.touroNIMS NOTICES, daseriment of Fail and 'inter Clot.ing —Menie. Youths% Boys` slid Childresee —choke dock. of edected style/ of Piece Goods. to be imodit to order. **Mod aria workinarwhip of our garments surpaseea tor none, eguatbui AU prices guaranteed bower than the Lowed Mashers dad fedi eatisfadion guaranteed eeetV - TnarJuleere or the Nis armelled and moswy retinae& • isaV between BIOTNYYY 004 /VIA and , Touren HALL. Birth erreall 618 Manaus I:3TRSIT. PUILADALPRIA. AND 600 BROADWAY. Imo SA tillages for • *Mir shnient.7l /very bodi who has traveled by railroad has hoard the abgv.• al j nouncomebt, acd has probably suffered orn cob g too hastily, thereby sow ing thu seeds I)yepnp.ll. It is a court tto 'mow that the Van:mien Syrup will cure the V 4 of et cases of As spepsia, at thousands are ready to Pertly. noil tit JUNEAU MEI' ER, INVENTOR AND Manufacturer cf the celebrated Iran Frame iinehhie highest oftr Wrige r r t f e al when and wherever _exhibited. Warerooms. 75:2 Arch west. Established IP I 9B. Ira w e rota FOE CIHt.:KERING PIANOS RECEIVED the Meted award at the Paris Exposition, DI TTON'S Wareroorns, 914 Ctestunt street. se2l,tf* EIN WAY A; SOW GRANT) SQUARE and upright PIiWOCIN at BLASIUS BROd, itam lAtEal NITI street eelttip. EVENING BULLETIN. Wednesday, Novombor.4, 18G9. MAIL '24;, Till.z CHIEF! .Like a great snow storm, all over the land, the white ballots fell noiselessly, yesterday, Item the rising of the sun unto the going down of the same; and to-day the silent storm of the great popular will of America covers the broad expanse of our vast territory in its pure mantle of an assured Peace. Here and there, it is true, the white symbols of the will of a free people have fallen into miry places of political corruption and rebel vio lence; and the dark blotches of New York and Louisiana and Kentucky and Maryland, and the lesser blemishes of Delaware and our own Fourth Ward, mar the perfect beauty of the sce \ ite. But these plague-spots are too few and too far between to be taken into much account, as we survey the grand spectacle of a nation rising up to pay its just homage to the Great Captain of • the age. The nation, and not the Republican party alone, has crowned Ulysses S. Grant with its choicest honor. It was the pure expression of the people's will that was recorded yester day at the ballot-box. All things worked together to this end. With that madness which goes before destruction, the Demo cratic party left nothing undone that could insure the triumph of The country's choice. It made itself odious before the people. It chose candidates who seem to have been fore-ordained to act and speak for the benefit of its adversaries. It enunciated doctrines which its own follow ers repudiated with disgust. It descended to the most horrible depths of infamy` in its efforts to defraud a free people of their most precious right. It made the very name of Democracy a by-word and a reproach; and, with falsehood and treachery and rebellion and dishonesty and every supreme folly it, paved the broad highway over which a re joicing people march to-day, bearing their chosen President to his seat as Chief Ruler of the Republic. The grand result is radiant with grand con sequences. "Bright Peace, with healing wings outspread," floats, with her holy bene diction, over all the land. That Peace which I Abraham Lincoln prophesied of, has come, and she has come to stay. The Rebellion died, as the sun went down yesterday. Warmed into life by a false Exe cutive, f , stered and fed by a desperate and defeated party, the Rebellion has struggled on, trailing ils slimy track over all the broad expanse of the sunny South, poisoning the free air with its pestilential breath, and strik ing its fatal fangs into the defenceless breasts of loyal men. To-day the foot of Ulysses S. Grant is upon its nee;'and its proud crest is crushed forever in the dust of submission to that Law which it will no longer dare to disobey. The Democratic party is dead also. Twin brother to the Rebellion, it cotild not but die with it. It had lost its own sense of shame and its claim upon the magnanimity of its conquerors. It had ceased to be de cent, and it deserves no honorable burial. The honest heart of the American people re joices that the party of Violence, Fraud, Ig norance and Treason is trampled out of shape arid.symmetry beneath their victorious tread. • Over the defeat of a generous or de cent foe, a conqueror may moderate the transports of victory ; but for a party such as was yesterday annihilated there can be no compunction of pity. Hail to Ulysses S. Grant: The honors that crowd upon him he has fairly won. The office which he is to adorn he has never sought. In the plenitude of their grateful hearts, and in the majesty of their resistless will, the People of all Peoples, the Nation of all Nations, have made Grant their President. Repablics are not always ungrateful; and the great Republic has honored itself in honoring the glorious deeds that shine all the more gloriously in the halo of quiet modesty that crowns the character of Ulysses S. Grant. Lifted up to the official level of Abraham Lincoln, General Grant will rule wisely and well. The tool of no party, the slave of no selfishness, the victim of no intrigue; sagacious, independent, im partial and loyal to the deepest core of his great heart, he will be the President of the United States; and his enemies will learn to biers the day that saved them from the curse sy Horatio Seymour and gave them such a • suleu as Ulysses S. Grant. AFTER THE EJLECTION, Xo people on earth, except the Americans, teal thrive and prosper with a change of ru l et o every four years. There is always something more or less convulsive and alarming even in the quietest of our elections; and in those that have occurred of Lste years, the peril has at times seemed to be fearfuL The Bonthernera made the Atill mistake of revolting against the popular :verdict at the election of 1860, and they were taught a bit ter lesson, the moral-of which must impress, all future generations. The embittered mi nority or 1864 and that of 1868 hav'e each •. threatened forcible resistance to the decision of the nut,irity. But apart from the -bluster of a few windy orators, the vituperation of a few irresponsible writers , and the cluinsy opposition; to common sense as well as common law, of a few offlce-holders of the said minority, there has been nothing to disturb the faith of intelligent men in the security and . permanency of the, republican institutions of America. The Union "must and shall be preserved;" the Government shall be maintained; the people of the United States arc determined that the system prac tically begun in their great Revolution shall be perpetuated, in spite of dynasties, or oli garchies, or aristocracies, and, in spite, es- Pecially of that misnamed despotism of the ignorant ; the , modern Democratic party. But, apart from political or partisan specu lation,here we are at the end of one of the great quadrennial struggles that are ordained by our Constitution, and a man.has been chosen to be our President who has been bitterly op posed by a very large portion of the people. There will be no rebellion against the popu lar decision in this case, as there was in 1860. The lesson of that year will never be forgotten, and the man now chosen by a really intelli gent constituency, that has been tried by the fiery ordeal of a great and victorious war, will be sure to command the re spect of the defeated in the civic contest, just as he commanded the respect of the defeated in the great military conflict which ended at Appomattox Court House in March, 1865. The country is now sure to have PEACE. The disturbing elements at Washington and throughout the country are henceforth to be deprived of authority and power. PEACE is assured to us under Grant, and with Peace will come Confidence, Security, Prosperity,Strength, and a total ex tinction of the treasonable factions and C 301- binations that were organized against the Re public in 1860, and that have disturbed it even since their defeat in 1865. Now 111 , 6 - people have good reason for ex pecting revival of businm3, an increase of wealth, and a re-establishment, through all sections of the land, of the harmony tnat ought to prevail among every people tiviaz under a common flag. They have good rea son to expect that the vindication of the az tional credit at the ballot-box will reduce we exorbitant premium on gold, even in spite of the machinations of Wall street gamblers. With gold and greenbacks approximating in values, there must come a general im provement in ail branches of trade, and a general beneficial in fluence among all classes of .the people. Enterprise; that has feared or doubted the issue of the political struggle, can and will now go forward fearlessly. Great and small projects, dependent upon the contingencies of Grant's or Seymour's election, are hence forth removed from all suspense, and may be carried on to their fulfilment. There wil be a general feeling of relief, in social as well as in business circles, that is sure to operate beneficially, on public morals as well as public trade. THE DEROCRATIC BANNER. Mr. Chairman W*llate, who is slightly in sane on the subject of Democratic gains, is sued the following manifesto, the other day : "I nm directed by the Democratic State Com mittee of Pennsylvania, to offer to the county, giving in November the largest per tentage of increase over its Democratic vote in October, a beefier with appropriate devices, costing $5OO. [ Signed I "Wm. A. WALLACE." Who is to get the banner with appropriate devices ?" No county gives any Democratic increase at all, and yet it seems hard that this elegant banner should be lost. If Mr. Wallace will accommodate himself a little to ircumstiNces, and include Wards, there will be no trouble at all. Alderman McMullin ill take it without a challenge. The Fourth 1 /4 and is undoubtedly the Banner Ward of the Democracy. In October, the whole vote of the Ward, Democratic and Republican, was and the Democratic majority ,it s. But, yesterday, the brave McMullin and his party determined to show what could be done, when the Democracy was really in earnest, and they rolled up the splendid majority of 3,303 ! Nearly as much as the whole vote of the Ward in October ! This was a heavy day's work, and it was all the heavier because there was much fewer men to accomplish it. In October, McMullin had valuable assistance from New York and Baltimore; but yesterday the Fourth Ward ran the voting machine, almost, if not quite without foreign aid. Few voters were al lowed to deposit less than two ballots, and the regular number ranged from three to five votes per man. Hand over the banner, Mr. Wallace, and see that it has "appropriate devices" inscribed on it. Let it bear the portraits of Share wood, Snowden and Devine. Let it be stamped with the broad seal of the Supreme Court, and surmounted by a coffee-pot and a stuffed ballot-box, where the Eagle is com monly perched. Let its motto be "We vote as we Fight—With Repeaters." The banner belongs to the Fourth Ward, and we insist upon Alderman McMullin's services to the party receiving their just reward. Hang out your banners, Mr. Wallace ! KILPATRICK AND rounesr The rebel General Forrest, of infamous memory,recently took offence at some observ ations made by General Kilpatrick upon his cruelty to negro soldiers, during the war. Writing from Memphis, Tennessee, under date of October 2.Bth,this wretched cut-throat calls Kilpatrick "a blackguard,a liar,a scoun drel and a poltroon." He then challenges himAnmortalicsiteat, aid n: Men BasilDuke as his second. Of course,General Kilpatrick, if be is a sensible man, will treat this docu ment with contempt. Forrest probably an ticipated such a result when he wrote it. General Kilpatrick may be needed again to dispose of rebels en masse, as he has gal lantly done before, and it is hardly worth while to engage in single combat with a man whose life is of no possible value to anybody but himself. The opinion of General Forrest upon the qualities necessary to make up a first-rate "blackguard, liar, scoundrel and poltroon," are valuable if he has made careful self-exam ination part of his daily duty ; but he has an eager desire, common among the guilty, to drag every other man down to his own level. General Kilpatrick's claim to veracity is excellent, if it is founded upon THE. DAILY gyppG.I3I7ILETPI---PHILA REIT II IA WEDNESDAY, ig 0V EN 11E11 4, 186 ti. his assertions of.Forroat's..barbarliy, for that is proved by overwhehninz official and pri. ate testimony 'and is a matter of history. Forrest's' repeated denial of 'it fastens upon him the vile name . that he applied to the Union General. The charge of blackguard ism has nearly the same application also, for a map w.hu possessed any claim to the title Of gentleman would - net use such foal lan guage, and would not consider that his honor would be idproved by submitting his person as a target.,. As for;Kilpatrick's Scoundrel ism, we shall hardly be willing to take the word oven of such an expert,' as an assurance of its existence.. General Kilpatrick 'served his country faithfully and well in the army, abroad and at home upon the stump, while Forrest has striven persistently for years plat to destroy it, and has not hesitated to stoop to any crime to attain his object. We all know, too, that General Kilpatrick 'is anything but a poltroon. Forrest and his friends know it also, for Kilpatrick has fought many a good and valiant fight with them, and it is worthy of especial mention that lire al• ways managed to conclude each contest by engaging in hot pursuit of his flying foe. Forrest, 'on the contrary, made his disgrace ful record as a murderer of unarmed men. His massacre of the helpless garrison of Fort Pillow was the work of a coward and an assassin, and so thb American people will re gitrd it through all time. General Kilpatrick would contaminate himself by having any intercourse with this wretch. Even now he would be the object of universal Korn, and would be shamed into obschrity and silence, if the Democratic party, headed by Andre Johnson, had not striven to make treason respectable, and to place just such audacious, unrepentant rebels in=power again. When General Grant assumes the reins of govern ment, and loyal men are protected in the South, we hope to have these rebels, who live only by our mercy, effectually silenced by indignant public opinion. Durborovii de 1.70.. Atter tioneere, Noe. 232 and 234 ,Market etreot, will hold on t., morrow, Nov. 5, at 10 o'clock, by catalogue, till runt 'nova's' Credit, a large .alb of Foreign D.:rueetie Dry Goode, irchnling 20 packages of co•- oc ard woollen Donteetics, Biauk-te, &c. Won hock , Clutha, 124,5.,mere5, Doeekine, Deaver., Chiectillias, Itasiste, Velvets, Velveteens, 2c.; British and ' , tench 1 at. v Gootle, Silks, SIitIWIS, Ltliene, Balmoral sett hoop Sktrte, Gelds' and Ladles' Varnishing \. v. 6, at 11 , )'cli.cl;:, on four motitha* :rekvz. *.!‘ piecekk tape-try In4rnio, Venetian. • ilk ; ,kt:nge and hag Carpeting., 16U piece- r t t.. (•,kata,, Auction Notice —Yule of Hoots and tyz gl e.ro Iv attention of trio .radc 7t 13r., HI. d ment of Boot:‘, Shoe 4. ,Cc., to Iht cold by catalogue, tor o -morrow tTbltr.qinv) morning, November st. 10 o'cl ck, by C. I). ilfeCiees & Co., Auctioneers, No. rxt; Market :}rust.. Poilit' . 'Breeze Park. TO RENT. 5,2 S Arch Street. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. The Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Storiee of the IRON FRONT BULLDING, RN ARCH STREET. See 30 by 55 feet; well lighted, back and front BULLOCK & CREDIBIIAW, N. E. corner Arch and Sixth Streets. oc:e iitAp• viVEll'S PATENT LI. IMMIIINA'PION SOFA BEDSTEAD. It lute the appearance of a Parlor Sofa, with epring back and epv it g teat, and yet in lees than one minute's time tvPll - onerretring or detaching in any way, it san be ex. tended info a handeome French 13edstead with heir eivving mattrars, complete. It if, without doubt the hand toinett and mart durable Sofa Bed now to viee. tor Bale at the Cabinet manufactory of S•FFCK a CO.'S-AND DUNES BROTHEitt3 Pianoe, and Maeon Harnlln'e (;abinet Or gaps. only at J. E. 1i01.11.1.08 New Store, aulYi litho 4p; No. 91.r.1 (Meant' t etreet. UliN CM MP, BUILDER 1731 CHESTNUT STREET, and 213 LODGE STREET, Mechanics of every branch required for hourebullding nd fitting promptly fu raised. fe27tt TJ ENRY PHILLIPPL WARBURTON'S DIPROVEt), VENTILATED and easy-fitting Dross Bath (patented) In all the approved fashions of the 13431113011. Chestnut street, next door to the Poet-office. octi tfrp D LAW D SPOONS A.ND . FORKS OF SEVERAL I. qualities. and h rated ivory handled table cutlery. For P,. 'ale by TRUM & SEtAW, No. 835 (Fight Thirty-five) Market street. below Ninth. DOUBLE FARINA, OR MILK BOILERS, TOFFEE and Tea Pots, Pena Kettles, Wash-basins, Coßanders, and other articles. for sale by T L;51.,:t N & SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street, below Ninth, Philadelphia. IDORGELAIN, LIGNUM BRASS AND IRON 1 Wheel Table, Chair Bracket and Bed Cast re. For eale ny TRUMAN dt tillAW, ri0.1335 (Eight Thirty•tive) Market etreet, below Ninth. MRS. R. DILLON, 323 and 331 SO Ul STREET. Millinery for Ladles and 3,1188(!li. E Mins, Silks. Velvets, Ribbons, Flowers. Feathers, Frarnes, Mourning M.llirery,Urape Veils, &c. Silk Velvet and Salk" Hate, Sash Ribbons. nod 3morp DR. BURTON'S TOBACCO ANTIDOTE. WATIRA.NTED TO REMOVE ALL MOORE FOR TOLSAOf3O. la entirety vegetable and harmless, and is also au excel lent appetizer. It ptertjiea and enriches the blood. invig orates the systetn.possesses great nourishing and strength ening power, enables the stomach to digest the heartiest foodanakes sleep refreshing and establishes robust health. ,s7nokese and ebewersfor sixty Pears cured. Price Fifty cents per box. Post mree. An interesting treatise on the nom-loos effects of tobacco, with lists of testituonial4 references, etc, bENT FREE. Agents wanted, Address DIL T. R ABBOTT, Jersey lay, N. J. TES TIMONIALS. From elm. U. S. TREASURY. Seeretar tp Otti4e. —Please Bend a s upply of the ANTIDOTE. The one received Agi duo. it, work scunLY. U. T. EDGAR. FllOll NEW HAMPSHIRE STATE PRISON. —Gentlemen of influence here having been cured of the appetite for tobacco by ueing Dr. Burton's Antidote, we desire a sup ply for the prisoner.. of this institution. JOS bPII MAYO. Warden of N. H. State Priem. A BANNER'S TESTIIIONY.—Dr. Burton's Antidote for Tobacco has ocean% ',tithed all clamed r'n• it. WAVIER MANN, let Nat. B'k. Now Albany, Ind. FROM TILE (DILLY ENGINEER ON THE ALLEGHENY VAL LEY RAILROAD COMPANY, PITTSBURGH. PA.—T have us.d the Antidote with great success.. it le curing all MY friends. IL BLACKSTONE. I A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY.—ONE Box Or ANTIDOTE cured my brother and myself IT NEVER rams. IV-BIJOU& A KIM, lielhey's_Statlon, Ps. Poit.or. .11EADQUAILTIES, have pained thirly...tioe pounds of liesh to three months by using Dr. Burton's Antidote, and al/ desire for tobacco to removed. WM L. WAIT. Jr. FROM TILE SOUTHERN HOME JOUSPIWBALTIMODE, Md. —One box of Burton's Antidote ?env/toff all desire for the weed from me. I take pleasure in recommending it to all our readers. T. Y. SLATER, Editor. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. oc2B-w,f,m-llitrpt (Trademark YCopyrighted..l .V. , % s !ar;ze epecial eale of pew imporLed Etol'ery I.`ll-11E WE IMF rcur 6. on 1 st:000. To-Morrow (Thursday) at 3 P. M. Mile beats 3 in 5, double teams M. GOODIN names pair bay Mares. J. DoVETT names g. B. IRONBIDE and MATE. They are the PAST EIBT teams in the city. Admission, $l. lt4 WO RENT. Li. F. HOVER, Owner and 8010 Manufacturer, No 230 South Second otrect. ocEls..im r CARPENTER AND DULLDEIt, NO.IOA SANSOM STREET, c3.lv4P PIILLABELPiIIA. nOTTON-63 BALES LANDING FROM STEAMER V "Tonawanda," 40 balm from Steamer"Juntata," treat New Orleans; for sale by W. M. GREINER. no3.6trp4 100 Chestnut street. ASARRING WITH INDFLIRLE INK. EMBROIDER -IEO Stamping. &c. M. A. TORRY. IEOO Filbert etreet. MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIA CLOT MOHINNDS WATCHES, JEWELRY, PLATE. &e. at JOKES & eo..s OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE, Corner of Third and Onekiß erects. Below Lombard. N. B.—DIAMONDS. WATCHES, JEWELRY. GUNS. REMAItL&BLYPRICES. 1024.11 'AT ORTON'S PINE APPLE CIEEEBE.-100 BOXES ON lr conshroutent. Landing and for sale by J S. B. BUSBIES, & CO.. Agent, for Norton & Eliner.loe South Delaware Avenue, 111,0TU 11 NO. New Styles,' New Materials, Low Prices; WANAMAKER & BROWN. FALJLL. (3-0•013 S. EDWARD P. KELLY, TAILOR S. E. Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Streets. HURRAH! Hui rah ! Hurrah ! The voting is done! Hurrah ! The campaign's been jolly fun! Hurrah ! We're satisfied, everyone ; Every father, and every eon; Grant is in, as sure as a gun, For the other man hadn't so good p run ; And all of our citizens, surely none Will say he isn't elected. And all the people, from East to WeSt, Say that they guess It's all for the best; Say that we'll now have peace and rest. And it's just the opinion ,hey always expressed, And just as they all expected. Aud the next important thing, we suppose, Is for all the people to have good clothes, To save them from all the wintry woes That come with such violence when you expose Your frame to the power of the winter snows, Or the blast of the storm that rudely plows Freezing your ears and the end of your nose, Chilling your blood. to the tips of your toes; Now it's time your clothes were selected. Hurrah ! for the fellows that got in Hurrah for everybody! Hurrah for an elegant suit of clothes for every man, of every political stripe ! Whatever your political persuasion is, sir, be persuaded that you must wear decent clothes, in order to be a decent citizen. The true road to elegance, comfort, and all that sort of thing, is by the way of ROCK ILL & WILSON'S Great Brown Hall, 603 and 605 Chestnut Street, 17.7 - .1 S C4A9 As. IS G Q°D FOR TWO) DILLARS .rCUT THIS OUT. f 9 This Card will be good for Two Dollars in part payment for all cash purchases of ready-made clothing, amounting to Twenty-five Dollars or more. CHARLES SPOKES & CO., seB 824 OEIEB rNuT Street. wuits, me. VII S IF' U S A. K. & F. E. WOMRATfI o No. 1212 Chestnut Street, (Late stand 417 ARCH Street), ARE SELLING Children's Sets of Furs at S. Ladies" Siberian Squirrel Sets,oB upwards 44 Mink Sable " KO 44 44 German Fitch 64 815 66 44 Stone Marten " 820 44 44 Royal hrmine 44 $4O 44 44 Hudson Bay eatble « S5O 44 Russian Sable " $lOO 44 DAM RIDING BOAS, SKATISG MUFFS, Li., FUR GLOVES, FOOT MUM, LAP BLANKETS. A great variety of Carriage and Sleigh Robes. A. K. dt F. K. WONCRiITH, No 1212 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA. außfle m w 4mro ROOTS AND SIBIODS 3LA.AIDIUES' SHOES. NEW STORE. HENRY WIREMAN, Manufacturer and Importer • OF LADIES' BOOTS AND SHOES, :pro. 1;8 Soiith Thirteenth Street,. , S.W. °or. Sixth andlluttonwood Ste. PHILADELPHIA, AND No. 487 Eleventh Street, WASHINGTON, D. C., Has opened hie Elegant New Store, No. 118 South TAIR TFENTH Street, between Chestnut and Walnut Streets, with a large assortment of the finest quality of LADIES' SHOES Of hie own manufacture. ALSO Just received from Paris, a large armament of Ladies' Boots, Shoes .and. Slippers, Made expressly to order by the beet and meet celebrated manufacturers. 0c.31 tfrp ro WATCHES AND MUSICAL BOXES Rr paired by Wilful workmen. FARR it BROTHER. Impertere of Wetchee. eta., Cheetnut rtreet. below Fourth. WAINIIIIII6III* JEWELRY* Aral. • TIFFANY .8z CO 660 and 662 Broadway, Now York, Invite %Mallon to their sleek of SILVER WARE OF THEIR OWN rtit ANVIL.' ACT ME, COMlTiall3g reproductions of the good' scut by thorn to the Paris 'Exhibition, for which they received the 0111 S award ever made to Amorkan manufacturers of Silver Wm c. Dinner and Dessert Services, TEA SETS, OASE GOODS, IN GREAT VARIETY FOR WEDDING• GIFTS, PRESENTATION PIECES. PRIZES &c., &a. • Dealt= and estimatoe for Silver Ware sent upon appli cation to any part of the United &atm nog m w tdell SOLID SILVER. The increasing demand for Elegem and Artistic Silver Wares has decided us to open our New Establishment with a larger and superior stook to any hith erto shown in Philadelphia, and with that view have taken the SPECIAL AGENCY for the Sterling Solid Silver Wares of the GORHAM MANUFAC TURING COMPANY. . The Silver Wares of this justly cele brated Company, are now universaliy acknewler god to be superior in quality; good taste, and finish to any Silver Goods produced in this country . Every desirable Silvei Artielo manu factured by the GORHAM MANUFAC TURING COMPANY will be found in our eases and a. succession of future novelties has been arranged for as fast as they can be made from time to time BAILEY & CO., Chestnut ' and Twelfth Streets, Special Agency for the Sterling Solid Sliver Wares THE GORHAM MANUFACTURING COMPANY the w 13t4D1 CLARK &-BIDO Fl. Jeweiers and Pllwersadtlis. Plo. 712 CHESTNUT Street, Invite the attention of their patrene ito their large and elegant ageortment of DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY. SILVER WARE, PL4 71.1 ED WARE, &c. Beautiful Designs in Silver and ether-Plated Wares for Bridal Gilts. fell Wall urpo SOLID SILVER. 13A.1.1.AgN- Sr, CCP., Chestnut and Twelfth Sts., ARE THE . AUTHORIZED AGENTS LN THIS CITY FOR THE STERLING SOLID SILVER WARE OF The Gorham Manufacturing Co. 4 fazawfM 111114,01EILILES. dicik" WHITE GRAPES. _ WHITE. ALMERIA_ .on Splendid Clusters, The fined den here In fifteen yearn, Only 80 Cents per Pound. SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, W, oor, Broad and Walnut Sts, rio2 H. Pt & O. R. TAYLO PERF ; I2IERY &RD TOILE VllO/IPS, 641 and 643 08. ninth Nitireou ADMBES' KID GLOVES.—GEORGE W. vormr... NO. 1016 Chestnut Art et, has Rust received a full ansort• went of Mime' Rid Olcvea; Dark, Medium, Bright and Light Colon. A oplendld aemortment. oc-80 tlt• i o+l/4 .1 • I Ilk 'lO ft: The Best-Fitting and Best-Made SHIRT OF 1 1I3E, DAY IS The Hiniprovtd Pattern 6hirt;' At the Old Stand, Nos. 1 and 8 North Sixth Strest, (And nowhere else), which has g(von so much p.atisfse. lion to all o bn haw, used It. GUARANTMED IN ALL PAUTItoULAIta. Alio, n'super.or assortment or 4(.113.111.1•0men1's Good g, Suitable for the Actaeon, comeritise 811Af Mi _ ERINO. Under Shirts and DraWers, wz a rv iln a !c o l!, CollamScarfii,TloN Gloves. Ildkra,tuc, CVILTAIIY CURTAIN STA3I3I,i WEINI 1M NIP The eubscriboti are now receiving their % Pall Importations OF RICH CURTAIN FABRICS PARLOR CHAMBER AND LIBRARY. WINDOW CURTAINS FURNITURE 00VERINGS9 COMPRISING French Salina and BrocateHoe, Royal Tapestries, Silk Terry and Cotolines. Wool Terry, Reps, Damasks, &e. Just Opened dirret from the Manufacturer, E1►IBROIDEb1+11) LACE CURTAINS; nEW DESIGNS, From the lou e.t to the highext quality—tome of the the RAWEST MADE. N IS CERTAIN% EMOROIDEDED AIUMLIN CERTiungs, 3./iCiIIeARD &ND Ie lIISLIN DRAPEIFSIES, YE STIR ErIA E CURTAINS in grecs! varielv. CARVED, PLAIN, GILT AND WALNUT CORNICES, comourm strADEs. Experienced and reliable workmen euperinbend onr Upholttery Department. and every effort la employed to give eattefaetton std seems promptness In fulfilling the orders entrusted to mt. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Arrison, No. 1008 Chestnut St., PEULADELPEILL . cal w I to letrt) LOIJU. ~ M OUNTAIN" OtIcKWHEAT MEAL CONSTANTLY ON HAND Mountain and Sterling BIJOK.WHEAT MEAL, In bags and half barrele—warranted soyerior to any other to the market. GEO. F. ZEHNDER, Fourth and Vine, SOLE AGENT. 0e.28 f tJa2 FAMILY FLOUR. In Lots to nit GROCERS, or by the single Barrel, korle by J. EDWARD AT/DICKS, 1230 MARE ET STREET. Ei'ee2ts 3m4p IBLACKIA G. SAVE Yt U MONEY And get a brilliant and larting Blanc by ming DOBBINS' ELECTRIC 13 Co 0 'l' V' Co I_, ISII - A email particle of this superior blacking, the size of a large pin head., when mixed with water, Is sufficient to male a brilliant and lasting thine for a full grown Boot TRY If. L fold everywhere, PIANOA6 A GREAT BARGAIN. A FICISW-CLASS PIANO, Ay one or the best makers, norrly new. will be sold at OriE.I.IALF the original met. at TitUM.P.L.EIt'S, 926 ÜBESTNIiT Btreet. THE "a0110317C01i.E1 5 PIANO. BUY A FOIST CLASS pHILADELPHIA MALI ALIO.° AT MAN U• ACTUREE a PRIG E% OB TAIN THEM GUARAN ME, AND THEREBy EN VOI:RAGE HOME /ELL:STUN% - Foreign Pianos sold by Agents are generally the ehesp• est that can be found in the -Veto Yorg or Boston markets. and after all tn ev colt the penalise r as much safirst class Schomaker Mahal , . Ihe Agent liar already several com missions culaedbefont the customer obtains an instru ment, and in a few years it brcomes worthless and there is no redress. Our /llama have maintained their high reputation as first-class for more than thirty years. and have 'been awarded the highest premiums, and are now admitted to be the finest and most highly improved instruments made in the country. Our new and beautiful Waren oms, No 1103 Chestnut street, are constantly eupplied from our extensive fac tories with a full assortment of superior Grand. Square and Upright Pianos, which we -tier on the most favora ble terms. Call and catimino them, and you will adoilt that we are able to prore all that we have said. and that no other eetabliabrnent in this city can offer the same /Octal indu-cmeids. THE scuoirAcKEE v o lt . la s t?. h qm e gao iiircet. N. 13.—Pianos to 11 , nt. . 1 • BRONZES OUR OWN 'IMPORTATIO The beet aesortmeet In the country, now opensn% for sale by MIRES, MERRILL Si THACICARII, Manufhoturere of Gas Fixtures, Lamp', Bronzes,&e,, 718 CHESTNUT STREET, PH .11 EA D ticl6 m vv:3EyP4. /ALIVE'S FARCTES, CAP ERS..Ste.—OLIVES FA.P.CIES x.l(btuifed ()deco, Nonpareil a udi Superfine Capers and French Olives; fresh gnu& ; ding' ex Napoleon ru., from-Havre. and for Kale bydOS.II. BUSKER & CO.. 169 South Delaware avenue and COTTON oe.l a 7 a lm 0c29 rota EUROPEAN AIPPAIRS LETTER *lsom PARIS. pearresnosaienee of the alsiladelobts; Erasing llunettna PARRO p Tuesday, Oct. 20;186fa—As I nsual, with the return of the Emperor to Faris and the pros pest of the reopening -of the political season, the French people are beginning to.think a little more about their owti affaimand a littioless about those of.their neighbors. For the last few weeks, Indeed, nothing on this side of the Pyrenees has seemed worth attending, to, so completely was all public interest absorbed by what was taking place on the other. But now quite a flood of ru mors has come up to us from the Booth in the train of the Imperial party, and everiy one is talking of what the Emperor intends to do or not to do. For, by general consent,he must do something. As M. Guizet asks in the volume he has just published, entitled La France et la Prusse responsables decant Europe, and which is a reprint and enlargement of his article in the Re vue des Deux Mondes, is being more read and no ticed now than in the form in which it first ap peared: "What is the cause of the general and persevering uneasiness Which prevails among all classes and all interests?" And his reply is: "The indecision of our rulers." What Franco requires,he says, is a clear and determined policy. But the Imperial government "has no policy." It has the air of " waiting to see what happensa! in order to " know what it is to think and do!" `This is a state of things which cannot be allowed to go on; and M. Guizot's remedy is for "France to put her military estab lishment on a peace footing." And this project of disarmament is, as you will have seen by the tone of the public press, that which report most confidently attributes to the Emperor, and which is most eagerly listened to and most favorably received by public feeling. The present position, in fact, is one which is universally regarded as insupportable; for the country. Is burdened with the weight of an intolerable military establishment, and yet is mocked and almotit humiliated by the perpetually repeated assurances by the government of its "pacific in tentions." "But," says the country in reply, "Lae deux choaes rune." If we are neither to have, the glory nor the prestige of war, nor the chance of victory, give us instead at least the advantages and blessings of a secure peace. If France is no longer to have her pride and vanity gratitied by dictating to her neighbors, lot us drop the pre tension at once, franklyi and candidly, and put ourselves on terms of equality and good understanding. Bat a merely impotent demonstration of power, accompanied with proftealons of pacific lawn - times which no one believes, is as ridiculous as 'it is burdensome and ruinous, and only ex poses us to he laughed at, while it drains' on finances. These and, similar convictions, which I hear repeated around me In influential classes of society, and especially amongst the leading business, men of the country, are growing at once eci strong in feeling and so loud in expres sion, that the gOvernment must, I think, yield, and prepare to make some serions_cerneesaions to tbem. Indeed, if I may credit the information I receive, definite steps in the direction indicated are at this moment being debated at at. Cloud. The only government functionary whets) "pol icy" never halts, nor stands still, nor hesitates, is &he Prefect of Paris. In the midst of all difficul ties, whether political or financial, and in spite of all outcries and recriminations,Baron Hausmann goes right ahead, and is "thorough" In all that he does in every sense of the word, moral or ma terial. Every now and tben one stumbles upon some fresh and unexpected scene of Prefectoriat destruction, which is quite startling, especially when this has taken place In some dense and closely built quarter of the city. Many of your readers, doubtless, are quite familiar with the labyrinth of streets and buildings facing the principal entrance to the Bourse, on the west aide of the Place of the same name. Well, right through this densely wedged mass, and right across the Rae de Richelieu, the Prefect is boring his way at, this moment, about as rapidly as though he had called in the canoes rages of his imperial master to his aid. Indeed the Prefect of Paris can be likened to nothing so much as to a cannon-ball himself, and is the greatest "destroyer" who ever adorned the annals of peace. Nothing stops him. He howls down diuretics or theatres with equal impartiality; bat it must in justice be confessed that be betide them again elsewhere almost as fast. Opposite the Bourse, he is sweeping away the old and long remembered Theatre do Venda- Ville, the original of the name of that most char acteristic and national of French dramas, and on the boards of which Jenny Conlon and Dora Gras once trod. But the new House is almost fin !abed on the Boulevard, and will be ready to re ceive company by the time the old one le lev eled to the ground. It was quite a sight to see the multitude of inhabitants whip, on the 15th that., the last day allowed them, were trooping off to go, heaven knows where, from the densely populated district through which the Prefect is drilling a new hole, and who had scarcely time to' bent a retreat, before an army of pickaxes wore pulling their late habitations about their Care. The now journal called Le Didble a Quatre ap peared on Saturday last, and was much run after. It is in the same form as its celebrated precursor and prototype, La Lanterne, viz., like a little book, and contains some sixty pages, for the price of half n franc. It is to be written alter nately by the editor in chief of the Figaro, M. de Villewessant, by two other contributors to the same journal, and by a fourth writer (hence the name of the Diable a Quatre) who conceals his individuality under the pseudonym of Mephisto pheles. The. public suspected that this fourth person was no other than M. Rochefort himself, the originator of • the Lanterne.. Bur. the three other contributors have "pledged their honor" that their colleague is not M. Rochefort; and I believe that in point of fact, the signature of Mephistopheles will cover a great number of different individualities. The Met inimber is written entirely by M. do -Ville messent,and is, I thought, somewhat disappoint ing,, consisting only of rather mUd gossip, and wanting the biting sarcasm which gave its vogue to La Lanterns. The writer evidently has a whole some dread of the expansive jurisdiction of the Bizienu3 Chambre, and writes with the fear of sup pression before his eyes. Indeed,a good number &this pages are taken up in narrating the pains and penalties of his friend Rochefort, and the diffi culty he (M. de Villeutessant) had in persuading that gentleman to decamp to Belgium instead of giving himself up to undergo the penalty of the twenty-seven months incarceration which are now hanging over his head. One explanation and excuse for the bitterness of the attacks of La Lanterns upon the government, given by M. de ITlffetneSsaut: on-----.:_belialfl-rotlils=frierfdfittaly -- enough. It appears that M. Rochefort was, like many other people, afflicted with consti tutional idleness, and, as a natural Consequence of this, he also, like many other people, always pat off his work to the very last moment. He sometimes went down to the office of his journal only a certain number of hours before it was to appear, and then wrote it off at once, his sheets being delivered wet from his pen into the printer's hands. Thus pushed for time, says his apologist, he often "wrote whatever came uppermost," without waiting to mince his phrases! And, I fancy,, that to "write, what comes uppermost" is about the only guiding principle of most of the contributors to such pub lications as La Lanterne, the Figaro, the Cloche, and others of the same genus. I was told yesterday for certain that Signor Marfoni, Queen Isabella's 'lastman " had.. just pawed through Paris to fight M. Rochefort (whose pen has already involved him in half a doze • duels) 143 r language oppressive' either - SO 'like Queen's "honor," or his own, it den'tmueli Mat, I ter which! THE REVOLUTION IN'SPAIN. Manifesto of the rrovielOnal Govern- The expected manifesto of the Provisional Go- Ve=Mont of B,pain wax published in Madrid on the,2oth nit. It is in the form 'of a diplomatic circular, and is very long. It explains the reasons which compelled the Spanish people to throw off the yoke of the Bourbon dynasty, enumerating grievances of the nation against the late ,govern reent, and says "The people must now regain the time which it has lost. The principle of popular sovereignty which is now naturalized in Spale,ls the principle of national Ilk, and the ideal type ot tito,nstioa's aspirations. We may, therefore, be perthitted to aillrm that the nattona sovereignty, exercised in the first place by the vote of 811,4nd subsequently by those elected by the people, will decree a coin.- tate system of Ilbertier., which form, or will form soon,the rich and luallenable patrimony of a eiv ilizt d country." The attar - also examines at length the ques tion of freedom of public worship, and expr.,,,ges hopes for the free exercise of every religion. It mho states the desire of the government to be on good terms with foreign powers, and to obLjia the moral concurrence of foreign governments, adding: "But if we should fail in this respect, if the example of emcees in recognizing the revolution be not followed, wo shall not be discouraged. We can tranquilly proceed with our task, for our independence is not threatened, and we have no foreign intervention to tear. "To legitimize the revolution we have sought the sole criterion now considered infallible— namely, an appeal to universal suffrage. The aim which we have in view Is to place ourselves on a level'with the most advanced nations, and thus cease to form a dissonance in the great con cert of nations. "We have a perfect right to expect from for eign countries respect for the state of things which we have created, and we entertain a jushi able hope that the governments which march at the bead of civilization will not refuse to Spain those proofs of amity and fraternity which they accorded to the power that crushed and humili ated us." A Notable Woman. M. Guizot occupies a column of the Paris Debar, with an "In Memoriam" article on the late Countess Foy. This distinguished lady ac companied her husband throughout the Penin sular war, from the year 1808 to 1814, sharing in the dangers of the field of battle whenever wo man's care and woman's sympathy could miti gate the sufferings of the wounded or soothe the last hours 01 the dying. Ou peace being restored to Europe the General devoted the energies of his powerful mind to the polities of his country, and ditd of the fatigue he went through outing a prolonged -debate at the Chambers.. His widow retired from society, and gave herself ap w hob) to the education of her children, for Y. how Eta: accepted the donation offered by gov erersent in acknowledgment of the General's ervices, although she refused her own share. The revolutionary party petitioned that her young sons should appear in the procession at General lormarque's funeral. The countess, al though a Matra', replied thatat an age when they could form no Judgment of their own she had no right to compromise their future career. Her brilliant intellect, surprisin memory and perfect simplicity, made her society ty a pleasure and a privilege. English Oriticisni of lieverdir John- The Albion, the special organ of British senti ment and interests in this Country, joins in the censure universally pronounced on Mr. Reverdy Johnson's ostentatious demonstra tions of regard and friendship for the English men most conspicuous for zealous support of We rebellion during our civil war. His fra ternization with Mr. f.aird,who is only known in England or anywhere else, as the builder of the Alabama, is censured as in specially bad taste. Mr. Johnson's course In these matters, the Albion thinke t is quite likely toarouso anew the 111-feeling to which they originally gave rise between the two countries, and thus to defeat the very object which Mr. Johnson, with ill-timed and ill-judged excess of zeal, thinks he has been pursuing. It say e, with justice and truth: Time anti the pressure of many a political diffi culty have combined to overlay, and smother up, as it were, the irritation hereupon that once pos sessed far and wide the people of this country. Mr. Johnson's overstraining of his points will, we apprehend, bring abcu t its revival; nay, we are sorry to perceive, through the medium of the press, that this result is already wrought out in an unprr.u.isru g rlegn, Outrages on Missionaries in china The Shanghai Recorder gives the following ac count of the recent outrages on missionaries in the vicinity of Chinkeang "A correspondent writing from Chinkeang, under the date of August 24, says: 'Mr. Allen, of Her Britannic Majesty's consulate, and Mr. Sands, of the United Staten consulate at this port, have just returned from Yang chow, to which place they went in order to institute inquiries into a most outrageous attack which has just been made upon the Rev. Mr. Taylor, of the Protestant Mission, and his party. They have been mobbed in the most box-- barons manner; about eight or ten thousand run rose in a mass, broke into their house and destroyed the whole of their property. The ladies belonging to the mission have all more or lees suffered from wounds and bruises, and the Rev. Mr. Reid had his eyes so severely injured that there are very serious doubts of his ever recovering his sight. The Chinese mob set firo to the house, and did all they could to burn the inmates out o; it. They were driven to such extremities that they were forced to throw the children from the upper windows, and the ladles were obliged to follow at the risk of their lives. One of them was within a month of her confinement. — The outrage was caused by the literary class, ho spread a report to the effect that the mis sionaries boiled up children to ure them for medi cine. The billy, impotent authorities knew of the difficulty fully a week beforehand, and in stead of taking steps to prevent a breach of the peace encouraged it by their indifference, if not actually by their connivance.'" EITEptORDIL DIARY 0 131 P ITrB- BURGH. Prominent Merchants Charged with Arbon. I.From the Pittsburgh pavans of Yesterday.) We have heretofore reported the fact that Fire Marshal Murphy was engaged in investigating the.cause of the fires which occurred at the cloth ing store of M. Hanauer and the trunk factory of John Bell, both located on Market street, in the First Ward. The fire at Mr. Bell's establish ment occurred between eight and nine o'clock on the evening of October loth, and was discovered in the cellar, where it originated. That at Mt. Hanauer's occurred between ten and eleven o'clock on the evening of Oc tober 24th, and it was discovered in the rear of the store-room. In both cases, owing to the prompt arrival of the fire department, there was but little damage done, comparatively. From facts then learned, and circumstances coming under the observation of the Fire Marshal, sus picion was at once aroused that incendiaries had been at work, and the investigation spoke of was commenced. Mr. Bell and the men in his em ploy, with the exception of Duffey, who was ab sent, were examined under oath, as were also Mr. Hanauer and his employds. It appears there from that Mr. Bell, at the time of the tire, was absent from the city, and that Mr. Hanauer had left his store about ten minutes or so before the discovery of the fire there. Bernard Duffey was arrested on Sunday at Mc- Keesport, by Officer McCready, on a warrant issued by the Fire Marshal. Tiii Bafitias - THlCltided With Dttffeyln tha In formation. A warrant was issued for his arrest at the same time as that of Duffey, but it was not intended to execute it untffthe former had been apprehended. A hearing in the case of Duffey and Bell was fixedlor three o'clock yes terday afternoon. LATER.—Duffey has since made a full confes sion of the crime in which ho and Bell are impli cated. Httnsner~s use. When the investigation at Hanauer's store had been concluded, the Fire -Marshal Issued a warrant for the arrest of Mr. Han atier, on a charge of having fired the building himself, and yesterday morning officer McCready, of the Mayor's police, towhom the warrant was entrusted, arrested him. He waived' a hearing, and entered bail in the_sum of three thousand dollars for his appearance at Court. Mr. Han auer has heretofore borne an unexceptionable character, and hle numerous friends desire that the public suspend _their opinion touching.the merits of the case, - as-they - are confident that as the investigation continues his innocence will be atiefactorlly established. THE- AILY LYENIN G BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, WFDNEiDAY. NOVEMBER 4, 1868. POLITIthtListorINAI.LMAiIIp 1:1PA Democratic-Altai:sit 'Upon Republicans.. The Pltsaburgh Chrimicie of lost night says: "A serious dtsturbancs,,arising oat of political feeling, occurred In front or the school-honae, in the Second Ward, Allegheny, lest' night, during which George Bothwell, a well-known citizen of the ward, received injurleawhieh it is probable will prove fatal. _ - "The parties charged with being implicated in the affair (they are all Democrats) remained in the lock up during the night and this morning they bol a preliminary hearing before Mayor Drum. A charge of felonious assault and bat tery had ix en preferred against them, and they wt re commlttt d for a further hearing on the sth instant, by which time the eztent of Mr. B.'s in juries can he determined. MI the parties named were more or less inland during the fight, and with their iamb and clothing covered with elec ted blood, presented. a shocking appearance this morning. "From all we can learn the attack on Mr. Both well and his friends' was entirely unprovoked, and resistance was not made until the assault bo came general among the attacking• party. Mt those engaged In it are residents of •the Second Ward. Mr. Bothwell and those arrested are mar WEI men, and have families." VYNAITOIA.L and COMAIERC.MILL Vile Philadelphia Money Marko a. Sales at the Philadelphia Stock Exchabge. nw sown. 3000 City 6's new Its 1021; 3000 do • 102,34 6000 do b 3 10234 2000 & Am 6s '59 b 5 94 2000 Lehleb Val Ms new cp bswn 915% 12000 Lehigh (41dLnbb 93 13 Eh Penns B c&p Ulf 20 - s1 Sob Nay pf 203 f 93 sb Coal Ridee 7 bash Restony'eß 1134 100 eh Read B b3O 493; 6to eh do Its a 483 f 100 eh do all Own ' 483 trrrwcall r9OO Bch Nay 6s '62 71 1100 City El's new 102y 4 2000 W Jersey R 6's 931 1000 Leh 6'sl3old In b 5 93 1500 Elmira R be " 1000 Phil&Eriellas 2dß 06 10 eb Leb Val R 04% 7000 do nw bds cp b 5 951 f I IVi dimeday, t. ov. 4.—Money continuea extremely ecarce and dear, and We hear of call loam being made as high as 7@,3 per cent.. and in _some In stances as low es 6 per cent. On miscellaneous securities the rates are from 7 to 10 per cent, according to the ne. cessities of the Lorrewer. The amount of loanable Node hem been largely increased by the PnY. meat of the ititereat by Cm Snli.tfres. at ry Deplirtn slit and the disbanisment by the city of V,05,6e7 in the shape of interest. ' Twenty-fivef the-se insti Cutlete annuence their semi annual die , . eeudP. obe lienemstan pays the largest. and the e'otirth N atonal the smallest. The South wark pays 4 per cent. L ft' than in November last; the Philadelphia 1 per cent.: the Eeneiegton I per cent.; the corn Exchange Iper cer t. and the Fourth National, I per cent. The other in. Etnnfiene di, Ida the clime per cent as at the last iernimmual 2ayment The capital of our banks has been Ir erem ua 3•259.(..teby the addition of that sum to the Seventh Nations Lwtneli in May last was not included in the increased taptea.l The only bank which times lie dividend ie the Eixtb Nati nal. which has carried its profits to the last half year's curpiuc; the elret National, the Bank of North .5 merica.and two new national banks declare their semi neatest dividends in July and Jan nal7e volume of business at the Stock Board this morning la at smell. and the "heart." succeeded in controlling the market for the e peculative shares. Government and State Loans were dull. City Leans new issues, sold to a limited extet t et 1412?.. and Lehigh Gold Loan at 93. Reading Railroad opened at 4. 4.4.9 hid, and fell to 4836 a decline of 3,i. Pennsylvania ltdlroad alp declined S 6. 12.3 a wasbid for Camden and Amboy Railroad; 43 for Little bebuylkill Railroad: 66 for Norristown Railroad; U.% fur Lehigh Valley Railroad; 401 for Elmira Railroad; 31,k, for Catawissee Railroad Preferred. md 231‘ for Phl'a dolphin and Erie Railroad. Canal stocks were dull and lower.fichuylkill Navigation preferred cold at 2034, a decline of N. and 281 k watt the beet bid for Lehigh Navigation. Canal shares were ne glected.. Passenger Railroad shares were steady; 5031 was hid for Second and Third Weals: 46M for Chestnut sad Walnut streeta tend 1511 for Thirteenth and Fifteenth streets. be following Banks have declared dividends in addi tion to these sari ady publisher : Penn National Bank —5 tier cent.' Common ealth National Bank 5 per cent Messrs De Haven and Brother. No. 40 South Third street, make the following quotations of the rates of ex change to-day. at IP. M tutted States Sixes, 1801,115'i 1154; do-do.. '62, 1083f(glati : do, do.,l664.lo7N®itrlfi; tio do .186 a. 1t17:(a107 , ,f :do. do.. '65 new. 110)0411 0 0 4 '; do.do. 1E67, new. 1102f€1111.1; do. 1868. 111, 4 A611.1.4,_• lqve. Ten forties. 1053.05: Due Compormd Interact Notes, 19X; Gold, 'Ma &MI; Silver. 12831012 0 . Smith. Randolph & Co , Bangers, 18 South Third street, quote at 10 o'cl , ck as follows: Gold,1381f; United States Sixes, 1881, none; do. Fivntwentiels. HO. 109'31091i; do. do. do., 1684. itrrhcaum..; ; do. do. do.. 1865, 107 X 46107,4, ; do . do. do.. July. 1865. 110i , i0.110.4 ; do. do. d0.d0.. 1867, 1 /05,M110; do. do do. do , inqami; U. S. Fives. 1 en-forliee. 10511011. 1 5%, Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government securities. &c., to day as follows: U. S. 1681,115.11@115.4; old Fivetwen nee. 10.1:0410 9 3t ; new Plyntwent lea of 1664. 107.. 4 6g1.07M; do.do. 1805. 107 N @108; Fivstwentiee of July. ; do. 1867 111(.11134: do. IE6B, 11U:@.11134; Ten-forties, 1e5va1063 ; Wallace & Reece. Ilankere, 42 Routh Third street, quote Border State Bonds to-day as foil :wa : Tennessee's. old, 6 4 1.;:e.'70: do. new, 1 0 1 '70R ; Virginia, old. 6611(4..%3* do. now, 6P@OO; forth Carolina ' s, old, 67.7.." , i'; do. new. 673^.-0,8734 :..latatourPe. 59C4..90. WZDNEMIAI. Ni.v. 4.-7 be merchants at the Commer cial bachange were engag,d thia tvoniing is the discus eien of the election returee. ty,the taclueion of husine.a affeire. and the traneactione In produce wen, of an ex tremely limited character. MEMMZMME=I The Floor market is rather firmer, but the demand Is very moderate at 3 caterdayie figures. Sales of isial barrt.la lowa, Wisconsin and Ilinneeeta Extra Family at tt.7 al $8 00 per barrel—the tat er tigure for choirs bran-in; Winter 10, heat do. do. at $8 00(8.10 EU: Fancy at ell g IS 25; and Extras at 86 7faßi , 7 25; Eye Fl-ir hi militia in a erne II way at $B. Prices of Corn Meal are nominal. The offerings of Wheat of prime quality aro email, and other descriptions are not wanted. Small sales tied at St .9t 05, and amber at $2 10 per bushel, Rye is dull at the late decline. Small sales of Western at $1 s'). Co; n is held firmly,and further sales arc reported at $1 20 for Western mixed and $1 or Yellow. Oats are in a better demand, and 6,000 bushels, mostly Wii”tern, sold a &' (4. 7 2,C. Whlekyle held firnily. Sales of duty paid $1 17@.1 18. Nov 3.—Toe monetary stringency continued unabated to-day, and an eighth per cent. coinnii , sion, in add.tion to the legal tate of interest, was fr,ely bid tor loans, while in some instances the commission offered was as high as one-quarter per cent. '1 be pressure was as severe as at any time during the past fortnight, and yet there are no present indications of any artificial reasons being employed_ to produce it. The stock market showed remarkable buoyancy at the opening. cotsidering all the circumstances affecting and prices advanced about one tier ceLt. from those cur rent at the close last evening; but in the affernoos the improvement was not sustained, and towards the close there was a general cecline, mainly in consequence or the prevailing dullness. the volume of business during the day having been ILIA. The natural tendency of prices is downward, owing as well to g eir being above tee range of real values as to the oepreesing effect of the existing stringency. but strrng bull combinations are evidently , resisting these influences, and the consequence is that there is a stronger market for itocks than was ever before known in V all street during a period of extreme monetary activity. How long this etste of tnings will last is un certain, but it is ohylon,ly critical ior the bull combina tions. Government securities have shown great buoy ancy during the day, and the indications are that they n ill experience a sharp advance tollowins the announce ment of the result of the Presidential :election. United States stocks hying relatively far cheaper than any others in the country. The demand foe re-investment growing out of the disbursement of the November inter est ought of itself to carry them up considerably The gold market wall on the whole steady, and the fluc tuations were from ii9l at the opening to 183%, with the closing transactions prior to the adjournment of the board at three o'clock at. 12335. following which the latest quo tation on the street was 13336@12/15,i. The borrowing de mand for coin we , artive, but the supply was large, and loans were mad , at 2@6 per cent for carrying and in an exceptional instance at 1 16 per cent,pee diem for borrow ing, as well as without interest to either borrower or lender. The gross clearings amounted to $(O6 090, the gold balances to $2,117 745.-and the currency balite-es to $8,962,254. The emb•Treaeurer disbursed :61,191 553 in coin in payment of interest on the public dehl during the day, making a total of about nine millions on account of the November Interest. The steamer lioleatin took out sl4o,tto in specie. [From the N. Y. World of to-day.] Nov 3—The money market is without change. A large amount of minimums were made as high as legal interest and If per cent. coramienion. and one case was reported of a member of the regular board of brokers paying legal interest end 31per cent commission on $175 000 at 330 P. M. to make up his bank account I.eaue on Governments were made in some cases at 3i, par cent. commission. The banks and some moneylenders,. as usual., charged only legal interest en their loans. The associate banks will hold a meeting at the Clearing-house tq.morrow. at 12 &clock. to consider the question of using the three soment. certcates for Clearing-house settlements, and relief is expected from this, mearure. It is ,stated that the A ssistant Treasurer has made loans to the b Mike on three per cent certificates, with a VIM to prevent further contraction of the currency by redeeming and cansellmg—them--These - t•ansitettana — of - I.4overnmont loom - erikertlllcaterr - Ive, -- presirdw - - - tire 3notahed by expedi ency, although not lawful. The operations of the Gold Each:two Bank to-day were as follows : Gold balancee..... Currency balances. Croce clearancee.. The tiniest Witmerlons Irom New York (By Telegraph.i NEW Yew'. Nov. 4.—Stocks weakhicago and Rock behind, 100 i, • Reading. 97.3 i; Canton Co..ti 4630; Erie, 433.1; Cleveland azdaoledo. 1015 k Cleveland and Pittsburgh. 86%; Pittsburgh and FortiV ayno, COL' ; Michigan Central. 119; Michigan Southern, 8454 • Now York Central. 12535; Illtnoie Central, 143; Cumberieutd preferred. 35 Virginia sixes, 69; NI iseouri eixee, 89; nucleon river. 167; I'lve-tweu. ties, 180. 1095 s ; do.. lest do., 1865. leri • New. 111; Ten.f °riles, 18.5%; Cold, 133}51 Money. 703 percent. Ex change. NEW Yetur. Nov 4.—Cotton quiet at 2534 cent*. Flo-ir firm; State $5 20®7 75: °hie. *7 25@il 25; weftern. $5 90 07 75; 8 =hem $8 10 .($ll3 50; velifornia. $6 7 6 5 410. Wheat dull and declined 2(43e. Corn dull a. $llO2l filx, Oats dull at 76c. Beet quiet. Pork dull at s27.2Lard dull. Whfeky quiet at $1 - • Bavrafour. Nov. .I.—Cotton quiet and steady . Ming Upland!. 25. Flour quiet and .unchanged. -Wheat - dull and nominal' - prime to choice. Bed $ 25®2 85. Corn a eh ado firmer and market better; old White and Yell3w $1 05@1 66. OW dull at 10(470e. BYO dull and nominal tSi 25®l 35. Provision unchanged. . . 1100 eh Read Ft c 48.94 200 ah do c its 48.94 100 eh do bl 6 4914 1 10001 do blO 49,11-16 400 eh do blO It 9 49 200 eh do 48% 100 eh do b6B4in 48 94 200 Fib do do 49 100 eh do do 49% 100 eh do. c 44 81 100 eh do 2dye.tin 48% 100 eh do MO 48.94 100 eh do blO 49% BOAZDEL. 200 sh Biz Mount 61; 27ehP B c 5.13/ 1000 sh do dne bill 541( 100 sh Lb Nv Pik boo 49,ks 10eli Mlnehill R 58 100 eh Catawnpf c 3154 100 al do sCOwn at Phiacideirrhaa Produce Pliaruet. New York Money [Market. [From the N. Y. Herald of to-d ay. I Markets by 'I elegraph. :111M.; - Pi.::. ':..4.1)111.1.0N Later Iteturnts NEW JERSEY IN DOUBT New Yor k 13,000 Majority for Seymour 01: EGON FOR GRANT Elizabeth City—Democratic majority 314. Whalien, Dem.. for Assembly, 102 nasj. TREATON, Nov. 4.—T116 State gives a Demo cratic majority for President and Governor, and for four Congressmen; at least this is the opinion of the Democratic Committee. The Republicans say that only one Democratic Congresfinian is elected. Neither party can give the majority, and both say it is small. Cumberland county gives 1,300 Republican majority. Atlantic county, Republican majority 500 Mercer county gives a Democratic majority. The State looks Democratic. Haight, in the second District, is probably elected. Bird, De mocrat in the Third, and Cleveland, Democrat, in the Fifth District, are elected. Latest from New York. Its - Weal Deepatch to the Philadelphia Evening flullettn.l IE NEW YORK, TRIBUNE OFBICE, Nov. 4,11 A. SI -In dila State Seymour will have about 6,000 majority, and Hoffman about 18,000. Nnw YORK, Nov. 4.—New York elects 18 Re publicans and 13 Democrats to Congress, includ ing the following, from the First to the Eleventh Districts: First, Henry A. Reeves; Second, John G. Schumacher; Third; Henry W. Slocum; Fcturtb, John Fox ; Fifth, John Morrissey; Sixth; Samuel S. Cox ; Seventh, Harvey C. Calkins ; Eighth, James Brooks; Ninth, Fernando Wood; Tenth, Clarkson N. Potter; Eleventh, Gco. W. Greene. The town of Rhinebeck gives Grant 44 ma jority. Red Hook, Democrq tic majority of 11,8. "'Special Deepatch to the Philadelphia Evening Balletin.l Wesni cryi v, D. C., November 4th.—Senator Corbett bas a despatch this morning from Port. lard, Oregon, kaying that that State has gone for Grant by a small majority. Portland City gave 200 Republinn gain. NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—Arrived, steamships Bri tannia, from Glasgow; lifanhattan, from Liver pool, and Alabgna, from Vera Cruz. lillorn.rrow - w, Conn., Nov. 4.—The Douglass Battery are now firing 200 guns in honor of the glorious result in the election of Grant and Col fax. ,i, Progress of tne Insurrection—Proba ,bility that she Troops Will Be Over powered—Negroes Conferring With Leroundi—lnstructions from itlltdrid Anxiamusly A.svalted. HAVANA, Nov. 3. 1868.—Captain General Ler siandra reticent course jeopardizes all the inter ests of business and prostrates, the commerce of the island. The distrust and alarm of the whole community are intense and the wildest rumors are current. Arrests continue to be made, but no executions have as yet taken place. The Cubans and Spaniards fraternize in an unprecedented manner, and all are waiting instructions from the peninsula, which are expected to arrive about the 4th inst. No change wall be made in the polity of the island until then; but it Is most likely that the instructions will not arrive until the 20th. In the interval a fierce outbreak is imminent. A deputation called at the palace to confer with General Lersundi; the body was COW posed of thirty leading men, but they were treated in a contemptuous manner by a brigadier of the Engineers and the leaders ordered to Spain. The telegram of the American Consul requesting his government to send a flotilla to Cuban waters was not allowed to ho passed over the cable. A meeting was helot at the Consulate, but was adjourned, with out having taken action, to await the arrival of the Cadiz tti amer. A . deputation representing. the negro population waited on Gen. Lersundi to assure him that there would be no negro ill correction, and offering their services to him in the present emergency. The Captain-General was highly pleased. The Captain-General is anxious to be relieved. From private sources I learn that the insur v.( nts are 6,000 strong, and that there are many Spaniards among them. They have overrun the eastern district of Holguin. They carry the old national colors, without the royal arms and in scriptions. Their cry is "Viva la Espai7a, Prinz y Serrano!" They shout also "Down with taxa tion!" Santiago de Cuba is threatened by them at present. Genera: Lersandi's nephew and others have been taken as hostages. Miami has been burned by a national war vessel. Logo is reported to have been defeated and taken prisoner or killed. The troops on the Island number 10.000 and aro looked upon as insufficient to quell the insurrection. The latest news is the publication of a telegram from Madrid contain ing ample instructions to the Captain General from the provisional government of Spain. The details by the steamer of the 30th inst. may allay the whole excitement. Rumors that English Mediation is Sought by President Lopez—Origin of the Report. LoNnoN,Nov. 3,1868.—1 t is inferred that Pres id. nt Lopez desires the mediation of England be tween Paraguay and the South American allies. Be recently gave the captain of the British gun boat Linnet permission to survey the Paraguay river, and it is believed that this unusual conces sion was intended to secure for Paraguay the good offices of the British government. CLAIRGY.MAN ASSAULTED WITH BRICKS.—Rev. Alfred Londerback was standing on the steps of his residence, No. 2009 Cherry street, yester- day afternoon, when a man on the opposite side ot etrebt threw a brick at him. The missile struck the steps. Mr. Londerback then descended to the sidewalk Another brick was thrown. This struck the Rev. gentleman en the head and knocked him down. He got up and retreated into the house. Bricks were then thrown through the window. The fellow who committed the outrage was arrested by Police man Dorsey. His name is Bernard Sheridan,and he resides in Marseilles Place, in the neighbor hood of Fifteenth and Spring Garden streets. This morning he was arraigned before Alderman Jones, and was held in $1,500 bail to answer at Court. LAIICILTY.—WiIIiam Thompson was arrested yesterday by the Harbor Police,:on Noble street, below_Front, for._the _larceny of-a--coat.. and a nontalnlti3s. wlakeri be fore Alderman Talmud and was Has held In $BOO bail to answer. • • $2.117,705 13 ..... 3.5 n 151 48 108.090,0L0 00 Birrauso A BED.—Edward Delavan has been held In Sl3OO bail by Alderman Toland, to anawar the charge of the larceny of a feather bed from a house of New Market and Brown streets. DREXEL & CO, l Philadelphia DREXEL I WISTHROP & CO. I New York. DREXEL, RABIES &CO., Paris. Bankers and Dealers In u. Si. Et (01V13S. Parties going abroad can make all their -tiromoial ar , rarigementemith 'wand procure lotions of credit HVOLO NO in 011.POrta or hurope. Drafts for gale on England. Ireland; Franco. gennanY ' 0:30 `O'Clciok. THE ELECTION. NEW JERSEY. !Correspondence of the Amoclatid Prem.] OREGON Marine Intelligence. flejoicLogeu 40011 A. THE PARAGUAYAN WAR. BULLETIN FO UIiTEI ED IT 10 N . BY TELEGRAPH. FROM WASHINGTON Election Exciternent Great Enthusiasm Over the Itestil, Election Returns in Washington. [Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin] WASHINGTON. Nov. 4.—There is great enthu siasm br•re over the, result of yesterday's election. Several Republican clubs turned out and paraded the streets this morning. The anxiety (Replayed to hear the returns last night exceeded anything ever before known. The different newspaper offices and headquarters of political associations were thronged. A large crowd of leading public men collected In the rooms of the Evening Press Association, whore the latest returns from all parts of the country were read out as fast as received, and the interest was kept up until a late hour. NEW YORK NEW Yonir, Nov. 4.—Eleymour's reported ma jority in Kings county 18.J : 1,189. Hoffmann run about 1,200 ahead of Beymour,„ Weather Report. Nov. 4,9 A. M. Wind. Weather. her. Port H00d..... E • Foggy. 65 Portland W. Clear. 83 Boston W. Clear. 40 New I ork... W. S.W. Clear. 46 Wilmington. Ea S W. Clear. 48 Fortress Monroe .N. W. Clear. 47 Washington .....N. W. Clear. 47 Richmond.... E Clear. 42 Augusta, Ga................ W. . Clear. 00 Oswego ......... S. Clear. 42 Buffalo E. Clear. 58 Ch1cag0........ ..... ....... W. Cloudy. 40 Louisville SW. Cloudy. 50 Mobile .. E. Hazy. 60 , New Orleans F Cloudy. 62 Key West N. Clear. 70 Havana. .... .N .E. Clear. TO State of Thermometer This Day at the Bulletin Office. tO A 81.....49 deg. 12 M.. —55 deg. 2 P. M...... 59 deg. ❑Weather clear. Wind denthwcat. THE COURTS. Thereon Cot er—Judse Hare.—Robert Orton vs. Geo. EL Petrie, 9 IL McKee, C M. Carpenter and G. IL Petrie. A fags ed issue. Verdict to...plaintiff. Churls M. B. Lbslle vs. Peter Martin An action tore. cover arrears of rent. Verdict for plaintiff for $449 05. The t.ity of Philadelphia vs. A. Ow ton, owner or repu ted owner. An action to recover the amount of a claim for cleansing the spool in 1859. the defence produced the receipt ofpas ty ho did work. showing that the amount of the bill had been paid. The question in the caeo was whether tho party doing the work by order of tho Board of Health was authorized to collect tho amount of the bill. The books of the Board of Health do not show that the amount was ever paid. Ottic ro of the Board testified that there was no instance where work was ordered by the city tha.t the cletiner was author zed to collect the bl 1. In this particular case the cleaner was paid by a warrant drawn by the Board of health, so that he received the amount both from the city and the owner. Under the instructions of the Court, tho defendant agreed to confess judament for the amount—BM 14. DISIMPOT COVET, Judge Btrond.—Edward McNarne re. The city of Philadelphia. An action In three city war rants, on which interest was claimed. The Court ruled that the plaintiff could not claim interest except since the commencement of the snit Verdict for plaintiff for $15.129 50 Francis Gerard vs John Speck. An action to recover an amount required to repair a carriage which' it 'was alleged the defendant bad agreed to furnish ass-, lint class vehicle, but which was second.clese. and required' the repairs. Verdict for plaintiff far eta In 1.. E. WALRA.VEN, MASONIC HALL, No. 719 CHESTNUT STREET. ADDITIONAL IMPORTATIOVS By Last Steamera • IN LACE CURTAINS AND DECORATIONS, Embracing some of the Richest Novelties ever introduced in this Department. 4 4 / BANKERS; 0 0 No. 35 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. DEALERS IN ^ COVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCK, COLD AND NOTE BROKERS. Accounts of Banks, Firms, and Individuals reached, subject to °heck at sight. , .IN FR RitT ALLOWED ON BALANCES. ......." EN ERAL kENT3., FOR , 4 Sto s PENNSYLVANIA 4,,, • v ~ A N D • PtIZ RN kV V; 3sv 0./C.d OF THE (5-. hit kNSIIO m 1. il o Of PIE -"I leac)." if UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.IPANY 18 a corporation chartered by special Act of Congress, ap• proved July 25, 1868, with a CASH CAPITAL, $1,000,000, FULL PAID. Liberia terms offered to Agents and Solicitors, who are Invited to apply at our °Mee. .Full particulars to be had on application at our °Mee, located in the second story of our Baulking House, where Circulars and Pamphlets, fully describing the advantages offered by the Company, may bo bad. E. W. CLARK & co., - Xo. 35 South Third St. COMPOUND CHARCOAL BISCUIT, • FOR DYSPEPSIA. . Tkeee are competed of fine Willow Charcoal. combined with ether articles of welticnown eillr.acy, in the form of Bran Biscuit, by which means medicines generally dim gettabl valuableere pleasant gni pulatable. WATER a • meet rtmedy fee BEA R.TBLIRN. BHAFFI. ACIDITY. NAUSEA, EKIRITATIONS. CON STIPATION, and other forms of I NINGES PION. Prepared only by - .JA ES T. SHINN, Apothecar ,Y oc2l4e,f,mrplat Broad and Spruce streets, Phila. GfIREEN GINGER—LANDING AND FOR SALE By J. B. BUSBIES & CO.. lea South Delaware avenue 3:15 O'Oloolr.. LATER, CABLE 'QUOTA.TIONS • New Nark State. NEW YORK, Nov. 4.---Fulton county gives 700 Republican majority. Onondaga county gives 3,300 Republican ma jority. LOCKPORT, N. Y., Nov. 4.—Niagara county, corrected, complete, with estimates for one dis trict, gives Griswold 319 majority; Grant, 391 majority. Skeels, Democrat, is elected In the First District by 14 majority: ' NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—The, whole State is re ported about 1,000 majority for Seymour. Hud son county elects the Democratic ticket by 8,000; six representatives to the Legislature, and:; one Senator. NEWARK, Nov. 4.—Tbe State gives about 1,000 Desnocmtiomajority. Randolph,' Democrat, 00 Governor has 2,500 majority. The Senate will have 12 Democrats and 0 Re publicans, and the Aitiembly 82 Democrats and 26" Republicans, thus securing a Democratic Senator in place of Freiinghuysen. Moore, Rep., 3,000 majority; Haight, Dern:, , 8,000; Baird, Dern., 3,600; Hill, Rep., 100; Cleve land, Dem., I,ooo—Halsey wW contest this. CLEvELAND, Nov. 4.—Nothing has been re ceived to indicate any change in the Western' States from previous despatches. Kentucky is reported to give 75,000 Democratic majority and elects 9 Democratic Congressmen. , LONDON, Nov. 4th, A. M.—Consols, 943®91% for money and account. Five-Twentles,.74X • Atlantic and Great Western, as;. Illittob3 Cen: tral, 9735. Erie, 28. PARIS, Nov. Ren tee, 79f.@97c. ,Nov. 4th, A. M.—Cotton ad vaneingi the sales to l day 1 iyll reach 20,000 bales. In addition to the 12,000 reported yesterday, 5,000, bales were sold after the close of the mar- ket, making 17,000 bales In , LONDON, Nov. 4, A. M.—Calentta Linseed ; 61s: , NEWPORT, Wales, Nov. 8.---The bark Jennie Cobb, Henley, Master, from Troon for _Now Or leans, put in here to-day requiring a now, foto: mast. eicarnie .intea,ngenco. , NEW YORE., Nov. 4.--Arrived, steamer St. Laurent, from Brest. h NEW YORK, NoveMber 4t :—Judge •Bamuel.R.: Betts,of the United Bthtes District Court of this district; died in New Haven on - Monday„atAbe! age of eighty-one. The Manufacturers' and Merchatts' Bank,No. 561 Broadway,was entered by burglars last night, and the janitor, Mr. James Ferguson, was mur derously assaulted, being knocked down by a "billy." His cries were heard by Ids daughter, who gave the alarm and the burglars escaped, leaving behind them a large lot of their profes sional tools. A horrible murder occurred last night in Thompson street. Maggie Murray, a white wo man, cut the throat of Upton Murray, a negro man, with whom she had been living. The negro was drvink and asleep at the time, and Maggie was in company with another negro man in the same room. When the deed was committed she left the room and was afterwards found on the corner of Broome and Sullivan streets with the razor still in her hand. The negro, after he re ceived the cut, which was five inches long and an inch and a half deep, got up and walked to a, drug store in Sullivan street, where he died. The election in this city yesterday was an ex ceedingly quiet one. Many who attempted to vote illegally were arrested, and a great many more undoubtedly succeeded in depositing frau dulent votes. The army of special deputies ap pole !AA by the Sheriff swarmed at the various' polling places, and did much, to obstruct the vo ting of the Republicans. They arrested several Republican inspectors without cause in the early part of the day, but Superintendent Kennedy issued an order in the afternoon which put a stop to this. In the evening large crowds assembled at the various political , headquarters and news paper offices. The Republicans were wild with, enthusiasm. Discharge of Female Clerks at Wash- The Washington Star of last evening says.: "Seventy-five female clerks, employed in the Office of the Register of the Treasury;' wore this morning notified that their resignations would be received up to twelve o'clock to-morrow, as it was necessary to reduce the torte, and should their resignations not be forwarded by that time, it would become necessary to dismiss them. A_ number expressed their willingness to resign and receive the thirty, days' leave of absence' allowed by the Secretary, but others de clared they would not'resign, but would be dis— missed. The pressure upon the Secretary by the friends of parties en the black list in the , 2d Au— ditor's and Register's Offices is very great, but it is Impossible to retain them, as the force must be reduced. At noon to-day those who were no tified that their resignations would be aegepted were allowed to leave the Department, si.=•,4 as they left the various rooms their countenances looked decidedly sad." Fotorra Wago.----As a sample brick of the way they do things in the Fourth Ward, we give the hourly returns in two of the divisions. We have not USN to comment upon them to-day, but our readers can form their own opinion en the subject. ' SIXTH' DIVISION. EIGHTH DIVISION. Grant Seymour. Grant. ,Seymour. 8 0'c10ck.....7 82 47 122 9 Itn . ..0 137 87 96 10 " ...Jr 91 22 65 11 " ....4 70 18 , 72 12 " ....1 33 6 136 1 " ...".4 74 4 124. 2 " ....5 29 5 93 3 " ....0 51 8 66 4 " ....0 92 1 114 135 2 95 219 3 218 Oct. 13th The annual meteoric shower is expected this year between the 12th and 15th of. November. `fhe astronomer _of - the:Cincinnati Observatory, writes to the Gazette of that city "On the 12th and lath of November, between tike houis of midnight and sunrise, watch will be kept at the Observatory for the so-called `November' meteors. In this labor it is peculiarly advantageous" to have "the co operation of several observers, and as the obser vations are of a very simple character the director would cordially invite all , who are inte rested in this subject to unite therein with him. Those who cannot do duty at the Observatory may still accomnilah something at their own resi dences, eseeciall,. if proVided with stood watch and a star map or globe. A map of the bright stars within forty-five degrees of Leo may indeed be easily constructed beforehand, and, be used with -good results: "Corresponding observatione will be made at several pomts within a hundred miles ofus, and it is hoped that some results for parallel ; may be &ducted. ' who intend observing will do well to com municate at once with the undersigned, stating to what extent they cim takepart in the observe.. dons. - CL - S.VELAND AUBE. "Cincinnati Observatory, Oct. 28." • . FIFTH EDITION BY TELEGRAPH. THE ELECTION: RETURNS FROM OTHER STATES DEW JERSEY DE KOCRA.TIC New JerseyjElection. The Western States. By the Atlantic Cable. 4th.—The Howse fs steady FROM'NEW ItO H. Ington. POLITIOAL. 33 1013 153 Rep. Dem. Rep. ...61 341 147 The November Nteteors. 4 . '00 O'Oloolt
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