THE IWSCWKgCTtOW IN SPAIN. Official Despatches Received at flic NponlKb Nlnistrv of Wat* , ■ The Civil Governor of the Province pub lished Aug. 24 the following Official extract of the despatches received at .the Ministry of War: ' ; ■ ;■ ( Catalonia. —All the railways .-and, tele graphic lines are free. Tb§.kq)Mmn of Lieut- Col. Rodriguez detested -yesterday on the leiTitory of Tap'is (Gerona), near the frontier, two hands of rebels, who were obliged to take refuge .precipitately in France. Nuin-, bers of resurgents have surrendered. The Aleade of. Llorono (Bozagodo) with volun teers, has assisted the carbiniers in defeating the insurgents. Volunteers of the Province of Gerona and of the civil guaru ol Torella have taken some prisoners, among whore, are four Frenclnnen who had esaapetl from the prison of Ceret (France). Fernando Pierrnd Roger, and 27 men belonging to ms band, have been arrested by order or the French authorities, and taken to the prison ol Perpignan. Gen. Manso de Zuniga, nomi nated General-in-Chief of the forces m the Upper Arragon, set out from the capital on the 20th. He arrived at Saragossa on the 21st. In his impatient ardor to place himself at the head of his troops, who had already been on the march for some days past, and without duly considering the enemies he might meet on-his way, he left Saffagossa on the 2 1st, with a sinall column ote#so Chasseurs of Guidad' Rodrigo and 30 Cavaliers del Roy. Yesterday afternoon they encountered at Linas de Mar--* cuello the combined factious of the ex-Gen. Pierrad and Do' Morioues, 1,200 strong. Taking advantage of the enthusiasm which animated his troops, lie resolutely attacked the position occupied by the rebels, and after a fusillade of two hours’ duration dislodged them at the point of the bayonet. The small detachment of cavalry at the same time charged with fury, and followed the rebels almost to the gates of the town. The tiring continued until, the ammunition being ex hausted on both sides, Mauso’s troops formed in Column, and quietly awaited the enemy, who, for an hour and a half,hesitated to attack them. Night coming on tke column encamped at Ayerbe, where it halted, intending to continue its march toward Huesca this morn ing. The rebels have retired to Zaocn, having lost fifty men hilled, besides three officers, and a great number wounded. The column lost, besides' General Manso de Zuniga, who fell a victim to his ardor, one captain and 0116 lieutenant wounded, 13 soldiers lulled and 21 wounded. The cpnduct of the troops has been beyond all praise.. The Spanish army has shown itself a worthy inheritor of its tra ditional glories. ’lt has not degenerated. The body of the brave GeneraJ Mauso was immediately removed from the field of battle by liis son and bis aid-de-camp, who conveyed it to the camp of Huesca, where they arrived at seven iii the evening. In the rest of the Peninsula perfect tranquil lity prevails. The Queen, upon being in formed of these details, has deigned to reward the services of the troops engaged in the pursuit of the insurgents in, Catalonia,: Va lence and Arragon, and notably the soldiers' of the column commanded by Gen. Manso de Zuniga. The Queen will provide for the families of the soldiers who have perished }n these encounters. It is her wish that the above bulletin and her Royal resolution.be pub lished as a general order of the army for the information and satisfaction of the troops. rKOOLAMATiONS OF THE (’AI'TAIN-GENEI’.AL OF CATALONIA. The Captain-General of Catalonia addressed, Aug. 24, the following proclamation to-the people: Catalonians— lt is with pleasure that I announce to you that the state of siege in which the Government has been obliged to put this territory—a model in Spain of indus try and of laborious habits—will only serve in my hands to consolidate the peace and tranquillity which these remarkable qualities of your character require in order to develop themselves completely! In all matters which regard commerce, industry and the arts and sciences, you will in no way feel the weight of my authority. You will only feel that you require it for the film preservation of public order. The Queen wishes it thus. Such are my orders from the Government, and a munici pality composed of the most illustrious men of this large capital are efficaciously second ing my efforts. Honor to the generous patri cians who on the day of action leave their •palaces and villas to consecrate themselves to the service ofthe fine city in which they were bom, and who; for the most part, pos sessed of honors and riches, accomplished first their duties toward their fellow-citizens, who look at them wijh admiration and re spect May God deign to accord them the rewards compared with which the greatest prosperity upon earth is a- small thing! Yesterday the brave Brigadier Garcia beat and ■ completely dispersed at Bruch the united bands of Baldreih and Taragona, killing eleven men and wounding a great many others. The Generals, officers and soldiers have shown that spirit of courage and loyalty which distinguishes this disciplined army. The brave Gen. Izquiendo, at the head of considerable forces, directs with his ordinary skill the concerted movements of numerous columns which must extirpate the sedition of the towns in the provinces of Tarragona and Prieure. The Governors of Gerona and of Lerida inform me that tran <iuillily-prevails in their provinces; there merely exists the renmants of some insurrec tionary bands who are endeavoring to enter France, which country, with a strict regard to the' duties of friendly cordiality, disarms them and imprisons them. The rising of the bands in Catalonia is consequently on the point of being completely annihilated. Not a single guard-house has been taken by sur prise, and not a single soldier has deserted his colors. Most absurd lies have alone so far supported the senseless rising, blindly aud cowardly guided by certain malevolent peo ple, who are as free with the blood of others as they arc avaricious of their own perverse blood, and who keep themselves hid in their infected holes in Barcelona. May the tears of all victims and the execration of all honest men fall on them. (Signed) Tim Count de Ciiestk. ' BaeceloSA, Aug. 24, 1807. • The Captain-General, lias also issued the following proclamation extending tke amnestv offered to the insurgents:' ' . Taking into consideration that in conse quence of the active pursuit of the insurgents the greater part of them have not been able to enter a town, and have consequently no knowledge of the amnesty offered by me on the-TOth inst> to’- those- who-should-submit themselves within three days, and the num ber of those who have submitted themselves not having as yet exceeded two hundred, 1 have resolved to prolong for three days more, dating from the publication of this new pro clamation, the amnesty accorded to those who have already submitted themselves. Those insurgents who,- at the expiration of thiß jpew ueiay shaii not Uuve submilled tiiem selVCfe,.and shall be made prisoners by the troops, will be shot within the shortest time prescribed to the edmm:inders-ot' the columns. 'J jie Cor:,;- OF. Oil BUTE. Baekei.ona, 23d August, lto;;. Botwkk.v two and three, millions 'tif barrels of whisky will he relieved- from the bonded’ w.u-u -bouFcs throughout the country by th, ; reseltuUu-' of the trimsportation embargo. In' one Ohirj dlattict- atone, over ninety thousand barrels have sicunr.ijatcd tlurinjj thb restriction. A Battle la the Desert. _ - The following is an extract from Ouidas - “Under Two Flags,” published by J. B. Bippincott jA Co. • It is the surprise .of a French ' detachment by an overwhelming Arab force ; •■■.**. ( ■ ' Cecil had awakened while the camp still slept. Do what he would, force himseif into the fullness of this tierce and hard ex istence as he might, he could not burn out or banish a thing that had many a time haunted him, but never as it did now—the remem brance of a woman. He almost laughed as he Jay there on a pile of rotting straw, and •wrung the truth out of his own heart, that he—a soldier of these exiled squadrons, was mad enough to love that woman, whose deep proud eyes had dwelt with such serene pity upon him. Flick-Flack, coiled asleep in liis bosom, thrilled, stirred and growled. He rose, and, with the little dog under his arm, looked out from the canvas. He knew that the most vigilant sentry in the service had not the in stinct for a foe afar oil’ that Flick-Flack pos sessed. He gazed keenly southward, the poo dle growling on; that cloud so dim, so distant, caught his sight. Was it a moving herd, a shifting mist, a shadow-play between the night and dawn? For a moment longer he watched it; then what it was he knew, or felt by such strong •Instinct as makes knowledge; -and- like the blast of a'clarion liis alarm rang over the Tib , armed and slumbering camp. An instant, and the hive of men, so still, so motionless, broke into violent movement; and from the tents the half-clothed sleepers poured, wakened, and fresh in wakening as hounds. Perfect discipline did the. rest. With marvelous, with matchless swiftness and precision they harnessed and got under arms. They were hut fifteen hundred or so in all —a single squadron of Chasseurs, two battalions of Zouaves, half a corps of Tirail leurs, and some Turcos; only a branch of the main body, and without artillery. Blit they were some of the flower of the army of Algiers, aud they roused in a second,with the vivacious ferocity of the .bounding tiger, with the glad, eager impatience for the slaughter of the unloosed hawk. Yet, rapid in ils wondrous celerity as their united action was, it was not so rapid as the downward sweep of that war cloud that came so near, with the tossing of white draperies and the shine of countless sabres, now growing clearer and clearer out of the darkness, till, with the whir like the noise of an eagle’s wings, and swoop like an eagle’s seizure, the'Arabs whirled down upon them,'met a lew yards in advance by the answering charge of the Light Cavalry. There was a crash as if rock were hurled upon rock, as the' Chasseurs, scarce) seated ill saddle, rushed forward to save the pickets, to encounter the first blind foree of the at tack, and to give the infantry, further in, more time for harness and defence. Out of the caverns of the night an armed multitude seemed to have suddenly poured. A moment ago they had slept in security; now thousands on thousands whom .they could not number, whom they could 'but dimly even perceive, were thrown on them in immeasurable hosts) which the en circling cloud of dust served but to render vaster, ghastlier and more majestic. The Arab line stretched out with wings that seemed to extend on and on without end; the line of the Chasseurs was not ohe-half its length; they , were but a single squadron flung in their stirrups, scarcely clothed, knowing only that the foe was upon them, caring only that theh sword-hands were hard on their weapons. With all the elan of France they launched themselves forward to break the rush of the desert horses; they met with a ter rible sound, like falling trees, like clashing metal., The hoofs #f the renting chargers struck each other’s breasts, and these bit and tore at each other's manes, while their riders reeled down dead. Frank and Arab were blent in one inextricable mass as the charging squad rons encountered. The, outer wings of the tribes were spared the shock, and swept on to meet the bayonets of Zouaves and Turcos as at their swift foot-gallop the Eufans Berdus of France threw themselves forward from the darkness. The cavalry was enveloped in the overwhelming num bers of the centre; and the flanks seemed to Cover the Zouaves and Tirailleurs as some great settling mist may cover the Cattle who move beneath it. It was not a battle: it was a frightful tangling of men and brutes. No contest of modern warfare, such as commences and conquers by a duel of artillery, and sometimes gives the victory to whosoever has the superiority of ordnance —but a conflict, hand to hand, breast to. breast, life for life, a Homeric combat of spear and of sword even while the first volleys ol the answering mus ketry pealed over the plain- For once the Desert avenged in like that terrible inexhaustibility of supply wherewith the Empire so long bad crushed them beneath the overwhelming difference of numbers. It was the Day of Mazagran once more, as the light of the morning broke, gray, silvered, beautiful, in the far, dim distance, beyond the tawny seas tof reeds. Smoke and sand densely rose above the struggle, white, hot, blinding; but out from it the lean dark Bedouin faces, tho snowy haicks, the red burnous, the gleam of the Tunisian muskets, the flash of the silver-hilted yataghans, were seen fused in a mass with the brawny, naked necks of the Zouaves, with the shine of the French bayonets, with the tossing manes and glowing nostrils of the Chasseurs’ horses, with the torn, stained silk of the raised Tricolor, through which the storm of balls Hew thick and last as hail, yet whose folds were never suffered to fall, though again and again the hand that held its staff was cut away or was unloosed in death, yet ever found another to take its charge before the Flag could once have trembled in the enemy's sight. '’’ The Chasseurs could not charge; they were hemmed in, packed between bodies ot horse men that pressed them together as between iron plates: now and then they could cut their way through, clear enough to reach then 1 comrades of the demie cacalcric, but as often as they did so, so often the over whelming numbers of tile Arabs surged in on them afresh like a flood, and closed upon them, and drove them back. Every soldier in the squadron that lived kept his life by sheer, breathless, ceaseless, hand-to-hand sword-pißy, hewing right and left, front and rear, without pause, as in the t great tangled forests of the West men hew iiside branch and brushwood ere they can force- one step forward. . ijc * * * * It was bitter, stilling, cruel work; with their mouths choked with sand, with their throats caked with thirst, with their eyes blind with smoke; cramped as in a vice, scorched with die blu/.e of powder, covered with blood and with dust; while the steei was thrust through nerve and sinew, or the shot plowed through bone and Jlesh. The answering tire of the Zouaves and Tirailleurs kept the Arabs fur tlier.at hay, and mowed them faster down; but in the Chasseurs'quarter of the field — parted from-tbe rest'of their comrades as they nud been by the rush of that broken charge with which they had sought to save the camp and arrest the lbe—the worst pressure of the attack was felt, and the fiercest of the slaugh ter fell-. , 'The Chef d’E6cadron had been shot'dead as they had first swept out to encounter- the ad- THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.—PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY,-SEPTEMBER 12,1867. vnnee ofthe desert horsemen; one by one the officers had been cut down, singled out by the keen‘eyes of their enemies,. and throwing themselves into the deadliest of the carnage with the impetuous sclf-deyotion character istic of their service. At the last there re mained but a mere handful out of all the brilliant squadroji that had. galloped down in the gray of the dawn to meet the whirlwind of Arab fury. At their head was Cecil. Two horses had been killed under him, and he had’ thrown " himself afresh across unwounded chargers, whose riders had fallen in the mGlee, and at whose bridles he had caught as he shook himself free of the dead animals’ stirrups. liis head was un covered; his uniform hurriedly thrown on had been tom aside, and his chest was bare to the red folds of bis sash; he was drenched with blood, not liis own, that had rained on him as he fought; and his face and his hands were black with smoke and with powder. He could not see a yard in front of him; lie could not tell how the day went any where, save in that corner where liis own troop was hemmed in. As fast as they beat tlie Arabs back, and . forced them selves some clearer space, so fast the tribes closed in afresh. No orders reached him from the General of Brigade in command; except for the well-known war-shouts of the Zouaves that ever and again rang above the din, be coulff not tell whether the French battalions were, not out utterly,,,to pieces under the imTfihnse numerical‘superiority of their foes. All lie could see was that every officer of Chasseurs was down, and that unless he took the vacant place, and rallied them together, the few score troopers that were still left would scatter, confused and demoralizer!, as the best soldiers wall at times when they can see no chief to follow. He spurred the horse he had just mounted against the dense crowd opposing him, against the hard black wall of dust, aud smoke, and steel, and savage faces, and lean swarthy arms, which were all that his eyes could see, and that seemed impenetrable as granite, moving and changing though it was. He thrust the gray against it, while he waved his sword above his head: “Art avunl, nics frl-res! Frame! France! France /” , His voice, well-known, well-loved, thrilled the hearts of his comrades, and brought them together like a trumpet-call. They had gone with him many a time into the hell of battle, into the jaws of death. They surged about him now, striking, thrusting, forcing, with blows of their sabres or their lances and blows of their beasts’ fore-feet, a passage one to an other, until they were reunited once more as one troop, whiio their sin-ill shouts, like an oath of vengeance, echoed after him in the butchery, that has pealed victorious over so many fields from the soldiery of France. They loved him;, lie had called them his. brethren. They were like lambs for liim to lead, like tigers for him to incite. They could scarcely see his face in that great red mist of combat —in that horrible stifling pressure on every side that jammed them as if they were in a press of iron, and gave them no power to pause, though their animals’ hoofs struck the lingering life out of some half-dead comrade, or trampled over the writhing limbs of the brothers in aftns they loved dearest and best. But his voice’ reached them, clear and ringing in its appeal for sake of the country they never once forgot or once , re viled, though in her name. they were starved and beaten like rebellious hounds, that in her cause they were exiled all their manhood through under the sun of this cruel, ravenous, burning. Africa. They-could see. him lift aloft; the Ragle he had caught from the last hafid that had home it, the golden gleam of the young morning flashing like flame upon the brazen wings; and they shouted, as with one tliroat, “ Mazagran! Mazagran!" As the battalion of Mazagran had died keeping the ground through the whole of the scorching day, while the fresh hordes poured down on them like ceaseless torrents snow-fed and exhaustless, so they were ready to hold the ground here, until of all their numbers there should be left not one living man. He glanced back on them,- guarding his head the while from the lances that were rained on him: and he lifted the Guidon higher and higher, till out of the ruck and the throng, the brazen bird caught afresh the rays of the rising sun. k “Euiccz-moi 7” he shouted. Then, like arrows launched at once from a hundred bows,' they charged, he still slightly in advance of them, the bridle flung upon his horse’s neck, his head anil -breast bare,, one band striking aside with his blade the steel shafts as they poured on him, the other hold ing high above the press the Eagle of the Bonapartes. The effort was superb. Dense bodies of Arabs parted them in the front from the camp where the battle raged, harassed them in the rear with flying shots and hurled lances, and forced down on them on either side, like the closing jaws of a trap. The impetuosity of their onward movement was, for the moment, irresistible; it bore head long all before it; the desert horses recoiled, and the desert riders them selves yielded, crushed, staggered, trodden aside, by the tremendous impetus with which the Chasseurs were thrown upon them. For the moment, the Bedouins gave way, shaken and, con-., fused, as at the head of the French they saw this man, with his hair blowing in the wind, and the sun on the fairness of his face, ride down on them thus unharmed,though a dozen spears were aimed at his naked breast,dealing strokes sure as death, right and left, as he went, with the light from the hot blue skies on ihe ensign of France that he bore. They knew him; they had met him in many conflicts; and wherever the “fair Frank,” as they called him, came, there they knew of old the battle was hal’d to win; bitter to the bitterest end, whether that end wqie defeat, or victory costly as defeat in its achieve ment. And for the moment they recoiled under the shock of that fiery onslaught; for the moment they parted, and wavered and oscil lated beneath the impetus with which he hurled his hundred Chasseurs on them, with that light, swift, indescribable rapidity and resistless of attack characteristic of the African Cavalry. Though a score or more, one on another, had singled him out with special and violent attack, he had gone, as yet, unwounded, save for a lunce-thrust in his shoulder, of which, in the heat of the conflict.'he was uncon . scious. The “fighting fury” was upon him; and when once this had been lit in him, the Arabs knew of old that the fiercest vulture in the Frankish ranks never struck so surely ■home as this hand that his comrades called main dej'emme, -mats muiridc fvr.” ' As he spurred his horse down on them now, twenty blades glittered against him; the fore most would have cut straight down through the bone ot bis bared chest and killed him at a single lunge, but as its steel flashed in the sun, one of his troopers threw himself against it, anil parried the stroke from him by sheathing it in his own breast. * The blow was mortal; and the one who bud saved him reeled down off his saddle under the lioois of the tram pling charges. “Ficpon s’en souvient," lie murmured with a smile; and as the cbnrgu swept onward, Cecil, with a great cry ot' horror, saw the feet of the' maddened horses strike to pulp the writhing body, and saw the black wistful eyes of the Enfant de Paris,look upward to him once, with love, and fealty, and unspeakable sweetness, gleam-- ine through their darkened sight. ' : But to pause was impossible. Though the French horses were fofcccj with marvelous dexterity through a bristling forest of steel, though the remnant of t the onco r glittering squadron was cast against them in as head long a daring as if it-had half tho regiments of tlie Empire at its back, the charge availed little against the hosts of the desert that had rallied and swooped down afresh almost as soon as they had been, for the instant of the shock, panic-stricken. The hatred of the opposed races was aroused in all its blind ravening passion;. the conquered bad the conquering nation for once at their mercy; lor once at tremendous disadvantage; 011 neither side was there aught except that one instinct for slaughter, which, once awakened, kills cvety other in the breast in which it burns. The Arabs had cruel years to- avenge— years of a loathed tyranny, years of starvation and oppression,years of constant flight south ward, with no choice but submission or death. They had deadly memories to wash out—memories of brethren who bad been killed like carrion by the invaders’ shot and steel; of nomadic freedom begrudged and crushed by civilization; of young children -murdered in the darkness ofthe caverns,.with tlfe sulphurous smoke choking “the innocent throats that had only breathed the golden air of a few summers; of women, well beloved, torn from them in the hot flam«i of burning tents aud outraged before their eyes with in-- shit, whose end was a bayonet-thrust into their breasts—breasts whose sin was fidelity to the vanquished. They closed in on every side; wheeling their swift coursers hither and thither; strik ing with lance and blade; hemming in, be yond escape, the doomed fragment of the Frankish squadron till there remained of them but one small nucleus, driven close to gether, rather as infantry will form than as cavalry usually does—a ring of horsemen, of which every one had his face to the foe; a solid circle curiously wedged one against the other, with the bodies of chargers and of men deep around-them, and with tlie ground soaked with blood till the sand was one red morass. Cecil held tlie Eagle still, and looked round on-the few left to liim. “You are sons of the Old Guard : die like them.” They answered with a pealing cry, terrible as the cry of the lion in the hush of night, but a shout that had in it assent, triumph, fealty, victory, even as they obeyed him and drew up to die, while in their front was the young brow of Petit Ficpon turned upward to the glare of the skies. I There was nothing for them but to draw up thus, and await their butchery, defending tho Earie to the last; looking till the last toward that “woman's face of their leader,” as they had often termed it, that was to them now as tliq face of Napoleon was to the soldiers who loved him. There was a pause, brief as is the pause of the lungs to take a fuller breath. The Arabs honored these men, Who alone and in the midst of the hostile force, held their ground and prepared thus to be slaughtered one by one, till of all the squadron that had ridden out in the darkness of the dawn there should be only a black, huddled, stiffened heap of dead men and of dead beasts. The chief who led them pressed them back, withholding them from the end that was so near to their hands when they should stretch that single ring of horsemen all lifeless in the dust. “You are great warriors,” he cried, in the Sabir tongue; “surrender, we will spare ?’’ Cecil looked back once more on the frag ment of his troop, and raised the Eagle higher aloft where the wings should glisten in the fuller day. Half naked, scorched, blinded, with an open gash in his shoulder where the lance had struck, and with his brow wet with the great dews of the noon beat and the breathless toil, his eyes were clear as they flashed with the light of the sun in them; his mouth smiled as he answered: “Have we shewn ourselves cowards, that you think we shall yield?” A hourrah of wild delight from the Chas- . seurs he led greeted and 'ratified the choice: “On racurt —on nc sc rend pas!' 1 they shouted in the words, which, even if they be but legendary, are too true to the-spirit of the soldiers of France not to be as truth in their sight. Then, with their swords above their heads, they whited for the collision of the terrible attack which would fall on them upon every side, and strike all the sentient life out of them before the sun should be one point higher in the heavens. It came; with a yell-as of wild beasts in their famine, the Arabs threw themselves "forward, the chief himself singling out the “fair Frank” with the violence of action flinging himself on a leopard. One instant longer, one flash of time, and the tribes pressing on them would have massacred them like cattle driven into, the pens of slaughter. Ere it could be done, a voice- like the ring' of a silver trumpet echoed over the field: “Enavant! Enavant! Tuc, tue, hte!" Above the din, the shouts, tlie tumult, the’ echoing of the distant musketry, that silvery cadence rung; down into the midst, with the Tricolor waving above her head, the bridle of her fiery mare between her teeth, the raven of the dead Zouave flying above her head'and her pistol leveled in deadily aim, rode CL garette, the vivandlirc. The lightning fire of the crossing swords played round her, the glitter of the lances dazzled her eyes, the reek of smoke and of carnage was around her, but she dashed down into the heart of the conflict as gayly as though she rode at a review, laughing, shouting, waving the tom colors that she grasped, with her curls blowing back in the breeze, and her bright young face set in the warrior’s lust. Behind her, by scarcely a length, galloped three squadrons of Chasseurs and Spabis; tramp ling headlong over the corpse strewn field, and breaking through the masses of the Arabs as though they were seas of com. * She wheeled hpr mare • round by Cecil’3 side at the moment when, with six swift passes of his blade he had warded off tho Chiefs blows and sent bis own sword down through the chest-bones of the Bedouin’s mighty form. “Well struck! The day -is turned. Charge!” She gave the order as though she were a Marshal of the Empire, the sun-blaze full on her where she sat on the rearing, fretting, half-bred gray, with the Tricolor folds above her head, and her teeth tight gripped on the chain-bridle, and her face all glowing and warm and full of the fierce fire of war—a little Amazon in scarlet, and blue, and gold; a young Jeanne d’Arc, with the crimson fez in lieu of the silvered casque, and tk<; gay broideries of her fantastic dress instead of the breastplate of. steel. And with the Flag of her idolatry, the Flag that was as her religion, floating back as she went, .she spurred her mare straight against the Arabs, straight over the lifeless forms of the hundreds slain; and after her poured the fresh squadrons of cavalry, the ruby burnous of the Spaliis streaming, on the wind as their darling led them on to retrieve the day for France. Not a bullet struck, not a sabre grazed her; but there, in the heat and the presß of'the worst of the slaughter, Cigarette rode hither and Ibitlier, to and fro, her voice ringing like a bird’s song over the field, in command, in applause, in encouragement, l in delight; bear ing her .standard aloft and untouched; dash ing heedless through, a' storm of blows; cheering on her “children" to the charge again and again; and all the while with the sunlight full on her radiant spirited head, and with the grini gray raven Hying above her, shrieking shrilly its _“lZ«e, tuc, tuc!’’ The Army bolieved with supersti tious faith in the potent spell of the veteran bird, and the story ran that whenever he flow above a combat Franco was victor before the sun set. The echo of the raven's cry, and the presence of the child who, they knew, would have a thousand musket-balls tired in her fair young, breast rather than’ to live to see them defeated, made the fresh squadrons sweep m like a whirlwind, bearing down all before them. Cigarette saved the day. XIIE CASE OFOENERAL m'ZJUHN lie Appeals to 3lr. Johnson lor a "View Trial. Wasiii.voton, Sept. 11.— General Fltz John Porter arrived hero last evening, for tile purpose of appealing to the President to.reopen his ease and older a new court-martial. He alleges he has after-discovered testimony that will ’mate rially change the result arrived at ljy the former court. Wliut the testimony is lias not tran spired, but it is not improbable that General Mc- Clellan may be a witness in bis behalf, and this 'ls believed to object of his return from abioad. ...’ ' ' 1 ;. "* J General Porter is accompanied by several in- fluential personal friends, who are also personal friends of thfPresident, and bis appeal will be strongly pressed. The following is the applica tion in lull, which . was presented to the Presi dent to-day, and is held under advisement, The matter was also laid before General Grant, and he promised to give it a fair and careful con sideration when it is presented to him for action: New York', Jan. 1-1, 1-SG7. — Tu hit K-reetknrg Andrew Johnsons, PnMdc.nt of the United :States— Sin: I beg leave to respectfully represent, that by court-martial, convened in Washington city in lsii'2, I was sentenced “to be cashiered, and forever rendered incapable of bolding olliec under the government of the United Btulcs," and that, in addition to all the penalties attached to so severe a sentence, persistent elforts have been made to fix those arising from the uncharged crime of treason. Seventeen years of my life bad been spent In the army of the United States —years covenng the active events of the Mexican war, and including the opening and most trying years of the rebellion. Intnistcd at'all times with duties of thegreatest responsibilities, frequently performed at ttie peril of life, 1 can assert, without fear of denial, that up to the period'- of the presentation of the charges, no breath'of suspicion had attached it self to a reputation which it had been, as K still is, my lile’s-stiuly to preserve unsullied. I feel assured your Excellency will appreciate the mo tive that induces me to frankly say . that, at no titne from tlie presentation of the charges to the completion of the trial, did it occur tu me that with such a record ns my country had gene- rously permitted me to make, could I by any court be adjudged guilty of wilfully neglecting the interests of that country in its hour of peril, and to whose reputatiofi, history and welfare I was bound by every sentiment of patriotism, gra titude and interest. Conscious of innocence, feeling that whatever ditlcrcnce of opinion might arise upon other points, there would not and could not lie any as to my faithfulness of purpose, I could not bring my mind to contemplate any other verdict than that of a speedy and honorable acquittal. It is possible I may have committed an error, both as to the court and myself in thus assuming much that should have been set forth. I also feel assured your Excellency will appreciate the mo tive that induces me to make reference to the events of my life whilst in my country’s service. The vindication of my honor alone compels me to do so in this paper as in a previous one read to the court. The verdict against me was found January, at a time of most unusual excitement. The country was environed with perils: distrust had seized upon many minds; errors of great magni tude had occurred; the press and the forum vied with each other in responding to a great and growing sentiment that an example should be had by which faithlessness or incompctency should bo promptly dealt with. May I not now sny with truth that it was my misfortune to be charged and tried at this—to me—most inoppor tune,of periods? I believe it is safe to say that much of the evi dence adduced against me upon the trial would, in the light of the present full information upon the vital, and at that time the necessarily dis- puted points, be either entirely changed or mate rially modified. Evidence of Jhe most important character to me, at that time totally inaccessible to either the court or myself, is now to be readily obtained, and, in a form and under circumstances brought together that admit of no dispute. Com petent and disinterested persons, including many of those who deemed my trial and condemnation ust, now concur in the completeness of the vin dication which this, “unconscious testimony” has given me. Relying on the justice of my govemmeut, feei ng assured that with the return of peace calm eelings would prevail, and knowing that from the very nature of the ease and the surroundings, time would, however slowly to my impatient honor, prove, the best arbiter, I "have borne in silence and without comprint the burdens of that sentence. I have taken tin; liberty of inclosing herewith certain document's from able and intelligent wri ters, which bear upon my. case.* It is useless to say more than that they bear un solicited contribution so far as they go; and I be lieve the time is at hand when it is my duty to appeal to my government for a revision of my case, however nearly such a revision comes home to me and all I hold"most sacred in. life. It is a duty I owe also to the honored officers who bore testimony in my behalf; to my brave command, whose history has been imperishably written, and to my country, that no stain of injustice should be recorded against her. My appeal is to your Excellency, to appoint a court for the purpose of reconsidering the pro ceedings in my case, composed, as I trust it may be. of the best talent and most, approved pa triotism in the army. I have every reason to be lieve that, with such a court now instituted, and with the full testimony now to be obtained, I can obtain the full and honorable acquittal I know I deserve, and which I will ever seek at the hands of my countrymen. With high respect, I am your obedient servant, [ Signed 1 Fit/. John Portkr. Nato K, Nov. 20,1860. — Tu I’rexidrat Johnsm^ — Sin: 1 have been informed that new evidence has been discovered, touching the case of fitz John Porter, late a major-general in the volun teer forces of the United States. I cheerfully join with others in recommending the appointment of a commission, to consist of officers of acknowledged capacity and character, to examine this evidence and ascertain whether injustice lias been done this officer or not; who, up to the time of the alleged offence, maintained the character of an officer of courage and ability. Your obedient servant, , [Signed | llknky Wii.son. I think with General Wilson, that a careful re view by a competent military commission of the proceedings of tho case of General Porter, is au act of justice, and which in trials before civil courts is always granted as a matter of right.- 1 trust his request will be granted. ' 1 | Siguedj John Shkrman. I cheerfully unite with General*Wilson in the within recommendation. | Signed | In.v Harris. Senate Chamber, January 10, 1807. . I concur. [ Signed J Horack Gri.ki.i.v I cheerfully concur in tho opinions above ex- Pr fsiS‘edt 1,. F. G. Fosticr. January 17, 1807. I concur most cordially in the recommenda ..tionsef Senators Wilson, Sherman, Harris, and Foster, and express unreservedly my btliti that rc-exumination of this case is due to GcnCuu Porter and to the Government. n I Sinned I N. P. Banks. House ol Representatives, January 17, 1807. • RuiiUim’B "Arniv of tho Potomac” Oreclcy’B "Amort. oJcSmSt'».» Sucto. .ft H - Gueruw ' e,lltor “Pictorial llliitory ol the Kcbcllicn. —Jnouiret , ' , Major-General Fit* John Porter was the first military officer BCDt by the Government to Har risburg, at tho beginning of the rebellion, and of tho many who succeeded him, none of them were more zealous, faithful and useful. I gave him my full confidence; and from the high opinion I then formed of him, Was surprised when his loyalty Was doubted. Believing that subsequent ovenfs and evidorico not -produced ut his trial l'ullv justify ,a new trial, ivery cordially and earnestly unite with Senator Wilson and othor distin guished gentlemen who concur with him in the within paper, in asking for Gen. Porter the ap pointment of a now commission to hoar his case, that justice may be done January 11, 3807 Tile Dentil of (funeral Cooke In Chile. The following has been received at the- State ' Department: "Lhoation. ok the United States, Santiago, Chile, August 10,18(17. — Sir: I have the honor to communicate the painful intelligence of the death of the Secretary of the Legation, Brevet Brigadier-General . Edwin E, Cooke, of Now JeVsoy. • _ “General Cooke entered the United States ser vice at the outbreak of the rebellion as a captain in the Second New York (Harris) light cavalry, and by distinguished gallantry rose to the com mand of his regiment, and afterwards to the re- ■ ' sponsible post of chief t of statf of my cavalry division. With the lamented Colonel Dahigren, he was placed in charge of the picked command of live, hundred men sent to enter Richmond front the south, on the .occasion of my expedition for the release of our prisoners, in 18(!ii, and had his horse killed under him by the same volley which;terminated Dublgreu’s.bsroie life. ~.% T “ilc was taken prisoner arid -confined for seve ral months in one of tin. dark underground cells In Libby prison, where deprivation of food, light and warmth completely brotas down his vigorous constitution. From Libby jlrihon he was sent to oilier points in South Carolina and Georgia, and finally, after enduring for eighteen months the cruelties of rehellion, returned home a wreck of * his former self, lie accepted the position of Secretary of Legation bv the advice of his phy sicians, who thought that this salubrious climate might restore his ruined health; but as time ' elapsed, he Bank into a gradual decline, and after a year of constant illness and great suffering, ex pired on the (ith instant, a victim to treason aud rebellion. “The funeral exercises were very impressive. The government authorized the ceremonies to take, place in the daytime, and furnished a large escort of cavalry, with music. The citizens sent their private carriages for the use of the friends of the IA-gation. and the bells of the churches tolled ns the cor tege, consisting of cavalry and fifty carriages, pulsed through 'the streets. As the laws of Chile prohibit the cbnveyance'of the dead through the city iu the daytime, and Rroteslnuts are regarded with most intense disfavor by the masses, these attentions on the part of the government aud people of Chile are very significant, and merit our most grateful njjpri eiation. “I have availed myself of the opportunity, in response to the feeling letter of condolence ad dressed to the legation by the Minister of Foreigu Adairs, to express my deep gratitude , for this great proof of fiieud.-liip for the United States,' and to assure the government of Chile that its kind consideration and the generous sympathy of it» eitizt ns on the melancholy’-occasion shall be communicated to the people of my country, as an additional bond of union between the two republics. . - ■ . , •*I have the honor to remain, very respectfully, your obedient servant, ' J. Kii.i-arnn a. lion. Win. 11. Seward. Secretary of State. 1 ’ Another Circular from Hinckley. The foliowing are the instructions, in the form' of a circular, to District Attorneys and Marshals, etc., which have been issued from the Attorney- General's office, in accordance with the recent Executive order addressed to the heads of depart ments: Circulars to all District Attorneys and Marshals of the United States, and to ull their respective As sistants and Deputies,and to ail person's holding any ofiicial relation to the Attorney General's Oflice:. - A'itoknev-Geskrai.’s Okkick, 10th Septem ber, 1807.— Sir: I herewith furnish you with an .ofiicial copy of the proclamation of the Presi dent of tile United Slates, dated the fid instant, and in the ninety-second year of American inde pendence. This proclamation recites in brief the obliga tions ot loyalty to the republic, and was intended to admonish you, in common with all persons holding any place of honor, trust or profit, civil or military, at home or abroad, under the United States of America, and all good citizens thereof, that the Constitution of their country is in force, auu that the government thereunder, with its several co-ordinate branches— legislative, execu tive and judicial—is the only lawful goverment for this republic, notwithstanding that many well-meaning citizens have, in consequence of disturbing events that are now happily past, come to look with indulgence upon falsa and danger ous pretences that the Constitution is not tho supreme law of the land, and also the most authentic proof of the will of the people, but that there are powers of government outside of the Constitution which mayvjawfully violate that in strument, and the laws .made iu pursuance of it. All citizens of the United States owe allegiance" to that uationalitv, as the same is embodied and organized in the Constitution aud such amend ments thereof as, having become expedient in the progress of the country, have been duly made and ratified. But, in a special manner, all persons holding office under the United Suites are solemnly sworn to support that Constitution, and also to bear true l'uitli and allegiance to the same, and to the government thereunder; and for the greater number of such incumbents at this time, it is known that they have been re tained or have been placed in their respective of fices upon express assurances of zealous loyalty to the Union, which is taken by all men to mean a cheerful obedience to the proper civil authority of the country. But for the functions of your office, which arc directly connected with the en forcement of the laws, a lively sense of their Banctity and authority is anticipated. You are requested to acknowledge the receipt of this communication. Very respectfully,, your obedient servant, John M. Bincklet, Acting Attorney-General. , Coal and: financial Statements* The following is the amount of Coal transported over thclluntingdon and Broad Top Mountain Railroad* for the week ending Monday September 9.18G7, and since January l r together-with corresponding period last year Week. - Previously. Total. Tons. Tons. T/mm* ..4.008 150,397 161,005 . .0,345 178,028 184,973 Decrease 1,737 22,231 23,UGS The following shows the shipments of coal over the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad for the week ending Sept.'7, compared with the same time last season Shipped North. Shipped South, Total 37,094 11) For corresponding time last year: Week. Year, Tilna.Cwt. Tmis.Cwt, . 7,381 OS 290,940 10 .23,760 13 731,042 04 Shipped North. Shipped South, Increase • • • • • i V The following is a statement of the coal transported over the Delaware and Hudson Canal for the week and season ending Sept. T, and the same period last year: Week. Season. Tons. Tons., Delaware and Hudson Canal. . 40,lira 573,m Pennsylvania Coal Company.. 710 14,034 Union; Coal Company 1,250 (>,830 ' Total Fur same period last year Tons. Delaware and Hudson Canal.. 34,720 Pennsylvania Coal Company..- 825 Total 35.545 _ 013,555 The followiini is an exhibit of the earninus and ex penses of the Cuioii Pacllie Hallway, 13. lor the month ol'July, 1807: • To amount of enrnhige, vl/: Government freight $47,007 ‘24 Government Troopn li»,ci74 00 United Staley Maws . 0,003 02 Milne, ami Passenger Tralllc, Total earnings, By working expenses .$lO-1,4110 77 4 m pro«ec«mto balance.; A. G. Ciiiwtn. Year. Tons. Cwt. 294,019 IS 882,440 01 Week.t. Tons. Cwt, . .12,077 0? ..24,417 17 1,170,405 19- ,33,148 01 1,021,538 14- Season. Tons. ; $04,545 46 125,025 13 $189,570 59 ,-rr., OKI'IIANB' GO LET SALE-ESTATE OF I>AT~ in;:; lick MuNully, dcccnacd.—James A. Freeman, Auc >»!,). tionaer.- under authority, of tho Orphana’Court for th.’City and County of hill, on tyedneaday, Hen. teinbcr 2i>, 1867. at 12 o’clock, noon, will he Bold at public nalc. at the I'hlludrlplila Exchange, tho following de. Bcrihed Ileal Ertatc, late t'uj property of Patrick Me Vully deceaacd: No. I.—Thrcc nh. y Hrlck Store and b>welllng No. 2306 Sprinb Garden street <« ith 2 hrlck hoitßcH on .Mel Nolly Btroot). All that certaiu lot of ground, with the buildings thurcon erected, eltimle on the »outh Bide of Spring (Inrdcnßtrcet, in tin; Fifteenth Ward of. the city at the distance of 10H feet «fc»t of Twenty-third street comalniiiß in front 2o led and In depth along McNally streetM left 7 inchce, to a2U fed-wide street. SiTOn the nhovi; lot are erected a tluee rtory hrlck Btore and dwell ing, frontin'; on Spring Harden ntreet (No. Ziuti), r.ml 2 three-Btoo- brick houses Irontiug.ou -McNally ntreet. Clear of all nicumbrnnce. - r,>o. 2.Miotel and Dwellings. S. U r . corner Twenty-third *', ,J ** r V/ Ail that lot of grouhd with tlit* m.ilmngn thereon groti-d. situate nt tliu southwest 'l 1 ", 1 '!? Garden and Tnenty.thlrd streets, in the ♦w, i V V ir< Viu !» cit >v Containing in Iron! on twenty tliiid rtteet IB loot, and depth along Hpring t.niden strtet #SU f< *t to Mc.Nally street. i'fTOu tho above ot i.rjs ereeted a substantia'ly built three-story preyed ’ du elling on the corner, and a three-story iiilf k duelling No. g.VM spring harden sirect. No. A-Hakery and Dwelling, No. 2111 Hpring Garden . treet. All that certain lot of ground with nuildings tm-reon elected, situateon the north side of Spring Darden "Wh"' tjte J'lito-nth Waul of tin* city, at the distance <ii HU left inche* thensu extending in liout IBIeOt to a jmint. thence at right anpleH to Spring Darden street, mu thvVitrdly 42 feet 7?i inches to « point, thence northeastwardly at right angles to I'enn avlyaum avenue 4:2 iect 77i inches to the south west side of J'fmih-, IvaniA avenue, tin m e southeasterly along tho avenue IB h i t to a point, theme southwestwflrd at right angle.- to said avenue I'tJ led -i;:* inches to a point, thence southwardly at right angle* to Spring Darden street ‘‘A inches to tho pbire of beginning. S*?" On the above Jot arc erected a three-story brick bakery and nwtlmig, with frame kitchen attached, bake oven in cellar, and a two-story brick stable ironting on I'enh-yl- Winiaa\emte. ( dear of incumbrance, fi?" to ho paid on ouch at the time of pale, . JJy the Court, , K. A. MDiUtICK, Clerk O. C. •- • i' .JAMES MIKHA'V, Guardian. ' JAMES A. iIIEEMAN, Auctioneer, Bf .7.12.1!' Store, 422 Wolnut street. MEXEGU I HIX’S' SaTe - ESTAi'irryK .itjilN Kraus/. deceased.-~.Jnme§ A. Freennn. Auctioneer. --'ihree-Ktory Hrlck Dwelling, No. 473 North Fourth street. —t uder authority contained in the will of the late Johu Kraus/. d< reared, on Wcdue.dav, September 25th, !W7, at 12 o'clock, noou, vv ill be no Id at public sale, at the I'hiiadolphia . Kxchaiige, tho following dcrcribed Heal i>tatc, v i/..; A three-story brick messuage, with three atory brick back building- and a two story brick stable in the rear, ami lor, situate on the oast side of Fourth street, between Nobl ami lJuttonv, ood streets., heing Iti feet frout and HI feet •}.!•_■ im.lev, m(*ro or lees, deep on the north Hue, and *1 loot 5’ i Im h* s, moro or less, deepen the south line, being ir, feet f»\ inches. ivi<b; on the rear. Btr' Subject to pound rent per annum. V? X* il,t t,, .V tu: . r I privilege <A the 4-fcet v. ide alley leading into Noble street. Br. luiim iluit': j'-'-f' rri'.u pivi-n rli** purclt:t-;t.‘r. Sl'.W H. be (mill lit tbe till!.- uf i*;ilc, Ity order ut (,'AIioUNK K'IKSTKIN, Executrix. JAMES A. MIKEMAX, Am-tioneer. btoriOUbMYaljiut utri-et. l*'i JJI.U hAU: JAMBS' A. FW-XMAN, ACC'J’K Stun .lM\ < iJ i u l»t, N«i. -loi! Mifiu r-tfit. ‘.'n \V<.(iji-.-nlu>»biiitMubcr iK. at 12 oYl f -< xi«•;>u, u iJI be »-Md ;.it public #»k\ at (in* i'hil.v ri< IphiH lu;,<tii«* iiijr rfc-“<:ril.'i:'l n-ril ■ .All tlirtt au'Um lot (»! vjonnd with th«- ; v f '.‘in* *• a ltd Slini4 tiu.ii.uu i-rcctcd, Mtmitc on tin; rxiiiiiw <•»•? ritU- <it «. b.miaiiton ii .Main -1 •. h*• i;l!.* :irt fii Mank im Htri-rt, in tin Twcuty i nil V.hi d. t in front f ( .-t 4 iu» Inv. and t M* lidinj’ in «!*-pth -u. t ra ■ ; -t ;A7 feet, hi-iisfrr 71 l«<-t 1 is/Ji . "id' mi tin- iv«r. • •"' < -J.WJ laay nnutlu ii tl-.-.-i.'vd K?«tr> ti.u t Hi.-ha-r/. ;,v ' Tl.<- r-t-.-re r< »t“ for:*4<*. ti v *R'.i lu b< paid at tin- t:u»- M -ale. A. i kkKMAN*. An»-!bn*-r, btor«-, 422 Walnut ftr i t. Mi'i.iiuc half:-.iamf.s a. ruv.v.vXs. ah. tioi:*«r. 'J hie- Lot*. Or aurr ■ noiv J)■ ;tl ,-tu h<hnv Li/ht* firth WkM. On WV<!- ji*• r<tn > , Hfi'ti jn) t-r !*<;«'. at 12 <jVV>cL. noon. will h,- n-\i J at |:uUm #• j*i*•, at thf I'Mhidelphja Kx'hanc« , th«* :■/!• !<-« ius dfM-rih <1 r. al -vtatr. viz. A h-fM pro-md . u th-- nmthi rljr j-id-- of uiou l;.-al i <u i f. at th. di-tamV ol Iri’l ft at ♦ uj'tu ntd from tht* rivt -id*- ui jo-ad, L*il:* 44 fu-t fiont on Oral flint, and «•vt.jndlnj' that Lrt ndtii (‘o-ithward hK-f--» t. f I*' Will !»• (livid* (i Into thtcc <l* fc* t;'lot> if dAim!. tt' i lf.ii of rtlliiifUi.'ihrairfc. 7 nt tu» thin- of kiK . JA.MKo A. i-'iCI.KMAN. Auction^!*. ntvn\ 4-2 Wnln.it riri-ft KOH SACK. M tf OK bAJJ> ON EASY TEEMS. OK WILL 'HE exch'aupt-d, a beautiful (.VrTAOi: Vii,u, •dtuah-d ad joinine the* O.r.NT* Town of Pa.; highly oniHiiK-iiUl ground*. large vrg^tabk'and fruit garden, d«> tic ib to «ofU tool u Kt«*r, stabling. <tc., <tr. Addrern Jh>x So. 4-4 Poppollicc, Ih»* i.w>tou'v, Pa. Mo*t of tbv i'tu.Mi 'L’ttK, Ai c., can be purchased, lee it FOR SALR.-A DESIRABLY SITL'ATEI) BTONE ■iji Redd ern e on Mount Airy avenue* (Willow Grove turnpike,) within three minutes walk of ML Plea sant Station, Chestnut Hill Railroad. French roof, dated, Ac., with about luitf an acre of ground. A part of the purchase money may remain on mortaaee, if desired. Apply to < a ALFKEDG. BAKER, jflipß) ~FOK BALE—VALUAB LE B UilN ESS PHOPE& mB |«**i * aurtli street, above Vine.—One three-atory "■* Building, 42 fret by 180, extending to Dillmm street Hm ft ctlJar 14 feet deep, heavily arched. Well adapted for manufacturing or other heavy busfm*a. AU*. large foin-etory Dwelling adjoining. Forparticu* lar* apply to JOHN (i. JOHNSON, .. aulo-tf; , No. TttTWalmit street. FOR BALE—S6O FRANKLIN STREET, 25 xHA ■S3* §lB North Seventh street, 23 x 140. 1827 East Delancey Place, 30x75. 1834 Buret) etreei, 21 x 70. 1?14 i*W'. street, Is x 106. - 1634 Bummer street. 28xM. N Apply to COPPI’CK & JORDAN, 433 Walant rtreet Mfok"sale.-a handsome country s«at containing 8 acre* of excellent land, with double modern residence, stable and etthiage-houw;, ice. •house. and all nectary out building situate on the Lan - captor turnpike. Convenient to Mellon Station on the P. linsylvania Central Railroad. J. Mrut'MMEY&SONS. Walnut street. fa, FORBALE-FOUR-STOUV DWELLING, WITH «r three-*tory back buildings. No. 422 South Fifuentli -*• Htrpet. l.ot 20J.1W., All modern iim> r <ivenieiitrt. Abo, H»e<*>torv Dwelling, with three-etory hack building.*, No. SCJIO lyOtnhnrd e-troet Apply to COPPUCK il JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. ffs. FOR SALE.—A HANDSOME BUOWN STONE E;|g Residence, 23 feet front, built in the beat manner, ■*-* and having all the modern Improvement*, situate on the couth Ode of Locu/t street, wwt ef Sixteenth, oppo fife St. Mark’* Church. J. .M. OCMMLY SONS. SUB Wnluut street. MFOR SALE—EiOIITII STREET,ABOVE BROWN --Three--?ory Brick Dwelling, d-mblo back building-, jude entrance. Lot Abo, a modern three .-toiy Brick Dn filing, on T« elfth street. Iyjt lkxlm). FETTER KKIEKHALM fy PLKDY, 32|Nortli Fifth ntreet. MWEST Alien S riIF.ET.-FOR SALE—A lIANI>. come fcfii-rtory brick* Kceidence, with three--turv double back building-, situate* on the south sid«* of Arrh ctreet, near Twentieth. Ha* every ?nod«*ru conve nience :tud improvement. Lot 2u.x170 feet deep. J. 31. OI.MMEY &: SONS, shs Walnut street. , CEttMANTO'.VN.-- FOIt SAM-; ~IIANi>S‘)Mi: Kli: Ih-idence on Chew »tr«vt. A mu.-t du.-ir ilik loca. 1 *0”• crt Joy October Ist. \VM. 11. BACON. •!:>> W alaut, Ea. j t Lean Building. MFUU SALE.-KLKOANT NEW RESIDENCE,' No. *>"} SERI CE STREET; ALL MODERN IMPROVEMENTS. MALLE, BROTHER A* CO., 2500 SOUTH STREET. Hcti-lmn* M, CEUMANTOWN-FOR SALE-A MODERN Penned Mom.- K«><id«.'fiee t with everv city nieure aud HiirTOiindvd with choice nhriihberv • vvrv desirably located on Morton street, above High.’ J. M GIMMES 4; SONS, 508 Walnut utreet. M” FOR MIAf-TIJE HANDSOME THREE STORY brick 22 feet front, with attics, und three atory back buildings, aud furnished with everv modern convenience. Situato No. 9U3 Pine street, Lot 116 teet deep. J. M. CUMMEY &80NS, 508 Walnut-street Mfor”sale-the VALUABLE STOKE PROP. ERTY.NO. 413 Commerce street, immediate pos/ session given. Ia four stories in height, 20 feet front nnd lot 76 feet deop. J. ii. GUMMEY, & SONS, 505 Walnut street. 4*3, FOR SALE—SPLENDID DWELLING, (JHEL fijSji* ton avenue, Germantown, containing fifteen rooms— ■“-“all modem improvements. Lot 80x236, and hand somely improved. Several desirable houtea to rent— FETTER, KKICKBAUM & PURDY. ans MFOH SALE-THE VALUABLE PROPER i’Y northwest comer of Washington Square and Locust street, threc-story brick Residence, with everv modern convenience, side olfices, and in perfect order. •J. M.OLMAIKY {S SONS, 508 Walnut struct. „ M f FOP. SALE.-IIOI.SE, 1820 SPRUCE STREET, 23 feet trout; furnished with nil modem conveniences, * aud ,u * ood order. Apply at 246 CHESTNUT • arid tu.tb,. u tf{ MF»K »ALE- I,A NOBOMK HOUSE ONWALNTTv 'U'»t ol bevoutccnth street. ' ,T. L. EDWAKDS, Room 18, 534 Walnut Htroet. MI&VlHn')™ I#'} 1 #'} N T? Ok SALE--A NEW STONE or M S «?.?.V“ hL ‘ l “ Lall<? ' 3 frnin Station, >«• Urt ’ ' , WJI. H. BAUON'. i 420 Walnut, Eapt ITnn Huildiue MIa l no P iit?lM l nS;7''X C i NE W II’oUSES, WAI.NUT Slxthet li r ‘^ t rhU«d«^ Mly t 0 W. BAND, IMNoTtS F Wtb® 20th nnd dirt ——————wx i — ■i rnluG ™ kentT OFKIOKB TO LET IN EA»F wnn hi-,,™,.- J 8 W " lnHt '“ reut A,i >’ ly ‘o S- K M>CAV « Wahun 1- a«2-tn w f 15(5 dBltA FURNISHED HOUSE TO‘rent' annum. Address PER : ' s,c„ tm H oitico. n o LET.—THE ELEGANT SKCONM>SToifv~T,7,'TW 4 .S. E. comer Seventh and Chestnut atreetr? ' ,M ' pu n by J. E, OOLLD. -mv gecu „ Alff, from October Ist, tin) promises now ommioj a- EDWARD P. KELLEY. 612 Chestnut street i n?,, by EDWAItO p. KELLEY, 613 Chestnut street. ' COAJL AND WOOD. A. JIABOM ntmta. JOlDf r T l thelr'iSSf“ SIGNED imTrß Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coat which, Witli tho preparation given by us, wo think cannol Le exceUed hv any other Coal Otlice, Franklin Institute Building. No. 15 South Seventh atreet. - ’ BWES * SHEAFF, IfclO-tT Arch street wharf. Schuylkill QUAKER SWEET OORN-25 BARRELS JUST RK ccvctaml for sale by JOSEPH B. BU3BJU A 00.. 10S South Oelaware avonuo.l ■* INSTRUCTION. ANDALUSIA OQI7LEGBi - ,A Homo Hoarding School ior Boys And Young Men. THE PRIMARY DEPARTMENT oiiem exfrn advantflgen to lIoyH netwe.cn fiotnd 12 yean o ape. THE ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT cinbrttcof.thc hruml branchefl of ft tho-ong'i Education. THE COLLEGE, PROPER, includon, K'i'ido? the umial College Couraen, an extendod Ci/imnercuU Coume, fitting tor buninesß In the highest •euse of u HiudncHu Education. Ajih.s oapp’s boakuixo scnooLTi'oit y<M;ng J»i LadieH, ecv u ttuui orb Load Sta< n. North Peisn-vlvrmia Railroad. Tlw t%v. itth ill commence September 20th. t.ircr.lnre may b«* ohtaii t at flu* office of Jav (htnke A: <Jo.. IM 'l Jdid fi: or by addrei-sdng the Principal. Shx 1 - tfiak* uo-.vu J\ , Montgomery county. p«. jut2U<>(’riP A IAnA.UK (. vMENT’S JTIhNCJJ PRi/TKSTA NT SCHOOL I - li YOLNO LAHfES, GERMANTOWN }’n.- ’} he 'l v. -tirnt Sio-ion will commem-.- SKITEM’ JSKK 11, iw:7. French i* the language o'f th-famslvrln.- }uj ii* !>• inj J< 4i;ir< dto i-prak it altoc*-ther. Parti- Unr m:. ntion mvn to the Jin/ii-h branches. For circular* :-\l !\ to tin- Principal. ' full? lull r f in: i'Mjeesigneb, si■ <• <:ess o prr~n7Mr-;srs I lionj t and Tazdvril. will re oj.cn the WEST PENN rt,'l AS:h r-KMINAR* for Yo'lng Ladi'--, No. 5-South M- -trick -tr. 11- on Monday. S 11• f !SUi. Mi:s. M. .S. MI'iT:HEEL, MISS U. N. TOWNSEND. < Ijciilarp may be obtained at the .'cFiool, , • /■MTHAEINK M. B U IPLE V ' WILL ’reopen 11fift V . h' hoohNo. 4 South Merrick .-tre.t oii.tb** Ninth of Ninth Month, (September.) lv>7.- . <.'la.-sw-.in Hi-tory, the Natural Science!*, and Drawing will be formed indepen. d' l.tly <i{ the regular reboot i-our*c; competent ProfeMore '•'ill attend to the>e branches. auibltoelj ( 'I.NTFAL IN STITi.TI'. TKN Til AND SPUING ' (i :o den street*. will r<M<j>en September yth, Bny e - pre pared for college or for bnr‘in*- i *. . ~ 11. G. .MoGFiUK, A. M m Principal, d. \\. SHOEMAKER, Vice Principal and Teacher of Elocution, History, &c. au2S-tfw* r "r'HK SCIKNTIFK 1 htiriwn removed to the Southeast comer of Poplar and seventeenth afreet*. Tlil- i? the beat provided acnool Pr b <>\r and young men In America. Parents are invited t" call durjug the morning hours. J. ENNIS, A. M. t ; Principal. AflL THFNDER, 230&01TU ForRTIf STREET. HAS roeumed hiu leaaona. (.'LASSES in Singing are now forming. Terma, $lO per course of 2U le>»*on*. N. B. Mr. T. has no connection witli any “Conw'rva tory-” L[^} \l R. JOSEPH KKECHT, LATIT()FYifECONSEHvX jL>I toire of J'aria. hew leave to inform the public tnat he will ch dutiee- a« teacher of the Piano on September 2d. Reeidence, Markoe House, Chestnut street, alKive Ninth. au3o-lm* rrii !^LABSicAuTRi^H^DENMiLIBHB^6(>U 1 S. I- corner lhlrteenth and Locust etreet-. will reopen reptt-rjiber pin. For reduced terms in English ftrnfie*, etc., pee circular or inquire of the Principal, B. Kendall, AM . au3b-l2t* No. 210 Chestnut street. T’HE ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL SCHOOL OF A. B. 1 Shearer, A. M. t removed from Twelfth and Chestnut Ftrvete to S. W. corner Broad and Walnut streets, will reopen September 9th. Circular* at No. 1229 chestnut t ' tr< -' i; L au2B-lm* THE ENGLISH, CLASSICAL AND MATIIEMATL ,4 Institute.—A Select School for Boys, No. 2 South Merrick street (West Penn Square), reopens Monday SepL S', with increased advantages for a limited number <>f pupils, JOSEPH DAVISON, Principal ‘au3l2tn* THE FRENCH AND ENGLISH BOARDING AND DAY 1 School for Young Ladies. 14(19 and 1-ill Lociwt street, 1,1 re-open on Wednesday, September 18th. For circu lar? or adfiitolon address Mieu BUFFUM, an3l-tf} 1409 Locuiit street C2ERMANTO WN SEMINARY FOR YOUNG LADIES, VJ GREEN dtrect, w>uth of WALNUT LANE, will re open September 11th. _Prof. WALTER 8. FORTESCUE. A. M., . ' Principal ( HIFSTNUT STREET FEMALE SEMINARY'. PIIILA- V delphla.— mw Bonney and Mb** Dlllave will're-open their Roaiding and Day School, at No. 1615 Che*tnuUtreet on Y\ edneeday, September, 18th. Particulars from Circu- •_ aulitocl. PRIVATE'SCDOOL FOR BOY 3 IN TIIEPHI'IADeC X jvhia City institute, N. E. corner Chestnut and Eigh teenth FtreeU. entrance on Eighteenth street, will re-opeD on MONDAY, September Pth. . _• __ L. BARROWS, Principal MISS GKIFFITTS WILL OF hi r school, in the second story of the building in th* i< ar of tin* church comer of Chestnut and Fifteenth i-iivi t.-.>ept. niher 11th. Entrance on Chestnut street Application!- made at 1126 Girard etreet. kc2-lius AH** MARY E. TIIROPP WILL REOPEN HER Englif’h aud French Boarding and Day School for Young Ladle-, at IMI CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia, on September 16th. For circulars apply at the .rltoul. * aul4-2in r PHE MISSES MORDEO’AI HAVE REMOVfID FROM I Dclancev Place, to 12U5 Srruee Htreot, where they v ill open the Seventh Annual Session of their School fur yunng ladies, on Y\ ednesdav, September 18. Instnictiou m English, I ieuch and Drawing. au27-tu th s Im* T A SELL FEMALE SEMINARY', -Ij AT AUBURNDALK, MASS.. I all Term begin* SEPTEMBER 26th; Addr.^a r<f,-th,s.tiil2ts __ _ CHAIL YV. CTSIIING. CEI.EUT BOYS’ SCHOOL, ‘ O AT A F B URN DA I.E, • MASS., Begins SEPTEM BERl9th. Address eco-tli,s,tul2t{ CHAS. YV. CUSHING. AIISS LOUIS? TAYLOR >VILL RE-QPEN HER -OX School ror'7’hildn»ri 'Ajn the I6th of-September, in Lungimrc'rf Bftilding, No. 5029 Main Htreot. Further iufor nintion can be had at ISOTulpehocken street au2B-t*el6 f ! rPIIOM AS BALD YV I N’S ENGLISH MATHE- X matjcal and Clannical School for Boye, Northeast corner .of Broad and Arch etreetn, will re-open Seutetn- airHlmo-* TIJE ARCH STREET INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG J Ladien, 1346 Arch street, will re-open on MONDAY, September 9th. • . Miss L. M. BROYY r N, Principal / AUADEMV OF THE SACRED HEART. NO. 1334 Y\ amut Parents and guardians are respect .l'.N- *i°rihea that the scholastic year, reopens on YLON UA *» bt: Ptfeinbcr 2d. aul6-lms \[K JAMES M. CHASE WILL RESUME HIS HI cla.-HCi? in Greek, Latin and the higher English branches, on September 16th. Address No. 737 Spruce 4 - ae3-tu th s 12t* ci;M INARIES AND PUT VATE FAMILIES DESIRING » vSki^J 1 '^ 05 ,9/-v^ u A lc | «acherw, are invited to apply to \V i Vt/N i.i , eil^' r “ 1U Foreign and American Mtn-io, 1104 Chestnut street. ne2-ltns Afb. M. 11. CROSS WILL RETURN FROM EUROPE H 1 ami resume his Lessons by October 7th, l*b7. Address. 1705 Race street. • 1 soll-tf / URL GAERTNER ‘ \s Will (oiniueuce his Lesson on the 12th of September .Addnvs 152 North Eleventh street. se7-12t* MISS STOKES’ SCHOOL, 4807 MAIN STREET Gonnautewu, will re-open Wednesday, September Utb- e* . au26-3w5 OKiNOR p. RONDINELLA WILL RESUME HIS SING- O ing Lohsoiih on the 9th of September. Addresa, South west corner Broad aud Piqp street*. He3-2m» PLAGEMANN ". A (Jives his services aw Music Teacher. No. 154 North Eleventh street. se7-12t* MISS TSCHUDY HAS REMOY'ED HER SCHOOL to 1717 Pine, where it will reopen Wcduesdaj', Sept. 13th. ae3 lm* rpilE MISSES JOHNSTON’S BOARDING AND DAY J. School, No. 1327 Spruce utreet, will re-open (D. V.) Sep tember 16, 1867.' iiu2Mmos ISS K LTeLDKEDGE’S SEMINARY FOR YOUNG HI Ladio*. No, 458 Marshall street will re-open Monday. September lrith < au29tHc22* GEORGE R. BARKER, A. M., WILL RE-OPEN HIS VA EngliHli and CliiHsicai School. Price etreet, Gennau town, on Monday, SeptemberPth. au27tf$ — Af H. V. VOS WILL HE'ITKN FROM EIT« rope, nnri roontmt Ills lohkoiis by October Ist, 1867. - Ad . d J‘^i 2M South Fifteenth ntivet Hell.tf-J A Is'NIE ciMUKCIIMAN’S FRENCH ~ AND " E NGLISH nr«.7 c I,^ Lndioa, 847 Franklin street, wMlre- September the itftli, 1867. au23 luif W,SMmiVs boarding and day lit'rltiUi °lBti7^ 0 ' *®*PP ruc ® street, will re open So^tom- mo il- E i, r i£NB ToN WILL RE-OPEN llLit . hcliool. I unth street. Sept. 9th. auST-lmi X). C iLulntiUK Library, 237 S. Ninth struct. auSU-tia* KE-OPENB SEPT. lltii, 1867. nu27-18t* AddfCßg, Jtov, H. T. W* LLS, Andalusia, Pa, LADIES’ SEMINARY, 1502 LOCUST X under the charge of.Mlw? CAREY and I)r. LABHKIt TON. The school commences on WEDNESDAY, Sep tember 18. T|-:«TI.MWNfAL FROM THPLa.TF IRSHOPOF PjWNBTf,VANIA. I have known Mr. Labberton for neural years, part of the time in* tutor to one of my kook. fti« attainment!* ar«3 re markable, hin power of teaching if*. in Home respects. miHtirpaHHed, and hia conn.eientloun ana enthu-siantic devo tion to hi* work most commendable. I take great jdcimur© in e.xpmmiug my full confidence in hip ability nml fidelity an an instructor and a man. ALONZO POTTER. Chumcs will be formed. Independently of the regular school course, for ladien who have left school but. an- de*d roju* of continuing Home of their Htudie*. For particulars ear ly at 338 South Fifteenth n.treet, between 10 and 2 o clock. antfMmS V Dt-NG MEN AND ENGLISH, (3IASSL J. cal. Mathematical, and Scientific Institute, No?. lPOti andlt«)SMt Vernon street, will reopen, with iucreaned taeiliticH, September 2d. Preparation* for hu-iiuenn orcol ege-t ranch, German, Drawing, Elocution. Rook-keep ing, PeiHnanHblp, ChcmMry and PhiloPophv by Special teaeherH. A departinent for huiull boys. Rev. .JAMES G. SHINN, A. M., Principal. au3l-l2t* (JI.NGING LESSONS.—SIGNOR T. NTNO, PROFES- I- f, °C, of Af and Conductor of Italian Opera in New jork, and all the Principal Theatres in America, liac decided to make Philadelphia hi* home, ami will give Lennon;' m Singing (Italian echool) and on the Piano. bor feimn, A r c.. nee Circular at the mimic Htore* of Andre »> # Co., Lee A; Walker, and Ron.* 1 !' <U Co., Chestnut Htioet. Signor Nuuo can be .Keen 9ls* Cheatnut Ptrc-.et. . , fieolm* i><7L*%;<;iriS'ic * * JL- TilK SCIENTIMO SCHOOL WILL IJE'iIN TUESDAY, September loth. THE PKOFKSSIONaL SCHOOLS WILL HBUIN TLKBDAY. September £4th. Apply at the College Building. MARKET Street mid WEST PENN HQ ('A RE. ALFRED L. KENNEDY. M. D., President of Fuciilty. Boa kdim; and day school fok yoing la* die*. and Kindergarten for Children. f*omuea*t cor ner Ninth and tinring Garden afreet*, will re-open Ninth Month (September) IGtli, A limited number of Jtoarder* v. ill be received in the home oilthe' I'rincipal. For clieulan* apply to 81. HAN HAYHCIiST, J-Tincipul, H*3-lms _ No. 462 Franklin street. CELECT jffcii school- " O \ No. Ill) North Tenth street. The exert iJM-jMn this Institution will bo resumed on the li;fh of the Ninth month (.September), 'Jim undmmnrd may be Hen at the rooms of the .School, from iU till 12, daily »u 24 ltd* CAI.EH S. HAU.OWKI.L. I THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.—PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12.186 T. War ' ' FFI ' 0F TIIK 11 rNTINCJIH*.’ AND IiKOAD TOI'-MiJINTAIN JtAII.KOADI 'OMI’ANV. , ~ I'uu.iliEi.i'iiu, Sept 11. 1367. NOTH E.— Ihe holders ol the bonus ami scrip of the Huntingdon and Broad Top Monntaln Railroad and Coal Company are-* requested to meet at Room N'.o. 30. Mer • chants’ Lxchanift:, on WEDNESDAY, September 18. 1867, jit 11 o’clock A. M., when a statement of the affairs of the < ompnny will bo made, and a proposition submitted to them lor their consideration. By order of the Board, sell-tit} J»” NOTICE.—THE TRUSTEES OP THE SECOND iTesbyterian Church.having been authorized by an act of the Legislature of Pennsylvania to sell the Burial Ground in Arch street, west of Fifth street, will com tnence the remova lef remains therefrom on the Ist of Oc tober next. They will he glad, meanwhile, to confer with any partite in interest, who may address cither of the undersigned. THOMAS M. FREELAND, .„„ N'o. 533 Arch street PEARSON YARD. No. 310 North Eleventh st. MSf' BATCHELOR’S HAIR DVE.-THIB SPLENDID HairDxe is the beet in the world. Thettmly true *nd Ptrftci Dye—H&nnlew. Reliable, Instantaneous. No disappointment No ridiculous tints. Natural Black or Brown. Remedies the ill effects of J3ad Dye*. Invigorate* tpe hair, leaving it soft and beautiful. The genuine ii signed WILLIAM A. BATCHELOR. All othere are imi tations, and should be avoided. Sold by ail Druggist* and Perfumers. Factory 81 Barclay etreet New YorSL OF A COUNTERFEIT. de7fmwly NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT CF.R -_4 , tifleate No. 810 for ten (10) shares of the Capital Stock or the Amygdaloid Mining Company of Lake Su perior, m the name of Jo?. H. Trotter, hue been lo*t or mislaid. Application lias been made to the Company for a new certificate. • Pmr.APtLrmA, Sept. 3,1867. 3Utg JOS. If. TROTTER mSS* n THE INDUSTRIAL HOME, CORNER OF Broad street and Colnmbla avenue, is open for the admission of Girls from twelve to eighteen years of age, who are neglected or deserted by their parents, and who need the shelter and instruction of a Christian home. If the public will sustain this Institution, many girls may be kept from evil, and made respectable and useful women l Contribution* may be scut to JAMES T. SHINN, Treaa. arer. Broad and Sprncejjtreets. n022-rptf WALL PAPERS.—THE CHEAPEST/AND FINEST '» goods iihviijn on hand. Also a preventive against damp n ails in dwelling*. Puper-hangcre sent to all parts or the eountrv. ] AOO -NOTICE-THE DULL MONTHS OF JULY l yOO. and August, will sell Wall Papers and Linen >\ indow Shades cheap. Paper neatly hung, Shades raanm factured, beautiful colore. JOHNSTON'S Depot is 1033 Spring Garden street. be?-9w Eleventh. fell-ly OPAL DENTALUNA.-A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOB cleaning the Teeth, destroying animalcula which in lest them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feeling of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the mouth. It mav be used daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and bleeding gtuns. while the aroma and detersivenesi will recommend it to every one. Being composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physicians and Microscopist it is confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the oar certain washes formerly in vogue. Eminent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents tho Dent&Uina, advocate its use; it contains nothing prevent its unrestrained employment Made only by JAMES T. SHINN, Apothecary, „ . __ . . Broad ana Spruce streets. For sale by Druggists generally, and Fred ”-- jpdk- - iD^^khouse* Gassard «a Co.Y l Robert C. Davis, C. R Keeny, JGeo. C. Bower, Isaac 11. Kay, Charles Shivers, C.H. Needles. S. M. McCollin, T. J. Husband, S. C. Bunting, Ambrose Smith, Charles Hi Eberie, Edward Parrish, James N. Marks. William B. Webb, E. Bringhunt & Co* James L. Bispham, Dyott&Co., Hughes & Combe, it C. Blair's Sons, Henry A. Bower, Wyeth & Bro. ENTIRELY RELIABLE—HODGSON'S BRONCHIAL Hi Tablets, for the core of coughs, colds, hoarseness, bron> chitis and catarrh of the head ana breast Public speak* ere, singers aud amateurs will be rceatlj benefittod by twrng these Tablets. Prepared only hy LANCASTER A WILLS, PharmaceutishL N. E. comor Arch and Tenth streets, Philadelphia. For sale by Johnson, Holloway £ Cowden. and Druggists gonerallr. ie2s-tf THOMAS S. DIXON A SONS, ASM Late Andrews A Dixon, M No. 1334 CHESTNUT street, Philadelphia, *Cs*£ Opposite United States Mint Manafactnrers or TAMES & LEE ARE NOW CLOSING OUT, AT O greatly reduced prices, thoir large and well-assorted Summer stock of Goode, comprising iu part o _ COATING GOODS. Super Black Trench Clothe. Super Colored French Cloths. Black and Colored Habit Ctothe. Black and Colored Cnßhmnretts. Super Silk-mixed Coatings, Black and Colored Tricot Coatings, _ , Tweeds, all shades andqualiues. _ . PANTALOON STUFFS. Black French Doeskins. 1 Black French Cassimeres. New styles SingleJdlUed.Cafisbn6r6s.l-: Striped anOllxed Cassbucros. Mixed Doeskins, all shades. Striped and Fancy Linen Drills. Plain and Fancy White Drills. Canvass Drillings, of every variety* „ r .,, . White Velvet Cord. With a large assortment of Goods for BoyB T wear, to which wo the attention of our friends and others. JAMLS A LEE, No. 11 North Second streot, I I Sign of the Golden Lamb-SI \\TALNUTB AND ALMONDS.—NEW CROP GRK ] MPERIAL FRENCH PRUNES.—6O CASES IN TIN vruf R S n oV J rs , a?£fi boxes, Imported and for sale by JO3. B. BUSSIER A Cv*t IDS South Delaware avenue. INNTBVOTION. MOI'A VIAK COU.EOF.ATHBTIILEHEM, PA. I hit* institution, under the auspices of tae Moravian l.nurch, vvhoHe echoQi* have enjoyed a high reputation V^/,' 1 , 0 ? “Jan three-quarters of u onntiirv, in located at ih tJili'hfin, Northampton county, Pa,, fne oldest and nMneipal ecat of the Moravians in f.hln country, Having hcen reorganized inIAM, with the view to a more extended Hnhere of lujefiiJiicfH, it non give-'* a thorough collegiate education. similar that afforded by other institutions 6f tho same character. In connection with it In a Grammar School* in which ■ RtimentH are prepared to enter upon the course oi Htudy purnued «t the college, and which, at the same time,offer* an opportunity for mich ne do not design taking a Collogi nte course,to lay a good foundation in those branched which will he of service in practical life, Students are admitted to the College after an examina tion by the Faculty. No student under fourteen yearn of age la received into tho Grammar School- A limited mini her of f-tndenta may hoard in the College building. Inc Christmas Term begins on the eleventh day of Sep tember next. i For further particulars apply to Kev. EDMUND J)E SCHWEI NIT/5, __ President For circulars apply to Jordan & Brother, No. 2u9 North Thtid street, Philadelphia. aul7-aa tu th lSt-5 I>OKDKNTOWN FEMALE C : OLLEGE7~IK)TtDENi J town, N. J.~Au institution for the careful and thor ough instruction of Young Ladle* in ail the branches of a complete education. Board and tuition in the Prenara* toi y and Collegiate Department/;, $-*OB per year. Washing. A'/wnt ana Modern Lanpvajee and ornamental branches, extra. Winter opens September lPth. For catalogued address Kev. JOHN 11. BKAKELEY, A. M., President. auß-tii.tlwiatS A CADEMY OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL -rV Church,'Locust and Juniper streets.—The Autumnal Session w ill open on Monday, September 2. Application* for admission may be 1 mado at the Academy, during the preceding week, between lu and 12 o’clock in the morn ing. , • JAMES W. ROBINS. A. M., anlD-th a tu24ts Head Master. MU. HABELMAN HAS DECIDED TO INFORM HIS friends and the public that 1m will remain in Phila delphia,and v.lll be prepared to give instructions in Vocal ..Mueicjrpm the 16th of September. ..Applications will.be v teciir<-d at Loub Myers’s Music SToro, 12!D Chcntnut -. <r ': ot - . ’ KclO-tu th 4 3t§ -pi A-NO. . VIOLIN AND THEORY OF Mfr.SIoT— A li'-inan Allen, of the Leipzig Conscrva- Pulniri. wiJJ re- nine hit* -lew«uns on the 16th Apply at lu- r*~.-]denc.e, 2027. Brandywine street,'or at that of JTo ie.-sor (»eorge Alien, 215 South Seventeenth sf. sell-lm* pIANO AND SINGING-MISS GARDNER, OF B*S- J ton. pupil of Mr. AUGUST KREJSSMAN. Am l>iy to Pnuesror George Allen, 215 South Seven teenth street, or to Mr. Homan Alien, 2027 Brandy wine street. sell ltn* pJANO. - J. Ml-* Elizabeth and Miss Julia Allen will re-ume their bv.*ons on the 16th inst. Apply at the residence of Prof George Allen, 215 South bTventcentb street. sell lm* MX- (iIfARLES il. JARVIS VnLL REfritN FROM Europe and resume his lessons by October V, IhH7. Add rot? 1$ 17 Green street. sell tf i-' BKOW.VS A(J A DEMY S OUNG i., No. lux; spring Gardeu street, will re-open on MON DA \ , Seldom her Pth. au24-2m* \f -U?ame i:V.sheer VnTi/l^:rir>7KTrF}?rEvjir. in iugcf Singing, llarmoliyand the Piano September Pth. A pply at 1230 Clu stnut street eelO-lm* TilE . MISSES STEINBRENNERS’ SCHOOL FOR l. f luldien, 2111 We*t De Luucey Place, will reop<-n on Monday, September Vth. Hr£-tu,tii,;*,tit» iv-wl, THE street, above Vine, is now open for the Fall RD( j inter Season*. Ladies and Gentlemen will uufl every provision for comfort and safety, so that a thor ■)'igh knowledge of thin beautiful accomplishment may be outlined by the most timid. Saddle horses trained in the r. .it n;Aimer. Saddle homes and vehicle* to hire Abo c-k Triages for fnnerals, to cam, &c. 'ftt-tf THOMAS CRAIOE & SON. SPKCiUL NUTItIES. •igy- aroust 21. van. .. r J hr Jntcivrtt oirEand Grant IJond.-. of the Union Uanhc jiy .(Ka-dcrn Uivi-ion, due Sep t'rinb'T !.*t. lr»;7, will be paid on presentation of Coupons tin-refov. ht Ranking Hon?e of DAICNUV. MORGAN £ CO., .&) Exchange I'lruv. New York, On and aft'-r that date, ISipiudj au^-th,Mu.lot* J.P. AERTSEN, Becrspiry. au3j-g.tu,th-14tS PAPER HANGINGS.,^ LONGSTRETH <fc BOI.DLN, . No. 28 North Fourth street, Opposite Merchant’s Hotel. HEDICAJU BXOVES AND LOW DOWN. -PARLOR. CHAMBER OFFICE. And other GRATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood Fire ALSO, ' WARM-AIR FURNACES, For Warming Public and Private Building!, REGISTERS, VENTILATORS AND CHIMNEY-CAPS, COOKING-RANGES, BATH-BOILERS WHOLESALE and RETAIL. CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, Act). TWOdSTOKY BRICK STORE and DWELLING, No 2711 Federal.Ptr<'*er, west of Twentp .-eventh. FRAME D\VRULING AND STABLE AND LARGE LOT. No. 3623 north Rruad street, extending through to Cenuantow n road, 174 feet deep. %3T' Full pßrtrcularain handbills at the Auction Rooms. W.M..J. PALMER, Treiujurer. • Extciwive Sale No. 1314 Arch street HANDSOME WALNUT FURNITURE, TWO ROSE WOOD PIANO FORTES. THREE ELEGANT MIR RORS, HANDSOME BRUSSELS AND IMi’ERfAL ouA^ I w?’ S if <^7, ??l. MA,ri,lNGS * FI *E HAIR AND SPRING MATKE3&ES, VERY FINE OIL FAINT* INGS, <fcc. ON FRIDAY MORNING. September 13. at 10 o’clock, at No. 1314 Arch street, by the entire Furniture, including handsome wal nut Drawing-room, Parlor and Chamber Furniture. Din, ing-room Furniture, two handsome rosewood Piano Fortes, made by Schoemacker & Co.: three large and ele gant French Plate Mantel and Pier Mirrors, in handsome gilt frames, very fine Oil Paintings by celebrated artiste, handsome Brussels and Imperial Carpets, fine Curled B air and Spring Matrcsses, White Canton Mattings, fine Feather Beds, Bolsters and Pillows, Oil Cloths, &c. May be examined on the morning of sale at 8 o’clock. Sale near Darby. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, HORSE,. CART, COW, LEASE, &c. ON MONDAY AFTERNOON, At 2 o'clock, at the residence, of the late Wm. C. Wit* Darby Road, opposite the Presbyterian Church, Household Furniture, Bay Horse, Wagon, Cait, Cow, Pig, Chickens, Garden Implements. <fcc. Alio, the unex pired Lease of the property, with about 6# acres of land. Rent 6300 per annum. Immediate possession. AT PRIVATE BALE. Handsome Br-own-etone Residence, with Furniture, Apply at the Auction Store. - TO RENT—Beveral Offices, Harmony Court, TORN B. MYERS A CO., t) „ ___ AUCTIONEERS, _ Noe. 233 and 334 MARKET street corner of BANK. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OP EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, THIS DAY AND TO MORROW. A CARD—Purchasers will consult theirintere?t by an early examination of our Attractive 3alP of Foreigu and Domestic Dry Goods, commencing at 10 o'clock THIS MORNING, comprising 11U) packages and lots of desirablo Staple and Fancy Articles, to be peremptorily sold by catalogue, on four months' credit, to be continued on rRIDAi MORNING, commencing at same hour. ON FRIDA Y- Hosiery, Shirts and Drawer*, Traveling Shirts, Fronts, L. C. Hdkfsy Buck Gloves and Gauntlets, Bilk Tie*, Cra vat?. Hoop Skirts. Zephyr Good?, d:e. Alfo, 50 cage* Gingham Umbrellas. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETINGS, <bo, r ON FRIDAY MORNING. * o’clock, will be sold, by catalogue, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, about 200 Viccea of Ingrain, Venetian, Last, Hemp, Cottage and Rag Carpetings, which may be examined early on themormng of sale LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS, &c. „ t . ON MONDAY MORNING, Sept, o’clock, will be sold, by catalogue, on FOLK MONTHS'CREDIT, about 700 lota, of french, ludfa, German and British Dry Good*, embracing a full assortment of Fancy and Staple articles, in Sllka, Wors ted?, Woolens, Linens and Cotton*. N. B.—Goods airanged for exomination and catalogues ■ ready early on morning of sale. On MONDAY, Sept 16. ATTRACTIVE SPfeclAL &ALE op ~ , , , PARIS DRESS-GOODS, Oi the celebrated fabrics of • FEVEZ FKESES ET CTIAtt> y ET, Paris, "" by order of Messrs. ESCIIER 4s CO.. New-York. lor particular* sec display advertisem-nit BROCHKSUAVVLS Included in Sale of Monday, ldth iu?t.. A line of high coat Broche Shawl?, for best city trade, importation oi Me*srs H. Hennequbi it Co. LARGE" PEREMPTORY SALE of BOOTS, SHOES BROGANS. TRAVELING BAGS, <fec. ON TUESDAY MORNING, Sept. 17, at 10 o'clock, will bo eoid, by catalogue, on FOLK M^NTflS 1 CREDIT, about 2000 package* Boots, Siloes, Brogan*, <sc-, of city and Eastenn manufacture. . Open for examination, with catalogues, 'early on morn ing of eale. AT PRIVATE BApE. 26 cases flno PALM LEAF FANS round handles. RAVIS & HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS, * lJ (Late with M. Thomaa & Sons). Store No. 421 WALNUT etreet FURNITURE SALES at the Store EVERY TUESDAV. SALES AT RESIDENCES will receive particular attention. Saie No. 1904 Wallace sheet. HANDSOME FURNITURE, MIRROR, FINE OIL PAINTINGS. LARGE WALNUT BOOKCASE. ■ BiiussELS Carpets, &c. * , on FRIDAY MORNING. . At 10 o'clock, at No. 1904 Wallace street, by catalogue, including very superior Walnut Parlor aud Dming-room Furniture, handsome Oiled Walnut Chamber Suit, ele gant Wardrobe, fine French Plate Pier Mirrors, line Paintings, large and superior Oiled Walnut Bookcase. 9 feet 6 inches by 6 feet wide; superior Library Table, flue Brussels Carpets, Cabinot-niaker’s Work-bench, Ac. Muy beexamined on tho morning of sale. - Sale on the Premises, 5:13 Pine street, RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE. ■ . ON FRIDAY MORNING. September 13, at 10 o’clock, Three-stonr Brick Residence with three-story back building, No. 632 1’ine street, 19 feet by. 130 ieet; parlor 42 feet deop; large dining-room and kitchen op firat floor, largo cliamborfi. eight miu blo man tele, cooking range, boater*, &c. t being a substantially built aud commodious residence. May be examined any time provi us to sale. SUPERIOR ,™™^ AR <iHANDDLIER 3 . FINE Immediately after the Residence will be sold bycata l9eue-\ *‘ lc « u P er ior’ Parlor, Dining-room aud Chamber I* umiture, Bronze Chandelier*, fine Tapestry Carpet* in ‘]>o ri J olu \y<!i’X superior Extension Table, Plated Ware, Kitchen Furniture* &c. [£AX£RB» BY J. 5L GUMAIEY & SONS, : AUCTIONEERS,9 **-tt M Dam i q « , No, Wo WALNUT street. Hold Regular Saloi of REAL ESTATE, STOCKS AND SECURITIES AT THE " ' ” EXCHANGE; Handbilla of pnch property leaned separately. One ihoujaiid catalogues published aud circulated, containing full descriptions of property to bo sold, «a also a partial fiat of propeity contained m our Keal Estate and ofie’-edatprivateimle, , mr Sales advertised jDAJLY in all the daily news papers. " By bakritt a co, auctioneers. CASH AUCTION; HOUSE. No. 330 MARKET utreat, comer of BANK street. without extra chares. NOTICE TO CITY AND COUNTRY MERCHANTS. SALE MO LOTS DRY GOODS, LINEN GOODS, CLOTHS, CABBIMERES ANT) SATINETS. „ . , ,„°^, Fi , 1ID AY MORNING, Sept. 13, at 10 o'clock. Atop. 3UO dozen Hoop Bkirte. 200 dozen-Shirls, Drawers, Overalls, Clotliing, <fcc. Atoo, invoice of Stock Goods, Notions, &i\ Tk ASHBRIDGE a CO., AUCTIONEERS, • . - No. GOo MARKET etreet. abore Fifth. ACOTIOI* SAME*. M THOMAS a HONS. AUCTIONEERS, , " a A r »nd 1« Sonth POTOTH street • rw- S BT pti>'B A.ND KIiAE ESTATE. ! TUraDAY-at"uo'dMt hito<w » u * £«>“■«« ever, 1 ~ , of eac h. property Issued separately, In w kich we I on tho Saturday previous ‘l*,/n C i cu ®. thousand catalogues' in pampnlet form, i »t VH^\*rivrv? s all the property to bo sold on ai TUESDAY, ana a Liat of Real Estate Sales are also advertised in the following newspapers: Nobth Amebioan, Pausa, Lzdgkb, Legal I iMTfiLMOnKGKR, INQUIRES, AOB. EVENING BULLETIN, Lvuning Trukobapu, GkumajiDemoobat. Ao. 1 TBKdgSSfifoStlßia* 4,lo Au^ on atore EVEEY VALUABLE STOCKS, tic. O.N TUESDAY SEPT 17 M tho Philadelphia Exchange- ’ . 4» ►•Jiartw fonfi American Natlaonl Bank. '-'u Muli’(h'lph;:i ,\:ition:U Bank. 4b HjmrcH Bontlnvark National Bank. 15 »ii»r<v I‘iFrt National Bank. *!.«» Lnion League Six Par Cent. Bonds. . 10 shares Horticultural Hall. 12 shares I'hiladeliihia and StuthemMail Steamship Company. $250 Pennsylvania Mate Loan 1867. 1d eharCrtSte.ibeuviUe and Indiana Railroad. 200 pJmrca Empire Ti .importation Co. 61 #nar<M Lnion Transfer Co. f> fhare# Acndoiny of MusK Pew No. 43 Arch street Church. . J?or Account of Whom itmav Coucorn— -400 pnnrcs Americftn An l-lncrustation Co. 30 snares \\ Mow Grove and Germantown Plank Road Company. 1(0 shares Green and Coates Street Paaeengcr Railway Company. $lOOO Pond Green and Coates Streets Passenger Railway „ . Co. 7 per cent. 1 f t arc Academy of Fine Arts; 125 shares J ninnylvanitt Salt Manufacturing Co. Executor#’ Sale— ' I2S G?ff d f D , < lHy «i>er (iont. Bonda. SBOO J lilludclpluaC.pcr Cent, bonds —clear of tax-. REAL ESTATE SALE. SEPT. 17. A ':i;K>-I)i:SI RABLK BE SIN ESS"LOC ATIO X—LARGE }£ L h‘. AI Lh . RESIDENCE, Xo. 529 ARCII street, east of Sixth street, with n Two-story Brick Stable nn3 7 hree-story Brick Dwelling In the rear. Lot SIX feet front, 288 feet deep to Cherry etreet-2 valuable fronts. Immediate possesion. MiP y ‘ H A ™ REE-HTORY RESIDENCE.S. \V. corner of ollth and Locust streets -has all the modern conveni ences. Lot 140 feet front 202 feet 'deep. Immediate possession. ta£TV? |i , , a < ?P' Sale-MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING anil CARRIAGE HOUSE, No. 3251 Rich niond street, south of Ash street Bridcsbure, 25th Ward; 120 feet front 150 feet deep-2 fronts. . }‘S r f.^ l ' t 0 ,7„ Sah'-YALfcABLE COAL LANDS. 653 s'Cl'ha. , 81/ILER TOWNSHIP, SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. 1 LNNA.. situate western end Broad! Moun of toe Minehill Railroad. TiIREIvSTORy BRICK DWELLING, No. 743 South Fifteenth street, north of Catharine. Immediate poises toon. Sole-Estate of Marla West dec'?-* rWO-biOl.i. BRICK. DWELLINGS, Nos. 323 and 325 Ouein.street, with 2 TWO.STORY BRICK DWELL INGfc in the rear on KattiTman at. T modern three-story brick D\N I-LLIaNG, >O. sail Spruce Btreet— Has all the modem coiivc-menccf*. Inirnodiat** o-^l :^' ,IK i : x H l^ I .; s . KHB^TANI >- TJ[II^E *STORY BRICK S i ORE and l)\\ I’jLLJ NG, No. 444 North Second ntriiot. moth of Noble fitieet, v.’ith a Threo-fitory Brick Dwelling in the rear. Immediate pewi-e/'eion. Executon*’ Percmjitory Sale—Kstatd of Thoma-* G. Connor, decM-2 TWO-dTORY FRAME DWELLINGS, Front street, south of Greeu, with 1 v iJlthe rear. , 2 THRE&STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Nos. 1614 aud 161 b Mcrvim* street, north of Oxford street. TIIKEE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 1022 Wood stn-et, east of Eleventh nt. ' VALUABLE TAVERN STAND. N. W. corner of Fifth and Powell rtreete. Immediate pof.-e^iou. LARGE and VALUABLE LOT, Vine street, went of &7fh Krec-t, 24th Ward-200 feet front, 230 feet deep to CllOlPOrt. GENTEEL THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 2u27.Ht3ta*ftterrtroet, east of 21nt et. LARGE LO r i, between Florence avenue and Warring ton street, 50th aud Fhiladelphiaand West Chester Rub Kind. 24th Ward. AUCTION BAJUSS :t homas « 98 io AHD No. JllO CHESTNUT street. . ; . . _ Roar entrance HOT 9tuudm ntjoet HOUSEHOLD - FURNITURE. -OF EVERY DE3CRIF ! TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. _ , , SAEES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. . Holes of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the most ; f Reasonable* Terms. 1 ,?'A!!F T i SALE OJF SUPERIOR FURNITURE, &c. rv f A K Pr9’l re f llca " tl,( ' Auction Store. FRIDAY MORN !»*i4'c • o’clock, comprises the best assortment of House* ; bold Furniture offered this season, including— VN alnut Parlor Suites, covered in plush and vJrrish 11 * Chamber Suites, finished in oil and Library Suites, in reps. u^!!?; # XSl v<, h^* rUMeb ;.? nd J n *™ Jn Carpets, Sideboards, uofv! 0 o^llo Chamber Suites. Secret *ry and ’Ti!>?»J aa ss'f?i >ru ls ftnd Hair Matresses, Extension Dining Fables, Sofaa, Bureaus, Wash-stands, French China. Glassware, Reclining and Spanish Chairs, Ac. ... ■ t„ P . KI '^ <;, >,I ,LaTK MTKROIIs. 2 F reuch Plate Mantel Glasses, 68 by 48 iuchos. 2 do do do do 64 by 46 do. 1 do do do do 72byM do. 1 do do do do 72 by f>| do 2 do do Pier do 102bv28 do. I do do do do 100 by 30 do. 1 do do _do do 72 by 26 do - T • elegant piano fortes. 1 Lone wood 7-octave Piano Forte, made by Hazleton <b 13;o., New York. 1 Rosewood 7-octave Piano Forte, made by C. Narvea son. New York. 1 Rosewood 7-octave Piano Forto, made by Schomackcr & Co. I Rosewood 6J£-octave Plano Forte, made by Me* Cntmncu. 1 Ho* wood 6 1 i octave Piano Forto. made by Wilhelm i: Schuyler. 1 Upright Piano Forte, nindo by Loud iz Co. I*ARLOK ORGANS. -One Rosewood and one Walnut Parlor Organa, made by C'irhart & Needham. . ■ ■ •St!PKRIOR'a*OUBEB«I°- * : y.fflßS&&iLk*ni. w«re C£kjE raKßoitB « .. , ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 9 o’clock, at the auction etoro, No. 1110 Chestnut street, will be sold— A large assortment of elegant Parlor, Chamber, Dining Room and Library Furniture. , , . , FINE GUNS. One splendid Prussian double barreled breech-loading Gun’cost $3OO. FORCE PUMP. Also, one Steam Force Pump. rriiL PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABUSHMET. N. £ JL comer of BIXTJJ and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally— - Watches, Jew elry. Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plato, and on all articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. l ine Gold Hunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Face Eiiglinli, American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches \ line Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lopine Watches; tine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt ing Case and Open Face English, American and Swlsi Patout Lever and Lenina Watches Double Case English Qmutier and other Watches; Ladies’ Fancy Watches; Diamond Breastpins; Finger- Rings; Ear Kings. Studs, «fcc.; I-me Gold Chaim?; Medallion*; Bracelets: Scan Pin-; Breastpins; Finger Rings j Pencil Cases and Jewelry generally. FOR SALE—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest, suitable for a Jeweler, price StiuO. Alto, t'cvcnd Lota in South Camden, Fifth and Chestnut eti Cr»s. Pinup Foun. Auctioneer. l\,f oCLELLAM/ * CO.. HLCCESSORB TO AYA PHILIP FORD & CO.. Auctioneers, SALE OF lcW CASKS BOOTS. SIIOF.S, BROGANS, &n on monday-Ajorning, September 10, commencing at 10 o’clock, we will roll by catalogue, for ca*h, about IbOO castes Men’s, Boys’ and i cntlis’ Boob?, Shoes, Brogans, Balmorals, &c. A] 1 , 0 - » euii-rigr assortment of Women's, Misse*’ and Children a wear, from Citv and Eastern manufacturers. ■ lo which the enrlv attention of the trade is called. | AMES A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER. *• No. 422 WALNUT «treof. PROPOSALS. Department of public hig h\va ys-offzce No. lt>4 South Fifth street, Philadelphia, Sept, lltii. ■, NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Seni-'d Proposals will be received at the Office of the Uiwl Comiiijtsioner of Highways until la o’clock M., on MONDAY, 16th intt., for the construction of a sower on tiie line of Perth street, from Jeffc-rson street, to (h.; north curb .line of Oxford street, to be built of-brick, circular in form, with ii clear inside diameter of two loot nix inches and with such inlets and man holes as may be directed by the Chief Engl neer and Surveyor. The understanding to be that the Contractor ehaJl take bills prepared against the property fronting on-said sewer to the amount of one dollar and twenty-five cents for each lineal foot of from on each side or the Ktroet, as to much cash paid: the balance, :w limited by Ordinance, to be paid by the city, and the Contractor v, ill be required to keep the street and sewer in good re pair for three years after the sewer is finished. When the street is occupied by a City Passenger Rail road track, the. Sewer shall bo constructed alongside'-of said track in such manner as not to obstruct or interfere with the safe passage of the cars thereon; and no claim for remuneration shall be paid the Contractor by the company using said track; as specified in Act of Assembly approved' liny 6th, 1866. All bidders are invited to be present at the time and Place of opening the said Proposals. Each proposal will be accompanied by a certificate that n Bond bad been filed in the Law Department as directed by Ordinance of May 26th,.1860. If the Lowest Bidder shall not execute a con tract within five day* after the work Is awarded, he will be deemed ns declining, and will be hold liable on OU bond tor the. difference between his bid. and the next highest bid. Specifications may be had at tlm Department of Surveys, which will be striolly adhered to. 'W W S\rEDLEY Bell-Stg Chief Commissioner of. High ways. *V! OTIC'K TO CONTRACTORS AND WHARF Xy builders. Sealed proposals will be received at the De partment of Highways, No. 104 South Fifthatreet, until II o’clock A. M. of MONDAV, Sept Itfth inxt., for the repair and extension oflbe Reed street sewer, from a point 177 feet east of Otsego street to theeast line of Delaware ave nue. Said work to consist of embankment, excavation, brick-work, concrete, crib-work, and wharfing, with a foundation of oiling. The work to be done in conformity with plans and specifications to he seen at the Department of Surveys.and under the directions of the Chief Engineer and Surveyor. Bids will be received for the following RENEWAL OF BRICK SEWER, including the removal of old work with material and workmanship of new sewer 948 feet long, per foot linear. No. 3—NEWTIUJNK AND CUB', including the removal of old wharf, material and workmanship of new work and the necessary embankment 118 feet 9 inches long, per foot linear. • No. 3—WHARFING ON DELAWARE AVENUE, upon it pile foundation, including the Trunk on Reed street, all materials and workmanship, extending from the north line of Heed street to Merrick's wharf, ish feet long, per linear foot W. w. SMEDLEr, Hcll-3t5 Chief Commissioner of Highways. ,' ; SHUUII ’S NOTICES. TN OBEDIENCE TO A 'RULE OF~t!IE DISTRICT A Court of the City and County of Philadelphia, the Sheriff of paid city'publi?he.i the following writs of- .1 lia* HnYumvitii Covenant! - 511 , HENRY C. HOWELL, Sheriff. Slierifi'a Othce, September 5,1867. Citr «.<</ Covntu <•//‘hilwivliihin, ,vt. THE CUM.MONWKAI.TiI OF PENNSYLVANIA, To tlie Sherifl of Philadelphia county. grsering: Wo command you, as before we did, that you summon Samuel Crawford, late of your county, so that he lie and appear before our .ludgcß at Philadelphia, at- our District Court for the City and County of •Philadelphia, to bo holdni at Philadelphia, iu and for the said Citvand County of Philadelphia, the third Monday of Sopteiubcr next, there to answer Robert D. Dunning of a plea of breach of covenant riiir ground rent deed, made by and between KobeitrDrfriMluing and Fanny. his wife, of the one part and Samuel Crawford of the other part, dated .December 5, A. D. 1851. Recorded at Philadelphia, in deed hook .1. T. 0., page 493, <tc.; and. havtn-you then there this writ We command yon, us before we did, that you summon ♦John Donuldson, lut<* of vwnr county, so that ho ho and appear before our Judges at Philadelphia, at our District Court, lor the City and Comity of rhiV*t*|inhu}_.ta "he hrdtfcn- nt-PHilmk*lp)fi&; in and County of Philadelphia, the'third Monday of September next, there to answer Robert D. Dunning of a plea of breach of covenant sur ground rent deed made by and be tween Robert It Dunning and Fanny, bis wife* of the one Eart, and John Donaldson oftho other part; dated Doeein ers, A. D. 1851. recorded at Philadelphia in deed hook J T. 0., No. 59, puce *l9B. And have you then there this! writ. \\ e commaud you, as before wo did. that you summon William King, lute of your Countv, ho that lie be and ap pear before our Judges at Philadelphia, at our District Court for the City and County of Philadelphia* to bn holden at Philadelphia* in And for the said Citv and County of, Phil ulelphia. the third Monday of September next,there to answer G.Blight Browne, Assignee of peter \ Browne (by deed dated March 19,1855, recorded sit Phila delphia, in deed book It. D. \V., No. 20, page S9)v of n pita of breach ot covenant sur ground rent deed, bv si cer tain indenture thereof, dated Juno ti, 18-12, recorded at Philadelphia, m deed book A. \V. M., No. 6, page 219, be tween Peter A. Browne and James MeGukau.nad abo indenture thereof, dated November 29, 1842, recorded at Philadelphia, ill deed book K. L. Id.. No. 41, page 104, be tween Peter A. Browne*. Janies McGuknn and William King, <fec, Aud have you then there this writ. i Witness the Honorable George Sharswood, Doctor of j Laws President of our said Court, at Philadelphia, the 28th day of August, in slic vear of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven. se6-lnw-2t . B. K. FLETC TN OBEDIENCE TO A It! L Conimon Pleas of the City 'UEH, l’ro Proth^notiu-y. .;p of TiltFoonVr ok Mid County of Pliilmlolphi*. iLjpK*? s the tollmvrnK urns of the Sheriff of mid city public Alias Suwtnons Covenant: u niasßY c. jiuwlll, she mi. Sheriff’s Oflice, September.*), 1*67. Citi/anii County TUK COMMONWEALTH OF PKXNHYLA AMA, To the Sheriff of Philadelphia eutintv, greeting. Wo command you. we did. that yon summon Jumna Oreen, lute of your County, no that he he ami ap pear .before our Judges at I’liihideli'hia,. at onr < *u; - t <»i Common Pleas, for the Cite and County ot i iuladeli'iija, to to holden at Philadelphia, in andtor the said City and County of Philadelphia, the third Xondto of fceptembei next, there to answer William Jh Sloan, H|K, deueo of Collins West, and Kcberea E. his' u ( ife, whrnh stud t ulljn* West was nssijaieo of Samuel if. Jfuiley and Saiah In wife, of a plea of breach of covenant, etc. We command you, as before "e did, that A on smnmou (tilbert Low, late of your County. *o that ho e midum vicar before our Judges at I hiladelphi.i, at om Coiut ot ! Vmiiioi lie as. for the City and Comityoi Philadelphia, to h«« hnhlcn at Philadelphia. in and tor the mid ( Ity and Oiiiutvof Aihulilphiii. till! Third Monday ot Snptoinljor ... ... »s, ,•. j j nMTi'ori' i,»*wih, »»r.. i.onr'rr .*1 l.pnVniid Fi niid!*A'l-;'>vir, Tmstnoa uil'niitd in tho K.f AVill nnd Tortiunriit ol Unviynco Lowts, town , ot n plea of breach of covenant. And hnvc you then and there the Ilouorahle .Joseph Allison, Doctor of Laws. President of our said Court at Philadelphia, the :ffstd\r irC\ugurt, Anno Domini, one tliommud eight hundred and sixty-eevon. ... - sci'Juw-'Jt T. 0. Wl'-’BIi, lNothouotrn-y /•TANNED EiiuiT, VEQETAUEEB, Att-l.UOl) OASES 1/ freak Canuod Peaches; 600 ca«ea fresh Cuuned nue Applea; 900 cases fresh Pirn? Apple*, in l.OOO cmjm. Green Com and Greou Pens; 600 cases nwb Pluuu'. in cans; 300 cases fresh Green £UK**« W 0 cases Cherries in ■yrup j 600 caeca Blackberries in syrup j WO c/wos Strav/ber nee in gvrup; 600 cases fresh Penns in syrup; *- , P9 II CSWW Cannea-Tfrurmtoes; 600 cases (tyuteiu, Lowror* nun Cuunv btx) cases Boast Beef, MnUon, Vtuil, Souiv, oc.hjr t'sUfc' by JOSEPH 13. BUBSIEU & CO., ll* rfeutU Detawnrs •venae LEGAL NOTICES* TUOMAa MoELKaTH’, ct aU »WrWi^lf^ t i3^S®SSr? the boundary line of the State of / of Allcgnany and Wash!ngt on,in tlio Stato* of 6 Bjlvania, and alio all the property ftfni o rfn»L e and nil thetolls.lssues, Income'anct - Company, thereafter to he derived to thm f?im tho'SSf of. oi travel on their said ro,d, or any part thereofVSS “ al > '- I,c O'"' 8 , ongfnee, locomotives, tmlcraThoracawr ot, !'? r tbiugß in tlic fmßine'jannd management said railroad, to have and to hold all and Bimmlar thZ (Btntp, hereditament* and promiserhereby granled or hf ■ tended so to be, with the; appurtenance, unto th? said iluimns Mcßlrnth. Ins heir*, executory administrator? hi« Hiicceßßora and dasigna. and to th« BUrvivor and auS? of them, and to their heirs, executors, administrator* and aligns, in trv*t Tievertheles*. for the benefit of" th! holders of bonds of the fluid Company, to the amount of one million of doJIarH, viz.: one thouflaud bonds for one tnomand dollars each, of even date with the said mort. gage, and lor the bettor flecuring the flame with tho prin. cipaMnonevH therein respectively mentioned, aiid interest tjineniter to uccmc thereon. And whereae. It waa pro 2?#.,** 1 r e Pai - < 1 mort S n KO that anyotherroal estate I«r° nod porHonal estate wherever situate. f, ho I i,d , ™ { Kht be purchased, and all improve s f,l *J nilfjht thereufter he mnde by the said Pittfl and Steubenville Railroad Compnny daring the 1 tnSTir of * H lO Pfud mortgage, should be deemed, JC pa i l of t,l ° mortgaged premises. * ( „r°i» taH 'entered by the Supreme decl»r?!l thlFiffivania, in the above ontided cause, ft was E r fiirS i n 8<l f d m ,°r t 3»*o waa the first..Hen-upon tnt. railro.id, tolls. franchises, property, income, estate#* warred to or described* •- wtfefed that orr default, being made bytha Jf te,lbc “ v , il J e Railroad Company in the payment w ithin the period fixed by thcsald decren nf Hi* SSSEf *£ '» d . ne nnd J-wfif «tho’bLdS ' „I£, 10 Baid mortgage,, the railroad property,-■ iiy the'.Sfd mart! and franchises crmvnrcd all the estate, right,tilth}, Mteubenvim.tiJiI I ld s™, and of the said l'ittsbtirgh adi the railroad I ™i- 1 ™? a d Lom f nnT ’ °f and ln thttt Portion of rivel^OWo^t^the'westJAy^end^ mnitinped and hereinafter set forth. ,lnd whereas "no fMdt lias been made by the said Htb-burghand sl™be£ ville Railroad Company in the payment as aforeJnldSf the said amount. Sniv thmjore, notice is horeby given that under and by virtue of tho said decree,Ltlie Haid i homes MeLlratfi,therein named,will,on WEbt-JESDAY the sixth day of November, A. D. 18«7, at 12 oYtock M„af the Court-lloueeiu the City of Pittsburgh, expose to nobite salebj vendneor outcry, the whole of tho railroad. tS v rth tile lands,depots,depot grounds and buildings. Phi- S¥ d f ‘ t ' 11 ; *«"■»"< of tho railway of“S J ittsburtb and btenbenville itailrond Company, nt tho Jit/'nf b Wh d , }"» boundaty line of -V, •btiitc of...,Nest- A irgini», in the counties nf Alleghany and \\ r ashliigton. in the Htate of Pennsylva .niii, and also all the proia-l'ty and franchises, and alf the tolls, nsues, income and prohts of the said Company .derii able from the use of or travel on their said rond n or any part thereof, and also all the cars, engi„,“, tooc/i.rr. ti\ is, tenders, horses, or otlier things used in tile husineaa 1 h of l h ß,iid railroad, and also till the estate ripht,t ith'.imerc»t,claim and demand of tile said Company, ol and in that portion of the railroad operated and run liy the said company through their lessees in the State of est \ li-gmiu, hetiveen the lioundary- line of the State of I niiisylv,inm. at the easterly end, and the river Ohio at «??• ".liioli passed to the said Tliomnn McEl. mortgage r und lorco 01 tho tvrins andiutentof the said A/". i/riuraHif. nil the lands, rights of way, railways. . ails, hr nlges, culverts, trestle-works, buildings, struct urea iiiaohmerv, stations, depms, depot grounds, heredita ment., ami appiirtonunces, personal estate nf icverv kind and riivrnptmn, corporate riglits and franchises granted, so n?la' 1 UJd oonveyed hv the said mortgage, or. intended of l in' n, , ,liT# s' "l; o ';e described, as situate in the countic* Of Allegheny and Washington, in tho State of Peunsyi- I '!' south side of the Wasliington turo ‘M l'-m ’ V .ilo' lairough of South Pittsburgh, on the south side of the Monongaheta river, opposite the City of I ittfhurpli, at its point ot connection with tile Pittsburgh and bteuhenyille extension of tile Pennsylvania Itailroad. and extends for a distance of about thirty-three miles to the west! rn boundary line of the State, whero it connects with the railroad in the Stato of West Virginia, above referred to, which latter raifroad extends from the said point of connection through the State of West Virginia, to a poult near the eastward!}- side of the Ohio river-nearly o ppi-iite the town of Steubenville, in the State of oiiio.nnd tlmre connects with a railroad crossing the-Ohlo river, oa tho bridge there constructed. T. _ ~TERMS OF SALE. ' The property will be Btnick oil to tho highest and best bidden upon his signing the conditions of salo. Twentv hve thousand dollars of the purchase money shall be paid in caslu and the balance within twenty days thereafter. J roviiled, however, that If the purchaser or purchasers ans the holders of bonds and matured coupons, or • ''-; a, 'r ed b >' lhl ' afoixyaid- tirst mortgage, heorihcy.mav ' rceeipt to tlie said Thomas McElrath for tho dividend of ■ Eiud balance of purchaßO money, payable on the said bonds' and matured coupons, or eitlier. tho Bum tliua receipted lor to be connulerea ns raid in caab on acconut of the uaid. purchoflc money, the Bald bonds or coupon* tobedeUvered nt the time of aucli receipt to the Bold Thomaa McElrath and to he returned by him to tho holdem after the dlv? dend thus receipted for ahall have been endoreed thereon, tfie accnied jutereHtoa tho enidcoupouH from tho date of * t u ir maturity, to be added to the principal in eatimattaff the dividend payable thereon.. In case the ttirme of snle are not complied with by the blddcrto whom the proDertir hna been atruck off, the next higbeat bldder at the sale who shall have Kigned the conditionfl thereof, shall have the option.of takiug tho property at.hia bid, upon Payim oraccoimtmg in the manner aforesaid for the aiuomaS thereof, witl in ten days alter tho expiration of the afore said twenty days from tlie day of sale. when the purchase money shall have been paid or re ceipted for, and the Bale confirmed by the Court, tho Bald. J homafi McElrath will executo and deliver to the pur chaser or purchasers a good and sutlicieut deed or deeds conveying the premises unto him nr them in feoflimplc THOMAS MgELKATII. : TVustce. nu29-tli,lot ] N the ORPHANS’ COURT FOR THE CITY AND .1 County of Philadelphia. Eatato of JOSEPH FISHER, deceased. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, bottle and adjust the separate account of WILLIAM E. WJIIIiMAN, Executor of the.hut will and testament of Joseph 1* iaher, decent, and to renort distribution of the balauce in the hands of the nccouutant, will-meet the parties interested for the purpose ot his anointment oa TU I. HD AY, September 24tb, IW7. at four (4) o’clock i*. M,. at 128 South Sixth street, in th« City of Philadelphia. JOHN C. IIEDIIEFFEft , Auditor. Held th s tusts IN THE COURT OF COMMON FLEAS I-OK THE J. City and County.ot Philadelphia.—Assigned-estate of ALEXANDER T. LANE.—The auditor-appointed by the court to audit, nettle and adjust the account of GEORGR SERGEANT, Aiaugnee of the estate of ALEXANDER T. LANE, and to report distribution of the balance in the (mud* of the accountant, will meet the parties interested for the purpoflt‘B of hi.** appointment, on Monday, Soptem b* r 23d. 1«07, at 4 o’clock P. M., at his office, ooutk Eittli street, iu the city of Philadelphia. Milii-th.s.m.ii ,f,6t5 .]AMES LY.ND.- IN THE OUI'HANS' (JOUHT FOR THE OITY AND X County of Philadelphia.— Estate of CHARLES BIRD*, deceased. The Auditors appointedby tho Court to audits 8( ttle and adjust the aecoud account of WILLIAM J, NEFF, CHARLES NEFF, J. R. NEFF, .Jin, and ALEX AN HER BOYU Executors of J< TIN IL NEFF, Si:., who. wit* Executor of the will of CHARLES BIRD, deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hand* of the accountant, will meet tlm parties interested ter tho purpose of his appointment on Tuesday, September.24tb, IM7, at 4 o’clock, r. M., at hi;! office, No. 113 South Fifth street, in the city of Philadelphia. . K*s*th,B,tusts . WILLIAM L. DENNIS, Auditor. . TN TUB ORPHANS’ COURT FOR THE CITY AND X County of Philadelphia, Estate of JOSEPH S. MIS- I.tARA. deceaHt?d. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust' the account of .JOHN' H. •XHAMUBELL, Exeutor of the Estate of JOSEPH S. and to.report nLtributicm of the balance in the hands of tho accountant, a ill meet thd partlea interested for the purpose of his appointment, on Mouday, September 23d. !Sti7. at I o’clock, P. M,» at his office No. 61!» Noble street, in the City of Philadelphia. eelOtti th s-OR TIIOS. COOifltAN, Auditor. • ' IN THE ORPHANS’ COURT"FOR TliiTcIT Y AND LCountv of Philadelphia.—Eetnto of MaRY Mo- CKACKEN, dec’d.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust tho account oi BENJ. JL. TEMPLE, AdiuiniA-ator oi tho eats to of MARY Mo- CRACKEX, dec’d., and to report distribution of tho balance iu the hand* of the accountant, will meet tho parties interested for the purpose of his appointment, on Mondnv, September 23. at 4 o’clock, P. M., at bin of,ice. No. 113 South Filth street iu the city of Phila delphia. • WALL. DENNIS, tec-th,w, tu,6tj _ . Auditor.. f UTTERS OF ADMINISTRATION CUM~TESTA Li m- iito annexo, upon the estate ot (CAROLINE CHAN CELLOR. deceased, having been granted to the under* “jgiu-d. all pcnKUi* indebted to tmid estate are requested to make payment, and tiiosCL having claims or deniamla to pren-iit tJiem without demy to \VM. CHANCELLOR, Jit., iJA School street. Germantotvu, or GEO. R. WOOD, 400 Chv*tiiut street, Philadelphia. :ui2Hli6t* WANTS. V\ v ANTED -A PARTNER" WITH $5,0U0 TO ENGAGE t * with the Advertiser in u Manufacturing buninesti, ii* thi.- eity, paying each partner s7,ow per year profit. For an interview, address C. V. R.,,. “elMt* Continental Hotel. -*** WANTED-TO RENT A WELL-FUKNI3HEI> Oj.u Houhc in the western part of the City. Address, to 1 J.-Jl. J 1„ this PCIIKIt- M WANTED-SEVERAL GOOD HOUSES IN WEST ' l'htladeliihin. I'rici; from se,tM> to $13,000. Also, to Kent, lioiiHM m>on Walnut, Sonice or Pmo atrocta, or tho intermediato. street* running north or south, be tween Twelfth and Twentieth streets. FETTER, KKICKBAUM & PURDY, . 82 North Fifth street. KOAHDING. PERMANENT HOARDING WITH GOOD AOCOMMO- L datum* can be had at “RETREAT," School Lane, i itliin five minutes walk of Station, Norriatown It. K. Hoarders conveyed to and from Station. Bulo,tu,th,st>t-* fjnjifll ANfcSoSE.UKSIDENpJE, NO. 301 S. RKGHTIf L street, corner of Spruro, v«? now opun to rccvfva uoardoi*; single rooms arid suites; private table if do* Hied. r ‘ ee7-lHi* j> ItOMS WITH'pMmANENT 'BOARD, "is£"(illESTV XV nut street. Reference required. sc; PERMANENT BOARmNG: CRVNBEIrAD AT'TTJK X “Retreat,” School huuvj Pos,tlta. fc n,Bt*.- GERW FURNISHING rr~, GENTS’ PATENT-SPRING AM BW. r/al toned aver/Gaiters, ka*thw, waft*. y M Midubrown Linen; Cloth and Xv to order•>’ y m er GENTS’ FURNISHING HOODS. ■ ■ overvdeweriptlou, very low, fk« Cheatnu* !£.( street, corcerox Nlulh. The bo^tKid Qlovm for ladlaa mafl goutu, at RK . HFT , DE!It .' EK . 3 baZAAB. mja-dmoO OPEN IN THE EVENING ’
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers