Sitz fif tilt "Artit. THE WIRE TRIAL. The trial was resumed on Tuesday, Sept 26th. John B. Jones testified that he had been a clerk in the rebel War Department; with re gard to General Winder, that officer was very unpopular ; efforts were made to remove him, but unsuccessfully.; he did not know whose particular favorite General Winder was; the latter frequently went to President Davis' and Secretary Benjamin's offices; as there was a clamor for Winder's removal as Provost Mar shal, and as Winder was not removed, the Presumption was that he was sustained by resident Davis. The counsel for defence were then asked to call their witnesses, and answered that they were not prepared. Colonel Chipman com plained that the counsel for the prisoner, Mr. Schad% had carried letters to and from the prisoner. The court asked Mr. Schade, to give them a letter which Wirz had just hinded to him. The court also complained that Mr. &shade gave him money. The counsel ex plained that they wished to furnish Wirz with better food. The two Catholic, priests, Hamilton and Whelan, who were engaged in their spiritual capacity atnong the Andersonville prisoners, testified that Captain Wirz was doing every thing in his power to promote the physical and spiritual comfort of the prisoners. Also that they did not know of Captain Wirz com mitting personal violence. On being cross questioned, one of them said that he did not _know whether spoiled meat was distributed, as he was too muckengaged in looking after the souls of the prisoners. The rebel Colonel Fannin testified that Wirz could not punish or reward the guards 'for anything they had done. September 27. Colonel Fannin's examina tion was continued. The counsel for the pri soner wished to ask a question about Howell Cobb's smell, which the court required to' be put in writing. The court was cleared, and :the questibn was not pressed by the counsel. :• A communion from Captain West, Super intendent of the Old Capital Prison, was re ceived, showing that Wirz was leniently -treated there. The court warned Mr. Schade against passing letters to and from the pri soner. Witnesses for the defence were called, being 'persons in the' rebel service, who testified that there was - much complaint in North Car olina and elsewhere about impure -virus for September 28. Colonel Parsons, a fbrmer , commandant of rndersonville, was further examined to-day', before the Wirz Commis •sion. said he distributed some of the boxes sent by the Sanitary Commission to the prisoners; vegetables were scarce, as the coun- , try was poor ; he did not know of sentries being relieved after shooting the prisoners ; some shelter might have been built for the prisoners, but was not, and he thought the Quartermaster's Department was to blame for it ; Wirz drew-up all the rules and regu lations, and witness signed them; the dead line was afterwards established by Wirz on his own responsibility ; the prison was not half oared for, but the witness thought the Person who crowded the prisoners in was to blame for this. A Lazarus Allen never heard that the guard received furloughs for shooting the prisoners ; - he never saw any man die from starvation. The witness then gave as his opinion that he believed the guard wore clothing taken from the Union prisoners ; but the court told him they did not want any opinions, after which they ad journed. September 24.—Captain Wright, rebel uartermaster, at Andersonville, for the KreeP l ie' t E n toP f o n rep y to questions -by prisoner's counsel, could not think of any acts on the part of Wirz to ameliorate the condition of the prisoners. Wirz permitted Masonic honors to a deceased prisoner. Cross-examined, he said he had no personal knowledge of what Captain Wirz did in the stockade, but outside of the stock .ade he knew that the accused put prisoners in the stocks and chain-gang ; Turner, who had charge of the dogs, told the witness that 'Captain Wirz had promised him thirty dol lars apiece for capturing prisoners. 'Judge Hall, of Geogta, had been a witness for the Government,. - now was called for de fence. His testimony was immaterial. He ,said the chief value of the land in the neigh borhood of Andersonville, was for its timber. Admitted himself an out and out secessionist to the close of the rebellion ,• also, that he was a sort of kitchen counsellor to the pri soner, answering questions and pointing out authories to Baker. Gene Pals Lee, Howell Cobb, and Johnston, ex-Governor Brown, and Commissioner Ould - have been summond by the defence. SOIITHEEN STATE CONVENTIONS. . . ALABAMA. —After an exciting debate, the ordinance of secession was declared null and void, September 26, The Alabama State Convention has declared against negro suff rage, having passed an ordinance that the number of white men shall be the basis of representation. They also passed an ordi nance providing that all debts created by the State of Alabama in aid of the late war, di rectly or indirectly, are declared void, and that the General Assembly of the State shall have no authority to ratify or assume to •pro vide for their payment. The convention also decided to submit the amendments to the constitution to a popularvote. The following .telegram was received Oct. let, at the. Free d Bureau showing the hearty co-opera tion of the civil authorities of that State with the 46e:ere of the -.Freectinente-Btm,eu Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 29, 1865.—Major- General Howard—General:—The Conven tion, to-day, by a vete of fifty nine to sixteen, required the judicial officers and magistrates of this State, to continue to act as agents of this Bureau for the administration of justice under the regulations leretofore issued from this office, and republished by Governor Par sons, until other legal provision is made. W. SWAYNE, Brig.-Gen. and Assistant Commissioner. SOUTH CAROLINA. —On the third day of 'convention, September 15th, the ordinance , of secession was repealed by a vote of 105 against 3. The repeal was received in silence —strikingly suggestive when one remembered with what dramatic applause the ordinance of secession was proclaimed passed. A committee was appointed to memorialize the President in behalf of Davis, Stephens, Nlagrath, and Trenholm. On the 19th, it was resolved that slavery having been abolished by the United States authorities,. it is forever prohibited. A dis patch has since been received by the Presi dent announcing the following action by the South Carolina Convention Columbia, S. C., Thursday, Sept. 28. The convention is adjourned after u: most har monious arid unanimous session of 'fifteen days. They have repealed the ordinance of secession, abolished slavery, equalized the re presentation of the Senate and taxation throughout the State, giving the election of Governor and Presidential electors to the people, ordered voting in the Legislature by viva voce, indorsed the Administration unani mously, and directed a commission to submit a code to the Legislature for the protection of the colored population. A son of ex-Senator Hammond offered the following,resolutions.— Resolve 4. That the Union is the first and paramount - Consideration of the American people. • Resolved, That sovereignty, a unit absolute and indivisible, which, in all nations, must exist somewhere, resides in the American poople, and its authorized representative within the limits of the organic law—the Constitution—is the Federal Government. GEORGIA. —The Convention has unani mously declared the act of secession null and void. THE STATES. Nzw YORIC—The Mayor and other officials of New York city, have been held to answer on charges of mal-feasance in office, before the Governor of the State. 1: CoNNEcncirr voted, October 2, agains giving:the colored citizens the right of suff rage. CommDo has indorsed the. new State constitution by an overwhelming vote. All that is now required is an act of Congress admitting the new State into the Union. VIRGINIA.—GeneraI Curtis has forbidden a meeting at Lynchburg, in behalf of Jeff Davis.—Judge Underwood, of the United Statei District Court at Alexandria, refused to admit. to practice, Francis L. Smith,-a for mer member of the bar, because he could not take the required oath, that he had never aided the rebellion. This case decides a number of apktlications, in which the same reasons are assigned, for admission. —The President has replied by the. Attorney Gen eral, to some Virginians, who inquired whether the test oath will probably be repealed or modified so as to admit Southern members, that "he has no means of knowing, what, Congress may do in regard to the oath, about which they jnqiiire. than any other citizen ; but it is las,earnest wish that, loyal and ,true men, to whom no objections, can be made, should be elected to Congress." This, Mr. Speed says, is - not an officialletter, but a sim ple expression of individual opinion and wish. Those candidates for Congress in Virginia, who cannot take the test oath, are withdraw ing from the canvass. Among those who have already done so, is Dr. Woods, of the Sixth district. TEXAS.—Late Houston pa,pers report a public meeting it Hemstead; Texas, in which three of the richest counties of the State were represented. Resolutions were passed ac cepting the situation, expressing an earnest desire to co-dperate in the President's and Governor's plans for the reorganization of the State, urging the people to qualify themselves as voters, and soliciting the Gov ernor to call-a convention a for the restoration of civil authmity at the earliest practical pe riod. MISSISSIPPL —Governor Sharkey, of Mis sissippi, has issued a proclamation, accepting the proposition of Colonel Thomas, transfer ring the right to try cases, involving the rights of freedmen for the Freedfuen's Bureau to the civil courts, provided that no distinc tion shall be mide in the administration of justice on account of color.. A3KANSAS.—Thee archives of the State of Arkansas, including the rebel records, which were carried off when the United Siates forces occupied Little Rock, have been fo'und in Lafayette County, in the extreme south west part of the State and are now back again in the capital. They were in a very damaged condition. TENNESSEE GUERILLAS.--A band of thirty or forty guerillas is committing horrible atrocities in Robertson County, Tennessee. Indiscriminate murder, arson and robbery mark their course. The leader is said to be a. - notorious HarPer, wh o has for some time parEit been in, that vicinity. GrEoßGiA.—The..iolice of Sa :Lhasa. - • • egroes tound in the streets after 9 o'clock at night, without pas ses from their employers, THE PARDON itIISINESS In the pardon office a large rack twelve feet high and eight wide has been erected, which is divided into longitudinal sections running the whole length, each section containing the pardon applications from each State in pro cess of passing examination. Virginia, of course, takes the lead, her pile being over ten feet high, and containing over three thousand applications. Alabama follows with a pile of fifteen hundred, upon which the dust is ac cumulating, as the President is awaiting the action of the Alabama State Convention. Georgia is next in order, with a pile about four feet high, containing twelve hundred ap plications. Mississippi and North Carolina are about the same, seven hundred each. South Carolina has at least five hundred, Tennessee three hundred, Kentucky, Louis iana, and Texas abont one hundred and fifty each, while Florida, Arkansas, Missouri, and Western Virginia are very moderate on the subject, and present but a score or two of ap plications. Altog . ether, there are at least ten thousand applications in the Attorney Gene ral's office.—The President granted nearly fifteen hundred pardons• in three days last week. Among them are Ex-Senator Badger, of North Carolina ; Ex-Congressman Mc .Queen, of South Carolina, and Duncan Mc- Rea, formerly colonel in the rebel army, and afterward cotton agent in Europe. MISCELLANEOUS REBUKES OP THE REBELLIOUS SPIRIT.- Bishop Wilmer, of the Episcopal Church, Alabama, having some time ago forbidden his clergy to pray for the President, while Alabama was occupied by a military force, General Thomas has forbidden him and his clergy to officiate, and has ordered their churches closed until the prayer is resumed • an. • •• • • . • Special and individual application must be made for permission. to preach.—The Com mercial Bulletin, in Richmond, was sup pressed, September 30, by General Terry for an indecentinsult to the memory of Mr. Lin coln. ARCTIC ExpLoRATIoN. —By a whaling ves sel arrived at New London from the Arctic Ocean, the Journal of Commerce has advises from Capt. C. LE. Hall, the explorer, who left the United States in 1864, under 'the pat . ronage of Henry Grinnell, Esq., of this city. Mr. Hall's letters were expressed 150 miles over the ice by dog-sledges to reach the open sea. He writes in good spirits, having ob tained much valuable information in regard to the Franklin Expedition. Mr. Hall ex pects to spend most of his time in Kind Wil liam's Land and on the Boothia Felix .Venin sula, and desires that a vessel shall be sent in the Spring of 1867 to bring him home. Three years spent as proposed in the huts of the Es quimaux, with good native interpreters who accompany Mr. Hall in his wanderings, ought to be sufficient to clear up all mystery respect ing the lost navigator. Mr. Hall's letter is 'dated Snow House, on the Coast Line of Roe's Welcome, lat. 64 46 N., lon. 87 29 W., Dec. 10th. Capt. Hall feels certain that he has traced out evidence to show definitely that Capt. Richard Crozier, who command ed Franklin's tecond ship, the Terror, and three other men,- were in communication with the natives, and that Crozier's life was saved by the judiciops nursing of a native. This native says Crozier was almost starved, but the other men were fat and stron, they having eaten human flesh, which Orozitr would not do. It would seem that these men lived for a ling time with the natives on THE AMERICAN PRESB Boothia Felix Peninsula, b finally went l r away to the south in a boat, d that is all the inhabitants appear to kn of them. Sir John Franklin's ships were I seen on the 6th of July, 1845, in the ice n the middle of Baffin's Bay. riwAxczAi.. A YEW ISSUE of the five-t ••• ty loan will shortly be put upon the mar. '. Subscrip tions can be, made in certifica • of indebted ness, compound-interest not and other j,e Government securities. The nds will lee furnished by the United S s Govern ment at three per cent. pre um.—The steamship Cuba arrived at estop, Sep tember 28, from Liverp6ol and alifai. She brings £20,000 ($100,000) in gd.—lnter nal revenue reeeipte,Septembe%, amounted to $1,278,795 59. They have'mraged about $1,000,000 a day. September ), they were $1,851,197 58. For the quarte 6ey reached $93,720,419.—The public de i September 30, was $2,744,947,726 -17. lerest $137,- 529,215 28. FOREIGN. IRELAND.—A Queenstown d. 17th of September, says :—T,,I contimie to arrest Fenian: T prisoners is Ivery large, amonl son said to ibe a captain in army in whose possession doc uniform were found. On Sattir the prisoners,' escorted by nio were.taken to the police court t arnithation. • The result has n • The mob heartily cheered the made no attempts to rescue. was. hovering. off the coast. 'A newspaper called the Iris seized in Dublin, September 1 sons, including the proprietor, custody. The arrest of Fenians in= c and a private in the Eighty-eight FRANOR—The correspondent don notes at Biaritz, mentions 1 of a reported plot against the either on the, way to San Sebasti return to Bayonne. The ,parties in it were aliens, including a brut sin of Orsini's. Precautionary me taken, and the Queen of Spain accompanying the Emperor and the' railroad station, notwithstan( night, in order that she might sh. run by her guests. G-EumANv.—By the Gastein I the duchy of Sa,uenberg is annex sin. Earl Russell protests, in a English RepresentatiVes abroad rights, old and new, have been tree' foot by the Convention, and -deg violence and fraud, are its bases. CAPE OF Goon HoPE.The Wa the Free States and the rasutos 1 cuted with vigor by, the Boers, tabled the aggressive. - • , THE Caorz,EA.—ln Italy ; '.the ;: h - (iii been: confined to filthy and cidw mainly. In Constantinople,, Se cr the deaths were only nine. The n of every kind, from the sparrowi gull and kite, absolutely disappe* capital within a week after the ciui the disease, have during the paste all come back. The cholera has increased so,,m seilles that the Mayor'has summo log of the physicians to ; concert relief. ITEMS. The number of slaves in Cuba in 368,550.—5285,500 were stolen fil Concord, Mass. National Bank, s4_) l 25.—The Freshman Class of_Yale already numbers morethanl.so.—til near Middletown,.N. Y., was. September. 24,. onhis own thr.WL-- Efforts are again being made tOlintrod the camel-into this country for eervice the great plains.—Railroad trains-in, S ern Indiana in which Generals Grant an er man were ,travelling, Septemlier 27t ere thrown from the track about the sa me. —Ali but two of the forts on the inia side of the Potomac will be remov Robert E. Lee has begun his duties a dent Of Washington - College, at Lee Virginia.—Seven hundred young chiefly from Massachusetts, sail fro - York this week for Washington TL —The laborers and miners in the 1 gions of Pennsylvania are nearly all a* THE RELIGIOUS PRESS, Rev. H. M. Dexter, editor of qhe ga,tionalist, is on a tour to Ei4,ope.. den he made a careful exaMinia;ll locnlities with which John Robiniot church of English Puritins were' a 8 We think *brief record of what h plished in this undertaking will in readers. Rialetter is dated Aug. 1: In brief, we have done the followi things, with many others of no public inte •t. —(1,) We have visited and gained I istinot idea'of a great many localities, like Klok steeg, the Rapenburg, • the Vro • kamp, Paradgse-steeg, Ursule-steeg, t Peter's Kerk, the Falyde Bagyn's Hof,, a others which will be forever interesting Ameri cans, antLespecially to American Ingrega tionalists, from their associations w Rain son and his little company. Speci y did we visit many times, and oft, the Pc n's Hof, under the care of the Walloon Ch h i which now stands on the spot where• obinson lived, ,and whose garden is iden' it with a part of the garden in which he • Hied, be yond doubt, and often with Elde Brewster and. William Bradford and Mile Standish 0•••-•"-m4.•%b ext , t 6 te . .iitin gade 1- *(.2l')'`WW .. securedb • `Fie' great kindness and patient service of rr Hoff 'twister,' a German photographist ere resi dent—several admirable and • accu to views of this. Hof, as it shims on the ok-steeg, and as it looks ~fiom the garden, h its re lation to the Peter's Church, near hick' it stands. (3.) We measured—after so e hours' of search in Leyden for an Engliih Cot-rule, which we had carelessly neglected bring— , and accurately determined, on the k-steeg, 156 feet west of the Heeren-steeg, th eastcor ner of the front of the property ned by Robinson and used by him and his ople for their Sabbath assemblies while t y lived here (at least from 1611), with the est cor ner, 25 feet 6 inches toward the R enburg, settling it that the house which • owned corresponds almost exactly with o t e central building of the Pesyn's with the entrance door, and the chalubdr over it. (4) We obtained permission/of the proper authorities to insert in the fiont wall "of this Pesyn's Hof, in a suitable place' under the west window, a small stone of memorial; and, through the kindness of Prof: Pluyges;:,-who' was good enough to charge himself witli''the labor of seeing the work properly done . ' and the stone in its place, we engaged the a:Ceoat plishment of that work, so that eVe'ry who shall henceforth visit Leyden from America, as well as all travellers thither, and the common Leyden populace, may be re minded of something sacred to so many in that venerated spot. After considerable thought, guided partly by our desire for sith plicity, and partly by the requisitions of the space readily, at bur disposal, and partly by our feeling that a large and worthy mural tab let should, before many years, be erected on the inner wall of St. Peters, where he lies ERIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1865. buried, with an inscription doing some justice to his glorious memory, and going into some particulars of his history, we decided on the following, which, before this reaches you, will be in its place—namely : S ON THIS SPOT lived, taught and died, JOHN ROBINSON. We intend this merely as an index-finger, pointing secarely to the spot, and preserv ing its memory in the minds of all, as identified with him and his work. . We feel that it is very desirable, indeed, that, before many years, a funeral monument, of a character to take worthy place by the side of those with which the church is already so full, should be erected on the walls of St. Peters ; and should carry, in Latin, Dutch, and English, the story of what he was and what he did. We have made some inquiry in that direction, and have satisfied ourselves that there will be, not only no difficulty in re ceiving, permission from the proper authori ties to erect such a monument,' but a hearty co-operatioii„on their part, towards such an endeavor. We hope that ten years will not pass away, before a suitable position in these inner towering walls (we have in. our own' minds fixed upon one as very eligible and probably easy to be obtained). will be occupied by aroperly ornamented slab, costing at least ($1,000) one thousand dollars, and call ing the attention of the continental world to the consideration of the hallowed dust that sleeps somewhere beneath these spacious aisles. (5) We have thoroughly reconnoiter ed all the halls of record here, and have not only compared all the, transcripts which 'we before had with their originals, in the various archives (inaking some important corrections), but have been able to get some new and very important light upon some of the most per plexing of the many qupstions which center in the Leyden residence of the Plymouth, men. It is really wonderful how perfect the Dutch sytem of record, in many aspects, is; and it gives one' a sense of antiquity which is novel and thrilling, to look up, in the rich archives of the Stadt-huis, and see the interminable rows Hof vellum-covered folios, reaching far back into the sixteenth century, and holding themselves brim-full of information in regar • to ten or twelve generations of Dutchmen, and of those who have consorted with them, as our fathers did. It was wonderful to see the precision With which each page, even two or three centuries ago, bore its own record, the writing being often so distinct, and the paper, ink, and accessories so good, that (with an eye not, indeed, unaccustomed to decipher ancient hand-writing) I was often able tfi read the antique Dutch without hin drance from the double difficulty of the strange neis of the language and of the chirography. Prof Day's familiarity with German and Dutch stood us in constant service ; and I feel that, with his help, a work has been ac compliSh.ed, so far as the Leyden traces of the Plymouth Colony are concerned, which it Would have been almost, if not quite, impos sible to have accomplished in any other way. iatch of the ; Irish police number of hers a per ' American I . nts and a R• afternoon, ited police, ndergo ex ranspired. soners, but ritish fleet purple was Ten, per • taken in sergeant ' egiment. the Lon [ [ iseovery mperor, r on the oneerned it Or eon re's were I..sted on press to it was any risk vention, to Prue 16tch to hat all n.under. ea that #etween prose • main- era has caiities •er 3d, which Ihe sea irk the •ak of nearly Palm gretris. 84MJEL WORK, Mar meet res of KRAMER & BAIIM. Pittsburg BANKING HOUSE OF WORK, McCOUCH & CO., No. 35 Souri THIN!) 'Street, PliNadeiphis. the tuber liege rmer ,ered DEALERS in GOVERNMENT LOANS AND COIN. Bins of Exchange on N. ,v - York, Boiton, Pittsburg Baltimore,,Cinc.nristi, eve:, constantly for Bale. -. Collections promptly made mirth accessible points in thi - Taliiirfed - ncates - and Deposits received, payable on demand, and interest allowed as per agreement. • Stocks and`:Loans bought and sold on conuxiission at the Board of Brokers. - ' - - Business Paper negotiated. Refer to Philadelphia and Commercial. Banks, Phila. delphla; Winslow; Lanier & Co ,New York; and crig sens7 and Exchange Bank, Pit4burg. ' rem :ton, en, New tory. B A N-K N G. H-0 U S E GEORGE J: BOYD, No. IS S. THIRD' ST,'PRILSDELPHIA. ' ' (Two doombelOw MechaTeics' Bank.) DEALERS INALI, RINDS OF GOVERNMENT. SE.CVRITIES, N 15.200, 10-40 s, 7-30 s, Os of PSI. PETROLETJM, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS,'(f) S, C. BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE BOARD OF. BROKERS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. ragre- Ley • f the d his iated. ccom- /•st our PETROLEUM. • . _ R. GLERDDININEr, Jr, STOCK BROKER, No. 23 . SOUTH THIRD STREET, Oil and Miningshares, Railroad Stdektand Bonds, and Government Securities bought . and sold on Com mission, at the Philadelphia, New York, and Boston BOARD OF BROKERS. - - SPECTACLES. lanufacturer of Gold, Silver, Nickel. and Steel Spec t soles, Eye Glasses, &c., has neatly furbished a room in connection with the factory, for RETAIL PUR POSES, wherespectacles of every description may be obtained, accurately adjusted to the requirements of vision on STRICTLY OPTICAL SCIENCE. Sales room and factory. _ No. 24S NORTEK EIGH'IIK Street, Second Floor: 9914 y COA LT C O . ALTT LEHIGH AND SCHUYLKILL 0 AL of the best quality, selected from the Approved Mines under cover. Prepared Expressly for Store and Family Use. Northeast corner of Paseayunk Road and Washington Avenue, Philadelphia. ALBERT REMENTER, 1010-1 y CALL AND EXAMINE. W G. BEDFORD, Ciitialliallitill REAL ESTATE AGENT N 0.53 NORTH TENTH STREET, RHLADA. My central location and the many means of com =vocation with the suburbs enable me to take the Aiebncy for sale and care of Real Estate; the Collec tion of Interests, ground and house rents in every part of the city. References will be furnished when desired. SIX DOLLARS FROM FIFTY CENTS. Call and examine something urgently needed by everybody, or sample will be sent free by mail for 50 cents, that retails for $6. R. L. WOLCOTT 661-1 y 170 Chatham &limn% N. -Y. SLEEPER'S UMBRELLA MANUFACTORY, 1602,310rket Street, above Tenth, 1611-1625." tV LLLIAM MeCOTTOH, WILLIAM' BARBER, PRILADBLPH/A PratnittEpillg DAC CHARLES BURNHAM, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN FRUIT-PRESERVING CANS AND JARS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. N 0.119 SOUTH TENTH STREET, PHILA. Arthur's Self- Sealing Tin Cans, Carlisle Screw TOP Glass Jars, Willoughby's Patent Tin Cans, Cement Top Tin Cans. Glass Jan with Cork Stoppers, Ar thur's Self-Sealing Glass Jars. Kline's Patent Top Glass Jars, Winoughbr's Patent Glass Jars, Common Tin Cans, Cement. Tinmen furnished tvith Tops and Bottoms, stamped up, for Common, Cement top, and Willoughby Cans. TICIIIR, It E Y' s ARCTIC ICE CREAM FREEZER The manufacturers of the ARCTIC FREEZER claim for it, the following points, and are ready to prove them by public exhibition, if disputed. ist. That they will actually freeze cream in four minutes. 241. They will freeze cream in less than half the time of any. other freezer in nse. 3d. They rennin much less ice than any other freezer.. 4th. They will make cream smoother and lighter than any other freezer. Iqt $3 -- 3 qts. $5 6 qts. $ 8 14 gts. $l5 2 " 4 1 4 " 6 I 8 " 10 1 23 " 20 WHOLESALE AND. RETAIL GAS STOVES, FOR SUMMER USE. BROIL. BOIL. ROAST. BAKE, TOAST. and HEAT • SMOOTHING IRONS.' ' hundreds of Familie.4 use them with perfect satis faction. • . No. 119 SOUTH TENTH STREET. PHILA. WALTON'S STORE, ' NO. 48 NORTH SECOND STREET, Is the Cheapest arid best plane in therCity to buy LOOMING GLASSES, PICTURE FRAMES, PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES, - ALBUMS, • ENGRAVINGS, LITHOGRAPHS CARD FRAMES, and CARD PICTURES, In the eiti. Call and see for yourselveaat • • ' WALTON'S STORE, • • No, AS Noith Second Street, , „ Above Christ Church, Philadelphia. NEW CARPET WAREHOUSE. LE ED-0-41-&-S H-A-W No. 910 ARCH STREET, PHTLADELPRIA, openin7,'new and choice selections of CARPETINGS, OF ALL THE VARIOUS QUALITIES. - Housekeepers will find it to their advautage to call and examine before purchasing, -1.009-3 m WELLTAIUtAitiALL, - IMPORTER. AND DEALER IN HOUSE 'FURNISUTNG GOODS, . . No. 1232 CHESTNUT ST., S. E. COll. 13T11. SUPERISR REPRIGERATOAS. WATER COOLER,S, FINE TABLE, CUTLERY , ,:• ' • FAMILY - HARDWARE, IRONING TABLES. to. be., HENRY HARPER, No. 520 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, - Dealer iroapd Manufaetarer'of WATCHES,FINE J.EWELOY SEILVER WARE, AND SUPERIOR PLATED GOODS. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES. BURNING OF THE MUSEUM LETTER FROM RR. BARNUM. NEW YORK, July 14,1356. MEssas. HERRING & Co.—Gentlemen Though' the destruction of the. American Museum has.proyed serious loss to myself and the public. I am happy to verity the old adage that "it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good," and eEnsequently congratulate you that your well-known SAYEAhaVe again demon strated their superior fire-proof-qualities in an ordeal of unusual severity: The Safe you made for me some time ago was in the office of the Museum, on the second floor, back part of the building. and in the hot test of the fire. After twenty foar hours of trial it was found among the.debri., and on opening it this day has yielded up its-contents in very good order. Books, papers, policies of insurance, bank bills are all in condition for' immediate use, and a'nobte com mentary on the trustworthiness of HExicu , o'S FIRE PROOF SAFE& Truly yours, P. T. BARNUM. HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, the most reliable protection from fire now known. HEthRING & CO.'b NEW PATENT BANKERS' SAFE, with Herring .e Floyd's Patent Crystallized Iron, the best security against a burglar's drill ever manufactured. . HERRING & CO.. - No. 261 BROADWAY, corner Murray Street, New York. FARRELL, HERRING & CO. .Philadelphra. HERRING & CO., Chicago. ANOTHER TEST 111111 OF HERRING'S FIRE-PROOF SAFES. The Fiery Ordeal Passed Triumphantly. The Herring Safe used in the offiee of our ware houses, destroyed by the disastrous fire on the night of the Bth instant, was subjected to as intense heat as probably any safe will ever be subjected in any fire— so intense that the brass knobs and the mountings of the exterior of same were melted off, and the whole surface coaled and blistered as if it had been in a fur nace, and yet when opened, the contents—books and Papers—were found to be entire and uninjured. This Safe is now on exhibition in our warehouse on Seventh Street, just the books and papers still re maining in it. Just as it was when taken from the ruin,. Merchants, Bankers, and others interested in the protection of their books and papers are invited to call and examine it. . J. P. BARTHOLOW, Agent for Herring's Safes, No. SEB SEVENTH Street. Washington. D. C THOMAS RAWLINGS, Jr., HOUSE AND SIGN PAIN TER, Broad and Spring Garden Streets. for 01 talrito. thf Loos oer the fashions which old pictures show As the; prevailed some fifty rear' aro; At leas that phase of fashion which conveys Hints o' those Instruments of torture—STA-TS t And the i compare the old_ complex machine, With th. t which in these modern days is eeen No mom v steel and whalebone is the chest. Or side, o liver, terribly compressed; No more curving ribs, or waving spine. Twisted a d tortured out ittßetaity's line For skill aid - ...nce both unite to show How nines C ,alth to dress do women owe. In MRS. SIIEKMAN'S Cottarra, ladles find,; The laws of thaw, with Faxhion's bide:eon/billed Supporting equally each separate Pari. They cramp no action or the lung or heart: And no injurious Ihrattire is placed To mar the flexur e of the „„, rai Their fit is certain—and, what's sure ro please. _ Inan prikwor... uteri / The figures of the ymiN_ th•.c 1,..ii, to form. Aiding and not repressing every charm: . . Irregularities ofshape they hid,• • Bo that by mane eon slight &haus h e spied. While e'en a listirs which is tinder:4...l As hen "bad. - may by their help seem good: And matrons wearing them a 6 , 1,11 Will Their early symmetry they'll long retain. lesaring e”lnrort. ::rd - These SE! mynas . .. I - set, van pl.! t., . One trial i.. the ”illy For, theiv.all they pun Fashinn'a demands with And no are truly ay nR' wog.% re V. , I. Iseymalm'o3 svwitous vom, ~;a~t~ons. `Vh.e, out. s Vka.e.e, this eA‘s whexe, "Wm. %Nave.- va.cm's CA-vamixub Comets caw be, obtaiwe4, at hex Sakes-Itooms, s'S*s North. % - th zov. Vi\bext, WOOD .& CARY Now offer in their Retail Departtrient addition to their usual'stook of Straw and Fancy Bonnets, Ladies' and Misses' Hats, etc.), a full line of SILKS, VELVETS, CRAPES, RIBBONS, LACES, FLOWERS, FEATHERS, JET and GILT ORNAMENTS, and other novelties of their own importa- WOOD & No. 725 CHESTNUT THOMPSON BLACK & SON'S Tea Warehouse and Family Grocery Store - -1 , C. - 11W.-toir."Broaa-asna obeetnnt Streets, (F,Ectablielted 1836.) AN EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF CHOICE . Black and Green Teas, and every variety of Fine Groceries, suitable for family use. Goods delivered in any ' part of the city, or packed securely for the country. W. P. CLARK, No: 1626 MARKET STREET, PINXI,AD A. -BOOTS AND SHOES OF MY OWN MANHFAC tura. Ladies'. Misses', Children's. Men's; and Boys' Boots and Shoes of every variety, at moderate prices, N n. 1626 MARKET STREET. Dyeing and Scouring Establishment. - Mrs. E. W. SMITH, No. 2S N. Fifth St., below Arch, Philads. Ladies' Dresses, Cloaks, Shawls. Ribbons, &c., dyed in any color, and finished equal to new. Gentlemen's Coats, Pants and Vests cleaned, dyed and repaired. 963-ly Vtptiltaptreto. Skylights on First and Second Flhor. EDWARD P. RIPPLE; PHOTOGRAPHER, No, 820 Areb Steeet, Plana Photographs from miniature to life-size finished the finest styles of are art. 960-1 y GERMON'S TEMPLE OF ART, No. 914 Arch itreeti PHOTOGRAPHS IN ALL STYLES Late of 702 CheetentStreet 0. 8. - DeMORAT,-- PHOTOGRAPH GALLERIES S. W. corner Eighth and Market Sta., Entrance N 0.2 South Eighth. -1y JOHN C. CLARK & SON, PRINTERS, STATIONERS. AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, [lOOO-6m 230 iocreic STREET. A NEW PICTURE. THE PEARL EE RHO TY PE at T. C. HARMON & Co.'s New Ferrota pe hooms. 916 Chestnut Street: The Pearl Ferrotype. on entire new thing. and the most beautiful and -durable Picture now. made, is taken all sizes. for Frames and Cases. - That Little Oem. the Car Ferrotype, is made in all kinds of weather; finished in ten minutes. • 12 FOR ONE DOCE.A.R. Alsci inserted in Cases. Lockets, Pins, auditing's. You are always anre•of a e.." , r 1 likeness inthe Fer"- type, as you can see thew before they arelmished: Photographs, Ambrokt pes. and all other good Pic tures copied. They are sent by mail without injury to the picture. Scholars will find them just tfie thing to exchange with their classmates. We warrant all pictures to please or no pay. Cad abd ore mine specimenc- J C. 'HARMON & CO. ! 916 Chestnut bireet, Philadelphia.