THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, I87C. 5 If 13 W - rORK I 8XVX S. From Cur Own Corretpondenl. New York, Sept. 29, 1370. The Hrdln-ti.n. tV.mna. Take the average woman at a first-class New York board ng-house, and you hare an epl tomi of much that is weak and vicious in woman. Wlty all the weaknesses and errors of the ecx should come to light more In boarding houses than elsewhere is a problem that I cannot solve. It Is enough to know that they do. The lady-hoarder of the period Is one of the silliest and most useless productions of modern society. Her virtue is of that frail a -tire that is always gravl aliug towards vice. Wtea she is not reading novels one is gadding tin streets, or sitting with one lady boarder scaudalizlng another. George Band becomes with her a favorite author, a .id she learns to sympathize yritb. "Ind'ana," firt in theory and then in practice. Slie ghes up her children entirely to tin Instruction of a French maid, and visits them periodically, with about as much motherly feeling for them as a vivified fashiom-plate wou'd have. She keeps in her room liquors and Cordials which she Imbibes too unblnshlngly to Care to driuk upon the sly. She makes a public bo ist of hating work, and declares that what- Cvcr else she may do, she will not sow for her Children. Things, she declares, have not quite comj to t at pass yet. She admires opera l3 (jfc, Mr. Ifisk, and Celine tf oat&land, lakes nt least one religious weekly, and goes to Church os rcgu'arly as the weather will permit. Sha s in all respects a first-class contradiction, the use of which is to show bow women .may degenerate when they wholly abandon them selves to the life of a boarding-house. That the hu band of aieh a woman coDtiuues to love her proves on'y the strength and constancy of rnas Kiiiue auueument. (ioit.chnlk'. HoiIt. 1 he body of Louis Morcau (Jottschalk is ex pected to arrive in this city to-day from quarantine, where it has been detained in order to comply witu tne precautious now taken there against yellow fever. It was shipped on board the Mv.rriuiac August 25, after Gottschalk had been dead more than two-thirds of a year. Mr. Thomas II all, a music publisher of this city, has charge of the body and will superintend the charge that is taken of it here. Upon its arrival it will be deposited in the vault ot St. Stephen's Roman Catholic Church, on Twenty eighth street, there to await the celebration of a requiem mass that will take place next Monday Week. The orchestra will number forty and the choir will consist of a double quartette. The mass is Caerubini's, and the orchestral perform ance will be the first ever given in this country. After the mass has been celebrated the body will be buried in Greenwood Cemetery, the obsequies being witnessed only by the relatives and per sonal frh'udi of the great pianist. TlirJrowth of Lrctare-tHvlng. Lecture-giving, as a profession, is on the in crease. Look at the women who are pushing upon the rostrum. Mrs. Caudleism Is taking a shape more genteel and less vixenish than it asf umed under the pen of Douglass Jerrold. Let us ho;e that curtain-lectures will grow Ecarce In direct proportion to the increase in the num ber of sporadic speechifyers. Look at the num ber of unmarried women who are commencing the'.r fall campaign In the lecture-room. What a touching illustration it is of the consistency of woiuau with herself that, in such two great relations of life as maidenhood nd luatronhood, she should so often cease to be loving at the fireside in order to be edifying from the platform. I 6hould 6hudder indeed if, running my eye over the prospectus of feminine lecturers for the coming winter, I felt that New York was to eudure them all. Luckily our pub lic halls ore f o monopolized by other entertain ments, aiid the popular taste runs so little in the way of feminine lectures, that only two or three of them make an appearance