TIIE DAILf EVENING TELEGKAFIT PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 18C9. T uriRiT or ran tnnaa. wr finlnlon of lh lilln Jurne.N Upon Current Toplr. lln.v fur tho Kvenl Compiled Kvery n TeleKrnph. CANADIAN INDEPENDENCE. prom the A'. Y. World. Some days ago the Worll published a para graph upoii the politics of our northern neigh bors which has now called forth a letter in tho finuio strain from apeutlouiau with special means of knowing what Canadian wants and wishes really are. This topio is particularly timely jrwt now, Bimco Rome lewd Canadian follows of the baser sort have boon avowing themselves in favor of annexation to the United States, and hold ing meetings in furtherance of that design. It is certain that men who hold such opinions are of no appreciable importance in Canadian councils. Neither their numbers nor their characters ore such that wo can prudently build any expectations whatever upon their proceedings. Even if men of standing among their fellows should join them, as none such Lave joined them yet, the effect of such an accession would not be to raise the project, but to lower the recruits, in popular regard. Annexation is tho least popular of all the many modes by which the Canadians propose to rid themselves of the unhappinesses of their pre Bcnt lot. It is impossible that it should bo brought about for some years to come by the consont of the people chiefly concerned. And it would be very unwise in us to make airy attempt to bring it about before that consent can be obtained. . The reciprocal attachment of Groat Britain and her American dependencies is, it is true, altogether a matter of sentiment. Tho tine phrases about a common language and a common stock, which we are sure to hear trliAn a nartv of Americans and a party of Englishmen dine together, tickle the Canadian- ear witniar more poiuucy mu mail nuoic . with they smite the American 4ympanuui. The reason is that they are much truer in Canada than here. The dialect of Montreal is much nearer the pure Attio of the Seven Dials than is the speech of people in New York. And the Canadian blood, except jthe local infusion of French in the Eastern pro vinces an infusion which is merely local and by no means leavens the whole Canadian lump is much more homogeneous and much more British than our own. An English man who lands in Now York feels himself a stranger. lie is among a set of people who not only do not think with him or sympathize with him, but who neither look like him, dress like him. nor talk like him. But as soon as he has crossed the border he finds himself among a set of beings precisely after his own heart, accent, and trousers. They have not been transplanted lona enough to have any trace of the soil or the climate to which they Lave been brought, and in the continual ar rivals of British military and civic officers they are furnished with patterns to which it is the aim of their existence to conform them selves. The main difference between them is that the Kanuck is apt so to better his in. (.traction that he becomes an exaggerated Englishman, and that, as the colonist i3 said to have been detected at Athens by the purity of his accent, a Canadian in London might be picked out by his superlative and unap proachable cockneyisni. All this is doubtless very soothing to the Bonis of both Britons and Canadians. But, in this aee. attractions of sentiment cannot, ia the long mn, prevail over repugnances of interest. Great Britain spends a large sum Tiimn tha pnlmiiofl vnnrlv (inrl frets HO appreci able return for it, except the barren glory of Dossessine them. This is a source of annual crumbles in Parliament; and these grumbles, thouch first emitted merely for the sake of Errumblinc. become real grievances in the course of time. On the other hand, the colo nists chafe under the restrictions, trivial as they comparatively are, to which the home Government still subjects them, and under the fact that the quarrels which arise among themselves must be settled by an arbiter in Downing street. None of these questions can be so settled as not to leave a grudge on one side or the other. These reciprocal irrita tions are slowly, but surely, ripening towards an open ruptnre. And, even in a purely sentimental view of the case, the position of - our neighbors is not one of unalloyed buss. The rising genera tion of Canadians have an uncomfortable sense that they are not citizens of a country, but only inhabitants of a colony. And they seem to think that that colony is old enough now to sever the umbilical cord which stretches over the Atlantic, and to make an effort, at least, to get on alone. In the pre sent unsettled 6tate of their provinces, they Lave no public careers open to them, for their country has no clear political future. The more adventurous of them emigrate to the States for the arena which is denied them at home, but which would be open to them there if Canada were once a nation. But, with all these patriotic and intelligible