JilAlH KV AMOXtt ANIMALS. ' Mimicry Olhcr Protective Keum blnnctl A in on K Animate. . Conclusion.' There are a considerable nnmlier of Dip tra, or two-winged flies, that closnly rescrn M wasps and bees, and no doubt derive much benefit irom the wholesome dread whith those inflects excite. The Midas dives, and other species of larpe Brazilian Dies, have dark wings and metallic blue elon gate bodies, renerobling the large stinging Sphecid:c of the same country; and a very large 11 y of the genus Asilus has black handed wings and the abdomen tipped with rich orange, bo ns f xactly to resemble the fine bee Euglodsa dimidiata, and both are found in the -xnrtw of youth America. We have also r"""J f TIl.Hnj , nnr nwn country P H-uca i,i,.i, ..re nlniost exactly like bees. In these cases the eud gained by the mimicry is no doubt freedom from attack, but it has sometimes an altogether dillerent purpose. There are a number of parasitic Hies whose larv.e feed npon the larvio of bees, 8ueh as the British genus Volucella and many of the tropical liombylii, and most of these are exactly like the particular spec its of bee they prey upon, so that tliev can enter their nests unsuspected to deposit their ejrgs. There are also bees that jnimic bees. The cuckoo bees of the genus Nomada are parasitic ou the Audrenid;e, and they resemble either wasps or species of Andrena: and the parasitio humble-Wes of the genus Apathus almost exactly resemble the species of humble-bees iu who3e nests they are reared. Mr. Kates informs us that lie found numbers of thse "cuckoo"-bees and flies on the Amazon, which all wore the livery of working bees peculiar to the same country. There is a genus of small ppiders in tlie tropica which feed on ants, and they are exactly like ants themselves, which no doubt gives them more opportunity of seizing their prey; and Mr. Bates found ou the Amazon a species of Mantis which exactly resembled the white ants which it had fed npen, as well as several species of Crickets (caphura), which resem bled in a wonderful manner dillerent sand wasps of large size, which are constantly on the search for crickets to provision their nests with. I'erhaps the most extraordinary of all is the large caterpillar mentioued by Mr. Bates, which startled him by its close resemblance to a small snake. The first three segments behind the head weie dilatable at the will of the insect, and had on each side a large black ' pupillated spot, which resembled the eye of the reptile. Moreover, it resembled a poison ous viper, not a harmless species of snake, as was proved by the imitation of keeled scales on the crown produced by the recumbent feet, as the caterpillar threw itself backward t The attitudes of many of the tropical spiders are most extraordinary and deceptive, but little attention has been paid to them. They often mimic other insects, and some, Mr. Bates assures us, are exactly like flower-buds, and take their station in the axils of leaves, where they remain motionless waiting for their ' prey. ' Having thus shown how varied and extra ordinary are the modes in which mimicry occurs among insects, we have now to inquire if anything of the same kind is to be observed among vertehrated animals. When we con sider all the conditions necessary to produce a good deceptive imitation, we shall see at once that such can very rarely occur in the higher . animals, since they possess none of those facili ties for the almost infiuite modifications of ex ternal form which exist in the very nature of insect organization. Thj outer covering of insects being more or less solid and horny, they are capable of almost any amount of change of form and appearance without any essential modiiication internally. In many groups, the wings give much of the character, and these organs may be much modified both in form and color without interfering with their special functions. Again: the number of species of insects is so great, and there is such diversity of form and proportion in every group, that the chances of an accidental approximation in size, form, and color, of one insect to another of a different group, are very ' considerable; and it is these chance approxi mations that furnish the basis of mimicry, to ' be continually advanced and perfected by the survival of those varieties only which tend in the Tight direction. In the Vertebrata, on the contrary, tho skeleton being internal, the external form de pends almostieutirely on the proportions and arrangement f that skeleton, which again is strictly adapted to the functions necessary for the' well-being of the animal. The form can not therefor be rapidly modified by variation, and the thin and flexible integument will not admit of the development of such strange pro tuberances as occur continually in insects. The number of species of each group in the same country is also comparatively small, and thus the chances of that first accidental resem blance which is necessary for natural selection to work upon are much diminished. We can hardly see the possibility of a mimicry by which the elk could escape from the wolf, or the buf falo from the tiger. There is, however, in one . group of Vertebrata such a general similarity of form, that a very slight modification, if ac companied by. identity of color, would pro- ' duce the necessary amount of resemblance; and at the same time there exist a number of species which it would be advantageous for others to resemble, since they are armed with the most fatal weapons of offense. We ac cordingly find that reptiles furnish U8 with a ery remarkable and instructive case of true " mimicry. . There are in tropical America a number of venomous snakes of the genua Klaps, which are ornamented with brilliant colors disposed in a peouliar manner. The ground color is generally bright red, ou which are black bands of various widths, and sometimes divided into two or three by yellow rings. Now, in the same country are found several genera of harmless - snakes, having no affinity whatever with the above, but colored exactly the Bame. For ex ' ample, the poisonous Klaps fulvius often oocurs in Guatemala with simple black bands on a ' coral red-ground; and in the same country is juuuu cum) j. nocerus equalis colored and banded in identically the same manner. A variety of Klaps corrallinus has the black bands narrowly bordered with yellow on the same red ground color; and a harmless Bnake.Uomalocrauium semicinctum.has exacty ' the same markings, and both are found in Mexico. The deadly Klapa lemulscatus ha the black bands very broad, and each of them . divided into three by narrow yellow rings; aud - this again is exactly oupied by a harmless snake, Hiocerus elapoides, which is fouud ' alone with its model iu Mexico. it.it more remarkable still, there is in ' " Fouth America a third group of snakes, -anna Oxvrhopus. doubtfully venomous, . and having no immediate affinity with either of the preceding, which has also the same cu rious distribution of colors, namely, variously disposed rings of red, yellow and b ack; and there are some cases m which species of all , three of these groups similarly marked inhabit the same district. For example, in hUps Lemiprkhii the ground color appears to be THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, Fill DAY, AUGUST 23, 1SG.. black, with alternations of two narrow yellow bacdsand a broader red one; and of this pat tern again we have an exact double in xyr bopus foiniosiiK, both being found in many lot lities of tropical South America.. . - ' What adds much to the extraordinary character of these resemblances is the fact, that nowhere in the world but in America are there any snakes at all which have this stylo of coloring. Lr. (lumber, of the Jiritiph Museum, who has kindly furnished the details here referred to, assures us that this Is the case; and that red, black, and vellow rincs occur together on no other snakes in thewoild but on Klaps and the species which so closely resemblu it. In all thepe cases the size and form, as well as the coloration, are so n.iich alike that none but a nntuialist would distinguish the harmless from the poisonous species. Many of tho mi. all tree-frogs are no doubt also niiinickers. When seen iu their natural attitudes, we have been often unable to dis tinguish them from beetles or other insects sitting npon leaves; but regret to say we neglected to observe what species or groups they most resembled, and the subject does not jet seem to have attracted the attention of naturalists abroad. In the class of birds there are a number of cafes that wake some approach to mimi cry, such as the resemblance of the, cuckoos, a weak and detfiiseless group of birds, to hawks and Galliiiacic. There is, however, one example which goes much further than this, and seems to be of exactly the same nature as the many cases of insect mimicry which have been already given, In Australia and the Moluccas there is a genus of honey suckers called Ti-opidorhyiichus, good-sized birds, very strong aud active, having power ful grasping claws, aud long, curved, sharp beaks. '1 hey at-mble together in groups and small Hocks, and they have a very loud bawling note, which can be heard at a great distance, aud serves to collect a number to gether in time of danger. They are very plen tiful and very pugnacious, frequently driving away crows aud even hawks which perch on a tree where a few of them are assem bled. They are all of rather dull and obscure colors. Is'ow, in the same countries there is a group of oiioles, forming the genus Miiueta, much weaker birds, which have lost the gay coloiingof their allies, and are usually olive green or brown, and iu several cases they have couie to resemble most curi ously the Tropidohynchus of the same island. For example, in the Island of Bouru is found the Tropidorhynchus bourueusis of a dull earthy color, and the Mimeta bouru ensis, which resembles it in the following par ticulars: The upper and under surfaces of the two birds are exactly of the same tints of dark and light brown; the Tropidorhynchus has a large bare black patch round the eye; this is copied in the Miuteta by a patch of black feathers. The top of the head of the Tropidor hynchus has a scaly appearance from the narrow scaled-formed feathers, which are imi tated by tho broader feathers pf the Mimeta having a dusky line down each. The Tropidorhynchus has a pale ruff formed of curious recurved feathers on the nape (which has given the whole genu3 the name of Friar birds); this is repre sented in the Mimeta by a pale band in the same position. Lastly, the bill of the Tropidorhynchus is raised into a protube rant keel at the l.sise, and the Mimeta has the same character, although it is not a com mon one in the genus. The result is that, ou a superficial examination, the birds are iden tical, although they have important structural differences, and cannot be placed near each other in any natural arrangement. Here, then, we have two cases of perfect mimicry and two others of good approxima tion, occurring between species of the same two genera of birds; and in three of these cases the pairs that resemble each other are found together in the same island, and to which they are peculiar. In all these cases tho Tropidorhynchus is rather larger than the Mimeta, but the difference is not be yond the limits of variation in species, and the two genera are somewhat alike in form and proportion. There are, no doubt, some special enemies by which many small birds are attacked, but which are afraid of the Tropidorhynchus (probably some of the hawks), and thus it becomes advantageous for the weak Mimeta to resemble the strong, pugnacious, noisy, and very abundant Tropi dorhynchus. Among the Mammalia the only case which may be true mimicry is that of the insectivo rous genus Cladobates, found in the Malay countries,several species of which very closely resemble 'squirrels. The size is about the game, the long bushy tail is carried in the same way, and the colors are very similar. In this case the use of the resemblance must be to enable the Cladobates to approach the insects or small birds on which it feeds, under the disguise of the harmless fruit-eating squirrel. Having now completed our survey of the most prominent and remarkable cases of mimicry that have yet beeu notioed, we must say something of the objections that have been made to theory of their production given by Mr. Bates, and which we have endeavored to illustrate and enforoe in the preceding pages. Three counter explanations have been proposed. Professor Westwood admits the fact of the mimicry and its probable use to the insect, but maintains that each species was created a mimic for the purpose of the protec tion thus atlorded it. Mr. Andrew Murray, in his paper on the "Disguises of Nature," in clines to the opinion that similar conditions of food and of surrounding circumstances have acted iu some unknown way to pro duce the resemblances; and at a recent meeting of the Entomological Society of London; when the subject was discussed, Dr. Sharp maintained a similar view, and added a third objection that hereditary or the reversal to ancestral types of form aud coloration, might have produced many of the cases of mimicry. Against the special creation of mimicking species there are all the objections and difficul ties in the way of special creation in other cases, with the addition of a few that are pe culiar to it. The most obvious is, that we have gradations of mimicry and of protective resemblance a fact which is strongly sugges tive of a natural process having beeu at werk. mother very serious objection is, that us mimicry has been shown to be useful only to those species and groups which are rare and probably dying out, and would cease to have any effect should the proportionate abun dance of the two species be reversed, it fol lows that on the special-creation theory the J!?01" nuiBt 1,liVe been created plentiful, causeSTI?re; ?,4 "Withstanding the many "X. ' oontinuaUytendto alter the pro- pOrilOnB Of HTMM.iun 1 i . have always' i;;;' l"?., w 1" u" their mi.: ::..t wu u"iuea " pose for which. !"!' 0,L rur-, liar characteristic , fT failed. A third diLuit, I V? Z?V la verv easv to J ty tha although it 1 brought about by vacation ."d Ze survi val of the fittest, it .eems a lJtL . "",Vjiotnnfl liAur ni 1 vi t 1 w ivi O XT ery strange things for a Creator to proteot an anhnal bymllklll5 it imitate another, wnea the very assumption of a Creator implies His power to create it so as to lequire no such circuitous protection. These appear to be fatal objections to the ap plication of the special-creation theory to this particular case. The other two supposed explanations, which may be shortly expressed as the theo ries of "similar conditions'' and of "heredity,'? agree in making mimicry, where it exists, au adventitious circumstance not necessarily con nected with the well-being of the mimicking species. But several of the most striking and most constant facts which have been adduced directly contradict both of these hypotheses. The law that mimicry is confined to a few groups only is one of these, for "similar con ditions" must act more or less ou all groups in a limited region, and "heredity ' must in fluence all groups related to each other iu au equal degree. Again, the general fact that those species which mimic others are rare, while those which are imitated are abundant, is in no way explained by either of these the ories, any more than is the frequent occur rence ot some palpable mode ot protection in the imitated species. "Reversion to an ancestral type no way explains why the imi tator and the imitated always inhabit the very same district, whereas allied forms of every degree of nearness and remoteness generally inhabit dillerent countries, aud olteu dillerent quarters of the globe; and neither it, nor "similar conditions," will account for the likeness between species of distinct groups being superficial only a disguise, not a true resemblance; for the imitation of bark, ot leaves, of sticks, of dung; for the resemblance between species iu different orders, and even dillerent classes and sub-kingdoms; and unally, for the graduated series of the phenomena, beginning with a general harmony aud adap tation of tint in autumn and winter moths, and iu arctic and desert animals; ami ending with those complete cases of detailed mimi cry which not only deceive predacious ani mals, but puzzle the most experienced insect collectors and the most learned entomologists. But there is yet another series of phenom ena connected with this subject, which con siderably strengthens the view here adopted, while it seems quite incompatible with either of the other hypotheses; namely, the relation of protective coloring and mimicry to the sex ual differences of animals. It will be clear to every one that if two animals, which as regards "external conditions" and "hereditary descent" are exactly alike, yet differ remarkably iu coloration, one resembling a protected species and the other not, the resemblance that exists in one only, can hardly be imputed to the influence of external conditions or as the effect of heredity. And if, further, it can be proved that the one requires protection more thau the other, and that in several cases it is that one which mimics the protected species, while the one that least requires pro tection never does so, it will afford very strong corroborative evidence that there is a real con nection between the necessity for protection and the phenomenon of mimicry. Now the sexes of insects offer us a test of the nature here indicated, and appear to furnish one of the most conclusive arguments in favor of the theory that the phenomena termed "mimicry" are produced ty natural selection. Ihe comparative importance of the sexes varies much in different classes of animals. In the higher vertebrates, where the num ber of 'young produced at a birth is small and the same individuals breed many years in succession, the preservation of both sexes is almost equally important. In all the numerous cases in which the male protects the lemale and her otlspring, or helps to supply them with food, his importance in the economy of nature is proportionally in creased, though it is never, perhap, quite equal to that of the female. In insects the case is very different; they pair but once in their lives, and the prolonged existence of the male is in most cases quite unnecessary for the' continuance of the race. The fe male, however, must continue to exist long enough to deposit her eggs in a place adapted lor the development and growth of the progeny. Hence there is a wide diffe rence in the need for protection in the two sexes; and we should, therefore, expect to find that in some cases the special protec tion given to the female was in the male less in amount or altogether wanting. The facts entirely confirm this expectation. In the spectre insects (rhasmid.e) it is often the females alone that so strikingly resemble leaves, while the males show only a rude approximation. The male Diadema bolina is a very handsome and conspicuous butterfly, without a sign of protective or imitative color ing, while the female is entirely unlike her partner, and is one of the most wonderful cases of mimicry on record, resembling most accurately the common Danais chrysippus, in whose company it is often found. So in several species of South American Pieris, the males are white and black, of a similar type of color ing to our own "cabbage" butterflies, while the females are -rich yellow and buff, spotted and marked so as to exactly resemble species of Heliconid;e with which they associate in the forest. In the Malay archipelago Mr. Wallace found a Diadema which had always been considered a male insect on account of its glossy metallic-blue tints, while its companion of sober brown was looked upon as the female. He discovered, however, that the reverse is the case, and that the rich and glossy colors of luo icuimo iuo luuiuuve anu protective, since they cause her exactly to resemble the com mon Kuphi a midamus of the same regions, a species which has beeu already mentioned iu this article as mimicked by another butterfly, l'apilio paradoxa. In this case, and in that of Diadema; bolina, there is no difference in the habits of the two sexes, which fly in similar localities; so that the influence of "external conditions" cannot be invoked here as it hits been in the case of the South American I'ieris pynha and allies, where the white males fre quent open sunny places, while the Uelicwnia like females haunt the shades of the forest. We may impute to the same general eause the greater need of protection for the female, owing to her weaker flight, greater exposure to attack, and supreme importance the fact of the colors of lemale insects being so very generally duller and less conspicuous thau those of the other sex. And that it is chiefly due to this cause rather than to what Mr. Darwin terms "sexual selection," appears to be shown by the otherwise inxplicable fact that in the groups which have a protection of any kind independent of concealment, sexual differences of color are either quite wanting or slightly developed. The llelicouidai and Dauaida1, protected by a disagreeable flavor, have the females as bright and conspicuous as the males, and very rarely differing at all from them. The stinging Hymenoptera have the two sexes equally well colored. The Carabidie, the Chrysomelida', and the Tele phori have both sexes equally conspicuous, and seldom differing in colors. The brilliant I'urculios, which are protected by their hard ness, are brilliant in both sexes. Lastly, the glittering Cetoniadm and Buprestid;e, which seem to be protected by their hard aud polished toats, their rapid motions and peculiar habits,' prebeut few sexual differences of color, while sexual selectiou has often manifested itself by structural differences, such as horns, spines, : or other processes. The same , law manifests itself in birds. The female, while sitting on her eggs, re quires protection by concealment to a much treater extent than the uibIh! an.l tr h lift. cordingly find that in a large majority of the cases in which the male birds are dis tinguished by unusual brilliancy of plumage, the females are much more obscure, and often remarkably plain-colored. The excep tions are such as eminently to prove the rule, for in most cases we can see a very good rea Bon lor mem. in particular, there a tew in stances among wading and gallinaceous birds in which the female has decidedly more bril liant colors thau the male; but it is a most curious and interesting fact that In most, if not all, these cases the males sit upon the eggs; so that this exception to the usual rule almost demonstrates that it is because the pro cess of incubation is at once very important and very dangerous, that the protection of obscure coloring is developed. The most striking example is that of the sooty phalarope (l'halaopus fulicarius, Linn.) In winter plu mage the sexes of this bird are alike in colora tion, but in summer the female is much the most conspicuous, having a black head, dark wings, and reddish-brown back, while the male is nearly uniform brown, with dusky spots. Mr. Gould, in his "Birds of Great Biitain," figures the two sexes in both winter and summer plumage, and remarks on the strange peculiarity of the usual colors of the two sexes being reversed, and also on the still more curious fact that the "male alone sits on the eggs," which are deposited on the bare giound. In another British bird, the dot terell, the female is also lighter and more brightly colored than the male; and it seems to I e proven that the males assist in incuba tion, even if they do not perforin it entirely; for Mr. Would tells us, that they have beeu bhot with the breast bare of feathers, caused by sitting on the eggs." The small quail-like birds, forming the genus Tu mix, have also generally large and bright-colored females, and we are told by Mr. Jerdon, in his "Birds of India," that "the natives report that during the breed ing season the females desert their eggs, and associate in flocks while the males are em ployed in hatching the eggs." It is also an ascertained fact that the females are more bold and pugnacious than the males. A further confirmation of this view is to be found in the fact (not hitherto noticed) that in a large majority of the cases in which bright colors exist in both sexes, incubation takes place in a dark hole or in a dome-shaped nest. Female kingfishers are olteu equally brilliaut with the males, and they build in holes in banks. Bee-eaters, trogons, motmots, and toucans all build in holes, and in none is there any difference in the sexes, although they are, without exception, showy birds. Parrots build in holes in trees, and in the majority of cases they present no marked sexual dif ference tending to the concealment of the female. Woodpeckers are in the same cate gory, since, though the sexes often differ in color, the female is not generally less con spicuous than the male. Wagtails and titmice build concealed nests, and the females are nearly as gay as their mates. The female of the pretty Australian bird l'ardalotus puncta tus is very conspicuously spotted on the upper surface, and it builds in a hole in the ground. The gay-colored hang-nests (Icte rime), and the equally brilliant Tanagers, may be well contrasted; for the former, concealed in their covered nests, present little or no sexual difference of color while the open nested Tanagers have the females dull-colored and sometimes with almost protective tints. No doubt there are many individual exceptions to the rule here indicated, because many and various causes have combined to determine both the coloration and the habits of birds. These have, no doubt, acted and reacted on each other; and then, under changed condi tions, it may well have happened that one has become modified, while the other has been continued by hereitary descent, and exists as an apparent exception to what otherwise seems a very general rule. The facts pre sented to us by the sexual differences of color in birds and their mode of nesting, are on the whole in perfect harmony with that law of protective adaptation of color and form which appears to have checked to Some ex tent the powerful action of sexual selection, and to have materially influenced the coloring of female birds, as it has undoubtedly done that of female insects. We have now completed a brief, and neces sarily very imperfect, survey of the various ways in which the external form and coloring of animals is adapted to be useful to them, either by concealing them from their enemies or from the creatures they prey npon. It has, we hope, been shown that the subject is one of much interest, both as regards a true com prehension of the place each animal fills in the economy of nature, and the means by which it is enabled to maintain that place; and also as teaching us how importaut a part is played by the minutest details in the structure of ani mals, and how complicated and delicate is the equilibrium of the organic world. Westminster lievitw. GAS FIXTURES. C ALL AND BVY YOUK UAS FIXTTJJRKS iroul tlie inuuumctnrerB. YAKKUUC A MARSHALL, No. U A KCH blreet. VANK1RK & MARSHALL, No. 912 ARGH btreet, manufacture and keep all styles of Um Fixtures and C'liandelient; ulno retlnibU old lixturea. VANKIKK & MARSHALL HAVE A COM jilete stock of Chandeliers, Brackets, Portable SihikIk, and Bioiizhs. al No. W1Z AHC'll isirttet. T TAN KIRK & MARSHALL, No. 912 ARCH Y blrei't. tlve enueclal attention to tilting up Churches, Public Halla, aud lwelliugn. Pick uvx at I'll K 1.UWKKT BATKH. OLD. GILT. AND ELECTRO SILVKR VT plaud Oas Fixtures, at VANKIltK & MAlt- btiAi.isf, no. vvi Aituu btreec. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. None but fiml-cluBM workmen employed. 8 VMM mwiau HARDWARE, CUTLERYJETCT CUTLER v. TA Hi"' WBlfA uiu P4lkK AiL TAXLUt OUlV 8Hi.AKb, KIC.i v HjfXMOLD'B Cutlery Btore No. 135 South TENTH Street, cutlery btore , r. .jyejyalnut fi"eTnburglarproof safes un ai MANDFACTDBBa Of HAFEB. r i REA1.KB IN ' BA K TBK T. ' a TARfiK ASSORTMENT OF FIRK F?TI , , ,roofHAFK8 on band, with Inside KdM and B"rKlr-PWr"f,r free ,ro,., dampueo doort. lwelllu-u,UBr).h uiM;MHKIH)B, Price low. " " No. l VI N hi Htrt 6 COAL. .t i. rn nFAT.KKH IN M ' 1 1 II ill I FU IG1J and KAtlLhi VF.l N U Alt Lt 1U11 I F" I"" ared exprmsly CUA'I "k iPT dry "uTr S3ra for l'uiully hhb. V a'"',.,1 J vVvi' uil Aveuue. onlce, No. 61 WAIN U 1 buoet. GOVERNMENT SALES. G OVF.HNMfcNT BALK OF THE MILITARY X J'.iulioHd ul liraxoa Hnntlano. Texaa. O.Uee ( uiei liuHrleiiuuHier KUtli Military District, New OneHtis, Lh,, July 9, 1K07. Healed 1'ropohHlH will he received at this office lim II 12 M., Auiuml 24, 1807. lor lue purchase of nil tlie rlnlit, UUe, and interest of the United KtHlen Iu nud totlie United HirIph Military Hail rnmt Itoru Urn aim SaUllugo to While's lUiuohe, Texas. ll o ale will Include the entire track and BlolniiR, buildings, water matlons, turu-lablex, etc , the rnllioad imiterinlg, tlie pupplles per taining to the romi, together with the rolllug Hlook, enra, machinery, and other equipment, us Jollows: 4 Claw liars. 2 Hhacklo liars. 2 Finch r.iira. 4 Square BrnnNes. 2 HhlpplnR iiuxes. 7 Flat Cam. UtO Railroad Chairs. 2",(j(j0 rounds Knllrimd Chairs. i rust! enr Frame. 2 Crow's Feet, 4 Kallroi Irond Froes and Swltrh stand. i iracK uatine. ".Etio pounds Kuilrond Iron. 1 Locomotive and Tender. 1 Locomotive. 1 Head-light Locomotive 14 Coupling Links. 4 Hplko Mauls, 2 Hpikn Fuuches. 5ftl pounds Car 8prings. 2 JuckKcrews aud Levers. 2F! pi unds Kailroad Hplke. Hi miles Railroad Track. 2 Turn-Tables. 62.5 Cross 'lies. 1 Flro Tongs. 2 Push Car WtieelB. 2 Hciew Wrenches. 1 Cooking Htove. I Stove. 3 Hand Cars. 1 rush Car. Tills pale will not include tue bridge over the Boca Chlca. 'ilie sale will not Include the title to the laud, which does not belong to the United Btates. This road Is about ten miles lu length, and extends Irom llruzos San lingo to White's Itanche, on the Rio Cirande. FrontbU point connection Is made by steamer with Browns- vino aim DiaiHiiiuniH. The route is the allot lea'. nd best for the im mense trallio between t he Oulf of Mexico and the Interior southern Texas and northern Mexico, and the communication by rail alone tai readily be extended to Brownsville. Tne road aluady completed saves thirty nines oi uinicun anu tortuous navigation. 1 no road is five leet gauge, good ties, T rail, aud full spiked. The property may be Inspected on application to Captain C. II. Hoyt, A. M., Brownsville, Texas, and any Information desired may be ob tained from that oflicer. or from the olliee of the Chiet liunrtermaster Filth Military District, .New Orleans, La. A condition of the sale will be that transpor tation bl).il be furnished for all Government troops ,and supplies whenever required, at rates not to exceed those paid by the United Slates to other railroad companies in the Fifth Military District. The terms of payment accepted will be those considered tne most lavoruoie to the uovern ineut. Ten per cent, cash, In Government funds, to oe puia on acceptance oi proposal, Tne Government reserves the right to reject any or all proposals. Proposals should be Indorsed "Proposals for tne purchase of Brazos Santiago and Rio Grande Railroad," and addressed "Brevet Lieutenant Colonel A. J. McGonnigle. A. O,. M. U. H. Armv. oflice Chief Quartermaster Fifth Military Dis trict, new ui leans, Pia." A. G. McGONNIGLE, Brevet Lieut.-Col. and A. U M. U. 8. Army, $20 it In charge of office. T ARGE SALE OF PUBLIC PROPERTY. J..J Office Army Clothing and Equipage, 1 bT. Louis, Mo., August 15, 1807. Will be sold at public auction, at the DEPOT OF ARMY CLOTHING AND EQUIPAGE, No. (107 North MAIN Street, St. Louis, on TUES DAY, the 3d day of September next, com mencing at 11 o'clock A. M., to be continued irom day to day, the following articles of Army Clothing and Kqulpnge. "2,ut)0 Great Coats (footmen's). 58.1)00 Great Coats (horsemen's). 60,000 Uniform Hats. 50,000 Ostrich Feathers. 50.000 Hat Cords and Tassels (blue). 50,000 Forage Caps. 3,111 Uniform Frock Coats. 45,000 Uniform Jackets. ,461 Veteran Reserve Jackets. $M Knit Jackets. 8,0h0 Lined Sack Coats. OH, 212 Unllned Sack. Coats. 7,000 Overalls. (1,000 Stable Frocks. S'J,4.'o Knit Shirts. 6.945 Knit Drawers. ZO.tKiO Leather Neck Stocks. 1,000 Worsted Sashes. 2K2 Pairs Boots. 16.053 Pairs Bootees. 12,10 Pairs Trowsers (footmen's). 15,0o0 Pairs Trowsers (horsemen's). 50,000 Haversacks, 60,000 Knapsacks. 25,000 Kubber Blankets. 0,5(0 Weollen Blankets. 20,000 Pick Axes. 15,400 Pick Axe Handles. These articles are all new, and offer great in ducements to dealers throughout the country, A small quantity of damaged property will be sold at the same time and place. Samples of all may be seen at the Depot within ten days ol sale, and catalogues had. Terms Cash in Government funds, ten per cent, down, the balance before the 'goods are taken from the Depot, which must be within five days after the sale, under forfeiture of the purchase and the ten per cent, deposited. By order of the Quartermaster-General, JOHN F. RODGEUd, Captain and Military Storekeeper 8 it) 13t United States Army. T ARGE SALE OF NEW MATERIAL. XJ Depot Quartkrmastkr's Office, Washington, D. O., August 15, 1807. f By direction of the Quartermaster-General a large lot of new Quartermaster's Stores and LI k ( 1 ,. I . V. nl.t . n I.Mi. ai.nllnn WCUIWUOB Will .UIU V IUUIIU ailVbiUU. at Lincoln Depot, under the supervision of Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel James M. Moore, Quartermaster U. S. A., on MONDAY. Sep tember 2, commencing at 10 A. M., consisting iu part ol ios lbs. ingot copner. 90 coal oil lamps, 5.000 table legs. 675 coal ou burners, 4000 tin cups, 2500 lbs. iron wire. 17,444 lbs.asst. iron nuts, 7,481 lbs. Iron and cop per rivets, 14,648 handles.axe.pick, 058 lbs. R. R. and other spikes, 103 carpenters', etc, clamps, 7079 lbs. oil tanned leather, 81(1 lbs. kole leather, 24Kt lbs. oakum, 177 lbs. Mica, 210 lbs. packing hemp, 271 spools W. and B. piane, etc., 110 wagon saddle trees, 210 wrenches. Gov ernment put tern, 0 gang saws, 244 yds. paper muslin, 1,382 ft. linen hose, 2u0 ft. gutta percha l i j i inn , 8100 ft. coll chain, tuoing. ALSO, 130 lbs. aloes. ouo ids. Buipuute cop per, 100 lbs. alum, 802 lbs. glauber salts, 100 lbs. epsom fait, 100 lbs. nitrate potus- SU3, 56 lbs. cream tartar. 100 lbs. calomel, 100 lbs. sugar lead, 610 lbs sulphur, 100 lbs. tartar emetic, 75 lbs. corrosive subli mate, 30 lbs. iodide potassa, 447 lbSwOlls juniper, p ke, amber, wi ntergreeu, British, croton, hemlock, etc. etc; 473 lbs. tinc tures, lobelia, ginger, Iodine, myrrh, hemlock, etc Red precipitate, spatulas, prescription, acales, syringes, ointment, do. Jars, eio. etc. Catalogues of sale can be hud upon applica tion. Terms Cash In Government funds. By order of General V. II. Tompkins, Depot Ouai termaster. JAMES M. MOORE, 8 17 13t Bvt. Lieut-Col., Q. M. In charge. HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTING. p A I N T I N C. THOMAS At FA1IT, UOtaB AK1 MIUM PAIMTElt, (Late Fatty Bra) No. 31 North TUIUI Streat ! Above Market. OLD BRICK FItONTH done np, and made to look eoiial Ul the nuest pre brick, bumplett al the allow City nut) country iruite lullcited. All orders bv Punt promptly attended to. 41luiw PROPOSALS. -IMPROVEMENT OK ' THE DF,3 MOINES JL KAPIDa OF THE Mississippi rimu-Z rj U. H. Knuioekh Ofkick. i . Davenport, Iowa, July 24, iNtf.f Sealed proposals, in duplicate, will be re ceived at this ollit e until 12 M., V EbNESDAY September 4,1807. for excavating the prlsrn and const luctlng the embankment wall $ the Rapids. Mlhhl8Kl'1 rlver t e Des luiuei - 'Ihe Canal Is to be about VA (seven and n half) miles long f xtemllug'Vo.n Nashville & Keokuk, Iowa. The width at the water siirfoA nslde the canal to be 800 three hundred) feet In embankment, aud 200 (two hundred aud tiltyj leet in excavation, and in low water to b 6 (live) feet deep. All the material excavated from the prism of the canal to be used in build, li g Ihe embankment. The latter throughout the greater part of the distance will be about rfoo (three hundred) leet from the Iowa snore Where rock excavation occurs, the bottom of the catial will have a Mope of 1 (one and one hiilf ) Inches to the mile. The embankment is tobet)u;ltof earth clay and rock; to be 10 (tea) fet wide on lop, Including the rip-rap cover, lug: to be 2 (t wo) feet above high-water mark wlih slopes of 1 (one and one-half) base to I (one) vertical. The average thickness of the rlp-rap protection to be 2 (two aud one-half) feetou the river side, 2 (two) feet on thecauai side, and 1 (one) foot on top. All propositions must state the prlceat which each and every kind of work speciiled In the proposal la to be done, and no bid will be con. bidered that Is not definite lu this respect. The Government reserves the rigui to reject any and all bids. A pi Inted copy of this advertisement must be attneued to each proposal. Each bid must contain a written or printed guarantee signed by two responsible persons. Blanks iur proposals of the form required. Willi lorm ol guarantee, will be iurnlsUed at this office on application. The price or prices lu the contract will be con sidered as Including the expense of furnishing all the materials aud performing all the work, according to the plans and speciUcatious exhi bited at the letting. a he entiie cobt of the canal Is estimated at 12,008,345 (two million slxty elsht thousand three hundred and forty-ftve). Theamount ap propriaUd by Congress Is $700,000 (seven hun dred thousand dollars) the contract can only be mane to cover this amount. Fifteen (15) per cent, of the amount of any work done or materials furnished, at the con tract price thereof, will be reserved until the whole work which Is the subject of contract Shall be entirely completed. Persons desiring further information cau obtain the same by calling at this ofllce, where maps, plans, specifications, aud form ot con tract can be consulted. Proposals must be addressed to the under signed, and should be endorsed "Proposals for work on the improvement of the Des Moines Rapids." J. H WILSON, Llent.-Col. 35th Infantry, 7 80 4w Bvt- Major-Gcnerul U. B. Army. pR0POSALS FOR A NEW JAIL. Department ok thb Interior. I Washington, D. C, July 31, 1807. Sealed proposals will be received at this De partment until 12 o'clock M on TUESDAY, the 17th of September, 1807, for the erectiou of the Jail In and for the District of Columbia, autho rized and provided for by the act of Congress, approved July 25, 18011. and the Joint resolutipu approved March 2, 1807. The designs, detail, drawings, and specifica tions cau be seen at the architect's oilice, in the eastern grounds ol the Capitol, Washington city, every duy, except Sundays, between the hours of 9 A. M. and 3 P. M. Separate bids will be received for the ma sonry work, brick work, lrou work, and car pentry work. The contractor whose bid may be accepted will be required to enter iuto a sufficient bond, to be approved by the Secretary of the Interior, for the faithful completion of his contract. Payments will be made as the work progresses, on estimates certified to by the architect: but twenty per centum of the estimates will be retained until the contract is completed. The contract will be awarded to the lowest ' responsible bidder, but the Department re serves the right to rejeot any or allot the bids snouid it ue ueemeu lor the interest of the Government to do so. The bids will be opened at noon on the 18th day of September next, in presence of such of tne uiauers as may choose to attend. Proposals should be eudorsed ou tho envelone "Proposals for New Jail," and be directed to the "Secretary of the Interior, Washington. DC O. H. BROWNING, 8 21 1 9 17 Secretary of the Iuterlor. PHILADELPHIA DEPOT. JL Assistant Quartermaster's Office.! XT n 'in ..... . .... i . I 1. Philadelphia. Auizuhl id. 1807. Proposals will be received ai this ofllce nnt.li l'i o'clock M., SATURDAY, August 24th, 1867, to restore to its original condition eleven hundred and fifteen (1115) feet, more or less, of "Willow Grove Avenue.1' Chesnut Hill, Philadelphia, on ths grounds formerly occupied by the United States Government in connection with the "Mower"' Hospital. Each bid must be guaranteed by two respon sible persons, whose signatures must be ap pended to the bid, and certified to as being good and sufficient security for theamount Involved, by the United States District Judge, Attorney, Collector, or other public officer. Plunk forms for bids can be had on applica tion at this office, and bidders are requested to be present at the opening of the same. The right is reserved to reject any bid deemed too high, and no bid from a defaulting con tractor will be received. Endorse envelopes, "Proposals for Repairs to Willow Grove avenue." By order of Brevet Major-General G. H. Cros man, Assistant Quartermaster-General, United Slates Army, HENRY W. JANE3, Captain aud Assistant Quartermaster, 8 19 5t) Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel, U. S. A. WANTS. " B 00K AGENTS IN LUCK AT LAST. Tbe crisis Is passed. The hoor baa come to lift the veil of secreBy which bag hitherto enveloped tbelnnwc history of tbe (treat civil war, and this Is doue by oiler lug to the public Ueaeral 1 O. Baker's "HISTORY OF THE SECRET SERVICE." For thrilling Interest this book transcends all the romances ot a ihousaudlyears. and conclusively preves that "truth la stranger lhau tlcilon." Agents are clearing from flOO to 300 per month, which we can prove to aoy doubting appllcaat. A few more cau obtain agencies In territory yet unoccu pied. Address P. GARRETT CO . JNO. 70S CllEJbNUT STRKET, ' 7 21 PHILADELPHIA. WANTED FOR THE U. 8. MARINE Corps, able-bodied Hi KM. Recrolts niiisi be able-bodleu, young, unmarried men. They will be employed la tlie Uoveruuimii Navy-yards and lu fchij of War on foielfcrn stations. 1'or further lulor tuallon apply to JAMES LKW79, Captain and Kenruitlng Ollii er, 1 frnw tf No. till B. VUOR'S ttueel. GARDNER & FLEMING, COACH MAKEK8, . H KOCT1I FIFTH NTUCET. Ne w and Second-hand Carriages for sale. Tar tlcnlar attention paid to repairing-. 5 808m CEORCE PLOWMAN, OAItPKNTKR AND BUII.DKll. UEMOVJKn To 1Vo.i:.a DOCK Strt, PHrLADEU'iriA. SLATE MANTELS. BLATK MAMTKLB are unsurpassed lor Durability Beaoty. trenKth.andCheapnpM made to oruer. ' ""i Work aeueran J- U. ICIMKS A CO.. 8 12 tu k o U26 aud im CHKHN fJT ttuoel.