THE J 'EAR OF TERR OR S. Vntpovrlnc of ill Vials of Wmth-Vol-canoes, Karthquakes , Cyclones Tre ni.i.aiCouroUI.Bl cm Karlh la tne Heavens Meteors, Comiti, sued Revolnttone-TlBe Islands tnat flee Awtf, And the Honiulai h reo Found T It Appalling ol ISOT-The Flacues n Written l tne Book. t Bince wonderful revelations of tke Tras- tOurian theory were P'lisb?dV th progress and rapid approach of t remendous badges la tbe condition of our globe and of the Dlanetarr system in which it id embraced, the attention of mankind has been continually arrested br astonndiug natural phenomena. Fearful thunderstorms, earthquakes, vol anic eruptions, both by land and sea, toma toes and inundations.have followed each other with scarcely any intermission; and at this moment there is widespread mourning in very one of the four quarters of the world we inhabit, for immense losses of life and pro perty, occasioned by these, convulsions of mature. Frighiful typhoons at Torto Rico, St. Do mingo, and fit. Thomas, B&ping, as we learn by the latest adviceR, along the Gulf of Mexico and adjacent regions to Matamoras, thence westward to the Pacific, hurling death and ruin as far northward as the shores of Alaska, and finally swooping down upon Australia, China, Japan, and the British East Indies; the submersion, of the island of Tortola for many hours; the sudden eruption of Vesuvius, and consequent volcanic perturbation of .Etna in Sicily, of Stromboli and the Ionian Isles; the threatened eruption of mountains iu our own Territory of Montana, and the Bulphurous conflagrations extending for scores of leagues in the country west of the Yellowstone; the alarming activity of a crater in the populous valley ol Mexico, whose fires have been appa rently extinct for centuries; shocks of earth quake in Portugal, Russia, Bokhara, and other portions of the globe, augmented in their effect by the singular solar obscurations observed within tbe year, and the sublime meteoric dis play,visible over two continents, oa the morn ing of the 15th instant, have convinced the learned that the cosmic shell, upon the outer surface of which we live, the vast system that embraces it, and even the ethereal spaces be yond, extending for myriads of millions of leagueB Into the Milky Way, are now under going some peculiar vicissitudes. Active readers are aware that upon the year 18G7 has been concentrated a full stream of prophecy from seers of every creed and nationality, and that dozens of them insist upon the certainty of a general cataclysm in the heavens and on the earth to come before New Year's. What there is real in these anticipations we shall not presume to decide. Our purpose is simply to review the situation very rapidly, while furnishing, In brief, some notes of the celestial and atmospheric phenomena that have appalled our race in times gone by. THB EEtrCE, f course, was the most tremendous catastrophe f which we Lave any written record. All nations, in using this peculiar expression, refer to the general inundation of which Noah and Lis family were the sole survivors, accord ing to the Mosaio narrative. The eye of pro found science Las, however, discovered the indisputable traces of at least fifteen deluges, or so to speak, in other words, fifteon grand variations by which the sea and the land have leen made to change places. How many more preceded these it la tor Ummaolenoe alone to know. These changes are accounted for by the comparatively late discovery of the conic movement of onr globe, which causes the pre cession of the equinoxes, and is fully com pleted once in every 25,633 years. By this movement the earth reverse its entire atti tude, and causes the oceans and the continents altimately to exchange places. For instanoe, there can be no manner of doubt that the solid jgreund on which we now repose waa once the bed of a sea, in which our mountain summits were islands and promontories, if they merged at all, and that it will be so again. J3ut these transformations, appalling to con template when fully effeoted, are the gradual work of ages, culminating here and there, Lowever, in calamities preolpitated by some great perturbation of the atmosphere or some sudden volcanio action. It is to these outside influences, heightened by the eooentricity of Tast planetary bodies, Buch as comets, etc., that we owe the danger to whioh we are ex posed, and whioh Las often burst into the reality of dreadful calamities, as it now seemi threatenine to do. The fabled land of the Atlantidea did once really exist, as we could perhaps prove, had We here the space. The present bed of the Atlantic Ocean was then blooming in the rays f the sun, and full of life, while the surface sow beneath our feet was fathoms deep below the billows. While we write, the oceau is gaining ground and rapidly too, on Europe, and losing it in America) our shores are merging; those of Britain, Scandinavia,' Ztuuia, France, etc., are sinking. From the Neapolitan shore one can look down upon the masonry of ancient temples that once were kith upon the land, and now are many feet beneath the waves. But all geological narra . lives note tkese facts from year to year. Let ms mention a few instances. The Church of St. Denis do Caux, now, with the parish that surrounded it, swept over by the billows at the distance of two miles from land, at the mouth of the roadstead of Havre, stood high and dry iu the eleventh century, and was not finally engulfed until 1378. JNear Rocbelle, also in France, the town of Chatetaillon has been swallowed little by little by the waters, The Jersey Islands, too, un doubtedly once formed a portion of the north rn mainland, and connected France with Eng land by an isthmus, At Douarnenez, not far from Nantes, the sea is undermining the cliffs, and steadily advan cing to the invasion of the adjacent district. It has been calculated, too, that in a few cen turies the city of Bordeaux will be completely covered with the sands of the sea. Similar inroads are noticeable alone the Boottish coaBt; aud at Wexford, in Ireland tLere is a register of the taxes raised in Ban now, a fine seaside town, wUih disappeared in the same way eight hundred j,ar1 ag0 Hapless Iceland is gradually being drowned and frozen out, as we learn from the reports cf the exploring voyage made thither by the Prinee Napoleon. Her sixty thousand in habitants will soon be driven away, or perish by the billows, the sand, and the ice. Bpitz bergen, once quite habitable, is no longer fre quented by the whale fishermen. Her waters kave lost their leviathan game, and the snow bo longer melts la her valleys. The island of Jan Mayen and 'Eastern Greenland Lave Chared the same fate. The rising of the bed f tbe Atlantic Ooean Las already so greatly diminished the current of the (Jul f Stream that Jt cannot reaL those far-oif shores In suffi cient volume to support animal life in sea or land, as before; and the beautiful swards and 'rests of Greenland, Iceland, and Spitsbergen vanishing. Even farther south, the whale fOjnpUjUlj disappear tLr,t ociUa THE DAIL1 EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER G, 18GL screw-steamers, which Parted on the fishery last summer, from Dundee, have returna.! wirh two whales only, thus making a loss of The surprising variations of the Gulf Stream have long been uoticed to be increasing annu ally; until, during the last year, our Ameri can mariners have made it a subject of special report. An eloquent French writer (Octave Giraud) spf aks of the Gulf of Gawcony as a vast necro polis, in which one may sail over the mint of former cities. Tbe ancient town of Novio magus was there engulfed in the year 580; and, when the sea is calm, the walla aud gables of its buildiugB can still be seen deep under water. Where the poet Ansonne onoe fished and wrote verses, the waves roll fathoms high. The rock of Cordouan, with its light house, now three leagues from the beach, once touched it. Between 1818 and 1830 the water gained 150 yards; and from 1830 to 1842, about 00 yards. From 1841! to 1845, it enoroached 100 yards 550 yards in twenty-five years, on a high shore. ln the coast of Normandy, near to Itegne ville, there stood, in the Middle Ages, a hand some commercial mart, which is now sub merged; and, in'fine, the whole littoral France presents similar indications. It was but thn other day that the port of France Lad to be strengthened, at a cost of 805,000 francs. On the 15th of llaroh, the tide rushed in for bun dreds of yards beyond the former limits of the coasts c f the Channel, near Ponterton. On the island of Walcheren, during the inundations of 1047, 1648, 1087, and 1700, the downs were swept bare, and the sands carried away by the rage of the billows, leaving un covered far below quantities of statues, urns, houses, nnd tombs, with inscriptions pointing to the highest antiquity I ln 1004 the eastern coast of England was inundated and lost considerable territory. In the Gulf of Bothnia, between Sweden aud Fin land, the depth of water Las greatly dimi nished, and islands have appeared above it, within one hundred years, but on the western coast of the Swedish Peninsula the sea con tinues to gain. On our side of the globe, the Bank of New foundland is swiftly rising, to reunite, one day, with the mainland; our seaboard cities are getting farther away from the open water; the bed of the Mississippi is rising, and the Gulf of Mexico filling. In Australia, fresh islands are continually cropping up, and, within a twelvemonth, the discoloration of a large patch of the Paeifiu in the route of the San Francisco and Hong Kong steamers, has indicated the early appearance of a new island there. Oil the coast of the East Indies, on the other hand, the natives point out to strangers the remains of the ancient city of Mahabali pores, long hidden by the ocean, but still showing, at low water, pagodas and palaces that were occupied ages Ago. After contemplating these facta, we may find the asserted fate of Tortola less surprising than it seemed at first, if it has, indeed, been submerged. Since we have not only thia en croachment of the sea, lontt working silently and gradually, then sweeping all before it at last, but VOLCANIC ACTION sufficient to account for it. In April, 1819, the Island of Sumbava, in the East Indies, became the scene of a volcanio eruption,which lasted for months, and was heard 1000 miles in one direction and 750 in another, or over a diameter of 1750 miles in all. The sea rose from two to twelve feet along the entire coast, and the Bank of Bima, which had been six fathoms below water, was left dry, while in the opposite direction the waves rushed to the very foot of the volcano, overwhelming the town of Tomboro and the whole adjacent country. They left a depth of eighteen feet of water where none at all waa seen before, and of 12,000 inhabitants on the island only 24 escaped. On the IfJth of March, 16C5, the ship Veritaa, in 20 degrees and 35 minutea north latitude, and 140 degrees 5 minutes east longitude, saw anew and magnificent island-volcano in mid ocean. A crater with four vents shot fire, ashes, and lava thousands of feet into the air, offering a spectacle of appalling sublimity at midnight. It was on the 30 in of January, 1806, that the tremendous volcanio eruption commenced, which lasted until the end of March with awful violence, and threw up three new islands in the roadstead of santorino, in the Greek Archipelago, the trio finally uniting and forming a promontory to the adjacent land. , Similar eruptions Lave occurred elsewhere in all ages. Strabo, the historian, speaks of one in Lis time on the Island of Methoue. In more modern times, amonor the grandest have been that of Bo k apt a, tn Iceland, tn i loa, which covered the sea with cinders for hundreds of miles, and caused an Island crater to spring up amid the waves. The eruption and ap- Jearance of a new island among the Azores, une 15,1811, Lad a crater a mile wide, and threw out volumes or soalding water above a cone two hundred feet high. It disappeared the next October, and by February, 1812, nothing could be seen of.it but a cloud of vapor arising from the spot. In 1038, 1091, 171'.', and li'Ji, mere had been similar erup tions in the same group the one that left its crater longest visible dating an island exist ence of three years. In 17U6 an island rose out of the sea in the Aleutian group, near Oumnak, and 'continued to inorease. Four years afterwards it emitted smoke and vapor, and in iwi was stilt so not that a man could not land on it. It was 2.Y milea in length, and 180 feet high, and threw off a pleasant odor Of petroleum. By-the-way.tthia peculiar odor was men tioned by ancient historians waa notioed at the earlier eruption of hintonno in 1050, aud at tbe great eruption of Vesuvius in 1805. It gives a Lint as to the probable connection of the volcanic tires with the interior reservoirs of naptba, BUL'i;eBting at the same time a very easy way by which (as Professor Loouiia thinks) the entire globe might be blown up like an over-heated steam-boiler. In 1830 a small volcauio island made its ap nearance oil' the Iceland coast near Kevkiavik. bestrewing the sea for many milea with scorito from a submarine crater. In June and July the island of Fernandina, or Julia, appeared ou the coast of bioily with a splendid eruption, covering the water with dead fish and filling me atmosphere lor leagues around with sul phuiio add gas. Thus it is olear enough that either the per manent im ursiou of th sea or the action of ubmarine voIomiisjs or earthquakes would account for even the sudden disappearance of TortoU, or, if that island was simply swept bare by tUu billows borne to an unusual height by the force, of a hurrioane, its fate was no more than tlat which overtook "Last Island," off the Gulf Const f Louisiana, a few vetrs ago. Last Island waa low and sandy, but had become quit a fuvorite bathing resort for the people ot New Orleans, Mobile, and elsewhere, A terrific storm drove the sea over it; all the hotels, dwellings, and bathing-BUlla were torn away, and tw persona perunea. But even without recurring to the suiter 1 raseau powers We find In the TOUHADOBS A!D TBUKDKHRTOKMH " quite enongh to account for all the devastation tbat occurs upon islands of the sea or on the olid mainland. The spirits of the air are sufficiently malignant and potent, whether liey act in conjunction with tbe awtul in fluences of the void above and the abyss below, or vent their own unaided fury upon tbe habitations of man.' Whether they come on as the hot sirocco of Egypt, the kermattan of the Guinea Coast, or the stifling simoon of lie Oreat Desert, they are appalling, lmt Victor Hugo has designated them all in lan guage of matchless force, that has been eagerly pei used by thousands of American readera in his "Toilers of the Sea." We shall not at tempt to repeat the description, but confine ourselves to a few salient Incidents. Our daily papera, particularly the organs of tbe French population residing in New York, Lave given accounts more or less desultory and incoheient of the frightful cyclone which seems to have ravaged all the West India islands, excepting Havana, within the last thirty days. We may briefly state that the Danish colonies, being the northernmost of tliefe groups, were the hrst to feel the tempest which struck St. Thomas, on the 25th of Oc tober, coming from the northwest, and raged from I o'olocK until b V. M., destroying In the lour hours property that cannot be replaced in years. It devastated the southern half of 1'orto Kico on the night of the 2Dtb, and the south of San Domingo on the morning of the 30th, every where blowmg down houses, sweep ing the country olear of crops and stock, aud sinking or hurling ashore all the shipping iu ine roadsteads. The same scenes were rei'nacted at St. Tierre and the Fort de France, in the French colony of Martinique, on the night of the 7th and 8th instaLt; and Tortola, a British island, was, at least, completely drenched and desolated by tbe billows. At Calcutta, lions xonz, Mata moras, Manilla, and close to Sitka Islaul, in the JNorth lacilio, our new possession, the same cyclone or its coadjutors continued their dread work. 1 he sum total of property destroyed is estimated at $50,000,000, and of life lost at 10,000, including the destruction at Tortola. Over 200 ships of different nations, and 5000 dwellings and public buildings went down; fire in some cases complicating the distress. We have Lad many tornadoes on this conti nent, but none comparable in fury to these west Indian storms, although, in Iowa and other Western States, whole districts have suffered. Ihe most terrilio of these tornadoes ever known in the United States waa that which enveloped Charleston, S. C, on the 2d of May, 1701. It was nearly equal to the wont cyclone. It came up Wappo creek like a dense column of smoke, and contained such a prodigious mass of vapor, in such rapid revo lution, that the channel of Ashley river was completely laid bare. When it reached the river, it made a noise like continuous thunder, Among the Antilles, In the Gulf of Mexico, or in the East Indies, these cyclones seem like a return to original night and chaos. Some' times, again, the whole sky and sea appear in names. Vessels caught in them, if they live at all, lose every sail, and half a dozen stal wart men, working together for their lives, can nardly hold the helm. In an awfnl storm of this kind, on July 25, 1825, at Guadaloupe, the wind at the height of its intensity seemed luminous; a silver flame played from all the points and inter stice b of tiie walls, keyholes, and other issues, and made the trembling inmates of the houses think that the heavena were on fire I The mHmutav r,f (1,ma nv.lnnai s,.. nl.nnla. .tn. m n varied from lifty to one hundred miles, and their height Irom one to ten miles. But these dreadlul tempests are not by any means confined to the more torrid portions of thecal lb, as tbe experience of France, fin g land, and the United States only too fully proves, the tropical record is one long nar rative of disastrous storms, increasing, how ever, m iinensity in these later years. The annals of the temperate zones do not offer so many instances, but there have been some which history and tradition will transmit to the remotest generations. Of these the most recent and terrible mar. with propriety, be briefly mentioned here. July 10, 1800, was made memorable by the most awful thunder-storm ever witnessed at Paris. About 1 P. M. the clouds gathered With magical rapidity over the city until, in less than ten minutes, the capital was plunged in darkness. The rain fell in such torrents that the streets were immediately inundated, and many workmen employed in the public sewers, not having time to regain their ladders, perisnea. The thunder was continuous and perfeetly appalling for three Lours, and the lightning struok more than two hundred places, directing its chief fury upon the Quartier Latin, and inoludiog churches, hospitals, and academies in its denpe- rate attackB. Gav. skeptical Paris was struck dumb with horror, and "the bravest held Lis breath for a time." The statue of liberty surmounting the column or July, on the site ol the old lias tile, was dazzlingly illuminated and surrounded with a halo of ruddy light, until evening. All night long, fear rested on the hearts of nearly 3,000,000 of people, and it was twenty-four hours before they breamed ireeiy again. On the 20th of last August, about 9 in the evening, a thunder-storm unequalled in vio lence for a century past, burst upon iondon, and lasted all night, blowing off roofB, causing conflagrations, aud levelling crops in the stir rounding country, with an extent of damage amounting to 1,000,000 sterling. Nearly a hundred persons were struck bv the lightning. and al'ady of rank residing some miles from the metropolis died of fright at the height of the tempest, beveral counties su tiered and their inhabitants were wild with alarm. On the night of August 18, a grand thun derstorm passed near lortland, Me., aud swept over Gorbam, ISortli Yarmouth, 1'ownal, and Durham, unroofing buildings, tearing up trees, and prostrating crops. At Lasca, Brideton, Winthrop, Leeds, and Waterville, the thunder was as regular as the swift beat ing of a pulse, and the lightning seemed one iucessant Hash. it greatly resembled tue storm of April 4. 1800, at Paris, which, with out being so imposing as tbat of July iu the same year, waa remarkable for the number of liahtmne strokes whiou leu in every direction The United States Lave been remarkable for the frequency aud proportions ef their hail storms. In 1851, hailstones fell at Pittsburg, Pa . measuring two aud three inohes in diame ter, and weighing, in some cases, more than a pound. But all accounts that we have of great temueBts occurring within the northern laa tudes duiing the last two oeuturies are eclipsed by tiie Btory of THB (IHEAT 8 TO KM O 1703. "The Lord Lath Lis way ia the whirlwind aud in the storm, and the clouds are the dust of his feet" (Nah. i. 3) is the appropriate uiotto of a quaint old book bearing tue louow- inir title; "Tbe Storm; or, a Collection of the mosl Reinaikable Casualties and Distresses which happened in the late dreadful Tempest, both by Sea and Land. London, 1704." The height of this overwhelming cataclysm was durmg the sigui oi tiie zcth and vvui w r9' vember, 1703, at tbe full moon, after an un usually wet season of six months. A tremen dcuB wind arose on the 24th, and blew on with increasing violence, day and night, until tbe 2Ctb, when it became an appalling hurrioane tbat burled tiles, signs, timlmr work, etc., into indistinguishable ruin, and awakened the utmost fear that tue entire eity of London ould be levelled. All the ships ou the Thames were blown from their moorings and tossed ashore, Lead and stern together. This dreadful wind never intermitted for seven days and nights. Hundreds of vessels were destroyed in port, and scores of others never returned from sea, while at least eltht thousand sailors perished. To give some idea of the force and velocity of this atmospherio current, we may mention that a vessel laden with tin was driven out of I (el ford at midnight, with only two men and a boy on board, dragging her four anchors, and wiinoni sail was da una into a creek m tue I-le of Wight, at 8 the next morning. Thus she must have been carried thirty miles per hour, and the velocity of the wind was proba bly three or four times ai great. We have not room to-aay to do more tnan refer to the terrific volcanio eruptions, earth- ouakes. inundations, flights of shooting-stars, showers of blood, stones, animalcule, sulphur, soot, frees, etc., that nave been witnessed; vast spaces of tbe ocean covered witn luuam- mable oil, or with fluids resembling milk and and smoke suddenly rising from the earth and ascending to the clouds on fair days, torrents of rain descending without a speck to be seen in the sky; dry, dark mists, evidently not of aqueous vapor, rising to tbe zenith and rest ing over whole provinces for days together, obscuiing the sun. Suffice it to sav that all the resistless forces of nature which Lave wrought such revolu tions in other epochs, even to the sand storms of the Desert that entombed the entire army of Cambyaes, lettmg not one man escape, seem to have received tome recent renewed impulse, and that phenomena multiply npon us with startling rapidity. It has just been discovered tbat a comet of great tue undoubtedly exists, and completes its flight within the limits of our solar system. and tbat it ia attended by an accumulating train of cosmio matter. Close astronomical observation confirm, the belief tbat onr globe and its satellite plunged directly through the train f the comet that appeared in 1801, and since that date there has been an unusual re currence of celestial and terrestial phenomena reflected, as it were, in the moral and political perturlations of mankind. Ihe augmenting size and number of tbe spots visible on the disk of the sun, the gather ing hoots of shooting-stars now regularly looked for, and the eccentric variations ol the magnetic needle, all point to some unusual phase of existence through which our earth is passing. If we look around us, on the condi tion of the nations, we nnd it agitated, con fused, and expectant of calamity and change all Europe and Asia heaving with the fires of suppressed revolution, and every part of America, including me united states, anxious and ill at ease. At out the 2d of December coming, we may expect to behold a succession, of wonders which the student ponders but scarcely men tions. N. Y. Sunday Mercury. GROCERIES, ETC. gllO'J WELL'S SWEET OIDER. Our usual (apply of this -CKLISBItATKD OIDKIt. JUST RECEIVED. AIXEBT C BOBCBTS, Deale r In Fine Orooerles. It 7irp Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Sta. pRESH FRUITS, 1867. PEACHES, PEABS, PINEAPPLES, PI.VIIS, APBICOTS, CIIEBBIEU, BLACKBERRIES, tlVIHCES, ETC. PRI MER VEJ AND IBEkH, IH CANS AMD tiLAMt JARS, Pot np for onr parUcu.r trade, and for sale by ths docen, or In smaller quantities, by " MITCHELL & FLETCHER, 10 3m KO. ISM COESHOT STBEET. JAMES R. WEB By TEA DEALER AND GROCER, S. E. COB. EIGHTH AND WALNUT MTI, Extra Fine Souchong, or English Breakfast Teas. , EuperlorCh ulan Teai, very cheap, " Oolong Teas of every grade. Toung By son Teas of finest qualities. ' ' All fresh Imported. ' g 14 RATIONAL UNION GBOCERT AND PROVISION COMPANY. Groceries and frovlsloni at Cost, Or VICE: No. 233 South THIRD Streek STORE: No. 608 ARCH Streek Cash Capital.....-- ... .... .....(30,000 President-W111LL. D. HALfcMANa . 11 llia SADDLERY, HARNESS, &e. PUK UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS OP TUB J- HEMT CKESNl'T STREET (NO, 110), 8 A UIlLr.Ity i HARNESS, AND HOUSE- Ill'HMMIISU HOODS IIOVSK OF LACIZY, K7EE.CER & CO.. h aliributalU to the following fact Trey are very attentive to the wants oflbelr cus tomers. They are Bailout d with a rulr business profit. Th.i mu ii minds onlv on their own merits. .rniiiii everv straD in aU harness they sell j m - - - .fiver Ho, tbe fault of the purchaser only who does not get what he Is gnaranteeo ana paia ior. Their goods are za per cenk cheaper tnan can M bought elsewhere. They have cheaper ana nner gooas man can d They have the 1 rgest and most complete stock In Philadelphia, . All Harness over 26 are "hand-made." , Harness from IU to two. Gent' Saddle from H to 7S. Ladles' Baddies Irom 0 to H2S. -, Tbey are the oldest and largest manufacturers the country. LACEY, MEEKER & CO., 14 tan NO. ISIS) CHEMNPT MTBEET, PRIVY WKLLS OWNERS OK PROPKRTY Tbe only place to get Privy Wells Cleaned aud 4lulnt..i.i ..A ... yaaf tr U.m. ' A. PKYHON, 1 U0 COUfeMITHB HALU IiiHHAR Y ttaeet. INSURANCE COMPANIES, 1829 CHARTER TERrETUAt r Franklin Fire Insurance Co. orrDUiDurma. OFFICES HOS. AMD 7 CIIESMUT MTBEET. JJBAETSI OH OlTOTlF.B 1, 1367, aa.SMo.ae. ..IIOO.WO'OO l.(P'.7f.5-(0 Accrued Mirpiua,, Frenulums MMn... CKSkTTLKD CLAIMS, IHUOMB FOB 1W. S.jo,uuo. 011 JO. ' MMISES PAID BIXCE 18911 OVKB as.seo.ooo. Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Liberal Term Chkrlea N. Bancker, Oeorge Falee, Alfred Filler, K rami la W. La la, M. D., Thfimni Hpark. William B.Urnt, 'Ionian wgnr, Bam n el Ornl, tinorg W. Mlchuaa, urn iea, CHARLES M. BLNCKKH. PrMtnunl. OtOKUK MALhi, Vice-President. J. W. MoALLIBTXH, Bvf rylary pro tern, titli OIJ BROOKLYN LI EE INSURANCE Or JEW TORKi Ml'TCAl POLICIES HOa-IORFKITABLK, Thirty day grace given In payment ot Premium. No extra charge tot residence! or travel In any portlon-of tbe world. Dividends declared aanaally, and paid la cash. Dividend In 1807, 40 per cenk COLTOB & SIIELDEN, BEDKiUL AOBN18, M.E. COBKEB SJCTEHTII AND IHESJIVT, . Agents and Solicitors wanted In all the cities and towns In Pennsylvania and Boutkern ew Jer sey Sll INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMEUIOA. OFFICE, No. m WALNUT BT., PHILADELPHIA. IUCOKKO RATED 1794. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITA!., 300,000. ASSETS JAH VABT 8, 1807 fl,763,967'30 INSURES MARINE, INLAND TR4NSPORTA- UUJM riUhi BioKo. DIBACTORS. Arthur G. Coffin, bttmuel W. J outs. Jobn A Brown, Cbarlea Taylor, A m br one White, Rlcbard D. Wood, William Welhh, h. Morris Wain, George L. Harrison, Kdward H. Trotter, Edward o. Clarke, William CuminliiKS, T. Clur ton Heuiy, Alfred D. Jenup, Jobu P. White. luun mason Louis O. Madeira. ARTHUK a. COFFIN. ProManL Chart is Piatt, Secretary. WIL1T1AM BUEHLKIt. Hn.'rlihnrtr va rv.nr.ru: Agent ior the Plate of Pennsylvania. l zJi GIRARD FIRE AND MARINE ( INSURANCE COMPANY. (No. 639) N. E. COR. CI1E3NUT AND SEVENTH STS., PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL AND SVBPLVS OVEB 300,000. ISIIWB rOB 1800, 104,01. .. Losses Paid and Accrued In 1800, 847,000. Of which amount not faouo temaln unpaid at this date. t loo.l to.MiUol property baa.been suooeaHfti'ly luNiired by this Coiupaoy Iu thirteen years, aud Eight Uun- wc ijwacs uj cue proiupujr paiu. DIRECTORS. ThAmu f V a van Vurman Hhepparfl, CUBS a oiftro. jr.. AllredK UlUelt, N. 8. .Lawrence, Clmrl s I. DupoDt. iu, mas Jdacneiutr, Ji hn buppiee, John W. Clagborn, JUr-ciJU J Ittpp, AX. XJ. a o ,,ttJt.OMA8 ORAVfiN, President. A 8. CI It LETT. Vice-President. 1 22 fmw JAMES R. ALVORD, Secretary. F I R E INSUR AN C E. LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND CI LOBE I askets oteb aABtiKAjiVJE COMPANY v va w VaV W INVEhTED IN TUKU.SJ O VEB. 100,000 PHILADELPHIA BOARD. Lemnel Coffin, Esq., (Charles 8. Hmtth, Bif Joseph W. Lew la, Ksq (Henry A. Duhrlug, ksa., Kdward utter, a4. , All losses promptly adjusted without reference tn ng.asd. Ao. 6 MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE, ATWOOD SMITH, 10 17 UislnBm General Agent for Pennsylvania. KOVIDEJNT LIFE AND TSU8T COMPANY OV PHILADELPHIA, . ' No. Ill K tOURTU tsiretk " INCORPORAT-ElI Bd MUM'U !S2, ISM. CAPITAL, 16u.o0s PAID ItV. Insurance on Lives, by Yearly 1'reminmn- nr ho a K, or 20 year Premiums, Non-loMeliure. ' ADiiUliles granted oa favorable eruis. Term Pollutes. Children's JLndowiimntn. This Company, while giving tbe lusuredthesecurlty ol a iald-up Capital, will divide tbe entire prottls ol tue tue DURiutaH among Its policy holders, Moneys rtcelved at lultreei, aud paid on demand. Authorized by charter to exeouie Trusts, aud to act as Lxecutor or Administrator, Assignee, or Uuanliau, and in other fiduciary capacities, uuuer appolutmeut ol any Court ol this Coiuuiouweulib, or auy person or persons or bodies polltio or corporate. lil H Iff TO UN HAMl'lli F, BHIPLIiY. juriiUA a. nuuiui), H1C1IAUU VO01, RICHARD CAD11URY. T. WISTAII b'kovVn, W. C. LONiiSTRKTIX, IILMDV niTWVa II A HI h St If IL Lil A in iXA..tLM.li. BA11VI L R. bail'LN Y, ROWLAND PARRY. r it.-Kit n i. Actuary. WITI.iAAI V. LONObTKKrJT, VIce-PreaUieul. THOMAS WIUTAH. Id 1 J. ii. 'fOWNSISND, 7 27 aisdlcal Kxamlper. Legal Adviser. -piICEMX 1N&UKAKCE COMPANY OP PHI- A. LAM-.LUllA. INCOJUOUAlkD lf64 CHARTKR PERPETUAL, No. 124 ALN UT Mreel, opooshe the kxchange. In hilnltiuli to S1A1UM!. and 1NLAN1 1NUH- A M. 1 , tills Compauy luuures Irom lues or dttimtue by KIRK ior liberal terms cn bulhlliiKH, uiercbauillne lurniuiie, etc., lor llunied periods, aud uermaueutly ou liul.Uiii(i by eeponilol piciuluut. The t oiupuuy baa been iu active operatlou for uioro thun fcilX'l Y YkAhri, during which aU .'Ossus have bueu promptly aujuBled and paid. Julin L. Hodge, Lawrence Lewis, Jr., M , II. Alahouy, John T. l.ew is, Wliliiun b. Uraut, Robert W. Letuulug, U. I lurk Wbarlou, tjiuiual Wilcox. lieujuuilu Kiting, 1'homus II. Powers, A. R. WcllMiiry, KJiuunU CaallUuu, iOUlH iNorriM, Junii wuutt KWi.lt, President. Bavtil Wilcox, Secretary. FIRE 1NSUKAKCE EX CLUS1 VELY. T 0 1 PKNNBYLVAN1A F1RK 1WMUHANCK CO ! PAN Y Incorporated lB'io Charter Perpetual No. J10 WALNUT blreet, opposite Independence bquar. Thut Company, favorably known to tbe commuulty or over forty years, contluues to Insure against Ions or damage by tire on Public or Private Jlulldlugn, either permaueully or for a limited time. Alito. on Furniture, blocks of Goods, aud Merchandise gone rally, on liberal terms. 1 heir Capital, together with a large Hnrpins Pnnd, sluveMUMl In tbe uiot careful manner, whf:beiiabl theuit o oHe to ihe Insured an tui doubled soourliy In ibecibsaolluas. WKKOroaa. Daniel KmllH, Jr., J,, ha r j,,ha Pevereu, Alexander Deiuon, Inaac Ha.lehurk f.Miirv Lewla. J. Glillngbaiil jTell, rj.rfrlk Jr. ' jjAMiaLt-MlTH, JA President, INSURANCE COMPANIES. DELAWARE Mt'TUAL SAFETY INSU. KANCK COMPANY. Incorporated by th Legislature of Pennaylvanla, ltus. Office, 8. E. corner THIKI) and WALJiUT Btreets. l'lnlmlrlphla. MARINE 1NHUHANCT.B On VesselB, Cargo, and Fi eight, to aU parts of tht world. INLAND INSURANCES On (orris by river, cai.nl, luke, and laud carriages all pails ol the Union. VI RK INSURANCES On rnerchandbe gcnprally. Ou Stores, Dwelling Rouses, eto. AHSETH OP TUB COMPANY. November 1, 1H7. tiOO.000 United btates ilve Per Cent. I nun. KMC !..... m 120.0C0 United Blates Hve Per Ctut. Loan, 1KH1 M - M.0C0 United ttieten 7 S 10 Per Ceut Loan Tieusury Notes - 2(0,100 Ptaie of Penusylvanla Blx Per Cent. Loan ...... 123,000 City of Phllmlelpula Hlx Per Ceut Loan (exempt Irom tx )....... 59.CO0 btate of New Jersey biz Per Cenk Lonn (201,000'Ot 134.4O0M S2.S2'5t 21O.0T0-OO 125,825 DO ei.ooo-oo lasoo-oo 23.375 D0 20,000' 18,000 OS 470 00 1S,000'C0 7.800-00 8,000-00 15,000-00 201,930-00 50,000 Pennnylvnnln Kullroad Klrat MoriKiy Mx Per ent. Bondn.... 28,000 PeouRyivenla Railroad, second Aloriiinge Mix lVr Oent, Bonos.... 24,000 Western Pennsylvania Kailroad tlx Per Cnt. t.ehds Peunsyl vaula Kntlroad (rnrot,) .. gl ,t vMateol 'lennaee Vive Per Cenk Loan.. 7,000 Ptate of Tennessee Blx Percent. Loan 15,000 Si shares stock of Oermanlown Oas Company (principal and In terest guaranteed by the city of Philadelphia) 7,(00 l.MiBhares block of Penusylvanla Railroad Coiuiianyn....n 1,000 100 Shares Htock of North Pennsylva nia Kailroad Company 10,000 80 Bharea blorK or Philadelphia and boulheru Rail bteamshlp Com- , ... Pany......M.................. 101,900 Loans on lion,! and Mortgage, first liens on City Properties...... fl, lol,4W) par. Market value 11,102,802-34 V OBI l,UW,t7V Real ICtitale 8A,000'00 Rills Kcoelvable for Insurance mad e'.. 219J35-S7 Balauces due at Agencies Pre miums on Marine Policies Ac crutd lntereot, and otber debts due the Company 43,83430 fc tack and iscrlp of bundry Insu rance aud other Com pan lea. , . tsfi6 00 tlniated value 8,017-00 Cash In Bank ...,siu8,(ii7-lO Cash In Drawer 2K8.W , 103,815-01 tl,507,(H-lS DIRECTORS. Thomas O.Hand, James C. Hand, JOIIU tj, UBVIS, Ko-mund A. Bonder, Joseph H. Seal, Tbeophllus Paulding Hugh Craig, F.dward Darlington, Jobn R. Penrose, H. Jones Brooke, Henry Blean. George O. Lelper, W Mliaro G. Ri, niton, Edward Lafburcade, Jacob RImkI. oamuei K. utokes, james t raqnair, Wllllatn U Ludwlg, Jamb P. JnnM. James R. McKarland, Joshua P. Uyre, John u. layior, eipencer Hclivalne, Henry C. Lallett, Jr., George W. Beruardou, j. a. oenipie, 1-Htauuxg, A. B. Berger, It T MnrUn M 1 MUMA HO. HANI), President. P"" JOHN c. DA Via. Vloe-PresldenU H F WRY LYLB URN, Secretary. HKMhY BALL. Assistant Beoretary. llt31 FURNITURE, ETC. -pURNITURE! FURNITURE! nODIBR AND ANTIQITEI -PARLOR, HALL AND CHAMBER SUIT AT REDUCED PBICESI. Our lacllltles are such tbat we are enabled to offer at very moderate prices, a large and well-aMorted stock of every description ol HOU8JIHOLD JTDRSI. s TURK AND BEDDING, - . ' ' Goods packed to carry safely to all parts ot the country, , ' RICHMOND A FOBEPAVOB, NO. 40 m. SECOND STREET. 911 tf fam & lis LCJAKIDR E HAVE JsEMOVED THKIB FURNITURE AKD UPHOLSTERING WAREROOMS TO HO. 1410 CUEMNVT STREET, " 91 8m Mm! to the corner of Fifteenth. TO HOUSEKEEPERS I have a large stock of every variety ot FUiUSIITUHE, Which Iwl'.l sell at reduced prices, constsUncoW - PLAIN AiSD M A RBL1 '1 OP WiTACJJC BUI1U WALMIT CBAURAH BU1TB, PARLOR BU11H IN VALVhT PLTJSH. PARLOR BUIT IN HAIR CLOTH. PARDOR BD1TB LN RAPB. Bldeboards, Exteuston Tables, Wardrobes, Boo, cases, lattreaees, Lounges, etc. eto. I, f. IINTINE, 816m N. K, corner PFOOND and RAca, Btreets. Jj S T A B L I S II E D 1795. A. 8. ROBINSON. French Plate Looking-Qlasses, ENGRAVINGS, PALNT1N68, DRAWINGS, JETO Uaaufsctursr of all klsols of LOOUINO-ULAkS, PORTRAIT, AND PIC TURE FRAMES TO ORDER. No. OlO OHESNUT STREET THIRD DOOR ABOVE THB BOUTIN ILNTAL, e , i . yHTLAPKT.rmAe list QPECIAL NOTICE. BALANCE OF IMPORTED FRENCH FVB. N1TVRE, SUITABLE POB HOLIDAY PRESENTS, Closing ont at Reduced Prices, at MR. I. LDTZ'B FURNITURB STORK,' II 80 21t No. ia South ELEVENTH Street. REMOVAL. OVA L.-U EUOTAL C. W. A. TRUMPLER HAG REft'GVED HIS r.lUSiC STOaLt . EROBI SEVENTH AND CUESNVT STS . .TO Ao. 926 CUJiSAVT STREET, 8 12tfrp PHILADELPHIA. GAKDjNER & FLEMING, OOAOH MAKERS. HO. 814 SOUTH HPrU STREET, New an a fccond-haud Carrlagea for sale. Fax ilciimr atunnUou paid to repalrlDjr 5 803oa JOHN CRUMP, ' ' OAKPliNTER AND BTJIL.tEIi: norsi o. lodh street, and MO. 17S CMENHUT STREET, HILaDliLHH. T. STEWART BROWN, B.K. Coroarof FOURTH CUESTNVT BTQ MiMuricTuflna er XRuTTKB, VAIIBUB, BAGS, RITICnjIES, BHA-Wl BTRAPa, HAT CASES, POCHXf B00K.8, FLAA4 mat l'ravsliag Oeeds caaerallv. W ILLIAM H. ORAWT IOV MIHHlltN Utuim mo. 0, 83 B. DALAW ARU Aenue, Philadelphia, PepoDt's Gunpowder, Redued Nttre, Charonal. Eta. W. Baker U Co.'b Chocolate. Ooooa, and B-oioa. WIT.