THE DAILY EVENING TELEGUAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2G, 1870. as srziLZT or inn runs a. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topic Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. TLAIN TRUTHS FOR THE NEGROES. Frrnn the jr. r. Timet. The colored people have been holding a convention at Tonghkeepsie to take into consideration the political and educational interests of their race in three of the Con gressional districts of this State. The Presi dent made a very sensible speech, in which he pointed out what the best white friends of the colored people have pointed oat frequently since their emancipation, that although their participation in politic is very well as a sign of their equality, and as a means of preserving it, reliance on politics for their social eleva tion is an immense mistake. He asked very pertinently, "Have they not been howers of wood and drawers of water long enough? Have they not blacked their master's boots and stood behind his chair until their hearts were sick and sore?" To these ques tions, we suppose, there can be but one answer; but it is useless, as he also pointed out, for the colored people to expect to escape from their degradation by simply Toting. Now that everybody votes, no man is respected for voting, any more than for wearing pantaloons, although inability to vote when others did vote would, undoubt edly, be a mark of inferiority. In order to rise in the social scale, the colored race must show itself capable of the acquirements and achievements through which other races have achieved distinction. It must furnish a fair quota of able and successful men of business, of learned and astute lawyers, of v eil-trained scholars, of eloquent preachers, of painstaking, and clear-headed, and thorough men of science. It must, too, do a reasonable amount for the arts of inusio and painting, at least we are disposed in con sideration of the multiplicity of white poets to grant it a considerable respite in the matter of poetry. Lastly it must furnish a respectable quota of honorable and polished men of culture, and women of the same sort. It is no doubt pretty hard for a race situated as it has been, and still is, to do all this; but it must be done, in order to attain to any thing approaching to social equality. Posi tion in this world is only accorded to desert of some kind, and all the speechifying that could be put into fifty years of conventions would not change the rule. Of course, no race is expected to furnish a great number of first class men in any department, but it has to furnish some, and of their performances the race gets the benefit in respect and repu tation. But, then at the bottom of all social im provement is improvement in character. Without a good basis of truthful, manly, self-reliant, upright character, there is no use in the colored people trying to raise them selves socially in the estimation of their ' white neighbors, and they may depend upon it that if they are going t act on the first resolution adopted by the convention, they will not hasten the formation of that type of character, or any ether type that will be of use either to them or Jto the community at large. That resolution was, "That this con vention will discountenance any person or persons who has or will continue to vote the Democratic ticket, and that we agree to disregard them, and will not give any place or protection or shelter or in houses or places of business, but consider them an enemy to our race forever." The grammar of this is not encouraging, though if this were its only detect it would pass well enough. But the colored people could hardly hit on a better mode of keeping themselves down, and making themselves both contemp tible and ridiculous, than by a formal attempt to nse their social intercourse as a means of Eolitical proscription. Moreover, they could ardly hit on a better mode of cultivating meanness, deceit, and other small vices, which sap character just as effectively as the great ones, and the prevalence of which has already a good deal to do with their degradation. The lesolution, too, stands in extraordinary contrast with the advice of the President and the avowed objects of the Convention, both of which nrge reliance on self-culture, through education and other ways, as the sole means of regeneration. We are no friends of the Democratic party, and we believe the colored people, like the Irish, and indeed the poor and ignorant of all races, have no worse enemy than this same party; but, then, a ne gro, who is kept from voting for it. by the fear that he would lose his place, or be cut off from social intercourse with his friends, would be a contemptible fellow, and sure to make a bad Republican. The same thing might be said of the negroes who watched him and persecuted him, Of course the professional politicians on both sides are ready enough to work the colored people up into furies of this kind, but the professional politicians are sorry guides for any people which has a social education to acquire. We see the Pough keepsie Convention is going to take measures to have "the strength of the oolored people ascertained in the three? Congressional dis tricts," which is very well as long as they don't flatter themselves that "their strength" lies in their numbers. Their real strength must always be in their education, or. in other words, in their ability to see where, in poli tics as in other things, their real interests lie, and to avoid falling into the hands of, and being led blindfold by, white demago gues. For which reason we anticipate a great deal more good from the determination of the convention "to build an academy, seminary, or high school," in or near Pough keepsie, tban from its determination to have "the colored vote brought out" in those cibtricts. The attempts of the colored people to work lueir way up nave not tnus far been very for tunate. lhey nave by no means put their test men into the front rank. They have sent one or two men to tne liar here at the North. who have been miserable failures in every way; and though some of their leaders at the Bouth have been good men, their politicians nave, on tne wnole, done tneni no credit, Their cadets, too, at West Point have cer tainly not been selected in such a way as to assert the principle of equality with much honor, and one or two mistakes, such as the election of Whittemore, have dishear ened a good many of their friends. But they have distinguished students now both at Yale and Harvard, and tnere are plenty of other signs that, with good sense and hard work, there is nothing to hinder them from winning, if not a place in the very front rank, still a very respectable place. THE MILITARY SITUATION. JVom the X. Y. Uorald. Our recent despatches indicate that the Prussians are still fighting for position in front of the southern line of works about Pris. Dourdan, a village southwest of Ver Milli, has been occupied by the besiegers, and (he fortifications at Yinoennes have been abandoned by the French. No strong effort has been made on the northerly side of the city, the intention being merely to present a thin front there, strong to resist, from behind the fortifications that the besiegers throw up as they move, any sally on the part of the French, but not strong enough to venture on an assault. The positions gained thus far are Sceaux, from which the Prussians command Forts Montrouge, Vauvres, and Bioetre; the fortifications at Yincennes, whence they can bombard La Pissotte and Charenton if neces sary, and Versailles. Outside of these positions a railroad encircling Taris has been completed, by which, in an hour's time, they can concentrate their whole force npon one Eoint. The woods which the French failed to urn enable the Prussians to mask their movements pretty effectually. One report states that the French had attacked the Prus sians in the woods on the south, and a severe battle had ensued, in which the former had been repulsed. Another report denies this, but if it is true no doubt the intention of the French was to complete, if possible, the de struction of the woods by fire in order to un mask the movements of the enemy. De spatches from Tours state that inside Paris there is a calm determination to hold out to the bitter end. Another despatch, however, says that all discipline is vanishing among the troops inside, and that the mob is rapidly becoming the dominant power. The Prussian movement southward con tinues with unabated activity. Detachments have entered Fontainebleau and Blois, and other detachments are marching on Nemours and Orleans. There remains but little doubt that these detached columns are Uhlans, who merely make flying visits, levy contributions, destroy railroads, it possible, spread false re ports of the movements of the Prussian in fantry, and are gone again. These movements cripple the French severely, and serve as an effectual mask to the actual operations of the invading army. It may prove, however, that the force moving on Orleans is actually a heavy infantry force following in the rear of the advance cavalry at Blois, and having Tours as its present objective point. Tours and Orleans are both to be defended and will probably undergo a siege such as Metz and Strasbourg and Paris are undergoing. With the disappearance of the Army of the Loire, which dees not seem to have attempted any resistance whatever to tne Prussian ad vance, the strange anomaly is presented of 1 ranee at war without an army in tne field, every force she has raised for service so far being cooped up in one of several towns now in a state of siege. What a weak enemy she has proven in open combat, and what stub born foes her mismanaged armies have proven in Strasbourg, Metz, and Toul I The siege of these cities is progressing slowly with no effectual change in the situation. Qeneral Ulrich, it is said, is willing to surrender, but has been deterred from it by the demands of the soldiery. A shell is reported to have set fire to the Strasbourg theatre, two hundred women and children who had taken refuge there being burned to death. At Metz the defense holds out stubbornly against a close blockade, the furious bombardment having ceased, owing, it is probable, to a partial withdrawal of the besieging force. We may soon expect a grand assault at Paris. King William cannot afford to sit down patiently to the tedious operation of starving out the garrison until he has tried the spirit and strength of the works and their defenders by flinging the full force of his army against them. The quiet withdrawal of troops from Toul and Metz indicates some action of this kind, and it may be that it is only delayed by the pending negotiations for peace. Heaven grant that blessed peace come early enough to save this century from the sight of an army of infuriated Prussians swooping through the streets of Pans. AN AMERICAN "I PRACTICABLE." From die Ntteburg Commercial. Wendell Phillips is fulminating in a Victor Hugoish style against Bismarck, whom he de nounces as "the willing tool of a bigot king," and against Prussia because the tierjuan armies were not set immediately on the home ward march after Sedan. Those who remem ber the extravagancies perpetrated by Phillips during our civil war, and his assaults against Grant after the close of the war, will receive with some reserve his unmeasured tirales against the attitude of Prussia. It is possible to entertain a hearty good feeling towards the new uovernment of Prance, and to wish the republican experiment in that country abun dant success, without so stultifying ourselves as to suppose that the surrender of Napo leon ought legitimately to have ended the war. Vie must be just in this matter. After Sedan, the French repudiated Napoleon, but they did not repudiate the war. Instead of so doing they pledged them selves to wage it so long as a German soldier was on their soil. They solemnly declared they would make no peace until the enemy was driven from the country. With such a challenge hurled at them, what were the German leaders to dot They could do nothing else but accept it. lhey had no alter native but to Beek their foes and again refer the settlement to the issue of battle. It could not matter to them that new names were introduced into the conflict. Napoleon had been eliminated from the strife, not by France but by their own victorious arms. The self-established government which had repudiated him in his misfortune had held out no olive branch. Its voice was loudly and boldly for war. Yet Wendell Phil lip) endeavors to create a hostile senti ment in the United States acrainst the Germans because they accepted facts just as they round them after Sedan, and nave since tried to press those facts to their natural conclusion. Is any man to be accused of a want of sympathy with demo cratio institutions because he rejects such logic as this? There has been something said in the journals of a turning round of American sentiment towards the French since the attempt at the establishment of a republican government in that country. We do not understand that this change of senti ment goes any further than towiih the ex periment a happy and prosperous issue. It is not bo weak as to buddoso that, being de feated in a manifestly aggressive war, the French will not have to settle the bill. We aro tolerably familiar with the expressions of our press on this subject, and the general opinion is that the Germ ins have fairly conquered the richt to demand Metz and Strasburg as an indemnity for the past and a security for the future. Such a demand is not grasping, or cruel, or oppressive. It is less than the Frenou would have consented to take if they had marched to Berlin, and less than this outsiders have no right to insist that the Germans should be satisfied with. When the French authorities make up their minds to yield these conces sions, they can end the war by apprising Bis marck of the fact. J ulea Favre can close the war if he has the courage to risk the brief indignation of his countrymen and offer for them what they have sot the practical judg- 1 men, to oner lor tueuelTts. PRUSSIA AND HER TERMS OF PEACE. From t)a S. T. Tribune. Count Bismarok has written a circular to the German ambassadors at the various Eu ropean Courts, in whioh he announces in of ncial terms, so plain and positive that they cannot be doubted, the principal oondition of peace which Germany will insist upon. She may demand other and greater guarantees; certain it is, however, that she will not be content with the dismantling of Metz and Strasburg, as M. Jules Favre has suggested; but means to take and to keep both. This condition was resolved on long ago; it was, indeed, duly considered and deter mined upon Boon after the war began, and was announced unofficially soon after the bat tle of Gravelotte. On August 28 a correspon dent of the Tribune held a long conversation with Count Bismarck upon the subject of the conditions of peace to be demanded. This conversation was reported in full in the Tri bune of September . After declaims that he opposed the organization of Alsace and Lorraine into a neutral State like Luxem burg or Belgium, and did not desire to hold them as unwilling members or conquered provinces of the German nation, Count Bis marck said: There remains to us, then, as a third course, to take Metz and Strasburg and to keep them. This Is what we Bliall do. lUrasburg particularly is abso lutely needful for the protection of Mouth (Jermanv. which Is at the mercy of a French army. Ho long as France possesses Strasbifrg there Is nothing to stop a French Invading army. Now, It would be very unfair if we were to leave our Bouth Uerman brethren unprotected, after they have fought so bravely and well by our side la this camnatga. Then, again, by holding Strasburg we cou'd a'wavi prevent any movement mi the Kii'ne. We should be able not only to march an army by the valley of the Main on Paris, but to take a French army marching on Mavence or C'oblentz in flank and rear. So we have besieged S'rasburg vigorously, and when we have got the old Herman town back again we shall make a Gibraltar of it." The circular of Count Bi3marck now pub lished simply reiterates these statements, and gives additional arguments by which he seeks to establish the justice of the demand to be made. The right of the Germans, as the vic tors in the struggle, to insist upon these terms no one will deny, and no neutral nation is likely to dispute, though it would seem from the nature of the circular that Count Bismarck fears as much. Its avowed purpose is to thwart the efforts making by M. Thiers to influence the neutral powers to intervene, and it cannot but have a powerful effect in restraining them, if any restraint be needed. Count Bismarck also announces that with the domestio affairs of France Germany will have nothing whatever to do. 11a will treat with any responsible Government authorized and strong enough to carry out the treaty which it makes. But in the matter of the future security of Germany from invasion he evidently does not intend to rely on parch ment promises. To the occupation of Metz and btrasburg by Germany, I ranee will eventually be forced to submit, for upon that depends the security of Germany and, as Bismarck strongly and rightly insists in his circular, the peace of Europe. THE FALL OF THE EMPEROR. From the London Saturday Review. The first impression made upon untravelled experience by a tropical landscape of pre eminent beauty, such as the harbor of Rio, is, How picture-like! how unnatural! The conditions of judgment are in like manner reversed when we survey as a whole some strange life or some exceptional and startling chapter of history. A work or character of fiction is credited with merit as being lifelike, that is, when it fits into our ordinary expe rience; but a man's life and career is judged to be especially valuable or instructive if we can only say of it that it has all the elements of romance, that it is full of dramatic interest, and presents the most picturesque surprises, contrasts, or coincidences, or that it con veys a moral, or points what we eall some great lesson, or brings out the award of a righteous Nemesis in the way of retaliation or compensation. No doubt the fall of the French Emperor will suggest, or is suggesting, all sorts of parallels, moral lessons, analogies, political sermons, and the rest of it. Nor can it be denied that a good deal may be fairly said in this direction, and that the life of Louis Napoleon Bonaparte is a very illustrative one. But in analysing the character of the man we may on either side make many mistakes. We may attribute too much of the recent history of Europe to him personally; but it would be a great error to take the other extreme, and find out all of a sudden that we bad for all these years and years been laboring under a mistake, and that the great mystery-man and deep con spirator and dark subtle intriguer was after all a mere windbag and delusion. If nothing is so succf ssf ul as success, nothing is so dis astrous, in estimating character, as failure The judgment is paralyzed equally by a superhuman triumph or a superhuman break' down. The dethroned Emperor is neither the swmd.'er and adventurer of Mr. Kinglake, nor the realization of Machiavelli's Prince; and probably, when his history can be fairly written, he will neither stand so high nor bo low in the world's annals as his contempo raries have plased him. As far as his moral nature is concerned, Louis Napoleon must be credited with a con stitutional strength of will and a definite, though not dignified, self-reliance. Under other conditions, and with another sort of education, Louis Napoleon might have been a fanatic; and in a sense hewas a fanatio that is, he had those elements of character which, with superior gifts, go to the making of a Cromwell or a Mahomet or a Napoleon the Great. He believed in something deep and abiding which presented itself as a btar, or a Mission, or a Fate, or a Destiny, or something which it was ordained for him to do. . Constitutionally cold, morose, and per haps timorous, he lacked what alone can en noble fatalism, the fiie of fanaticism. He believed in bis star, but he did not sur render himself to the enthusiasm which car ries the fanatio through. He was destined to do something; but he chose for himself the path of cunning, intrigue, conspiracy, and double-dealing. It may be that his last campaign was the true reflection of his life long character, lie really believed thaj, it was his mission to humble Germany, and that war was his policy; he thoroughly be lieved in this, but then some constitutional weakness, some secret terror and mistrust. kept him back from action at the supreme moment of fate. Most likely his early life was against him. His youth was that of a dreamer of dreams. His first book was enti tied Reveries J'olitiqueg&a it was some Years before he got to his Jdees Napo leeniennes ; and it was not till after these maunderings and speculations that he took up the active part of life in bis Boulogne expedition of 1810. What made the Second Empire was not the personal aud individual energy, not the persevering am bl tion, not the keen-sighted, far-reaching, subtle policy of Louis Napoleon, but circum stances over which he personally exercised little control, and to the existence of which he contributed nothing, but whioh be bad sufficient cunning to turn to his own pur pose. Louis Napoleon contributed nothing to the . mismanagement of the Bourbon restoration. : He certainly misappre hended French feeling under the Citizen King when he planned the Strasburg cm cut, and when, undeterred by this ridiculous blunder, he repeated it with exag gerations on the shore of Boulogne in 1810. The Revolution of 1848 owed nothing to the heir of the Empire; neither its immediate success nor its subsequent breakdown waa manipulated by the man who is sometimes sainted as the Arch-Conspirator of Europe. In the long run events played themselves into his hands, and he became Deputy, President, Dictator, Emperor. But all along he made use of the events, he did but little, and that not boldly, to create them. No doubt he doggedly kept in view one, and a de finite, object that is, the reaggraudizement of Bonapartism; and he clung to this per sistently, obstinately, doggedly, but with very little poiiey. He was one of the Italian car bonari; the chivalrous imitator of the Eng lish Pretender, the defender of order, aud the author of the coup d'etat of 1851. But he tried all these things by turn, tentatively and experimentally, because the situation created them, and he availed himself of the situation and worked it. The situation he never cre ated. He meant to restore Napoleon ism : but in a haphazard wav he availed himself of chances, more often faihnes than successes, which might perhaps tend to this same end. But this is not a supreme mind; the supreme mind is not only to have one great endand in a sense that one end Louis Napoleon had but also to know the means to acquire that end. Ihe great man Is he who never blun ders. Louis Napoleon has repeatedly blun dered, and of course, at last, once too often. Although such considerations detract very considerably from greatness of character, they at the same time account for, and in a sense extenuate, the worst features of the late Emperor's career. The most serious consideration urged against the second em pire is that it has demoralized France; aad the accusation is quite true. But then it must be remembered that Jt ranee has always been demoralized. Louis XIV and old feu dalism demoralized France, under the Revo lution, because it destroyed but did not create, 1 ranee was submitted to another stage of demoralization; the first empire most fatally demoralized France, so did the Kestoration; so did the Citizen King and M. Guizot; and we have yet to learn the services to political and national morality rendered by Ledru llollin and his colleagues of the Kevolution of 1848. What Louis Napoleon did was to accept French de moralization and turn it to bis own pnrp m and to increase it; to add one sort of domo ralization to another, and to turn the existing situation to his own purpose. He lived from hand to mouth, and undoubtedly it was his own mouth. Cavaignao was very likely an honest man, and Lamartine a feather-brained enthusiast; but Louis Napoleon did not set up for being more than fated to restore Na poleonic Casarism; and as he had no good elements to work with, he worked with bad ones, and so long as he gained his purpose he never scrupled to make them worse. His worst crime, that of the coup d'etat, was proba bly judged accurately by Lord Palmerstou, who remarked that as the co-existence of the President and the Assembly was an impossi bility, it would be better that of the t o the President should prevail. The solid objection to the second empire is that it did not regene rate A rench politioal life; it may be feared that the sad answer is that French political life is incapable of anything worth calling regeneration; Louis Napoleon s excuse is that he did not undertake the impossible, and only did what he could under the circum stances, which were no creation of his. It may, and must, be answered that the mission of a great man is to give the political life of his country those elements of stability, truth, and morality in which it is deficient; but our contention is that the Emperor was not a great man nor an honest man, and did not pretend to be a great man or even an honest one. In stead of reforming French publio life, he played into and used for his own ends its worst characteristics. What he found was an in tense, absorbing love of glory and aggran dizement in publio and social life, and cor ruption and intrigue and jobbery in political life. These were the legacies of the First Empire and to some extent of the Citizen King. This is what he found, this is what he used; and certainly the fall of the empire will not clear away these black clouds. The new Republio, if it may be called a Government at all, has at present but one profession and one principle, that is, to carry on the war, which is, in other words, to carry on the prin ciple upon whioh imperialism anchored itself the passionate love of military glory and the claim to European sovereignty. No words can be too strong ip condemn the evils of imperialism; but it may be fairly con sidered whether imperialism latent, but real did not quite as much create the late Em- eror as Louis Napoleon created imperialism. Ie worked it, and worked it only as it can be worked, to evil; but he did not create the evil, or perhaps the necessity for it. It is just possible that there may be a dim balf-conscious sense of this truth in the French mind at this moment. Paris, and we suppose France too, is execrating the fallen Emperor; but after a few fitful and disas trous experiments with republicanism it will, unless Prussia can give France a new mind or character, be just as Imperial au fond as before. Even so-called Constitutionalists, such as Thiers and Guizot and, for the matter of that, MM. Favre and Gambetta are, as regards the duty and necessity of carrying on the war, at one with Rouher and the Duke of Gramont. France has been a menace to Europe for many a long year, but the French people would have it so; and in exhausting our indignation on the empire, let us not forget what made the empire and Ciesarism. In many respects the Emperor personally is deserving of commise ration. Shattered in body and mind, and de prived of the men of genius who all along have bad more to do with the success of the empire than the Emperor himself, the De Mornys, Walewskis, and Tbouvenels of his palmy days deserted and reviled by those, the millions of France, to whose evU passions it was his worst fault that he pan dered although we must judge the Emperor harshly, it is only fair to interpose the cau tious hint that after all at his worst he was but an instrument of France. And Franca as yet shows no signs of being better, or of learning wisdom even by the stern sohooling of adversity and of military disasters which have no parallel in history. The monkey fit is now on Paris. Like spiteful children they are breaking their toys, and with a total lack of dignity they exhibit a most deplorable de ficiency of common cause. It is easy to break the Emperor's busts, to scratch oat the impe rial cipher, and to trample on the eagles, but it would be more to the purpose to pluok out the imperialism, whether impersonated in Louis Napoleon or in the Provisional Govern ment, which is festering aad eating out the heart of the nation. special' notices. ist K N I O N. REPUBLICAN TICKET. JUDICIARY. ASSOCIATE JCIKJK8 OF TBS COURT OF COMMON FLIAS EDWARD M. PAXSON. THOMAS K. FIN LETTER. . ASSOCIATE JCDOK OF Till DISTRICT COURT! JAMES LYND. COUNTY. sheriff: WILLIAM R. LEEDS. REGISTER OF WILLS: WILLIAM M. BUNN, Late private 72d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. CLERK OF TUB ORPHANS' COURT: SERGEANT JOSEPII C. TITTERMARY. .CITY. RECEIVER OF TAXES: ROBERT H. BEATTY. city commissioner: CAPTAIN JAMES BAIN. CONGRESSIONAL. 1st District BENJAMIN HUCKEL. Sd 8d 4th Cth HON. CHARLES O'NEILL. HON. LEONARD MYERS. DON. WILLIAM D. KELLEY. ALFRED C. HARMER. senator third district: BENJAMIN W. THOMAS. ASSEMBLY. 1st District SAMUEL P. THOMSON 2d " WILLIAM H. STEVENSON. 3d WILLIAM KELLEY. 4th " WILLIAM ELLIOTT. 5th WILLIAM DUFFY. 6th ' COL. CBARLES KLECKNER. 7th " ROLERT JOHNSON. 8th WILLIAM L. MARSHALL, 9th " WILLIAM H. PORTER. 10th " JOHN E. REYBURN. 11th " SAMUEL M. HA.QER. 12th " JOHN LAMON. 13th " JOHN DUMB ELK 14th " JOHN CLOUD. 15th " ADAM ALBRIGHT. 16th " WILLIAM F. SMITH. 17th " WATSON COMLY. 18th JAMES MILLER. By order of the City Executive Committee. JOHN L. HILL, President. k ??S) Secretaries. 9 14 wftntt&dOt gs- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the Utneral Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation or a Bank, In ac cordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled 1 HE CIIESNUT STREET BANK, to be located at raiiaaeipnia, wan a capital or one nun dred thousand dollars, with the right to increase the same to nve hundred thousand dollars gy- OFFICE OF THE FRANKLIN FIRE IN- SURANCE COMPANY, Philadelphia, Sept. 17,1870. An election for Ten Directors, to serve during the ensuing year, will be held, agreeably to charter, at the ortlce of the Company, on MONDAY, October 8, 1870, between the hours of 11 A. M. and 9 P. M. 9 19 13t J. W. MCALLISTER, Secretary. gy 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 ef a Bank, in accordance with the laws or the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE HAMILTON BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to Increase the same to five hundred thousand dollars. gjp NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AP plication will be made to the Treasurer of the City of Philadelphia for the Issue of a new certlQ cate of City Loan In the place of one whioh has been lost or mislaid, viz., No. 15,169 (Bounty Loan, No. S) for Five Hundred Dollars, lu the name of Susanna Orr, Executrix. JAMES W. 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No trouble to show goods. 9 81m gy- NOTlCEIS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting or the General Assembly or the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank-, In accordance with the laws of the Commonwe lth, to be entitled THE UNITED STATES BANKING COMPANY, to be locate at Philadelphia, with a capital of one million dtllara, with the right to lu ciease the same to five million dollars. TREGO'S TEABERRT TOOTH WASH. It is the most pleasant, cheapest and best dentifrice extant. Warranted free from Injurious ingredients. It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth 1 Invigorates and Soothes the Gums I Purines and Perfumes the Breath ! Prevents Accumulation of Tartar! Cleanses and Purities Artificial Teeth I Is a Superior Article for Children 1 bold by ail druggists ana aenusm. M. WILSON. DrHBfirist. Proprietor. 8110m Cor. NINTH AND FILBERT St, Phtlada, aga- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly ol the Commoawealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation or a Bank, in ac cordance with the laws or the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE JEFFERSON BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thousand dollars, with the right to Increase the same to five hundred thousand dollars. B ATCn ELOR'S HAIR DYE. THIS SPLEN did Hair live is the best In the world, the only true and perfect Dye. Harmless Reliable Instan taneous no disappointment no rldiculoua tints "Does not contain Lead nor any Vitalio i'oinon to in jure the Uair or Sortem." Invigorates the Hair and leaves It soft and beautiful ; Black or Brown. Sold by all Druggists and dealers. Applied at the Factory, No. 16 BOND Street, New York, uaiinwft j- THE UNION FIRS EXTINGUISHER COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire Extinguisher. . Always Reliable, D. T. GAGS, 0 80 tf No. 118 MARKET St., General Agent. QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY co LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. CAPITAL. Jtt.000,000. SABINE, ALLEN fc DULLES, Agents, vi ii . vat a i v i w n bi.UI1t 85 FIFTH and WALNliP Streets. tW- MUSIO SCHOOL MRS. ANNIE E. SIMP. PON will open lier Music School at No. 117 N. TWENTY-FIRST Street (corner of Tower) on SEP TKMliEli 170. Instruction on Piano and Caii. net Organ aud la Shiguig ad Uariuonr. ti lui 6PEOIAL, NOTIOE8. ty- LAW. DEPARTMENT, UNIVERSITY OP w PIKIIIlTI ViKIl A farm will luln am MONDAY, October 8. Introductory Lotare by Hon. J. I. ULAKK UAKU at 8 o'clock 1L t H St gy- WARDALR O. M 0 A L L I 8 TB fi, A (tnrnn a nrl llminin'lnr At Taar No. $03 BROADWAY, New York, ter HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING m wmia witu inmu itrvu-viiui vwa. uwihvw no Mia. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, foraiorlr aomtor t iha Oolton Dwatal Rooma, darotaa bi aatira praotioa to tba ritniaaa attraction of toato. OfBoa. No. tU WALNUT Btraat. IW HOUITIOAL.. gQf FOR SHERIFF) WILLIAM U. LEEDS, TENTH WARD. T 11 tf g FOR REGISTER OF WILLS, 1370, WILLIAM M. BURR, SIXTEENTH WARD. Late Private Company F, Tlltf EDUCATIONAL.. CARL OAERTNER'S NATIONAL CONSERVA TORY OF MUSIC, 8. E. corner TENTH and WALNUT Streets, is now open lor the Fourth Sea son ror the reception or pupils. Instruction Is gtven by a stait or the best Professors In the city In the following branches: Vocal Music, Piano, Violin, Viola, Violoncello, Contra Bass, Theory of Harmony, (1 rand Organ (or Church Organ), Cabinet Organ, Melodeon, Flute, Clarionet, Oboe, Bassoon, Horn, Cornet, Trombone, Harp, Uuitar, etc., etc., and in the Italian, Ueruiau, French, and Spanish Languages. For particulars see circulars to be had at the Office of the Conservatory and in the Music Stores. The Director or the Conservatory takes this oppor tunity to express his sincere gratification at the suc cors which has attended his efforts to establish this Institution in Philadelphia on a permanent basis and with the prospect or continued prosperity. He would likewise declare his gratitude to the many kind friends among the students and else where, whose Interest In the cause of thorough in struction in the art and science of music has as sisted so materially in bringing the Conservatory to Its present state of usefulness. He can only promise in return that his devotion to the object of raising the Institution under his care to a high place among the great Music Schools or the world shall be as it has been the controlling influence at the Conservatory. CARL GAERTNER, 9 121m Director and Proprietor. nlf. I.AUIi:iKIE A4JIIH ACADEMY FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS, ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS, No. lOd South TENTH Street. A Primary, Elementary, and Finishing School. Thorough preparation for Business or College. Special attention given to Commercial Arithmetic and all kinds of Business Calculations. French and German, Linear and Perspective Drawing, Elocution, English Composition, Natural Science. FIELD PRACTICE In Surveying and Civil Engl, neerlng, with the use of all requisite Instruments, Is given to the higher classes in Mathematics. A first-alass Primary Department. The best ventilated, most lofty and spacious Class rooms In the city. Open for the reception of applicants dally from 10 A. M. to 4 P. M. 3 80 Fall term will begin September 12. Circulars at Mr. warburton's, No. 430 Cheannt st. ALLOWELL SELECT HIGH SCHOOL FOR Young Men and Boys, which has been re moved from No. 110 N. Tenth street, will be opened on September 12 in the new and more commodious buildings Nob. 112 and 114 N. NINTH Street. Neither effort nor expense has been fcpared In fitting up the rooms, to make this a first-class school of the highest graae. A Preparatory Department la connected with the school. Parents and students are Invited to call and examine the rooms and consult the Principals from 9 A. M. to 2 P. M. after August 16. GEORGE EAisTBURN, A. B., JOHN G. MOORE, M. S.t 817tf Principals. HAMILTON INSTI TUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES, No. 3810 CIIESNUT Street, West Philadel pliia. Day and Boarding School. This institution, having successfully completed its fourth ycr, has become one of the established schools or our city. Its course or study includes a thorough English and Classical Education, embracing Mental, Moral, and Physical culture. Its ninth session will open on MONDAY, Septem ber 12. For terms, etc, apply at the school. 8 29tr PHILIP A. CREOAR, Principal. rpiIE DRAWING- SCHOOL OF THE FRANK JL LIN INSTITUTE Will open on MONDAY, September 26, and continue on MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, and FRIDAY EVENINGS, from 7 to 9 o'clock, for twenty-four weeks, under the superintendence of Prof. JOHN KERN. TERMS Five dollars per quarter. Puoils under 21 years of age can attend the lectures of the Insti tute on the payment of one dollar. For tickets apply at the Hail, No. 18 South SE VENTH Street. WILLIAM HAMILTON, 9 20 6t Actuary. IMLDON SEMINARY. MISS CARR'S SELECT j Boarding School for Young Ladles will HO OPEN SEPTEMBER 14, 1870. It is situated at the York Road Station of the North Pennsylvania Railroad, seven miles from Philadelphia. The Principal may be consulted personally at her residence during the summer, or by letter addressed to Shoemakertown Post Oifice, Montgomery county, Pa. Circulars can be obtained also at the office of JAY COOKE & OO., 8 8 Bankers, Philadelphia, "p-D G E II I L L SCH O O'L, MERCHANTVILLE, N. J., Four Miles from Philadelphia. Next session begins MONDAY, October 3. For circulars apply to 3 21 ly Rev. T. W. CAT TELL. VOUNG MEN AND BOYS' ENGLISH CLASSI 1 CAL AND COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE, No. 1908 MOUNT VERNON Street, reopens September 6 Thorough preparation for BubImus or College. Has a Preparatory Department for small Boys. 8 87 lm Rev. J. G. SH1NN, A. M., Principal. CH EGA KAY INSTITUTE, Nos. 1527 AND SPRUCE Strast, Philadelphia, will raopan on TU&&DAY. Baptoiuber 10. Eraoob i tba Ungoaga of tb ln.i)v anri la Min.lArt.l, aDnkan in tha inatituLa. i lb mtva 6m J' ANE M. HARPER WILL) REOPEN HER School for Bovs and Girls, N. W. corner of EIGHTEENTH and CUESNUT Streets, on the 14th of vth month (September), 1870. Ages 6 to 13. 9 8 lm MISS '3 FN N I E TTB ECICT E ACHE R0 F THE PIANO-FORTE, No. 746 FLORIDA Street, will resume her duties September 1. 9 IB lm nnUE CLASSICAL INSTITUTE. DEAN STREET. above Spruce, will be re-opened September 6LU. 1 2m J W. FA IRKS, D. D., PrtnctpaL 822 fir A A YEAR HOARD AND TUITION AT IOU THE EPISCOPAL ACADEMY, BERLIN, J. f C OURTLAND SAUNDERS COLLEOE, FOR Young Men, Youth, and Small Boys, Phlia. 6 23t PIANIST FOR MUSICAL ENTERTAINMET8 or Dancing Soirees, No. 110 S. ELEVENTH Street. 13 81 lm Reference Mr. Boner. No. 1102 Cheannt atreet. WHISKY. WINE, ETC QAR8TAII10 A McCALL, Ko. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Cti. IMPORTERS OV Brandies, Wines, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc, WHOLKSALB DEALERS U PURE RYE WHISKIES. UIBOWI AMP TAJ PAtP. tM ViriLUAM ANDERbON A CO., DEALERS IM v v ine w nisKiea, No, 146 North SECOND Street, Philadelphia, JOHN FARNUM & CO., COMMISSION MEB- tf chtDtt apdiManofaotarara of Oanaataaa Ttokma. f. a. aJ yUk.AU'.' aa PtU-laivUa. lata