THE DAILY" EV UiN IN G TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1870. 4: PUBLISH EDEVERY AFTERNO ON (BI'MiAYB BSCni'TKD), AT THE EVt.NINO TELEGRAPH BUILDING, No. 1(W tf. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. The Trice isihree cent per copyl'lovbie sheet): or eighteen cents per week, payalile to Hie carrier by whom tu-rved. The subscription price by mail is Nine. Dollars per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents for two months, invariably in advance for the lime ordered. MONDAY, APRIL 2",, 1870. THE PLEBISCITE. On Saturday we published a lengthy dospitoh from TariH, piving the oflloial text of tho question to which the people of Frauoe are to retipond in a few days, together with the dotniU of the manner in which the voting is to bo condncted. This morning the procla mation of th Emperor, appealing to tho people for an affirmative- ronponse, was pub lished, and the whole schomo of the plebiscite i-i now before the world. Napoleon has the happy faculty of com pressing things into small compass when it 8 jits his purposo to do so, nnd in the wording of the phMneite ho has dono so in a noticoablo degree. The question to which tho rotors of France are to say "yes" or "no" is simply this: "Do tho people approvo the liberal reforms which have been ciroctcrl lu the Constitution since 18tt( by the Emperor, with the concurrence of tho great legislative boilles of the State, and ratify the Senatus Comniltum Of April 20, 1870 ?" The whole Napoleonic Idea is here in a n itshell. His Imperial Majesty does not say to the people, "Are you satisfied with the reforms which I have inaugurated ?" or, "Will yon be satisfied with any reform short of the orerthrowof the empire?" but simply, "Do you approve the reforms which I have con descended to make in the fullness of my ab solute sovereignty?" If a majority cry out "Yes," in response, the Emperor will conde scend to inaugurate such further reforms as be sees fit, or deems absolutely neces sary to preserve his power intact; but if, by way of protesting against the whole imperial regime, a majority say "No," the astute ruler of the Tuileries will pervert the answer into a condemnation of all reform, and shape his course accordingly. The question is so shaped that those who are opposed in toto to the present dynasty can do nothing save remain at home on the day the Tote is ta'ien. It was proposed that this class should express their sentiments by depositing blank ballots, but this project seems to have fallen through, and the only protest that will prol ably be entered will be a silent one. In this connection, a speech delivered by the Prime Minister in the Corps Legislatif recently, the material portions of which are elsewhere given, is important. After des canting at length upon tho course of French politics, and the lesson to be derived from a review of the past, M. Ollivier said: "When I hoar yon maintain, as an invinclbla trtesis, tliut universal suffrage carries with it tno destruction ot a monarchical government, I say experience pronounces against you." And so it does. The First and the Second Empire alike were based upon universal suf frage, and on each occasion the vote was almost unanimous. The following table gives the affirmative and negative vote on the several questions that have been propounded to the French people since 17!3, by the answer to each of which the form of govern ment was either revolutionized, or an accom plished revolution ratified and approved: r'i. Ag-iinttt. Constitution of 1793 (Republic) 1,801,913 11,010 coiibl nut urn oi the year 111 (ltepub- llc) 1,057,3SO 49,957 Constitution of tho year Vlll (Con sulate) 3,911,000 1,063 Jieiiatus Con.snlto ot tho year X ((,'nnKultite for life) !t,509,18S 9,074 SinntuH CoiiBUlte of the year XU I (Klllplre) 3,3-21,075 Act additional of ISIS l,.;iMl,lh)J 4.20H CoriHtitutKJll uf I8.V2 7,47:;,431 011,361 fceniiliia Consulto of December, ISM (Empire) 7,328,199 053,141 Doubtless iMs the contemplation of those figures that inspires the Emperor and his shorn Liberal Cabinet with confidence, but there are still other figures which are of equal importance and even greater significance. Tho opposition vote in lS.i.( wos but 23,145. At the elections of 18.17 it had swollen to .r71, 000; at the election of ISO.",, to l,(i!i:!,0()0; and at the election of 18(i!t, to ::,21S,885, while tho votes polled by tho Government candidates was 4,0."3,).G a Government ma jority of only 801,171, large enough, in itself, for the time being, but portentously small in comparison with that of previous years. Yet thero can be but littlo doubt that the result of tho approacbing plebiscite will present an overwhelming endorsement of the Imperial regime. The whole thing is a glaring faroe, and it was a full appreciation of this fact that led Messrs. Darn and Buffet to resign thoir portfolios. Miss. Wheaton we regret that the tele graph does not give her namo in full is a true woman, and fully understands the senti ments of tho great mass of the women of the country on the female suffrage question. It seems there was a large party in the Illinois Constitutional Convention, now in session, in favor of conferring tho ballot upon women; but Mrs. Wheaton came to the rescue of tho constitution-tinkers whoso wits had boon unsettled by tho frantic harangues ot Susan B. Anthony and Anna E. Dickinson, and by a timely and ablo address before the conven tion in opposition to female Bufl'ntgo threw so much light upon the benighted intellects of the womau-righters, that the faction has boon extremely demoralized, end female suffrage, it is now thought, will stand no chnnoe at all. Mrs. Wheaton has conferred a lasting favor upon her sex, and should be hold in grateful remembrance for so doing. Afteb tub Absentees. The House of representatives has run so much to seed of late that it has at last bestirred itself, and despatched its Sergeant-at-Arms after a sooro or so of its members who are wandering about the country without leave of absence. Among those who are to be hunted up and brought back to Washington, nolens voltnt,- is General Ilutler, tho chairman of the He construction Committee, who, as soon as the Georgia bill was returned to tho House from the Senate, saddled down with amendments, asked and obtained leave of absenoe for a week or more, and, not content with thin de laying the settlement of a vexation question with which the conntry is heartily digitated, left the capital a day before his furlough hegan. Hut Ilutler is to be brought back, along with the rost of the delinqnents, an 1 it is to be hoped that, when tho Houso on jo gets him before its bar, it will revoke his leave nnd compel him to remain at his post at least until the Goorgia business is disposod of for good. An Infamous Speculation. Information has been received at the War Department that large numbei s of buffalo robes, obtained from Indinns suffering with tho small-pox, which are undoubtedly infoctcd with the virus, were packed with a view to early shipment from some of the trading posts on the Upper Missouri. Here we have a pointed illustra tion of the unconscionable character of the people who infest the frontiers. A more diabolical outrage than this could scarcely bo conceived, and yet the plundering, thieving white men whose example the Indians are so prone to follow engage in this deadly specu lation, without a semblanco of hesitation. The Government, it is stated, has taken mea sures to frustrate this hideous conspiracy against the public health, but it should not be content with preventing the shipment of these plague-bearing buffalo robes. The heartless wretches who have engaged in this speculation should be brought to justice, if they can be detectod and caught. If they can be properly punished in no other way, they should have their deserts tueted out to them by a drum-bead court-martial. TnE Income Tax Iniquity. As stated by Mr. Schenck in the House of Representatives on Saturday, the whole number of persons who paid an income tax last year was 27'',8 1;', as follows: Number paying less than $20 107,f00 " " from $?o to so 69.1S4 " " from $v) to $ioo 41,19a " " trom$iooto$20o 45,500 " " over $200 9,404 This statement shows how unfair and un equal this whole system of taxation is, and affords an irresistible argument in favor of its repeal. Less than 273,000 persons liable to the tax had the conscience to make true re turns of their incomes, and on this mere handful, in comparison with the whole popu lation, fell the burden that should have been distributed among eight or ten millions, if there existed any necessity whatever for its imposition on anybody. But our national expenditures have been so much curtailed that there is no necessity for the revenue re sulting from tho tax, and it should be done away with without any further delay. The heads of the St. Thomasites are level, despite the repeated Homersaults to which they have been subjected. They have at last realized the fact that they are still subjeots of King Christian, and that they are likely to remain such until an earthquake of more than tho usual violence shakes tho lifo com pletely out of their bodies. So, on the 8th instant, they gathered around the festive board and made gluttons of themselves, in honor of tho fact that his Majesty of Don mark drew his first breath on that particular day some years ago. This anniversary ban quet is a hopeful sign. We can only regret that General Itaasloff did not hear of it before he sacrificed a snug cabinet berth because of the refusal of the Senate of the United States to pay over a trifle of $10,000,000 for St. Thomas, with its earthquakes, tidal waves, and other peculiar institutions. TIIE NEWSBOYS' HOME. Ok last Thursday evening a very pleading entertain ment was given at tho Amateurs' Drawing Room, on Seventeenth street, above Chesnut. The entertain ment consisted of a series of tableaux illustrating the opera of Faust, with appropriate musical selec tions. The arrangement of the pictures was very artistic, and reflected great credit upon tho ladles and gentlemen who participated. A largo audience was In attendance, ami the performance was such a decided success that It has been determined to re peat it on Thurauay evening next for the benelitof the Newsboys' Home. Mrs. Susan Gallon KoHchcr and her huMiand have very Kludly consented to ap pear on this occasion and slug some of the favorite airs from Pant,! between tho tableaux. This feature will or course add greatly to tho Interest of the en tertainment, and as the object to which tho receipts v. ill be devoted Is well worthy of tho patronage of the public, there should be a crowded audience la attendance. Tickets can be purchased of F. T. S. Barley, No. HIS Chosnut street; T. P-irrish, No. S41 Walnut street, and E. V. Karle, No. 810 Chesnut street. . An uoKonAiiLB trait of character on tho part of the French poet Alpiiou.se do Lamartine yaa dis closed In a case which camo beloro Vice-Chancellor James In London recently. In 1820, when Lamar tine was attached to the French Embassy in Naples, Mlts Ulrcli, a young lady of English extraction, though herself born lu France, and of considerable fortune, fell desperately iu lovo with him, and they were soon after married. A reversionary fund of -Cln.OOO was settled ou Mdme. do Lamartlnu for her s purate use for life, after her death for her hus band, and on his death, if there were no children, the fund was to be applied to such objects as Mdme. do Lamartlno might have prescribed by will. It was niade a condition, however, of the eitliwy of tho testament that It Bliould be "attested by two or moro witnesses." As it happened, Mdme. do Lamartlne died in 1S03, leaviug a will by which she busto.ved 1 evtral legacies one to found a school for girU at. St. Toint subject to her husband's lifo interest. Tills document, however, was found to have boon attested by only ono witness, which would have Ken quite enough, under ordinary French law, bat did not fulfil tho conditions of the deed under which the deceased lady held tho property. In duct, therefore., tho will was null aii'l void, anil M. de Lauiaitlue liilghr, if he had chosen, have set It utlile, Hiid appropriated tho fund to his own use. No doubt it would have been a questloniblo a '-t In pueh a case to disregard tho express wishes of his wife; but, considering the straits In which in his later years LaH'urtiue found himself, and tho press ing obligations he had to meet, lie m;iit with noma plausibility hava argued that, had tho good lady foreseen what was to be his p wltlou, bio would rather have given him the fund absolutely tli.in havi tfi It for the education of unknown yo uia girls an I the other objects of the will. Lamartlne, however, regarded the testament hs sacred, and cuuuVuu'd all the bequests by a special deed In HOP k Em;i.!S!i editor derives soma eons'iiiihn fiom the information that inland H not the ( lily land rpp'wed y iff s!mp.-ec;ern. 'n i-vi t i i f n American newspuper the follow.ntf letter from a Yankee to her g'ocer- "Mr. Tuttle This here thlnn has got too much hemp in It for molasses, and not quite enough for clothes-lines ; so I've strained 01T the molasses, and send you tho J'i to make up the measure, nnd have turned over the hemp to the Vigilance Committee to be spun tip for future use. 80 be sure to send me the real tning this time, as all hemp gone to the V. C, and the rope is a-growlng." A tfi.eoram published In the Memorial Diplo. watiivf (tat eg that All I'asha has received an assu rance from the Cabinet of Vienna that Trince Met ternich had been Instructed to Bupport DJcmll PiKlia In his efforts In Tarts to realize the loan for the construction of Ottoman railways. The same paper adds that it has no reason to doubt the authenticity or .this announcement. It Is natural that Austria should take an interest In Turxlsh railways, for as soon as the Ottoman Kmplre is con nected with Europe by rail the Eastern question may be expected to enter into a new and probably a pact 9c phase. It Is also stated that tho French (iovertinient Is favorable to the realization of the loan, Its official quotation having been forbidden on the Hoarse only in consequence of the law of ls:io concerning lotteries, under the provisions of which the loan falls by reason of its premiums. A discus sion Is going on In Paris as to the propriety or bringing the new obligation under this law. In the meantime the stockbrokers have been Informed that their operations will not bo interfered with. Some of tho fun that Is supposed to be Inherent In a breach or promise cose consists, it Is thought, in the appearance of artistic woe iu the countenance of the plalutitTor tho plaintiff's mother. Fainting Is considered to be done according to the advice of counsel or nttorney, and demonstrations with a h-iudkerchief are ascribed also to the suggestions of the advocate. In Cork the other day an action was tried, involving the Infraction of a promise to marry. Ii was complicated a little by tho fact that the plaintiff had been led astray by tho defendant. As counsel wag proceeding with his statement "a small child bugsn to cry In court, and counsel continued to b ly be thought the little child whoso cries had dis turbed the court was tho child," The Jury found a verdict after this ror the plaintiff. U. G. A0AIX7 "Yon Me! You Villain! Yon Mr!" We find the following pleasant little Item lu the New York Tribune: "Tho New York Tribune has a decided tendency towords rree-lovlsm," says the Indianapolis Sentinel. or course it has. The Tribune is the daily organ of the free-love philosophy. We copy the above from the editorial col umns of tho New York Times. In so far as It emanates from the Sentinel, we have the charity to believe that tho writer, blinded by ignorance and political malevolence, was not fully con scious of the flngrnacy ofjts falsehood. But no men excuse can be made for the New York Times. That journal lies deliberately, wilfully, wickedly, with naked Intent to defame and ma lign. The Tribune is exactly such a "daily oracle" of Free Love as it Is of Free Trade and Free Rum neither less ner more. And the rime is perfectly aware of the fact, and knows that Its lie is utterly without excuse or plau sibility. Incidentals. Halifax is unhappy because it has no Quar antine hospital. Sj pher is not to figure In Congress. All his plans have come to naught. Massachusetts complains that Its legislators are liable to home-sickness, and that the attack (a sort of relapsing fever) carrios them off. Mr. Thnrlow Weed's account of stage-coach travelling forty-six years ago, published In the Oalajy, Fa havlDg a great run through tuepapors. A great many compaaies have been mus tered at Quebec to repel the Fenians, but they average only thirteen men each, exclusive of oiliccrs. A Cincinnati hotel-keeper dresses all his waiters in full naval uuiforui, probably to re mind them that they must be constantly on tho watch tor boaiders. Of the 140 members of tho Mississippi Legis lature, ninety-seven are natives of the Soothern States, eight are natives et New York, and ton of New liugland. An ex-soldier in Sacramento has boon charted $100 iu gold by a San Francisco claim npent for collecting back pay duo him amount ing to $100 iu currency. During tho eight months ending March 1, 1ST0, the New Dominion received 6 5,0: 13, 0( IS from customs and 2,3:13,571 from excise duties. Its expenses were 10,120,401. The Massachusetts House of Representa tives voted two to ono against woman suffrage. The women themselves, we are told, took no intcrcbt in the movement started iu their behalf. A candidate for alderman In Newport, It. I., announced that if he was elected beefsteak Miould be seventeen cents a pound and wages $7 a day. His wages and his beefsteak ? One member of the Mississippi Legislature fays that ho is an Old-line Whig, another that lie is a Henry Clay VVliig, a third that lie is an old Had., while a fourth proclaims that he goes In for "My country and her people." The Ohio Legislature, at its late session, passed only seventv-two general acts, and tho Columbus Wale Journal says that there was lets buncombe legislation and loss of the mis chievous special tinkering business than at any other session within the memory of tho oldest inhabitant. The San Francisco Society of California rionccrs 1ms been presented with the first bar of tin made from native ore in tho United States, and regards it as the most appropriate and unique addition which could bo made to its cabinet of specimens of the mineral wealth of l'acliic Coast. Surviving officers of tho staff of Stonewall Jackson have published an appeal for funds to place a monument over his remains, and say that such memorial of love and respect, more tlmu all others, meets with the cordial approba tion of Mrs. Jackson. The Census Marshals In Wisconsin are mostly one-armed or one-lcgcd soldiers, and a Wisconsin soldier, who lost an arm during tho war and "kuowshow to ympatliizo with them,'; has sent an artificial arm to bo presohted to ono of the one-armed appointees in Dodge rarity. The widow of Sir John Fraukliu arrived in San Francisco bv steamer on tho 13ih lust., having gone thither for the purposo of satisfy ing herself as to the authenticity or correctness of the reports published several months siuco relative to the discovery on tho southern coat of certain documents, which sooined to promise another clue to her husband's fate. Ou Thursday a woman servant fell through the elevator, a distance ot five stories, in the, l.aclcdo Hotel, St. Louis, and was fatally in jured. On Monday a boy fell from tho fifth story of a building in Cincinnati, and was killed. On Tnesday morning a lodirer in tho Van Rensse laer House, in i Albany, loll from a Ufth-story window and was killed. The Portland Araus savs that Mr. John A. Four of that city fctrongly resembles the lato (icnernl Thomas "in personal appearance, and thut at ono time when In Washington ho was invited to examine a new portrait of General Tht'iuiis, and several gentlemen preseut, after carctully scrutinizing tho picture and compar ing It "w ith the original," as they supposed, declared it a capital likeness. Oho gentleman expressed his gratiilcailon at tho correctness of tic likeness, "having uevcr before," us lie said, "injoyed the pleasuro of seeing General Thoinas In person " HATS AND OAPS. nWAUHURTON'8 IMIMIOVRD VE NTT luted nnd enny lifting Drexa HuU fpttxntnd), in all tho in provt'ct lOMhimiH 01 the Hedsun. Oill'-rtNUT S.rol, in It door to the l'ubt OlhuH. UlJriO UMBRELLAS, ETC. T ,,-N A FINE ASSORTMENT OK 1'ONtiKK 'f Y" l'Hrntiiiiu. nil ojloretl luiiiitte. Hie lutt-i Mylt-n """l nrt riin I'n.i rlh.. ul IUNi:k T'i. LU V'h fid biaml, fm idi v IN, .jit. 4;;l:aru r r.v. r.!:n.L ("' "r ivths :i H" J UiXON'S, No 81 . KIOUTU Street lulaiullj BPEOIAL NOTICES. Tor additional Speetol Aocfc1 M Itu faWrfs Putt. JOHN WANAMAKEIt, Xos. SIS and S20 Chesnut Street. All varieties of Rare and Elegant Spring At tire for Gentlemen and Boys, at JVos. SIS and S20 Chesnut Street. JOHN WANAMAKER. Bay- ACADEMY OF FINK ARTS, NO. 1035 OHK8NUT 8TRKKT. SHERIDAN'S RIDE. Great Life-size Patntin of the POKT-ABTIST, T. BUCHANAN KKAD. NINTH WEEK OF TUB EXHIBITION. The Poem reoited at 13 M., i and P. M., daily, br MR. J. B. ROBERTS, the eminent Tragedian and Klooukion'st. Tho exhibition tetaweek will b for the 4 3? 6t BENEFIT OF THE LINCOLN INSTITUTION. Admlsnion 25 oente Including tbe entire Taltiable collection of the Aoadetnjr. Open from 9 A. M. to 8 P. M and from 1 to lo P. M. t?S C. SAUNDERS' COLLEGE, w7 pcIILA. Lectnrea. MONDAY EVENINU8. 4 5 tmip' 6EWINQ MACHINES. rp II 13 WHEELER & WILSON For Sale on Easy Terms. NO. 914 CHESNUT STREET. 4 6 mwsS PHILADELPHIA. OLOTHINO. BUY THE BEST. THE BEST. THE BEST. THE BEST. THE BEST SPRING CLOTHING, J ich Spring Raiment ! pening now our new Goods! heaper far than last Spring! Tlnd and description to suit you ! J jurry along and secure our bargains! J ucomparably better than elsewhere! J Ight Overcoats In every variety ! Jower prices than for years past! AMD o P 2 w a a M en a sr "ynatevcr Spring Style you want! Immense Importation for Spring wear! JMixurious light Coats ! gtjllsh Spring Suits! Qvercoats for April ana May! Jone but the BEST! mm W WESTON & BROTHER, TAILORS, S W. Comer NINTH and ARCH Sts., PHILADELPHIA. A full assortment of the most approved styles for SPUING AND SUMMER WEAR, NOW IN STORE. A SUPERIOR GARMENT AT A REASONABLE PRICK. ' 418rarp PIANOS. CHARLES BLASIUS, SOLE AGENT FOR TIIE SALE OF T IU WH3T 2l SOUS' fKPJ World-Eeiicwned Piano. tfJ (Agent for Bteinway A Gone ainoe ISM.) AT THE OLD WAREttOWMS. No. lOOU CI I US.H UT Street, 415tf4p PHILADELPHIA. c R Q U S'uruihlied Uie Trade. W. G. PERHY, 0 4 2:;smwfiit No. VH ARTH Kfree'. JJI;Ei:CH AND ENGLISH PAPERS, f.ur&e Assorlmeul, NEW STYLES, fcEIXlNO AT LOW CASH lUTEi. W. G. PEERY, 4!3 8t 5 L. A n i ; No. 7'2H AR :iI Street. BOOKS itt my own mnniiCtclure SELLING AT REDUCED PRICES. W. G. PERRY, Manufacturer, 4 W DC ho. iii 4.Uv.a wU'ooU mm Ul I t 5 B , m W 4 Z H 5 ? S U g S3 tj - t S- I NEW GOLDEN FLAX LINENS JUST OMENED AT MILLIKEN'S LINEN STORES, No. 1128 CHESNUT STREET and No. 828 ARCH STREET. Received Per Steamer City of Antwerp. NINE CASES MORE OF THESE CELEBRATED LINENS. Our GOLDEN FLAX LINEN is undoubtedly tho best Linon in the market, and muoh choaper than any other first-class Linen. PRICES DOVN TO THE COLD RATE. GREAT BARGAINS IN TOWELS. Another Case of Extra Large Huck Towels. These Towels we shall sell at $."()( por dozen. They are much better than Towel usually sold for $ 4'.r0. PRINTED LINEN DRESSES. Ladies will observe that our SPRING IMPORTATION OF LINEN CAMBRIC DRESSES are now in storo. The patterns are very stylish. " Also, Fino Plain Linens for Suits. J, m. HAFLEIGH, Nos. 1012 and 1014 CHESNUT STREET, Has arranged for the week commencing MON DAY, April 25, the most attractive stock of FOREIGN DRY GOODS EVER OFFERED. 500 ADDITIONAL SUITS FOR LADIES AT $10 00. 1000 LAMA LACE SACKS AND SHAWLS. GREAT NOVELTIES IN CHILDREN'S DRESSES. v GRENADINES, LAWNS. AND ORGANDIES. 20 CASES NEW FABRICS FOR SUITS, 25, 30, 50, AND C2 CENTS. 10,000 YARDS BLACK HERN ANI AT 75 CENTS. BLACK SILKS, $1-50; PLAIDS AND STRIPES, 87c, ffVOO, and ?1'25. NEW STYLES IN LINEN SUITS AND SILK SUITS. 500 DOZEN JOUVIN'S KID GLOVES AT REDUCED PRICES. A FULL ASSORTMENT OF ENGLISH HOSIERY. 4 2S 3t SUMMER RESORTS. T LANTIC HOUSE, Newport, Rhode Island. BOAKD REDUCIiD. Tills Ilotel will be opened MAY 30, at $3-60 per da; lor transient boarders. Families ma; make special arrangements by the week or season. WM. W. HAZARD, 4 11 HlMp PROPRIETOR. M'MAKIN'S ATLANTIC HOTEL, CAPK May, M. J., now open for Ruents. 4 ft) tit jutifl juuiHAiviN, I'ropriotor. FOR BALE. CHESTNUT I1ILL FOR SALE. A POINTKD STONK DUIT1SI.K HOUSK, well built, with all modern improvements, aoi two acres oi ground, wi.b vegetables unci fruit. Apply to or address WM. H. RAfJON, 4 23 ft No. 317 WALK U T Slrjet. WEST PHILADELPHIA FOR' SALE ,!"!! or to Kent. No. 41IB Sr'RUCE Mnet. verv bani. tome brown stone front Ki!itlncti, Mansard roof, aide yurd, an nionnrn conveniences, in purled order, inline dinte potihoKHion. No. 41 1 1'INK Mtrtet-Double Mansion, built of drem1 grey stone, side yard, every cuuveniunce, iu period order t'oasession May 1. O. J. FKI.Ti A BRO., 4 3 emwlm No. V2t) H, I HO.Nf Street. TO BE SOLD, BY THOMAS A SONS. '''! on the 'Jnth instant, at the Kxctianire. thn comfort able DwellinK House A. W. cornor oi KKVhN I'KKN I'il and mjM.WKK Streets, iiti feet I rout, near Logan riuuare. It lias large rooms, bigli ceiliugs, nvory couveuiouue, lare gardfn iu a delg'ttul uuiKlibornood. Will be sold at a bargain. 4 20 61 FOR 8ALF, ON EASY TICRM3, FIIIST- class UWK1.IJN(, Hare street, nmxxite Lotan fcuniare. Also, one House No. 1:7 NitolHtiuth street, aliove Olierry. Inquire of H. WISKMAN, No. Wa WAti N UT btroet, or at buildings, oi 4 2omwf tit FiJH3MA !L S FOR SALE-A WRY NEAT, COM- f fortable Oottane in TOIIH r.SDA LK. nn Uin bnnks oi tho Jielaware, Willi nau gardon, largo soddo. and r. pletB with every convenience. Amny In J. KUKHMU), 'I'OKKliSDAU'., or at No. H2S CHKSXUT Kt.4 S3 TO RENT. TO LET THIS STORE PROPERTY NO. 722 Obeanat street, tweut j fle feet frout, oa baa dred and forly Bv feet deep to Bennett street. Back bnildinci Ave stories high. Possession M ay 1, IS7U. Ad dress TUOMA8 8. FLETUHHTt, 1:1 lot! Uelanco, I. J. REAL. ESTATE AGENT. qaniel tn. FOX & son, Conveyancers and Real Estate Aganta, No. 540 N. FIFTH ST., Plilhululpbiit. J rinuijial Agoucy for Cottages and Lots at C1PK NMT uud Al LAN! IO Ul'l V. 4 14 iiulp FRED. SYLVESTER. HEAL ESTATE BItOKEIt, lo. 20 KoiUb rOIJU'l'll Mtrcet, KH5rp PHILIUKM'HIA. ACRIOUL.TUKAL.. ci:it,ii hi:?.: 101,1:! AT I.UMHKR YAl!l No. Wi NORTH Ujli'.VI':S,!nV4 Vine street. HIANOS. RARE CHANCE. WILLIAM BLASIUS, (The eldest of the late firm of BL&SirjS BROS.), ' TVcav Piano Storo, 1008 CHESNUT STREET, (Next door to bla former place,) OFFERS AT "Wholesale Iriccs, (FOR A SHORT TIUE OflLY.) TUB "DECKER TiROS' " TJH RIVALLED PIANOS, (Superior to Stelnway's), AND THE KEANICH, BACH & CO. PI&N0S, (Equal to Stelnway's), and 4 s lm feEVERAL nPNuKEP DOLLARS CHEAPER. KIKKHH BOH KANUKACTIIBKHI OT riRST-ULAbS PiANO-iORTBS. Fnll guarantee and moderate price. 3 ii i W ARKKOOM8. No. 810 AKOH Stres. THE FINE ARTS. Qm F. HAQELTINEj No. 1125 CHESNUT STREET. FOR THIRTY DAYS FROM DATE I WILL SELL MY IMMENSE STOCK AT A LARGE REDUCTION. A great opportunity to obtain choice gooda In the FINE ARTS line at low prices. 11 lOrp REFRIGERATORS. REFRIGERATORS. a FOU THE CHEAPEST AND BE3T CO TO THE MANUFACTORY Of P. P. KEARN3, So. 39 NOP.1H NINTH ST11EET, 4 23smw!mirp BITLOW ARCfT, EAST SIDT5. 1 E F R I O K R A T ) R 8. It K. 8. PARSON A I'tl.'S BKLV VKM U.A'l lNw lihf KlijKH ATl)RS. the ctispuHt itutl mimt rliatile in tlin instkul 'id wltl kp JH. .VIS Vr.OKTAlil.K.H, KHUlTj, MU.tv, aud r.LTTl' K lunKer, Oner, anil unlilnr, WITH I.I.SS UJK, than anj' oilier 17i'fri(!i nil'ir in ui. V tM."Bl mid ii.rml. at tlio Oid ttun 1, Nu. SJ.Mi'X 'K. ..wvb. wU.wrt n.iab W .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers