Editor THURSDAY NOV. 21, 1878. The election of Blsbee (Rep ) In Florida la now conceded. The Treasury Department ha commenced the purchase of silver bul lion at Denver, Colorado, for green backs. This elves the miners an on- portunity of dealing directly with the Treasury Department, Instead of through brokers. Government officers In New York are continuing the Investigations Into the adulteration of refined sugars, They decline to make known the re sult of their analysis at present, pre- terring not to mention names of bus- pected refiners until proofs of fraud are firmly established. C It is reported, on what is said to be good information, that the bodv of A. T. Stewart was taken to Canada, and is now concealed there. Thieves who demand a ransom of 8100.000 for the remains, have placed the matter in the hands of a Moutreal lawver and are negotiating through him. as there Is no treaty governing cases of this kind. It will bo impossible to arrest the thelves. Another report says the body Is hidden at or near Shamong, Jiuriington county, New Jersey forty miles northeast of Camden, and the thieves can bearrcstcd at any moment. The Philadelphia Record says that Chairman Quay was pretty well tired out Tuesday night. When he sought his bed in the morning, after the exciting events of the night, he gained no rest. A pet canary which had become infused with the spirit ot enthusiasm that pervaded all Repub lican hearts, sang loud the notes of victory ,by the couch of the man who led the hosts to victory, and the chair man failed to sleep. It is something unusual for a bird to sing at four o'clock in the morning, but this was an unusual occasion. 3Iuch ex Itenient was created in oil circles on the 16th by reports from the bullion district thai Phil ipi' well, on the R. Vandcrlin farm, had struck and was flowing at the rate of 1,000 barrels a day. Reliable intelligence places the production at from 500 to 800. The well is owned by Phillips' Brothers, who have drilled twenty-five dry holes in search of this belt. The bullion district is in Venango county, eighteen miles from Oil City. In con sequence of the strike the market de clined from 90 6-8 to 80 5-8, notwith standing desperate efforts of the bulls to prevent it. A young farmer named Albert Vansiccle, who lived nearSligo, John boii township, and removed last spring to the northwestern partof Kansas, in tending as soon as he had a home, to return for his wife and children, who remained behind. It is reported, un fortunately, that while absent in Kan sas, he formed the acquaintance of a certain female, and in a short time be came too Intimate, so much so that since his return numerous letters have passed between them, the contents of which became known to his wife. To solve his domestic difficulties he blew out his brains with a revolver, after having Imbibed a pint of whisky to strengthen his nerves for his leap into eternity. The Philadelphia Record says: "There is an old law in this State wheh provides that all persons who use profane language are amenable to it, and upon conviction may be fined $100 and suffer an Imprisonment of three months. Esquire Simons f Conshohocken, has had occasion to re vive the ancient statute, because while hearing a case yesterday, Leslie Stewart, a police officer, of West Con Bhohocken, became unruly in hisofllcc, and, it is averred, used profane words to the Justice. In order to mete out punishment to the officer, Squire Si mons caused the arrest and had him held to bail for violating this sacred law. This is the first case of the sort which has occurred for years. A terrible story of scandal and death comes from Washington county. A man named Henry Walls, who is in the coal mining business, lived at a little town named Coal Bluff with a Wife and eight children. His eldest child is a daughter, twenty-two years of age, who has a child about five years oldv which is supposed to have her father as its parent. About a month ago an abortion is said to have been procured by Walls upon his daughter to cover his guilt a second time. Wails eloped with his daughter and went to Ohio. Mrs. Walls became partly in sane, and on Saturday she deliberately drowned herself, leaving seven child ren completely destitute. Wall is a man about fifty years of age. We learn that a meeting of a few' of the moneyed kings of Wellsville was held a few evenings since to discuss the subject of a norrow gauge railroai from that place to Eldred. Fron what we can glean the cost of complet ing the toad was estimated at $125,000, It is said that over 75,000 would be ubscribed Immediately by parties re- Biding in Wellsville. It is understood that the Wellsville people are anxious, if the road should be built, to have the control of the same, and it would prob ably be owned by a few individuals. If the road should be built it would certainly get a large passenger bu siness,, and If the oil territory in the vicinity cf Wellsville should prove fruitful, the road would in a short time be an important one as a connect ing Hue between two oil fields. El dxed" Erprctt. Henry A. raraons, Jr., - flan Cameron. From the ItnUlmoro Uuzotte. - There is something of moral force and grandeur in the rule of the Cam erohs in Pennsylvania. Since Simon the First rose from his humble print ing office and began to sway the poli tics of that State fifty Empires hove come and gone among men. He saw the Fourth William of England sink into the grave and Victoria ascend the throne. He saw Charles X of Franco fleeing before the wrath of a betrayed people j saw Louis Phllllppe dethroned In France and a Republic established, and he saw the usurping Napoleon rise to the head of an Empire, while he was great in the State, ond saw him tumble off his pasteboard throne like a clown In the pantomime. Since he become the dictator of politics in Pennsylvania, Austria, Italy and Greece have successively been shaken by the revolution. He has known two Czars of Russia and three Kings of Italy, and has seen the Padlshas of Turkey come and go like puppet in the skilled hands of a showman. New worlds have grown up ami have been fitted with rulers since he became the leader of men. He has seen the Pal- merstons and the great Premiers of Eu rope rise to power and dwindle out of sight. He saw Thiers twice the savior of France, and then followed him to his grave In all these years his power hasremaitcd unchanged and unshaken and he passes his sceptre to his son, with undiminished grandeur, while he steps back into ease and domestic peace, with the complacency of a Lear who divided his kingdom. Gre-t is the name of Cameron, and great Is the dynasty which Simon has founded iu Pennsylvania. It is a mighty power to-day, and it will doubtless exist with vigor unimpaired, when the New Zeulund traveller sketches the ruins of St. Paul, and when the last of the race of the drunken weavers of Moyamenslng pauses on a frosty moonlight night in front of the dial on Independence Hall, and, leaning against the fence, musingly contem plates the marches of the centuries on its pale face. The "Fat Contributor" says in last Saturday Sight: "Some heartless para- grapher thinks it would be easy enough for Dan Rice to start a menagerie be cause the wolf is always at his door. Rice though poor enough, can never be troubled with t lie wolf at his door. His present wife was the only child of a wealthy banker in Uirard, Pa., named O'Connell. They were mar ried in the Full of I8ul, it being a run away match. Rice was then 37 and his wife 16. Her father, a Presbyterian deacon, was teriibly chagrined and en raged because the 'idol of his heart and home' married a showman, and he refused to recognize them. At his death, however, lie bequeathed his property to their son Dim Rice Jr., whose mother has the benefit of the interest until the boy becomes of age. The property amounts to about 175, 000. So don't worry yourselves over 'poor' Dan Rice. A fire at the Virginia Penitentiary, on Friday morning, destroyed a large three-story brick building over two hundred feet long. The fiames origi nated iu the engine room. Another building, of similar proportions, was separated by a narrow yard, a part of which was occupied by a tobacco man ufactory, and the remaining part by a dining hall for prisoners. It caught fire at many windows, but the fiames were kept clown by the st returns efforts of the fire department. Last named building intervened between the fire and the main buildings in which the prisoners are confined. There is much excitement among them. The prison guard was aided by the police force and by soldiers. Don't Don't point your gun at yourself. Don't point your gun at any one else. Don't cary your gun so that its range includes all of your bunting companions. Don't try to find out whetheryour gun is loaded or not by shutting one eye and looking down the barrel with the other. Don't use your gun for a walking stick. Don't climb over a fence and pull your gun through muzzle foremost. Don't throw your gun into a boat so that the trigger will catch on the seat and the charge be de posited in your stomach. Don't use your gun for a sledge-hammer. Don't carry your gun full cocked. Don't carry your gun with the hammer down. Don't be a fool. Don't you forget it. The Mormon women held a meet ing in the theatre at Suit Lake City, Utah, and passed resolutions avowing that belief in the patriarchal order of marriages as revealed to God's people in past ages, which, if lived up to, were conducive to long life, strength and glory. They indorse it as one of the most important principles of our holy religion, and claim the right of its practice. Walton Dwlght, ex-mayor of Bing hampton, died Friday night, "aged forty. He was a large lumber dealer, Colonel of the Pennsylvania Bucktail Regiment during the war, and of late belonging to Chicago. The sum appropriated for the sup port of the police force of New York City this year is $4,000,000. The po lice is 2,500 strong Samuel Bart hold, proprietor of the Suuuyside Hotel atGutenburg, N. Y., died of hydrophobia. Bloodhounds wero used in search ing for Stewart's remains, but so far without success. John O'Connor, ex-member of the Ohio Legislature, is charged with for gery at Dayton. Hunter, the Camden- murderer, hangs Janusrj 10th. OFFICIAL i.-ovnties. Adams Allegheny Armstrong . Reaver lied ford Berks Jllalr n- Bradford Bucks. Butler Cambria Cameron Carbon Centre Chester Clarion Clearfield Clinton Columbia Crawford Cumberland ... Daupiiiu., Delaware Elk Erie Fayette Forest Franklin Fulton Greene.- Huntingdon Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lackawanna , Lancaster... Lawrence Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Lycoming M Kean Mercer Mifflin . Monroe Montgomery Montour Northampton Northumberland Perry Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill Snyder Somerset Sullivan Susquehanna , Tioga Union , Venango Warren Washington Wayne Westmoreland , Wycoming York Total The following is the vote cast for the prohibition ticket: Governor, Lane, 3,653 ; Lieutenant-Governor. Shalleross. 3.014 : Kecrt-tarv nf Inlemnl AfT.iiin Prnii 3 K.S7. The following vote was cast 40; Wayne, 1,894; Clearfield, 22o: WhkIiIiiuIoii fill Tntnl , . . , - - - " 1 KE W AD VEIi TISEMEN IS. THE Scientific gmrican. The Most Popular Scientific Paper in the World. THIRTY-THIRD YEAH. ONLY $3.20 A YEAR, INCLUDING POST AGE. WEEKLY. FIFTY-TWO NUMBERS A YEAR. This widely circulated and splendid ly illustrated pa per is published weekly. Every number contains sixteen pages of useful information, and a large number of original engravings of new inventions ami discoveries, represent ing Encinccrinir Works. Hteam. Ma chinery, New Inventions, Novelties in j Mcciiunic, Manufactures, Chemistry, Electricity, Telegraphy, Photography. Architecture, Horticulture, Natural History, etc. All Classes of Readers find in The Scientific American a popular re sume of the best scientific iniorniation of the day ; and it is the aim of the publishers to present it in an attractive lorm, avoiding as much us possible abstruse terms. To every intelligent mind, this journal affords a constant supply of instructive reading It is promotive of knowledge and progress in every community where it circu lates. Terms of Subscription. One conv of The Scientific American will be sent for one year 52 numbers postage prepaid, to any subscriber in the United States or Canada, on receipt of three dollars and twenty cents b, the publishers; six months, Sl.Ou; three months, 1. 00. Cluhs. One extra copy of The Scientific American will be sui- plied uratis for every club of five sub scriber!) at 3.20 each ; additional copies at the same proportionate rate. Post age prepaid. Ulie copy Ol THE bCIENTIFIC AMERI CAN and one copy of the Scientific AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT Will be sent for one year, postage ir oaid. to any subscriber in the United .-lates or Can ada, on receipt of seven dollar by the puonsuefs. The safest wav to remit is hv Postal Order, Draft, or Express Money care fully placed inside of envelopes, se curely sealed, and correctly addressed, seldom goes astray, but it is at the sender's risk. Address all letters and make all orders, drafts, etc., payable to MUNN & CO., 37 Park R ow, New York 1 'HE SOCIETY STORE. A new stoe started in Ridgway un der the auspices of the ladies of Grace Church, with MISS L. E. H'ZEE. as Agent and Saleswoman, A fine assortment of goods on hand and selected with great care. KM BKOIDEK 1 hfci. LACE EDGE. FRINGES. HANDKERCHIEFS. LADIES TIES. TOILET SETS. LINEN SUITS, CH1LDRENS SUITS SAMPLE SILKS. Machine silk, thread and needles. Also a fine lot of Dress Goods. Fancy work or all kinds. Framed mottoes tc., Ac. All cheap as the cheapest and goous warranted nrst class, call and examine our stock. MISS A. E. M'KEE. Agent for the Society. All kinds of Job work neatly exe cuted at this ofllce. VOTE OF PENNSYLVANIA, 1878. qoVKBNOR. LIEUT. eOVERNOR. jSEC. INT. AFFAIRS. JUDGE SUP. COURT. w g s w j iTe j"'w- f 'i o w o f - o - - ? i j ! JLL J LJ J ! 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THE Hew gorfc'bsmjrf THE BEST FAMILY NEWSPAPER, Publishes both the religious and secu lar news that is desired in any family, while all that is likely to do harm is siiutout. It devotes lour pages to re ligious news, and four to secuiar. The New York Observer was first published in 1S23 ; and it is believed to be t he only instance of a Religious Newspapaper continuing its even course for lifty-slx years without a change of name, doctrine, intent, pur pose, or pledge from the date of its birth. The Fifty-seventh Volume will contain all the important news that can interest or instruct; so that any one who reads it will be thorough ly posted. We do not run a benevolent institu tion, and we do not ask for the support of charity. We propose to make the Best Newspaper that is published, and we propose to sell it as cheaply as it can be afforded. Let those who want pure, sound, sensible, truthful reading subscribe for it, and let them induce others to do the same. We are now publishing in the Observer the story of JOAN THE MAID, by Mrs. Charles, author of "Cbroni cies of the Schonberg-Cotta Family." We send no premiums, we win send you the New York Observer one year, post-paid, for $3.15. Any one sending with his own subscription the names 01 r.w subscribers, snail have commission allowed in proportion to the number sent, tor particulars see terms in the Observer. SAMPLE COPIES FREE. Address, . Hew York Observer, 37 PARK ROW NEW YORK. jpOR TWENTY CENTS, The H. Y. EVENING POST. (WEEKLY) WILL BE-SENT To Any Address in tne United .States, (Postage paid by the Publishers) UNTIL JANUARY 1st, 1879. The New York Evening Post shows uo falline off since the death of Mr- Bryant, but rather the contrary, if anything. Sprinffleld (Alasa.) Union. It maintaius the high standard set up for it by the late Mr. Bryant. L'tica Herald. The best of evening newspapers by all odda. Louisville Courier-Journal The leading representative afternoon daily of New York city. Areu Haven Commonwealth- '1 he wisest and soundest of all our newspapers; (A"f w York Indepen dent, j Has a very larce circulation amomr the respectable reading public of this city. Xew York World. Accepted ut the South as the best au thority on any subject. New Orleans 2 iine. Twelve Months for $1.50. Semi Weekly, oue year ; 00 V..VrUHVJEa v VV I SPECIMEN COPIES FREE. Address n , W. C.. BRYANT & CO., Broadwuy and Fulton st., New Y Lieutenant - Governor: 328; Crawford, 3,356; ' 111 Venaniro. Camero'n, PENNSYLVANIA KAIL ROAD Philadelphia & Erie R. R Division BUMMER TIME TABLE. ON and after WEDNESDAY, DEC. 12, 18J7. the trains on the Philadelphia Si Eli; KrHroaJ will run as follows: WESTWARD. ERIE MAIL leaves Philadelphia 11 55 p m " " " lteuovo 11 00 a m " " ' Emporium I 00 p m ' St. Mary's 1 40 p ui " Ridgway 2 16 p u " ' '' Kane 3 SO p iu " arrive at Erie 7 35 p id EASTWARD. ERIE MAIL leaven Erie 11. 20 am " " " Kane 8 60 p il " " " Kidgwav 4 49 p n " ' " St. Mary's 6 17 p m " " " Emporium 0 10 p iu " " " Rcuovo 8.85 p m " " arr. at l'liiladephin... 7 00 a m Day Express aud Niagara Express con neel eisl with Low Qrvde Division and U N. Y! & P. K. II. W. A BALDWIN. Gen'l 8up' J-ON'T BUY WRAPPING PAPER, PRINTING PAPER OH PAPER BAGS until you have sent for quotations, stating size, weight, quality aud quan tity required, to Garrett & Buchanan, General Paper Dealers & liamifact'rs, 12 and 14 Decatur Street, PHILADELPHIA. Light and Heavy Roll Paper all grades n'38in2ml. THE most useful present FOR YOUR WIFE, intended wile, mother or sister is one of our Niekle Plated and Polished Fluting and Crimping Irons. 4 irons on one handle and at greatly keotced J'HICES. King Kevcrsuble Fluting lion, 3.50 Home Fluting and Crimp ing Iron, $2.75. 8ent Prepaid on receipt of price. Hewitt Manufg Co., Pittsburgh, Pa- P. O. Box 8'i8, or 160 Pen 11 avenue. An Agent Wanted in this County. 9-tiw BOOT AND SHOE SHOpT two dooks west of post office. THE undersigued is carrying on Boot and Shoe making. Custom made work neatly done to order and prices to suit the times. Mending a specialty. Please give me a call and be convinced before going elsewhere Thankful for past patronage, we re spectfully solicit it in the future. Mrs. M. E. M ALONE. nov7m3. Young men prepared for active busi ness life. Advantages unequalcd. Course of study and business training the most comprehensive, thorough and practical in existence. Students re ceived at any time. Forcirculars con taining full particulars address J. C. SMITH, A. M., Pittsburgh, Pa. n38inlm2. "I"") LAIN AND FANCY PAPEH AND ENVELOPES Tor Sale Cheap at this Odlce THE NEW YORK WEEKLY ATLAS!. Send Seveaty-Fiye Cents and Reccire - n for One Year. It Is an eight page, forty-eight col umn paper, issued Wednesday morn ing, and contains all the latest news from all parts of the world, together with a variety of CHOICE LITERATTRE, CHOICE LITERATURE, ORIGINAL POEMS, MASONIC, FASHION and 80CIETT GOSSIP. The Agriraltnral Department Is a special feature, conducted by one of the most celebrated agricultural writers of the period, and the discussions which appear each week have been commended by the press throughout the entire country. The Dairy and Lire Stock Department Is exceedingly well conducted. The result of numerous experiments made by the writer will be clearly set forth in an intelligent manner, and every Farmer or Stock-Raiser must acquire valuable in formation from the contents of each issue. The ARTICLES ON APICULTURE are contributed by a gentleman who has successfully mastered the business, and cares for upwards of One Hundred Colonies of Bees The extended . Market Reports excel those of any weekly periodical. 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Thk Sus will be printed every day during th o yeAr to onie lis purpjse and method will be tli o same as in llie past : To pre sent all tbe news in a reliable ehape, and to l ell 1 lie truth though the heavens fall. The feliN has been, is, and will continue to be independent of everybody and every thing cave the Truth and its own cuuvic tioiiB or duly. That is the only policy which a newsntipcr need nave, that la tne policy which ling won for thia newspaper l be couhdeuce and friendship of a wider constituency thn was ever enjoyed by any other American Journal. The Sun is the newspaper for the people. It is not for tl e rich man against the poor man, or for the poor uniii against the rich man, but it seeks to do equal justice to all interests in the community. Ii is not the organ of any persou, class, sect or party. There need be no mystery about i's loves htid hates. It is for the hmiest man against he rogues every time. It is for the honest Democrat, against tbe dishonest Republi can, and for the honest Republican against the diHhooest !'ein crat. it does not lake ts cue from tbe utterances of auy politi cian or pol tical organization. It gives its support unreservedly when men or meas ures are in agreement wiin tbe Uoustilut'on and with tbe principles upon which this Kepublio was louuueu for tne people. Whenever the Coustilutioa and constitu tional principles are violated as in the outrageous conspiracy of 1870, by which a man not elected waB pluced iu the Presi. dent's otlico, where he still remains it speaks out for the right. That is Tub iM'N's idea of independence. Iu this re spect there will be no change in the pre grimtuie for 1879. in is M-N has fumy earned the hatred of rascals, frauds ani humbugs of all sorts and sizes. It hopes to deserve that hatred not less in the year 187'J Iban in 1878. 1877, or any year gone by. Tus Sus will con tinue io shine on the wicked with unmiti gated brightness. while ihe lessons of the past should be constantly kept, before the people. The Sun does not propose to make itself in 1879 a magazine of ancient history. It is printed tor the uieu aud women of to. day, whose concern is chiefly wuh tbe affairs of to-day. it lias not h tne disposition and tne ability io afford, in readers the promptest, fuller!, and most accurate intelligence of whatever in the wide world is worth etteution. To this end the resources belonging to well esiablixhed prosperity will be liberally em ployed. The present disjointed condition of par lies in this ouuutry, and the uncertainty of the future, lend an extraordinary signifi cance to the ev uts of the coming year. The discussions of the press, tue debates aud nets of Congress, cud tne movements of tbe leaders iu every section of the Ke publio will have a direct bearing on tbe Presidential election of 188U an event wnich must be regarded with the most anx ious interest by every piiriotio Amerioan, whatever his political ideas or allegiance To these elements of interest may be added the probability that the Democrats willoon trol both bouses of Congress, the increas ing feebleness ot the fraudulent Aduiinia siration, and tbe spread aud strengthening everywhere of healthy abhorenoe of fraud in any form. To present with aeouracv aud clearness the exact situation in each of us varying phases, and to expound, accord ing to its well-known methods, the priuoi pies that should guide us through the laby rinth, will be au important part oi The fcUN's work for 1879. We have the means of making The Son, as a politioal, a li.erary and a geuerai uewrpaper, more entertaining and more useful than ever before j and we mean to apply them freely. Our rates or subscription remain un changed. For tbe Daiiy Sun, a four-page sheet of twenly-eigbt columns, the price by mail, postpaid is 65 cents a month, or 16 60 a year: or, including the Sunday paper an eight page sheet of fifty-six col umns, tbe prioe is 65 cents a month, or $7 70 a year, postage paid. The Sunday edition of The Sun Is also furnished separately at $1.20 a year, post age paid. The prioe of the Wsikit Bus, eight pages, fifty-six columns, is $1 a year, post age paid. For clubs of ten sending $10 we will send an extra copy free. Address 1. W. ENGLAND, Publisher of Tim Hn.i, New York City. " It Is worth double Its price" Otto ; wa, (Canada), AdvtrtUer. JfriT. CHEAPEST AND BEST I -Sa PETERSON'S MAGAZINE! FULL-SIZE PAPER PATTERNS I " Pktebson's Maoazi!hi " contain every year, 1000 pages, 14 steel plates, 12 colored Berlin patterns, 12 mam moth colored fawhion plates, 24 page of music, and about 900 wood cuto It principal embellishments are SUPERB STEEL ENGRAVINGS t Its Immense circulation enable fu proprietor to spend more on embeilsh mnnta srnripa A.o. than anv other. It gives more for the money than any io the worm, its THRILLING TALES AND NOVELETTES Are the best published anywhere. All the most popular writers are employed to write originally for " Peterson. " In 1879, In addition to the usual quantity of short stories, FIVE ORIGINAL COPYRIGHT NOVELETTES will be given by Ann H. Stephens, Frank Lee Benedict, Frances Hodgson Bur nett, Jane G. Austin, and that unri valled humorist, the author of " Josialr Allen's Wife." MAMMOTH Colored Fashion Plates jQyv Supplement will be given In every number for 1870, containing srfull-size pattern sheet for a lady's, or child's dress. Every subscriber will receive, during the year, twelve of these patterns, so that these alone will be worth more than the subscription Erice. Great improvements will also e made in other respects," Ahead of all others. These plates are engraved on steel, twice the usual size, and are unequalled for beauty. They will be superbly colored.. Also, Household and other receipts ; in short everything Interesting to ladies. N. B. As the publisher rtov pre pays the postage to all mail subscri bers, Peterson " Is cheaper than ever; in fact is the cheapest In the, world. Terms (Always In Advance) $2 a Year 9Rcduced prices to Clubs.- Two Copies for $3.50 ; Three Coplee for $4.60 with a copy of tlve premium picture (21x20) " Christ Blessing Lit tle Children,'' a five dollar engraving, to the person getting up the Club. Four Copies for $6.60; Six Copies for $0.00; Ten Copies for $14.00 with an extra copy ot the Magazine for 1879, as a premium, to tle person get ting up the Club. Five Copies for $8.00; Seven Copies for $10.60; Twelve Copies for $17.00 with both an extra copy of the Maga zine for 1879, aud-the premium picture, alive dollar engraving, to the person getting up the the Club.. Address, ost-paid, CUARLE8 J. PlETERSON, 30G Chestnut St Philadelphia, Pa, fci-Mpeclmenssent gratia if written for. Awarded the Highest Medal at TIcua and Philadelphia, E. & H. T. ANTHONY & CO, 691 Broadway, - - New York, Opp. Metropolitan Hotel. Manufacturers, Importers and Dcnlers la Velvet Frames,- Albums Gkapho- BCOPE8. ANP VIEWS, ENGRAVINGS,. CHROMOS, PHOTOGRAPHS, And kindred Goods Celebrities, Actresses, etc. Photographic'Materials, We are Headquarter for everything in the way of ' STEREOPTICONS AND MAGIC LANTERNS, Being Manufacturers of tbe Micro-scientific- Lantern, Stereo-panopticon , University Stereoptlcon, Advertiser's Stereopticpp Artopticonv School Lantern, Family Lantern,, People's Lantern, Each Htyle being tbe beat of tu class la the market. , Beautiful Photographic Transparencies of (Stannary and Engravings for the windows. Convex Glass. Manufacturers of Velvet Franrorfor Miniature and Convex QUs Pie- tares. Catalogues or Lantern and Slides, wlw directions for using, sent on receipt of ten cent, drt mxt ifcU adwitlsfinT,i1 far mr .,.