The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, August 16, 1861, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    American Affaire Abroad,
MB- JOB* BRIGHT OR OCR TROHHLRB AHD TBS OOT
TOR QUXiTIOH,
Ob tiro evening of August 1, Mr. John Bright
Spoke In Boebdale on behalf of Mr. Ohoetham,
the liberal candidate for Parliament. His apceoh
li reported In the Manchester Guardian. In the
oonrfe of it he laid: Without complimenting Mr.
Ohoetham, I oan tell yon that be 1* a most native—
-1 believe the most active—member of an awoola
tlon formed in this distrist for the purpose of pro
moting a better eepply of eotton, not from India
alone,lrat from all part* of the world where cotton
can be grown, andalthough,perii&pi, it would
be too mnoh to lap that that aeeoolation had been
able to produce any great results, beoaure so
ehort a time has elapsed slnoe its operations
began, yet it hae now sown the seed, ae it were,
of a production of eotton in very many parts of
the world whore that production probably
would never hare bom heard of, or thought of, if
It had not been for the labors of that associa
tion. With . regard ito the supply from India, I
may tell you this, that there la no man from Lan
cashire of late who hat boon more assiduous In his
attendance in London whenever anything was to
be-done with the minister from India, or with the
Borne of Commons, with the view to promote the
Opening of the Industry of that vast country, so as
totUoroaie the production and export of oStton to
this country. I think that, Just now, if you oan
Hud * man who, on questions of groat State policy,
agTOss with us, at tbs same time having a deep
personal interest in this grant ootton question, and
haying paid so mnoh attention to it as Mr. Onset
ham has, I think there is double reason why he
Should receive the to’os and hare the oonfl
fence of this division of the county. [Cheers ]
fow, Is tilts ootton queetien a great question or
not? I mot a spinner today—he does not
live in Koohdale, though I met him here—
and I . asked him what ha thought about
it i and ho Mid, 11 Will, 1 thtn/k iotton will
tom* iamthmo ” [Laughter] And I Had
that there 1# that kind of answer to be had from
three out of foui\of ail the spinners you ask They
new that in past times, when eotton has risen 50
or 80 per sent, or some extravagant rise, some
thing has oome—the rate of interest was railed,
or them has been a commercial panto from some
cause or ether, and down the prioe has gene, and
when everybody said •• There would be no ootton
at Christmas," there proved a very considerable
Stock at Christmas And so they say now. I
don’t in the least deny that it will be so; all I
assort is, that this particular ease is now: that we
have never had a war in the United States between
different Motions of that country, affecting the
production of ootton before; and It is not fair nor
WHO, but rather ehitdish than otherwise, to argue
from past events, whloh wore net a hit like this, of
tile event which is now, passing before ear eyes.
They say, “ It is quite true there is a civil war In
America, but it will blow over: there will be a
compromise, or the English Government will
break the block ade" Now.roeolleot what break
ing the bioekada means. It moans a war with
the United States; and I don't think, myself,
that it would be cheap to brook the block
ode, at the oost of la war with the United
BtatSS. I think that tao cost of a war with the
United States would give, probably half wages,
for a very considersble .time to those persons in
Lancashire who would be out of work if there was
ae cotton, to say nothing at all of the manifest in
justice and wrong against all international law,
that a lsffai and sfleotive blockade should be inter
fered with' hy another country. It is not oxaetly
the business of this meeting, but my opinion Is,
that tiro safety of the products on whloh this coun
try dopondsrestf far more on the suooessof the
Washington Government than upon its failure;
and I believe nothing osuld be more monstrous
than for nr, who are not very averse to war oar
solves, to sot up for erities—oarping, cavilling
orttict—of what tiro Washington Government is
doing. I saw a letter the other day from an Eng
lishman, resident for twenty five years In Phila
delphia, a marohant there, and a very prosperous
merchant. Ha said. "I prefer the institutions of
this country (the United States) very mnoh to
yours & Englandj” but ho saye also, “Ifit bo
onek admitted that here we have no country and
US government, bat that any portion of these
United States oan break off from the oontraiGo
VornfoOnt whenever it pleases, then it is time for
me fopaeh up what I have, and to go somewhere
where there is a country and a government."
Weil, foal is tiro pith of this question. Do yon
suppose that if Lancashire and Yorkshire thought
that they would break off from the United King
dom that those newspapers who are now preach
ing every ktsd of moderation to the Government
of Washington would advise the Government in
London to allow. thaia two counties to set np a
special, government for, thsmsolvos ? When the
people of Ireland asked that they should secede,
was It proposed in London that they should be
allowed to secede peaceably? Nothing of the
kind. lam not going ;to defend what is taking
place In a country that is well able to defend it
self Bttt I advise you, and I advise the people of
England, to abstain from applying to the United
States doctrines and principles whloh we never
apply to onr own ease. At any rate, they have
never foughtfor " tiro balance of power" in Eu
rope. They have never fought to keep up a do
eaying empire. fney have never squandered the.
money of their people in snob phantom expedi
tionl as Wo have boon engaged in. And now, at
this moment, when yon are told that they are go
ing to.be ruined by their vast expenditure, why
the sum that they ate going to raise in the great
emergenoy of tins grievous war 1b no greater than
what we raise every year during a time of pesee,
fLoud cheers. ] They say that they are not going
to liberate slaves, So! the objeot of the Washing
ton Government Is to maintain their own Constitu
tion, and to act legally, at it permits and requires. {
No man is more in favor of peace than I am; no
man has denounced war more than I have, pro
bably, in this country; few men, in their public
life, have suffered more obkquy—l bad almost
said more Indignity—ln oonseqnenoe of it. But I
cannot for the life of mo see upon any of those prin
ciple# upon whloh States an governed now—l say
nothing of the literal word of the New Testament—!
cannot roe how the state of affairs in America, with
regard to the United States Government, could have
been different foom what it is this moment. We
had a heptarchy In this country, and' it was
thought to ho a good thing to get rid of it, and to
have a united nation If the thirty-three or
thirty-four States of the American Union oan
break off whenever they like, I oan see nothing bat
disaster, and contusion throughout the whole of that
continent. I say that the war, be it suceeisful or
not, bo it Christian er not, be it wise or not, Is a
war to sustain tiro Government and to sustain the
authority of a groat nation; and that the people
of England, if they are true ta their own sympa
thies, to their own history, and to their own great
aet of 1834, to whfok reference has already been
made, will have no sympathy for those who with
to btrtld np a groat empire on the perpetual
bondage of millions of their follow-men. [Lend
ohoors, I
A Disbanded Volunteer.
tFrora the Kew York Sunday Mercury.]
It seems, from the following letter, that the
rebel* on die line of the Potomao hare been put on
abort allowance of beef and bread, and are desert
lug In consequence. Meanwhile onr arm; In and
about the teat of Government la booomlng, under
the eneellent regulation! of General MoOMlsn,
mere tffloient ever; da;. We commend onr dis
banded friend’s epistle to the »enoua eonalderstton
of onr readerf. It It one of the raeießt he has
mitten i
WAsaindron, August 9, 1861.
Eddytur* ef the Sunday Mer&ary,
I lain from a rentable eoroe as bread staff* la
Smisisg ekane with the eoratedrits at Mraasseß
and as beef also la meated ont to the men in all.
mil; imall ohnoka. Konsekens la sum ef tbe floor
or the Sutbern Army is gettln warm;, and onleta
tbar air better snppUdc wltb the grate staples of
Ufa thar'il be eenslaahul bolting afote long
Oar aptei report, matoh aioknoas in the rebtl
oantp. More’n a thousand ot Boworygnard’a ihl
rerally is down with the ahakea; and the billiards
—as the; call the billyus fever in Virginny—bes
also prosiorated menu; aa shaped the fl;ln halls
Ime sorry to aa; tbara ben a power of fever and
ager payablnle In onr own hespittlet Sense the
kommenasaent ot the Dog Days, bat bark and
eanlae brakes up the deoesse In most eases- The
blsitn temperatoor at this season Is all fired trjin
to Nathorn eonatetooshlns, and segerail of onr
kumpanlet aa sum hers aa fresh oompleoted aa
yang redishes la now aa yalter aa carats The
reason heat brings all ths bile to the sutfit
Bat th« orfallist kuss in these dtgglns Is the
masketers She sojera faces wen they enm in from
picket dooty, laeka aa el they’d ben sowed with
Are and the erop Was enmmin up uncommon thick
Mtlyuas of the aangwingary erlttera rise outer the
slashes at rundown and charge bagonet on every
usfortlnit haman as shsnst throes in thar way
Doaghskin pants wont tarn thar piaind weepluv,
and When Ins; attaot the bare sktn they make a
Muddy bassynesa of it std no mistake. A trend
ot mind sea be never seen shod piuc .bottom;, but
Its wasser’n phleas a darned site
So sines or a forrard movement at present Men*
ny tblnks that'll be no March ontil September, In
tbe mean time tbe sekatsry of war la reddin the
army of ssrtain pusstnuymo a pupa, and pnttin
Itaoob Wait pointers In thar plaees. Msoiellins
disi/pltn la likewise dooln us a good lorn, and onr
troops will bo redd; to renoo the game whenever
Simon aaa wig-wag,
DMarten Trent the rebll samp reports aa the
Meet tom,the north bout our sharp abaters makin
thirty Inoh strings, has hed a neckstensive effect at
ked'kwarten plumpln a ball throo the osipul at
evry pen, la enmmin a Httte to tear tbe Ball’s eye
to shoot the id eta ef ihe bullya of Sail Kan.
When Jeff Davis was informt as hts effuse was
Shot forty four times in sueaseihin throo the dtea
freme at Weehtwklng, they sey he was task sick
at tbs attunmlek and turnt as pail as ef he’d ban a
gun to klok the book!*."
1 enderstand as Davis, Boweryguard, Joaatnn,
aod Dee bes tent aekrlt orders to a Phiiadelphy
manfaeturer for four bnllUt-praff shirts witch la to
be imuggltd South by iomalo Baessrshlnista ondar
thar ouder ltnnen, the neper edges beta keasesled
with lace to aa to peer into the topi of their ahim
myasta, I trail aa a hrlte loek-ont trill be kep for
cm, far I don't went oat sharp ahutsrr to waist
thar powder end shot on the steel corsets How
lever than no eall for em tofireattheboddy;
they kin tint at the eyes as Old Pat’s men righted
the British grannydean at Bunker BUI
Talking or femsle aeetssahiniats, thar infarual
tretehery la aeawahln to Dellely They alt een
ilnaaUy gels Booth with Nathern arms ondernaatb
that psttyeotes, trad eriminal curryspondenae in
thar bussumi. We ougbter hev a femmynins per
leee on Mooes and Dioaaun'a line, to aairteh thar
wardrobe and kempel em to make a clean brest of
It. As It la they air little better than locomotive
maakt battrees ■ .
Washington Hast Haft M lively now as it was
when the offsira etraldriltt the b*f ratal when 'hay
ehewsed without leave or lisente. They kant com
in from tba tnbbobs now togit their licker without
• permit. Kousskently the streets Inltod of faosn
allot! etowdtd with the mlllntary wires kwlto a
oiyit asspec*,
Pretwe Hapollynn bos bon the Hon of the weak.
Ho Ukol honest old Abe amaislnly, and id no
wnnder the po pit looks np to him, for ha raeltaoa
hie ndshins of a poplar president
* * * * # * w
I her moony more akraps of informaabln on
hand as I should bo glad to send yon, bat as the
mail is j*at ready to start and post and rail waits
for no man, I mast postpone them Mil nox weak,
remaning at tuhU
Yonr alltu
A DISBABDSD VoLUHMBR.
A CURIOUS document, Issued by ex- Governor
Olaiborne P, Jaokaon, of MinonH, appears In
■one of the Western papers It purports to be a
«> Osotaratton of Independence of the State of
Missouri," and U addressed to the people of that
State. lie starts with the assumption that the
Government of the United States has made war
open Missouri, 'and after a long tisane of false
hoods relative to what he oalls the usurpations of
the “ Lincoln Government,” he declares the con
neetlon of the State with the Union sundered, in
vlrtoe of the dissretforany authority oonferred
apon him by the Legislature—his notion to be ttb-
Jsot, however, to the ratilaaUon of the people at
tha ballet box, at snoh time as their impartial ver
diet ean be obtained Missouri will no doubt be
very much surprised to Snd herself-out of the
Oates so easily.
Gen* Ben McCulloch.
In oonneotion with the reported death of this
somewhat famens personage, at the battle of Darts
Creek, Missouri, the following sketch of him .will
he found interesting:
General MeOnllooh was born in Bntnerford
oeunty, Tennessee, in 1814. His father, Alexan
der McCulloch, was aid-de-camp to General Cof
fee, and fonght nnder General Jackton at the
battles of Talladega, Tallahassee, and Horseshoe,
doting the Creek war. His father emigrated to
Georgia while Ben was very young, and Ben was
kept at school, in Tennessee, until he was fourteen
years old. After this, Ben was kept hunting un
til he was near twenty-one. At that time the
hears were so bad in Tennessee that the settlers
could not raise their hogs. Hunting boars in the
oane required much oantlon, and if a man’s gnn
snapped he lost his breakfast. Toung MoCnllooh
frequently killed as many as eighty bears daring
a season, and never less than twenty tn the oonrse
of a wintar. This life gave him a taste for wild
adventure, and, when he became of age, be deter
mined to go on an expedition to the Rooky Moun
tains, and left his homo, for St. Lonis, to join a
oompany of trappers He arrived too lete, how
ever, and likewise failed in joining a oompany of
Santa Vo traders.
He returned home, and soon after called on Col.
David Crockett, who was making lie expedition
to go to Texas to take part in the revolution. The
whole Southwest at that time was alive with feel
ings of sympathy for the Texans, and men were
daily Hooking to their standard, Naeogdoohes
was appointed the ptaoe of rendesvons from whloh
the expedition was to start, and Christmas of the
year 183 S was named for the day of meeting, when,
as ‘-Old Davy” expressed It, they were to make
their Christmas dinner off the hnmpqf a buffalo
MoCnllooh again arrived too iato, and friding tha
Bros os, when he was taken slok, and he did not
recover nntil after the fall of the Alamo, MoCul
loch’s disappointment was very great at not being
able to join the gallant band of patriots, bnt it at
terwarde proved very fortunate for him, for Col.
Travis, after having sustained a siege of thirteen
days, with only one hundred and eighty Texans
against Santa Anna’s army, fell with his brave lit
tle hand, after having killed nine hundred of the
enemy.
- MoCnllooh, on joining the Texan army, under
Gen, Sam Houston, was assigned to the artillery,
and made oaptain of a gnn. Ha served gallantly
at the battle of San Jaointo, where Santa Anna
was taken prisoner, and his army of 1 500 men
killed or taken prisoners. MoCnllooh afterwards
settled In Gonsales oonnty, Texas, and was em
ployed on the frontier surveying and locating
lands. Ha frequently led the wild border soouts
against the Indians and Mexicans, which service
be entered before the celebrated Jack Hays He
alto distinguished himself at the battle of Flnmb
Creek, in a fight with the Indians, who at the time
burned and sacked the tovfn of Linville. He joined
the expedition against Mier, bnt, not agreeing with
the plans of the leaders, he returned home before
the fight, and etoaped the cruel hardships and Im
prisonment of that command, which had snrren
dared te the perfidious Ampudia.
When the war broke oat with Mexico he rallied
a band of Texan warriors on the bank* of the Gua
deloupe, and set out for the seat of war on the Bio
Grande The oompany arrived four days after
the battles ot Palo Alto and the Besaos. His
company was aoooptcd by General Taylor, and be
was afterwards employed in the daring scouting
expedition towards Monterey, in whloh battle, as
wdl as that of Buana Vista, be won imperishable
renown He afterwards joined Gen. Scott’s army,
and continued with it to the conquest of the city
of Mexico. For his gallant' services he was ho
nored with a national reputation, and the office of
United States Marshal or Texas was given him by
President Pierce.
When Mr Buohanan decided to send : an army
to put down rebellion in Utah, Ben McCoUcah
was, to the astonishment of all seriously thinking
men in the country, appointed one of the peace
commissioners to Salt Hake, and in thataapaclty
made, at the expense of the Federal Government,
a passage across the plains and back. Well mean
ing folks got the idea that the Mayor was te be
mid* Governor of Utah, and it was thought that
his antecedents fitted him for. the presumed rough
work ha would have in bringing the Mormons to a
8»oie of propriety, and, therefore, his appointment
as aomajssloner, his patriotism at the time being
undoubted, was everywhere hailed with delight,
it is now presumable that as a conspirator against
tfc i country he was sent out by Messrs. Toombs,
VI yd, and others, to examine oar Southern located
public lands, and prepare the way for their pro
posed selsnte by. the Cotton States—for MoOullooh
did nothing as peace commissioner, but did much
in observiag things tn New Mexico Bad elsewhere
in his “ divergent travels.”
General MoOullooh was married three or four
years since, and a characteristic story is told of
him when his first child, a boy, was born, that he
insisted, to the great horror of his young wife, in
having the youngster christened "Buffalo Hump,”
in honor of a particular friend, an old Indian ohief
of that unique name.
The general is a thin, spare man, of great muscle
and activity, and is now about forty-seven years of
-age He has a pleasant fane, and is mild and cour
teous in bis manners, with an air of diffidenoe.
He Is very 0001, and of determined bravery, and If
not dead, is yet yonng enough to add considerably
to his reputation as a soldier.
GENERAL NEWS.
A Fatal Accideht.—On Tuesday, a fatal
accident of a very distressing charaoter happened
on the Pennsylvania Railroad, near the Cresson
House. , A poor widow named McAfee, the mother
of five ohildren, had baen.engßged during the day
at the Oreason House, having solioited the privi
lege of earning a little bread to feed her ohildren,
who were in a destitute oondition After getting
through her work, she started for home, well pro
vided with snoh eatables as eohld be furnished from
a hotel table, and doubtless anticipating a joyous
welcome from her hungry ohildren. On the way
home, she was struck by a passenger train and in
stantly killed A passenger writes us: "I saw
her lifeless body a few minutes after the accident—
the provisions with which she intended to feed her
starving ohildren strewn around her. Will you
publish these foots in your paper, and make an
effort to enlist the sympathies of some of the bene
volent oitlxens of Pittsburg tn behalf of these des
titute ohildren?”
We hope the above may meat the eye of some
one who will take an interest in the welfare of the
helpless orphans thus thrown upon the charity of
others. —Pittsburg Gazette of yesterday.
« They Gah’t Draft Ha, Now.” —An in
stance wherein was depleted the foolish fear some
persons are apt to indulge, retpeating the possibili
ty of being drafted jpto aetual military service,
and the extremity to whioh this fear oarries them,
has oomo under our notioe. A gentleman who shall
be nameless, called upon Dr 8 , a few days
since, snd inquired what would disqualify him for
military service, and prevent his being drafted.
He was informed, among other things, that the
loss of the forefinger of his right hand would have
the effeot. Taking his leave of the dootor, the
apprehensive individual was lost sight of for about
an honr, when he again made his appearance,
wishisg'the stump of his finger dressed—the same
having been accidentally “amputated” while
“ outtfng wood!” Proper liniments, <ko., having
been applied, tha patriot, as ho wss emerging from
the door, exclaimed, in an exultant voice, » They
can’t draft me, now—New Savin Journal.
Major Brower.—Major Browne, at Pick,
ens, is beoomiDg spiteful Our people at Pensacola
put, themselves to much trouble to place him in
possession of the Manassas news. They went so
far as to hasard a landing on Santa Bosa Island,
and, attaching the paper containing the intelli
gence to the body of a dog, secured the despatch
of the unfque courier toward the fort by append
ing to the tail a rattling ean. All Hits attention
the old curmudgeon shows his appreciation of bj
sanding baoka proclamation, offering a reward of
three thousand dollars for the bodies of Captain
Clanton's mounted men, dead, or alive, who, a
few weeks sinee, peppered a boat’s orew from the
Boat. What a aasine ingrate !—N O. Delta.
Advices from Ceylon, dated at Colombo on
the 29,h of June, report that the export of eoffae
daring the fortofeht amounts to 30 001 ewts, in
the proportion of 36,641 plantation and 13,360 ewts
native—the greater portion of whioh wont, as
usual, to London, for whioh port six ships hav«
sailed, taking 34,767 ewts. plantation and 6,136
owts. native. The weather for the past fortnight
baa been good, and favorable to the preparing and
shipping of produce. The prospeeta of theooming
crop are atill rather gloomy Labor is very
plentiful.
Brv. Joseph Cross, chaplain of Hie Walker
Legion, and war correspondent of the Nashville
Christian Advocate, in his letter describing the
battle of Boil Bnn, says: “ The brutal raseaJs in
Washington beat to death the few Southern cap
tives they had taken.” This miserable fellow for
mer says, that in a few weeka he hopes to preach
front tha steps oi the Capitol in Washington, on
the words of General Joshua before the gates of
Jericho: “ Shout, for the Lord has given ns the
city.”
A Plucky Professor.— Some civilians went
to Manassas, not only to see, bat to aid in the
fight. Professor 1. W. Bardwell, of Antiooh Col
lege, went over into Virginia to see a iqusd of
Antiooh boys serving in the Ohio Seoond, and not
desiring to leave the field “to the sound of the
enemy’s cannon,” ha took a musket, joined the
ranks, and fought through all the battle from
Friday morning till Sunday nlgnt. The hoys say
he waa “ brave as Julius Csesar.” That’s tha sort
of spectators that we want at our battles.
A triad ox a new six-inch twelve-grooved
rilled Dablgten gun was made at the Washington
navy yard. The gun was designed by Commander
Dahlgren, to avoid any sagarfiaon* weight,.and yet
preserve the requirtte stfength for effective service.
The experiment was oondnoted in the presume of
several gunners snd engineers, and was highly
satisfoetory The firing was at the target 1300
yards distant, the shot being a sixty-four pound
eonfoai ball. The range of tha gun is four and a
half miles
Camps of Rendezvous ahd Instruction
An order has been tisued from the War Depart
msnt establishing samps of rendezvous and instruc
tion at New Tori, Harrisburg, Pittsburg, and Oin-
Oinnati. Every volunteer is to bsmustered in as scon
as enrolled, and tent to the camp of rendezvous as
soon as mustered in the expense of traosportoticn
to be borne by the Government. The War Depart
ment reserves the right to attaeh soldiers or com- -
panics to other regiments, in ease that for which
they were enrolled be not ready at the time fixed.
Oafr Girardeau—Cape Girardeau is to
day only known to thousands of people la the
United States as the lcoation of a Federal camp
menaced by rebels; snd yet it is- the most Im
port&nt oity in «outh Missouri, well built and
finely moated, with a population (before the war)
of about five thousand. It is immediately on the
Mississippi river, one hundred and fifty miles be
lowSt Louis, and fifty miles above Cairo. The
hills cf the river just here are high and rolling,
giving to the. place, from an approaching boat, a
finelyspinturerquo appearanoe. There are -fine
■bbools, Protestant and Oatbolio, in the plsoe, two
printing offices, numberless ohurohes, and flouring
mtils.— Chicago Tribune.
Both houses of the Rhode Island Legisla
ture havo passed a bin providing that the bounty
law shall continue in force as to volunteers en
listed prior to tbe 16th da; Of Juno, 1861, into the
First and Seoond Regiments of Rhode Island
detaohel militia or volunteers; and every non
oommissiened office*-, private, end musioian, en
listing after said 16th of June, shall receive as
bounty the sum of 816, upon being mastered Into
the service of the United States
A Rochester Merchant loft his house on
Thursday evening to “ correct an error, in his trial
balansa ” Lis wife followed him, and found that
it required a carriage to find the error. She took
a vehicle likewise, and pursued to *• deep hollow ”
There the driver of the first carriage wae bailed to
stop—the wife ran to its door, and opening it,
found tha handsome'and riohly dressed terror”
Inside. The.aeoonnt.was immediately squared.'
A Fat Mam is Battle.—During the Bull
Ran battle an order was given to a New England
company to lie down and load, and only rise when
In the act of firing. During the hottest of the
confiiot Captain Taw observed a man standing
while loading “ Contrary'to order,” exclaimed
the uaptain, “ yon must lie down while loading.”
“ The foot is, captain,” said the man addressed,
“lam so plagnoy fat that If I lie down to load it
takes too long to get np again.” The eaptain
turned away with a smile, and left the fat man to
choose Mb own method of fighting.
A Wbit or Habeas Corpus has been iasued
by a Judge in Campbell oonnty, Kentucky, to re-:
lease the rebel Nontenant eolonel, Tyler, who Is
now a prisoner at Newport barracks. Before the
writ oan be served Tyler will be on bis way to
Fort Lafayette, in New Fork harbor, where the
Government has ordered him to.be taken.
Aooobdino to a proclamation of Governor
Brown, of Georgia, that State has furnished Seven
teen thousand troops for the rebel army,-and
equipped them at a coat of nearly threo hundred
thousand dollars, exolusivo of the arms, which, of
oonrse, oost nothing, as they were stolen from the
Government.. Governor Brown sqya that all the
arms athls disposal are now exhausted.
A oobbespomlext inßuenoa Ayres, writing
on the 27 th of June, states that the republic was
rapidly arming for war with the Confederation.
AU the war steamers not belonging to Urquisa
had been pnrehased by the government. Hiquisa
as commander in-obief of the national forces, was
equally alert In his movements. Exchange rated
fearfully high. American- imports commanded
good prices.
The taoht Wave, with four young men
foam Boston, was wrecked outside Boston harbor
Monday night. Three of them wero drowned—
via: James Gordon, of the firm of Gordon & Mo-
Hay, of Boston; Pierce Morton, ex-mldshipman
in the Boyal navy, and John Mitoheli.
Akother Steamer Captured.—Yesterday,
as we loam from one of the Continentals, the lake
steamer Pamlico, which has been running hence
to Mandevllle, Covington, Ac-, was seised by a
part ot that company, nnder Lieutenant Water
man, for the nee of tile Government.: She is now
in the charge of Captain Pratt, of the Confederate
service.— N. O.Picayune, B th-
The Lowell Vox Poputi ohronicles the death,
in that oity, of a- home aged forty-two' yean.
Ha had been in Lowell thirty-seven years, and
was able and wilting to work up to tbo day before
he died.
It is reported that Mr. Boteler, ex-member
of Congress from Jefferson oonnty, Va , has died
from a wound reooived at the battle of Bull Bun.
Tbo wound was in the foot, and, after muoh Buffer
ing, he is said to have died of lockjaw.
Lieut. Frakx E. Browhbll, who killed
Jaekson, at Alexandria, has reooived-the present
of a dagger from some of his Boston friends.
George Orruom, of Loudoun Va.,
is said to have been killed in a late skirmish With
Federal troops.
There are twenty-one regiments of rebels
at New Madrid, Missouri. They number, abont
twelve tbousand men. The Rooky Mountain Mus
tang has his eye on them.
John H. Poxssoy has been appointed addi
tional paymaster In the army.
mtn? iv.L< Li i/ r '■XT’'
'E-JtAJCj vmt .cjJtii-kfieJLt X. JrJlv f
THE WEEKLY PBBBB
seen established os aieoure and permanent fonndatisa,
but it la. In realitr, a marvellous example of the degree
•f lavor which a rightly-oondaoted .
LITERARY, POLITICAL, AND NEWB
JOURNAL
tan receive at the hands of a liberal and enlightened
publio. Our moat grateful thanks are tendered for the
patronage already bestowed upon as, and we shall spare
no efforte whioh may serve to render: the paper even
more attractive, useful, and popular In the foture.
The general features of the paper, in addition to its
POLITICAL AND NEWS DEPARTMENTS, will he
Pottry, Skttchu, Biography, and Original and Si-
Ucttd Tala, chosen for their lessons of life, illustra
tions of history, manners, and general
merit—and adapted, in their" variety, to the tastes ei
both eexee and all ages.
OUR NEWS COLUMNS
iml continue to be subjeot to nnremittink oare and
attention, and: all diligence be employed to make this
paper a compendium of all the prinoipal events of inte
rest whioh transpire at home and abroad.
The LITERARY oharacter of THE WEEKLY
PRESS, now universally acknowledged to be of an ele
vated stamp, shall not only maintain Us present high
standing, hut shall be enhanoed by important and valua
ble contributions from a*>lo writers. Deeming main
op kobals the great safeguard of private happiness and
publio prosperity, wy shall oarefhlly exclude from obi
oolnmns everything which may reasonably be ohjeoted
toon the aoore of improper tendsnoy. The fields ol
purs literature afford sufficient material to make an AG
CEPTABLE FAMILY NEWSPAPER, containing all
the elements of excellence, without a single ohjeotion
able line; and the proprietor of the THE WEEKLY
PRESS mayjustlyolaim that no head of a family need
hesitate to let its oolnmns go nnder the notion of any
member of hia household. \
The POLITICAL course WEEKLY PRESS
need not he enlarged upon here. Independent, steady
and fearless, it has battled, anwaveringly and sealoss
ty, in defense of the
BIGHTS OF TH* PEOPLE
against EXECUTIVE WStiRPAXIOM, ahd anfair ans
tyrannical legislation; ever declaring- and’adhering to
the doctrine that POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY oonsti
totes the fundamental basislor our free institutions, ant
that toe intelligence and patriotism of our oitixens will
always be preservative of a wise, Just, and salutary Gov
eminent. Thaw arefitoe priaoiples to whioh THE
WEEKLY PRESS has been committed, and to these it
will adhere.
TERMS:
One Copy, on* year——tin
Three Copies, one year— IM
Five Copies, one year.— IN
Ten Copies, one year— —■ IIM
Twenty Copies, toons address, at toe rate if
Cl per eanere R) M
Twenty Copies, to one address of eaoh ssb
aeriber—— MW
Any person sending ns a Club of Twenty offmore, will
be entitled to an extra oopy. We oontinne to send THE
WEEKLY PRESS to Clergymen for «1.
Specimen Copies will be forwarded to those wk* ra
west them.
Subeoriptione may eannaanee at any time. Warms
always ueh, in advance. All letters to bo addremedta
JOHN W. FORNEY
V;, <l7 ?HH3TNUT STREET,'
«* 4. *. re as T. uyg m. ,
« Y ll E pR]E »
BOOK
AND
JOB PBINTING
ESTABLISH MEN T.
NO. 417
CHESTNUT STREET.
PHILADELPHIA.
The attention of theßnsinesa Community,
is reßpecttolly Invited to the New Book and
Job Printing Office of « The Press,” which,
has been fitted np with New Material, in. the
most complete manner, and is now prepared
to execute, in a satisfactory style, every vari.
Hty of Printing
BOOKS,
PAMPHLETS,
CARDS,
CHECKS,
NOTES,
DRAFTS,
‘ RECEIPTS,
BILLS OF LADING,
BILLHEADS,
LETTER HEADINGS,
PAPER BOOKS,
CERTIFICATES,
,;.JDEEDSi?.— - J ■ -
BONDS,
MORTGAGES,
Gold, Bronze, and Colored Printing Exe
cuted In a Superior Manner.
MERCHANTS, MANUFACTURERS, ME-
CHANICS, LAWYERS, AUCTION.
EBRS, PUBLIC OFFICERS,
BANKS, RAILROAD
AND INSURANCE
COMPANIES,
Will be supplied with any description of
Printing required, at short notice and on the
iDMt p’fiioniblA t«mft
GUSINBSS Cl AMDS,
Jr;UK WBLg« RRAOHCAL SLATS
ROOFER, TURD Street and SERMANTOWR
Koati,» prepared to put on anTjunountof Roofing, on
liß J?S* t , J I P odor *i 9 A" 1 ": Wilt tusranty to mak«
everj.bttildint perfeotli watsr-tiri Orden promptly
ittCQdOft. tOi
oriii! MAlsnrAGi'u&ii
•W"-- MRW.oSMISKS.v,,':. . i,. .
File* .and 'Rhips .of 'iMjfr, ifi»teiriiai,ii l rapd
«W,
at,naneiaemret’o. pritee. ■ ~
•• h**!#!*.^:**:*.--*'.*,»“■*»* •
»pl-dto • ; i- fe. SfftiYft'.
EASS 1 AND COMPORT.
A,. THEOBALD askai Who.eanpleasear mil
THE PRESS.—PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, I*«t.
“'T'HCE'y «0 RIGffiCT TO TNSORASO* OOMPANY OF THK
-* A STATE OF PFNNIYLVA VIA.*—OFFICE. Woe 4
THE SPOT” I MOT StreetJmrirMnWoCKandT , HlßDB*tro*ts,^Sfc
I delphia.
INSTANT RELIEF!
PURIFY YOUR BREATH!
THROAT CONFECTIONS
GOOD FOB CLERGYMEN,
GOOD FOR-LBCTURBKB,
GOOD FOB PUBLIC SPEAKERS,
GOOD FOR SINGERS, ,
GOOD FOR CONSUMPTIVES.
circulars!
KIDICNAL
STOP TOUR COUGH!
STRENGTHEN TOUR VOICE!
SPALDING’B
•Brixxnai darby
SPALDING’S THROAT CONFECTIONS.
HVTKI ART DRUOHIXD WOB
SPALDING’S THROAT OONFXOTIONB.
OXODRSK CRT Tent
SPALDING’S THROAT CONFECTIONB.
They relieve s Cough Instantly.
They blear the Throat.
They give strength and volnma to the Voice.
They impart s daliaiona aroma to tou Breath.
They ate delightful to theTasta. •
They are made of staple herb*, and oannot harm
"any one..
1 advise every ene who has a Congh, or a Huky
Voice, or a Rad Breath, oranydiffioultyof too Throat,
to get a package of my Throat Confeotions. They will
relieve yom instantly, and yoa will agree with me that
* they ge right to the spot.” Yon will find them very
asefol and pleasant while travelling or attending pnMi*
meetings, for stilling year eeagk or allaying you thirst
If yos try one paokage, I am safe in saying that you will
ever afterwards eomddartoam indispensable. Yos will
find them at toe Dragnets’ and Dealers in Medicines.
FBIOB TWENTY-FIVE GENTS.
My Signatore is en each outrage. AU others are
eoanterfoit
APsskage will be sent by mail, prepaid, en receipt ef
Thirty Cents.
Address
HENRY O. SPALDING.
No. «S CBDAR STREET, NEW YORE.
CEPHALIC PILLS
SICK HEADACHE.
NERVOUS HEADACHE,
CURB ALL KINDS OF
HEADACHE!
Hr the eee et thaw nils toe poriedieai attacks at'jftt
c«u *r Sitk Htsdesto may be prevented: and if taken
at the eemntenaement of an attook immediate relief
from pain and sioknesswiU be obtained.
They, widomfoil in removing the IVmmm sad Hwd-:
«<*< to whioh femalea are so subjeot.
■hey act gently on toe faotreb, removing etototoMfe.
Far Lfttrsrv
an persona of nitaiaty kabitt, thexare valaabto as a
Laxatin, improving toe arrttitt, givihk tsiuauid torsi
totoe digestive ergana, and reaforihg,toe aatanil elas
ticity and strength of toe vnole syste*.
The CEPHALIC PILLS are the remit of leng Invretl
gallon andearafuffreondubtod experiments, haring
oeCn m ass many years, daring whiah ttms iheyhava
prevented and reUeved. a vast amothf-er phin and
suffering from Headashb, whether orittnating in to*
narvsw# ayatern er from a deranged state ef toe tit
-9M<Ar
.Whey are entirely vegetable la their a«m>«idtien, and
may be token at aU tuner. with perfect eafeiy withest
makint any chance ef diet, aa A tks <lmn ef a,*-
trumilt tmu rmitrt it hi, to administer tbmte
eUUrm,
BBWARK Of 001
Rhecenainefcave ave tizaatxret ef Xesry 8; Spaidlst
eneaeUex.
•eld byltoucfistaand Ml ether Bealeta laJdedieintt,
A;Bex.will.be tent ky atoll prepaid ea receipt ef the
PKIO&. SSS OlKte .
AO order* ahrald ke addressed
h»mm ; a. ss^'iOi»rat
« ws*a* K»K»,ionr rou.
Wrom tks Nmndasr, Btrfitti, pa,
_ Meet tks MmzmHur, Iferftlk, To.
. Arons tMDemterot,St,Bteui,Mimiu,
Jfjro* &r©,©r haweb©eirtN»l^ , »itfctS#V«dftokM.
t BSm%f W may have
#r*HtM4Ad*9rtUt t Fr*i4m94r&.Jo
KUm arAMaid to to a romarkablyetre*-
remedy fertile headache. and one of the Terr beet
>rthat T©rr fraxueat oonplaint wbiak bat
Oitoovored. ,
rrom tks Wttim k. A, Bazctts, Mite, lU.
We heartily anlone Mr.Bpaldlnr.aad kiaanrivalle*
iHiiin jnujK • s "
Stem tks Rsmmeka rztley'star, Mmmtai fa.
We are rare that pereoni mlftiikx Wiih the heedmake,
srkatrytham. wtilatialttothem. ; •
from the Bentbim Path -Rader, Ifsta OrJseas.La.
Vry them! yoa tbatare aflliated.asd weare amre that
fiSffls’Wv? 6 iSSSsaEsfas
aupradaaa TV™"*
Areas tks hr. Leads JDsmasrat,
Frees tks &OMitii,lUun»rert, Jest*.
from tbs Advertiser, Jrrevidmu.Jt.i. .
■ j. ; ■■
from tbe Daily Dims, tHwort, A. I.
SotknUs Fills are l ***ef all kiads.'
from Iks •kvsmtrstol kfan.
■aid taka vary a*asWaoafsr,tta ksadsek
JkeastksCtasaiaraial Bkniaaet’
•ateriaxkamesltyaaaaewkarauavad. '
W* Riasle kettle el ■FAUUie’s rRKrAun
•kw* wdl aavataa'tlmoetkairaaai amt'-tsHT-ea
HPAkDmO’B FRSFABJSP iJJjtfS'
«PAU»va« FB®ridiysn>'s?s,t f 'ai' ;!
BPAI.DiarG’S PSBPAKgt> mil*
,*4y®/wMK>iE6-fis
■wwwnr;;?'., t'.'wwAiwjf.
**“’.* inm w *iM* 3ivst
freUirenUßjlKi:
i.’lmiUe*, it i« : T9T-rde«irib]e to Tinvf «m« olmp »ai
Maraiumt w»» fnr.ropainm F*rttt})irei Voyi.i'TiwtlWi<
ptKPjuika iUlWfov'
WMti all nob * inert ©noie*» and 'no itnwbbbt ua
aordtodoffiSTt in■ aS&*"raUr**.£!l\
tkertiotom» _ ;’ -f’v /’[ •-■ •
•* rtsiroi V • «.
«•■*•—* Biirti nuk. - fris*,l*
«fBO. • &44ra*i
H- ■ M'V/ Ti;
"-• ** ««»5* Wm»MK,.i«Kg,.3Bm,
■ •• i aAUlflOjj,!; ; .
« wttia «• .f»l
»ala twin the txmtfmpeiau sabHa, imltaficncoflii'
I’ItKPAJtKD I «»«M i>fcn»iiitf*A*>
P3r«hMint,»na m* ttist Sh*Jailna»« ..
?mr-tr*spgH!ig nu&jwm-jfimimi < A
la m Um. Oataiita ,«rin«; all «iMn an mriaiilaa
omcMrfaiai-. ; ; . - ‘ " .* ./' ’’ ' "fcuwr/
INEC7BAHOSC «OMFAN»R.
INOORFORATEDin 17M—CHARTEEPEitPETPAI..
CAFiTAL, BJOO 000,
PROPERTIES OF.THE OTjVIdAM Y, FEBRUARY I,
MARIKE - fi^n4«&. TRAKSPOJITA -
DIREOTORS. _
Henry D. Bherrerd, Samuel Grant, Jr„
Charles Maoateacer, lobiaa Warner.
William n. Smith, Thomas B. w ittaon,
John B. Bndd. Henry 8. Freeman,
William R. White, Charles 8. Lewis,
George H, SWar^. dwjlrd c C. Carson,
HEMHY D. 8 HeKrerD, Preaident.
WILLIAM HARPER, Seoretary. ; irffi-tf
A NTHRAOITK INSUKANOB OOMPA
XB ET|.-Anthoriaed Teoitai DdoajSt-TKARTRIR
, Street, hetweem Third gad
Fnrto StrMt, PUtMTelpkla, ■ - ■
_This Gomsany will inssrs against Issa er dhmags Sy
■lra, en Bindings, Fanutsre, and Memhandise gene
duae, Maria* lanmnsas on Veawla, «ut**b, aid
Freights! lilaad li«™a||torih>arto aftoeTsien.
C. Aa»im*d, Jshnß,'makistra,.
SavfoFeanaiv Wm;F.D*a«,
W. M. SMITH, Reeretarr. ' ' _ apj-ti
»pH3B HfiLIANOS
MUTUAL INSUKANOB OOHPANS
... trniuimriu,
DFFIfiB, K>. SCO VTALEVT. BTFXffV", '
or aerpetiMLand en FarniHr*
CsMs, Ware*, and Mar
ehaadise.in towner
Pennaylvania.Railro&d Co.’* ( per sent, first
p.^«&^teCisrss:w:
eond mortgage load, fjhoflm)——. arm 00
Huntingdon and Broad Top Railroad and
Csnal Qo.’s mortgage .l«n .: dAEO 08
•ronndTent, firit-olasl™. tMf to
Collateralloaiu, well aeoured— 80
City of Philadelphia a per oent. lo(in_-.__ aOAOO 80
: Allegheny Oounty a per sent. Pm HR. loanu lomw
Ooirmiemisl Ranlf stnslr.:... . , CUB U
The JteUanoe Mntaal Inooranoe Co.’s stoeh MmiOO
the OosntyiFirelnhuranoeCo.’s stook- IJM 00
mejDelawareJt. S. lnsuranoeCO.’ssto*k_ no 00
MBlonMutual.lnsiraneo Oo.’s wrlp_„ ->HBiOO
Bills reoeivable- 14MTI
gw* MWMtt, aaeraad interest, ke— ; ?am st
lllIGYOK#:
1 moral** ’
Jelmiß. WorrsU, MarehSllßffi:
M.L.C«*m, a . LJehnaeffEtow*,
IqbertSoland,! CharlerLelOnd.
f.D v ßOaengarfon, JaoobT"B3fitin*,
OharlesßjWood.r. Bmith Bowen, ..
James S. Woodwato, • John^^Vwfobitt*.
It**®- enyerprir®
INSURANCE OOMPAi”
, .OFiISiHiIrAbBLPSA. ■'
fFIHB IHSnUNGE RXDLBBIVKLT.)
eojfFAjrrs bwildinh, b„ w, eosjtsM
109Z.TH Aim WALIffT STXBBFB.
DiREOTORB:
USES?* fsxMsairr
fgti&S'' JSSfeMfe-;
PENN BfUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE
COMPAMr...-. -, ;~i . - ,
No. 8»1 CHEBTNTT Street, Philadelphia.
ALE SHE PROfiTS JHVaJED AMONG THE IM-
Insure Liyeafor ahbk terms or for the wholo term of
life;oantAnnaitiwjmd EndowmentsipurohaseUfe
InreroßtsiEßeal Estate, and nmkeaU oon tracts de
pending on the contingencies of bib.
TheT act as Exeontors, Administrators, Aisignew,
IrniMM] and va&rdiaoH, .■ -
of, fitoto of Pennsylvania, oity of PES- . ■
-d«iphio, fco——i ■ it.. --aaa.ne-M
Premium notes, loans onoollaterala, ko,__ 874MT8
Pennsylvania, MorthPennsylvama Rail
roadfyand County six per oent. bonds— 100.801 M
Bank, insuranoe, railroad, canal stooks, ko. WAD dS
Sash on hand, agents’ balances, ko., ke. SBJOO id
JOSH W« BQWWOR.,SBowtaryi : mhU-tf
TYELAW'AKE MUTUAL SAFETY EN
BJ STRANGE COSIPAMY, PHILADELPHIA.
Dteerparatod by toe Legislature ef Pennsylvania, 13J.
•fieel.X. center ef THIRD and WAUHTT etreefo,
• PHILADELPHIA.
KfB¥RAJ(*H, :
•arg*., >T# *ol^parlaef the Werld
•n *«•** *y JtiVsu,fGwmJe, Aahe*. and Land Cav
■a Mirskanduio generally.: On Store:. EwclUnt
Senses, k»,
AJSMttta. OF fiats S®M?AK7.
„'Kata interacted--•UMtrfi
lttßSM Trawl-ram* list* fin V'-tmt —•'•'• •
' UifliO KMjlimitaymock Hsrmantawn Qkc *
raPRuE?'
. * ,l F llia ■ . —- IMMW
• BJteloo liare* Fftosirlmua JUiliwM
' M*» pinncrimte IES
; MOO 80«lu«*« BoSeoi 858 68
Steam Viz ComeaHT. __ os
MO i chare* limadejpluaan* Htvra-de
: *" • “ “
-> : - : ,li000 > «kareaCQntln»Bt»l Hotel C« ttD.W
msss^s^st
MM
WS5!&»a
tby , ■■:.,,, njttoa
Strip Mt «l«fk tf BBBfif? JLSjBS2TtS«9 ma^
jt*PTßaE=»wi.vr , »
—— aussis.
_mia_tarti» buusotojus. , v .,
igNto.;’'
'SSfffft." ..
< < jrmjAM -
amsaT>7>B@t?iBM
IjURR ®SUEANOjEfSOLTJSreKi,IF-S
FIHEINBffRiIf
. Thig Coijpaar, favorably known totoe’eoniHiiisltr
for toirty-mxyeara, continue* to insureasainiitfiSiiPor
damage by, Fire, an public or pnTate BaßdlaM.'eMiar
Pgnm® or for a limited tune. AlsoThuJ'umtture,
of Stoode orMershnnduie reneraby^enlibern)
‘whoirOapital, together with a lario SurpluxFuu*, ia
Inverted in toe most earefß' manner, vhiah enablus
Kaviiv&tU SEfirS
Jmlhan P«t*r«l| l f iWM *Wa S&ililiiim,
Qaratw CftmpbcH* Y luJbSnfi,
-JONATHAN'’ Prertdeni
Waamt H. Cuowxu., gesretary, ‘ apt-ly
INSURAMOR. ,~-MSOHANIUB‘
SIHSfKANCE COMFsSy et Philadelphia, He,
. Ner& sTATRStaM!, beloyrßacs. insu^fftfiii-'
.fSSf* ™ raifflffitruMmnta*to adjustall •
ishtts ureiupar,,&n4 ikorebT >«* to merit the psttea
asesflhspshffe; ;> ?■;■
■ .; pduspwaii,'. ■ ■ ■; * '
, trap!** 1 -
&|plfciii. .-Jg&apfeM*
: gkyaaaa '-fffiii Hr> LRutrles CLar*,
a bqucrm ; sms :aroso»i]»tas ,00.,
iaa - eMAJtvsa s ejßf-
Inverte/m eound and >
tusuraoh DweUiuis, ■ Stores; Putoitureyllerohanaiite,
vessels Is sort and. their oarroee, ahd other perecd*
PTeptrty. Ali lewei liberally lid promptly adiwi.t»<
•apjwsr^';:
AABKKT q, .
IRXOHANG® INStJRANOE COMPANY
AH -OJRas No. dOa WAIjNH* Street.
FOB tHBHRANCB onTtoMM and Mershandtoe,
gsnsrnUy. ’ «S taverabls terms. eilhhrliiaite* »t oor
, jffhnft. ginacds, - Olmrlea Tkempseh,
JSdwardD. JUberta, - James V. Hale,
Samuel £. Bmedley, , Joshua X Owen,
: f ■ TBPKMIAH BOtitSALL, Presiaehr:
_ ,5= <4. @XMHOUO. Vim Prwideßl,
tI«SA.h» Pox. Sseretarr. j*(ff
pBUuADULPEOA TBBSA-OOTTA
ISwojuc& ,
,■ o««*mJWms Jloom*, 1010 GBEtnrirvV'Stnwfc
.ii... - Ornamental Chunnw-lopt.
OinlenVaM* maStanorr-
Bn»»U#tl«,Flpoh2* ?l!3, ;
Jkrahlteotar&T Omsjneste. , ■ '
Water ripe,warrantedte «ta*s£; ■%
prosiure. ohe&p&Dd durable,
Ifne Tra3© supplied on li bei&i wr***.
m»strftt«iq&tßioraar«>ntb7 ? -
-s»!' -VP *9pJi9&h*rf H, .
v ■
jref? EHOTITBD, per ‘‘Annie luinl>*li,»
froa iaverge-frit . ’s
Awaitt, mi wiarr.
1 ,iM te Ol.Suoom b*Hl«
3)0 *» Calomel, in 1» bottles, ■>
■ So i& y.l gfiaatlulSiiai ' -■ '
1 yg&Q'336SO&: ■
• ACOW* Mei* : JXtia>.3 s £, au 0 1 iMUuijK**'
<r,eBc*>&fc- • *<**• ««..
:v ..;
< '
■ s>&i»!«. JK'jMncrnij 'MMuSfci '
llAfefeVt ” ■' ,j. j>
'C*
Skaukoad luma.
flEwca—a piiliiAjLiajuf niA
LeereNew IMeot-oornerol BROADmio CALLOW
mLh Strata, PHILADELPfIiIA, (Funnier en
trenoes on Thirteenth-and on Cellowtult atreeta,] at s
A. M., ponneotint itlmatait with the PENrt’sYL
r«n ni to Sn LINES.
traaoee on_ Thirteenth and on Ceffoyhill rtTeefii.Jfor
and HARRI9JBU As. at 18.16 P* M»*
SATLV, oonnaottna at Eamslrarffirith the northern
DISTANCES AND KEAD-
Fnpi* PmunaneßU., Milee,
lo PhoenixTip* ~ JBl
Sl«aaaw»tt
tefcrr-rjg
BtreTerton Junotioniaa
arjr„, , ,I*9
mmtarlniui..
stare———ira!
Milton——* . —185;
Manor—■ »-»■».—~W7
Williamsport-—-. —«JO9
Jersey Shore .....Mg
Look Maven——Jw,
gwItOB ■■> ’t—--Pgr ~,
The 8 A M. and 1.18 F.M. train* nSSct dSirat Port
, close connections with lines to luar&ra Falls, Canada,
th lfep(&ffi : Comer ol BROAD
end CALLOWBtILL Streeta. „ .
„ W. H. MoILHBNWJSy, Seoraterr.
May 10.1881. mT*Mf
SUMMJSii ARHAWWB
kn« “««
H£J£&ttSKl&2£
JKJJtSfsa &¥**&*»« ««™»,
,t«ST» W.ond mk
'M«Kms: a “*■•*•
<J£a*o FhlSdOliihia, 8,8,10, UA. M., a, Mi, 4.8,8.9.
nM *• *•■“'•
°"rii* 8 A, rf. sai B.H JP. M. wifi mako aoitosiostko
•ermsntowß road. ...
OR IWDAIiA ‘
P*M.
* ?; mi,s.u a. *t„ i*,«,«,
“*** * M ‘ OK SRMDAYS.
ie»TO Hdtodeiohla.i A. M., i andi P. M,
Aosto 1 ogdi P. M.
Aeart «i, A, M..IAS,
>.«, Mi,4K, «£,£ and 11# P. M.
LeaTeMsnaTank, SX.TiJ. Mi, SX. II.X A. M„ «, OK,
i, T, and 10 P, M. ;
.heave Philadelphia,* A. M„ t, 5,andTXP, M.
teave Manarnnk, 7k A. M„ IX, **, and » P. M.
■ JR, KT SinTIH, Senerai Superintendent,
anrjl-tf. _ Depot, METE and BRBSH Streets.
PBKHBK.VANIA OSHTRAL
•60 MIL^»^L%JfKACX:.
1861.- wimmm- 1861.
Connecting direol at Philadelphia with,Throurh Trains
from Boston, MesrYork, and All point* But, and in the
•man Bepot at Pittsburg With Through Vrum to and
from all point* in tne West, ftorthweet, and Southwest
—tbu furnishing facilities for the transportation or
Faumntgeru unnorpaned for speed and comfort hr am
ether route.
Express and Fart Bines run through te Pittsburg,
withoutchange of Gan or Conductor*. All Through
Passenger Trains provided with Lougfaridge’s Patent
Brake-need seder eerfeet oontrol of the engineer,
thu addfnr mnoh to the safety of traveller*. _ •
Smoking Can are attaohed to each Tram; Wq£i-
AB-FO|jLo\sß:
garnibnrg Aooonnraddatlomvia Gjlumbis. S.S9 P. M,
'•;-i “ “ Ho, A at U.OO P. BL
i Wert Gherter Passengers will take the West Chester
■Meo, 1 and 1 Harrisburg aooommodation and Golsmbia
Trains, ■
Passenger* for Sunburn. WiUiamseort, Elmira, Buf
falo. Niagara Falls, and intermediate points, leaving
Philadelphia at 7.38 A, M, and tM P, M7.ro direetlr
unmebi , -
Tickets Westward mar be obtained at the offiees of
the Company m Philadelphia, Wow Fork, Boston, or
Baltimore; and Tickets Eastward at any of the impor
tant Jtaiiroad o®oei in the West; also on board any of
the regular I/ine of Steamers on the Mississippi or Ohio
rivers. -
WT Fare always at low, and time as auiak,« by any
ether Route,
For further information apply at ue Passenger Sta
tion, Southeast earner of Eleventh and Market streets.
The completion of the western sonneotioss of the
MIWMM THE
•Beat west.
The sonneotion of tracks by the. Railroad Bridge at
Pittsburg, avoiding all drayage or ferriage of Freight,
together with the rtvmg of time, are advantages readi
ly appreciated by Shippers of Freight, and the Travel
to and from any veint
in the Wert by the PennFywSiia J®<£d«« « Si
ttSMt. ss fwnurmbit as are shergsdhg ether Astir#**
iSrße p'artieulat te mark paakages “ via Pennsyl
vania Railroad.”
For Freight Contrast* or Shipping Durations, apply
te, or address either of the foUowmi Agents ef the
Otrtpany:
' • ■ . . 3J. A,Stewart, Pittsburg:
H. S.Fieree/fc Go,, ZMe*Ttlle, 0.: j; J. Johnson, Rip
ley, 0.; R.MoMeelj.Mayiiyille, Kyj Ormsby ACrog-
Fortsmoiith- O.; Paddook A. (fa., Jeffnwonyilie,
Jm.Tj,'MooW,"Lomrnlle, Ky ; P.B. O’Riley A
ByaniSUWYnd.; M. W. ,6nham A Ck>„ Cairo,
R.F. Staymafer A Glass, St. {mujer Mo. : John
[rtrit, -HaehviUe, .Tenn, TSarrur A\Himt, Mem-
SJtm, Venn.; Clarke A Co., duoago'.lU.} W. H. H.
Xoonta, Alton, Ill.: or to Freight- Agents of Railroads
at diflerent jomt* in the Wert,
RB-KlttsKow/jr,, Philadelphia,
MASKAWA ROOMS, 80 Hoithetreekßaitimere.
lg|c§& Co.. lAstorHonsejOr 1 B. William et..H. Y
AEECH A CO., Ito.77Btate street, Boston.
H. H. HOCSTON, Sen’l Freight Agrat, PkUa
laMr
™ ov
JTAXM,
At t A, At-, via Sends* aid Ambsy, S, as-.; A. Ae-
aid JVrißFcl^'fiOA** *
- Aeee’SHWdßtiss—■—. .. _ tS
via. Camden ssdJaissy ®!y, Maraing
AtllftlrMr, via Konsiagton and 35rawTS57
WertsrnSsxpre,w. ISO
At 1»4 7. M„ Tit GasuiOß etui Attboy Aconsse-
At Tii CazEieh eat Ast)wy|.b > Bad Arßs" * *
' ' Mil II ■' ■ I. ,0 I ■ II n {QQ
JUos|VK.,'nAEeastsct«asndJ«nwyOitT.BTe
, jliarßmieß!,—,— y„ l»
•iSsSks^^J^SS^llLtm
AtjE WL, Tie Oastdes a»d Jersey 6fty. Broslrar
a»U -- - . r-n-r- ii-- -•' - r ,-. ft S
At sisOsmdsa aaOeraoy Sity.Seatk-
M., ria Camden-aBd I, fergi>y~City, id, * °°
far Water ■as.Etnßdebarz.Saruieß.inihMlteae,
: nsm, ttreat Bend y «wn MB tjgjj^fiitn^ißaitiea.
£gst-ft
T’?? tor ts ™ eh
Balanee, Barer w, BwilM
teauFlemee. Berdentvea,«», atlatt, 1,». W,$SX*
JTi.IL '• —■ '■ i„r ‘ • . ’
.BteamboaiSreiiton, forCßordentawn end intenitetUate
plgMi, atW P. Tharf
_*rFor;l»eTr Yorirand Way
Beset, take.thejeare.on fßth etreet. aboTe/Wafiiat,
SaSaa hoar !»)[pra:de»artttie.; Vke eare the
eacrare battheir rrfanne appareLr All baeraji orer
Mtf poande tpbo paad for Npa. .OompanyaDKit
tfAijafaagwSMt:
mußti
jjajjjt " o^n,,
On
ImMwmpwTßOßPMi^ljoWpeetrpflSi
Manoh Chenk, Haeletoii, Wilheeliam, Ae.’
Atl.diP/S., (Biprora), forJßethiehem.Eaeton, Ae,
Oiie train reaehee Eeeion aha majreeeieao
eriththeleWrh 'VTtaey-Btu&iWiC atEßßthleham, beinr
as
wdte^gjatsiga^^^i^^
Mere JfoSuithtm at MB.A. M.t AißA.M.taaiMl
• gi*e A; M. HuuaßKlfc _ ■
. $ i
. Be&Men»3mß^lpiuaat« ffw. . . : :
gate to Betgfchtfid-lfl M IPexe to»giyA Cauink.tf M
Jk tttHOVnHhwwWß Btreet. in eider
*Tw!?B«M^W > S^S*fH“?stS*hdiyJ!^»is*Jeenße«t
at Berks raeet with Fiffipand iTffiftji-etreete. and
aeeend twenty
Aeent...
f
i Fer BaUimero at BAB A.M., UJBA.M.,(Bsereee),
"pw’okeiiter at IM A. Ki, itSA.M., (.UandSMß
Wrlsunetoß M a,UA. M„ UAi A.M..AIE tutd
U £ar hew Oaefie '«t ( «d A. M. aad t.UF. M.
Far BorercatfliU A. XL. and iSk r. «
|erMlforrSt|J|A.|t,
at B.U Mt A.
VeaTs Baliehery at l.« 7. St.
Itoara, Milford at i P, M. „
keare Borer at rut a. M. an* AS) F. Bt .
isaveNewOaetleatS.UA.TJOP. Jtt.
Aeave Oheeter at 1.4 S A: M.,S.<e, lAJand MO F.M.
. teave BattlsMjfe; for SaUehary bs«j Ball
r#M ** - 4m6»8 FOA BAXTXHOXB: '■ :’ f!
*«t»e Ohsetor at 5.4» A.M., 11.06 andlMaF.K,
Star* WUauaiton at tM A. M., F. Mu, ee* U
: FAEißlH’'FJtAlJt,'with Faeeehjer Bar attaehed, ".
Aeare FerryriUe' ud iatermedleto
* l A*”?'w!ljei!iyl»* far rernrilto aid tstonsadlato
*'s£ye* WUenwm for FbUedeldhia iLSd' latereie-
for Balttawre and mtomedl-
for Xarre-de-Braee and lstaraiedi
*'*^t**I *“ “ *tW* bWbAYB OKLY s
' At 10 BO froth Philadelphia to Baltimore.
At* is from Baltimore to Philadelphia. . •■
, Knight’s Sleeping * >r wulbe attaohed to every night
train from Philadelphia to Washington
’ {)t . -
Jfarthem Omtrtl
K&uro&rf*
Banbury and Erie R,R,
.pH ERNDAYS.
:e»n coMruiOlß.
BEAM* BY AVtViOn.
TO r. PAN«3OAST, AUOTIONB2B, Sne-
CMtsorto B.Soott.JTa, 431
STOCK OF WHI 16 GOOD-, HOSIERY, to.
Tina Moraine,
August It, onmmenoing at 10 a’otnok precisely—
Sals of a nook of white goods, hosiery, hoop starts,
*.otions« &o*« &o«
SHERIFF'S SALE.
This Morai?f. , , ,
A urns u, oommenoiD! at lo o’olook preeiaetr, at <3l
Chra'mit street, the baanoe of gioeerr Btoolc. fr-m
northeast comer of Eleventh andfipting Garden streets.
E»UKJ*SBS, SKIJKJLSX, & <30.,
* Wo. *SO MARKET CTtECT.
oaaip mm & ua, AUtmomßiza,
* *«- •*» WARgR? gtrwt %n 4 g«n wryro?.^
TMOSISS NATHANS, AUOTIONEJBE
ifA MEJtOHAbft, mthmst
corner of SIXTH and RACE Streets,
NATHANS’GILfcAT SALE
OF OOIiLaTBEAXiS.
On Tuesday Morauf.
August 27, at 10 Nathans* Auction
House, I®os IBS and Mf worth Bi*th street adjoining
the southeast oorneroi sixth and Bsce streets.
Consisting of Cold and filler Watohes, Diamonds,
Go'd Chains. Gold Jewclrr* £o.,viz:
Fine 18-earat gold English patent lever watches, ex-*
tra fu’l jeweled, in hunting esses, doable cases, end
open faces, of the most approved and best makers; fine
JS carat gold escapement, detaobedleyen.jepme. ho
rizontal, and duplex watches, m hnntmr caseß and open
faces, of the best mike ret gold English, Swiss, and
French watohes: fine 38-carat gold double-time patent
leva •• watohes; fine is carat sold independent seconds
watches; fine 18-carat god watch, with independent
seconds and half a»d anarier seconds, soitab'e for
horsemen and physicians; silver hunting-case, double
case, and double-bottomed English' patent lever watch
es, fad jewelled, and plain, of the most approved and
best makers; stiver escapement lever, lepme hori
zontal and duplex and French watches,
of the best makers, in hunting oases, doable ea*is. and
open faces; gilt and god p'ated watohes of various
binds; fine gold vest, neck fob chatelaine, and guard
chains; hair chains; diamond breast-pins and finger -
j rings; gold penetl oases and pens; go d and silver spec
itsetea; gold braoeltts; fine gold finger-nngs; gold
l breast pins; ladteseets jewelry, and jewelry of every
description.
Watchmakers, jewellers. d*alen, and private pur
chasers. are invited to attend the sale, as every article
wir positively be sold, without the least reserve, for
OSsn,
. W.Goods open lor examinntion early on the morn
in* of Bale. M. NATHANS.
; ATtPRI* E? l^kVimeb.
for leu than half
: fine told buntinr.oaee, doab-e-ciaae, end donble-bot
tomTEncliah'patent lever watohee, of Hie moat approved
and beet maker* ;.fine gold double-time Enrlish patent
ever vratobee; independent-seconds lever wstehes;
fine told huntinr-oaM and open-fhee escapement lever
and leplne watohes; horixontal and dnvlex vratobea,
allver hnntinis-oaee, doable.oaae, and double-bottom
Enrliah patent lever, eeoapemont levei, and- leplne
Satobea, of the moat ajrpfovedand beat maker*; dou
e-oaea and open-face etlver vratehea; allver tanartaer
mlver cnartler and sin,le-oaw watobea: .fine told net.
peek, fob, and cnard ohaina; diamond nnrertrinraand
breaet-pin* s seta of fine cola Jetrelr,; cold bre&st-pm*,
ear-rinti. fmjrer-rtnra, bracelet*, penoil-oaeea, pens,
and jowolrr of evenr.deaoription; tan*, pistol*, mnstoal
nutnunente, piano-fortei, and artiele* lenerallr.
t MONEY TO LOAM.
Money advanned liberally, lor any lenyth of time
atreed upon, ob told and silver piste, 'diamond*,
watohos, jewelry, fowlmr-pieoen, musical 1 nstraments,
dry mode, olpthior. irooerien.hardware, outlery, fur
niture, beddint. fajtoy artioles, and on all articles of
SoSsIGNMBNLS AMD.CB j-POOB BALES SOLI-
cram
. Liberal «iuh sdTanosa made on all artiolea eon*i*nt4
for «*!*- P«r*or>*’ r*v»w to
IiEGAI,,
FJ THE ORPHANS’ COURT FOE THE
CITY AND CWUSTT OFPH-LABELPHIA.
„ . PLstate„<KJOHN tPCONNORI deceased.
.MARY O’CONNOR,,the widow of deeedent, having
Sled her petition Mid appraisement* olaining real and
personal estate to the vaiue o> 8300 as there nee
orth under the Aot of Assembly m snob case made
and provided- thereto must be filed os or be
provedbyda court, "‘■^kwis 0 a c*?Bld¥, 11s ' 1
, , , Att y p r o Fetitinaer.
Jalyg TMU »ttl3-mtb4t*
Fthb court of common pleas
FOR THE CITY AND COUNTY OF FHILA
-9ELF2_IAt
iWILUAM ROSS vn. MARTHA ROSS.
Jane Term. 1881 fro. 6 Mivor©*. -
: Yon will please notioe a rnle granted in the
above aaae, to show oaute why a Divorce, a vi»e«lo
matrimonii should not be decreed- Returnable on
Sepreinber 16 -831. at 100 ooclt A. M.
This pnblioatign is made on aoooont of roar absence,
and m defanlt of personal servio.-
„ „ A TFOMPSOiv. Attorney for Übeltant.
To Mabtha Roes. Respondent. an9-f*tu-4t*
1 ETTEKS TESTAMENTARY uP> N
THE vs FATE of BRIDGET KELLEY, late of
the City of Philadelphia, deceased, having beang.-aptei
by the Reels ter of Wills to the unders gnad, all persons
having claims or demands against the eata'e ol raid de
oedent. are reonestsd to moke kncvrn tie same without
delay, and those ndeb s - thereto to make payment to
PATRICK v. C FUGH txeoutor,
au9-l-6*. Nos, lid or iMI Race st-oPhilada,
E -T*TR OF ROBERT LESLEY, BE
CFASED*
JLcettera i upoofaid Estate having been
grtwtecr by the «e*ister of WiUe to tae usdereifnedt
ail perous md bted theret i wiUp'eafeinafce »a meat,
ana those fr&vins olams or demands against the *aid
estate are requested to make known the same, without
del*vt«_ - Jalw^LKfiOjEY,;
819 South FOP it v'hlstreiit
jvM-f-dt*
DtSy *Ii(JT ON —The limited partner
ship heretofore exiitme between the eubaonb
under the style and of TILLJNGH a L\ D. P
JPI LD, & PAR i’RlDGK,fcrtbepnrpoBeofearryHig
on the wholesale boot and shoe business n the ory o *
Phi lad Iphia is !hi-ds.y diss aved by mutual consent
Toe badness of she firm wilt be settled by 'samel M,
Duffield. W» ness onr hands and sea's this Ist of Au
gust, A. D, 1861*
fT.D.TILLFNGHAST, lh. 8.1
General Partners. j 11.11
lE. F. PARTRiiiGE. W.
Special Partner, JAMtS ABBOTT. tX,.S.]
anS-ftt -
«.A.t.t.,Kt<r At> ELNSCts
figure—mb WEST OHEBTEB
RAILROAD TR ATNS via
PEWNSYLVaWia R-AILRUAP, leave depot, comer
ELEVENTH and MARKET Streets, at 8 M A.M., IS
noon, s 80 P, M., and I 7* iL
On Sunday, leave PhUadelphia at 7JO A*
West Chester at 4 P> M, IySP-tf^
is * ofijssa-fat
■WlaWgßlAiro PKIDADEDFHIA
juHiKoab.
tiajsbdia. „
SUMMER ARRANGEMENT.
On and alter MONDAY, Jans 3,18 M, the train, trill
ieare PHILADELPHIA.Wm the Depot, M. B. comer
of BIG BTEBNTH and MARKET Streets, at TM an
10AD A. M.J and », 4.U, S.SO, and 10 P.M.snd an
learo the Station, comer'of THIRTY-FIRST an
MARKET Streets, (West Philadelphia.) at 841 and
1 0M A. M., and ana 10. U p, M.
JLeare PHILADELPmuiEH. and t F. M.
Dears WEST CHESTER at 8 A M.andP P.M.
Trains leannr Philadelphia and West Chester at STAS
A. M. and 4.1* P. M. oonneot at Fennelton wuh Trams
on the Philadelphia and Baltimore Central Railroad
for Oxford and intermediate points.
HENRY WOOD,
ssrff-tf ■ Oenetai Superintendent
fg£aBBM^K PHTILAinBLPmA AND
eSm W —Nbb..mmnw railroad to..
(OdUeWSoxikFoirttstreot.)
„ Ob and after May 1. 18H,ae»oo ticket* Jill be iaraed
by thi* company for the period* of three, si*. nine, and
tweiee montii*, not traufferable. ■
Season eahool-tisket* nr atee be hat at H per aent.
•an B. BRADFORD,
me tiOTIOS. —OHBSTSE
eiU start from the new Paeeenger Bepot of the Phila
delphia and Headier Railroad Company, eornar of
BKOAB and CAItOWHUII Streela, fpaaaengar aa>
tnuiga onCaßovauU
“IratlllHß BlUXßfor Sewningtowa leaves at MB
nun for Betratogtfwa leavas at
BOOT*.—
aRMffIHHeI.FjnrfcAOEBJBiA;;abb .Kb
jAiiowTO.l. StEftfttx, (FsawiSftftrftßlmceft «s 3al~
fSwaiars *** ***?*
M;..
«ha - MBA. M.‘train tonsecia at assort, fer
. . Bhe abavotraina mat* direat
withthe trainee? the Itew Yert andKrio, CanandaigM
addMiacanj Falin. tndß»ffa!o,WevY«rh, an* Erie.ani
»eW:Yerk,CentniiJtfcUre*d*, &ea> al ; setsto FTerth and
BaStse,Aß* steoaaaies
Bridie, and aUn>er»i*dlatopeinSß.,
BMhetxeashe pnsemed at too Phuaoeipma and £,-
reira BkiinadAi c.e’e«etet Ogee, northwest some; ef
BDC3E andCST 1 Ps^>M«
■•naBWS' 1
Ae»T9 tie Phil t tklphia and.Jtoadms fleyet. Bj«idtato
BaQowhßl air* te&By (Btmdaya SKeepts; l ?. for all
»eißta-WaetiCs «qrai,»«aP. K,
. Fjroiehte ir*,.' heideuvere* betore gP, S*.. s* isrwrs
■ ,»M « H; »gh‘ Jgeeet:
lyllfST and <SAAAOWafEJWI»rdr to
x uavt*™ * “ ”"g|, Bri®>KAß-». Agent.
mnunee iwe*"- <•-«.« *«Wt»F*tr«*»r
-.»*%* " • ‘ *
HAIR KBSTORATIVE.
rpHB ONLY PREPARATION
ihathAb
, . STOOD THE TKBT OF YBAJRB,
utn.esowß motto sun mo*.* romii *vs*r dm.
And teetimonialß, new,.and almoat, withont number,
might he given, from ladies and gentlemen in all grades
of societj .whose united testimony none ooold resist,
that Prot. Wood’s Sir Heetoiattve will restore toe bald
and gray, and preserve toe hair of toe youth to old tote,
is all its yonUtthl bean ty!
Battls Cum, Mioh., Deo.n, ISB.
Paov. Wood: Thee willt please accept a line to in
form thee that toe hair on my head all fell off over
twenty.yeais ago. oaused by a.oompboatod onronio dis
ease, attended witoan eruption on toe hired. A oon
tinual oourse of eafibnng through life having reduced
me toi a state of dependence, I have not been able to
obtain etoT for caps, neither have I been able to do
' them.np, in ooneeQuenoe of which mr head hae suffered
extremely from cold. This mduoed me to paj Briggs
* Hodges almosi theiast oent I had on earth for a two
dollar bottle of toy Hair Restorative about toe let of
August last. I have faithfullj followed the direouons,
andthe bald spot is now covered with hair thick and
blaolt,‘though short; it is alsooomms-in all over my
head.. Feelmr ooottdent thatanoiherlarge,bottleiwould.
restore it eutirelr and permanent! J, I fee! anxious to
persevere in its use, and being destitute of means to
purchase any more, 1 would a*, thee,.if theewonldst
not be willint to send me an order on thine agents for *
bottle, and receive to thyself toe Scripture declaration
—“ The reward is to those that are kind to toe widow
SUSANNAHKIRBV
BieoßißK. Woble 00., Indiana, Feb. S, 186 S.
P*o>. 0. 1. Wood : Dear Sir tln toe iattor part of toe
year UM. while attending toe State and National Law
Sehool of the State of New York, mj hair, from a cause
Dfiknovs tome, commenced fallmK oh yery rap*Dlj» so
that m the short spec- of mx months, the whole opper
part of mv scab* vras almost entirely bereft of its cover
ins, and much of the remaming portion upon the side
and back part of my head shortly aftei became Kray ; so
that you will:not be surprised when I tell you that, upon
my return to the State of Indiana- mv more casual ato
auaiutanoes were not so much at a lose to. discover the
cause of the change in my appearance, as, my more in
tira&te acquaintances were to reoopmse me at all.
I .at once made application to the most sinlfn! pn?si
oiahs in the oountrj. But, reoeivjng mg assuranoe.frohl'
them that my hair oould again be,restmed, I was forced
to become reoonoiled to my fjtte, iratu, fortunately, in
the latter part of toe year 1857, jour Restorattve was
recouiHionded to me by a druggist, ag being .toe most
reliable .Bair Restorative in use. I.tried one bottle,and
found to my great satisfaction that it was producing the
desired effect. Since that time, I have used seven dol
lars’ worth of. your Restorative, and as a result, have*
riohooat of. very soft blabk hair, whioh .no money osn
Zt a mark of my gratitude for your tabor and abU in
toe prodnotion of so wonderful anartiole, Ihave recom
mended its use to many of my friends and acquaintan*
oes, who, I am happy to inform rou, are using it with
ilko effeot. Yen respeotfuny. joura, 1
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Depot, «* Broadway, and sold by ail dealers throngh
ontths-world. „ ,
. The Restorative is , put up in Bottles of three sixes,
six: large, medium.and sn.all; the small holds!half*
pint, and retails, for one dollar per bottle; toe medium
holds at least twenty per oemt. more In proportion than
the small, retails for two dollars a bottle; the lane
holds a eussrt, 40 per oent. more in proportion, and re
tails for 93 a bottle. . ......
O. {. .WOOD. A CO., Frpprietors, *4d.BROADWAY)
New StreWst.Lomj,Mof
. (And sold by all good Druggists and Fumy Goods Dsal-
JSold inthisoitTbyß. A. FABLNKSTOCK fc Co., Noe.
KAXSSS BT AWOTIOW.
if THOMAS & SONS,
s ~ i %g£#G2M2gß!? a *- t
gfOCKB AND KRAI, RBTATtS-9TUi AUGUST.
SpW a file at the Fxohsnge on TUESDAY
»tn mat. Descriptions preparing.
.fVBlilO SADlia HEAL ESTATE AND STOCKS
EXCHAr«GE KvER'? TU®DAY7 ht «
ttSss> b «"ioe«* eeaeon. In Air and
August, only OMarton al sales.
AT TKIVATE SALE.
Ear* aiarge amount of real estate at private
■ln* inolndlngeyery description 'ofcity and oonntfr
property. Erin tod lists may oe had at the avati on store
Sale at Nos. IN and 141 South Fourth Street.
•wsmmiSiikvam‘Mtoit.
APIB OTHER fIARPETBi &o,
. - . On Thunder Morning.
At 9 o’olook, at the Auction Store, an auortmefit of
i xcellent wsoond-hand furniture, elegant piano lortee*
me mirrors, carpet*. beds and bedding, Ac., from fomi
im declining housekeeping, removed to the store it
oenvenienoe of aale, ■
MFITZPATRF’K & BROS., AUO
• TIONEEBB. BOA nHEWTUTT St., ah.ve Sixth.
At 7 o’clock, of boo us, siauuiierr* and fancy good*,
watches, jewelry, olocks, silver-plated ware, catiery*
paintings, musical insirnments, Ao. _
Also, Hosiery, dry roods, boots and shoes, and met
ohandfse of every description. • . ,
DAY SALES every Monday, Wednesday, and Fri
day, at 10 o’oloek A, M,
' PHIVATE SALES.
At prirate sale, several larre consignment* of watehee
nd jewelry, boon, atationery, silver-plated ware, out
iry, fancy roods, so,, to whioh is eoifoited the atten-/
tion of our and country merchants and others.
_ Consignments solioited for all kinds of merchandise,
for either public or private sales,
KT Liperal eaeh advances made on eonuaxanila.
Out-door sales promptly attended to.
MEDICINAL.
Ej'UXIR PROPYLAMINE,
The New Remedy fer
RHEUMATISM.
Baring the past year we have introduced to the no
t oe of the medioel profession of this conn try Due Fere
Cryttelixtd Ckioridt of Prepylami%4, ae a
REMEDY FOB. RHEUMATISM?
and having,received Horn many eonreea, both from
physicians of the hi rhest standins and from patients, the
MOST FLATTERING TESTIMONIALS
of its real nine in the treatment of this painful u>i
obstinate disease, we are induced to present it to the
public in a form READY FOR IM MEDIATE USE,
whioh we hope wiU commend itself to those who an
■nobrisg with thia afflicting complaint, and to the me
dtoal practitioner who may feel diapoeed to testae
power* oLthis valuable remedy. y
ELIXIR PROPYLAMINE, in the tom above epe
ken of, hae recently been eitensively experimented
with in the
PENNSYLVANIA HOSPITAL.
andyrithMAßXE D 8 UCGESB (as will appear from tk*
published eooountsin the metical journals.}
druggist* atNoente^rbotge,
MACHINERY AND IRON.
PENS STEAM ENGINE AND
SSHKboiler WORKS.— a levy,
and FOUNDERS, banns, for man? years, been in
ruooessfnl operation, andbeeu exclusively eng need in
building and repairing Manna and River Engines, high
and low pressure. Iron Boats, water Tanka, Propeller*.
*o., Ac., respectfully oner their service* to the pnbue,
u being fully prepared to oon tract for Engines of all
eixee, Marine, River, and Stationary, having eete of
patterns bfdifferent elaea, areprenared to ex acute or
den with muck despatch. Every description oi ratteen
makinrmade attfie iborteet notice. Huh and Low
Pressure, Fine, Tubular, and Cylinder Boilers, of the
best Fennsrlvama charcoal iron. Forgings, of all sixes
end-kinds; Iron and Brass Castings, of alideecriptionsi
HoilTurnrar.Sorew Cntting. and all other work con
nected with the abovebnsineee.
- Drawings and Specifications for all work done at their
establishment, free of charge, and work guarantied.
The enbsoribers have amide wharf-door room forre
pairs ol boats, where thei can lie in perfect safety
and are provided with shears,-bloom, falls, «,«>
for raising heavy or light wmghfo. & .
JOHN P.LBVY,
BEACH and PA 1, MEW Streets.
I, VAneSSK KXKKIOK, JOH» n.COM.
■ wra.mt b. icnuuck, hahtxbt mum.
CSOUTUWAKK FOUNDRY,
Q FIFTH AND WASHINGTON BTAEBBS-
1 MERiutH?dc SONS,
ENGINEER B AND MACHINISTS,
Mnnnlaotiire Hick, and low Pressure Steam Entines,
forlasd, nver, and marine service.
Boilers, Gaaometere, Tanks, Iron Boats, fee.; Cast
ings ofall kinds, either iron or brass.
Iron Frame Roof* for Gan Works. Workshops, Bui
rood Stfttioiiii fto.
Retorte and Gan Machinery of the latent an* moss
imvroved oogtreation.
Every description of Plantation Machinery, suohaa
Susar, Saw, and Grint Mills, Vacnam .Pans, Open
Steam Train*. Defecatera, Filter*. Ptunpint Entities,
iko.
Sole Areata for N. EjlUenk’* Patent Bnsar Bolting
Machines : waM-y
POUiT-PUiASSAKT FOUNDRY, No. 951
BEACH Street, Kensington.
IiUJI E. TIERS infoinu his friends that, havinspar
ohased the en'ire stock of Patterns at the above Foun
dry, he is now prepared to reoeive order? for Rolling,
Grist and Saw-Mill Oastmts, Soap, Chemioai, and
House Work, Gearing. Castings made from Rever
beratdry or Cupola Furnaces, re drror kreen sand, or
kwi* •’’r*
SHIPPING'
WMKJL.Y OOMMXJMICJATION
SHK BY STEAM BETWEEN HEW YOKE
AND LIVERPOOL, oaUmc at Q.U£EHBTOWH{Ir*-
>«nd,)to>laßdand embark raMenier* aad dptpatoho*.
The Lirerpool, Near York, and Philadelphia Steam
ship Company’* wlendidClyde-huilt iron aorew rteam-
.
KANSAKOO, Satarday. Anpartir
K'VNA. Saturday., AMimM
E Andere?y a»t»r<*Tthrosrhe»tthe year, £»)»¥&*
THEOBeNFROM fBILJ&EIrPgIA.
CaMn.to aaeenetovn, or Lnrenxwl—_ ft*
80. to London, TO LiTorpool . , fM
Steexate to ftueenatanrn, or hiTcrpool ..,■■■■■ ,»■ >M
Do. - to London —— f »
Po, Jtetura tickets, available for ex month*,
- from .Liverpool.,., . : ■ ..—I
JFMMncets forwarded to Paria, Hambrnrs*
Bremen, andAmcwerj>,ai tbroaffh rate*. - u
Certificate* ofpaa««e leaned from liiverpeetie Mo*
Certificate* 'lamedfromftueenatowni* JJ
wSeift^ have miperlor aecominodatieni f 5
panence»» are oonitmotea with watertight oonTpar*
manta, and earry experienced Surreoiuu ~, ‘• ?
Ferfraijht. or at theoffioeof the Gem
' lli®t a^MS, e%d fc
is Aireipool, to m INMAN,
Tower Boildhaea
Ik oHaos©w, ts
Tim: BSmSB AND NORTH
ROY AS. HAD, I«£AM-
>*om w*w TO** ve AivMtyeefo ..
OUef Cabin Passage.- —RUB
beach* Cabin Pessags. —— - n
rxoM soavo* ve uvx*reeg,
Chief Cabin Pusage— 818
Beoond Cabin Passua—......._ BP
tks ships fkom New York oali el Cork Harbor.
Cram Boston call at Halifax an* Cork Har-
Hffi*Kbs'iANf »£!s*•
-r Amie "“-
nese vessels tarry a olear white light at matt-kea*
green en starboard bow; res op portbow,
AFRICA, Bhannon, leaves N.Yerk, Wsdnesday, Aug.
rHßOPAtAnderaon, Bostou, Wednesday, Aug.
PEjUfArdlidkihs, ” N.York, Wednesday. Aug.
CANADA.MoodIe, ‘ Boehm, Wednesday, Bept.
ASlAiljott, “ N.York, Wednesday .Sept 11.
ARABIA; Stone, ; f; Briton, Wrtnes*» Sept M.
aFRICJ,, Shannon, 23,
Thsowner* these ships will not be sMomntabla for
Sold,' Silver, Bulbon, Specie, Jewelry, Preoious_Btonee
•r HstalXt Unlen biibi of lading are signed therefor, ui
toe value thereof tosrsin expresses., For freim-cr
* Bowling a rM?lWrk.
«>jyhe PRESS”
BOOK
AND
JOB PBINTING
ESTABLISHMENT.
NO. 417
CHESTNUT STREET,
PHILADELPHIA,
Tbe attentioii of the Business Goimnmdty
ip respsotflillY Invited to the New Book and
Job Prlnflnß Office of « Thb Fubb,” which
haa been fitted np with New Material, in the
most complete ruaimer, and Is now prepared
to exeente, in a satisfactory style, every va
riety of Printing:
BOOKS.
PAMPHLETS,
CAROS.
CHECKS.
NOTES,
DRAFTS.
RECEIPTS.
BILLS OF LADING.
LETTER HEADINGS.
BILL HEADS,
PAPER BOOKS.
CERTIFICATES.
DEEDS.
BONDS.
MORTGAGES,
BJL&L TICKETS AND PROGRAMMES.
MERCHANTS, MANUFACTURERS, ME-
CHANICS, LAWYERS, AUCTtON-
EERS, PUBLIC OFFICERS ,
BANKS, RAILROAD:
AND INSURANCE
COMPANIES,
WUI be snppHOd with say desexiptisn of
VrinHiig required, st short notioe and on ths
aoat ressonabla terns.
CIRCULARS.