THE DAILY EVEISING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1867. SPIRIT OF TI1E PRESS. nvntAI. OFI5I05B OP THI LBaDWO JOtTBKaLB pro CBBBwnr topics com pilbd bvbbt PAT FOB THB KVKNINd TBLBOBAPH. Garibaldi and Roma. fVotn ym y. Y. Herald. a .nnJ time Garibaldi has attempted to VlTf Koine to Italy. A soond time he Las Ud. It i hard to kick against the prick. A defeated cause, however, mar be noblo; and It U safe to say that whatever men may think Of Garibaldi himself, nine-tenths of the intelli gence and common sense of mankind have de Oidod in favor of the cause which, worthily or unworthily, he represents. The cause of united Italy has again suffered defeat; hut defeat has resulted, not from the weakness of the oause itself, but from insufficient strength. It U the old, oil story might has prevailed against right. It is difficult to foresee what new phase the question is about to present. If it prove true that Napoleon, as our despatches inform us, has delivered his ultimatum to the Italian Government, requiring the soldiers of the Kinfj to evacuate the Papal territory before Thursday at noon, the Italian Government will find itself in most awkward cirnumstances. It will he a most bitter pill for Victor Emanuel to swallow. Swallow it, however, he must, or fight. These are the alternatives on which the immediatel future of this question de pends. To yield to Napoleon would disgust the Italian people; it might even ruin the dy nasty. Not to ;yield will bring down upon Italy the weight and strength of France; and whatever be the ultimate result, or whoever may take part in the (struggle, the immedi ate consequences will be disastrous to the kingdom. Alone, she is not a tnatoh for France; and even if, with foreign help, she were successful in the long run in expelling the invader, It could not oe until her towns and cities were demolished, her plains deluged with blood, her population wasted, and the progress of the country thrown backward tor some genera tions. There are other questions lying behind these alternatives, but we care not at present to enter upon them. It is quite possible that Napoleon may be holding some proposal in reserve, compliance with which would render the position of Italy less difficult. To the September Convention, which has been a curse from the first, all this misery is to be traced. We are willing to believe that its days are numbered, and it will be best for all parties if no such unholy compact is again entered into Th Cue of Jeff, Oavll. From the If. Y. Herald, We are assured from Washington that the case of Davis is to be once more deferred, and will not be called till May next; that the No vember term of the Court, before which he gave hail, will be permitted to go by, in order that he may come before Chief Justice Chase next year, and in order that another indict ment may be framed and so on. Fifty rea eons coma be given, no aouut, eacu more rldionlous than the other, and all tending to oonfirm the proverbial notion of the law's delay. It ia to le hoped that Congress will end all this pitiful trilling by declariug the national Will on the case of this distinguished offender, and recognizing that it is not a case for the OOurts. Nothing is clearer than that disputes between separate nationalities, as well as all questions arising oat of tUe collision of armed powers, must be determined Ih accordance witn those rules 01 national rigui mat we call the law of nations. And since events them selves pushed us from the position of regard ing the late war as an insurrection; since the Confederate States were belligerents, recognized by foreign powers and by ourselves; since they had so distinctly a separate national life that in our reconstruction we treat them as a oonquered country therefore, questions arising out of the collision of such a power with our own must necessarily be con sidered as in the sphere of the law that regulates the relation of sovereign and inde pendent States. To treat the case of the head of a government with which we waged four years' war as a case to be settled iu our do mestic courts, is to stultify ourselves beyond all example. The only pretext on whi-h the Court would f.ffetanrl in rv tha nnan fit IJ.ivM In in find ninl fix the laws of treason; but the dimensions of his acts went so far beyond that, that we broadly recognized they were of another char acter by armies and ambassadors. As for the faot of Lis attempt to subvert our Government, we do not need the finding of any twelve no bodies in Richmond to tell us of that. General Grant and his army were the jurors who found the facts of the case, and it is only left for Congress the treaty-making power the power having cognizance of war, and all the notations arising under it to determine what shall be done with our enemy, now that he is in our hands. For Congress to do this would be in accord ance with the precedents of history in accord ance with natural law and common sense. Let Congress, therefore, declare the will of the nation, which doubtless would be that the culprit would be sent out of the country; to atay out for some fixed period as five, ten, or, for that matter, fifty years. Such a decision would be satisfactory to the country; and Congressmen should be better employed in making n tuan in turning somersaults over the Constitution, so that, like Thad Stevens. they cannot tell from day to day whether they msiue or outsme that remarkable instru ment. Manufactures lu the Interior. From the N. Y. Ivioune. Before the Revolutionary War, many of the mwaie ana some oi tu higher classes imuii a. 3 . f . - raieu uom j-.urope to in Colonies. After our independence, they disdained to seek IiomeB among us, ana lor more than eighty years eur lminigraius nave teen laborers Recently, and particularly since the war, we have been receiving accessions of a different kind. To Penney! vania, and to various parts of the West, come German ministers, mer chants, ana eaucaiea miners; aua to our crape regions expert cultivators of the vine from France and the lfhiue. Besides these, gome of the Eastern States are receiving from Great Britain manufacturers who are destined to produce aa important results as any since Colonial davs. They have tirougnt capital and skilled labor, and they have built some of our most extensive and important manufactur ing establishments ; and so successful have thev been, that others are following their e i am rile. Few of our people are aware of this fact, but foreign Governments are, and they are alarmed, for they see not only that they are unable to crush our manufactures, but that some of their own people work against them by oasting their lot with us, the inducement being our stability and rapidly increasing wealth. There is no doubt that these educated, wealthy, and enterprising Europeans will give much that is valuable to our society; still, they cannot help being absorbed; for the power of digestion in Anglo-American institutions is as irresistible as it is wonderful. A people which adopts the settled -policy of buying articles of daily use from foreigners either will remain, or will become, barbarians. Civilization in nations is indicated by their drawing manufactures into their midst, and by tlieir emancipating themselves from foreign labor and skill. What is true of the traffic be tween nations is true also of the traffic between the different parts of a great nation. The freight and expenses on many articles taken from the Eastern States to the West exceed iu value the original cost. The first settlers ex change all the products of the soil they can spare for building materials, and to make home comfortable; and much of this trade is at such a sacrifice that it cannot be permanent. Therefore, so soon as possible, manufactures areata ted, that articles of prime necessity may be made near home. The trade with distant points following the settlement of a country is equally ruinous, for indebtedness, and, in time, more or less insolvency ensues; and to prevent this the manufacture of good requiring more capital and skill comes in. Thus we see in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois, manufactures have increased with each year's growth, and a great variety of ar ticles for daily use are now produced within their own borders. In those sections where the soil is best, and where mental activity, a3 a consequence, is greatest, more varied pro ductions succeed. At Elgin, the new style of American watches are made; at Joliet, a great variety of perfumery; and in Chicago, jewelry and a fine list of fancy articles. Money paid in liobton and New York for beef from Illinois has been invested, so soon as it could be spared, in building woollen factories, flax works, machine shops, and furnaces, which are laying the foundation for a market for beef at home. The progress of manufactures has been in proportion to growth, and to the lapse of time, and they correspond in order to successive geologio periods. The attempt of England to supply America with manufactured goods must fail. The dead weight attached to the transportation of goods, and of the coarse and heavy products which pay lor tnein, aione will urea it down; nor can their cheap labor, which brutalizes, and which is intended to brutalize us, save them; for it contains within itself every element of decay. 1 he whole scheme is an experiment; for never before has one civilized nation at tempted to manufacture for another civilized nation. The distance to which goods can be transported profitably, either from one country to another, or within the boundaries or either, is limited. The trade between Europe and America, to be healthful and permanent, must be in commodities produced by the help of natural advantages not common to both. If this law is respected, there will be fair profits. and the increasing population will make this trade enormous, iiut this is only on the con dition that the population of the two conti nents be more equally balanced; and Europe will receive great advantages from still sending us laborers and manufacturers. In the West, the child is born which will live to see cotton come direotly out of the Mis sissippi, ana wool directly from the farmer's barn, to be woven on looms made from the ores of Missouri and Lake Superior iron Simultaneously, the wearing apparel of people, with a reconstructed ambition, will be woven on looms run by streams pouring from the Cumberland Mountains into North Caro lina, Virginia, Georgia, and Tennessee. For the. good of a whole couutry, when developed, only particular goods should be landed on our shores to cross the waters of the Hudson and the Susquehanna, and the main traffio for New England should be, not with the West, but with the islands and countries reached by sea. Even now, articles worth many millions, which lormerly were produced in New England, are sent to the lower Mississippi, to the plains. and over the llocky Mountains from the work shops; the furnaces, and factories of the three great cities of the West. Nor is it Western, it is JNew England men who control this trade, ana who nave gone West to be near their cus tomers, the same as British manufacturers are crossing the ocean to be nearer theirs. When the natural advantages and the soil of the States of the Mississippi valley shall be de veloped equally with the State of New York, their population will be about as follows: Oh lo (1,000,000 Iowa 6,000,000 Michigan 4,000,000 Nebraska 0,( 00.00 ) Indiana 4.0OO.000 West Virginia. ..'.2.0 JO 000 i liinois ,imu,uou iveiiuicny ;i,ooo,oou V ltcousln 3,000,000 Arkansas 2 000,000 Minnesota 5,000,000! . M isHOUri 0,000,000 Total 02,000,000 Kansas 8,000,000! The great American desert is fading away. A magnificent country is about to be opened wu mnes west oi the mouth oi the l'latte. It is true that new methods of farming will be re quired, and among these will be irrigation, the boring or artesian wells, and the planting of forests. Knowledge of a practical character has so increased in our generation, that what were obstacles thirty years ago are not such to-day. In a collective sense our national per ceptions are so enlarged that men in common life quickly take into view small objects as well as remote ones having connection with each other, and, being possessed of ability to execute, they triumph where their forefathers despaired. Hitherto, wherever the red man and the buffalo lived, the white man has planted gardens and orchards, and bounded the horizon with fields of grains. The plains have as many natural advantages as Judea. once a populous and favored land. With the fertile soil and the unchanging climate of the interior, with the help or industry and mechanism, there is no reason why it should not present rural and village scenes as fair as any other tie world can show. Long after the commencement ot this century, the Grand Prairie of Illinois, now rich in farms and un equalled by any beneath the sun, was sup posed forever uninhabitable. To each generation is given a great difficulty to overcome. Far away in the glades and val leys of the mountains of the interior grass grows abundantly, and there herds oan graze this summer: there those varieties oi apples which bear bountifully in Sweden aud Russia will crow: and beneath the snowy roof, ani mals and men, with provision in store, will wait for the running of the torrents and for the springing of the grass again. On all maps this great interior is dwarfed. But from north to south, and from east to west, the distances are coumaraUe l tin. iliutannn from Paris to Moscow, and from the ruins of Carthage to the 1 entluud Firth. Of farmers to supply the inynaos or miners ami t.namnmHn with load: of tradesmen, and mechanics, and operatives in factories, run by coal or by water from the mountain?, the population between the Big Blue and the Sierra Neva las maybe estimated to reach one hundred millions. These are the things which our ohlldren shall see when our bodies are mouldering In the dust. For thousands of years our couutry has been reserved for the anal triumph of civilization. All that with lo muoh labor and blood, and with so many tears, has been pained, shall be Raved; and as an offering to the lovers of oivil and religions liberty who perished at the stake, on the gibbet, ami lieneath the axe of the executioner, immeasu rably more. With this view of the glories towards which we are marching, how incon ceivably paltry ia the soheme of the free traders, who at the outset of our progress. and in the bloom of our youth, would bind us hand and foot to the manufacturing inte- lests of the little island of Great Britain. Tlifl Hudinn'i Day Company Monopoly. From the N. Y. Time. It is now some four or five years since the Hudson's Bay Company, forecasting the cer tainty of the early termination of its territorial swav in the Northwest, proceeded to reor ganize itself, with the view, first, of increasing the number of its stockholders, and thereby enlarging its influence for the purpose of sell ing out to good advantage. It issned stock iu 18GI3 to the amount of two millions sterling, which was readily taken up. The late Mr. Ellice was, at the time, the con trolling authority in the concern, as he had been for forty years previously. He saw very clearly that the substitution of a regularly- organized Government in British Columbia, for the Company's patriarchal system, must shortly apply to the whole of the Northwest territory; and he concluded that, as a prepara tory step, he could dispose to good advantage of a considerable portion of his iuterest, and allow the transfer to be made by a company in which he should not have so large a stake. The change was made with an adroitness characteristic of the man. The reorganized Company in its prospectus proposed to esta blish a plan of colonization along the Southern boundary line, wherever there was laud to at tract settlers. The directors proclaimed their utmost readiness to surrender to cultivation their hunting-grounds as soon as they should be required, and to prepare the way for immi gration as fast and on as liberal a scale as their means would afford, resigning their pro prietory rights upon receiving reasonable compensation whenever the British Parlia ment should see fit to organize a colony within the territory. The Company's promises have not been redeemed. The only show they have made of attracting settlement has been simply to order surveys for the opening up of lines of telegraphic communication. And that work has proceeded so slowly that the residents of the Red River country despair of ever seeing it completed under the Company's direction The Fparse population in the valley of the Sat katrhewau are dissatisfied, and the move ment in Vancouver's Island, looking to an nexation to the United States, has giveu them nerve to represent their grievances as in tolerable. A chance in their political relations 13 re garded by nearly all the responsible residents as an absolute necessity of their existence. The newly confederated provinces have for the time enough on hand, without attempting to take the northwest or the Pacific colonies in charge. The purchase of the former would involve an outlay of at least $10,000,000 before they could even set up a feasible claim to a title. A3 much more would be needed to open up communication with the northwest colony And even then, the question of permanent possession would not be solved. 'I he settle ments in Northern Minnesota are o-lvauuing so rapidly towards the hich lattitudes that the Hudson's Bay Company's subjects find all their material interests lie iu the direction of that prowpuronH Htute; and tlioy would vote to morrow, had tuey the rignt oi voting, lor an nexation to the United btates. Two Notable Bank Failures. From the If, Y. 2me. The simultaneous failure of two British anking institutions the "Royal" of Liver pool and the "Commercial" of Canada illus trate anew the perfect recklessness of the management which characterizes banks which have had an established repute for many years. The persons intrusted with the entire management of the "Commercial" of recent years, owned among the whole of them less than two per cent, of the whole stock, amount ing to four millions. They were mainly what might be called financial "shysters," aud held their position either as creatures and members of the local Government, as publio or private trustees, or as the tools of railway speculators and contractors, who desired to use the bank funds for purposes alien to legitimate bank busineFS. The speculators include the most notonously corrupt men in the province originally the agents and pensioners of Messrs. 1 etc- & jack son, of London the latter in turn having become their dupes and victims. The vast majority of the stockholders of the "Commer cial," it turns out from the published list, are either widows and minors, or trustees for the commutation clergy funds of the English and Scotch Colonial Churches. The latter are not likely to realize five per cent, on the invest ment. The nominal sums held as stock by the railway operators were all invested with the view of getting control of the bank manage ment: the proxies of five-sixths of the sub scribers having got into their hands through the double influence of politicians and "con trading capitalists." So far as appears now, there is no worse bank failure considering the amount of its capital on record. The "Western," of Sjot laud, had a much larger capital when it went by the board six or seven years ago. But its stockholders were of a class that could better afford to loee their investment than the hun dreds of poor people who have trusted to the rogues that controlled this provincial concern The failure in this case was doubtless caused, in a great measure, by the rapacity of the new Government banking concern which, like the old Bank of Upper Canada ami the Commer cial Hank, is last being turned into a mere Government machine, to be used, just as the others were, iu the interest of a cliuue of rail way men and politicians. The Royal Bank of Liverpool was a sound aud healthy institution until it took up the business of making special advanoes after the manner of Overend, Gurney & Co.'s Bank, The "Royal" had, until within a year ago, as good a repute for doing a safe and legitiniite business as any bank In tut United Kingdom It began Brat to dabble in the shipping busi ness; taking mortgages instead of oommeraial paper, ana getting deeper and deeper into this line until, as the London iMily News informs us, it came to own 40,000 tons in ships. It then went by a natural and easy grade from shipping to make advances upon speculative Euruhases of cotton. The descent was, por aps, even more rapid than the fuilures we have noted. We might look nearer homo, doubtless, for otner serious examples in speculative bank ing. But most of our banks are worked on so much smaller a scale, that they do not invite the name notice m these gigautlo failures when a collapse takes place. The evil In England and the Provinces la the same as here. Stockholders who have no special schemes to work through the bank are too generally indifferent to the charaoter of the investment when first presented to them, and they are altogether neglectful in a majority of instances of seeing to the eleotion of an honest and capable directory. The failures might be expected to be ten times more numerous than they are, it we only look at the perfect uncon cern with whioh trusts are deposited in the hands of bankers and brokers, whose honesty is too onen gauged by tiielr success in specu lation, and by that alone. We do not sup pose, however, that the state of things will be changed by attempting to lecture upon it. 1 eople will do with their money what they please. The great misery comes when the pioperty of irresponsible persons minors, wards, and others is recklessly sacrificed to serve the purposes of designing, selfish, and dishonest men, who seek to serve as directors or trustees. Tha New Chinese Rebellion. From the N. I'. World. The great rebellion of the Taepings in China was scotched, not Killed, at iNauking, the ancient capital, two years ago. Uniting their bhattered forces with the .Niem-fei rebels iu the North, the defeated party and their allies have ever since carried on a guerilla warfare, which has now grown to another formidable insurrection. The Emperor, or "Son of Heaven," proclaimed, less than two months ago, the "disgusting reality" that bauds of banditti had forced themselves into and occu pied several important provinces of China proper, and that the "high civil officials" and those in command of troops in these, had quite failed to subdue, or even check the in cursion. Ting Pat-chen, Governor of Ho-uan, and Tseng-Kuo-chan, Governor of Hu-peh, were recommended to the "severest punish ment" for their derelict behavior; and the "Son of Heaven," indignantly commanding Li Hung-chang, the officer especially "com missioned to superintend the operations directed against the Nien-fei," to "win re nown for himself by stamping out at once the smallest spark ot rebellion," hnished oil his mandate by calling upon all concerned to "tremble and obey 1" The Nien-fei rebels so far refused to comply with this last awful ab juration as to risk the chances of a great battle soon atterward3 with the lartar forces of the Emperor. The battle took place in the pro vince of Chih-li, within thirty miles of Peking, the national capital. A cable despatch from London informs us that the Imperialists were defeated, and that Peking itself was in danger of falling into the hands ot the insurgents. This news is very important. The Chinese empire, in wnicn civilization was iar advanced when it was just dawning in Europe, has already . existed under twenty-six different dynasties, embracing, as Chinese pundits allege, a period or about nve thousand years. The revolutions which have previously oc curred have arisen, however, from causes en tirely diff erent from that which has produced the recent and present revolts against the throne. The rapacity of the Northern Tartars, and the jealousy between them and the Mongol race3 who originally inhabited the Boil, produced wars, at intervals of centuries, which lasted in some cases from twenty to thirty years. The Pagan religion has continued to prevail during the whole period, with but slight variations and modifications. At last, the religious superstition of the present mixed Moiigol and Tartar population has been disturbed. While it cannot be claimed that the beams of an exterior civiliza tion, which began to strike in upon the shores of the Celestial Empire thirty or forty years ago, have touched many Chinese bosoms with the glow of a pure Christian faith, the idea of a Supremo Being and a future life is nevertheless engendered there, and par tially inspires the current insurrection. The nation is probably deformed and gross; but it is significant, because it is a war with Bad dhicin, the prevailing Chinese religion. As it has apparently seized upon many enthusiastic minds, it is liable, while the rebellion pro gresses, to take hold on more. If the rebellion succeeds, as there seems to be a fair prospect of its doing, the pagan belief will have received a crushing blow. The religious, and through it the moral and intellectual, sentiment of the Chinese people will be brought one step nearer to that of peoples who profess the Christian belief; and the fair understanding which has been growing between China and other oivi lized nations during the last fifteen years may thus be more rapidly strengthened. Already the barriers to intercourse with the outside world, which were erected and kept intact until the present generation by ruler after ruler upon the Celestial throne, are almost completely broken in. Commer cial relations with Great Britain, France, and the United States are sanctioned not only by the Government, but by a large minority of the influential classes iu the Empire. The establishment of a foreign scientific university at Peking has been allowed. The number of Chinese merchants in California, and the num ber of Chinese travellers in this country and in Europe, is observed to increase year by year. Agricultural implements and manu facturing machinery from America are an nually imported into the Empire. Hereto fore, the peculiar feature of all the wenderful but slow processes of manufacture in that country has been the general absence of machinery. The periphery of the Chinese empire is esti mated at l,rj.r0 miles; its area 5,000.000 square miles. It includes the entire table-land of Eastern Asia about a third part of the Asiatic continent, or a little less thau a tenth part of the land surface of the globe. It has a supposed population of 120,000,000. Its climate is excessively temperate, and, ia the extreme south, tropical. Nearly every pro duction of every soil can be grown there. Every mineral, except platina, has been dis covered and mined. Its more peculiar staples, such as tea, silk, etc., and its rare manufac tures, are of incalculable use to the outside world. To enhance, and thus cheapen, their yield for export, is an object which foreign nations have in view. Any event whioh ap- parentlv tends to augment the disposition of the native people to relinquish their prejudices against frank dealing with other peoples, ought, therefore, to be watched with interest. " INSTRUCTION. QTEVEN8DALE INSTITUTE. HOARDING! BCnoOlTFoit VOUNQ LADIES. Terms Board, TuIUod, etc.-per scholastic year.l&oO, NO EXTRAS. . Circulars at Messrs. Fairbanks & Ewlnii's, No. 711 C1IE8NUT Btreel; also at Messrs. T. B. "teroon Brotliem', No. 8141 C11KSNUT Btreeb AOJtowi, personally or by uota, ,. , , j N 'rOBTKR BROWNB. Principal, 10 I thintf Sotub Awboy, N. J. Old Bye Wliisldes. THE LARGEST AND BEbT STOCK OE FINE OLD RYE 7 H I O K I E 8 IN THE LAND IS NOW r03SfiSSED BY HENRY S. H ANN IS & CO.. Nob, 218 and 220 BOUTO IH0HT STEEET, WnO AFFKUTI1K SAME TO THE THADH IU B.OT ON VSKI AOVANTAUXOtta TERMS. Tbelr Itoak of Rye Whiskies, lit BO HP, aort prlsas all tha favorUa brtasi slant, a art runs through tha various moaUhs of 1H06,'66, ad of this jrear, up present date. Liberal contracts snada foir lota to arrive jat tf(K t jr Ivaula Railroad Depatl Krrlcssosi Line Wharf, or at llonded Warehouses, as patties sua jr elect. . i - CARPETING3 OIL CLOTHS A. REEVE L. 12 tfctttti2m LOOKING- CLAGOEG OF THB BEST FRENCH PLATE, Every Stylo of Frames, ON IIAND OR MADE TO ORDER. In NEW ART GALLERY, F. BO LAND & CO., U 1 2tu2p 3Vo. 014 AIICH Htrcet. QTEAM ENGINE PACKING. Tbe modern and extremely popular packlug, called MILLEir.S LCBRICATIVE, OB NOAr-VTOAE PACKIN, Has already been adopted by over 20,000 Locomotive and HlaUuuury J)iigliit8, and Is beyond question tbe euhlent tipplled, the most durable, tbo cheapest, and wears tbe machinery tbe least of any steam euglne packing ytl Introduced. It Is not liable to burn or cut, does not require oil, and there Is no wants In tbe use, an It la made ot all sizes to suit the boxes, from to 2 Inches In diameter. All persons luteresled In the UHe oi tbe steam engine are particularly requested to give this packing a trial. A liberal diacouut will be made to dealers. f. C. NADI.F.It, KO.030 ARC II STUKi r, 111 1 LA. Bole Agent for Pennsylvania and Delaware. Rce cerliilcate below. OFFK'K (1FI11I BrPKBtNTRNPENTOF MOTTVB 1'UWi.K AHU Maimikkuy, Kkik Railwav. New York. beut. 2tt. lHttf .. My Dfar Sir: In reply to your Inquiries In rela tion to tbe comparative economy of ilemp Packing, as compared with Lubricating I'ackluir. I will h that Hemp Packing, at an average cost of, 33 cents per pound. coHts us 2 310 mills per mile ruD, while the Lubricating Packing cools, at an average cost of bl 2-8 cents per pound, 1 l-lo mill par mllo run. We propose to ue it exclusively ior ail bieam Bluffing IJUA CD. 101 tJUijr jfUUIB, U. U. JJKUOK& Bupt. M,P,4M, P. 6. The popular 11YD11AITLIC PACHINO, Adapted to cold-water pumps, and made similar to tbe Lubrlcatlve Packing, but ol dlllereut material, will be furnished promptly any tta from ii to a Inches, and will be found a superior article lur pumps. 21 atutb 2tl2p W. C. H. BOOTS AND SHOES. BOOTS AND SHOES AT REDUCED PRICES. FALL AND WIN ISR STYLES OF FiltaT-CLAJSa WORK on band and made to measure. Tbe best material used In all our work. BOYS' BOOTS AND 8H0K8, of tho best quality, always on band. BARTLETT, HO. 83 SOUTH SIXTII KTUKET, 9 17rr ABOVE CHRSNTJT. SOAP. IMPORTANT TO THE LADIES ! ! Ko 5)orc Dread of Wash-Day !! MOORE'S IJLPCTJi O-MA GNETIC SOAP. "WASiHIXO MADE EAST." Accountllshed without boiling or rubbing. The finest aad most delicate fabrics, as well as tbe coarsest, made besutllully cteau without boiling or robbing, saving In tbe process half tbe time, labor, soap, ANDALI.TIIElUEI.lt This Is tbe best Soap ever invented lor wasblug purposes. We otter this fcoap to the ladloa, confident that they will Bnd.arter tbe first trial, tnat.tbey cannot do with out IU BOLD BT ALL GROCERS. 10 U thmlZt EW YORK 'DYEING AND PRLNTlNO EBTABL1HHMKNT-Works on fitateii iHlaod. Ofllca in Philadelphia. No. ) N. iUUlllU Street (west side). . This Old and well-known Company, the Inrpest Of Its kind In tbe umi'Kl. and In ti e (orty-nlutb year of Its eilbPCuce, la preparad. with the moat exteimlvs and Unproved machinery, to dm, eunnm, aiMl finU. In a manner uuiuallod. every Variety ol gajmeul Uarme W OUT new French proof ftttAtfut being rUpe4. V HluQuttui k. V 3X U 1) KW O G 13 T. KNIGIIT & QOU NO. SOT CIlESNtV sJTBKKT. GROCERIES, EW. pRESH FRUITS,i 067. PEAC'IIEN, PEAKS, i , PINEAPPLES1 PLIHS, APBIt-OTS, I , C1TERI1IE& HI.ACli.UI.UUI :, O.V1NCES, 1 PIll.SEIlTED AND PBF.MII, IH CAMS , ULAKN JABW, Put op for our particular trade, and rot sal by the dozen, or In smaller quantities, by MITCHELL & FLETCHER, 10am NO. 1804 CIIESNCT BTBEBT. JAMES R. WEBB, TEA DEALER AND GROCER, H. E, CO. EIGHTH AND WAISUT ST. Extra Fine Souchong, or English Breakfast Teas. Superior Cb ulan Toai, very cheap. Oolong Teas of every graao. Young Hyson Teas or llnest finalities. All freth Imported. 8 Hf SEW BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, WHITE CLOVER II ONE Y, I'IKST OF THE SEASON. AELEItT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, 11 7Jrp Corner ELEVENTH and VLNK Sts. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOFSAFES C. L. MAISER. MAXUrACTTBKB OT riBl AMD BtKOLlIt'PBOOr SAFES. IX) CHS HI IT II, UKtlrllANCiKR, AH IS PEAI.FIt IX BCILDINtj HARDWARE, t tin. a4 RACE BTBEBT, A LAItGK ASSORTMENT OF FIRE and Bnrirlar-tiroof SAFES on hand, with Inalda doors. Dwelling-house Sales, free from dampness. Prices low. C UaAneivfokokk, II No. m UHK btreet, WINDOW BL1NCS AND SHADES. 831. CHARLES L 1IALE, 831. (Late Salesman and Super! itendent for B. J. Williams) . KO, 881 ARCH STBEET.1 MANUFACTURER Ot VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES. Largest and finest assortment In tbe city at tha LOWEST flllCES, ' 9 U 2m8p TJPHOLBTEBINQ IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Qa J. WILLIAMS & SONS, HO. 16 NOBT ii SIXTII STREET, MANTJI ACTURERS 07 VENETIAN BLINDS AND WINDOW SHADES; Largest aud finest assortment In the oily at the LOWEST PRICES. Repairing promptly attended to. STORE fcHADKB made and lettered. U 2m8p COPARTNERSHIPS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVES THAT Til B Copartnerbblu lately existing between J. W1L L1AM JUNKS and WAKH'N REKtlffi IUKKK, under tbe II run of J. WILLIAM JONES A (JO . Ira porters, Manufacturers, aud Dealers lu Dye WouiW, liye stufls. etc.. Is dissolved by mutual consent. All debts owing lo the said partoerxblp are to be received by tbe said J. William Jones, and all demands on the bald pattnerHblpare to be presented 1 to him for pay. ment. J. 1I.LIAM JUiNlts, me U WASH. REECE BAKER. Philadelphia, Nov. l.isw. UllJt THE BTJINK8 OV THE nOCSW WILL B13 conliuiiPd at the old stand. No. 17 N. FRONT Ktree, by J. William Jones, Louis I. Houard, and Ueorge v. k nnrr. who have tlila day formed a CoparluersUlp ' Jua' Wlu LOUIS I. HOUARD, UEOUGE 1'. KN'ORR. Philadelphia, Nov. 1. 167. 11,9t. DISSOLUTION.-TflE FIttM OP JONES fc 'I HAUiKK, Job Printers, I. this day dissolved by mutual consent. The business will be continued, alid the accounts of the firm settled, by WILLIAM W. JUNKS No. 6I0 MINOR Street, November 5, 1W. 11 8 - INTERNAL REVENUE REVENUE STAMPS FOR SALE AT TUB PRINCIPAL. AOI3NOY, WO. 07 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHI LA. A LIBERAL DISCOUNT ALLOWED. Orders or Stamped Checks received, aud delivered wKh despatch. Order by mall or expren promptly attended to. , T2tf J A CO II JE. R1IWAT. JOHN CRUMP, OAItFKNTElt AND mm,DKKJ Kuoni . sis vovm street, akb HO. 17 W tlUlMMIII STREET, rKLUADauratA fan
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