THE DAILY KvtfNING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA; MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1871.. (SrililT OF THE PRESS. EDITORIAL OPINIONS OF THB LB1DIJTO JOURNALS UPON CtJBUENT TOPICS COMPILED ETEBT DAT FOB TUB EVENING TELEOBAPH. TELE PIIOTOQltirilEHS'- CONVENTION. From the S. Y. Tribune, If young men's fancies, as the poet tells ua, lightly turn with the warm npring winds to thoughts of love, middle-aged men's appa rently rnn as fast to conventions. They herd together during every May and Jane oa the slightest pretext of union. They meet and koo-too each other as Quakers, Presbyterians, prize-fighters, or patriots; and now as photo graphers. Some spark of good, we suppose, is struck out of all this friction; a certain cor dial emulation and guild-spirit, if nothing better. That improvement and new ideas may come from this great annual Association of Thotographers is a matter in which we are all personally ooncerned. The convention, we learn, was large and en thusiastic; delegates and specimens were pre sent from all parts of Europe; our own large houses in every State contributed their best inventions. The staid Quaker City glimmered with lenses and graphoscopes. The smell of collodion and blue lights filled the air. There is probably no mechanical art which has made such rapid advance as this since the days of Daguerre and Niepce, as is shown by the numberless inventions and the exquisite soft ness and beauty of the speoimens exhibited in Philadelphia; but in an rcsthetio point of view the profession, we are foroed to hint, has lagged far behind. In the cities where success would pay men with real artistic talent to adopt the business, they have fre quently done so; but outside of these large markets it is. usually left to any young Yellow who can command money enough to buy a camera and expertness enough to han dle it. Photography, like wood engraving, while it offers a field for a great artist, suffers from the fact that the process is easily learned, the materials are cheap, and the poorest workman will always find work and wages. The average operator, as we all know to our cost, has no knowledge of the first rules concerning light or shade, nor any gliui- . mer of the idea that there might be a skill in placing and draping his victim which would secure a beautiful and attractive pic ture out of the most meagre and inhar monious materials. He plumps him into a chair of torture in a room heated to 'J2 deg., screws his head into a vice, aad then placidly offers to "wait until he has as sumed his best expression." Hawthorne's morbid fancy that the secret devil in every man peered out of his face somewhere in a photograph may have had its foundation in fact: the treatment human nature undergoes in that chamber of horrors brings whatever is diabolical in it to the light. There is an old story of a Greek artist to whom came an un hopeful subjeot in the shape of a man blind, lame, and with a broken arm. He painted him taking aim with a bow kneeling on the lame leg, closing the blind eye, drawing back the broken arm. Our modern photographer would have ssorned such art as sheer com pounding of a felony. Seriously, this is no matter for jesting. We may leave what footsteps on the shores of time we please in the shape of character or good deeds, but our real selves, our faoes, are inexorably in the charge of those minions of the sun for posterity; and whether we will or not, they choose that every wrinkle and smirk shall go down unflinchingly. For the great majority of ns, twenty years after we are dead, the only trace left of us on earth will most likely be a photograph in some dusty album. Is it unnatural that we should wLaa this to be at least the just shadow of what we were? The most praotical Gradgrind among ns would fain look with a cheerful f aoe into that golden age to come, unknown world of strangers though it be, and not scowl baok to it a grisly ghost. We beseech the convention to scatter some notions of true art among its members. Kryolite and velvet cases and in visible rests are no doubt excellent things, but a subtle sense of grace, and fitness, aud beauty is not altogether to be despised. Have meroy upon us, Messieurs Photo graphers; you have the immortality of this generation in your keeping; for the love of justice do not any longer confirm the Dar winian theory by sending us down to unborn ages in the presentment 01 a race 01 gorillas THE DEMOCRATIC SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS. From Uarper'i Weekly, edited ly G. W. CurtU. "Mr. Orator Puff had two tones in his voice," and consequently, as the affecting narrative informs us, he oould not esoape from the nit. The Democratic party, with- the same vocal variety, is in imminent peril of a similar catastrophe. Its Northern voice and its Southern voice sing different tunes; and as its object is to lull the pnblio into eentle slumber, it ia naturally angry to nod that the discord only more thoroughly arouses the country. Mr. Vallandigham had soaroely blandly alluded to the fact that tne gooae hung high when Mr. Jefforson Davis Bavagely retorted that not only did he not "acoept the situation." but that he "acoepted nothing So, also, while Tammany Hall complacently heard the praises lavished upon it by the nre eating Mobile Register, it was confounded by the vigorous observation of the same journal that, of course, Tammany would not expeot to nominate its candidate! Alas for the "creat statesman" of New York, the execu tive wcent of the Erie ltine!" Indeed, a more laughable tragi-comioal spectacle has not been lately seen than the present bitnation of the Demooratio party. It is engaged in the praiseworthy bat not bop ful attempt to dissolve oil in water, and to mingle in sweet silence gunpowder aud fire. It is divided into two factions, the Northern and the Southern. The cleverest of tue Northern leaders are auxious to break tho chain that binds them to the corpse of sUvery and to the disastrous past of their party a Earty false to the oountry, to liberty, and to aman nature. But they have no platform to propose except acquiesoeooe In KepulmoAu action and denunciation of Republioaus, This, being a tacit confession of the total failure of their own party and a repudiation of all its traditions, does not warmly com mend itself to the mass of the Deiuoor-ttiti voters. It seems to taein, and very uatu. rally, an insincere course; and they declare, with animation, that such couusels are offered by those who have no faith in Demoordtio principles, and who are, therefore, no batter than the enemy. "If holding the otlicei and sharing the publio plunder is the ouly prinoi pie invciveu in tne pontics 01 io-aty, stys a Kentucky Democratic paper, "there is im necessity for keeping up two political oriui- ZittionH. wm:e inns Borne 01 tuej more Bagaeious Northern Democratic leader advise au i'i'im. cence in the 6itutioa, t'ut Southern ouUf, who Lave been both the bruin and tba heart of tbe ptrty, with scornful aui dhtimt brown insist upon v. bat they call the principles for wiiio'i the Democracy Lave alwajs contended. Taos principles are really the Virginia and Ken tucky resolutions of nearly eighty years ago resolutions which assert State sovereignty to a point which is incompatible with Na tional supremacy that is to say, the South ern Democratic chiefs insist upon the right of secession. They deolare that the "lost cause" is traditional Demooracy, and that, when you abandon the constitutional principle upon which that cause is justified, Democracy, as a party name, is meaning less. Indeed, there are a large number of those who were the sincerest Rebels, who lost everything in the war, and who now insist that, the Democratic principle having been overpowered, there should be no hesitation in abolishing the State Legislatures, and in establishing "one right, one government, one Jaw." The ablest of the Southern leaders and papers insist upon the lost cause as the only rational Democratic platform. And Jeff. Davis, the best beloved Demooratio leader in the Southern States, declares in reply to the "new departure" that a little patient waiting only is necessary to secure the victory for which he and his friends contended. This was the spirit and these were the chiefs who controlled the Demooratio party at the last Presidential election. They propose to contest the mastery again next year. They deride and denounce 'the Northern aoqui escers as men of no faith in principle, as mere temporizers and Laodiceans. And this position is so strongly taken, and the censure is so free, that the Northern leaders are already angry.' The very warmth of their tones shows their alarm. For while they are profoundly persuaded that there is no other chance of Democratic success than express ac ceptance of the situation, they are as pro foundly convinced of the tenacity of their late masters at the South. A few weeks ago the Southern views, were described by the Northern managers as the eccentricities of "our gallant and chivalrous friends," who would, as . good Democrats, gracefully yield when "we" knocked them on the head in the convention. But all this is changed. The Albany Argus now disposes of our gallant and chivalrous friends in this manner: "The boisterous Montgomery Mail is dead. The senile Mobile Register has changed its coat and fallen into line, an humble, and, we trust, repentant fol lower of those whom it tried to browbeat into its waved-up folly. The Memphis Appeal alone remains as a vociferator of nonsense and a gabbler of platitudes." And the New York Wtrld, the friend of the Erie agent, says of the other great statesman of its party: "The truth is that Jeflerson Davis is not only a badly beaten general, a failure as an execu tive head of a resisting people, a thoroughly whipped Rebel, but a politician who stupidly, criminally (to use the mildest phrase) blun dered. And these be brethren! From all this it is plain, first, that the Northern Demooratio leaders are convinced that the Southern voice must be silenced or the party is already defeated; and second, that they feel much stronger than they did in 18GS, and propose not to wheedle but to lash the recusants into submission. But the fact is none the less evident and significant that the support of the Southern wing is indispensable to Demooratio success. There fore if, ia the National Convention ; of the party, Mr. Vallandigham, who in 18G-1 made the (Jhioago platform of surrender to the rebels, should in 1872 make another platform of surrender to the Republicans, it would certainly be an occasion of satisfaction to every patriot that the party did not take an openly revolutionary position, but it would as certainly be no ground fox supporting a- party which contains every revolutionary and dis turbing element. The question, as we stated last week, would then be whether a purer administration or greater fidelity to the new order could be more reasonably expected from the Democratic than from the Republi can party. There can be little doubt that the v allandigham platform would help the Demo cratic party in the Northern States, but it would as surely exasperate the stancbest Southern Democrats. Meanwhile those who are disposed to think that the Eoniooratio party is always handled with admirable saga city, and that it can rely upon its stern disci' pline, may refresh their memories with the history of its last three National Conventions in 1800, 18G4, and 18G3, of which it may be said that each surpassed the other in politioal blundering. OUR NEGRO POPULATION. From the K. Y. World. Superintendent "Walker, of the Census Bu reau, reports tne negro population of tne United States, under the enumeration just taken, as 4,81)5,2Gt, stating, however, that this total is obtained by estimates in soma few localities, but that "the differences made by revision will probably be limited to units. tens, or hundreds." In this view the figures civen doubtless express our negro population with an accuracy sufficient for all practical purposes, and by a comparison with the figures of the enumerations respectively of ISM and 18G0 and the ratios 01 increase in either case it appears that the blacks are dying out since the war. To eluoidate this let us give the several enumerations mentioned, and the increase absolute and ratio of increase in each case. The table stands: reputation. Increase. liatio, InlSRO 8,638,762 lu lo 4,436,709 796,947 81-90 In 1S70 4,fy6,264 459,655 10-3tf Now while it appears here on the face of it that there was an increase of 450,555 ia our negro population from 18G0 to 1870, aud that the per cent, of increase was lu lib, it is evi dent upon reflection tnat tnia period 01 tea years in which the increase might be sup posed to have" taken place evenly year by veer is, in fact, divisible into two equal parts of five years each from 18G0 to 18G5, whea the negroes, or mne-tentns 01 tnem, were in slaverv. and from 18G5 to 1870, when all were free. In the first half decade there was, of course, no new element in the life of the negro. The storms of war, to be sure, rolled about him, but his position was too humble a one to be hurt by the blast; and whilo battle was deciminating the white race the black remained in its old atti tude of security and. as it is fair to assume, at its old ratio of increase. In other words, the negro from 18G0 to 18G5 was just where he was from 180!) to 18G0 the death-roll of the colored troops being ridicu lously small and as he increased from 1S50 to 18G0 at the rate of 2 TOO per cent., so from 18G0 to 18G5 he increased at that same rate proportionately, or at the rate of 2TJ per cent, per year. For five years this is lQ-'Jo per cent., and adding 10 !I5 percent. (485,710) to tie figures (4,435,701) of 18G0, we find tt at in 18G5 the negro population of the United States must Lave been 4,1)21,410, or 2G.1':5 more than the census of 1870. Ad mitting the premise that the negro popula tion increased from 1800 to 18G5 at the sam ratio as from 1850 to 18(50, and the coLcluhiuU is irresistible that in 1805 it ks gi eater than it is now. The only vkv tu contravene this result is to say tbbt ILe table we have given shows an in titiibu of 10 oG per cent, from 16G0 to 1870, niid to this' the answer is Instantaneous What made the ratio of 21 V0 in the seventh census drop instantly on the beginning of the eighth decade to 10"3G, or less than half? What great convulsion changed the whole life of the negro in I860 to make him less than one-half as fecund as he had theretofore been? There was of course no snoh great disturbance for the negro until 1865. Then the change came; then was his whole life altered; and from that time we 'are to estimate the effect of emancipation upon bim. The case is analogous to that of a man who is well from the first to the fiteenth of the month and pulled down by a fever from that to the thirtieth: his loss in flesh is not the month's work, but that number of days only from the time the fever set in. To as certain the effects of an anomaly we must begin where the anomaly begins, end taking up the negro population of the United States from 18(55, when its whole condition changed. we find that population has not only made no increase in tne last nve years, but nas actu ally fallen off. Beyond this fact, Mr. "Wal ker's report is not specially remarkable, though, as we have heretofore mentioned, Kansas exhibits the curious increase of its negro Vopulation from G25 in 18(50 to 17,10S in 1870, and Kentucky and Virginia have fewer blacks now than' ten years ago the former having 222,210 to 2:10,107 in 18 GO; and the latter 530,321 against 548,007. These losses are explainable by the fact that during the war many Kentucky negroes fled North, and since the war the Virginia blaoks have drifted freely into the better paid field of oot- ton culture in tue lar South. IMMIGRATION AND ITS COURSE. From the N. Y. Time. Everybody admits that we owe no incon siderable portion of our prosperity and rapid development to foreign immigration. The rapid growth of the Pacific coast has been remarkable, but the population of the States west of the Sierras was drawn, for the most part, from the older States. The West and more especially the Northwestern States, attest the value of immigration. During the decade just passed there was a considerable decrease in the number of arrivals. The causes for this, both in this country and Europe, are now happily removed. At the beginning of the decade our own war, and in the last year of it the war in Europe, operated against large immigration. Those who have made the subject a special study predict that in the present decade the in crease of population from foreign immigra tion will far surpass that of any former period. Emigration from Ireland has reached its maximum, and will, without doubt, Bhow, in the next ten years, a considerable decline. This will, however, be more than counter balanced by the increase from Germany, and in addition the people of other countries from which immigration has heretofore been small, will be attracted to the- United States by the certainty of bettering their condition. The immigration from Sweden and Norway in the last decade is worthy cf attention as illustrating how rapidly the increase will be from any country as soon as the- superior ad vantages of the United States come to be known. In the decade ending with the year 18G0, immigration from Sweden' and Norway was but 20,931: in the decade ending with the year 1870, it increased to 11 7, 790. This large immigration sought the Northwestern btates, adding to tne wealth, and aiding in the rapid increase of population, which bids fair to give to this section a preponderating influence in directing the affairs of the na tion. ! The Southern States, relieved from the burden of slavery, are now seeking to develop their resources by encouraging immigration, They have learned the secret of the success of the Northern and Western btates, and are re solved to profit by it. Lands are abundant and cheap, and a large portion of them capable of cultivation; the climate is desirable and the products varied; water and timber are abun dant, and the markets are easy, of access, Agents of different States are now ia Europe for the purpose of bringing the advantages of the country to the attention oi intending im migrants. But as these agents represent a particular interest, their representations of the superior advantages South will not be im plicitly believed. Large grants of land have been made by the Government to certain railroads, and these also have agents in En- rope, but their representations are open to the same objection as those made by agents of the Southern States; and the immigrant. while listening to each and oomparing their statements, will, as Heretofore, rely on the information contained in the letters of his countrymen who have made homes for them selves in the West. Our laws favor immigration, but the peo pie of other countries require a knowledge of them. Little care has hitherto been taken to give the immigrant information with re gard to the resources of the different sections of the country, lbe skilled workman knew that he must remain in or near the large cities and manufacturing towns, and tho agri cultural laborer, having a suiall sum to invest in land, or seeking employment, that he must go West. lhe special report or Mr. I5a ward Young, Chief of the Bureau of Statis tics, just publshed, will afford the immigrant all needful information. With infinite labor, a large mass of statistics relative to the agri cultural advantages of each State, and the wages of labor, skilled and unskilled, in different sections, has been collected and arranged. It is indeed the immigrant's hand-book, and will be found equally valuable to the foreign immigrant and to the citizens of the older States who contemplate removing to a newer country. The price of land, its nearness and accessibility to market, the kind of produce and its market value, the nature of soil, cost of stock, wages of skilled and unskilled labor, and many other valuable data are given, wmcu will enable tne immi grant to contrast the advantages offered by different sections, and to decide in advance of embarkation where he will settle thus sav ing him much time, anxiety, and expense This work, which is published by authority of the Government, will exercise an important influence in determining the future direction of immigration, and it brings into notioe many regions which are at present almost unknown to tne ioreign workman or agrioui tunst. THE COMPARATIVE WORTH OF THINGS AND MEN. From the London Spectator. The general grief and horror with which the nows of the devastation of Paris in this fratricidal war has been received, the con sternation with which Englishmen and Frenchmen alike have heard that "a palace of strangers is become a heap," "a defenced city a ruin," cannot but strike us, when we re member the comparative indifference with which we bad come to hear of the terrific slaughter of human beings of which tbe his tory of the last nine months has been iuii. For it is not the human misery, the loss of life and loss of livelihood to the inhabitants of Paris, which we think most of when we read of the Tuileriea in ruins, the Louvre partly destroyed, the Luxemburg blown to Eieces. and of so , many of the grand istorical buildings ' of Paris left with hardly "one stone upon another that has not been thrown down. It ia of the beautiful city itself 1 we think, and not mainly of its people. We sorrow for the miracle of art and mftgnincenoe, tne lairest capital in Europe, the chief intellectual stimulus of the whole -Western world, the ' one place which nobody visited without receiving a new im- session of the vividness of life and the bril inncy of man, the spot on the surfaoe of our planet where human i acuity seemed the keenest and the most available, where human wit had reached its culminating point. And this, of course, though the work of the 1 rench people, was not the work of the French people in any one generation. Iu every sense Paris has been a capital, for she' had inherited tne accumulated intellectual wealth of ages, and the' great palaces aud terraces and monuments and gardens which made her so fair were as much the products of savings, as much artistio capital essential to tae raagio she wielded over the minds of men, as the mill and looms of Manchester,, the products of Lancashire s past savings, are essential to the great industrial work of every new year of our cotton manufacture. Paris as "a olty of confuaion that is broken down," Paris with shattered monuments and ruined palaces. and tcmblins bridges and wasted cardans end a river choked with fragments of ma sonry, cannot exert her old spell over the imaginations of men till the waste places are restored, and tbe wilderness again blossoms as tbe rose. Ihere are adjuncts to the power of men which are essential conditions of its exercise, and therefore it is, we suppose, that we feel authorized to grieve more when we hear of a destruction whioh prevents France from being to the future of Europe what she has been to the past, than we grieve even when we near oi tne sweeping away ol a great portion of a generation oi a rench. men in the hurricane of foreign and civil war Men may come and men may go, but while the spell of France remained, there would always be Frenchmen enough to use it aud transmit tbe great . i rench tradition to the world. But now, when "all joy is darkened. the mirth of the land is gone, in tbe city is left desolation, and the gate is smitten with destruction, "who is to cast the spell of France over us? With Paris in ruins, the staff of the enchanter is broken and her magio lost. The "Capital of Pleamire has beoome a wilder cess, and while it remains bo 1'ranoe must loss her peculiar place in the world, and the heart of tbe continent almost cease to beat. Hi can hardly be denied, we think, that there are physical conditions of human life bo full of significance and so difficult to create anew, that their Ions diminishes the moral significance of the life of the men who are their natural interpreters even more than the loss of any number of those interpreters themselves. A plague in Rome that destroyed half the population would be a tearful thing, but would it be wrong to feel less calamity by far than the physical destruction of Rome itself, even though all the mhabi tants bad had time and warning to escape ? It cannot be inhuman, to think so, for did not our Lord himself, who named himself the bon of Man to show his intensity of human sympathy, speak of the physical destruction oi Jerusalem wita a shade ol ,w most deeper pity and sorrow than , he expressed in referring to the mere carnage and loss of life which would aooompany it? The destruction of a typical city, of a centre of age-Ions life, is the end of that age, in a sense in which the mere cutting off of half a gene ration oi men need not necessarily be bo at all. What was, is at' an end; who but a pro phet csn tell what will be? How shall we know that the old spell which the suioidal armies of the Commune and the fratricidal armies of Versailles have destroyed between them shall ever be revived? No one would desire to see it precisoly what it was. There was enough of Circe in Paris to turn even the wisest of men who had no antidote raoly" in their hearts, not only inte the most grovelling, but into the maddest and most possessed of swine. That that part of her spell may be silent for ever we shall all wish. But may not the power to give a fitting framework to the email things of life, to fascinate and vivify. to create a true sooial intercourse, and send a thrill of tenderness and gayety through the trivialities oi conversation, go with it r May not tbe ruin or l aria tarn out to be the judcr. ment-day of an epoch, in which much that is good will pass away along with amen that was evil, and Pleasure lose, with many of her worst dangers, all her counsels of perfection? Ob the whole, ws are persuaded that it is no spurious and inhuman judgment which shrinks back fiom such news as we have received this week, with even more awe and misgiving than from the news of the bloodiest battle-field and the most destruo tivo campaign. There are external conditions of life which thread together history, and the annihilation of which ends and beams an era, It is possible,nay, it is quite probable, that tho Durning oi i'ans is a ' catastrophe of this nature, tbe more so that it arose from the collision of social discord, and not from the shock of conquest. If only as a measure of the fierce internecine passions that have been at work in tbe very heart of French society, this mighty explosion must shake France to the very centre, and mould her future into new and probably less unoonstrainod and buoyant life than that of her past. The importance that is so naturally at tecbed to the physical devastation of Paris is not, then, in our opinion, due to that weak ness of imagination which is unable to realize the meaning of a great accumulated mass of human misery so vividly as it can realize a great loss of material grandeur and wealth on the contrary, it is due to the instinotive feeling that a very much greater change is coming over unman lite than any mere short ening of the period of one generation's exist ence would imply. It may be quite true that if any great building were on fire, the man who deliberately postponed the duty of se curing the endangered lives of the bleeping women ana children to that of resou Ing the treasures of art it might contain, wouia be regarded as inhu man. Our sympathy is imperiously claimed by living sufferers even at the cost of sacrificing a multitude of the refined enjoy ments and educated tastes of posterity. We might respect the man who gave his own life to save a great Raffaele or a Turner, but we Buouia naraiy ju&tify one who offered up an other a for the same end Evon in Paris, the man who should have deliberately eleoted to kill an innocent soldier for every piatore saved to tbe Louvre, would be rightly es teemed to be a wretch worthy of instan-. death, asd this though it is quite certain that many a picture would do vastly more for tae future life of the French nation than many a ,i i i , n At 1 A1-AJ. . - jjuu luougu mat is true, mat is no reason wby we should not deliberately grieve mors over the destruction of ull the greatest ornaments of a great capital, than over the loss of a host of innocent lives. It would be wrong to commit a single delibe rate Murder, even in order, if surh a thing were conceivable, to save Moot Blano and the Lake of Geneva to Europe: vet no one would think of feeling the same horror at hearing of a new murder which he would feel at tae thonght of the final loss to Europe oi tnose magnificent forms and colors. Or, to take a more wosflible case, it would claarly be utterly demoralizing to save a bank from breaking, and a whole population from des- , . ... . , , uiuuoii ana penury, by putting a violent end to a sincle life: vet it would be very heartless not to feel far more re gret at the occurrence of the former ca lamity than at the occurrence of the latter. It is pite easy to invent fifty oases in wnicn it wouia De utterly wicked to ward off a great catastrophe by intentionally causing one or much less magnitude, though it would be both natural and right to regret the ooour rence of the latter. A failure of the harvest is a far greater and more lamentable evil t,uan puiaii tujuntiurjKuui uvuutij WiiljU UUUi- tually and deliberately committed small' in justices to prevent the failure of a harvest, would have any promise of a great future. The destruction of Paris might almost com pare as a calamity with the destruction of a vein of genius in the character of a great people, while the destruction of a multitude of 1'arisians could only compare as a calamity with a temporary suspension of that vein of genius; yet even for the sake of not only preserving but stimulating that vein of genius, no one would have sanctioned the deliberate murder of a multitude of Pari sians. iWe hold, then, that the universal hor ror which the week's news has brought us is perfectly legitimate, even though the same degree of regret has not been felt over the hecatombs of lives lost on the field of battle. The ruin of Paris is the catastrophe of a thousand years perhaps even greater in its consequences than the meeting of the States- General and the storming of the Bastille,but, at present at least, purely dark, and without any of the bright hopes justly excited by those events. MILLINERY. M S B. R. D I L L O NOS. M3 AND 331 SOUTH STREET, FANCY AND MOURNING MILLINERY, CRAPE VEILS. . Ladles' and Mlpseg' Crape, Felt, Gimp, Hair, Satin, 811k, Straw and Velvets, Hats aud Bonnets, Frencti Flowers, Hat and Bonnet Frames, Crapes, Lacea, Silks, Satlos, Velvets, Rlhbona, Sashes, Ornament and all kinds ef Millinery Goods. OLOTH3, OASSIMERE3. ETC LOTH HOUftSI. J AMEO ft HUBDn. Wo. 11 Worth SECOND Mtreet, . Sign ot tne Golden Lamb, Ax w receiving a large and splendid aasortmon of new styles of FANCY OASSIMERE8 And standard mokes of DOESKINS, CLOTHS an . COATINGS, S 88 mwt AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. LOOKINO OLASSE8, ETC NEW ROGERS CROUP, "RIP VAN WINKLE." . NBV7 CHHOMOS. All Cbromos sold at 25 per cent, below regular rates. All of Prang's, Hoover's, and all others. Send for catalogue. Itooking-Qlagsea. ALL NEW STYLES, At the lowest prices. All of our own manufacture. JAMES 8. EARLS & SONS. No. 818 CHESNUT STREET. VVATOMEI, JEWELRY, ETC GOLD LIED A L REGULATORS. G. W. RUSSBJL.K., ISo. 22 NORTH SIXTH STREET, Begs to call tne attentlon.of the trade and customers to tie annexed letter:. 1 TBANSU7I0M. "1 take pleasure to announce that I have given tc Mr. G. W. RUSSELL, of Philadelphia, the exclusive ta'je of all goods of my manufacture. Re will be afcie to sell them at the very lowest prices. "UL'STAV BEIJK.EK, "First Manufacturer of Regulators, "Freiburg, Germany. lOb. I ALL." "BE SUM KNICKERBOCKER IS ON THE WAGON." KNICKERBOCKER. ICE COMPANY. THOS. E. CAR ILL, President. E. P. KExtSHOW, Vice-Fresident. A. HUNT, Treasurer. E. u. 00 KNELL, Secretary. T. A. HEiNDKY, Superintendent. Principal Onlce, No. 435 WALN UT Street, Philadelphia, Branch Offices aud Depots, North Pennsylvania Railroad aud Master street. Ridge Avenue and Willow street. Willow Street Wharf, Delaware avenue. Twenty-second .and Hamilton streets. Ninth Street and Washington avenue. Pine Street Wharf, Schuylkill. No. 4&3 Main Street, Germantown. No. si North Second street, Camden, N. J., and Cane Ma v. New Jtntev. 1811. Prices for Families, Offices, etc. 18TL 8 pounds dally, CO cents per weefc. U es " is " 80 0 B5 " Half bushel or forty pounds, so cents each de- uvery. WHISKY, WINE, ETC w INKS, LIQUORS, ENGLISH AND . SCOTCH ALES, ETC. The subscriber begs to call the attention of dealers, connoisseurs, and consumers generally to hlB splendid stock of foreign goods now on hand, of his own Importation, as well, also, to his extensive assortment of Domestic Wines, Ales, etc., among which may be enumerated : 600 cases of Clarets, high and low grades, care fully selected from btat foreign biocks. 100 casks of Sherry Wine, extra quality of Quest grade. 100 cases of Sherry Wine, extra quality of finest grade. 'it casks of Sherry Wine, best quality of medium grade. M barrels Scoppcmong Wine of best quality. 60 casks Catawba Win " " in hnrrpia " " medium trade. ToKether with a full supply of Branuie, Whiskies, Kcotch and iUjgusn Aies, cruwu dluui etc, kw. w hlch he la err pared to furnish to the trade aud coa Burners generally la quautltlHB that may be re quired, ana OH uie uiuoi, iiuerai teruia. P. J. JORDAN. BBtf Ko. 820 PEAR Street, Below Third and Waluut aud above Dock street. CAR&TAIR8 & McCALX, So. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Sti, IMPORTERS OF Brandies, Wines, Gin, Olive Oil, Eta, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PURE RYE WHISKIES, IN BOND AND TAX PAID. Mt 1AFE DEPOSIT OOMPANIHTi THE PENNSYLVANIA COHPANY FOR IR5UBANCTC""tN "XlVE'S AD - G KAN TING ANNUITIE8, Offlc No. 304 7ALNtJT StrecL INCORPORATED MARCH 10, 1313. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL $l,O00.O00. 8UBPLTJS UPWARDS OF $750,000, Receive money ondepoBit,retaavla ondemanil, for which Interest la allowed. irnd under appointment by Individuals, corpora tions, and courts, antns EXECUTORS. ADMINISTRATORS, TRUSTERS, GUARDIANS, ASIONEKS, COMMITTERS, R1.C El VERS, AGENTS. COLLECTORS, ETC. A nit for tbe falihfnl performance of Its dutloa as such all Its assets are liable. CHARLES DTJTILH, PaesidenU William B. Aua, Actuary. ' DIRECTORS. Cliarles Dntllh, : Jonhua B. Llpptncott, Henry 3. Wllllnms, William 8. Vaux, Charles 11. Hutchinson, Lmdley SiBjth, Gcori?e A. wood. Anthony J. Antelo, Charles S. Lewis, John K. W.ncherer, Adolph E. Korie, Alexander Blddie, Henry Lewis. THE PHILADELPHIA TBUST, SAFE DEPOSIT AND INSURANCE COMPANY, OFFICII AND BUROl.AR-PKOOF VAULTS Df THE PHILADELPHIA BANK BUILD1NQ, No. 421 CHESNUT STREET. capital, srsoo.ooo. Fob Safi-kkkping of Oovbrnmrut Bonds and other bKOUKiTiits, Family Platk, iTkwblkt, and other Valuables, under special guarantee, at the lowesi rates. The Company also offer for Rent, at rates varying from f 15 to $J5per annum, the renter holding the ke. SMALL SAFES IN THE BUKGLAR-PUOOF VAULTS, aimruiug absolute Pbcukity against Fiaa Tdk ft, Burglar v, and Accident. ah nnucinry obligations, encn as trusts, uuak Mankbips, Executokriii. etc., will be undertaken and faithfully dlHcharpcd. A U truMt invextmenes are Kept separate and apart frvm tne Company'! aanetH. circulars, giving ruu aetaus, lorwaraea ou appu cation. DlKECiuits. Thomas Robins, Augustus Heaton, F. Katcnford Starr, Daniel Haddock, Jr., Edward Y. Townsead, John D. Taylor, Uoii. William A. Porter. Lewis R. A&uhurst, J. Livingston Erringer, R. P. WoCullagh, Edwin M. Lewis, James L. Ooghorn, Benlamin B. Cotuea.va, Kiiward S. Handy, josepn v.Hraon, ai, u. OFFICERS. President LEWIS R. AS.'IHURST. Vico-President J. LIVINGSTON ERRINGER. Becretorv R. P. McCULLAGU. Treasurer WM. L. DUBOIS. 9 3fmwS LUMUbH 1 nnn nn a feet hemlock joist. AXD SCANTLING. iLL LENGTHS,, ALL SIZES. , (l0 000 MJ"i ii suvi'ii Our own working. Assorted and unassorted. OPA AAfk FEET 4-4 VIRGINIA SA: FLOORING (Dry.) Our own worklDg. Assorted and unassorted. OKI) AAA FEET 4-4, 3-4, 5-8 and UUi INCH SAP BOX BOARDS, Together with a large and well-selected stock o thoroughly seasoned UulluiDg Luinoerof all desortp tionB. suitable for the erection of Urge factories, stores, dwellings, etc. in connection with the above ora nrtw m iinlntr a J Steam Saw and Planing 31111,' :1 And are fully prepared to furnish. Builders an oiners witu . Mill Work of all Inscriptions, WINDOW FRAMES, 8ASIT, SHUTTERS, DOORSi SUPERIOR WOOD MOULDINGS A SPEOIALTYi DROWN & WOELPPER, No. 827 RICHMOND STREET, 6 9 tutbslm PHILADELPHIA. 1871 BPRUCE JOTST. JPRUCB JOIST. HEM LOOK, HEAiXOCK. 187 1871 SEASONED CLEAR FTNS. iQw SEASONED CLEAR PUStf. 104 CHOICE PATTERN PINK. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. RED OEDAU. 1871 FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGIN LA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOOKINO. FLORIDA STEP BOARDuL RAIL PLANE. 187 t 071 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANS. 1 Q7 AO i 1 WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK, AO 4 WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT FLANK. t Q fJt UNDEHTAEEKS' LUMBER. 10 41 UNDERTAKEN' LUMBER, RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. 187 1871 SEASONED POPLAR. SEASONED OlLSKfOr. 1871 1UII WHITE OAK PLANS AND BOARDS, HICKORY. CIGAR BOX MAKERS' IQnl l0 4l CIGAR BOX M AEER3' 10 Iff SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS, FOR SALE LOW. lOM CAROLINA SCANTLING. 10 4 1 CAROLINA H. T. KILLS. 187. NORWAY SCANTL1NU. 1GT1 CEDAR SHINGLES. -i 10 I 1 CYPRBIBS SHINGLKS. 10 I MATJLE, BROTHER & CO., No, S&oo SOUTH Street. Tf-kATMTTT. priNR. ALL THIOKNRSS-KS. I (nUMOH W.ANK. AI.LTHIlllfNltSSlli 1 COMMON BOARDS. ( 1 and t GiUE FKNUis BOARDS. WHITE PINE FLOORING BOARDS. YELLOW AND SAP PINK FLOORINGS 1 I k SPRUCE JOIST, ALL SIZE.8. HEMLOCK JOIST, ALL SIZES. PLA:lTJHDXa LATH A SPECIALTY. Together with a general assortment of Baii&iJ Ln tnber for sale low for cash. T. w, a halm , e sosm No. 1T18 RIDGE Avenue, nortu of Poplar s LECAL NOTICES. TN THB COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR Ti I fii'V a nii rinitw'PV otw PHII.AIIHI.FIIIA. 1 -Uvnf PhtlRriftlnhlnviL HOUKKT L. CUKKY. OWUiJ etc Lev. fa. ; sur claim. D. To, Ho. 160. 1 The Auditor appointed by the Court to report of , trlbution of the funds arising from the SberW'a s under the above writ of all that certain two-stJ basement and stone dwelling-house and lot r. rrrnn n A fittnura (in th north hi da of lA'tllne, fl merlT Bim fctreet. ia the Twentj-foarta ward of t Ullf Ul fUHOU''P"i - ' " wv-. - ..imri r in Oiwir fn v wlllnfl Bfrttrtt ttA ft' 6 lncbe, aiiJ in deptn iw feet to Grape itreet, w HieCt IH8 Iriir luirjiroicu, iui iuo f K"" " nnniMimeut. on TUESDAY, the 87th day of Jul lhil 81 v lxn iit turn wmuw, nerbf WALNUT and SIXTH Streeta. PhUadelphil when nl where all (l ersoua are required to mat the r emiujo, ur ui uo ae"irrri imm wm , ; "l f.,n,i. HKN'HY S. HAUtHT. afmw6t AudliorJ tt-OILEES. SATE AND ECONOMICAL. St Tubular, water nuclide of flue. Plum CyiUnW Tanks, Fmxs, and DiKsra, I i.L,m1ii' okoKGEO. TIOWARD, k m No. 17 S. EIGHTEENTH bUeetJ