THE DAILY EYENINU TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY,- JULY 23, 1870. PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON (BtTHDATS IXCXPTKD), AT THE EVENING TELEGRAPH BUILDING, No. 108 8. THIRD STREET, . PHILADELPHIA, Thr Trice in three cent per copy double sheet), or eighteen cent per xoeek, payable to the carrier by whom served. The lubsoripllon price by mail i$ Nine Dollar $ per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents for two monthi, invariably in advance for Vie time ordered. SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1870. The earliest regular edition of The Eveniko Telegraph goes to press at lj o'clock, and the subsequent regular editions at 2$, and 4J. Whenever there is im portant news of the progress of the Euro pean war, extra editions will be issued after this hoar, and before the regular time for the early edition. " THE LTDERTY OF LABOR." From the K. T. Tribune. "Thoeo newspapers which (!lko the Richmond Oixpatrh) persistently asnrt tnat the Tribune has favored and recommended the Introduction of large masses of Chinese lHiorers to compete, at low wanes, with American workmen (to use a milky euphuism which need oM'eod no sensitive soul), state 'the thing which Is not.' That this kind of labor will ever be, to any great extent, employed In the New England and Mid dle States there Is good reason to doubt, llow far It can compete with the labor of the blacks at the South and Southwest is one problem of which the solution must be waited for: while still another is, to what extent It may be relied upon for subju gating our enormous t rritory, of the cultivation of which we have made scarcely a beginning. These are political and economical questions which must receive their response through the lapse of time and through t'lrcumstances. For the present we put them aside. "Hut what the Tribune has Insisted upon, and while it is published will continue to Insist upon, Is that In the practical solution of these problems on the part of the race calling Itself Caucasian (we dout know hy), there shall bo no sruelty, no injus tice, no violation of the fundamental principles of freedom, but, on the contrary, a strict adherence to the republican doctrine upon which this Govern ment Is founded. That is to say : having held out an invitation to all the world to come to ns; having for years doclared the United States to be the refuge of the nations; having put into our Con stitution an acknowledgment of equal rights for all ; having proclaimed that within our borders no man shall be forbidden to work at such lawful calling as to him may seem proper; having made a covenant against wrong and Injustice; having done all this with fervency and In apparent goed faith, our Idea Is that the United States should either renounce Its principles or boldly stick to them. "We claim for the Chinaman, as for every other kind of man, full permission to come within our borders, to work here at his trade, to make con tracts which our laws will enforce, and generally to do all those things which he might do if he were a Swede, an liiBlnnan, or a Patugoman. About the esped'encv of his coming or staying away, we say nothing. That Is his business and not ourB. "flecondly, we aver, with all the force of which we are capable, the right of an employer to employ such workmen as he may see lit, be the same demi gods or Digger Indians. That, we lay, is his busi ness. "Thirdly, we deny the right of any class of men to band themselves together to prevent any human being from working if be wishes to work industry not being bo universal In this world, or so fatal to Its prosperity, that we must resort to mobs to di minish it "These are onr views. Now for their practical application. We find at North Adams, in the State of Massachusetts, a company of Cnlnese employed in a certain way. Being thus employed, peaceably and profitably (according to their own Ideas of profit), we deny the right of anybody to harass or the protection of all laws which are good of the Divine, the moral, and the enacted. Any organized attempt to drive them away from the town In which they are sojourning we hold to be a consplracv, punishable by fine and Imprisonment. If one of :hem is killed, it Is murder. If tho build ing in which they work is burned, It is arson. They are under the protection of the laws of Massachu setts, and they must so remain (If the laws afore said are good for anything) while they remain In the peace of the Commonwealth. 'Gentlemen critics and cavillers! There is our doctrine concerning Chinese labor. If you can im prove upon It, or refute it, go ahead !" The above article from the New York Tribune enunciates such correct doctrine on the Chinese question that we fu'. y endorse it. If a crnsado is to be organized against idleness, we are not sure that we might not.be tempted to join it. The land teems with lazy loafers who are a burden to society and a perpetual tax upon its productive energies. If a million of these sponges could be shipped off to a foreign land, in exchange for a million of faithful workmen of any nationality, this country would be im mensely benefited. But since we cannot get rid of our lazzaroui, about the very worst thing we can attempt is to exoludo useful laborers from our shores. Suoh a policy would be especially inopportune at a moment when the European war threatens to suspend the influx of German immigration and when the necessity of foreign industrial help is more palpable than at any former peri ad of our history. The real development of more than nine-tenths of our territory has scarcely yet commenced, and thousands of tempting fields of industry are habitually neglected in Bparsely-populated and poorly-cultivated dis tricts. The Chinaman, if he comes here at all, must come as the ally and aid, in many ways, of the American laborer. In Califor nia he has performed labors too unremunera tive to gratify the cupidity of our cauntrymen, without affecting the demand or wages for any description of American skilled labor. He has done useful things which would have re mained undone in the absence of his assist ance, and filled voids that would have re mained unfilled if he had not come hither. We cannot understand what harm has re sulted from the exploitation of abandoned gold placers by the Chinamen, from their em ployment in California factories, from their labors as barbers, or house servants, or even from their service as workmen on the western division of the Pacific Railroad. If they work hard and consume little, we can afford to condone even this grievous sin in conside ration of the rapidity with which all immi grants learn to bring their demands up to the full American standard. There is a cer tain class of politicians who seem to be ' distressed by the fear that the Chi naman will reduoe the wages of skilled laborers in the' East to sit dollars a "month; bat they should console their perturbed spirits with : the reflection tnat no sucn re duction ofcn ever be effected unless a corresponding ehange in the cost of all the necessaries of life precedes and superin duces ii. Good work will continue to secure a good living in this country long after these men have ceased to play the dema gogue. Meanwhile sensible men can decide for themselves whether it is better to have JUo urtioles wLicli enter lato daily consump tion dear and scarce on account of the laok of laborer, than cheap and plenty through their abundance; and whether America, after having reaped a golden harvest from the encourage ment of immigration, should aow reverse her policy and dose her porta. . THE MAYORS VETO. A special meeting of Councils was held yes terday afternoon to consider a message from the Mayor vetoing the resolution of Councils authorizing the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Streets Passenger Railway to use Locust street as a stopping-place. At the last ses sion of the Legislature the Thirteenth and Fifteenth Streets Company was given authority to lay a connecting track on Locust street for the convenience of visitors to the Academy of Music, and although there was considerable opposition to this arrangement on the part of property-holders in the vici nity, it was generally conceded to be for tho public benefit. The Mayor takes a just view of the case when he states that the act authorizing the laying of the connect ing tracks gives all the requisite permission to make the necessary stoppages for the re ception of passengers, and that the resolution of Councils being unnecessary is necessarily unwise. The Mayor intimates that the reso lution to make Locust street a place of tem porary rest could easily be construed into an authority to establish a regular standing place for cars, or to make a siding adjacent to the track, all of which would be obstruc tions to a street already not too wide, and annoyances and impediments to travel. If such a favor as this were to be extended to the Thirteenth and Fifteenth streets road, other railway companies could expect to enjoy the privilege of stopping their cars in front of the Walnut and Chesnut Street Theatres and other places of amusement. The Mayor urges that the passenger railway companies are already looked upon with disfavor by many of our citizens because of the extraordinary bounties they have re ceived, and that it is well that they should be more cautious in asking for public favors, as they may reach a point where public indigna tion will be aroused and shown in a marked manner. The position assumed by the Mayor with regard to this matter will meet with the cordial approval of all the citizens of Philadelphia, except those immediately in terested in the object of the resolution, and Councils acted wisely by sustaining the veto. THE INTEREST ON TEE CITY DEB T. At the special meeting of Councils held yesterday afternoon a communication was re ceived from the Pennsylvania Company for the Insurance on Lives and Granting Annui ties, stating that, as fiduciaries for a number of estates, they held certificates of city loans prior to the act of Congress of the L'.'th of February, 18G2, to the amount of $:49,0O0, and that they had demanded and been refused payment in coin of the July interest, and had also been refused payment in legal-tender notes of the sum of $11,. '101 due as the July interest on $376,700 of the city's loans, created subsequently to the said act of Congress, held for the same estates, but in separate certificates. The reason as signed by the City Treasurer for his refusal to pay the latter amount was his inability to separate the payments on his books of inte rest on the different loans. This communi cation was referred by both branches of Councils to their Committees on Law and Finance, and the whole subject will therefore go over until the regular meeting in Septem ber, unless the Mayor calls another special meeting to consider it. The disposition shown by the members of Councils to tempo rize with this important matter is not credit able to their good judgment and publio npirit. If the creditors of the city choose to go to law about it, they can undoubtedly compel the payment in gold of the interest on the loans created prior to the act of 1K02, and the city will have to foot a bill of costs and other legal expenses in addition. There can be nothing whatever gained by delay, even in political capital, and those members of Councils who hope to win favor with thoughtless voters in their wards will proba bly find that they have made a wrong calcu lation if the city becomes involved in a series of expensive lawsuits. There is no reason why the city loans should not command a premium in the market, and it is only the hesitating, dubious, and insincere system of managing our finances that Councils have adopted for so many years past that has brought our credit to its present low ebb. : ANOTHER pjlKSOMKXOX. - An American medium Ooea Maine Aatonlahlns Pluylo and Hninn. 'lhe wonderful doings by an American me dium are recorded by a London letter writer, who says: "lie is a young man about twenty one, tall, and strikingly handsome. His mani festations are of a varied character, but those which attract the most notice by their novelty are musical. Melting a house one day where he happened to be, I heard from a room on the floor above me some very masterly ylayiDg on the piano-forte. I went upon the staircuse to hear better, and have seldom heard any player with a finer and stronger grasp of the capabilities of the instrument. In a few moments sieging was added the singing, appa rently, of a line soprano of great compass, exe cution and power. Kotering the drawing-room. I found this young American the player and the singer and he played, talked, and sang for an hour. He assured me, and his friends assured me also, that be had never learned to play, and could not even read music, and that he played and sang only under spirit intluence. I after wards heard him play and sing for two hours to a company of thirty or forty persons, to their apparent great delight. At Paris, where he was for some time, he told me he had played and sunt; before tho best musical circles, and in London he Is engaged almost every night at fashionable parties, at which his extraordinary performances are natu rally the chief attraction. One of his feats is to sit down to a piano with a musician aud take part in a duet, which may be either an improvisation or music with which he is quite unacquainted. Of course. I cannot say per sonally that he has had no practice, which would enable him to play the gems of the finest operas with great breadth and felicity of treat ment; but I certainly think bis whole perform ante one of a very extraordinary character. QOLONNADE HOTEL. FIFTEENTH AND CHESNUT BT3 NTTEILT RCW AHD HANDSOMELY FTJ VttUJU) is aow (84 lit pcmautol ec tmuiat tau RELtOIOUS NOTIONS. fp VNTON 6 KRVTCES CENTRAL PRICSBY TKH1AN and T II I 11 1) REFORMED CHURCHES. Rev. M. W. JACOBUS, 1). D., of 1'lttMMirg, will preach to-morrow (S.inbath) tnorn Ingtnthe CENTRAL TKE-SBYTERIAN CHURCH. KIOHTH and CIIKRRY Streets, at 10 o'clock, and In the THIRD REFORMED CHURCH, TENTH an 1 FILBERT Streets, In the evening at 8 o'clock. gs- UNION SERVICES WEST ARCH STREET and SEVENTH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES. Rev. HENRY C. McCOOK will preach to-raorrow In WEST ARCH STREET CHURCH at inu A. M., and in SEVENTH PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, BROAD Street, above Chesnut, at 8 P. M. rags- SPRINO GARDEN STREET M. B. CRTRCn. TWENTIETH and SPRING GARDEN Streets Rev. L. C. MATLACK, of ltew Orleans, will preach to-morrow at I0j o'clock A. M. REV. JAMES NEII.L WILL PREACH IN the ARCH STREET M. E. CHURCH, BROAtf Street, below Arch, Sunday morning at lox o'clock. Strangers invited. tSf ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH, TWENTIETH w and CHERRY Streets. Service (Choral) and sermon to-morrow evening at 8 o'clock. At this service the seats will be free. ' 7 8 s6t ny CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCIT, N. I,, N. E. corner FRANKLIN and THOMPSON Streets Services at 10)tf A. M. and 8 P. M. Sabbath-school at 9 A. M. SPECIAL. NOTICES. tor additional Sptrial AoMcM) M. to FnM'i Pwtt. w FINEST SUMMEK CLOTItlNO. R N K M N K A Nos. 818 AND 8'JO K CHESNUT W STREET. R IqT STEIN WAY & SON 8' GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT PIAN03. CHARLES BLASIU8, 80LB AGENT FOR TUB SALS OP TBI WORLD-RENOWNED PIANOS, AT THE OLD WAREROOMS, 4 16tMp No. 1006 CHESNUT STREET. GRAND EXCURSION TO CAPE MAY', over the West Jersey Railroad, In honor of the FIFTH MARYLAND REGIMENT, Accompanied by ProfeBsor McClurg's celebrated Liberty Silver Cornet Hand, MONDAY, JULY 86, 1870. Fare for the Excursion fi-fio Tickets for sale at Ticket Oltlce. No. H2s Chesnut street; at the Hand Headquarters, No. 8:tT Chesnut street; and at Market Street Wharf (upper side) on the morning of the Excursion. Last boat leaves Market Street Wharf (upper side) at 6 o'clock A. M. 7 2 !4t DURYEA'S GLEN COVE STARCH RE celved the first prize at all exhibitions in this country and In Europe for the past ten years. Starch when pure Is purely white and free from sourness. Inferior starch has a golden or yellow tinge, a color not desirable in one's linen. If you want the best and most economical In use ask for DURYEA'S. Wholesale Agents, HENRY C. KELLOGG .t CO., 7 22 2t WATER and CHESNUT Streets. ft- PHILADELPHIA AND TRENTON RAIL w ROAD COMPANY. NO. 224 8. Dei.awavb Avekuk,) Plill.ADKMMUA, July 20, 170. DIVIDEND NOTICE. The Directors have declared a semi-annual divi dend of FIVE (ft) PER CENT, upon the capital stock of the Company, clear of Taxes, from the profits of the six months ending June 80, 1870, payable on and after AL'UTST 1, proximo, when the transfer-books will be reopened. 7 21 lot J. PARKER NORRIS, Treasurer. gy- PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAIL ROAD COMPANY. Olllce, No. 227 S. FOUR Til Street. Philadelphia, July 18. 1870. The obligations of this Company given for pre mium on Oold In settlement for Bonds or Coupons due April 1, 1870, or those given for the settlement of matured Coupons issued y the East Pennsylvania Railroad Company, will be paid on presentation at hd.v time on aud after the 20th of August next. 7 10 14t 8. BRADFORD, Treasurer. tgy HARPER'S HAIR DYE THE ONLY harmleM and reliable Iy known. This iplendid Hair Dja i perfect. UbinM red, ruatv, or gray hair, whiakera, or uiouataobe instantly to a gloaay black or natural brown, without injuring the hair or staining the akin, leaving tne hair aott and beautiful. Only 50 cent lor a large box. OALLKNDKK, THIRD and WALNUT; JOHNSON. HOI.LOWAY A COWDKN, No. tSuJ AKGll Street;TKKNWlTH.No. 614 OHKKNUT Street ; YAK NHM FIr'l KKNTll and MARKICT Street a; BROWN, FIFTH aud Q11K8NUT bU;and all Druggiatt. tl Clip gs- T. W. BAIL Y, No. C22 MARKET Street, is daily receiving new designs 1n Diamond Work, tine Oold Jewelry and Silver-ware; also, American and Foreign Watches, and has made great reduction in his prices. H. 1) Watches and Jewelry repaired by skilful workmen. T 18 lm DURYEA'S IMPROVED CORN STARCH received the prize medals at the Paris and Havre International Expositions. Try It, and you will find It the most healthy and economical in the world. 7 22 2t' QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. CAPITAL, ,UU0,0uu. 8ABINK, ALLKN A DULLES, Agent. K FIFTH and WALNUT Street. Q- WARD ALE O. MCALLISTER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, No. m BROADWAY, Maw Yerk. M A. IP OF TBI Seat of War in Europe, 8izo 33x28 inches, $2'00, MAILED TO ANY ADDRESS. Compiled from the latest and most authentic sources by V. HKNDSCHL. JAMES S. EARIE & SONS, No. 816 CHESNUT Street, 7S3 2t raiSADSLPJIIA. THE PERFECTION OF THE ART OF REFINING WHISKIES. P. Hevner, Sole Proprietor, for the State of Pennsylvania, of the CELEBRATED "P. P." WHISKIES, Nos. 246 South FRONT and 117 DOCK Street, Philadelphia. It has been clearly demonstrated that all utBij uiueai mat musi necessarily ue empiov ea, decomposing, disengaging and vaporizing contained in the mash, which when condensed form the deleterious fnsel oil bo detrimental to ordinarily distilled, are apt, even when only used sparingly as a stimulant, to create Nausea, The "P. r. Whiskies, on the contrary, "stimulate and cheer" without unduly exciting the brain or Injuring the coats of tho stomaoh. They are distilled from the choicest Cereals in a partial vacuum, the pressure of the atmosphere being reduced from 15 lbs. to about a lbs. 'u "M" uuuoci ueuuv a icujuciaiuio 01 ohiy aooui mil flerrrflca nt ftfat in rAnnirArt in rtiatillinir 'I hi nomaoa a chanical. no acids,-charcoal, essences, extracts, i- T u ur oul Pure 'ooiesome, ana are distilled. The "P . P." Whiskies have been tested by some of the most eminent of the Medical Faculty, by Analytical Chemists, and by the best ju dges of Liquors in the United States, and pronounced perfectly pure and wholesome, and especially desirable for Family use and Medical pwpotcs. 1 J Members of the medical faculty, the trade, and the public generally are cordially invited to call and inspect the machinery and process an d examine the liquors and the impurities extracted, at the Refinery and Warerooms, Nos. 124G South FRONT and 117 DOCK Street. P. HEVNER. POLITICAL.. FOR II E R I F F , WILLIAM 11. LEEDS, TSNTH WARD. T 11 tf gUjy- FOR REGISTER OF WILLS, 13T0, WILLIAM M . B U N N , SIXTEENTH WARD. Late Ttivatc Company F, 731 P. V. ri 11 tf OLOTHINO. BEING BILL, TEN DOLLAR BILL! That's the kind of Hill that wlU bring you a RBAL ALL-WOOL 8COTi.II CHEVIOT COAT, VEST, AND PANTS, SCOTCH CHEVIOT ALL-WOOL, ftO. Tlicre is no other place In town Where a suit like thu Can be afforded, Except at GREAT BROWN IIALI, 603 and 605 CHESNUT STREET. CHARLES STOKES & CO., No. 631 CIIEeiVlJT Street, CLOTHIER, LARGE AND CHOICE STOCK OF GOODS FOR CUSTOMER WORK. ALSO, 6 S7tf FINE RE aDY-M APE CLOTHING. OARPETINCS, ETC. GOLD. Fi'eminiTi lias gone np5 C It PETS MUST rOLLOlV. Buy your goidi btfore the rise in prices. R. L. KNIGHT & SOV, 1222 CHESNUT STREET, 7 S3 St4p PHILADELPHIA,' BOOTS AND SHOES, BARTLETT, FINE CUSTOM-MADE C;OOT8 AND 8 HOES. Made on oar Unproved Lasts, insuring Comfort Beauty and Durability. Ko. 33 SOUTn SIXTH STREET, 1 13 thatoDn ABOVE CUES NUT. WASHINO MACHINES. TO THE DOUBTFUL. Bring some soiled clothing on any Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, and we will prove to you that tii KING WASHER Will do the work weU and quickly. W will tell them payable in easy instalment. Weareagenta for the RELIANCE WRINQER9, the easiest to work In the market, (8 0 thatuSuirp J. H. COYLE & CO., Wholesale Dealers In Wooden Ware, Yarns, Etc., No. CltJ MAltKKT STREET. Agents wanted for Pennsylvania aad New Jersey. Liqnors distilled by the ordinary methods contain drugs or chemicaU vf any description being innocuous as a beverage, retaining in simple DRY GOODS. The Housekeeper's Opportunity!! TAKING ACCOUNT OF STOCK! GOODS REDUCED TO EFFECT IMME DIATE SALES! Bleached Pmask Table Linen, 50c, up. Hand-loom Table Linens, 45c., up. Muslin aud Linen Sheetings, all widths and quali ties. Towels, Napkins, Crash, HuckabacS, Bird-eye Linen. . Honeycomb, Dimity, and Marseilles Quilts. Linen Duck for men's and boys' wear, 20c, up. Colored Linens for ladles' wear, 25c, up. Thin Summer Shirts and Stockings. Gents' Gauze Shirts, 25, 75c, up. Ladles' Gauze Merino Vests.regular made, TSc, up. Cartwnght A Warner's Shirts, closing out. Chlidren's Gauze Merino Vests, all sizes. Ladles' Regular Made Hose, 25, 29, Sic. Gents' Regular made Half Hose, 25, 23, 81c. Children's White and Colored Stoiklugj, all quali ties. White Goods at a Sacrifice!! Corded Piques, 23c. Figured Piques, 25c, up. Victoria Lawn, Plaid Muslins, French Manilas. Hamburg Edgings and Inscrtlngs. JOHN BURNS, House-famish in g Dry Goods and Im porter of Hosiery, 315 and 917 S. i:JLi:Yi;TII St., It ABOVE SPRUCE. "AT THORNLEY'8," ANOTHER SWEEPING REDUCTION. GOODS MUST BE SOLD. I am determined to clean out my SUMMER STOCK I if the community need goods at HALF their usual price. 1 have went right through and manked ' prices down in some CASES FIFTY PER CENT., ! and In MANY CASES TWENTY-FIVE and THIRTY PER CENT. f j I Ac'i Point os from f to 155. Lace Sacques from $10 to 125. Thin Mixed Tress Goods. I Lawns, Percales and P. K's. Black Hernanles and Grenadines. Linens and Japanese Grass Cloths (for Suits). Black Silks, Pongee Silks, Japanese Silks. Kid Gloves, Parasols, Corsets, Skirts, etc. etc. A full stock of STAPLE and DOMESTIC GOODS, 'AT THE OLD ESTABLISHED STANP," X0BTHKAST C0BNEB EIGHTH and SPRING GARDEN Sts., JOSEPH H. THORN LEY, ! a 3 thstnt PHILADELPHIA. M R 8. R. DILLON. ItOS. 833 AND 881 SOUTH STREET. LadiM and Minac Crp, Gimp, Hair Pam.I and Straw Round and Pyramid HaU; Ribbon, Satin, Bilk. Valval, and Valvetaena, OrapM, Faatbera, Flowars, uut, Saab Ribbons, OnuunanU, Mourning ItiAinery Or p. VaiU, a to. 14 ART EXHIBITION. C. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERIES, No. 1125 CHESNUT STREET. LOOKIXG-GLASSES, PICTURE FRAMES, ENGRAVINGS. ' V' .' AUTOTYPES, SWISS PANORAMAS, CUBOMOS, PHOTOGRAPHS, ARTISTS' MATERIALS, 11 iorp ETC.ETC. THE FINE ARTS. NEW VIEWS IN THE PARK. Punlance's Stereoscopic Views In the Park, 23 cents each, 12 50 per dozen. New Chromo, portrait of Dickens, th last likeness for which he sat, mounted, 9zll inches, so cents each. Mailed to any address. NEW CHROM08, after Blrket Foster. NEW ENGRAVINGS. LOOKING-GLASSES still at reduced prices. JAMES S. EARLE & SONS, No. 816 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. ORGANS. CHURCH AND CHAPEL ORGANS, Warranted Unexcelled and Satls factory to lurcliuerg, COSTING FROM 65) TO $3UdO EACH. With food Second hnd Orgini for Mia, ol Organ of any aiza boilt to order bf WM. B. D. SIMMONS & CO., No. U CHARLES Street. Boetoa, U.i. St. Stephen's Epiacopal Cbarch, and th. Third Re formed Church. Tenth street, Philadelphia, eonta in Or. gawrM our reveal make, U ttiurp a very large percentage of impurities; the all the banefnl elements and noxious Rises life and health. Consequently Liquors, as Sick Headache, Inflammationtnt Kidney used hence the "P. P. Whiskies are not only purity the flavor of the oereals from which they BEWINQ MAOHINE8. THE AMERICAN Combination Button-Hole AKB SEWING MACHINE Is now admitted to be far uperior to all othera as a Family Machine. The SIMPLICITY, EASE and CERTAINTY with which It operates, as well M th uniform excellence of lu work, throughout the aa. tire range of sewing, In Btltchinff, Ilemmlnsr, Felling Tucking, Cording, II raiding (tuiliina, Uathering and Sewing on, Overvaluing, Embroidering on the Edge, and its BeantlTnl Untton.llole and Eye let Hole Work, Place it unquestionably far in adTance of any otha similar Invention. This la the only new famfly machine that embodlea any Substantial Improvement upon the many oi machines In the market It Certainly has no Equal. It Is also admirably adapted to inanuiactana mi. poses on aa kinds of fabrics. Can and see It operate-and ret samples of ta work, We have also for sale onr "PLAIN AMERICAS a beautiful family machine, at a Eednoed Prloe. This machine does all that is done on toa Combina tloa except the Overseamlng and BaOoa-hols work Office and Salesrooms, No. 1318 CIIESJNTJT ST., 4 83 thatnSmrp PHTLADKLPHa. II E WHEELER & WILSON bEWIAG machine. For Sale on Easy Terms. NO. 914 CHESNUT STREET. 4 mwn! PHILADELPHIA. FINANOIAI. IJ II E Lehigh Valley Railroad Company Will, until August 1 next, pay off at rar and Accrued interest, Any of their FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, due la 1873, on presentation at their Office, No. 303 WAL NUT Street. I,. CIIAiriliERIaVIilT, TREASURER. June S3, 1870. ' yj lmip jy R K X E I fc CO., No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET. Amoricau and Foreign ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT available on presentation In any part of Europe, lravellers can make all their financial arrange ments through ns, and we will collect their Interest and dividends without charge. DBIXKL, WDITHB0F & Ca.jDHIIIL, BiBJXS & Co., New York. j Paris. p STOCKS, LOANS, ETC., BOUGHT AND SOLD AT THE BOARD OF BROKERS, BY GEORGE J. BOYD, JU thstiranv; No. 18 6. THIRD Street. OARRIAQES. GARDNER & FLEMING, CAB RI AGE BUILDERS, No. 214 8. FIFTH Street, BELOW WALNUT. In order to make room (or extensive alteration! and repairs to our Warerooma and Manufactory, we are closing out onr entire stock of IT 6 tf rp Phaetons, Jenny Linda, Buggies, Etc., AT VERY MUCH REDUCED PRICES
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