THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, MAROII 25, 1871. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON (STJNDATS EXCEPTED), AT THE EVENING TELEGRAPH BUILDING, No. 108 8. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. TlM rrice is three cent per copy double sheet), or eighteen cents per week, payable to the carrier by whom served. The subscription price by mail is Arine Dollars per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents for two months, invariably advance for the time ordered. SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1871. MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE. A subject of the first importance, which has Dot yet received the general consideration which it deserves, is the great and growing necessity for a national code of laws regulat ing marriage and divoroe. To establish such a code, and to pat a stop to the uncertainty and scandal which exist at present on account of the varying enactments of the several States, a constitutional amendment will be necessary; and those who believe that upon the sanctity of the marriage tie and the restraint of license depend the future safety nd welfare of our social organization, cannot too soon commence to agitate in favor of such an amendment. The Yelverton case and some others which have engaged public attention of late years have shown bow great outrages upon publio decency, not to speak of private rights, result in Great Britain from the varying and conflicting mar , riage laws of England, Ireland, and Sootlaad; and in this country we are only saved from innumerable occurrences of the same kind because marriage is considered merely as a civil compact, and the forms necessary to constitute a legal marriage are of the aim plest description in all of the States. It is in our divorce regulations, however, that the greatest chaos prevails; and scandals of the most outrageous character occur every day through the facilities which are afforded in some of the States for undoing the marriage bonds. In addition to this, the leaders of the women rights movement, forgetful of the fact that, if marriage and divorce are to de pend entirely upon the momentary whims of the contracting parties, the women will be the greatest sufferers, are clamoring for the privilege of free divoroe; so that when either a husband or a wife be comes tired of his or her partner, or discov ers a new "affinity," the marriage may be dissolved, in spite of the claims of children or of society at large. It is obvious at a glance that if these free-love doctrines are allowed to prevail all respect for decency will speedily be swept away. Children will have no natural protectors, and the whole founda tions of religion, morality, and social organi zation will be undermined. Marriage is, from its very nature, something different from a mere business partnership; and those who enter upon it unadvisedly or hastily, or who do not find all their expectations of wed ded bliss realized, cannot be permitted to make society at large suffer for their mistakes or misfortunes. This is one of the relations of life in which society has some claims supe rior to those of individuals, and it is infinitely better that a comparatively few unhappily matched couples should be compelled to en dure their misery as best they mty, and to take care of their children, than that, by a Bystem of free divorce, all the floodgates of the grossest forms of immorality should be opened for the destruction of the nation. No opponent of centralization, however bigoted be may be, can contend that the regu lation of marriage and divorce should not be in the hands of the General Government, or that there should not be uniform laws for the whole country. In fact, the only opposition would oome from the now unimportant and nninfiuential clique of coarse-minded women who profess to believe that they are the vic tims of masculine tyranny; and the only serious obstacle in the way of placing the whole matter in the hands of the General Government is in the difficulty of obtaining the uecary amendment to the Constitution. Xhis difficulty could easily be overoome if sufficient interest were manifested by those who look with horror upon the pernicious doctrines of the advooates of free love, and there are already evils of sufficient magnitude existing under our present system to excite that lively interest in the subject that is de manded if a reform is to be effected. FREE- TRADE D ONKE YS. The American Free-trade Leagae has indulged in the publication of a broad blanket sheet, with tne title of the "Peo ple's Pictorial Tax-Payer." These words are printed at the top of the first page in gor geously illuminated