SPIRIT OF THE Pit ESS. UrromtAt orimoNg op thi lbadiwo jourhals UrOK CBRHBKT TOPICS COMPILED EVKBT DAT FOB TBI KV AMINO TKLIOKAI'H. Making Haute to be Itlch. fVn the tf. Y. Tribune. The dreadful doroestio tragedy which has last oooarred In Philadelphia the murder b ma inBane husband of his wife and two chil dren, and his subsequent suicide is lull of Warning to a large class of men who believe themselves to be peoullarlj exempt from ln telleotaal infirmities. Mr. Blaokstone, the Unfortunate gentleman who destroyed himself and his family, had invested his capital in a business which was really prosperous . and profitable, but by the dishonesty of an ac countant, considerable amonnt of cash had been embesfled. There was no defloienoy trhioh the resources of the partnership were ttot ample to meet; but the theft and less of so Urge a snm overthrew the mind of Mr. Black tone, until in his madness he sought, with Serverted tenderness, to save those who were ear to him from want by consigning them to the tomb. The motive, If a nan In his condition can be said to have a motive, was un doubtedly oreditable to the best feelings of his nature; but the original delusion was a mis taken notion, a melancholy and morbid over estimate of the value and Importance of money. This delusion has at all times been a fruitful souroe of insanity. It has filledjthe brains of squalid alchemists with dreams at onoe a pleasure and a pain; it has beguiled the half-clad and half-fed miser into a con tentment with nakedness and an Indlffarenoe to hunger; it has destroyed the sweetest natural relations and ohanged brothers to enemies; It has oaused those who were atfiist Ingenuous to become badly subtle and full of dissimulation; It has proved too strong for constitutional benevolenoe, and has made the band close and griping which nature meant Should be generously open; It has developed new . forms of felony and led men into pe culiar and irresistible temptations; it baa - provoked disgraceful breaches of the . most sacred trusts and the cruel spoliation of the widow and the fatherless; and or more than a moiety of all the pain and misery of this groaning globe it is either directly or indirectly responsible. But avarioe can hardly be considered at this time distin guishing mark of the money-maker. Gene rally, if his gains have been great, his expen ditures have kept pace with them, and he has been anxious to proolaim by luxurious osten tation the golden favors whioh have been be stowed upon him. But it is easy to see that this profusion only adds to his eager appetite by increasing the demand upon his cheok book. To berioh contents the miser; to be thought rioh is the passion of the modern Votary of Plains. This is not feeling which Is oonfined to Wall street, nor does it influenoe those alone who stir the foundations of the market by large transactions. If a man's . sphere be a narrow one, within that sphere be wishes to be thought successful; and he looks eagerly forward from the twilight of small ' things Jto the broad noon-day of unlimited ' opulenoe. Suoh passions are oontagious, and . are shared by most of those who buy and sell. Pecuniary losses beoome the worst of misfor tunes; he who owes and oannot pay is the Tileat of criminals; rivals in trade are hated and, If possible, crushed, until society seems to be held together only by the oohesive power of mutual loss and gain. Here and there is a man who ts driven from his equanimity by the prospeot of insolvency, and is half mad be cause he has promised what he oannot per form; but failure to most is distasteful beoause It will entail a diminution of importance and Imply a want of commercial talent. A third or fourth place in the race may oontent the majority, but to be wholly distanoed is Intole rable.' In one of Mr. living's earliest but most exquisite sketob.es there is the story Of a merchant who was overtaken by bank ruptcy, and whose principal thought was of the disoomforts and privations which his young and lovely wife would be forosd, in consequence of his reverses, to suffer. It is hardly necessary to remind the reader of the delightful moral of the tale of the oheerful aoquiesoenoe of an amiable and loving woman in misfortune, of the summer light which her Sresenoe diffused throughout the new and umble home. If men would but remember bow many exoellent pleasures, how many ele vating pursuits, how many of the worthiest cods, are quite independent of mere material Wealth; If they would but consider the ambi tions whioh best beoome our better nature; If they would but think how truth, and love, rand oonatanoy, and self-saorifioe are oftenest ' most beautifully developed in an atmosphere of poverty; if they would but reflect that no bankruptcy can deprive them of the charms ef nature, of the gratifica tions of study, of the happiness of home, they might be less eager in the pursuit of wealth, . and less inoonsolablo for the loss of it. But We have forgotten the better half of the lesson whioh Dr. Franklin taught us. We are wil ling enough to thrive luxuriantly, but we are not willing to enjoy moderately. It is safe to say that none of the admonitions of that fine Id man, whioh are oftenest quoted in defense of acquisition, referred to enormous aggrega tions of private wealth suoh as in our day have beoome almostrtoo oommon for notioe. Happy la ho that can bit upon the happy medium ; who can fairly decide for himself the relative Value of different schemes of life ; and who can be oontent with poverty if it be his por tion, or wis in the use of wealth should it be Touohsafed to him. - in . i GenefcfcrSlcltlea nd the Mlswlon i, mi- to Mexico. From thftf. Y. Herald. It Is Opposed to make General Siokles Min ister to .Mexico, as our Washington despatches tells as,' and the President only hesitates In this appointment from a doubt whether or not Biokles .would like some years of exile in such a country j Grant may naturally be disposed to proffer to this effloient ' adherent something that looses like a handsome recognition of appre ciated Mirioe, and not like the infliotionef a I penalty) and therefore may well stand in the doubt the paragraph indicates. At the first glanoe th Mexican mission would seem one giving the holder a oheioe between oblivion or a bad name, Apparently men of very satisfac tory talent can go there and be lost to onr fur ther knowledge as completely as the pebbles that MmrnarA Park Mat (ninth A .(-.. ..la -pw - - uw &AfM4 ywvio mV try thel depth. At the same time it la a land that swarms with Jobbers from our side of the line, who expect to "gobble up" the Minister from his very entrance lo to the sphere of their operatiojds. If the Minister should be a man disposed to object to summary proceedings of that tort, woo to him i Every telegraphic despatch; Touohsafed to us would bo eloquent With accounts of hi bad oonduet, his "betrayal Of Anurloan interests," etc.; and this clamor would not bo small thing to endure. For neh reasons and for others sot dissimilar la their nrtnra General gkkles oonld scarcely be SS!Sr uxm UMmlng towards the flesh El!i!l J71 H to a ministry in TV? Poe neater home, in whioh ho Blight uiUisr wear out nor nut at. But, At t" .1.. ' i. I ' V we rightly understand the Gpoerel, we fancy the main question in regard to his going to Mexico would be as to whether there is any. thing to be done there. Has the President or has the nation any polloy in regard to that coautrjf i! mere is any definite line oroonauct towards the neighboring repnblio to be followed and any result is sought the mlnalon has another character altogether, and the man of hloh mora with an inoentive Of a possible suooess deollnes no hardship, excuses himself from no privation, and faces all consequences; for ear nest endeavor makes him superior to all these. This is what we want, then, before we send a good man to Mexico something to send him for. From our own view of the cam we regard the Mexioan mission as seoand to none in importance, but this view supposes national purposes. If we have not th t lift it into the number of places that afford a possible career, the sending of Sickles there is merely sending an accomplished gentleman on a tour in searon or the picturesque when very likely he regards the ploturesque as a bore. Irlr. .Toluifton and SucccHor. from the K. Y. Timet. Mr. Johnson, when engsged In "swinging around the cirole," Is never over-ohoioe in epithets or over-courteous to opponents; but he eould not have said anything in more oxeorable taste than he did at Knoxville, in exclaiming, "Thank God! my honors have not neen gained through blood. The wounded soldiers oannot attribute their wounds to me." Compared with this, his Baltimore slur at his successor as being a willing "slave to Con gress" was a compliment. All the blood Grant has shed has been in defense of that Constitution of whioh Mr. Johnson still imagines himself to be the only guardian. It was noble blood, nobly offered; and it waa beoause General Grant had so managed that this blood was not shed in vain, that his countrymen first turned their minds npon him for the Presidential chair. To slur at those whose "honors have been gained through blood" is to cast a reflection upon some of the best men of the land, of all opinions and all parties; it is to deory the ultimate tribute of patriotism. Tlie Cuban Situation. From the K. Y. Timet. Whatever may be our views of the Cuban cause, we must not be blind to the faot that the insurgents have not yet made the degree of progress generally claimed for them. Ex aggeration is the leading trait of all news from the Island, both from the offioiai and the insurgent side. We showed the other day how, in the Spanish stories, every cross-road skirmish was magnified to a great battle, and every dispersion of a knot of suspioious charac ters was telegraphed as a tremendous defeat of the patriots. What has beoome of that "utter rout of a great body of insurgents near Trinidad f " Ten days have since elapsed, and nothing has been heard of the affair. . Rumor and report are absolutely all that we get from "the scene of oonfliot," and so trivial are even these that one begins to doubt whether there Is any oonfliot at all. Take the telegrams of the last ten days they are the merest twaddle. Cuban news la a mere repetition of Cretan, whioh was so untrustworthy as to revive the uncompli mentary Cretan description of St. Paul. That "reliable gentleman" who uBed to figure, along with the "intelligent contra band." in our own war, has evidently taken up his abode with the Queen of the Antilles, and is plying his old vocation. First he tells ub that "the Peruvian monitors are certainly aiding the insurrection" although the official pledge of neutrality under whioh Peru took them-has been made public Next be tells us that "within a few days the in surgents will have possession of a seaport;" but he has told us that for three months, lie speaks of Havana as being somewhat in the position of the Viceroy of Egypt, under whose Beat a "loaded bomb" was lately put; whereas, private residents there tell us they would hardly suspect that an insirreotion existed but for the newspapers. An Eoglish gentleman an impartial observer lately rode on horseback through the whole of that "insurrectionary dlstriot" of whioh our "re liable gentlemen" regularly sends maps, shaded with various degrees of blackness, to indioato the spread of rebellion. At eaoh vil lage he paused and inquired where the insur rection was. "At , so many miles ahead," was the invariable response. He got to Ha vana without finding it. We would not underrate the insurrection, whioh is a very serious affair, and promises one day to be successful. But what we say is that sympathy must not lead observers to discount a suooess not yet attained. The real efforts of the Cubans will probably be made in summer, when, as Mayor Hall says, Gene ral Yellow Jaok will take the field against the foreign levies, and the native troops will be better disciplined to fight. There has yet been nothing like a pitched battle, and hardly oven a respectable skirmish. Xlie Government Kecurltic In vetigutiou. From the X Y. Herald. Two years ago a joint committee of the houses of Congress was appointed to lnvestl- fate the alleged irregularities or frauds in the 'rinting Bureau of the Treasury Department, and to make a careful examination of the method adopted by the Treasury to print the bonds, notes, and securities of the United States. The business was put into the hands of a sub-committee, oomposed of Senator Ed munds, Mr. Buokalew, and Mr. Halsey, and Senator Edmunds has now made a report for the committee. Two years ought to have been long enough to have investigated thoroughly the affairs and alleged irregularities of the Treasury. But after all this time the oommittee finished its labors, as those of every Congressional inves tigating oommittee end, in finding out nothing, or next to nothing. There is In the report a mass of verbiage about the duties of the seve ral bureaus and officers, all of whioh we knew before, and about the magnitude of the Trea sury transactions sinoe the war; whioh also we knew, and then there are some suggestions lrMfc "iormlD or proving the service, wbioh are all very well; but nothing was dis- mli&Aii&tJT""1? For stance, we should like to know where the following missing bonds and notes went to: Datt nf Bomb and tfatet. -Amount February 18, mi "'IV'fik jiarchs,i8i July it. iboi : ;; August 18, 1861 xgJ'V Five-twenties, 18ti3 j 8fto'2oo Gold certiilcates, 163 i'aso'ooo bwull amounts (aggregated) ' 80)000 Total . U,m,m .' We believe there is no doubt about these being missed and unaccounted for. If the oommittee failed to discover this faot, how muoh more may remain nndlsoovered f We fear the oomxnitiee did not go beyond the Walls of the Treasury Department to get forma tion. ' It oonfined Itself, probably, to the ex amination of those only who were interested in protecting the department. It was either incompetent or purposely left the Irregulari ties or frauds covered ap. Its labors are a miserable failure, and the result is the oountrj gets nothing hat white wuUog report , X" ' ''..' . ' : '.. , lgAiijrjyENINO TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1863. I FURNITURE.' ETO. U It N U 11 K. A. & II, LEJAM3RE IIAVK REMOVED Til Kilt FflMtire & Upholsterina Wareroois TO NO. 1127 CHESNUT STItEET, 8 10 wfmCmrp OIUAUl ROW. ft O It EAT BARGAIN s IN FURNITURE AT RICHMOND & CO.'S, No. 45 South S12CO;vi Street, 8 261m KAST SIDE. FURNITURE. T. & J. A. HENKELS HAVING REMOVED TO THEIR ELEGANT STORE, No. 1002 ARCH Street, Are now selling FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE at very Reduced Prices. 4 1 Braro AVISO. MEUBLES FINO EN EXniBICION, in Serie de G'uartos, COLOCADO COMO 8ft laa de recibimlento y CUARTOS DE CAMAItA. GEORGE J. HENKELS, ''thirteenth and chesnut, 813mrp . . PHILADELPHIA. CARRIAGES. frfjfe GARDNER & FLEMING, CARRIAGE BUILDERS, No. 214 South FIFTH Street, BELOW WALNUT. A Large Assortment of New and Second-hand CAR RI AGES, INCLUDINO Coupe Rockaways, Phaetons, Jenny Linda, Buggies, Depot Wagons, Etc Etc., 13 23 tutha For Sale at Reduced Prices. QARR IAGESm HIcLEAR &, KENDALL, CARRIAGE BUILDERS, No. 712 SANSOM Street, Philadelphia, ' Invite all in need of any kind of CARRIAGES to call and see their large assortment before purchasing, as they intend selling at REASONABLE RATES. 209v2trp OARPET1NQS, ETO. 1869 spring. 1869 L E E D O M & SHAW, BNo. OlO ARCH Bti-oet. We are now receiving a very large stock of NEW GOODS for SPRING SALES. Embracing all the new styles of CARPETINGS, FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, 8 11 wfmsm ETC. ETC. a grand orsriirjo OH NEW CARPETS THIS WEEK, ALL OF LATEST IMPORTATIONS. E. H. GODSHALK & CO., NO. 723 CHESNUT STREET, 8 19 fuiw3mrp PHILADELPHIA. NEW CARPETINGS! ARCH STItEET Carpet Warehouse. JOSEPH BLACKWOOD, 1 ton. No. 832 ARCH Street QROOERIES AND PROVISI ONS . P RE 8 II FRUIT IN CANS. PEACHES, PINEAPPLES, ETC., OKEEN CORN, TOMATOES, FRENCH PEAS, MUSHROOMS, ASPARAGUS, ETC. ETC. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer in Fine Groceries, 11 Trp cor. ELEVENTH and VINE Streets. jyjIOHAEL MEAGHER & CO., 1 No. m South SIXTEENTH Street, I Wholesale and Retail Dealers la PROVISIONS, OYSTERS, AND SAN CLAMS, FINANOIAL. UNION PACIFIC 3 . A RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE 30 YEARS SIX PER CENT. GOLD BOFJDG, BOUGHT AND SOLD. DE HAVEN & BRO., DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, ETC., No. 40 South THIRD Street, SI U railtADBXTHIA. HENRY G. GOWEN, (Late of Cochran, (iowrn Sc Co.), BANKER AND BROKER, No. THIRD Stroot, PHILADELPHIA. Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold on Commission m Philadelphia and New York. Gold and Government Securities dealt in. New York quotations by Telegraph constantly re- ceiveu. COLLECTIONS made on all accessible points. INTEREST allowed on deposits. 8 10 Ira GLEMMK, SATIS & CO NO. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA." GLEMfflNG. DAVIS & AMORY NO. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Direct telegraphic communication with the New York Stock Hoards from the Philadelphia wince. ij o. SUCCESSORS TO P. IT. KELLY &, CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GolJ, Silver, ani GoverneM Bonis, AT CLOSEST MARKET RATES. N.W. Corner THIRD and CHESNUT Sts Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS in New York and and Philadelphia Stock Boards, eta eW- 9118m mmmm DEALERS IN UNITED STATES. BONDS, and MEM BERS OF STOCK AND GOLD EXCHANGE, Receive Accounts of Banks and Bankers on Liberal Terms. ISSUE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON C. J. nAMBRO 4 SON, London, B. METZLEH, S. 60HN Sc CO., Frankfort. JAMES W. TUCKER. CO.. lrli And Other Principal Cities, and Letters of Credit Avauawe Throughout Europe. LED YAR D & BARLOW HAVE REMOVED THEIR LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE TO No. 19 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA, And will continue to give careful attention to collect ing ana securing iijuais tnroughout the United States, British Provinces, and Europe. Sight Drafts and Maturing Paper collected at Bankers' Rates. 1 88 6m CITY WARRANTS . BOUGHT AND SOLD. C, T, YERKE8, jr., & CO., Ko. 20 South THIED Street, 41 MJamisok&,C raXLADxxplILt. FINANCIAL. Cjj4 , 500,000. SEVEN PER CENT. GOLD BONDS, THIRTY YEARS TO RUN, ISHOKD BT TH lake Superior and Mississippi liiv'er Railroml Cnmpany. THEY ARE A FIRST MORTGAGE SINKING FUND , BOND, FREE OF UNITED STATES TAX, SS- CURED BY ONK MILLION SIX IIIINDKKI) ANDTHIKTY-TWO THOUSAND ACRKS OF CHOICE LANDS, And by the Itnllroad, Its Rolling Stock, and the Frun chUcs of the Company. A DOUBLE SECURITY AND FIRST-CLASS IN VESTMErT IN EVERY RESPECT, Yielding In Currency nearly Ten Per Cent. Per Annum. P EJ--ENT PK1CE PAR ASD ACCRUED INTEREST Gold, Government Bonds and other Stocks received in payment at their highest market price. PamphleU and full information given on applica tion to JAY COOKE & CO., NO. 114 S. THIRD STREET, E. W. CLARK & CO., NO. 35 S. THIRD STREET, Fiscal Agents of the Lake Superior and Mississippi River Railroad Company. 8 10 60Up v bankers;4? No. 35 South Third Street, PHILADELPHIA. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCK, COLD AND NOTE BROKERS. Aee.mnU of Balu, Firnu, ai Individual ncivad. intiietf check at night. IN-TERE3T ALLOWED ON BALANCES. general" AGENTS, V FOR PENNSYLVANIA OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Tll NATIOVATj I.IFR iNStlRANCK COMPANY Is 'xrporntioii churtored liy special Act of CougrMa. ap proved July 25, iscs, with a r CASH CAPITAL, $1,000,000, FULL PAID. Ub(-ri! forms offered to Apnta and Solicitors, who r( lnvjted in apply ut our oiflce. ImiII j 111 tiruliirs to he had on application at ourofflc. .iwatwi .i the second story of our Hankinn JIouho, )iere Circulars and Pamphlets, fully denrribinir Ui3 ulvuntagea ollered by the Company, may be bad. E. W. ( LARK A CO.. Aro. 85 Htntih Third . RANKING HOUSE or No3. 112 and 114 South THIRD Street, PHILADELPHIA. Dealers In all Government Securltloa. Old 6-108 Wanted In Exchange for New. A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. Interest Allowed on Deposits. COLLECTIONS MADE. STOCKS bnuirht ami snl.l on Commission.. Special business accommodations reserved for ladles. We will receive armllcatlona for Poiici nfT ira Insurance in the National Life Insurance Company of the United States. Full Information given at our office. 4 1 sffl JJOMK INVESTMENTS. Reading- 1. Ifc. Sixes, Clear of State, Uulted States, and Municipal Taxes. r-mm Ivanla nil NrwVork Cnnal snil U.K. lUorttfUtfe lioudtt, Principal and Interest guaranteed by the LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD COMPANY. We have hut a small aninn and offer them at a price that will pay a good In terest on the investment. DREXEL & CO., Bankers, 19 fmw4ptf No. 84 S. THIRD St., Phllad'a. STERLING & WILD MAN, AND BROKERS, Wo. 110 S. Til I It I St., pkiia., Speclul Agents for the Sale of lanvllle, Huzlcton, mul WUkeft- wurrc IluIIroad FIRST MOltTUAtJK BONDS, Dated 1867. due In 1887. Iuterpst payable half yearly, on the llrnt of April ami lirst of '"'r near vi ciui nu! t uned tnates Taxes, At present these bonds are offered at the low price of 81) a.1cruetl Interest. They are in denomhiatious of tow. auu fiuuu. Pamphlets containing Maps, Reports, and full In formation on hand for distribution, and will be sent by mail on application. Oovernmeut Bonds and other Securities taken In exchange at market rates. Dealers in flocks. Bonds, Loans, Gold, etc. 8 lm Pa ;S. PETERSON & CO., Stock and Exchange Brokers, No. 39 South THIRD Street, Members of the New York and Philadelphia Stock and Oold Boards. stocks, bonds, Btc, bought and sold on com- BUsaioa only at either city. . 1 wl WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETO. JAS. E. CALDWELL & CO.,- JEWELLERS, No. 819 CHESNUT Street, Vntil thctr late Store is rebuilt), ., ? 1 i ' , ' HAVE NOW An Entirely New Stock of Goods, To replace thnt destroyed by fire, and are now opculng ... PAULS MANTEL CLOCKS, Single ami In seta, with SIDE OHNAMENT3. Dardou & Son's newest and best grades of OPERA GLASSES, ' Bridal Party, and Opera Fans. The latest contributions of Art in REAL BllONZE. A largely Inoreased supply of Diamonds, Fine "Watches, Jewelry, AND ARTISTIC SILVER WARE. Also, a very full line of GORIIAM MANF'O. COMPANY'S FINE ELECTRO-PLATED WARES. PRICES MODKRATR. f4 B 1m It E M O V A L. vV. 15. WARDEN, IMPORTBR Or Watches, Diamonds, and Jewelry, Haa Removed from the S. E. Corner of Fifth and Chesnut Streets to No. I029 CHESNUT Street, PHILADELPHIA. N. R WATCHES REPAIRED IN THE BEST MANNER. s llthstul LEWIS LADOMUS & CO., JEWELLERS, NO. 802 CHESNUT STREET, Would uivlte especial attention to their large stock of Ladies and Gents' Watches, AMERICAN AND IMPORTED. Of the most celebrated makers. FINE VEST CHAINS AND LEONTINES, In 14 and 18 karat. DIAMOND WORK of the latest designs. Sold Silver-Ware for Bridal Presents, Table Cat lery, Plated Ware, etc, S 971 C.&A. PEQUIGNOT, MANUFACTURERS OF WATCH CASES, . AND DEALERS IN AMERICAN AND FOREIGN WATCHES, Wo. 13 South SIXTH Street, MANUFACTORY, No it S. FIFTH Street. ESTABLISHED 1828. WATCHES, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, 8ILVEUWARE, and FANCY GOODS. G . W. RUSSELL, NO. 82 N; SIXTO STREET, PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM B. WAHNR nn Br Wholesale Dealers in "Si CTl EVIN CHESNUT' 8treot, 8 feecond floor, and late of No. 80 8. THIRD 8t! JN GAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF COIN AND IS KARAT ALWAYS ON HAND. LEWIS LADOMUS &, CO., JEWELLERS, rp No. 80S CHESNUT STREET. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETO. JOBERT SHOEMAKER & C Q., N. E. Corner I0TJRTH and RACE Sts., PHILADELPHIA. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, Importers and Manufacturers of White Lead and Colored Paints, Putty, varnisnes, Etc. AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINO PAINTS. Dealers and consumers supplied at lowest prices for cash. 12 H PAPER HANGINGS, ETO. QEAN & WARD, PLAIN AND DECORATIVE PAPER HANGINGS, NO. 251 SOUTH THIRD STREET, BBTWEKN WALSCT AKD BrRUCE, Philadelphia:. COUNTRY WORK PROMPTLY ATTENOKil Tpj 8 1st TOOK ! LOOK ! ! LOOK J f !-WALLPAPEr5 A PiK0A,880STMENT OFWALL PAPKR8 and Window KhadtM. H IT Rat npiL bTON A BUN. No. UN WUjWoARDKIf I it" 1J Wta COTTON BAIL-Dtrmr vn cmn-iii nv , , , " m-a.i - i amf v ciwmiuZZ Abu, Vftpw M.uufftctniW Hrier F1U. from thiri M, " ' '"vmia wivin. miiun, inii nijii t-m mj.. A m r .. .... .,.