TEE NEW YORK PRESS. EDITORIAL OPIRIOM OF TH LRAIUSO JOURNALS VroU CCBRKBT TOPIC8 OOMPILRD BVRHI DAT FOB TH1 BVKMNO TKLEORAPH. The President and the Flva Commwdiri, Prom th Herald. The President has forced Ms way into a Jilemma of a rerjr disagreeable nature, and it Ifnot easy to see Low ha can secure a satls Uotory escape. Ile.is at open issua, not as before with a coordinate branch of the Govern-' Jnent, ' but with his subordinates; and. those jubordlnates are sustained against him by the fense of the country. It he accepts the posi tion he compromises the dignity of his ofllco; If he removes the Generals he increases that Irritation of the publio mind that is now all against him, and thus immensely strengthens the hands of the violent radicals. What will lie do ? The telegraph informs us that "Gene Jal Grant declines to relieve General Sickles from his command in North and South Caro lina." Is that the way in which the thing is to be gotten over by a quiet nse of General ti rant's name t ' Generals Sickles, Sheridan, Schofield, Ord, and Tope were doing very well. Under their respective administrations the law, whose pas sage had so much excited the country, was Seen to take shape as a practical plan of recon struction, and was notably fair to the people. It promised a speedy solution of difficulties that but a little while before seemed to defy all remedy. General Sickles, perceiving the Xeal scope and spirit of the law from the first, 1 assumed all the power it gave, and addressed liimself earnestly to the labor of putting the Southern social system in practical harmony Kith the ideas of the conquering section. His acts were not more warmly applauded by in telligent men at the North than they were wel comed by the people of his district, who began to realize the benefits of an equitable rule and an honest administration of justice. General l'ope did equally well. Sheridan had some rougher elements to deal with, and was com pelled to the extreme acts contemplated by the law. , Ord governed his district with high ability and considerate courage. Schofield Was in entire harmony with the people subject to his rule, and intelligent Virginians doubted If the best conceivable reconstruction would be an improvement. Such was the position when in came the Attorney-General with his two opinions. Ilia opinions swept away the very foundation Upon which all this administration was carried on.- General Sickles, the first to perceive the Scope of the' opinion, as of the law, and the Ixtldest to come to conclusions, proffered his resignation, recognizing that a military com mandant was a useless article under the Presi dent's view of the law. Sheridan comes fcefore the public in a sharp, "whirling-through-Winchester" sort of a letter, in which he declares that the Attorney-General's second Opinion opens a "broad and macadamized load for perjury and fraud." The other Gene rals having taken the same course as these in their action under the law, doubtless hold the same views of the opinions the President lias promulgated nullifying the law. Thus the President, putting himself in an attitude of antagonism to the law, comes into conflict with men who were enforcing the law, though Bubject to his orders. They are men of too much character to relinquish their well jnatured opinions according to the President's political convenience to concede their non entity, or even to be quietly swept out of the Way. What can the President do f lie has driven himself into a position in which either to act or to stand still involves a bad result. Jf he does not remove the Generals, he loses the prestige of his executive power; if he removes them, he plays into the hands of the party of extreme measures, and gives them for new capital all the popularity with the nation of these renowned and gallant soldiers. New Conflict on Reconstruction What Will Coajiceii Alo 1 JFVom the Eerald. The President, through his Attorney-Gene ral, one of those Iludibrastio lawyers I "Who can a hair divide Betwixt lis south and southwest side," lias revived the confliot, which we had sup posed to be ended, on Southern reconstruc tion, lie has again thrown down the gauntlet, and the Executive Committee of Congress has promptly taken it up in a call urging a full meeting of the two Houses on the 3d of July. "It is thought essential," says Mr. Schenck, Chairman of this Committee, "to seoure quo rums, if it should only be to remain in session long enough to pass some declaratory act on the Bubject of reconstruction." It may, then, Ixj considered as Bettled that a quorum of each, of the two Houses will be present in the capital on the appointed day, and that their first pro ceeding will be the sending a joint committee to wait upon the President, announcing that the two Houses are in session and ready to re ceive any communication which he may have to make. The answer of Mr. Johnson will probably be a message explaining and vindicating his re cent course of action, under the opinions of liis learned Attorney-General detiuing the metes and bounds of the governing powers conferred by the acts of the last session upon each of the five Southern military district com manders. The action of Congress will doubt less be a new law of reconstruction, so clearly and minutely establishing the powers of the five district commanders as to admit of no eva ' fiion of the conditions of registration, the '5alificatlons of electors, and the rules and concerned to its State Convention, Constitu tion, and Legislature, and to its election of Senators au Representatives to Congress. It ,ay be safely assumed that under this deola jatory act a more rigid enforcement of the general terms to the excluded States laid down at the last session will be exacted than would liara been required had the President, in his execution of these laws, leaned more to their 'true intent and meaning" and less to his exploded policy. Had he desired the special intervention of Congress to rectify the irregu larities and harmonize the action of the five distriot commanders, he, could not have adopted a more effective measure to secure Ids object than in the contse he has pursued; ut a wiser expedient would have been a pimple proclamation recommending the pre sence of a quorum in each House on the 3d f Jnly. It 1b evident, however, that his purpose has leen rather to embarrass, delay, and defeat 41. DAna4mMiAn YtrnfrrATVima nf Hnnfrraaa lilt? IICUUUBWUMW" 1 " C " v - than to assist In bringing it to a successful Issue. With the failure of the appeals to the tiunreme Court of Sharkey, V alter, Jenkins, and Company,a general opinion of aoqnleBoence Jn the opinions 01 euca men as ueuorais i,ee, llamnton. and Lonestreet, and a general dis position to .fulfil the conditions of Congress, THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, Imrnrdlately followed, from Virginia to Texas. But whon it liecarae apparent, after the South ern misBion of 8mator Wilson and the confis cation hints of Thaddeus Stevens, an! from the movements of the Freedmen's Bureau officials, and from the proceedings of the mili tary district commanders and their subordi nates, that the Southern blacks mas, and a portion of the Southern whites, were rally ing to the Republican party, and would pro bably carry two or three of the ten States con cerned, it would seem that President Johnson took the alarm. Put in undertaking to defeat the radicals with their own weapons, he has again been playing into their hands. ' i The Attorney-General's remarkable rigma role on registration, though incomprehensible to the Southern : anti-radical elements, was still encouraging, and his more extended opin ion on the laWs of reconstruction would, per haps, have brought every man to the registra tion office who dreads the ultimatum of Stevens, but for the immediate warning of a July session of Congress. From that mo ment, as we learn from careful observers on the ground, those Southern opposition ele ments so far gave uy the fight that It is be lieved, as matters stand to-day, they hava turned over to the Republican Union Leagues of the South every State from the Potomac to the Rio Grande. It appears that these leagues, encouraged by Congress, the War Department, and the military authorities South, and sup ported by the Freedmen's Bureau, form already a comprehensive, compact, and power ful party organization, while the Southern opposition, without leaders or means, - all moneyless and all adrift, are utterly hopeless of any effective resistance. I Is this condition of things likely to be changed by the approaching July session of Congress? By no means.' On the contrary, the vantage-ground thus gained by the Repub lican party will be strengthened at all points in a new Reconstruction bill, and