The evening telegraph. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1864-1918, April 21, 1871, FOURTH EDITION, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
THE DAILY EVKN 1IN G TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY", APRIL 21, 1871.
fating &clcgvayi
' FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1371. " "
TnE ADJO VRNMENT OF CONGRESS.
The first scBsion of the Forty-second Coa
grefls haa come to an end, and the results
achieved are before the country. There haa
I) eon a great deal of meaningless talk; not a
few exhibitions of blackguardism, that have
tended to decrease the respect of the people
of the country for the law-making branch of
the Government; a great deal of quarrelling
and ppitefnl oratory on the part of men who
entertained exalted ideas of their own im
portance; and little or no legislation likely
to be . of . . any practical . benefit
to the country. The only important
measure that has received the full attention
of Congress has been the Ru-klux bill, the
utility of which is more than doubtful, while
raany subjects of unquestionable import
ance have either not been considered at all
or have been enable to command the favor
able notice of our Senators and Representa
tives. The Kn-klux bill passed yesterday,
and now it only remains to be seen how
much good or how much harm the efforts to
enforce it will do. If it has any effect in
putting a stop to the political
murders and outrages that have dis
graced certain portions of the Southern
States since the conclusion of the Rebellion,
its passage will not be regretted; but all the
indications are that it will do- more harm than
good, and that it will tend to postpone that
complete reconciliation between the North
and the South which good men of all sections
are anxious to bring about. Contrary to the
dictates of sound political policy, and con
trary to the urgent advice of the best and
most thoughtful men of the Republican party,
Congress refused to pass an Amnesty law;
and this refusal, taken in connection with the
passage of the Ku-klux, bill can scarcely
fail to increase the irritation
and bad feeling that unhappily
exist at the South. For the defeat of the
Amnesty bill the Senate alone is responsible,
and the great mistake made in ( this instance
is unfortunately not the only performance
that will tend to bring the "upper house"
into discredit. The Senate announced its
intention not to consider any measure but the
Ku-klux bill, . but the Deficiency bill was
loaded down with amendments of every de
scription, the great majority of them being
private schemes to extract money from the
publio treasury, and well calculated to in
crease the unenviable reputation already ob
tained by the Senate of the United States,
that it is one of the most corrupt legislative
bodies in the country. Fortunately the
Ilouse of Representatives is either more vir
tuous than the Senate or else its members
Stand in greater awe of publio opinion, and it
refused to concur in the Senate amendments.
During the session about forty bills, publio
-and private, were passed some of which, like
the one for the relief of Nicholas P. Trist,
the negotiator of the Guadeloupe treaty, had
merit. None of them, however, except the
Ku-klux bill, were of special publio interest
or importance; and, with the result of the six
weeks of Congressional labor before them,
most sensible people will be apt to think that
the session was a waste of time and money,
and that it had better not been held.
RELIEF FOR WAR DAMAGES.
We give to-day the report of a special com
mittee of the Senate, which presents an in
teresting review of the causes of the destruc
tion of Chambersburg by MoCausland in
18G4, and of the spoliation generally of the
border counties by the Rebels, and it pre
sents the question of responsibility for these
claims in a manner that cannot fail to carry
conviction with it. The committee are
unanimous on several most vital primary
points. They all unite in testifying that the
people, and not speculators, are the parties
before the Legislature; that the measure pro
posed will stand the severest test as to the in
tegrity of its aims, and that the General
Government is justly or legally
responsible for the liquidation of the claims.
The only diversity of opinion among the
members of the committee is as to the proper
method of presenting the matter to the Gene
ral Government. The majority unite in a
proposition that seems at once just and prac
ticable. They say that by reason of the
withdrawal of the troops, organized by the
State for our own defense, to reinforce the
defeated Federal armies, Chambersburg was
burned and the exposed counties suffered
great losses, and therefore the General Gov
ernment owes it to the State and to the de
spoiled citizens to make restitution. They
say, furthermore, that these citizens cannot
make suooeasful claim before Congress, but
that the State, acting in her capacity of a
great Commonwealth, can do so without fear
of failure, whenever she can do so in
her own name. The majority of the
committee do not propose to pay the
claims, nor do they ask that any new debt
be incurred, or that taxes be increased; but
they apply an amount less than the taxes
of the raided counties to the payment of
interest on the claims, and thus bring them
Into the possession of the State to recover the
money from the General Government with
which to pay them. This measure, it is
claimed with reason, will afford substantial
and Immediate benefit to the people who
have lost their property, without imposing
debt or taxes upon the State, and secure the
payment in full of these extraordinary losses
at an early day by tlie United Slates. It seems
to be free from objeotionable features, and
it will doubtless afford the much needed re
lief to the citizens who have suffered, with
out in any degree impairing the very flatter
ing condition of our finances and ere lit.
The committee seem to have united in a
careful effort to have all speculative, frivo
lous, and dishonest rfrfiua excluded from tha
benefits of the bill; and if thai L fuitVully
done, the uieamue will be satisfactory to the
public.
The closino Horn of the notion in the
House of Representatives yeterly were
devoted by Butler and Farnsworth to a char
acterifltio purpose. Batler attempted to
show that he was not a blackguard, m charged
against him by garrulous old Garrett Davis,
but unhappily thought it necessary, in so
doiDg, to prove that almost everybody else
was a blackguard. Farnsworth, who appears
to think that ho was sent to Congress for the
express and solitary purpose of worrying
Butler, indulged in the same line of talk, but
succeeded only in confusing Butler with his
brother-in-law. Beck, the lively Kentucky
Democrat, likewise participated in the melee,
end proved that Southern' Democratic virtue
of the old-fashioned ante-bellum type is not
extinct. And finally, just before the Speak
er's hammer fell and the session was ad
journed without day, Sunset Cox expressed a
desire to have the coroner called in. If the
coroner could be called in to hold an in
quest on Butler and Farnsworth, it would
be a good thing for Congress and the Repub
lican party. These two worthies are getting
monotonous. Butler may not be an honest
man, and Farnsworth may not be a white
man, but a coroner's jury, the people begin
to think, would be the best authority to in
quire into and settle the matter.
Councils yesterday determined t o appro
priate the Spring Garden Hall property, at
the corner of Thirteenth and Spring Garden
streets, to the purposes of the Girls' Normal
School. The present building will either be
extensively altered or else torn down and a
new one erected. It is most probable that a
new structure will be put up, as the present
one is not adapted to the uses of the school,
and the alterations required are so many that
it will most likely be considered advantageous
to erect an entirely new building with all the
modern improvements. The present Normal
School building in Sergeant street is noto
riously inadequate, and better accommo
dations should have been provided
long ago. The Boys' nigh School has
been accommodated in an elegant and com
modious edifice upon our noblest thorough
fare for many years, and it is not oreditable
that the girls' school, which is of equal
importance, should have been up to the
present time confined to the dingy and in
commodious structure on Sergeant street. The
location of Spring Garden Hall is an excel
lent one for the Girls' Normal School; and
whether the present building is retained or a
new one erected, it is to be hoped that the
necessary work will be completed at as early
a day as is possible, in order that the school
may have the benefit of the change without
farther de!ay.
Smith, that inoorrigiblo "Rooster," suffered
a relapse yesterday afternoon. In fact, he
was subjected to another attack of pneu
matics, which was severe enough while it
lasted, although happily it did not last long.
It was under the guise of a "Pennsylvania
and New Jersey Transportation Company"
that Smith introduced his submarine tubes
to the Ilouse. Sam Josephs, who finds it
quite impossible to be a stranger to virtue on
all oocasions, riddled Smith's tubes so effectu
ally that they would not hold "slush,' and an
indefinite postponement put an end to the
business. Smith must try again.
