BUSINESS NOTICES. ssowEar. bIETEOIO. At twelve o'clock; last Wednesday night, When all the skies were glowing bright, afar; Boulter from his couch arose , To see this grandest of free shows: But first, for feat he should get cold, Took a stiff " horn" of Bourbon old: Then, as he looked up to the sky, One mass of meteors met his eye, • And he exclaimed, "Well, that beats all, Except the show at Tower Hall:" • WS }Wm , Good style Cassimere suits to match as tow as —. Finest. 11^ench Cassimere Suits to match upto ..... ................ ...... And all the intervening grades, WE HAVE • Good, all-wool Black Suits, as low as... tB. 00 Angst Black French moth and Bassi= mere Baits up to .and all inteivening grades. lisvE The largest, beat assorted, and most complete stock of Men's, Youth's and Boys' Clothing, in Philadelphia—equal to any in the city, in style, make and fit, comyMaing all kinds, styles. sizes and qualities, adapted to the wants of all, and sold.at lower prises than the lowest elsewhere, or the money refunded. _Tat/ wa IV6etTuten BEENET'r CO,, TOWER HALL, WITH 6TEI. 518 MARS= STREET. air AU our prices are lower than for several years. GEO. t3TECK & CO.'S PIANOS.— ese beautiful instruments are as only recommended by the fallow ing among the leading artists in America as any pianos made in this country or in Europe, Wm. Hawn, S. B. Mills, Theo. Thomas, H. C. Timm. !Lax Maretzek, Geo. W. Morgan, Carl Bergman, ner Carl Wolibohn, Chas. H. Jarvia, M. H.. Cross, Carl Gaert- H. G 4 Thunder, J. N. Beck, Joseph _Rizzo, B. v. dram Ctatumbita of certificates as to their durability, and the references of one thousand purchasers in Phila delphia and vicinity, to be had on application. For sale in rhiladelphla only. by 3. E. GOULD, lakbisa4dl Seventh and Chestnut. itgliTEE WEIMER, PIANOFORTEm Is considered by leading Musicians the finest instrnment now made. It is the leading Piano in New York. and Is recom mended chiefly for its immense power se wsttty. sweet. seas, bretancy, elasti: touch, and great durabUity. 1 _ For saleby J. A. CIETZE, 0a7.43,3m 1102 Chestnut street. - -- .... 01IICKEElNO PIANOS IN EUROPE.—HANG 'VON BULOW, the great German Pianist, by letters Ituit received from Europe, proposes to play only the CRICKER.I2QG PIANOS during his concert tour in She United States. W. R. DAMON, ie24-ti3 No. 914 Chestnut street. STEINWAY & SONS' PLSNOS 10 1 Have been awarded thirty-two premiums at the principal Fairs in this country in the last seven yens, and the first Prize Medals at the Grand International W , rhibition, London, in 1862, in Competition with 269 Pianos from all parts of the world. Every Instrament is constructed with their Patent Agraffe arrangement. For sale only by BLAsrcrs BROS., 022 No. 1006 Chestnut street. PIANOS. GEO. STECK & CO'S. cele-{ PIANOS. PIANOS. braced Pianos. for sale ONLY PIANOS. PIANOS. by J. E. GOULD, PIANOS. Seventh and Chestnut. rimA IaRICREIRING GRAND PIANOm played by Bcambati, the great Pianist of - Europe, at Florence, Italy, was considered superior In all respects to the instruments Of Broadwood di Braid, hitherto regarded as the best In the Brewßooms 914 sel2tf milp i •:a • :4: .4`e e are* • it 'e z . t om —The Pew Scale Chickering Grand Pew Pianos are acknowledged the best in England, Germany and Italy. Notice the great testi monials received from Europe In August last. Mag- M i lablitit i niSag e I l i: Miri l tUT STREET, ocs-tii r W. H. DUTTON. CABINET ORGANS. These beautiful instruments CABIBRT ORGANS. are made ONLY by MASON CABINET ORGANS. Al%l I.IN, and for sale in Philadelphia, only by J. E. GOULD, Seventh and Chestnut. owITHE ()RICE BRING . UPRIGHT I ffi PIANOS possess quality of tone and amount of power nest to the Grand Plano, and are particularly adapted to the Parlor, the Boudoir or the Study. These beautiful Imam ments, in great variety, at the Chickering Booms, 914 Chestnut street. ocitErtf W. H. DUTTON. l ot l MEYER'S NEWLY IMPROVED CRP...A °ENTSCAE OV L ERSTRUNG PIANOS, Acknowledged to be the best. London Prize Mode and Highest Awards in America received. MELO DEONS AND SECOND-HAND PIANOS. 0c24.w,5.m.2m Warerooms, 722 Arch st., below Bth. Z, Zcari I :go Ji. STYLE.—The oeleorated Gem Orden IMlmmense assortment; very lOw prices MTh YLS.NO ROOMH. W. H. DUTFON, im26.tft No. 914 Chestnut street. ImimTHE BEAUTIFUL NEW STYLE war R. SON PIANOS, seven octaves; charming tone; guaranteed durability: very low price, 914 CHESTNUT STREET. H. W. H DUTTON. PIANOS. 1 HAINES BRO'S. elegant instruments PIANOS. and moderate in price, I have dealt in for PIANOS, fourteen years, and give a ave years' illiarantee with each. J. E. GOULD. noB-tf Seventh and Chestnut. POLITICAL. 