2 THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1871. SPIRIT OF TUB mB3S. KDITOBIIL OPINIONS 07 TBS LEADING J0UBNA.L1 UPON CTJRBENT TOPICS COMPILED XVEBT DAT FOB THE EVENINO TELEOBAFH. TI1E OniO TLATFORM. From the N. Y. Timte. The action of the Ohio Republicans was looked forward to with interest, not nnmin gled with anxiety, by the best of the party throughout the country. It was felt that the present occasion was a preliminary test of the capacity of the party to move steadily for ward without breaking line, keeping in its tanks both the deliberate and the impetuous. Judging by the synopsis of the resolutions which has reached us, and by the light thrown on the action of the convention by the ante cedents and associations of General Noyes, and by the speech of Senator Sherman, the country will be justified in believing that the Republicans of Ohio fairly represent the Re publicans of the nation, and that no real seed, no live issue has been treated by them with neglect or evasion. In speaking with pride of the past of the party, identified with the. highest triumphs and severest trials of our country, the Ohio platform but expresses the just and solid confidence for which the past affords ample warrant. It is true that mere gratitude is cot sufficient capital for a party to make new ventures with. Rut it is equally true that promises for the future are judged by per formances in the past, and that as long as a party maintains a snbstantial unity it is in evitably and rightly judged by the nature and extent of its actual achievements. Laurels win no new victories, but the army that has its banners wreathed with them has fewer desertions and more recruits than one whose record is, like that of the Democracy, stained with cowardice and treason. In turn ing its attention to the present and future, the Republican party has a right to challenge the closest scrutiny of its previous career. But the Republicans of Ohio do not con tent themselves with retrospect. They un dertake conscientiously and clearly to meet the demands which steadily-developing pub lic opinion makes upon them. They em phatically dissent from that view which would make the party the instrument of extreme protection to special industries and limited sections of the country. .They yield grace fully but decidedly to the conviction which has been gaining ground for these past foar or five years, that the duties on imports have been, and, even after considerable modifica tions, still are unequal in their operation. They pledge the party to the service of making them bear evenly upon all industries, and upon every section of the Common wealth. The Ohio platform also meets the other pressing requisition of enlightened publio opinion, that the civil servioe shall be re formed, and, in approving heartily the prac tical measures adopted by the President, shows the sense of the party in the West that the work shall be done with all possible thoroughness and dispatch. It is well to re member that the purification and reorgani zation of the civil service is a comparatively recent demand. It his grown up wholly since the war, and in a time when the most engrossing questions resulting from the war, and involving the peace, order, and prosper ity of the country, were pressing upon the publio mind with overwhelming urgenoy. It belongs, moreover to a class of questions with which the American people are some what unfamiliar, and to which they have given but little study and enjoyed "praoti cally very little experience. Rearing these things in mind, the temper of the Republican party towards the reform must be accepted as highly salutary and promising. If it is not all that the most ardent and best informed students , of this question would desire, it is quite as assuring as, all things considered, could have been expected. We need not say that deliberate expression from a Republi can convention, in connection with the prac tical step taken by a Republican Congress and President, is worth a thousand of the most explioit vows of the Democracy. Civil service reform in the mouths of the party that in cludes Tammany and which Tammany con trols, is a bitter jest. . If the platform of the Ohio Republicans is less advanced than the opinion of some por tions of the Last on tne question of amnesty in the South, the Southern leaders have themselves to thank for it. . It is Jefferson Davis and Toombs and Stephens that have checked the growth of popular sentiment in favor of amnesty, and it is not to be denied that since the incontinent display of rebel lious feeling on the part of these men, and the reception it has met at tne bouth, the Ohio Convention would have ceased to be representative had it made any unqualified demand for sucn a measure. These points, and many others, were ably treated by Senator Sherman in his speech on the evening of the convention. Witn ad oil rable clearness and energy he exposed the flimsy pretensions of the Democracy, and pointed out the epeciho claims of the lvepubii can party to be trusted with the execution of any reforms desired by the people. lie showed tnat long servioe baa not made turn dull to the changes of Dublio sentiment, and that he. and the body of which he is one of the vete ran members, are prepared to , advanoe steadily and practically to the realization of any well-defined popular purposes. His frank though moderate adhesion ta the advanced positions of the convention is one more of ' the many signs that tne Republican party is to continue to be, as it has long been, the representative and therefore the governing party of the nation. It is only necessary to add that in most essential respects the posi tion of tne Iowa Republicans, whose viotory is certain, Is the same as that of the Ohio Republicass taken in the face of a determined foe a fact which adds to the significance of both. t ' . i THE PARTY OF FOGIES.' 1 From th$ irr. World " ! ' ,' V7' Politics in every free country, politios most or ail in sucn a eoantry &s the United states, is a business . for planters, not for erave-di! gers. It concerns iUolf not with raining monuments to the dead, but with providing nomes ana a career tor ine living. Tne lte- Publicans make a great outcry at Jefferson . for stirring up , tne dry bones of the v i , war at the ' South; but Jefferson ., , , doing there what they them- re. lie is an anacuronum, I " i i i , .n. If you should take - - - ' ' ear and bid him '' I"-''1,' VV j" ' ' ',,' needfulfor i i- : .. .'. -a would ! W,.-- ;;:.; ,;'; w the ... ' . .-o . -i i -- - ' 'n patty .., . .nin (with "-c" ' '' v ' "' ea.l-b.eali" tiling ot-r .a luo after iel off. It ii 'He!f ta j witu- Nor need this surprise us when we consider how completely this Republican party is domineered over by veterans lagging saperfla. ous on the political Btage. Its leaders are men who have grown gouty and rhenmatio in the clover of place and power. The ma- iority of its Senators and Representatives iave haunted Congress for years. Sumner and Wilson, for exampte, go back in Federal notoriety more than two-thirds of a genera tion. Ranks has been a Massachusetts idol for a time whereof the memory of man run. neth not to the contrary. Whether Horaoe Greeley really ate the first pie which ever sate on the Stuyvesant pear tree in the time of "Hardkoppig Pete" may perchance be matter of doubt. It is not matter of doubt that he fought a good fight for Harry Clay at a' time when the grown men of to-day were behaving as improperly in their nurses' arms as Shakespeare says babes so placed always do. So is it with the whole calendar of the Re publican saints. Their journalists, like the great agriculturist we have just mentioned, and his friend the trusted Forney, have come down to us with the brave of Bunker Hill from "a past generation." Who remembers a time when the voice of Chandler was not heard in the Senate? Who can recoil by an effort of the will from the present hour into a season of the House of Representatives in nocent of Bingham or of Kelley? Were these venerable men able to agree upon any set of political maxims, their individual imbecility might be overbalanced by their collective force. This, however, they are unable to do, and the world is consequently afflicted with the spectaole of a long hucksters' wrangle between the old women of a political market which already threatens ta tumble to the earth. New men of mark and force com ing forward they have none. Friends and foes alike recognize the aooessions of capa city and character which the Senate has made from the Democratic party in the persons of Mr. Bayard, Mr. Casserly, and Mr. Thur- man. 'ine only latter-day Republicans who have appeared in that body whose names are ever mentioned in its debates are Mr. Conk ling, of New York, and Mr. Carpenter, ot Wisconsin. And of these the Tribune itself contemptuously tells us that the one is an inflated turkey-gobbler and the other a pin feather popinjay. The youth and promise and energy of the country belong by the irre versible order of nature to the progressive Democracy. The fogies and the fatuity of the land are barnacled about the place- holding veterans of radicalism. It were reason enough, were all other reasons wanting, to hope for the approaching overthrow of the Republican party, that all its great columns are visibly cracked, caloined, or toppled over with old age. , THE LESSON OF PANICS. From the N. Y. Tribune. The periodical braying in the mortar of that class of beings upon whom the operation has been called ineffectual by high autho rity, took place in Wall street on Wednesday. A knot of cool and determined gamblers con spired to spoil a number of their confreres by buying in open market a greater amount ot a certain stock than existed. The prelimi nary measures of this plot were taken with sucn skill and good fortune that npon the morning of Wednesday this combination had bought of the securities of a corporation whose capital stock amounted to 170,000 shares the enormous quantity of 273,000. If the conspiracy had been carried squarely through the day the sellers would have been at the mercy of the buyers, and the latter might have exacted any prioe they saw tit for the stocks in their posses sion, and those which they bad con tracted for. But at this very point the or ganization showed its element of weakness. The old maxim of "honor among thieves is a very silly one, and is only used by those who know nothing of rogues or too much of them. In a transaction which is in its nature dishonest and illegal, there is no guarantee against treason among those who are engaged in it. The maxim of all despotisms, that where there are three rebels there is one in former, is a true one; and the same tendenoy of human nature provides in Wall street that where there is a pool there are "double bankers." In this case, the one portion of the combination found to their horror, on the morning of decision, that their associates de clined to keep engagements, and it' is cur rently reported and believed that many of them were busily engaged on Xuesday in un loading the securities which the rest were en ergetically buying according to agreement. The edifice of plunder reared with such infi nite caie and pain was found to be under mined before it was completed, and it came down with a crash and a fracas that ruined some of the builders and spread confusion and dismay among hundreds of disinterested bystanders. On Thursday the lesson was so fresh and so impressive that it was heeded. Buyers for investment were timid and sensitive. Amid the wreck and debris with which the street was littered, it did not seem safe for any one to engage in the pastime which had been shown to be so disastrous the day before. In the abandonment of the hour, the implements of the gamblers were exposed for the time to inspection; and the publio, after handling the loaded dice and the marKBd cards, was naturally somewhat slow to lay down its money in a game which had betrayed all its reckless rascality. But this caution will not last more than a day or two. The disorder of the excited gamesters will disappear. The marked cards will be shu filed so deftly the gudgeonB will not see their differential backs The loaded dice will be shaken so gayly that their rattle will seem like the soul of fair play, and the fever of gambling, checked for an instant by this quick shower-bam oi panic, will go on as before, burning out the nervous Bystems and the moral nature of all engaged W it. - Occurrences like those we have just wit nessed are not in any sense to be deplored. It would be well for the community at large if they could become so frequent and so fla grant as to convince the dullest of the inhe rent unwholesome and dishonest charaoter of the whole Bcheme of stock gambling, of which they are the fullest illustration. If the timid and nervous speculators, who form the large majority of the material npoa whioh these predatory operators ba.se their grand combinations, could be only convinced that w hen they enter into a conspiracy to rob others, thfcir accomplices are bent on plunder ing them also with strict impartiality, it would cease to be so easy to organize these brigand angs. Until the business circles generally are jiutu who itiiw imjuviouoq mere is lima nope for a reform in the street. There is, unfortu nately; a gTeat deal of human nature left in the commercial world, andaa long as it fcoems probable that A. and li. can lie in wuit for J, and spoil him of Lis shekels, there will 1 e iu&rle these unholy alliance. But from tie hour when it becomes impossible for these two rogues t4 trust each other in their rob- 1-iiitH, the road will be safer to the inuocent wevfartT. London Clubs, Clubs are essentially English. Though every continental city in Europe has imitated their institution, yet the English club still re mains evi generig. The olubs and circles in Paris, in Vienna, in St. Petersburg, and, above all, those wretched transplantations called English and American dabs whioh flourish in every city in Europe, are as differ ent from their Pali-Mall namesakes as the worship of Bacchus is from total abstinenoe. On the continent the cafe takes the real place of the club; it is there that men eat, drink, smoke, and read the papers; while those v.ho belong to clubs have generally some claim to wealth or distinction, and use them as a fashionable lounge where bets are made in the dav time, and jligh play is the amuse ment of the evening. The last light in whioh a Frenchman, Austrian, or Russian views his club is that of a home. And here lies the ieat difference between club life abroad and club life in England. To an Englishmen, if he is a bachelor, his club is his .home. It is there that he sees his friends, writes his let ters, dines, and spends the greater part of the day. British respectability, in its most severe moments, can wish for no more de corous haunt for husbands and sons to enter and take up their abode. As long as men are w ithin the walls of their club they have to con duct themselves as gentlemen. Shouid a member behave himself in an objectionable manner, and to the annoyance of his fellows, most assuredly he will be reprimanded by the secretary, or if his offense be very repre hensible, be requested by the committee to take his name off the books. Since Thackeray in his Miscellanies took youva Brown by the hand and showed him over his splendid club, the new clubs that have been started are legion. The host of names down on the books of the Carlton, the Travellers', the Athenreuni, the Oxford and Cambridge, the University, the "Rag," the social exclusiveness of Boodle's, Brooks', Arthur's, White's, etc, and the long time that men had to wait before they could enter any of the old London clubs, caused it to be a matter of absolute necessity that new clubs should come into existence, unless Young England was to be for the best part of his life absolutely clubless. Men were tired of hearing that the A'thenrcuni or the Travellers', in say 1800, were electing the candidates put down in their books in 1845; hence committees of influential men were formed, and, in addition to the older clubs, we have now the Junior Carlton (the most successful of all the new clubs), the Naval and Military, the New University, the Thatched House, the Marlborough (for a very exclusive coterie), the Gridiron, the Junior Athenieum, the Albemarle, the Whitehall, and various small military clubs. London clubs may be divided into four great classes the Bocial clubs, the political clubs, clubs requiring special qualifications, and the professional clubs. The social clubs are the Travellers', Boodle's, Arthur's, the Marlborough, the Windham, the Union, the Raleigh, Junior Athenaoum, Gridiron, Thatched House, etc The first four are among the most exclusive in town. The po litical clubs for lories and Conservatives are White's, the Carlton, Junior Carlton, and the Conservative; for Whigs and Radicals, Brooks' and the Reform. The professional clubs are the United Servioe, Junior United Servioe, Army and Navy, and Naval and Military for officers in the army and navy and militia; the St. James' for diplomatists and civil servants; the Athe naeum for bishops, judges, and distinguished artists and men of letters; the Garriok for actors, journalists, artists, and men of letters (in these two last there is a good sprinkling of men-about-town); and the Whitehall for engineers. The clubs requiring specifio qualifications are the Guards', for officers in the Household Brigade only; the Oxford and Cambridge, the University and the New Uni versity, as their names imply, for Varsity men; and the Last India and oriental ulubs for Indian officers, civil servants, and mer chants. For card playing, the Portland and the Arlington. For billiards and the best night club in London, Pratt's. Tinsley's Magazine. Modern Politeness. When our friend Brown, a courteous old beau, dines out, he considers it one of the first rules of good breeding to appear .pleased with whatever is set before him, and to avoid disturbing the toupee of the host, or causing the fall of the smallest flake of enamel from the cheek of the hostess, by any audible criti cism upon their menu or their oompany. But then he is pronounced by the superior judg ment of the fast circles to be an awful snob. He is far too "slow" to understand the comfort of abusing the ortolans as they disappear into his mouth, and the Lafitte as it runs down his throat. This antiquated creature cannot en joy the delight of exhibiting a cool contempt for bis entertainer and all his concerns, nor appreciate the luxury, . on quitting a house after dinner, of carrying with him a comfort able feeling of repletion, and the stimulating consciousness of having shown the inmates than they are rather a nuisance than other wise. What a privation it must have been to our benighted forefathers to be compelled, by the usages of their time, to restrain these gene rous impulses these natural thanks for hos pitality ! In our enlightened days whoever is admitted into what a few people look upon as the fine flevr of sooiety is free from any such restrictions, in thOBe nappy bunting grounds he may give free expression to his sentiments; but he must be careful that not the slightest polish conceals the roughness and crudity of his proceedings, for ' even here there are laws, and they are enforoed by heavy penalties. He must not make the fatal mistake of bringing with him any courtesy or respect for the feelings or others, or, above all, any sense, if he should have such things about him. He might as well bring the cattle-plague or the small-pox. His civility will be interpreted as humbug; his feelings will create suspicion; and his conversation, if even moderately rational, and not carried on in the slang of the set, will be thought such a bore that he win be cut the next day, or declared to be as great a snob as old Brown. When we lament over the gradual spread of these habits, it is a comfort to hear from some people that the qualities of the heart are as flourishing as ever. It may be so, but it is not impossible that they may be endan gered by the total abolition of politeness. which is an outwork of kindness and friend ship, and which, when it shows itself in a "desire to make oneself less," we have the highest authority for preferring to the oppo site sentiment, which takes iu rise in self- xaltation. It is also admitted that habits aff ect the charaoter. A long course of inoi- vility and disregard of others will go far to produce the qualities of which they are the outward sign, and we may nnd that in repu diating politeness we have parted with many Christian virtues to which it is nearly allied. i JtmUyt Magazine. Reminiscence of Coleridge and Words worth. ' Our meal concluded, I once more tried to ascertain the names of the new comers. But my hostess evaded the question and withdrew to her boudoir,' and I was compelled to adjourn to the saloon, that I might despatch my letters before I was interrupted. I had scarcely entered the room, and was trying to improve a bad sketch I bad made the day before, when an old gentleman entered, with a large quarto volume beneath his arm, whom I at onoe concluded to be one of the anonymous gentry about whose personality there had been so much mystery. As he entered I rose and bowed. Whether he was conscious of my well-intentioned civility I cannot say, but at all events he did not return my salutation. He ap peared preoccupied with his own cogitations. 