TLIE liLLli TRADE IN GERM A NY, The Orrat nrcwtrlci of Vicuna, aad MudUIi, Tho manufacture ftn.l cotnumptt" rspWHv IncroMsitipou tbe 'v- f , opposed the lareo 01 D; V I8 Exhibition wi" uiint-nt, and It is finest t-- ..mmiiropUoii at the Puns i- .. unit further eiteiul Its nw. The .-u.plc ever uelic!tii ti King: ( imbriniw .. m the Austrian p:irt of tlm Kxlnbitiou pirk. It is a very lurce wcotlen buildinc of pimply but admirable countruotiou, with a liuht roof howlnfr. the timbers, ami a broa l nailery rmimi tbe interior, It is wcil lmea n.l v iHliit'" ami thoHC who preicrtlie open air timl p.enry oi accommodation order th: Fptu-iou venm. .ti ut.ic. The brewery 10 which thif "?h' mcnt belongs UWv. lar't in Ausir.., an. I in deed on the t ontui' iit. THIS VIENNA HKl:WI HH. Thr principal brewery in Austria in m m PeUtwch.it, ricui Viennf.. rn-i s e-iub.i; "; ; 1032: but i'.s importance l!t'.ta only Hoiu i u. when tho late r.iopiicMr, Mr. Anthony ' took potweiM. ii ot it. Previous to Iih l.i'f 1 4acthe only beer brewe.l Hi.iv 'TLA.'1 a highly lerii.cnted bi er. v. inch would not ke ep, but was continently dvunic at, an cm rlv aire. Mr. Lrcher tlioio'.i'-'hly revolutionized the hie.v ery, formed roufwe stor? collar i and intro duced the tlowlv fermented lac r beer, vv hi. h oon prow into cnininous popularity. l"ir'" tbe tirst -ar ot the roin ot Mr. ljr,'lr ' quantity made at Sthwocli.it amounted to J i',.).,7 gaitithe year I860 the brewery became totally lnaleuuate to the supply leipiired; the premiv b cre ojtlcuded, and inucliinery mtrodiieed in toad of manual labor, roou xlt-r tlin -Mr. Dreher purcha-c.l domain near Muz, Uinou for its t-TO fill oi hep-. He laid JHlt i n e.rrn ive hop planta iou, and al.-o buil a bivwery there nccordmL' to the modem );tim. 1" 18C2 he purehiued the landed property oi JJ.ein bruch. near Pf .-tb, an I ei. ct. d a (-tore hr-'wery, answering all lliej modern iIciihumIs. Hi'liJJ, accordingly three larce hreui lies. The fchwechnt brewery is the arv,a. ou the Continent. Including malt floor-, it ociMive.-nin area oi twenty-one and one thud acre, l o'ir tccn aud a ouurtrmero are covered ith vaults. The daily coupumptiuii of malt, made m the winter, is 5U butdieK riquiriiitr lloori ot A and one third acres ol area, and a ston-too ti for 18.000 bushels ol raw hurley, aud inacfl.ines for storing tiO.OOO bmhel-s of mult. Machinery ia employed to 'convoy the dry malt to the brunors and cracker', and thence to the iMillitiR-hou'o, in which latter arc six cop per pann, the lurirost holding OTH) pallon.i. Uur'mr tlie working mouths the make amounts to 47.34H pallons ot beer daily. The fermenting rooms hold 12-lG vats, holding Oot,773 sallons. In the subterranean cellar, which together occupy an area of three and three-quarter acre?, there are 4ul7 barrels or tun-, holding from 600 to 2600 pillions each, or 5,100, 80;i gal lons of beer in all. At the Hide ot the collar', and in immediate connection with them, there are ice-pits ot more tlvin two acres area, in which 40,000 ton of ice can be stowed away. Ia tbe works are employed throe fixed and one portable Hteam-ensruio, and one hydraulic eDfrine tocether, eisrbty-bone Dower. They em ploy 360 brewers and "brewers' Awtauis, and 260 draymen aud laborers. Rails run throuih the whole establishment, and are connected with tbe railroad. The stables contain 72 horefl and 240 dray-oxen. l'rom the 1st of January, 1HG6, to 1st of January, 1HH7, r,,'M'),MH pallons were produced, yieMni.' a revenue to the (Joverument from tUid sinirlo brewery of nearly $488,000. In the Saaz brewery, built by Mr. Dretn r ac cording to ibe new system in the year 1hi;i, tho working ia not condued to the wlnt-r months, but continues the whole year round; only the summer months are devoted to the brewiug