2 THIS DAILY EVKNTXU TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1871. srxnxz or this runs a. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals gpon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. Mil. liLACK'tt KEPLY TO WILSON. From tkt X. T. Woild. The striking article from the Galir; which we reprinted yesterday is one of the most remarkable specimens of vigorous rhetoric and overwhelming lgio which it has been out fortune to peruse for many a day. lSut we wish that Mr. Mack had Leon content to give the nncolored argument without his vin dictive, Hcathing rhetoric. His reply to Ssna tor Wilson would not indeed hive boon huhU piquant reading if he had dispensed wifcli its warmth of coloring, but it would have baan more persuasive, and more convincing to tho misguided people who regard the late Secre tary Stantou as a model patriot and political saint, lihetorio has no value except as a means of gaining attention; and Mr. Mack's eminent talents and rceoguized standing would have insured hlua readers without this extraneous aid. The hardest lesson both for tyros and veterans in argument is to learn the weakening effect of excessive emphasis, lie who would convince others must adapt himsolf to their points of view. The art of doing this is the great secret of persuasive writing. Mr. Black and Senator Wilson together have made it very clear that Stanton was one of the most consummate hypocrites and most extraordinary examples of duplicity that ever lived. There is no longer any room to doubt that in the memorable winter of 1301 Stanton acted a disgraceful double part; pre tending to President Buchanan and his Cabinet that he was a zealous supporter of their views, and at the same time holding clandestine interviews with the llepublicau leaders, assuring them that he was devoted to their interests, and habitually betraying to them the secrets, or pretendad secrets, of the administration . His role in the Cabinet was that of a st aunch and thorough-paced adherent; his other role was that of a spy upon the ad ministration and divulger to its enemies of its secret counsels. Mr. Black produces un answerable evidence that Stauton acted the first of these parts; Mr. Wilsoa produces evi dence, equally unanswerable, that he acted the second. Now, even on the supposition that he was a truthful spy upon the Cabinet which gave him their confidence, his conduct was inen'ably base and disgraceful. But tho evidence shows that his midnight revelations were unscrupulous falsehood. He libelled the Cabinet which gave him their confidence in order to ingratiate himsolf with those to whom be pretended to divulge their secrets. If there be a lower depth of baseness and de pravity, history has not revealed tho names of those who have sunk to it. It must not be forgotten that at tho time when Stanton was acting this disgraceful part, there were other men in the Cabinet whose record is as "loyal" as his. General Dix was Secretary of the Treasury, "and Mr. Holt Secretary of War the two most im portant positions, at that time, in the admin istration. These gentlemen were present at all Cabinet meetings; were cognizant of all the. Government counsels; had as ample means as Mr. Stanton of knowing all damag ing Becretp. If the administration was un faithful, General Dix and Mr, Holt were accomplices, and Stanton's pretended revela tions must have implicated them as well as other members of the Cabinet. Who, even among Republicans, believes that they were consenting witnesses and parties to treason ? And yet they must have been, if there was any truth in Stanton's midnight disclosures. It is clear that those pretended disclosures were Blanders, invented by Stanton to curry favor with a party which would have offices to bestow during the ensuing four years. He simulated zeal for Mr. Buchanan's admin istration to insure the oflice he then held; and he acted the part of a spy upon it, and fabricated slanders ngainst its loyalty, as a means of recommending himself to the pirty which was about to come into power. How did it happen that General Dix, with equal opportunities and equal zeal for the Union, never discovered the enormous treachery which Stanton made it his daily and nightly business to convey to the camp of the enemy? The explanation is, that the disclosures were cot facts, but fabrications. It is known and notorious that the first month of Mr. Lincoln's administration was modelled on the last two months of Mr. Buchanan's. If there was feebleness and vacillation under the one, it was continued tinder the other. Mr. Lincoln's inaugural was in the very spirit of President Buchanan's conduct. Mr. Seward, abetted by General Scott, intrigued for the abandonment of Fort Sumter, although President Buchanan had been resolute and per sistent in his determination to hold it. The new administration adopted no new measures until the firing upon Sumter aroused and electrified the country. Mr. Lincoln is just as open to accusations of treachery as was Mr. Buchanan dating the last two months of his administration, when Stanton was aoting the spy and deceiving both the Cabinet and the Republicans the adminis tration by pretended zeal for all its measures and opinions, and the Republicans by bear ing false witness against the men who gave him their confidence. Mr. Black, in his last article, nails many falsehoods to the counter, but its chief inte rest consists in the damning light it sheds npon the character of Stanton. If Stanton had died before he was made Secretary o. War, there could not be twojopinions respect ing his disgraceful duplicity and baseness. He was an energetic and unscrupulous ad ministrator, and was so fully supported by the passions of the people in that passionate era, that they would willingly ignore or con done the loathsome treachery of bis previous conduct. But history will give its final ver dict on the sound maxim, Nihil tie vwrtuii nini vtut'M. THE CRItelS OF THE STRUGGLE IN FRANCE. Prom tkt If. F. 2'ines. What may be called the third epoch of the Franco-German war is drawing to a close The first ended with Woerth, when it was demonstrated that an offensive campaign was out of the - question, and that all the available strength of France would be re quired to defend her own soil. The seoond ended with Sedan, when the incapacity for this purpose of the empire and its regukrlv organized army was fully demonstrated. The third will close with the inevitable surrendor of Paris, and the more than probable defeat of the thrice-organized Army of the Loire, which has once more been summoued to make a supreme effort on behilf of "Liberty and the Republic." After that, if the war continues at all, it must be in the form of irregularly 4.gaui.vi (tail Uutfuliviv iiUiiu, L uoio of men animated by no uniform impulse, save the single determination of saying No! to every demand for submission on the basis of territorial concession. Terrible as have boon the hardships of the later phases of the strug gle, one like thh would lo far more replete with horrors. Strong ns the Germans are, tbey have not force sullicioiit for a complete military occupation of Frauce; but, once re leased from the vnst enterprise of besieging Paris, ibey can isolate ia the most complete nmnner tho four grput sections of French ter ritory and population from eah other; they can prevent any possibles goveruineut being obeyed over any but a very small portion of the fountiy; they can, in fact, omplete the social and political chaos which is already im pending over tl.o natiou. The Republican leaders of France and no other political power need for a moment be taken into account kiiow this ns well as the most disinterested of on-lojkers. Yet it by no means follows that universal submis sion will fi.How tho fall of Paris. They may pimply elect, with tho possible concurrence of the majority of the" poople, to allow Ger many to work out the problem before her in any way she tLinks fit. They may say, "She Las got the provinces she wants, lot her keop them, but their cession will be formally ratified by no act of ours. While tho invader remains on our soil we shall continue to re fuse to convene a national assembly, whose sittings would be held under the muzzles of Prussian cannon. Our conquerors want a huge indemnity; the longer they stay the more difficulty they will have in raising it. Let them go on making forced requisi tions here and there, so long a3 they find them repay the cost of collection". Let them continue to ppiead famine and pestilence as they have already scattered death and ruin, till civilization cries shame, and in very wcarineP8 Germany recalls her hosts, and contents herself with ocoupying what she in tends permanently to keep." Such a resolution might be deplorable enough, but no one cau sny that it is impossible. Come what may, Franco and tho Republic are indestructible, snd it is far from impossible that the ap proaching crisis of the national defence may be only the opening of a new phase of this determined and terrible struggle. PAUPERS. From the X. Y. Tribune. The pauper in the body politio threitens to be the one unsolvable problem just now in England and hero. Our friends in Philadel phia and the guardians of the poor in Loudon especially appear to find the burden mir.i than they cau bear. What business a man who can't work and is not aslnmed to beg has to live at all, is a question apparently too hard for these gjutlomcn. Even the bugs of creation find their uses iu museums, or. cased in