'The Impartial suffrage Movemen Among the Demooraoy. Eastern and Western Views. The Boston Post, the leading Democratic paper in New England, yesterday contained the following editorial article: When those who talk loudest about Uni versal Suffrage are taken seriously at what they say, they betray the hollowness of the dogma and the insincerity of their profes sions by at once abandoning both. It could not be expected of them in reason that they should do less. Impartial Suffrage is guarded by proper restrict ons, so that the fountain apolitical power may not be pol luted. Universal Suffrage means a throw ing down of every barrier, in the shape of qualification and condition, by which the source of authority is kept from profana tion, and tossing into the trampledarena of party strife the very safeguard that permits -such contests in popular governments at all. 1 , Impartial Suffrage is strictly according to Democratic theory and rule; it is impossible to conceive from what other it derives sup -port. But its very name Implies the exis tence of some sort of qualification; that, for instance, its enjoyment shall be put upon • an impartial obedience to some requisition that is standard. To establish no standard is debasing the very authority derived; the abandoning of all conditions is an outright annihilation of the value of franchise. When the founders of our republican go vernment laid broad and deep their plans, they had much to say on the purity of the ballot, and the due protection of the franchise. All their discussions of the subject gopprove that they thoughtithe sta bility of the structure was to depend on the soundness of its foundations, and that chief among these foundations was the protected ballot. They did hold that all power was derived from the consent of the governed ; but they had never learned to stultify themselves by claiming that all alike pos sessed the right to vote became of their level qualifications. The subject has been left, all through our history, with the State Governments for \ their own management; and there alone it belongs to-day. We realize that a new school of experimentalists has emerged from the chaotic style of thinking generated by the temporary tumults of war, who seem to believe that the bolder their assumptions • the better chance for them to obtain a foot hold, and whose leading tenet is that the war for the Union under theMonstitution has been successful only as it has over thrown Union and Constitution together ; but they advance no reasons, and employ no substantial argument than can supplant the solid work of the framers of our system. The most they can say is that things are , changed. But the purpose of the war: was not to revolutionize, but to establish. It is not more competent for Congress to go into the several States now and dictate the terms of suffrage, than it was before the war. If it be, then it can be shown recorded on the prog;ramme of the purposes of the war. To say that it grew as a result out of the work of war, is merely to admit that the war has wholly broken up and destroyedOurrepub lican system. There can be no valid objections to the prevalence of the impartial suffrage princi ple. Base it as here in Massaohnsetta on citizenship, taxation, and a certain degree of intelligence, and no reasonable man will, question the 'fact tcat it is calculated to strengthen the political character of every State that adopts it. These three simple and comparatively easy qualifications are per fectly fair and do not derogate from the value and dignity of the elective franchise. They bestow it with freedom enough, and still surround it with the safeguards that are calculated to enhance it in the popular esteem. Those who require it feel that it is an acquisition; to be without it after coming to manhood would mark the denied indi vidual unenviably. And from such con siderations it becomes a possession that speaks the general authority with an ap preciable emphasis. These qualifications which we have named as peculiar to Massachusetts, we should be glad to see adopted by every State in the Union.. They are just, because they are im partial. We would like to see them set up as a common standard of suffrage,to which men of all conditions and colors should duly report themselves for examination. Color ought to have no more to do with the matter than size. Only establish a proper standard, and then apply it impartially. A rule of that sort is too firmly fixed in, justice and equity to be shaken. It commends itself too clearly to the right sentiment of the entire body of our countrymen to be successfully traversed by objections. Once let this prin ciple be fairly presented to the people of the several States, with the knowledge on their part that they alone are to have the disposal and settlement of it. and we sincerely be lieve it would not be long before it would be adopted by every State in the Union. But adoption is another matter from en forcement. The most patient examination fails to reveal the authority from which Con gress derives the power which many latterly claim for it, to go into the States apd compel them to adopt a particular rule of suffrage, or to abolish all rules entirely. Notonly is the ballot, which is the source of authority, corrupted by so leveling a process, but the primary prerogative of the States themselves is seized and trampled upon. The ballot loses its purity, the State is robbed by open violence, and the people are taught a lesson in arbitrary - proceedings which they can as readily put in practice in the future without regard to the ballot as with. We repeat that we shall rejoice at the adoption of im partial suffrage by all the States, North and South alike; but we should not like to see that or any other sound and excellent prin ciple forced upon the citizens of the States by any outside power whatever. There is such a thing as practically ruining even a good principle by a bad method of applying it. We are at perfect liberty to discuss this matter within those limits by which our own political power is bounded, and we may set forth as noble au illustration of our convictions as a local example will admit; but it is not allowed us to combine in Con gress to compel other States to follow that lExample, though it were the perfection of reason in itself. and the neplus ultra of jus tice and morality. street. W. H. DUTTON [Corespondence Cincinnati Commercial.] WASHINGTON, Thursday, Nov. 14, 1866. The movement of leading Democratic news papers in the East and West in favor of im partial suffrage has caused a decided sensa tion in Washington, especially among offi cials and Southern men. The latter decliire that the South will accept impartial suffrage in preference to ratifying the Constitutional Amendment. A well-known New Orleans editor, now here, favors it, and the Hon. W. H. Trescott, of South Carolina, who was an officerof the Confederate. Government, and formerly Assistant Secretary of . State under Buchanan, arrived here today, and says South Carolina prefers it to the Amend ment. It is rumored to-night that the Pre sident will recommend universal amnesty for impartial suffrage, in his forthcoming message. The Chicago Times contains sub stantially the above. [Correspondence of the N. Y. Tribune.] WASHINGTON, Nov. 16, 1866.—The lig eneer, the organ of President Johnson, hitherto most bitterly opposed to the col ored race, astonished its readers this morn ing by following in the wake of The Chicago Times. Its editorial says that "there never can be stable peace in this country until the colored race are made entirely equal before the law in regard to civil rights, 'lt is de sirable that after long and injurious agita tion, the South should spontaneously do this," The Star of this evening advises the South to accept the Constitutional amend ment. The compromise foreshadowed in cor respondence as likely to be proposed on the part of the South,as a means of extract ing the country from the dilemma in which it is involved in the matter of reconstruc tion, appears to be getting into shape, so that may soon be put before the people. Negro suffrage is regarded by leading Southern men as preferable to the disfranch isement proposed in the Constitutional Amendment, and they believe that in a comparatively brief time the people of the South can be brought to the point where they will concede it, if it can'ba made the basis of a settlement of the whole difficulty and secure a general amnesty for participa tion in the rebellion, and a restoration of their former status in the Union. The sub ct is receiving much attention, and is the theme of general discussion in political cir -des here especially. There is reason to believe that the conference at the White House of several members of - the Cabinet, and other leading men, with the Pi esident, was on this matter, and that Mr. Johnson desires to get it in such shape as to enable him to bring it out in his annual message. There is much speculation as to the view Congress will take of the subject. The proposition is favorably received by - many even of those who are considered as extreme Radicals, they believing that with the ballot in the hands of the freedman, the Southern States can be kept out of the con trol of the secession leaders without other restrictions. This is a question absorbing public attention here now, and it will doubtless soon agitate the whole country North and South. All admit the .necessity for a prompt and equitable settlement of the existing difficulties, and if this proposition should prove acceptable to the people, as it is believed it will, both North and South, the embarrassments of the situation will be obviated. Gov. Swann, of Maryland, arrived here this evening, and had an interview with the President. Randall, of Pennsylvania, Rogers of New Jersey, and other Demo cratic Congressmen are here, in close at tendance on the President, trying to work through certain appointments which they wish to have made before the reassembling of Congress shall prevent the summary ex ercise of the appointing power by the/Pres ident. This being Cabinet day, but few visitors were received during the day, but this evening there was quite a large gather ing in the ante-rooms, and the President received quite a number of the callers. The.Programme of the Future, Accord . log to Wendell Phillips. [From the Anti Slavery Standard, N0v.17.] THE DAILY EVENING BULETIN.HPHILADELPHIA., t-ATURDAV. NOVEMBER 17.1.866 ---TBIPLE SHEET. The people haVe spoken, and uttered their veto on Johnson, his policy and his adhe rents: The Republican party has been the mere channel through which, as the most convenient and ready one, the Nation has spoken. In fact there are but two parties to this fight, and the Republican is not one of them. The President, as the South's leader, is one. He seeks to shield the South from all loss in consequence of her defeat, and to: restore her principle of oligarchy—a white man's government—as unchanged as possi ble. He is one party to the fight. The people are the other. They have made up their minds that having gotten their band on the neck of this sectional , tigarchy, they wilt strangle it before they quit hold. They believe, with Lander, that "a king should be struck but once, a mor tal blow." They mean that slavery, with all its roots, branches, suckers, parasites and dependents, shall die utterly and for ever! This is the signification of our late triumph. It is more than a partisan vic tory. -It is the., declaration of a national purpose. Congress and its amendments were counted out of the battle. The Presi dent, representing the South's claim to an immediate return into Congress, bringing with it State sovereignty stilt strong enough to uphold oligarchy, appealed to the people: They have answered him, and nailed his theory to the counter as base coin. Congress abdicated and left the fields when it tried to stand neutral, assenting in its Amendments to the South's claim of sovereignty over the law of citizenship, yet protesting against the Executive usurpa tion of acknowledgment. From that mo ment the nation ignored them, and .fought , its own battle on the principle itself—im partial manhood rights the nation through. Whoever will serve them in carrying out this purpose they forget and pardon all his past, bowevbr equivocal, and take him to their hearth. Witness that pride of the West, Gen. Logan. Whoever tries to baulk them in this effort, no matter what his past merits, or laurels, he sinks out of sight. 'Witness Beecher lost in the wave he fondly imagined he could stem. Witness Grant un able to stir a plaudit on the Illinois prairies —lllinois, his own State—from an audience of twenty thousand men, one-half his own soldiers. 'Witness the Ne w York Times sank fifty per cent, in value in six months by its vain attempt to oppose this dumb but resist less movement of the nation. [This asser tion, at all events, is utterly false.—En. Times.] This fact that no name, no laurel, no services, weigh a feather If put into the scale against Radicalism, is the most cheer ing and wholesome characteristic of the hour. It is this that cheers us, even against such an appalling fact as that a million and a nalf of voters—more than six hundred ' thousand in the two States of New York and Pennsylvania are still corrupt and ignorant enough to support the mobocrat of the White House. We recognize the terrible signifi cance of this fact. Put behind sueh a mass of besotted and corrupt tools, the pat ronage of the Government, and the moral support of the South—if the word "moral" can ever be used in such connection—and its influence must be fearfaL Still, the peo ple have shown such true instincts,such un faltering devotion, plucking out right eyes, and cutting off right hands when they of fended, that we catch fresh hope from the elections. Maryland is herself a testimony to our theory. That defeat is fit rebuke to her faithless leaders. They swindled the negro out of his rights to conciliate their op ponents. They suaceeded in preventing Congress from granting suffrage in the Dis trict of Columbia for the same purpose. They gagged the late Loyal South ern Convention on that ques tion to propitiate rebels. Of course they entered the canvass loaded with the odium of their supposed principles, and without the strength which would have come from their avowaL Such policy de serves and secures defeat. But this defeat will save Maryland and Tennessee. Mas sachusetts nails her colors to her top-gallant Mast. First among the States—dear old Commonwealth—she receives the hated and victim race into her Legislative Halls. While Tribunes and Posts, while National Republican Committees and State Com mittees were welcoming rebels back to Congress, even if they rode over the neck of our only Southern ally, the negro, Massa chusetts shows them a specimen of such a model State as the loyal masses mean shall exist in the present territory of South Caro lina before they begin to inquire whether it, said State, has chosen any fit person to rep resent it in Congress. Revolutions never go backwards. It is equally true that Radicalism travels west ward. Personal Liberty Bills, Women's Rights Bills, and all such legislation started from New England and have "swung round the circle." This last Yankee notion will soon begin its travels, and complete them when North and South know no race before the law. Then, when a million of black men aid in shaping our national policy, their race will feel the effect the world over. They will never leave their brethren in Cuba under the yoke. They will put a shield over the struggling nationality of Hayti and lift Brazil into harmony with the nine teenth century. Then will the touching and sublime picture Maria Lowell drew of Africa cease to be true. Her great dark face no light From the annaet glow could take; Dark as the primal nlgut Ere over the earth God apake; It seemed for her a dawn could nem' break, * • • • • • So Bit I dreary, desolate, . Till the slow rooting hand of Pate Shall llft me from my sunken state. The dawn has broken, and will soon ripen into perfect day. Even this timid Thirty-ninth Congress, which abdicated leadership and postponed action till they were "certain sure" what the elections would be, can now resume (heir places. Let, them go back, and throw ing this chaff of !Reconstruction out of one window and swindling amendments out of theother,impeach and remove the mobocrat of New. Orleans and Baltimore; the demo gogue who, but for the marvelous courage, rare sagacity and statesmanship of Judge Bond, would have deluged Baltimore with blood. We have no words warm and strong enough fitly to express our admiration for Judge Bond, or our sense of what the coun try owes him for the victOy overexecutive treason. If enough patriots cannot be found to im peach the President, then let the true men of Congress stop thesupplies; refuse to trust rebels with the public funds. This will check corruption and bring the public cre ditor with his large influence to our side. At any coat, take the Government from the control of all rebels. A Horrible Murder Revealed. [From the New Albany (Indiana) Ledger.] Some six or eight weeks ago we published in the Ledger an account of the sudden and unaccountable disappearance of Mr. Wood mansee, a prominent and widely-known merchant of Brownstown, Jackson county. The friends of Mr. W. were almost dis tracted on account of the mystery that shrouded his fate. They advertised all over the country, giving a full description of him, and offering a large reward for such information as would discover his where abouts, or whether he was dead or alive. But no information could be obtained, and his relatives despaired of ever again hear ing from him. But murder will out, and it is now defi nitely ascertained that the last night Mr. Woodmansee was seen (at Seymour, on his way to the East, to buy goods), was his last living night on earth. lie had been in one of the hotels at Seymour daring the even- ROCKHILL& WILSON FINE CLOTHING HOUSE,; 603 and 605 Chestnut Stree LATEST STYLE SACK & WALKING GOAT. BOYS' CLOTHING. ing, if our memory serves us right, awaiting the arrival of-the train going east on the Ohio and Mtssissippi Railroad, designing to take passage on the train. About nine o'clock he left the hotel, leaving his bag gage there, but taking a large sum of money which -he bad on his person. This was th•• last seen of him alive. WENDELL PHILLIPS On Thursday last the body of Mr. Wood mausee was found in White river, not very far below the old village of Rockford. The bead was severed ,from the trunk, and a strong twine cord, to which was attached a heavy stone, was made fast to that part of the neck left, and to the body. The string had cut deeply into the neck. The body, although much decayed, bore the marks of terrible mutilation inflicted upon it by the men who murdered him, as there is no doubt of his being murdered. Facts and Fancies. Why is Rossini like Ignorance? Because one gives a stab at mind and the other a stab at matter. M. de Lamartine, meeting M. Alexandre Dumas soon after the publication of the "History of the Girondins," inquired anxiously of the famous romance writer if he had read it. " Oui; e' est superbe I O' est de l'histoire eleae a la hauteur du roman." A massage has been sent across the At lantic by a battery consisting of a tear in a percussion cap. Breech-loaders generally are played out, when a whole battery can be firedhy a single wet percussion cap. The percussion-cap message sent by Mr. Field to the British people, at the close of the late banquet, was a model of brevity and wit. It ran thus : "I am fall—my— nation." The Macon Journal is "authorized to state that Hon. Alexander H. Stephens is not in favor of the proposed Constitutional amend ment." As Stephens is "everything by starts and nothing long," we shall expect a powerful argument from him, in favor of the Amendment, at an early day. The retreat of a party of lawless charac ters in St. Louis has just been discovered in a sewer of that city. We congratulate St. Louis on the retreat of the rascals. The means of routing them seems to have been Per-sewers. General Hood is writing a history of his old army. He will probably handle the long how in a way to rival his great ances tor of the same name. Mr. Thomas Hughes says in his last Lon don letter to the New York Tribune: "I hear, to-day, on what should be very good authority, that an American lady, the widow of an officer of your Army of the Potomac, is on the point of marrying one of our great tory dukes. I trust the rumor may be true; at any rate, it is ben trovato." From what we have heard of this story from "our own correspondent," we are disposed to conclude that r. Hughes and his "tory duke's" love, Make a capital newspaper story. For the duke lwould be great 'treasure trove," But the lady's not yet Trove a tory. CArrenr Knight of the brig Water Witch, arrived at Baltimore on Friday, from St. Jago de Cuba, reports having been boarded, ‘cadle passing Fortune Island, October 30th, by parties from the shore, who stated that everything on the island had been destroyed by a hurricane the preceding day, and that ,ne hundred and, seven houses were blown down, and the inhabitants in a state of starvation. pmMASON tt. HAMLIN CABINET OR. GANS. from $75 upwardc Only at GOULD'S SEVENTH and CHESTNUT. nolo-11,4p1 TATIONKBY-kLZTTKES, OAP AND IQ k 3 PAPERS. WM:LOPES, BLANK BOOKS, and every reqte In the stationers line, Bellies et the lowest Arms al J. B. DOWNLNG'S Station Store, taaMIDPI Bishth street, two doors above omq WalnaL {OEN ca M I BITILDSB, MI M EMI cm 2,13=3 LODEWMIXT. hieutusnlcs of every branch required for hoaaebniid. ing and fitting prenptly tarnished. jy23-6m.rp SAMUEL LEINAU.:No. 111 South SEVENTH ID street Philadelphia, PLUDISEII. GAS and t.Ty,llll. FITTER. Work done promptly and In the best manner. Pumps, Gas fixtures, and all material wed In the business furnished. ocl7-6m4p/ PALL RTYL.IS HATS. TH.BO. EL lticCAlla, Hat, and teBhpßra_porttrtn__ 4ll l 8M MugsTAUT STREET. at WARBURTON, FASHIONABLE HATTER, 430 Chestnut street, Next door to Post office. 5e131y,4p7 NP.WSPAPER ADVEBTIGENG.-30Y, OOE & 00 N. E. corner of PIFT,H & CHESTNUT Streets Philadelphia, and TRIBUNE BUILDINGS, New York, 11113 agents for the Buttirrter and tor the News papers of the whole country, DrU-SrorP2 600 600 nioNw" . A.ELb w TREET AirE : BRACKETS, WOODENWARE, FANCY BRONZE MATCH SAM. c c 23 GRIFFITH & PAGE. SIXTH AND ARCH. BOLTSE FIIIINT‘HING STORE, 49 SIN. WOOD , W OR L H WA I NT DII H O T NWA T E. SAFES, SETTLE TABLES LIDAY and cLOT HESODS. WRiNGE.ES. HO GO nog 3ra . rpi THOS W. 'YOST, Agent. 41 , 14 P JONES, Wu.TRNIPLE. Josti DICKERZON JONES, TEMPLE .t CO., WHOLE-ALE AND RETAIL HAT MANUFACTURERS, 29 South NINTH street, first store above Chestnut. - ocs-tf UPERA GY. AFAR.% Fine Opera Glasses, made by M. BABDOII, of Paris. Imported and for sale only by C. W. A. TRUMPLER, Seventh and Cbeernm streets. oc2O4p,tf PREPARE YOUR CHRJSTMaS PRESENTS: supply yr.urself with Photographs at RESSLER'S ,allery, Second street. above Green, where you get ai.x Card or one large Photograph for $l. ZINC NAILS. Copper Tacks. Drams and Iron SCul). per Nails, Tinned Tacks, Plated and Porcelain ritad Furniture Nails. for sale by TRITSIA.N ,HAW. No. 8.35 (Eight Thirty-five) Market Street, below Ninth. PIIOTOURAPH. ALBUMS AT REDUCED PRICES, of superior styles, at. REIMERS Looking Gi.as and Picture Frame Emporium, Arch street, east of Seventh. Ps.Y FOR A PATENT ASH SIFTER in the value I cf the coal saved by its use. There are but faw families where thla c.nnot be easily done. Various p. tterna of them are for sale by TRUMAN SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thirty-Eve) Starlet street, below Ninth. ( lERISTMAS IS COMING; SO PREPARE, AS IT V takes time to make Photographs; resort early to B F. IsEIMBR'S Gallery. 624 Arch street. Six Card or one [aria Photograph Si. BIITTER, PRINTS, Dough Rollers, Potato Mashers, Meat Ponnders. Mince Meat Bowls and Bionics, I owel Rollers, Wath Boards and otter wooden Ware for Housekeepers, for sale by TRUMAN dt SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street.below Ninth. tiI'EPPING CASES AND DESKS, DE LA ERIE'S VV and other line English makes MASON dt CO., 967 Chestnut street. PKNIVES , AND SCISSORS..—Rogera',Woe. tenbalmee', Mappin's, and Wade & Butcher% best. MASON & CO., en Chestnut street. FINK STANDS—a Beautiful Assortment Tor Holiday Sales nols,th,s,tn,Btrp ELAVA NA. ORANGES, FRESH CANTALOUPES, Peaches, Tomatoes. Corn, Peas, Mushrooms As paragus, Dates, White Clover Honey, new Raisins. Currants, Citron Figs in small boxes. , ROBERT DONNELL & SON. 806 Walnut street, Dol7 EtTp FINE ALMEBIA GRAPES, 75 t CENTS PER pound. ROBERT DONNELL & SON, nol7-6tl - 805 Walnut street. ROCRHILL&WILSON FINE CLOTHING HOUSE, 603 and 605 Chestnut Street. FATAL Ar, OVERCOATS IN GREAT VARIETY. JOY. 008 & 00. W. G. PERRY, Stationer. 7tB Arch street PAST OF YOUR IN tluenoe and Patronage - 133licited. • . CLOTHING NEW ENGLISH BOOKS. JUST 'RECEIVED. THE HISTORY OF SIGNBOARD% from the earlieet tinted to the preterit day. with one hundred illustrations. Pr= $2 15. TBE BOOK OF PERFUMES. By Eugene Rummel, Price $2 50. TES HISTORY OF A SHIP from her Cradle to her Grave By Grand•Pa Ben. $1 51^. FOB SALE AT MRS. JANE HAMILTON'S BOOK STORE, 1344 CHESTNUT STREET, it PHILADELPHIA. FOR RENT, ON MARKET STREET, BELOW prrur. Very desirable rooms on 2nd. 3rd and 9th floors, from January 14567. DICKSON B a 03., It 4pl 3 Wa.LNUT iStreeta 1311.313.3aEL ORNAMENTAL HAIR MANUFACTORY. Tlse hugest Lad beet assortment cd Wigs, Toupees, Long Hair "raids and Viotonnes, Fri. settee, Illusive Beams for Ladies, .5.t prices LOW= than elsewhere. [tals2947/ 909 ousrs wr STREET. THE GIRARD HOUSE. THIS WELL-KNOWN HOTEL PROPERTY FOR SALE' ON EASY TERMS. Apply to ISAAC O. PRICE, or T. JACKSON, nol3-6t rpt No. M North SEVENTH Street. HAINES BROS.' PlANOS—Moderate in inim and sold with five years' guarantee, J. E. GOULD, SEVENTH and CHESTNUT. nolo-tf 4W ALASES FOR THE CHAMBER AND ' FOB Traveler's use. Just imported by BARE dk BROTHER, note alt Chestnut street. SA.LIL—To Shippers, Eirocers, Rotel-Keepers r and others—A very superior lot or Champaign Cider, by the barrel or dmn. P. J. JOILBAN, - noa.rptf 220 Pear street. below Third and Walnut. DINR IMPORTED AND AMERICAN STATION 1: BUY, New Styles. Our Initial Stamping Is un surpassed. • W. G. PERRY. Stationer. nol SSD p 'M Arch street. DRENCH EMBROIDERED MUSLIN EVENING DRESSES.—GEO. W. VOGE.L, No. 1016 CHEST NUT street, has Jost received from Parts, a case of Embroidered Muslin Evening Dress es. nol3.6trp* icacirmsON PLANO& .... INOThe new style Cottage Square Piano, full Seven Octaves. beantillal Carved Cases, the must charming m C tone, Low Price, S guaranteed durabillizr. aHESTNUT treet.. oartf 4p THE ORiSAT .A.ISI.E.RICAN \ COUGH CANDY • CROFT'S COLT'SFOOT ROCK CANDY, Sold =the principal Inigg•taia: 3s FACTORY, ecla-Dnapi 125 North SECOND atreet. JORDAN'S taI&L.IIIBIIATED TOIIO ILLE.—TIis tr truly healthitd and nutritious beverage, now in nee by thousands-invalids and others—hits established s nbaracter for quality of material and "purity of mann facture, Which stands unrivaled. It is recommended by physicians of this and other planet' as a =parlor taw., and requires but a trial tO convince the moat skepUal• lof its great merit. TO be had. wholesale and retall.of P. J. JORDAN. 220 Pear stmt. FITLER, WEAVER & 00., Zdannegicturers of If.ANILA. AND TA.RIOLD CORDAGE, Cords. Twines, &n., N 0.12 North Water street, and No. edictorth Dahmer - avenue, Philadelphia, litowas H. Errors. MICHANI. WzAVIII- Coariun P. Mamma. RICK WIDE BLACK GUIPURE LACES FOR TRIMMING CLOAKS.--GEO. W. v OGEL. No. 11 , 16 CHESTNUT street, has received an assortment of Wide Black Guipure Laces, for trimming Cloaks 1:141 Shawls • aiso a full assortment of Black Guipure ...widths now in demand. nol3-Strp• SCHOMACKER PIANOS. IMThose wisbing to purchase one of these justly celebrated Pianos, with:the new Agraphe Scale, will please call at the new and elegant Ware rooms, 1103 CHESTNUT street where they can ex amine a line stock, now selling at greatly reduced prices. A full guarantee for Eve years given. nolkStrpl I'MA° BATHANS Auctioneer and Money Broker, A N. E. corner of Third and Spruce streets, only one square below the Exchange. NATHANITS Principal Mice, established for the Lost forty years, Money to loan in large or small amounts, at the lowest rates on Diamonds, Silver Plate, Watches, 'Jewelry, Clothing, and goods of every description. Office hours from I A. M. till P. M.. dekl.ttrp rll l O HODEIEEKEEPEIBS,_ _Tor cleaning saver and 1. diver-plated ware,a NEW P0L1.8.1 . .M POWDER; the beat ever made. FARR & BROTHER, felt , . • : •a , „ • , ROCKHILL & WILSON Fine Clothing House, 603 and 605 Chestnut Street, Foreign and: Domestic Fabrics Made to Order, Reasonable, Serviceable and Fashionable. Ott in the Best Btslea, made with care an ele• trance, etittable for the rdrobe of any Gentle. man. • WANAMAKER OWN. Sixth Stree ßEt t—from Mats ket to Minor Street. W. DUTTON. CLOCKS. CLOCKS. CLOCKS. We Open This Day an Invoice of ME FRENCH CLOCKS. CLARK & BIDDLE, Jewelers and Silversmiths. 712.CHRSTNUT STREET. 1,-; 4 . STERLING SILVER, /t•)_ meaufacttered expressly for BRIDAL Pratenta NEW JEWELRY. Of all the late Styles. W.A.TOFIES Of the most Celebrated Makers. PEARLS. DIAMONDS. and other Endow Stones. Wedding and Engagement Rings. Old Sete of PEARL or DIAMOND JEWELRY re mounted In modern style. Watches and Clocks repaired and adjusted by was? petent workmen. AU goods warranted of first quality. Special attention given to DIAMONDS. J. T. Gallagher,- Late of HASLET &100., FORMERLY BAILEY & KMUDr6f. 1300 CHEST NUT STREET oca) s to th-tf rp WHOLESALE STOCK Watchts, Jewelry and Silver. Plated wgR,~, TO BE CLOSED OUT AT RETAIL, AT A GREAT BACRTFICE, FCBTTIv.tAX TO CLOSE BITSEKR,S. This will afford a rare opportunity for procuring fhile goods in this line. at GREATLY BELOW TBE USUAL PRICE& WOODWARD, LOITETT & CO., 712 Chestnut Streets, SECOND STORY, SECOND STORY. BAWL K. SMYTH. EDWARD P. ADAM SILVER-PLATED WARE. Smyth 48r, Adair, PRACTICAL MANUFACTURERS OP FINE SILVER-PLATED WARE, HARD AND SOFT METAL. 1834 Cliestnut Street, Opposite tr. E. Mint, 2 fin Jr. Factory, 34 South Third Street, north s to 26trp; Stalls. 910 New and Choice Goods - 910 AT MEAD Ar. CO.'S; No. 910 CHESTNUT ST.; MAITUFACTIMICES OF SILVER PLATED 3 0 L f Area 8 112 JEST RECEIVED, Our Fall Invoices of RHINE WEINS. H. & A. C. VAN BELL. WINE MERCHANTS, 1310 Chestnut Street. atiZR a Elam 4p WEBER'S PIANOS! t a t felThere are more of these celeorated instruments sold in New York City than any other make. They are used in the Conserva tories of New York and Brooklyn, and are recom mended by the leading Musicians for Brditancy and Durability. - For Sale by J. A. GETZE, 1102 Chestnut street. 0e...5,th,5,tu mt_ ORGANS AND MELODEONS, Frm the celebrated Factories o MTre o at, Linsley & Co., Slordneer Mel. Lo ; and Taylor and Farley. Wholesale and retail Agency. S. A. GhTZ Fl, oc2s,th.s,tn,lmi 1102 Chestsut street. SQUAIIE PIANOS, 914 011111STNUT &MEET. ocs-tf4p W.E. DUTTON. 11. 1 BERIUR BUCKWHEAT FLOUR,—For sale In 100 and 125 pound bags at 11 50 per hundred, at 121 North WATER strt et. nol4-6trps $30:000 to 1 45,0,00 to invest in one sum on city mortgage. Also, sams of from $5,000 to VO.OOO. E. Et. JONES, 13015.304 p No. 522 Walnut Street. - - Ri Nl CHICKERXRO UPRIGHT PIANOS. 914 CHESTNUT STREET ocry-tf 4p W. H. DUTTON. - IDIOOI , SKIRT -MANUFAOTORY.Roop rts l.l. and Corseta ready made and made to order; war ranted of the best materials. dilBo, &Meerepaired. MRS. E. B VT.Wr. . ._'l3l.l' • • 812 Vine street. above Eighth; ROCKHILL & WILSON ME CLOTHING HOUSE, Coachmen's Coats, RIMING COATS. HUNTING COATS nol-4al rp Coachmen's Coats
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