aspirations for independence, there is none for annexation. And nothing can obstruct the attainment of Canadian independence more than threats or lures of American an nexation. We have already, at the South, one diseontented and depressed population, whom the reckless legislation of our radical rulers has made to feel that they are not citi zens, but aliens. Let us not think of making another at the North. If the Canadians wish, after they have attained independence, to become members of the Union, the question 01 annexation win ue in oraer. it is not in order now. And any attempt to moot it will only bind the Canadian closer to the mother country, from wboui the course of events would ' soon-1 detach them, and make the mother country more reluctant than ever to lot them go. . ' SUNSET'S SUNBURST. Prom the A'. Y. Tribune. Hon. S. S. Cox has just returned lrom a tour of desultory roaming about the Old World. It were superfluous to add that he has resumed speech-making. . If he were brought to confession, he would doubtless 4 'allow" that the lack of audiences was his chief privation while abroad and his strongest impute to come home. There were heavy charges to confront in London and Paris, " fiuhtinor and anarchy in Spain, and fleas in 'Algiers; but what, to the "spouting wretch," i a these to a dearth of ears around the stand, and an aWsence of cheers at the close of each . well-turned period ? Sunset resembles his great prototype, i that '"his home is in the right-setting sun";" and hither he turned his eager steps so soon as no uau wamou, vy no . quent trial ending in sore disappointment, Hi lit his most mellifluous cadenoes evoked no rosuonsive shouts from the forty generations whereon the Pyramids look down in most in ' vincible silenoe. Sunset, like ..his carpet Lagging compatriot, Jack Rogers, is nothing if not flatulent, and, having landed from ihe "steamer, and been duly serenaded, he, on Thursday nicht last, harangued a bevy oJ his admiring constituents after this humorous fashion; "Warn of violence and Institntlotis of barbarism are gone. It tn our now to gritpple and throttle I'iflss legislation anil monopoly, to destroy the nrm pollerg of labor, to champion iiirnln the principles of tlemocrallc expansion not the expannlon of Irre deemable currency or unrequited taxes, hnt the ex- iiHiiHiou oi territory ana the eslaiillHnsient anew 01 local Bclf-Rovernmont, bet It demand the standard currency of iroltl and silver, and the repeal 4 the atroeioiiH tarlif which HlmckliH commerce and para lyzes ludtiHtry." All which reminds tis that tho orator was in UoncresB throughout the Ions struggle which resulted in the overthrow of "tho in stitutions of barbarism," and noisily, with in temperate denunciation, resisted every Btep taken to make them bito tho dust. "Tho de spoilers of labor," by robbing it of its recom ponse and keeping it imbruted and degraded, had no more glib-tongued, unscrupulous pot- tnogger in tneir interest than tnis same uox, and their "class legislation and monopoly ever found in him a most facile tool. The "local self-government" he delights in would (rive all power in largo districts to loss than a quarter of the pooplo, who do little work, while those by whoso labor everything is produced are allowed by this throttler of class legislation and monopoly no voice in framing or executing the laws under which they must live. And this ho colls Democracy! bunset would have us believe his partv hos tile to "the expansion of irredeemable cur rency;" yet here is that party in his native Ohio supporting Pendleton for Governor, who insints on paying the national debt in green backs,, and applauding Ewing, senior, who wants fourteen hundred millions of new greenbacks issued on purpose to pay off that debt as cheaply as possible. No "expansion of irredeemable currency," indeed! Then what means the greenback plank in your last national platform ? The "standard currency of gold and Bilver that is just what your party in Congress have resisted every effort to re-establish. Iheir votes are on record against contraction, against resumption, against every effort to harden the currency and return to the coin standard. What's the use in oratory, when the whole world knows that your party does all that you condemn, and upholds all that you say should be torn down. SOUTHERN RESOURCES AND SOUTH ERN IMPROVEMENTS. From the If. Y. Timea. Attention has recently been directed, and not for the first time, to the city and harbor of Brunswick, Ga., as a point of first im portance on the Atlantic coast, in view of its new railway connections, since the war, with the interior of Georgia and Alabama. As long ago as 183t the United States Gov ernment surveys along the Atlantic coast of the Carolines, Ueorgia, and ilornla esta blished the fact that no such harbor as Brunswick, for depth of water, safety of 'an chorage, and salubrity of climate, could be found from Cape lluttcras to tho nttejmost coast of Florida. Looking back to the first settlement of Georgia under General Ogle thorpe, almost contemporaneous with the colonial grants to the two uaronnas, the surprise is that Wilmington and Charleston and Savannah should have then attracted tho attention of commerce along the Atlantic coast, to the neglect of a harbor superior in its essentials for shipping and more directly on the sea than either or all of them. It may be said in explanation that these loca tions were selected because they were either upon or at the mouth of considerable rivers, running from the interior of the colonies to the sea, the consideration of the depth and safety of harbor to foreign shipping being overlooked or deemed of secondary impor tance, when the depth of water was ample for the class of vessels then trading between the mother country and hor colonies. Nor is it surprising that for fifty or sixty years after the independence of these colonies of Great Britain was declared and established, the Cape Fear to Wilmington, and the Cooper and Ashley to Charleston, and the Savannah river to Savannah, should have been deemed important to these locations. Railways were either wholly unknown 'or in their earliest in fancy, after steam or other navigation was es tablished. The very idea that depth of water should suggest itself, or that the bars and inlets at tho mouth of the Cape Fear, or the bar and shoal water of Charleston, or the natural obstructions to navigation below Savannah, never occurred to the publio of the Carolinas and Georgia in connection with the importance of deeper harbors, until the General Government ordered the survey re ferred to in 1836, when our great railway sys tem and its connection with the seaboard were attracting especial interest in the Southern States. This movement Lad been anticipated by Georgia and South Carolina. - They had made liberal appropriations, ana put in active force their railway projects for the benefit of Charleston and Augusta on the one hand and Savannah on the other. And although the result of the Burvey was, as we have stated, in favor of Brunswick as by all odds the very best harbor on the coast, the Sa vannah and Augusta influence was too power ful in Georgia to sutler either aid or atten tion to be directed to it. Of late years the Georgia State policy has undergone a sensible change. Before the war certain New York capitalists took hold of the Brunswick and Albany Railroad, in con nection with their interest in Brunswick city property, ihey expended several, millions upon it, and were in a fair way to make the work complete to the intersection of the pro jected Florida Road when the Rebellion broke out. .everytning tney naa aone, including the road, its equipment, etc., was swept away Hia Trnr. " TIia rn.il-5 wava tnkan Tin? th.A rails arriving at Brunswick m were seized, the equipment run off, and a general sequestration con.immated by the so-called Confederate authorities, the State of Georgia ... A - 1 ! . : . uciug a jim i j u me npuiitiuon ana conversion ol this property, butce tho war the wronor has been acknowledged by the Legislature of ueorgia. Apout three and a half millions are acknowledged to be due to the Brunswick and Albany Road; the importance of the repair and revival of the road recognized, and its extension to the State line of Alabama, or the means of such extension, guaranteed. The line is direct, to Eufaula, on the border of Alabama, and thenoe lo Montgomery and Vicksburg. Fifteen thousand dollars per mile, State indorsement, on six per cent, bonds, Erincipal and interest payable in gold, on two undred and thirty-seven miles, is secured, the State acting as trustee to the General gage, and pledging the punctual payment of interest as well as the reimbursement -of the prinoipal at the end of forty years. Nor is this all that Georgia has done, or proposes to have done, for Brunswick. State aid has also been granted to the Macon and Brunswick Road, a line by all odds the shorter and more direct communication as between Macon, Atlanta, and Chattanooga, and the entire oentre of the State and the eeacoast,thaa the Macon and Savannah Road. A reference to any railway map will confirm this fact. This road has also been taken in hand by New York capitalists, and will soon be com pleted. It will harmonize with the Brunswick and Albany, and will assuredly be completed in all the present year. Both lines pierce the very richest cotton regions of Georgia; both, I will contribute to the prosperity of tho city of Brunswick, and will together tend to estab lish, at no distant day, the supremaoy of that point as tho most eligible exporting mart for the Southern and SouUiwestom States south of Norfolk, Va. TIIE TAMMANY MUDDLE NEW YORK DEMOCRACY NEGRO SUFFRAGE. From the If. Y. Herald. The Tammany Twcod-Bclmont muddle is settled. It was sottled with the return of Sweeny roter the Great. The flare-up by the Tweed organizations in certain wards against Belmont was a trick from the begin ning to work certain little wires for certain ward nominations, including aldermen and assistant aldermen, ofi'icos worth hedging and ditching for. The idea was to tickle tho Grand Sachem at tho expense of tho bondholder of the Manhattan Club, who is not in tho Tam many inside ring. The game was preposter ous, and as it threatened to be dungorous Sweeney at once blocked it, and Tweed is satisfied. His particular friends in the pre mises, in the excess of their admiration and devotion, were getting him into a bad box, and he was thankful to be helped ont of it. The contest, however, for the city spoils, fat places and lean places, waxed warmer, and tho little party cliques of the wards and election dis tricts of this island, which overflows with milk and honey at this season of the year, are all mining and pipe-laying for the spoils. It seems to be understood, however, that Tam many will not make up her local slates till after the State Convention at Syracuse this week; for Tammany wishes to go into that gathering with an unbroken front. Tho sachems have discovered that tho rural dis tricts have taken the alarm and are likely to show some opposition to the Tammany pro gramme for regulating first, the Democracy of the State, and secondly, through tho State, the National Democratic Convention of 1H72 under the banner of Hoffman. Tho interior likes Hoffman, but does not like the idea of being gobbled up by Tammany. Conse quently Tammany at Syracuse must present a compact front and bo prepared to play a skil ful game, or her story may be that of the maid with tho milking pail. The Tammany loaders, we understand, had resolved upon lighting nigger suffrage on the fifteenth amendment, under the idea that as the Governor intended to forget to forward to Washington the ratification by our last Legis lature of said amendment, it could not be counted, and that so, with the election of an anti-negro suffrage Legislature this fall, said amendment would bo squelched perhaps entirely. But ns tho Governor's trans mission of tho New York ratification, oti the application of the Acting Secretary of State at Washington, has settled tho action of New York on Slid amendment, it will have to be dropped at Syracuse. There are red-hot Democrats, of the New Jersey school, who are in favor of fighting for a Legis lature to repeal said ratification; but as the State Department, under Mr. Soward, has de clined to recognize, such proceedings,it might do so again under Mr. Fish. On tho negro suffrage proposition of the new State (Consti tution, however, we presume that Tammany will take her stand, and that the Syracuse Convention will second the motion against the almighty nigger. And why ? Because in tho event of the failure to secure three-fourths of all the States to the fifteenth amendment proposed to tho Federal Constitution, "tho supreme law of tho land," the action upon niccer suffrage in the State Constitution be comes a matter of some importance. " In eny event we expect an interesting fight in this State this fall on negro sufirage. Under the old state of things there would bo no doubt of an overwhelming majority against the nigger. But tho new departure of tho Southern Democracy (Virginia leading off) in support of the fifteenth amendment, and the surrender of this question by tho Wisconsin Democracy, have changed the whole face of things on negro suffrage. It is sure to come, and under this general belief tho tide will probably be in favor of the everlasting nigger, even in New York. General Grant is em phatically in favor of universal negro suffrage, and it must not be forgotten by Tammany that now, for the first time since 1805, the national administration and all its retainers work with the Republican party. All this Federal power in New York city and State is a clear gain to the party since last year, and it will be felt in the election on this issue of negro sufirage. ' "-, WINES. H E R MAJESTY CHAMPAGNE. DU1MTON tft XiUSSOXf. 215 SOUTH FRONT STREET. rrHE ATTENTION OF THE TRADE 18 X. solicited to the following very Choice Wines, eta., for b UNTOlf LUBSOW. HB BOUTH FRONT STREET. CHAMPAGNES. Agents for ber Majesty, Dae de Montebello, Carte Bleue, Carta Blanche, and Charles tarre's Grand VinKuKenie, and Vin Imperial, M. Kiev man A Co., el Mayeaoe, bpaxldins Moselle and RliiNH VV INKS. MADF.IRAS.-Old Island. Sooth Side Reserve. bHKKRIES. F. Rudolphe, Amontillado, Topaa, Val letta, Pale and Golden Bar, Crown, eto. POUTS. VinboVelho Real, Valletta, and Crown. CLARKTB Promis Aine A Cle., ilonUerraud and Bor deaiu, Clarets and Sauternt Wines. GIN. "Meder Swan." BRANDLiUi. Hennessey, Otard, Dupny Oo.'l various vintages. c A 11 S T A 1 11 S MoO ALL, Nos. 126 WALNUT and Si GRANITE Street . - Importers of BRANDIES, WINES, GIN, OLIVE OIL, ETC.. AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS For the sale of PURE OLD RYE. WHEAT, AND BOUBBOW. WIIIS. in 1 I a. vi KIES. 6 2b2i4 CAHSTAIRS' OLIVE OIL AN INVOICE of the above for sale by . T T OARRTAIRS ft M0OALI1. . 