The evening telegraph. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1864-1918, April 29, 1871, FIFTH EDITION, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE DAI1A nVflNINU TELEGRA PH PHILADELPHIA, SA TURD AT, APRIL 29, 1871.
spirit OF TUR PRESS.
XDITORIAJj OPINIONS OF THH LEADIVO JOUBH1LS
' XTTO.N CURRENT TOPICS COMPILED XTERT
' DAT FOB THE EVHNINO TELEGRAPH.
NO IMMUNITY FOR SLANDER.
Frtm th K. T. Tribune.
Libel suits are generally regarded a de
vice for the persecution of newspapers; they
ehould be held a wise provision fot their
protection. We dissent from the declaration
of a prominent editor, the other day, when an
acquaintance claimed his congratulations on
the reoovery of a substantial verdiot for a
wanton slander, "Ob, yon know newspapers
are all opposed to libel suits." The Tribune
is not opposed to libel suits; it is in favor of
them. It heartily wishes there were ten
times as mary of them; that the law's delays
might be lessened, the process of forcing a
verdict simplified, the probability of heavy
damages for clear malicious libel increased a
Lundred fold. In short, the Tribune is not
in favor of Blander; wants no immunity for
slander; longs for the day when the impunity
wherein so many other papers riot, to the
disgrace of journalism and the incalculable
reduction of its power, shall be summarily
ceded, by short, sharp justice, impartially
and relentlessly administered.
Here is the case of Mr. E. L. Sanderson, of
Brooklyn, against whom this libel was printed
in the Suiuley Mercury, in the autumn of
18G7:
"Elnathan L. Sanderson, extra radical candidate
for Assembly from the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and
Eleventh wards of Brooklyn, did a good thing In his
Bober moments In the way of collecting soldiers'
cla'ms against the Government for a fearful per
centage. The blood nione) he got from the Boys in
Blue in tills way is supposed to be a big thing, and
may elect him to the Assembly on the 'loyal' ticket,
although the soldiers and sailors are out In full force
against him."
It was not till this month of April, 1871,
that, three or fonr days ago, Mr. Sanderson
was finally able to secure from the court of
last resort a judgment for five thousand dol
lars damages for this wanton libel, the means
for determining the falsity of which were in
the possession of the editor when he reck
lessly sent it ont. A verdict was obtained in
the Kings County Court. The case was ap
pealed to the General Term, and the judg
ment of the Court below was there affirmed.
The case was then carried to the Court of
Appeals, where the judgment was again re
affirmed, and Mr. Sanderson was given, after
three and a half years of vexatious litigation,
his order on responsible men for his five
thousand dollars.
Now whe does not see that it would have
been better for the cause of honest, reputable
journalism, if the damages had been made
twice as heavy, and awarded five times as
soon? We have looked through the copy of
the paper in which this libel was printed, and
do not doubt that that identioal sheet con
tains a dozen others as gross and malicious.
But there was only one of the victims uniting
the means and courage to proneoute with the
pertinacity to fight through three courts and
three and a half years for his verdict. Sup
pose the others had been ready to do the
same, and the verdicts had been irrevocably
rendered in each case within six months, can
it be doubted that the Sunday Mercury would
thenceforth have thought it profitable to in
dulge more sparingly in wholesale slaader
that a swarm of lesser organs of porsonal de
famation would have taken warning by the
example that honorable journals would have
gained in repute and influence by this pro
cess of cauterizing the excrescences of jour
nalism? There are papers in this city that never
print an issue withont a libel. Sometimes it
is the offspring of malicious hate, more often
of malicious recklessness. In not one case in
a hundred is a fair correction ever made. A
few angry victims go to the office, intern per
ately thrtaten suits, find their threats not un
naturally met with defiance, and then, re
membering the cost, interminable delays,
and great uncertainty, abandon the matter;
while the newspaper, accepting this as a
triumph, refuses any explanation, and either
blackens the libel or avoids the subject, as its
estimate of the probability that the victim
may be goaded into an execution of his threat
may dictate. Others ask corrections cour
teously, and are so disgusted at finding these
adroitly put in such guise as to conceal the
fact that there is any correction (or perhaps
even to make the original libel worse), that
they abandon the matter. The rest, witness
ing these results, do nothing; but lament the
lawless tyranny of a lioentious press. Mean
while the profession is degraded, and the
influence of every honest paper is curtailed.
Angry and wronged men do not draw fine
distinctions; too many are ready to believe
that an inherent vice of the system which
is really only the depravity of its baser
Eiembers.
On many well-meaning journals, too, there
comes a reflex influence. Finding slap-dash
personal abuse one of the profitable things in
the market, and the organs of slander appa
rently free to say what they please without
restraint of any kind whatsoever, the wants
of their business and the spirit of competi
tion gradually draw them into the same cur
rent of miscellaneous libel. Here was a repu
table journal, the other day, so demoralized
as to charge a United States Senator with an
infamous offena without a scintilla of evi
dence or even of probability for it, and so
brazen as to refuse correction. On oar table
lies another reputable journal with an article
gloating over a story it has wantonly invented
that a young lady, prominent before the
pnblio, is secretly married. Political malig
nity may explain the one; a mere goatish lore
for prurience the other; but would it not
be better for honorable journalism if both
could be promptly and sharply punished
for their inexcusable offenses against truth
and decency?
We conclude as we began. Libel suits
should be regarded, not as the persecution,
but as the protection of journalism. The
Tribune is in favor of libel suits, wishes there
were more of them, and that the process of
getting verdicts and collecting damages were
eabir. But let ns not be misunderstood.
The subjects of real wrong rarely prosecute
for libel, and we wish they would; the trick
sters, the adventurers, the men without cha
racters to damage, are the ones so generally
prompt to seek salves in oourt for what no
court can cure; and for thorn we profess no
purpose save to give them the same hard
fights they have so often had from ns
in the past. We intentionally make no state
ment which we do not believe true, and right
to be made. When we are mistaken, as must
Sometimes happen, we hold ourselves always
ready, when the mistake is brought 10 our
. knowledge, to give the promptest reparation.
There are fools who, after that, would still
seek damages in oourt, and we are glad that
they generally meet the fool's reward. But
clear and malicious libel, correction whereof
has, on proper application, been refusal,
ought always to be prosecuted; and we hold
it the duty and the interest of honorable
journalists, in self-defense, to unite in eu
oouragitg the prosecution.