1 began to conjecture what manner of man he was. His general appearance would have led me to suppose him a disnenting minister. His hair was long, white, and neglected; his complexion was florid, his features were square, his eyes watery and hazy, his brow broad and massive, bis build unoouth, his deportment grave and abstracted. He wore a white starchless neckcloth tied in a limp bow, and was dressed in a shabby suit of dusky black. His breeches were unbut toned at the knee, his sturdy limbs were encased in stockings of lavender-colored worsted, . his feet were thrust into well-worn slippers, much trodden down at heel. In this ungainly attire he paced up and down, and down and up, and round and round a saloon sixty feet square, with head bent forward and shoulders stooping, ab sently musing, and muttering to himself, and occasionally clutching to his Bide his ponderous tome, as if be feared it might be taken from him. I confess my young Bpirit chafed under the wearing quarter-deck monotony of his promenade, and, stung by the cool manner in whioh he ignored my presence. I was about to leave him in undis puted possession of the field, when I was diverted from my purpose Dy tne entrance of another gentleman, whose kindly smile, and courteous recognition oi my bow, en couraged me to keep my ground, and pro mised me some compensation for tne snout nut upon me by his precursor. He was dressed in a brown holland blouse; he held in his left hand an alpenstock (on the top of which he bad placed the broad-brimmed wide-awake" he had just taken off), and in his right a sprig of apple blossom overgrown with lichen, llis cheeks were glowing witn tho effects of recent exercise. So noiseless had been his entry, that the peripatetic philosopher, whose back was turned to him at first, was unaware ot his presence. But no sooner did he discover it than he shuffled up to bim, grasped him by both hands, and backed bim bodily into a neigh boring arm-cbair. Having secured him safely there, he "made assurance doubly sure, by banging over him, bo as to bar his escape, while be delivered his testimony on the fallacy of certain of Bishop Berkeley s propositions, in detecting which, he said, he had opened up a rich vein ot original reneo- tion. Not content with cursory criticism, ne plunged profoundly into a metaphysical lecture, which, but for the opportune intru sion of our fair hostess and her young lady friend, might have lasted until dinner time. It was tnen, for tne nrst time, X learned who the party consisted of; and I was introduced to Samuel Taylor Uoleridge, William Words worth, and his daughter Dora. I must say I never saw any manifestation of small jealousy between Coleridge and Wordsworth, which, considering the vanity possessed by each, I thought uncommonly to the credit of both. I am sure they enter tained a thorough respeot for each other's in tellectual endowments. Coleridge appeared to me a living refutation of Bacons axiom, "that a full man is never a ready man, nor the ready man the full one, for he was both a full man and a ready man. Wordsworth was a single-minded man, with less im agination than Coleridge, but with a more harmonious judgment and better ba lanced principles. Coleridge, conscious of his transcendent powers, rioted in a license of tongue which no man could tame. Wordsworth, though he oould discourse most eloquent musio, was never unwilling to Bit still in Coleridge's presence, yet eould be as nappy in prattling with a child as in com muning with a sage. If Wordsworth conde scended to converse with me, he spoke to me as if I were his equal in mind, and made me proud and pleased in consequence. If Cole ridge held me by the button for lack of fitter audience, he had a talent for making me feel his wisdom and my own stupidity, so that I was miserable and humiliated by the sense of it. Memoir vf V. M. Young, Tragedian, hy ma avn. Earthquakes In Great Britain. Twice a year, npon an average, has BrU tannia experienced a twitching somewhere. The great majority of these shocks were. however, confined to Scotland, and of this majority the largest proportion was felt only about Comrie, in Perthshire, whioh is so quaky a spot that it was deemed advisable. many years ago, to ereot instruments for registering the frequent dislocations to which the Boil thereabouts is subject. South of the Tweed the earth's crust is in great repose; in England proper earthquakes are few and far between. The last one exten sively felt was that of October ti, 1SC.3, whioh occasioned great commotion In men a minds, but did little hurt otherwise. There was one later, on the morning of August 21, 1804, felt at Lewes, in Sussex; it coincided in point of time with high tide on the Sussex coast, and it was smart enough to craoK a tow walls; but its area of damaoim power was verv limited. On the Dth of November, 1852, the greater part of the mountainous district of North W ales w as shaken to an extent that considera bly alarmed the people thereabouts, though no serious injury to property resulted. The disturbances of the 17th of March last were of somewhat extensive charaoter. It would appear from the reports numerously communicated to the newspapers that the area of commotion must have embraced all that part of England between the Cheviot Hilla and the line joining the mouths of the Mersey and Huniber. And the shocks were somewhat more severe than those occurring within reoent times, of which we have given the dates, for we bad reports of considerable damage having been done to substantial buildings. The actual displacement of any particular object, or of the earth at any par ticular place, we may never know, for we be lieve that there , is nowhere in England an apparatus for registering this datum. Cua- neil l magazine. A Journal for Head Ornamentation has been started In Berlin. A Woman r ullrage Convention will be held at Long Branch lu August. An Illinois gentleman has taken a gold medal lor ralblnif 1000 varieties of apples. Wbat word may be pronounced quicker by adding two more letters to it. Cjuick. Pickerel fitting In the Thousand Islands is excellent. BUMMER RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY. THE ISLAND HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. THIS LA ROB, NEW, AND ZLKQANT HOTEL Is now open f or the reception ot guests. Carriages will be In attendance on the arrival of every train to convey persons to the house, free of charge. Address EVAN ROBERTS. SUPERINTENDENT, 6 16 lm ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. UNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Will open for the reception of guests, on SATUR DAY, Jane 84. Music under the direction of Pro fessor M. F. Aledo. Persons desiring to engage rooms will address SELFIUDGE & DAVIS, 16 lm ATLANTIC CITY. WUXI HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, Will open June 24. Parties wishing to engag RoomB will apply at the offlce of the Surf House Co., No. 402 LOCUST Street, Philadelphia, or to M. UEIDLEK, 6 16 lm ATLANTIC! CITY, N. J. STOCKTON HOTEL. C-APE MAY, NEW JERSEY. Capacity, 1200 OPENS JUNE 84, 1871. Terms : t 0 per day. $28 -00 per week. CHARLES DUFFY, 6 80 lm ' Of Continental Hotel, Proprietor. ASHLAND HOUSE, CORNER OF PENNSYL VANIA and ATLANTIC AvenueB, Atlantic City, N. J. Thin popular establlshmeDt, which has been greatly improved ana doumedlu size, 1a now open ior ine reception or tmesis: aemrame cominu stealing rooms for families; splendid croquet grounds adjoin tnenonse; guests conveyed to aud irom the bathing grounds free of charge. Terms, 114 per week; ga-60 per day. House opo the entire year. t s iuu u jjkiat, eiceodini proprietor, THE VINCENT IIOUSE, PACIFIC AVENUE, between New York and Tennessee aveaurs, Atlantic City, N. J., one square from the dpot, has been refitted and refurnished, and Is NOW OPEN. and in tne occupancy or tne undersigned, 1 former proprietor, wno invites an nis oii irienas and the public geberauy to call and see mm. 0 10X111 J. 1 11AUDW c O N O R E S S AND TUB HALL OCEAN OEAN HOU8E, ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. will open JUNE 17, for the reception of truest. 6 16 eod2m Proprietor. TAMMANY HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, EL1AS CLEAVER, the well-known cuerer has refitted his house, and Is now readT for the re ception of guests. The bar has been removed to the adjoining nouBe. and a li rut-class barber shop odiied, jueais supplied at any nour, e is eon l in qPHE SCHAUFLER HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY n. J. i ne best location on the inland, with an A No. 1 table, and the best attention paid to Ha gueiis. jusrniy one sleeping cnamoers, with beds tu, DDBurpaBseu. ei6 lm Aims buiiai fjuer, Proprietor, rpUE COLONNADE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, A Beautifully situated between tLe Railroad Depot and the Beach, In full view of the Ocean. 6 16 lm J. nENRY HAYES, Proprietor. '"THE CLUB HOUSE, CORNER OF ATLANTIC j ana rxjivy luitik Avenues, Aiiaauo city, wia open Monday, June 19, with the bar we 1 supplied wun tne choicest brands of w tnes, uquors. c igars eiC. ilAltttl CUWAKU. 6 161m ; Proprietor. 1JROSPECT HALL, CORNER OF PACIFIC and KKNTl CKY Avenues. Atlantic Citv. N. J. Liellghtfuily located, enlarged, and retmed and re furnlBhed throughout. UK J. F. BELK aP, o iu lra proprietor. ST. CLOUD noTEL, CORNER OF KENTUCKY and ATLANTIC Avenues, Atlantic City, N.J. For terms, etc. address HUBMilSUAVY & rALMKK, 6161m Proprietors. SOMEKS COTTAGE, MICHIGAN, NEAU PA CIFIC AVENUE. This bouse has been thor- oughiy refurnished and Improved, and Is now open ior ine reception oi guests. o m lm i. TuuttNis. LIGHT HOUSE COTTAGE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. JONAH WOOTTON, Proprietor. Located between u. B. iiotei and tne beaen. rne neare Bt house to the surf : Is now open for the re ception of guests. 6 16 8oi M EARS' HOUSE ATLANTIC, ABOVE KEN- of visitors. Term", f'i pr day, or fill por weelc. Superintendent. 6 16 lm SURF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., WILL open for the reception of guests on SATURDAY, Suh tuBt., by 6 is l iv. u. .nisi inus, rroprieror, Eagle notel, NO.J87 N. TIIIKDst., Phlla. CHESTBR COUNTY HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., open the year round. J. K.E1M, 6 16 lm Proprietor. CENTRAL HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., open all the year round. UnUtU fc TlllLLl, 6 16 lm Proprietor. I7UREKA COTTAGE. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Id ATLANTIC and VIRGINIA Avenues, will be open June 24 for the reception of visitors. H ADDON BOUSE, FOOT OF NORTH CAKO L1NA Avenue, facing the beach. Atlantic City N. J . U now open. Railroad to the beach. 6 18 lra 1T. i. o. uuiufuiti, proprietor. CONSTITUTION HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Is now open lor the reception of gueHts. , JACOB R. SACKETT, 6 It lm Proprietor. CONSTITUTION nOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Is now open lor the reception of gaexts. JAWO XW OAlvuil, 6161m Proprietor. KENTUCKY HOUSE ATLANTIC CITY, opened June 1 for the reception of guests. 6 16 lm MRS. M. QU1ULEY, Proprietress. ri I1E ALU AM BRA, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., I will open for the reception of guests on SA TURDAY, June 84. No bar. R. B. LKKUS, 0 10 1U1 rruprietur. T B N N I 8' OOTT I I ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. AGE, is now open for the reception oi guests. 6 16 8m JOSEPH II. BORTON. 1)R1VATE BOARDING ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., PENJ.SY LVANIA, near Atlautlo avenue. A few choice double and siugle rooms. Apply at No. 1314 ARCH Street. e ltfeodlm rpREMONT HOUSE, CORNER PACIFIC AND X. VIRGINIA Avenuen, Atlautlo City, e 16 lm H. BLOOD, Proprietor. I EN N MANSION, NEAR CON OS ESS HALL, I Atlantic City, N. J., l n"w open for guesui. 6 16 lm F.LIZA CAN BY, Proprietress. "infE C HALKONTE," ATLANTIC CITY, IS NOW A cnen. Railroad to the beach. 616 1m' EI.1&HA ROBERTS, Proprietor. TEACU COTTAGE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. I., IS now open for the rtcepilon of guests. No i.ar. 6 16 eod lm T. C. GARRETT. riMlE CLARENDON, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., J is now open for the reception oi guea's iu 1111 M. C. BKOJI1 SUMMER RESORTS. SUMMER RESOHTS ON MNROF THE PHILA DELPHIA AND HEADING RAILROAD ANI1 BRANCHES JUNK 1, 1H71: wAPsiun aut.it-.ii raTnon, jwrs. uaroune Wui.der, Pottsvllle P. O , BchnylMU county. TK8CARORA HOTEL Mrs. M. L. MUler. Tns. carora P. O., Schuylkill connty. mansion, HUU8K w.F. smitn, wahanoy City P. O., Schuylkill county. MT. CA RM KL liOUSE Nathan Ilord. ML Carmcl P. O., Northumberland county. wihtjs uolsk- i!'. juayer, nestling r. o.. Berks county. CKINTlUlLi AVB..NUB, liUUStf It. 1. UAVlS. Read. irg P. O., Berks county. MT. PLEASANT SEMINARY - L. M. Koons. Boyertown P. O., Berks county. . lA i i iriijus u. p. ureiaer. jutiz p. o.. Latt- oaster connty. H YGEJAN HOME Dr. A. Sm tn. Wernersvlll P. (., Berks county. COLD SPKiisus hotel (Lebanon conntvwwn- liam 1crch, Sr., Box No. 170 Uarrlsburg P. o., El'HRATA srniNGS-John Frederick, EphraU P. O., LnncsRter county. PERKloMhN BKH GEnOTEL-Davls Loneacre, Colleprevllle P. O , Montgomery county. PROSPECT TERRACE-Dr. James Palmer, Col lepevllle P. O.. Montpiwierv cunnrv. M'RIM MILL H kIGUTS-Jacob H. BreUh, Con Shohocken P. ., Montgomery count t. DOUTY HOUSH-U. Haffcred, siiamokln P.O., Northumberland county. 6 8 Sawim T7 BRDIC HOUSE XI MINNEQTTA HOU8li The subscribers, for the past seven years, coa tectcd with the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia, de sire to announce to their numerous friends and the travelling public generally, that tticy hare leased the well-known HEfiDlC Hil'SS. Wllliaraspnrt, Pa, aud MlfiNEQUA HOUSE, Minnequa Springs, Bradford county. Parties leaving Philadelphia via Pennsylvania Central Rnllrond, Bt 9 40 A. L. IV P. M. aud in M., reach Wllllamsport In sevea hours, iainneqaa hrrings In nine hours, without change of cars. Cars Stop in front of the Bonne. Parties leaving New or via New Jersey Centra! Railroad, reach Wuliamsport lu ten hours, without chance of cars. Terms 83 per day. SC0FIELD A BARRY, Pkopribtors. C. N. 8COFIELD, Late cashier Continental Hotel, fhlladclpoia. N. H. BARKY, Late Steward Continental Hotel, 6 9 2ra Philadelphia. SUMMER BOA R D I N G. The RENOVO HOTEL, a new and commodious building, newly furnlBhed, situated on tue bank of the Susquehanna river, at Renovo, Clinton county, Pa., on Philadelphia and Erie Railroad, Is open for Summer Boarders. Trains leave Pennsylvania Rail road Depot, West Philadelphia, at l'J-40 and 71W P. M., reaching Renovo at 11 P. M., aud 6-25 A. M. Business men wiRhlng their families at a healthy and pleasant location, can leave Philadelphia Satur days and return by Monday afternoon. Baggage checked through. 'Pullman sleepers on all nig lit trains. Kakb. Philadelphia to Renovo. $S-30. Excursion tickets, to be had at Nob. and 901 Chesuut street; 'MercLants' Hotel; No. 116 Market street; No. 4900 Main street, Germantown; and at Pennsylvania Pailroad Depot, Thlrty-tlrst and Market streets, at ((10) ten collars and (tbc.) twenty-nve cents per rennrt trip. BoaTd, $12 to ft4 a week for single boarders. Special terms made for families, for which, and to secure rooms, apply to proprietor, WILLIAM n. MAY, Renovo Hotel, Clinton county, 6 15 lmj Penasylvanla. BEDFORD MINERAL SPRINGS. THIS rOPU hir summer resort will be open for the recep tion of visitors on the loth day of J UNE, and remain open until SEPTEMBER 18. The Bediord Railroad is completed to within one tour's ride over a pood turnpike to the Springs. Parties from Philadelphia will come through direct to the Springs la from twelve to fourteen hours. Excursion tickets can bo hod at the Pennsylvania Iiallioad Offlce, and baggage checked through. Persons will come by the Pennsylvania Railroad to Huntingdon, thence by Broad Top Road, i persons wishing to engage rooms, or any farther information, will please address the Proprietor of Bedford fc'princa Bedford Water will be promptly sent to any part of the United States at the following rates at the Springs: t61Q24t Half barrels (In mulberry wood), 20 gallons $3 00 (steamed oak) 20 " 3D0 Vho!e barrels " 40 4-00 KctjB, 10 gallons 8-00 BOARDING HOUSE FOK vTsiTORS FROM THE CITY. The uirterslgned had Just titled up an elegant Boarditg House for city sojourners In the countrf at. the village of Bl'SHKIbL, . Pike county, Pennsylvania. Buohklll Is located between Miiford aud Stroudbburg, 81 miles from the former sod 13 miles from the latter place. It Is a plctur eKqje, airy, and healthy place. Its surroundings are uiiih, mountains, vaiieys, wa.eriaiis, cascades, and everything desirable in country life. He has jet room for a limited number of visitors, andean accommodate early applications. For further information address JAMES B. SCHoONOVEK, Bushtill, Pike county, Peuna. a li aatuths4t I AN CASTER HOUSE, LANCASTER, N. H.", j will be opened June 1 for transient and summer boarders. It Is located In the V' alley of the Connec ticut, in full view of Mount Washington and the Vermont Hills, at the terminus of the Boston, Con cord, and Montreal Railroad. N. B Persons surrering from asthma and "hay fever" will Cud Immediate relief here. Ibices reasonable. For particulars and circular address E. STANTON & X., 6 10 8m proprietors. AJEW'lNLET HOUSE THE UNDERSIGNED A beg leave to Inform visitors to . ATLANTIC CITY that they have taken tho above-named notel. and will open for the reception of Boarders on SATUR DAY, the 44th Inst. THK BAR AND OYSTER STANDS are now In operation. McKIBBIN k McQRATH. Jkhe McKibbin. A. O. McGratu. 6 16 eod lm ORETTTSPRTNOS, CAMBRIA OOIJNTY, j Pennsylvania. This popular watering-place, on the summit of the Alleghany Mountains, will be opened for visitors on the 1st of July. The Hotel has been extensively repaired, and ever j thing will be done to make visitors com fortable. For further Information address F. A. UlBBONS. Proprietor, 6 10 8m Loretto, Cambria Co., Pa. R R Y U O U 8 HIGHLAND FALLS, (NEAR WEST POINT). This new and elegant establishment on the banks -or the Hudson River will be opened early la June. Liberal terms for families. Address CAS. W. HENDRIX, Highland Falls, New York. HO T ' E L, CHITTENANGO WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, MADISON COUNTY, NEW YORK, Is open for guests. Accommodations lor 400. Gas, bells, and carpets In every room. Scenery, drives, and table are not surpassed In the country. Rates to Bult the times. 6 80 8m D. P. PETERS, Proprietor. E A - B A T H I N G. NATIONAL HALL, CAPE MAY, opens July 1. Commands unob structed view of the Ocean. Superior accommoda tion for visitors. Terms, tie to 1 18 per week. No bar. Satisfactory reduction to parties and families set urlng rooms for the season. Address 615 8m A. OAKRETSON. HIGHLAND DELL HOUSE. BEAUTIFULLY located on a spur Of the Blue Mountains, near Delaware Water Gup. Its high situation, and a pure dry air la very desirable for invalid j; beautiful scenery, pleawtut walks and drives. No bar. Terms 8Li other particulars furnished on application to J. y. rUi'LKE, Stroudsburg, Monroe couutv, Penn sylvania. ol0 3ui MAXSON HOUSE, NARKA(J1NSETTPIER,H. I. Located or. elevated land, near the Bathing Beach, having a One view of oe-an, By, aud sur r. uuoing country It is entirely new, furnished tlnoujhoBt with elegant furniture. Application for r om and board, should be addressed to C10 6W B. TUCKER, Proprietor. IPJIRATAMT. SPRINGS. LANCASTER CO?, 'j PA This delightful Summer Resort WILL 1 K OPEN for the Reception of Guests on ISth June, lb'il For particulars, address J. W. FREDERICK, PropY, II. fl. REIMIARlBupt, 6 1 lm c lOZZENS WXHT POINT COZZENS' DOC K. HOTEL ULDSON RIVER, FOR TERMS, Ac. SYLVAN US T. COZZENS, IS NOW OPEN. Addree West Poiut, N. X CENTHEHOl7sK, CAPE MAY CITYJi NOW fpcu lor the reception of guests. 6 2'Jlw J. E. M EC KAY, Proprietor.