I THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH TRIPLE SHE ET PI 1 1 L A 1) E LP 1 HA, SAtUlUMV, DKCKMH'M 11, 8W. 'I lie Story il Et jjoiiiii. yi th Louden Si tetattir. It i8 a habit of tho KngWsh peoplo, one of ,e many rhftraoteristjc habitM which have iwle them ro beloved IhTonyhout the world, i forgot the very names of tho races whom, l the courso of their tiOfitiny ax God Al mighty's ilonghhhrtre, they plough up into e noil. Nut one in ten thoitriaml ot tnem ui the fainleHt recollection of the name of liy innn Kept, nnd it aoems to tnem nuite dierons that the representative of an lrinh iieftain should call himself The O'Donoghuo. elrih pedigreeH are aatiii.od by every cock sy, and none but Angio-inaiunH nave an lea whether any family in India iti Hindoo or oliammedan though the naiuos are quite i unlike bh those of Jews nnd Christians bile Ho Kfd Indian, or Australian, or Tas- aniau. or ,Ivak name is so mucn as pro- fount: Iter, Ve nc Vng Uinccable. A Mort of legondary halo has, how- preserved the word 'Tocahontus as name of a lied Indian lady who did some- g or other which was somehow romantic, d who became the founder of a great Vir- lnia family. Ibe kind of idea afloat among almost an lucated men is, we believe, that there was wo a Virginian princess ieionging to a ua- e tribe, and named Pocahontas, who mar d an Englishman under most romantic cir iiistances, came over to England, and died a broken heart for love of an Englishman ier than her husband, whom she believed ud but found to be alive. With the legend re has floated down through two centuries idea of the, lady, the gentle Bavago the Ichsed Pocahontas and urcat king's dangh- r of Virginia," as Ben Jonson doos not call r, but says somebody else does who was le embodiment in some way of the melan- oly naturol to her race, who was so beauti- ll and so refined, and from whom sprang one the few aristocratic families of America, e Randolphs of Roanoke. Mr. E. Neill, few United estates uonsm in Dublin, lias en at tome pains to examine the ground- rk of this legend, and baa written a mono- rnph upon it, which is, we fear, conclusive, d which will destroy in the minds of most en the illusions which have hitherto sur- nnded the name of the "Indian Princoss." She was just a savage of the ordinary Indian Vd, who ran naked in the woods till she was olve, lived at thirteen with an English lonist, and was married at fifteen by an bitioua settler named llolfe, for tho good the colony, and from a secret hope of tting a good bargain out of her father's ids. Pocahontas, otherwise Matoa. was rn in l.'ilK, daughter to an Indian chief in pginia, named Powhatan, the Sachem of a be very much dreaded by tho early settlers; u she was, in our English sense, neither tlncesfl nor Queen, and the effort to exalt r rank was, to all appearance.part of a well- timed fraud upou the British Government. ie popular story that while still a child of elve she saved an English settler. Cantain liith, by taking his head in her arms just as p brains were abont to be beaten out, and d she died of love for him, is an invention the said Smith, who had originally written very different report of the affair, given by JNeiii, in which he describes rowhatan as tremely kind to him. The truth seems to that her father, Powhatan, a chief who iltivated the English, used to send her in ken of friendliness into the English fort, here William btrachey, Secretary of the lory, saw and described her in 1610. ll'heir younger women goe not shadowed hongst their owne compame until they nigh eleaven or twelve returnes of the ife old ,(for boo they accompt and bring ont the yeare, calling the fall of the lcafe iiiitock); nor are they mucn ashamed lereof, and therefore would the before re- umbered Pocahuntos, a well-leatured but linton young girle, PowhatanB daughter, metymes resorting tojour fort, of the age en of eleven or twelve yeares, get the boyes rth with her into the morkett place, and ako them wheele, falling on with their bndri, turning up their heeles upwards, whome e would follow and wheele so herself, naked she was all the fort over. The young dy who thus anticipated our city Arabs was, e should mention, under twelve; after which !nie Indian etiquettes imposed some measure decorum, in the shape of a leather apron ke those worn by blacksmiths, or at that me other English handicraftsmen. It is robable, from a casual notice by the same trachey, that she lived for a short time as ife to a "private captain named nocoum, liiat is. a "volunteer captain named Cook- am, it being for the moment a part ot Vir mian policy to encourage such unions in rder to populate the colony, but there is be- hond this casual notice no distinct proof of ie fact. I . In 1(513, when Pocahontas was fifteen years Id. Powhatan had, for reasons unknown, narreled with the settlers, and held certain f them prisoners, and a Captain Argall, a iold and unscrupulous man, considered that pe earnest way of recovering the men, and obtaining some quantity of come for the Wonv s reliefe, would be to seize l'ocahon jw as a Hostage, ana ne accoruingiy - 1 V- . -11 oerced another chief, Patowomek (Poto- Vac ?) into betraying her into his hands, hich done, he sent a messenger to l'owhutan einanding the prisoners and a "great quan ity of corne." Powhatan at once yielded, ent in the seven prisoners, a broad-axo, a fjng whip-saw, both of them stolen, and "ono anow of come," and Captain Avgall, it is VUor. congratulated himself on a verv bold t nd successful warlike niancmivre. Tho betrayal was effected by enticing her n board to see the ship, and bribing her uardian, Potomac, with "a small copper ettle and other less valuable toies, so highly t him esteemed , that ' doubtless he would mo betraved his own father for them," par. licularly to Captain Argall, whom he esteemod us brother alter the inaian lasmon. i oca ontas. however, was not restored, but re plied by Sir Robert Dale, the Governor of e colony, as a means ot extorting sua oeuer onditions, which he was explaining to Pow hatan, when it was suggested to him by Air 'ohn ltolfe a person apparently ot some lobilion and few scruples, who thought, to ndL'e from the narrative written by Ralph lamor. Secretary to the colony, thai by nis narrincre with Powhatan's daughter, "one of nide education, manners barbarous, and trued generation." he could advance tho 'good and honor of the plantation."' and who, roni his subsequent proceedings, entertained fan idea that he miuut through her put m a formidable claim to the lauds over which her father hunted that tho best way vo secure l'owhutan would be to marry his fduughter to himself. Sir John Dale soems to have thoncbt tniH a rather noble act of sell sacrifice, aud l'owhutan, who had ja-it sold I'ocahontas' sister for two bushels of beads, entirely oonsented to the marriage, and sent witnessos to see me ceremony, which, it ap. pears, gteaiiy scanatui.ea uie JingiiHn,whetht! because ltolfe was already married, or be leause they disliked Hwdi unions, cannot now e inaae out. ir cau ii, u ascertained whether any legal marriage ever took place though Pocahonta was undoubtedly repre Mnted in Europe rk Ilolfe's wife. At all events, it, appears to have ptruck him and others that the "Virginian . Princess" could J be used with effect to in duce the Hritish Court to advanoe more money to the plantation, and she was sent with the Governor, Sir Thomas Dale, to England in the following year, where she created no small sensation. It was the inte rest of the settlers to exalt her dignity, and they did it so effectually that, althongh some times described as "the woman Pocahontas," the rrivy Council held a meeting to discuss whethet Kolfe ought not to be tried for high treason' in marrying her, and Simon do Posse, the artist, wrote under her portrait, "ilatoaks als Ilebecka (her native and Christian names) daughter to the mighty , Prince Powhatan, Emperdur of At taiioughkornouck als Virginia. " Tho pifcture represents a thoroughly Indian ouiunj with high cheek-bones, gloomy facei and lanky hair, some thirty years of agef-she was only eighteen who never can nave been beautiful according to English: ideas of beauty, dressed in a high felt hat) such as is now worn in North Italy, and a broad white ruff. She appears to have remained in England but a few months, and was returning homeward when she died at Gravesend, 1 on 2lst May, 161(5, and was buiied in the chancel of Gravesend Church, as "Rebecca Wrothe,'.' wife of "Thomas Wroth, gent., a Virginia lady borne." No trace whatever of her conversation or hor character can be recovered, nor is there any evidence that she was regarded in any other light than a converted Tasmaninn or Maori would now be, that is, as a snbject of some intellectual curiosity, but little