amber, may givo ri;-;e to poetic in quiry as to "how the devil they cune ttiero?" Hut the pauper, they complain, dead or al'.ve, is so much waste matter. Society spews him out. Science will have nouo of htm. This class and order are, alas! but too well kao vn. There is no doubt as to how he got here. He has not only come already, but ho keeps coming every year, a gaunt, unweaned army, in swaddling bands; and he claims it to be a religious duly so to keop on coming in per 2duum. Under these circumstances it is no wonder that the patience of theso guardians of almshouses should wtx threadbare, and that they should strive to lessen the weight by every laudable means open to them. In one of the English work-housos the means embraced the inclosing of coatuma cious paupers in air-tight celld over night; kicking to death; smoking out women who were trying to escape by the infirmary chim ney with chlorine gas, the infirmary being filled at the time with sick and dying patients. At St. George's-in-the-East the guardians divide the trade of the almshouse among themselves, one supplying the paupers with boots and shoes, another with liquor, a third being tinker in general for the boilers. The chaplain complaining that the baochanaliin brother kept the paupers not only drunk, but busy stealing to pay for thoir grog, ho was incontinently taken by the nape of the neck and kicked out of the board. One nurse was exported for an UDploasant habit she had of shaking tho dying paupers to hurry their exit the witness apologizing for her, in the last case of the kind, by alleging that "Mrs. Snllivan did take an unreasonable long timo dying." Our neighbors in Philadelphia have massed all their dead weight of pauperism in Block ley Almshouse, and the meetings of its guardians are anticipated in that city of bro therly love by reporters and people as the best of raree-shows. A certain Mr. Parker, it appears, steadily complains that the bread served to tho paupers is not to be distin guished in taste or appearance from wet sand; that the wards are fuller and fouler than the Black Hole of Calcutta, and that their in mates are dying like sheep, and certainly with no unreasonable waste of time. The reverend old Quakers who constitute the rest of the board as statedly reply to him not by investigation of the difficulties, but by threats of "kicking him out" and oaths agiiust "jabbering bean poles," calculated to create astonishment in the minds of all who are ac customed to revere Penn and tho boasted charities of his grave followers. What truth there may be in Mr. Parker's allegations we know not, but the very language of the guar dians increases the doubt we have often ex pressed of the expediency of placing large bodies of the helpless wards of the State, whether paupers, idiots, or insane, in the care of a few men who naturally soon come to regard misery as a mechanical weight to be overcome by a general hard system and rule. In England the boarding-out system is rapidly coming into general use with regard to their paupers, and, we doubt not, a plan approxi mating to it will before long be found the luost in accordance not only with benevo lence but economy in this country. WHY GOOD PEOPLE DO NOT SYMPA THIZE WITH FRANCE. From the London Spectator. In the Fortnightly Jlevietc and the Pall Mill umttte Mr. 1 redenc Harrison has vigorously expressed his amazement that good Liberals should display any sympathy for what he calls Bismarckism. But the reason is not far to seek. It was set forth in the lecture of Father Hyacinthe last week. At least half of the stern anger with which France is visited by the most moral, most upright, class of Englishmen comes from the fact, not that the gauntlet was thrown down by France, or that her pretext for declaring war was tho m ist transparently wicked ever employed by a gre.it nation, but that she done mora tha'i any other country to clothe vice with splondjr and grace. People whose Christianity did nbt drive them away from the side of the Southern States, but permitted them to wiak at slavery, look upon France with disgust au 1 vehement passion, because Paris has raised vice to the dignity of a fine art, beo.rno the literature of France recalls t'ao license of drt cayiiJ!' Uouae. and buumwH II. . r..i ..... I I'lufc'u bttri.js a depraved taste revoking sweet delicacy of an English household. Some of the best men and women resolutely refuse to look byond the proposition that Germany is a nation of purity, and France a nation of license. They cannot bring them selves to hold with a firm grip the equally manifest proposition that Prussia may now be going as certainly down the abyss of political immorality, as Franco did on the eve of the war. Or, even if they hold that Germany is doing