THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPHPHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY C, 18G9. J EWSPirElW IN THE SCHOOLS. m Fngllnh Tlw or tlif PropoMtflou tot J I Awmjt Midi KcMtllnjc Uookti 1 The London Saturday Review thus discusses U8 proposition to substitute newspapers for fading books in oar pablio schools: ! Travellers generall may be divided into wo classes, fashioned after the model of the die and Industrious Apprentice. The Initia tions traveller in Europe does all the ploture lalieries, cathedrals, and rains, whilst his lazy timpanion lounges through a couple of streets, 'a America the great object of the industrious iraveller is to see, and of the idle traveller to avoid seeing, as many schools as possible. It the one defect in the general hospitality of Americans that they cannot realize the exist ence of the latter class, few of them can be lieve that a man may sincerely, and from the bottom of his heart, object to being converted for the time into a volunteer inspector. Svery one who has ever visted America has therefore been dragged through a perles of schools, has duly admired the viva city of the children, and has listened to the declamation of a certain number of poems and orations. Such persons will be gratified by hearing that in the city of Philadelphia they will not in tutnre be annoyed by the mangling of standard literature. The poor old frag- ents of poets and orators will be allowed to ett in p-a.se, and infantile organ will be raotised on the viler material of the daily spapers. The motive, however, of the nge is not any relief to travellers. The iig generation will, it seems, be mile ao- mteu Willi "Congressional debates, state Airs, wars and their causes, accidents, opds and fires, great publio Improvements, to., subjects upon which the youthful mind ill feed much more profitably than upon ")autiful orations or pathetic fancy writing." naming this order to be genuine, there is a ireshing naiveti about it whioh is charao- .Urisdo of the country. American ideas on such matters cannot be cruder, i in some respects are certainly 'more intelligent, than those of the British 'middle classes; but they are expressed with a 'beautiful simplicity, unrestrained by any fear "of cynical criticism. This passage puts in the plainest form what a large class really thinks on both sides of the water. There is some thing, indeed, rather more amazing than usual to any one who has been a student of l'uila delphia newspapers. If the infant iini is to Ve ilavored by the food on which it is to be fed, as the canvas-back duck contracts the taste I of the wild celery, the Philadelphians of the fnfnra n?ill Via a ram arlmVtlt yant.rAt.tnn. A future will be a remarkable generation. A i philosopher may be insulted by the pleasing nickname of a booK-tn-uree.!iiej; but a newa- paper in pants, to use the dialect of the coun try, is a far less pleasant phenomenon. Ame rican newspapers, outside of New York, no where rise above the level of the provincial press in hngland, and it is terrible Vto think of one of the numerous heralds or Mercuries of oar native rand1 taking llesh and walking abroad among US. A youth who bad learnt politics by tponting the "editorials" of a provincial newspaper, whose imagination had been en riched by its poet's comer, and whose miscel laneous information was derived from the column ia which one line informs ns that a melon has been raistd in Fottsville, Pa., mea suring two feet in ciroumference, and the next that seventeen murders had been committed in Texas in ten days, would have a singularly constituted mind. It is strange that any hu man being should propose to saturate the youthful intellect with third-rate newspapers. and to sink the faot that any greater masters of, literary composition ever existed than those wtto provide daily intelligence for the inhabi tants of Philadelphia. Most of us feel the need ot some sort or intellectual um brella to ward off the pelting Bhowers of information which descend upon us from a oloud of periodicals. We are anxious to cultivate a profound ignorance of some of the stores of useless knowledge which are thrust upon our notioe. But here it is proposed to take the unoffending youth of a whole olty, and inoculate them from their earliest years with a taste for the consumption of rubbish. We oan only hope that their digestions will ultimately revolt at the insipid meal, and that Philadelphian teachers will discover the urDrisinz fact that their newspapers are drearier than even the Btandard writers of the English language. Aid yet we feel a certain hesitation in (peaking positively of the matter. If we toko the adult Englishman or Amerioan who his reoeived an average education, we might finoy that he had been instructed pretty much os the plan described. The objeotion to plung- ) tog infants into premature newspaper read 1 1 tog would be founded not so much on the fact U that it would be a bad preparation for their J later studies, as that it would be only too t w,n nli liba thorn. It. nrnnlil ha a Rtartlintr st.l. " a tistioal return which should show truly the number of persons whose literary zeal ever takes them beyond the dally papers for their politics and the lighter part of magazines for their amusement. Reading, so far as the British shopkeeper is concerned, is coming to be definable as the art by which persons dis cover what the Telegraph or Standai d thinks about the world in general: excellence of the jtyle will soon be measured by the approach hi$ it makes to the glowing beauties of the j'elejraph'$ artioles; and it will be one more itep, and not a difficult one, to teach the infant pouth to lisp in aooeuts derived from the iune source. On grand oooasions boys will declaim the last flowery leader instead of a passage from Shakespeare or Maoaulay. Those poor old Btandard authors, who, it is true, always received more respect than familiarity, have a harder straggle than ever to keep their beadi above the rubbish heaps of worthless literature. The tendenoy of whioh the Thiladelphian ichool-teachers have given a grotesque illus tration may suggest a more serious reaction. It is an extreme corollary from the utilitarian theory of some of our reformers, and brings oat very neatly their special weakness. There is no oountry where the advantage of some mental training in some loftier branches of knowledge than r.re attainable by means of newspapers is plainer than in America. The post characteristic fault of Young America is its undervaluing of everything that has been done beyond the Atlantio, and its prevalent impression that America should have not merely new creeds and new political systems, bat a new multiplication table and new laws of nature, The senBitivmess upon wmou we lonietlmes rally our cousins is comparatively I eupei fiolal and transient phenomenon. It is natural enough that a country whose litera ture is Btill provincial should be especially leDbitive to opinions coming from the virtual metropolis, and that a country in many geiise young should have some of that un 8y vanity aud desire to be received on equal (tiius amongst its betters which is character Igtlo of the hobbledehoy stage of existence, lint this is quite compatible with a more jptply.seated conviction that the Amerioan it t being of a superior order, whose merits freDot as jet thoroughly recognized, but who i, rpidly showing his superiority to all the piles enunnibiieu m nit) da world, couse ,,nfutly, there ia no people noon whom it is , desirable to impress ihn faut that some Pofl could write Kngiiuli before the Declara tion of Independence, and that there Is a eUndard of cultivation and learning to whioh thv have not at present even nearly ap proached. They are suffering from very natu ral dflusions of mental perspejtlve, which n ake their own continent and epoch loom iu t e vastest proportions, and they are sped illy In ued of suoh oorrectives to their vision as can be supplied at school. But we cannot flatter ourselves that tin moral bo obvious in their case has no applica tion to us. There is, it is true, a large and growing class of Englishmen which recog nizes more or less dimly the. fact that there are other oountries beyond the British Chan nel, and there are some foreign civilizations which are not quite unworthy of notioe. There is also a class, though not so rapidly increasing, which is aware that a few books were written, and a few things done, before the nineteenth century which may be studied with some show of profit. Still, the measure of the Philadelphian sohool teachers only em bodies a sentiment analogous to the oommon English sentiment that "Janius" or the wiiters of the Spectator would be seoond-rate scribblers at the present day, and that there is more good writing ia the daily press than would have fitted out a first-rate author of the past. The answer which is generally made to this, and to the often-quoted comparison be tween the iimi.tand Thucydides, or between knowledge of the Mississippi and the Ilissus, rather laws to allow lor the hair-truth con tained In those assertions. The obstinate de fenders of the old classical system are apt to dwell too extensively upon the advantages of the training which It confers upon the mind, without insisting upon the substantial value of the knowledge imparted. They aooept the position of their antagonists, and admit that a youth who has been trained for many years in olassios or mathematics is then to forget all about it, and take to some purely utilitarian study. They argue that they have put so fine a polish upon his intellectual powers that he is to be able to take up with effect any study ho pleases. Now, it is only natural that their opponents should feel a difficulty in be lieving that a man who is to devote his whole faculties to certain pursuits is the better for having previously sharpened them on something which is to be entirely laid aside. If, after sharpening your razor to the utmost, it is only to be used for cutting blocks, one can hardly resist a suspi cion that the sharpening has been more or less thrown away. Neither can it be denied that our present educational system is liable to some extent to this blame, and that in some interpretations at least of its merits the theory seems to be involved that a study which is useful in after-life is necessarily useless as a means of training. If classical training, for example, were founded on a more intelligent method, and such superstitions as that of ex cessive verse-making were effectually laid, the answer to the Philadelphian heretics would be much plainer, because they would more easily reoogmze the utility of a study which should be no longer ostentatiously unsuitable to any one but schoolboys. They might perhaps be induced to recognizs the advantage which a man derives from having some acquaintance with the world in a large sense, and from hav ing, as it were, an intellectual anchorage be yond the very unstable and shifting sands of provincial journalism. But to meet effeotually the prejudices of which this is a ludicrous in stance, some modification in the views of ex treme purists is required, and it would be well that they should provide themselves with arguments plain even to the capacity of per sons who believe in Philadelphian newspapers. INSURANCE COMPANIES. UNITED SECURITY LIFE I X S U R X X C E AMU TRIM COMPAQ Y. OF P E X X SYLVAN OFFICE: I A. S. L'. Corner FIFTH and CIIFS.NUT Sis., PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL, S 1 ,000,000 1) I It E O T O II S. PHILADELPHIA. GEORGE H BTU4.RT, 8. H. HOR8TMANN, UI.UIMK W. C'HILLb, WM. A. PORTER, F. A. DREXKL, WM. V. M K KAN, THOMAS W. ii,VAN8, A. J. UREXEL. JOSEPH PATl'ERHON, win., yj. MuueiUJM, t. J. HOLMS, IIENUY K. ROOD. NKW tOKK, JAMES M. MORRISON, Presldeat Manhattan B ante JO.-i.ru blXARl, or J. J. utuart H Co., Jtiankeis. BOSTON. EON. E. B, TO BEY, late President Board of Trade, CINCINNATI. A. E. CHAMBERLAIN, of Chamberlain & Co, CHICAGO. L. 7.. LETTER, of Field. Leller & Co. I . M..bMiTH, ol tieo. C bmltb t Brothers, Bankers. L0U18VILLK, Kf. WILLIAM GARVIN, of Oarvln, Bell A Co, ST. LOUIS. JAM KS K Y EATMAN, Cashier Merchants' National 1JUUJC. NKW HAHPKHIHK. PATTERSON, U. b. Senator. HON. 3. W HALT1M0K1 WILLI M PREbCOTT SMITH, Superintendent CocsollUattd Railway Line, New York lo miiii.fion. f. M. bllOEMAKER, of Adams A Co.'s Express. L'liRlHTlAN AX.OfU. W.Uall di Ax. tKANClb T. JxJNU, President Central bvlnb" GEORGE H. BTUART, President. C F. UETTd Ktcretary. J. L. LUDLOW, CoLuulling Physician. jokoeVperm. D., Uealc,kl E''"!"" C. HI U ART PATTERSON, 1 f.f.. RlCHARJj LLLLOW, ') Counsel. This Company lsiuus Policies of Life Insurance ui on all the various plans that have been proved Dy me experience of European and American Com panies to be safe, sound, and reliable, at rates LOW AND UPON TEUMJS AH FAVORABLY Ad THOSE OF ANY COMtANY OF EUUAL ttTA B1L1TY. All policies are non forfek bie after the payment t two or moi e annual premiums. n 13 jm wamrp TStsUKANCU COMPANY NORTE AMER1QA, No. 232 WALNUT STREET, PHILADA. INCORPORATED 1794. CHARTER PERPETUAL Mttrlue, luluuU, ud Aire Imiurance. ASSETS JANUARY 1, 1868, - $2,001,266-72. $20,000,000 Losses raid iu Cult Siaos in Organization. niRKHTORS. ArthorO, Coffin, George L. Harrison, bamuel W. J ones, John A. Brown, Charles 'lay lor, Ambrose While, William Welsh, Richard D. Wood, h. Morris Wain, JllliU MmHOU. t rin la R, Cooe, Eo ward H, TVotier, Edward S. Clailie, T. Charlton Heurt Alfred 1 Jossup, John P. While, LwuUC. Madeira. ' ARTRUl! a. COFFIN, President. I'haki.ks Platt. H.;feuiry, Wj LI I AM KUKHLKK, iXarrlsbiirg, Pa-, Cent INSURANCE COMPANIES. jggg.ciiAUT:u ruitrEiUAL. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. OFFICE! 437 UiESXUT STREET. Aos. 435 and AMSRTS If J4HD4HT 1. 1S0S, capita h. .. .4tl).00O A I CR UKD HVRPL US m....... I.Ol ,trl'a i-liKMl VMH....., , m,H rjitiTTiJD CLAIMS. 1NC04XK FOB I8d7 tnn.non-iia sno,oooof lAHmr.H rAfn since isa uvu 5 COO.OOO. Perpetual and Tempoiary Policies on LiberM Tsrra DIBKOTORS, Ghrl N. Bancker, Uoorge Fnlna, TublM Winner Alfred Filler, Frauds W, Lewis, A, D Thomas Sparks, William B. Uraat, B&Diiiot "ruin, Uporge w Jtuooarai, CHARLES IN BA-NUK.KK. President. OHUKUK FaLKIS, Vloe-Prenlilnnt. J AS. W. Uc A LL.ltsrF.lt, Heoretai-r ro tern. F-xccDl at LexlDiit.ni. Kenlaokv. tills Oamoany has no Agmmles Wen of yuuoiirn. iiy N 8 U R C AT HO MB IN TOE Pcini Mutual Life Insurance Co. Ko. D'Jl IIILSMI St., I'liiladelnhhi. ASSETS, 03,000,00. CHARTERED BY OUR OWN BTATK. MAIS AG KD BY OCR OWN CtilZKNU. LOtSfcS PR0MP1LY PAID. P0LIC1K8 ISaUKD ON VARIOU8 PLANS. Applications may be made at tlte Home OUlue, anl Ibe Agencies throughout tke atate. 2 is JAM KM 1KAtlTAIB PRKSIDKN t NA.tlt KL. fcTOlilis) VICE PRKblDtCNT JKO. W. HOltMEB A. V.P. and A01UARV IIOKAT1U W. WIBtMIKAa BKCRETAKY PIKES IX 1NSUUASCE COMPASY 01 PHILADELPHIA. lJS(JUJlfUHAlM,L) 1(104 VJ1ARTKK PERPETUAL. JSo. Ui WALK UT Hireet, opposite the Uxciiange. This Company luaurea Iroiu wan ot damage by FIR Mi. on liberal terms, on buildings, mercbnndlse, fnmltur eic, ior iiuii eu pnriouti, uu peruiauemiy ou uullu- Th C uinaiiy bits been In active operation for mn thaublXl'Y VKAKS, during which, all loaaea have been promptly aajuxied and rftl r 111 rtWCTOKii. John L. Bodge, liav id Lewis, li. a. jMabnuy, mei jauiin itllting, Joliu T. Lewis, TuouiKS H. Powers, W ll'lam ti. Urani, a. R. MCHh iry. Robert VV. Lettiuing. iKduiunU (. uttUlon. D. Clarlc AVhartou, (Samuel Wilcox, Lawrence Lewis, Jr., I Lew Is C Norris. junn ti. vv uuuiiUliK, presiaeni. Bamukl Wiwjox, becrelary. i inl FIRE ISSUKASCE EXCLUSIVELY TUB ItHMil'LVAMA FlKn. INSURANCE COM f A N Y lncurnorated 126 Charter PeruHLual . 510 WAL UT bireet, opposite Independence Squaro Tnis company, lavoraoiy Known to inecommuuliy for over lorty years, cntluues to lnnure against ionr or damage by nre on puoiio or Private .Buildings either permanently or ior a nmiieu time. Also on PnruUure Blocks of Goods, and Merchandise gene rally, on liberal terms. Tlieir t apuai, logotutfr wi'n . ourpmi r nua Is Invested In the moil csretul manner, which en;bei them to offer to Ibe Insured an undoubted iccaruv It the case oriot. . Danlnl Hralth, Jr, J'ibn Devernax, Thomas emllh, Henry i.ewls, J. Glllinc-liain Fell, Alexander Benson, iMaac naxleburst, Thomas Rouinn. pmiln! Haddock, Jr. WM. 0. CBOWELL. Secretary. gTRICTLY MUTUAL. PROVIDENT LIFE AND TRUST GO. OF PiliLAUl'.X.r'JllA. OFFICE, Ke. Ill H. FOUKXII STREET. OrKanlzed to promote xiMOURANCE aiaont membeis ol the t,,. BUUlIil I VI IIUIVSIJM, Good risks of any class accepted. PolicltA Usuud upon approved plans, at tb lowosi B AMU EL R. bHIPIJTY. Vice-President, WlLLiAU O. LiNGSTKTH. ' ActtiaryT ROWLAND PARRY. The advantage- oUered by this Company ro excelled I27 jai'iiiiuL riiiu uisuiuixcii comtany LONDON. ESTAltXISlIEI) Siii, Paid-tip Capital and Accumulated Fund, 0)0 0 0,0 0 0 IN COLD. l'KEVOST A I1EIIHING Ageuts, 114 3m. No. 107 Bouth THIRD Street, Pblla, FIRE-PROOF SAFES. PROM THE GREAT FIRE IN MARKET STREET. UEHRIAG'S PATENT S.1FS Again the Cliiimpion ! THE ONLY SAFE THAT PRESERVES ITS CON TENTS UNCHARRED. LETTER FROM T MORRIS PEROT 4 CO. Phii.ahmi.phia, Twelfth Montn Htb.ltfiH. Messrs. Farrei. Uerrluk & Co.. No. 6'2'J CheHutit sueei weuls: it Is with great pleasure mat we and eor tettlmouy to the value of yonr Patent Champion bate. At the destructive tire on Murketstieet, ou toe evening of the 3d Intl., lour store was the centre 01 the conlUgratlon, auu, being til-ed Willi a large siock ol nrugs, oils, inrpeuune, paiuis, varuisu, a.001101, etc , made a severe and trying test. Your bale mood In an exposed situation, and tell with the burning floors into 1 he cellar among a qeantny or combustible ma terials. We opened It next day and found our books, papers, bank m ies bills receivable, and: entire cojteois ail sale. It Is especially gratifying to us t int your Hale csmtt out ail right as we bad entrusted our mi tt valuable books to 1', We snail want anotnur of yeur bales iu a lew days, as they have our entire con tidvuee. Yours, respectfully, T. MORRIS PEROT & CO. HKRRINO'S r ATFNT CHAMPION B.1FE9, the viciors in more tnau oi,U accidental 11 res. Awaidcd the Pri.e Htuli at I lie World's Fir, l.onaou; Worm's J'a.r, New York; audEXfoalliou Ualvnaoao, Fans iaanufactured and lot sale by FAItllEL, HEKUING k CO., No, (a 41li:SMJT KTllEtT, 12 9wlm:mrp PHILADELPHIA, sail -1 C Ii . MAIS E It If AKUyACTDBKB OF AM) HIJKULAii-PliOOir SAFES, ilCh LOCKeMlTH, BELIH ANGER, AND DEALER IN BU1LDINU HARDWARE, H No. 434 RACE Stree I N T I-WI K D 0 V R AT ILER For DtvclllutiN, t'nrs, Kteanilxmls, Etc. l'leventH Kstlling and Slmhlog ol the Win dows by llio wind or other causes, tigotous tuo eakli. pievenls tbewiudftDelelUKili-uiii euteriiig, eanily tttluclieet, and rrqulita but h blulo glnnoti to jude of ll nicrils, cun ou iuo ucueiai Agent, O. P. HOSTi, No. 727 JAYSE Stmt, Between Market aud CbeHnut, 12 11 fmwiim Plilladelphlit. QCORGC PLOWMAN, CARPENTER AND GUILDER, RL310VLD 10 Ko. IU DOCK Street, PHILADELPHIA. T)RiZr.S CAviiit.il in ItOVAT. HAVANA X JiENTl't'K V, and MISSOURI LOITERI K Circulars sent ann liiliriiiitiloii Kiveil J OH Hi r- H UAII-.H, Jo. in ilMUAUWAY New York. Pot i:iui RAILROAD LINES. 1 RnQ FOB NEW YORK. TUB CAMPUS A.OIIO. AND AM HOY AND PH I LA DKLPIII A A NDTRKNTON R A I I.ROA IKOOM PA N I KM' LIN KU ZPtKV.!it,UKLLLk. TO NEW YORK, AND WAX triAAKJHn . . '0 WA1.WPT ST RUST WHABf. A ;'A, M.. via Camden and Amboy ACoom...f V2 A! 5 A,?, vl CaniOen and Jersey City Ex. Mall 00 f 1 2" J11 and Amboy Express....- 8 00 Ar 5 . M,l 'or Amboy and Intermedials stations. At 8-80 and s A. M., and 1 no. P. M. for Freehold, At 8 and 10 A. M., a, 8 80, and 4 80 P. M. for Trenton. . nd to A. M., 1 2. 8 w, 4 8l 8, and 1180 P. M.for Bordentown, Burlington. Beverly, anl De lanco, At e-SOand 10 A. M., 1, 881, 4 80. 6, and 11-80 P. M. for JMorence, EdKewater, Riversioe, River. on. Pal myra, and Fish House, and 8 P. foi Florence and Rlverton. The 1 and 1130 P. M. Lines leave from Market Street Ferry (up jer side.) ritoM kknhinoton nirnv. At 11 A.M., via EenbliKton and Jersey City, New York Exprms Line. Fare -. Ai7-:iLd 11 a. M.8 an, 8 80, and 8 P. M. for Trenton and Brit tol. AndatiO'lSA M. for Bristol. At7'80and It A. M. 2 30, and 6 P. M. for Morrlsvllle ami Tuliytown, At 7 o and 10-15 A. M. and 2 30, and t P. M. for Uclienck's and EddliiRion. At 7 0 and 10-15 A. M. 2-80,4.1, and 6 P. M.for Corn well's, lorreeoale, HolmeeburK, Tacouy, Wmslno. mine, RrldesburK, and Frankiord, and at 8 P. M. for lioluiestiiirg and lniermedlaie HtaUona, FROM. WKHT t 111 LADELPH IA DErOT, Via Conuecilng Rliway. At f 45 A. M , a-). 4, au. and 11 P.M. New York. Ex prees Llrts, via Jersey City; Fare, i M. At 11 8U P. M. Emigrant Lln Fare, ti At 46 A. M., I'Jo, 4. e no, and 12 P. M . for Trenton. Ai 9-46 A. M., 8,6-80 and 12 P. M.,for llr.s o- , At 12 P.M. (Mght). for Morrlsvllle. Tu Wwn Hchei ck's, Eddlrg-ou.CoruWPll's.Torrpsdale.llolnies-burg, 1 acoay, Wissluomlng, Brldesburg, and fcrank- ,JTh"e 9-45 A. M., 6-30 and 12 P M. Lines will run dully. Alloi'jers, bundays excepted. For Lints leaving Kensington depot take tne cars on Third or Flfih streets, at Chenut, m minute before departure '1 he cars of Market beeet Hallway run direct lo West Philadelphia- lepot. Chesniit and r. , v.i.. (111 Hiindavs the Market Street cars will run to connect wltn the 9-44 A. M. 6'30 and 12 P. M. Lines. 14ELVALERE DLAWAR3 BAU.BUAD wiia, At 7-30 A. M. lor isiagam Falls, Bullalo. Dunkirk, Eimlra, Ithaca, Owego, Muchesier, ijingnamioii, us- j,o. Mi,ni.r,M. wnkeaOaire. bcranion, btrou'dsburg, Water yap, ticbooley's Jioun- Ail'WA. M. and 8 30 P. M. for BelvMere, Easton, Lambeitville, Flemlugton, eio, ineu r. m. a.iub couuec-s direct Willi the Train leaving Eastou lor Maucb Chunk, Aiieniown, bbiiiibm", ",,,- Q. At 5 P. M. lor Lauibertvlilo and Intermediate Sta tions. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON COUNTY AND X't,SX 11LaU1.JjX 4X AX AJ WlWAA.waw inf, MiBitUT STREET FERRY. (Upper Side.) ai 7 ai d lu A. M.. 10. 8 M, and 6 lu P. M., lor Mer- chantsvllie, Moorestowu, uartiuru, nwiunv a. Vluctnlown, Blim'ugnBui. "iu """'" At 7 ' a.M... 180 and 8 30 P. M.. lor Lewlstown, WrlRhtwtown, Cooksiown, jNew e.gpi. n- aerowu, Crebin Ridge, luilej Blown, Sharon, and HIliiatown. Jlld 1 JjAjX.A ill. IX, uaiurfi.iaiH bwuw DEKKSYLVA1S1A CENTRAL KAILUOAD FALL TIME, TAKINU EFFECT NOV. Zi 1888. The trains of tLe Peuiioylui Ouirni Aaliroad leave the i'rpoi, al'lHlRTV-eltual' ouu MaXCm;! Kireew, wnlcu is rt-acuea airei;i.iy uy.me uarccl Street cars, ti.e last car couue;ilug wnu enca train luavlug Front, and Df artel s.et-ta inlny uiluutus lie. fiire lis ubpaibure. iuiueAiiiiMB'iu utuut oiruui cars run wlihln one ttua-e ot liieDei'OU ble .ing Car TlcKoio can o una uu appllcMlon at tnellckvi olbco N. W. corner Ninth and Chesuut ,liTn"oAneecn?onU Transfer Company will call for anu deliver baggage at tue depot,, Oiaora lo!l at No." ul ctiesuut stieet, or No. litt Market siroet, will IW,elve auction. y Mkii I'ruii ! it ou A liti Paoll Accommo'uaiiou, 10 30 A. a.., 1 .u, and v uu p. ja. Fast Line V M, K'.i. h'rntMiH UitUA. M. uarrlBOUj-g Accomuioda.lon i'3'J P. M, Miucabler Accommodaliou - r. m p.riiMbiirir Train...-......... o"M) P, M Cincinnati Express 8'o P. M. Mu.ikiiii Htillalo Exnress KM 5 P. M. Philadelphia Express U ou Nignt, baturday right to W llilumsiiurt only. On HJiid y night uasaengers will leave Puiladelphta at It o'clock. l-hilauelithla P xpress leaves uaiiy. Ail o.ner train daiiv, except Bonuny, wiern Ancommodatlon Train runs dally, ex. cetit buuday. For this lriu tickets muat uo pro cured and Signage delivered by 5 00 P. M., at 10, lu TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT. VIZ.: rtini.tn. ail 1. vnrens ........ A. M. PhiiKdeiLhla Express s lu A, aL, l-7r VT.,1 .nil f.ullalo u-xpresa. .............. .....10 imi a. M. Parketburg Train . l' A. M, F&fit ., w in 1 XiAUCAHier Trftlu - T.V lV'.ikA L vnriaa 4 tA If. M' HMrtsnurgAccommod 40 P.' it'. For furLher lulouiaiiou i'i"j a or lurtuor iu .OUJj, aaLEN. Ticket Agent, No. Hoi CHXhiN (IT rtlreet, FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent, No. 116 MARKET street, BAM DEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot, The Pennsylvania Railroad Couitiany will not m nme any risk for Baggage, except tor Wearlug Ap parel, and limit their responsibility to One Hundred Dollars in value. All Baggage exceeding that amount In value will be at the risk of the owner, unless taken by special contract, jtu w aku 11. w 1 L,e,iA 4 2i General Buperlutendent Aituona, Pi PHILADELPHIA, WILMINUTOH, AND Baltimore railroad. ii&ie table. lfftUienciOK MONDAY, Novumber 23, lf8. Trains will leave Depot corner Broad street and Washing ton avenue, as follows: Wav-niall Train at t 80 A. M. (Sundays excepted). for Baltimore, stopping at all regular btationi, Cou- nee-ilng with Delaware Railtoaa at Wilmington for Ur slum lu intermediate siatiuua. Kxitrt-sa Train at VI M. (Suudays nxceptt-d) for Bal imoreand Washington, siopring at Wilmington, Perrjville, aud Havre-' e-et race, connects at Wll mt.ii.t..n with tmln fur New Cabtle. Express ira'n at s-uu jr. xu. (nuutijo uuuiuu iur TtHitunnra and Waalili Eton, stoiipiiig at Cnester. n. .1 . j . . I , . . . UMlmtnut in ?VT ..... i nUllOW. JjlUWUOU, jiuiuii., .. a - port, t-ianlon. Newark, jmkiou, utrMi-r.twi tumtn. town, pet rt vllle Havre de Orace. Auerdeea, Perry niau's. Edgewood, Magnolia, Chase's, and biemwer's Nlabt Express at 11-30 P.M. (Dally) for Baltimore aud Wasnlrgiou, stopping at Cnesti-r. Thurlow. Liu- DllM WGOd, Olaymont, wiiu.iugiot-, newtun aikiuu, Norih-East. Perry vllle. and Havre de Grace. Pntseuvers lor Voriress ilouxoe aud Norfolk will take the U-UO tmn. Ilv.a Stopping at all btatloi.s between Philadelphia and w i.m Autui. A n.v. i.. kj. Wllmiikiun. Leave Pbl adelphla t lltnA. M., 2 3". S t, and in p m. The K-iHi P. M. Train connecu with Dela ware Railroad lor xiarringiou auu mieimouinie stations. , u.m a s f.Q ..,k 1-u.Ve W ltmillKVUU I v' niiu O IW A. w, . v, - iu wuu 7-ou P. W. The K lo A. M. Tram win not siop between Cptt ler auu A'lu.aueipiiia. motwr. j. aimiu iruui Wllmligton runs tail; all other Accommodation TraiiiB tunoajs excepted, tunoaysexcepieu, Lalilmore to Philadelphia. Leave Baltimore M., Way Wall. V 'Ao a. AL, Express. 2 25 P. M., vroie l; A.M. 'AViM BALTIMORE. Leaves' Bf Itlmore at 7 ih P..M.. stopping at Mag- .,..tt iLt.vnt.n'. A lieiaeeu. 11 a vie ue-eirt.ee. rerry- He, inaritoiowu, " "-7,1 " , ..:7 . . t . . .. k. n L u w t h'.lui.i.i Mwiuarlr. Btaotou, Newport, wiiuiiugiuut.-j """"t amlClusier, ,. ., Bn.h. and n.uihwesc may be procured at ticket olriow. No. sis f-iietnut street, uuuur Contlneuial Hotel, where also s Lie Reoms and Bflths iu ecplng e ars can be .riirpd uuriiik the dsy Persons purchaaiug tickets ui. il.iH i.llti-.e t.au uitte f..s" MM mv. wu- ibis i.llice can have baKRtfe checked i,Le by the Union Trai-sler Company, nee by tue e, KKJlNi!;Y 4 Bupl cel p'erlnteudent. BAILUOAD. ItUOutt AilD LADELc'HIa. RAL'lIMOKE. UAKieisutJee. wnju&uaruHi, AM 'IUEOREAT OIL KH.WlO.ai ejj nliBrij. k if tailt Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains, 011 and a ' er - MONDAY. November M, 18' 8. the ..V,1'.4"?.?. The Philadelphia aud Erie katlroad will ruu as follows:- .,.,,. . att Ttiatn leaves Pnilaaeiphla 1045 P, U, tl ALL ,1 RAIN eT" -wiiiiamBpjrl 814A.M. i. arrives at Erie 1 !0 P. M. irttiw VFRVKSleavesl hiladelphia 11-60 A. M. .7 WUIlamsporU s-60 p. M, 1 arrives at Erie Ki- 0 A. M, ELMIRA- MAIL leaves Philadelphia 8-U0 A. M. arrives at Lockhaveu 7'15 P. M. MAIL TRAIN leaves Erie 10 55 A.M. " ' WUIIamspu't li 00 A, M, " arrlvrs at t-hlladelphla lo-Ot) A, At, EE IE EXrr.Etjb leaves Erie -26 P. M. " Wllllmuort. 7 60 A. M. arrives at Philadelitlda... 4-iu p. M. Mall and Kxnrrts connuct with Oil Creek anil Alleglw uy RlVer Raluroad. BAIllHulS OKK(IKjj) 111 KOI till. AX.V ttJt.LI Am IIliHH, 1 11 General btiperluluudent. Y 8 T JEKSUY KAlLROAD S. FALL AINU WllS'l'Iill AKKAINti .V1KMT, fmiu tojl oriiAiiKW Hireeii (Upper Perry). Commencing WtliKithUAY, Ht-piemoer 18, 18C8. v Kiir.i.t..w. F'r Cap May aud stations below MilivUle, 813 P. M. For V 111 vllle. Vine-laud, and Intermediate stations 8l a. a in f. iu. For Mi liluetou, balem, and way stations 8-15 A. M . n .1 fa-.tll P M. wnorti.iirv at 8-15 A. M.. 8-15. 8-80. and 8-00 P, M, ' I'lelvhl tralu leaves Camdou dally at 12 o'clock "''lelglit recdved at second covered whasf below Walnut hi reel, ai!iy. , Vreii-lit DelivetedNO. IMHnutrt Delaware avenue. WILLIAM J. 8K V r 1.1.. A tj.!iVjila'.Vaii'li T-HIT.AOKLPHIA AND EKIfc t wia'IKK TIME TABLE.-Til riTiJiip HfitlTK BKTWEEN PHI RAILROAD LINES. TD RAPING KAILUOAD. ORRAT Tflfl VR" J j 1 LINE from Philadelphia to the Interior of isvlvanla. tha ek:hiivlbltl Mtinii.h...n. .....,. Pennsylvania, the bchuy land ard Wvomlnk Val ard Wyoming Valleys, the Norm. Norilnrait andtbeCanadaa. Winter Arrangement of Panienger Trains, December 14, 1S6S, leaving the Company's .'""."T"'" "uu ivwDiu streeis, ruuauei pbla, at the following hour: MOBN1NU ACCOM MODATION. At 7MA.K. nir Reading and all Intermediate stations, and Allen town, JtetnrHng, leaves Reading ate up. M arriving In Phlladelplila;atiP. M. .t iiu w UOKN1NO KXPREHH-At S'lS A. M., for Readlnr, Lebanon, BarrUburg, Pottsville, Pine Urove, Tama- qua, Hunbury, Wlliiamsport. Einura. Kochmier, Niagara FallH, BiiITbIo, Wllkesharre, Plttston, York. Uariisie, rbamberitourg, liHgerntown, eio. The 780 train eouneois at Reading with the East Pennsylvania Railroad trains for Ailentown, etc.- and the 8 16 A. M. connects with the Lebanon Valley train for Harrlsburg, etc.: at Port Clinton with Catawmsa Kan road trains ror Williams port. Lock Haven. Elmlra. etc.: at Harrlsburg with Northern Central, Cumber Isnd Valley, and Mchuylkill and HusRiiebanna trains Dt. Nnrlhiimhapl.nil U7 1 . 1 1 -.... v' w .ti.mKA burg. Plnegrove, eio. . AFTERNOON EXPRESS.-Leaves Philadelphia at 8 .10 r. M. for Reading. Pottsville, Harrlsburg, eio.. connecting with Reading and Columbia RaUroad trains for Columbia, etc. POTTHTOWN imiMMOnATrnN Tji Pntta. town at i 4h A. M., stopping at intermediate maitons: arrives In Philadelphia at U'lO A. M. Returning leaves Philadelphia at 4 00 P. M.;airives iu Pottslown at 15 RKAUIWa ACCOMMODATION. Leaves Ra1ln t7-o A. M stopping at all way stations; arrives In I nilaaeipnia at 10 w &. M. lnBRad?ig"at,CT.IM,.,1,Mle,phI 4 45 P' Trains lor Pbliadelnbla leave TTarrlHliiirir at stn a M and Potto vllle at S 46 A. M.. arrivlnn In Phlladel. phia at 1 P. M. Afternoon trains leave HarriKburv t 2-06 P. M and I'oltsvllle at l io P, M.t arrlvius at Philadelphia at s-45 P.M. Harrlsburg accommodation leaves Reading at 7-15 A.M., and Harrlsburg at 4 10 P.M. Connecting at Reading with Afternoon Accommodation mmth .t P. M., arriving In Philadelphia at P, M. Market train, with a Pasueiiirer car attaniinil. Iniu Philadelphia at 12-itOjuoon for Pottsville and all Way stations: leaves Pottsville at 7-80 A, M. for Philadel phia and all other Way Stations, ah tne above trains run dally, nunanys excepted. 4nedav train Ip&va PntmvllA at R141 A. m.. rtrl Philadelphia at I'M P. M -, leave Philadelphia tor Reading at e 00 A, M., returning from Reauiug at 4 62 CHESTER VALLEY RAILRO AD.-Pftinengers for Downlngtown and Intermediate points take the 7 ao A. M n-M) and 4 0 P. a. trains from Philadel phia; returning from Downlngtown at 8 ao A. M., U15 and 6-16 P. M. perk I OMEN railroad. l'asneneers forHk n- pack take 7 HO A. M. and 4-oo P. M. trains Iroin Phila delphia, returning from Hklppack at 8-10 A.M. and 12 45 I'.'JU. HttiKe lines lor various points In l'erklonien Vallev connSLt wltb trains at Colleuevllle and Hkio- Pcf i r. yy i una. r.i nr.on r t i riiiouunt ai-iu TUE WES1', Loaves Mew Yoik at 9 A. id. .6'0n, aud 8 00 P. M,, parsing Reading at 105 A.M., 161), and lo-ltt P. Ai., aud connect at Harrlsburg with Pennsyl vania aud Northern Central Railroad Expresw Train lor rmsourg, Chicago, Wlliiamsport, Elmlra, RAltl more, eto. Returning, Express Tralu leaves Harrlsburg, oa arrival of PennBVivaiila Express from PUisburrf, at 8-60 aud 6 60 A. M.. 1050 P. M , passing Reading at 6'44 and 7 61 A. M., aud llbO t. IS., arriving at New York, ll'lie A.M.. and 12-it) and b'w P.M. Hlenplng Cars accompanying tnese trains through between Jersey CUy and l'lttsourg, without change. Mall tralu for New York leaves Harrlsburg at 8 '10 A. M. and 2V5 P. M. Mall tralu lor Harrlsburg l.aes New York fit 12 Niton. HCHUYLKILL VAJuLKY BA1LBUAU.-Trains leave rottsvllle at fa-45, 11-80 A. M and fi 10 P. M.. re-iurulng from Tamaaua at 8 bo A. M., and 216 and l it P. J-L . . bLJlC yi.iiiijij Anil nu.-ijur.rtAft.ti itAiLr ROAD. Trains leave Auburn at 7 no A. M.. for fine- grote and llarrlourg, and at 12 15 P. . tor Plue grove and Treniom; leiurulug (rum Harrlsburg at :o P. M., and from Tremint at 7 40 A. M., ana o as P. M. l l-JJVH.113. iiriniBu nrnt ctana ticaeis ana emi grant tickets to all the principal poluts In the Nona and weot ana uanauas. Excursion nckeis irom i niiaueipiiin to xteauing Bhd iiitermedlnle Stallone, good lor day ouly, are sold by Morning Acuuiniuodatloii, Xdarket Train, Reading and Pi lioiowu ACeommoda.lon Trains, at ruUuued "Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day oniyare sold i.t Reading aud luienueaiute stailoos by itettaiiig una ruujigwu Accommouauon Araiua at rtOuced rates. 'J he loliowing ticKein ate ODiainaDie oniy at the Olltceof 8. Bradlord, Treasurer, No it7 IS. KourtU street. Philadelphia, or li. A. Nlcolls, Ueueral Super luieuelent. Reauiug. Cetmutiitaiioii i icset at per cent, aisconnt, be tween any poiuls desired, lor latullies and linns, Mileage i ickciu, guuu tut zjuv miiea, netwedU ail loiiilb, at I iS-60 eacn. lor families and lirms bt-ahou Tickets lor three, six nine, or twelve months, lor holdeis ouly, lo all points, at reduced '"clergymen residing on the Hue of the road will be furnished with caruit, entitling themaelves aud wives le tickets at hall laie, incursion Tickets from Philadelphia to nrlaolnal stations ,good lor baiurduy, ouuduy , and Mouday, at reiiue-ea tare, to ou uau oniy an tue lie set Oulce, at Thirteenth aud Callowhlll streets, ERElOHl'. Uoous ol all ou crlptlons forwarded to all the above points iroin. the Cuipauy's Newurelght A-rpoi, Xiroau auu w lliovv autrtria. Preight 'i'ralns leave Phlludelpbla dally at 4 35 A. M., IfH) noon, 8 and 6 P. M., for Reading. Looaiiou, HatriBbttrg, Pottsville, Port Clinton, aud all points be eino. Malls close at the Philadelphia Poet OlUce for all places on the road and Us branches at 6 A. M., aud lor the principal biatious only at 216 P. M. liAU .AOE. Duugan's Express will collect Bag guge lor till trams leaving Philadelphia Depot, Orders can be leliai No. 2zi ti, Eourth Mireel; or at the Depot. Thirteenth and Callowhlll streets. WEST CHE-iTEU AND PHILADELPHIA KAlLROAD, WIN 1K.R AltRANliEMu; .41. -uii auu aiter juasii ua. i , uctuuor o, loua, iraius will leave as follows: Leave Philadelphia from the Depot, THIRTY JflRST auu CHEbN UT Hireeis, 7 46 A. M.. 11 A.M., 2 Jo P. M , 415 P. M., 4 60 P. M., ti-15 aud 11 0 P. M. Leave West Chester tor Philadelphia, from Deport on East Market street at 6 2& A. M., 7 45 A. M., -uo A. 10-45 A. M., l oo r. ju., s ou jr. ju.., auu S'oa tr, M. Trams leae West Cheater al oO A. M.,aud leav ing Philadelphia at 4 50 P. M., win stop at B. C. Juno tlou and Media only. Passeugers to or irom station between West Chester and i. U. Junction, going Eaht, will take train leaving West Chester a. 7-.6 A. U., and going West wilt take the train leaving Philadelphia at 4 60 P. M., and transfer at B. o, juuciiuu. . w . The uepot in rutinuotFut w iwuteu airectiy oy the Chesnut and Walant titreit cars. Those of tne Market Hireet line run within one square. The cars of both lines connect with each, train upon lie arrival cmon . Leave Philadelphia at 8 mi a. M. and 2-00 P. JL Leave West Chester at 7'd6 A, M. aud 4 00 P. M. Trains leaving Philadelphia at 7 '45 A. M. aud 4-F0 P. M., and leaving west uuesior at 8 oo A. M. aud 4'60 jr. M., connect at x. vi juuciiuu wuu trains ou A. & B. C R. R., lor Ultu auu lutuiuieuiata poiuui. 4 ief t Bti. a uwu, uenerai bud t. DHUiADELtPHlA, UERflLANTOWN, AND NOiUliBlur Sxty-J1M TABi. Leave PhUsdelphla 6, 7, 8, o6, lo, li, U A. M.. 1. 1. t. iH. 4.6,63, 8-10.7, 5 ,10,11, 1'AP. M. A-tave ttmutnii wnu o, i , i?m, o, o 4J. y, ju, At, IX A, M., 1 2. Hilt i,tt7lL ,ti,tlwl11 t"1. Tbe 8 2u Down Train, and aj aud h Up Trains i WIU not slop cn the uermauwwn rranca, JM tUl.lA 1 El, Leave Philadelphia 9MA.ll, t, 7, 1W P. M. LeavetiermantuwnSM A. M. 1. 6, B P. U. CHEHTNUT HILL RAILROAD. Leave Phlladelnhla a. 8. lo. li. A. M.. 2. aV. 6V. 7. a and U P. M. Leave Chestnut xiiii i iv, o, ana iriu A. n& l'U 4-40, 6-10. i-40, 8 40. ana 1U 40 r. xn. Leava Philadelphia V A. M. i and 7 P. H. Leave Chestnut HHl 760 A.M.. IZ'40, 6'40 and 9-28 Kilo- ivwouwwv. u lYuitnioivwn. Lave Phlladeipma o, and 1106 A. U. IU. . ... .-1 M.,.K Ana l u . m - T.'.l.,.n A ill. 1. 7.... U. mnit 11 . VT . , . . 1 X.ia. r,,oM BUNDYs. Ajt-V ' " 1 -l S, ,. Philadelphia 8 A. M., and 7Te P. it. litave Norrlutown 7 A. M.. 6-ito aud 8 P, M. Leave Philadelphia e,7-; H, ad 11-SS A. ix. 1, 4H, 6S. 0 UD- "f..,T mt,. "... i dil.i ly o-t nd UH A. M Leave Philadelphia ia, M ii ana tm r. m, llve fiUw-unk 7H A. M., 6 and T. M. yoVV. b. WIlION. Ueneral Superintendent, Depot, NINTH and UREEN BtreeU, VTOimi PENNSYLVANIA KAILR3AD. IN t ut BETHLEHE. DOY LkBTOWN. MACeH til UN K, KA-'lUM, W1LLIAM3POR1 WILKIC-4- PITTfaT'6N, TUNKUANNOCK. aNO HORANTON. WINTER ARRAIUEMENTS. Pasr enger Trains leave the D tpot, corner ot UK 11 lis aud AMUitiCAN bireeis, uatiy (auuaays exodptudj am follows: At 7 45 A. M. (Express for R-thlehem, Allentowa, Muucli e 11 link, lla.letou, Wlliiamsport, Wlikesourre, Mttnanoy City, Plttston, and Tuukhaunock. U'45 A. M. (hxpretb) lor Jtctltlt-lieoi, Easton, Allen titwu, MaucU Cnuuk, Wllketbarre, Plttston, and At 1 46 P. M. (Exrres) for Bethlehem, Mauob epulis, wititi'Buttrtt), i-iiLtou, ituu ncraiiion. At b-'JOP. M. lor Bethlehem, Eastou, Ailentown and Uauch Chunk. For Doy leslowu at 8'45 A. M., 2 45 and 4-15 P. M. For Fort Washington at 10 4i A. M. aud 11 HOP. M. V.,r LuiiKdale at b'2 1 P. M. l'li li and tlxlb streets, Hecobd and Third troi. and Uulou City Panseuger Railways ruu 10 the new TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA From Bethlehem at 10 A. M 10, 6 26, and 8 ?'yiom Doylestown at 8-35 A. M 4-56 and 7 P. M. From jtu!nle at 7v.O AM. ' trout Fort Wabhingion at lit li A, M. and 810 P. M Philadelphia for lietlilnliem hi 0 30 A. M. Philadelphia lor Doy leniowu at 2 P. M Doylestown for Hhlladelpnia at 7 A. U, llnlltli Ut ui for Phlliitie nltla at 4 P. M. 'Ilikels sold and Railage rltfckttl OiriUKh at Mann's North Pennaylvauia Bitagu Eiprcss Olllue, nd. int.iitm n.icet. gl.U CLARK; Agut, AUCTION SALES M. oUVB Noa- i Pale at the Auction Rooms, Nos. m and l41 Bt Foartlt HANpHOMKFURNITurlT. PINn , Jl AIM I (HOMK VELVET. HRtmshlyrV CARPET8, KTO -UAAlEtt , . un rnnrsaay rsday Morning, , - -i .lit, titifia ronm" rtw.i i?n",w.,?"ofl,n"tof lrlor ho,I?hSrrt Jit niiure.comprliiliig handsome walnut parlor dinlnr room and library furniture-, oiled wain"? iSin 5; snlta: superior rosewood 7-octave plano-rorie S by Chambers A Oabler; French plate mlrrnra,' warfc Jan. 7. at v o clock. Blaflfl Klltl 111 Kl O rl warn. Kn. . . ping fine hair mattresses, superior ortice furniture handsome chandeliers. gas cotiHiimlng and cook In Moves, handsome velvet, Brussels, autf olber oarpnte. eto. etc. 15 it BUNTING, PUKBOROW A CO.. AUCTIOHe RKRH. No, nzand !W4 MARKET HtreetVco,.?. of Rank sUeeU Buoceasors to John B. Mjere tdktag, PEREMPTORY RALW OP A FTR9T-CLAS4 RW TAIL STOCK OB- DRY OOOD . . Un Thursday Morning, w&VtLZ$U9 ''c'"ck uu 4 aionth' ere?l' THOMAS BIRTH ft BON, AUCTION EBRS AND COMMIWWION M K1WHANTO 1W tf CHEetN UT btieet; rear entrano.fi?OT Vi. LARGE BALE OF LA DISS' FANnv -.LEIeiH ROllKS, ETO .. ,. " 'I'bnrsday M.rnlng, furs. MllPft.Wl ltBal.i aut.nf.J' Cbftlltlt j uiw, v iue auctiou store, ISO. llier!hnnni vill be sold a stock of superior EancVPurJ log seui of mluk. sable, a and 4 tr"pe; ro3 sus, Ulierl.n squirrel and n ch ihii i'.. .tin rnlloM B.inl..l. u m.mw coaprlslni ermine se n n lis. cncs collars, satnlielii. tn. fc.LI.IHH ROBES.-A ISO grey fox, wolf, rock mar ten raccoon, ber, and bnrlalo robes. Tbe furs can be examined on Wadursday. 1 5 !t tTTDTjI,8a1e at No. 11 lo Chf-smit street i i ii io ejiiespiii street t HOUSEHOLD FUKNUllKF PIANn CA RPETtS l IHllOKS. PLATE j WARE V,U1.H8yVAKK, ETO. ttaaih,. PORT ;m,ca1 CUTLERY. U (ltl It'rlilau l...l.. m0 k' Ki ',h.e i'cthin store, No. lllOChosnat S.,,W.'" h.e 'rge asHoriraent of s,.,,,,, " Ktoua-band. ' "Dd Ulfl,u rooul '"'"Itro. now and CI AMPAGWR wine. ,,.,.,. On Friday Morning. :.. ,.?ck,i ilie suotton store, will be toll loo Z?i.vt WtotU to. -g champagnes of various l2t L1PPINCOTT, BON 4 CO., AUCTIONEERS AbHHURoT BUlLDIN;No;240 MARi W.' NOTICE .,?e?!!,.'!r',Mf'fDry Woods 'Notions, Trlmmlnir JaunJIy. tV"y WEDNESDAY tbVJugh Cullblliomentfl ol filnrlr rinnrt. cm .nit.t. Bales hashed within live days. ' """'-"' ClutI;XII0NEEE8- ko- a ,." "TniS DAY, Morning and Evening, A large Invoice ol Blankets, Bed ttpreads, Dry eioods Cloths, Citfslnieres. lloulery, blallouery, Table and PocRet Cutlery, Noilons, et;. " e-iiy auu country merchants will find bargains. Terms cash. Ccods packed free of charge g n V. McCLFfS & CO., ALCT10NEEU8 s . j 0. ! . tos MA1.KE1 iitieet. HALE OF BC0T6, rROJil! BROOAKb, BALMO- HAI.B ETC. On Thursday Morning, Jan. 7. at 10 o'clttea. we will sell, bv catalniuip. fir owl, a lafgeassortment of men's, bays', aud youths' DU'tis, buoes, nri'sans. ouiuiora s, etc. a'po. a lurge uue or lauits', misses', anu cniinren wesij 12 4t MARTIN B110THER3, AUC 1 1 ON E ERS. I ..aleiy t-ali mupii lur M. Thomas & bona.) No. CHEmnut bt.. ear entrance troiu Minor GOVERNMENT SALES. SALE OF DAMAGED CLOTHING AMI i;uUU'AGE. AStll'. tUAKTKUMASTEU-GKNEBAL'80t'PrC8!, ) 1 hiMuiLi-aiA, una. io, iu3. J Will be sola at public auotluu, under the di rect Km if Cupula W. U. GUI, Military 8 lore- keeper, u. H. Army, on nocaunt 01 IheUulted BtHttn. at the bCllU YLlvILL AKIKNALj, OKAY'S D iSHHV KUau, iu tne city of Paiia iltipulB, Pa., on Til URSOAY, the 7tb of Jauu aty, IKi'J. at 10 A. M , the follovln uainea artl-cle-e 01 elaruagea clothing and. equipage, rag, etc. ei., vik : 'Jit b orage caps. 1 BluDkete, woollen. 314 Uniloim Coa'8. 60 Uniform Jackets.1 cavalry. 1,833 Uniform Jacbets, LigbtAr.illcry. 1 819Great Coats,! 897 K n a p s a 0 k s . strapped. 2,700 Axe Handles. 62 Hatchet Handles 411 Cttinp Colors. 2 Htorm Flans. 32 Canteens, com plete. 221 Trumpet and Buttle Cords and 2,738 pounds ' Burlaps, old. 1,110 pounds Cuttings, white cotton. 10,101 pounds Cuttings, old tent. 2,3.V pounds Paper, old 1 4ii3 pounds Hags, old. 7,971 pounds So.raps Iron. 288 pounds Scraps Old Knapsacks, Hoi Bern tn. SO Great Coals, Foot men. 04 p a 1 r Trousers, Hoi semen. 292 pair Trousers, Footmen. 157 Suck Coals, lined. 10 Sack Uouts. un- lined. 470 Shine, flannel and Knit. 609 pair Orawew. 164 pair Slocklogs 20 Haversacks. 600 Boxes. Old. 1 lot of Lumber, old: also, a quantity of Chevrons, Feathers, Fifes, Scales, Drums, eto. Tbe sale will commence at 10 o'clock A. M. oa tbe day above mentioned, aud eontiuue from day to day until tbe whole of tbe property ad vertised is soiu. Terms oasn in uovernmeni lanas. All property purchased must be removed Within 5 (live) days from tbe dale of tbe sale. Catalogues will be furnished on application at tbis oilice, or at that of tbe Military Store keeper at the Schuylkill Arsenal. v D. H. KUCKER, Assistant Quartermaster- General, 12 29 8t brevet Majoi-Geueral U. 8. Army. CARRIAGES. E S. Noti e Is respectfully given to oostonieri ana olhsr desuleg C'AiiklAulLSof the MANUFAOTUUB or WM. D. ROGERS, OF OHESNUT STREET, To Place their orders aa sooa as possible, to Inaurt their ootnplellon for the DRIVING SEASON OF 18G9. CARRIAGES REPAIRED In the most beat and cxiieflitlous manner. , -. t AltltlAOKa bTOBED and Insnrance effeot , WM. D. ROGERS, Kos. 1009 and 1011 CUESJiCT Street, A 11 6 fm w2m PHILADUL . TVB. KINKELTN, AFTEB A RESIDENCE and nraotloe of thirty years at ins Mprthweal - 77T.n nfi i.irA tnd Union HtraeUi. has lately ro- uToved to Bimth ELKVEisiXH Btreat, between MAJ4- Htaserlorin'trii Prompt and Pwrectonrjoi all recent, chronic, locaf, and oonstltuUonal atfeo tlens of a special nature, Is proverbial. .nartA tlh Diseases of the skin, anpearlut; In ."J fewut forms, totally eradicated; wnUl and P hysloal weakness, and all nervous debmtles solentinoaiy and sucoessrully treated. Uttiue tours from I A. m. ol?. H. Si KBRICK & SONS BOTJTHW4RK FOUWDKr. DJ J 11 TV (SSU -w - lt No. 4M WASHINGTON AVKSOX. Philadelphia. WilXIAM WRIGHTS PATKNT VARIABLE CUT OX STEAM-JCNGIN BMnlated by the Governor. WIRRICK'S SAFETY HOISTING MACHINB, PateuteOJane. yID JOY.a PATKJST VALVKLBiS S TRA M H4MI4HUt. p. M. WESTON'S PATfiNT SKLF-CKNTKIUNG, SKLF-U LANC'l Jia CUNlKlFCUALUUAU-DUA.lNlNij aU-CtllOIIfi HYDRO KXTR4CTOK, ' V.'iiSUtUilU'iii.:UA4. JIUiW R kl I A C