A.PIERICAN , twr. AT WilE. E IPOSI T An English Critique. The London .Athenituns speaks slightingly of the paintings sent . by American., artists the Paris Exposition. NW quote t - • The order of the, catalogue o' this7great gathering next compels us to examine the Art of the United 'States' of .America, ;wlkich may be under two. heads; first, which is French in origin as in nature; secondly, that which is prose. The latter class comprehends much that is valuable, much that Is interesting; but as it aims to be topographical in landscape, and melely illus- wive in figure-painting, is by no means of -the-highest importance when we are reckon ing up the wealth of the world in art. With this clam rank the large topographical and meteorological landscapes of Messrs; Church, "The Falls of. Niagara," "The ,Rairiy Season in the Trepics,2, and, inferiorly to the last, as less effectively achieving a common aim, Mr. Bierstadt's "The Rocky -Mountains,”? 'and Mr. J. F. Crops.ey's "Mount Jefferson, New Hampitire." • These are.speetactilar pictures of the . cona- MOU sort; or scenes on .a smaller scale; and valuable in their way. Better in painting, and finer in sentiment than these, is Mr. J. Hart's River TunJfis,Connecticut—a bright landscape, showing a gently flowing stream, its meadows and trees. In Mr. Kensett's Lake Ocorge i Autumn; is the besetting opacity of United States• practice , inland-,' - seape, such as we find in common French art of the kind, and observe to be dominant in Germany, a defect which, apart • from all other considerations, places the result in value far below even ordinary English lam> shape-paintings, In this way,,_the produc tions of Messrs. Hubbard t.V.; Giffard, who show us with spirit a grand range of blue hills, and one or two inferior painters, are below par. .Nevertheless, it is undeniable that in some of these pictures are to be ob served'. signs- , of -pathetic purpose :of their authors, without which all landscape is merelyientific or topographical. Now German-French landscapes, with which may be classed the works of our present subjects, are, when topographical, apt to .be wofully. dull and heartless. We decline to rank with artwork 'such things as result from- this want of pere,eption of something more than description can supply by brushes and colors. ' A man has no business to paint a landscape unless he means something by it of the pa thetic sort; topography and scientific illus trations are good, but they are not art. - The better skilled painters who are grouped here with those above named are French in grain. As a rule, these men have a truer perception of the aims and value of art than their less fortunate, but, it may he, more original brethren. , Mr. •Whiriller 1s eminent among- these. Of him our readers know enough. It would be difficult to find ' an artist more intensely French than he. Mr. Lambdin's name we remember in Paris. His The Last Sfrcp, a lover at his mistress's death-bed—the best painted portion a closed balcony, the effect of the excluded sunlight, has many ,cleverly expressed points. NIL McEntee is French to the core of his — thought, and - patlretic - beyond - the - common - in his picture of desolation and merciless rav age, Virginia in-iB62—two wrecked houses in a wilderness, a river flowing through a waste. Mr. Whittridge's Coast of Rhode Island is exceptional to the common here, rnd in - an original manner renders finely, but rather Ilimsily,.the lapse of waves on the shore. The Pride of the byMr. A. P. Gray, reminds one of the superior pic tures of Rippingille in its sentiment, which rightly pertains to a, ConsuMptive (laughter and distressed 15nrents ; it has inch better drawing than our countrymen could impart to a picture. Mr. D. Huntington's Republican Court in the ti me of Waithingtou, a large produc tion' makes the critic respect the simplicity: 'of its author ••ven while he .smiles ut his prim itive ideas of art. This is rather a collection of honstly-studied dresses and portraits with out vivacity, although painted well, than a picture in the true sense of the term. . Nev.; ertheless, being honest, it - is worth a legion of flashy - French spectacular pictures, and an acre of its counterparts among ourselves. 'We look upon this quaint and Quakerish example as the sole valuable specimen of native-born Lulled States figure painting on these walls, and are certain that the severe and un- sophisticated principles it illustrates are the tools of genius, hopeful of the ;best art. Within his means and with all his ability, the 'motto of Mr. Huntington is evidently "thorough." In other hands, here is the secret of power. SR far as he goes he is happy. Generally, the defect of his country men appears in seeing in art nothing beyond its necessary office 6f representing nature, and seeing thus much pro - gaically.- M. Mig hot shots a sense of more than this in his AS'olir6 . B of the Srtscitteiwimo; but it Wottid be better to call him a Frenchman than any thing else. There is a precious but showy quality in Mr. W. ] limes Confeticratv Prison( .1.8 to the Feont. The 14ineyurate. oY helleils Islair. Lake Erie. Kelley's Island in Lake Erie, has, of late I years, beCome famous for its grapes and wine. An interesting history of the business carried on there is given in a letter to the • Ohio AS7cde Jourwd, a part of which we copy: "These interested in studying geological phenomena, as well as those having a taste for American antiquities, may dud some mat ters of interest on Kelley's Island. Every where on and around the island deep grooves have been cut into the solid lime rock by the glaciers. In some instances these glaciers moved blocks of reek weighing twenty thousand tons, not on a level plain nor on a descending slope, but really moved these masses up hill. I know of no better place to' see the effects of glacial action than on the north and east shores of the island. On the south side of the island, detached froin the island, however, lies a large block of lime stone, whose upper surface is completely covered with figures of sun, moon, men, deer, &c., graven in the rocks, as is generally believed, by Indians: "Grapevines were planted on thkisland more. than twenty years ago, and are At in ..:...good bearing condition—in fact the oldest vine,pu the island is today as prolific a, bearer as any of the more recent vines. The vari eties of grapes planted are the Catawba, Isa bella, Delaware and Concord; many other varieties are represented by a tew Vines, but nine-tenths of the wine made on the island. is from the Catawba. "1111853 Mr. Charles Carpenter had one acre in grapes. He sold grapeA from the crop to the amount of $lOO. Nine rows of Isa bella vines yielded him 1,575 pounds of grapes, from which he made .200 gallons of wine. He gathered 2,270 pounds of Catawbas,. but sold most o. th em for table use, and from -- the ref:wander he manufactured 130 gallons of wine. In 1857 the first quality_ of his Ca sbowTeTd a. specific gravity o 1 78 - degrees, and with the addition_of _six.otatices •of sugar, showed•9o degrees. Of this quality he made 967 .gallons. His No. 2 Catawba `Must' showed 67 degrees, but with the addi tion of twelve ounces of sugar was 100 de grees;- of this he made 178 gallons. The laa belia 'must' showed 58 degreesi 'with ei;lit ounces- of sugar, 85 degrees -24r, gallons. Mr. Kelley, - in 1857, made. 3sn .1044. In 11357 there • were about Bev enty acres' in grapes On •the •island, one half of which were set out that spring:. "The leading wipe-growers on the island morellian,a,year ago formed a .joint stock comp my of. $lOO,OOO capital; *9,0,-000 . 'of thn Capital • has been taken, and payments anwiLating to thirty-live per cent. -have been• made.' The company have contracted for the grapeS on 150 acres, the must' of which ficist the equivalent to a standard of 85 degrees. The company owns - a wine-cellar with a sto rage capacity of about 800,000 gallons. There are now Some 12,000 gallons of wine on hand -in it, and they intend to fill it with ,the Vin tage of this year. The company has em ployed a very intelligent' German from near the Rhine, who from 'youth was brought up to wine-making.. FO as ,employed last 'year, and his Manufacture 'of the vintage of 181;6 gives Nay nattering promise of being the best wine ever made in. Ohio; it certiinly is very, .fat ,superior, to that made in former years. To ; ine, it is Very evident that much of grape-eultiire and wine-making is yet to be learned, before Ohib Will produce it wine in every respect equal to that made .by that toil some, patient and somewhat stolid tribe of the , Teutonic race—the Swabians on .the -Rhine . . , . .. "Aside from the company's cellar, there are eight other-cellars on the island whose aggre7 gate capacity does not exceed that of the com pany's alone. The company have made pre parations and arrangements to manufacture a first-class article of Catawba 'Brandy.' -Wine and vine-growing must be fully as remunera tive as 'petroleum' stock. When I first visited the island in 1853, there were several-men employed as laborers, working for $l9 to $1 F, per month; with the savings of these limited earnings they purchased several acres of land, -planted—them—in—grapes,—and—to-day--have not only comfortable, but really elegant homes, are free of debt, and have an annual income of ft:gm $3,000 `to $5,000. About that period, of time a German lauded on the island, with $OOO in cash—his entire worldly-fortune. - :, lie paid' .$lOO of it for a few acres; planted them in grapes; „and I am told that he now is worth over $50,000, all made out of his few acres of grapes, by in dotnitable perseverance, unCring industry and unyielding energy. Is not t 's.-an ex,ample well worthy of imitation? I..lleys' Island and the lake shore are not the Only' laCeSwhore a sure reward awaits earnest-and mitient in dustry. lam willing to admit tin t the lake itself is of considerable ach'-antk in muff tying the meteorological influence. for grape groting; but there are many othe • points in Ohio where grape-growing can be lade just as profitable as here. "The success which seeme to hover around every one who engaged eat tly in vine-culture or wine-making protuA, as may well be imagined, quit' a mania for vineyards. Put-in-Bay Island is being ra pidly converted into a large vineyard; North Bass Island is rapidly filling with the vine; the Peninsula has many acres,. and round, about Sandusky possibly one o 6 usand acres are in grapes. I do not approve of 'guess ing,' but could gain no definite statistics; and can only say in support of the 'thousand acre' guess, that on the road from Sandusky city to Venice there is literally almost a con tinuous vineyard for a drstumcc of rigout "five miles, and the entire suburbs of Sandusky city are simply a vast vineyard—here fifty acres, there ten, there twenty, - over there fifty-four, here six, there twenty-five, &c; ' "At - no period since grape-gr wing was commenced has there been pro Ilse- of so bountiful a_ yield - of grapes .as the present season gives. Those best situated .. i for the manufacture of wine are of opinion that not -more than half of the crop, shOuld the present promising condition be fully - realized at the 'gathering' or - harvest; can: possibly be made into wine; the grapes on Kelley's Island alone - 1 will make 240,000 gallons. - Official Report of Itte Capture of Vera __`r Cruz. 4 Commander Roe, of- the United States steamer . Tacony, under date of June 27, has sent to the Navy Department a detailed report of the sur render of Vera Crux to the Liberal forces. It Contains some points of interest not heretofore published. He says: On the 22d, the news ar rived of the fall of Mexico. On the 211 d, I re ceived through our Consul, the news that Maxi milian. with the chief generals of his army, had been shut by sentence of court-martial. During the day of the 22d there"was a great excitement in Vera Crux. A council of all the iofficers of Vera Cruz was held, and resolutions were adopted, declaring that-the city should not be surrendered .to the Liberals, unless a heavy sum of money should first be given to each man. Bureau, the Imperial Commissary, and one of the generals opposed this, and resolved that the should be made. General Curves, an adherent-of Same Anna,and leader of the foreign troops, was arrested by order of Bure in. The French Consul promised to keep the foreign • troops in subjection, and the United States Consul - was again requested to visit the headquarters of General Beuavides to stipulate for a surrender. He accordingly came to the Tacony, accompanied by a deputy frimn Vera Cruz, and I sent theme ashore abreast the Liberal camp, `They succeeded in their efforts, and though - orders had been given from Porfirio Diaz to General Benavides to give no Mrms or condi tions to Vera Cruz, Bcnavides still adhered to the plornise previously made, through a spirit of humanity and to avoid bloodshed. On the 2lth I received a letter from( or Cousur, as follows: "Vote CR iv., June 24.—hear Sir:— . -At the request of Don Domingo Bureau, I beg of you to come up with your ship Miniediately into the harbor. The difficult• is with the forMgn troops. Lurch sends out a flag of truce at 11.30 A:M. As.thls is a secret I dare not ask' for a pilot. Yours: - truly, E. I. SAri.NrEn." On the afternoon of that day I . got underway, accompanied by the English sloop-of-war Jason, and moved up. I moved to a buoy between the Cantle and Fort Conception of Vera Crtm. • On the night of the .'sth, Bureau deserted from the city in secret and.. it is raid, embarked on the Austrian corvette Elizabeth, bonnd to Vow Orleans. On the Ceneral Perez Gomez, Commander of Sao Juan d'Ulloa, became the Commander-in- Chief, throUgh the d*. ertion 01 Bureau. At fl P. AL, of that day he visited the Britjsh Consulate, and in presence of :di the foreign consuls, that, of Spain excepted, together with that of. Captain Aynsley, ihe French Captain and myself, Ml . cred up the,town and its defenceS to these representa tives. Ile offered me the Castle of tiau Juan, but, I had uo force to occupy it, and left the whole matter with the Consul. In the meantime Captain Arilsley and myself sent word for the Tabasco to &sum), which was promptly done, as also the schooner, her consort. The merchants subscribed money to pay the dues of the 'Foreign Legion, and the TaliaSco was ordered' ready by her owner to carry them away. The English and United States Consuls.-during the afternoon of the same day, rode out to the invt sting camp to offer up the city. During the night of the '..sth guns were mounted on San Juan d'Ulloa, and pointed at the Jason and Tacohy. . We sprung our broadside on the eastle; and sent word to all the forts that Wit shot was fired at our ship it would be returned by both. I was pleased to get free front my moor ings at an early hour, as the infected air coining to us front the Castle was extremely dangerous. The object for which moved there no longer existing,. and the castle being offered to me by GiMend Gomez, I hauled out a thotmutd yards distant to tle northward, during the '26th. The_Cousclar visit tp Benavides resulted in the arranputent that the Foreign Legion . stentiti at -once-embarkruntl- the-to Vr ft -be-handed over-to-the civil authorities, who would immediately open -the-gates and-the-Liberal-foreetewould enter: - -On the morning of the 27th, at. about 9 A. M., the Foreign Legion began to"embusk on the Tabasco. No Itegs were hoisted on the forts or castle. At -noon the Legion wits all embarked on the Tabas co, and she moved out temporarily under the ottetion of the Jason and Tacony, by order of the Consular government, to get water, which Was upplicd to her by the Jason. , At 3 I'. M. the Consular government turned over the city 313(1 forts 10 the civil authorities o THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PRILADELPHIA, 'WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1867 Vera Crnz, which opened the gates to the Liberal orees, and these forces entered Vera Cruz about b P. 1.1., and occupied the city, aid dcfOncce of this place without bloodshed-or riot.' Thus I havolhe honor to report, that Mexico, entire, is nOwrunder the goVernment of President Juarez. There is a place left under the Int- cONCIAISION OF I(IS6TERDAY'S PROCKEDIMIS. I Dr. Lewis J. A. McMillan - recalled, and ex amind by Mr. Pierrepout_l have had a quarrel with the Rev. Mr. Boucher; tu the summer 0f186 , 1 we had a general election, and Mr. houcherAdvo cated the claim of one of the candidates and I the other; during the election I met Mr. Boucher twice; on one occasion of my meeting him at West Sheffard,-beingin .Mr. Boucher's house, I went out and dispersed a crowd in front of a church, and from that day I did not see Bouchsr for weel:S; 'Mr: Boucher owed Me money, and 'l, wrote to him about it 'and he never answered; lioncher then came down to my office, and in the presence of Dr. Erskine, who was my partner, he asked me what Iliaclwritten such letters to him for, and I replied that he owed me money. and .1 wanted it; -on a 'certain day . 1 was riding past Father Boucher's house and I was-called in and was . ushered into the parlor; Father. Boucher asked me what I meant by sending him Such A man as I sent him the day before; - I had sent a bailiff, and I told him I had served him right; he called me a blackguard -and a scoundrel, and I said he was a gentleman; I was then about to leave, and Mr. Boucher slammed the door, and I:turned and slapped him in the face; I never had a word of conversation with Mr. Boucher about an abortion; no such conver sation occurred, as that:detailed by Mr. Boticher, and I pronounce, what he' says - to be utterly false. By Mr. Bradley—When I passed Boucher's house in the carriage, I think a Mr. KeMp was with me; I did suggest to Mr. Pierrepont to ask if Dr. Erskine was with me; Mr. Boucher owed me ten dollars. ' the money was collected by a -bailiff—named—_Martin,_antl—lianded—to—me;_. I— never gave a receipt; Martin gave the receipt; Martin paid me° the money in September, 1864. (Paper exhibited.) I recognize that as my signature. (The paper was read. It is dated • June 20th, 1864, and is a receipt to Mr. Boucher for five dollars in full for- all. demands.) That was not the only bill; that bill was for attendance upon 'Mr. Boucher himself,- • and 1 after 7 wards visited his sister professiohally; the bill against the sister was contracted in the spring -of 1864; I believe spring lasts until the 21st of June; my nannury is distinct about the account against Mr. Boucher's sister; Mr. Boucher's sister was living with him in the summer of 18h-I and in 1863; 1 rendered lhe bill for tho Slater's attendance three or four.months after it was contracted; had IlVe quarrel.. , with Mr. Boucher about August; I visited Mr. Boucher's sister in the summer, or late in the -prim; of 1801; when I said the money had been due a' year oefore the quarrel, I lied forgotten about sthe receipt; the receipt -refreshed my memory: never had but one quarrel with Mr. Boucher; the election in 1,01 was held in August; it may- have been held in June, but Ido nut think so; I don't remember whether returns of the election were to be wade: 1 took an active part in the election. but can't re member in what month it oceurrred; the quarrel occurred live or six weeks after 'the election; I was not one of Mr. Boucher's parishioners; I am a Catholic, hut I did not attend Father Boucher's, church; I attended the Episcopal Church; 1 left Sheffard shortly after the quarrel referred to, and went to sea; the; township of Sheffard was di vided into two parishes; Waterloo was not in that parish tlam; at the time of . the quarrel Mr. Boucher invittd me into his parlor, and not a word was said about the subscription; he'' , ..tonly asked me about the bailiff; my Memory is die tinet-about-that; I remember-shippingshim-ht-the 'face; lie was about ~to close the door wheu I . slapped; I say that nothing about abortion was said at that quarrel, and I never - had a conversa tion with Boucher on the subject of abortion; I have associated with both the English and French inhabitants of Sheffa rd. Dr. John Erskine sworn, and examined by Mr. Pierrepont—Am a pi . :gilati of Wa&erloo; C. E.; I know Dr. MAilla Lknew his character. intimately fortfah and veracity; his character was perfectly-good; his reputation as a luau of truth.and'Yeracity was never questioned. By Mr. Bradley—l never. heard any one say any . diing - abmit his character frit . trial' and vera city; I never heard his character questioned for truth and veracity. By Mr. Pierrepont—l never had conversation With Boucher in regard to the church subscrip tion. Mr. Ernest Racicot sworn and examined by Mr. Pierrepont—Reside at SweedsburAcTanada East, and am an advocate at the bar therei am acquainted with Dr. McMillan; have knOwn him fifteen years; his character for truth and veracity is good; I have never heard it questioned; I re side with him in the same district; I resided in the county of. Missisquoi, and he in She tfard. By Mr. Bradley—l reside nineteen miles from Waterloo, where McMillan resided;`l was at Wwo terloo at every term of. the court, and at other times; Dr. MeMilian remained at Waterloo till he went to sea in the fall of 1864 have met Dr. Mc- Millan very frequently; have heard persons speak of Dr. McMillan; I never heard 'anything' said about his truth or veracity; have heard persons say he was a good doctor, but never heard his truth questioned. . Mr. Levi A. Perkins sworn, and examined by Mr. Plerrepont—Resided in township of - Putter, C. E.,; and am clerk of the Commissioners' Courtand Court of Justice; lived is the village with Dr. Mc- Millan from fall of 18C0 until spring of 1s02; I knew MeMillan's reputation, and have always heard him well spoken of. By My. Bradley—l live twenty-eight miles from Waterloo; visited Waterloo several times, and saw Dr: :McMillan; during the time McMillan resided at Watelioo I heard many kind expressions of McMillan; never heard Rcbets, the hotel-keeper-, speak of McMillan. Mr. Joseph N. Guppy sworn, and examined by Mr. Pierrepont—ln 1665 was assistant superin tendent of the Erie (New Yolk) Railway; on the morning of April 11th, 1845, the first passenger train lett Oswego for Elmira at 1.35, and it reached Elmira at 0.12; it reacled,Elniira, on time; the train before the above left at 0,15 P. M. of the 12th; it reached Elmira at 11.20 P. M. • By Mr. Bradley—On April 13th, 1804, there were several trains from Binghatupton to Os wego; on April 13th the first train from Bing ham pion. arrived at Oswego at 1.10 X. M.; Can't say when that train HI Albany. .13y Mr. Merrick—Trains .were running from Nei, York on that day, and passed through Os wego; the-first afternoon train left New York at 5 P.M., and arrived at Oswego at 1.33 next mlirn ing; it is an hour and forty minutes from Oswego to 'Elmira. By Mr. Bradley—On April 11th the first train left Ilmira at 12.:15 A. M., and arrived at Oswego at two o'clock; the- next left Elmira at 1.35, and arrived at Oswego at three o'clock. Wit ness then described the time of arrival and de parture of trains at and from Elmira and OsWego. Ainfiron Field sworn, and examined by Mr. Pierrepont—Beside at Elmira, N. Y.: ,have lived there two years since May Ist; in April, 186.5 I was at Elmira, negotiating for the purchase of ite furniture Of the Brainerd Clouse, and - I purehas t 1 it on April 14th; there was no room there that we Called a reading room; the front of the office ha a room with settees, and it has a telegraph office; Uteri) were papers lying on the settees, and', in the reur there was a wash room and a . cpat \ rerun. By Mr. Merrick—The settees are on both sides of the room as persons come in; always the usual places where casual passers come in. The Sturratt Trial. 'By Mr. Bradley—l do not know what became of the Brainerd house register of that date; there were several persons came and inquired about the register: I have searched for the register, and could not find it; there were settees and a long table in the room called a reading room; persons coming in to wait for the omnibus would sit in that room. Charles H. Blinn, recalled and examined by Mr.Pierrepont—it was on Monday night, April. 17, 1865 that I piked up n• pocket handkerchief. Mr. T. Ilollabau called hi).. Witness said that is not the roan who laid down and dropped the handkerchief; I cannot see the slightest ro semblance between Mr. Hollatan and the man who - dropped the - handkerchief: I gave handkerchief to be washed two days - after I found it at the depot;.l then kept it in my possession until it was given up to the detective, on April 25th; do not know the name of the 'detective whci took the handkerchief; it was ode of Captain Gleason's detectives, and not one of Colonel Baker's detectives; my uncle was sick at the time, and he died afterwards; don't remember that'the handkerchief was washed after my uncle died; I know itwas on tha night of the 17th t found the handkerchief, because it was the first night of the emu that the builte ran on the Lite; •can't remember the name of 'the detective who took the handkerchief; at that time I was living in Burlington; the detective's name was Chapin; I knew the name, but it had slipped' my memory for the moment; my post-office address was at Winewski Falls; I live on the Burlington side of the'riVer; was then - living at :Burling ton, on the Winowski Falls rood;' I know. that I delivered the handkerchief on the 25th, because I noted' the time in my diary; I knOw the' handlter-: chief was found when I stated, because c the boats then ran, and I understand it was published In the Burlington Times; I have a. letter from the editor stating that it was published in the Bur lington Tim's: I was at the depot on the morn ing of April 20th ; can't remember the dati of my uncle's death; my attention, has not been called to it. , By a Juror—l wrote a letter to the editor of the. Burlington Times, asking him if he published about the finding of the handkerchief, and the date thereof; that was since my examination here; the answer refreshed my memory. . By the. Couit--I wrote the letter for my own gratification: my object in writing was to see if the editor concurred'with me. By Mr. Merrick—HaYe no recollection dl telling Mr. Chapin that I found two handkerchiefs; don't remember saying I found two handkerchiefs; don't remember saying my 4 unele died Tuesday evening; 'am positivele did not die the night I found thetandkerchiefs; My residence was out side of the city limits, but in the town of Bur lington. At one o'clock the Court took a recess for thirty'minutes. Upon reassembling C. T. Hobart was recalled and examined by Mr. Pierrepont. Witness said—After I was sworn, before and, after I testified, I saw Mr. Hollahan in Mr. Brad ley's office; I have no recollection of seeing; Mr. Hollahan except in Mr. Bradley's office; Ilona ]tan is not the man who wanted to pass on my train without paying, and he looks nothing like the man. Mr. Bradley said he desired now to . nak a ques tion personal to himself. It had been stated is the publie prints that he (Mr. Bradley) had of fered :11) - IliiNirtit bribe, and7lttl6 - iired Jlr. 1I to explain the matter. Mr, Hobart said no such offer was , ever made to him, and the publication was utterly false and was, made without his knowledge or ounsent. All that Mr. Bradley had said was that the witness fees would la4pnid by the defehee out.. of some money that had been contributed for that pm pone. No one connected with the defence ever made a'proposition to pay any money for any testimony. Lewis J. Wciehman recalled. and examined by Mr. PierrePont-1 know ,John T:Hullohan; I was - with Lim at Burlington on the evening of April 19th, 1865:‘ on the !Miming of the 20th Ifollohan; Bigley, McDevitt and myself went to the depot, and we took The cars on the traek;' Ifoltolluu did not lie d• nin the depot: my infpression is ire took the cars on a side track; Ilolloban did not iu Canada t.. 11 me that he li.ft the handkerchief under Ilk piliow [ - the hotel in Burlington. No cross-c x amina tio . • Joseph Wells, Jas. T. Crawford, Jaine. 3 T. Mc- Cullough, John Torhert. Joseph L. Mahon, John V. Reardon and Frank Titus, residents of ton, Md., testified to the had reputation of Ste phen F. Cameron for truth ui veracity: Michael McNamara, John 11, Clark, John Campbell, John E. Imwe, John W. Kelley, Wilson. Robert F. Martin, Daniel Garner, Bell, hen S. Ives, John L. Kelley, Edmund Roekett, A. M. Lloyd, John Ogden and Eugene. Iv ,wer testi fied to the good ebaraeter of John T. Tippett. • The court then adjourned for the day. Impartial Suffrage in New Jersey. A convention of the Republican party of the State of New Jersey was held yesterday in Tay- Trenton,to consider the question of so amending the constitution as to aduill right of suffrage to all men, without distinction of race or color. There were representatives from all parts of the State present. Courtland Parker, of 'Newark; was clMseb President. following address to the I:LTlole:ins of New iters4 was read. Fellow-cifizeue: The work of a political party; founded upon the principles of justice and free, dom to all, can never be ended. As reforms arc accomplished, - new labors present themselves: Sc' long as wrongs and imperfeetions continue r exist, so long will it be necessary that right minded men .should unitc'to alleViate or rein them. Whthi the Republican party was first formally organized, it reaffirmed, with pointed emphasis, its purpose to bring the tlovernment of the United States back to the principles of the Declaration of. Independence.' Opposed to these principles it found the vast power Of the slave oligarchy, not alone defending existing wrongs, but endeavoring to extend them over territory as yet unsullied, auf.! Which, by the very terms of the Constitution and of the early legislation of the Republic, was dedicated to freedom. , Against this extension of human bondage our party. then hardly recognized as a political bower, de clared irreconcilable war. The first formal plat form, established at Philadelphia in June, 18:dir radical and revolutionary as it was called, was a rceflirmation of the gospel of the fatties, the fundamental principles of the Republic. It declared the inherent equality of all Dien, de nounced slavery as a relic of barbarism, and set up the standard of absolute right.as tlic•govern ing principle of its action. In this SCIISO it was not radical but conservative. It sought not to establish new theories; but to Melee the comitry to revert to those which presided over the birth of Amcf lean nationality. , Thus pledged, in a troubled and gloomy hou r it began its work. What has it accomplished,l,',. Never hastily accepting an issue which " - Ls.--rcbt the dUty of the moment, it has taken up ;3110CC6- 8h: reforms hi the order of their prece,lence, wisely postponing much that was good but un attainable, until, one by one, a series of gigantic evils have fallen before its irresistible pro gress. Kansas, then the battle-field of prinei ple, was saved to freedom, Rapidly organizing its forces, and. led by a gracious Providence, in IbUb it elected Abralnun Lincoln to the Presidency, and with a calm courage In stalled him against every threat and at every peril. The war of the rebellion broke out. The Southern. States were practically a unit; the North was divided; and the Democratic party openly promised . to throw itself across the path of any army that should march to coerce the seced ing States. But the American people were true to themselves in this crisis, and the real 'lmo cracy of the country were found, in the hour or trial, under the haulier of the Republican party, firm in the cause of their Country. From that hour to the present the , courage of the ReiMblicau party has never falturcd. In its most desperate emergencies it has only drawn closer to the faith oi its founders; and in its darkelt period, when under false and incompe tent generalship our Ethnics had been driven back upon the national Capital, Abraham Lincoln fi,il eninly promised God that he would proclaim the emu hcipation of the slave.- The Wieling and the prayer were answered at Antietam, and the pro clamation was issued. From that auspicious day success attended our arms; new and greater gen erals assumed vommand; the era of McClelhin and Porter passed away, and that of ,Grant and Sherman and Sheridan came in. The eatalawle of our triumphs is unrivalled in the records of political parties: Within seven 3 -ars - we have twice elected to the 'Presidency the neblestinan of Modern timeli: We have :UM cessfully resisted and subdued ar,gigantie rebel ion. We have stricken off the shackles from lour millions of bondsmen. We have added new l stre to the glory of American arms. We hays: restored the Union. We have protected. the 'learnt:ft from the malice of defeated re els. All over the South we have substituted the sehdolhouse and the clitirch of God for the emblems of barbarism and slavery. . We • have painfully endured - the assassination of our great leader. We have defeat(xl the treason to our principles of his weak and unprincipled successor. And in spite of hiS vetbeg, we have maintained the beneficent work of the\ Freedmen's Bureau; have enacted and-tin forced 'tIN bill of civil rights; have given impar tial manhood suffrage to ten rebel States and the bistrictof Columbia, and have placed the work of - reeonstruetien --where-'nekthef- , the-machins . tions of a false President nor , the special plead ings of his subservient advisers can longer delay the triumph of our ,cause, confided, as it is, to fire men who, having fought our battles, are now 'proving themselves as gre4in-p's they were heroic fp war. . What then is our duly? It is this: We must not stop until we,have reached the full measure of our race, and ave embodied the Declaration of Independence, in all its matchless pnrity_and un selfish - fidelity to truth, in the body ot the Consti tution of the United 'States. , We nut9t bee to it that while we can get the Smith to grant suffrage to the negro, we do not ourselves refuse into tliPseWhoirve among us. We must Call WOW. aid the viAes of the colored race, not only as. a reward for their courage and fidelitymn the bat tle-fields of the war, but as a corollary to our own creed, to. the Declaration and to the broad and comprehensive philosophy of the' platform of Consistency demands that; haVing ae cepted the'truth that all men are created equal, and endowed by nature with certain inalienable rights, we should accept the negro as coming within the definition of manhood, and, having conceded to hinrall his personal rights and all the benefits of our civilization, leave him ' then, to battle in his own behalf, and stand or fall in the struggle of life, as all must upon his Indi vidual melt, his industry, his intelligence, and his fidelity to the truth. An unfortunate concession to slavish preju dice, in 1844, marred' the otherwise symmetrical constitution of the State of New Jersey, by the insertion of the word " white " :is a qualification to suffrage. We demand that that word shalt be stricken out. We demand that all men shall be equal before Die law. Arid, seeking to obtaimthat righteons end by means the most direct and speedy, we deem it at once politic. and just to call upon Congress to discharge its duty, and either by the enactment of a law defining,' the qualification of -voters. or by the other course of proposing an amendment to the Federal Con stitution, to the effect that no man shall, in any State, be deprived of suffrage by reakon of race or color, to finally settle this question. We esteem this hitter course to be -Mir - safest and surest. Such an amendment, proposed at the next session of Congress, might become a part of the organic law in time for the election . of 1888, and so scenre to our cause the electoral vote of Maryland, Delaware and Kentucky, otherwise liable to he. lost. By no other plan can we so speedily and certainly accomplish our just and patriotic purpose. And while we urge this duty upon our Senators and Representatives in Congress, we declare our fixed determination to act for ourselves, and, in default of Congres sional relief, to appeal directly to the people of New out-the-word "white 7 ? - from the Constitution of the State, and so give to us a truly republican form of government. The time is auspicious.. The Republicans of New Jersey have uo need to stand in the atti tilde of apology. We comic before the people with Clean hands. GA-pure and able State Execirtive; whose name is the synonym et charity - and honor; - Senators abd itepreseetatives in Congress vim have rapidly won high place, and restored the early dignities of the State ih the councils of the nation, and a legislature ever true to the principles of freedern, these and the glorious record we have heretofore recited. arc our elahns upon the confidence of the people. We appeal• with sanguine anticipation to their sympathy and co-operatiOn in the noble task of wiping out • the only relic of the old barbarism in our CCM- Stitnliion and making it altogether in harmony with the vital doctrine of the Deckrtti , in of lii r. deperuknee and the soul of the Constitution of the United States. The witill'!,3 War; unaniurionlyatlopt , (l. as IT , re the following ' • Pr - .•oicr - -(1, That the equality of all nicn before the law. Withollt, al,tilletiOn of race or color,-is re cognized by the early doctrines of the Republic, thePeclaration of independence, the Constitu tion, the ordinance of 17K, and the political writings of Washington, JefferSon, and others of the founders: and was sanctioned by the C.Mstitu tion of New Jersey, formed by the true men of the revolution; that,iinder the plausibly apparent necessity of tolerating slavery by a State rignt, we have grievously departed from that standard; and that the insertion' of Me wor,', -white, - in the Constitution or 11 I, was a violation of the true principles of Reoublie:in Government. R,.,,,/ced, Thai, pledgint; . ourselves-to the' eradi --craion-of-the-wrn-d-white front tire -Constitution of New .Jersey by evsry legal and honorable means, we alsol call upon . Congress to take meas.. urea to indueelor compel all the States of the- Fnion to establish a just.and uniform rule of suf frage, excluding all distinctions of'` class, race or eolor, so that the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges nod imunnuties of citi zens in the several States: and the United States Shall redeem Its original promise, "to guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government." es,,/•.d, That •this doctrine of the absolute equality - of - rill - men, - before the law, of which partial suffrage is a necessary corollary, is in strict accordance with that sublime declaration of the Fathers of the Republic, that "all men are created equlll," which was and is the corner-stuue of all our democratic institutions. ' TIAi by our action this day we in tend 'heartily to endorse the votes of , our Sena tors and Representatives In Con4ress in .avor of securing impartial suffrage to :ill the people of the Stat , !s lately in rebellion, and to repudiate the charge that we are willing to impose upon others a fundamental principle of g - overnment which we ;Iry not prepared to accept for our selves. 11, , ,N01 , .. (I, 'That the Republican party of New Jersey, encouraged by past triumphs: and proud of the high record of its Executive, its Legisla ture,and its 4 S..nators and Reprceutatives hi Con gress, chemifnfly aceepts the issue of iniP:irtial suffrage as one of the most important ~ nesti,!ls to he adjusted in the approlching campaign, confident that will be sustained by the calm judgment and patriotic sen;iWent of the people of this State, and :he gracious approvtil of Al mighty God. Pcso/red, That this convention approves the course of the loyal majority in Comrress ill stead fastly resisting the ;,ttenipts of tau) President to mthrlittite Ins will for the authority of Gingress in reconstructing . the States lately it; reh-llion, and that wu adjure them ;1. , ,1they).11 e lili; . :Tty and the tkifety of the nation to p4ol'.ivere in that re sit anue to the cud. During thu proceeditn.ts speecht.s Were made lry Don. F. T. FrelioghuAcn, of New Jersey: Hon. Henry Wilson, of nassachusettF.; Senators Nye; of Nevada. and Cat tid!, of New .Jersey, :tint ex- Governor frawley, of Connecticut.' • The Convention adjourned .sine. dk. 9YELEGICA.PII,it; MINIMA/CV. • effective force Of United States troops in Texas is :3,165 nwn. Tin: Great Daimios of Japan oppose the open ing of the port of 0811C3 to loreigner6. Cncx•r liNlll.llOl'S official orffan denies the troth of the stories; , )1 a probable war. Gym n.ti. FAHHEI„ arrested in London on the Isth, for being a Fenlau,,,ts undergOing exautina tiou in Dublin. 'nu: crop prospects in Arkansas are very en couraging. A large amount of corn has been planted. THE reports of the grain crops in,North Caro lina are more encouraging. Those concerning cotton are not favorable. CliAL111:110E with Indhmola, Texas, has been suspended, on account of the yellow fever, which has assumed an epidemic form at that port. Tin; French Government has prohibited the placing of any portion of the Russian Railroad loan on the Paris market. THE boards of registration have been appointed in North Carolina, but, the tiniu for- registering has not yet burin 4ed. DIE planters in the vicinity of Augusta, Ga., have been ordered to inform theiremploycis of the presence of the registratioteboard, that they may be registtred. Am. political and governmental distinctions between Poland and Russia have been obliterated IT Imperial ukase, and Poland IS now one of the provinces of the ltussiamlimpire. A SAVANNAH despatch' reports the cotton crop somewhat dam aged. by recent heavy rains. The prospects for fora two-thirds crop are favorable. The rice crop is reported badly damaged. THE cholera is decreashig, at .Ateniphis. The cliscaec is prevailin4 on the plantations in the VI einity of Pine Bleat, Desare and Helena, Arkan- THE Austrian frigate Novara has sailed from Trieste for Vera Cruz with orders to take back from Mexico the remains of the Archduke milian: el AUGUST US IL ROUE WELT, dr% Newark, N.J., was found dead,upon theildcAfk,_corncr of Fourth and Pine streets, St. Louis, yesterday inoruing. It is thought he fell from the window of his room: • THE Louisiana levee - convention yesterday ap pointed a committee of three to call on General Sheridan, to eee what could he done to repair the levees, and adjourned sinE. die.• . Rio; W, .AATT•iiinvs, agent of the United States EXpre;:s Company .at Weston, Mo:, absconded last week, with $B,OOO to $.10,006 belonging othe company. Its was a member of, the firin of Slatchews tvCo., grocers, - whei Ellalie 'an - assign= -- meat aboji a month since. • Tim cholera is * raging .badly at Forts•Hitrlier and Hays. Fifty new eases were reported at. Fort Mirher on - liaturday. and F,l.Vo?riteen deaths: There were seven case:; in one family at Salina,. Kansas, three of which plowed fatal. TIM: SULTAN left England yesterday on his return to Constantinople. He will pass through. Germa y and stop at Vienna for one week where, 1,,s formerly announced, he will be the ( ' the Emperor of Austria. vMsui... , Amer, one of the Japanese students at ly is. College, in Aiassachusetts,conimitted sui— cide, by hanging, on t Sunday evening. Mental depression, amounting almost to insanity, was the cause of the act. • BliowNsvlLLE, Texas, advices report that E - cobedo has been appointed commander of the :Mexican army, and that Juarez has announced himself a' candidate for ret;leetion to the Presi— deney. GREAT preparations , iire being made at Vienna for the reception of the Sultan. If all the plans , are carried out the ceremonies and festivities during the Sultan's stay will .excel in grandeur. and magnificence anything he has met with la , France or England. • IN the House of Lords, last night, a motion w made on the part of the Government for a second reading of the Peforin hill. Earl Derby made a powerful argument -in in .. ,- favor of the measure. Earl Grey and others folloWed in op position. ADMIRAL FARRAGUT arrived in Paris last evening, and receive on all sides 41P most dis— tnignis.hed attention. The United States minister, General Dlx, gave a fere in .honor of the. admiral. A large number of American ladies and gentlemen were present to meet him, and gave him a most cordial and gratifying welcome. Committee on the Assassination of .Presl:- . dent Lincoln invite all persons having evidence or knowledge of any facts, papers or documents, tending to throw light upon the subject, to com municate with the Chairman, General Butler, with the assurance that such evidence will not be made use of against the person or persons fur• - nishing it upon any trial • GEN E AL it I F fR, 7- Freedincn`stitteau Com misttioner in TeXtlB,•reports that at Gonzales, St:- guin, Liberty, and other places, donations of land on which to erect school houses, have bean matte by white citizens. The physical condition of the freedmen in that State Is, doubtless., far better han in any other Southern State. Each county has been able to support its own poor, and it has been unnecessary to call for any supplie4 for the- - destitute, as provided for by the molutioa adopted by Congress, and approved March Iftl, CITY BULLETIN. . , . BANIt F - Fri f:—Petitions ot the iolleoirintr; per nns lor the betetlt of the l,tt hilukriiiit 1 w h been filed in the United Stalks Court for the E i i6, tern Dii,trlet of Pinsylvania : I'hilad.l l , l,ig----Tbornw , D. Welder, TTenr . .....v Eint:rEon M. Mast( r, George 174:- naml Smith, .John \V. Cullen, George \V. \Var ner, Hobert !thaw, Henry L. Fte , ter; Adam "Ti)- ily. 'A . m. Henry Darliwzton. John Guvley; Lay Norton and Wilt , .on Stearley, trailing :tt*. Nort , M & Stearley; Roger Davis, Marmaduktu. Waff , on; Charlek , Ad:MI:3101d Charles tradim4 as Charles Adam, ,t; Son; Aaron Aron heimer. Jo-eph Geadim4, Harriiion Bloom, Wm. J. - .1,11k111, , . John A. Ilardin4, George 0: Alien, licnry WeMstoch, Ebenezer Burt, - J. MOrton Gale. Ellen L. Duron..le;i,e Y. "Teenier, E.aiaii Aldrich. Perry C,,,dy---Jeinftm Four2r. .1 If, t,--Josevh. Barker.. Win. F. Stucker W. 4 'Aestes,,--AN tn. S. :Slulany. F. Davii. Norr, , tmt-P-----Joe. H. It(Alev. (/u .14 r- P. illiam Frick. Clarence G. Frick and John M. Wilson.-Ltradini.4,-;p4—William-Frick-&—*A— rambrrion,/—Stimuel C. Brown—Petition of. Bomberger; Cunningham, &% Co., that Sairmel C. Brown be declared a bankrupt. ading—(;eorge n, Abraham Arnold. J.,boarm Joseph H. Bryhtball Petition of Josiah and coat said Joseph H. Bryhtball be declared a bankrurt: AIrI".74ITED NIr1:1,1: , . AND SI:I( If Henry Forrest was arrested yesterday upon the oath of his wife and was taken before Alderman Hibbeed. Mrs. ForreSt has had her husband ar rested several times 'for abuse and tlAats, but. upon his promising . to do better and not molest her he has been released from prison, Afew days ago he went to her boarding-house, at .Franklin and Vine streets, and used very violent language to her. She then had st other. warrant issued for his arrest. While in the magistrate's office yes— terday Forrest again pleaded to be let off, but 1116 wife replied that she had frequently forgiven him without . avail, and the law must now take its course. Forrest suddenly pulled a razor from his pocket and made a lunge at his wife's throat,. but she. seeing the.mntion. got out let' the wt.•-- Before anv one could seize him or take the razor from his liand. he drew it across his throat,inflict ing a long gash, exteoding from near the wind pipe to the ear. The•blood flowed freely, i - ‘nd a few'moments Forrest'beenne very weak. physician in the neighborhood was soon 'tat ;the .place and dressed tlke wound in ,; .. - tich a manner as to permit removal to the l'enrAylvaniti Hospital. .Though the wound is very severe, it is Loh - , thought to be a mortal one. A 13urrxt; Soc.—Francis Dutfv was before Re corder Encu yesterday and was held iu if'',.o) bail to answer the charge of assault and battery with intent to kill. ' (ln Monday night he went home intoxicated, beat' his mother, a woman of 65 years, broke threil looking-glasses.' knocked, down his sister and kicked her. injuring her eon sidei-ably. Ile then went to bed.,_Yesterday morning when he got up he resumed his attiwk upon Ills mother, beating her until her pody and face were discolored With bruises. Mrs. Dobbins, au aged lady, an inmate of the same house, testi tied that she believed that Francis would havO killed his mother N she had' not interfered and persuaded him to desist. . l'Ut .117 Pl, KO icK,EI.4.--Louisa Jordan, alias Elizabeth Thompson, Martha Welsch and. Emma Snyder, had a hearing before Maydr Mc :Michael yesterday, 'charged with being prof.? - sional pickpockets. They were arrested in the morning, at Eighth and Filbert streets, by Detec tives Brown-and Stevens., Louisa and Martha were committed under the ninety-day . act, anti Emma was held in bail to keep the pease, her antecedents being unknown to the detectives, while the others are notorious..- Tilt: Won K COMMExcEit.—The old Peen Man— sion, at Second and Gothic streets, is rapidly dis— appearing. The work of demolishing the struc, ture to make way for the handsome building. for the Commercial Exchange of Philadelphia was commenced yesterday, and is being carried on vigorously. ,Seniors Ai ' lin:yr.—Last evening - Mr. F. e. Jacoby, residing at No. 4a York avenue, was thrown from his carriage at Twenty-fourth and. ,tiring! Carden streets, and seriouslyanjured. The horr:e whichhe was driving took fright at a loco motive, gave a sudden bound, overturned the ve hicle, throwing Mr. Jacoby out iutollie street. FATAL REsuLT.—Edward 3ileShay, who was badly injured by the explosion of a still in War nock Street ? below Jefferson; on Moudiv night,. died last night at the St. Joseph's Hospital. ElN'i"ro N.IIIIi3IEN.-I was somewhat reminde'. of Rio Janro by a cireurnstance which hap pened at Nii, peed the of r day. hi strolling about I met a Spaniard drivi , along three she-goats, weariaz bells, and all he.ewily laden with the laCteal !Midi ; feeling quite thirk I hailed hint, when he knelt down - and soon milked me a pint, which I envel- Oped immediately, paving hint tuppence (four cents) for the drink. having seed cow's milk de livered to customers in the same way in Brazil, the circumstance was no novelty, and had always• appeared to me a certain mode of, preventing , adulteration or dilution; my eyes were' soon opened, however, to the impolvibility of regu lating the mysterious operations of ;milkmen.. On hai s lin t „ , the same fellow at a later hour, I ap • preached - delis-enough to detect the existence of a third of a pint of- water In the measure into• which he was about milking me the • pure milk,. -and-of-course- dtelined---to-purehase.—Gibraltar•- Correqietulent Dlt?,burgh Despatch. .11. rt ciyik .Erd 'ENTAL NEWS EXCHANGE. CON CHOICE SEATS To all places of amusement may be had up to 6,1 d o'clock, any ev.niug. mtag-tf pENNSYLVANIA AC.AIiENY OF FINE ARTS CHESTNUT. allow .i*TAITH. - Open frcm itit..l4. to fi P Hutijitrrun WerVa grou.t Picture of tiItRIST REJEU'Inu4 still -lea tt & "SONS, AUCTIONEERS, • .1.11,, No 1:P and 141 Smith FOURTH Ktraat. "BALKS OF BTOOKI3 : ANIC REAL Pnl , lie Salem at the Philadelphia Exelianiia ovezy TUMMY. at 12 o'clock. LA ilandbilln of each property Wiled eoparttoly . : addition to width wt publii.b, on the Saturdar pruvitii.t to each Anil'. OHO tbourand en talognpn , to patuphict torta, Ftvipg full di,, , eriptionn of All th , :. Property to. be Hold on tlig-VOLIA 'WING TUESDAY, and n Lbt of itnal Edtate attVrivato Or Our SideN tire ttlmo mlvertitled in the - followhot titewmpttpt;rs: N 6 Pal/ It .11 YMCAS', ./41 , :40a, .11 'I 1.1.1.15.: :14.1.1:. INQUIr EVY.N•Ni; 13( 1,1,E r E%yntrl, I l'lA.liltAl.ll, G EI:MAN 11y.m.,tht47. Itll - 1 , -!1:i! , 1;e ° sit the Auction store EVERY "I'llUltsl.),%l MORNING. STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE, JULY 31). inth:dv !mum' Cotirt Plunk.q. Pte on. deold - VA LT BUM NO, •11C, tA LEST. gtreO r tibove Fourth, BZUI=I I.:.trltv u}cm. orphanh' Court Salv- -Ertate of Thoimuf Floepon, doe'd— ,LAIII.D.: and VALUABLE LOT, over throe AWIES, Eldice Road. . • , orplo& Conti Sale—Eidato of J E ainex Gray. dec'd— RICA and FItAME DWELLING& Third vtreoL north or Glecu ttreet. Eetnte.-- ItRICK lid I'UAME DWELLING'S, Ne• ket, north of Poplar *greet. Ext.,. I 'tore' Snlc - Eetatv ljleninf. Itichardoon, &Oct VAL EMILE ' WHARF I"):(PVERTY, GL? i NEWS. ItLN CANAL, u. Dr the DelivA , nre rii er. FOUE-15TORV BRICK DWELLING, NO. 223 North Twelfth,t , t. • • LAME and ' VALUABLE TIIREE'STORY BRICK IC:ILDi NG, occupied -a. a tobacco Manufactory. and a. Three - story Brick Dwi Ring and Stable, S. E. corner of Brmoodv E d cW T a H a R C E i. E et •S r TO t.. R .- Y OBRtI C fro DWELLING, WELLING, No. 414:+onth nieventh rtrect. north o Loin toad et. THEEL.SIDRY BRICK TAVERN and DWELLING, IN , / hi:: L.enet at. I:yew] ton' Sole---Estate of John M. Schwartz, dec'd— V. , :-STDRY BRICK DWELLING, 1214 Slivery street, übovn (iir141 . 1.1 barrio. Estate—TWO-87010' - FLAME DWELLING, SavPi v etrevt. adjoining the above. 'IWDSTORY FRAME DWELLING, No. 6e2.3 Marriott sheet. Peremptory Side--2 THREE-STORY BRICK DWELL INGS. S. W corner of Prorperoud ally and EAmx idrect, Ligt,th Wnrd. GENT EEL DWELLING and LARGE LOT, Sixth Pt., north of 1., ry ptreet. STOCKTON. South Camden. N.. 1. _Peron ROUND_RENT. 444. CITY I'ItoI'ERTY—BUSINESS LOCATIONS—Three Large and Valllnllle LOTH, S. E., S. W. and N. E. corner • ol Alarket and rtreeta. l'eremptr , .• Sale —Br Order of the Logan Land At , ,,ocia. tion BLE LOTS, 'twenty-flat Ward. Tn hrii,tory BRICK DWELLINGS. No. 412 and 414 Solneta,t i.itteet. coot of Coral threat. t2ith Wurd. Two Modern Thrta , atory BRICK corrAGEs, No , . 45 and 47 llnrrhon strt,t, Frank ford, 23d Ward, each 31 Lod front, 1`.:9 feet deep; pure ten Moult and the modern yon. v.toit•neea. , . LOT adjoining, 41 feet front, 129 feet deep, Sale Non. 139 and 141 South Fourth street. .81 - 1 , E1tiol: WALNUT FURNITURE. ROSEWOOD PIANO FORTES. FRENCH PLATE MIRRORS, BEDS AND BEDDING, BOOXuAsE, FIREPitoOF 1..,A FES, BRUSSELS AND OTHER CARPELS. 4:e. ON TBURSDAY MORNING. At 9 o'clock. at the auction roonim, by catalogue, aupe nior M'alnltt Parlor, Dining room and Chamber Furniture, row.o Plano Forte, Frenelt Plate Mirrore, line Mat and Beetling, china and Glaraware, auperior De.ka,rupelior Fireproof Salo?. Brueeel,t, and otter Carpetn. a e.. etc a large Velocipede. AT PEIVA'f E HALE liftud•ore 8r0W11.0t011.2 itt,lld.'llC.C, with Api It' ht ti,. A.;. Wm Si.: . inticc.A. Harmony Court. A.MES A. FREEMAN, AI:CIF/NEER, el No.',ltt WALNUT iqrcet. ON WEDN ES DA Y, :JULY 31, At 12 o'clock noon, will to' sold at public Bale - Of the Drake Petrol, no Company. nukeo the asm,.ment of two cents per share (called May 14/ ahall he sooner paid. By order of "A. W. D. COM Et': Y 3, ' Secretary and ica•tirer. REAL ESTATE SALE .ILLY 31, AT THE EXCHAN(;E. TIM , ale,:on WEDNESDAY, at 12 o'clock noon. nt 'the Exchange, will include among other properties the fol. low log— PROPERTIES NOS. 113, 113, 117 ANI) 119 NORTH FOURTH ST--Store, and Dwellinge, east tide of Fourth erect. Ivo feet routh of Arch etrtet. a feet 11 inches front, and in depth eartward feet. • lit•V • There are erected on the said premises four dwell. ingo, three of them having stores (routing' on Fourth st., and a two-and a half•etory 1451 ck workanop on the rear. L-rtin , fa" - 0777.7T,V1 ,- tWn. Weer atithoritii , 1,1 the Cow, ttl CoMmon Po'44. Terms at sale. $10) 'to be paid when the property to atrt:ck off. Ad mini.trators' Snle N 0.6122 South Delaware Avenue. LEASE, STOCK. AND FIXTURES OF A TAVERN STAND. • , ON THURSDAY MORNING. At to o'clpck, will be sold. without reacrve, by order of Un- Ad minntrstore of the Estate of Charles Murry, deed., the Lea.e and. Fixtures of the well.known Tavern Stand, No. 10.: South Delaware Avenue. ALo, the Stock., cow. prising Whiskies, Gin, Brandy, Wine, frir" caA. rtir- humfdiate jo,w-6,911m :riven the pure/lA.4er. tg,Sale at Chestnut street Wharf. Schuylkill. • 'CANAL SCHOONER ANN JANE. ON SAT U IDA Y A FTE RN 00N. At 1 o'cl.,e !c. will he sold, at Chestnut etreet wharf, nn the river S.. - lkill, the, canal schooner Ann Jam., built of Delaware white. oak, double timbered, and in perfect order, s% ill, all the Itiapirm complete, Cabin Furniture, new GY y ,-xamined at anytime, Trries et eale. . - UN Y, AUGUST 1.3, AT It O'CLOCK NOON. Will be cold, 01 the Ofhie of the Drake Petroleum c,“n pony, No. HI, South Sloth etreet, Philadelphia,. shares of the 't'ck of the said Company, unle. nwnt of the, e eLnts per share, called June Lth tae t, ~hall poofier, paid. lfy Order .1 W. IX COMEGYS, 111 S Secretarpand Treft.#llrer. • • T HOMAS BIRCH et. SON. AI4.3"IONEERS AND CoMMISSION 3.IERCHASTS, • No. 1110 CHESTNUT street. Rear entranee 1107 Sansom street. lIOUSF.HOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIP TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. SAEES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Sake of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the tno«t Reason:Ole Terns. SALES OF REAL ESTAIF STOCKS, &n., AT THE EXCHANGE THOMAS • BIRCH & SON ri...epeetfolly Infacin their friends and the public that they are prepared to attend to the Sale of Real Eetate by auction and at private :late._ Sole No. 2:2+3 North Ninth etreet . WALNUT PARLOR AND CHAMBER FCRNITURE, COTTAGE SUITS, TAPESTRY, INGRAIN AND OTHER CARPETS,. GLASS AND CtILNAWARE,.&c. _ UN THURSDAY MORNING, . July ".5, at 10 o'clock. at No. 2.16 North Ninth Ptrt - ot, n ill he told. hand,ome Parlor Furnitur.., in hair cloth; Eta - ere, Walnut Chamber Fa rntture,Cottage Suito,TaP ,, trY. Ingrain and other Carpets, Bedding, Matre,...e,, Witte. Ac. Alro, Kitchen U.:nails, 6:c., of a family break ing up houPekcepiug. Solo No. 1110 Cheetnot :treat NEW AND i;I:oNIAIAND . 11064:11OLD . FURNI TURF:, SUPERIoIt PIANO FORTES, kc. _ . ON FRIDAY MORNING, At o o'clock, at the auction store, No. 1110 Mesh:tot street, will he sold-- A In! ge ru.3ortment of superior parlor, chamber, din ing-rooin and kitchen Furniture, from familkl removing from the sits. --- • S a, nt No. 'A South Fifteenth street. • NEAT .110113E1.10L1) FURNITURE,' CARPETS', &c, ON 'TUESDAY MORNING. At 10 o'clock, nt No. 7,9 i Smith Fifteenth vireet, will be , old, the G 01100.01.1 Furniture of a fainily renmviug, com. Jrit Jug —Walnut parlor and chamber cabinet ware, parlor Rol chamber carpets; china; ghiee ware; kitchen turni• :ore, Th., iuruihurc has been in ii±e but a short time. Cau be umkui s ined at 8 o'clock on the morning of eale. 'HINER PLATED WARE AND TABLE CUTLERY. CARD—We have now on hand and offer at private gale itirin . t1)1 , week,a_Ettnelill aPPO - tnient_oLtir.d.clalief ield Plated Ware and eurerior ivory Handle Table L:ntlery. DAVI(n. &RV EY,_ AUCTIONEERS, (Late with M. Thomas & Sone). Store No. 421 WALNUT street. • Sale at N. ISM Canute street. i'UPERIOR FURNITURE, •CABINFT• ORGAN, FINE TAPESTRY CARPETS, &c. ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 10 o'clock. at No. 1810 Camne street, above Montgo nery al cone, the Household Furniture, including carved valout parlor suit, Mason & litunlin organ, noving nut. thine h.) Willcox dr, Gibbs, fine tapestry, ingrain and Ye. titian carpote, &c., all nearly new. May be examined on the morning of dale. • FURNITURE SALES at the Siert , EVERY TUESDAY. SALES Al' RESIDENCES will receive ',articular 'Relation. ÜBE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT, S. E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches. iewelry. Diamonds, Gold sod Silver Plate, and ou all .rtlcles of value, for. any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Face tlnglish, American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches; sine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lepine Watches; tine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt rig Case and Open Face English, American and Swiss 'atent Lever and Lupine Watches; Double Case English ivartier and other 'Watches; Ladies' Fancy Watches; Samond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings. Sruds, ic.; Fine Gold Chains; Medallions; Bracelets• Scarf Us; Breastpins; Finger Rings; Pencil Cases and jewelry enerally. FOR SALE—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest, uiGtble fur a Jeweler, price *650, • Also, several Lots in South cauiden, Fifth and Chestnut treets. . 2AIIILIEL C, FORD A; SONS, AUCTIONEERS, No. 12.7 south FOURTH street. Saler Of Real Estate Stocks, Loans, &c., at Philadelphia :xchange, every FRIDAY, at 12 o'clock noon. . Our asks are advertised in all the daily and several of ao weekly newspapers, by separate handbills of each roperty, and by pamphlet catalogues, ono thousand of •Inch will be issued on WEDNESDAY preceding each de. SFr LEAL ESTATE, STOCKS, LOANS, AT 41VAMSALE, - - • ... • Orrniiair. - 21Wilit 2, Will b e He ld, e t th e Exchange, at 12 o'clock, the fallow. §,tocks and Loans— On Account of Whom it may Concern -2000 shares Lethal Coal Co, Y J. 51. GUMIsIEY & SONS, AUCTIONEERS, No. 508 WALNUT Street. :or Hold Regular Sales of EAE ESTATE. STOCKS AND SECURITIES AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXCHANGE. ':IW "Handbills of ouch property issued separately. Ve r. One thousand catalogues published and circulated, Intaining full descriptions of property to - be sold, as - able" ,partial list of property contained in our Real Estate vgielor, and offer ed at private sale. Sales advertised DAILY in all the daily news- V 4 qIBEIDCE et; CO. AUCTIONEERS, NO, E.O.DIAItN.ET etreat, ahoy° Fifth, SUDILIERk TRAVEL V NORT H PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD SHORTEST AND 510 ST I'Li•A:AANT ROUTE TO • W ELK 1 , :613A Et It LI, MAI:Cii CHUNK. EnsTos, ALLEN'fOWN, MOLNT cArtmEr., itAza:ToN, BETLILEi • And [1111,01;011in tha . • LEII.IOII, I‘IAILA.NOY 'and W.YO3II . NG VALLEYS. C0101110(110UP Carr. 811100th Mick, lii fiCollory and Exedkii , I ari• the 60.:cialtios of this Route. Throtodt to Wilkebiotrre.and Dfnurli Chunk withou clotniot ot care. • EXCATIZSION TICKF.ITS, • From Phlladclphia to Principal, urged from the 'TICK LT OFFJCES ON I.T. Reduced on Satar daye.sn.od to retorn till'Monda,y Evening. EXCUPSION TICKETS 'I() 11'1.1.1(ESIIARILF., good for TY,N I,AI irrurd any dee. l'hrongh Train, letter the-bcpot. It ff RH'S and ANI E CAN f•trett:', et 7.45 A. M., 1.-30 r M. rid 5.20 M. For l'articnlaN see 'Dow 'raids! in nails . papers. CLAIIK. - Gcneral Agent. J 1115" PAM Tickct, Sold and llaggagr Cheek,' through to the Principal Pointe at Mt nn's :'•;orth Pennbylvanbc Baggage Expreem Other, No. 100 South Fifth an yet. FARE TO WILMINGTON, 15 CTS. 117111ENTEK OIL 31001‘, m CI'S, On and after - MONDAY, July Bth, the glimmer Ariel will leave Cheetnnt Street IWhart at 3.45 A. M. and 3.45 M. R e turningleave BVVilmington at 6.40 A. M., and 12.45 P. M. Fare to Wilmington. 15 eta.; Exeundon Tiekete 25 etc. Fare to thecter or Book, 15 eta. . 33'23.60. FOR CAPE MAY.--THE SPLENDID new Steamer SUE, Captain C. Taggart, -w ill taku_the „Felton!a_Place_OP ..01:491) .May route. The SCE wan Wilt to run on the Cheeapeake Bay; Is handeomely fmuished; hue tine state.room cc. eommodatione, and In fitted up with everything neeeasary for the «afety and comfort of paseengere. The SUE will leave Chestnut etreet wharf on TOES. DAYgo TDURSDAYS. and SATURDAYS, at 9A. 31., re turning..on alternate days at 8 A. M. • Fare to Cape Nay, *,2, including carnage hire. •• Servants.... 1 75, ' .- - " G.ll. 111:DDELL. N. 11.---31ann'm Ex Hera Company has,• arrang,d toad tend to.l4lggi.p. ch,ek bam;,,,g, through to hotelg, afro cell tirk,t , i nt their 'lug South Fifth rtrvet. j3-23-6 t CAMP MEETING, VEs;ELAND. NEW JERSEY, Commencing WEDNESDAY, July , , WEET .IEI RAILROAD LINES leave foot of Market . Iplwr• ferry) am followe: Counneuckg Wednerdav, .1 17th, Ple,7. FOE V 1 1.1 .ND kt.WA. M., 9.1!0 A. 31., 3.0 u P. M. and 3.7 k) 11,turning :ne • VINELAND 1'01:. 1111.L.WELPAIA 7.13 A. M., 8.2'4 A 1., M., 6.65 UICKETS Iv:KA tiny time durinr tho rlAwm. sEwELL, iym-tro,:r4 • h dent. „i 1041. - Mimmor ELIZA 11.1Nlll IX will Leavy Dock rtri whorl drily iit to A. M. and 4 I'. M. R.,turn. Irai Market v, hail, Wilmington, at 7A. 31. nd 1 I'. 31. - . . Fore tlp-rwivl trip OZEIMES;MEI I r pa; tico hap, arily ou bna rd. j.y22 L. V. 111."1:.N.S. Captain. LP THE 1:1 to \ r. and Brvtol =l,rich ing -way nt'cOtTe-dale., Andalufis and Beverly. The . I .lendifi Steambolf JOHN A. WA IIN leavex Philadelplda, (The,tnut Ftre,•• -chart, at 2 and .1 o'clock P. H. Returning, leavee Brietol at 6..50 o'clock A. 31. and 4.o'clock I'. 31. . Fare 25 cte. each way. EscurtiOn. 40 cte. 3e15.t.” Fqp ei I A RTF A, • ler*:) , comirodioue etetmer ADM ie now pre pared to run excurtionr. wi,hing to charter apply- to D. in -.OFF, North Wharvee. FOIL tIAL.F. • containing 1 1 6..1ert of 1 •X(I'llUllt land in the liitited " tnL td cultivetion; odtunte env mile trent the Depot. I ,, ,rko•latrv, on the l'enn.ylranin Ratlrend. I I , IItLI , Nlttn,don 11011.4., neW ,dene barn, And ne: eoeNer, an in ierfect order: 12. acme , vood• nidlo erehelgla, CtlClTitli t gra pep, in a Lond:m, I EVI`rY tield but fte watered by a- Crony, , f. 1.it.':%1 111:".1" (.0* Wnliau ,droot. . , ....... GERMANTOWN PROPERTY FOR SALE.— . 2 A Pouted Stone Reildenee, with all- the modern " eon:trier/eve- Stone Stable and Olneli I lonae,and are Lot ,- f Groun , d, at the cca - ner of Pulaaki alienue, firet doure eoutli of Calvary chnrcb, and convenient to \% ayue -kat lon. )1: :•.\L P---. 1 SPLENDID RESIDENCE, IN , !phis, c , ntilining 11 r‘,011,,,, , , all tr,Ourn improvement!; an excellent two rt,,ry ptal , l,!. Lot Kix 1241. FEtTER, KRICKBAI'M C PIT.DY, - :;2, I'itth etreet. tf FM. :, , ALE--SMALL FIRM 1)1' FIVE ACRES IN th, town of Hammonton. N.. 1., within on,: , f Houre attacked. Allto, Fruit, Straw. 131.4tkberrit.", Grapes and Vegetablre. Will he -.ld low. Immediate poti;,.,ion. Apply to COPPUCK .1( N, 4%3 Waln'tit. street. _ll. di 5T111 . .E7- 1 111 :1.1 I.E.—THE: 11.‘311/:i11‘11: 4:::dlrick I:edd. nye, :11 feet n weber ,vith the et , )ry dolbli. back building, ibuilt and tinplird tiir,oghont In the beFt manner, %Nth tsvo natirrooniß and ttrn 4 , •11Nt rittiate No. 1723 Arch street. Lot 14,1 feet drop. . .1. 31. 111 . 3131EY A.: SONS, Witlnnt , trert. F+[ll I'—Tl.lll HANDSOME 'lllltl E spiny •• ;.; !dick I,,idence,. with three,itory back L 11: La niched throu , zhollt in th be,t ;winner, with i.,:tra convidd, ni.e , . and in perfect order: ?ito,:te No. 1.d.: North SiXtrath rtrcet, abn‘e Ar,ol. J. 31. GI:3I3IEI' e: .treet. E ., FOR SA LE--- lIAN DSOME sit ii:vm:o RESI. North Franklin etreet. built in the lief•t inanucr with every iinp&o:, , inent ; lot tr; fell front. Yrire Sis4,ool. il. la. NATT, 46 North' Seventh r:::,FOR SALE—A 'VERY prsirt.tm,F; TIIIt . r.E. etory Erick Dwelling lloinqt, with two.titory double " bock bnildluge., on Catnac greet, north of Ilerke. ['rive re,4.otk.. Apply to I. C. PRICE, j) - 9.11n• No. 54 North Seventh ~tree[. er7... I.Y11: SALE— THE THI:r..E.STOILY BRICK I:ESI iil:.. d. nee, with attic and three-eNry bock buildings: .". 1 . , a• situAtt- No. 1410 Sprpeti btreet. Lot 2 feet trout bv 44u feet ,i.,p. Innnedinte poe., , sion given. J. IP , il:31.‘11:\ ”:. 60N S. 50t Witlnut Etieet. 4r,, EDE SAI.E.--A HANDSOME DOUBLE •liltlcK t ::! ! iidenee, with back bnildinv and extra eunveni- A na, mit , mte nn the northweFt corner of Seven teenth on Cutne rr+trert2. I,et gS feet front by 120 feet deep. J. [AIM & SUMS, 506 Walnut <ztreet. sALE-Titr, VALUABLE. STOKE PROP- M . , Lin Ni.. 413 tunnuerce -tret.t. " ' Iw lour~t, in 40 tee! front . and lot 7.; feet deep. J.1 .3 6131311.1, . 003 Walnut etrert. FOIL SALE --, GERMANTOWN • - ELEGANT pointed Stone R. ridenre, replete with every iteetern an pre, el!,t in ; lot 1t hy::11;'two j vacant. 11. 11. NArr, 46 N. Seventh et. yPi.ilte .T 4 —OIIitiALE—ELLGAN-T-11 miNGE. . No.-2°.22 s NIUCE STItEET, rf lER it, CO., . . FOR SALE—TWO NEW HOUSES, WALNUT 11E . lane, titth :aid sixth lionhee, west of A Hants street, Germantown. Apply to A. NV. RAND, 1:14 North Sixth street, FOR SALE.—A MODERN HOUSE, NO. 4al PINE let street. 20feet front by 141 feet deep. Apply td C. LI. MlTlttli No. L.).1.3 South Sixth etreot. S.l E THREE-sToRY filauKpri. UFJ k.leuct!, feet front; with attic:. and back buildfug - .4 5 --....+ 08 ‘ .N .., a n . 2: , Lombard street. 'J. M..(iII:NIMEY 61).N., QToCK, FIXTURES, MACHINERY AND LEASE OF 1-7 the old ectabllthed Perfumery baninees, 0.411 Arch !Arcot, for sale. Mock will be cold in Ito to suit purchasers, at a great' sacrifice. Price for thn whole low, and tonic racy. JYII/c w 03t• WOE SALE—DESIRABLE GERMANTOWN LOT, 150 I' by 2:l9feet, on . .lohnson street, between Morton and ale titre eta. ROBERTS, 904 Franklin street. WO KENT. FOR BENT—P,OOIIB surrApLE FOR MAN[- faetureN, No. 207 Carter's Otter t, netweon Second " and Third, below Uheetout atreet. Ahm, third story, 4:3 Walnut Ftre 0 L Apply to (101'.11.:Cli JORDAN, 433 Walnut street, To RENT—THE THIRD, FOURTH AND FIFTH floors of Building No. 105 Arch street. Apply to BISHOP. SON & CO., 140 100 Arch street. my:l•tfs INsTuucTi - oN. fAELACOVE INSTITISTE. — ENGLISII,CLABSICANp preach hoarding School for Young Ladies.—This new and beautiful Inetitution will receive students Sept. WM. Accomplished educators j healthy location, magnificent river•eide residence and homelike comfort, are the chief attractions of Delacovo. For proepectue, address II RACHELLE G. BUNT, Principal. • 'Beverly. N. . my I,lmos, TIIJ PHILADELPIIIA RIDING SCLIOOL. Fourth street, above Vine, ia now open for the Fall and Winter tießSOne. Ladies and Gentlemen will dud every, provision for comfort and safety, so that a thee'. - - ough knowledge eithis beautiful - accomplishment may be obtained by the most timid. Saddle horses trained in the beet manner. Saddle horses and vehicles to hire Also carriages for funerals. to cars, oarrtf THOMAS CRAIOR• gr. SON. AtXTION SALES. jOHN MYERS & CO ? AUCTIONEERS, Noe. 24 and 234 MARKET street, corner of BANK. • AT PRIVATE SALE. " 25 came fine PALM LEAF FANS, round handled. • Puns Fowl), Auctioneer. MaCLELLAND CO. ~SUCCESSORS TO " . • • . PHILIP FORD dt CO., Auctioneers, . 806 MARKET street BY BARRITT ttc CO,_AUCTIONEERS. MARKETAuCTION I.lol.rtiE. No. 230 street, corner cif BANK street. ash [OYU'. 4* c**fr3 ** w *at THE DAILY EVENING- BULLETIN;-PIIILADELPIIIA, WIT)NESDAY, JULY 24, 1867. SEASONED,' LUMBER•. AND II A_ 1 7 t, .1D WO 0 fl. . R. A. & . J. J.-WILLIAMS,. Biyir ROAD AND GREEN ST . outa 186'7. --- 12H . 118, , xc - Erir.ll2l SPANISII CEDAR 130 X-BOARDS. No. 2500 SOUTTII Street 67 --- , SPRUCE JOIST—SPRUCE JOI 1.8 ST,BPR . JOIST. UGE -FROM 14 TO .32 FEET LONC. FROM 14 TO 32, FEET LONG. SUPERIOR NORWAY: SCANTLING. I,LAULE. BROTHER & CO., my 13 tty No. 25M EUUTH Street. I UMBER CHEAP FOR CASH. 11E.NILDCK Joist. Sheathing and Lath, ,tc. CAROLINA. Delaware and White. Pine Flooring DRESSED SIIELI,'ING and Lumber for fitting stores. ;HEAPES'I SHINGLES in the city. ie7-2m NICHOLSON'S. Seventh and Carpenter streets. I UMBER. =TILE UNDERSIGNED ARE PREPARED Li to furnish any description of Pitch Pine Lumber, from cit. Mary's Georgia, on favorable terms. Also, Spruce foist, ac., from Maine. EDMUND A. SOLIDER Dock Street Wharf. nay29-tfa --SCANTLIN:br LINN:CM LUMBER. AFLOAT.—SCANTLING AND Joint of length from 14 to 28 feet long, _an sorted gam, 'I3E4 to UK shout 160 M. feet,__For sale by WOR • MA ?Ca. "CO.. So. thz Walnut 'lntent . . . Tti'l.),R)•-' ' ~ s . 't, (rIPM: WirriniTirMir c \ l , , Nrum iitummo..lo.:vl„, This valuable preparation combines all the medicinal rirtues of those Herbs whichion experience has proved the safest and most efficient al ‘rative properties for the zure of Scrofula, King's Evil, Vhite Sivellings, Ulcers, Scrofulous, Cancerttus and lndol nt- Tumor% Enlargement and Ulcerations of the Glands, 'Joints, Bones, and Liga ments •, all the various Dioceses of the skiffiruch 'letter, Slit Rheum,• PJffirmorms, Boils, Pimples, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes,.tc.; Epileptic Fits, St. Vitus Dance, and diseases •.nginating from an impure state of, the blood or other fluids of the body. mh6-w,f.m tfil This celebrated Syrup in a certain specific for all stages of Dysentery, Chronic or Acute Diarrhoea, and Summer Complaint. During thirty years' experience in Allis city, this medicine lien never been known to fail RS emu° of the mot respectable families can teetifv, at whose request and in compliance with the wb , lies of several medical end clerical gentlemen. they are presented to the public. Tide valuable medicine is a vegetable compound.and per• iectly eale in alletagee of life. • ions and Anti-Dyspeptic Pills. These Pills are exceedingly efficacioua in curing Dyispepp sia and Liver Complaintr?..ervous Affections, and all di. teases resulting from an unhealthy state of the Liver. E. LYE'S.slfilicines Prepared and Sold at No. 202 North Ninth Street, tivylB-2m PHILADELPHIA. C Rev, I. IL GATES' C 'iMAGAMOOSE. This celebrated • Indian Remedy is fast becoming THEt Family Medicine. It tea moat thorough' BLOOD kW:WIER. It cures where all other remedies fail. It ie recommended by eminent public men, clergymen and business men of high standing.• It is invaluable in all cases of Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Inflainniation,Bron. chitin, Coughe, Colds, Croup, Fever -Sores. White Swell linge, Dropsy, Chills and Fever, Kidney afflictions, Con gumption in its Mat etages, and all nervous and general debility. - Thousands of Bottles of Macarnooeeliave been sold, and all who have taken it agree that it has no equal. C Sold by Druggiets and at .MACAMOOSE DEPOT, No. IBS Race Street, apR-3m • • Philadelphia. OPAL DEN'I'ALLENA.—A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOR cleaning the Teeth, deetroying animalcule which in• feet them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleenlinees in the. mouth. It may be need daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detereivenees ivill recommend it to every one. Being composed with the aeeietance of the Dentist., Phyeicians ausiMicrnecopist.. it no conficlio offered as a reliable substitute for the ner certain washes formerly in vogue. Eminent Dentists, acquainted with the constituente the Dentallina, advocate its nee; it contains nothing prevent its unrestrained employment. Made only by JAMES T. SIIINN, Apothecary, Broad and Spruce etreett 'ally, and ID. L. Steakhouse, 'Robert C. Davis, 'Gee. C. Bower, Charles Shivers, S. M. McCollin, S. C. Bunting, Charles 11. Eberle, James N. Marks, E. Bringhurst & Co.. Dyott h Co., 11. C. 'flair's Sone, - Wyeth & Bro. MMI=EMI For sale by Druggists gene Fred. Brown, Haeeard C. B. Keeny. • - Isaac H. Kay, C. H. Needlee, T. J. Hueband, Ambrose Sndak. EdwareParrimh, • William B. Webb, • James L. Bin)bam Mabee & Combe, Henry A. Bower, INTIRE.LY RELIABLE—HODOSON'S BRONCHIAL V .12J Tablets., for the cure of coughs, colds, hoarseneee, brow chide and catarrh of the head and breast. Public speak. ere; singers and amateurs will be greatly benefitted by using these Tablets. Prepared only by LANCASTER di WII,LS, Pharmaceutists., N. E. corner Arch and Tenth etreots, Philadelphia. For eale by Johnson, Solloway a ioveden. and Druggists generally. se2ii% tf HER MAJESTY CHAMPAGNE, ID TT N rE 0 N, 151 80t1TH FRONT B'., 80L0 AOOIIT. WINES—The attention of the trade ie solicited to the following very choice Wines, Brandies, &c. For sale by DUNTON & LUSSON, N 0.315 South Front street. SHERRIES—CampbeII & Co., "Single," "Double," and "Triple Grape," "Rudolph," Amontillado Topaz, V. V. PA Anchor and 13ar, Spanish Crown and F. Vallette's. PORTS—Rebello, Valente & Co. Oporto, Valletta's. ' Real," P. Martin, and F. Valletta's pure juice, &c. BRANDIES,..-Renault &Uo.—in glass "-Oand- wood; Hen: jrieseey-&-Co. .otard,Dupuy dr.-Co.ldlibigult--vintallei 18S6 and 1863. GlNS—"Mader Swan" and "Grape Leaf." CLARETS—Cruse, File, Freres & Co.; high grade vainest Chateau Margaux, superior St. Julion—in pinta and quarts; La Rose, Chateau Lumin3'. MUSCATI De Frontignan—fu wood• and glassi Var. mouth, Absinthe. Maraschino, and Cordials—in glass. CHAMPAGNE—Agente for Chas. Farr, Her lidajeetri Royal Rose, Burgundy, and other favorite brands. - •• SWEET OlL—L'Eepinasee & Cancel.Bordeatut. r i..._ J- ..... ... 1 " • Successor to Geo. W. Qray, —. 2 . 33 It .10 W IE. It, . 24, 26, 28 and 30 South Sixth; St., Philad'a. 4, 4, : , Fine Old Stock it riut-Broin Alm, ...,4 6 '.1.C111, / ' for ninny' and l!dedioina ~ - 'Tithed• State§ • NW," rdo: 24, 26 and 23 S. Fifteenth St., YtIII,nDI:LP.Ei.[A, ESJ4ER BROTHER, WOOD MICIILDINGS, BRACKETS, STAIR BALUSTERS, NEWELL POSTS, CERRO, TDRTC AND SCROLL WORE, &c. - largeot aihnortruent of Wood, Mouldings In ibis eit7 corutautly ou hand. ju33tu4 . • . 6 4 —SELECT 'WHITE PINK 18 1 • 'BOARDS AND PLANK, 4.4. 2)4, 3 and 4-Inch, CHOICE PANEL AND FIRST COMMON. 16 feet lona 44, 64. 2._2Y. 3 and 4-inch. MAULE. BROTHER & CO., • No. 2690 SOUTH Street. +r7 -BUILDING! hPAT E i tYra i l l" 4.4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 6-4 CAROLINA FIMORING 4-4 DELAWARE FLOORING 5-11 DELAWARE FLOORING, ASH FLOORING, WALNUT FLOORING, • SPRUCE FLOORING, STEP BOARDS, RAIL PLANK. PLASTERING LATH, MAULE,BROTHER &CO:, No. 2.9, 1 0 SOUTH Street 18 6 .• E iE D D A A B R A A N N D D 6 g I t E s S s I g Na IL E T, COOPER SHINGLES, No. 1 CEDAR LOGS AND POSTS, NO. 1 CEDAR LOGS AND POSTS, MAULS, BROTHER dt 1867.- LUMBER ITIMPARRI CEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY, CEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY. MAULE, BROTHER dr CO LIAR OF ALL F 112: SEASONED WALNUT. SEASONED WALNUT. • DRY POPLA P T CHERRY AND ABIL " - • OAK•PLANK AND BOARDS. ' HICKORY. • ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT VENEERS. MACLE. BROTHER .I.r. CO MEDICAL. 'tiRIFYING MEDICINE. E. LIE'S DYSENTERY SYRUP. WINES, LIQUORS, &C. 1 L CIiEIiTNTJT I_,A.EYEE S D4viq Ai. tea Comb) , at Watrriag Plaim, will find '" SPLENDM'ASSOZIMENV Or 2 d , Materials for White Bodies. t Ernbr'd Breakfast Seta. Linen Collars and Cuffs,' ' . Linen hidersieeves. N Printed Linen Can:brio]. . 'J _ Plain and Printed inpres. 0 E. M. NEEDLES & CO.'S / N.W. Cur. llth and" Chestnut -Sts. N,llrAll sfi didlts,lJ;€3slHo TO-VI Q A CANVASS MESH BLACK IRON BAREOK THE t../7"r be,e quality imported. Also, tho ordinary qualities. 8.4 White and Black Barege. 8-4 White and Black Crape Maretz. Rich Figured Grenadines and Organdios. Grenadine and Organdie Robes, redocod Summer Silks and Poplins. Figured Unrolls, for Dresses. aterialB for 'Ft avoling Suite. - Summer Gress Goods, very much reduced in prics. - EIJWIN HALL & CO., 28 South Second at. QTOCK CLOSING OUT—SACRIFICE IN PRICES.- 13 Fast Colored Lawns,2o and 25c, Wide Unbleached Linen, ac. Nice Plaid Valentian, at 250. Plaid LI:110H, half-price, at 25c. De Laines, 20 and 2.5 c. Marline, 11leached, 12,54,14 and 181ic. All the beat tnalres of MIIBIIIIA. STOKES & WOOD, 702 Arch street. BLACK AND WHITE LACE POINTES AND RO tun - flit& Sea•eide and Llama Shawls. Shetland and Barege Shawls. Spring Cloaks, reduced. Gay Plaid Cloths, for Circulars. Scarlet and White Cloths. • Broche Shawls. open centres. Plaid and Stripe Woolen Shawla. • EDWIN HALL Az CO., '2.9 South Second at, FINANCIAL. 7-30'S CONVERT :,,,7' INTO 5- ii 1 ON MOST FAV . •A : LE TERMS. \, ,,,,\s 1)1E I-1 - AXE ' Sc, 13 RC,. 40 SOUTH THIRD TREET. ii..T,4 4 1 , 1 SPECIALTY. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO. BANKERS AND BROKERS 16 South Third St., 3 Nassau but, Philadelphia. New York STOOKS AND GOLD BOUGIIVAND SOLD ON COMMISSION. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. ;\. ,11sTRI.GHT &- 8 b.. 41 •1 10 V4 BANKERS' &.-• BROKERS, • N 0.17 NEW STREET, NEW YORK. - Particular attention given to the purchase and ask of all GOVERNMENT SECURITIES', RAILROAD STOCKS, BONDS ANTI WILD. Softness exclustvely on Commission. All orders .11'111 teceive our personal attention at the Stock Exchange and Gold Board. . CI O '. 000 TO 'INVEST IN illtST-CLASS ]TORTgagea. .1. 31AOUIRE, it 5O Walnut street. 50 —A WELL SECURED GROUND RENT O 7 . of 88.25 per annum, for Pale by I. (3. PRICE, it-9.lv` . No• •54 Not th Seventh street. Mort WELL SECUgages of these amounts for sale by 1 . C.1. I NorthS street. . jyS 1m• 1 $ 1 2 w . ; ( : ) , 20. Mort gagee NEW PUBLICA.TIONN. d' if:VILLE CtoLLEGE. BY nits. HENRY woon; V/ author of "East Lynne," "Verner'a Pride." "Oswal d Cray," "EarPa Heirv? , "The Channingv," etc. Orville College iv printed from the anthor'm manuscript and advanced proof vhects, purchased by 14 direct from 11frs. llenr • W,od. and 49 leaned here by mi_ahmiltaneopoy tot i the publication of the work In turope. Price 50 etc. THE IYJFIIEL CHIEF. By Gustavo Almard, author of "Prairie Flower." An entire new work. Complete in one large octavo volume. Price Seventy-five Cente. pETEI:sos , GREEN CLOTH EDITION OF DICKENS. LITTLE DORRITT.' With Thirty-eight Illustrations. From ( nigthorbeeign» by H. K... Browne. Price sl'22 in green morocco cloth: or, $1 (X) in green paper cover, eewed. There are 1161 V published of Peterson& Green Cloth MIL tion.ot Dicktno. eix volume», viz.: • LITTLE DO IZRITT, with 38 Illustration». GREAT EX PEt :TA'PIONS, with 27 Illustrations. lILEAK 1101'SE, with 27 Illustration». TALE OF TWO CITIES. with 04 Illustrations. DA LOVPERFIELD,-with 25 Illuetration».— W': MUTT 'AL FRIEND, with 42 Dluetratione. Price of each $1 25 in cloth, ou2l 00 in paper cover. All books* published are for sale by its the mament hey ere issw , d froVit the press, at Publishers' prices. Call n person, or send for whatever books von want: to T. B. PETERSON & BROTHERS, Mti Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Pa, iA ROA INS IN BOOKS. BARGAINS IN BOOKS. We are closing out at retail a large corphia stock of some 'wo Dollar hooka at Fifty centa each, anti lots of other (poke at Ilan' Price. Call and get a lot of them before they re all cold. jyllat • TUST READY—BINGE LAMS LATIN GRAMMAR... e./ NeW Edition.—A Grammar of the Latin LanguNge. For the use of Schools. With exercises and vocabularies, By William Bingham, A. M. Superintendent of the, Bing. ham School. The Publishers take pleasure in announcing to Teachers and friends of Education generally, that the new edition of the above work is now ready, and they invite a careful examination of the same, aud- a comparison with other works on the same subject. Copies will be furnished to Teachers and Superintendents of Schools for this purpose at low rates. Price ell to. Published by E. H. BUTLER dz 137 South Fourth street. Philadelphia. Mad for sale by booksellers generally. UAIMER J READING.—ALL THE NEW BOOKS, AS soon as publisfied. for sale by - JAMES S.' Successor to W.'S: iv A.Thrlirtion, 1214 Chestnut street. HENRY TIIE EIGHTH AND HIS COURT. By L Mulilbach. _ 0 STEI'DEN'DANE. By the author of "In Trust.. ON THE BORDER. By Ednuind Kirke. RURAL STUDIES. By Ike Mael. • NEIGHBOKS , WIVES ry ._ By J. T. Trowbridge. • A largo assortment of books in every department o literature constantly on hand. brio I LOOKING-GLASS FRAME AND We aro now fitted up with improved machinery. and have a large stock of mahogany, walnut and fancy framed Looking.Glassod, at reduced prices. GRAEFF de CO., jyl9 3m xA. 73 Laurel at., below Front. •• ' , "EXCELSIOR" HAMS, SLEOTED FROM TsilE BEST CORN-FED 800% ARE OF STAN'PA.RD REPUTATION, AND TIIi BEST IN TUE WORLD. • •7, H, MICITENER ac 00. i GEN EPAL PROVISION DEALERS And. cc rem of the celArated • `• "' EXCELSIOR" SUGAR,OURED HAMS, TONGUES AND BEEF, N 05.142 andl44 North Front street. . - None genuine unlea3 branded "J. H. M. Et He., EXCEL , 510 R. ., The Justly celebrated "EXCELSIOR" HAMS are- - cnred - by j. If. M. - it Co. (in a style peculiar to themselves), ex. pre, , sly for FAMILY USE; are of delicious flavor; free from the unpleasant taste of salt, and are pronounced 1).: epicures superior to any now offered for sal NEW SMOKED AND SPICE Corner Eleventh and JAPANESE POWCHONG TEA:, The finest quality imported. . Emperor and other. fine chops; Oolongs, Now Crop Young Upson and Gunpowder, gcnuineChulan Tea, for sale, by the package or retail, at JAMES R. WEBB'S, Jar's WALNUT and EIGHTH STREETS. NEW GRAHAM AND RYE FLOUR, WHEATEN . Farina, 'Corn Starch and -Matzena, Rica Float Behhl4oll'ATatent Barley and Groats, in store and for sale at (MUSTY'S East End Grocery, tie. 118 South Second street. NEW CROP PRESERVED ,GINGER, DRY AND IN syrup; assorted preser-ves, jellies and jams always in store and for sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. f 111010 E TABLE CLARETS, PINTS AND QUARTS— liJJ re old medicinal brandy, wines, gins . , die., for sale at COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No, 118 bouth Second street. G ENUINE BENEDICTINOREM, CHARTREUSE, Aniseed, Curacoa and Maraschino Cordials; just re. ceiwed and for sale at CUUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 110 South Second street. . • "WRENCH WINE VINEGAR. VERY SUPERIOB V French White Wine Vinegar, In more and lifer male hi F. SPILLIN. RENOBLE WALNUTS.-6 BALES OF GRENOBLE Paper Shell Walnute, and Princess Paper Shell Al. 'monde for sale by M. 1. SPILLTN, N. W. Car. Arch and Eighth streete. • ti ACCARONI AND VERMICIE'LLL-100 BOXES OF 1 , 1 choice Leghorn Maccaroni and Vermicelli, of the lett importation. in store and for sale by M. F. SPI IN N. W. Cot. Arch and Eighth streets. JT M. ROM L, COAL DEALER, lIAS REMO . from. 957) Delaware& avenue, and succeeds Mee are. Walton & Co ' at N. W. corner Eighth and Willowstreeta Office 113 B,g:coed street. The beat - qualities of Lehigh. and Schuylkill coal dear ered in the best order and at the ehortest notice. mhfrem ra R. HUTCHINS. 11. S. E. CORNER GIRARD AVENUE AND NINTH STREET, Keeps constantly on •hand, at the lowest market rates, all the best qualities of • • LEHIGH, EAGLE VEIN, GREENWOOD, an., COAL. Orders by mail promptly attended. to. a. !LABOR nrtrita, MBE INORSIONED INFTrE AT TENT I ON L 11 •7 T 7 C . their stock of Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal; which, with the preparation given by ua, we think cannot be excelled by any other Coal. Office, Franklin Institute Building, No. f 6 South Seventh street. • • BINES SIIEAFF, Arch erect wharf. Schtivlkill Tide Metal, as a Roofing, is NON-CORROSIVE, not re• ri qufring paint. it is self-soldeng, and in large sheets, re. quiring lees than half the time of tin in rooting buildings or railroad cars, in lining tanks, bath-tuba cisterns, dm., or any article requiring to be air or water-tight. 100 square feet of roof takes about 173 feet of sheet tin to cover it, and only 108 feet of patent metal. OFFICE, • 108 South Fourth Street, Philadelphia. mr , yr-in w f t T Ulth 'IP SEED! TURNIP SEED NEW CROP. By mail, at 10 cents per oz., 75 cents per lb. Grown on, our Seed Farm fronl'aelected stock; and war raided. 81±7:11 for price Hot, giatio. STEP/IV.St i;411.1.11 , 18,, COLLINS, ALDERSON & co., vv. (MA& A 1.1 , 43t50N, Seed Wareliouae. ROBERT Do WNE., t ) 1111 & 1113 MARKET Street, jetn-0.w.t1 Fell Pbila., P . Intl:F.loS WHITE 'SOLID CELERY . PLANTS freBlC 'daily,. at Seed Warehouse,' No. '7l4' Chetna street. jr•20.6t3 T° TEE ii' SEED, NEW CROD.—ALL THE BEST varieties, at DREER'S Seed Warehome, 714 (Mud - ma oreet. .13+^.0-4io I A3,EB & LEE ARE NOW CLOSING OUT, AT e.. 1 greatly .reduced prices, their large and well-aeeorted Summer stock of Goode, Forarrleing in part COATING GOODS. Super Black French Clothe. Super Colored French lothe. Black and Colored Habit Clothe. Black and Colored Ca,lun,tretti±. Sum* Silk-mixed Coatinre... Black. and Colewd Tricot Coatings. Tweeds. nil elliOetl PANTALOON STUFFS. flack French Docekins. _Black 1 4 ' ,, incli Caseimeiee: New styles Single Milled Catudinerce. Striped and Mixed Caeohneree. • Mixed Docnkius, nil nhadee. • Striped mid Fancy Linen Drille. Plain and Fancy White Drille. Canvass Drillings, of every variety, White Velvet Cord. With a •large aeHortment of Goods for Bops' wear, to which we incite the attention of our friends and others. JAMES & LEE, No. 11 North Second ntruet, Sign of the Golden Laiah. BERMUDA AND GEORGIA ARROW ROOT.—THE New Crop—sweet, pure, and of dazzling whiteness; directly from the growers. Sold at standard weight, and guaranteedin freshness and purity. - ' DURRELL, Apothecary, myloif 1110 Chestnut street JOHN C. BAKER & CO.'S CELEBRATED C. L. OIL in boxes, of 1, 3 and 8 doz. each. Ipecac root and powder in balk and bottles. Agents for Hoff's Malt Extract Beverage of Health. JOHN C. BAKER & CO., 718 Market street, Philadelphia. Jes DPOBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY AND GROATS, lA, Bethlehem Oat Meal, Bermuda' Arrow Root, Cox' Sparkling Ge t atin„Tivlo oe eePa i iie ll eea ' (e agllakucirl RetailgigLstsacvedlBakalaaß & Co., Wholesale Druggieta, northeast cor. Fourth and Race stream. FRENCH. ROSE WATER.--JUST RECEIVED, AN 11 invoice of the Celebrated "Chine tittle distilled Rose, Orange, Flower and Cherry Laurel Water, For sale in cans and bottles. ROBERT SHOEMAKER dr. CO., Whole. sale Druggists, northeast cor. Fourth and Race streets. DRUGGISTS, CONFECTIONERS AND PERFUMERS are solicited to examine . our stock of superior Eisen. tial Oils, as Sandemon'e Oil, Lemon and Bergatnot, AI. lien's Oil Almonds, Winter'e Oil of Citronella, Hotchkiss' Oil of Peppermint, Chills , Oil of Lavender,Origanum. Orange, etc., etc. ROBERT SIIOEMARER &La, eXttill N. E. cur. Fourth and Race eta.. Philada. LOST,—CI RTIFiCATES No. 947 B. FO 50 SHARES, and No. C. for 100 eharea of l'biladeltddaluid_Gray's Ferry - PABEimikaillailway - fifd6k, both in any name, 1111.VO been !oat or nunlald. All pea ,e. era kruny oltutionod tvgdifitirnegotlialicg - kihi — CiltilleiLti:d applicatroilliii - ai been made for their renewal. S. GROSS PRY, .IylS-s,wBt. 2101 Green street. N - -- OTICE.--APPLICATION D BEEN MADE TO the Mutual Aseuranee Company for the renewal of Policy No. kOtie, killed 26th November 1831, to Robert Montgomery, for $l.OOO. on prendee• N. F. corner of Third and Lombard atreeta, Philadelphia, which has been lost or mislaid. •• • • - S. &B. ABELES. jy2-tu4t. No. 341 North decond wed.. 1033 - , - n NOTI I CE—THE DULL MONTHS OF JULY Wind ew . Sh ges A d l i g e t a l P. • ' gt l tie s Ptie l a % t r q i bi; P Zi f ign i' lli n n e t?. lectured, beautiful colors. JOHNS L'ON'o' Depot is 'l= Spring Garden street. below Eleventh. fel4lv • • WORKS. OR SALE—PER SCHOONER SA BINO FROM CU raco, 1W tone 13raeiletto wood, a) tone Fnstic, 400 barrel:4 gait and trl barrels augar, Apply to WORKMAN dt.C(1..12:; Walnut gale. inyttLtf FIRST OF THE SEAS ALBERT. C. RO __Dealerit Fine,_Grocti COAJLAND ROOFING, &c. ROOFING. PATENT 7A_L ROOFING. AGICICULTURAL. CLOTHS, CASSESLEILF,S, &C. DRUGS. LOST AND FOUND. P 'IEI . .'r 1 ,Lt w. . SCOTT` & SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AND DEALERS IN Men's Furhishing Goods, '\ 814 Chestnut street s oar doors bel yv the "Contitumtal..* PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT • MANUFACTORY. Orders for these celebrated Shirts su?pLiod promPtb briof notice, • WINCHESTER & CO., 706 CHESTNUT. jelmgr,f,ff GENTS' PATENT-SPRING AND BM toned over Gaiters, Cloth, Leather white and brown Linen, Duck • also made to order . -. ter - GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, - : of every deeeriptioni very low; 901tChaMelt . -.. ' ...-g street corner of Ninth. The beet/Chi Melia for ladles and gents,' et RICHELDERFEISS BAZAAR. tnYMmO4l OPEN IN THE EVENING. Sterling,Standard & Silver-plated Warea. An elegant and extensive stock always on hand. Manu facturers ()land dealers in Geo. Eno'a celebrated Paton; ICE PITCGER, which retain.) the solidity of the ice one. third longer than any other, and is by far the moat econo llama ICE P,ITCILEE ever invented. S. E. Corner Eighth and Chestnut St.., Philadelphia. my2o..orf m67t LEWIS LADOMUS & CO., Diamond Dealers and Jewelers, No. 802 Chestnut Street, Philada., Would invite the attention of purehagers to their farts and handmmo tuvortment of DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, ILVERWA_RE ICE PITg.}LERS, in great variety. A large aßsortmont of email STUDS for Eyelet•hoHeh lust received. Watehea repaired in the beet mannerand guarantee& To Persons Going Out of Town: GALL-AT 328 Chestnut street, • And supply younelven with • PORTFOLIOS, TOURISTS' WRITING DESKS. DRESSING CASES. '• • CIIESSNIEN. • CHECKER BOARDS, . • ETC., ETC. ETC. All kinds of Blank Books, Printing, Stationery, Pocket. Books, Pocket Cutlery, dm., dm., at very greatly reduced prism. jytl•lm "'TO PAPER MANUFACTURERS. SEALED Proposals will be received nt the office of the Superintendent of Public Printing for supplying the. State with Printing Paper. Said Paper to be Book paper, Ilteasuring 2.5 by 40 incher,and to weigh respectively 40 and and fie pounds to the ream. Also, Double Flat Cap, mea suring 17 by inches, weighing 98 pounds to the rosm. Bids will be received for each kind separately. Said Pro posals to he opened In presence of bidders, August 1, 1 867,,. at the office of the Spenntendent. Contract to run from - December to August 18611. The successful bidders will be required rigidly to con form to sample,swhich will he furnished upon application at the office of the Superintendent . ; no proposal will bo considered unless accompanied by a guarantee that the bidder or bidders„provided his or their proposal shall be accepted, will enter into an obligation with good and suf ficient securities to furnish the articles proposod•for; and each proposal;most be accompanied 'by satisfactory evi dence that the persons making said proposals are mann faCturers of, or dealears in the description of paper which he or they propose tolundeb. July 18, 1867 0 PICTURES, FRAMES, 4%:40. A. fS: ROBINSON, 910 CHESTNUT STREET, LOOKING. GLASSES, Engravings and Photographs. ON HAND Ult MADE TO ORDER 1321 _ • mantrate STREET. ,IDLE, BARR & CO., IMPORTERS OF AND DEALERS IN Foreign and Domestic Hardware, BALDWIN'S BUTTS, SCREWS, PULLEYB,_ 13OIM SPEAR & JACKSON'S HAND AND PANEL SA BUTCHER'S PLANE IRONS AND CLUSEIABN AND REVEAL HINGES, &a, &O. 1,000 Kegs Naibi P, IUAII Sizes, REDUCED CES. IntoSfinvogos I) I Of Qt 314 314 rtRAND OPE THIS ' DAY, "DP THE I..Tcluokest and recherche Paris Fashiona, , TRIMMED PAPER PAW' 'UuNtii. • • • " Just received. , MR& id. A. BINDER, No.loBl cuEsTNirr Street, Philadelphia,. • Importer of LADIES' DRESS AND CLOAK TREMOODINO& Anther, Pearl. Crystal, Jet and suit Drop and Flat 21140. , Aber Studs and Beads in all colors, Ornaments, Bu _knob Guipure and Cluny Lakes, Cords, Tassels,. Fringee, Yana and Mantua Ribbons, French Corsets, Belting% and "M I& minas unmorally. PA vTar A DRESS AND CLOAK MAKING. In all /to varieties. 9 INURN . IBII[ING . GOODS* PEIILADELPHM Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, Of late styles Ili full •varletY. WATCHES. JEWELRY, &C. ENO .& CO., MANUFACTURERS OF STATIONER PROPOSALS. . FPNK, Superintendent Public Printing, 75 Market ntreet linrrisburg. .15719 29-3 t lIARDWAIt E. S IDLES. HARNESS, &c. mhtim.w,ti
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