8 U 9p8 Nos. 136 WALNjnAjijj?ljljj! COPARTNERSHIPS. . Til E exiai PHP A 1?T VFRSTTIP HERETOFORE listing under the tiriri name of tUri ri it nm BAKER was dissolved by mutual oun " -1 iianufiu-tory will be .settled and 1 Im liiiHi,iruu ..f Hi. nmn Street, and that of the store by IbAAO . BAK.Eil.at NO.V1UCHESNUT boBp-RT oORNKLIUSi ISAAC F. BAKE It, WIIJ.IAM 0. ItAKI'R, ROHKR1' O. COKNKLIUS, JOHN O.OORNK.LIIJS, - ROBERT C BAKER, GUAHLKS K. OORNEL1US, Philadelphia September 2, lBoV. ' The undersigned, late oTjoRNELIUS ft BAKER, have this day entered into a conartueraluu under the firm name ot COKNKL1V8 ft SONS. .lrM i purcha,d the factories (No. 19hi7T),'r and tilth street n.ar Columbia aveniel and jail Mie ma. chinery ot the late firm, we are prepared to continue U l niauuiarture and sale of uas natures, ' -1 Wl C11EUUY SUeet, P"1 ORNELTUS. John a WufeLlLIT- : ' , CHARLES K. IWttAJlUUS. t PhiladelpbU, September 8, lb. ., Wr , CRAWFORD ARNOLD and ROBERT O. BAKER, laieol CORNELIUS BAKER, have this nay "ei 1 a copartnerahip under the name I of AK1IUI'" . univnifc tiavin ng.urohaawl the entire stock 01 '' " " of Cornelius A Baker, at 710 CH ESN U f btreot. they nrtu are ire l repared to omit nine at that plaod tueaiueoi .as t utures, Lamps Bruuzea, eto. v m mm SPEOIAL NOTICES. BKiT THIS IS THE LAST DAY. REPUBLICANS! EXAMINE THE ASSESSORS' LISTS I If yor.r namo Is omitted, go In person and it Inserted on the Extra Assessment. have Copies of the Lists of the entire city are open to tlic Inspection of Republicans at NO. 1105 ClfESNUT STKEET, AND AT TUB tNION LEAGUE HOUSE, BROAD STREET. The Assessors will sit at tho following places: OXLY TO-DAY (MONDAY)! SEPT. in, UNTIL 7 O'CLOCK P. M., FOR THE PURPOSE OF ADDING TO THE LISTS. AS THIS IS THE LAST OPPORTUNITY, ATTEND TO IT AT ONCE I 1st Ward 2d " N. W. cor. Front and Morris streets. N. W. cor. Fifth and Redwood streets. 3d " No. t33 queen street. 4th . " 8. E. cor. Juniper and South streets. Mil . " S. E. cor. Fourth and Spruce streets. Ctu No. 810 Cherry Btrcet. 7th " N. E. cor. Dean and Pino streets. 8th " S. V. cor. Twelfth and Locust streets. 9th " No. 1C19 Market street, loth " Nos. Ill and 113 N. Broad street. 11th No. 209 Green street. 12th " No. 613 N. Fifth street. 13th No. T41 Spring Garden street. 14th " Spring Garden Hall, Thirteenth and Spring Garden street a. 15th " east of Nineteenth street, N. E. corner of Fifteenth and Brown, and west of Nineteenth street, at No. 8143 Mount Vernon street, 10th " S. V. cor. Fourth and George streets. 17th " N. W. cor. Front and Master streets. 18th " No. 622 Richmond street. 19th " No. 1918 Frankford road and Seventh and Yoik streets. 20th " Fast or Broad street, at S. E. corner of Elcvi nnd Girard avenue, and west of T reet, at S. W. corner of Flf- teei . .i;ut Thompson streets. 21st " Sum smith's Hotel, Manayunk. 22d " Clayton s Hotel, Old York road and Mill street. 23d , R. Johnson's, nolmcsburg. 24th " No. 4108 Uaverford street. 25th " Frankford road and Clearlleld street. 26th " S. W. cor. Broad and Shippen streets. 27th " No. 4252 Market street..' 28tU Gross' Hotel, Broad street and Montgo mery avenue. By order Republican City Executive Committee. JOHN L. HILL, President. ' R?T. GnCL7'L0Cn' Secretaries. 91S2t5 'aST REPUBLICAN MASS MEETINGS. TIIE m UNION REPUBLICAN KTA VK OKNTRAT, COM. M1TTKK have made arrangements for MASS MKKT1NU8 us follows, viz. : TUESDAY, September 21. WnynesburK, Greene county E. B. Lucas, Esq , J. W. Buer. FRIDAY, Septomber 24, ' Gormai town Don. A. W. Henazey. Butler, Butler county. SATURDAY, September 25, Hnrrielmrsf Hon. C Doluno, Holmesburg Hon. A. W. Hnnszey, Captain J. P. Rea. MOND AY, September 37, Lancaster Hon. O. Delano. Monoujfuheltt City (lonoral Harry White. TUESDAY, September 28, WcBt Chester Hon. V. Delano. Middlebura- F. 11. Rauch, Esq. liedford Thomas J. BiK'uuin, Esq. Tionesta. Washington Genorsl Hairy White. WEDNESDAY, September 29, Clearfield. Apollo, Armstrong connty. i ixkj noun i , oeiJiomuwi an, Norritown, Montgomery county Hon. O. Delano, Ben jamin Haywood, Ecif . MONDAY, October 4, Mauch Chunk. Pittsburn Hon. John Scotfe Hon. G. A. Crow, H. Bucher Swope, Kan. . TUESDAY, October 5, Beaver Hon. John Boott, Hon. G. A. Grow, H. Bucher RwonA. Kan. New Brighton Hon. John Scott, Hon. G. A. Grow, H. Bucher hwepe. Esq. V 'WEDNESDAY. October 6. New Castle Hon. John Scott. 11. Bucher Swopo, Esq. THFRSDAY. October 7. West Greenville Hon. John Scott, II. Bucher Swope, Esq Kit tanning Hon. G. A. Grow. Butler. FRIDAY, October 8, Moadville Hon. John Scott, H. 11. Swope, Esq. Clarion, Tyrone. . SATURDAY, Octobers, Erie Hon. Jobn Scott, Hon. G. A. Grow, H. Bucher Runnn. Vina. JOHN OOVODE, Chairman. nrO. W. BAMEItSLY, M. 8. QUAY, W. J. P. White, Secretaries. B. H. G WINNER, 918 jgg?- UNION LEAGUE HOUSE, BROAD STREET, ' Philadelphia, September 17, I860; NCsTICE.-A Meeting of the UNION LEAGUE OF PHILADELPHIA wiU be held at the LEAGUE HOUSE, on FRIDAY, September 84, at 8 o'clock P. M., for the purpose of taking such aotion as may be deemed ad visable In relation to the approaohing election. By order of the Board of Directors, 9 18 fit GEORGE II. BOKER, Secretary. rfiy QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, w LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. CAPITA L, i.'a.OWI.lXiu. SAHINE & ALLEN,Agents, 93 FIFTH and WALNUT Streets. nfiT FIRST-CUASS PIANOS AT FIXED PRlCK8.-Opening of DUTTON'S NEW PIANO ROOMS, Nos. ILK) and U28 0HK8NUT Street. Ohicker iDg Pianos. Immense Reduotion in Priues and Introduo tion of the One Price System. Great Success of the New Price List in New York and Boston. Strict justice to all purchasers by moans of the . aKTONWUINUlY LOW PRICES, and .nalUrableNew Prio. -UiIAM H. DUTTON, 9 71m Nos. 1186 and UaaOHKeiNUT Street. agy J. E. GOULD, NO. 023 CI1ESNUT Street, is selling 6teck ft Oo.'sand Hainos Bros. Pianos and Mason ft Haiuliu's Uttbinet Urgaus near lino at at anyforvtcr time. , 6 26 J OS E P O E Y, Medico-Oirujano de U Unlversidad de la Habana, recibe oonsultas de ft a 11 de U manana y de W a 6 da la Urde tn su oflclna ealle Nuevs (sudj Na 736. Residency en la caUa de Green, No. U17. : DR. JOSEPH POEY, Graduate of tba University of Habana (Cuba), baa re. moved his office to No. 736 S. Ninth street. Residenoe, No. 1817 Green street. Offioejloura-f) to 11 A. MSJtf to t P. M. 7 S3tf (ir,Y BATCITELOR'S HAIR DTE. THIS .nlnHi( flair itva is the bent in tbe world 1 the en If ttnlnnHifl flair live true and perfect Dy; lianiilmia, reliable, instautaneous ; no riiHaouointuient; no ridiculous tints; remedies the ill hecta of bad dyes: invigorates anil leaves the Hair soft and beautliul, oltuk or hrmtn. Sold by all DrugsrulS aud Perfumers: snd properly applied at Batchelor's Wig Eao tory. No. Hi BOND Street. New York. 4 87mwf8 ; lt- DR. F. R. THOMAS, TIIE LATE OrE- fmU ntor of the Cotton Dental Aasociation, la now the only ont in Philadelphia wbe devotes his entire time and oractice to extracting teeth, absolutely without pain, by rrtahnitroua oiide gas. jOttloe. linfl I WALNUT St. lio' " LEGAL NOTIOE8. INSTATE OF JOHN W. GRIOG. LETTERS J testamentary having been granted by the Register of .1.. ami fwitiniv of Philadeluhia noun the will uf JOHN W. GRHiG, deceased, all persona having claims on the deceased are reuuealea to uotiry tne f.ieoutori and all per sous indebted are r'iuetl to make imyrueu to No. )8 FIFTH Street, OrtO I HAKES H. DUNN. No. too WALNUT Street, 8 80 uiOw Executors. INSURANCE.. DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSU RANCE COMPANY. Inoorporsted by the. Legu latare of Pennsrlvsnia, 1H3S. Office, a K. corner of THIRD and WALNUT Street. Fhillnipni. MARINK I On Vessel Crg, end VniftM to -si part nrtaot the world. On Koods br rlTer. cannl. Me, and laud carriage to ftU part m the Union. I' IRK 1N8UKANUK.9 On Merchandise generallf i. on b tores. Dwellings, Hooter, Eto. y AM'TS Or TU COTPAWT, November I, l. , $200,000 UnHSUte. i? ewtUM, 130,000 t'n'ted States bis Per Cent. Loan, 1811 ......... . .... , 1JD.HV W S0.0C0 United States Blx Per Oent. Loan (for Paoirlo Railroad) 60.0UUM0 800,000 Bute of I'enmylrauia Kix Per Gont. Loan 811,3iIm)B 136,000 Oltr of Philadelphia 8i Per Cent. . , m l4an (exempt from tax) 123,504 00 60,000 Btate of ISew Jersej Six Per Oent. IiOan Sl.oUOW 80.000 Penn. Kail. First Mortgage Six Pet aM Cent, lionds. . 80,900 00 85,000 Penn. Rail. Hsconl Mort. Six Pet Cent. Bonds r 84.000 W 86,000 Western Penn. Rail. Mortgage Kit Per Cent. Uonds (Penn. Uailroad guarantee) ao,(!33DO 90,000 State of Tennessee Fire Per Cent, ,vv,.rtl Loan 81,000 000 7,000 Bute of Tennessee Six Per Oent. Loan 6.031-85 15.000 Germantown Gas Company, prin oipal and Interest guaranteed by City of Philadelphia, SUO shares (Slock I5.000TX1 10,000 Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 200 shares Stock 11,800 00 8,000 North Peennylvania Railroad Co., 100 . . .. shares Stock 8,500 00 &0.G0O Pill L-. I -.!..!.;. . -.1 Gmik... Mall Kteanishin Co.. 80 shares Hlock.... 15,000'00 U7J00 Loans on Board and Mortgage, first . . Liens on City Properties aff.WO.OO Sl,li,S00 Pat. Market yalue, $1,130,335 38 . . Cost, Sl.OfO.ftH Jtt RealKstste Hfl.OOO'OO liills receivable for insurance made &U,itiD4 Balances due st agencies, premiums on marina policies, sooraed interest, and other debts due the company Btock and scrip of sundry corporations, 41(156. Kstimated value . . 40,178'88 1.813'0 Cash in bank $116,1501)9 Cash in drawer U 66 116,563-78 81,64Y,3oT80 D llcT',," i Kdmnna A. RmtiW. Thomas O. Hand. John U. Davis, James O. Hand. Tbeophilus Paulding, Joseph U. Seal, Hugh Uraig, John R. Penrose. Jacob P. Jones, James Traqnair, Kdward Darlington, 11. Jones Brooke. James 11. WcKarland, Kdward I-afourcade, I Samuel K. Stokes, VVUiiam U. Lndwtg, George O. Leiper, Henry O. Daliett, Jr., John D. Taylor, George W. liernadon, William O. Bouiton, Jacob Ki-Rol, Spencer Mollvaine, D. T. Morgan, Pittsburg, tionn is. beuipte. iloanua r. njre, a. ii. iserger, linrirAr. THOMAS (!. H Prmtlrtnn. JOHN O. DAV IS, Vice-President HKNRT LTLBTJRN, Secretary. HF.MKY BALL, Assistant Secretary. 10 6 1829 0HAKTER PERPETUAL, Mia Fire Insurance Company OF PHILADELPHIA. Office, Nos. 435 and 437 CHESNUT St. Assets Jan. I.'69f $2,677,37213 CAPITAL ACCRUED SURPLUS... PREMIUMS UNSETTLED CLAIMS," jioo.ooo-oo 1,0S3,GV3-T0 1,1!U,343M3 INCOME FOR 1S69, 1300,000. Losses paid sisce 1829076? $5,500,000 Pemetoal and TemDorarr Policies on Liberal Tnrmn. The Company also issues Policies on Rents of.Uuildings ui uii aiuub.urouna itentB, ana mortgages. DIRECTORS. Alfred G. Baker, , Alfred Fitler. Samuel Grant, I Thomas Spurku, George W. Richards. I William Ik. Grant, Isaac Lea, I Thomas S. Ellis, George tales, Gustavus S. Benson. U. iARr.R, President. JAS. W. MCALUCS3- President. .THEODORE M. REGER, Assistant Secretary. 39 fr & D U R Y LIFB INSURANCE COMPANY. No. 891 BROADWAY, corner READS Street, New York. CASH CAPITAL. 16t,u60 VUo,uuu aepoeitea who tne oiaie 01 new York as seouritr for policy holder. LEMUEL BANGS, President. GEORGE ELLIOTT, Vioe -President and SecretaiT. ' EMORY McOLlNTOGK. Actuary! A. B. M. PURDY, M. D., Medioal Examiner. . Thomas T. Tasker, nuuuiliuicg 01 rEU&UBSlOri, John M. Maris, J. B. Llpplnoott, Charles Spencer, William Divine, uoun a. vvriKiic, IS. Moms Wain, Arthur Q. Coffin, John B. McCreary, James Hunter, In the character of its Directors, noonnmvnf trmn.o.. r.,. xi. rvorue. inent, reasonableness of rates, PARTNERSHIP PLAN OF DECLARING DIVIDENDS, no restriction in female lives, and absolute non-forfeiture of all policies, and no restriction of travel after the first year, the ASBUKY pre sents a combination of advantages offered by no other company. Policies issued in every form, and of one-third made when desired. Special advantages offered to clergymen. - , Fox all further information address JAMES M. LONQAORH, Manager for Pennsylvania and Delaware. Office. No. 8uil WALNUT Street, Philadelphia. FORM AN P. UOLL1NSUEAD, Special Agent. 4 169 gTRICTLY MUTUAL. Provident Life and Trust Co. OF PHILADELPHIA. OFFICE. No. Ill 8. FOURTH 8TREET. Organised to promote' LIFE INSURANCE amons UIVUIUTIB Ul tUO OWlDbJ Ul JfllDUUS, , Good risks of any class accepted. policies lamea on approved plana, at tne lowest rates. ' President, SAMUEL R. SHIPLEY, Vice-President, WILLIAM C. LONGSTRKTH, Actuary, ROWLAND PARKY. The advantages offered bj tills Company are nn T N 8 U li E AT HOME, A. IN TCU Penn Mutual Life Insurance COMPANY. No. 921 CHESNUT STREET, PIIILADELPHIA. ASSETS, 93,000,000. CHARTERED BY OUU OWTV STATE. MANAGED BY OUR OWN CITIZENS, LOSSES PROItlPTLY PAID. POIJCIES ISSUED ON VAHIOUS PLANS. AppUcatlons may be made at tbe Home Office, and at the Agencies turouguout tne State. 3 IS JAMKS TKAQUA1R PRESIDENT UAIMI'EL, E. STOKES VI0E-PRE8IDRNT JOHN W. HOHNOlt A. V. P. and ACTUARY UOHATIO S. STEPHENS... SECRETARY rpiIE ENTERPRISE INSURANCE COIIPANI X OF PHILADELPHIA. , Office 8. W. Corner FOURTH and WALNUT Streets. FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. , PERPETUAL AND TERM POLICIES ISSUED. 1 Cash Capital ;. tJW.WO'UO Cash Assets, July 1, lddK, ,!: 27 23. DIRKOTOBS. F, Ratohford 8tarr, J. Livingston Krrtaf er, i fiaiuro rarier, John M. At wood, Benjamin T. Tredick. George H. Stuart, .lnhn 1L Hniwn. William O. Bouiton. Charles Wheelur, Thomas H. Montgomery, James Aertsea. flrst-cUas risks, taking no This Company insures only specially oaaaraous nsa whatever, suutt aa faowries' F. RATOHFORD HTAHR. President THOU AS U. MONTUOMEBir, Vice-President ALtXAHDEB W. WlSTKB, Secretary. jtij -piIOCNIX INSURANCE COMPANY OF No. 224 WALNUT Street, opposite the Exchange. . This Company insures from loss or damage Uy rlKa, . u on liberal terms, on buildings, merchandise, furniture, eto., for limited periods, and permanently on buildings by deposit of premiums. . , . , The Company uas oeeu in uiore insn BIXTf 'VF.AKS, during which all losses lure been ri. D1A11 r. , " ; , promptly adjusted u!jTORS. John L. Hodge, David Lewis. M. K. Maiiony, John T. Lewis. W'lllibn, K. tirsnt. Benjamin Ettlng, ' 1 bonus II. Powers. A. R. Molieary, Kdinund Oaxtilloti, ' Samuel WilcoK.. 5 Robeit W. Learning, D. Clark Wharton, t kwr.nu. Lewis. Jr., i.ewia ). noma. SiMOtL Wilcox. Secretary. IN3URANOE. 1; MME INSURANCE C O M P A N Y. No. m CIIESNUT Rtrflet. INCORPORATED lSt. CHARTER PERPETUAL. CAPITAL, 3H,0x. FIRK INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. Insures against I.o or Damage by Fire either by Var. potual or Temporary Polioios. DIRECTORS: Charles Richardson, Wilhnm H. Khuwn, Francis N. Buck, Henry I4wi, Nathan Hill', George A. Wpat, Robert Pnarce, John KMnr, Jr., Edwnrd li. Orne, Charles Stokea, John W. Kvennan, Mordoeai Ilur.liy. CHARLES PIOHARDHON, Proairient. WILLIAM H. R 11 AWN, Vice-President. Wn.t.TAMB I. Bt.ANcHAKi, Secretary. 723 T HE PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. lnrnrrtnrfttd lS-Jti Chnrtnr Pnmnlt.il ' No. 510 WALNUT Street, opposite Indnnendonce Snuara 1 his GoniDnny. favorably known to thn nommnnit. 1 ... over forty yoari, continues to insure ami I nut loss ordniu. age by lire on Public or Private Buildings, either perm. Bent ly or for a limited time. Also on Furniture, Stocks of Goods, and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. Iheir Unpitnl, togothor with a Inrgo Surplus Fund, Is invested in the most caroful manner, which enables thntn to c.flor to the insured an undoubted security iu lie cuss of loss. DIRECT Its. Daniel Smith. Jr.. John Devrtreut, Thomas Smith, Henry Lewis. Alexander Benson, Isaac Huzleiitirat, 1 nomas Robins, , Gillinghaiu FelL i-i,n;l TT..t.t..i. i wm r rnnwpilrAEIKI'.S,MfTI1'' Ja" PM"' w M. O. CROWELL, Secretary. gjjnj OFFICE OF THE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA, No. 2.T2 WALNUT Streot Philadelphia. ' Incorporated itsh. Gtiartor Perpotual. Uanltal. S500.C0O. Assets 3,r!!)0.009 A1AK1INK, 1SLAKU, AND HRK INSURANUE. OVER $2,000,WW LOSSES PAID SINCE IT3 ORGAN- DIRECTORS. ArthnrC. CoWn. r rancis R. Copo, Edward H. Trotter, Kdward S. Clarke. T. Gharlton Henry, AJfred D. Joaaup, John P. White, Iiouis O. Madeira, Charles W. Cushman Samuel W. Jones, John A. Brown, Charles Taylor, Ambrose white, W illiam Wolsh, S. Morris Wain, John btason. V. Ulfl KD ... 11 II ' 1 ituii ARTHUR O COFFFV. PnM..I CIt Altl.li'K PI. ATT 11... a UiTTm.. - r , v . " , luvt remuenc, .iinimiAn hi An in, ncctisry. v maw, n. i kkv r H, Assl . Secretary. an piPEMAL FIRE INSURANCE CO., LONDON. KNTABMSIIEDBISO:!. Paid-up Capital and Accumulated Funds, 88,000,000 IN GOLD. PREVOST & HERRING, Agenti, 45 No. 107 S. THIRD1 Street, Philadelphia. CHAS. M. PREVOST. CHAS. P. HERRING. SABINE, ALLEN & DULLES, IKSUIlAr-TCa AGENTS FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, 914tf PHILADELPHIA. JMEW PUBLICATIONS. "PHILOSOPHY OF MARRIAGE. J- A New Course of Lnottires. a. HnlivnaH . i. York Muteum of Anatomy, embracing the subioots: How to Live, and What to Live for; Youth, Maturity, and pld Age; Manhood Generally Reviowed; The Causoof Indigestion flatulence and Nerrous Diseases Accounted for: Marriuae Philosophically Considered, etc. eto! Pocket volumes containing those Lectures will be for " 1 k1!Ev ' Pldi.5."oeipt of 5 cents, by addressing W. A. LEAHY, Jit., S. E. oornnrof Plt'ril .,,,1 uiiifim Streets. Philadelphia. a si LUMBER 1860 SPRUCE JOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. 18G9 1869. SEASONED CLEAR PINE. iQft SEASONED CLEAR PINE. lOOU tiiwia rfluniiji nun. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. EED CEDAR. 1869 . FLORIDA FLOORING. . FLORIDA FLOORING. CAROLINA FLOCKING. VIRGINIA FLOORING. DELAWARE FLfORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA STEP BOARDS. KAIL PLANK. 1869 1 ftfiQ W ALNUT BOARDS AND PLANK.1 Qrv lC50y WALNUT BOARDS AND PLANkIM)'.) W ALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1869 UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 1Qif. UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. lOOy RED CEDAR. , WALNUT AND PINE. 1869 SEASONED TOPLAR. SEASONED CHEKKV. 1869 Atill. WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS, HICKORY. 1869 CIGAR BOX MAKEKS' 1 O'rt CUiAK BOX MAKERS' I nUlf SPANISH CEDAR BOX BuARDS, FOR SALE LOW. - , 1869 CAROLINA SCANTLING. CAROLINA II. T. S1I.LS. NORWAY SCANTLING. 1869 1869 CEDAR SHINGLES. 1 QA CYPRESS SHINGLES. 100i7 MAULE, BROTHER A CO., No. 2600 teoUTH Street. 115 rjNITED STATES BUILDERS MILL, FIFTEENTH STREET, BELOW MARKET, EE11ER & BROTHER, 'Proprietors. WOOD MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, ETC. BALUSTERS AND TURNING WORK. A Large Stock always on hand. U 8m DANEL PLANK, ALL THICKNESSES X I COMMON PLANK. ALL TIUOKNESSKS. I COMMON BOARDS, fand 2. SIDE 1-ENCK BOARDS. 1 WHITE PINK FLOORING BOARDS. TFI.l.OW AND SAP PINE FLOORINGS, 1 and 4A. SPRUCE JOINT, ALL SIZES. HK MLOCK JOINT, ALL SIZES. PLASFKU1NG LATH A SPECIALTY. Together Kith a general assortment of Biiildinar Lum bev.iorsaletow for cash. T. W. SMALTZ, 8 5 tiui FIFTEENTH and STILES Street. U M B E R UNDER ALWAYS DRY. COVER, Wa'.nut, White Pine, Yellow Pine, Spruce, Hem lock, Shingles, etc., always on hand at low rates. WATSON. & GILLINGIIAM, 8 295 ' No. 924 RICHMOND Street, l9th ward. M R R I C K & ' 8 O N 8 80UTHWARK FOUNDRY, 1 ' No. 430 WASHINGTON AVENUE, PMladelplL'a, WLLLIAM WRIGHT'S PATENT VARIABLE CUT-OFF STEAM ENGINE, Regulated by the Governor. MERRICK'S SAFETY HOISTING MACHINE, .Patented June, 1S68. DAVID' JOY'S PATENT VALVELES8 8TEAM HAMMER D. M. WESTON'S PATENT BELF-CENTRINO, SELF-BALANCIVO CENTRLFUUAL SUUAR-DRAININQ MAC1UNK. ANf RO EXTRACTOR, For Cotton or Woollen Manufacturer. T 10 nvwr t. TATJOBM MKltBICK. WILLIAM M. BtgJUUOK. .. i- . . tovm m. COM. . , : I rrwiv avtsvra wvunroa onusiMV niTB'Tf'ir'' iiu a i.t. ,ain wo wji iav...v X No. Sal CH ESN I IT Mrt . farward Parcels. Paok- kgea. Meiohauduie, Bank Notes, and Ssoei. e'ther by it lina m 1. . . . . L. V. 1 . nlMj OoinUSIUeA. V au tue pruiuiM lunua aua siue i g Lk m a N , , gapariatandtasa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers