THE DAILY EYEING TELEGRAni PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1871. ariniT of . tub rjissa. ZDITOBIAI. OriSION'8 OF THE LEADING JOURNALS VPON OUR BENT TOPICS COMPILED IVEBX DAT FOB THE EVENING TELEOB1PH. "TIIE NEW DEPARTURE." From the A. I. Nation. Republicans of all shades of opinion have for a good while been urging on the Demo crats the propriety and expediency of accept ing ."accomplished faots" that is, of formally acknowledging in the public utterances of the party that the war and the amendments to the Constitution adopted since the war had Bet tied certain questions beyond further dispute or cavil. These questions are the non-existence of the constitutional rights of seoession, the ' abolition and perpetual prohibition of slavery, and the equality of all men before the law. Republicans have furthermore urged on them the propriety of acknowledg ing the validity of the public debt, and the duty of the cation to discharge it in coin, according to the terms of the contract, and in accordance with the good old Democratic doctrine that there was no money known to the Government of the United States eioept hard money. For six years the Demoorats have reso lutely refused to do any of these things. They have enoouraged the South in the belief that the war hud settled nothing exoept , the momentary superiority of the North in strength. They have denied the validity o the three amendments which put into legal form the de facto changes effected by the war in the status of ft certain class of citizens, and provided fresh securities against unequal or discriminating legislation; and tuey have persisted in denying the validity of the assnrances given . by . the Govern ment in the hour of its extremity to the per sons from whom it borrowed money as to the amounts they would receive in repayment or, in other words, have stoutly maintained that if one borrows money when his credit is very low, he may, afterwards, honestly repay it as if his credit had been very good when borrowed, no matter what the terms of his contract wore a doctrine for which it would be difficult to claim any higher source thaa the mock-auction shop or the faro-bank. They have fought through two Presi dential campaigns on this policy of negation, and have failed miserably in both. They could not get the country to acknowledge that nothing was changed by the war, and that the one business of sensible men was to get baGk as fast as possible to the point from which we started in 18G1. What has nude their persistence all the more extraordinary was the plainness with which the Republicans were profiting by it. There has rarely been a party in power which, since 1865, has offered so many tempting points of attack to an able and energetio opposition as the Republi can party. Its legislation for the South, and its financial and foreign policy, although, per haps,far better than the Democrats would have furnished in its plaoe, and as good as we had any right to expect, were nevertheless fall of imperfections of the grossest and most glar ing kind, out of which an opposition whioa was as numerically strong in the country as the Demooratio opposition was, might have made formidable use. The results of recon struction legislation at the South have been pitiable; the manipulation of the Supreme Court has been shameful; the debauohery of the civil service debauchery continued, too, mofct barefacedly in the teeth of strong pro fessions of zeal for reform has been flagrant, and all three have apparently afforded materials for an overwhelming Demo cratic victory; and yet the Democrats have made nothing out Of them whatever. The address of their members of Congress, at the close of the last seiwion, read not like thu indictment of eager and triumphant acouners, as it might have been made to read, but like the abject apology of men who have failed miserably, and da not exactly know why. In fact, read in the light of the accounts of the Democrats given ,by the leading Republican papers, there was something very amusing about it. Acoording to these papers, the De mooratio chiefs were brigands of enor mous stature, of inexhaustible re sources, reckless courage, and fe rooions and implacable temper ; the address, however, sounded like a plea for con sideration, or for some cold victuals and old clothes, from a parcel of puny little con scripts who had made an attempt to storm a great stronghold, and gave it up beoause the villains inside fired at them. A considerable portion of the party, headed by Mr. Vallan digham, seem to have learned wisdom at last, and propose to surrender all" the principal points in their former creed, and to begin their opposition to tne party in poer on a new line; to do, in faot, what the Republicans have been long wanting them to do, and abusing them for not doing; that is, accept the situation as settled by the war, and offer the country some reasons for supporting them which have no direct con nection with the war. They offer, in snort. to do what the Republican party his been doing maintain the results of the war, and to do something which the llepubliaan party hiu thus far neglected or failed to do correct and restrain the evils growing out of the war, They offer, for instance, while adhering to the three new constitutional amendments, to oppose the dangerous tendency which the Republican party has for some time been manifesting to treat the amendments as having practically abrogated the whole Con stitution; or, in otner woras, as Having con stituted the majority of both houses as supreme judges of what is or what is not constitutional. They oner to treat the re construction measures as finalities; thtt is. to put the Southern States on a footing of equality with the Northwrn States, and pvit further interference with their affairs on ex actly the same level with interference in the affairs of New York or Massachusetts. Taey call for universal amnesty, and while they denounce lawlessness ou the part of mobs, they also denounce that disregard of law on the pirt of the Legislature which is displayed in such measures as the Ku-klux act, which not only disregards the supreme law of the land, but creates an officer unknown to tne law, viz., a dictator. They cull, too, for a revenue tariff, or, in other words, for the cessation of wh U is perhaps the most prolifio source of corrup tion, the attempt to proteot native industry by means of taxation. Rut instead of calling for reform in the civil service, they propose to take the work of oolleoiing the Federal revenues from oue set of rasoals, the t e leral employes, and band it over to another set of rascals, the State employes; and they ask Btill to have the Government debts paid in greenbacks that is, one promise to pay sub stituted for another. Now, though this programme, which flrt made its. appearance under ValUudighaui's auspioes at Dayton, has siuee been 4opt I by the State Conventions in Ohio and Ten nessee, and though there is every sign that it will make way enough with the Democracy at large to have a fair ohanoeof adoption at the 1'reBidential Convention next year, it will need an nnoommonlv strong ' candidate. stronger than the Democracy is liaeiy to adopt, to give it any great weight with the country, owing in the main to the general want of faith in the honesty and good sense of the men who, in case of a Democratic vic tory, would be sure to manage the administra tion at Washington. But however little value it may have as a platform, it . has a great deal cf value as a Bign of the times. Whatever else it may be or ruftv not be. this it is: a bid for the sup port of that large body of Republicans who are very 6icn 01 Kepnoiican aomgs, ana wno lore for a decent excuse for trying notn new measures and new men. It is impossible to overlook oertain facts: 1. That during the present Administration nothing whatever has been done until now to reiorm tne civil service, in spite of the loud and oft repeated promises on the ' subject. 2. That a ereat blow has been struck at the purity, independence, and usefulness of the Snpreme Conrt and of all courts, by packing the court to prooure a euaaen rever sal of a carefnllv considered decision. 8. That so far from any steps having been taken towards a return to specie paymeuts, this packing of the eourt was resorted to with the direct purpose of getting a judgment which made a return to specie payments more diffi cult and uncertain than ever, and this pack- iva has been formally and publicly justified by the Secretary of the Treasury. 4. That no serious attempt nas Deen maae to re form the revenue, or infuse order or method into the tariff, which is now in a state of as ereat confusion as it was four years- ago; and that, so far as we know anything of the mind of the party, it is occupied rather with the discovery of tne means of avoiding the ques tion altogether tnan of dealing with it honestly and fairly. 5. That the time and attention of the administration during four years have been mainly oocupied with the project ot annexing a semi-barbarous island occupied by a turbulent population unused to civil government, and that it was never so intent on this scheme as at the moment when Congress ' was appointing the President a dictator as a possible substitute for regular civil government in half the Union. The one positive step in the history of the Republican party that can be urged as a set-off to all this is the conclusion of the treaty with England, the value and impor tance of which we have no wish to underrate; but it is well to oonsider whether a year hence people will be disposed to regard this one piece of foreign policy a compensation for the almost total neglect or internal re forms. nOMtEOPATHY. From the A 1". Tribune. The National Institute of Homoeopathy is now holding its twenty-eighth anniversary in Philadelphia. The statement made by this powerful body of the progress of the homoe opathic science is most gratifying to those who believe in it. The Institute, founded about a quarter of a century ago in this city, did not then number twenty-five members all told. Now, they have over 10,000 repu table physicians and surgeons in this country and Canada, with numerous colleges, dispen saries, hospitals, and asylums, all supported by individual effort. Our friends oonsumed a good deal of their time in grumbling that individual effort was left to do every thing for them. They not only are still refused all Government and State aid in actual funds, but have been most cruelly and unfairly snubbed since their birth as a medi cal body by the Government. No homoeopa thic Burgeons were allowed to enter the army except as privates, and consequently the wounded soldier was forced to aocept allo pathio boluses and lancets whether he had faith in them or not. In applying for a pen sion, too, he was obliged Eto submit to the decision of the old-school praotitioner. These were grievances sore enough at the time, no doubt, but we should think hardly worth resurrection or bemoaning now. lheir othejr complaints that Congress yet refuses to reoognize their right to practice in the District, or to admit them into any inedi cal offices in its gitt have more force and per tinence. Persecution, either of injustice or ridicule, may nave been beneficial to our medical brethren in giving them zeaL persist ence, and the cohesion of a oertain etrprit de corps, whioh otherwise they would never pro bably have had; but they seem now to prefer that their virtues should arise from some other cause. The blood of the martyrs is very likely the seed of the Church, but in this case the martyrs evidently think they have had enough of it. The great Btrnggle of the present is, they tell us, "between the spirit' of progres sive medicine on the one hand and conser vatism on the other." They do not see, ap parently, that in this identical decent garb of conservatism, the unyielding etiquette, the grave decorum or the allopathists, lie their chief strength and secret of popularity. A man will allow any other man to be a radical but bis doctor. He is quite willing that pbysioians in Edinburgh or Timbuotoo should try experiments, but he will have no tentative tinkering with his own lungs or liver. That the old school of practice is over-suspicious and tyrannical in exoluding quackery, is their ohief recommendation in the eyes of their disciples. If our homceopathio mends belonged to that class whom Uaw thorne calls "the unfortunates that oan see the other Bide of the question, they would perceive that this aristocratic intolerance be longs to and is not an ill-fitting garment for anv man or- Beet whose suocess is sure and surely founded on a just basis. We see, in fact, side by side with their protests against the exclusivenesa of their 6nemy, significant bints that in their own well-to-do middle age they are not indisposed to imitate it. They wish to "raise their standard of medioal edu cation, to admit only the beat-qualified phy siciaus to their rnks, and urgently condemn all irregular practice; by which last move incut thev will cut off an offensive member. but an exceedingly strong one. The idea that any woman with a pamphlet and morocco box of pellets in her pocket could go about amaog her neighbors a second Abernethy, was one cause of tbe swift, triumphant popularity of their system. , They show the wisdom of strength and age in resolving to do away with it. They do not, however, show the wisdim of either the one or the other in the attaok made upon tke pulpit in their annual ad dress. A cooler judgment will, we think, convince them it was out of place, and, to rise the mildest censure, in exceptionally bad taste. Men of scieoee and men of theology may be at war as they state, but soienoe and religion are not; and even if they were, we con not see what a system whioh deals with antidotal pellets and the digestive organs has to do with tbe doctrine of lh9 creation and atonement. It was, too, an impolitio move, TLere Las been an odd prejudioe for years aiapnjj ihe conservative masses which tuado long hair, abolitionism, homoeopathy, and looseness in tne marriage relation, synony mous witn atneism. Abolitionists, by strlotly attending to their own business, have at last cleared their reputation oi all taint of free love, irreligion, or uncombed looks. Our homceopathio friends would do well to imi tate so prudent an example. COMBINATION VS. COMPETITION. From the f. T. World. Tbe radical artificiality of our present in dustrial prosperity is in nothing so apparent as in the persistent efforts of almost every branch of industry to proteot itself not alone against foreign competition by means of tariffs, but also against domestic competition by means of combination. Within the last few months we have noticed in this city, in Philadelphia, and in Tittsburg, Pa., conven tions of manufacturers of pig-iron, iron plates. , nails, copper, glass, and paper, not to speak of tne coai-mine owners, an neid for the pur pose of devising remedies against overpro duction and against the decline in prioes inevitably resulting from continued competi tion; and within a day or two there has been further held in this city a convention of the bar-iron manufacturers of the Atlantio States, who have formed "The Eastern Iron masters Association for the purpose of preventing "depression of business and looal jealousies" by means of "concerted action." Now, what do all these conventions and associations mean ? They mean that the pro moters and members thereof believe they can defy tbe laws of trade and the laws of com mon sense, and can continue to fleece the publio in the future as they have done in the past, without mercy and without justioe. They mean that the tariff swindle has enabled them to charge tbe community more than a reasonable profit on their goods; that the un reasonable profit has induced more men and more capital to enter these protected indus tries than can find remunerative employment in them; that their unreasonable profits have bo impoverished tbe community as to disable it from consuming even the former limited production, much less the present increased production; and that all these proteoted in dustries are now in a position of semi-bankruptcy, against which they try to protect inemseives dj signing pieages not to sen their goods below certain prices, so that tbey may still make a profit on their limited sales. . , . If it were supposable that these men could accomplish the object they have in view. their combinations and conventions would require the most energetio efforts on the part of the publio to defeat and destroy them. Hut their plans can have no permanent in fluence, and hence would only be worthy of publio contempt or indifference did they not furnish such an admirable illustration of the inevitable results to whioh the praotioe of protection leads, did they not clearly prove to what straits these protected industiies are driven, did tbey not distinctly forshadow the desperate efforts these Radical monopolists will make to maintain their present tariff protection, and, if possible, still farther in crease it. The whole Radical party is to-day sustained by the influence of corrupt leaders who have secured their own election or that of their friends and tools for the sole purpose of perpetuating and strengthening the pre sent tariff scheme, which is, in plain words, tbe most digantio scheme of robbery ever invented by man. Stripped of all disguises, rubbed clean of all "circumambient foam," the tariff is a law by which the price of a foreign article ia in tended to be artificially advanoed, so as to enable the domestio producer of a similar article to obtain from the domestio consumer a precisely similar advance in price. All the talks about protecting domestio industry, about elevating domestio labor, about creating home markets, are either ignorant delusions or wilful false pretences mainly tbe latter. The objeot of high-tariff men, the men who, as iron-smelters and rolling-mill owners and salt-makers and cotton-spinners, get themselves elected to Congress, and put on committees of ways and means, and commit tees of commerce and manufactures, or wno spend winters in Washington lobbying aU day and half the night these men have no other object than to be enabled by law to charge the domestio consumer more for their products than they could get without the law. Befog it as you please, that and none other is the practical object of all protective tariff legislation. Disguise it, deny it, twist it, ramify it as you please, no man ever went to Congress to aet an increased duty on any imported article except for the purpose of being enabled to charge every domestio con sumer just so much more for his own similar domestio product. Now, as long as the demand keeps paoe with the production, these proteoted indi viduals do succeed in getting this extra prioe, do succeed in plundering their fellow-citizens just bo many dollars a ton, or so many cents a yard, under color or law. But the moment the demand is no longer equal to the supply, either because the profits of the business have tempted too many to embark in it or because the plundered and impoverished people are no longer able to pay, even then the tariff will not enable the manufacturers to keep up the price. They begin to com pete with one another; the natural conse quence of competition is lower prioes. The lower prices benefit the people, but of course they are not relished by the proteoted manu facturers. They have become so aooustomed to large profits, guaranteed to them by law at tbe expense of the community, that they have come to believe that they have a vested right to put their hands in the pooketa of the people. And when they find that the tariff no longer enables them to do so, they meet and combine and agree and pledge themselves to Btill help one another to keep up the old swindle. Foreign competition is the policeman the mere fear of whom prevents the domestio manufacturer from overcharging his customer. Against that policeman the manufacturers protect themselves by the tariff. They then Lave the victim entirely at their mercy. But now they are in danger of quarrelling among themselves about the division of the plunder. The strong ones want it all for themselves, and won't let the little fellows share. But tbe little fellows are smart, and cry out, "If you do not let me share I shall call the polioe man!" In other words, at two of the reoent conventions in this city the larger manufac turers were foroed into the combination by the threat of the smaller ones to declare for free trade. But free competition is not only the police man who prevents the manufacturer from plundering the public; it is also the great stimulus to economy, skill, invention, and progress of every kind. We are assured by competent authority mat in many respects our iron manufacture is to-day more clumsy and wasteful and expensive than it was ten years ago, because large profits have made the manufacturers careless and indifferent; and we are furthermore assured that many manufacturers are really losing money au4 far from prosperous. We do not doubt it at alL Even in unprotected industries there is complaint of bard times. But surely the proteoted industries have never been pro mised that they should be guaranteed against loss. They certainly are least entitled to it, because tbey have wilfully shut themselves out from the only influence whioh could make them permanently prosperous free competi tion." When the iron manufacturers find it impossible to keep the members of their as sociation to the pledges they have signed, let them join hands with the free-traders and abolish protection, and they will find their industries revive as if by magic They will find that instead of running away from the policeman of foreign competition, and hid ing then? iniquitous schemes behind the tariff, tbey will be glad to welcome him as a friend and adviser, they will be able to look honest men squarely in the faoe, and will have no need to meet in secret conclave and bold mysterious conventions like conspira tors plotting against the publio welfare. THE QUININE SWINDLE. From the N. Y. World. 'Before our present tariff went into effect a com- pany organized by Pelletler. a French chemist, lost $To,ooo in vainly trying to establish a factory for the production of the drug in this country. Bat lc is now made here cf sunerlor quality, and furnished to the American people at less than it wou'd have coat mem naa iney remained dependent ou foreign mar- aei.' urwune. M. Pelletier, the greatest quinine manu facturer in France, or in the world, came here about 1857 to manufacture quinine. lie bought some property up town and com menced to manufacture the drug. The duty at that time was 15 per cent., and the prioe z. Messrs. rowers & Weigbtman and Rosen- garten & Sons combined against him. as the Frenchman refused no doubt to join them in perfecting the home industry by keeping the price up, and during the year 1858 the price of quinine was down to $123 and daring loitv to $i'zu per ounce. The objeot was to drive the Frenchman away, and this was the more easily done that M. Pelletier made quinine only, while they manufactured all kinds of drugs. About the year 18G0 or 18G1 M. Pelletier was offered about four times as much for bis up-town property as he had paid for it four years before. lie sold it, and left Rosengarten and Powers & Weightman to continue to produce quinine at the cheap rate of $120 per ounce. Uut no sooner was the French man gone than the aforesaid monopolists raised their price on the drug, and through influences best known to themselves had the duty raised ' three times in three years, iuub: April, 18G1, from 15 per cent, to 20 per cent. August, 1801, from 20 per cent to 30 per cent. July 14, 18G3, from 30 per cent, to 45 per cent. So much for the history of M. Pelletier's endeavors to mannfactnre quinine in New York, and refusing to league with the Tri bune tand its monopolists against the fever- sick population of the United States. And now we come down to faots and fig ures that have taken plaoe within a year, namely: In June, 1870, a year ago, quinine was sold in New York by the two monopolists for $220 per ounce. At that time there was a duty of 20 per cent, on the bark of which it is made. On the 1st of January, 1871, the duty on the bark came on, yet Messrs. Powers it Weightman and Rosengarten & Sons raised the price en quinine 15 cents per ounoe, at which it sells now, viz., $ 2,35, for M. Pel letier's factory was Btopped by the German war. WTby was the price raised 15 cents per ounce and why was it not lowered 15 cents per ounce when the raw material was made free ? Do these facts and figures not show how entirely we are at the mercy of mono poly? Said Mr. Wells at Chicago: Suppose Mr. William D. Kelley, who managed that quinine buslneiis in the House, had gone to work In an honest, straightforward way, instead of fixing It up to tbe profit ot his constituents in Phila delphia. Supposed he had proposed tbe form of a bill granting bo much bounty to these constituents- nave you any idea now sucn a Din would real? 1 think I can give you tbe form of It: Be It enacted by tbe Senate and House of Representatives. In Congress assembled, That In order to establish Jus tice you mast nave mat in, tor it aounas gooa, you know to promote the general welfare that will take well with the people and to protect American Industry, and especially the Industry of manu facturing quinine that tbe Secretary of the Treasury be empowered to pay from any moneys of the Treasury, not otherwise appropriated, tlSO.OOO to Powers & Weightman aad Kosengarten fc Sons, on condition that they will ctiarge theAmerican people for quinine not more than twtnty cents an ounce more than It can be pur chased for anywhere else. Do you suppose that any Representative would dare to veto for such a bill? Do you suppose that any member of Congress would dare go home and face his constituents after having voted for such a bill? They have a saying down Kast where they used to build ships, bat do not now when anything untoward happened, that there was the devil to pay, and there was no pitch hot: but I tell yon, gentlemen, that if any member of Congress voted for such a bill as that, when he came home to his constituesta be would had not only the devil to pay, but that tue pitch was hot and feathers ail reaay. (Applause ana laugnter-r CURTAINS AND SHADES. WALRAVEN J MASONIC HALL, No. 719 CHESNUT St., Offers some new designs for ClUTAIXS AMD LAMBREQUINS, FRENCH CRETONNES, STRIPED TERRY and COTEL.INES Also, GIMPS AND TRIMMINGS of entirely new patterns. An assortment of LACE CURTAINS of especial elegance and cheapness, soma as low as flOO a window. BKOCHE TAPE8TRY PIANO AND TABLE COVEK8 are offered greatly below lntrlnslo values, with a large assortment of EMBROIDERED CLOTH PIANO AND TABLE COVERS. 8 16 thatuSmrp ART GALLERY. Xlstablislied in 1705. KZcGAIirj'S ArtGallerlew and Warrooru, No. 910 CHESNUT Street. Oil Paintings Mirror Tablet, Frames Cornices, MStc. AU Chromoa rduced 80 per cent, on form prices. 1 Btuth 6mrp DRY GOODS. QKEATEST BARGAINS OF TUB l'ERIOD IN DRY GOODS. ALEXANDER RICKEY, No. 727 CHESNUT STREET, - In Victoria Lawns, nignop Lawns, Plain and Flald .i-.uuwvoo, v-m a t viivu vi grannies, uamourg j&agiiig, LLAMA LACE BACKS and P0INTES ?.V.clt c?f "'f,?' Efocne Grenadines, Japanese bills, btrlped bilks, Ulack, Silks, Linen Suitings, FRENCH LAWNS. And the greatest variety of benuttful s'vle3 In ' ' wvju civt caiuuiidu m IUIB City. TUB 25, 87tf, SO and 75 CENT DEPARTMENTS FOB THE BALK OB" Choice Dress Goods REPRESENT THB GREATEST BARGAINS OF THE PERIOD. ALEXANDER RICKEY, No. 72T CHESNUT Street. 6 8 thftutfrp 1000 riECKS OF FRENCH LAWNS In new and beautiful effects, at 95 cents. ALEXANDER RICKEY. SPECIALTY IN BLACK SILKS AT $150, ?1'75, and $2 PER YARD. ALEXANDER RICKEY. 'J'HE MOST REGULAR AND BEAUTI FUL MESU IN TIIE 0 Purest Silk snd Wool Black Romanies Ever made for l per yard. ALEXANDER RICKEY, 6 8 thBtutfrp' No. 787 CHESNUT Street. 1871. SPRING GArCOEN STREET SINCE 1853. 11 THQRNLEY'S" CENTRALLY LOCATED DRY GOODS ESTABLISHMENT, ON THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF EIGHTH and SPELNG GAED2H gts. An Immense Stock of Ooods. Prices very low Indeed. . Everybody Bure to get suited. The utmost attention to customers. No misrepresentation In order to effect sales. It purchases are not satisfactory we return the money. DRESS GOODS, SILKS AND SHAWLS, MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR. Ijl.rtfflA liAl'B SAUyUKMAJND FOINTE3, KID GLOVES, TABLE LINENS, QUILT?, Etc. Etc. JOSEPH B. THORNLEY. 2 thsta THE BEST 75 CENT BLACK HERNAN1 IN THE CITY. BLACK HERNANIES, ALL QUALITIES STRIPE AND CHECK SILKS, ?125. Ely, Hunsberger & Ely, No. 1126 CHESNUT. STREET, 4lltuths3ni PHILADELPHIA. SILKS, SHAWLS AMD DRESS GOODS ! ; i . No. 916 CHESNUT STREET, Invites attention to bis stock of SILKS OF ALL, KINDS, INDIA AND OTHER SHAWLS. Novelties In Dress and Fancy Goods, INDIA, PONGEE,; AND CANTON CRAPE IN SHAWL8 AND DRESS GOODS. 413 8mrp THE NEW YORK Dyeing and Printing ESTABLISHMENT, STATEN ISLAND, 40 N. EIGHTH Street, PHILADELPHIA, No. 93 DUANE Street, New York. DYE AND FINISH IN THE BEST MANNER, Silks, Satins, Velvets, Crapes, Ribbons, TUsuea, Bart-gea, Merinos, Cloths, Alpacas, Reps, Paramat tas. Muslin Delaines, Fringes, Trlniuitugs, Hosiery, Klo Gloves, etc. Also, cleanse Lace Curtains and Linen Shades In a superior lnauner. Goods called for and delivered In any part of the city. 4 la stutnsmrp 11 IK OUR OWN MAKE OF CHAMPION ' I 'Ju Hoop Skirts, In aU the newest styles, the best and cheapest In the market. Also, gooJ Eaaternmade Sklrta, from 10 to 40 springs, from 81 to 6(H). boiled Skirts, quarter prioe. CO K SKI 6, 1 ORSKTS-110 styles, and prioe from 45o. to $6-86. MitpeB' Corsets, superior quality. esc. for French Woveu Corset: reduced from 650. THOMSON S Glove fitting Corset at $1-S5,$lt0 1174. 12-60, t3 W), 14-76, and $6 60. MRS. MOODY'S Abdominal Corsets, from 12-75 to 16. MADAME FOY'S Corset Skirt Supporter at 11-09. fl French Woven Corsets, the cheapest lu the city. EVERY desirable style of Corbet at prices which defy competition. PAhlER Kl hTLKS. In 89 6tyle, 86c. to $4, BON 1 ON BUSTLES, from 47o. upwards. PARASOLS at wholesale prioes. L DIES' UNDER-GAKMENTS A complete assortment at lowest rates, call aDd examine our goods, at No. 133 N. EIGHTH Street, and No. HIS CHESNUT Street. 6 S3 tuthsrptf WILLIAM T. HOPKINS. (rffc PARASOLS, 76C, $1. $1-88: LINED, fl-S5, J 11-60. 1 75: Silk Sun Umbrellas, oo., 1, 11-85, 11-60, at DIXON'S, No. 1 S. EIGHTH hi. 3tf REFRIGERATORS. A 8UPEBIOB ASSORTMENT AT Wholesale and Retail. All at Low Prices. I. I. Ii;Alt:8 Manufactures liU own, Ilefrliferators. ro. 39 North NINTH Street, 6 801ni4p BELOW ARCH STREET, OAS FIXTURES. NO STORE ON CBESWUT STREET, i i. , . .. CQBHELIDU SOUS' RETAIL SALESROOMS, 821 CHERRY Si. CAS FIXTURES. CHINA, GLASSWARE, ETO. GAY'S CHINA PALACE, No. 1109 CHEUNUT Street. JUST OrENEP, AN ENTIUE NEW SHAPE STONE CHINA, FRENCH FINISH. Dinner and Tea Sets complete, 103 pieces. .. . .'.120-20 AL80, Svone China Dinner Sets, 100 pieces is 09 Stone China Dinner Seta, 97 pieces 773 Stune Cnina Cups and Saucers, per set 12 pieces 03 White Btone Cnlna Cnamber net ,. 8-50 , Decorated Stone China Chamber Set, 10 pa... 460 White French China Dinner Seta, m pieces... 13-00 Table Tumblers, per dozen 60 Table Goblets, per dozen 75 Glass Tea Sets (4 articles) 45 Ab endless variety of ail styles White and Deco rated China Fancy Goods, eta, at lowest prices. Parties about furnishing for the country; will da well to Inspect our Immense stock before purchasing. Goods to go out of the city will be pscked and delivered to transportation office free of charge, aud Insured agalnBt breakage to destination.. SHOW-ROOMS OPEN TILL 9 O'CLOCK AT NIGHT. ; 4 S2 JSitt FIRE AND BURGLAR FRO OF SAFES STEASY FIRE-PROOF SAFES, SANBORN'S PATENT Burglar-Proof Safes, Of "Welded Steel and Iron; MADE BY AMERICAN STEAM SAFE CO. No. 32 8. FOURTH St. 1 1 - E. W. THOMAS. 81 stuthSmrp INSURANCE. I NIIUG 1 AN ULD Purely 1ST n t u a I HOME COMPANY. NO STOCKHOLDERS TO RECEIVE LARGE DIVIDENDS. INCORPORATED IN 181T. THE PENN MUTUAL Life Insurance Company No. 921 CHESNUT BTKEET. Accumulated Fund, nearly.. ....91,000,000 Receipts for 1870 ..91,250,000 Principal Features Small expenses, absolute se curity, large Return Premiums, Prompt payment of Lot sea, and liberality to the Insured. SAMUEL C BUST. President SAMUEL E. 8TOKEM, Vice-President. JOHN W. HORNOR, A. V. p. and Actuary. B. R. STEPHENS, Secretary. 6 8tuihs2lt . JAMES P. WOOD &CO.f ro. 41 h. roi UTII uniiiKT. Steam and Hot-water Heating, with Uold's Patent Cat Iron Apparatus. Architects, Hu Utters and others desiring buildings heated with steam or hot water should not fall la examine this apparatus, which la superior to all the Imitations offered for sale. Our cast-iron Radiators are adapted to high as well a low-pressure steam. Kteam-nttlng in ah It branches done at the shfrtmt notice. PatUcular attention paid to ventilation. M.FELTWEJLL, Superintendent. WOOD'S AMERICAN KI T C 1 1 EN Ell, on the European principle, of neat and durable con struction, sulUttile for public Institutions, hotels, aud private residences, having powerful water backs, and Its cooking and baking qualities cannot be mrpassed. Also, WOOD'S PAIUS RANGE, of a new and beautiful design, a superior Cooking . and Making Range, and the beat construction for Uf-iting purphea jet offered for sale. Sole Agents for the sale of URltVlTU'S PATENT AUCII1MEDEAN VENTILATORS, for ventilation, and a sure cure for smoky chlumwy. BALTIMORE: FIRE-PLACES HEATERS. The latest Improvements, ' and the best In the market. JAlTli:aJ 1. WOOD A CO., 6 6 StUth 86'j-p No. il S. FOURTH 8t Savery'i Patent Combined Water Cooler and FIE Fill CURATOR Baa piovod luteli tj be nupertor to auy m the market. (Jail and ex 'amine. 4 6 thstu kmrp Depot, No. 6w lMA-hEK f Street. 1 J U2 1 a