10 urmis or tzitj rues 3. editorial Opinions ofthe Leading Journal) upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. JUDGES IN PHILADELPHIA, "rem the '. 1", Tiiim. At tbe recent election in Philadelphia there were three jndgesbipH to lo filled. Two of the successful candidates were elected by do cided majorities. The third, though of the name party, catae pretty near being defeated, for the reason that he wax const lored by many people to be not exactly a tit man for the position. How far this opinion wm cor rect we are nnable to nay, and the greater part of our readers would ore very little to know. The point to which wo are calling Attention in, that the opinion existed, and that it produced tho effect we have Rtated. And the case is still more worthy of notice from the circumstance that what diiuiuiHuei the vote for the individual in question wa not the idea that he was grossly unfit for the judgeship. Tbe feeling was not that he would be bribed if elected, or that he would disgrace Jhe Bench by notorious incompe tency. All the difficulty was that some of tho voters thought whether justly or unjustly is not now to the purpose that his abilities and previous history did not fully come up to the mark of what ought to be demanded in the caso of a candidate for tho judiciary. The inhabitants of the Quaker City, if they kave not of late years sent a reasonable pro portion of rascals to the State Legislature, and been burdened with a respectable num ber of plunderers in their municipal offices, have most certainly been making a remarka ble fuss about nothing. As the population of that locality are generally of a tranquil disposition, and by no means fond of creating a disturbance, we.have no doubt that their complaints are not without a good deal of reason. But, however this may be, there is one department which the Philadelphians have never given np to political rings. To whatever degree dishonest and unprincipled individuals may have worked themselves into other positions, the judiciary is unscathod, and there is a quiet determination among the people to keep it so, which even the con trollers of party nominations do not dare to defy. There is occasionally considerable grum bling in Philadelphia by Democrats at lie publican judges, or by Republicans at Demo cratic judges, on the ground of alleged leaning towards one side or the other in ques tions connected with elections or other po litical affairs. That such charges Bhould be made is natural enough; and that Home of them might be true, even with judges of the very highest character, would be in no way improbable. Bat, apart from cases involving political questions, tho character of the judi ciary of Philadelphia is unimpeachod and unimpeachable. The idea of suspooting a judge of corruption, or of being under the influence of any speculating clique or com bination, is one which never on any occasion enters the head of a Philadelphian. To his inexperience and innocence tho very suggestion of tho thought would be shock ing. In the peaceful and happy city of mar ile. door-steps and white window-shutters, where he and his father and grandfather were born, he has no recollection of any such charges ever having been made against a judge, and he is certain that if made and ex tensively believed, an investigation would take place which would either result in the J udge's acquittal of the accusations, or in his being obliged to vacate his seat on the bench. Indeed, he is pretty sure though he remem bers no instance in point that the Judge hi rune, f would either demaDd Buch an investi gation, or else at once resiga. To him, the word "Judge" is as suggestive of honesty and impartiality as tho mtntiou of Fairmount is of hydrant water. There is one thing about this subject of judges in Philadelphia which is rather puz zling. It is the question why the people there, seeing that they are so particular about having good men for the judiciary, and so successful in obtaining them, have not carried out the principle more effec tively into other things. Why, in other words, do they so uniformly elect suit able men to the bench, and so frequently choose notoriously ivnfit individuals for the Legislature and the city offices? There is an apparent inconsistency in thia which we are at a loss to explain. A teacher of long experience once remarked that he had often noticed that if he got rid of the lazy boys in his school, some of the indus trious ones became lazy. The measures, he mid, which were used to urge the indolent pupils forward, were found to have operated as a needful incitement in keeping a portion of the more studious up to their work. If, on a similar principle, the Philadelphians have an idea that the hammering at dishonest and incompetent officials in other departments is a useful stimulus in preventing the present high character of their judges from being impaired, perhaps there may be something like philosophy in it. Human nature is weak in the beet of men. and a little stirring up of the ' conscience once in a while is very well,, even in the case of men in whom there is no apparent reason for it. But whatever may be the cause of the phenomenon we have mentioned, we must sincerely congratulate the Philadelphians upon the fact that they have kept their Judi ciary pure. However much may depend upon the character of men in other public situa tions, there are probably no positions in our Government which, all things considered, so intimately affect the interests and the welfare of all classes, rich and poor, as those held by the Judges. THE LATE ELECTIONS AND THE OUT LOOK FOlt THE NEXT PRESIDENCY. t orn Uu N. T. Herald. The late elections East, West, and South have established several important facts in reference to the next Presidency. They settle the conflict for the next Congress for the Republicans, with the balance of power in the President's veto; they show in their re Bults that on the platform of General Grant's administration the Republican party still substantially holds its ground; that it has aecured, through General Grant liberal policy towards the black race, the mass of the even hundred and fifty thousand ooloral voters of the country a powerful element; that the great political reaction expected by over confident Democratic arithmeticians has not yet begun, and that the Republicans, with Grant as their candidate, have still the io3ide track and a good headway for the Presidential succession. On the other hand, it will bo perceived from these elections that the De mocracy everywhere are organized, aotive. and hopeful; that, under the management of Tammany Hall, they are too strona to be dis placed in New York, city or Statefthat they are quick to avail themsel?e of diaafl'eotlo in THE DA 1L F EVENING TELEGRAPH TRIPLE SUEM end discords in the Republican camp, and that they arc vigorously working for IK 72. The most important point, however, gained by Tammany on Tuesday last lies in her de cisive victory in this city under all the new safeguards applied for an honest election. She thus stands before .the country relieved of the odium so widely charged against her f winning her victories by fraudulent votes and false returns. She has also gained a gTetft moral advantage over her accusers in co-operatiDg with the United States authori ties in the maintenance of law and order. In thus gracefully recognizing the sovereigu authority of the United States she sUnd clear of any charges of a seditious character. At the same time the President has displayed the soundest judgment in his quiet and con ciliatory arrangements for the enforcement of the laws, and in the appointment of th tt cool, experienced, and clear-headed diplomat, Caleb Gushing, as the legal adviser of the belligerent Marshal Sharpe and his collea gues. Thus the triumph of Tammany is glorified in the triumph of law, and she Btands before the country now a great, posi tive, and undisputed centre of political pjwer as the "head centre, ' in short, of the De mocratic party of the Union. Governor Hoffman is her candidate for the Presidential succession, and his popularity throughout the Empire State rests upon the solid foundation of a good publio record and approved abilities at a politician and ns a statesman. The Republican candidate for 1872 is General Grant, and there is no danger in his case of any contesting Republican aspirant, ne stands to-day the accepted champion of his party against all comers, and he stands upon the acceptable platform of a careful, money-saving, retrenching, tax-reducing and debt-paying administration. Against him, from the facts of the late elec tions before us, the Democracy in 1872 will have but a slim chance of success. There is no telling, however, what changes in the political issues of the day may bo brought about within a single year in these eventful times. Before the formal opening of the Presidential canvass, the Cuban question, the St. Domingo question, the Mexican question, or the Alabama claims, involving the Cana dian annexation question, may be brought upon the carpet in such a shape as for a time to supersede all other questions among the politicians. All these issues are in the hands of the President, and upon a bold stroke for Cuba, St. Domingo, Mexico, or for the acqui sition of the great river and Gulf of St. Lau rence as an outlet for tho rapidly accumu lating products of the Northwest, General Grant may make a popular hit which will re peat, in his great Buccess, the second election of Jackson or the second lection of Lincoln. Meantime the Tammany Democracy have a great task before them iu putting the party for 1872 upon some new platform on the living issues of the day, after cutting it loose from the dead issues of the time of Buchanan.. But first and foremost, the duty devolves upon Tammany of giving this city some satisfactory and substantial equivalents for the tax levy something more than the Bhadows of city improvements, including im proved communications from end to end of Manhattan Island, and with the islands aud mainland on both Bides. If the taxes of the National Government were on the scale of our corporation assessments Secretary Bout well would have the disbursement of a thou sand millions a year. General Grant has more, much more, to show for his money col