THE DAILY EVENING jTELEGRAPH PHlLADfiLrillA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1870. COUNT TON MOLTKE. From Ih London Sptrtator. Immense, and, as it were, Rolf -dependent strength of the Prussian suonarcny is shown in nothing so clearly as in the way the IIohenzollernB hare maintained the tradition of tbriftinens in the bestowal of rewards. Tbey have never had to bny anybody. From first to last, from the first King to the first Emperor, the sovereigns of Prussia have been exceptionally independent within their dominions have been as individuals wealthy, and have followed a bold, far-reaching, and ambitions line of policy. Wiih territories little larger than Holland, and a country far less rich, tbey claimed and maintained A posi tion among the mightiest potentates of the world, resented the faintest slight to an Ambassador, and scarcely acknowledged precedence even in the Etnperor of Germany. They have occupied precisely the position which tempts men to spend most lavishly, yet they have maintained for l.0 years, through six genera tions in their official policy as in their household management a tradition of thrift, pushed often to cheeseparing parsi mony. One man in the line was a kind of Northern Bourbon, wasting wealth in sterile magnificence and coarse voluptuousness; but he did not break the tradition, and to this bout the Ilohenzollerns are served better than any Princes of Europe, and give their servants smaller rewards. Nobody in Prussia is paid anything like the worth of his work. Tho whole aristocracy is drawn into the army by salaries which would diRgust English bank clerks, while the elite of the cultivated, men usually without means, are formed into am effective bureaucracy, and paid less than English clergymen. A genercl is paid like an English captain, and a prefect like a su perior clerk, while the majority of the bu reaucracy, which initiates and directs and moderates all things in Prussia, which gov erns in the highest sense of that misused word, are compelled to practise an economy which English Dissenting ministers or Scotch schoolmasters would deem painful. A rigid, unsparing economy pervades every depart ment, and has so penetrated officials as to be come a kind of point of honor, as if .waste or even espensiveness were in themselves jnst a little discreditable. To this hour, the King, who has become by suc cessive accretions of wealth one of the richest princeB in Europe perhaps the richest in personal income thinks it no shame to send to a city in distress which he keenly desires to conciliate 0o thalers, or 7."0, and would feel genuine surprise if informed that the sum was not very great. In the midst of incessant battles with Parlia ment for money, the Schloss treasure 7,000,0(i has never been teuched except for war, nnd the State commences a grand campaign, tLe greatest of our century, with a loan which London would take up at a bite and forget in a day. The extra amount of public money expended as yet in this war by Germany is' not 4:20,000,000, and though XlC,000,'oiO more were recently asked for, the departments have found, time to reduce the demand to twelve. Part of this economy is due, no doubt, to the practice of levying requisitions, taught by the First Napoleon to Germany; but Its main support is a thrift so determined that the plunderers have given up the- game in despair, and as a Prussian ollicul once said to the writer, "Our-treasury is not afraid even of a dockyard." This rigor not only con tinues under the present administration, but is slightly intensified, "many small pecula tions having been suppressed," and pushed in some departments almost iato cruelty. The Prussian hospital service, for example, i penurious to an unjust degree. There are not enaufch surgeons, no comforts are al lowed, not even hospital clothes, men with broken limbs still wearing their cheap rough uniforms. Quinine, chloral, good wine, everything that costs money, is always, the international surgeons report, wanting, and the disuse of chloroform is partly due to a dislike for an expense which a little more "fortitude" in the victims of war would Render needless. No Seneral, however high, makes a fortune; Baron von Dreyse receives a modest wage, and we doubt if Sir Joseph Whit worth would reckon Krapp as rioh. The State in Prussia aooepts your services, it does not buy them; and yet those servioos are exceptionally well rendered. There is not, ho far as we know, an instance in Prussian history of a (State servant having been re warded as Marlborough was, or Wellington, or even Lord Hardinge or Lord Dalhousie. A sum was voted after Sadowa to the King, to distribute among his highest servants; but Count Bismarck, who had given Prussia the supremacy in Germany, received only an estate .laie indeed in acreage, but not worth '.-.0,000 in open market; and Baron von Moltke still less, a sum, if we remember rightly, of about Xl.yXM). Nor is this chariness of money made np by any lavibess of honors or carelessness in social discipline. The King is in the last resort master of every man, and accounts have beeu published, obviously correct, of the great Chancellor's dangers from a group of legitimist old ladies who constantly, by their influence with the King, thwarted his best-laid Jans. If the world is not utterly misinformed, he has had to resign once or twice, and even now he remains just what he was; Count Bismarck Sohonhausen master in one way of the world, but hopelessly unable to contend with the stern old oflioer who is indebted to him for supremacy in Europe, for a position which fulfils the dreams of German legend-makers, and might make Frederick the Groat leap under his stone shroud w ith exultation chief among the ktatesmen of Europe, but still the "faithful servant of my august" and not very intelleo tnal "master." It was widely rumored after Hadowa that Connt Bismarck would receive the little enclave which is still, we believe, kept in some way separate from Prussia, and would be Duke of Lauenburg, but Prussians only smiled at the report. He serves the Ho--teu-ollernx, tbey said, not Napoleon; and so it proved. Honor enough to him that the Xing accetds his advice. The routine ob served towards the Chancellor is intelligible for after till he only makes history but we confess, fully as we had recognized the policy of the great ierruan dynasty in this matter of rewards, the cold thrift of honor as well as money which makes every star so valuable we have felt a faint surprise at the measure meted out to Von Moltke. lie wins campaigns. lie is the greatest in the field which the King bestknoMR. The nreci-e place which Gene ral von Moltke will hold in military history is .till perLaps uncertain.! llle has never yet, either in IN4, or in 18oti, or in 1870, been opposed to a reasonably good tactician, an cmal army, or a formidable strategist. Beat- ins the Danes, wnen mey aa oaiy musKeis, was poor work; and Benedek, perhaps ham pered by fucret instructions, proved but a feeble opponent; while in France he has never met a strategist of any sort, and only once a general. We rather think, writing n)v as obfKHfUit ClTUlaB"; tllst U M CC' ion he was defeated, and that August 16 should be credited to Marshal B-zaine, who, . bad be had bnt powder, would have retained the honors of the day. But gene ralship must be judged by its results, and judging by results, no sovereign ever had such a servant as General von Moltke, who, having first reorganized an army in which no soldier had ever seen a shot fired, having formed $ school of generals and remade the scientiflo services, so guided that army as in a campaign of seven weeks to strike down the Austrian Empire, and then in a campaign of three months to subjugate the greatest of military monarchies. So far an close and scientiflo observers can detect, General von Moltke has been in this tremendous cam- Esign the Providence of the German army, as planned everything, foreseen everything, Lbs never thrown away a life, and never missed a spring. His single brain has been wotth a hundred thousand men, worth all Napoleon was to the French army, and on his seventieth birthday the King of Prussia makes his mighty general a Count, promotes him one step in the social hierarchy, as it were in recognition en pasta nt of sound ad vice lent to him, the King, in his manage ment of the war. A few days afterwards he makes two Princes of bis own blood, who doubtless have fought well and sncoeeded, bnt who are nevertheless only efficient in struments in Von Moltke's hands, Field-Marshals, the superiors in the military hierarchy of the genius who has led them to victory and empire. In that realm of thought which of all others he understands, in the very mo ment of supreme triumph, with his wholesoul subjected to the advice which yet he will not reward, the greatest Prince in the world coldly and deliberated prefers to the claim of genius that of blood, and signifies to man kind that if his generals master earth, they remain his family servants still. There is something galling to men who be lieve that the tools should go to the workmen in such a distribution of honor, but while we protest, we are not blind to the strength manifest in such acts. They show that the terrible weakness of all new governments, the necessity of buying support, is absent from the Prussian monarchy. The State, and the King as its representative, have no need to conciliate any individual, not even the man who seems to work out victory as if it were a problem in the Calculus. He is bidden to work it out, and what higher inducement could there be? nad a Itepublic employed Von Moltke, it must have dreaded his ambi tion. Had he served Napoleon, Napoleon mnht have loaded him down with honors and wealth and territories, have filled him fat w ith spoil to bind him to his side, and even then must have dreaded in him a rival, a foe, or a successor. The King quietly admires and trusts. He has no need to bribe. He can be endangered by no rival, threatened by no enmity, undermined by no individual opponent. He is there, master by right of birth, in victory as in defeat, too strong for even the semblance of hostility, as far beyond assault as if his power were self-derived, able to acknowledge aid, or to reward high service, or to abstain from rewarding them, and sure. whichever he does, to be held to have acted as became a king. If he hangs np his worn out sword in the place of honor, lo! what a gracious king; if he flings it away, lo! what a master of the severest statecraft. Von Moltke has done his duty, and what can king say more ? It is difficult to read of this countship without a slight feeling of con tempt for such niggardliness in the bestowal even of honors, or without a deep respect for the organization which is so strong that it need scarce be just to a soldier at whose name the fighting world grows pale. Thk Site of Pabadise. Among the papers read at the British Association in London was one by Sir Henry Bawlinson on the Bite of the Terrestrial Paradise. He supposes the geo graphical description in Genesis 11 to be de rived not from Iranian mythology, but Ba bylonian tradition. "Gan-eden," or tho Gar den of Eden, is in his opinion a Hebrew modification of one of the old vernacular names of Babylonia " Gan-duni," "Gan" eic-nitjing apparently an enclosure, while "Duni" was the name of a deity. The four rivers are the Tigris and the Euphrates, the Surrapi and the L'kni, '. e., the eastern arm of the Tigris and the western of the Euphra tes. Cush (rendered in the authorized ver sion Ethiopia) is one of the primitive capitals of Babylonia. It is needless to add that, as at present stated, this theory is much less plausible than that which connects the narra tive in Genesis with Iranian myths, especially as the serpent, and the Tree or Life with its guardian cherubim, are Btill unexplained from Babylonian sources. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFE MARVIN'S SAFES. She Best Quality! The Lowest Prices! She Largest Assortment I F Ire-n roof. Durglar-oroof. MARVIN'S CHROME IRON SPHERICAL Uurgflai Halo Will resist all BURGLAR S IMPLEMENTS for any lengtn 01 tune, nease aeuu lor catalogue. MARVIN & CO., No. 721 CnESNUT Street, (MASONIC HALL,) PHILADELPHIA- 865 Broadway, N. Y. 108 Bank at., Cleveland, Ohio, A number of Second-hand Safes, of different makes and sizes, for sale vjtBY Low. Safes, Machinery, etc., moved aad.hoisted promptly ana careiuiiy, at reaonaDie rates. iu 1 irnwoin MALT LIQUORS. ALE ! ALE ! ALE ! Great Reduction In Prices. DRAUGHT ALE, f 6 PER BBL. BOITLINU ALE AflD rOIlTJ-lt, 97 PER BBL. XX ALE, DRAUGHT PORTER, AND BROWN 8TOUT, $8 PER BBL., At CUCKB8' OLD-ESTABLISHED BREWERY, moat. S36, 828. W30 and 834 NT. JOIIH Street. II T mwslmrp PHILADELPHIA. MATS AND OAPI, ff WABBTJRTON'8 IMPROVED VENTILATED aVJk and eay-Uttlng UK ISMS UATS (patented), 10 a' the improved iaauions 01 me seao, cu-ttaN u Street, urn door. W us. lw Vines rpi FINANCIAL. Wilmington and Reading n ATT.TIOAD Gcvcn Per Cent. Bonds, FREE OF TAXES. We are flerfno; 900,000 01 the Second Blortace Honda ot Mils Company AT 82i AND ACCRUED INTEREST. For the convenience of Investors these Bonds leaned In denominations of $1000, f 500s, and 100. The money Is required for the purchase of add! tional Rolling Stock and the fall equipment of the Road. The road Is now finished, and doing a business largely In excess of the anticipations of Its officers. The trade offering necessitates a large addition outlay for rolling a toe It , to afford fall facilities for Its prompt transaction, the present rolling stock not Doing sufficient to accommodate the trade. WM. PAINTER & CO., BANKERS. No. 36 Gouth THIRD Street, II PHILADELPHIA. A LEGAL INVESTMENT FOB Trustees. Executors and Administrators. WE OFFER FOR SALS 32,000,000 of rni Pennsylvania Railroad Co.'s ItA 9IORTGAUB 8ix Per Cent. Bonds at 93 And merest Added to the late of Purchase. All Free from State Tax, and Issued In Sums of flOOO. These bonds are coupon and registered, Interest on the former ray able January and Jaly 1; on the latter April and October 1, and by an act of the Legislature, approved April 1, 1370, are made a LEGAL INVESTMENT for Administrators, Execu tors, Trustees, etc. For further particulars apply to fay Cooke Ac Co., K. XV. Clark St Co., W, II. IYewbold, Son Ac Aertsen C. Ac II. Horle. 11 1 im JayCoqke&Jjp. PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK, AftD WASHINGTON, BANKERS, AND lealers in Government Securities. (special attention given to the Purchase and Sale of bonds and stocks on Commission, at the Board of Brokers in mis ana oiner cities. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS?. COLLECTIONS M AUK UH ALL rULNTS. GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT AND CSOLD. Reliable Railroad Bonds for Investment. Pamphlets and fall information given at our office, No. 114 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. flO 1 3m B. K.' JAMISON & CO., SUCCESSORS TO P.F.KELLY CO., BANKERS AND DEALER8 IN Gold, Silver, and Government Bonds, At Closest Market Rates, N. W. Cor. THIRD and CHESNUT Sts. Special attention given to COMMISSION ORDERS in New York and Philadelphia Stock Boards, etc. etc. 85 p O ft DALE. Six Per Cent Loan of the City of Williamsport, Pennsylvania, FB OF ALL TAXES, At 85, and Accrued Interest These Bonds are made absolutely secure by act 0 Legislature compelling tha city to levyjaumelentr u to pay Interest and principal. P. 0. PETERSON & CO.. No, 39 SOUTH THIRD STREET, s PHILADELPHIA ELLIOTT A BURR l 8ANKXRS Bo. 109 SOUTH THIRD BTRBSV, DEALERS IH ALL 60VERNMJDTT 8 -CURB TIES, BOLD BILLS, ETC. DRAW BILLS OF EXCHANGE AND IS8TJ1 COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT OH THJ UNION BANK OF LONDON. TRAITS TRAVELLERS' LETTERS OF CREDIT ON LONDON AMD PARIS, available ttrougaoot Europe. Will collect all Coupons and Interest free of cm or parties making their scandal arrangement! W1UU. FOR SALE. C. T. YEItKES, Jr., & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 20 South THIRD 8troot, 123 FftlLAPfiLXfllA. FINANOIAL. A RELIABLE Safe Home Investment XII 11 Sunbury and Lewistown Railroad Company 7 PER CENT. GOLD First Mortgage Bonds. Interest Inj nlIe April and Octo ber, I'ree of State and United JStatet Taxes. We are now offering the balance of the loan of $1,200,000, which is secured by a first and only lien on the entire property and franchises of the Company, At 90 and tho Accrued late rest Added. The Road is now rapidly approaching com pletion, with a largo trade in COAL, IKON, and LUMBER, in addition to the p isnenger travel awaiting the opening of this greatly needed enterprise. The local trade alone is sufficiently large to Bustain the Road. We have no hesitation in recommending the Bonds as a CHEAP, RELIABLE, and SAFE INVESTMENT. For pamphlets, with map, and fall infor mation, apply to Vm. PAINTER & CO., DANKERS, Dealers In Government Securities, No. 33 South THIRD Street, 6 9 tMp PHILADELPHIA. UNITED STATES SECURITIES Bought, Sold and Exchanged on Most Liberal Terms. G- O Lt 13 Bought and Sold at Market Hates. COUPONS CASHED Pacific Railroad BcecJss BOUGHT AND SOLD. Stocks Bought and Sold on Commis sion Only. Accounts received and Interest allowed on Dalit Balances, subject to check at sight. DE HA YEN & BRO., No. 40 South THIRD Qtreot. 811 PHILADELPHIA. D. C. WHARTON SMITH & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS. No. 121 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Successors to Smith, Randolph & Co. Every branch of the business will have prompt at entlon as heretofore. Quotations of Stocks, Governments, and GoM, constantly received from New York by pkivatb wire, from our friends, Edmund D. Randolph A Co. JOHN S. RUSHTON & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS. NOVEMBER COUPONS WANTED. City Warrantn BOUGHT AND SOLD. No. CO South THIRD Street, 8 861 PHILADELPHIA. ' 530 r.so HAnnissorj cxiabxbo, BANKER. DEPO8IT ACCOUNTS RECEIVED AND INTER EST ALLOWED ON DAILY BALnNOJiS ORDERS PROMPTLY EXECUTED FOR THE PURCHASE AND SALE Of ALL RELIABLE SE CURITIES. COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE. REAL ESTATE COLLATERAL LOANS NEGO TIATED. 3 ST 6m No. 5S0 WALNUT St., Phils da- Corn Exchange Bag Manufactory. JOHN T. DAILEY, N. Z. Cor. WATER and MARKET Sts ROPE AND TWINE, BAGS and BAGOING. tot Grain, Flour, bait, buper-?iuMipuiiie of Lime, Bon Dost, Etc Large and small GUNNY BAGS eonatantiv' &ak Ajao, WOOX. PACK BHIPPINO. 4rftff LORILLARD STEAMSHIP OOMPAN1 FOR ItllW YORK, SAILING EVERY TUESDAY, THURSDAY, AM SATURDAY. RATES TEN CENTS TEH 100 rOUNRS, FOUR CENTS PER CUBIC FOOT. ONE CENT PER GALLON. KHIP'H OPTION. INSURANCE BY THIS LINE ONE-EIGHTH OF ONE PER CENT. Extra rates on small parknges Iron, metals, eta No receipt or bill of lading signed for less thao fifty ceDta. Goods forwarded to all points free of commissions, ThrouRh bills of lading given to Wilmington, N. U, oy the steamers of this line leaving New York tri weekly.. For further particulars apply to JOHN F. onu . PIER 19NOKTH WHARVES. N. B. The regular shippers by this line will be charged the above rates all winter. Winter rates commence December IB. 1 8 1 THE REOULAR STEAMSHIPS ON THE PHI LA1)ELPHIA AND CHARLESTON STEAM SHIP LINK arc ALONE authorized to issue throng! Dills of lPditgto interior points South and West ii connection with South Carolina Railroad Company. ALFRED L. TYLER, Vice-President 80. C RR. Co. PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN VAIL NTRAMR1ITP floMP A NVd mruTT. I.AK hKMl-AlONTHLY MNM TO INI if w im. LFANS, L. Tba YAZOO will mil for New OrlMot, tU HaTin. or 1 liurndftir, I ceiiihr I. ftt 8 A. M. Tb JUNIATA will Mil from NewOrlenns, via UTan, On . oveinlipf . THROUOd BILLS OF LADING t ai lowraM h, kntothnr routs iriven to Mohile, (ia West on, INDIAN OI.A, HOOK PORT-, IA VACUA, and UKaZOS.and to all point on th Mimimpp1 rivm betwenn New Orison, and ht. Ioni. Red Ki.or treik-bu roshippod at Now Orleans without OBargeof oemmiaaiona WFKKTY LINK TO 8ATANNAH. GA. Tbo WYOMING will eoll tor Barannab on Satur day, NoTpmber 2ti at 8 A. M. ine TOKAW AMDA will aail from Sarannab on Sator day. NoTetnher 2. TbHOUtill KILTJ8 OF LADING riven to all the prin cipal town in Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Minaissippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennmaoe in connection with tbe Central Railroad of Ueorgia, Atlantioand Oulf RaU road, and Florida at earner., at aa low rate u bf ooinpelina lines. 8KMI-MONTHLY LINK TO WILMINGTON, N. O. Tbe PiONKRK will tail for Wilminnton on Hatnrday, November iM. at A. M. Retaining, will leare Wilming ton Saturday, Oecnniber !!. Oonneotswitb tba Uape Fear River Steamboat Oon. ny, the Wilmiuiton and Weldon and North Uarolina aiiroads, and tbe Wilmington and Manchester Railroad to all interior points. Freight! for Colombia, 8. O., and Anfrnsta, Ga., taken via W llrniniiton, at aa low rates aa by any other route. Intinrance effected when requested by shippers. Bills of larlin Binned at Uneen street wharf on or belore daf of sailinc WILLIAM L. JAMES, General Agent. No. UU Booth THIRD Street Ttl. FOR LIVERPOOL AND QUEENS of Royal Mall Za&sl&lTOWN. Intnan Line bU Hii.ers are appointed to sen as roiiows: Citf Of Brooklyn, Saturday, Nov. 86. at 3 A. M. City of Limerick, via Iluiilas, Tuesday, Nov. 23, at 11 A.M. City of linissels, Paturdatr. Dec. 3. at s A. M. t'ity of Washington, Saturday, Dec. in, at 2 P. M. and each succeeding Saturday and alternate Tuea lav. from Dier No. 45 North river. RATES OF PASSAGE. TavaWe in gold. Payable in currency. . First Cabin 7B Steerage 13 To London so To London 35 To Paris 0 To Paris 3S To Halifax 20' To Halifax 18 Passengers a;so forwarded to Havre, Hamburg, Bremen, etc., at reduced rates. Tickets can be bought here at moderate rates by persons -wishing to send for tnelr friends. For further information apply at the company's onice. JOHN G. DALE, Agent. No. IS Broadway, N. Y. I Or to O DONNELL & FAULK, Agents, 4 B No. 402 CUESN UT Street. Pniladelphia. vti rt a nxrr -pur mpirun vn i? in airi vr . ir btifiuuuid I i j rUkOUUH FREIGHT A1U LINK TO TUB SOUTd INCUKASKD FAOlLrriKSAND REDUCED RATES Steamers leara eery WK.DNK8DA Yand SATURDAY, at li o'clock noon, irom FIRST WHARF abors MAR. KRT Street. HKTUKNINO, leaTO RICHMOND MONDAYS and TUl'RbDAYB, and .NORFOLK. XUKSDAYS and 8A- No Kills of Lading signed after 12 o'clock on aalllna THROUGH RATK8 to all points in North and Booth Carolina, via Seaboard Air Una Railroad, oonneotinit at Portsmouth, and to LynouburK, Va., Tunneasee, and the W .dt, ia Vir. inia and Tennesaea Air Line and Richmond and DaoTtlle Railroad. . FreiKbt UANULHD BUTO1N0K. and takon at LOWER RATKS THAN AN? OTHER LINK. No charge for oommieaion, drayaga, or any eipeme ot ?to.WBhlps insure at lowest rates. Freixbt received daily. No. 13 8. WHARVKSand PierlN. WHAKVK3. W. P. PORTK.R. Agent at Richmond and City Point. T. P. OROWKLL CO.. Agents at Norfolk. 4 U NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXAN drla, Georgetown, and Washington, D. C via Chesapeake and Delaware Cauui, wah connections at Alexandria from the most direct route for Lynchburg, BrlBtol, KnoxvUle, Nashville, Dalton, and the Southwest. Steamers l ave regularly every Saturday at nooD 'Tom the first wharf aixno Market street. Freight receivod dally. WILLIAM P. CLYDE CO., No. 14 North and South WHARVES. HYDE fc TYLER, Agents at Georgetown; M. El.MtllKiE & CO., Agents at Alexandria. 6 1 9 . FOR NEW YORK, VIA DELAWARE '"J? and Ilarttan CanaL Z&k SWIFT SURE TRANSPORTATION COM FAN X. DESPATCH AND SW1FTSURE LINES, Leaving daily at 12 1VL and 5 P. M. The steam propeTers of this company will com mem e loading on the 6th of March. Through In twenty-four hours. Goods tortrarded to any poiut free of commission Freights taken on accommuuaung terms. Apply to WILLIAM M. BAIRD h. CO., Agents, No. 132 South DELAWARE Avenue. F r x V V VST V f O K, 't.4JM via Delaware and uaritsn canal. riiiriA express steamboat company. '1 be bteam Propellers of the line will commence loading on the 8th instant, leaving dally as usual. THROUGH IN TWENTY-FOUR HOURS. Goods forwarded by all the lines going out of Ne York, North, East, or West, free of commission. Freights received at low rates. W ILLIAM P. CLYDE CO., Agents, 140. 12 8. D&LAWA11K AVUI1U3, .TA1YTF8 TTAND. AirenL No. ll WALL Street, New York. 3 45 DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE I STEAM TOWBOAT COMPANY. sTliirarpa1 tAWAit htt.WPAn PhilAdfllnhtA. Bultimore, liavre-de-Grace, Delaware City, and In termediate points. WILLIAM P. CLYDE A CO., Agents. Captain JJLN LAUGH LIN, Superintjndeut. ft re. No. 19 South WJ.anres Vniladeiphla.411 OORDAOE, ETC. WEAVER & CO., uorii hi A.ui' ac ruiti:it AMD nil ii ciianii.ijii. No. 29 North WATER Street and No. 83 North WHARVES, Philadelphia. ROPE AT LOWEST BOSTON AND NEW YOR PRICES. 41 CORDAGE. Hanilla, filial and Tarred Cordage At Lowest Nan York Prioea and rratgbta EDWIN II. MTL.KK cV CO., Factors. TKJVTH Bt. and ax&MAKTOWa Avanaa. Btora.Ro. 83 B). WATKB Bt. and 2 N DELAWAB Avanaa. ill 12m PHILADELPHIA! -J. T. mH. M'MAUON. SBTTTISQ AXD COMXTSSWy UKRCnjLXTH, No. B COENTIES SLIP, New York, No. 18 SOUTH WHARVES. Philadelphia, No. 48 W. PRATT BTREET, Baltimore. We ars prepared to ship every description ot FYpin-ht to Philadelphia. New York. WUmiEgton, anc IntnriertmU' nointa with rjroniDtncgs and despatch. Canal Boats and bteaui-tugs furuished at the shortest lOUOfk COTTON SAIL DUCK AND CANVAS, OP AU numbers and brands. Tent, Awning, Trail. and Wagon-cover Duck. Also, Paper Manutao turers' Drier Kelts, front thirty to seyeuty-st, inches with Pauuns, OQ OON SAU.EH, MTHOMA8 A BON, AUfTTIONEERS, NOl. 139 and HI S. FOURTH Street. fclTERIOR DUTCH FLOWF.R T.OOTS. Last Kale of the Season. On Wednesday Afternoon. Novembr r a, st r o'clock, at the AucUon Roitos, three cases Lutch Flower Roots. 11 it NOTICE. THURSDAY PEXT, Nov. 24ih, being Thtnks glvlngDsy. our regular snle of Furniture will place ou FRIDAY, Nov. 2.Mh. 11 U It Fxtenslve Pale at the Auction Rooms. SI PF.RIOR HOI SKHOLD FUHNITURK. ROSE- WiOD TIANO. Mirrors, Finn Window Oirtnias, Parlor Oigan, Fine Carpets, Etc. On Friday Morning, November 2B, at 9 o'clock, about liwo lots superior Household Furniture, comprising walnut parler fur niture, covered with plush, rep, and hair ciom; wai nut chamlier suits; library ad dining-room furni ture; French plate mirrors, superior rosewood puno forte, made by Schomacher St Co. ; pa'lor organ la rosewood case ; walnut wardrob?s. sideboard, book, cases, extension and centre tables, louuges, two nilts fine bioca'e lie window curtains and cornlena, Une hair mattresses, feather beds, china, glassware, wa'nut office fnrnitnre, show case, stoves, in vl vet, Brussels, and other carpets, etc. 11 22 It Closing Pale Nos. mos and 10n Areh streft. STOCK OK Kl.EOANT CABINET FURNITURE, Manufactured by John A. Henkels. On Monday Morning. Nov. 2t, st in o'clock. This stock comprise a general assortment of first-class furniture In oil, vaniu-h, and ebony llnish, manufactured by John A. IleiAels, expressly for his wareroom les, and war ranted; sale peremptory. Mr. Hetkels is about re ntovtrg to Thirteenth and ChcsnutBta. Il23 3t ri-HOMAS BIRCH A SON, AUCTIONEERS AND I COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. Hid Ches NUT btreet ; rear entrance No. 1107 Sausom street- CARD. Our Sale st the Auction 8tore)on FRIDAY MORNING will eral)race a large and Varied Aiajrt nicnt of both New and Secondhand Furniture and Carpets: also. Mirrors, Rosewood l'lnno-ortr, china Toilet Sets, Silver-plated Ware and Cutlery, timi diug, Kngravlnps, etc. There will be sold ab nt 10M) lots of Furniture, Carpets, etc., well worthy the ac tcntion of Housekeepers and others. It Sale st. No. llio Ohesnut street. HANUPOMK WALNUT PARLOR. LIBRARY, t HAMBKK AND DINING-ROOM FURMITURB, FOUR KOSKWtHtD PIANO FORTES, LARUK AND SMALL MIRRORS; Velvet, Brussuls, and Ingrain Carpets; Wardrobes, llookcanes, oniae Hables; Sj)iing, Hair, and Husk Mttrpsse: Feather Beds and Bedding, Silver Plated Ware and Table Cutlery, Engravings, Ctilua, etc. On Ft Way Morning, Nov. 25, at 9 o'clock, bv catalogue, at No. 1U9 Chesnnt street, will bo sold, about loon lots of New and Secondhand Furniture, Carpets, etc., of every description. RCSfiWoOD PIANoS.-Atl o'clock", will basold, 4 rosewood planes. NEW FURMTl UK MADE RY J. A. HKNKKLS, To be sold ou acuunt of whom it may consent. At 1 o'clock One chamber suit, 10 pieces, solid walnat. . one parlor suit, covered with gretm rep, 7 pieces. One reception chair, covered with damask, one waluut towel rack, line walnut bedstead. Also, FINE BRAND1KN, WHISIvIF.S. WINKS, ETC.. IN DEMIJOHNS AN 1 BOTTLES. At & o'clock, will be s.ld an tuvoloe of Fine Lltltiorn, comprising Hennessy brandy of lsio; eight year old tye wlilxkv: ginger, eliprry, and apple brandy: Sheir.v, Catawi.a, a'id .Malt'lr Wine; 10 dozen Younger & tlulnuos ale and brown stout, etc., etc. It Sale at No. 902 Oirsrd avenue. STOCK OF GlitKiKKIhS, FINK TEAS, ETC Also, PLATFORM AND FIVK SETS COUNTER S'.'AIKS. LAROK 1CK CHEST, MARBLE TOP CtiLNTEH, FIXTURES, K1V. on Saturday Morning. Nov. 2(5. st IS o'clock, at No. fiii-j G Irani avnue, will be sold the Stock aud Store Fixtures of a Family Grocery Sfre. 112J21 open early on morning or sale for examluttion. B UNTING, DURBOROW A CO., AUCTIONEERS. Nos. tai and 234 MARKET street, corner of B8nk street. Successors to John B. Myeis A Co. LARGE SALE OF CARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS, ETC. On Friday Morulng, November 2fi, at 11 o'clock, ou lour months' credit, about 200 pieces ingrain, Venetian, list, hemp, cot U ge, and rag carpetings ; oil cloths, etc. 1 1 19 ' NOTICE TO ITKRIS, SADDLERS, AND CAR PET DEALERS. iro pieces printed woollen felts. sou rich printed felt crumb cloths. A line ol printed felt robe borderlugs. Sim feheepokiu mats, lncludmg very line whole English BKlns, 11213t LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EU ROPEAN DRY GOOUS. Ou Mondav Morning, November at 10 o'clock, ou four months' credit. 112i4t SALE OF V,o n CASES ROOTS. SHOES, TRAVEL LING HAGS, HATS, ETC., On Tuesday Morning, 112.14t Noven.ler 29, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit. " BABBITT' a. CO., " AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION HOUSE, No. 230 MARKET Street, corner of Bank street. CaBh advanced on comilguments without extra charge. 11 24 FURS. FURS. Tenth Large Trade Sale loon Lois American and Imported Furs, rurcaow. Collars, Uloves, etc. Ou Friday Momlug, Nov. 2 at 10 o'clock. ROUES. ROBES. Also, I2.ri lots wolf, fox, bear, buii'.ilo, Amrora, and other fancy robts, Up blatikfts horsu llaukcts, ct. Alao, M) lota ladies' black, white, aud brown ara cban sactjues, seal sacimcs, etc. It CONCERT HALiTaUCTION-ROOMS, No. Ill CHESNUT Street. T. A. MCCLELLAND, AUCTIONEER. Personal attention given to sales of household fur. nlture at dwellings. Public sales of furniture at the Auction Rooms, No, 1219 Chesuut street, every Monday and Thurs day. For particulars tee "Public Ledger." N. B A superior c.aas of furniture at private sale V CITY BAZAAR AND TATTERSALL8, J'trtxWo. ll0 RACE Street. Regular A union Sale of Hortws, Wagons, Har. ness, Etc., every Thursday, commencing at 10 o'clock A. M. No postponement on account of the weather. Gentlemen's private establishments disposed of at public or private sale to the bt-st advantage, and a general assortment of Hoi sex, Carriages, Har ness, Etc., to suit the need of all classes of pur cfcasi ra, constantly on hand. Carnages taken on Storage. Superior stabling lor Ilorsea on sale or at livery. Outside Sales solicited and promptly attended to. Liberal advances made on Ilors-s, Carriages, and Harness. DOVLJi A NICHOLS, lo 19 u Auctioneers. FURNACES. Established in 1835. Invariably tha greatast sncceaa ovsr all corn petit toa whenever and wherever exhibited or nsad ia tha UH1TKD 8TATKd. . CHARLES WILLIAMS' ! Patent Goldeil Eag',8 FumaCeS, ' Aeknowledcad bf the leading Architects and Builders be the most powerful snd durable Furnaoes oSerad. a4 ! Uis most prompt, st at small o, and Urgeat house la line of business. HEAVY REDUCTION IN P1U053, sad onlr ftrst-alass work tornsd oat. Not. 1132 and 1131 MARKET Street, PHILADELPHIA. H. B.-BKND rOR BOOK OF HAQT8 OH HAl , AND VENTILATION. SMsis) 5'SAXON GREEN NEVER FADES. i 8 ia
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