tit E JENNINGS ESTATE. There are, it is said, ?eleven ways, of spell ing Jennings, the name by which the famous Thiglish fortune of sundry milliOnS of pounds sterling, that is reputed to 'be going a.-begging _fora claimant,- is known. Now if each of These eleven ways was multiplied by a hull ' dred,it would convey a somewhat limited idea of the number of Americans who claim rela tionship with the great original golden Jen flings, and each of whom indulge in the hope of securing a cool million or two at the final "cutting-up." The London Tunes, in a recent number, gives two histories of this much talked-of estate, and as there are doubticssh number of Jenningees who regularly returthe Ilinim . lN, we give the substance of both statements, that. all who are interested may have all possible light upon the interesting subject. One correspondent of the Tint s; a air. Hargrave Jennings, says: "MI e u on v ioug property, var i ous l y esti mated at from two to seYen. millions sterling, and including: estates in eleven counties in England, and money 111.- all the old banks in ~.\ London, is still in vigorm dispute.lt was F left by an extraordinary mi .r named William ipor Jennings, described in the ... mina/ Register of 1795 as the "richest commoner in Eng, land." Ile was born in 1791, and died at his seat, Acton Hall, near LongMelford, Suffolk, instanced as one of the most splendid private edifices in Great Britain, and boasting a ball room (which was never once used) con: strutted at a. cost of .1:30;000. Notwithstand , ing his incalculable wealth, so mean were , the habits of this old man that he lived in the underground story of .his great house, per mitting, for the space of nearly thirty years, the approach of no woman. He died un married and childless, and left no will. The Baroness Howe, daughter of the celebrated Admiral Lord Howe, took possession of the old man's property, through a claim of inter- Marriage between a member of the Jennings family with that of the Curzons. Adminisbra- tion was, however, not granted for eighteen years—a significant fact. "William , Jennings Was the godson of King William 111., and served as page to that monarch. In connection also with his family at this period were Sarah Jennings, afterward Duchess of Marlborough; Frances Jennings (her sister), Marchioness of Tyrconnell, wife of Richard Talbot, the Lord Deputy of Ire land . for King James 11.; and, little as it is supposed—Miss Hills, afterward the famous rival and successor of the Duchess iu the affections and favor of Queen Anne, Mrs. '° Masham; in reality the creator of the fortunes of Harley, Earl of Oxford. Mrs. 31asham was a cousin of the-Duchess of Marlborough, „ and was introduced at . Comt by her. Frances, the Marchioness of Tyrconnell, was, in the days of her distress, the celebrated ' "white milliner" appearing in the doniesfic history of George 1., and commemorated in a modern comedy. Sciame .1 enyns, the philo sopher,. and Constantine Jennings (there are eleven different ways of spelling the name), the possessor Of three for tunes, who, notwithstanding, died in poverty in 1518, in the Rules of the Kirin's . Bench Prison, and who is , known as Dog Jennings," on account of his purchase of "Alcibiades' Dog," were also of this.family. The supposed figure of "Alcibiades' Dog" coat 2,000 guineas. However, the public in terest in regard to a property,and a story which read' more like romance than plain matter offset, rests in the circumstance, that the property is still in litigation, new claim ants appearing every day. Earl Howe, Earl Beauchamp, and other members of aristo cratic rank, claiming affinity (though remote) with the original faniily, are: in _possession, although the claim has been always protested against, of this extensive property. Alto gether this attraction of the great property lying open to the heirship of some persons undiscovered yet, if at all„discoverable, draws claimants not only froth the United States, but to my familiar knowledge, from the Cape of Good Hope, India and Australia. I omit Ireland and . Canada, which countries have sent to England claimants in profusion, with the proper proportion of lawyers and pedi gree fanciers. Such is a story of wealth." Pf /- contra, a - Mr. - D. 31. Stevens writes as follows to the Times: "William Jennens, of A cton-place,County of Suffolk, died on the I9th of June, 1795. His will, made some years previous to his death, simply devised his real estate to his wife for her life, leaving the reversion as well as the whole of his personal estate undisposed of. His wife dying before him, and he ap pointing no executor, on the ilth ofJuly, ;798, administration with the will annexed was granted to William Lygon, the first Earl Beauchamp, and Mary, Viscountess Dowager Andover, the cousin germans, once removed, and next of kin to the deceased. "On the 21st of November, 1817, a second administration of goods unadministered was granted to the Countess Beaticliamp, the widow and executor of Earl Beauchamp, one of the former administrators, who, as well as the Countess a Andover, was then dead. ' "The real estate of the deceased descended to and was taken possession of for the heir at-law, Hon. George Augustus William Cur zon, then a minor, who, dying Binc peoli, in 1805, was succeeded by his brother, the pre sent possessor, Richard William Penn Cur '/.011, first Earl Howe of the second creation. Jennens Was the only child of Robert-Jennens and Ann, the daughter and heir of Carew Guidott, Esq., of Hampshire; Robettlennens-was:the;-;fifth::7sowrof Ilminphrey .Jennens, an ironmaster of Bir mingham, who married Mary lifillward in 1‘;57. Jennens haying died eine pito/i and intestate, and being the only child of his father, Robert, it became necessary to go back to the issue of Humphrey Jennens to discover the heir-at-law. "The first son of Humphrey Jennens,named Justin, was born in 1159, and died within a year of his birth. The second son, Charles, was born iu 1661, and died in July, 1717. This Charles Jennens married twice, and had issue—first, Burdett, who died an infant; second, Charles of Copsaha man well known to the literary world of the middle of the last century, who died s. p. in 1 7;a; and, third,'. Elizabeth, who married William Hamner, Esq. Of this marriage there was issue an Only daughter,Esther, who, married Assheton, first Viscount Curzon, of , which marriage was born a son, Penn Assheton Curzon, to whom the last named Charles, by his will, left his estate. This Penn Assheton Curzon, who died in the lifetime of his father, married Charlotte Sophia Waller, Baroness Howe, daughter of Richard Earl Howe, by whom he had issue—first,George Augustus , above mentioned; second, LeiCester, who died an infant; and third, Richard William Penn, present Earl Howe, who succeeded to the family estates,ineluding those of William Annuls, which latter he claimed as heir-at law, through his brother, his father, his grandmother, and his great grandmother, of Charles Jennens of Gopsai, the first cousin of William Jenneng of Acton. . "With respectto the personal estate of Wil liam ,Tennens, it was distributed between two second 'ciiiisinS; his sole next of kin, the one descended from his aunt, Ann &amens, who married: Ai •Clement Fisher, and the other from Mg aunt Esther, who married the before- Esq.'s father, mentioned Hamner, also named William. From the fact that no other person has during a period of ne ar ly 70 years made a successful claim, we may with much reason assume that the two distributees were his sole next of kin. At all events, in stead of "this extensive property lying open .10 the heirship of some-ptrsOns undiscovered," as asserted by Mr. Hargrave Jennings, it ha= been held, and 'as regards the real estate ads versely held, for so long a period of time that no.person, howeYer good the root of his title might originally have been, Call in the face of the Statute of Limitations of ::(1 and 4th of William IV.. cap. 27, now .recover the real estate from the present possessor,•who is, in my opinion, also the rightful owner, while as regards the personal estate it is not at all probable that any person can successfully call upon the legal representatives of the original administrators to account after the lapse of so many years. "I am afraid, also, that your correspondent would have some difficulty •in connecting either Sarah Jenyns, the philosopher; Con stantine Jennings, the purchaser of "Alci biades' Dog," or the celebrated Sarah Jen nings, Duchess of :Marlborough, with the family of the deceased millionaire." THE EMPEROR 'THEODORE. A, Sicetcli oli.ihe Abyssinian Jr onarch• The following is a description of Theodore • 11., taken from a book published last year in France by a gentleman for some time French Vice-Consul at Massowah. 'The man on whose head now rests the lot of Abyssinia is forty-six years of age. He is of average stature, of an imposing carriage, and of an open and sympathetic physiognomy. His features, less regular than those of most Abyssinians, are expressive and changeable, and have none of that borrowed dignity which marks certain Oriental faces with solemn insignificance. The look is lively and piercing; the distinct lines of the profile well expreSs the firm will which has enthralled, the freest and-least decile people of the East. Rigorous toward others in matters of etiquette, the Negus has emancipated himgelf in matters of costume, and affects a negligence which, however, never becomes bad taste. A simple soldier's coat, a pair of trousers and a belt from which hang pistols and an English sword, and over all a chaina, or embroidered toga—this is his habitual costume. It has sometimes happened that Europeans pre sented to him have hesitated among the crowd of silk pourpoints (balakaini) which Sur round_ him, and committed mistakes which have much diverted him. This disdain of all luxury governs all his acts. The furniture of his tent is of the simplest, while his residences at Magdala and Debra Tabor are encumhereil with silks and stuffs from France and India. In the field he wears the coarse black intimtry buckler, while, by his side trots the page charged with by suite shield covered With blue velvet Scattered with imperial lilies. That which a: firs: is the most striking in Theodore is a happy combination of suppleness and foree—espe- chilly of force. Born proud, violent, and ; (flirted to pleasure, he d'ommands his p issions in this sense--sthat they never make him overstep the limits he has Marked out for himself. He has been unjustly aectissal of drunkenness, and on this subject the ire French Consul has collected some informa tion. He is very sober, eats little, drinks more, but never up to any marked over- exeitemeiat, far less to coarse drunkenness, i more worthy of a yolof or Mandingo Kihg than of a sovereign of Christian Abyssinia. As to women, they have never had the least ! influence on his public life, always excepting his first wife, the good and itlretted Tzoo bedje, for whom he had aIA - tiys a sort of . worship. been, how- I ever, the faithful c panioni his days of trial, and when he lost her . , seven or eight years ago, he saw in this death a chastisement which heaven inflicted on him for having burnt a woman alive at Godjam. Tzoobedje had kept him in the ! simple life and pious practices of an Abys sinian of, the old time, and when she died he ; lived eighteen-months in the strictest Conti nence. A marriage of ambition, has.been the indirect cause of the irregularities helms since made public. To put an end, by a kind „ fusion, to the pretensions of the family of Oubie, he married, about six years ago, the daughter of the latter, the young and beauti ful Toroneche, who had throughout Abys sinia the reputation of an accomplished Princess. Witty, accomplished, charming, she had scarcely any detect but the obstinate pride which is a very general drawback with AbyssinianS of a certain rank. For two or three . years the most j perfect union reigned in this house hold. Theodore had for his graceful partner a tenderness in which pride had no small part, and when she had given him a son he assembled all the grandees at a theatrical and showed them the new born, saying, "Behold him who will reign over you.' It is doubtful whether the guests took seriously an ohservation against which the older eons of the :Vegas had the right to protst. One (lily, on the occasion of the Easter j•.'tes, • teglo - • Toroneche asked her husband for the nardun of some Tigran chiefs, kept in irons for their attachment to Oubie. This legiti mate demand ea - cited in the highest degree the suspicions of the irritable Negus. "What do you mean ?" he asked. Do you prei% - a• your father to me ?" "Perhaps I do,' answered the haughty Princess. She had scarcely spoken when a violent blow fell on her cheek. Bell, who wished to intervene, received another. Oubie, who since the marriage has been restored to favor, was placed in irons, and has not since recovered his liberty. Moreover, the Negus, to inflict a deadly blow on his wife, at once took four favorites from the lowest ranks. This first explosion over, he dismissed them all except one wo man of the Yedjo-Gallas, who has none of the physical or moral cingins of the itegh;'s but ho- skilfully,retains'ater -capricious lover by .a number of oases and attentions which the proud Toroneche has the imprudence to de spise. What Shows the abasement of the national character is that those who surrotind the Negus have taken his part in the scan dal. The Church alone protests by the voice of some venturous; priests. At, Easter Theodore being obliged by decorum - 4 to communicate, obtains absolution only on the condition of promising to change his con duct. Ile then goes to see the itegli., who still exercises a certain ascendancy over him --for he is proud, notwithstanding his infi delities, to be the husband of a woman SO ad ;mired. He passes an hour in listening to the most biting and hardest truths, and if he oc casionally rages and threatens, the iteghe re minds him coldly that no Negus has ever killed his wife, and that she knows well he will not dare-to begin. Theodoic then re turns somewhat ashamed to his little Cont., makes a public confession, declines "that he is really the most scandalous sinner in Ethiopa—that he is it in spite of himself; that it is a victory of the devii—a victory whieli should make us feel our weak ness and nothingness." Finally he promises to try and do better, and dismisses the favor ite. Easter over, he takes her back again, and sometimes adds a second. In these freaks all with the Negus is calculated for effect. Ile is theatrical, fakerer, as say the Abys siniaas. it is just the shade which the peat Latin comic writer renders by gtorioBu.v. When he gives audience to strangers, to chiefs who come to make submission, he leans negligently on two magnificent tame lions, while two others roll, gape or stretch at his feet , and he enjoys Jike a child the emotion which the formidable 'dying decoration in spires in the visitor. --MONAN'iItICIP.S 1N 81 , :ur,Alf ri NDSI.--The muni cipal body of Naples has just received the very pretty present of seventeen vast monasteries, for thy:el:if which the Provincial Connell has applied to serve as barracks for the Carbineers. Portions only will be given up for that purpose,' as some are large enough to receive the population of a 1 , mall town, and it is to ho hoped that these braid ings will be appropriated , to the use of 'the labor ing poor, who are crowded together in hovels better adapted to, wild be:tete. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-VOILADELPHIA, rriIURSD.AY, OCTOBEiI, ,3,1867. AMORAL FA1:nA!:111' has arrived in London. BINATANAN C , ., of Glasgow, ntwo stopped payment. Ir revolt occur:; in Rome 'the Pope Will go to OV1:11 VeCCII.I. Turnr is a I , l2linf: of distrust in political and llnaiici ti cl:cics at ['aria. THE annual exhibition of the Dirks County Agricultural 'Society commenced yesterday. Cr..- , .n, is expected to. address a Republi can mass-meeting in Reading to-night. SuEnioaN yesterday attended the Pater son races. f'nr vote in Mobile yestea:day was 821 blacks to 21 whites: CITAVI.ES NEN'i will arrive in this country in November. , :.‘101::TI of the rcgi'stered votes in LoulE iana have voted for a Convention. ins u 1 10,000 persons visited the :Igri cultural Fair at Doylestown, Pa., yesterday. Hjx.,I,I7TIi,NARY demonstration.; arc rcnorted to have been made at Viterbo, Italy. Tun Emperor of Austria will visit Paris on the 20th inst. Tin , . internal revenue receipts, yesterday, were -,".1.761,316 StivnnAT. buildings,, in London, Ohio. were destroyed by fire on . Monday.. Loss ii. 10,600. IT was currently reported in Washington, Jast night, that the President had pardoned IL'M. T. .llunter. GIN. ScHOFTELD has set aside the proceedings of a Virginia county court, in a certain case,.and ordered the prisoner to be released. THE flour mill of Bond & Polk, near Vincennes, Ohio, was burned on Tuesday. An immense quantity of wheat was destroyed. Loss i 20,000. C(NCIIESSMAN Sii.u.ms,,of Indiana, delivered an address; to the blacks in Richmond; Va., last night. Tin: postage to Schleswig-Holstein and Lauen burg by the .Hamburg steamers is now reduced to the same rates as arc now charged to Prussia. THE annual report of the cashier of the Bank of California shows transactions for the year amounting to over $62,000,000. I..tmr.-GEN. Windham, successor to Sir John Michael, commander of the forces in Canada.. arrived in Quebec yesterday. 'HENRY HOW. 1111), an attache of the British Le gation, and son of the English Minister at the Court of Munich. was yesterday married to Miss Cceelia Riggs, at Washington. D. C. Al DEN, the newly elected Mayor of Nashville. was, in his office yesterday,—the ;ion risked by the old atithorities havit- ht2;_a re fused. ~• lu New Orlt:ans, inks de id. leg iii Of the 11•27: S lic,ll - 11 it LS nude :trod u.m: no ; jr . neat to made :iron: the decision. arpl:e,l:i. ,, nElor 0: ren bori , led warel.t , r._ of the '. TI il-: (;0 - •;e:1107 1:•.: -- iS .11 , i)011.:::: F. , ::; - 1.• . ..1" t.41.1*,i1. a IT , ":1-::.n own t.....i1t0r tr: -..;cute. .tt.l 2.,•.,0.:.,....,, .rut!zt- c•I: • I... , ;:hiL:i• c , ,r.tuty. ViCe. .1..0n:.,:,:ker. 7 . ..2- Fif1:11 - 2(1. -• • . THY. rt , ::: Vl'Vt!: - . y tr ,- ,.1...v 1. - ... l:Vere!:. th_.• • I :_)VtrE ILltilt and theS.u.:(.l , ,vl-st. , . 15i:1e.(1.5 . h:1,-- - C•..:.f: : 71 r• , :1r:t. , .1 t , y. Cue att,titorltl-.TE ftt tio:,oitt: - 1., ant': . w:11 1,7 , I , lt to tht. ..'.4.•. , 2.a::.2 t . .,t - tb.e LAS: , 2-.-, - .-...*.0rt f.: - .: T.t.,:.i. , :k. , :l • IllurtoL. • • A 1 . % , 1 wis played in N , .:r; York. betwtieu tie - : stonethis city, and El% ceisior Cint, or New York. The tr.true virtori , azis. The .se.ore stood 20 to 15. Russian America a scam of pure anthracite coal over thirty, feet deep hay been dis.overed. and has been traced fors mile, near a good har bor, where there is an abundance of oak - and nr timber. UNI .11:1Nh11 Goodloc will soon re intue. the execution of processes the United gtates Cour:. staved by General Sickles' order .:TTO. 10. General Canby has instructed the post commandant at Wilmington no: to interfere with the attempt. SEN ,, r.llo3rEuo Was th - e recipient of a e - rand dinner. given by citizens of New York...• fast nlght. Letters *ere received from. General Grant, Tcad dens Stevens, zietretary Sewttrd. and others not able to U.?. present. There was much ent.h.T.4i.ism and good feeling. Cominissioutr of th+: Ofiici..e has submitted to thtt acting; 5 , :;12.7t `..117 I . the in terior for aphroval the fourth list of com prising a.:eruimi: to the Central Pa cite Railroad und•;r acs of Congress Tut. branch rant at Charlotte, N. C., is soon to be put in operattar., but will Only be worked for as- - _ , Ay:ng• purpos I: said that the gold thine:" in North Carolina and contiguoas States, which were neglected (tiring the war. are being woi•kA again. gives an account of the state of this group of the So..i th Islands, :Ls onserved in a recent visitittlon of the stations occupied iNfiawailan missioni . .rles. The wars of the fierce people or these Islands still continue, and indeed are chronic; the ,ontli axe, not in the open Geld. but by ambush and sudden raids, without any previous prordaniallon Of hostilities. But even among tl.e clans that still adhere to heatheni , m the missionary's person and property are respeetcd, his presenee on the islands being esteemed :4 benefit by all parties. At Omoa the visiting delegates witnessen swot: of the ceremonies which the pagan M.arouesans - were paying to the , memory of Kanaka niildher, a sorceress who had recently died. They had built a..temple hi the upper valley to Ike local deity,and spent the day in the discharge of firesarrns ata target set upon the Inilding,and with triumphant and discordant shouts celebrated the day. On the day following they bore down the valley a canoe covered with a platform, on which was a house with a live nig, dog, and i:oik, and fruits and food. The procession of tattord'sava,, ,, eS bore this canoe down with . shouts to the beach; and launched it through the surf to the (rriran, where it lioated away and disappeared. This was a last offering to the god un the occa sion of the death of the sorceress, and ended the kapu, which had been in force six . weeks. The French missionaries have been established noon the group permanently since the occupation of the-islands by that nation. Their principal establishment is on Nukaireevit, - and-theirm tinenee strongest on the leeward islands. Port Anna Maria, on Nukaieeva, is the capital of French Government. The governor and the bishop reside there. The harbor is landlocked, secure, and much public work has been done by the authorities in buildings •and road-making. Thitfluns have a line and well-conducted board ingnlnool of GO girls, with buildings pleasantly situated, and there is also another !school of 40 boys, under the care of the priests. The great de crease and fehing away of the Marquesans, how ever, is very discouraging to missionary effort, which, added to the intractable disposition of the adults, causes the hope of the missions to depend mostly on the education of the young. The islarukr are fertile. Au effort is being made ifs the authwities to introduee the enldvation of cotton and eGifee, both of which grow luxuri ,letly. r_r he Go /eminent has enacted 'wholesome laws against corder, wars, cannibalism, sorcery, Vill;d1, on the leeward islands, arc beginning to take effect, and are exertir4; a salutary effect iu checking these evils; On ttHwindward islands The will] indeperutence of the Pagan tribes still remains ;moved by civilized law. The popnla - lion of the Marquesas group, according to the trench Governor . ; is 8,000, of whom 5,000 live upon. Mivaoa, and the balance on the other five islands of thir group. GrtowTyCov PnussiA.—The following figures show the rapid growth of Prussia within a period Of two centuries : Under the Elector Frederick• I. Pruf , sla eon-ABU:a of 121 square miles of 'territory, inhabited, by a population of 188,200; under King Frederick 1., of 1.981 sluarri miles of territory and a population of 1,731,040: under Frederick 11., of 3,476 square miles of territory and 5,659,- 006 inhabitants; under Frederick William IV., Of 7,103 inhabitants; miles of territory and 16,350,000 in habitants; and it now has 6.392 square miles of territory and 24,000,000 inhabitants. sir r phenomena - which Jupiter pre tented on the night of the 21nt of August was oh aerved in Europe. Several agtronomere have already recorded the results of their vigils, and amongst othere the editor of the Astronomical Regiscur, who Bays the appearance of the shadows wan very remarkable. When the five black spots were projected on the line of the belts they guvc one the idea of "a bar of printed manic.' A liEw EXPLOSIVE SIUII!iTANCE.—An explosive substance, 'wbone effects are somewhat like those of gnnpowder, , has been discovered, 'France by Pool. It is prepared by the action of chlorate and of nitrate or ,i)sgatT on ordinary glue or cinglass. • TELEGRArnic Str/71111A1KH. The Ylarque.at% I.taands. 11==21 POLITICAL NOTICES. Wrir NINTH WARD. A 3111.P11 Meeting,' of the Union liopublican eitizelei of the Ninth Word will be bell at NATIONAL 11 A Market Street, above Twelfth OV FI:11).11' EVENING; Of ;TOP.Elf..t, at N o'clOCk AddrePo,Y will bo delivered by tliti following (Hein guielled gentlemen; Col: It. STOf !KE'I'T )lA'I"I'ILEIVS, of llarland. .INO. E'fi., of l'ittelnirgh. C. W. 1:01111, of Pittsburgh. IL )JL( LIElf SW()I'E, FiEq., of Clearfield. A. 11, CHASE, EHri., of York. Hon. CHARLES O'NEILL. .of lIENIIt T. KING, Key. Capt. t't and Other:=. 'fin. adjoining Wardi , are. reFpeetfully invited to attend 1:y order of the Connitittee. ITANCIS ItLAUKBUItNE, .1011 N FAI:EI I:A, DAVID ItatTLER. 163 - RALLY! RALLY!! RALLY !!! 1:NION REPUBLICAN MASS 'MEETINGS will he held ns fOlilOWN: Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Wards, Thursday, October 3,1867; At FRANKFORD ROAD and SiIACKAMANON STREET, Let every one who ie true to the great Republican min ciples of JUSTICE, LIBERTY AND EQUALITY, Cone, and by their pre.enre Phory that the work E 0 well begun MUST LE COMPLETED. C , ane and strike another bLW iteaiteit 'traitors and Treaigen. A numbt.i . ~f ii-lp.tl Ivill addre , , , the 1110 ting,. By ottl,r,Uni,.:llT:qican City Executive Committee • JOHN C. RETLER. Chain - LI:A) Committee on Town. meet irie ,e& - TWENTY-FOURTH AND TWENTY-SEVENTH WARDS! UNION REPUBLICAN MASS MEETING Friday Evening, October 4th, 1867, AT WM, PENN HOTEL, Market Street, West of :38th street. Let every man come Who in opposed to placing the Na. Coma Governthent in the , hando of rehels and traitors; who is in favor of. the gallant and war.tried soldiers, Grant, Sheridan and Sickles, and who desires to eoe the Union reconatructed on a baaia of lasting peace. The following eminent apeakers Will address the meet. ing: Gov. JOHN W, GEARY. lion. WM. D. KELLEY. MORTON MuMO ;HAIM. JAMES I'OLLOCK. 4:en. LOUIS - WAGNER. Gen. JOSHUA T. OWENS. .HENJAMIN 11. BREWSTEE, Erg WILLIAM I 1: MANN, Erg. .JAMES LYND, Erg. oc2.:;t *lawman of tom. on 'lown lleeting SPECK .1. NOTIOIM stir PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, TREASPRIAt'S DEPARTMLNT. NUL& DLL1111.4.., Cep:ember 16, 1617. NOTICE TO BONDI lOLL)ERS. At a ine'eting of the Board of Directors, held on 4th instant,the following pi eamble and rt..mlution/weru tirl!to : . /u /Tag, N!:nlercal upplh-atb:qh+ havP been mado to thin Company IDJU tie holde,a of the Firnt. and decond . .Morfpage Coupon' Bhp do to convert the rain, into Itegkt , r,d lleutral Morteace blonde, dated July 1, loti7; thtch - !re be it_ . . . . • Re.heit'ed, That the Treasurer he, and he in, hereby in otructed to caul, tothlie notice to he given that thin Com. puny in now prepared to exehang., ite Registered Ronde, ,cared by a general ', l onic:we 111.7 , n the line from Phila delphia to Pitn-bid ph, the e,tate. real and pereimal, and cDrkorare Imughten therfin /o,ntioned, dated July L:11:67, tor tlm Second Misfgage Coupon blonde , et Fold Company, on the read between Harrisburg Any further inforination eau be .4,tained en application at tint , (Alice. T11 , i31A3 T. 1:11tT11, rcld • 24. 28, 28 and 80 South Biath* St., Pbilad'ii. . ~.4 „ , Fine Old Block it Nut-Brown Mee, • e zire,,- , %iv° ' - -- ,-- 1 , . 1 .13 , for Faintly and Modicin . UNION REPUBLICAN TICKET. WILLIAM Y. CAMPBELL ie..- DA VID 1.01. a " ERT C. TITTELMA 4;11 ". WILLIAM. W. .NVATI sth " EDMI - ND S. YARD COI " GA. (..11ARLES fill•;ck N rA. 7tll " JAMES StllEltS Ott,". JAME.i V. STOKT,S, Rtth " ELISIIA W. DAVIS 11th " CIIAHLES EAGER. 12th " ALEXANDER ADA IRE 12th " ENOS C. RE.N•N ER 15th " JAMES II014;ATI 16th " MARSHAL C. HONG lEtL ,7,1:%1F.S N. MARKS. JOHN L. HILL, _) Secretaries. ISAAC AI.,BItIDE, I. NT)! NV: W . l lON ItEPUBLiCAN TICKET Common l'ouncif, JOHN (. Bt TLEIt, . . . For the ime::pired term of Bartholomew \V. IW:4 :y, re Yll,lled. SIMEON DILLINGHAM, • For the unexr.irrd term of G.,rve h:e.ler. decem., , l. re:7o-7t4 JAMEi 1101.ND'IltEE. C l r- 1_ , ." O . Ham received and now open iii Fall Importation of India Scar e, torether with all otlivr kinde of Sh v,vlo AIM RICH DRESS SILKS, I:LA(Ai SILKS, CIJ)AKS, To which the attention of plerchanre ii invited; th. odd are purehaetql for cash :tint will Gerold cheap. EC3otfs 1101 CHESTNUT STREET • E. M. NEEDLES & CO.'S, N.W. Cori 11th and Chestnut Ste, (;) ,r 4 House Famishing Dry Goods, e , 0-4 nwiplit at the recent depreesed rrricea, Shirting, Sheeting, Pillow and Table Linens, Tablet:lathe and Napkins to match, ...z; Doyliedi-Towels.and Trowelin g ; Blarreilled Quilts and Toilet Cow era,Biankete, Honey Comb, Lancaster, Allendale, • C •v•j • Jacquard, and other Spreads. • Domestic Aluelins and SheetingB. In all qualitied and v. idtte4, AT TILE LOWEST RATES. .1011 C EDWIN HALL & CO., :18 SOUTH. SECOND STREET. are now receiving their Fall and Winter importation. Fancy Stylee.Popline. lk.f aced l'opline. Plain Silk and Wool Pori Black and Colored Poplin Alpacas, Black and Colored Dehtinco. • Black and Colored Poplins. Fancy Styles of Cloakings. 13 , 1 Green and Blue, Blue and White, and Scarlet and White Cloakinge. C)PS NING I OPENING —WE OPEN TO-DAY A large assortment of Irish Pnplins. in Browns, Blues and Steels. Illsek and Mode Biarritz, very beautiful.. Gay plaid All-wool Poplins, a choice selection. Figured Alpacas. neat styles, 50 cents. Lupin , a French Merinoes, all shades and Qualities. Very tine Pure Moliairs in Plaids and Stripes. All-wool Poplins, Fured, Spotted and Plain. Silk Warp Lavelln,polin Silks, Sh ,wls, all grades. TOXES & WOOD. 7(0 Arch street. CASTILE SOAP.--100 BOXES GENUINE V . White Caidlle Soap, landing f mei Brig l'onimylva. Ma, from Genoa, and - for Kale ify ,jO3. li. BlisslES, ,tt CO., 108 South Delaware avenue. POLITICAL NOTICES• JUDGE OF SUPRDIE COURT, HON. HENRY W. WILLIAMS. ASSOCIATE jUPGE COURT OF CONMOIN PLEAS, HON. M. RUSSELL THAYER. COUNTY OFFICERS. Sheriff, JOSEPH M. COWELL. Register of Wills, Clerk of Orphans' Court, RICHARD M. BATTURS. CITY OFFICERS. City Treasurer, DAVID JONES. City' Commissioner, BENJAMIN F. URWILER. Senate—Third District, JOSEPH A. BONHAM. Assembly " A. M. WALK INSHAW F. W. l'itomAs (;) , ,uitGE T. TILOI:N Col.:1011N CLARK By ( irdbr of the Republican City Executive Committee W3l. R. LEEDS, President JODN FM:FARA. Alderninn. DA VID BEITLER. school Dir,ctor*, JOHN L. YOUNG. FRANCIS IiLACKIWRNI FRANCIS NEWLAND. HETAIL. DRY GOOlift. INDIA SHAWLS It V. 910 Chestnut Street, 1101 CHESTNUT STREET E. M. NEEDLES & CO. Invite attention to their Firet•clads Stock of Laces and Lace Goods, Embroideries, Hdkfs, Veils,&c., To which additlocul will constantly be made of the Novelties of the Seation. They offer In their a ) - White Goods DepaAffient HEAVY SKIRTING CAMBRICS, At SO, and4Ocents. A Great Sacrifice. ,T,IIN,LBRHO TOtt and the magnificent PAP:NU:NNE ISALLETTROUPE , who are received nightl , with filloUTS ADMIRATION. NOTlCE.—lteddent, , of adjoining towns bare new an opportunity of witneroing tide Grand Spectacle and return home at art early hour. The performance cMeee at 104 o'clock. A BRAND MATINF.F. IVl.itl" SATURDAY AFTER NOON AT 1: O'CLOCK. KORN occured without extra charge at Lee it Walker'e Music Store, Chortnitt, above Seventh street, and at OM Academy from 10 until 3 o'clock. . *CA UO.NUERT BALL, CLOAKINGS No. PECIAI V N tI Y t ri t 4 I , V- 4 1110N c i FOP If+';7. Mn.y lu;st ' 11nPorter of Laclice . Dra, and Cloak Tri toninK4 Fringer. Satin 'frimmingr. Rib Lony, tinilaire and Cluny ].seen, Crape 'l' rimminK., Fumy Jet Collar. , and Bette. Past Edge Velvets, in choice ehade,.. —ALSO Black Velvete, nil width. m pricer. Parisian Dia, :L M anal Cloak eking in all its Doys• - •. monte, DI'Vni,r , 111:1(11. on 2111.11.1:e' notice. Wedding and 1-nvel ing outfit. , load , to order in the most elegant tunnite: and at such rates ne cannot 101 l to plea , . EMlta of mourning at Flliilll2BL notice.' Elan rd Trlmund Puna Patterns for Ladies' and COSI dren's Drases. Sete of Patterns for Merchants and Dressmakers rosily. Patterns sent by mail or e.%preee to all-parte of the Miry. flittton's and Madame Demorest's charts for sale, and System of Dray-Cutting taught. ee:!,141 filtillSigraurern. RISLEY'S CONTINENTAL NEWS EXCI/ANUE intolcE SEATS To. all places of amusement may be' had up to f.;;d c , clOch any evening. NEW PIIILAIALPITIA OPERA OCHE, BIN ENT I l HUcct, !Mery Aftl.3l. TUNISON &PA IttiONS IiA3IUPI S S N1.1)1(1).. ....... GREAT SUCCESS OF TUN ISON CO.'S MINSTEELS OPEN FOR T,IIESEA:3ON. EPH. HORN, FRANK MORAN W. BUDWORTI ' C. C111:/t(AL And the Ln rffeq fuld AI()ST TALENTED Ci)MPANY IN TIM AVMLD. Seats can lie occurod in advanco 'without I:,:tra, Cliargo. Doors opon at S o'cloci% Performance hogins at 8 o'c loot CA I) EMY or mus l J. E. cDON OUG .. 11 Lurece And Manager EXCITEMENT INCREASING, 1101.:SE TI I I lONG ED NIGHTLY with the ELITE AND BEAUTY 01' PHILADELPHIA t o w it iit , the let wrg. ol3pectaele ever prightced, TILE. BLACK CRIsON, CHESTNUT Street, above TWELFTH BLIND TOM CONCERTS. POSII IV E1.1"1111: LAST %V I:Eh:. EVERY THIS WEEK • , FAREWELL . MATINEES NVEDNESDA , Y AND SATURDAY AFTERNOONS, October 2 and 1, at Admireion, Fifty Cen t . Children tinder 12. T.ventr.tive Cente. Reserved Beata, Sev.-nty live Cents. Tickets at (Awe. W. A. Trumplere Marie Store, 926 Chertnut street; al,o at the Hall. Balcony reeerved fur eolorc4.l pereou.... :Idmi < eion ?R cents. m RS. JOAN DREW'S AIZCII STREET"FIIEATRE. I hwre open at 7. It, Fht. :Lt 7; , j o'clock. LAST W1..1.h OF M It. E. }AMY AND MISS 11.1;tiffiET1'A Tlll3 (Tlintvday 1,NIN(:, October S• WI, THE FALL l'"1 . Ala,lllN the Fell I:t.mpAttv. After %hie)).'l It 1.11A.N1):,(.0111.111.oliANI). ‘Vyt rthurt 11, IP,VINci ERMA Y--1',11:1AVE11. 311:„ NI+:111 01'7111, PoLlt:l2 A tiREAT BILL I 1.01: :- , ATI•1:17 Y 31()! , 1).11 NEN'I re INN 13FAL1.EN. )Ir. Ertmt,'N I.CON art ,4 . ATE RI:If CIII:sTNur STREI:T t l nt t 1-4 Itt-Writ ' t. FOIT:T11 i)r 11F. , t.111,1/1 . And 0.. t Lb, n., Frtl't if:FlTst (r.'11,1". OF THE 1 .1(1 -. AT \V i.O r , 11v PAP. f !..11". 1 - T• LAI, - I'l IMF; UI 1:1!,,, '1111: r, FAVI.IIf! I r..,:utily Alire,l4;vo , 4l by Tin: NI:11' (.03 , IPANY nidny fi,no•nt f :1!r r. 311 Ann N01 . 111' 1 ;. \VINE SVni;i:. , Wo. \ ant., i1:1, :1 I E ff.. 4 4l i tut "N t. ll-.1. ". THIS 1 'GILT Of Rob& rtxoter (70,Hedv of . • CAnTlf The man n?eripi tl.h. c. I. hrnted hat been PUI , CII.ASFD FOR. Tli in 'I fiLATia: from the author*, ectrut..lLd ;Lay t hero e• o fired the mit) , c..rrcct ,m 1 pc•ei,nt;• repv an thi, To conclude “ith Pare., .4' 31E. AND MRS. • Duett by Mr. tud Biro. I.i.;mer,.al 'When n Little Farm We Keep." Imitutiour of celel.r3ted 01.4:2:6 tit:fent and Black Crc..k I 4..nceN FRIDAY•-BLNEEIT OF ?•11t. W. OOMERS AL. EW ELEVENTH 0 PI:RA 11 , USE. lr ELEVENTH ntrect, ;lbw., CHESTNUT. TImE FAM RESHRI. CA RNCROSS DIXEI'S TILE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD. Continued rucc,, , of ‘he heautitUl II URILA II TRIP_ ARM r.• THE 'Woja"), Firrt week of the Cr , at origin:A b•eq-a,. SLACK CROOK BALLET r•F l'Ast 'INA LINO C , A;)(PLIELS, It) the Grand G.,rps de hail t .1. L. CARNCROS'e. Manager. • It F. SIMPSON. Treasurer. cc p11ILAI)E L P II IA r I it 4:crner TENTII abd cALLO Wllll.l- rtreeta, • •Under a New Managerucot: will open for the Winter Searon - LAI:LY IN , OCT( 431:11. Thi , building has hvvn iwproved %sith NE.NV MODES or IN1:1:ES9 ANI) ; both NI truth end A 9P1.1::\ ND Ulk or HIGHLY RAINED A COMPANY UNI'Nt I iN Tlf CNITi:I) 11 - 1 l't 11.111N , ;S 11 \ A Ni'1 " 0(;Kli /I:NT 11!:S." .IS.Al:l`n 11.1.1 11 1:.1 FLI) 1-44:1 I .l tr: en:it:A:nth ; d 01, 16 • , • 1,. Ciqr,”,nrlfir t.te:jobv IVUNr)I:I:J. , I 'll - r-.20,.'.(.^, 1 rlt.' In" I'l 3. 111 1 , t1 . 1...t,‘ , 0 I d T.r", :ad nn k i,,y /dip r I rg uud ac, ~ -a tu %if will . .6 , 1,,•11:nr. L 1:17%f 11:Lviisg 01, I elery v. wing 5 , } • • 111-. ti,':, t-. C.r• lvitiy.•lt • Xtr...!:'.•••••..,a0 It; cin:sl NI . 1' pti,t:: So , 1!1 l'EN'fil rir.ut I ui t. at ; I• .:1\ METE L) TlCuL[ Clt?. I, .11 A E, L LPAND M E, By CARL sr:vrz•:i 'it( k.% .11 1..1.:>1.),1 .11 1 trrro!wr nt V,,alirt- fr.( J'arkap. ,d '4 'I lc 1:. I. 'ro tp. had at {haw r Ptrht t, and it tht• p ENNSYLVANIA ACADEM OF PINE ARTS, above TENTII. Ovn from 9 A. M. to I; P. Weet'r gre3t. fitter,: of CHRIST RE:JD-TED rtill on exhibition. - - FOX'S AMERICAN VA NIETI"I'IILATRE: LVEI:Y VEN IN ij on i SATURDAY ArI'ER.NOON, REAT COMBINATION TWA- , CE. In Grftnd Ballete, '1;11:i001111 SQug., Dancer, Gynumrt Art, Pantoruirnee, LADIES' THAI INGtu Ii i , - :- B R 0 \V N' S ,11 .1 tv\., \\ ' MANUFACTORY. .-- ARCH ,STREET, I:LOW FOURTH), PH fLADELPI IJA. te.f.:6.210 FURS, atc. EMANUEL C. PAGE, ~ FURRIER, • 4 q r A " , r 1• 4 " No. 327 :Green St., , • BELOW 1'01711T11,1•1(11,A1)A., The old established eland for 24) yvars ! Resproif invites the attention of thi• Ladier and the public in general, to his aseornnent 01 Easiliunaldc nmt. each ua RUSSIAN, 11111/RON BAY SABLE, MINK SABLE,R SQUIREL, ERMINE, WITCH, .CO. Alen, an assortment of IIII,kILOLI C1111:1)11.EN'S Pints, TRIMMINOS, &c. 5e,2841 to flint§ CLOTHi IN G. 1867. FALL AND WINTER. 1867. An ekgant selected stock of the newest fa brks, by ALBRIGHT & HUTTENBRAUCK, MERCHANT TAILORS 915 Chestnut Street -ett,4l) d td.3mo P*Orrietirts !•,tm.r.e Mariay,t,t TILE BLACK, CROOK. IMME Mr,.). C. Mi.T.I) Jul 11,2 e•out Mlllll2 AFLAIISS IN *MANCE. 'l'2(c lineasiness and its Causes. , • [FrOW the Pall Mall Gazette, 9ept.10.1 In the following letter an Englishriterchant, resident in Naples, gives his impressions during a business our which he has just • made in France; "I send you an account of the general feeling I observed _among the po-- pulation, as far as I had the. opportunity of judging. The first thing that struck me was the deep-seated feeling of uneasiness and dis trust of the future pervading all rinks of mer cantile men, a distrust which seemed the ' greater the - higher one went in the scale. The explanation they gave for this feeling, when questioned, was the felir of war in no dis tant future: but the probabilities of peace being disturbed did not stein to me suffi ciently overwhelming to account for the • strength and generality of the belief in it. I therefore tried to take deeper soundings,. and found my supposition correct. The general uneasiness had a lower basis. When M. Thiers in the Corps Legislatif condemned the policy of the French Government, however petty his theories may have appeared to im partial observers compared with the Em peror's policy, it is nevertheless certain that he struck a chord that vibrated in the heart -of the nation. The populace care little for one Policy or the other, but they care very much for success. They feel instinctively' that whereas after the Crimean and Italian wars France was decidedly the arbiter Of Europe and her wishes more or less a law for other continental states, it is now so no longer. Of late French 'diplomatists have mot been successful. They wanted to reconcile Italy to the Pope, but Italy and the ',,.Pope. ' are- .greater ,r enemies thanVer. They wanted to regenerate the Latin race in America, and curb the Anglo ..fts.ort: yet at the bidding of the latter they had to desert an unfortunate Prince whom they had sent to his destruction, and were now almost redut-ed to wish that the very' Angio-lsaxon race they had intended to check would step into their succession and do what they themselves, Frenchmen, had failed to accomplish. The statesmen of F'rance had counted on the defeat of Prussia, yet Prussia was victorious. They had interposed in favor of Danes and Poles, yet Danes and Poles had been ruthiesdv crushed. They had asked for a few coal fields (01 the banks of •the "thine, bet roe:: were met bye curt refusal: and the solution of the •Luxemnurg question wits more like defeat than victory. The pens of the Covernment ant its party,grated on their cars, for they detected their hollow ness. • The Emperor's speech at Lille. where he confessed past di-.ointitures, acknowl edged the existence of .lark spots on the horizon of the future, but declared iris con fidence in the strength of France, is but one of the thousand proot-:, of the ability by which he has so. long ruled France; thereby:llc: separated himself, as he has done more than mice before, from hi. too-zealous, followers, and stood forth as the true-representative of the feelings of the nation. SO much fOr politiCi; but they are' not the only source of uneasiness. At home the - laws of political economy have been violated, and the con .wquences are beginning to be felt. Ern ployment_ was to be found for the working classes ; gigantic works were undertaken, many of public utility. and by others Paris . and other principal cities of France were embellished. But at what a cost : Government and •municipali ties are over head and ears in debt, and more loans are everywhere in contemplation. Alt that transforms itself in the long run into in crease(' taxation and stagnation of trade; that again into want of employment with which Government in the end is unable to cope. 'Do not complain so much about your posi tion in Italy,' was constantly said to me; 'we are not much better off here; only things are managed_more_ - dexterously.. and made to look pleasanter."flors financial depres sion brings social questions to the surface, „mild perhaps thi6 is the most: abundalit '7,11.7nrc eof apprehension. The French see the irreat question between labor and capital pre senting itself in England for solution, and al- - though f•Juck with wonder and admiration at the peaceable working out of reform, which they consider a great revolution, they can hardly bring themselves to believe that the labOr will likewise be peaceably worked out. te that as i; rn ty. they see that tiri~ ;inother egta grave iluest' t ons alco Me\ itably • appt.)aching in France: let in the a1 , .-A:nee of England's un iiberty (;f public disesiou, action, they gee no elements !Or their pteo civil solution in their;own land.par ticulary lcz it is generally believed that there are !evolt.ttionary parties, organited and ready t.•:( take advantage of the first favorable moment. 'The next revolution,' was said to Ole raf,re titan once, 'will be social, not poli tical: and the Emperor NV ili either put Jahn self at the email of tire movement, as it would • he. in his character to do, or fill in combating it.' short,the French, rightly or wrongly, tee': sot :y humiliated, politically, financially and socially; they calculate that hrtwever peacefully inclined their rulers may be. war will before long be a necessity to avoid what they fancy might be greater evils.- Ancesfs.r§.. M the Editor (if the ...Vcw Yoie r Gi%:*ctte. —Su:: Miles O'neilby, in giving a sketch of General Sheridan in the Citi:e:// of last'week, speaks of "his most illustrious progenitor, Richard Brinsley Sheridan," and says : "General Sheridan is a direct cadet of the family that has given us Mr. Sheridan. the friend and colaborer of Doctor Samuel John- son; Richard Blipsley Sheridan, the greatest dramatist,. sang_ writer ,and oiator of the h 1 ilestan thee; the 'Hon:: Mrs." Noittin; of London, whose lyrics of society are familiar in every ear: and tho Countess of Dufferin, whose one exquisite ballad of .`I am sitting on the stge. Mary,' it she had never written anything else, would alone be sufficient to secure for her immortality. It is of this stock, and in pretty direct line, that' Gen. Sheridan comes—for Mrs. Norton and Lady Dufferin are grand daughters of the brilliant Richard Sheridan: and we know not any blooded stock in the whole world of intellect or politics from which an ambitious man, such as Gen. Sheridan certainly is, might . rather prefer to spring." • . What Phil. Sheridan's preferences may be in regard to ancestors we do'not know. But - (certainly Richard Brinsley was not the pro genitor of our Phil., for the very good reason that he had but one child, Toni Sheridan, whose only son is a tory farmer in England and a member of Parliament. As for the "Countess Dlifferin," she is like Mrs. Harris; "there was never no rich person." Toni Sheridan's youngest daughter married Capt. Blackwood, of the' Royal Navy. She is now the dowager, Baroness Dufferin, and her only child is the present Baron Dufferin, and Claude hoye, whose charming book, "Letters from High Latitudes," is well known to Ameri can readers. Tom Sheridan's other daugh ter, once renowned for her beauty. when Lady Seymour, is now Duchess of Som erset, and her sister, the Hon. Mrs. 'Norton, is the mother of a son who will,when his uncle dies, become Lord Grantley. The ancestors of these Sheridans were Irish Pro testants; and the first of the name who be- . came famous was the grandfather of Richard Brinsley, a Dublin school teacher, and an intimate friend of Dean Swift. Phil. Sheri . • don's progenitors were a very different set, and he is the first of his thirdly that has been known to fame. His father is an honest • working man out in Ohio, and we have no • doubt that "glorious Phil." takes a good deal . ;more pride in him than he would in the ' author of the "School for Scandal." The Sheridous are very numerous in /reload, but they have a good many representatives in this country. Men like Philip 11. Sheridan do not inherit honor; they bequeath it. Respectfully, . . W. “Tibble Itiraorical Cottage A correspondent of the London Tcicyraph writes from Scotland: "Tibbie Slid is living yet, and, though She • has lately been laid up with sickness. she is now very well `for her time of life.' I don't knoW Tibbie Shiel's age. When did James Hogg die? More than thirty years ago, I am sure; for his death was not long after that of his friend SeOtt;' and Sir Walter died in September, 1832. Well, Tibbie Shiel was 'no chicken,' not only when the Ettrick Shepherd died, but when, on the contrary, he was very much alive, and was considered by those who knew him best to be not a dying than. While I was at Selkirk, and the very day before I posted thence to Tibbie Shiers cottage, on St. Mary's' LoCh, a Eitnager who had lived in liktrick vale, ,w hen young, but had been away for fifty years, went through all that country, and looked in many faces, and inquired by name for many people he had known,. and found only one face and one name to greet his melancholy search with a living answer. The iiice and the name were Tibbie Shiers. "I entered the cottage, of course, in which Wilson and Hogg and . 'that set' spent many daylight hours, worthy to be talked of with the now classic Nights at Ambrose's; I saw the flagon that the Professor christened; I handled the drinking vessels they had handled and had chinked together, and had wigged their ale from, many, many times. 'From Tibbie I learned that she , has now a license to sell ale and spirits; and that her cottage, an. inn de, ic t eio for fifty years and .more,.,is this Year an inn plc jc<> The story of this license is a funny one. A superintendent of police new to the district laid, an intbrination against Tibbie Shia for contravening the act of Parliament, which could never have been intended to apply to Tibbie. When the sum mons came before the Fiscal, that kind hearted functionary, whose conscience may not have been free front the recollection of having taken a glass or two at the unlicensed house of entertainment by St. Mary's Loch, privately advised Tibbie to make no ado about the matter, hut to defer quietly to the com mands of the law." --410 A Religious Cliolcra Specific. The Poe/';o(' of Parma publishes the tOl lowing extraordinary production as genuine : L.,n) (0' ill; SA( 1:1.:1, A.l:l r —.l A,;1!:;s1 C r.A.brycs I)! •EA:-/ . >. — While the terrible pestilence of 1 7:20 was raging in Marseilles, and mowing day by clay its thousand victims and more as was eel tilled by the 'bishop himself of that city belbre the assembly of the French *clergy, them dwdt at Marseilles, in the odor of sanctity, a nun of the Visitation, •by name 'Magdalen Remusat. a fervent worshipper of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. By her advice the lord bishop, in order to a . , ert the scourge, solemnly consectated the city and the whole diocese to the Sacred Heart of .Jesus Christ, and so marvelous imp prompt were the effects" of this CODEteratiOli that all men held them to he miraculous. From that time forth. Sister Magdalen counseled all to wear upon their breast, in the form of a scapulary, as a preservative against infection, the image of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, with the inscription, 'Stand off! the heart of Jesus is with me.' This pious practice, which spread greatly in France by wins of the nuns of the visitation, was of marvelonS efficacy in all-Jubseqiient cases of contagion, and its efficacy was seen to be renewed last year in the city and diocese of Amiens, and at this very time in certain parts of Lom bardy and of Central Italy, where, on the breaking out of the cholera, the worship of the scapulary was diffused. The said scapulary consists of a heart cut in red woolen stuff, and surmounted by a little cross: Both heart and cross are placed upon a square of white woolen, with this inscription, 'Stand off (hold the heart of .lesus is with me' .'Approved) "+ Fr. Fm.rcE, "Parma, I cth August, 1667'. "Forty days' 'indulgence is granted daily to all who wear upon their persons the scapulary above mentioned, repeating a (i/opia Poiri with the jaculatory hofrc F Bishop.- inigitrian :11nsic in rztris. An English correspondent says in a recent letter from Puis: "The greatest attraction in the evening at the Champ de Mars is. to be found in the Viennese c(tfi', where, while beer and coffee are served round by a flaxen-baited Austrian maiden, a band of swarthy. fierce-eyed Hun garian gypsies pour forth a perfect tempest of harmony. They are seven in number. three violins. a bass a violencello, a flageolet, and a kind of harmouicon. The music they exe cute is often of their own, composition, stir ring marches, mazurkas and national airs. Sometimes the first violin and conductor of the little band begin by improvising,whili the others fall gradually into sonic wild, weird ace ompaniment. * Two delightful_ hours may be spent there. Last night a strangely mixed public of a hundred or so, who had come to satisfy their curiosity, and who, like me, were quite fascinated by the :icy sacr•'' of these enthusiastic musicians, clapped and called 'Bis: Pis:' in the most furious manner. A Princess, of Sclavonic descent, a 'star' in the Parisian world, whom I recognized seated in a corner, was enchanted. and showed her delight by ordering champagne to be sent up to the valiant little orchestra. A fat deputy next to me and a great rough-looking old general were almost as much carried away as a knot of art students; who took no pains to .hide their.admiration. It was - ,-altogether strange scene viewed through the hazy clouds of tobacco smoke, and worthy of the pencil of Gustave Dore, whom I saw looking dreamily from beneath his protruding eye brows." A Mysterious Samson in Paris. "Echoes from the Continent," in the Lon don ficra/c/. gives the following: "I told you some time ago that there was at Paris, in the Rue le Peletier, an arena where the most sturdy athletes of France wrestle three times a week. A few days ago the manager received a letter signed 'Au Amateur,' in which the said amateur proposed to fight successively with all his champions, on the condition that he should preserve the strictest incognito; and that it would be as strictly respected. Agreed. The next even in« a brougham stopped at the arena, and the amateur entered, wrapped in au ample cloak of black satin, enveloping him from head to foot. Ile sat down for a while. One of the strongest athletes put himself in a fighting attitude. "The amateur throws off his cloak at once. A thrill of admiration runs through the spec tators. His face and neck arc covered with a thick black netting; a tissue of white silk strikingly delineates the prodigious muscles of his torso; he wears•black gloves and white pumps; his drawers are of black velvet. "He comes to the athlete. The fight be gins amid dead silence. His hands must be of iron, for the athlete is roaring each time they touch his sides. After three minutes of parrying the unknown man succeeds in grasp ing the athlete, bluntly bends his back and throws him on the ground. • "The crowd is frantic; a thunder of ap plause salutes the victory of the modern kiamson,'t who quickly wraps himself in his black cloak and exit by a side-door." COPARTNERSII/PS XTOTICE.—THE PAATNERSHIP HERETOFORE EX. .1.1 feting between JOHN W. CLARKSON and GEORGE U. WHITE, Ju., under the firm of CLARKSON & WIIITF, expired on the 2d inst. by limitation. LIILADELNITA I October 1, IH7. oeo.2t* THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.--PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3,,1867. The followiii.4 amount of Giflin rvnn metthi,red 144,11 or viiiinacipiiitt. ro, the fplarter eliding Sept. :;.0. Cure . 10 v... ii Fcr_Ainn. d, ezr. The holowily! i, a statement “rthe coal traneported Over the Delaware and Illid.“011 Canal fur the week and veason endlll4 Szept.:4',;, and the same period hog year: Week. liea.m. Tons. ' ToliF_‘. Delaware and Iludyon Canal.. 40.672 Q115,-.42 Pennsylvania Coal Company.. 714 117,7141 Unlon Coal C0mpany......... 2,217 S 13,130 'rot 1,02 , ,763 P'or pct utr: , Ti Tun !. I)o•lawnri , 1,011,04:; iV2lllia 01/11i1:111Y.. - 1 1 :6 13.-6/ Total 2.4,Pit11 1,024.:111i) The lorowiw...:!-.11(Jv. , the .-1111,:.wiltq of coal oNer the D~latcnm, T.1111:1111 . 1.1'11f. 1.1111 %s'i•-tarn Railroad Ibr the ..11(1:11:4 (.1,1111):11T(1 With the same time reason : Shipp.(l :forth e, _ ......... 36, tt , s 10 1,244,792 oi; corre-pon(ll2r4 time)hit..l year: NVeek. Tollp.Cwt. 9,77'2 0:1 23,4'19 O. N,,rt Shipped 7ncren=i_ FM PO ItTATI NS. Retorted fir the Plilladelphia Evening Bulletin. Steamer Wyoming; Captainjeal is,):.; seeds*); Iftilst ;-32 bales J B Brown . 33 bids le,in 45 bales cotton Cochran, Ittupcil ac Co ; ir,:; 199 do domestics Cht4horn, Herring & c o ; 14 Lids !lour 3S sacks do Etting & Bro; 23 kegs Engel & Wo4; 22 bales yarn Bay & McDevitt; 12S du cotton 27 do bides 5 do'wool 1 bid wax 2 rolls leather L .7:11111. , ; 125 pea iron 2 bids do 1 141)1 do Wickersham & CO; 90 bids 74 hit bbls Mau i-ey, Bunton & Co; 17 bales eottop It K Neil; 23 do 2 bids dried fruit order ; 211 bales cotton 1; itattersrin & co; 41 do II Sloan; 11 do Wood , Garrett; 12 do A &, Suns; '2 bales yarn J P Watson. NEW ISEDIDED --Schr Golden Eagle, Bowes-1000 kaPons winter six.' in oil 100 bids mallard trhale oil2no do crado do Slitilier & Co. 1110V.ILTIENTs ouLAN ' d AITILKS. RANEE ( i 'la. Erin ..L....iv 11,o:A _New York.. __Sept. 1, B. ;I. .11:: .. , . ....... (ii.—;to w..'-.ow Yorit........Scpt. 13 ilitwmia (11:::•;:ow...N Cr.' York... (—Sept. 20 M..tttq. LivetTool..llo.z:on ..... .. ...,.e pt, 21 (..ti::,. of 3.lawl.etu;nlAverp:i..Ne...,. York Sept. 21 :;,,x00in...........nn0timry..New Y0rk.......5e• 0 t. 21 Wr.;.er ,Sotlthampron.. - Nciv Y0rk........5..pt. 21 W.:.-1 . 11 :+l..trop"-.:-tot:tlCton..New York . ...... Sept., 2 t tzitwritt....... ..... Liverpool... New York ..... „Sept. 24 1..:1n,1,1 61-p. , j01v..N.,w York Sept, 2,5 Nebrat.ht ....Li verpool..New York Sept. '25 City of ii, t-1 ,, i1... Li verpuol..New York . ..... .: , :tpt. 20 Ni.". - :, :'.:,/*, i ,2 '. .... I.:vorpool..QuOw. - t • cept. 2,1 Pe: eire ...., ......... liavre..Ne w Yon - Sept. 21' New York..llamburs • Oct. 5 •-• . ....Nev. York ,uct... lstar of the rdon ...Philada..New Orleans Oct. 5 il4 la.. Savannah . ...... Jet. 5 Corte4 • New York.. New Orlean.s....Oct. St Lanret• New York..ilaere uf nivverp.New Ys , rk..Lti,erpool ....... llr:wlirua Ne.v York..Glaseow Or' Medwcy New'York..Lcindon ...... Palmyra Sew York.. Liverpool.„ „ oet: 5 Ja - Boston...Liverpool_ _Oct. 9 ChicaLio .... New .......Oct. 9 Dennual - New York.. Liverpool..., Oct. 9 Alliance ..... Erin New York.. Liverpool Oct. 19 City of Bot-ton.. New York.. Liverpool.... • Oct. 19 . Stars and Stripe. 4 BOARD OF TRADE. lIENRY WINSOR, CHARLES WHEELER, 1--MONTHLY ONLYITTIL JAS. P. YOUNG, Eire litbr.s, 6 13 St SETA, 54: HIGH WATER. 5 ::1 Sti.stner Wyontintr, Teal, hours from - Swan-- ❑ai;. kt,'. It) Phiboiel;lhia and So: aftm Ma. Co: I'aen ,- ,..•crFiNtri Col 11W Fia2.le,nu , se int'unt A Hayes, Mn Maria Fry, II ill Wy..th . Sep: 2u. otTllatterr., rxpern..nced a E,:vere gale ir‘on NE. yrkh.a heavy running, which lmtvd (I.nring . pnssage. 311 - ri.0.11, 24 lt..krs• front New York, with rtill:qt to W li Bird S Co. Earl: ( - 2. Willa Palmer, fr,ll/1 I:w...era:am, via .130 , t0n ith bran ly, rc. .o L IVe.lergaard ( Schr flush.. from Provin , _etown, A S .110we.s, 4 day f from New Bed with ;0 tn,‘Mer .tiL co. 5 , 111".. 4 va1l Nor:, Truax, day from Dover, Dc! IvirM Ja- Stu . :Murtha M Lav• - :, .1 day from )[:1) d, _rain t. .ia Barratt. :•;clui VI aim ..)1 .a, Boston.. Tug Tic Jeacr?. in, Anon, froth Baltimore, with a tow of barges to P Clyde Co:~ r, P,emictt. 11 i:initzttt Phia and Co. • .Steikincr NV 1' Clyde .ti; Co. 't- , trunv..r 1: )1: (;:yrle&Co. bt.t.:aner 1 - I,,rencu Fr;:ukLu, Picr uv, 13alLimore, Cr, - ,cc- Jr. Su:airier ,'J S Shriver, Dennis, 13:11ifinore, A Grovee, Jr. Bark IZti)a: .ifoLter(i3m. J T JilKtis. Schr 31 E :•.:tap!ei, DinEmore, Boston, E A Somler&Co. Schr J, B AuPill, liacis, Fall Kiver, 7 17u_• Thom4F .7eirer,oil, Allen, for Baltimore, with 3 1.0}V.01 . bargeL , ,W P Ciyde MEMORANDA. Ship Daisy, Phillips, sailed from Liverpool Inn clt. for\ his poll. Ship Bessie North, Toye, sailed from Liverpool 20tn ult. for this port. Ship cty of sydrey, Brown, sailed front I.7cutta 9th Aug for New York. Ship Nicobar, Bellamy, sailed from Calcutta llth Aug for Boston. Ship Heleis, Hanson. at Falmouth, 21st ult. from Ran 51.1 , 11. Ship Lottie Warren, Lucas, cleared at Liverpool 13th ult. for Aden. Ship Edward O'Brien, Oliver, from New York 11th April, at San Francisco Ist hest. ' Steamer Alliance, Kelly, hence at Charleston Ist instant. Steamer New Ytirk, Jones, hence at Georgetown, DC. Ist inst. Steamer Bremen, Noynaber, cleared at New York yesterday for Bremen. Steamer City of Carl: (Br), Phillips, cleared at New - York yesterday for Antwerp:•.. Steamer Gulf City, Stewart, cleared at New York _ yesterday for Key West and GalVeston. Steamer Ann Eliza, Richards, cleared at N. York yesterday for this port. Steamer Celia, Gleadell, sailed from Havre 17th ult. for New York. Bark Glide, Hathorne, from Boston, at Tamitave, Madagascar, 36th July. Brig Veranda (Nor) Sorenson, hence at Dantzic 17th ult. . Brig Florence, Rathbun, hence at New York yester day. J Burton, Burton, hence at Swinemunde 17th ult. Brig R Wylie, Croscup, cleared at N York yesterday for Buenos Ayres. Brig William A Dresser, ,llatch, hence at Boston yesterday. Brig Gilmore Meredith, Ayres, hence, via Gibraltar, arrived off Barcelona 16th ult. and was ,warned off to proceed to Mahon to perform quarantine. Brig Ida, Gray, from Wilmington, NC. at Bristol, E. 17th ult. Brig Mary. C Bosevelt, Farnsworth, from Richmond for this port, at Holmes Hole 29th ult. Schr H M Read, Benson, hence at Cohasset Narrows 29th ult. Schr John A Griffin, Foster, cleared at Charleston 25th tilt. for Georgetown, DC. Schr Mary Weaver, Weaver, -hence at Georgetown, DC. Ist inst. Schr R W Perry, Parley; North Pacific, Ericsson, and Crisis, Brown, hence at Norfolk 30th ult. • Schr Clara, Barrett, was discbg at Lavacca 22d ult. Schr J R J.pva, Little,hence at Charleston yesterday. Schr H RR No 91, hence at Norwich 110th ult. Capt Charles Woolsey, of pilot boat Fannie No IT, from the Eastward, .wcut into New York yesterday morning and reported: On the Tat inst. at dusk, when 415 mires SE by S from Sandy Hook, the boat struck against a large spar, apparently attached to a large sunken schooner or a brig. As it was in 23 fathoms of water, and the epar was in sight, and .as it was in the track of vessels bound from the Capes of Delaware to Shinnoycock, it is probable the wreck is a coal loaded vessel from Philadelphia for an Eastern port,foandered in the late heavy gale. The buoy on College Point, Flushing Bay, lies about 100 yards to the Bof the point of the reef, where it should be, and in consequence a brig struck on the reef on Tuesday, but came off; and a sloop struck on it afterwards and sunk. BEDDING, FEATHERS, &C. VEATHER BEDS AND HAIR MATREBBES RENO vated. Al" Feathers conatently on hand. Factory 811 Lombard street. sole 1m• MPERIAL FRENCH PRUNES,-fA CASES IN TIN 1 madame and fancy bozos, imported and for male by .108. b. BU8&IER 44 00.0.03 liOntla Delaware avows. Grain and Coal Statements. AVe(Ac.. Sens On Weep. Year. Tons. Cwt. TonM;wt.. .14,19 r. 19 3311;921 19 .22,30`2' 11 947,970 07 11, ARRIVE F1:081 POE 1,,;1110n w York Llvurpoo'...Bry3ton TO picl'AitT. MARINE BULLETIN. 'PORT ,OF PHILADELPHIA-0 , a.. : ARRIVED YESTERDAY CLEARED YESTERDAY MARINE MISCELLANY NOTICE TO MARINERS TL OMAS3 Ih 30116, AUGTiONEERS, 1.11. tics. In and 141 E.•ath FOURTH ntreet. SALE.' OF STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE. I Public Solea at the Plelladelphia Exchange ever) TUESDAY. at ii o'clock. tt - ir Handbills of each property lamed naparately, In nddition to which we publish, on the Saturday previcau to each sale, one thounawl catalogues' in 'pamphlet form, giving full deOptions of all the provort7 to be dObli 00 the FOLLOWHNU TUESDAY. and a List of Peal Estate at Private Salo. 10,661 kf 21)5,751v 20g,r,7 , 15(.. rt 11,11 1, ‘(1(.. 2(1 __tar Our .ialos are ail° advertised to the following neivepapera: NO*l-ti AM/ !2,10A71', Pilnia, LE 1)(17.1t, INT7.I.I.IGYNCER, lucivißEß, Aor. EVKIAI:fII livr.ro.vc. T171.Y.411.k1.11, I VAN DXMOORAT. Forr.ituro fial , 3a at the Auction store EVERY TOZP.SDAY MORNING. - SA LE VA LI 'ABLE LAW BOOKS. (IN Fl:ll.tA At'll,i:Noi)N, 1 .ct. 4, at Ho• eolmnenr.inz at 4 rA1.,01(, it. i4•l4iir! lA'h:trton. iqvitut.and Po2port, Par , ais', , pnit r - Plin-ctWd At 5 Male No. 1.fun1.. , , , nit , treet. re itNITER E. I.IANo. .` , 111:F.01: CAITET6, FLNL- (211.1 NA, (11L ON Ir,tH'.ll - MOI:NING, • Oct. 11 . a% ' , tree,- ru..t.t. loge th h' e Pta. erinr nT rol and Cit f• Furnitnr,, 1:0,-ewnnd Nano, by tri,oina,l,:e..: Fhta )inner mid Tea Chinn, (}ln , . and Plated Wale, made. Catpett, Canton Mat ting?, Fine Matres-,' , . 11, dn , &e. Yileo, OA; K.ttch..n FrrLiture, Betrigeratt • &c. N , ,.112; blot'tro. t. HANDSOME 1V ELT:(;-.‘ pil.t: miltitoßs. LABr;r: itooKcAsE, .11AN I :•. , ()M I: 1:1;r6:4EU.3 AND UTIIER CAIZ• 2 , 1ATE1.,551:5, n r.. UJ 111 :1)NESIJAY MORNING. ectobvr 'etb. at lo o'clocl:. by cpalt,gw.. nt No. 1.1•2-1 "%Val. nut ,treet, the Flutiltre. incbuiing IVAlnnt and 1 . 111-11 I'minv Lan:, atitl winch ['hit" Mirrore. If atal9fone ‘Vitlnat l'..ttaw..rChatnbe.r kurnfoire, fmnitar... rine Unit' Matn-yee. Hand Otto ~ther Canton Mitt. ting?. into China Nod hia, , m:ltse, Kitchen Pllnlitllrc, Year. T t. .117,41% 0 7:0,:.69 10 1,113,535 19 Nay be examined on the morning of 0010. at 8 o'clock 170,9r6 OT ENT—Several 011itee.: Harmony Court TAMES A. FREEMAN. AUCTIONEER. No. 412 WALNUT Ftreet FOURTH FALL. SALE OF , I:I:.IIESTAT—ou'r. Thin Sale on WEDS ESI)AY. at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Exchange, will includt. the follow lug -I)lVE.l.l.l:stiS :•31., v,ARD—Tci-o three.stGry brick (11% ening?, No?. f.?•216 :Ind 2'2,21 I.' lit.. below Locnet, 1%011610 , 6 - .1 fret. !!•":",.1 ground rut on each. re" Will b • gold pepriratel v. re - S, le Per, inplor y. ItICLIMOND ST--'l'ho ho! port inn 131'1;0.10 cool yard and toil!, Iticlinp.nd b, lox Norris, lot 131 by 210 fo , t to Gun net - c Run. S;tl.:c'et ground cent. Orphi'l6' Cou _lb/fa/lac No, 4 , 2 S. 'IIIIIW ST--A izent , 1.1 thr.,--tory brick r..- :abb.no,, i ed 6pr.o : lot .18 hp ~ !1.1 feet. Clear. Trn 'ETOWN LANE—Two valluable tract. of mod in the llEutli Warr:. cur.tainina 15. tench 7' : acreu-).'r, ill luu. 4-et4:4! by Pi.c , . LuzerLe and E. 1 Tluu•Y ~0 11t3ill a 131,1, antit,- - of Uu Will I. era u-u•iu.unut , 'lv. ot Er., A lu: nu% run -uutand ar.,11 , ,t, fuuu.t, 0, 1 rt - PA.i. _Sip:. 11 ti.rt r o r, Litt Ned,1” , [..1..t 1; Its to ,:rtiud rout. • P, , tat . No. 1151 S. I . ll'll ST • \ -t. st: t. sttlo;.ot 1.1 ottml rant. I)cidat.,.o Co?Pc' ~ ( UP--,‘;01, f • No fr.:11:11.1.,1\ (.1:111 Si' flit - pc—tory -t .1 It 1- f. t.. Slthi..ot to a toorts:;‘go of t ; .1,, It). pl,c 'it r .4.l S. n.. , irth threo ,tg bi I , 1: 1,,r, I.;•l4Jsv 51, 3151 -t..• lot - 1* (h p/auk' Cutul P.Vatc. SALE ON THE DELAWARE COUNTY. OF 'IIOIISDAY AfiIT,KN(II)N. tie. 10, 1 , 43;. :it inck. FARM i.t thirty Hire=, with Oki thi• G.llTrtford 'l'i r2tl ikr rood, in hi, Del .0 v. iintv il, trona Narkrt eqrvet ie high. %Veit watered and tiimcd. iii• 'lt foly time. Ex. erttor,' - ca 11. I'4 , ' OEM I==Ml=Er . . . . 110U:3E110W FUNITURE. CARPEr4, KITCIIEN I - TENSILS, &c. ON FRIDAy MORNING. . . . . . At 11l o'clock, will be .sold, by order of thy Adinini , trator of Charlee S. Stratton. decea,d, at No. 12.2 e, North Second trect, til the entire 11.,uehold Furniture, Carpete. Kitchen C :7- :flay be fa'aid rith cat(!).../Wl.l on £/ e riwraiay rj.IIOMA. ; , ([I & SON, A.UCTIONEERS co:m.missioN ERCHANTS, No. 1110 CHESTS UT ~treet. Rear Entrance 1107 Sam , om Ftreet, HOUSEHOLD FERN ITERE OF EVERY DESCRIP - TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. SALES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Salem of Furniture at Dr.ulling-! attended to on the meet rea,Lonable terms. =II:M=MEMM - - CARD.—Our gale on FRIDAY MORNIN (4, at 9 o'clock, at the Auction Store. No. 1110 Chestnut street, will com prise about wOO lota of desirable llottPehold Furniture, in cluding Velvet, IlruFeek Ingrain and Venetian Carpets, Rosewood and Walnut Parlor suite r., in pinah and reps; Library .Suiles, Walnut and Cottage Chamber Suitee, elegant Sidarboardp. litaFeiee, Centre and 13o , piet Tables, hair cloth 1 arlor Furniture, large French Plate Mantel and Pier Mirror', SecretarieA and Hook-caws, Unice Ta- Wel and Deek,.. Esteneion Dining Tables. Wardrobe.% uane Seat (,hairy, Lace Window Curtains. Matre2Fee and beds, Piano Fortee, Gas Chandelier. , Silver Plated Ware, Parlor and Cof-king Stoveo,-Cloek•ai C 6 1 ,01 Furnit'ire.&c. I 'Oar WIN I:. Ire. about forty.gallou. ry .6uprrior 41141 Port Winee, !r: le nil johL,. • PARLOR ORGAN. One Pm kr Organ. FOWLING Three ~ u porior Double Barreltcl Fowling Piece NEW. AND SECONHIJANI) HOUSEHOLD FERN'. 'IMRE. FINE CAI:PEIS, LOGKING GLASSES, FIANO FORTES, FRENCH CHINA, CUT GLA*,3, ,tc., At P o'clock, :it the auction store, No. 1110 Chestnut etreet, will be sold— _ . . . A large m:iortment of Superior Parlor. Chamber, llining-rooiu and Library Purnitoic, from familieg &dim FREN lI CHINA, GLASSWARE,' &o, F1u11.91 China Dinner and Tea Sett. ,ete of 'rich (:ut Gioa. Tiench t Nina li”beinian WB4-I l'oney -tande, China Figur, fine. Tea Traye, Handle 'fable Cutlery, &c. TWIN B. myr.r.s & CO.. ej A ITT r ONEERS. 2: 4 2 a nd 2::4 MARKET sb eel. corner of BANK. LA RG,F. ftSITIVI.I - -SA LE OF BRITISH. GERMAN, FRENCH AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, 'IIIIS DAY ANr TO 3101tROW. A ( A RD---We folicit an early examination of our Salo TEE, MORNING. commencing at 10 e tleek to be can tim;ed 'lO-Mid:MOW (FRIDAY% by catalegue. on tour month,' credit. which will comprise I &JO package. and Attractive and beinionable Foreign and Domedtic . Dry Good.. LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF HOSIERY, GLOVEIi.;. SHIRTS AN DRAWERS, &c. ON FRIDAY MoRNING, teler 4. by catalogue, en tour niontleo credit, at 10 e't leek. embracing— dozen men's, won en's and children's bleached, troa I. and fancy Hose and Bei lie, Cloth, Li:de and Silk and Gauntlet , : tips dozen gent,' and ladle& Merino Vi ~ t d, Shirt. and I. Eraww,Traveling _Hoop Skirts, &c. :au dozen Silk Neck Ties. tuft Erout±, Ildkk., Sue penile! s, 4,1 Clt,e6 Cin¢ltam Umbrellae. Alto. an invoice of Ready-made Clothing, ladled' I (Wake. ctc, Tiiimnings, Braid., I'orte Monnaies, Hair Nets, Buttet,4, Notirns, Arc. LAIK;I: POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETINGS, ON FRIDAY MORNING. Oct. 4, at 11 o'clock, will be Bold, by catalogue, on FOUR :MONTHS' CRI•DIT, about 200 pieced of Ingrain, Vane thin, Liet, hemp, Cottage and ling Carpetings, which nia9 be examined early on the morning of gale.. N. Phi LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF FRENCH — AND OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS, &c. ON MONDAY MORNING, Oct. 7, at 10 o'clock, will be gold, by catalogue, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, about 700 lotr of French . , India, Ger-- niau and.Vtieh Dry Goode, embracing a full :woortiurnt. "Vejle articlee, Lin*-ii:iiid - C ono. N. B.—Goode arranged for examination and catalogueti ready early on Morning of Bale BY J. M. GUMMEY k SONS, AUCTIONEERS. L I lold Regular Sales of REAL ESTAM . I‘ . 9SMANR,W..itt . ITIES AT THE ;if - Handbills of each property issued stparately, One thousand copies published and circulated, con taining full descriptions of property to ho sold, as also a partial list of property contained in our Real El.itate Re - gister, and offered at private sale. Iltw" Sala advertised DAILY in all the daily news papen 4. SALE ON MONDAY, OCT. 7, Will include— By ORDER OF lIEIRS—Three-story Brick store and four Brick Dwellings, S. E. corner of Twenty•fourth and Caldwell stmts. below Walnut. No. 7213 LOMBARD ST—Three-story Brick Dwelling, with four Dwellings in the rear, running through to Cullen street. THIWE•STORY BRICK DWELLING, with back building. and modern conveniencei, No. 102.6 Vernon above Brow n et GERMANTOWN—DesirabIe Building Lot, Morton or Wilson trtreet and Woodbine avenue. DESIRABLE BUILDING LOT, corner of 'Woodbine and Willou avenue. BY BARIUM` & CO; AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION HOUSE. No. 230 MARKET street, corner of BANK street. Cash advaneed on condos/made without extra charm LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE 1000 LOTS DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, SIIIItu S. DRAWERS, HO si-Eity, SUSPENDERS, NOTIONS, ON FRIDAY MORNING. October 4, at 10 o'clock. Also, a large assortment of Cutlery, Carpet Bags, Also, 10u lots Linen Goode. Also, 1000 dozen assorted 11tadery. 300 dozen Hoop Skirts. 500 cozen Over.,and Under Shirts, Shirts and Drawers, _Knit Jackets, Dress Shirts, &c. PHILIP Form, Auctioneer. CLELLAFD at CO., myccEssoßs To PHILIP FORD & CO, Auctioneers+, No. 506 MARKET street. SALE OF 1800 CASES BOOTS SHOES, BROGANS, &o. ON MONDAY MORNING. October „commencing at 10 o'clock. we will sell by catalogue, for cash, 1800 cases Men's, Boys' and Youths' Boots, Shoes, Brogans, Balmorals, &c. Also, a superior assortment, of Women's, Misses' and Children's wear, from City and Eastern manufacturers. To which the special attention of the trade is called. di HARVEY AUCTIONEERS. If (Late with M. Themaa Sone). Fußtin ttiArie Ne. 491 WALNUT street. SALES at the Store EVERY TUESDAY. SALES AT RESIDENCES will receive !Particular attention. VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS. ON THURSDAY EVENING, At 7 o'clock, valuable Miscollaneous Books, including a munber of early American History, from a private Li brary. • T. L, ASHBITIDGE di` g s ktlicrlONEEBB. tfo. GOO mAu.a.ET 'treat, above nth. AUCTION SALES ON FRIDAY MORNING, No 5U' iVALNUT Htreet a iva.no .z .......... .. ... .. I'Ni~.ADIiLP}SUi EXC}LANGE, AUCTION SALES. B 1 B. SCOW, JR.. SCOTT ART GALLERY. No. 1 o -.I) CHESTNUT street, Philadelphia. , ATTRACTIVE SALE OF MODERN OIL PAINTINGS. Principally from the American Art Gallery, N. York. On WEDNESDAY nud THURSDAY EVENINGS, Oct. 2 and 8, at 7,irfi at Scott's Art Gallery. Chesnut street, about 185 M. /DERN PAINTINGS, of aried and pleasing subjects, all elegantly mounted in rich gold leaf frames. Now open for examination with descriptive catalogue.. Sale without rimers e. _ . trlit:. PRINCIPAL MIAEYESTAIJLISIIIIIENT,S. E. corner of X'l If and RACE street.i. Money advanced or Merchandise gen:Tally—Watches, Jew( Diamonds, !Old and Silver Plate, and on alt arti cle, of so foe, for any length of time agreed on. IVATGLIE:i AM JENVELItY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Mulling Ca A., Double Itottoin end Open Fare English, American and SWir4, Pritprit Lever ssatehc-c Fine (laid lihnting Ca,e and Open nine LeAne Watches; Fine fold Duple'. and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt ing Case and 0:4 Face English, American and Swiss Patent Lever niarbeeine Warehes; Doable Ilar. , c English Quartier and otker Watches: Ladle,'" Fancy Watches; inano,ed Ilrea.tnin4; Finger Rings; Ear RingN; Studs, ; Fine Gold Chain,: Med dliam ; iiracelets ; Scarf Pins; In eastO in, Finger P(11 , 11. Ca,c , . and .Jewelry generally, FOR SALE.—A large and valuable Firetroof suitable for a Jeweler, cost ;450, ' Booth Lamd-n, Fifth and Chestnut vtreet,. RIM SALE. Coat or Lumber Yards, Foundries, &c. FOE SALE—A LARGE LOT 01' GROUND, liOCTIIEAST CORNER OF TWENTY-SECOND AND HAMILTON STREETS,- • 31 feet 6 inches front, by 2,r,n feet deep. A. B. CARVER, S. W. cor. NINTH am! FILBERT EIOATTO CAPITALISTS A\ D THOSE /I.SIRIM, NV P6lVvr.--Attention - 1,. called to the sale of the Farm of the late Itiaard Snwthurot, Which will be Pohl on Saturday, the sth of October next. at o'clock P. M.. at the Indian Queen ht Wilmington, Del. The farm to Eituate about five ndlee northwest of Wil, nrington, on the Lancaster turnpike, adjoining tin; lirandynine Spriup and Fell'' epiee mine. It to well wale! ed. Rol Clay creek running throe - h en which there IF n good water-power hiving fnll of xerenteen feel. Vic 13 E 4 lir , t quality, with ti>o entire Net. of building,..,.coithiining about acrte, thirty of which id inendLit.„ „ . - A diagram of the water power and laud will be ex. Milner! at the ,ale. For fin titer particular, apply to JOHN it. SQUIRES, No. 250 South Fourth street. Philadelphia. _ Fp]; SALE—FIRST-CLASS DWELLING , Sa) Franklin atn•et, N,•. North r',i•venth street. \'o.b. 1'27 I)o:airy pin rr. . :7•• South Ftfterntn ?Arent. No. 11:11i) ponlnad rtreet. tor , . and ths4.l ing 7b5 Mouth Srenndrtrret. Ibl,:oley place NV:tltiut ,11 r..tt. r W " ES'III . LI'EIIiICKEN b•ritl:ET. GEll.NIAN ,„1::: --For .- -A liand-qae modern r,-idence,eoutaining foul teoi ye • lqintry. e.rooni, and eldni t .ei, t :Ind itli extr:i e , i.nvenienee:.+. Lot 101 11.. 5 u,. lit t y Di feel deep. beautif ally improved. Lor..- lice :OH°, ruperior f urnitwv, Licari% Ili,. for: ale it de,ired. •f. 'LAME): ‘1:. ,7tl I'llll.A DELPIIIA.-1 . 4 )1; SA I. hard-t.n,(1,11!)14- niod,rn coph.itiing ii of incdern ;Qui improve:ll , l7+. Flant , d Hit choice I+l:rn !awry ,tabk :Lod clirri:ozo-10w,... Lot fe..t fnmt.Jy 101 Ict . t deep. J. N. GI SONS. 501 SValtint rtreot. PUI SALE-.A DoDDLE TititiD,sToity MASI'IU 1::: Dwelling. N. \V. COlller : - ; , :v.•lltvelltil find titiliMP . T eitrcet-. contaillitif! 15 rof r,,tntinunrc wa,ll rtandr , , cv:.!..11 tub+, and nil tile convenience+ of a lir.q.cla++ tits FETTER, KRICKIIIUM PFRDY, North Fifth e tweet FOR SA I.E.—A iiANps(ot t: DI:EssEI) STON It 1:0-4(1,110., [Wilt :111,1:1111,11e(1 thriw g ilmit i n a eliti. ! riiir Ina nth.r. with i•Ntra vonveniencee. fir,t~ story }mint( in frerc.i, floor: , draiii•ned. wirvil with tin: and in prrfert order. Rtliiintie_e3i Cornet idrioist, near i 4 t. Church. .1. M. titT.T.liMir.l. ro, Walnut :itrret. „ex.?. FOR SALE.--A THREE-sTon - DWELLING, With twmetory back buildinp, N 0,1228 Ogden et.reet, With three,Aory dwelling in rear on Myrtle etreet. All modern improvements. Om., range, hot and cold water, bath, Le. Apply to COPPLCK JORDAN, 9;3 Walnut street. rFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE —FOR SALE—A ilanoome .modern cottage Tert;icLlCe, with largo lot of ground ,lituate on Spruce street, near Phirty ninthr3Veet Philadelphia. or will ho exchanged for tir4t .clatoi city property. G.U.NDIEY A: SONS, .5(Pi Walnut rtreot. FOlt SALE THE HANDSOME c MODERN three.,itory thick how , e, No. '2021 Pine street, ket front, with iniin,iliate 'J. 31 Aiii.:lllE, 51f2 Walnut street.' r FO} SALE.—ELEGANT NEW RESIDENCE, NO. ‘.}2.2 SPRUCE STREET; ALL MODERN DI PROVEMENTS. MACLE, BROTHER k. CO. eee,lrno! :Zoo SOUTH STREET c'EST PHILADELPHIA—FOE SALE —A LAEIiE Double Stone Mansion, suitable for a ..uhlie InFtittil tioibwith LiA tiround nu feet front be 175 feet deep. Situate_ou the northeast corner-01-Thirty-ninth -4reet.F. .1. M. 0 UMMEY 4: SONS, 5iN Walnut street. EFOR 1101;SE, 1099 SPRUCE STREET, 'll n feet front furniAed tvith all modern convenienceA, :cud fu g,od order. Apply at 216 ClilliTNUT rFOR SALE TWONEW HOUSES, WALNUT " lane, filth and eixth honeed, w,et of Mame street, ' Germantown. Apply' to A. W. RAND.. 12.4 North Sixth street. Philada. ir.27-tf,l TO RENT. I rn.r a b.rin nt yeArr'. nn no hurroventent len?n, 1101 SI: •.:39 North NINTII Street. 111.N1lY G. SMITH, 41.:4 Walnut :Area rILET—UPONIO AN Ildl . llo VIM: LEASE, THE tine property, No. 1212 Che,tout ,treet ; trot (Font ' by 2,1 , ', lect in depth, to Son, oo ,treet. Apply to 6LI;GLANT No. •1:I Arch Areet, GERMANTOWN—FO,It 11ANDS0111.. ttt; donble t4otte re,lilcuce, with Inv crc city cunvenictic , l on lA,:Rot aV1311111 . . nettr tie cititroutl depot. (11:)131EY & St tNt, ratt, Walnut •trect. IFFB 'ES FOR RENTL NONE ,%!! I! E DESIRABLE for lawyer,' or Fir t floor tt:ttt %Val. nut street. ti; O LET THE ELEGANT SECOND•6TGRY ROAT,,„ T S. E. corner Seventh and 4tinetimt street.—noel uccif pied 1.3 , J. E. GUILD.'' Al , O. from October lot, tifr premno,' -now occuri.d by EDWARD P. K ELLEY, Clo , , , tnot ,treet. Addrea EDWARD I'. KELLEY. 612 Clo,4unt ILVANTS. BOY SEVENTEEN 1 EARS 7 in the counting.r, , ,,in of a largv it,anntactorr, Addre,, in hand.‘s riling of applicant, phis Poet °nice. oc7.3t'al rWANTED TO l'CI:C111181.',—A 1.101 , 5 E, ON Green etreet west of Broad, and Enet of Eighteenth stref;te; l'o4es6ion April ht. Addi'oe e Box No. I , MEM3===i= BOAIIIII.N.i. TB REE PLEASANT ROOMS To RENT, WITH Board in a private family, at MI Spruce et. ee:A.46t. MO LET—A POCTOR'S OFFICE, Fl l NtSIIEO,AND 1 bedroom; with hreakfaet in a private family. Apply at Isio..TA South Twelfth ,itreet. oc 130 ITIO LET—TWO COMMUNICATING ROOMS, WITH. _L out board, iu a private family, i 54 douth Twelfth street. uc 1 3t* 11111 E IIANDSOME 'RESIDENCE. NO. 3bl S. EIGHTH -I,,street, corner of Spruce, in now open to receive j afilere; eines rooms iuid mites; private tablo' if de• eei•lm• CLOTHS, CASNIfiIIEHEM, at. TAMES & LEE IN VITE TILE ATTENTION OF THEIE tl Mende and othere to their large and choice aesortaieul of COATINGS. Duffel' Heaven.. Cantor Shavers.- - Chinchilla Beacon , . Eequimaux Beavera. Black Doeekine. Fancy Caßgirnern4. Satiuttb., Cortie. _ lienverteeng At wholesale and ictail, by JAMES & bEE, No. 11 1.4 orth Second et., Sign of the Golden Lomb. rItOPOSALS. NO'I'ICL•' TO CONTRACTORS.—SEALED PROP( ). eulg will he received for the clearing. grubbing, grad. leg, treadle. work, and bridging upon tlw line of the Smoke born IndlreadK between SwetleFboro and 11"ood• bury, in tilouceeter county, N. ,1. Dbitance , e about 10 Bids will be received for single vertions or for the en• tire road.. Plano and epeeilleatimth may he HOCII at the Mice of the President, in Swedes horo, on and atter MONDAY, the 7th init., when any de,ired information will be given in person or by letter. Proposals will be re. ceived oc the MUove work at the President's oltice up to and including Monday, the 14th inst. Partied toidering for the work will receive notice in writing of the acceptance of their propodald on or before thelPth day of October instant. J. ;7i, TilWIt3O,lC„ President. Mw cid:mimeo, Oct. 1. it9da, eel to Or NEW P:UBLICATIONX. JUST IttADY—BINGIiAM'S LATIN GRAMMAR.— New Edition. —A. Grammar of the Latin Language. For the use of Schools. With exercises and, vocabularies. By William Bingham, A. M., Superintendent of the Bing. ham School. The i'ubUohere take pleasure in announcing to Teacheni an d f r i en d s of Education generally, that the now edition of the above work h now ready, and they invite a careful examination of the same, uud comparison with other works ou the same imhiect. Copies will 'be furnished t."; Teachers and Superintendents of Schools for this pupate at low rates. Price $3l 50. Yubliahad by E. EL BUTLES..dc Co., 131 South Fottrth Or*, Philadelphia. " And, for sale by Bookaellere generAßY. amid - TUST PUBLISHED.—ISATIISIttrkIit LIVE AND Mino. By J. G. Holland, (Author of "Bitter Suva.") THE BULLS and the JONAT.HANS. J. R. Paul. ding. TILE ART OF DISCOURSE. By Henry N. Dar ; THE ART OF_COMPOSITION. By Henry N. utlY. GRACE BEI% NEDYS WORKS;- 8 vela VoL 1---Anna Rom VoL 2 , --Father Clernout, ac. Vol. a—Denallen; or. Know what Judge. All the New Hooka received WI 8001141:1 poldiahed. JAMES S. CLAXTON. . atiocessor to Wm. S. dr A, Marteln, iiraeW tf 1414 Chestnut Stroot . _ PoIIEBERVED .TAMA.RININ KEG 3MA RTINIQVIC Tamarinds in wain% Ituidina and for sale , hp B. 8U5t31.14444 108 bouttt Delaware avenue. LEGAL NOTICES* 17 N THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 1 for the Eastern District. In equity. 'PUMAS MeELRATH, et at, TILE PITTSBURGH AND vs. STEUBENVILLE RAI& goAD COMPANY, et al., of J'anuary Term, 1.864 No. fit Wherrak, The Pittshargh and Steubenville Railroad Company, by mortgage bearing date the first day of August, A . O. 1856, And dilly recorded, did grant, assign anti convey Mat) Thomas McElreth. his successors and SlAYign,., the whole of the railtoad,logethet With the rands. depots, grounds and buildinge situate between and at the termini of their railway et the City of Pittsburgh, and the boundary line of the State of Virginia, in the countlee of Allegheny- and NV tishington, in thy State of Penney,- sylvania, and also all the property and franchises and all the tolls, ismuem, income and profits of the sate Company, thereafter to be derived to them from the useof, or tray." nn their said ro.d, or any part thereof; .and also all the Can, engines locomotives, tenders, horses,. Or other things used in the basiness and management of the said railroad, to lifiVe and to hold all and - singular the estate, hereditaments and premises hereby granted or in tended so to he, with the appurtenances, unto the said Thomas MeEirath, his heirs, executors, administrators, his.successorsand assigns, rind to the survivor and Rini vies 91 them, and to their heirs, executors, administrators and aFf!iglaY frle4 2i , verthelem, for the benefit of the holders of 'bonds of the said Company, to the amount of one million of dollars, viz.: one thousand bonds for One thousand dollars each; of even date with the maid mart gage, and tor the better securing the sane with the prin. civil moneys therein respectively mentioned, and interest thereafter to accrue thereon. And wherea,, it was pro- Med hi the Said mortgage that any other real estate sitoide as aforesaid, and personal estate. wherever situate, wldeli Yltonld or might be purchased, and all improve. menuth might thereafter be made by the said Pitts ba gh and Steubenville Railroad Company dieing the continuance of the said mortgage, should he deemed, held and taken to be part of the mortgaged premises. iid WhiTedii By a decree (entered by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the abovefentitied cause, it was declared that the said mortgage was the first lien upon the railroad, tolls, franchises, property, income, estates 'andluemises therein mentioned, referred to or described. and was ordered that on default being made by the Pittrgh nod Steubenville Railroad Company . In the payr ea t within the period fixed by the said decree, of the anie, int ascertained to be due and payable on the bonds seemed by the said mortgage, the railroad property estates, premises, appurtenances and franchises conveyed. by the said mortgage, including all the estate, right, titie. interest, claim and demand of the said Pittsburgh and • Steubenville Railroad Company, of and in that portion of the railroad operated and rim by the said Company through their lessees in the State of West Virginia. be-- Breen the boundary line of the State of Pennsylvania. at the easterly end, and the river Ohio at the westerly end , - w hich passed to the said Thomas McElrath. under and by force of thederms and intent of The paid mortgage, should be exposed to sale by public vendee or outcry. as one ea , th, ha in the ,Ctty Pittsburgh, by the paid Thomas MelArath, to %I - hop, all needful authority for that purpose woe thereby given, upon the terms and conditions therein mentioned and hereinafter met forth. And Whereas, De , fault has been made by the Sold Pittsburgh and Stenbens vine Railroad Company in the payment as aforesaid of the sold amount. Now therejiwe. notice is hereby given that under mid by virtue of the said decree, I, the said Thoniam IllcEirath.thervinnamedovill,on WEDNESDAY. the ixt.ll day of November, A. P. 1867, at is o'clock M., at the Court-Donee in the City of Pittsburgh, expometo public sah• by vendee or outcry, the whole. of the railroad, to gether with the lands.depots,depot grounds and buildings, situate Iv.tween and at the termini of the railway of the Pittmburgh and Steubenville Railroad Company, at the City of Pittsburgh, and the boundary ile of the State of West Virginia, in the counties of Allegheny end Washington, in the State of Peansylve nie, and Oho all the property and franchises, and all the to I Is, i 1-s illlolne and profits of the said Company, derivable frfmi the ere of or travel on their said road, or :my part thereof. and also all the cars, engines, !enema. tier, tencirrs. horse, or other thin* mica In the business or management of the .aid railr.nd, and also all the estate, right.title.interest,elaini and demo Lund the said Company. 4 and hi that portion of the railroad operated and run by maid Company through their lessee, in. the Stateof . IV,t Virginia, la•tiveen the boundary line of the Stateot at the easteily end, and the rifer Ohio at air Wjidoid , end, Which passed io the said Timmas McEl r under and be force of the terms and intent of the said mortgage. f/eileratift. all the rlp,ht4 of way, railwayl. culvertQ, tref..tle-work, , , build in g 9, etructltroi„ maHlinerv, :•tatinn=. du•nui,, depot ground, , , lleredita. nal:l, , mind appal truancv4,.,,i,prfonal f‘..tltte of every kind and di• , criphnn. r•nrnoratc right, and franelMTergranted, as,igned and ClalVe.% nil IT the,aid mortgage, or intended to to be. roil way alsyve described, es situate in the counties of Allegheny and Washington. in the State of Pennsyl begiw on the south ride of the Washington turn. pike load, in the borough of South - Pate burgh, on the south side of the Monongahela river, opposite the City of Pittsburgh, at its point of connection with the Pittsburgh and Steubenville extension of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and extends for a distance of about thirt v-three miles to the weiqern boundary line of the State where it connects, with the railroad in the , State West Virginia, abovo referred to, Which latter railroad extends from the said point of connection through the State of Wont Virginia, to a point near the eastwardly side Of the Ohio river, nearly opposite the town of Steubenville, in the State of Ohiodind there connects with a radroadcrossing the Ohio river, on the-bridge there constructed. TERmb tip SALE. The property will be struck oft to the highest and best bidder, upon his signing the conditions of sale. Twenty 'ti ve thousand dollars of thepurchase money shall be paid •in cash, and the balance within twenty days thereafter., I'sosided, however, that if the purchaser or purchasers are the holders of bonds and matured coupons, or either. secured by the aforesaid first mortgage, he or they may receipt to the said Thomas MeElrath for the dividend of said balance of purchase money, payable on thesaidbonde and matured coupons, or either, the sum flies (receipted for to he considered as paid' in cash on account of the said, purchase money, the said bonds or coupons to he delivered , at the time of such receipt to the said Thomas iticElratlt, and to he returned by hint to the • holders after the divt dend thus receipted for shall have been endorsed thereon. the accrued interest on the said coupons front the date of . their maturity,to he added to the principal in estimating the dividend payable thereon. In case the terms of sale are not complied with by the bidder to whom the property hue been struck off, the next - highest bidder at, the sale,. -who shail - have - signed the conditions thereof, shall have the option of taking the property at his hid, upon paying or accounting in the manner aforesaid for the amount thereof, within ten days after the expiration of the afore said twenty days from the day of sale... When the purchase money shall have been ,paid or re. ceipted for, and the sale confirmed by the Court, the sales Thomas AleElrath will execute and deliver to the - pur. .elia,-er or purchasers a good and sufficient deed or deeds conveying the premises unto him or thent in fee simple. THOMAS McELRATIf. Trustee. alCith,lot I.IIt.SII.I.L'S OFFICE, E. D. OF PENisiSYL UVANIA. . DJ:1,1411 A, October 311, 1867. 711 i, to give notice, that on the 2tith day of September, 1867, II IA arrant in Bankruptcy Wila ieeued against the es. tate of DAVID 2AN,of Philadelphia, in the county of Philadelphia, and 6uLte ui l'euneylvania, who hag been adjudged a Bankrupt, on hie own petition; that the pay lavot of any di•bte and delivery of any property belonging to such Potukrupt to lii iii, or fur hie lice, and the tranefor of :in, - property by him are forbidden by law; that it of the ereditere of the iaid Bankrupt, to prom II iii d,dip. and to ebou=e one or 1110 i e aSriigIIIITS of ltiit ll' be held at a Court t f Bankruptcy:to be holden to -121-i . l.iliratv street. in the city of Philadelphia, before it. FHANKIAN FISIIER, Egg., tiegjeter, on the tltith day of ociuli g r, A. D. hti7, P Welock. A. M • I'. C. ELLMAh:ER, L. S. :\ I apthal, ae Isti.wenger f c317L0 of; N I THE couirr THE CITY AND ad,dphia. Et-tati. ELIZABE.III. PI I Ytilt! t fi, ge i 111 d.- 1 -1. he Auditor appointed by tho Court .o.lAudit„,tettio and adjuat, the account of JACOB M. 1- ELLdri, attorney he tact for Executord tinder the will a Xfd 7. A BETLi • I'IIYSICK. deed., and to report di,trihn : ti!!a. of the balance in the haud,of the accountant,' , Wili chit the porde, interet tediarthe pl7rpoe of his appoint. moat, on Taceday, October 15th. at 4 o'clock P. K. at office, No. 190 South Sixth 14_ in the city of Philadelphia. (iusLANTS ROIAK, Audlior. uc:ah,e,ti o-`ui 1 1 ASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, 6. 1!.4 IN lIANKRISPTCI. At Put LAI , EI.I.IIIA, th1 . :211 chty of October, A. D., 1867. 'I he onderrigued hereby given notice of hia appoint ituit as Aaritutee of ISAAC U. ItEl ES. of .the tidy 11113 County t.l Philatlehthia. and State of PennoylvAnia„. within said Di4trict, who hoc been ndindged tt bankrupt upon hie own petition, by the District Court of said Di - tf jet R. S. REED„timignoc, 0(3 th3t. 113 Arch Htre,t. THE ORPHANS' COURT, FOR THE CITY AND County of Philadelphia.—Estate of THOMAS PAR KER, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit. nettle and adjust thf account of THOMAS PARKER, Jo., Adminis rator of said Estate, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, as also of the fund arising from sale. nt real estate of decedent, will meet the parties interested for the purpont of his appointment, on Monday, Oct 14, 80, at 2 o'clock, I'. M., at his office, No. 62.3 Walnut street, is the the city of Philadelphia. JAMBS DARAL RODNEY, 611 J, to thAt; Auditor. IN FTHE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE. CITY AND) , County of Philadelphia.—Estate of GARRICK MALLEILY. deceived.—The Auditor appointed byAbei Court to audit. eettle and :Millet the account of Hon. W 111.6 LIAM STRONG,Adminietratorot the Eetate of GAF:IMM MALLERY, deceived, and to report distribution of tho balance in the hande of the accountant, will meet Um partite , intereoted for the purpcmee of hia apootudyneat. om TluirMac, October Mb. Itli7, at 4 o'clock. P. M.. at ht, office, No. 113 South Fifth Arcot, in the city of Philadel, phla. ' - THOMAS HART, Jit., Auditor. 1 THE ORPHANS. couicr FOR TILE CITY AND County of Philadelphia.,--E atate of W. L. LANE, de. ceared.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, eettle and adjust the thud account of TAMZEN H. LANE. Adininistratrix of W. L. LANE. deceased, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant. will nicot the parties Interested for the purpose of his apneintawnt, on Monday, October 7th, 1487, ut 4 o'clock 111., at his office. ,o. Lib South hixth street, in the city of Philadelphia. JAMES W. LLTTA, Auditor. THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND County of Philadelphia,—Estate of SAMUEL, PIIo LINO, decd.—The Auditor appointed by the Court te , audit, Fettle and adjust the bruit account of WILLIAM . OVERINGTON. Trustee under the last Will and Teata meat of SAMUEL PILLING. deed, and to report distribution of the balance in the hand.+ of the account. ant, Avid meet the parties interested for the purpose of his appointment, on Wednesday October uth.• hid:, at H. o'clock A. M., at the office of Wednesday PANCOAST, Esq., N 0.416 Walnut street, In the city of Philadelphia, ee26,t N THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR. TSE CITY AND I Connty of Philadelphia.—Edtate of ELIZ &BETH A. HODGSON, deed.—The Auditor appointed by the Court' to audit. settle and oot the account of DAVID HEY. Executor of the ladt will and totament of ELIZABETH' A. DODlib(),N, dent., and to report distribution of the, balance in the bonds of the accountant, will meet the partied tutereetcd for the purpose of hia appointmetil t ou, illeuday, October 7th, lag at 8 o'clock P. hide ee, No. 221 South Fifth etrvet, the city of Philadelphia. tic2fitis,e.tu.fit J. GRAN VILLE LEACH. Auditor. TN '2IIE ORPUA NS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND County of l'hiladelphia.—Estate of GEORGE W. BAY ofF, dr—va.4.A.--Nake is hereby given that the widow paid doceclont tiled ha ettid Court an iurantore Ala u pprefeement of his poreonal property. to the value of atra, with bur petition, to be allowed to retain the mane ruder the act a April 14th, IBM, and ito eupplomouta: and that the same will bo,allowed by the Court, on Saturday, October Ugh. naive) expo toga be filed thereto. THOMAS BRADFORD DWIGHT. . . Attorney for Petitioner. ricnOlu,tl) , 4t o LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION UPON THE 'EfF, tote of HENRY F. lIEBERTON, dee'd. hatincEeets, grouted to the undersigned, piteous indebted to Uro said estate will make payment, and those having claw will present them to ROST. G. WHITE, Mon Locust' treet, or to his Attorney, GEO. JUNEINoIt., S. E. pow* of Sixth and Walnut streets. 50194 la ' LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION CUM TS mento annexe, upon the estate of CAROLINE CRAW_ - CELLOII t deceased - having been granted to the WSW. signed. nU. persona lndebted to said estate are routostodita . make payment, and those havin_g claptis or deMants-tiV present them without delay to WM... LHANCELLO... a. I'M School, street, Germantown, or OW): R. W00.1.3._.400 CheStilut street, Philadelphia, :