THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH 1'IIILADELPIIIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1870. 30 on hit or Tnn mass. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. THE MOURNING IN GERMANY. from the K. T. HeraW. The great victories won by German arms, And tbe almost miiacnlons prostration of Germany's most powerful and most daagerons foe, have sent a thrill of national exaltation through the pulses of Fatherland. Bonfires, illuminations, triumphal processions, public meetings, and congratulatory addresses have not been wanting in any of the large cities that dot the broad region extending from the Rhine to the borders of Russia. The echo of these jubilations comes to us across the Atlantic, and it is so loud and hearty as to drown the cries of grief and anguish which ascend along with it from thousands and thousands of homes made desolate by the curse of this dreadful war. In fact, there is a determined effort, and, under the cir cumstances, not an unwise one, on the part of the German authorities to suppress the true details of the carnage inflioted on their troops. The story would be so appall ing were it all frankly told at this junc ture, as to awaken all over Germany a voice for instant peace that conld not be re sisted. Hence, the most is made of the suc cesses gained, and as little as possible is said of their frightful cost. However, King Wil liam himself has, once or twice, involuntarily given a glimpse behind the bloody scenes. In bis famous despatch to Queen Augusta from the battle fields in the neighborhood of Metz, he admitted that it sickened him to think of his losses, and all correspondents agree in representing the slaughter of the Germans in nearly every engagement fought since the beginning of the war as two-fold that of their antagonists. At the battle of Gravelotte the German dead lay heaped upon the heights whence the French had been dislodged towards the close cf the action "in swathes and winrows, like grain in a densely planted and well-mown field," and the distress of the royal commander-in-chief at the almost utter annihilation of his splendid Guards the pride of the Prussian army is described as having been extreme. Again, the peculiar system of recruiting and organization pursued for the German service is such that in many cases a large proportion of the able-bodied men of whole villages and small towns are enrolled together in the same companies and regiments, with the idea that their conduct will be benefi cially influenced by the additional esprit Oe corps thus preserved, and by the fact that every man will be f ghting tinder the eyes of his own neighbors and early companions. Consequently, the slaughter of these recent battles has thrown whole communities into mourning, and, as the South Germans have really done some of the severest work, there are districts in Baden and Bavaria where almost every family has lost a father, brother, or son. fcaxony, too, has been literally decimated by the wholesale destruc tion of her best troops. It is one peculiarity of the German soldier that he is more likely to nave a wite ana tamiiy at nome tnan is the more volatile and fickle Frenohman: and, hence, his death is not simply the passing away of a unit from among the multitude. but involves the immediate suffering of seve ral persons. Thisfa:thas been very touch ingfy illustrated upon many occasions during the struggle. Tbe fierce Uhlans soouting in tne neiguuornood of tne Alsatian towns re peatedly exhibited great emotion when ca ressing the children of the villagers upon wnoni they made their requisitions, and, when questioned as to the cause of their agi tation, replied that they, too, had wives and families at nome. But so general has been the carnage that no class in . the German armies has been spared. At Sedan there was an absolute battue of titled officers; and long lists of counts, barons and gentry of distinguished came and social position figure among the slain in the statements of the press in Aus tria, where the careful restrictions imposed upon the North German editors are not en forced. In one word, the domestic heart of Fatherland is lacerated as it has never been before. Her homes grand and humble alike are wrapped in gloom. Men whose own healths are in safety, on this side of the Atlantic and elsewhere, at wide distances from the actual scene of sorrow, may hold war meetings and pass ferocious resolutions; but the afflicted people of Germany, in all her cities and in all her fields of rustic poverty and labor, pray that this riot of blood may be stayed and that their stricken hearts may be no longer torn by the fangs' of mili tary ambition. THE GERMANS IN OUR POLITICAL CAMPAIGN. From the X. Y. Timet. There can be no question that the Repub lican party are to gain, in the approaching political campaign, an important German vote. We hear on every side that the Ger man Americans who have hitherto been members of the Democratic party have become dis ' gusted with the course of the Democratic leaders and journals on the Franco-German question, and are coming over in large num bers to the Republican side. It is well under stood by them that the leading organs of the Democratic party have assailed the cause of the "Fatherland" with every weapon of sar casm and abuse. The World has never ceased vilifying the motives of the Germans, and using every possible argument to draw Ame rican sympathy from the Prussians. The Republican journals, on the other hand, have almost unanimously sympathized with the struggle for German Tinity. From the begin ning they have condemned the means which Louis Napoleon used to acquire power, and the oppression he has exercised over free thought and personal liberty. They op posed him when seeking to acquire a foot hold for Imperialist ideas in Mexico, and would undoubtedly have urged the nation to war rather than submit to a perma nent French occupation of that unfortunate country. When Napoleon, on the 15th of July last, began his sudden and uncalled-for war against North Germany, the Rspublican pub lic men and newspapers felt and denounced. it as an unprovoked attack on a peaceful neighbor; they regarded the struggle as in fact one between Ciesarisni on one side, and a people just beginning a course of constita lional liberty on the other. Between Na poleon and King William, personally, they had not much to choose; but one represented despotic ideas, and tne otner, for the moment, the mighty efforts of a free community towards unity, which we know from expe rience to be the path of liberty. Moreover, Germany embodied, to our Bunds, the freer ideas of the age; freedom of thought and institutional progres; its army was a citi lay in popular education. Its Teutonic vir tues were our own pains-taking industry, a pure family life, and the courage whioh, though not often brilliant, grows firmer from disaster. These were some of the reasons which brought the Republican party into sympathy with Germany in this great strug gle. The sympathy would have been equally deep and honest had no German-Americans existed. " But we rejoice at the coincidence, because it shows, what all reflecting persons have long felt, that for a German-American to be a Democrat" is an inconsistency, both logical and unnatural. The two really have nothing to do with one another. The American Democrat has always sympathized with arbi trary power. He ought to be called the American Tory, or Junker. He has a secret love for Disraeli, and a fellow feeling for Louis Napoleon. He adored the slaveholder. The German-American is of necessity a hater of tyrants and an enemy of oppression. The Democrat flatters the priesthood and believes in the temporal power of the Pope. The German (even if a Roman Catholic) would overthrow both. " The American Democrat hates news ideas and "reforms," and always opposes any great popular measure, whether sanitary or moral, which will make the masses more intelligent or comfortable. The German believes in progress and popular improvement, and the elevation of the masses. The Democrat dislikes free schools, and would make them ecclesiastical. The German admires them, and would secu larize the church schools. The Democrat has no ideas or a single principle in his party, and merely clings to a great name. The Ger man is in sympathy with all the fermenting ideas of the time, and does not at once recog nize that the sacred name of "Deniokraf' in America is but a lion's skin. This war has revealed these incongruities in the position of German-Americans within the Democratic party. They see they are strangers there. They are in the wrong place. WTbat can a German "Demokrat," who has fed, as upon mother's milk, on ideas of liberty for all men, and of the progress of humanity, have to do with men whose idol was the slaveholder, who admire Louis Napoleon, and whose only aim is so to be guile an ignorant populace as to enjoy fat olfaces. The true democrats of the United States are the Republicans. Their career has been a glorious series of struggles and victories for the rights of man. ihey havo always upheld the people against oppressors in any lorm. Their animating enthusiasm has been their love of freedom, and sympathy everywhere with true liberty. To them, the German Ainericans rightly belong; in their ranks they will find a true harmony, and nowhere will their principles and services be so gratefully and heartily recognized as in the Republican THE PROSPECT IN FRANCE. From the N. T. Sun. The demands of Prussia, though nowhere formally expressed as yet, are pretty clearly understood, luey are tne surrender of the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine, so that France shall hereafter not touch the river Rhine, the payment in addition of a liberal money indemnity for the expenses of the war, and the occupation of the fortress of Metz by a Prussian force for some stipulated length of time, even if a point as yet vari ously stated that fortress should not be in cluded in the territory to be handed over to the conquerors. The nature of these demands excludes all idea of peace at present. No French Gov ernment would agree to them a republican government least of all, much as all the pre tenders to tne tnrone would like to see the republicans make an odious peace. The French people appear willing to pay any rea- sonable sum of money, to stipulate for the reduction of their army and navy to a certain fixed limit, and to surrender their great northern fortresses temporarily as a guarantee lor the faitnful performance of their agree ment. But they are not willing to yield any part of their territory; and it is to bring them to such a state of willingness that the German armies are now gathering around Paris and will soon commence the siege of mat great capital. IJow long this siege may last it is. of course, impossible to say. As yet the strength of the Parisian fortifications has not been tested. They were built thirty years ago, before the invention of rifled artillery and smooth-bores of fifteen and twenty inches diameter. Unless they have been strength ened by heavy earthworks of which we have not heard their .walls ef masonry cannot for any considerable period be proof against the attacks of tnese great guns. Besides, it is well known to engineers that these fortifica tions are not everywhere of equal strength. Their weak point is on the southeast, in the direction of St. Denis, and it is from that direction that the Prussians seem about to make their first onset. Still, it is not pro bable that the defenses of rans can be re duced in less than forty or sixty days, and in this time military operations on the Prussian Bide must be substantially suspended else where. The French, however, will all the while be active in organizing new armies, in threatening the Prussian lines of communica tion, and in harassing the enemy in everv possible manner. In this way the siege of Paris, if it can be sufficiently protracted, will greatly exhaust the Germans, and contribute 1 A . 1 f immensely to prepare mo r rencn lor under taking off ensive operations afterwards against them. The whole campaign henceforth must de- f ond partly upon the length of time which 'aris can hold out, but still mora upon the real spirit of the French people. If they sternly determine upon ngnting to the bitter end for their national integrity, no matter what the sacrifices or how great the cost, they can win. It all lies in their own spirit and resolution. If they are heroes ready to cover France with ruin rather than diminish her boundaries, and sacrifice the last relio of her prestige, the contest will be terrible, but the victoiy will be theirs at last. Seventy. hve years ago they were capable ot sucn a Btruggle; but are they capable of it now t HOME AT LAST ! From the K. Y. Tribune. Mr. Ignatius Donnelly, having been thrice chosen to Congress from the northern dis trict of Minnesota, wanted to go again; but the Republican Convention saw fit to nomi nate another: so he ran stump and threw away the district. Hereupon, Mr. Donnelly, who was a i'ennsyivanian born, and had hitherto been a zealous protectionist, came out a "revenue reformer, and commenced assailing the party which had hitherto en dured and subsisted him as the enemy of the West, because it naa eiectea sucn men as himself to Congress, and thereby upheld the nolicv of protection. After doing what little mischief he could in the way of spouting wherever he could corner an audience, Mr. D. has at length got him relf into line with the sham Democracy. Ha is to run again for Congress as a stamp ca didate, inflicting on the Republicans all the abuse and misrepresentation whereof he is capable; end the Democrat are to print his name on their ballots and see if their votes. with those he can pick np by his anti-tariff dodge, will not pull blm through. The worst sold party to this arrangement is not the handful of Republicans who may be duped by it, but the sham Democracy. They in 03 elected Eugene M. Wilson to the seat, by minding their own business and letting others do the same, lie nas a iair claim to their support for re-election, and they could vote for him without feeling as if they had been caught at midnight in a neighboring hen-house. But they have caught the Don nelly, and will probably be ven years in getting rid of it. Perhap9 they have deserved no better; but our own experience ot tuat complaint impels us to tender them our pro found sympathy. This man Donnelly auords a tair illustra tion of what is meant by "Revenue Reform." Its inspiration is hatred of Republican as cendency and a determination to overthrow it in 1;72. So it is understood, and there fore it is favored, by every enemy of General Grant's administration. Thus the Chicago Times applauds the Chicago Iribune for com mending Democratic (that is, anti-protective) piincipks in quarters which Democratic journals never reach. Thus the Ohio States man commends the State Journal as being soundly Copperhead so far as the tariff is concerned. Everywhere a free-trade speech maker is justly hailed by the Democrats as luring fih into their net. Happily there are not enough of them to rescue sham Demo cracy from the famine which, for lack of I ederal loaves as well as fishes, it has endured for the last nine years. RUSSIA AND THE WAR. From the London Saturday Review. After the Congress of Paris in ls,"0 the policy of Russia was authoritatively declared to be one of strict isolation and reserve. England, it was announced, had betrayed the confidence of the Emperor Nicholas, and re pelled his offers of a share in the confiscation of tbe lnrkish empire, in order to throw herself headlong into an alliance with the Second Empire, and to secure the friendship of a dangerous conspirator by lending him her own prestige. Austria had played an obscure and shifty part as a neutral; Prussia had looked more kindly on her old ally, but declined a closer and more active sympathy. Russia bad learned a severe and bitter but profitable lesson from her heroic efforts and gloiious reverses: to live her own life, to recruit and renovate her unexhausted though shattered energies, to devote herself to the material interests of peace in a word, to "collect herself" for the sure but not pre cipitate fulfilment of her destinies, Se rtcueilhr that was to be the whole duty of Russian statesmanship for years to come, according to Prince Gortschakoff'. That duty has been faithfully observed, and a new Rus sia, more Muscovite and more discreet, though not less despotic, has been created out of the ruins of tbe old Russia of serfdom and silence, of intervention and intrigue. In the two great centres of tbe Empire some thing like national opinion has sprung up and spread from a few salons to the colleges, and from official circles to public journals. Foreign capital has been attracted by high interest and punctual dividends to invest ments in railway enterprise. The founda tions of a new polity and a new society have been laid, and while all this internal renova tion was going on, never was the foreign policy of Russia more decided, more digni fied, or more self-possessed. Sebastopol was scarcely taken when the Emperor Napoleon was meditating his own terms of peace with an enemy who, having served his purpose in obtaining one alliance, might be the confi dential partner in another. At the opening of the Italian war in 18.P a Franco-Russian alliance was in the air. Louis Napoleon courted it, nor was it from any want of warmth in his courtship that his "intentions" were declined. What he wanted it for, or what was the ulterior object of his intentions, is lees clear. Probably his "intentions were only half-formed conspiracies against some power whose alliance was no longer indis pensable to him. Russia knew very well that while he was courting her alliance he was coquetting, like his uncle, with the inexhaustible credulity of Poland, and holding in reserve the dreams and hopes of that everlasting victim of French revolutionary i argon. When, a few vears later, the Polish insurrection broke out, and that fantastio and impracticable nationality threw away the last chance of a government and administration of its own, the French Emperor felt himself obliged to make some show of active sympathy. But the moment Prince Gortschokoff replied to covert menaces by a disdainful despatch, the heir and suc cessor of the man for whom thousands of brave Poles bad fallen in battle drew back and held his peace; and ever since that signal diplomatic discomnture ne nas assiduously cultivated the most friendly relations with the power that slapped his face, and has al most obsequiously studied to please the re storer of order at Warsaw. His ostentatiously affectionate welcome to the Czar in Paris during the International Exhibition a wel come so inauspiciously interrupted by a Polish pistol was bitterly remarked by French republicans. During the four years of preparation for tne attaoK upon Prussia, Louis Napoleon hai persevered in his assidui ties at St. Petersburg, through one of the most devoted of his personal agents, whose favored position at the court of Alexander II is a favorite topic in the Official Journal, This laborious affectation of friendship has not, however, estranged him from his other alliances, with England, with Austria, and with Turkey. It has rather assumed the character of a warnirg to bis other allies to beware of the possibility of that Rus sian alliance which he could never obtain. Alexander II, if less disdainful than his father of these advances, is scarcely more solicitous of their sincerity. While the Jour nal Ojjicu l was dwelling with eager satisfac tion on General Fleury s successes as a cour tier, the Czar was publicly and formally ex changing with King William of Prussia con gratulatory reminiscences of a memorable defeat of the First Napoleon in Germany. Such were the relations between the Gov ernments of France and Russia when the Duke of Gramont read to the Chamber the declaration of war, and such to all appear ances they are now, when the German armies under the Prussian standards are marohing upon the French capital. For the best of reasons Russia is watching the frontiers of Posen, and holding Austrian neutrality in check. In the Baltio Russia observes the movements of the French squadrons with anxious attention. Russia advises and sus tains the neutrality of the Scandinavian kingdoms. Russian influence restrains rather than encourages the rash intrigues of the KiDg of Italy. Russia recognizes the justice of the retribution which Prussia is inflicting npon Imperial France. But when we say "Russia, we mean the Russian Court and Government. lSothiag leu, probably, than the appearance of the Sultan in the field as the ally of France against Germany, or the armed intervention of Austria, or perhaps the formation of a Polish legion, would tempt the Czar to swerve from his neutrality, or to abandon the common interest of all the neutral States in circumscribing the area of hostilities. For, if Russia, in the sense of the Russian Govern ment, is certainly not unfavorable to tbe German cause, very different is the publio opinion of Russia as far as it finds expression in the journals of that party which is supposed to represent the national sentiment of the Russian people. These journals, and especially the most inde pendent and influential of them all, are loud and emphatic in their sympathy for France in her present trials and troubles. They com plain of the partiality of the official telegrams which exaggerate the successes and disguise the losses of the German armies. They swear as valiantly as the Oaulois or the Soir that the victories of France are yet to come, and rejoice by anticipation in the disastrous retreat of King William and his confederates across the Rhine. To what are we to ascribe these Muscovite sentiments? To chivalrous compassion for tbe gallant heroes of the Malakoff, the descendants of the heroes of the retreat from Moscow? To a belief in the dtmocratic and socialistic ideas of Louis Na poleon? To the love of the Russian aristocracy for Paiis? Or is it to the Musco vite hatred of all that is German of German statesmen, German generals, German admin istrators, and German bureaucrats? Or to the natural antipathy of near neighbors ? Or to jealousy of tne copartitioners of Poland? Or to a dim fear of a future revivification by united Germany of the Baltic provinces? The last we take to be the best of all the good reasons and baJ passions that may be found in the Prusso-phobia of the Russian press, especially in the organs of the Old Russia party. If we add the spirit of resist ance to whatever may be the course of the Government, this extreme tenderness for the hereditary patrons (and betrayers) of Polish nationality is perhaps sufficiently explained. Without attaching too much importance to the stories, in which the French official press appears to take comfort, of the extraordinary social successes of General Fleury at the Russian Court, and of the Em peror Alexander leaning on the arm of the Ambassador and putting him on terms of confidential and almost affectionate intimacy, there is reason to believe that thesa lively demonstrations have more than a personal significance. The Emperor Alexander is a kind-hearted man, and he must feel for the woes of the ruler of France. Common gene rosity not to speak of Imperial magnanimity would, under existing circumstances, re commend one of Louis Napoleon's nearest and dearest friends to the sympathies of the sovereign to whom he is accredited. Personal courtesy is not necessarily an act of policy, and personal kindness to a recon ciled enemy and a hospitable friend who has fallen upon evil days is grateful to one's feelings without compromising one's interests. Alexander II may be glad to break the fall of the French Emperor by lavishing attentions upon his favorite agent. To sup pose that all this "enforced ceremony" means a deliberate design on the part of the (Jzar to relinquish a secure and profitable neutrality in favor of France, to exchange an old and tried alliance for a new and hazardous one, to stand, armed and menacing, between a liberated Germany and a defeated aggressor, as France stood between Austria and Prussia at Nikolsburg, to snatch from King Wil liam the results of hard-won victories, and to save the disturber of Euro pean peace from merited retribution this appears to us a very wild hypothesis. The Russian people or, rather, the knot of eccentrio politicians who impersonate a people may be jealous of the triumphs of German arms and of her vast defensive mili tary organization, which is henceforth to be supreme in Central Europe. Looking to the present, and not into some far and shadowy future, the military supremacy of Germany, united under Prussian leadership, in Central Europe should be a guarantee, rather than a danger or an obstacle, to the peaceful growth and prosperity of Russia, so long as Russia remains a defensive power. An alliance with France is an alliance with the revolution. This might please the communists, but what have the old Russian party, the exterminators of the Polish nationality, what have the new Russian party, the Panslavio agitators in Bohemia, to hope from it? If by an alliance with France the old Russian party means a division of the empire of the East, it can hardly be the common interest of the pre sent neutral powers to prevent Prussia from exacting full securities against such experi ments. Russia may regard with evil eyes the development of German naval power, but this development is only tne natural and inevita ble consequence of the territorial extension and unity of a nation whose mercantile ma rine is already the second in the world. If Russia dislikes the unity of Germany, she must learn to accept one more accomplished fact. The Russian Government is in no con dition to go to war to prevent it; and if it tried to do so, it would seek in vain for allies, and would provoke disasters compared with which the retribution that is falling upon the inordinate ambition and the fi.ebrand policy of Napoleonic i ranee would be but a passing cloud. SPECIAL. NOTICE8. NOTICE. REPUBLICANS, AROUSE! There remain but SATURDAY, MONDAY, and TUESDAY for your names to be placed on the EXTRA ASSESSMENT LIST. We earnestly urge upon all Republicans to at tend to this. EVERY NAME LEFT OFF THE LIST li.A VOTE LOST! Go, therefore, to your Freclnct Houses and exa mine for yourselves. JOHN L. HILL, President Republican City Exec. Com. John McCillocgd, t Secretaries. Marshall C. Hono,) 916 4t NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 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, In accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA BAN K.to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of five hundred thousand dollars, with the right to ncreaae me same to leu miiuion aouars. ty- JAMBS M. J3 LAWYER. 8 C O V E L, NO. 113 PLUM STREET, CAMDEN, N. J. roiiectU'M made anywhere Inside of New jr. ey. I 3U( SPECIAL NOTIOES. ggy NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TIIAT AP. , plication will be made to tne Treasurer ot the City of Philadelphia for the Issue of a new certlfl cate of City Loan In the place of one which has been lost or mislaid, viz., No. 15,169 (Bounty Loan, No. 8) for Five Hundred Dollars, In the name of Susanna Orr, Executrix. JAMES W. PAUL, 8 84 6w Attorney of Susanna Orr. EST KOTICE IS HEREBY GIVES TIIAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth or Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, la accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to e entitled THIS SOUTUWAUK BANKING COMPANY, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thousand dollars, with the right to Increase tbe same to one million dollars. tsr iUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, W LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. CAPITAL, 2,000,000. SABINE, ALI EN k DULLES, Agents, 8i FIFTH and WALNUT Streets. THE IMPERISHABLE PERFUME ! AS A rule, the perfumes now In use have no perma nency. An hour or two after their use there la no trace of pcrfnme left. 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NINTH AND FILBERT Sta., Phllada. gy NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will bo made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, in ac cordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE ANTHRACITE BAN K, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital or live hundred then sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to two million dollars. THE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY 07 PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire Extinguisher. Always Reliable. D. T. GAGS, 6 SO tf No. 118 MARKET St., General Agent. prg- HEAPQUAKTKKS rOK J&TltAUTLNU Teetn witn rrosn rmroaa-uxia uas. ADeomwiy no D&in. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, formerly oDerator at th Golton Dental Koonis, devote hia entire praotioe to the amieea xtraotion oi teetn. Uffloe, no. vu waijnur treat. i mo HOL.ITIOAL,. F O R S H E R F F, WILLIAM R. LEEDS, TENTH WARD. T 11 tf ty- FOR REGISTER OF WILLS, 18T0, WILLIAM M. 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'J on ece of furniture i in the form of a handnoiu PARLOR SOJTA, let in ene minute, without nnaorenrini or detaching in sny way, it can be extended into a beau tiful REM.) 11 liEDISTKAp, with Spring Uair Mattress ia eaail managed, and it ia imposeible for it to set out of order. Tbia Sofa Bedatead requirea no propa, hingea, feet, or ropes to aupport it when extended, as all other complete. At naa uio wavomaum us uurMu jur uuiuing. aofa beda and lonngee have, which are all rerr unsafe and liable to get out oi repair, out in oeaaieaa ia iormea oy imply turniDs out tbe enda or doling them wban tbe Bof a ia wanted. Tbe price ia about tbe e&mo aa a lounge. An i animation of Uin novel invention ia solicited. II. F. HOVER, Hi tnf6m No. 230 Soatb SECOND Street. Philada ROOFING. li E A D Y R O O F I N G. to all building, it This Roofing la, adapted nun hit annHad to "rr bTKEP OR FLAT ROOFS atone-half the expense of tin. It la readily put on old Shingle Roofs without removing the ahinglea, thna avoiding the damaging of ceilings and f urnllurs while undergoing repairs. (No gravel used.) PRiSKKVE YOUR TIN ROOFS WITil WBL TON'S ELASTIC PAINT. I am always prepared to Repair and Paint Roofi at abort notice. Also, PAINT FOR SALE by the barrel or gallon; the best and cheapest In the uarket w. a. wmmv, ITS Xo. IU N. NLNTU fti, atwa FOR. BAIfc. f BROAD STREET PROPERTY FOR SALIC HANDSOME : BROWN-STONE RESIDENCE southwest corner of Broad and Thompson atreeta, tnree stories, with French roof, containing all mo dern improvements, newly frescoed and painted throughout. ALSO, IIANDSOME BROWN-8TONS RSSI DENCE. west side of Broad, above Master street, nearly finished ; lot BO by 800 feet to Carlisle street Also, Lot west side Broad, above Vine street, 109 by 800 feet. Also, west side Broad, above Thompson street, ISO by 809 feet. Also, east side Broad street, 100 by 683 feet to Thirteenth street. ALSO, LARGE BUILDING on Dock street, knowa as "Jones Hotel will be rented and altered to suit tenant. R. J. DOBBINS, 8 13 thstu Ledger Building. FOR SALFA VERY VALUABLE HOUSE X-iilM and LOT at the N. W. corner of Forty-secoud street and KlngseSHlng avenue. House built of brown atone, three stories, contain ing 16 rooms, and finished In the best and moat sub. stantlal manner, with all the modern Improvements one of the most desirable houses iu West Phila delphia. . Property should be seen to be appreciated. Persons wishing to know the terms and examine the tropertvean do so by calling on JAMES M. SEL EKS, until 8)tf P. M., at No. 144 S. SIXTH Street. and in the evening at iso. ooo s. roKi i-bti.TOU street. - iuu W E 8 T PHILADELPHIA. Foil SALE OR TO RENT, IIANDSOME BROWN- STONE MANSARD ROOF RESIDENCES, 4114 Spruce street, possession October 10. 4116 Spruce street, Immediate possession. C. J. FELL it BRO.. OCtnthslm 120 South FRONT Street. O R S E. A NEW AND ELEGANT BROWN-STONE RESI- DENCE, East side of Logan Square. Replete with every convenience. Inquire at premises. Lot 28 by iso feet. a lm FOR SALE NORTH BROAD STREET lil The dealrible four-story residence, No. 80S N. iKt'AU street, with four-storv back buildings, com plete with every modern convenience and improve ment. Lot 20 oy 160 feet, with stable In the rear. Apply at No. 632 AKUli street, second story, or upon the premises. 9 17 6f FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE FOR City Property, one of the finest FARMS la the country. R, J. DOBBINS, 8 IS thstu tf Ledger Building. TO RENT. TO RENT TO A QUIET GENTLEMAN A 1IUUUQUU1D 1U1UIDI1CU IttllUl AUU UCU'lUVUt IU a private famliy. Inquire at No. 33 S. 0 14 lot ELEVENTH Street. rpo RENT THE STORE NO. T22 CHESNUT Street. Apply on the premises between 10 and 12 o'clock A. M. 817 tf TO LET A SECOND STORV, WELL lighted Room, No. 104 HUDSON'S Alley, with steam power. Apply to Adams express Olllce. 16 6t GOAL. THE LEHIGH COAL AND Navigation Company Is now prepared to deliver to families In any part of the city or Germantown their well-known "OLD COMPANY LEHIGH GOAL," or rta IVowport Coal, From their mines In the Wyoming Va.ley. As the company MINES, TRANSPORTS AND SELLS Its own Coal, the pnblic are assured of GOOU QUALITY, FULL WEIGHT, AND PROMtT DE LIVERY. Parties buying Coal at the PRESENT LOW PRICES Can have It delivered at such time as best suits them during the present season. Orders received at the Company's Office, No. 122 South SECOND Street, AT THEIR COAL YARDS, No. 04 RICHMOND Street, 8 16 lm AMERICA Street, above Diamond, Or at the Yard of J. T. Roberts ft Bro., Germantown $550. White Ash, Pure and Clean. dive It a Trial. MITCHELL & WROTH'S COAL DEPOT, N. E. Cor. NINTH and GIRAED Ave., 9 2 lm4p PHILADELPHIA. ANTHRACITE COAL, TON OF 2240 LBS. DE llvered, LEHKIH, Broken and Egg, fW; htove, 18-25; LOCUST MOUNTAIN. Broken and Epg, ta-75. Stove, 16 75; 8HAMOKIN and LOR liLKRY Nut to carters at low prices. EASTWICK 4 BROTHER, Office, No. S28 DOCK Street; Yards, cor. TWENTY SECOND and WASHINGTON Av. 8 20rp tf 17 O T H E R M K L MANNING. t LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL. COAL, Depot . l'j. corner ninth ana al&stexC, onices, j m jsANsoitf 9tr HOTELS. QOLONNADE HOTEL, FIFTEENTH AND CHESNUT STS., ENTIRELY NEW AND HANDSOMELY FOR. NihliKD, lanow ready for permanent or transient guests V M 1 T OROVE HOUSE O will be kept open During OCTOBER and NOVEMBER, at reduced ratea for Board. Tbe convenience of this honse for business men Is unsurpassed by any in the vicinity ot Philadelphia, All the rooms are heated and supplied with gas. Only three minutes walk from White Hall Station, on Pennsylvania Railroad, opposite Bryn Mawr. J Isaac h. evans. "West Ilaverford P. O. THE COUNTRY TBB K1TTAT1NNY HOUSE, At the DELAWARE WATER GAP, Pa., wll continue open the entire Autumn at reduced rates of board. The change of foliage commencing about the soth of September Is nowhere seen to greater perfection. Write for circulars. W. A. BRODHEAD tt SONS, 9 13 tuthBtf Proprietors. A LEX AN DER G. CATTELL k CO., PRODUCE COMMISSION MRRCHANT9. No. 26 NORTH WHARVES AND NO. 8T NORTH WATER 8TB3ET, PHILADELPHIA. AMIANDIB G. ClTTUKU ELIJAH CkVTXLU C OTTON SAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, OF ALL numbers and brands. Tent, Awning, Trans: and Wagon-cover Duck. Also, Paper alanafa. turers' Drier Fella, from thirty to seveuty-U Inched with Paulina, Belting, Sail Twine, ta . JOHN W. EVKHMAN. is io vat iiv4 uet lutf Buxosi, 8 17 7t A , U T U M N IN