The Shirratt Tri4l4 MOOR 43/ IltidallVAlre reoOYDINCI.I IDr. MeMWan roves cross;exitinitied liy — Mr. Mer rick—l du s ot remember of any date that Surratt gave me except on two occasions, when ho said fie was in Richmond a week before its fall, 'and when he said he was , in Washington the day of assassination; he merely told me the abduction . plan had failed; there are no circumstances that could fix the time When the plan of abduction failed; Surrtitt told he was in Richmond, and that he was in Montreal the week, of the assassination, and he received a letter from 4 Booth while in Mon treal, directing him to, return to Washington;that it had been necessary to change their plan and act promptly; he did not . tell me what change of plan the letter referred to; he left ithmediately afterwards, and said ho reached Elmira on Thurs day before the assassination; he said he tele graphed from Elmira td Booth, in New York, to, know, if he (Booth) had gone to Washington; he did not'Say whether he went further than Elmira or not; all I remember his saying about St:Albans was that he was there a few days after the assas sination;. the'prisoner told me all I have related, but' he never . told me 'anything connected 'with. the incidents of the assassination in Wash ington, nor did he ever say • that he was in Washington the day of the assassination; I made an affidavit to_these facts in .Live-pool on the day after we landed; in that affidavit I said Surratt told me that he and Booth had concocted a plan to abduct President Lincoln,and that while in Montreal he received a note from Bootti,order ing hiin to Washington, for it. was necessary 'to change their plans, and to act promptly; I went to the U. S. Vice Consul in Liverpool, and made my statement and he took it down, hot verbatim, but in substance; I never told any one that Stir ratt said he first learned of (the assassination in Elmira; I made an affidavit before Justice Melley in Liverpool,and' I was, before the Judiciary Com mittee last.winter; I have been'here since Janu ary, and -have sustained myself with my own means; a day or two ago I asked the Marshal for some.nioney, and I got it;_ after we arrived -at Liverpool on the Peruvian I was transferred to the. Nova Scotia, and, then to_other vessels, and last to the Damascus,. after which I left the com pany voluntarily; medicine is my profession; be fore that I was a merchant, in business with my father; I did not fail in business; I left the business of a merchant because I. did not like it; I was practising medicine in Lennoxville, Eastern township; 1 do not know a man named James Fuller, in Lennoxville; I left Lennoxville to better my professional business: I never had - any trouble -with Mr. Fuller or any one else in Lennoxville; I then removed from Lennoxville and went to Mansonville, and was there fifteen or eighteen months; at ; the request of friends I went to Waterloo and Ecaled there, and remained there till I went to sea; Ido not know a man named Mr, Dully; I never offered my services for pur poses of fmticide; I say upon my oath I never did so: my wife is here with me, and came from Can ada with nie; the State Department pays my ex , pulses here, but it or no other department knows my wife in the matter; since I have been here I have received $l5O, g:1•50 from the State Depart: ment and $.lOO from the Marshal here; after lea V- Mg the Steamship Company I staid at home some time, and then I went west, and was about to open an office in Chicago, when I was called away to tome down here; I was summoned here by the Marshal of Chicago; it was not a 6;urnmonS'tei'ap pear before the Committee on Judiciary; I was not summoned before the committee; I went to the House of 'Representatfves one day with a friend,- and was introduced to Mr. Geo. S. Bout- Well, who asked me to testify before the Judiciary, Committee, and I consented; I .do not remember the times of the conversations in regular order; these conversations with Surratt were held at dif ferent times during the voyage; on the last day of .the voyage he repeated sonic of the things he lied —told me during - the voyage and added the•remark- About Andrew Johnson; I can't say positively what he did say, nor can I tell the order in which he made these revelations; he did not tell me who he was during the voyage; I suspected who he Was, but did not ask him until the last day; I did not ask him half a dozen questions in the *hole Yoyage,beeause he seemed to be so communicative and desirous of telling all of his own accord; What I have related , of the gunboat is as he told me; at the time Surratt stated that he shot at the • escaping Union prisoners he said they (Surratt's party) left them and went on their way; lie said _they stopped the car and shot at the Ylthkees; I have .told that circumstance to more than sixty people since October, 1865; when Mr. Wilding said the government - was not going to prosecute Sur ratt I did not think it necessary to keep the matter secret, and I told it to several parties; one evening I understood Surratt to say that he was in corn pany with a rebel regiment, and they went intoan orchard to eat fruit, and while there heard the ticking of a teleraph instrument, and in a search at house nearby they found a Union soldier in the garret, and with him a telegraph instrument, and they took the man and executed him; I made - the nffid . avit because -I' considered-that the crime was not only one against society, but against civilization; -1 conceived the idea of giving him up after I knew who he was; when I went to Mr. Wilding, the Vice Consul, I told him I had a secret, but I did not wish my name to be known in the matter; Mr. "Wilding told me after I made the affidavit that a large reward was offered for Surratt;-and--I haVe said that if any one was entitled tothe reward for his arrest, I was entitled; I have stated that in this city; I never specified the , amount of the reward; I never said I intended,to claim the reward; I have never said so to any one; . I never told any one' that Surratt was in Elmira on the morning of April 14th, and that he did not know of the assassination until the morning after ; I never said Surratt first learned.of the assassination in New York, 'and immediately went to Canada; I never said that Surratt had no connection with the assassinatlori, . and that I only regarded him as a political offender, and would therefore aid him; I never, stated that the plan to abduct the President was an individual enterprise of Booth's; I have never said anything contrary to what I say on this stand; I have the prisoner and Booth planned the abduction and expended ten thousand dollars; I never told any one after my return trip to England that I went out with • Surratt, that 'I never repeated 'Surratt's conversation to any one ; I never told any one that I had never stated any of the conversation with Sur ratt; I made no affidavit in Montreal ; I had a conversation with' Consul General Potter, bat I made no affidavit; when Surrattlealled 'Upon atte.e at Birkenhead I had made my affidavit, but Ddid not tell Surratt so; I consented, at Surrattis re , quest, to bear some money for him from Canada to Europe,„but that was after Vice Consul Wild ing told me that Surratt would not be prosecuted; I took a letter from him directed to a friend in Montreal, but I did not get the money; upon the return of my ship to Liverpool Surratt called to see me; I never called to see him; I have never said that I had no belief in a state of future re wards and punishments; I did not take a copy of the affidavit I swots to at Liverpool; I know. St ephen F. Cameron, who crossed in the Nova Sco tia with me. . -At 12.4 b the Court took a recess till 1 o'clock. Upon °reassembling, Paymaster George D. F. Barton, U. S. N., was sworn and examined by Mr. }Filson—ln Dccen4)er, 1866, I was attached to the United States steamer Swatara, in the Eu ropean squadron and was at various ports in the I Mediterranean; know that the 'person at the • bar was aboard our ship; I first saw him on 1./e, • eember 21st, 1866, when he was brought aboard our ship as a prisoner, at Alexandria, Egypt; after taking him aboard we went to Port 'Mahon ' and from there to Villafrauca, where we found the admiral, and were there ordered home, stop- Cape Henry on the 18th of February, and de livered the prisoner here on February 21st; when I first Saw the prisoner he was 'dressed in the uni form of the Papal 7.oliaves we went to Alexan dria, Egypt, from and theprisoner had gone to Malta; from Rome; we left Civiti Vec chia and arrived at Malta iii two days, and were Eve days going to Alexandria from Malta. No cross;extnination. Captain Wm. M. 'Werrnerskirch was sworn, and, examined by Mr. Carrington—Was in the army In 1865 as an officer; on Monday night, April 17; 180, I was at Mrs. Surratt's house; Mawr 11. W. Smith and two detectives named -- Samson and Bosch were With me; I saw *Mrs. hurratt on that occasion, and I afterwards saw bet at the Arsenal, during the trial of the ,con spirators; at the Arsenal also saw a man whose name was Payne or Powell; on the night of April___ :17th we were at Mrs. Surratt's house forty or forty-five minutes , when Payne came in. • Witness described Payne's dress, as heretofore • - deieribed, and continued: both of Payne's boots weremuddy„ and he looked as . though he had teen sitting in the mud; when he , came. In he ' asked , to see Mrs. Barran; and upon being confronted, with her she raised her: hands and' said' before God she did not know Payne; . Major Smith asked Mrs. Surratt . if Idle - "knew .PsYne b and she .denied.ever see mg him., I heard • some conversation with Mrs.. Starrett ; -Major Smith. told Mrs. &nett and the other ladies they weteliis prisoners, and must go to the Provost Marshal's office, and Mrs. Surratt and Major Smith went up stairs to get the wrappings; oncoming down stairs Anna'Surratt wept, andyrs. Surratt quieted. her; Mrs. Surratt then knelt down and prayed. and was then put in a carriage and taken to the Provost Marshal's office; it was after the-prayer that Mrs: Surratt denied having seen Payne; I remember Mrs. Sur ratt passing Major Morgan,tut did not hear her Make any remark to Major Morgan; after Mrs. Surratt left I assisted in searching the house, and we found a colored woman in the kitchen; I think I would-know the woman if I saw her; her name was Susan Ann Jackson; have not seen the co lored woman since; in searching we found t um ber of articles, and also some photograpi and pictures. [Photographs exhibited.] I thinkthese i! pictures were found in the house; the picture of Gen. Beauregard looks much like the One I found in the house; there were a number of pictures of persons in uniform or in citizen's dress; they had names of prominent rebels in military and civil life written under them; there was one ,picture that particularly attracted my attention—[picture exhibited;)—l found this picturcron the back man tel-piece; the' picture referred to represented the - Virginia State arms, the Confederate flags, and Confederate shield ; and above them were written the words: "Thus shall it ever be with tyrants." Witness'examined other pictutes; and said be could not recognize pictures numbered 1, 2 and 4; the pictures and papers were all put in a bundle and sent to the Provost Marshal's head quarters; I recognize these two pictures, one a picture of Gen. Beauregard, and the other 'the Virginia coat-of-arms and the Confederate flags. No cross-examination. D. S. Gooding, Marshal of the District of Co lumbia, sworn, and examined by Mr. Carrington. I received the prisoner in my custody when he was landed at the navy-yard and taken to the jail. Mr. Bradley said this was idl a waste of time, as the defence admitted thatthe prisoner was the man who was brought from Egpyt in the Swa tara, and who_3v_as dellyered _here, and they ad mit also that he wore a Papal Zouave uniform. Mr. Gooding, therefore, was not examined fur ther. James Walker, colored, sworn, and examined by Mr. Carrington—Have been lithig in Wash ington since September, 1862; came here from Fredericksburg, and followed the army around awhile; in 18631 webt to the Pennsylvania House as a porter; I know George A. Atzerott; he came to the House on the Marlboro' or Piscataway stage; I have seen. a young man visit Atzerott, who was called "John;" 1 have seen the man called John frequently; I recognize the prisoner as the man; I have seen him there with Atzerott; Atzerott occupied room No. 51, more or less: Laughter. 1 1 remember the night President Lincoln was killed; 1 saw Atzerott that night, between ten and eleven o'clock: lie came along C _street on a horse, and called me to hold the horse; the horse was a light, bay; Atze rott said he had traded his dark bay horse; Ise asked, me for a switch, and 1 could not find one, but gave him a piece Of a barrel hoop, and he rode off in the same direction he Caine; he came back between two and three o'cloCk and woke MC up, and I answered the door; he said hd wanted a room. and I told hint I could not give 51 as it- was occupied; Atzerott had a friend with him. and said he wanted a bed for himself and-friend; the man with Atzerott was a tall man, with a flushed, red face; he was a young . man, and had his hat over the, side of his face; Atzerott lett in the early train next morning. Cross-examined by 31r. Bradley—The two men came in at the same tinie; there was no converga lion bet Ween - them, but Atzerott called him his friend; I was examined at the arsenal trial, and Was-asked to -describe- the- man -who came - with Atzerott: Atzt'rOtt and his friend did not come out at the same time. Henry Benjamin St. Mare was sworn, and aruined by Mr. Pierrepont—ln 1866, in. April, I was.in the Papal States, at Valetra; it was about forty Milts from Rome; I was a soldier of the Papal army,and in the ninth company; these were _called the Papal Zouaves._ (The dress worn- by- Surratt was exhibited). That is the dress worn by the ZOLIIINCS; I saw the prisoner there and I knew bim; I think the time I referred to was the 14tli or 16th of April; about the 18th or 10th of June,lB66, I saw the prisoner again; he came to my quarters with two other Zouaves,nanied Dibart arid Lebau, and we four took a walk;--we took the road to Naples; we had some conversation at that time, and I was occasionally speaking to, my compan ions in French and to Surratt in English; I asked the prisoner how he got out from Washington, 'and, he told me he left the night of the assassina tion or the next moining, and said he was so dis guised that no' one er-aild 'recognize hire as an American, and that he was disguised as .nn, En glishman, with a scarf over his shoulders; I then went to Malta and did not see Surratt, but I af terwards saw-Lim on the Swatara. No cross-examination. Judge Fisher said the Court- had now- been in sessibn over three hours, and as it was a very op pressive day, it would probably be well to take a recess now, Mr. Bradley said the defence would like to be Informed Avhen the prosecution would close the testimony, in order that they_ might know what to do with the witnesses for the defence. Mr. Carrington said they would probably close to.morrow, but lie could not be certain upon that point. Mr. Merrick suggested that there was an hour that could be very profitably used to-day yet: Judge Fisher said he had already exceeded the limits prescribed by his physician, and the Court therefore, at 2.10; a - djournedinatil ten O'clock thi morning. Junoy. Fluout ASSAULTED BY TILE COUNSEL FOR WAstirsoToN, July 2. - --To-day, after the ad journment of the Criminal Court, as Mr.lrradley, Sr. was passing out of the court-room, he met Judge Fisher in theball, and some words passed between them in reference to a ruling of . the The Washington E renin g JSTre,ss, in giving an account of the difficulty, remarks:* Those who witnessed the difficulty say that harsh language was used, and that Mr. Bradley informed the Judge that if he (Fisher) were not sick he would thrash him. Judge Fisher replied that he did not. claim immunity from the .threat ened castigation on account of his Illness. The combatants were about to come to close quarters when Deputy Marshal Phillips and some of the bailiffs placed themselves between the parties, and endeavored to force the Judge into the Marshal's room. Mr. Bradley, Jr., who was sitting at a desk in the court-room, talking to the prisoner Surratt, hearing of the difficulty outside, made a leap over two desks and three chairs, and hastened to the rescue, Meanwhile, Judge Fisher had been forced into the Marshal's room, but before the dour could be closed ; Mr. Bradley, Jr., made his appearance,and Judge Fisher turned and grappled with him. The parties were then separated again, and Judge Fisher was locked in hisyoom. Mr. Bradley, Sr., returned to the court-room, and Judge Cartier, who was sitting on the bench, said the difficulty must cease. - Mr. Bradley tried to explain Um matter to Judge Cartier, while the Marshal was attempt ing to calm Judge Fisher, who was eventually induced to go to his home in Georgetown. The difficulty" created much excitement, and quite a crowd gathered about the door of the court-room and the door leading to the pastinge where It occurred. Liege says that the men engaged in reopening and repairing the works of the coal mine of Bow Buveur, at Jemappe,after reaching a depth of nearly 160 metres, have, at the end of fou' months, come upon a gallery communicating with the lower ladders; there they discovered seven bodies of the' unfortunate workmen who were there imprisoned while making their way to the surface. 'file bodies are completely mummi fied, the shrivelled flesh adhering to the bones. This phenomenon is attributed to the abundant exhalations of carbonic acid gas. The bodies lay on their backs, one after the other, the hands being crossed under the hbad. Two were found ;locked in a close embrace. No satisfactory con clusion has as yet been arrived at as to the cause of the death of these men, whether from the In % halation of carbonic acid or 'from want of food, :being thus entombed. The gallery was unaafe at the time the discovery was made, but care is being taken to ventilate it. and to bear away the bodies safely. The work of reparation' is yet likely to be tedious, for much injury has been done, and the work requires to be set about 'with great caution. LAnor. Pitrzits.--A collection of 'rare books and manuscripts sold in Paris last week produced the enormous sum of 1200,000. THE DAILY - EVENING BULLETIN.=-PHILA.DELPHI A, WEDNESDAY, JULY JUDGE OF TEE COINFM.OS Pi.i s Couirr.--at a meeting of the members of the Philadelphia Bar, irrespective of party, held at the Supreme Court room on the 2d of -July, 18G7 Ell K. Price; Esq., was-called to the chair, and James E. Gowen was appointed secretary. On motion of Horatio Hubbell, Esq., seconded by Samuel C. Perkins, Esq. ' and after remarks by Horatio Hubbell, Samuel C. Perkins, John.' B. Colohan, Samuel G. Thompson, Henry C. Townsend and Samuel H. Perkins, Esquires, the following resolutions were nuanituously adopted : Resolved, That in, the ensuing election for •an Associate Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, this meeting, composed of members of the bar whlanitalistinction of party, being well satisfied of the integrity, impartiality, learning, industry and uprightness of the Hon. James R. Ludlow, the present incumbent, do hereby formally nomi nate and rtiost-earnestlY recommend hint as the Citizens' candidate for re-election, Irrespective of party. Resolved, That this meeting is of the sincere opinion that it would be delrimental to the inte rests of this great city to ilfsplace Judge Ludlow, a man of long and tried experience, and substi tute another In his place who would have to learn what the other has acquired. ---- li uz erthitt - 111 — ithrriffibleititglitirtifariteterr industrious assiduity, and amiable and unaffected deportment, we have every confidence that Judge Ludlow will always show himself as heretofore, a good and worthy citizen and conscientious magistrate. On motion, it was resolved that the proceed ings of the meeting be published in the Le,qal In telligenver and in tlo daily newspapers of the city. The meeting then adjourned. FLOODS IN DELAwnitE,Thq.late heavy rains Which have fallen in the loWer pat. of Delaware have filled up the ponds and raisedthestrearne of Stissex ecinnty almOst as high as the spring tiodit. the like of which had never before been icnown by the oldest inhabitants. Whole fields are under water, preventing in Many places this gathering of the harvest and, making it 'impossible to Culti vate the corn, which is suffering for want of cul tivation. It is impossible for pedestrians to travel on account gf ponds and high water in the public roads. We Itre informed that nearly, if not quite all, the bridges on the road between Berlin and Snow 11111 have been swept away, and Collier's Mill, in Baltimore Hundred,, was bodily washed away and carried down the stream by the break ing of the dam and the . sudden rise of water.— Wilmington Commercial. RAVAGES OF WILD BEASTS LN BENGAL.—Re cent returns silo* that in .the division of Bhau gule, India,. which includes the Santhal country, one thousand five hundred persons have been killed by tigers in the last six years. In Assam, seven hundred and thirty-three have been killed, and four thousand fourhundred and seventy-four tigers have been killed by hunters in the same penod The Commissioner of Cuttack r . no ticing the destructivenesi of vald elephants in the Gurjat districts, remarks that they roam about in herds of from eighty to two hundred, but, notwithstanding that a reward of fifty. rupees has been offered for the destruction of each, the natives will not, and dare not, shoot them. OLD MEN.---"Dod's Book of Dignities" notices the following extraordinary instances of lon gevity amongst the great men of the law: Ex- Chancellor Brougham, 89 years; ex-Chancellor St. Leonards, 86 years; ex-Chancellor of Ireland,' Blackburn, 85; ex-Judge, Lord Wensleydale, 85; ex-CliiefJustice of Ireland, Leroy, 91., ex-Chief Baron Pollock 84; Acting Judge of Admiralty, Lushington, 85. Total age of seven persons, 604 years. This gives an average to each of more than eighty-six years and five months. A PERSONAL PAILkGRAER.—A Paris paper re lates that a few evenings since two gentlemen were slowly walking. down the Boulevards, and rematked.a at—the—cor-- ner of the Rue 4e la PRIX and of the Boulevard des Capucines. One of the young men softly ap proached the child,and, withmit awakening him, slipped a gold piece within the pocket of his tat tered waiscoat. This charitable jlaneur was the Crown Prince of Prussia. RAILW.67 DISASTERS.—During the first three, mouths of the current year thirteen railway acci dents have occurred in Great .Britain. One was caused by a broken rail, two by broken springs, one by a broken wheeltire, One by overloading a goods engine, one by.an excessive quantity of uggage on the roof of a passenger carriage, three from defective signals- and station mar, agement, three from neglect on the part of rai:- way servants and one, presumably, from wil!ful TRIPS TO PAilts.—Tile first of the series of exem'Ains to the French capibit. organized by the Paris Excursion Committee. tinder the presidency of Mr. Layard, left Lomhin - on the Sth of June. Several large employers ire in treaty with the committee for the accommoda tion ot Ivorlimen whom they propose to send over to Paris during the: present summer. ATmictous Cum.l.Tv.—There is a priest now residing at Capri_who possesses two hundred blind quails. He has had.their eyes put out with a hot knitting needle in order that they should 2'eall," and so decoy others of their species. He has driven a good trade this season, and as.he waxes richer becomes a man of great importanve with his fellow townsmen. Confc'rEssi, liAcm;.—The other day the popu lation of Vienna crowded the Prater to witness singular race. Eight horses ran, each ridden by a lady belongingto - high life. Tlie'stakes were a parure of diamonds of great value. The Coun tess by half a neck. E3III:I:ATING.-A great number of Italian la borers, finding it Impossible to obtain work in Italy; have emigrated, to .Austria, where they are now employed in the arsenals at Pola and Trieste. ' BELGIAN__GOIA , .—The mint of Brussels -has just coined gold pieces, with the head of Leopold 11., to an amount of 4:200;000.. CITY BULLETIN. A NEW 5C71001., HOUSE—COIMIC-STOINE LAY ING.—The corner-stone of the Keystone Grammar School, Ninth Section, Nineteenth street, above Chestnut, ves laid yesterday afternoon in the presence of a large number of persons. A stand was erected on the open lot, frqin which addresses were made by Hon. Morton McMi;. ohne], Edward Shippen, President of the Board of Controllers, Judge William S. Peirce and Richard -Thidlow. Esq.• The stone was laid by John Fareira, Es., President of the .Board of Directors, anti contained copies of _ the Philadelphia papers of--that date, together with a fac simile of the first Public Ledger, and report of the School' Board of the first section School District of Pennsylvania; also, a list containing the names of all the officers and teachers of the Ninth Section, year book of. the Zane Street Grammar School for 1861-62: volume containing the Constitution of the United States and __Constitutions of the several States, pre sented by B. McNally, and a silver medal, with the following inscription: "Deposited by J. L. Young, 2206 Market street, at the laying of the corner-stone of the Keystone Grammar School, iltli Section, July 2d, at 5 o'clock P. M., 1867. Principal, Annie C. Webb; Assistant, E. A. Singer; Corn. ou Property, W. C. Haines, Jno. B. Greet], .L. R. .Fleteher,. M. H. Stanton, C. W. Carrigan. Architect, J. C. Sidney. Builder, James Rorke. Secretary, H. W. Haillwell. On. the reverse are the names of the killowing. Directors: James Freeborn, B. F. Kern, Francis Newland, Richard Ludlow,John Ti. Young,, E. Blackburn. E. C. Markley, avid Brooks, S. W. Mitchell, John Fulcra, D. McNally, W. P. Jenks. At the close of the address, the gentlo men participating In the affair, together with workmen employed on the building, partook of a fine repast, provided by private subscription. The building will be - of brovhi Stone, 95 feet front by 101 feet deep, and three 'stories in height. It will be surmounted with a handsome cupola, and an iron piazza will be erected on the front and on each side of the structure. A CITY RAILWAY OIITUAGE.-Yesterday after noon a respectable-looking colored woman, who was apparently fully eighty years of age, and who was - evidently suffering from fatigue and the extreme - heat,made an effort to ge t t - upon ear No. 13, of tho Tenth and Eleventh Streets City Railway, at Tenth and Mount Vernon streets. The car, which - contained but very few, passen >gers, had stopped, and just as the poor old woman was about to step upon the platform the brutal conductor tang the bell, and the car passed on, leaving the poor woman standing helpless in the street. The heartless act excitekthe honest indignation of all who witnessed It. The recent act of the Legislature is very explicit lu its treat ment of such cases, and if the officers of the corn-. • piny or the friends of the poor. old woman desire to procure witnesses to the' affair, they can_xet their wanes by making application to this aloe. • SALE OF REAL ESTATE, STOCKS, INC.-3108m , Thomas tit eon's sold at the FieAlong°, -yesterday noon, the following stocks and real estate, viz:' .' 50 shirts Corn Midianite Bank, $7O, $8,500 00 $6OO United% States 10-40 bond, 100 X, $502; 50; $lO,OOO nuntingdoa and , Broad Top.? per cent. bonds 81' cents, $lO.O 00 ; 5 shares National 1 13ank ' of Northern Liberti&Jsll6 sto, 577'60; 4 ehares Mercantile Library, $7, $2B 00; 15 shares Steubenville and Indiana Railroad, $ll 50, $172 50; Mortgage of $l,OOO, $4OO 00; Three story brick residence, Forty-first street, south of Sansom street, 50 feet front, $9,900 00; Three story brick dwelling, No. 1052 North Tenth street, subject to certain unumbrances, $175 00; Two story brick store and dwelling, S. E. c&ner of Fourth and Chestnut streets, Camden, N. J., $2,000 00; Cottage and lot, Oil City, subject to inenrubrance $5O 00; 160 acres, Peters' Run, sub ject to ineunibrance, $5O 00. FATAL. RESULT OF A ' Sum fkritoitu.—George Grouse, aged thirty, a teamster in the employ of Win.'G. Kitchen, of Roxborotigh, while driving along Third street, yesterday afternoon, was overcome by the heat, and fell to the ground, fracturing his skull. He was taken to the hospi tal, where he died last night. ACClDENT.—Yesterday morning Jacob Eaton, aged twenty-lour years, fell through the joists of the new schodMiouse building at Seventeenth and, Wood streets, and was badly injured about the head. He was taken to his home at Front and Leopard streets. Bor DRowNED:—Charles Hoffman, seven years old, whose parents reside on the Richmond road, above Wheat ,Sheaf lane, was drowned in the Delaware yesterday afternoon. TEL3EGICA Plillo SVAIDIAfY• THE Queen of Prussia departed from Coblentz on the 20th ult. for England. DURING the absence of Abdul Aziz, the - Grand Vizier, Ali Pacha, is the Regent ofTurkey. THE general closing of the bar-rooms in Charleston,_S. c„ was enforced yesterday. No drinks were obtainable except at the hotels. SEVENTY-THREE whites and two hundred and thirty-nine blacks were registered in Charleston, South Carolina yesterday. MA - Ytitt - WA LLACII, of Washington, has ap pointed Mr. Bradley, Sr., Surratt's chief counsel, Corporation Attorney. THE Richmond, Va., Registry has just 'closed. It gives the colored men a majority of Bye hub , fired over all Ihe whites registered. 31. BENNING6EN and the Minister of Hanover are in Berlin, to confer with Bismarck on the organization of a government for Hanover. A ii.o; named Thomas Keeley-., was arrested in New York, yesterday, on the Charge of having murdered Col. O'Brien in The riots of July, GEN. GRANT has ordered an-investigation of the allegedilogging.of a citizen by-order of the- mili tary commander at Fort Sedgwick. Otm Consul at Palermo has officially notified the State Department that the chOlera has re-ap peared in Sicily, and is very severe in his consular YOUNG freedman, named Frank Smith, haB applied to the Seer(A:ay of Warfor a cadetship at Wet Point, from the Finit (.ongreesional District • of South Carolina. Tim Viceroy of Egypt is visiting all places of interest in Paris. lie-war:present at a si.;.,'on of the Corps Legislatif, dud received a. visit from Louis Napoleon. Tim colored Republicans of Alexandriaa., held a meeting on Monday night.. They were ad dressed by Dr. J. E. Snodgrass, of 'slew. To k. The spe4ker was introduced by. Judge Under-. wood. - THE trial of Chauncey F. Page, charged with murdering his wife and mother, was concluded at La Porte, Indiana,yesterday. The accused was found guilty, and sentenced to the Penitentiary for life. A SCREW rra: light-house has been_ereeted at Upper Cedar Point, Potomac river, in place of the light-ship now stationed at that point. The new light-house - will be illuminated, for the first time, on the evening of the :Nth hist. f' &xi:ET drilling is. still kept up by the Fenians in various-parts• of Ireland. A large number of men were recently discovered near Wicklow, en gaged in practicing military manceuvres, and several of thew were taken prisoners. - 31m1 lit GENERALS SICK Schofield, and other commanders of the Southern military dis tricts, have issued orders for the proper obser vance of the - Fourth of July throughout their respective commands. LIE Committee of Arrangemetfts of the *tie tam National Cemetery have resolved to invite the President, his Cabinet, and Congress, to attend the dedication of the cemetery. They propose also to invite the army and navy,-and-State.Guv ernors and Legislatures. . is.stated that the President ha; tendered the Governorship of our recent purchase from Rus sia to Hon. Benjamin Stark, of New London, Connecticut, lately a Democratic Senator from Oregon. Mr. Stark now lives in his native city, New London, ou the wealth he acquired on the Pacific coast. . IN rim House of Lords, on the 21st ult., Earl Russell eulogized the conduct of Lord Stanley in the Luxemburg affair._ Lord Derby thanked Lim, ar,d stated that England hesitated to take part in the Conference until it became evident that her participation was necessary to prevent war. .ANkr,r.timt tobacco-fair took place at- St. Louis yesterday, at the tobacco warehouse, where Skir led' premiums were offered by the warehouse ootripany and dealers. ranging in value from 1;0 Yo $4OO. The attendance was large; and Vir ginia, West Virginia, Tennessee, Kcntucky,Ohio, 1111hoiF, Connecticut and Missouri competed for the prizes. The premiums were awarded to Mis souri. Virginia s Kentucky and ‘Vest Virginia. The fit% premium hogshead, bright Wrappers, sold for`i , 2ss per 100 pounds; and the second pre •thium, of the same class, for $2.10. Other hogs heads brOugh, from $l4 50 to $B5. file Louisiana Levees. Whilst Gen. Sheridan ~is ' discussing with Gen. Grant the Attorney-General's opinion and impugning the conduct of the President; and.whilst the Military Governor, Flanders, is traveling up and down the river and ad dressing political conventions,' and the civil ex-Governor Wells is awaiting the order re storing him to office, the most valuable time of the season is rapidly passing away, and no preparations whatever are being made for building the levees in Louisiana. It looks very much as if our poor people were destined to sutler another year from the ravages of an 'inundation. • The material and 'agricultural prosperity of the country, in the estimation of those in authority; seems to be a matter of secondary importance when contrasted' with the more interesting and absorbing question of personal aggrandizement and political ascendancy of local factions. All other matters are made subservient' to this latter one, and every interest is jeopardized to promote some selfish scheme. How long is this deplorable state of ,affairs to exist ? how much longer are the people' of Louisiana to see the fairest portion portion of the state abandoned to the catfish and alligator erence on the part of those who have it in their power to obviate such calamities as have af flicted the planters of the alluvial lands for the past four. years? When will the relief which we so much 'require -he given to us? Already we hear many of our oldest planters seriously talking of abandoning their places and leaving the State. Many others will be tbreed into bankruptcy from their inability to cultivate their lands. In fact, the greatest dis tress is in store for many who have heretofore succeeded in warding .otr the pressing claims of their creditors., The reconstruction of our levees is a mat ter of far more interest to the .people than the political reconstruction of Louisiana. W.th all of the levees down and the. agridultural resources destroyed, it would be a question of supreme indifference and „ unimportance whether we -be hi; or out of -the Union.• If we are to starVe, it matters not what form of .goveitment, civil or military, witnesses our suffering. Repair the levees, let the peoPle return to their industrial ,pnisuits - and _build up the material welfare of the - country; and 3, 1867. sb regain some,of our former prosperity, power and infitinCe. " Salley — the people, both white and black, by giving them em ployment which will yield them profitable returns, and thus make them bappy. We hope to see this subject of the, levees engage more the attention of the authorities and of the people of this city. They must make sonic move, or New Orleans will lose another cropfrom the most productive por tions of Louisiana.-117: O. Corn. Bullo€in. What Is &Muni—Poetical Arguanonts In a Court of Jiiiittre.. Not long 8, - court of justice in England was engaged in defining. what "a team" meant. The case was as follows: A Duke made an agreement with one of his tenants in Oxford shire concerning the 'occupancy of .a farm,. and a portion of the agreement was expressed in the folloWing terms: "The tenant to per form each year for the Duke of , at the rate of one day's team-work with . two horses and one proper person, for every £6O of rent, when required (except at hay and corn har vest) without being paid for the "Mine." in other words, the rent of the farm was made up of two portions, the larger being a money, payment, and the .other a certain amount of farm service. All went on smoothly until one day; when the duke's bailiff desired the farmer to send a cart to fetch coals from a railway station to the ducal mansion. "Cer tainly not," said the farmer, "I'll send the horses and a man, but you must find the cart." "Pooh, pooh! what do you mean? Does not your agreement bind you to do team-work occasionally for his Grace?" "Yes, and here's the team: two horses and a careful man to drive them." "But there can't be a team without a cart or wagon !" "Oh, yes, there can, the horses are the team." "No, the horses and cart together are the team." The question which a whole row Of learned judges were calt&l upon to - decide - wit - s=4 - 1v is a team/ The form in whiCh the inquiry came on was that of ejectment; the duke seeking to eject the farmer on the ground of alleged forfeiture ' because the latter had re fused to interpret "team-work" as including the supply of a cart us well as horses and a driver. In : all probability both parties were sincere, and both obstinate; each believed him self to be right, .and so believing, determined not to, yield an inch to the other. The case was at first tried at ONford before a common jury, who gave a verdict substantially for the duke. A rnle was afterwards obtained, with a view to bring the question 'of definition be tbre the judges at the Court of Queen's Bench. .The .counsel. for ~the...duka contended. that as. team-work cannot be done by horses without a cart or wagon, it is obvious that a team must include a vehicle as well as the horses by which it is to be drawn. One judge said that "in the course of his reading he had met with. some lines which tend to show that the team is separate from the cart: —•-• • • . - Giles Jell was Sleeping, in his cart he lay; Some waggish pilrrers stale his team away. Gileswakes and cries. 'Ods bodihins,what l s here? Why how now; am I Giles or not? If lie, I've lost six geldings to my smart If not, Ods bodiliins, I've found a cart."' Another justice quoted a line from Words worth: "My jolly team will work alone for me," as proving the farmer's interpretation, seeing that though horses might possibly be jolly, a cart cannot. The counsel for his Grace urged that the dictionaries of Johnson and Walker both speak of a team its "a number of horses drawing the same carriage." "True," said Justice A---, "do net these - cautious prove that the team' and the carriage are distinct things?" "No," replied the counsel on the duke's side; "because a team without a cart would be of. no use." He cited the descrip tion given by Caesar of the mode of -fighting in chariots, adopted by the ancient Britons, and of the particular :use and-meaning of the word temanon. "From Caesar he came down to Gray,the English poet,and cited the lines: . "Oft did thebarvest to their gichle Their furrow ott the stubborn glebe bath broke; How jocund did they drive their team afield,- How bow'd the wood beneath their sturdy • stroke!" and from 'Gray he came down to the--far famed "Bull's Hun" affair in the recent Ame rican civil war, which told graphic account of told that "the teamsters cut the traces of the horses." The counsel for the farmer, on the other hand, referred to Richardson's English dic tibnary, and to Bosworth's Anglo-Saxon dic tionary, for support to the assertion that a team implies only the horses, not the vehicle also; and he then gave the lidlowing, citations to the same effect, from Spenser:, "Thee a plowman all unineeting found, As he his tollsothe team that w:ty did guide, And brought thee up a ploWman's state to bide." From Shakespeare: "We fairies that do run, By the triple Hecate's team, • From the presence of the sun, Following darkness like a dream." Again from Shakespeare:. "---I am in love, but a team of horse shall Not pluck that from me nor who 'tis I love." From Roscommon: "After the declining sun Had changed the shadows t .and their task was done, Home with their weary team they took their way." From Dryden: "lie heaved with more than human force to move A weighty straw, the labor of a team." Again from Dryden: "Any number, and passing in a lino: Like a long team of Snowy swans on high, Which clap their wings and eleaye the liquid sky." From Spenser's "Virgil": "By this the night forth from the darksome bower Of Erebus her teamed steed you call." From Martineau: "In stiff days they may plough an acre of wheat with a team or horse. The "glorious uncertainty of the law" titre* the duke and the limner 'into further litigation before they could settle the question. The jury of Oxford decided foi• the duke; the' judges of Westminster decided (two against one) for the farmer; but then it was determined (more to the advantage of , the lawyers than of the parties concerned) that the case should be heard over again on some other plea, or uneer some other legal aspect. Why_ young. Men do not Murry. fiev. Collyer, - the Unita rian clergyman, recently preached a sermon in Chicago on "Our Daily Bread," in the course of which he discussed social ques tions, and explained why. young men do not ninny : "When one said lately in the presenee of a frank, outspoken young woman in this city, that the 'reason why young men did not marry was that their wives would not be content to begin to live in a homely fashion, after they bad been raised in luxury, she re plied, 'Tip woman is quite as willing as the man to cio that and I know - of no woman in the circle of my acquaintance who would not be content, for the sake of the man she loved, to cast her lot with him and make his in terest in every way her own.' I. believe the young woman, spoke .the truth: When I hear a,nmn living in chambers and constant in his attendance at 'play and opera say, .'I dare not marry, because. I know no woman would be content .to , live as one should have; to . Eye,' I say to myself it may be true; but it 'leeks very., much like old Adam, who ate the Apple and then turned - ---- • . mend and laid .the blame on the woman:': Let this be as it will. 'Here is the dismali • fact Staring us : everywhere in the face, and in. no plaee more painfully than in our own city, that for_sacial,_eonventional, or still worse - reasons, the best youth of the country is held • back from its most sacred duty as well as its most perfect felicity—falls into that sad lids take of a long engagement, in which the pain and disappointment bears hardest always on ' • the woman; or the young man shuts his.eyes. and his heart when the spirit walking among the golden lamps WhiSpers to him of some maiden, 'That is thy - Wife,' and says 'No f not yet for many a year to emus'—and so marries at, last away: on in life, when both lines have become set in their own fashion, and their love is hardly long enough to , give them the kindly mutual forbearance toward what is dissimilar in character and disposition, until • they can become " Self-revercnteand reverencing each Alike in individualities,' and so the best of the lays of the best of our youth go' by and -find dare not' wait upon 'I would.' • "In the name of 'all that is. sacred, I ask why this is, and get for my answer, 'We can not Worst it.' The young farmer can afford it on the prairies; We miner ,on Superior; the woodman on the peninsula; the carpenter at his bench; the smith at his anvil; the operative at his frame or loom; the 'longshoreman and the sailor. :That cluster of men down there in Pennsylvania, and those in Yorkshire, whose mere young men were with me long years ago, lost no time and 'asked few flues ions, because some night instinct told them hey must do that or worse—worse in any and eyery way they could look at it; and so I can remember, as if it were yesterday, how speedily these found the wife and went to housekeeping "one room er tWo, as they could manage it, am made the' hammer ring with anew music, and gradually got their house and household goods, and the world has never failed them, no, not for a day; but through dark ftiture and bright, and sickness and strength, they have found the deepest experiences of their life each with the other, for Great, Heart and - Interpreter go to gether on this pilgrimage, and now they see their children coming, up to manhood and womanhood about them, with the fresline of their own youth in their heartS, and know-, though probably they cannot tell, the deep content of a life ordered after the fashion God gave them when he treated them man and wernan. , I.here are .men with..noble. powers, with fliculties that will insure them a greater place, living in the most-plentiful land on the globe; evening themselves lhrnugh the years of their youth with that poor lost tribe of ballet-sin;r ers, the loneliest of all those to whom “0.1 has given a chance, and when you get at. their real reason it is either one or the other f7l' these. They cannot believe what, if they have lived in the country, they have seen. twenty 'times to be true of the birds that sing about us everywhere : that new exigencies tap liev energies, and the. little fellOw who, it f e w weeks ago, had quite enough to do to take care of himself, is now caring for, a m:st full just as successfully. They do not believe that.. the_ Maker _who_ has. made-,their life of itself a natural prayer for daily bread, has provided that the answer shall be equal to the cry: or when they pray they mean by daily bread board for two at the Sherman, the privilege to attend parties three times a week throughout the whole winter, to take a trip to Saratoga iii'summeri and -- miss no - chance.• at any other pleasure, however expensive. Let it . be that 44 shred of that which make , F this fatal failing in the flower of the youth of America—the men from Harvard and Yale and all of their line quality—and the thought ful cannot but deplore' the education that can rlo.curse the'fair manhood and cause the bloS- Riming of youth to come to such an untimely end. Magnitude of the Irish Emigration. The London Daily .News says : "Those sections of the annual reports of the Emigration Commissioners which relate to Ireland have for many years recorded the magnitude of the emigration from that coun try. They are becoming even more impor tant now, for 'what. they show as to the de cline of the natural increase of the population. They prove that the population of Ireland is not undergoing a mere numerical reduction, but it is attacked in its reparative priucipc, n its very root. The number of Irish who emigrated in the sad eight years from ts 47 to 1f•54 averaged *270,105 per annum. During the following eight years it averaged 59,ie: , 9 a year. Dining the last fora• years it has again increased so as to average 107,840 a year. Tie increase of population by births, the Com missioners observe, must principally depend on the proportion which those between the ages of twenty and thirty-five beau• to the rest of the community. The propOrtion of such persons in the population of the *hole king dom is about twenty-five per cent., while their proportion in the emigratioiof the pre sent day pis more than fifty4wo'per cent. "When the fullest deductions have been made for emigration, the Irish population re turns kill show large deficiences, which can only be accounted for by admitting a decline in the power of the population to reproduce itself: The natural increase of the popula tion of Ireland in the period between 18:11. and 1841,Nas one-tenth per cent. per annum. In the period 1844-1831, which included several terrible years of famine, fever and flight, it of course fell enormously; but even between 1851 and 1861, when there was nothing to produce a specially injurious effect upon the health Of the people, the natural in crease of the population was only 70 per cent. per annum. In“ the ten years before 1861 the' population fell from 6,515 703 to 5,764,543. A natural increase of 460,040 souls was to be set igainst an emigration of 1,210,- 060, and the decrease of the. population was 757,251. In the six years since 1861 as many as 517,:87 emigrants have left Ireland, and supposing the natural rate of increase. of the period 1851-61 to have been maintained, the population at the census in 1871 can scarcely exceed 5,360;000 souls. But the COLlllllllS sioners believe that it is not being . maintained. Of•the :18,890 persons who emigrated last. year, 36,423 were single men, and 87.56 per cent. of the whole Irish emigration went to the United States, being a much larger pro portion than in previous years. Ma the emigrants do not leave in cir cumstances of destitua — m is anown — by tire . better order of paSsenger accommodation which they select. In 1863 the proportion of those who emigrated in steam vessels was 45.85, in 1864 It was, 53.55, in 1865 it was. 73.50, and in , 1866 It was 81.16 per cent,; the shorter and better accommodation bing about one-third dearer than Mr - sailing ships. The inferences is f the Emigration CoMmis sioners as to the Offect•of emigration upon the natural increase of population are corrobo rated by the returns of the Registrar-general of Ireland. Last year the marriages of Pro testants were only 1 , for every 144 Protestants and .1 for every 212 Catholics, the rate in this country .being ono marriage to every 122 per sons. The birth-rate in Ireland was two-and a-half per cent., while in England it was three-and-a-half per cent. in the same year. Mr. Disraeli. may pokyone an Irish Reform bill, which perhaps is not the most direct remedy for the decline of population, but the state of things which these figures disclose must commend itself to a reformed' arliament as one of the niost. pressing. subjects-for jts. consideration." • NOTJES. o a r Di,LAWAJtE AND RARITAN CANAL CON patry, and Camden and Amboy Railroad and Trans. imitation. Company.—Notice is hereby given that the Transfer h ooks of the Stock of the above Compan ies will ..be closed for two weeks, beginning July Ist, 1887. The di videntito be dediared In .July, and maduayable — August ISU - 186711 - HTTV -- made C(1 - file iilteahohders of - Tidy Id, 1867. , • The Stockholders of the above' Campania'', and of the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad Company, of July let, 1867, have the right to subscribe for' unissued stock of the Delos are and Raritan Canal Company, at Par, In the pro portion of one new share for twenty old shares, whether fell or part paid. The certificates of stock, and the re ceipts of fractious •of shores, will be ready Mr delivery August Ist, 1867. Certificates of Stook will be given for fractions when. presented at this (Mice in even shares. Fractious, until eo ronvert64, wilinat draw dividend. Any Stockholder may postpone the payment on tho shares, so to be taken, until September let, 1867, by paying Intereot thereon at the rate of 7per cent. per annum; if not then paid, the right will be forfeited. . Jr 27 Bt( RICHARD STOCKTON, on, N. J., June 29, 1867. Treasurer, • stir NINETY.FIRBT ANNIVERSARY, OF. AMERI CAN INDEPENDENCE. THE STATE SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI OF e PENNSYLVANI& The annual meeting of tile Society will be held on the Fourth of July, 1807, at Auguatin'e, No. 1105 Walnut atreet, at 10 o'clock A. M. Membera of other State Societies who may be in the 4ty on that day. sre respectfully invited to dine with ow , oide tri at the above place, at 5 o'clock P. M. - GEORGE W. HARRIS, Secretary. gto rill lAIorIPIIIA. June 25th..1867 NOTP FRANKFOItD Apiir HOLMES'. burg Railroad Company. Notice is hereby given that a Meeting of the Stoekheld: 4'n. of the Frankford and lloimenburg Railroad Company will be held on TUESDAY, the 16th day of July. A. D. 1667, at 7 o'clock, P. M., of Fuld day, at the office of the Vompany. in Holmeisburg for the purpote of increnaing 7 the en stock of paid.' Company, pureitant to the pro. %Wow. of their charter. ERWIS - THOMI'SON, Precident. - • • JOH N F. PATTISON, Secretary. • Puti.nio mena, July 1, 1867. Iyl-Bt,an,w,P§ Mir BATCIIELOR'S HAIR DYE.-THIS SPLENDID Hair Dye is the beat in the world. The only true and Perfect Dye-Ilarmicsa, Reliable, Inetantaneoue. No ,disappointment. No ridiculous tints. Natural Black or Brown.. Remediem the 111 effects of Bad Dye*. Invigorate, / the hair, leavingilt soft and beautiful. The genuine is signedWILLIAM. A. BATCHELOR. All others are lint. tationo, and should be avoided. Bold by all Druggtets and Yardmen+. Factory 81 Barclay /tree; New York. ISS - BEWARE OF A (IOUNTERFLIT. m wiz - . stir - NO . =A TICE PPLIEATION- WILE BE-.M ADHTO- TO the Department of Iligbwave, on TUESDAY, July Pith. PB7, at 10 o'clock A. M., for the paving of Twentieth street. from Parrigh to Poplar street ; length to be paved, 4071ect. JAMES D. WHETHAM. HAWKINS A: DICKINSON. Cu Imre are invited to meet at the Department on the above dote, and show CRIMP. if any they hark, why a con tract ohould not be awarded to SAMUEL MILLER, Contractor. THE INDUSTRIAL HOME, CORN gg OF Broad street and Columbia avenue, is opeW for the admission of Girls from twelve toeighteen years of age, who are neglected or deserted by their _parents, and who need the shelter and instruction of a Christian home. 11 the public will sustain this Institution, many girls may be kept from evil, and made respectable and useful women Contributions may be sent to JAMES T. SHINN, Treas. vier, Broad and Spruce streets. ncrgsarpti sdr OFFICE OF TILE PHILADELPHIA AND T&tENTON ItA ILROAD COMPANY, No. 0,..LH South Delaware avenue. Philadelphia, June 27, 1n , 17. Notice in hereby given that the' Traneter Hooke of fhb. Company will be closed on the' let of July, PAH, and eu .coutintiejor J. - PARKER NORRlS; . Trefigurer. ate 8 A NITA I:1CM. FOR INEI3RIATES AT MEDIA-- bow open for the reception of a limited number of patients. Apply to JOSEPH PARRISH, M. D., on the prernhme, or at the City Office. No. bOn Arch itrcet, from 9 to 10 A. M.. daily ji.e23.61. SiQr -1111:411 OF NATIVI'II", ELEVENTH and Mt. Vernountrectr,strvicle Fourth at July lux at lio'clo+A. jy2,20 Z ter bolle . ro SP o F i C t i tf A i A I Iti I IT I NSI O rm Ti giittY qK lIA 11 called for DA/NI/AY. July 8, :A 11 0 , c100k.. ; ILL GEO. Y. MOULTON, Socreterv. RE= DIVIDEND NOTICES. r , i PHILADX..I:IIIA AND READINGRAILito.to 1967.dclphla, June 96th, . Tlo•Tratuder (looks of tiff; Company will bo closed on SATURI)A.Y. - the 6th of July next, and be re-opened_on TUESDAY, July I6th, 1867. A lit idend of Five Per Cent. has been declared on the Preferred and Common Stock, clear of National and State taxes payable in cash. on and after the 15th of July next, to the holders thereof as they stand registered on the books of the Cmopany on the 6th of .July next. AU paya- Lte this °Mee. All orders for dividends must be witnessed and stamped. jef:7-taul: S. BRADFORD, Treasurer. .v... OFFICE MIN HILL AND SCHUYLKILL '" 1 1 area Railroad Company—Philadelphia, 7th month Whip lat. 1667. A Senti-annual Dividend of Four Per. Cent, equal to o dollar! per ahare. has tub, day been declared. payable to the btock holder, or their legal repreeentativet, clear of all State and. United State, taxas, on and after the 11th meant. The Tranger looka will be eloped, until that date. jyt e. w f , 3t; SAMUEL 3IASON. Trearnrer. Till; PHILADELPHIA, 151LIIINGTON AND Halftime e ItaWoad Company, Philadelphia, June 14th, 1467. The Board of INrectore have declared semi-annual Di% Wend of Four per cent_ on the Capital dtock of thi, t ornpmy, payable, clear of Government tax, on and after l-t July jel4 1.01,W:4C A. 1101ENER. Secretary. 4 10. V- TIIE (.IRARD LIFE INSURANCE ANNUITY and 'front I 'ompauy of Philadelphia. June 2?. i he Maungern hare thin day declared a Dividend of F.er Per Cent. on the Capital Stock for the taut rix mmti parable to the Stockluddera clear of the State and t tilted :••tate take. ou demand. JOHN F. JAMES. - Actuary. Ake- HANK OF NOUTH A3fERICA DIVIDEND.-- Rank of North America. Julv tat. WTI. Tle Dyecton. ha% e declared n Dividend, for the pact rmmtha. of Seven and a Half Per Cvnt... and an extra- Wild of ETh,e l'er Cent., together T elve and a p ilall l'er t'ent.,tree of United Staten Lucerne tae Jive per cent, on and after sth in.t. J. HOCKLF.Y, 61; 01 _ stir mi. LEllll.li VALLEY RAILROAD COM. Lan declared a quarterly dividend of Two and a halt.per rent. vlyable at their Office. • No. 413 WALNUT. Street, -on and atter 2.106DA1 Judy 150. lica7. • 7t , 1 citAmßEraaix. Trea.4nrer. jarOFFICE PHILADELI'III4.• AND ERIE LAM) 'innpanV, ....1V! Walnut ,tr,:et. ;July 2; 1.57. lioa•d (1 Dir , rtore have ttd, , day declared a Dlvi d+-nd hree per Cent.. payable on delll3lld. jyt: 4t. H„ I'. RUTTER, SeeretarY . iii. %L NOTJcES. IN 'I HE OR COURT FOR THE CITY AND county of Philadelphia.—Estate of JOHN SKI': V I Nt:, -d-ccascd. —The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit; settle and tidiest the account of PENNSYLVANIA 4.:OMPANI FOIL INSURANCE ON LIVES AND GRANT ING AN \ CITIES, Executors under will of JOHN SKI 1:- \ IN( ;. deceased. and to report distribution of the balance in the hand' of the accountant, will meet the parties Hite rested for the purpose of his appointment, on Monday. July Pith. 1467, at to o'clock. A. M., at his office, No. e2O street, in the city of Philsdelphia. 'GUST : AYES REMAK, Auditor. THE ta or COMMON PLEAS FORTILE CITY and County of Philadelphia.—Atsigned Estate of CAI:I:IN.-7 he Auditor- appointed by , the Court to audit. settle attrindjuert the account of JOHN Is Ell. BEN,L - MALONE, WM. I'. 'UEFA and PETER STEMAN,-Trustees for certain creditors of PHILIP - CAR. LIN. whose names are particularly set forth in the war rant of Attorney - tiled in the District Court for the City and County of Philadelphia, of .March Tenn. NIA No. jus, D. S. H., in account with the said Estate, and to make dlatributl oft-of the balance Hi. the hands of the 'account ants, will meet the narties interested for the purposes of his appointment on Friday. July 12th, lie?, at 4 o'clock P.M., at his - office, 140 south Sixth street, in the city of Philadelphia. D. - M.; M. COLLINS jyl m wf ir3 Auditor. N THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THECFFY and County of l'hiladelphin—Entate of THOMAS OS. MAN. deceased.--The auditor appointed by the court to distribute the fund in court arising from the unto of real relate of said decedant, will meet the parties intemted for the purposes of his appointment, on MON DAY. July Bth, 1867, at eleven o'clock, A. M. at hia office, No. ltB S. Sixth street, in the city of rhilada. H. E. WALLACE, .1e281):::.;56,4 Auditor. 1 E THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia—Estate of LLIJAII BOWEN, deceased. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit. nettle and adjust the first and final account of CHARLES L. BOWE?, remaining Executor, and to •ruport distri bution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested for the purpose of his appoiutinent, on Saturday, the sixth day of July, A. D. 1867, at 12 o'clock, M., at his (MCC, No. 271 South Fifth street, its the City of Philadelphia. , jc26w,f,m,50 7 1 / 4 TPTICE.—LETTERS TESTAMENTARY ON THE lent will and testament of SARAH IL ATIIERTON, fate of the city of Philadelphia, deccasod, having been grantad to the undersigned by the Register of Wills for the ~ city and county of I'hiladolPhia, all peroone indebted to the estate of said decedent are retniestedmako _kart merit. auti those haring claims or — Guiana — a - go us e saute to maize them known, without delay, to I'ETER C. lioLizs, Executor, 407 Library street. Plll LA DELPIII.A. May Met, 1887. royal-fon,w,lBll I.iISIATE OF MARTHA MIFFIAN DEC:EASED. 1l Letters testamentary upon the Mato of MARTHA MIFFLIN. deceased, having been granted to the under signed. all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims against the same to present them without delay, to -- T P • J. SERGEANRICE, Executer, No, 813 Arch street, Philada.. jepw.f. LETTER'S TESTAMENTARY HAVING BEEN granted to the subscriber upon the Estate of JAMES :ltl deceased, all persons indebted to tho make payment. and those holing claims, present them Co 'amnia) G. PEABODY.? ry„,„# n " ;JANE THABODY, 1723'Arch street; • jel .0 6t: Or to CHARLES GILI'IN, 709 Walnut st. Ell'EltS TESTAMENTARY . HAVING BEEN granted to the Subscriber upon 'the Estate of ANNA tit:I:INCH. deceased, all persons Indebted to the melte ,10. ,„„1,,, l': yitient; upd those haVittp.elahas will present them to IVI 1,1:I..01 :NI I 'SSEII., Administrator,' No, 213 'North Third street. le 211 f ni W st. iVI "S. 'l°" Raltaa l Nl) MIDWIFE,. je:3B-6t* No. 609 CATIIAIIIIsL Street, Philn4a._ T ACE C U ti.T.A INS TR A NSEEIII . IFDQ I /1-1,144, - M.E Stpk:D. t-INA • at Mrd. GLIILLEOLE Ims So Ut Niuth etroot. PERSONAL. A 111 VIS E NLIE NT& WILEY'S WWI:M 6 ENTAL t4PAVEI 'EXCHANGE. CHOICE SEATS To all places amneement map be had up to 03i o'clock any evening. ___ mbiatt GRAND DISPLAY , OF FIREWORKS Tan Evening of the Fourth of July, . • AT Eastwick Park, Gray's Ferry, l'rofessor Jacicson. A full Baud of Music will perform Afternoon and Evening. The Park will he open during the day for Boating and other =momenta. A pleasant resort for familleal and children. I A Spruce and Pine treetatairs run direct to the Bridge. Admission.— ..... . ...... ......4*. ........ . :..25 cents. It• • . VIITALNUT/ UEET THEATRE, N. E. corner of TV NINTH nd WALNUT. Commences at B. THREE LAST PERFORMANCES OF THE SEASON. 'WEDNESDAY EVENING, July SLIM. Last perfOrmanco but two of the groat Drama, In six acto, of , ___..... - / UNCLE TOWS CABIN. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FOURTH JULY. UNCLE TOM'S CABIN. Antlast performance but ono. Do Is open at 1, 4 .6. Conuncnce at 2. THURSDAY EVENINS, July 4, UNCLE TOWS CABIN. A /AFL night of the dramatic season. . IE RS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE. LAST WEEK OP TILE Begins SEASON at . 8 o'clock LAST WEEK OF G. L. FOX. TRW (WEDNESDAY) EVENING, JACK AND GILL. Jackdaw Jackulation. Al L. FOX TIII:RSDAY,IitivRTII OF JULY, ht 2 o'clock, • A GRAND MATINEE. JACK AND GILL AND A DRAMA. FRIDAY-LAST BENEFIT OF G. L. FOX. SATURDAY AFTERNOON-TACK AND GILL. SATURDAY NIGHT, LAST TIME OF JACK. AND GILL NEW Cif MTN UT STREET TiIEATRE.—ONE week only, cofumencing Monday. July L William Sinn a: Co. Lcusiiffli. The celebrated and original Skiff & Coy lords' Minstrels, from the Academy of Music, Chicago, Introducing in addition to their celebrated Minstrel programme, the Grand 'Musical Panorama of Sherman's March to the Sea. a feature alike commendable for its ainureineat and Instruction. : . _ ParqUette and Dress Circle ..... ...... ..... ........50 cents. Orcheptra Seata. . .............................75 Family Circle 25 " Doors open at 7. C ommence at.B%. je27-91.. DIERSTADT'S LAST GREAT PAINTING. 1) THE DOMES OF THE GREAT YO.SESiITE. Now on Exhibition, Day and Evening, In the Southeast Gallery of the ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS. lers-Inn pENNBYLVANIA ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS CHESTNUT. above TEN TS. . Open from A. bf. to 6P. M. Benjamin WeeVa great Pfctore of CEHUST J• dill on exhibition. je4tt lIIEDICAI. H. .. i 74 ,. : ..,. /5 , : y la f ! ) 3,, PURIFYING MEDICINE. This valuable preparation combines all the medicinal virtue* of those Herbs which long experience has proved the eat cot and moet efficient siterativeproperties for the teof"tufa' Kluge E v i l. White gg tipg c scrofulous, tancerou andlndo lent r ememt and Ulcerations of the Glands, Joint.. Bone, and Liga ment. ; all - the various Dieemes of the skin,such as Tetter. Salt Rheum, Ringworms, Bona, Yinaplee, Carbuncl6a; Bore Eyee, ac.; Epileptic Fite, St. Vitus Dance, and diseases originating from an impure elate of the blood or other fluids of the body. E. LYE'S DYSENTERY SYRUP. This celebrated Syrup Is a certain specific for all stages of Dysentery, Chronic or Acute 'Merril...a. and Summer 4:o.t.,l , lftint. During thirty years' experience in_this city, thin medicine has never been known to fail, as eome of the moat respectable families can testify, at wham request and in compliance with the wishes of several medical and clerical gentlemen, they are prowuted to the public. 1 his valuable medicine is a vegetable compound,and per. fectlY safe In all stages of life. Anti-Hiltons and Antl-Dyspeptic - Thtee Pills are exceedingly efficaciotut in curing Dyspep iia and Liver Complaint, :Nervous Affections. and all di eases rekulting from an unhealthy state of the Liver. E. LYE'S Medicine* Prepared and Sold at No. 202 North Ninth Street, myt63m _ PHILADELPHIA.. Rev. L R. GATES' ',MACAMOOSE This celebrated Indian Remedy is fast becoming THE Standard Family Medicine. It is a moot thorough BLOOD PL:RIFIEH, It cures e. here all other remedies fall -It is recommended by eminent public men, clergymen and businesa men of high standing. It is invaluable in all cases of Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Inilammation,llron chits, Coughs, Colds, Croup, Fever Sores, White Swel. Lingo. Dropsy, Chills and Fever, Kidney afflictions. Con. eumption in its first etagcs..and all nervous and general debility. Thousands of Bottles of Micamoose have been sold , and all who have taken it agree that it has no eqUaL el Sold by Druggists and at MACANWOSE DEPOT, ~. No. 818 Race Street, apKBm. Philadelphia. 14j IPAL DENTALLINA.—A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOR V cleaning the Teeth, destroying animalcule which In feat them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the mouth. It may be used daily, and wilrbe found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detersiveness will recommend it to every one. Being composed with the assistance of thc.Dentiet, Physicians and Microscopist, it Is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the un certain washes formerly in - vogue. Eminent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents . the Dentalltna, advocate its use; it contains nothing prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by JAMES r, SHINN, Apothecary. Broad .and Spruce greets For sale by Druggists generally, and Fred. Brown, ID. L. Stackhouse, • linerordCo.; i Robert C. D via, C. R. Keeny, 4Geo. U. o er, bane JL Hay. Charles era, C. IL Needlea t S. M. Mc 'ollin, T. J. Ilnaban S. C. Bunting, Ambrose Charles li. Eberle, Edward Parrish, James N. Mirka, William B. Webb, - E. Bringinwat b CO.. James L. Bispbam. • Dyott h Co., Hughes do Combo, -I__,H C. 131air'a Sona, Henry A. Bower, • i Wyeth & Bro. . LiNTIRELY RELIABLE —HODOSON'II 'BRONCHIAL Tablets, for tke cure of coughs. colds, hoaraeness. bron. chills and catarrh of the head and breast Public speak. era, singers and amateurs will be greatly benefitted by using these Tablets. Prepared only by LANCASTER WILLS, Pharmaceutists, N. E. corner Arch and Tenth. streets, Philadelphia. For sale by Johnson, Holloway & Cowden. and Druggists generally. ise2s-tf NACIIINERY, IRON, &C. BOILER EXPLOSIONS Guarded against by using Shaw k Justice's !term Column Gauges AND LOW ,WATER SIGNALS. Manufactured only by PHILIP S. JUSTICE, 14 N. FIFTH. Streets. Shops—Seventeenth and Coates streets. Jel4lm4 PENNSYLVANIA WORKE, ON THE. DELAWARE River, below PHILADELPHIA, '- CHESTER, Delaware county, Pa. REANEY, SON do CO., Engineers and Iron Boat Builders, 'Manufacturers of NONkinds of CONDENSING AND -CONDENSING ENGINES, Iron Vessels of an descriptions, Boilers, Vats, Tasks, Propellers, acc., &c. T. VAUGHAN MERRICK, • WM. H. MERRICK JOHN E. COPE. Fa - ilk - AND= WASHG- - i..) TON STREETS, MERRICKSONS, _ ENGINEERS AND MACIIINISTS, Manufacture High and Low Pressure Steam Engines, for Land, River and, Marine Service. Boilers, Gssomdters, Tanks, Iron Boats, &c.. - Castings of all kinds, eithoriron or brass. Iron Frame Roofs for Gas Works, Workshops and Rail. road Stations, dtc. Retorts and Gas Machinery, of the latest and most fxo proved construction. Every description of Plantation Machinery; and Sugar, 'Saw and Grist Mills, Vacuum Pans, Open Steam Trains, Defactators, Filters, Pumping Engines, &c. Sole Agents for N. Billeux'a Patent Sugar Boiling Alms. ratus, , Nesmyth's Patent Steam Hammer and As di Woolsey's Patent Centrifugal Sugar Draining Machine. lAS FIXTURES.—YLLSKEY,MERRITIATILACI.CARA, 3 No. 718 Chestnut street, manufacturers of Gas Filo tures, Dunes, &0., dm, would call the attention of the pub• tic to their large and elegant assortment of. Gee Chande• Hem Pendants,. Brackets, &c. They also introduce gee Pivot , into dwellings. and public buildings, and attend to extending, altering and repairing gee pipes: •• All work ( - TOPPER AND YELLOW to METAL BREATHING. 0 and4 wig • llßrazdor's Coor d 1 Irr.of Coo , • con 'etantBilar on hand ' an for ea by HENRY 8 CO;. No. Booth Wharves; UMIIER ONE SCOTCU PIG IRON—GLENGAR N pork brand,m etore and for sale in tote to suit; by PETER WRIGHT, dt SONS, In Walnut etreet. le7-tr TALLAN VERMICELLI.-100 BOXES ME QUAL ity, white imported and for sale by JOB, U. BUNgEit & C0..108 South Dchware IMMO. TIM DAILY 'EVEMIT BULLETIL-4 7 11ILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1867. KEELEY & BROWNBACK, LUMBER YARD, SAW AND. PLANING '111114.14 North Sixth Street, above Jefferson, PHILADELPI - I lA. LUMBER FOR CARPENTERS, GAR BUILDERS. CABINET AND PATTERN MAKERS. SEASONED PINK.ALL rIZES, ALL KINDS OF BUILDING LUMBER AND EIABD WOOD. ALSO, TRUNK AND BOX BOARDS. A LARGE ASSORTMENT O 1 WOOD, MOULDINGS LUMBER SAWED AND PLANED TO ORDER.. jy2-tu iii arnt "United States Builder's Mill," No. 24, 26 and 28 S. Fifteenth St., PHILADELPHIA. ESLER & BROTHER, MA.NI37AOTURESS OT WOOD MOULDINGS, DRACHM RAID DALIENTRE, NEWELL POSTS, GENERAL TURAINGAND SCROLL WOREAc. The largest assortment of Wood Mouldings in thin city constantly on hand. Jf..4.3m1 F. H. WILLLAMS, Seventeenth and Spring Garden Streets. BUILDING LUMBER AND HARD W023,11.8i.th.2m rWTE 1867. - "Lw BARD HI S. AND PINE. PLANK, 44,54, 84, 2, 2}4, 3 and 41noh. CHOICE PANEL AND FIRST COMMON, 18 feet long 44, 6.4, l i t 234, Band 4.inch. LE BROTLIER dr CO.. o. 2500 SOUTH Street. • 1867 nmiNGI BUILDING! BLTLDING I . LUMBER I LUMBER I LUMBER I 4-4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 6-4 CAROLINA FLOORING, 4-4 DELAWARE FLOORING 64 DELAWARE FLOORING, ASH FLOORING, _ WALNUT FLOORING, SPRUCE FLOORING, STEP BOARDS, RAIL FLANK,_ PLASTERING LATH, MAULE, _BROTHER di CO.. No. 8550 SOUTH Street 1867. -( 'C LAI R DCYPRES S SIILNGLES, S . • COOPER SHINGLES, No. I CEDAR LOGS AM) POSTS, No. 1 CEDAR LOGS AND POSTS, MAULE, BROTHER Qt CO. 1867 .LL I),Tainfililgi CEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY. CEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY. MA CLE, BROTHER & CO 1867:- ALB l u L ip,r il i t Br , ALL SEARkNED WALNUT. SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR., CHERRY AND ASH. OAK. PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT VENEERS. MA ULE, BROTHER SE CO 1867. CIGAR BOX MANUFACTURER SPANISH CEDAR BOX-BOARDS. No. MOO SOITITH Street 1867 --SPR ST. UCE JOIST—SPRUCE JOIST—SPRUCE JOI FROM 14 TO M FEET LONC. FROM 14 TO 32 FEET LONG. SUPERIOR NORWAY SCANTLING. MAULE. BROTHER et CO.. No. 2.200 SOUTH Street. my L 3 ta LUMBER CHEAP - FOR CASH. HEMLOCK Joist, Sheathing and Lath. &c. CAROLINA, Delaware and White Pine Flooring - DRESSED SHELVING and Lumber for fitting stores. CHEAPEST SHINGLES in the city. Jc7-2m NICHOLSON'S. Seventh and Carpenter streets. LUMBER.—THE UNDERSIGNED ARE PREPARED to furnish any description of Pitch Pine Lumber, from 3t. Marra Milt Georgia, on favorable terms. Also, Spruce Joirt, &c., from Maine. EDMUND A. SOUDER & CO., Dock Street Wharf. my2ilifa ``SPRUCE' DUMBER AFLOAT.—SCANTLING AND Joist of length from 14 to 23 feet long, assorted alma 3x4 to Bxl4, about ISU M. feet. 'For aale by WORE:DIAN (X). No. 128 Walnut 'treat SOLNIER BOOKS Fa THE COUNTRY! BOOKS FOR 'THE REA sifoßE!! Boom FOR THE TRAVELER!!! .. . t .... 75 12 011111(ms ItudolFtit .... 75 FirFt and True L0ve..... 75 711 c.. 50 Fanchou, the Cricket, ;fa (X 1 Coneoclo and Conntcee of Ito • FAIIIL • Frank 751 Lea is 7.11 i Fine editloua of above are harry' C”verdaly's Court- ehip. a), of cloth.. ..2 001 CAPT. ".lA4RY _ Newton F05ter.............50 King's.Oaiv .. . ...50 Pirate and Three (Mi'tere..so ,Peter Sim Percival Poor Jack.. .50 ISea King.. ...... ....... ..... 50 Send for our Mammoth DeiscriPtive Catalogue. Addreet all cash orders, retail or wholesale, to T. B. PETERSON & BROTHERS A 306 Chestnut street, Philada., Pa. Books sent, postage paid, on receipt of retail price. ALL NEW BOORS ARE AT PEFERSONEP, Mail Orders promptly attended to. JUST READY—BINGRAM'S LATIN GRA-T New Edition.—A Grammar of the Latin L au e. For the use of Schools .. With exercises and' vecab ariea By William Bingham, A. M., Superintendent of the Bing. ham School The Publishers take pleasure in announcing to Teacher' and Wends of Education generally, that the new edition of the above work is now ready, and they invite a careful namination Of the same,, and a comparison with other morks ou the same subject. Copies will be furnished to Teachers and Superintendents of Schools for this purpose it low rates. ' PPicel 60. Published by H. BUTLER do • 137 South Fourth street, Philadelphia. And for sale by booksellers generally. Jacob. ... . 50 .I”plict in Search of ........ Phantom 1143Fliip.unan l'aclia of Al any Talee.,..-..50 Naval Snarli•yow 50 FRIENDS IN THE COUNTRY.—BOOKS FOR SUM MER READING. All the new books, as noon RP published, for Pale by JAMES S. CLAXTON, 1214 Chestnut street. A TRIP TO THE AZORES, OR WESTERN ISLANDS. Tllll LAND OF nicnt:' 'By J. Ross Browne. FATHERS AND SONS A Novel from the Russian. THE MAN WITH A BROKEN EAR. By E. About. MEMOIRS OF THE MoDOWELLS. By William B. .rague, D.D. ' e26tf WINES, mations, &V. HER MI, JEST CHAMPAGNE, S_ JD IT 'T 0 N, in ROO H FRONT irr., Mt AUNT. WINES—The attention of the trade hi solicited to the following very choice Wines, Bran Mos, ibc. For sale by DUNTON & LUSBON„ No. 915 South Front street. SHERRIES—CampbeII & Co., "Single'," "Double," and "Triple Grape," "Rudolph: , Amontillado,Topaa, V. V. P., Anchor and Bar, Spanish Crown and F. Valletto , e. PORTS—Rebello, Valente & Co. Oporto. "Vinho Velho Real," P. Martin, and P. Valletta's pure juice, dm. c0u..41.• 113reur__ nessey Co. Otard,Dupuy & Co., 01d.Bizquitr—vintage. 1838 and 1863. GIN S—"Meder Swan" and" Grape Leaf." CLARETS—Cruse, Eils, Freres & Co., high &rade wines' Chateau Margaux, superior St. Julien— pinta and quarts; La Roee, Chateau Luminy, &c. MUSCAT —De Frontignan—in wood and ghost:Ver. mouth, Abelnthe, Maraschino, and Cordials—in glass. CHAMPAGNE—Agents for Chas. Farr, Her Majesty's Itoyal Rosa, Burgundy, and other favorite brands. WWIRET OlL—L'Espinasse & Oancelßordeanx. Successor to Geo. W. Gray. 7 - , 24. SG, " 88 and SO South Sixth'. St., • . Eno Old Stock & Nitt-Browri Ales, " I rase • for Family and Idediom- - viv WALL PAPERS.—THE CHEAPEST AND FINEST goods always on hand. A _ preventive for damp walls in dwellings. Especial sampan given to hanging the paper. CHARLES LONGS'PRETII, Jet•tom) No. El N. Fourth st.,opposite Merchants' Hotel. TELY, 1887-TO THE PUBLIC BUST RECEIVED, A U handsome assortment of Wall Papers, as low as 123fs ( 15 and 20 cods; Glazed, 81 and 87)5 cents; Gilt, 10 cents, $1 and $1 15. Neatly hung . Linen Window Shades, I • new colon just mkufactured, in endleas varietyokt. JOHNSTONS DEPOT. fel4-1Y NO. 1038 4rius tauten atreet.bolow &lova% LUMBER. ULA=I:I:2M=II SUMMIER READING!! SEMI GEORGE SAND'S WORKS - - Jealousy, I vol.. paper....l 50 or in 1 vol., cloth. '2 ou Indiana, I vol.. paper 1 50 or in 1 vol., (al n paper, or in c10th....51 50 dojetadt :. l voL,sloth...*2 00 NOVELS. FOlllll3Ol of Harry Racket Scapegrace.. „. 75 anted In cloth, at $3 each. Lorrizilar L1tt1eg00d......1 50 or in cloth 2 00 ATT'S BOOKS. PAPER. HANGINGS. LEOTION ISAIL.LENI AA% THOMAS 42 BONS. AUOI7ONEEARk_ L ___ Nos. 188 and lel South exiturrb sio -- NOTICE.,--- -- • Th !Ind ay being, the Fourth of July, our Regular Bole of - Fliriltui e will co hold on FRIDAY. July Gth. - ' N BALES OP STOOKS AND. REAL' TATE. fir Public Bales at the Philadelphia 0 eifeb TUESDAY, at 12 o'clock. oar - Handbills of each property issued arately b addition to which we publish, on the_ Wards p DI to each sale, /.022 catalogued. /11 PamPhlet form, 1/ tap acriptions of all the property to be sold on the W. vs) INO TiTESDAY, and a lint of Real Fatale at Pri+de ale. Itir Our males are also advertised in the folio new* pstOers : Nu= 'Alrinuaars, Pan, Liman. gm" Lamar. Drratuourcont, Aga, Evzanso WILLICTEII, Even. , LNG '/VEt0,144.114 013111(411I DZMOCEAT, &C., - . itir F urniture Bales at the Auction Store EVERY THURSDAY MORNING. REAL'ESTATE SALE. JULY P. Orphans' Court Salo—Eotate of Robert Pollock. deed.— I.o'l, Salmon and Somerset etreeta, 19th Ward. Same Estate—DESIRABLE COUNTRY. PLACE. U ACRES. Ridge road and Edgeley Point lane. 21st Ward. Some Eidatt-4 GROUND RENTS, $B7 60, *64. *B2 and *72 each. Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of George Moore. dee'd— TWO.BTORY BRICK. DWELLING, No. 23 Aehland at. First Ward. Orphans' Court Sato—Estate of Ann S. Busman, deed— THREE-STORY BRIG% DWELLING, No. 1336 Parrish street, east of Brood. _ Same Estate—WELIALCURED GROUND RENT, *75 a year. 'tirulfaus' Court Sale—Eatate of Dr. John Vanzyle, dee'd---TWG - BTORY BRICK DWELLING, German at, between Fourth and Fifth. Same Estate-3 FRAME DWELLINGS, German st.,. bete stn Fourth and Fifth. Orphans' Court Sale—Eitate of Thos. J. A. Henkels, deed —THREE.STOP.Y BRICK DVVELLINti, No. 1512 North Seventh street, above Jefferson. NEW THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING. Three. story Brick Stable. Carriage Home, Sheds and Large Lot, corner of Columbia avenue, Hancock street and Manlier street-160 feet front MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. S. W. corner. of Thirty sixth and Locust streets-10 feet front, 202 feet deep. It has all the modern convenience'''. Immediate possession. Executor's Saie—lEstate of Rev. John P. Robins, dee'd— THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 6411 Marshall street, between Green and Coates. - Same Eatate—THßEE-13TORY BRICK DWELLING. No 1318 Parrish street. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1352 Richmond street, between Huntingdon street and Lehigh avenue. VALUABLE MOROCCO-DRESSING ESTABLISH MENT, No. 1130 St. John street, 46 feet .5 inches on St. John street, 46 feet 5 inches on Canal street. 146 feet deep. 1111 LEE STORY—BRICK—BUILDING.-occupied—as—a-- Tobacco Manufactory. S. E. corner of Broad and Wallace streets. VALUABLE COLLEGE BUILDING, known as "White River Delaware, at College Wharf, three miles talon . Bristol. Bucks county. Pa. HANDSOME COUNTRY ItErsIDEIICE; 20 ACRES, known as "Linwood." Cholton Hills, five minutes' walk of the Old York Road Station, North Pennsylvania Rail road. HANDSOME MODERN RESIDENCE, with Ode yard, EM Coatee greet, 36 feet front. Bale Noe. 129 and 141 Eronth Fourth street. . . HANDSOME WALNUT FURNITURE, PIANO FORTES, FELNCII PLATE MIRRORS, FIREPROOF SAFES, BANE/SOME VELVET AND BRUSSELS CARPETS, ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 9 o'clock, at the auction rooms, a very excellent as sortment of 1. urniture, handsome rosewood and walnut Parlor Furniture, handsome walnut Chamber Sults. superior Chamber and Dining room Furniture,4Contre TableS, Piano Fortes, in rosewood and maim coma.; fine French Plate Pier and Oval Mirrors, gape Fire. proof Safes., Iron Chests. four handsome walnut ook. cases. eu_perior walnut Desks., Oil Paintings En gravings. Refrigerators; 'Counters, handsome' ruissels; Velvet, and other Carpobs,_&c., &c. UFFICE FURNITURE. Abo, four large and handsome walnut Book •sees, suit able for wprofessional gentleman. Also. 27 superior walnut Counting-house Desks, Office Tables, dm. Sale No. 1811 Pine etreet. ELEGANT ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT FURNITURE, CIIICKERING GRAND PIANO FORTE, HANDSOME MIRRORS. VERY ELEGANT AXMINSTER CAR. I'ET, WWI CUT GLASSWARE. &c. ON MONDAY MORNING, July 8, at 10 o'clock, at No. 1611 Pine street, by cata logue, the entire Furniture, Rosewood and Brocatello Drawing-room Suit, elegant 'Walnut Dining-room Furni ture. finished in oil; handsome Buffet Sideboard, large and elegant Bookcase, superior Chamber Furniture, two very fine Mantel Mirrors, in walnut and gilt trainee; Rosewood Chiclerring Grand Piano Forte, very elegant Axminster Carpet, Brussels and Imperial Carpets, rich Cut Glassware. fine China. fine Bronzes, Kitchen Furni ture, Refrigerator, &c. Al ay be examined early on the morning of Bale Sale No. 314 Booth Fifteenth street. HANDSOME WALNUT FUBNITURE, ELEGANT BOOKCASE. FINE ENGRAVINGS, HANDSOME I3RUSSELS CARPETS. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. June 10. ant 10 o'clock, at No. 314 South Fifteenth street, by catalogue, handsome walnut Parlor Furniture; hand. some walnut Chamber !nits. Oak Dining roam Furniture, elegant walnut Bookcase, fine 1 , ngravinga. Paintings, handsome Brussels and Venetian Carpets, Kitchen Furni• hire, &c. -Cm' The articles are-in-good: cm:alai:in, being_nearly_ I ne Maw. y be examined early motile morning of aide. TO RENT.