THE 'DAILY EVENING-TELEGRAPH PHILADELPIHA, TUESDAY AUGUST. 30, 1870. criniT or snn rnnac. Editorial Opinions of the Leading Journals upon Current Topics Compiled Every -Day for the Eveniffl Telegraph. " " KING YOUNG. ' PYrm the N. T. Time. The Mormon platform ' fairly sketched by the highest authority ia not by any means a new' thing. In fact, the most remarkable . iHLiirn Hiiimi iiih iiniiiiiiitm ill I iih Rniiininniiw M fialt Lake is thelt uniformity. 'Liberty, i freedom. - and , eoual riizhts" is Iirichani . Young's comprehensive though somewhat , pleonastio mode of summarising them a preface, however, which sparcely does justice . to the proposals with which the speaker fol lows it up. On the occasion of the reoent Jaoneer, celebration at Salt, Lake City, the lormon President made an address of which it may be said that its statement of general principles is perfectly unexceptionable, while its enunciation of details is exceedingly open to question. ' ' " ' 1 1 It is characterized throughout by the same odd miiture of shrewd common sense, bla tant braggadocio, and open, undisguised con tempt for the authority undec which he lives, which distinguish most of : the publio utter , ances of the remarkable mam who is the present ; autocrat of Mormonland. The spokesman of the Latter-day Saints skillfully puts in the foreground of his declaration a reference to the undoubted industrial tri umphs which his followers have achieved in the Salt' Lake Valley. In . claiming for them the privilege of continuing their work of making their deBert bloom as the rose, and of elevating the outcast and the destitnte, Brig ham Young most have known very well that he was demanding a right which nobody has ever questioned; but in asking Congress to pass an impossible law before consenting to obey a law already In existence, he must have been equally aware that he was violat ing one of the first priuciples of an organized Skate. - i . Were the Government of the United States to decree, as the Mormon apostle desires, "that every man that is capable of taking care of himself shall marry a wife," it might indeed earn the gratitude of universal spin fcterhood, but it would transcend its functions as completely as its aocuser does, by giving every maa the liberty of marrying as many wives as he pleases. , Brigham Young may honestly believe that polygamy is the one sovereign ppecific for the evils of society, but the Government under which he lives has en acted certain statutes with which this, means of reform is perfectly incompatible, and so long as he and his followers choose to con tinue citizens of this repnblio, they must re cognize the fact that obedience is the first law of civilized communities. An equally dangerous development of Mor monism appears in the Prophet's reference t- the mode of conducting popular elections. He Bays in effect, I hold myself the supreme judge of who are and who are not fit to hold not presume to dictate whom you shall choose, but I shall certainly see that you select no one who is not acceptable to me. This attitude of the Mormon leaders, and the disposition that comes from it on the part of their followers to vote as one man, have already been productive of civil broils in Iowa and Missouri, and will be so again the mo ment that they are surrounded, by a Gentile community numerous enough to have their liberty imperilled by tactics so foreign to our free institutions. The Mormonism of Salt l ake is in its political aspect the unchanged Mormonism of Nauvoo it is a despotism growing up in the midst of a free State, an autocracy confronting a society where the will of the people is supreme. A strong personal government may be a desirable thing enough for certain stages of social growth, but in the United States it is an anachronism and a social anomaly. Even so acute a lum&M a. vniijrio wna uotruyuu iu.19 prema ture admiration of the wonderful social order established by the Jesuit missionaries among the Indian races of Paraguay, just as other thinkers rather less acute have seen nothing , but what is admirable in the civilization of Salt Lake. We have seen the .historical re- l.rilint irn ff iYia n n 1 i t i f oil mnA li nl nn aUiA of submission to which the Paraguayans were reduced in their becoming the dupes of a tyrant like Lopez, and an unchecked develop- . it . . . 1 . . . r . . .. men i in ice nnncimes 01 Mormon nimninriam would infallibly pave the way for an unprin cipled and reckless adventurer, who would prepare for us another heritage of civil strife and long-enduring hatred. THE AMERICANS IN PAUIS. From the A". T. Tribune. The "American colony'' in Paris, which or dinarily numbers forty or fifty thousand per sons, has been rapidly diminishing of late by the departure of its members for safer and pleasanter regions. Probably one-third of them have fled to England, Switzerland, Bel gium, Italy, and this country, since the be ginning of the present month, and it is likely that the remainder will now disappear as quickly as possible. The mighty German army is daily approaching Paris nearer and nearer, to assault or besiege, as ciroumstances may render one or the other necessary; and the perils from the enemy without, as well as from the- revolutionary elements within, must render that city the least attractive, as heretofore it has been considered the most attractive, plaee of residence in Europe. The military rigors of Trochu and the Defense Committee must also have made Paris par ticularly disagreeable for Americans. All foreigners are under the closest surveillance by the authorities, and all are in constant peril from the suspicion and excitement of the populace. Quite a number of Americans have been under arrest as German "spies," and it has been found a difficult matter to secure their release. Several have been as saulted on the Btreets by mobs which aobused , them of being Germans; and there hava been cases in which suspected or assailed persons found it impossible to obtain either protec tion or redress. But if there are Americans willing to re . main in Paris even under these disadvantage ous circumstances, we imagine that they will all be anxious to clear out, now that there is a prospect of the enforcement of the "Safety law" of 1832. A few days ago the Liberie fiublished quotations from this law, by which t appeared that, in case of siege, all foreign residents of Paris are liable to be called upon, to serve in the "National Home Guard." There will doubtless be many anxioua applications at the Amerioan Lega tion for protection against the enforce ment of this law; but we doubt if Minister Washburne can give the applicants any better advice than to get out of Paris with all convenient speed. Even to get away tkey are compelled to obtain passports from the military authorities; but it will be better for them to take this trouble than to run the rials of cc-lii;i rezilc-cs is rU It would oertaiely be a very disagreeable thing for the pleasure-seeking Americans in Paris to b compelled to take any part In its defense under present circumstance. The military government of the city have announoed that it will be defended to the la it extremity (which all ' may believe who choose); and Americans, as . well as other foreigners who may be reduced to service in the f'Home Guard, ''.will be in. danger of being sent for ward to the ramparts to confront the triumph ant army of the Crown" Trlnce." Minister Washburne might enter his protest, and our Government would not fail in its duty; but what, in the mean time,' might befall the tin happy victims of the IloDie Guard ? ! CABLE DESPATCHES -NEWSPAPER EN-' TERPItlSE VS. NEWSPAPER TRICKERY. From the N. T. JleraU. ' Nearly all our daily city journals are re ceiving more or less, according to their finan cial capabilities, cable despatches touching the movements and developments In Europe from day to day,- military and political, con nected with this gigantic war between France and the allied German States. Of these des patches the Herald specials as records of facts, we may say, without injustice to our contemporaries, are more nearly correot and more comprehensive than any others, be cause we have spared no labor or expense to make them so. The rules, of the Associated Press,' of which the Herald is a member, re quire that the private news despatches of every journal concerned shall be shared among its colleague, and that every such despatch when received "shall be imme diately handed over to the agent of the asso ciation to be copied and delivered to the several papers of the association in the same mariner as other telegraphic news is deliv ered." , . i We have always held this to be an nnwise rule a check upon individual enterprise and an advantage only to the negligent, the in competent and the slow coaches of the asso ciation, in sharing equally the fruits of the labor of collecting telegraphio news, which has chiefly fallen upon the Herald. Having been foroed to accept the rule, we have faith fully complied with its conditions, carefully avoiding any evasion, hedging or double dealing. Not so is it with that model of all the virtues and of all proprieties, the Tribune. That journal, on the contrary,' Blnce the com mencement of this European war, has delibe rately evaded and violated this law. It has ap propriated to itself, under the weak devices of the shoplifter, the -property of the associa tion to which it belongs; it has been playing the game of obtaining credit and money upon false pretenses. Its enterprise is a fraud, and its exclusive news is stolen goods. . It has de prived its associates of news which belonged to them, while it has been sufficiently adroit as an "artful dodger" to hold them to their full share of the expeuse. ,. And as "Robert Macaire" flourished in triumph the handker chief filched ' from a neighbor's pocket, so boasts the Tribune of its achievements in this dirty business. ' . We have thus been robbed in the dishonest