2 THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1870. crin.iT or txxxj mean. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. the ri:orLES of euuope AND Till! GREAT AVAK. Prom the A; I'. Iltrald. To and fro the tide of opinion sways, from bide to ide, in reference to tho right ani the strength of this power or of that in the torri ble conflict which threatens lo cover Chris tendom with blood and ashes. Tho number of the armies is counted, the array of floets i s given in elaborate detail, and tho ability of the leaders and the captains is extolled in endless articles. Trance, Prussia, England, Kussia, Italy, eto.are mentioned confidently as undivided units of strength. But as yet no one in the press of Europe or Aaiorica has bethought him, or at least has expressed the thought, that there may somewhere beneath the surface reside a vast, silent, suffering multitude of men to whom the marching tnd countermarching of these hosts menu ruin, misery, and death. What has the individuil in either nation embattled against the other to charge upon the poor work ing man or peasant who lives and toils beyond the dividing frontier? " He is a brother in poverty, and in oppression, perhaps, -with the conscript who is suddenly called from his humble hearth so f aco bayonet and bullet for a cause he does not conprn hend and . to the benefit of men who have ' been the masters of him and of his kindred before bim for hundreds of years, l'eace is the gospel of civilization and progress, and war is the doctrine of every violence and every vice. A century ago this was not com prehended, but to-day of the one hundred and fifty millions of human beings who people Europe the vast majority, in accepting the general truths of the religion of Christ and receiving the rudiments of knowledge, have learned to look upward for a higher glory than to manure the soil for the ambitious satisfaction of a prince, and to a nobler end of life than the memory of wounds and slaughter received by their oomrados or in flicted upon their antagonists. This is the idea that pervades the working masses the true bone and sinew of Europe. Emperors and kings issue pompous orders from their palaces and bodies of armed sol diery advanoe to the field of death; but the million the mass of suffering, toiling men remember that on the East and West, they have only brethren laboring and praying like themselves. This is the inner tone that we begin to discover already in the great dia pason of war that sounds in our ears from beyond the Atlantic. At Strasbourg, at Co logne, at Geneva in Switzerland, at Florence and Milan in Italy, the popular party, as con tradistinguished from the Court and the army, has spoken. When, as early as 1851, M. Ilo mieu predicted the coming of the "Hed Spec tre" he feared the terrific outburst of re- ' volutionary passion that then threatened to overthrow all forms of order in Europe. But the rise of Napoleon III and his military government conjured the ghost and laid it with the welcome formula, "The empire is peace." Peace alone was the safety, and " only with peace could the old systems hope for any lingering permanence, lint now it has been shown by war after war, culminating at last in a catastrophe that has no bettar pretext than the succession to a discarded t crown in a country of but third or fourth-rate importance in the world, that while the , monarchical ByBtem endures and standing armies are tolerated there is no guarantee against a sudden deluge of blood. The only rainbow in the sky to the nations of the earth is seen in the colors of the republic, one and universal. This is a mighty lesson, and at the hour while we write the peoples of the Eastern hemisphere watch impatiently for the moment wiien by mutual del eats tue iron rod wielded by either hand of armed power shall be worn ana broKen. livery necessary of ' life made coBther, the very finer of . Providence, by its shortening bounties in tho harvest field and its burning heats on laa 1 and sea, pointing to a period of intense tri bulation, how shall the people exult in mutual ' slaughter? The voice of the humble ascends to the throne of God for rescue from this endless scourge. The prayers of all good men go up incessantly for peace and for the banishment of the causes and instruments of war. How . shall the most venerable and most enlight ened nations of the world continue this bloody orgie while on tho hither borders of the ocean there is a spectacle of strength. prosperity, and happiness with liberty, and without the sword, continually offered to their gaze ? This war, with its accumulated horrors, will do more to utterly disgust men with the grim Moloch that has so long deluded and trampled on them, and its memories will more incline them to the cause of republican ism, and, we believe, of final truth and peaco among nations, man any event since the cru cifixion. TUE TIIEATHE OF THE WAK. From the X. Y. Sun. Good maDS of Eurone can be found in every household every school atlas contains them and ail who wish to follow the de velopments of the war with intelligence will do well to gather from the map a clear idea of the general features of the country in which the fighting is to take place. In studying the map, the first, object to be examined is the beundary line between France and Germany; and its most obvious peculiarity is that near . Lauterburg it forms almost a right angle. One side of the angle is marked by the ltbino, the other is a conventional lino from east to west. The aggregate length of these two sides is less than 300 miles. Luxemburg and Belgium on the northwest and Switzerland on the southeast are neutral territories, and do not come into consideration at present, as their neutrality will doubtless be respected, at least during the earlier stages of the con flict. The Rhine rises among the glaciers of the central Alps, flows north to the deep lake of Constance, and thence pursues a westerly course as far as Basel, the capital city of the Swiss canton of the 8&me name. From Basel it flows north by east to the great German fortress of Mentz, or Mayence, in Hesse. This part of its valley is a fertile, low plain, about thirty miles wide, which is bounded on both sides by mountains and levated pla teaus, on the east by the Black end Odea Forests, and on the west by the Vosges aid Haardt mountains. At Bingen, a few miles west of Mentz. the Ithine changes its course to the northwesc, ' traversing a deeply-cut gorge of theKheius'i plateau. It is this part of its valley which is so famous for its picturesque beauty, and whose vine-clad hills, turreted castles, aud hoary ruins attract so many tourists from all parts of the world. ' From Basel to the little river L&uter the P.hine flows between France and tho grand duchy ef Baden. For the nxt ".".0 miles it flows through German territory, having the Bavarian Palatinate, a small part of liesse, and a large part of tho Prussian Uhine prov ince, upon its western bank. The ailments of llie Hume, wnose banks will soon resound wih the din of battle, are the Moselle and the Nahe. The Moselle rises on ' the western flanks of thd Vosge9 ruonrtaiLS, flows through the hilly region of nortbenskrn France, then separates Luxem burg from PPQHa, and at last traverses a very tortuorts and deeply cut valley. It reeoivs tho Ka're, or Soar, which, rising in France,, flows through southwestern Prussia. The Nnbe rises in Prussia, and flows into tho Mine at Fingen. Its tributary, the Glan, flow s through a valley wlich opens into the volley of the Saar. We may safely ussume that tho first battle of Ihe war will be fought near tho north eastern bourdery of France, somewhere be tween tho valley of tho ltliiue and the valley of the Mosdle. The Prussian forces are massed on tl;e north, the French on the south of this line. Lach army l&s in its rear a series of strongly fortified places, with which sevetal lines oi railway maintain an easy ana rapid communication. 'ihe country between tue luune ana tne Moselle consists of two belts of hilly plateaus, which are fceparated by th valley of the tipper Faar. the Glan, and the lower Nahe mentioned above, tne eastern belt includes he Ilaardt and the northern continuation of thc Vosges mountains. It is covered with dense forests end intersected in an irregular manner by numerous gorges and vaUeys, which would seriously impede military opera tions. A railroad crosses it on German soil, connecting Mannheim and Speyer on the Khme, by way of Kaiserlauteru, witu haar bruck on the Suar. Another railroad crosses rn French soil, from Strasbourg to Sarro bour,?. The western belt includes . elevated ridges and broken table lands, and, although easier of eccess than the eastern, twould make the avrcn of an invading force extremely diffi cult and fatignirg. A railroad from Biugon follows the valley of the Nahe, and leads to Saartu uek on tho Saar, and thenoe to Metz on the Moselle. It is most likely that the operations at the openir of the campaign will be conducted through the two valleys above described. The broken grouud enclosing them will afford excellent positions for defense and offense. Ihe country Is sucn as to give ample opportunity to the oommanders to cprry out brilliant manoeuvres; and i' remaius to bo Bern which of the two parties will ex hibit the greater talent, promptness, and celerity. Frarce has along her noTibwcfain frontier a scries of secondary fortresses, which are not very important, except as points of support in a position occupied by the army. Such are Lauterbourg and Weisseubourg, east of the Vosges mountains, and Thionville, on the Mosello. Further inland are two fortified rln?s of the first rank, Strasburg on the, Rhine, and Metz on the Moselle, neither of of which would bo passed by an invading army without absorbing at least a corps of observation. The only Prussian fortress near the fron tier is Saarlonis on the Saar, which mate rially aids iu the defense of this valley. On the Ithine there are several fortresses of the first rank, two of which are at 'presont con sidered by good authorities impreguable Metz, opposite tne moutn or tne Mam river, and Ehrenbreitstein, opposite the mouth of tho Moselle, near the city of Coblentz. The plans of operations are or coarse known only to the commanders and their staff officers, and all speculations regarding them are futile. Prominent officers of both armies have for years past studied ths ground and its advaiitrges for attack or defense. The ttrategical design adopted by either side has been carefniiy matured, and it is cot likely that grave errors will be committed- General von Moltke, of the Prussian army, proved his skill in. the brilliant cuapvgu of lSliu. Whether the French nossess an offiosr of equal genius is doubtful. Their recent cam paigns in tho Crimea and Northern Italy did not show a strategist or great resources. The operations will bo of extreme interest, not onlv from the magnitude of tho armies. bnt still more from the intellectual forces arrayed against each other. "DKAPERY MISSES." From the N. F. Timet. A French journalist, M. Be strand, has dis covered a new trade, which he says is carried on in London. It is th delight of many Parisians to detect tresn and nemous sins in the British capital, whioh, through the pens of its writers. Las so long flaunted virtuous indignation before the eyes of naughty Paris, The gay denizen of the Boulevards regards J onuon rnucn as the peop.'e or otuer Amen can cities regard uoston mat is to say, as a "whited sepulchre," whose misdeeds are real if net flagrant, and whose "rank corruption mining ail witnin miecw unsoen. jm. Bsr trends new trad j is an illustration of this concealed turpitude, and hin aooount of it must have been quite u delicious morsel for bis current literary repast. It consists, as he explains, in carefully selecting handsome gins oi low station, ana, alter mating a strict bargain with them, adroitly teaching them to plivy the part of young ladies. Thoy are wasned, dressed in tne xasmon, given a few lessons in doportment rnd speech,, and then judiciously cxnibued in Kotten li w. the Zoolcgicnl Gardens, tho opera, and other fashionable resorts, until they "attract the attention and gain the heart and ultimately the hand of some nob. man. The enterpris ing operator is a matrimonial agont. After him, of comae, comes the delude. "Little by little," says the delighted M. Bertrand. "ihe poetio illusions of the honeymoon dis appear, until fct lust the husband discovers that he has married a girl without position or educauon. fco mncn tne worie! liut in the meanwhile the bargain has been struck, and the matrimonial aent has pocketed his premium. Thcefl l AfA-if i ntr -na on .allail t an pears, "Drapry Misfes," an! one reason why so many vulgar-looking women are at the head of rich men's families in England is that each of their husbands in the callow years of youtn wiu caugnt by a '".urepery Miss. It teeins to be taken for granted that while originally dazzled by the spells of his enchan tress aided by her ingenious preceptor the averr.pe iloghshman is totally incapable of perceiving ti e absence of the education And manner which ae characteristic of young ladies. ny oook-maid, with fine eyes, a pro fusion of sunny hair, and a superficial laoqaer of style acquired, let us say, iu six easy les sons, can sub' me this amorous John Bull, and bear Lira off In, triumph. Tho horrid iUth euLBequently dawns upon him by slow iltgrees. As passion qoola repson assumes Lersway, and '.ho d iluded Benedick looks around to take vonLeance on the too aooom plished .igect who has betrayed him; but, mean vmle, tatt dexterous speculator has re tired to Hume distant seashore, or seoluded village, lo prepa.e nioro "Pranory Misses" for the .hymeneal market. The happy pos sessor of the cook-maid makes the best of a bad bargain, and their future marital felicity is typified in the experiences of Mr. and Mrs. Cnudle. Although unable to accept M. Bertrand s amusing statement precisely as he would have rtsr we have tto doubt there is some indirect truth in it, for the following reasons: It is admitted, and is indeed a subjeot of general complaint in England, that men shirk mar riage, end especially shirk it in their own rniik In life. Women are more numerous in Irigland than men, and by natural laws, the reverse operation of which has been seen in California and Australia, are relatively less sought after. Living is very costly, female drens Las been growing more extravagant, find at the same time female pretensions, in cluding what relates to the government of the leniily, have become more exacting. Lng- litbmen Lesitate more, therefore, than they once did to put their heads in the noose. At the pa rue time, the worship of mere beauty in women for reasons easy to point out is more prevalent than ever. By all there circumstances the chances of success for schemes like those of M. Ber traiid's "Drapery Misses" manifestly in crease. Eager to carry their point, neither the "Miss" nor her instructor is likely to" be over-strenuous as to settlements, the victim, even if suspicions, as in fact he often would be, touching the obscurity of his charmer's onin, niignt secretly nope to be compen sated by ner economical habits in the future. end the lady's good looks might thus carry the day, when in other circumstances her intending spouse would shrink from matri mony altogether. M. Bertrand is perhaps not so far wrong as regards the substantial occurrence of what he depicts, although he probably commits an error in declaring that to be a regular trade which only presents it- Fell as an occasional conspiracy. hat is really odd about his story is, that M. Ber trand should impute to London a business which at least four French dramatists, dur ing the last few years, have, by implication, lastened upon x'ans; a lact or wnicn it ap pears not a little remarkable that a French journalist should be ignorant. MEMORIALS AS MERCHANDISE. from the A'. Y. World. To honor our dead is one of the deepest, as certainly it is one of the most nearly uni versal, or unman instincts. To do them honor by making real sacrifices in their be half la a practice so prevalent from the cremation of herself to which "every woman os calls nerself a lady leels compelled upon the deuth of her lord in aboriginal India, and t he sacrifice of horses and dogs which accom panies the funeral of a warrior in aboriginal America, to "tne splendid sorrows that adorn the hearse" of civilization, and the monu ments in which good-feeling and bad taste have combined to "disfigure and present'' the virtues of the dead in the cemeteries of civilization, from Montmartre to Greenwood iuui we are jusimeu iu considering it one of the few indisputable indications of the real as well as the nominal kindred of man kind. Any conspicuous disregard, and. much more, any conspicuous defiance of this icstinct inflicts a shock upon us, though it be told of a stranger. It is a feeling of real pain that it causes when it is told of such a familiar friend to all of us as Charles Dickens. ' ; ' Precisely what circumstances have neces Bitateo tne saie oi tne novelist a enects we are not informed, and it is neither necessary nor decent for us to inquire. It is, however. a perfectly publio fact that his death has left his family in a condition very far removed from destitution; and it is a perfectly fair comment upon that fact to say that the sud den dispersion, by public sale, of the trea sured trifles which had been accumulated during a lifetime by private diligence and private taste was neitner a necessary nor de cent tiling to do, and tfiat witn a proper feel ing on the part of those who may have per- muted or compelled it, it would nave been an impossible tmng to do. mat tnis view was taken of it by those who were concerned in it we may conclude from the proclamation whicn tne executors of Mr. Dickens will have very properly put forth, that no choice was left them by those in whose behalf they were acting, and w no mignt have been expected to cnensn a more tender regard for Mr. Dickens memory and a higher appreciation of the sanctity of whatever objects were closely associated witn tnat memory than themselves. It is not at all consoling to find that what was tnus essentially a shabby transaction was rendered shabbier still by the vulgarity with which it was conducted: nor will the shame which strangers feel, and which members of ms own household seem not to have felt. over wnat may stnetly be called a desecra tion of the memory of Mr. Dickens, be at all allayed by the announcement that the associations which gave the objects thus dis posed oi tne extrinsic value which was their main value, were so mucn more pre cious to strangers tnan to those to whom they ought to have been most precious that the collection sold for five or six times its intnnsio value. For that an nouncement only goes to show that they of a man's own household may speculate upon the existence and ethcaoy in others of an affec tionate remembrance which prompts them to saennce money lor tne possession of memo rials which they themselves are willing to saennce for money. . This disagreeable topio would hardly be worm treating were it not tnat it exhiuits a British phase of a lack of right feeling in a direction which the PBritish harisee assumes to be a peculiarly American direction. It is the custom in the British navy, as it is not the custom in the American navy, to expose for sale the effects of the sailor who has died at sea. To have his raiment parted among his survivors, and to have lots cast for his vesture, was the supreme posthumous indig nity wnicn the Hebrew psalmist looked for ward to at the hands of his enemies. Yet this is almost literally the indignity which the British novelist has suffered at the hands of his friends. When the widow of the late Mr. Lincoln, though with the palliation of pov erty, and with every precaution for privacy, hawked ber own raiment in the market-plaoe, in spite of her being the widow of a popular publio man, a British critic congratulated his countrymen that from such a spectacle they were "undoubtedly preserved." The 'critic is requested to ponder the circumstance that a member of the family of the late Mr. Dickens is responsible for having hawked in the mar ket-place, without the palliation of poverty, and with every device to secure publicity, whatever connected itself most intimately with the private life of the most popular of imtisn pubno writers. TnE WEDDING OF THE PERIOD. From th Cleveland LeatUr, Miss Blanche Butler has become Mrs. Ames and has duly gone on her wedding tour, leaving behind a doting mother and four adoring bridesmaids, some of whom, it is painful to see, have been so far wanting In womanly modesty aud deoency as to publish In half a dozen leading papers a detailed de scription of the bridal trouaeau. The happy bridegroom, as he looks over a morning paper on bis tour, will be delighted to find the public graciously treated to a rail descrip tion of bis wife's outfit from robe de nuit t stockings and handkerchiefs. The labors of Miss Butler's aunt, Mrs. Webster, in Paris, while ordenng and collecting this immense and extravagant outfit, are plaintively related, the width of the trimmings, the cut of the jackets, and even the quality of the lace on the corset covers, are tenderly and lovingly described. . In short, nothing has been spared (bat could help to show how insufferably vulgar and snobbish a thing may be done in American society by those who ought to know better. From the first this weddiDg has been an infliction of the gravest sort. The wedding day, leading points of tne frovsscav, the names and dresses of the bridesmaids, and all sorts of little despicable gopsip about t he lovers, have been written and telegraphed all over the country for months. A wedding, one of the most sacred and deli cate subjects that a marauding pen can invade, Las been clothed with all the vulgar ostentations of a cattle show. All this could not have happened by chance. No reporter could know how many or how elaborately furbelowed were the underclothes of the ex pectant Mrs. Ames without some one high in authority in the Butler family was willing and anxious that these things should be known. hen, therefore, we see sucu papers as the Boston Post falling into line and giving a whole column to a description of the walking dresses, the silk stockings and tne embroi dered canibnc jackets, and fairly distancing the veriest Jenkins that ever wrote down his peepings for the London Morning Post, it locks as thou on there were a very weak spot, not only in our journalism, but in American society. Ihe fashion of:displaying bridal trousseaux in show windows, and having them described in newspapers, is known n jwhere else than in America. In England or on the Continent such an act would be very properly regarded as a lasting disgrace, bnch a display must be Kbocking to every sensitive, modest woman. iortrnately for us, such immodesty as that w hich we have just seen is too costly to be common; but in almost every town there is some wealthy girl vain and foolish enough to delight in such a display, and there is in so ciety at largo enough of prurient curiosity to make all such disclosures eagerly sought after and read. ith such shameless exhibitions as these going on troni time to time, it is hardly becoming in us to complain when well bred people from abroad pronounce Ameri can society crude, vulgar, and disgusting. The only consoling feature of the case is that the lengths to which our brides and their motherB are now running will produce a re action, in which all decent people shall unite in resolving that their weddings, like their funerals, shall be purely private affairs. LUMBER. 1870 SPRUCE JOIST. SPKUCK JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 1870 1870 SEASONED CLEAR PINE. SEASONED CLEAR PINK. CHOICE PATTERN PINE. 1870 SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS, RED CEDAR. 1870 FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOOItiNG. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIKG1NIA FLOOIUNG. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. KAIL PLANK. 1870 1 Q-7AWALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 1 QTA 10 I v WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 10 I U WALNUT HOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1870 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. RED CEDAU. WALNUT AND PINE. 1870 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. (SEASONED CUElitY. 1870 ASH. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS, HICKORY. IQA CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 1 0TA 10 I U CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 10 I U M'AIMSM tfiUAK 1SUA 1HJA1UJ3, FOR SALE LOW. 1870 CAROLINA SCANTLING. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 1870 CEDAR SHINGLES. -t QftA CYPRHSS SHINGLES. 10 U 115 No. 8600 SOUTH Street. "PANEL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES, X. lOjUMUI i'LAMi, ALL. THICKNESSES. 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and 8 SIDE FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BOARBS. YELLOW AND SAP FINE FLOORINGS. IV and A fctJIJlTf'l.' Tr.ltt'P ATT l v rru HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY. Together with a sreneral assortment of Buildtrur i.uiouer i or ai low lor vaau. i . w. DJUALli. 0 81 6m No. ma RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St. United States Builders' Mill, FIFTEENTH Street below Market ESLER & BROTHER, PROPRIETORS. 4 89 8m Wood Moulding, Brackets and General Tnrnlnff Work, Hand-rail Balusters aud Newel Posts. A LAKUJS ABOUKTMttflT ALWAlo ON HAND, BUILDING MATERIALS. It. B. THOMAS & CO., SIALBB8 IN Doors, Blinds, Sash, Shutters WINDOW FRAMES, ETC., V. w. cobnib or EIGHTEENTH and MARKET Streets 41812m PHILADELPHIA. STOVES, RANGES, ETO. HTMIE AMERICAN STOVE AND HOLLOWWARE IRON FOUNDERS, (Successors to North, Chase ft North, Sharpe & Tnomson, anu cogar u. i noinson,) Manufacturers of STOVES, HEATERS, THOM SON'S LONDON KITCHENER, TINNED, ENA MELLED, AND TON HOLLOWWARE. FOUNDRY, Second and Mlmin Streets. OFFICE, 809 North Second Street. FRANKLIN LAWRENCE, Superintendent. EDMUND B. SMITH, Treasurer. JNO. EDGAR THOMSON, President. JAMES IIOEY, 6 2Tmwf6m General Manager. A LE X AND ER O. CATTELL & CO. iV J-RODUOK OOMMI88ION MKRUUAJITS, Ho. SoHOKTll WUAJtVm4 . Bo. tl WORTH WATFR BTKXBT, 4 TJT " O. Carauu BUJaS (URStb SPECIAL NOTIOES. tfeB- mrriCK IS HKItKHY Hl EN THAT AN " application will be made at the next niretlnir of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of reniiHvivarua ror toe incorporation or a nnic, in ccordanoe with the laws of the Common wea'th, to be entitled THK NATIONAL BANK, to be located t I'hllaclelpbls, with a cnpltn.! of one hundred thou Rflnd dollar, with the right to Increase the same to one million dollar. fgy- FHTLADKLrHIA AND READING RAITr- Street, Philadelphia, June 9, 18T0. DlMDhMII HOT1UJS. Trie Transfer Hooks of this Company will be closed fn the 7th of July next aod reopened on Wednes day, UllIT XII. A uiviaena oi riitv rn.it jnr r. iia oeen as clared on Ihe Preferred and Common Stock, clear of NatioDaland State taxes, payable In cash on and after the 8d of July next to the holders thereof aa they stand registered on the books of the Company at the close of business on the 7th July next. All payable at this oftlce. ah orders lor dividends must be witnessed and Stamped. 8. UKADFORD, stvim Treasurer. &-- r.OTICK IS HEREBY GIVEN TII AT AN application will be made at the next meetlajr of the General Assembly of the Commonwealt h of Penssylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank', la accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to ne fniiuea i no. ovuu l m iut uaak, to be located at Philadelphia, with acnpllal of one hun dred thonsand dol'ars, with the rlitlit to Increase the same to five hundred thousand dollars. gfc$r THE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved. Portable Fire Extinguisher. Always Reliable. D. T. GAGE, 6 80 tf No. 118 MARKET St., General Agent. miSr- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN " application will be made at the next meeting oi tne uenerai Assemuiy oi tue commonwealth of renuHjlvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, in ac coroaure with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE AMERICAN EXCHANGE BANK. to be located at Phiiaduiphia, with a capital of two nunurea ana nity mousana nouars, witn the right iu iiicreBHe me buiub tu one minion uoiiara. ggy- TREGO'S TEABERRY TOOTIIWASII. It la the most pleasant, cheapest and best dentifrice extant, warranted free iroin injurious Ingredients. It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth! Invigorates and Soothes the Gums! Purines and Perfumes the Breath ! i Prevent Accumulation ef Tartar I Cleanses and Purifies Artificial Teeth! Is a 8tipeTior Article for Children t Sold by all druggists and dentists. A M WflflMtf IWrnrniat PrnniafA. 8 S 10ra Cor. NINTH AND FILBERT Sts., I'htlada. vW- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TnAT AN application will be made at the next meeting oi iiie iienerai osBumuiy oi me uommonweaitn or Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, in ac cordance with the laws of tho Commonwealth, to be entitled THE BULL'S HEAD BANK, to bo located at riinaacipnia, witn a capital or ono hundred thou sand dollars, with tho right to Increase the same to eve hundred thousand dollars. BATCHELOR 3 HAIR DYE THIS splendid Hair Dyel the beat in the woild. llarm- leoa, rename, innutntaneoaa, aoea not osmmn load, nor nj-rifair poison to produce para lysii or death. Avoid tne vaunted and delusive preparations boast' ng virtue tbev do not poneesa. The genuine W. A. Batchelor's Uair lye naa nau ttiirty jreara antarmaned reparation to up hold iu integrity aa the only Perfect Hair Dye lilaok or Brown, bo 1 b aU UriuariBta. AnDllad at No. lit Il lNn estreat, new ton 4 avmwf gy- NOTICE IS HKK'CBY GIVEN THVT AN IT onnllnotlnn mill l.a nmrin .1 thn the General .Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank. In ac cordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE BHIDESBUR i BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to nve hundred thousand dollars. flgv- HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING no oain. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, formerly ooerator at t,h. Oolton Dental Kooma, devote bia entire praotioc to the patnieea extraction oi teem, urn, no. yu wa.l.rvui' sireeu 1 K QENT.'S FURNISHING QOOD8. PATENT SHOULDER-BEAM JL SHIRT MANUFACTORY, AND GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING STORE. PERFECTLY FITTING SHIRTS AND DRAWERS made from measurement at very short notice. All other articles of GENTLEMEN'S DRESS uoodb in mil variety. WINCHESTER & CO., 119 . No. 706 CHESNUT Street HAIR CURLERS. PUB HYPERION IIAIR CURLERS, AN INDISPENSABLE ARTICLE FOR THE LADIES (PatenUd July 9, 1867.) Thla Carter Is the most perfect Invention erer offered to the publio. It L easily operated, neat in appearance and will not injure the hair, aa there is no heat required, nor any metallio substanoe used to rust er break the hair Manufactured oul , and for sale whelesale and retail, by McMillan & co., i 83 6m No. 63 North FEONT Street, Philadelphia. Bold at all ry oode, Trimming and Notion Stores. ENGINE. MACHINERY, ETO. tPK PEN STEAM ENGINE AND BOILER ft !jg tvn u k- K N k F I R & LEVY, PHACTI- CAL AND THEORETICAL ESMINEEKS, MA CHINISTS, BOlLElt-MAKERS, BLACKSMITHS. and FOUNDERS, having for many years been la successfdl operation, ana Deen exciumveiy engaged In building aua repairing marine ana itiver Engines, hish and low pressure. Iron Boilers. Water Tanks. Propellers, etc. etc., respectfully offer their servlees to the public as being fully prepared to contract for engines or all slzess, Marine, River, and Stationary; having sets of patterns of diifeient sizes, are pre pared to execute orders with quick despatch. Every description of pattern-making made at tue shortest notice. High and Low Prmaure Fine Tubular and Cylinder Boilers of the best Pennsylvania Charooal Iron. Forglngs of all size and kluds. Iron and Brass Castings of all descriptions. Roll Turning, Screw CuttiDg, and all other work connected with the above business. Drawlnes and speculations for all work done the establishment free of charge, and work gua- TftXit Q4 The subscribers hare ample wharf dock-room foi repairs of boats, where they can He tu perfect safety, and are provided with shears, blocks, fall-, etc. etc., for raising neavy yw FIE, JOHN P. LEVY, 8 165 BEACn and PALMER Streets. iURABD TUBE "WORKS AND IRON CO., JOHN H. MURPnY, President, PHILADELPHIA, PA. MANUFACTURE WROUGHT-IRON PIPE and Sundries for Plumbers, Gas and Steam Fitters. WORK8, TWENTY-THIRD and FILBERT Streets. Onlce and warehouse, 41 - No. 43 N. FIFTH Street. WINES. CHOICE TAB CLARETS. L E ALBERT O. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, n n Corner ELEVENTH and VIWB BtreetA WHISKY, WINE. ETO. QAR8TAIRS No. 126 Walnut and & McCALL, 21 Granite SU, lit PORTERS OF Brandies, Wines, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc, WHOLESALE DEALKBfl IU PURE RYE WHISKIES. 1W BOND AMD TAJ PAHX Kn WILLIAM ANDE11SON A CO., DEALERS Yf ta hiam Bieaiee. ' ' d lei SorU iKOOWD Street, POiladalviaSa, BUMMER REBORT8. ; A T LAW T I O HOUGH, Newport, Rhode Island, BOARD ItlDTJClilD. This Hotel win be opened MAY so, at 30 pet day tor transient boarders. (. . Families ma; make special arrangements by ta week or season. WM. W. IIAZARD, -llmf4p ' PROPRIETOR.' BELMONT HALL, BCIIOOLEY'S MOUNTAIN, N. J.t IS NOW OPEN. 1 This favorite resort has been greatly Improved and enlarged, and offers superior Inducements to tnoso seeking a healthy, quiet, and fashionaole re treat for the summer at reduced prices. 7 11 lm D. A. CROWELL, Proprietor. T AKE GEORGE LAKE HOUSE, CAI.D- XJ veil, N. Y.-B.t of accommodationi for tarn Hi and (t.nlleni.D. board per day, 3'W; from Jane 1 to Jair 1, (114 par week; tor the eiwoo, $14 to 17'50, according to room; lot the months of July and Ancu.t, $17'i"x); AuKoat, itU, upen iron uona l to uotober ial. aaareee -8 6 am H. J. KOOKWFIX. c 'II I T T E - N A N WHITK 8ULP11KR SPRINGS. u-.a: Q O. rim-omra noiei, wud every requjntte. Dmwtnn room and aleeuins-cara from New York cltr. ia lladaon Hirer Railroad at 8 A. M. and 6 P. M , with. out chaDxe. bend for circular, 66am B ERSLEY'8 POINT HOTEL, CAPE MAY CO.. N. J., 1b now open for too reception of visiters 6 80 lm" Proprietor. CAPE MAY. TUE PHILADELPHIA II O U 3 Z, OAI'K ISLAND. N. J.. OAI'K. ISLAND. N. J., The house been greatly enlarged and improved, end ffeB stirwrior inUuoemBt to tbose aaekiuir a auiat an I pleaaant bomt by the niie at a moderntu priop. Addrem. orOape May r.. ottir r ii uo, no. it uiiitsui street. 6 L i-n OCEAN HOUSE, CAPE MAY, N. J. THE BE3T tsble on Cape Island. Numerous home-Ilka comforts, location within fifty yards of the bes bathing on thebracn. are the or nclpal advantages possessed by this flrst-fiiaas T?nr,ily 'otel. No bar oa the premises. ' - :.l 1 E ,t SAWYER, o ho inr proprietors. TREMONT HOUSE, CAPE MAY, N. J. This Uoaae is now open for the recntition of frunnM. Rooms can be endued at Ko. Wi MOUNT VEKNON Street, until July 1. 6 lb urn i AKM.aua johim. M cMAKIN'S ATLANTIC HOTEL, CAPK MAY. N. .1. l'he now Atlantic is now open. 6 25wim3m JOHN McMAKIN, Proprietor. s. W. CLOUD'S COTTAGE FOR BOARDBR3 opposite Hughes street, Cine 7 81m' FRANKLIN. Inland. ATLANTIC CITY. UNITED STATES HOTEL. ATLANTIC; CITY, N. J., IS NOW OPEN. Reduction of Twenty Per Cent, in tha Price of Board. Musio under the direction of Professor M. Tf. Aledo. Terms, $20 per week. Persons desiring to engage rooms will address. BKOWN & WOELPPEB, Proprietors, No. 837 RICHMOND Street, Philadelphia. I6thitn1m 6 2B dim 7 26 that aim SURF HOUSE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. is Inow open for the! season. Resides the al vantage of location this bouse enjoys, and thd fine .bathing contiguous to it, a railroad lias been couetrucWil since last season to convey guests from tue hotel to the beach. The bouse has been overhauled and rePttad throughout, and no peine will be spared to make it, ia every particular. A r Aoiani.ioiinr.nl'. 611 m J. FKKA8. Proprietor. rioaTnousE cottage, Located between United States Hotol and the beaoh, ATLANTIC) OITY, N. J. BOARD RKOUCfiU. Open from June 1 to October L Ji-l-iiin JONAH WOOTTON. Proprietor. rprjE WILSON COTTAGE, X ATLANTIC CITY. A new and well-furnished Uoardinir-honaB nit NORTH CAROLINA Avenue, near the JJepot. l eruis it suiu 1 6 lm" . ROBERT L. FUREY, rroj-rletor. "PEACH COTTAGE, ATLANTIC CITY NOW A nrBt-class Family UoardUicr Huase. XJ open. MICUIOAN Avenue, near the U icti. NO UAii. Terms to suit all. Apply to J. H. DOYLE, Pronrlv; tor, or E. F. PARRO'll, No. 86 N. ElOiUfU Street, corner of Filbert. j 711m ATEPTUNE COTTAGE (LATE MANN'S J.1 COTTAGE), PENNSYLVANIA Avenne, first houae below the Mansion House, Atlautio City, it HOW OPKN to receive Hues ts. All old friends henrtily welooii'e. and new ones also. U1UJ. J OHN BMICK, ell !an Proprietress. MACY HOUSE, MASSAOHUSETl'S AVErE, Atlantic City, is open the entire year. Situ ated near the best bathing. Has large airy rooms, with spring beds. Terms $18 per week. a u ow uuituu. n. maui, rropnetor. ATLANTIC CITY. R0SEDAL3 OOTTAGfL VIRGINIA, between Atlantic and Pacltieave- iiiifg, MKd. K. lung KEN, formerly ef THIR TEENTH and ARCH, Proprietress. Hoard from f 10 to in per ween. Tiimwsti CENTRAL ATLANTIC OITY. II o N. J., USE, is NOW OPEN for the reception of of rueits. OllbW L.AVY1.UK iiUi LV, PrcprietOiS. a-'IlE "C1IALFONTE," ATLANTIC CITY, H J.. Is now open. Bailrosd from the house to the beab. KUSUA ROllKHTo, S li am rropnetor. INSTRUOl ION. I7DOEHILL, MERCHANTnLLE, N. J., WILL BE opened for SUMMER BOARDERS iroci July 1 to September IB, 1870. The House Is new and pleasantly located, wlta plenty of shade. Rooms large and airy, a number of them communicating, and with flrst-clasa board. A few families can be accommodated by applying early. For particulars call on or address REV. T. W.. CATTELL, 7 1 MerchantvlUe, N. J. IVERV1EW MILITARY ACADEMY, POUGIl" KELl'MK, N. Y. OTIS B1SBEE, A. M., Principal and Proprietor. A wide-awake, thorough-goai? School for boys wishing to lie trained for Hasiiiuas, for. CoU lege, or for West Point or tho Nava! Aca demy. 7 lesmthim CI1EGARAY INSTITUTE, Nos. 1527 AND lf2H SPRUCE Street, Philadelphia, will reopen oa TUibJJAY, September 10. Kreuub istlio longoageof the laniiy. ana is ounataniiy puu.ou . ud iimvhuij. 6 lb wfin bm D'llEliWA, , PrinolpaL HY. LAl'DERBACH S ACADEMY, AS8EMLLY BUILDINGS, No. ltW S, TLNl'H KlieeU Applicants for tho Fall Ti-rni will bo received oi and after August 18, Circular at Mr. Wartmrton s, No. 430 Chesuut street. B 30tf USE CHAMBERS' STAR 1 H EVANS, 6TODDART 4 CO.. 710 8ANS0M buvit. 7 9 fmwlm COTTON SAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, OF ALL nunilttrs and brands. Tent, Awniug, Trunk, and Wagon-cover Duck. Also, Poptr Manufac turers' Drier Felts, from fiiriy tu sevenry-uix Inches, with PauUus, Beltlnsr. 8 ill Twine, etc. JOHN W. JVKRMAN, No. 10 CHURCH Street (Cilf Sto.-es),