this will probably be the exclusive business of this ex traordinary session. This confiscation scheme of "Old Thad. Stevens," the still more revo lutionary agrarian notions of "Old Ben Wade," the preposterous women's rights theories of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and the financial reforms of moonshine and green cheese preached in the prairies by George Francis Train, will all have to be postponed, at least till the cooler season of next December. Nor do we apprehend the impeachment of Presi dent Johnson. He is too useful to the radicals to be removed. " He has been the making of them, and when they show any signs of de moralization, he is sure to commit some faux fas that harmonizes them. He may expeot to e badgered and frightened ponsiderably with this impeachment prosecution, but it will only be flourished as a flaming sword over his head to keep him within the control of Congress. The solution of this conflict will most likely be the reconstruction of the ten outside States under the banner of the Republican party, the complete abandonment of President Johnson by the South, as a disastrous failure from first to last; the extinction of the last flickerings of those old Southern State rights fallacies which have broken down his administration, and a struggle in the Republican National Conven tion of 1868 between the followers of Chase, sustained by the national banks, ' and the supporters of Grant, backed by the army, which will bring to the severest trial "the cohesive power of publio plunder." As to the restoration of all or any of the States of the five military districts in season to give them a voice in the next Presidential contest, the chances are now against them; and for this, if disposed to be thankful, their thanks are especially due to Mr. Johnson and his learned Attorney-General. Our Northern Neighbor. XYom the Tribune. . Saturday, July 1, Is to be a holiday across our Northern frontier. On that day "The Dominion of Canada" becomes an actuality. It embraces at present what was formerly known as Upper Canada (henceforth "On tario"), Lower Canada (henceforth "Que bec"), New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, but is expected 60on to attract and incorporate also Newfoundland, Cape Breton, and, in fact, all British Amerioa. Lord Monck, hitherto Governor-General of Canada, is to preside over the new "Dominion," at a salary of $50,000 per annum, and his chief advisers are to be drawn from each province of Bub-realm. The coalition of the so-called Liberals and Con servatives which has carried the consolidation is to be perpetuated if possible; though the greater number of the Liberals seem to think that it has already lasted quite long enough. After the new rule has dispensed its patron age, the number of its adversaries may be ex pected rapidly to increase, lieorge lirown, editor of the Globe, will be a leader of the oppo sition. Ottawa will be its capital. Their popu lation and wealth exceed those of our thirteen Colonies when they declared their indepen dence; while their natural and artificial facili ties for both internal and external commerce are good. A railroad from Halifax to the St. Lawrence will doubtless soon be added to them; while a wagon-road from the western settlements of "Ontario" to those on the Red River of the North is to be opened forthwith. Newly opened gold mine3, in Nova Scotia, in "Quebec," and in "Ontario," are counted on to enlarge sensibly the resources of the Do minion. Taxes are lower than with us, though pretty high, and morally certain to be higher directly. Many immigrants are. annually attracted from Europe, but they have a prevalent habit of slipping over the frontier, and making their homes in the Union. Foreign goods are usually cheaper than in "the States;" but produce is also lower, and farms bring higher prices in gold on our side of the boundary than on the other. On the whole, though Canada has in creased fairly and hteadily in wealth and popu lation, she is less thritty, less enterprising, and makes slower progress than this country. one manufactures too little, and imports lar too much, and is not likely to improve in either department. It were almost super fluous to add that she is always deeply in debt to the merchants of the mother oountry. lhat British America must ultimately choose to enter our Union on fair and honor able conditions, we believe; that the more in telligent and energotio of her people already desire this, we cannot doubt; that a few years' experience of the new rule will diffuse and intensify this feeling, we confidently predict. The large, intelligent, and substantial farming interest will not long rest couUmt with prices far below those realized for like products by their rivals a few miles south of them. Pro perty in Canada is rendered insecure while costly improvements are discouraged by the consideration that a war between Great Britain and the United States would very Boon insure the overrunning of their selvage of inhabited country by irresistible armies, while imposing intolerable burdens on the outnumbered colonists. Quebec. Montreal, and Toronto woald each Bee its buildings and lots doubled in value bv annexation, while their trade would be suddenly expanded and their ruaau- lucturea quadrupled. But the "Dominion"! muRt run Its course. It So monarchy' "lawt card" this side of the valley of the Amazon. Let us quietly watch the progress of the experiment, deprecating and. (if possible) averting any rupture with Great Britain which would tend to excite hos tile feelings between us and the Canadians, and thus embarrass and postpone that frater nal sympathy which will yet be developed. We would not acquire Canada by conquest, nor yet by purchase, no matter how moderate the price; but, believing that the true and lasting Interest of both peoples would be sig nally promoted by their fusion by mutual con sent, we would be careful to interpose no ob stacle to such a consummation. r -. . Bant Anna and Mexico. From the Time. We cannot share the indignation of eome of our neighbors at the interference of our naval officers to prevent the landing of Santa Anna in Mexico. Perhaps it was illegal, but it was fortunate and useful nevertheless. , We have professed to be anxious for the restoration of Republican authority and we certainly do not care to see it again menaced and the country thrown into fresh commotion by the machinations and intrigues of the unscrupu lous adventurers who are always ready to I plunge Mexico into civil war tor their own i advantage. 1 Santa Anna has outlived his publio useful ness. He is old and broken down. Nothing has survived with him but his unscrupulous and unprincipled ambition. When Maxi milian first landed, he made haste to tender him his services. His letters were eloquent in describing the need which Mexico had of an Imperial Oovernment and of foreign aid When his services were rejected here, he offered them to Juarez, protesting the Greatest indignation that a foreigner should dare to set foot on Mexican soil and try to overthrow the institutions of the republic. Rebuffed in that quarter also, he repaired to this country, and has been busy ever since in getting a chance to invade Mexico on his own hook. If he he were to succeed in getting a foothold there, he might prolong the struggle against the Republican authorities a little longer. He would probably rekindle the fires of civil war now dying away, and bring about the slaughter oi some hundreds or thousands more of his former fellow-countrymen. We are not Borry that the action or one of our officers has defeated this attempt. We hope Juarez will speedily regain possession of his legitimate authority, and that the experiment may again ue iainy iriea wnetner p the Mexicans ate capable of self-govern- ment or not. We have iairly made ourselves responsible to the world for the peace and good order of Mexico. The prevention of the return of Santa Anna to Mexico, for hostile purposes, is the first step towards a fulfilment of this obligation. We hope it will not be the last, if others shall be found necessary. ; Who Were the Conspirators 1 From the 1Yorla When Benjamin Butler, in a fit of personal spleen against an opponent in Congress, de clared last March that Mrs. Surratt was an in nocent woman unjustly hung, very few people were convinced who were not convinced be fore, because very few people are in the habit of believing anything Butler says. But the testimony of a low drunkard against, may perhaps be rejyirded as doubtful as the testi mony of Butler for, that unfortunate victim of the military Star Chamber at Washington; and whoever carefully read the statements elicited from the witness John M. Lloyd, during the examination at the Surratt trial on Monday, must have been startled into a sus picion, at least, that Butler did not lie. It was the evidence of this man Lloyd, the landlord of the hotel at Surrattsville, that did most to convict Mrs. burratt at the assassina tion trial. Lloyd alleged, in the first place, that some five or six weeks before the assassi nation, Harold, Atzerott, and John U. Surratt, who is now on trial, came to his house, and left and concealed in it, with his knowledge, two carbines, a cartridge-box of ammunition, and a rope sixteen or twenty feet long; that the carbines were covered, and he did not examine them at that time ; that on the Tuesday pre vious to the assassination he met Mrs. Surratt in a buggy near Uniontown, when she called his attention to the "shooting irons" that had been left at his place; that about 5 o'clock on the afternoon previous to the evening when the President was shot, he returned home that the village of Marlboro, where he had been attending a trial, and found at his. house Mrs. Surratt, who said to him, "Mr. Lloyd, I want you to have those shooting irons ready; some parties will call for them to-night." Mrs. Surratt then handed him a package enclosed in paper, which he "did not undo until he got up stairs, and found it was a field-glass;" and asked him to "have two bottles of whisky ready, as they would be called for that night." lie also testified that soon after 12 o'clock the same night, after the assassination, Booth and Harold came and called for aud took away one of the carbines, the field-glass, the whisky, and a monkey wrench, without alluding to the rope, and leaving that behind ! and further, that, just as they were leaving, Booth said: "I will tell you some news; I am pretty certain that we have assassinated the President and Secretary Seward 1" The War Department spy, Weich- man, gave a certain color to these latai allega tions by telling that he drove in a buggy with Mrs. Surratt to Surrattsville, on the afternoon alluded to, lor the purpose, as she explained, of collecting some money from a man named Nothy, on which occasion she carried a paper package which "looked like two or three saucers done up in brown paper." Now let us observe what Lloyd testihes in this later trial. After rehearsing, in substan tially the same terms, the circumstances of the first visit of Harold, Surratt, and Atzerott, their deposit of the arms and other articles at his house, and of Mrs. Surratt's visit the after noon preceding the night of the murder, he states that when Booth and Harold called near midnight, after the deed, he "went up stairs, and got one of the guns, a field glass, and a cartridge-box. which was all he could bring. and he did not go back." Nothing is said here about a monkey-wrench, or the rope which had been deposited by the consplra tors nearly six weeks before I In his cross- examination Lloyd states that at Briantown, two weeks after the assassination and before the trial; "a man named Cattincham said if he would testify he would receive the proteo tion of the Government." The endeavor by counsel to procure an answer from the witness to the question as to whether he. the witness. "would have given diilerent evidenoe if he had not been put in fear, and that if it were not for his previous examination he would give different testimony now," was overruled by the Court. But the following passages in his subsequent testimony were sufficient not only 10 render a direct reply to that question need less, but to quabh, it would seem, la the judg ment of any candid Jnror, the effect of any and all assertions which Lloyd has made in regard to this affair: i i I don't know what Mm. RnrraH'a hnalna flown there on Arnl M; when Mm. Murralt km there several other person wre (here; Mr. Jarvo wm tlif-re; M at Marlboro attending a trial, ami aflor (xwrtwa ov-r Drank a good deal ,ncl wnut home niurh IntnxiratPd; I Inlil down before Mm. Rurralt led Hnrrattnrllle: I wa so drunk I had to lln down: Drunkenness has the ulect to mnk ma firKit tlilnits, and;whnn 1 Rot drunk I sometimes knni up urn sprees; bad heen In bud habits of drinking when I look possession ol the tavern, and before that I kept a bar at the house, and unfortunately for ma i was my own oeni customer; the son was up the next mornlne. and 1 then tonic a flr'nt: I did not flx my mind upon anything Unit happened the night before until the soldiers came; wnen Iarnld and Booth oame there that nlirht L bad a conversation, bnl have dtlled II; I (ml no confi dence In Harold telling me that the President bad been killed, because 1 Uiougln he wus drunk; the sol diers came early In the niornltiK, and after I found What had happened. 1 nerame frlnhieneil, aort went to d i i ii k I nt: do not recollect exactly what i told the delicti??, but think that I told him that the men liar, old and Hooth bad not boen there: I did not wish to he a wltnfHS In the cae. and I mtffiit have tnld 1 knew nothing about it: Jurvo said there was money enoiifth In this case to make os both rich If I would tell what I knew about the men. and t eald I knew nothing about them; I acknowledge, t went to bed drunk, but I think I know of the conve'satloti; I acknowledge that drunkenness blurs my memory, and makes me fortrnt Iblntrs: I bad not been on a continuous spree belore April 14. because I was trying to Kive it up; but 1 broke through; think I took several drinks on Thursday, April Witness resumed, and In answer to certain question! by Mr, l'liirrepont, said Mrs. OHut was In the b use when he first came np; does not recollect whether he staggered and iell or not when talking to Mrs. Sur ratt: does not recollect who drove liliu home; was sober enough to drive himself. By the Court Liquor bus atendonoyto make tn fomeiiul. and thereiorn when 1 go to leitllv In a court 1 never do drink, for fear 1 should forget faoia that I should testify to. lfy Mr. Bradley Many things happen when I am dn.nk that I do not afierwarna rvinnmber; think it was at 11 o'clock when 1 met Mrs. Burratt io Union Uy Mr. Carrlugton On the Tnesdny referred to Mr. Weirbman was In the buggy with Mrs. Htirratt; do not know ibalWelchman heard the conversation. This was the wretched tool employed by the War Department to enable it to hang Mrs. Surratt. He "took several drinks on Thurs day, April 13." He returned from Marlboro drunk, on the afternoon of the 14th; was so drunk when he met Mrs. Surratt that he "does not recollect whether he staggered and fell down when talking to her," and "laid down before she left;" was so drunk that he "thought Harold was drunk" when he, Harold (It was Booth before), "told him that the President had been killed;" wa3 bo maudlin the next morning when the soldiers arrived that he "became frightened, and went to drinking" again; was so com pletely saturated with liquor afterwards that he doesn't "recollect exactly what he told the detective," but thinks he told him a falsehood. And at last this self-confessed inebriate owns to a confusion of memory, a forgetfulness, a general chaos of all his facul ties, that causes him to "fear, when he goes to testify in court, that he should forget facts that he should testify to." But a man named Cattingham told him that If he should testify lie would "receive tne protection of the uov eminent," and a detective named Jarvo said "there was money enough . in this case to make them both rich if he would tell what he knew," and the poor drunkard, frightened by the fear tnat lie liimseu migut be regarded as an accomplice, and encouraged by Stanton's emissaries to hope that he might escape this accusation, and replace, at the same time, the money tnat lie had spent in dissipation, trumped up a Btory that, having once rehearsed it at a former trial, he gets sober enough to reneat at tms one. When the valueless nature of this testimony is thus exposed, the fragment of Booth's diary that has appeared may assist us to a better knowledge of what was really intended, up to the last moment preceding the assassi nation, by all the parties concerned. "Until to-day," Booth writes the very night after the deed was done, "nothing was ever thouglit of sacrificing to our country's wrongs. For six months we worked to capture; but, our cause being almost lost, something great and deoisive must be done. But our failure was owing to others who did not strike for their oountry witn a neari. uurtuer on ne says: "i nave a greater desire, and almost a mind to return to Washington, and in a measure to clear my name, wnicn i Know tnat 1 can do." The fact that a rope "sixteen or twenty feet long," and a 'monkey-wrench, were left at Lloyd's house live or six weeks before the tragedy, and not called for by Harold and Booth, with the other articles, when they stopped on tneir nignt nom Washington, 13 very significant indication that an abduction was contemplated. Might not this rope have been intended to confine a prisoner t and is it not fair to suppose that the wrench was to be used in case of any accident to the carriage in which the prisoner was to be borne away ? What, at last, did Booth mean when he wrote that the failure to ab auct "was owing to others v Ana upon what did he base even a momen tary confidence that he could return to Washington and "clear his name r" Who were these others who did not strike with the heart that he desired ? Not l'aine, or Harold, or Atzerott; lor one of them, at least, struck as boldly, if not as successfully. as Booth did at the last. What were the asso ciations upon which the chief assassin founded, or could found, a hope of palliation f Surely not his association with the common accom plices who have been convicted and huncr Was there then some higher influence that he could have either dared to preserve him (if that were possible) from the consequences of his crime, or forced to share his obloquy, perhaps his fate T Are there those living who were aware of and connived at the proposed abduction or the rretudent, although they might not have been privy to the assassina tion itself f Where are the missing leaves of the diary f for until those are produced, or until the memory and the conscience of some one who saw and read them render their secret to the world, the conspiracy that led to the murder or Abraham Lincoln will still remain a mystery. INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE N.K.l'OnNERFIFTU AND CUES HUT STB 3siabll8ned Nov. 1, 186a. Chartered liarcu 14, ua&. BOOHKEEPINti. Course of instruction unequalled, consisting of prafc f uai tutihods actually employed in leaaiug uuuo i.iu .n(i .,,1. .tii. iiiii.tiuii In Fairbanks took-kecpluji, which U the text-book ot thin luUtu uou. OTHER BRAHCBES. ' TeiearraDhlng. Cammerolal Calculations, Baslnea no oruauieutal Writing, the Higher WaiheuukUoi, Coreapontleuoe, Forms, Couimarclaliiaw, omj. tnwit.iitAi.ir Oia institution and infiga or them elves oi lu superior appointment. Circulars on ap plication L. JfAlKUAHJLB, A.M..,lTeUueiit. T. K. MKBCHAMT.kSeoreuixy. 61 c,fR?jfc GARDNER & FLEMING , OOACII MAKERS, i . NO. 1 leOlTTIl Firm HTUKET. and Recond-band Carriages for sale. Far tlcular attention paid to repairing. , . 6 SO 6m JUNE 27, 1867. Old My e WMsldes. HIE LARGEST AND BEST. STOCK OF. , FIPJE OLD RYE WHISKIES IN TIIE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY 1 : H EWBY4S. HAWWIS.A...CO., Nos. ' 218 and ' 220 SOUTH TROKT .' STREET, WHO I I 11 TIIE HA91E TO THE. TRADE, IN LOTS, .TERHS. 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RUSSELL A CO., KO. a NORTH MXTU STREET, Have just received per steamship Europe, an lu voice ot MANTLE CLOCKS, Purcbaned In Paris since the opening of the Ezposl tion, which tor beauty of design and workmanship, cannot be excelled, and they are pffored at prices which Invite competition. 6 m JOHN BOWMAN No. 704. ARCH St. rHTLADHLPHIA, ' MANUFACTURER AND DEALER US 6ILVEB AND FLATEDWABK. Oar GOODS are decidedly the cheapest la IhlolU fol ' TBIPLE PLATE, A WO. 1. . WATCHES JEWELUI. w. w. CASSIDY, Mo. It SOUTH' SECOND STREET, Otters an entirely new and moat carefully select stock of AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES, , JEWELRY, SILVER-WARE, AND FANCY ARTICLES EVERY DEbCRIPTIOa suitable for . . - BRIDAL OB HOLIDAY PRESENTS. An examination will snow my stock to be nnsn I . HH..H It. niialtlD Allfl rh.unnu.. Particular attention paid to repairing. tut C. & A. PEQUIGNOT, Manufacturers of t.oljl and Silver Watch Caaes. And Wholesale Dealers in AMERICAN WATCH CO. '8, HOWARD fc CO. '8, And TREMONt A.IHI3HICA.N WATCHES 4 8 WO. SOUTH FIFTH STREET. HENRY HARPER, No. 520 ARCH Street. Manufacturer and Dealer In WATCHES, riNE JEWELBT, SILVER-PLATED WARE, AID 811 SOLID SILVER-WARS Large and small sizes, playing from I to IS airs, and costing from la to SUuu. Oar assortment comprises such choice melodies as "When the fciwallowe Homeward Fly." "Evening Hong to the Virgin." La Marseillaise." 'Home, bweet Home." " r'aust Waltz," etc etc. Besides beautiful selections from the various Operas. . Imported direct, and fur sale at moderate prluue, by FAUtt & BltOTHKR Importers of Watches, etc., UUsmthJrp No. 824 CHESNUT St.. below Fourth NO. 1101 O it KOWDT Street. E. 171 NEEDLES & CO., K, W, Cor. Eleventh and Cnesnut, OFFER AT A GREAT SACRIFICE WHITE FRENCH BRILLIINTES. Ladies who have used THESE GOODS will t not fall to appreciate them at the prices, S5, OO, 35 OeutS' leeJMB XflKTBTTHO IWI JOHN CRUMP, CARPENTER AND BUILDER SHOr-MiKO. S13 LO DOE STREET, AHDM ' ivaa CHLSWUT stbfjkt, 6M PHILADELPHIA ... JL . H VEKT ADVANTAGEOUS Ox. BO WO, comprise alt the favorite bran msiui n unvrvo, bmi Oi IUIb tlar. nn 1 . - REMOVED. OUR BEDDING STORE IS REMOVED FROM THE OLD STAND TO No. 11 South NINTH Street. 527 B. l. KNieUI SOW. ENGINES, MACHINERY, ETC. QOLD'S IMPROVED PATENT LOW STEAM AND HOT WATER APPARATUS, FOR WARMINU AND TEH TI LATIN Cr WITH PUKE EXTERNA. AIR. Also, the approved Cook tug Apparatus, THE AMERICAN KITCHEN& On the European plan or heavy castings, durability aud neatness ot construction. Suitable tor Hotels, Vnblic Institutions, and the better . class ot Private Residences. ; Also, Agents for the sale ot SPEARMAN'S PATENT SAFETY VALVE, Which should be connected with every water back and boiler, and ORli'i IIH'8 PATENT ARCHIMEDEAN VENTILATOR. km STEAM AND WATER HEATING COMPANY. JAMES P. WOOD ak CO, KO. 41 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. ; B. M. FELT WELL, Superintendent ' 4 an 8a 3 OILER EXPLOSIONS ' ' GUARDED AGAINST BY USINO SHAW & JUSTICE'S HEBCl'BT COLUJIS CUXACES AMD LOW WATER 81UJVALS, MANUFACTURED ONLY BY 6 14 lm PHILIP S. JUSTICE, HO. 14 WORTH FIFTH MTn PUILA Shops SEVENTEENTH and COATES Streets. gTEAM 130ILEK EXPLOSIONS CAN BE PREVENTED BT t7MINCi ASHCEOPT'S LOW WATER DETECTOR PRICE 90, APPLIED. Allti. S. BATTLES, BOLE AGiKT TOB PENNSYLVANIA, 67 tt NO. 84 NORTH HIXTIIHIBEEI FENN bXBAM EiNGJNE AMD ' BOILKH WOKKtS.-NKAF1K A LKVY HwiL iiCAL AND THKOKKT1CAL KN(ilN KKltS . MACHlWlbTIS, B01LKK- HAKIiHS, BLACK- K BMI'IKa, and FOUNJJKltH, bavins' tor many yearn t been lu successful operation, and been exclusively f engaged In building aud repairing Marine and River I Koginwi, high aud low-pressure, Iron Boilers, Water' ' Tanks, Propellers, etc. etc. respectful! v oitnr thair" Services to tne public as being lully prepared to oon- ' tiauv lur euaiutja ui an aiuw, diariue, ittver, and blatluuary; having sets ot patterns ot altlerent slsea, are prepuied to execute orders wltb quiuk despatob. Every description of patteru-maklug made at the shortest notice. High aud Low-pressure Flue, Tubular, and Cylinder Boilers, of the buit Pun nivl. vania charcoal iron. Forifluua of all sIkhh ami tt !..... ! Iron and Brass Castings of all descriptions; KoU Turulug, Screw Culling, and aU other work, connected th the above business. ' DrawiuKs and specitlcatlons for all work dona ft ai we esubou&uiuauk irev ui vuarge, ana worK guar. The subscribers have ample wharf-dock room Ibi repairs of boats, where they can lie in perfect salely. and are provided with shears, blocks, tells, etc, eta.. tut raising heavy 01 light weights. JACOB 0. NEAFIH. John p. levy. ' 821 BEACH and PALMKH Streets. 1. VAUUHAN KJUtBlCK, WILLIAM H. IUUUUGK juim . 00 pk. S0CTI1WARK KOUMJfiY, FIFTH AND WAJaJbO&UTON rttreote, PHILAUJO.PHIA. . M1.KK1CK fe bONH, KNGINEEHti AND MACHINISTS, Biannfacture High and Low Pressure Hteau JCnglnet tor Laud, ltlver, and Murine bervloe. ; Boners, tiasoinolers, Tauks, Iron Boats, eta. Castings of all kinds, either iron or brass. 1 ' Iron rame Koofs lor Uas Works, Workshops, and Railroad bunions, etc 1 ltetoris aud tiult M achlnery, of the latest and most Unproved construction. ' Every descripilou ot Plantation Machinery, and Sugar, Saw, aud Gi'lat Mills, Vacuum Paua, Opeu bitKm Trains. Defecators, Filters, Puwpuig iui ginea, etc bole Agents for N. BUIenz's Patent Sugar BoUlU -Apparatus, Nesmylh's Patent feioaul Uauimer.au Aspiuwall A Wooisey's Patent Centrifugal hun Draining Machine. taVt B HI DKBBUKO MACHLNE WOKET: OFFICE, No. IS N. KONT KTREET, j ' rsiuuKLruti, t We are prepared to nil orders to any extent tor 0 well-known MACtt-USERY FOB COTTON AND WOOLLEf MILLB, t Including all recent Improvements In Carding, Bplf nlng, anu Weaving. We lu vlie the attention ot manufacturers to oar a: tensive worts. ; U ALFRED JENKH 4 BON, PliIVY WELLS-OWNEKSOF PttOPKRTY The only place to get Privy Wells cleaned au) 0 Win looted at very tow prices, , 1 1 A. PEYSON, ' ! Manufacturer of Poudretwe, S 10) GOLDSMITH 'H U ALL. LIBRARY buwei, ft i:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers