MM' THE D AILS' KVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2G, 18C9. mj dfcT. ,i ... (Evening clcgtaiili PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON (Bl'KDATB BXCKPTKU), AT THE EVENING TKLEGRATn BUILDING, MO. mfl 8. T1I1KD STREET. PHILADELPHIA. The Price i thru crM per cttpy (double, sheet); or eighteen ceitt per week, payable to the carrier by whom trrvrd. The mibfurriptvon price by mail is A'ine IMlam pre annum, or One Dollar and Fifty Cents ftrr two mimthK, invariably- in advance for the time ordered. THURSDAY AU(JUST 20. 18W. THE NEW DOMINION. Thk young English prince has not gone to the New Dominion one day too hoou. The discontent of the people in rapidly increasing, nnd their loyalty is waning away ho rapidly that the presence of half a doon of Victoria's children may soon he necessary to quell the n.-pirations of the Kanucks for independence and annexation. The abrogation of the llooi proeity treaty has demonstrated the vital im portance of free trade with the United States, and the conviction is rapidly growing that if it can be had on no other terms than incorpo ration in the Union, those terms should be submitted to. English aid to Canada is ne cessarily Helfish and comparatively useless. Millions of English capital have been ex pended in the construction of Canadian rail ways, but the routes have been selected rather with a view to promote the military interests of Great Britain than with a desire to accommodate the people. Their welfare is made subordinate to ulterior designs, and if their affairs can be manipulated in a man ner conducive to British interests, the home government cares but littlo how much they may Buffer. The whole New Dominion scheme was founded on the false idea that a powerful confederation could be built up on our Northern i rontier as a check to American progress; that eventually a railway route from the Atlantic to the Pacific could be opened to the British possessions, which would be come a formidable rival of the continental railways of the United States, and that the bulk of British emigrants, hereafter, would seek new homes in this new elysium. But these plans were completely thw.irtel by the abrogation of the Reciprocity treaty. It demonstrated that all the aid Great Britain could render was of no practical value if American markets were not freely opened to Canadian products. Instead of attracting emigrants from Europe, the New Dominion has sent hundreds of thousands of her best citizens to the United States; and at a recent annexation meeting held in Quebec, one of the speakers said that 1,'. ""(), 000 Canadians were now "prosperous, contented and happy" in this country, while those who remained behind were "miserable, nnd one-half of the year restricted to the bare necessaries of life." John Bud has made nearlv as bad a failure in his New Dominion project as Napoleon made in his scheme to establish an empire in Mexico. Animated by the same motive, jealousy of the Republic, they have both been discomfited by the iu herent impracticability of their plans, and their folly would be laughable, if it had not caused much misery to the immediate victims of their experiments. In striving to engirdle or crush us they have only depleted their own treasuries and imposed unnecessary suli'erings upon the people to the north and southwest of our broad dominions. The practical question in the New Dominion to-day is quaintly expressed by a writer in the Montreal press to be, "Shall we become a na tion of marksmen, and the object annexa tion ?"' And the general disposition to answer this question in the ailirmative is only checked by the exaggerations of the Lnvdeus of the American debt which are publisho 1 in the Tory newspapers. A candid examination of the bugbear, however, results in the convic tion that the existing debt of the New Dominion is more oppressive to the people, in their present impoverished condi tion, than their share of our debt would be, if their prosperity was restored by free trade with the United States. Sooner or later this Agitation can have but one result. It must load to annexation. But it is better for all parties that the subject should be thoroughly considered in all its bearings, and if our Gov ernment steadily refuses to re-establish the Reciprocity treaty the Canadians will inevi tably learn the value of a close atliliatiou with the American people. MOSES TUB SECOND. Asir.i:w Johnson, of Tennessee, some time President of the United States, has been both misapprehended and misrepresented. Some stupid or malicious Bohemian, in reporting his recent speeches, represented him as claiming to have set free the sluvesof Tonnes see, while acting as Military Governor of that State, by authority of President Lincoln; while a still more stupid or still more mali cious Bohemian recorded him as claiming to have acted under the authority of the Consti tution of the United States. The ardent admiration which Mr. Johnson has always ex pressed for that instrument, and the extreme devotion with which he guarded its integrity and inviolability for nearly four years, led us to credit the latter statement in the most unqualified manner. Mr. Johnson s profound knowledge ol the lunuameniai law of the land most certainly qualified him for dovisinu some constitutional manner of accompliHhing his object, while his professions of sublime devotion to that immortal document should certainly have resiraineu mm irom going about the business in an unconstitutional way. With what astonishment, then, do we read an authoritative correction as to the course and motives of the Groat Emancipator, recently published in a Tennessee paper The Moses of Tennessee is made to develop a uew and unlooked-for phase of his many sided character, to reconcile an unflinching devotion to the Constitution with an open do fiance of its unmistakable provisions. But this is not the most astonishing part of the business. Not only does Mr. Johnson explicitly deny that he claimed to act the part of liberator by virtue of the Constitution, the flag, and the thirty-Reven stars; but he further declares that he did not claim to act by the authority and direction of Mr. Lincoln, who, as Commander-in-Chief of the military forces, proclaimed liberty throughout the land and to all the inhabitants thereof as a war mea sure, rendered necessary and justifiable only by the exigencies of the conflict at the period when emancipation was proclaimed. All the world knows that Mr. Johnson is the last man in the country to advocate the right of the military to ovorrido the civil power. But all the world knows equally well that Mr. Johnson acted for some time as Military Governor of Tennessee an officer, to quote his own words, "unknown to the Constitution nnd the laws" and, further more, that, during the dark days of the war, he gave a hearty support to all the war mea sures adopted by the Government for sup pressing the Beiiellion. It would be natural, therefore, to suppose that if Mr. Johnson were to deny that he went into the Moses business under warrant of the Constitution, he had done so by virtue of the military des potism of which he was the head and front in Tennessee. Yet even this assumption is denied by his alleged desire, and ho is represented as saying that he freed the slaves of Tennessee, not by authority of Mr. Lincoln, nor under or by authority of the Constitution, but that he did so "by the broad, inherent right which God gave to every man to own and control him self." Or, to use his own words in a speech delivered at Knoxville: "I myself proclaimed that slavery no longer existed in Tennessee; that every man was free by the inherent prin ciples in him." Now this whole story is ut terly incredible, and unworthy of belief with out further authentication. Besides being in conflict with the well-known constitutional views of Mr. Johnson, it is in conflict with his well-known modesty, and until we hear more upon the subject we are forced to believe that it is merely a device of some enemy of the ex President, alio seeks to bring him into disre pute. The fact that the alleged authoritative correction sees the light through the columns of the Knoxville M'iiy, which is owned by l'nrson Brownlow, lends weight to our posi tion. Parson Brownlow "s hntred of Andrew Johnson is so intensely bitter, and his charac ter ns a politician so unscrupulous, that he would cheerfully lend himself and his news pnper to such a dirty purpose as that of de faming the Great Emancipator of Tennessee, the stout defender of the Constitution, and the champion of the tlag with the thirty seven stars. THE IS I'll LING A ME EMI1ASSY. A si:hiks of very remarkable rumors have reached us from China with regard to the rejection by the Pekin Government of the treaty concluded with the United States by Mr. Burlingames embassy, and with regard to the character of that embassy, which, if the rumors be correct, turns out to be some thing very different from what was xupposod. The rather vague despatch from Hong-Kong informs us that the Pekin Government refuses to ratify the convention concluded by Mr. Burlingamc and his embassy with the United States: that the Chinese text of Mr. Burliu game's credentials differs from the foreign version in the former he is ap pointed Envoy of China to tributary nations nnd, lastly, that J. Boss Browne, the late American Minis ter to China, in reply to nu address of the American and British residents at Shanghai, has denounced Burlingame's policy, and de clares that the establishment of foreign rela tions with China on a basis of equality is im possible at present. There are a number of suspicious circum stances about all this which indicate that all the craft and duplicity is not on the side of the Chinese authorities. These disconnected and very unsatisfactory reports come to us from Hong-Kong, which is almost exclusively a British settlement, and the headquarters of British influence and intrigue in China. The selection of an American as the chief of the imposing embassy which was sent out with the ostensible purpose of demanding admission for China into the family of civilized nations, gave mortal offense to the English traders, who saw in this action an indication of A mcviean supremacy in the councils of the Empire, and the loss of their own influence. Boh in China and at home they threw every possible obstacle in the way of Mr. Burlin game, nnd it was only by his fine tact and the obvious justice of his demands that he was able to overcome them. There is very little doubt that British intrigue has been at work upon the jealousies and fears of the Chinese Government, nnd that Mr. Burlingame and the work that he has been engaged in have been misrepresented in every conceivable manner. If the treaty is really rejected. therefore, the probabilities are very groat that the English are really responsible for it. As for Mr. J. Boss Browne, it is very likely that but littlo difficulty was found in getting him to tnke the position he does. His ap pointment to the delicate ond responsible po sition of Minister to China was a matter of surprise with every one, and his prompt re moval by President Grant was a matter of intense dissatisfaction with himself. Mr. Browne's denunciation of the Burlingame policy, therefore, is not difficult to account for on the grounds of jealousy and disap pointment. At the Bamo time it must be acknowledged that the alleged course of tho Chinese Gov ernment is fully in accordance with their established reputation for duplicity. They fe r the "outside barbarians," who can sweep their country, batter down their walls, and sack their cities with a handful of men, but they are not willing to dismiss their own pride and come down from the lofty height where they have placed themselves, so as to acknowledge the equality of other nations, or to recognize foreign princes, except us the inferiors of the "Brother of the sun nnd the first cousin of the uiooa." A singular instance of this has just been shown by the refusal of the Chinese court to receive the English Prince Alfred on terms of equality. Some years ago there was a similnr difficulty with the English Minister upon a point of etiquette, and the Chinese Empe ror refused to receive hiiu unless he and his suite went through the ceromony of knocking their heads upon the ground a certain pre scribed number of times. The capture of Pekin put nn end to that sort of nousense, but it is more than possible thnt the favorable accounts which hnve been sent home by Mr. Burlingame nnd the members of his embassy may have persuaded the Imperial Govern ment that now nil their difficulties were nt an end; thnt there wns no longer any danger thnt ships of wnr would batter down their cities whenever some Englishman or Ameri can hnd a real or fancied grievance to be redressed, and thnt they were consequently at full liberty to mnnngo affairs in their own fashion without let or hindrance. There is every renson to believe that Mr. Burlingame undertook the embassy with the purest motives, nnd the treaties which he has concluded are all more advantageous to China than to any one else. If the reports about the rejection of the trenty with tho United States and the irregularity in Mr. Burlin game's credentials are true, that gentleman will be placed in a very embarrassing posi tion. We are very much inclined, however, to doubt the whole story until some more positive information is received, and if there is any trouble, there is very littlo doubt that an investigation of the case will show that British intrigue and jealousy are at the bot tom of it. STEPHENS ON SECESSION. The ex-Vice President of tho Southern Con federacy, A. II. Stephens, continues from time to time to ventilate his theories about State rightB, the rightfulness of secession, the justice of the Southern policy in originating the war, and other favorite Southern abstrac tions. It is scarcely worth while to fight over these old battles. If the bloody contest de cided anything, it settled them. Even Ste phens is now compelled to admit that the alleged right of secession "is not based on the Federal Constitution, but upon the au thority that made that compact." In admit ting this he admits everything thnt was ever seriously controverted. If people choose to rush into rebellion or revolution, they can and will do so whenever they feel that it is safe and desirable to encounter thnt fearful risk. A million of men can defy a national or State authority, if they please, just as a band of robbers mny resist a sheriff's posse, or a bur glar knock down a policemnn. In either case they must take tho consequences. The danger nnd deception of the favorite South ern doctrine consist in the pretenso that a resort to secession is legal nnd lawful in the ordinary acceptation of tho term, and that tho American people have no right to coerce a State. Faith in this delusive idea precipi tated the Rebellion, but tho result proved that the nation will maintain itself intact at nil hazards, nnd that tho alleged right to defy the national authorit ies by State action is of no more value than tho right to batter your head against a stone wall, to press your breast against a line of gleaming bayonets, or to attempt to ascend to the moon in a flying machine. Pi:iiSLXXTIO. OntniKCN on t!ie .lews ot IHoliliiviu. .ir Francis Goldsmid sends to the London Telegraph the following translation of a letter from Moldavia, giving information respecting the persecution of the Jews In that princi pality: "Families accustomed to every domestic com fort have been driven from their homes, anil arc obliged to wander about without knowing where to reft their weary limbs. The poor exiles have not even been allowed time to collect the scanty remnants of their portable property. They have been despoiled, defrauded, and ill-treated yet no one conies forward to procure for them the needful sympathy, and to put a top to the infamous proceedings. On the last festival of Pentecost the village Jews were thrown into wagons and removed from 41. ..ft. .1. .,tiilu Mintiliir lwlnnn.1 timetlces were Illicit ivuui ........ -. repented on subsequent Sabbaths, so as to nirirra- vatc the ottensiveucss auu inortuviux eiieci oi these persecutions. Women in the agonies of childbirth were dragged away from their couches. In vain did they Implore to have only one day's respite granted them. "Among the Jewish villagers was ono who. during the whole period of the famine of 18(H), had relieved the laborers residing In the vicinity, and had thus aflorded sustenance to no less than eighty families. Tho sum thus expended amounted to 7000 francs, as is proved by the papers he left behind and whic h bear the olficial seals of the sub-prefect, as also of tho chief of the village. During the same period this bene volent Jew caused a new bridge to be con structed at his expense, when tho former one had been carried away by the overflowing of tho river. In like manner this Jew had con ferred many other benefits upon his fellow villa gers. Scarcely, however, had the mm stry the first rescript fortfio expulsion of the Jewish villagers, when the sub-prelect nnd the chief of the yi lago Biivmo seized this same Jew, together with his wife and children, threw them into wagons, and carried them awav from their comfortable homes. His charitable works and the documen tary evidence of his public usefulness obtained tor him no consideration. PEACHES. An Ori liiird Forty-live Jlilei Long. George F. Akcrs, of Nashville, who Is at pre sent ou a visit to Virginia, writes to a friend in Kashvillo from Petersburg that "tho breastworks in front of Petersburg thrown up by tho Con federates during the late war. extending to the left towards Richmond about twenty miles, and to tho right about twenty-flvc miles, for the de fense of the city, have grown up In a connuoii8 line of peach trees of every variety, vie ding an abundant crop tho present year. This Is the only legacy left by tho ofcdeattfrwIlt?nrWfle'ef on the advance line within one ?Z the enemy. Having eaten the trult ; while .on picket duty, they cast the seed 'lnd no they appear in one continuous line of loi-flvo miles in beautiful trees, ylcldiug tho greatest variety of tho finest fruit." ui.i....i hv ltnilrond. ( The quantity forwarded by railroad on . Tuesday Benson. jne uuuuiuu nw -- .. .....j i -i i . n..i.iu'uru lino, cou- signed to New York, seven to Philadelphia, and two lor Wilmington, uiiikiiik hi and sixty-four car loads. Hilnunytuit Vow- ?iitrca(. A LIFE FOR A BALLOT. Murdrr of nn InoflrnnlTe Citizen In Kentucky. Prom the Xathrilte Banner, Last Friday evening (August SO), not long be fore sundown, Captain W. L. Hathaway and Mr. Henry Frazier left Snilthvllle for the house of a man named Bradford, about four miles distant. On the way, no hostile feeling was exhibited by Hathaway towards his companion, who was re garded ns one of the quietest and most lnofTon slvc citizens In Do Kalb county. After reaching Bradford's a glaso of cider was indulged In, when some remarks wero made as to the result of the recent election. Hathaway, who supported Center nnd the May Convention, but afterwards went went over toVtokes, soon became very ln tctiipcrnte in his language, and said that "any man who voted for Center was a rascal, md that he could whip any scoundrel who did vote for Center." Mr. F ritzier quietly replied. "I don't believe you can." Hathaway Immediately put his hand" behind him, and was in the net of drawing his pl.tol, when he was seized by Barton, while James Williams, the f htritf of the county, who was present, held Mr. Frnzicr. although tho latter was unarmed and liiadc no movement whatever. Just at this moment fieorge Hathaway, a brother of Captain llatlmwuy. came up and 'pushed Barton rudely aside, saying to his brother. "Now shoot the rascal if you want to. ' Captain Hatha way at once fired on Mr. Frazier, who was still in the grasp of the Sheriff. Two shots took effect, one in Mr. Frazicr's side and one in his heart. He fell to the earth and did not live more than two minutes. No effort was made by the Sheriff to arrest either of the murderers. George Hathaway was subse quently apprehended by a posse of eitizeus, but his still more guilty brother had not been found nt last accounts, although a diligent search was being made for him. W c devoutly hope that the dastardly and cold-blooded assassin will be brought to justice. His career of blood has lasted long enough. A rutllan and a bully by instinct, he has kept around him since the war a band of desperadoes who have been the terror of the peaceable and order-loving citizens among whom they dwell. It has been a mystery to us how his murderous band could have ruled there so long. Although ever armed to the teeth, Hathaway, like all cowards, has never sought to vent his infernul fury except on the unarmed and defenseless. He knew that Mr. Frazier had no weapon, and was not anticipating any colli sion. Aided directly by his brother, who was of tho same stripe, and Indirectly bv the sheriff, who thus wantonly violated the laws he had been elected to enforce, the deed was easy of accom plishment. SPECIAL NOTICES. BQ$r FOR THE SUMMER. TO PREVENT sunburn and nil discolorations and irritations of tho Bkin, bites of mosquitoes or other inects, use W rent's Alconiited Glycerine Tablot. It is delioiously fragrant, t ransparont, and has no equal as a toilet soap. For sule hy d,7;ift'i!??ner"11J'' K- . A. WKIOHT, No. i4 Clli'.bNUT btreet. 245 JJQT U. S. OFFICE OF ARTIFICIAL LlMBs! An appropriation ($50,000) having been made by Congress for purchasing ARTIFICIAL LIMBS FOR OFFIOF.RS of the United States Army and Navy mutilated In the service, application may now be made, in person or by letter, by ofticors entitled to the bonetit of the act. and who desire the best Artificial Limbs, to Dr. fe. FRANK HALMF.K, Surgeon Artist, No. UW CHK.SNUT Street, Philadelphia, No. 678 IlKOADWAV, New York, .,. No. hi (iRKK.V Street, Boston. 5 12? Offices for Supplying Army anil Navy Officers. Bgy J. E. (ioi'LI), NO. ;J CHESN'tJT Street, is selling Kteck A Co.'snnd Haines Bros'. Pianos and Mason Jt Hamlin's c'nbinet Orguns nmr'v ui tow at at umtjonnrr time. JS Jfcir YANKEE GREEN CORNUTTEliS. for table and kitchen use, give you the healthy pulp without the indigestible hull. Various stylos nnd prices, from 23 cents up, for sule at all the house-furnishing stores. h 7 jfcgr- DR. F. R. THOAIAs7tHE LATE OfE- rator of the Colton Dental Association, is now the only one in Philadelphia who devotes his entire time and practice to extracting tee'h, absolutely without pain, by fresh nitrous oxide gas. Office. KU7 WALNUT St. 1 Uri JOSE V O E y", Medico-Cirujano de la Universidad do la Habana, recihe consultas de P a It de la uianana y de 3VJ a H de la tarde en su ofli-ina cullo Nuovt isud) No 735. Roskloncia en lit culle de Green, No. 1&17. DR. JOSKPH POKY, Graduate of the University of Hubana (Dubai, has re moved his office to No. Kb S. Ninth street. Rosiclenco, No. 1H17 Groon street. Office Houre-H to 11 A. M. S)J to ti P. M. 7 2!tf iiS? JAMES M. 8 0 6V E h, LAWYKR, OAMOF.N, N. J. OolIections made everywhere in New Jersey. (! 12 t9 t IQT ELLIS' IRON BITTERS. "HAVING nsed your Iron Bitters in my praotioe, I can testify to its superior tonio properties for invigorating the appe tite and promoting digestion. I can unhesitatingly re commend it in cuses of general debility and dyspepsia, arnl in conditions of the system requiring the iae of a ferru ginous toniu. Its agreeable Uuvor must recommend it to all. ours, respect fully, Ciias. S. Gaunt, M. U., Pro fessor in the Philadelphia University of Medicine and fsurgesy." 24tuthfB5 For sale by JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY 4 COWDKN, No. ana AKCH Street, and by 1 i-uggists generally jC?2r THE liKtil'LAR MEETING OF THK REPUBLICAN IXVINCIBLKS will be hold at GASKILL'S II ALL, Corner FIFTH and BF.N.SON Streets. Camden. N. J., on IR1DAY EVFNING, 27th inst., at P. M., sharp. All who uenovo in lair play in politics aro uivita:! to attend. Addresses wi'l bo mnile byOF.ORGK UFRCFU Fsn and JACOB MUI.FOKll, Ks.t. ' '" By order ol the President. ft 28 ;lt RAMUKL ARCH Kit. GROCERIES, ETC WHITE PRESERVING BRANDY. GENUINE AND I'UHE French White Preserving Brandy, Imported direct, uml for sale by SIMON COLTON & CLARKE, S.W. CORNER BROAD AND WALNUT,, 7 1 Btuth PHILADELPHIA. fJEW SPICED SALMON, FIRST OF THE SEASON. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer In Fine Groceries, 11 T5 Corner ELEVENTH and VINE Street COAL. TMFORTANT TO COAL CONSUMERS. Save 20 percent. In the cost of your Fuel. Buy Broad Top SUM I -BITUMINOUS COAL at to $7 per ton, In stead of paying $9 for Anthracite. In Kurope no othor than BITUMINOUS COALS are used, and in Pittsburg and the West soft coals are used exclusively. Then vhy ean't we do tht same in Vhtlidrtphia t Broad Top Coal is a free burning SEMI-BITUMINOUS COAL, and is admirably adapted for STKAM PUB POSKS, and for the G RAT K, tho FURNACE, the RANGE, and the S'I'OVK. Is it not yju duty, therefore, to lay aside -riu.i with Anthracite at its present EX ORBlTAAlt'ATK. and THY if you cannot use Broad TopanuTM- similar good coals, and thus save at least 2 per ton inihe cost of yourfuelr Buy the Lump size, and when necessary break It as required. Broad Top T ual can be bad ol the undersigned, and most of the other I iial dealers. Be sure and a&k lor the Broad Top Coal. Coal dealers. llowKLluN (,OAL AND ,KoJ ()( S. W. cor. Front and Walnut. S. O. FORD A CO., fc Reading Railroad and Second street turnpike. GhOKUE A. HKUKHTON, Chesnut and Thirty-tUird Street a. U. B. WIGTON, Walnut street, below Dock. KKMBALL COAL a IKON Co!. No. SJ6 Walnut street. GEORGE MF.ARS, 8 7 Btutb, lmlp No. 31 Wftluut street. EXCURSIONS. (I RE AT INSTITUTION. MUNnrS MOONLIGHT KXOUPRION to ATLANTIO CITY, on SATURDAY KV KNING, SUth instant. Readsr, go. 8i8t JgECK'S PHILADELPHIA BAND, NO. 1. LAST GRAND EXCURSION AROUND NEW YORK BAY ASD STATEN ISLAND. Leaving Philadelphia, from WALNUT ST. WHARF, on Monday, August 30, 1869, at 7 '30 A. M. KARK r OR THK KXCURSION-Single Tickets, $3TO; (nut Ionian and Lady, Irfi 0U. Tickets can be piwurod at the Offices, 1"o. Ml and KM Chrsnut street, mce of Beck's B.nd, No. Market street, No. Wl (iirsrd avenue; and at the wharf on the nioining of the Excursion. 8 36 3t try LAST REtil'LAU TRIP TO CAPE Lf?MAV on KATl'KDAY Anguit 2.-The atiiiiiVEirt M earner LADY OK THE LAKE will make her laM regular trip t., CAP E MAY on SATURDAY, leaving A HUH STREET WHARF at HA. M., and return on Monduy. Fare, ini'luding carriage hire $2'2f Excursion tickets, " " SOU Tim IdMiy of 1 tin Lake will mnko an etra trip on THURSDAY, (September 2, and return next day. 836 2t DON'T FOKOET Ml'NDY'S MOONLIGHT FXCURSION to ATLANTIC CITY, h ATURDAY EVENING, 2Mb. intt. - M QRAND VISITATION OF THK KNIGHTS TEMPLAR, (IN FULL UNIFORM!, TO ATLANTIC CITY, ON SATURDAY. AUGUST 28, Leavinir VINE STREET FERRY at 20 P M., re nialning until MONDAY AFTERNOON. jraul Itetievr- ou Monday. ON SATURDAY EVENING URAND HOP WILL BE GIVEN AT THE SEA-VIEW HOUSE, Preceded by a display of FIREWORKS, under the supervision of Professor JACKSON. MASTER OF CEREMONIES. SIR WILLIAM WALLACE I.OUDWIN. FLOOR MANAGERS. Sir J. L. Hutchinson, I Sir John Tliornlv, Sir Charles L. Hale, I Sir Himnutms Neil. ASSISTANT MANAGERS. Sir Chas. II. Kingston, Sir Nuthau Smith, sir Chas. F; Meyer, Sir Thomas lirown, sir A. C. Ireland, sir H. (1. Clark, Sir John lluuuhl, I lOiliert Fra.er, iJohn W. Wallace, Horace Whitemaii, ;H. M. Mitcheson, 'John Lucas, j Thomas Farley, jllctijaiiuii il. jtrown, J as. II. Dayton, IJohn F. Starr, Nr.ionn L. lotuiK, Sir Edward Massoii, Sir E. S. Keeler, Sir W. C. Ewing, Sir F. L. Vinton, sir .John Woolverton, Sir Thomas J. Corson, Sir James II. Ileclitel, Sir .lames H. Stevens, Sir Seth Thomas, Sir J. L. Dp Cour, SirW. 11. F. Wood, Sir Georjre Shattuek, iSir J. Luyton Kocister. Complimentary Tickets, admitting a Gentleman and Ladles, may he obtained by Sir Knights and brethren of Eminent Commander Goodwill, ?o. 1117 Cherry street, Philadelphia, or of the Committee. Round Trip Tickets to Atlantic, good from Satur day until Monday, :hji). 8 25 4t 4p U N D Y ' S TWELFTH ANNUAL M0DNLIGHT EXCURSION TO ATLANTIC CITY On Saturday Evening, August 28, 1869. Last boat leaves Vine street whurf at S P. M. ; will arrive In Philadelphia at 0 'M on MONDAY MORNING FOLLOWING. Tickets, Jl-50. S 25 TrXCTRSION TO CAMP HANCOCK Aj "I'HII.ADEI.PHIA CITY GUARD." AT WHITEHALL, 1.E1IK1H COUNTY, PA. EXCURSION TICKETS from Philadelphia to White, hull will he issued from othces nf North Peunsylv.inia Railroad Company, No. lu.ri S. FIFTH St root, and corner KERKS and AMERICAN Streets, on August 21, J, 24, 2 ', 2i, 27. tiood to return uotil August - inclusive. l uroii-2 75 for round trip, 21 tit ELLIS CLARK, Agent. OF COURSE EVERYBODY WHO CAN (JET oft will Koon ML'NDY'S JUOONI.IGU T EXCUR SION to ATLANTIC CITY, SATURDAY EVENING, 2Hth inst. H2ii.lt "pEADING RAILROAD PARK ACCOMMO- DATION TRAIN Rotwoen Philadelphia and Uol mont, commencing August'.', 1?.1. Starting from station, SEVENTEENTH Street and PENNSYLVANIA Avenue, and stopping at Coates street (Park entrance), Itrowo si reft (Park entrance), Thompson street, Mitllin Lane (Entrance to F.ngel A Wolf's Farm), and east end of Co luinbia bridge (Entrance to Washington Retreat). (DAILY, SUNDAY. EXCEPTED.) Trains start, from Koven-iTrains start from Belmiint teentn and Pennsylvania: At b .si A . Al avenue : At 71U A. M. ( A. M. " lll'illA. M. " 13 20 Noon. " 2 lu P. M. " 4 oil P. M. " 6 as P. M. " 7 1U V. M, 111 A. M. ' H lKi A. M. " 1 HO P. M. ' 8 00 P M. ' 4 50 P. M. " 6 'M P. M. " 7 4U P. M. Arrangements have boen made with the Green and Coates Streets, Seventeenth and Nineteenth Streets, and Union Passenger Railways to sell exchange tickets in connection with above trains, good either wuy, for 13 cents. Single fares, on Park Accommodation Train, lu cents. Tickets iu Packages-7 for &0 cents, 14 for $1'UU. For sale at offices, Seventeenth street, Coates stree and Belmont. anu no m LOWRIE BELL, P6 22t Generul Agent. ( ET READY FOR MUNDV'S GREAT MOON vi light FxeimsioN to Atlantic city, on SATURDAY EVENING, 2th inst. t '6M WATCHES. JEWELRY, ETO. J E M O V A L. A.. 11. WARDEN, IMPORTER OF Watches, Diamonds, and Jewelry, Has Removed from the 8. E. corner of Finn ana Chesnut Streets to No. 1029 CHESNUT Street. PHILADELPHIA. N. B. WATCHES REPAIRED IN THK BEST MANNER. 3 Utlistui OLD MINQ. OUR MOTTO. CHEAP! CHEAP!! CHEAP!!! Is Etill Our Motto! YOU OUGHT TO SEE TUB GOODS WE'VE GOT. OH! THE AUGUST SUN SHINES HOT, HOT, HOT, OHt FINE CLOTUIS, CHEAPl A SPLENDID LOT! OH I AND "C'nEAP! CHEAP ! I CHKAP:!!" IS STILL OUR MOTTO!!!! WTE ARE DETERMINED THAT NOIiODY SHALL GO WIT BOUT GOOD SI MM ER CLOTH S WE ARE DETERMINED TO RUSH OFF OUR SUMMER STOCK REGAR JLESS OF PKK'B! I WE ARE DETERMINED TO SATISFY ALL GOOD FOLKS WHO WANT GOOD CLOTUBSit! WE ARE DETERMINED NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD BY ANYBODY AT ALL, SO, COME! COME ! COME! TO THE GREAT ZROWCT HALL OF ItOCKHILL & WILSON, N03. 603 AKD 605 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. DRY GOODS. RICKEY, SHARP & CO., NO. 727 CHESNUT STREET, ARE CLOSING OUT LAWNS, , ORGANDIES, And Other Summer Dress Goods, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. IT 13 tf THE GREAT FIRE AT YONKERS. H ER RING'S SAFES AGAIN TESTED ! Yokkebs, N. Y., August 13, 1369. MK88K8. Heuhinu, Fakiiei. a Sherman, Ni-w York Gentlemen : At the great Are here on tiun diiy niglit last (ili inst,), which covered an area of two blocks, we hart two of your Safes In our bull ling, whkh passed safely through the ordeal. When Urat discovered they were surrounded by burning lumbur, and bear evidence of luvlng had a severe test, as our place of business ccuoied seven lots, nil covered with buildings and lumber, ail of which were en tirely consume", and to this heat the Safes were exposed. It was with great satisfac'lon that wo found, upon cutting into our Safes, as they were so warped ani swollen they could be opened In no other way, that our books and papers and money were all saved ; indeed, the blils came out of the Safe without a singe, and nothing is discolored but the binding of the books. Respectfully yours, ACKEKT Ac QUICK, HERRING'S PVTENT CHAMPION SAFES, the most reliable protection from lire now known. HER RING'S NEW PATENT RANKERS' SAFES, coin bluing hardened steel and iron with the t atent Fiaiik.- lluite or SITKiiEL EiSEN, furnishes a resistant I fure unknown. FARREL, HERRING & CO., M1ILADELPHIA. HERRING, FARREL A SHERMAN, No. 881 BROADWAY', corner Murray St., N. Y. nERRING & CO., Chicago. HERRING, PARREL & SHERMAN. New Or- e litis. 8 19 4lf QREXEL & CO.. NO. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Aiuorlcn n niitl Foreign ISSUE DRAFTS AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CKED1T available ou presentation lu any nurt of Europe. Travellers can make all their financial arrange nients through us. mid we will col'.ect their Interest and dividends without charge. Dhkxel,Wlntd. op. I-Co., Dkbxki, Harjks & Co., New York. I raits. 3 10 4 PIANOS. -r-gj STEl K & CO.'S A: HAINES BUGS' TTPi I I'lANO-KOKTKS. S ' ANU MASON A lUMI.IN'S OABtNKT ANn MKT KOPOUTAN ORGAN'S villi Mi a naur utiH ..until.. I , . t "A. HUMANA. Kvory Inducement utfured to mrebaBrt. ,1 If 'ATTT 7 24Mtuth3in Kaiai CU kBN UT KiSit. fg?f-Tl R K M O v A L- ClilCKKRIKU CK ANIj.tjOllARK ANU UPRIGHT RKMOVKD'-iO ISoi. 1126 kiid 118 CHKSNUT 8TRKKT -8P,!U WILLIAM li. jiuTTOV. fife3 ALBREC1IT, ., '"U.I'UUFHtl or foil (ntriutee ind niixiernt urioM Hi WAKKUOOMS.N0)lOARQH8Uwt.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers