THE DAlLT EVENING TELEGRAriiFHIL'ADELPHlA, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1870 sent to Altua with his men, and waa employed in a large tiiiinU r 01 those destructive enterprises which were thought to be tne necessary though cruel policy of the FrciKh Government to subjngftte and keep tn order the reckless valor of the rab tribes (inpatient tinder a foieic,n joke. The rising of Jlou Max. gave the Frem li rmv of occnpatlon no rest, and the prin cipal bn.itf the contest fell on CanroOert'a regi ment, the CTih fl the line. El,rnt months of constant fighting cud bloody reprisals broke the spirit of the refractory tribes, and in 184T he got his colonelcy. The promotion did not bring Idleness, It onlv led to Increased duty, until after chastising several minor trlhns to no purpose, the grand insurrection of tho Kabyles and the nhtives of Jurjura commenced. This, like all the rest, was termiuated after Immense fatigues and great losses on both sides. In la49 he relieved Boasada from blockade, and utormed the Arat for tress of Zaalchn, leading his men In the assault. This Inst achievement brought his recall and his employment on scenes of more wido-spresd honor and less work. At the nomination of Louis Napoleon as President, Canrobert Joined h a party. Ho be came general in the new republic, and In the coup de afhad command of one of the divisions of the army or Pnris, and assisted in the rnpresslon of the popular dissatisfaction. Some political functions of considerable Importance were next assigned to him. and In 1W'3 he became general of division. Canrobert was sent to Tnrkey in ISM, In command of the 1st Division of the Army of the East. Tho introductory campaign of the Dobrntseha was unfortunate, and this division suii'ered terribly from cholera. Subsa quentlr, wh n the centre of military operations wus changed to the Crimea, he was at the battle of Alma and was slightly wounded. Two days afterwards, when St. Arnault, commander-in-chief of the French, wai dying, he turned over the command to Canrobert, who moved immediately on Sevastopol, constructed several batteries, and opened lire with the Intention of carrying the fortress by a cnup tie. miin, but fln-l-lng this Impracticable, be forthwith laid down a plan of gigantic Investment. He was wounded at Inkermsnn. ills mode of procedure not being satisfactory to Lord Raglan, the British commander, Canrobert was relieved by Pellssler from the commander-ln-chielship, and re sumed dutv at the head of his own corps. In 1956 he was made Marshal of France. In the French Austrian war he was at the head of the Bd Corps, lie was at Magenta and at Solferino. Since the c'.oso of that war he has been engaged In several olllces in France of no special interest to the Ameri can republic, and even Ins vote against the temporal power of the Tope in 1861 must be regarded rather as a matter of military obedience or policy than of personal opinion. During the disturbances in Paris caused by tne arrest of Rochefort In January last, Marshal Canrobert was milttary commander of Paris, with 100,000 veteran troops at his back. Count de Palikao. to whom has been entrusted tne command of the Vd French Corps d'Armee, la of the extreme age of 74. Bis full name 13 Charles Gulllaime Marie Cousin de Montauban, Count de Falikao, aud he was born on the 84th of Jane, 1790. Ue was employed at an early age In Algiers, and distinguished himself there as a cavalry officer. On September 4, lS3ti, he was made chief of a squadron of horse; on the Tth May, 1843, lieutenant-colonel ; ana on 2d of August, 1845, colonel of the 2d Chasseurs. He became general of brigade on the Slat of September, 1851, and com manded, the division of TIemccn; general of division after SSth September, 1850, he com manded the Division of Constantino. Recalled to France he was put at the head of the 21st Military division during the sloge of Limoges. The year 1800 was marked In the life of General Oousln Montaubnu by one of the most extraordinary events of modern history. Invested wi'h the chief com mand of the French expedition into China, he had the honor of accomplishing that almost fabulous invasion which brought the arms and banners of the French and English even to the capital of this vast and diatant empire. The capture of the forts Of Takouatthe mouth of the Pelho on the 20h of August, the great victory of Palikao over General tfang-ko-hlo-sln, on the 21st of September, tho de struction of the royal palace, tne entry Into Pekin on the 12th of October, forced the Chinese t accept the treaties Imposed by the allies, and assured, at least temporarily, the respect of Kuropean interests in the extreme Est. The General left there at the end of the same year and returned by way of Japan, many of whose prin cipal cities he visited, and re-entered France In the month of Julv, 1861. In recompense for these great successes, the Emperor had already elevated him to the dignity of the grand cross of the Legion of Honor on the 2Uth of December, I860, and had, made him Senator on the 4th of March, 1861. On the Sd of January, 1S82, he conferred on him the title of Count de Palikao, and submitted to the Corps Legislatlf a project of pension ing him, which excited a lively opposition there. The General demanded Its withdrawal; the Emperor opposed this, and the project was accepted by the Chamber with a modulation On the 22d of June, 1865, he was made, in place of Marshal Can robert, who waa called to Paris, commander of the 4th Army Corps, of which the headquarters are at Lyons, aud of the 8th Military Division. lie was made commander of the Legion of Honor on the 2:sd December. 1843, and Graud Otllcer SSth Decem ber, 1850. In 1860, when he Aas given the grand cross, he cou'd count forty-two years of eifective s cry ice, tweuty -eight campaigns, and one wound. Dlarshnl nazal a e. Marshal Francois Achilla Bazalne, who has been placed in command of the Imperiil Guard aud Re serves, is the descendant of a family of soldiers, and was born in 1811. Having finished his studies at the Ecole Poljtechniqne, he entered the array In 1831, served In Africa in 1S32, was promoted from the ranks to a lieutenancy In 1336, and received the cross ot the Legion of Honor on the field of battle. In 183T he was sent to Spain with the legion, and when the war of succession closed he went back to Algiers, where ; he was in the expeditious against Miliuutili, Kabylla, and Morocco. For several veara he had the superlntendentshlp of Arab ariairs In the province of Tlemcen. In 1854, being at the head of the 11 rat regiment of the. foreign legion, he was appointed to tho com maud l the infantry brigade formed from this legion. He performed valuable service with his men at thealegeof Sebastopol, and In particular co-operated lu the reduction of Kioburu, one of the out poBts of the great fortress. After the retreat of the Russians he waa governor of Sebastopol until its final evacuation by the allies. Marshal liazaine has a special Interest for the American people from his connection with the Maximilian expedition to Mexico. He commanded the French contingent, succeeding General Forey aa chief In 1863. The suc cess of the Emperor's discipline against the haif armed aud ualf-clvllized levies of Mexico was almost as rapid and remarkable as that of Cortez or Plzarro against the aborigines. Oajieawas taken, Juarez put to night, the triumph waa complete. All that was needed was stability. If the day of success was brilliant, tho day of reverse was soon t come, and Its darkness wiped out even the me mory of ealv good fortune. The termination of the American war and the known disinclination of the United Hates to foreign interference in Ame rican affair auiraated the Mexicans with new hopes, liazaine in council advised Maximilian that the empire was impossible. Bazalne was recalled; Maximilian court-niartlalled and executed, aud Nanoleonlll suffered such diminution of military prestige aud political reputation as can only be restored !v the possible successes of war with T'rflMHiA. He was made Commander of the Legion of nonor August 16, 1356, and Graud Cross July 2, 136S. Ou September r. 1364, he was made a Marshal of France. General Cliangaroler was, according to the rumors which came from Paris yesterday, to be made a Marshal of France and placed in command of the Reserves, but later despatches state mat this command nas ueen given to Marshal Bazalne. General Changarnier Is 77 years oui, and possibly may not take an active part in tne present cttiupaigu ou account oi nis extreme age. Nicolas-Anne Theodule Changarnier, born at Autun (swine and Loire), April 26, 1793, graduated from fci. iyr m ioio, wun me grade or sous-lieu. tenant, and entered as a simple guard in one of the privileged companies of the body-guard of Louis XVIII. He joined as lieutenant lu January, 1813, tne iota uegnnent oi tne line, lormea or me urovin clal legion cf the Yonne. In 1323 he engaged with distinction In the Spanish campaign, and became captain the 9ih of October, 1823. lu lb.iO he belonged to the 1st Regiment of the Royal Guard. Returned to the caaeis, ue was sent to Africa, where he iusti. lied, in a series of actions full of vigor and force. ins rapid advancement. He took part in the expe dition of Mascara In the Sd Light lnfautry. Chief rOf battalion, fceptemDer si, lbds, ne distinguished nunseu ov ois intrcpiaitv ana tan jroxa in tne cun paign of Marshal Cfonsal against Achinet-Hey, and during tne retreat or Constantino uuon lsone put to flight numerous bands who annoyed the army (24 Mi November, 1886). He was made lieutenant-colonel January 45, 1837. The part which M. Changarnier tooi in me expedition oi me fortes de Fer on tained him the grade of colonel in the 2d Light Infantry, and his successes against the Hogjoutes uu tuv jxujf ica ma tiuu ui kii umuer or tne Liegion of Honor. After the expedition of Medeah, and me aim oi uoionoi ue aiouzai uu (jiieilir (1S10) he was made marshal of the camp 81st of June. Three Tears of new and brilliant services, a wound received at Medeah, a vigorous char ire of cavalrr against a superior force of Kabyles, then the reduc tion of the tribes about Tenex, who susalned Abdel Kader, caased lilni to be elevated to the rank of general of dU lslon the 8d of Au trust. 143. In 1847 ue received the command of th division of Algiers itu tiajjuso! the Duke d Auiuale, Governor-Gene ialol Algiers. Wien Cavaignac had been male by th provisional government at once general of division aud gover nor of the colour, Changarnier returned ti France, and, in a letter, 'in which he magnified his habit of conquering, asking the republican g vernineut to make nse of his devotion to France. M. de im tr tine made him Ambassador to Merlin, hut he pre ferred to remain in Paris, and in the outbreak of loth of A pi II, so dangerous for the provision! govern ment, he put himself spontaneously at. the head of the forces which were at the disposition of the government, and re-cst iblished order. In the month of May he went tj replace General Cavaignao In Algiers, the litter taking a seat In the Senate; but in the election or t lie 4t li of June he was hlmseir chosen representative of the people in the department of the Selue. General Cavaignac having ecome chief of the exe cutive power couflded to M Chnrarnler the com mand of the National Gnard of Paris, which he keot after the presidential election, aud to which he added, on the uth of January and Uth of June, I sr.', that of the troops of Paris, which reached the num ber of lOO.OuO men. After that he occupied an Imp irr ant position In connection with all the events and the political complications of the times His repieseu tutlve ami energetic attitude pieventid civil war in the streets of Paris on the 29th of January ; and the rapidity and severeness of his measures extin guished it on the 13th of June inside the walls of the Conservatory. A declared adversary of republican institutions, he was considered ready to destroy them by violence in the lutereat of the m jst opposite of monarchical munitions, and everybody agreed that, he followed the role of Monk. After having sustained during two j ears, in spite of the uneasi ness and hostility of the Assembly, the position of President, M. Changarnier showed himself, ou the 9th of January, 1851, opposed to the policy of Louis Napoleon, and was deposed from h's double com mand. The Assembly wished, for tnelr own secu rity, to give him in exchange the command of troops destined to protect them, but the piopositl ill was negatived, and M. Changari.ler, who had declared In the Chamber that "for the inauguration of the era of the Ciesars there could not be found a bat talion, a company, or a squad," cmld do nothing either to prevent or hinder the coup d'etat. Arrested on the morning of the 2d of September, he was con ducttd to Mazns, where he remain-id several flays, and was then banished from France by the decree of the 9th of January, 1352. He then resided in llclgluin, at Mulincs, i el using to profit by the authority which had been accorded to him to return to his own country. He sent to the Freuch Journals on the SlHt of March, lsrn, a letter opposing the very violent portion of the "Memolres d'un Bourgeois tie Paris" of M. Vcrou, where the latter savs that lu the month of January, lS4s, M. Changarnier, before him and other witnesses, ottered to arrest his colleagues, Cavaignac, Charras, Laniorlclere, and other repub lican generals. After the general amnesty he re turned to his estates of the Seine and Loire. He was promoted officer of the Legion of .Honor on the 5th of April, 1849. It will be seen from the above record of his life that his being entrusted with uu Important command would indicate a desire on the put of the Emperor to conciliate all classes of his subjects. fllaratinl Forey, whose command has not yet been announced, will llgure largely lu the war, without doubt, JElle Frederic Forey waa born in Paris, January 10, 1804, and, alter a pielnnlnary education, admitted to the military school of St. Cvr in 1822, from which he became instructor to the 2d Light Infantry Regi ment. He participated lu the lirst expedition to Algiers, to which he returned after garrison duty in the Pyrenees and promotion to a captaincy. He distinguished himself lu the battle of Medeah, In the retreat which followed the llrstsiegeof ConstauUue, and at the Iron Gates. In 1840 he was placed at the head of a battalion of Chamuurs-a-pieii, going inrougn tour otuer Algerian campaigns, and returned to France in 1841 with the rank of colonel. In 1S43 ho was made a gene ral, and his services to the coup d'etat, with his en tire adhesion to the cause of Napoleon, were re warded by the commander's Cross la the Legion. He Is accounted an able organizer and tactician. In 1HC4 he was general of reserve, and in the Crimea held for a short time the commaud of the troops be fore Sebastopol. The tlrst division of the army of Paris belonging to the army of the Alps, Forey met tne Austnans at Aiouteueiio, win May, ism, and alter a severe engagement compelled them to re- mat. in isoz ne was sent to Mexico with tne ex peditionary corps that was to place the new Em peror on the throne of that country. He had two divisions of Infantry and one of cavalry. His first act was a proclamation giving the Mexicans liberty to vote. ' This was speedily succeeded by a general sequestration of the property of all those who voted adversely to the pretender. This excited much angry comment; out it seemeu to meet tne approval or the French Government, for General Forey was ma!e Marshal. Having appointed a provisional government- Forey turned over Ills command to lia zaine and returned to Paris in October, 1363. W1LLIA3I 11. THOMAS. ft perch of William II. Thomas I .nut Evening lu Went Philadelphia. At a meeting of citizens of West Philadel phia, held last evening, General William B. Thomas, the opposition candidate to Judge Kelley, made a speech, in which he said: Fellow Citizens: As the people's indepen dent candidate for CoDgress for the Fourth Congressional district, I cannot but feel the want of an organized party and an active daily press at my back. But the absence of these is a necessary peculiarity ot my position. Al though I believe I shall be supported by the honest and independent men of both political parties, still I have neither party or press that I can command. I have no party fund to draw upon. -1 shall not ask any one to contribute to the expenses of the campaign, and I cannot ail or d to do more tnan meet such as the most economical expenditures may demand. 1 nave no organ, ana suau not attempt to control any newspaper with money. Hence, if any one of them shall have a kind word to say of me during tne progress ot the cam paign, the piblic may know that it is not the result of purchase and sale. The friends of my opponent, knowing tnat the voters of our district were opposed to hia renomination, collected a fund of over $13,000 from some of our leading machinists and manufacturers, who labor under the de lusion that their interests at Washingson are Bafe only in the bands of Judge Kelley, to secure his renomination by the Republican Convention. As much of tte sum as was found to be necessary was used to control delegates. Any further sum that may be required in order to subsidize tne public press, colonize and purchase voters and re ward dishonest election omcers, is said by his managing politicians to be within reach, one hrni alone pledging itself for $10,000 for that purpose. Already two of the leading journals, the rres and Evening Telegkaph, have entered the list as his chosen organs, both of which commenced their services on the 1st of July, by the publication of false and malicious articles intended to misrepresent and injure me in the estimation of our citizens. Other venal journals, I have no doubt, will be found, during the campaign, who, under the Dlea of sustaining regular nominations, will commit themselves to the work of misrepre sentation and falsehood. I have now been a voter for thirty-five years, and my first recollection of political strife was iu regard to the question of a tariff, or the proper policy to be adopted in the admission of foreign goods into this country. This strife has been renewed since that time at stated intervals by politi cal parties whenever they could find no other question to divide upon.' And this contro versy has done more to cripple the various industrial interests of the country than all other causes combined. The consequence of making any given subject the issue, about which political parties contend, is to drive both to extremes. Henoe the Whig party and its executors aim to fasten the doctrine of free trade upon the Democratic party, whilst the Democratic party charges its ad versary with a determination to foster mono polies and special interests at the expense of the people at large. The true interest of the country will gene rally be found in the mean between these two extremes, and this middle ground would be adopted by our legislators if they were not driven from it by lh ieoklM4 douuuoia tiou of tLclx opponent ou either dido. It ill be a happy day for our manuf (tcturine, inecl'Muical, and other interests when the t rill cefiscs to be a political issue, and mem- beis of Congress are left to follow the dic tates of their best judgment in rogrd to this question. hat we require is a settled policy, and a pulley to be enduring mut be a n;or1rate rue. An extremely low range of dutiep, or u extremely high rang, cannot lot g ptevail. A tariff made in the interest of iny particular branch of industry at the expne of others equally important being utmost, cannot endure. It may bring great wea;th t t be principals who may be fortu nate er.otigh to engage in it during the fe Jems in which the bubble is expandiog. but the operatives, aa well as a majority of tho principals, will ultimately be involved in utter ruin. Legislation should bo mainly directed ia the interests of the poor, who constitute Lite t-nllis of our population, and not ia tht of the rich, who are able to take cire of themselves. What the poor man nud hi fun ilj require is daily bread, and not a foast to I e followed by a famine. Daily bread c.in otjly be obtained by daily employment at fair wnges. and constant employiueut can oi.ly result from a settled policy. Tha i.wuw which have divided the two great politieil parties for the last ten years having cul minated, politicians have been casting alout for a new bone of contention, and Had ing it diflicnlt to find one, a pirt of tho ile pnblican lenders have concluded to call up the ghost of former years and fight the taritf battles over again. This is necessary, also, to divert the attention of tho pnopl-j from the corruption of our leaders at Washington, Ilarribburg. and throughout the country, which, having been exposed by all the honest journals of the parly, is resulting in independent political action, threatening the defeat of the various combinations and rings in the interest of the plunderers of the public treasury. As an independent candidate, pledged to reform these abuses, I am made the target against which the heaviest volleys of these corruptions are directed. I am denounced by the ring journals of the Republican party as a Democrat, a free trader, a bolter, a din organizer, and, as such, am made responsible for all the doctrines these slaves to party think proper to attribute to opposing organi zations, and whilst they make the most false and ferocious attacks upon me, they have not one word to say against the regular nominees of the Democratic party. Now, my fellow citizens, does this not show cltarlvttat their objection is not to what they think proper to. denominate my Demo cratic views, but to my independent position kb a reformer, pledging to do all in my power to expose their villainy nnd reform their wicked nd corrupt legislation. Forney's 7 '?, of July 1, the day upon which it for mally entered the service of the Judge, disre aiding all senfe of truthfulness, charged me with being the most pronounced free trader in reimsjivania.andthishe prof esses to infer, not alone from the cautious words he says I dropped on accepting the peoplo's nomina tion, but from my known utterances on other occasions, and especially by my unrestrained conversation in private life. As I am a very plain man and use plain language, I now pronounce this statement of Colonel Forney a deliberate falsehood. He refers to my private conversations as evi dence of my free trado views. Will ho state when he or any of his family, either political or social, heard me express such views? I challenge him to name the occasion and ad duce the proof, or stand before the world a convicted calumniator. But Colonel Forney judges also from the cautious words which he says I dropped on accepting my nomination. lbete expressions of opinion are now on record, and by them I Btaud. I dare Colonel Forney to open his columns to a free discus sion of them. In order that you may know my views on the tariff as then expressed, I read from my speech delivered on the occa sion of my nomination: "I would adopt as a tariff such a soale of duties as would produce the largest possible sum that could be obtained without doing injustice to any department of industry or any considerable division of the people. In the imposition of these duties I would dis criminate so as to give protection to such in terests as could be aided without injury to others, and so as to collect the greatest reve nue from articles of luxury, which are mainly consumed by the rich. At the same time I would admit the absolute necessaries of life free." This is my platform on the question of the tariff, and by it I expect to stand during and subsequent to the canvass. Is this free trade ? If it is, then I believe that seventy-five per cent, of the voters of the Fourth Congressional district is in favor of this doctrine. But what must we think of a cause which requires the expenditure of such vast sums of money and resorts to such lying misrepresentations to sustain it ? Colonel Forney considers Judge Kelley the only suitable man in 11 the Fourth district to represent it in Congress. In order to show how shrewd a judge of human nature is the Colonel, and how accurate a critio of states manship is he, and also to enable you to de termine how far you can rely upon his judg ment as to men and things, I beg leave to read from the lnnylvanittn of September ID, 1S.1, to show his opinion at that time of our distinguished Judge: ''Kelley now stands before the publio blackened with the guilt of shameless incon sistency, personal treachery, and the meanest hypocrisy. We may as well expect the ex ample of Benedict Arnold to produce con verts to treason as the nomination of William D. Kelley, under the circumstances, and in violation of a pledge that a brave and honest man would have died rather than have for feited even by implication, to induce Demo crats to abandon their party." And again, on the 20th of the same month, be writes: "It was predicted of . William D. Kelley by more than one of his intimate friends, the moment he was appointed judge by the lamented Francis it. Shnnk, that he would eventually forget the hand that raised him to power and stab the generous party that took hiai from obscurity. Those who had used him did not hesitate to despise the cbamelesssess of an example which in any man would have been regarded as base, but which in a jurist, clothed with sacred powers, was the extreme of infamy. Little more was heard of him for a year or two. His post tion with the bar was always that of an ex ceedingly weak man, whose whole stock in trade was that of being a noisy and impudent declaimer, and whose only claim to official favor had been his effectual denunciations of the Whia party. He had few or no legal abilities, and be was too willing to take his opinions ready-made from his more able and painstaking associates Since Colonel Forney wrote the above, the Judge and be have kissed and made up, and are closely embraced in the same political bed The Colontlihas received the thirty pieces of tUver, ana u now mowing the Ju.1,9 s horn. Colonel Tliomaa thea refers to Jud-e K&1- ley's advocacy of the traffla in coolie Chinese laborer, and defines it as an ins'ilting and fiendish policy. He continues: From present appearance, tha Facile Hil road is about to he made one of tin greatest curses that could befall tha laboring una of the Atlantic States; by being c inverted int a high road upon which an immense horde of barbarians are to be rapidly introduced, da moralizing our politics and our labor. Oae of the strongest arguments ever alvnucel against American slavery, except its intrinsic injustice, was its tendency to depreciate free labor in the free States, aud yet it never suc ceeded in bringing 'TiM-dass skilled labor" down to six dollars per month, as proposed by Jndge Kelley's organs. The future of the laboring men of Phila delphia is indeed a dark and gloomy one. The Judge's principal organ "earnestly calls upon intelligence offices and labor agencies of this city to fciipply our mines, public works, our private grounds, and our homos with this cheap labor, the most skilful of which cm be furnished by these Chinese agencies for less tbnn mx dollars per month. This elmtdng appeal by oue of tho leading journals of l'Mladelpuia should be heodod by onr laboring population before it becomes foievir too late." Allow Koopuinnschoop to succeed iu" delivering his October cargo of slaves, or any part of it. in this city, aad the future u.ay be easily seen. However indisposed such respectable em ployers as Matthew Baird, William Sellers, Brmeut & Dougherty, and others, may be to employ such labor, and however willing thev mny be to pay their men such wages as free men are entitled to receive, they will be driven in a very short time by force of com petition to employ the cheap labor engaged t y oilier employers in otuer cities, and we shell soon see these mills nnd shops filled with Chinese laborers: our parks being graded, and our streets repaired by pig-tails; our mines w orked by orientals, and our kitchens end Bewir.g-rooms supplied by labor of the same character, to the exclusion of our own indusli ions females. The effect of all this must be to displace our native-born and adopted citizens from their present places of employment, and crowd tbem upon other departments of in dustry, end thus bring down the wages of labor, as proposed by the Pre, to six dollars per month, or less. It does appear that Judge Kelley and his two organs, iu thus de- finug to reduce the wages of labor, and at tie same time to retain the highest rate of duty on such neeessarics of life as coal, salt, etc., are disrecnrdfnl of the interests of the poor, in their extreme anxiety to increase the wealth and add to the comforts and luxuries of the rich. Ordinary and natural emigration from China cannot be prevented, but the undue stimulus given to it by such slave dealers as Koopmanschoop, who seeks by a system of peonage to supply all our labor establish ments with workmen, introducing them by thousands, should be resisted by our citizens by every means within their power. SPECIAL NOTICES. . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVES THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of I'eniiEylvanla for the Incorporation of a Bank, In accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA BAN K,to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of live hundred thousand dollars, with the right to increase tne same to ten mumon qouars. ttfS- OFFICE OF THE PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD CO., N 227 South FOURTH Street. - PuiLADELrniA, June 32, 1870. NOTICE. In accordance with the terms of the lease and contmct between ibe East Pennsylvania Railroad Oo. and the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Co., dated May 19, 18riP, the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Oo. will pay at tbeir office, No. 227 South FOURTH St., Phila delphia, on and after the llth day of JULY, 1870, a divi dend of Sl'SU per share, clear ot all taxes, to the stock holders of the East Pennsylvania Railroad Co., as they stall stand rendered on the books of the said East Penn- nvlvuniH Railroad Co. on the 1st dv of Jul v. 1870. All orders for dividends must be witnessed and Slumped. D. DIIAITUAU, Treasurer. Note. The transfer books of tho East Pennsylvania Railroad Co. will be closed on July 1 and reoDened on July li, ism. 6 221m Treasurer East Pennsylvania Railroad Oo. :Sf I.OTH E lw HEKEU 1 U1EN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Hank, in ac cordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE ANTHRACITE BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, witn a capital 01 nve hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to two million dollars. PHILADELPHIA AND KEADINU KAIL- KOAD COMPANY, Oitlce No. 27. S. EOUHTH Street, Philadelphia, June xst. is.o. DIVIDEND NOTICE. The Transfer Books of this Company will be closed on the 7th or July next at a reopenea on Wednes day, juiy w. A Divideud of FIVE PER CENT, has been de clared on the Preferred and Common Stock, clear of National and htate taxes, payable in ca-m on ana after the 2 2d of July next to the holders thereof as they stand registered on the books of the Company at the close of business on the Tth July next. All payable at this oitlce. All orders for dividends must be witnessed and stamped. B. BKADFOKD, 6 2 lm Treasurer. NOTICE IS H3KEBY GIVES THAT AN w application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, tn accordance with the laws or tne commonwealth. to be entitled THE aoUTUWAHK BANKING COMPANY, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of one hundred thousand dollars, with the rieht to increase the same to one million dollars. t&T THE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHER COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire ExtlEgulsher. Always Reliable. D. T. GAGS, 6 SO tf No. 118 MARKET St, General Agent. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be mude at the next meeting or tne oenerai Assembly or tne uommonweaitn or Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank. In accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE IRON BaNK, to be located at Phi ladelphia, with a capital or oue hundred thousand dollars, with the right to increase the same to one million dollars. THE IMPERISHABLE PERFUME ! AS A rule, the perfumes now in use have no perma nency. An hour or two auer meir use mere is no trace of perfume left. How ditterent la the result succeeding the use Of MURRAY & LAN MAN'S FLORIDA WATER ! Hays after its application. th,e handkerchief exhales a most delightful, ueiicate, ana ugrecauie iragrauvvi oitutnsj TREGCVS TEABERRY TOOTHWlSH. It is ths most pleasant, cheapest and best dentifrice txtan t. Warranted free from injurious ingredisnts. It Preserves and Whitens the Teetht Invigorates and Soothes the Unmsl Parities and Perfames the Breath! Prevents Accumulation of Tartar! Cleanses and Purines Artificial Teetht Is a Superior Article for Ohildrenl Bold by all druegiats and dentists. A. J". llJun, ifuitKiBV, riviirimort t IUI'IIOWIi iu PniliuWlphla. SlOm Oor. NINTH AKU tlLUKUl UU NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, in accordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE KEY. STONE STATE BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of two hun dred and fifty thousand dollars, with the right to increase the same to uve hundred thousand dollars. tS- HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING Tsth with frsah ft ltrons-Oxids O&a. Absolutely DO pain. Dr. F. R. TUOMAh, toruisrlf operator t ths Coi:oii )jLl uui iu wuia iwtioto t-ul pauilea UUkuUutt of tlO, OAv. vU WALNUT bUtrsi. . I . PROPOSALS. np.orosALs for naval mvtskial. Navy Dupartmrnt. Bl'KEACOF EO.CIPMEKT AND ltKC HVtTINO, NO.V JUT 11. 1WU, S FA I.ED PROPOSALS to furnish materia for the Navy for the !lcl rear endinir June S.i. isri. will be rtceived at this bureau until 1ft o'clock A. hV of the r th of August next, at which time the proposals will ne opened. The proposals must oe addressed to the "Ohier or the Bureau of KUtpmeiit and H crultitw, Navy Hepartnient, Washington," anil must be ludorsnd l'Kijiossis ror Materials ror tne rtavy, ' tinu t-hev IUBV be dlst'neulhhed from other business letters. Printed schedules for any class; together with ln- structlons to b'dders, giving the forms of proposal, of guarantee, and of certlilcates of guarantors, will oe mrnihtied to sucn persons as desire to bid on ap plication to the commandants of the respective navy yards, and those of all the yards on application to the bureau. Tho Commandant of each navv vard and the pur chasing Paymaster of each station will have a copy of the schedules of the other yards, for examination onlv. in order that persons who intend to bid mav Judge whether It is desirable to make application for any of the classes of those yards. . 'i ne proposals must be for the whole of a class. and all applications for Information or for the ex amination of samples must be made to the Com mandants of the respective yards. 1 he proposals tmiHt be acco'unanied bv a certifi cate from the Collector of Internal Hevenue for the district in which the bidder resides that he has a license to deal In the nrtlc.es for which he proposes, nnd he must further chow that tn is a manufacrur r of or a regular dealer iu the artlclea which he oilers to supply. The guarantors must be certified by the Assessor or internal Hevenue for tne district iu which they reside. The contract will be awarded to the nerson. who makes the lowest bid 'hod gives the guarantee re quired by law, the Navy. Department, however, reserving the right to reject the lowest bid or auy which it may deem exorbitant. Sureties in the full niuouut will be required to sign the contract., nnd their responsibility must be certitlet to the patisfactlon of the Navy Department. as additional security, twenty per centum will be withheld from the amount of the bills until the con tract shall have been completed, and eighty per centum of the amount of each bill, approved in triplicate by the Commandant of the respective yards, win be paid by the I'symnster or the station designated in the contract in fuuds or certlilcates, at tne option 01 tne government, wttnin ten days after the warrant for the same shall have been passed by the Secretary of the Treasury. 1 ne classes 01 tins uureau are numbered ana ue- plgrateil as follows: o. 1 nax L'anvasretc ;-o. 13 foap auaTaiiow. o. 2 Cotton Canvas.etc. No. 14-ox hides for rope. jno. s c otton tiamiiiocK iso. n urusnes, Bag and Cot stall. No. 10 ShlD cnamUerv. No. 4 Iron and Steel. iNo. II Tar and Tar Oil. I No. IS Stationery. No. 6 Galley Iron. No. 7 Chain Iron. No. 8 Hardware. No. 9 Cooking Utensils. No. 11 Tin and Zinc. No. 12 Leather. I No. 19 Dry Goods, No. 20 Firewood coal. No. 21 Sand. and CHARI.ESTOWJM NAVY YARD. Classes Nos. 8, 3, 4, 8, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 10, IT, 19, 20. Bl(UUtlL.liN, iMiW lUtTK. Classes Nos. L 2, 3, 8, 9, 12, 13, 15, 1, II, 19, 19, 20, 81. . t . t r. r nut rillLinur.LiriiiA. Classes Nos. 2, 8, 12, 16, 17, is, n, 20. WASHINGTON. Classes NOS. 2, 4, Bt 6, I, 8, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 20. NORFOLK. Classes Nos. 2, 3, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, IS, 18, 20. PORTSMOUTH, N. H. Classes Nos. 2. 8. 12. 13. 16, IT. 18, 19, 20, 21. 7 12 tu4v 1-ROrOSAL8 FOR CLOTHING AND CLOTHING MATERIALS. Navy Departmbnt, INT, ) UINfl, V 1, 1ST0. ) BUREAU OP PROVISIONS AND CLOTU July Sealed Proposals, indorsed ''Proposals for Cloth lng," will be received at this Bureau until 2 o'clock p. ai, on tne 2iin oay oi Juiy, isio, ror tne supply or the following articles, viz.: du.uuu yarns uarx isuie r lannei. 10,000 yards Blue Nankin. 10,000 yards Barnsley Sheeting. 5,000 pairs Woollen Socks. 8,000 pairs Calf Shoes. 4,000 pairs Kip Shoes. ' The above-mentioned articles must be delivered at the Navy Yard, New York, within ninety days from the date of contract, and must conform to navv standard, and be equal in all respects to the samples at tne several isavy larus, ana must pass tne usual inspection. The Flannel must De an wool, twiuea, ana wooi- dyed with pure Indigo, and must be in pieces of about fifty yards in length, twenty-seven Inches wide, weighing five and one-half ounces per yard, and to have a list on eacn edge oi lour wnite woollen threads woven In the whole length of the piece ; tho pieces to ne ronea separately wituouc ciotn boards, and no piece to have a less average weight than five and iour-tenths ounces per yard. The quality and color of the flannel to be equal to the samples at the several inspections. Tne Nankin must aiso oe pure inuigo-d.yea. The Sheeting must bo free from cotton, eighty Inches In width, weighing twelve ounces and thirty- one one-hundredths per yard, texture 4 by 4 to 1-16 incn. The shoes must be delivered in boxes made of seasoned white pine, planed and tongued and grooved; sides, top, and bottom five-eighth Inch thick, ana tne ends one incn tnicK ; tne sides to oe nailed to the bottom, and the top to be secured by not less than ten one and three-fourth inch screws. one screw at each end of the box, to be counter sunk one quarter Inch by one and one-quarter inch In diameter. The sizes of the Socks and Shoes must conform to the schedule to be supplied by the Inspector at New York. Bonds, with approved security, win oe required m one-quarter the estimated amount of the contract, and twenty per cent, in addition will be withheld from the amount of each payment as collateral security for the due performance of the contract, which reservation win not do nam until tne contract is fully complied with. livery oner muss oe accompanied oy a written guarantee, signed by one or more responsible per sons, mat tne Diouer or uuiuers win, ii nis or tneir bid be accepted, enter Into an obligation within five days, with good and sulncient surtties, to furnish the articles proposed. No proposals will oe consiuercu un.ess accompa nied by such guarantee, nor from ot.v purtie-t who are not bova fidt manufacture of cr regular dealer in the article then offer to furnink, in conformity with the second section of the joint resolution ap proved March 3, lSbd. 'inn. lfennruneuL runci yco liic ik w iciou au.r proposals unless the responsibility of the guarantors is certllled to by the Assessor of Internal Revenue lorthe district in which they reside; and unless the license re ouired by act of Ccngress Is furnished with the proposal, as wen as to reject any proposal not considered advantageous to me uovernineuu E. T. Dl'NN, 7 8ftu8t Chief of Bureau. FURNITURhi RICHMOND & CO.. - FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE WARERQOfilS no. 45 SOUTH SECOND BTKEKT, CAbT 8IDH. ABOVB OHE8NUT, PHILADELPHIA 6 11 rURNITURE i gelling; at Coat, No. 101 81AUUET Street. 418 3m Q. R. NORTH. WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETO. WILLIAM B. WAttNE CO., J Wholesale Dealers in WATC." KS ANI JE W ELRY, rs. r.-, o. jf. corner or.' ii-' i 11 u iit- 8 25 Second floor, and lateof No. 35 S. THIRD St. CLOCKS. rOW KB CLOCKS. MARBLE CLOCKS. BROKZK CLOCKS. OOUOOO CLOCKS. VIENNA REGULATORS. AMKBIOAH LOOKS U. IV. UUSiULL, Wo. 22 WORTH SIXTH STREET. PIANOS. ALBRECHT, RIEKES A HCHMIDT, M AN U r ACTVRKK9 OK FIRST-CLASS PIANO-FORTES. Full guaiantee aud moderate prices. 9 U W AUUtoofcS, N.o. 610 AR.C4 Street. 1ROPOKAT.S FOR STA WPRD RNVELOPES AND NEWSrAPEli WRAPPERS. - Post Omrs Prpaktmkitt, July 11, WO. SEALED PROPOSALS wiU r received nntu 19 o'clock M., on the llth days of Angnst, ISTO, for furnishing ail the ''Stamped Envelopes" and "News paper Wrappers" which this Deportment may re quire during a period of four (4) years, commencing on the 1st day of October, 18T0. via: STAMPED ENVELOPES. - No. 1. Note size, t by f( Inches two qualities. No. 8. Ordinary letter size, 8 Vi6 by 0 inches " three qualities No. a. Pull letter size, 8f by &itf Inches three qualities. No. 4. Full letter size, (for circulars), angummed on flap, 3 by PX inches one quality. No. 5. Extra letter size, 8j by 6, Inches three qualities. No. 6. Extra letter size, 8X by 6i Inches (fer cir culars.) oiiKunimed on Hap one qnulilty. No. t. Oillcial size. 8 15-16 by 8't inches two auall- ' tics. No. 8. Extra ofncial size, 4' by 1ft V Inches one quality. STAMPED NEWSPAPER WRAPPERS. Six and a five-eighths by 9J Inches (round cut) ' one quality. EMBOSSING, WATER-MARKS. PRINTING, 1U LI.M PAPER HTVLE OF JIANl EACTUUE. All of the above Envelopes and Wranpers must bo rmbjsscd with postage stumps, of such denomina tions, styles, and colors, must have such water- , marks or ether devices to prevent imitation, aud ' bear Ftich printing and ruling as the Postmaster General may direct. The envelopes mint be made In the most thorough manaer, equai in every respect . to the samples furnished tj bidders by the Depart ment. The paper must be of aprved quality, ' specially manufactured for the purpose. Whenever envelopes are order ot the styles known as "Black-lined" or "Self-ruled," (lines printed In side, or ruled on the face), the same shall re fur nished, without additional cost, the contractor to pay all charges for royadv In tne use or putented inventions for said" lined or ruled envelopes. DIES. The dies for embossing the postage stamps oa the envelopes and wrappers are to- le executed t the satisfaction cf the Postmaster-Oeueral, lu the best style, and they are to be provided, renewed, and kept iu order at the expeuse of the contractor. The Department reserves tne rightof requiring ne dies for any stamps, or denominations of stamps net now used, and any changes of dies or colors eli ii 1 1 be made without extra charge. lieiore closing a contract tne successrui bidder may be required to prepare and submit new dies for the approval of the Department, The use of the present dies may or may not be continued. 1 he dies shall be safely and securely kept by the contractor, and should the use of auy or then be temporarily or permanently discontinued they slia'l be promptly turned over to the Do-pa-tinent, or its agent, as the Postmaster-General may direct. UtM. The envelopes must be thoroughly aud perfectly gummed, the gumming on the flan or each (except lor circulars) to be put on by band not less than half an inch the entire length ; the wrappers to be also hand-gummed not less than three-iounns or an men in width across the end. SECl'hITY FROM FIRE AND THEFT. Bidders arc notified that the Department will re quire, as a condition of the contract, that the en velop"8 and wrappers shall be manufactured and stored in such a manner as to insure security against loss ny nreor tneiu Tne manuiactory must at an times ue siioieci to the inspection or an agent of the Department, who will require the stipulations of the contract to be faithfully observed. rauiviAu. All envelopes and wrappers muse be banded iu parcels of twenty-five, and packed in strong paste board or straw boxes, securely bound ou all the edges and corners with cotton aud linen cloth, glued on, each to contain not less than two hundred and hity of the note and letter sizes and oue hundred each of the oinelal or extra oillcial size, separately. The newspaper wrappers to be packed in b"xes, to contain not less than two hundred ana Uity each. The boxes are tone wrapped and securely fattened in strong manllla paper, and Bealed, so a to safely bear transportation by mall for delivery to post masters. When two thousand or more envelopes are required to fill the order of a postmaster, the straw or pasteboard boxes containing the same must be packed in strong wooden cases, well strapped with hoop-iron, and addressed; but when less than two thousand are -required, proper labels of direction, to be furnished by an agent of the De partment, must ne piacea upon eacn package oy tne contractor. Wooden cases, containing envelopes or wrappers, to be transported by water routes, must be provided with suitable water-proofing. The wuoie to oe oone nnoertne inspection ana direction of an agent of the Department. DELIVERY. The envelopes and wrappers must be furnished and delivered with all reasonable despatch, complete in all respects ready for use, and In such quantities as may be required to till the dally orders of post masters; the deliveries to be made either at the Post OUlce Department, Washington, D. C, or at the office of an agent duly authorized to Inspect and receive the same ; the place of delivery to be at the option of the Postmaster-General, and the cost of deliver ing, as well as all expense of storing, packing, ad dressing, labelling, auu water-proonng to be paid by the contractor. oAmrLKS. Specimens of the envelopes and wrappers for which proposals are Invited, showing the different qualities and colors of paper required, the cut, and style of gumming, with blank forms of bids, may be had on application to the Third Assistant I'ostniasier-i.enerai. This advertisement and a specimen of the samnle envelopes and wrapper furnished by the department must be attaenca to auu uiaae part oi eacn ma. GUARANTEE. No proposal will be considered unless oil'ered by . a manufacturer of envelopes, and accompauicd by : a satisfactory guarantee Bigncd by at least two re- . sponsible parties. AWARD AGREEMENT BONDS. The contract will tie awarded to the lowest re sponsible bidder for all the envelopes and wrap pers, the prices to be calculated on the basis of the number used of the several grades during tie last tlscal year, which was as follows Noie size 1,469,250 Letter size, first quality 60,46T,soO Letter size, second quality 8,956,750 Letter size, second quality (ungummed).... 8,618,000 Extra letter size, first qualHy 6,810, T50 Extra letter size, second quality (un- gumiL'ed) 454.000 Official size 669,900 Extra oillcial size 8,ln0 Newspaper wrappers 4,936,250. Total.. 86,239,5(10 Within ten days after the contract baa oeen awarded, the successful bidder shall enter Into an agreement in writing with the Poatinaster-General to faithfully observe and keep the terms, conditions, and requirements set forth In this advertisement, according to their true intent and meaning, and shall make, execute, and deliver, subject to the approval and acceptance of the Postmaster-General, bonds with good and sufficient sureties in the sum of Two Hundred Thousand Dollars (2o0,0()0) as a forfeiture for the faithful . perfarinance of said agreement or contract, according to the pro visions and subject to the liabilities of the seven teenth section of an act ef Congress entitled "An act legaliziug aud nuking appropriation for such necessary objects as have been usually Included in the general appropriation bills without authority of law, and to fix and provide for certain lucldental expenses oi the departments and offices of the Gov ernment, and for other purposes," (United States Statutes at Large, vol. 5, page 260), approved August, 2i, 1842, which act provides that lu case the con tractor shall fail to comply with the terms ot his contract, "he ana bis sureties shall be liable for the forfeiture specified iu such coutract as liqui dated damages, to te sued for in the name of the United Mates In any court having jurisdiction thereof." RESERVATIONS. The Postmaster-General reserves to himself tUe following rights: 1. To reject auy and all bids, if, In hla Julftnent,' the interests of the Government require it. 2. To annul the contract whenever the same or any part thereof la oil'ered for sale for the purpose of speculation; and under no circumstances will a trans fer of tr.e contract be allowed or sanctioned to auy party who shall be, In thaopiniou of the Postmaster General, less able to fultiil the conditions thereof than the oi iginal contractor. 8. To annul the contract, if, tn his Judgment, there shall be a failure to perform faitbriilly auy of iu sti pulations, or lu case of a wilful attempt to impose upon the Department Envelopes or Wrappers lu. feiior to sample, 4. If the contractor to whom the first award may be made should fall to enter into agreement and give satisiactory bonds, as herein provided, then the award may be annulled and the contract let to two next lowest responsible bidder, aud so on until the required agic-cmtnt and bonds ate executed; ardsuchnsxt lowest bidder sha:i be required to fulBl every stipulation embraced herein as If he were the original party to whom the coutract waa" .warded. BIDS Phould be securely enveloped aud sealed, marked "Proposals for Stamped Envelopes aud Newspaper Wiappers," and addressed to the Third Assistant Posiniaster-Geueral, Washington. D C JOHb A. .1. CKsioWKLL, JS.eod 13t Postiaaiter-UtiaeraL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers