WENDELL PHILLIPS ON THE DAN ' GERS OF THE HOUR. . . RBILLIANTI AND CIIARACE'BRISVIC ADDRESS. Splendid 'Audience at the Academy of Music. • Last eii3ning an audience comprising a large proportion of the intellect of the city assembled at the Academy of Music, to lesr that_eccentric apostle of his own ideas, Mr. Wendell Phillips. All parties were represented tongues and creeds,'! po litically, aid all were equally interested in the eloquence of the brilliant but erratic orator. He said : I have no theory, personal, of Government. lam no abstractionist. lam -only applying 'to our Government those _rules of frankness', and uprightness which - we demand for ourselves in social life. I only say of Congress , and of statesmen that they have conducted the Republic by such ways and on such maxims that if any -ordinary individual conducted his business in the same way he would have been bank :rupt in ninety days. Men say that I forget the services, of distinguished leaders of the .Republican party. I deny that. I neither forget nor undervalue the services of any - man. - I remember them constantly, bat Ton and rha've a,-.great principle to solve. -God has given us a mighty work to do. - upon the shoulders of this generation has been placed the task to vindicate demo -cratic institutions in the face of the nine teenth century. What do you demand of your Congress, as the duty and fidelity o statesmen ? that if they attempt to lead they shall foresee the next step, provide for it, meet it with prudence and sagacity. All that I ask of these public servants is, that each one should serve the people with the same principles offidelity as we have in useful business. My view of our situation is, that we need more than ever that democratic principle, the voice and instincts of the people,because :now and in recent times Democracy has produced no leaders. Well; now it as plairid as the sun at noonday that the South does not accept the situation. From Wade Hampton down to the most silent member •of her doininant race, there is not one single individual anywhere that accepts the situa tion. On the contrary, by every voice and by every act that comes tons fromthe other side of the line, she repudiates it. She has -committed no treason; she has forfeited no rights; the North has acquired nothing but her old constitutional compromises to use against her neighbor. Men say Johnson has betrayed the Re publican party. -Betrayed it to whom? To the Democrats? No! he did net stop long -enough even to be counted in that camp. He betrayed both to the actual rebels south ,of the line. Your children--if my instincts are right--your children will live to see the evidence in black and white that from the -9th day of July, 1865, Andy Johnson was hand and glove—not with the Democratic party—he did not linger long enough with it -even to betray it—[Applau.se.]—but hand -and glove with the prisoner at Fortress Monroe and his coadjutors. Yes, the perils - through which the. Republic has found its - way hitherto unharmed, the dangers from - which the masses have saved their own Go vernment, fifty years hence will show, as I believe, more fearful than the hardest of us ever suspected. My present mission is to warn my coun trymen that the danger that had menaced - the nation in the past from the treasonable acts of the President of the United States, has not-yet ceased. The rebellion had taken possession of one section of the Government, -and trusted to obtain possession of the whole; quartered in, the White House, it in tended in its next move to encampunder the • dome of the Capitol, in the Senate House and House of Representatives.. I did not litter any prediction a year ago, because I feared the rebellion. Men said was afraid of the South. A man does not exhibit any undue fear of starvation when he plants whf9r. A man does not express any anx..ty about getting home when he in -uires the shortest road. I believed then -a q s I believe now, that the masses of the Re public, duly warned, would save it from zany enemy, inside or out; but I believe there never has been any enemy to be -dreaded outside of our own lines. No, not in the weakest hour of our civil war was there any danger outside the lines. Our whole danger has always been inside—in •our own fears, in the irresolution, the haste, the immaturity, the distrust in our own ranks. One of the great wiles of Democracy is that it is too much in a hurry. It would reap almost before it has sown. It digs up _its seed every twelve hours to see how it has aprouted. The haste to-day is to reconstruct the form of the Republic, in which exists the oligarchic will of a great majority. It never hates. , Without haste, without rest, I fOresee a patient dozen or hundred men lay their plans in this generation and the next— watchingundeterred by temporary disas ter, undismayed by any results unforeseen —it moves in its steady way onward till it reaps the full harvest of a complete success. But one wants to engraft on Democracy, with patient foresight, the long-waiting, the readiness to see events unfold themselves in nature proportions and order; and every man who undertakes to advise his fellow .•citizens to-day is to advise them not to be in a hurry; to remember the situation in which`God has placed • them—the struggle, not of forms but of ideati. What have we been doing? The South kept geographical success by an idea represented by a faith that repudiated' the Declaration of In dependence; that believed that one third was born booted and spurred, and the other two-thirds saddled and bri dled for that third to ride; that believed in gags and Lynch law, •Bowie knives and the :flames, as the best tests of public opinion; that sent women to jail for teaching poverty to read; that made its streets unsafe for free speech to tread. The South rose in rebel lion against-the open Bible, the equality of manhood before the law, ungagged lips and the Declaration of Independence. That • South was whipped. Now, the questi comes, what that vi tort' means, and what _reconstruction on that victory means? - If it means anything, it does not mean drag ging South Carolina to the feet of Massa chusetts and chaining her with clamps of iron. It means that North making over