THE DAILY EVENING TELjfiGKAl'll TRIPLE SHEET PHILADELPHIA; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1870. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON (SUNDAYS BXCEPTBD), ATTHIC EVENING 'lT.aEOKA.PII BUILDING. No. 103 S. THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. The Prix w. three cents per copy double sheet), or eighteen writs per week, payable to the carrier by whom served. Tlie subscription price by mail is Aine Dollars per annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents for two month, invariably in ' oance for the lime ordered. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1370. S3- The Evening Telkgraph, from Its original establishment, lias been in the receipt of telegraphic news from the New York Associated Press, which consists ot the Tribune, Times, Herald, World, Sun, Journal of Commerce, Evening Tost, Commercial Advertiser, and Evening Ex--press. The success which has attended our enterprise is, in itself, a sufficient evi dence of the freshness, fullness, and relia bility of the news which wc have received from this source. Last March we entered Into a special contract by which The Evening Telegraph has the exclusive use of the news furnished in the afternoon by the Associated Press to its own members, the North American, Inquirer, Ledger, Press, Age, Record, and German Democrat, of this city, and the leading journals of the East, North, West and South; and hereafter The Telegraph will be the only evening paper published in this city in which the afternoon despatches of the Associated Press will appear. aT The earliest regular edition of Toe Evening Telegraph goes to presa at o'clock, and the subsequent regular editions at 2 J, 3 J, and A . Whenever there is im portant news of the progress of the Euro pean war, extra editions will be issued aftor this hoar, and before the regular time for the early edition. 1UR CONSTITUTIONAL CONVEN 110N. We are glad to notice that the proposed Con vention continues to attract the favorable attention of a number of journals in the in terior, and that the necessity for a radical revision of the fundamental law of the Com monwealth is generally acknowledged. The ' ultimate success of this movement will de pend in a large degree upon the spirit in which it is conducted and the char acter of the delegate chosen by the people. It is possible that the Constitu tion might in some respects be injured in stead of being improved, and weak or bad men would affect a Convention as injuriously as they affect the Legislature. What is needed is that the best members of both parlies should make an earnest endeavor to promote the interests of the people, and if the voters of Pennsylvania improve the op portunity likely to be presented, this great end can be secured. But already hints are thrown out that some of the Democrats will make a desperate effort to have the Registry law abrogated by the convention, that attempts will be made to overthrow some of the existing restrictions upon corporations, and in various other ways private axes will be ground. It is far better, ho svever, to incur the risk of such dangers, against which the people have the sure safeguard afford I by an opportunity to vote down an obnoxious new Constitution, than to suffer the present Constitution to re main unamended. It is vitally important that deliverance from the existing evils should e energetically sought, and in addition to the various reform propositions to which we have heretofore referred, it is perhaps desir able that provision should be made for the election by popular vote of a Lieutenant Governor, as well as for a restraint of the pardoning power, which has been sadly abused by our Executives. The most import ant object to be obtained, however, is the reformation of the Legislature. If a plan ran be devised whereby good men can be sent to Harrisburg to pass good general laws, they will correct evils as they are developed from time to time. We know of no consti tutional change which seems so likely to effect this end as an increase in the number of members. Practically this system works well in New England, many of her best citi zen being every year chosen as legislators. The objection is made in some quarters that an increase of the number of members would convert the Legislature into a mere mob; but the proceedings of the National House of Uepresentatives, containing nearly two hundred and fifty members, of the British House of Commons, which oontains more than sii hundred and fifty members, and of the National Conven tions of the Republican and Democratio par ties, prove the fallacy of this objection. In large deliberative bodies men of real talent generally attain leadership, donkeys and im beciles are coughed down, and comprehen sive measures of general importance are much more apt to be considered than petty private bilk. In our present Legislature the real leaders are notorious mainly for their ve nality; useful publio laws never receive atten tive consideration; the publio interests are habitually neglected; and the bodies now an nually assembled in the Capitol at Hairiabarg thus lack the very characteristics which en larged membership seems to give to national conventions, the House of Representatives, po.1 tUc Jloast of Coauaoas. HIE DEMOCRA TIG PROGRAMME. The Democratic politicians of New York have made up their minds to claim not merely the leadership of the party, in a general sense, but the next Presidential nominee. To answer the objections likely to arise from Seymour'B candidacy in 18M, with its disas trous consequences, the World alleges that that nomination was forced upon the last National Convention by the Western Demo cracy despite Seymour's protests and the oppobition of the New York delegation. Tam many and Tweed havo set their virtuous hearts upon the nomination of John T. Hoffman. lie has been the serviceable tool of the rascals of his party in New York city and in Albany, and millions of money will be wrung from the New York tax-payers to pro mote the present intrigue for enthroning him nt Washington. The Democracy of the future is to be embodied in Hoffman, Tree-trade, and Tammany thievery. By the revenue reform movement, which has already weak ened Republican strength in several im portant quarters, the Twoeditos hope to promote the additional Northern de fections which are necessary to secure Democratic ascendancy, while in the South selfish and wrangling Republican leaders are rapidly paving the way for the complete overthrow of the Republican party. Uinler this programme Pennsylvania is marked out as a victim from the out set. Her industrial interests are to be sacrificed for the benefit of the New York importing houses and European manufacturers, and the influence of her Democracy, in Democratic councils, is to be overshadowed by the commanding decrees of their tri umphant New York brethren. Those circumstances, however, fortunately iucrease the chances for continuing Republican as cendancy in Pennsylvania at the moment when the necessity for securing her aid in the next Presidential election becomes im perative. If the late Congressional contests are to be regarded as a test of publio senti ment, the loss of the Keystone State in 1872 would bo fatal to the Republican party. If she follows New Y'ork, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia, Florida, and Alabama into the Democratic camp, the Dmo:ritio party will regain control of the National Gov ernment; and the great political necessity of the hour is to strengthen Republicanism in this Commonwealth. Since the attempt to redeem New Y'ork has proved a dead failure, there is no more important field for patriot ism, prudence, and partisan efforts than this neglected Cinderella of the Atnorioan sis terhood. A BUREAU OF NAVAL JUSTICE. Plato wrote a rather extensive work for the purpose of defining justice, but, the impossi ble commonwealth by means of which alone he concluded that abstract justice could be realized, presented a good many peculiar fea tures that we Americans, who live under a lepublio that is some degrees removed from ideal perfection, would consider manifestly unjust. There is a good deal of injustice under our system, undoubtedly, and if ab stract justice cannot be realized under either an ideal or a practical republic, the advocates for fair play and no favors may well conclude that they have a task before them as endless as that of Sisyphus. By a reasonable amount of vigilance in looking out for our own inte rests, we in civil life can, however, as a rule, manage to pass through the world without being called upon to seriously specu late upon Plato's problem; but there are a good many evidences to prove that in our military service, and especially in the naval branch of it, a clear and definite understanding of what the word justice means is sadly needed. It is therefore with a cor tain amount of satisfaction that we note the fact that the first steps have been taken for the organization of a Bureau of Justice-! the Navy Department, and we sincerely hope that the results it will achieve will be com-' mensurate with the importance of the subject ' over which it will have jurisdiction. Can didly, we have no very great iaea that this Bureau will immediately, at least, accomplish a great deal in the way of convincing officers who nit upon courts-martial that certain clearly defined laws of Congress, no less than the abstract principles of justice, ought to guide their deoisioos, and not their own individual or class prejudices. The whole pre sent organization of the navy, its traditions and its system of training, which commences from the first hour that a midshipman sets his foot in the Acadeny at Annapolis, forbid us to hope that any average naval court-martial will be able to judge the offenses of an Ad miral according to the same standard as those of a common sailor. A bureau presided over by old line officers, hardened in the traditions and prejudices of their class, is not exactly the place where a court-martial finding and sentence will be likely to receive impartial revision. But while our expectations of good to be accomplished by the proposed bureau 'are not particularly exalted, we do expect considerable edification from the report which the Secretary of the Navy has ordered Rear-Admiral A. A. II ar wood and Captain W. G. Temple to make for the information of Congress and the country. These officers have just been named Judge Advocate and Assistant Judge-Advocate of the Navy, and their appointment is considered the first step towards the organization of a Bureau of Justioe in the Navy Department. In order te provide them with employment the Secretary has directed that they shall re view all the records of triaU in the navy, whether by general or summary courts, and advise the Secretary in regard to the proceed ings and sentence in each case. If Admiral Harwood and Captain Temple do their work thoroughly, their report will be interesting if not agreeable reading, and it will prove to an astonished comntry that the proceedings, the findings, and the sentences of naval courts-martial in innumerable in stances have beea marked by the most fla grant injustice and violation of the rights of peucxs ec;ecl of omcuv3 against military law. To go no further baok than the war for the suppression of the Rebellion, the records of the Navy Department will show how SecretaryWelles repeatedly set aside sentences of naval courts-martial because they were con trary to law, and how the stinging rebukes that he administered time and again to the officers comprising such courts were unable to produce any decided reform in the admin istration of naval justice. As specimen nuggets from the mine in which the new naval Judge Advooate and his assistant have been directed to work, we may mention the case of Surgeon Greene, who was convicted and sentenced for the high crime and misdemeanor of refusing to de clare a sick mnn well at tbe bidding of his commanding officer; the case of Lieutenant-. Commander Seely, who was convicted of out rageous cruelty to seamen under his com mand, and who was merely sentenced to a reprimand from the Secretary end to suspen sion for a few months; this sentence was essiLtinlly the same as that in Dr. Greene's ense, and it was only procured by the Secre tary sending the findings of the court back for revision several times. It is worthy of note also that Seely's commjnding officer, who was responsible to a great extent for his performances, was never put on trial at all; and the case of Second Assistant Engineer William Pol lard, who was expelled from the service not withstanding the fact that not a single tech nical offense was proven against him. He was cashiered by a court-martial upon "general principles," because some of his superior officers considered him a nuisance in persistently sticking for his legal rights, and refusing to allow himself to be overriden. The injustice of the sentence in Mr. Pollard's case was recognized clearly by Congress, which passed a law at its last session au thorizing his reinstatement. The two first cases we have mentioned are tolerably familiar to the public, and they are excellent examples of the manner in which naval justice is administered in the different cases of line and staff officers, and an im partial public may well inquire, if such a dis crepancy exists in the application of the rules of law and equity to line and staff officers of about equal rank, what must be the difference between the treatment that an Admiral and a common sailor are likely to receive from a court of naval gentlemen sworn to judge im partially according to the law and the evidence ? That a Bureau of Justice in the Navy Department will accomplish much towards reforming the state of affairs we have indicated we do not believe, but if the report of Admiral Harwood and Captain Temple is properly prepared, it may call the attention of Congress aud the country to a great wrong that ought to be reme died, and may prevent the passage of a law that will do away with some of the obsolete features of courts-martial that are disgraceful to the civilization of tho age, and that will provide some system of trying persons ac cused of military offenses under which they may have reasonable expectations of receiv ing justice with as much certainty as they would receive it in the civil courts. If anything can add to the satisfaction felt by the citizens of Philadelphia in paying that portion of their tax bills which goes to the support of the police, it will be the redaction that some of these gentlemen are so full of patriotism that the confines of the city and State are too narrow for its exhibition. To what better use can we put our munioipal funds than the payment of men who foment riots at a Camden election ? THE KB XT HOUSE. lilt Political Mtandtoc According t the Latest HetHn-A. i'robable Itepublloaa Majority f :u; ' In tbp table below we give the result of the 3 f ormanibers of the Forty-second Con- gcSSTaccor'ding to the late returns received, .tljp delegations marked thu () being esti mated, as elections in these States have not yet been held. The standing of the House in the Fortieth and Forty-first Congresses Is also givtu: 4WH CONl.RKKS. 41T('ON(iRESg. 42DCOMQRKSS - I ' , , Jlfp. Vein. Hep, Hem. Hep. Horn. Alabama 6 .... 4 2.... 8 8 Arknnstts .... 8 1..., l a California 1 a.... 1 2.... i Connecticut... 1 3 8 1 3 'I Delaware 1 1 i Florida 1 ....1 i Georgia 4 3.... .... '3 4 Illinois 11 a... 10 4.... 7 7 lndluua t 8.... 7 4.... 0 6 Iowa 6 .... i ....6 Kansas 1 ... 1 .... 1 Kentucky 1 7 9.... I 8 Louisiana 4 S ....4 1 Maine t .... 5 .... 6 Maryland 1 4.... 6.... 5 Massachusetts 10 10 ....10 Michigan t; .... 6 ... 6 1 Minnesota..... it ....1 l a MissiSHlppt .... .... 6 6 Missouri S 1.... 7 8.... 6 4 Nebraska. 1 ....1 ... 1 Nevada 1 ....1 ....1 N. Hampshire. S ....3 .... 3 New Jersey... S 8... 2 3..., 3 8 New York.... M 11.... 1 li.... 15 10 N. Carolina... 7 ....6 1....S 6 Ohio 16 3.. . 14 C... 14 5 Oregon 1 .... l.... i Pennsylvania . 18 0.... 18 13 11 Rhode Inland.. 8 ....8 ....8 H.Carolina.... 4 .... 4 .... 4 Tennessee a .... s ....a Texas 3 l.... 8 Vermont 3 ....8 ....8 Vlrptma 3 5.... 8 5 W. Virginia... 3 .... 3 l a WlbcouBla 6 1.... 6 l.... 4 8 Totals..... 173 60.... 107 67.... 141 102 60 CI 102 Hep. maj.123 100 aa A full House consists of Zi'i members. We make the prospective Republican majority in tbe next House 3D, and do not believe that later returns will materially reduce it. Pittsburg roughs find amusement la smash ing U0 panes of glass. Parson Broderick'a fee was four seed cucum bers for marrying a couple ol lo trans. A club of students in the Baptist Theological Seminary at Chicago are boarding themselves at a cost for provisions ot 1 a week each. A Western mlllpond is annoyed by a snake, sixteen feet long and as big aa a dove pipe, which makes way wiih ducks and goslings with perfect ease. In VUh "sweet clover" grows from six to ten feet high, and a shrewd Yankee thinks a Kood thiuK mhiht be made by tapping it for sap hi ike ' ti'ar teuton." NOTICES. Fai l Ovfkcoa. lAnht ti Medium irw;, jut the thinq fur etl inornhiii ami tKetinan; alto for fnndrrntel etml weather all winter. Mors xumfiil, in fart, tsan a hrary (trrrroit, and tntwh Ime'r in price. Jiett aortinent m the city, aiut -M nt Intfrnt prt-e. Half-tray between J BB,)TI7 Repcctioh in FiucKf, ocTcaisR, is:o. Mm-rn fc Hamlin Organ Co. 'a celclrte1 Instruments, for sile In Philadelphia, only at Gould A Fischer's Elegnt Waierooms, No. 923 Cluanut street. se tlnlr new and beautiful resonant e wes, with eupiione solo atop. PORTABLE ORGANS. S'yle 14 octaves, 1 set of rerd. .price $.-o Stjle 24 octaves, 2 sets of reeds, with knee slop CABINET ORGANS. 65 Style A C octaves, 1 stop, Tremulant.... price, $100 Style C 6 octaves, s sf-ors, " .... 12 Style D 6 octaves, 6 stops, .... mo Style E 6 octaves, 7 stops, .... 175 Srjle CI 0 octaves, 6 stops, Double Heed, Resonant Case no No. 21, B octaves, 6 stops, Double Reel, solid walnut. Vox Humana " 1C0 No. 43, S Octaves, 5 stops, Double Rreil, Resonant Cae, every Improvement, " 200 No. 47, 6 octaves, 0 stops, Double Avf, Resonant Case, Euphone Solo Stop. " 2-23 (icorge Steck A Co s Grand, Siuare, and Upright Pianos. Also, ltraduury and Haines Bros.' Tianos. GOULTJ A FISCHER. Wy. G. FISCHER. J. E. GOULD. Economy in Fuel and Labor. We commend to the publio favor the 'Imprnveii Gold Medal Sala mander Uvt-Air Furnace," which has stood the trial for four years, and has given perfect satisfaction. It Is made of the best material and Is easily repaired. The const ruction Is simple, and It Is self-cleanlnir, burning the whole season without rekindling. The joints are self-flacklng consequently always tight; and It may be conslderel self-ftedlnir, as attention Is not required more frequently than once la twenty four hours. With all these virtues It is a moat powerful heatt r, and the air from it is pure, moist, and free from all lit purities. Perfect satisfaction Is guaranteed by the manufac turer, Mr. John S. Clai k, who invites an examina tion of them at tils warerooms, No. uos Market street. Ci.akk'8 Goi.n Mkdal Kamvk Notice to Hocsk kebpeks and Bi'iLDnBS. Now is the time to make your selection of a good Biking and Heating Range. The Gold Medal has never failed to give satisfac tion. It is the cheapest because the best Range In the market. It consume very little fuel, and will heat three rooms In the coldest of weather. It is so coustiuctcd as to a low the heat to pass otr, in warm weather, without heating tbe rooms. Do not fall to examine the Gold Medal Range, before making ycur purchase?, at the warerooms of John S. Clahk, Manufacturer, No. 1008 Market street, Sole Agent and Manufacturer of the Improved Baltimore Base-burning Fireplace Heater. NEW PUBLICATIONS. TEEEE FACTS WORTH KNOWING AKOUT THE Closing Out Sale of Books, Chromos, Etc. Etc. Etc. AT THE OLD STAND No. 724 CHC8NUT Street. 1. IT IS A BONA PIDE CL03ING OUT. The subscriber intending to retire from the ItETAIL BUSINESS on JANUAUY 1, 1871, has rented bis store from that date, and the stock launt be sold. II. WE HAVE A SPLENDID STOCK ON HAND. It embraces BOOKS in almost every de partment of literature, and i every style of binding. ENGLISH AND AMERICAN EDI TIONS of STANDARD WORKS; FINE IL LUSTRATED WORKS; JUVENILES AND TOY BOOKS; CHROMO-LITIIOGRAFIIS; PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS; GOLD PENS, Etc. Etc. Etc. III. WE ABE MAKING ENORMOUS REDUCTIONS. A largo part of our stock we are offering at fully ONE-HALF THE PRICE aaked else where, and the very CHOICEST STOCK we guarantee to sell at fully TEN PER CENT. LESS THAN WHOLESALE PRICES. An examination solicited. DUFFIELD ASHMEAD, AGENT, No. 724 CHESNUT STREET. riNANOIAL.. DItEXEL & CO., No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET, American aud 1'orelffu flankers1, DRAWS EXCH&NGS ON LONDON AND PRIN CIPAL CITIES OF EUROPE. DEALERS IN Government and Hailroad Securities, Dreiel, Winthrcp A Co.,Drejel, Ear jet dk Co., fio. 18 Wall Street, I No. Hue Scribe. New York. I Paria. ((( TO LOAN ON MORTUAOEOF aMI'.lHIU city property, in aumifof not leas tiisotfti7oeacn. 8. kinoston mk-ay", fi'o. V WAXM'i' bircfl. OROOERIE8, ETO. ALMEK1A GIIAI'ES . In Deautiful Clusters, 35 CENTS TER LB. OH 3 LBS. FOR $1-00. E. BRADFORD CLARKE, SUCCESSOR TO SIMOIi C0LTON ft CLARKE, S. W. Corner BROAD and WALNUT lttintutrtp PHILADELPHIA. OLOTHINQ. Better! Better!! Better!!! We do not confine ourselves to the lowest Grades of Suits. We have, all read for you, Ever) variety of the Finest qualities of Cloths, Casstnieres, Meltons, Diagonals, Stripes, Heavy or Light, Of the Finest Wool, Of the Choicest Patterns, Of the Choicest Makes. OUR GREAT BROWN HALL In Iti Rtadj'Made Department Cimnot he excelled ia Variety of Stock, Beauty of Stock, Immensity of Stock, Cheapness of Price. Ot'R GREAT BROWN IULL IN ITS CUSTOM DEPARTMENT Is far ahead of every other house la Richness of materials. Promptness of manufacture, Accuracy of fit, Cheapness of price, All men and all boys wanting Reliable Clothes at the lowest prices COJlE! COME! COME TO GREAT BttOWN HAM, 603 and 605 CHESNUT STREET. "UNDER - II U I CI. 'PHIIADCLPIUA:PA. Coats, Pants. Vests. Coats, Pants, Vests. SI5O0 Heavy Heavy Winter SIO'OO Winter Ovetcoats. Overcoats. QOMPARISON INVITED. OUR CIItiVIOT SUITS ARK MORE DURABLE, WOKE STYLISH, BETTER CUT, BETTER MADE, BRTTEH TRIMMED, BETTER EVERY WAY, MORE DURABLE, MORE 8TIUSU, BETTER CUT, BETTER MADE, BUTTER TRIMMED, BETTER EVERY WAY, WOKE DURABLE, MURE STYLISH, BETTER CUT, BETTER MADE, BETTKR TRIMMED, BETTER EVERY WAY, AND GUARANTEED To GIVE MORE SATIS. FACTION TO THE WEARER THAN ALL THE LOW-PUICE1) SUITS AT ALL THE HALLS IN THE CITY. EVANS 4c I.IACII. No. 628 MARKET STREET, Il8tUth3mj PHILADELPHIA. FINK HE A. JT Y - M A. J JE CLOTHING, Combining Style, Durability, and Excellence of Workmanship. JONES' Ono-I? rico ESTABLISHMENT, No. C04 MARKET STREET. CEO. W. NIEMANN. Handsome Garments made to order at the short est notice. io 8 tr rp WESTON & BROTHER, TAILORS, S. W. Corner NINTH and ARCH Sti, PHILADELPHIA. A fell sssortmert of ae moat approved stjlesfar FALL AND WINTER WEAR, JUST RECEIVED. A SUPERIOR GARMENT AT A REASONABLE bWINQ MACHINES. p II WHEELER & WILSON HinVIAH ItlACIIlftH, For Sale on Easy Terms. NO. 914 CHESNUT STREET. mwft PUILAUFLPII1A. DRY QOODS. JOHN W. THOMAS, 405 and 407 N. SECOND St., lias JUBt received a large Invoice of French Silk end Wcol Poplins, In all Shades, TO BE SOLI) AT 75 CENTS AND ?109 PER YARD. Triwe jroorts wre boncht for CASH at LE33 thaa 'GOLD COhT OF IMPORTATION," and at the above prices are the1 CHEAPEST and most ek'gnt Fabrics offered this season. 9 21 stottuparu S I U K Si EXAMINE GEORGE FRYER'S STOCK OF Black and Fancy Silks Before Purchaslug. No. 91G CHESNUT STREET, 83 8m PHILADELPHIA. BLACK SILKS AN ELEGANT ASSORTMENT NOW OPEN AT THE LOWEST PRICES. PERKINS & CO., 9 South NINTH Street 9 13 tnths3m4p PHILADELPHIA. EDWIN HALL, No. 28 SOUTH SECOND STREET, Invites attention to Ws Stock of lllark SilkM, Colored Silks, livening Silks, Hew Dress 4oolw. Silk Cloaking Velvets, SILK PLUSHES, RROCHE SHAWLS, BLANKET SHAWLS, VELVETEENS, CLOAKING CLOTHS, All of which will be sold at the 9 5 mws3m4p Lowest DIarlict Prices. EVER SI MCE 1053 We have bien on Spring Garden Street We aimed at building up a Large Trade. We nave succeeded. OUR FOUNDATIONS WERE: FAIRNESS, POLITENESS, STEADINESS. PERSEVERANCE. Our Present Stock is Magnificent in Style, Wonderful In Va riety, and Very Eei sonable indeed in Prices. Some Specialties. New and Seasonable Dress Hoods. New and Fashloonble Shawls Rich Rlaak uilks, Popllni and PKlds. Blankets, Flaiinel, Casolraerea, Cloths, Table Linens, Napkins, Towels, lldkfs. Piano Covers, Marseilles (guilts, 14 Oioves, etc JOSEPH H. TH0EBXEY, NORTHEAST CORNER OF EIGHTH and 8PKINO OARDEB SU, S 8 tflstu PHILADELPHIA. GEORGE D. WI8HAlVi, No. 7 North EIGHTH Street, Is now prepared to offer one of the largest and best selected stocks of Drees Goods To be found In the city, and will be sold at the LOWEST CASH PRICES. NEW GOODS OPENING DAILY. EJghtk Street i:iuporlniu lor Black Silks! Black Silks! BLACK onus GuilV, heavy, li m $t-T5, 1 J. BLACK UROS ORA1N, wide, fi. BLACK UROS UUAIN, rich, titS, 120. I1-T0, S3, 3 W. U, 140, IS. A SPK3DID ASSORTMENT OFIR18H POPUNU. For Bargsloi call at 'GEORGE D. WISH lfS ONE PRICE 8TORE, i tbs No. 7 North EIGHTH Street. Our Motto Small Yii iuuk Hales. REAL ESTATE, WEST PHILADELPHIA, CI1LSNUT Street, weak of Fortieth, at Public Hale, Uj It. T110M.A8 fc SONS, Jvovemuer 19. Xi 1! ltJ