THE NEW YORK PJIESS. KDItoual opinions or ihi lkadwo joornalu CFOIT CUR&BiTT TOPICH OOMPILBU EVHBT DAT rOB THB KVKNINO TRLKORAPtt. ifTntrs In TMBiiiN-Browiklaw'i Kule From the Timet. The proposal of ultra radicals to subject the Constitutions of Maryland Bud Kentucky to Jongressional revision, under the prt tense of providing therefor a republican form of gov irnment, invests with interest all that relates to the political condition of Tennessee, where Brownlow is carrying out their theories to perfection. To the knowledge possessed by the publio On this subject a correspondent yesterday furnished a noteworthy addition. The writer of the letter la a citizen of Tennessee, a consistent friend of the Union cause, and a man whose Statements are worthy of the fullest.oredonce. There is nothing iu them absolutely novel: they reiterate representations which hare been received from other sources, and the literal truth of which can no longer be doubted. The letter1, however, throws additional light upon some points which have not been pro perly appreciated, and illustrates the approach of a crisis which ISrownlow's last for power Beems on the eve of precipitating upon the State. What republican government in Tennessee amounts to is plainly shown in the means Which Brownlow is employing to insure suc cess for himself and Ins friends iu the ensuing election. The system of proscription whicli he has instituted has culminated in the dis franchisement of four-fifths of the white men Of the State; and still it is pushed further wherever there is danger of a Brownlow defeat. In some counties the white voters are fewer in number thau the offices to be filled. In others, the Governor is availing himself of a law enacted by his creatures in the Legisla ture by which he is empowered at pleasure to Bet aside the registration where it is unsatis factory, and to appoint a new Registrar with the view Of making matters more agreeable. Thus adverse majorities are overcome by a Short and simple process, enabling the Gov ernor to disfranchise all who withhold from liim support. ' . This extraordinary power he is exercising to an extent that renders the holding of an elec tion a farce, the regular registration under the law being set aside, and a new registration made under the direction of Brownlow's agents. Even the candidates in some places officiate as registrars and prepare the lists of those who Shall vote a shameless substitute for the old method of ballot-Btuffiog. Where the affinities of the citizen are not known, the certificate of a regular Brownlow man is required, and the result is the wholesale exclusion of loyalists, tried and true, as well as of former Rebels. Nay, the latter sometimes fare better than the former, as a oircumstanoe mentioned by our oorrespondent proves. An ' anti-Brownlow Unionist, who served as a Federal officer during the war, has in one instance been re quired to procure the indorsation of a Rebel Colonel who happens now to be on Brownlow's Side t The effect of this condition of affairs upon the white people of the State may be con ceived. We have but to suppose ourselves in the position of four-fifths of the white Tennes Beeans inoluding a majority of original and Steadfast Unionists to judge of the anger and Indignation which the course of the Brownlow faction is everywhere exciting. It is not sur prising that fears of extendod trouble are enter tained, or that conflicts on a small scale con tinually occur during the progress of the can vass. Infinitely more astonishing would it be if the outrages perpetrated by the party of extremists who seek to intrench themselves permanently in power, were permitted to pass wholly unreseuted. The pretenses under Which they are perpetrated add to their enor mity. A band of outlaws holding the offices of the State, and trying by force and fraud to keep them, would be a spectacle ead enough in all conscience. Here, however, we have usun pation, tyranny, injustice, and crime carried on in the name of loyalty and Union, with former Rebels, now in the Brownlow interest, helping to commit them, and thousands of faithful Unionists among the victims. To make matters yet worse, the same disre gard of principle which marks the conduct of the ruling faction iu