Si zullantinto. OVERWORK OF CHILDREN IN ENG- LAND. Notwithstanding the exposures hereto fore made of the inhuman treatment of very young children by parents and em ployers in various branches of industry in England, and the attempts to mitigate the evil by legislation, it seems to prevail almost as extensively and with as much cruelty as ever. Rev. J. Thomson, of Paisley, says in the May number of the Christian Treasury, " This frightful state of things has now passed away " Certainly he has failed to inform himself of the facts in the oase. A new Children's Employ ment Commission, appointed in 1861, has made four reports on these dreadful abuses, and is still engaged in investigation. The facts brought out are of the most extraor dinary and humiliating nature, and furnish small hope for the rising generation of the poorer classes in England and Wales. The results of these investigation's, thus far, are given in the April number - of the London Quarterly Review, from which we shall make such extracts as will suffice to give a correct, though far from exhaustive, view of the facts in the case. The first branch of industry considered, was the celebrated Staffordshire . earthen ware, with which the name of Wedgewood is connected. In this, more than one-sixth of the workers are children from five to ten years of age, nearly six hundred being not over five years. "Young girls are employed in painting cheap earthenware, and their health was seriously injured by being kept too long at their sedentary work in crowded and ill ventilated rooms; but the children whose case presented the strongest .claims to com miseration were the ' mould-runners ;'— little boys employed to convey the articles turned out by the potter into the stoves— small rooms, thirteen feet square, and from eight to twelve feet high, attached to the workshop. They are fitted with shelves on which moulds with the moist ware arranged upon them are placed, that they may be dried pievious to removal. ThAse ovens are raised to a very high temperiture, have no vents for steam, scarcely any vet.r tilation, and no windows. the centre stands a cast-iron stove liditted to redness. On entering thes9,rooms, the thermometer, in the hands of an Assistant Commissioner, rose in one or them to 130 0 ; in another to 148°. In the latter a little ' mould-runner' was found eating his dinner. In a' third, the thermometer burst from the intensity of the heat. The boys were kept in constant motion throughout the day, each carrying from thirty to fifty dozen of moulds into the stoves, and remaining in them long enough to take the dried earthenware away. The distance thus run by a boy in the course of a day of not wore than ordinary work was estimated at seven miles. From the very nature of this exhausting occupa tion, children were rendered pale, weak and unhealthy. In the depth of winter, with the thermometer in the open air sometimes below zero, boys, with little clothing but rags, might be seen running to and fro on errands or to their dinners, with the perspi ration standing on their foreheads, ' after laboring for hours like little slaves.' The inevitable result of such transitions of tem perature were consumption, asthma, and acute inflammation. "The practice of dipping the earthen ware into a mixture of borax, sofa, potash, and carbonate of lead, for glazing it, was also found to be followed by the most fatal con sequences The clothes of the workers were constantly saturated with a poisonous compound, which produced Paralysis and epilepsy in adults, and epilep . sx.in children. By constantly handling the pieces of earth enware the fingers of the children became so delicate and sensitive that they bled on the slightest abrasion, and the process of absorbing of the poison was thus more cer tain and rapid." Parliamentary legislation has, however, interposed to protect these victims of paren tal 'avarice, and since 1864, no child under thirteen years of age, can be employed in this branch more than half of the working time, The manufacture of Lucifer matches, car ried on often with little capital, and with the rudest accommodations, produces the MU terrible effects upon the miserable children who are employed in stirring the inflammable and poisonous mixture for , a considerable portion of the day. " The phosphorus is thus not only breathed, but absorbed by the clothes, making the children shine like little imps in the dark, and giving them at night a very spectral appearance. It is the process of dipping which chiefly produces the jaw disease, a vapor continually rising from the heated mixure, which the dipper, ignorant of the consequences, unavoidably inhaled. The disease is thus described by a medical practitioner It seems to be at first, as one of its names implies, merely a local disease, affecting the jaw-bone; but it causes in all cases, when fully established, great and un bearable pain ; lasting, with little or no relief even from sleep, for months or often years; ending with the loss of parts or the whole of one or both jaw-bones, and so to a greater or less degree of the power of mas tication, and often in an entire breaking up of the constitution and death.' " This business, also has been placed under legislative restriction with three others of minor importance, while others are still the scenes of cruelty and oppression, and slow murder, which the worst Red River cotton plantation could never have rivalled. In lace-making, infants of two years used to bo set to work pulling out the threads, and many were found working at three years. This was the case as reported by the Commmission of 1842. "The usual age for children to be set to work is now between nine and ten, but in some private houses as early is eve. It is in the manufacture of pillow or hand made 'late, however, that the oppression to WhiCh young children are subjected has been most painfully exposed. The business is taught in schools established for the purpose. Six is a common age to begin to learn, but many commence at four and five. The places of work are termed lace-schools, generally rooms in small cottages, with the fire-places stopped up to prevent draught, and without ventilation. The work ter quiriug considerable manual dexterity but very little muscular strength, children are turned very early to profitable account by their parents, who pay a small meekly sum for their instruction and sell flit!, lace made by them. There is nothing more startling and distressing in these reports than the details ofthe suffering to which these poor children are subjected in learning a busi ness by which they are to earn their live lihood, the wearisome days, sleeplebs nights and, painful exhaustion which manufacture by almost infantile fingers involves, and of the physical and moral ruin which soon overtakes little creatures herded together in rooms with scarcely space to move or breathe, and deprived from infancy of every kind of recreation and enjoyment. At night, eight or ten children are often con gregated round one small candle, and their worn and haggard faces abundantly prove the injurious nature of the employment. " From fifteen to twenty have been found collected in a small, low room, not more than twelve feet square, working for fifteen of the twenty-four hours at an employment exhausting by its monotony, and exposed to every influence that can destroy health. In one school only twenty-five cubic feet of air are found available for each child in a room with .its window closed and without ventilation. In some houses, to keep the lace clean, the children sit without shoes in the coldest weather, the floors being of plaster or brick. Although the treatment . of the children by the mistresses is said to have improved of late, a long cane is re sorted to in proportion as the hours of work are protracted, the youngest becoming at length so fatigued as to be ' as uneasy as birds.' "The Straw plait Manufacture is attend ed with perhaps even greater abuses and physical suffering than that of lace-making: It is carried on under conditions very simi lar to the pillow-lace manufacture. The age at which children commence their in struction is almost incredibly early; parents this, as in the laie business, being eager to derive a profit from their children at the first possible moment. Girls only three years old have been found at work, and •five seems a common age at which to commence. The parents find out what the physical endurance of their children, when taxed to the uttermost, will enable them to accom plish,—and they rigidly exact it i they are thus driven to school before a winter's dawn, after having been kept at work throughout the greater part of the previous night. The mortality among these poor overworked children is great, consumption and fever carrying them off at a very early age. The rooms in which the business is taught are excessively small, and the chil dren are packed together in the smallest . space, like herrings.' An Assistant Com missioner, on his visit to Houghton Regis, saw the little clippers with scissors tied to their waists, and the mistress had by her side a long stick, which, however, on his entry, she put out of sight. In other plait schools formidable sticks were seen, and the 'mistresses admitted they were obliged occasionally to use them. In a room ten and a half feet square and between six and seven feet high, forty-two children were found seated with the window shut. • The air-space for each of these forty two chil dren would be exactly eighteen and a half cubic feet, or less than half what one would have if shut up in a box three feat each way. "The Hosiery Manufacture has engaged the serious attention of the Commission, and it needs to be very strictly regulated. The girls begin seaming,'—a process required to complete most of the articles,—as young as five, and instances are known of some having commeneed at four. The greatest proportion'of this work being done by the wives and ohildren of the men who labor at the frames, the parents are generally alone answerable for overtaxing their chil dren's strength, and deprlving them of the necessary amount or rest and sleep. 'Little creatures, four or five years of age,' said a well-informed witness, 4 are kept up shame fully late, mothers have been known to pin them to heir knees to keep them to their work and prevent their falling down from sleep or exhaustion, and they slap them to keep them awake. A child has so many glove fingers set for it to' do before it is allowed to go to bed, and it must do them.' The practice of parents sitting up all night and making their children do the same is said to be far from uncommon." When we pass from these lighter employ ments to those seemingly less suitable for children, the various manufactures of metal, the case is not altered. Nol only the more delicate branches of these pursuits, but the, heavier work at the forge and the anvil, by night and by day, is shared in by boys and (rifle alike. Worcestershire and Staffordshire are re• ferred to in the following extract: "In the blast-furnaces, mills, and forges, great numbers of children and youths are employed in night sets, between 6 P. M. and 6 A. M.; and in the miscellaneous trades overtime is very common, a great number of children working as long as the men, viz. from 6 A. M. to 11 P. M. Lit tle girls are employed in bellows-blowing (very hard work for childrei) for fourteen hours a-day, standing on platforms to en able them to reach the handle of the bellows. An instance is given of a father baying worked his three young boys from four in the morning until twelve at night for weeks together, until the other men ' cried shal e upon him.' Over*ork is systematic ; 1.2.00 boys under fifteen, and 2400 youths b e _ tween thirteen and eighteen, work through the nights of every alternate week. Iron chains are wrought in this district, and there is no employment in which boys are subjected to a greater amount of labor. E ac h link , is formed by welding together, at white heat, the ends of Wok pieces o f rod-iron, a man and his boy striking,alter nately w ith the .greatest possible rapidity THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1866. r• P , lest the iron Shonld cool before the welding is ceinPletea — Trelabaof VhSvalTnieitiured . only by the strength of the men; for as long as the men can work, the boys must attend them; but so heavy is the work, that by 6 P. M. the men themselves are completely exhausted, and obliged to cease; and it has been pronounced unfit for boys. A chain-maker at Wednesfield Heath, working in his own shop for a large manu factory, and who had left the establishment that he might employ his little girls to help him instead of hiring boys, which he was obliged to do in the public workshop, was found by the Assistant Commissioner, en gaged in making a large'chain. Two girls, nine and ten years of age, were working as `strikers,' and a little girl of eight, occa sionally relieved by a. still younger one of six, was working the bellows. The gross earn ings of this man amounted to two guineas per week. It may be doubted whether the world amid now produce a more revolting 171St071Ce of parental oppresssiou than the spectacle of these two young girls, whose little hands would have been appropriately employed: in hemming a kerchief or work ing a sarapler,. begrimed 'with the smoke, stifled with the hear, and stunned with the din of a smithy, wwlding sledge-hammers, and forging iron cha , ns from morning till night." Two thousand children under fifteen are employed in Birmingham alone, and forty thousand women, children and youth in Birmingham and'its district. (To be Concluded.) Whoever has read the new History of England, as far as it is completed, by Fronde, has had a rich treat. The volumes are written in a style that keeps the interest awake from the opening sentence to the close. There is, too, an apparent thororgh ness of research, and candor in adducing testimony, that gives the seeker after his torical truth confidence in his guide. Still, the volumes essentially ehange r some of oar previous opinions—piecing some historic characters in a Tier. light, and reversing decisions FeviouslY reaehed. Especially of Henry.lll k . this true enry . We think 'That sovereign, could he do it, would most heartily thank Mr. Fronde for the service done to his country. One trait, truly noble, of his reign, is strikingly brought out, and may well be adverted to as an example for the govern ments of to-day. It is the quality of his justice. The chances of escape, under Henry VIII., for a convicted traitor, di minished just in proportion to the dignity and position of the criminal. The nearer he stood to the crown the less the hope. For one of the commons, a poor, deluded, private man, there was hope of the royal clemency. But for one of the nobility, a lord, a peer of the realm, there was. no chance. On him the stroke of justice fell quick and sure. The passages from the ball to the tower, and from the tower to the block, followed each other quickly. No petitions availed. It was a royal quality of Kin , * Henry's justice. But will any future historian ascribe this character to our national justice ? Is it thus we are dealing with traitors ? One poor, friendless, contemptible, wounded, almost dead agent of the rebellion, holding office under its leaders and executing their behests, has been dragged through a tedi ous trial, condemned and executed. But does any one believe that one of the origin ators, or gTeat movers of the rebellion, is in danger of any such fate ? So far, it has seemed, we have been anxious to make some little show of retributive justice, but have not dared to strike in any.high Place. Such, we'fear, will be the course through. out. A high premium would have been demanded to insure the life of the great leader the day he was captured ; hut a very small premium would be required to-day. He is reported , to be confident, contented, cheerful; and he has every reason to be. There is little for him to fear from the Indic. of that nation whose life he has • at tempted to take, •and many thousands of whose loyal sons he has been the means of bringing to untimely and cruel deaths. The memory of his great crimes grows daily more faint, and the indignation felt at the atrocities committed under his leadership is dying away, and the , number of those who demand his death is constantly dimin ishing. is there any other government on earth that would permit such a mau to live? Can a nation long live with such a feeble, partial, , timid' administration of justice ?— Watchman and Reflector. KOLAPOOR CHURCH. Copies from the ORIGINAL PHOTOGRAPH OF THIS FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Fe aals at thin 05.., for the - benefit of the laiipoion, prioe $1.26, powe• prepaid. 1088 Bread and Spring Garden Streets. 31pt 31 utv i WM. L. G-AIMETT, No. 31 Swath 2d St., above Chestnut. East Side, His oonstantly on hand a large assortment of Men's Boots and Shoes. City Made. Ladies', Misses, and Cbildren's Balmorals, .10. Be sides Trunks, Traveling Bags, etc., in great variety and at LOW PItICES. Men's Rubber sole Boots and the best quality of Gem 0 Shoes of all kinds . 1012-17 e)1) W. G. BEDFORD COIVIYAICER 1111 REAL ESTATE ARE No. .!..3 Nonni TENTH STREET, PHILADA. My central location and the many means of com munication with the suburbs enable me to take the Agency for sale and care of Real Estate, the Collec tion of Interests, ground and house rents in every Dart of the city. References will be furnished when desired. FOOLISH:" and tx am . lar—t § mwently needed by eve 11 " eau " 9 -k 911 ',1 1 D BB llare Um& inft, cents. Call %PAY. 0," " "'"lntisam 10 ND t ,' ° free — by moil for 50 mite ti l l "retie fo r y ork. . ; i• , •—• NATIONAL JUSTICE. THOMAS RAWLINGS, JR., HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTER, ` ~eDi.riiral: AYER'S CATHARTIC PILLS iIkARE the most perfect purgative which we are able to produce or which we think has ever yet been made by any body. Their effects have abundantly shown to the com munity bow mch they excel] the or dinary medicines in use. They are safe and pleasant to take, but power ful to cure. Their penetrating pro perties stimulate the vi- al activities of the body, re move the obstructions of its organs, purify the blood. and expel di,ease. They purge out the foul humors which breed and grow distemper, stimulate sluggish or disordered organsinto their natural action, and im part a healthy tone with strength to the whole syst em. Not, only do they cure the every-day complaints of evbrybody, but also formidable and dangerous dis eases. While they . produce powerful effects, they are at the same time, In diminished doses. the safest and best physic that can be employed for children. Being sugar-coated, they are pleasant to take; and, being purely vegetable, are free from any riik of harm. Cores have been made which surpass belivf, were they not substantiated by men of such ,italied position and character. as to forbid the suspicion of untruth. Many eminent clergymen and physicians have' lent their names to certify to the public the reliability of our remedies, while others have sent us the assurance of their conviction that, our Preparations contribute immensely to the relief of 'our afflicted, suffering fel low men. The Agent below named is pleased to furnish gratis our Atom lean Almanac, containing directior s for the me and dertiticates of their cures,. of the following complaints: Costiveness, Bilious Complaints, Rheumatism. prom. Heartburn. Ifekdaehe aris ing from foul stomach, Nausea, Indigestion, Morbi d of The Bowels and Pain arising therefrom. Flatulency, Loss of Appetite, all Diseases which require an evacuant medicine. They also, by purifying the blood and stimulating the system, cure many complaints which it would not be suptosed they could reach, such' as Deafness. Partial blindness, Neuralgia and Nervous Irritability. Derangen..ents of the Liver and Kidneys, Gout. and other kindred complaints arising from a low state of the body, or obstruction of its functions. Do not be putoll by unprincipled dealers with other preparations which they make more profit on. De mand AYER'S and take no others. The sick want the best aid there is for them, and they should have it. Prepared by DR. J. A. AYEK and sold bgDruggists generally Gents' &nDts MODEL SHOULDER SEAM SI-lIRT l 'Af./iNUFATORY, 1035 Chestnut Street. Mclntire & Brother, GENTLEMEN'S FURNISIIING, NECK TIES, TIAN DHERCIIIETS, CRAVATS, FORT MONNAIES, GLOVES, SUSPENDERS, HOSIIERY. MB AID SUMMER VIDERCLITIIIE GAUZE MERINO VESTS AND PANTS, LISLE THREAD VESTS AND PANTS, GAUZE COTTON VESTS AND PANTS. LINEN DRAWERS, JEAN DRAWERS, MUSLIN DRAWERS. CHESTNUT ST. TEA HONG. WEST & BROWN, No. 809 CHESTNUT STREET. WEST 451 c BROWN ARE RETAILING THEIR LARGE STOCK OF TEAS PEES. THE CHOICEST TEAS ARE ALWAYS TO BE FOUND AT THEIR HONG CALL FOR A PRICE LIST JOHN GOOD & SON, U N DER TAKERS, No. 921 Spruce Street. CASKET AND COFFIN \YARROW!, No. 237 South Eleventh Street, Where varioue..ki• - and sizes can be seen. . - ATELIER PHOTOGRAPHIC. Al.. DE MORAL S. E. corner Eighth and Arch Streets. PHILADELPHIA. The public are invited to &tame speelnirt*t of Life Size in Oil, Water Colors. IvorytYpis, India Ink, and Poreelian Piot - urea of all sizes. CARD PICTURES, S2'so PER DOZEN. Entrance on Eighth Street. WENDEROTH, TAYLOR & BROWN'S FINE ART GALLERY, 912 and 914 CHESTNUT STREET, l'Elli-,ALEPEI...PIELL A.. 1.019ty AGENCY, 353 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. IS a" F.. Dyeing and Scouring Establishment. Mrs. L. W. SMITH, No. 28 N. Fifth St., belaw Arch, Phila. Ladies' Dresses ' Cloake, Shawls, Ribbons, Am., dyed in ail color, and finished equal to new. Gentlemen's Coats. Pants and Vests cleaned, dyed and repaired. 963-ly VIE PHRENOLOGICAL CABINET ~.u• ,55_41.14 AND BOOK STORE, r e,, -0 : For the sale of Book& on Porenoloa,. I• 4 phyaiology Hygiene, and Phonography, A'a a nd for Ph 'enologio 1 exa mi nat ions. O ra. by mail should be a •see to --. TOWN L. CAPEN, s Be. 25 Sibeth"reatki Iltre•t. Phila. .THOMPSON. SLACK & SON, BROAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS, DEALERS IN FINE AND EVERY VARIETY OF CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES. Goods delivered in any part of the City, or packed securely for the Country. ulacieer S 4> v. IVINS & DIETZ. 4.14 No. 43 STUAWNEBRY'STREET, /fir Strawberry street is between Second and Bank streets. CARPETIN GS; NEW. STYLES, MODERATE PRICES. Cheap Carpet Store. _ d4 tv 1:1 VS 1)1:51' sturtaitt Caitnt,s. CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S FIRST-CLASS "ONE PRICE" READY-MAP CLOTHING STORE, (Under the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia.) DIAGRAM FOR SELF•MEASUREMBNI For Cont. Length of back from 1 to 2, and from 2 to 3. Length of • sleeve (with ; arm crooked) from 4 to 5, and around the most promi nent part o the chest and v a s waist. State whether erect or stooping. II For Vest.— _ Same as coat. For Pants.— a Inside seam, and outaid• from hip bone, around the waist and hip. A good fitgna ran teed. Officers' Uniforms, ready-made, always on hand,ot made to order in the best manner, 2.11.1 on the MOll reasonable terms. Haying finished many hundred uniforms the past year for Staff, Field and Line Offi cers. as well as for the Navy, we are prepared to exe cute orders in this line with correctness and despatch. The largest and most desirable dock of Ready-made Clothing m Philadelphia always on hand. (The p r i oc marked in plain figures on all of the goods.) A department for BCys' Clothing is also maintained at this establishmens, and enprrintended by experi enced hands. Parents and others will Sad here s most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low prices. Sole Agent tot the " Famous Bullet-Proof Vest." CHARLES STOKES & CO. CHARLES STOKES, E. T TAYLOR.. W. f. STOKES. . 4 „,„ BKRIVELIAS. 13,aitittts &;fitfrktr,s. BANKING HOUSE GEORGE. J. BOYD, No. IS N. 'THIRD ST, PHILADELPHIA (Two doors below Meehaaiee Bank.) DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES 5-2 ft, 1411-44115, 741 , 1144 Ile •1 PETROLEUM, AND ALL OTHER 8T OC S IS, 33 CO 14 - D tSI. C BOUGHT AND BOLD AT TIIE BOARD OF BROKERS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. PREMIUM ELASTIC STITCH SEWING lifitc_lH IN lE.S WITH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, The ,Grover & Baker S. M. Co. manufacture. in ad dition to their celebrated GROVER. ,k BAKER STITCH Machines. the most perfect SHUTTLE or LOCK STITCH" Machines in the market, and af ford purchasers the opportunity of selecting. after trial and examination of both, the one beat suited to their wants. Other companies manufacture but one kind of machine each, and cannot o'er this ormortu nity of selection to their customers- A pamphlet. containingeamples of both the Grover k Baker Stitch and Shuttle Stitch in various fabrics, with full explanations, diagrams and illustrations, to enable purchasers to examine. tort and compare their relative merits, will 'be furnished; on request, from our °Moos thmughout the country. Those who desire machines which do the beat work, should not fail to send for a pamphlet, and test and emapare these stitches for themselves. OFFICE, 730 CHESTNUT FITMENT, PHILADELPHIA. CARUART'S BOUDOIR ORGANS! CARHART'S CHURCH HARMONIUMS I CARHiiIIT'S MELODEONS! „. ‘- Unequalled by any Reed Instruments in the world Also Parmelee's Patent Isolated Violin Frame Pianos, a new and beautiful instrument. Sole agent H. M. MORRIS% 728 Market street. AGENTS WANTED, Male and Yenisiejn a plea. " sant t permanent and honorable business. or farther Damaolairs address A. D. BOWMAN A CO., 115 Nas sau Street, New York.. Clip out and seta= this le- gry exicfnlts, &L+ Second door above Chesnut street. I=! OIL - CLOTHS - • MATTINGS, &O WINS & DIETZ, 43*STRAW - JSERRY Street, Phi No. 524 CHESTNUT STREET, gtiziug 3;1 atiits. LOCK STITCH *28,80 PER DAY! FURNITURE. I have a stock of Furniture in wrest variety which I will sell at rodueed prices. Cottage Chamber Setts, Walnut Chamber Setts, Velvet Parlor Suits, Hair Cloth Suits, Reps Suits, Sideboards, Extension-Tables, Wardrobes, Lounges ? and Mattresses. A. N. ATTWOOD, 10:03-tf 45 SOUTH SECOND ST., PHIL A. PATENTARTIGLES PATENT ICE CREAM FRAZERS, Patent Old Dominion and French Infusion Coffee Pot, Patent Sliding Ice Pick, Patent Gas Stoves, Patent Fruit Cans and Jars, Patent Flour Sifters, Patent Door Springs. Manufaottred and for sale. Wholesale and Retail, by CHAS. BURNHAM & CO., 119 S•nth Tenth Street WILLIAM YARNALL, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, N.. 1!!2 CHESTNUT ST., S. E. COIL. 13TII. SCPERI3R REMRIGBRATORS, WATER COOLERS FIER TABLE LERY, FAMILY HARDWARE. IRONING TABLES. - . ie.. 1044-Iy LAW, COIIIICIAL, FANCY PRINTER, spmA.m PO WER. IMPROVED BRONZING MACHINES, ORIGINAL STYLES OF COLOR PRINTING, CHAGRINED BUSINEitCARDS, Wedding and Visiting Cards Similar to Engraved. Plate. Ihasiatess narelopes with Card, 82 50 per Th•aaa=d. Haling tarnished a Large Room in Sansom Street Hall, with the latest improved Machines and New Type, am enabled to execute the Finest Close of Printing. OFFICE, FIRST FLOOR. PHILADELPHIA, JAIIIIIII.TY j, 1866 Dian Sts:—The lee business heretofore carried on by us under the name of " rdoliere leg:red.." will here after be known as the • COLD SPRING ICE AND COAL COMPANY." We respectfully solicit from Yon a continuance of your favors under the new ar rangenient, and assure you that hereafter you will be supplied by the Cold Spring Joe and . Coal Co. with Ice of the best quality, always at the loirest market rates, and witk regularity andpromptnesk WOLHERT: & BROTHER. (INCORPORATED APRIL. ISc 4.) COLD SPRING ICE AND COAL CO. THOS. E. CAHILL, Pres. JOHN GOODYEAR, Sect. HENRY THOMAS, Superintendent. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS AND SIEIPPERSOF ICE & COAL. BOSTON ICE now being supplied daily in allved limits of the consolidated city. Twenty fourth Ward, Richmond. Mantua, and Germantown. LEHIGH and SCHUYLKILL COAL carefully selected for family use, and as low as .the lowest for a first-rale article. BLACKSMITHS',OPAL of excel lerLt.sugity HICKORY, OA. h. and P INE WOOD. and h...UtDLING WOOD. DEPOTS. Southeast corner Twelfth and Willow Streets. North Pennsylvania R. R. and Master Streets Twenty-filth and Lombard Strout'. Pine Street Wharf, Schuylkill:. OFFICE. 110. lb WALNUT' STREET. W. B. FULTON, CARPENTER AND BUILDER No. 40 SOUTH SIXTEENTH STREET, Residence, No. 1532 Vine Street. ESTATES SEPT IN REPAIR. Carpentering in z3rean" P1 . 1 . 1 1 017 -z --1037-2 ma J. F. PADArthr lre. 7118 Market St, S.r•• comae, St Miaktkp ee I.IIIIADILPHIA. n i•• Maindastarets and/ L 1•44 la BOOTS: SHOW. TRUNK% OA-Rvirr BAGS AND YALU= of every variety and Wes. yell-13