G WILLIAM L. DAYTON. BT HON. JAMBS M. 8C0VBL. Prom the Northern Monthly Magazine. The world Las never been governed too little. Kings, from Ca-sar to Maximilian, most of whom Carlylo would classify as "chielty Btufled clothes suits," have fretted their brief Lour upon the stage, and then turned to dust. Uut, when the millions who toil turn to wards the uncrowned kings of thought, among whom were Lincoln aud 1'ayton, these names are never permitted to die. The "still, sad nmsto of humanity" whispers their names through the dim aisles of history, while the common mind, with reverent atlechon, kin dles at, and keeps alive in tender remembrauoe the great deeds and tho lightest words of "Ti e simple cent ones done forever ami forever by." And biography means nothing unless it Bays, "O my brother I impart to me truly how it stands with thee in that inner man of thine; what lively images of things past thy memory has painted there; what hopes, what thoughts, affections, knowledge, do now dwell there. 1'or this, and no other object that I can see, was the gift of hearing and Fpeech beatosved on ns." Tamo no longer consists in having ne's name repeated many times in tlie neYrf papers, else Vallaudigham would be greater than Aristotle. Greatness must think, and art, and ftrl, and sitr. It must daro, and be ready to die, remembering that, if wrovg is sometimes on the throne and right upon the Beaffold, it is the dim splendor of the scallold where truth dies, and not the gilded throne Where wrong lives, that sways the future. But to the subject of our sketch: William Lewis Dayton was a statesman, not a politician in the every-day sense of that much abused word, which, by common con sent, describes the men who believe tho hoatts of the people are to be won by the mo.st suc cessful puller, and that the people themselves are like asses ready saddled and bridled, upon whioh. the most unscrupulous adventurers can Bafely and speedily ride into power. Mr. Day ton was a politician in the best and noblest Bense of that word; a politician such 413 Cicero delights to describe, dwelling in the higher regions of political thought, meditating upon the principles and policies which make up the life of states and nations, studying and teach ing the true foundations of lasting national greatness. He belonged to the old school, the ancien regime of anti-slavery Whig statesmen, who had the sense to see and the courage to declare that the American statesman's con trolling purpose was to make politics moral by a union with natural and national justice. William L. Dayton was born in Somerset county (Baskingridge), New Jersey, February 17, 1807. He graduated from college in Sep tember, 1825, and was admitted to the bar in his native State, May, 1830. In pronouncing his eulogy in the Senate of New Jersey, of which body (then called 'The Council") Mr. Dayton was elected a member in 1837, just seven years after his admission to the bar, Senator Little said: "I have heard an emi nent jurist declare that Judge Dayton tried his first case as well as he did his hist. He was quick in arranging the facts of a case, throw ing aside the weak points and seizing the strong ones. Where a crime was to be punished or a wrong redressed, happy the Btate or the man who secured the weight of his professional (strength, aii.l windom. As a friend, he never allowed political differences to have a feather's weight with him." These are strong words of praise from a life-time member of a political party adverse to Mr. Dayton's views. No man ever better illustrated the truth of the sentiments which in every-day life make the man and the gentleman; when carried into public life, the hero and the statesman. We may differ in opinion from those with whom we agree in sen timent. After scarcely a year's service in the State Senate, Mr. Dayton was appointed associate justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, and wore the judicial ermine, the youngest man upon the bench. This position he resigned in November, 1841. Samuel L. Southard, of whom New Jersey and the country were justly proud, a man of real power and of wonderful eloquence, died in 1842. William L. Dayton was ap pointed to fill this