regard to registration aud disfranchisement, governs their appeals to the negro element. The four-fifths of the whites who worship not Brownlow are held up to the blacks as enemies who must be Kept down as (possessors of property which the blacks may righteously appropriate. The bitterness of a partisan contest is, therefore, intensified by the passions Incident to an antagonism of races. The two causes, combined, are rapidly reducing the State to a condition compared with which that of the people of Georgia or Mississippi is superlative bliss. Instead of wondering at the bad blood, of which all ac counts from Tennessee speak, rather let us Wonder at the patience that prevails and the respect for order which the leaders opposed to Brownlow enjoin upou their supporters. Unless a change come, and that speedily, Interference of some sort will be called for to rescue Tennessee from the faction that domi nates over aud disgraces it, and to institute reoonstruction after the fashion of the military government plan. Certainly, neither Mary land nor Keutucky affords a hundredth part of the justification lor interference which Ten nessee presents, whether considered in refer ence to wrongs done or the legitimacy of the wrong-doers. The unconstitutionality aud ille gality which attached to the organization of the ten Governments now termed "provi Sional," also taint the foundation of the pre sent Government of Tennessee. We see no method of purging it of the foul humors which find vent in the Brownlown regime except that of reconstruction from without. Let the wants of Tennessee be remembered when help for . . i t i - i i i.i 1 a juaryiana ana nemucKy is mvuneu. BTstrro Suffrage In the South A. natch of Blacks Iu Cuirii, and What Tbtitl From the Herald. A day or two before the adjournment of the late session of Congress, Mr. Sumner admo nlahed the members of the Senate that it would be well to prepare their minds for the reception, within the next twelve months or SO, of a sprinkling of Senators of African descent from the Southern States. From the developments of the Initial steps to recow fitmctiou. and from all the signs of the times there was something more in this notification in Idle badinaee. we tninic tne proua iilities are all in favor of the Afrloan sprink line SO boastlnely foreshadowed by the Massa rhiisntta Senator; and we should Bot be sur prised If, with, the accomplishment of their work of rehabilitation, the ten outside States wr to send uo five, ten, fifteen, or twenty colored gentlemen 'to the lower House, aud lialf-a dozen, more or less, among vug wu script father jofjUia Senate. , ,tt:'" ' " .I'.O- iV 1 ,t..(A. 111).'. . THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, In rotund numbers the aggregate population of these ten outside HtateB may be set down at eight millions, and the proportions at. four million five hundred thousand whites against three million five hondred thousand blacks which gives the whites a majority of a million. Allowing one voter to every seven porsous. these figures will cover five hundred thousaua j black voters against six hundred and fifty thousand white voters. The blacks have I decisive majorities in South Carolina, Missis- j sippi, and Louisiana; the whites in Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, j aud Texas, while the two races nearly balance , each other in Florida allowing for the larger destruction of the whites by the war and the increase of the blacks by accessions during the ' war from the border slave States. Hence, if all the voters of both races are brought out, the blacks are fure of three States, and they may tarry four or five of the ten. We may safely assume that, while the blacks en masse will vote the Republican ticket, they will be supported by some considerable fractions of the whites; so that, if we go no further, the chances are in favor of the blacks. But Rebel disfranchisements will probably in the aggregate cut off seventy-five thousand men otherwise entitled to vote; so that in all the tun States concerned the whites will have but seventy five thousand majority to rely upon. But, in the next place, the actual regis trations made of voters from Virginia to Texas exhibit an almost unbroken catalogue of black majorities, go heavy in most places as to show that large numbers of whites, from indiffer ence, disgust, or despair, have given up the fight ou the threshold, and that, from the Po tomac to the Rio Grande, the Republicans, with their solid black vote and their white supporters, hold the game of reconstruction in their hands. So, from the facts and flgureB before us, the actual situation of things warrants the conclu sion that the Republican party will carry nearly all, if not all these ten outside revolu tionized Southern States in their work of re construction. Nor is it likely that the blaoks, constituting in all these States the bulk aud strength of the party, will consent to do all the work without any of its rewards. They have only to demand a share of the honors aud offices to get them. Hence, we may conll deutly expect, and during the present Con- tress, that sprinkling of members of Africaa escent iu both Houses suggested by Senator Sumuer. We are called, then, to inquire what will be the moral effect iu the political world of this startling innovation upon the old order of things 1 We may be sure that negro equality, proclaiming itself through negro voices from both Houses of Congress, will make a pro found impression upon the public mind throughout the North. We apprehend that the result will be a general reaction against the Republican party in the Northern States; for we know that there is a stronger wall of white prejudice against the negro iu the North than exists in the South. This prejudice elected Buchanan in 185(5, and would have elected Douglas or Breckinridge in 18(10, had the Charleston Convention consented to unite upon either. We may expect, then, when the blacks assume the political balance of power of ten reconstructed Southern States, and send up their black representatives to Congress, that there will be a. revolutionary reaction against them among the whites of the North which will upset the Republican party. This may be the real object of those lead ing Southern white politicians who are urging their people to the experiment of allowing the radicals and the blacks all the rope they may desire in this business of Southern recon struction. Let us push this thing of negro equality, say these Southern leaders, into Congress, and then the laboring white masses of the North against this Southern negro political balance of power will take the alarm, aud a Northern reaction of the whites against the blacks will be the inevitable result; and thus the Republican negro party will be de stroyed by its own weapons. This will, in all probability, be the solu tion of the experiment of the political or ganization of the blacks against the whites in the South a reaction of the whites against the blacks and the Republican party in the North. Meantime, however, we suspect that the spontaneous and powerful popular move ments North and South in behalf of General Grant for the succession will carry, every thing before them; but with the settlement of this question there will unquestionably oome a uecisive Northern revolution on this other aud momentous issue of negro political and social equality. A Black BInu's Party iu the South. From the Tribwte. It is the destiny of the Republican party to abolish in our laws all distinctions on account of color. It Is the first great political party in this country that has maintained the truth that manhood is absolute, and that the rights of a man are not to be measured by race or omplexion. As a party cannot be oreated by the mere resolutions of a Convention, but must grow out of the conviction of the people, it has formed its creed slowly, article by article. It abolished slavery; that was not enough. It made Union soldiers of the slaves it had liberated; that was not enough. It gave the ballot to the negroes of the South; that was not enough. It clothed them with full citizenship, the right to sit on juries, to hold office; and yet this is not enough. It remains for the Republican party to place the colored men of the North upon the same level, so that in every election, every Court In the United States, there shall be no question of black or white, no rule for the one race that is not also the rule for tne otuer. miner Dy the action of States or of Congess it will cer tainly effect this; in a year or two at most an discrimination on account 01 coioi wm mo banished from our laws. Tlinmn men in the South who are WOrKlng 10 establish a black man's party are the enemies of this principle of equality, ana n vuey carry out their plans they will striKe itepuoucau-nm a blow far heavier than tne iemocriw;jr tan deal. They will go far to undo the grand re form of which the war was the instrument. Iu Virginia it is feared that the State Republi can Convention, August 1, will be the occasion of a division in the Republican ranks, aud the creation of rival parties, black and white. In Missouri, also, there are adventurers who urge the colored men to demand representation on the Presidential ticket, and in case It i3 refused, to form a separate organization. We do not believe these efforts will be sustained by the colored men, for they surely know the fatal results ol such an unprincipled policy. It is unprincipled because it denies every moral principle of the creat movement which gave the colored race their rights. The Repub lican party abolished the distinction of color m politics and law: these asritatora would re store it. Republicanism broke down the bar riers that separated the races; these men would rebuild them. Republicanism seeks to recon cile on the broad plains of this continent the discordant peoples pf Africa and Europe; here it would solve the problem of races, and prove how much greater and deeper are the uuitlea of humanity than its divisions, and that under equal laws all races may exist in one peaceful confederation. The far-reaching results of this experiment, the tremendous effect of Its suocess, we need not intimate, though few men may have reflected that American Re publicanism is the leading -reform of the world, and that God has given it a continent to work out the enigma of human happiness. With what disgust, then, must all true re formers look upon this ignorant or malignant attempt to ruin an experiment so noble. The men who would establish a black party iu the South would create for us a new Africa. They would place a gulf between race and race. Nothing can be more anti-American thau a party which denies the unity of American citizenship; such a party could not long exist. Who has forgotten when, in 1304, aGerman party was foolishly projected, the indignation which that suggestion caused f America desired to reconcile all nationalities in her own, and would inevitably have crushed any attempt to set up France or Germany or Italy as an alien aud independent power upon American eround. Fqually certain will be the over throw of any effort to gather the millions of colored men in the United States into a dis tinct political organization. - We desire the time to come speedily when It shall no longer be matter of surprise to see colored men at the polls, on juries, or in office; but we know that this will only come by the absorption of the race in the American nationality. It is said that this is impossible; that the differences of the races are not to be reconciled. This we do not believe; but the shortest way to prove it would be to organize a black men's party. That would be couclu Bive. If alter four years' lighting, the greatest results of which are the freedom and the cut zenship of the colored men, their first act should be to affirm that color is the true basis of political distinction, there would be no more to say. Republicanism would be answered and sileuced, aud those who had put it to shame might boast if they could that, while we had soucht to make the colored citizen an American, they had left him, as we found him, an African. ' Negro OflIcc-IIolllnr and Its Come- queue. fYom the World. "These portents are visible only to those who manage to comfort I heiuselven hy invoking u prospect of misery. Nowhere, so lar ns we have seen, have the blocks been eager to claim otlloo. ana uiue-umins oi nil t.tiu clamor tor tueir selection lis candidates has been raised by whiles. Of course, we presume, they will, iu some lnslnnceH, be candidates, butonly because iney are ueeuiurl 111, not because tuey are black As u rule, tliey will vote for the most coiupo- ttut 11 publicans Hiitrisesteil, reKiirdless ot their color. They are not likely to make colors qualification, when t hey have so Ions suffered ! unjustly hecnube of that absurd discrimina tion." Tribuve. The World predicted that filling the greater part of the Southern offices with ignorant negroes just let loose from degrading slavery, would either lead" to a bloody conflict of raees or cause the retention of the Federal troops in that section to keep the peace. The Tribune replies, not by showing, or attempting to show, that these consequences would not naturally follow, but by denying the proba bility that negro voters will prefer negro can didates. Assuming the consequences of negro office-holding to be conceded, we proceed to rebut the denial that the negroes will seek office. Of course we are not dealing with certain ties, only with probabilities. The question is, whether it is probable that a party made up of negroes and whites in the pro portion of nine to one, or nineteen to one, will give a majority of the offices to the whites. Taking the alleged natural and the enacted political equality of the races as the basis of our reasoning, a spirit of equity would divide the offices between the two in proportion to their numbers. If the races are naturally equal, intellectual capacity will be equally distributed; and if the whites claim a larger proportion of the offices than the voters they furnish bear to the whole party,- the blacks will justly Bay that the equality which s asserted in theory is denied in practice. Against such violations of logio and justice the blacks will have complete security in the greater preponderance of their numbers, aud their consequent power of prevention and re dress. . They will be ten to one or twenty to one in every caucus, and their delegates will bear proportionate sway in every convention. If, by greater skill in intrigue the whites should nevertheless get more than their pro portionate share of nominations, the negroes would rely on their superior numbers at the polls, and refuse to accept the candidates. If the negroes do not monopolize the Southern offices, it will be from forbearance, not from inability. The disfranchisement of nearly all the intel ligent and capable Southern whites tends to bring capacity and political experience into disrepute. The negroes are not likely to be wiser than the laws which invest them with power. When the laws set a stigma on capacity and experience, the negro, who derives all his importance from the same laws, will not hold these qualifications in honor. When the laws whioh make him eligible to all offices, declare everybody ineligible who has ever held an office, they educate the negro into contempt for mental qualifications, and teach him that a community is more likely to prosper by ostra cizing its most capable men than by electing them to office. Even if the negroe3 should be disposed to vote for qualified candidates they will not be permitted, all such men being de graded into political outcasts. Legislation which thus does violence to com mon sense and inverts the order of nature by ordaining that the tail of society whioh eon tains no brains shall be its head, and the head which has the brains shall draggle in the dirt, such preposterous legislation leads to no good. The negroes will be. justified in electing them selves to office, when they can find nobody more capable whom the law permits them to choose. But a government thus composed of, and controlled by, the most ignorant classes, will excite the contempt and derision of the intelligent part of the community. ' It can never Xe self-sustaining, for the reason that the whites whe will scorn and deride it are a majority of the inhabitants, though they may be a minority of the voters. The reconstruc tion scheme of Congress, therefore, entails upon the tax-payers of the whole country , the Terpetual burden of maintaining great armies n the Southern States to knen down the majority, and prevent a bloody conflict of the two races thus placed la unnatural relations, CHARLES, nUMPP, roBTE-noKNAie,' pocket-book, and ATCHEIi MANUFACTURER, i KOi 47 NORTH ftlXTJU STREET, . . ', i Below ArcU, Philadelphia. Porte-fitoncale, Fortlolloii, ". freMlDKOaei Clgal t'aaea, C'abttB. J ' Pock etr-Book, HituhelH, Work Boxen, - Banker' CMOS. J'umee, , ileuoy ueiis mult, eio. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. , 70tX INSTRUCTION. BUSINESS COLLEGE, W. E. CORNER FIFTH AND CIIENHTTT STS tstabllnbed Nov. 1 lMn, Chartered March 14, 1W& BOOK-KEJRPINUi Course of Instruction unequalled, consisting ol prac I leal methods actually employed hi lending house in tins end other titles. lllnntrnted In Falrhankr Bowa-keeplng, which Is the text-book ol tblalnaUiv t.on. OTHER BRARCnnt, ' TPlrtrrphlnK, CammerclM Calcnlatlons, Btulnmrn and OrounjoniHl Writing, the Hiicher Mathematics Correspondence, Form, Commercial Law, etc TOPSW MEN Invited to visit the Institution and Judg or tbem ielvi B of Iu luperlor appointment. Lliculats ouap pi icatlon JL. FA litBA KB, A. W... President. 1. hi. Mfbpha.nt. Secretary. 61 SUMMER RESORTS. CAPE IMLASD. NEW JERSET. Binre the close of 1W much enterprise ha been UIri layed at to la celebratod sea-shora reaork New aiid niHKuil.otui coitaiies have been erected: lue Hoi Ws have been remodelled; a tine park, wlih a well made one mile drive, has bten luaunuraied; and In all ii, e enaeutlals ot a popular summer resort, a spirit oi Improvement is largely n.aullwten. 1 lie geographical ponltlou oi Cape Island Is In itseli a popular feature, when properly understood. BIlu aled ul the axtrema O....I hu. , ....,- .. ... ....I occupying a neck ofland m the confluence oi the Delaware Bay with the Atlantic Ocean, It beoom r,"".cl' nuiiuuuiieu oj nan water, hence favored oy continual breezes from the sea. The bluff lurniHhes a heautiful view of the Ocean, Delaware Bay, and picturesque back country, taking in CaLe Heulonen dluLinni.lv m.t a. iiLmi, nf inun tuilea, Ihe beach la acknowledged to aurpana and other point upon tbe Atlantic coasi.,belngoi asuieotb, compact saud, which decline so gently to tbe ui that even a child can bathe with security Added to these attractions lathe fact that tbe eOeot oi the Unit btream upon this point renders the water gi iujuuvw7 warm a point not to De overlooked by persons seeking health irom ocean bathing, 'i he distance irom Phliadeluhia lootw inland lull miles by rail, aud about the luna fllktmina hr aukiio, down the Bay, and by either route the facilities lor travel promise to beol the most satlHtnctory charac ter. The Island has Hotel and Boarding-house ac commodations for about ted thousand persons. Tbe leaojug Hotels are the Columbia House, with George ajuiivu mn piufji-jviori congress .nan, wun j. jf, Cake as proprietor: and United tstntaa. vlt.h wi Miller as proprietors, all under tbe management of gentlemen who have well-establlsUed reputation a uutei uiau. s j) mwaluw gXCHANCE HOTEL, ATLANTIC OITY. The subscriber, grateful tor past tavors, tenders thank to his patron and the public for the generous custom given him, and begs leave to say that hi house 1 cow open for tbe season, and ready to re ceive boarders, permanent and transient, on the most moderate term. The bar will always be aupplied with the choicest ot wine, liquors, and cigars, and uperior old ale. The table will be set with the best the market affords. Fishing. lines and (ackle always on hand. Stable room on the premises. All the comfort of a home can always be found the Exchange, GEORGE HAYDAY, 629 tuths2m PROPRIETOR. UNITED STATES HOTEL, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J IN NOW OPEN. FOR PARTICULARS, ADDRESS BROWN A WOE1PPEB, ATLANTIC CITY, Or No. 827 RICHMOND Street, Philadelphia, 6102m MERCHANTS' HOTEL, CAPE ISLAND, N. J. This beautllul and commodious If otef is now open for the reception of guest. It is on the main avenue to the Beach, and less than one square from the ocean. WILLIAM MASON, t PROPRIETOR, AMERICAN HOUSE, CAPE ISLAND, N. J., -i.Y JOSEPH hi. HOQHH.O, formerly of the Ocean House. One square irom the depot aud the ocean. Board $3 per pay, or ijta to lis per weolc 17 Moitliolot SEA BATHING NATIONAL HALL, CAPE IbLAMJ, .N. J. Tut large ana coinniodiou Hotel, known as the National Hall, la now receiving Visitors. lerniB hiOllerH.LA. tflhllilrmi and u,,aniT hall price. AARON OARRKT80N. Proprietor. ClOUNTKY BOARD. A FEW PERSONS CAN be accommodated with irood Board and nicaalt u rooms, near l'airvllle, Chester county, ten nituulos ride from Ruilroad btation. For particular address MARTIN, l'airvllle, Chester county. 78W BBt Or, No. 710 N. blXTKKNTH St., Phlla. GKOCtKltS, cTC. BUT IF YOU WANT GOOD TKA, GO TO WlLtsON'8 old-established Tea. Warehouse, No. ! CHKSK UT Street. WILSON'S OOLONG. DOLLAR TEA PURE TTTILSON'8 DOLLAR TEA FFNR YnTTVrs VV HYbON. WILSON'S DOLLAR TEA-GIVES vernal satisfaction. UNI- w ILSON'S JAPAN. DOLLAR TEA PURU WILSON'S DOLLAR TEA RICH AND FRA grant. w ILSON'S DOLLAR TEA EVERYBOD1 likes lu 6 12w24t E W SMOKED AND SPICED SALMON, , FIRST OF THE SEASON. AEHERT C. RODERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, 11 7rp Corner ELEVENTH and VINE SU. JAPAKESE TOWCnONG TEA, ,THE FINEST QUALITY IMPORTED. ' ! ' Emperor and other fin chop OOLONGS. New crop YmUNO HYSON and GUNPOWDER and genuine CHULAN TEA. For sale by ths package or retail, at JAHES R. WEBB'S, 1141 ' Corner WALNUT and EIGHTH St. QARFIELD'S SUPERIOR CIDER VINEGAR i .Warranted tree from all POISONOUS ACIDS. For sal by ail Grocers, and by the Sole Agent, PAUL A FEHQUSON, 19m ' WO. 18 MORTll WATER ST. pATENT WIRE WORK BOB RAILINGS, BTORH FRONTS ' UUiKllH, PARTITIONS, FTO- OOAL SCREENS, FUUKDKlNli.ii yflHJui, ETO. JuU WALKER A 0, feu. U N. bXJLlU Utnatt IB 6a JULY 27, 18G7. Old Bye Wliislcies. 1 . THE LAKGEST AND BEST STOCK OF,: FINE OLD RYE VHISK.IEO I TIIK LjVNP IS NOW POSSESSED IiY ' HENRY S. IIANNIS & CO, Nos. 218 and 220 SOUTH FRONT STREET, WHO OFFER THE SAME TO THE TRADE, !( LOTS.OH VERY ADTANTAflBOCI TERMS. Ttaelr Stock, of Hye Whiskies, IN BUND, comprise all tho favorlt brd) ilaut, and runs through the various months ot lH05,'(it), and of this year, up to iiresent date. Liberal conttarts mad for lots to arrlvo at Pennsylvania Railroad Ueuot, Krrlcssom Lin Vharf,or sit Bonded Warehouse, as parties may elect. MILLINERY, TRIMMINGS, ETo 17 O U R N I KJD MILLINERY. ALWATB ON BAND A LARGE ABHOBT&LENT Or AT HO. 004 WALNUT STREET. 82? bm MAD'ILE KEOCH. sins. u. DiLLoa. V HOS. 8 AND S81 SOUTH STREET Ha a bandsom assortment of 6PRINO M.LLU N fc.it Y. Ladles', Misses', and Children' Htraw and Fauo; Bonnet and Hats of the Intent styles. Also, bilks. Velvets, Kttibons, Crapes, Feather ITIowi-rv frames, etc 71H FURNISHING GOODS, SHIRTS.&C EllINO GAUZE UNDERWEAR OF CART WRIGHT AND WARNER'S (ELERRATED 91 AN IT FACTE RE. MERINO GAUZK TJNDKRWKA.R In every var.ety or size and style, for Ladles', Gents', and Children's Wear. HOMIERT. A large assortment of HOHIEKY ot Knlih aud German manufacture, in socks, three-quarter sock aud long hoau OLOVES, In White, Buff, and Mode Color. For sale at IIOFMANN'S Hosiery Store, Sfitutht NO. NORTH EIUUTH STREEX. J. SCOTT &, CO., MUIBT MANUFACTURERS, AND DK4LKK8 IN MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS NO. 814 CHENUT STREET. FOUR DOORS BSXOW THK "CONTINENTAL,' t ZTJrp PHILADELPHIA. PATENT SHOULDER -SEAM HIIBT MAN U FACTORY, ANDGENTJLE MEN'S FURNISHING STORE PERFECT FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWERS made irom measurement at very short notice. All other artic.es oi OiiLNTLKMKjS'S DRESS GOODS in lull varifty. WINCHESTER A CO., 1 11 No. 706 CHlCfcNUT Street WANTS. B 00K AGENTS IN LUCK AT LAST. The crisis is paused. The honr has come to lift the veil of secresy which has hitherto enveloued tliwinimr history of the ureal civil war, and this in dona bv oilur. I lng to the publio Ueaeral I C, Baker's HISTORY OF THE SECRET SERVICE." For thrilling Intercut this book transcend all the romances oi a tbousandlyears. and conclusively prove that "truth is atrauper thau lictlon." Agents are clearing irom fjito to MX) per month, which we can prove to an; doubting applicant. A few more can obtain agencies in territory yet unoccu pied. Address P. GARRETT CO., NO. 709 CUENUT STREET, 7 2tf " PHILADELPHIA. HARDWARE, CUTLERY, ETC. gTANDBRlDGE, BA11R & CO., IMP 0ETER8 OF AND DEALERS IK FOREIGN AND AMERICAN HARDWARE, MO. laai JX ARRET STREET, Oflert or sale a large stock ot IlnrclAvaro and Cutlery, TOGETHER WITH 1000 KEGS NAILS , AT REDUCED PRICES. 