—Several OffiCat. Harmony Conti. THOMAS BIRCH COMMISSION HE F & SON AUCTI NTS ONEERS AND ICHA, No. 1110 CHESTNUT otreet. - - - - - - - (Hoar entrance 1107 Sansom street.) HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DEMME. TION RECEIVW ON CONSIGNMENT. SALES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. dales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the moll Reasonable Terms. SALES OF REAL ESTATE, STOCKS, &0., AT THE 71E. THOMAS - BIRCH & ON ANG respectfu ll y inform their friends and th e public at they are prepared to attend to the sale of Real Estate by auction and at private sale Sale No. 1110 Cheetnut street SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES. CARPETS, MIRRORS. BILLIARD TABLE, PLATED WARE, RUSTIC FURNITURE, ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 9 o'clock, at the auction store, No. IHO Cheatunt street, will be sold— A large assortment of superior Parlor, Chamber and Dining•room Furniture- . Alen, Velvet, Brusaels and other Carpets, French Plate Mantel and I Mirrors. Spring and Hair Matreseer, Vases, China. Plated Ware, dm. SUPERIOR ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES. Iwo very superior tirst-class Piano Fo:tes, made by Schluter & Co., of New York. Two do. do. do. Gale d: Co. BILLIARD TABLE. One Billiard Table, complete. RI 'STIC FURNITURE. Alm, Basic Chairs, Settees, dig. JAMES A. ERRPMAN. AUCTIONEER, No. 422 WALNUT street Receiver's Sale, Montrose street, below Eighteenth. LEASE, FIXTURES AND STILLS tit' A DISTILLERY ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 10 o'clock, will be sold, without reserve, by order of the Receiver, in Montrose Ftreot, below Eighteenth, the Lease and Fixtures of a Still House, locludiag two new Col per Stills, coinplete, one of 400 and the other of ZM callow.; Yung. llogshend Et, Buckets, Mode, &v. Imme diate possession given the purehaser. AT PRIVATE SALE.—aOO shares stock Locust Gap Im. proveruent Co. This is a well-known coal estate of about 2,11 W acres—LOU° acres of very valuable coal land and Leoo of very superior wood land—in Northumberland county, with two Milt-class Collieries, of the capacity of 200,000 tons of coal. Full particulars of the Company can be learned at the Office, 417 Walnut street. The attention of capitalists is invited to this stock as the prospective value is veil , great A guarantee satisfactory to the purchaser wilt be given that it will yield at least eight per cent per annum (clear of State tax) dividend. THE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT—S. lE L corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on merchandise generally, Watches. Jewelry, Diamonds, Gold and Eillveras and on all ar tides of value for any leng.h of time on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT ATE SALE.' Fine Gold Hunting Came, Double Bottom and Open Face English, _American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches ; Pine Gold Hunting Came and Open Face Lepine Watches; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver aunt. mg Case and Open Face English, American and Swiss Patent Lever , and Lepine Watches; Double Camerfts_lish Quartier and other Watches ;Ladies' Fancy Watches ;Dia. mood Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Wilt"; BintleA. Fine Gold Chains; Medallions; Brace; ; Scarf ; genera FOR Finger Rings; Pencil Cases, and Jewish"! FOR SALE.--A large and splendid Fireproof Chest, snit able for a Jeweler. price SM. Also, several Lots in South Camden. Fifth and Chestnut streets. BY .1. M. OITMMEY & SONS. AUCTIONEERS. No. 598 WALNUT street. [ls" Hold Regular Bales of REAL ESTATE, STOVES AND SECURITIES. AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXCHANGE, I Handbills of each property issued separately. I 1000 catalogues publlehed and circulated, contain in full descriptions of property to be sold, as ales a partial list of property contained in our Real Estate Register, and offered at private sale. Fir Salem advertised DAILY in all the daily never Mere: SAMUEL C. FORD & SONS, AUCTIONEERS, No. 127 South Fourth street. Sales of Real Estate, Stocks, LOMB, &0., at Philadelphia Exchange, every FRIDAY, at 12 o'clock Noon. Our sales are advertistid ) in all the daily and several of the weekly newspapersi_ by separate handbills of each_ rhfch ? wili n i a ;VonfeTtr - WENVEMY preceding each salo. Fr - REAL ESTATE. STOCKS. LOANS. &c., AT PRIVATE SALE. • DAVIE & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS. • '(Late with M. Thomas & Sons.) iiTEN Store e L i kti 4ft Walnut ti.(74 A T REELDFICES will ' receive POSIIOOIai a on. JOHN B. MYRRH & CO.i AUCTION:Z=IN. Nos. 232 and 214 MARKET street. corner of RANK. AT PRIVATE SALE. 25 cases fine PALM LEAF PANS, rounothandles. 'DT 1.) BARRITTC & SII AU CO.. AMONU CTIONHO USEERSE. A. - No. 2sO MARKET atreet, corner of BANK street. Cash advanced on consionntents without extra charge Pinup Form Auctioneer McCLELLASlda.otrecEssoßa TO WORD & CO., Auctioneers, See MARKET street. By B. SCOTT. AUCTIONEBIL___ '" • - Na 140 unurANUTstreet. ••L. ABBE RUKUI & CO.. AU AUCTIONEERS. II • • No. lice MARKET Masa. above PUY& ANTON PRESERVED GINGER -- PRESERVED C 2 1sler am. of the celebrated Ohyloona broad; also, Preserved Ginger. In bonne, imported and for sale by OSEPIL B. LIMIER & 106 Booth I)elawaro GYOIII.IO. TO Atli*: .• • . •T 0 Lr J l f . . • A FURNISHED HOUSE, N0.'1607 Race Street. Tide apariolui rekildence, newly furniPhed,'will berented to a respectable family, and if required the care of, the how and board will be furnished by the present occupant. )y2,6t4 TO RENT—A RIVERSIDE RESIDENCE,,—THg situation is unsurpassed for bathing, boating' , Fish. ing and gunning, with large lawn, well shaded. Als6, a great variety of fruits and flowers, and fifteen acres of pasture grounds. The place Is con7crilent of access to city. The house is suitable for a large family or a limited niunber of summer boardem. Apply, for tbree days, from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M., at No. 220 Dock street. . my2stfy E. S. PARSON. FURNISHED COUNTRY SEAT FOR RENT.- IEA handsome double residence, with stable and car. riage house, and several acres of land attached; de sirably located, miles from White Hall station. on the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, 8 miles from the city: large vegetable garden, pasture,and abundance of choicest fruit. J. M. GUNMEN A: SONS. 508 Walnut street. LTO RENT FOR FOUR MONTHS A FUR. niched House, with every convenience and nice " garden, corner of Price and Hancock Woks, Ger mantown. Apply to ENOCH TAYLOR, Hi North Sixth street. jya.lt• TO RENT FOR THE SrAIMER—A FURNISHED in; Home in Germantown. A. large room on the ground " floor imitable for an invalid. Green etreet, tiret door above Itittenhomie. }vl-8t• ETO RENT—NM - AT STABLE, VAIIONAN otreet, bock of 018 Wulnhit " Apply ot the prOni ken. - J91.6t• faTO RENT—THE HANDSOME RESIDENCE, , B. W. corner of Twentletit'and Green. Apply to W. " T. REED, 45 North Eighth street. je.3414 MO RENT—THE THIRD, FOURTH AND FIFTH A floors of Building, _ No. 105 Arch street. Apply •to BISHOP. SON & CO.. No 106 Arch street. . nol•tfii FOR SALE. itFOR SALII—A FINE STORE AND DWELLING, near Fourth and Spruce streets; 19 rooms. Price only 512,000. Also, ath ry ree-sto brick Dwelling, on Spring Garden street; lot SO Ord Immediate pomsesmion. Several small houses in the vicinity of Ninth and Willow streets for sale very cheap. 13uRding Lots in the Most deli- . ruble locations for sale. , WATER, KRICKIIIAnf & PCTIt.DY, - je27-tf 32 North Fifth street. A m A BARGAIN, 524 ACRES. A valuable improved Farm for sale or exchange on Mrs Lake Eric, near the city of Eric, with good buildings, fruit and water; would divide well into two or three farms. well adapted for grain and grazing. The owner now resides in Philadelphia, and will sell or exchange for good city or country property. Apply to CHARLES B. WRIGHT jell-20n) 142 South Third street, Philadelphia. inFOR SALE.—THE SUBSCRIBER OFFERS FOR sale the valuable Property, consisting of Mansion House, stable and lot of ground, situate at the north west corner of Spruce and Eleventh streets, in the city of Philadelphbv, containing in front on Spruce street 194 feet, and on Eleventh street WO feet. Apply to LEWIS 11. REDNER, jeal.tf . No. 152 South Fourth street. E, GERMANTOWN PROPERTY FOR SALE.-2 A Pointed Stone Residence, with all the modern ' conveniences, Stone Stable nnd Coach House and large Lot of Ground, at the corner of Pulaski avenue find, house south of Calvary church, and convenient to Wayne Station. Apply on the premises. mhilw.tm ARCH STREET—THE HANDSOME FOUR story brick. Residence, It feet front, with three-etory double back buildinge ' , mittiate on the xiorthweat orner of Twentieth and Arch streets: has parlor, dining. r oom and kitchen, library, PiX chambers, &c., kc. Im mediate poaaeasion given. J. M. OUMMEY 6: SONS, 5 1 38 Walnut atreet.- FOR SALE—THE HANDSOME THREE STORY E. brick dwelling, with three-story double back • " buildings, situate No. 123 North Sixteenth street— has every modern convenience and is in perfect order. Immediate possession given. J. M. (1131-11EY d 2; SONS, 608 Walnut street, r" FOR SALE--A HANDSOME THREE-STORY ;;; Dwelling, with three-story back buildings, No. 818 ' North. Seventh street; built in the best manner, with all the modern improvements. Immediate possession. Terms easy. Apply to COPPLiCK & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. irFOR SALE—THE HANDSOME FOUR-STORY brick Remidence,„ with three-etory back buildings, ' Fitunte No. 1811 Pine street—has every modern con venience and improvement, and is in good order. Lot It 3 feet front by 105 feet deep to a street. J. 31. GUMMEY d: SONS, 508 Walnut street. inFOR BALEVery desirable Residence. No. 131 North Twentieth street, above Arch, opposite tit. Clement'a Church, now vacant. Open from 8 to 12 A. M., and 2tosP. M. Price, $11,500. je29.3t• -rGERMANTOWN—FOR SALE —A HANDSOME -doublerpointed -Storm- Cottage Residdnce, _built in the best manner and having every convenience; situate on West Tulpchocken street. J. 31 GUMMEY & SONS, 509 Walnut Wee: FOR SALE—A THREE-STORY ERICK DWELL. ing, No. 4023 31o:ism-using avenue; also a- two-story brick-Dwelling, No. itH South Front street. Will be sold cheap._ Terms easy. Apply to COPPUCK. d:JOlt- DAN, 9.T3 Walnut Arcot. . ELOCUST STREET—FOR SALE—A handsome ir four-story brownstone residence, :12 feet front, having every modern convenience and improvement, situate on Locust street, oppusite St. Mark's Church. J. 31. GUM MET dr. SONS. 508 Walnut street. 2 FOR SALE—ELEGANT RESIDENCE. NO. 21.tA sritucE, STREET, BOOTIIER & CO., je2nt" No. 2.51 X) South Htreet. LOCUST STREET.—FOR SALE, A HANDSOME four-story Brown Stone Residence, twenty-two feet front having every modern convenience and Improve ment. Situate on Locust Street, opposite St. Mark's Riturch. J. M. GLMMEY & SONS, NB - Walnut steed... FOR SALE—TWO-•NEW HOUSES, WALUT M I lane, fifth altd•iiixth houses ; west of Adams Wtet, " Germantown. Apply to A. W. RAND, 1:}1 North Sixth street, l'hilada. 1e27-tf§ FOR SALR —A MODERN HOUSE, NO. 424 PINE street a/ feet front by 141 feet deep. Apply to . C. IL AIUIRHEID, ap3o-tf6 No.= South Sixth street. PROPOSALS. DROPOSALSFOR MATERIALS TO BE SUPPLIED .1 TO THE NAVY-YARDS UNDER THE COUNI. ZANCE OF THE BUREAU OF .STEAM ENGINEER ING. NAVY DEP A RTMENr. • BEIREAC OF STEAM ENGINEERING, WABIIINOTON, D. U., June 11,1867. SEALED PROPOSALS to furnish materials for the Navy for the fiscal year ending 30th, 181 A will bd re ceived at this Bureau until 10 o , clock, A. M. oftho ltith of July next, at which time the proposals will be opened. The proposals lOWA be addressed to the "Clue! of the Bureau of Steam Engineering, Navy Department, Wash ington," and must be endorsed "Proposals foe Materials for the Navy," that they may be distinguished from other business totters. • , Printed schedules for any class, together with Instruc tions to bidders, giving the forms of proposal, of guaran tee, and of certificate of guarantors, with printed forms of offers, will be furnished to such persons as desire to hid,Oß application to the commandants of the ,respective navy yards, and those of all the yards on application to the Bu reau. These iseheduleimill be ready , for delivery ou the with of Jane, inst. Thu Commandant of each navy-yard, and the Purchas ing Paymaster of each station will havo a copy of the • schedules of the other yards, for examination only, in . order that persons who intend to bid may judge whether it is desirable to make application for any - f the dames of those yards. • • • The proposal Must be for the whole of a class; and all applications for information or for the examination of samples must be made to the Commandants of the re • spective yards, The proposal most be accompanied by acertificate from the Collector of Internal Revenue for tile district in which the bidder resides, that lie has a license to deal .in the articles for which he proposes,•and lie must further show that he is a manufacturer of or, a regular (limier in the • articles which he offers to supply. .The guarantors must be certified by the Assessor of Internal Revenue for the district in which they retido. • • The contract will be awarded to the person who mair,es the lowest bid and gives the guarantee • tequircd by the Navy Department, however, reserving the right to re-' lect the lowest biki, or any which It may deem exorbitant. Sureties in thuAill amount will be required to sign the contract. and their responsibility • Duna liticortified to the satisfaction of the Navy Department, As additional se curity twenty per centum will be withhold from the amount of the bills until the contract shall have been completed,. and eighty per content of the amount of each bill, approved in triplicate by the Commandant of the re spective yards, will be paid by the Paymaster of thin eta -lion designated in the contract wir fen days after the warrant f6r the same shall have be 'passed by the Secre tary of the Treasury. The classes of tins Bureau are numbered and designated as follows : No. 1. Boiler Iron and retr. No. n. Plg Iron. No.. 8. Boiler Fettling. No. 4. Gino Packing, Rub - . her Hoge, &c. No. b Sperm Oil. No, Undeeed 011, Tur pentioe, he., Hose, &c. Holly. No. in. Tallow and Soap. No. 29. Laritenas, &c. No. 10.. Eugineern' Store.. No. 80. Lignutovibe. No. 11. Engincent"rools. No. 81. Hydraulic 47tacks, No. 12. Engineers' luetro• 6tc. motto. . • No. 32. Sour Flotu•;Crunthles, No:13. Machinery. No. 14. Wrought Iron I'ipc, No. T 3. Patented Article.. Valves, &c. No. 34. Cotton and ile„pip No. 15. Braes nod Copper Packing, titc. Tubes. No. 35. Anthracite Coal. No. 16. Steel. No. 36. llitundoon. Coal. • No. 17. Iron Nalle, Bolt., No. 37. Sand, Lime, &c. Nub:, &e. No. 88. Brick. No. 18. Copper. . No. 29. Filer. No. 19. Tin Lead, Mlle, &c. No.4o.CharcoaL No. 20. White Lead. No. 41. Iron Tubes. No. 21. Zinc Paint. No. 42, Dudgeon's Pump.. The following are the clannen, by 118 eh number., re. guired at the reopective RTS Navy MOUT 11.Yardett• P(). . NoB.l, 2, 4. 5,. 6. 8,9, 10, 11, 12,, 18, 14, 16, 18, •17, 18, 19, 20, 23, 2 4 , 26, 27, 29, 10, 21, 32, 3, 34, '35, 32, 37, 38, T.), 40, 42. CHARLESTOWN. • Non. 11, 5: 4. 6,6, 8. 9, 10, 11, ti), 14, 15, 16 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 2:.c SM, 25, 24 27.84, V., 22, 34, 24 2th,_ 27, 32, *, 40. BROOKLYN. Noe. 1,2, 4,6, 6.8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 23, 26, 27, 29,132, 34,15, 86. 27, 38, 80 40. - PUILADELPIII.A. NOo. 1, 2.8, 8; 10, 11, 12, 16,17, 18, PA 20, 92,23, 26; 27, 32,34, 35, 31, 88, W. WASITINGTON. Noe. 1,2, 8,4, 5, 6.8, 9,10, 11, 12, 18.14, 15, 16,17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23,24, 25, 26, 27, 28. in., 31. 22, 24, 25, 26, 37, 88, 29, 40, 41. • NORFOLK. 1., , T05. 5,8, 10,11, l6, 17, 18, 19, 21, 27, 94, 27, 22. 25, a 37, 59, 40. jeltlw4to No. 22. Colored. Palnto„. Dry ers, &e. No. 23. Stationery. No. 24. Firewood. No. 23. Hickory ands Ash Plank. and Hutto. No. 25. White Pine. No. 27. Week Walnut, Cher MM= 74EAUIL EfFICATE 154.14149. ORPHANIVCOUBT BADE.- 1 -ESTATEDYBARAId Comly, deeensed. James A'. Freeinan, Auctioneer. Naluable Promrty, 58Y, Acres. Bristol Turnpike, near Hohnesburg, Bird Ward, opposite ."fiipring Bradt," the liandamne Country Beat. of Edvrin' Forrest, 'Bed-. Under aifthority of the Orphans' Court for 'the Test and' County or Philadelphia, on WednesdaY, dnlylfo, salt o'clock,. noon, will Witold at Pubile Sale, at,ilie P Add. , phis Exchango,the following described Real EstaßilaNr the_property of Sarah comly,doceinied iA tract id tandWM .. thebuifilings thereon, situate in the 23d Ward of the BIWA,— ginning at a hickory tree for a corner of r land of Atrbsand land of Henry Vandike, deceased; extending thence by land of the Oxford an d Lower Dublin Poor House, N. delb E. 20. perches to a corner, thence 8.23%" deg, E. 46 percher to a corner, thence by the same N. 8 7 ,4 deg., - E. 0,6 percher to a stake for a corner, thence by the saine S. 23' 4d0 E. 42.7 perches to a corner.- thence by land of - William' wilt and James IL Dungan, N. deg., W. 564 perchei toils corner, thence by the name S. 'P deg., W. 4.48 'perches to a corner in the tine of land late of henry Vandike, deceased, and thence by the PRIIIP N. %I,' deg., W. 35.7 perches tei the place of beginning. Containing 58 acres and 128 percher of land, more or less. • Ii - Thin property is on the northweaknly side of the Briotol Turnpike road, near Bolmeiiburg, directly o "Spring Brook,"the handsome comitry Rent of 1 1 = Forrest, Esq., late of Caleb Cope; Esq., having a front of about 1770 feet on the turnpike, and is eligibly 'Mooted for building purpooeo. It could be (Divided into a number of choice buildimeitce. ILO about nine miles from the city, and within ashor t distance of the stations at llointesburg and Tacony. There la a house, barn and the moat farm outbuildings on the preinieca. re — Plan at the Auction Rootno. .rzr - Clear ofilli IhcumbrOnce. • • • • ' • f 37500 to be paid at the time of male. By t e Court, E. A. 3IERItICK, Clerk O. C. WILLIAM li. GOMLY 4 Guardian. = JAMES A. FREEMAN. Auctioneer. Store, .1112 \Yawn . stroet.:' Je20,27i931 E" ORPILLNIP COLET , :AL ESTATE OF m Frederick Neil, deceased -. lames A. Freeman, Aue tioneer.—Underthority. of the. Orphans`, Court for the City and Comity of Philadelphia, on WediOday, July 10, 1867 at 12 o'clock. noon, will he sold at publiemetle, at the 'Philadelphia Exchange the following.,,dcaoribeb real estate, late the property ofFrederick Pleis, - deceasedt N0..1.. Store- and Dwelling, No.' 266 , South Twentieth. street. All that certain three-story Brick Mein g& an& lot of ' w ground, altnate on the southeast corner of 'Twen tieth and Ann streets, above Spruce street, in the Eighth. Ward of the city, containing iu trout on Twentieth sweet 16 feet, and in depth along Ann street 40 feet. 117 Y" Clear of ineumbrance. - . co. s.—Store and liwellitist, 288 SoutitTwentlethistreet. The one full, equal, undivided moiety or half part in •alt that certain lot of ground, with the three-story bricknies sung° thereon erected, situate on the west.slde of Teen. Seth street. at the distance of 78 feet. 9 lathes northward from Spruce-street, In-the. Eighth Waird of the city. - - Con. taming in front 15 feet 7 inches, andjn_depth_sl fcet.6- -- tnehes - tiva - TfO9tWide - alley, with the privilege thereof; Pr'Clear of Incumbrance. ' lEin9loo to be paid on each at the time of sale. By the Court. E. A. MERRICK,. Clerk 0. C. • CAROLINE PLEItI, Administratrix.. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer. 3e91),27.84 Store 02 Walnut street. - - ORPlitasiS' COURT SALE.—ESTATE OF PE I. A. Dare, deceased. James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. Dwelling. No,oooltichmondettect, Eighteenth Word., Under authority df the Orphans' Court for the City and , . County of Philadelphia. on Wednesday. July IOW : 1881, at 12 o'clock, noon, -will be sold- at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange,. the following described real eis-' tate. late the property of Peter A. Dare, dec'd.—All that. certain lot of ground with the three-story brick messuagis ' thereon erected, situated on the southeasterly side of Richmond and northeasterly Hide of Hanover street, In the Eighteenth Ward of the city, beginning at a corner formed by the intersection of said street, thence north easterly along Richmond street 18 feet 2 inches. more or lees, to the ground of Andrew Day. thence southeasterly along the same at right angles with Richmond strebt, 8t feet 11 inches, thence southwesterly 19 feet, more or less, to Bowyer street, and thence northwesterly along Mario ver street 81 feet 1 inch to Richmond street. Under and sub j ect however, as respects. the. southeasternmost f eet of the above lot extending across the rear end thereof, to its use as and for a passage way and' watercourse by the owners and tenants of the premises adjoining, on the northeast fOr)4100 to be paid at the time of Bale. . By the Court, E. A. MEItRICK, Clerk 0. C. SARAH DARE, Administratrix. JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, Store, 422 Walnut street. je2o tri .1.11 ORPHANS' COl3ltT SALE.—ESTATE OF ADAM Mi Dock. deceaaed.—James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. Property. No 942 -- North Third street.` Under au thority of the Orphans' Court for the City and County of Philadelphia; on Wednesday,' July 10,1867, at 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold at public saleott.the Pitiladelphiaritx. change. the following described Real Estate, late the pro perty of Adam Mock, deceased: All that certain rectangn far piece of ground with the frame buildings Attached. situate at No. 212 North Third street. above Poplar street. having a front on Third street of 18 feet, and extending int depth 200 feet to Charlotte street. - • VW - Clear of ineumbrance. . 1W On the abOve lot are erected a thretatori frame home fronting on Third Street, with & tevestory frame liouren in the rear, and a two.story frame Carpenter shop fronting on Charlotte street. VW' *lOO to be paid at the time of sale. By the Court, E. A. MERRICK,. Clerk O. C. ROBERT MOCK, Guardian.. ..TA3rES 'A;FREEMAN,IAnntroneen, Store 422 Walnut street. je20.27J98 EORPHANS' COURT SALE. ESTATE OF THOM " ne J. McCoy, deceased. James A. ' , monism Atte- Homer. Lot Twenty-second street, below Indiana street, Twenty.eighth Ward. Under. authority of the Orphans'-Court for..the city and_county.of y a on Wedneiday, July 10, 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, Win. be sold at public . Hale, at the PhiladeLphia Exchange, tho following tlencrlbed rent estate, late the property of Thom as J. McCoy. deceased. All that certain lot of ground, he- Innaot No. 122 on a .plan of, lots of ".The Philadelphia Cottage and Homestead AssociatiOn,"! 'situate on the.east Fide of ,Twentynecond street, at the distance of 195 feet Mirth Mint Indiana street,' in the Twenty-eighth Ward of the city. Containing in front 16 feet 3 inches and in depth of that width at right angles with Twentynecond street. 02 feet 6 inches. • • 13V — Clear of inctimbrance. . . . lir $5O to be paid at the time of the ealo. • . By the Court, E. A—MERRICK, Clerk IS:C. AN NlE3teCtil Adminbtratin. JAMES A. FREEMA.N, Auctioneer,. je5,9.7,Jy3 Store, 4t3 Walnut street; ORPHANS' COURT SALE.--ESTATE .. OF William J. McCoy, deceased,-,rames A. Freeman, Auctioneer.—Three-story Brick Store and Dwelling, No. 517 B. Sixth street.- Under authority of, the Orphans* Court for thellity and' Comity of • Philadelphia; on' Wed nesday...lllly 10..11t67: at.l2 441oeic, noon. he add at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the 'follotfitnc. described Retil•Estote, late the yroperty of Williamj. McCoy, deceased: All that certain lot of ground with the three-story brick mestuago (containing 8 rooms) thereon erected, situate on the east aide of Sixth street, between Lombard and South streets, in. the Fifth :Ward, of the city, at the distance of 23 feet north of Mary street;• con- Mining in front 19 feet and In depth of that width 65 feet. • ille"" Clear of ineumbrance. • OW - 18100 to be paid at the time of sale. By the Court, E. A.. MERRICK, Clerk O. C. ANNIE MOJOY, Adinhaistratrik. • JAMES A. FlMEMAN,Auetioneer.' Je2.0,27,jy3 Store, 422 Walnut street. PUBLIC SALE.—JAMES A. FREEMAN, ACC tionezr.—Two-story brick Dwelling, No. 537 Queen strcet.—On IVeduesday,July 10th, 1867, at 12 &Clock. noon, will. be sold at public sale, at tho Philadelphia Ex change, the followingdescribed re estate, viz.; All that certain two-story brick al messenge and lot of ground situate on the north side of Queen street (No. 537), at the distance of 56 feet eastward from Sixth street, in the Third Ward of the city, containing In front 16 feet and in depth 56 feet 9 inches, more or less. Clear of incnmbrance. 1138'" A policy of insurance for $5OO included In the sale. rat" Possession with the deed. 11187" Key may be had Of Mr. Thomas Martin, at the N. W. corner of Fourth and Pine streets. - • JAMES A.TREEMAN. Auctioneer, Store, 01 Walnut street.' ji2o 27 j 3 3 PUBLIC SALE OF CITY PROPERTY.—THOMAS & Sons, Auctioneers.—Business Locations—Large and Valuable. Lobs, New Market street and Callowhill street, Eleventh Ward.—Pursuant to Ordinances of Select and Common Councils of the city of Philadelphia, will he sold ht public sale. without reserte. - by 'order of - Columlh. stoner of City Property, on Tuesday, July 30th, 1867: at 12 P h o'clock, noon, at the iladelphia Exchange, the follow ing described Real Estate,. belonging to tins City of --Plias delpbbr: No. I.—All that lot of grouhd situate itt the southeast taller of New Market au& Callowhill street?. Eleventh Ward, containing in front ou Now Market street 20 feet, and attending in depth along Callowhill'etreet 60 2—All that lot' of grOund sititate at the southwest corner of New Market and Callowhlll streets ; containing 1n front on New '2litrket 'street 20' feet, and extending in depth along Callcitsbill street sin feet. No. B—All that lot of ground' situate at the northeast corner of Nov Market and Callowhill Arced; containing in front ou New Market street 20 feet, and extending in depth 60 foot. . The above arc very valuable and desirable ritilldinig Lots, worthy the atteatiou of Capitalists, 13011ders:Mann (as:hirers and others , . TuOMAS & SONS:Auctioneers, 4113 2027 . 130 and 141 South Fourth street. COP.ARTNERSJIIIPS JULY Dm, 1867.—T11E UNDERSIGNED HAS, THIS d,v aemociated with hint in the Comintealon linsinosa, GEORGE R. REPPLIER, under the form of JANNEY dt REPPLIER. The btatineee to be conducted ea• heretofore at No. 23 Bank 'Arcot. IYl3t• TT T , Ik 110. WALLACE, Jn. RETIRES FROM OUR nu OLIN day. P1111.411)1 3.1 . 111 A, June 29,1867. TUAM 138$3111M' IIT E . HAVE THIS DAY ASSOCIATED TOGETHER I I under the film of 'WALLACE & KEENE, for the traneaction of a,eneral Bunking and Brokerage business at No. 42 South Third stmt. THO. WALLACE * Je, EDWARD. W. KEENE. FIIII.ADEI;PIitA, July 1, 1857. • • • ' MR. STOCKTON 'BATES HAS AN INTEREST RI OUR, buoineed. rpHE CO.PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE EXISTING 1. between the undersigned its this day , diossakreddleg mutual consent, lIERCUI,Ed ATKIN withdrawing.' Tao .I.ltainess will be continued andra z d r ala tir-da•• julj , ISTAO -11E1WELERAIMIN,---, s ,c,011,1 MOTH% CASSIMERES ABU VESV I S..-,TAMES‘ LEE Anise the attention of theigf and °Blursto their large aad well.assorled Spring ket Goods, coin. dal" Pad COATING GOODS. Super illack French taped. Super Colored Preach Cloud. Black and t:ctiore4 Coatings. Piece. Tricot Coattail!all colorr. Elsor and Celora4lNsbdoolvlt 2 . " Unger Silk .mixed Coatings. quay ` • Tweeds. all shadee ILO qwa • 1/ANTALoort - nun's. - Black French lane , all grader. ed Fancy Careimpres. New styles stripodAgEolb_ores, All shades itaind Doeskin". Se. LADIES' CLOAKANGS. CA Magma Ribbed Clubs, stri ped ciothic 64 Mottled and 64 Mixtures, a l l graded and colors, Also, a large wort:neat of Goods adapted eklowd , for Boy"' wear, wholowde or reran. .JAMES & LEE. ' No. 11 North Second at.. Slim of e Golden Lamb. T ,— URREY FIGS.-25 V ASES NEW CROP,LyANW3 grades lauding and. for gala by JOB. 8.,10186.488 CO., Lb South Cabman) albrata4 JACO& JANNEY.