Among Cannibals. The British Consul in the Bight of .Bial s r Africa, furnishes the following highly int.e,r eating details of African affaixs -331 9A in terior Op °kraal the chief town, is built tin a dry ridge, part of which is adorned with ;Magni- I ficent trees. A stockade, throtigh:, winch peep some guns, defends the water front of the town, which seemed longer "than 'Grand Bonny. Dense masses of people crowded the beach at the public landing place. - The Bonny chiefs, Prince George, Banigo and tltlondusi, landed, but we remained in the boats until they had- seen the Xing. In fifteen • minutes, they returned WA beckoned us to land. The stench was terrible; all the stinks at outskirts of all the Afrcan villages I ever entered, though mixed and shaken to gether, would be weak compared to this. After pegging through the crowd, we !net some fellows who tried to stop as. "It was contrary to jaju for white menV enter the town." The Bonny chiefs scolded, and we pushed on, but soon met a mob of hundreds, and further progress was impossible. .In vain did Banigo and Calen .dusi scold,fixid push, and even knock some down; .the ' others pressed closer together, shouting, barking and gesticulating franti cally., After looking at the performance until We get tired of it,• we returned to the boats. ....canoe came off with two messengers from the Xing, inviting us ashore. Guards armed with long sticks stood at the corners of the streets, and the town was quiet. We were conducted to the King's audience chamber. which had ne light except - what came in at the door. Chairs were brought, and the chielli and others crowded in. A beating of idrums,announced that the King had gone to the juju. house to consult the spirits before proceeding to business. In half an hour King Pibia appeared.. Re wls — a — strongly-built mea)of 45 with a round, good-natured look bg face. 'Re shook hands and sat down on a low stool in the corner. Apologizing for the rude reception his people had given us, he asked us to remain until the following day, as some of his chiefs had not yet arrived from their Tillages. A table of native manu facture was brought when the Queen spread a tablecloth over it, and tombo, an muntoxicating palm wine, was presented . Permission tnsee the town was given, and we paid a visit. to the juju house; a noisy crowd attempted to rush in after us; but a vigorous application of the long stick of the guards drove them back. Masses of human skulls hang from the walls,and numerous rows of skulls cover the roof of a kind of altar. In front of the altar sat it juju man, having a footstool of human skulls. The Okrika had eaten the victims whose skulls decorate the juju house. An old man who accompa nied us spoke with evident gusto of the dif ferent cannibal feasts he bad partaken of; and mentioned the parts of the human body which he considered the sweetest. It is the first time I have seen cannibals in Africa. We saw men at work tarring ropes; others retailed gin in the streets by the wine-glass. We bad a glimpse of the Okrika funeral cere mony. Three - young men, facing the same way, had the ,corpse of a boy done up in matting, on theff-shoulders. They twisted and tugged, and appeared as if struggling with unseen spirits who wished to drag the body to'a shallow, open grave, by the side of a haute:- At times the young men had the advantage, and brought the body from the wive; then the spirits prevailed and dragged thorn forward. A man. 'keptbeating a drum. The Okrika are all well clothed, most of the cloth bein made from the palm leaf. They are acquainted with several vegetable dyes; - yellow and blue are used to paint their pper sons. We slept in Ogobome, a large village which has an oil market, and about two miles from:the capital. A good dinner was pro vided, and wemere offered a choice of sleep ing apartments, close inner rooms or an Open verandah. lay companions preferred the latter. I was conducted to a neighboring. house and found the people very kind. My bed, small boxes of unequal height, un luckily was in the best room, in - which I found a good fire, 30 kegs of powder, and a considerable quantity of cloth and gin. I managed to sleep tolerably well, but my companions were badly bitten by the sand flies. The King's messenger came for us at sunrise, and shortly after, seven we were - seated with the King and his chiefs. Kin Fibia remarked that in Bonny the King and chiefs could settle public affairs, but in Okrika the people always wanted to be pre sent. Be thought it would be better to have • the interview in a public place, so that his people could hear all that was said, and not have to pester him after I was gone. We accordingly adjourned to the street. There was some disturbance at first, ,but nothing like that of an excited political gathering in a civilized country. King Fibia requested them to be silent and listen to what was said. Ills Prime Minister and oratbr having before him specimens of two kinds of dried fish, a fish trap, and pieces of net, commenced by remarking That he was glad to see me. They - did not understand the customs of the white men; no white man had ever been in their town before, and they hoped I would excuse them if they proceeded in their own. way. He then picked up the dried fish, and trap and net, and handed them to me, saying: "Bonny and Calabar have ships to trade with, but Okrika has nothing but fish. It is on fish we live; it is with fish we buy the oil we , have to sell, and this has been the case ever since Okrika has been a country. It was in the creeks I saw in coming that they caught their fish, and Calabar men came into these creeks and stole their fish out or the nets, and , also robbed their canoes." Mr. Livingstone discussed with them terms of peace, and it was finally arranged that Fibia should send down two of his chiefs to meet the chiefs of Bonny and Calabar to settle tlif. differences. The Consul adds: "The session lasted four hours and a half. Never before in Africa have I seen such powerful looking men as the Okrika.' I could not but admire their physical strength. As they sat before me, chewing bits of chop-stick to clean their teeth, and gazing earnestly at me, the thought occasionally flashed across my mind, 'Are these can oxtails wondering how a piece of roast Consul would taste, and which would be the most savory, cold Consul or hot?' On parting, Fibia made me a present of about a ,it-load of gigantic yams, two goats and a fowl." Couriers , English. A Paria correspondent writes to the Boston Post about couriers in Europe: "Though these servants are indispensable in many cases, and really do save paterfami lias and his retinue a world of trouble, yet they are often not so necessary as they seem, and their frequent dishonesty and collusion with.the hotel-keepers and shop-men, in ex torting plunder from helpless tourists, make them a perpetual aggravation. But these qualities are no more annoying than the facility they possess for distorting the Eng lish' and .every other language. Like the Emperor Sigismund they are supra grain viaticum, while their etymology would shock Dame Juliana, Berness, Mistress _Quickly, Mrs. Malaprop, or Mrs. Partiugton. flome friends of mine, who have lately been making the tour of Europe with one of these murderers of Anglo-Saxon, were treated to suchentertedninents as'the following: Having i w a one cla , visited the castle of lit. Angelo, at .. • Rome; ear courier took. them to a dark and smoky, aeon, and informed them that this was the . ce 'where Beatrice Cenci was damned to Nke executed.' Being asked the \ meaning 4r 1. , • Homo, he replied that the words were Sp sh, and signified 'what a inanr;r:At Pinup 'i,' when .visiting the spot where *tit fulpid eitiPino of the Roman *l-IALETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 186'7. MIME soldiers who perished rather than abandon their,post, he said 'ilere they dug up eighty, skillets.' On another day, when they were ,discussik their plains for the future, lie hor rified them by suggesting that they should go to ' he scolpture gallery at the Vatican and. see 'the Greek sculpins. "All 'this appears very amusing to read, but is not particularly entertaining to those who came abroad in search of information and at the same time have no appreciation of the humorous. An English lady told me that her courier conducted her to the church where the Moses of Michael Angelo sits in gloomy and frowning grandeur, and stopping before the statue with a profound salutation said impressively, as if introducing two high contracting parties to each other for- the first time : 'Madam, this is Noah.' " The Carer of a Creole. There died in the poor-house of this county, and was buried last Saturday at the expense of the public, a woman who was at one time the *rife of the famous Ned Bunt line, and at another the mistress of Ben Mc- Culloch, the Texan, ranger. The date 01 her registry was "July the 2Gtb." The name entered was "Martha Leguire," but she went by various pseudo nymes, and was originally a Cuban, born at Havana and raised in New Orleans. Her true name was Maria Cordova. _ The story of her. life, as given to - us, as rather more romantic than commonly turns up in the every-day experience of a local re porter. Her father was a tobacconist, and the first mention made of her was when she w' was &girl fourteen or fifteen years of age, when she was known in the Crescent City as "the pretty cigar girl of Canal street." She attended at the patriarchal shop, both wrapped and sold the choicest principes, and added to her charms and her reputation by an exceedingly coy modesty that defied assault. Buntline—before he came to Nashville and was involved in the fearful tragedy that is associated with his naive—lived a thriftless, dare-devil life in Texas, on the prairies, upon the Gulf coast and about New Orleans. He was a handsome young fellow, of obscure, origin, ready talent, neat address, and varied accomplishments. was an meeting with the pretty cigar girl was an accident, and his suit was long and diffi cult. •At last.be had to marry her, and,three weeks after the marriage the couple suddenly disappeared.. = - ... ._ _ There are various ac,os of their absence. It was said that the -"Captain," as Ned was then called (he is-=-n , General now), com manded a brig in the Caribbean seas, and did business as an active and fearless pirate. It was renoiied that .he had gone to Texas to see Judge Wartrous, and claim the fortune left by Lafitte. It was sworn to in court that he bad retired on the proceeds of a faro bank in which he. was interested, and fitted him up a ranch at Corpus Christi. Most likely this latter is the correct version. In 1847, when McCulloch appeared at the head of the scouts or rangers, by which Old Zack set much store, he had with him an orderly, remarkable for his retiring, reticent„ modest disposition, his intelligence, and his handsome, girlish face. This orderly, it will be remembered,i accompanied him through the campaign, being wounded in front of Perote, and left with the monks of Santa Cruz, at the old convent near Pareda's ha cienda. McCulloch was always careful of the secret, but somehow it leaked out. The orderly was a person of the tender sex; was, in fact, the pretty cigar girl of Canal street. Where the ranger had found her, •how the piratd had become separated from her, are point& on which we 'are unable to. enlighten the reader. McCulloch never saw her again. He left her at Perrote, was wounded him self at Cherubuscc,a r cobveyed to Vera Cruz and-thence ordered_to.Washington. Whether he ever made ab effort to regain his lost orderly is unknown. She remained at the monastery for nearly ten years. , ~. . Not yet shorn of her beauty, she appeared in the city of Managua, Central America, at the time of the entrance of Gen.Henningsen, and there made the aerinaintmacto of a gamb ling fillibuster, well-known in New Orleans and Nashville, whom she accompanied back to the States. Her descent from &cathedral to the monte table, and from infamy -to pau perism, was very gradual, but also very sure. She found herself, during the winter of 1865, at the clew of the war, In this city. She had been sent North from Atlanta, by Sherman, when he depopulated that city; • first to Cincinnati and then to Louisvi . The last act of an eventful career opened in a little outhouse' of this city, west of the - Capitol. For a few weeks she employed herself as a sewing woman, but gave way to drink; and, after the customary seasons of arrest and punishment, relapsed into hope less mendicancy, and:rinally into the poor house. .. , Here she died, and hence she was carried to au unmarked grave. One who saw her after the body was decently clad for inter ment represents that she presented a most beautiful but saddening spectacle. The traces of the original charm that had singled her out of a city lull of Creole girls still remained, though dim and marred by the signs of want and sorrow and dissipation that overspread them. We give the story, such as it is, as one of the illustrations that now and then occur in ammon lite, representing the more romantic side of familiar things. It is more suggestive than complete or satisfactory; and will recall a train of events to the minds of some of 'our readers. , Two of the parties, at least, men tioned in it are well known to the general public. The principal is, indeed, known only to a few, and they, the vicious, who knew her for no good, and the charitable, who knew her only to minister to her the last .of flees of nature and of nature's God.--NaBh ville /Voter. _ _ , Japanese Joiners and their Tools. I From the F.an Francise/ Bulletin.) - The Japanese calling themselves the Ha ga-ta,kce troupe are fitting up the stage of the Metropolitan Theatre in the similitude of a Japanese temple for the exhibition of their feats of strength and legerdemain. They are said to be all of one family, and the very carpenter's who are doing the joiner work are members of that family. Japanese car penters, Wise . an advantage over American mechanics in the fact that they have four hands instead of two,their toes being handy as their fingers. But they gain nothing by it, because they make no use of work benches or vices. if a Japanese carpenter wants to sharpen a 4 eaw, he squats on his hams, places 'the back of the tool to be operated on on the ground,, grips one end of the saw with, his left hand, seizes the other with the toes of his right foot, andgoes to work whit as much confidence as a - Yankee carpenter at a bench. Their tools are not like American tools„ Alton& they have a faint similarity, s'aowing - arat all tools have one common parentage whether their inventor was Tubal Cain or some other artificer. All Japanese saws are shaped like butcher's kleavers. Thelaandle is like the handle of a cleaver, but llatlrh, as if Whittled out of a piece of inch board, the metal shank of the SSW is &inn into that handle, and the whole is secured by being wrapped with fine split cane. The metal of the saw is about the substance of our saws; but the teeth are nar rower, giving more of them to an inch, and much longer. They ure all pointed towards the handle and cut the wood like so many hooka: 'When a Japanese wants to rip a plank, he places it autos, anything which. will elevate the end a few *Claes, then stands on the. w cod and cuts it by . *izing,the cleaver locking saw, in both, handegird,pulling it to- wards him. '• Tbus, by a number of short,quick up strcdrea, lin gets through a plank not so speedily, but quite as effectivelmis an Ame rican carpenter would with the lone; sloW, down stroke of the rip-saw.;:;';'The planes are small, with, single irons, tip,; handles. The planes are shorter, lighter,'.And the wood shallow, than ours, being generally not more than an inch deep. To plane a picce,of wood they lay it on the ground,' squat on their hams, hold it fast with their-.toes, and work the plane with both hands toward them. To drill a hole they have a short awl, inserted in the end of a round stick eight or nine inches long.. They take the wood between their toes, squat as before, and make the hole by rubbing the handle of the Awl between their hands in less . time than , ,one of our carpenters could drill one with ii 'gim blet. Their hammers are, solid cylindrical pieces, not made shapely with waists and graceful outline like ours. They have the same flat-sided handles as the saws. The Japs have iron squares, not unlike American squares, marked with degrees. Their mea sures are brass, very light, and fluted. On one side the inch, or what stands for the inch with us, is l 3-16 inches,: and' divided into ten parts. On the other sidels 'a different scale, measuring 1 3-16 inches,' and divided into twelve parts. Some of their tools appear to be mere children's toys; for instance, they have a smoothing plane 23 : inches long, 1 inch broad and half an inch thick. Their chisels are light and small. The cutting parts of some are the size and shape of a section of a half a dollar—the square side being the cut ting edge, and a round metal shaft connect ing the convex aide with a wooden handle. The most ingenious article in their tool chest is a chalk line. It is a wooden. cup con taining a spongy substance steeped in Indian ink. This is pierced front and back, and the marking-line passes through it. "The end of the line is attached to a small awl, the other end of the line, after passing through the cup, is wound round a reel, not, unlike a fishing rod reel, which takes the place of the handle of the cup. To mark a line down a plank, the Japanese carpenter sticks the awl in at one end of the proposed line carries the cup . to the other, the line payhig itself out as he does so; he holds the line down to the board when he reaches the desired spot, strikes the mark, and then takes up his cup and reels up the line as he walks back to the spot where he inserted the awl. The process of paying out the line and of reeling it' up again Tooth draw it through the ink supply in the cup, and keep it ready for action. rite . ild.Flower Gardens of Kansas A writer to the Farmers' Club, American Intitute, speaks in raptures of the beautiful appearance of the prairies, covered with their . wild flowers:. "For the wild flowers of Kansas I must express my especial admiration.' .Any one here may have.a flower-garden of considera ble show, who will cultivate two square rods of ground with wild flowers. I will name, of the many, only the following TeW as de serving of some notice. The blue iris, the yellow day lily, and the purple phlox, grow only in the forest, and also the Judaki l tree, and a straw-colored 'honeysuckle. On the prairies we have the yel low cactus, growing only on - rocky slopes; the blue and the white larkspur, the latter dotted with purple, growing on moist . spots, but only where the grass is. very thin; the _white evening primrose, .a: perennial,- growing:in similar localities; and the yellow, a magnificent flower of from 'four. to six inches in diameter, growing on the rocky slopes. The verbena' and foxglove are also very common on rocky situations; -be cause there the deeply-rooted prairie-grass will not thrive, and hence- there , is an open ing for any hardy plant. I have seen, two colors of the verbena—Ad and purple;, but the latter was so small a flower as to be al most unnoticeable. - ' We—have also-a-white hyacinth, a purple petunia, a blue lupin, and many others. "Bprinkled all over the prairies, among the grass, we find red and variegated phlox, yellow polyanthus, and sometimes a purple petunia and blue spiderwort; and least of all comes the beautiful blue gentian,with straight edged petals, after the first frost. - "All of the above, so far, as tried,, grow finely under common garden cultivation, and most are equal in beauty to the cultivated varieties. Of wild roses, we have the small prairie rose growing about a foot high, single flowers of blush in hot weather, deepening into a bright red in cool, usually from two or three inches in diameter: and the climbing vai;iety, also single.; pale red growing in clus ters, 'and resembling in its foliage and growth the cultivated queen of the prairie, and ibr single rose is a very fine one." MORMON TnEOl.OO I% —They believe that God has a real body of flesh and blood, the same as a man, but a body perfect and glori fied. His wisdom and knowledge are not so infinite that they cannot be'increased, so that if the world had to be made over again, ex perience would suggest improvements. He lives in a. place called heaven,.but is not the supreine ruler of the whole universe. The God we worship is the God of the .solar sys tem only: - There are Gods many, and Lords many, and probably one superior to ours. lie has many wives, from whom are pro duced the spirits of all flesh, that afterwards become embodied hurnan beings by earthly marriage. It was he,.himself, who visited the Virgin 'Mary and became the father. of Jesus Christ. (Please to note that I hate to write down all this, but cannot help stating what was told to rue, and, , also, that these are doctrines known to the. more advanced Mormons, and not generally taught in the schools.) A man is a portion of the body and soul of the Deity, just as our sons descend from us,find is as eternal as the author of his being. He is born to a lofty destiny, and may i ise to be a God, even the very God, but only by•oheying the preeept and following the example set to. bins of having ninny wives. God rules over several varie ties of disembodied spirits. The per-. feet, who have proved on wilt that; they can rule well their many yvises and families.t-econd. the' imperfect, vho have' failed in their duty to the church on earth by being bachelors, or. having an imperfect and incomplete family government. These will be the servants or the higher powers, sud can never attain to high honors. Third, the dis embodied spirits, children of the ruling pow ers who are waiting until men and women call for them to occupy earthly bodies,who'Se 'souls must wander through mauy . ages - in Hades, till they have atoned for thew guilt, and may be received into a lower cotalithin of happiness. There is neither hell n3r eternity of punishment in the Mormon creed. —Correspondence of the Soolliall-.frees: eau Journal. 'u. SINCIiA. , II `, ~ t LITHOGRAPHIC STABLISHMENT Removed from No. all Chestnut to . Nos. 500 and 508 North Street, (Between Market and Arch) i Bonds, Baps, Certificates, Bin Wads, ClO lars, dhow Cards, Checks, Calmly, &dentine Plates. - -,- .., Drawings of every description, and Chromo.Litio• graphy in the finest style of art. ee.34lxot , BOND'S BCPTCN ANA IRENTON trade supplied with BondWriatter,_c•ream, 09 6. • and E. halo, wiNt a- Ttiorto6, celebiated T rea teeiadWino Biecult, by JOB. B. BUSS/Eli 46 CPA 800 Agents, M 8914 i Delware ayenuo. • • , 1.. ~ LITHOGRAPH) PRINTING. SPEOIA.K. NOWA IE3 BATCHB,LOR'dAin DYE.-LTBIB firLF.NDID 'Bair I:o_ye is tho beet in the world. The only and PerfiW Ne—Barinlessißellablo, ,Inatantattootta. No disappoititntent. No ridicatoun,ttnts. _Natural Black or Brown. Remedies the 11l often! of Bad Dass.. , , Invigorates the hair, leaving it soft and beautiful. The genuine la signed wuziam BATCHIALOR. M °ora aro lint. tationa, and should be avoided. Bold by. alt Druggists and Perfumers. Factory 81 Batalay_street, Now , York, 11BWilltE OF 'A COI4I , I,TBAPIAT. de7.l,M;wly • TUE INDUSTRIAL' HOME, CORNER OF Broad street and Columbia avenue, is open for the admission of Girls from' twelve to eighteen years of age, who are neglected or deserted by their .parents, and who need the shelter and instruction of a Christian home. If the public will sustain tins institution, many girls may be kept from evil, and made respectable and usefu Contributions may he sent to JAMES T. WINN, Tree. .surer, Broad and Spruce strfets. n022-rptf I OFFICE OF , T hl DELAWARE COAL. COMP pang, No. 316 Walnut Street. Philadelphia, Sept. 36th, 1881. The Stockholders will meet at the Company's office at 13*Oclock,on MONDAY the tiventy.chghth.day of OCtober next, to confirm stile and authorize conveyance of real estate situate in rhiladelphia. . J. It. witur, re2,6.28V President OFFICE, OF THE SALEM COAL COMPANY, liar 11 MERCHANTS' EXCHANGE, Puti..tinuxittn, October 13,1897. The general meeting of the Stockholders. for the elec tion of Lirecfors and the transaction of other business, will he held at the Offith of,the Company, on MONDAY, November 4th, 1867, ail o'clock, P. M. 0e9.4 t noe A. L. MASSEX, Beey. JIIII324EDIENTS. RIBLErt3 CONTINENTAL NEWS EXCHANGE CHOICE SEATS To all places of amusement may be had up to 630 o'clock any evening, • mh2d.ti 70PISTORL—AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC. It. Director. . • ... ..J. GRAD. THIS Oct. 25, LAST NIGHT OF MADAME ADELAIDE RISTORL who , she will appear in leer great Tragic role of MEDEA, the same Tragedy in which Madame RISTORI made her triumphant debut in America, and the lAA act of MACBETH, which includes the CELEBRATED SLEEP WALKING SCENE'-so admirably presented last . season by Madame RISTOAL SATURDAY AFTERNOON, at half.past 1. Doom open at 1. MARIE ANTOINETT'E MATINEE, nod Lest Appearance of Mad. RISTORI in Philadelphia in her great role of Mario Antoinette. Admission to Parquet, Parquet Circle and Balooay, III; iteccrved Seats, 60 , cents extra; Family Circle, 50 cents: Gallery, 1115 cents.' _ Santa for the Matinim can be had at the Academy of Music, and at TRUMPLER'S New Music Store, No. 926 Chestnut street. On the Matinee, admission to all parts of the Rouses Reserved Seats. PO cents extra. One. Dellrr.~ A •' • " MARIE ANTOINETTE MATINEE, AMERICAN ACADEMY OP MUSIC. ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON, At half-past 1. Doors open at 1. For the last time, MARIE ANTOINETTE, Girtcometti's last And greatest elaborate work, will be presented with great e plendor,gorgeous cosltumas and new scenery of the most costly 'character. Last appearante in Plilladeltihla of MADAME ADELAIDE Rid WORM. in her great role of MARIE ANTOINETTE. On the Matinee. admi.sion to all parts of the Academy, One Dollar. Reserved Seats, NI cents extra. WALNUT STREET THEATRE. T ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY. MONDAY EVENING, October :$B, MC. BENEFIT OF . . MR. THOMAS J. HEMPHILL. • Business Manager and Treasurer. when will he roxiduced, after careful preparation, A MUSICAL OPERATIC COMEDY, in three acts, now playing with 11111111•11:40 HUCCCI36 at the. French Theatre, Newt ork, entitled THE GRAND DUCHESS OF GEROLSTEIN. adapted and arranged expressly for the American Stage, full of sparkling Songs, Ducts, Dances, Choruses, dm MRS. W . GOMERSAL. the charming Vocalist and Burlesque Actress, who has been engaged expressly for six nights. will appear as THE GRAND DUCHESS. Concluding with the beaful Comedy_of THE SOLDIER S DAUGHTER. Box sheet now opcn for the securing of seats. oe2i-Bt ---- AATALNUT STREE'/"I'LIEATRE, N. E. CORNER OF TT NINTH and WALNUT atreetts.' Begins 'IRIS (Fridy) EVENING, Ocber MR, • BEIEFTT OF MEL J. B. ROBERTS, who will appear in THREE CHARACTERS, . SIR EDWARD MORTII.LE it, • in Coleman's popular Pi IRON of TuE N CHEST, AND FABLAN DEI FRANCIII AND LOUIS DEI tRANCLII, in the thrilling dramatin Romance of • • TliF) - CORSICAN BROTHIDa. SATURDAY—SPLENDID BILL. XTEW CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE. IN Doors apes at 7. Commence at a quarter before & THIS (Friday) EVENING. Oct. 2e, BENEFIT of the Distinguished Actress, MRS. D. P. BOWERS. who will appear in the biato STUAR rical Tr T, agedy, MARY PaPPorted byy THE BRILLIANT STOCK COMPANY. Produced with BEAUTIFUL SCENERY. To conclude with THAT BLESSED BABY. SATURDAY MATINEE, ..MRS.D. P..BOWERS as MARY STUART. In active preparation. eIAttLE ANTOINETTE. MIW. JOUN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE. BeglIU! at IN a , clOOlL, NOBODY'S DAUGLUTER-,A GREAT urr. BENEFIT OF MISS KATE REIONOLDS. TO-NIGHT (Friday) Oct. 25th. 18417. FIFTLITIMEAm Fulton Ilaeder's grand Drama UG of_ z _ I'll BODY'S DAIITER, with its startling (beets. Great Gambling Scene of KENO. FARO AND ROULETTE. MISS KATE ItEIGNOLD3 in three original characters, aided by the Full Company MONDAY, November 4th,—SURF. Every Scene New. N E W CHEST NUT STREET THEATRE. EXTRA ANNOUNCEMENT. ' SATURDAY AFTERNOON, nctober 24th, GRAND FAMILY MATINEE. On which °When n, MRS. D. P. BOWERS Will appear it\' ice gMAat re impe TU A reo natßT. ion of MARY S • Admieelon to 11 parte of the Home, 80 cents. - • Deere open at 15. Curtain Gees at 2.15.___ It ACADEM 4,, c0.1 , MUSIC. RIGGINGS' ENfILISII OPERA COMPANY. CAROLINE. RICHINGS • Directress Wi M tt commence a limited Beaman on MONDAY EVENING, October 25th. IMI. All the Old Favorltee, with additional'Articte and New Operas. Opening Opera, BOHEMIAN GIRL. Box hheet for the 91110 of Reserved Seale, WITHOUT EXTICA CHARGE. Now open at Trumpler's New Munk Store, No. 9213 Chest. nut eirect. Tickete, One Dollar. . 0c24-Btl3 NE W PHILADELPHIA-OPERA HOUSE, SEVIINTILIittnot. below ARCM, THE RESOnOM FASHION. The largest and most magnificent MINS . ] BEL HALL IN AMERICA. TUNISON & CO.'S MINaTRELS. Crowded idu!lutly with the elite of the city. Now pm foniling r 'ut; STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA, one of the most LAUGHABLE BURLESQUES of the nge. Company comprlang the beet talent in the country, headed by EPti. HORN, FRANK hfORAN, W. S. Budworth, C. Church, W. Allen, W. L. Hobbs and S. Sanford. AduMsion—Parenct, 10 cents. Funnily Circle, %cents. Private Boxes, 0, Dom , open at 7 o'clock. Performance commences at 8. Box °nice open h emu 10 to 3 o'clock. oclatfl ‘6BEII.BLY BUILDINO, TENTH and CHESTNUT streets. . The Mammoth STEltEO'('lCONforarho t time only. commencing on MONDAY EVENING, October 91, at 8 o'clock . . 'lids instrument produces the same effect ob. hived by a Parlor Stercoecone of making objects stand out is bold relief, only nit a gigantic evsle. 'rho collection es.lo aces eevet at hundred of the finest European and American viewd, enabling the 11111111.1gera to vary their piegraleme Irni t time to tipse. f ldr.:•lts. Children, 26 cents. ficlmte ter sale at 't I:2;Bll'LElt'd Mimic Store. 92.6 eetind street. and at the Poor. ocllctit S T:1;. - ELEVENTH STREET OPERA 11/ USE, E 1 . ENTII street, above CIiE6TNUT. r,Oll RESOIzT. oARNCRoSS Ss DJ N MINSTRELS. THE ta.E.V.i STAR TROGPE OF THE woRLD, By dew);. the ”roat tamoutional Panorama, the UltltArt TEll' A HOUND TUE WORLD, gill I rhea t, d one week 17101 V. • ltir~t tv uck of the uew Iturlerque entitled • E Itll.ll,MW.sa , RAIDERS. Lard wed): of the wonderful • JAPS AND ARABS. LJ fl Olt.T 1 CHLTI.TI.LAL HALL. GRAND MArt IN: , F., Ity CARL sr.Nrws ttIICHEbTRA of Forty Performers.. EVERY THURSDAY AFPliltNuoS. • • nt half-pa,t t oree o'cloc%. ocolipt—Minn GLORGIA NA 111,Alallu1 Ng. 6.tNG1.0 ADMIS6ION, 60 CENTS. rneknee of 4 Ticker, for titl. To be Iced at Loner & Co't. Store. 1.102 Chertnts etr6ct. find at the doin: oeTi Ab6I;:%IBLY BUILDINGS. SIGNOR BLITZ. FAREWELL SEASON' King of Magicians, Prince of Ventrilolniata. olld of 34 yvt. ;ice, Drol'erica of the oleo. GI en t IndLm Barket Foal. The Ii tightible llluatrcla and the Birds. EVENINGii at; ' WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY AF'fiII:NOGNS at 3 o'clock. A thniredon 25 cents; Ghildren 15 cents; Reserved Scats 50 cos. ocs-tf _ - - Ar'tERNIANIA ORCHESTRA.—PI BLIU REHEARSALS Vf at the MUSICAL FUND HALL every SATURDAY at 1.06 A.P.A. Tickets bola at ',he Door nut at all principal Nt mill St oive. EngagementA can be made by addres,ang G. BAbTERT, 12:5 Monterey street, or at It. wrrncvs wrie Store. 1021 Uhystuat otreat. oelo ----- FOX'S AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE EVERY EVENING and SATURDAY AFTERNOON. GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE. In Grand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesques, Songs, Dances, Gvihnost Act& Pantomimes. &c. pENNkIYTNAIVIA ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS, CHESTNUT. above TENTH. Open from A. M. to 6P. M. Benjaniin West's great Picture of CHRIST REJECTED 0111 on exhibition. 184.0 fIANNED FRUIT, VEGETABLES, (to.--1,000 CASES V f rij o l canned Poaches; 600 cases fresh Uannod klito Apples ;PM eases fresh Pine Apples, in g i as4 . 1 000 cases Green Corn and Green Teas; bee cases fresh 1,1„no. in cans; 200onses fresh Green Gages; 500 cases Cherries, In syrup; 600 caeca Blackberries, in syrup; 600 cases Straw berries, in syrup ; 500 eases fresh Pears, in syrup ;2,olawases uped Tomatoes ; 000 Muttonyst, Lobsters and C 1111118; 500 OW.es Roast Beef Veal, Soups, fire. For sale bY 'JOSEPH B. BIeSSIER dr CO" 108 Mouth Delaware avenue,,, . " 313 - xt,v.ggs, faolaps , - FROM • . • LATE AUOTION' SALES '• Owing to the general depression Which has prevailed in trade this season, we have had great advantages in our purchases in the AUCTION ROOM. This, with our cheap location for conducting our busi ness, enables us to offer n large and attractive stock of New-Goodsta.+ prices which will compote with any in the City. CURWEN STODDART & BROTHER, 450, 452 and 454 N. Second Street, above Willow. 0c2413t 4r.) III1*) $ alp 44111.1i=11,9 E. M. NEEDLES & CO. Invite attention to their First-class Stock of Laces and Lace Goods, 0 EmbroideriesP f Hdkrs Veils &o To which additions will constantly be made, tit A ti l e Novelties of the Reason. .4 They oiler :heir g White Goode Department HEAVY SKIRTING CAMBRICS I et 80. 85, and 40 cents. A Great Sacrifice. liilMWriP -0 - = MMr.:'7Wiz.riSVlT" INDIA SHAWLS. 11Gr . ER, 916 Chestnut Street, llas received and now open his Fall Importation of India Shawls and Scarfs, together with all other kinds of Shawls Also Elm DRESS SILKS. • BLACK SILKS, POrLINS, CLOAKINGS, CLOAKS, eta., To which the attention of purchasers fa incited; the goods are purchased for cash and will he sold cheap. se3otfo J. CITA.M.I33ER , S, No. 810 Arch Street, HAS JUST OPENED NOVELTIES IN POINTE LACE GOODS. THREAD LACE VEILS, CLUNY COLLARS, POINTE LACE DMUS., Bargains; lIMIBURO EDGINGS. 760 French Embroidered Linen Seta. from 50 canto to $1 —legs than halTprice. oc11111:0 1101 CHESTNUT STREET E. IL NEEDLES 8; CO ' S, (;) LW, Cor.llth and Chestnut Sta, House Farnirling • Dry Gook Bought at the recent depressed prices. RigiSheeting,Pillow and Table Linens. s l i g .toths and Napkins to match. Wine Olotiylies, Towels and Toweling, Marseilles ulna and Toilet Covers, Blankets. Honey Co mb. Lancaster,A ll endale. ‘...• Jacquard, and other Spcads. Domestic Means and Sheetinpe, In all qualities and widths. • AT THE LOWEST ItATF.S. 'LS ,11,11N,L531-10 10 CASSIMEHES.• CLOAKINGS. HEAVY Al Chinchilla Beavers, for Overcoats and Cloaks., "Joharney's" Czrine Beavers. superb quality. Silver Fox Cioakings, Whitney Beavers. Fine 6-4 Mixed Cloakinge, ingood styles, $2, $2 W and $3. Black Doerkin Cassimeres, in variety. Nice Mixed Cassimeres, for Boys $l. • Large assortment of 3.lmed Cassimeres, for Boys' Suits. Very Fine Casaimerea. for Gentlemen's Suit. • STOKES k WOOD, 702 Arch street. EDWIN BALL & CO., SOUTH SECOND STREET. are now receiving their Fall and Winter importation, Fancy Styles Poplins. SUk•faced Poplins. • Plain Silk. and Wool Poplins. Black and Colored Poplin Alpacas. Black and Colored Delainee. Black and Colored Poplins. - !- Fancy Styles of Makings. 84 Green and Blue. Blue and White. and Scarlet and White Cloaking& GENV/Eit runNismriro OOODb• PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT MANUFACTORY. Orden, for these celebrated Shnotice irt' ouoyllea promptly b. Gentlemen's FOrnishing Goods, Of late etylee in full variety. WINCHESTER & CO., 706 CHESTNUT. Jelign.w,f.tf J. w. SCOTT & co., SHIRT MANUFACTURERS, AND DEALERS IN Men's Furnishing Goods, Sl4 Chestnut Street, Four doom below the "Continental." 1111LADELPICEA. mhll.m.w.tl "/" i GENTS' PATENT-SPRING AND B. ..f.' 7 tgisdbrrern G etrit r u 4 ; C altl i arc i g h 4fOtli v = **. , Velvet Legylngs; Bloomed° to order • '' tiv - GENTS' FUR.NIS G GOODS, ,r- street, of every description, very low, 9U3 Chestnut f --- street, corner of Ninth. the htai. Kid Glover for ladigp and pmts, at rti._!_ _ CtiELIDERFEItIi BAZAAR mvntmotl OPEN IN THEE , , • NING LADIES> COEt BET .RCH STREET, (BELOW FOURTH), PHILADELPHIA. 51328-2 m. SPECIAL NOTICE.— FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS FOR 1867. Mrs. M. A. BINDER, 1031 CHESTNUT B PREM. Importer of Ladies' Dress and Chvik. Trimmings in Fringes, Satin Trimmings, Tassels, Chaps, Braiday bone, Guipure and Cluny Laces, Crape Trimmings, Foley Jet Collars and Belts. Fast Edge Velvets, in choice shades. —ALSO— • Black Velvets, all widths, at low prices. Parisian Mese and Cloak-Making in all its Departments. Dresses made on 24 hours , notice. Wedding and Travel ing outfits made to order iu the most elegant manner and stanch rates as cannot fail to aloes. Suits of mourning at marten notice. Elegant Trimmed Paper Patterns for Ladles' and Can , dren's Dresses. Seta of Patterns for Merchants and Dressmakers ready, Patterim sent by mall or express to all parts of the Union. Mrs. Huttonts and Madame Demoresthi charts for sal, and System of Dress-Cutting taught. se24-tf ('CANTON PRESERVED GINGER. PRESERVED kJ Ginger. In syrup, of the celebrated . Chyloong brand• oleo, Dry , Preserved Ginger, in boxer', imported and for, sale by JOSEPUB.RGSSIER dc 00..108 South Delaware , avenue. . I.ROWN BRAND LAYER RAISINS. WHOLDB NJ halves and iptirtsx boxes of thin splendid fruit, land. ing,..and for sale hy" aos. D. 131.7.9131.Ett & CO. 108 south Delaware avenue. ROWN'S MANUFACTORY. NEW BUOKWHEAT FLOUR, WHITE CLOVER HONEY, FIRST OP THE SEASON. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Mar in Eine &maim Corner Eleventh and Vine Street% FINE PARMASAN CHEESE, DUTCH•IHEAD CITE E, IMITATION ENGLISH STILTON CHEESE. For Bale by JAMES K. WEBB, WALNUT and EIGHTS Street& FIRs3Ts vrifg m u 3l FOR BEST FAMILY FLOUR , At the late , Inter-State Pali to • •-• George Zehrider 9 Dealer in choke Brands Penna., Ohio, It, Louie and Virginia Flours Also, Onbolted Rye and Wheat, for making Dorton Brown Bread, Rye Flour, Indian Deal, he., he. GEO. F. ZEHNDEIL„ , Fourth and trine. sel7tl PASTRY FLOUR. We have now in Ptoro and are constantly supplied with. the following brands of choice fancy White Winter Wheat Flour: BRILLIANT. 09LD DUST. bUPERLATFVE. FOUR ACES. THOMPSON'S ST. LOUIS. GEISENDORFF'S XXXX We arc solo Agents for these brands in this city. HOFFMAN *:KENNEDY, ocleinrwl4 804 NORTLOWILA RITES. UNION COCOA STICKS. CHOCOLATE, COCOA, Brows, and other Chocolate preparationa, manatee. = tured by Joefah Webb & Co. For nate by E. C. KNIGHT trz CO., A genta (or the Manufacturers. 0c2.11104 S. E. Cor. Water and Chcatnut Strode. M - ACKEREL-152 RIMS, 74 I.IALVES, 1 QUARTER t , late caught Bay No. 1 MackereL Just received and for sale by B. SOUDER k 04)., oc7A-tit Dock Street Wharf. ATEW CROP TEAS—FINEST QUALITY '1 911 INA 1.11 and Japanete Teas in store and for sale a , ;COLBTY'S Beat-End Grocery, No.llB South Second etre., 17)LE lt OLD JAMAICA RUM, IIOLII • "CD GIN. blediclnal Wines and Brandies, Speer'. Port iNqua and California Wince, in store and for sale, t CO 03TY'S Feet-End Grocery, No. 118 South Second ey'eet. -6:itENOBLE WALNUTS.-8. BALES/ F ORENOBLII Paper Shell Walnut., and • . Ps,pos Shell Al monde for sale by M. F. EIP/ELlki .W. (.or . Arch =A Eighth streets. EW MESS MACKERE _ •• " - CIT.LED SALMON, SEES: ad, and , • Bound» in Witt, loft reedy.. and for c STY'S East-End Grocery, No. I. South Second street. LiACCARONI AND VERMICELLL-IDO. BOXES 01P 1111 choice Leghorn Disecarord andi Vermicelhe lag importation, in store and for sale hy M. F. W. Cor. Arch and Eighth st reets. VW HITE PRESERVINGL ORANDY, PURE CIDER T T Vinegar ~ P ure Spices, Mustard Seed. dcc., always on hand at COL STY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second street. NEW GREEN GINGER-900 LBS. JUST RDGEIVED. in_ prime order. For ease st COUSTY'S ESE End Ore. eery, o. 118 South Second street. rizrrmrTioi T'S-10'3 __:_._ EXCHANGED FOR 5-20 9 5, ON MOST FAVORABLE TERM% De Haven. &Etre., 40 South Third Street. oVic u 4 SPECIALTY. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO. BANKERS AND BROKERS 16 South Third St, 3 Nurse Street, fluledelphie. New York, STOOKS AND GOLD DOINThit AND 80W ON COMMON:WM INTEREST ALLOWED ON DRTOSITIL .MIGHT 4°. -44 BANKERS & BROKER'S, N 0.17 NEW STREET, N.EW YORK, Particular attention given to the purchase and sale oZ GOVERNMENT SEGER/WES, RAILRO BONDS AND GOLD. Business exclusively on Commission. All orders will receive our personal attention at the Stock Exchange and Gold Board, doll4Yo LOOKING GLASSES AND PAINTINGS* A . S. ROBINSON,. MO CHESTNUT STREET, LOOKING GLASSES, ]PAIIOTTIIOTGt3, Engravings and Photographs. Plain and Ornamental Gilt Frames. Carved Walnut and Ebony jARIIIVB. ON DANE , OR MADE TO ORDER! 5 I7r yv ) , 4 to 1 Q,..1 Jilort 6 " ;e7 ciez7A/v/ CILESTNTIT VI -A, 32. ..1%7; Succanor fa Gee. I , 7'Orny . , 3E2 .11. JO" 24. 28, 28 and 80 South .Biztt.St.• Phila~l a. Fin Old Stcteka NutatairB les, bye , r a mili end HAPPIEST lIATS. The clouds in many a windy rack Arc sailing oast and west, AO sober suns are bringing back The days T love thebest. • The poet, as he will, may go To summer's golden prime, And set the roses In a row Along his fragrant rhyme. But as for me, I slug the praise Of fading dowers and tree,. For to my mind the sweetest days' Of all the year are these: When stiibbly bills and hazy skins Proclaim the harvest done, And Labor wipes his brow, and Iles A dreaming in the anti= And Idly hangs the spider on Her broken silver stab., And ghosts of thistles, dead and gone, /31Ide elott , eking the air-- Where all is still, unless perhaps The cricket makes ado, ' 0r Whet* The dry-billed heron snaps Some brittle reed in two— • Or school boy tramples through the burs His tangled path to keep, r ripe•mast rustling downward, stirs The shadows from their sleep. Ay. he that wills It so may praise The lilies and the bees; • But as for me, the sweetest days Of all the year are these. —Frans "A Love e'a Diary," ley 'like Carl/ Scene in a London litituallatic Church. tl`correspondent of the Pall Malt Gazette writes this account of of his recent visit to St. Michael's Church, London: I had heard that the evening before Michaelmaii Day (I speak as a man ac quainted with bills) would be the best time for seeing with what magnificence the festival of Si. Michael and All Angels would he celebrated. The service, I was informed, would commence at-half-past eight; but that if I wanted a seat I ought to be at the doors much earlier. Accordingly, I went betimes, bad no difficulty in obtaining admittance, and easily got a seat. Unfortunately my, view was interrupted by a big pillar, but I can posi tively affirm that the church was full to overflowing and . semi-suffocation before half-past eight; that the pillars were covered to, their ornamental tops with red cloth or baize, and had the ornamented tops hung with festoons of flowers, berries, and evergreens; that banners of many kinds floated on either side of you as you sat facing the altar; that fine bouquets, in what looked like silver vases, were plentiful on and about the precincts of ? the altar; that there was a great blaze of light and a glorious glare of color; and that a spectator felt inclined to adapt the memorable phrase of Marshal Rosquet; and exclaim, "C'cst magnifique; mats ce n'est pas la religion? At times an ecclesiastic (at least he wore a surplice, though his rank was probably not much above that of a gig -bishop) seized a bell rope 'which bung conveniently near the chancel and evoked aby no means tuneful sound from a cracked bell reported to have come from Sebastopol, whither many of the dwellers in the neighborhood of St. Michael's would cheerfully subscribe to have it re turned. At length the service seemed about to commence, for procession was formed, which, issuing from a door in a corner, marched down the north side of the church, and then up the middle to the places appro priated to the members of the procession. At the head walked two standard-bearers, one carrying a banner with a device, as it ap peared, of aspeckled „cross on a crimson ground—the other a banner with the de vice of a crimson cross upon a white ground, said to be St. Michael's own colors. There__was also—a--third —standard-hearer,- who carried a banner where was a portrait suisttredly` of Saint Michael. One member of the procession bore aloft a huge gilt cross or crucifix (I think the former, although I know the difference is quite as important as that between aibboleth and shibboleth), and another bore upon a crimson velvet cushion something bearing a strong resemblance to an embroidered s , smoking cap; red-hot Rit ualists and anti-Ritualists will both know what it really was—l speak as my eyes in structed me. The procession must have con sisted of more than fifty persons, of whom some were evidently choristers; some wore what looked like yellow, tippets, and were (it was suggested) clergymen; one looked like a legate from the Heralds' College, so figured was he behind and before; and one or two appeared to have an executioner's red cloak with a white gown over it. There were few comparatively ordinary officials, whose only peculiarity was a tight black upper gar ment; these officials eventually pulled out from their hinder pockets implements in the form of landing-nets, with which they were avenged upon the mere sight-seer, who was given to understand that the landing-nets were for the catching of coin. The members of the procession, as they marched down and up, would have sung a triumphal hymn bad they been able th master the tune: but though many of them carried the music as well as the words, the result was a failure, and it may be said that the singing was as a whole execrable. The service was the ordinary choral ser vice, except that there were interpellations of hallelujahs sung by the choir with great energy and suddenness, and of unintelligible vocal exercises performed by a boy at junc tures where the directions printed in the usual prayer books do not give any warning, so that the unritualist worshipper wasted much valuable time in fruitless endeavors to "find the place." If my memory serves me properly, the preacher gave out,no text; but, after invoca tion of the„Trinity, slid almost imperceptibly from -a recommendation that those persons who wanted to go should go at once, to a dis course about St. Michael 'and the angels. It seems that they have adopted the arrange ments of our calendar. At least the preacher informed us that St. Michael and the angels were preparing to keep their festival just as the clergy and congregation of St. Michael's were. His remarks about the sacramental „presence, the mother of Goo, the confessional, and so on, were such as one would suppose a judicious preacher, fearful of disturbing the minds of weak brethren, would omit. Be declared that God himself had instituted ritual; and he might have made the same deelaration about purnt sacrifice. -He selected epithets for certain angels, talking of the "blessed Gabriel," the "magnificent Michael," and (as I understood) the "beneficent Ra phael," and he maintained that the prospects ef a man were preferable to those of a "blessed angel." At last we were dismissed, and in Walking quietly by;bad an opportu nity of observing the candles on and about the altar. So many candles I never saw out of a shop, and both they and the sticks which _held them were. gigantic. And the candles were, without any possibility of Mistake, lighted. Indeed, the aprearance of the east nd of the church was most brilliant;' and Ritualists may rest contented, and anti-Ritual ists discontented, with the assurance that everything was done to usher in with due pomp and circumstance the 'festival 'of St. Michael and All Angels. Ailized ADlLerien,ll An Arizona'correspondent writes thus: I have spent much time in Central Arliona, and have studied: it pretty thoroughly. I have especially turned , my attention to the previous occupation of the country by a civ ilized race, the probable cause of their de struction. and its subsequent occupation by the preseht race of wild Apaches and Pueblo Indians.. It is a magi. •of conjecture when this race of people, who have left so many grand works behind them (now in ruins), first came into the country. It is,presumed, however, that they must have crossed to this country by Behring's Straits and traveled south until they , found a suitable country to settle upon. 'There are but few remains of these settlernents to be fonnd north of the 77th parallel of north latitude, but south of that line and west of the 104th parallel of west longitude the ruins of ancient cities and towns are found. • Humboldt, Ward, Wilson, and Bourne, besides more recent explorers, have given to the worhdJ a partial description only of the peculiar features of the former settlement of Arizona by a race far superior to the present aboriginal inhabitants, de scendants of a people who cultivated many of the arts and sciences probably brought by them from the climes of Asia and Africa. My explorations, in the central portion of Arizona have been prolific in bringing to light many new features of the ancient occupation of the country, not seen by the explorers who have Preceded me since the 'year .1805. I find that the reports of Father De Nica are in the main true. The towns which he gives an account of are traceablh from the Casa Blanca to the pretintit towns of Zuni and Mogul. I date the period of the destruction of these towns from 1569, and since the visits of De Nica and Cap tain Espejo. These conclusions' are arrived at from geological appearances and the fact that those cities and towns were destroyed by volcanic convulsions. Ruins of former habi tations are everywhere-to be found in Central Arizona. Traces if acegnais, or canals for conveying water to supply the inhabitants, are seen in many places. Inscriptions on rocks several hundred. feet from the valley below, and perpendicular, note with accuracy the former condition of the country. showing that there did exist lakes of great size, which communicated with the ocean—as Inscrip tion Rock on the Pieced°, near Zuric, the bluffs of Moguls, those of Ojo del Gallo, and the basin of Owens River plainly indicate, the outlet of the latter being at Red Rock canon. CRIME. A REMARKABLE AFFAIR. A Little Boy-'l`ries to Hang Has Brother and 'when Hangs Himself. [Friona the 3rehiphli Post, Oct. 14.] coricepondent at 104 Mile Siding, on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, sends us the particular?. of a most singular and de plorable occurrence which occurred at that place on the lt!th hut. Three children of Mr. William; Roberts (a workman at the mill at the Siding) went out to the woods, a few hundred,yards from the house, to gather sticks for the fire to cook dinner. They were a little boy of nine years of age, another of seven, and a little sister of five. They had with them some small cords or strings, plaited from the raveings of old gunnysacks. The elder boy, it seems had become, by some means, 'possess of a mania on the subject of hanging, and often spoke (sometimes in a jesting way, and at other times apparently in earnest) of hang ing himself, but his parents had no idea that he seriously meditated anything of the kind or would attempt to carry it into effect. While out in the woods on-this occasion, he took his smaller brother to a bush not over six feet high, and bending it down required his little sister to hold it bent, while, he tied one of - the strings mentioned around his brother's neck find fastened the other end to the top of the bush, and then let it go. The bush, however, -.had- not sufficient spring to strangle the little fellow; and only choked him to a slight extent. The elder brother then untied him and took him 'to a stump -which-had a-projecting-limb,- and -tried-hard to hang him to it; but the coitAfter:passing around his neck, was not long enough to tie around the limb, and he abandoned the at _ tempt. - Having failed to hang his brother, the boy then seems to have determined to hang him self, and climbing up a sapling about fifteen feet high and about the thickness of a man's arm at the ground, he made a slip-noose with the cord, which he placed around his neck, and tying the other end to the top of the sapling, he jumped from the bush, bend ing it down with his weight, and being strangled almost instantly by the noose tightening on his neck. The brother and sister ran to the house and gave the alarm, but when assistance arrived the boy was quite dead. His. knees Were on the ground, and the cord stretched tight by the spring of the sapling. The small string used had made the work of death sudden and sure. . The whole affair is a very singular one,con sidering the youth of the victim. The act was clearly premeditated, and the probable effect of the means understood. Tobacco the Cause of Disease. Mr. Trask, in his crusade against tobacco, can find important data in papers read before the French Academy of Medicine by scientific enemies to the weed. Leading scientific men in France, and eminent teachers unite in the opinion that the use of tobacco is most pernicious to students, and sows the seeds of many fatal diseases. It is interdicted, if we mistake not, in the Polytechnic School. One of the members of the Academy of Medicine. in a very elaborate paper drawn up with great care, asserts that "statistics show that in exact proportion with the increased con sumption of tobacco is the increase of dis eases in the nervous centres (insanity, gen eral paralysis,: paraplegia) and certain cancerous affections. ' It may be said, in reply, that the Turks, Greeks and Hungarians are inveterate smokers, and yet are little affected by these nervous dis eases. But M. Jolly accounts for their ex emption by the fact that the tobacco used by them is of a much milder form, containing slight proportions of nicotine, and sometimes none at all. Excessive indulgence, therethre, does no harm in this direction, and no case of general sin progressive paralysis has been discovered in the East, where this mild to bacco is in use. M. Moscan says : "The cause is plain enough and evidently physio logical. In all the regions of the Levant they do not intoxicate themselves with nico tine or alcohols but saturate themselves with opium and_ perfumes, sleeping away their time in torpor, indolence and sensuality. They narcotize, but do not nicotine them selves; and if opium, as has been said; Is the poison of the intellect .of the East, - tobacco may one day prove,in the West the poison of life itself.' It is the nicotine, in the stronger tobacco Used in England, France and the United States, which proves so pernicious, and the French physicians hold that paralysis is mak ing rapid advance under the abuse of alcohol and tobacco. There has been au enormous, increase of insanity, and: of eliseages of the' nervous centres in France, chiefly among men, and whenever the history of such cases has been examined in asylums:and hospitals, their connection with tobacco has been obvious. Soldiers and sailors, whose abuse of tobacco is most flagrant, are the most numerous classes In, these hospitals, and their cases are the most 'incurable. The reform of _veteran smokers is almost hopeless, but possibly some may be deterred from falling into bad habits by a knowledge of these fatal tendencleS., Nervous diseases have increased rapidly in this country as in France, and paralytic shocks'are -frequent. If theae are owing largely to the use of tobacco young men will do well to flee temptation, NIA eeentti k the pettaltyorviaence (R. 4.) .rourn4l. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OOTOBEII 25, IA?, From our latest Edition of Yesterday. Hy the Atlantic Cable. FLORENCE. Oct. 23d, 9P. M.—The news i s glorious for the cause of Italy, -but the Govern meet suppresses the details. - - Seizure of Smuggled Goods. Nuw YORK', Oct. 240.—Tw0 bags' 'of silk rib bons, cotton hose, webbing, tape and shirt but tons, supposed to have been smuggled on the steamer,City of Loudon, were seized this morn- Mg. The ship Marmion has-,arri'ved here from San Francisco, and the mate, Joseph W. Spraul, has delivered himself up for shooting, a seaman namcd4fidrew Quinlan; for mutiny and deadly assault. Spraul has been held to answer. The Newlter Money N i arket. NEW Y0nK,0ce.24.--7Yloney is easier on call and discounts arc extremely stringent. Exchange active; Governments dull; stocks active, IlloV4mentit'ol: . General Shetlditn. PkOVIDENCE, Oct. 24.—General Sheridan left for Hartford to-ditty. itENß ,pp i ,ap 014' TRADE. CHARLES WHEELER, MaximLy Comerms, JAS. F. YOUNG, 'Reporfea tor the rinludelpnla vening Bulletin. sp. JOHN, NB.-Behr Addle Ryerson, Houghton-- 786,300 laths 19,435 pie. eta D Tromp, Bon & Co. DIOVEDIESITS OF OCEAN STEADIERS. , . . tTO ARSIVS. EtAXII6 mom TOE . DAM Worcester........Liveirpooli .Baltlmore Oct. 2 Helvetia.. .....:Llierpool—New 'York Oct. 9 C of Wamhbigton.Liverpool—New York Oct. 12 Hecht Liverpool_New York ...... —Oct. 12 Allemanla— ...... Hamuurg..New York' Oct. 12 Malta ... ... .... ...Llverpool—New York Oct. 12 Minnesota...... ...Liverp'l..New York ........Oct. 15 Hansa .. .....iionthampton..New Y0rk ........ Oct. 15 City of Faris Liverpool—New York Oct. 16 Caledonla„,. , .;;...,itilegew,lloW York ..... —.Oct. 16 France.... .... , .. L verpool—New York Oct. 16 Nestorian.. ...... Liverpool, ,lituebeo ... ........Oct. _ 16 Russia .Liverpool_biew Yor ...Oct. 19 Bellona 4:„London..New Y0rk.........0ct 19 Propontia... Liverpool_Boeton ...Oct. 19 . , TO DEPART. Atlantic New York.. Bremen Oct. 28 Fulton New York..Havre ..Oct. 26 soniesta,....„. :New York..Htuuburg Oct. 26 United iiingdorn:.N York..Glasgovr ..... .....Oct. 26 Alliance ..... „Phliadelphia..Charleston Oct. 26 France.. ..'... .P _.New York.. Liverpool Oct. 26 Tonawanda ...hiludel phia_Savannah Oct. 26 Moravian Quebec.. Liverpool. ..... ...Oct. 26 City of London.. New York.. Liverpool Oct. 26 Atlanta .... . . ....Ne4York..London Oct. 26 Pennsylvania. .New York..Liverviol ... . . ....Oct. 26 H Hudson .. :Philadelphia.. Havana ' ; Oct. 29 Persia.. New York.. Liverpool Oct. 39 Pioneer._ ... .Philudeinhia..Wilmingt'n,NC... Oct. 31 ED ule ~....New York.. Havana Oct. 31 Arizona New York..Abpinwall... ..... Nov. 1 City of Parie....New York..l.lverpooL .. Nov. 2 Villa de Purie....New York..Elarre 'Nov. 2 C 0,13 robl a New York..Glaegow Nov. 2 Star of the I:nion..-Pl9l sda..Charleston Nov. 2 bvu niece , 6 41 BoN brrs. 519 11110 U WA? ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Steamer MaTtlower, Robijabon. from New York,with mdse to W M Baird A; Co. Steamer C Comstock. Drake, 24 hours (rot \. York, ith =the to W M Baird Co. Steitir.er Tar.ollY, .:CidION, 24 hours from New York, with mdse to NV S 1 Baird a. Co. Bchr Addle 'Ryerson, Iluughlon, 14 days from St. John, NB. with lathe, Ite• to D Tramp, Sou ..44 Co. Schr Weetinoreland, Rice. Providence. Tug ThosJetlerbon, Allen, from Baltimore. with a tow of barges to W P Clyde 8t: Co. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer Philadelphia, Fultz, Neyr York, Win P Clyde dr, Co. Steamer II L Gaw, Iler, Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Seta Westmoreland, Rice, Providence, Westmoreland Coal Co. Schr Levi Hunter. Perry. Boston, do Sehr Sll Hewitt, Foster, Boston, Borda, Keller. & Nuttine. Schr Louisa Frazier, Steelman, Boston, It Jones. Tug Thomas Jefferaon. Allen for Baltimore., with a tow of bargea,W P Clyde ileCo. 514 Orpheus. CtoWell, cleared at New York yester day for San Francisco. Ship America. Morse, from New York, at Acapulco lot Inst.—had henry weather on the passage. Ship Uncle Toby, Sinnett, from Callao, at Baltimore 23d Inst. Ship Franklin, Barsley, cleared at San Francisco 3d inch for Bong Hong. Ship Juliet Trundy, Perry, from Baltimore for San FrancSro, which put into Rio Janeiro 14th ult. was leakir.c , nine inches, per hour at the time. She was discharging 25th nth , Ship Emerald. Alickell. from San Francisco flat May for Liverpool. was epoken 15th Auz. off Cape Horn. Ship Kenilworth,,Brown. from. Baker's Island, with guano., put into Falmouth. Eng. 9th inst. leaky. Ship Oscar I, Overgaard, front St John, NB. at H,ravlreerd.9l.ll inst. Steamer Star of the Union. Cooksey, from New Or leans 19th inet. via Havana 23d inst. for this port, has on board 539 hales cotton, 15 bales moss, 20 bbls pe t sus, 1201 bbls flour, 99 empty casks, I'6 empty bbls, 16 pkgs corks, and 11 pkgs mdse. Steamer Columbia, Barton, cleared at New York yesterday for Havana, ac. Steamer Beverly. Price, cleared at N York yestenday for this port. Steamer New York (Brem), Dreyer, cleared at New York .43d inst. for Bremen. Steamer Cortes, Whitman, cleared at New Orleans 19th inst. for New York. Steamer Cruanuer, iloodlese, cleared at New Oneans lath that. for Liverpool. Bark Cereal, Bolt, hence for Venice. was spoken 22d ult. lat 41. lon 48. Bark .0: A Sunder, Payne. from London for this port, was passed 'ad inst. Ist 40 54, lon 69. Barks Eugenia; Dennis, and Somerville, 11511, hence, were loading at St Mary's Ga, 18th instant for Monte video. Bark E Schultz, Rueeell, cleared at Guttenberg 3d lust. for Toth America. Lark Wheatland, Johnson.from New York via Mon tevideo, at lineno, Ayree Gth ult. Balk Aguee, 'Thompson, at Baltimore 22d net. front Rio Jacek°. with coffee. Brig J Bid:more, Graffam, cleared at Portland 23d inst. for this lain. Brig Mine (Br), Morrow, hence at Cienfuegos 9th inst.—nor as before reported. Brig Lille. Day, at St Marys, Ga. IStli inst. from Sa y:3'4lrib. to load for Canary BrigS V Hlerricl., 'Gorden, hence at Havana 17th Inst. via Bey Brig blit,tile Traub, Bacon, sailed from vatanzas I:th it.E.t. for a port noritt of natter:l& —. bcbr Pearl. Goo Len, elthed at. New York yesterday fur this port. Schr J C Patterson, Corson, at New York yesterday from Burton. Sehrs Caroline Kienzie, : WoOdrnlf, and Boston, Smith, sidled from Providence 22d had. for this port. Schr D 1 P Bedsun, Buell, ' cleared at Portland 21st inst. for this port. Schr Grace Walton, Nickerson, hence at N Haven 21st inst. Schr Clorub, cleared at Georgetown, DC. 236 lust. for this port. Seim A Hammond, Paine, cleared at BOston 23d inst. for Rockland to load for Norfolk. Scbr John McLain, Bill, cleared at Baltimore 23d Inst. for Wilmington, Del. Scbr Crar, Hummoud, cleared at Boston 22d lust. for Bangor to load for thls port. The rocks have denetrated the bottom of the steamer Amsterdam, from Malaga, ashore 'at .Ifuntauk, and tears are entertained • that she will become a wreck. The cargo is badly damped, but a portion of it may be savoy in good order if the weather holds good. ticbr Phantom, of Baltimore, late Ginn, which left Aspinwall Sept 4 for San Bias, was spoken, no date, at anchor off Saida Barbera Cay, with two Indians and first mate on board, the latter not expected to live lotf.f,, the crew baring died and were buried at sea. Capt than died after arriving at the City, and was bated on shore. (The Pis owned by Mr Ricketts, of Baltimore.) Sehr Flying hiik went ashore at Bowen's Landing, Caliturnhi, Sept 25, and became a total loss. NOTICE TO MARINEIW._ A second buoy has been placed to learitiflore clearly Diamond Reef. Enst River, New York. It le In 24 feet wmer, about 25U fret ESE from the buoy marking the north. end of the reef. Itoth buoys should be left to the southward iu passing. - Pilots of ,forry steamers, end those towing vessels, are requested not to pass over the buoys, which are 4cm:stony:so large that they nay cease serious injury and possibly loss of the, if run foul of, particularly by a crowded: ferryboat. Py:order of the Lialitinitien DonA A LUDLOW CASE, Capt USN, - Lighthouse Diem! . .tid Dist. ,• New : York t O 2 - "ea . • . • _IMO .IFINC4. PATENT METAL ,IRQOP,ENG... • . , • This Metal, as • Roofing, is NOM.CORROSEVE, not rti• gaining paint. It la - seli•pittetim aril jra large AMA, re. wiring can than half the time oUtin in- rooitua bulldizup or railroad cars, in linA s tanks, bathtubs, oisienut,4s6.; dre., or any article rag to btrele or watertight lug square foot of roof takes about 'I feet of sheet tin to cover R ORFieid only ice feet of patent mud. 114 sow, stithetrok, rtuadeipata. W4ITE GeSTILE soa„ . ... 100 poxEs GiINITLNE els, grx 4 1111 8 - 11 . ' " f ra.sl3. l l3Tratar 00.,108Acm m*mare Et t i t 4: n•“; 4 • t i 0101-r",:ALT; .411 Y ° Nei. "WA • MA-RINE BULLETIN. OR T OF PfiILADELPHUL—Ocr.p AOaORANDA. MARINE lUSCELLANY ROOFING, &c.k AUCTION SALES. M . Tao m#B SONS. AINT. 1014F2E1‘ 431 • ' • Noe. in dud 141 South Et) ____SAIAES,Ot STOCKS AND REAL Evretit" t tar` Pahile Sala at the Philadelphia Exchange OVerf TUEBDAY-,atl i olciock. • Pr — Handbills of each property levied eaPoratedr. addition to Wide wo publish. on the Beards& previous to each sale. ono' thousand catalogue/Mu pamphlet form. ..ivingluil 'descriptions of all the property to ho eold on the FOLLOWII4Ci TUESDAY and a Lid of Load Estate at Private gale. Our Sales are also adVertbed_. in the following teWepILVAII: NOET.II AMILITIOAY4 rEI:§W Laumna. INTILLXGrvfORII, /INDIUMS, Aug, Ev3hili(l HIMLLTLIIi RCM/NG TELZGHAPll.CinemaxDastoenaT, ato. F11212101[19• 811106 44 the Auction` Star. EVERY THURSDAY MORNIN STOCKS dm. ' " • ()N TUESD_Att, _our. po, At 12 o'clock noon, at the rot/amiable. change-- Ei eluires Wceit Jeraey Ferry Co. 110W(I eldo of Afar. ket etrA.eQ Itiladolphla)' par Ssoo. , 119 shares Peunoylvania Coinimur for Insurance on . Lives and Granting Annuities. 170 shares Phaddx insurance Co. 106 shares National Exchange Bank. 10 aliarep liortleolttral iialL • 1 $5OO Union League Bond.' , ' • ' • 200 ohares Awe, lean Baton Hole Machine Co. • 1 share Point Breeze Bark - $3.500 Barclay Coal Co. per ' l' ent! t: BTa: *2.t tO iiiimuehanna Steam Libilleel' " 160 shares Camden mad AtlanticP R. preferred. $l2OOO Union Canal Co. • , 20 shares Enterprise Laurance Cot r 65 tharea Green and Goatee Streets Pessenger Rail , way CO. . ' REAL MAW/SALE.' OCT. 29 Orphans' • Court Salts-sEetate of Plunkett: fleeson. the Tinunser. dec'd.--VALMALk Bustrir.se firAisn--13TOBE. heNvp4l:49l,A.C.Riihelli:ctilefartdstitlN,Fisnee. Toß.)r, BRICK STORE, No. 215 North Front street and N0:248 Water et,. ' 'VALUABLE FARM and COUNTRY SEAT_, 78 ACR , Lancaster turnpike, Paoli, Chester count/ , ra.6 about DI miles from Philadelphia. MODERN THREE-STORY , BRIGS DWELLING, No. 1710 North Twenty-second st. above Columbia avenue. THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING, No. BM Hel. math street, between Pine and Lombard streets, with a Three-story Brick Dwelling in the rear on Richards et, No. 1628. LOT. Bedford street, between 16th and 16th. MODERN THREE-STORY STONE RESIDENCE. N. W. corner of Forty-second . and Beckett streets, 27th Ward-48 feet front 175 feet deep, 2'J4 TORY , NE DWELLING arid LARGE LOT, Germantown road. above Green street, Mang Sun, 23d Ward. THREESTORY BRICE DWELLINGS. Nos. 1815 an 1617 Shippen EL THREESTORY- BRICK DWELLING. No. 817 Union street, with a Three-story Brick Dweßintfin the rear en `MODERNypet. No. 320. THREE.STORYBRICK STORE and DIVE& LING: N. E. corner of 20th and Wilcox streets, with a Brick Stable in the reari - • ' Peremptory SaIt—HANDSOME MODERN THREE STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. No. 1506 Green street. Lot 36 feet front. HANDSOME MODERN RESIDENCE, N. W. corner of Fifteenth and Lombard sta. 2 THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLINGS. Nos. 252 and 254 North Twenty-second at. HANDSOME MODERN TIIREE-STORY BRICK RE. SIDENCE t No. Pine et. ELEGANT COUNTRY RESIDENCE, Church lane. third house east of the railroad, GER3IANTOWN. HANDSOME MODERN FOUR-STORY BRICK RESI DENCE, No. 974 South Fourth street, above Spruce, 22 feet tu MO D ERN ' ll the modern conveniences. F01:13-STORY lIRICK RESIDENCE, No. 276 South Fourth it. VALUABLE CHESTNUT STREET STORE—FIVE STORY BRICK BUILDING, N. E. corner of Fourth and Chestmt street..—the entire tint story on both streets built of white marble. VALUABLE BUSINEE/3 STAND-THREE-STORY BRICK STORE, N. W. coiner of Fourth and Spruce streets—has Large bulk windows. 4 VALUABLE STORES, Nos. 403, 4M 407 and 409 Strut , : tt. _ _ ENGLISH AND AMERICAN BOOKS. ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON. Oct. 25. nt 4 o'clock. choice Eneliah and American Book*, fine editions of the Poeta, Illustrated IVorke in fine bindings, large collection of Engravings, dm. Sale at No. 1039 Vine AreeL SUPERIOR WALNUT FURNITURE, FRENCRIT'LATE TIANTEL MIRRQR. VELVET AND BRUSSELS CA/WETS, &e. ON SATURDAY MORNING. Oct 26, at 10 o'clock, at No. 1030 Vine street,hv cata logue, superior Walnut Househald Furniture, one French Plate Mantel Mirror, fine Velvet and Bnuwels Carpets. China and Glassware, Kitchen Furniture and Utensils, ie., IC. Can be examined at 8 o'ciiick on the morning of sale. Sale No. 1809 Pine s treet. SUPERIOR FURNITURE, HOSEWCOD NAN 0 FINE FRENCH PLATE MIRROR, ELEGANT VELVET CARPET, Lc. ON TUESDAY MORNING., Ott. 27, at 10 o'clock, at No. 1808 Pine street, bY cata logue. the entire Furniture. 'including handsome Walnut Parlor Furniture, covered in hair cloth and reps; superior Walnut and MahoganyChamber.and Dining-room burni titre, _Rosewood Piano Forte, made by Bacon & Raven ; tine French Plate Pier Mirror, handsomely framed; %Val• nut llookcapp. handsome Velvet and brussels Carpets. China and Glassware, Kitchen Furniture, Lc. May be seen early on the morning of sale. TO RENT—Several Offices, Harmony Catirt. • J OliN B. MYERS & CO.. • AUCTIONEERS, Nor. 24 and 234 MARKET street. corner of BANK.. LARGE PEREMPTORY, SALE OF :FRENCLI AND OTHER EUROPEAN DRY GOODS, &c. ON MONDAY MORNING, Oct. 31. at 10 o'clock,wili be sold, by cataloe, on FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT, about POO lota of Frenc h,lndia, Ger man and British Dry Goods, embraelnaa fu assortment -of Fancy - and Staple articlea,in Silks; Worsteds, Woolens., Linens and Cottons. • • ' - -N. ft-Goods arranged for 'examination and catalogues ready early en morning of sale. LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF FRENCH., SAXONY. BRITISH AND ITALIAN DRY GOODS. &c. NOTICE.-Included in our sale on MONDAY, Oct. 4,, will be found in part the following, viz- A SPECIAL OFF RING OF. PARIS SHAWLS AND DELAIKES, By order of • Messrs. H. HENNEQUIN & CO. IT For particulars see display advertisement. SAXONY WOVEN- GOODS. A large line of Saxony Woven Dress Goode. of a well ki,on n importation, including.- . BIENCY UNI-Plain Chine, very choice shades. LASTING UNI -All wool filling, in rich chine grounds. SILK BRAGANZA--Corded stripes, terming a plaid, Tery costly. SILK- NICKERBGCKER-All wool filling, Jacquard make. • FOIL DE LAIN - E. • SCO'l CH PLAIDS, in rich Cackeniere patterns. N. ft-The above, together with various other styles of a very celebrated make, will present a very choice and dotirable as.gortruedt of extra and new style goods. AZSO- Pieces Paris Merinoes,Delaines and Cachetnerer. Pieces Silk and Wool Popelines, Biarritz, EPinglines. Pieces English Merinoes. blohairs, Alpacas, Coburg& SILKS AND VELVETS . ; Pieces Lyons all boiled Black and Colored Taffetas. Pieces Lyons all boiled Gros Grains and Drip de France. Pieces Lyons all boiled Gros du Rhin, Cadniles, Pieces Lyons all Silk Black and Colored Velvets. LADIES' CLOAKS. An invoice of Plain and Trimmed Cloth Cloaks. • 100 LOTS TRIMMINGS, BUTTONS, dm., of a favorite importation. just landed, including Beaded cialams and Gimps, Webs and Cloak Trimming:, Pearl, 11,:n and Passamunterie Buttons. Sc. -ALSO- Glove?, INTite Embroideries. Hdkte.. Balmoral and Hoop Skirt.% Shirt Fronts. Fancy Goods, Nets, &c. LALGI: PEREMPTORY SALE OF BOOTS. SHOES, BROGANS. TRAVELING BAGS, ex. ON TUESDAY MORNING. Octal. at. 10 o'clook,will be cold, by catalogue, on FOUR CREDIT, about 2000 packages Boots, Shove, 'Briont,s, &c., of city and Eastern maufacture. oren for examination with catalogues Carly on morning of BIPORTANT SPECIAL PACKAGE SALE OF Di i!iiESTIC COTTON AND WOOLEN GOODS, ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. 00. B), at 10 o'clock, ON FOUR MONTHS' CREDIT and ra:t fur Cash, by order of— Ye4tir9. FRANCIS SE INNER kr CO:, of Melon. Q::- - For pal Oculars see Dhr,lay advertisement, LAI:GE POSITIVE SALE OF BRITISH. FRENCH. 01:1131 Ali AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS. %S will bold a largo sale of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, by catalogue, on FOUR moNTals , CREDIT. ON THURSDAY MORNING. Oct. 81, at 10 o'clock. embracing about 1000 pack-ages and lots of staple and fancy articles. N. 8.-Catalogues ready and goods arranged for exami nation early on the morning of sale. BY J. M. GURNEY & SONS, AUCTIONEERS, No. 608 WALNUT 'street. Fold Regular Balea of REAL I.STATE STOCKS AND SECURTTIES AT THE •YHiP.nDELYIif EXCiiANTc Mr Handbills of each property issued separately. If 3 Uue theueand copies published and circulated, con f awing full descriptions of property to be sold, as also a parka .list of property contained in our Real Estate r ofed. prva sa. Re gVA, S nd s f ad r er at sed i DAILY ln all the daily news papers. - SALE ON MONDAY. OCT. M. Will include— Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of Christian Stikel, dec'd— TUREESTURY BRICK DWELLING, S. W. corner Jeftenon :Led 23d eta. Orphans` Court Sale—Sarno Estate—TllßEE - STORY BRICK DWELLING, N, W. corner Kid and Wright ate. Peremptory date—LARGE LuT Or' GROUND, 100 by 2fB feet. N. h. corner Second street and All3ghany avenue —three f roLts. WALLACE ST—Two-story Brick Dwelling, No. 71d. NORTH SIXTH ST—Seven Modem Three-story Brick Dwellings, with every convenience, Nos. Nil. 2113, 2415, 2417. 2119, 241 and 24. W. above York it. RI% No. 1020 CHESTNUT S I C .L O S AT T ART IL bALLE stroet. Philadelphia. PFEEMPT)RY SALE OF 175 MODERN PAINTINGS. A Punkin :he Private Collection of a Gentleman about Going to Europe. fIN MONDAY and TUESDAY EVENINGS. Oct. 4 an, :.9, at 7, o'clock. at• Scott's Art Gallery, 1020 Ch.-stunt ca cot. -will be sold peremptorily'. about 175 paiLtingd, ?rincipatly by well known American •artists, viz--IV. Shridan Youag, 'Geo. G. Hartw lok, Da ptlt.i2 , Daltlye, W'. Cooper, B. F. Dyko, Frank Meade, Henry poeac, Pnal Ritter, and others, embracing the private col. !cede') of a gentleman about going to Europa. 4- . it r Now arranged for examination. mum. PRItOIPAL MONEY. ESTABLISHMENT,, 1 corner oiSIXTEI and RA CE'otreeta. money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, Jewelry, Dianonds, Gold and Silver Plate, and on all ;tel t:lei+ of villnc for any length of timo agreed on. WATCIII4 AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold blunting Case, Double Bottom and o.pen Face Euglibli, Anode.= and Swiss Patent Lever Vi atc,heel Fine Gold Muting Case and Upon Face Leslie° Virateixes; Fi ne Gem mplex and other IN atchea; Fine Sliver Hunt ing c ane and Open Face English, American and Styiss Patent Lever and Lupine-Watches ; Double Mee Engllah guarder and ether:.watchee Ladies' Fancy Watchee; Diamond liroactiline; Finger Ringo; Ear Ittngn;rds, itc.; Fine Geld Chains_; Mediations; race i 1 Vim Breastpins. Finger =up; Pencil Owe. and -J airy generals.FOß SALE.—A large, and._yaluabla...FireProcl suitable for a JogreWi . nbat Sing streeAlsW several Mirth 80M11 Camden. Fifth gout Ohgatane ts. DAVIS 4/ ParZitkeriVriMlTAL FUITATIArMr* 410',W7=4 attentioll. TW e L. /0 . 13.8ELD599.4101 lotawa, . ilcrtww ."; , AUCTION 111ALIIIII THOMAS CO a MM S & L O S N O M N E RAUA N TN . EERS AND L • _ EntranceCHESTNUT dtreet. Rear llO7 &mom street. • HOUSEHOLD FURNITTRE OF EVERY DESCRIP TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. • SALES EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the moat reasonnble terms. :MIA.: AT No. 804 MARKET STREET—FIXTURES, STEAM BEATING APPARATUS AND iIIitNA(JE 017 A RESTAURANT, HORSES, &c. ON TUESDAY MORNING. ' At 10 o'clock, at No. 804 Market street. will be sold, the Market street department of Ford'esßestaurant, compris. ing weir to eight horse Boiler. with the pipca for heating the building, one 60 gallon steam Iron Water Boiler, two Steam Tables and Fixtures, seven Counters with marble tops, twenty Restaurant Tables, Iron fratnes and marble tops: fifty "Arm Chairs, twenty High Stools, apparatus for stembing oysters, Show Case, one forty quart Ice Cream Freezer, Seamen's patent, &c. 110R8E13. One Bay Horse, 7 years old, sound and kind in single or double harness. 43ultable for a family or, for businew purposes. AIM a Sorrel Horse, 6 years old, sound, of good style and active. Sold for want of use. LARGE SALE OF A FRESH IMPORTATIONOF FINE SILVER PLATED WARE AND TABLe. CUTLERY, manufactured by JOSEPH DEAKIN Is SONS, of Shot. field. En and.. On TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY moevriNcs. October ?.9th and 20th, At 10 o'clock, at the auction store, No. 1110 Chestnut street, will be cold, a large assortment of naw goods, Jut received direct front the manufacturer; Particulars hereafter. TAMES A. FREEMAN. AUCTIONEER, No, 422, WALNUT street. J AMES ' REAL ESTATE SALE ON TIM PREMISES. GERMANTOWN. ON SATURDAY AFTERNOON. At 2 o'clock. will be sold, without reserve, by order of the Executors of Edward Royal, dee'd.— II AllbP.S. MAIN ST., GRRMANTOWN. southeast from Manheico et. The residence, barn, dtc., and lot, Mg by MO feet. will be Fold first The remainder of the estate will be divided into building lota, according tudhe plan. g ACRES. PL'LA SRI AVENUE.—AIso, over two acres, Pulaski avenue and Seymour street*. which:will likewise be sold in desirable lots. Or Plane and desenptiona may be had at am Auction Store. Ititt — Sale the whole Estate Deremptorzi. SALE OF FORFEITED STOCK. . ON TUESDAY, The 12th day of November, 1867, at 12 o'clock noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Office of the Drake Petroleum Company. No. DIE South Stath street, Philadelphia, 28,170 shares of the Stock of said Company, unless the assess. ment of five centsper share upon the same, due Sept, 12th last, is Sooner paid. By order of , W. D. COMEGYS, Secretary and Treasurer. Purrar FORD Auctioneer. McCLELLAND & CO, SUCCESSORS TO ~, PIDLIF FORD & CO, Auctioneers, No. Bed MARKET street. SALE 'OF MOO CASES BOOTS, SIIOES, BPA3GANS, BAAMORALS. &c. ON M Y MORNING, October 8 , comme ng at 10 e'plock, we will sell by catalogue, for cash. 1 cases Men's, Boy and Youths , Boots, l' hoes. Brogans. Balmoral's, &c. Al5O. a superior assortment of Women's, Misses' and Children's wear. To which the early attention of the trade is called. BY BARIUTT do CO.. AUCTION EERS. AUCTION HOUBE, JUIDASH No.= MARKET area. corner of BANK et. Caeh advanced on conehturnente without extra charge. LQITIJfI It. . •R. A. &J. J. WILLIAMS OFFER A large assortment of SEASONED LUMBER AT LOW PRICES. In large quantities. RABB WOODS AND BUILDING, LUMBER BROAD AND GREEN STREETS oel&letO 1867. - "LEBYTAIt‘DLITASIIaNK. 44, 5-4. 64, 2 .244. 3 and 4-Inch, CHOICE PANEL AND FIR6T COMMON, 16 feet long, MAULE, BROTHER at CO., No. 2500 SOUTH Street. 1867.12Efff: Ltl iv il i Ft iG L ! BUILDING! 44 CAROLINA FLOORING. 5-4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 44 DELAWARE FLOORING. 6-4 DELAWARE FLOORING. " • ASH FLOORING. • WALNUT FLOORING. ' SPRUCE FLOORLNG, STEP BOARDS, RAIL PLANK, PLASTERING LATH MAULE, BRUISER & CO, No. 2500 South street. iotai7 —WALNUT BOARDS. ClOl.l I WALNUT PLANK. WALNUT' BOARDS: __ `WALNUT PLANK. • LARGE STOCK-SEASONED. MAI:LE & BRO 1867. — ITANER I:Blti7NEEltrrAFERBsi LTDAR, WALNUT, ILUIOGANK . , CEDAR, WALNUT,_ _MAHOGANI. MAULE, BROTHER dc CO 18 67 ALBANYLUMBER OF ALL KINDS. . LUMBER OF ALL KLNDS. SEASONED WALNUT. - SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR. CHERRY. AND ASH... OAK PLANK - AND BOARDS. HICKORY ROSEWOODAMD WALNUT VENEERS. MAULE, BROTHER et CO 1867 --CIgAR.BON MANUFACTURERS. . CIGAR-BOX MANUFACTURERS. SPANISH CEDAR BOX-BOARDS. No. 2500 SOUTH street. 1867• J SPRUCE JOIST—SPRUCE JOIST—SPRUCE OIST. • . FROM 14 TO 23 FEET LONG. FROM 14 TO 32 FEET LONG. SUPERIOR NORWAY SCANTLING. MAULE. BROTHER & CO.. No. 2500 SOUTH street. VELLOW PINE BOARDS.—A CARGO OF ONEINCII yellow_pine boards just received from' St. Mary's Georgia. For cab by E. A. SO UDER t CO.,- _ oc24,:it Dock Street Wharf. (O.IIDIGLES, SLIDIGLES—IN GREAT VARIETY AND aD all prices; cheap Flooring and Fencing, snorted widths Shelving. Particular attention given to lumber for fitting up stores. CAROLINA FLOORING AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. NICHOLSON'S. Seventh and Carpenter street?. se 2 2m4 p IPT rnv mauf ji _ru Dl IN TUE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FOR THE CITY and County of Philudelpitia.—ln the matter of the as. signed eetate of JOHN POLLOCK and J. R. CASSEL. BERRY. late trading as POLLOCK. CASSELBERRY ,k CO. Petition for order ou Assignee to reconvey signed estate. The'Auditor appointed by the Court to re. Pert on the propriety of the assignee of the above estate reconveying all the assigned entate of the above named assignors to them, PO that the said assignors by a contem poraneous act. can assign the same to OWEN EVANS, in pursuance of an agreement entered into betwedn Bald Utt.iplol:l and the said assignee, dated the P.Sitit day of August, A. P. 1857, will- meet the parties interested for the purposed of hi= appointment at his -Deice, No. 118 South' Sixth etreet, in the City of Philadelphia. on Tuesday, the' sth day of November, A. D. 1557. at 314 (Moak, KNEASS. oe2sf m w st; Auditor. IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CITY ANH County'of Philadelphia.—SAMUEL BLUR, HENRY RAU and JOSEPH RAU, trading as BLUM, RAU As CO., vs. HENRY C. BhOLASKEY. et: fa. June Term, 1867. No. 13.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to distribute the fund arising from the sale under the above writ, will attend to the duties of his appointment, on Monday the 4th day of November next, at 4 o'clock I'. M., at his office, No 708 Walnut street, in the city . of Philadelphia, when and where all persons interested are required to present their claims or- be debarred from coming in upon said fund. JOHN G. JOHNSON, oelB-10t. Auditor. THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND 1 County of Philadelphis.—Estate of ELI HOLDEN, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, settle and adjust the account of DEBORAH HOLDEN, Administratrix of Estate of ELI HOLDEN, dec'd, and to report distribution of the balance in the handa of the accountant, will meet the parties interested for the purpose of Me appointment, on Wednesday, No vember 6th, 1867 at o'clock, P. M. at the Wetherill House, No. 6(5 Summit street, is the city of Phila. delphim 0c25 fonov.st* US. AIARSILWS.OFFICE, E. D. OF FEN.NSYL . VANIA. .POCT,ADELPIIIA, October M. 1967. This is to give notice, that on the 26th day of September, 1867, a Warrant in Bankruptcy was Issued against the ea. tut, of DAVID DUNCAN,of Philadelphin,iu the county of Philadelphia, and State of Pennsylvania, who has been adjudged a liankrupt, on his dwu petition; that the pay, meat of any debts and delivery of any property belonging to such Bankrupt, to hlm, or for his use, and the transfer of any property by him are forbidden by law; that a meeting of the creditors of the acid Bankrupt, to prove their debts, and to choose one or mote assignees of his astute will be held at a Court of Bankruptev.to be holden L at 426 ibrary 'street, in the city of Philadelphia, before B. FRANKLIN EIMER, Esq.. Register, on the 26th day of October, A. 1667, at 9 o'clock, A. M. P. C. ELLMAKER, C. S. MfiNhal, as Messenger.. oca 17 25,3 t; ESTATE OFJACOB SITLES.DECEASED.--LETTERS, of administration upon the estate of band deoectent having been granted to the tuniowigned. Deneone dotted thereto are requested to make payment without delay,aud those haring claims thereon to present them to El ZA ANN STILES, CLIAELES M. LUKENS - lon Beach Bea Street, above Laurel, 0c11,f,6t• VSTATE OF CHARLES LP NS: DECEASED. Lot ten+ of Adintnietration to the abovo.eatitte having ,been granted to the undersiguod, all puraona indobted are reouebted to motto poymout. owl those having clairna to present tilt to to RACHEL Adutiniatratrix, 541 Err ddnek Arcot, or to her Attorney: F: :JOHN SON, 4.T; Wo loot eitreet. 041,4,6t*: t I STATE OF iii:RVEY J. nirgetlELLEvr, Dhle'D.— -LU Letters of Administration upon the Estate of IlEff. VEY J. ItATCLIELLEIt, dee'd, heving Weparanted to the undersigned. all porous indebtedlo geld Estate will make payment, and those havii i tianinut. , will present them SAUL .:111. GUITLEY. 0c44 45Aqu.th,Fiftb.btreeL , LETTERS TESTAMENTARY ON TtlE ESTATE 01 MARY B. QUAY, deoeakekthaeliat beet `ranted to the tuderslgned, Pentium Atidobtod said. estate are requested to mantiaymint ;rose h a ving chains to, present them to REA •A' EUON, Aausutttlax,, Deposit Company, o, 4M.1 ttr steed. sa:x 1M414,4 1 4101, WOO-0 li : t i k , 1 - 4) - T., othiti i oilf ;iv it , wp, A ra ,44,ut isrfht.., be , ,_, .. An 11 a r r enll4"Will' =co, Frimunk Dv tait," V tuti a dWatte ' 411041: '' , PO /kW e'llA 8011041.- 811M0119613* MAXIE. - PIi ILAPEIRSTAK.E I4-4 0 10 / 11 D AND NO 6l ' r t 194, VOLK STEAMSHIP EDW....L.. - THROUGH EREIGHT„AIR LINE TO nil , BOTTS AND WEST. EVERY WEDNESDAY; AND SAMIDAT. At Noon, from FIRST WHARF above id tit g &g itreet THROUGH RATES and THROUTItUr. _ hsaa points In North and Ronda Carolina Seabesoll Air- Line Railroad, connecting at Pommel lustrOarch burg. Va., Tennessee and thuWest, Ala_ ir._ _ , and '.l eanessee Air-Line and Itlchmand arid mender Amain* Freight HANDLED BUT ONCE , and taken at Ur Jtio E 8 THAN ANY OTHER LINE. . _ this The regularity, safety and cheapness Of route now mend It to the public as the most, desirable medium far carrying eery description of freight. ' No charge for commission, drayage, or any exoeskruir transfer. Steamships insure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. ,41 writ; P. CLYDPA C11.,* 14 Nortir'arid South Wtorret; W. P. PORTEPAgent at Richmond and Oily Point T. P. CROWELL & CO.. Agenta at Norfolk. OttiNl4i x or Boston---Steamahip Line *toot s SALLINO FROM EACH F'PRTEVEItY FIVEDIML, FROM PINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA. AND Lag. wHARF, BOSTON. • ;rt. This ipsline it coin posed of the' Steamsh. , BOMAN, 1,486 utak Captain fO. Baker. ' SAXON_y ,1 SOS tont, • Captain'S. FL Hattll , 44.' NOBBIAN 1,206 tOti, Ci c s L. Orman, The ROMAN from : hill . on Bath IV 6 ItlL The SAXON from Neon on • Bator IS These Steamships BAB Pim , 'AT t received every day, a Steamer botoi,alWainr the Freight for points beyonthßosfartgent pit For Freight or Paeadoggtamorior , 6 14 apply to NAY W 00H . royal 13H1 Smith Ware THE PIIILADTI.PIiIA2MHKOQMOURIIi LEAJLAEAMISHIP COIMADix.BB. ' ..._ . • R ULIMLLNIB ~ .01 t (8 -MONTHLY) , 46 . :,,,. poR NEW ORLEANS, t,A.„ VIA VAN& ' ' JUNIATA.. 1,216 tone. Eaptaili.". .HO , , iN:T STAR OF THE UNION (1,08 tons), Lash T. . The STAR OF THE ONION will leave on ear on Hatur t d i l. , November 2d, at 8 o'Clock Ai. IL. trona 18 South 1, hams. , _, • ,_ - , At The J lATA will leave New Orleans tor this iiiite November 2d. , • . • ' , ' Through bille lading signed for freight to Mob vector', to a_tches, Vicksburg, Memphis. Naar/like= St. Loule,.Louievill" and Cincinnati,, . ~,_, .. ~ • Agents at New Orleans -ereevy,Nicktrson k CO. ' ' WILL. JAMES General kiosk. , fe23 CHAS. 814 South Delftware wrens& E. DILKINt, Freight Agisat - THE PEDLADELPHIZND 87TakilIN 1;.;it:: MAIL EnEAlistriP MP_ REGULAR WE• Y FOR SAVANNAII_,_GA. TONAWANDA. 81,0 took CaPt. Wm. &Wog& • WYOMING, 880 tons, Captain Jacob Teal. _ , The steamship TONAWANDA will leave for the . b o os port on Saturday, Oct. 18th, at 8 o'clock A. M., from Me 18 South Whams. Thy ough passage tickets sold and freight takeyy for MR points in connection with the Georgia Central Agents at Savannah—Gunter de Gammen. WM. L. JAMES General Agent. 814 South Uthitritte &MM. feM CIIAS. E. DILICE% Freight Agent. - THE PHILADELPHIA AND SODITIBRX 4.6 V: MAIL STEAMSHIP contwara REGULAR LINE (SEMI-MONTHLY) FOR WILMINGTON, N. C. Tbe steamship PIONEER (812 tons), Captain J. Benee. will lelhv for the above port on Monday, Octobu U. at 5 o'clock P. IL, from Pier 18 South. Wharves. }mils of Lading signed at through and reduced rates is all. princbpal_pointa in North Carolina. Agents at Wilmington—Worth &Daniel, WM. L. JAMES General Agent, 814 South g . laware &VIM& CHAS. E. DLLKE Freight Agent. NEW EXPEERS LINE TO ALEXANDRIA. Georgetown and Washington, D. C.... via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal; with ow sections at Alexandria from the most direct route fat Lynchburg, Bristol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and tb bonthwest. Steamers leave regularly from the first wharf &ben Market street, every Saturday at noon. Freight' eceived daily. WM. P. CLYDE ' & OM." 14 North and South Wlttuvelt. • J. D. DAVIDSON, Agent at Georgetown: M. ELDRIDGE &Agents at Alexandria, :V ginia. • stpll4:f FOR NEW YORK, VIA. DELAWARIIIOI4 RA RITAN CANAL. Express Steamboat Company Stea m . pellora leave Daily from fast wharf Ma WALititotagraisC Througb in twenty-four hoar,. Goods forwarded to points, North. East and Welk, free of commimilen. Freights received at the loWeat rates. WM. P. GLIDE dt JAMES HAND, A_gent, 14 8044 104 Wall street, New York. HAVA.NA STEAMERS. SEMIMONTHLY LINE. The SteamahiPs_...:_.._._,_. r - HENDRICK 8UD50N............. ... . .... . .. Cent Howie STARS AND STRIPES.. . Hollo w These steamers will leave ..... volt . for Havana, ever= other Tuesday at BA. M. , • The steamship HENDRICK HUDSON. Howes, roaster.: will call for Havana on Tuesday morning, October Sink at 8 o'clock. _Passage to Havana, NM currency. No freight received after Saturday. For freight or passage apply to OMAS WATIHON & SONS. ----- -140 North-Delaware avenue. 116al------- DAILY LINE. FOR BALTIMORE, V Chesapeake awl Delaware Canal. Philadelphia and Baltimore Union Steal*. boat. Company, dallzat 2 o'clock P. M. The Steameta of tuts ill2o are now_plying regularly be.: tween this port and. Baltimore , leaalag the &gene wharf below Arch street daily at 2 o'clock r. M. (Sruubige excepted.) - . - • Carrying all description of Freight as low as any other line. Freight handled with great care, delivered promptly. and forwarded to all points beyond the terminus free et commission. • . Particular attention paid to the transportatio n of AI de.cription of Merchandise, Horses, earriadoe, dui.; die. 'For further thformation, ap J ply to • D. 81108% - ent: apiEtly§ No.IB OI Nor Dl th Dela w are Ait Avenue. FOR NEW YORK BWIFTSIDUI Transportation Company-Deepatch rata Bwiftsure Linea via Delaware and Pa& tan Canal, on and after the 16th of March, leaving dithr at 12 51. and 5 P. M, connecting with all Northern and East ern lines. For freight, which will be taken - on accomOns• dating terma, apply to WK. M. BAIRD &AM, mhl3ly No 139 South Delaware avenue. DELAWARE AND CIiERAPEAKE Steam Taw-Boat Companse,-Hatgele towed between Philadelphia,. BsWiner*. Havre•de-Grace, De CUT and intermediate War. Whi. P. CLYDE COes Agents. Capt. JOHN LAUGIII. LIN, Burt Office. 14 B. Wharves, Phila. aplUdelli BAY STEAMEF. FOB firALR.-iA. BIDS. . wheel Bay Steamer of 400 tons, built of white oak. copper fastened and copPereit has large saloons with statoroom accommodigona for about one hundred passengers, and will be sold low: Yoe tame, apply to E. A. SU EDER & 5.10.,, , ;D0ck Wont wharf. ' batik Iv&FOR LONDON.—THE Al CLIPPER / BRIG A.D. GILBERT, Nonll t master, wilt,have Walk despatch despatch as above, having bulk of her cam en. aged. For freight, apply to NVQRKMAN &CIA* /la Walnut street. 0c444 STEAMBRIP ROMAN, FItOhl• BOSTON.—Cons sneer of merchandise per above steamer will please send for their goods, now landing at Pine street wharf. 0e2.44,3t • - • HENRY W 1 1 ,03011 & CO. .._e • is : 511 1. timed againist barbo hg or trusting any of the crow f the brig Jilt Di GOOD, from London, as no debts at their contrac g trill be paid by owners or conmignoes. WORK,MAN= ,133 Walnut street. oaf Bn. .13ARKW, H JEIsICINIL FROST LIVERPOOL, IS x now disobarghti, under general ,cider, at first wharf . below Pine street, Consignees will ' ease attend to the reception of their goods. PETER WI UHT do BONN'S Walnut street. JTAB. BHINDLER, eaccemor to JOHN SHINDLDIrk ' • BONS, Bail Makers, No. NO North Delaware avenue, Philadelphia. All work done in the beat manner and on the lowest pat moat favorable terms,' and warranted to give perfect Mika faction. Particular attention given to repairing. PROPOSALS. TIEI'ARTMENT OF PUBLIC HIGIEWAYB,.OI4 - 108. 17 S. IV. corner of Fifth and Walnut streets. Puicanntruta. October IWI. NOTICE TO CONTRAQTQRS. • Sealed proposals will be received at the Office Of Biel:Bar Commissioner of Highways until 12 o'clock , 28th inst., for the construction of . a Sewer on the'Site 'of " Berk street, to commence ut the Cohookalnk creekcat or near Über street. and extend westwardly to Twocra econd street, of 'he following dimensit i n4 front the IV to Woodstock street to be of a clear de diameter of four feet six Maws (4 ft. 6 in.) frOM Woodstock sOect to wentyaccond street, three feet six inches,((.3ft 6 MO. with such inlets end towholes as may be directed by' the Chief Enieer and Surveyor . 'the vluderstse= to be that the Contiactor shall take bills prep against the operty fronting. ,on said sewer to the , amount of one dollar and twentp-fivo cents for each lineal foot of front on each aide of the street as so muell paid ;thobalance Who maid by the owner of pre tan . and the Contractor will , be required to keep the , and sewer in good order three years after these rL finiahed. Alrbidders are invited to be present at the tint , .place of opening said proposals. Each proposal bet t accompanied by a certificate that a bond laas beenilL , the Law Department as directed by Ordinance o f At - 1860. If the Lowest Bidder shall not execute a coq within Svc days after the work is aworded..he will be v-o -deemed as declining, and will be held liable ,on h hi.h.kr on*,i fqr the difference between his bid and the 'next bid. tipecificationamay be had at ,the Del)tuint. Surveys, which w il l he strictly to r w. . a alsizt i r m y ' Chielainfrrilsidinfer of 11147 - wirt. • r ."'• CLOTHS, thitsBl/11.1Piiimity404,, .„• --------------. JAMES & L.EF: ARE NOW RECEPT49 I 4 II _,Ett MI and Winter Steck, comprising ever,y Tisletor adapted to iden's o adlit Y o ltietoi x i v i n i . . ~, ~,, ,; , ; 1 Duffel) Beavers. , t , , . I j Colored Castor Bealiiirti, , Black and ty,olored Esquimau's, ',....' ' r , r..' .....t Black and Colored Ohlualitica.'` ' ' COATINGS Black 114* "GM. Black French Cloths Coloredi'rencit Cloths. . lb: f, Tricot, all ?Mom' ''' l l , ' , l and Di a a, A nai, A, PANEALOON 1441% * - 77 -: - ' —7- r - l' ' '..11.4. Black Wench Casasseres, : .. 1 i ! L Blunkl'renehTfloeskitisY :: ' ' ''' '' '''''''' '''' 4 '''' ganclowa , .. ~, ~. ~ d at au a •., . " • , ,04 „*.„,, , i,lazt c64 ;stitiolzr o , . eave . 44 iAdqtfia l i 7 At ' - ' 7 ;to at ' , f rk t Ot: lE,t I Pt 4410r#00Mliati at..4llim of l'r'' t. 146.40 I ' , 0.4 11161f 1 14,1ttr kali:2 istes. ; • : I , ,gv. le 9i d to ' t o .KNir WI , ci ' , , 1 l' s .'4* • bli;j §Vaal bMI-411r1Mal
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