THE NEW YORK PRESS. EDIT OlilAL OPINIONS OF T1IR LEAPING JOURNALS C1DN CCKHKNT TOPICS CoMI'lLKD EVUltl CAT FOR THE EVKMMI TKLKOKAPU. President Jolinmu'a Administration Ills Mistake and Present Oppurtuul tlc. JVoni the JlrraHl. Under the lights of history tlm aiiminintra tion of Mr. Johnson lias ho far lieen a bmlgttt f blunders. His first mistake was one of mission, and w locate it on the l.itu day of Ainl. 18U5. the dav on which he was Bworn into oflice. Abraham Lincoln had lived to 8o the Hubjugation of the armies of the llchelliott, and had been received in triumph among the smoking ruins of liichmond. The work of destruction had substantially ended, and the task of reconstruction confronted Mr. Johnson from the moment after he had taken the Presidential oath. An this business ex clusively belonged to the sovereign legislative l.raneh of the Government, the first duty and the first stroke of sound policy which ought to Jiavo occurred to the mind of Mr. Johnson was a proclamation calling an extra session ot Con-less. As the law then stood, without such a call the recess (short session), which had commenced on the 4th of March, would last till the first Monday in December, (seven months and a half were still before Mr. John flon to act, witli or without Congress, as ho jnight determine; and in determining to ap- propriate this long interval to the develop ment of his own policy, in forestalling and superseding the rightful authority or ( on press, ho committed his first and greatest plunder. Through all the summer and autumn of 3S(i,r), however, while assuming ami exercising the exclusive powers of Congress in the work ing up of his provisional Southern State esta blishments, he still pleaded the constitutional plea of the supervising and sovereign jurisdic tion of Congress. In his first messige (De cember, lMi'i) to the two Mouses, this sovo Teign authority was conceded in the attempt that was made'to evade it. It was not till the 2A1 of February, lSo'i!, however, in that famous stump speech from the White House, that the first tilt against Congress was made ly Mr. Johnson, and in this his hostility was limited to such violent radicals as Stevens and Sumner and "the dead duck" Forney. Ju fact, running through the last April Con necticut election, and down to the adoption of the pending Constitutional amendment hyCon-pi-H.-s, the position of Mr. Johnson was that of a Republican President who intended to light out his fight against the extreme radicals Within the lilies of the party. Had he adhered to this resolution, in falling in with that , amendment, be might still have become mas- j tcr of the situation; but just here he com- Diitted another disastrous mistake to himself i in appealing from Congress to the people, dis astrous especially from the way in which he pushed this appeal. His Philadelphia August National Conven tion was an offensive mockery, an incongru ous jumble of dead heads, adventurers, crudi ties, and curiosities. Instead of serving him any good purpose it broke up his independent national party programme, and left him at the mercy of the helpless remnant of the Chicago Democracy. Then followed that melancholy pilgrimage to the grave of Douglass, of itself a great budget of blunders, a stumping tour which, in connection with the Memphis and Ttfew Orleans massacres, brought down upon Jlr. Johnson and his policy that tremendous avalanche of Congressional Republican ma jorities which last fall swept the country from Jlaine to California. Here, however, was an other chance of salvation to the Executive in the acceptance of the verdict of the people, and in falling in with the policy of Congress which they had so emphatically approved. Hut this verdict, which he had sought, he Utterly ignored in his annual message of last December, and still discussed the saving Virtues of his own condemned anl exploded heresies of restoration. The repudiation, then, of all his two years' labors, and their results in the work of South ern reconstruction, with a new beginning from .Appomattox Court House, was the onlyalter- ijanvo icu iu congress, involving, it neces- nary, the impeachment and removal of the i President himself. Over half-a-dozen vetoes, I more or less, this sweeping work of recon- ! Btruction has been consummated. Mr. John eon, completely deteated at every point, and ' With the sword of impeachment btill hanging ! over his head, is now left to the test of the ' execution of these laws. What, then, are his opportunities for the redemption of his admin- 1 ist ration? His first opportunity is that which is offered Lini to-save himself in seeing these recon struction laws of Congress "faithfully exe cuted." We are gratified with the evidences Wore us of his good intentions in that direc tion. Jiut, bound tast the new tenure of vmce in uio maiier 01 ins patronage, and pla ced in the grip of the Secretary of War, is not the jixecuuve reduced to a mere automate n? In this business of bouthern reconstruct! fin liu may be, but there are other questions open to Mr. Johnson, such as our future financial policy, including taxes, tariffs, bonds, banks, currency, retrenchment, and reform; and our foreign policy,embracinga settlement with Kng land and a new and definite understanding with all foreign powers upon commercial rights J)elligerent rights, and neutral rights. On these great questions Mr. Johnson, if he will, may take the lead in shaping the programme of the future dominant party of thenation and in this way ho may still leave for his ad ministration a good report in history. The ground which he has lost, if we consider him as playing the Presidential game of an aspirant for another term, may not, perhaps, bo re covered; but he has still a splendid margin not only for totally eclipsing the administra tions of Tyler and Fillmore, but for reviving on a grander scale the old financial anti monopoly party of (Jeneral Jackson. The Public Distrust of the Democratic Frmn the Times, Party. The Xutionul InUlUguictr remarked a few lflVd 4l.nl 111.- 1 , .,.c urn - iiuu mere ueen a mass nomi nating convention of all men in New Hamp Blare, irrespective of old jmrty names and State tssues, who are opposed to the destructive and revolutionary disunionists in Congress, doubt. less the latter would have met with disastrous defeat at the late election." tv,i i i, unlikely, and the scope of tW,na rk m gh ? y,h mlSf1- The Republicans have r ' , uTl(,reat0 thB "tupid selllsh- ihlllZ B a 01 lUelr rPuts, than to their own good nen.se and wisdom, not only for their victory in New Hampshire, but for their il 7i r1"101 everywnere else. At the close of the war all parties, at such. vere substantially broken nn. Tim iiilnr.lnl.w upon which they were based had in the main THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADFXPIIIA, TUESDAY, disappeared. Some of them had vanished in the presence of war, and others had been defi nitely settled by tho result of the war. New issues, new problems, new national wants and necessities had arisen and demanded popular action. The lines of existing party organiza tions by no means defined with accuracy the actual divisions of sentiment on theso new problems. The Republican party was far from being unanimous in support of the Sumner and SjeVens theory of reconstruction, nor was the Democratic party any more unanimous in denouncing the war which had crushed rebel lion, or in protesting against the "unconstitu tional" process by which slavery had been abolished. There was a general ferment in the Miblic mind, a disposition to let tho past bury its leal, auu vu uitoi, an iu emergency re quired, the new issues and the new policy which tho occasion demanded. lint neither party was inclined thus to let political power slip from its grasp. The Union party naturally felt that it had carried tho country through tho war, and that it was, therefore, entitled to take the lead in measures by which the Union should be restored. The Democratic party felt that, the war being over, they might avail themselves of the re action which they predicted against debt, taxation, and arbitrary rule, and regain the power from which they had been so long ex cluded. They accordingly adhered to their old organization, followed their old leaders, put in motion their old machinery, and under their old party name renewed the old struggle. The Philadelphia National Convention offered a grod occasion for acting upon tho iiolicv which the Aalional nirliunn r now re commends. That Convention, in some of it9 leading features, responded to what was un questionably a national sentiment. The fact that leading men from both sections had again met in friendly council, was of good omen. The proceedings of the Convention , were characterized by dignity, good-feeling, : and a patriotic desire for the public good. , The declaration of principles which tho Con- .' volition adopted was acceptable to the great mass of the people, and proved that both sec tions were ready to accept the results of the war, and to take, as fixed and irreversible, , the great principles and measures which tho overthrow of the Rebellion had established, j The Convention had laid down a platform upon which the great mass of the people were : perfectly willing and ready to stand; and if proper action had been taken,- a national I movement would have grown out of it by j which the Union would have been restored, , and the policy of the nation marked out for ' many years to come. j lint the Democrctic party would not con- j sent to this. It saw in the Convention only a I ladder for its own return to power. It resolved to use it for its ow n advantage. It went into the contest under its old name and its oij. ; organization; put forward its old leaders; ap- , propriated the Philadelphia Convention as its I own, and coolly invited those of tho Union i party who accepted its principles and shared its spirit, to help them prostitute both to the restoration of the Democratic party to power. In Pennsylvania they had nominated, in the narrowest and most selfish party spirit, ' lleister Clymer, one of the most obnoxious anti-war Democrats of the State, for Governor; ; and far from seeing the wisdom of changing this action to meet the new state of things . which the Convention had created, found in ' that Convention fresh hope of success and a fresh motive for adherence to their party pur- pose. In this State they rejected, with osten tatious contempt, General Dix, because of his j support of the war; nominated for Governor a Democrat of the straitest sect; adopted a plat- j form which no Republican could possibly sup port without stultifying himself, and in this ' spirit entered upon tho canvass. In Ohio, Indiana, and the West in general, the party acted in the same temper. Instead of dis carding "old party names and stale issues," they blazoned both upon their banner, and marched to inevitable defeat. j For the people had neither forgotten nor forgiven tho part played by tho Democratic , party during the war. As an organization ' in all its corporate action it had been tho i virtual ally of the Rebellion. It had de nounced the war for its suppression, and to . the extent of its ability, antl within the limits where such action was safe, it had done every thing it could to render it abortive. The people would not, under any pretext, return such a party to power. Whatever distrust they might have of men and measures in the Union ranks, they preferred the chances of both to the certain results of confiding the Government to Democratic hands. The Presi dent, by taking the stump for the Democratic ticket, greatly strengthened this sentiment. His speeches not so much the opinions and principles they embodied as the temper and spirit which they evinced alarmed and re volted the public sense, and contributed powerfully to the defeat of the Democratic party. If the Democrats cling to this narrow and pel fish policy, they may reasonably count on the same result. Prominent and intluential men in the Union ranks are doing much to disgust and alienate public confidence in the Union party but they will never quite suc ceed so long' as the only alternative presented is the return of the old Democratic Bourbons to power. Mr. Abbott's Coup il'Ktat. From the Tribune. It isn't every Yankee who can storm the doors of the Imperial -palace, and intrench himself in the Imperial closet ; and it is a little mieer that while the royal residence has been broken into oftener than any other human habitation in Paris, the person to break into it tin most successfully should be an American clergyman. Other visitors in other times the august occupant ot me hour would have kicked out, if he could ; but our conquering compatriot was received, as he takes pains to inform us, "with tne mosi gratifying cordiality." Chronology is not without its coincidences. It was in February that Napoleon 1, having smashed the Council of Five Hundred, went to housekeeping in the Tuileries ; it was also in February that the Rev. John S. C. Abbott, called upon Nnrv.iu ur tt,,, h.nviner the presence, our historian wrote a long private letter 'to a friend in New Haven, portraying hw emo tions and detailing the pet wVlc,hAie,. f upon this thrilling occasion. '1 hw letter, as a matter of course, the friend ha sent to tne newspapers-a perfectly proper V"" Why should the social circles of New Haven Lav. a monopoly of this interesting produc tion? Why should such a contribution to history Ye7 hidden in anybody's breeches pocket f WThy should the public be cheated out .1 Yha delights of this charming epist e Wu have only one fault to find. The letter should have been published in Marj.er', Mg zin with pictorial illustrations. "He re ceTv'ed xne ty the fireside," says Mr. Abbot , ouohlngPy. picture of the fireplace with i. American upon one ide and tm great Frenchman upon the other, would have 1 sold an enormous edition of the magazine. Considering all that thoy have done for Mr. Abbott, the Frabklin-squaro people have a reasonable right to complain that the I. ivy of their pages did not send the narrative directly to them; and there is a ploasuro in thinking that ho lias a more elaborate cll'ort (with cuts) in reserve. The first thing which his Imperial Majesty did after receiving Mr. Abbott "in one of the interior parlors ot the palace," was to thank hiin for writing the Life of Napoleon I, and "for the justice done by my pen to the lim peror." That so great a man should be obliged to wait for historical justice until the advent of so small a one, will remind the ; reader of the lion who was caught in a net, ' and of tho mouse who liberated tho mighty ! prisoner. A large number of Frenchmen have expatiated upon tho glory of the Fmpe I ror, but Mr. Abbott has been the first to raise ' him to the rank of a moral and religious char acter; and it is this which makes the perusal of the "Life" a perpetual and amusing sur prise. The apologies of Mr. Abbott have the relish of comedy. We are always looking forward to the mollification of murder, and are constantly curious to know by what fine name the next villany will le dignified. We revel in the metamorphosis of falsehood, and, after the execution of the Due d'Kngheiu lias received Mr. Abbott's extenuations, wo have perfect confidence in his Old ll.iiley capacity. We do not remember that Mr. Abbott has occasion to mention the fondness ot his hero for cheating at cards; but if it had been necessary, he is just the writer to prove conclusively that his Majesty revoked to the glory of God, and made misdeals for tho honor of Franco. Mr. Abbott is not one of the greatest, but he is one of tho most unscrupu lous of the new school of historical white washers, who start with the presumption that the world has been all wrong, and who show their skill and ingenuity by setting it right. It is to be regretted that professional delicacy has prevented him from trying his hand upoil the devil. There are yet neat things to be said in behalf of that sable personage, whose deeds, it is true, were evil, but whose talents were of the highest order. He met one dark day with his Waterloo pray how long must he wait for a sympathetic historian ? Mr. Abbott, being lace to face with the Em peror, made a long speech, of which he in serts a report in his letter. The subject of this speech was the life and adventures of Louis Napoleon. "When I reflect," said Mr. Abbott, "upon the birth of your Majesty in Paris," etc. etc. The historian must have gone on reflecting for about half an hour. He reflected upon Strabourg and Jionlogne, upon the Castle of Ham, upon the Mexican ques tion, and upon a numbur of other disagreeable subjects; but the imperial host stood it all, apparently wilbout irritation, and submitted to be soaped with the best possible grace; nor does he appear to have winced even when Mr. Abbott most unnecessarily lugged in the cuiip d'etat by the head and "shoulders, ami pro tested that it was beautiful. P.ut this was not all. Being in for it, this Christian minister determined to go the entire animal. As he had swallowed so much, he made no bones of Mexico, vowed that it was a shame that the Mexicans would not submit to Maximilian, declared that his own Government "had made a great mistake" in not lending moral support to the Fnipire, and tli'n, being seized by a spirit of prophecy, he .predicted "a state of chronic anarchy" into which these most un reasonable Mexicans must be plunged. Im perial Majesty listened and "expressed his assent." which was a very handsome thing to do. He wonder what he was thinking when he expressed it. of For sixty minutes, as lie informs us, did Mr. Abbott remain closted with the monarch, and during that time he made the following sagacious discovery: "The Emperor looked decidedly older than when I saw him fourteen years ago." This is very singular. Pray, did Mr. Abbott expect to find him looking younger ? However, it is a comfort to know that his Majesty does not grow stingy as he grows old, for he presented to Mr. Abbott "a copy of all his published works," which we trust Congress will allow the donee to bring home without paying any duty. "The Em peror," says Mr. Abbott, "is, intellectually, one of the most highly cultivated men in Eu rope." It takes one man of genius to find out another. But we must bring our sketch of this pleas ing event, so flattering to our national pride, to a conclusion. Mr. Abbott has since been to a public reception, and the Emperor shook hands with him in the presence of four thou sand spectators. Every one of them, no doubt, half-mad with envy, "for," says Mr. Abbott, "this was an honor which was not conferred upon any one else." Three thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine courtiers, brave or beautiful, went to bed disgusted with life and the coldness of their sovereign, while Mr. Abbott (with the much-favored right hand, which wo suppose he will never wash again), sat down to write the record of his lofty luck for the delectation of New Haven. It must have been a severe trial of the humility which we naturally look for in a Congregational clergyman. Mr. Abbott must remember that he is but a man 1 Depredating the Dead. From the World. The recent death of Jesse Iloyt, on whom public attention was strongly fixed some twenty years ago by the surreptitious publi cation of his correspondence in the notorious "William L. Mackenzie's pamphlets, incites a writer in the Times to string together two columns of gossip relating to tho New York Custom House. It is written jn such a sham bling, penny-a-line way, that it would deserve no notice if it did not, in one passage, con vey a totally false impression of the character of an eminent citizen of this State, who filled the highest offices both in the State and Fede ral Governments. The passage to which we refer is the following : T1.i'rtesU.y,''iM ur.tn wns a nmn "ffw friends; puruMU-h ana clients were abuudaut but real ftitili Val.r".?'- V.1" Bte- W mi ,V tf i "" un, 1!"rt!: uexi. came Hen t e lln a !."UU .llvv' or ruher Willi ". UcaAer of Air v0t """"'"y lo rehearse alia foi litnes bv u1 ' ' inren' "or the means dentiH. Ta?r. lUpi,1"L,eir5a M1? nvcr tniuio.i iiiMwiV plu "ever liked him uud sense B man of the peonL1 and 1 Ji? .WU8 iU.V day that be could co. nVaSd r ? m ground of Irlendshlp. thr " iSrVr..u- . r11"! iml,io, men. Uln eleollou 1, CT wno ' merits, but In respect to in. n?, bls Oene.ul jHCkson. iV w hose )w t r , n?'.l0n W'.Ul naturally succeeded. Had ffi ,oIlcy 18 tube of Van Hurcn-8 UrlahTli'"," P""Mi of IJnUenwald (alias tn" ffieftook "foil wouU never have had the 1i,.,7,tJ , , Tx beaten by 'Tippecanoe and Tylw ioc belnK We are confident that this slanderous pas sage escaped the notice of the editor of the lunes, whose habitual courtesy to the living may be taken as a guarantee that he would not wantonly violate the decorum due to the dead Even if what is here said of Mr. Van Buren were true, it would be questionable taste to "draw his frailties from their dread abode-" but being the reverse of truth, it tends to mis lead the younger class of readers, who are not well acquainted with the politics and public men of the last generation. So far from Mr. Van Jluren being "a man of few friends," scarcely any of our statesmen has had more, and none that we can call to mind was so much indebted to personal friendship for his political promotion. 1 In his own State, Mr. Van Ruren was the soul and centre ol the famous "Albany Re gency," whose memlicrs were never suspected by friend or foe of any want of devoted attach ment to each other In describing Mr. Van Burcn'B earlier political career, Judge Ham mond in his "Political History of New York almost habitually speaks of "Mr. Van Buren and his friends" (see Hammond .JiT), a on of expression which conveys tn the re.ler tl correct idea that he was a power in pol cs y means of an able and attached follow in Never was a man so little isolated iu polities' as tho hading spirit of that powerful "Re gency ' 1o pass from this cluster to indi vidual instances, there is perhaps no friend ship m the political history of the country so noted or so disinterested as that of General Jackson for Mr. Van Buren. Another me morable instance is that of Silas Wright who refused the Vice-Presidency solely on the ground that his friend Van Buren had been unjustly treated in regard to the nomination for the higher office. We mention these in stances becauso they are conspicuous; we know not where in our history to look for their parallel. Mr: Benton's immediate resolution to brin forward Mr. Van Buren as a candidate tor ice-I resident when he was rejected as Minis ter to England, is another well-known though b ss remarkable proof of the zeal of Mr. Van Buren's friends. Tho fact that in 1S44, not withstanding his unsuccessful run in 140, he was deleated in the National Convention only by the trick of forging a date to a letter, and adopting the two-thirds rule by the Conven tion, demonstrates the warmth of personal regard felt towards him by tho great body of the party. Nor did ho experience kindness only from political associates. A pleasant personal intercourse always subsisted between him and tho great Whig leaders, particularly with Mr. Clay, with whom he was on jocular terms, offering to bet suits of clothes on tho result of elections, begging frequent pinches of his lino maccaboy snuff, and warmly invited by him to visit him and Mrs. Clay at' Ashland alter retiring from the Presidency. At another time we get a glimpse of Mr. Van Buren and Washington Irving making a summer jaunt together through the rural districts in a pri vate carriage, and entertaining each other with pleasant anecdotes and reminiscences. We could lortify our contradiction with multi tudes of minor instances, but the noted ones we have given render otheis superfluous. MISCELLANEOUS. - ASTINCS'S COMPOUND SYRUP OP NAPTHA CUItES COUGHS AND COLDS. GIVK IT A TKIAL. For sale by all first-class Druggists. MrOTT A CO., AGENTS, 8 8 lm No. 232 North SECOND Street. g L AT E MANTELS. 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Kxteusiou Tables, Wardrobes, Book, cases, ilaureeBes, Lounges, etc. etc. I. I'. l!JTir JfE, 8 1J N. E. corner SECOND and RACK Street. ESTABLISHED 1705. A. S. ROBINSON, French Tlule Looklng-Masscs. EKdllAVIXGS. TMNTINGS, DRAWINGS ETC Manufacturer o! all kinds o) I.OOKIKQ-CLA&S, PORTRAIT, AND PICTDRB F2.AKL3 TO OEDER. No. OlO CI1ESNUT STItKKT, THIRD DOOR AltOVK THE CONTINENTAL, 1'illLADKI.f 1I1A. 3 15J ROOFING. OLD SHINGLE ROOKS (FLAT OR STEEP) COVKR. ED WITH JOHN'S ENOLISH ROOFING CLOTIflH And coaled with 1.101111) (ilTTTA pkuciu PAINT, making them perfectly water-proof, LEAKY ORAVEL ROOl'S repaired with Oulta Percba Paint, and warranted for five years. LEAKY SLVTK ROOFS coated with liquid which becomes as hard ai sliite. TIN, COPPER, ZINC, or IRON coated wltt Liquid Guttapercha at small expense, Costranglu from one to two cents per square loot. Old Board 01 Shingle Roots ten cents per square foot, all complete Materials constantly on band and lor sale hv th PHILADELPHIA AND PENNSYLVANIA ROOF 1NG COMPANY. GEORGE HO HART, 1 1 8 Km No. V.m N. Ft lURTH Street ire, O O F I IV G . OI.I MIINUI.K HOOFS, FLAT OR STKKV '0 1 It t.it Hlill .l l'FK4 114 It OOP ll4.- l.O'i II, timl coated with l.lll 111 miT TJ 11 Itl llA 1'AI.M', iuuklug them perleclly wutei pron f, l.KAHY (JKAVFX HOOFS repaired with Guttl Perchu Piiint, and warranted lor five years. l.KAHV M.ATK KVOI'N coated with LlquU Gulia I'ereha Paint, which becomes as hard as slate. For TIN, t Ol'l'l'.K, .list, and lit ON KOOtl, this I'uinl Is the tie )lua ultra ol all other protection. It forms a perleclly Impervious covering, completely resists the action of the weather, and constitutes tborouKh protection against leaks by rust or other wise. Price only trom one to two cents per square foot. TIN and till tVEI, BOOFIN6 done at th shortest notice. JtateriBl constantly on hand and for sale by the 5IAMKIOTI1 ltOO!l.i '0.ll'AN V. JUl.llll.KS' V KV KKETT, 1216m No. 801 GREKN Street. HARDWARE, CUTLERY, ETC. B UILDIMG HARDWARE Dozen Baldwin's Butts, all sizes. 8iu Dozen Keurick's Pulleys, 1,, p, 2 Inch. 6iki Dozen American Pulleys. It,, l'i, 2, 2lj Inch. Spear A: Jackson's Hand und Pauue.1 buws. l;utcher's Plane Iron, all sizes. Butcher's Firmer Chisels, all sizes. Excelsior While Lend. ity-miide Rim and Mortice Locks. Dnncannon und Anvil Nails, all sizes 1-crews. Knobs, Bolls, Tuble Cutlery, Planes. fcuw Files. Latches. Axes, shovels and Spiules, Shut ter ami Rivenl Hinifes, strap and T Hinges, Shutter Rolls. Plutform Hiid other bcules, Wire, Curry Combs Etc. Etc. A or sale by STANDBRIDOE. BARR A CO.. Importers of and Deulers In Foreign and Domestic Hardware, Isalls, and Cutlery, 87lli8tugj No. 1321 MARKET Street. CUTLERY. A fine assortment of POCKET and TABLE CUT LKIfi . RAZORS, HA ZOlt fTROPS. LADI KS' SOlbsORS PAPER AND TAILORS' SHEAR.-,, ETC., at uri-ft-u' L. V. II K I, MOLD'S Cheap Store, No. m South TEN! H Mreet. Three doors above Walnut, 11 C A s LIGHT FOR THE COUNTRY. r .fil 7" FERRIS C'O.'S AUTOMATIC OA MACHINE FOR PRIVATE RESIDENCES, MILLS, HOTEL) CHURCHES. ETC., FURNISHING FROM TEN TO SIX HUNDRED LIGHTS, AS MAY BE REQUIRED. This! machine Is guaranteed; does not get out "o order, sud.lue time to manage It Is about five minutes a week. The simplicity of this apparatus. Its entire reednm from danger, the cheapness and quality of the light over all others, has gained for It th favorable opinion ol those acquainted ;wilh lilt merits. The names of taose having used them for the last three years wli be given by calling at our OFFICE, NO. IOS KttVTII EOl ltTlI STREET, Where the machines can be seen in operation. FERRIS CO. i Box 401 P. O Bend for a Pamphlet. , Ktsiutuutn E1 L O XL I AND Preserver of Natural Flowew, ' A. H. POWELL. No. 725 ARCH 'Street, Below Eighth Pecquet, Wreaths. Paikcti, Pyraxildsot CntFtow BiLltfidtocfUtrktalleouii. I it tup .su.- .6- i"v-'i ';'".";-' ,.'-- r. J WATCHL3, JtWELKV, ETC. j'iVMS LADOMUS & CO DIAMOND DKA1.KRS & JKWELEUS. IVill lllS, JKWKI.KT A KILVm WAIllt. , WA1CHE3 and JEWELET KEF AIRED. ChttTtnt St., Phii. Have on hand alarge and splendid assortment DIAMOND. WATrnrx, JKITKUtT, AND KII.VER-WABB OF ALL KINDS AND PRICES, Particular attention Is requested to onr large stock Of DIAMONDS, and the extremely low prices. BRIDAL PRESENTS made of Sterling and Stan dard Silver. A large assortment to select from. WATCHES repaired In the best manner, and war ran ed. (8 It4p Diamonds and ail precious stones bought for cash. JOHIN BOWMAN, No. 70i AllOII Street, PHILADELPHIA, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN 4 SILVER AND PLATE DW ARE. fo?"r G00r8 re 0rlle117 the cheapest in the city THIPLK PLATE, A WO. I. Sai3 WATCHES, JEWELUY. W. W. CASSIDY, No. 13 KOUTlt HECOND HTREET, Offers an entirely new and most carefully select d stock of AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER-WARE, AND FANCY ARTICLES OW EVERY DESCRIPTION, suitable for BRID It OR HOLIDAY PRESENTS. An examination will show my stock to be nusur piissed in quality and cheapness. Funicular attention paid to repairing. g ig C. RUSSELL & CO.. NO. 23 NORTH SIXTH STREET, gHaveJust received an Invoice of FRENCH MANTEL ( LOCKS, Manufactured to their order In Paris. Also, a few INFERNAL ORCHESTRA CLOCKS, with side pieces; which they oiler lower than the same goods can be purcbused In the citv, SZ6 HENRY HARPER. 0v ISio. 5Q0 ARCH Street, Manufacturer and Dealer In HATCHES, FINK JEWELRY, HILYElt I'LATED WARE, AND 8 1 SOLID MIL YER-WARE, AWNINGS, ETC. WiVINGS! AWNINGS! IMILDEW-PROOF AWNINGS. W. I'. S11EISLE, 49 South. THIRD Street No. No. 31 South. SIXTH Street, Manufacturer of MILDEW-PROOF AWN. INGS, VERANDAHS, FLAGS, BAGS, TENTS, and WAGON COVERS. Btencil Cutting and Canvas Printing, 273mrp AWNINGS, WAGON COVERS, BAGS, ETC. 11 you want an EXTRA AWNING VERY CHEAP, let our Awning Makers take the measure, and make it from a lot of loco Hospital Teuts lately purchased by us, many ol which are new, and the best 12-oz, duck. Also, Government baddies and Uarneus of all kinds, etc. etc PITKINS & CO., 8131m Nos. 337 and 839 N. FRONT Street. REMOVAL. DKEEK A BEAKS KEMOVED TO NO. I'RCNEl Street. DREER & BEARb, former! ol Goldsmith's Hull, Library street, have removed t No. 412 PRUNE btreel, between Fourth uud Flit streets, where they will continue their Manufactory of Gold Chains, Rrucelets, etc. In every variety. Also the sale ol tine Gold, fculver, and Copper, Old Gold and hilver bought, January 1. !Mi7. 1 193m BARLOW'S INDICO BLUE, PIT VP AT i WlLTEBGilfS DRUG STORE, NO. 23a NORTH SECOND STREET, rill LADELPIIIA, Will color more water than four times the earn amount of ordinary Iuuiko. IT 19 WARRANTED TO GIVE SATISFACTION. It la retailed at the same price as the Imitation and inferior articles. 819mJ 5-20s 5-20s MoOAULEY, IlOWLETT & Co., PATENT MACHINE PAPER 1U A& I LOI R SACK MANnACTUHKK8 ANH fKINTKHU, NO. 020 COMMERCE HTREET. Sntchel-bottom Flour Hacks vvllUe' " -to 51ks. " Special attention ii".',r3 Philadelphia slie. and ireat varZl of nU."eJ l.0 11,8 ""ferior quality various warns oY Si tlVerU1,'J,,ufuctureH' ''i 'o th men. Coulee loners ii,- ,Utler?' l. H1"-proinpilyaiieua!d8:,",e'c- Orders for primed baw the trade. tof ud a llberul discount made to 8 7 insiuim PASTE! PASTE! PASTE! THK VMIOM PA8TK AND SIZING COMPANY be'own" b!f ATENT PA8TE It 1. Put up In br.U. t.1, barrel,, and boxaf. KKITII & PICKETT, BOLX A0ENT8, liotutbstin No. 134 South Wharvwi. Eh