letters, intertwined among which is the motto, "Millions for Revenue, Not One Cent for Monopolists." It is rendered still more attractive by a strip of salt water from which projects an ugly-looking rook labelled "Protection," against which a small vessel having the general appearanoe of a Cape Cod finning smack is being hurled, all of which is intended, if not calculated, to strike the beholder with awe and inspire him with terror. In addition there is a string of donkeys burdened with huge bundles pla carded as "Tax," the said donkeys being represented in every stage of decrepitude, from a alight irregularity in the spinal column to a complete prostration upon the ground, all of which is very hard on the donkeys, especially as they have every appearanoe of being free-trade donkeys. The asinine monotony , of . this melancholy too bagerie is somewhat relieved by the apparition of a meek-looking lamb, on which "Protection," in the guise of a wolf, i about to pounoe. The prospective fate of the iamt free-trade lamb, of course is in tended to distress the beholder, j ust as his Lean is to te touched by the peril of the Cane C?i frijPS Thers ,s Unwise into- duced a delightful Oriental reminlaoenae. which looks like Sinbad the Sailor struggling under the weight of the Old Man of the Sea. Sinbad is discovered in the act of wading through visionary water, but has taken the precaution to pull his trousers up to his knees, by which simple device they have escaped the moisture. Sinbad having taken a sudden turn in his watery ramble, the inscription borne by the Old Man is on the off side, and we are therefore unable to decipher it, much to our regret. Finally, the rear of the procession, or the head of it, as you like, is brought up by a pert-looking terrier a free-trade cur, of course, although there is no visible label to fortify such a presumption. On the inside of the sheet there is a graphia picture of the "Protection Hospital," presided over by a matronly caricature of Horace Gree ley, and crowded with monstrosities, the whole cartoon being surrounded by a grand array of knives and forks, watering-pots, hand-saws, tombstones, coal-scuttles, tallow-candles, and ladies' stockings. Thrown in is an assortment of free-trade buncombe by Mahlon Sands, and the whole is put up expressly for family use, at the low price of five cents. But five cents per copy would not make sufficient return to pay for designing the big-headed, broad stomached, lank-legged infant to whom Horace Greeley is devoting his undivided attention. Hence there is a resort to advertisements, of which there are about eight columns. Of these, nearly six columns are made up of the cards of Birmingham and Sheffield iron manu facturers, English insurance companies, free trade literature, and the like. The character of these advertisements gives an unmistaka ble clue to the whole production. It is sim ply a small shot aimed at American industry from the English battery, serving but one purpose, and that is to show that the active free-traders of this country are nothing more nor less than the agents of British manufac turers. THOSE EXILES OF ERIN. The struggle over O'Donovan Rossa and his companions in exile appears to have subsided for the time being. These illustrious per sonages imparted by their presence additional grandeur to the grand pageant in which the New York Demoeracy indulged on St. Patrick's Day in the morning; and having had by that time a surfeit of ovation and recep tion, they settled down to more serious busi ness. It is scarcely worth one's while to be an exile, unless it can be turned to some sub stantial account. Rossa and his compatriots, albeit amateurs in the exile line, are by no means so ingenuous that they do not comprehend the true func tions of an exile, and discern the rare privi leges which fall in the way especially of an exile from Erin in these United States. Are there not hod-carriers to be plundered, and kitchen-girls to be filched from ? Is the Irish Directory business played out? Are Head Centres, and Central Organizers, and the likes o' them utterly undone ? Is the cause of Irish independence an accomplished fact ? . lias the Snnbnrat . sank into th sea, along with the snakes ? O'Donovan Rossa and his compatriots opine not; and they have lost no time in organizing for a grand campaign against the hod-carriers and the kitchen-girls, whose scanty earnings at tract their attention as the ill savor of the carcase allures the bird of prey. So they or ganize a Central Directory, or something of that sort, for the custody of the funds which are to purchase the redemption of Ireland, and condescendingly invite all the Irishmen and Irishwomen in America to drop their old associations and send forward their cash to the headquarters of the new one. But they have run counter to opposition from an unanticipated source. John Savage has been in the Irish Redemption business for some years past, and knows just what percentage it pays. His experience has taught him just how far kitchen-girls and hod-carriers may be bled without fatal effect. And Savage is naturally loth to give up his calling at the bidding of this self-constituted Direc tory. At a session of the Fenian Brotherhood in New York a day or two ago. Savage let fall some plain words. With one stroke of his tongue he stripped O'Donovan Rossa and the rent of the exiled crew of the flimsy conceit which had before disguised them, "lie took occasion, says the re port, "to rebuke the exiles for their dicta torial course in seeking to destroy the Fenian organization in this country, that they might establish a secret directory, composed of themselves, for the custody of the funds." Mr. Savage's head is perfectly level, as a man with half an eye can perceive without a spe cial effort. O'Donovan Rossa is after the "custody of the fands." So is Savage, and hence his rebuke of the exiles. It is not that Savage is opposed to the systematic plundering of hod-carriers and kitchen-girls, under the vain pretense that their contributions are to be directed towards the liberation of Old Ireland. Savage evidently favors "the funds," objecting only to undue haste on the part of the exiles in constituting themselves a secret directory for their custody. If Savage were ready to throw himself into the gap, without a thought of "the funds," he would not care a stiver who became the custodian, bo long as the money accumulated in some body's bands. If O'Donovan Rossa and his immediate companions in exile had their eyes on the gap alone, they would not attempt to disturb Sivaue in hia stronghold, nor indulge in unseemly strifa over "the custody of the funds." Both seta of Liberators are after "the funds," the exiles being a little more eager than their rival, because they are a trifle more seedy. Eash crowd is ready to leap into the gap, but it is the gap in the pockets of hard-fisted Irishmen and red aimed Iiishwomen that invites their head long plunge. They are after gold, not gire, The blood-letting trick has long since ceased to be attractive, but "the custody of the funds" is a mighty good thing, as long as there are mors fools among our fellow-citizens of Irixh birth or descent than the fojl- killers can attend to. There is no help for it, we suppose. The redemption of the Emerald Isle will not cense to be a stumbling-block to men and women who need all they can earn for their present sup port or future COmfort. Bst when, the cus todians of the funds fall out, the rivalry ovef the spoils promises to be instrumental in opening the eyes and closing the purses of a few, whose meagre savings would otherwise fall into the clutches of the Head-Centres, Senators,Gentral Organizers, Exiles, and suoh. THE IMPEND IN O ISSUE. The free-traders were never more active than at the present moment, and the tariff question will probably become the paramount issue of the next great political struggle. The Democracy, outside of Pennsylvania, present an unbroken front in favor of free trade; and the few Republicans who favor that disastrous dogma will do more harm than good to the Republican party. The battle of American ndustry must soon again be refought against the gathering clans of its allied foes, and Re publicanism will find in this conflict a cause worthy of its steel. In the present condition of this country protec tion is the natural ally of individual freedom, while free trade is the sure forerunner of vassalage and industrial slavery. Labor must ever continue to be the great source of wealth; and any system which unnecessarily transfers to foreign hands a large portion of the labors involved in the supply of American wants diminishes, to that extent, the productive power of the Union and the prosperity of American citi zens. Enoouraged by the increase of free trade strength in the lower branch of Con gress, the New York importing houses which represent British manufacturing firms are making desperate exertions to influence pub lio sentiment in favor of their own special interests and the interests of their British masters. The lavish use of British gold for this purpose is not even denied, and Americans are openly insulted by these pre sumptuous efforts of foreigners to instruct them in regard to their politioal duties, and to make this country a missionary ground for. the advocates of false and pernicious British systems of political economy. John Bull would not hesitate a moment to drive out of his domains, or to imprison or hang, any Americans who attempted, on English soil, to influence English politics by a lavish expenditure of American money; and the English agents who have' organized a vigorous campaign against our industries deserve no better treatment here. But as free discus sion prevails in this country, the people can give vent to thei r indignation most effectu ally at the polls, and from this time forth they should take special pains that no candidate suspected of free-trade tendencies receives their votes. The late reports from Dominica indicate that Cabral is making headway ogainst the forces of Baez, and by the time Congress is ready to favor annexation the obioken-thief instead of the present President may be in power. 11 avis g already Ku-klux Klans in the South, Greasers in the Southwest, Sitka Indians in the Northwest, and Kanucks in the North, the nation scarcely needs to seek new troubles in a new quarter. NOTICES. Spring Sale IK Fine Clothing for Gentlemen and Boys. An entirely new stock. By far the largest and most varied, the moat elegantly made up, in new and stylish modes, well sewed and nandaomely trimmed; grave and gay, to snlt all tastes boys of six or men of sixty. Scale of Prices Cheap, Cheaper, Cheapest. Wanamaker 4 Bbowh have now opened, after months of preparation, a stock of Spring and Summer Clothing, which far surpasses even their former efforts. This they will dispose of by a Lively and Quick Sale, to Insure which they have put the lowest figures possible on every article in store, Advice Corae and see for yourself, secure a nrit pick'' In the stock. Register jour orders early In the Custom Depart ment. , . A ok your wife to examine our Boys' Clothing. Buy your Slilrta, Cravats, etc, In our enlarged Gents' FurnishlDg Department. Oak Hall Building, The Lakgest Clothino House in Philadelphia, S. E. Cor. Sixth and Market Streets. A Great Sewing-machine Mart. From No. T30 Chesnut street, running back at a right an?le to Eighth street, are located the admlrably-ntted-up warerooms (In this city) of the Grover A Baker Sew ing Machine Company, presided over by our popular fellow-citizen, George W. Eddy, Esq. A visit there within the last few days convinced as of what there was already little room for doubt, that the Grover fc Baker Sewing Machines have the deepest hold upon the affections of our people. Always a favorite, the recent improvements which have been applied to it render it well-nigh Indispensable In every household In fact, it performs admirably what no other ma chines attempt. Last year' the aggregate sales of Grover A Baker machines largely exceeded those of any previous season, and the present Indications are that the current year will witness the greatest In crease in the demand for these machines that has yet been realised. Indeed the time seems to be rapidly approachlDg when, both In America aad Europe, no house will be considered completely fur nished without the presence of a Grover A Baker Sewing Machine, which machines, we may remark, are got up In styles quite commensurate with the most ornately furnished palaoe, while at the same time they are sold In just as good working frames at prices that compare with the most moderate In price. urney Fi t, The Sudden Changes op Temperature, together with the searching winds which are now socoimoion, are causiBg severe Colds to prevail everywhere, and laying the foundations for many cases of Inflamma tion of the Longs, Pleurisy, Asthma, and other Lung Disorders. Prudent people should now take especial precautions to avoid unnecessary exposure, and if unfortunate enough to contract Colds, would do well to resort at once to Dr. Jayne's Expectorant, a safe and reliable remedy, which will not only promptly cure Coughs and Colds, but will relieve and strengthen the Pulmonary and Bronchial organs, and remove all dangerous symptoms. Sold everywhere. TBI PCBITT AND SDPKRIOBITlf Of Dr. t'OltOU'S Nitrous Oxide Uaa forpaiule tootu extravt'oa is ! proverbial. OdtceNo. "3T Walnut street. PHILADELPHIA CLOTH HOUSE HILLUU3 N. W. Corner of EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN MATERIALS LADIES', embraces o very thing, native and Foreign, that is Rare, HE 'S Is ccmpn hen&ive, covering everything that the refined taste of London, Faris, riew York, Eo stop, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, or any of the larger centres, could desire LUPIN'S BLACK DBAPS D'ETE AND BOMB Alt INES, For Gentlemen's Suits and Ladies' Embroidered Sacks. Every variety of Cloths, Cassimeres, and Vestings, for Friends' Wear. ALL KINDS OF LINEN DRILLINGS AND MARSEILLES. WILLIAM T. SWODGRASS $c CO., F. W. Corner of Kinth ar.d Market Streets. fcHEKCx's Mandrake Fills are prepared only by Dr. J. II ScnENCK, and told wholesale and retail at his Principal Offlce. N. 35 North Sixth ST., Philadelphia, and by Tra; g'st- everywhere. Price twtn'j five cents per box. No Curb, No Pay. Forrkbt'3 Juniper Tar For Coughs, Croup, Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis, Sara Throat. Splttlnc or Blood and Lung Diseases. Immediate relief and positive care, or price refunded. N. B The only genuine Is pre pared by Dr. J. Mason Forrest & Co., since 1862. For sale by French, Richards & Co., Tenth and Market, and A. M. Wilson, Ninth and Filbert. Price 85 cents. PURE WINES, Direct from California. Port, Angelica, Mutcatel. and Hock. Also, Fine and very Pure BRANDY, At prices lower than ever offered before, and etroDgly recommended by our best phyalclans. E. BRADFORD CLARKE. (SUCCESSOR TO SIMON COLTON A CLARKE,) S. W. Corner BROAD and WALNUT, 1 31 tuthstMp PHILADB&PIIIA. PAPER HANCINQSi fJACLE, COOKE AND EWIIMG, Paper Hangings, No. 1210 CHESNUT St., 8'8Bmw3mrp PHILADELPHIA. CLOVES. CDESNIT STREET KID OLOYE HOUSE, No. (W. , LADIES' KID GLOVES. "Hartley ' 1185 'rtajou'7 1&5 BARTHOLOMEWS', "Jouvin" 1 8S "La Belle" i "Joseph" 100 CnESNUT Children's 100 Oents' "La Belle" 1 60 GenU' "BirUey" 8 25 STREET HOSIERY. Ladles' Hose, 23. 88, 81c. up. Ladles' English Hose, 35, 38 to KID GLOVE fcoc ' Ladles' Balbrlargan Dose, tints' Hose, 5, 8a up. HOUSE, . (tents' i hose, 31, ssu. up. Gents' Furnishing (ioods, etc PARASOLS, 008 - FANS. COMBS, BlU'KHES, CHESNUT STREET. GLOVES, HDKtfS., CORSETS. We import our Kid Gloves for. and especially to meet, the demands at our Retail Stores, which have iucreased toiucb an extent that we now claim the largfbt aiovH trade In Philadelphia; aad why t on the merits ofour gooos. li'JL fcffEfi CUItUUIU.'iU 0V Grand.'Square and Upright Pianos. GREAT REDUCTION, FIXED PRICES. DUTTON'S PIANO ROOM?, " I is lu)4p b'os. 1124 and 1129 CUESNUf St. IMPORTANT COHLIUKICATION XTOOIfcX THE OF T. HiHTH and IIAEKET Streets, GEjTP.1i oir iron GENTLEMEN'S, AND BOYS' WEAR, ARTE3EfJT OLOTHINQi AY.UtOAl f t Spiin ? CvjMCoatsI Velvet Collar! Silk Breast! Silk Lined! Spring Overcoats! For Boys! Coys!! Boys!!! FA 11 1JETTEK AND CIIEAPEK THAN ELSEWHERE. R0CKH1LL . ft " WILSON, 803 and 605 CHESSUT STREET. .V UNDER 1 HUE 'PUUADUPHJA:PAi Elegance, Fashion, Good Taste, Characterise the' Assortment of Goods We have to submit to Our Customers. Ready-made Clothing of all qualities and styles at reasonable prices. FOR BALEi FOR SALE, AT MERCHANTVILLE, NEW .Tnrn K.irl new (tnnventent. and nn&t(t tuna nnv mill tn hn mm it nled : larffft front nrd and garden ; price moderate. Inquire of E. G. CAT TELL, Merchant ville, or at No. 84 N. DELAWARE avenue, Philadelphia. 3 83 6t fT COUNTRY SEAT AND FARM FOR M Uuj7-mlle stone, and Dear T&oony. Mansion houao and small du elling to le Apply on premites, or ff FOR SALETHAT VALUABLE CORNER property, northwest corner ELEVENTH and LOMBARD streets. Excellent location for store. Cheap. l'OBHefcsion immediate. WILLIAM F. JOHNSON, No. 6i!8 WALNUT Street. iH&ttt G FOR BALK HANDSOME FOVR-STORY IS Dwelling No. SiOlT AH :H Krent, ) by 140 feet u. 34 feet street. H. KINGSTON Ml'C'AV, No. ii W A Lt. UT S treet. If OR EGG'S BRICK MACHINE, Eew, Kever Used, For Sale. CAN REDELIVERED ATOSCE. Address CAPITAL, 1 23 1M 11 ai !wu3, I hlUdelphia Post OOlce. OObb fjwdhn Chaste, and Beautiful. PARTG3EE1T JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE. JTJST OPENED. A LARGE INVOICE OF English Work Baskets, WITH FITTINGS COMPLETE, Just received by steamer Russia. J. E. CALDWELL & CO., JEWELLERS, No. 902 CHESNUT Street, aiastntht PHILADELPHIA. OARPETINOS, ETO. McCAlLULl, CREASE & SLOAN. IMPORTERS OF Spring Importations, NEW DESIGNS IN ALL FABRICS. Now in store; and to arrive, together with the whole lock, are oflered at . I? op ixl ax Prin58, To Insure large tales, Prepararory to Removal In July to our new warehouse, Nos. 1012 and 1014 Chesnut St. HcCALLUM, CREASE k SLOAN, No. 500 CHESNUT Street, 8 1 wsmSmrp PHILADELPHIA. FINANQIAL. JJAVING BEEN APPOINTED AGENTS FOR THE SALE AND EXCHANGE OF TBI NEW UNITED STATES LOAN, We would tender our services to Investors or hold ers of old loans desiring to make exchange. DREXEL & CO., ICO. 84 80UTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA FOR GALE. The Farnitnre of a Flrtt-olati Club Boom, including Billiard Table. WILL BE BOLD LO if. 8 81 tuHisSt Address ''CLUB," this omoe. HIDD DOULE, IN CONSEl'EM'E 09 THE Ai dm-esoe of A. K. MYiln. ha leattvd the Sol Til VUSS bHAUD HTAULKS, snd buying refitted the same with every conve. nlence, reepectlullj asks the patronage of the public lu Bur'pnrtiug (if lliKMOL'SL STABLE OF PHILADELPHIA. A