wrong by seizing Alsace and Lorraine against the will of the inhabitants, they will not face the logical result that sho is doing a deed leps beinously bad than the partition of Poland, and that sho merits a large measure of tho stern judgment which has followed the ciime of France. They have but one answer that the French are n wicked people. Nor can it be denied that Mr. Carlyle has a firm substratum of truth for tho vehement rheto ric in which he clothes the counts of tli9 in dictment. Paris alone would go far to con demn a whole people. London miyboouly a gradation less wicked, if indeed it bo less wicked at all; London may bo a sink of vice equally gross and equally hideous in its nluindauco; but the vice of Lon don is not gilded, or taken tinjjr the wing of wit and taste, like that of the French capital. The vice of London is coarsely vulgar, idiotically insane; it does not give a tone to society, nor has it a literature devoted to the celebration of its own infernal fascinations; men of letters do not enlist in what Mr. Car'yle might justly call "tho Devil's Regiment of the Line," or sell their souls into his service. Mr. Swinburne has striven hard, no doubt, to erect an Eoglish literature of impurity, based on the best models of France; but when the thing was done in plain English, its Yileness, its want of manliness, its imp-like orgies filled men of the world with unutterable loathing, which was only intensified by the plaudits of tho little clique who placed the young poot in the same rank with Shelley. France, on the other hand, has nourished a large school of letters to which the artistic treatment of vice is the abiding theme. In no other country would such a writer as Theophile Gautier be possible. Here is a man gifted with wit, charming sentiment, a delicate per ception of the intricate machinery of passion, tenderness of soul, an easy and melodious eloquence; and all these endowments are em ployed to teach, so far ns art can teach, that the aim of art is to bring back the gilded and (esthetic license of Greece. One of Gautiers books. wLich we do not choose to name, is so full of subtle analysis, so enriched with beauty of expression, and so infernal in its viciousness, that even a man of the world might bo excused for calmly and doliberately tearing it to pieces, leaf by leaf, for carefully placing tho fragments in the fire, and watch ing till every fragment of the lazav-like stuff be turned to ashes. The literaturo of Eng land presents no such phenomenon of genius weddtd to a satyr like depra vity. Even Byron, the most fl.igram of our poetic sinners,, won tho enthu siastic homnge of the reading mob by tho intensity of his passion, by the marvel lous force with which ho gave utterance to the Philistine craving for freedom from the shackles of a prim civilization, by the inten sity with which he rellected the unrest and the weariness that trouble the meanest souls, by powers that might in noble hands have been consecrated to noble ends. The vileness of Byron has not helped him to becomo tho favorite poet of the untutored young, and of what Mr. Matthew Arnold would term the un regenerate middle-class, but has rather hindered him from reaching tne cniei place in the Pantheon of Plulistia. And the moral taint on such pootry as that of Byron belongs to a different genus from the artistic depravity which casts the blight of a moral leprosy over the lighter literature of France. The typi cnlly French school has raised vice to the dig nity of a fine art, has crowned it with poetio garlands, and chanted its praises with song; so that if the new gospel has the warrant of truth, it undoes all the Christian teaching of the last two thousand years, and sets us dreaiily down once more amid the paganism of a viler and less gifted Greece. France has been the corrupter of youth. She has been the evangelist of depravity. Armed with a literaturo as perfect in form as that of Athens, sho has waged war against that purity of tone and principle which is the most distinctive heritage of Christianity, aud iu comparison with which all tho gl Dries of literature, all the graces of art, all the tri umphs of our electrio telegraph and steam engine civilization are only so much dust and ashes. Germany, on the other hand, is not less specially a land of domestic purity than Eng land itself. The Germans are good husbands, good wives, good sens and brothers. Much, it is true, must be raid on the other side. Vienna, Berlin, Hamburg, and some other German cities are not the most exemplary in the world. The gambling "hells" which ex isted at Baden-Baden, Wiesbaden, and some other German places of fashion, until they were found intolerable by the stern Lutheran ism of King William, did shook tho English sense of propriety. And amid the established gods of morality and religion, the German thinking class wields tho Thorhauimer of revolution more remorselessly than the most intrepid of the French ioouoclasts. German thought has given a new depth to the French instinct for the destruction of the sanctities and the proprieties. Germany can claim half the parenthood even of such distinc tively French producta as positivism. Ger many has done a thousandfold more than France to disturb the quiet of orthodox England, by directly or iudirectly sending across her frontiers a crowd of Goths and Visigoths in the shape of essayists aud re viewers, ColenBos, Voyseys, and the apostolic band of devout atheists who are guided by the one orthodox follower of Auguste Comte, and who find salva'iou in the commemora tion of their ciaiuluiothers. AU tho-e facts are soiicwfully admitted by the good. apolo gists for Bicuiaiekism. But, ia reply, they point to the purity of moral atmosphere in Germany. Immorality is not ia the air. The people are too much swayed by the dictates of manly virtue to breed Theophile Gautiers. His mantel pieces would excite the loathing of every cultivatad man outside that dilettante clique which is characterized by an incapacity for logical thought, and a picturesque hostility to the moral law. He would be "cut" dead by the literary class, which would tell him that, although he might wield the scalpel as re morselessly as he pleased, andmightst ite the results of dissection with the fearlessness of science, he degraded the divinity of intellect by giving an unhallowed g'ory to passion. He would excite the same scorn and disgust as a man cf geuius who habitually got drunk and rolled in the gutter. He would be classed with Edgar Allan Poe. And it is because Gtimany sets up a high standard of purity ia speech and act, that her triumphs over France have been celebrated with the Utile lujubs of many good Englishmen. It is, , cu tU vlLvl L.ui.', becjusg tits t;i;4 literatnre of France is a literatnre of license, and becauso her moral atmosphere is murky, that she excites absolute loathing In many English homes which have taken the noble side in all the great contests of recent years, such as the fight to liberate the Amerioau slaves, and the contest to free Ireland from the iniquity of the alien Church establish ment. The tremendous punishment of Franco excites such fierce joy as might have iired the spirit of the Hebrews whon they heard that the priests of Baal ha i been ut terly destroyed, and the Canaanilish women and childreu smitten with the edge of the sword. The hatred is so absorbing as to blind the eye to tho lines of political recti tude. The unscrupulous intrigues of Bis marck; that barrack-room piety of the King, which thanks God for victories, and cuts Providence in a season of defeat; the barbario spirit of tho squireen caste which is permitted to rule the best instructed poople in the world; the detestable military spirit which threatens to make Prussia the pest of Europe; the sanguinary evangel of professors who would set Europe in a flame to make good their own tthnologicnl dogma, that Germany is gifted with a divino right to r :ile everybody who speaks a German patois; the aboiiinable wickedness which has punished tho firing of stray shots by setting fire to whole villages and sending innocent women and children adrift on the world all this display of a dull brntality and a blind fury which history will execrate and God will judge, wrings from many of the best Englishmen the comment of silence or of condonation. Those literary apostles to tho Gentiles who have sat at the feet of the French Gamaliel will sneer at a preference for Germauy which is built solely on the idea that the domestic life of the Fatherland U jnrer than, that of Trance. They will dismiss such a preference with a contemptuous sneer at the highly organized irrationality of the British Pnilis tine. And we certainly offer no apology for the apathy with which a section of tho liberal party sees the most caste-bound and essen tially un-liberal of all Courts preparing to transfer a million and a half of people from the rule of France to that of Germany, and treating the protests of those people as con temptuously as if Alsaco and Lorraine were inhubited by a race of cattle. That many of the persons who were on tho side of the North during the Aruo rienn war should now be singing hallelujahs over tho Aggressive policy of Bis marck, shows tho liberal instiuo a oven of many liberals to be only skin-deep, and their moral sense to be at the mercy of their preju dices. And equally unjust, we also grant, is the accusation of wholesale immorality which is ilung at tho French people. The peasantry of France, who form the bulk of the nation, compute favorably a respects morality of act and tone with the peasantry of typically "moral'"countries like home-loving. Presby terian, and pious Scotland. The idea that France is represented by Paris, ami that French novels are a true index of French life, is on a par, in point of accuracy, with the belief tLat the United Status are faithfully represented by New York. Hence a signal iujustioa is done to the canso of liberalism and to the morality of Franco by the good people whom we have in view, when they shut thoir eyes to the criminal folly of annexing Alsace and Lorraine, nnd to tho wickedness of burn ing villages full of innoceut women tnd chil dren, because a Theophile Gautier cm bo bred by France, and because the moral at mosphere of France is has pure than that of Germany. But suoh a protest against the good people does not satisfy the professional despisers of the British Philistine. They ex claim that the morality which can coudomu the Gautiers must bo tho morality of Church wardenism, and must be ai far beneath tho dignity of philosophical discussion as the po litical creed of an average Tory squire, or the theology of an average clergyman. Nevertheless, the British Philistine is guided in this instance by a euro instinct, which enables him to detect, in a confused way, truths a thousand times deeper than the phi losophy of the light brigade of "thinkers" that half know Hegel and wholly know Dumas. They see that whatever is best and most enduring in modern civilization does rest on purity of life. They see that the nation which displays a puro family iife, aud gt neiates a pure tone of thought, is dowered with elements of lastingness for which we look in vain amid the must splendidly gifted of tLose peoples that have accepted the Athe nian edition of the moral law, Thoy see that the nation which finds its guidance in that abbreviated code of duty is on the high road to death. And if these are the counsels of Philistinism, as they are contemp tuously characterized by some poetical rheto ricians whose peculiarity of mind enables them to exhaust the possibilities of shallow ness, it is time for all of us to seek in Philis tinism a school. If, on the one hand, the German war bR8 led many good people to forget the principles of liberalism, and utter unduly sweeping judgments on the morality of the French poople; on the other hand, it Las brought into healthy prominence the de testation with which the best part of the English people regard vice, however gilded it may be by fabhion, or however glorified by intellect and art. CARRIAGES. ESTABLISHED 1S53. JOSEPH BECKHAUS, Ko. 1204 FRAKKFOUD Avenue, ABOVE UIKAKO AYENLE, Mitiiuiacturer of exclusively FlKST-CLASi j yv. jz jz i o k h. NEWEST STYLES, Clarences, Landaus, LamlauU ttes, Close Ooache, Slilftu.g qr. Coaches, Coupes, B troucties, l'tiictorn, Kockaway, Etc., SIIIaBLU r'UK PKlVATti FAMILY aud Fl'llLIU VtS. 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KKTt'KiMNO. leave KIOHMOND MONDAYS and THTi?UY8' nd HOIU'ULK TUKSDAYS and BA No Bill of Ladine eigned after 12 o'clock on tailiiu liROUGH RATKS to all point In North and Sontl Carolina, Tia Soalioard Air Liue Kuilroal, oonnevtinc at Port.emontb.and to Lynohbnrar, Va., Teunmatid, and to W eat. via V irginia and lennetiaee Air Line ana Riol moni and Danville lUilrofid. Yt-AfM HANDl.K.ll BUTONOK. and taken atLOWRH RATKS THAN ANY. OTHKR LINK. No chime for oommiseion, dravae, or any eippnte p rannfer. ... . , bteamshipi Insnre at low eat rate. Kri'ifiht received daily. BUte Room acconuasl&l'oiia for MwjTt. WILLIAM P. lll.VDK A CO.. No. IS S. WHA RVFS and Pier 1 N. WHaRVri W. P. FDR I FK, A stent at Richmond and Ottw Point T. P. tUKUWKLL A UO Agents at Norf olk. U FOR blVEKl'OOL AND tTlJKRVH SfgTOWN-Iinu.in Line of Itoyal Mali bUMii.i rs are appointed to sail aa follows: City of Paris, Saturday. Jan. at. at 2 P. M. City of lialtiniore, via Halifax, Tuesday, Jan. 24, at 1 V. M. City of Iotdon, Saturday. January 2-. at 11 A. M. Citv of J'.rockl.vti, Saturday. Feb. 4. nt 2 1'. M. aid each succeeding hatuntav aud alternate Too- day, fr?ni pier No. 4f North river. it AT US OF PASSAGE. Payable in gold. Payable In currency. Flrft cabin 875 Steerage .- To London so; To Iondou Si To Par's 90; To Paris ss To Halifax 20 To )!n!ifn m Passengers also forwarded to llavro, Hamburg, BrtineD, etc., at reduced rates. Tickets can be bought here at moderate rates by persons wiohiiit' to Bend for tuclr friends. Fr further Information apply at the coinnimy'B OfflCP. JOHN G. DALE", Agent, No. 15 Hroadway, N. Y. ' Or to O'DONNLLL & FAULK, Agents, 4 8 Ko. 402 CliESNLiT Street. Philadelphia. riiHE KEGI'LAU STEAMSHIPS ON TIIK PHI JL L.A UljL.1 111 A APtlJ ,UA l.L.Ca OlICAJll fcl". Oil HIP LINE are ALONE authorized to tssuo througt 1 1 1 ci r-t lrH f ti MituHrtv tvilnta Urtnth nvt l t - uuLUbiuu mtu ouuiu vBiouurt luiurutii 'joranaay, ALFHKD L. TvLKit, VIco-PresUlent So. C. RK. Co. g5 PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHSP.S i- IfiftLZ. Mill U'I1 t AICU IU rif1 n a trinn - ... . - - - pwiin w r.ni'iujjii uv.tirant n ititliU UU BKMI-MOSTULY LINK to NKW OH. LKAKS. I Ttie JUNIATA will aail for New Orloanii, via Havana or Wcdneydny. January lrt, at 8 A. M, k Tho YAZOO mil aail from New Orleans, via Havana, on , Jnnuury . TU ROUGH lill.LS OK LADING at aa low rates a bv auy other ronte Kiven to Mobile, Galveston, Uuny. OLA, ROOK PORT, LA VAOO A, and BRZAS,and to all pyiuta on the MiseiHsippi rivei bntmeen New Orleans and M. Louis. Rod River iroihu reuhipved at New Orleans wilboat oeargeof oomniia&iona. WF.ICKT.Y LINK TO SAVANNAH, OA. The WYOMING will aail ror Savannah on Satarl.iv. J..nui,ry21, at 8 A. M. o v 4 j, Tbe TON A WANDA will sail from Savanaan on Satur day, Jiir.uuiy 111. TU ROUGH BILLS OK LADING given to all tbeprin cipnl towns in Georia, Alabauit, Florida, Mississippi. Ivounisna, A rknnsas, and TeDnps.iee in connection witt tl'e UeiiUal Kailroiul of Georgia, Atlantic and Gal' Rail road, and Florida steamers, at rs low rates aa by oompeLiof lines, KKM 1-MONTH LY LINK TO WILMINGTON. N. O. Tbe PIONKKR will sail lor Vt'ihninRton on I'iuirv dc, Jacuurv 26, at t A. At. Kaliumutf, will leave Wil uirton I ridnv. If binary. Connects with tbe Cape Pear River Steamboat Ooob, pacy, the Wilmington and Weldon and Nortb Carolina Kailrckdn, and tbe Wilmington and Manchester Railroad to all interior points. Freights for Colombia, 8. O., and Augusta, Oa., taken via Wilmington, at aalow rates as by any otber route. Insurance effected when requested by shippers. Bills of lodii'K signed at Qneen street wharf on or beiore oUr of sailing. WILLIAM L. J AM KB, General Agent. 1 15 No. IM South Til DAD BUees. T H 1 r-u II K ANCHOR LINa STEAMERS all every Saturday and alternate Wednesday tuauu jiuiii rianjteuw niiti uerry. PcSFcngers booktd aud forwarded to and from all railway stations lu Great ISritaln, Ireland, tier ninny, Norway, Sweden, or Denmark and America as safely, speedily, comfortably, and cheaply as by Hi!, lUULt K1 llUC "KM'KKKS" bTEAMtltS. "KXTKA" STKAUKK3. IOWA, TYPIAN, BRITANNIA, IOWA, TYKIAN, ANGI.IA, At STKAI.IA, 1SRITANMA, INDIA, COLL'M Iil A, tl nop A. liul l ANNIA. I roin Pier 20 North river, New York, at noon. Kates of Past-age, Payable In Currency, to Liverpool, (Hasgow, or Derry : Ftit cabins, fus aud fib, according to location. Cabin excursion tickets (good for twelve mouths), nt tiling best ucconmiodutious, (130, Intel mediate, S'H; steerage, in. CirtiUcates, at reduced rates, can be bought hero by those w ishing to seud for their friends. Draits lhf-ned, payab.e on presentation. Apply at the companv's oilic.es to HEX DHKSON imOTHEItS, 12 27t No. 1 UOWLINU (HUCKN. T 11 I T STAR LINE. OCEANIC STEAM NAVIGATION COMPANY'8 LINK OF NEW STEAM Kits LET WICKS NKW Yt UK AND LIVERPOOL, CALL1NO AT CORK, 1WK1.AND. The company's fleet comprises the following mag. clticeiit lull-powered uccuu steamships, the six largest In the world: OCEANIC. Captain Murray. Rf'TIC. ATLANTIC, Captain Thompson. IMLTC. PACIFIC, Captain Perry. ADRIATIC. Thtse new vessels have been designed specially for the transatlantic trade, and combine speed, lafety, and comfort. j'tiSHCiigtr accommodations unrivalled. Parties sending lor their lncuils iu the oid coun try can now obtain prepaid tickets. Steerage, fH2, currency. ' ' ' Other rates as low as uny first-class Hue. Eor further particulars apply to LSMAY, I.MRIE 4 CO., No. 10 WATER btreet, Liverpool, and No. I EAST INDIA Avenue, LEADEMIALL Street, london; or at the company's oillces, No. la liHOADWAY, New York. c . ! 6r J. H. SPARKS, Agent. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO AUvXsN 'drla, Georgetown, aud War.:rgtcn it n via l!hiuunpakA unri llrt Avrarr CttUtUt Willi LUUUV,.l"uB - - most direct route for Lynchburg, Drtstol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton, and the Houthwest. bteamers leave regularly every (Saturday at noor torn the tlrst wharf alove Market strooL FKlgM received dally, p cLyna No. 14 Norch and South WHARVES. HYDE A TYLER, Ageuti at Georgetown ; IL ELDKIDgE A CO., Agents at Alexandria, 1 1 Za DELAWAKe" AND CHESAPEAKE iJTiLteSTKAM TOWROAT COMPANY jTT7LllHrgeS towed between Phil idlphia, Kitimore7Havre-de-Graoe, Delaware City, and In- ClLLIAM P. CLYDE A IXi., Agents. Captain JOHN LACGHL1N. b ip.'rluin.iont. . i . Anni.anMnna nt A In v a u.i rf a fr.'iKn HIPPNO. ppfr LOHILLAUD STEAMSHIP COMPAQ FOIl HI2W lOKU, SAILING TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS, AND SAT UKDAYS AT NOON, are now receiving freight at winter rates, com mencing December 2. All goods shipped on and aftcrthts date will be charged as agreed npoa by tho agents of this company. INSURANCE ONE-ElGHTn OF ONE PER CENT. Ko bill of lading or receipt signed for less than fifty cents, and no Insurance effected for less than one dollar premium. For further particulars and rates apply at Com pany's o nice, Pier 33 East river, New York, or to JOHN F. OHU PIER 19 NOHTH WILARYES. . N. B. Extra rates on small packages Iron, metals, 'c. 8 8, 1i' u it fj " . i. " n , ir m w it t I A ' THE 1'l.OIUDA PORTS. AND THE SOUTH AND SOUTHWEST. CHEAT SOUTHERN FREIGHT AND PASSEN GER LINK. CENTRAL RAILROAD OK (1 EORGI A AND AT LANTIU AN GI'LK RAILROAD. FOLK STEAMERS A WE UK. TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS, AND SATURDAYS. THE STEAMSHIPS SAN SALVADOR, CiiptaUi Nlckerson, from Pier No. st North lflver. WM. R. O ARRIS ON, Agent, No. 5 Dotviing tircen. MONTGOMERY, Captain Falrcloth, from Pier No. 13 North River. R. LOWDEX, Agent, No. 3 West street. LEO, Captain Dearborn, from Pier No. 16 East River. MURRAY, FERRIS A ((., Agents, Nos. 01 anil tii s.iutU street. OENF.RAL RARNES, Captain Mallory, from Pier No. i.6 N 01 th River. LIVINGSTON, FOX .V CO., Agents, No. ss Liberty street. Insurance by this line ONE HALF PER CENT. Sup-rior accommodations for passengers. Through rates a ad bills of lading lu connection with the Atlantic and Gulf Freight line. 1 1 fir Through ratcH-and bills of lading In connection witn t eiitrm Katiroad 01 Georgia, to a:i point. C. D. OWENS. OEORMK YONGH, Audit C. R. R., No. 409 Uroadway. Agent A. A G. R. It., No. 229 Lroudway. j t t-'it nun iwitu, 111 iJEi4J w zwua vv Anil Hnrlt.nn fnrtfil BVtT WiytTr I) rr rv,r limn. t. S VV 1 F T S U R K TRANSPORTATION COMPANY. DESPATCH AND SWIKTSURE LINES, 1 caving daily at 12 M. and b P. M. The steam propuirers of this company will com mence loading on the 8th of March. Through In twenty-four hours. Goona 'orworded to any point free of commission Freiehts taken on accommodating terms. Appiy to WILLIAM M. I5AIRD A CO., Agents, 5 No. 132 South DELAWARE Avenno. 1 o R ST. THOMAS AND BRAZIL 1 I MTED STATES AND BRAZIL STEAM SHIP COMPANY. EICULAR MAIL STE aMLRS sailing on the 23d of evi rv month. MhRKIAIAf'K, Cartaln Wler. Mil 'I'll A Me RICA, Ciiptula E. L. Tlnklepaugh. NObTH AMEhlCA, Captain G. li. Slocum. '1 liene splendid steamers s.v'l on schedule timo.and mil at St. Thomas, Para, Pernamtmco, Uahia, and Rio de Janeiro, going and returning. For engage luents of freight or passage, apply to WM. M. OAKRISOX, Agent, 12 lot No. !i Rowling-green, New York. FOR NEW YORK via Dela ware aud RarlUn Canal. EXPRESS STEAM ROAT COMPANY. liie eteam Propellers of tho Una will commence loading on the 8th instant, leaving daily aa usnaL TU ROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going ont of No York, N'.rth, East, or West, free of comuilsalon. Freights received at low rates. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., Agents, No. 12 a DELAWARE Avenue ' JAMES II AND, Agent, No. J PLWALLStreet, New York. 8 4? CORDAGE. ETOi CORDAGE. Manilla, Sisal and T&rred Ccrdagt At Lowest New York Prices and freights. KDW1M H. KITI.EU ofe CO.s ? Suitor, TKHTHBt. snd GKRMAKTOvrR Avenue, Store. Ho. 23 31. WATKB St. and a E DELAWAH ' Avinne. 412 12m PHILADELPHIA! ; WHISKY, WINE, ETO. & f3 cC ALL. Ko. 120 Walnut and 21 Granite ti IMPOUTKK.3 OS ErandleB, Wine, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc.; WHOLES A LS DKALKK3 IN PURE RYE WHISKIES, IW BOND AND TAX PAID. tSlpl FURNITURE. ETC. HOVER'S TATEKT SOFA BED. In consequence of certain parties representing; thut thtlr to:u Reds and Lounees ate of my patent, 1 btg leave to in'orm the public, that my SufA Red la lor Hale only at MOORL' CAM PiON'S and ALLEN & ULOTHf H'N, and at the Manufactory, No. 83(1 South SECOND Street 1 li!s novel Invention Is not In the least compli cated, having lo cords or roi es to pull In or Jer to reculate, or rrops to keep It np wheu in the form of a bedsterd, vvhleh are nil vey tms.t'e and liable to get out of repair. The heosrend Is formed by turn ing cur the ends, or closing them whea tae Sora is wunud. Ko. 230 SOUTH SECOND STREET, 12 2 tufiStrp PHIL VCELPHI A. CLOTHS, OASSIMERES, ETO. Q L O T H HOUGH. HUDCR.j no. 11 Worth WIH OfB Street, 8!ga Cf the Golden Lamb. h of new styles of FAKOY OASSIME11E3 And standard makes of DOK.SK.lNd, CLOTHS and' coatings, (ssainwi j AT W HOLES ALS AND RETAIL. ' SAXON GREEK FJEVER FADES, 8 1 am Com Exchange, Dag Manufactory. JOHN T. BAILEY, XT. E. Cor. WATEH and MARKET SU KOFB AND TWINE, RAGS and BAGGING, fot Clam, Flour, halt, buper-fUiwpUnUj of Liuiu, Ron Dust, tlo. Large snd small orTJNY 8AQ3 constancy lUUdt Alao, iJh BA'JUHk