G AN HOUR IN CASTLE GARDEN. Tina Landing Maa orRmlKitnti-Whtrt Thev or I'nt-wnM 'l'i.y Lnnk Llka unci What Tlr Uo-Wht They K.nt n.l Where Tty Sleep Servant Ulrl Ki. perlemeet. Did any of our readers ever pay a viait to Castle Garden f Perhaps some of them may have done bo from motives of artistic curiosity to view a crumbling relio of old New York, while those more practical may have passed an hour there vainly endeavoring to select from the reeking horde of emigrants a cook or chambermaid. Castle Garden proper is situ ated on the northwestern extremity of the piece of ground known as the Battery. A large circular building, covering half an acre in extent, with a flat dome of whitewashed wood work, perforated with glass windows, whether to let the numerous stenches made escape, or to permit the air from the outside rather foul at the best to pass in, is a problem only to be solved by the Commissioners of Emi gration. The building itself is of brown, unhewn Btone with the old embrasures for gun3 still Temai'iung, as they appeared when the first ISonaparte issued his famous Iierlin decree to crush English commerce. The parapet gate way, or entrance to the Battery, as it was called, still exists in all its huge proportions, with its square cut blocks of stone, and through its portals have passed in ton years 2.C00,10U emigrants from every nation on the face of the globe as contributions to the future Toting population of the States. A level, arid, sandy plain, denominated the Battery, for the reason that no guns are visible, fronts the Castle Garden, and is encumbered with peanut stands, apple stands, lemouade stands, stands where Bologna sausages and large loaves of Butch bread are exposed for sale, and where gingerbread cakes as large as pie plntes can be obtained for the moderate sum of two cents. Aged but vituperative Irish women of masculine frame, with bleary eyes, tawdry garments, and faces lined with the wrinkles of hardship, dispense the delicacies of the season to the emigrants. , The peanuts are not equal to p'Ucs ae Jbie gras as a relish, the apples rot in the sun lor want of purchasers, the sausages are mouldy and not fit for Sitngerfest consumption; but the crown ing glory of these retail huckster-stands is the lemonade kept by them in dirty wooden or tin pails. This delicious beverage lias three in gredients or component parts, namely, mo lasses, vinegar, and water. A few decayed and repeatedly squeezed lemon rinds, intended to deceive the keen eye of the observer, float on top of the dirty-looking fluid. The tongues of the Datnt da la llalle at Paris, or the noto rious fish-women of London,cannot outrival in acerbity and virulence these women whim once let loose upon any ofl'ending party. We wit nessed an instance of their agreeable proficiency in the art of abuse. A half-grown boy of the street had, it seems, purchased a glass of lemonade from an aged Celtic priestess, and' after putting it to his lips, such was the horror and sensation of disgust experienced, that the glass involuntarily dropped from his grasp and fell to the ground, where it lay for a mo ment broken into small fragments. With a howling rage the savage sprang at the boy, crying: "What did'oo brake my glass for, 'oo scamp; ayeh ?" "I did't mean to," whispered the gamin, in a whining tone. "I'll tache you to brake my glass, which cost me twenty cints, you young vagabond," and so saying, she fell upon the lad in a great lage, and beat him in the face with her clenched fists, for a minute or two, to the great delight of the spectators. The hoy would have been half murdered but for the intervention of a burly policeman, who stood at the gate of the Castle Garden, curling his beautiful moustache, and admiring the grace ful curve of his shapely leg. This majestio Iwiutr advanced with a commanding step; in stantly the crowd fell back in reverential awe at his portly presence. "Wot's all this V said he, in a voice like thunder. "Wot's all this about, I should like ter knew? Can nobody speak?" and the majestio being glared in inquiry upon the terror-stricken crowd. "I only w-a-r-rumed that spalpeen's ears for breaking my glass," whined the virage, and with proverbial gallantry the noble police man, finding that the sympathies of the crowd were with the woman and the broken vessel, turned to the reckless boy and threatened to warm him soundly for his brutality. The hoy shrank off in a meek manner, and Castle Garden saw him no more. Feeling considerable premonitory dread as to our reception by this