6 THE DAILY -EVTSMtfG TKLEGltAFII PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 18G8. J INCHING SHOES:' lYrmtfie Saturday Rnnnv. There are to wa of dealing with plnoh ing shoes. The out ia to wear tbena until you get accustomed to the pressure),' aud so wear them easy; the other id to kick them off aud have done with them altogether. The one is founded ou the ftGuouiutoClatinfc principle" of human nature, by which-' it is enabled to fit itself to circumstances, .the other Is tht high-handed masterfulness whereby the earth is subdued aud obstacles removed the oue is emblematic of Christian patience, the other of l'agan power. Both are good in certain stats, . and neither is absolutely the best for all con ditions. TLere are some shoes' indeed which, do what we will, we can never wear emy. We may keep thorn well fixed ou our feet all our life, loyally accepting the pressure which fate and misfortune have impoaud on us; but we go lame and hobbled in consequence, and nevr Enow what it Is to make a free step, or to walk on our way without discomfort. Examples abound; for anicmg all the pilgrims toiling more or less paiutully through life to death, there is not one whoae shoe3 do not pinch him 8omewhere, how easy soever they may look, and how soft 'Soever the material of which they may be made. Even those proverbial poifbt'gsoia of roomy shoes, ihe tralitional Kirjj; and Piiuceaa, " have their own private little bedroom slippers, whioh pinch tlieru un detected by the gaping multitude who mea sure happiness by lengths of velvet and weight I golden embioidery; and tbe pro Terbial owners of the treasure which all seek and none liud, might better stand as instances of sorrow than of happiness examples of how badly shod poor royalty 13, and liovr, far more than meaner folk, it gutters from the pinching of its princely shoes. The ungeuiality of a profession Into which a muu may have been forced by the injudi cious overruling of his friends or by the exi gencies of family position and inherited right, is one form of the pinchiug shoe by no means rare to find. And here again poor royalty oomes iu for a share of the grip on tender places and the consequent hobbling of its feet. For many an hereditary king was meant by nature to ba nothing but a plain oountry gen tleman at the best perhaps even less. Many, like poor "Louis Capet," would have gone to the end quite happi-y aud respectably if ouly they might have kicked olF the shoeg of sovereignty, and taken themselves to the high lows of the herd; if only they might have ex changed the sceptre for the turning-lathe, tha pen or the fowling-piece. "Je dctesto mon metier do rui," Victor Emmanuel U reported to have said to a republican friend who sym pathized with the monorch's well-known tastes in other things beside his hatred of the kingly profession; aud history repeats its frank avowal in every page. But the purple is almost as hard to be got rid of comfortably as Ueinueira's robe; for the most part carry ing the skin along with it, and trailed through a pool of blood in the act of transfer which is scarcely what royalty, oppressed with its own greatness, and willing to rid itself of Bceptre and shoes that it may enjoy itself in list slippers after a more bourgeois fashion, would find in accordance with its Wiethe.-1. Lower down in the social scale we find that the same kind of misfit betweennatureand position is a very frequent occurrence pinch ing hhoes productive of innumerable corns and tender places. How often w) see a natural "heavy" securely swathed iu cassock aud toands, and set up in the pulpit of the family church, simply because the titbes were large and the living lay in the family gift. Eat th.it Btiff rtctoral shoe of his will never wear easy. The man's secret soul goes out to tho parade ground and the mess-table. The gutter aud jingle and theatrical display ol a soldier's life Beem to him the finest things in the whole round of professions, and the quiet, uneventful life of a village pastor is of all the most abhor rent. Ho wauts to act, not to teach. Yet there he is, penned in beyond all. power of break ing loose ou this 6ide of the grave; bound to drone out muddled sermous halt au hour long and eminently good for sleeping-draughts, in stead of shouting terse aud stirring word of command that eet the blood on lire to hoar; bound to iout the . bhadowy enemy of souls with weapons he can neither feel nor use, in stead of prancing ott at the head of his men; wavivg his drawn sword above his haal iu a Whirlwind of excitement and martial glory, to ront the tangible enemies of his couutry's Hag. lie loves his wile, and takes a mild parsonio pleasure in his roses; he energizes his schools, and beats up recruits for his parish penny readings; he lends his pulpit to the mission ary delegates, and takes the chair at the meeting for the conversion of Jews; he does his duty, poor man, so far as he knows how, and so far as nature gave him the power; but his fret are in pinching shoes all his life long, and no amount of walking on the cleri cal highway can ever make them pleasant wearing. Or he may have a passionate love for the sea, and be mewed up in a lawyer's musty cilice, where his large limbs have not half enough space for their natural aotivity, where he is perched for twelve hours out of the twenty-tour on a high stool against a desk, instead of climbing cat-like up the ropes, and set to engross a long-winded deed of convey ance, or to make a fair copy of a bill of costs, instead of bearing a hand in a gale, and saving Lis ship by pluck and quickness. lie could save a ship better than he oau engross a deed; while, as for law, he cannot get as much of that into his heavy brain as would enable him to advise a client on the simplest case of assault; but be knows all the dilterenoes of rig, and the whole code of signals, and can tell you to a nicf ty about the llags of all nations, and the name and position of every spar and stay and sheet, and when to reef and when to set sail, With any other nautical information to be bad from books and a chauce cruise as far as the Kore. That pen behind his ear never ceases to gall aud fret, his shoe never ceases to pinch; and to the last day of his life the high stool in the lawyer's office will be a place of penance, and the sailor's quarter deck the very heaven of his ambition. No doubt, by the time the soldier wrongly labelled as a parson, or the sailor painfully workipg the legal treadmill, comes to the -end of his ca reer, the old shoe which has pinched him so long will be worn comparatively easy. The gradual decay of manly vigor, and the slow but sure destruction of strong desires, reduce one's feet at last to masses of accommodating pulp; but what sufferings we go through before this result can be attained what years of fruitless yearning, of fierce despair, of pathetio self-suppression, of jarring discord between work and fitness, urn it pound all the life out of lis before our bones become like wax, aud pinching shoes are transformed to easy fitting slippers. For itself alone, not countiug the beyond, it would scarcely seem that such a life was worth tbe living. Another pinching shoe is to be found in cli mate and locality. A man hungering for the busy life of the city has to vegetate in the rural districts, where the days drop one after the other like leaden bullets, and time is only marked by an accession of dullness. Another, thirsting for the repose of tbe country, has to jostle daily through Cheapside. To one who thinks Canadian salmon-fishing the supreme of earthly happiness, fate gives the chance of chasing butterflies in Brazil; to another who holds "the common objects of the seashore" of xnore'aoooa&t than silver and gold, an ad verse fortune assigns a statiou in the middle, i of a plain as arid as if the world had ben made without water; and a third, who cares for nothing but the free breathing of tueopen moors; or tie rugged beauty of tbe barren fells, is dropped down into the heart of a narrow valley where he cannot see the sun for the tress. At first this matter of locality seems to be but a very mall grip on the iot, not worth a thought; but it is one Of a oertain cumulative power impossible to describe, though keu enough for him who suffers; and tbe pinching shoe of uncoageaial place is quite as hard to bear as that of unoongenial work. Again, a man to whom intellectual companionship means more than it does to many, is thrown into a neighborhood where ha cannot hope to meet with comprehension, still less with sym pathy. He is a Free-thinker, and the neigh borhood goes in for the sttiotest Methodism or the highest ultra-Ritualism; he is a radical, and he is in the focus of county Toryism, where the doctrine of equality and the rights of man is just so much seditious blasphemy, while tbe British Constitution in held as a direct emanation from divine wisdom second only to the Bible, or he is a Tory to the backbone aiid his backbone is a pretty stiff one and he U in tha midst of that blatant kind of radicalism which thiiA geutlehooi a remnant of the dik ages, and cotifoiia ls good bwediug with servility, and loyalty to the crown with oppresniou of the piople. Sur rounded by his kind, h U a mm h alone R3 if in tbe ruidlle of a de sert; an Knglisliman among Knplish'iiD, he b3 no more mental compuionihip tunu if he were iu a foreign country, whore he and his neighbors ppoke ditterent tongue, and had eaoh a set of eipn? with not two agree ing. And this kind ot solitude makes a pinch ing bhoe to many mtuds, though to some of the more sell-centrcd or defying kind it is bearable enough, perhaps even giving a sense of roomiLeas which closer communion would not give. Of course one of the worst of our pinching shoes is matrimony, when marriage meaus bondage and not union. The, mismated wife or husband never leaves oil', willingly or un willingly, squeezing the tender places; and Ihe more the pressure Is objected to the worse tbe pain becomes. Aud nothing can relieve it. A country gentleman hating the dust and noise of London, with all bia interest in his country position and all his pleasure in his estate, and a wife whose love lies in Queen's balls and opera-boxes, and to whom the coun try is simply a slice out of Siberia wherever it may be; a Lealthy hospitable man, liking to see his table well filled, aud a wife with a weak digestion, irritable nerves, and a mor bid horror of society; a pushing aud ambitious man, with a loud voica aud imposing presence, and a shrinking, fireside woman, who asks only to glide unnoticed through the crowd, and to creep noiselessly from her home to her grave are" not all these shod with pinch ing shoes, which, do what they will, go on pinching to the end, and which nothing short of death or chance can remove ? These pinching shots of matrimony pinch both sid3 equally excepting, indeed, one chance b to be specially phlegmatio or pachy deimatous, aud then the grip is harmless: but, as a rule, the ring-fence of marriage doubles all conditions, and when A walks hobbled B falls lame, and both sull'er from the same mis fit. However, the only thing to do is to bear and wear till the upper leather yields, or till the foot takes the required shape; but there is an eternity of pain to be gone through before either of these desirable enda cornea about; and the instinct which dreads pain, aud questions its necessity, ia by no means a false one. For all that, we mubt wear our pinching shoes of matrimony till death or the divorce court pulls them from our feet, which puiuts to the need of being more careful than wo usually are about the fit beforehand. Poverty has a whole rack full of pinohing shoes very haul to get accustomed to, and had to dance in lightly as wore the fiery slippers of the naughty little girl in the Gjrmau fairy tale. Given a large heart, generous instincts, and au nupty hand, aud we have the elements of a real tmgudy, both individual aud social. For poverty does not mtau only that animal want of food and clothing which we generally associate with its name. Poverty may have two thousand a year as well as ouly a mouldy crust ana three shillings a week iroin the parish; and poverty cursing its sore feet in a brougham is quite as common as poverty, lull of corns and callosities, wheeling a costerinon get,'s barrow. The shoe may piuch horribly, though there is no question of hunger or the "two-penny rope;" for it ia a matter of relative degree, aud the means wherewith to meet wants. But as poverty ianot of those fixed conditions of human life which no human power can remove, we have not perhaps quite so much sympathy with its grips and pinches as ia other things less remediable. For while there ia work still undone in the world, there is gain still to be had; the man whose energies run now in a dry channel can, if he will, turn them into one more fertile; and if he is making a poor business out of meal, it is his own fault if he does not try to make a better one out of malt. Where the shoe pinches hardest is in places which we cannot proteot and with a crip which we cannot prevent; but we cannot say this of poverty as a necessary and inalien able condition, and sympathy is so much waste when circumstances can be changed by energy or will. . Foreign Notes. Says the London Spectator of Ootober 24: The Times has received a telegram from its American correspondent announcing that the Democrats have finally rejected a proposal to exchange Mr. Seymour for Mr. Chase. In other words, they are resolved not to give up State Sovereignty, the right to establiaU serf dom or repudiation. Mr. Seymour has taken to the stump, but the party is described as much "demoralized," a word used, of course, in its American sense of frightened, and not in its English. As the party never had any morals, it could not lose them. The election of General Grant seems certain, and an inter val of four yeats more is granted to the He publicans, during which we doubt not they will insist on equal justice in the South, and will, we hope, purify the party of corruption. But that their success involves so tremendous anitsue, tbey would almost deserve to lose, first, for allowing so much pillage, and, secondly, for governing through "bogus" legislatures. We want to see a little sincerity in their action as well as their opinions, aud perhaps General urant may supply the want. The Investigation Committee appointed to inquire into the affairs of the Royal Bank of Liverpool have presented their report, and a most extraordinary document it is. All real power seems to have been monopolized by the two managing directors, Mr. Hutchison and Mr. Shand, or whom one owed the bank when it stopped 103,477, of which i.70,000 will be lost; and the other usually owed '20,000, which will, however, be paid. Only these two directors seem to have been cognizent of an astonishing agreement under which the Royal Bank contracted to "carry on" Messrs. Wilson h Co., shipdealers, who owed the conoern XOO.COO. Rather thau lose that money, or, to speak more plainly, rather than call attention to the accounts, these gentlemen bound the bank to pay Messrs. Wilson's debts and all other debts their business might inour in five years, and to release Messrs. Wilson from all deraacds. Under this arrangement the total debt became X'5,000, and another firm was simrarly treated to the tune of nearly X100,0(0.i ah this while the bank was repre sented as most flourishing, and the board con gratulated the shareholders on the flourishing character of the statemeut 1 Aud then we send betting' sharpers to prison, and inflict the treadmill for petty larceny I Kase-Uall an English Insliliition. . Tie London Athemnan ooutends that the American national game of base-ball is Eng libh in origin. It diacouises as follows: "The English cricketers are reported to have taken to the American game' of base ball. This game was English before it was "American. 'Multa renatcentnr (apwi Unitel itatetimses) quae jam cecidere (mi no).' Miss Austen, about the beginning of the cen tury, writes of a young heroine, who preferred cricket, base-ball...' to dolls (see 'Northanger Abbey'). While on the subject we should like to raise a queation which has been on our minds for many a year. When boys we played at 'prisoners' base,' as we always called it. But we afterwards found, In grave books, that the boy's game is 'priBon bars.' Was this the original, afterwards corrupted f or is the second phrase what the learned call a codjhc tural restoration ? a thing from which may Heaven guard all honest old idioms 1 We see iu the newspapers that tbe young son of N.i poleon the Third plays at 'prisoners' base.' " San Francisco is assessed at over a hun dred millions. Lawrence, Massachusetts, employs 35,000 factory girls. FINANCIAL. FINANCIAL. Dealers la all tlOTcrmucnt Securities. BILLS OF EXCHANGE Tov Kale on Lout'on, Fraukfort, Paris, Etc. We Issne Letters oreuctllt ou Messrs. JAMES W. TUCKER & CO., Taris, AVAILABLE FOR TRAVELLERS USE THROUGHOUT THE WOULD, Hating now direct private commanlca tions by wire betttceu our New York ami riilladclpliia Offices, wc nro constantly In receipt ol all quotations from New York, and are prepared to execute all orders with promptness in STOCKS, E0ND3, aud GOLD. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO., Ho. IG Couth THIRD Street, 1 10 PHILADELPHIA. jKI0N PACIFIC RAILROAD FIItST M0KTGAGE BONDS At 102, AND ACCRUED INTEREST. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD FlliST MORTGAGE BONDS At 103, AND ACCRUED INTEREST. 101; SALE BY No. 40 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. 625 WH. FMHTI2 & CO., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOYERN- SLENT SECURITIES, Mo. 36 Oouth THIRD Gtreot, "HILAPKLP.HIA, AGENTS FOU The Union Pacific Railroad Co., AN Central Pacific Railroad Co. We hate on hand THE FIRST HOST WAGE SIX PER CENT. U0LD INTEREST BONDS of both Companies, for sale or Exchange for GoTemmciit Securities. Tauiplilcts, with Haps, Reports, aud foil information furnished ou application. m RANKING HOUSE Of Nos. 112 bd 111 South THIRD Street PHILADELPHIA, Dealers In all Uorerunient Securities Cld 6-20s Wauled In Exchange Tor New A Liberal Difference allowed. Compound Interest Notes Wanted Interest AUewcd on Deposits COLLECTIONS MACE. STOCKS DODlM ftnd sold a Coram lMMMfa Bpeclftl kMineaa ooommodtlona rMrved lot ftdie. 10 8 In W will receive itppllaatlons trr Polio! of Life Iniaraooo In ue MtkUonal Lite Insurance Ooiapany of tbe Uull4 OWlt ull lAlwrmftUuu lvu M u GOLD BOUGHT. DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, No. 40 South THIRD Street, 10 S til 18 PHILADELPHIA. QTERLING & WILDMAN, BAKKKFS AND BROKERS, No. 110 South THIRD Street, AOENTS FOR BALK OP First Mortgage Bonds of Roekford, Roc: Island, and St. Louis Railroad, Interest MHVJN fKU CENT., clour of a'l tax payable In GOLD Augiut mid February, fur bale 1)7, aud accrued lulcreat lu currency. Also First Mortgage Bonds of the Danville. .Uazlclou, and Wilkesbarre Railroad. Intoreet SEVEN TER CENT., CLEAR OF ALL TAXES, payable April and October, lor Bale at H9 aud accrued luttrest. Phiui bleu wllu maps, rpportn, and f ill Information of there roads olwava on hand lor dlttrlbn Ion, DEALEDH In Uavernmeut Bond), cold, Silver C'lupodb, etc. ET0CK3 of allklndft bought and sold on oomm.s Blou In New York and Philadelphia. 11 3 tutlia QLENDINNING & DAVIS, No. dS SoulU TIIIKI Street, Stcck and Gold Brokers. QUOTATIONS OF NEW 0RK STOCK3 ALWAYS ON HAND. 4 3p B. GLKND15N1NO, JB. JOHN H.DAVIS, EAST INDIA TELEGRAPH. TUB EAST INDIA TELEGRAPH COHPAF1Y, I'his Company liavo an exclusive graut to lay SUBMARINE CACLE8 PKOM Canton to Tien-Tsin, (TEE SEAPORT OF PEK1N), CONNECTING ALL THE PORTS ON THE ASIATIC COAST, Whose foreign commerce amounts to One Thousand Millions Annually. This Company ia chartered by the Legisla ture ol the State of New York, with a CAPITAL OF 8S.OOO.OOO: SHARES, flOO EACH. A limited number of shares are offered at $50 each, payable (10 each, 115 November 1. balance in u'cntkly Uuttalmeula ol $2 50 per share. THE INQUIRIES FOR THIS STOCK ARB NOW VJsJtY AOTIVK, AND TIMS BOARD OF DI RECTORS IlfSTRUCr UH TO BAY IT MAY BE WITHDRAWN AT ANY TIALS, AND THAT NONK WILL BE OFFER&D ON THE ABOVI2 TKtlMS AFTER NO VKHBfCR 20 NEXT. For Circulars, Maps, and full luiormaUoa apply to DKEXEL & CO., No. 31 South THIRD Street, riiUadclphla To duly authorised Bank! and Bankers throughout Pennsylvania, and at ihe OFFICE OF THE COMPANY, Nos. 23 and 25 NASSAU STREET, tH NEW YORK. fjl II B GJIKAI ' ( , . MOUNT MOHL4U, : -v ; embracing an aifa of one hundred and fifty-five acrpR, aud comprlHlug ererjr variety of scenery, ia hf tar the larneHt and mint beautiful of all the cetuete- tie near Philadelphia. - - - - - At the tide ol Improvement tend northward, MOUNT MOIUAU, by geographical position, In FOREVER BAFK FROM INTRUSION OR DIS TURBANCE BY OPENING OF BTRKETrl, and will never be hedged In and surrounded by bouses, factories, or outer Improvements, tu inevi table fate of other cemeteries northward or centrally situated. At convenient distance from the city, readily ao- CftH'blebyan excellent road aud by the streetcars of the Darby Passeueer Rallwny, Mount Morlah, by Its uudlsturbed qultt, fu nis the solemu purpoie ol Its dedication as a last resting place of tuedead. ao luiieral service here L ertr Interiupted by the Bhrlll whistle of the lueomotlve, uor the seusiblllilei of friends or visitors shocked by the rusU and rattle of leug trains of passing freight or coal cars, as uiiut of uic-tftlly be the case In other burial-places, now established or projected, on the immediate line of ntci.ru railroad, or through the grounds ot which such rrtllrouils ruu, J not now rbe hues of Auiutuu tingo Willi gorgeous colors ai.d luuulle variety the fi llase of the various groups o' tluo old foroot tre-s adi. ruing thp margin of tho strenm w-hirii. mennders through the grounds, aud adds to great a cuaroi to the attractions of the place. Churches of all the principal Protestant Onnumtna tloi.s have here purchased eectlous of ground fur tlio upe of tlielr congregations, aud mure than seven thcusand families have given this great Rural Ceme tery the prelereuce ovu all others. CI. c Ice lots of any size desired may still b3 hid upon tippllcatlou at the Lottie, at the eulrauoo of the Cemetery, nr at the Rraich Oilice, I cna Mutual lu Burs nee liulloing, No. 921 CHK.NU T btreet, up sta.rs. win re any lufoimn'lon will be given by 10 28 1m Of.OROE CONN ELL, Fecrotury. LUMBER. FALL. IQG8. P. H. WILLIAMS, Scveiiteeiilli and Spring Garden Sts. Calls the atteutiou of RuIMers and others to his Stock of SEASONED LUMBER, COSSISTINQ OF Hemlock ami Spruce Joists, Carolina Flooring-, all grades, White Tine Boards, all qualities, Shingles, Flustering Lath, Aud all kinds ot Building Lumber. 10 8 thstnZm AT LOWEST PRIOBt. 1868. fcPHUCE JOIST. bpAl'CK JOIHI'. HUM LOCK, il KM LOCK. 1853. IRf'Q BKSOJSEIJ CLKAU PINK. lOnO AOOO bKAteuJNED CLEAR -PJiS K. J-OUO CHOICE 1'AITERM PINK BPAKlfcli CEDAR, COR PATTERNS. RED CEDAR, 1Cf!Q FLORIDA FLOORING!, -1 OiQ 1COO FLORIDA Fi.OOlUNii. lOUO CAROLINA FLOOttl.NU. V1KOIN1A FLOORIAM. DELAWARE FLOORiNU. ASH FLOOR IN U WALNUT F LOOKING. FLORIDA BTKP ROARD3, RAIL PLANK. ItjCX WALNUT Rny. AND PLANIC. "I U,!Q XCOO WALNUT BDb. Aull PLaJNit. i-OOO WALNUT BOARDd. walnut flank. ICfiQ T NDEKTAKERS' LUMBlfilt. 1 Q,;o XOOO JKiEKTAKERM' LUMBER. -LOUO RED CMDAlt. WALINUT AND PINE. -ICf'Q SEJA8UNED POPLAR. IviiJO J.COO bEASONil) CHEWRi'. . J.OOO ASH. WHITE OAK PLaK AND BOARDS. HIOEOHY. CIOAR BOX MAKERS' 1 QPQ XOOO CIHAR BOX MA KKK-s' iOUO SPANISH CKOAK BOX BOARDS, FOR ISALE LOW, ICf'Q CAROLINA fcUiNTLINO, IQfiO j.cou carolina h. t. sills, j.ouo Norway mjamtliau. IfiflQ CEIJAR taitNULES. 1 OPO XOUO CVPREUd Mil MILKS, lOUO MACLK, BKOTHFR A CO.. I'l No. UooeelOUPil Istreei. ""TJ-INITIO) STATUS BUILDBES' MILL," Nos. 24, 2G, aud 28 S. FIF1TETH St PHILADELPHIA, CGLER & BROTHER. MANDTACTUBIBS OF WOCD MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, STAIR BALU3- TELS, NEWELL POSTS, GENERAL TURN INO AND SCROLL WORK. ETC. The largest assortment of WOOD MOULDINGS lu this city constantly on hand. 9 2 2m T. P. GALVIN & CO., LlifVEEER CQritflSSION MERCHANTS SHACKAMAXON SlKJiET WIUKF. BELOW SL OAT'S HILLS, (so-OALUiD), PHILADELPHIA, i u iNTu vnn Hnrrrn krn ajjt k:ahikhk irn fttCturtm of V ELLOW PxME and fePKbCK TlfeBK BOARDS, elo., imll be harpy to luriuou orders wboitwkle rales, deliverable at any acco slhle port. Constantly receiving aud ou hand at our w harl DOI1.MKBIN fiAJOlUXSU, MJAJN ItaiNO, Mill BPKCCK, HEMLOCK, SKLEC'I' MICHIGAN AMD LA IN A UA 1-i.AJNH A IN U UJAJUW, AIM It HW UA1CU tmif-ENKKH. 1 U StUtlil ALL OF WHICH WILL MB UEUVKHEU AT AMY PAUTrTM;CITYIKOItIlTl.r, FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES 0 . I. . II A I 8 E n . ' ! w.vnviiTiTRvit nw Filth ANI JiLHliLAU-PKOOF 8APE3, LOCKeMlTH, BELL-IIANOER, AND DEALEJi 85 No. 484 RACK Street. STOVES, RANGES, ETU. NOTICE. -THE UNDGBSIUNED would call auomiuii or tue public to his ?'fl NEW UOi-UEN EAULE FURNACE. fi&i This Is an eiulny new lieuinr. It is so uoti structed as to at onei-comiuend IlsmU in KxuHral iv c. being a ooiublnavlon 01 wruncnt and cant Iron. II U very stipple U lu couuirucium, and Is it-rlnC'ly air iltthi; sell oifaulttK, finvlQM 110 pipes or drums to be taken out and cleaned. Ills so ariaugf'd Willi uptight hues as to product a larger amount 01 heat from tn same weight of onal it -t any luruuee uow In uie The uygrouietrlo condition ot the air as produced h my new arrangement ol evaporation will atoncade monstrate thai it is th4 only Hot Air F'uruace tha' will produce a perfectly healthy atwoNphnre. Those lu want of a complete Heating Apparatus would do well to call aud examine the Uoldeu Eagle CHARLEH WILLIAMS, Nos. 1132 and ll4 MAKJ,rB'J,J' A larr assortment of Cooking Rangeu, Vtre-boarr. Ptovea, Low Down Urates, Ventilators, eto.,alway on hand. . . . N. B. Jobbing of all kinds promptly dona. SUM SHIPPING. LORILLARD'S STEAMSHIP LINE; FOR MEW YORK.- j From and after this date, lbs ratei ot freight by this line will be ten cents per loo lbs. for heavy goods; fonr cents per foot, measurement; one cent per g alio a lor liquids, ship's option. One of he Steamers of thl? Line will leays srery Tuesday, Thursday, and Stnr4 day. Goods received at all times on covered piers. All gotds forwarded by New York agent Use of charge, txonpt cartage. . .. j Pot further information, apply on the pier to ' i 8i8 6m JOHN F. OJIL.' I tffU FOR LIVERPOOL AND (JUEKN3 .C-l. TOWN. Ionian Liu a of Mall Hiun,.n ci ti ojr PAttiat, Hamrday, November it ifl NA (via llnliiaxi, 'lunnday, Novoniber 17, ul'l Y OF JLONDON. Haiurday, Nov. at. CU V OF BALUMWRE, isalurday, November 8, I'lTV III? INI h.W ViuL' 'f,-.... .11 - . . , . i ,iiri.Li1lii.k . . . . ! . ..... . t at 1 P, W., from Pier 4, North River, 1 RA'lES OF' PAWSUM. by thb Milt STEAK.? SA11.1NU SVJUtX BATIIBDAV, Pnvable in Uold. l'uvKOie in Currenov-i FlIfcT CABIN tinOHTEERAOK....M-.. j w) iuuou...,..., ina ki iinuun.,mHMM to 1 oris 11, 1 to I'-iis 4 I' ASK OK HV TUN TuasilAS (TIKKK VIA HAIAVAA, JIHNT tAIU.N, BT1LKKANI, i Ptiv uhlH lu ioid. PnvMhl in currenav. t Liverpool........ t0 1 Llvti ooi I t) all, ts 1 ! 11. Joi.n'N. N. F I or' oy Ri'Miii'ii Meumer... e linuiijurg, Bra Halltux... lt..1r,liu a, N. F 1 4, by Bratcli Steamer. I L li I A M 8. GRANT, (e. 8 & DELAWARE Aveune, PhlladalphUt, Pnpnnt's Gunpowder, Kellned Nitre, Oharooal, Etc W. Baker A Co. 'a Chocolate Ooooa, a'ld Broma. Crocker, Bros, Kb Co.'s Yellow Metal bkeatblng, Jktlie hb4 NaLCi xf Passei girs alH'i I. rwurduu lo Hav lilt u. eu-.. bt retiuc'd rHiLto. I ickett r.in he hoiuhl here oy i eruons sendinz fo: thi ir Irlemti, ui mi Hi" u:e rfci'.i t or li.rti.er iniui me.Uou itvoly at the Comnanv'ef Clliiea. j JOU.n U. nAiiK, AKeur, no, niii'.JAUWAl.fl. YJ , . . . 'MI.1.I. A .ll'l h' A M.lnlj li Ko. 411 'll liyiMj t WMI, Plillauelphi NLW EAfULbb LINE TO ALEXi rttMiThiaudrl. tjtoigeioAn, aud Wadhlugtoni L. .., via vjueipe.ke aud Heiawwre Canal, with on-' ii.uoiiD ni Aiezuuuria iruui ruo rior.i afreet rout lor L uthuurg, Lrimoi, Eaoxvlilo, NtuuivlJle, Daitoa i Knuiti, it!InuinJij v.cijf iMiiuuujr a. flOJJB frtim IIHI vl.a.i . ... u A .' ut' L ... I r.. WM. i. CXYCK 4 CX., , lSo, 14 JToiUfc and b(;itlli Wiiarvefl, M. &LLnALUK, A Co., Afcmu ft!, AioxMudrU. VlN nJ-FOit KKW IORK, VIA' rnf ' ' Al.ii, AND RaUITaN CaNaxJ APRJifcS bUAAlHOAT lOill'AS V The Sieaui Propelleri of huh line leave DAILY" from flrst wharl deiow, Market street . ' THWOIJUil IN 24 HOURS. I Ooodr nrwarueu uv ail tiix imu, u.iiisiuitoin.-i " "t ..fi,u, auu tt vnt, utw ol UOUIUIISUIUO, Freights received ui our uutuil low rutcn. WILLIAM. P. ULVUK 6i CO., AgentSJ, ...,ro 14 - VUARVEa, Philadelphlai JAMFSJ HAND. AkonL. a,j No. Htf WALL Streei, corner of WonlU.-'New York Pll 1 1. A DKl.PII f A . HUMlunuiJ 1 AND NORFOLK SiEAAIojilP I.l ini I bOU 111 AND WK8T, AUJ EVF.RY BA1URDAY, I At noon, from FiRoT WHARF above MARKET Street. i 'J HROt'GH BATE8 and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all points in Norm and bouih Carolina, via Sea huurd Air Line Raliroud, connecting at Portsuiouih ai.d to Lyuihuuig, Va., Teunes.u'e, aud tho West, via Vlrgiuiu aud Teuuessue Alx Line and Rlciuaood and Dauviile Railroad, , FrelKht HANDLED BUT ONC'K, and taken at LOW KKRA'l htt THAN ANY OIHKRLiNIt, i The regularity, saiely, mid cheapuiMS of tuls route couimeud it to the l uoilo as tue mout desirable xno, d um for carrying eveiy description ot freight. i No charge lor commisslou, dray age. or any expense Ot transfer. i fcuenrushlpa Insnred at lowest rates. I Freight received dally. I WILLIAM P. CLYDE 4 CO., I ... - N". U North aud fcoulh WUARVEa 1 V. P. PORTER. Aseut at Richmond Aud ll(V T, P. CRO WELL & CO., Agents at Norfolk. 6 1 STEAIV1B0AT LINES. XH1LADKL.P1I1A AN V XKNJ 1. ti n Mi'aaiuuat Line. Tun xti'mniuiui lN 1 LutHKsT leavea ARCH Hirt Wimrr in. irtuiou, siuppiug at 'i'ucouy, 'iorresdalH, Ueverlv Bui lu.gton, Drlsiol, Floreuce, Roholus' Wharf, and White Hill. Leaves Arch Street Wharf Leaves south Trenton. I haiurday.Nov. 7, Uou't go'Katurdny.Nov, 7, 9 A.M Hominy, 9, 1ia A.M 1 iMouduy, " , R A.fli 'luesoiiy, " Id, 8 A.il'l uoBday, 27,12 M. ( Wed'ilay, 11, a.M Wed'duy, 11, 13i P.M Ihurnday, " 12 V A M Thursday, 12, l P.M Frluay, " la, lo A.MlFriday, ia, 2 p.jy j-are u iriuwn, w oeuuj eacn way; intermedia places, tts cents. 4 u as FOlt WJLMINUTON.CUESTEK, 9 lyT'lliVA.S i v-1 . Hi .1 7111". .7. ,t. '. . t--;SS!.J5biuo Hotels, IS c.:uia, j Hi. atuiiiei ARIEL leavts CHFSNUT Street v harf at 8 45 A. ill ., aud returning leaves Wllmlng ton at 2 P. M. Excuialou tickets, lo ceuls, Th steamjr s.fti. FF ON leaves CHEaNUl' Street Wharf alP, M. F are, 10 cents. 10 12w J ntZs, OPPOSITION TO the cojri iiwsBll!iJ!ai RAILROAD AJD Rl EJ1 bteau.er'jOHN Si'LVE-(TER will make daily fns "at T Wmuiiigtou (ouuuayseAoeod), toucn Uueet T ak" jTS?.!, "ikV u. Jtt " u,l,UI LUOII, IZ8U Xa W.3URN8, Cnptaia; wrirLS L'AILT JEXCURSIOaS. THB miTwai KHe.iuid cteamboal JUUt A. WAR- iiavn LhtjMl bUeel Wnarl, iuliaua,, at I N o xioca and s o clock P. iA., for umuiiuiu and Bristol, touching at Riverton. Torre.idan. Audalnsia.t aud Beverly. Returulug, leaves Bristol U I o'clock A, Jn. and 4 P. M. 1 Pare, at cents each way; Excursion so us, ' Utf r xFZZfs FOi NEW T0KK-S7IFr-SUBK sifciM if? tim frausiioi'tatlun OoutpaiiT Despatola a a owiitnuie Lines, via Delaware ind Raritan Canal, on and after tne lsth of March, letvtug dally at It M. and 5 P. M coiuibctlng wllu all Dorthern n4 Eastern lines, For freight, which will be taken on actommodatlnc terms, apply 10 WILLI A at M. BAliD ADO., A ill N o. lai h. delawaIe Aveaaej f rLA!ZZJ SUNDAY E X 0 P H 8 1 0 N. I JgSrCIlANOE OF TlME.-ithe splendid iiiwuir i V ILIUHT leaves Chesuut st-ett wliarf at HKt A. 11., aud 2 P.M., lor Burlington and Bristol,! touching at Tacony, Riverton, Andausla, aud Be.) verly. Ijeavlng Bristol at lOJtA, M. aul 4 P. M. Faie. j 26 cents. Excursion, 4o ceuts. JO 10 s tf j FURNISHING GOODS, SHlRTS.dtg Ha 8 a Kb Ci Harris Seamless Kid Gloves. KYEBY rAIU WAUUAXTED. EXCLUsrVE AOENTS FOR GEITS1 OLO 7E8. Ja W. SCOTT A CO.. 527jrp HO, 811 C1IKHT MTUKBT. "PATENT BIIOOLDUli.BKAV HIBT nsRVFACTVitr, I AND GENTLKMKJS'B FUENISlIKa STOBB.j PFPF'ECT FI'Pl'iNG SHIRTS iND DRAWERd made irom measurement at very shirt uotice. i All other articles ol UENTLJMEN U DREO , wjvxta ui iuii variety. WIKCUKSTEH & CO., IU No. 708 C1ESNUT street. COAL. BMIDI'LEIOS A CO., DIALERS IS -4J.ARLRIi.iH LEHIGH aid EAuLtt VKlJM CoAL, Kept diyDuder cover. Repared exprwly fi r family one. Yard, No. l'.IJ w AbRioUi'l'OA A"ua. Office No. E14 W ALMUJ' Btraat. til lMl'IiyVi:i UALTIJlOllIi mM with llluniiuaticg Boors and Wiudowg, AND ' j Magazine of bdIUcIoiiI fapaclty Tor fuel to last ti hours. j TIie;moft cheGi ftil and perfect Heater In use. OLD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BY J. S. CLARK, Ao. 1C08 aiAMLT blKLLT, MHlmrp HILADELPHLA; i