that South in its likeness, till South Caro lina gravitates bynatural tendency to New England. Every other close of the rebellion is a sham.' Every other haste to acquiesce in their seeming close of it is treachery, con - scions or unconscious. Now, that recon : struotion can be 'had but in one way, the South must be won to the capital and to the energy, to the brains and to the _habits of the North; it must be a free passage and a free dwelling place for Northern brains and _Northern capital, as the West has—been. What makes the West in the ' likeness of New England? Became the old and rich , States poured oat their abundance upon the prairies, and made them over in their own _likeness; that strengthened them as sister States. That the process is inevitable and tur-_ sparing process of the territories south of Mason and Dixon's line. Men toss about the word "reconstruction" as if it meant Alex .ander H. Stephens seated aide by side with Charlesi - Sumner, as if it meant Wade Hampton and Judge Kelley under the roof of the House of Representatives. As well send a couple of puppets to play Represen tatives' and Senators. Reconstruction • begins , when the South yields up her idea of civili 2ation, and allows the North to permeate her channels and make her over through out the route which victory has given to the better and the dominant idea. Now, until that process commences, reconstruction has not commenced. No sounding names, no donning of official robes, makes one hair's breadth step towards reconstruction. It is only rebellion in a new,form; it is only the South assuming her old power, undismayed and unweakened by this effort at victory of her rival. Practical statesmanship says - don't criti cise General Grant ; we may need him. The nation needs nobody. My criticism of these statesmen and generals ' is, they do not do their duty. The people, that have given us this victory of October and November, will never be conquered. Witness :.rant, the Wellington of the century, the idol of the ariny,zgathering armfulls of laurels. But in hie own State of , Illinois, in an audience of twenty thousand men, one-half of them his old soldiers, when a letter was read from him it was received with silence. When one man asked for cheers—silence! Another and anotber,again and again asked for cheers—silence! An when the pet of the State, Ingersoll, mounted thestage and said, "Not a cheer for Grant?" not a voice re sponded. For the General chooses to be neutral; be does not take the uniform of either party, and the people will not cheer him. [Great cheers.] What the people de mand, is not past services; it is willing to forget past offences for services to-day. The Constitutional' Amendment, which we are told by the official voice—and that is the only one to which we can listen—is to be a bridge to restore the South to its old place in the Government, undertakes, in the first place, to engraft into the Constitution of the United States a new feature. As the nineteenth century opens before us the largest and most progressive minds of both continents are undertaking to enlarge the politield arena, while both sections of the United States ,stands ready to-day to ex pand with the opening demands of the nine teenth century. Yes, the timid and cow ardly policy of a party bound only upon its own perpetuation, undertakes to en graft into that Constitution the word male" confining suss in the onward march , of the suffrage question to one sex. I repudiate all linfitatione. Our fathers left it uncommitted to face the demands of the opening century. I would leave it un -committed. The amendment, secondly, undertakes to ignore entirely the rights of the negro to the help of the Government. To-day we have the right to protect him, and the power. The amendment surrenders both into the hands of the dominant race of the Southern Territories. We have to-day the right gained by battle; and we have the power, having the whole Government ma chinery in our bands. We are pledged in honor, and by theneceasitiesof a five years' war, to exercise both the right and the power. The Republican party undertakes to give up the right and the power and trust to the contingencies of a possible motive. They call it a compromise. Compromise is a respectable word. It covers a respectable fact. Compromise is when two men differ on a boundary and agree to settle it by mutual arrangement. Compromise is whin two men disagree on the amount due each on a contract or from the profits of a business, and they sit down and arrange their mutual claims, honorable, just and equal. There \ never has been a compromise in American political history. Wehave elevated a swindle into a compro mise and dignified it with the name. The white race of the North and the white race of the South came togetherin 1789 and sacrificed to their general advantage the rights of the absent blacks. A swindie—and they called it a compromise! Prussia and Russia met together on dismembered Poland and sepa rated it into fragments, and anointed it to the adjoining kingdoms and called it a com promise. .Aswindle ! The House of Repre sentatives and Senate essayed to amend the Constitution in safety, because our millions of blacks held their places in the scale when the balance trembled beneath the North and South, and they sat down with a rebel Pre sident to swindle their allies out of their rights, and gave the amendment to the country as a compromise. The Constitutional Amendment is not only a swindle on the negro, but it is giv ing us back to that same political perambu lation that ruled this country essentially from 1801 to 1860. •Put your foot upon it; reject it; send it drifting, with a hundred other schemes of Constitutional Amend ments, and send back Congress into its halls with orders to admit no Southern ter ritory at present, nor perhaps till long after the 4th of March, 1869. I don't believe in reconstruction. Streets running with blood; the Capital in exile free speech suicidal: the South repudiating her old maxims; she is tc be rooted up, to be made over, to be smothered, to be out-grown, to be covered over with a rich and prosperous growth of Northern emigration, brains and money, before you can begin even to rebuild the States. Men