lected than the Tammany government. Taxes speaking of taxes we can do nothing without taxes; but give us, O Sachems ! a fair equivalent for our taxes collected, and you may hold on in tho city for twenty years. Next, with regard to the State. Protect the people against the grasping schemes of rail way and other leagues of powerful corpora tions, and you may hold the State for twenty years and avoid the intervention of Con gress. Having all become millionaires, O most potent sachems ! now is your time to act largely and liberally for the city and tho State. There is no necessity for nay hurry in pushing the claims of Governor Hoffman for the nomination of the next National Demo cratic Convention. The past Presidential conventions of the party are full of instruc tions upon this subject. Never since the time of Jackson has there been any certainty as to the candidate of these juggling conven tions, and the aspirants first in the held have always been the firBt to bo knocked in the head. No, we must except Buchanan , in He was first in the field that time, as he was many times before, but that time he succeeded. But what a time they made of it with him, and what a mess he made of it! He was the Louis the Sixteenth of to old Bour bons, lacking the guillotine. So now, not forgetting the keep-in-the-dark dodge of Hora tia Seymour, whereby he cut out Pendleton in 18C8, we have our misgivings of this prema ture trotting out of Governor Hoffman. It is e. different case; but it reminds ns that John Van Buren in 18G.1 trotted out Andy Johnson for the Democracy, which was the ruia of Johnson, and the ruin of the Democracy, too. Again the Western Democrats have not for gotten Seymour, and they still have an eye on Pendleton. These old Presidential soras are hard to cure, and disappointed and badly treated aspirants are apt to seek their revenges. Look at Calhoun, Tyler, Martin Van Buren, Fillmore, Seward, and Johuson. Let Tammany, then, for the present, be as modest as Hoffman in reference to his claims to the next Presidency. If Seymour ha 1 not spoiled the trick we Bhould recommend a posi tive withdrawal of tbe Governor from the field. As it is, let him be held by Tammany as subject to eventualities and not as an ultimatum; and thus he may escape those rival cliques and factions in the convention so fatal to any favorite under the two-thirds rule. Briefly, let Tammany do the best she can, with the aid of the Governor, for the city and the State, and she will do the best ahe can to make Hoffman President, if not ia 1872, in 187(1. And thu9, O greatly exalted sachems ! since these late instruoiive elections, thus endeth our firbt lesson. FIGS FROM THISTLES. From the If. Y, Tribune. A journal which, under a thia varnish of independence, colored by an occasional eo certricity, has done more than any other to Bnbject afresh our city and State to the ten der mercies of the Tammany ring, mildly suggests that, as the master-spirits are all rich and have a fresh lease of power, thoy should now stop btealing and give us the benefits of honest and frugal rule. The suggestion is preposterous. Men who are Bucoeabfcl in an evil course rarely or never forsake it. Not till thoy eno muter their Gravelotte and Sedan are they able to realize that honesty is wiser and better thtu policy. Their Austerlitz and Jena only serve to lore them on to their Madrid aud M jsaow. Messrs. Tweed fc Company are ambitious of playing their parts on a national stage. They think the machinery, appliances, aa4 tactios which have made Hoff'mtn Mayor and Governor, will serve to make him Presi dent, and thus give them control of the Federal treasury and patronage. We do not believe they can succeed even in the nomi nation; but Vny naturally take a different view, and will spend as much money in securing delegates to the next Democratic National Convention as they usually spend on a Legislature say a million. And whence shall they obtain this sum save from- our conquered tax-payers? Can you imagine them capable of taking it out of their own peckets 'i The suggestion that they might judiciously surprise the publio by suddenly presenting themselves in the role of reformers and eco nomists ignores the very elements of their power. It is oblivious of the truth so tersely summed up by Mr. Calhoun in the sentence, "The cohesive power of publio plunder." The Tammany Ring is a power, simply because it governs for itself and its sup porters not for the goneral good. Thou sands hasten to do its bidding, because thoy know its service pays. It selects men of char acter for the three seats it had to fill afresh in CongreRs this year, because their respecta bility would improve its reputation, and it had no job "set up" at Washington: it sends to the Asscmby, for the most part, mere char acterless, conscienceless tools, because it needs unquestioning instruments at Albany, and knows that these will receive just as many votes as the best. In short, it adapts its means to its ends, in full view of the truth that 'Crowns got by Mood must be by blood main tained." Suppose the ring should to-morrow for swear profligacy, and resolve thenceforth to govern honestly and virtuously, how could it ever again poll bo many legal votes as it has ju6t given to Hoffman? At least half those votes were cast by men who do not desire virtuous, frugal rule, but the contrary. They are blacklegs, keepers of dens of in famy, liquor dealers who sell on Sunday in defiance of law, with stipendiaries and job bers who either have already secured, or hope soon to secure, personal gain from the sway they uphold. Do you suppose Mr. John Glcnnon, drawing two salaries from the city treasury, with the approval of some of our great capitalists and financiers, while render ing no service whatever in return, wants frugal and honest rule? If we have it, how is he to live? And his case is that of at least ten thousand of Tammany's most active and efficient electioneered. They want either pay for doing nothing or impunity in doing wrong; and they secure it by upholding Tam many's power. She will lose her hold on them from the hour that she makes the public good her controlling aim. Fernando Wood, when first chosen Mayor, gave a fair trial to the experiment of governing so as to secure the approbation of the wise and good, and only abandoned it when he had become satis fied that it was alienating all his old friends and not fully replacing them by new. At present, our city is governed upon a clear comprehension of the fact that virtue is Blow in perception and inefficient in action, while vice is alert, apprehensive, and intent on the main chance. Ten blacklegs afraid that their craft is in danger will get more votes into the ballot-boxes at least, will count more out of them than forty deacons. Our rulers know right well that the voters who pay no taxes into the city treasury greatly outnumber those who have a direct, palpable, recognized interest in frugal, honest rule and are, as a class, keener politicians. Two millions of dollars added to our annual tax levy will not swell it very materially, while that sum skilfully expended in ward politics will make a good many thousand votes. It will give $1000 each to two thousand ward politicians, who must be poor sticks if they cannot, by an outlay of ten per cent, of their allowance, in addition to their own time, each bring twenty to fifty voters to the polls. If the master-spirits of the ring were mainly intent on purifying their reputations or sav ing their souls, it would doubless be advisa ble that they give us better and cheaper rule; but, considering the purposes they really have at heart, we cannot realize that the counsel volunteered them, that they reform and live cleanly, is pertinent or likely to be heeded. THE "ALABAMA" CASE AND THE CA NADIANS. From the K. Y. Kation. The Alabama case is now in a somewhat curious phase. Our readers may remember that the treaty Rigned by Mr. Roverdy John Bon was rejected for two reasons; one was that the machinery which it provided for tho ad justment of the Alabamas claim was defective; the other was, that the satifaction proffered under it for the wrong done to the United States was insufficient. In other words, the mode of choosing the arbitrators was bad, and the work given the arbitrators to do did not cover the ground in dispute. The posi tion taken up by the present Administration has been, indeed, one which all impartial observers, at home and abroad, concede to be sound, namely, that Great Britain owes not only full pecuniary satisfaction for the losses Bustuined by the operations of Confederate cruisers built or equipped and suffered to escape from her ports, but something more. Now, what is this "something more?" The failure of our Government to say frankly what this is, is what, at this moment, arrests the negotiations, and, possibly, the settle ment of the whole question, for it may be that, on learning what it is, the British Gov ernment would concede it. It has been very curious to see how steadily everybody who has touched on the subject has refused to clear up this point, or do more than vaguely, and indeed darkly, hint at it. The claim that England must pay "consequential damages" on the ground that by her concession of belligereut rights to the Confederacy or, in other wordB, her declaration to her own subjects that a state of war existed between the United States and the Rebel Confederacy bhe worked all the subsequent miichief, has, of course, not been seriously maintained by any respectable authority, and the only result of its publio production has been to give a Blightly comio aspect, in the eyes of foreign jurists, to the American case. But it is, nevertheless, admitted on all hands that the mere cash payment of the Alabama claims, which we believe England is quite ready to make, cannot and ought not to settle the con troversy; but the thing which, over and above this, England ought to do, the present ad ministration, no less than the last, steadily refuses to state, and, until it is stated by somebody, England announces that Bhe will make no further move. Nay, the delay has, if we are to believe the PaU Mali Gazette, produced in English opinion Borne symptoms of a withdrawal from the advanced ground which she occupied on this Bubject a year ago, the doctrine having begun to find favor "that the rule sought to be enforced against them us was a very modern and very doubtful innovation on international law; that the law of nations, regarded in its integrity, did not in any way impose on the British Government the duty of preventing ships of war, constructed by private traders, from getting to sea; that the general and publio obligation which that law - - PHILADELPHIA, SATUKPAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1870J created was the duty of submitting, without complaint, to the capture and confiscation of such vessels by the ships of the Unitod States." Whenever an American politician takes up the question now, however, it is generally for the mere purpose of going once more over the old allegations and proofs, with which ten years of discussion and iteration have made the publio so familiar. In the meantime, however, the men who lost their ships during the war, and to whom the Alabama case has, therefore, a personal as well as political interest, are getting old or beginning te die off, and, having been thoroughly familiarized by orators and news papers with the nature and extent of their losses, and with the obligation which rests on England to make them good, and being constantly reminded that it is now the busi ness of England to come forward at onos with "the cash," and learning that England is ready to pay "the catih," some of them are not unnaturally anxious to get "the cash" in. But here the very newspapers which are most clamorous for "the cash" step in and say the sufferers ought not to receive it except through the Gov ernment, and by virtue of an agreement with tbe Government. In this they are undoubt edly right. The owners of vessels destroyed by the Alabama have no direct claim on the British Government, and the losses they have suffered were also offenses against the United States, the atonement for which it belongs to the United States to exact. But then there reBts on the United States Government an obligation of the strongest kind, either to ad just and pay their claims at once itself, and then take its own time to exact reimburse ment from Great Britain, or to push the set tlement of their claims now with all conve nient speed. It has no right to use the claims merely as weapons of offense, and, while making the world ring with accounts of the destruction of our commercial navy by English cruisers, treat the complaints of the owners of the navy as of no consequence. No prospect of advantage to the country at large through intentional delay in the nogo tiations will justify total indifference to the demands of the individuals whose losses really give our case most of its woight; for it is the extent of our losses which makes it worth while to hold England to a strict account. If the Alabama had Bailed just as Bhe did, but had afterwards done American commerce no injury, her sailing would certainly never have been made the Bnbject of complaint against England. Now, what are the causes of this unwil. licgneES on the part of the administration and of a portion of the press to define the satisfaction which Great Britain must give in order to close the Alabama controversy? They are two in number: one, which proba bly only actuates a comparatively small num ber of persons, is the desire of revenge. They expect that England will some day 'get involved in a European war, and that "then the United States will have an opportunity of paying her off in her own coin; and we can tell the Fall MaU Gazette that nothing could please thia class better, or serve its purposes better, than that fine old rule of international law, which it Bays is being revived in Eng land, that the only obligation which rests on a neutral power with regard to the starting of war vessels from its ports, for the service of belligerents, is the obligation of submitting to their capture without complaint. If any power in the world has an interest in preventing the revival of any euch rule, it is certainly England. With this class, however, there is little use in arguing. The impolicy of revenge, and the useless ness of nourishing revengeful feelings, and the essential barbarism of introducing re venge as a force into politics in our day, is too well known, and has been too often dwelt on, to leave any ground for the belief that those who take this view of the Alabama case do bo through ignorance. We who believe that there are such things as principles in politics, and that they are not limited in their application to one country or one conti nent, have only one thing to say to these gentlemen, and that is to request them to refrain, for decency's sake, from openly preaching magnanimity and moderation and general utilitarianism to Bismarck and Kins William. 6 The second class consists of persons who hope that by holding out we Bhall get Canada eventually in Batisfaction of the Alabama claims. In this class we believe we may in clude Harper's Weekly and Senator Trum bull. In mentioning these, we mention pro bably the two ablest and most respectable supporters of the scheme. Senator Trum bull has, in a recent speech in Chicago, set forth the undeniable advantages, political and economical, both to the United States and to Canada, of the annexation of the latter. In fact, it is something which anybody who knows anything of the circumstances of the two countries must wish to see brought about; but it is precisely because we wish to see it brought about, and that speedily, that we deprecate all advocacy of it on this Bide of the line in connection with, and especially as a pen alty levied on England on account of, the Ala bama case. It ought not to be necessary to point out to any man who has any familiarity v. it h history, and has occupied himself with politics, that the cession of territory is re garded by all modern nations as a sign of defeat and humiliation. It is something to which no first-class power ever submits, ex cept in exchange for something else, or as a tenible necessity imposed by irretrievable disaster in war. In the frantio resistance offered to it by the French, even in the throes of despair, we have a striking illustra tion of the horror with which it is regarded by the leading nations of Europe. With the feelings of the French about it, everybody who is capable of putting himself in other people's places and anybody who is not ought to let politics, anil es pecially foreign politics, alone must sympathize. Now, Great Britain has not been defeated in war; Bhe is, therefore, though willing enough to pay damages for the Ala bama depredations, not prepared to submit to the payment of a penalty, and especially of a penalty bo exceedingly humiliating as the surrender of territory. If Canada, therefore, be asked for as a penalty that is, as some thing to appease an angry enemy without any reference to its pecuniary relation to the wrong for which it is expected to atone it will of course at once bring into play the national pride and divers other worse pas sions, and then we may bid farewell for an indefinite period to ail hope of a settlement of any kind. There is one way in which the annexation of Canada to the United States might be made acceptable to England, and might be brought under that wise and just rule which Jlurptr's Weekly applies to the cession of Alsace and Lorraine, but apparently does not see the force of on this continent, and that is, its being demanded by tbe Canadians them selves. We have not a particle of doubt that if the Canadians called for a severance of the few remaining bonds which unite them to Great Britain," their application would be re ceived by nine-tenths of the English publio with open or secret rejoicing, and at once be acceded to. Bntitis jnst as safe to any that annexation against which the Canadians pro tested, men of all parties in England, and more particularly the English Radicals, would feel bound in honor to resist to the death. What the Canadian feeling is on the sub ject we do not pretend to be able to npoak of with certainty. We know of no trust worthy evidence that any considerable portion of the people aa yet desire annexation, though we believe there is plenty of evidenoe that the feeling in its favor is growing, and that, if politicians on this Hide of the line will only behave with discretion, ff will yet bear fruit. But it would be difficult to contrive a better mode of making annexation hateful to tbe Canadian people than for us to talk of it as a punishment for the commission, by Eng land, of wrongs with which the Canadians bad absolutely nothing to do, and for which they are no more responsible than we here are for tho condition of Ireland. Annexation, on such grounds and under suoh ciroumstanoes, would not only violate all the rules which some of its advocates are now, with curious inconsistency, urging against Bis marck with regard to Alsace and Lorraine, but of several others of which Alsace and Lorraine cannot claim the benefit, and the breach of which would bring the Canadians more Burely to the level of cattle, or, reonr ring to tbe original application of tho term, to that of "blackmail," than any people in modern times have ever been brought. Canada is not part of England in the sense that Alsace and Lorraine are parts of Franon, and a more monstrous violation of right could hardly be contrived than would be involved in fastening on her the responsibility for de fects in English foreign policy. , The delay in framing and producing dis tinct grounds of settlement in this contro versy, and urging them persistently on Eng land, becomes more and more discreditable to the Government and the public the longer it lasts; and what a proper regard to the in terests of individual sufferers, to the dignity of the United States, and the interests, of civilization aud justice, calls for, has been, we think, well Bet forth by Dr. Bluntschli, in the article of which we gave a summary a few weeks ago, namely, compensation for all damage done by crnisers Hailing from English ports, and the issue of such a joint declara tion touching neutral duties as Bhall not only attest the illegality of the past course of Great Britain in this war, but settle the law for the future. SHIPPINO. gPECIAL NOTICE TO SIlIPrEKi VIA 8AVANNAII, GA. 2fetS . x?iMif ai 0 usnai despatch to ail points on the WESTERN AND ATLANTA, MEMPHIS AND CHARLESTON, ALABAMA AND CHAT TANOOGA, ROME, 8ELMA, ROME AND DAL TON, SELMA AND MERIDIAN, VICKSBURO AND MERIDIAN, MOBILE AND OHIO, NEW ORLEANS, JACKSON AND GREAT NORTH ERN RAILROADS, all Landings on tbe COOiA RIVER. Through Bills of Lading: given, and rates guaran tied to all points In the South and Southwest. WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Ageut, 10 17 tf No. 130 South THIRD Street. jtTjfjTgfc LORILLARD STEAMSHIP OOAU'ANI FOlt NEW TOKK, SAILING EVERY TUESDAY, THURSDAY, AN I SATURDAY. ' RATES TEN CENTS PER 100 POTJNrS, FOUR CENTb PER CUBIC FOOT, ONE CENT PER GALLON. Kill P S OPTION. INSURANCE BY THIS LINE ONE-EIGHTH OP ONE PER CENT. Extra rates on small packages Iron, metals, etc. No receipt or bill of lading signed lor less than Cfty ceots. Goods forwarded to all points free of coram f salons. Through bills of laUng given to Wilmington, N. O . dv the steamers of this Hue leaving New York tri weekly. For further particulars apply to JOHN P. onr,, PIER 19 NOrlTH WHARVES. N. B. The regular shippers by this line will be charged the above rates all winter. Winter rates commence December IB. s g , TUB REGULAR STEAMSHIPS ON THE PHI. LADELPHIA AND CHARLESTON STEAM SHIP LINE are ALONE authorized to lusue throuer bills of ladlrg to Interior points South and West U connection with South Carolina Railroad Comnanv ALFRED L. TYLErT' Vice-President 80. C. RR. Co. 4fffiU PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTH KRN SwfrTMAIL STKAMSHIP COMPANY'S RKGII LAKbKMI-MONTHLY LINK TO NKW OR. Ths JUNIATA will Mil few Nsw Orleans, via Havaaa. or Tueadav. roveraber 16. at 8 A. M. ttavama, Th YAZOO will Mil from Mew Orleans, via Havana On November . THROUGH BILLS OF LADING at as low ratm as h, any oilier route given to MotiIe, Galveston, INDIAN. OLA, HOOtvPORT. LA VAUU A, an t HKOS,nd to ill r ninti 00 tbe Missieaippi rivei between Mew Orleans and t. Louis. Red Kiver iri;bu reabipped at New Orleans without charge of csmmisaiona. WKFKLY LINK TO SAVANNAH. GA. The PAN TH KR will Mil tor Bavannah on Bator d. November 12 at 8 A. M. ine TONAWAf DA will sail from 8avannan on Bat. or dT, Novomber Id. TfahOUUU blLLS OF LADING given to all thsprin. olpal towns in Georgia, Alabama, ilonda. Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee in connection witb tbe Ueatral Railroad of (ieonria, Atlantioand Gulf Rait road, and Florida team era, at as low rata as by oompotina lines. SFMI-MONTHLY LINK TO WILMINGTON, 1. O Tbe FIOKKKR will sail for Wilmington on 8 loardny. November 13. at A. M. Returning, willleave Wilmina ton Baiurday, Novumber 19. Connects with tbe (Jape Fear Kiver Steamboat Com. pany, tbe Wi'min ton and Weidon and North Carolina Railroads, and tbe Vi ihnington and Manoheater Railroad te all interior points. Freights for Columbia, 8. O., and Augusta, Ga., taken Via Vt ilmington, at aslow rates as by any other route. Insuranoe effected when requested by abippera. Bills of lading signed at Quean street wharf on or before day of Milinif. WILLIAM U J A MRS, General Arenfc t 1 o-J30 Sooth THIRD btreek. PHILADELPHIA. RICFTVfO ND 1 AND NOKKOi.K HTKtUKHIP nun THROUGH FREIGHT ALU LINK TO TUJf SOUTH INUREASKD FACIUTIRSAND REDUCED RATES Steamers leave ovary vVKDNKHDAYand SATURDAY at U o'clock noon, from FIRST WHARF above MAR-' tiV l Street. RKTl kNJNG. leave RICHMOND MONDAYS and THURbDAYS, and iiORFOLK TUESDAYS and 8A? TURDAY8. B Ne Bills of Ladini aigned after tf o'clock on aailinc rJROUGH RATES toall points In North and South Carolina, via Seaboard Air Line Railroad, oonneotina at Portsmontb.and te Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee, and the West, via Virginia and Tennessee Air line and Rioomond and Danville liai broad. Freight HANDLKD BUTONOB, and taken at LOWER RATKS THAN AN V OTUF.R Lisn. "'" No charge for oonunisaion, dray age, or any xpenso Of ransfer. . hie am ships insure at lowest rate. Freight received daily. 6UU Room acvdatfor , No. 19 8. WHARVES and Pier 1 N. WHARVES. W. P. POKI ER, Agent at Richmond and City Point. T. P. OttO WfcLL A CO.. Agents at Noriolk. U mm NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAN fJvTClrla, Georgetown, and Wellington, &iah2iu4D. C., via Chesapeake aud Delaware Cuual, with connections at Alexandria from the most direct route for Lynohburg, Bristol, KnoxvtUe, Nuthvllle, Dalton, and the Southwest. bteamers leave regularly every Saturday at noon torn the Unit wharf above Market street. Freight received daily. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., No. 14 North aud South WHARVES. FIYDB A. TYLER, Ageuts at Georgetown: M. EldRIDGE i CO., Agent at Alexandria. 1 . . usLawAtis ad CHESAPEAKE TfaJSTKAM TOW BO AT COMPANY 1 i svuttTKca vowea ttetween Philadelphia. Baltimore, Uavre-de-Grace. Delaware city, and in termediate points. WILLIAM P. CLYDE ft CO., Agent. Captain JOBN LAUGHUN, Superintendent. Oilice,No.ISbouUi YYlArvea VifcUadelliaUL tilt SHIPPINU. FOR LIVKRPOm. nn -iri ct?vtu ctK-Biiirie ii'imii wu tu anil as iuuowa: r City of London, Saturday, Nov. 1, at S P. M. I City of Brooklvri, HRtnrttay, Nov. s. t8 A. M. CtVofLlraerick, via HuUfax, Tuesday, Nov. 8, Olty of BmRAelK. Paturdav, Dec. 8, at 8 A. M. and each succeeding Saturday and alternate Tues day, from pier No. 45 North river, RATES OF PASSAGE. Payable In gold. Payable lu currency. First t aoiD T8 Steerage . To Louden 80 To Ixindon. To Paria 88 88 0 To Parla To Halifax - sesaee.s.. aw a C lldlimA If t'aHHel.ffprn aln fr.rwnrr1orV t Uou-va n SO To Halifax. 10 Bremen, etc., at reduced rates. Tickets can be ttonnht heraat moderate rates by persons wishing to send for their friends. For further Information apply at tbe company's 00) ee, JOHN G. PALE, Agent. No. 18 Broadway. N. Y I Or to O lMiNNKt.T. a vaiti u 1 :.. 1 4 B No- CHESNUT Street. Philadelphia. FOR NEW YORK, VIA DEIAwXEsT sfrfS and llHritan CanaL i-hSWIFTSURK TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AND SWIFTSURR LINES. Leaving dally at 18 M. and 8 P. M. The steam propellers of this company will com tnence loading on the 8th of March. Throngh In twenty-four hours. Goods forwarded to any point free of commission Freights taken on accommodating terms. Apply to WILLIAM M. BAIRD & CO.. Agents, J No. 138 South DELAWARE Avenua. W n u w n vu v r u N "'rVj iininjinnnioBlliI nitnun canal, .1 ifWii ETPHMRTItiMnill'lwtiUDiuv ' 11cm vi me uugwiucommenw loading on the 8th instant, leaving dally as usual. THROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR UOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going out of No York, North, East, or West, free of commission. Freights received at low rates. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO.. Agent, t a tvrirn tt . t N0, I2 DELAWA.RB Avenua. JAMES ITANP, Agent, No.jli9WALL Street, New Yorfc. 8 4 OORDAOE, ETOi ' 'l ht hinfltn Hiwmll.M r h 11 11, ' WEAVER & CO., ROPE MANVFAVTirBGnB AMD - BIIIP CIIArVDUBKS. No, B9 North WATER Street and No. 88 North. WHARVES, Philadelphia ROPE AT LOWEST BOSTON AND NEW YORK PRICKS. 41 CORDAGE. Manilla, Sisal and Tarred Gordagt At Lowest New York Prices and Freights. KDVVI1N II. FITLjEK ofe CO Factory . TKNTH 8 1. and GHRMANTOWH AvootM 8 bore, No. 83 , WATER Bk and 23 N DKLAWAS i Avanna, HHm . PHILADELPHIA, LUMHtR. 1870 8PRUCB JOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. HEMLOCK. -HEMLOCK. 1870. 1 C7ft SEASONED CLEAR PINR. XJ I V BBAtUISJiH Cl.KAK FINE. fiitis-D DimnL-tiw n r . . s V SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR. 1 QTA FLORIDA FLOORING. 10 I V FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA 8TEP BOARDS. RAIL PLANK. 1870 1870 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.-. Q rj WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK, 1 0 T 7 WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, -t QiTA UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 10 I U RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 1870 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. 1Qni' SEASONED CHERRY. 10 I U ASH, WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1 ft 7 rt CIGAR BOX MAKERS' i Q ha 10 t U CIGAR BOX MaKKRB' lOlU SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS. FOR SALE LOW. IU'711 vAxiOUINA DCANTLING. -IOTA IO I U CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. lOiU NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 CEDAR SHINGLES. -f Opt A CYPRK88 SHINGLES. 10 fl MAULE, BROTHER At CO., No. 8000 SOUTH Street 1JANEL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. COMMON PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and 9 side FE CE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BOAR MS. YELLOW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS, IV tad iX spruce joist, all sizes. ' HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLAKTKU1NG LATH A SPECIALTY. Together with a general assortment of Batldiiur. Lumber for sale low for cash. T. W. 8MALTZ, 681 6m No. 1T1B RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St. United States Builders' Mill, FIFTEENTH Street, Eelow Market. EGLER & BROTHER, PROPRIETORS. Wood MouldVngs, Brackets and General Turning Work, Band-rail balusters and Newel Posts. ' 1 8m A LARGE ArSOR I'M B NT ALWAYS ON HAND. BUILDING MATERIALS. II. E. THOMAS & CO., MALiaS IK Doors, Eiinds, Sash. Shutters' WINDOW FRAMES, ETC., M. W. COBNBK Of EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Btreeti ; . CUTLERY, ETO. fT ODGER8 A WOSTEN HOLM'S POCKET 1KNIVES, Pearl and Stag bandies, and beautiful nuibb; Rodgeis', and Wade fc Butcher's Razors, and the celebrated Le ooultre Razor; Ladles' Scissors, In cases, of tbe finest quality ; Rodgers Table Cutlery, Carvera and Forks, Razor Strops, Cork Screws, etc Ear In struments, to anslst the bearing, of the most ap proved const ruction, at . P. MADEIRA'S, No 118 TENTH Street, below CbesnnU SAXON GREEN NEVER FADES. 8 lflm J. T. a-AHTON. kt'sUilC. SBJPPISO A ND COMMISSION XKRCILIXTSL No. 8 COKNTIKS SLIP. New York, No. 18 MJUTU WHARVES, Philadelphia. No. 45 W. PRATT STREET, Baltimore We are prepared to ship every description of Freight to Philadelphia. New York, Wuiulbgtoa, and Intermediate points with promptness and despatch. Canal Boats and Steam-tags f urulMbod at the ahorttaft notice. '