THE DEMOCRATIC ADDRESS. '
In the Congress of the United States, at
Washington, the Democratic party are fortu
nately in a minority. At Albany, the capital
of the State of New York, as well as in New
York city, and in some of the Southern States
and districts where Ku-kluxism is most ram
pant, they are in a majority. We refer to
these well-known facts because, in view of
the tone of the address issued by the Demo
crats in Congress yesterday, they afford a
forcible new illustration of the old rhyme
Betting forth that
'When the devil was sick the devil a monk would be ;
w oen ine aevu goi weu me aevu m moat was ne. '
The Democrats at Washington, being in a
minority, complain that "partisanship is the
only test applied to the distribution" of
Federal patronage, they are shocked at the
enormous amount of the national expend!
tures, and they burn with indignation at the
thought that "the publio offioes have been
multiplied beyond all precedent to serve as
instruments in the perpetuation of power."
While it is quite possible that there
is some truth, perhaps too muoh, in
these charges, the wonder is that the
party which has its chief seats of power at
Albany and New York, and whioh finds its
master-spirits in the Tammany nail Ring,
should presume to make such aoousations at
a time when the inherent rottenness of its
own organization is bo painfully appareut.
Surely some better time should be chosen for
these accusations than the moment when
Tweed is completing his arrangements for
the extension of a series of unprecedented
exactions upon the tax-payers of New York,
and when the evidenoes of his controlling in
fluence over the Democratic erganization are
being multiplied. It may be wrong to make
partisanship the only test applicable' to
the distribution -of patronage, but
the Democracy, who invented the
doctrine that to the victors belong the spoils,
who have maintained it with a "vigor un
known to all other political organizations,
and who do not even now pretend that they
will ever depart from this cardinal prinoiple
of their faith, are not the men to denounoe
the Republicans for a partial imitation of
their example. However wrong it may be to
multiply public offices unnecessarily, what
prudent citizen would venture to look for a
reform of this abuse to the party of Tweed
and Tammany Hall? Coming nearer home, how
many good policemen did Daniel
II. Fox keep in office, despite their Republi
canism; and how many bad ones did he ap
point and retain in office, despite their defi
ciencies and delinquencies, simply because
they were zealous aiial faithful adherents of
the Democratic party? And how many De
mocratic State legislators and Ceunoihneu
would hitate to provide profitable plaoes fur
their partisan associates if they had the power?
Aide from the moralizing paqsngos of tha
address of the Democratic Congremrnn,its
other paragraphs relate mainly to revenu
reform (so-called) and the Ku-klux bill. The
talk about revenue reform means free-trale,
but the authors of this document have been
too cowardly to say so in plain English.
They wished to seoure the signatures of all
the Democratic Senators and Congressmen,
and as a few of the number were anxious to
win tariff votes in their districts, it was
doomed Impolitio to deal fairly and frankly
with the people. The true attitude of the
party is well described in the statement that
it is for free-trade everywhere except where
more powerful interests demand protection,
when it suddenly becomes, in snch particular
ocalities, an ardent champion of domestic
industry. Bat in reality it has not been for
many years heartily in favor of protecting
anything except slavery, and since its aboli
tion it is at this moment heartily and sincerely
in favor of the principle more noarly allied to
slavery in its practical operation than any
doctrine extensively advocated in this coun
try, to wit, free-trade.
The Ku-klux clause of the address is false
n some of its assertions and ridiculous in
others. It has ftie audacity to assert that the
Democratic party, has no sympathy with
attempts to deprive any man of his rights
under the Constitution an assertion whioh,
in view of innumerable outrages upon colored
citizens and in view of the doctrines openly
proclaimed by a large portion of the Demo
cratic party, is manifestly untrue. It also
alleges that "no word of conciliation, of k;nd
encouragement, or fraternal fellowship has
ever been spoken by the President or by
Congress to the people of the Southern
States." This assertion is so preposterously
and notoriously false that it is positively
ridiculous. The whole address is so notably
weak and deficient that it is charitable to
BuppoBe that its author, before preparing it,
had indulged in an extra allowance of Bour
bon, by way of mitigating his grief over the
tendency of recent political events to heal
dissensions in the Republican ranks and to
ensure continued Republican ascendancy.
DR. BOLLINGER.
Dr. John Joseph Ignatius Dolllngcr, against
whom the Pope has hurled the major excommu
nication, was born at Bamberg, in Bavaria, on
the 28th of February, 1799. He was educated
for the Church, and, immediately after his ordi
nation in 1823, was appointed chaplain to the
diocese of bis native town. In 1836 he made
his first appearance as an author, publishing in
that year a work on "The Doctrine of the Eu
charist during the First Three Centuries." This
brought him into prominence, and the same
year be was Invited to lecture on the history of
the Church before the University of Munich, a
Roman Catholic institution, with which he has
remained in connection until the present time
as l'roicseor or Uhurcu History. me
substance of his lectures was published
in 1828, under the title of "Manual of the His
tory of the Church," and in a more extended
form in 1838, as a "Treatise on the History of
the Church."
Turning his attention to political life finally.
he was, In 1845, elected to represent the Uni
versity of Munich in the Bavarian Parliament,
becoming In 1851 a delegate to the Diet of the
Germanic Confederation at Frankfort. Here he
gave full vent to his extremely liberal opinions,
and cast his vote for the absolute separation
of the Church from the State. He then attacked
the temporal power of the Pope, the abandon
ment of which he advocated in a reries of lec
tures delivered in 1801. Throughout his long;
career be has frequently appeared aa an author,
all his works having a direct bearing upon the
history of the Church and Its relations to the
State. Ills erudition Is as accurate as it is ex
tended, and be has long stood in the very front
rank of the historians of the Church.
The action of the late Oecumenical Council on
the question of Papal infallibility served to fully
arouse the venerable theologian, and during the
discussion in the Council Dr. Dolllnger assailed
the arguments of the Papal party in a masterly
manner, effectually exposing their absurdity,
and bringing down upon himself the full mea
sure of Papal wrath. He is suspected, also, of
having been one of the unacknowledged authors
ot "Janus," the famous anti-infallibilist tract
which appeared the year beiore the assembling
of the Council. This suspicion tended to in
crease the disfavor in which he was held
at the Vatican, and his final refusal, when called
upon by the Archbishop of Munich, to give In his
adhesion to the obnoxious dogma has resulted
In his excommunication by the Pope. Bat Dr.
Dolllnger still holds his professorship in an
orthodox Catholic university, and the grave
question which Is now presented Involves his
retention or removal from this post. It is under
stood that he will be supported fully by the
Minister of Worship and the other lay function
aries of the Bavarian Government.
It Is scarcely possible that, in opposition to
them, King Louis will succumb to the demand
for his removal; and in the event of his retain
ing his professorship, a lively and necessarily
bitter warfare between the Liberal and Ultra
montane parties in Bavaria la In prospect
Whatever may be the result of the struggle, the
hiirh reputation of Dr. Dolllnger Is beyond Its
reach, and In the end the cause of a liberal aud
eulightened Christianity will not be apt to
sutler.
NOTICES.
Wet snorLD
W'OKKINQ MKN
lxvKsr TUEia Savings
in
WANAMAKKK fc ItUOWM'S
Kbauv-madb Clotiiiko?
BlCArSK
First. Money iiveed in this Clothing yklds
a higher rate of satisfaction than money in
vented elsewhere. ,
Second. Honey invented in this Clothing i
less in amount for any given article than the
money that ha to be invested for the same
' garment eUt where.
Third. Money invested in this Clothing goes
further than money invented in any other
Clothing, towara giving tht 'warer comfort
and a respectable appearance.
Fourth. Money invested in thin Clothing lasts
for a long tine, the Clothitig being so good
and so well mad that the investments do not
have to be o frequently repeated.
Fifth. Monty invested in this Clothing is a
slear saving of 80 or 80 per tent, of the monay
uJ.it A ha to b rt'J fur no better Clothing at
Ooyns other place.
Wanamakbu k Bkowk,
Fopcljik 'H)a Hall" Clot Bind noinsK,
S. JL CoahkB Su.m us Mliutr STaxjrra.
THK REASON WHY
Brussels Carpetings are Now Selling at ;
TO
200,
Is, ttat in the purcbese of Isrgo lots are included some patterns not strictly first-class in
i;tjle, which are offered at these very low figures.
,9" By the above announcement we do not wish to convey the ;
IMPBES&ION
That we have no BRUSSELS C ARPETS AT niGnEU PRICES, but invite special atten
tion to a line of
TYr , t, ,.n 1 n
New and Beautiful Patterns,
Made to order for us by the best manufacturers
selling at
S2'25,
$2'35
S2"40,
S250.
i. L. KNIGHT SON,
IVo. 1223 CHESNUT STREET,
PHILADELPHIA.
Every article will be sold as low as goods
otter American city.
Thk Ricbt Kind of a Mokumint. The house of
Crlppen & Maddock, No. 116 South Third street,
Philadelphia, is one or the oldest established and the
very best In that city, having a continuous existence
since 1805, passing in 1825 Into the hands of Crlppen
&. Maddock, the sires of the present amiable and en
terprising gentlemen now conducting the business
so satisfactorily to the public and creditably to them
selves. Having grown as It were into the business
from infancy, they bring to it a lifetime of study,
the result of which is they have to-day a business
house that stands as a monument to their commer
cial enterprise and Integrity. Gentlemen whose
business brings them dally from all parts of the city
near to this house have only to step in, give their
orders, return to their homes In the evening, and
And the choice fresh groceries nicely put away to
the 1 atlsfactlon ot the honse-wlfe. It la needless
for us to attempt to enumerate what they have, for,
In a word, they have everything an epicure could
wish for; in a word, they supply everything in a first
class grocery line, their prices lower, their goods
better than elsewhere in the city, a call only being
necessary to convince the most skeptical that the
Ir es of their choice goods are cheaper than com
iuoi goods that are sold all over the city. Delaware
County American.
Tnx sale at C. P. naseltlne's Galleries, No. 1125
Chesnut street, last evening, made by Henry W. &
B. Scott, Jr., was well attended, but prices were
lower than ever obtained in bis galleries. .
The sale will be continued this evening, when the
balance of the catalogue will be sold, In oonseqasnce
of extensive alterations about being made In his
galleries.
PIANOS.
STEIN WAY it, SONS'
GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT PIANOS.
Special attention Is called to their
PATENT UPRIGHT PIANOS.
CHARLES KLASIUS.
Warerooms. No. 1000 CHESNUT Street. Philadel-
phla. 4 13 tfrp
epffi SCHOMACKEll fc CO.,
GRAND SQUARE AND UPRIGHT
PIANOS.
Special attention Is called to onr Upright Pianos.
They possess the highest Improvements of any In
struments made, and are uurlvalled for tone and
durability. ,
Also, sole Agents for the celebrated '
BURDETT ORGAN. .
SCHOftlACKER & CO.,
No. 1103 CHESNUT Street.
4l81m4p
PIANOS AND ORGANS.
GEO. 8TECK & CO.'S.)
BRADBUKY'S, V
PIANOS,
BALNKS' BROS',
4K9
J
MASON AND HAMLIN'S CABINET ORGANS.
GOULD fc FISCHER,
No. 923 OUES NUT Street.
1. 1, gould. No. 1018 ARCH Street.
VIL O. r-lflCHSB. l IT tf4p
g C II I C K E It I N.G SONS'
GrandEquare and Upright Pianos.
GREAT REDUCTION
FIXED PRICES.
BUTTON'S PIANO ROOMS,
1 88 lm4p Kos. 112 and 1123 CHESNUT St
V T,l . MENCKE & BROTHER,
No. 804 ARCH FTREET.
Just received direct from Paris, a complete assort
ment of tha celebrated
BOUDIER'S PARIS KID GIOYES.
Also, a new Importation of
Victoria Kid Gloves, $1 Per Pair.
The best It Glove in the market.
Real Guipure and Thread laces.
A splendid assortment of
LATEST STYLES
I adies Dross Trimmings.
WM, IY1ENCSCE & DROTHKr?,
i
4 81 2t ' No. 80 1 ARCH Street,
OPTICIANS.
OPEC TA CLEG.
MICROSCOPES, TELESCOPES, TI1EU
MOMETERS, MATH EM ATIOAli, SUR
VEYING, PIIILOSOPUIOAIj AND
DRAWING) INSTRUMENTS
AT REDUCED PRICES.
1 liwuiwrwfc No. 924 CUEsNUT Street, Pnlia,
of New and Old England, which are rapidly
of same quality can be had in this or any
t '
CLOTHING.
LIE it OF PHILADELPHIA!
AROUSE
In vour mlarht to the Importance of making an early
examination of our vast stock or Elegant Spring
Ciothtner. You are freely incited to coma o our
'CJKEAT BROWN HALL," and look closely at our
assortment. You will and that you have come
TO A.
Most unparalleled wealth of fine raiment, ia every
variety ana or every styie. jnen 01 gooa
SENSE
Will be struck In a moment with the magnitude of
the preparations we have made for the satHraction
Of everybody tnis spring, uenuemen 01 rnuaaei-
phla, li you want to get ine wortn
OF YOUR
Money, If you" want to be suttsfled with perfectly flt-
t Ino warmontH If inn wont'tji lift nrnf.RiM.rtd In thfl ci.
BIGHTS!
Bay your Spring Suits at the
GREAT BKOWN HALL ;
ROCKHILL I WILSON,
603 and 605 CHESNUT 8TR22T.
KVJJXnder the
V .riii t-S
HOTEL
PU11ADELPH1 Ai FA
With '
Barest Beauties
of
Fabrlo and Finish
Piling our counters,
And with
Able Interpreters
of Style
To display them, and
And to assist yen in your
CHOICE,
We request the custom of the public
Additionally
A Large Ready-made Stock of
Clothing.
Prlces.IYarloui Styles.
WEGTON & BROTHER,
TAILORS,
S W. Corner NINTH and ARCH Sts,
PHILADELPHIA.
A full assortment now in store
OF THE CnOICE&T NOVELTIES OF
THE SEASON
FOR GENTLEMEN'S WEAR.
A SUPERIOR OAR11ENT AT A REASONABLE
B PLMC8. 4 8 8mrp
SOAP.
SOAP! SOAP II SOAP!!!
PATEUT PERFUMED DETEES1TE.
PATENT PERFUMED DETERSIVE.
PATENT PERFUSED DETERSIVE.
This is the best and most economical LAUNDRY
SOAP lu the United States For house-cleaning, and
washing Flannel or Woollen floods, It has no equal.
It la sold by all grocers, and manufactured only by
McKEONE, VAN HAAGEN & CO.,
15 wfmsm Philadelphia and New Yort.
BONNETS, HATS, ETO.
130 ARCH ST. T0 ARCH ST.
C I L L 8
TRIMMED ROFINETS,
TRIMMED HATS,
STRAW CiOODS,
R1BUONS, FA.OWER8, Etc.
CMopleU stock In oar own Inimitable styles, re
U1U.K a wU0Uala rat, p R
iliiwvtl No. TW) AUiU Street.
DRY GOODS.
STRIPE C1LKG
IE ALL
Colors and Prices.
A
1 .
JOIIHVi. THOMAS S CO.,
Hoi. 405 and 407 N. SECOND Street,
8 22 wfmRmrp
PHILADELPHIA.
SMS, SHAWLS AND DRESS GOODS
No. 916 CIIKSNUT STREET,
Invites attention to bis stock of
SILKS OF A 1.1 KINDS,
INDIA AND OTHER SHAWLS.
Novelties In Prtm and Fnucy Goods,
INDIA, PONGEE,: AND O ANTON CRAPE IN
- SHAWLS AND DRESS QU IDS. 413 8mrp i
head Teotbihs,
N. E. Cor. NINTH and CHESNUT,
MANUFACTURERS OP
Silver-Plated Ware.
Wedding Presents,
Hotels Furnished,
Families Supplied, i
WITH EVERY ARTICLE REQUIRED IN TnEIR-i
LINE OB" OOODS. 8 S3 wfmmrp
OAR Rl ACES.
GARDNER - & FLEMING,
CARRIAGE BUILDERS,
Wo. 214 South FIFTH Street.
BELOW WALNUT.
A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF
LIGHT CARRIAGES,
INCLUDING PIITO S3, JENNY LINDsj
ALWAYS ON HAND.
All WORK WARRANTED to be of the b
WORKMANSHIP and MATERIALS.
Also, an assortment of SECONDHAND 1ARJ
JUAUAO lOr BB1U Bl rBBBUUBDlB priUBB. ,
Special attention given to REPAIRINO.
KEPAIR1NO, KEPAINTINU, and VARNI8HING.
FINANCIAL.
TRAVELLERS' CREDITS.
i
Our Letter of Credit gives the holder the privilege o
drawing either on
DKEXEL, IIA1UES & CO., Paris;
IN FRaNC3,
' oa on
Sestrs. A. 8 PET R IE & CO., London;
IN STERLING,
Aa may ba fonnd most convenient of profitable, and;
la available throughout Europe. To parties going
atuoad we offer special facllliiofl, collecting tnntr In-
tcrcst and dtvldeuaa during their absence wituoaH
charge. ,
DREXEL & CO.i
Ho. Si BOUTH THIRD STREET,
PHILADELPHIA j
1
AGRICULTURAL.
sa
THE PHILADELPHIA LAW
i
MOWER,
Two thousand of these eilebrated Machines wf
acid In the spring of 1870, and ttin snpplv failed
meet the deuiaud. They are acknowledged to Ixa,
the beat Mower in the world, and we warrant thj
every machine will please the purchaser. They ard
of six sizes, aa follows : I
No. 00, for a young lady. price 13-0(
0, for a lady or boy " 1 M
1, for a man ss-o
8, for two men " Sskhi
SV. for a pony or light borne " 7S 0t(
8. for one horse " ifMr(M
1-WWe deliver all machines and operate them au
your residence without extra cnarge.
ROBERT HlIST, Jr.,
Seed and Acrlcnltural Honse.
4 20 6t rp 29 and m M ARKET HL, above Nluth,!
WATCHES. JEWELRY. ETO.
HENRY HARPER,
No. 722 CHE8MUT Street?
A NEW STOCK AT LOW PRICES OP
WATCHES,
OPERA AND VEST CHAINS, I
FINE JEWELRY
SILVER BRIDAL PRESENTS,
Rogers', SUver-Plated Spooua, Forks
Sets, Castors, Ice Pitchers, Etc.
4 It luiap
GTO THOSE DESIRING SUMMER RE3I
dences, the new suburban town of
YT E N O N A H
presents special and attractive features. Sitaata'
tn the wtai jersev jituiro.n, n nine, irwm (. amaen
45 nunuta from buaiuea oeutres. i'ot parUvaian
addruss
DANIEL AL POT A SON, '
1 19 wis St Ko, tw N. ilrTU blrcot.