THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1870. as nrxuxs or thz3 runes. Editorial Opinions of Iho Leading Journals upon Current Toplos Compiled Every Day for the Evening Telegraph. ENGLAND'S NEUTRALITY. From the S. T. Timet. Tho position of the English Government, Spiritless and selfish aa it ia, undoubtedly re flects the feelings which predominate among the English people. Trade considerations are uppermost in the national mind. For eign politics resolve themselves into a prob lem which only the ledger solves. The first consideration when the war broke oat was as to its elf ect upon English industry and com merce. At every stage of the bloody straggle the same question has recurred: Will the losa of Prussia and the disasters of France help or hurt British business interests? There was panic so long as there was an apparent probability that England might be drawn into the contest. That averted or supposed to be averted the shop-keeper begins anew to count his chances of gain, and with a result which to him is satisfactory. "One reason why the collapse of France will be lesa inju rious to England than might have been ex pected" is the suggestive heading of an article in a late number of the London Eco nomistand the ''reasons" multiply as the war proceeds. Perhaps if the collapse of Prussia were added to the collapse of France, the grovelling soul of Mr. Ball would be supremely happy. This feeling, be it remembered, is not ex ceptional it is all but universal. Not a soli tary public man or journal of note has uttered a word in favor of any other policy. The peace-at-any-price idea inculcated by Mr. C'obden has taken deep root in the British heart, and all parties pay tribute to its influ ence. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Bright cham pion it zealously. The distinguished Com moner who furnishes genius to the Tories echoes it with ill-disguised irony in his talk with the Buckinghamshire farmers. The middle-class meetings held in the large pro vincial towns have ail protested against doing aught that might end in hostilities. Even the radical working men, gathering in thou sands to demand the recognition of the French republic, couple the demand with a proposal of arbitration as a means of render ing a war unnecessary. The "grand Demo cratic outburst," as the London meeting of avowed Republicans is termed, was careful to guard against the supposition that in urging recognition to the republic they de sired to see any risk incurred in its behalf. Their indignation at the failure to support French democracy knew no bounds, save those suggested by a regard for the British . pocket. They wanted to display sympathy, and yet to avoid the possibility of being called upon to give that sympathy tangible and practical effect. It is very well to say that "the war must cease, and that the ltepublio must be sus tained;" but what conceivable connection exists between these results and the peace-at-any-price demonstration in Trafalgar (Square? France does not crave the sympa thetic resolutions of a London meeting it needs the moral support which recognition by the English government would afford, and . the practical support which active interven tion implies. On the other hand, Prussia does not heed wordy attacks upon its King and Princes, or wordy compliments paid to its enemy; it is indifferent to everything bat the mediation which means fighting on the occurrence of a given contingency. On both sides, therefore, England's policy is worse than useless. It does not direotly aid France it does not direotly or indirectly restrain Prussia. Both are irritated to no purpose. They are tantalized by continual evidence of a desire to meddle, and disgusted with the cold, calculating timidity which is afraid to strike. Plausible reasons are at hand against any step on the part of England which leads even remotely to participation in the conflict. "War is a game at which monarohs play," and the people who endure its penalties are justified in insisting that it shall be engaged in only when inevitable. This position, however, bears relation to the old-fashioned readiness to subsidize and fight for causes in no manner affecting the national welfare. Of wars to put down kings and to set up kings to put down republics and erect thrones England has had more than enough. The blunder its statesmen and people make is in failing to distinguish be tween quarrels from which they may properly stand aloof, and quarrels which indirectly concern themselves. When the millennium arrives, the world will no doubt get on without great armies. Arbi tration, or