times in believes. _ hall. The cluh ; • in the billiard-room ov: • --- and the pretty little face him at home. Only the little ci itself is not quite so pretty as it was in the tenderness of its regret. The resigned little martyr has no notion of being robbed of the halo of martyrdom. Insensibly the spouse finds it harder and harder to remain at her feet. He hates music and he is whirling from opera to opera. The piano is hard at work throughout the day and conversation will run on nothing but Schumann and;Weber. He likes politics,and a blank little face listens as well as it may to his stories of the last di vision or his theories as to Premier. He is used to his quiet evening at his club, to his cigar and his piquet; andhe finds a mob in the drawing-room,and the smell of the divine weed absolutely insufferable to his wife. In the long run he takes to hie old life of isola tion, and the neglected being wins the sym pathy of her sex as: she resumes her position of semi-detached wife. And unfortunately she now and , them wins the sympathy of the other sex - too. -Men wonder how Brown can treat his wife so badly, can leave her to neglect and to' a thousand temp tations. He has but one defender, and that is the.wife whom he abandons. She could have wished it had been otherwise; that the dreams of her girlhood had been realized; that a sympathy of soul had bound them to gether. As it is, she will only accept just a very little perfectly innocent sympathy else where. Friendship of the purest and highest kind may be suffered to administer its inade quate consolations. But the litany of the church bf Plato must be chaunted without a note of pity for herself or of blame for her spouse. Between such clashing rocks the friend must steer his boat into that sweet mysterious sea. It is with a touching reserve that the' victim of hie 'caprice accepts her liberty, for she is after all a wife, and her ring gives her a lib - erty denied to maidens. She is musical, and can practice for whole afternoons with that gallant young tenor in the Guards. She is artistic,and' what can be more charming than a tete-a-tete with that blushing Carmine over his sketch-book ? She has a taste for poetry, and poets couch at her feet to read sonnets in the tender light of the parting day. The wide *circle of friendship opens before her. She listens to:the confidences of happy and unhappy lovers. -Life becomes varied, busy, interesting. Her gobd temper, her vivacity, her sunny happiness redress the wrongs of her home, and society borrows a gentle light and sweetness from the semi-detached wife. The picture is pretty ; but it has its terrible do era. 'IT' e wonder that, now the elections are met - and the quidnuncs of the Clubs are busy , wir y , sir gains and their losses, no one has ' Btteta p •d to give areason for what was after a u the post remarkable feature in the whole electoraluggle. it is true , that woman found stow' r opponents than weeping' Home Secretaries d senile Commissioaers of Po llee. Butt as hot so much:'-the. stoutness of the deten that was remarkable as the utter breakd of the attack. Not that Miss Becker brae wn. Face to face with the . ev isingl,fart . r she brought into the sharp -4.51 . relief Vie concilable antagonism of 1 law No one could have "re forcibly to her injured tt' , four seas woman is a • The provoking part i • that_ ,der sisters • w quietly on with tas before. , 'lf Miss Becker, to• : Beuverie's, l epigram, 'is a leader leads, her fair clients are certainly • t tio don't follow., f‘lieF. l dshutless her eloquence,' her energy, only' .re conspicuous the immobility of her - fell, not liefotethe.obdurney of the judge,'lit'before" the apathy of 'the matron. It was in, vain that her strut ' beato appealed to,her'jselise bf dull •r sense of logic. Next to the British diouitself, the most amusinginstance :I compromise is to , lie.fouridlin the ~ Ale., She is the Uriali Heap of soot y, 1 umbling herself before the-Church and the Law, whispering sweetly' het vow to honor andobey, hugging her chains as a chat ' tel and a slave. With what a perfect self-sac rifiCe she flings herself at the altar, with what an immense-self-surrender . - she, owns er lord +at ~ the marriage ; breakfast! And yet—if one may penetrate that heaving bribm and read the secrets of that shrinking i''heart—she has not the remotest doubt of her '''own infinite superiority, or of the infinite su periority of ber...sex. . Miss Becker may have :;overstepped the bounds of ignitable pm , priety, but she' epresents fairly' enough the mass of feminine opinion. Where she failed :Is? - f - 1-- r-attempt.M condense it, to give -it a pilled al forM, and' to hurl it .at Ain) park NiLin le teaihfr ethe'British Constittition." She found me baffled by that masterly inactivity With which woman in her time has bellied so , y social:deliverers. From Geer& 'Sand '.. - l a U to Miss Hominy, from the Saint-Shno ' A to the Woman's Convention which is ' in full session at Boston, a thousand t •preity preachers have been denouncing the .47 miserabioVe,of Abe matrimonial home. Bleetive‘ol the affections,'" the'' mobile'emotions of , the heart, have been set against - the 11,arr9w, limitations, the monotony, the deglitlt ungognitYcof the kommon do-- • Ines ' atibliS of the world. 'Woman has 'lmes called to freedom, to Bohemianism, to ,i, tO li the pulpit, to the stump . Preachers 'O ,. d erent order,but appealing to precisely 'az '....saltriti Magnet of revolt, have spread be ,{ 01)40'0010a of the crapo and the le. over the' life; but , if • they -liave a as indleating this dase - the ti L initter. ' 'for a independence, highest ,fielil of pie mode of nu her- little cock .. ake of humtin • • oubled 'union of . 43 glanced' at the :ryes a refuge for owever yielding it „an always take te the faith. What is ho has sent his fund, or thundered mounoed evangelical let 'Aleut being , who hands him her "In wn at "Leave thou v s." It is a strange 12311111...,. 2in modem society be- tween the - convictions of the" husband and the faith 'of the wife. Is it to come to this, that among ourselves, as across the Channel, all the religion is to be left to the weaker sex ? The missionary box,the little cross on the prayer-book, the early matins, the em hroidered slippers for the curate, tho pretty pictures of saints with saintly aureoles, the well thumbed poems by Kirke White, the ritualistic service, the Evangelical newspaper —this country BO strange to Englishmen is the country in which many English wives live. The poetry, the imaginative ness of their nature, finds a sphere in sympathies, in prettiness,that seem trivial, unintelligible, unartistic to the minds of men. To woman, on the other hand, the jar of theological disputes, the jiiugh clash of creeds, the bare outlines Otte philosophic faith, seem barren, coarse,'heculk, revolting. A woman ceases to be , womae. 3 r when she rattles of the objections to the authenticity of the Pentateuch. A man' feels manhood ebb away from him as he busies himself in the millinery oftlie"Directorium. Day by day the gulf grows deeper and wider. Men detest sermons, and woman still clings to her popular preacher. Men cry for light and breadth and tolerance, and woman still does her knifting beneath the thunders of Exeter Hall. The very charity of woman, her be nevolence, her self-sacrifice undoeS the work of ' the poor la,cvs, and flings their conclusions in the face of the econo mists. It is hard for a man even to understand this frame of mitid,to compre hend how the quiet little wife, Who never did a! conscious 'wrong to anybody, can, weep over the vote that he gives against the Irish Estatlishment, or how the heart that never thought ill of the worst and vilest can harden with bitterness at the cry of heresy. It is hard now, and it will become harder by and by. The two worlds are sheering further and further and further from one another, an Englishmen may soon have to experience what they have pictur'ed in the Italian and the Frenchman—a home divided against itself on the highest of human interests. It is then,' perhaps that we may reap the fall!harvest of the seed , that we are Bowing, and learn the ultimate import of the social arrangernent which is quietly creating for us the semi-de tached wire.—,S'aturday Review. Women in Wussitt—Nets Movements. The two letters below, from L'invalide Ruse, have been translatgd for The Revolu. "KAllsen, • October, 1868, Sir: The ladles of Kalisch, wishing to express their • deep in terest in the education of Russian women, have decided to make known,,through the press, their determination to adhere to the project which has already been presented to the University , of St, Petersburg, of establish ing 'Faculties of History, of Philology', and of the Natural• Sciences for, the benefit of wo man. "In sending the accompanying letter to your estimable paper, allow me to say that it was not written under the influence of a tran sient enthusiast'? ,nor frorkany trifling, motive. It expression of the urgent necessity for our- studying European science, and the modern means by.which , European civiliza tion is developed and advanced—it is the deelaration of mothers of families, milieus for" •the fate of their daughters who hayg to meet in,life a different order of things :.and new social needs. . `nip to the present day, thoroughly edu cated women have been rare the world over, bat particularly with us. Modern civilization, , which has Made progress beyond example,Ls the ticiences, in civil economy, and in the well-being - of man; lias employed the aid of woman is, the domain of family life only. But it' woman has done nothing it is because she. hati.siot had the means of instructing her self, , We 'cite' a 'case where a woman by hOpPy . cliance received educational advan tugesr-Joha Stuart' Mill ackapwledges with love and gratitude het co-operation iu his bast Philosophical works. Ameriawtbe education and first teach ing. of children is confined exclusively to wo men,, With, us, also, the ;University, instruc - tion will furnish to some hundred women the Means of teaching `.the,.sciences thoroughly, arld,eduCatiag,children either in families or in s4hoola , for young girls; it,ill furnish them also means of directing cultivation In the widest sense or the'word, and to aid their laMilies in industrial and commercial affairs. We do not,say that, developed by a course of university study, the mental and moral na ture of women will bring to science now el . ement. , • But it , is'Nery certain that superior edutation , will make woman capable of 'sharing worthily the labor of her father, her husband, her brothers,' het sons. "We have not spoken of a medical faculty, simply because we have not wlebedito diverge, from the project already presented by the la dies of Bt. Petersburg; But the nenesSity for female physicians is manifest and urgent, and in certain branches of Medicine the Intuition and experience of woman would prove a most valuable acquisition, - "Receive, etc., "The princess, MAME STOLIERBATOF. "Kalisch, October 20, Ib6B. "The question of the establishment of a university, or at least of two faculties; ono of history and philology, and the other of the natural sciences for women, absorbs the at tention of the little circle of Russian ladies ; in Kalisch. "The widespread opinion that this question. on,thapeliaf, the 'educati ' on of ' women, tends to thtidevehipment of the raCe. We Who sympathize in these views have but to Oxpress l the _hope that in other cities still r of our vast country, women will_express pub • holy theiropinion on a queition which. so in • timately concerns them. • • • declarations Will then reunite in , a poWer!nixiiiice in', favor of, this question, and despite of enemies, itis enemies !will ,provd to the_ eye of government and to our people how 'strong within is 4he'conviction ';of >the ne lc,Ossity fora . higher edieition,and With what quick Sympathy we are in, unison • `on taid ' tThe',Princess;Stcheibatof, de Stempel,`, Princess Galitsyne,pountess Bamoysky, Baroness Franh, and sixteen others.' ea , P. 2&% 'v tv.the out or :aslaw e :in, she zeoverw,i •at social g society , sleet' the @hement• the:ninaple. • • • There no greate r . 'eduCation into vulgarity than home carelessness.` A'man'or woman, brought up tinder such 'a Octopi., ia'ruided• for all the reahtyofyefilientent in after:Years. Tim surliness too "often allowed at, home, ',where children...are permitted to be snappish, AO each other, •disobliging..and: disoorirteouc r ruins the manners as• much as it hurts the ' Hence we' come to cotiPany'rnati nets, to a Sickly sweetness Put, On'sirriply for the occasion`, to iv formality ; of epeeCh and an - .oppressiveness of attentions, ,to an exagger ated politeness. ;that is= so terribly afraid of' transgressing into liberties. as to 'be' absolute Voildageyand to all' the silly little affeetations belonging to the condition. ' " , We never snow any, 'one Whom , ,have riotlived,With, and. even then " not always. , To be admitted into the. Temple, does, not include entrance into the adytum; and we may remain for Weeks in a house where master, and , mistress and maids• are' all re ticent alike, and may know nothing 'of the reality underlying the surface. People of whom I once knew something, and , who were notoriously ill-matched, but marvel ously polite, could keep their house full of company, and yet allow none of their guests to find out that the husband and wife were inot on speaking terms. All the communi cation between them that was Atsolutely necessary was carried on by writing. Per sonally, these two, dispensing smiles and civilities to all around, held no direct inter course. Yet they managed so. well that no one saw through the screen. With company manners and company dress, there is'also a company voice. Who does not, know that false voice of society? Mincing or thrown boldly forward, Clung into the chest or pitched up into the head, it is all the same—the company voice, accent, choice of words and register—all artificial alike. And there are company gestures. People sit and stand and walk, and use their Wide ac cording to the different degrees of, familiarity in which they stand toward their society. There is a vast deal of companymatte-be lieving among us; and if we would only give half the time we now bestow on "looking pretty' and "behaving pretty" in society, to being sweet-teMpered, and amiable,and care ful of pleasing, at home, it would be all • the better for ourselves and our families, and a ain in 'the way of true tiviliccition.—All the Year Round. • tl ONES 7 ONE- ICS CLOTHING HOUSE, 604- . 9IARKET STREET, „ PHILADELPHIA. First Class Ready-Made Clothing, suit able for all Seasons, constantly on hand. Also, a Handsome Line of Piece Goods for Custom 11-crk. 0 11 P 16 \ 0 . ': 1 .0„ 411111# 41111' • Notice is respectfully given to customers and others de siring CARRIAGE'S of the MANUFACTURE, of WM: IL:ROGERS, • OF CHESTNUT STREET, to place their orders ;as, soon as possible to insure their completion for the DRIVINGLSEASON OF 1860, CARRIAGES. REPAIRED lathe most neap and asp& ditious manner -- r , - CARRIAGES STORED aiig:lnserance,effected. • - ' . WM.; .10 - 0-ERS, ••• 110 s. 1.009.aut 1011 . .. Chestnut St., Philada 1006 r w amrp Pennsylvania. - Elastio' ~Sponwe , 00i 1111 Chest Out . • Itt.;A8 1 ±1 1 17 ' AslJl36 T l T i ii,MoT,RI I ERFP.fralt ) t ,' MIR ALL TIIANrPERIAVOS ,HALTLANDFAR The Lighteethsftet and luiolit Tlaitio and Dbrableina• ter%) known for MATTRESSES, TILLONIEW I IA i hip . ARRIAON AND it le 'titn' tlielY . lnititrultible. 'perfectly clean 'hnd free from duet., ,bbio-NoTi;AOIC AT AL., I le aiwaya free trout insect Ilfe; is perfectly healthi. and for the eiok is uneiiiiiiied." If soiled' any dan be reiteyated quicker and easier than any other Matti:era. Rpechea t te t ailion n aiNo ti oLtuROFIES, NALL% Railroad men Care , eapeelany. invited to, exaroine_the Cushion eyonge. • •; , SATISFACTION GIIAIuar4TEED. , THE Iv2om 131 , , • • • baddlers," liournessultiakers. Diannlac. turers olf clothillg.-18°°11$0111°ereak, VV ill find it TWlSTaterest to use our UNRI ALL MAtaIINE and the "Milford Lipari Teread:" Mantdaetured expressly for us , froni the bust materna. and warranted :a superior agtlolei• , THE BINGER MANUFACTURING CORFANE • Manufacturers and:Proprietors of the SINGER Ligwztio N0.'1106 01. 4er&RtlTret:- • 'MAOTIME. , my2lyrn: • . . C 0 it. Agent NiiTLER, WEAVER & PIIE:W FAVltitrir INDIA 'RUBBER, MACHINE . HEWING STEAM Pking Hose. Engineera and.deafera inn find a full assortment of Gooilyear's Patent Vulcanized Rubber -Beltiug,-Faskhig Elope, to., at tho'blanufacturees Headquarter& • , GOODYEANS, • 8118 Chestnut street • • • South side. • N. 13.—We have 'non , on hand a large lot'of Gentlemen% Ladles` and Memel Cunt Boots.. LUSO, every variety and stvlo of Gnm Overcoats. G— FOR SALE, 180 TONS OF ORALS kl afloat. Apply to WOUKMAN 41i CO.. 123 Walau e treat. solbtt. 1.1,,A I) ELY WAAT ED E LSI) A DEUEIII6I* '3O tat b, -TRIPL.F SHEET. Celiti9n; bniiing been l'rinin tier :or I§.dies in a to resort to:publicity, oat peal:tot adherence- ake to state-here the MI 'the w,orld.--argu exeelient work, based company manners NA Na. CAIELEIAGJEs. ELASTIC &Pose*. sEIVINIP'/MACMWIES, SOW IN FOLD QPRAAT/ON. bloom N. WATER w 413 N. AEU awe ' fa• kinw Yourilkagdatlstbilefi7. , , At*e''*o toealf,Y.ouit : atteidlertte ni,V r tTtF..PAA47 I IOI4 OF conikrcrrth EXTItilaT iIIbRIL The ooentenent , patia aro. BUOttU, Leße Lres,. CtrilßS; BERRIES. M:Ona OF FREPARJuTION.—BrioIp, in vacate, ~Timiper ,Berrles,'hy distillation,, to form a ,ilne gin. Cuhebs exo - trarted bidispitieernent by liquor 'ohirdried.tram:Jtitilper •,. • • . Berries, containing very little sugar, a. emeilprOportion of spirit, and more palatable than any now use. The' active properUes are by thin mode extracted. • Buchu, as prepared•by Druggists generally, is of a dirk color. It is a plant that emits its fragrance;.the action.of aflame destroys this tits active principle), letiving•a dark' and glutinous decoction. Mine is the color of ingredients. The Bnchu in my preparation predominates; the smallest quantity of the other ingredients are added, o prevent fermentation; upon inspection, it will be foind not to be a Tincture, as made in Pharm acopcea, nor le it a Syrup— dnd therefore can be used in cases where fever or inliam- mutton exists. In thle, you have Abe knowledge of the ingredients and the mode of preparation. Hoping that you will favor it with a triakand that upo inspection it will meet with her approbation. With a feeling of confidence, I am, very respectfully, H. T. IZIEL3IBOLD, Chemist and Druggist of 16 Years' Experience in Phllmielpida, and now located at his Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 59i Broadway, New York. (From the largest Manufacturing Chemists in the World. "I em acquainted With Mr. M. T. Elelmbold; ho once. pied the Drug Store opposite,my, residence. and was suc cess)ul in conducting the business where others bid not 'been equally so before him. I have been favorably im pressed With his character mid enterprise. WILLIAM WBIGIITM AN. Firm of Powers .& Weightmen. Aanufacturing Chemists, Ninth end Brown, streets. Philadel. HNIAIHOLD% FLOW Escrwr Burma, for weiknes arising from 'indiscretion. Ihe:Obilsucted powers of =Nature which are accoratianicci by so many alarming umptome, among whiCh will 'be 'fMindlndlerpoeltlon to _ Exertion, Loss of Memory., lyalcefaM,ess, Horror of Disease, or Forebodings of Evil, in fact, Unilidreal Laser bade, Prostration. sad inability to enter intwate ealoy ments of society. The Constitution, once effected ; with Organic Weak ness, requires the aid of Medicine to etienkthen and vigorate the system. which MEOROLD'S 'EXTRACT &THU invariably does. If no treatment to submitted to, Consumption or Insanity ensues. lIELMBOLIATLVID EiTILAOT BUOIIU. in •afrectiorui pe collar to Females, le unequaled by any other preparation. as In Chlorosis, or 'Retention. Painfulness, or Suppression of Coatomary Evacuations, Ulcerated or Schirrus State of the Uterns.and ell complaints incident to the Box,whothe arising from habito of dissipation, imprudence in, or the decline or change of life nEmsnaoLD's FLUID ExTßeur Montt AND Luraovan ROBE INeen will radically exterminate from the system diseases arising from habits of distipation, at little ex- ,penes, little or no change in diet, no inconvenience or ox poeure ; completely , supen3eding those unpleasant and dangerous remedies, Copaiva and Mercury, in all these URO ELELMBOLD'S FLOLD EXTBAOT BuWill in all &HMOS of these organa, whether exieting in the male or female. fromwhataver cause originating. and no matter of how long Standing. It h 3 pleasant in taste and od6r, "Immo. diato" in action, and more strengthening than any of the preparation's of Bark or Iron. Those onffering from brokondowft , or delicate condi. tutione, 'procure the remedy at °nee. The reader' must be aware that, however , diabt snot* be the attack of the above diseases, it is certain to affect 'the bodily health and tnental•powent.. AU trie above ,dlaksea require' the aid et a Ditiretic. 2iEIoADOLDI3 EXTRACT EUCLID la the great Diuretic. _ Bold by Draggista everywhere. Equen—isl. 25 per bottle. or 6 bottleif or $6 50. Delivered 'Ed any address: Describe aymPionts in all ecinnintileationa., Addreess H. T. HELMBOLD. Drug and Chemical Ware. lionise, 594 DroUdwayiN. • None.ire genuine unless Aono •up n-etoel.engraved 'add signed I • , • T. lIELIVIDOLD. de2 2,m • ' • . I =ZEE I=illllEl =ME . . .............. . .. ..... . FOR ANY 1101 - 1 - SE TO GET THE PRICES .601 VIN AS LOW as we . . . are now selling all our CLOTHING', and the REASON jot* it can be very easily seen. An appraiumelf of the stock was made under direction of the EXECUTOR, and. then it °was' determined to, eeil it at ONCEto,make a quick settlem e nt of the accounts of itte former Firm. To dolhis TIED PRIDE§ WERg' ALL PUT DOWN, so that we GUARANTEE Ahem fully TEMPER CENT.' LOWER THAN THE LOWEST ELSEWHERE, OR. HOODS TAKEN BACK . AND CASH ;PAID OVER AGAIN , WHEN SHOWN TO BE OTHERWISE. It will be remembered that our Style, Make Mad-Finish fs,FAIi, BETTER' thiLa 'ordinary B,eady•Made Clot,l3tag. Oar ' !aria facilities alwaytrinable us to HELL CHEAPER THAN-OTHER HOUSES;. and now, under these special circumstances, it can be readily seen, that this la THE 'opportunity to 14 in a full supply. We have still a very large stock (at least el:60,000 liorth'of Gooils)s' and freshly supplied every day by new lots, as we are rnaklrig ttp all the piece Foods we bad on band. As before announced, the continue to ono* Oscine whom it suite tient to make selections and ptsy Winston:. manta until all is paid up STORE :OPEN : FROM 7 A. M. TO 6 P. M WANANAKER & BROWN, NEW PUULIigAIIIOMs. New Book and Stationary Store. HENRY GRAMBO & CO., (H. Grambo of the late firm of LIPPINCOTT GRAMAIO . ds CO., and GRIGGJILL,OTT & ca..) 601 Chestnut Street, (Oppootto the New Ledger Office.) 'Wholesale and Retail Booksellers, Stationers, itioultinook and En velope Inatttaetarevs, Littto. graphers and Printers, lm-• -porters of Engineer's Materlats. Christmas and , New= Yeat's Presents, We have Just received our shipments of fancy articles and novelties for the holiday trade. which are retpect. fully submitted for examination and sale to our friends and the public. Our stock of first class Blank Books and Stationery for merchants is complete in every respect. Annexed we enumerate a few of the leading articles, of the fancy trade : Work stases inevery variety; Jewel Cases; Odor Cases: Travelling Bags; Shopping Bags; Silk Bags; Bronze Figures; Ladies' Dressing Chtees -Gentlemen:a Breathes Cases: Card .Receivers ; Pocket Books of, the finest and newest pattern4lmported ; Library and-Oftice inkstands: .htshogan,v, Rosewood and Fancy writing Deaks in every ,variety oI sizes and styles; Pans; Match Boxes; Pa pier ,Alache ; Cabinets. Tables and ' Dean • Work 1303 Scotch Goads:. l'earl Thermometer;t: Pearl Albums: Pearl , Penholders; _Pearl Folders; no plus ultra Desks;'Back Gammon .tioarda ; Cribbage and CL ibbage Boxes ; Chessmen; Rodgers' Knives Fancy Note Paper Olowstytes). A superior assortment of Stationery. Domestic and /In• ported, all at the very lowest prices. dela 18t rpl FINE ILLUSTRATED CHOICE HOLIDAY BOOKS! HENRY GRAMBO 8c 00., 601 Obeatnut Street, (Opposite Ledger Mee) Have just opened, with a large assortment of STAND ARD ENGLISH AND OTHER BOOKS, in fine bindings; also. a very fine selection of ALL THE NEW AND CHOICEST ILLUSTRATED WORKS. JUVENILES AND TOY BOOKS, ALBUMS, die.. adapted for the present Holiday Season, and to which they invite the attention of all in search of elegant Christmas Presents. at moderate prices. ENGLISH: AND FOREIGN BOORS. PERIODICALS, dm., imported to order weekly by steamer. del2.lBtrp MCCXIV CHESTNUT STREET. THE CHEAP POPULAR BOOR /TORE. , We are now selling the balance of our Holiday Stock at such low rates as to astonish our - patrons All Boolks.at Leis than Publishers' Priem Sunday=schools. Public and Private Libraries. Gifts for Teach... and Preachers. Gifts for the Old and:the Young, supplied at the lowest rates in the city. THE CHEAP BOOK STORE: JAMES S. CLAXTON, 1.214- Chestnut St r e e t . . ~ , • . I Store open Every Evening. deli at HOLIDAY> BOOKS • At Greatly Reduced ,Prioes4; Annuals,- ' • , • . "Juveniles, ,• • ' • Toy Books, • • --Prayei. Books, • - Bibles. etc. * etc,. ciHARL'Es- DESILVER; No, Up) ftwitnat dOl6 wave 6trpb 1117ELSVIOULINGV1114;101102' "CIIRISTMAS , .PRESENTS' , , One-of the mostdapprapriateprosente for a gentlemen is a' ':' . • flaniisonle'WrOpper of Smoking Jacketi' • JOHN C. •ARRISON Noe, 1 and S . NortWilixth• Streeti • ritni.AßELpmA; Gls now offering an unusually large, handsome and well selected stock cliffs own importation awl manufaetnie at - reduced RFicee to eult the times. , ,CAIIDIGAN JAVISSIES, ' SWIRIFS TIES ' GLOVES, MUMMERS, EMBROIDERED SUSPENDERS, 'And the latest novelties for gentlemen's wear. no4-w a m rpisn - MILLIIE T, RS. R. DILLON, 823 and 831 SOUTH STREET. R. . Millinery for Ladles and Misses. Satins, Silks.—VeiveM, Ribbons,Flowers, Feathers, Frames. Mourning Millinery,CrapeVeils, are. Silk Velvet and Satin Hats, Sash Ribbons. no 4 3morp EMOVAL—J. M. GUMME ro Y & SONS_, REAL ESTATE Au Broken. w . have removed to No. 733 alnut etreet. ..X,_T,:;.,..5.-:. , ?M.'1P4?!§4,!51[];tir...47P, OAK HALL, THE LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE, SIXTH AND MARKE r STREETS. STATIONER N• BLANK BOOKS EXTRA INDUCEMENTS BLANK BOOKS FOR THE NEW YEAR. Large assortment a WELL SEASONED BLANK BOOKS Of all sizes and paiteraa,.which are guaranteed to be of the b 4 Ft quallll, and at greatly redamd WM. M CHRISTY, THIRD ST, ABOVE DOCK. IDIAIRAIES for 1809. Full Assortment of Clayton's and other Celebrated Pub- Ushers make OF DIARIES. Just Received 200 Reami of Fine Letter Paper, Belling at Reduced Prices HOLIDAY GOODS. Fine Pen Knives, Pocket Books, Gold Pena, iPiaying Cards, &c , la great variety of styles. iwg....,nr., : e.01.1.51iy*,. Blank Beek Manufacturer, ttationer, F'ririter and Lithographer, 127 SOUTH THIRD BTItEET, BOY DOCK delb3m w Strp CABLIPETiII4IOI24 olco. NEW CARPETING'S . of the best French, English, and Ante riean manufacture, embracing, : ; ("nett's; Chenille, Axminster, Felvets, larusseli,'.lrapestry, three' ply , Ingrains,- Dam ask and . :Venitians; 'also, Oil Cloths and niattings," ever*, quality, great, variety. All 'at , lOwest ;Cash prices. R; L;`Knight &Son, 1222 ' ' Chestnut Shiest, . - BOND , S BOSTON AND. THTRENTON BISCUIT.—E :trade duPplled with' Mind% Batten , . Cream; Milk. Oysters:and , -- ggg, West & Thore*e cote. braced Trenton and Wthe Biscuit. by .JOS. - B. BUSSDII* & CO., Bole Agorae. 108 South Delaware avenue. • DINE A.111..E CifEESE—NORTON'S CELEBRATED .L Brand on consignment and for sale • bv..100.'8. BUS. BIER ds .00..0108 Routh Ddaware avenue ' . IIRESH. LOBSTERS AND SALM/W-600 CASES, LOO dozen fr esh Lobsters and Salmon, landing and for sale by JOB. B 8118SIER &VD. 108 Sauth Detatrara num