THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1870. VRETTY WOMEN. After all, is the world bo very absurd in ita love of pretty women ? . Is woman so very ridiculous in her chase after beauty? A pretty woman is doing woman's work in the vorld, not making speeches nor making pud iclings, but making life sunnier and more beautiful. Man has forsworn beauty al together. It is hopeless to recall the Peri clean idea of manhood, to insist on the de velopment of personal beauty as not less manly than that of personal virtue, to demand the grace of Canning from our statesmen or the dignity of Ilobertson from our divines. The world' of action is a world of ugliness, and the good-looking fellow who starts for the prizes soon discovers what Madame de Girardin calls le viaUieur d'etre beau. He is guessed to be frivolous, lie is assumed to be poetic, there are whispers that his morals are no better than they should be. In a society resohrte to be tigly there is no post for an Adonis but that of a model or a Guardsman. But woman does for mankind what man has ceased to do. She clings to the Periclean ideal. Her aim from very child t hood is to be beautiful. Even as a school girl she notes the progress of her charms, the deepening color of her hair, the growing symmetry of her arm, the ripening contour of her cheek. We watch with a silent interest the mysterious reveries of the maiden; she is dreaming of a coming beauty, and panting for the glories of eighteen. Insensibly she becomes an artist, her roam a studio, her class an academy. The hours work with her, but she works with the hours. "What silent musings before her mirror, what dreams, what discoveries, what disappointments, what careful gleaning of experience, what sadden flashes of invention ! The joy of her toilet is the joy of Raffaelle over his canvas, of Michael Angelo before bis marble. She is creating beauty in the silence and the loneli ness of her chamber; she grows like any great art-creation, the result of patience, of hope, ,of a thousand delicate touchings and retouchings. But even to the Gioconda the moment of perfectness, of completion, comes at last; the master takes his work from the easel and given, it to the ages. 'Woman is never perfect, never complete. A restless night undoes the beauty of the day; sunshine, blurs the evanescent coloring of her cheek; frost nips the tender outlines of her face into sudden liarshness. Her pencil has ever to be at work even while the hours work for her, and the hours work against her at last. Care ploughs its lines across her brow; motherhood destroys the elastic lightness of her f era; the bloom of her cheek, the quick flash of her eye, fade and vanish as the years go by. But woman is still true to her ideal. She won't know when she is beaten, and she manages to steal fresh victories even in her defeat. She invents new conceptions of womanly grace; she rallies at thirty, and fronts us with the beauty of womanhood; she makes a last stand at sixty witk the beauty of age. It is the same great artist who exhibits year after year, but whose style ranges from the girlish innocence of a Fra Angelico to the severe matronage of a Zurbaran. She falls, like Cicsar, wrapping her mantle around her "buried in woollen! 'twould a saint provoke! " Death listens piti fully to the longings of a lifetime, and the wrinkled face smiles back its last cold smile with something of the prettiness of eighteen. Perhaps we enjoy beauty less than we might from the absurd connection which men Lave established between the enjoyment of it and love. We fancy it impossible to care much about a pretty face unless we can hang it in our own gallery. "What care I how fair she be, so she is not fair to me !" It is perhaps truer to say that nine-tenths of our enjoyment of beauty disappears with posses sion. The lover dwells on his mistress' face till he loses all sense of the world of beauty without it. He is like the connoisseur who so dotes on the little Correggio he has picked np for a song that he ceases to care for the larger range of art. 'The real way of enjoying pretty women would be never to fall in love with a pretty woman at all. The true joys of life are its unconscious joys, the pleasure we derive from the laughter of children, from the landscape that we drive dreamily through, from the music which we have not listened to. And so the truest enjoyment of beauty lies, not in the observation or analysis of this face or that, but in the sense of pretty forms and pretty faces about one. The joy of variety, the pleasure of the inexhaustible range of the beautiful, comes to the admirer of pretty women. Ve are not quarrelling with the in stinct which leads us through pretty faces into paths of domestic peace. It is often necessary to lestrict one's sphere of enjoy ment; and if one is absolutely obliged to marry, one had far better marry a pretty wife than an ugly one.' The refinement which the student of art gains from constant contact with beauty of color and form every one gains in some degree from daily contact with the beautiful in flesh and blood. Woman is the art of home, the Giorgione whose bril liancy flashes through the quiet parsonage, the Perugino whose grace tempers the rough ness'of every day, the Rubens whose large ness and abundance fling a glow of comfort and ease over the most ungenial career. . Life becomes more harmonious, it beats with a keener pulse of enjoyment, in the presence of pretty women. After all, a charming little figure, a piquant little face, is the best remedy for half the ills of existence, its wor ries, its relations, its dulness, its disappoint ments. And even in the larger and more C icid types of beauty, in the beauty of a dy Dumbello, if there is. a tinge of stu pidity, there is at any rate an atmosphere of repose, a genial influence moulding our social converse and habits into gentler shapes. It is amusing to see how the prettiness of woman tells on her dress, bow the order and pro priety of her dress tells on the home. The pursuit of beauty, the habit of prettiness, gives an ideal dignity to the very arrange ment of her bonnet-strings. In every, move ment, in the very Bweep of her ample folds, in the pose of her languor, in the gay start of her excitement, one feels the softening, har monizing influence of her last look in the glass. She may be gay, 'or sorrowful, or quiet, or energetio, but she must be pretty. Beauty exercises an imperceptible compul sion over her, which moulds her whole life into graceful and harmonious forms. t Her dress rises out of the mere clothing of man into regions of science, of poetry, of art. A thousand considerations of taste, bar monies of color, contrasts, correspondencies, delicate adjustments of light and shade, dic tate the choice of a shawl or the tint of a glove. And as prettiness tells on dress, it tells on the home. Flowers, pictures, the gay notes of a sonata, the coziest of couches, gorgeous hues of Indian tapestry, glasswork of Murano, a hundred exquisite somethings and nothings, are the natural setting of pretty women. The art of the boudoir tells op all but the chaos of the husband's study. Around that last refuge of barbarism floats an atmo sphere of taste and refinement in which the pretty little wife lives and moves and has her being. And from this tone of the home grows the tone of society, the social laws of good humor, of propriety, of telf-restraiut. v( cnsid.mti?u fvr vtUers, of genUwess, cl vivacity. The very hush of the rough tones that have thundered over Teloponnese as Pericles bends over Aspnsi;i, the little turns and delicacies of phrase, the joyous serfdoms and idlenesses of the manliest anil moRt ener getic of men, tell of the triumph of pretty womnn. , It is a triumph purchased, like most tri umphs, not without loss to the conqueror. There is a tnatteur d'etre, belle M well as a bonhevr. Life, if it gains in delicacy, loses something in breadth and vigor from its very concentration. There is something terribly monotonous in the life of the pretty woman, in the daily battle with ennui and boredom. One ounce of real love would outweigh papa's pet tings in childhood or mamma's fuss about her child's coming out. There are jealousies of the school-room and jealousies of the ball-room, little envies, little spites that line with thorns a path which seems Btrewn with roses. Then there is the plague of fops, the eternal circle of vapid admirers, the eternal drivel of men about town. The prettieslips have pouted sometimes with a longing for the ugliness which secures their sisters a chat with a man of sense. The prettiest bosom has heaved a little rebclliously at the destiny that consigns it to the stupidest of eldebt sons. Perhaps it ' might have been better to have been a little less charming and to have uyirried that amusing younger brother with an income of a few hundreds a year. Sometimes, too, a pretty woman will sigh a little over the infinite littleness of her life, will long for the wider world of politics and effort from which her very prettiness and its train ot results shuts her out. Marriage is a mere catastrophe, prisoning her existence, restricting her to a single adorer in the place of a thousand. Then, too, the single adorer is so hafd to keep, and the thousand are so easy to gain; and so begins the strife between pleasure and duty, the little warfare fought out under the watchful eyes of tattling dowagers and im pertinent fribbles. And then comes the in evitable decay. It is easy to turn from the glass, but it is impossible to turn from the eyes that surround one, and every eye be comes a mirror in which the pretty woman reads the wreck, of her charms. Younger rivals pass her by, the circle of adorers thins ' to a few bores and old beaux, men treat her to second-rate stories or talk with their eyes fixed on another corner of the room. There is a shade of impertinence in the address of the young Guardsman wall-flowers claim her for their own. She has lived for a year or so, and her whole existence is a mere looking back tq that year of life. Or it may be that her prettiness simply passes on' from phase to phase, but even the prettiness of thirty-five, fascinating as it often is, seldom fascinates its possessor. She conquers new realms, but she fails to reconquer the old. She brings gushing undergraduates to her feet, her desk is stuffed with the lyrics of un whiskered Strephons, but there is a terrible irony about it all, and she turns with a sense of the ridiculous from their sighs and pro testations. She is beaten, and she knows it. Strephon has done enough if he has Berved to cover her retreat. Perhaps the one later prettiness that a woman feels to have real power, more real power than the pretti ness of youth, is the prettiness of old age. There is the charm of life's afterglow over the grey, quiet head, the pale, tender face, lit up with . a sweetness, a pitif ulness that only experience and sorrow can give. It is there, somehow,- that we bring our troubles and find peace. It is there, at any rate, that we read a subtler and diviner beauty than in the rosy cheek of girlhood, a beauty spiritu alized, mobile with every thought and emo tion, yet restful with the rest of years. An innnite tenderness and largeness or Heart, a dignity whose grace and naturalness robs it of all sense of restraint, a touch that has in it all the Gentleness of earth, a smile that has in it something of the compassionaleness of heaven, this is the apotheosis of Pretty Vomen. VELOCIPEDES. We give the following from a late number of Die Oartenlaube, Leipsio: In a former number of the Oartenlaube it was mentioned that Newton, 200 years ago, invented a vehicle to be propelled entirely by the person sitting upon it. The city librarian in Nuremberg, Ilerr Lutzelberger, has now written to us that Newton was not the first who invented such a machine. In Doppelmaier's "History of Mathematics and Arts in Nuremburg," published 1730, it is stated that John llautsch, a machinist, born at Nuremburg in 15U5, made a vehicle with four wheels on which a man could move by means of an arrangement of wheels in itself, and that upon this vehicle ne, in 10VJ, re peatedly went in the street,rup and down hill, at the rate of two thousand paces an hour, while, in front of the machine a dragon spouted water to scatter the people, and two angels blew 6mall trumpets. Doppelmaier alse tells that Stephen Farfler, a watchmaker in Altdorf, born in 1G3:, made r . '- I i - , l a 3 lor.uimseu nrai a iour-wiieeiea ana aiier wards a three-wheeled vehicle, which he pro pelled himself, and upon which he went to church, being prevented by lameness from walking. The three-wheeled machine is now kept as a curiosity in the library at Nurem berg, and Doppelmaier gives pictures of all three of these machines. A Gbeat Bev ery. According to the Licensed Victw jra' Guardian, Messrs. Bass & Co., the bitter beer brewers, use up 5'JOO quarters of malt per week. The quantity of malt brewed during the year was close upon 1CO,000 quarters. Quantity of land to grow the barley at 4 J quarters per acre, 42,300 acres. TLe quantity of hops used in the same period was 23,000 cwt. Quantity of coals used during the brewing season, ICQ tons per day. Amount paid . for malt tax, 180,314; and license duty, XS'JiH, or a little over "00 per day. Amount of six months' trsffic by rail to and from the brewery pre mises, 134,11)5 tons. Quantity of trucks used during the same period, (i'.),f4, or 452 per day. Amount of carriage charged by the railway companies during the same period, 4."'j7,8'.s 4s. 4d., or All,2(0 7s. 4d. per month; this is exclusive of many thousand tons of coods received and forwarded by highways. Number of casks in use in the trade, 500,000. Number of men and boys employed in Burton alone, 1834. The amount paid in wages is over A' 2 000 per week. Number of horses, 70 to 80. Number of locomotives, 4, equal to 320 horses; number of engines, 20, equal to .432 horses. Extent of private railway, oyer nve miles. Ohio comes up and puts in Its claim for the champion remarkable memory. It claims that a man in Salem, in that Slate, can tell from memory the weather of anv and everv dar since lb7 that be distinctly remembers whether any day was clear or cloudy, warm or cold, rainy or enowy. Readers of one Boston newspaper are in formed, with scrupulous rearularitv. iust hoi long each day is, and how many minutes longer or shorter it is than was the same day of the mouth six months previous. This original stroke oi invective geuiua supplies iuc joiier wuu ftWV; WW imvw jotting a year. RAILROAD LINES. 1Q7A FOR NEW YOHK THE CAMDEN IO I IF. and Amboy and Philadelphia and Tren ton Katlroad Companion' llnei from Philadelphia to New York and way Places. FROM WALK UT KTRKIIT WHARF. At 8-80 A. M., Accommodation, and 9 P. M., Ex press, via Uamrien and Amboy, and at 8 A. Ex press Mall, and- 8 :t0 P. Accommodation, via Camden and Jersey City. At 6 P. M.. for Amboy and intermediate stations. At 6-80 A. M., 8 and 3-80 P. M. for Freehold. At a P. M. for Iiov Branoh and point on New Jeney Southern Railroad. At 8 and 10 A. M., 13 M., S, 8 80, and P. M. for Trenton. At 0-8O, 8, and 10 A. M.. 12 M., 3, 8-80, S, 6. 8, and 11-80 P. M. for Bordentown, Florence, Bur llngton, Beverly, Delanco. and Klverton. At 6-80 and 10 A.M., It At., 8 80. 6, 6, 8, and 11-80 p. M. for EUgewater, Blverside, Klverton, and Palmyra. At 8 30 and 10 A. SI., 12 M., t, 6, 8, and 11-80 P. M. for Fish House. The 11-80 P. M. line leaves from Market Street Ferrj (upper side). 1 ROM KSWOIKOT05 DKPOT. At T-80 A. M., 2 30, 8-30. and 6, P. M. for Trenton and Bristol, and at 10-46 A.M. and 0 P. M. for Bristol At T-80 A.M., 2-80, and t T. M. for Morris vllle and Tullytown. At 7 80 and 10-48 A. M., 2-80, 5, and 0 P. M. for Schenck's. Eddlnfrton, Oorn wells, Torrasdale, and Holniesburg Junction. At 7 A. M.. 12-30, 615, and 7 80 P. M. for Bustle ton, Holmeftburg, and Holmcshurg Junction. At 7 and 10-46 A. M., 12 80, 2 80, 6 16, 8, and 7 80 P. M. lor Tacony, Wlssinomlng, Brldesburg, and Frank ford. FROM WKftT PHILADELPHIA DBPOT, . Via Connecting Hailroad. At T and 9-80 A. M., 12 46, 6 46, and 13 P. M., New York Express Lines, and at,ll 30 P. M., Emigrant Line, via Jersey City. At 7 and Q-80 A. M , 12 46, 6 46, and 12 P. M. for Trenton and Bristol. At 12 P.M. inlKift) for Morrlsvllle. Tullvtown. Schenck's, Eddington, Cornweils, Torresdale, Holroesburg Junction, Tacony, Wlsslnoming, Brldesborg, and Frankford. The 0-30 A. M., 0-46 and 12 P. M. Lines will run daily. All others SuudayR excepted. Sundav Lines leave at 12 M. (noon), 6 40 P. M., and 12 night. BELVID&RB DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES PROM KBVB1KOTOM DBPOT. At 7-80 A. M. for Nlatrara Falls. Buffalo. Dun kirk, Elmlra, lthaoa, Owego, Rochester, Bingham- ton, Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, Montrose, wiiktsbarre, fscnooiey's mountain, etc. At 7 80 A. M. and 8-30 P. M. for Soranton. Stroudsburg, Water Oap, Belvldere, Easton, Lam bert vllle, Flemlngton, etc The 8 80 P. M Lino connects direct with the train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk, Allentown. Bethlehem, etc At o r. so., irom Kensington uepot, tor LamDerc vllle and Intermediate stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON OOTJNTY AND PKMBEKTON AND HIOHTSfOWN KAIL- BODS. FROM BfARRBT STRUCT FURRY (UPPHB BIDS). At 7 and 10 A. M.. 1. 216. 3-80. 6. and 0 30 P. IVI.. and on Thursday and Saturday nights at 11-30 P. M. for Merchantsvllle, Moorestown, Hartford, Masonvllie, Halnesport, and Mount Holly. At 7 a. m.., a 16 ana e-30 tr. jxl. tor iumuerton ana Medford. At 7 and 10 A. M.. 1. 8 30. and 6 P. M. for Smith- vllle, Ewansvllle, Yln&ntown. Birmingham, and Pemberton. At 7 and 10 A.m., l and 880 p. M. for Lewistown, Wrlahtstown, Cookstown, New Egypt, and Hor- nemown. At 7 A. M., 1 and 8-80 P. M. for Cream Ridge, In laystewn, Sharon, and Hlirhtstown. June 10, 18(0. win. n. uaiiniLu, Agent. T)H1LABELPHIA, WILMINGTON, AND BAL- T1ME TABLE. COMMENCING- MONDAY. JUNE 6. 1870. Trains will leave Depot, corner of Broad street ana Washington avenue, as ioiiows: way man Train at B-ao a. m. (sunaays excepted) for Baltimore, stonulnir at all rearular stations, Connectln g at wllmln g ton with. Delaware Railroad I 1. f Bn(An J V. Uwmwwmm UvntiAh UnM.n. aLd Maryland and Delaware Railroad, at Har rington witn junction ana .Breakwater Maiiroaa, at Se&ford with Dorchester aad Delaware Rail road, at Delmar with Eastern Shore Railroad, and at bausbury with Wloomioo and Pooomoke Rail road. Express Train at 11-4B a. m. (Sundays excepted), lor nammore ana waBumgion, slopping at wu mlngton, Perryvllle, and Havre-de-Urace. Con nects at Wilmington with train for New Castle. Express Tram at r. m.. (Sundays excepted), ior Baltimore and Washington, stepping at Chester. Tburiow, i-iinwooa, uiaymom, wiimingcon, new. I'Ufb, DtftUWIM UlkVVUi bU ABDb Charlestown, Perryvllle, Hayre-ae-Orace, Aber deen, Ferryman's, Eugewood, Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer's Run. Nictht Express at 11-80 P. M. (Dally), for Baltl more and Washington, stopping at Chester, Lln wood, uiavmont. wiiuuniaon. xsewaric. triKion. North East, Perryvllle, Havre-de-Uraoo, Perry man's, and Magnolia. Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk will take the U'46 A. M. tralm wiuuinmun tkaiws. Stopping at all stations between Philadelphia and wilminirton. Leave Philadelphia at 11-00 A. M... 2-80, 600, ant 7-00 P. M. The 6-oo P. M. train connects with Dela ware Railroad for Harrington and Intermediate stations. Leave Wilmington e-o ana s-io a. m., a-oo, -oo, and 7-16 P. M. The 8-10 A. M. train will not stop between Chester and Philadelphia. Ihe 716 P. M. train from Wilminirton runs Daily; all other ao- oommodatlon trains Sundays excepted. Trains leaving Wilmington at a. m. ana t P. M. will connect at Lamokln Junction with the T-C0 A. M. and 4 80 P. M. trains for Baltimore Con ral Railroad. From Baltimore to rouaaeipnia. leave Balti more 726 A.M., way Mali; U 00 A. M., Express; 2 86 P. M., Express; 726 P. M., Express. SUNDAY TRAIN FROM BALT1MUKK. Leaves Baltimore at 725 P. MV, stopping at Mag nolia, Ferryman's, Aberdeen, Havre-de-Graoe, Per ryvllle, Charlestown, North East, Elkton, Newark, Stanton, Newport, Wilmington, Clay moat, Lin wood, and Chester. (Jn Sundays, leave i oiiauoipuia ior w env urovo and Intermediate stations at 8 00 A. M.; returning, lelt West Grove at 8-66 P. M. Through tickets to all points West, South, and Southwest may be procured at ticket offloe. No. 828 Chesnut street, under Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms and Bertha In Sleeping Cars can be secured during the day. persons purchasing tlokeis at this ottlce can have baggage checked at their residence by the Unlen Transler Company. a. I . iifcJNJNH.x, superintendent. PHILADELPHIA ' AND ERIE RAILROAD. SUMMER TIME TABLE. On and alter MONDAY, May so, 1x70, the trains en the Philadelphia ana jsne itauroaa run as follows from Pennsylvania Railroad Depot, West Philadelphia- MAIL TRAIN leaves Philadelphia . 10 20 P. M. " wuuamspon oo a. M. arrives at Erie 7-40 P. M. ERIE EXPRESS leaves Philadelphia 10-60 A. M. " wunauujport . 816 r. M. arrives at Erie 7-26 A.M. ELM1RA MAIL leaves Philacelphla T-60 A. M. " wuiianiBport B-O0P. M. arrives at Lock Haven 120 P. M. BALD EAGLE MAIL leaves Williams- iort 180 P. M. ' arrives at Lock Haven BABTWABD. 2 46 P.M. MAIL TRAIN leaves Erie - 8 60 A. M. 9 -26 P. M. 0-20 A. M. 9 00 P. M. 816 A. M. " Mtliuamsport arrives at Philadelphia ERIE EXPRESS leaves Erie - " . wiuiamspon arrives at Philadelphia 6 30 P. M. ELM IRA MAIL leaves. WiliUmsuort - -9 46 A. M. arrives at riiiiauaiiuiik ou r, iu BUFFALO EXP. leaves WlUiamsport 12 26 A. M. " H Harrisburg 6 2J A. M. " arrives at Philadelphia 9-21 A. M. bald jEAULxi aiA lu leaves u. navea 11 a. iu, arr. WUUamsu't 12 60 P. M. BALD EAGLE EX. leaves Look Haven 9-36 P. M. " " arr. WllUamsport 10-60 P. M. Express Mall and Accommodation, east and west, connect at Corry, andall west bound tralas and Mall and Accommodation east at lrvinetoa with OU Greek and Allegheny River Railroad. W 1U. A. rJALOJ V? 1IN, General Superintendent. THE PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CEN. TRAL RAILROAD. CHANCE OF HOURS. On and after MONDAY. April 4, 1870, train, will run as follows: LEAVE PHILADELPHIA, from depot of P., W. A B. R. R. Company, corner Broad street and Wash ington avenue For PORT DEPOSIT at T A. M. and 480 P. M. For OXFORD, at 1 A. M.. 480 P. M. and IP. kt For CHADD'8 FORD AND CHESTER CREEK R. R. at 1 A. VL, 10 A. M., 8 80 P. M., 4-30 P. M-, and 1 P. M. Train leaving Philadelphia at T A. M. connects at Port Deposit with train for Baltimore. Trains leaving Philadelphia at 10 A. M. and 430 P, M.. leaving Oxford at 6 Oft A.M. and leaving Port Deposit at 9-145 A- M., connect at Chadd's Furd Juno RAILROAD LINES. "OEADTNO RAILROADGREAT TRUNK LINE J.V from Philadelphia to the Interior of Penn sylvania, tbe Sohaylklll, Sasqaehanna, Cumber land, and Wyoming Valleys, the North, North wet, and the Canadas. - v ' SPRING- ARRANOEMENT Of Passenger Trains, May 16, 1870. Leaving the Comnanv's Depot at Thirteenth and Oallowhlll streets, Philadelphia, at the following hours MORNING ACCOMMODATION. At. 730 A. M. for Reading-and all intermediate Stations, and Allentown. Returning, leaves Read ing at 8-86 P. M.t arrive la Philadelphia at 9-26 P.M. MORNING EXPRESS. At 816 A.M. for Readlntr. Lebanon. Harrlsburo;. Pottsvllle. Finetrrove. Tamaaua. Sunburv. Wil- llamsport, Elmlra, Rochester, Niagara Falls, Buf falo, wilkesbarre, Plttston, York, Carlisle, Cham bersburg, Hagerstown, eto. Toe T'so a. ai. train connects at HLauinu wita East Pennsylvania Railroad trains for Allentown, etc., and the 8-16 A. Mi train connects with the Lebonen Valley train fer Harrisburg, etc; at PORT CLINTON with Catawlssa Railroad trains for Wllilambpnrt, Lock Haven, Elmlra; etc.; at HARRISBURG with Northern Central, Cumber land Valley, and Sohuylklll and Susquehana trains lor Northumberland, WlUiamsport, York, Cham bersburg, Finearove, etc. AFTERNOON EXPRESS. Leaves Philadelphia at 880 P. M. for Reading, Pottsvllle, harrisburg, etc.; connecting with Read lng and Columbia Railroad trains for Columbia, eto. TOTTSTOWN ACCOMMODATION. Leaves Pottstown at 6-26 A.M., stopping at In termediate stations: arrives in hhlladelphla at 80 A. M. Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 4-00 P. M.; arrives in Pottstown at 616 P. JU RE AXING AND POTTSVILLE ACCOMMODA TION. Leave Pottsvllle at 6-40 A. M. and 4-20 P. M., and Reading at T 30 A. M. and 6-86 P. M.. stopping at all way stations; arrive In Philadelphia at 10-20 A. M. ana 9 26 P. M. Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 6-15 P. M.; ar rives in Reading at 766 P. M., and at Pottsvllle at V'40 P. M. . Morning Express trains for Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at 810 A. M., aad Pottsvllle at 0 A. M., arriving In Philadelphia at 1 P. M. Afternoon Ex pre 88 trains leave Harris-burg at 2-60 P. M., and Pottsvllle at 2-60 P. M., arriving at Philadelphia at 700 P. M. Harrisburg Accommodation leaves Reading at 7 16 A. M. and Harrisburg at 4-10 P. M. Connect ing at Reading with Afternoon Accommodation south at e-86 P. M., arriving In Philadelphia at 9 26 P. M. Market train, with a passeeger ear attached, leaves Philadelphia at 12-30 boon, for Reading and all way stations; leaves Pottsvllle at 6-40 A. M., connecting at Reading with accommodation train for Philadelphia and all way stations. All the above trains run daily, Sundays ex cepted. Sunday trains leave Pottsvllle at 8 A. M.. and Philadelphia at 816 P. M. Leave Philadelphia for Reading at 8 A. M.; returning from Reading at 4-26 P.M. CHESTER VALLEY RAILROAD. Passengers for Downlngtown and Intermediate points, take the 7-30 A. M., 12-30, and 4-00 P. iVI. trains from Philadelphia. Returning from Down lngtown at 6-20 A. M., 12-46, and 6-16 P. M. PERKIOMEN RAILROAD. Passengers for Schwenksville take 7 80 A. M., 12-80. and 4-00 P. M. trains from Phllakelphla, re turning from Schwenksville at 8 06 A. M., 12 46 noon, and 416 P. M. State lines for various points In Perklomen Valley connect with trains at Col- legevllle and Schwenksville. - COLEBROOKDALE RAILROAD. Passengers for Mount Pleasant and Intermediate Points take the 780 A. M. and 400 P. M. trains from Philadelphia, returning from Mt. Pleasant at 700 and IV 00 A. M. NEW YORK EXPRESS FOR PITTSBURG AND THE WEST. Leave New York at 9-00 A. M. and 6 00 P. M. passing Reading at 1-46 and 10 06 P. M., and con neotinir at Harrisburg -with Pennsylvania and Northern Central Railroad Express trains for Pittsburg, Chicago, WlUiamsport, Elmlra, Balti more, eto. Returning Express train leaves Harrisburg on arrival of Pennsylvania Express from Plttsbunr at 6 86 A. M. and 8 60 A. M., passing Reading at 728 A. M. and 1040 A. M., arriving at New York 12 06 noon and 816 P. M. Sleeping cars aooompany these trains through between Jersey Glty and Pittsbum without change. A Mall train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8-10 A. M. and 2 60 P. M. Mall train for Harris burg leaves New York at 12 M. SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD. Trains leave Pottsvllle at 6so and 11-30 A. M and -60 P. M., returning from Tamaqua at 835 A. M., and 1-40 and 4 60 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUSQUEHANNA ROAD. RAIL- Trains leave Auburn at 8-66 A. M. for Plnegrove and Harrisburv, and at 12-06 noon for Plnegrove. Tremont, and Brookslde, returning from Harris burg at 8 40 P. M., from Brookslde at 8 46 P. M and from Tree" out at 6-26 A. M. and 6 05 P. M. TICKETS. Through first-class tickets and emigrant tickets to aU the prlnoipal points in the North and West and Canauas. Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate stations, good tor one dsy only. and sold by morning Accommoaation iuaritet Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains, at reduced rates. Excursion Tickets 10 rnuaaeipnia, gooa ior one dav onlv. are sold at Pottsvllle and intermediate stations by Reading and Pottsvllle and Pottstown Acoommoaauon Trains, at reauceu rates. The following tickets are obtainable only at the office of S. Bradford. Treasurer. No. 227 S. Fourth street, IhUadelphia, or of G. A. Nloolls, General Superintendent. ReadinK. COMMUTATION TICKETS. At 26 per cent, discount, between any points desired, for famlUes and firms. MILEAGE TICKETS. Good for 2000 miles, be tween all points, at 647-00 eaoa, tor families ana nrmB. SEASON TICKETS For one, two, three, six. nine, or twelve months, for holders only, to all noin Is. at reduced rates. CLERGYMEN residing on the line of the road will be furnished with cams entltUng themselves and wives to tickets at hall fare. EXCURSION TICKETS from Philadelphia to principal stations, good for Saturday, bunday, and Monday, at reduced fares, to be had only at tbe Ticket Office, at Thirteenth and CaUowhUl streets. FREIGHT. Goods of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company's new freight depot, Broad fend Willow streets. MAILS close at the Philadelphia Post Office for all places on the road and its branches at 6 A. M., ai a lor the principal stations only at 2 16 P. M. FREIGHT TRAINS leave Philadelphia dally at 4-86 A. M., 12-80 noon, 6 and 716 P.M., for Reading. Lebanon, Harrisburg, Potts vlUo, Port CUnton, and points beyond. BAGGAGE. Dungan's Express will collect baggage for all trains leaving Philadelphia Depot. Orders can be lelt at No. 226 S. FOCRTH Street, or at the Depot, THIRTEENTH and CALLOW HILL Stieets. WEST CHESTER AND PHILADELPHIA RAIL ROAD COMPANY. On and after MONDAY, April 4, 1370, trains will leave from the Depot, THIRTY-FIRST' aud CUES NUT. as follows: nui, Jc-HOM PHILADELPHIA. 6- 45 A.M., for B. C. Junction, stops at all stations. 7- 16 A.M., for West Chester, stops at all stations west of Media (except Greenwood), connecting at B. C. Junction for Oxford, Kennett, Port Deposit, and stations ou the P. and li. C. R. R. -40 A. M. for West Chester stops at all stations. 11-60 A. M. for 11. C. Junction stops at all stations. 8- 30 P. M. for West t heater stops at all stations. 416 P. M. for B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 4-40 P. M- for West Chester stops at all stations west of Media (except Oreenwood), connecting at B. C. Junction for Oxford, Kenne it, Port Deposit, and all stations on the P. 4 B. C. R. R. , 6-30 P. M. for ii. C. Junction. This train commences running on and after June 1, 1370, stopping at all 6w'!M?'for West Chester stops at all stations. li-ao P M. for West Chester stops at all stations. uwi r. m. jH1LADKLPHIA. BS8 A. M. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 6 80 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations. T40 A. M. from West Chester stops at ail stations be tween W. C. and Media (except Greenwood), coa nectlug at li. O, Junction for Oxford, Keuuett, Port Deposit, and all stations on the P. fc U. C. R. R. 816 A. M. from B. C Junction stops at all stations. 0 -00 A. M. from West Chester stops at all stations. l-oe P. M. from B. C. Junction stops at all stations. 168 P M. from West Chester stops at all stations. 4 06 P M. from West Chester stops at all stations, connecting at B. C. Junction for Oxford, Keunett, port Deposit, .and all stations on the P. A B. C. R. R. 6-66 P. M. from West Chester stops at all stations, connecting at B. C. Junction with P. A B. C. R. R. 900 P. M. from B. C. Junction. This train com mences running on and after June 1st, laid, stop plUgatalUtauousBUNDAy8( . 808 A. M. for West Chester stops at an stations, coa uectiiig at B. C. Junction with P. A B. C. R, R. f-bO P. M. for Went Chester stops at all stations. 4-80 A. M. from West Chester stops at all statiocs. t-60 P. M. from West Chester stops at all stations, conaectuig at B. C. Junction with p. a b. c. k. r. RAILROAD L.INE9 3ENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAILROAD. " AFTER r. M., SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 1RT0. The trains of the Pennsvlranla Central Railroad leave the Depnt, at THIRTY-FIRST and MAR. KJi 1 streets, which is reached directly ey the Mar- v, Plivi, i .mi iu. inn, vnr vuinjouuu nuuvnuu train leaving; Front and Market streets thirty minutes before its departure. The Chesnut and Walnut streets oari run within eae square of the Depot. Sleeping-car tickets cap. te naa on application at the Ticket Office, N. W. corner Ninth and Ches nut streets, and at the Iepot. Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver baggage at the depnt. Orders left at No. 901 Chesnut street, or No. 116 Market street, will receive attention. TRAINS Lt AVI DBPOT. Mall Train 8-00 AM. Paoll Accommodation . . 12-60 and 7-10 P.M. Fast Line 12-30 P. M. Krle Express 11-00 A. M. Harrisburg Accommodation 2-80 P. M. Lancaster Accommodation . 410 P.M. Parkesburg Train ., . , , . 6-30 P.M. Cincinnati Express 8-00 P. M. Erie Mail and Pittsburg Express . . 10-80 P. M. w ay r-assenger 11-30 p. M.. Erie Mall leaves dally, except Sunday, running on Saturday ntifht to W tlUamsport only. On Sun dav nieht riftssenner will leave Phlladelnhla at 8 o'clock. Pittsburg Express, leaving on Saturday uigm, runs umy iu xisrrisuurg. Cincinnati Express leaves dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. The1 Western Accommodation Train runs dally, except Sunday. For this train tickets must be pro cured and baggage delivered by ( P. M. at No. 116 market street. Sunday Train No. 1 leaves Philadelphia at 840 A. M. : airlves at Paoll at 9-40 A. M. Sunday Train No. 2 leaves Philadelphia at 6-40 P. M.; ar rives at Paoll at 740 P. M. Sunday Train No. 1 leaves Paoll at 6-50 A.M.; arrives at Philadelphia at 810 A. M. Sunday Train No. 2 leaves PaoU at 4 60 P. M.; arrives at Philadelphia at 6 10 P. M. TKAInB AKBI.V AT UKrUTi Cincinnati Excress 8 10 A. M. Philadelphia Express Erie Mall . Paoll Aocomtuodat'n Parkesburir Train 6-30 A. M. . . . . 6 80 A. M. 8 20 A. M. and fl-40 P. M. 9 00 A. M. Fast Line and Bunalo Express . . 9 85 A.M. Lancaster Train . . . . 11-65 A. M. Erie Express ...... 6-40 f. M. Lock Haven and Elmlra Express . 9 40 P, M. Paclfio Express . . - . . . .12-20 P.M. Harrisburg Accommodation . . 9-40 P. M. For lurther Information apply to JOHN F. YANLEER, Jr.. Ticket Agent. Ne. 901 CHESNUT Street. FRANCIS FUNK, Ticket Agent. No. 116 MARKET Street. SAMUEL H. WALLACE, Ticket Agent at the Depot. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will not assume any risk for Baggage, except for Wearing Apparel, and limit their responsibility to One Hun dred Dollars In value. All Baggage exceeding that amount in value will be at the risk of the owner, unless taken by special contract. A. J. CASSATT, 4 29 General Superintendent, Altoona,Pa. -VTORTH PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD i THE SHORT MIDDLE ROUTE TO THE LEHIGH AND WYOMING VALLEYS, NORTH ERN PENNSYLVANIA, SOUTHERN AND IN TERIOR NEW YORK. BUFFALO, CORKY. ROCHESTER, THE GREAT LAKES, AND THE DOMINION OF CANADA. - SUMMER ARRANGEMENT. Takes euect May 16, 1870. Sixteen Dally Trains leave Passenger Depot, corner of Berks and American streets (Sundays excepted), as follows: 7 00 A. &L (Accommodation) for Fort Washing ton. At 786 A.M. (Express), for Bethlehem, Easton, Al lentown, Mauch Chunk, Wilkesbarre, WlUiams port, Mahanoy City, Hazleton, Plttston. To wand a, Waverley, and In connection with the ERIE RAIL WAY for Buifalo, Niagara Falls, Rochester, Cleve land, Chicago, San Francisco, ana aU points m the Great West. 8 26 A. M. (Accommodation) for Doylenown. 9 46 A. M, (Express) for Bethlehem, Easton, Al lentown, Mauch Chunk, WUUamsport, Wilkesoarre, PittstoD, Scranton. Hackettstown, Sohooley's Mountain, and N. J. Central and Morris and Essex Railroads. ' 11 a. M. (Accommodation) for Fort Washington. 1-16, 3 30, and 6-iO P. M., for Ablngton. 1-46 P. M. (Express) for Bethlehem, Easton, Al lentown. Mauch Chunk, Mahanoy City, Wilkes barre, Plttston, and Hazleton. 2 8u P. M. (Accommodation) for Doy lest own. At 8-20 P. M. (Bethlehem Acoommodatlon) for Bethlehem, Easton, Allentown, Coplay, and Mauch Chunk. 416 P. M. (Mall) for Doylestown. 6-00 P. M. for Bethlehem, Easton, Allentown, and Mauch Chunk. 6 20 P. M. (Accommodation) for LansJale. 8-00 and 11-30 P. M. (Accommodation) ior Fort Washington. Ihe Fitth and Sixth streets, Second and Third streets, and C'neVn Lines city Cais run to the Depot. TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA FROM Bethlehem at 8 66, and 10 35 A. M.; 2 16, 6 05, and 8 26 P. M. Doylestown at 8 25 A- M., 4 40 and 7 05 P. M. Lanedaleat7-30 A. M. Fort Washington at 0 20 and 1120 A. M., 3-10 and 9-46 P. M. AMngton at 2 35, 4-65, and 6 45 P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9 30 A. M. Philadelphia ior Loylestown at 2 00 P. M. Philadelphia for Fort Washington at 8 30 A. M. and 7-oo P. M. Doylestown for Philadelphia at 6-30 A. dL. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4-00 P. M. Fort Washington tor Philadelphia at 9 S0 A. M. and 8-10 P. M. Tickets sold and baargaae checked through to principal points at Mann's North Pennsylvania liuggage impress umoe, ro. 100 s. rum street. May 16, 1670. ELLIS CLARK, Agent, "PHILADELPHIA, QERMANTOWN AND NOR A. illSTUWCi tiAiLKUAU. TIME TABLE. On and after MONDAY, June 6, 1370. FWR GERMAN TOWN. ' Leave Philadelphia 6, T, 8, 9-05, 10, 11, 12 A. M., 1. 2, y4, 9, 4, 4, 6-C6, 6, , OX, 7, 8, 9, 10-05, 11, 12 P.M. Leave Oermantown 6, 6 55, iy, 8, 8-20, 9, 18, 11, 12 A. M., 1, 2, 8, 4, lt 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 P. M. The 8 20 oown train, ana 84 ana e v.up trains, Will not stop on me uerraamown eranoii. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia at uji A. M., 2, 4-06, 7, aad lob P. M. Leave German tow a at 8 A. M., 1, 8, 6, and B)i r. iii. CHESNUT HILL RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia 6, 8, 10, and 12 A. M., 2, J'i, 6, 7, 9, and 11 P. M LtaveCheftiUt Hill 710, 8, 9-40, and 11-40 A. M., 1'iU, 3'U, S'to, 0 , a u. anu lirtu r. au ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia at 9M A. M.. 2 and 7 P. M. Leave Chednut Hill at I SO A. M., 12 40, 6 40. and 9-26 P. M. Pafibeouers taking the 6-65, 9 A. M.. and 6U p. M. trains ft bin Oermantown will make close connec tions w ith the trains ior New York at Intersection -station. FOR CONPHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia o, 7 X, 9, and 11 05 A. M., IX, 8, 414. 4, 6i, bj-i, 8 06, 10, and P. M. Leave Nniiown 6U, tJ'So, 7, 7 860, and 11 A. M., 14, 8, 4, 0)i. s, ana wv r. , iu. ON SUNJJAYS. Leave Philadelphia 9 A. M., 2v4. 4, and ' P. M. Leave Norristown 7 A. M., 1, 6 . and 9 P. 31. FOK MANAYUAK. Leave Philadelphia b, 7i. . and 11 05 A.M., i 3. 4V. 6. 614, tik . 6 05. 10, ana 11V P; M. leave Manayuck 6, 6-66, 7, 8 10, 9 20, and 11U A, M., 2, tya, 6, 6;V, 8V, and 10 P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia 9 A. M., 2X, 4, anJ Vi P. M Leave Manayuna 1 A. M , lx.ev and 9t P.M. rL muu i n it Au.r,jAD. Leave Philadelphia 5 P. M. Leave Plymouth 8 V A. M. ihe 7 A.M. train from NorrUtowa will not stop at Mogee'a, Potts Landing, Domino, or Schur'a Aane. -1 he e r. mi. train trom Philadelphia will siop oniy 11 ocnooi Lane, w irsmouiing, Manay uuk, uieen 1 ree, sou cjonsuouocuen. Passengers taking the 7. W-i 6 A. M. and 6U p. M trains trom Ninth and Oreen streets will make olose connections with the trains for New York at In tersection fetation. The 9X A. M. and I P. M. trains from New York connect with the 1 and 8 P. M. trains from Oer mantown to Ninth and Oreen streets. 6 20 W. ts. WILSON, Oeneral Sap'C rpHE PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE CEN X TRAL KA1LKOAU t-U. thaikh voh PHILADELPHIA leave PORT DEPOSIT at 926 A. M. and 428 P. VL, ou arrival of trains from Baltimore. OXFORD at 6-OS A. M., 1088 A. M., and 630 P. M. CBADD'd FORD at Tiro A. Jtt-i is-wju., i-au r. bl. A-i V XI anil S-4S P. M. Passengers are allowed to take wearing apparel ouly as baggage, aud ttie companv wui not U re soonsible for an amount exceeding one hutiJred dollars unless a ipetlAl contract is made for tie 4S uiV4H AUO DON SALES. AT THOMAS fc SONS, NOS. U AND Ill ill. S. FOURTH STREET. Pale No. 1409 Cnennut street. FlXTURKS OF AN ICE CRHAM SALOON ANT) CAKE BAKERY, PLATE -LASS SHOWCA8K, MARBLE TOP COUNTER AND TABLES, SHELVING. ICKCUKAM CAN'S AND MOULfcS, BAKE PAN, COPPER KETTLES, ETC. . Ou Mondny Moriiing, Junes, at 10 o'clock, the fixtures, comprising , Plnte plans showcase, marble-top counter, shelvtug, niariile-top tables, a Inrge quanta? of g ass Jars, l- e cream plates, stone china take stin'i9, copper kef ties, bake pans, pound cake pans, ice crenra cans . and moulds, tubs, superior mortar and pestle, brass scales and weights very large and superior stove, bread troughs, etc. 1 Sl'RPLl'S HOUSEHOLD f URNITTRE. Also, the surplus furniture, loinpriuing v'alnt parlor furniture, rosewood piano-torte. made l Pennsylvania Manufacturing Co., maliognnv cham ber fnrnitnre, stoves, inirraincarpetn, handsome gaa chandeliers and brackets, etc. May be examined at 8 o'clock on the morning of sale. . B Terms Cash. Particulars In catalogues. C242t SALE OF REAL ESTATE AND STOCKS, On Tuesdav, June S3, at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Exchange will include: IUksr Street, No. 6l Brick Dwelling. Tenth Strxet (south), No. 62H Modern Resi dence. Sixtkiniu Street (North!, No. 813 Modem Re sidence. Wood Street. No. ir-80 Three Brick Dwellings. Ninth akd M astir Streets, N. JL corner coal Yard. Rising Sun valuable Lot. 7-tf acres, fronts on five Streets. Wist Delanckt Place. No. S182 Modern Resi dence. Fifth Street. Nob. 1(121 and 1623 Modern Resi dence. HiLLBnAi.E Street Valuable Saw Mill. Second and Pkimb Streets. N. W. corner Store and Dwellings. r iftkentu street (North No. 2r.2-Moderu Dwelling. Lafayette Street, Cape Mav, IT. J.-DouHle Cottage. iuarkbt street, iso. FB02 store and Dwelling. Powxli. Street, No. Bis Brick Dwelling. Nineteenth Stheet. below South Bru t Dwell ing. Delaware Street, Camden. N. J t lots of ground. Eighth Street (South), No. 1003 Store aai Dwelling. HEACH street, mo. use "rreatv note." Twalfth Street, (South). No. ion Brick Dwell ing. JATHARIKK (STREET, r0S. S00 and S0G BCiCk Dwellings. sixteenth street, Norm or Tioga LOU Sepviva Street Lot. Clearfield Cot'NTv, Pa S27 Acres. Ridoe Road, Roxborough Dwelling. Chound Rent 143 a year. Sluo shares Clarion and AUegheuy River Oil. 1 1800 first mortenee couoou bonds Juniata Ima Manufacturing Company. ssv snares uentrai national i;anK. SO shares KeusiDjUon National B:ink. 100 shares Buck Mountain Coal Company. 100 shares Enterprise Insurance Company. M shares Chester Valley Railroad Company. S0o) first mortcraire 7 rer cent. Tremont Coal Company, June aud December. t.wo consolidated mortzage Huntingdon aul Broad Top Railroad. . 9 snsres rroviuenc j.ue ana Trust company. . 400 shares New Creek Company. 10 shares National Bank of the Republic. 6 24-3t 1UNTING, DURBOROW A CO., AUCTIONEERS, i Nos. 83-2 and 234 MARKET street, corner of Bank street. Successors to John B. Myers tk Co. LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO PEAN mix Otoujjs, On Monday MorniDg. Jane 27, at 10 o'clock, on four mouths' credit, Including A SPECIAL AND CLOSINU SALE OF 800 CAR TONS BONNET AND HASH RIBBONS. by order of Messrs. Kutler, Luckemeyer & Co., the importation of Messrs. Boleilac Frares. 6 21 2t CLOSING SALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, On Tuesday Morning, Jane 23, at 10 o'clock, on four mouths' credit. 6 223t CLOSING SALE OF BRITISH, FRENCH, GER MAN AND DOMESTIC DRY WOODS, On Thursday Morning, June 0, at 10 o'clock, on four montus'credlt.rc 24 St M ARTIN BROTHERS, AUCTIONEERS (Itlr nIemaa for M. Thomas A Soaa.) w. fiMCIUKSNli l'Hcrest. rear entrance trnm Bflaa. THOMAS BIRCH & SON. AUCTIONEERS AMD COMMLSSION MERCHANTS, Mo. 1114 OHK8MJT Street, rear eatrace Ho. 1107 tlansom street. r . A. MCCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER Ho. U19 OHKSNCT 8TRJCKT. Peraonal atteacloa io to saIm of Hooaeheld Forn tare at dwelling. Pablio eaiee of Furniture at the Aootion Rooms, H9J L119 0HKbNUT Streeet. oivrj Monday and lharsda. For partlooiara see iS-oiic Ltdtitr. I U N. B. A enperior olaet of Fomitoreat priratetali. BY BARRITT A CO., AUCTIONEEIU CASH AUCTION HOUSE, 11441 HO. 130 MARKET Street, corner of Bank street Qua advanced on comignmeoU without extra ooarae. SCOTT'8 ART GALLERY AND AUCTION couMissiOH salesrooms. B. KOO IT, Jr., Aaotioneer, No. 1117 OHEbNUT Street. (Uirard UoV ' N LOUISVILLE, K Y W. 6E0B0E AM)rHSOf. H.O. SrUOt. JHUW A8 ANDERSON A OO. (Katabliahed Ivjo). AUCTIONEERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. LOUISVILLE, KY. Bnsineaa itrictijr OoainuMlon. All aaotlon sales ezola lively tor cash. , Oonsiirnnieate solicited for aaotlon or private sale. Regular auction aai us of boots, auoee, and hate evert Thursday. RsRalar auction eaiee ol dry 'sroods, clothing, carpet notions, etc., eery Wednesday and Tharaday. 3 1J kn RAILROAD LINES. fEST JERSEY RAILROADS. COMMENCINO WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1. 18T3. Leave Philadelphia, foot of Market street (upper ferry), at 8oo A. M., Mall for Cape May, Brldgeton, Salem, MilUllle, Yineland, Swedesboro, and latermedlata stations. 11 4S A. M., Woodbury Aceommodatlon. 815 P.M., Mail tor Cape May, MlilvlUe, Vlnt land, and way stations below Glassboro. 3-30 P. M., Passenger for Brldgeton, Salem, Swedesboro, and intermediate stations. I 45 P. M., Accommodation. Woodbury, Qlasa boro, Clayton, tswedesbero, and way stations. Commutation tickets at reduced rates batweei Philadelphia and all stations. Cape May Season Tickets, good for four months from date of purchase, sfiO. Annual Tickets, (100. Freight Train leaves Camden dally at li o'clock noon. Freight received in Philadelphia at second covered wharf below Walnut street. Freight delivery at No. 223 S. Delaware avenue. 8 15 WM. J. SEWaLL, Superintendent. ENCINEO, MACHINERY, ETO. STEAM ENGINE AND .Hntl.irR WORKS NEAFIE A I.K VY i-nAOilGAL AND THKORKTlOAl ENUISHKRS MAOH1NISTS, bOlLKE MAKERS. BLA0K.8MnH3 and iOUKDEKS, haras (or many fears, beea in successful operation, and been eio losisly en ned In bnildinc and repainM Marine and Kivr Engines, hi-h and low preasore. Iron Boilers, WaU tanks, I'ropellera, eto. etc, respeotfolly oHer theu asr vioes to tbe pablis as being rally prepared lo oontraot to sncioes of all sizes. Marine, Rier, and btationary ; ha Tin, sets ol patterns ol different sizes, are prepared to execute orders with Quick despatco. Hery desonpuoa of palWra oiakiDg made at the shortest notice. Uigh and Low pres sure tine 1 oboiar and OyUnder Boilers of the beat Peoa. yivaaia Charcoal lxoa. FofKin-s of all sue. and kinds, Iron and Brass Uastinf i o all rieeonptioue. KoU Tnnunji Kcre Cluiung, and all opar work ooaneoted wUh the ftDrIiJTn"fc'san'l speoifloatiOBJ for all wort done at tos ..aolisbuisnt free of tavire. and wora paranMed. Tne solwc nbers nao ajS:s wbart dok room for repairs of mats, where ther oaa Us in perfect aaiety, and are pro. tided with snsajrt. biocaa, faus. sto. eto for rajung bsarf luJatw-J JACOB O. NBAFUL JOHN P. LKVY, 1 1; BBAOH and PALM KB Streeta, G IBARD TUBE WORKS AND IRON CO. JOHN H. MURPHY, President. rBILaSELTBiA, Pa. fftlasnlavcturw Vreuht lro Pipe I And Sonarieafor Pieaibtra, cas and Stasia Fitters. WORKS, TWENTY-THIRD and FILBERT Street. OFFICE AND WARKUOUSK, 41 Ne. 4Nrth FIFTH Htreet. ALEXANDER O. CATTELL & CO. PRODUCE COMMISSION MKROUlti T8. No. NORTH WUARVltS Wo. 81 NORTH WATFR STREET, FULLADHXPatA. iUliKU S4X-aUa apVaa Oaxu;