Til III DAILY EVKMNG TELEGKAP1I PHILADELPHIA, .MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1870. onmr or teth rn.3333. ditorial Opinion of the Leading Journals uponCurrent Topics Compiled Every Oavfor the Evening Telegraph. THE NF.iY 1M-1Z AND l-UTrilE OP THE KOM.YN C.VillOLltJ UUUilCII. From the A. llei c.Ut. At this momentthe turning point of p.u age eventful hej'ouil all cootpaiisoii in bygone Listory the gaze of civil lze'.l maukiml is fixed on Homo with peculiar interest. The call for an (Ecumenical Council of ti i Church reputed Apostolic and universal was of itsolf a great awakening to the world. To the faithful and earnest a luoronts of Catholicity it was a summons tht neonieI inspired in the midst of accumulating disorders; the breaking down of nil restraints; the abroga tion of old tenets; the setting up of self and the higher law, so called, in the plaue of the one Supremo Father, whose precepts had be come the basis and the rallying point of order in barbaric times and the bul.var it ' against destructive license and vice in the days of a corrupt and unbelieving civilization. To the opponents of Ko.nau ism, per se, on tho other hand, this call wa3 deemed a llagrant challenge thrown down to "tho spirit of our time"' aud a defiance of tho work achieved by religious and political pro gress. These two opinions divided Christen dom while the Council was Bitting, and they divide it still. But in the meanwhile, through all the jarring aud cavilling of authorities, the Church itself is evidently vmdorg oing a wonderful and salutary transformation, or, rather, is sloughing off the excrescences which tho ambition of prelates and priuces find the exigencies of peculiar times and re gions had fastened on it. This process is grand to contemplate in tho light of a history so picturesque aud so majestic as that of the Uoman Church. In order to p.ppreciate tho change let ns cast our thought backward for an instant to tho period when Christianity began to take hhape and emerge from tho alluring but de ceptive mirage of pagan mythology and the imposing but unsatisfactory rites of ancient Judaism. "Voice of the East, voice of the West, voice of the four winds, woo to the Temple ! woe to Jerusalem!"' was the terrible wurningjory of him who was known as "Jesus, Hon of Ananias, " who, as Josephus tells us, Biiddenly uplifted his voics amid the city in tho hour of profouudest peace, aud coased not by night or by day until the whole Jewish people had heard of Lis coming, and his pro phecy. But as Jesus, the Christian ilansiah, had been rejected, so was this Jesus, the pro phet of ruin, despised by a headstrong people. Yet tho sack of the ancient city by the Komau Titus came, aud the ideas of the Christian faith caught np amid the lire and carnage of tho Jewish capi tal clung to the skirts of the cou iuerers and were transferred with them to Eonie. But in the meanwhile, as we learn from sacred tradition, St. Thomas bore the Gospel of Jesus to the farthest Ind; St. John preached it and exemplified it in Asia Minor; St. Andrew mado it a revelation of a higher life to the rude Scythian hordes; St. Philip spread it abroad over tho Asiatic Continent; St. Bartholomew established it in Armenia; St. Matthew disclosed it to benighted Persia; St. Simon made it tho new and saving light of Mesopotamia, and St. Luke with it refuted the legends and the imaginative hoogony of Arabia. Thus was a grand, a Glorious mes sage mado known by inspired and divoted men to a Buttering world. The heart of humanity leaped up to hail a dawn so benig nant, and, in spno of all trials aud perse cutions, the faith nourished and grew on all Bides. The terrible persecutions which, be ginning with Nero at liome, were continued under Domitian and his ferocious successors, tmt seemed to give strength, vitality, and fixed stability to nascent belief so full of na tive strength, as tho storm wind but imparts vigor to the oak whose roots are deep in the soil, even while it sweeps away the feebler children of the forest and scatters them dying in its path. And why was this? Because, to continue our simile, the roots of the Chris . tian creed descendod deeply into the hearts of men. The simple virtues of it3 early fol lowers, the purity and lofty life of its apos ties and its udvocates; their divine eloquence; their inspired erudition; their indefatigable toil; their fearlessness in the presence of chains and death, and the sublime promises they uttered from the gibbet and the stake to the humblest and weakest who believed, were a power which t overawed tho purple tyrants of the world and announced Christ and Him crucified as indeed the "very pre sent help" and Saviour of the stricken people. Vivified by the warmth of a' zeal that had been kindled by the lamps of the sepulchre, and viviliod by the blood shed in so many massacres, at last, in A. D. o(;5, the new Church, ho sorely beset by Julian the Apostate, found a iioman emperor to thoroughly protect it. Jovian, who Lad braved the wrath of Julian, heard his own troops exclaim, "Fear not, Emperor; you command a Christian army. Tha most aged amoDg us were instructed by the groat Constantino, and the rest by his son." The cross which had appeared but as a vision of victorious omen in the sky became a fixed emblem in the most poweiful and civilized of cities, and hurried on from conquest to con iuest until it rose resplendent upon church spires in half the world. At last the iEjuiuo nical Council, held at Constantinople A. D. ysi, in the reign of Theodosius, and aucapted by the West, proclaimed and fixed the maia dogmas of the Church, and it became a posi tive power on earth. But even with this access of spiritual dominion begun tho usual corruptions and troubles thit beset things human even while they strivingly aspiro to God. The Aiian, Macedonian, Pelagian, Kestorian, and Eutychian heresies and the schism of the Donatists rapidly suc ceeded each other. There were divided counsels: Popes aud anti-Popes; prelates who lost themselves in tho ambition of the prince, aud princes who claimed to be prelates without the unction and the call. Formulas and ceremonies be gan to overcrust and eclipse tho simple, para, sweet teachings of the Sermon on the M o iut, and gorgeous fanes and royal pomp supar seded the plain remembrance of the Last Supper and the homely words of the morning and evening walks by the Bacred shore of Galilee. Conversions were ubuudaut indeed, and, to use the same phrases which St. Paul himself, quoting from the Psaluiut, applied to the apostles, "'Their voice was heard over all the earth, and their word was carried to the extremeties of the world." Every conti nent and island hailed the crone". From Ice land to the Corea tho matin and (he vesper bell of Catholic worship directed the thoughts of toiliDg men to Gedj but. fllatjj the waters oi Siloai brook that flowed F8t by the oracles of Ujd. had been perturbed by hasty and misguided hands. Although the doctrine which was Christ himself remained sound, unmoved, and Btrong, tho moss and the lichens of couturios gathered on the rock of St. Peter's. Tho an cient Church was loo often ma lo to seem the ally of oppressive kings and a stumbling block in the way of scientific and political progress. But, at last, after the long tribulations of the Dark and Middle Ages, a fresh light begins to dawn upon the Catholic mission and upon humanity. As pious aud imagina tive dwellers by tho Khiue boliove that Charle magne is yet to arise from his tomb, and by the sign of tho crucifix upon the hilt of the sword of old renown restore a united Chris tian empire over all tho west, so do many who are earnest find sincere believe that th"y behold in tho events just occurring in Eiropo tho resuscitation of tho grand Church Uni versal in moro than its pristine beauty. And the aspect of the hour fully warrants this impression. The unity, the porsevd: nneo, tho combined intelligence) of every part in the grand total which is called tho Catholic body, and which now controls one hundred and fifty millions of our race, are telling rapidly upon tho endless divisions of religious opinion that constitute tho unwieldy bulk of Protestantism even in its safest strongholds. Tho lioman Catho lic system, which is a sort of imperial repub lic to employ a seeming but uot a real para dox has thrown aside the hampering weight of middle-ago incumbrances, aud now ad vances into the full blaze of all the intellec tual illumination of our time, adopting what is useful and rejecting what is dangerous in modern ideas, retaining tho sanctity of home, of parental authority, of the marriage tie and of the duty of the subject, and denouncing and rejecting all "higher law" that is not of Christ. In tho presence of such a rival, armed at all points, and claiming to bo hallowed by long tradition and precept alike directly flowing from Ziou and from Calvary, the Protestant body has no certuin triumph but in restored purity of doctrine, a revived forco in upholding the sacra meats of God, and a redoubled and unsparing zeal in good works. If it will not discharge its task faithfully and completely, be hold One approaching whose foot are "beautiful upon tho mountains," as tiio bearer of good tidings to all the earth. TI19 harvest is ripe in tho fields and tho reapers are abroad. America, the laud of youth, of hope, of faith, of prophecy, of atonement end rehabilitation, stirs in all her borders with the impending second birth of what shall become the true Church of Irammnel. As liberty, betrayed and lost in Europe, re vived again upon these favored shores, to travail, tor a time, indeed, but to conquer ut last, and to conquer for all nations, souio of whose children are gathered here as pledges and hostages for them, so may the purified Church of Christ, whose spires begin to up hold the sign of safety upon every hilltop in our land, rise higher to the light with us, and, chastened by tho past, endow its future with a full fruition of God's grace to man, and "broaden and brighten unto parfect day!" FOR SALE. From the Vcavcr Jladical. Tho Dcmocratio vote in tho next Legisla ture is up at auction. The best bidder can take it in a lump with all its paraphernalia left over from tho last tureo disastrous cam paigns. Democratic legislators are just no, v being sent for to llarrisburg and boing co!lled together for delivery when tho grand sale is effected. Hon. Samuel Josephs will play auctioneer, and his gentlomanly clerk, Mr. AVallaco, will deliver tho live goods to the cus tomers after the most approved fashion of the slave marts! "Going, going, gone," are a'l of you Messrs. Buck-Hew, aud Purmau, and Broadhead, aud Dill, and fifty others who, like you, believe that they are honest men and free agents in tho Legislature, and your infamy is blazoned to the paople of the State two months in advance of its consummation, by Mr. Wallace's organ. In plain English, the proposition is to de liver the organization of tho Legislature and the keys of tho State Troasury into the hands of a sufficient number of bolting llepubli cans, who, in turn, are to pass a Democratic apportionment bill. "When such accursed contracts were made last winter, it was in tho privacy of Wallace's chamber, and in the darkness of midnight. That in the present emergency the plot should bo paradod pub licly in the broad noon indicates that Messrs. Josephs and Wallace are very bold in the belief of success already assured, or are become very desporato, There are several ditli julties in the way of this bargain and sale, which must be gotten rid of before the hammer of Josephs can fall. There may be a lack of bidders. In our judg ment there is but one Kepublicau candidate for Treasurer in Pennsylvania base enough to sign tho compact, and tho lato election has left him effectually hors tie combat, and screaming with the anguish of his wounds. And if another bidder could be found, it is safe to say that ho will have trouble in find ing Lis share of the merchandise in the He publican ranks. Should Mr. Mickey be a candidate and fail in securing a caucus nomi nation, his friends will vote solidly for his successful competitor, whomsoever he may be. Of the gentlemen vho last year were de ceived into bolting the Kepublicau nomina tion, scarcely more than ono or two will rc- peut the experiment, especially when warned in advance that their cuirso is to surrender Pennsylvania to the Democracy for ten years to come. And the Democratic party will approach the coalition this year with suspicion. Last ytar tho contract of tho leaders of the bolt was to surrender the seats of Scull nud Watt and defeat tho Metropolitan Polhe bill. They got the Treasury, and what was the re sult ? Finley receivod his seat from causes which they could not control. The Metro politan Polico bill passed aud the scattered forces of tho Democracy were compelled to rally on Geary to secure its defeat. Watt holds his seat to-day aud makes tho Senate Kepublicau. And when these strange results came to be investigated, it was found that the high contracting parties on the side of the bolt had made an unauthorized use of the names of their bankers in the Legislature, and, further more, that they had made no special effort to deliver the goods which they had actually in possession. And, worst of all, it was discov ered that some of the most active of the Democratic managers in the Legislature, win were clamorous in their appeals to ptrty spirit, aud touching in their devotion to Dia mond, had their pockets stuffed with good hard cash in sums of from $:tt)0i) to l'h): each, as the price of their action, and hat their party spirit and affection for Diamonl sensibly waned after the Treasurer was elected. And it was also whisparel about the Capitol at the close of the session that of thouj who were not bought many were Bold, and the cash paid for their votes. It is just possible that many Democrats will fvil to perceive the distinction between t"" IxoupLt wjtb an apportionment and being bought with money, and that others will look upon the proposod political contrac t as a blind, under cover of which the cor ruptions of last winter will be repeated by their mercenary leaders, while their party, as then, will take nothing by the motion. We hazard little in saying that tho nomi nees of the Republican caucus for all of its offices will be elected, whomsoever they may be. So far as tbe office of Treasurer is con cerned, it is of trifling weight compared with tho necessity of maintaining the unity and in tegrity of our organization. If any Kepub licau can be found base enough to bid at the Democratic auction, and Republican legis lators can bo found corrupt enough to follow in his lead, tho villainy should be dofeated at all hazards. Tho election of an honest and reputable Democrat would bo infinitely loss hurtful to the Republican party than a repeti tion of the successful treason of one of its own members. In this dilomma it should let go the purse aud put forward tho sword btaier. THE FUTURE OF GERMANY. From the. X. 1 7'imcH. The reported armistice enables us to assume that a few weeks will, in all probability, ter minate the terrible war between Franco and Germany, place Prussia at the head of the German Confederation, and establish her as tho leading power of Europe. So rapidly has history been creating itself that our readers can hardly yet realize to themselves the astounding political changes which have been taking place during the past summer and in the last few years. Four years ago the long-continued struggle for supremacy between Austria and Prussia came to an issue in the war of lStiC. On tho iMst and L'-'d of June of that year, the two Prussian armies of Silesia and Saxony crossed the frontiers of Bohemia, much as this summer they passed the boundaries of France, under tho same Princes, and guided by tho same subtle brain. In precisely ouo month th6v camped before Vienna and Presburg, with tho ancient empire of Austria at their feet, while another army Lhd forced tho Hanoverian troops to capitu late, Lad beaten successively the army of the Confederation and the Bavarian corps, aud udvanced to the heart of Bavaria. In lesi than a month Prussia Lad put five hundred thousand men on a war-footing, and had swept over Germany f-oui the Rhine to Hun- Gary Vet in that year Prussia wa3 only tho fifth of the great powers, with less than half the population of either France or Austria, and only a quarter of that of Russia. Her reve nues were not a quarter those of Frauce, and oven the new kiugdom of Italy contained more lnlmuilants, and boasted double the in come. She came out of the six weeks' cam paign with thirty millions of inhabitants, and substantially holding all Germany from the Baltic to the Main. In tho present summer, in one month from the time her two Princos had their armies over the French frontier, she Lad broken the military empire of Napo leon, and Leld the Emperor prisoner; and in less than two months Lad taken the two strongest fortresses of Frauce, captured some three hundred thousand prisoners and an im mense amount of war material, and invested the capital of her enemy's country. Probably less thun another month's time will see her retiring victorious from shattered and broken France. Such campaigns as these were before unknown to modern history, for even Napo leon's wondeiful campaign of Jena, ending in the prostration of the Prussian kiugdom, was child's play compared with tho prodigious forces managed and exerted in this war. A nation which has developed such enormous and well-directed energy as this is, of course, only the beginning in a graud and long-continued career of progress. The question will continually occur to for eign observers, "What is to be the issue of all this? What sort of power is this nation, so suddenly arrived at the height of great ness, to become iu relation to modern Eu rope?" Henceforth, in all probability, Prus sia is to bo absorbed in a grand confederated Germany. But what stamp will the leading member have on the new uniou, in which it sinks its own personality? Prussia itself is composod, as every well-constituted State should be, of the most opposite elements. In her educational system she is domocratio and iu tho front rank of modern advance. Every citizen not only has the privilege of acquiring knowledge, but must accept it, whether he will or no. Iguoranee in Prussia is held as the one irreconcilable enemy to the State. Military service, too, is democratic in form that is, it is the duty of every citizen, from which neither high birth nor wealth can excuse him, the only exemption fin time of service) being gained by education. Then the new popular repre sentation in tho Parliament of the Confede ration is exceedingly complete and widely extended, ro that even tho laboring classes, in the last Diet, were represented by their own delegates. To a certain extent the civil faervice is also democratic, inasmuch as it is open to competitive examinations, though here the various features of Prussian social life Lave sc me influence. West of Prussia, also, the RhiLe Provinces and the now acqui sitions, Hanovor 1 nd llesse-Cassel, are demo cratic in their social organization, the soil being divided into mauy small ownerships, and the people being liberal in their political views. On the other hand, the old military and feudal element, on which the Counts of LSran denbnrg built up a kingdom, is strongly rep resented in Eastern Prussia. Here tho suii is divided into large es'u'es, and held by the country gentry, who possess an unbounded infiuence over their tenantry. Here is the most extravagant loyalty and bigoted "Prus siaLism." The bureaucracy or orfice-holders are largely intule up of representatives of Prussian "Junkers," or tho younger sons of noble families. The army, too, from its local organization, is frequently officered by the resident country gentry. And as a climax to the monarchical aud conservative ele ments of the State, the royal family have proved themselves, by ecouomy of govern ment, military genius, and their readiness for peisonal sacrifices Jtrtie 4 kings tf men," and worthy to command a brave people who resptct and love thorn. It would need a Generation of royal idlers and do-nothinas to j wipe out from Prussian memories the reool i lection of what the Iloheuzollorus Lavo frisked and accomplisLed tor Prussia and Germany during the last four years. To add to all these complex elements in the Prus sian State is the learned class, which Las so treat an influence over tLe young mind of tbe nation, an infiuence at once liberal and conservative. To predict the effect of all these various forces upon the constitution of the future united Germany would be a rash undertaking. The influence of Baden and South Germany will undoubtedly be liberal, and united with tbe liberal elements of Western Prussia and the university towns, we may Lope, not for a necessarily demo cratic progress, but for wbat is far better, a steady rational advance of all Germany in the paths of constitutional liberty. ENFORCING THE LAW. From the A". V. IVifcutK. The resistance of tho Democratic press to the President's precautions against riot on election day began with bluster and threat, and sank, through tho various stages of de nunciation, auger, indignant remonstrance, and expostulation, to a sort of argumentative opposition which differs but slightly from en treaty. To all these manifestations of Demo cratic temper, General Grant Las remained calmly indifferent; ho knows his duty; he will do it fearlessly; and thanks to his firmness we shall have an honest election, and there will be no disorder. Tho wild nonnense of dema gogues about Federal soldiers "coercing" voters, and liayouets intimidating the Demo cratic host, deceives nobody. Not a nun in New York supposes that a soldier will iutor fero with Lis voting exactly as Lo pleases. Not a man believes that if the whole United States army were brought into the city the legal vote would be affected in any way what ever. In the fact that a sufficient force to preserve order is held within call, to be used in case of need, nobody has reason for chagrin who does not purpose committing some ciimo. Wo hold that President Grant would Lave failed in Lis duty if Le Lad not takon amplo precautions to put down any disturbance which bad men might create on the day of election. The frauds at tho polls in New York had for years been so notorious that Congress was at last driven to pass a strin gent law for their prevention, nud tho Presi dent was charged with tho enforcement of it. When the ring which had hitherto supportod itself by fraud saw how this law would inter fere with their crimes, they expressed in tho most violent language a determination to resist it. The Wtiill, tho Ejpra, aud other organs of the Tammany party nov deny that there was ever the slightest proba bility of any resistance except "through tho legitimate and satisfactory channel of tho ballot-box." But a week or two ago their tone was very different. They havo pro-" fessed peace only since it became evident that the President was unmoved by threats, and that respectable citizens of all par tics were horrified at their menaces to riot. On the Mh of October the World announced that tho appointment of deputy marshals was equivalent to the inauguration of a reign of terror, and urged freemen to consider what, in the face of such ah emergency, they were "willing to do and dare." The new election law, it furthermore said, was "calculated to create a riot," and provoke the people "to go to the polls with arms in their hands." At a Democratic meeting in this city on thel lth of October, a speaker named Wolff U3od those words: "Now, fellow-citizens, arguments havo failed in this country, and if you dasire your liberties, if you desire free ballot-boxes, if you desire to perpetuate those institutions for the benefit of your children, sity stand by your anna" On the L'tlth of October the Hon. James Brooks said in a public speoch: "If tho Federal Government attempts to en force the elections, as they Lavo in South Carolina, one hundred thousand Democrats in this city will rise in opposition and pitch all the troops they havo ordered here into the river." In these and similar utterances of Demo cratic editors and orators there is evidence of a deliberate purpose to instigate disordor, and it was only when that purpose was de feated by the firm attitude of the Govern ment that they changed their tone. They have since made frantic efforts in other ways to counteract the law. They have threatened marshals and supervisors with the direst penalties; they have warned Federal officials to beware of the wrath of Barnard and Car dozo; they have offered bribes by the hun dred thousand dollars to secure a lax enforce ment of the law; they have solemnly an nounced their "inflexible determination to havo the law declared unconstitutional," and to punish with all possible severity every one concerned in its execution. But threats of violence at tho polls, bribery, and persecu tion by a corrupt judiciary have alike proved harmless. For once Tammany must submit to an honest election. WATCHES. JEWELRY, ETC. tVIS LADQMUSi CO. fBIAffiOXDl DBAliKKS & .fKWELKIiS M WATlJlKo, JEnELIll A DlI.Yt.fi A II K. . WATGFE3 tad JEWELS Y EEPAIR JL02 ChoBtnut St., PhiiR; BAND BRACELETS CHAIN BRACELETS. We have just received a large and beautiful as sortment of Gold Band aud Chain Bracelets, Fname'.led and engraved, of all sizes, at very low low prices. New styles constantly received. WATCHES AND JEW ELK Y In great variety. LEWIS LADO.MUS & CO., C 11 fmws! No. 602 CHKSNUT Street. YOVS2R CLOCKS. Ko. 22 NOltTII SIXTH STREET, Agent for SI EVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOCKS, tnth. ltemoutolr & Graham Esoapenicnt, striking Hour only, or striking quarters, and repeating hoar ou fn'il chime. Estimates furnished on application either person ally or by ruaiL 6 25 rtl WILLIAM B. WAKNE fc CtTT uO?V, Wholesale Dealers in &'SA WATCH DS AN1J J KWELRY, K jf. corner SKVENT11 and CUES NUT Streets. 9V Second iloor, and late of No. 33 S. Till KD St. CLOTHS, OASSIMERES. ETO Q L O T H HOUSE. J A W E 3 HUDCR, Ro. 11 north gUCOXf) Street, Bign of the Golden Lamb, Are w receiving a large and splendid assortment of new styles of FANCY OASSIMEKES And standard makes of DOESKINS, CLOTHS and coatings, 3 as mwa AT WHOLESALE! AND RETAIL. QLD OAKS fe'EMETERY COMPANY OF FIIILADELFIUA. This Company Is prepared to sell lots, clear of all encumbraLct s, on reasonable term. Purchasers can sec plans at the onlce of the Company, NO. 61S WALNUT STREET, Or at the Cemetery, where all Information needed will be cheerfully given. By giving notice at tho olllce, carriages will meet perRonn dchirous of purchasing lots at Tioga Station eu the Oermautown Railroad, and coavey tham to the Cemetery aud return, free of charge. ALFRED C. IIARMER, Prewdent. MARTIN LANDENBEROER, Treaa. MICHAEL NISUET, Sec'y. 10 5wfm6m EDUCATIONAL. nALLOWELL SELECT 11IOU SCHOOL FOH Young Men nrd l'.ovs, which has been re moved from No. 110 N. Tenth utreet, will be opened on September 12 In the new and moro commodious bulldiiipsNos. 112 and 114 N. NINTH Street. Neither effort, nor expense has been pnred in Uttlnff up the rooms, to make this a 11 rat-class school of the highest grad. A Preparatory Department Is connected with the School. Parents and students are invited to call Bnd examine tho rooms ami consult tho Principals from 9 A. 11. to 2 P. M. sft. r AmriPt 16. OEOKWE KASTI'.URN, A. I., JOHN G. MOOUK, M. S., SITtf Principals. HV . LAI1I) tl UlliHtrN ACADEMY, ASSEMBLY IH'ILDINUS, No. 10S Somh TKNT1I Street. A Primary, Elementary, and Finishing School for boys and young men. Persons Interested in educa tion ore luvlttd to call mid witness tho method of teaching and discipline practised. Circulars at Mr. Wnrbnru.n's, No. 4M) chcimut s'roet, or nt Hie ArmHruy. Open for visitors from 9 A. M. to 4 1'. 31. S 20 jj D E H 1 L L SCHOOL MERCIIANTVILLE, N. J., Tour Miles from Philadelphia. Next Frssion begins MONDAY, October 3. For circulars apply to S211y Kcv. T. W. CAT TELL. "rorMJ MKJJ'S AND HOYS' ENUf.TSIT, CT. SSI 1 CA1, AND COMMERCIAL INS HIT IK, No. l'.ms AR'1'NT VKRNON Street. Preparation for DusineFSor Co'tege. !;isit Preparatory Dcpurtnvmt. RevJ.U.SSMINN, AM., Principal. 1)1 smtuiiU pHKOARAY INSTITUTE, Nos. 1527 AND IMP SP1UTCK StrePt.rMledehdiis, will roopen on Tl'fUAY, htptcuilipr IU. Krenob is the lauzaane of tfc. family, sod is constantly spoken in tho institute. (, In vim lini J ll'U KRV 1 1,1, y . Principal HENRY O. TUT NDEK'S MUSICAL ACADR J 1 my, No, KiS PlNli Street, is now opeu for the reception of pupils. See circuiiirs at Music Stores. Olllce hours 8 to l A. 31. aud 1 to 3 P. M. in 11 lni THE FINE ARTS. PICTURES. "THE grihlT OF TclE MIST," by T. Duchanaa Read. "LOME," from the Palatine Hill, hy J. O. Montalart. THE OKAND WOUK, 'TliC White JSountniii ;olt:li,' UY THOMAS HILL Mew Pc jrers Oronp, "Coming to the Pardon." Exquisite Swiss Carving3 from lutcrlakun, at all prices. New rhrcmos. New Enprravlntjs. "The Charged Cross ;" "The WetterhoriV' 80x40, the largest ever made, EARLES GALLERIES. Jfo. 81C qiJS VIIT ST 11 E E1 ART EXHIBITION. Oti FREE E-XHiBtTIQH AT CHA3. F. HAEELTKIE'S GALLEIVS, Ko. 1125 CHESNTJT STREET, BRAUN'S FAMOUS PANORAMIC VIEWS Ot Berlin. Potsdam. Chariotteuburor. Coblentz. Uetdel. btrg, Jena, Weimar, Erfurt, Eiub, Uiidcn-Bailen, eiubarten, Brussels, Amsterdam, Waterloo, Liege YDres. Rotterdam, Utrecht, etc. etc. A complete set of the Berlin Museums, and Interior views of ail the rooms in ine various royai palaces of Prussia. Particular attention Is drawn to the fact that In a few days luo views on tho Rhine and us fortlOea. tions, as never before seen, will be exhibited. 11 in FURNACES. Established in 1835. InTari&bly tbe freMoet mcccas CTcr all competitior whenever sad wherever eihibited or need in the UN1TK0 STAIK8. CHARLES WILLIAMS' Patent Golden Eagle Furnaces Acknowledged by the leading Architects and Builder betbemott powerful and durable Farnacos rfforcd,an! hemoetprru.pt, systematic, and lurKtst house in line of bueinets. HEAVY KEDUCTION IN PillCJSU, Mid only Crot-clua work tnrned oct. Nos. 1132 and 1134 MARKET Street, PHILADELPHIA. W. B.-KKND POR BOOK OF FACTS OH CEA1 AiDy FNTILATION. 83 1m STOVES, RANGES, ETC. I3UZBY & HDNTEBS0N, EtfOHKING GLORY Sieve, U cater and Ilangc Warehouses Nos. 309 and 311 K. SECOND St, Above Vine, Philadelphia, Special atteutlon to Heater and Range lit pairii K promptly attendou to. iVork. 10 s im rpiiE AMERICAN STOVK AND 1IOLLOWWAR8 1 COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, IRON FOUNDERS, (Successors to Ncrth, Chase A North, Saarpe & Thomson, aud Kdjj-ir L. Thomson,) Manufacturers of STOVES, HEATERS, TilOM SONS LONDON KITCHENER, TINNED, EN A MLLEl, AND TON HOLLOW WAR& FOUNDRY, Second aud Mlilliu Streets. OFFICE, 209 North Second Street. FRANKLIN LAWRENCE, Superintendent. EDMUND B. SMITH, Treasurer. JNO. EDGAll THOMSON, President. JAMES IIOEY, e27mwff.:n General Manager 8HIPPINU. FOR N IB W YOR 1 via Delaware and runtau canal. EX PKKSS UTJtAMBOAT COMPANY. '1 he bteiim Propellers of the line will commence loading on the 6th lnstaut, leaving dally as usual. THKUUOU IN T WEN PY-FOUH UuURS. Goods lorwaraed by all the lines going out of Ne York, North, East, or West, free of comuiissioo. Freights received at low rates. WILLIAM P. CLV DB A CO., Agents, No. 12 S. DELA WARE Avenue. JAMES HAND, Agent, No. 119 WALL Street, New Yorfc. 8 48 Ep.fcdrla, Georgetown, and Waslilugton, a- i c.. via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, with connections ut Alexandria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, Bristol, Knoxvlilo, Nashville, Dulton, and the Southwest. Sieameis leave regularly every Saturday at noon 'rom the tirnt .wharf above Market street. Freight received dally. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., No. U North and South WHARVES. IIYD2 k TYLER, Agents at Georgetown; IL ELRIDGK & CO., Agents at Alexandria. 61 m FOR NEW YORK, VIA DELAWARE 1 k2i SWU'TSUltS TRANSPORTATION DOM PA NY. DESPATCH AND 8W1KTSURB LINES, 1 eaving daily at Vi M. and 6 P. M. The steam propellers of this company will com nienee loading on the 8th of Marco. Through in twenty-tour hours. Goods lor warded to any point free of commission Freights taken on accommodating terms. Apply to WILLIAM M. BAIRD fc CO., Agents, 4 No. 13i booth DELAWARE Avenue. SHIPPINQ. g 1 E C I A L NOTICE TO SIlirPEK3 VIA SAVANNAH, OA. FREIGHT WILL BE FORWARDET1 sr . .m. -LL ft ?rlth nnr nannt ilAanatnl, t nil nntnta cn the WESTKRN AND ATLANTA, MEMPHIS AND CHARLESTON, ALABAMA AND CHAT TANOOOA, ROME, SF.LMA, ROME AND DAL- Jiu, stLMA AND MERIDIAN, VICKSBURO AND MERIDIAN. Moillt.R a TMn niiin vjw ORLEANS, JACKSON AND GREAT NORTH- UAiLitUADS, au Laudines on tha COOSA RIVER. Throuph r.llls of Lading given, and rates gaaraa tied to all points In the South and Southwest. WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent. JO 17 tf No. 130 South Tl HHP Street. 'frff LOR1LLA.RD STEAMSHIP OOMPAN? JiYnr-. I'OEt NI3W YORK, SAILING EVERY TUESDAY, THURSDAY. AND SAT IK DAY. ' RATES TEN CENTS PER 100 TOUXDS. FOUR CEN'lfc PEK CUUIO FOOT, ONE CENT PER GALLON. SHIP'S OPTION. INSURANCE LY THIS LINE ONE-EIGHTH OP ONE PER CENT. Fxtra rotes on small paeknges Iron, metals, etc. No receipt or bill of lading sigued for less than fifty cents. Hoods forwprded to nil points free of commissions. Throuph biliHof hiding given to Wilmington, N O ny the bteuiiK rs of this line leaving New York'trll weekly. For faithcr particulars spplv to JOHN V. OTIU PIER 19 NOllTll WHARVES. N. P The rrpniliir shippers by this Una will be charged the above rotes all winter. Winter ratcB commence Dect tuber IB. 89? -rN.f'i FOR LIVERPOOL AND QUEENS. SfcUilOWN.-Iuii.an Lino of Royal Mall bteiuiit rs are Hpnolnted to sail as follows: City of Pari.", Satnrdav, Nov. Vi, at 8 A. M. City of Cork, via Hultfus, Tuesday, Nov. IB, at 10 Ai M. ty of London, Saturday, Nov. 19, at 2 P. M. City of Brooklyn, Saturday, Nov. SC.. at !S A. M. and tat h succeeding Saturday and alternate Tues day, from pier No. 45 North river. RATES OF PASSAGE, rnyahle in gold. Payable in currency. Firpt Cabin 75 Steerage 3 To Lonnwn so To London 85 To Par's 90 To Purls 83 To llalirax 20 To Hiillfax 15 Passengers aliio forwarded to Havre, Hamburg, Bremen, etc., nt reduced rates. Tickets can be bougtit here at moderate rates by persons wishing to send for tnelr friends. lor further information apply at the company's olllce. . JOI1N G. DALE, Agent, No. 15 Broadway, N. Y.l Or to O'DONN ELL & FAULK, Agents, 4 B No. 402 CUES NUT Street. Philadelphia. rfWfJi, PHILADELPHIA, IUCHMO ND ikJ&9. M NORKOidC SIFAV.SIUP LINK. THKULtm FREIGHT AIR LINK TO TUfll SOUIil AN1 VVKST. LNORKASHD tAUILITIFS AND REDUCED RATES r OK 170. Stti&mers leave erory VKUNKSD AY and SATURDAY t 12 o'clock noon, from FIRST WHARF bot MAH. JUO Street. IO 'l URNING, hwre RICHMOND MONDAYS nd THURSDAYS, md NORFOLK '1UKSDAYS and SA. TURDAYB. No Uills of Lading signed after 13 o'clock on sailing 'hROUOH RATES to all points In North and South Carolina, via Seaboard Air Line Kailrond, connecting at Portsmouth, and to I.juulihurg, Va., Tounctsie. and the) West, via V irk into and Tennessee Air Line and Richmond and Danville Kuilroad. - Freight HANDLKD BUTOROK, and taken at LOWEB RATES THAN ANV OTHER I,NK. "wnn.j No charge for commission, drayage, or any expense, of ranster. , hteamships Insnre at lowest rates. Freight received daily. fctate Room accommodations for paaeenjrer. WILLIAM P. Ul.YDK A OO., No. 12S. WHARVKSand Pier 1 N. WHARVES. W. P. POR'I P R, Anent at Richmond and Oit.j Point. T. P. OROWELL ia.Agents at Nor. oik. tf lj THE REGULAR STEAMSHIPS ON THE PUT-LaI-ELPHIA AND CHARLESTON STEAM SHIP LINE are ALONE authorized to Usae through" bills of ladiiK to 'interior points South and West la connection with South Carolina Railroad Company. ALb-RED L. TYLER, Vlco-Preldent So. C. RR. Co. f?JWv ril I LAI F.LPII I A A NL) SOUTHERN StfU&wMAlI. STEAMSHIP OOAlPW'S RKUUl UK ttrT.Mi-MONTU.LY UNS TO NKW OR. 1j J1 S 1a The JUNIATA will sail for Now Orleans, via Havana, or TueMay, November lo. at 8 A. Ai. 1 Tbe YAZOO will sail from New Orleans, via Havana On , ftoviiir.ber , THROUGH blLlS OF LADING at as low rates aa by anvother rout.o ifiven to Mobile. Oilv.'M.in. IVIlliV. OLA , ROCK V )H i;, LA VACUA, 11 J bit ZOS,nd to all 1: oinrs on vt ni.sniwiiipi nvei netweoa i 0 Orleans and t. Louis. Ron River treigbu resaiDDbd at Nm HrWn. WFKKLY I.INF TO 8ATANN4H, Qi, The TONA WANDA will sail tor SavuuntU on Satnr. day, Nofiuiir i atH A. M, The WVO.MINO will sail from Savannan on Satur day, Noveint er 6. Tri HOUGH LILLS OF LADING pivt-u to all the prin cipal towns in Georgia, Alabama, ilon.iu, Mississippi, Louieiiuia, A rkansus, and Tennessee in rooneotion with the Central Knilmnd of Georgia, Atlantic mid Golf Rail, road, and Florida steamers, at as low rai.es aa by competing hnee. SFMI-MONTULY LINE TO WILMINGTON, N. O. - Tbe 1'iONKKIi will sail for Wi1u,,ukioii on Sitorday, November 1h. nt iA. M. Returning, will loave W liming ton Sa'niday, November 5. Counee'd wall tne Cape Fear River Si oh in boat Oora. pany, the W ilmin ton and Weldoo and North Carolina Railroads, and U Wilmington and Manchester Railroad to all interior points. Freights for Colomhia, S. O., and Augusta, Oa., taken via W ilmiii(.t.o, at aslow rates as by any other root. Insurance 1 Betted when requested by shippers. Bills of lading sigued at Onetn street wharf on er before daf of sailing, WILLIAM L. JAMK8. Gorjnral Agent. 15 No. 130 Sontb I HlKDJitreet uCLnWAKE AND CliESAPEAKB STEAM TO WHO AT COMPANY. Ki i t Rarges towed between Philadelphia, Rultiniore, liavre-de-Orace, Delaware City, and In termediate points. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., Agents. Captain JOHN LA UGH LIN, Superintendent. Olllce. No. 12 South Wlarves 'itiad.ilpuia, 411 OORDAOE, ETO. WEAVER & CO., KOfi'U JlANUrACTIIiSllUa AND B9IIP CIIANlyKiJU, No, S9 North WATER Street and No. ss North WHARVES, Philadelphia. POP3 AT LOWEST BOSTON AND NEW YORK PRICES. 41 COPDACE. Manilla, Sial and Tarred Cordaga At lowest New York Prices and Freight. fc-DWIIM U. FiTI.KU oV (JO raousry. TENTH St. and UHRMANTOWH Avenue, Store. No. 23 8 WATKK Bk. and 22 N DELAWAJB Avenue. 41212m PMILADELPH1AJ SAXON GREEK nn van fadhs, 8 iem COAL. COAL TFR TON OP 2240 LBS. DELIVERED, LEHIGH. Furnace, 7-75; Stove, $8-00; Nut, 7C0; SCHUYLKILL, Furnace, 6-75; Stove, 7 -00; Nut, J5-7S; SHAMOK1N, Grate, 7-25; Stove, $70 j Nut. Id 25. EASTWICK A BROTHER, Yard, No. 2200 WASHINGTON Avenue. Odlce, No, DOCK Street. 6 20rp tf JOTlIt UH1EL Sc IrlMHXIAU, l.LIIIGII AND HCIU YLKILI, COAL, Depot N. E. Corner NINTH and MASTER, Offices, I 43 South THIRD Street, 724 SANSOM " 1012 tX