2 THE DAI1A nENINO TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1871. enniT of tub press. EDITORIAL OriSIONS Of TMH LBADINO JOURNALS X7TON CURRENT. TOriOO COMPILED BVBBX AT FOR THH KTKtI3t TELHaHTH. RUFFIANISM ON BAILS. Frtm 0 S. T. ZVikunA It ia getting to be ft sari on 8 question whether the cars of some of our city passen ger linos are not, at certain hours of the Bight, the most dangeroas plaoea to which a respectable citizen caa resert. The murder ous attack upon Mr. Pntnani, last Wednesday evening, occurred in a reapeotable part of the city, and at a time when the streets ought to be comparatively safe. Yet it was a long while before any assistance was rendered to the dying nan, and we may alaaost pay it wan by mere aaoident that the mur derer was arrested. Foster, at any rate, went home without molestation, if he had not been reooguized by who knew hiin, he would probably Bad, one have escaped soot free. The ceniuion complaint that the police are never at hand when they are wanted is unfair. The beats are long, and though the men be never so watchful and zoalous, murder may easily be committed without their knowledge. The alarming fact suggested by the Fataani homicide is that etreet-cara afford Bach a safe and convenient field of operations for the robber, the bruiser, and the tipsy roue, unless drivers and con ductors can be made to take some other view of their duties than now, seems to be ac cepted. It ia hard to read the newspaper acoounts of this tragedy without indignation at the brutal indifference of the oonduotor who could hurry away anal leave a dying man senseless in the road, and a mueh stronger feeling toward the driver, who is now in jail on suspicion of complicity in the outrage. We shall not prejudge these two men. There may be extenuation ef the conduct of the one, and the circumstances which throw sus picion upon the other may be inoorrectly re ported. But the case has called out a great number of commnnications from passengers who have experienced the dangers of the city cars, and there is no doubt that on several of the roads robberies and assaults, winked at by the drivers and conductors, are compara tively common. There are certain lines which the pot-house politicians and strikers are understood to use fur the benefit of their friends, and on which a ruffian who has ren dered good service to the party at primary meetings and on days ef eleotion is always Bure of a situation. And men who know something ef the dark aide of city life have often noticed that piatps and pickpockets on these roads are generally on terms of confi dential intimacy with the company's em ployes. The writer of these lines saw a gang of thieves make an atteoapt upon a gentle man's pocket en a front car-platform, but, being foiled, they jumped oil and esoaped. The oonductor then eauie forward and laugh ingly remarked to the driver that "they didn't do it as well as usual to-night." In re ply to a question, he admitted that the same gang 'wiked his car" every night. "De you mean to say that you let them do it?" "Well, it's none of my business. I'd only get myself into trouble if I said any thing," a sentiment in which the driver heartily concurred. On the same line we saw a tipsy brute fall headlong three times into a lady's lap, and the conductor, when asked to put him out, pluosply refused. We suppose that was "none of his business" either. There is at least one line on which men in the mast offensive stage of drunkenness have full license to annoy other passengers and terrify women; on which respectable ladies are hardly safe from insult at any time, and if in sulted will get no protection from the con ductor. We do not mean the line on whioh Mr. Putnam was killed; but it seems, from the events of Wednesday evening, that the regulations of that road also give drunken men the right to do pretty much as they please in the cars, provided they have paid five cents and are acquainted with the driver. It has been proposed to remedy these dis orders by giving railroad hands the power to make arrests, holding the companies respon sible for whatever abuse they may make of their authority. That plan would probably Aggravate the evil in a city like New York. Oonduotors have already the right to expel from their cars anybody who is dangerous to the other passengers, or who offends against deoenoy by intoxication, profanity, and soon. What we want is an order from the compa nies that this right shall be rigidly exeroised. Conductors must understand that their duties are not confined to making time, paoking passengers, and collecting tares. They are bound to protect their passengers in person and property. They are not to laugh while pockets are picked, nor to look oa while women are abused by drunkards, nor to let the friends of the driver chaee young ladies from one corner of the car to another, and then dahh out the brains of any gentleman who interferes to protect them. Here is a lesson from the mournful tragedy of last week which surely can be learned without much trouble. While the horror of that assassination is still freh, we wish a few of the directors of city car companies would spend a day and night in travelling over their lines and seeing for themselves the rampant ruffianism for which they are re sponsible CAN THE GEItMANS UNITE WITH AME RICAN UEPUBLICANS? From the AT. Y. Tivte. In the comments made by some of our con temporaries on our recent articles urging the necessity of incorporating more of the German-American population ia the Repub lican ranks, there have been assumptions made which we desire, once and for all, to correct. We have not been urging a "boundless revel of lager," as a means of winning over these voters, as the Tribune persists in stat ing, nor, as assumed by the Brooklyn Union, have we recommended giving up "American habits" for German. What we arge is simply this: The Republican party wh not formed to support reforms in drinking habits any more than to advance reforms in religion. It has its definite municipal and national objects in the field of politics, objects whioh are sufficiently remote and snlfloiently diffi cult of attainment to satisfy the most ener geuo ana araeni reiormer. xuey are pri marily to preserve the fruits of the war at the (South, to conduct the National Government economically and with careful regard to the resources of the nation, and to promote muni cipal purity and honesty. The latter object in New York city just now looms np over all others, and affects the daily comfort and prosperity of every in habitant. To attain this, to purify the city from official corruption and dishonesty, to restore ita good name and make its citi zenship an honor rather than a disgrace, we need the votes of a large body of respectable and orderly citizens, who are now mainly against us we rutin the Ger man-Americans of New York State. These, though substantially in sympathy with the Republicans and bitterly opposed to the Catholic Irish, are driven from our ranks by the attempt of many ef our friends to urge extreme abstinence legislation on the party. We need not say to the readers of the Times that we have the highest respect for the motives and objects of the "Temperance" party. We should regret seeming in any way to obstruct their legitimate and moral work. They are struggling with the most gigantio evil of modern civilization, and they do it consistently by themselves abstaining en tirely from even innocent indulgence. Still, their field is the moral one, not the political. Extreme legislation will only produce reac tion. The Republican party is, moreover, not the organization for their efforts. They should fori a "total abstinence" party, apart from all political organizations. Neither can we forget, when these reformers urge ex treme legislation for the laboring classes, that the great majority of the American mid dle classes do new in their own homes in dulge in moderate and innocent drinking, which such lawa would not check. It is also a great mistake, whioh those who have argued against us in this matter have made, that the Germans demand nothing but unbounded license. The Germans, it is true, have had for generations very different sooial hafcits from our own. They are mainly na tives ef wine countries, and, as is the custom of such people the world over, are in the habit of drinking, in family and socially, somewhat freely ef light beers and wines, which are much less alooholio than our eider. As a general thing, they are less given to in toxication than our own people or the Irish. In arriving here, under a different climate, with stronger liquors in use and dearer wines, and among a people of different sooial cus toms, the more sensible part of them see the propriety and necessity of somewhat changing their habits. They behold every day, in the Irish quarters of the city, and in the Ameri can bar-rooms, the frightful effeets of unre strained whisky and rum drinking. They see the long roll of crimes against persons and property every Monday morning, committed on the Sunday in our corner groceries and rum shops. Now, we should be doing vio lence to all that wo know of the good sense of the German-Amerioans, if we did not sup pose that they were open to any reasonable compromise on the subject of publio drink ing. There ia one, for instance, very simple and practical, which has not at all been suffi ciently considered, but which would make a vast practical difference in publio tempe rance; that is, a law forbidding the sale of aBy liquor in places where provisions were sold, thus taking away the incessant tempta tion from laborers and women who are run ning up acoounts or making purohases in groceries. Then, again, the distinction which could be easily made between selling alcoholio liquors and beers. Or still further, the permitting the opening of beer gardens on Sunday afternoon. Any, or all of these compromises would, we believe, be accept able to the great majority of the German Americans, simply on the ground of publio policy and general welfare; the community having tne riont to preserve a part or one day for its own repose or order, and to forbid dangerous stimulants to the working and other classes when they were most likely to be tempted to criminal actions. Our own reformers, however, would unhesi tatingly reject any such compromises, oa the ground of conscience. But the sensible and wise citizen, seeing that in a great cosmopoli tan city like thia he could not make all the people what he would have them, either in religion or morals, would be glad of the second best thing to presorve some order aid temperance, and cheok extreme indul gence and crime. United, the German and American Republicans could accomplish this; separated, we have what we see now corrup tion in government and unlimited lioense in social habits. DEMOCRATIC DISTRUST OF THE PEOPLE. From JIarper't Weekly Edited by Get. Wm. Curtis.) One of the most suggestive faots in our po litical history is that the Demooratio party fcaa been for many years the organization of all the aristoeratio and anti-American elementa of our society. Twenty yeara ago the sole great polioy of that party was the extension and confirmation of slavery. The slave-holding class was as haughty, although not as re fined and educated, an aristooraoy as any ia the world. In circles where the "Southern" influence was supreme the politioal and social sentiment was purely medieval. Under the dominance of thia sentiment in the Southern States all the guarantees of liberty were de spised, and ita express constitutional stipula tions were disregarded. Yet thia aristoeratio clans and this sentiment called themselves Democratic, and absolutely controlled the Democratie party. At the same time every young man becoming interested in politics observed that if any body had a cynioal con tempt for the people, or disdained their capa city to govern themselves wisely, and ex tolled a "strong," paternal government, like that of Austria, he was sure to bo a Demo crat. And at length, when the aristocratic interest, fearing to lose control of the Govern ment, attempted its destruction in order to found a new system upon the worst form of human slavery, the conspiracy was perfected in a Democratic cabinet and Congress, was maintained in the field by Democrats, and was morally sustained by the Democratic party. The attempt to destroy a free popular government by those who called themselves Democrats having failed, the restoration of the Union followed. Against the protesta tions of the Democratic party emancipation had been effected, and the disturbed States were full of two classes the freedmen and the late rebels. True to ita aristocratic in stinct, the Democratic party struggled to re tain all that could be saved of slavery, and established black codes, introducing among freemen a system of caste. The mischiefs were evident, and the scheme was defeated. Equal civil rights were seoured by the equal ballot, and this also against the most strenuous hostility of the party called Democratic Throughout the epoch of reconstruction the policy of equal rights among American citizens, which ia the distinction of the American system, was dog gedly resisted by the anti-Amerioaa and aris toeratio spirit which inspired the Democrats; and the party which had attempted the over throw of the Government because its lawful tendency seemed to be adverse to the exten sion of slavery, and which sullenly demanded that those whom it could not keep slaves should not be made equal citizens, denounced the party of liberty and union as despotio, because it would not immediately deliver the freedmen to the mercies of those whose bands were yet dripping with the blood of loyal citizens. It is not less observable that the tone f the Democratic press, as it ia called, is in har mony with this tendency to distrust the people. Through the war it alluded gently to the British Tories who favored the rebel lion, and sneered at the English Liberals. When Goldwin Smith, one of our best friends, came to thia country in 180 1, thin press steadily depreciated him and hU work in influencing English opinion. Meanwhile, true to the same instinct, the most servile lackeys of the French Emperor were to be found in the American Democratic pres. Abroad it toadied to Louis Napoleou and patronized John Bright, while at home it steadily ridiculed theunfortnnate colored citi zens, sneered at the Southern leaders who hon orably accepted the results of the war, and heaped the most fulsome adulation upon thoso who did not. The first Democratic National Convention after the war was controlled by the game old spirit of hatred of equal popular lights. Even the earthquake had not shaken off the dominance of the slave-holding aris tocracy. So abject had been the submission of the party to a spirit utterly antagonistic to American principles that it was helpless in the graRp of Wade Hampton and his Southern friends, and the Democratic party, therefore, went into the last Presidential eleotion, as it had entered upon the elections of a genera tion, as the party of hostility to equal rights and aristocratic distrust of the poople. The latest illustrations of this spirit are not less significant. Among the most striking is the alliance of the Democratic party with the most deppotio and reactionary school of the Rowan Catholic Church. That Chnroh h a clearly defined political policy in this coun try, which is fatal te the permanence of a free popular system, and of that policy the Demo cratic party is the supple servant. So fearful is it of offending that Church that the Demo cratic press is either silent upon the political regeneration of Italy or sneers at it, while it is forced by the same fear to fawn upon the Church by depreciating the importance of Dr. Dollinger s excommunication. So also in tho Democratic Congressional caucua to prepare an address to the people, Senator Saulsbnry, of Delaware, is reported to have said that the Democratic party of hid State would not con sent to acquiescence in the equal rights of citizens; and the representative man of the patty from the West has taken the same ground, and is sustained by the most influ ential Southern Democratic presses and poli ticians. But in the State of New York, where the party is thoroughly organized under the Tammany leadership, the contempt for the people is most manifest. Without permit ting even the reading of their edicts in the Legislature, and, of course, without tolerating debate, the Demooratio leaders have applied the usurpation of the Erie bill to municipal government. Officers whom the people had elected for a year or for two years are re tained in office for two and three years more than their elected term ! The leaders have also decreed that four officers in the city, two of whom only were elected by the people, and one of whom has bad his term ex tended after election for two years more, shall levy and disburse all the city taxes ! The details pf this imperial system we have heretofore exposed. It is so ingeniously con structed that while, as in Louis Napoleon s in France, there is the form of a popular election, the authority and terms of subse quent appointment are such that the whole power resides in officers who are not elected by the people, and whoso terms are more than double that of the appointing offioer, who, by the enormoua concentration of patronage in their hands, is nezessarily their puppet and tool. Executive responsibility is thus annihilated; and such is the total disre gard of the ordinary safeguards of a free popular system in a party which has for more than a generation despised eqnal rights, and defended slavery ns the foundation of fro institutions, th.it if the Democratic leaders had decided that the terms of the appointed which are the real offices in the system should be twenty years instead of five, the decision would have been ratified wit!a the same utter disregard of the ordinary forms of legislation. In presence of such faots party heat is im pertinent. The question is of the practicabil ity and permanence of American institutions. Here is a party which has always opposed equal liberty, which instinctively affiliates abroad with the most absolute and reaction ary policy, which at hone is tho ally of the JRoman Church in its assault upon the publio school system, which includes the Ku-klux and every enemy of the Union, and which now, in the State of New York, strikes with the Erie bill at the right of property-holders to elect their agents, and by its amended charter abolishes popular government in the city. 'Ibis party is strong, rich, organized, unscrupulous. It is the servant of the com bined capital of enormous corporations, and its corrupt methods are so notorious that of themselves they justly excite anxioty for the future of the country. It is supported by ig norance, by class jealousy, by hatred of race, by disaffection to the Government. Is this a party which can safely obtain control of the national administration!1 It is a patriotio, not a party question. It appeals to every intelligent Democrat, and it appeals especially to those Republicans who, in presence of such a peril, ardently engage in the quarrel of their party in New York. It appeals no less to the Republicans of Ohio and of Missouri who seek to raise the party (standard an effort in which we cordially sympathize that they do it in a manner that will strengthen onr own party, and not the enemy. It appeals to the American faith in the people and in free popular institutions, tnat it shall defeat those who distrust and de spine both, and who are leagued fast with the foes of intelligence and liberty. Indeed, the only doubt of the issue in 1872 springs from indifference or blindness to the fact that the paramount question is whether whatever the faults of Republican measures and men the party that we have described, whatever its professions may be, can safely be intrusted witn tne uovernment. THE GERMANS IN POLITICS AND PENN SYLVANIA. From the If. T. WorUi. One of the worst features of the war car ried on by the railroad corporations against the coal miners and their association is the attempt to create national antagonisms be tween tne working inon of diuerent racea employed in the mines, as well as among the inhabitants generally throughout the ooal regions. A month ago the agents of the com panies thought they had Buooeeded in break ing np the union by meana of jealousies stirred up among tne 'jermana, Irish, Scotch, and Welsh against the two chief officers of the association, who are English by birth. But the men were wise enough to see through the scheme, and by their own voluntary action restored the most perfect harmony. Thia time the companies have been shrewder. It appears that the men whom they engaged in Castle Garden and sent up on a special train so aa to arrive at Soranton in the mid dle of the night were Germans; and when some of the men of the union were suspuoted of an intention to interfere with them the whole German population of the neighbor hood was appealed t j to protect their countrymen against the "vUlmioua Irish," who were said to be at the bottom of it. But the Germans, however much they may deter mine to proteot their countrymen from in justice, are not likely to permit themselves to be used "ttrn anderen Leulen die Kas'.ankn avs dem Fever tu holen.' They of all peo ple in the world understand bow that game has been played on them for a century past, and how the persistent playing off of sue rationality against the other Prussinn against Badenser, Austrian against Saxon cheated tbem of their liberties. They can see the role which the radical party has sketched out for them in politics admirably mpresnnted in a recent number of Harper's Wfk'n, where a German and an Irishman are playing see-saw upon a barrel, while a radioal bank, railroad, and tariff monopolist has his hand in their pockets and his jug at the spigot. Thia is the rtle which the Germans are expected to pixy in national politics as well as in the coal miners' strike. So, at least, would the radical monopolists have it. JOHN-JACK. From the GoUcn Age (Edited by Theodore Tilttm). John-Jack, in the story, was an eccentric individual, who fanoied he was two persons in one John tho good, and Jack the bad. These two in one often argued violently with each other John reasoning against Jack's evil courses, and Jack vindicating himself on the ground of his innate depravity, botne- times John would get a strong grip on Jack, but more often Jack reigned dominant over John. Between the two, whoever was in the ascendancy, there was a civil (or rather an uncivil ) war an unending feud which agi tated the one general and tempest-tossel breast of double and divided John-Jack. In like manner, for a few months past, the two wings of the Democratio party the better and the worse, the humane and the cruel, the law-abiding and the Ku-klux have been wrestling with each other in a John- Jack strife. The World, and some of its followers at the North, have uttered the reasonable voice of John, saying, "bygones must be bygones; the amendments must be suatained; and the negro shall be unmo lested. But, on the other hand, a dozen or more of tho old-fashioned fire-eating presses throughout the South, with some at the North to borrow and propagate their 11 erues, have replied in the temper of Jack, basing, "We mean to repudiate the amend- ments; we Bhall show no quarter to the negro; and we are reaching out our bloody hand into the past to bring back the old regime." And so a John-Jack controversy rages within the Democratio party; a debate between its inner voices, but heard outside; a colloquy between its nobler and its baser self; a struggle which may end in the victory of reason on the one band, or or madness on tne otuer. Just at this point, the Democratic members of Congress have issued aa address to the people of the United States a sort of Parthian arrow which, in their rt treat from Washing ton, they have let fly at the Federal Adminis tration. Their attitude towards the Republi can party does not interest us; thia attitude is, of course, a partisan hostility expressed in criticisms more or less just; but the policy which they propose for the Demooratio party their own future career excites our pro found attention. Having spoken, what have they said? Ia it the language of John or Jackr It is a mid-way, non-committal, half-muteness, in which we hear neither John's declaration of good intent, nor Jack's counter-statement of purposed misohief. There is the best of reasons for this diplo matic vagueness. The Democrats in Con gress, who are the authors of this address, consisting, as they do, both of bad and good men, or, in other words, both of Johns and JacKH, war ted their document to utter, not a discordant, but a harmonious voice; and aa the whole body of signers could not speak colleotively either as John or aa Jack, the pronunciamento waa made to exclude every thing Johnsonian on the one hand, and every thing Jacksonian on the other. No party prospectus was ever more meaningless on the chief point concerning which the people to whom it is addressed want to know its mean ing; and that is, the future polioy of the Democratio party in referenoe to the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments. On this momentous subject, this address is what Rufus Cboate would have styled "a glittering generality." The Democratio party itself does not know what policy this manifesto manifests whether John ia determined that Jack shall cot interfere with the amendments, or whether Jack ia to pnt a gag in John's mouth, and then "cry havoo and let slip the dogs of war." John takes up the document and reads what it says of "the rights which every freeman cherishes," and of "the best guarantees of law and order," and of throw ing round "the humblestcitizen, wherever he may be, the protecting regla oi those safe guards of personal liberty which the fundamental laws of the land assure:" all this John reads with delight, and then says to Jack, "This means that the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments are to be sustained, and the negro is to be protected under them;" but Jack replies in hot blood, "It means no suoh thing. On the contrary, just as for fifty years the Declaration of Independence did not, in the South, include the negro, so now these amendments shall be, to him, a similar mockery. And sinoe there was always in the South, as in the North, a constitutional guarantee of free speech, and yet there was never any lree epoecn in one-nan the Union, so now, in that same half, these constitutional amendments, guaranteeing the civil and politioal liberty of the negro, shall be tieated us Republican promises made to the ear which a Democratio administration shall break to the hope." And so the Demo cratic members of Congress, in their address. have stimulated, rather than healed, the con troversy between John and Jack. Notwith standing the mook gravity, and the sad-embroidered solemnity, and the semi-pathetio sweetness of thia manifesto, it ia nevertheless "a trumpet of an uncertain sound," It fore casts neither one policy nor another. It gives to assurance whether the Democratio party mean to protect the negro against the Ku klux, or to re-enforce the Ku-klux against the negro. Sitting as independent critios of the politi cal situation looking dispassionately on a game which we have no band in playing we give it as our prophetio opiniou (worthless as such horoscopes may be) that John can win, but Jack must lose, the next Presidential election for the Democratio party. Three years ago at Tammany Hall, if John had been allowed to nominate Chief Justice Chase, and Jack had been prevented from nominating Frank Blair, the Democratio party would in all probability have won the great battle which they then lost. Jack's disposition is to rule or ruin. Having ruled the party to ita ruin, the question for that party now to settle id, whether or not John shall rise to the dignity f the succession, and by asserting that moral force which, in ita majestio onset, sometimes stuns, stupefies, and oonquers btutish violence, compel Jack to yield in 1872 to the wholesome oounsels which he despised in lbo8. For our own part, if John shall become the thorough master of Jack, we shall be willing to Bee turn beoome the chosen master of ns all. But at present the John-Jack struggle between the World and the party which it is attempting to inspire a struggle in which the Congressional address-makers have studi ously taken part a struggle which consists or good advice in the North and of midnight assassinations in the South thia struggle between John and Jack is, in its present stnge, like a . controversy between Jacob's voice and Esau a hand. ho can trust a political party whose leader ia John-Jack? FOR SALE. FOR SALE, An Elegant Residence, WITH STABLE, AT CHE8NUT HILL. Desirable location, a few minutes' walk from depot D. T. rRATT, 8 84 8m No. 108 South FOURTH Street. O It H A L K It SPRING LAKE." 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Cabeen, Morgan, Clements, POINTED STONE DWELLING, large lot, 100 by 800 ; well shaded, old trees, etc. Im mediate possession. H. C. THOMPSON, No. 226 W. WASHINGTON SQUARE, Or, J. M. GUMMEY & SONS, 4 26 6t No. 733 WALNUT Street. fFSi FOR SALE LOW, AT CHESNUTgJ Hill, an unusually attractive and complete zfl Country Seat, five minutes' walk from Chesnut 11 ill Depot; six acres of beautiful grounds, fruit, shade, stables, grapery, green-house, lish-pond, etc. Modern pointed stone residence, 13 rooms: One views. RICHARDSON 4 JANNEY, No. 806 S, FOURTH Street. 4 aUhatuS w NINETY-THREE ACRES FARM FOR Bale or exchange for city property, or good merchandise, iltuated In Richland towrshlp, Bucks county. R. J. DOBBINS, 4 27 12t Ledger Building. FOR SALE HANDSOME BROWN-STONE REHIDEENCE, with side yard, BROAD and MASTER Streets. Lot 80 by 200 feet deep to Car Hale street. R. J. DOBBINS, 4 2712t Ledger Building. FOR SALE NEAT THREE-STORY BRICK ia! DWELLING, with Bide yard, No. 1413 N. EIGHTEENTH Street, or will be exchangad. R. J. DOBBINS, 4 27 i2t Ledsrer Building. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE ELEGANTLY i located COTTAGE, at CAPE MAY, furnished throughout. R. J. DOBBINS, 4 87i2t Ledger Building, FOR SALE ELEGANT FOUR-STORY 1 brown-Btone RESIDENCE, No. 191T CUES NUT Street, with Bide yard. Lot 44X by 173 feet. R. J. DOBBINS, 4 27 12t Ledger Building. m FOR SALE-MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEK, li:: and a treat bargain given. A desirable new riweinnir on Walnut street, above Thirtj-fourth. Apply at once to THOMAS ALLEN, No. 8933 CHES- CiVl Btreet, ileal fjHaie Agoiu. tiior TO RENT. CHESNUT STREET STORE to nnriT, IV o. APPLY ON TIM PREMISES. 4 82U FOR RENT, STORE, No. 339 MARKET Street. APPLY ON PREMISES. 4 88tf J. B. ELLISON 4 SONS. SCHOOL LAN COUNTRY SEAT TO RENT. -Manslen House, furnished, ul be let for the summer months: 16 rooma. besldea bath-rooms Icehouse, grapery, green house, aeoblea, kitchen garden, and 9 acres of land. All In complete order, 10 minutes of two railway stations. i'HILIP 8. JUSTICE, No. 14 N. FIFTH Street 4 i4 Philadelphia. TO RKNT FURNISHED DESIRABLE L J Summer KeltneeF Township LUw, School Lane. Geru'ul,,wn- Dcuooiiuo, weJUSTluB BATEMANr A oo f o 1 8f No. 121 South FRONT Street. EDOOATIONAL. JJAKVAKD UNIVERSITY, CAMBRIDGE, MASS., Comprises the following Dopartmonta: Harvard College, the University Lectures, Divinity School, Law School, We Ileal School, Dental School, Lawrence Sclentlflo School, School of Mining and Practical Geology, Bussey Iuaututlon (a School of Agriculture and Horticulture), Botanic Garden, As tronomical Observatory, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Feabody Museum of Arch neology, Episcopal Theological School. The next academic year begins on September 88, 1871. ' The first examination for admission to Harvard College will begin June S9, at 8 A. M. The second examination for admission to Harvard College, and the examinations for admission to the Scienttflo and Mining Schools,; will begin September' 83. The requisites for admission to the College have been changed this year. There la now a mathematical a'ternative for a portion of the classics. A circular describing the new requisites and recent examina tion papers will be mailed ou application. ' , UNIVERSITY LECTURES. Thirty-three courses In 1870-71, of which twenty begin In the week Feb ruary 12-19. These lectures are intended for gradu ates of colleges, trachers, and other competent adults (men or women). A circular describing them will be mailed on application. TnE LAW SCHOOL has been reorganized this year. It has seven Instructors, and a library of 16,( oo volumes. A circular explains the new course of study, the requisites for the degree, and the cost of attending the school. The second half of the year begins February 13. For catalogues, circulars, or information, ad dress J. W. HARRIS, 1 8 8m Secretary. JDGBH1LL SCHOOL MEBCHANTVILLB, N. J., Pour Miles from Philadelphia, The session commenced MONDAY, April 10, 1871. For circulars apply to Rev. T. W. CATTKLU SAFE DEPOSIT OOMPANIE. qBE PENNSYLVANIA C0HPASY FOR INSURANCES ON LIVES AND GRANTING ANNUITIES. Office No304 WALNUT Street. INCORPORATED MARCH 10, 1813. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL $l,O0O,O00. BTJBPLTJS UPWARDS OF $750,000. Receive money on deposit, return i lj on demand. for which Interest Is allowed. And under appointment by individuals, corpora tions, and court, act as EXECUTOKS. AJUAMlS l KA'TOKS, T1UJSTEKS, GUARDIANS, ASSIGNEES. COHvilTTKUS, RECEIVERS. AGRNTS. COLLECTORS, ETC. And for the faithful performance of Its duties aa Bach all Ita assets are liable. CHARLES DUTILH, PaoeldenU William B. Hill, Actuary. DIRECTORS. Charles Dntllh, , Joshua B. Lippincott, Henry J. Williams, William S. Vaux, John K. Wucherer, Adolph E. Hone, Charles 11. Hutchinson. Llmlley Sinvth, George A. Wood, Anthony J. Antelo, Charles S. Lewis, Alexander Diddle, Henry Lewis. MILLINERY. M R S. R. DILLON. NOS. 853 AND 831 SOUTH STREET, FANCY AND MOURNING MILLINERY, CRAPE VEILS. Ladles' and Misses' Grape, Felt, Gimp, Hair, Satin, Silk, Straw and Velvets, Hata and Bonnets, French Flowers, Hat and Bonnet Frames, Crapes, Laces, Silks, Satins, Velvets, Ribbons, Sashes, Ornamental and all Kinds of Millinery Goods. WHISKY, WINE, ETQ. CAR8TAIR8 ft McGALL, No. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Sts., IMPORTERS OF Bias dies, Wines, Gin, Olive Oil, Eta, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PURE RYE WHISKIES, IN BOND AND TAX PAID. 885 Philadelphia .Hardware House. L AV7 N HO WEES IN GREAT VARIETY. JAMR8 M. VANCE A CO., No. 211 MARKET STREET, 4 83 12trp PHILADELPHIA. BARLOWS INDIGO BLUE IS THE CHEAPEST and best article in the market for JBI.l i:iN3 lil.OrllES. It does not contain any acid. It will not Injure the finest fabric. It la put up at WII.TRERHKH'! DKm NTOKR, No. 233 N. SECON D Street, Philadelphia, And for Bale by moat of the Grocers and Druggists. The genuine has both BARLOW'S aud W1LT BEKGEK'S name on the label ; all others are COUN TERFE1T. BARLOWS BT.I7K will color more water than four times the sum weight of Indigo. 8 23 tuths2ui J. T. BARTON. lDLiHOK. 17.aYSTOff A Blc9IAIIOIV( SBIPPIHO A IfD COMUISSIOy MSJtBANT8, No. S COENTIE8 SLIP. New York, No. 18 SOUTH WHARVES, Philadelphia, No. 46 W. PRATT STREET, Baltimore. We are prepared to ship every description ft Freight to Philadelphia, New York, WUmlnytoo, an Intermediate point with promptness and despatch. Canal Boats and Steam-toe t orulahed at the ahortea LOttoa, U B S T O L U V D . Thia new elegant and commodlens flrst-clasa Hotel, JUUireiT .ii,.n l!i.l .hnnliltVII'NTll Now open. Terms, 3 per day. 4 1 im O. W. MULLIN A BRO., Proprietors. GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS. A Full Assortment. OUR OWN GROWTH. COLLINS, WETHKRILL A CO., 8EKD GKOWKtfS, 4 4 tufa tf Nos. 1111 and 1113 MARKET Street. 1ARACAS CHOCOLATE, imported and for sale by 441m No. 129 8. FRONT Street. w PRIME HE A V Y V SEED OATS. COLLINS, WETHKRILL A CO., Seed Growers, Nos. 1111 and 1113 MAKKET Street ALEXANDER Q. OAT TELL A CO., PRODUCE COMMISSION MEKCUANTaV, No. NORTH WHAKVE4 NO. T NORTH WATER STREET, PHILADELPHIA. IXXXlOMM G, CAST. VUIAB CiTTlL