'.THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1870. LITERATURE. REVIEW OF ' NEW BOOKS. T. B. - Feterson - A Brothers send ns "DaYid Copperfield," by Charles Dickens. This work is the acknowledged masterpiece of the author, and it is particularly interest ing on account of its autobiographical charac ter. "David Copperfield" is not strictly an autobiography, but it undoubtedly contains many reminiscences of Mr. Dickens early struggles and successes in authorship, and some of the scenes in it could scarcely have been written as they were if they were not personal reminiscences. Messrs. Peter son publish a number of editions of Dickens works, at prices to suit everybody, and, in consequence of the large demand caused by the Budden death of the author, they have determined to sell them to the public at wholesale rates for a short time. This will be an excellent opportunity for those who wish to possess complete sets of the great novelist's works to procure them at very small expense. The same house sends us "The Countess of Eudolstadt," by George Sand. This is the second volume of Petersons' complete edition of George Sand's works, and it will be read with interest by all who have perused "Con euelo," to which it is the sequel. "The Countess of Eudolstadt" is not equal to "Consuelo," but it has great and peculiar merits of its own that will commend it to the attention of those who can appreciate first- class fiction. This edition of George Sand's writings is printed on good paper, and is bound in attractive style. From J. B. Lippinoott & Co. we have re ceived "The Seat of Empire," by Charles Carleton Coffin. Published by Fields, Osgood & Co. The Northern Pacific Railroad enter prise has of late attracted a great deal of publio attention to the hitherto almost un known region comprised in the Northwestern section of our empire. A readable and reli able work that will give a good description of the country and explain its advantages will therefore be appreciated at this time. Such a book is the one before us. The author is the celebrated war correspondent "Carle ton," and hi3 account of a trip made last summer on the proposed route of the Northern Pacifio llailroad will give the pub lic a better idea of the character of the terri tory that is about to be opened up to civiliza tion than can perhaps be obtained from any other source. The book is written in a very readable style, and is filled with adventures and incidents of travel that will commend it to those who read only for amusement. It also, however, contains a vast amount of really valuable information and important statistics that are deserving of the attention of those who are interested in the Northern Pacific Road, or in the development of the great Northwest. The work is aocompanied by a map prepared principally by the Bureau of United States Topographical Engineers, which, in addition to other matters, gives the routes of the Union Paoifio and Northern Pa cifio Railroads, with their connections. Porter & Co. send us the following re cent publications of D. Appleton fc Co.:- .. "Woman's Friendship," by Grace Aguilar, is the third volume of the cheap and uniform edition of that writer's works now in course of publication. This is one of those stories of domestic life that Miss Aguilar knows so well how to relate, and it is worthy of a per manent place in any library, and will repay more than one perusal. "Contarini Fleming" is one of the cheap edition of Disraeli's early novels that Messrs. Appleton & Co. are issuing in com pliance with the demand created by the pub lication of "Lothair." 0"Breezie. Langton," by Hawley Smart, is a story of English life of quite as much merit and interest as most of the current fic tion of the day. - Torter & Coates also send us "The Lovers of Gudrun," by William Morris. This poem has been reprinted by Messrs. Roberts Brothers from "The Earthly Paradise," for the convenience of tourists and others who may desire to read it as an independent work. "The Lovers of Gudruu" is not only the finest performance of Mr. Morris, but it is one of the greatest poems of the century. This edition is embellished with an illustra tion by Ilammatt Billings, and is gotten up in neat and tasteful style. Turner & Co. send us "Violetta and I," by Cousin Kate. Published by Loring. This is a poetical little story that will make very pleasant reading for the hot afternoons of summer. Part 33 of "Zell's Encyclopedia" brings the work down to the title "Edmund Kean." The first .inme of this encyclopedia is now complete, and gecond is being pushed forward rapidly. A the price will undoubtedly be advanced after tu wor ja finally issued from the press, those who iie not subscribed should do so at once. From the Central News Company, No. 505 Chesnut street, we have received the latest numbers of The Cornhill Magazine, T&nple Bar, and All the Tear Hound. A Life of Suffebincj. There died lately, at Kiel, Germany, a youth of Sunk City, Wisconsin, aged twenty years. When at the age of eleven years he (then a bright, pro mising boy, the pride of his parents and the admiration of all who knew him) was smitten by a painful bone disease, terminating in a long nervous fever, from which he arose an almost helpless cripple in his lower limbs. Debarred in a great measure, says a Western paper, by this infirmity from the society and sports of his youthful companions, his mind (always clear and active) matured in a degtee to which his feeble body in no wise kept paoj. Patiently enduring his infirmities, and fail ing to be cured by medical science at home, he yet could not give up the hope that there might be help for him elsewhere, aud consn quently, in the fall of 1808, he persuaded his parents to allow him to make a voyage to Germany, in order to consult and test the tkill of some celebrated physicians of that country. On arriving at Hamburg he gave himself but a fortnight's rent before prooeed ing to Kiel (noted for its medical colleges an J hofcpitala), and. submitted to a painful opsra- tion,"Which rendered it necessary to lie with his lower limbs encased in gypsum for months. He was just recovering from the effects of this treatment when attacked by a new form of disease, which his enfeebled body had no power to resist, and he fell a vic tim to the dread destroyer. Yet this youth seldom complained. The cheerfulness with which he aocepted and bore his misfortune, the heroism and patience with which he endured his long and great sufferings, won general admiration and respect, attracting, too, the sympathy of all who knew him. THE IRREPRESSIBLE FENIANS. From the London Spectator, Another flash in the pan ! Will nothing weary out the indomitable perseverance in failure, the pertinacity in false starts, the constancy in effervescence, the patience in impatience, of the Fenian Brotherhood ? The whole race seems' to have gas on the brai a and gunpowder in the blood, and to exhale its fever from year to year in flashes of de lirium as wild and fitful as the outbursts of a volcano or the periodio ebullitions of a hot mud-spring. Yet, if we come to consider it, inconvenient as it is for the world, vexatious for us, and iniquitously unjust to the poor Canadians, who are made to suffer exactly on the principle on which the man acted who revenged himself on an enemy by picking the pocket of his second cousin, this inflam mable temperament which will lavish itself on providing the world with small alarms aud irritating disasters on a petty scale, is neither so exceptional nor so hopeless a phenomenon as it seems. Almost every race that has had a keen national sentiment and national vanity, and no national satisfaction for it, has at some time or other gone off in just so futile a series of detonating explosions, to the ner vous disgust of a preoccupied world, which never can endure distracting political demon strations which are mere signs of temper without practical importance. Frenchmen, Spaniards, Italians, Poles, Hungarians, have all in turn alarmed Europe by demonstra tions apparently as ill-considered and futile as much like the mere summer lightning which indicates the disturbed condition of the elements, without even pretending to give a full vent to trie agitation as any of these Fenian fiascos; and in their case Eng lishmen can always be philosophical, and moralize on the rationale of phenomena so distressing. But in the case of the Fenian outrages it is more difficult especially when we consider that our ancestors carefully pro vided so many of the elements in the compo sition of this human gunpowder, and we, though we are repudiating their policy, have none the less to suner from its pernicious fruits. We ought seriously, then, to be more pa tient than we are of these fatuous and waste ful igneous displays of political vindictive- ness we do not menn, of course, in the sense of failing to put down with relentless completeness these outbursts of passion, or in the sense of devoting less care and fore thought to discovering and providing against them but only in the sense of regarding them without any of that fretful surprise which they always seem to excite afresh in this country whenever they occur. Ihey are, strictly speaking, natural results of the policy of the past, and it is j ust as silly to complain and groan over thein as it is to chafe at the necessity of paying the interest of the national debt, or of hiring police to watch and disarm the young thie ves and vaga bonds whom we had refused to educate. In matters of this kind we quietly take the consequences of our own acts, and don't fall into a pet every day when we pay our heavy taxes or discover some new nest of vioe and crime. But in the case of these more showy political phe nomena these quasi-rebellions in Ireland, outrages in England, invasions of Canada we are apt to think of what happens as if it were entirely gratuitous and causeless, and attributable to a sort of temper preteraaturally anarchical and destructive. Of course, if we look at the acts as if they were free and de liberate acts, nothing could be more wickedly wanton, both because they sacrifice life and peace for no purpose, and because they really tend to prolong the evil for which they affect to find a remedy. But then that is just the mistake of our point of view. These violent and miserable breaches of order are no more free and deliberate acts than an attack of brain-fever is a free and deliberate act or, to suggest a better analogy, than the virulent scofnngs at Ireland and everything Irish in our most characteristically English newspa pers the pictures in Punch, for instance, which always make a gorilla or a baboon of the typical Irishman, are free, deliberate acts. All nations, whether politically active or poli tically suppressed, have a fund of wasteful and destructive energy in them which comes out in one form or another, though races with a comparatively satisfactory national life are apt to let this waste steam evaporate in words (which are not unfrequently, by the way, quite as disastrous in result as actions), while races without any satisfying national life express themselves ia sterile conspiracies and gusts of spit-fire violence. The same vicious energy which England has hithorto wasted, and still too often wastes, in impotent anger against Ireland in simply swearing, as it were, at the Irish for being so impracti cablethe Irish waste in impracticable and reckless attempts to injure England at their own risk and peril. Both kinds of waste are equally futile, though one is more fatal than the other. Yet there is a sort of perverse grandear, too, in this life-long willingness of exiled Irishmen to throw their own lives as well as their property away in the insanest of insane enterprises, only to express once more the undving resolve never abandon the vendetta between their coun try ih England. If our contemptuous bit terness tuar(js Ireland is less destructive, as of course it 1, it i8 also quite without risk. We hazard nothing beu we heap contumely on Ireland. But thesu wretched Fenians know perfectly well that they U-y.ard every thing for an enterprise of the most wDeie.,a character, and for which they themselves. suffer most, though numberless persona 1 11 Is 111; i l . i wuoui iuey wuuiu wuungly aumit f,o oe per fectly innocent must Buffer more or less with them. It seems to us quite clear that pa triotic vindictiveness of this sort, however perverse and calamitous, indicates a sort of reserve force in the raoe, which, if we could only find the secret of turniug it from destruc tive into conservative channels, would make the Iiihh nation one of the most powerful iu the world. If soldiers can admire achieve ments like the useless Balaklava charge, politicians ought to find somewhere at tlio bottom of their hearts a feeling of renpeot for the unwearied aud unwearidblu euergy whiah can fet ill fcuthciibe, and organize, and risk life afcd liberty and property, though failure and disgrace have followed failure and dis grace for generations, solt.ly for the sake of once moreexpreshing the determiuatiou never to give up the feud or abandon the hope of revenge. Passion of thit kind is very lud," pnd wist is more, if Ireland could only in l j? Ed glued by its present actions, it wo Jd La monstrously unjust; but it is force of a sort, and of disinterested ort; and therefore if once it could be directed by , anything ap proaching to calm wisdom, it ought to give distinction and nobility to the race which is capable of cherishing it so long and bitterly. Such seem to us a few of the reasons why the anger and impatience with which we hear of these cruel and utterly unjust assaults of the Fenians on the tranquillity of the British Empire in all parts of the world are inappro priate emotions. We ought to understand that the Irish character is as yet as certain to give out this cry of hereditary passion as the English character is certain to receive it with something of insolent contempt when it is heard. "Natural selection" is much talked of in these days, and if ever a political char acteristic were carefully produced by "natu ral selection," this smouldering resentment of the Irish towards our rule has been so produced. We have trained up a whole race to a habit of vigilant hatred towards British law and rule, and are angered to find the habit continuing after the causes for it have been gradually removed. We might just as well complain of the ferocity which lingers in bloodhounds when the practice of using them for the pursuit and destruction of human beings has been discontinued. These miserable plots, and insurrections, and inva sions are just as little of voluntary iniquities as the fraud and violence of the children of the dangerous classes, or the cunning of the Jews at the time they were the hereditary victims of every nation in Christendom. We ought to look on them somewhat as we look on such calamities as periodic floods or famines calamities to be alleviated by fore thought and contended against by all the strength of a vigorous executive, but not to be offended at as if they were contrary to nature. Of course, we do not in the least mean that Fenians when caught ought not to be sternly punished. We should absolutely object to admitting any influence to the representations of the United States in extenuation of pun ishment, should any such representations be made to us after this raid as were made on the last occasion. There are cases in which men, however much we may be disposed to extenuate their personal guilt, must, for the sake of order, be punished with reference to the mischief they do and the necessity there is for deterring Others from the same crime, and without any reference to the excuses which may be really applicable to their indi vidual case. We hold that these reiterated Fenian crimes are of this description, and that they must in future be severely and even relentlessly punished. But that is no reason at all why we should fall into moods of feeble irritability and causeless rage over politioal phenomena which are no more surprising than the ripening of any harvest of which we have sown the seed. The Dead Alive. A curious story is told by the Gaulois of the disappearance from the Paris Morgue of a body which had been brought there. The police having found a man lying insensible in the streets called in the assistance of a doctor, who declared that the man was dead in consequence of conges tion of the brain. The body was conveyed to the Morgue, was undressed, and. placed upon one of the Blabs with the clothing sus pended above. In the pockets were found a purse and a letter with address. The keeper of the Morgue was astonished the next morn ing to find the body had disappeared, together .with the clothes. He proceeded to the ad dress upon the letter, and inquired for the person mentioned, and was at one introduced to a man in whom he recognized his missing charge. This man, a printer employed at the office of the Oavlois, explained that he was subject to cataleptic attacks, which sometimes lasted from eight to ten hours. On the pre vious evening he had been taken with one of those fits, and remained unconscious until early in the morning, when recovering he found himself at the Morgue, with his clothes hanging over him. He dressed himselt, and, as the doors were only latched, he took his leave, intending to return later to reclaim his purse and to explain the causes of his sudden disappearance from legal custody. A Swabm of. Bees in St. Louis. The St. Louis Democrat says: "At 2 o'clock on Wed nesday afternoon a large swarm of bees visited the city. As they were passing over Fifth Btreet, between Myrtle and Elm, the jingling of tne bells of a street car arrested their progress, and the whole colony settled on the limb of. an aliauthus tree that pro jected over tne siaewaiK. rne weight of tne swarm caused the limb to break, and the little busy bodies were precipitated to the sidewalk. Imagining that an attack had been made upon them by the passengers in the car, they flew upon the horses and men. stinging them severely. The horses did not wait for the order of going, but went at full speed, while some of the passengers took to their heels. Persons passing on the street were also attacked, and there were many ex clamations of 'Shoo fiy!' as the smarting pe destrians made frantic efforts to brush the enemy from their heads and faces. Several ladies were seen gathering their skirts close around them and getting out of the way by hasty walking. Several bees became entangled in a lady's waterfall, and it was hard to tell w Inch was worse Beared the bees or the lady. A colored man captured the swarm by spread ing a sheet upon the ground; the bees all crowded into the sheet, and wer carried away by the colored bee-charmer. CL.AS8. 205 ti L A S 8, 207 BENJAMIN n. snOE.WAKER, Importer or FOREIGN WINDOW GLASS. Manufacturer of amkrioan window glass, bole A cent for the salt of I'BENCH WHIl'K FLA 'IK CLASH, L 1. L'Ulli. I I fu IN. J ill . h. or A TVS FKKNUH aKY-LUHT GLASS. Hiving been appointed bole Agent ia fhiledelpiua lor tneeaie or me proauctsor mi IKKNOii PLATK GLASS COMPANIES, I would drew the attention of purchasers to the very superior uuality of blua made by tuein. It ia whiter and more oighly polished than any otner glass in the world, auii wor. h tweuty uer cent, more for building purposes. For sale, with every other varietyot GLASS, Oruaiuen tal, Colored, Cut, hrubossed, and Plain, by , BfaNJ. 11. NIIOKiM AKER, No. 205. JM7, -M), lilt ABOVK RACK, lattlinrpl 411 WATER PURIFIERS. FAIISON'S ew l'atent lVater Filter taa lurffier Will effectually eleanae from all IMPURITIES, and re mote all foul taate or amell from water paaaed through it. In operation and for aale at the MANUFACTORY, No. i.it DOCK Btreet, and aeld by Houae-furaishinf Store gPBCTkUy. ' j at J. T. VAUTON. 1? An i on Ac . ar'MAHO'. 91 o M A 11 O IV, X- SHII'HNO A NO COM VISION MMROHA.lt TS. -w. - - - - . . - u . . sura. - No. H HOUi'li WHtHVkH, Philaduluhla. ho. 46 W. r-HArj' Street, Baltimore. We are prepared to sbip erer, description wf Freight to ri.ilKHlihi. New Vr.rk, WilniiDtt.nn, and 'ntrioil ie Li i i lu rilu prompt Ofctts abd .e-ptoa. Oaagj vltf eA4 riNANOIAL.. QEVEN PER CENT. First Mortgage Bonds or THS Danville, llaaleton, and Willies barre llailroad Company, At 05 and Accrued Interest Clear or all Taxes, INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL AND OCTOBER. Persons wishing to make Investments are Invited jo examine the merits of these BONDS. Pamphlets "applied and lull information given by Sterling & Wildman, FINANCIAL AGENTS, No. 110 SOUTH THIRD BTREET, 13 U PHILADELPHIA. Government Bonds and other Securities taken In dchange for tne above at best market rates. WE OFFER FOR SALE THE FI11ST M011T0AGE BONDS or Tna SOUTHERN PENNSYLVANIA IRON AMD RAILROAD COMPANY. These Bondi ma THIRTY YEARS, and pay 8KVXN PBR OKNT. interest in gold, olear of all taxes, payable at the First national Bank in Philadelphia. The amount of Bonds issued is 8iM3,000, and are soared by a First Mortgage on real estate, railroad, and franchises of the Company the former of whiob cost two hundred thousand dollars, whioh has been paid for from Btock subscriptions, and after the railroad is finished, to that the prodnota of the mines can be brought to market, it is estimated to be worth 8 1,000,000. 7 b Railroad connects with th Cumberland Valley Railroad about four mile below Ohambersborg, and runs through a section of th most fertile part of th. Cumber land Valley. W sell them at 93 and accrued Interest from Ma rob L For farther particulars apply to C. T. YERKES. Jr., GO., BANKERS, Ft 2 SOUTH THIRD .STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Wilmington and Reading RAILROAD Seven Per Cent. Bonds. FREE OP TAXES. We are ofTerinc: $200,000 of, the Second Mortgage Ilonds ol s this Company AT 82 AND ACCRUED IKTEEEST. roa the convenience of Investors these Bonds are Issued in denominations of $10008, $500s, and 100s. The money Is required for the purchase of addi tional Rolling Stock and tae full equipment of tne Road. The receipts of the Company on the one-half of the Road now being operated from Coatesvllle to Wil mington are about TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS per month, which will be more than DOUBLED with the opening of the other half, over which the large Coa Trade of the Road must come. Only SIX MILES are now required to complete the Road to Blrdsboro, which will be finished by the middle of the month. WM. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS, No. 36 South THIRD Street, 6 6 . PHILADELPHIA, jAYC0QKEe5;(Q). PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AND WASHINGTON, BANKERS JTO Sealeri in Government Securities. Special attention given to the Purchase and Bale of Bonds and Stocks on Commission, at the Board of Brokers In this and other cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL POINTS. GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD. RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS FOR INVEST MENT. PamphleU and full information given at our office, No. 114 H. TIIIItD Street, PHII.AnET.PHIA. 1 8m D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., HNKER8 AND BR0KEK8, No. 121 SOUTh THIRD 8TRKKT.' accessor, te Smith, ft tdolpA Oe , (very branob of th. k amines will has. prompt attentioai as beretof era. Quotation, el Btocka. Ooveraaueota, and Gold ana. rvueused iioiu ie V.a ifyt w,n , wimsi nf FINANCIAL. LEIIIGU CONVERTIBLE Per Cent Firit Mortgage Gold Loan,. Free from all Taies( W. offer for sals 11,760,000 of th. Lehigh Goal and Ravi ratios Oomrnj's new First MoTt-ia Biz Per Oent. Gold Bonds, free wa all taxes, interest da. March and Sep ember, at niWETY (90) And Interest In currency added to date of pnrebaea. Thee, bonds araof a mortac. loan of $2,000,000, dated October ft, 1869. They have twenty fire (26) years to ran, and are convertible into .took at par until 1878. Principal and interest payable ia cold. They are secured by a first mortcaic. on 6600 acres of coal lands in th. Wyomlnc Valley, near Wllkesbarre, at present prodnoinf at th. rat. of 100,000 ton of coal per annum, with works in progress which oon template a larc. inoreaae at an early period, and also npoa valuable Real Estate in this oity. A sicking fond of ten cent, per ton npoa alt ooal taken from the mines for fire years, and of fifteen cent s per ton thereafter, is established, and Th. Fidelity Insuranoe, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, th. Trustees under th. merta.i oolleot these suns and invest them in thee. Bonds, agreeably to th. provisions of th. Trust. For full particulars copies of th. mortcage, .to., apply to O. H. BORIS, W. H. BKWBOLD. 80H A AERT8ES J AT OOOKB a OO.. DRRXEL A CO., . B. W. OLARK A OO. n lm CITY WARRANTS OF LARGE AMOUNTS Taken "Very Clieap. DE HA YEN & BEO., Ho. 40 South THIRD Street. iiu B. K. JAMISON & CO.. SUCCESSORS TO r. JP. KELLY ste CO,. BANKERS AND DEALERS IN Geld, Silver and Government Bonds At Closest market Bates, If. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT 8ti. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS In New York and Philadelphia Btoc Boarda, eto. PU0- ' Mi I L V E JEt FOR SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 20 South THIRD Street PHILADELPHIA. No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GlENDINNING, DAVIS AMOR., No. 2 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Receive deposit subject to check, allow intrai on standing and temporary balances, and execute oruer. prompuy i or me purchase and asae of STOCKS, BONDS and GOLD. In either cltv. Direct telegraph communication from Philadelphia auuae uu new lora. ig F O R S A L I Williamsport City 6 Per Cent Bonds FREE OF ALL TAXES. ALSO, Philadelphia and Darby' Railroad Per Cent Bonds, Coupons payable by the Chesnut aad Walnut Streets , Railway Company. These Bond, will be sold at a price whlcb will maae uiem a very aesiraoie investment. P. 8. PETERSON & CO., No. 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, M PHILADELPHIA E LLIOTT D U If I BANKERS Wo. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET, DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECUK1 TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC. DRAW BILLS OK EXCHANGE AND 1MUI COMMERCIAL LETTERS OP CREDIT ON TU UNION BANE OP .LONDON. IS30K TRAV3LLEK8' LETTEltS OP UKEDIT ON LONDON AND PARIS, available throoghoal Europe, Will collect all Coupon, and Interest free 01 oharg. for partioa making tbeir OnanciA) arrangement wlthna. 7 - a " PIANOS. ALBRECHT, HIEKKH A BOUMIDT, MiMUracTUiutka of rotST-CLA PIANO-KOHTEH, Poll sVAlMUeshJ moderate prices. I I W 1)a,OvmS. a. 09 ARCH Bit OARRIAOE8, ETO. CARRIAGES WM. D. ROGERS, CAXUIXAGIJ ZSUZZCDSZl, ORIGINAL AND ONLY Manufacturer of the Celebrated ROGERS CARRIAGES, lOOO and lOl 1 CIIiaSNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. New and elegant styles of Carnages constant! produced. 8 ss tothaSmrp A CROOERIES, ETO. CHOICEST FINE SOUCHONG, OR English Breakfast Tea, IN BMALL BOXES, FOR FAMILY USE. JAMES R. WEBB, B. E. Corner WAINUT and EIGHTH, 6 31 Btuth3mrp PHI LA DELPHI A. O FAMILIES GOING TO TUB COUNTRY. We offer a fuU stock of the Finest Groceries to Select From, And at the LOWEST CASH PRICE Packed se curely and delivered at any of the Depots. COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South SECOND St., 117 thsta BELOW OHASNUT STREET. C U R I N G, PA C KING, AND SMOKING F8TABISHMENT JOHN BOWKR A OO. CURKHS OP SUPKRIOR ' SUGAR.C17IIED BEFF, and TONGUES, and dealers In ProTislon. generally, b. W. corner TWENTY-FOURTH and BROWN Streets. 6 84 Smthstu rpO FAMILIES RESIDING IN THE RURAL DISTRICTS. We are prepared, as heretofore, to supply families at their country residences with every description of FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, Etc. Etc. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, 11 H Corner ELEVENTH and VINE StreeU. ALPINE BAUCE PREPARED BY AN OLD caterer, pnre, wholesome, appetizing;; pronounced by rood judges the best table sance in the market. 8Kb. bKR A UKO., No. 30 N. WHARVKS, Philadel phia 6 241m LOMBER. 1 0Vd 8PRUCE JOIST. iqra lOlU SPRUCE JOIST. lOlU HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 1 Qr-( SEASONED CLEAR PINi OTA lO I U SEASONED CLEAR PINE. lO 4 U CHOICE PATTERN PINK, SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS, RED CEDAR. ' IQn'fi . FLORIDA FLOORING. 1 0TA 10 I U FLORIDA FLOORING. XOlU CAROLINA FLOORING, VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS, ' RAIL PLANK. 1 QTii WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.1 OTA 10 i V WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.lO ) WALNUT BOARDS. - WALNUT PLANK. 1 W71 UNDERTAKERS' LEMBEH, iQTA 10 t U UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 10 I U RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. . 1QTH SEASONED POPLAR. IOTA 10 i U . SEASONED CHERRY. lOYU ASH. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1 OTA CIGAR BOX MAK.KKS' IOTA 10 I U CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 10 4 U SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, FOR SALE LOW. 1D7 CAROLINA SCANTLING. OTA 1 0 I U CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. 1 0 4 U NORWAY SCANTLING. IQTA CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 QTA 10 4 U CYPRESS SHINGLKb. 1041 MAULE, BROTUEK CO., 1H No. B60fl SOUTH Street PANEL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES I COMMON PLANK. ALL TUlMeUKASSJUI. 1 COMMON BOARDS. I and i 8I1K PHNOK HOARDS. WHITK PINK FLOORING BOARD. YELLOW AND SAP PINK IfLOOBlNOS. Lai and 4)a. BfKUUlE JU1SI, ALL Blm. U KM LOOK JOIST. ALL BIZ KB. PLA K'i'KKUiG LATH A ofKUlALTT. Together srila a ceoeral assortment of Kaildms; Loinbei for gate Iosf t aV w. dMALTZ. 6iU dm Ne. 1716 RIDGE A?enne. notth of Peplar St. United States Builders' Mill, FIFTIES TH Street below Market. ESLER & BROTHER, PROPRIETORS. 4 29 Bra Wood Moulding., Brackets and General Turning Work, batu-rnil milliliters aud Nwe! fiieta. A LAKGK AfSoKTMKNT ALWAYS ON HAND. BUIL.DINQ MATERIALS. R. R. THOMAS & CO., siaLiua LN Doors, Blinds, Sash, Shutters, WINUCW FRAMES, ETC, M. W. 00KKBK Or EIGHTEENTH and MAKKET Streets 419J PHILADELPHIA; rp II O M A S S I M 0 H8, A. (Successor to Henry Simons). V. ri. NATIONAL WAGON AND (K)A(JH WORKS, OVKIUK, No. biahKW MAKKcCT MKKKT. Wagons, Carta. Drays, Wheelbarrows. Timber, Wheels, etc. All oik warranted. Orders promptly attended to. 621m ALEXAN1 ERG.C ATTEI.L CO. I'RODUOK COMMISSION MKKtJUANTS. No. fcJNOHTU WUAKVKa AND Ho. 21 NOHTU WATPW 8TREKT. fUILADlLLPmA. ALUAMSU OaTOAU, XUleS Call 4.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers