MESE C •+', ' I . ' ..: .., ~, ', C,,g ~ k, 's''''. iniSiritraiViSin: , ~*, ~ ~. s, t , rfe l 11010) Irlfialto 4 B Ze "iiilti 4 0 'lb( 4 it i , e 1 1 , 4 ii : 0 4 ' .. s e t bO :: 'l.Pre i i'''S! . ThlliOltiry ad the recce ttney f , e Con. greys ” 10 1 Ph - -asserelileit, at,Lausanue on the I • - st,• 14th::in:;,., haying :been ticnifdrfefi on Yibtor, iiiisol-Tie sent the followi.lig letter :. 4 • . . •. ' , , I elloiejtti s not of ,the- •triiiteti ~.SYgtes of EitroP6 : I t ,• Pormit rile to g ive you this name; for the 11 , '.k rppean ..trederal llepublic is founded in rights, .''',• : i• `.•A and in the tneantiroo is founded in fact ,You 1. V ' eicio; therefore' idie eilittgt; , , You prove it by, , you • -r iimon o which, ioutlincw Unity. You are • the c Otaipenceituent of •the ,grand future. You • ' ik ' ,/s. confer on the the hinictraryl'residency Of your', l'''"' .*. '#• 4 Oortgreas, andtl, am profoundly toughea ••by i +.l that act. Your Congress is , mqr,e, than An 'assetahl+ of ,' Intellects ; , it - le, a sea • s . of r,:•colupilation4 ' •committee , , , of • •.,‘ the ,futdre table ,of the !mid. 'An , eli te ,o t ty s . 1 ,i . because • tnkin..oothise l a res ni e ll i l i t t ith ygu e ‘'signifY by' law 14. ,;' i ' a te iwriris - iyiong; ) tbat murder even glorious; l• 3' both - butte, and royal,'iS infamy; that human' , • blood is precious ; that life is , sacred. ,That a- ' last,war. will he 'necessary, lam assuredly not , of those who say otherwise. What '4lll pia& , ' • yrarbe?' :A. war of conquest: „ What conquest , • is troth° , made?" Liberty. The first want -of inanahis chief right; his f.injt diity—is'liberty.r, . , Civilization, tends, invincibly to unity . of- - language: l of money, ,of meazureS, • Yid - ''the ",p -the fusion of in hutianity, ~ ~"thichis the supreme ,unity. , ".Concord has a i synonym—simpfification as wealth., and "life 4 4 . 4•` . bave,a synonym—circulation. The first of - t e servitudes is the frontier. Who says ron-. i tier says ligature., Cut the ligature; aftace the , • 'frontlet, remove the 'qUStOinB oilfeeti'l'e.movd t ' : the soldier, in other words be free ; Peace fol , 10w5.."-. Thenceforth there will .be profound ' • peaces; peace inhdeonee , for ,all ; inviolable peace;, the normal state of labor, of exchange, of supply and demand, .of production and of, , . . consumption,' of vast effort.in common; of the `attraction of the industries of the go and come ~ Of ideas of theihuman flux and reflux. 1 Who 'has.' an,interest in, frontiers? The. .. ;kings divide to goverw_, ~ :A .frontier indicates „..fr sentry-hex ; te sentry-box 'implies a 'Soldier. - , . 4,No"one.can pass"is the Pasii-word of, al), pri ,-liWifilegesi prohibitions, juttm.entst , and ^tyran-- .- Inns.; Prot:if-this frontler—trom this sentry-' -- rf '...;- hoz—from this soldier, all human calamity: . ' ,'"`: proceeds. The king being the exception, re :, • - 9Ydreis the soldier to defend him; the/soldier; N.,,, intehis turn, . must, murder .in order `to live. Kings;muit have armies; armies must have t s , war. , ' Otherwise their raison d' etre vanishes. ~•... Atstrange thing that man should consent to , kill man withoutknowing why. The art of tke despots is to, divide the people and the , army. • One-half oppresses the other. . Wars have all ~- kinds of pretexte, , butthey have never but'one , ..• .„„,'', cause--:the army. Do away with the array' ie,e , "Ti andiyou do away with war. But how suppress f; thetarmy? By the suppression of despotisms. '' / Howall supports itself! Abolish the ,para - it sites in their different forms—civil lists, paid A idlers, Salaried clergy, pensioned magistrates, aristocratic .sinecures, gratuities tk , public 1, edi,fice, standing armies. Make this sweep 'l, 'an yon endow Europe' with - $2,000,CNX),000 li Pe': ' num..o-erV, hy a fitroke of the pen, is the dT art prkt, ofutiseryslittplitlictf.The.tbrottes do . . iaotiwish this simplification. They prefer forests 0 - bityonets. The' rings , only understand one - -•fpoiet- r perpetuate .war. It ,in ,;.believed that they are 'quarreling, but not" 'entirely. They are assisting each . other. .Thesoldier must, 1 repeat, have his, reason for existence. Per ri z.petuate the aridly; Perpehiate; despotism;, - ex t, t:lleilt, ferociotls logic, - The. kings — ..,exhaust, th,iif,:ipatient; the . peeple," -by Woodshed: There is a savage fraternity_ of swords, froni which. - ,result.s the . enslavement ,of man. TheAfgotp,l to preeeiff tifi: - ..: your 'object, which 'have called, i , somewhere, the re -90,,,<,,, (absorption of the Soldier in the citizen. The day when this repoisesSion .will take place— , the day when the people,will nothave outside • thew the man of war, that inimical brother, they' will again find themselves "united ; loving, .. doibled in power, and in soul; and ' Civiliza tion will .name herself Harmony and Labor, and police will make 'itself' as' iight does by. the sunPleoscensien ,of •'a star, „Tile star: is'. liberty, liaise;''' theforbro,c ; the , cry ': ' ' De , li-s-erance! which contains the Monition of all. " Citizens and brothers, Iliand you my warmest thanks awl my cordial adhesion. , ".., ., ~ VIcTOR ALIGO.- TH iE The New Scheme of the Siguttob Aathorl• ties. - Hav,ANA ) Sept. 18.-JZtip' new 'arrangement, at the head of which statict ,SerioriZangroiliz and Ajtuia, coritemPlates the payment of. $l5 for each Cuban who doe'S' net' wish to volun teer.,, .Every Wan mnstnovr ishoW , ' his hand.. • Are : you for the Cubans, or are you for the. In tegnty Espaiiol?--these die the questions that _baveLto_be_met, and_rio'Lavoidande_is_to_Jaft' tolerattid; ..The journals , contain long lists of. names sifted by Cubans as Well as Spaniards which lend all seeming comitenancb to the action of, the Government. Very, many, signaturee. appear of old and': honored Cubans, Who, according. to this showing,' de • sire to see Spanish sovereignty preserved in tact. The Count • of Pozos Dulces, long the recognized leader of the Cuban party, for years• the editor of El Syg/oj and whose sister is the widow of Narciso Lopez,,figures' in the number. Then one'sees the* name of Zaldo, • of Jose Antonio ll'esser, and, of many other well-known Creoles. •What does this mean? Do these people really desire to , see the Span-, lards succeed, or are they, afraid of confisca, tion in case of a refusal they,, lend' their signa tures to the manifesto ? The policy of putting out,thisPaper to secure names has been alluded to by yciur corres pondent heretofore. The object is,: of course, to manufacture public sentlinent abroad- -The thirty gunboats will, ere be:flnished They arc withheld from the use of the Spanish Government' at present, by the "United States authorities, but a, superbuman - effort mill 7 soon be made to have them released. One of the leading , Powers of Europe will. the Spaniards say, offer, to'guar antee that the new boats building' at New York will not be iised in any event ag!iin.st Peru: Now, in addition to this, the Spaniards are determined to show, to the' best Of their ability, that the principal Cubans of the. Isle do not want the United States to recognize the insurgents'as belligerents, or give them• the slightest' enciauragement.' It is believed that many, or most of the 'Creoles' signatures „ have been procured through fear. At 4all events, the Spaniards now seem to have no idea of giving up the contest swill= of pr. Hayes from the Frozen Seas. Sr. Joaws, N. F., Sept. 27.—The expedition of Dr. Hayes and Bradford, the artist, has re turned'trom the Arctic regions, entirely sue; cessful in; every object, and well. They penetrated the middle ice,in which the British steam-whaler Alexandria Ras crushed by the ice and lost. ' Her crew was saved. PERSONAL, MIQI3,,THE LADIES; x THE"OOI324.ritQU)II A LA POMPADOUR," • . „ for beautifying and preserving the complexion, and giv ing it the freshness and brilliancy of youth; is • with out 'a' rival, Is 'perfectly free from any deleterious minerals.and drums, and -lie calcacy . , is wonderful for rendering the akin soft, pure and - beautiful. It is 'the true secret or beauty, and all ladles - should Übit Format) by AU dealerd. • ' • R. MICHALSKI & CO.' No. 21 South Eighth DRY 'GOODS. NEW• AMERICAN' STICKS Al $2 75 per Yarict JOHN Nos. 405 and 407 N. St Aloud StICOA, Aso11:410 Th BA Li; fly W. THOMAS , 9 . 11 • I,THE DAILIY - EIF,ENING Biliart rVIN—PIIII.,ADELPAIA TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 8 , 1869 ERNE MEI ~~- z ; ~'D~Y~:.~ ..r.. a i r.M1..~ r'':. '.. i'l' S .IW...tIA!V.PfOO:; d 1014 Chemillut loi. J FILL OPEN MONDAY SEPTEMBER 27tfi , ';'• New Styles In '1• • • • I r s) RE S S GOOD . Babes > Chambre. 131aeleSilki. ' One Case Hid ONO, $ 1 2 5. 1,000 Pleces'4-4 Bleacheo Nislnn; 12's. REDUCED FIO 4 15c Wulki Suits • ' NOW OFFEBEIVOD, Milk - Ay TO ORDERS :' REPELLANT,; -CLOAKS g ,r REDUCED 1 8.108. 1869; 9ritAim. EDWARD FERRIS, Importer and Dealer White Goods, Laces,,Embroideries, Handkerchiefs, Linen Collars and Cuffs, &c., At Very Low Prices. ,EDWARD FERRIS, 807 CHESTNUT STREET. istztu th 8 , . UDExwA i vr : Q.N:4-..W DELI(' Cr fiCOPS, 215 North 1111011 Street, above Race. IVe are v ew, opening all the Novelties in PAU ;DRESS . GOODSI' A t prices to 'mute quick Bales. ,We invite an early ~spection of the sante. ELDER,WALTON & CO. " sel6-th ato 2mvo ' - . MOURNING STOOK Is Now Coinplete ;'• ; mit r.vtitY VARIETY FOR FALL. P,ERKINB&OO.,.. No. 9 South Ninth Street. k7tutheamr BLANKETS 1 LINENS MUSLINS S 19 CASES BLANKETS. 19 CASiS Bib/126E1MS. 19 CASZS isiatmEirs. AILJL. THE, GRADES. ALL THE tateozs. ALL THE GB/MIMI. EVERY GOOD SIZE. EfERY IROOD SIZE EVERY GOOD SIZE. ONE DALE LINEN TABLE DIAPER. R O.OD LINEN TABLE DAMASKS. ' TO'W'ELS, NAPKINS AND DOYLIES BEST. WIDE SIIIEE'TINTAS. BEST PILLOW COTTONS. BEST YARD 'WIDE MIUSLINS. COOPER & CONARD, Ninth St., below Market. LINEN STORE, ,tp- 828 Arch . !Street. New Store, 1128' CHESTNUT, ST. New Department... Bed Clothing. Best Blankets, Fresh from the Mills.' Marseilles Bed Quilts. ' Honeycomb Quilts, all sizes. Allendale and Lancaster Quilts. Linen Shootings, every width. l Ootton Shootings, 14 A, Casin9 B . •,• , • We tuela to do , ' a .largo; , .derpartmeilt by offering cheap and reliable goods. • P:O,THVI:."V . N . A, H . .T' RI C.,E$ DRY GOODS. RICKEY, SHARP & CO. ,714 7 3 7 CHESTNUT STREE'ro CORNER EIGHTH AND MARKET STREETS 1 iBO9. OUT. • ) TRAWBRIDOrk & CLOTHIER. TT • • •• • • PLANKETS BLANKETS; QUILTS, QUILTS, , QUILTS We sitagain receiving the celebrated HURON BLANKETS which have heretofore met such unpreeedented sale. Attention is specially directed to the quality, size and weigh of theei Blanket's. 'theiare-manufaciiiied eipressly foo our sales, and will not be:found in any other establishment.— i • = HURON OrOi.JD HURON SWANSDOWN BLANKETS." " ' HURON PREMIUM BLANKETS: HURON EXTRA SUP ER: ,BLA.NKETS. CRIB BLANKETS, EVERY QUALITY. ,J:.N.: .. :i_.'QV.I L . T":;:::. • • •MARSE. JACQUARD, BRIDAL, 'We aim,,in the above goods, to, be able to show- every,customer ,the kind desired;. avid at the right price., STRAWBRIDGE & CENTRAL DRY ,G.OODS HOUSE, CORNER EIGHTH ANA STREETS.: STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIER • Inviyithe attention of Families,Publio InstitUtions and the Proprietorsof Hotels, Boarding Houses and Shipping to their large new stook of \\ HOUSEKEEPING ,DRY GOODS, Ccmprising all the varieties of style and width's in every d43seription pf Linen Sheettngs. I.lino4,„Vurniture Dover*. Pillow-Case Linens. Jacquard. Lineti 1b".12. - rniture Covers. ,`Linens. Table and; Melodeon. Covers. Table 'Cloth Striped and Plaid Table 4Clqi7-041(p,glil• Napkins and nosrr • Cretonne 'Chintzps. Towels ana' Toweling's. Twineit Furniture Coverings. 'l4:rien Ta,ble Covers.. Printed and, 136,iiika,s1 - 4. TOintitiesy'in colors. LAinen ITouse Olbths*: Made u ourselves fr lie of th, very , Vest quality •s , TlRA,wl3jtj. - D.,ot;" -. &_;",c..LoT,..w_rg CENTRAL DRY:croODS HOUSt.l;'' ;;' ~ QUILTS, QUILTS, Q - . HILTS.- ~.... ~,. , .. . ...1.4,,, ,, .. , ,,,,,. ~,..,.,, , . ! ~ . ..;, i ,.,..:1,..,,-i - . . .... A. N D HONEYCOMB. LINEN GOODS SHIRT inen' of .oiu• BLANKETS, ° „BLANKETS, 13LANK.ETS. 'DIMITY; LAN° A S'I'ER, CRIB, CL9THIEft, , 'fl •, • *6 - tl 4' " 1r BOsoMa wn Jmpor a 100,T.:.aa ; 2, "0 QUILTS, QUILTS, QUILTS;v , r, :. ammo n. a..Y, ~: "~:6'lf. . 1 n4l 1. , . • i is Id guaran STRAW:MUDGE :St-'''CLOTHIERS OPENIN(VOY"SILKS,: AND DRESS GOODS: - i.:',,it: - . - (•: , ,,i' , :.:1_4: . :::;;., : , : i ..:,,:.:, BILKS, SILKS, 13LAQN..SILic:;..' . ! . 8x40.;§.,f0c . ,,,,:_:,..,:„ ONE CASE . POULT DE SOIE. ` 52.00. Mtiroo4, Made„ IPeat% ONE CASE POULT DE SOLE, $2 ' ONE CASE 'VERY WIDE AT 83 06 ; Same Goods sold recently at $3 50. 3131.,AJCIK.tfin S 7. BLACK C isatimig , Ow , 00. BACK 1.1 KS, very cheap, *2 25. ° 331.4.4N-cla. tia n 50; 73 - 1-.A.!Off. SIMEKS, _Os 00. P } MEitUJA.N_ - SI-LKS,. ONE CASE VELOUR POPLUYS, ONE CASE VELOUR POPLINS ONE CASE VERY RICH LYONS SILK POPLINS. i -,ALL7WOOtt•PLAIp,::..povuNs 111-Wool Pia Ads. -&11-Woo1 Flaicl, 7ri-; All-Wool Plaids, S. Ttich Diagonal laids; *Mr Blue,' and, 43-reen Mack. .All-1 7 Voc.f. 1 Poptiarks S 7 *1 60 $1 2/- . After months ~o f• preparatiei-our - .DRESS.-GOODS , s to ck , , , y. Dlete, and our pafrons have the opportunity to select Dress Fabrics .; ~ , , r -b• f; • 4 , from, an unsurpassed' : assortment, the prices now, as f heretofore, being .../ • t , , • always at the bottom of the market,; 4 , : ; , STRAW.BRIDGE . '& . ::OE'e()TM::S4O ''.''',l','.,i .'i-i'''.;,t!"-,;.;.',.;''..:.''".';'..';7';',•.7':':2,.`.:, ~ ... ~ ..!,,q.i.',...,...,`.' : , ',i, 4 ,i ;.,1....',.',.;,f.f.;..i.ii.],ii1__ CENTRA I EM I'O RIZTM., COR'NEW 'Altifflo„ MARKET - ' MEM Vinbraoing the New Shades in Chevy', In. all,the New Shades. TWENTY-FIVE PIECES , A Weiff , Artiele; Very DesUable. In Entirely New §hadesi $2 00. Entirely New Shades, $1 50 IMMNII=I SILKS, SILKS; FANCY SILK FA:Np.y - .ILKK": . ., Lavender, Pi~hl~, Blue, :SIDS, =IBM