o "2 Tim m:w york press. EDITORIAL OriRTONfl OF TnB LKAPISO JOURNALS UPOS CURRENT ToriCH COMPILKD EVBHT DAT FOB THR BVFNINO TEhRORAPH. Tht Hotttancii and Danger of the Na- ttunal Bauds. from the Herald. Out special corfeirOD1uce 'rorn lte t,8t n ftho condition of llie; national , bauka, nakes Boh revelations as sliouM open the tjah of the public' tq tue . rottenness' ail danger of these Institutions- To ua the facts reyealed an not at all urpr1siiig;'for(we hkvo'long fore seen and shown through the columns of .the Herald what must .rfsult from eucti an ;lu mensely fraudulent 'and incongruous.' system. We felt it our duty to proclaim to the -people the" danger that it was inevitably coming. ,For a time we stood, almost alone in our efforts. The Tast power of the national , banks over . politicians and the newspapers generally made It up-hill work j but the people and many of our public men are' becoming enh'ghtehe4 at laat. tThe independent metropolitan press la above national bank influence, and can afford to tell the truth. In spite of the power of this . gigantio monopoly and of the Chase radical faction, which looks to it as a grand politioal jna ohine, we saw that a large party in Con gress last winter and spriBg, aa well as several ltnding newspapers, of the West, dared to attack the monster evil. "" ' ' ' , '' Our special correspondent referred to, who Is employed in the work of probing the rotten condition of the banks, and who has visited Jiuffalo, Chicago, St. Louis, and many other principal towns of the West, gives us startling results of his Investigations. Daniel' O'Con Cell said once that he could drive a' ooaoh and fix through the aots of l'arliament, and he certainly knew how to get through or around them. Our national bank managers and direc tors find it easier to evade the National Bank act, and do so with the greatest facility. For example, one of the banks spoken, of by our correspondent has a capital of two hundred thousand dollars, and it honors the drafts of a speculating stock dealer, who has no funds iu the bank, to the amount of a hundred thou Eand dollars a week, or titty jercent. of its entire capital, in direct violation of the forty seventh section of the act. IIow much this bank accommodates others we do not know, but the probability is that It does so to a large amount, thus carrying on transactions vastly beyond its capital or tvhat the law allows. "Half the banks in the Interior," we are informed, "are guilty of like Violations of the law every day." In. many cases, the speculators without means who obtain such accommodations are bank directors Or their friends. In one case a bank president, more honest than the rest, withdrew from the institution because the directors were specu lating largely with the funds, and he could not control them. "I resigned," he said, "sold out my stock, and abandoned the concern. " He very properly added, "Under the law, as yon are no doubt aware, the stockholders are only liable for double the amount of their Stock to creditors. . A board of unscrupulous directors, if they were . so , disposed, at ' a period when the deposits . are large, can speculate-upon thefandsr -and, in the event of trouble threatening, transfer their Stock to men of straw, retaining only sufficient' to give them control of the institution. Take, for example, a bank with a capital of two hun dred thousand dollars, a circulation of a hun dred and, fifty thousand, and individual and Government deposits of a million and a half. It may have deposited half a million in bonds with the Treasurer to secure Government deposits and circulation, yet how easily it can fail, and the manager's profit at the expense of the Government and unsuspecting depositors! There is much rottenness in the system, and I am glad I am out of it." Such is the testi mony of a National Bank President who knew all about the system. Can we be sur prised, then, if the Government should lose the people's money, and thousands of unfor tunate depositors be fleeced by these gam bling and rotten institutions ? Have we not examples in the cases of the Merchants' Na tional Bank of Washington, of the First Na tional Bank of New Orleans, and of others that might he named r Is there not the best reason to believe that the evil is widespread, and that a general crash will be the conse quence f The people of. New York, and all through the populous part of the country on the east ern Bide of the mountains, have been suffering from the high price of provisions. They have been astonished to see flour over twenty dol lars a barrel, and provisions in proportion, When it was known there was an abundance in the country. "We now learn that it was the pet national banks of Mr. McCuIloch and Mr. Chase that forestalled the markets, and that, too, by using the people's money, and through tho power which the people's repre sentatives in Congress had given to them. Jiut, like all greedy speculators, they have overreached themselves aud have large stocks On hand when prices are falling. This is one of the chief causes of the shaky condition of the Western banks at present, and one which makes such a prudent wan as the Bank l're Jdent referred to before stand from under the 'rotten system. " But what shall we say of the Government, f those members of Congress, and particu larly of Mr. Secretary MoCulloch, who bolster up this infamous system? What shall we say of the Seoretary of the Treasury, who lets these speculators and forestallers have the Government deposits to carry on their ne farious business with and to cheat the publio f Incompetency is too mild a term to apply to Jiim. He is guilty, we fear, of doing a wilful great publio wrong. If he does not see the evil he is too stupid to hold the smallest office. If he does see it, and, from weakness or some thing worse, dares not grapple with it, he de Serves to be removed, impeached, and pun ished. Not content with taking from the people upwards of twenty millions a year in profits on a circulation which belongs to and Should be appropriated to the publio use, and iot content with other enormous privileges never conoeded before to private corporations, these national banks have commenced a gigantic i system of forestalling the markets, of oppressing the people, of swindling poor de positors and th Treasury, and of controlling the political affairs of the country. All this they are doing, too, with the connivance aud aid of the Secretary of the Treasury. There jiever was in the history of the world before anything bo infamous, corrupt and dangerous. It b time a remedy were found for the mon strous evil: and if nothing else should call Congress together before December, this Should. The act establishing the national banks should be repealed without delay. It Is an immense ulcer on the body politic, and. If not speedily, removed, will endanger all the best Interests and the very we or tue country, THEDATLY. EVENING TELEGKAm PHILADELPHIA , - - WEDNESDAY - . 1 i' -- " ' - , . - , , . - - a . K r Tin President and IUmnitrnrtlon Tht 1'erlla of Interference. .. From the 1'imeg. ' i Everybody sees that, if the Tresldent ads upon the opinion of the Attorney-Oennral, and removes Sheridan, Pope, and Sickles, reversing their action, and reinstating the civil officers whom they have displaced, we shall have a renewal, in its most violent form, of the radical excitemont of a year ago. The tone of the ex-, treme radical press indicates this.' Nothing .would suit thoir- purpose better. ' A little : judicious manipulation on their part, under such circumstances, would easily create new riots and moliB in Southern cities. The active interference of the military would be Invoked. Popular passion would be, aroused, afresh throughout the North, and the country would be plunged at onoe into new commotions and disturbances, fatal to the publio peace and to all hopes ot speedy reconstruction. . Is this desirable T What Beotion or what interest has anything to gain by it t Its first result will be to prolong the exclasion of the South from Congress, and to exclude them utterly from taking part in the next Presiden tial election. The llebel Interest in the South may, and doubtless will, hail .suoh aotion, if the President shall take it, as a speoial inter' position on their behalf. It may delay mea sures w hich they resist but it will only be to introduce others more severe, and render their success doubly certain. Why. should the President lend himself to Bohernes which aim only at prolonging strife and, postponing the day when the Union shall be again fully re stored f ; . . . , ' The Attorney-General has argued the case with very great ability, but he has argued it like a lawyer, and as if none but legal points were Involved in its decision.' We confess that, in the main, we deem his argument con clusive. Upon legal grounds it will not be easy for any one to answer it. But it is not a question to be decided on legal grounds alone. -Other considerations of still greater conse quence are involved. The question is one of publio policy, and it must be decided upon grounds of the publio welfare.1 , Mr. Stanbery says that the ' law' must be . construed strictly, and he therefore restrains within the narrowest possible limits the powers which it confers. But it must also be oonstrued with reference to the r will and purpo of those who made it. . . ! The motive and intent of Congress in passr tog the law enter largely into its construction even in a court of law, and still more largely in deciding how it shall be carried out; and the President knows perfectly well that it was not the Intent of CoDgress, in passing this law, to restrict within narrow limits the power and jurisdiction of the military commanders whom it created, and to enlarge the authority of the local civil authorities at their expense. Its motive and purpose were exactly opposite openly, avowedly, notoriously so. The only reason for passing the law at all was to restrain and restrict the power of the local authorities, the State Governors, Legislatures, and Judges. They were believed to le in "Rebel" hands, and the object of the law was to weaken and reduce their power to the lowest point. '.. This must be taken Into consideration when the execution of the law is in question. . 1 If the military rghn were to be perpetual in the South if we were laying now the foun dations of permanent rule there the case would be different. We might then justly and wisely be technical and obstinate in con tending for the largest exercise of local liberty. But it is not so. The existing rule is tempo rary, provisional, merely a stepping-stone to . the reestablishment of civil authority by the people themselves. It Is merely a gateway through whioh the South is to reenter the Union a bridge over which they cross into the resumption of their constitutional rights and the renewal of their authority over their own affairs. Why wrangle over temporary troubles, to the delay and possible defeat of the great end to be accomplished. When the Military bill was on its passage in Congress, Mr. Stevens did not hesitate to say that he deplored its passage because the Presi dent would sign it, the South would take it and come back into Congress, with increased representation and the negro vote, and take part in the next Presidential election. Such a result would be disastrous to measures which he deemed essential to the publio good. The President did not realize his fears by signing the bill; but he will now gratify his hopes if he obstructs its operation and delays the re construction for which it provides. The law is working well. The Southern people do not complain of the action of the military com manders. Sheridan's removal of Mayor Monroe and Judge Abell met the approval of all loyal men, and his displacement of Governor Wells was received with hearty applause by men of all pai ties throughout the State. The famous Order No. 10 issued by General Sickles was approved by Governor Orr and all the leading men of every class in the State, and has wrought out none but good results. In our judgment the President will commit a very grave mistake if he interrupts this steady and acceptable operation of the law. Practically, he will neither aid nor please any considerable portion of the Southern people, while he will arouse very sharp hostility everywhere else, and play directly into the hands of those who seek pretexts for fresh commotion, and for putting still further off' the restoration of peace and union to the country. Revolution. Front the Tribune. We seem to be on the verge of an industrial revolution. Everywhere is the cooperative movement discussed, and the hopes held out to the laborer are almost electrifying. Two things are favorable, and,willbe noted by those who have Been many hopeful schemes perish. One is, there are no attacks on the social sys tem, and the family relation is as firm as the ancient rocks. The other is the conviction that no cooperation is possible if members are idle, intemperate, or even immoral. In self-protection, and In common prudence, only the best materials will be selected. Thus does coopera tion arise to the diguity of a moral reform aud even of a religious movement. Besides this, there are startling results in a quarter quite unexpected. The proprietors of heavy manu facturing establishments are aroused. Antici pating that labor may become still more un certain, some of the heaviest firms are propos ing consolidation, that they may have all the advantage which abundant capital can bestow. They know what it has done. Some, already have consolidated. Another important movement is about to take place in this city. Sufficient capital has been raised to start a cooperative importing and Jobbing dry goods house, and it only re mains to complete the details of the organiza tion. The outlines of the plan are to employ experienced managers, and salesmen fitted for the place, who now are in our large establish ments, but who have no prospect of rising, not because they have not qualifications, but f?8ei thertt re 110 vacancies. There are said to be salesmen in large houses in this city who, having a pen rtitage on their sales, make '20,(UU a year. Fome few are making even more. The location of the new house will not be in a marble building,- but where rent is moderate. Silk sold in Centre street will be as valuable in Michigan as if bought in Broad way. By such economies it is expocted that at least 100,000 a year can 1 saved, and this' sum will enable the projectors to sell g'oods cheap. ' Country merchants will be expected to become stockholders, or, If they do not, It is in the scheme that they will be such, lu part, for they ai-w to draw dividends according to the amount of their purchases, i Meanwhile, ;capital has a share, and the olerks and mana gers another share. It is thought that if the concern is wisely managed, the final result will be that all other establishments in time will be forced into the measure, i Then hosts of middle men, commercial travellers, and high salaried clerks will be displaced.. , . , One might think this enterprise unconnected with the interest of the laborer. Not so. .First, the laborer will be able to buy . cheaper goods. Then the house will be Immediately connected with the manufacturer.' All that is needed to complete the circle is that the manu facturing establishment should 1 be conducted by cooperatives. ..'''," ..'..'',','.'., ! Tb Action of th President. JYom the Tribune. , .' ' , . ., '.,,' ..",.'.' ' ! The President and his Cabinet ri Monday de cided that the opinion of the Attorney-General necessitates the revoking of those acts o f the district commanders which it deolared to be illegal. Mr. 1 Stanbery himself pointed out that such action would necessarily follow the approval of his argument. : "There .is," he eaid, "an executive duty to be performed here which cannot safely be avoided or delayed," and, in support of this conclusion, he quoted recent decisions of . the Supreme Court, in an elaborate argument. , It is evident that the Presidential interpretation of the Reconstruc tion law is not intended to be merely a theory; it is to be carried out. ' As rapidly as possible our soldiers in the Rebel States are to be con verted intb uniformed policemen, powerless to repress disloyalty or punish crime, except when they take the shape of murder and mas sacre. All that Sheridan and Sickles and Pope have done to protect loyal ' men, and to irevent the States from falling altogether into tebel control, is to be undone by peremptory order. All that the people did through their Congress is to be undone by one man. The law is to be nullified. We are constrained to believe that this is the President's intention, and that he means that his lightning aud Mr. Stanbery 's thunder shall fall together. Al ready the Rebels in New Orleans are rejoioing in the faith that Monroe and Abell are to be reinstated in the offices they abused.'. If this is not the President's intention, the opinion of his officer is waste paper, and the Cabinet meeting on Monday an idle threat. But there is a thunderbolt behind that Mr. Johnson wields, and if, indeed, this issue is to be foroed upon the country, it will be promptly met. , General Schenck, it is said, has already sum ' nioned the members of Congress to Washing ton, and, our despatches say, of the fourteen Senators who have accompanied Senator Wade on his Western excursion, there U not one who ' baa not decided that u July session is necessary- ":. ,'; , " ' :v.;. v ; ; ' Republican Perrtdy. ' - f From the World. ... '., . 1 Congress should assemble lu July and luhlresa llst-lf i.gnlu to Kecoust ruction. We must mitka tblablll bo plain loan eveu t-tuubery may un derstand It, and bo Cunipielieu.-lve that the Pre sident canuol escape lu execution. Triunne. The cloven hoof is at last completely bared. The purpose . of the radicals to prevent the people of the Southern States from participat ing in the next Presidential election because they are not certain of radical majorities there, even with the negro vote, is now as good as avowed. It could not be made more manifest to any keen observer of our current politics, not even by proclamation. During the last fortnight there has been a steady preparation of the publio mind for the event which is now demanded openly by the Republican journals a session of Congress on the 4th of July, to alter the Reconstruction acts of the Thirty ninth and Fortieth Congresses, and adapt them better to the accomplishment of their alterna tive purposes the protracted exolusion of the Southern States, or the constraining them to organize "decisive and trustworthy Republi can majorities." In one aspect this was not the worst that might have been expected. We had feared that the radicals would, agree to have no July session, but on the assembling of .Congress next December would find or feign some excuse to reject the Southern Constitutions, and thus throw their admission over till the session of December, 18 U8, after the Presiden tial election. It was for this reason that we have bo persistently demanded the radicals to make now any objections they have to make to the process of reorganization as at present going on. To permit it to go on when it was not to be accepted at last, would have been to deliberately and publicly fool the Southern people and to heap contumely upon injustice. This policy was too brazen-faced to suoceed. The country, which longs for reunion, what ever politicians may desire and plot, could not have been blinded to the open and outrageous injustice of such a proceeding. The radicals have therefore determined to call a July session, and to make an excuse for revising and altering the "terms of Recon struction," as they call them, out of the opi nions of Attorney-General Stanbery, which they do and will allege "cut the heart out of the Military bill." The I'ribune, Herald, and Times in chorus allege that the Military bill made absolute despots of the military commanders, that such was the intention of Congress, and that the provisional civil governments recognized in that bill exist by their authority aud survive at their merev. The Tribune, scouting the decision of Chief Justice Chase (its candidate for the Presidency till Mr. Greeley's ambitious hopes had been aroused), the decision in the Mississippi case, which imposes directly upon the President the entire responsibility for the conduct of those military commanders, his subordinates, has even denounced the Presi dent for discharging that responsibility accord ing to his own sense of duty, and the Attorney-General for fulfilling his function as the legal adviser of the Exeoutive, in enlightening that sense of duty just as if, for uniformity's sake alone, Borne interpretation were not in dispensable, and as if anybody but the Execu tive had the responsibility of interpretation and execution. That those Journals misrepresent the Mili tary act is bo conclusively proved in Mr. Stan bery's last opinion that not one of them will dare pretend to find in the aot itself grounds for their theory of the powers and duties of the military commanders. That they falsify and belittle the duty of the President to exer cise that law of Congress, is so conclusively ehown in the decision of Chief Justice Chase, that not one of them will dare put that deci sion before itrt render But in order to bol ster up their avowals that it was the real In ,t( -ntion of CoDgiess, now obstructed by Mr. Jobtnon, to wipe out all' the State Govern ments and set up a parcel of military autocrats in their place, eupreTne over everything but the lives of their cubjects, they are quoting the lniguage of President. Jdhnnou's ; veto in contrast with the language of Attorney General Staubery'n opinion. - It is not iucumlmnt upon the World to recon cile the .two. The day that the veto of the Supplementary act wan published, we pointed out that President Johnaon had overstrained hia interpretation of it. Sympathising heartily with his denunciation of its manifold enormi ties and - usurpations, we objected that, in selecting the grounds of his veto, he had, by excess of seal, given to the radicals a warrant for severe interpretation of the Ret, which would Infallibly be used against him. But if the President, sustaining and justifying with ardor a veto, cannot be pardoned for having occupied a. different view-point from that which he ocenpiea in fulfilling his sworn duty to execute the laws of the United States neither can Congress, which rejected the Pre sident's interpretation ot its act by overriding his veto of It, be Justified in discarding its own language In the enactment and assuming the' .The radicals are not a whit more consistent than the President, of whose inconsistency they are attempting to take advantage. The Attorney -General has interpreted the Military acts in accordance with the established and reasonable principles of legal interpretation. He has not strained nor quibbled. Mr. Evarts, Mr. O'Conor, or any Republican or Demooratio lawyer of the first rank, would interpret the act precisely as Mr. Stanbery has done. They could do no otherwise, and interpret law ac cording to the principles and practice of the law. And it is to be said, moreover, that the second opinion of Mr. Stanbery, in those mat ters left over to subsequent consideration, rather stiffens than relaxes the law. The President being constrained by his duty to Bee all laws faithfully executed, aud by his in the decision of 'the Supreme Court, for the acts oi ail the military commanders, oould not refuse to interpret the law; could not refuse to be enlightened by the opinion of the Attorney General npon the law; could not refuse to apply the established rules of legal interpreta tion to the construing of the law; could not hesitate to enforce a uniform interpretation and execution of the law the first essential of even Buch justice as the law itself permits, and certainly a condition of successful recon struction under the law. Therefore the pretense of a necessity having been created by the President, or by the Attor- ney-ueneral, lor contrary and corrective action on the part of Congress at a July session, is wholly a pretense and sham. With shameless and perfect perfidy the Republican party pro' ceeds in its purpose to secure the perpetHa tion of its own power, even at the expense of prolonged disunion. , , SPECIAL NOTICES gqgf REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION Uakkthbhro; April M, 1867. The "Republican Biulu CVuveuilou" will meet mt the "HerUlo Uoiihb." lu WlllluiDHpurt, OD VKDiS.kSLAY, the Mltx da; of June ileal, tu 10 o'clock A.M., to nominate candi date Ivr Judge of tbe Supreme Court, and to tuiiiale proper measures ror tne ensuing biale cauvaaa. A bereuiiore, Uie Convention will be composed of Representative and Beaatorlal Delegates, cuonen la the usual way, ana equal lu number to the whole of the Uenatora and Itepreaeniallvea In tbe Uei-eral AHMeoitily. Hi order of the Stat Central Committee. - Jb'. J UiUAN, Chairmen. Okorqb W. HAiiitiir.tv,lH,.,, J. ltoHLEY Dunquhon, oecreiariee.- 520 81t STOCKIlOl-DEHS MKLTING. THE iAHAlEhh' AN 11 MkCUiMlN1 NATIllNl r. BAKK. Philadklphia, May 2s. 1867. A General Meeting of the biockholdxrs of The Farmers' and Mei lianlcs' Rational Bank or Phlla df i4) ,a will beheld at the BAMKIMU HOU8K, ou BAl UKDAY. the 2Ulh day of June next, at twelve oVlolk, noon, lor the purpose of taklug Into consider ation and deciding 1 pou amendments of the Third and Filth of the Articles oi Association, of the said Bunk. By order of tbe Board of Directors. 1 28 tJ'J W. HUsliTO , J a., Cashier. 83T ' OFFICE OF- THE PHILADELPHIA GiS WOKK8. JUNBI. 1867. Proposals will be received at thin olllce. No. 208. Bl "VEWTH Ktreet until noon of tbe 1st day ot July, lot tbe sale to tiie Trustees ot the Philadelphia Uas Vi orks of tbe Block In the tiermantown, Klchmond, Mmiyunk, and fcouthwaik aud iioyanienslug Qua Companies, to be used aa invealmeuia loithetiluk It giuud ol said Companies. bilm Bi-isJAAlIN S. RILEY, Cashier. rS- GKORGE W. FOBD, DOCK STREET, a-35-' one do, r below Hiiro., collect Bouuiy, Pen sion; Ruvion Money, and all claims agaiust tho Gov ernment. For a speedy selttemfnt, call on Mr. V )(), who Is well versed with all the details of the business. 6 11 lax r?T" BATCHELOK'S Ha splendid Hair Dye Is the HAIR DYE. THIS best In tbe world. 1 lie only fine ana $-rfrct Ihe Harmless. Reliable. In stantaneous. Is'o aisappolntmeut. No ridiculous tints. Natural Black or Brown. Remedies the 111 ellecls of hod Dytt. Invigorates the balr, leaving It soft aud beautiful. The genuiue Is signed WILLIAM A. BAHllKLOR, All others are mere Imitations, and si ould be avoided. Hold by all Druggists and Per ft tiers. Factory, No, SI .BARCLAY btreet. New Y"rk. 5finw KEW PEKl' lME FUli TUE IlAKDIEux'ILlEJ' PHAtON'l "Night Blooming Ccreus." PUAL.ON'8 "Night Blooming Carens PIIALON'S "NJght Blooming Ceraus." PIULON'g "Night Blooming Ccreus." P II AVON'S "Night Blooming Ceraua." A moat exqmsite. delicate, and Fragrant reriime, distilled from the rare and beautllul flower from whlob It takes IU name. Uabuiactured only by 611 tri PHALOS eX BON, New York. 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' Customers may be assured that son bat tbe be articles, at reasonable prices, will be sold at bis store A fine assortment of . - ' 1 -FLATED-WABE CONSTANTLY ON Tf AND i WATCHES and JEWELRY carefully repaired. AJ orders by mall promptly attended to. tlOwsnUna . LEWIS LADOMU8 & CO.. i Diamond Dealer sad Jawallera, ; . ' . . f 1 NO. SOS CBESHCT STM rnjXADEUKIA' i ' .. . . , Would Invite tbe attention ol purchasers to their large and banasome assortment ot DIAMONDS, . WATCH EM, JEWELBT, SILVER-WARE, ' ' ' . ETC. ETC. ICE PITCHERS In great variety. A large assortment or small STUDS, for eyelet boles. Just received. WATCHES repaired In the best guaranteed. manner, and 81lp FRENCH CLOCKS. . RUSSELL. Jk CO., NO. 23 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Have Just received per steamship Europe, an lu voiced MANTLE CLOCKS, Purchased in Paris since the opening- of the KxposI tlon, which lor beauty of design and workmanship, cannot be excelled, and they are offered at prices which Invite competition. s -m JOHN BOWMAN, No. 704. AKOH Btroat. rHIIADIXFHIA, MANUFACTUBJLB AND EXAXXB IN SILVEB AND PLATE DWABB Our GOODS are decidedly the cheapest in theolti for TRIPLE I'LATE, A NO. 1. f, WATCUliS, JEUELuY. W. W. CASSIDY, No. IS SOUTH SECOND STREET, itocttof n ecUrely new nd most Carefully seleor AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES, JEWELBY, SILVER-WARE, AND FANCY ARTICLES - EVERY DESCRIPTION suitable for BRIDAL OB HOLIDAY PRESENTS 1 An examination will show my stock to be nnsar paused la quality and cheapness. Particular attention paid to repairing. a C.&A.FEQUIGNOT, Manufacturers of Uold and (Silver Watch Caaea, And Wholesale Dealers In AMERICAN WATCH CO. '8, HOWARD A CO.'S. And TBEMONT AMERICAN WATOIUasi it NO. t SOUTH FIFTH STREET. HENRY HARPER, No. DQO AltGII Street, Manufacturer and Dealer la WATCHES, riNH JEWELRY, SILVER-PLATED WARE, AND til SOLID SILVER-WARS REMOVAL. R E M J3 V A L. A.. &, II. LlJAMIllTE, Late No. luizctesnut street, bavt removed their FURNITURE AND UPHOLSTERY WAREROOMS V V. 1103 CIIKSNUV STUKKT, UPSTAIRS. 40 3m 0L Wliislcios. KIES NOW POSSESSED BY MANIMI3 CO, SOUTH FRONT STEEET. . LOTS, OX TF.BT ADVANTAGEOUS BONP.romr.rlsesa.il tho fa-rarlte brands d of tats 7ar, ip to month of ltiOSoe, Depot KinanT & SON, M7 CIIESNtTT STREET, (Below the Qfrard Hoase). REMOVED. OUR BEDDING STORE .IS BEHOVED .'' F BOH THE OLD STAND TO 1 No. 11 South NINTH" Street. 27 ; ' . ! R. l. KNieuT soar. . MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETC. OURNINC MILLINERY. AXWAYB ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT OA MOTJItlilGr HOIVJNEXS, AT NO. 0 WALNUT STREET. 827 6m MAD'LLE KEOCH. MISS. It. DILLON, KOS. SS AND all SOUTH STREET, ! handsome assortment of SPRING MULLI-' I ladles', Misses' , and Children's Straw and Tana Bonnets and Hate of tbe laU-el styles. - I Also, Bilks, Velvets, Ribbons, Crapes, Feathers. Flowers. Frames, em. ; m ( ' GROCERIES, ETC. T, HE " EXCELSIOR" HAMS, SELECTED FROM THE BEST CORN-FED j UO,M, ABE OF STANDARD It EI OTA . TION, AND TIIE BEST IN TUH WORLD. J. H. MICHENER & CO., t' V E 11 A V. niii.u,uiJkB . . . - - - " . A r. A. r. It , AAU CURERS OF THE CELEBRATED . ! "12 XCEL8IO U. SUGAR-CUBED IIANN, TONttUES. AND 1 BEEF, Nop. 142 and 144 N. PEONT Street. None genuine unless branded "J. IX, M. & Co., EX- CJ-IblUJfc.,' The Justly celcbraUd "EXCELSIOR" HAMS are curtd by J. H. il. A Co. (In a style peculiar to them selves i, expressly lor r AMiliY U6K; are or delicious liuvor, free Irom the unpleasant tanu ot ult, and are pronounced by epicures superior to any now ottered lor sale. 1 Imwmq UT IF YOU WANT GOOD TFA, GO TO WlUsOlS'S old-established Tea Warehouse, No. IW6CHKMSUT btreet. ' , w 1 L 8 O N ' S OOLONO. DOLLAR TEA-PURE WILSON'S HYbON. DOLLAR TEA-FINK YOUNG w lLSON'S DOLLAR versui satlHluctlon. TEA GITE3 UNI- w I LSON'S JAPAN. DOLLAR TEA PURE ILSON'S DOLLAR TEA RICH AND FRA VV srant. WILSON'S likes It. DOLLAR TEA EVERYBODY e lKWKUt r0 FAMILIES RESIDING IN TIIE RURAL DISTRICTS. Wa are prepared, as heretofore, to supply Families at their Country Residences with every description of FINE CiROCLBIES, TEAS ETC. ETC. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, 117rp Corner ELEVENTH nd VINK Bis. Q-ARFIELD'S SUPERIOR CIDER VINEGAI Warranted fret from all POIBONOUH ACIDS. For aaie by all Urocers, and by the Sole AgeuU, PAUL. Ss FEitQUSON, lmg NO. IS NORTH WATER ST. SPANISH OLIV ES. THREE HUNDRED GALLONS OF ITliie Spanish Olives, For sale by the fallon. much below tho cost o nipoiUllijn, by JAMES R. WEBB 8Ht Corner WALNUT and EIGHTH Hts. HOOP SKIRTS. 628 nOOP BKIETS, ncQ HOPKINS' "OWN MAK.K" O-O PlUUfct HJUUCELHll ' It fiords us uiuch pleasure to announce to our numerous patrons and li-e publio, that In conse quence of a slight decline In Hoop feklrt niaUu-lal, together with our lucieased lucilliies lor intnuluo turliiK. aud a strict adherence to HUYINU and bKLLlNU for CAbll, we aie enabled to oiler all our JUh'IXY ttLkt-HATlO) HOOP fcKlKltt at UK JDVCLI) PltlCKS. Aud our t-klrts will always as hvreiolore, beluund In every reieoi more dtMirable, and reHliy cheaper tbau any sIukIs or double spring Hoop hklrt in the market, while our aaaortuieut la uiieciiialleU. Also, ciustantly receiving from New York and tbe Easlerti bltttes full lixeeotlow priced bklrta at very low urices; anions- which Is a lot of Plain toklrUi at the follow ins rates: 15 springs, 56c.t wl spniiRS, Soo.j sprlnsB, 76cj du BjirlugB, oo.; sa springs, twu; audi sjirliigs, IfWi. ' hkuu made to order, altered, and repaired. Wbol sale and retail, at tl e Philadelphia Hoop bklrt h.a poriuui, Mo, bMt Al'.Cll street, below heveruu. Iomiu rp W1LI.1AM T. lioPKINU PRIVY WELLS-OWNFRU OK PKOPERTY 1 he only place to gel Privy Walls cleaned and Olslnlectadat very low prices. . A, PKYKON. alanulmcturerof Poudretta, OOLDBSIITH'H HALL, LlBUAJtY otreet.
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