mass of Frenchmen were scared by the : apparition of a socialism that would nave destroyed society. 1 barely succeeded, with the aid of England, in foiling a great Russian despotism rotten at the core. I barely sucoeoded in Italy in in flicting a defeat that was barely more than a drawn battle on the most alien and worst- organized government which ever earned the curses of a nation. I did not even suooeed against the barbarous anarchy of Mexico, and the moment a great power threw its weight into the scale, I had to retreat, and infamously leave the ruler of my choice to a shameful death. I woefully failed in curbing the de crepit power of the Tope. I woefully failed in setting limits to the ambition of Prussia. And now that I have for the first time pitted myself and my people against a power really young, fresh, and full of vigor, I am staring ruin in the face, and waiting helplessly for the coup de grace. My main idea of internal government, that you can give the form of popular liberty while retaining, in an admi nistiation which has a chronic fear of the people, the means of undermining and plot ting against its will, has turned out a failure. My main idea of foreign policy, that you can gratify the sentiment of patriotism and of unity of race without conceding the power which makes patriotism and unity of race formidable to neighboring am bit ionp, has proved a drearier failure still. My scheme for freeing Italy from the foreigner, and yet not givmg it to the Italians, was but the first and greatest blow against my own throne. My hone of gratif ving the federal instinct of Ger many without raising anew rival to France was a futile dream. nether in foreign or home policy, the limits which I plotted to assign to the lionular ideas I recognized have been mre threads round the arms of a giant. And the very advantages on which I counted from imposing those limits, the advantages of a strong administration beyond the med dling of popular criticism, have proved disad vantages instead. My personal government has turned out not only corrupt but feeble, unable even to bring a strong army into the field, and to sustain the glitter of the Imperial name. I had thought that I could at once give a certain satisfaction to great popular ideas, and yet prescribe to them boundaries which they should not pass. But I failed conspicuously abroad, where every step I took towards satisfying the popular yearnings of Europe recoiled upon me, and made my own throne unstable, and now at last I have been driven to menace unsuccess fully, by arms, the extension of the very ideas which I first authoritatively intro duced into the Cabinets of Europe. My best ideas are subverting my worst, and find me, at the close of my life, at the head of an army, fighting for my worst ideas, and ready to be subverted by them. Melancholy and exhausted myself, and with out the elasticity of a genuine creed, I have always believed that human nature was to be governed through its weakness, and that its best tendencies needed very partial satisfac tion; and now I find whole peoples fanatically inspired by that one of my beliefs which was nearest to a creed, and raging vehemontly against me for supposing that that creed could be confined by the conditions conve nient to me. The men I have exiled, the men I have murdered, the men I have sent to Cayenne cause me no remorse. They were in my way, and I could never a vagrant have been anything but gambler if I had not put them out of my way. But for those popular ideas which I bave so cautiously encouraged, and which, after clipping all their bonds, are coming back to destroy me those, which I have called my best ideas only because they have been the most living tor the stimulus 1 have given to them I do feel some remorse. Might I not have stifled instead of forcing their development ? Should I not have kept my hard-won throne longer if I had ? My only permanent success has been the support of the Pope against the revolution. Had I but supported Austria against Italy first, and against Prussia next, could the new foreign policy of Europe have grown so far beyond my power to guide it as it has? Surely it would have been wiser to keep my secret which was really the secret of the power most hostile to me to myself, and use it only to teach me what to fear. That I, who have never had the animal spirits for a great initiative, should have myself set in motion popular foroes which it would require the most peremptory and commanding initiative to restrain even for a moment, was surely the blindest of plots against myself. A dreamer like me, who not only does not enjoy action, but feels like the paralytic whose nerves will not obey his volition even when he resolves on action, ought to have put the drag on every popular movement in Europe, tne passions ot his own people included, rather than have sown broadcast forces which, as he could give them neither prompt guidance nor prompt resistance, are burling him to ruin It may perhaps bo the easier for me to lay down power, mat i cava never enjoyed it. but I am not sure that it is so. It is hard to think that if I had held my own counsel as to national ideas, and used more freely and persistently the instruments by which I gained my throne, l might at least have died as powerful and as inscrutable as I had lived. and never betrayed to the world the lassitude of nature and paralysis of will whioh, though they wholly unfit me for military command, are not entirely without their ad vantages for dampening the enthusiasm of nations and maintaining the dignity of a leaden crown. I suppose I have been a bad man, though I hardly know the meaning of the term. But as I feel that I should be less miserable now if I had been a worse man. there can hardly be much in the superstitions which it has been my most successful and only consistent line of policy to support We do not suppose that such exactly have been the Emperor a reflections; but he has given a very unfair view of himself to Europe, if they have been in any great degree either more hopeful, more manly, or less tinged wun tne com cynicism ot a prostrate mind. THE OVERTHROW OF NAPOLEON WHAT NEXT? from the X. Y. Herald. Bismarck has again proved himself too much for Napoleon, lie has achieved a tri nmph greater than that of 18(50; for his suc cess then only set aside every obstacle to Prussian ambition except France, and as I ranee was the greatest obstacle of all, the success that had bo other effect upon her but to excite irritation and enmity was not com plete. It is the glory of Bismarck's latest achievement that it removes the last and greatest obstacle to Prussian policy. It sets aside France, the only remaining power com petent or likely to stand in Prussia a way. Napoleon was inveigled into this war by the acts of the Prussian Premier just when I'russia was ready lor it, and wnen the Em peror had lulled himself to a false seouritv and faith in his power by the great political nostrum, the plebucite; when he had deceived bimbelf by the device that in his stronger dnj-s he used only to deceive others: and the same acute politician who secured his inac tivity in 18GG, who by shrewd -contrivance of appearances duped him to stand still when be should bave done his utmost in moving. finally lured him into the blunder of moving when he should have stood still fooled him into declaring a war whose least doubtful re sult must be his own downfall. Ilia last appearance on the throne of Franoe is scarcely in a more dignified character than that of a puppet worked by the Prussian Pre mier. He was tempted in ISfifi by the allur ing bait of the Rhine frontier. It seems to be a monomania with the French nation that it will never be happy till the commonplace Rhine is its eastern limit. Because that was once the limit of France, and France lost it, the nation's pride is bent on its recovery; and Napoleon saw the prestige it would give to bis reign and reflect on the dynasty if he could restore that glory. With the hope of the chance to seize it, or the promise that he should bave it, he stood still; and the war ended and the promise and the opportunity slipped away for ever. But in 1870 he saw slipping away not only the chance for a Rhine frontier but the glory of keeping intact the dignity and honor of France. He saw the nation humiliated in his reign, and the nation, skilfully initated by the arch enemy, Raw things the same way, and thus he was tbrnst and duped into war. Napoleon s vanities and peculiar position uncovered him to the arts of Bismarck. His intellectual furniture is made up in great part of the splendid rubbish left by the resolute soldier of fortune, his uncle. Napoleon knew how to utter on occasion things that seethe with the spirit of democracy. He never suffered himself, however, to be controlled by them. The nephew treasures these utter ances as a dynastic goppel, and does not dis tinguish between what the hrst Emperor be lieved in and what he said to humbug others. lie is thus involved in continued incon sistencies, and it is because of the prac tical application of one of these pretty Napoleonic theories that he is now in imminent peril. It is because there is a united Germany that France finds herself in the bands of an overwhelmingly pow erful foe; yet Louis Napoleon tried to excuse to Fiance his inactivity in 18(50 by taking a position for the Bonapartes on a political formula that assumed to reconstruct Europe by the aggregation of peoples accord ing to nationality. This would do many things in Europe that France might contem plate without displeasure. It would give all Italy to the Italians, and so prove a fair stroke for the Latin nations. It would rend Austria piecemeal. It would put the British empire in liquidation. It would disturb Russia. It would take from Prussia her half digested cut of Poland. All this would be satisfactory in a Napoleonic view, perhaps. But there is one other thing it would do, that in its danger to l' ranee would infinitely overbear all self- complacent views of the disasters of others: it would give her a great German nation for her next door neighbor a nation of people hostile by tradition, opposed in character and sentiment, and havinor centurv- long scores of humiliation to revenge. It would at one step forfeit that supremacy through the division of others that the politi cal policy of every French dynasty has built up. Committing himself to this philanthropic blunder, .Napoleon made it easier for Bis marck to assimilate all the Northern German States, and to approach the States of South Germany with the conditional alliance that now puts Bavaria, Baden, and Wur tern berg side by tide witn rrussia in arms. And who doubts that the Emperor has at last helped the l'russian over ins most dithcult ground by furnishing the war whose fire shall fuse these all into one nation.'' Yet what are all these events but so many lessons teaenmg tne peoplo tueir power.' Ins marck and the Prussian monarchy move in a whirl of success and supremacy just now. because their purposes coincide with the na tional development and tendencies of the great German people. They assist and give the opportunity to this development, and in so doing they encourage, beyond all calcula. tion, its further progress. What is naturally tne ultimate aim oi tms progress f Mot to satiate the ambition of a few Prussian princes, but to emancipate a great people ireni all tyranny, and enable tnem to work out their destinies, subject only to such a rational control by Government as they may then in their own intelligence and freedom choose to submit to. In other words, the tendency in Central Europe to-day is towards a grand uerman republic, in setting tree tne forces that have enabled them to conquer Franoe and overthrow Napoleon, the men who now direct the Prussian policy have st free the forces that will drive them out that will tumble the Prussian throne, with other thrones, and by which the people can conquer their right of self-government. In the brain of universal Germany this idea has come by such imperceptible steps that it may be called a growth first to be, next to be free; first to be assured of oxistence, next to qualify the modes of that exist ence. Germany is now essentially one. The people of all her States have fought siJe by side for a common German purpose, ex cepting only tne people of the Austrian States, who have, however, given their aotive sympathies and open encouragement. Thus the first great stage is secured, and the second is not far away, for we live in a time of rapid transition. The next study of the Prussian King and his Minister may be not bow to further develop and wield the power of the uerman people, but how to control and sup press it. The Austrian monarchy and the French monarchy are two foes the German nation has crushed. The Prussian monarchy must be me next victim. THE FRENCH COLONIES. Fnm the S. T. Timet. There are other ways in which France may be amerced by way of penalty for beginning and losing tne present tremendous conflict, besides depriving her of Alsaoe or Lorraine, or otherwise curtailing her home territory. She possesses colonies inconsiderable, truly. both in area and population, when compared with those of England, but which might prove of great value to a nation like Prussia, having so limited a seaboard, and ambitious of adding naval power to her magnificent military re sources. . In Asia, Africa, America, and Oceanica, France governs dependencies wnien, considering ner own navy, might be difficult - to win - from by the sword, but which might it her be readily acquired by her successful enemy as conditions of a new treaty of Paris. Should Frussia be as conclusively triumphant in the pending war as now seems probable, it may be presumed that the importance of acquir ing facilities for maritime development will not be lots sight of. it is undeniable, as the World has pointed out, that the blockade of the Baltic and the North Sea by the Frenoh fleet chores the trade of a dozen great Ger man cities, and stints supplies to their vast sui'Mdiarr populations, thus inflicting great if temporary, injury. To guard agMust such an evil in the future, or eVan partially to cope with it, Germany needs outlying colo nies where fcer snips can gather in safety, can coal, refit, and victual, and sally forth aa occasion serves, to meet the enemy on the high seas, and to break or run the blockida of her home ports. xsow, in America, France possesses Mar Unique, Guadeloupe, aud Guiana, besides the little islands nf St. Pierre and Miauelon. these colonies having an aggregate popula tion of about 8.10,000 souks. In Asia the French possessions include, besides the pro vinces of Cochin China, with a population of about a million, the valuable points of Pon dicherry, Chandernagore, Karikal, Mahe, and Yanaon. In Africa Franoe has holds in benegambia, Gaboon, the Gold Coast, and the inlands of Reunion, St. Marie, Mayotte, and Mossi-Be, with peoples exceeding a mil lion; and in Oceanica, New Caledonii, and the Marquesas and Loyalty Islands. Added to uiese actual sovereignties, trance wields a protectorate over the kingdom of Cambo dia, Porto Novo in Africa, Tahiti, Gambier, and other islands of the Polynesian groups that substantially augment her influence, and prospective, if not immediate, naval strength. These places do not, to be sure, like the colonies of England, constitute ele ments of power by furnishing immense mar kets for home manufactures, but as marine depots several of them are of serious import ance, and for an inland country like Germany they might in time become of incalculable value. Other European powers may object to any material absorption by Prussia of the area of Alsace and Lorraine; but a diminu tion of French colonial possessions is un likely to arouse such jealousies. Such a procedure is consequently not unlikely to form the subject matter of a clause in any treaty or peace which follows the existing war. By similar concessions France has often before settled the balance of an unsuccessful contest, and the plan may be once more tried wun success. THE CHINESE LABOR QUESTION. From the Bonton Advertiser. The interesting letter of Judge Kelley on the Chinese labor question will attract the attention of all who have given any thought to tne recent phases of that problem. While his essential positions are unques tionably sound, we do not agree with him as to the feasibility of legislation to correct the mischief which he fears. The right of every man to dispose of his labor in his own way is innerent and inalienable; there is nothing in the nature of a Chinaman to render him less entitled to a privilege which we claim for ourselves, and whioh, under ordinary circumstances, we cheerfully accord to the rest of mankind. The good sense and regard for justice in the community must be trusted to see that the privilege is not taken advantage of, to their own and the public injury. No reasonable employer who understands his own interests chooses to fill his service with ignorant, de graded, and ill-paid laborers, whom he has cheated with a dishonest contract, and all whose feelings and interests are at war with his own. Mr. Sampson has no motive for filling his factory with a chain-gang of vicious Eagacs, who have no idea of staying with im beyond the time of their contract, or of adapting themselves to the situation while they remain. The risk of danger from such importations into any civilized community where there is a moderate sense of justice or a decent regard for the common wolfare, is nothing compared to the injustice of laws nullifying honest contracts between men who are competent to judge for themselves. While we take this position against inter ference by legislation with such contracts entered into by parties intelligently and in good faith on the same principle that we object to fixing the hours of labor or the price of commodities by law we fully agree that it is not wise to encourage the introduc tion of unskilled and poorly-paid labor in our factories, and it is not just to force such labor into competition with that which has grown up on our soil. But the remedy is to be found not in laws which restrict the power of individuals to work out their own destiny in their own way, but in the inevitable laws of trade, modified by an enlightened public opinion, and a considerate and just dis position on ' the part of workmen and employers. In some portions of the country, where the opportunities and demands for labor are greatly in excess of the laborers, the prosecution of great works which have wonderfully- iacreased the wealth of the country would not have been possible without the associated labor which has come here under these much-abused and much-misunderstood contracts. But there is no necessity for procuring labor on such terms in Massachusetts, nor indeed in any of the older States; and we do not believe there is the slightest danger that it will ever gain a substantial foothold on this side of the continent. ' Mr. Sampson's ex periment is an exceptional one, and although 1 1 - i , i . . . ii way prove entirely Buooessiui unuer 1113 skilful management, it is not likely to be followed except under a like provocation. But tne right to follow it is as clear and unde niable as the right of workmen to associate themselves together for their common ad vantage. The subject is worthy of the attention which Judge Kelley has given it. It should be treated always in a spirit which, instead of arraying the workmen on one side and the employers on the other, will bring intel ligent workmen and employers together to consider bow the most equitable exchange of advantages can be made. The genuine labor reform will be the result, not of a tri umph of one class over another, but of a common good understanding between them It is in the power of employers to contribute to this by timely and reasonable concessions, and of workmen by conceding to employers the rights which they claim for themselves. SHIPPING. ffft FOR LIVERPOOL AND QUEENS. aTU w A.-iomaa iine or itoyai Mau bieaiueni are appointed w sau as roiiowa: City of Uuienck, Tuesday, August B0, at S P. M. Citv of Parts, Saturday, September 3, at 13 M. City of Cork (via Haitian), Tuesday, Sept. 6. at 1 P.M. City of Antwerp, 'i nursday, bepu 8, at 1 P. M. VllJ VI IWHUVU) URlUluaj. kfCJlbVUlUOl iV All 1 , in. and each succeeding Saturday and alternate Tues day, from pier xso. s woim river. HATES OF PASSAGE. Payable la gold. Payable in currency, First Cabin t"5 Steerage 30 To Londen b0 To London as ToPaT.a 90 To Paris SS To Halifax 0 To Halifax is passengers also forwarded to Havre, Hamburg, Bremen, etc. at reduced rates. Tickets can be bought here at moderate rates by DersoDS wlahinff to send for tnelr friends. For further information apply at the company's oflice. JOHN G. PALE, Agent, No. IS Broadway, N. Y. Or to O'DoNNELL ft FAULK, Agents, 4 8 No. 08 CHESNUT Street. Philadelphia. 1 jT'C-vTSTEABI TOW BO AT COMPANY lmiuuiore, Usvre-de-Urace, Delaware City, and In termediate points. Mi i.i.i ah f. ii.iui in., Agents. Cptaii) JOHN L&l'UBUN. Superiuteuoeut. SHIPPING. rTfr L0RILLARP STEAMSHIP CJOMPANt rem mmv yokk, SAILING EVERY TUESDAY, THURSDAY, ANC SATURDAY, are now i ecelvtng freight at FIVE CENTS PER 100 TOUNDS, TWO CENTS FEIt FOOT, OR HALF CENT PER GALLON, snips OPTION. INSURANCE ONE-EIGHTH OF ONE PER CENT Extra rates on small packages Iron, metals, etc. No receipt or bill of lading signed (or leas tuaa fifty cents. NO ricK. On and after September IB rates by thla Company will be 10 cents per loo potiuds om cents fier loot, ship's option; and regular shippers by this Hie will only be charged the above rate- .ill winter. Winter rates commencing December 16. For furtbet particulars apply to JOHN F. Olirl 8J riER 19 SOUTH WHARVE3. rpilE REGULAR STEAMSHIPS ON TUB PHI. J LaI'ELPDIA AND CHARLESTON STEAM. MUP LINK are ALONK authorized to Issue throuirr blilB of ladti g to Interior points South and W wit is connection with South Carolina Railroad Company. ALFRED I TYLER, Vice-President 8o. C. RU. Co. FjpRV rHFLADELPniA AND CHARLESTON r-3 STEAMSHIP LINK. '1 nia line Is now composed of the following nm. class Steamships, BHiling from PIER it, belw Spruce street, on FRIDAY, of each week kat i ASHLAND. 800 tons, Captain CrowelL J. W. E VERM AN, 6VS tous, Captain Hlnckler SALVOR, 600 tons, captain AshtrofC SEPTEMBER, 1970. 3. W. Kvcrraan, Friday, Sept. 8. paivor, rnuay, repc. v, J. W. Everman, Friday, Bept. 1ft. SalTor, Friday, Sept. S3. 3. W. Evermau, Friday, Sept. 30. Throtisrh bills of lading riven to vi the Interior of Georgia, and all points South audi Southwest. Freight forwarded with promptness and despatch. Kates as low aa by any other route. Insurance one-half per cent., effected at the omr tn Orst-claes companies. No freight received nor bills of lading signed oa da; of Bailing. 6uiua.il a auams. Agents, No. 8 DuCK Street. Or WILLIAM. P. CLYDE A CO., No. li 8. WHARVES. WILLIAM A. COURTENAY. Aient In Charts ton. a 94 -rfm PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN gfflllW.MAlL 8TKAM8HIP COMPANY'S REOTI. LAU bBMl-MOfllUU JjLNH to new ok LFANS, 1 The AOHILLKS will nil tot New Orluna dir. Tufitdaf txjptemher 6. at 8 A. M. Th AZUL will uu from Hew Orleans, vi Havana. Co , nepiemoer . THROUGH BILLS OF LADING at as low rata as br any other route RiTen to Mobile, Ualreoton, Indianol. L. - .1 11 n. unit .n .11 n.i.4. . 1 . . 1 between New Orlean and Bt. Louis. Red Hirer freight rebhlppad at New Orleans without chars of cemmiuioo. WKKKI.Y LINK TO SAVANNAH, OA. The WYOMING will aail for Knn.h n.f. daj, Scptembpr 8, at 8 A. M. -1 be 'lONA WANDA will aail from RiTinn.h nn R.. day, Peptomher 8. ihhuuun niuj ui L.umujnventoall theprio. :inl towns in Georgia. Alabama. I'lorirtn MiniaaT..ni Louieiifcna. Arkaaeaa. and Tennessee in nnnnwiinn the Central Railroad of Georgia, Atlantio and Gulf Ru- 4 roau, ana r lonua ieauisi, at as tow rates ao of ooinpotinf uun. t BKMI-MOHTHLY LINK TO WILMINGTON, N. O. The PION'KKK will sail for Wilminirton on WaHi.i.. August JU.st 6 A. M. Returning, will leare Wilmiogtoa 1 CUlKN.ft U"FI"UUTI . Connect s with toe Caps Fear River Steamboat Com. puny, the Wilrairn ton and Weldon and North Carolina Railroads, and the W ilmington and Manchester Railroad to all inteHor point. 1'reighta for Colombia, S. O., and Augusta, Oa., takes via Wilmington, at aalow rates aa by any other route. , Insurance effected when requested by ehinnara. RHI. f of lading signed at Queen street wharf oa or befor day I of sailing. .. w ii.i.hm J., u&nr.o, uenerai Agent. 1 tio. UU South THIRD Street. TT T T T A T T71 T T5TTT h nrnrr,t.,.. 'l'UKOCGH FREIGHT ALH LINK TO TUB BOUT? AND WHJJT INCREASED FAOIUTIKS AND REDUCED BATES J 1 lv 1 K70 Steamers leave every WKDNKSDAYand SATURDAY at lil o'olock noon, from FIRST WHARF above MAR. Itl1'!1 Street. Ti'kNlNfl. leave RIOnMONn lHOHniva THURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS aad BA. TUKDAY8. No Bill of ijaamg eignea auer i? o'oiooa on aalUnf &li HROUGH KATKS to all points In North and South Carolina, via Seaboard Air Una Railroad, connecting t Portsmouth, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee, and the West, via Virginia and Tennessee Air Line and Richmond and Danville Hailroad. ireight UAND1.K.D BUTOROE. and taken at LOWER BATKS THAN ANY OTHER LINK. No charge for commission, drayaga, or any expense at " township insure at lowest rates. Freight received daily. SatSB;a,M,ICT5S OO.. No. 13 8. WHABVKSand Pier IN. WHARVES. W. P. POK'I ER. Agent at Richmond and Oity Point. T. P. OROWF.LL A CO.. Agents at Norfolk. 6 U FOR NEW YORK, VIA DELAVVAHK and Harltan Canal. , SWIFT8UKB TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AND SWIFTSURE LINES, Leaving dally at 18 M. and 8 P. M. The steam propellers of this company will com mence loading on the 8th of March, Through In twenty-four hours. Goods forwarded to any point free of commissions. Freight taken on accommodating terms. Apply to WILLIAM M. BAIRD A CO., Agenti, No, 133 South DELAWARE Avenue. 5 NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEX AN. drlii, Georgetown, and Washington, D. C via Chesapeake and Delaware i Canal, with connections at Alexandria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bristol, KnoxvUle, Nashville, Dalton, and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly every Saturday at noon 'rom the first wharf above Market street. Freight received daily. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO.. No. 14 North and South WHARVES. nYTK A TYLER, Agents at Georgetown; af. ELD RIDGE A CO., Agenta at Alexandria. I FOR NBW YOR via Delaware and Raritan Canal. dj- EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANT. The Steam Propellers of the line will commeuca loading on the 6th Instant, leaving dally as osuaL TU BOUGH IN T WENT Y-FOUK HOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going out of Na York, North, East, or West, free of commlaalon. Freights received at low rates. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., Agents, NO. 13 S. DELAWAKK Avenue, JAMES HAND, Agent, No. 119 WALL Street, New York. 8 4 OORDAOE, ETO. WEAVER & CO., bopg iHAii;rACTUui:s AMD SIIII C1IAN1L.12U3. Na 29 North WATER Street and No. 83 North WHARVES, Philadelphia. ROPE AT LOWEST BOSTON AND NEW YORK f BICES. 41 CORDAGE. Manilla, Sisal and Tarred Cordagff At Twt NewTorkPrioaaand Freights. Sl iniuiioutuifl, rviUllMUID1. 1 A V l .Iin "V 1 r urnnta Banwvn J Hit WIN II. FITl.KR 4c i Factory. TENTH Bt and GERM ANTO WB Avaaaa, Store, No. S3 WATEB Bt aad SB N DELAWARE Avenue. WHISKY, WINE, ETO. QAR8TAIR8 ft McCALL, No. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Eta. IMPORTERS Of Brandlei, Winet, Gin, Olive Oil, Ztc, WHOLESALE DBALXK4 M PURE RYE WHISKIES. IHBOHD AND TAB PAK. Mtpt 7ILMAM ANDERSON A CO., DEALERS IX Flue Whittles, No. 140 North SECOND Street, Philadelphia. in,,uiiiviH(Aiv riiMuiflsinN uitr. i i uji yy " , ' d1n?'';,J P0,nU,TMk,f1!?, 7 l