of tapping beer (Schunk-beer), a beer peculiar to Bohemia, while the winter months are devoted to brewing laper-beer. To etloct the summer blowing, without injury to the quality ol the beer, very effective cooling apparatu is omplojed. The tormenting cellars are t.o abundamly supplied with ica that the temperature in thein d e- not exceed forty-three to tilt v dearec? of Fahiculieit, even in tlie hot- t't summer mouths and in 'die store cellars the tempi rature is constantly kept to abo.it th'.ily-six devices Fahrenheit. The prie for beer at tho PaiH Kxhibitiou was gained by tho Scnvsechat brewery. Tho throe brewrie? named yield a yearly in come to the (Joverumeut of G2S,8j5. IflE MUNK.Tl BItK A'KKXKS. The-e htatiHticB of the great Austrian brew eries cimuot be mulched ou tlie Continent: but Munich is better known as a brewing region than Vienna. The breweries of Munich are freely thrown open to young brewers, and thirty cais since Dr. Kaiser, Technological Professor In the University of Munich, e-tablinhed a course of scientific lectures on tha subject, which have been attended by more than a thou eaudyoung men. One of the famous Bavarian breweries in Munich has given practical instruc tion to more than three hundred of these pupils. The productiou of beer has been doubled in Havana In thirty years, and at the sime lime tbe number of breweries has di'iilnished; machinery has to a great extent replace I baud labor, and this has led to the iormation of very extensive establishments. THE KINO OF BAVARIA A DUEWK'l. In Munich there arc eixteen breweries in ope ration, two of which are worked for account of the King of Bavaria, thirteen belong to private individuals, and one to a. monastery. Nurem ler? has twenty-four, and Augsburg seventy-one. In point of quantity ot beer Munich outstrips all her competitors. BEKR AMD WINE. ' While the manufacture and consumption of hecr is rapidly increasing, wine is as quickly decreasing. Twenty year ago there were in Lower Austria 80,000 yochs or 120,000 acres of vineyards under cultivation, which produced annually 2,000,000 eimers, or 30,000,000 galloas of wine. There are now only 00,000 yocbs of ytiieyardJ, producing 1,04G,0U0 eimers or 16,000, 000 gallons. During tbe same time the manufacture of beer bus increased lrom 1,400, OiiO eimers, or 21,000,100 gallons, to 2,900,000 eimers, or 43,000,000 gallons, being more than double. This last quantity was brewed in 1805, aud by the former years' rate of growth it may safely be calculated that the consumption now amounts to 62.000,000 gallons. There are at present 114 breweries at work, employing 1600 workmen, and have 30 steam eniMncs of 760 horse power. Fach workman produces 2000 eimers, or 30,000 gallons of beer yearly. Tho workmen's wanes are 1 to li florins per day i68 to 75 cent?), with board aud lodging. A Flowery Auctioneer. There is an auctioneer in the north of England whose announcements rival those of the famous Bobbins, who talked of "the litter of the rose leaves and tbe noise of the nihtiu-'ales.'1 This man is named Donkin. and he oarrte- nn i,tu business at Newcastle -but he does cot sell bv auctlOD. Ou tbe contrary : "Hy virtue of a romoilsslon wlihiii ennfrrs nnon hm the high rlvllKol xercMn J in " ctl?ns ol Uie Hfc-rioullnral Imiin.r, witl,,,, ,j"(, o lull ol ploasuut memories and NorU,uiiibrliu assuull tlouu" he will "dispose of thirty-six West Highland bullocks, two short-horn heifers, and tiity fu beep." Nor is he ashamed of his climax. He dilates upon it poetically : "IlepelltioriH," he uys, "upon tlie exiiuUlm tUvor Of tne teel ol ih Kyloe o, lu all thn rlchuMts ol n lull maiurltr, wouhl he uu uiiiittrdunulilu tauioloiy In tlie eur of thefuniily huteliur, whose hibII tsmHu lug poem upon Hie Klorlfs ol' uliluriiittuic. repusin." Nor does bo end here. He gives his reasons for indulging in iheso llights of laucy: "A dry ratulrifiio hnre uilulit havwdone; but to hob wltboul emotion uud an uxclauiuiluo of Hurprlsna Kleciloo lrom Hie nalive lierils of Hie sliutlis of Am vie lieliihleiilon by Hie eleKnee of llilr mijestlu loiui mul MgMy pollsl'K l c.iiiUlilnu. would doimn uul as 'dull as Uie fal weed lliut rots ou I.uliie 1 wimrt' " t rifoTLAKD. The foor hundred ami twelve Church of England congregations in Sootlan I gave (700,(KMJ last year for charitable purposes. THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, f no fit a of autiiop': '-cZIIP. .mthorsiilp is, nowaday? a nortrt;e ot profit when purMied lndostnousl by those who thoroughly understand it. Charles Dickons bus probably received a half million for bis works, and his income is about seventy thousand dol lars per venr. But he is a perfect man of busi ness, owns all his books, and has them niBim pictured lor himse f. although he fells them throinih Chapman ,t Hull, to whom ho allows a I ercentage. Mrs. Stowe, for "Uucle Tom," netted a small fortune. The en:oluii.ei't.s frf Cooper, Irving, and men ot like rank, were considerable; even sylvanus i.'obb, Jr., uud M'f. (jouthwortb have accumu lated foitniies; aiiiHlio itn'.bors' percentage from the pale of some ot n r popular (Chool baoks have ti. e air ol labl '. Noali Wdwter lived for l he i rep.tiT part oi li'otime upon the prod's ol his s -ellinfr-bonV. The nuns obtained by some i I the French n'lthors for siii'rle works tire -till more s'hiII.til'. Victor lingo w is paid fhO.tidi) for "Li s M(ra)l''s,'. and frt()0(j for the eopyriuht of n inelo poem; while the "Notre i) line de Pari-'' lu-ouuht him $40,000, and hi- oilier works slmilaiiy larce sum-. lie Is said to have ietuse. if lOO.OOO " l r the copy right ol his lust bock Yi t he hacked about hit hist woik a long time bciore he found a pnrchaFor at three hundred francs. f.'eorges Sand realized ten thousand dollars on each ol her seveiity-iive volumes ot novels, and about it-so.OOO additional on her plays. There is litilo doubt that Alexandre lbimns, the elder, ha- nmde nearly a million of dollars, and spcit it, Mies Brandon is rapidly acquiring a for tune. Sardou, the author of f. i Famine lie tioifcnii plav produced in English, in New Y oik, under ti e ti le of the Fast Fa'iiiu lias received lor it, io u the Parisian and provincial theaties, abo.i MO.IMM). l'aul Foval, another jihy right. ee( ivud lor La Jiosit, played here under the name of T'ie Jtuke's Moilo, S24,i'i(i; aud lor l.a .Fi.s lu J)iiUe, $.22,000. litid. s this. h;s annual income from tlie copy wngli'i ot his novels averages $12,000. Ponsard receive I 551 2,000 in advance lor his la.st pU'CC. Lam ariine lias leeeivcd and spent a for tune, and com plains now of poverty, nor. being probably worth S50,0!i0 a pitnblc cii-e of di-sti-tulioii. "Ho Eugene .Sue received 750,000 francs tor his ' Mj-teiies of Pans,'' uearly as much lor the "Wi'iiderirg Jew," and retili.ed u large for tur.e from his various works, and spent it as French authors generally d). Scribe, the drnmiitioi, lett a fortuno ol $300,000. But there is a dark side to tne picture. The miserable life of lavage, anil the equally mise rable lite of Poo, were duo, perhaps, mainly to the lack of moral principle in the men; but thoie are instances even in modern days of tho pcantiucts of reward of modern authors. Al phonc Kiut wrote his tirt novel, popjlar in Fiance even yet, and sold it to a publisher for twelve hundred trancs ($240), and took promis Kiry notes lor the amount. The notes were never paid, and the costs of protest, amounting to as much more, tell on poor Karr. Another rrench writer of reputation, Sandeau, received for novels six hundred franc-, one halt iu waters. Heranger, troin whose works his pub lishers netted a halt million of francs, received an nnnuity of less than a hundred and sixty dollais. However, Beranger had few wauls, and was so content that, it was with diflioulty his publishers could yet him to take tbe money when tbey raised hi- anniml pea-don to three thousand traucj. The elder ati'hors suffered more than tho oinigcr. Thus Spenser was always in want; Corie ille hud an old age of misery; fas o had to borrow tjnall amounts of silver at one tin.e to procure tood; Camoens, the great Portuguese poet, died "in an hospital, without having a sheet or shroud to cover him." Aldrovandus also died in a hospital; Ocklcy, the author of n famous "History of the Saracens," passed a irroat part ot his lite in a debtor's prison; Vaudel, the must illustrious poet of Hol land, died in poverty; Cervantes was miserably poor; X j binder sold a manuscript work lor h dinner; the fate of (.'liaiter'.on is universally known; and Vuneola, before lie closet u lilo of wietcliediii'ss, lett bis dead body to I tie surgeons for the benefit ol hi- creditor-. THE AMEER TRADE. The trade In ambi r is becoming more exten sive every year tit Menel. The diar'unis in the Ramliind, tlie district between Konibeig and the Baltic, recently yielded live thousand three hundred rounds ol amber in one year. Amber is louud on the seacoast of EaMeru Prussia aud on the t holes aad at the bottom ot tlie Fresh and Curish Halls. It ii II he I for in the surf with nets, or dug up out of tho i-andd, but the Hiei-t suecesslul met bud is to dredge tor It st the bottom d tbe water. Au hiumsh paper hovs : "In former times amber was only procured by pirkiug it upon the seushoie, but it had since tieen discovered that large amber fields exist from six'een to thirty lcet below the aiirface ot the sea, in a tertiary stratum. As, however, it i- impossible to make arnb.T pits without re moving the saud hillocks ou the coast, a large tract of laud, by this practice, has becu deprived ot its natural barrier against the inroads of tbe sea, and the sea border has thus beeu exposed to the dangers of Hoods and drifting sands. It is suepecUd that when the leases uie leuewed tne (iovernmcnt should make some anange nieLts for preventing tho amber districts from beicg exposed to such dangers; indeed, it ap pears lhat the diggings could be earned on more eflictuully by a bystem of mines, which would obviate the necessity of removing the hillocks on the roast. ' The diggings up to 18G2 had yielded very fair profits, but by 'tho ysteln ol dredging a Memel firm in one year obtained 17,500 pounds of amber, at a cost of about 60,0('O Prussian dollars.- In 1SG3 the quantity collected by this method was nearly twice as large; in 18U5 more dredging machines were iu operation, ami 53,000 pounds of amber were raised. Iu 18G0 the quantity had Increased to 73,000 pounds. At present about 14 machines and about 400 work men are employed in dredging, who work day and night if tbe Half is not frozen up. The Memel firm pays about 4000 Prussian dollars per annum to Covernmont in reut, and the current expenses are said to amount to 180,000 Prussian dollars a yt ar. Similar works ore about to be established iu the Flesh Half, near the port of Pillau. "The quautity of amber thrown up by the sea of late years has been inconsiderable; the exact amount, however, oanr.ot be ascertained, as the fishermen who collect this mineral sell it pri vately, in smull parcel-'. Mr. Ward, her Majesty's vice-consul at ALmcl, reports that amber now constitutes an important article of trade at this poit and also at Dantsic. It is exported to Aus tria, Turkey, and Franco, and after many fruit less attempts to introduce it as au article of trade with this country, orders were received in 1HG6 to ship amber to England, whence it is re exjoitcd to the Fast Iudies, Alrica, and China. It appeals that considerable quantities are now sent to England, but, unfortunately, no official accounts of the quantities are ou reoord at Memel. The amber found at lhat port is ol ex cellent quality, and is considered to be particu laily adapted for pipe mouth-pieces. The prices vary according to the size and quality of tbe piece, from five silver groncben to $s0 per pound. Tbe largest piece ever found in tbe Height orhood of Memel weighed about ttvo poutid-, and was valued at about four hundred Priiti i n dollars" Tb Poliou Panic In Italy. Cases of poison panic, with Its terrible conse quences, are continuully reported in Italy. A b ar: ul tragedy has juet been enacted lu the neigh boi hood of Cerace, in Calabria. A mob oltacked the house ot the Captain ol the Na tional (iuard, and then broke lr.to the barracks ol the carbineers. On being told to disperse, ?! r,f,,l!"',l,K to do so, a terrible struggle uisued bet w een tbe soldiers aud tho population, t,, ''"f. ""Ives, cutlasbes. hatchets, anylhtnj r .,n V,,0111 or,'u u,,1 occasions: The nineer ni L. N,,tl"l Cuard and another wo ,d?d t ! i','"","fv w, re . Bnd others ni?hlf ftTArV,? 'f"1 tu small force were - " . : " Vu lnn uouse of the unfor tunate ( aptam, and binned tbe wL.'L.. , i,. :ned the tharruf.La r.f I liu carbineers. &t, t; tc of use siunee arrived when it was too THE LST L ITEflAHY LARCENY IN ENGLAND. i The old custom still appears to obtain anion a certain class of English writers of ridiculing French literature in public, and stealing lrom it in Kccret. Another llaennt instance if thin sou of larceny has just' been exposed by tho Fall Hail Unicitr. It seems Miis Braddon, editor of Li igracia, ennped a Mr. Baineton White to write an "original novti" for the pages of that magazine, and Mr, White lulfilled his engagement apparently y the production of a tale called ,,Clrce1" which was duly printed In Jloiratia as r.u "original novel," and then, after the prevailing fa-hiau, reprinted in book fortii hy a London publi-hing house. Hero, however, its successful career of imposture Is suddenly checked by a copy falling into the, hands of a Fall Mali clitic, who, being well up 111 his French theatre, immediately discivcr that the "Circe" of Mr. Habingtou White is uothing more than a Iree translation and adaptation to tbe Fucl'sh novel s'jlo of Octave Feuillct's piny of Doliia, published iu 11:1, but never artd nor intended loi the stage. The none of Dalt'a is laid in Naples, that of "Circe" in London: the hero of the f irmer is a compo'er, that ol iho latter au ar'.nd; the minor situations and characters are somewhat diilerent in the two works, and in tho catastrophe there is tome variation. B it, says the Fall Mu l critic: "It would bo the height of credulity to imagine lhat tho resemblance between these two books is merely a matter of accident, or to be attributed, in Mr. Pud's words, to 'two people happening to lilt noon the samethonsbt,' and M. Feuillet making tirst use of it." And the ruthlest demolisher of Mr. Babington White's name and fame proceeds to show by ex tracts from each work, that the similarity in some instances extends even to identity both of thouL'ht and diction, or, in other words, that Mr. White has conscientiously (?) translated M. rctiiiiot. And the article concludes with th'i following extinguisher: "The crjitig ullonse of the book, ho wever, is its absolute dishonesty. Its adapter is simply attempting to palm oil upon the English public as an original novel a baok stolen from the French, altered in some respects, lengthened and much maltreated altogether, but with its origin siill clearly to be traced by those who will trouble themselves to examine into the matter. We claim a right to protest against a proceeding io fraudulent. Iu all ca'cs of adap tationlet it be a play lrom a play, as Ti.e htrtets of London from Lea Fauvres des Farh; or a play from a novel, as Still Waters Run Devp irom -i,e i. enure;' or a uovpi lrom a novel, as 'The Doctor's Wife' from 'Madame Bovary,' and 'Circe' from 'Dalila' it is the merest justice that the obligation to the foreign and origiual author should be publicly acknowledged aud lorinally placed upon lecont." Thee are sentiments which ev:ry honest w liter, here as well as abroad, will echo. A Little Bill of Ki panics. A letter writer in Hpain has exhumed from the old records a little bill of war expenses, rendered by the .Spanish General (Jouzales ile Cordova to King Ferdinand, after the famous battle of CeriguoU. The writer says: "The 'Ureal Captain' was perhaps not much of a bookkeeper, and thought tbe kingdom he had just gained for His sovereign oueht to make up frr any slight inaccuracies in his 'entries.' Besides, he, like (Jeneral Narvacz, was au Anda lusian, and the Andalusians are regarded as the Unseens ol Spain. Accordingly, twenty-four hours afterwards, ho presented the King with the following little bill, which is a singular con trast to the modest account of his own personal expenditure handed in by George Washington to the young Congi ess of the United States of America, after the conclusion of the struggle for independence, successfully maintained by the British Colonic agaimt George III. Tue famous 'Cuentas del Gran Captain1 is much cele brated in .Spain, and mav be protitably stud.ed at the present moment. It runs as follows: ''Two tiunilr. d thnuiod havaii liiiiiffrtMl aad tlilrty- six (lueiilH Ktvcn to Irlurs, nuns, hiiU h r meu Ii"uni(i, that ibty mlabt pruy for Uie huucush of tuu Hpuuiali arms. ' One hundred million ducats spent on pickaxe, spiuU s and In es. "Ten thousand ducats for pi-rfuinud litovfs, to pre serve tlie tumps liuiu had odors iirlslni; from the multitudes o' lliu er omy ten duud udoii I'iu lield. "One liuDlr'd and seventy thousand ducatn lor ro neu lng chuieli bells drs r iyid in rniitliin ix ain. "Fifty lliou-iind duents for brandy distributed to the oney on the duy ol battle ' Oi e million dufiitx for tlmnksijlvlni? masses. "Th' ee uiiIIImiin ducats lor ihusmoh lor the dad. ' h I u f . t hundred tliuiiHuiid duuaiH lurspies. "Aeil, liis'iv.onehiiuiired million du 'uis in eompen KBUon for uiy piilii nee In listening lo a cheseimrintt king, who (iiMiixud.s rci:nunis Iruui u liuiu who bail p.eseiileu him with a kin.iloni." ConctralDg Scliool Chlhlreu'a Kye. A curious work has been publi-hed at Breslau lately by a Dr. Hermann Cohn. giving the result ol an examination of the eyes of ten thousand and eix'y school children. The proportion of shortsighted childreu was 171 per cent., or sev enteen hundred and thirty among ten thousand und sixty. Noviliaee children were louud to be tliortsighted until they had been some time at school at least half a year. Tnere were in pioportion four times as many shortsighted children in the town (Bieslau) as in the coun try, and shortsightedness increased generally witb the demands made upon the children. Dr. Ctdin attributes the evil iu a great measure to the had construction of school benches, which force tbe children to read with their books close beiore their eyes, and with their heads held dow o warns. An Emperor's Godbon in Tuodble. The other morning a prisoner attired in the height of fashion was placed at the bar of the Correc tional Police of Brnsaels. This young man, who held Lis head erect, although under a triple charge of swindling, of illegally wearing decorations, and of bearing a false name, was the eon of the poet Casimir Delavigne, godson of Napoleon. FOR SALE. FOB. SALE THE FOIK-STOR? DWELL ley House, No. ltios LOCUST Street, handsomely furnished, und replete with every oonvenlcuce. The furniture can be sold with the house. Apply nn the promises. 10 3 tot TO RENT. f TO ItENT-ELEGAKT COUNTRY SKAT, .Liiktiiindhonx'ly furnished, lo rent for two veura and B-iiali, lrom .November I, I.S87, In Moiilnone'ry eounty, shot t dislitnee In m Jenkintowu stution.ou the North 1 eoiinylvuiiitt lullroud. Apply to C. II. & JC. 1 Ml'IBHEin. JO a lot No. iioi H. BIXTlI (Street. o FFICES TO LET IN SECOND HTOHY bliVlCNTTl htteet, ubovo Cliesnut, cuAHU';s Kiiuii'-', 10 5.it No. BH. hhTVKN rilHtrtet. QAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. Tlie Fidelity luauranca, Trust and Safe Dt-poklt Company, tor the Safe Keeping sf Bonds, 8tockM,and Other Valuable. CAPITAL $500,000 lmikCTOUH. . . N. B. BHOWNK KUWART) W. U' AKK. ALKXANDKll HKNUY, - I'A i.hWKI.I,. t LAhJ- M'K 11. C'LAHK, JtiMN WKI.HH, J. U1LI.1NUII AM KKl.l. HKNUY I). UIUrtON, LJ A U f b M KI A f ' A f I. J T IT tl Oftice In the 1-Ire-proof liulldiiiic of lh pidMdelphla Niiliorial Hunk, I'll KSN V I' htrt-ei. ubove Koiirlji. This t'ompHiiy rtri lvi-s on di-poslt. and "J'V Tt.h.H ink KAKK KKKI'INU Ox' VALTJAULKB upon Ibe lollowihK ruteo a yeur, vl&: . Coupon Hoods ' l,pr Krglslered HundH and riecurlltos .50 cents per iw (lofd t'oln or Hulllon . pi. per si HllviT t olo or Jiullion , fipr i'so Uold or Silver Plate it ,!ori,5l. I'unh lloies oraumll tin boxes ol llnukerti, Mroao, ('pimli!.lii, etc., contents unknown U the Uouipiuy, and llublllty limited, i" ayeur. , ,, 1 he Coin puny oilers for HKNT (renter exolusiveiy holding the key) HAFM lNhlUKl IM VAUI-lSiil tM. (iiu, m, w, and 7.ri a ear, according K ua locution. , I ouiions nd Interest Collected lor one per cent. Interna allowed on Money iJeposlta. ThU ( imipkiiy Is authorised to receive aad execute Trust, of every deoorlptlon. . . 12Himwfrn n. B. BKOWNK. PrasMent, Umm it J'AlTEaeON.becreUj'y aad Treasurer. I8b7. J. F. & E. 3STO. 0O4 OHESNUT STB3SIST, HATE NO TV OPOFD T1IFIH Fall Importations of New Carpeting'S. J. F. ? E. B. ORRIS, " 1STO. 004 CHESNUT STREET, 500 PIECES J. CROSSLEY & SONS' PATBNT TAPESTRY CARPETS. J. F. & E. B. ORWE, NO. 0O4 CHESNUT STREET, SCO PIECES ROYAL WILTON CARPETS. J. F. & E. B. ORHE, NO. 0O4 CHESNUT STREET, NOVELTIES IK FRENCH CHENILLE CARPETS. J. F. & E. B. ORWE, NO. 904 CHESNUT STREET, 500 Pieces New Styles English Brussels Carpets. J. F. & E. B. ORR3E, NO. 904 CHESNUT STREET, 250 Pieces Yard and a half Wide Velvet Carpets. J. F. & E. B. ORTJE, NO. 904 CHESNUT STREET, ROYAL WILTON CARPETS, . BRUSSELS CAR PETS, For Stairs and Halls with Extra Borders. J. F. & E. B. ORNE, NO. 904 OHESNUT STREET, 50 SHEETS ENGLISH OIL CLOTHS. CARPETINGS. 519 CIIESIWT STREET. 519 FINE CARPETINGS AT Hl'.DUOKU I'RIUISS. WE WILl. SELL OUit AXMISS1EBN, BOTAL WILTONN, TtLVlTK, KKC1L1NII BBIINKF.LN, TAPEKTKY DUIJSNEU, THKEE-PLYI, HVPEB INOBAINM, BBl'ftKELN AND DAMAN K HALL AND STAIR CARPETS, WITH EXTRA BORDKBD, ENGLISH OIL CLOTHS, IN SUOKT, EVERY UF.N4RIPTION OF DKSIB.IH1.1J CARPETINGS, At Greatly Reduced Prices, With a view to BELLING Ofc'K OUH KNT1KK BTOCK.AT OVll BETAIL WAlltttOOMH. No. 519 CHESNUT Street, Prior to Jiemoval on iiral ot Jauunry uext. McCALLUM, CREASE. & SLOAN, 101 liithslmrp NO. SHI HIMNITT NT. p R A N G'S AB1EUIOAN CIIUOMOS IN IMITATION Of- Oil. 1A I MTIN4.I9. PlibllHhcd by L. Pit A NO & CO., Boston. Bold In nil Picture (Stores, tenU Kir Catalog uo. loltutlimm QHAMPION CLOTHES-WRINGERS KKUUCIil) TO SS 50. GRIFFITH & PACE, 10 NO. 00 AUCII NTOKKT. OCTOBER 8, 1867. 33. ORFE, 1867. CARPETINGS. QARPETINC8. WHOLESALE AMD RETAIL. LJB2EI3 0BI Ac 8 II A Wj NO. 910 AUCII 8TBEET, BETWEEN NINTH AND TENTH STREETS. W r now opening full and com. plct tikortmtut, both ITorcIgn aud IJo mctlc,for Fall Bale. 8 27 3mrp 832 CAKPETIAGS. 832 ARCH STREET. FALL STOCK NOW OPEN AT TUB AKOII UTltKKT CARPET WAREHOUSE JOSEPH BLACKWOOD, HO. 838 AIIC'II NTBEET, 9 10 2m Two doors below Ninth, South Side. CLOAKS. CURWEN STODDART & BROTHER, NON.430,43aANDI31ir.SKl'OND HTBEET, ANNOUNCE THEIR OPENING OF Autumn and Winter Cloaks t'lllLDBEN'N N it UN, AND 107 31 lADIKV UltlSfKS, ON WEB.MBIPAT, OCTOIIEB 0, 1H07. CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS. Every one lu lulklug About the Cloaks ut IV KNS. No. n S. NINTH Hlreot. c CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS. i-VLiy new uiyif at IVKNS'. No. 23 B. NINTH Klreet. CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS, CLOAKS. VV liuuitime burgaliia ut IVENS', 9 21 Im No. 2.1 K NINTH Htretst. QEKTLE MEN'S FURNISHING GOOD?. TflHVTNK Nil HIT EnrOBIDtl, iNus. 1 and 3 North SIXTH Street. JOHN O. ARMS ON, Importer, Slanufaiturer, and Dealer In Every Description of UKSTLEUEN 'H rVBNIMIIINU IHHtlM, Would luvlle lnnpectlon to till FINE STOCK O 0001H, tultable lor the aoson, ulllnu off at moderate prlcva. special attention given to the manaraetara ol FINE bHIKTb AND OOIXARH. Warttiuted to gve th,fctlon. ( rp JHIJ1RY- trimmings, etc BONNET OPENING, WOOD & GARY, No. 725 CHESNUT STREET, vvim.oii:n FALL BONNETS, a TIll'BSDAV, 0 T4nKlt a. SlOlmrp QLOTH HOUSE. SNODGRASS & CO., NO.' 31 KOI'TII KECUBII) NTH K RT, COMPLETE fcTOCK OF ClcthSjCoatings, and Cassinicres, FOB 1AU1EN, (JEXTLKniN fl AND IIOTM WEAK. NPKCIAI. ATT1.NTION (JlVCN TO I.AI1II.K I'MlAKINtlH AND NA4KINUK HIIOLDS'tLF, AND HKTAII,, lu I Imrp QONNET OPENING, WEDNESDAY, October 9. CHAS. A. SCHOLLER,". No. 724 ARCH STREET, 107 2t riULADKI.PUIA, t MRS. R. DILLON, Has all the novelties In FALL MILLINERY, for Ladles, MIbbcb, md Children. Also, Crftpen, bilks, Rlbbooa, Velvet, Flower, Feathers, Framen, etc. Milliner topplled. sift BONNET OPENING, WEDNESDAY, October 2. E. P. GILL & CO., WO. 780 IHi n NTBRKT. 10 2 24t jrx YOUNtJ LADIr.rt' AND CHILI) KEN'f frira,MlLLlNKRV OPKNlNd. WKu.N KSDY. Oo obcr'J. IHi7. H1U-. NICHOLS', No. mm !! KIOHTH hlreet. below chesuuu 107 Ul Hoop skirts. 628. VM. T. HOPKINS, 028, MANUFACTURER OF FIRST QUALI TV: HOOP SKIRTS, Ft)R THE TRACK AND AT RETAI U NO. 028 AIM II NTBEET, ItKLtMV NtV VIINTII, PIIlLADtXmilA. Also dealer In full lines of lo-priced JSew Vork and I'.'uMiern made hklru. All the new ami dettlmble HtyloHandslr.es ot Lidltyi'. MiHheB', and Children's llocp-Nklrtx ouiiHlantly on. huud and made to order, embracing the laricmt and. mimt varied aiviorlmeiitlu thin niurkeL at very mode rote prices very .ady shonlil try "Our Own Make" of Hoop. Skirih. as they have no equal. Homuern, West'-rn. anu near Trade buyers vr 111 dull It lo their Interest lo en amine our tfoods. ( ataloguea of styles, sIwh, aud prices sent to any addresp. 17 3m CLOTHING. ROCKHILL & WILSON, CLOTHING HOUSE, Nos. 603 and 605 CHESNUT St FALL AND WINTKlt CLOTHING. We offer to tho public tho largest and best selected Stock of Ready-made Cloth nt In the City, for Men's and Boys' Wear. Also, an elegant assortment of Piece Coods, which wo will make to order for Men and Boys, at reasonable prices, and in the most approved styles. Always on hand afull assort ment of Fall and Winter Over coats and Businoss Coats, Coachmen's Coats, Hunting Coats, New Stylo Walking Coats, Pants and Vests, of all descriptions. Boys' Ready-made Clothing in great variety. ROCKHILL & WILSON, NON, 008 AND Otis lirNUr Nil UK 1ST 303m - PHILADELPHIA pKT THK BKHT-THE HOLY HIBLK-HARU V Jt Iiik's Kdlllons Family, Pulpit and Pocket liible In beautiful !alyle of Turkey Monuxio and antlune blndluKH. A new edition, arranged for photographic por'raiia of famine. WM. W. HAnniNCI, PuhllHhw, (No. S2d umifcNUT btrev tiWT Fuurtli
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