perversion of a rule of our association which requires that if any part of a despatch to any member of the league, if even a word of it is used by any other member, the payment therefor shall be the proportion that Ould be required for the whole despatch. There is another rule of the association under which all special despatches that are received by any member after one o'clock A. M. shall be sent to the office of the Associated Press instead of being sent to the paper to which they are addressed, in order that they may be promptly copied and distributed to the several papers concerned. To avoid this rule or law of the association the Tribuneh&s had its despatches, likely to come in after the hour designated, addressed to one of its subordinates as an "outsider," a trick w hich neatly cuts off the association from such despatches until it is convenient for the Tribune to furnish them to colleagues "just in time to be too late" for its publication in their morning edition, un less in a mutilated form, but still in time to exact from them their full proportion of the costs. Now, as John Randolph is said once to have remarked in Congress, referring to certain individuals of the. Barnum school, "These men may be very smart, and this, Mr. Speaker, may be called Yankee , enterprise and Yankee shrewdness; but, sir, according to our old-fashioned notions, it is Yankee trickery and Yankee swindling." WHAT PEESONAL, GOVERNMENT HAS " COME TO. From the rail Wall Gazette. In the days when personal government was in better odor than it has been of late, thdse who found fault with it were sure to be put aown oy one nnuorm and, as it was supposed, crashing answer. - At all events, it was said, it secures that strong, composed, self-controlled executive which in time of war con tributes so greatly to the safety of the State. There can be no divided counsels where one man is absolute master, no haste, or con fusion where the inception and the comple tion of every design are vested in the same hand. Under a Parliamentary Government a reverse of fortune at once brings with it con fusion and every evil work. The nation has a right to be consulted at every step, and the consequence usually is that no step at all is taken. The action of Parlia ment dwindles down into a profitless series of recriminations. Unavoidable defeat is as fatal to a general as open treachery or proved incompetence. Political considera tions intervene at every stage, and the move ments of armies may in reality be directed against the opposition rather than against the enemy. In peace, constitutional govern ment may make a fair show; you must wait for a great war before you can accurately appraise its merits as compared with those of the rival system. To-day the test we were told to look for ia being exhibited in actual working. The Emperor of the French en tered npon the war with Prussia with the Imperial system completely re-established. He had conquered or cajoled the leading poli ticians of the Liberal party. He had got rid of Count Daru, and made things pleasant with M. Ollivier. Thus all the promised virtues of promptitude, decision, and unity had the field left open for their exhibition. Under the guidance of an absolute dictator, France was to advance to the supreme effort which she has so long been anticipating and making ready for. The expei iment has been made, and we see the results of it. Every fault attributed to par liamentary government has been shown to be present in double measure under the per sonal government. A defeat in the field has been sufficient to bring about a politioal re verse far more serious than there is anything in the military situation to justify.. One wing of the French army is beaten by supe rior forces, leaving large bodies of troops absolutely untouched, and every Frenoh for tress as yet unassailed. Such a trick of for tune at the opening of a great campaign is not without parallel, and there is nothing, so far as is yet known, to destroy the Emperor's hopes of rallying his forces and effacing the ty repulsing j Prince Frflderick Charles. Itnt id ' do I this h should hare a mind at ease-and fall liberty-to Uy his plans with do reservation to meet contingencies of a non-military kind. What chano has ha of either f . The news from Paris must sound as ominous in bis ears as the news from the front. If the ' one may mean disas ter to his arms, the other may mean ruin to his dynasty! ' 'The very means by which the former may be averted are laden with danger to the latter. If he chooses his generals withoit regard to the politics they profess, he .runs the risk of their victories being won in. other interests than his. If he calls upon every Frenchman to bear his part in the defense of the' country, .he cannot foresee the use to which the arms he gives them will be turned. The defeats of Saturday were in ' part Owing to the necessity of doing something to wipe out the discredit of Wisiemburg, but the victory which Bhali wipe out the disr)dit of Woerth and Forbach may cost ' him' more than the defeats themselves. , The Emperor can now see enacted ia his own lifetime the events which would in any case have followed upon his death. The ob ject of his reign has been to build up a strong government, under shelter of which the suc cession should quietly pass: to his sou. In some respects Paris seems agreed to act as though the grave had already closed on him. If he bad died a month ago it is to the Ministry which has just resigned i that he would have bequeathed the care of his dynasty; and, from their . conduct under the depres sion of one or two lost battles, he may judge of their capacities for such a trust, r He must sometimes have questioned with himself what would be the fate pf an heir committed to such, hands, and now his question is answered as plainly 'as though he could have revisited in spirit the scene he had left in the flesh. He se'63, while living, the autho rity he would have lert to govern France fall to pieces in a panic of incapacity. His min isters are such as . he has made them. They were as good as the exigencies of the Impe rial system would allow hi ai to secure; and as soon as the trial comes they show that they have neither head to plan, nor hands to exe cute, nor heart to rule. Where are the trusted councillors to whom the empire would ' turn for aid if the sovereign1 were suddenly re moved by death? If there are none forth coming when he is for the time removed by military necessities and discredited by mili tary disasters, what chance, is. .there that a vacant throne and an incursion of republican ism would bring then; to light ? The collapse which threatens the dynasty to-day, would ultimately have overtaken it under any cir cumstances whatever. , . ., , ' M. Clement Duvernois' sudden appearance as a proposer of a vote Of want of confidence seems to show that the Emperor bad deter mined before the meeting of the Corps Legis latif to try what possibilities of mending his ?osition may lie in ' a change of ministry, 'he revolutionary scenes in the Chamber and in the streets of Paris are sufficient evidence that General Montauban will hot find his task a light one. But Montauban is very firm; and he is not very scrupulous. . ' ' SPEOIAL. NOTICES. THE CITY MISSION OF THK PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH Is now In active . operation., i The undersigned, General Superintendent (by appointment of tbe Bishop), would.respectrullynd earnestly urge upon members of tbe Church particularly, and Christian people generally, the necessity of united and com bined effort in the extension of the knowledge of the Gospel of Jesus Christ among the neglected portions or our community, and la providing for the relief of those in our midst who are 4,in trouble, sor row, need, sickness, or any ether adversity." . ' The present time demands unusual exertions on the part of Christians to stem the tide of sin and wickedness which Is coming up over our city. . All moneys sent us designed for the support of Missionaries, for defraying the expenses of Halls and Char els for Divine worship, and for the relief of the destitute, will be thankfully received and carefully and usefully applied. The Kooms of the City Mission, No. 22S South NINTH Street, are open dally from 8 to 4 o'clock. Let every one come up to the help of the Lord. . Rev. SAMUEL DURBOROW, " ' General Superintendent. W. W FRAZIER, Jr., Treasurer, 8 26 Bt ' No. 101 S. FRONT Street 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 STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of live hundred thousand dollars, with the right to ncrease the same to tea mllllion dollars. wgy THE IMPERISHABLE PERFUME !-AS A - rule, the perfumes now in use have no perma nency. An hour or two after their use there Is no trace of perfnme left. How dltierent is the result succeeding the use Of MURRAY & LAN MAN '3 FLORIDA WATER l Days after its application the handkerchief exhales a moat delightful, delicate, and agreeable fragrance. 31 tnthai - gy- NOTICEIS 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 KEYSTONE 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 live hundred thousand dollars. 1 . TREGO'S TKABERRY'. TOOTHWASIL It Is the most pleasant, cheapest and best dentifrice extant. Warranted free from injurious bagredleuts. It Preserves and Whitens the Teeth 1 Invigorates and Soothes the Gums I Purities and Perfumes the Breath I Prevents Accumulation ef Tartar I Cleanses and Purines Artificial Teeth I , Is a Superior Article for Children I Sold by all druggiitta and aentiBts. , A. M.WILSON, Dragglst. Proprietor, 8 10m Cor. NINTH AND FILBERT Sta., Phllada. 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 ac cordance with the laws of the Commonwealth, to be entitled THE ANTHRACITE BANK, to be located at Philadelphia, with a capital of five hundred thou sand dollars, with the right to increase the same to two million dollars. THE UNION FIRE EXTINGUISHES COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Manufacture and sell the Improved, Portable Fire Extinguisher. Always Reliable. D. T. GAGE, BSOtf No. 113 MARKET St., General Agent. jaT 8 T I N V A I &. sTo N S GRAND 8QUARE AND UPRIGHT PIANOS. CHARLES BLASIUB, SOLS AGEKT rOB TBI 81LI Of TH1 WOELD-BEN OWNED PIANOS, .. AT THE OLD WAREROOMS, , U UtMp No. 1006 CHESNUT STREET. ga- NOTICE 19 HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN w application will be made at the next meeting of the General Assembly of tbe Commonwealth of Penuylvaiiia for the incorporation of a Bank, In accordance with the laws of the Common wealth, to be entitled TUE IKON BaNK. to be located at Phi ladelphia, with a capital of oue bu ud red thousand dollar, with the right to increase the tame to one Uuu.ua auuars. i ( i . i BPEOIAL NOTIOE3. jgy NOTICE IS ITEREBY GIVEN THAT! AN - application will tie marie ai-the next meeting of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the incorporation of a Bank, tn accordance with the lawi of the Commonwealth, to. I entitled THE SOUTOWARK BANKING COMPANY, to be located at PhiladRlphla, with a capital of tone hundred thousand dollars, with the riebt to Increase tbe same to one million doilara. Sr(ia: M,J 8 M. ..8,0 O V E L, k LAWYER,' x s No. 113 PLUM STREET, CAMDEN, N. J. ! Collections made anywhere inside of New .Ter sey. . .. .. . ... aiesot QUEEN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. whivii aiiu ijii bnrwiji - CAPITA! 1,000,000. SABINE, ALI.KN t DI LLE9, Aeenta, Si -1 . - - FIFTH and WALNUT Streets. 'Or HEADQUARTERS FOR EXTRACTING Tih with frmb N'ltrooi-Oiid llu. Abaolatalr BO pain. Dr. F. R. THOMAS, formerly operator at tbe Oolton Dental Rooma, devotee nil entire praotioe to the painlaea extraction of teeth. Uffloe, No. U WALNUT Street. IM fjgs V A R D A L E G. MCALLISTER, Attornoy and Counselor at Law, - No. 808 BKOADWAY, i New York. t SUMMER RESORTS. T O APE MA 1. i QONCRE88 HALL, CAPE MAY, N. J., Opena-June 1. Close, October 1 Mark and Simon Hassler't Orchestra, and ful Military Band, of 120 pieces. TERMS 13-60 per day June and September. 11-00 perdayjnly and August. ' ' - The new wing la now completed. Applications for Rooms, address 4 18 lit J. F. PAKE. Proprietor " Til ATLANTIC CITY. ... ' THE "CHALFONTE," ATLANTIC CITY, N J., is now open. Kailroad from tbe honte to tbe bearh. KLISUA &OBKKTS, , 6 11 8m ' f Proprietor. ART EXHIBITION. ON FREE EXHIBITION CHAS. F. -HASELTIHE S GALLERY, No. 1125 CHESNUT, STREET, BRAUN'8 FAMOUS PANORAMIC VIEWS Of Berlin, l'otsdam, Charlottenburg, Cohlents, Heidel berg, Jena, Weimar, Erfurt. Ems. Baden-Baden, Wetsbaden, Brussels, Amsterdam, Waterloo, Liege Ypres, Rotterdam, Utrecht, etc. etc , - A complete set of the Berlin Museums, and Interior views of all the rooma in the various royal palacei of Prussia. -. ; Particular attention la drawn to the fact that tn a few daya 100 views on the Rhine and its fortiflca. tlona, aa never before seen, will be exhibited. 11 10 THE FINE ARTS. COLLEGE OF ST. B0ER0ME0. NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC VDJWS OF ST.' B0RRO ,, . , y MEO COLLEaB, For the Stereoscope .25 cents each Also, Larger, Mouuted. . . . . .......... . cents each THE BEST MAP OF THE SEAT OF WAR IN , EUROPE. 10 EACH. j DICKEN8' LAST TORTRAIT. '- , JAMES & EARLE & SONS, LooUng-Glass Warerooma and Gallery of Paintings, No. 816 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. WATOHES. JEWELRY, ETO. TOWER' CLOCKS. No. 22 NOKTH SIXTH STREET, Agent for STEVENS' PATENT TOWER CLOCKS, both Remontolr & Graham Esoapement, striking hour only, or striking quarters, and repeating hour on Tail chime. ----' Estimates furnished on application either person ally or by maiL 6 25 WILLIAM B..WARNE & CO.. Wholesale Dealers In a B. corner SEVENTH and CHESNUT Streets. 8 8 Second floor, and late of Nov 88 S. THIRD St. FURNACES. Established in 1835. Invariably tbe areateet raoceet over all competition whenever and wherever exhibited or need la the -' UWITKO STATES. CHARLES WILLIAMS' Patent: Golden Eagle . Furnaces, ' "-" ' ' .' ..'..':) Acknowledged by tbe leading Architect and Builders be tbe most powerful and durable Furnace offered, an tbe pa oat prompt, ayatematio, and largeat houe in line of b Hainan. HEAVY REDUCTION IN, PRICES, and only flnt-elasa work turned oat, . , Not. 1132 and 1134 MARKET Street, ' ' ' ' PHILADELPHIA. N. B.-SFND FOB BOOK OF FACTS ON HE A? AND VENTILATION. , 622 4m WHISKY, WINE, ETO. QAR8TAIR0 A McCALL, No. 126 Walnut and 21 Granite Sti. IMPORTERS Of Brandies, Winet, Gin, Olive Oil, Etc, ' - WHOLESALE DEALERS Ul. PURE RYE WHI8KIE8. IN BOND AND TAX PAID. ' tSlpi TV 7IL-IAM ANDERaON A CO., DEALERS IX I Fine Whiskies, r0. lu North SECOND Street, . Philadelphia , PIANOS. ' - ' - i if?S GEORGE STECK CO.'S PIANOS, Grand, Square and Upright, ' i . AU0, ' . . I 1 : ' ' ' ' .' ' Mason & Hamlin's Cabinet Organs. AN ELEGANT STOCK AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. J. C. COULD, 8S No. 923 CH ESN CT STREET. - ALBRECHT, RIEEES SCHMIDT, " HaNPFinTElH Or FIRST-CLASS PIANO-FORTES. ' Fall guarantee sod moderate prices. M WARKltooats, No. aio ARCH Street. O NK DOLLAR OOODS FOR 95 CENTS HEAL ESTATE AT AUOTION. ,5f O i B. 1 By virtue and in execution of the bowers e6ntaind In a Mortgage .executed by , TI1E CENTRAL PASSENGER RAILWAY COMPANY of the city of Philadelphia, bearing date the eighteenth day or April,' 1363, and recorded la the office for recording; deeds and mortjraBcs for the. city and county or Philadelphia, in Mortgage Book A. C. 1L. No. (,' page 483, etc,' the undersigned Trustees named tn said mortgage -, ,.-.. WILL SELL AT TUBLI0 AUCTION, at the MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE, la the city of Philadelphia, by . i MESSRS. TIIOMAS & SONS, Auctioneer at is o'clock M., on TUESDAY, the eighteenth day of October, A. D. 1870, the property described la and conveyed by the said mortgage, to wit No. 1. All those two contiguous lots or pieces of ground, with the buildings and Improvements thereon erected, situate on the east Bide or Broad street. In the city or Philadelphia, one of them be glBnirjg at the distance of nineteen feet seven Inches and five-eighths southward from the southeast corner of the said Broad and Coatcs streets ; thence extending eastward at right angles with said Broad street elghty-elght feet one inch and a half to ground now or late or Samuel Miller; thence southward along- said ground, and at right angles with said Coates street, seventy-two reet to the northeast cor ner or an alley, two reet six Inches In width, leading southward into Tenn street; thence west ward crossing aald alley and along the lot of ground hereinafter described and at right angles with said Broad street, seventy-nine feet to the east side of the said Broad at reet;. and thence northward along the east line of said Broad street seventy-two feet to the place of beginning. Subject to a Ground Rent of 1280, silver money. . ..,... ( No. 8. The other of them situate at the northeast corner of the said Broad street and Penn street, containing in front or breadth on the said Broad street eighteen feet, and in length or depth east ward along the north line or said Penn street seventy-tour feet and two Inches, and oh the line of said lot parallel with said Penn street seventy-six feet five Inches and three-fourths of an inch to said two feet six Inches wide alley.? Subject to ground rent of lis, silver money. , No. S. All that certain lot or piece of ground be ginning at the S. E. corner of Coates street and Broad Btrect, thence extending southward along the said Broad street nineteen feet seven Inches and five eighths of an Inch; thence eastward eighty feet one Inch and one-half of an Inch; tnence northward, at right angles with said Coates street, nine feet to the south side of Coates street, and thence westward along the south side of said Coates street ninety feet to the place of beginning. ; . No. 4. Four Steam Dummy Cars, twenty reet long by nine reet two inches wide, with all the necessary steam machinery, seven-Inch cylinder, with ten-inch stroke or piston, with heating pipes, &c Each will seat thirty passengers, and has power suflluicnt to draw two extra cars. . f , Note. These cars are bow in the custody or Messrs. Grice & Long, at Trenton, New Jersey, where they can be seen. . The sale or them Is made subject to a lien for rent, which on the first day or July, 1870, amounted to f coo. i No. 6. The whole road, plank road, and railway of the said The Central - Passenger Railway Company of the city of Philadelphia, and all their land (not Included in Nos. 1, 8, and 8,) roadway, railway, rails, rights of way, stations, toll houses, and other super structures, depots, depot greunda and other real estate, buildings and Improvements whatsoever,and all and singular the corporate privileges and fran chises connected with said company and plank road and railway, snd relating thereto, and all the tolls, Income, issues, and profits to accrue from the same or any part thereof belonging to said company, and generally all the tenements, hereditaments and fran chises or the said company. . And also all the cars of every kind (not Included In No. 4,) machinery, tools, lmplcments,and materials connected with the proper equipment, operating and conducting of said road, plank road, and railway; and all the personal pro perty of every kind and description belonging to the said company. Together with all the streets, ways, alleys, pas sages, waters, water-courses, easements, franchises, rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments ana ap purtenances whatsoever, unto any of the above mentioned premises and estates belonging and ap pertaining, and the reversions and remainders,' rents, issues, and profits thereof, and all the estate, right, title, Interest, property, claim, and demand of every nature and kind whatsoever of tbe said Com pany, as well at law as in equity of, in, and to the same and every part and parcel thereof. TERMS OF SALE. ' ' , The properties will be sold In parcels as numbered. On each bid there shall be paid at the time the pro perty is struck off Fllty Dollars, unless the price is less than that sum, when the whole sum bid shad be paid. , . i , W. L. SCHAFFER, -,motl. . 8 13 61t . W. V. LONGSTRETH, Traateea- OORDACE, ETO. " LEAVER & CO., rope iiANi;jrACTrjui:ns .. : . . ) AXD .. ,.. . SHIP CUAftDLlZXiS, ' No. S9 North WATER Street and j No. 83 North WHARVES, Philadelphia. ROPE AT LOWEST BOSTON AND NEW YORK PRICES. , . ,1 : CORDAGE. Manilla, Sisal and Tarred Cordage .. At Lowest New York Prioe and FreihU, ' J EDWIN IL FITLEtt Ac CO Factory, TEHTH Bt. and GXBMARTOWfl A venae. Store, Ko. 88 . WATER St, and 33 N DELAWARE j . . ATenne. PHIPPINU FOR i LIVERPOOL AND OTTKRVS. .TOWN. Inman Line of Roval Mali bicaxuers are appointed to sail aa follows : City or Llmerkk, Tuesday, August 80, at 2 P. M. City or Paris, Saturday, September 8, at 18 M. City of Cork (vlaHalilax), Tuesday, Sept 8. at 1 P.M. City or Antwerp, Thursday, Sept. 8, at 1,P. M. City or London, Saturday. September 10', at 8 P.M. and each succeeding Saturday and alternate Tues day, from pier No. 4 North river. RATES OF PASSAGE. Payable In gold. Payab'.e in currency. First Cabin ITS Steeraga 3) To Londtw 80; To Ixmdon as ToP. W, To '.'aria k.... 88 .7 iitax soi Tc Ualiax ia PaaPdUEtra also forwarded to Havre. Hambaro. I Bremen, etc, M redid mlea Tickets can De loupi cere at moderate rates by persons wltthlng tc ieud for tnelr friends. For further information apply at the company's ornce. ' JOHN G. DALE, Agent. No. IS Broadway, N. Y.t . Or to O DOKXELL & FAULK, Agents, 4 B No. 408 CHESNUT Street. Philadelphia. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO A LEX AN 1 idrla, Georgetown, and Washington, l. u., via cnesapeake and Delaware Canal, with connections at Alexandria from the most d'.rect route for Lynchburg, Brutal, linoxvillo, Nashville, Dalten, and the Southwest. Steamers leave regularly every Saturday at noon torn the nrst wharf above Market street. ' Freight received dally. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., No. 14 North and South WHARVES. HYDE fc TYLER, Agents at Georgetown; M. ELLR1DGE A CO., Agents at Alexandria. - , , 41 DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE STEAM. ToWBOAT COM PAN V. barires towed between PhiiadulDhia. xuuiuuure, uavie-ue-uraco, istuuwaie CllJ, ana in-. tei'iuediaie points, WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., Agents. Captain JOHN LAI GULIN. Supertnteuneuu Lmce, fc U tMuoi Wfv -Miuvitu ilii 8HIPPINC lt aC T i l? TT T A X!T QTtf i tQi rTFO f "V 1 W D A tv ev fl f. v wtaiiuuu w at A. B r O R " N E vr TT o it k, - SAILINO. EVERY TUESDAY, THURSDAY, AND . , SATURDAY, . are" nov i eoolvlng freight at 1 ) FIVE CENTS . TER 100 rOUNDS, TWO CENTS FER FOOT, OR mi.F CENT PER TJALLON, (j s i SHIP'S OPTION. t u 4 INSURANCE ONE-EIGHTH OF ONE FER CENT Extra rates on small packages iron, metals, etc. No receipt or bill of lading signed for leas tiaa fifty ccnis. NOTICE Cm and after September IB rates by this Company win be lo cents per loo pounds or 4 cents per loot, ship's option ; and regular shippers by this line will only be chanted the above rate all winter. Wintr rates commencing December is. For farther particulars apply to JOHN F. OHU 8 8 PIER UNOttTH WHARVES. THE REGULAR STEAMSHIPS ON THE PBU LaDELPHIA AND CHARLESTON 8TEAJK. SHIP LINK are AI.ONE authorized to iasue tlirouirb bills of ladli tt- to Interior polnta South and West ta connection with South Carolina Railroad Comnaav . ALFRED L. TYLER, 7 ice-President So. C. RR. Co. PHILADELPHIA AND CHARLESTON STEAMSU1P LINK. - - TTT 'i bis Hue is now composed or the following (inr. class Steamships, sailing from PIER 17, below Spruce street, on FRIDAY of each week at 3 ASHLAND, 900 tons. Captain Croweli. J. W. EVEKMAN, 6'.8 tons, Captain Hlncklev SALVOR, 600 tons. Captain Ashcroft. SEPTEMBER, 18T0. - - ' ' J. W. Everraan, Friday, SepS. 8. Salvor, Friday, Sept. 9. J. W. Everman, Friday, 8ent. 14. Salvor, Friday, Sept. xs. J. W. Everman, Friday, Sept no. Through bills of lading given to Columbia, S. C . the Interior of Georgia, and all polnu South aa'i Southwest. Freight forwarded with promptness and despatch. Rates as low aa by any other route. Insurance one-balf per cent., Dec ted at the offlce In Crst-rlass companies. , No freight received nor bills of lading aigned on day of sailing. SOUDER A ADAMS, Agents, No. 8 Dock Street. , Or WILLIAM. P. CLYDE A caT' WILLIAM A. COURTENAYMChar'les. tOB 84 PHILADELPHIA AND SOTTTnwpv MAIL KTKAMSHIP mupivm u,.V. ,AK bKMI-MONTUL? LINK Tn b?bXS' The ACHILLES will anil for New Orlean tfireot. m Tueadar beptember . at 8 A. M. veo uireot, on Tb. YAZOO will aail from New Orleana, ia HaTana. 00 .September. THROUGH BILLS OF LADING at a low rate as b any other route (riven to Mobile, Galveston, Indianoia. La Tacca, and Braao. and to all point oa tb Mi wtMippfriTnt between New Orlean and St. Lotus. Ked Raver freuruu reebippad at New Orleana without chart Of oeauaieaiuaa, WEEKLY LINE TO SAVANNAH, OA, Tb WYOMING will aail for Savanna oa Bator day, beptf mbrr 8, at 8 A. M. ..... InelONAWANDA will sail from Bavannatt on Bator day, feptemher 3. THROUGH BILLS OF LADING riven to all tbe prin. oipal towns In Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Miwiiajppi, Louisiana, Arkanaaa, and Tennessee in ooaneotion With tbe Central Railroad of OeoTRia, Atlantic and Oolf Rail road , and i londa eteamers, at a low rate aj ty eompetuia !' . , , ... ,,., . . ' SFMI-MONTHLY LINE TO WILMIKGTOW, N. O Tbe PIONEER will sail for WUuunton on Wednesday. AuRtut 81, at 4 A. M. Retaining, wOi leave WUmiorto Wednasdajr, September 7. aw Connect with tbe Oape Fear River Steamboat Oom pany, tbe Wilmington and Weldon and North Carolina Railroads, and tbe Wilmington and Manchester Railroad te all interior point. Freight for Colombia, 8. O., and Anrneta, Oa., taken via W ilminKton, at aa low ratea aa by any ether root. insurance eueoteo wnen requested Dy aaipper. Bill of lading ig-sed at Queen street wharf oa or Ware day of Bailing. WILLIAM U JAMES. General A tent. No. 130 Sooth THIRD Street. fSffU PHILADELPHIA, RICHMOND, aSaaaeUaensARD NORFOLK STEAMSHIP LINBL I HKOL'OH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO TUE SOUt2 ANO WK8T tNOREASED FAOamWR AND REDUCED BATES f OK 1H70. Steamer leave every WKUNKSDAYand SATURDAY' at lao'olock noon, from FIRST WHARF above MAR. K.F.T Street. . RETURNING, leave RICHMOND MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and NORFOLK TUESDAYS and SA. TUKDAYS. , No Rilla of Lading aigned after U o'clock oa aalUng HROCGH RATES to all poinU In North and South Carolina, via Seaboard Air Line Railroad, oounecting as Portsmouth, and to Lynchburg, Va., Tennessee, and tbe Went, via Virginia and Tennessee Air Line and Rioiunood and Danville Rnilroad. Freivbt HANDLED BUTONOE, aodukea at LOWER RATES THAN ANY OTHER ONE. . Ko charge tor oonuniaeion, drayage, or any exponas of "tesmship Inenr at lowest rates. ' FreiKht reoeived daily. fcUte Roomaooomm WJL A CO.. No. 13 S. WEAR VBS and Pier 1 N. WHARVES. W. P. PUR1ER, Agent at Richmond and Oity Point. T. P. ORUWFLL A CO.. Aaente at Norfolk. S U ' FOR NEW YORK, VIA DELAWARE and Rarltan CanaL iSWIFTS V RE TRANSPORTATION tJUJirAKl. DESPATCH AND SWIFTSCRE LINES, ' - Leaving daily at 18 M. and 8 P. M. The steam propellers of this company wUi com mence loading oa the 6th of March. Through In twenty-four hours. Goods forwarded to any point free of commissions. Freights taken on accommodating term, Apply to WILLIAM M. BAIRD k CO., Agents, No. 138 South DELAWARE Avenue. 4 - wFOR NKW YOR , , J UP via Delaware and Rarltan Canal. EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANT. The steam Propellers or the line will commence loading on the Sth Instant, leaving dally as nsual. THROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going oat or No York, North, East, or West, tree of commission. Freights received at low rates. WILLIAM P, CLYDE A CO., Agents, No. 12 b. DELAWARE Avenue, JAMES HAND, Agent, No. 119 WALL Street, New York. 8 4 kTrNITURE, ETO. HOVER'S ' ' it.''- Celebrated Patent Sofa Bedstead I new being; made and sold in large n timber both (in France and England. Can be bad only at toe manufac tory, 'lb i pieve of tumiuire is in tbe form of a handitom. PARLOR SOFA, yet in one minute, without unaorewin or detaching in any way, it can be extended into a beau. tifni tRFJUOH bKDbTVAD, with Bp ring Hair Mattreea 1 complete. It baa uie convenience or a Bureau tor Holding, is auly managed, and it ia impossible for il te get out ot order. This Sofa Bedstead requires ne props, hinges, feet, or roe to wpport it when extended, aa ail other eofk beds and ionnge bave, which are all very unsafe aud liable to get out of repair, but tb Bsditead l formed by simply turning out tbe end or closing team wbsn th ttofs is wanted. Tbe prioe is sbout the asms aa a lounge. Aa eiaminatiod of this novel Invention ia eolitited. II. F, novEit, t U tntbm No. Ziu South SECOND Street. Pbllada LEQAL NOTICES. 17 STATE OF ALEXANDER BESON, JR., DE i CEASED. Letters or AdmlnUtratlon on the Estste or ALEX ANDKR DENbuN, Js., deceased, having beeu granted to the undersigned, all persons Indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and all persons having claims to present the same without delay to EDWIN N. BENS jN, Gl'STAVl S S. BENSON, EDWIN NORTH, Administrators, No. S S. TiUSD Street. Or to their Attorney, G FORGE JUNKIN. Esq., 8 1 tucf S. E. cor. SIXTH and WALNt'T Sta. Unit vyV iojU., U h. a tu Cvtfft; Oavv! tidily Xi'ik'k&c'' Corn Exchange Bag Manufactory. ' JOHW T. BAILEY, X. E. Cor. WATER and MiULEET Stj LOPE AND TWINE, BAGS and BAGGING, Ktf Grain, Flour, Salt, fcuper-ptusptiate ol Lime, Bom Dust, Eto. large and small GCNNY BAGS constantly RTTn !p ; 'j 'j i
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