some other oontri vanoe for settling disputes peacefully, will do their work. But the millennium is a matter of no moment to King William, Bismarck, or Yon Moltke; and the power that would sway their counsels, and accord support to the republio, must not be afraid of the consequences of its action. Responsibilities attach to a nation as to an individual. A citizen has obliga tions which he cannot evade: he may be called upon at any time to aid in main taining order. So with England. It is member of the European family of nations, and a very pompous member into the bar gain. It wears an air of authority, and is fond of lecturing the rest of the family. To do this decently, however, it should be williDg to uphold its authority in any way that may be required to render it effeotive. This it must do, or cease to be a first-class power, Its present policy will speedily put it on t level with Spain or Italy; and then even the shop-keepers will discover that the peace which looked like treachery and cowardice is in the end worse for industry and commerce than war itself. The prestige of a nation has an inaennawie connection wiin its prosperity, &na prestige i not regulated by the bank's rate of discount. THE FOREIGN PRESS ON TIIE COL LAPSE OF THE FRENCH EMPIRE. Mm tke A1. T. Herald. By our latest mails from Europe we reoeive the first opinions of the British and Conti nental press with reference to the surrender at Sedan and the general collapse of the Na poleonic system. The London Times, whose opinion is still cited as most important, al though in actual news the press of New York has left it fat behind during the remarkably rapid progress of the existing war, uses highly figurative language in the first gush of it a&tonihhmenc. Under date of September 5 it says; 'The volcano has burst! The surrender of the Emperor and the capitula tion of MaoMahon'a army could not stand alone. Suoh tidings would make the earth open, and the earth has opened at Paris." ''So soon as the intelligence of the Emperor's captivity was published the empire was at an end." Farther on, after sketching the faots of the movement in the Frenoh capital and the oprising of the republic, it add: "It must, by this time, be evident, even in France, ttant, under the present conditions of the fight, France is overmatched. The fault may be attributed to the bad management of the army both during the war and before it, and not to any inherent inequality in the military powers of the two nations; and it is quite unnecessary and would be even inde fensible to continue the war simply to show that Frenchmen are among the best soldiers of the world." On the keynote thus sounded the other leading journals of the United Kingdom sing much the same strain. A continuanoe of so frightfully bloody a confliot is deprecated for the sake of common humanity and progress, and King William is most earnestly reoom mended to let well enough alone and not to push the French people to the alternative of a general appeal to the radical revolution. Here and there the Tory papers cannot help showing their teeth at the republio, and all the old stale sneers and slanders of a class of writers who are nothing if not servile and reactionary are dished up again in tho same sauce antique. It is the liberal Irish press that gives the young republio of France the warmest, heartiest, most whole-souled wel come, and we remark, not without some glimmerings of an early political conjunction of fortunate planets in still another republi can sky, that mention of "the banner of stars" oocurs more than once in their eulo gies upon the Gallio tri-colyr. No bad aooom paniment for the houra that precede the re arising of the "Sunburst" and the "Ori flamrne," and those who comprehend the word "republio on a white banner borne through the streets of London on Monday evening last will not mistake the symbols. The Dutch and Belgian press, dated to the 7th instant, have come in, and their articles are full of patriotio emotion at the possible imminence of danger in tne direction of Prussia. The Nicuwe Bottcrdamsche Courant, a well-conducted, long-established, and highly influential business organ of the great com rcercial centre of Rotterdam, unites with its able contemporary, the Algcmeen JIandels Had of Amsterdam, in expressing the pro ail determination of tho Netherlands to defend their independence as their fathers of the old Dutch republio defended it in other days, and at the same time in offering the most earnest prayers for the cessation of the war, the relief of the sorely tried French people, and the peaceful maintenance of the new form of eov ernment in France. These are kind and cheer ing words from a sturdy people, who have a fine navy yet and one hundred thousand as brave troops under arms as ever fought for right and liberty. The Belgian papers are more reserved, the ministerial journals of Brussels confining themselves to graphio letters and to condolence for the slaughter on both sides, The Independance Beige frankly espouses the cause of the Provisional Government, and says of those who compose it: "They are most honorable and intelligent men, each and all distinguished by an immense majority of votes cast in their favor by the capital and by tne most enugntened centres of France. They are the men, too, "who, for ten, nay. for fifteen years, combated the faults, all the excesses and all the sinister resolves of the Imperial Government." In France the journals of the Northern departments speak pityingly of the fallen empire, but with enthusiasm of the republio, There appears to be, indeed, no dissenting voice on the latter point. As for Paris, we might fill columns with the warm utterances of its press on every phase of the situation vine papers reoentiy dynastic give tne new government a clever welcome. The I 'ranee, the Patrie and the Conetitulionnel rally to it without reserve. The Dcbats hums and haws and mumbles in its sleep just as it always does after a repast on any unacoustomed disb. The Teuple FraneaU and Le Public fearful misnomers, as the reader will peroeive, since they were the watchdogs of "the Right or maioritv in the late Chambers snarl viciously at the now regime, and the Figaro has actually been mobbed for its foolhardy diatribes. The oicae, tne opinion rationale. the Oaulois, and the Liberie, and, of course, tne journal vmcia, are ail 01 one mind on the matter. 'This criterion, indeed, may be followed throughout, that everything fresh. brilliant, kindly, sincere, and hopeful in me tropolitan; journalism goes heart and hand for the repnblio, while all the soured, blase. Bceptical, purchasable organs suggest sneak ing doubts and difficulties. We have for this occasion but few words to add. Adopting the great idea of the age, that the newspaper press, conducted as it should be, is the voice of the time and of the people, and heeding the press of Europe, from the Highlands of Scotia to the Sicilian shore, and from the Atlantic eastward to the Neva, we must be lieve that the mind of Europe is fully aroused; that the blood of the toiling millions is up, and tnat l ranee, their exemplar, for the moment stricken down because of her lm perial palsy or political king's evil, is arising again, vclothed and in her right mind, to lead on a new array of States marching in a new path, with new words blazoned on an ensign, new in its combination, but in its principles of truth and justice ancient as the everlasting hills. MIOAWBER IN FRANCE. From th N. T. Tribune victor Hugo is a man of genius; besides as everybody knows, he is freedom's high Eriest, and, we have no doubt, goes about, as e says, with the sacred elixir of liberty coursing through his veins instead of blood; and George Sand can marry and nnmarry her Heroines witn more admirable celerity than ay novei-monger 01 mem all. lint, const dered as a fighting pair, their mode of war, fare, we humbly contend, is open to criti cism. They have rushed to the front with dauntless vigor, and hurled each of them a closely-written sheet of letter-paper at the foe. But is the best means of assaulting the Germans in the present crisis that of the penny post ? True, in ordinary times, a man c. courage might be forgiven for turning tai and running for life if one of M. Hugo's epis tles were plumped fairly at him. We have a Train of our own; we have like gasping ex periences to remember. We know what it is to mentally drown in a tidal wave of frothy eer. Hut the situation now, we supmit, is imminent. Wilhelm has a thick skin and a good many men to back him. We fear that Paris will find other defenses necessary than Hugo and Sand cackling on the parapets. The lady, it is true, keeps out of shooting range, ana saieiy cnants ana gesticulates far off her admiration of the republio. PerhaDs if she were actually in Paris, with the enemy at the gates and famine impending, she would find the third awakening of liberty less ideally eeauuiui. ine piump nine woman poses like the prophetess Deborah, and evidently deems herself a mother in Israel. AU the world is hopeful sow for France, and earnest men see symptoms in the present revolution more healthful and indicative of a progress towards real liberty than any whioh have pre ceded it; but nobody, we fear, will join her in holding up Paris just now as "the normal state which the conscience of humanity de sires, or the inevitable end of the toil of u- rnanity." Female politicians are sanguine in i ranee as in ew 1 ork, no we ver. v ery small acorns beoome great oaks in their eyes. As for Victor Hugo, he is filicawoer red i vi rus, lie nas pelted tne worm m general wuu his letters for years and years, from his heights in Jersey, and now he rushes on the Prussians with this last epistie, as tnougn they were one gigantio Heep, to be demol ished by a twirl of his pen. It appears to us peaceful outsiders that he reveals the plan of the campaign more imprudently than is the usage with military men. "Behind the ramparts." he assures them, "there are bar ricades! and behind the barricades the sewers will be filled with powder, whioh piff! ' paff! boom! will blow them all up quite into the air!!" Should they survive the sewers, he proceeds to inform them, they will be ob liged to take Paris in detail, eaoh stone and bnok havmg the intention of making separate nght of its own. "Eu rope deBicns to be slaughtered on tnat fvot. and the great lignt ot l rencn liberty must be extinguished soul by soul ! Con sidering the facta that the Jbrench people have hitherto proved themselves very expert in playing the game of follow-my-leader in masses to liberty or despotism, and that Eu rope is just now busy in keeping her skirta as clear as possible of the scrape, we must listen to his prophecies with a certain measure of allowance. He has his own doubts of Paris, apparently, and of the apathy with which she has seen him march to the front. f'KliA tlcnna Ktif alia tcill auralrA " Vi n .pida, "her indolence will give you the measure ment of her energy," which is a mode of measurement of energy only to be imagined by a lingo. benonsiy, a great name snouid never be allowed to cover folly. The mistake in French politics has always been that it was a pie wide enough for every man's finger. Poets and novelists have taken the lead aa often as statesmen, and the impressible Parisian was as ready to follow one as the other. Victor Hugo ia in some regards a great man, a poet and a novelist, with free, liberal views, but singularly destitute of the common sense, aplomb, and practical insight needed in a political leader at this crisis, when not only the Government but the very existenoe of the nation is in peril. We would be gUd to peroeive no such symptoms in his condition &s these heated, unmeaning cries; or, if they must be uttered, to find they were thought worthy of no notice. France has listened to such mongers of farrago before, and always to her own detriment. We have faith enough, too, in Victor Hugo to believe him capable of better things. We would prefer to find him with a rifle in his hands than shouting to the Germans mysterious warn ings of sewers full of powder. The walls of Jericho leu, we are told, at tne blast of a ram's horn. But we have altered all that. Something more than the blowing of a ram's horn will be needed to defend Paris. A JANUS-FACED PARTY. From the Uarrttiburg Patriot. Emphatically the radical party is a two- faced, double-dealing party. It acquired power by professing that it was not its inten tion to interfere with the rights and domestic institutions of the States; and yet no sooner was it well seated than it began, at first insidiously, and soon openly, to assail both; and it has continued ever since to do so. There is not a State, North or South, that has not bad some right invaded, some outrage committed upon it. Obviously it aims at a concentration of power in Federal hands; and, slowly per naps, but certainly, it is ap proaching tne full consummation of ita de signs. Already, under radical construction of the Constitution, and acts of Congress in accordance with that construction, the Fede ral Government claims and exeroises a power inimical to the spirit of our free institutions and dangerous to perso nal liberty. When soldiers are sent into States to control the ballot-box in favor of the reigning power; when the radical Governor of a reoonstruoted State is sustained by Federal bayonets in making arbitrary military arrests of innocent citizens and endeavoring to force from them confes sions of guilt by revolting and barbarous punishments now iar, we asK, are we re moved from a dospotism ? These things have been done by the administration of President Grant and approved by the Re publican party, and yet they are in direct conflict with the professions of the radical party before it came into power; and even now, in the faoe of facts which stand out patent to the world to give the lie to their assertions, they still profess to be in favor of the freest institutions and the largest liberty. Because they have liberated the slave, they claim to be the friends of freedom. And yet their actions are all ad verse. The pages of the Federal statute books are covered with laws as arbitrary as are to be found among the statutes of Eng land three centuries back, or any of the de crees of the Autocrat of all the Russias since the days of Catharine. We find another in stance of the two-facedneBs of the radioal party in this: It professes now a profound friendship for uermany and the Germans. It applauds every act of King William, and shouts aloud at every victory won by his gene rals over the French; and yet at the last session of Congress a naturalization law was passed, so stringent in its provisions that Germans and all of foreign birth not already naturalized, or not already having nied tneir intentions, win una it a very diffi cult thing to become citizens of the United States. We do not wish to do injustice evea to this radical party whioh has done so much wrong to tne country, isut is not what we have stated true? Its professions and its actual policy are as wide asunder as the poles, and in the name of constitutional liberty, which it has outraged, we denounce it. It has lived by hypocrisy and deception. It has preached one thing and practiced another. It has worn two faces, and deserves to be as we trust it will be politically damned for its duplicity and double dealing. MR. GREELEY'S LAST LUNGE AT GRANT, From th If. T. World. The Tribune, having arranged New York politics satisfactorily, now exudes on Penn sylvania. After having persistently de nounced Philadelphia as the dirtiest, dullest, and most disreputable city of our land, it now, under the startling caption of "A Dis aster to be Averted," advises it what to do. It seems there is a bitter feud among the radical brethren of that peaceful region; that the Bmooth surface of loyal brotherly, love, "Where birds of calm tate brooding on the charmed wave," is ruffled; and two little stormy petrels liter ally "Mother Carey's chickens'r--0'Neill and Greeley, are heralding a Radical tempest. Each wants to go to Congress. Each has active and no doubt interested friends. On the broad shoulders of Covode, O'Neill perches and twitters. Unwashed Radicalism sustains Creeley. The tribune counsels the exclusion of both. It evidently baa a poor opinion of O'Neill, saying with solemn truth fulness that "greater men" to wit, John Ser geant and Horace liinney "have filled the place before him;" that "his party is tired of him, and think four terms enough for a man of his calibre. it then adds sneerlnciy: "Whether Mr. Ceeeley is any improvement on Mr. O'Neill is a problem on which we can shed no light; but it solves it by recommend ing both to be thrown overboard. This arranged, the Tribune suggests the proper man, the venerable Mr. Carey, whose speeches on prohibition would be listened to with the same ecstatic delight with which his lively essnys are now read; or the younger gen tleman with the hilarious name, Mr. E. Joy Morris, who, having been seven years in Tar- key, is now at leisure to represent the (Quaker Christians. But the Tribune is leading our Philadelphia friends far astray. Does Mr. Greeley call this supporting President Grant? Every one knows, aud none better than the Tribune, that when the Secretaryship of the Treasury was offered to that arch-free-trader, Mr. Stewart, the heart of the venerable Phi ladelphia prohibitionist was nearly broken, and a vow more terrible than Ilamilcars (end which his bitter temper enables him to keep) went up that President Grant should never be forgiven. As to the youthful alternate of the Tribune, the case is still worse and the wound fresher. Mr. Morris was in Constantinople, doing his duty wisely and well, when bimon Cameron demanded his removal, aud the substitution of a gentle man of melodious name, his own son-in-law, Mr. WTayne McVeigh. Without a scruple the deed was done, and Morris, who had been useful, like Motley, who had been useleea,was conscripted into the new army of martyri. His support of the administration which thua dealt with him would, we foar, be very equivocal. Really, our neighbor presumes too far on human stupidity. Our suggestion to Philadelphia would be, if we may meekly venture one, that if her citizens are anxious to re earn the ancient renown, the loss of which the Tribune so piteously deplores, they should rally round the Democratic can didate, Mr. Cuyler, a man of talent, charac ter, and standing, who would do honor to the community and to Congress, and make his constituents, in their pride, forget there was ever such jarring atoms aa O'Neill and Cree- ley, or bo rash and impertinent, if not subtle and malignant, a counsellor as the lnoune. An open foe is better than a false friend. That the Tribune should wish to punish Grant, after Saratoga, ia natural enough, we suppose. But even the Philadelphia radicals can hardly care to be made the tools of Mr. Ureeley s implacable spite. LAST WILLS. From the X. Y. World. We have often thought that one of the best places to study human nature must be the Surrogate's office, among its records of the dead. The "wonted fires" of testators, as of poets, live in their ashes, and there is some times striking revelations of charaoter in a will. The Saturday Jietieio lately had a ter rible and, in our judgment, terribly just arti cle on Mr. Dickens mortuary malediction with its Bpiteful insult to his wife and parade of undertaker's discipline; and there is not a day in which executors and heirs, and of tener widows, do not find themselves worried and perplexed by the freaks and caprices of him for whom they mourn. The shortest will we ever beard of was a bequest of personal pro perty to an "heir-at-law, and twenty years of fierce litigation followed its probate. The names of Tholusson and Perrin and Blake, and that wretched man, with a poet s name, who made a rule which centuries have not expounded, live in English law as warnings; while at home Stephen Girard's orphans and the sailors of our Snug Harbor tell the same tale of testamentary perplexity. His was the best will ever made who had had sore experience of interpreting others the gentle, sweet-tempered man whom Junius and Chat ham could not anger, who migbt have been a poet had he not been a lawyer, and who, when at the age ef eighty, chose to leave no legaoy of law behind him. "Those who are nearest and dearest to me," said Lord Mansfield in his will, "best know how to manage and im prove and ultimately in their turn to divide the good things of the world which I commit to their care, according to events and contin gencies which it is impossible for me to fore see or trace through all the many labyrinths of time ana chance. This train of thought on a topio whioh, though of daily interest, hardly belongs to the category of news, is suggested by two testamentary documents lately given to a curious world the will of Admiral Farragut and that of the murdered Mr. Nathan. The will of the gallant old sailor is very charac teristic, and shows not only his happy, sun shiny disposition, but the serene domestie atmosphere he must have breathed. He loved the few of his household equally. He trusted them alike. He had no limitations to put upon them. He gives to his son the war trophies which he had earned and they were not the irmts 01 ravage ana plunder, but swords and medals which gratitude had be stowed, and which he could wear without blush. He gives to his widow the home where they lived happily, and divides his estate equally between taose he loved so well. He does not seem to have had an unkind thought of anybody, and was apparently quihe careless of the studied Blights put upon him while living by those whom his great deeds had mainly elevated to the positions which enabled them to insult him. Had he antici pated or been anxious about the persistence of these petty injuries after his death, he rmoht have obviated them doubtless by re membering General Grant and Admiral Por ter in his will. The last will of Mr. Nathan has another and very touching interest. It throws a striking light upon that thoughtful parental love which is a characteristic of the ancient race to which he belonged, and the careful nurture of which doubtless goes far to ao- count for the indestructible cohesion of the house of Israel through so many ages of wanderings and of woe. Ita very restric tions and limitations are expressed, as they were obviously devised, in the purest Bpirit of tender solicitude ior the welfare of his household and the credit of his name. It is a doubly evil thing that the cruel fate of so just and kind a citizen should have been pos- Bible ana mat it snouid go unavenged in so great a city. 6PEOIAL NOTICES. KOTlUfi ia HEREBY GIVEN THAT AP. pucauun wm do ui&ae to tne Treasurer or tne City of Philadelphia for the Issue of a new certifi cate of City Loan In the place of one which has been lost or mislaid, viz., No. 15,169 (Bounty Loan, No. 8) for Five Hundred Dollars, la the name of 8S4 6W Attorney of Susanna Orr. T. W. BAILY'6 Old-esUblished WATCH AND JEWELRY Store, No. 62 MARKET Street, sue doors below Seventh street. Americas and Imnorwd Watches. Diamonds, and fine Gold Jewelry and Silver Ware, m every variety, at ituutouauie prices, ana warranted. N. B. Pleane eaii aud examine our stock.. 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GAGS, P SO tf No. 118 MARKET St., General Agent. gy- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the Incorporation of a Bank, In accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to ue entitled this national bank, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to one million aouara, liftY" ULEEN f 1KB INSURANCE COMPANY CAPITAL, 2,000,000. SABINE, ALLEN & DULLES, Agents, Ji FIFTH and WALNUT Streets. egw- NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to do enntlea the uuuilk.ill kivek hank, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hun dred thousand dollars, with the right to Increase the same to five hundred thousand dollars. JAM E 8 M. 8 C O V E L, LAWYER. No. 113 PLUM STREET, CAMDEN, N. J. Collections made anywhere Inside of New Jer sey. 8 16 sot y THE IMPERISHABLE PERFUME t AS A rule, the perfumes now In use have no perma nency. An hour or two after their use there is no trace of perfume left. How different Is the result succeeding the use of MURRAY A LAN MAN'S iLUHiDA water i uaysarter its application the handkerchief exhales a most delightful, delicate, and agreeable fragrance. 8 1 taths gy NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of 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 BULL'S HEAD BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to live nnndred thousand dollars. t- HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING i eciu vim irvsn n i truu-txiu tM. ADSomteiy BO D&ln. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, formarl onarator at tha Oolton DeaUl Room, devotaa his antira nr&otioa to tha painleaa ztnoUon of Uath. Offloa, No. 911 WALNUT 8 treat 1M HOL.ITIOAL.. gg? FOR SHERIFF, WILLIAM li. LEEDS, TENTH WARD. T 11 tf ggr FOR REGISTER OF WILL S, 1370, WILLIAM M. BUNK, SIXTEENTH WARD. Late Private Company F, 711 tf WATOHE8, JEWELRY, ETO. TOWER CLOCKS. G, W. RUSSELL, So. 22 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Agent for STEVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOfiRTS. both Remontolr & Graham Escapement, striking hour only, or striking quarters, and repeating hour on full chime. Estimates furnished on application either person ally or by mall. 6 26 WILLIAM B, WARNS CO.. t"7 wnoiesaie Dealers in LStlA WATCHES AND JEWELRY, S. B. corner SEVENTH and CHESNUT Streets. 8 Second floor, and late of No. 85 S. THIRD St. THE FINE ARTS. LOOKING-GLASSES AT Gold. JPrices, EVERY VARIETY IN STYLE, AND THE VERT BEST WORKMANSHIP. FRENCH PLATES OHLY( EAR LES' GALLERIES, T7o. 816 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. ART EXHIBITION. ON FREE EXHIBITION AT CEAS. F. HASELTINE'S GALLERY, No. 1125 CHESNUT STREET, BRAUN'8 FAMOUS PANORAMIC VIBWS of Berlin, Potsdam, CharlottenburR, Coblents, UeldeU berg, Jena, Weimar, Erfurt, Ems, Baden-Baden, WeUbaden, Brussels, Amsterdam, Waterloo, Liege Ypres, Rotterdam, Utrecht, etc etc A complete Bet of the Berlin Museums, and Interior views of all the rooms la the various royal palaces of Prussia, Particular attention Is drawn to the fact that In a few days 100 views on the Rhine and its fortlaca tlons, as never before seen, will be exhibited. 11 10 MILLINERY, ETO. M 11 B- DILLON, NOS. 823 AND 831 SOUTH STREET. Ladles' and Misses' Crape, Gimp, Hair Pamela and Straw Round and Pyramid Uatt; Ribbons, Satins, Silks, Velvets and Velveteens, Crapes, Feathers, Flowers, Frames, Sash Rlbbons.O' laments, Mourn lng Millinery. Crape Veils, eta 1 I A vjuffY LBXANDBR G. CATTKLL A CO., no. x ovam wuakvius AND NO. T NORTH W4TKTR 8TRKET, PHILADELPHIA, AtlttVDII G. CaTTKBU gLUAW CkTrMt l. .UMBRELLAS CHEAPEST INTtlE CITY. rOH SAUfe. BROAD STREET TROrERTY FOR SALS. HANDSOME BROWN-STONE RESIDENCE southwest corner of Broad and Thompson streets, tnree stories, with French roof, containing all mo dern improvements, newly frescoed and painted throughout ALSO, HANDSOME BROWN-STONE RESI. DENCE, west side of Broad, above Master street, nearly finished ; lot DO by 900 feet to Carlisle street. Also, Lot west side Broad, above Vine street, 100 by 900 feet Also, west side Broad, above Thompson street, 160 by 909 feet. Also, east side Broad street, 100 by B93 feet to Thirteenth street. ALSO, LARGE BUILDING on Dock street, known as "Jones Hotel;" will be rented and altered to suit tenant. R, J. DOBBINS, 8 18 thstu ' Ledger Building. WE8T PHILADELPHIA. FOR SALE OR TO RENT, HANDSOME BROWN STONE MANSARD ROOF RESIDENCES, 4114 Spruce street, possession October 10. -4116 Spruce street, Immediate possession. C. J. FELL fc BRO., . 9 8 tuths lm 180 South FRONT Street.' f FOR BALE A VERY VALUABLE HOUSB ItfiJ and LOT at the N. W. corner of Forty-second stieet and KlnirsesslnR avenue. House bnilt of brown stone, three stories, contain tag 16 rooms, and finished in the best and most sub stantial manner, with all the modern Improvements one of the most desirable houses In Wesl Phlla? delphla. Property should be seen to be appreciated. Persons wishing to know the terms and examine the property can do so by calling on JAMES M. SEL LERS, until 8X P. M , at No. 144 S. SIXTH Street, and in the evening at No. 600 8. FORTY-SECOND Street 9 lOtf R S A NEW AND ELEGANT BROWN-STONE RESI DENCE, East side of Logan Square. Replete with every convenience. Inquire at premises. Lot 23 by 150 feet 9 9 lm X3 FOR SALE. NORTH BROAD STREET. I s -a i ne aesir&oie iour-siory residence, rso. sus jm. BROAD Street, with four-story back buildings, com plete with every modern convenience and improve ment Lot 80 by too feet, with stable In the rear. Apply at No. 832 AHU1I Street, second story, or upon the premises. 9 II 6t FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE FOR City Property, one of the finest FARMS In -A- tho country. 8 18 thstu tf R. 3. DOBBINS, Ledger Building. TO RENTa rpo RENT TO A QUIET GENTLEMAN A handsome furnished Parlor and Bed-room in a private family. Inquire at 9 14 lot No. 83 S. ELEVENTH Street rpo RENT THE STORE NO. T22 CUE3NU Street Apply on tho premises between 10 and 13 o'clock A. M. 817tf TO DKNT-WITH Tin-Rn TWf RK.VYNTV. Jllii story Communicating Rooms, with private bath attached. Also two on the third floor. Address No. 919 PINE Street 9 818t TO RENT THE DESIRABLE RESIDENCE No. 1811 DELANOY PLACE. Possession on 9th lnst Open. JOHN B. COLAHAN, 9 21 8t No. 624 WALNUT Street TO LET A SECOND 8TORY, WELL llghted Room, No. 104 HUDSON'S Alley, with sieam power. Apply to Adams express Office. 9 16 6t WHISKY, WINE, ETO. QAR8TAIRS & KIcCALL, No. 12S Walnut and 21 Granite Ctt, IMPORTERS OF Brandies, Winei, Gin, Olive 011, Etc.. WHOLESALE DEALERS IS PURE RYE WHI8KIE8. IW BOWP AND TAX PAH). 18 M w ILLIAM ANDERfcON A CO., DEALERS V Dine wmsKies, No. 146 North SECOND Street, rkUadelpMa. LUMBbR. 1870 gPRUCE JOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 1870 i QTA SEASONED CLEAR PINK. - 0J( 10 i U SEASONED CLEAR PINE. 10 ( U CHOICE PATTERN PINE. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR. 1870 FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOOK1NG. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. RAIL PLANK. 1870 1870 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. 07A WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK. IO 4 VI WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1 OTA UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER.. - QA 10 i V UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, 10 I V REDCEDAR. WALNUT AND PINB. 1870 SEASONED POPLAR. SEASONED CHERRY. ASH. 1870 WHITE OAS PLANK AND BOARDS, HICKORY. 1QrA CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 1 Q'7A 10 IV CIGAR BOX MAKERS' 10 I U SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, FOR SALE LOW. 1870 CAROLINA SCANTLING. CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. NORWAY SCANTLING. 1870 4QnA CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 Q7A 10 I U CYPRESS SHINGLES. 10 I U MAULE, BROTHER k CO., 119 No. 2500 SOUTH Street PANEL PLANK. ALL THICKNE8S88.-. COMMON PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES. 1 COMMON BOARDS. 1 and 9 SIDE FENCE BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BOARS. YELLOW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS, ljtf and X bPRLX'E JOIST, ALL SIZES. HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLASTERING LATH A SPECIALTY, Together with a general assortment of Banding Lumber for sale low for cash. T. W. 8MALTZ, 6 l am No. 1U6 RIDGE Avenue, north of Poplar St United States Builders' Mill, FIFTEENTH Street.elow Market, i E3LER & BROTHER. PROPRIETORS. Wood Mouldings, Brackets and General Turning Woik, Band-rail Balusters and Newel Posts. (9 1 m A LARGE AfcSORlMENT ALWAYS ON HAND. BUILDING MATERIALS. " R, R. THOMAS & CO., DIALKB8 IN Doors, Blinds. Sash, Shutters , WINDOW FRAMES, ETC, '! 1 ; K. W. OOHNIB OF ' ' EIGHTEENTH and 1IAEKET Street mam .. .. . PHir,ngT,rniAj
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