formidable being in Tulue cloth, we asked in an humble manner: "Sir, can you tell me if strangers are per mitted to enter the Garden ?" The "sir" mollified this gentleman to a great extent, and in a gracious, patronizing tone, he signified his permission. Entering a long, narrow passage, with a flight of Btaira at the end, we ascended and found ourselves in a large room dedicated to the clerical staff em ployed by the Commissioners of Emigration to transact the business of registering the emi grants. A number of frowsy-looking and gawkish emigrants sat outside of an enclosure, waiting for an opportunity to procure infor mation. Whether their universal contact with emigrants, who are looked, upon as bo many cattle by these fellows, has rendered them gruff when asked for information promptly, and rigidly impassive or deaf when questioned mildly, we do not know; but it is certain that for stoical indifference a Castle Garden clerk would compare favorably with Zeno himself. While waiting in the office a scene ocourred worthy of mention. A huge Irishwoman, with red hair and freckled face, evidently not an emigrant, but rather a drunken, besotted specimen of the race, advanced towards the desk, carrying a red-headed baby, with a scrofulous affection in its face and head. A very impassive young gentleman, with black eide-whiskers, who sat at a desk, cried out in a stentorian voice to the woman, who had no stockings or shoes: "What do vou want ?" "I want to see Mistress Casherlly, bekase" "What do you want?" again cried the young gentleman, in a manner not quite so impassive as ceiore. "1 want to Bee Mistress aaueiuy, ye k.uuw, l)6ltASd"M "Go down Btairs," said the young gentle man of impassive temper. "I want to see Mistress Casherlly, bekase"- "(7 down Btairs," cried the young gentle man, with a great glitter in his eyes. "I tell ye I want to Bee Mistress Casherlly, bekase ye Bee" " Will yu yo down btaibs !" yelled the im passive young gentleman, in a now thoroughly roused Btate. The woman obeyed this time, and the impassive young gentleman, feeling that he had dona his duty, his whole duty, and nothing but hia duty, Bat down in a state f exhaustion. Leaving him in this state of mind, we left the office, went down a flight of stairs, and entered through a ygh and wide gateway a huge circular hall, used for the re ception of emigrants during their stay in Castle Garden. The hall is about three hun dred feet ia circumference, with galleries run THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPII PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, ning all round, and rosembles a cirous more than anything else. Light is admitted through glass side-windows fifty feet from the floor, but no air. A deadening, stifling smell greets the nostrils as you enter the halL almost overpowering. It is said that a keen-noso-l traveller may discover forty dillerent stenches in the streets and purlieus of Cologne, each stench and odor differing from the other thirty-nine. .But the stenoh which strikes you as you enter Castle Garden is a combination of forty diflerent odors, not one of which resembles the Balm of a Thousand Flowers or Jockey Club. You can faintly recognize saurkratit, decayed bologna, boiled butter, peanuts, unwashed women, the odor of venerable hams, boiled corned beef and cabbage, onions, rancid cheese, herrings, and many other kindred stenches. A motley crowd or rather swarm of emigrants are herded together on the bare floor of the Garden, like so many sheep or pigs. From every nation in the world, from far-off Sweden and Norway, from the homes of Dalecarlia, from Sudermania, charcoal burners from the Black Forest, in their caifs, with light hair, red stockings reaching to their knees, and heavy wooden sabots. Peasants with ruddy faces from Cork and Kerry, from Dublin and Galway, fair, fresh young girls with trustful look and laughing, wondering faces from the Danube, Bliine, and Shannon, all mingled pro miscuously, chatting, talking, eating, crying, or sleeping quietly. A cargo of Swedes, Nor wegians, ami Danes have just been lauded, and herd together to the number of 21)0 ou the floor, gaping and wondering at everything they see and hear. They left Gottenburg 40 days nince en route for the prairies of Illinois, via Hamburg, Liverpool, and New York. They look travel-stained, dirty, and weary, but as yet have not begun to understand the toil, trouble, and difficulties of their new life. Their pastor, a venerable, slurdy-lookiug son of Dalecarlia, with white hair and deep blue eyes, sits among them on an old trunk. lie has accompanied them all the. way, and will Bee them safe to the settlement of which he is pastor in far-off Illinois. Gnu of his flock, a middleaged woman with deep blue Scandina vian eyes, and tawny hair hanging down her flushed cheeks, is engaged in cut ting up a huge sausage for the delectation of the 'Tastor." The men are all stout-bodied, hearty-looking fellows, muffled up in warm homespun, as it they were among the frosty fiords of Norway, and carry at their belts short dirk knives in leathern sheaths. They have all blue eyes and light hair, such as is never seen among Latins or Celts, and is only to be found among Scandinavians or Saxons. To look upon these fair faces and deep, earnest blue eyes, almost burning in their intensity, one is prone to think of the ancestors of the people before him of Gustavus Vasa, of Mar garet of Denmark, the Semiramis of the North, of Harold llartager, of Udin, tue iather ot the Gods, of Freya and Lok, the Spirits of Evil, of Sagas and Scalds, of warriors and priests, and heroes who went forth yearly to burn, destroy, and capture, who drank wine from the skulls of their enemies, and sought vainly during a thousand years for Valhalla, the home of the gods. Alas for romance I these poor, inno cent peasants never heard of Odin, being strict Lutherans, and their only trouble is to know if Chicago is as far from New York as New York is from Stockholm. The emigrants who speak the English language are kept in separate compartments of this large circular hall, or bull-pen, as it might be more properly termed. The floor is swept once a day, but even that does not suffice, for the place is in itself a sink of filth, and unfit for human beings aB a place of occupation. The galleries are sometimes filled as well as the lower floor, when there is a number of passengers, and a Btrange Bight is presented from the various costumes worn by the peasant emigrants. Now, for instance, let us go among the Swedes. Here are children, men, and women huddkjd together upon the floor promiscuously, and without any proper sanitary precaution, in the hottest weather. One-half of the emi grants are Bleeping, and they are wedged so close together as to lie like spoons, some with' a dirty rag covering them, while not a few of the women's body clothes are tossed about in a manner which ought to call a blush to the cheek of any adult. Ilere is a very nretty little girl of twelve years or therabouts. her lower limbs exposed as she sleeps, and it is evident that a plentiful application of aoap and water would do her no harm. One single case of contagious disease among those 250 Swedes, and ere nightfall every one of them would be stricken by the destroying hand. 10 prevent imposition upon the emigrants a semblance of keeping out the emigrant boarding-house keepers is maintained by the Com missioners; but, notwithstanding, they may be iouna insiae oi the uarden every day. the only precaution that is taken to protect the inte rests of the emigrant being to keep the boarding-house shark off until all the routine busi ness of the place is transacted with them, and then these scoundrels are free to do their worst. Boarding-house keepers are allowed to advertise their dens of infamy inside of the walls of the Garden in every known language English, French, Italian, Spanish, German, Swedish, Danish, Welch, Russian, and Swiss. The rates charged by these fellows range gene rally as follows: Board per week for adults, $8 in currency; per day, $1-50 in currency; single meals, 50 cents; single lodgings, 50 cents. The fare is just what might be ex pected from these blood-suckers and human vampires. There are three lunch counters or restaurants within the walls, and there can be no possible competition, as no person is allowed to enter the Garden or leave it with out a reason. Printed bills of fare line the counters, in the different languages, with the tariff as follows: Sausages, per pound o 25 Cheese, per pound 0 25 Milk, per quart .""!!".".'. 0-10 Loaf of bread 0'10 Loaf of home-made bread n.20 1 cifcar 0-05 1 package smoking tobacco o-lO Behind the counters the emigrants may feast their eyes upon huge loaves of bread, huge bulks of cheese, raw hams, and now and then comes the odor of coffee, of what quality we cannot undertake to say, as we did not taste it. PasEiDg through the rear gate of the Castle you will find yourself on the river's bank, where several arcen nsnd fnr tog emigrants from the shipping to the Castle, are lying. There is a kind of a terra-plain of Btone, and beneath thin iha auer day, listening to the constant piasli of 111 ft tPfll'lia . .1 lit. . , - j ?, u 1UUJ"US witn wistful eyes out towards the Narrows and the sea, thinking vaguely and confusedly of the Vaterland from 3,7, cam- Here they Bit, staring i. ovom reauues 01 tne riew World Wv..W exposure onthe . "l luu emigrant BhiD ,ey are r,uHu with tn u They are weary of the sun Tug tU the heavy oar; Ili uve at the stubborn sail Thed In the inld-sea gale' Wrecked on the fatal Uore ', Bweel is rest, ah I sweet u rest Wlilte the arms and warm tbehreaat Jx'aught beyond but the unknown W..f jNaueUt but tne waves luUmgwn, The emigrant, on leaving the side of the emigrant ship lying in the stream, after she has pasaed the perils of quarantine, is taken on board of a barge or tug, with his trunks, bedding, clothing, bottles, parcels, and old rubbish of all kinds, and from thenoa trans ported to the water-gate of Cantle Garden. On arriving there he is relieved of his trunks and baggage, which is stowed away carefully in racks and numbered in a corresponding fash ion, with the number placed opposite the emi grant's name in the register, where his bap tismal appellation, surname, birthplace, age; occupation, and future destination are regis tered for future reference. The boxes and trunks are kept in a long covered way which makes half the circuit of the garden, aud affords ample food for reflection. Here there are boxes of all shapes and sizes tin boxes, wooden boxes, metal boxes, boxes of oak and pine, of cedar, rosewood, and mahogany, ob long and square; some large as the camp chests of McClellan on the Peninsula, others lit to hold the title-deeds or regalia of an empire. The eastern side of the Castle is devoted to the baggage of emi grants going out of the city, and when they arrive at Buffalo, Chicago, St. Louis, Boston, or Cincinnati, they And there their baggage ready for them as soon as they have satisfied the charges upon the freight. The EDglish-speaking emigrants are registered fiiet, and then the Germans. Alter being registered, which takes a long time, the emi grants are driven into the bull-pen to await a further disposition. Lavatories, or places for washing, are located arouud the Castle large, gloomy-looking places, calculated to keep before the eyes of the emigrant the hold or steerage of the ship from which he has just debarked. Washing or cleanliness is not en forced upon the emigrants, and the huge bloc ks of soap and the damp, wet floor of the washing-rooms present a very black and disconsolate aspect. Around the wall3 of the bull-pen are scattered huge maps of the States and Territories, admirably calculated to impress upon the minds of foreigners the great size and extent of Uncle Sam's domi nions. The walls of this filthy house re sounded with the clash of muskets, drums, and swords of the old regular army, and after wards to the glorious warblings of the peerless Jenny Lind, to the delicious strains of Catha rine Hayes, and to the crash of Jullien's horns and instruments; for here were given the monster concerts of this great artist when in his prime. Well, to-day it would make Jenny Lind sick to look down from one of the galleries where thousands used to sit entranced listening to her " Norma," and behold her own countrymen and women, from far-off Upsala and Stockholm, herded to gether like sheep in a July sun. The ghost of the great Jullien would not allow its white gloved fingers to rest upon polluted lintel or door-jamb for fear of contamination. Large blue-bottle flies haunt the seams of the plank ing in the floor of the bull-pen, sucking and feasting upon the corruption. A thousand persons have often been confined in this worse than Black Hole of Calcutta, while at other times not a score of emigrants are present. It is an erroneous impression that the emigrants from northern countries surpass in cleanliness those from the more southern climes. The Swedes, Germans, and Russians are, very contrary to general expectation ; the Irish and French compare favorably with other races in cleanliness, and sur pass them in light-heartedness and a disposition to bear up under hardships. The Welsh emigrants are, nearly all, consigned to the embraces of the Mormon chiefs of Utah. The specimens of Welsh emigrants who were here, bound for Salt Lake, and the miners and mill-spinners from some of the rural districts of England, are terribly dirty and ignorant. Great numbers of the English emigrants have little or no knowledge of the Creator, or of any revealed form of religion. The ignorance and brutality of the lower classes of English emigrants are astounding, and would be de cided incredible by him who knows nothing of tne facts presented. Ilere is a group or Irish emigrants sitting upon their household Lares and Penates. There are three little girls, ranging from three to ten years of age, a motherly-looking woman of fifty, and a boy of fifteen. The family are dressed comfortably, and rather cleanly. The mother is crying quietly; the smallest girl has caught the infection from the old woman, and is burying her tiny knuckles in her eyes with great determination, while the boy stares steadfastly at the ceiling, and keeps his mouth wide open as a commou thoroughfare for the nasty flies which infest the bull-pen. Anjacclimatizcd friend, with a rowdy look, is talking to the old lady, and endeavoring to make her feel comfortable, but sue wui not he comforted. She left the hills of far-off Tipperary at the bidding of a faithful son, who resides "some place" in "Missus Sury," as the old ladv exnressus it. but she has lost the address, and forgets the name of iiie precise locality. "Can't ye remember the name of the place at all, at all, Biddy ?" says her comforter. "The divil a bit me knows. Jamesy tould me in the letther that there was a great dale 01 watner near his place. Is there mucn wather in Missus Sury f Will ye stop yer bellewing there, Molly V " Is it in Meessury ye mane f Sure, it3 full of wather and shnakes." "Cross of Christ 1 and are the shuakes alive, Tim ?" "Yis, Biddy, and kicking, too." "Well, I wish I never had left Nenagh, in ould Tipperary," said the old lady, "for whiu I'm out here, shure, Andy, that I thought 'd be some use to me, is no more than an omad haun," pointing to her son, who still kept his mouth open for the admission of flies. There is an hospital attached to the Castle Garden Depot, situated on Ward's Island. Ward's Island is 103 acres in extent, and about $12,000 worth of produce is raised annu ally on the island by patients. There is an attendant physician at the Castle, and an apothecary's shop. Cases of fever aud cholera are instantly carried without to the hospital for treatment. Two millions and a half of emigrants have passed through Castle Garden during the last ten years, bringing with them an average of $50 per head. This amounts in the gross aggregate to one hundred and twenty-five millions of dollars. During the year 18UG, 233,418 persons arrived at Castle Garden, bringing with them 203,236 pieces of baggage. Of this number 10b',716 were from Germany, (18,074 from Ireland, 30,18(5 from England, 4979 from Scotland, 3D07 from Sweden, 3085 from Switzerland, 3240 from France; Denmark, 152(5, and Hol land, 1506 The remainder were from seventeen different countries. The States most favored by the emigrants on leaving Castle Garden are New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. OMn r,A MnnaiwliiiRfltta. ""8 , w . UUI. AMMMUWW Til 'd Germans go to Pennsylvania, . Ohio, Illinois, and Wisconsin; the Irish to New York, Massa chusetts, Connecticut, and New Jersey; the Swedes to Delaware; the English to New Yorit and Pennsylvania; the Scotch to New YorK and Illinois; and the French toNewYorK, Louisiana, and Canada. The greatest number of vessels leave the ports of Europe In tne following order: Liverpool, Bremen, London, Hamburg, Glasgow, Jlesse, Antwerp, u Londonderry. Formerly the Irish preponder ated, now the Hermans hav lh n...i.,..r, v in the proportion of on hira .(rt The CotumittttionwB of Emigration have officers in every city in the State of New York lVr the aid and protection of emigrants. ' m 7 VK'nea 10 e Castle Garden depot an office for the employment of emigrant girls who desire to procure situations as help in located on the northeast corner of the Castle a-Ji 50 feet in e :- ' u wiuin, witn seats ar ranged with an aisle in the middle like a church, and a desk rajled in whore a pulpit would be in a church, behind which sits a gentleman of the Teutonio persuasion, in a mixed pepper-and-salt suit, to answer ques tions. Here it is the custom for persons who desire to get a great deal of work for very little money to apply for servant "gals," as the policeman at the door terms the private help. Any girl who has just landed at this port can obtain a situation by waiting at this place and submitting her person to inspection o those who may desire female help. Having procured a place and entered the service of her employer, she may, if she dislikes the re muneratiou or work, inform the Coiumis sioners of her wish to leave her situa tion, and the privilege is accorded to her of returning to the Employment Agency at the Garden, as often as she changes her mind during the space or twelve calendar months from the time she has landed on the shores of the New World. The large majority of these cirls who seek employment are mdns trious, clean, and honest before being defiled by the filth and contamination of the great city. Some of these are, however, very giddy, thoughtless, fond of dress, gaudy colors, and easily led away by solt and honeyed words They may have to encounter two great dangers, which shall be speciiied: Cut off from home and parental teaching, set adrift in a strange land, it is a common occurrence with them to obtain employment in families, when design ing scoundrels employ every art and influence of money and circumstances to seduce and destroy them. The other danger is from the emigrant boarding-house keepers, who haunt the Castle Garden depot like evil spirits to entice any fish that may be en tangled in their nets. Nominally these birds of prey arc supposed to be deprived of any power to further their ends: but this is altogether a mistake, as the calandar of crime in our courts, and the cata logue of wretched women In these dens of in famy infesting the city, will show; but a ma jority of the girls are poor emigrants, driven to desperate courses by the circumstances they are placed in alter they leave Castle Garden. Very few German girls ever seek employment in the office at the depot, as they are picked up m tne hull-pen by these scoundrels, speak ing their own language, who make magnificent promises to them, and wheedle them, in order to have them accompany them to their dens Very few single girls, without friends, arrive in New York city with more than fifty dollars in money. These boarding-house sharks charge eight dollars a week for lodgings and food. Having got the f,irl into the boarding-house. the next thing is to buoy her up with delusive hopes of a comfortable situation, which they are certain never to procure for her, and hav ing done this, it is then necessary to encour age her to procure cheap finery, and end by Keeping ner at the boarding-house lor month to get her in debt. Then, should she desire to leave, the next move is to hold her clothing and trunk for a bogus board bill. I he society of abandoned women, who are employed to Bap the poor girl's virtue, and the troubles of prosecution lor debt, make the girl a pliant instrument in the hands of the boarding-house shark. She then becomes an easy victim to the lust of the highest bidder, and her ruin is consummated. Many of these girls, after undergoing a course of prostitution and shame for two or three months in the lager beer dens of Greenwich street, the dance houses of Water street, or the perlieus of Greene and Mercer streets, are afflicted with fits of ennui, and return to the Castle Garden depot for a change of scene, or else they are secret missionaries of evil, sent by their employers to corrupt girls who as yet are perfectly innocent. These girls are quite shameless, and by their vile conduct disgust all who visit Castle Garden for the purpose of procuring help. The clerk who has charge of the employment office is sometimes put to hia limit of patience by the antics of these young ladies. A number of persons from the country visit the Castle Garden daily in search of girls to work on the farms. A few days since a gentleman of venerable years and appearance came from the Connecticut Valley to procure help. About thirty girls were pre sent, seated in the office, awaiting employment. Some of them had the fresh rosy cheeks gene rally found in emigrant girls before becoming inured to this climate, bo different from their own. the soft blue eyes, and expression of innocence and virtue, while others bore in their countenances the marks of hardened depravity and crime, carrying in bonnet and shawl the colors of the rainbow. The old gen tleman, after looking around at the upturned faoes, selected a rather hardened-looking girl, and said to her: "Do you want a situation, my girl ?" "Well," said this charming damsel, "that depends. How much you want to give f" "How much do you want f" said the old man. "Well, I want tin dollars (with a toss of the head), unless 1 have too much work to do," she added. "Can you cook," said the old gentleman. "Av coorse 1 can," said she, and addod, "but where do you live ?" "In Connecticut," said the old man. "Oh, deed'n I'll not go to Kunecktikut for tin dollars a month," and away she went, tossing her head. The old gentleman made another attempt; this time, however, he did not have to make the selection himself, for a gaudily dressed woman, with flaunting ribbons and traoes in her face of chalk and the rouge-pot, sauntered up to him, and placing herself in an easy atti tude before the old gentleman, commenced to catechize him as follows: "Is it a servant ye'd be afther wanting r "Yes; I want a servant," said the old man. "How much will ye give V "What are you worth f " "Well, I couldn't work for less than $12, and I always got the fat where I worked before." "Can you cook t" "Of coorse I can cook all around." "Do you know how to make pastry f" "What's pastry f" "Why pies and cakes." "And it's wanting me to make yer pastry ye'd be for $12 a mouth ! Butjsure," with an impudent leer, "I'll be able to make enough pastry for meself and you. How large is your family?" "I have three daughters and a son," said the old man meekly. "How old is yer son t" "Nineteen years." "Ia he good-looking T" "I cannot be a judge of that myself. You hail better come with me and see for yourself." "And bo ye Jiave ttice daughters. Well, JULY 29, 1867. why don't they make their own pastry r Shure it's afihei quarrelling tuey i " me. I'll, iiuiade 111 not go v iuukwvu. widye." The old gentiemnn asKPa a young who was a bystander what he thought of the yonng lady, and was answered: "Well, I think if yon have three daughters, you had ueiier not iukq mm gin iuvu juui ikuu.j Ihe young man then recommended mm iu question a young, pretty, and clean-looking girl who sat apart from the rest. Ihe old gentleman did so, hut tne young Miss informed him that she had "been in the habit of living in the highest of families, and wouldn't go to Kuneckticut for the world; hut she had a friend that might go." The friend would not go either, because she wouldn't like Kunecktikut," and "thin ye had to be ail night on the boat," and the "man with whom she lived wanted her to get up at 3 0 clock to raiiK tlie cow, which was a shame, as every body knows I" The last hair broke the camel's back, and the old gentleman left Cas tle Garden without a servant, nevr to come back. AT. y. Tribune. FINANCIAL. 7 8-lOs ALJL, SIU14:il4, CONVERTED INTO Five-Twenties of 1865, JANUARY AKD JULY, WITHOUT CHARGE. UOKDM UUIVEKED IMMEDIATELY, DE HAVEN & BROTHER 10;2rr. MO. 4U W. THlRl STREET. U. S. SECURITIES A SPECIALTY. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO., BANKERS AKD EROKEB.S, NU.ieS T1IIK1 St., St, 8 NASSAU ST., PHILADELPHIA. HEW TOKX OBJDEBS FOB STOCHM AM MOLD EXfc ll'TED IK FlIILAI'LLI'lIIA AND NEW York m JSATIONAL BAM OF THE REPUBLIC, 809 and 811 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL, ...-.1,000,000 DIKECTOKa Joseph T. Bailey, fvalhitn Hilles, lieu). Bowmod, Jr., fchiiiuel A. lilBiihtuu, Kdward 11. urue, William Krvlen, Osgood WelHh, Frederick A, Hoyt, Wm. H, ttbawn. WM. H. KHAWN, President, JmU Cashier of the Central National Bank. JOS. P. MUMFORD Cashier, 5 12 Late of the JPhUadrJvhla National Bank T. LOUIS BOND S. Vv e offer for sale a limned amount of BIX PJllt CKHT. liOJSUb CITY Ob' 8T. LOUIS, Having twenty years to run, principal and Interest payaoie in jnbw yoi-k, AT THE LOW PRICK OF KIUHTY-OJSK, And accrued Interest. We recommend them as reliable and undoubted Beourlty, yielding about elifht percent, 10 tlie purcna.ser. TOWKBJKNI), WHELENT A CO., 7 14 St No. 30 W AlxNUT Street. PROPOSALS. TTWGINEER OFFICE HARBOR DEFENSES, JLU Ko. 55BECOD Blreet, Third Hlury, HAL' 11 1 uniiL' u,i A A AA A. V A-tf . va Healed Prorjosals. In dunllcate. will be received at this office until 12 M. of FRIDAY, the 9th any or aiuibi, irni, lor tne TiruDer ana f ra iolug required for tlie coustructiou of three (3) cribs in the uusqueiKinua river, below iiavre, de-Grace. Md. Proposals must be separate for Timber and Framing, and in duplicate for each Proposals lor "Timber" will embrace all the timber, scantling, aud piles required. Proposals for "Framing" will embrace driving the piles, framing and putting together In place the timber of Cribs, including all bolting, spi king, and bracing required to complete the structures. For particulars as to payments, time of be- this uuice, wnere pians auu specniuauous can be seen. Contractors furrjJshiDg"Tlmber" areexpected to hold it without expense to the United Mtates until required for use by the engineer in charge or the woik. No bids will be considered except such as are made after forms to be obtained from this Office by letter or personal application. Bids will be opened at 12 SO P. M. on FRIDAY, the Uth day of August, 1.S07, In presence of such bidders as may desire to be present. The right Is reserved to reject all or any of the bids lor any cause uoeiueu uunicient uy tne un derslened. iWILLIAM P. CRAIGHILL, Bvt. I.t.-Col., Major of Engineers, 7 27 Ct Post Oihce Box 311, Baltimore, Md. T3ROPOSALS FOR CAVALRY IIOR3E3. DErcTY Q,uartkrma8Ter-Gkn.'b Office,) Baltimore, Md., July 25. 1K07. Sealed Proposals are Invited, and will be re ceived at this office, until MONDAY, at 12 o'clock M., August 6, 1807. for the delivery, lu the city of Baltimore, of twenty (20) Cavalry The Horses will be subjected to careful In spection beloie being accepted. They must be sound In all respects, well broken, lu full flesb and good condition, from fifteen to six teen hands high, from five to nine years old, well adapted In every way for cavalry pur poses. The ability of the bidder to fulfil bis agree ment must be guaranteed by two responsible persons, which guarantee must accompany the proposal. The Horses must be delivered within fifteen (15) days from the date of acceptance of any proposal. The Government reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Payment to be made on completion of con tract. Bids will be endorsed 'Proposals for Cavalry Horses," and addressed to the undersigned, Baltimore, Md. 7 27 7t STEWART VAN VLIET, Deputy QuartermftHter-General U. M. A. Government 1 PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE AWHINCIS, WACOM COTKBS) It you want an extra Awnlnf very cheap, lei oat awnlus makers take the meaaure, aud make It from a lot of imh) hospital tents, lately purchased by us, mauy ol which are entirely new. and ot the beat U UU V D UM.WW Of all kuius. FIT K I N KJ e 1 sm u,mDd m Horut sums tuwt. J flTKIN A. KJ arneas 'INANCIAL. JEV7 OT ATE LOAN. THE NEW SIX PER CENT STATE LOArj, Fro from all State, County,. and Municipal Taxation, Will be famished in sums to BUlt, on applica lion to either of the undersigned: - JAT COOKE A COn DBEXKIi A CO, 7SlnHp E. W. I'LABK A CO. m BANKING HOUSE or Jay Cooke & Co., AON. 118 AKD 114 S. TIIIIID BT.( PTOLAt- Dealors in all Government Socnritiea, OLD C-SOs WANTED IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. A UBEBALDI1TEBESICE ALLOWED, Compound Interest Notes Wanted INTEREST ALLOWED UN DEPOSITS. Collections made. Stocks bought and sold on Commission. Special business accommodations reserved for ladles. f a am NORTH MISSOUKI RAILROAD FIRST MORTGAGE SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS. Having purchased $600,000 of the FIRST MORT GAGE COUPON BONOS OF THE NORTH MIS SOURI RAILROAD COMPANY, BEARING SEVEN PER CENT INTEREST, having 80 years to run, wa are now prepared to tell the same at the low rate ot , And the accrued Interest from this date, thus paying the Investor over 8 per cent. Interest, which is paya ble temi-annually. This Loan Is secured by a First Mortgage upon the Company'a Railroad, 171 miles already constructed aud in running order, and (2 miles additional to be completed by the Uretot October next, extending from the city ol bu Louis into Nortueru aud Central Ails souri. ' full particulars will be given on application to either 01 the undersigned. . W. CLABK A CO. JAY COOKE A CO. DBEXEL A CO. P. a Parties holding other securities, and wishing to cbange them lor this Loan, caa do so at the market rates. 7161m THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE PURCHASED THE NEW SIX PER CENT. REGISTERED LOAN OF IBB LEHIGH COAL AND NAVIGA TION COMPANY, DCE IK 1807. IHTEBEHT PAYABLE 0.1TABTEIILY FBEE OF UNITED HTATES ASD STATE TAXES, ASD OFX-EB IT FOB SALE AT THE LOTV Fit ICE OF NINETY-TWO, AND ACCBCEDINTEBE8T FROM MAT This LOAN la lenurml h. .. Company's Railroad, constructed and to be th tructed, extending from the southern boandLt0aI theborouehof M&iv.h r u l&lva "" diukb across me saldrlvei now la process of oonMmntin ..m... .... , wuu ail Lha Company's right, llbertless. and franchises appertain. ww HUU. 4JIlUfeb Copies ot the mortuase mar bn h.H at the office ofthe Company, or a eit w . .V .Ujned. euiiuer. DBEXEL fc CO. E. W. CLABU st CO, JAY COOKE CO. tJla W. H.NEWBOLP.BQH A AEBTSEN; 7 8'IOS SEVEN - THIRTY NOTES CONTESTED WITHOUT C1IABOB ITO luis SEW G - O s. BONDS DELIVERED AT ONCE. COMPOUND INTEREST Nnrira r. highest market rates. I WM lua " -ni 1 ku a CO., RO. 10 BOETU XIUUDBilKEtX, .J