admiration. Her hunband, John Eolfe, returned to Vir ginia, and was appointed Secretary to the colony, and apparently mode a grand spring at Powhatan's territory, for the Virginia Com pany in 1(518 sharply rebuked him for re porting that the natives were reserving the country for his own child, "which we do sup pose to be a device of your own to some special advantage for yourself." They had a hobit of speaking plainly in those days, especially to servants. Pocahontas had one son by llolfe, who returned to Virginia, and seems to have been re cognized by the Indians as a connection, and it wus through this son that the Indian blood entered the Virginia planting families. An "esteemed and industrious mechanic," named Randolph, settled on the James river, and his son ltichard married Miss Jane Boi ling, great granddaughter of Pocahontas, and became the grandfather of John Tvandolph, ot Konnoke, the well-known V lrginian. who. it is said, considered this descent the proudest among his endless claims to the reverence of his countrymen. The whole story, we fear, is essentially unromantic and common-place; but there is little harm done by telling it. The human mind is so constituted that it can actually read the story of ThermopyLu, and in defiance of figures given by the very histo rian whom it trusts, believe that the pass was defended by three hundred mon only; and so it will read Mr. Neill's collection of facts, and believe, nevertheless, in Captain Smith's rubbishy romance about tho naked little savage who "played cart-wheels" m Lord Delaware's fort; and it may be, after all, wiser to believe both in Thermopylie and Pocahontas. 'rii: "i:uows or tii iHim-io." j BY AUGUSTUS MAVEltlCK. From Packard's Monthly. In the Italian campaign of lri!) the news papers of England, France, and the United Mates were engaged in eager rivalry. The struggle to obtain easy and "exclusive in telligence of the events of the war continued unabated until the end ot the struggle. The .London J line selected its best correspondent for service in the Italian army; leading Irench journals promptly recorded the suc cesses of Napoleon, and glorified the carnage of Solferino and Magenta; tho New York newspapers had representatives on all the fields of - battle, and the foremost among these was the late Henry J. ltaymond, to whom the That and its readers were indebted for the clearest and most complete of all the contemporaneous narratives not excepting the brilliant run executed by Mr. ltaymond when he supposed himself pursued by an infuriated squadron of Austrian cuirassiers. It was in midsummer when the Newiork Time became famous in consequence of this same lively campaign. While the chief of that journal followed in person the fortunes of the war, his subordinates in the otlico of the Times followed their own sweet will, and it is but justice to the capable gentlemen who then constituted the editorial corps to say that the reputation of the paper was well sus tained., In fact, the act of one of their num ber increased its popularity for at least one day for on that day appeared the editorial article known as "The Elbows of the Mincio." That remarkable production convulsed the town at breakfast time, became the topic of street talk before noon, was read aloud by the evening lamp, and then was filed away among the ephemera winch are considered too good to be lost. 1 know of scrap-books in which it is sacredly kept to-day of men who bought old tiles of the Timet to scissor out that one column of diligent collectors who have made a copy of it one of the ap pendices to their set of Disraeli's "Curiosi ties." The "Elbows" consisted of phrases which, though disjointed, were in every sensespirited; the (ipace occupied was one column of the I tiius; the title, "Ihc Defensive Square of Austriun Italy." The first half was grave; the last half well, Bacchus was responsible for that. The opening passages contrasted strongly with those which followed, as the cosy tlow of a running spring contrasts with the bubbling torrent of the brook dashed into foam by countless pebbles the pebbles in this case being corks, and the foam of that sort which some Auaeroontio tells us i "pleasant boating." In short, it was a break fast which, like Charles Lamb's last pioce of pie, did tho business. The polished writer and elegantly finished gentleman whoso presence wus always welcome at any festive hoard, and whose pen achieved the original triumph, of "The Elbows" over all competitors, Trench, English, or Ameri can, bud "break! astod. 1 lie breakfast was a good one; viands there were of the best. and th6 vinous compounds were beyond com pare. lhe company wus select; the bourn tied; no one took note of time. Night fe.lL and all the city went to sleep except the newspaper men and tho disreputable charac ters. lp the luiUM ofuVe, on Uayniond s desk. lay thai decorous part , of the "Elbows," and towards midnight the article got iUelf finished not so decorously. This is briefly the story of its origin. Opening with a concise stutemeut of the Hclf-imprisunment pf tho Austrian within "their famous strategic square," the writer proceeus to snow the strength oi tno uuad 'l-V 41.1.. 4 41. : cle some clever touches, but the pause is sudden, not to way painful. All that follows the introductory paragraphs was incoherent drivel, of the most curiously complex cha- rsrfer; and, inasmuch as the story is quite out of print, and is sometimes in brisk de mand, and is funny in itself, and worth pre servation as a literary curiosity, I am tempted here to reproduce it bodily, as follows: From the Timtn, July is, 1859. , "Austria has neglected nothing which might insure her dominion over the waters of the Danube. She has done all in her power to favor the development of En rope, which is the pacific development of Eng land. She has dealt with edged tools boldly, but not, we feel sure, in utter vanity. "In 1848 Peschiora was captured by the Sardinians, undor King Charles Albert; but there can be no doubt that the French bore away from the first fight ol Magenta very questionable compliments. At this time the Sardinians, under the Duke of Genoa, wore ready to defend tho famous Quadrilateral. To-day the Quadrilateral has ceased to exist. "The fortress of Teschiera lios on an isle near the scene of the conflict. "A broad rood has been made bv Austria. in the direction of the Alps, to unito the reg ons of the Vorarlberg and tho Tyrol with Lombardy, by the pass of the Stelvio. This road passes through the Vatelline, runs around the Lake of Como, and ends at Berga mo. It may serve as well for the retreat of the beaten Austrians into the Tyrol as for the advance of the victorious Austrians upon Italy. Two railways pass also by this control point of tho Austrian position. One of these railways unites Lornbardy with Vienna, by circling around the crescent of the North Adriatic; the other, leaving Botzen, in the Tyrol, skirts tho Lego of Gardu, touches Trent, , Rovercdo, and Verona, and bv a branch road reaches Mantua, and thus unites the two main angles of tho famous square. The New York flcrulil, in giving yesterday a pretended map of this square, carefully omitted the bridge-head of Legnago, and thus converted the square into a triangle. The strength of Peschiera and Legnago is out of all proportion to the besieging force. The main merit of Peschiera is that this fortress lies on an island, and was captured by the Duke of Genoa in 1848. At this time tho Sardinians crossed the Mincio after several hours' hard fighting; and if we follow the windings of the Mincio, wo shall find count less elbows formed in the telbow of the regu lar army, at places like Salianzo, Molini, and liorghetto. These places moke up the base of the allied army. The line of the Mincio is the base of the new campaign we are abont to open. ' "Almost at the southern end of the river Mincio lies the strong fortress of Mantua, the only Gibraltar of Austria in Italy, guaranteed by the treaties of 181 . Mantua, as we have said, lies on a lake of the river Mincio. In spite of the labors spent upon it, Mantua still holds the next rank to Verona. It is a post of danger lor the army shut between its walls, rather than for the enemy without. After a battle of several hours' duration, the Sar dinians, at Goito, give way, and if we follow up the course of the Mincio, we shall find innumerable elbows formed by the sympathy of youth. Defended by Wurmser, in 17!t7, Austria surrendered to Napoleon III in 18.V.I. Notwithstanding the toil spent by Austria on the spot, we should have learned that we aro protected by a foreign fleet suddenly coming up on our question ot citizenship. A canal cuts Mantua in two; but we may rely on the most cordial Cabinet Minisier of the new power in England. "Mantua is protected m the centre by five detached forts, Pradella, Castle of Faith, St. George, and Migliaretto, which commands Cremona, Borgo Forte, and Govemolo. "A canal divides Mantua and makes a small port in tho lake, communicating by five forti fied roadways with the land. "At lioverbello aro machines for flooding the whole region, and in the upper lake floats an Austrian squadron. The region between Mantua and the Po is iuqiracticable for un army, "f is a marsh full of fevers. On this side the square seems impregnable. But how with the line from Mantua to Legnago V Leg nago is no stronger than Peschiera, but it has the double advantage ot a bridge over tho Adige, and of dikes ready to inundate the whole Adriatic region. The fourth face of tho square links Verona to Legnago. This is the best defensive line of Austria in Italy. At Verona the lost features of the opposition lingered. The Adige is swift and deepat erona; it can only be passed at Cerpi and Bussolengo in the face of a thousand perils. Paris is strong in her circle of fortifications." Undeniably this was a successful perform ance. That older jingle of rubbish which tells us abont the old woman who went to the garden to get some cabbage to make an apple-pie, and how "just then a great she bear comes up and pops his head into the shop what ! no soap ! so he died, and she married the barber" and how at the wedding the Great Panjandum and all the rest of them "fell to playing the game of catch as catch can, till the gunpowder ran out of the heels of their bouts" all this was Footo's fun, performed while ho was sober, in order to see how ridiculous he could be; but, suc cessful as it was, it paled before the magnifi cence of tho "ElbowH," for the latter showed how ludicrously a tipsy fancy could upset a compact and well-stored brain. There is but one other specimen in the literature of tho comic concocted over wino and cigars by a party of mad wags which is of a piece with this, and here it is; "It is not, believe me, an agreeable or easy business to perceive the unparalleled embarrassment and partial paralysis of a harassed and vacillating pedlar admiring the symmetry of a peeled onion and gauging the contents of a barrel of cider with a powter syphon. How dissimilar from this premise is the mien of a deceived and grieving Sybil, dispensing inadmissible and indispensable inuendoes with malicious tongue, as she Bits upon the Pillars of Hercules, or reposes upon the Croton Aqueduct, and with a willow wand separates the mosquitoes and caterpillars upon its summit from the ghosts of yaohtmou re suscitated from the Elysian Fields!" Vet close analysis of the article known as the "Elbows of the Mincio" reveals glimmor iugsofsonso mere suggestions of coherent idwas. The framework is oak, but the filling in is litho, willowy, and unsubstantial. Four distinct subjects were evidently in the mind of the writer when be sat down to pen this remarkable efl'usiou. These subjects were the defensive square, the military strength of Austria, the new Cabinet formed in England, and the massive fortifications with which Na poleon was then environing Paris. Unfortu nately, although each of these topics was in itself interesting and important, they did not fuse wtll together, for the simple reason that champagne is not a chemical solvant. The defensive square happened to be in Italy, therefore "the most cordial Cabinet Minister of England" had nothing whatever to do with it; the fortiflcations.of Paris, albeit of great value to France, hod no neoessary connection with "the canal which cut Mantua in two;" and the moaning oi the writer was so hope lessly obscured in the passage apprising us that "we are protected by a foreign fleet omicg up our question of citizenship," that, no seer could throw liuht nnon it. On the wholo, it was a "mixed" production. The effect of this bombshell in the oWm of the Tim? was exceedingly amusing. When fliA members of the editorial fore a ilmnnnd in singly or in couples, to take up t he labors of the day, the morning sheet was passed frr.ni nun to another, accomtmnied bv the natural query, "What does it mean, and who not vet been answered; the latter half wvi known and buzzed about within an hour. When the absolute completeness and ridicu lous nonsense of the article stood fully re- 1 . i .1 wtnM . L 4 veaiea, a conceriou iui oui upirom a rlnyon ttirnntu elieeked onlv bv thn Hinl.lnn appearance of its unhappy author among the .i -f . ;i t i . . merry crowu. i m -. iuuu not upon the scene of sorrow and repentance. It is needless to mention names, or to en largo npon tho incidents of the occasion al though name, date, and circumstances are under my eye at this moment, duly minuted upon the pages of a commonplace book in which it is my habit to note certain striking incidents in tho history of journalism. CLOAKS. QLOAK8 ! CLOAKS !! THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT. THE FINEST QUALITIES. 'I" lie .HoMt IteUMonitblc lri''. IVENS & CO., 83 S. .MTII street, and N. K. or. i:i;iITll andWALX T, 116 tilth 2m PHILADELPHIA. WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC Closing Out at Reduced Prices PREVIOUS TO Making Alterations in Our Store. WATCHES, DIAMONDS, JEWKLEY, 1 SILVER-WARE, MUSICAL BOXE8, FANCY CLOCKS, AND BRONZE ORNAMENTS. WILSON & STELLWACEFJ, No. 1028 CHESNUT STREET, 12 1 125 PHILADELPHIA. ESTABLISHED 1828. WATCH BS, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, 6LLVEKWARK, and FANCY GOODS. G . W. RUSSELL, HO. 1 N. SIXTH STREET. PHILADELPHIA. WILLIAM 6. WARNE & CO.. vr0 wnoieuia umieni in . ft U7 1 Tl Ml L'L illll IVIVIPFDV bTK comer SEVENTH and OHKhNUT Street K i tteoona hoot, ua late oi no. oo b. i iilku at. JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE. PLATED COODS OF THK FINEST QUALITY AT Till: LUUKMT KATE, AT No. 804 CHESNUT ST., SECOND FLOOR, BY V. II. RO(xEIlS. We are daily rec-eiYing from our Factory, in Oonnee- nicut, the latest ftyles of Uoodt, of all patterns from Rogera Brothers, and "llerideo Britannia Co.'a" manu factories. Trlplc-Elut'l Hilverware, Saitahle for BRIDAL GIFTS AND HOLIDAY PRESENTS. No. tut CHESNUT STREET, Second Floor. U 2(1 lm A. U. ROGERS. CARPETINCS, ETC. pj C VV CARPETS. AXMINSTEBS, WILTONS, VELVETS, BRUSSELS, 3-PLY3 AND INGRAINS, Venetians, Druggets, Oil Cloths, Etc. LEE DOM & SHAW, No. 910 ARCH STREET, 9 2SJ!mrB PHILADELPHIA. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE tv .T. WATSON & ROTH. mmn mi - - at;n' Iftii r j i anil MijOf the late firm of EVANS A WATSON. M FIRE AND BURGLAR-PROOF SAFE 8TOKE, NO. 63 SOUTH FOURTn STREET, 8 31t A few doors shore O beenat st, P hiled FLAVORINQ EXTRACTS. Miirm.ttui:ii' FLAVORING EXTRACTS Are warranted eioal to any made. VANILLA. OUANI.E, w.vif Nin. lm;. ti's K APPLE. BITTER ALMONDS, C1NNAA1UM. Proparod at A. A'IUlrKer' Drug Store, No. KB North SECOND Street. Dpot for BARLOW'S INDIGO BLUE, he beet article nilo lor Blueing cluthe. niwrJmrp Hf E K K 1 C K & 8ON8 BOUTHWARK FOUNDRY, No. 430 WASHINGTON AVENUE, Philadelphia, WILLIAM WRIGHT PATENT VARIABLE CUT-OFF STEAM ENGINE, Regulated bj tne Governor. MERRICK'S SAFETY HOISTING MACHINE, Patented Jniie, 1668. DAVID JOY'S PATENT VALVELESS STEAM HAMMER D. M. WESTON'S PATENT PELF-CENTRING, H HLF-B ALANCTNG Clt-STlUF'tiUAX bUGAitrDtULLMUNU aUHJUWB AND KO EXTRACTOR. For Cotton or Woollen Manufacturer, f 10 mwf f. VAVJ0BV MVH10S. WILLIAM . KZBJUOK. ioum oofs. cn:vi:oi, IIKO., fc CO.. O OILN, 11 l3ia No. 6 8ICUOND Suet. PIANOS. Grand Square and Upright riano3, With tketr fcewlf patented RESONATOR, hi wntch the erfelnal tolnme Of tenad n aJnays bs retained, tue ame In a Violin. ELASirS BEOS., No. 100C CHESNUT STU15ET, H7 wntf PHILADELPHIA. j-fej ALBRFXHT, ' iS3J ' Bl EKES A SCHMIDT. ttSi , ' ' MANIIKAOTmiKllS OF nilST-CLASH PIANO-FORTES, frill Rnaranteo and nioilerate prices. a4 , WAKKKOOM8, No. f.10 AROll Street fifJa'BKADBURY'S AND OTHER in 1 H Vinnrid. m Tav W A. Earlnn's. alio Unrhnrt A Nrrdhsro'sOrirsnii. from f0 npwarda WILLIAM U. KlKC'IlHi. No. 1(118 AIU.11 htroet and No. 21 N. ELEVENTH Street. 11 XT 2m BLANK BOOKS. Important to Book-keepers. JUST PUBLISHED, TDE "CATCII-WOItD" LEDGER INDEX. (.COPYRIGHT 8ECTJRED). Book-keepers and a'l others having to use an Index will find this a very valuable book. By ming the "Catch-word'' Index, It will not only save time and eyesight, but the finding of a name quickly IB a mathematical certainly. You are invited to call and examine It. rUBLIHHKD BV JAS. B. SMITH & CO., WnolcHale and Retail Blank Book Manufacturers and Stationers, No. 27 South SEVENTH St., 23 thHtoSiD PHILADELPHIA. CARRIACES. GARDNER & FLEMING, CARRIAGE BUILDERS, No. 214 South FIFTH Street. BELOW WALNUT. A Large Assortment of New and Second-hand C ARRI A G E H, INCLUDING Coupe Rockaways, Phietons, Jenny Linda, Baggies, Depot Wagons, Etc Etc., 3 23tnth8 For Sale at Reduced Prices. LOOKING CLASSES. ETO. E 8 T A B L I 8 HED 17 9 6, A. 8. ROBINSON, FRENCH PLATE LOOKJNO-ClLAi&Sti, ENGRAVINGS, BEAUTIFUL CBROMOrj, FAurrrNcs, Manufacturer of all kinds of LCOKUSG-GLA88, PORTRAIT, AND PICTURE FRAMES, NO. 910 CHESNUT STREET, 1C Fifth door above the Continental, Puila. DRUGS, PAINTS, ETC. JOBEKT BHOKMAKEK & GO N. Corner FOURTH and RACE 8tt fHll.ADKI.PHIA. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS Importers and Manufacturers of White Lead and Colored Faints, Putty' Varnishes, Etc AGENTS FOR THE CELEBRATED FRENCH ZINO PAINTS Dealers and consumers supplied at lowest prion lor cash. isi M. MARSHALL, DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN PAINTS, OILS. GLASS. AND PATENT MEDICINES, Xos. 1301 and 1303 JIAKKET St. 10 21 thstatim EXCURSIONS. . JCSL 8T:iay trips up the dela- fii-MJet'nmr HDWIN iOHRKST will loava Aituil t reot whirl at 8 o'clock, and AI.Karate's wharf. he.nrLl",1.i,,.,' 0 .1k A. M., for Horonee JIeihM ami 1 While H ill, touching each way at Bri(Wmrir, Tacony, 4 -. ,1 1 1 1 . 1 .. Li wharf tramtDins. loares Whits Hill at 4 Ai P. M.. and llnsUil, i 4u. tare each way. 24 cents, Kjooxaiou tickets, ucenu. 7 3tf n, Krutol and IMjbiua' SUNDAY TUT PS TITit- "sprrv" !,id Btll1"1n,'.0Tt, 0,f.N A- WARNKR will .. . . ? d'K". 1 . ' i .M8we's wharf, Knsin(rtn, at 2 o'clock P. M. for HurWon and Brimol. Touch! n it Kiertj..n. Anclluia. and Beverly. Returning, leSvSs lirintol at HAt o'clock A. U. and 4 o'clock P. M. Fare.SuuL Kicur.ion.4Uo. 7 8stf i.-iuuia luetraiH, street wharf) at MATS AND CAPS. HWARBURTON'8 IMPROVED VENTI laUd and easrntting Dreai IUt (patented), in all the improved fashions of the season. OUJCINUT Btreet Mi. iuiiiu,mi ihiiivu. ui lug Dlt dimr to the Post Otllca IlUros w I R E W O R K. GALVANIZED and painted WIRE GUARDS, tore fronts and wtnrtows, for factory and warehous. windows, for churches and cellar windows. IRON and WIRE RAILINGS, for balconies, offices cemetery and garden fences. Liberal allowance made to Contractors, linlldera and Carpenters. All orders rilled with promptne and work guaranteed. ROBERT WOOD & CO., St0thTD Na llMJUDrAT(,nM pjjjj Wl ara prepared to ship every deaoridiioa of Pratgtit s Fbiuwiplua, New orfc, wununjrton, and intermediau pomu wim wrompm ..u-oMuaton. Canai Uuawaad ALEXANDER G. CATTELLA CO l-BODUCK OOMMIH8ION M KROUAKIU Mo. I OKIH WllAKViUi AND Re. If KORTH WATKR STRUCT. VHlS.kUILU'UlA ' B AtSTtrr O Oattuia. KuiaSI Oawouj WIIXlAMANI)ERSON A COiDKALERS is ue vVluakiea, V. MSorU) SOOONO 8tret, Piuladelpbia. NEVyjUBLIOATIONS. OMIAY Pni'NfilVTNI HARDING'S EDITIONS OF THE HOLY X1III1VE. Family, Pulpit, and Photograph Bibles, FOR CIUU8TMA8. WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRBSKNTI Also, Presentation Bibles for CHURCHES, . CLERGYMEN, SOCIETIES AND i TEACHERS, ET p W nrifl QtinAv. t, n ........ ..v. v. .. j i m..t. t . . mi key Morot'i-o. Pant-led nml Ornamental DphIrth equal o the I.onilou and Oxford edition, ut. ukh th. Hall thi-lr prices. ' " ' W. V. 1LVHDING, Ho. 32C CIIES1UT Bill BET, . BTKESGTH, BKAUTT, ' CBEAPNESa 1 nml i.TKt-t.'TX . VsJBlIm lull I Harding's Patent Chain-hack ' ' PHOTOGRAPH ALDUM5. For Weddlnir. Holldar. or Blrthrtav rrcscntfL thin AlbumH are particularly adapted. The book trade and dealers In fancy articles for holiday tales will find tho most extensive assortment of Photograph Albums In the country, and superior ui any iiiTewtiore mauo. t or great strength, dura- olllty, and cheapness, Harding's Patent Chaln-bact Animus are unnvaiien. rurcnascrs will nnd it rreatly to their advantage to examina timaa n lines of goods before making up their erders for holiday stock. , . Also.a larce and Bnlendld aaHortmcnt of now ntnum of Photograph Albums made In the usnal manner. W. W. IIATJDIIVO, NO. 326 CUESNUT STREET,' ' lm PHILADEIJIHA. y ANTED AGENTS, TEACHERS, Students, Olenrymen. Farmers' sons and diiuhi.n all to soil BEFORE THE FOOTLIGHTS AND BEHIND THE SCENES. BY OLIVE LOGAN, Ha Great Reformer of Stage, who, haTln abandoned stage life, now exhibits In iia . iilhVK?K8- ,. Trnthful. Moral, and Hlsh toUi ?. eli ? Sensational. Rich, and Kacy, it outaells al other books. Beantifully illustrated wilK 40 spirited e ErarinKS, Ii4 fnll-pae out., 660 pages, on roue-tinted paper. f'Jt u inuoen,I' et offered. Proeetus, Saniplt 1 yV1, lliues, and Hutionery Free For circular, eznUir lna, address, iinmdiately, PAKMKI.K.K A OO-, Pnb bebers, either at Philadelphia. Pa., Oineinnati, Ohio. Middletown.Conn. luaotuthaJ ELL'S rcrTJLAK. EIICYCLCrEDIA. A DICTIONARY OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE. ' T. KLLWOOD ZELL, Publisher, Nos. 17 and 10 South SIXTH Street, 10 30 s PIIILADgLPHIA. P HIL080PUY OF MARRIAGE A New Course of Lectures, as delivered at the Nan York MiMenm of Anatomy, embracing the subjects ' How to Live, and what to Live for; Youth, Maturity, and Old Age; Manhood Generally Keviewed; The Oanseol Indigention; Flatulence and Nervous Diseases Aeoonnted ' For: Marriage Philosophically Considered, eto. etc Pocket volumes containing these Leotnre will be lor. warded, post paid, on reoeipt of 86 cent., by addressing W. A. LFlAItY, Jb.. 8. K. corner r FIFTH and WALNUT Ktreeta. Philadelphia. fcjM LEGAL NOTICES. 1 N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY A AND COUW'I Y OK PHILADELPHIA. Kbtateof JAM KS HAMILTON. Deceased. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle, and sdjust tho thirty-ninth account of Thomas Cad wnlaaer, Kxecntorand Trustee of the last W ill and Tee timient nt JAM K8 HAMILTON, Deceased, arising from thai portion of the estate belonging to schedule B, an noxea to the indonture of partition in snid estate, dated January 2ti, 1841. recorded is the omce for recording ot ilceiis, etc., in Philadelphia, in deed book U. W. (J., Ma l.page 447, etc., and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the acouuntunt, will meet the parties in. , ti'rrstcil for the purposes ol his appointmout on MON DAY, Ieoeiubn"J0, 1W!), at 4 o'clock P. M at hi. ettioe, tin. 4( 6 WALNLT Street, in (he city of Philadelphia. Ii.tlistn5t WILLIAM D, BAKKH, Auditor. IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THB CITY AND COUNTY OK PHILADKLPH1A. FjitHte of ALBKRT K. BKVF.NS, decoased. The A nditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle, and adjust the account of WILLIAM H. KKKSf, Adminis trator of the Fstate of ALhKKT 8. oK VKN8, dcoeased, , and to report distribution of the balance in the bands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the furpose of his appointment, on MONDAY, December 20. Holt, at eleven (11) o'clock A. M., at his oltiee, No. 4u6 WALNUT Street, In the city of Philadelphia. WILLIAM D. BAKKR, 12 HthstnSt Auditor. IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR TnE CITY AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA. FJstate of MANU8 MuCLUSKKY, deceased. The Anditer appointed by the Court to audit. uiUe, and adjust the account of SI All Y MULIIOLLAND (Lite AlcCluhkey), administratrix, doceased, and to report dis tribution of the balance in the luinils of the accountant, will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of bis ap pointraunt, on WKDNKSDAY, December 16, 1H, at i o'clock P. M.,at his office, No. 113 8. FIFTH Street, in "? grt." j'WILLIAM L. DKNNI8, .Andltor TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR 1 THK CITY AND COUNTY OK PHILADFXPHIA. Tho asBinod estate of KOBK.RT H. HAY. 1 he Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle, and adjust tue til at and hnul acuount f W. F. Jl'DSON, Kmi., assignee, and to reH)rt distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will ineot the purties interested, lor the purpose of bis appointment, on FKIDY, Dooember 17, A. 1). ImW, at 12 o'clock, M. (12 M ), at the office of W. F. JI'DhoN, Ki., No. 7WJ WALNUT Street, in the city of Philadelphia. 12Hth.tuwUut CROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. LARGE VARIETY OF New Goo1n, Suitable for the Heuson, just received. ALBERT C ROBERTS, ' Dealer In Fine Groceries, ' 11 1i Corner ELEVKNTII and VTNE Screets. . ' MIOHAKL ME A OHBB CO. ' NO, SU8 South SIXTEENTH Street, Wholesale and Rntail Dealen in KWV1SIONS, u s x tun, fta" FOR KAaULY C8I jtbb aPixms PltK DOZEN. , , "CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS. Ob' R. THOMAS & C O., " DXAI.XK8 W , ( Doors, Blinds, Sash, Shutters. WINDOW FRAMES, ETC.. , M. w. oowsa OF , ,( EI0HTEENT1I and MARKET Streeti TlTTTT A TV fwT IwrtT a in stb PGILADEI4PHIA. OOAL. yif H. T A C C ART, " " COAL DEALER. OOAL OF THB BEST QUALITY, PREPARED EX PRKHHLY VUU FAMILY UrJK. 1208, 1210 and 1212 WASHINGTON AV., 18 1 Sin Between Twollth and Thirteen th streets. ' JET GOODS, NEWEST STYLES DIXON'S, ho. U B. IstUUTU Street UJltlsw