Xtino 01 ttk. lig:041*44110/04,1)4 The Postmaster of Washington, D. C., it is understood, is to be removed, and one of proprirtors of the The National littelligencer will be appointed in his place. Gen. Howard, Commissioner of the Freed men's Bureau, has written a letter in reply to some inquires made by the Hon. Roswell Hart, member of Congress from New York; concermng the operations of the bureau. The General details the organization and work of the bureau, giving its statistics from June, 1865, to June, 1866, from which it ap pears that the number of persons receiving rations is decreasing, and that the poorwhites dependent upon Government bounty are equal in number to the blacks. The letter closes with the opinion that, in the present condition of affairs, the bureau is indispens able. THE STATES. New York.—State. Governor Fenton has issued a proclamation, ordering a session of the Supreme Court on the 29th of August. The Court will be held for the pulpose of revising the decision of Recorder Hackett, Judge Cardozo and others, pronouncing the Excise law unconstitutional. New York.—Oiey.—Cholera abated con siderably last week, and thepapers express the belief that, as an epidemic, the disease is no longer to be feared. The means adopted by the Board of Health for preventing the spread of disease have been remarkably suc cessful in some striking instances. In the Almshouse and prison, after the thorough use of disinfectants the epidemic ceased. In the Brooklyn Penitentiary 38 cases occurred in a single night; the prisoners were removed to tents and disinfectants used, and no ease occurred afterward. The proofs gathered here ; even if no others were extant, would g o far to establish the fact that sulphate of iron and carbolic acid, when properly applied to infected places and things, utterly destroy the cholera poison:—Active measures are being taken by the police to break up the gangs of pickpockets that infest the street oarsand other public conveyances. Detectives in citizens' clothes will:be employed to arrest all suspected persons, who will be registered at Police Headquarters and their photographs added to the Rogues Gallery. Shoplifters will be similarly dealt with.—The Mayor has vetoed the elevated railway scheme for Broadway. Ohio.—Oholera in Cincinnati—Dr. C. E. ITOwton of Cincinnati, writes to his brother, Robert 'S. Newton, of New York, stating that cholera is among them in a most malig nant form. He says the flies are dying in the streets ; the gutters are covered with a green scum ; the atmosphere is dry, heavy, and sickening, while a general panic exists among the citizens. Deaths, Aug. 8, 27 ; August 9, 39 ; August 10, 68. Kentucky —A violent rebel Sympathizer named Duvall was elected clerk of the court of appeals last week, by twenty or thirty thonsandtmajority. Tennessee.—A Freedmen's Convention was in session at Nashville last week. Re ports were made on the state of the Freed men throughout Tennessee, which show that they generally work lands on shares, receiv ing from half to two-thirds of the crops. Comparatively few are working for wages. They are mainly treated well, but in all coun ties great abuses are practiced on Freedmen, to a greater or less extent, with hardly any ehanee for redress before the law. This is especially the case regarding murders, assault and harsh oppression, involving severe pun ishment, by white perpetrators. On the contrary, the blacks are promptly and severely punished for offences to the extent of the law, and often unjustly convicted. There is great ignorance among the Freedmen as to the steps to be taken to bring their cases before grand juries and court proceedings generally, often resulting in the loss of pro perty or redress for crimes. Many counties are without schools or churches. The schools are flourishing wherever they are planted. 'Teachers are badly wanted. There is room and work for hundreds, but a small chance for many self-sustaining schools. Considera ble real estate is owned by the Freedmen throughout the State, but confined mainly to towns. Few Freedmen in the rural districts own real estate. A Committee was appoint ed to draft a memorial to the Legislature of the State asking such annual appiopriation of public school funds as will secure to the oolored children of the State the advantage of a common school education. Thanks were also voted to Congress for the Civil Rights bill.. General Fisk delivered an address, August 10. He urged industry, temperance and stability. He wanted to see one hundred and fifty school hordes built in Tennessee before frost. He thought hereafter contri butions from the North would tall off, and the Freedmen, more than ever, would have to support their own schools. At Spring Hill threats were made last year that no col ored school would -be tolerated. Now one was flourishing in the shadow of a rebel gen eral's residence. Freedmen's rights before law in the State were real. Five convicts had been sent to the penitentiary since June on the testimony of blacks. He urged the cultivation of harmony with the whites, and especially with former masters. He pledged himself to ferret out and punish the burners Of school-houses. He offered the delegates a reward of two hundred dollars for evidence convicting the burners at Athens a few nights ago. He read largely from his pamphlet Plain Counsels to the Freedmen, closing with an exhortation to Freedmen to seek homes under the homestead law. An agent would be sent out in a few weeks to learn how many families would avail themselves of theppor tunity.&o The Convention adjourned thT same day to meet at Knoxville Sept. 3, to form an _Equal Rights League. Arkansas.—The officers of a Mississippi steamer report that as they passed Helena,.. Arkansas, August 7, the 56th Regiment o f United States Colored Infantry, which were there awaiting transportation to St. Louis .and thence to the plains, had taken posses ion of the town and were firing indiscrimi nately upon the whites, and swore they would burn the place and kill every white. One citizen named Galbreth was fatally wounded. [This is since denied by officers of the regi ment.] Mississippi.—A private letter to General Howard, Inspector-Ganeral, dated Vicksburg, Miss., Aug. 3, 1866, states :—" Things are Fgetting worse in this county every "day. reedmen murders are nothing now. At least thirty have been killed during the past six weeks in this county. Within the past twenty-four hours one Union Southern and two Northern men have complained to me that they have come to town because they dare not remain longer on their places, near Edwards Depot." Louisiana.—New Orleans. —Deaths by cholera, Aug. 8, 18. The, N. Y. Tribune of August 10th says :—" Official information at headquarters shows that the statement of Lieut.-Gov. Voorhees that 42 policemen and several citizens were eitherkilled or wounded is an unmitigated falsehood. One policeman died of sun-stroke and about three were badly 'wounded. One citizen, rebel, was killed accidentally by the police on the other side. The record will show the slaughter of over 100 Union men, and the wounding of about 300. These are facts. "Rebels are complaining that they did not kill enough Yankees and conventioners, but brag that the time is coming when they will finish their work. Union men are afraid to go out on the street after dark, and invaria bly barricade their homes during the night, while the present police is composed of thugs. Life is terribly insecure, day or night."— August 9, 24 deaths from cholera.—The rebel Gen. Dick Taylor is a delegate to the Philadelphia convention. Territories.—Gen. Grant received a dis patch at Washington, Aug. 9, dated Fort Reno, announcing the murder by the Indians of Lieut. Daniels, 18th Infantry, July 20th. Since the 14thult., 24 men have been scalped between Brown's Springs and Tongue River. Financial.—lnternal Revenue receipts for Monday, Aug. 13, $2,053,165.23. 4 BY THE ATLANTIC CABLE. LONDON, August s.—Published August 8. —Before the armistice had been extended to Bavaria the Prussian army had moved rapid ly and secured a good footing. They are forcing a paper currency upon the people. By the agreement the Prussians are to occu py Wnrzburg ; but the Bavarians are to re tain the fortress at Mentz. The Baden troops left it yesterday, and the Wurtemburg troops will leave it on the Bth inst. The river Rhine is re-opened. During the last three days, the Austrians have been pouring into the. Tyrol, via Bava ria, to the number of about forty thousand. The Italian navy is to be reorganized. The court-martial of Admiral Persano, who recently commanded the Italian fleet,• is pro gressing. A new Italian loan of three hun dred and fifty millidn lire has been ordered. The cholera is increasing in England. BERLIN, August 6. —Published August 9. —The first sitting of the Prussian Chambers was held to-day. The king opened the ses sion in person. He was received with great enthusiasm. After referring in handsome and devout language to the late splendid victories, he dwelt upon the financial situa tion,. and expressed the hope that the au thorization of measures refused by the Cham bersito Bismark before the war,would now be granted, and so the high-handed course of the Prime Minister, against which the repre sentatives of the people were almost in open revolt, and the country in a most ominous state of uneasiness, would be declared legiti mate. • • DRESDEN, August 6.—Special Peace ne gotiations are to be , opened between Austria and Prussia. VlErme, August 6.-It is expected that a definite treaty of peace will soon be signed by the Austrian and Prussian Plenipotentiaries at Prague. Italy is not included. FLORENCE, August 6.—The Italian and Austrian generals met at Cormona in Aus tria to negotiate. PESIII, August 6.—Several political arrests were made by the military here to-day, and others are reported in other parts of Hungary. LONDON, August B.—Published here Aug. 10.—The relations between the Governments of Austria and Italy are assuming a threaten ing attitude. August 9.—The truce between Austria and Italy has been extended ten days. There is great excitement in London this evening at a supposed attempt to blow up the two houses oll'arliament. Ten packages of gunpowder, with a fuse partially burned, were found near the entrance to the Lord Chamberlain's office in the House of Lords. The members of Parliament- have visions of another Guy Fawkes' gunpowder plot. -- The deaths from cholera in London during the last week were 1053, and from diarrhea 354.—The officers of the British Custom Service have seized six blockade-runners at Liverpool on behalf of the United States Government. The Great Eastern sailed from Heart's Content, August 9, to grapple for the lost cable of 1865. She took 8000 tons of coal and provisions for a six months' cruise. LONDON, Aug. 10.—The session of Parlia ment has closed. The. Queen's speech on the occasion of the dissolution returns thanks to the Government of the United States for the action taken by it in the matter of the late Fenian raid into Canada: The speech also expresses the Queen's dratification at the success of the Atlantic cable. The rest of the address relates to home questions.— Napoleon has asked from Prussia an exten sion of the.frontiers of France. LONDON, Aug. .I.l.—An armisticelas been agreed upon between Austria and Italy upon the basis of the cession of Venetia to'ltaly. —No answer has yet been given by Prussia to the French demand for an extension of the frontiers 'of France to the Rhino.—The Governor of Schleswig-Holstein has been ordered to arrange for an election of members to the German Parliament.--An arildstice of four months has been signed between Aus tria and Prussia. The sovereigns of Baden, Darmstadt, and Saxe-Meningen had solicited the King of Prussia for an armistice. Upper Franconia has been seized by the Prussians. —The Empress of Mexico has arrived in Paris. She seeks aid from the French Gov ernment to the cause of Maximilian. AsPY BAY, N. S., Aug. 12-6.36 P. The cable across the gulf of St. Lawrence was again picked up at 9 A. M. to-day, the weather being fine. The splice was made by Mr. Charlton, and the steamer headed for shore. The cable will be landed at eight•this evening, when communication via the Atlan tic cable will be almost instantaneous between the United States and Europe.—Nine o'clock T. M.--=The cable across the gulf. of St. Lawrence is in complete working. order. The missing link having been thus'restored, we now have London news actually ahead of time, on account of the difference of longi tude. The 'papers of August 14th contain the following : LONDON, Ang. 13—Noon.--The armistice between Italy and Austria, which expired on Saturday, has been renewed for four weeks. United States-Five-Twenties, 68f. BERLIN, Aug. 13.—The oficial paper op poses the claim of France fpr an extension of her frontier. CRONSTADT, Aug. 10, P. M.—A cordial and magnificent reception has been given to the United States squadron by the Russian fleet. The Emperor Alexander visited the flag-ship Augusta, and was on the Miantono mah yesterday. All due honors were paid to him, and he was saluted by the fifteen-inch guns of the Monitor. All the vessels were fully decorated for the occasion. A Paris telegram of August 10, says : "The French Cabinet has addressed a note to the Prussian Government pointing out that the great changes which have taken place in the political organization of Ger many, render at necessary that the French frontier should be rectified by an accession of territory to France." The French Cabinet made yesterday an other communication to the Cabinet in Ber lin demanding the restoration of the French frontier as it existed in the year eighteen hundred and fourteen. PARIS, August U.—The Aloniteur says that General La Marmara, of Italy, and the Archduke Albrecht, of Austria, have been authorized to sign the armistice on the basis of the cession to Italy of the Lombarda- Venetian line. POIDWIMit4O/41ZMAigiiirsoi8 Frankfort on the Maine, the seat of the Diet of the Germanic Confederation which voted to side with Austria, was entered and occupied by a Prussian army July 16. It is a wealthy city of 80,000 or 90,000 inhabitants and was entirely independent, being, one of the so-called free cities of Germany. 4, has always,resisted the reactionary policy of Bis mark, and is, of course, obnoxious to the King and his prime minister. The Prussian occupation has been followed by the extraor dinary demand of ten, million, dollars for in demnity. It seems to be the purpose of Prussia to humble and punish and break the free spirit of this city', and thus remove obstacle from the exercise of a aesiotic power in the future over the smaller Ger manic States. Advices received from Frank fort, July 26, state that the Senate and other municipal bodies of that city have assembled in order to draw up a petition, which M. de Rothschild was instructed to present to the King of Prussia. The Prussian Commis sioner, however, refused the necessary per mission. Burgomaster Fenner has hanged himself out of despair at the manner in which the Prussians have acted toward the city and himself. The Prussians have had a list drawn up of the members of the Senate and other municipal bodies, together with a statement of their landed and movable pro-. perty. All the bankers have held a meeting, at which it was declared that if violence of this kind were resorted to they would sus pend payment in Germany and abroad. Much indignation is expected at this high handed and ominons 'proceeding, in France and England. South Germany.—The Prussians, whit: arranging for a truce. with Austria, sti, pushed their victorious progress in Siva :. and Baden. On the 26th of July. the 'p liminaries of peace with Austria *ere Signg that power seemingly abandoning her allie of thd Confederac to their fate. On thi. 26th and 27th of July the Prussians wer spreading over Bavaria and Baden, havin 4 fought several successful engagements wit the troops in those countries. The plan of settlement proposed by Prus sia includes a confederation of the States o North Germany under the dominant influ ence of Prussia. It would seem that an agit, tion for the extension of this Prnsso-Germa . alliance so as to embrace the Southern State has already commenced. European corre pondence says : "The public movement • . favor of Prussian supremacy, is getti stronger and stronger. In Dresden, a nu.. - ber of leading politicians, so long the avow d friends of Austria, have combined with . e adherents of this Government, and issue' a common declaration, in which the reunio . of all Germany, under Prussian auspices, is ;e -dared to be , a necessity of the times. et ters and articles advocating the . same i ea abound in the Wurtemburg and Baden pr;: People, it appears, were never so'deeply. ';'; pressed with the evils inseparable from a '- vision of Germany into a number of pe y States as now." Italy.—Very great dissatisfaction appe from comments in the journals on the na -1 disaster off Lissa. ' Admiral Persano .• -- manded a court-martial, which was gran .. The late successes of the G-aribaldians n the Tyrol are considered by the Paris S . e as infinitely more important than is gener, iy supposed, and as calculated to exercise a certain influence in favor of Italy when t e negotiations forpeace are entered upon. T e writer uses the following language : " There is no occasion to dissemble thef , Gen. Garibaldi and his volunteers, Arriv.d where they are; hold one of the master-Ire s of Austria. This situation, when the clans s of peace are about to be discussed, canny 4 fail to receive much consideration. The i - tervention of the hero of Caprera • , therefore, this time again not have.been - less to his country. •It is probable that, ' d the armistice not been arranged, he wo d have opened the road into Austria to a la ge Italian army, which might at a given po nt have been able to unite with the Prussian ." Xexico.—Mr. Romero, the Mexican n ister, received August 9th official dispatc es from his Government, dated at Chihuahua, up to the 9th ult. The Mexican GovernmOt had taken in consideration the tender of Gen. Santa Anna's services, made to President Juarez, and concluded not to accept them, assigning the following reasons :—" Because Santa Anna, being one of the originators and promoters' of the plan' to take foreign inter vention to Mexico, his sincerity cannot be depended upon now ; because the Mexican people have lost all confidence, in him,. and , cannot, therefore, place any reli*ce on'him, hia presence. in Mexico would only excite distrust and fears, and would only be an ele ment of disorderand weakness." ' ' ADDRESS OF SENATOR IVIISON' Senator Wilson addressed a meeting, Aug. sth, of the "National Association for the Education of Teachers among the Freed men," at Bostop. After referring to the object of the meeting, Mr. Wilson said I tell you here to-night, and I want you to remember it, that although we have by the bloody hand of 'war smitten the fetters from the limbs of the bondmen, we have not sub dued the heart of the slave-masters. We appealed for thirty years to the heart, con science and reason of the people of America. The noblest utterances that ever fell from from human lips fell upon the ears of the American people; the noblest men—the products of our Christian civilization ' wrote, and spoke, and toiled, and labored to con vert the heart, and conscience, and brain of this nation and to lead them to undo ,the heavy burden and let the oppressed go free. But they would not do it; and when u this nation was educated up high enough to come to the simple resolve that it would not) ,per mit the institution of slavery.WitittitsVhaine, and fetters, and whips, and blood-hobids to extend over the vast territories of the United States, the slave-masters plunged the nation into the fire and blood of revolution. They went into rebellion to carry slavery into the depths of the continent, and they came out without the power to hold a slave anywherein America. (Applause.) You have got to teach the slave-holding communities of the rebel States. You have got to change heart, con science and reason, so that they will recog nize the black men as brethren—as country men who have equal rights before the laws of the country with themselves. Since the rebelsarrnies went down I have never ceased on any occasion—and I never mean to—to do all I could to lift up and build up that section of my country. (Ap plause.) I will go as far as the man that goes furthest, in demanding the amplest guarantees for the security of men and of the countrY, but I meet that section of the coun try not as I met it in war, as an enemy, but as a part of our common country, and I would build up and elevate all classes and condi tions of men there, and improve all pcirtionti of that part of our country. • I come back to you after an eightinonths' session at Washington not despiurhig of my country. I meet men sometimes who tell me that all is lost. Ladies and ge6tlemen, all is not lost! (Loud applause.) We have triumphed, just as sure as God liv:: in the heavens. (Renewed applause.) 2 by, we have done nothing for 'the last six • ;re but march from victory to victory. w stood slavery six years ago ? Where is el very to- FOREIGN. BOSTON. , THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1866. day? It is totally annihilated—ground to powder; and the bondmen of the country stand up to-day secure in their civil rights by the laws of the United States. (Applause.) But the work is not yet done. There is yet work for this liberty-loving and Christian people, and they will do it. We have been disappointed, and sadly dis appointed. And why ? Because the man we elected Vice-President of the United States, who became President by an act I need not name, or in consequence of it, has disappointed our expectations, and turned his back upon the men who elected him— upon the principles he then professed, and is ,to-day the inspiration of wrong and outrage upon loyal white men and upon loyal black men of the South. I say it hereto-night, and I say it in profound sorrow, that Andrew Johnson put the rebel States back into the hands of the rebels, and he has put the black men of the South and the loyal men of the South under the hoofs of those rebels. Gen tlemen : A year ago last May when the rebel armies had all surrendered, that conquered, humiliated, subjected people lay prostrate at our feet. That was their condition. Our army of a million of men stood there proud and victorious; our power was everywhere felt and acknowledged; they were humbled and defeated; hope was lost; all was lost; and they were ready to take life or anything we chose to give. In that hour the Presi dent of the United States had it in his power, without any resistance from the North or South, to have asked and demanded a modi fication of all their constitutions and laws, so as to secure the equal civil rights of all men, and to have given the black man the same rig_hts possessed by the white man. I met no man from the South in May or June of last year who was not ready to do it. The Northern press expected it. The re ligious organizations that met in May of last year in this city, in New York, all over the country, demanded civil and equal rights for the emancipated bondmen. Aye ! And the right of suffrage, too. Even the old Demo cratic or a n of Massachusetts; I mean The Boston Post, thought it would come. The World, the leading Democratic organ of the country, said that suffrage would come to the black man by-and-by. The News, edited by Ben Wood, had an elaborate article in favor of negro suffrage. When he commenced that policy of his, the wisest, truest and best men, men who have studied this question for many years, protested against it; but they were told that it was an experiment—that if it failed Con gress would have the power to right it; they were told that he was in favor of suffrage as much as anybody—as much as Mr. Chase. He told Mr. Chase and Mr. Sumner that he agreed with them on that subject, and you know what Mr. Chase and Mr. Sumner think on that subject, and the country knows. (Applause.) That was his position ; but gen tlemen, when Congress assembled in Decem ber last we found that the President had a policy—it was my policy. Congress was not consulted ; in fact, it was denied that Con gress had anything to say in the matter ; and the traitor editors restored to their presses to fire the Southern heart again, and the men who had sympathized with them during the war, denounced Congress, and called on the Presi dent to clean Congress out. And when we passed the Freedmen's Bureau bill—(Ap plause)—although he had read it, as is stated by Mr. Trumbull in his late speech in Chica go—and he had the care of it—it was met with a veto, and that great measure was ar rested. Thank God, it was arrested only for a time. (Applause.) We have a bill more comprehensive, better, than the one he ve toed ; but he vetoed that, and then we promptly passed it over his head,—(great plause)—for we have got a majority in Con gress. And then we passed the Civil Rights bill—the greatest bill ever passed by a Con gress of the United States ; that great mea sure was met by a veto from the colored man's Moses., (Laughter.) Bat, - thank God ! we had a two-thirds' vote in both Houses of Congress, and we passed that bill. (Ap plause.) It is upon the statute boot:, and it will remain there forever. (Great applause.) No party, no combination of men will ever come in power in America, that can repeal the great Civil Rights bill of 1866. (Tre mendous applause.) I say to you, to-night, ladies and gentle men, that we shall rise amid these misfor tunes; we shall elect another Congress fa vorable to liberty—(applause)--and when the hour comes we shall elect a President of the United States who will not betray us. (Loud applause.) There is to be a Convention on the 14th of this month in Philadelphia— (derisive exclamations)—a conglomeration of pardoned and unpardoned rebels, copper heads, and the flunkies of the Whig party. (Laughter and shouts of derision.) lam glad that the Convention is to assemble. Gentlemen, we have seen these things before. The man we made President, and made it, toe, as a generous gift, for he had not a vote on the green earth to give us, nor anything else ; whom we took up, and made him Vice-President of the United States, now has turned his back upon this great, grand, his toric party,—(immense applause;)—and has taken into his counsels traitors, men who sympathized with traitors and camp-follow ers that follow all parties. And to-day, (would you believe it '?) Mr. Simon B. Hans comb represents Massachusetts. (Laughter.) Ex-Governor Andrew, Governor Bullock, Governor Banks, Mr. Sumner, all acknowl edged leaders of public opinionin Massachu setts, have nothing to sa_y about the affairs so far as their State is conc&ned, but Mr. Simon B. Hanscomb and Mr. John Swift are the illustrious individuals who now put up and put down and turn out and put in men in this commonwealth. And let me tell you, gentlemen, that every other State has gone into the hands of the Simon B. Hanscombs and the John Swifts—(Cries of shame.) Well, you may think this is a pretty pass for things to come to, but they are come to i ; and do you believe, gentlemen, that these things are to continue ? I tell you there is not an Andrew Johnson Republican that can be elected in a Free State in this Union. About ninety-nine out of an hundred men who voted for him are . against him to-day, and will be against him in the SepteMber, October and November elections. • Therefore, I say to you, that while we have abundant cause for profound anxiety ; while we 'have abundant cause for sorrow—aye, abundant cause for shame, too—that we are masters of our position, true to our princi ples, and are as sure as the sun holds on his course that we will triumph and triumph Within the end. (Tremendous applause. ) With a President in favor of suffrage, in favor of equal rights of all men in America, with a Congress strong and firm, with a liberty-loving,: law-abiding Christian people behind them, we will compel these men lately in rebellion to adopt this amendment. And the lovers of liberty there, and that, too, in a very few brief years, will carry on these reforms, suffrage and all the rest. I -say then, to you, to-night, we shall have to give of our of our influence, what we possess, to the holy cause of elevating this people we have emancipated; but while we are doing this we must be true to the country, 'to liberty: and above all, it becomes us to be true to our cherished convictions. W e have been among the foremost in the great contest of the past, and I am sure we shall be among the foremost in the struggle of the future, that is to establish equal, universal and impartial liberty in America. (Ap plause.) 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DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MEASUREMENT Far Coat. iii‘ - ' Length of bac) .00" -- . fromlto 2. an! .... k from 2 to 3. Length q . sleeve (wit I i , arm (smoke % from 4 to 5, ar ti around tl -, most prom 4, d ; ig e nt ch p e t s t i rt at , 1 w w i a l i e s t t t her . S e ta re: ora ng. For Vest.- Same as coat. For Pmts.-- Inside seam. and outside / from hip bone. around the w A a g is o t od an fi a t gn i :: ranteed. Officers' Uniforms, ready-made, always on hand,oi made to order in the best manner, an.‘ on the mos reasonable terms. Having 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 stock of Ready-made Clothing in Philadelphiaalways on band. (The price marked in plain figures on all of the goods.) A department for Boys'Clothing is also maintained at this establishment, and superintended by experi enced hands. Parents and others will find bare a most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low prices. Sole Agent lot the " Famous Bullet-Proof Vest." £HARLE STOKES ditt CHARLES STORES. T TAYLOR. W. ,Jr. STORES. LAW, COMMERCIAL, INSURANCE, FANCY PRINTER, STEAM POWER. IMPROVED BRONZING MACHINES, - ORIGINAL STYLES OF COLOR PRINTING, CHAGRINED BUSINESS CARDS, Wedding and Visitbg Cards Similar to Engraved. Plate. Business Envelopeswiih Card, $2 50 per Thou hand. 1 ' Having furnished a Large Room in Sansom Street Hall, with the latest Improved Machines and New Type, I am enabled to execute the Finest Cl9B£l of Printing. OFFICE, FIRST FLOOR. AND EVERY VARIETY OF PORT MONNAIE.S, SUSPENDERS, HMBRELLAS. W Strawberry street is between Second and Sant streets. HENRY HARPER, No. 520 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPIL 7B4 Dealer in and. Manufacturer of • WATCHES, FINE JEWELRY SILVER , WARE. AND SUPERIOR PLATED GOODS. J. & P. CADMUS, Ma 7*B Market St., S. E. corner of Mb& rathaultrtox. Manufseturers and Dimino in BOW SHOES. TRUNKS CARPET SAO AN D VALISES of every iariety'and el-IY XlmtztkErping ankft,s. F TYR NITUR E. I have a stook of Pnrnitrire in groat variety which I will sell at reduced 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, 1038-tf 45 SOCTH SECOND ST, PHILA. PATENTARTICLES PATENT ICE CREAM FREEZERS, 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. Manufactured and for sale. Wholesale and Retail. by CHAS. BURNHAM & CO., - lig South Tenth Street. WILLIAM YARN/ILL, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, No. 1232 CILESTNIUT ST., S. E. COR. 18TH. SUPERIOR REFRIGERATORS, FIFE TABLE CUTLERY, WATER COOLERB FAMILY HARDWARE, IRONING TABLES, dm. Eco.. 104.4-ly WALL PAPER S. W. COR. IOTH Br, GREEN. CURTAIN PAPERS, BORDERS, &C. Good Workmen for putting on paper, and all work warranted. 1046 6m JOAN H. PILLEY. DANNER'S WASHING MACHINE. Best in the City. IT SAVES TIME SAVES LABOR. SAVES CLOTHES EVERY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ONE. For sale at the Furniture Store of Agents wanted. J. Eta....A.S. 1047.6 m No. 837 MARKET Street. CONFECTIONS GEO. W. JENKINS, Manufacturer of choice Confectionery. Every varie ty of Sugar, Molasses and Cocoanut Candies. ALSO, Wholesale Dealer in Foreign Fruits, Nuta, &c. &c. GEO. W. JENKINS, 1037 Spring Garden Street, Union Square, PHILADELPHIA. 104841 grrg &DAS, &l. Aosi citaPwr 8 2 , IVINS & DIETZ. No. 4X STRAWBERRY STREET Beoond door above Chesnut street. PHTLADNLPELA. CARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS, • MATTINGS, AC. NEW STYLES. MODERATE PRICES & DIETZ, 43 STRAWBERRY Street, Philads. Cheap Canal Store. ti. 4v. l'Ars Ifs 1).
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