87thsta CUTLERY. A Dne assortment nf prifi"r.H TAHLK i:UTI,KKY, KAZOKS. RAZOR STROPS. LADIKS' HOIS- M 1 14 hi PAtbL 1 Mlt niarr, SHEARS, ETC " W L. V. HKLMOLD'B Cutlery Store, No. 138 South TENTH Street, 11 Three doors above Walnut. Q. lltii CHJ(ijNCTHtFwtr E. M. NEEDLES & CO. OFFER IN HOUSE-FURNISHING DRY GOODS, ADAPTED TO TUE SEASON, ' Hummer Oaose Blankets, irult . Cloths auu Doylioa, Jialh and other Towels, ' . i i urnliure Chintzes and Dimities, Pillow aud Hhtelinf Liueu. i'loor and Stair Linens. , Honeycomb, Allendale, AND OTHER LIGHT SPREADS, AT REDUCED PRICES. leeJlS JJ1N8HHO lull 'OH AMERICAN COSiCBETE PAINT AND ROOF COMPANY. 'J his paint, for tin and metal roofs, old or new, is unequalled. Roofs of every kind, old shiuglus In. oluded, covered or repaired thoroughly. Leaks aud dauipueos prevented. Paint tor sale by the can or barrel. Rimitiens has prompt attention. No. M.t N THIRD Street. 17 13 lmj J06EPH LEEDS, TAME9 E. EVANS, GUN-MAKER, SOUTH, tf Street, abov Second, would call the attention of sportsmen to tin choice (election of BURHK TKOUT AND BaHS XOS(a new assortment). Kline, and ail the usual selection of f 1SU1NU TACKLE In all U various brandies. HAND li Uzr.E LOADING OUNH altered to BKKKCH-LOADEltS lu the best fiianner, at tli lowest rates. . - 11611 T. W. B. THE PET OP THE HOUSEHOLD. P. P. W. B. PARIS' PATFNT wrmifiW ROWER. Every housekeeper should have them to their shut ters; they bupersede theold-fanbloiied rlbuons. Prion, 1 wenly-uva cent pur pair, bold everywhere, aui bJtale aud retail by B. V. PA His, i -6 lu , , No. 27 S. THIRD ktweet. WAfCrifcS JEWELRY, ETC, AMERICAN WATCHES. W. "W. CASSIDY, HO. IS SOCTH SECOND STREET, PHILADELPHIA ABES ATTENTION TO HIH VARIED AND EXTENSIVE STOCK OF HOED AND SILVER WATCHES AND SILVER WARE. Customers may be assured that none bnt the be article, at reason able prices, will be sold at hi store A fine assortment of PLATKD-WABE CONSTANTLY ON HAND WATCHES and JEWELRY carefully repaired. A! orders by mall promptly attended to. 4 10 wsmSra We keep always an hand au assortment ot LADIES' AND OENTS' "FINE WATCHES' Of the best American and Foreign Makers, all war ranted to give complete satlslactlon, and at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. . FAR It & BROTHER, Importers of Watches, Jewelry, Musical Boxes, etc 11 llsmthjrp No. 824 CHESNUT St., below Fourth. Especial attention given to repairing Watches an! Musical Boe by FIRST-CLASS workmen. LEWIS LADOMUS & COV i Diamond Dealers and JtwtlUn, NO. 80S CHESNUT ST., riHLADEIJPHXA Would Invite ths attention ot purchaser to ths large and handsome assortment of DIAMONDS, ( WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER-WARE, ICE PITCHERS In great variety, ETC ET" A large assortment of small STUDS, for eyelet boles. Just received. WATCHES repaired In the best manner, and guaranteed. 14p WATC11ES, JEWELUY. W. V. OASSIDy. NO. IS SOI in SECOND STREET, tScko ent,rely newnl most carefully selected AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATCHES. JEWELRY, SILVER-W A RE, AND FANCY ARTICLES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, suitable . TOR BRIDAL OR HOLIDAY PRESENTS An examination v. Ill show my stock to be unsur passed In quality aiid cheapness, w oe unsur. Particular attention paid to repairing. Bid G. RUSSELL & CO., NO. NORTH SIXTH STREET, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN FINE WATCHES, FRENCH CLOCKS, ClOLD JEWELRY, AND ."fl SULID SILVER-WARE. HENRY HARPER, No. 590 ARCH Street Manufacturer and Dealer In WATCHES, FINE JEWELRY, , SILVER" I'LATED WARE, AND H SOLID SILVER. WARE C. & A. PEQUIGNOT, 1 Manufacturers of Clold and Silver Watch Cases, f IMFOBTBBfl AND PKALKBS LSI . i .. . 1 WATCHES. tnnm HJ.t . B ..... bv-vrwrr r, . . Manufactory-No, MM fcouta FIFTH Street, 41 PHILADELPHIA, LEGAL NOTICES. the unoeraliT. uu .Tr..' ."V" 5"",u 'ld to Will make payment, and all iersuurUavlu chuflS against the Keetale will nrmimit ti,. v,u cbMuia 11 t '1 A 1. I. 'I'll I ELIZABETH BARKER. Administratrix Ksflt tttJ" ELEVENTH htr, Q-J9 ARCH STREET. -OAS FIXTTOPq VZl CHANDEL1EKS, URONZK ST A'rrVri 5 ETC.-VAN KIRK & CO. would fmMttn?,! I urchaslng elsewhere, ly " a call belora -bleVrices "-' ' . i VANKIRK A CO 0 0 K N E X C H A N O 1 t r tt BAO MANUFACTORY U JOHM T. BAIL?? I'OO, K. K. Comer of Il!Jffi3 WATER Btref, AJvALER8 IN BAU8 AND BAGGLNQ Grain Floor JLu T 1e!r'l'tlon. tor urain, riour, Bait, huper-Phospbate otLlms,Bona iou T Bail. iA.una Casoabw. j FINE WATCHES. TESTATE OF PJLTER BARKER, DECEASED
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