BUSINESS IVOTIOTP,S.: LThlthr DUSTRRS, itrroe amiement, different +NO', imperzrlaus to Idle, Nailo at the nexk. ttilino 01 reduced prwea elocrut.Rocr.. BENNETT sW:way Warren TOW Nit LIAO " 11 ' 171 ond 618 SIA 111 , 1E1' .sTRIEr, six TN Streets. Philadelphia And 000:FROADMIY, Ano York. air All kinds V Sumner aothiniA &law .off to *so aut etoek•at rery le priecw. My E'S NEWLY IMPROVED EItESCENT B‘I.a4 O 4 VERSTRUNG PIANOS. A c k row iedoett to be the beet. Louden Prize Medal and RichertW•rde In America received. 'MELODEONS An) SECOM-LIA ND PIANOS. .17,22-Ic. w Wareroorna, 789 Arch et:, below Elchth. X VENING BULLETIN. Monday, Jody 29, leer. AN: EX.KIIIVG gIPEAD. The traveler from Munich eastward, by the old diligence road, used to see at no great distance from tbe:city, on the , roadilde,, a tell marble column, surmounted by La bust. It 'was erected in v 833 by King Louis of Bava ria, on the spot 'where he parted from his son Otho, liibenteset off to Ascend the throne of Greece, to 'which he bad just been chosen by the western powers. The bust WAS that of .Otto, and on theipedestal ' , of the column—which is probably still standing— were some -sentimental 'verses by the King himself; wholhadinnt• yet become as famous, as he dflerwards :did, when• Lola Montez turned histhead• and a threatened revolution forced +him to abdicate. This <Mho, who- went to (41reece with such a nourish, was: driven:from it by a revolution in 4862, and it is now snot iced that he has just died , of measles:at:Munich, wkdther he bad retired to share the fortunes• of ex-kingehip with his -father. - Oslo _was *King :Louis's second son, and was horn in Saltzburg June :Ist, 181.5. He was married in the fourth year of his reign in Greece •to The Princess Frederica Amelia, daughter of the Grand Duke .of Oldenburg. This.maniage pro' ably cost him his crown in after. years; for while he was weak., indo lent and apathetic, he was harmless until his Queens ambition, rapacity and recklessness led him into such a course of misrule, that the people' were fairly: driven into revolt. • Be skies, he had done nothing to make him self personally popular. He made the court of Athens as German as the Court of 'Munich; and he showed his. indiffer ence for Greece and the Greeks by spending part of every year in Bavaria. The revolt of 18G2, , which compelled the Bing and Queen to fly from the capital, ended by his abdica tion onthe- 20th of October, in favor of his brother, • Prince Adalbert, of Bavaria. But this prince• never set up a claim to the succes sion; and, after banding the crown around among-a dozen royal families of Europe, the Greeksiktiast got a. young Danish prince to accept Upend. he- now reigns over them as George the First; King of the Hellenes. Tito•ittte . ex:King Otho was a very com anon-place.sorkof person. He had not even the • dilettante taste of his father, for the latter revived • in modern -31naich a good many of the artistic glories of ancient. Athens. ilebecatne, oleo, under his wife's influence, &despotic sovereign, and the two combined to run the kingdom •heavily. into debt, whilst they andtheif German AdVisers, pocketed the revenues. Probably no people on earth will feel the death of Otho less than his former subjects of-Greece. His, queen survives him, but they-never had any children. His father, the ex-King Louis, also survives him at the age of eighty-one years—older by several years than any of the reigning monarchs of Europe. :THE. PERILS OE TELE HAIL. There are nine hundred railroads in the United -States operated by steam. They em ploy .thirty-two thousand miles of tracko and over this great iron net-work, hundreds of Ihonianes of living beings are• being whirled to and fro, by night and by flay, through dark tunnels, over trembling- trestle-works, from which the passenger looks down dizzily into apparently bottomless abysses, around sharp varvesi beyond which no human prescience can predict the possible obstacles in the way, sealing steep .mountain sides, and launching down again into deep valleys, while the sheer precipice is ready for the most trilling deflec- Lion of the thundering train from its narrow path; depending fdr their safety, under Providence, upon the sobriety and cool vigilance. of a few men, often worn with fatigue .and.. nervous excitement; upon the tenacity of =Aerial and the order of the road appointment% Two classes of people are keenly alive to the perils of railway travel: those who almost never travel, and who are in a condition of nervous terror,Whenever whistle blows, , or another train whirls past them, or a truck jolts across a switch, or an unexpeCted tunnel plunges them into dark ness; and those who constantly travel, and, who have acquired an intelligent appreciation of, the reaLdangers of railway life. Of these da.ogein, some are absolutely un avoidable. They result from the , destructi bility of albmaterial. Tue sudden breakage of a rail, u flange or an axle cannot possibly. be fores.:en or h,verted. The use of good material and ,constant examination fcc, the only precautions which can be,used against tills class of dangesis, and these are so far succesnful that comparatively few, accidents result 'from this cause. But there is another class of dangers to railway travelers,,arising from causes which are en tirely within the control of railway managers. Accidents which arise from the emplOyment of intemperate and, in&nipetent men belong to this class, and alao those which are caused by the use,of cheap andinfecrior material or by the failure to:adopt Vas various improvements in railroading which have been devised from time tb time for the better protection of hu man life, and the preservation of valuable property Under this last head there is .a large and in creasing class of accidents to wino' h we desire to call the special attention of railway direct ors and other officials. The accidents which arise from broken or misplaced switches are, perhaps, more numerous than those from any other single cause..—Every road of any con siderable extent is compelled to nse hundreds of switches for the purposes of its local trade. Some of these axe in daily use, - arid the switch-tender grows careless from the very monotony of his duty. Others are so rarely tilled that the engineer dashes `along, forgetful that such a ti'w itch exists Optim his line. Be tVveen the Nvo, along, grim catalogue )f rail Way disafile.rs 411;r4 v , 4 - .0 day after day, awl the bloody record. }]Ashes with the almost stereotyped phrtint: ""The accident is attrib iited,to n misplaced switch." We ireferred;"y . er:y briefly; a few days ago, to a cOrivance for which the public is in debted toi the, 'anveritive genius of a young Igr, William Wharton, Jr., Whidhcornpletely abolishes this class of rail way accidents. Without attempting any &tailed description of this 'ingenious inven tion, suffice It to say that it loaves the main 'rack of 'the road- unbroken in its entire length, and is entirely independent, in its action, of the switch-tender, so far as. the, question of danger is concerned. It may he fastened right or fastened Wrong 'or not fast ened .at all, without in any way.affecting the traimunoving upon the main tracks of the road. The adoption of this safety-switch on the Reading and Harlem Toads, is the best poseilitla guarantee of its practical usefulness, and the time is not far distant when it will be applied universally. • "So far as the promotion of (Mere private patents or personal interests are involved; . public journalism as not at all concerned; but 4in so grave a question as the protection of the ives of the thousands of people who are every day traveling the railway lines of this coun try, all classes are .alike interested. It is ad mitted that there must be a certain amount of risk in railway traveling, but the community has a right to .expect and to demand that wherever it is demonstrated that the risk can . be diminished it •shall be done. Railway men are pursued and pestered with all man ner of contrivances which are impracticable and useless, and they grow skeptical upon the whole subject of improvements. But those who assume the grave responsibilities, connected with the charge of millions of pre cious liVes, .are bound to discharge those re sponsibilities faithfully and to see to it that no accidents shall occur which human ingenuity can possibly. avert. It is gratifying t. 6 Philadelphians to know that it is to one of her own Sons, that the pub lic is indebted' for an invention, the•introdue tion of which will save thousands of valuable lives, while it preserves the tracks and rolling stock of the railways from one of the most incessant and rapid causes of wear and tear. It is another testimony added to those which .' have for years made the mechanical genius of `Philadelphia famous throughout ;;the world. /AMC ON THE OCEAN WANE. "A: life onstlie'ocean wave and et home on the rolling' deep" is a very pretty sentiment, particularly when it is set to music. So is the experience of a certain craft "in the Bay of Biscay, 0!" and so again is the very pretty delusion thats"there is always a little cherub up aloft who looks out for poor Jack !" There have been many very fine things mit ten ooncerning "stout vessels and crews," "wet sheets and flowing seas," 4te., sisc..; but the eminent probability is that the authors of these pretty words knew no more of the ac tudilies of "a life on the rolling sea" than the average sailor knows about the composition s , of .poeticastanins:••• They *fife of "bending masts .anci,"curling _waves"_ much as an es-. sayist wrote who once penned a glowing descant on the advantages of early rising. It was notorious that he was himself abomina bly indolent and it was ascertained that the early-xising treatise was written in bed, the author being too lazy to get up, even for the purpose of glorifying in print the virtue of early rising! Going to sea is not necessarily a disagreeable thing if the seafarer has a state room with all the "modern improvements," on a erst-class steamer, and if the steward sees to it that the turtle-soup is nicely served, the chicken and roast beef properly cooked, and the wines and cigars are of the most ap proved brands. But that style of going to sea is as the luxurious private carriage to the comfortless prison van, in comparison to the accommodations afforded to poor creatures who venture to cross the ocean in the steer age of an emigrant ship. Crowded and unhealthy quarters; a huddling together of the sexes in a manner that renders the ob-• •servance of the commonest decCncy an 'im possibility; uninviting food; sleeping bunks that are scarcely better than torture-racks; vermin, filth, stench, &gusting associations, and a host of nameless nuisances form the daily and nightly annoyances of the hapless emigrant. Years ago Congress, in its wisdom, provided laws to prevent the over-crowding of emigrant vessels, which was one of the most prolific sources of misery i n these com fortless voyages; but it seems that thishuMane regulation is eisregarded or avoided. We learn through a despatch from Washington that information having reached the Sacra tary of the Treasury that vessels were on the way, overloaded with emigrants, for the ports of New York and Baltimore, instruc tions have been issuedsto the proper otbleinia to take measures to remedy the styli. At Bal timore, it is stated that as high as two Der cent. of the dud hs among emigrants have been caused by oVercroseding the vessels. We may talk about the thiserie4 of lite shave-trade; and t lie horrors of the ••middle, psasage,' but the cupidity and greediness of sitive ssseas too often prompt the commission of eistelties to helpless paasengers, that were scarcely ex celled through the greed of satire traders or the cruelty 'orthe — oflicers of slave ves se l s , Scores• of thousands' of emigrants seek our shores annutilly; they should be ',tented with humane consideration on their way bithavial not be suffered to fall victims to foil ire; poor or insufficient food, or overcrowding. There is another class of men who have to bear a full share of all the inconveniences and miseries of life on ship-board. The common sailor endures more hardship, greater risk and more exposure than falls to the lot of almost any other man. His labor ie heavy and exhausting; his peril almost all 'times imminent, and his services but ill-requited at best. In rare exceptional imam:wee he is comfortabry lodged on ship-board, and his. food is good; but in the great majority •of eases the fore castle, is a black:hole of Wretchedness that a humane man Weald hesitate.ahout putting his dumb beast into. Theie .is no pretence of making any provision for comfOrt or health, and the s food is as . coarse and 'uninviting as the-lodging places are rude and uncomforta ble. We have heard it, urged that the sailor IRE DAILY EVENING 131.VAETIN D -PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY. JULY 29. 1867. would not be the better for any more decent coat - tors or nom humane treatment, and that` his person ttrA habits lit him for the place on ship-board which he usually occupies, The experienoe on naval vessels, where the sailor is, as a rule, comfortably quartered, disproves this assumption,and common sense and every day- experience dispel thei Lehi thati brutal treatment e*er tended to the improvement of . men, and they demonstrate that the most ef ficient' way to do,#i•liA'‘aliii brutalize a man, is to treat hinilke brutal and , degraded be ing. There is a Widn:fteld for improvement in sea life, and it is to be earnestly hoped that Secretary lireCullocit's recent order may re stilt in the reformation of •at least 'one great abuse. • • '• • The Southern rebel papers and the :s.lorth ern Copperhead journals•are hugely enjoying a joke which they say took place somewhere Smith, on the Fourth of July last. It seems that there was a celebration of the day with an oration, the reading of the Declaration of Independence, &c.. An officer of the United States, who vas present, did not recognize the Declaration as a fulmination against British authority in the old Provinces, and suspecting it to ben new instrument of seces sion, ordered the arrest of all who were aid ing or abetting the meeting! The story, whether true •Or . false, :is a pretty good one, and iftrue, the over-zealous were:rer of shoulder-straps should lbe relieved from military duty until he hasitime somewhat to improve his history. But the yarn is off settod by a circumstance which is said to have occurred in .a border State upon the same day. The Radicals and the Conservatives are about equally balanced in a_ certain commu,.. pity, And they agreed that for once they would forget their old aninuisitiaS, and have a joint celebration of the day. The affair came off according to arrangement, Mr. R., a well-known• Radical, being ap pointed to read the .Declaration of Indepen dence, and the oration being delivered by Mr. C., a strong •Conseritative, A couple of neighbors got into a conversation concerning the celebration on their way home, at its .lose, and one of them, a Radical, asked his companion, a Conservative, what he thought of the address of Mr. It.. the reader of the Declaration? "Well," said he, "the.wor , P4 are all sniooth enungh, and the speech wiis well enough written, but it was, a lladieal lie !' TLe 3loyamensing Hose Company, with a view tb.getting before the world their/own version of the riot, in which the mob was led to the attack by .Alderman Willian llcjlullin and Councilman Barnes, and also / / with a view to justification before the public upon the "Yon are another" principle, have com menced a cross-action, and several/ members and adherents of the. Hope Engine/ Company have been arrested and held/ to bail to answer at Court. ,It is hard to conceive how this course is to. alter the matter/in public es timation. There is no doubt', that there are bullies and blackguards who affiliate with the Hope. Some 'of them, doubtless, have beaten members and adkerprits ,. .4 rioting and ruffianism the rioters and ruf fianshave some real or/imaginary gifeviiii6e %which they desire to redress. In all feuds there are injuries to be redressed and . revenges to be gratified. Society cannon recognize the right of indiViduals (ir. organizations to resort to the lex talionis at pleasure,and Alderman 3lcMullin, Councilinan Barnes and their bru tal followers committed just as grave a , breach of law as though they had directed their riot ous proceedints against the property of an '4;inoffensive party: If Alderman McMullin does not know this he is unfit to by a magis trate. lie can take whichever he chooses •of the horns of the dilemma. Hon. Daniel Mace, who committed suicide in Indianapolis last week, was formerly a Representative in Congress from Indiana, and more recently Postmaster of the city of Lafayette. Mr. Mace was a native of Ross county, Ohio, but early settled in Warren county, Indiana, where he pursued for a time the business of a merchant. Subsequently, he engaged in the study of law, and acquired some prominence in the practice of that pro fession. In lea), he was elected to Congress, from the _Lafayette District, on the, Demo cratic ticket, and re-elected on the same ticket •in 1852. At. the time of the intro duction of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, in 1854, he opposed that measure, finally identi fying himself with the anti-Nebraska or Re publican party, and in - the fall of the same year he was re-elected to• Congress tbr a third time on the anti Nebraska ticket. We believe 31r..Mace teld some military appointment for a short time•dtuing, the war. He participated in the . •Conserrativo-johnson movement at Philadelphia last summer, receiving the ap pointment of Postmaster at Lafayette, a post, Lion whiOh ,he beld.at the time of his death. It would be worth while to make a list of all the suicides that have occuyred anfonff the supporters of Andrew Johnson. He has.,lqm self committed the crime politically. rue editth of the New Castle ( 7 .iactr o (Democratic) has been in Philadelphia, to see if he could draw any consolation from the political ave . .t as presented in this section of the k•Jonarmlnveahb. After surveying the held, he exclaimed in agony of spirit, "oh, Lord ! hew long ?" It is quite evident that ifthis invocation is ever.answered, it will not be in a satisfactory manner. The Democracy is more and more demoralized by Johnson ism: ' Judge Sharsw4tiod's nomination has done it no gond, and the Western editor, knowing how popular Judge Williams'is, es pecially the West, sees rio hope in the fall election. The Constitutional Convention of Michigan, in adopting the principle of manhood suffrage,. has inserted a clause expressly including ali the Indians living in the State. A Motion to exclude those Indians who adheri..to their tribal relations was decisively rejecteqe This is in effect an extension of the laws of the State over all its inhabitants. All nre alike controlled .by the laws, and alike protected by the laws. There remains no legal distine thin among the people of Miehigan . after the adoption of thiS amendment. This is the first instance in which a State has granted all. the privilegsS of. Citizenship to the descendants of the aboMnee. • • , An. investigation into the- management of The alms-lrouse at Petersen, New Jersey, is bringing to light a shocking condition of cru elty. - The Superintendent put the inmates under as hard discipline and ae short com mons as fell to - the lot of Oliver Twist and. his fellow-sufferers in. the English , : parish' work-house. It was in evidence that this New Jersey Buinble of a Superintendent allowed but two crackers a day for the sub sistence of a child two, • years old, and when the mother begged for a ,larger alloWance for her starving , boy, the application carised as great a commotion as Oliver Twist excited when he had the temerity to ask for "more." This is 'only one instance of many hundreds told of this torture pen for the unfortunate. But if the Superin tendent Was a Bumble they were not without a Mrs. Convey for a matron, and the paupers whO fell under her discipline had a hard time et' it. Cruelty and oppression are bad enough under any circumstances; but when the victims are the sick, the unfortunate and the helpless, cowardice is added to the sin of oppression. DOWNING' , II AMERICAN LIQUID CEMENT. FOR mending broken ornaments, and other articles of Glass, China, born Wood; Marble, &c. No heating re quired of the article to be mended, or the Cement.. Al ways ready for use. For sale by JOHN R. DOWNING, Stationer, fe7tt 129 South Eighth street, two doors ab. Walnut. M'CAL B/ LA , S NEW HAT STORE, N. E. CORNER TENTH AND CHESTNUT, FORMERLY CHEST NUT A OVE SIXTH, AND CHESTNUT ABOVE EIGHTH. 'our Patronage Solicited. jelltf4p§ FRENCH CIRCULATING LIBRARY. I'AUL II GIRARD, Frerfch Bookseller, Stationer and Engraver, / (202 South Eleventh street. • " illf - Note paper and 'envelopes promptly and neatly stamped. / say3l.4p-ly -- -i -x TIIEO. H. WCALLA„ ,anr / AT HIS OLD ESTABLISHED, HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM, MI - islettrP - 804 Chestnut street ja, ARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and easy-fitting Drees Hats (patented), in all the ap proved fashions of the season. Chestnut etreet,-next door b the Poet-office. aela-IYIT jaNEW STYLES FOR WARM WE ATHEILiu he Panama and Mackinaw Hats, together with a great variety of Straw Hata, selling at low prices, by / TIIEO. 11. WCALLA. . / AT HIS OLD-ESTABLISHED • HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM, ief.-tfrp) __.l. BA CHESTNUT STREET. 600 H * " ••• -- ARC STREET. - 600 • / GR I FFITH & PAGE, BEST , REFRIGERATORS AND , CROQUET GAMES. . , . . . -- H. P. dc C. R. TAYLOR, PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS. 641 North Ninth street. T.,INGRAVINGS, CEIROXIOS, ALBUM CARDS', IN wood and c'es-ntooA, with other gem., at REIMER 4', CO.'S, manufacturers of Looking Giant and Picture Framer,. No. 624 Arch etml. EVERAL STYLES OF SARDINE OPENERS.— These may also be soled for opening Fruit C.ws. For ~nle TRUSIAN A: SHAW, No. 835 (Eight Thirty.five) Market street, below Ninth. ' I)EINIER, SECONLISTREET, ABOVE GREEN, DOES _it Photographing igl all Ate .branchea. Lite,tize in Oil; alto, copying from atl kindg•of pictured to the new Porta.. lain Miniature, which 48 only $l. 7 - EW STYLE EXTRA SAFE NIGHT LATCHES, .I.N with email and , 00nvonlent keys, and a variety of other ptvlet, for eak attho Hardware Store of TRI.7IIIAN & SHAW, No. KG (Eight Thirty-five) Marketotreet, below Ninth. 13110T0311N1ATURE8 ONLY $l. AT it iIEIMEWS Photograph Gallery, N0.e14 Arch etreet. A 'variety of came and frames fortheee genus on hand. LAWN SCYTHES, GRAS S I HOOKB, SNATHS, R'lietrtoiw flakes, Pitchforkz, etc., for KII.IC by TRUMAN tr. SHAW, No. t 32.5 (Might Thirty-five) Market etreet, below Ninth. . STRAW HATS AT COST, AT M'CALLA'S NEW Hat Store N. E. corner Chestnut and Tenth etreete, Philada. FormetlyChestnutosbove Eighth , jed341,44 SBUMMER HATS AT COST TO REDUCE STOCK, at,3l:4E ,New Eat 8* N. E. corner Chestnut • - 10 . Wfritt, Chestnut street, Il t bove • 9elB-ti.44 JONES, TEMPLE &CO., - 938OUTH NINTH STREET, F•SHIONABLE RATTERS. jylfrtfrp RUBBER MACHINE BELTING, STEAM I Packing Ilase,..tie. Engineers and .fivalers will find a, fulFasserlment of ficiodynaes Patent Vulcanized Rubber Bettie& Packing /lac, &c., at the _Mani.' acturer's Headquarters, GOODYEAR'S, • SOB Chestnut street, South side. N. B.—We have a New and Cheap Article of Garden and Pavement Bose, very cheap, to which the attention of the public le called. I,IARKING 'INDELIBLE:INK, EMBROIDER. L ing. Braid Lag, Sttua drc. DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES.—GRADUATES MORTAR;_ Pill TilesDonits, Brushes, Mirrors, Tweezers, Pu Boxes, Dorn )CO(r., Surgical Instrtuncnts, Trusses, Hard and Soft Rubber 'Goods, Cases, Glees and Metal Syringes, &c., all at" First Hands" prices. SNOWDEN & 'MOTHER, ap6tf rp , 23 South Eighth street UVERA GlBSne. Pine Opera.Glalece, made by M. Bardoo, of Parie. Imported and for We by C. W. A. TitUNIPLEEt, Seventh and Cheettut streata. oc.l4pif ISAAC NATHANS, AUCTIONEER, N. K CORNER Third and Spruce streets, only one square below the Exchange. $250,090 to loan in W i re or small amounts, on diamond,, silver plate, watches, Jewelry, and all goods of value. Office hours from 8 A. 3 . till 7P. M. M" , " — Estab- Hebei:lE4er the last 'forty years. Advances made in large amounts at the lowest market rates. ja.Btf rp LIFE, GROWTH AND BEAUTY.- "London" Gray Hair Color The only Restorer" "London" Hair Color Restores" "London" Hair Hair Color Infallible Restorer" "London" "Hair Color Restorer" "London" RE6I‘O.IIF-D Hair Color Hair Restorer" "London" Hair Color Restorer" "London" without Hair Color, Restora- Restorer" "London" Hair Color Restorer" "London" Dyeing. Hair Color tivo. Restorer" It in the only known Restorer of Color and perfect Hair Dreseing combined. Delicutoly perfumed. "London" Does Hair Color Removes Restorer" "London" Hair Color Restorer" "London" not Hair Color all Restorer" "London" Hair Color_ Restorer " "London" Stain Halt. Color Dandruff Restorer" "London" Hair Uffor Restorer" "London" or Soil Hair-Color and Restorer' , "London" Hair Color Restorer" "London" Anything. Hair Color Itching. Restorer" MAHE'S VIE LAIR SOFT, GLOSSY AND LUXURIANT, KEPIS Tl/1 SCALP CLP AN, COOL AND ILEALZ4Y. "London. Nair Color„,_ Restorer” "London Cures ail Hair Color It will Restorer." "London Hair Color Rol" "London Diseases' Hair Color prevent Rector ." "London , Hair Color Restore " "London of the ' Hair Color the hair Restore ." "LondOn Hair Color Restorer." "London Scalp. Hair Color from Restorer." "London Hair Color Restorer." "London Hair Color Falling. Restorer." No washing or preparation before or after its Gee; ap plied by the hand or soft brush. Only 7fs cents a bottle. Sold at DR. SWAYNEII, . 330 N. Sixth street, above Vine. e2d-vv,f.s.rn4o•tf And all Druggists and Variety Stores WINES, LIQUORS. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC ALES, BROWN STOUT AND CIDERS. P. J. JORDAN, 2'20 Pear street, below Third and 'Walnutstreets, streets, begs to call attention to his large and varied stock of goods now on hand, embracing Wines of all grades, amongst which are some very choice sherries and clarets; Brandies, all qualities and different vintages; Whiskies, some very old and superior; Scotch and English Ales and Brown Stout, together with Jordan's Celebrated Tonic Ale now so extensively need by families, physicians, in valids androthers. Cider, Crab Apple ChamPagne and Sweet Cider, of qualities unsurpassed. These goods . are furnished in pack ages of all sizes, and will be delivered, free of coat, In all parts of the city. 251 TILE PROTECTIVE FRUIT JAR. 251 TIN PRESERVINGr air-tight. UPRIGHT REFRIGERATORS, (Schooley's Patent.) ' PATENT JOE KING REFRIGERATORB. WATER-COOLERS AND ICE-CREAM FREEZERS. A Sne article of NURSERY REFRIGERATORS. GEM PEA-SHF,LLERS. CHAMPION CLOTHES-WRINGERS. PATENT CLOTHES-DRYERS. DORTY'S PATENT CLOTHES-WASHER, the greatest invention of the day. This machine will save time as well as labor. WM. It. KERNS' House Furnishing Store, ha the evening. No. 251 North Ninth street. 2 1 251 MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, ELATE. CLOTHING, &cr., at %NES & CO. OLD EnA DUN OFFICE. Corner of T Ird and Gaskill areas. Belo Lombard N. B.—DIAMONDS. WATCHES, JEWS &0., REM ARKABLE LOW PRI LE 1/011 BA M AT . °I TH y E f C th O e O ei L y ET I SP c O s T er NP oiTnHt.Boats leave foot of South street, daily every throcKuartero of an hour. Fare 10 cent... myanm4n OPLENDID'MUSIO •THE GLOUCESTER POINT 10 Gardena every attepotodu, cemmeneing MONDAY, July 29th. iY2 , 5.16t rpo ALWAYS A REFRESHING BREEZE at Gloucester Point. Boats leave foot of. South street, (WIN every three-quarters of ashen. Fare 1.0 cente. IfiyMmly THE TRAVELING SUITS, The White Duck Vesta, The Colored Duck Suite, The Alpaca Coate, The Drap d'Ete Sacks, The Short Duck Sacks, The Linen Dust Coate, The Light Ciaesintere The Skeleton Sacks, Are calpopular at this time, because they arc just the thing for this hot weather.. Our etylee are as elegant ae in any custom establishment. Our prices are so low, people buy with great satisfaction. WANAJIAKER & BROWN, THE LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE, OAK HALL, THE CORNER OP SIXTH AND MARKET STS. CHOCOLATE FOR TOURISTS. STEPHEN e, WHITMAN, No. 1210 IVlarket St. iy27-ato NORTH MISSOURI R, Ri FIRST MORTGAGE 7 PER CENT. .BONDS. • Having purehaeed ow.* OP nit. FIRST MORT. GAGE COLTON BONDS OF THE NORTH MISSOURI RAILROAD COMPANY, bearing 7 per cent. intern .1, having yenta to run, we are now prepared to rell the Fame at the low rate of 85, and the accrued intereet from thin date, time paying the invvotor over 8 per cent. Inter erd, which IF payable eemLannually. Thin Loan in 'wowed by a First Mortgage upon the Corn. pany'e R. R., 171 miles already conetructed and in running order, and 52 miles additional to be completed by the let of October next, extending from the city of St. Louie Lutz Northern and Central Missouri. Full particulate will be given on application to either of the undersigned. E. W. CLARK & CO. JAY COOKE A: CO. DREXEL. & CO♦ P. 15.—Partiee holding other securities, and wiehinit to chap them fox' thin Loan, can do eo at market rates. lylfelrnrpf, INDIA RUBBER .GOODS ) No. 708 Chestnut Street. MANUFACTURERS AGENCY. Vulcanized Machine Eteking, Steam Peeking. Cu ° and Prin Citl i = l3 ait ' l ' _te ln aZ3 l, rry n il t eeL e Zt e l i ciZ , _of Rs Dru r i ke t kiik i Wholesale and at lowest factory Prim , RICHARD LEVICK. ap6dmrpf PATENT WIRE WORK FOR RATLENGS. STORE FRONTS. GUARDS PAEITTIONS. Acc. COAL ac'REEN/FOURDRINIER mem isse. , inufacbired by . M. WALKER it SONS, fe9o4m4pil No. 11 North Sixth Street WAGNER'S CONGRESS HALL, NO. 527 CHESTNUT STREET,oppolito the ?tate House Ale° of PUrtuil BOWL,BROAD AND TUILNEIPB LANE, PHILADELPHIA. T. WAGNER, of Broad street, Proprietor. .1y15•1m4r4 M. A. TORRY, 1800 Filbert street • FITLER, WEAVER & CO. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY,/ NOW IN FULL OPERATION, No. 23 N. WATER and 23 N. DEL. avenue An Invoice, email Bizet, 3, 2,8.4 and 6 Tune 4 in hand eomely Ornamented Cues, met received. • Imported direct, and for Bale low, by FARR & BROTIIER, i 912 374 CIIESTNUT street, below Fourth. LOOKING' GLASSES OF THE VERY BEST Q ICT 11_, IT Y. EVERY NOVELTY IN •3 STYLE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. JAMES S. EARLE & SONS, 818 CHESTNUT STREET. FOR CAPE MAY.—ONUESDAYS, Thursdays and Saturdays, the new and swift ateainer SAMUEL 31. FELTON, Cant. L. Davis, leaves Chestnut street Mimi on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 9 A. M., and returning leaves Cape May on Mondays, Wednes days and Fridays at 9 A. 31. • Fare, ..$2 59, including carriage hire. - Servants.... 1 76, Children.... 125, " 11 Excursion tickets on Saturday good to return on Mon day, $4, including Carriage hire. • • G. H. FICGDELL. N. 13.—Mann's Express Company have arranged to at tend to baggage, will check baggage through to hotels, cottages, &c.; also sell tickets at their office, 105 South Fifth street. • 62811001' SKIRTS. HOPKINS' "OWN MAKE." PRICES REDUCED!! 1 It affords us much pleasure to announce to our numer ous patrons and the public, that in consequence of a slight decline in loop Skirt material, together with our increased facilities for manufacturing. and a strict ,adhe rence to BUYING and SELLING for CASH, we are ena bled to offer all our JUSTLY CELEBRATED' HOOP SKIRTS at REDUCED PRICES, and they will as heretofore, always be found in every respect more deaf. ruble, and really cheaper than any single or double sprineffloop Skirt in the market, while our assortment is unequaled. Also, constantly receiving from New York and the East ern States full lines of Skirts at very low Prices. among which is a lot of Plain Skirts at the following rates: 15 springs, 55 cents; 20 springs, 65 cents; 2b ring. 75 cents; su springs, 65 cents; 85 springs, 96 cents, and 40 sPrinti• Skirts made to order, altered and repaired, wholesale and retail, at the Philadelphia Hoop-Skirt Emporium, No. 628 Areh street, below Seventh. ml ell m,wlyrp WM'. T. HOPKINS. „HOOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS.—MRS. E. BAYLEY, No. 812 Vine street, istow manufacturing all the va rieties of Hoop Skirts. Corsets. dm. She has also the Real French Corsets of now styles. Hoop Skirts' altered and repaired. mh26tfrp VI OR BALE—PER SCHOONER BABINO FROM CU raco, 100 tons Brasiletto wood, Su tone Pus_ __ 400 barrels salt and 87 barrels sugar. Apply to WORKMAN &M.. 128 Walnut street. m 7294 MUSICAL BOXES. Important Auction Notice. LARGE OPENING- SALE or BOOTS AND SHOES, FALL 1867, On Thursday Morning, August 1,. Commencing at 10 o'clock McC.LEL.T_AND & (succomr6 to Philip Ford dr. Co.), Auctioneer& will sell of their store, No. 506 Market Street, 2,000 CASFS. PRIME 8008, SHOES, BROGANS, At, Every case represent. d (7atalokrue will be e,olOl witty out rererve. 'invent of Hoots and Shoos will ilnd it to their Interett to attend this sale. McCLELLAND &0. Auctioneer% 506 Market street jy29.Btrp§ 5,000 Sold Since Publication NEW POEMS. The Library Edition (with portrait) The Blue and Gold Edition__ Sold by all lrookeellern and malted postpaid by the Oa/ ROBEItTS I t--11,4 13, - ..ec LI. FINE HAMS, SMOIiED 33 EE V,. Tongues, smoked Salmon, Spiced Salmon, Sardines, Boneless and in Tomatoes; Potted Meats, Prairie Game, in great variety; Finest Quality Olive Oil, and every variety Choice Family Groceries. BY THE PACKAGE OR RETAIL SIMON COLTON dc CLARK", S. W. Corner Broad and • Walnut.. nthl-fan.w4fro RE M 0 V A . C. M. STOUT & CO., LATE 1026 CITESTITUT 6T, HAVE REMOVED TO 11.00 Chestnut Street s 'Mere they now offer barinktne in LACE CURTAINS. UPHOLSTERY GOODS, PIANO AND TABLE COVERS, • • MOSQUITO NETS, lIOUSETURNISHING LINENS. QUILTS, at,. A T LOWEST PRICES. trivl-wfm REMOVAL. E. S. JAFFRAY & CO. Beg to Inform their friend)! and the public that they halo removed their place of buziatmaf from =I to 008 Chestnut Street, UP STAIRS , Having greater facilities and more room for doing b.-ri nese , . their stock will be considerably Increased in the oe . riouis departments. Represented by S. STORY, R.Etitov ~L. WM. IeirA.RPUR, Chronoinea4 and Watch.mak Respectfully Informs has friends and customers that no has removed from over Messrs. Bailey & Co.'s, 819 theet nut street, to' 407 Chestnut Street, Where he intends to keep on • hand a supply of first quality Watches.Ehronometers,Clocks, Ladiets , and Gents" Gold Qhains, Beals, Keys, dtc. .Chronometera rated by Bolas and Siderial Transits. Especial attention given to• repairing Watches. iy23.3m GOLD'S IMPROVED PATENT LOW STEAM ♦FD HOT WATER APPARATUS, FOR WARMING AND VENTILATING WITH PI;Elt: EXTERNAL AIR. UNION STEAM AND WATER HEATING CO.. JAME," P. WOOD di: €O., 'NO. 418. FOURTH Sheet 104 m B, M. FELTWELL, Sup't. WILLIAM B. CAMILE, OARLILE & JOY, House and Sign Painters and Glazien, No. 437 Arch Street, Philadelphia. Glazing and Jobbing attended to with promptnese anti demoatrh. MVP UP R call. mv4 tf4Nt. BANKING HOUSE jAyCooliE443p., 112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A. Dealers in all Government Securities. .1r26.8m rPil ~i-AmEgr T. STEW - AR - TB - KOWN - , MB. Corner of 11111111 Y, FOURTH and CHESTNUT STS. MANUFAOTURHIt OP TRUNICO;NALISES, an a l BAGS suitable for Europe= caravel, (Formerly at 708 CHESTNUT ST.) NEPtPECANS. -10 BARRELS NEW CROP TEXAS ane landing , ersteatoahlp Star of the Union, ands for aale by J. B. BURBLER f& CO.. 108 South Denman &venue, 131it:14 ?tfAURICE JOY. 3StC I O.ND EDITION. - ; I I'ELEGRAP . I -1 . FOREIGN' [ NEWS BY STEAMER. Iliotf4 in JL4nnertsiti re. Increase of the French Army. DESTRUCTIVE FIRE IN CHICAGO. FROM WASHINGTON. The Trial of Surratt Continued. The District Attorney's Argument. Front Europe by Steamer. Nxw Yon K, July '29.—The steamer City of Boston brinks European dates to the 18th inst. The steamer England, which was to sail simul taneously- with the City of Boston, sustained da mages in a storm, which detained her. ENG LAND. There was mach rioting and some bloodshed at kit. Helens, Lancadtite, on the 15th, on the ocea elon of the Orange demonstration. For a time there was a, complete reign of terror. FRANCE. The twenty-three batteries of artillery, sup pressed in November, lBsis; by a decree of the Emperor Napoleon, have been re-established. Napoleon has sent to .M. !thither the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor, set in diamonds, accompanied by a note in which he expres-led the hope that this attention on his part will cause flOnlier to - forget the unjust attacks made upon him for his services to his country. Fire in • hicago. Cito mm, July '29.—A fire lait night Iletroyed 111 the buildingti on•Milwaukce avenue, front No. ito.) to No. 211. They were occupiedprit;r:ipally • retail dealers. whose, lo4sce r s stige from to tr 2,5 , 000. _Thy oggregatt: Irms is 4 ;75,00). with 6f .510.009. The Surratt Trost!. .Itl "...9.—T11(: trial of John li. t-:.rratt was resumed this tuorllill4 n:,l Court, Judge Fisher pre-1d1n.4. The attend anee was smaller :ban asuai_otvir. , z in part to the withdrawal of the old pa-se,and the limitation to the issuing of nee Orl, in Part to the ruin which fell at the. opening of the I 'uu rt. Among the auditors, however, were .e.veral la dies who have been regular attend.iiil,i sines the beginning of the trial. Mrs. Ann S. Stephens. the authoress, occupied her accustomed • = tt ' within the bhr. Bhe seems to take a lively wrest in the proceedings, and, it is said, proposes some day to weave the facts and details into a story. Mr. Carrington resumed the floor and con tinued his address to the jury, and discussed the questions of fact submitted on Saturday. In re gard to the first fact, whether the act charged was committed about the time therein dated ouu the jurisdiction of this Court, he had but I,ittle to say, for the evidence upon that point was clear and Cspldt. - As to Booth, he enters the President's box, which had been carefully prepared for his ingress beforehand, and pours the contents of his pistol in the brain of the representative of Otis nation , Therresident hoWs his head and dies is he had - flied; w e.x ith no presiilon of malice to - any one. When did such a crime as this ever before occur? Is it rieceer ,saty to call up this scene,.which can never be forgotten by Atherican citizens? The scene was graphically described by our own citizen, Colonel Stewart; and if he - had held Booth in a herculean grasp the assassin's blood would never- have stained the soil of Virginia. The testimony of Doctor Burma could not but satisfy the jury that the President's death ensued its the ..result of the shooting , by Booth. and this set tles the second proposition: that the woaad the occeased received caused his death. The third proposition is: Does it appear that the ;.sartult and death were the result of a conspiracy, of which the prisoner at the bar was member, and that is the great .iutstion.• for if it appears that the death was the result of a con spiracy, no matter for what other purposes that conspiracy was•formed, then Wati murder, and . God - grant that the day will never come. when an American or English judge will ear:: a,,c:( - f, :tat , suet: an act is not murder. N? .1:4 I 'ntinued itrthe ur.x: Edition NeW4 7 Fint is.t, , ; MoNnor, July , pilot boat Mary:am:l reports the a. - rival, bound ) Baltimore, of the chip Tiber, from Callao. Bark- Lielaware, Demarara; Senora, Savannah. Brigs Cleta,Porto Rico; Eliza Henrietta, Buenos Ayres; Jabez, Bermuda. The brig E. F. Aagust, from Rio, is in Hampton, Roads. The Spanish brig Ephita, from Havana for New York, was spoken .July 2kltti. Financial News from New York. tapocial Elenetch to the Philadelphia Evening bylleeepo'e Independent News Agtiney.) MIN+, YORK, July 29.—United States 66, 1881, 1106,4110%; United States Five-twenties, 1862, ilix@inViditto, 1864, 109>gan109;4; ditto. 1865, 109‘©1010.:::*; January and July, 1083.40 1 ) , ,;; Ten forties, 169., 1 4t, Seven-thirtictz, February and August, 107%63107i; ditto, June and De2.ember, 10iVir107%; ditto, Jan. and July, 107;y,(01.07%; 4401d,1403g; New York Central. 1031(0109V; Erie 77Wii.VIA;; ditto, preferred, 776:g78; Hudson 120(i_41.14!..: 2 ',, Reading, 108 1, A®108 , ;4; Micuigan Southern, BitirB3,; Michigan Central, 112(0112%; Illinois Central, 118340119; Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, 933@53zjk, Cincinnati and Toledo, 1250125%; Rock Island., 103%0,)10 . 3%; Northwest, common, 5131@51? Northwest, preferred, 7:33. 2 ;073.; Paelile Mau, 145@14534; Atlantic Mall,, 1110111;.,c; Canton, 52..1@53y,,; Cumberland, 88X6 393:; Quicksilver, 343‘.@)35; Wayne, 106;.. 2 :0106),; Mariposa, 93 , ,‘ €4lo3 , ':•Western Union Telegraph, 48,V(0.18.';' , 1 4 ;805t0n ton Water Power, 2:3;402,3; Terre, Ha.ute.sl:mslJ , j; Toledo and Wabash, 52:N@.53; Chicago and Alton, 115@l16;Chicago and Alton pref:rred,ll7, , ,,V , )llB; Ohio and Mississippi CertlEcates. Tun DisAtM::' -- AT MOUNT th..6loa.—Le,ttel from Mount Desert make it certain' that the stul accident which we recorded yesterday morning was the result of a want of duo care on the part of the unfortunate- persons in the boat. The party had taken the favorite sail froin Southwest Harbor to Bar Harbor in the morning, and vere returning in the afternoon, with a strong south east wind and frequent heavy squalls and gusts, the danger from which was Increased by the mountainous character of the coast. A boat fn charge of Captain Royal Higgins followed, and found the danger from flaws so great that it was thought best to shorten sail, but it was observed that the.other boat did • n0t...d0 so, ..and the te* eerily of those in charge of it was remarked upon. The result justified the fears, for a heavy flaw struck her when not far from Egg Rock, an* she went down stern foremost, dragging down her dory, and the sails disappeariug.la a bo u t f our minutes. Miss Blake, who was rescued, was found cling ing to an oar and Insensible, and was .saved at imminent risk by Captain Higgins, who reached her in-the 'small boat belonging to his oraft, Nothing was seen of. the other persons who w e r e lost. Twenty minutes seem . to have covered the whole.tirno from the fatal gust to the re,im e o f lytissAlike,',ln_whiell brief Interval eight persons, I"njoylug the pissing moment In all hilarity' and confidence were carried do`w I.ll'Blor of friends and the sniffing ehom.—Boton Vraveller, NEW 114311.11 i. NI: Imo:, July 29.—Although there wa r s a heavy thunder and rain storm here last evebing, the atmosphere continues very oppressive. Tne churches, yesterday were but thinly attended. One preacher, by way of tempting a congrega tion, advertised .his place ot worship as "the coolest, hall in the city." The number of deaths, last week in this city and at the institutions was 678—an increase of 97 over that of the previous week. The mortality .was principally among children. George Williams, George M. Wahl and Joseph S. Sudley were arrested on Saturday, and ar raigned before juStice Dowling, on a charge of having committed the tiencei of bank check forgeries which have so startled the mercantile community. The prisoners were. remanded for examination until to-day, as the evidence, was incomplete. The two pilots of the steamer James W. Bald win were admitted to bail Saturday by the Supreme Court in $5,000 each. Messrs. Albert Van Winkle and Jacob H. Tremper became their bondsmen. ' George Whitdeld Chandler, alias George W. Garrison, an acter(of some repute, formerly of the Olympic Theatre, was brought before the Jefferson Market Police Court, on Saturday morning, upon complaint of his wife, who charges him with bigamy and desertion. '[r. Chandler was held to hail. The Rev. Dr)feClusliv Afsflris city 'has hen appointed Bishefp of Louisville, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Bishop Lovialle. It Is announced also that lettcrs have been -re ceived from Rome in which it is stated that Bishop Rosecrans, of Cincinnati, is to he the successor of the late Bishop Timon, of Buffalo. Rochester, with the counties of Livingston, Steuben, On tario and Monroe, will be created a separate dio cese, with the Very Rev. William Gleason, of Buf falo, as the first Bishop. The inquest in the case of Francis Shields, a newsboy, who was killed by being run over by a car on the Forty-second street line, was con cluded yesterday, thejury exonerating the driver and conductor from blame. Walter Jackson, a boy years of age. whose parents reside in Hudson City, N. J., died sud denly on Saturday night from fright, his fattier having threatened to whip him. - Frederika .Wickerman, a native of .Germany, aged 2J years, on Saturday attempted to commit suicide in her apartment at No. 22 Mott street, by swallowing the phosphorus cut from a number of matches. She received medical attendance, and is recovering. A decree of divorce was granted Saturday In the Supreme Court, Judge Leonard presiding, in the. action entitled Esther Kohn vs. Louis . . The eharge6 against Rev. S. H. Tung, Jr., are, it in to be investigated by the Committee in private. Jaineg Tinney. a young inan nineteen years of f e ll from a boat into the Harlem River yes rdav, aid drowned. A rasa of cholera is said to have occurred in (1n en- county. The Ladic- Brooklyn Southern Relief Associa tion have received up to the present time ----- Incendiari hi us in Concord, N. H. C ,, N , ..fll , , N. H., July 2.. Itos7.—The commu nity here are greatly excited at the unusual prev alence of incendiary fires, no less than half a dozen having Occurred within ,the past few days, des trOying upwards of 5':1,040,400 worth of prop erty. The last broke out about daylight this Morning in J. Gi.ti Hill's stable, destroying that and two others owned by Arthur Clough and . J. G. Johnson and Bradley, and damaging a couple of dwellings on Centre street. The• Sherman House, St. Paul's church and the surround ing buildings were saved with great effort: The loss on all is about tlii,ooo, on which there is an insurancfrof one-half. CITY lIIMILETIN. STATE OP TIIE THERMOMETER THIS DAY AT TIE BULLETIN OFFICE. 10 A. 34....82 deg. 12 M.... 80 deg. 2P. 25....80 deg. Weather cloudy. Wind Sonthwat. Patiniza..—There are few operationa more pain t:a than cutting teeth, tlLef flower's Infant Cordial ratibeci. r c.. hl sig +infants la a soother: — Emma Mos for Constipation and Habitual Cos tive:lee& Depot, Sixth and Vine.. Fifty tents a box. GOLD MEDAL Pri b rumEn2. Napoleon_lll. awarded the prize medal, at the Parießipoeftidnll367, to It. &G. A. Wright for the beet Toilet Soape, Ex tracts and Perfnmeries—for eale by all the principal droggiete. R. &G. A. Wright, 624 Cheetnnt streets. WAIMANTED TO 017 RE OR THE MONET RE rtntrro. Dr. Pitlet's Rheumatic Remedy has cured 4,500 caeea of Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Gout In this city. Prepared at 29 south Peauth street. Butßow's eOAPS.—Elder Flower, Turtle Oil, s3lyeerire, Let ace, &dayflower Murk, Eerie, eze. SrOWPILY tb BeOTILLII, ilaiX)rtere, 43 South Eighth etreet. DIA*GGISTS' Bus - muss and Fancy Goods. fi..nownzst Batratleß, Importens, 23 Soittis Eighth street. GOLD W6-NTF.II DE PLAVEN .t BRUMES, No. 40 S not Third street. DIED. I.I.I'IINC , WT.—en the 37th Haines, Eon of _lea and Ai nu H. Lippincott, In the 24th yercr of but age. Ilia relatives and .friends are respectfully invited to attend his funeral, at WeettiOd Meeting }louse, on Third day, the rkth inst.,-at n o'clock, A. M. Carriages will be in waiting at Riverton Station to meet the train which es l vem Walnut street at 10 o'clock. MITCHELL.—On th trimming of the flei , sie Wilton, daughter of Edwin and MaryA. Mitchell; aged yearn and 8 menthe. Notice of the time cf funeral to-morrow. THE UNDERSIGNED HAVE PURCHASED TDB NEW SIX PER ,CENT. REGISTERED LOAN OF THE seo Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company, DI7E IN 189', INTEREST PAYABLE QIETAR'TERLY, FREE OF IJMTED STATES An STATE TAXES, AND el tql,R IT FOR BALE AT THE LOW PRICE OF NINETY-TWO, And Accrued Interest from May 1. This LOAN is secnred by a first mortgage an th . o Cora coneiliiietedbanddto ho Ainichg from eh hieth7Lel'ar:rartltnivegtoaelttn boroughf their bridge across the said river now in - proceed- of eon- Tl(7. lc l i a . f t rge t tL e fei 'v a i gog'i t e l 4Y:i n k:Ni ' S Railroad and Bridge. Copme of the mortgage may bo had en application at the office of the Company, or to either of the andereigned. DREXEL dc CO, • • • E. W. CLARIS & co. • • SAY COOKS i CO. W. IL NEWBOLD, SON dr; AERTSER3 3el2tf 7-30 7 5, CONVERTED INTO 5-20'S IDIEZEIXIFAL., 8e; coo, .734 , South Third Strept. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY ;JULY 29, 1867. THIRD EDITION.,I BY TELEGRAI)H. LATEST BY THE CABLE. State of the 11a,rkets. LATER FROM WAS HINGTON. Gen. Grant Gone to Tennessee. The Election Excitement There. ANOTHER PRESIDENTIAL TOUR. A. J. Going ,to Look-Out. The Trial of Surratt Continued. Hy the Atlantic Telegraph. soon lIRPOJtT. LoNooN, July 29, Noon.--Consols for' money, 93%. U. S. Five-twenties, 72M. Illinois Cen tral, 763. Erie IL 8., 1834. LIVERPOOL, July 29, Noon.—Cotton—Sales of 10,000 bales; Uplands, 10%, Orleans, 10%. Breadstuff's are excited but not quotable. Provisions and produce unchanged. LoxDoN, July 29, NOon.—The markets are un chan Als•rwEnr, July 29. —Petroleum c Saturday at 1)43 fiance. Latest. front 'Washing ton. [dpeclal Rvvatctip!..he P . 11114t. Evening Etulletin, by Independent News A gen cy:i Wasithibios, July Tl—General Grant left Long Branch this morning, and is on his way to Tennessee by special train from New York, in order to give his personal Attention to affairs in that State during the election excitement, which is represented to bc,intense. A conflict between the opposing parties is represented to be immis nent: nesident Johnson, accompalied by Mrs. Stover and other members of his family, together, possibly,with oneor two members of the Cabinet, proposes a visit to Tennessee after the election excitement in that State is over. They will go to Lookout Mountain and .preibably remain there two weeks. ' . Surratt [Continued from Second Edition.] Mr. Carrington cited from: ttl Greenleaf, Section 89, to show what a conspiracy was, and con- tended that the prisoner conspired to commit an unlawful act, and the act was committed by some one of the conspirators; then he was guilty and guilty of murder; where would our safety be if the law were otherwise? Now apply that law to the fact in the case. The first scene of that conspiracy is laid on Pennsylvania avenue, in April, 1861. Three men are engaged in conversation, and the subject Is the murder of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. One suggests as the instrument of death the telescopic 'rite, another, whose heart is touched with pity, says : "No, we might kill his wife and child." But "no," says the first, "we will kill all, if necessary; we'll murder all, if necessary to the execution of our bloody put-. pose." Is this doubted? It does not depend upon imported testiniony, but on the testimony of Mrs. McClernand, a lady born and bred In your own city, whose character_ no- attempt sta - been made to impeach. What do you see? In April, MCA, malice, hissing and hot, and murder contemplated against the President of the United States. Who were diet party? John W. Booth, the friend and associate of the prisoner. and the especial pet of Mrs. Mary E. Surratt; Atzerodt, to' whom the ladies at No. 317 gave the name of "Port Tobacco," and Harold, who drank whisky given him by Mrs. Surratt to nerve his . arm for 'his bloody deed. The second scene of this bloody act occurs in a Third even car of New York where a hely overheard a e nversation relative to the murder of the Presi&nt. The conspirators attract her attention. They are disguised, but, one of the mysterious providences of God, they drop certain letters, which are secured by the lady and taken to Gen. Scott, who, conceiving them to be of im portance, sends them to the authorities. Mr. Pierrepont here read the letter found' by Mrs. Hudspeth. Mr. Carrington resuming, said—The jury had heard the testimony of Mrs. Budspeth. He cared not who the persons overheard were, for it she wed that by solemn vows there was a pledge to mur der Abraham Lincoln with the pistol, the dagger and the cup. Du yoti remember that at this very time Harold was the clerk Ina drug store, and the command was very plain—" If the pistol and the da44gcr will not do its work, then use the cup." That other letter from St. Louis, signed by some one% wife, may'we not infer, was from the wife of Louis Payne, the friend of Surratt? But Payne was deaf to this appeal, and bent upon his murderous purpose. He goes on until this, murder is consummated, and the land is 'filled with tears and mourning. Let us leave the city of New York and return to Washington, the metropolis of the great Christian nation, and visit there 541 11 street, the third scene in this bloody tragedy. Visit that place and the first figure we see is that of Payne, Hui Moloch of this infernal conspiracy. Next we have Atzereat, the Belial of this infernal conspiracy. He was the pet of the ladles at 541; they gave him the sobriquet of a P'Ort Tobacco." They petted him. Who next? There was Howell, the blockade ruuuer. I would call him 'gammon, for he had no other ambition than whiskyand money. Who next? There sits old Satan, Booth, and next to him Beelzebub, Surratt. For he would show that Surratt was second in power in com mand to Booth. • NEW Yonh, July 29.—Cotton quiet; Middling Uplands ' 27 ; :. Flour-5,200 bbls. sold; State and Western dull and 10@15 ets. lower; State, $6 304411; Ohio, $9 60@512 40; Western, 66 30 14'12; Southern, s9qslo 75. Wheat declining; 4,4)00 bushels sold; California White, $2 75. Rye dull. Barley quiet. Corn-42,0010 bushels sold; New Mixed Western $1 02@$1 05.. • Oatsiscarce and than; )8,000 Inishels sold at 81®95c. Beef ,quiet. Pork heavy and lower; 500 bbls. sold; New Mess, $23 85. Lard steady at 12(313!4. Whisky quiet. Spirits Turpentine firm at 58‘ , 50. Rosin steady; Strained. s'4; 'Pale, stkiss4; 50. • NATIONAL BINS OF THE . REPUBLIC, Beg AND tal CHESTNUT STREET. VEILAMLIIIII. CAPITAL, - - $1,000,000. 4 • POLECTOILII: • Nathan Hue. , Edward U . Urue , lFrcdaric A.Hoyt Bent. Rowland , Jr., William Ervien . I W lIL H . iihawn , INIT. H RHAWN, Pr ier of th esident, Late Caehe CentralNattaaal Bank. JOS. P. SIUIWOHD, ()ashler, • akt , 9ltlsp4 Late qt the Philadelphia National Dank. , 7 11 AK UR SWEET . CORK-25 *DAHRIII.4I,LU_ST, ceived and for bale by JOSEPH D. DILISULISK CO., i 316 idontle Delaware &venom 2:15 0'01(.)ok. Continued in the next Edition. Commercial. youvt,...yipalON BY TELEGRAPH. LATE NEWS FROM MEXICO Gen. Vidaurri Shot. , AN ADDRESS FROM ESCOBEDO. NVA.SIIINGT The Indian Peace Commissioners. THE' lIIREATENED DISTURBANCES H TEATIMES. Surratt's Trial Continued. From !Mexico. NYW ORLEAIsiq, July 29. Brownsville de spatches of the 26th have been received. A San Luis special of the 15th says that Gen. Vidaurri was shot in St. Domingo Square, city of Mexico. general Diaz refused an interview, or the privilege to see his son. Mr. Schaffer, the counsellor of the late Emperor, is imprisoned. The generals arrested at Queretaro are to be sent to their respective States for trial. Marquez was levying prestamos in the capital until the very hour before he left. The Liberal Government has decided that all Imperial Prefects are to be punished by six years' . exile, and the Secretaries by two years. - - 6errerakJuan Alvarez died at Iquala in the latter part of April. Eseobedo made the following address to the subaltern officers of the Imperial army before releasing them:- "The Supreme Government might dispose of the lives of those who, forget, ting,they were Mexicans, fought for a foreigner elevated to power by the invader; but the government always magnanimous, forgives those who until now have been enemies of their country; because it expects that their future con duct will correspond with the clemency used to wards- the misled sons of Mexico. You are at liberty, and you may ask your passports for any point where you desire to reside." One prisoner at Queretaro, since he was libe rated, writes fromMorclia, saying that he received good treatment by the, Liberal' army. A special train left Z.luadalajara for Manzanillo On the fld inst.' Several French prisoners, lately released, accompany the train. Corona, writing from the capital, says that all the garrison, with all its chiefs and officers, except 3larquez, is in our power. O'Haran and Lableo arc prisoners. lovar, Uabano, Lopez, Portflo, Elquera, Locunga and the Regent, Soles, sur rendered , themselves prisoners: It is said that several persons in the capital will be punished with death. The following particulars of the occupation of the Capital are from La Prenga, of Guadalajara : At daybreak on the 21st the,parapets of the enemy were perceived to be abandoned. Shortly after the announcement was telegraphed that all the fortifications were also abandoned. The order for our advance into the city was given. Everywhere were found trains of ammunition, and the baggage of the enemy and arms were scattered along the road and in the streets of the city. The entire garrison had deserted and retired - " iv :" 44 Ai! '- ire4ittderumgr, sure good order and to deliver up the position, *nd place himself at the disposal of the beseigers as a prisoner of war. From Waushington. WASIIINGTON, July 29.—The Navy Department has received from Commander Creighton news of his arrival at Porte Grande, St. Vincent's Island, on the 29th of Jane. He intended to leave for Rio de Janeiro on the Ist of July. Gen. John B. Sanborn and Col. Tappan, com missioners under the recent act of Congress to make peace with the hostile Indians, have ar rived in this city and reported to the Commis sioner of Indian Affairs. These gentlemen will leave immediately for the Indian country. Official, as well as private, accounts from Ten nessee represent the danger of outbreaks or riots all over the State next Thursday at the election. The Government has for some days past been maturing such measures as may preserve the peace. • Major-General Thomas telegraphed to the Presi dent to-day that all the troops in Kentucky will be engaged in preserving order in, that State, but he believes he will be able, with other forces at his command, to prevent, riots at Memphis, Nashville . . and other large towns. He will • to morrow go to Memphis. The Surrall, Trim. Contiuucd from Third Edition Who next do You see? Oh, that it were dot so that an American woman could be found in such company, giving her support and counte nance to that conspiracy. There'sat yrs. Slater. There was no' infenial deity she could properly personate, for bell has no fury like the hatred of a depraved and • wicked woman. Has the English language words to express the depravity of this woman, who, in cold blood, requested the prisoner at the bar to shoot down Union soldiers, escaping from rebel prisons? A brave man's heart melts with pity when he sees his bitterest foe at his feet, but here is a Man and a woman Murdering in cold blood men in distress, who iippeal to their clemency. • But what is the next scene in the bloody tra gedy? Do you doubt the testimony of Miss Ho nom Fitzpatrick? If not, you cannot doubt the truth of the fourth scene in this tragedy. This lady goes to the , theatre with the prisoner; Booth enters and calls the prisoner aside, and they have a private conversation. .What was it? No ear heard it ,hut that Ear that hears the gentlest sound. Bitt can it be doubted that the subject of this conversation Was the murder of Mr. Lincoln ? What is the next scene? On April 11 th, 1865, we find the conspirators at Ford's Theatre. B th enters the theatre, and he fires the fatal sh t. A whistle sounds—a whistle making a 1 nilar sound is found in the house of Mrs.Surratt. 613.11 l' r t it the signal Payne invades the sacred precinct of the family circle, and raising his murderous arm, he makes an assault upon the faithful nurse. He enters the sick chamber and strikes with the fury of a demon at the almost lifeless corpse of a feeble and emaciated old man.' By a mira culous interposition of Providence his life is. spared. Payne escapes, and. where does he go? To the arms of Mary Stir ratt, the mother of the prisoner at the bar. He goes tin re reeking with the blood of an Ameri can citizen. He goes to the general reutlezVous whence all had issued on their murdcrous under taking. Does not all this prove a conspiracy ? It has net b'eeu necessary to refer to the testi mony of Lewis J. Weichmun, for without the conspiracy is proven complete. 13ut he (Mr. Carrington Y 1 now , cause to Weichnian's testi mony. Why should it diseurded ? Ignorant men are governed by - prelhdice, but not so with an intelligent 'jury. NO witness's • testi mony 'cab be. discarded tnless his ; Chary seker is proven bad on other ;'reasons;. 3:00 O'Clool‘. that a different state of facto is proven by other witnesses., From whaf, had already fallen from Mr. 3leiriek, It would be attempted to show that Weichman was one of the 'Ac4ollaplices. Ile spurned the accusation. It has been said that it was fortunate a Union clerk was boarding among these infernal spirits, for was ever such another ednelave assembled this side of hell? Weidman was among the faithless, faithful, If Weidman) bad been an accomplice, Surratt would have made of him a confidant, and would, have con versed in his presence: If Weichman was a liar, hovv easy would it have been to have sworn "I saw the prisoner here on April 14,'18&!" He did not see him because the prisoner did not permit. him to see him, and he told the truth and the whole truth. 'Continued in the next Edition.l New York DankAtOtement. • Nuys , YORK July '29.—Tbe following is the .2 statement of ti e Newlfork banks : Loans, increase . ;' , 1131,663,575 Circulation; increase 21,311 Deposits, increase I • 1,172,934 Legal tenders, increase 1,164,539 Specie, decrease 27 . 4591 606 NEW JERSEY MATTERS. THE SCHOOL CEN6O9.—The school trustees in the various distracts, under the new law passed by the Legislature, last,winter, are required to take or cause to be takn, a complete census of all the children in said districts, which .census must be taken between the first and the twen tieth of Augnst. ,This is for the purpose of as certaining how many children are admissible into the'public sthools. A report is likewise to be made to the County Superintendent by the first of September, a failure to comply with which regulations debars the district so failing of the school funds appropriated by the State. SENTENCED. -- Kelso, convicted at the May term of the Camden county courts, of murder in the first degree; for killing another man named Kelley, has had the verdict changed' from its original to that of murder in the second de gree. For this he has been sentenced to the State Penitentiary, at Trenton, for the term of twelve years, and stands committed until the costs in the case are paid. THE CAMP MEETING—The catip,, meeting at Vineland closed on Saturday. It was a complete success, and was largely attended. Some of, the ablest preachers in the State participated in the exercises. A NEW &nom, HonsE.—A fine and commo dious school house is in progress at May's Land ing. which will be finished by the first of Sep tember. Philadelphia Stock Exchange. BETWEEN BOA RDA. $2OOO U S 5-20 s '55 cp 1100 sh Phil tt Erie WO 2.8 ca, , 11 lts 1083,1! GO NtcYti Iton Coal c 5 5000 Pa Gs 1 series c 1011.1'1 58 sh Read R 54 4000 City Gs old 054 , 25 sh do traits( .54.! 2000 Pa H 2 met Gs 95M1100 sh do GO days 59 , i; 1500 Leh Nv tis 'B4 1[9.89 =EI $l4OO City 66 new 09?„'. 5000 N Jereiy 66 3600. do lts otr, , gl b 5 10314 3000 do old 35 + 4 l 11 eh Penna A 53N I. E. WALRAYEN, MASONIC HALL. 719 Chestnut Street, HAS NOW OPEN A FULL LLNE OP LACE CURTAINS, From the beet Manufezt,oriee; • • - Embraciatt the Newed Melva; Nottingham ',Rep Cuttaina, OF VERY BEALTIJ US PATTERNS. MOSQUITO NETS, WHITE AND IN COLORS, WITH .THE ILOSTSAP- PROVED FLXTUREE3. WINDOW SHADES, A Large Assortment. ALL OFFERED AT : VERY REASONABLE PRICES. NO MORE ANNOYANCE FLIES AND MOSQUITOES! DE COURSEY'S PATENT FLY AND MOSQUITO BAR This novel and Valuable invention is designed for pro tecting Gilded Frames. Oil Paintings. Nlantle Mirrors, Pier (basses, Portrait and Picture Frames, Chandeliers, Statuary, Groups, &c., and excluding from bed chambers and other apartments, those ever•perplexing pests, Flies and Mosquitoes; • The Invention ti to plgenleusly Contrived that it can be hat applied to say wo No Wooden Frame is Required. Thus reducing the price of the article more than one half of that of the ordinary Mosquito Bar, which is not my ungainly in appearance, but cannot bo fitted to any' other than the window for which it is expressly made. The patent Bar, on the other hand, will snit for a large or small window, and can be rolled lute the smallest bundle and carried in the pocket, if ncceeaary. - Boarders at the sea-shore and elsewhere will Lind them a great convenience. Ail that in required in order to attach the Bar, in four ordinary pine. They can also be used to cover Oil Paintings, Gilded Frames. . dec., requiring no tacking whatever, and. can be taken oft and replayed in a minute. For sale at all the principal Upholstering tind Home f uni haling entabliellineuta in the city. Also, at the Maul. f actory, N. W. Cor. SEVENTH and CHESTNUT Ste. N. 13.—Ordera by mail promptly attended to. NEW STATE LOAN. THE NEW SIX PER CENT. STATE LOAN, FREE FROM ALL State, County and Municipal Taxation, WILL BE ruRmenELD IN SUMS TO SUIT. ON API'LICATION TC .ENED MIETt. 01' TUE UNOLII. 'l3lO. JAY COOKE & CO., DREXEL & CO., E. W. CLARK &CO. J• 23. la-514 FIFTH EDITION BY TELEGRAPH. LATEST FROM WASHINGTON, FILIBUSTERING MEXICO. Expected Proelamatin of the President: The Late Riot at Rogerville, Tenn. THE SURRATT TRIAL. The Argument for the Proseoutiow FROM .11TE W 01MIC. A MAN SHOOTS HIS WIFE. Arrest of the Murderer. FROM THE PLAINS. FROM RICHMOND. Latest tromMaustilngten: Special Dempatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulled*. by Haseen's Independent Neele Agency.] WAsfunTrox, July 2D.—lt is understood on good authority that the President of the United States is about to issue a proclamation against the projected filibustering expeditions to Mexico. The Late Riot in Tannic,Osee. ripecial Beepatch to the Evening Bulletin, by Iltuaeon's Independent News Agency.) WASHINGTON, July 29.—Additional accounts from Rogersville, - Tennessee, report that in the recent riot orie Conservative white and one Radi cal negro were killed. Seven others were partially wounded, and twenty-five or thirty injured. Each party charges the other with the responsibility of the affair. The stirrings Trial. Continued front the Fourth Edition. But suppose Weichman was an a.ecompli2c ? If he turned and repented,,that was his concilia tion. Qurlng this conspiracyl i Weichman met the officers face to face. He told them all he knew. He pursued the prisoner, and, like a true Ameri can citizen, he conies here and testifies against ' him. It must be remembered that Weichman re monstrated with Mrs. Stiffen, and she replied . that John iran-with this party, and Booth was . crazy upon one subject. But has Weichman been contradicted in any one material point? He (Mr. Carrington) defied the defence to point to one prominent fact wherein Welch man has been contradicted by any credible wit ness in behalf of the prisoner. Mr. Carrington read from Greenleaf to show that if a man is an accomplice and repents da ring the conspiracy, he Is relieved from all re sponsibility, but, being not connected with it, and giving information. shows that he had no connection with the conspiracy. He gives all, information as soon as possible. The defence has, finally, failed to prove that Weichman was placed under arrest. Ithi true he was placed under arrest by McDevitt, but he stayed at pollee headquivtere under the mere request of Major Richards. It could bo shown that .Weichman's testimony was corroborated,in all material points of the transaction from its inception to its consumma :-!--illirifti*ington) was somewhat aumsed_. at Weichnuin's cross-examination, arid asked if Weichman did not bear himself manfully, and . Mr. Bnidleyfolmd himself foiled for once in en- 't deavoring to discredit this witness. He came through the fiery furnace well tried, and ten, firmed by all the witnesses. The first point testified to by Welchman is cor roborated, and that is that No. fill I street was the rendezvous of these conspirators. Secondly, he testified to the intimate relations of the pri soner and the other conspirators, and no one contradicts him in that. Weichman also testifies to the • mysterious meetings and conversations, ciphers and geogra phical projection after heforms the acquaintance of John Wilkes Booth, upon the introduction by the prisoner at the bar. In this he is uncoil tradicted. In relation to the conversation at the theatre, he Is confirmed by Miss Fitzpatrick. Wcichman's testimony lerelation to Payne and Surratt practising with bowie knives was here read, and Mr. Carrington said this was also uneontradicted. Again, when Weichman re— ceived a mysterious telegram from - Booth, and asked Buffett what it meant, he is told not to be so inquisitive, and is given no satisfaction. Couple this with the fact of Surratt's immediate' visit to the Herndon House, end it shows that Surratt and Booth were endeavoring to' secure a hiding-place for Louis 'Bayne. Booth telegraphs to his tool, Surratt, to preptire a room where they may conceal one of their instruments. Mysterlotts MurderinNeur York. (Special to the Philadelphia Evening geßncy.) ulletin by iliulou's Independent News A Naw YORK. July 'A.—Thomas Carey; in Seventy-first street, was arrested yesterday on the charge of -having caused the death of his wife . by shooting her in the thigh. The facts of the: case - arc very singular, and show a neglect of duty on the part of come public officials by which Carey nearly escaped prosecution. _ It appears that on the 18th instant 3lrs. Carey was shot through the thigh by a musket-ball. It was alleged that the wound was inflicted' by her husband, and he was arrested. Mrs. Carey re fused to make ceinplahrt, and as it was sup posed at the time that she was not dangerously injured, Carey was discharged. • , A few days ago the woman died front the ef fects' of the wound. The police were notified that an inquest was to be held, but do evidence was brought against. Carey. The kirk rendered' a verdict that the woman came to her death by :e wound inflicted by some person unknown.. Yesterday the ease was brought before this po lice. and Carey was arrested. It is probable th at the ea4o will, be rd-opened by.the Coroner. From the *►iiains. Sr. Louts, July 29th.—A ,despatch -from Eliss worth, Kansas, three miles from Fort Harker, says there were fifteen cases of cholera, there en. Saturday, and five deaths. Thu town JS almoit deserted, and those who remain in it expe2z. Indian raid. „,, From Richmond. G RitlimoND, July 29.—Governor Poirpoint -' was' this morning assaulted at the executive non by Mrs. Driseoll, - who was immedlater arrested: by the . pollee; The assault was . - made because the Governor had pardonedy lsillint ber sou. The Governor' W4',not,'lnjtired.. From Schenectady. Si 3 I lI.NECTAI)Y, N. Y.; JUly'29.—.4. mgimmedi Willielnt l'enn was arrested hero to-day, ellen& with being en accessory to the murder of Michael Dick, of Oneida; N. Y:, who was poisoned about. two toonau , since. Bprisoner NaS taken la Oneida in cilarge of ,two °dicers from this Oleo- From Moline. L'mv ts.rox, July mencement exercises of Bales ColiegO 011,41:043 6 terday 'afternoon The counnetiergrupo' t ekes place on Wedneiday. Thu usinbers eight. 4::15
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