vacancy, and in 1845 he was elected to a full term for six years in the United States Senate. Here he was the youngest member of that tody, and was one year younger than Phil. Sheridan, though he served in the Senate the companion of Benton, Silas Wright, Choate, Crittenden, of Kentucky, and Berrien, of Georgia. In this body of great minds he was the peer ot the greatest in intellect or elo quence, in integrity or in power. Here, too, he justified the noble words of Minister Bigelow, who said over his grave: "Mr. Dayton possessed in a conspicuous degree that first of all Christian graces truthfulness. I do not mean to say by this merely that he would not say what was false. He could not act falsely. He scorned all indirection. This may seem too common a quality among states men, and too much a matter of course to be selected for special eulogy. Those who think so have had either a more extensive or a more fortunate experience than mine." Here, too, how can we forbear to' give the truthful and touching words of M. Laboulaye, an eminent French thinker, who once said there was one insanity incurable in a French manthe love of liberty f M. Laboulaye said at the funeral ceremonies in Paris, after stating that it had been nearly one hundred years since the bonds of an irrevocable friendship had been signed between France and America; after naming Jefferson and Franklin, Oouver neur Morris, Edward Livingston, and other3 who had cemented this alliance, "Mr. Day ton," he Bays, "will take his place worthily upon this list of glorious names. "Gentlemen, call to mind the circumstances under which Mr. Dayton came, in 1802, to represent the United States in Fiance. I do uot wish to wound the feelings of any one. At Bucn a time, and in such a place, there is room only for amity and for sorrow. But I must say that the great misfortune of civil war la, that it at the same time enfeebles a nation within and leaseus its inUuence without. In such a cane, a minister must feel great in quietude, a more than ordinary susceptibility in defending the interests of his country. Mr Dayton was fully equal to this delicate task' Thanks to hh frankness and good faith and courtesy, he maintained the relations of the two countries upon the best footiuiz ami in equal conditions; that is to say, equally honorable for the two countries. This waa a service rendered to France as well as to Ame rica, and which will make brilliant in the future the name of Mr. Dayton. 'The future 1' I forget that I am in the presence of the dead what remains to us but a little dust 1 and yet, for those who survive, it is a consolation, it is a duty, to speak of the virtues of those who are gone. These virtues accompany them to the foot of the Supreme Tribunal, and there, let us hope, obtain for theiu the mercy of the Eternal. Happy is the man who, like Mr. Dayton, can present himself before that tri bunal, with the services he has rendered hid ouatjy, willi Lja tonscienc lear of having Til? DAILY EVENING TKLEGKAPII PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, committed any ehi against the great cause of civilization and humanity, the cause he main tained and sustained because he believed it to be (as I believe it to 1A the cause of justice and of human liberty." No pronder record can a Rtatesman leave than such words as these, unless it be the glorious deeds and the unshaken fidelity of which EUidi praise is the fitting monument. In truthfulness and directness of character, William L. Dayton bore a close resemblance to Abraham Lincoln. The one was only a generation removed from a revolutionary an cestry inured to toil; the other was a laboring man himself; both believing in a government of the people, for the people, by the people, because they themselves lived close to the popular heart, knowing right well that no price was too high to pay for a republican form of government, in which liberty should not be a mockery, a name, anl a delusion, but in which liberty was the real, vitalizing, con trolling element of power. What historical propriety there was in these two great men standing in the New Jersey benate, animated by the same heroic purpose, to save a sinking Republic 1 And none that witnessed that scene will soon forget with how much feeling President Liucoln, referring to bis early reading of Weerub' "Life of Wash ington, FfJd: "I remember all the accounts there give:: of the battle-fields and struggles lor the lili ities of the country, and none lied themselves upon my imagination so deeply as the fctnipf;!'" here at Trenton, New Jersey. I recollect thinking then, boy though I was, tltnt there naist huve been something more than comi! n that those men struggled for." Mr. I'i.) inn's miijd, senile in its strength, was like the peak of Tentriff", which catches the glow of the morning sun before the day dawns up n the lower level. lie sustained the Wilnict pioviso; he boldly declared against flaveiyin the District of Columbia. With cii:il courage he asserted to the fullest extent tho right of Congress to legislate in regard to blavery in the Territories of the United States. And he never went backwards, lie lived the Latin maxim, Vcxtigia nulla rctrorsum. Mr. Lincoln regarded William L. Dayton as one of the six foremost men in the Senate; and, after hearing a great speech from the Senator from New Jersey, he turned to a Congressman, and said: " The destiny of our country is not in peril with such men to defend us." And from the floor of the House the Great Commoner from Illinois, with great force and considerable wit, ridiculed General Cass' de fection on the Wilmot pioviso question thus: "When the question was raised in 1840, he (Cass) was in a blustering hurry to take ground for it; . . . but soon he begau to see glimpses of the great Democratic ox-gad waving in his face, and to hear indistinctly a voice, saying, 'Back, back, sir ! back a little.' He fhakm his hunt and las his eyes, and blun ders back to his position of March, 1847; but still the gad waves, and the voice grows more distinct and sharper still, 'Back, back, I say 1 J'urllur bark I' And back he goes to his posi tion of December, 1847, at which the gad is still, and the voice soothingly E.iys, 'So 1 stand still at that 1' The warm attachment existing between President Lincoln and our Minister to France continued till the hour of the latter's death. And, when speaking of New Jersey, as Mr. Lincoln very often did, tho names most frequently on his lips were those of Mr. Day ton and of William A. Newell. Mr. Ljrtuu HMr.il in iit hnak4 -vr.tfc Olnjr, - Webster, and Calhoun. But he never bent the knee to the Baal of slavery; and the ox gad of the subtle statesmen Of the South had no tenors for the polished, courtly, and self reliant gentleman. With Henry Clay and Daniel Webster both in opposition, perhaps the ablest advocate of General Taylor's admin istration, on the floor of the Senate, was Mr. Dayton. His sagacity, for that day, was won derful. He must have regarded compromise then as it has since shown itself to be, the American devil 1 He opposed the compromise of 1850 bitterly and persistently, and to-day we thank him for his matchless fidelity. But we must not linger too long on these pages of our nation's history pages dear to us, because the lessons there taught by some men of deathless memory have kindled a new evangel in the hearts of the human race, till the flag itself, then so nearly the emblem of human bondage, has again become to the gaze of the whole earth the beautiful symbol of human freedom, dearer to us, ten thousand times, than ever, since its baptism in the blood of our best and bravest. Mr. Dayton happily blended in his personal bearing both dignity and affability. The writer of this can never forget the generous hospitality of the American minister, Mr. Dayton, who then resided in the Rue Circu late, near the Arch of Triumph, commenced by Louis Philippe and completed by the Third Napoleon, and blazoned with the exploits of conquering Frenchmen. Unlike the Romans, the French citizen first asks for "glory," then for pauem et circenses, (bread and the circus). When stricken by death, Mr. Dayton seemed only to be in the prime of life, and, if he had lived longer, the very highest honors awaited him. But he died with the harness on. And, if the world could cease to remem ber his countless virtues, it can never, it will never forget that the' slave-master's