say that the Radicals hate the South. There is a class of magnani mous Christians who talk about nothing but conciliation. Conciliation,! Who have been the friends of the South for forty years? The Abolitionists who have stood upon her borders and warned her of the lemon that concerned her peace, who have told her that she was running a race that could end in nothing but a collision with the spirit of the nineteenth century; who told her she was beckoning bankruptcy and blood to be her guests.. We told it to her for a quarter of a century. We urged her to get rid of an institution that -could only commit her finally to that which "biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder." Her day has come, and bankruptcy and ruin have cov ered all her fields. Who stands ready now to rebuild her waste places, to make her fields laugh with prosperity, and every sort of agriculture climb her hillsides ? Who would cover her rivers with steamboats, and set the planter in motion in all her States? Why the men that undertook to tell her that she must come into line with the nineteenth century, if she expects to live or prosper—the men who exhorted her to give up her faith in-the bastard sham and chaff which she calls, politics. Who is to be trusted? Our black allies. Who is to be punished? The rebels. 'lt is no sin that the dominant white race at the South is not converted; but it is not con verted. The rebel is to be conciliated just so far as it is for the good of the country, and not an inch further. Men say that I am hard upon Senator Wilson; that I criticise him unduly. I only say in public and before his face what all his friends say in private and behind his back. I only say that he came before the public in September, and says: "I knew that Andrew Johnson had betrayed the Re publican party' lattt January, but I thought I would try and'conciliate him, and so I held on and kept quiet." What do we send men to the Senate Chamber for? 'Do a hun dred men govern this country, 'or the masses? Can the people be trusted with facts, or are they to be hidden in thehreasts of states men? You have one-half of the Republican pprty leaders undertaking to tell nil 'that they have - known:fill 'winter that Andrew Johnson was a traitor, but meanwhile they have let popular sympathy and confidence 'end respect cohere and grow around him until they have strengthened a new party : whereas, if they had told the truth when they discovered it ; if every man who saw him treacherous had deserted him when they 'saw it, he would not, ; since January, have secured adherents enough ttithe visible upon the surface of public affairs. [A.p plause.] I contend, in the present state of the ctusvass, the treachery of the Republican party is in its' leaders, and that he who knows such facts and keeps them secret for six months, letting the people in the mean time,centre end crystalize in the wrong di rection manifests the genius of oligarchy instead the open day of Republican conft demos in the instincts and right intelligence of the people. THE DAILY.kirENING"BULLETIN.-PHILADELIIIIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 1866 -• • I deny the services of Mr. Wilson in any of the years gone by. I do not tusk' you not to respect them; I only ask you not, be . ..trust them. - The Constitutional Amendment, so far as the negro , is eoncerned, is a siwintlies and`don't delude anybody with the reseed , - able but misused term of -"comprotillee."- The absent, the unheard, the disfranchised race is sacrificed between the, upetir • and nether millstone of .rebeldoth, while the. Republican party knowingly, systemati— calls, and persistently sacrifice it to preserve their political supremacy. Why. on, the sacrifice of the black,the white race read its place, practically, at• the heim of B.ete! How long will they be a_; minority? Bow long on questions of finance will they be, a minority? They have the same political strength when they re-enter that House and ; Senate that they had before•lB6l. • They had used it for fifty years with un interrupted triumph, except in. the matter of Kansas. Whv should they fail 'in time to come? Vice President Hamlin - told you. from this platform,then from another in this city, how he was approached in Texas time with bonds offered for $5 that his vote was to make worth $lOO in twenty-four hours. With millions upon millions of that very security floating in the House of Rep resentatives, with fifty or sixty Southerners wielding them, how soon would the revolu tionary enthusiasm chill the ordinary earthly and political virtue? How soon will the finances of the country be a football,like all other political questions, and the South dominant as of yore? - Certain conciliators say to the South: "Da what you Will, the motive should be in your own breast not to do so."' Well that was a very good tegienent in the old times, when we were bound in the Solomon, seal of what we call the terms of the Constitution, and couldn't do any better. But times have changed. No more compromises of the Constitution, no more surrender of the om nipotence of the war power, ientil Louisiana and South Carolina are made over in the likeness of New England, and run; like kindred drops, indistinguishably into one. And in order to do that the very first task I would set the reassembled Congress, before they look at the amendment or utter the word .reconstritction, is to impeach the rebel at the White House. Let us hope that Congress comes together on the 4th day of December with convic tions that it will that da throw conciliation out of one window, and t y he amendment out of the other, and begin business by im peaching the President. [Great cheers.] Let the territories of Louisiana and South Carolina take care of themselves. We are going to attend to this machine with the Government that belongs to us. And the first process to commence is to impeach the rebel who has usurped the functions of President. Rebel l—too dignified a desig nation; the great mobocrat of the White 'louse. Yes. Does he want to mob in New Orleans; he Ignores Governor Wells. Does he want to mob in Baltimore; he re cognizes Governor Swann. Law or no law, State or no State, limited authority or omnipotence, no matter which, a mob ;s the result. Impeach the mobocrat , f the White House, and the second step is-to depose him. And im .•eachment is of no value if, while it drags its length through the Senate Chamber, the mpeached party wields the navy and army patronage of the Government against the impeaching House and the judicial Senate. ad moment the Executive of the United States is impeached, statesman -hip, and the Constitution, and the necessi ties of the hour dictate tnat hia place should be supplied until an acquittal restores him ro office, or a condemnation subjects us to the choosing of a new President and Vice President, to supply the plapes shrink dead and the deposed. I know men from ibis step of interfering with the functions of the Executive. But the Constitution under takes to give us the power of impeachment in such shape that, ordinarily speaking, it is utterly unapproachable. There is a chance that in any ordinary time the Pre ,ident of the United States should be even practically liable to impeachment. Such an emergency as the present, and -inch an uprising as the popular enthusiasm as the civil war has left, is only concurrence of circumstances that renders it a possi bility. And that same emergency dictates 'hat we should exhaust the arsenal of the constitutional weapons to make it efficient. I would, therefore, set the precedent. Like ,he English nation n'BB, I would make this iaw of the realm consist with the constitu tional precedent. A farce and a sham Is the attempt to try the President while to remains in office. In the nature of he trial, in the concurrence of the con qitutional remedy, there Is nothing .o repudiate the step, and there Is everything under the circumstances to dictate it. I. say, therefore, impeach the President; and while he is on trial sequester him. What is the advantage? Then we run the machine. Then, the undivided North— the loyal nation—managing its own Govern ment,tbat reconstruction whichlendeavored o describe to you, commences at once. The moment that rebel hand :leaves the helm, New Orleans is safe for New York capital and New York men. The moment the Senate of the United States breathes the oreath of its own spirit into the Govern ment, Massachusetts may remodel Loui siana—not till them In ordinary times we should be obliged to bear Andy Johnson to the 4th of March, 1869. But his treachery, his collusion with rebels, his resistance to the laws of Con gress, the blood of New Orleans upon his conscience, his sins against the whole es sence and spirit of the hour, enable us to remove him. I, for one, am not for waiting two long years to commence this inevitable initiative construction of Southern territory. I am not for waiting two years, while a rebel In the White House builds up the Southern aristocracy, given it strength, cohesion, organization, prosperity, capi tal. Mark you, there is but one pro hie 111 before us. Johnson, Republi caniam, Senators here and Repre sentatives there, are puppets. The nation sae but one business; it is to make the idea that conquered in this war dominant down to the Gulf. [Loud applause] It is to make free speech, free printing e freedom of coin oaerce, energy and enterprise the law of the Republic; and when that_ process com mences peace commences. When that pro cess commences, reconstruction commences —not till then. All that I say to you of par ties, all that Psay to you of impeachment, has no individual purpose. Jolmapta is but a weight to be forgotten, I hope to-morrow. But remove him in order to begin the-great national duty. This IS my only object. I confess, fellow-citizens, I would exhaust the arsenal of constitution al law to secure the leic tory of the people.' We have a set of men, one-half- intentional traitors' and the other half willing to wait until the 4th of March before they resist:them, and you let the Go vernment hitch and stagger along under just thatcondition of things. What I de mand of Senators is that when they see a traitor in the White House, to spread it on the wings of the wind until the peoplere buke it out of existence. And what I de mand of the army of the United States,from Lieutenant General dowseis that they make the streets of the cities of the conquered re public safe for every man to tread. [Cheers.] I listen to no talk of Constitutional Amend ments. I want to hear nothing of recon struction, The question of to-day is whether the Pre sident of the United States is to be allowed for two years to hold this government over the edge of Niagara; and whether Senators and Lieutenant Generals are to stand, out of motives of etiquette, silent, and joarnals are to preach conciliation. I say no. The war is not ended. The fight recommences in a new shape. If General Grant has sur rendered, as General Sherman did to John ston—if he, like Sherman, has surrendered to Johnson, let ha itnow it. This people atv bound and certain to save the nation. We hatre got every element on otir side. I don't doubt it.. Coleridge,said governmeat was made up of three elements. One was, and the fast, Subthission,tb wer, to 'Co operate, power triad' together; end the' se cond was allegiance to something--a a law, a charter; but the third was, loving your national brother better than anything else in the world. _ The North had the three elements, the South ,hadn't. We were law-abiding citi zens;;we worshiped' .the common law and the Constitution. It stood tons in the place of-Bonapartato the Frenchman, and Chas.' Stuart,to the Highlander; and then Illinois, And Massachusetts, and Ohio, and ,New, York, and' Pennsylvania,, and Wisconsin were closer than any other% States on the face of the globe. The elements of nation ality were ours, and 'With the army and navy in our hands we were certain to crush out rebellion. We are certain to'' do it to-day.' [Cheers.] But all we want is honest, plain spoken intelligent men to lead. I do not tear the President. Fear him! I never read one of his speeches, I never heard of one of his actions that he did not remind me of a scene I saw painted once, the way the poor persons in the outermost provinces of Russia hunt the Vrear. Too . poor to bay miisketa, and Ids hide impervious to any arrows they can make, they-practice on his credulity. He loves honey. They go to to a honey tree and fasten a peg above the hole where the bees have built and to that peg they hang a cannon ball or a stone. When the bear comes to push his head in for the honey, he moves the stone, and it - comes back upon him. Angry at the blow, he givealt another; it comes bank with still stronger force. Aroused and enraged, he pushes the moving pendulum with a still stronger blow, and it comes back with the added momentum, and thus he swings around the circle. [Laughter.] Well, now, Vermont was a good blocs New Hampshire, was a better,Ohio was appalling,andlndiana and lowa were terrific, but Pennsylvania was a settler. And now that Massa chusetts, and Connecticut, and Illinois, and all the rest of the States have swung the circle, Why I have no fear of that individual obstacle. It is not there that my anxiety rests. It is in the Republican party, and Congress itself. For the sake of its own expediency measures undertaking—fearful of each other, fearful of certain results—to postpone the battle as if when Lee and Grant met in their final encounter, they bad come together, counted troops,and then postponed the fight a twelvemonth. No postponement until the 4th day of March, 1869. The fight begins on the 33 day of December, 1866, and from that hoar the machine is to be exclusively ours. Do our duty, and in 1869 we shall be in a far differ ent state from this. We have had traitors before. We have had one in the White House. He called himself a "public fana tic'. ary." Last year he has been writing a book to show the world why his treason did not succeed. We have got his twin in the White House to-day. He calls himself "an humble Let us do our duty in December, and trust that he will not make -:perches here to explain why he did no succeed and why be never intended to ane ceed in his treason. Mr. Phillips closed amid mingled laugh ter and applause. 1 1 _ ,r 1 ib. ann.) V.lfsrEEllib. JAIDISZt LEE invite the attention of their friends and other, to their large and well smarted stock of fob adapted to men's and boys' wear. ovinpriftins Black French Cloths, Blue French Cloths, OVERCOAT CLOTHS, Colored FresCh Cloths. Black French Beavers, Colored French Beavers. Black uimau: Beavers, Colored Baquimaux Beams, Blue and Black pilots, • Blue and Black Paletotk. PANTALOON STUFFS. BlackFroach Casalmeres, Black French Doeskins. parv ixe. Htandi i ar and Sniimures. Plaid es, and Silk ped Casa Mixed Castalmersa Satinets. all qualities, Cords, Beaverteeria, Jtc., vesting, uks, At wholesale sad retail, by JAMES ct al a No. V North Secnnd Rtg of Ow Goldem Lamb. BIISINIESEI WiLLIAM T. ItEWAS & BROIHKR, PLUMBERS AND GAS FITTERS, NO. 913 NORTH EIGHTH STREET, (ABOVE WILLOW, PHTLADELPECIA. [nov3.3mee; Repairing of all kinds At short notice. Orders through Poet Office will receive prompt attention. COUNTRY WORE ATTENDED TO. —at FL 0. LANCASTER. ELL (maxi swim, SPRUCE STREET WHAR $231 - 411LIaltltD CORN, OATS and MILL-FRED Mi. sold Wholesale and Retail at lowest Market Rates, and delivered to all parts of the City. semy Q C. .11NIOUT di co., WHOrauss T. E ettoccutE G.B.E. Cor. WATER and CHESTNUT streets, Phil %Walls. Amite far the sale of the Products of the 3outhwark Bog n er Refinery and the Grooms' Bugs Home, of Phlladeltalla. EXPBIM3 CONILPANIES. ADAMS' EXPRE BB COMPANY — Oa and afte. . -1 - usisDAy, may I, the FREIGHT DEPART KENT of this Company Will be REMOVRD to Hu New Balldfn6 , Elartheast corner of rms. and MARKET streeta. Entrance on Eleventt rir7el a sge on Market street. ArW• ALL MONEY and COLLEXTITON Iit7SECUSE slit be transacted as heretofore at ED (111ESTHro street. Brasil Parcels and Packariei will be received at *tithe! Aim Call Books will be kept at each °lnns, and any mils entered therein previous to SP. will receive attention same dm, if within a reasonable distance of our office. Irt__9.lAes for goods - and - settlements to made at MO CHESTNUT street. JOHN BINGHAM. arm% LADIEr' TEIREIHNen. ;IB.A.ND OPENINt4.—.R.R.S. M. A. BINDER, Of NO. 1031 Cheotant street, Philadelphia, importer of Ladies' Dress and Cloak Trim also, an elegant stock of Imported Paper Patter= Ladies' and Children's Dress. Parisian Dress :and Oloak Making in all its varieties. Ladies funisldni their rich and costly materials may rely on being ar tistically fitted, sad their work finished in the moat prompt and efficient manner, at the lowest possible prices r in twenty-four hours' notice. Cutting and but tug. Patterns in sets, or by the single Place ,for mar chants and dressuudrers now reads'. fitAbONIC /N MARTIN .LEA.NS, /CO. 102 Cl[Fafnir) X STREET. (i 0 Pint Prom:di:lin ~led by Franklin -. . !tut ;0 tuba to MARTINMARTINmum, - mana. oi MANIC PINS, SO EMBLEMS, &0., , &o. , Nei and original designn of Maim& Mar , Tex. ilars' Medals, Amy .Medals and Corps Badge, 0 every', deacrinldon. nol4-ar.th.fri.snil DENTIISTRY. OnD. ROLPIEI LEE has administered Nitrous Oxide, or Laughing Ow, to thousand with per• tea success for Dental, Surgical and Medical pur posetrand for tunusement.Crnly fifty cents (50c.)per tooth for extracting. No charge for extract: whenartificlal teeth are ordered. Office No. 256 West Washington Square below Locust street. Seventh street cans pass the door. Don't be foolish enough togo elsewhere and pay g 2 and Is for the gas. N. B—l continne.to give in. stroctinns to the Dental profession. oc3o-Im} Miff triV riga IJ, NXTEIEREAS LETTERS OF A DAILNIPTRA.TION TY upon the Estate of GEORGEKIIITH, gentle. man. late of Philadelphia, have been granted to the subscribers, all persons indebted to the said estate are rfquested to make Immediate payment, and those 115 Mb g claims or demands against the samer will make known the same vrilhout delay - to GEO; F7LEWLS,X; S. Third street; GEO. L. KELLER, IT7 S. Sixteenth Street. - - no2l-tvato • PAPER HANGINGS et SHADES O 9 9 WALL PAPERS es low as 10, 125 i and 20 sJO. cents. Gold and Satin Papers cheap. • Fine WINDOW SHADES thannfactnred, all stscs,at JOHNSTON'S DEPOT, No. 1083 Spring Garden street, Below Eleventh, , i , 3c" ,- (L111-011 R B. AVERY, :H&S REALOVEI.), VJBITING CAtIE ,s S .. _AND DESKS , BUMS SON & CO., I And other "13" ma kes: 907 Chestnut street. SIMON GAZTLAND-- No. 35 SOUTH THIRTEENTH. ST/MET. n 017.3501 23 2 sow .B. MYERIS & co.. AUCITIOHIED.Re Nos. gig and 2341fARRET street. corner Of Bast` LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF BRITHDI6O3.I/RENLH., GERMAN AND DOMESTIC DRY DS. We will bold a Large Sale of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, by catalogue. on tout loscatths' credit and part for cash: • ON THORR DAY MORNING. November '"'", at o'clock, enthracing abOnt la 0 paw, ages and lots of staple and fanny artinicw woolens. worsteds, linens. CU. and cotton', to which we Invite the attention of dealers. R. it,...-osgatogues ready and goods arranged fo, ea . :ruination early on the morning of awe LARGE PERIMIPTORY SALE OF EUROPEAN AND DOMESTIC) DRY GOODS. NOTlCE—lncluded in our sale of THURSDAY, November 22, will„be found the itsllowing— DOIMSTIOS. Bales bleached and brown =slim and drills. do white and scarlet all wool and dothet flat:meta, do all wool white, blue and gray blankets. Cases Canton, Shaker and fancy eh...rib:6 flannels. do 'Manchester and domestic gingbams and plaids. do Rob BOSE, alienist/3, corset tea- a, cambric!. do indigo blue tickings, checks strities denims. Co wigans, miners' checks, jaconets, prints and de /do eatlntte, cloakings. tweeds, linseys, kerseys. MERCHANT TAILORS' GOODS. Pieces French and English black and blue Cloths. do Velours, Ratines. Chin l t Astrakhans. do French 'I ricota, Paletots, .uoeskins, Broad Cloth. do Bsoulmanx, Castor and Moscow Beavers, Pilots. do Fancy Cassimeres and Coatings, Elyalans do bik and tx,l'42 Italians. satin de Chlnes,Nestings. LINENS. WHITE GOODS. &c. Full lino Irish Shirting Linens, Barnsley Sheeting,. Fall lines bleached and brown Damasks, Table Cloths, &c. - • Full Uses Huck Tovrels.Ettesla DatterCanvaol4. Full lines Combrks.. Jaconeta. Shirt Fronts, Nabs- Books. DREW GOODS. SILKS, &c. Pieces Paris Plain and Printed Merinos and Delaines. do silk chain Epin glin es, Poplins, .21tmrpress do bik and cord Alpacas, Conargs.Mohairs, Reps. doplain and twilled Persians, all.wool Plaids. do Taffetaa, Pooh de Soles Gros du Basins, *a Also, Hosiery and Gloves. traveling and under shirts and drawers. sewing silks, patent thread, silk ties and warts. =lnaba de. LARGE POSITIVII! aux Oa asiaammiss.ito. ON FIUMAY ..MORNENG. Nov. 23, at U o'clock, will be sold, by nnalo= r l4 Mar months' credit, about 203 Metes of and line ingrain, royal damask, Wenetbri. 13n, Datc Macy. coneys and rag mxpintoss, embracing a choice assortment of superior goods. which may be examined early on the morning or sale. LARGE PEREMPToRY SALE OP MEM; AND OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS. dso. ON MONDAY MORNING. NOV. Zs. At 10 o'clo will be sold, by catalogue. ON POUF moNTBR , about 7001ota °Mena. intliaGer man and British Dry Goods, embracinga fall assort ment at fancy and staple articles in flits, =Mails woolens. linens and cottons. N. 8.--Goods arranged for examination and cats tones ready early on morning Of sale. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OH 800115. SHOES, BROGANS. TRAPP:UM; Rams. gm ON TUESDAY MORNING. NOV. J. At 10 o'clock, will be sold, by catalogue. on lOU months' credit, about I=o packages Boon, Shoes, Bak. morals, embracing kprime and fs3uk sk§mgtraegt of finstolass City and. stem manurial-gum Open for exasainatiau with catalogues early on the =ming of sale. THOMAS SSIO OM BIRCH & SON Aucrnoxsz 41.al aa CMN No. 1110 CIENSTNHT sh•eet. (BM entrance 1107 Sanaa= street.) HOUSEHOLD FURNITHEE OF EVERY DI SaftIPMON RECErvED ON CONSIGNMENT. SALES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Sales of Furniture at Dwellln= attended to on moat Reasonable Terms. SALE OF REAL ESTATE, STOCKS, &0.. AT_TMI XCCEIANGE. THOMAS MEM E& SON respectfully Inform thsh friends and the public that they are prepared to attan. to the saleof Beta Estate by auction and atorivats Rah STOCK OP AN APOTHECARY STORE, On THDRS auction store will be Rol'', the Steck of a Retail Drug Store. consisting of Dams, Show Bottles, Patent Medici. es. Paints, Stationery-etc. Sale at No. 1110 Chestnut street. NEW AND SECONDHAND HOUSEHOLD YUBA?. TURE, PI—NO FORTES, CARPETS, ALLEIROB.S, Ra.t.ra ttr) TABLES, &c ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 9 o'clock, at the auction store. No. 1110 Chestnril street, will be sold— A large assortment of auperiorWalnut Parlor, Cham ber ano Dining room Furniture, Piano Fortes. Brits. Bele and Ingrain Carpets Spring and Hair Matresam, Mantel and Pier. Mirrors, China and Glassware, Stoves, Kitchen Furniture &c, BILLIARD TABLE Al.°, 2 superior Billiard Tables, with marble beds, Pnelan cushions, ' WINES AND LIQUORS Also will be sold some anterior Sherry Wine. Port Wine, Brandy and Whisky, in demijohns, from a pri vete atre.k. A ROLL AND. AUCTION - BIM, 1208 MARKET street gales of Purniturr. at the Auction Store /WERT WEDNESDAY, at 9 o'clock. Particulat attention given to sales at Private Bad T.Lt.s. NEW CENTRAL AUCTION ROUSE, Capacity—Four floors. each 7s by ?A feet. Location—ln the very Centre of the City, and adjoin. ing the Farmers' Market. Advantages—Has been a first-class Secondhond Fur. niture Stand for over thirty years. Storage—Superior accommodation for Storage of Furniture. Inducements—Very liberal terms offered to persons having Furniture and Merchandise for sale. References—Over one hundred of the most prom! neat citizens of Philadelphia. Sale at 1203 Market Street. FIFTY CHESTS FINE TEAS. TirN B &GS OF COFFEE. SUGARS.SYRUP. FINE OLD WHIS BY, BRANDY, WINES, 50 130.310 S WINDJW GLASS 2000 FOUNDS WRITE LEAD AND ZINC, ,fte. WM be sold on THURSDAY, At 10 o'clock, the Stock of a Wholesale Grocer de• dining business. Sale positive. Catalogues for distri bution on Wednesday. See North American and Gazette. S. E. corner of SIXTH and RAGE streets. Money advanced on Merobandtee general', Watches, Jewelry Diamonds, Gold and Sliver Plats and on all article', of value, for any length of thw ' ATOILEB AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SATAN Fine Gold Ranting Case, Double Bottom and. °pas Pace English, American and Swiss Patent Levin Watches' Fine Gold Bunting- Case and Open Pace Lc pine Weicis z yh t se Geld Dnplea and Other Watcher Pine Silver Ung Case and Open race English American and Balsa Patent Lever and irEVlU Watches; 'Double Case English gnarlier end other Watches;, penny Watches: M9lond Brent pins; Pincer Rings; Earßingo, Brads, CM; Pine GEII4 Chsfnd; Medallions ; Braceleia; Scarf Pins; Breast Pins; Binger Bingo; Pencil Cmes, and Jewally tem 1. &1{ BiLlik;46. large ipsti splendid Pireproof Chip SI suitable for &Jeweler, Price gase. - • Also, several Leta in South CaMthiniFilth ans Chestnut street" PUF2 FORD & ACTITIONICSIRS, No. 608 AEAB.FILT waves. SALE OF 1908 1 OASES BOOTS AND SHOES, ON TELDBSDAT ROWING; NOV. '4, commencing at 10 ,o'cloct, preCbeiY, win be 80u by. catslostui, - 1900 cases prime Boots, Shoes, Bronans, Balmoral!), Congress' Gaiters. Bata) Overshoes, dteg, from first class city and Easternmannactarers. By _ _ &&BErgl . & &Oak& .121. IMO 'Mark& street, corner Mt& Cub 1 01 , 100811 on COnOnnneuftwithontanis Chang I:IMIMITAIUU‘' CABIM.GEN. 3E,JLJEG A.NT` FAMILY CARRIAGES BECKHAUS & ALLGAIER Desire reap ectfally to call the attention cif the Public to their extenalve znanniactory of FIRST-CLASS VEHICLES SUCH 69 'Landato, Round Front, Coupes. Cale ohms, Barottohee, Phaetons, 01 the l a testae improved European dealgroi, speCially adapted for private ftunily use, of which they have a fine assortment constantly finished, on hand and in process cif construction. The residents of Philadelphia and vicinityare in formed that they can beaccommodated with of modern styles superior workmanship and superb finish at home, without reference to ./gew,York or the FACTORY AND wARBRooxo, 1204 FRANKFORD AVENUE, olVeginf Above Girard Avenue. FOR SALF4 - 1& Wee assortment of new and aecond-and Carriages. top and no top Lige ea, and Oarmantowne,and Wagons. 0170 1 .M B DD &SONS, No. 480 8.A.10E 13 = Noe. 231 and 233 CROWN street. ocu-am tieV.ILIVIDINI IS/UfAllar. 114:41630i7A0E,10,04w:.zywAvsertzwza:4t.,A AARBBLIMI 00.. AIICITAHOUrao f : EQ. lsos _Bro4agET MIA Nho4Bnt72 • REAL ESTATE' SALE NOV. 27. rphans' Court Sale--Estate S TON E. Skirving, dec'd fifEAT and SUBSTANTIAL RESIDENCE,. Stenton avenue. near Fishes's lane, GERMANTOWN. about two minutes' walk from the railroad station. The house is built in Italian style. contains 11 rooms, and has all the modern conveniences. also 'a Stable. and Coach House, fruit and ornamental trees, dkc. Orphans' Court Sale-s state of Thos,M. Zell, Geed- GROUND RENT. Ito a year. Same Estate -GROUND RENT 208 A year. Same Fatate-GROUND RENT 288 70 a year. Same Estate- LOT OF oROUNL, Lancaster Tarn. e. S F. of Haverford road. • VALUABLE FARE' AND COUNTRY SEAT, over .78 A CRE , , Willistovvn Township, Chester comitY, near the Paoli elation on the Pennsylvania Railroad-. Stone House, Frame Barn, and other out buildlegs. VALUABLE FARM.I.O ACRES. Tredyffren To sm. slap,- Chester county. PA. 1Y miles from the Paoli Sta tion-Stone Daellivg Carriage Hordie, Spring House and oilier out braidings. VALUABLE FARM, 108 ACRES,. adjoining the above-Large Stone Home, Stone Barn. Wagon and Spring House &a Terms of each farm hall cash. • - Orphans' Court Sale-Estate of Miriam Cridland,' dec'd-LARGE and VALUABLE PROPERTY. 802116 Broad st., Lehigh avenue, 18th. llth and lab, Ede. 21st Ward, viz -Valuable Lot. 637 acres.. fronting. on Lehigh avenue. Township Line road, 12th and 13th eta, The improvements area large Stone - On. containing LS rooms: Same Bkuate--VA-LUABLE LOT. 4 37 100 Acres. fronting 0.1 Broad street. Lehigh. avenue, Thirteenth street and Germantown and Norristown Railroad. The improvements are a Stone Dwelling, containing rooms and Frame Stable. tame Estate-YALU 4 tax' LOT, 39 perches, front. frig on Broad street. Lehigh avenue and Germantown and Norristown Railroad. Same Eatate-LARGE and VALUABLE LOT, acres 143 27.160 Perches, with eitensive fronts on . Broad street, Fifteenth street, Sixteenth street. Hun ting:ion street Lehigh avenue and Germantown and Norrittown nailroad. fair The above is well worthy the attention of cald taints and others. See Lithographic, Plana at the Auction Rooms. THREESTORY BRICE DWELLING. No 1632 Filbert street, with a two-story Brine Dwelling in the rear on Jones street. micswEE.sir -TOBY BRICK STORE and DWELLING. No. 4r3 Richmond at , N. E of Hanover. Trustees' Peremptory Sale-Estate of Albert Coin% dec'd- Bran/Inm STAtrp-TWO.STORY FRAME TAVERN and DWELL ING,I ACRE, e. W. corner of Buck lane and West Passynnk read, Ist Ward.. sale by order otHeirs-E hn Lowery. dec. -TWO STORY FRAME WELL I NG,D No. 1249 Mont somerV avenue, south of Thompson at , with a Three- Story Frame Dwelling in the rear. Same Estate-2 FRAMEDWELLINGS, Nos. 940 and 942 Beach st. Peremptory Sale-TIEREETORY.BItICEK DWELe I .LO.O, bio. 1439 Germantown road smith of Jefferson at-2 fronts. Busnexas Locayies-23:i STORY BRICK /MEL. - LING. N. E. corner of Third and Lombard am tale Om order of Heirs-Estate of Judge Longstreth. dec'd -4,II.I:TALBLE COUNTRY SE aT, Cnesturd Bill and. Snringhouse Turnpike, Whitemarsh Town so 1 p. Montgomery county. Pa. Sale by order of Heirs-Estate of Gnerget Remtde,- dee d-2 THREE STORY BRICE ZWVT.LINGS, ins and 211 Wood at 2 THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLINGS. Nos. 616 and 618 Mon' nom err avenue. 2 THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Noe. and and 310 New at , between Third and Holum and Raw and Vine sta. VERY LARGE LOT, WHARF and DOCK. CBE-I'r ua STREET. Schuylkill river and 24th st -116 feet front, 344 feet deep. See plan. Peremptory. Sale-nULI,DING LOT. Lombard at., between glatand22,l eta Sale alseinte. MODERN FOUB.-STORY BRICK EItSIDENUM o. 7 bummer at , west of 16tH at.-in exceneus re pair and has all the ixtoderncanvenienem. Possession ulv 1.1667. 2 THREE STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Maxus at., south of Lancaster avenue, adjoining use marine yard Lot 40 feet Lunt 100 feet deep THREE-15TORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 441 N. Thirteenth at,, south ot.l3nttnnwOod et C:earance Coaches Dog Carte, &0., Sale Noe, IIN Audi:4lE4mM Foterth ELF GANT Rile.b.WOOD DR&WINfe , ROuIt FUR NITERS. HAELSONE WALNUT AND OAK PARLOR AND DENIM; Row& EIjEtraTURE. CHAMBER FURNITmts. FINE MANTEL AND , PEER EIRROBJe. PIANO FORTES, FINE STEEL, CARPELINE ENGRA D& VINGS, HANDSOME PE.rxmr des ON THUBHDAY MORNING, At 9 o'clock, at the auction stem by the elegant Furniture including salt elegant Rosew onQ Drawing Room Furniture, covered rich brocatelle suit Drawing-room Furniture, covered fine reps handsome Oak Dinhagroom Furniture, large Sideboard. sunering Parlor and Chamber Furniture. line Mantel and Pier irrons. Plano Fortes. fine !steel Line lOrglvings: handsome Velvet and lirmeels Carpets. &a. being the entire Furniture of three dwellings—removed td the store for convenience of sale.' FINE STEEL ENGRAVINGS. Also, SS fine Steel Line Engravings, very old and rare, many of them proof imnresaions. ORIGINAL AUTOGRAPH. Also, Original Autograph of Napoleon L Also, a very fine toned Violoncello. with case. VALUABLE 3.IIBCIrLLANEOITS BOOKS FROM LYBRARIES. On THURSDAY AFTERNOON Nov. 22: at the auction score, vain ante ait‘cellansona Books from Libraries. Also, 34 fine Magic Lantern !Slides. WRAPPING PAPER. ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON. At 5 o'clock., 30 Reams Wrapping Paper, SO by 40-450 pounds, TO RENT—Several Orlce; Harmony court. DAY/8 & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS. (Late with M. Thorium & Saus.) Store No. = Walnut street. • Sale No. 45 South Third Street, At the Office of Matthew T. Miller. EsqQ. VERY STIPERP OFFICIE FritiVITURE COUNTER, EVANS & ILSDAY. TRIT W ATSON SAFE, &c. At 1234 o'clock. P. U.. st No. 45 Smith Third street the very superior °dice furniture, made—to order by Eammett,comprisinglargecounter,officetables,coant ir g house deik. &side c.unters fitted up with racks and drawers, large chilled iron fire and thief proof safe by Evans 4 Watson, letter press, iron railing. office chairs, &c. May be examined any time previ ous to Bate. S A T.R OF VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS 3300103. uN THURSDAY and FRIDAY RVININGS ad and ad Mats., at 7 o'clock, collection ation rooms. No. 421 Walnut st., a valuable of English and American Miscellaneous Books a portionfrom private library. includmg fine editions of choice au thors Illustrated works in fine bindings. Among which may be found the following—Jardine's Neut ralista' library, 40 vola with 1200 colored plates, half Rues'a; Dusc.kencles Cyclopedia; Bobbe's (komplett, works, 16 vole; .Gwilt's Rudiments of Ambito ture; Baron Munchaosen, illustrated by Dore; Book British Ballads: Prrin's Gothic Architecture, vole' Cassell's Bible Dim loners; Gems European .Pictoriat Galleries; (Marie's Emblems, inll cal , * Knight's History of Eng land, 8 vole; National Portrait Gallery Eminent Ame ricana, t vole, quarto, cloth; Bell's British Theatre. 30t v le. Gaelic Gatherings. folio; Royal Victoria Gallery , . a series of 33 beautiful. Engravings. folio; Pyramids of Gesezeb, folio; Bell's Anatomy of Expresiion in Paint lea: txtustable's Graphic Works, folio; Goodric.he's Illustrated Natural History of the Animal 'Ringdom; lenrel Angelo's Works. quarto: Beverly's Coucholo g cal Mensal. Also, a large number of the Catholic p..r.liCat lons of James Duffy, London. 1:M. Now open for examination with catalogues, FURNITIME SALEM st the Store everrroesdor BALM AT RESIDEINCEM will - soave partlouLitc attention. BY B. SIXYTT, AUCTIONEEIa mmur No. MO street. GREAT AUCTION SALE OF PICTURES OIL PAINTINGS, PASTELS AND CRYSTAL MEDALLIONS, Belonging to the Alum/can Art Gallery, N. y,, to,be sold at Scott's Art Gallery . , 3010 Chestnut street, On the evenings of WEDNESDAY. THURSDAY and FRIDAY. Nov. 21. '4 and 23, At M o'clock each evening. CARD.—We are now prepared to MakearrangemenS /or special sales of Oil Paintings er any other works of art. Our location being in the centre of the most fash ionable thoroughfare of our city makes it a desirable resort for connoisseurs and lovers ol art in general. N. B.—Sales of merchandise In general solicited. Personal attention given to out-door sales. 1. B. SCOTT. In. JAA9D73 3fIitfRICLP.ALMAIMS, SREET'S OFFICE. Pa - rranmeina, Nov. 17th,1868.5 . NOTICE IS HElthltY GIVEN, in accordance with the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Penn tOlvania. passed 11th day of March, A. D. 1846; entitled An Act relative to Registered Taxes and lilanielpal Claims in the County of Philadelphia," that the follow ing writs or Scire moles sur claim have been placed in my bands foe-service..to _ City of Philadelphia ye. Osborn Conrad, owner. dee.. C. P, >6 s o, , robe , ..term, MS No. 29; for the sum of seventy.nine dollars for work and labor done and per— formed. and mt.terlahr furnished. in paving the cart. way. on Seyhert street, in front of the' lot of gmund sihiste oil the north aide of Seybert "street, at the dis tance of two hundred and twenty feet westward front the west side of Nine. eeuth street, in the Twentieth Ward of the city Of. Philadelphia, Containing Int:mat or breadth on the said Seybert street forty feet, ettd attending in length or depth'northward of that width at right angles to the said Seybert street onthe eastern brie thereof seventy•orie ibeithree and three quarters Inches and ,on the western line thereof thirty-seven feet eight and three•eghtlis inches.' - • DP AirdirsrEss. - 71- mars' OlirritraMtNr - rTILLT .4-. , ar.ehee And have irromated to NEW the best eVery degree of Deatneak can be had at the Ear Imminent - pepot 01. PaLdNELP.A.. No. 1.15 Teeth street, below Ohtetnet.. oat Uckl_ ocicirr BOORS AND CARD 0.&13/0-131 XngIiSR.RrSUCR and Russian Leat.ber. MAWR dr. CO. ObestauS iltraot. , m017•/OL AUCTION SALEM. MMMUS * BMW Autiriozw. . tNa1.1.119 Bontiv2TOUBTH strentj A_ BALES Or STOIXIIS AND Reff'Alit t the , every TEWDAY. at no'clock wen.- Sir Handb 'of each oroputy loaned reparately. and on the Betoreay previent to each gale ine-oater. Imes im am igge; term, givhispli aernritalinua - er, an:TAT AT PRWATIt th. pri do o nted Walesa_ ,es udingcornprlainn several. hundred uramt llen; Incl e deacri etien 01 der mid country Property', the lonallest dwell" , ark to the most elegant =undo • elegant: country ;seat% farms inain NO - POEM at gli 8152 4a 3rUR SAIM Mis VI Anal - Stare BPERY THIII3B.DAY. j Panda:War attention riven to Man al Priests same Ake AUOTIONICEER, No. 422 WALNUT street. ICA 11.0k11(1) 041PW0 - 91.1 Itvr(;/1 HENRY C. HOWELL, Ether=
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