here during au entire year. Anna Dickinson and Olive Logan are about the only two feminine lecturers who can draw in New York city houses a respectable bize. A Free Church. A Free Church for Strangers is to be opened next Suuday. It is the result of a piece of libe rality on the part of Cornelius Vandcrbilt, and is intended for the express accommodation of strangers visiting the city. The circulars which have been seut out state that Its founders be lieve the church to be the first undenomi national one established in America; that their symbol of faith is the Apostles' Creed; that their ritual is bimple: that their communion is open; ai A that theifseats are free. In fact, the only tet question which the church proposes to tho?e dei-iiiug to become members is, whether 6uch persons are trying to be saved from their sins through Jesus Christ. For a long time a sort of Free Church has been supported in the large chapel connected with the New York Uni versity, where a unique individual calling himself Bishop Snow presides, expounds the Revelation, and Is particularly fond of alle gorizing about the Scarlet Woman and the Beast with an iudtiiuite number of horns. 1 don't know how much good (or harm) his sermons did, bit they were scarcely of a nature suited to an au . dience composed of strangers, and representing many colors and shades of religious belief. But where, and how often, will you find the religious genius who can thrillingly utter thoughts that are thrilling, and yet which, avoiding all ques tions of dogma, are such as can be accepted by the great mass of the people, and be wrought by them into their lives? And until you do discover a religious genius like this, you miss the great good that ought to be won in establish ing a Free Church for Strangers. , The Farracut Ob.eiiule.. While I write the public buildings are draped in black and the city is preparing to profess pro found gloom, in view of the funeral pro cession of the late Admiral Farragut. That precession will take place to-morrow, when the schools, the public buildings, and places of bust Bess, generally, will be closed. The 1st and 2d Divisions ef the National Guard are to turn out, and the great military and naval ofllcers at pre sent in the city, the Governor and his staff, and the President are expected to join lu the public mourning. Ttaa Shattered D renin t The Hausom cab furore is broken and dis solved aud lies behind one, like a shattered dream. but a flood of gratitude would over whelm the man who should introduce Hansoms, Of something tantamount to Hansoms, into this City ! 8urely they would be appreciated here quite a6 much as in London. As it is, it is almost impossible to get down town of a morn ing betweeu ulne and eleven without either Walking or hiring one of those hideous aud buggy cab which defile the precincts of (be public squares. The stages and cars are alike packed, and after seeing a dozen crowded vehicles pass you, the fact becomes visible that you must either trust to your lees or to the cab mau'i c xtfM"n to carry ym down town Au Bait. riRAmO A TRADE MARK. Aa iBfftm.n. Imp..tnre. To the RHtnr of Tte Evening Telegraph: Sir: Mr preparation, "Helmbolda Bucliu," Is known the world over as a standard reraedr. Tiie success which has attended my business has !uluce'l some knave or k-naves to pirate mr trada mark, la order to palm oir upon the patent medicine traie and the unsuspecting public a spurious article. Aside from the pecuniary Injury which these swin l!ers may do me, they are Imposing upon the sufl'er Itift public. The aillicted, by nslnjr their worthless and pernicious preparations, may sustain irreparable snd fatal injury. I ast therefore at your hands, as the conductor of the most widely circulated news paper In the United States, If not in the world, an opportunity to expose the knaveries of these In famous impostors. Their mode of operation la as fellows: Circulars