MEM= mon moNi .110oa1)h Smith, the .11torrtion Lestdev• in the Rochester Union and Advertiser we find the following account of the peculiari ties which marked Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, previous to the publica;:ion of his .11c Cl(!)ati "1 knew him well before his book was pub lished. Ile was then a wood-cutter on my farm, more willing to live by his wits than his axe, nnJ worked through the winter' in company with some twenty o'l' thirty otheis, rough backwoodsmen. , He and his two associates built a rude cabin of poles and bruit, covered with leaves and earth, in the woodsiopen to the South, with a camp-kettle in front for cooking; and here,atnight,around 11 huge fire, he and his comparuons would gather, ten or a dozen at a time, to tell stories and sing songs, and drink cheap whisky (two shillings a gallon), and although there "were some hard cases among them, Joe could beat them all for tough stories and im practicable adventures, and it was in this school, I believe, that he first conceived the wonderful invention of the golden plates and marvelous revelations. And as these exer cises were rehearsed nightly to his hearers, and as their ears grew longer to receive them, so his tales grewthe more marvelous to please them, until some of them supposed that he also believed his own stories. But of this fact there is no proof. Ile was impu dent and assuming among. his fellows, but ignorant and dishonest, plausible and obse quious to others, with sufficiont low cunning to conceal his ignorance, but, "in my estima tion, utterly unqualified to compose even sucks jumble of truth and fiction •as this book contained. "The most probable theory of its origin that I remember to have heard is that it was the strange work of an eccentric Vermont cler gyman, written to while away the tedibus bours of long confinement by nervous debil ity, and that this idle production;after his de cease, fell into Jee's hands, and that having learned something of the gullibility of his cronies, this incidental matter incited in him the first idea of ,turning his foolish stories to account, and this enable him to make the surreptitious manuscript the text-book of his gross imposition. I speak 'understandingly m saying he was shameless as well as dis honest, and relate a small matter to prove it. During the Winter he was chopping forme, I was is thehabit of riding through the clearing daily to see that the brush was piled as agreed, the wood fairly corded, and no scattering trees left uncut, and in this way became well acquainted wita the conduct of every man; and on each Saturday took an account and paid the hands. Lily mode was to ride around While each party-measured their ranks and turned a few sticks on the top to show that they had been counted. in this way 1 one day 'Wok • Joe's account, he accompanying me and removing the sticks on the top of each rank. After thus going the rounds and returning to the Shanty, lie said he had another rank or two that - Thial not seen, and led me in a differ cut direction in a roundabout way, to wood that I had already measured, but the sticks on top had all been laid back to their places. I saw the trick at once, and could only make him confess his attempt to cheat - by re f leasuring the whole lyithand all this he thou t would have been a fair trick if I had not 'found it out. So much for the man in small things. "After he left in the spring 1 lost 'sight of him Until my friend Judge Whiting (long since deceased, of the very respectable firm of Whiting and Btitler, attorneys, who wad then loaning money on mortgages fora trust coMpany,. asked me if I knew anything about Joe Smith. I told him that I knew him. for a great rogue in a small way, when he in formed me that he pretended to be a prophet, and was abOut publishing a-Book-of-Revela tions, and had induced two credulous men in Pain - limp apply to him (Judge Whiting) for money on mortgage to publish it. 1 learned afterward that Joe and an associate had prevailed on a worthy citizen of Waterloo cColonel • C— who was then in a state of great depression from the recent loss of his wife, to join their fraternity and cast in his lot among tlx m; and that while they were at his house tal ing an inventory of his eilbcts for the. pu p( se, his son, a spirited young man, canie hi and on finding what they were about threatened them so strongly with a prosecu tion as swindlers, that they left for the time s , until his father had recovered from his'dela sion, and thus escaped them. "I know nothing further ofhis doings here, but after his removal to Ohio, when he es tablished a hank that failed, I was shown one of his bills, and I recollect that on ex amining it I thought the device on the face (f it was.niost admirably appropriate, viz.: A 'fitiutly fellow shearing a sheep." Insolvency a la node. Angelina,. dear, you know you •have bean asking me, for the last ntonth or so, why your clear Charles is so. ketsvec,—so preoc cupied._ Well, if you are wide awake, I will mike a clean breast .of it; butmind, no hysterics, no fainting, no , going off in that . way. We are -ruined. Come, come, never .mind,, the thing is not se bad as it looks, but it is enfre nOus, a horrid bore. Overreach,Gobble & Co. have coil apSed! The worst of the matter is, just to save ap -pearances we must make a show of martyr dom, beginning At home; we must surrender the lease of our commodious West-end man sion: no end of expensive baubles, — too, must be subniitted to the fall of the hammer. Coarse brokers, smelling of beer and tobacco 'and nearly as fetid "as niggers, must, from the nature of the case, have the run . on the day . of view and the days of sale, of my Angel ' Ma's boudoir. Don't cry, sposa mia 77 those horrid "official liquidators," whose bodies are not worth:'Melting, and whose souls are not likely to be saved, • must be, in soin , sort, propitiated. 4 sop must be thruNy n, I t '`guts 7 to-a-bear" fashion, :o the fteo.f )1111tailt Cerberi—the portly step-fathers 'of millionahe insolvency. Well, Angelina, dear, dater all, our settlements are safe; La! by the way, it is an awful bore thr these pope, de-,11.9, the, small shareholders—fel lalis up to their e..is in debt to their butcher, baker and laundress—called on to pay a "call" amounting to—one hundred pounds! Sarve it right. Well, Anff.elina, dear, we must economize. rVc will retrench, discharge, like "poor Wilkinson," our scape•saiat, a dozen servants, and, pending this night mare-bogy of a panic, we will go abroad. Yes, Angelina, dear, write on for rooms at the Grande Hotel, althoogh it is rather of the latet,t. The crown personages are all gone, but we may as had better leave ou tlaturday night, by the mail train, and take another vie 0- the grand Exposition. Thence -. ,ve can make our Way on to Baden, where I haw! it in my head to try a new mar 11' this fail, we can drink the waters of refection at Vichy, thence r'n. avant into italy;araf. —do" the Eternal City under the cicetortesltia of 0 clack courierlVien the Pontine. niaohcs are free from malaria. Might do worse--oh. Angelina? Of course. Angelina, dear, fiq e k ~,mo rgue. rite, that pearl of Parisian abigails, will attend you; and, positively, yto, one bat that prince of valets, Simracmd,, can, or shall, shave your Charles. By the way, 3p(Ma 021(t, we have always understood 04C11 other well. Nothing like having two strhias to or.m's how. There are two thobsafill pounds (never mind ueiand -squeezing them) in Bank' of E Take care of them; make ti b itari bosetn :friends; put some of them in your dresslng .'aise—yes, let them serve UR 1)1( iding nr your eilyer Jlabk of equ die vie! bider tic 0040 of the canitibial. curtains i m .105 k) er int , : ins!. etir of any dear 'TWA' t.iltt my pockets are equally well lined. Sapristo, what is the use of learning to cast accounts, or•bOok-keeping by double entry; or of being a director, if one be•not paid for, it. —London Cosmopolitan. The First Advertisoment. The London City Press says : "The first known newspaper advertise ment is one which refers to the theft of two honks. It is contained in an early number of a paper called , the inipartial MGM genecr, published in the year 1048. It was inserted by a gentleman of Candish, in Sfif folk. After this these 'notifications were very few and far between for several years, until we approach the era of the London Oa,:ette. Here, for some time, they assumed no very definite form, consisting merely of a short official notice; mitalics, at the end of each Gazette, and not headed with the title of 'advertisement.' One of the first called by this name in this paper is contained in' the number for May,,1067. It is sufficiently re markable to deserve resuscitation, and runs as follows ' • 'An advertiSemente are, by His Majesty's command, to give notice that, by reason of the great heats which are grow ing on, there will be no further touching for the evil till Michaelmas next, and accord ingly, all persons concerned are to • forbear their addresses till that time.' In Chambers' Journal, in an. article on "Early Newspaper Advertisements,"wre read: "Charging for advertisements commenced at a very early period. A few at first might have been inserted gratuitously, but the revenue flowing from this source was so obvious a consideration that the practice soon began of charging a fixed sum for each. "In theMerettriusLibrarius,a bookseller's, paper, it is stated that: 'ru show that the publishers design the public advantage of trade, they will expect but sixpence for in serting any book, nor but twelve pence for any advertisement relating to the trade,unless be excessive „long.' The next intimation as pride is in the Jockey's Intelligenecr, which charged one shilling for each, and six pence for renewing. The Obscrvator, in 1701, uharged one shilling for eight lines:and the Conntr,y Gentleman's Courant, in 1700, inserted advertisement at twopence per line. The Pditie Aaverliscr charged for a length of time two shillings for each in sertion." irlw Earth. • The very earth itself is an unsteady basis of science. Dr. Robinson said to the British Association, that "he found the entire mass of 'rock and hilt on which the Armagh Ob servatory is erected, to . be slightly, but to an astronenser quite perceptibly, tilted or canted, at one season of the year to the east, at an other to the west." And, what is still more . startling to the astronomical world, the. Greenwich transit instrument, the very tuck of the covenant of scientific certainty itself— must we utter it--has wavered. The high priest of that sanctum sanetorum of science,.. Prof. Airey, the ,Astionomer Royal, makes the alarming confession as follows: "While the construction. of • this instrument, ' and the modes of observation with it, have given a warranty such as the world never possessed before, for the steadiness of the instrument and its 'adjuncts, there have been instances where the ozimuth of the in strument, greatly to the surprise of the as tronomer, has varied four seconds, as deter mined by opposite passages of the polar star." Mr. Airey has no other way of ex plaining this than by the supposition, that "the sound and firmset earth itself is in motion:" A supposition fatal to the scien tific certainty of observation made on such a tremulous basis;for if the whcile hill on which the Armagh Observatory stands, can be canted to the east And to the west, and if the solid earth at Greenwich has been detected in wavering four seconds, who can assume greater stability for any other obser vatory ?' Or who can tell whether such trenidations have not vitiated the inobl nir reaching observations ? It is only occasionally that siderial rectifica tions can be made, and in all intervening hours nobody can tell s how much wavering may arise from the seenlar and magnetic ex pansions and contractions of the earth,which physical geographers assure us are contin ually active. Yet we are asked to accept visionary theories of the formations of worlds, based on observations of minute angles, Where the error of the tenth of a second in Ihe parallax of a distant star involves an error of distance of thousands of millions of wiles! The whole modern theory of the leu ii(jilar fonilation of this earth's universe, and of the actual distances of the fixed stars, has Absolutely no broader basis of observation tom the accuracy of observations of the sixtieth or hundredth part of a degree. What then are we to think of the scientitia certainty ‘); observations continually exposed to such disturbances and jostlings?—lkonily Trea sury. A Efrog Story. A writer in Science, Gossip says "A near neighbor, upon whose veracity I can iely, recently opened a drain in Kept, when he made the following discovery :=-At the mouth of the drain were placed two large stones, in measurement neatly two feet square and three inches thick; the one at the top rested closely upon the one beneath. Upon lifting it iron the lower stone, the skeletons of five frogs were discovered; they were in circle in the centre or the stones, quite flat. Upon taking one of them up and. lioldin4 it to the light, there was only a threadlike appearance of hones between the dry,' flattened and fleshless 'skins; these skins weie clear and Want fully marked._ in his state They were s e en by several persons, and by each of them the frogs were, considered to be dead; but when the water commenced to flow over them there was a slight gasping pereelVed in the throats or each, by degrees the bodies swelled, and 1i fu, and motion returned. Tuen, to the surprise 1 , the hcholders, the figs sprang up and ran away into the drain. :'How did these frogs get beni!ath the stone h4covered the lower .one so closely?. -There - was no space lin- them to cater Or depart, and upon the surlimies there was not the slightest indentigiou made by the frogs. It was supposed to be thirty years ago that the Stones Were plat4'.o7er the drain." BLoon Colter,. 1.• s.—The London says t ' ; '.A paper havilw• appeared in the btdt, runithnr th e .m t ,e.tscopio.t/./eorn,;!, which tel it certain ex tent evidenced an exception: to Professor (dulli tur's views on the rtubje4it of bleothcorpuseles„ ihe liolyssor has written tin artlitn,' which will' appear in the forthcoming number (November) of the Jou rn 1V A npeomy. I laVing been far oittlt with a copy of the paper, we can state that tdte;', author bus brought for Ward ample evidence to prove the correetnet.s of his opinions. Therercaw, we think, be little doubt that his classification of achnols, based,on the form and structure - An' the blood-globules, still holds true. Professot:' Guth vur divith ;di - yetlebrate or imalS into two great urones- first, those: whose Wood 7 corpuicies. ore, tent a weiddleened tmek.up t Pyrenmytata,a, Re6iion nviltdilte the 1)11113, reptiles and fishes ;• and se in ..vhich no real nneletts exists in the Hood ditdts; to this suction he gives the:oo.lne, of 4yretto ',ado ; it embraces only one order', that of Mununalio. Professor Gulliver says that the form of the blood-corptveles in some mammals is so remarkable that by them alone the Sp,ecies may ho distirgulhed. This is especially alio of the great ant-eater, meeppLiga jabatet." TIIE Lai: to Eutiesc.—At at meeting of the Fre hell Academy, on the Itith ultimo,M. 'Chac,or llt.;• gave an account Ot his observations tef the bolter eclipse on the night of the 13th. ' m.c'etko,- A..oinite examined with lint spectroscope the light proccedir•g from the lunar disk. His object in doom: - vo toa to di-cover whether the spectrum o Oman. d telluric :Absorption bands. Ile ex po • to d 10 fond these, owing to the, light 'baying ray :Fed the terrestrial atmosphere, but he :was saja vin ; imej3 bande were peredved.-.:, THE DAILY EVENING BIILLETIN.-PHILADELriIIA, WEDNESDAY,; OCTOBER 9, 1867 . The proof-readers employed in London are - organized in an "Assobiation . of the Correc tors of the Press." At a recent public meet ing of this body to protest against grievances, Charles Dickens presided. He said' he had consented to preside for • two reasons; first, because he thought openness and publicity in such a case was a very wholesome example, very much needed at this timepand highly becoming a body, of men associated with that great safeguard, the press. Secondly, because" he knew, from some slight personal expe-. rience, what the duties of correctors of the press were. How those duties were usually discharged, he could testify; and he did testify that they were not mechanical; that they were not a•matter of • manipulation and a trained eye, but that they required from those who performed teem much natural intelligence and much superadded qualification, readi ness of reference, quickness of resources, an excellent memory, and a clear understand ing. lie most gratefully acknoWledged that - he had never gone through the slieets of any book he had written without having had presented to him by the correctors of the press something that he had overlooked, some slight inconsistency into which he had fallen, some little lapse which he had made— in short, without having had set down before him in black and white some unquestionable indication that he had been closely followed through his work by a patient and trained mind, and not merely by a skilful eye. In this declaration he had not the slightest doubt that all his brother and sister writers would, as a plain act of justice, heartily Concur. ii==Niffiii Dickenti and the London Pjantt-Readm Mr. Challoner, the secretary, said the asso ciation was not a trades' union; that it had never before interfered with the question of wages; and that it did not seek to. do so now in the ordinary way. It did not propose to strike, but it simply wished to lay before the employers and the public the position in which the renders of the press, realty Stood. Mr. Harper, in moving the first resolution, said that he did not plead for himself, for there were exceptions to every rule; and while the rule was for readers to be ' under- paid, be belonged to a house which liberally remunerated all its responsible employes. lie would put it to the meeting, - whether it was, not anomalous that the minimum wages of a compositor should be the maximum paid to many printers' Teaders? [Cheers.] It iniOtt be asked what would be our civili :anon with out literature; and he might also ask what would lie our literature without primers' readers. There were compositors so bad that if their Work went out as it came from their hands it would really astonish the na tives. llegg moved the adoption of a memo rial, of which , the following is an abstract: "The lower purchasing power of money of latc years has been the cause of an advance of wages in most skilled trades. The major part of the printing trade has , shared in this yance; but readers have been overlooked. Rending being a mental - operation, a reader's efficiency depends upon his personal qualifi cations. 3 minimum salary is not, there fore, fixed, but an advance of ten per cent. is requested. Overtime should be better regu-' lat . O.t readers often getting a lower payment foenight work than compositors. The more a reader learns, the more valuable he is to his employer; study should, therefore, be en couraged by liberal treatment. The recent advance having raised the rate of the com positor, that of the reader should be propor tionately raised, so that the old distinction should be at least maintained. Further, the employment is unwholesome, study is expen sive, and a reader's position and (if at all educated) tastes involve: a greater outlay in the necessities and conveniences of life than those of other printers." An Adventurous Traveler. A Melbourne paper announces the arrival in that city of Mr. Christian Friedrich 13oksta9r, a 0 c-rua an Lin, rclor, wive camp ovor land from Sydney, the greater part of the way on foot. Mr. Schafer is of dwarfish stature, from the effects of an injury to the spine received in youth, but in spite of this physical drawback he has, during the last fifteen yearS, traveled over a great part of the surface Of the world, mostly as a pedestrian. He has passed through every country in Europe, through Asia Minor, Syria, Riiiypt, North Africa, and across the width of North America, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, on foot and alone. lie has in the course of his wanderings compiled a large mass of observations on the customs and character of the various populations,through which he has passed; carries a book of credentials, iu which his passports are attached, and in which he has autographs,of potentates, am bassadors, generals, governors, consuls, mayors, and mandarins, which,when his tour is%conipleted,w4he an interesting collection. He proposes to Make a complete tour of these colonies, and to pass through . Eastern Asia (India and china), finishing his long ram filings by allol4ll journoy 0n,,,f00t through Russian Tartary back to his hoine. lii BA-ttaiicas.-- 7 Therelit a series of sketches of Gustave Dor6, refirci4enting the utter des titution of a crack reginlent in , i provinciai quarters. -The artist shows yon a - picture ot - High Street, with a crowd 6f military men louring about in an agonizing state of idle ness, without a bonnet in Sight; Without even a perambulator to .remind them of town We knoW that die resources of the barracks, in such cases, are slight indeed,:and those of the mestroom . distraCtingly few; in the' , navy things are even Wokap.., •The very thought of men heing obliged t6"retniiin for tnree year, doging from tine African creek to another after slaver, iyethe same vessel, is enough induce a sense of deOlation, when co 'ShiCro • intpersonaily.. ' We -'once quired of ,:lientenant what 116",f i 'Alid hnder„,:the2 circumstances; and he re drtuik ruin and went to bed." On'shore aye afraid that gentle tieir,whose resources are neither commercial, wail,: lit 'entry, military, or naval; - 'llt iuls from - sheer vacancy, and often, ,uufortunatiily - for . their friends, do not. olloW : so completely, the Jest'of the Programnie of the lieutenant CO& lentned to the African station. , ;l'.:Thethottle is a resource which has' 'become an institution. The whispers of lage glasses . in society indi cute to Whitt ilit-extent it is popularized; flit mr silliness than thiS,resouyetc bettet ' we had roguery, for a set is a rogue, an - td eiteittSdill who deal With-{who trust the fuculties he muddles and, stupefle's. But our disposition roust not land us on a teetotal platform: - 'Those who want honest resources must look for' them in honorable hiclustry,qii ail and In trtie , ENGWII , VIE PORTU(ibEE.— X little book has been published. in PariS,„profesSing, to4each the Pm tuguese hout to converse hi. English, which contains a • Most amusing , c okleetion. eri;ors. ~One dial4ne com 'insnees thus : "Po you compose,: without doubt, ,also, some '-small discourses i r Eiig lish ? " "Nut, yet it den't_makii that Som: exereises." yNiou speaTk, English al wiiis?" `:Sometimes; - thoUgh : i ,flay .it yet.", "'Yon jest, • you doe's expreSs you Self vet 4 y Among the anecdotes is the following:. "One eyed as• I aid against a Men which had good eyes that he saw - iietter thait him. The party was accepted. l'had•gain, over sid:the One' eyed; why - .I see ~ you' two. eyes, and you not look me who due:';' Here, is thi last paragraph of the' preface "WC:expect then. who the little book (lOr 'the .care, what wrote,' hint, and' for her typographical motion) that may bet : worth ,the aeeeptatiou of the studious persons; and especially„ of the Youth;' at which we dedicate him par " SPECIAL NOTICES. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, TI EASURER'S DEPARTMENT, rummy/axe/lA. September 15,8057. - NOTICE To. BONDFIOLDERk At a meeting of. the Board of Directors, held on 4th instant, the following' preamble and resolution Wert, adopted: If hercazi, Numerous applications have been made to this, Company from the holders of the First and Second Mortgage Coupon Bonds to convert the mime Into the Registered General Mortgage Bonds, dated July 1, 1867; therefore be it • .I?,lved, That the Treasurer be, and he in, hereby In ntructeelp cause public notice to be given that thin Coin pony is now prepared to exchange its Registered Bonds, secured by a general mortgage upon the line from Phila delphia to Pittnhurgh, of the estate, real and personal, and corporn to franchises therein mentioned, dated July 1,1867, for the First and Second Mortgage Coupon Bond, of said Company, on the road between Harrinburg and Pittsburgh. An}further information can he obtained on application at thin office. -THOMAS T. FIRTH, sel6-30t - 4 Treasurer. sow. NOTItiIE ANNUAL MEETING 01? 'l'l IP. .0— Stec} holders of the CALDWELL OIL COMPANY, for the election of officers for the ensuing year Will be held on WEDNEsDAY, October 16th, 1867, at 12 o'clock 31, at Ow office of the Company, No. 218,1 , j Walnut ntrect. Speciat Aoticein hereby given, that at the above meet ing, It y ill be, determined by a vote of the majority of the Heck of the Company, that the capital thereof and the par amount l t ind M v i amlueo will hbaen e a r e pr o enti n c g h a n ina edt r o i t3 su o c f h t a h n e stock shall deem advisable. CHARLES M. SITEII, Secretary. Piiii,An.‘„ Oct. sth, 1867. oc3-10',3 OFFICE RES HAJTE MINING COMPANY, NO. , 3M WALNUT STREET, P - Septenibor if. 18517. Notice is hereby given that all stock of the Resolute Mining Company, on which instalments are due and on paid, is hereby declared forfeited, and will he mold at public auction on THURSDAY, October 11th. 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, at the office of the Secretary of the Corpora tion, according to the charter and by-laws, unless previ ously-redei med. By eider of the Directors Belli to oclel B. A. HOOPES, Treasurer. sekr THE INDUSTRIAL HOME, CORNER OF THE Ntreet and Columbia avenue, in open for the RdllliFEloll of (Me froth twelve to eighteen genre of age, who 11.1'e neglected or decanted by their pareutA, and who need the ekelter and imtnllction of a Chri.dian home If the public will sustain this imtitution, many girls may be kept from evil, and made roipactable and ucef al women. Contributions may be sent to JAMES T. SHINN, Trea curer, Broad and Spruce streetc. nodd-rptf BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYE.—THIS SPLENDID Hair Dye is the best in the world. The only true and rerfret Due—llaruller , e, Reliable, Instantanemo. No disappointment. No ridiculoos tints. Natural Black or Brou n. Remedies the ill effects of Bud Dues. Invigorates the hair, leaving it soft and beautiful. The genuine ie aigned 'WILLI ANI A IIATCIIELOR. All others are ind. tatione, and 5110111 d be avoided. Sold by all Druggista and Pet 111111,Tc. Factory 81 Barclay street, New York. BEWARE lA , A COINTERFEIT. del-I,ln,wlY me. 'WOMAN'S MEDICAL com,rm . : OF PENN -9-he Introductory to the Eighteenth .kn mud Sc, aion of this Sehnol will be delivered by Isaac . Con ley, M. D., Professor Principles and Pl'aeliee 01 .Mt dicme, m 1 ED , ESDAY, the. Nth inst., at -1 o'clock P. M. at the College lii fluting, North t:oiNge AVelele and Twenty-second street. The public ate invited. oc9-vit," ANN PRESTON, M. 0., Dean. r OFFICE OF TILE LEHIGH COAL AND NAY!. gation Company. Octob,:v sth, 1847. The Stockholders of this Company are *.'e,l' to c... 11 at the Office; ad soon ne. toe:ible, and obtain 1 coPY 0 •circah.r eNtending to them BEE privilege of upon attain :Trine, to the new Loan aln.:t to he I:Nned, and also containing iinpol tent general information. oe7.tit, SOLOMON SHEPHERD, Treaeu, or. ger uNIVEI:spr Y OP tSANIA, MEDI CAL al , PART M . 2..) 1).67 The regular lectures cif this aen.ml ,lAir.itee MONDAN , tictob r lAth, and centiiv:,l mail the tiroc ci ?larch. Fee the 1-111 stars, Till. ' 17. RiP;Eit!-1, Dean Medical Farad . v. wt , OF F1(;1; '1111.; DELAWARE CI) 1.1. (OM" pony, No. Walnut Street. 26th, 1807. oe Stockholder+ will nn et at he CompnnY',l orlic , . at 12 o'clock,on 11.5 i .the twenty , ichth day of Octolicc i eat, to confirm .010 COaVt'y ant t) ci rCtil eqnt,...itn:tte in It. WiIITE, WI V OEN 11) OFFICE OF '.UIE FRANKLIN FIRE ANCE COMPANY NY. Vim.% ileum Detain r 7th, P-A•i. At a meeting of the Board of Dir. et thin dAY; ,ellii-1,111111:11 Dividend of Si: yet. Cent., And an extra Divi dend of Ten per Cent., ,vas declared on the Capital St,ck. payable to the 6tockholderk or their legal repr,kentatiye-.. on and after the 17th instant etc ' oe9-101: J, W. M,:ALLISTER, pru kW,e , DIVIDEND.—TiII; DI R O ECTPS or T 1 I I; Ziti Petroleum Company have declared dividend of TWO PER CENT on the Capital Stock, clehr of ri,tat,• tax, payable on and after the 17th inst., at the on eof the l'ompany, 218 Walnut etreet. Tyanefer book., to clo , k , at 3P. M., 9th open lOth. maw EDWARD P. BALL, Secretary. Pi.; 1..% 1:1 lA. OCAONT Sill, 1367. • INSTRUCTION., AIMERTON'S ADVANCED CLASSES, IAL' Lt.:UST J J , treet, int,nd,l for Ladies who have Lett School, but ho arc detireud of p.t.reuint; one or me,.e Brant:hos of Study. lhe 'Fenn mottnnenres on Monday, Qctober 1b , 37, . Application -Cray be made et . . ,',33 South Fifteenth atfeet,--- 11 , 1Y„sdi . `(,t, York Road Station, North Pennsylvania Railroad. 'fhe ,cFsion will commence B , .!ptember (.I , culara may taf outmi.d at thu Jay Cooko Co., 113 South Third Htreot, or aoicio..tif,g tot, inakert ,- .v.m P. 0., Montgomery county. Pa. auultoc3l! LA'T'IN -- AND T.1r , :111.• Schools and Families. Eve.ning Cla, ,,, ea•Por Ladten and Gmitica.en. lh.ultuisor /1.11/EN. . . Applicationd will 1,. rveeived nt Mr.. JANE 11. 4 , MILTON'S Bonk Str, , r, 1';44 Client of otrkkot [(JAL; ENi AND E.NOLI:iII Sl I{ool. FOR j young 111. n and 80y,,, , nth and 10xwet I.anguag4.4 Depart, went *l5. P. - E.NJ. KENDALL, A. 7.1., Prindpal. TILE ENOLIS.II, CLASSICAL AND MATHEMATI. Int , t.itute.- A Schad Doy:i, No. 2 tjcuth Merrick. ,trett I Wcet Penn Square), reoperw Nionda.Y. Sip). 9, v. ith increnstd advantageti for a li..aLted number of t'upiL. JOSEPII DA'. ISDN, Principal. 2at• DIN V.11'1; h 4.4.1( RA. FOR BOY:3 THE I'l (ILADEI, Inetitnte, N. E. corner CheAtnuf. and Eigh• - tenth ..!rett.‘ tntrAn,e un Eightctlith etreet, will re-c pen rt NIO:,DA 7..n.l.ptcnther L. BARROW.% Prinripnl. VI 188 MAR? E. 'I'd!PI"NILI , J(E-01. , ,.1 FIER LKIL Englieh and ,'renclt fi.,arding and Day `school l'otan; Ladio, at lell Ulf F..3'rN Philadelphia, )n liepteraher Eth. For circular d apply t tho •ehuol. aaal.4-2n2 TIIE ARCH STRJIET CIT. :COI'. vouNu I.lldie;2, 1145 A. - ch et.:eet„ will re-cpeu m 3 3.IONDAY, iepteiuber Kb. aut"..2.n5 Mies L. :Tr. BROWN, Principal. `iI;'OAZDA Chemical Advice, Report, Drns inge, &c., on the aria and 'actor(n, Ij2l Marshall ntrcct. VI }SS F. T. BROWN'S ACADENII FOR YOUNG Ladieo, No. 1003 Spring Garden dtreet., will re-open on ItONUAY, September 9th. tua4.2mo VI R. V. VON AMSBERG HAS RETURNED FROM EU. LY rope, and reeumed hie Tenons by October L t, 1E47. Andreas 25.1 South Fifteenth street. THE PULAD. LPHIA RIDING SWIM,— ' Fourth Btreet above Vine, he now open for the - Fall aid Winter SCD.HOIIII. Ladies and Gentlemen e ill find every provielon for comfort and safety, so that a thorough knowledge .of thin beautiful accomplinbuient may beobtained by the most timid. Saddle tweed t ained in the brit manner. Saddle hoe and vehiclee to hire. Alec, carriagen for funerals, to care &c. se2s-lf THOMAS ukteit,;.z SON. 19111SICAL. , , '11 : E. JOSEPH .I{N'ECIIT, LATE OF; THE COMB vittoire of rfiri., hegi leo' to inform tho public that he will 11'611111e his (Latex aiteacher of the Piano on Sep. tcnitier 20. Wt.:Welke, 31arkoo Howie, Chodtnut rtreet, ithove Ninth. ocP, DIANO, VIOLIN AND TEEORY MUSIO.— LL fleman Allen, A. M , (Ave of tho Leipzig (loner-we tortoni, resume his lessons on the Pith inst. Apply at his residence, 2017, Brandywine street, or at that of l'ro lessor George Allen, alb South Seventeenth st. WAND AND HINGING—MISS GARDNER, OF CI OS -- ton, pupil of Mr. AUGUST ICREISSNIAN. 'AP -017 to Proiessor George Allen, 215 South Seven street, or to Mr. HC111:111 Allen, :,?.17 Brandy wine street. sell lin. IANO. I—Aieil Elizabeth and INT h!H :Julio. Allen will reennie their on,- Itith ,nk•t. A irbly ut thu renideneo of Prof. Geoll.e Allen, 215 South Seventgruth etreet. cell he VI d CA (IL WO 1,1.;0111 . V/ II•L RETIN:N FR iM ill Europe and II 41111111; lIIN loemen, by Uitobee 11th. A - ddreFe No. i'6•lc, nsth Tsrtifili etrcut. • 00,41 - VI Al' AM E E. SEILER WILL RESUME lIER 'PEACH cII ing t f Singing, Harmony atrd, the Plano :2,ept.:•mber ;?•,(.r 1 . A pply at IMO Qhcetn ILL streeti egle.",in* • VI R. M. 11. CROSS WILL RETERN• FROM 1111 ROPE I n and rcemne hiu Lemons by October 7th, 113137. Addreve, (101 Race (treat, ectl,tf ~21GNOR P. RONDIN ELLA lIAVI RESUMED lIIS o•si Hinging Leedom at hie cceidence, No. alki South 'Mar „ceentli etrect. oc3.:lnno PE Boy E, too SPRUCE STREET, HAS RE- Hulled her leen 'us in Piano and Singing. ec7 6t. LA GRASS , PROFESSOR or PIANO AND tp. 2029 Winter 9treet. °aim' ALLAD 'SO GING AND PIANO. -TIMMAS AND GEORGE BISHOP. El S. Ninetnenth ev.20170 DANCEING. 'L "14•"11ARINI'S FASHIONABLE DANCING w. Dlimy, A'.l II kI,L, Broad street, below Walnut , Sip nor MARINI'S t;i:1148eli will col.thience Monda..,•, Oct. 14tb, th.! above 11 all. Dap+ of tuition for %I 1,1.4.1 and :Mueff , rv, Monday nnd Wechicoday, fr atn 4 P. M.; • tlk.n.k to 13 r .M. For ;,arti,.11!!.. , ,E, Ja• hitti r at Ac:Ldkony, or at Mr. Ant.b..;'.i .ti Hoot rtrevt. erxNty !RADIO VII izc. 000 FI ENO PATE:NT METAL ROOFING. Tbie Metal, 4113 It ROCallg, le NON-CORIIO9I7M, ro tubing pl,int. It it olderimi, mid !at go alioobs, ro niirivrt len , than half the time of tin in rooliag building; n• railroad care, In linime tank t.r0.11-tuho, chrte ate, 61e., c., or n/..y.mtiele rem:army, to he air or 10($ ±quilre' ruvrof roof h‘lcee :shwa llr2 tee: of ah..‘mt, tin to ,6•er FlC and only len feet of patent meta!, OFE, 114 North Sixth Silva, Phthtiloolft. MV . 2ItIII fl - OALT.--2.F00 E,IVERP(Y)I, ulO, 2(nl.,,acke Finn Salt, nilcr t and ler I! alo by W•'+'t''?R. , STAN Cc CO;; 123 Walnut, CURWEN STODDART & BRO., 450, 152 and 454 North Second Street, Announce their (porting of AUTUMN AND WINTER CLOAKS, CHILDREN'S SUITS AND LADIES' DRESSES, On Wednesday Next, October 9th, HP. 0c7•3t4 ------- 1101 CHESTNifT E. M. NEEDLES & CO. Invite attention to their Firetchwe Stock of Laces and Lace Goods, 0 Embroideries, Hdkfs, Veils,&c., To which additions will conetantly be rondo of the Novelties of the Season. I: st They offer in their g White Goods Department HEAVY SKIRTING CAMBRICS, At 30, 33, r.nd4o cent,. A Great Sacrifice. 'JARRILLS JlN,lsamo lOU 11\1 'DIA SHAWLS. GEO. 11, "X - r •JE .916 Chestnut Street, Dal received and now oxen i,i, Fall Importation of India Shawle and Searle, together with all other !chide of Shawld Also RICH DRESS SILKS, BLACK SILKS, POPLIN S, CLOAKINGS, CLOAKS, Lt n., • To which the attention of t uteneEnre invited; the gc , ds ate riirchaßed for oath and will be cold cheap. 101 CI LESTNUT STREEI E. M. NEEDLES & CO.'S, Cor, tith and Chestnut Sts. Rom Farniihing Dry Gods Echeht at th., recent depre?-ed r ricer, Shirting, Sheeting, Pillow and,Tallit Linen!, '1 able lotha and Napkins to maul', Wine ..loth, Doylico, To o'ol9 Mill Toweling, tptilt, , and 'Toilet Cover?, litankete, i lc nt y Comb, I.lncn.-.ter, Allendale, .lacqeard, and other rinrcade. is and Sheeting?, • In all qualkive and widthe, AT THE LOWEST p_vrEs. LTIN .LSraYi C) TOT IMMM VI:TWIN HALL sAJLTH SECOND STREET, .11/ are now recrlivinit their Fall and Winter importation, Daley Stylee Poplins. • Silk( aced Poplins. Plain Silk and Wool Poplins. Black and Colored f'oplin Alpacas. Black and Colored Detainee. Black and Colored Poplins. . Fancy Styles of Cloakings. 8-4 Green and Blue, Blue and White, and' dcartot and White Cloakinge. ITtii;l 6 :•r :- ! -- d i -5 . Trp .1, % 1 4 1 t -N a;1 ; • 11:5 1 .•ri • oN One lot good it UFA:: ( -- One lot fine' Ittio4la Crri.h, 14 oentit.. Two nf Bath A very large variety of fieetch and E•i-ein Diaper, at reduced price.. 4U dozen heavy re4l-bordered r l'onvele, e.•nte. :1.1 dozen large red bordered Towele, a t .22 cents. KTOKES & ID. 70'.1 trek p,treet. A° A NiLN CIAJLft 7 3-10'S EXCHANGED FOR 5420'5, ON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS. e 1-Taven 40 South Third Street, w e. 416 . • iw SPECIALTY. Tk SMITH RANDOLPH & CO, BANKERS AND BROKERS 16 South Third St, 3 Nam PhiladeiphiL New York STOqKS AND GOLD 50EGEtT i;ND SOLD ON (MAMMON, INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS,. , BIGHT & c y %,•••• • ;,.,„ BANKERS & BROKE!'`.. `80.17 NEW STREET, NEW Y WAK. Particular attention given to the pm - oblige anill cilia el all GOVERNMENT NECEREIVIES, IRA lEROA ICO STO4.9 I AN, RONDO AND IGOLID. Furinera excluelvely on Comminalon. All orders will receive our personal attention at tbi Stack Exchange Midi Gold Board LL 0,000 $6,500 AND.OTTIER SLIMS TO LOAN on Mortgage of lity property. ce7.:3V E. It. JONES, L2I %Valuta etreet.— HERR I NG,. FEATHERS, &-C• ------ —,- VEATI.IER BEDS AND HAIM. MATRESSES RENO 1 voted. Also, Feather° conetantly on hand. Factory 1311 Londpard street. eel° lm' A: a URAND 01 3 Eluvric COSTUME CONCERTS. Drat appearanc. , thid Beason of UDOPE 11ABEIZIANN , WU° redpectf tiny announced TWO GRAND CONCERTS, On the Evenings of 15th and latl, Oetober, HORTICUI.I URA L BALL. AP, Wed b) dOlllO of the principal Addista of this country, who will appear in tlelf:Cti0118 iron: POl ULM< I'N.P'Ar3 1N COSTUME, Particulars will be given in the public press during the ;cook, • ocrsit. Lp:A it OF ..• • —CARL S'ENTZ - . . - - ------- II ORTIcuI, T II R A L II AL L . GRAND MA's INt E, By CARL BENTZ'S ORCIPEriTRA of Forty Performer 9, EVERY, up 1 RSDAY ArrEitrq icp ' "(Contruencingli)otobe II r 3, 18671, DireCtOr t, aol 3 o'clMu ndul i.Tek. 'Llohn r. Juan Louie, \ neallnt, M I4C r M ..., .......„ F ooictv. • SINGLE ADM4SSION, 50 CENTS. • , Package of I 'I Ickota far *I. To be had nt Boner ,Cl. UCH. Music Stc're, 11e . ... Cuicetnut idruct i and et 00 dyer, .•0e25-1m) , • . RISLEY'S CONTINENTAL NEWS SEATS To all places of amyeem ent may bo had ituY ovenlvg• mh29.11 ,BLIND TOM'S LAST APPEARANCE, Friday Eveping; Qctober HOWIL JULTu[ AL IiBALLL. A kw more Eeeerved Seats - can be had atlU3 ARCH Ptrell and 54 North FOI ACTH etreet. Tickete. 50 cente. Iteeerved Seat!, 75 centa. 0e32.t. CC/NOE - UT HALL, CiIESTNUT ntreet, above TNJELTI'II. For a nlm¢t 11DR; only. ennimeneing on • NIDA octoh , :r 15th, und'uvery '4iglit attar until further notice, and on W - Et,DAY“ -and SATURDAY . AFTERNOONS, at. 2Ri The wonder and marvel of the age. Al lig nideout and Divine. Thu APOCALYrsn Th.. Book of Revulation inwertled. aitE VISIONS Of Si'., .101 IN PRESENTED TO -EW, _ :d • .Frotn deenn by the celebrated French nrtiat, Guetavo Dore, and the most idninent :fttbd,sin - tile country and Ent op,. 'Fifty evh.1,4114 defr tont, repre:entleg, whet Ht. John runt when a door in heaven rise opened, an de, verioed by hint in the Book of Revelation, m , evelation, co „,„ c h, F with the Vituon of the Seven Golden Candice:cm, and ending with the viAolei or the DAY OF .16D1tMENT. THE RIGHTEOUS ISCENDIIG TO,HEAVEN, The wicked deee,nding into THE INyr9 om LESS PIT, Viewt , of the New derniodent, the Future Horne of the Claktian— A Street in the New Jertothon—The RIV UR OF LIFE AND TREE OF LIFE, Golden l'avelsonto—Magnitirent Palaetlr, with Jeweled Goluning and Gilded I honer the whole forming o Keene at I'NI'AItALI.F:d.F:D It ecetning to the be-hold& one perfect lanze of glory. I;r7 i'fICE.--There rebreacintatb , ty. which haw: filled the lot geet halls in all the cities et thin ere,ntry with the nOet relined and intaligent in the eoitniinity, Placed la fele tlrc piddle by the ri .Ineet the t;..st end. rent dlt ineii of ALL DENOMINATIONS. They have been produced up di a ~A{, of Magnificence and liplender never before attenipti:d, at a c , , , t 1:f , eier I''ols.'l)l"lllol..thAND DOLI.AhIi, by that ;It. , e minent Artie!, Dannuatt {Wilmot, Et.l., o..ncete lien, el the Vi,i9lhiol 'at. Jo!.tt have borne 0 , ,t no, eh,hlll , •li . t he Ow lit.,e. A Itarni,, this city. author of "Bar n !me Rie. , lati.4l,” Wm. thy, "vi,lote• would nob.; the tine,t, (In:win/to in the world.'' And in order that the entire co aniunity fel enabled to Oh w there le•iinlifid and irettr',etive r,. , ehtotioll,, the ria. of ALMISSIUN ' I,) ALL I , A.P:rs Or THE HALL 18 a' PLACIU , TWENTY-FIVE (..ENT!3. Vn It,•••ar, dfioato. 1:N111111'110N WIIIINI:r;11.1Y and 8.1"1 v. 1111.•- ad ta itt,A c• 10.•• ..•.d2. 1)0 , , t (qadi. I:lTning, at 7 ; • n•a 1.,.•,• a•low . do , •••• t'l 4.1.1,211 t iCh• C -. " linif,n Cr.; i..n in nil:. - .141 pi. att,,,u, n t 11.11, tit r j;•.!, _A_ (J . I P?1 ) . - . 1.A.;: :' ;4I: , :1 4 1.!: :3- 4-41 fl ts LAS: Pl,/.1,)1::%1 la: I:L.A4 I'.II',ISTENSI: is t.I.ET Tr.or cAiti). 1, rm. BLAcK ' (,:fh n. the 11 ...weer.% t 1 n to MIAI7.XII" 6,4 , tor I titot, IMII eatirjactory IILAXIC CROOK. jr, on,. r. c,k haw. 11 .. ;.V: 41 ?, iihdrk.ua to: the prt , ... Lit. /I/ to t to:•nnyellivnt, to ADNITRIN(. Tl.lol' 4 ANbs eßuNri) Ti AT PALATIAL ELI (2F: TO WITNE6S FIIC GORI.EOI'S NATURE AND ART • ' IN CLASSIC GISOUPIs:(i : !! 'IILMLNSI. 1.11 V: NEW BALLET. . ile i1iv.,,,,,.„..f„..r„,.....t...." 'tpr , .. l7, . ;i.1.:.. I'l - I'll A, MI,Lr iii...i - ry r.K4; , .:- VILLE. A.YIONENO. P.'S. BAPTISTA. NoTiri:.- bi.• t.i.,1 trairi fro:1 ~11 o.,1:,oloink; r itie , r.,cl 1... , 1, , ill havr oloplia ti .e to r007,-y oo 17 i v L.,...1.,,, , ,,.. thi• AC:sti(lEO • , li 311.1Nie :OA WitrierP Ili I. Gt./I:0E11LS 1.1 • El. TA( LP, rt.d ro '; L. th, !,1 home by 11 ~',1,-.0.k. TILE PRICES UP ADVISSION FOR IHE LAS 1' 'LW', . •"' . - ' 31ATINL:E3 V II I. 131 ,Il part> rl tic,::Fo. No rft,r. , :cl r o for -al. ,vory ti P. i...r...d",.atr ris d, y in n..1..141.1 , .., Lo.o . 712 '..ryo - t;lron trif E.W (;!lESTNI;'f STREET Vi Y EVENING. (frt. Lon' WEEK OF NITDOCII. ill al pear in hi, bTilliAtit hq,..r.enh;:v,n \ FE!..IX, in :VI,. s4litlivr , ..• 4 ”f".•iV. 417 . 21 , TIIE:WON DLit, Ported STOCK PANI. NTTSDAY . . Hno ti FRIDAY- Mg. J. E. kit - I:IN.', 111 E 6,ITrIWAy AFILH,NrI FA:4ILI Arr. P. P. I:WWERS p IkrALst. srl:iirl"r IIEATIII - 1, N. t V:" fit 1:4 qt 11115 • % V. due ;, 1 , le I•• 7, • , h.• ". "• I I Attl 1. VI i-r lil, ti ,, , ti,l, 21. 1 h.:141 .!3 r 1 \ • 'l; i 1.17 1;%• - r-'.1Ti; tiF o“:T'i:]':f I I.l'tit.,'", • ...13 Ai I:S....JOHN DREW'S Al:Un vst . a • I wilu, . c!''. Fir?ST OF INN ALLEN INTONLSI).Vi AN]) I:‘'EltY Third 1'a.11. , ,te D. ant-. u ith , ceiwr, Ni y br.ll.l..f:N. \117 , 3 h"..11 itEI.,NOI,D3 in her oririnal par: of KATY 74.1(71 - IRE. author, I:I I MUND 7,CoN Eh, TEitit.A.Nut; (1 , 1:) AN. Aided be the Fill 11:1DAI --Fa:NE.IIT 1!`: , 11t. F.11,t 1N In prep.:7:l.o.D, EW 1 PEILADELPIII.A tit.P.tt,bacw v TusisoN H. PAR:-. , .0NS LEL S. 5ANF0RD.......... GREAT StAXESS OF TC.RIj)N k CO,'S pEN FOR TUE SEAS ,ti, EVIL LiURN, FP.ANK MORAN,' • W. III:DW(A.T1.1. • C. And the Largr•lt and M(ST TALENT.i:D•compANy IN Tili3 WORLD. Seats can bo Et2ctired in 'udillnco Clistrgo. • 7 )00ra open r.t. i o'clork. l'erfol 1.14.11 1/'1011.5 of CA'lo6' pISTORI.-ACIDEMY Or al SIC L Director..... .' anAl , hom the honor to annoonoo that MADAME ADEL.% 1.1,111 Kr.-vroai will RNo a 61inrt 'noon of 11V1 NIGHTS ANTI "..1/ MATINEE, collllllVlleing on MONHAY October M. rho 81'118011 Willinna:;ur:a."lto'' ceia tra:cdy ot. LLIA.IIIEI'II, in •,‘ hich M arloae w - 11 , o.etain tee — a o odnrah illlp,:r10111:tion of ELIZABETH. bcrn Th, 'WU pany of 11,1rae. 1:-FTotahesnthch •11.3.-• nlyntrd by hew Arlin G+. Ala '.ag them 14 Sig. • 10 uttr 01 tl4 fey. w. 1.1.1, 1/M11:',1,10. Actin''perlf 12. • r..tt It.,ly,hate aidad the hiehe6t di ., tination Ire the 0 eolhnlrc o f hi, per ,oulf 00110, nod 1010 1% 111 111 pe nt all,' 111 l'!Iili1,11-11,11i, ill the Barr :taut ek . 'e Et SEN. See,wl la. \IA STE ,% It I'. ' l ' lll d 011.11, • , • Alll2l AN ' E , E 141 E. ' Fhe Edl . .criptia, '0 "On nt tivo nivhtswillon MON 11 - % , October.l4. 'MEW ELEVENTH STREETOPERA ESC., V ENT I I rtreer, ahoy,: CIiEbTLILIT. b EVA M !(E4 CL'. CARNCRoSS & HiNEY , S Nr3TRELS, (IREA'I STAR TROI; PE ) T lAN/I:Ln. Contintwil vuec..l3 nf,he Ilemitiftil lll,}:RA1I TRIP AROI; N 'PIE: WORLD. lieurnd NATI* of tit peat. ~ r ighial (At° FcorplNs ( I CoKl.'PriEjA, By the Gram' le J. L. UARNCItoSS, .Manager. R. F. SIMPSON. Treasurer. ceLt T LAI) E It 1 A C CU 6, . Comer TENTH itul lA LLOW apt„ railer a New 31 anngereent, will. arum icr Ow. Winto , .: 6e93011 EARLY PNOCTOREC This building Inn. Leon entirely renovated, :.Ite•ed 4aa; Improved with NEW MODES OF INGRESS ANTI E3S. both nu 1 Until 1011(1 A SPLENDID STUD OP` TR/0 14,1 a DOUSES. A COl5l PA NY UN E THE UNITED STATES. A titiMIIILV BUIL] /I NOS. 61(;):01t 13L1'17. RENVELL &SON Ring of MegielanF, Pri nen of Ventrdoqub ,. . ,, . World et I aullerlcd et't tio Voice. (heat Indian Itadirt The Laughable Alinstrol , and the Ilhuti. LVENIMiti at 7i 'y NV EON and SATUICD:C{ AI.'IERNOkK4i3 lit :4 o',loelc. Adnibision 9G ccutts; t.,hildrta lu cont,3l Reserved Sc.t.te 50 co•idF. 1)1...0.1" FENNSYLI7.- in FINE ARTS, 4.141 A ACADtY CIIF,STN ET, lIIK,ve TENTII. OPen from 2 A. 1,1. to i; 'Fienjtunit, eSt , wgrent Pi lk c l titro . ox . C ' llßlST RIIJ ECTEI? eta' on ~.xhibitiou. 1.1 1 0X , s ANIEftWAN VA. EVE3ty p.:N -• SATURDAY API:TR . :4O(IA. GREAT C . O.NIBTNATIoN T1;01.11.9 , 3. In Grind Bull e ' 4. Ifulopclree Danrce., Vymnunt l'f.ntVwiilive, &c. y! I ENTS 0 1. 'r P:oc 31, tape anut,t J. 1.A., TILLES,O3.A.PHIO St/ rrtmr.Anw. W11.1.1/01 of Prussia yesterday arrived at Ansley. FnANets JOSE.PIi refuses to change the Con cordat. GA1111;A1.1/1 has issued an address denouncing Rata zzi. A 1;AT1 f.p has taken place between the Turks and Montenegrins. Fenians still cause much anxiety to the authorities In London, the Fenian, was burled in publin on. Monday with a great demonstration. TIIE cadres of the French army have been en larged, but the effective has not been increased. Lott' MoNch. and family have gone to Ottawa to reside permanently. Tlll. Yellow fever interments in New (Mean a on Monday numbered 50. Tin , . Menomonie Indians are quiet, and are following their usual occupations. Japanese ram Stonewall arrived at Bridge town, liarbadoes, on September 7.th, and was to sail on the 16th for Japan. IT is reported that Gen. PriM, the Spanish re volutionist, has arrived in this country it ,2o.(filito. ON Sr one million pounds of tobacco were Ship ped from Richmond, Va., during the month of September. Tll WI: the usual number of petit jurors have been ordered at Richmond, to mead the proba bilities of Davis's trial. Pur.HotINT Joussos has corrected his procla : - mation of August, I5Wd, with respect to the rtl hellion In Texas, declaring it ended in April, 186 d. THE ITAtifts question has been settled. Italy is to take possession of Rome. The ',recent Pope is to remain there until his death. when the temporal power of the Pope is to cease. IT is denied that the American Minister de manded the release of Garibaldi on the ground that be was an American citizen, but he asked the government to show clemency. Tom. banking house of Stone, .'McCoy . at Independence. Missouri, was robbed on Sun day night of several thousand dollars exact amount not known. T1(17 Tennessee House" of .Representatives or ganized on the Bth. and JUItICS i•:unimer, colored, was elected assistant doorkeeper Over white competitors. The Governor will be inaugurated to-day. when hdL inaugural will be delivered. ' AT the primary Ward meetings of the Republi cans in Richmond, Va., laSt evening. Judge Un derwood, Mr. Itunnicutt and a ‘Viru R. F ill, of Massa liw-ettri. with two colored' men, were agreed c II as candidates for the State Convention. Toy I:urinals claim to have killed seventy and caught one hundred and ten at liagnarea: . The Caribaldians UM marching on Home. The Florence prCE, - i urge upon the government to an ticipate them. To / jury lists were draAvnon Monday in the Parish of • Orleans. Louisiana, under ffillitary,or ders! from the registered voters. Two humfrel jurors were drawn. of whom twenty wrre whites and the balance negrous. From thiS .nuniber _rand jury is to be selected. Itereptiou of filternlnn In Lowell. 130Y1 1 .a. Oct. X.—M3jOr•Gellf.l%ll. Sheridan had all enthusiastic reception at Lowell this afternobn. He arrived here at '2 o'clock, and was met by :Mayor Riehardson and the members of the city government and a large military and civic pro-;, , Aq•Aoll. and escorted to' . Monument Square, where he was 17c1C0111 4 .'d to the city, and intro duced to a vast assemblage by tlie Mayor: General Sheridan replied as follows: I think you all know I never make speeches. I regret that I have not words to express my gratitUde for these marks of approbation of lily aets, in the war. I can only sae ,that I feel highly Ilan-. tired by this reception in Lowell. I but glad to see that those who stood up for the country am. still true to their principles, and I hope :they will ever remain so. I ant glad to see that the same, spirit animates the people. General Bullet was culled out by the assem blage and said: assemblage, in honor of the soldier hero of Winchester, the Shenandoah, ks Five For, and the still more difficult command of the Department of Louisiana, speaks for itself. - He has-said-he-does-not makes speeches._ His acts 'speak for him. We shall always remember the acts of ties soldier who showed statesmanship fit to rule thJ country he has served... The lion. Henry Wilson, who was also on the platform. was now called npon by a crowd and responded as follows: ,tf 311 , 1 , 11, , ex. coati! . 11 : am glad Lo see you here' to-day, to welcome one of the foremost. it not the foremost, Generals of the re bellion. You have paid that respect and adniira lion which is felt by - the loyal men of the whole North. It was his fortuneto take part in" the' field. am: to win distinguished honors. and it was reserved for him at a later day, iu New Orleans. where another General had shown at an earlier date a capacity to govern traitors. to show that he was no less a statesman than a soldier. Be fully met the requireutents of the hour. Ile has endeared hinv.ell to the, liberty-lovirg . citi vel36 of the country. Never till they forget his ride to Winchester. his gallantry at Five Forks. and his more recent distinguished services. will they ceasr.: to love Sheridan for his fidelity to the country. General Sheridan. after making a hurried in spection of the. Fair in progress, was eseoi utrl back to the depot. and took a special train for Boston. This evening a banquet was given hint by the Prior Club. He leaves for the West to-mor:ow morning. A Letter front the Japanese Commis. C11:1311111 The Secretary of State has received the follow ing: Yvorm, Japan, Mir, Third Year Kimo.—The undersigned halve the honor to inform you of their safe arrival in Japan, after a pleasant voy age. on the2Gth of July. Their warmest thanks are due and are hereby tendered for the kind re ception tho - met with in the United States, and for the attentions extended to theM during their stay in America. They cannot help adding that the speedy and successful result of the mission with which they were intrusted was undoubtedly due to your kindness and benevolence. The un dersigned also beg to present their compliments to the Hon. F. Il'. Seward (Signed ONo Trroo“ono, 111:vrsmoTA, JUDAY.A. To the ion. W. H. Seward, Secretary of State New York City . Items. NEw YoRI:, Oct. 11:—A large quantity of Coun terfeit fives on the National Bank of Michigan were passed last night in Brooklyn. H. McCauley, a burglar, was to-day sentenced to twenty years in Sing-Sing. SecretarS . McCulloch has written a letter to go to Europe by the Boston steamer to-morrow, to counteract the effect of the prejudicial reports of our financial coeditlon. The body of the missing fireman has been found in the wreck of the steamer Dean Richmond. Callicott and others pleaded not guilty at the United States Court, to-day, in Brooklyn. From New York. Oct. Bth, 3P. M.—The PO4 says special despatches have already been received in NViighington from Pennsylvania, virtuallv con ceding the success of the Radicals in that State. No 8.1 I 1.1% . AY Six.Enuts.—ln Germany, some of the railways are new constructed without wood. The rail Is made about nine inches high, with a broad flat base, which rests on a well-pre- Tared bed of ballast, and when properly placed is further supported by a layer of gravel. Thus •constructed, the jerky motion of a train, occa sioned by numerous cross-sleepers, Is done away With : the hammering sound becomes a steady continuous roar, the longitudinal bearing is dis tributed over a greater distance, and the need for repairs occurs butrarcly. A PICTUEE SWIM—The Coraliill tells this story: "The late W. Hope, the wealthy banker of Amsterdam, bought a picture as a Rembrandt, and gave two thousand guineas fqr it. Finding ;that it did not quite fit the frame, he sent for the ,carpenter to ease it a little. Whilst watching the operation he remarked how wonderfully the pie lure was preserved, considering that it was nearly two hundred years old. 'That is impossible,' said the carpenter. 'This wood is mahogany— and mahogany had not been introduced into Europe at that time.' Mr. Hope burnt—the pic ture.' • LRIGKVfI IN ENGLAND —Among the deaths registered in England in the year 186 there were 21 men and 68`woruen abovti.a hundred years old, ) viz.: 5 men and 25 women, aged 100; 4 men and • 15 women. aged 101; 5 men and 11 women. aged 102; 3 men and 4 women, aged 103; 1 man and women, aged 109;.2 men and 4 women, aged 105; 1 woman, aged 103; 1 man and .1 woman, aged 110, Opera-Glass Annoyances. (front the Nett York Commorclal Adve,tber.: Opera-glasses are as much misplaced in the hands of impudent people as are fire-arms in 4 the hands of fools. And yet it would almost seem that no one possesses au opera-glass Who is not impudent. It is had enough to be stared at with the "naked eye" but when one brazenly brings to bear on you an opera glass it is unendurable: No well bred perspn does it, however, and that is one Consolation. It is done only by those overstocked with im pudence. A friend of mine a few evenings since, at one of our places of amusement, , adopted an expedient to protect his wife, sitting by his side,.•from one of these impu dent bores, which o pinved effectual. On the other of the house .sat an effeminate looking young man, mbre gaudily than tastefully dressed, with an opera-glass, which, after surveying the audience and selecting some lady, he would clap. to his eyes, and stare at her for minutes. Ile finally brought his glass to bear 'on my friend's wife, who, noticing this action, became cuite 'un caSy and nervous. Finally my friend took the card with the word "Taken" printed on it, which lie found on his seat, and held it up directly in front of his wife. The boor looked a moment longer—and but a moment, and then he turned his gaze elsewhere. Those in the immediate vicinity saw the action and enjoyed it greatly. Boor, however, finding that lady was "taken," sought others, and labored assiduously with his glass all the eve ning, giving no attention whatever to the peil'onnarlee, Dektrindlon of an Old Church. The rat/ iffall Gazette says: "It has been found necessary to pull down one of the few ancient churches now remaining in North Yorkshire—the Church of All Saints,Slingsby --in consequence of its decayed condition. The church is an ancient rectory, and for merly belonged to the patronage of the abbot and convent of Whitby. The old church contained a cross-legged eiligy of one of the Wyvills, - who, tradition and I)odsworth man uscripts say, slew the famous snake of Slingsby, which is reputed to have been so terrible that. the highway . 'to Mahon was diverted one mile to the south to miss the snake's lair. In a tomb below the efligy a skeleton was found, the Bony hand of which wore a splendid and massive gold'ring, having the death's head and cross-bones picked out in colored enamel, The tomb, the skeleton and the effigy have been preset Wed, and will be restored to the chancel of a beautiful Norman church which is to be reared on the old site, of which the lion. DIrS. Howard will lay the foundation stone. Froth below the foundations of the old church coins of the Manse Towns Confedera tion (twelfth century) 'Were dug up.• Coat Statements. followin:z ,IIOWS the hu,i,tr• of the Lehiah Coal and :Cfr. i'_ , ;tlion Company for the creek and E•ea.on end- I n •.,67 Week, ' Total. Tor Y. Clirt. Tons. Cwt. Summit, M ineo .. .. ... .....12,: - .61 1/1.1 2i.11,509 (li' 11 ,,, ,r0 111111.31ine5...'. .. ... ..... .... 1,313 03 „Tiihn Laub'. k & Co .... 352 15 W. T. Carter & C 0...., ......... 755 12 10,311 N Spriniz Mo'arith mines....:..' 38.1 10 4,r,r.5 oT Th.noko-.111.1:16,:. C 0............ r.. 42 17 • 9,010 0,7 Honey Drol: Cold Company.. 2,067 05 34,628 tra "German Penna. Onnpany..... 225 04 7,425 03 Mt:Neal (...al and Iron Cu 75 00 4,051 115 Knickerbocker, . . • . 1,494 1G North Na110y,.... ....... .... .... 82500 De1ati0..............' . ....... . ~... 1,140 10 ,' alters, Brothers & Co--. .... 52 10 `'.luunt. Etna C0mpany.,...... 202 03 1,212 14 Trenton Coll Company ...... 154 14 Th , frawe Coal Corhpany 03 10 1,408 04 . \\ . 'illiame'St, Herring.... .... . 139 00 A. Pardee ..%:, Co 2,19915 57,811 01 G. D. Markle a:, Co 1,390 17 41,603 04 W. S. Ilaloey & Co.. ...... .... 69 05 3,566 (r 2 Back 31ountain Mines ..... .... 1,120 18 32,004 15 ,I..aip, NVitiss Jr, C 0............. 753 02 28,145 15 Coxe. 117. there .Sr Cu.......... 580 04 9,03 S 03 Elienatle Coal Co 1,276 07 2-!..,3.59 02 Stout Coal Company.... 664 13 16,762 14 Darleitth....... .... ..,.... 1,035 13 -. 16.1172 10 liilillaiol 450 11 •11,111513 .M.tint Hall• ' as 10 . - . Upper Lehi 3,11 Coal Cu..., 649 06 10,956 ('2 .Newreirt. Coal Co • 3,533 15 Warrior 1tun............ . . .... .... 2,056 10 Parri-h ..`.: Th0ma5............ 6.50 14 9,54-0 05 ..... .... : - .151 01 .6,360 12 Lehi:4h and Susquehanna.. , ....'- . ' 2,933 05 l',ermunia ................. 11+3 11" " 0,663 1:, Frank1in.......... ..... *.... •• • • 5,501 lit) Ataienried............:- ..... 1.151 01 6,292 ory Wilke-lirre ........ ...... 3.3-14 12 61,045'17' Italtimtore ...... .......... ..... 200 0e) . 14,104 to I:nion ... ... ........ ... . ..... . . . .... 5,323 03 95 06 6,093 18 EN - et - hard Cord Co. ..... .. .... 2,525 16 Valley Coal ('ompany. .... 189 03 Jolla Harton..... - . .......... ... • 206 15 Other Shippert..... .... . ... .... ' 490 02 5,905 15 Total for week 1:3,110 Or, 733,361 05 Ci,rie,pomliug time hid year-1:5020 Od ~ ., 0 5,910 17 Decrea-e 19 68,559 12 The following =hones the shiomeut of coal over the Delaware. Lackay.anna and Wei.tern Railroad for the week: ending Oct. 5, compared with the same time Shippcd N.rth Shipl.cd Suuth 37,335 05 Fur curret-I,oliding time 11.1 voar: NVeek. Year, TOll.. CWI. TOIIS.O Wt. . 8,69.5 14 326,4 W 03 .21,720 00 91 , ,000 10 Shipped North Sb!iptql South liervlce IMPOB.TATI9NS. ileported for the Philadelphia EVeUIAg CAIBIRIEN—Bark Linda, Ilesvitt-476 hhth.. eugar 49 tee do John .7da:•on & Co. ITIOVEPIENTS OE OCEAN STEARIERS. TO ARRIVE. MAIM. I , UOM MI DA Z, West'n . .Metrop's.Soutliton..New York. Sept. 24 Europa Glasgow.. New York Sept. 25 Nova Scotian ....Liverpool .Quebee. Sept. 2t3 fulled Kingdom..Glargow..New York Sept. 27 Etna .... ..... ....Liverpool..New York Sept. 27 Tripoli ...........Liverpool..New York Sept. 28 New York. ...Southampton..New York.. Oct. • 1 PPennsylvania.Liverp't. .New Y0rk........0ct. 2 Worcester... .. ... Liverpool.. Baltimore - ' Oct. 2 Germania.....Soutbarnpton..New Y0rk........0ct. 2 City of Baltimore. Liverpool. .Now York . ...... .Oct. 2 Fulton Falmonth..New Y0rk........0ct. 2 Moravian ........Liverpool. .Quebec . ... ...... .Oct. 3 Persia LiverpooL.New Y0r k........0ct. 5 TO DEPART. America., .......New York.. Bremen Oct. 10 Eagle.... New York..llwana Oct. 10 San Francisco... New York.. San Joan, Nic Oct.. 10 BenryCnauncey.New York..Aspinwall Oct. 11 Alliance... ... .Philadelphia.. Charleston.. ...... Oct. 12 Cella • New Y0rk..L0nd0n...........0ct. 12 Saxonia.... ..... New York.. Hamburg . 0ct.12 Erin . ..... ......New York.. Liverpool 0ct.12 City of Boston.. New York..LiverpooL ..... . .Oct. 12 Iliberniii.........New Y0rk..G1a5g0w..........0ct. 12 Tonawanda ...Philadelphia..Savannah . Oct. 12 Stars and Stripes... Philaaa..Havana...........Oct 15 Nebrarnh a........ New Y0rk..Liverp001.........0ct. 16 Scotia ...........New York.. Liverpool Oct. 16 Morro Castle. ... ...New. York.. Havana Oct. 17 Pioneer.. ................. .Wilmingt.'n,NC... Oct. 17 Juniata........Philadelphia..New Orleans Oct. 19 BOARD OF TRADE. HENRY WINSOR, CHARLES WHEICLER, Moamar Columns. JAS. F. YOUNG, pocitimaDsaUMiduiA PORT OP PHILADELPHIA—Oor.p 14 , 1 , 14 RIBES, 0 20 I BIM SIMI, 5 90 I HIGH WATia, 11 40 ARRIVED YESTERDAY Steamer Saran, Jones, 24 hours from New York, with Inds.° to W M Baird & Co. Steamer E N Fairebild,Trout, 24 hours from N York, with mdse to W M Baird & Co. Steamer Chester, Jones,24 hours from New York, • with mdse to W P Clyde' Co. Bark Linda, Hewitt, n days from Remedios, with sugar to John Mason & Co. Tug Thos Jefferson, Allen, from Baltimore. with a tow of barges EARED C Co. CYESTERDAY. Steamer Norman, Crowell, Boston, H Winsor & Co. Steamer Mayflower. Robinson. New York, W P Clyde & Co. Steamer J S Ide, Webb, Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Steamer H L Gaw, Iler, Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Steamer A C Stimers, Knox', New York, Wm P Clyde & Co.. Bark Desiab. Gilkey, Antwerp, Woritman & Co. Schr B 0 Irwin, Atkins, Provident* Day & Huddell. Schr Jos Waples, Robinson, Georgetown, DC. do Schr J S Clark, Clark, Savannah, Lathbury, Wicker ersham & Co—not as befoardported. • Tug Thomas Jeffereon, Alla, for Baltimore, with a tow of bargee,W P Clyde .5k Co. Correspondence of the Phila. Evening Bulletin. READEN(I,Oct. 7 1861. The following boats from gm Union c4aal pawed THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADriimulA, - !VVEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9.1867. Tarr. To; -.4 L 3,1.17; Ur( Wo.k. TonC .14 ."-.! .22,(% •05 1,U2,130 11 110,415 ,14 1,144,251 13 1-, Into the Sehnylkill Canal, hound to Philadelphia, laden and consigned as follows' J bi Rine, with lumber to Simmons & Co; Ella, do to Ii Croskey & Co; Olive Leaf, do to Malone & Tay lor ; Sinnemalioning, do to &Ivo - 1U! Navigation Co; Ari7.ona, do to R WAlverton: Mary Elizabeth, to Norcross & Sheets. F. MEMORANDA. Ship Montana, Moore, from Liverpool for Calcutta, was spoken 26th Aug tat IS 8, lon 34 W. Ship Electric Spark, Leach, sailed from San Frau ciscu ult. for Liverpool. Ship Lord Lyndhurst (Br), Westgar4, front Calvitta for New York, was off St Helena 24the , Aug. Steamer Chicago (Br), Cutting, cleared at New York yesterday for Liverpool Steamer Wyoming,. Teal, hence for Savannah, at Ty bee at 12 o clock on Monday night. Steamer Palmyra (Br), Watson, cleared at N York yesterday for Liverpool. .Steamer Cuyahoga, Johnson, cleared at Newyork yesterday for Yokohama. Steamer City of New York (Br), Tibbetts, cleared at New York yesterday for Liverpool. Steamer Amsterdam (Br); Gibson, cleared at Malaga 20th ult. for New York. Steamer Ariadne, Parrish, cleared at Galveston 2Sth tilt. for New York. Steamer Cuba. Move, from Liverpool via Halifale, at Boston yesterday. Steamer Europe, Le Maire, front New York 21st ult. at Havre 7th im.t. Bark Jennie Eastman, Starkey, from Akyab via St. Helena, at Queenstown 22d ult. Brig Minnie Abbe. Fuller, r,G days from Buenos Ayres, at. New York yesterday, with hides, &c, Schr Daniel S Mershon, hence for Boston,at Hobnes' Hole 7th inst. Schr Kate E Rich, front Salem for this port, at Holmes' Hole 7th inst. haying been run into by an un known sehr, and lost her flying jibboom. Seth* Nellie Putter, Somers, hence at Danvers 29th ult. Schr F W Johnson, Marts, hence at Charleston, 7th instant. • Schr Boadicea (Br), Blamileld, from Rio Janeiro 7th Aug. at Baltimore 7th inst. with coffee. Schr J,A Parsons, Slaver, 29 days from Galveston, at Quarantine, Wilmington, NC. 6th inst.—all well on board'. Schr H G Carty, from City Point for Trenton, NJ. at Norfolk 7th inst. leaky and with loss of sails. Schr RJ Mercer, Stetser, hence at Washington 7th 'instar.t. Schrs W B McSbnin, Christy; Sarah Watson, Smith; Margaret Powell, Fenton•, Access, Moore; P Boyce, Adams; Alexander, Ireland, and A R Wetmore, Lip pimott, hence at Georgetown, DC. 7th inst. Setal. Sarah, Cobb. and J Truman,Gibbs, sailed from New Bedford sth inst. for this port—not as before re ported. Seta J Stockham, Risley, hence at Marblehead 3d instant. Seta R S Miller, Henderson, sailed from Marblehead 3d inst. for this port. Schr Bonny lees, Holt, hence at Ellsworth nth ult. MARINE MISCELLANY. Schr White Swan, at Holmes' Hole, reports: 6th inst. at .4 AM. was run. lut.o Fehr Sliver Muguet,- Watron, from Philadelphia for Boston, ears' away her foretoptnat and rigtring, fore shrouds oil, heard side, rail, hulwarks. etc; seven stanche broken, also the anchor stock and windlass i mochas( The Silver :Angnet collided with a schooner in the Sound, and lost her heat". gear. The brig Julia, at :New York trom, Demarara, re; ported having euperienced a terrinc hurricane on the Int h nit; was on tier beam ends fur two boors; 'blew the fort:topgallant suit from the gaskets; nplb. foresail and strained the vessel so badly as to came her to leak. The pot.tion of the vessel at the time was in lat 35 35, 100 .73 36. i-cbr Sarah F.iimbetle which went ashore off East DeuMs ' has beet,beet, got oti. Brig Ben; Delano, Delano. from St John, NB. for Ilavana, which out into Norfolk, full of water, will be sold to partoe' bills at that port—the purchaser to carry Oat Iter voyatte to Havana. Seer Willie Late, of Monhr , an, was run into be schr Grcynoued, Off lion Island, 3cl inst. and cut down to the water's edge. Erhr Ada F' Lowe. ashore at god:port, Mass. will prove a tc,u3 loas. She has been stripped, and about 40 bids mackerel (half her fare) were saved. — . NOTICE TO MARINERS. The wreck of one of the Fchouners which struck on homer Shells in the late dale is now Punk about 500 yards W S V from the beacon in mid.channel . Her Tilfti,:f , are alxyre water., The range lighta for the SwaAt kept strictly in range, carries you a little south of the wreck. GEO W BLUNT. LOOKING G ASSES AND PAINTINGS. A. S. ROBINSON, 910 CHESTNUT STREET, LOOKING GLASSES, PAINTINGS, Engravings and Photographs Plain and Ornamental Gilt Frames. Carved Walnut and Ebony Framee. ON BAND OH bfADE TO OP.DERI SEWING &CHINES. GEM THE BEST. Comparison the Only Test.. FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE. The first Prize at the Paris Expositioa. Making four different i,titchee, with self-adjnettng ten3iori in Ehutile. WHITNEY & LUKENS, Central Agents, or_-w e M tf4 1193 CHESTNUT STREET.E2 ITIACHINERY, IRON, a:O. pIIILADELPIIIA ORNAMENTAL IRON'WORKS. ROBERT WOOD & CO.. MnimhicturerA of CAST. wRouGHT AND WIRE RAILINGS, GARDEN AND CEMETERY ADORNMENTS, ForNTAINS. VASES, STATUARY kc.. YEA:A DAUS. SETTEES, STABLE FITTINGS. 1I RIDGE AVENUE. PHILADELPHIA, PA. 110BFRT WOOD. THOS. S. ROOT DRON E WORK. I taring fitted up our Foundry with spetial reference to tl e ::!ore elaF, of IN ork,we are now prepared to till whit onqtneer all ordere for .Bronze Casting: , of every de s, !Ono. to which the Fuhscriberi, would most re,p,‘ct f illy call the attention of the public,ae alco to their varied and exteneive 3t,s . ortment of ORNAMENTAL IRON GOODS, he largest to be found in the United State. Felli-Amsl ROBERT WOOD k CO. T. VAUGHAN MERRICK: WM. IL mERRICK. -101 IN E. COPE. QOUTIIWARK FOUNDRY, FIFTH AND WASITG -13 TON STREETS, MERRICK k SONS, it. ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS. Manufacture High and Low Pressure Steam Engines; for Land, lOver and Marino Service. Gasometers, Tanks, Iron Boats, 4:e. Castings of all kinds, either iron or braes. Iron Frame Reefs for Gas Works, Workshops. and Rail road Station', k.c Retort:. and Gas Machinery, of the latest and Most im prbved cc netruct ion. Every description of Plantation Machinery, and Sugar, Saw and Grist Mills. Vacuum Pans. Open Steam Trains, Defactators, Filters, Pumping Engines, dm Sole Agents for N. BilleuX'S Patent Sugar Boiling.Appa rants, Nesinyth's Patent Steam Hammer and Aspinwall Woolsey's Patent Centrifugal Sugar Draining Machine. Ab 11.XT R E 6.—MISKEY, MERRILL .J Thaekara, No. Ms Chertnut street, manufacturers of (:as Fixtures,L amps. Am.. Sc., would call the attention of the public their large and elegant assortment. or this Chandeliers. Prude nts. Brackets, Am. They also introduce gar pipes into dwellings and public buildings. and attend to extending, altering and repairing gas pipes. All work warranted. IOPPER AND YELLOW (METAL SHEATHING, V Brazier's Copper Nulls. Bolts and Ingot Copper. con staidly on hand and tar Tale by HENRY WINSOR Co.. No. E 52 South Wharves. TT CHEER ONE SCOTCH PIG IRON—GLENGAII noek brand, in store and for pale in lots to suit, by PETER WRIGHT S SONS. 115 Walnut street.' JO ti W tNTS. 1 WE IniURANCE AGENT WANTED—A FIRST LA class, energetic and reliable man is deeired to take charge of the Philadelphia Agency of a number one Life Insurance Company. The best of references required as to ability and character. Addrese. with references fur further information, .1. F. FRUEAUFF. Hollidaysburg, Blair county, oc7 • Pennsylvania. WANTED—IN AN IMPORTING AND JOBBING VI White Goods and Lace Douse. ft first-chuis salesumn, Who thoroughly understands the businese, and can an. d.mbtedly influen:e a large State and near trade. Also, one of like qualifications for city trade. A liberal salary to those wlio can till tho above requirements. Address, with real IMMO and references, box 2135, P. 0. 0c441 ALADY CALCULATED TO FILL ALMOST ANY poeition &eine to act as private necretarA correm ponding clerk, or collector for some reliable house; or could take the control of ionic special department. Su perior references. Addrees "C. C. 1i.," EVEMNO lirm.rnria °Mee- 0c3.12t§ GENTLEMEN HAVING BOOKS THEY WISIt Closed, or Accounts made out, can have such service performed by a competent pereou, at moderato charges. Addreas F. L. F., this Office. oci%tit' WANTED 'fo PURCHASE---A HOUSE, ON Green street, west of Broad. and East of Eighteenth streets. Possession April Ist. Address }Sox Ito. 1, Bur.t.crtti OFFICE. stating price. oeB-12t1 CANNED FR .2 FRUIT, VEGETABLES, ,1.-1,000 CASES fresh Canned Peaches; 600 cases fresh Canned Pine Apples 200 cases fresh Pine Apples, in glass ; 1.000 cases Green Corn and Green Peas; 600 cases fresh Plums, in cans; 200 cases fresh Green Gages; Mk cases Cherries, in syrup.6oo eases Blackberries, in syrup . ; 600 cases Straw. berriekin syrup: 000 cases fresh Pears, in syrup ;2,ooocases Canned Tomatoes: 600 cases Oysters, Lobsters and Clams; 500 cases Roast Beef. Mutton, Veal, Soups, &c . For sale by JOSEPH B. BUSSIER & CO., . 108 South Delaware avenue. 111IPERIAL FRENCH PRCNES.-00 CASES IN TIN X . 6 aunietorg and (limey boxea, imported and for sale by JO*. U. Bligatat CQ" 106 16outh Dclamkre avonuo. SHIPPERS , GIIIDE. For Boston—Steamship tae, Direct, BAILING FROM EACH 1." , RT EVERY FIVE D 413. FROM PINE STREET. PHTLADELrII.IA, AND LONG WHARF, liOnlON. • Mt• This line is composed or the firetchtea Steamships, ROIIAN, 1,485 tone, Captain O. Baker. ' I4AXON, 1,2. e tons, Captain S. IL Matthews. NOR MIAS, 1.9.0 , 4. tone, Captain L. Crowell. The ROMA)! from Phila. on Saturday. UCt. 1.2, at B P. M. The E 4 ANO:sofrosin lioeton on Friday, Oct. 10. at 3 P. M. There Sterimehipe pall punctually, and Freight will he received eyery day, a Steamer being iilwaye on the berth. Freight for points beyond Boston sent with despatch. For Freight •cr PaNage hmperior .accommodatlona), apply to • HENRY WENSOR & CO., my3l Ti, South D-laware avenue. THE PHILADELPHI A AND SOUiIIEBN MIX MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR LINE (SEMI-MONTHLY) FOR NEW ORLEANS, IUNIATA. 1.210 tom. Captain P. F. Rorie. STAR OF THE UNION (1,076 tone), Caut. T. N. Cookaey. The JUNIATA «ill leave for Nem . ()Hearn! on Saturday, October Etth, at 8 o'clock A. N., from Pier 18 South wharves. The STAR OF TILE UNION will leaye New Orleans fa Mb port October 1:•th. Through HRH lading signed' for freight to Mobile. Gal voton. tchez,' Vickrburg, Memphir, Na4iville, Cairo, and Cincinnati. Agent= at New Orleana- Creemy, Nickerson k Co. WA!. L. JAMES. General Agent, 314 Sontii nelawaro avenue, fen CHAS. E. DI Lims, Freight Agent. ' TAB Plll F.A DEI,PHIA AND SoCTIIEIIN =" MAIL S'PEAAISII I P COMPANY'S REGULAR WEEKLY LINE FOR SAVANNAM:(4. TONAWANDA. Mr, tons. Cam, Win. Jennings. NV I'OllllN O. Fall) tons. Captain 'Jacob Teal. The eteamehie TONAWANDA will leave for the aboVa port on Saturday. Oct. 12th, at 8 o'clock A. M., from Pier ld South Wharves. Through passage tickets sold and freight taken for all pollute in connection with the Georgia Central Railroad, Agcnta at Savannah—linnter Gamtuell. I,VM. L. JAMES. Genet : al Agent, al4 South Delaware avenue. fell CIIAS. DILKES, Freight Agent. 415-781;" THE PHILADELPHIA ANTI SOUTHERN MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR LINE. (SEMI-MON'I'EILY) FOR. WILNIINGTON, N. C. Tile steamship PIONEER (812 tons), Captain J. flonnett, will leave for the above port on Thursday, October 11, at eo'clock A. M., from Pier 19 South Wharves. of Lading aiened at through and reduced rates to all principal INdots In North I larolina. Agents at Wilmington—Worth & WM. L .7,04E8. General Agent. - • 314 tmtli - DCfaivare avenue. rhh7 CHAS. E. DILKES, Freight Agent. PHILADELPHIA, MOH:110ND AND NOR. FOLK STEAMSHIP LINK THROUGH AIR LINE TO THE SOETH - AND WEST. - - Steartn.hi leave every SATURDAY andWEDNESDAY, at noon. from find wharf above Market Area. TIIRCg..O . II RECEIPTS TO NEWHERN. APO, allta in s ,North and South Carolina via Sea board and itoanokeTtail,nad, and to Lyuchburg,Va., Ten. nes.s.eo and the Wert, via Norfolk, Ptiteraburg and South Side Railroad. and Richmond and Danville Railroad. • • The. reg.. a:ay and ellealln/qq , thin route oem mend it to the public, as. the most deldrable medium for carrying every de, , cription of freight. No charge for commierion, drayage, or any eNpenr:e of trap: fee. fdteaulk.h4., ITlrtlte at lowe,t rates.. Freight received Daily. WM. P. CLYDE A:. Co., 13 North and Sonto Wharvea. I'.II PORTER, Agent at Richmond and City Point. T. P.c Pow & CO., Agents. at Norfolk. apli-ti .. HAVANA STEAMERS. SEMI-MONTHLY LINE. The Strain...l.4.a hi ENDMCK HUDSON__ ..... Ilowea STARS AND S'l ' ........ ... _Capt. Holm,. There Fteamers. will leave this port for Havana. every other Tuesday at A A. M. The PteionFliip STARS AND STRIPES, Hoirtie,marter, will rail for on Tuesday morning, October 13th, at 8 o'clock. Parpagi. to Havana, $l9, currency, No freight received after Saturday. For freight or paerag,.. apply to. THOMAS WATTSON & SONS, nullo 140 North Delaware, avenge. 'NEW. EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXANDRIA, - Georgetown and AN, aehington. D. C., via Chceaneake and Delaware Canal, Wittl COD nvetinn= at Alexandria tram the most direct route for Lynchburg, Brietol, Knoxville,-Nrehville, Dalton and the Southweet. Steamers leave regularly from the tiret wharf above Ilarket street, every Saturday at noon. Freight received daily. WM. P. CLYDE k CO., 14 North and South Wha. vee. a. B. DAVIDSON'. Age.pt at Gong town. M. ELDRIDGE (Xt., Agents at AleNandria, Vir ginia. ap11.1.1 NEW YORK, VIA DELAWARE IND eLtial . I.I } MA CANAL. Exprede Steamboat Company Steam Pro. pellord leave Daily from tiret wharf below Market etreet. Through in twenty-four hours. Goode forwarded to all point,!. North, Eaet and Weet, free of cominisdion. ireightd received at the lowest rated. W3l. P. CLYDE' & Agent., 14 South Wharves. JAMES HAND, Agent._ 161 Wall etreet. New York. apll .f DAILY LINE FOR BALTIVORE; Via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal. Philadelphia and Baltimore Union steam boat Company, daily at 2 o'clock P. M. • • The Steamers of thin line are now plying regularly be tween this port and Baltimore, leaving the' zecond wharf below Arch street daily at 2 o'clock P. M. (iibudays excepted.) Carrying all description of Freight ac low as any other line. Freight handled with great care, delivered promptly, and forwarded to all peinta beyondthe terminus free of commieeion. Particular attention paid to the traneportation of all de.c.tiption of 31erobandiee, Carriages, ‘&, &c. For further information, apnly JOHN D. RUOFF, Agent, nr16131 • No. 1e North Delaware :ivenue. FOR NEW YORK SWIFTSCRE Trawportation Company—Degpateli and Swif [sire LiTll.B.Virt Delaware and Rats tan Canal. on and after the 15th of March. leaving daily at 12 M" and 5 P. M., connecting with all Northern and East ern line& For freight, which will be taken 11CCOM1110- &Ling , ternm, apply to WV. 31. I2AlltLJk, CO.. tuhlaly No. 132 South Delaware avenue. DELAWARE ANDCIIE9APEAKE Stearn Tow-Bat ronwnv. --Barged towed between Philadelphia, Baltimore, nacre-de-Grace, Delaware City and intermediate' P , inte. Wl5l. P. CLI DE Agent.-. 1. Capt. JOHN LAUGH LIN, Sup't Oflice, 14 ba:ve-+, Phila, pll-tdels FOR LI iNDON.—TUE CLIPPER BRIG A.D. GILBERT, Noun master, will have quios dewitch P 9 above. having bulk or her cargo en gaged. For freight, apply to WORKMAN & CO.. 1:1; Walnut ttreet. ocl.tf,) STEAMSHIP NORMAN, FROM BOSTON.—voivignee4 of merchandise per above steamer will please send for their goods, now lauding at Pina street wharf. ocs-3t ' HENRY WINSOR & CO. 1.8 S. S. SIIINDLER, ouccespor to .101 IN SHINDLER 4.; e) SONS. Sail Malcem No. WO North Delaware avenue. a. All ~cor k done in the best manner anat . the lowest and m 0,4 favorable temp, and NI - a :Tau te d to give perfect tlatit , faction. ~ ,,i eelor attention given to repairing. I.mmEs 1867. - "LFNAiIL'I'&I I ; I igANE, 4-4, M 5-4. 5-I, 2. 2t4, I and 4.ineb,A CHOICE PANE AND FIRST COMON,`Bi L feet long, 4-4, 5.4, 64. It, 234, 3 and 4-inch. SIAULE, BROTHER G. -• No. 2500 SOUTII Street -1867. ITIMIS"LniZtriaIIiM ING 4-4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 5-4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 4-4 DELAWARE FLOORING. IA DELAWARE FLOORING. ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. SPRUCE FLOORING, . , STEP BOARDS, RAIL PLANK, - PLASTERING LATIL 3IAULE, !moil CO., No. :ZOO South street. 1867. -- w .n.N t\ -,F ANMILANK. LNI 71` BOA ILOS. WALNUT PLANK. LARGE STOCK-SEASONED. LLE LS: P.O 1867 •- 1.1 4 3113 ER FOR UNDERTAKERS! • LLMBER, FOR UNDERTAKERS! CEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY, CEDAR, WALNUT 2 MAHOGANY. 31ALLE, BROTHER & CO 1667.1111.11.: EIRLPEII OF ALL KINDS. SEASONED WALNUT. SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR, CHERRY AND ASH. OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT VENEERS. MAULE, BROTHER 4S:: CO lOU•— ciifiAß.Box.-NIANuFAcTuREns. • CIGAR-BOX 31AluirAcTERERs. SPANISH CEDAR Box-BoAims. No. 2io) SOUTH street 186 7 . —SPRUCE JOIST—BRUCE JOIST—SPRUCE I JOIST. FROM 14 TO :12. FEET LONG. FROM 14 TO FEET LONG. ' SUPERIOR NORWAY SCANTLING. MAULE BROTHER No. 2500801;TH street. myl3-tq C.I.HINGLES, SHINGLES- 3 =lN GREAT VARIETY AND AD all prices; cheap Flooring and Fencing, assorted widths Shelving. Particular attention given to lumber for tittiug , up stores. CAROLINA FLOORING AT LOWEST CASH PRICES.' NICHOLSON'S, Seventh and Carpenter streets. se I 2mo MOTHS, CANISIIIIMILEN, dco. JAMES At LEE ARENOW RECEIVING THEIR FALL and Whiter Stock, conipriaing every variety of Geode adapted to Men'e and Hoye' wear. • ()VIORCJAT CLOTHS. 'Mirell Ileavert.. Colored Cantor Beaverg 'Black and Colored EBouininiix . ., Black and Colored Chinchilla. Blue Black Pilot& COATING 6 Black French Clothe. Colored French Cloths. Tricot, all colors. Pique and Diagonal. PANTALOON STUI Fb. Black French Osasimeres. Black French Doeskins. Fancy Cassinieres. Mixed and Striped Cassimeres. Plaids, Bibbed and Silk-mixed. Oleo, a large assortment of Cords, Besoverteens. Kati. netts, and Goods adapted to Boys , wear, at wholesale and retail, by JAMES & LEE, No. ll North Second at., Sign of the Golden Lamb. NITI`R — ANi) ALtdOiIDB.—NEW — CROP TV noble Walnuts and Paper Shell Almond& for sac by J. D. 13U13SIEll 4r , (.10.. 103 licatli Delaware avetatel X GALE, 1.1111TIO) JOHN Ba MYERS &AU CO.. CT+ONEERS. .N0r.2n.end.234 MARKET street corner or BANK, LARGE POSITIVE SALE' OF BRITISH. FRENCH, GERMAN AND . DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, We cv,lll bold a large mile of Foreign and Dome.tie Dry Goode, by oatatciguo v on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, __.__.- ON Tl UIiBDAY MORNING. Oct. 10, at o'clotk. embracing about 1000 packkes and lots of staple and fanny articles. N. li.—entalogues ready and goods arranged for exami nation,enrly on the morning of sale. LARGE PEREMIfTOKX _FOREIGN AND ''''''''''''''' in our Sale of THURSDA Y, October 10, will 'be foundsin part tho following— . DOME FS. • Bales bleached and brown Cottons and Drills. do. all wool Cotton and Shirting Flannels. do do White and Gray Army Blankets. Cases Blue Checks, Stripes, Denims. Ticks, Wigans. do Kentucky. Corset and MLeed Jeans, Miriam' Flannel/4. do Paddingo, Printa, Delainea, Cambrice, Sikolas. de Casaimeres. Satinets, Kersey's, Waterproofs, Lin sey's, &c. LINEN GOODS. Pieces Shirting and Sheeting Linen, Diaper, Dnma.aks. do Towels, Bucks, Table Clot ha. Napkins. Crash. MERCHANT TAILORS' GOODS. Pieces 111 k. and Col'd. Clothe, Docalcins, Fancy Cloak. Inge. do Fancy Casaimerea and Coatings Molcskins.Pilota. do Aloscowas (;actors , Eskimos. Poterahams. • do 'tricots. .M , lions, Whitneya, do Ferny nnaa. Ratines, Scalakma, Croilw• do Italians Satin do Chines, Vestinga, Velvets. DRESS GOODS, SILKS AND SHAWLS. Pieces Patio Delalnes, Mertuoca, Saxony Plaids, Reps do Bik and Col'd Alpacas, Camp, and Molialra. do Black and Colored Silks, Lyons Black and Col'd. Velvets. Brodie, Woolen, Stella and Thibet Shawls, Mantis. - - ALSO-- White Goode, Silk and Linen Ildkfs.. Umbrellas, Ties, Army Blouses, Iloelery and Gloves. Marseilles Merino Shirts and Drawers, and Traveling Shirts. Balmo ral and Hoop Skirts, Trimmings. Suspenders, &c. PAIRS BROWN AND GRAY BLANKE CS. 2%5l pairs 10 and 11 lbs. heavy Brown and Gray Bien ,kets. GENTS` AND LADIES' FURNISHING 'GOODS. Closing Sale of an Importing House, comdsteng Gents', ladies' and ierce black, white and colord Paris Kid Gloves and Gauntlets. BuagMeaver, Castor and Dogeltin Glover. Linib an Wool Lined Buck and BeaVer do. Plush and Bilk Lined Kid, Call and Dogsgin do. Fur Toe. Lamb and Wool Lined Buck du. Buck, Isld, Denver and CastorPauntlets. • White and colored Ringwood Gloves and Gauntlets. Fleecy heed English Silk Union Gloves. Ladles. and misses' English White and Fancy Cotton and :Merino 1130 e. Gents' English regular make super stout brown and fancy Cotton Balt Bore. Gents , English fancy Tip . and Fleecy Felt do. Nova and China Silk Shirts and Di /mem Euglbh Merino. Shetland. Ribbed sand heavy brown Shirts and Drawers. &c. 25 CASES MILITARY GOODS. 10 eases heavy blue lined Army Blouse,. 5 do do blue unlined Army Blouses.) da do Cavalry overcoats. 5 do do Cavalry Jackets. . SCO DOZEN Si illtT FRONTS. WI dozen superior quality Linen Shirt Front-•, • COLLAR VELVETS, A full line very tine blk silk Collar Velvets. NOTICE TO MANUFACTURERS. • Attention Is called to the following -500 LBS. TURKEY RED YARNS. 50011)s imported real Turkey lied Yarn, for immufactur• iug inapt der. • LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETINGS, ON FRIDAY MORNINo. Oct. 11, at 11 0 , olook,:vill be old by catalogue. on FOUR MONTHS` Ci t DIT. about SOO piecee of Ingrain, Verm- Han, Lirt, Hemp. Cottage and Rag Carpetinge., which may be examined early on the morning of ..,;de. LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS, &c. ON MONDAY MORNING, Oct. 11, at In o'clock,will be sold, by catalogne, on FOUR MONTHS' I;REDIT. about 7011ot. of French. India, Ger man and British Dry Goods, emle'aeing fall as.ortment of Fancy and Staple articles, in Silks. Woratecti, Woolens, Linens and C Hons. N. I3.—Goods arranged for examluation'and catalogues ready early on morning of sale. LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF BOOTS. SHOES, BROGANS. TILAX MANG BAGS, 4:c. On TUESPAY MORNING, Oct. at 10 o'clock,will be erAd, by catalogue, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, about 17).X1 pnckaer3 Boob+, ShoeA, Brogane, &c.. of city nnd•Eastern inanufactJ tee, Open for examination with cataloguea ce.rly on morning of sale. THOMAS & SONS, AUCTIONEERS, Noe. Fa and 141 South FOURTH stieet. SALES OF STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE. Off" Public Sales at the Philadelphia Exchange every TUESDAY. at LI o'clock. Ifir" Handbills of each property Leaned separately, in addition to wbich we publish, on the Saturday previous to each sale, one thousand catalogu' . in pamphlet form. full descriptions of all the property to be sold on the FOLLOWING TUESDAY, and a List of Real Estate at Private Sale. 101, — Our Sales are Aso advertised in the following newspapers: NOrru ANterao.A2N, PRF.I3B, LEDGER, LEGAL iNTELLIGYNCEL INQUIRER, AGE. EVENING 81/LLErIlf. EVF-NING TELEGBAPII. GEIGM.A.N DEMOOISAT, &O. 1V Furniture .Sales at the Auction • Store EPDXY TiltiiSDAY MUNDT°. REAL ESTATE SALE, OCT. 15 Will Include- , COUNTRY PLACk—GENTEEL THREE-STORY K MVO . LING and Frame Stable and Large Lot, Franklin and Witoinoming sto., Tscony,23d \/ard. Executbr's Salo—Eotate of •IP.111.!P K. , !.211e, E RY ELEGANT COUNTRY-RESIDENCE, v. Rh ,Stable and, Coach Home and beautiful grounds, l'acony- :NO feet on Wa.hirgton at., 3011 feet on Wiesinoming at., El) feet on Franklin - et:; :Xio feet-on-Aramingo at.—foar. valuable fronts. xecutore Sale—Estate of Samuel Crager, dec'd—DE SIItABLE FM+ M. 32 ACRES, Ridge avenue. 91st Ward. Peremptory Sabra 1101:11.11tN FOUR-*TO ttY PREdS BMCK end BROWN-STONE RESIDENCES, Noo. 2121, 2125:21:27, 2133 and :1135 Walnut at—have all the modern convenienree. Immediate pra+seraion. Poromptiale—LAßGE and VALUABLE LOT, 22d and I:3d Walnut, occupied as a Lumbor Yord. BUILDIN LOTS, 17th and 18th and Wharton and ltan eta. 41 BUILDING LOTS, 17th and 11th and Titan and La tona eta. 1' xocutors' Peremptory Fale—FMate of Hugh O'Dom nell, deed. for account of a Former Purehnsdr TWO. STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 915 South Sixth at. Same Estate—THREE•STORY BRICK DWELLING, N 0.531 Redwood M. Same Fatnto—BUILDING LOT, Washingtdrt at., Iv.- tic( en Concord and Mt Ple.,sant 2 '4 lIREF.STOR YBRICK DWELLINGS, No.. 2204 and 22e6 (:b HMI an M. 7 THREKSTORY FRAME DWELLINGS, S. E. corner of Front and Vine sta., Camden, N.J. VA 1.1'.11t7.11 BratNass STAND—THREE.STORY BRICK STORE and DWELLING. No. 419 South Second street, between Pine end Lombard. SUBSTANTIAL BUILDING and LARGE LOT% aolth Fide of Washington avenue, we,t. of 24th it-7Jfeet front, 130 feet deep to A her Ft. TWO-STORY II1G( K 'CAR and COACH_ FACTORY, Washinotco avenue, east of Twen-x-firet at. Br SINESB STANI*THREE-STOhY BRICK:, STORE and DWILLING, S. E. corner of Race and Jacdby sta.. beast en 12th andl3lll. 1 LYGANT COUNTRY SEAT and FARM, 1m stares, fronting on the maln street, Haddonfield, Camden county, N. J.- Large : gnomon, Item, enact Ho. ce and o!lin. oat buildinga. CD) RE F 7 STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, Richmond eti N. of York 19th Ward. 4Tb REF:STOW/ at DWULLTNI:S. S. W. corner F dgimont and DivD ltiehmond. 250, Ward. Fermaptory SaIe—BUILDING , • S. E. corner of 45th and Oregon et, THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 131 South Eialitcentb st., itbuee Walnut. THI:EE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 330 Dean at.,' with al hrec-story Brick Building oa Iseminger at. THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. 2:'04 Marriott street. THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No:1069 North 'tont st. LARGE and VALUABLE LOT, S. W. corner of 34th ! and Sycamore its —147 tea front. 11;7 feet deep. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DwELLING, S. W. corner Of Pine and Albion Ms..' between list and 22d. THREE STORY 'BRICK DWELLINGS, No. 723 Fallon Pt.. between Cathirrine ;mid itzwater. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. No. 030 Franklin st., north of Poplar st.-25 feet front. Executors , Peremptory Bale—E , M., of John Roland, dec'd—THREE-STORY BRICK STORE and DWELLING. No. 1:39 South Eighth et., . hove Walnut. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING and Large Lot, Lancaster avenue, N. W. of 33th street-60 feet front, 120 feet deep to Warren HANDSOME CUT-STONE FRONT RESIDENCE, No. 4106 Locust st., east of Forty-second et. Has all the mo dern conveniences. Lot:3s feet front. 100 feet deep. SALE BY ORDER OF UEDVS—BUSINESS STAND— THREE-STORY BRICK STORE and DWELLING. No. 1125 Shippeuat., with 2 three-story brick dwellings in the rear. TWO HANDSOME THREE-STORY STONE RESI DENCES, Nos. 4101 and 4107 Spruce st., west of st., each a 5 feet front. Have all tile modern conveniences. MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No. 541) North 40th st., south of Aspen at,. West Philadelphia. lies all the modern conveniences. V env V.4I.I*AeLE ' BuelNtss Sr.tsn—FOUR•STORY B I STORE. N 0.5 North Water st . above M erket at. WELT SECURED GROUND RENTS, 1621 cacti a year. QV" Full particulars in handbills. 'Sale at Nos. lrn and 141 South Fourth street. HANDSOME 'WALNUT FURNITURE. VENN FINE IAI•.TEL AND PIER MIRRORS, PIANOS. IRON ClEsTs, HANDSOME VELVET AND BRUSSELS CARPETS: HANDSOME CHANDELIERS, &c., ON THURSDAY MORNING. At 9 o'clock. at the aucHom rooms, very silperior Fur niture, including handson Parlor-Furniture, covered in Brocatelle and Hair Cie a Walnnt. Chamber Furniture, Cottage Clan •r Sulu, Extension Dining Tables, Bookcases, Oitico 'Babies, very tine French Plate. Mantel, Pier and Oval Mirrors, handsomely framed ; Piano Forte, Iron Chests, handsome Chandeliers. line Feather Beds. White Blankets. Whit French and Steno Carpets,re he misomo Velvet, Brussels, and tiixl Cooking end Gas Consuming Stoves, Coun ters, &c. VALUABLE MISCELLANEOUS BOORS. • Daguerreotype Apparatus, including live Camerna Volght lender. liatho. Galvanic Battery, C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON. Oct. 10, at the auction store, commencing at 4 o'clock: Also, Morocco Ceo,containing 130 American and For cign Copper Collie. • Sale No. 434 Franklin street. SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD PURNITURE, HANDSOME ROSEWOOD PIANO, PIER MIRROR, FINE VEL VET CARPETS. ,Lc. ON FRIDAY MORNINO, Oct. 11, at 10 o'clock, at No. 436 Franklin street. by cote.- lopue, euperior rr ainrt Parlor and Chamber Furniture, handsome Rosewood Piano Forte, b'rench Plato Pier Mir ol, Ira and !Rumen , . Carnets, ,te ra linv lin beenen on thelnornlnit of sale, at :8 o'clock. TO RENT—Several Offices, Harmony Court. BY J. M. GU.MMEY & SONS, AUCTIONEERS. No 508 WALNUT street. Or Hold Rea A r n Sales of REAL ESTATE STOCKS AND SECURITIES AVriin I'll ELPIIIA EXCHANGE. _tom r Handbills of each property issued svparaielY. gar One thousand copies published and circulated, con taining full descriptions of property to he sold, as also a partial list of property contained in our Real Estate Re gister, and offered at private sale. lar Sales advertised DAILX tit all./ the daily news Pelage. DAW & lARVEY. AUCTIONEERS, (Late with M. Thom as At Sons). • Store No. 421 WALNUT street. MITURE SALES at the Store EVERY TUESDAY. S AT RESIDENUES will Focolve partioldne attention. AUCTION, SALIM TROIKAS RI eCEI Sc SON, AIVVIONEERS ARO COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No.IIIOCIIESTNLIT Rhea, Rear Entrance 1107 Sane= erect, HOUSEHOLD FURNYITRE OF' EVERY DESCRIP TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. SALES EVERY FRIDAY MORNEIG. Sake of Furniture at Divelltnita attended to on the mot rcaconnble terms. - .. SITF-ItIOR S NEWAND C SE t C n O u N r H e AN D E. BOLD FURNITURE, CARPETS, PIANOS, MIKWRS, CIUNA, dtc., ke, ON FRIDAY MORNING.. At 9 o'clock, at the auc.tion store. No. lllO Chestnut street..vi ill be mold,— • A large assortment of elegant Parlor. Chan:age: an 4, Dining-room Furniture, from families declining houses. keeping. Also, 2 Portable Heaters, suitable for a large bundiait Sale N. W. corner Eighth and Spruce. streets.. HOUSEHOLD EcEtcyruitE, SCHOMAPEER • PIANO FORTE, CARPETS, CHAMBER FURNITURE, &c. ON MONDAY MORNING,- At 10 o'clock, at the northwest corner of Eintind Spruce streets, will be sold, the Furniture of afa de [dining hoilsekceping, comprising—Rosewood ants Forte made 12y Sclinmacker & Co.; suite Parlor inFurni ture, reps; Brussels and other Carpets, Furniture of fif teen chambers, Mirrors, tine hair Matresses,Dininirroorn. and N Rehm Furniteire, 12 stoves, &c. Catalogues can be had at the auction store on Saturday. BALE OF LADIEFO AND CHILDREN'S FANCY FURS, SLEIGH ROP,ES. &c. On TUESDAY MORNLNG, At 10 o'clock, at the auction store, No: 1110 Chestnut street, will ho sold— Au fi p sor imeot of elegant Furs, consisting of Idink lia ble. B rmine, Sibe , lan Squirrel. Fitch and other Fur ,llvffs.(Jolla sand Capes Also, Children's Furs, Skating Com Gent , emen's Caps, Gloves and Collars, Sleigh and Carriage Robes, &e. • •The Furs can be examined on Monday. • SALT OF A COLLECTION OF SILVER AND COP PER AMERICAN AND FOREIGN COINS, MEDALS, dm ON TUESDAY. AFTERNOON, October 15th. at 3 o'clock, at the Auction Store, 1110 Chestnut street, WILL BE.SOLD • A collection of Silver and Copper American andVoteign Coins, Medals, &c. t. talonme 1011 be ready for distribution at the Auction Store ou Friday. • Sale at No, 9I Filbert street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, CARPETS, GLABSESote. On WEDNESDAY MORNING,' October 16th, at 10 o'clock, at N0..918 Filbert strtet. Will be sold • - The entire Household Furniture, comprising Hair-cloth Parlor Furniture, Brussels, Ingrain andl'enetian Pier Glasses. Chamber Furniture, Beds and /deciding, ingroom and Kitchen Furniture, Stoves, de., ikc. • t;atalogues can be had at the Auction Store on Tuesday. TAMES A. FREEMAN, AUCTIONEER " , • No. WALNUT street. SALE ON TILE PREMISES, DELAWARE (*mar. OF THURSDAY ArrEttNOON, Oct. 10, 186 r, at - 9,46 o'clock. a desirable small FARM of thirty acres * with then improvements, on the Garretford Turnpike road. In Upper Darby, Delaware county,4 S miled from Mutat Street Bridge. The situation is high. Well watcired and fenced. Mar he examined at any time. Ex.:tot/tore &tie —b tale of lleteeca H. Powell, clee'd. Salo No. 16:31 Arch street. HANDSOME HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE. French Plate Pier Mirrors, Velvet, Tapestry a.n4 Imperial D Carpets, Feather erIP, China Ware, ,Stc. ON FRIDAY MORNING. At 10 o'clock, wi he ad, at No. 16n Arch Ftfert, the entire Honmehold Furniture, including—Mirrors, Carpets, Piano Forte, itc: , ewcod Parlor Furniture, secretary, fine Feather ltedq, China and Glacsware, Kitchen Utensilgote. P; • Mao be examined 'with catalaaire4 at 6 o'ciocA - , on the ritontiop of sate. • • DY B. scow, .In., 11 SCOTT'S ART GALLERY. N. 11110 CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia. • POSI7 WE PALE OF MODERN PAINTINGS. nN THURSDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS, • Oct. lo and 11, at 7}5. o'clock, at Scott's Art Gallery. 1031 Chestnut street, n ill be sold without reserve, about 175 Modern Paintings, Pastels, Crystal Mtdalllotui. of, a va riety of American Landscapes, River and Mountain Scenery, &c. "- -• Now open for examination. , SPECIAL SALE OF TRIPLE PLATED WA rtn., ON FRIDAY MORNING. October 11th; at 10.1 o'clock, at Scott's Art Gallery, No. 10211 Chestnut et. will be sold, without reserve, a aPlcu dul n=ortnient of Triple Plated Ware, beat City make. cumprisins Tea Services, Trays, Cake Baskets. Cele Glasses. Castors, Ale. BOHEMIAN GLASSWARE, dire. Also, an assortment of Bohemian Glassware, Pitchers. Vases, Colognes. Wino Sets Got lets, Also, an invoice of Terra Jotta Ware. Open for examination on the morning of TE PRINCIPAL MONEY. ESTABLISHMENT, S. E. corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches. Jewelry. Diamonds, Gold and Silver Plate, and on all arti cles of value. for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine (told Huntlng.Cmo. Double Bottom_ anclOpen Face English, American and Swiss Patent Levet-Watchea; Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Impine Watchca; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watelies ;"Tine Silver Hunt ing Case and Open Face English, - American and Swiss Patent Lever and Lepino Watches; Double Case English Quartior and ether Watches; Ladles , Fancy Watches; Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; Studs. Cc.; Fine Gold Chains; Medallions; Bracelets ;Scarf PilIS; Breastpins, Finger Rings; Pencil Cases, 'and Jewelry generally. FOR SALE.—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest. suitable for a Jewelff, cost -31350. _ Also, several Lots in South Camden, Fifth and , Chestnnt streets.. , • PHILIP Foal), Auctioneer. McCLELLAN.Ia co.,LIY pgEmatintoueen, No. 506V1RIZET street. BALE OF BM CASES BOOTS, SHOEt¢,BROGANS, &C. ON THURSDAY HORNING.' October H. COlUtliencing at to o'oback, we will sell b catalogue. for cash, about 1900 cases Mtn' s, Mbyte and Youths' Boots. Shoes, Brogans, Baltnorals: &c. Also, a deal , able assortment of Woman's, fdia!es . and Children's wear. To which the special attention of the trade is called. SALE OF ISO CASES BOOTS, suogs, BROGANS. dm M ON MONDAY ORNING. October 14, commencing at 10 o'clock. we will sell by catalogue, for cash, 181 V cases Men's. Boys. and Youths.. Boots, Shoes, Brogans, Belmorals, Also. a superior assortment of Women's, _Misiea' , andi Children's wear, from Citv and Eastern manufacturers. Comprising a destiable assortment of goods. T. L. ASILBRIDGE & CO., _AUCTIONEER2i, Nn. ZO5 MARKET street above Fifth. POSITIVE SALE OF CARPETS, &c. ON THURSDAY MORNING. <', Oct. 10, at 11 o'clock, on a credit of three months, we will sell by catalogue, about lOU pieces of Ingrain,Vonn flan, Cottage and Rag Carpets. to which the attention oil city and country trade-in called., Open early on morning of sato for inspection.• w BAIUUTT ,0 CO.. AUCTIONEERS. CA Nil AUCTION HOUSE, . • , 1‘.10.2.10 111 A Pain Hreet. corner of BANK at. Caelhadvo need on cowl enmenta without extra charge. CONTINUATION SALE. • ON THURSDAY MORNING, ' - Oct. 10, commencing at 10 o'clock, 800 lots of Pry Gooda. Shirtr. DrawerA Notione, ate., in larao variPty. FOft SALE. THE DWELLIN(,; W No. 1426 ALNUT Street., For site, with or without the • Furniture, _ Or to Let FURN)SUEP; STABLE and COACT AIOUSE: \Vest side of Fifteenth street,iabove Loeiwt, Can be had with the :home. .lESSUP moottr.. N 0.27 North Stxttiatreet. n: FOR SALE THE POMSTORY DWELLING ROUSE, Ilandefotnel . y. finished and replete {vitt' every convea encei The turnitnre can be sold with the home, rtFOR SALE —FIRST-CLASS. DWELLINGS. 950 Franklin %treet. Ininiedialiiiiossession. 818 North Seventh at. 127 De Litneey Place. 42115. Fifteenth strset. :1810 Lombard street. " r Store and Dwelling, 705 South Second street. : mu N o ah Eleventh street. Immediate po;sesaion. Apply to CO 1 . 1'1.7CK & JOIUMN. 433 Walnut street. WEST TULPEBOCKEN STREET, ' GERMAN- Etown.—Forsale. —A handsome double • modem residence, containing fourteen rooms, exclu sive' of wnsh-room, pantry, store-room,' and ehina.eloset and, with extra conveniences. Lot let) feet front by 21i3 Met deep, beautifully improve& Lock tion most desirable. Also, superior carpetslind furniture. nearly new, for sale if desired. ;J. M. GUMMEY Qs SON seByolnut street. ARCH STREET—FOR SALE •TIIE HANDSOME EBrick and Brown-atone Residence. with. three-Mory double back buildings. ' built and. finished throughout in a auperior tuanner,with extra convenience& and in complete order. No. lrsh3 Arch street. Lott Meat front by 160 feet deep to a area. J. M. GUMMEY SUNS, US Walnut etreet. ARCH STREET.—FOR SAL'S—THE ELEHANT rtbree•etory brick Residence. with attics awl danblea thrce•etory back buildings, situate No. 1426 , Arch et: is built inn superior manner; ilas every modern improve ment and convenience, and is in perfect order. Lot 25 feet by 140 feet deep to a street. J. 31.HUMMEI: dtSONd, bal elnut street. irFOR SALE.—AN ELF:GANT FOUR-STORY Stone Residence, built. and ttniehed. tiwoughout to the very best manlier, by the present owner,'ex- PreEsiy lorhis own occupancy, famished , with extra cou veniences, first Seer painted lu fresco and in perfect order, situate ou West Locust street, near St. Marks Church. J. 31. GUMMEY A: SONS, US Walnut street. - . FOll SALE. NEW BROWNSTONE FRONT rtoimee, No. 2917 Spruce street, lot 24 by 180 feet; No. 5921 Spruce street, lot 21 by 180 feet, to Rittenhouse street, 10 feet wide. Finished in the moat elegant manner. . Wa RKEN, No. 218 Walnut street. At buildings from Bto 9 and 3to 4. . 0c4414ts FOR SALE—A DOUBLE TUREWSTORY MITE rDwelling, N. W. corner Seventeenth and Su og streets, containing 15 rooms, stationary' wash et wash tube, and all the, conveniences or a ficat.clar dwelling. KRICKBAUM &rth PURDY • ::`.3 No Fifth Meet._ YOR SALE OR EXCIIANGE.—FOR SALE—a 111 handsome modem cottage residence. with 'WM lot of ground situate on Spruce street, near Thirty. ninth. West. Philadelphia, or wilt be exchanged for. gra. class city property. J. AL GirldßlEY & BONS. SOS Wsdrtat street. FORS SALE.--SPRUCE STREET, S. E CORNER of Twentieth street—The desirable four OZ Rest, dome with threeetory back bandluP Itt'Centelete order throughout. oe2.wj,m;6t• CLARK & ETTING;7O7 Walnitt it/tee itFOR BALE.- 0 N OCTOBER 22d,/ BY TBIOIitAB & Bons', Attetfoneen3 , —The omitted teottoors dwell tog. o. 33 Vithryn street, 0,11011) Slollset front, Terms, halt-cash. $ AWFUL* FOR BA 1.8.—A VALUABLRBUdiNESS OR PBC• g vi t t , d we lling, southeast cornet Broad and (Mt/mho avenue. Mine:Won November lat. Tenn* to suit. Apply to CO VPUVIC. 6c JORDAN. 4ro Walnut WOK No. 1608 LOCUST STREET.