TIIE FATE OF MRS. FAIR.
From th H. T. World.
A word fitly spoken, the wise man tells ns,
is like apples of gold in piotnres of silver.
California is rich both in gold and in silver,
but she has never combined her treasures in
more useful form tbau when on Wedoeiday
a San Francisco jury pronounced Mrs. Fair to
be guilty of murder in the first degree. It
remains still to be seen whether the Gover
nor of California will have the oonrage to imi
tate tbe firmness with whioh Governor Hoff
man, in the case of the ruffian Real, who
murdered a policeman, did his full executive
duty, with an equal superiority to the merci
ful movements of hi own nature and to the
organized influences which were brought to
bear upon him to sway him from his loyalty
to Lis oath and to his trust.
With the single exoeption, perhaps, of the
murder of Mr. Key by Sickles, the murder of
Mr. Crittenden by the woman whom a 0li
f ortiian jury have now most righteously con
demned was the most thoroughly di jus crime
of the kind which has been perpetrated of
late years in this country. It closely resoui
bled the "Washington tragedy" of 18.ii), not
only, as we Lave already pointed out, in the
elaborate care with which the dranutio aoces
fcoricB of the deed bad been oouBidered aud
planned by the perpetrator, but in the cold
blooded and exquisite selfish uess of the mo
tives by which, so far nait is given to man to
analyze the motives of his fellow-creatures, the
asBBsnin seems to have been governed iu the
doing of the deed. As subsequent events in
terpreted by the light of revelations made
in the course of the trial have abaud-tutly
shown, the murderer of Mr. Key deliberately
determined upon attempting to convert to his
own personal political advantage, by an out
burst of simulated passion, a scandal in which
be had acquiesced bo long as it seemed likely
to slumber within the circle of his intimates,
but which he had sufficient knowledge of his
countrymen to feel would damn him were it
to become public in a tame and common
place fashion. His calculations, made for the
meridian of Washington, proved to be cor
rect. With the help of Edwin M. Stanton he
emerged from his trial an injured husband
maddened by the delicacy of his sensibilities
into an irresponsible murderer.
TLe slayer of Mr. Crittenden, after ex
hausting her last hope of converting hia re
maining resources of property and of ability
to her own exclusive advantage, in like man
ner resolved upon refreshing her somewhat
worn and threadbare reputation as a siren by
surrounding herself with the blood-red aure
ole of a murderess. Possibly she had rend,
certainly Bhe was far enough advanced in life
to remember, the proceedings in the case of
that remarkable young lady of Scotland, Miss
Madeline Smith, whose trial for the murder of
her lover and dismissal upon aSootch verdict
of "not proven" were immediately followed
by no fewer than sixteeu offers of marriage,
some of them from persons of means if not
of mind. But a woman who had passed
through life after tbe fashion of Mrs. Fair
needed not the help of precedent and exam
ple to teach her a contemptuous confidence in
the power of insolence and indecency over the
imaginations of a certain proportion of what
we sarcastically style the "stronger sex." Mrs.
Fair, in her well-known and widely-advertised
character of a woman scorned into trausnen l
ing the furies of hell, might be quite sure of
recovering all and more than all that she had
lost by the miserable subserviency of Mr.
Crittenden to the yoke of the home which he
bad madly dishonored but could not bring
himself coldly to disown. She had nothing
to fear bnt the possibility of such a verdict as
that whioh has now in truth overtakea her.
Bnt how vague and remote that possibility
must have appeared to her I Of her malt
prototypes the most distinguished hud escaped
from the gallows to beooiue the Kssooi&te and
friend of the Chief Magistrate of the Union,
and to be selected by him as the fitting re
presentative in a great foreign city of Ame
rican morals and manners. Of those of her
own sex the most conspicuous, the truly
heart-broken Miss Harris, who came all the
way from Chicago by express train, stopping
at the best hotels, to shoot another woman's
huhband in the National Treasury because she
bad wished to marry him herself, had been
surrendered by twelve sobbing oitizens in a
jury-box to the tender embraces, damp with
manly tears, of her sympathizing counsel.
Why should Mrs. Fair have anticipated a
lets flattering fate than theirs? If we are
to believe the reports of her trial, sue
is better looking than Miss Harris. Her
hifctrionio talents certainly are not much
inferior to those of Sickles. She mtde a
mistake, to be sure, in that tirade whioh fluug
her fiercely and brutally, the lie npon her lips,
against the widow of her viotim confronted
with her in the court. But then she had not
enjoyed such advantages of education as her
masculine predecessor. Perhaps, too, her
almost exclusive familiarity with hotel-life
may have misled her as to the universality of
that intolerance of conjugal fidelity which
seems to have been her nearest approach to a
moral conviction. But at all events she was
attractive enough and clever enough to war
rant her in counting upon a triumphant ac
quittal. It is recorded of a duchess of the
Begency that she put down her eonfessor
peremptorily, when he sought to tame her
with eternal terrors into temporal restraint,
by informing him that in her opinion the
Almighty would think twice before he
damned a person of her quality. What
French duchesses of the last century
expected of the Almighty, American
drabs of the present century seem to
expect of American juries. It is not very
easy to justify criminal legislation at all, ex
cept its design be to benefit society, either by
disciplining its members into restraining
their passions or by putting away those mem
bers who trample the discipline under foot.
In our reoent American practice it ha i come
near to be established as a principle that to
prove the criminal transported by individual
passion over the limits of social discipline
was to excuse the crime. We cannot be quite
sure that this principle has really been set
aside in the case of Mrs. Fair. Her condem
nation may, perhaps, have resulted rather
from the belief of the jury that her pa-isioa
wai simulated than from a sound recognition
of the true basis of just verdicts in suoh
cases. Still it is something to find a oapaoity
even of critical dramatio perception in an
average jury. It is better that a woman who
has outraged every principle of deoency and
every noble instinct of humanity bhould be
punished for bad acting in the dock than t'iat
the should be acquitted of murder in tbe
highway merely becanse she is a woman.
RUFFIANISM IN STREET CARS.
From th N. Y. Time.
Any one aocustomed to travel at night in
our street cars will be able to appreciate bow
completely the respectable inhabitants of this
community are at the mercy of our city row
dies. Their extensive control over city boards
and local courts lends to our collective mss
t f rutnaiiism a social importance and a degree
of immunity from ordinary restraint uuex
fueled in any great city of the world. Any
uenkni a drunken or quarrelsome roua
may single ont for insult in almost entirely
without a remedy. lie may be riding in a oar
filled with passengers, nearly all of whom are
resectable citizens, but in itae vnt of hi
beirp- made the target of brutal insolence his
pt scchbly-diKpoFed fellow-passengers will, in
nine cases out of ten, keep their sentiments to
themselves, and represent tbe cause of order
by a masterly inactivity. Nobo ty koow
whether the foul-mouthed aggressor may
not by an alderman or part proprietor of some
local justice. He might have the ear of thfl
Governor, or might be one of the shoulder
litters who bask in the smiles of Twee I.
To forcibly eject such a fellow, in the inte
rests of decency and order, might somehow
turn out to be a State prisou offense, while
to remonstrate with him might probthJy be
the signal for a little promiscuous sh ioting,
for which he would not. nnlikely g. unpun
ished. In Mich a case, lh refore, people who
value tbeir lives aud their liberty oautiously
let the insolent rowdy alone, and congratu
late tbeuiselves that they have not happened
to tLe recipient of bis attentions. As for the
drivers and conductors of street cars, we
have yet to hear of one who will turn a pas
senger out for any reason short of being
tumble to pay his fare. He may be disgust
ingly drunk, filthy in speech or violent in
conduct; but tbe company' servants, having
but a low idea at any time of the decencies
pioper to a pnblio conveyance, may proba
bly have a certain sympathy with the of
fender, and will certainly not, uidesa in very
exceptional cases, have him put out or ar
rested. A melancholy illustration of how much a
ruffian may dare and do with the tolerauce of
on-lot kers was piven on Tuesday night. Mr.
Avery D. Putnam was a ptsseuspr in a
Broad v.sy car, and was accompanied by two
ladies. He occupied a seat near the dior
opening on the front platform. Beside the
driver stood a man named Foster, said to be
an ex-conductor of the Broadway and Seventh
avenue line. This fellow took it into his
head to exeicise the natural right of a New
York rough to insult a lady. He opened trie
door several timeH, and by look and action
behaved insolently towards the younger of
Mr. Putnam's female companions. A quiet
remonstrance from the gentleman ap
pears to have been regarded by tiie
rody as a perfectly unwarranted in
terference with his special prerogatives.
Awaiting the time when Mr. Putnam and
his companions alighted, Foster seized tn
book of the apparently sympathetic driver,
and stepping from the car, delivered his vic
tim a blow on the head whioh fractured the
tkull, and will probably result fatally. A
more atrocious outrage it would be impossi
ble to imagine, and its significance lies in the
fact that nobody who has any experience of
night-cars will be greatly astonished at it.
People will say that the safest rule iu such
cases is not to notice the affront, but quietly
to &et out of harm's way by alighting. But
will they at the same time refl-et how utterly
degrading to the inhabitants of the greatest
city of the greatest of free people is the
confession involved here? Our roughs have
f.,ot tbe upper hand of us, and we give a
sneaking indorsement to tbeir rale. Taeirs
is the unbridled license, and ours the quak
ing fcubmission. Theirs is the power to oom
niand executive pardons, pigeon-holed in
dictments, and reverence from the polioo.
Ours are the taxes that maintain ruffiauisua
in rii tous and insolent ease, and ours are the
votes they are hired to render worthless.
The morbidly cautious passengers of a
street car are but a type of the society to
which they belong. We are snoriflcing man
hood, fair play, chivalry, everything that is
worth being proud of, from a slavish fear of
tbe dregs ot our populace who have come t
the surface. How inseparable are political
liiicrnle si.d tiouiitl lioeiine in brought home to
every man's understanding by an incident
like tLe prevent. If our ruffians were not
pampered, flattered, and paid by the knavish
ring that misgoverns us, they would be far
1 hs bold and infinitely less daugerous. There
is no perceptible dividing hue between the
men who, if the law did its duty, would
be in the State Prison and the men who
c ntiol both the prevention and the punish
ment of crime. Their interests are perfectly
identical, and those who believe in the
stability of the one will be likely to fear to
dispute the immunities of the other. If the
public who ride iu streetcars would respect
themselves a li'tle more, and the class of
rowdies a little less, we should soon see
a marked reform in the insolent de
mesnor of these worthies, and perhaps a
corresponding regard to deoency in their
political patrons. It will be but a melan
choly consolation to the relatives of Mr.
Putnam to be told that he has fallen a victim
to such brutal passion as grows up side
by side with political depravity, and to
whose excesses we are all equally liable.
Tbe present offense is so monstrous that it
cannot fail to excite a universal sentiment
of pnblio indignation. It may thus help to
direct attention to the primary causes that
render such an act possible. It will, without
doubt, incite a general demand for the better
regulation ot our street cars and a more care
ful choice of the men to whom they are en
trusted. Mr. Putnam's unprovoked and brutal
murder may thus, by the startling disclosure
it affords of the need for reform, be the
means of producing a partial remedy for simi
lar outrages. For his sorrowing friends
every ret-pectuble inhabitant of this commu
nity will have but oue sentiment of heartfelt
sympathy, and for his dastardly assailant but
one indignant demand for the full measure of
justice.
Tnle wonderful .medicine cures all Diseases and
Pair, including
KilJtUMATlsM, NBUHAIOIA,
BT. VITUS' DANCE,
CHILLS AND PBVKR,
by electrifying ana strengthening the entire Ner-
veUS SvBteUl. resbirillK the lns-nslfila nersnirtl.in.
and at once giving new life and vigor to the whole
frHnie. tNK TfASPMONKUi- WlLb CTTHE THK
Nkw Yon. March 1. 1S70.
Having seen the wonderful cura'lve effects of
Watts' Nkkvous Antwotb in eaaca of approaching
Paralyse, severe Neuralgia, Deullir.r, and other
nervous disease, I moBt heartily recommend Its use
aa a moki vaiuauie mean iue l ours truly,
b. M. MAiiLoKY, m. D.,
No. 4Sl Fourth avenue,
4 19 wemtf Sp Coiner Thirty-ieoond street
rp II K ST.
C L O U D
This new elejrant and commodlens first-class Hotel.
VU AUVii BM''I Ottl Ail I Llm
Now open.
Terms, (3 per day.
4 1 tm O. W. MUi LlN A bEO.. Proprietors.
WJ WARBURTON'S 1MPROVKO VENTILATED
flatid eaay U'tlng DKKSS IlATd (patented), tn all
the improved faahiona el the season. CliKiNL'T
fctreet, neil door to tbe roel ouloe. rpS
REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION.
mmmmmm
M'?t -li.wi z-tzr.i ja
CP EXECLTUIXS PKKEMPTOnY SALE.
bi a Bstat or II anion KnMusnn, deo'd. Til ms
A StiBn. Auctioneers. Very fclegant Countrv beat
and Farm known aa "Wooiton Hall." M.imliu.
Farm, and Tenant Humes, no acres, Phil idnipuia
and Wilmington Turnpike. Hrandvwine Hundred.
New Castle county, Del., 8 squares from Bellevue
Station, on the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Hal
timore Hatlroitd, half mile from the mver Dxl-tware,
8 miles from v itnunirton, 9 nu:e from Chester,
aud its miles from Philadelphia Oil Tuemlay, My
io, imii, at it o'clock, noon, will lie sold a', nu'tl.c
ale, without any reserve whatever, at the Philadel
phia Exctanife
AH that veiy Uejrant country-seat and f wra, com
prising f 0 acres of land, situate on the westerly side
of the PhilHdelphla and Wilmlt gton turnpike aud on
io private romm, inrue i ruins, about w iiuies lielow
ClieMer. 8 abme Wilmington, 2) from Phil i lclpliia,
half mile oi the river Delaware, and about 3 squares
from liellevue Station, on the Philadelphia, Wil
niliiirtoii and Baltimore Kallroad. The ttnprove
niciitH are an t legant and spacious thrce-st ry stone
niHi.hton, n am building 4U by 44 feet, extreme Inngth
HI feet and circular piazza and porttc around three
Hini'sorit; conducted on inn castellated tityleor
architecture, t-eliig built In the most substantial
Dimmer throughout; has large hall in tue centre,
Faloon parlor, conservatory, dining-room, library,
kitchen, aeuilerv, store and china room, and tire
proof Kafe on the llrst floor; 4 commodious ch-t'nbrrs
( ach having a bath-room aud marble-top ntit,louary
wushMand, hot aud cold water, water-closet) on
tlie second floor; 4 cliamltets, it bath-rooms, and 2
water-tan s (ivhlcn are snp;iiii d by 2 hdra.il-u rrm
me of the tHTsks will contain litm gallons oi sprlug
wnter on the third floor, binl an observatory above,
l'.akoiies, with window a opening to them from all
the rooms; private stairway, numerous closets (m
eludlng cedar anrl wlue),staiued glass windows, mar
ble mantels, walls end ellings beautifully rrescoed,
liHiidsomely paperert and painted, g (with hand
si n.e tIMurts) and water throughout, 5 bath rooms,
w at ei -closets, bell-calls, 2 furnaces, cooking range,
e c.
A genteel Sjtf-story stone farm house, two-story
stone tenant house, stone atAtdo a id carr:ae house
(Neiu. an Btjle), btalls for Uve horses; stone toe
nonce, rilled, with a keeping-room for provisions;
lrHine tool house, stone and frame barn, gas house,
built or stone, complete arrangement for making
fiai, the operation very simple; frame chicken
ht nse, 6 a3r s of wooniand, a rivulet of pure sprinir
vnter runs through it, ann collected by a small dam,
and csnli d 1.25 f et through Iron pipes Into tnn rm
I'.ox, the surplus flowing into the pond ; also a llsh.
pc nd, beautiful stoue wall on this turnpike front,
capped With North rlv-r flagging; very elegant
Osage orange hedge, forms a lienutlful curve around
the front lawn ; the gravel drives about half-mile In
length, ranging from 10 to so feet wide ; are thor
oughly made, paved with large stones and covered
wl h broken nones and gravel, and uudergnaad
drainage; large vegetable garden, beautiful la vn,
in t lie cent re of which la a handsome Iron summer
house, surrounded by beautiful trees ; abundance of
fiutt tre s, apple orchard, etc.; also, 4 Iff beautiful
ui-.d well-grow u forest and everpretn trees on the
sides of the drives and around the mansion.
This property was bnllt by the late Hanson Robln
Fon, lor his own occupancy, aud no expanse has
been spared to make it a very elegant and fluUhed
country eat, all the materials being of the beat, and
I lie grounds beautifully laid ont. Thn mansion is
lMCHted in the centre of an extensive lawn, elevated
oner W'O feet above the river Delaware, and crn
nionds a beautiful and extended view upuu ldo.rn
the river and surroundings.
The location is especially healthy. Photographs,
plans and pnrophleta, containing more lull p.micu
jsrs, n ay be set n at the Auction Rooms, Philadel
phia, or it the olllce of Samuel M. Harrington. Esq.,
Attorney for tb Executrix, serond story, building,
Seventh aim Market streets, Wilmington, Delaware,
wlit-ro Riiy out, wlRttltiR to vi-w t.h.s prmnlBM oati prt
a conveyance. Trains leave Phil ulnlphla at 8 30 and
11 A. M., and S 80, 5. ard T P. M. for liellevue Sta
tion. The house und premises will be ready for in
spection at all times. OuTucsdais and Fridays of
e. h wee k a carriage will bo at liellevue Station on
the arrival of 11 A. M. Hnd 3-30 P M. traini from
Philadelphia, to convey visitors to the property.
Terms of Sale. Two-thirds of the purchase money
my remain on the premises, to be secured, with
Interest, eic, by bond anil mortgage, with policy of
fire insurance traiferrcd as collateral.
Immediate possession, fiouo to bu paid at tlraa
of sale.
M. THOMAS SONS. Auctioneers.
4jlSB6t Nob. 139 and 141 8. FOURTH Street,
REAL ESTATE-THOMAS A SONS' SLE
.'!! Cent"ei Three-story Brick Store and Duelling.
io. 1070 East NorrU sneet. second house above
Thon pson street. On Tuesday, Mav 2, mi,
et VI o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sa'e, at
the Philadelphia Exchange, all that genteel throe
story l.r.eW dwelling, wUh two-storv back bul'ding
and lot ef ground, situate No. 1070 East Norrls
street, second house above Thotnp'on street; con
taining in fronton East Norris street is feet 9 Inches,
and extending In depth 108 feet, 8 inches, to a 4-feet
wide alley, wuli the privilege thereof. It Is occu
pied as a store and dwelling, cont ilus 8 rooms ; has
gss, hath, hot and cold water, rauge, etc. Terras
gvocO may remain on mortgage. Immediate pos
session. For further particulars, apply to V, C.
Headman, No. r.'M Arch street.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Auctioneers,
4 15s3t Nos. 139 and 141 S. FOURTH Street.
REAL ESTATE-TlfovlAS & SONS' SALE.
Kli 2 two-story Brick Dwellings, Nos. 713 aul
7 1& Pierce street, wst of Seventh str- et and south
of Morris street, First ward. On Taesdav, May 2,
1S71, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at pnblio sale, at
the Philadelphia Exchange, all those 2 two-story
brick dwellings and lot ol ground, situate on the
north side of Pierre street, 111 feet west of Seventh
street, Nns. 713 and 71S; each containing tn front
on Pierce street 14 feet, and extending in depth 44
feet Together with the common usu and privilege
of a 2 feet wide alley, laid out and opened. Thev
each riave 4 rooms, gas, range, etc. Each subject
to a yearly ground-rent of 33. Immediate posses
elon. They will be sold separately. Keys at No.
9k3 Stutli Fifteenth street.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
4 15s3t Nosl39 and Ul SFOURTU Street.
fREAL ESTATE THOMA8 A SONS' HALE.
Valuable Business Stand. Three-story ; brick
ry Stable, No. 206 8. Eleventh street, below
Walnut street, tssjtf leet front. On Tuesday, May
2, lt71, at 12 o'clock noon, will be sold at public sale,
at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that valuable
three-story brick stable (with basement) and lot of
grtund, situate on the west side of Kleveuth street,
south of M'aluut street, No. sou, the lot containing
In front on Eleventh; street 65 feet, and extending
tn depth along Ker.obla street fii reet. Tbe stable
lias a press-brick front, good basement, the con
veniences, etc., ras accommodations for about loo
horses and 100 carriages. There is room for three
stores on thla lot. Immediate possession. Terms
110,000 may remain on mortgaae.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Auctioneers,
4 16 E3t Nos. 139 and 141 S. FOURTH Street.
(f REAL ESTATE THOMAS A SONS' 8U.E.
Llu, Modern Three-story llrlck Dwe'ling, No. 1314
Muster street, between Thirteenth and IS road streets.
On 'luesday, May 2, 1871, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be
sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange,
all that modem three-story brick dwelling, .with
three-story back buildings and lot of ground, situate
ou the south side of Master street, west o Thir
teenth street, No. 1314; containing In fronton Master
street 17 feet, and exte. ding in depth 81 feet. Sub
ject to the restriction that no building for otfnsive
occupation shall ever be erected on said lot. It has
fas, bath, hot and cold water, beater, rauge, etc.
mmeoiato possesblon. Terms gttoo may remain
on mortgage.
M. THOMAS A SONS. Auctioneers,
4 8 22 29 Nos. 139 aud 141 8 FOURTH Street.
PUBLIC SALE THOMAS A SONS,
uctloneers Genteel Btory brlck'rtwelllng.
No. 336 Stevens street, first, house east of Fourtu
Street, Camden, N. J. On Tuesday, May 2, 1S71, at
ii o'clock noon, will be sold at public sa'e, at the
Philadelphia Exchange, all that genteel 2-story
brick dwelling, with 2Ji-storv back building and lot
of ground, situate on tbe south side of Stevens
atreet, 80 feet east of Fourto street, No. 836; con
taining in front on Stevens street id feet, aud ex
tending in depth loo feet. Tbe house has the
nicdern conveniences; gas, bath, hot and cold water,
gas oven, etc. May be examined.
M. THOMAS . SONS. Anctloneers,
4 20 22 29 Noa, 139 and 141 S. FOURTH btreet.
HEAL ESTATE AT AUOTION.
K K A I. MTATi! run u ii Suva' j i i c
, --. -'--- .J -..rt..(..T...'...J .1 I'JI
,;:i - Modern Three storv Itrlek Ijweillnir No. 1115
i i am am ax on street, witn 3 1 hree-story drick Dwell
ings In the rear, Nos. lm, use, aud 1132 jMy street,
Jviilileeiith war. On Tuesday, May, 1st I, at. 12
o'clock, noon, will be sold st i nblle a'e, at tnn Pnl
etphia Kxclmiige, all that lot of ground with the
Improvements thereon erected, situate on the uorth- '
east side of Srmckaruaxon street, lug feet ft Inches,
more or less, southeast of t;irard avcuue, No. 1135; ,
containing in front on Shackamaxon street 20 feet,
and extending In depth northeast 80 feet, more or
less. Also, ail that lot of ground, beginuttig at a
point 90 fee t, ni re or less, northeast of SiiacKa
nix on street, being 123 letn Inches, morn or less,
Bouthcanof Oirard avenue; thence exte ding south
east 40 feet, more or less; thence northeast fist feet 2
Inches, more or less; thence northwest 40 feet, more
or Icbs; t&etice southtsi st. 69 leet 2 Inches to tha
place of beginning. Also, all that lot of ground, witn
the Improvements thereon e rected, beginning at a
point r.8 feet noitheastof Sliackamaxon street, ncln
123 feet t Inches southeast of Oirard avenue; t hence
extei.dirg southeast 40 feet, tnoie or less; thence
northeast 41 feet 9 Inches, more or less; thence
northwest 40 feet, roeire r less; thence soutlwest 89
feet 10 lurries, more or less, to the place of begin
ning. The Improvements consist of a modern three
stoiy brick dwelling, with two story back build ugs,
having the gas Introduced, Imtli, hot an I cold water,
water closet, cooking-range, etc , fronting on Siiaek
an axon street, No. 113ft and 8 three-story brick
dwe llings, eHch containing six rooms, fronting on
Day street, Nos 112s, nsn and 1184. They win be
sold t get. icr. t lenreif nil Inenmbranoe. Plan at
the annlon rooms. Possession 1st of July. Terms:
fst-on cash; baUnce tuay remain for Blx ycari.
May be exatuin d.
M. T POM AS fc SONS. Anetl-neera,
4 80 22 S9 Nos. !3i and 1 1 I S. FOURTH Street.
f PVBI.IO SAI.E-THOM AS 'fc SONS, AUO
L;;: tlomers On Tuesday, Mar 2, ls;i, nt 12
o ctock. noon, will be sold nt public sale, at the
Philadelphia Exchange, the following described
property, viz.:
No. 1. Two-story brick dwelling, Slvty-flfth
street, south of Callowhill street. All that two
stoty Mansard roof dwelling, with bay window,
verandahs, etc., and lot of ground, situate on tho
ea--t sine of Sixty-fifth street, 70 feet south or Cal
lowhill street; containing In front BS feet, and ex
tending In depth 14S feet to a 10 f.-et wide alley. The
house coi tslns large parlor, dining room, kitchen,
and B ehnmbers, built In the best manner, etc
Terms $2000 may remain on mortgage. Immediate
pop session.
No. 2. Two-story brick dwelling. Sixty -fifth street,
noith of Race street. All that two atory brick Mau-sard-roof
dwelling, with two-story back bnllding and
led of gronnd. situate on the west sh'e of Sixty-fifth
street, soo feet north of Race street ; the lot contain
ing in front on Sixty-fifth street 40 feet, and extend
ing In depth 225 feet to a 60 feet street. It is sub
stantially bnllt; has parlor, sitting-room, dining
room, kitchen, and 6 chambers. Terms I JOOO may
remain on mortgage. Immediate possession. For
further particulars, apply to Jeremiah Bonsall,
S. W. corner Sixty-fifth and Vine streets.
M. THOMAS & SONS. Anctloneers,
4 15 B3t Nob. 139 and 141 S. FOURTH Street.
fT3 REAL ESTATE THOMAS fc SONS' SALE.
Mi On Tuesday, May 2, 1871, at 12 o'clock, noon,
will be sold at public sale, at tbe Philadelphia Ex.
change, the following described properties, viz. :
No. 1. Three-story brick n welling. N. 190S
Thompson street. Twentieth ward. All that three
Btoiy brick messuage, with two-story back building
and lot of ground, situate on the north side of
Tht.mpson street, 72 feet west of Nineteenth street.
No. 1903; the lot containing In front 18 feet, and ex
tending In depth on the east line 76 feet (5 Inches, aud
on the west line 66 feet, wldeniug on the rear to 18
feet 6 Inches. The house has saloou parlor, dining
room, aud kitchen on tho Brat floor; 9 chambers,
batli-room, and saloon sitting r orn on the second
floor, and 2 chanibe rs on the third floor; has the gas,
bath, hot, and cold water, conktug-rauge, heater, etc.
Terms 3ooo may remain on mortgage. Immediate
possession.
No. 2. Three-story brick dwelling, No. 1C20 Amboy
street, Twentieth ward All that three atory brick
lntsUHge and lot of ground situate on the west side
of Amlioy street, between Oxford street and Co
lumbia avenue, Twentieth ward, No. 1620; the lot
containing In front 16 feet, including the uorthcru
moiety or half part of an alley 2 feet 3 inches wide,
and extending In t epth 40 feet 6 inches. House eon
teiins 6 reioiuB and bntti rooin; has gas, hot aud cold
water, etc. Clenr of all Incumbrance. Terms cash.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Auctioneers.
4 ft 22 29 Nos. 139 ana 141 8. FOURTH Street.
REAL ESTATH' THOMAS A SONS' S Xtt.
l-Oii'i nesdrt.v. May 10. 1371. at 12 o'clock, num.
vi in be sold tt nubl c sale, at the Philadelphia Ex
change, the following described property, viz. :
No. 1. Three valuable buildings lots, Nos. 13.11,
1333, and lS?f North Seventh sir reel.. Ai those nree
contiguous lots of giemuel siMia con the east Bide
ef Seventh Btreet, north ot Thompson street, Nos.
1331, and ISHS; each lot containing in fronton
fceve nth stree t 18 feet, and extendi! g In depth 100
feet. NcB 1331 and 1333 each subject to a yearly
gronrd rent of $03, No. 1333 clear of all Incum
OrancM. They win be sold separately or together.
Tt.ims. rash.
Ne. 2. Two-story brick building and largo lot, Nos.
1336 mid 138 Marshall street. All that large and
valuable lot of gronnd, with the two-story brick
bnildfrg thereon erected, situate en the west side of
Marshall stree t, above Thompson s'ree-t, Nos. 1335
undloHH; contatntrgin front on Mart hah street 86
feet, mid extending in depth 74 feet 10 Inches. Clear
of all incumbrance. Terms, casi.
M. THOMAS A SON'S, Auctioneers,
4 '-2-.lt Nos. 139 and 141 8. FOURTH Street.
f1 ADMINISTRATRIX'S 8 A. L K EST A T B OF
jl Farsh L. Davis, deceased. Thomas A Son,
Auctioneers Very desirable Farm. 90 acres, Nor-
llstown turnpike, lxiwer Providence township, Mont
gomery county, Pennsylvania, inlies from Ool
le'gevllle Station, on the Perklomen turnpike, on
Tue sday, May .6, 1S71, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be
sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchauge, all
that valuable farm of 90 acres, situate on the west
fclde ol the Nnrrlstown turnpike. 6 miles ab ive Nor
ristown, miles from Uoliegesvllle Station, on the
Perkionieu Kallroad, about 21 miles from Philadel
phia. The Improvements are a genteel 2Vjf-atiry
frame house; has hall In the centre, 9 rooms, eta:
large stone barn with accommodations for 23 head
horn cattle aud T horses. Ice-house, spring-house.
can lagf -house, and outbuildings; water in every
field ; fruit and shade trees; vegetable garden; large
rrr nt on tne turnpike, witn aesirauie building sites,
Terms Tvto-tlilrda cash. Immediate possession.
Dr. Thomas Davis, at ejouegevuie, win convey visl
tors to the arm.
By order Of iiaTT A. Davis, administratrix.
M. THOMAS A SON'S, Auctioneers,
4 82 B4t Nos. 139 and 141 S. FPU KTI1 Street.
fT. PUBLIC S 1LE THOMAS A SONS, AUC
lxtloneers. Two-and-a-nalf-story stone Dwelling
and Stable, No. 65 Sharpnack Btreet, Oermantowrx.
On Tuesday, May , 1871, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be
sold at pnblic sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange,
all that two-snd-a-half-stiry stone dwelling, frame
stable and lot of ground, sitnate, on the southeast
wardly side of Sharpnack street and northeastwardly
Bide of Nash street, Germnntown, Twenty-second
ward ; thence extending northeast along sharpnack
s'reat fio feet; thenee southeast 119 fevt lueti:
thence southwest 61 feet 2 inches to Nash street, a id
thence northwest along Nash street 119 feet IV
Inches to the place of beginning. Also a lot adjoin
ing, irontlng on Sharpnack street 46 feett 10 inches,
and extending In depth nn the southwest line 119
feet )4' inch, and on the northeast linn lid feet 11
Inches. Tetrns, ha.f cash. Mav be exainlued.
Clear of all Incumbrance, Immediate possession.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Anctloneers,
4 lfjESt Nos.J89 and 141 S. FOURTH Street
ft RBAL ESTATE. THOMAS A SONS' SALB.
Jjjj Modern Four-story Brick Residence, No.
fil North Fifteenth street, above Arch street. Oa
Tuesday, May 2, 1871, at 12 o'clock noon, will be
sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all
that mom rn four story brick (mastic)messiiage, witn
two-story double back bnllolngg and lot of ground,
situate on the east side of Fifteenth street, north of
Arch Btreet, No. 141; containing in front on Fif
teenth B'reet 18 feet, and extending In depth loo feet
to Kershaw street. The house h as parlor, dining
room aud kitchen on the first floor; gas, bath, hot
and cold water, water closet, furnace, cooking
range, et& Terms One-third cash. Possession 8J
May. May be examined.
11. TUOMaS A SONS, Anctloneers,
4 22 B2t Nos. 129 and 141 S. FOURTH Street.
PUBLIC PALE THOMAS A SON3, Auc
tioneers. Small Farm, 10 acres, one mile from
lu ixrlf. New Jersey. On Tuesday. May 9. 1811. at
19 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public Bale, at the
Philadelphia Exvbsnge, all that smill farm of 10
acres, situate on the turnpike leading from Bur
ling to Camden, 1 mile from Beverly. New Jersey.
1 be 'niprovements are a very neat two-story dwell
ing, has 6 rooms; new barn, about 200 peach trees,
and several acres of small fruits. Terms $1000
may remain on mortgage. Will be shown by the
tenant, Mr. George Marter.
M. THOMAS A SONS. Anctloneers.
4 S0j9m Noaasu and 141 8. FOURTH Street.
4J REAL ESTATE-THOMAS & SONS' SALE.
i'i 8 Genteel Three-atoiy Brick Dwellings, Noa.
2.l3and 2315 Tnllp street. Nineteenth ward. On
Tuesday, May 9. Is71. at 19 o'clock, n on, will be
sold at publlo sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange,
all those 2 genteel three-story brick messuages and
lots of ground, situate Noa. 2313 and 231ft Tulip
street, Nineteenth ward; each containing In front
on Tulip Btreet 16 feet, and extending la depth 69
feet. Each contains A rooms; have gaa tlxturea
throughout, eta Terms $1600 may remain on
mortgage on each.
M. THOMAS &. SONS, Auctioneer!.
4 ltfc3t Noa. 129 and 141 6. FOURTH Street.
REAL. ESTATE AT AUOTION.
BRAL f STATK THOM AS fc HONS' SALB.
"i On Tnetelay. May 8. ls.i. at 12 o'clock noon.
v. ul be told at tiulillu sale, at tne Philadelphia Ex
change, the following decribed properties, via. :
No. I. Three-story brick Dsruiiing, No. 190$
Ttionipfon street, Twei.tb-th wrd. Ad that three-
B'ory bii'-K nicsMinge, w:th two-story back building
and lot of ground, sttuatu on Pie north side eif
1 l.ompson sire-i t, It feet west ef Nineteenth street,
No. :l'3. the lot containing In front 16 feet, and
extending in depth on the east line 76 fee'- 5 Inches,
urn em ene one eo ice , widening on trie rer to
is feet 6 Inches. Tne house has sunn Darlor.
dining room and kitchen on the first floor, 9 clian-
oets. 1 a' re-room and mioon sitting-room on the
second floor, and 2 chambt rs em ihe t iird flimr. Has
the- pas, bath, hot ami cold water, cocking rango,
healer, ela Ti ntis-$3000 limy remain on mort
gage. Immediate possession
No. 9. Three story brick Dwelling, No. 1620 Amboy
street, Twentieth ward. All that three-story brlcn
me ssuriih and lot of ground sltn.ite on tie west side
eil Amboy btreet, between Oxford street arid Colnra
l iaave une, Twentieth ward, Sn. 102 1, the lot con
tt.lt li'g in freiLt C6 feet, tnclmiing the northern
me.iety or half part of nn alley 2 feet 8 inches wide,
and extending In depth 40 feet 6 1 iche. lions-
contains Oroonis and bsth-room, hss gas, hot aud
cedd water, etc. Cl ar of U incumbrance. Terms
ish. M. THOMAS & SON'S, Aoi'ioneers,
4 20 29 Nos. 139 aud 141 8. FOUR 1 H Street,
RKAL ESTATE THOMA A SONS' SALE.
1 On 1 uesdy, May 2, 1871, st 12 oVIoek, noon,
will be Bold at publlo sale, at tho Philadelphia
Exchange, tho following described property, viz.:
No. 1. Three-story Urick Sfri ivud Oweliing, N.
W. ci rner of Fiftee nth and ehristUn streets. All
t tint three-siorv brick message nnd lot of gronnd,
Bl tiate at tho N. W. ceirner of Fifteenth and (irirliu
ilsn streets; the lot containing tn f'-nnt em Fifteenth
Hreet 17 feet, anil extending in depth along Chris
t an street 80 fee t to a 8-feet wi le alley. The store
Is occupied as a liquor store; house contains 19
re oms; has gas, bath, hot and cold water, cooking
rst ge, etc. subject to a yearly ground rent of $123.
May be examined. Immediate possession.
No. S. Three-s ory Brick Dwelling, No. 820 S Fif
teenth street All that three-story brick messuage,
with three-story back buildings, sittnte on toe west
Bide ot Fifteenth street, below Jhrl-'tiail street, No.
820; the lot containing lu front 16 foet.. and extend
ing In depth 60 feet to a 8-feet wide alley. It con
tains 10 rooms, has gae, bath, hot an 1 cold water,
cooUng range, WHter-clost. furnaco, e;tc. Subject
to a yearly gremnd rer-t of $116. May be examined.
Immediate pofsess'on.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Anctlon-ers,
4 20 29 Nos. 139 aud 141 S. FOURTH Street.
fl REAL ESTATE THOMAS A RONS' 8 A-E.
Jjy Modern Twostory stone Dwelling, Race
street, esst of Thitty-slxth btreet. On Tuesday,
May 9, 1871, at 11 o'clock, noon, win be sold at pub
lic salt;, at the l'hlladelpnia Exchange, all that lot
of giound, with the two-story st nt dwelling (French
roof) with two-story back buildings thereon erected,
situate on the north side of Bace street, loo feet
em of Thirty-sixth street; containing In fronton
Pace:reet 20 feet, and extending In depth 100 feet.
The house has all the modern conveniences, hot
and cold water, bath, gas, range, eta Terras $3500
may remain on mortgage. Immediate possession.
M. THOMAS A RONS. Anctloneers,
4 15 29M6 Nob. 139 and 141 8. FOURTH Street.
REAL ESTAt'E THOMAS A SONS' SALE.
Three-story Brick Dwelling, No. 838 North
1 iilrty-seH-ond Btreet, between Baring and Hamilton
Btreets On Taesdav. May 9, 1871, at U o'clock, noon,
v.1'1 be sold at public. Bale, at the Philadelphia Ex
change, all t hat tnree-story brick messuage, with
two-story back buildings and 1 t of ground, situate
on the west side of Thirty-second street, between
Baring and Hamilton streets, No. 838; containing In
front on Thirty-sccona afreet 20 feet, and extending
In depth 11S feet; has 8 rooms and bath room; gas.
heater, range, hot and cold water. Terms Halt
cash. Immediate possession.
M. THOMAS A SONS, Anctloneers,
4 IS B3t Nob. 139 and 141 S. FOURTH Street.
FIRE EXTINQUISHER.
THE UNION FIIIE tX TING USHER, j
OVER FIVE MILLIONS ($5,000,000) OP DOLLARS
WORT-H OP PROPETY IN THE UNITED
STATES HAH ACTUALLY BEEN
SAVED BT THE EXTIN
GUISHER Within the pst three years; while In Philadelphia
alone twenty-tlve ores, endangering property to the
extent of hUNDRBDS Of THOUSANDS O HOL
LARS, have been extinguished during the past year
by the same means. Our Machine s the IMPROVED
CARBONIC ACID OAS EIRE KXTINOUlwHKft,
and Is Indorsed and nsed by M. Balrd & Co., Henry
Dlsktori A Son, Beoiamln Bullock's nons, morris,
JTahker A C o., j Alau Wood A Co., Lace & Phillips,
Bromley Brothers, H. J. Holms, Ciiarles Kneu, John
kid co., Hiiuty Ma-ielra, KTaoiem Perot Hons,
Herge W. Chtlos, Penusvl-anla Railroad OOrapany,
Philadelphia and Boston Steamship Company, Phila
delphia and tout hern Steamship Cennpauy, and
v.any other of our leading business men and corpo
rations. CAUTION. All parties In this wnrnunlty are
warned against buying or spUIii "Extinguishers"
except those purchased from ns or our agente, under
penalty of Immediate prosecution for Infringement
Our prices have been reduced, aud the Machine la
now wll.l.ln the reach of every property holder.
N. B. One style made specially for private resi
dences. Union Fire Extirguiiher Company
OFFICE, n 23 Btntrrp
No. 113 MARKET BT11EET.
SAFE DEPOSIT OOMPANIEw.
THE PEKN&YLVANIA 00 tf PAST
FOR INSURANCES ON LIVES AND
GRANTING
ANNUITIES,
Office Ho. 304 WALNUT Streei.
INCORPORATED MARCH 10, 1813,
CHARTER PERPETUAL
CAPITA I $1,000,000.
BUBPLUS UPWARDS OF 750,000.
Receive money on deposlt.returanli on demand,
for which Interest is allowed.
nd under appointment by Individuals, corpora
tions, and conns, act as
hXECTTOBS. ADM INISTK.ATOKS, TRUSTEBS.
OUAKPIANS, ASSIGNEES. COM tUTTEES,
KhC'blVKKS. AUKUW, COLLECTORS, ETC.
And for tbe faithful performance of its duties as
t-ucb ail Its assets are liable.
CHARLES DTJTILH, Paesident.
Wru-iiH Hill, Actuary.
DIRECTORS.
Charles Dntllh, .Joshua B. Llpplncott,
Henry J. Williams, I diaries U. Hutchinson,
W iiliaru S. Vaux, ILindley Smyth,
Jejhn It. Wucherer, jOeorge A. Wood.
Adoiph B. Borle, Anthony J. Antelo,
Alexander Blddle, Charles 8. Lewis,
Henry Lewis.
WHISKY, WINE, ETC
CAR&TAIR8 SH McCALL,
l?o. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Sti
IMPORTERS OP
Br an die , Winei, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc.,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
PURE RYE WHISKIES.
IN BOND AND TAX PAID.
SSI
FUKNITUKh.
JOSBPH H Campion flate Moore A Oamntoni.
WILLUM SMITH, KICUAKD K CAMPION.
SMITH & CAMPION,
Mauntactnrers of
FIMB FDRMTUBK, UPUOLSTERINQS, AND IN
TKRIOIt HOUSE DECOR 4.TIONS,
No. SJ0 80UTH THIRD Street,
Manufactory, Noa. 815 and SIT LEVANT Street,
Puiiadelphla. 81
A LIXANDR R bIoaT TIL l7 A C oT,
ti. FKODUCB COMMISSION MSUCHANT
No. S NORTH WHARVK
AND
NO. IT NORTH WATRR 8TREBT,
PHILADELPHIA.
AxaxAwna a. nrrn .mi fUL
C3
RIME 11
E A Y Y
RtKIt OATS.
COLLINS, VTBTHEHILL A CO.,
Seed eirowert,
Noa. 1111 anl 1111 MAU&KT Street.