lash might become music to the Sage of Marshfield, but that, to the ears of a New Jersey Senator, the Bound of that lasu, before whien Presi dents then bared their backs (and history still repeats herself in presenting in this year of grace, 1SU7, the same attitude of baseness), to a Senator from New Jersey, that lash must ever be the symbol of that society which creates and nourishes slavery for the body, atheism for the soul, and despotism for the people. W hen the sad news came to us of the na tion's loss, New Jersey hastened to crown her foremost son with tears, as she had long since crowned him with laurels. The Legislature unanimously passed reso lutions t hat, in the judgment of New Jer sey, Mr. Dayton stood in the front rank of his profession, beside Webster and Choate and Lmmett and l'inckney; and that, "while we mourn the dead, we gratefully remember that unbending patriotism which made his last years the brightest of his manhood, as lie bravely stood by his country, and with Btraightforward honesty defeated the subtle and tortuous and dangerous policy which ruled at the court of the Man of December." The whole State mourned him. Senators Bukley, Little, and Scudder delivered eulo gies marked by force, feeling, and eloquence. "Mr. Pitsideiit: We have mot here to honor the dead. ' Never before has an honored and eminent son of New Jersey fallen at a foreign court in the disihaipe of a publio trust, as died Wil liam Lewis Dayton on the second of December, the American minister at the court of the Kui peror Napoleon. "Some great mind has declared that death was not an evil, because it was universal. But when the duuuilets Baker fell pierced with a dozen bullets, saying to his soldiers, 'Lie down, boys, but it does not become a general to Rhiink in front of the foe, the nation felt it public calamity which deprived the country at once of a soldier, an orator, and a states man. "And, as we stand above' the grave of New Jersey's foremost son, we can say, not without emotion, it is no common chance that takes away a noble mind. "Some of you knew William Lewis Dayton better than 1 did. And I am glad to give way to another, after a brief and imperfect tribute to New Jersey's dead. I may bo pardoned if, in my brief tribute to the private worth and publio character of the deceased, I dwell some what upon his record as a statesman. It belongs not more to tho State than it does to ' the country; I had almost said it belonged to the world. "Almost all of rtfl remember for it seems but yesterday with what unanimity and generous warmth of feeling the bar of New Jersey bade Mr. Dayton God speed as he pre pared for his journey to Europe; and with w hat feelings of sadness and melanoh jly, fears for tho future of his country, ho started for the imperial court. "No man ever represented America in so momentous a crisis. Benjamin Franklin de clared that this Government was the lirst ever framed upon the truths of religion a3 a basis. But, when ho represented our half-grown Re public, the experiment against absolutism aud tyranny had not proved successful or 'per manent. "William L. Tayton, on tho contrary, went to France when an armed and formidable power, with one hundred thousand men in the Held, menaced the very existeuce of this Government. And the Mau of December Limsill', Louis Napoleon, the companion of such adventurers as Momy, ld Manrepns, St. Arnaud, and others, who, winning Paris by bayonets, after shed ding the blood of thirty thousand freemen, wa3 of all men tho one to sympathize with and to recognize, as Boon as he dared, a confederacy w hich was sought to be founded upon the avowal that the Declaration of Independence under which we had lived for eighty-eight years, and grown great, aud prosperous, aud happy, was a fallacy and a delusion. Here, then, of all places, was the position where Mr. Dayten's fidelity to principle and his distin guished ability could shine with eminent and original lustre, Some of his friends, in wri ting to him, said: 'This position affords little opportunity for distinction.' But, Mr. Presi dent, this statement is a grave mistake; for what position in the cabinet of Mr. Lincoln or as a Senator in Congress can give such opportunity for distinction as a post where, as the guardian of the republic, it was Mr. Dayton's privilege, by urbanity of dispo sition and by his straightforward honesty of character, to conciliate an unfriendly power and to thwart the subtle inventions of his country's enemies ? "No, sir ! When the history of this just but terrible struggle comes to be written, its pages will gather lustre as they record the patient vigilance he exercised, and the bold, open, and determined warfare he made against the -subtle policy to which the court of St. James and the Emperor of the French have been so nearly committed. If opportunity offered we would gladly go back, and pause in admiration at the record he made while a Senator in Congress. In 1850, during the memorable contest for compromise, Mr. Clay, in the course of the debate, asked Senator Dayton if he would support the measure in the event of the removal of an til jotliotl 4ww tfrmfc w lol lln Dayton had protested. The ready answer was : 'I will not support that mea sure under any circumstances whatever, because I believe it fraught with danger in the future.' In vain did tho gallant Ken tuckian say: 'I go in for an honorable com promise whenever it can be made. Life itseif is but a compromise between death and life, the struggle continuing throughout our whole existence until the great destroyer finally tri umphs. All legislation, all government, all society is formed upon tho principle of mutual concession, politeness, comity, courtesy; upon these everything is based.' "Pardon mo, Mr. President, for saying to tho Senate, that such fidelity, such straight forward honesty and stability of purpose, teach us who share in the control of public allairs. that it is a publio man's duty to plant himself indomitably on what he be litres to le ri;ht, and bide his time in victory or in defeat. Judge Dayton's character did not need success for a stimulant. If his greatness could be reckoned in qualities, it consisted in keenness of perception, in cour age, and in openness of soul. As a states man, Mr. Dayton was the equal of Southard, the peer of Clay, and, unlike the sage of Marbhfitld, he never made a speech of which he could regretfully say in his last hours, "It was the greatest mistake of my life." As a lawyer, Judge Dayton ranks with Choate, and Addis Fmmett, and the accomplished William Pinckney. He was, as these resolu tions say, a thorough lawyer, possessing a mind enriched by varied experience and dis ciplined by the exercise of study. "He was never a laborious student, but had happily a mind like that of Chief Justice Mar shall, which discovered truth by intuition. When upon the Supreme Bench, Judge Mar shall would Bay to one of his associates, 'This is the law, please look upon the case which supports it.' Whether in publio or private life, at the bar or upon the bench, in Congress or at his own fireside, in a foreign land, as a gentleman aud a friend, he charmed by his affability and dig nity. He was a gentleman in Bishop Doane's definition of that term, a gentle-man, and those who have ever associated with him in the circuits or before the Supreme Bench will never forget his kindness of nature, his sincerity, his geniality, and his sympathy. "But, alas that man, with his power of thought the greatest in the universe, must bow before the great destroyers. Man in form and moving, how express and admirable 1 in action, like an angel ! in apprehersion, like a god ! is no stronger than the little child w hen both go to take their places in the silent halls of death. William L. Dayton is dead. New Jersey, from tie lair hills of Sussex, from the rich and fertile fields of Somerset, which claims the honor of his birth from Sussex to where the ocean washes the southern shore of the State, reveres his memory, now that he is dead; all, all gratefully lay their tribute of affection upon his grave. "Liberty, whose advocate he was, rising luminous aud beautiful above the tears and chains of her children, weeps for him. And we, bending reverently above the grave of the statesman, the friend, the legislator, the patriot, we yield thee to thy place in the world beyond the stars to thy place in thy country's heart, with affection, with gratitude, and with prayer." HARDWARE, CUTLERY, ETCV c u t l e ii r. A fine assortment of POCK ETand TAhl.K Cl'TUItY, RAZOItrt, RA.OU RTUOPS. I.ADIKJ' HOiS. KORrf. PAPER 'aw ik 'l'AILOiW SHEARS, Ki O.t I V. IT HXMOLD'8 Cutlery Store, No. pti south tkntu street, 11 Thin doors above WaluuU POLITICAL. tT UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. JCDOE OF StTEEME CO CRT, HON. HENRY W. WILLIAMS. Associate jvixse coit.t of common tleas, HON. M. RUSSELL THAYER. COUiXTY OFFICERS. gnrr.iFF, JOSEPH M. COWELL. KEfilSTEIt OP WILLS, WILLIAM Y. CAMPBELL. CLERK OF onrnANs' COURT, RICHARD M. BATTURS. CITY OFFICERS. CITY TREASURER, DAVID JONES. CITY COMMISSIONER, BENJAMIN F. URWILER. SENATE THIRD DISTRICT, JOSEPH A. BONIIAM. ASSEMBLY. Dint. 1 DAVID FOY. 2 ROBERT C. TITTERMARY. 3 A. M. WALKINSIIAW. . 4 WILLIAM W. WATT. 5 EDMUND S. YARD. 6 Col. CHARLES KLECKNER. 7 JAMES SUBERS. 8 JAMES V. STOKES. 9 F. W. THOMAS. 10- Col. ELISHA W. DAVIS. 11 CHARLES EAGER. 10 ALlilKANlI3H ADAIRE. 13 ENOS C. RENNER. 14 GEORGE T. THORN. 15 JAMES HOLGATE. 16 Col. MARSHALL C. HONG. 17 Col. JOHN CLARK. 18 JAMES N. MARKS. By order of tho Republican City Executive Committee. WM. It. LEEDS, Tresldent. John Tj. ITili,, l Isaac McBkiuk. J Secretaries. 9 2, R ALLY! RALLY!! UNION REPUBLICAN MASS MEETINGS WILL BE HELD A3 FOLLOWS:- Slxteeuth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth Wardi, AT FRANKFORD ROAD AND SIIACKA- . MAXO'N STREET, OK TIItJKSDAT EVE SIX CI, OCT, S. Let every one who is true to the great Republican Principles of JUSTICE, LIBERTY, AND EUCAEITY, Come, and by tbeir presence show that the work 10 well begun JH UHT BE COMPLETED. A number of distii.u.blspeakers will address the meetings. Come and strike another blow against Traitors and Treason. Br order Union Republican City Executive Com mittee. JOHN G. Ill'TLEB, 10 2 2t Chairman Committee on Town Meetings, (T UNION REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE BOOMS, NO. 1103 CIIEHNVT ST It EE T, Fhiladklphia, September 28, 18e7. The Union Republican Bute Central Committee have made the following appointments for HON. JAMES M. SCOVEL, OP NEW JERSEY, WHO WILL. SPEAK AT I RANKPORD, MONDAY, beptouiber 80. MEDIA AMD CHKBTKR, THURSDAY, Oct. 3. DOWNINGTOWN. FRIDAY, October. PHIENIXVILLE, BATURDAY, October 8. WEST CHESTER. MONDAY, Oct. 7. 9 27t Mr. BAIT.. Pnonkor of the Pennsylvania Senate. spmks at FRAJSK.EuUD.ou TUESDAY EVKISIKU, uciouer i. irir NINTH WARD UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. Common Council, JUliN KAHK1UA. Alrteniii.n. DAVID JUia ILKR. (School Directors, JOHN U YOUJSU, JHANtlH BLAOKRURNE. PR A NCI 4 NEWLAND. For the unexi'lied leim of Bartholomew W. DeeBley, SIMEON DILLINGHAM. For the unexpired term ol Goorie Kmslor, dwenqed. JAM EM KUUMUl'KKE, S !Kl 7t (COTTON AND FLAX, J BAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, Of all numbers aud brands . Tent, Awning, Tinnk, and Whkou Cover Duul AIho, Paper Manufacturer' Drier Fulls, from one! several luot wide; Puullng, Reltlnt;. Hall Twine, etc, JOHN W. EV HUMAN CO., " I S JX . 1WI i OJS Ja' Alloy. OCTOBER 2, UG7. CLOAKS. G LOAKS, CLOAK:?, CLOAKS. CLOAlii Ev eiy one ta Inli.mfc i ln.nl uc I mik ui IVK.NH', No. 5.1 S. NT XI II Mrcet. c "LOAK3, CLOAKS, CL'lAKS, CLOAKS. j'.viry new siy.e ai . 1 VF.NH1, y. r.l S. NINTH Street. fiLOAKS, CLOAKS CLOAKS, CLOAKS. IniDivimo ha'Sam- at IV ENS', 8 21 Im No. -R H. NINTH street. INMHliCiTIOft. GRtAT K A T I G r A L TEUCnAHSiO COr.f:ERC'AL INSTITUTE, &ON. SOP AM) Hll SIIANVT Ktlit l T rnji,ADKi.riiiA. II K jf"o V A J- To tl Finest CoIKk Rooms In the City, Fart of the Fr-rnr.d, nr.d the whole or the Third an Fourth Floors et BANK CF P.IcrUBI.IC BUIJ.DISt.JH, Nearly ( pi oHH th Cnnt!i.' nul liutpl. The beet orenntzed and conducted Bn,liies Collect In the illy. Ihe Corps ol Teat. hen has no fitperlor. Education lor the Coimf ni!;-room In the shortOM poHslhle time cotihisteiit with the luteie; of the student. Bend lor clrculai". BIWfm JACOli If. TAYLOR. PreMde'U. l"0.ia)INO AND DAY SClWiL T'OH J- YOCNU I, A UJ K3, AND K UN DEKOARTEN It'll ClilLDHhN. M. E. corner ol M N til nftd r-l'KINO UAUDKN blreem, will reopen Ninth Mmuh (Si pii niher) Ki, PW7. A limited numiter or .Boarders will lie r c.i ived in the home of the Principal. For circulate apply to bLSAN JTAYHUKST. Principal, 9 WMnlm No. 41 KR A N K LI N fctieot. EUODY ACADFMY, KOU YOUNU MEN and l!o, No, 1416 LOCUfaT Street, Fib W AUD CLAltENCJi. bMl'i'H, A, M., Principal. Re-opens (September 111. Pupils prepared tor hUHinosa or pio ftHuional Hie, or lor hh;h sinnding In college. A lirMt-clOKS Primary Department In separate rooms. Circulars, with fuH lnlormutlon, at No. 1-zJk CHEBNUT Htreet. 8 12 2m rpHE MIMICS KOCERS" HAVE REMOVED J from No. .'0 B. Piitecnlh street to No. 1M14 PINK f-ueet, where they wilt- roopeu their bchoul lor Youua Ladlts and Children, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9. 9 4 lm 1 f7 PKLECI WHITE riXE BOARDS lOl) I . AND PLANK. 4-4. 5-4, 8-4, 2, 2)i, 8, and 4 Inch CHOICE PANEL AND 1st COAUklON, 18 feet lonit. 4-4, 6-4, 6-4, 2. 2.'-,. 8. ami 4 Inch WniTE PINE, PANEL PA'1'1 ERN PLANK. LARUE AND bUPElUUK Ht'OCK ON HAND, 1 f ,7 -BUILD IN Ul FuTlD I N O -Ll.O . UCII.D1NM! LUMBER I LUMBER! LUMBER! 4- 4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 5- 4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 4-4 DELAWARE FLOORING. 6-4 DELAWA It U FLOORING. WHITE PINK FLOORING, ABH FLOORING. WALNUi' FLOORING, BPRL'CE FLOORING. HTEPBOAUDW, . RAIL PLANK. PLASTERING LATH. 1 ftfV7 CEDAR AMD CYPRE9S lOU I BHINOLEB. LONG CEDAR SHINGLE. faHOKT CEDAR BlilNULEa. COOPFR (SHINGLES. FINTI ASSORTMENT FOR BALE LOW. NO. 1 CEDAR LOGB AND POSIB, 4 Qun LUMBER FOR UNDERTAKERS J.OU I LUMBER FOR UNDEKTAKKItdl RED CEDAR, WALNUT. AND PINE. 1 QfT ALBANY LUMBER OF ALL KINDS JLOU I ALBANY LUMBER OF ALL KINDB, BEABONED W ALN UT. DRY POPLAR. CIIKKHY, AND ASH, OAK PLANK AND iHJAllUti. MAHOGANY, ROSEWOOD, AND WALNUT VENEERa 186 rj CIGAU-I'OX MANUFACTURERS. riUAK-llltA MANUFACTURERS. BPANJhil CEDAR BOX LOARDB. 1 -'"CCE JOIST! SPRUCE JOI31' lOU I . SPRUCE JOIST! FROM 14 TO H2 FEET LONG. bUPEUIUU NORWAY SCANTLING. ... MAULE, BROTHER & CO., ' Pi No. toon SOUTH STREET, fjB S. BUILDERS' MILL, .&, 31, 86, AND 28 S. FIFTEENTH ST., ESLEIt & EEO., Proprietors. Al k y on hand, mane of the Beat Seasoned Lumber at low pricea, WOOD MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, BALUSTERS, AND NEWELS, Newels, Balusters, Bracket and Wood Momdlngs. WOOD MOULDINGS. BRACKETS, BALUSTERS AND NEWELS. Walnut and Ash Hand Railing, 3, 3!i, and 4 Inches. BUTTERNUT. C H E S M U T, and WALNUT JUOULDINGB to order. ' a V.tf J. C. PE II K INS. JLUIMBF.lt MERCHANT, Successor to R..CIark, Jr., NO. 324 CHRISTIAN STREET. Constantly on hand ft large and varied assortment Of Building I.nmPer. 6 24 tiEjkil liuW. E. 171. NEEDLES & CO., Eleventh and Cbeanut Streets. HOUSE-FUitflSniN G DRY GOODS, Bought at the Recent Depressed Prices. Rilrtlnpr. Pillow, Fhretlng, and Table Linens. Table Cloths and Napkins, to match. Wine Cloths. Dikylles, Towels aud Towelling. Marseilles QullUs and Tollot Covers. BluDkets. H oney comb, Lancaster, Allendale, Jacquard, and other Spreads. DOMESTIC MUSLINS AND SHEETINGS, In all qualities and widths, at the lowest rates. aom mi vino WINDOW BLINDS AND SHADES. ga J. VILLIAMS & SONS, no. 16 nobtii sixth stbejet, manufacturf:rs op VENETIAN XS L I IV 13 AKD WINDO W SHADES. Largest and litest assortment in the city at the LOWEST PRICES. Repairing promptly attended to. PTO H K SHADFB made and lettered. 9 25 2mBp 831, CIIAHLES L. HALE, 331. (Late fcaletman and Superintendent tot B. J. Williams) NO. 881 AKCII SI BEET, . MANUFACTURER Of VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES. Largest and finest assortment lu the city at the tOW EST FRICKd. t9 'a 2m84' UPHOISTFRIKn IN ALL ITnANCHKa COAL. B MIDDLE-TON CO., DEALERS IN . 1IA11MUU LEIUttH and EAULK VEIN A veiuii OlScS. KO. el. WALN UT Mr. I i C L OTH5, f ASSlPiERES, ETC. J I'M 1;F.( EJ VEIL, EW 3TYLK3 FANCY CASSIMTiRES ANb COATING U. Ii, atMiiiou to our unpsnaliy large lire or gooda adapted to Itl V. & 'H AN1 HOTN' WEAK. MOfcKIS, aOTIUFR iVLtiWIS, CXOTII JOBBEH3, R 24 tira N(. I AKIl tlK.rorjKTIfSTi c L O A K I N C S. We call particular attention to a large asortmen ol yerydesliahle styles I A1I1N' M.OAUINUN, Jnet received lrom New Tork auction sales, In add tiin to tbe BJLVER POX, DIAMOND, HYDE PARK, and many other leading makes. ' sir Bin?, cLoiiiiEu & lewis, CLOTH HOUSE, 24(!m WiW. 11 I 1 W. FOrMTIl'WTj. WA I CrltS, JtWELfSY, ETC. jjEVVlS LABC:wlU3 & CO., Diamond Doalera and Javrallers, V.PCa OIFMNITT ST., rilllAIi'I-LPHIIA Would Invite the attention ol pnrcluvsers to their li-rge and handsome aiiorlmeiit cf lUKiHP.i, ATtUIN, jewi:lkt, NILTtlt-WIBt, era C. KXO ICK PITCHERS In grrat variety. A large assortment ox small BTUEs", for eyel, boloe. iutil received, V ATCHLti repulied In the best manner, and guaranteed. 6i;,p jgk WATCIIEb, JLWEUtY. v W. V. CASSIU1' NO. I? MOCIli BiKCONU SlIttJ-.T, OilerH nn entirely new aud moat care.uiy selected stotk ol AMERICAN AND GENEVA WATOlIBU, JEWELRY, 8ILVER-WARJ5, AND EANCY ARTICLES O .EVERY DESCRIPTION, suitable 1 lOIi UH1DAI. It HOLIDAY FBiETII An examination will show my Btocli to be UustU paaned In quality and cheapness. Particular attention paid to renalrlnir. 81fif C. RUSSELL & CO., So. Tl KOUTB BIITU ST1IEET, Have Just received from Europe an Invoice of JSOVKLTIEB, consisting of ANIMALS' HEADS, for balls and dining-rooms; HAT-RACKB of Boar's tusks, and some very curious CLOCKS, of Chamois and Elk horns. . The above ls the first Invoice of these goods In the country, ami are oilered at very low prices. 6 1K Jg AMERICAN WATCHES, :w&The best In the world, sold at Eactory Prices. r A. a nr AIIIAKIAW. . r KyUllalHU I j MANUFACTURERS CP WATCH CA3ES, No. 13 Bouth BIXTII Btroet. 81 Manvraclnry, A'o. 22. S. tlt'TIT Street, gTliKLIKd SILVERWARE MANUFACTORY NO. il l LOCIST STREET. GEORGE SII Alt J?, Patentee of the Ball and Cube pntterns, manufactures every description or line BTERLINO SILVER WARE, and offers for sale, wholesale and retail, a choice assortment of rich and beautiful goods of new styles at low prices. 19 26 3m J.M. BHARP. A. ROBERTS. SADDLERY, HARNESS, &c. rUE UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS OF THE NEW IIIESNUT STREET (WO. 1816), SADDLERY, HARNESS AKD IIOR.SE iFVBNIKIUNCi JOODS HOUSE OF LACEY, MEEKER & CO., Is attributable to the following facts.-. They are very attentive to the wants of their one. tomers. . . , . ThflV nra MuMfirlpfl with & fRlr hnnlnaaa They sell goods only on their own merits. They guarantee every strap In all harness they eel over lie, the lault of the purchaser only who does not get what be Is guaranteed and paid lor. .. Tbeir goods are U per cent, cheaper than can be bought elsewhere. They nave cneaper ana nner goods than can be benght In the city. They have ti e 1 rgestand most complete stock In Philadelphia. All Harness over f& are "hand-made." 11 - I - ... ... Gents' Baddies from to 78. Ladies Saddles from 10 to 1123. Tuey are tne oiaest auu largest manuiacturera in the country. 914 5m NO. laifl ( HENNtTT STREET. STOVES, RANGES, ETC. . NOTICE. Til B UNDERSIGNED f-.t would call attention ot the piiblln to his f'li. NEW OOLDEN EAULE i URN A OK. This Is an entirely new healor. Itlsso;con structed aslo at once commend itaelf to generalluvor, being a combination of wroutjht and can I Iron. It Is very simple in Its cnusti notion, and Is pei lootly air tight; sell-cleaning, having no pipes ordrumstobe takeu out and cleaned. It is so arranged wiln uprlKht Hues as to produce a larger amount of heat from the same weight of coal than any furnace irfiw In ose. Tlie hvKrometrio condition of the aires produced by my ne'w airangenient ot evaporation will al once de monstrate that It Is tlie only Hot Air Furuacelnat wMl produce a perfectly healthy atmosphere. Tliuse lu want of a complete lieatiug Apparatus would do well to call and examine the Gulden iuuile. . CHAKLES WILLIAMS, Nos. 1132 aud 113 41IARK E t street. Philadelphia, A large asnortmentofCooklng Ranges. Plre-Hoard Stoves. Low Down Uiales, Ventilators, etc.. always on hand. N. R. Jobbing of all kinds promptly done. S loj FERTILIZERS. A M MOiN I ATED PHOSPHATE, AN aINBiI.inPAtiNFDrEBTII.IXEB For Wheat, Corn, Oats Potatoes, Grass, the VegetabM Garden, Trull Trees, Grape Vines, Etc. Eto. This Pertlliier contains Ground Bone and the bee lertlllKlng lHalta. Price f.o per ton of pounds. For sale by tu Cf lutactniTu, V.-ILLIA M ELLIS CO., Chemlate, 12bmwf No, TH MARKET Street,