IMI U El ri *ltourikketts. 07710 E: morn scions, 84 no 86 rim AT • OVVICIAL PAPER • PlitsbasilOlLEcgeway wad Am, gnAar oematr. eriESDAY, DEC.. 1, MOO PIITHOLZIIII at Antwerp, firm. U. B. !Wipe at Frankton. 9 Bonnclosed in Now York yesterday s r't 1214(4124. it An . Intimating talkie, tram the Phlla• t.ielphis Myra _American, on the "Ohio ;River Navigation," will dnw the read• c7's eye to another o f . one columns, this ;morning. Ft 'd Tux Reading Times, In new type, and r,srlth its thrms rearranged, presents an ',appearance equally creditable to the taste the publishere, Ittidfolhe enterprise, or tltuttliourlshing Inland city. AnarnErcenban expedition is talked eof by the Ire* Toil. filibusters. They !are discounting; in this way, their ran. Ninine anticipations' of Congressional 2nympathy. They any come to grief in `either direction. Tnz owe of Georgia will demand, early in the corning emaitm, the attention (and the no brges to be` delayed decision of (longram ; Let her Ilegislatnre ratify the XIV tb kitl u cle, or favorably attest tthe validity 'Mt Its pre:W i ne ratification iby the vote which was taken before the colored members werkescluded, and the most serious dits care will be relieved. • Tam Census Coicarrrsz appoln . A: the lest session of Cowry will Its report early to the approething acoomPatita. by A Val oigsnfsiaB the Census Buren for ?870., The bill pro ! vides for tho of several Items of ststisticsintAstAbreced In say former Census Isw.4incing the rest will be one for the enumeration of the different re- Ileorm sects In •frui tormlxl, a proihdon, as it strikes us, of Teri Qaestlonsble Si IleaancY• ne•-1, • . Ws print„li soothes column, an inter esting IltstedetiVtlf eigumatances con. neatest withitte pest bath. defalcatlomat Cleanlsad..lbet !Wet, who may also Lase seen otmetin .pbsersattons, of ges t terday, tastable's the leading points of this affair, willmosfall to notice the two prominent points in to-day's publication —the advice from the delinquent official to his ~infacipl7. MO they -should not put such teMPietion in the way of hie successcms, illagiiihinvadmcniiiion with which the COWitiredieriteseemaidy remin ded the Dhectomottliete dtdincpumoy in Tau proirind coned the ell-quation hare been 'permitted, through corres pondents, to occupy a much larger space in our columWhaneve mdicipated, when the dlscussignVinul lilt opened, or than has been wtiligi agreeable to the edits. lontal maUsg 11 n, ;Of-, jhe Gsvcrrn. Dleelalming,nll , editorial resPonsibillty for the orgilloui or ile - mestis which have been tbiis far presented on each aide, we mmd, nom! close ouir cobamne to the discusslcuri aping only to any inter est which may hold itseraggrieved by the communkntlon of -thIS morning the Privilege, Wreaked, of reasonable apace for reply. A no , in the Tetmesees Legts. tatare, to defeat the appllcattoci of the tint:Woad card'rhattatmogs Railway r Company. for the right of way through . ._ that Btate, IS charsetitn some ..quartetre, i' upon the uttkieuily - influence of Louie vine..lt li 41B1carilt to cioncetre, even - granting Mbrilitfplitallon to be correct, i how the proper authorities of any Btate could be guilty...9l inch perverse stupid!- : ty uto yefue,ulth their eyes open, the solheadvantages which sub a trimir km of commtudattlonwould certainly confer, by lie conettuction, upon the material mteresta of their people. Tennessee m* be behind the age in her politics, but she g i would be clear out of sight in lie rear, in . 1, the line of everything like pmetlesl good 1 . acne if she thus .objects to her own me g tertal improvement , .3 BE GOLD ADVANCED one at two per cent., yesterday, on a report that the Secretary had refaux!fralcce below 122. If that report be correct, Mr. Boirrwsu. has lade salitike,. and h will not take long for him to disamm ltd indeed, be may have realized the habitation al ready,: Bob ,sr don't =win any such rumor. NO 0 rI. &aef more clearly than he does, that it is for the Interest of the Treasury tollilipree - of Its surplus of coin as long as it Can command any premium whatever,--ao long as any fiactlonal per centime of appieciallon can be gained for Its taper prtialbitleVAlnty. It Is clearly" not within either the duty or the discze non of the.srcßtarg to fix any arbitrary. limit the operations of a policy which can 'him but one legitimate objective Obit, and to whichit gravitates with sew accuracy sagratifying at, without official Interference. Ili.icesiadble. SEE la &Nab rerr, the reading of the „ Bible was reossitly - prohlblted thopab• lie schools iiihat city. In Ban Fran. deco, on the otherhand, Father Gallaher, a Catholic priest, is permitted to eater the Tenth Ward, School, immediately after dismissal, and teach the catechism of his church to the children. The matter came up at st;tato milting of the school board of thilteiVr. • Kr. MEAN one of the directors,: drew the attention alba board to the matter, and argued that it was an Intleardir '. 44, the law to permit sectarian indirectkMia be given in the , schools. Thirsts* met -by violent oppo• sitlon hum thole who sustained Father Gallaher in dda_Catftlis. Ind a torrent of abuse was poured upon Mr. Stillman, who was Citqtrtinfaaf At - it bled for oh jetting to seph tells:4lone. Finally the subject wastildepon the table by a vote of 7 to 4, anethrte Father Belisha is left free tot:Meade the children in the Tenth Ward School as mach as he sees proper. s. % ,a N ME -'' EMI r . " • .S. -. . --- trr7, 7 ' ' THE OZEAT EXPEDITION under Baker, ~4 , prepared by the. Viceroy of Egypt for the l Yexpieralim4ed =ran oftheterritorks, in the bearaf Mire, which embrace the sources of the Nile, has at het taken Its ' ~, departure. It Was some mouths since k. announced bOleirentbspo missionaries . B seed apply forpermissidn to prooeed witti 1 the expedition. More recently, he b i n abet given pubilturrotice 'Utak while he Ishall not countenance the alamtrade, which is stilirsitgnizenthroughouttbose p regions, yet head' not attempt to abet ''.. ilk dawn leranbifittlicinii with p other forms of forced servitude, Rear, ti tionmy journebtrbotlPlCEirope and in li our own campy, one sloth** ol4eetion• p 4 able in this innytamaree; ea Its centrals they comma tilintfelgsting splendid re. mita. from an entarpOteerhtehlooks•db 12 *Sly to the omen of aeondnad, and 14 . ihsfoundlngef a sewrand indspeiderd F'; pine for tha Agniti.mi Viceroy. , . Thee a brilliant :expectations may be sadly dump pointed, when the end of these great expe ditions shun come to be written. Its or gaolzasion has "the bad drop" in it, the ideas which control its leader and - the Egyptian government are at war with the spirit of the age. We shall see, then, how it prospers. FATHER BY AONTHE The position of this eminently gifted Frenchman, Is very like that which Men Tit: Loess occupied when he nailed his celebrated theses upon the church door, In Wurtemburg. precis -nut, es I,i: Truth did et that time, clings to the Church. of home with sincere and fond devotion, While in real antagonism with what he conceives to be the errors, not of the Church, but of that who ace using it wrongfully, by making It a clog and hindrance to the brotherhood, unity and .progreas of all who bear the Christian I name. Anathematized by his own Church, he came to this country, where 1 he finds that sympathy for which he yearns, not among the brethren of hie' own COMMUDiOII. but among Protestants of all sects. But this is a position witch he cannot long maintain, and, like o- TEED, be will soon be constrained to ke higher and more decided ground. to same is evidently one of those ho never goes backwards, Upon this d theatre, where opinion Is freer, and w ere mere image. and forme are less potential, then in Europe, he is studying the great . problems which have stirred his mighty Antelleet,l' and heart to their depths, but which are not yet elm to him. Whether he' shall turn out to be to France, what Lomeli was to Germany, the event alone can tell. MeI6OPUUTA DEMOCR ACI Doubtless many people would like to know how ttis thatthe city of New York rolls up such enormous Democratic ma. jorities—majorities ranging from forty to sixty thousand. In Atte first place; a majority of the voters of the city ace of foreign birth. The whole number of native born voters is about6o,ooo, of whom about 40.000 are Nepalleans, the residue, about 80,000, are of foreign birth. Very large numbersof the leading met of New York, mer chants, lawyers, roaster MeCtill3ioll, etc., reside In the antormding towns, villages and country, to the distance of eighty miles, and are not, of course, city 'voters: Again, New York, le a Catholic, city, made so by the overwhelming numbers of that faith who pour into it from foreign pnintrles, especially from Ireland. It has been and that there are more men in London than there are in Dubin. The eame.mlght almost be and of New York. Bo preponderatipg istbatelemeat that many politicians of American birth and Prot" scant parentage have turned Catholics for popularity's sake. So po tent are they. that they bays divided the school Pond, and run their schools under the rule and for the interest of their Church. Hot lens than ten thousand voters of that city are direct7Y interested in the liquor 'businesn Of these ninety-nine out of every hundred vote the dunocratic ticket. The gambling fraternity are very nu• mucous, and are . almost to a man demo• crabs. One of them, .1 obnMorriseev, le a democnstle representative in Congress, 'and no constituency in the country le more title represented; for he is not only a gambler, but a prize tighter and a rut flan. There are many men in that city who traffic In the abame and degradation of woman. Without a single known excel". Sion all those vote the - deafecralic ticket. And lastly, there are at every election from twenty to forty thousand illegal votes, east mainly by what 'recalled "re- ! pesters," men who 'go from precinct to precinct, voting again and again under assumed names. They are paid for doing this, (brit is s part of the regular tactics I of therpirty. In that vast population this! ti not a Macon role to play, especially where the officers of the election are In. dined to wink at it. In 1868 these fraudulent votes turned the scale In that great State against Guam and Cots►x; and this year, although the majority was greatly less, the city was too strong for the country, and again New York went Democtstic. Truly that corrupt, and polluted metropolis Is a heavy and die coaraging load for that &ate to cam ; for, outside of the city, New York It as decidedly Republican as Massachnsetts or lowa. TINKERING TEE TVRIVV, In discussing the financial question, Congress will hive due regard for the kindred matters of the tariff, and of pro tection for home industry. We obeerve cuirent intimations that, while Meissen& of the protective theory will muter their full strength, with a comfortable con fl dance in their ability-to meet the assaults of a very compact and thoroughly or goateed free-trade party, the design is entertained of making large additions to the present free-list, even to an extent which, according to one report, will reduce the annual receipts from customs by at least seventy millions of dollars. This suggestion 11 palpably an 'bawd one, sin/ that would be abating full forty per cent. of the present revenues from that source,—an abatement which, this year, would have cut off at least seven-tenths of the amount by which we have reduced the public debt. If the friends of home Industry, and of the inentenance.of that financial policy which has been thus far moat successful. feel themselves strong enough to control the situation, we e6ll4ronture to suggest to them the conspicuous wisdom of doing Judas little as possible, except to defeat all outside attacks upon the existing con dition oft things. The country might certainly do better in some particular de partments of Industry than It is doing now, but, in the absence of any general wellscapported demand, from any special interest, for inenhancament of protective rater; it is plainly a bad policy to agitate any question of soca an advance at pre seat. It nlsy be advisable to extend the free-list somewhat, but not so as to impair the riVannesecelpts to any noticeable extent. Memberii who proposal(' dry up the cut. tomato the Wig of $70,000000 will and It simply impossible to collect that amount is Ohm directions, euperadded to aiding titration. - If they imagine that the csuntry desires that kind of re, lief, at the risk of a corresponding Inv pension of its debt paying policy, they reckon mlosS JgttoranlUY• Let us first be sure that we can refute and keep dawn that active and resolute influence Id limn of free•trade, and of importation' without limit, which has made Itself prominently manifest of Then, it will show a more sincere and in telligent regard for the real intcreis of out people to4alk rather of an increase or many of the present duties than of the ehiticaritit of any of them. With public burthens se heavy as tho wintry now feels, the treasury maids the hut dollar of revenue which any tar .i.o ran:be made to yield. The existieg rater of imposts yield, neither of revalue nor of protection, as mach ar the Treas. ory could prOtably absorb, or as our ladutrial beagle 11414. ploy w ith Advantage.. Iftlioie rates may not ill' 1::::i. ..'.:,,11 4,,... .• , PITI emu LA-I II DAILY GA.ZRTTE : WEDNESDAY MORNING DEC EMBER 1, 1889 be increased, it is the madness of folly to Mink of diminishing them now. It is better that the tariff should be maintained as it 41, although but moderately protect litais that we should oak for more then we may qt, ox concede more than the runes:3l%3es Of the Treasury will ins tify. A Washington latter styli: The frierdt, of Protection to Home Lay bet were never so strong am they nil: Is the coming Congress. They will he I able to meet and answer all the partinans of Free Trade. Tbey ran (Neut 1 , , the transcendent development of American .1 mechanical skill in the last eight year. as their vindiration, and for wltnelof of the : loath:a of their ranee to the loud VOlre of the heretofore free-trade eith In freer of protection, trod the conies. Rion , of thooaamir in Europe of the M- I etifllefeney of a nysf em tnat only enriches I the capitalist w hile It beggers the w ore. man. 311 E OIL CORNER ➢t>sene EDIT , m•. I have eatentively perused all the editorials and communt catkins which have appeared in the Piths burgh press, relative to the "corner" oil. 1 coo Adored them altogether un called for, until Saturday last, when the action of the "hellborn conspirators," to quote Observer's language, induced change of opinion. I submit a brief re. some of my reflections for the considers. Lion of your readers. It is well known, ' at least by the lmina: community, that the "infamous conspirators" in question "earner( d" relined oil In Philadelphia, towards the close of last month, by the aid of large capital. It was evidently the intention of these schemers to duplicate the game during the present m onth Finding the load mom burdensome than they anticipated, they dropped the re fined. What has been the result• On the 29th of October rt fined oil was In de mand in Philadelphia at 37 cents; on the 29th of November it was decidedly weak .talicents.. The latter figure, by the laws of legliimate trade, should make crude in Pittsburgh worth but 12} to 131 CPO t In the face of the above facts, the gam blers have becu buying up all the crude cautracu they could obtain at 111 , 1 cents, with a determination to "corner" the crude oil market at the close of - the year. With a view to this end, the "bulls" are thwart ing the managers of the railroad in the delivery of oil by detaining the care on the rid hags at the refineries, taus prevent ing the railroad company trout transport ing the amount of oil required to fill the contracts within the swatted time. The success of such a scheme would place the "shorts" completely at the mercy of the "longs;' and extortionate "differ/iers" would be demanded for a failure to deliver oil which the "bulb)" in reality did nut wish to receive. Is this lestitintelte, honest , trading, or le it dishonesty and duplicity to take advantage of a "situation" whien they, the conspirating, have brought shout to accomplish a nefarious end! The low stage of the river has been a great natural advantage io the "bulls" to ' the prosecution of their scheme. 01 course these taco hose never rrayed that the windows of Heaven . might remain shut, until the expiration vi the year, and they Countless deeply sympathies with the pour of the river cities and towns, solle. itous about the winter's sspp l y of coal To be explicit, I give the following ez you of one, of lbr many, tricks of the gambling operator, tin Saturday morn ing, rain commeueed falling, there was every prospect id a speedy rise in the river and pasties were dispos..l to sell oil to he freighted t y water. tine Oral, which had been buying all the oil it cold ob tain at 16j cents, very frankly refused, on Bothnia); morn of, to purcbsse in view of th e downward tendency of prima. so. other deafer, the head centre of this die' I bobcat conspiracy, a Chrutian gentle- ! man, probably a lineal descendant of one of the money chabgere wheat Christ' drove from the Temple, was asked if •he wanted to buy oil at sixteen and three-fourth cents for Decedther delivery. 4 cons:fence seared bj ras_ edify did ribt rebel against the answer. "Yea," which was promptly returned. Test "yea" was stake yes, and the speak er knew it to be such. Had there been 1 days of special Providential intervention, its author would have merited the fate of Ananias and Sapphire of old. With Idephisterphileart audacity, be refused to accept the names of seller. whose can. tracts were as good as his own or these of his delectable clique. What wee the object this whited sera:Ochre, toll of dead men's bones, had in view, in refusing to receive the contracts of certain parties! It was to discredit their business ioteg• rity, and deter Them from throw ing any more oil upon the markt! —thus leaving the "bulls" the masters of the situation. Now, sire, the conspirators contend, with an affectation of honest indignatioe, that no oae has any right toaell what he bee net. A manifest absurdity. I give a parallel Came, by way of illustreuith. It is announced that pioposals will be re- ceived for the erectiou of a public build inc. A carpenter, a large cootractor, ' requests a master bricklayer to name ills price for famishing and completing the , brick work re site for a building of such and such - dimensions, no per the specifications. The price Is accepted c r declined, according to the carpenter's I judgment of the present condition and 1 future prospects of the legitimate trade. .1 will suppose that the pnce Is accepted and that, immediately upon the signing of the contract, other bricklayers, jealous of the move, buy up all the brick on hand and to be made for some time to come In that section of the country. What' is the result? The carpenter le held to Ids contract; he cannot obtain material except at ruinous rates; the sub contractor is in the same predicament, all the reault of a " corner" precisely similar to design to the recent and present movements in oil. Can any one honestly state that the con tractor had no bootees to close the agreement, because he had not then the materiel on hand, and because a jealous clique locked up said materiel and check. ed legitimate trine? Such, however, is the argument of the "bulls." Infamy is but a mild term for ouch a course of ac tion. . To make a more direct application of the principle, suppose an exporter sends his agent to Pittsburgh to contract fur 10,090 barrels of refined oil for delivery at a time he may deer best for exports ' tion. The agents requests W. It. to fur nish the ri ford and they, pooled aa to the price of crude; findertsute to deliver the oil at a price mutually agreed upon. W. II.;go Into the market and purchase say 16,000 barrels of crude oil from J. it. W. at a price 'which will yield them a reasonable margin On the refined. In the meantime, an Increase of production threatens to weaken prices, an', rather than see J. it W. reap the lion's thereof the bargain, W. It. adopt Wei/allowing plan. As J. it W. hail no right to sell what they did not own, they deserve a severe castigation at our hands. We will therefore buy all the oil, of the ! kind we contracted for, that we con pro. I cure, and thus render J. it W. unable to comply_with the turns of their contract. J. & W. are in a Career; WO CM collect heavy damages fortheit failure tei deliver. Now, sink I ask would not an act of this kind, squarely exposed, condemn the 1 perpetrators as villains of the ! blackest dye? Yet such agame has been played ' upon an extensive scale in Pittsburgh for months; and I em satisfied that It is the intention of the conspirators to still fur ther advance the price of oil, blasting a very it iillortant branch of our legitimate I trade, unless the Grand Jury will laves. tigatc, expose and check The fraud. .Itiany of Abe refiners bought oil In large quantities from dealers in crude to suppty4helr refineries. When the con- tracts were concluded, the idea of forth. I toga warmer" was favorably entertain. eel, and an efroo was made to include all refiners in the uoholy "ring." Fully 1 one-half of the refiners, knowing the criminality of the ehtiFiraevs spurned the proposition. The ' nog' was then enlarged sad streng,tbened - Ay the intro duction of outside unscruptdotia specula ton and capitalists. 'With amPlararans at their command, the "belle advanced the then fictitious price of oil. Ist, forming this cofithinatlon, the n.finers snood that their object was toexport their own oil and effectually PrOteetthermselves apical the designint Eastern operators. Some ifil, it bitrue, has bean exported; but I fail to see the connection between an exportation of refined oil and scoriae/ In the oil market at home. If they are di shoos of tasking money b'y exportation,. does It appear rm. sonahle , that they would bay up all the trade oil of a certain gravity, for this year's driven only• and thus I The Cardin (..1•11 , _ false the price of cru•le tour cents per The Cardiff Giant, which has been gallon higher than the toglroat price of creating so much excitement in the Onon rr tined would warrant thorn no paying ' . digs Valley, New York. has been subject. The inieffigent reader can readily' per- , ~4 t o ~, careful ~ ,,,1 14, 0 from several crave the Its' intent; 01 the ill lov"nrd i arriatifte gentlemen. This stone giant ~ ,,, kiE, ,,,.. Au p r inchtis of our trade harn4 exhibits the marks of, OK sculptor's wads been.mare or leer. effee{ed by the eb-i very plainly,:antilsonne of them, platen sorption of capital in carrying out the I laxly whale the legs and urns join the iniquitous plot. Buikigliod other lioOlt \ Mid,. are etteedffegly fresh.Thermal/o ctal Inatitutiona have pulled out into-the m i rof the figure is said to be Perfect. stream. and the revolt he . been, no dlll - The statir.; Which is a reclining figure, Lomat , a tight money market and ultra ` ca r ved carved from gypsum , was discovered In I times to all • . a bed of muck, nearly covered with I arc glad I I mid that every journal in ' water. Experiments were made on the the city, alai but one t xoeption, has con• . solubility of varioos klitls of gypsum demnrd in bitter terms this "c irner" 1 under different circumstances, and it we movement in oil. Public condemnation ascertained that a block of this material. has gone even further. 14aning divines weighing ceirepteen ounces,' exposed to have warmed their oorignegallons sAshibt. the constant action of rain wider for forty- We pernicious' intim:am of these =dully eighls hones, lest one ounce. The tuella and unlawful conspiracies. But all to no lof a carefully conducted series of expert , purpose. The game is stiff madly pur• . meets of the above character, when sp. sued. Social position and ample linen- plied to the stone pull, prove, it iA assert coil resources are deemed satisfactory\ ed. that the statue hes only been buried atonement tor the crime. bleep a pauper 370 days, and that the antiquated appear. in jail prississes a better principle than i since is due to exposure to the dissolving some of the oil conspirators. The Roman ' effocta of water. maxim "Whom the G.ids would destroy 1 they first make mad," may be verified in the time of the "bulls" as they are sires- I ily sufficiently choleric to indicate a speedy deattuction. "Lying rides upon debts' back" is a trite proverb; and, when the end of the bulls cornett', debt will have a terrible load. Ahors The Great Cleveland Defalcation. A letter from an oMcer in the Second National Bank, of Cleveland, 01110 , states that that bank will lose very large ly by the detalcation ut it cashier, who recently' committed ;Weide. Over foul hundred thousand dollars of capital and deposits have been sunk, and limeade made upon the special deposits in tin boxes, din, in the bank vaults, which may amount to over two hundred thous and more. These Special deposits were taken nut and sold at various tame to bridge over the deceased cashier's accouter. with the bank. Inn letter he felt fur the directors, he told them that they had lost their money and he had lest his life. That he had played Milhaud, had lost and abotdd pay the lentil. Bar caul tined them about ear r putting so much temptation In the way of any future cashier, and staled that the Bonk Examinol, salt out by the Comptroller. was =lens, that who'b e made one examination of book aci counts there was a defalcation el ever two hundred thousaad dollars, and the last time lie examined it and pruneunced it all right there Was about halt a short. The directors have decided to make good the losers of the special depositors, and to do this will probably meniche the total lanai sut the bank over VOU,UtX/ Its original Capital fifluS $13110,000, its Bur- ' pins 11156,000, and it had Just called in. $OOO.OO O mint, hit the tairtflus, to make its total capital $1,000,000. its stock holders are mostly wealthy men and can stand the loss. Another report states that the Examiner did report an uneatistactury condition of the bank in August last, and that the' Comptroller thereupon wrote to the Pres ideut of the bank, calling has aim' Minn to the irregularities. He sold • dud tram the report of the Examiner upon the condition of your bank ou the , 1 :nth ult., that the violation o f er viral provisious of the law, to which the allen non in the cashier has been called hereto -1 lore, still continue to exist, and I has. come to the conclusion that curtain cum muntcatious to him do nut wane under the n o tic e of the directors, era a hum the respousibility of Loathe:nog the litudiseas I of the bank In ateurthatdi with the pro- Vllfsns of the law properly Texts. therefore rehlreas you and through you I the otner directors et the bank, and hope that when von are made acquainted with the viola• lons noted try the I,samther yen will see that it it sf•er , loty, in fr,,,ritance with your etnrial ague, to r - frrf cf the ant) L ins hi fe,ut tile law rireets The icier then cells ritteriti I.lth v irregnlstreies, among then, inaufflcanty in the re-nerve; that several leans store Is excess of one truth the capita!, that ...me Inns were improperly secured; tint the bank has burrowed $1,0.000 of a relived company, which was very tad policy it the hank had each a reserve as it claimed. The letter then closed as follows: "The directors of the husk bare eel dehtly (nth d t o realise the -tart that It their duty to administer its attars bath. tally and gm, ru Ihewnelnea atrfeify In accordance with the requirement , et the law, and have lett the control of imainiva too enti - ely to the hoods of the cashier, who, though he may he very capable and honest, certainly dare not obey the It Is hoped that the directors will give more of their aftentlon to the manage mint of the affair, of the hank tiereaiter... To this letter the Preaident of the 11.mii returned a tutu.: dignified reply, implying much eller:lse at the Cofnptrolier's Com• tollniatll , o, end defending his earthier 'it, very Llynsifterat , le roperfty. Coral Jewriry vedertsting Farts. N 311.1 1 .5 is known the world over for its production of coral jewolry. sad every body who gc.t., there passes through the coral fever belare ho leaven the ciy. The shop windows aro !idiot the most esqui tate precincts to this tteattuful nVerial, and es the prices raked are considerably lower than in America, the purchases by Americans are very large. I du not know that 1 have anything of (tamest to say about 1.111.8 C products, except to paint out to my lady friends at home those qualities In coital which fix its value in Naples. In a conversation with ono of the inanteacturers, t learned that coral depends for its talus upon three consider. atioas—its color, Its size, and the perfect ion at In texture. The valuable color', or tints, of coral are sufficiently well understood among American ladles ; but they are it it aware that It is the limper. teeth's' , of coral that determine, more than anything else, the forma loth which it shall be carved. A large piece of coral, for Instance, one side of which is sound. and the opposite side of which Is Imper fect, will be carved into a Pompeian face, or some other fax, either human or ani mal. Small pieces of coral, with the same imperfections, will be carved into flowers. It may at once be concluded, by any purchaser of coral, that those articles which represent laces, with the back side LIM, or combinations of little I flowers, belong to the second class, so far as their value Is concerned, no matter how pretty they may be—and some of them are ten beautiful Indeed_ In fact, I think there are Many American ladles who suppose representations of Sowers in coral to be particularly valuable and desirable. That was the popular opinion formerly, I know. The most valuable articles of coral jewelry are those which present coral in the largest perfect masses —WIMPS, symmetrical In form, and hay. tag no imperfections In any aspect. So •e have them mode op lute brooches, Ac., in combinations of bars, lobes, spheres or sprigs at natural form, which beer examinatton on every aide. It happens that the best coral jewelry Is We lout ornate, and the least attractive to the uneducated eye. It Is astonishing bow a few days of looking Into shop 'w in dows seta one against all the prettiness of all coral Sewers and fruits and feces, and fastens one's admiration upon the plain and massive specimens of the perfect coral, whose value lies in Its perfection. —Dr. Rolland. _ _ --- _ The Lincoln Slanumot at redeemlphts. The modument to the late President Lincoln, which is to be erected at Broad street and Girard avenue, is thus de scribed : The pediment is of Quint'' , granite, eighteen feet high and sixteen by eighteen feet at the base, The buttresses at either corner finish at the bottom of the die with a moulded asp, on which mats a trenze eagle. At the have of the die a festoon of laurel and oak, in bronze, or. Dements each face. The die le paneled and each panel will contain an inscrip tion. The pedestal finishes with a moulded *, en which rt les the statue. The figore-ht of bronze, and represent' the President in the se t of signing the Emancipation Proclamation. The figure is in a sitting position. Dee hand is uplifted and holds the pen, and the other the document. The height of the statue is nine and a half. feet. There will ghee- be en extra base of hammed granite, snaking the total re height of the monument some thirty feet. The extra bee will be about three feet Iztdez than the base of the monument GB *Mud. . The.granite part of the monument is now entirely completed and ready for setting. The bronze work is expected in about six moraine time. The oast will be about C.12,000h- ‘ Tax tot LI crop ofdka. CollOt y is esti mattd at some 1,400,000;0.00 .bpabels of pain, of which %heat le J' ,000,000 and corn 800,000,000. Snitirwr's- SALES. —The Supreme Court of Pennaylvania bas decided,, dodge Sherwood delivering the opinion, that a mortgagee, or a purchaser at Sheriff's sale, is not hound to look beyond the judguibnt docket to ascet t tin whether the entries thereon are properly made by authority, and that where there is a de• festive entry of a judgment, or an 110- authorised entry of satisfaction, the Pro thonotary la Itabliortor damages to any party injured. Hens:, where the Pro. tbonotary, without the authority of the Court, entered on his docket against a Judgment, "satisfied on ti fa.," it was held that the entry was perfectly regular and conclusive as to third persons to whom the judgment itself regularly dock eted was constructive notice, and that It was not necessary to search further and ascertain whether there was an, record of an order of the Court directing such satisfaction. MEE= Mn be 0013901ted catty day u obi I o'clock y .tbttu reaL Mcdkto. Mot*. 167 Liberty stmt. and (tom 4 to 0 aad I to 9 ett night ME= 11=1= troll. sbe r a r Totypee. /1,.1ux •nd CEME= ME= MEM 1=1:12 rcm MIZE LarT.l.Dk liachlt” 1:1213=1 I= I= 1= of ttu Ileart .1,1 =I •pparalas NecTrools. t kerated Limb. IZEM=I 175ZZIEril I=l9 =1 IftE2==l; vb.. h., to get ficlief from utt,r W loom. Into Eb mtofr,ol tmalmtnt. E. LIVE IN TIMEX. t LI M.ITEM la Ibis ouretrl eava at dlOrntat ..avont or Oa 'yew. lb temp-manta let. • Ilmae Vet berm, aO3 Aulfmoe hey, a a... Mates earl ruielosa• Met trebone oely to LAT tellll••rate . 4oeta, our $111.1.4191.1 Mg, • Mt lerrrld. ape our We alusoat wets re 1114. (.I,W,{. t even t•r • ,1, In/ • ••• 1•{1o• Item 0111.111 • •Cr tours Ir. 0 Jesr•t• • Yaptemberlt dO. O O the - :o health •• •t up..., lb la .04 • •••at 111. 15=1 mnt r!‘.. • .411 n• amm... 001 07 r•cm....1 47 ccccc of do, emem .04 W. • : ml.'. •••,..t. le mt. •I. l• mo et. to con 1.12. m. 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