POLITICAL. Meeting tat mitten/a Sail. The Republicans of the .Ninth Ward held a mn s • last evening. which was addressed by lion. Chas. O'Neill, Hon. li. - Iftieher Swope and Hon. ii StoekTU ,Matthews. IVe give below the speech of Ole latter irentleman in ft_ill„phono graphically reported for the. EeI...NINA. Bri.LicTlN. named gentlemen were selected The following ne oflieerS: .M•CSident-Tran Randolph. Pfs—First Precinct, Simeon Dil mr 'arm • Second Precinct, Charles N. .11ooper; Third Precinct, Henry E. Keerie; Fourth Pre cinct, flat icy Precinct, btsuillel H. Perkins: 61.7ith Ert Clout, Alsido 11. Yarnall; Seventh Precinct, NS'. Bullock; Eighth Pre cinct, IVillirim Seerctarles—Ed. I3enj. F. Kern. lion. Charles O'Neill - was the first speaker. Ile disens.oo on , v , esi is of the ollifillntes. eulo gized Judge Williams and Mr. Thayer, !and pre tiatActi that Liu non muulu recut Vo a IllajUrlty of 1 5 . 110 0 on Tuesday next. Mr. Thayer is a gen tleman of great legal ability, and will ,add lustre tei the bench. 11 Philadelphia or Pennsylvania falters in her ditty on Tuesday next it will give great comfort at the \Visite house, aud no man can predict what ntlfew Johnson inny then do. Ail that hits been done in the past in the way of legislation may he undone, and we may again be called to the field. .Me. ‘‘'/Inant A. Bull presented the- reaolu 7 goys, which' assert that indifference —to tire" . result on 'Tuesday next faithlessness is faithleness to the Republican party; that the candidates of the party arc worthy of the support of every citizen. svinsim 0,. ooki.TT sivrimws. • Upon cooling forward the speaker was repeatedly - plandstd. When quiet had been fiomovlint re=tool, tie said; Mr. Chairman and Felloir.Citizcw: Only the sins ph plea of my lips-mnly with an int,mse yearning in say heart for the good of our common country, do I come iu . fore you to-night.An I t. von will pardon me when I say that flock adequate w eels in which b., give ,•:;pre.,iois prnfOunk,gratilication welessom „and cordial reception Inta ffiVakimiollh-tnv heart. The past seven years of our national exist:mice will 'con: tititrite n Wiest nremorable epoch in our country's It may indeelthe said of oar Aineric.m youth of the pr, • sent day that they have already lived great lives its IWO - lag lived through this great struggle; and should :my I,f those aged men with vl seeable heads. who year, ago looked forward with longing eyes for the coming of that repose for which Clwy prayed-should any, of them now puns into that dark volley which is so full of shad sia s, they wculd pass away with the noise of contention, ssi, gry controversy anti /11 11 , 1,•1. slehfifi• vet lines-:usupon their ears. "After life's fitful fever" they 11111 V sleep well; but they will leave to the men who are now in the prime of manhood,and to thone Who tire Just entering the arena of 211,1.1, M I . sit 11, evitable conclusion the prolonged struggle in which our countrymen have been engaged and which has widely divided them. Upon as flk'n sires the labor of the same old battle-the battle that, Was not alone apolitical hat II philosophical I.lCCe , City- -in the midstfof which FLlCily.ti•ong and irresistible moral en,•: . cies and ide:tq have been clinti. totted. lu that battle, the people of title land, by their own sense of right, by their inherent, 'ineradicable des otion to tel have compelled. the repre sentative tacit of the nation. in nil deparrineiso of the Government, step by step. little by little, to lift theineelvve pto the high level of national dmand and ot national '"'necessitv-until to.dav in title re e public there has heels bred, in theof the tires of civil war-not sem (died by the tires of contlagration, but warmed with :so inex tinguishable tire-a. breed of men who will not re,t until the crowning cap-stone has 110.11 lanced upon the superb edifice of universal, exact and liberal fres-dont for all. [Great applause.) Ac the issue is an old one, so are the contending parties who oppear before the tenirrinii of public opinion :sod ask, each in turn, for a verdict at your hands. It may he wi IL therefore, for me to recall to your minds the leailittt gars. tions and events which th,tinguirli the career of each, and; by tints contra.ting the nierits of each political minty. ennele you to dett st hich is the better entitled to your confidence and yoor ~iiiptithy. and the fruition of your eehthr• nee and support.. which id col start gee. NOW we know - of the peril, through which we hate passed, .and tit. tr•gli filch we have, borne our,elves sn proudly, PO gallantly and so valiantly; and we know now that those were polls which brave men, sy the ex.ovoke of honorable effort, and intelligence, and by famine . all the inborn strength of the nobility and manhood of our - people, could meet and overcome. But the peril, which lie in advance of its, are those which spring from perjury, from rerrenney, from turpitude, from malign and corrs tpt ambition. from a 'perverse and dogged will, from nu obsti nate temperament, from n man of implacable resentment, from a man the fires of whom seethintand boiling nature We kept alive by the insidiuux WHIM of the' corrupt and debauched politicians by whom he surround, linnselt. To-dity there exists within the capital of the Republic a conspiracy gotten tip and c.trited forword by men known to this nation who are prepared to risk every. .thltut within their grasp to steam their inn'- poets, even though the accompliehment of their objects' , should iIIVOINT the 111111 :Old deesJillth -It of the laud. There are but two parties, and of thoi, two there is one with at short record of but seven ye . ars. It ir4 scarcely seven years after Liberty, driven trout your Capitol, sought toe eyrie of your engle,and, I mine upward on the stings of your noble bird, s,•nt through all the I mul her lamentations 0, er the sure destt lietwon :tad certain ruin which the then dominant party Sr as bringing upon the land, and summoned forth from the-fastness., ot - your mount:tine, from the rece.ses of your valleys,' from your rural homes ' and Irmo ) one workshops, tic • true siii.n of the nation to the organi zation of "a new Party. And in the -sum' mer of ISIIO, the Republican tiztrty, if. it is now rolled, and as it then baptized itself, tirat sprang into exi , leure as a national mganization- i. l.tpplail . ,a•l L and 114..111 and . c:m people., u p u o t rt thud tl i t ,i e en tring s hise s s „i o e t er th that party it may he said that there IleVer yet ha,. lived iu any land it poet who could give, us in epic that would tell its daily glories; there ii,ver yet has liviqd a painter wlmse skillful bre,ll, even though dipped in the volors of, the could give us the radiant splendor of its achieve. nients, as, day by day, it lists marched steadily forward to the accompli - Slinient of God's holy purpo +es and the work ing out 01 justice aud right among our fellowmien.Lain-at applause.) NO sculptor,:autid the elassic traditions of home, either with the inspirations ot antiquity or W kit the strong current of modern civilization fluol Ming within ilia heart, could-form au adequate conception of that figure, or that groom of figures. which should utly tell to posterity, in :vinbolle grand , mv 'And grace of out line and symmetry of proportion, wont this patty--thin new - pints - . this party of :5 better time ittlfi VTOCit, Wirt)" dint WAr+ born amid the throes of the - Republic, uneci rattily suit doubtfully attegaling. tipsvard towards the development of the spirit and genial of one imtitutions-what this party has done, not alone for the United States, for the continent of America, for the lands ss hoe civilization diffuses its benedictionS and its joys, bait for all lands and for all continents; and to: all places and for all time, until the millenima dawn. [Great applame.l it sent its tirst repre,entatis e matt to enter the hoope of our Presidenb.-sent him there in!lii simple. interlined, unadulteran d 'Western nature: for hr needed no kingly trapping,-,nn tall/011M hearings nor in. signia of royalty , for :Nature herself had contioh.sioned him herprince, and had ascii him her patent of nobility, With Fenl, upon it thr t are i nde,drautible and hope:ids a ble ; CO that horeattcr, when men come to read of .ths• prottdeq Ithea ge, in our land, they is ill pr:s lee the simple 'fj`le. 11114 • growth, :gift eXp4lll-1011, necinine:, and fame ct Abraham Lincoln ttreinentlotH cheering:.:" he (Tweed the thredilsold ol the inauplou set apart for him by the itation-cro. , sed it :ill tn.:aiding with appieliensien tor the future, diffident of his lusts capacity, alarmed by the wide spread auguries ot e, hich met ,if ion ou either nand. there walk,d • forth from the bells into which Ito was about to (-Mei . utter 10. in years all pregnant a ith Mt cosy and that, the iittest and meet appropriate illurtration, ILresentath e and leader of th e llenwei mit • party nt is • :lilted Stittes 11P to thllt di-pen,ation tioulde and an..ietv ; and there ha- been public 111:111 (ll' leafier to hop te the chara‘ • terirt ice of the thanocrat to h.• d,,,. so fully and Nt ell so did except his sue. censor, flies Isoutli, who murdered the President that walked in a. Buell:mull walked out. rApplitiv.e. Abrahlitti Limoln writ into the IA II uses' -it I ma , Call it by that 11111.114, -Mill he found F1'1,(10111, 110 t tattering upon her pedeontl, but to mimic its the dust; he tound the sceptre of the empire broken; be found the rein, of eO , - eminent thrown upon the if:Wk. wide careering steeds until the ar of state seemed ready to be dashed into irre -media hie ruin. lie found a Senate halting, vacillating, timid of pm pose and full of his enemies; he found is Mouse of Representatives trying to patch up a peace and resort to the most accepted Americaumode ot settling dillieulties-,it compromise of principle, and a. ill With the devil; for that had been the way in which that n tole its purses. tic loon* tile nation alarmed, setuitive. distriiqi,ll' cif him •Ltreading, ore jt 111)011 the' burning crust; of at cOIC/11.1(0. vilthin: ivith tires, that threatened at tiny moment to burst forth and oven% helm the land as lentil:memo and Pompeii lss! been. (Neill lielniv,l ninny centuries ago. Its found,too,that colonic' c,• was tdlilsg it, 0011'Y:tilt promises of security. that trade wire busy', and that every maw was 'fulfilling the belies: , of his daily life, wade through all the nation there it as it reluctance to beliove that there Wits • danger ahead. sin unwillingness to •th ink that our le,oittli ern I maitre n-oh. touch that word **brethren" has cost w• lit long strife-that our "Southern brethren' l‘ould actually and bodily and nienniimly take up anti,. for theparpuse ,s 1 a ,Aerting the rights ss•hieli they claimed to Ins, v, and claimed to have been violated anti trampled, • upon 1,;,. the people tit the United States, and by the Con t . mare-. or the United Stunts as the representatives of people. I say Mr. Lincoln found the au n, ld in the condition law, e described. lion recollect the Peace Con gress, mid the committee of thirty'-flares that sinus raised in the Moose of Representatives, Yon ra collect that s•\ 1111111 at that time Mid is plan 1, , Wilk he Wit+ going to pacilicato all the elements and by then, into 11:0111011t again. YOll recollect tl.l.re si not a songle Public mail, from the Po. Lonnie ris et to the lake, who had the courage mud the torsotnanlin -s0 that the of the Soutls !Henan light and that the hol a, ready to rake op the gong of battle as soon es it was east down• and to cuter the arena equipped anti urguui zed, to lidtt iu csruest, to tight to e- cootie'. and to tight to e - -,tertainate, if tw-ci than that the rebellion rhoulti ,u(.1.,•,-d. Not It hit r i a .l ! . n rir We had daily declamations soloing front that tlabb'c old prOphtt. W111..1.1. Seward, in which It , . nn ,‘ • would not have tats air for thirty )'ear:. Ire ! , t h Wirth et 31arch to fits Fifteenth of April. there WII ,, 1011hle•dellIth political chicanery and all sort.; ~f trichs, but ill'-re wa g ; nothing like a broad . honest, liberi , I I:t o f t i,,, stateemansl.ip in which we wi•re engaged, and not a eingle public than in the land who said to the, i .„. • isl e :is lie ought tot has e said: "lic it ,o; the acr., umnnou ) - ell owl:cattle the sword we follow l our example, b u t we will do users-sec Will throw away the reabbant of onr-. Von tell lis that civil Will . • rage over 'the land mid J'our expect to - °Netopt front its horrors. to be excepted from . .vnetation. and you expect to be able to 'sear its h.._ ghipo. We toll will not permit the flaming line v. combat to truss the broad waters that lie between the thipittil and the IleW eonutp which you promise to estah th,r. ah,r.-• that We WU/ Witt Ch do e into the South not wills tingle army, but with arilly idler laud:, shining legions and phalanxes of patriots, „ ith steel and fortified with all the implements . of modern warfare; and nil.ere, en you invite the struggle you shall Inn eit at your doors', and at your firesides. in tin' Of idst Of ,d your fonqathers,on the wide sliyabrudis of the South, by your winding tut the base of your lofty mount:des, an d p os h you step by step and step by step. \Via-se . ..Tr the glifts.ring phones of the loyal troopers can lie H.,111 timid the dim Ell okt of the battle. you shall so. the, of the public. it hitch shall mill y•,15 bac:. to your fealty • and the longer; 01-I ITEM the worts it ,hall intend to tight on, to light always, to fight ever until tv,. 15115" e• realize,{ sal the free institution, of the Clos i i; i i;i ttlit,l l , s , s ,,T, ' „iti t 'u ,„ sited States tile the best, not only tor Hi' and although you neither. iiiidet;fisi . n w il Surd your children; nor a • rociate them, and although you 1 • ended ht„ ,„ lotted aside I ""r . I sought to lift fip a single antagonistic institution will wipeout a nd destroy that institution shish has been the o pi ev ource ocrow pretended devotion toe form of govenauseni. e-tc eh e You a Porilipurifiedrepublic •1% tvl rite yon equal and exact ; Will giro not tiOnlpgilleollo jllVtiee; rte Will rive con you oat clierbdi it feeling of ptittC mid molts which • ou may bOintide happv • and wo wilt make 3 oil know that the republic whiel , 'bad its birth-place nu a battle titlihthat h Hit gone throughtwo foreign ryas, triumphantly can two flu (vigil a CIA il fi w . r to pave, to 'preserve to vindi cate all the purpobe: , which are embodied in o ur organic tau. and to 10th Ill' 11 grander. rudder and more potent eh 1- lization than ti sever hod berme." 'Applause.) There Were tto men in 1861 to utter such breve worth!. There have b , eu thoithands Mince thou who have used 011011 language, unit svhat 10111' not foretold as mi•mice or ae prophecy harheen realized ns fart, and stands as im mutable as the everlasting bills. Well, yotr remember what transpired from April Isfit. 1 will not go over the first yen r 01 . 10'0 01 01% I menu to go 1101 r ail an rapidly and .suceinctlv. as poEsible fe t but, y go, you know how ilitlictift it is • to condense within a speech M alt hour all the leading episode: , in the grand march of a groat people up to dent :.•+ and higher 11001111nc: , ,,,and colutritatrnenn ttftnoividualdignitt and individual valve which 110111' of un had felt until we bad wiped out el t tvery. I will forget with you, for the time being, b u nter with it= stalling garrison yielaing to the flames.; though that old I ortril,r never would liner been taken bad not God, in 11i0 nice and inscrutable pro idenee, ordained that it should be licit for un that the fortress upon which we had r:et our 110p6 and around which centred our fears for no anxioll, dove. should yield. I will not recall to you BRlO mere... with its bleotly streets and that Mad, intane and bloody' attack upon the troops of the State,. • I will not recall to you dint whirlwind of cli.loyaltY which swept over out' 0111 town and carried men away from their positions NI 101 l they thought thezmelves safe and necitre, whirled men out into the treason which was OVol . l9 , llllldillg the land. I will not speak to you of Big Bethel, Bull Ihra, Ball's Bluff; nor of the :air,' that.' Week a ftor week, and Int,nth after 111011111, was permitted to lie in idlenepiA and inutility and inactivity beyond and Within the fortifications of Wash ington. I will not speak to you of the march to Yorkto and to 'lslllnasstie With its Quaker gulls. They were Quaker guns that did as much to the aridly under Me. Clellan as (Maker votes do here to the artily tinder George Sharelvood, for I do not ante there ate. man , ineniocts of the Society of rriendo who intend voting that ticket, [Laughter and applatise..l 1 will not speak of all these things• nor recall to your Minitel 'the pal fielders/al that drabs battle of Antietam, tell ii.lt" tpnrtul 19,4.. of Hie, and the fact that it hail snit littlo effect upon the course of Illlseilnelt events. I will not epealt to yam of anything that transpired up to the time that the 1 einocratie party threw MI the mad:. throw ;isiile ill Sis abandoned all attempts to iniFlead and deceive. :end came out openly, flagrantly - , dirolmittablv. lint true to' , .itself in all its charaeteristie;-- .. time out nv the acknowledged and confessed ally, alder and n latter of dad ey iiipatilizer with the people if the irlio were iu nuns against, the Government of tape nation. Aril I take the two parties from 1840 or '53. when the I)intovratic phrty ran Ih n iitii &willow . for Governor ef it York, up to the preoent hourond I say pity(' tlellnitinn of the tw0 1011110. 4 I Hint the 111 . 1 1 111111- _1„:1144 1 3.1 13 . has been the right arm of the Government: that At "l Ms been- , the , rtressury:the army and navy, and the of the l'iiited Mates. And I say of the [Minn Craey : it has been the whining, pewling, wretched politi• , :it tarty of the country--nother fish, flesh nor fowl-- living one day to the Lord, and tile next day to the X 1 1 11. "When the devil Was sick., the de il a monk: would be," says the old animus.. but "when the devil go well, the it a monk was be." [Laughter and applause. '1 hey Lace been praying "Good Lord, good devil," since 18.52. Whenever there was 11 victor , for the North, they were 1011111 ; there wan ft spell of speechlessness upon them 11,. , complete an that which clutraCteritted theitt ill the'[ Cowl:nth:II in this city last year, when every 1111111 them a ppefit'cd inn his place irith a padlock upon his tongue, which bore upon In lime the cabalistic letters "A.. 1.-160 mark:" I A pplimee.l IVe have the two parties lincv so contrasted that we can most fitly compare them. I am not noWnpeaking :.f the re- cord of the Democratic party in the past, it Melt it 1•11:3 oil as 11 national party in engineering the civil strife. I :in, not speaking of it= gradual inroads upon freedom• nor of the . leghlation which was lull 01,011 nlll' tattitt• hook-, hich it .. , ouelit to Make slavery the ;:rent mid predomi nating clement in the growth hind et:pan:M.ll tit the Conn tr) , 10111 not now recalling to your minds its comlitet since IPlet, II hilt Mr. Calhoun'' , millith':ltion pr 10 00 thwiy. and effertuall nipped is the bud by the and nil i-ion et Andrew ail,-on. Nor out I speaking t. , you \ lilt l'elerelleo to the Mexican war, lilt)' the iinue,ation .of Toeap, tier with refortitno to the repeal of the .lir.-011ri l'onmrioili , e , nor the Li eompten Constitution and the ansa. , and N , loaAtii:druggle. nor any of those antece, 111 - 111 :lel, of the Donme:'atie party. ,'Rich have stamped it ;mon the pnaa.s of our 'Antrim' an It Math all tht• tone onjim lilt , 1.11 , 1 invariably putting forth all the imergii•s of orgi,Wzatien. tit Imild up the in,titl!tion of rills ery 11111 ii it rhool,l oy 1•IiI11 1 (100' the Al hobo larotl, and mlhi ill legit:lath:ll :End till c o mity butt, all the State,, and all he re lotion. , of the citizens of the inherent State , to each other. and to the general Goverinnent and low's pot ...upon the Ptututo Iperke of the Ststel , ..i , linida all be made to wear the ioMple'l ton and color of this iwtiffition, and should all be eeir ed in its interest. In fact, 1 need clot rewind you teat this party watt -o hold and persistent iu its aggre , eiells 11Pult the 'onstitution and laws 01 the litmithat it finally ti»numke the whole strength and power and perpetiiity of our institutions depend upon the feeble elinin whielt bound the 11111110 of 'lour millions of human beings. And they sought to holdup the,- V11:1111A 11, a barrier between ' te - peoplelandthe growing spirit of Christinaizing eiviliza lk„tul which Witt:walking abroad over :ill the earth: and It • the clangor of those chain , they tried to frighten Civil our shores, shake down our very temple: , of won-hip, make peoplemelieve that Calvary Slits II lie, 1111 d hole nal rative of Christ's life, death and resurrec tion was a 1111 1 11. 1:1111e, :11111 there 10:15 110111111 g 011 earth worth haring but the right to OWII 1111111:111 1/1 1 1111ts. SO 1011 g n.+ the 011till'ellitof 1101111111 r fury and right, ous hulignittioo hulled, from 1 , 74 t to the fall of V.:tilt, this ',arty did not dare to some before the people in anything like'tlwir. old attinole, or iminite4 thejr old syropleinev aniFenbeerviency - for their B,iiithern masters --who had nhvaye been owir 111111 would always have con tinitml no to be had things contimied 4.t. they were. in plat , of theft former 11111:Fteli, 11:r will ;TI - e them noW the black people of the South, .and they shall rule them. fGreat The speaker litre iligavowed any - feeling of gratification or 11easure nn account of the poAtion which the white locn 01 thc South 110 AV 'ooellpied twwitrds the people win wire 1 0 11110'1y their :tlaven. He deplored the itielan. ulioly and lamentable spi•ctlicle. and 1118 heart ached for that reb e llious, defiant, high , trong, editetited and sen.i. live licork, gallant in 1110llY respects, 1.1111 had carried on ft. long War -agaillA the inevliamitible re.tottrgen of. the 1110:t powerful nation in the world ifer -when we were only half a people,we were the most powerful people in the well Id, ns the de , ..hdunellt of our reeollree , achlon etna,..l)-11 nation whew errug4l , had beet unequaled in the annals of war. Thel , had t or neon ouch Hight befori-wttneFred 110101 , 0 !Wen 111 that grand uprising ot the Anwrican people—e Very every In:mould every 11 11 1 1 vii•tuom cc :mom ill the land ilk ing the hest of her hope. liappines. ambition and :ispiratlons to pre,el e 110 I.llld 1111 41,1111 it down Unfettered to pos terity. All the 1111111:10 . 1.11y1111, 1 1y united in one common elf,;rt to lift up man country to a grander level and ft higher position. But the Democratic party—what ltd they do? While all this wee going on (and it only ended when the cud come, eel the end was the eagle shout of clef...y that woke the hill: t--what did they do? They mid: "You can't 'Whip 'eel:" "tine : , nrithern man is :le good es live Vall i:c.a.:" .When your regiments marched through your di y knots laid your welkin shook with huzzas. and the glad thrill of expeetant triumph went toyotir lingers' en. . yOll heard then. and all through your ieleille,B 1.1101 . 011 ifert, at . oil time..., the shrill tenor of the Democrat, 'ai 'hey'll go down South to make compost for the field,.." And in. deli they slid truly. nor peoldr liar enriched the Southern lend w ith . their 1,1,d. They in.\ ...lone more than that. TleTe lel an old mythological talde which tell, of.the sowing of the dra {Mu', eath from w, hick sprang it elTiOn , already tinned for tot' fray. Mit from that Northern blood thus shed on ;-...lithernnull iliall. , pring up iu till time to eollll3Pllell sweet 'loll el, of in..tice and etch beautiful plants of freedom, that wherever our ehilnren ,118116toplf a oentury hence. all through the Southern land, they .will find the fields gar landed with forget-memet , that will tell them of their fathers, who died that the old .land might live. it.reat ,ipiqiintae. l qi,..,... 4. ,,,ker further reviewed the unfriendly and di, loyal ..puit of the I iemoorn tic party. reciting their reseed 4 0 11plilicipit , .„: , t 111111Clett'd ny Janie, 1111Cilellell 1... F the 111011til-pitTO Id Jeremiah :3. nick, and Miler leaders, ttu til the mind. of tine yolk of the land b.:clinic impreg nated with tho,o baleful influence,. lle Ilielered trill. fully end tearfully the terrible eXil'ellliliee to in intuit the 111t11011 AV:1 , 111iVull ill consequence of the rc,istenee of Demneratia mileiale, and fem.. no /Mater was this re-isle 1111,t to the authority of the Government more detormined. more con,i,tent rind 111,01. IllquI"4111111 11'0111 DelllOtT;ltie judges in 011 V Cogan , .Uni4l every ea:m.lou they improved the oppo-timitie , all,iided them to VIII her. I'llSe Um Government and relea , e trout its service h e r ~,,, ler cnli.‘ted aoldiers. Ile belied elllitralliCillln. ht N'ete VOrli. Huey ilYi• tell the deaf:: in Pelie,ylVltnia, Chief .In,tice' 'Woodward dl,1:11'011 :1;2..1 ill,t the C ni,titti timthlity .If tin' 'draft, and Judge - Sher iwoud. the j.resent Democratic condidot.., boldly declared the legal tenders of the Gol el it, Llt, illelllollo'llllollWiliell it tiillolld , il to -tht:liti it! life, on conntitutional and imutoperly anth-riavd. 1. I. l'olltill. 1.1011, he eitruc,tly appealed to hie learns , to A It lid firm in eoprorl of the grt'llt mute, of PA`PllblicAlti,lll,llllll to erlltell with triumph that party which had the- 1.. r ~.,. hold y and gloriously triecharged the mi,,hm whi,h had hail /t.•• signed it. . Meeting: in the Tiventy-!..ieenth Ward. Last night a large and enthusiastic Union Re publican mass:meeting oil the citizens of the Twenty-fourth Tweilty.;seve4h Wards - wifi; held at the,Comndssloners' Thirty 7 Stiveulli,: and Market streets, which was handsomely dCed rated and lighted. The West Philadelphia Brass Band occupied a place on the platform, and pre vious to the organizaiion of the meeting, per formed,a number of martial airs. The following gentlemen were selected as officers of the meeting: Pr , siikid—C. C. Pierson. Twenty-fourth Ward. rice Pre4.,tents—J. W. Massey, S. D. MeCJIla, J. W. Lybrand. G. W. Freas. Janes B. Foust, David Fox, William W. Kerr, A. W. Ilawline. James Miller. B. H. Haines, James, M. Sellers, J. A. Simpson, Lieutenant William Letforh, George E. Hall, John S. Ogden, L. M. Serrill. Henry ,C. Davis, and D. W. Geisse. &L./wit/les—F. A. Williamson, Charles Price, James Newell, Joseph Davis, Thomas Hunter, and Benjamin S. Riley. Benjamin H. Haines, Esq., Clerk of Select Council, then read a set of well-prepared resolu tions, setting forth substantially that the safety and dignity of the American people required the most Indignant rebuke of Andrew Johnson ; that restoring unconditionally to traitors their rights is unwise and unjust; that the reconstruction measures meet the' approval of the people; the necessity of a revision of our tariff laws, to pio teet American labor; the endorsement of the Re publican nominees, and the certainty of our local. as well as our national interests, requiring their election. The meeting was addressed by James Lynd, F.sq.. Gen. Louis Wagner, .yon. Wm. D. Kelley, and Wm. B. Mann. 41. Meeting at Germantown. A large Republican meeting was held last even ing at the - fown llall, Germantown. General ( - mien presided, and on taking the chair stated that he bad just returned from a trip through a number of the wegtern counties of the State, and was glad to say that the prospects of a brilliant Republican - victory were very encouraging. Speeches were made by .11mi. James H. Camp bell, General Littlefield and others. Stories About Norwegiftus. A. traveler tells a story of a Hallingdal man Who entered a church during the performance of divine service: Walking up the aisle of the church, he stood a moment in front of tho communion table, and Men, turning a somer sault,. he sprang over the communion rails and alighted on the table. The officiating clergyman, who was sotowned for his great strength, seized the offender by the neck, cud THE DA[LY EVENING BULLETIN:4EI ILADELPHIA, SArl LTD" OCTOBER 5,1867. hurled .him back again among the people, eA, where he remain .for some time insensible. Now, the Norw inns are very fond of witnessing feats o strength, and the clergy man hi question was ever afterwards much esteemed, \ A remarkable feat waSyerformed by a sol dier, a Hallingdal man, m the garrison at Christiana. A. brother sbldier hung up his cap as high in the air Ils he could, and the Hallingdal man.taking a sudden leap,knocked the cap out of the hand of the other,with his debt foot. , The men of Halling.dal are said to have a strange and barbarous custom when in drink. When well primed with finket, they draw their short knives, and pointing them towards each other, they inquire in an amicable way, "flow far will you go?" A certain portion of each knife is then measured off on each side, and the remainder of the blade is then careT fully bound' round with, cloth, so that the knives cannot penetrate, beyond a certain dis tance. All present then set to work and stab and slash each other in all directions. some times these encounters end fatally, but a little blood-letting does none of the parties any harm. .1t may be asked if these combats arise from a natural task for shedding blood. It is said not to be so, but the custom has been handed down from father to son for many, generations, and that any Hallingdal man who refused to fight when challenged would be branded as a coward. Here is another anecdote: Two English travelers were making an excursion through Norwegian Lapland, accompanied by a Lapp guide; it was summer time, and the day was extremely hot and oppressive; so, having to make their way over some high mountains, they sat clown on a good sized stone to.. rest. The Lapp guide .stood atql respectfuldisance„ but being inquisitive, as his people gcrally are, he kept his eyes firmly on the English men to observe what they were doing. One of the travelers happened to wear a wig, and wishing to cool his head he removed it, as well as his hat. On seeing this, to him, ex traordinary proceeding, the Lapp stood for a moment spell-bound—he had never seen such a thing as a wig before. He then beat his hands on his breast, gave a most unearthly howl. and subsided into silence. He made no remark. and the travelers proceeded on their way; but the Lapp could not be persuaded Wally account to go near the Englishman who wtwig. Toilers - with the Brain • The "Health and Longevity of Brain Workers," by Dr. George M. Beard, an article in 110,1)cr . Moiithlg. presents some curious statistics with regard to the physical effects of intellectual labor, showing that constant activity of mind forms the most favorable condition for the attainment of old age.. It is true that many whose names shine brightest in the galaxy of the world's thinkers, walked all their lives in sorrow and pain, and sunk into premature graves. But on the other hand it is just us true that the logical cause of the suffering and early decease of these men is to he found, in most instances, not in their intellectual activity as authors so much as in their 'native feebleness of consti-.- tution; intheir dissipated habits, or in their external circumstances. Many delicate, finely-strung natures are irresistibly impelled to authorship by, the force of their genius, and, if such arc doomed to a life=long battle with disease, surely their calling should not be held responsible for their misfortunes. Some worry themselves to death, others histen it by over-indulgence of the passions, and others die simply because nature dbes not allow them sufficient capital to sustain life; but' very few die simply from over-exertion of the mind. Contemptate what wonders of toil as well as of suffering have been endured by many authors who have yet attained a good old age. Sir Walter Scott, overwhelmed with debt, lonely through berouvomorit, porOsteatly writing and planning until he was past sixty; Dante, fighting with poverty and his own weaknesses, plunging into all mystenes and sciences for threescore years, and ten; Ed wards establishing a reputation as a theologian and philosopher that shall stand forever, while he was obliged to meas ure out kis plain food according to the ca prices of his delicate stomach; Irving, work ing at his desk for twelve and even fifteen hours a day, rising often ,at midnight to resume his task, and yet not compelled to lay aside his pen until he was seventy-six. Beside these, scores of names are at once suggested of men of genius and letters who have struggled with poverty and various formsfo,f ill, and yet have thought on and writteyuntil past the allotted term of human life. itAlege students are referred to as affording mples of vigoous and bounding health, not inferior to that of any other body of young men in the country. Intelligent farmers fbrm an important class of brain-workers, and it is generally known that they reach.a high aver age of longevity. ,"lint this green old age is nit due to then• muscular exercise alone, for mechanics and laborers, who work even harder than farmers, do not live as long by many years; it is not due to the pure air they breathe, for many out-of-door laborers are much lower in the scale of longevity than they; nor lastly, is it due to the calmness of rural life, for the farmer, if freeholder, is burdened with grave responSibilities and oppressed by weightier cares than the butcher in the market, the teamster on the4ighway, or the Workman he employs by the day, all of whom die Much younger than. he. Farmer's are long-lived not only because of pure air, moderate ex - ercise and,countly •quiet, but more especially beeause; they can. counteract the . injurious effects of by steal' 'labor by varied activity . of the mind. Of nearly twenty thousand of this elaSs who died in Massa chusetts, the average age was over sixty." In our large cities also the beet physical development is found in the most highly favored classes as regards material prOsperity, and whose habitual pursuits demand constant activity of Mind: Merchants and manufac turers live longer than artisans and laborers, but not so long as professional men. Rea soning from analogy and from the facts of biography, it would seem that those who are endowed with unusual intellectual powers can work harder and longer, all things being equal. than the rank and file of humanity. lIPHOLSTEIRY, &c. 13 - JETVIDING AND FEATHER WA I:MIR/USE, TENTH STREET, BELOW ARCH. Feathers, Feather Beds, Bolsters and Pillows, Straw, Husk, Hair itutt Spring Mattresses, Spring Beds and Spring Cots, Iron lledetoada of all sizes. WINDOW SHADES of every quality, and a great variety of Comfortables.inns and Counterpanes, of all kinds. eapetially Marseilles BLANKETS. A very large !:- , N0111111:21t lit Blankets, se c!ten p as to defy competition. AMOS Hir,BORN, No. 44 Noah TENTH Street, selittli r. to 26t rp¢ Below Arcb. PRANG'S American Chi onion Imitations of Oil Paintinp. Piddletat L. PRANG & CO., Boeton. Sold In all Pletetre Storer!. Send for Catalogue. ee24.tti,tll,e.l2t BOND'S BOSTON BISCUIT.—BOND'S BOSTON BUT. ter and Milk Biscuit, landing from steamer Norman, B and for sale by JOS. H.USti/Eit Q UV.,Ageutn fpf nOud, 108 South Delaware accrue. N p,TATDNS. • Reported uaep o r /ailaampma l uvening Bulletin. HAVANA —Steamer Stars and Stripes, Holmes -760 bxs sugar 300 bble oranges 140 bunches bananas 8 cratespine apples 10,000 cigars Thos Wattson & Sons. LIVERPOOL—Bark Istria-4701 seeks common salt A Kerr & Bro; 8175 sacks ground salt Wm Bumm & Son ; 2400 do do 79 doz matting a quantity of rock salt and scrap iron order. -- - MOVEMENTS TO ARRIVE OF OCEAN STEAMER& . x, y. FROM FOB " DAM Cella London.. New Y0rk....... Sept. 14 Erin ..L....iverpool—New York Sept. 18 Hibernia Glasgow.. New 'York Sept. 20 Wan Liverpool.. Boston Sept. 21 ,5 1 , 7 ;0nig. __ _ ...Hamburg..New York....... Sept. 21 Weser Southampton.. New York.-- .Sept. 21 W'e't'n 111etrop's.South'toll..New York Sept. 24 Siberia—. . ....... Liverpool—New Y0rk........ Sept. 24 Europa Glasgow.. New York Sept. 25 Nebraska ........Liverpool_New York Sept. 22 City of Boston—Liverpool—New York .......Sept. 25 Nova Scotian. —.Liverpool ..Quebee. Sept. 2G Pereire Havre..New York Sept. 27 l'ittted Kingdom—Glasgow..New Tort - Sept. 27 Etna ..... ........ .LiVerpool_New York_ „....Sept. 27 Tripoli --Liverpool —New Y0rk..... _Sept. 28 Cuba.... ..... ....Liverpoal.„l3pton.... Sept. 23 TO DEPART. Java............ ...:Boston..Liverpool. ... ...... .00. 9 Chicago .........New York_Liverpool— ...... .Oct. 9 Pcninarl - .New York.. Liverpool Oct. 9 City of N YOrk..New Yor k .. Liverpool Oct. 9 A inerlca.........New Yqtk..llremen " Oct. 10 Eagle.... New York—Havana Oct. 10 San Frauciseo—New York.. San jaan, Nie Oct. 10 BenryCnauncey.New York...Aspinwall Oct. 11 Alliance ..Philadelphia..Charleston.: ...... Oct. 12 Erin ..... ..... —New.York..Liverpool Oct. 12 City of Boston.. New York..Liverpool........—Oct. 12 11ibern1a.........N C W York.. Glasgow.... .... -: . Oct. 12 Stars and Stripes... Philada..liavana.' .... —Oct. 15 Nebraek a........ New York.. Liverpool ( Oct. 16 Scotia New York. Liverpool . ... —Oct. 16 Morro Castle. —New York —Havana , Oct. 1T BOARD OF TRADE. HENRY WINSOIt. CHARLES WHEELER, FMONTIUN COMMITTII; JAS. F. YOUNG, MARINE BULLETIN. PORT tiF.PIIILADELPHIA:-.-00T. Sun RISES : 6 16 I SUN Sims, 5%14 1 . Ai 6145 ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Steamer Stars and Stripes, Holmes. 4X days from Havana, via quarantine, with sugar, &c. to Thomas Watteon & Sons. Passengers—Mrs Mamiela Diez Gown)les, Mr Pedro A Berrose, of Spain. Smanter Mas , ey, Smith, 24 hours from N. York, with incise to W Baird & Co. Steamer Beverly, Pierce. 24 hours from New York, with mdse toWP Clyde & Steamer Diamond State, Robinson, 13 hours from Baltimore, with Inds° to J Ruoff. Bark Istria,' Sewall, :15 days from Liverpool, with mdse to order. Towed up by WILY.' A Sunder. Schr E S Reeves, Oheen, 7 daYk{rom Rappahannock River, with locust posts to BaCon;'Collins & Co. Selo. Julia Weeks, Vanderslice, 1 day from Odessa, with grain to Christian & Co. Schr John T Long 'Pannell, 2 days from Indian River,•Del. with hunh'er to Bacon, Collins & Co. Schr clayton•& Loivber,Jackson, 1 day front Smyrna, Del. with grain to Jas L Bewley & Co. Schr Louie, Taylor, 5 days from Boston, with mdse to Crowell & Collins. Seta J D Ingraham, Dickinson, 4 days from Middle town, with stone to captain. Tug Thos Jefferson, Alien, front Baltimore, with a tow of barges to W 1' Clyde & CO. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer Wyoming„ Teal. Savanna!), Philadelphia and Southern N cit SS Co. Steamer Philadelphia, Fultz, New York, Win P Clyde & Co. • Steamer J S Skiver, Dennis, Baltimore. Ye Groves, Jr. Bark Restless, Sheldon, Demerara, Thos Wattson & Sous. Bark Eugenia, Dennis, St Marys, C7a. E A Sonder&Co. Brig Nury (Br), McCulloch, Antwerp, C C Van flora. Schr Fanny Keating, Daniels, Boston, Bonin, Keller & Nutting. Schr Ruby, Lee, Newburyport, Wannemacher & Co. Schr Vandalia, Lord. Boston, J E & Co. Schr S Washburn, Cummings, Taunton, •Audernied, Norton & Co. Tug Thomas Jefferson, Allen, for Baltimore, with tow of barges,W P Clyde & Co. • Correspondence of the Phila. Evening Bulletin. READING, Oct. 3, 1867 The following boats from the Union Cmal passed Into the Schuylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden and consigned as follows' Mary & Lizzie, with lumber to Norcross & Sheets; Delaware, do to Dodge & Co• Virginia, light to cap tain ; Fly No Limber to Watson 2%laloue & CO; Dela ware, corn to linffmad & Kennedy ; Electric, lumber to Patterson & Lippincott. F. MEMORANDA _ Ship Lydia Skoldeld: ,S - koltield, from Liverpool 19th Aug. for this port, was spoken 23d ult. lat 49, lon 56 21. Ship Victoria Nyanza, Jones, from Calcutta May 10, at New York yesterday. Ship Gentoo, Freeman, from Manila 17th May, of _Boston ,yeaterdity. ship Wtil*l7 Router, Raynea, front chdetata. mat May, at New York - yesterday. Ship Continental, Lecraw, from Liverpool 12th May, 'at Calcutta prior to 17th ult. Ship Edward O'Brien, Oliver, at San Francisco 3d inst. was chartered for Liverpool at the rate of .C 2 ster ling. Ship Scotia, Morse,from Callao 14th May, at Queens town 20th ult. Steamer Denmark (Br), Thompson, cleared at New York yesterday for Liverpool. Steamer ;New York, Jones, sailed from GeorgetoWn, DC. 3d inst. for this port. Steamer II ammonia, Ehlers, cleared at New York yesterday for hamburg. Steamer St Laurent, Bocande, cleared at New York yesterday for Havre. Steamer Nay IloWer, Robinson, cleared at New York yesterday for this port. Steamer _South America, Tinklepaugh, from New York Aar Jiro JrneirO, was passed in the Para river, 7th ult. bound up. Jkirk Wm Van Name, Craig, from Boston for this port, sailed from Holmes' hole Ist inst. Bark Geore 11 Jenkins (Br), Durkee, sailed front Savannah lid mst. fur Montevideo. _lark White Wing, Ross, from Buenos Ayres Ist AIW. at BOSIOII lid iust. hawk Richard Irvin, Sherinuine, front Buenos Ayres 11th Ang.-at Boston ad inat. Schr Ida, Niculson, was up at Savannah Ist instant for this port. Schr R R Townsend, Townsend, hence at Galveston 25th ult. Schr J (4 Babcock, Fisher, hence at Salem 2d inst. Schr W G Dearborn, Foster, cleared at Wilmington, NC. 2d inst. for this port, with 190 bbis rosin, 173 do tar, 124,771 feet lumber, 10,000 juniper staves, 43 tons old iron, bags feathers, 10 pkge mdse. Schr A 11 Cummings, and Sloop Octorara, cleared at Baltimore 3d inst. fOr Wilmington, Del. Schrs T C Smith, Lake; A M Flanagan, Cain, A E Martin, Lloyd; J Kenzie, Lake; Eliza & Rebecca, Price; Rescue, Kelley ; 'C E Paige, Frink ; E G Wil bud, Parsons; Nary Milnes, Burdge ; Jas Alderdice, Jackaway ; Restless, Baxter,. and C E Elmer, Haley, hence at Boston ad ink. Schrs A Mason, Rose, and I Thompson. Baker, hence at Gagetown, DC. 3d inst. MARINE MISCELLANY Bark Isabella C Jones, Jones, front Philadelphia Aug,N, cad Capes of the Delaware 19th, for St The bias, with a earn of coal on government account, foundered at sea Scot S. Capt Jones and one of the crew succeeded in getting on the skylight, the balance of:the ereii.weirt down T With ::the vessels After"rez: tiatining on the skylight for 70 hOurS, Capt Jones. was rescded by a Spanish VeSsbr(the - Otlitifeeatinth having died from exhaustion) and carried to St Jago de Cuba, and at the date of the letter to the owner in Baltimore wits in the hospital, but imprortng. The Isabella Joues,'previous to this voyage, had beeh put in com plete order and newly coppered. There is $20,000 in surance in Baltimore on the hull. No insuronce on freight. INS URANC E. THE. SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY. The Fidelity Insurance, Trust And Safe Deposit C)ompany' s FOR THE SAFE KEEPING OF BONDS, STOCKS and OTHER VALUABLES. • N. B. BROWNE, CIIARLESMAPALESTER. CLA IIENCE H. CLARK. EDWARD W. CLARK, JOHN WEIS] 1,, ALEXANDER HENRI. J. (iILLINGIIAM FELL, S. A. CALDWELL. DENBY C. GIBSON. WV" Office in the tire-proof building of the Philadelphia NatiOlial Bank, 421 Chestnut street. • This Company receives ou deposit, and GUARANTEES TliE SAFE KEEPING OF VALUABLES upon the follow• ink rates a year, viz: Coupon Bonds., .. . ...... ........$1 per EOM Registered Bonds' cud Securities— ...... 50 ets. per 1,005 Gold Coin or Bullion. .$1 26 per 1,000, Silver Coin or 8u11i0n......... •• • • •• • ........ I s 2 per 1,000. Gold or Silver Plato.. —....... per 100. CASH' BOXES or small tin imx . es. of Bankers, Brokers Capitalists, dm., contents unknown to the Company, and liability limited, $25 a year. The Company offers for RENT SAFES INSIDE ITS VAULTS at $2O, $3O, $4O, $6O and $76 a year, according to . size and location. Coupons and Inteteat collected for 1 per cent. Interest allowed on Money Deposits. Trull of every kind aocopted. N. B. BROWNE, President; ROBIRT PATITIMON. Secretary and Treasurer. jallith.s.tmrply 7 NOLA ItTAIBEIt MACHINE lIELTING, STEAM 1. Packing Hose, Ate. • I Enninecru and dcalera will find a full asHortment of oodyear'e Patent Vulcanized Rubber I telling, Packing How, ate., at the Ma nuladfurer'H Ileadquartere. HOW/YEA Wt.), 808 Cheidnut street, • South'aide. N. have it New and Cheap Article of Garden nod Pavement Ilutw, very cheap, to which the attention of the public is cnlled. n3AAC NATIIANS, AUCTIONEER, N. E. CORNER Third and Spruce streets, only one square below the Exchange. $280.000 to loan in large or small amounts, on diamonds, silver plate, watches, jewelry, and all goods of value. ()Mee 1100114 from 8 A. M. to r. M. lEO &tab. liahed for the last forty years. Advances made in largo nurOlaßts nt the Itrlvv:t nuaket rated. jabtflp encomiums, Lagoons, no. ESTABLISHED IN 1t 1836---The Great Tea Mart and Fine Family Gro eery Store of Thompson Black's Son & Co, N. W. cor. Broad and Chestnut streets, who have now in Store some choice brands of Black and Green Teas of very fine flavor, which have been se lected with the greatest of care and especial reference to the tastes of their customers. A fair , trial is all that is necessary to convince the most skeptical that their goods are as represented, and that their prices are as low as the lowest. THOMPSON BLACK'S SON & CO. zuhim.a. tu-Iyrp4 WHITE PRESERVING BRANDY, PURE CIDER AND WINE VINEGAR, GREEN GINGER, MUSTARD SEED, SPICES, k, k AU the requixitos for Preserving and Pickling purposes. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer in Fine Groceries, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets. • sUPBRIOR. VINEGARS. French •Whito ino, atid'Pae Oa Cider 'Vinegary. FOE Salo by JAMES R. WEBB, Jail WALNUT and MOUTH STREETS: V.IIZST Pmt EMIIJIV~ AWARDED FOR BEST FAMILY FLOUR,';' At the late Inter-State Fair, to George V. Zehnder, Dealer in choice Brands Penna., Ohio, St. Louis and Virginia Flour. Also, Unbolted Bye and Wheat, for making Boston Brown Bread, Bye Flour, Indian Real. &c.. &c. GEO. I. ZIMMER. Fourth and Vila,. eel7tf PORT GRAPE WINE WINc :117k7—S-171000 VINEYARDS, NEW JERSEY. SPEER'S PORT GRAPE WINE, FOtR YEARS OLD This justly celebrated native Wine is made from the juice of the Oporto Grape raieed in this comitrv, Its M. valuable TONIC AND STRENGTHENING PROPER. TIES are unsurpassed by any otner native Wino. Being the pure juice of the ['rape, produced under. .3dr. Speer 's own personal supervision, its purity and genuineness are guarantied. The youngest child may partake of its gene. roue qualities, and the weakest inv/Id may ttn ad, V/Illtligt. It in parttuldarly henelici to the aged and de bilitated, and suited to the various aliments that &Mkt the weaker sex. It is in Itvery respe A WINE TO BE RELIED ON. Samples at the store of JOHNSON, lIALLOWAY tt, ca, No. 23 N. SIXTH street, FRENCH, RICHARDS & CO. DYOTT 4: CO., No. 232 North SECOND street. Invalids use Speer's Port Grape Wine. Females use opeer's Port Grape Wine. • Weidolv persons find a benefit by its no. Speer's Wines in Hospitabi. are preferred to other Win& Sold by Druggists and Grocers. jy3t.t.tu;th,s,attrP A. BitpEß, 243 Broadway, N. Y. PICTUILES. FuxinEs, .51:13. LOOKING GLASSES OF THE VERY BEST ta, .A. - La rr Y. EVERY NOVELTY IN STYLE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. JAMES S. EARLE & SONS, MS CHESTNUT STREET. ruKislcyv - A.r.. • C. W. A. TRUMPLER HAS REMOVED HIS Maisie Store From Seventh and Chestnut Sts. TO 926 CHESTNUT STREET. anl2-tf GOLD'S IMPROVED PATENT LOW STEAM AND HOT WATER APPARATUS, . FOR WARMING AND VENTILATING was PURR EXTERNAL AIR. UNION STEAM AND WATER HEATING CO.. JAMES IP. WOOD et CO., NO. 418. FOURTH Street E. M. FELTWELL, Sup't. selatful CHAMBERS & CATTELLI 32 N. THIRD STREET, IMPORTERS OF FRENCH AM GERMAN CALF AND KIP SKIAS, CALF, KILO AND PATENT LEATHER, RED AM OAK SOLE LEATHER. anl-8m IT§ Jr%MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, PLATE, CLOTHING, dle., at JONES dr, CO.'S OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE, Corner of Third and ILiaa kill streets, Below Lombard. ' ' N. B.—DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, GUNS, die., , FOE PALE AT • . RRIMRICARLY LOW PRICES. matlnt RHEUMATISM. RHEUMATISM. POSITIVELY• A PERTAIN €VRE. NO QUACK MEDICINE. NO lODINE, POTASSA, COLCIIICU3I OR MERCURY. DR. J. P. TLEWS GREAT RHEUMATIC REMEDY:, FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA. Used Inwardly. r lUsieffpflirwardlk. A lewd ruarantee given, ntating exact quantity war: ranted to cure, or 111( 1 111!3' refunded. 'I hu only petmument Rheumatic Cure prepared by rt\ regular phyntefan in America. It in warranted not nt• j intone. Beat Pliiitttlelphia phvniciann prescribe It, end cured br it. .A weep them Dr. Walton, ird N. tieventh street. • A Bent lawyers and Judaea cured ky It. Among tiled,. 1 1 011..1 utige Lee, Camden, opPonite I.lllladelphia. An Alderman of the city cured up ft—llie I lonor Alder man 'oll,ly, Twe»ty.third Ward. -, And thouHunilm of certificates endm•ee it 4 carittbro power. and its diel:OVlTy War , truly ft 1110 , 1erll1 , 11Clo. Prepl ed by Dr. • Filler . , 0110 of .Plilladelphiee oldret regular phyvicia DA. Principal office No. 29 South Fourth Street, Botween 'Market and Clominot. A dviee and coloodtationn, free of charge.'dally. All orders and inquirieB by mail athorrered.. IF YOU :WISH , TO BE BE A "UT IF tie °steno de Pertda, or Vittoria Regia, for 'Nondrying the Complexion and , „ .Preservik the, tiltin. • 'fhb tollet'articie refe , orated chemict in Frauee, and it I to Min that Ito Ladieri. of the Courts of Europe own their beauty. With all it , eimplicity and purity there in no article that will compare. Ivith it an a beautifier of the complexion and preierver of the akin. M. C. :llctfluifky purchneed the receipt of him omo ten yearn ago; he Min rime that tune given Jt n perfect WA among him pernonal friend, and the aristocratic ctrele , of Philadelphia, New York. BaltinioreM , , , ton, New °amia. St. Lonli , , Savannah, I Marlecton. Wilatint,n, N. C., &c. Thew have aced it with angaitillied admiration, and would Touchier the toilet imperfect without thindulightful and purely harmlme , preparation. Victoria Itegia and (facelift ilo Percia ham gt. en each entire raticlaction ur every illVtancc, that he le now compelled to otter it to the Thiv article i= eatirely different from anything of the kind ever attempted. and in warranted FREE FROM ALL POISI/NOIPS SUBSTANCES. After ming (Javelin do feria and Victoria Hugha tar short that., the ,kin Iwoe a r,dt, satin nice Iv it trealine. , :•. and vottve,a 10 the ekiu that can (oily i r e predated by maim: thiy valuable a rticle. It prevente. le, vulgar liquid or C.1 e,e 111.0 , 114 0 . and fta 1 , 1,0111 v Le deteeLA tile et.t FUIt REMO - 1 . /N (1 TAN. IT;I:CE LES, SUNBI tt AND (1:TANI:1)1 - S I EASES 'I HE .7iKIN, IT IS IN VALUABLE. M. t. ..V1.1.l" COD/1011.W ,• in recommendinit I.i Bezia and ',elf.; II 1 . Ira to the ',adj. , . bring th e .ul5 poleet aunt reliable toilet article wt., in - aer. Genuine Prepared only by "op. 31c4Cautslie,:4-, Audid Immo :darni. , ,d on :ch labol no othE r Depot, No, In North Seventh Street. Sold by ”IlDrugght4 and rtawerm hi the United State abd Cat, a d:t . 4.tit e ttir;m: i %I'A I, I rENTALLI • A.--A SUPEitiOlt AItTII 'LE FOR I ph.aning iii, Tr,•th, d.adroying anininle oh s filch in. f.•-t tlk in. giving tow , t.., tlo• wino. and leas in:: a ferling of fragranc , and pi.alert i leitidin , .? in tho mouth. It ;nay I. u...,d ,h‘ily, and will I. twind to ptr,ngti.en vvi. , ,ic. and bl,..ding giinio, 55 tido t h e ariains and detoriiireni , ar us ill ree‘nnual it to ...vi, 0111. Doing tunprAi.d with the a.--irtnince of the Doitist.Pliy4i : i.no And Mtcro,eopi4.„ it I confidently I diered MO a rt•lLLl,N.lll) , titntl , for the no• r,ttaill us R-111 .- fOrac•rly in 1a.4...-. Eitiunait Diaitigte, iuoviiiiiit.ol .with ilia ectuditiii•nt* of tin. Dentallina, ud.,./C:sti• RI% , 1,...; it contain, nidhitirt t, pl'e‘i nt ite unri,!truitted l'Zlit,hwinpilt. Made only by JAIM I:6 T. SIIINN. AValierary. Broad and npriii.i.t :treetv. Por Pala by Brug , ..ii•to v.:nerallv, and Fred.Brw on. . . . ID. I. ritackhoo , , ll,,aril & Co., :P.olirt e. I i . . 4 *. I:. K.4.em, :1;4.a. 1.... Bo .i• wer. lvaite 11. Has, , r,".liai.. riltivia . .. , . c, 11. Ntaallt, ...1. M. )1‘.1.'.41141.. 'l'. J. 1111-I ,ru t, . S. t:. blunting. Anlbro,e Smith, ;(:bar. It. 1.b4.1-1.,.. Ed..v:.rd l'arri , i,. ,Jann.. N. Marl.,.. 41 . 141. IL NVebb. '1: I:thvglilln..t 444: c.,.. Janice L. l'll44l.liala. 1 livatt ...' 1:4 , .. 114404, .l comlK. 111.1 . I:lair'.. S4AI,, lir nr)..5. llows-r. i ' , V; i.th . ' : nro . A 1 'O. P. V. A, h.‘1:411'10.1 -‘, WS VELF:IIP.A'f ED SPAN:I7IIi ..I 1 811 111(3, a puri.ly vegiAable 1 reiiiiratku for 11,3. io.v.i a. Scrofula, and all ilityl.ritt4-4 , a the blood. N , ira.3 gcniii nu without the i n.tte of Di. P. t:. A iLIiSTRONI i on the label. . Priticigatl 1.4.-pat, ill Naitli Ninth ,tra.4.t - UNTIL:ELY RE AILL LIE—III/1)(:::: ( N'S iii:)NELLIAL 114 'FaLlrtr, for tht•cor, brow cLitir and cl , hin :h.: her.d and Lr, :111f1 :111121 4 ,W 4 Will 1; Fr ill' 6 , llllitte'd by :',l" , d only h:. LANL ArLTEL; 1V11.1.1-. (~:- n o r A:: h Tint!' Eor .John - :u, IL 4.1 6, r1y COW,illl.olld In up!ri - t:: geurrall?. - G - ENTLERIEN 7 S FURNISHING GOODS. THE FINE SHIRT EMPORIUM JOHN C. ARRISON. Nos. 1 and 3 N. Sixth Strut, Importer, Manuracturar Dealer in every description of Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, in great variety and at Moderate Price. Particular attention given to the man. ufacture of Fine Shirts, Collars, &0.,- warranted to give satisfaction. SEWING +CHINES. GET TLIE BEST. • Cornpa ristkrtrie nly Test. FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE. The First Prize at the Paris Exposition. - linking four different EtitclicH with eelf•ndJnetlug tendon in ehuttle. 11111TNEN & LUHENA, General Agents, oc2-w e in to 1123 CHESTNUT STREET.= COAL AND WOOD. S. MASON 11.1N/14. .1i 1. 1,111:ArP. rpllE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATIENTIoN TO their etoek of Spring Mountain, Lehigh and ',omit Mountain Coat, whwh, with the preparation given by Illi, we think cannot be excelled by any other Coal. °Rice, Franklin Inetitute Building. No. it South Seventh etreet. 'SINES & jaludf Arch etreet wharf. Set in) IMP. THOMAS w]Errs, (BucceoHor to Win. N. flnghos,) FOltliN OF SECOND AND CHRISTILN STREETS. BALED, FRESH, SALT AN k. VACKLI6 HAY, `BAUD, WHEAT, OAT AND RYE STRAW, SHIPPING AND CITY USE. 8 Nt fiMIT TO IRON FOUNDERS. BY tiSIN/1 THE HARRISON BOIL,ER. In connection with a cupola Witer, to which it May be adapted with but little coot, a eatinv of the Coltlre ex vow for filo wotall Iwo, 'red fme Wet can be uttlrall teed. Tile bOilen , time applied may he Neen in operation daily, between 2 and 5 o'clock I'. ,at the HARRISON 110ILER WORKS, fie 26411141 Gr a y , u Ferry road, near U. S. Ardent FITLER, WEAVER 4 CO. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY NOW IN FETAL OPERATION. No. 90 N. WATER and 82, N. DEL, avassai crl.lm David Paull Brown To the isWitor au; PiteAergh Commercial : You Ican very properly called attention to the elec tioneering; pamphlet of one David Paul Brown in favor az.hillgo Sharswood,and exposed its fallacy. 1 notice that a Sunday paper pubiished here re produces part aft as a paid "advertisement," pre mising that, Mr. Brown is a lawyer of "national" reputation—somewhat of no exaggeration. lie is rather a criminal advocate of some local celebrity in days gone-by, remarkable for certain eccentri cities of dress and Manlier, and has never figured in civil Cases of importance. You may 160 k in vain for his name in the published reports of the supreme Court and the ".American Encyclope dia'," which furnishes for the same fifty illustra tions. "Brown's" vouchsafes no allusions what- ever to this learned Theban! Perhaps tie sketch . of Sergeant Stork by the amiable atttlior of the Bench and Bar conveys about as correct a coneep ilon of the Philadelphia attorney in .iticstion as Could be given. Speaking of Sergeant Stork, he bays : "He is not distinguished for any professional depth, but there is a •mickness about him, whieit is of great service to his client, especially in addressing a jury. He is often execedingly happy in his cross-examination of an adverse witness. One of his favorite expedients in his cross-examination is to try to frighten or con fOund the witness. Be speaks With much ease and great fluency. Most speakers feel it their chief difficulty in their public addresses to find a sufficiently ample supply of words. Mr. Stork is incumbered with too many of them. * should take Mr. Sergeant Stork to be on the high road to his sixtieth year," etc. Such was Sergeant Stork some thirty years since, and such is now Barrister Brown ! 4 Mr. Brown, who evidently believes all the good people west of the Schuylkill more or less bar barian—a.pleasim; delusion of the metropolitan mind, :assigns in his pamphlet some three or four reasons, or rather apologies, why he (1.1. P. B.) will vote for Judge Simrswood and against Judge Willi are briefly us. follows; . : know jiidge Wflhi%ms cu d:: ite does kiow,Judge,:,Stittr:)Wood,,:, . SharswOod - has ' he'en twenty . years on the 'Bench and .fudge Williams less than half that time. Third—Judge S. was born in Philadelphia and graduated at the University of Pennsylvania, and Jud,r , e Williams was born in Connecticut and graduated at Yale College. Fow-tll--.ludge Sharswood is fifty-six years s of age,, and Judge Williams is not quite so old. The first reason, donbtlt'ss, is more powerful with Mr. B. than the subsequent three, but as this is purely personal, it cannot be expected to operate as favorably upon those who are differ ently situated, and who enjoy the acquaintaneas of Mr: Brown himself, or who know Lucia the candidates. lie would, \ cry probably, vote on the sanic grfnlml against my Lord Coke, the Earl of Mansfield or S.ir William Blackstone, as it is doubtful whether any of ti.;se gentry were on confidential tsrms with the ancestral - Browns" of their epoch. The pith of his argument. how ever, is to be found in the remaining reasons, and he goes on to say: "foe fact of Judge Wll lia NIS being - put. forty-six years old. may be the ground of pftss.,Tption that he,. by due efforts, may live to be au eminent Judgss" Bow fa: lige or previous, judicial experieir!e may Le absolutely neee'ssary to qu:aiiv a man for the Bench will be best illustrated by a refer ence to known facts. Chief Justice Marshall, perhaps the brightest ornament of the American Judiciary, was appointed by President Adalll4 to the Szipmme Bench of the United States at the age of forty-si.x—the exact age of Judge Wil liams—having had flp previous judicial training whatever. Judge Story at the early age of thirty two years was appointed by President Madison an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. ' Judge Grier, one of the ablest Judges of our time, after eight years' service as President Judge of the 'District Court of Alle gheny county, which the astute Brown sneers at as, a Court of "limited jurisdiction," was appointed odme ,of the Justices of the Su preme Court of the United States. Chief Jus tice Gibson, a master mind, after three yesirslexperience. as President Judge of the Eleventh District of Pennsylvania, at the age of thirty-six became an associate Justice of the Su preme Court of this State, anti at forty-seven years of age was Chief Justice. The present Chief Justice Chase, as well as his predecessor, Roger B. Taney, had never served upon the Bench prior to their elevation; and Lord Mans trans-atlantic fame. succeeded Sir Dudley Ryder as Chief Justice of the King's Bench, after having served two years as Attorney-General, never having been a Judge until his promotion. Other instances might readily be adduced to show the fallacy 01 Mr. Brown's assumptions, and that the most eminent men of our own and other times who ,have adorned the Bench were men comparatively fresh from the bar and who of themselves, elevated and dignified the judicial office. It may rudely shock the sensibilities of the re calcitrant Brown that none of these Illustrious lights of the profession were born in Philadel phia,and that not one, of them,to our knowledge, graduated at the University of Pennsylvania. how they achieved distinction in their profession in the at,..cnee of such advantages, may well ex cite his wonder: but we pre-,:une he Will regard :leir cases as pliendinena which do but serve to illustrate and prove the cot reetness of the general rule. D. is trae the defection of the whOle race of lilmWtis would seriously affect the popular vote in the State—partici/la:Iv should they carry with them the influential and iriehdly houses of their llhiiltriouk kinsfolk, the Smiths and Joneses. But of !melt an iinpalling calamity we have no fear! David Paul - Brown may waver, and even the xnemora.ble John Smith himself desert the ' pub lican standard. but the Browns and S. iths of happy memory the old John Brown s c :b . and the Smiths 01 the house of "Ger it '—.will steadily adhere to the family traditio s d faith. Whatever these apostates may ,41 , 0, therefore, I am convinced these patrician families will vote as hentoiore, for priivipl , .; rather than men. Indian Affairs. A St. Louis_despateh, of yesterday, says: (lenerals Sherman, Harney, and Terry, and Senator Henderson, the Indian Peace Commissioners, leave to-morrow for Fort Harker, and thence to Medicine Lodge creek, south of the Arkansas river, where they will hold. a grand council with' the Indians. Colonel Taylor, now in Leavenworth, joins the Commission at Law rence. Colonel Tappan, another Commissioner, left yesterday with ~10,000 worth of clothing and other goods as presents to the Indians. Telegrams from Superintendent Murphy, of the Central Superintendency at Medicine- Lodge creek, says that these are nearlypall Indians of the Naiiroo, Arrapahoes, Kiowaa and Camanches. .They are being,- led _by the, Supyintendent, and . are anxious to meet thetommissioners to confer on terms of peace and about something more to eat. Little Robe, a Cheyenne chief, of the Dog Soldiers, .is still on the war-path, and it is sup postal that it was some of his band that attacked General Marcy's train on the 35th ult. at Pawnee Fork. It is reported that llornanNose,the Arm pahoe Chief, has gone to bring in hostile parties. He, - with some of the friendly chiefs, it is stated, arc determined to chastise the refractory Dog Soldiers if they refuse to come. The Indian Agent, Colonel Leavenworth, tele graphs that the Kiowas and Camauches arc anxious to meet the Commissioners and conclude the treaty with the Government. The family of Little Robe were massacred at Sand Creek by Col. Chivington, but he says he does not go to war for that, but because of the burning of the Cheyenne camp by the troops last spring. Alter the Land Creek massacre these In - khans came in as soon as it was ascertained that the government disapproved of the. affair. Mr. Beauvoir, of Fort Laramie, Dakota, tele- graphed to theilounnission that he is confident that the hostile tribes in that section are disposed to peace, and will come in to meet the Commis sion in November. • tlattiriettri tDni Jury Order. General Mower has moditied the. military orders relative to juries in the Stnte of Texas, so Ainto render it practicable to obtain juries in that State. He has adopted the views of Governor Pease and Judge Sabine. The following; is:the order : Hsavtcfcuv'r•.us FIFTH' PrwrßP"r,: NEW UtILLINS, 6ci,t• •' 5 , 1867.—SM:chit 'Order, No. 151. All persons duly registered as voters under the Recousruction laws of Congress, in the State 01 Texas, and no others, will MR:after lie considered as eligible for jurors in any of the courts of that State. No other oath will he required except that taken upon registration. The county courts of the State of Texas will immediately revise their jury lists and make the new lists conform to these directions.. By command of Brevet Major-General Joseph A. Mower. • GEo. L. ri.ta•rsurr. A. A. G... RE OOP S 00P SKI it TS AND UORSETS.—HRS. I PAYLEN'. No, 81:3 treot, to now tanuufactur. • ng all no 1 11a -1, h% of Hoop S!drto, Convta., Sto. Sho h,trf Hilo the kcal P , onch Corte/. of now EtY/(10.• Loop Skald 3iltcrecl and veraired. - • ' inhfAkfrlP RIESLErti CONTINENTAL NEWS EXCLUNGE. To all places of anmocmclit may be had ap to 63 o'clock any evening. ,n2hZu A e; AD E Y 01' MUHIC. li J. E. 31 , JDON01:611 Lee , . , ,ec and Manaker with the 'ELITE AND BEAUTY OF VIDLADELPITIA to wither e the Tip Ft vrg. otos Spectacle ever produced. TIM BLACK CROOK. THE BLACK CROOK. and the magnificent . PAIIENNr lIALLFT TROUPE, who arc received nightly with • SHOU I OF AnmumrroN. NO l'lCE.—lichidrnta of adjoining iOW/13 havo now an opportunity of. wanerclign Oda Grand Spectacle ; L ed return home at an early hour. The performance el,sel It o'clock. A GRAND MATINEk; EVERY SATURDAY AFTER Monte mccured without extra charge ct Leo Iliker'll 3111:4e. 8t OM, Chcetnut, above Seventh etreet, and at thu Academy from 10 until 3 o'clock. ge)) N EW CHESTNUT STItEET :THEATRE. C inn cueing at 8 o'clock. AFTERNO , PAM iLY MATINEr "CASTE." elf I T.ATH: , ,Pi, f.\, Sept. :nth, 18ti7., The untual meeting of the Siockhoblere of the Mingo Oil ( ie.upan v will be held at the office of the I' Anuany,on MONDA Y. October 7111, 181;7, at 12 o'clock M., for the pm , pore of electing a Board of Directors to eerve for the en v:jug year: DIVIDEND. _......__. A dividend of Ten P-r Cent. on then:defied capital hart -- _ hien dechir, /I, and will heay pablo on and alter the 7th of THIS (SATUDAY) NIGHT, DOUBLE. BILL. ,i , ctedier 1 ,:ft TWO GREAT PLAYS. Tranefer hooka will he cle:icd from Wc•dneedny, Oct. 2d SlX't II NIGHT OF • ' till Wedneeday the ,ith. . MR. JAMES E. 3111P.DOCIL i , e26.th f! ta 5t5 TREVOR T. FOWLER, See'.Y. AND LAST TIME FRICE PES AXT.F . MINING COMPANY NO. . .. _ Of the Beautiful Play entiti,d ler — 0 „. . . . . . , 324 WALNUT STREET, PHIL.% iii.:Len lA, September WINE WORrili WONDERS; I it% 1807. OR, THE INCONSTANT. Notice io hereby given that all etork of the Reeoluto Young Miraliel . Mr. J. E MURDOCH 2)4ining Company, on which imitalmenta are due and nu- , Supported by THE BEST COMPANY IN TIHS CITY. paid, to hereby declare:4 forfeited, and will be •eold at public auction on TB IIitSDAY, October 17th, llitil, at 12 To conclude alth a nieloArama, in two act., entitled o'clock, noon, at the onice-of the Secretary of the Corpora- HAWK, THE HIGHWAYMAN: I Don, according to the charter and byTawe, mikes provi- of% ounly redeemed. By ordered' the Dlrectori: , • THE CONVICT'S DEATH. eedtt to , cll3l B. A. IHJOPE.b. Treatewer. ------. , WALNUT STREET 'THEATRE, N. E. CORNER OF see. THE INDUSTRIAL, HOME, CORNER .OF F MN 11l inn! WALNUT etreete. Begins at 7.?.i. Broad Rtreet and Ceininiia avenue, hi open for the SATURDA'Y NIGHT FESTIVA L. ad miFeion of llirli t rom t - ,velYe to eighteen yeara of 'air, ' ENGAGEMENT Fint ONE NIGHT ONLY and' who are neglected or deeerted by their parente, and w io of the celebrated eccentric Comedian and favorite, need th , .helter and instruction of a. Christian home,. If .1111..J011N SEFTON, the public will curtain tide imtitution, many girl, inav who will appear. for the only time in twelve year?, in hie he kept from evil, and made, respectable and u.)0101 original and •world.renowned character fif --, , women. • - "- ,: • . "-•."• " .JEM3IY TWITCI-lElt:' • ti. . • (.nntribtitionemay he - Ferit to*JAMES . co in:.:5llINN,•Tr,, WeNterhi dobie.4.lc Drama fif , . r , . , ~ . , .eurer,,Br,na4l and Spruciiptreet.4.•, ~ .. ~ . .. 4,1 , 14.e.1t1i . I ''' ••'' ;'.' 4. ' THE ooLEN PA:l;74Eit •"'-'• ', -, " t-1 • -, - --, • --• ~- - - • • I night of the Ilene al ions! Drama of. var NTTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT (Eft. 11 A ITING Fl it THE VERDICT. tifli,ate No. 310 for ton (10) Otero) of the Capital MONDAY- ring night of the accomplhhed abtreiq., , Stock of the Amygdaloid Mining Company, of Lake Su- MISS CHARLOTTE THoMpsON. perior, in the name of Joe. H. Trotter, hag been loft or mielaid. MRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE. Applicaion hoe been made to the Company for a new Doors open at 7. Regina at 7Jii o'clock. certificate. LAST NIGHT OF' • Pm LA DELP/11A, Sept a, 1..67. MR. E. EDDY AND MISS ff. IRVING. I CO. 34A.5 A GREAT BILL—THREE PIECES. 'TRAGEDY. DRAMA, FARCE. THIS 'Saturday , EVENING, October sth, 1 , i437, WILLIAM TELL, • BLACK-EYED SUSAN, THE EIMPI" ANI) MISS 11. IFIVINU IN .11.14111 E PIECES. Faleent r`r, IN NISFA LI. EN, IVitfi New :i a•n , ry and , Great Ca.., Mi,re K,VVE lIEIGN,OLDS and EDMCNP "VEW HIILADELPHIA opEI;A fousr, :7.:EVFNTH Str,ct, bow ARIA! L. V. Tr tifS,(P, , ,' rt H. PS RS‘LNS 6.011: EL S. SAM- GREAT D.( I:::i73OITUNI:UN ~ ;').*:3 ..',II!;STI:ELS LPII. .Ind the and MOST TAI.ENI ED I; , i I III; IVORLD, S , ate' ran rcc•ircd in ad - varco - 6 - ithci.:t Extra 11,1riT. Y,crforu:n ne, h , •cirl, n t P. o' , ICC:: ONCER . T HALL BLIND TOM CONCERT:3. FOSTI I: LAST DAY. TO-NIGHT nt 8 o clock. FA kn.:ELL :MATINEE THIS (SATUIIDA Y l A Intl:NC - IC/N. • • october 5, at :14). Adrnii.ion, Fifty Crate, Children ender 12. T , centy-iivo Cente. Reserved Seats, Soto nty.ntic• Cents. Ticketa at Uhae. W. A. Trumtler's :Muck Sore, 1 , :e3 Cho , tnat etreet ; oleo at the Hall. . • Balcony reserved for colored pereonc. `AdmiFFion, cent*. ceLo-Q: N EW ELEVENTII STREET OPERA Ile ESE, ELEVENTH street, above CHESTNUT. THE FAMILY RESORT. CA RNCROSS A DIX EY'S MINSTRELS. THE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD. C9ntinu , d P ICCI 'OP of the bealditul HURILAII TRIP AROUND THE WORLD. Firrt week of the great ~ riteinal burley. te, BLACK CROOK BALLET OF FASCINATING CoRYPLIELS. By the Grand Corr! de Ballet. J. L. CAILNCROSS, Manager. R. F. SIMPSON. Treasurer. cc.; p ILADELPHIA ClIt(;t:S, Corner TENTH and CALLOWHILL .treete, Undc: a New.3lanagthald, v. 111 open for the Winter Seaton Thi , building hew been entirely renevated, altered and iwt•roved uith . NEW .MODES Or INGRESS AND EGRESS, both 'n 7 imtb and Ca rtreete. A SPLENDID STUD OF HIGHLY TRAINED HOESES. A COMPANY UNENcELLED IN THE UNITED STATES. cr.llo k SSEMBLY ISFILDINr:S. • .1 - 1. — IIIE PLAIN s AND ROCKY MOUNTAINS." L RINGWAUPS ILLUSPRATED LECTURE having proved oininoutly .ncge.lFltil, will uo inteated every evening during the wcok, coramencing MONDAY, Soccember 30 W UNDER!) CII'S NIAGNIPICENT PAINTINGS, 111o,tratilc of and Mo.intain Scenery, and many other largo dnd acc.,tat,iviewe, will lie o x very- evcnitr. Adnikoion, 50 Childrcu'a ticket., :25 cents. Se cur.ql ,eate. without extra charge, :it TEI pLER'S, CI ESTN4LT .treet; al-oi at HAMILTON'S Stoce, 10t3 ktreet. Doors' open at 7 o'clock. Cow mem,' at e. eeal-et c"TIc L L. by CARL SENTZ'S i!IiCIIESTRA of Forts' Prrforrecre, • EVERY 'IIIURSDAY AFTERNOON (coinmenr. lug October 3, 1'7,67), at o'clock. Mr. Jean Looir, VocaliPt ' Mi.ic Director (.1 Meudel,cilia Fccictv. , SINGLE ADMISSION, 50 CENTS. Package of I icket, far Al. To be had at Boar Muaqc Store, 116 Ch , fftnr.e. Erect, and at the dnor. metZ-Inas TIUR I;I'S NOW READY FOR 'BLIND TOM'S 1...)N -ERT at noimccurunAL HALL, on FRIDAY October 11th. Tict.tr, cente. It,•Aerved 6cat. , . crnte. For eale ht Perk.!nplao ,t; Iliegine'e, co 'North Fourth etrcet. at lON Arch etreet, M. E. Bonk. Rome. Ce 111,! and 11,-or him !art Concert. Secure your , cute early, an there ie a limited muuber of reeeryed ecat.. It , PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS C above TENTH. Open from fl A. M. to 6 P.M. Benjamin Wert'd great Picture of CHRIST REJECTED etill on exhibition. , OX'S AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE EVERY EVENING and • SATURDAY AFTERNOON. GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE. In Grand Balleta, Ethicrpiati-Burleaques, Songe, Dancea, Gynunipt Actd, Pantomimed. ,tc. liiT ;tt::tt • UPECIAL NOPIt'E.— iJ LL AND WINTER FASHIONS Mrs. M. A. BINDER, 1031 CIIEsTN UT S ntErr, Importer of Ladies' Drees and Cloak Tri flutings in Fringes, Satin TrinuningsA;arsels, Brtdds, Rib bons, Guiputgm and Cluny EMTes, Crape Trimmings, fancy 3etCollars and Belts. Fast Edge Velvets, in choice shades,, —ALSO— Black Velvets, all widths. at low prices. Parisian Drees and Cloak-Making in all RaDepartments. Drerws'inade on 2.4 hours' notice. Wedding and Travel ing outfits muds to order in the most elegant manner and at each rates as cannot fail to Mem.. Elm of muumuu; AL P.norEenuozice. Elsi4ut Trillnlted Paper Patterns for Ladies' and C=l dren's Drie s. pets of .Patterns for Merchants and Dressmakers ready. Patterns eent by mail or express to all parts of alto Mrs. llutton'a and Madame Demorest's charts for Hide, and" System of Drees-Cutting taught. , 8024.tf I:ITHOGRAPIE PRINTING. 'T. SINCILAALITZ-'S LITHOGRAPHIC ESTABLISHMENT Removed from No. 311 Cheatnut to ' Nos. 506 and 508 North Street, Bond% Naps, Certificates, Bill Heads, Circa ' Jars, Show tams, Checks, Labels, Scientific Plates. • Drawing of every derTription, and Chromo-Litho grahby in tho snent etylu of art.'• 800 lu4 TA ! i t : , f AND 'R M.? IN.-16)FIAT R ELS N. W. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA; SATURDAY, OCTOBER, 5, 1867 AItIUXEMEIrrtc. CIIOICE SEATS EXCITEMENT INCItEASING. HOUSE TII RON G El) NJuIITLY E.MMMM OPEN 17' , A: TIJE til!:,:N, 111Dv,!,,.p.Ti1, - C. GI V;RCLI, f,ll ESTN UT. ?'r•:et, above TWELr I f If EARLY IN OUTORER. LAMES , THIN In ISi 4Aft. B. P . , O . W , .-N '•S C S P MANUFACTORY. _RCH STREET, ,OW FOURTH), PHILADELPHIA. ee^_ - in* (Between Market and Arch) 250 tinrrebi Anchor Ship Pitch, 450 . 11arro s son.,inakeree 11l Store :knit I or Salo by ED WA it. ROWLEY, —li South Winirvod ser. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, Th til;ItER'S DEPARTMENT. PA ILA mamma.. tteptenltrer 18, 111:7, NOTIM TO I3ONDHOLDERS. At s. meeting of the Beard of Direr:tore, held on 4th Inetant, the following preauiblo and :evolution N./0N adoted li/ p v.reae, Nurner - oeis appllcattene have boon made to lid: , Company wen the holdere of the Firet and Second Mortgage Coepen Benda to convert the enure into the. Regklored General 34.9rtritgo Ronde, dated July 1,160; therefore he it li , :rofeeq, That the T:emurer be, and ho la, hereby im xtructea to cauee public notice to be given that 'Ulla Own pany ix now prepared fo ex - change ite Ilegietered Bondi; kecured by a general. mortgage upon the line from Phila delphia to Pit h!burgh,thu canto, real and pereowd, l-p and eeony:l; iranelmel therein mentioned, dated July 1, 1&,7, tee the First and Second Mortgage Coupon Itouda, of "aid ompany, the road between Harrleburg and PithMargh. iq fl,r . thcr inf orrnttlon can ho obtained nu anplication at tin, on:ce. TIIO3IAS T. II itT if. tpiy- MINCO OIL COMPANY, 111 """^" Walnut 0 i , FILE of' TIII; FRANKLIN FIRE: INSU RANCE COMPANY. ' PIMA W: f. 1.111 pt. '25, .1967. An rkotion for DiriTtorti fr.r . tin; ;in.; /car,. NM agreeably to Cha:teir at a g of thn ei.holdeni icr I p•;rpr.i;e. et thy ()nice ni the er,LU ,..ny Y. 7th. at 10 01,6: A. M. .1. V.:. M,ALIASTEIi, ! Of' DI..LAWAI:f; COAL COM. P;dl - .lophia, !,. r.' , r'lci` 1.7 1) tv. , thty 1,1,, , r W.: CO:11 . 11 - 1.1 rf J. V!I 111-7, Str.ge Ely- .1 tl toectint; ; .! dtdd Lloyd ttt "1 - i.rit•• 4:r auy ; Itt• rad t't i., h, I t tht, t;f tilt. ;i r , '"j n,. "r,.'. ttn Ootttt.t: o'dt .10. FIN W. . .',. ;At,: . Li..1:(;11 V t.T..ll_,'Y tar.,y i dn9a 00. qua; t,irly di id tit , alld a il.dl V.... 113 \Vain.: etrot:', .tuft Tt:LsDA), ()claw: - l th, 11;67. i.. Cll.l DIVIDEND OF CIVE ,CENT. FOR THE , : ~.onthy, on the , ;a0t..11 Stcck of the I'..nn r, Salt .v.anni.too,rimt Company, watl Mml,troci thin de_, y p.,;,ab!, , m nut ,ft , r 15th A?.11:E.1.. SIM ES, Trem.ure:% No. 121 Wninnt at-eat. SA L 'ld T 111: DIVELLINC HOES! Handvomely fniEhed and replete - .till] every convent cnr , .. The Fernit , re can lie Bold with the hot He. Apply on thepronti.?eo. oc-3-ItIt) FOR sALr..--rntsTA2LAss.mvELLl . Ncs. KA) ~ ranklin rtreet. Inmwdiate pce.e:!L•mn. PIPS Nog th Seventh et. • " De Lance, Hace. " -I±lS. Fifteenth str:et. 21. le Lombard plreet. SL , re and I 705 Second atnb t. 26, Elev , aath Ftre , t.. fm nu-rliate pc, • t Apply to CO d.; JORDAN. 4.L1 Walnut -dire:. WEST 'I ITLPEiIOOLEN STREET, GERMAN n.—For ha.ndFome double modern containing fourteen rooms, exclu. rive wash-room, pantry, store-rocre, and china,Clos , :t and with extra coliveniencee. .Lot LOO mt.t front by 21t; feet deep. beautifully improved. Loca tion meet I,,irabl, A lsu, et: perinr ear t., and furniture, nearly new, for role if deArecL J. M., GC:IMEY St sths Wall, at street. r .111(111 and STIZEET—FOR THE HANDSOME and ReFiricnco, with tin'....etor, hack b , iildinge. built ~.nd throuchout in a snperior nianue,%with rvtr3 cont . cuictic and in complete ordur, Nu. I 3) Arch etr-et. Lot 124 f: ,- nit by It') fo..t deep to a etr,et. .1. :O. SONS, V. nlnut street. SALE—TIi E ELD;ANT thr..,, , t,.ry brick Rceidencc. with :itticA and 419 .thht tbna,:oly back b 14ad Arch F.:. ; .ilt in a tperior manner; h+id icodern rI n ..0- n,nt and cr.u:enience, and is ia perfect order. Lot _5 ice: by 14 , 2 feet deep to a etrect. U::M & N 5 ally!: otr,:t. rSA: E —AN ELF.c.INT Stnnir bud" rind tinirti,nl thronclin..: iu t by th • nil, r on it •icctin•inev, flirrihrt , nl with ,•- con y, niiici•ril pitintrd and in ••, n street ‘ no,tr . Cll.:ch. J. N. 1;1. :4)1E1 6, 544 Wahr:t etr cot. ' , A LP. • ENV BROW ST , /NE FKU • L e EHoine, No. Eul7 Spo oc etruer, lot 24 by foot ; No. Spruce -treet, lot 22 by 1b,./ feet, to Rithrnh;::,o 40 foe': IA ide. FiLliElled ill the tneEt eleirant ravaluer. N. 228 'Arainut street. At buildings from 8 to 9 and 3 to 4. oc4-91t. F(Jlt SALE—ADOUBLE, THREIi.STO Y Dwelling. N. W. corner Seventeenth and Summer etreete, containing 15 rooms, HeAtiolldry v.,119!1 etandg, h tube, and all the convoniencea of a fir:it-clue. d:‘, 'ling. - . _ FOR SALE OR EXCIIANGE.-.—FOR SALE—A hanopome modern cottage teeidence, ivith large lot of 1„-round eituate on Spruce street, near Thirty ninth, \Wet Philadelphia, or %%ill he. exchanged for rst cla,-B city property. J. M. GL - MMEY &SONb, 508 Walnut Etr, et. :FOR SALE.—ELEGANT NEW RESIDENCE, NO. 2011 SPRUCE STREET . ; ALL MODERN IMPROVEMENTS. MAULE. BROTHEL: & CO. Fee,' lm ''..600 SOUTH STREET. faFOR SALE OR TO LET--A NEW AND ELT: gantly furnished houre,*eligibly located, in Ow ern part of thu city. Adthera "F.," ROLLA:TIN Of c. it:FOR BALEAA VALI , ABI.4 BUSINESS Olt PRI a: vete dwelling, lioulhuant corner Broad and Colq/libi , l, avenue. l'oree.9Fion Noveinb r lnt. Terms to 14 , [t. Apply to COPPLCK JORUAN, 483 Walnut street. , FOR SALE.—HOUSE, 1620 SPRUCE STREE 2 feetfront; furniehed ith all modern ccinvenlen L , en, an in good, order. Apply at 246 I.:IIF.STNU7 etre et.. eel° tusth,etls .NIARK'S CIIVIZCII.-I , OIL SALE—PEW NC)..75, L) south aiAe. Price, ri.:61)11. Ap,ly 1083 Main street, Ger ninntlyo. n. (+l3-3t. _E . Il'o RI:NT-411 SI 1l UE STREET. -MODERN DIvOliu. ; ;; all ltp.: modern inipro .oineutP. R. S. ti. GEORUE South Thini erect. E . TO RENT.- .A kitNISIIED l'IlitEE.S I'llY .I:rirk I lonee, wi rve th, I ti tory back:blino, in c. !hut order n.nd modorn Apply :it .3c; 50. :th Skteo nth ,tr,et, Id-. 1 ICES FOR RENT -- NONE MOJN: ioi Jaicyuso arin,iimme.; av,onte. Fit et ;lour 1.;29 trot ~tr,et. o.T.ltt} ruo ELE(IANT SECOND•STOLY ROOll, 1. S. E. cnruer Seventh and Chestnut etreeto—now occu• pi.•(l by J. it. 001.:Li). A h.o, fro,m October lot, the premium now occupied by El AHD I'. KELLEN , Slit Chestnut ntreut. Address EDWA IN) I% KELLEY. ;i Ch , ,tnntstr,!et. noat.tf IA7 ANI ED—IN AN !MN/ WONG ANII joBIIING V V NV kite lloode and Lace !lone. a tirmt-cla6a eale,, to, tc Ito that ultahly the - bludne, , e, and can o.n d,,abi, diy inihuuL e a largo Stato and near trade. Alto, one of like qua lineations for city ttado. A lib , eat salary to tI o e who Call till the 01)W/a reqllirera.•llte. Addy. t'e, n it!! real IMMO nod rt icronece, box 212 E,, I. 0. of .t-tC XLADY CALcuLATLD To FILL ALMOST ANY poeition dceire.. to act ae privato eceretary. corree. .4...1ja•k., or collector for porno reliablobowio; or could tak& no control of point. eoecial department. ;•itt. perlor referencce. Addrees "U. C. EvI.:; , ,ING Unice. oc:I18t1 , WANTED PO PURCHASE-,A HOUSE, ON Gre4 n Htrect, wvst of Brood, mut Emit. of Eighteenth' streets. Pniqnpsion April hit. Addreen Box No. 1, Br 01 , 111A1 etnting pricy. WANTED -A 110 LAH3.--sTATE pAßTleurdius, find Nu. 1607 th etryet. oer,.a" rillitiEE PLEASANT ROOMS '1 . 44 RENT, 1 Board in a private family, ut 1714 Spruce et. riIHE HANDSOME EESIDENUE, NO. 301 S. EIGHTH etreet, corner -of Spruce, ie mow open to receive boat dere i.ciugle manna and suites; private tablo if ule eired. MRS. IL. WRIGHT, 0.187 Pine street, will open I'ASIIIONABIA, MILLINERY,' 0I- ll' I; IISIMY; October 3d, 1867. oil.!it PAINT MO Barre a Relined. Rosin Oil, for pninting Koofg, farmMingo, yyssels, am,, far. Bahl by EDWARD IL 'ROWLEY, If lionth SPECIAL NOTIOJEI4 Jos. H. TR(YrtER, IJ VP niirictst; I . ok[, Lt. No. Ir'.4A LOCUST STREET .01111EIBONI FETTER, KRICKBAUM S Pt7RAY, 32 North Filth r trc et. TO ILEN'a W ANTS. 8410 A KIIIING. nal,Litcutiv. iitvsysei YO' LADIES' SEMINA HY. 15412 LOCUST STREET. ', tinder +.to nrgo •of MiEn CASEY and Dr. LA BIIER TON. Thu ectiool cotantencen on WEDNESDAY, SeP temborlB. TEHTMTWiTAI. rAmt me LA TT Bib/IOP or PIItIIIfrAVANIA. I have known Mr. Labberton for sevral,,years, part of the time as tutor to one of my sons. Hie attainmenta are re markable, his power of teaching is, in some respects, unsurpassed. and his conscientious and enthusiastic devo tion to his work most commendable. I take great pleasure in exPressing my fell confidence in his ability and fidelity as on instructor And a man. ALONZOPOTTER Classes will be formed, independently of .the regular s chool tourer, for ladies who have ieft school but are desi rous of continuing some of their studies.: For particular apply at 335 South Fifty:nth street, between 10 and 2 o'clock. • au763t3to A CADEMY OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL Church,'Loeqst end Juniper streets.—The Autumnal Session will open on Monday, Item ber Applicati,no for admission inay be made at t e Academy, during the preceding week, between 10 an 12 o'clock in the morn mg. JAMES W. ROBINS. A. M., nalreth e ROAR Head Master. ABBERTON'S ADVA NCED CLASSES, 15u2 I.oc UsT A , tr intruded t. intruded for Ladieq who have left wheel, but who are dedroloi of parmlfig one or more lleanebee of Study. • 11 ertn (..anTTICLICCB on Monday, October 11, VV. Application may 11,3 .made at 338 South tol f tennth e.t rent. Fo3o-In4 Ari s ldi c ei.',lT;l.74's,"lngia'Acelp=l/,'?),UU . 1 ( 4 York Road Station, North Pennsylvania Railroad. The twelfth seveloilwill commence September 20th. Circulars may be obtained ~tt the office of Jay Cooke & Co.. 114 South Third strect,"br by addressing the Principal, Shoe maker-town P. 0., Montgomery county, Pa. ant:Roc:3P 'WRENCH, LATIN AND GERMAN TAVGIIT IN J_' Schools and Families. Evening Cln,res for Ladies and Gentlemen. Professor 31 &ADEN. Application! will be received at Mm JANE HAMILTON'S Book Store, r. , A4 4:llcethlit Atrebt. I IEYSItAL INSTITUTE, TENTH AND SPRING G'dfderi treete, will reopen Septembc:•i , th. 130,H pre pared for college or for beHinece. H. G. McGlTilt - E, .V. 31., Principal. J. W. SHOEMAKER, Vice Principal and Teacher of Elocution, Ilietory, drc. auatdlq ILASSICAL, no:NcH AND ENGLISH SCHOOL FOR V Young Men and Boys, Thirteenth and Lecudt d trcet,.. English studied SM. Languages extra. Primary Depart. Meet 515. 5e:11.2.4t5 BENJ..KENDALL, A. M., Principal. 11111',. - .. L ENGLISIL CLASSICAL-AND -,MATIIE . MAU. Sal LllPtittite•A ScleCt.,:ichegl.for BoYe. Isle..,. l ,' , 'Swith . i..,rricliect. (Nett PennSweirel, reopen I , LondaY. Sept. 9 t with increa.ed advantepee for a limited number f) of p upils. JOSEPH DAVISON. Principe!. num ;-.en. • 13RIVATE SCHOOL FOR BOYS IN THE pHILADEL nhia City , lniititute, N. E. corner Chestnut and High teonth , 4treeta, entrance on Eighteenth area, will re-open at MONDAY. September 9th. aul-tno L. BARROWS, Principal. ~iTIH3 MARY E. TIIROPP WILL RE-OPEN HER .11.1'Engliell and French Boarding and Day School for Yo.:ng Ladke, at 1841 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia, on depteraber leth. For circulate apply at :he Fchcol. :114-to LIFiNOI: NAZZA,IPROrESSW: TUE ITALIAN loizgn age at the Uni - ..erpity of It(qtn , yl.,tna, will r,- sonte cover.; on the :110t. Ortoio. u ot. 'linme.t , and i.rivate Ireern., at hid r.:nten , .:e, No. Fifternth Ytr.•e•!, or nt that t t toe popile. Fel4-9-t 114 n.• Will; AR( .11 STREIT I.M4TITITE FOR YOUNri A:cn t c will:e-fl,ll tiMONDAY, Sertentt,t , r a,..117 Mire L. M. /1.1:07(N, v.*II.::,IIST AND 11“ ,11 .Lyl , l ~ /11 :LI , . art, ,u,l :o vl thet.iriF. 11,2.2 ! , ...r , et. • • Si '1:. ACADErit FUR YOUN:i Ni \o MONVAY, R. -3!-21W rz. v(r!: AMSREI; , ; HAS I;f:TrIZN ED FRO arid mic , l hi lu,mnu hl. Oc:cuer Sdt. 1' 4 ;7. Addre,B::s4 Swath l'il•mmltn ri. .. MITH'S m) 'IRVIN CI AND DA? -L YLI S VI S ,6 houl, No. 132.4 t:lmet, - will :e.open Septum. bur lt;th, 1199,7. 7 HII ADTL PHII RlDP;6fif S( F1()()I— -, Fe irth -trret ahoy Vino, I , •ow opcn I r the Fell and Wilder Svarr•n4. La(' - et! and fir•zitl , !rva •e. ill lind eVory provj , lon icr coN.fort ety, that nor& igh v•,t !hid boar.t.'4 ul neronipliqq:uent play obtain,' by the rnoHt ti.pid. Saddla hnrce twined in the boot manner. Saddlt, - nor.c.l and ychicled to hire. Ales, earriagel for flirterals,4.o car:!, e:c. eel -`.f CRAIGE SON. M USICAL. JOko:Pli KNECHT, LATE 01 THE 1!;0::;SER /TI. vatoire 01 Parip, hef!e leave to inform the public that he - .011 rer!ntne hir; duties ea teacher of the Piano on Ser. tember 2d. lierPidenee, Markoe Ptree:, above Ninth. ec3-I TU. PIANO, VIOLIN AND THEORY OF MI:SIC.— Heman Allen, ,fli.oe of the Leipzig Cono'r7o forlorn, will r,torne his lemma on the 16th rust Apply at his residence, 2027, Brandywine street, or at that of Fro eesor George. Allen, 315 booth Seventeenth et. eell-lui• 'DIAN° AND SINGING—MISS GARDNER, OF B'' S. 1. ton, pupil of Mr. AL:GUSI' KREISSMAN. Ap ply to Protemor George Allen, 1115 South Seven teenth street, cr to Mr. Bohan Allen, 2027 Brandy. wine streeL sell Igo Mieß Elizabeth and MiFe Julia Allen will resume their lee,ione on the lath Met. Apply at the'reeidento of Prof. George Allen, 215 . South Seventeenth etrect. sell lin. AI AD AM E. E. SEILER*WILL ItEsumE HER TEACIE ing cf Singing, Harmony and -the Piano September rein. .Apply nt 1230 Clicetnut etreet. eelo-1m" - 11,1 R. 11..0R0i313-I,V# 7 . RETURN FROM EUROPE 11l and reeume hie Lee ..cits by October 7th, 1807. Addre ,, e 170 hace etreet. eell.tf SIGNOR I'. RONDINELLA IIAS REsunr,i) Sillging 1A:F.3(711H at No. 308'7.! 'tali teenth etreet. FR. CHARLES H. JARVIS WILL RETURN FROM .01. Europe and resume liie leseoun by October 7,10;7. A Eldreei3 1817 Green et:eel:. dell a LA GPASS PII4,WESSOIt 4 " PL1:•;0 A!;(1 13 Singing. 2 1 .1: ,treet,. . Ttb ALLAD SII.G/NG AND PI /JO. -THOMAS AND 1/01E01:GE BISHOP, ,r 3 S. Niue /xuth otrect. ec..3.1 lm' dIA'N APPt 1.113:::PS FASHIONABLE DAN33.ING .133ADE.'4Y. .111: Natatori , an Broad street, below Vininut. .74r. 31a.rini'd eliHrten - ,rill coin w„nee nn Vctob- 14th, ntthe chow hr.ll. - For pal - ticulard eeu circalarP, to be had at i ho Academy and at A11)11E'6 Diiedc Store, ,0 qt• rheet. PIANOS. - WAN° TUNIN ;. 1 --- the etibticrihr2r, having removed to Boston, half tranEferred hid bufinepti into the charge of Mr. D. P. ilanFz, who id exporienced and competent as a tuncr and repairer. Q. E. SA lii, ENT. Orders atilt received at ~f fi ,'heel nut etreet, or 1.3q9 Pine etreet. me.213-e,w,4t• PICOPOSAL. TO 01 ICE TO CONTRA um Mi.—SEALED PROP°. .1.`4 tale will be received for the clearing, grubbing, grad ing, treatio•work, and bridging upon .the line of the Swedettoro Railroad, between Swelleaboro and Wood bury. ill Gloucester county,,N. d. Dietaneu of about 10 ilex. Bids will be recoiyed fonsing,le sections or for the en tire road. Plans and specifications may be seen at the Office of the President, in Swedesboro, on and after NONDAY, the 7th hut., when any desired information ill be giyen in person or by letter. Propodais will be re ceived for the above work at the President's oftice up to feud including Monday, the 14th inst. Parties tendering for the work will receive notice in writing of the acceptance of their propesala on or before the 19th day of lieteberhistant. _ _ J. S. T.IIOIIBON, President. r4'.l; orboarn, Oet: 1, 1867. ocl to ttt s 7t• ILIUIUBEIII4 F'. WII_J_JIASNIS • 9 Lumber Merchant, Seventeenth and. Spring , Garden streets. _ - A FULL STOCK OF BUILDING LUMBER AND DARDWOODS ALWAYS ON HAND. 04•22.1tutiLlm Q , 67 _ SELECT WHITE ['IND. LARDS AND ('LANK, 4-4, 64, 6-4, 2, 3 and 4 -inch, CIIOIOE PANEL AND 111031' 4,IVMMON, 16 feot, long, 4-4, 5.4, 6-4, 2,3 and MACLE, 111tOTH ER Liz N•LI:.500 BOCCI[ Swot. ( - 2 07 --°-111HI.DINO! BUIITHNG ! /WILDING ! 1,C1,) LEM BEE ! 4-4 CAROLINA PLOORINO. 5-4 CAIIOI,INA FLOORLNC. 4-4 DELAWARE t LOORING. DELAWARE FLOORENtL ASII FLOORING, WALNUT FLOORDIC. SPRUCE.; FLOORENU, STlll' BOAh DS, RAIL FLANK, PLASTERINC LATH, MAULS, BROTII ,t; • No. 2504 So,tUx --',VALN',:rI' BOA E: DS. 'NA LN JIAlt;i1", ;3170UK-• ASONED. M A LI, 0.71 LIM BET: FOR UNDERTAKERS L - ' . .••• 1867 • - LMISER FOR UNDERTAKERS I CEDAR, WA L \ UT, MAHOGANY, UEDA% WALNUT, MAIIO‘.IAN Y. MAI,LE, BROTHER ,(f. •CO lAN Y LUMBER OF ALL KINDS 1867. - `lll: . kNy Lot BEICOP ALL KINDS: SEASONED WA LN • SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR. CHERRY AND ASH. OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT VENEPIRS' JSIAULB. BROTHER. s Co. —.IDWAR.IIOIsi NIANLTACTURER Jk O / . I;tuAlt.l3oX MAN L IrACTUREits. SPANI6II UEDAtt BOX.RO.IRDS. No. 2000 3OUTllutrert 8 ,67 — SP II UCE:IOII3T--81'11.1;CE JOI3T- 7 1:31'11111.116 . 401ST. Ffto.sl 1.1 TO :32 FEET LONG. FllOll II TO 3 FP:ET 1 , 0!111. SUPEIRIOR NOI2I,VAY 811ANTLING. 151ALTLE, BitoTi I (;o„ Dual() • - sO. 2500 Otl Htr.;et. (.2 KIN CI LEH, 81IINGLES GREAT VARIETY AND 0 nil prices; cheap Flooring and Fencing, assorted widths Shelving. Particular attention given to hunbor for fitting up fitorom. CAROLINA FLOORING AT LOWEST CASK PRICES. NitaiOLSON.6, So vetith and Carpenter Stream. vo g linf IPERSONAM. J. it3eVBELLA MARIANN°, M. A. FRAI ALE PHYSICIAN. 27 North Twelfth atrect. REAL ESTATE SALES. - ---- EVECUTOES , PE!:EMPriIitY KALE.—EIiTATE of Thorium H. Craig,', deceased.--Thonme Az; Sane r Auctioncers.-14n Tueeday, October 22, Pea, at 12 o'clock, noon, will ho cold at public oak, without rescrve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following described property, vi;,: No. I.—,Modern founstory brick Residence, No. 329„North Fo4rth street . , above Vine street. All that modern tourordory brick incerunge, with two,dory hack baildinge and lot of ground, eitimtc on the cite, side of Fourth direct, 1 , 5 feet north of Wood etreet, No. 229; eon. tabling In front on Fourth etreet 20 feet, and extending in deptirll7 feet glitches. Together with the common nee and privilege of a 2 feet 9 inches wide alloy leading into Din wyn etreet, It le in very good repair, had large ealoon parlor. pitting room, dining roe, n and kitchen on drat floor, 4 chambers and bath roost en the eccond floor, and 4 chandlers abovo; gee throughout, hut and cold water, furnace, cooking renge,,tc. Subject to a yearly ground rent of :•1121', Spanish milled idIVIT dollars. Terme—Half ChBll. riEr . Sale Aconite. Immediate possession. No. 2.--Very valuable thret , story brick building, known as Thomas 11. Craig, & Sons' Philadelphia Riding School, NOR. :;25 and 327 North Fourth street, adjoining the, above; 42 feet, front and extending to DitIVYII etreet-2 fronte. All that valuable throc.story brick building and lot of ground, situate on the east KA; of Fourth street, adjoin ing the above, being Nod. 325 and 821; containing in front 42 feet, and in depth about 1.1 foot, more or lees, to Dill• wyn street, excepting lie I. UK. , outhertunoet portion, 2 feet in front, which to only about 142 feet deep. 'lie ing is well and substantially built, revere the entire lot, and cob be readily adapted for any bitoinese. It is well lighted, is built of the best nuiterials, in till] very beet manner, and the cellar heavily arched, the latter ti id I feet deep, and v.lie formerly used a. , a brewery. The j ground floor is now used as a stable, the second floor as a Riding School', and on the third door arc 2 l'6OlllH, use VerY,barg. Clear of all Incurnbrance. Poeeereion within a montk of sale. Terms--half cash. rw- May tu, examined any day'prevloug to sale sale Itmolute. M. THOMAS S SONS, Anettonucre, nnd 141 South Fourth al., me2Bocr, 12 19 E. • PUBLIC SALE, ORDEII. OF DEIRS7--ES- Ni! tate of T hentax P. Ash, deceased.—Thomas & Sons, Auctioneers.—Very valuable Farm and ( nuntry Seat, tid acres. Springflidd road, near Darby. Delaware county, Pa., ti miles from Chestnut Street Bridge. On Tuegday, October 22, 1P67, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at Pile Philadelphia Excliangm., all that v:thtable tarn, in the township of Darby, Delaware county, Pa_ late ;he residence of Thomas P. APII, deeeaged, situate at the corner of t 4 pringlield road and liongall's Mill road, ex tending back to Darby creek, and hounded om the south;. east by Darby Itorouph line. The buildings are of stone, from'a superior •quarry,on the premises , and consist Of a. I/ORM() twp , , , tory• dwelliingw house; ling,: carldage .house,.eprafg. .tenant-honso.,....This. property-IT in , amy ranidly improc . ing neirfhorhood, remarkable for health. fulness end regpecfability •' out a'of a mile from Clifton, Kelleyville and Darby road stations. on the Philadelphia, Media and IVet Chester Railroad, running Itpas,enger trains each way daily, and 2.4 of a mile from the terminltH of the Darby Pageonger Ibulrruid, on which carq run half hourly to Mo.rkm.t. street. It has over 1.000 feet front on public roads, many good building sites, a number of spring. 4 and water-courses, several aeres of tine timber, melee., Illi.adOWe and upland's, nut, fruit and shade tree , , be. - itil - clear of :1.11 ineumbrunce. criii,--‘l ,, re than Polf the pcceli.l6r money may re main cu hand and Han :tt time Auction ronme be: paid at time, M. TI10:1 . AS . k )NS, Auctionoerg, w•C 9 nes 12 19 1;!.!•:nr1 141 South Fourth strut rIEOLTOES' I'EI:EMPTEILY SALE. -ESTATE of John Roland, d,cea-od.—ThotraH Son , , Atte- Stand. - Three,dory 1;1 irk Seth Eighth street, between Cit-et wit and Walnut Itro , t-., 212 feet front.--On flctold:r 10111, bni7. at 12 o'ebotk, ,told at poblbt at the Philadelphia L., clan,,, all that ',dna ble brie's lde , r - tago and lot of ground, op the we,t -ble of F:ielith I ,o hveen I . hertnut t' Walhdt its., No. 1:^!; containing, in fr , .nt on Eighth 0t.."1. If C.t d inch , •te, uo T, ittld in depth abodt 19 feo • d iakkr. Ale.), a lot of g., , n0: :tdj , .ining to the, trert ead of thq auoye lot, containing in breadth, coot and wont, 20 ft."...'; iced in depth .4! trot 4 inclo,t. Bounded rnuthward kv , Aby by lute head of g o n,. o ' edi ti ng i nto Voln.:t ~ trout. north by +oatit lin- of All. iaot. alley, which 1,,d , into another fret wide alley, which open-. into Eighth etreet. Together with the o , ntdit of rvation pouting the fre,. Irv! cad - .v.:tar-coon,: on the ride of a cer tain lot, hounded by Eighth , theet and Walnot mtreet, for conveying the ',rater onderground from the bark end .4 the fast above de , crited lot and the adjoining ground into Walnut qtreet, at all thne. torever. It to occupied ad 3 an excellent bat-dner , , dand. Sole abiolote. ely order of Exec dor, • 1 Si. TLIOMAS Anctionc , r, , , re'29,ct 5,12 . Igt•band 141 South Foorth etreet. tr. j: v HEAL ESTATE.—TIIWLAS SoNS' SALE.— Thresto,y B I.', rick Dwelling, No. A 7 (Airily:Mu street, " west of Tnirtocnth street, and it threee.dory Brick Dtvelling in the rear of Kates street, No. 13.15.—0 n TneE day October 2•2 d, 1867 ? at 1.2. o'clock, noon, will be sold at public rale, at the Philadelphia Exchange. all those brick meet llagoB and the lot of ground therelinto belonging, sit nate on the north side of Christian street 132 feet east of Broad ,dreet,.No. 1347; containing in front on Christian street 16 feet, including halt of a :la inches wide alley, to tie left t pen on the wept side to the depth of 47 feet cis, incher, and extending in dvptii97 feet d Inches to Kates street. (ri , lbject to the res notion that no building shall he, erected on said lot; or any part to he used or occupied for any purpo , e other than a genteel dwelling.) The im provements ore a three-story brick messuage fronting on Christian street: c‘mtainiug t) twins, gas, bath, Lc.; and a t'uve.story brick dwelling fronting on Kates atreet,having 4 room , . :.!e. irisr - Cigar of all incumbrance. , Terine—sl,ooualay remain on mortgage. $lOO to be paid at tinic. of Haig. M. THOMAS A: SONS, Auctioneera, 139 :11(1 141 South Fourth Area ,25 2 ,0c5,10 'r REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS Li; SONS' SALE.- Very valuable Business Location, Nos. 1002, 1004 and 1006 Arch street, west of Tenth street, and No. 46 North Tenth street,.so fectfront =Arch street.—On Tues.. da•,-, October 22d. P 67, at 12 o'clock, noon, Ns ill he sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that large and 'zalualile lot of ground and the unpucument6 thereon Fit iate on the uoutiMde of Arch street, about 24, feet 3 inches west of Tenth street, Nos. 1002. 1004 and 1006; containingln front on Arch street LO feet, and extending in depth 110 f. yt, nvrro or ,51. Alio, all that valuable lot of ground and the improvements thereon erected, west shit: of Tenth street, 110 feet south of Arch Street, No. 46; containing in trout on Tenth street 20 feet, and extending in 4h. o .pth 74 feet 3 , inche , , more or less. The improvements ar' .., three-story brick stores end dwellings fronting on Arch street, wits 11 brick dwellingA.in the rear, forming a court, and known ue N,untater', court, and a genteel three-story brick ,tore and dwelling irouting on Tenth etreet Clar o: all ineorolr:llNC. M. THOMAS SONS, Auctioneers, e , 233,06,12,10 13q and 141 South Fourth street. REAL ESTATE.-THOMAS •/t. SONS' SAL E.— Modern Three.story Brick Dwelling, S. W. corner of P!ne. and Albion greets. bet..veen wentydiret and Twenty-second streets.—On Tue, , day, October 16th, 1847, at 12 o'clock. noon, trill be sold at public sail?, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that modem three-gory brick seuage, with three-story hack baildingland lot of ground, situate at the eouthwe4t corner of Pine and Albion streets, between Twentyiirg and Twonty,:econd rtreete • con taining in front ou Pine street 19 feet ' and extending in dopth fi9 tto a 2 feet 4 inchos wide alley, with tho privi lege.thereof. It haa parlor and kitchen on tirat floor; 2 chambers, dining-room, hath.row gore-room, On Old second thior, and 3 chambers above; gal introduced; hot and cold w atrr, wat"r ckqet, furnitc.., r. t c, Lc. Terms--$'2,500 may remain on mortga • IT)" Clear of all incambrance. VI - Immediate poe:+sion. May be xamined any day previous to sale.' M, THOMAS fi SO B, Auctioneers, eo2H ocs 12 ra and 141 oath Fourth street. L. REAL EST.VErni:dIOM S d SONS' SALE.— gl Modern Threc,ltory Brirkolfesidence, No. 950 Frank lin xtreet, north of Poplar greet, 25 feet front.—On Tuesday, Ui t. Int h, 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be cold at public rale, at the Phllade!phial3::change,all that modern three.-story brick messuage, with two-story back buildinga, and lot of ground, situate on the west side of Franklin street, south of (ward avenue, No. 950; the lot containing in front 25 feet, (iut:biding an alley about 3 feet wide, of which this house luau the exclusive right,) and extending in depth feet 9 inehee. bonne in laved 2l feet front; Wands back 3 feet from the iineaf thd strict;! hen the modern conveniences; Imo the gas introduced, with fix tures,(which are included in the sale free of charged bath, hot and et Id water, 2 vange,+. Ver Clear of all ineumbrance. Terme---$5,e00 may remain on mortgage. immediate po.oeesion. Keys "Timone, at No. 457. 31. TIO3I,AS & SONS, Auctioneerg, 13) and 141 South Fourth street. ItEAL ESTATE.—TIIMAS EONS' PALK— Su higantial Blildine, and Large Lct, Wa-hington avouue.—On TeeHlay, Oct. loth, 1867. at 'PI &clock, noon will he mold at pehlic sale, at tit Philadelfdds. Ex, e bongo, all that lot of groinol and the improveinentB thereon erected, situate on the .:oath aide of Wit,diington a ;TWO', In feet:west of 'l' . ...,utleth Htreet; 70 -feet front, 130 feet dewy to Alter •F treot: On thia lot' is a enhatantial building erected, with tomes, ,citable for storage parpove, haring good entrance! , , boing he railroad. , irowits for , any important 11,1inne, , A can ah provided to count it with the Went and South, and can be used 0 0 a car factory. irF; Clear of all ineiltibrane,,, Terms—Part of purclnve Luor. , y can remain liccitred on the prentis. M. THOMAS & SONS, AnctionceN, 1,39 and 141 Fourth street. HEAL ES'T'ATE:.—THOMAS ct, SONS' SALE:— Valuable IludnetN Staud.—Three-istory Brick Stu,' and Dwelling, D a. 416 toroth Second .ireet, between hint! and Lombard streets.—On TutHdny. October 15. 1557., at 12 o'clock, noon, will be Hold at nublic ante, :it the dolphin I , xchange, all that valuable three-story brick rouge, with two.tary back building,. and lot of qfonngi, Fitnatv on t nen . cHt old. , of Second coiner of Stant ptvo ailey . between Pine and Lombard rltr,H4, No. 418: containing in front on Second rdr , .. ,, t. 20 - feet. and o.%tentlit; lit depth 71 ft el, ntoro or 1. It ha.; been occupied aH a pacer: etor6, tad is au old-edtablished etand. Kept at the N. W. corner of Second and Union At rt7.•l'. LW Clear of all ineumbrance. , 28, 5,12 Ir Inuit dlute Ihtlf M. 'III(),MAS 4.. Si 0: I:i7 and 171 : 4 . P• .1:111 itrcct. e98,0c3,1:1 11. BEAL ESTAf 02 t' et , SO N:l' t;,, T‘vo-Fitory Brick I ;ar and tou avenue Ea,t of .Twcot;. - -tirnt 'nom day, October fits, 1887, at It: , be cold ut public ealo, at the Philhdelphia E.:ehange, all that two utot trick. cat or roach' factory .old 1,,, V1 , 1:1111, Ablate Oil 11,0 tooth tide Wa,hingtoo Avenue, Oat.: Prime :AO 1:30 feet emu of Twenty.tirlt etr. - et, Twenty-eixth Ward; the lot. vont:41111g in front fe,), ..I.•eding in depth feet to Alter Areet. It to Welt :obliged or pa..menger or freight curs--the Baltbooro railroad patiNCY the property. illear of all imam hraoc , ,. Term,,-'A portion of the p.irc.i.i•te ioull2y eau remain, if deeired M. T.TAOMAS k SONS, A uc ti o ,„„, , 189 and 141 South Fourth EtreOt ,280c5,412 TWAT, ESTATF—THOMAS k SONS' SALE.-- fs; Two Three-gory ittick Di:101141m No. 711 Fallon et., and Fitzwate” ,trort•L Ott'rm. , . day October vah, its?, at 18 o'clock. node, will be sold at , public 4/111 . at tin: PhiladAphla Exoliange., all that lot of ground and the tvo three-gory brick, thvelllng,i thereon erected. uate Oa the ;eeht aide of Fallon street (for merly Flower streetd No. 782; containing lit frooton Fal lon street (areordlint to sinvey) 18 feet 8 inches, and ex tending in depth 85 foot ll ineheA en the north line, and !h; feet fnehee on tie., south line. Thu hottsei ecand hack ti ola the street. \l. T}fOSIAS SONS, Anetieneere, 1119 and 141 South Fourth sti.wit. ko 28 ocs IS Lt., PEAL ! STATE.- THOMAS t SONS' SALE.-- Soven I hrev-otoi ylranio Dw 1,1 ellings, . E. corner of ' leront and. V ino oUeeto, (.'amden, el. J. On Tunnelgy, October 15th, 1867 at 13 o',elocls, noon, will ho told at pub no Pale, at the Philadelphia. Exchange. all thole 7 three. fool . )' fro me mown:log and the lot of ground thereunto belonging, Pltnate at tho eoutheaßt corner of Front :u.ul Vine idrecte, Camden, ; containing together 113 front on Front otreet ta feet, and extending In depth 95feet. Six of the houses front on Front - street, each 11 feet, a Waco t rout and tho other on Vine o tre feet front. frir Clear of all ineumbranee. )f, rrilomAs d SONS, iturt're., ID and 111 foerth otrect. s 4 0t.G,12 REAL, .11 ASSIGNEE'S PERE)/ premises..—Thomas ant Estate - and personal p Potter}} Company, situate ox, thiladolphis. and Reading Ha. - Philadelphia. On Wedneeday, oe, of Assignee, will be sold at pnblie San., at one o'clock, P. M., on the premises, nit of ground, with tho pottery, buildings and thereon erected: , • • • - One of them, situate on the. northwest side of street, 73 feet 7!.; inches southwest from the :amain. 51 de.of the Philadelphia:lndite:Wing Railroad, Nitteteenh. ard, city of Philadelphia; containing in front. on Sal mon street f,7 feet 11 inches, and extending in depth north west, at right :mg CH with Salmon street 192 feet 6- ' inches to the southeast side of a new street. 30 feet wide. called east by Bounded northwest Cabot,ilton street,. northeast by ground now or late of ClL:tiles south' east by Salmon street, and southwest by the next herein described lot. One other of then,, situate on the northwest side of Salmon street,l3l feet 0.„ inches. Hatthwest from the south west side of tie. Philadelphia, and Reading Railroad; con taining in front on Salmon ~treet 71 feet 434 inches, end extending in depth northwest, at right .angles with Sal ine/1 street, WS feet 6 inches to Tilton street. Bounded northwest by Tilton street, northeast by the last above de scribed lot, southeast by said ilahnon street, and south-. west by the next herein described lot. And the other of there. situate u, the northwest side of Salmon street, 205 feet inches southwest front the seuthwest side os the Phibwitaphia and Reading Rail, Cad: containing in front on Salmon street S 8 feet, and extend ing in det,th northwest, of rid, angles. with Salmon street, 103 feet 6 inches to Tilton street. Bounded north west by Tilton r treet,northea.4t by the last above described lot southeast by Salmon street, and southwest by ground now or late of Isaac W. Norris. Upon lota first and, second, above described, Mere is a nit rtgage of $lO,OOO. Upon lot third, above described, there is a yearl ground rent of $6O. N. B. There Is erected on the said three lots of ground, 3 kilns, (one 18 feet in diameter, and two 15 feet 4 inches each in diameter,) a slip kiln, dipping room, drying•room, works hop, and ware room, with Beggars, seggar drums, seggar hoards and bench and cutter, blocks and moulds, stilt machine and dyes, wad machine, glaze mill, clay mill, grog mill. shelving and ware-boards, jiggeett4;:whirl2. era, blocks and nimilds, and dipping tubs used in:Wiirrying on said pottery business. The foregoing property will ho sold together. • $3OO to be paid at time of sale; balance cash on the exe cution of the deed, say within 15 days from sale. No. 2.—A1l that lot of ground, situate on the Southeast side of Edgemont street,27o feet 10;4 inches northeast front Lehigh avenue, 95th Ward, City of Philadelphia; contain ing in front on Edgemont street 57 feet 11 inches. and ex tending in-depth - southeas* of that width,dictweetspat ailed linen at xlght anglio, to Edge,mont street,lo3.feet Inclicifto Tilton street. me s:tictdo els subjea to'd yearly ground rent of $57. It has been used as a clay lot, in con nection with the pottery above-named. $lOO to be paid at time of sale; balance cash on the exe cution of the deed, say within 15 days from sale. PERSONAL PROFERTY.—AIso, a propertyale of' the real estate, will be sold the personal consisting of a fireproof safe, desk and other Mice furniture, tools scales, paint mill, step ladders, pianks, barrels, hogsheads and other articles. Ice - The Richmond cars of the Second and Third Streets Railway, run wlthin.i,f of a iomaridof the property. GEORGE SERGEANT, Assignee 226 South Fourth street. B, THOMAS '& SONS, Auctioneers, lag and 141 6:Fourth street. HelP 21 nes PUBLIC SALE OF A DESIRABLE COUNTRY Place.at Wallingford Station,on Theniday afternoon. Oct. 10,'67, at half-pact 5 o'clock. On the premiere, Providence road, near tlinkson's Corner, about 8 ¢ miles from Chester, and 114 miles from Media, in Nethdr Provi dence towmlalp, Delaware county, Pennsylvania. 'and about eleven miles from the city . of will be cold to the highest bidder, a demable country place, con. tanning between d :old 7 acres of superior land, very,de sirablv located, adjoining the lands of William Ewe. Jpeob' Ivrea, and Al r. Norman. The improvements 'Ant quite extensive; the most im portant part having been erected within a year, in mo dern style, by competent mechanics.. The house has French slate roof, high teilinge :red porch on three sides. Tll,le is an ice vault ,and cave, built of brick, and the born and out-buildings (part of which are now) are morn than eldlicient for the want, of the place. There is an abundance of fruit trees and shade on the premises. 1 he waterio of the best quality, and never futile. ,The view from the house cannot he excelled,and its proximity , to Wallingford Station. on the West Chester and Phila., delphia Railroad, being about 500 yards distant, front which seven trains depart daily each way, rendere• it tt very desirable residence for pereons doing builineod the city. • May he examined previone to male. POSBeBI33OII imme diately. • Terms—One half mud' ; i 4 O 0 to be paid at sale. Farther Information muy be obtehted of Mr. JAMES R. CUMMINS, OM Walnut street, Philadelphia. ' 0e1.1t4 B y ORDER im?IFILIRS.—ESTATE OF • ROGER - McDONALpj.dseeatTd.. ;7 - ..:SMEISIOCk. SONS, Anctioltecnt. STORE AND FD UR DWELLINGS. TWENTY FOURTH STREET, BELOW WALNUT STREET. On Monday, October 7th, PM, will be cold at public sale, at twelve o'clock, noon, at the Philadelphia Ex change, _ _ All that certain lot or piece of ground togetherwith ml the improyementi thereon erected, situate On the, east side of Beach, now Twenty-fourth street. and the south side of a 20 feet wide street called Caldwell street, between Walnut and Locust streets in the Eighth Ward of the city dolphin. Containing in front or breadth on sal each street 211 feet, and extending in length or depth of that width on said 20 feet wide street 110 feet to another 20 feet wide street. Improvemenbi consist of a two-story brick store and dwelling fronting on Twenty-fourth street, and three three-story 'brick' dwellings, containing three rooms each, and one three story brick dwelling, containing six rooms, fronting • on Caldwell street. PET - Clear of all ineumbrance. J. X (I,II3IMEY & SONS, Auctioneers, se'2l•Mocs . . 508 Walnut !Arent. 'REAL ESTATE.-J. M. GIIMMEY ez SONS , SALK THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLLNO, AND FOUR DWELLINGS -IN-TUE REAII,-No.-126-LOMBARD - STREET. On Monday, Oct. 7th, 1861. will be sold at public Bale, at 13 o'clock, noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, AS that certain lot or niece of ground, together with the improvements thereon erected, situatp on " the Routh side of Lombard etreet, at the distance of 158 feet eastwardly from the coat aide of Eighth etreet, in the Seventh Ward of the city of Philadelphia: containing in front on Lombard etreet 20feet, and extending m depth of that width, 96 feet, to Cullen etreet. Improvements consist of a substantial threesnory brick dwelling, front. ing on Lambard,,street: 3 two•Mory frame dwellings in the rear of the same, and a thresetory brick dwelling fronting on Cullen etreet. re" Subject to two yearly ground rents—ono of $3O. and the other of $3.1 J. M. GUNDIEY dz: BONS, Aitetioneere; ev21,28,0c5 808 Walnut etreet. r• REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS • &SONS' SALE.— Tbree•story Brick Dwelling, No. 100 North 'Front street. On Tuesday, October 15th, 1067 at o'clock„ noon, will be sold of Public Sale, at the Philadelphia. Ex chance, all that three-story brick meaning° and. lot of ground, situate on the east side of Front street and south side of Otter street, Sixteenth Vard; containing in front on Front street ie feet, and on Otter street 100 feet .to a S feet wide alley. Ire Clear or all incumbrance, • Terms—Part of ourcliape motley can remain. M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers, 139 and 141 South Fourth otreet. =MI LEGAL NOTI C ES. E DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, SS.—lii ..LU DANK REPTCY. At Put LAD 13.1411.1, the 80th day of September, A. D. 1847: The undersigned berchy'gives notice of hie appointment as assignee of :JAMES M.ICARTNEY, intho city of Phi ladelphia, in the county of Philadelphia, and State of Pennsylvania, within said district, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt upon his own petition. by the DietrOct Court of said dhtriet. JOHN ROBERTS, Assignee, N South Sixth street. TILE ORPEANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND I Count , / of l hlladelphiu —Eutato of ELIZABETH PILYSICK, dee'd.—The Auditor appointed by . the Court to audit, settle and adjust the first acccuut of JACOB IL ELLIS, attorney in fact for Executors under the will of ELIZABETIa PHYSIUK, doc'd., and to report dlstribu tion of the balance in the halide of the accountant, will meet the parties interested fur the purpose of his appoint.. ment, on Tuesday, October 15th. at 4 o'clock P. IL, at his office, No. 120 South Sixth at, In the city of Philadelphia. 0c04.11,11,tn-50 GUSTAVUS RF:NIAK, Auditor. • IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY. AND I. County of Philadelphia.- Estate of THOMAS PAR KER, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit. settle and adjust the account of TIIOMAS PARKER, Adminis rater of said Estate, and to report distribution of the • halance in the hands of the accountant, no aloe of the fund arising from sale of real estate of decedent, will meet the oartios interested for the purpose of his appointment, on Monday, Oct 14, 1867, at 2 o'clock, P. M., at his °dice, No. 623 Walnut street la the the. city of. Philadelphia. • JAMES DAIL•II., RODNEY, ocl, ttrth 55t4 • • - .-Aeditor, ORPHANS' COURT FOR TIER CITY AND County of Philadelphim—Eatato of GARRICK MALLERY, deceaded.—The Auditor appointed by _the court to audit, settle 311(1 adjust the account of lion. LIAM STRONO,Admiuistratorof the Estate of FIARRICK. aI.I.ERV, deceased, and to report diatribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant, will ingot the parties interested for the purposes of his apigpiuttnent, ota Thtmalay, Octelar leth, 180, at 4 o'clock P: M., at hi 4 otlice, No. lid South Fifth area. in tho city of Philadel. phia. THOMAS HART, Jr.., • ee2B.e,tlt,th•ot. Auditor. JN THE ORPHANS' COURT VOR, THE CITY AND County of Philadelphia.—Estate of W. L. LANE, do ceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, stoth• and adjust the thud account of TA3IZEN EL LANE. Adminiatratrix of W. L. LANE. depeaaed, and to report adri Lotion of the balance in the hands of the accountan!, n ill nicet the ',active interested for the purpose of Ma appointment, on Monday, October 7th, 180, at 4 o'clock P. :it his ofilce, No. ID South hixth street, in the city of Philadelphia. se:hidli,s,tmte JAM PS 'W. LATTA, Auditor. N T EOR lANS' CO Liiii • FOß THFCITY AND County of Philadelphia.—Estate of SAINICEL PIL LING, dec`d.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, cettlo and adjust the haul account of WILLIAM VEIGNOTON. Trustee under the last Will find Testa ment of 81111.1.31:1, PILLING, deed, and to report distribution of the balance in the hands of tho account. out, wi tl meet the parties interested for the purpose of his appointment, on Wt do October 9th, 1867, at 11 o'clock A.. 11., at the °face of CHAS. PANOOAt3T, Esq.. No. 41i Walnut street, in the city of Philadelphia, se24,th,s,ttist-• N THE ORPHANS/ COURT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of ELIZABETH A. DOEGSON, dee'd.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit settle and adjust the account of DAVID HEY, Execitor of the loot will and testament of ELIZABETH A. DOEM UN, dee'd., and to report distribution of the balance In the hands of the accountant, MD moot the parties interested for the purposes of his •appointment t on 31ondsv, October 7th, 1867, at 3 o'clock P. M., at his othce. No. mouth Fifth street, In the city of Philadelphia. swit'4ll.o,tll.sto J. GRANVILLE,' LEACH. Auditor. T FITTERS TESTAMENTATtY ON THE ESTATE OF .1.4 BENJAMIN HUBBEIer having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to the stuns will make p vmvut. and Mess having claims will present them to CillasTlAN IIUBBEItT, Executor, No. 1314 Perth street. ssati4stit* LOMT. 's`P OR ..\II.SLAID—A PEI:PEPUAL POLICY OF .L Inintratice, ingued - by Ow Fire Amoeintli i January 1.11: 11 Im4B ,to ORO. It. 01IAN.t.N, for $1,500, ..uxigned to :1101tORCAT LRVY. Any Informal:ion iteorning tho Hanle will bort:caved itY ROBERT artAFFIN, . . 137 Pine 'street .1111EDDING FEA'A'n CRS, r3cC.9 9 seNtli tul2o 11 1 .17ATET:IRDEDS AND 'HAIR MII,I'II:EASES RENO. vateil.• -Ale°. Feat:um co:II:tan:1y on nand, `Factory 311 Lombard street. 64119 lm• ~irri>>eii . ________--__ FPENUII I'itUNES.- -50 CAdES IN T iIt emlnikt.l., , . :111,1 fluicy box,., imported and for 'sato by 34:”•,t. It . i t' 1 . 16 tiouth. Delttwore avenue.