are Issued to the drug trade In a given district, ottering "llelmbold s DucUu" at a large re duction from wholesale trade rates. These circulars are dated from a given streot and number In a cltv lu the vicinity of the district thus covered. Many druggists located in small towns and by-wars are thus Induced to order by mail, thinking that a branch ottlce for the genuine article has been estab lished. By the time I have been Informed or these nefa rious transactions, and have placed my detectives on the watch for the rascals, they have made their harvest, and flown to other and more distant points to repeat the trick and Impose upon the public 1 find also that their plan Is to receive orders at one town and fill them at another and quite dltl'crent pluce, to avoid detection. In all this, however, the public would not be se much Interested were the article supplied a genuine one, or in any way valua ble. But the contrary is the fact. The Ingredients of the spurious compound, as I find by analysts, are simply water, with some cheap coloring matter, to deceive the unwary. A travelling agent is also out rej resenting himself as a son of H. T. llelmbold, and f ndeavorlng to borrow money under such re presentations. 1 am this day In receipt of a letter from the well Icown house of Stewart A Morgn, of Indianapolis, on this matter. They state that other tricks were tried In Cincinnati. Many letters have been re ceived by me from Maine to California some de siring to know If I had lowered my rates, others askii g protection or reductions from former pur chase. To all such I can only reply that my medicine is put up under a certain trada mark and Ujvernment KUrop, to counterfeit which, or vend the counterfeit knowingly, Is as criminal an oilense as pljklnga pocket or breaking into a bank. My only depots are No. fiS4 Broadway, New York, and No. 104 South Tenth street, Philadelphia, Pa. I employ no travel ling agents to solicit orders, and all peisons so repre senting themselves are swindlers. To protect the aillicted and the trade I have made the most ample provision. All persons acting in collusion with these swindlers, or selling their wares, will be prosecuted ; while to any person who will procure the detection of these criminals I will I ay a reward of one thousand dollars. Very respectfully, II. T. Uelmboi.d. New York, September 29, 1870. tCOMMUNICATKD.l Hon. William ftl. Mann. We have a young and energetic man, who, from his deportment and sociability, commands the re spect of all his associates, and they are legion. When our oountry, in the dark hour of her trial, called, for aid, Mr. Bunn was among the first to respond, and did his whole duty, while many of those who are now endeavoring to disparage his chances for elec tion to the office for which he has been fairly nomi nated, were far In the rear, lUeply moved at the in activity it was at times necessary for the army to exhibit, and wondering why that noble army did not 'move to the front I" How soon, when the danger Is over, do these citizens forget the risks the soldier incurred on the battle-field, and Bpcak of the claims of the citizen to be rewarded 1 You have ever advo cated the soldier for promotion In the civic line as well as the military, and have pursued such a con sistent course In this respect that you have trod rather roughly on the toes of some who have pub licly announced that the soldier was "played out." Advocating, then, as you always have, the claims of those who have risked their lives In their country's defense, I know you will not neglect our candidate for Register of Wilis, who Is as strong a nominee as the Republican paity could have made. A Friend of tub Soldier, MUSICAL. AII DRAMATIC. At thk Walnut Miss Lucille Western will have a bei etlt this evening, when she will appear as "Lad.T Isabel" and "Madame Vine" In the drama of Jijuit Lynne. To-morrow there will be a matinee, when East Inne will be performed, and to-morrow evening Mifcs Western will appear as "Nancy Sykes" In Oli ver Tiriat. At thk ARcn Lester Wallace's amusing comedy Of Central Park; or, the House with Two Doors, will be repented this evening. At tdk Ciiesmt the Llngard troupe w.ll appear on Monrfay evening next. At thk Eleventh Street Opera Houss: a variety tf negro burlesques, songs, dances, and other attrac tions are offered this evening. At the Arch Street Oi'Kha Housb the burlesque of T. t lmeh Bowl and other amusing features will be given this evening. At the American a variety performance is an nounced for this evening. At the Acadsmy ok Mcsio the Messrs. Hassler will give their first musical matinee of the season to morrow. A fine programme of popular musij will be presented. . CITf ITKW1. Fall Overcoats. X Vine Aenortment, very eoin- fortable in place of tlce Linen Viwter, for travelling at ihiseanon. j rices numerate. Jftdf-way between Fifth and Sixth streets. beknett 4 co., Tower Hai.l, No. CIS Market Street. Anniversary. October i; 1870, will bring Rockhill & Wilson into their forty-first anniversary. On the first of October, 1S29, the Tailoring and Clothing business was com menced In a small room, IS by 24 feet. To-day they occupy the magnificent store known as the Brown Stone Clothing Hall, Nos. 603 and 60S Chesnut street and No. 36 South Sixth street. Then their place of busine was In an obscure location ; to-day It Is on the most popular and fashionable thoroughfare In the city. Then their capital was precisely one hun dred and fifteen dollars; to-day it Is sufficient to drive the heaviest manufacturing and commercial engine known In the Custom and Ready-made Clothing business. Then their credit was limited to a very few cloth bouses for their supplies; to-day it Is unlimited both In Europe and America. Then their business amounted to but a few hundred dollars ; to-day it amounts to millions. Then they were young saplings, sending forth their tender shoots in the manufacturing and commercial world; to-day they are sturdy oaks of the forest, and thousands of people are protecting themselves under the shades of their magnltlcen', mantles. Several of our old customers, who started with us in the commence ment, boast that they have never worn a garment from any other house during all that long period, and have trained up their children In the way they should go. .Thankful to our friends for past favors, we can say te them with confidence, on our forty first anniversary, that we will start with the largest and most desirable stock of piece goods from which to take measures, and also Ready-made Clothing for Gentlemen, Youths, and Boys, ever offered to the public, and at prices that no one shall have to com plain of. Dissipation and Late Hoiks. After the festal night comes the miserable next morning, with its headache, its qualms, Its gloomy reflections. Busi ness must be attended to; but neither mind nor body is fit for business. What is to be done ? Flow are the energies ft the system to be worked unhand Its reserves of vitality brought out? How is the clouded brain to be cleared? the languid and re laxed frame braced up for action? Under such cir cumstances a single wine-glassful of Plantation Bitters will bring about an immediate and benefi cial change, and a healthful glow will be diiTifced through the whole organization by the tonic opera tion of this wholesome cordial. Ma. William W. Cassidt, the Jeweller at No. 8 South Second street, has one of the largest and most attractive stocks of all klndj of Jewelry a ad tJUver ware In the city. He has also on hand a fine assort ment of One American Western Watches. Those who purchase at this store at the present time are certain to get the worth of their monev. NtA Moss Fakine, made from Pure Irish Moss, Is col etdtrcd tiv all who have usfd It to ho a mmr is. 1 ligutlui, healthful, aud economical food. TnK Word "SozonoNT,'' which Is fast becoming a household word, Is derived from the Greek, and composed of two words, Sozo and Ooontes. "Sojso," translated, means to preserve, and "odontes," the teeth. Sozodokt, a preserver of the teeth. And It Is true to Its name. . Promptness, energy, and perseverance have es tablished a reliable, cheap and first-class Curtain, Shade, Bedding, and Upholstery Store In the well known house of Albertson & Co.,' No. 1439 Chesnut street. Hebnkr'r Pinino Saloon. No. 43 South Second street. Ten additional waiters In attendance to-iar to accommodate the rush for heavy dinners at light prices. Umbrella Stands Ho, 12 75, 13, 3-w, $3-50, 1450, and 5. Wholesale and retail Farson fc Co., Dock street, below Walnut. 'Spalding's Olce" will mend your ways, or any thing else that needs mending. MAKKIUD. I .A re nuNTEB. At the Parsonage of the West. ern M. K. Church, No. 8003 Sansom street, on the 21st instant, by Kev. J. 8. Cook, Mr. Charles A. Lake and Miss Mart . Hunter, all of this ciry. RrssiLL Wilson on the 8th Instant, at the Centenary M. E. Parsonage, No. 42M Haverford avenue, West Philadelphia, bv Rev. K. I. D. Pepper, Mr. Hekrt H. KimsELL to Miss Emily B. Wilson, both of this city. CRAiomfAn. On the morn'ng of the Sftth Instant, Thomas crahjhead, tn the cnth year of his age. The relatives and mends of the family are respect fully Invited to attend the funeral, from his late residence, Roxborongh, Philadelphia, on Monday, tn'tooer n, at t r. m. uarrtages win meet toe it a. M. train at the Green Tree Run Station, Norriscown Railroad. Kenyon. On the 29th Instant, Mvra Grace, wife of J. J. Kenyon and youngest daughterof James and the rate Eunice S. Ruggles, in the 25th year of her age. The relatives and friends of the family are respect fully invited to attend the funeral, from the resi dence of her husband. No. 2013 ftlervlne street, on Sunday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. Mcknight. On the 28th instant, Mr. John Mc knight, aged 40 years. The relatives and friends of the family, also Lodge No. 3, A. Y. M., Shackamaxon Lodge, No. 343, I. O. of O. F., Wm. Penn Lodge, No. 2, A. P. A., Empire Grove, No. 88, U. A. O. of D., 8aogawatha Tribe, I. O. of R. M., are respectfully Invited to attend his funeral, from his late residence, corner Frank ford avenue and Thompson street, on Suuday afternoon, at 1 o'clock. Proceed to Laurel Hill Cemetery. FINANCIAL A DESIRABLE Safe Home Investment Tllli Sunbury and Lewistown Railroad Company Oll'er 81,200,000. ISonds, bearing 7 Per Cent. Interest in Uold, , Secured by a First and Only Mortgage. The Bonds are issued in 1000s, $500s and $300s. The Coupons are payable in the city of Philadelphia on the first days of April and October, Free of State and United States Taxes. The price at preseat is 80 and Accrued Interest in Currency. Paitles purchasing prior to October will 1 will make me auierenccon the UOLD INTEREST. This Road, with its oonneotion with the Pennsylvania Railroad at Lewistown, brings tne Antnracite Uoal Fields 07 MILES nearer the Western and Southwestern markets. With this advantage it will control that trade. The Lumber Trade, and the immense and valuable deposit of ores in this section, together with the thickly peopled distriot through which it runs, will secure it a very large and profitable trade. WM. PAINTER & CO., Dealers In Government Securities, No. 36 South THIRD Street, 9U4p PHILADELPHIA. COUPONS. THE COUPONS OP TIIE FIRST MORT GAGE BONDS or rax Wilmington and Heading Railroad, Due October 1, Will be paid, on and after that date, at the Banking Bouse of WM. PAINTER & CO., No. 3G S. THIRD ST., PHILADELPHIA. 9 83 tolS W. 8. HILLES, Treasurer. B. E. JAMISON & CO.. IUCCESSOKS TO . IT. ItliLLLY te CO, BANKERS AND DEALERS BR Gold, Silver and Government Bond At Closest market Bates JT. W. Cor. THUD and CHESBUT Bti. Special attention giren to OOMMI8&I0H orders In New York and Ftuiadphia block Boards, etc etc. ui QLIm.KIMAU, 1AVIS Sc. CO., No. 48 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. GlEKDINNING, DAVIS & AMORT, No. 17 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Receive lc posits subject to check, a'low interest on sunding and temporary balances, and execute orders promptly for the purchase and sale of bTOCKS, BONDS aud UOLD, In either city. Direct tieg rsph communication, froui Pnlladelnhla house to Kcw Yotk, 1 9 UNANCIAL, Wilmington and Reading XXAZIiZlOAD Seven Per Cent. Bonds, FREE OF TAXES. We are Aerlng $900,000 ot the Second fflortjcajje Houdi ot this Company AT 82J AND ACCRUED INTEREST. For the convenience of investors ttese Bonds are Issued in denominations of f 10009, 5009, and 100 The money la required for the purchase of addl tlonal Boiling stock and the fall equipment of the Road. The road is now finished, and doing a business largely in excess of the anticipations ot it s officers. The trade offering necessitates a large additional outlay for rolling stock, to afford fall faellltles for lta prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not being sufficient to accommodate the trade, WM. PAINTEE & CO., BANKERS.' No. 36 South THIRD Street, 88 PHILADELPHIA. A LtGAL INVESTMENT FOR Trustees. Executors and Administrators. WE OFFER FOR SALE 82,000,000 OF THl Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s UEHEllAL. D10KTG3AU12 Six Per Cent. Bonds at 95 And Interest Added to the Date f Purchase All Free from State Tax, and Issued In Sums of tlOOO. These bonds are coupon and registered, interest on the former ray able January and July 1; on the latter April and October 1, and by an net of the Legislature, approved April 1, 13T0, are made a LEGAL INVESTMENT for Administrators, Execu tors, Trustees, etc For further particulars apply to lay Cooke 6c Co., U. W . Clark Sc Co., IV. II, Newbold, Son fc Aertsen, C. Sc H. llorle. g i im JayCooke&(Q). PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AND WASHINGTON, BAN K E ILL an Dealers In Government Securities, Special attention given to the Purchase and Sale of Bond and Btocka on Commission, at the Board o 8roken In this and other eltlea. INTKBSST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. COLLECTIONS MADE ON ALL POINTS. SOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND SOLD. RELIABLE RAILROAD BONDS FOR INVEST. KENT, Pamphlets and fall Information given at oar office. No. 1 14 S.TIII11U Street, PHILADELPHIA. T 1 km p O R SALE. Six Per Cent Loan of the City of Wiliiaxnsport, Pennsylvania, FREE OF ALL TAXES, At 85, and Accrued Interest. These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act o Legislature compelling the city to levysafflclent tax to pay Interest and principal. P. 8. PETERSON ft CO.. No. 39 SOUTH THIRD BTREET, S PHILADELPHIA f I Ij V EJ 'Jtt FOE SALE. C. T. YERKES, Jr., t CO., BARKERS AND BROKERS, No. SO Soutlt THIRD Street. PTTTT. A TVBT.PHIAj 203 IXAXIXIISSOIK CRAXtXXJO, BANKER. DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS RKCE1VED AND INTER EST ALLOWED ON DAILY BALANCES. ORDKU8 PROMPTLY EXECUTED FOR THE FL'hCUASB AND SALE OF ALL It SUABLE bS CUKITIKS. COLLKtTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE. REAL ESTATE COLLATERAL LOAN 3 NEGO TIATED. IS 81 6m Ho. 03 8. SIXTH St., Pkilada. FINANCIAL.. UNITED STATES SECURITIES Bought, Sold and Exchanged on Most Liberal Terms, GOLD Bought and Sold at Market Rates. COUPONS CASHED Pacific Railroad Bonds BOUGHT AND SOLD. Stocks Bought and Sold on Commit' sion Only. Accounts received and Interest allowed on Dally Balances, subject to check at sight, DE HA YEN & BEO., No. 40 South THIRD Street, 11 PHILADELPHIA. MOST DESIRABLE INVESTMENT! LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD 7 Fer Cent. XVSortgage Bonds. We offer for sale, at par and accrued Interest, the SEVEN PEIt CENT. BONDS, Free from all Taxation, of rui Lt 1IK1IL VALLEY RAILROAD 60. The Pallroad property, which Is mortgaged for security of the holders of these Bonds, is finished, and has been In full working order since 1934, earn lng and paying to its stockholders dividends or ten per cent, per annum regularly npon the full paid-up capital stock, now amounting to tlT,957,S50. the Bonds haye forty years to run, ARB REGIS TERED and FREE FROM ALL TAXES, Interest SEVEN PER CENT. PER ANNUM, payable Sep tea.ber and March. Furchasers will be allowed a rebate of interest a the rate of e even Per cent, from the date of pur chase to September 1, and Interest added after Sep tember 1 to date of purchase. For further particulars, apply to DKEXEIj A: CO., V. A- 11. HO It IK. W.0.MKWBOL.D. SON Jk AEKTMKN. Philadelphia, August 8, 1870. 9 16 1m JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS. NOVEMBER COUPONS WANTED. City Warrants BOUGHT AND SOLD. No. 60 South THIRD Street, 8 86? PHILADELPHIA. NOTICE. TO TRUSTEES AND EXECUTORS. The cheapest investment authorized by law are General Mortgage Bonds of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company. APPLY TO D. C. WHARTON SMITH t CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Ho. lfl SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. E LLIOTT Dunn BANKERS Ko. 109 SOUTH THIRD STREET, DEALERS IH ALL GOVERNMENT SECURI TIES, GOLD BILLS, ETC. DRAW BILLS OP EXCHANGE AND ISSUE COMMERCIAL LETTERS OP CREDIT ON THE UNION BANK Of LONDON. ISSUE TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OP CREDIT ON LONDON AND PARIS, arailabla throughout Europe. WU1 collect all Coupons and interest free of ckarga for parties making their flnanolal arrangement with na. tut COUPONS. THE 7 PER CENT. GOLD C?OUXOIVH or mi SUNBURY AND LEWISTOWN RR. CO. Due October 1, Will be paid on and after that date at the Banking House of WM. PAINTER & CO.. No. 36 SOUTH THIRD STREET. 9 81 !2t J. a. L. 8IIINDEL, Treasurer. SAXON GREEN NEVER FADES. 6 l cm M ILL. I NERY, ETO. M It S. R. D ILLON, NOS. 823 AND 331 SOUTH STREET. Ladles' and Misses' Crape, Gimp, II air Pamela and Straw Round and Pyramid Hats; Ribbons, Satins, Bilks, Velvets and Velveteens, Crapes, Feathers, Flowers, Frames. Sash Rlbiwaa.Of amenta, Mourn log M Uiuier j, Crapeyelia, etc 1 OAS FIXTURES. CORNELIUS & SONS, P1AI FAtJTlIREIKS OF GAS FIXTURES. Wholesale and Retail Salesrooms, No. 821 CHERRY Street PHILADELPHIA. We bare no store or salesroom on Cliesnut street. 9 14 2msp CORNELIUS & SONS. BAKER, ARNOLD & CO., M AH irACTIUIJlS or GAS FIXTURES, CHANDELIERS, PENDANTS, BRACKETS, ETC. Of Every IDesign. SALESROOMS, No. 710 CHESNUT Street, MANUFACTORY, S. W. Corner TWELFTH and BROWN 8 23 imrp PHILADELPHIA. OARPE.TINQS. CARPETINGS. McCALLUM, CREASE & SLOAN, No. 509 CHESNUT Street French Moquettes, French Axmlnsters, Crossley's 6-4 Velvets. English Brussels, Crossley's Tapestries, Hall and Stair Carpetings, CARPETING8 OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. LOWEST FXIXCES. McCALLUM, CREASE SLOAN, ro. 509 CIli:sm T Street, 8 Slwfmam rp Opposite Independence HaU, CARPETINCS. NEW Designs, NEW Colorings. OIL CLOTHS. AN ELEGANT AISORTMENT R. L. KNIGHT & SON, 1222 CHE8NUT STREET, 9 9fmw2m . PHILADELPHIA. CARPETINCS. Axminster, Velvets, Drussels, Tapestries, Three-ply Ingrains, Gil Cloths, Etc. IEIDOM, SHAW & STEWART, No. C35 MARKET STREET, 9 80 fm2mrp PHILADELPHIA. ART EXHIBITION. ON FREE EXHIBITION AT CHAS. F. HASELTINE'3 GALLERY, No. 1125 CHESNUT BTREET, BRAUN'S FAMOUS PANORAMIC VIEWS Of Berlin, PoUdam, Charlottenburar, Coblentx, Heldel berg, Jena, Weimar, Erfurt, Kins, Baden-Baden, Wekbaden, Brussels, Amsterdam, Waterloo, Lleg4 Yprea, Rotterdam, Utrecnt, etc. eta A complete set oX tne Berlin Museums, and Interior views of all tne rooms la tne various rojal palace of Prussia. Particular attention la drawn to the faot that In few riavs 1K5 view, on the Rhine and lu fortifl-.-tioua, as u.ver twiore leeo, wUi um eAUioittd, IX id
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