BASH STEPS. Shortly before I left Brittany, there was a wedding, to which all the world were in cited. The tailor married the washing-girl. “An affair in high life, upon honor,” said the English young man. “I ought to get out my Bustah.” The Buster is the silk hat. The peasantry are quite distinct from the -working classes, to which our hero and heroine belonged. The farmers are not in the habit of intermarrying with artisans, *nd the line of division is kept visible by a marked specialty of dress.' If a peasant ■cuts his-hair, he is regarded with scorn, as aping the manners of those patricians who follow a trade. The tailor, however, is often in Brittany a man apart. He is the gossip, the gazette of the village. The farmer-girl,going home at twilight from the field, stops, be she never so tired,for amomentatthe tailor’s window to hear of the last engagement or the last scandal. He is perhaps at work on her •embroidered petticoat or her nnder ■clothing, and be gladly pauses when she in terrupts his light, and tells how Yves hired =at the Liilie, and who are the maidens ■chosen to follow the virgin in white dresses at the coming pardon. The , feminine na-, ture, appreciating gossip, adores the tailor but seldom in the way of matrimony. In his professional visits to the farm-houses he ■eats with the women,after the men are done It‘ is not quite the thing to marry a tailor. But, at last, after negotiating many a match for others, he contrives to effect bi s •own. Then look out for splendor. You may be sure that what the wedding lacks in •dignity, will be made up in magnificence. We had been provided with the prettiest ■girls of the Pon’-Am’n—and the girls of Pon’-Am’n are celebrated through the coun try-side for their elegance and coquetry. I had the landlord’s daughter herself—a .young creature, with a smile, a brace of ■dimples, and a well-modeled head, with nothing in it. This light- charge floated into ■church with me at the level of my shoulder. To imagine the scene presented by the interior you must people it with the illumi nations of old missals. The company were -all kneeling upon praying-chairs marked with a curious tale of old Breton surnames,- and the artißanne coiffes, in parallel ranges, were brought into perpendicular as the •comely faces bent in prayer. This head dress, taller than a bishop’s mitre, is a double' -scroll of fine, embroidered lace, standing back from the forehead at an obtuse angle. Below this the artisanne wears, if she has ■the luck, some gorgeous cachemir shawl bequeathed from remote ages: her head is wrapped in superb colors which glimmer through the lace: her ears are hung with pendants, and she is apt to be dressed in -solid old silk or satin. A church peopled with such figures resembles one. of those -scenes of the middle ages with which the ■Flemish subjects of Baron Leys and his -school have made ub familiar. I fancied the very flowers upon the altar conserved a perfume of antiquity; and the censersswong out the odor of primeval amber. When the priest, by uniting the couple, had diminished our party by one, we filed •out in a very splendid procession. The bride wore the marriage ring of Brittany, a piece of heavy silver sculpture rudely repre senting a heart held between two hands. At the church door and afterwards, a num ber of things began to happen to me for the first time in my life. The old beggars on the steps said for me, in exchange for currency, a great many more prayers than were ever prayed for me ■at once before. I never before walked with a prettier girl behind a pair of boluses moaning re spectively from a wooden trumpet and a ■beniou (bagpipe). I swelled with the thought that I had never before been part of a pageant which had emptied literally every house in a town to furnish spectators or participants. I never paw barriers before. The barriers were ricketty old chairs ae : ■out by ricketty old women in great profu sion: the seats were covered with napkins and bore little cakeß and bonbons. Each ■chair was a tollgate, at which you laid down the price of a sweetmeat, though it would not have been etiquette to take away your purchase. The barriers were arranged at •every few steps along the route to our breakfast-hall, some quarter of a mile. I have seldom been poorer in small coin than I was upon escaping into this shelter. The ast barrier was that of the cook,at the house door, and here, being expected to lay down a ransom considerably .more valuable than the preceding, I reached a state of embar rassment approaching bankruptcy. Well, we followed this cruel route with the best grace possible, our tall caps nodding, our cachemirs sweeping, and the music gal lantly howling before. Then we entered the house—an unoccupied one hired for and ■devoted to this occasion—and concentrated ourselves with the utmost density at the ta bles. Four rooms were occupied with two long tables each. The guests to be fed with good cider and good meats during two entire days were not much fewer than three hundred. Six and eight hundred invitations are not uncommon among the richerfarmers- We wedged ourselves along the benches The little brown bride, pressed with her partner into a comer, broke up the contours of her coiffe against the wall behind, which was far too close to accommodate that style of costume. I did not feel quite secure, but I knew that I should see in the eyes of the second groomsman, a carpenter, the exact moment before the flimsy tables would come down. Similarly, I looked to the first groomsman, the butcher of Pon’-Am’n, for intelligence t f what meat was reliable. He partook of everything, and a great deal of it, with a heavy surplus appetite for more, until all the dishes were polished, and I am obliged to him for an indigestion, which is also one of the unexampled experiences of my pilgrimage. We then danced; we danced for two days, with intervals of gorging. A good sized shed, erected on the place for merchants during the monthly fairs, Was our first ball room; bnt we overflowed from that in a moment, and took to dancing in the place, along the roads, and wherever our light feet could listen to the pipers. We danced until the moon shone out, we danced till curfew; and after that we obtained permission at the Gendarmerie, and danced until the wild, dissipated and debauched hour of ten. The sober village became a Capua Terpsichore laughed' upon us from the clouds. The landlord’s daughter agitated IHK QAILVSTBNIMg BPM.EXIN : PHILADELPHIA. MONIMT 1 KCKMBBB 24.1886.—TKm.8 SBVBT ■her pretty head until! could have heard it rattle, if my theory of its vacuum had not been correct. The drunken and reokless fishermen of the coast—the only Bretons who ever stipulate for the; privileges of the latch-key— straying into, bur haidst from the dead silence of the surrounding country, stared on ns from under their ulramarine bonnets as we hopped with joined hands in an endless ribbon along the night road, while the older men who did not dance poured upon us from the lighted windows those prolonged Celtic' refrains which recite the gallantries of the troubadours or the Round Table. Enfant Pebdu. Whither then, leaving tljis Enchanted Ground, leaving this Brittany which time has forgotten, whither can I climb for on® last,sweeping, comprehensive view? I would like to comprehend Brittany. I would like to Bee and feel its thick twilight, its ballad; romance; I would like to overlook the waves which whisper to its shores the legends of the Table Round; I would like to be where I can feel the latest influences of the Roman Church, which, dying to-day at the centre, is still vital at the extremities, and waves over lands like Brittany a dreamy umbrage , ”T a Henyan depth of shelter and of power. For this last look let me climb once the huge donjon of Rnatephan," The best place I know of in any country .to read the Castle of Indolence in of a Sun day, is the ruin of Rustephan, a mile from Pon’-Am’n. Haughty and gray among the Breton huts, dreaming of feudalism still in its purposeless old age, masked by an oak forest from the common road, it is" a huge reliquary of obsolete ideas. As I approach it scarcely defines its mossy lines against the gray evening sky—it is a castle in the air, it is an idea, it is one great pillow of reverie. The roofs have all fallen in, and the sashes ha ve all fallen out. From the middle of the principal facade one great window stands against heaven, with the chamber it used to illuminate, all gone, and the Gothic apes clinging to the corners as if they were, frightened and would like to be unchained from their long imprisonment. The owl, whose laughter I have heard all through the oak-wood,suddenlystops as lapproach. I enter the great tower by the principal portal, from which the door has rotted out The delicate industry of Breton Gothic makes the granite break into leaves and branches over my head. Other sculp tured foliage bestrews the whole ground about my feet, among the crisp oak leaves of November. The granite boughs have found their own autumn, and lay their solid leafage down among the tributes of the oaks. The very soul of loheliness inhabits the ruin. I clamber up the broad crumbling stairway. Some of the coping, fallen formerlv from the extreme summit, has crushed its way through the solid steps entirely to the ground. Thus my ascent is not without its little adventures. Over my head, as I start up the spiral, hangs a fragment of half a ton, the greater part of a huge old step,quite broken out, and apparently restrained from falling by nothing but the cement of a little earth. In various other parts of my course the staircase is quite lost, and I clamber up the central pil lar as up a tree, taking advantage of the knots left by what I may liken to its lopped off boughs. And presently, at the second story, all possibility of ascent by this means is lost. Yet the tower walls are higher still above me, and I mean to reach the summit. What then? A minor tower, one of the lesser features of the architecture, runs up side by side with the principal one. In a certain place two windows in the two shafts occur side by side. I step across from case ment to casement, hanging for one giddy moment quite outside the edifice, far over the brown autumn ground. Then, running up the little twisted ladder of stone, I find myself at the top, and once more in comma nication with the interrupted staircase. I breathe the wild wet air, I look aoross the woods and fields, and in one place, where the horizon is sharply cut by a sap phire wedge I see the mouth of the river, acd, beyond, the ocean. My castle has been oontended'for by dif ferent theorists. One antiquary gives it in 1250, to Blanche of Castile, mother of Saint At any rate, in 1426, it was the home of Jean du Favre, grand cupbearer of France. His beautiful daughter, Genovefa, used to live there, always in a green silk dress. When the little Jannik Fletcher tended his sheep along the hills, he never dreamed that he should be a priest. But one day his -•poor mother said, “ Jannik, leave those brutes, and go up to the castle. My Lady intends thee for a kloarek (acolyte). Ton are going to school at Quinper, to learn to be a priest; so, bid adieu to the young girls.” Genovefa shone among all the maidens of France as the moon among the stars. .Tan, nik passed hef, embroidering lace in her doorway. “Do not go, Jannik.” “I must.” Afterwards he returned a grand and holy man, “Hail, Lord of Rustephan. Hall all here, great and small, lam come to pray your attendance at my first mass,” The priest said mass at the parish church. The tears streamed over his book. For Ge novefa had thrown herself at his feet. “In the name of God, Jann, stop. Ton are' the cause, the cause of my death,” Messire Jann Fletcher became rector of the parish of Nizon. They used to see him in tears over the great tomb of Genovefa. After the Chateau became a ruin, it was a custom with the peasantry to repair thither for songs and dancing. But once they staid till midnight, and behold! in the open Bqnare that marked the place of the princi pal hall, a bier, and a fair young form on the bier, with four great white candles at the corners, such as they bum for nobl® maids, and a young girl far above, walk ing the ruined eaves in the moonlight, in green satin, flowered with gold, singing by snatches, but sighing oftener. And after wards some one saw, looking out from the topmost window, the bald head of a priest, with piercing eyes. So they stopped danc ing. As I myself was looking out from the same casement, over the sea to the south, I saw Ben Adhem approaching. His color box was in his hand, and over his shoulder he carried his proper bundle of fasces, the umbrella, folding easel, ~ Enfant du. the Fblla. Sventog Bulletin.] i A liIXIIK JPBOK TIKGISU. ; Pbtebsbueg, Dec. 21st, 1866.—N0t long 'since, Virginians wererea’dy to be loyal— •from the simple reason that they feared to ibe anything else. , Directly after.the evaoua- I ition, (the polite term used here for the great skedaddle,) a General who' was once high in authority in the. Confederacy, said he would be satisfied if he only knew what the 'Yankees were going to , dp with him—con fiscate all his-property, hangj" him or do I both. That he would be let alone and even tually pardoned, suffering neither loss of liberty nor property, did not occur to him i for an instant. Apd I might say the same I ofall who took an active part in the rebel -1 lion. They felt themselves guilty and be- : iieved they would have to suffer for their treason. But . Andrew Johnson ar rayed himself against Congress and the loyal North, and at once the rebels hailed him as a new leader, and they grew bold, .as of old, and determined to oppose earnestly any political action taken by the Radicals (as they call all but Copperheads) contemplating their restoration to the Union. And now, after a long residence among these-people, lam fully satisfied that so long as they are encouraged by a sympathi zing President, and retain hopes of Copper head successes in the North, no legislation on their part conforming their State ConsH tions to the demands of sensitive and en lightened Republicans, need be looked for. and it is suicidal for Congress and the loyal North to hope and wait for any such action If the tremendous sacrifices made by the loyal people of the United States to quell and pnman the insurrection, are worth any thing at all, it seems to me tfieir represen tatives in Congress have thefull,undoubtfu right to make laws guaranteeing to the rebel States republican forms of govern ment, and of demanding suoh safeguards as shall prevent a people so strongly preju diced in favor of the past, from ever at tempting to re-enact the terrible dramas of the last five years. Diving South one misses the grand old flag—more than anything else. Occasion ally a small revenue ensign floats above the Cußtom House; but it is only a tew days,since my attention being drawn in ihat direction, I discovered the union down. Whether this was done to please the people or merely accidental, I cannot tell. When permitted to organize military companies I suppose they will carry nothing but State flags, unless obliged by law to unfarl the "red, white and blue.” The only occasion upon which the country’s colors were car ried through the streets, save by United States troops, was in a parade made by the negroes in honor of emancipation. Next week comes Christmas, it is cele brated here by fireworks and torpedoes in a style quite on a par with your anniversary oi Independence Day. The nation’s birth day here resembles a day of fasting and prayer. The town wili be flooded with ne groes until after New Year’s Day. Thev continue to take the whole of Christmas week, making engagements and contracts tor the coming year on New Year’s Day. Many have already arrived in town, and i-oine have considerable money and the mer chants cater for their custom in a manner that—looking ahead—methinks I see cer tain politicians imitating. The northern capitalist wishing to make investments either in manufacturing or agricultural districts of the South, will hardly find a better point then this. Land .can be purchased at a very low figure—and in the production of tobacco, cotton, corn and wheat, it promises heavy returns. Labor is cheap and good (when properly paid). The Appomattox River provides a water power for mill purposes, that is only equaled by that of the James River at Richmond, where property is held at a much higher figure. A number of cotton and tobacco factories are now running and from the facilities for obtaining the raw material and the cheapness of labor, I hope in another year to see many more in suc cessful operation. (Please, Congress, don’t forget the tariff.) As a citizen of the North, with two years’ experience in the South, and wishing to continue to make it my home, I hope and pray that yonr people and Congress will not recede one inoh until the Union is restored with guarantees of iostice and the rights of citizenship to all, regard less of race and color. It is the only security against Copperhead rule and reoccurrence oi mob violence, that once drove all liberal men from the country and which seals the lips of thousands to-day. Justice. AMUSEMENTS. The Chestnut.— Mr. and,. Mrs. Barney Williams commence an engagement thin evening, appearing in “The! Fairy Circle” and “The Custom of the Country.” The afterpiece will be “The Miller of Whet stone.” To-morrow afternoon “Griffith Gaunt” will be given for the first time at a matinee, with Miss Josle Orton as Kate Peyton. Academy of, Music.— There are to be grand Christmas doings at the Academy commencing to-morrow. A grand Danto mime of “The Arabian Nights 5 ’ is the chief attraction, with the addition of Father Kemp’s Old Folks. Performance every evening of the week, and matinees on Tues day, Wednesday and Saturday afternoons. The Walnut.— “ Paul Pry” and “The Naiad Queen,” with Mr. Clarke in both pieces. To-morrow at the matinee “The Naiad Queen” will be given. The Akch.— Mrs. John Drew re-appears this evening in Daly’s version of “Griffith Gaunt.” The American.— For the Christmas holidays the fairy pantomime of “Little Bed Biding Hood” will be presented. To morrow “Little Red Riding Hood” will be given for a matinee. Signor Blitz appears at Assembly BuiWing this evening. He also gives three performances to-morrow. A New Defence.— a man named John Norton was examined before the London Magistrates, the other day, on a charge of picking pockets on Blackfriar’s bridge. The prisoner, in defence, said he was on the bridge looking at the works, with a vast number of persons, when he missed his handkerchief. He looked round to see if any one was near him of a suspicious char acter, and, not seeing anybody that he could nx upon, round the company ex amining the handkerchiefs in their pockets f £? ee *£ had sot his. (Loud laughter.] When he came to the prosecutor his hand kerchief was very similar to the onehe (the prisoner) had lost, and he took it to see whether it was his or not. [Renewed laugh ter.] He had no intention of stealing it; he only took it to examine it, as it was so like his. [Laughter,] He was sent for trial. _ The J 1 ™™ 0 States Supreme Court.— Chief Justice Chase gave his deoision on Saturday in the caseof Josiah Bacon against ' fFV 8 ’ ®°d Henry Goodyear against O. A. Daly. In these cases the com plainants, the former being the owner of the Cummings patent, and the latter of the Goodyear patent, ask for an injunction re straining the defendants from using vul caffized rubber for Making arHfiolal gums . uod plates for teethe He denied the injuno tion in the first case and granted'atempo- Tary injunction in the seoond case, subjeot to removal at any time when the parties .shall give reasonable security for tlm pay ment to the complainant for suoh use as they may make of it. COMMEBCIAX* BALKB OF STOCKS. 5 9*o° SS, 6 ! new Bk 56 N s ® ll ' do ' d bill 52 66 J.lSshlehNv 55 ,44 ah do lisahMlnehlUß 58* FBIOEa, OF STOCKS IN NEW TORE. Ulil XeUgrapK) American * l%sa}/bja“ !Stt3a£iSgfgH wa ISi tedbtateB bid < Dull, ) Wnaao* waa Business—Dee. 84, im ■ Stocks were dull to-day, but without much fluctua tion in prices. Government Doans continue to sym pathise with thedownward tendency in Gold, but the 'offerings were Ilgot.' 110* was the beat bid for the Coupon Sizes, ’81; 107* for the “policy” Bonds: 105* fbr the Five-Twenties, ’62; 106 for the ’6la; 104* for the :>Bse; 105 for the Seven-Thirties, and 99* for the Ten aroiHes. State loans were inactive. There was some investment demanp for City loans, at 99*for the new. and 96 for the old issues. Five hundred shares Pennsylvania BaOroad sold at 56, and small lots at 56* -an advance of *, Beading Bailroad closed very quiet at 42@t2*. 129* was bid for Camden and Ameoy Bailroad; 65* for lehlgh Valley Bailroad; 31* for lltUe Schuylkill Bailroad; 37* for Worth Pennsyl vania Bailroad; 42 for Blmlra Bailroad Preferred, and 29 for the Common atock. Canal stocks were dull at Saturday’s figures. Bank shares ware held with re markable firmness. Commercial sold at 56. 139 was bid for First National; nafor the Sixth; 110 for the Seventh; 240 for North America; 150 for Philadelphia; 135 for 1 arm era’ and Mechanics’; 100 for Northern liberties; 95 for Kensington; 57 for Girard; 56 for Penn Township; 42 for Consolidation; 56 for Commonwealth and 62 for Union. Passenger Ballway aharea were not Inquired after. 14* was bld for Hes tony file. Brother, No. 40 Booth Third e^wtotay.anS'Shi l " o *** l9l " « . . Bnytn*, BelHor, American Gold ire silver-Quarters ana halYes___.lZ7 . Oompotmd Interest Notes: “ “ Jnne,lSM_. 18 “ JclyT 1861.. mi ' " An*. 1864 m IS “ OCU, 1884... 14 “ “ DSC., 1864 m 13 7, “ May. 1865... 11 " “ AD*., lB6Bm 10 “ “ Bept, lB66m SJJ t 1- - Oct. 1885 m BJS ,notB eo ' ?enm “ o ‘ Ac., c.a«'«,i£Bi •So*”*” B m B *' Old 5-20 Bonds— iSci/ New 8-550 Bonds, 1564..... jJs 6-80 Benda,lBBs, M Sun* 6-20. July, 1865. ZlZo-T* Eg* 7 S-10, Augnat. .......... ins • J01y........^.--........................ JC45' I^s QOld—St 12 ~T , 13JV timith, Banaolpn ee ° beard from. It la supposed she f™e if 'O. m—'I'UJS AHOH STREET TT 7 ■! . DUONG KOOMB f I B bnS een refltteELL t Fourth ind Aynij. psftVT«a?S .Aß Y*“ ?hatbotte,r OaRIBr ‘rHJSAS a share of this Stock, membership frio,. diM2trp| RELIGIOUS NOTICES. WEIK. OF PRAYER A meeting will be held on Th.Ux.sd ay Next, Dec, 2!7h, at 1 o’clock, p. M., In the trail of the YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, 1210 CHESTNUT STREET, To make arrangements for the week of Prayer, Clergymen ana laymen are Invited to be present. lt| I^§“»r B I:»S3SS? iLKI ‘ ,8 free church, geb- la this church To-mor row (Chrlaimaa). at 10J4 o’clock A. M. The Festival of the Snnday School on Priday altemson, at o clock. The seats In this church are all free. it* ITS* Sf. JUDE’S CHURoH, FBaNKLIN ST.. tKSr above Brown.—Service at 10X o’clock Christmas u A eermon adapted to the season will be preached by the Rev. J. K Karcber. Collection In aid ofdlgabled clergy fund. It* SPECIAL NOTICES 7 DIVIDEND NOTICE. OiEICE OP THE MAPLE SHADE OIL CDWPANY. 524 WALNUT street, FHtL&DSLrsn, December 22, 1656. ’ _7he Board of Directors have this day declared a Dividend of 1008 PER CENT, on the capital stock, p ?S? b !S^ n^ n1074 MUTOaL INS OR COMPANY— PHXLaDBLPSia, Decern oex SI, 1856 .The Annnal Meeting of the Stock and and Scrlo bclders of the Company will be held at the office. N corner THIRD ana WALNUFalreels, on mon- DAY. Ulh ol Janaaty, 1867. at which time an Election years^« lll beheld™' *° BerVe for tte 6msa “* three deM Jau} JOHN MOSS. Secretary. jy-'S* ENSUHA2*C3C COMPANY OF THSS STATE PENNSYLVANIA. PfULAJMXPKIA D? An Elecilon for Thirteen Directors of the Company will beheld at the Company s Office, Nos. 4 and s rr. CHANGE BUILDING, on MON DAYTjannary 14th 1867. between the hours of 10 o’clock, A. M., and l 0 SSSiv Sr 311 - William harper deMiJals} Secretary, ars» THE industrial home, comer of BROAD street and OOLUMBIAAvenu “isopS for the admission of GDIs from twelve to eighteen years ofage, who are neglected or deserted by thSr tATfnts.and who need Lne shelter and Instruction of a Christian home. If the public will sustain this Insti. £r ° m evU “ a Contributions may be sent to James T. Shinn Treasurer, Broad and Bprace streets. n023-rptf * beneficial associa. * enM of admission are as follows: Jute Membership lesno Ha trance fee . ou Application for admission to membership msTba made to any manaser, or to „ WILLIAM A. ROLLS. Sec’ry., del2-w.f,m jjaSOrpi 789 Market street. Vr S3* HORTICULTURAL HALL.—The Annnal Meeting of the Stockholders will be held at Hort llctual Hall, sooth treat corner of Broad and Walnut streets, on TUESDAY. Jan. 8. M 67, at ~a o’clock P.M.. fur the election of ten DlrectorMand the transacting of other business. A. W. HARRISON de2s-tn.tba 6t| Secretary. (TS* FOR LIGHT FANCY CAKE DOUGHNUTS •Mr, ajad PASTRY of all kinds, suitable for the New Year’s Table, use the PIONEER YEAST POWDER. For sale by grocers generally. del9wj.m.3trnj _ HC. KELLOQ3, 8. w. corner Water and Chestnut Streets. PhUatia. S;j> HOWARD nOsniAL. Nos. ms and 1520 YUimbard street, Dispensary Department, Modi treatment and medicines fhrnlshed gratnltoualr to the poor. AUCTION SALES. JAlula A. JjatEMAB. AUin iowicir.R * No. <22 WALNUT street. STOfTR R_ ON WEDNESDAY, DEO. 26,- At U o’clock noon, at the Exchange— -2 shares American Exploring Company ol PhUa. ICO shares Pioneer M thing Company of Colorado, 100 shares Central National Bank. SO sharesßecoad National Bank, (Franklbrd.) ' . Peremptory Bale. 1100 shares Walnut Island Oil Co. 100 shares McElhensy Oil Co. 200 shares Beveane oil Co. 100 shares Caldwell Oil 00. 500 shares Cow Creek and Stillwell Eon Oil CO. 400 shares Tlonesta Oil, Lumber and Mining rv> 200 shares Dalzell Petroleum Co. 650 shares Mccllntockvllle Petroleum Co. 200 shares Cherry Buu and Blood Barm on Co. 1600 shares Cherry Bun Oil Co. ICO shares Bevenue OU Co. Too shares Walnut Island OU Do. TOO shares Alcorn Oil Co. ■ 500 shares Cow Creek and SHllwen Bun Oil 00. 100 shares Honest* OU Lumber and Mining Co 100 shares Onion Petroleum Ca. a 650 shares MccilntockylllePetrolenm Co. 50 sh ires Olnßmore OU Go. Dg- Sale Peremptory _ London .Hair Color Restorer The most London ''Hair Color Restorer _ .. 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It will make the hair grow on bald head™ 8, It will restore the natural secretions. 4. It will remove aff dandruff and itchings. 5‘ w 3!. 1 “take the hair soft, glossy anaflexlble 6. It will preserve the original co'or to old age. 7. It will prevent the hair from felling off. 8. It will cure all diseases ol the scalp. 0h 1 ?. 75 cents a bottle, six bottles H Sold at Dr SWAYNEfe 8, No. 830 North Sixth Street above Vine, hod all the leading Druggists and Dealers In Toilet clcß ’ ee22.Bjn.w.f,tfrp Baldness, ffi deSlraMe ° gFICE ’ d “l» CPABKIiIWQ _AN(jJiGICA.—The subscriber htm Olately received an Invoice ofthlsjnstly California Wine, to which he wishes the S non of conno ssenra, For pore quality and excmfnitA boaquet. it stands ousnrpaffled. It will cotapSSlS voiably witti the higbeat grades of European wines, andxan be fbraisfc ed at about one half their cost p J. JORDAN, 230 Pear street. bSowThid aSd VS not st. . large supply of English and Scotch Ales. Por- Brown Siont. t gether with Jordan’s celebra ted Tonic Ale, Fine Cider, Ac., always on hand. PEgSKTENT SOAP BUBBLES OP GREAT strength and durability. They will last for many hours, may be pnnctnred w*tbont breaking, and can be blown to twenty Inches in dlameterTshoirtoe the S’^ B .^, IIIL 5 an . t ? rlsraallccolora and fbmishlnga d(2 UghUhl entenalnmmt.lbr adults and ichiMrem Sola nZfflT' PortBr andßooU ‘’bytte JAMES T. SHINN, Broad and Sprnce streets decll-rptf} - PHIOKKRIMB santmt PumnC ohebthdt stbhbt. 111*1'OC54flp W. H. DBTTOSi HOLIDAY PBESEim WM. A DROWN VtJO., 246 Market Street, Have now In stock an . ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OP i UMBRELLAS, MADE PROM Superior English and French Silks, OP THEIR OWN IMPORTATION, finished with the LATEST STYLES OP IVORY, WALNUT AND PARTRIDGE POB ' PRESENTS. CHRISTMAS fKESSNTS. OPERA GLASSES, GOLD SPECTACLES CHILDREN’S MAGIC LANTERNS, : DRAWING INSTRUMENTS, &C.r &C. JAMES W. QUEEN &CO., 924nHE8 TN UT STREET WRITING DISKS POBTFOUOS, HOLIDAY PRESENTS MOSS & CfO.’S, delttlalrp 432 CHBB7ITUT STHBB7 CHRISTMAS PRESENTS, LADTTCS’ PUB TRIMMED HOODS. LA PTES’ HEATING HATS. PBESCH RTT.tr UMBRELLAS. CHILDREN’S VELVET HATS. GENTS’ PUR CAPS, COLLARS and GLOVK3. THIO. H. M'CALLA. HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM, 804 Chestnut St. del2-12trp| NOW READY, THE NEW HAT, BY WARBURTON, Hatter, 430 Chestnut Street. NEXT DOOB TO POST OFFICE. deu-lm IPI FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. Fine Opera; Glasses, Elegantly Bound Music Books AND MUSIC POLIOS. 0. W, A. TRUMPLEB, SEVENTH AND CHESTNUT STS. aestirpt Christmas Presents** PBBBENTB FOR LADIES. PRESENTS FOB GENTLEMEN. on Jiand a fresh stock of FANCY GOODS, which we offer at reduced prices. FOB GENTLEMEN. Meerschaum Cigar Hoidera. ‘ Brier Root Pipes, carved and plain. Tobacco Bexes, Tobacco Bags, Cigar Cases. Match Boxes, Cigar StandslElasks. Ink Stands, Match Boxes, Paper Weights. FOR LADIES. Beautiful Bohemian Glass Toilette Sets, vases of Parian, and Bohemian Glass. Si araffes Toilette Bottles, Card Receivers. Odenr Cases and Stands, Traveling Book Stands, Beading Stands, dtc. - K. A G, A. WRIGHT, 624 CHESTNUT Street. dematrpi CHEISTMAS PRESENTS. The beat and moat useful Present to give a Mena the needy) Is a barrel of my superior St, Loots at Family Flour And a bag or half barrel Mountain Buokwheat Meal. Warranted equal to any In the market. GEO.F.ZEHJfBEB, Successor to Allman & Zehnder. FOURTH and VINK. del£-14trp2 FOR THE HOLIDAYS H. P * C. R. TATLOR’S Toilet Soap and Toilet Boxes, Colognes and Extracts fotthe Handkerchiefs,Verbena, Geranium and La vender Waters, Almond,Bose and Ambrosial Hhavlmr Creame.and Taylor’s Celebrated Saponaceous Shavlnv Compound, all of which may be had at the prlnclnaL Drug, Trimming and Notion Esiabllsment at retail. and by wholesale only at thePactory, „• 641 and 643 NOBTH NINTH STREET. de!424trpS • ; . , . SKATES ! SKATES t i EffTBA QUALITIES* BKATESI for Ladles and Gentlemen, ofthe finest rant nt«*. •. Ho. MS SounfißraEresTsuMt. Three doors below Cheannt. deS-Zmrp BSa OmUKEBING GRAND PIANOS.