13T1StNVA: 40 4 NOTIC .«Fog ati4oth cuthowienivasoirAt,r, . Most Xtyllish Ctothi 0 'l4.l llo aderOhilk. Styfieh Votfitnif in Phikidelithia, Slag htuttitli•Ciething in Philadelphia, -• ;••- At 'Patbet Rat/. At licraler italk • . • At Timer ERN, rit Tower Han. Our dock ir maraitnetiired With erects" care ftir this 0 " 02 ,,,,pae 0 , ire dtiVeantiatitant in extent and varied, e assortment , 'and itt style, fit and mate of Goode. 'tom aluaye oltaranteed leaver than the lowest eteewherr. pratfall satisfaction:via:olo4ml 'every Ini.reheeer, or the *lles cancelled and money refulyied. gaitway.bettosett • Startrarr & cp., PiJen -and Tawas JIMA. Math , street& ' 616 illAnicter Stuart. • Aan.-800 BSOAbWAY. New Yoe.g. DEAFNESS STILWELIiti ORGAN' If&rotor. It tits into the ear and is not perceptible, re- Mum sindield In the head, and enables deaf persons to bear distinctly at church and public assemblies. ° I .A."Treatitio. ott Deafness, Catarrh, Consamptfon end Cancet; their minim, means of speedy relief, and ulti• Pate ettre,lY a pupil of the Academy of Medicine, Paris. sent free for 20 eents. Scrofulous diseases successfully treated._ STILWELL. 81 East Washington Mee, New York City, where all , letters, to receive often dloeynnet Isiaddressed. Dr, li=lillrELL, of New York, will be professionally at 100Pitte street, Philadelphia, 'Tuesday next, from 10 • oells,ta,th4m EVENING BULLETIN. Thursday, October 31, 1867. A WAR OF RACES. The world has grown familiar with the old bugbear of the lovers of slavery, North and South, a war of races. Long before the re bellion began, Northern men were warned that if slavery was interfered with, there would be a war of races—a war, that is, or negroes and whites. After the rebellion be gan, the copperheads of the North said that the design of the Republicans was to bring on a war of races. When President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation appeared, the war of races was again predicted. When negro soldiers were employed by the United States, the war of races was sure to come. All these direflil prophecies failed to intimi date the Government or the, people, hat sus tained it, and the rebellion was finished without the war, of races. - During the process of reconstruction, the supporters of the Johnson policy, North and South, have revived the old alarm, and we are daily told that the war of races is bound to come if the Congressional policy of reconstruction is to be carried out. The Southern rebels, encouraged by Johnson, re fuse to vote at the elections for State con ventions, and the negroes and white radicals— the latter very few in number—are the only voters. Because the negroes recognize the authority of Congress, and vote according to th e ir convictions, the non-voting whites de clare that there must be a war of races. They begin it themselves, in a mild way, by re fusing to employ the negroes in their fac tories, in their shops, and on their farms. This has been done in Tennessee, Louisiana and Virginia, to a con siderable extent. The negroes have borne the injury patiently, wisely wait ing till reason shall return and the necessities of the country shall again give them work. As it two parties to make a quarrel, the war of races cannot get itself fairly began. But the rebels do not yet give up all hope of it, and they are sending to Wa s hi ng t on ter rible stories of the arming of the blacks and impending "repetition of all the atrocities of St. Domingo-" This is mes.nt to frighten Congress and to encourage the President. Ile is urged to "take steps for the protection of the defenceless whites,' by sending a large m ilitary force into each State. It is ludicrous to represent that the Southern people, who were brave enough to face the whole, power of the loyal North for four years, are so dreadfully - afraid o r the poor, despised negroes, and of course nobody with any sense believes it. But the cry of a war of races must be kept up. It is almost the last hope of the oppo nents of the Congressional mode of recon t-Unetion, and the vaunted chivalry is obliged to pretend to abject cowardice, for the sake of frightening the, radicals and keeping up the President's perverseness and obstinacy. In the meantime, the public would like to know when the promised war of races is to begin. The secret seems to be confined to the bosoms of the white race at the South. The blacks do not appear to know anything about . it. GIRARD COLLEGE. The t)cat Dif&tors of Girard College who bave gained such unenviable prominence be fore the public by their arbitrary expulsion of the Preddent of the College have at last been forced,-.by , , the pressure of public opinion, into a defence of their conduct, and a long statement of their ease will be found in another column of to-day's Braun - IN. This extraordinary document is remarkable chiefly for two thing: avoidance of the accusation which is made against thole ten Directors, and 'second, the vague and unspecific character of the charges which they bring against Major The charges which these ten Directors have to meet are two-fold and are so ex ceedingly simple that no one can be misled about them. They are briefly these : First, the expulsion of President Smith 'without • show of trial, a privilege. awarded to the lowest criminal in the community. Second, the refusal to per- Pres[dent Smith to resign his post, when such resignation was guaranteed friends in the Board. These charges have not and cannot be met, and mail they are disposed of, the charge of "indelicacy and want of dignity" made by the Directors against Major Smith, because be has Invoked the protection of the law, is absurd in the extreme. In place of meeting these charges, the ten Directors have set forth an address to the public which will probably cause careless sad credulous readers to shudder with hor ror. According to this document, Sodom and Gomorrah were types of all moral beauty compared with Girard College, and Nero and Caligula, were the embodiments of an the gentler virtues, compared with Presi &at fimith. We do not propose at this foe te go into the detaila of this maul foto, hut will call attention to one or , two ta Which may tend to abate the distress af the conunnnity at this startling exhibition Wholeguile cruelty and wickedness. ItiS fitot that the Committee of Discipline and neChArge, under vhoee administration s t „algae alleged abnsetimust have takeh OM*, is composed mainly if not entirely pe r qf he ten 4irector4 who sign this doom/pent These individuals are, therefore, sePOOsigae for ovary Abney which is charged, as relates to =discipline, absconding and ex- Pl l 4 lo b..t' It is a fad that the matron who had °hag° of the house, ~arid" Was responsible for 'its cleanliness, was the selection of these same Directors, and they are, therefere, responsible for every abuse which occurred in her de partment. It is a fact that the steward who nas charge of the "economic condition of the institution" is the appointee and favorite of these Direc tors, and they are, therefore, responsible for retaining him in office, if he has "an entire want of brain" fo r k his work. It is a fact that the single case of excessive corporeal punishment that has been reported 'to the Board, was inflicted by a prefect who was, afterward, confirmed in his office by the Board, in spite of President Smith's refusal to recommend such confirmation. And so we might go through this whole document. The official investigation which is now going on will fully expose the trae state of this whole case, and it will be well for the public to suspend its judgment as to the management of Girard College until the results of that investigation are made .ynown. .The EVENING BULLETIN has never undertaken to defend President Smith's ad ministration, for the simple reason that, until - the action of the ten Directors has com pelled some inquiry into the affairs of the College, we have known, nothing about it. The question of merit is now made a direct issue by the sweeping charges of Mr. Boswell and his associates, and it will undoubtedly be met by the accused. Meantime, it needs little acquaintance with the practical work ings of all large educational institutions, to induce the grave suspicion that in - the document of the ten Directors, the state of Girard College is grossly exaggerated and misrepresented. All such institutions neces sarily contain a certain proportion of bad boys, whose insubordinate and im corrigible habits require discipline of greater or less severity. There are always cases of absconding, and of unreasonable complaints from fond,:and thoughtless and fault-finding mothers. In an institution like Girard Col lege. containing five hundred boys, many of whom come into it destitute of habits of cleanliness, honesty and obedience, it would be a miracle if they should all turn out para gons of neatness, honor and subordination. The un measured violence of the statement of these ten Directors strongly confirms the conviction that their original action was as little justified by facts, as it was by the prin ciples of honor and justice. When the Jaffa colonists, dissatisfied with the privileges and the opportunities of Ame rican citizenship, sailed away from Maine to build up a colony in Palestine, very many persons exulted over the fact as an illustra tion of Yankee pluck and enterprise. There were plenty of prophecies that the waters of Jordan would soon be applied to working saw mills; that first-class watering place hotels, with steamboats running to them twice a day, would be established upon the shores of the sea of Galilee;that a salt company would begin operations in the vicinity of Lot's crystalized wife; that a company would com mence boringibr oil on the sites of Sodom and Gommorab, and that Yankee enterprise generally would transform the country and render it an easy prey to Mr. Seward's insa tiable appetite for territory. Sadly enough, none of these extravagant expectations have been realizcd. The colonists were strangers in a strange land, and instead of infusing the people with new life and energy, they found themselves redueed to beggary and distress, and they are now glad to accept the charity of t h e i r c ountrymen and their government to enable them to return. American pluck and enterprise have ac complished great things, both at home and abroad, but in the latter cases they have been always backed by immense capital. These colonists were poor men, who believed their opportunities to acquire wealth to be better in another land than they are here. The enchantment was borrowed from the distance. Common sense tells us,and experience proves, that there is no fairer and better field for labor than that afforded in this country, under_this free government. The Southern gentlernen who endeavored to overthrow this "Government and, failing to do so, left the country in disgust, and went to Brazil, only to return in an impoverished condition, learned a lesson which the story of the Jaffa colonists ought to impress more deeply on the minds of the discontented. Men only suc ceed in this by industry and perseve rance, and in no country on the earth are these more liberally rewarded than in this, while each individual, at the same time, en joys a larger measure of personal liberty, and ; a better protection of his rights and property, than he can obtain elsewhere. Fast, the entire New York has been having a Mass 3lcet ing in favor of the strict enforcement of the Excise and Sunday laws in that city, and it was addressed by a number of eminent advo mtes of the font erdnce and Sabbath cause, including lion. Horace Greeley and, Rev. Dr. Durbin. Rev. Dr. Newman Hall, of London, was al,o ',mow; the speakers, and he narrated a fact which speaks well fur his-, habits of dose oi.Eemtion in London, but which proves i itlwr that he moved in a very select circle in New York, or that he never ventured out of doors while in the '`Com mercial Metropolis." He said that "during the seven weeks that he had spent in New York he had seen only three or four drunken per sons, while at home he would have met as many in a single evening." If Dr. Hall con siders New York a cold-water Paradise, he has only to tome to Philadelphia if he would, visit the seventh-heaven of tee-total propriety. The amount of drunkenness in New York is two or three hundred per cent. greater than in this city, and the populations of both cities are about equal. We would like to "show the fair side to. London," par ticularly with so estimable a gentleman as Dr. Hall as its representatiye; but truth is mighty and should Prevail, and we have only tc, say that if the reverend' gentleman, while making his stay in New York,•desires to see something more than three or four drunken persons in the next seven weeks, let him go to Coney Island next fiunday; to Hoboken on the succeeding Sabbath; to the Five Points .and Mackeralville at any . t i me ; to Tammany and Mozart Hall ditto, and finally, let hires go around among the llothamite Cop perhead headquarters in' pursuit of election returns ort the night of the sth proximo,- and, we will be greatly astonished if he dac e not TIIFiDAILY EvaNING itfilillSDAY, OCTOBER '3l, 1867., return to his lodizingw(if happily he f4ets there at all) With a more enlarged idea of New York capacity in the 'way of ,gettb* drunk; possi bly With a generallightn,ols in the regions of his watch-fob and his bretches-pocket, and not improbably with a sensation of •promis cous crackedness about the crown. Dr. Hall has spent seven weeks in New York; but it evidently was a rose-watery and not a Whisky-and-watery e4retienee. Another of the loyal State Governors, who helped to sustain the Government of the United States in.the trying time of the re bellion, has succumbed. John Albion Andrew, ex-Governor of Massachusetts, died yesterday in Boston, aged 49 years, having been born in Windham,Mame,on the 81st of May, 1818. Of those faithful Executives in the beginning of the war, there are, we be lieve:none now living except our own Cur tin, and Morton of Indiana. Governor Curtin's health was broken down, too, but a visit to Europe has restored him. Governor Murton is a mere wreck of what he was. Few people have an idea of the mental and physical trials that these noble public servants endured during the period of the war. Governor Andrew might be called prims inter pares, and his wise and ener getic administration made the services of Massachusetts invaluable to the Republic. The well-equipped troops he sentso promptly to Washington, in the spring of 1861, suf fered the first bloodshed in Baltimore, and were largely instrumental in saving the Capital and securing the inauguration of President Lincoln. His subsequent services were equally important, and in the various councils of the loyal Governors he was always courageous, energetic and wise. His death will be sincerely mourned, not only in New England., but by every true patriot in all parts of the country. It is worth remarking, as a somewhat singular coincidence, that this thirty-first of October, 1867, when Garibaldi is hammer ing away at the gates of Rome, and threat ening the destruction of the temporal power of the pontiff, is the three hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the day upon which Luther nailed his famous ninety-live Latin theses upon the door of the Sehlosskireli at Witten berg, and aimed the first blow at the spiritual power of the papacy. Although these theSes admitted the sovereignty of the pontiff, they contained, virtually, the germ of Protestant ism, and produced the deepest agitation throughout Europe. The coincidence pos sesses no peculiar significance, especially in view of the fact that Garibaldi's schemes are' not likely to prove as successful as Luther's; but it is at least worthy of corn ment,if for no other object than to prove, by the contrast of the formidable temporal power of the Pope then, with the fragment which remains in his possession at the pre sent day, the fact that it is destined to ter minate within a brief period, having served its only purpose, which was to protect and defend religion when it needed the support o of a powerfid arm. . _ Sales of Real Estate, by James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. ' On ()wise' and inside pages will be observed, by our readers interested in Real Estate, the sales of properties advertised by James A. Freeman, Auctioneer. Besides a nu mb e r of deairatie properti H ou s e, e sold by order of owners. the Estates of .forntsdeceased; Rch.wa Wriphl, deceased; Witham Watson, deceased; Mar;, , Kenton, deceased. are also included. - - TIOWNING'S AMF,RICAN LIQUID CEMENT, FOE 1-/ mending broken ornamenta, and other articled of Glare. China, /You, Wood, Marble, &e: No 'heating re quired of the article to be mended, or the Cement. Al. ways ready for me. For tale by JOHN It. - DOWNENG. Stationer. fe7.tf 12.9 South Eighth street. two doors ah. Walnut. my WC:AMA'S NEW HAT STOKE, 1111 'N. E. CORNER TENTH. AND CHESTNUT. FORMEitLY CHESTNUT, ABOVE EIGHTLL Your patronage solicited IL FALL STYLE FIATS. THEO. H. WCALLA At His Old E.tablithed HAT AND CAP EMPORIUM. KA CHESTNUT !tree. siWARBURTON'S IMPROVED, VENTILATED and easy-fitting. Dress Hats (Patented in all the ap doo r to proved the fashiorueof the season. Chestnut e treet, nex IP t Pc,st-offiee. (11.3-IYr ...__ HEATER SCOOPS, SHOVELS AND RAKEE3, Stove Shove Pokers, Tonga and Plate Lifters, riven Scrapers, Mica or Dinglane for stove 40°7. Sheet Zinc for rifting under staves, and superior Polish, for sale by putting SHAW, No. 835 (Fight Thirty-67e) Market Etreet, below Ninth. - - VIALLETS FOR TIN3IEN, BOTTLERS. CARPEN ,aII. tern, etc. A Leavy iron- bound article for store uae. A mall, neat Mallet for lade tool cheat , . For Pale by TRU ..MAN SHAW, No. ha (Eight Thlrty-five) Market etreet, below Ninth. OYSTER KNIVES. OYBTRR BROILERS, STEWINfI and Frying Pane., at the gore os TRUMAN 4 SILAW, No. 8135 (Eight Thirty five) Marketetreet, below Mirth. DISTORI 3LARRET XASKETS. LARGE. MEDIUM; 1, and tuskil e ize. The new Ithstori Basket. and other etylee, round. ov3l and isquare Market 13ftekete, Shopping and Workbaelete, at W. R. KERN'S Houee PurnWning store, tio. 3il (Two Filty•oneiNorth Ninth et. ocBo2trp: .1_867 GET.. YOUR HAIRCUTBY FIRST-CLASS . Bair Cutters at KOPP'S Saloon. Shave end Bath, 5 cents. Razors eetin order. 1..5 Exchange Place. Open Sunday morning. (IV) G. C. ICOPP. I,I"OGENTLEMEN WHOR W EAR. LADIES' SIZES KI, Glover.—l have' laced on the coont , :r shoot 55 dozen Light Yellow color Kid Glove., a good shade for eveniti4 wear, in perfect order: tilte 7. 7.'4. 736". to he Kan st 1.1 s pair, jun ball price. TOtLA DIES WEARING NO71; RID GLOVEI3.—IIIAVE eurplas stock of about 40 dozen IS h' Kid Giovoe, atl ro , So. e. in perfect order, which 1 have placed on the counter, to tw: old at $1 per pair, just half price. (11X). VOGEL. . No. 1616 Cloadard rtrect u'~'+-I,try "DATENTED.—PANTS CLEANED AND ?STRETCHED _L from one to five Indio% M.01121,T, French titetun Dyeing and liennring. 9Yd4 south Ninth etrnet and Vid I:ace etreet. T id gloves cleaned every day. te...*Aturp• COSIPOUND CHARCOAL BISCUIT, FOR BY SPRI - 13LA. A valuable remedy for 11 EAUTULT., ,, , Acimrr, WATEII. NAL:KEA. Will ow lON. and other forms of Ludt geetiou. The finest Willow Charcoal and other effectual medicines are COM blned in the form of Bran Blimp t as to be very palatable. Prepared only bv IA AIES T. SHINN, Apothecary, S. W. corner Broad and Spruce streets. Sold by Druggiets generally. ocl9 Int*: NDIA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING, STEAM" 1 Packing noise, du. Eno:Meese and dealore will find a full suusortnient of Goodp•ar't Patent Vulcanized 'tubber Belting, Packing &e.. at the Manufacturers Headquarterz. GOODYEAR'S, ,BUti Chestnut etreet, South side. N. 13. We have a New and Cheap Article of Cardin and Pavement Home. very cheap, to which the attends of the public hi IITMA N'S CHOCOLATE .—TIIE FINEST CBO ' Mate for table tote; manufactured at the Phliadel. phis Steam Chocolate and Cocoa Work's; STEPHEN IF. WIDTMAN, (silica and store 1210 Market 'street. oclkir#4P OURTEENTII WARD DEMOCRATS AND F Rearm will meet daily at 1142 Spring Garden Went. at JOIINSTON'ti DEM', and furnish their houses Witt beautlfti; mtylcupf Wall Papert!andLinenWindow Shales before the next campaign. me1.4.194P MARKING WITH INDELIBLE INK. Elllsllolrraf - Mhug, Braiding. Stamping. dm. TOR/VA' Ifigo lber_. WIIITE CASTILE SOAP.-1W BOXES GENUINE ‘T White Castile Soap. landing from Brig Penn?. GENUINE I'l' from Genoa. and for male by JOB. B. BOStif illt CO.. len South,Delaware avenue- ROCKHILL &WILSON, FALL CLOTHING, MEN'S CLOTHING. 603 AND 605 CHESTNUT STREET. JAMES NEILL, JR., FORMERLY & JAMES NEILL, WILL NOW DE Glad to Receive his Friends IN THE CUSTOM DEPARTMENT OF WANAMAKER & BROWN. MAMMA on Sixth street. WINTER CLOUTING. BOY'S CLONING. c-).3 E GO ). • HAS REMOVED . HIS STOCK OF Steck & Co., and Haines Bros'. Pianos, AND Mason &Hamlin's Cabinet Organs, to his new and elegant store. NO. 923 CIIESTNTJT ST., NORTH SIDE, ABOVE NINTH. ee•26tt4 „NOW REAT>Y, AMONG THE INDIANS! AMONG THE.INDIANS! AMONG THE INDIANS! Eight Years in the Far West. Eight Years in the Far West. Eight Years in the Far West. BY H. A. BOLLER. C1 , 41]. 110 e, 42E page's. V. T. ELLWOOD ZELL & CO., - PHILADELPHIA. 'oc;3l.th !.21.15 PUBLISHED THIS DAY. • A Tale of Two Cities, and Great Expectations. By CHAELFS DICKENS. The twelfth volume of tee mai. vereally popular Diamond Edition. Illustrated Edition. with Sixteen Full-Page Illaotratiene by S. EVTIN , IE. Jr., Si Lk; Plain . Edition, 91 15. •.• For Tale by all Ifookeellere. Sent postpaid on re ceipt of price by the Publiehert. _ TICKNOR & FIELDS, Boston. itt FIRST PREMIUM, AMERICAN INSTITUTE FAIR OF NEW YORK, Hu been awarded to the 1-3L.A131.;E:1( CO., For Hadley & Holyoke Spool Cetton For general riterieritv over all other Cottons eold in this market. A. T. STEWART & CO.. GENERAL AGENTS. 41. SPA- Y..rk, Berton and Philadelphia. REDUCTION IN PRICES. French Calf. d culla Ede, Boar, firet . qu.ality, $l2 (XL Do. do. tingle do. do. do. do. $lO 60. Do. do. double do. do. 24 !do. $lO W. Do. do. tir.gle do. do. do. do. $9 uu. BOYS' FINE BOOTS AND SHOES At Very Low Prices. -33 A..itit r ii_i_4E7V r r, 33 S. SIXTH STREET. rol ABOVE CHESTNUT. JAMES R. WEBB, Tea Dealer and Grocer,' S. E. corner EIGHTH and WALNUT, extra Fine Souchong or English Breakf art Teas; supe rior Chulnn Teak very cheap:Oolong Teas of every grade; Young Upon Tear of tineet qualifies; all trews imported. JST WHAT EVERY 130 DY REQUIRES, T Pon IlLezoitisu 14)NT/0N LONDON LONDON LONDON LONDON LON DON PA LDNI 1.05405 tf,s,f,tof 11Ayr. COLO!: REKLOIff!II AND DILMIIND, lost 44N I Covot itewroarit AND DILMLINfi, LoNDON 11AfIL. COLLiff. AND DfL37l - 5131N0, As a dressing it is exquisite. Stops hair from falling. (Juice all humors of the scalp. Dam not stain the skin a particle, or roil hat, bonnst or the fluent linen. Sure to product a new growth of hair. IS NOT A DYE. THE ONLY KNOWN RESTORER OF COLOR AND PERFECT HAIR DRESSING COMBINED. PRESERVES ORIGINAL COLOR TO OLD AOE. Why it In so highly esteemed and universally used: DIA/Ares—lt never falls to restore gray or faded hair to Re original youthful color, softness and beauty. Tircausr—it will positively stop the hair from falling, and (muse It to grow on bald heads in all cases "ere the follicles are left. lirca BE- -IL will restore the natural secretions, remove all dandruff, itching, and cures all diseases of the realp. Meat:as—lt will do all that is promised, never failing to preserve the original color of the hair to old age. 3lzra usr—lt Is warranted to contain no mineral sub stance. and as easily applied as water, not . staining the ekln . 11 particle, or soiling auy thing. Only 78 cents a bottle $8 per dozen. Sold at Dr. SWAYNE'S, No. KID North 14tith street, above Vine, and all Druggists, Variety and Trimming tSores. oc22tti th tfrp GRAY IlAi4 AM) )'ruvrsr~su EUGENE bgKIEFFER'S RIDING SCIIOO4 Dugan 'greet, below Spruce, between Fifteenth and Sixteenth earlier. Theproprietor reepectfully here to inform the equeetrian public of Philadelphia and vicinity that hie School le now open. _ ochllitrp* ROCKHILL &WILSON, READY-MADE CLOTHING, CLOTWINO MADE TO ORDER, At the Shortest Notice 003 (I,NR 00D 9fit,O3 . NUT STBEET4 ..-~ f ... Will Sell on Four Months'. Credit, To-Morrow Morning, November let, ZEPHYR WOOLEN GOODS, Being the balance of stock of the Keyotone Knitting 31111 a, Together with a general aseortment of DRY GOODS, HOSIERY, GLOVES, NOTIONS, &c. J. W. PROCTOR & CO., LI Fr, 01:OWTIL, V !GOIC WtAKFAT In Endless VasOty AUCTION NOTICE JOHN B. MYERS & CO., AUCTIONEER, AT TEN O'CLOCK, A LARGE SPECIAL SALE OF To he Sold Without Reserve, BY ORDER OF MR. THOMAS DOLAN, JOHN B. MYERS At CO., 920 Chestnut Street. NEW CLOAKS OPENING EVERY MORNING. NOW OPEN, LADIES' DRESS FURS or ALL KINDS REAL ASTRACHAN ARCTIC SEAL SACQUES. CLOAKING CLOTHS BY TIM YARD RICE BLACK SILKS, IN ALL QUALITIES. FROM $2 TO 97 50. Corded Poplins, REPS, Empress Cloths, Epinglines, Velours Busse, Silk Chain Paris Crepes, AND OTHER RICH COLORED FABRICS LADIES' WALKL'IG SUITS. LADIES' DRESSES ;MADE 7N TWENTY-FOUR HOURS J. W. PROCTOR & CO., 920 Chestnut Street. th BLANKET FLANNEL ESTABLISHMENT, NEW FALL GOODS. All deeeriotlone of the beet makes tinehrinkable Finn mete, as ROGERS' ENGLISH PATENT. REAL WELSH AND SAXONY: BALLARD VALE AND DOMET. SHAKER, BOTH WHITE AND RED. REP FLANNEL, a new and heavy article. - PLAID AND PRINTED OPERA. GILBERT'S OPERA, all colors. DOMESTIC WIMP, RED AND CRAY, Both Twilled and Plain, of all qualitlee. HEAVIEST ENGLISH AND AMERICAN CANTON FLANNELS, Both Bleached and Unbleached. Alpo, all plus and beet maker of Blankets, as GOLD MEDAL, GOLDEN GATE, EXTRA PREMI UM, PREMIEM, &0., SUPERIOR CRIB AND CRADLE BLANKETS, dco. Sheppard, Van Harlingen & Anion, No. 1008 Chestnut Street. oel4 17 M. 'A 28 811-rp§ itTIN & TAIPLO PERFUMERY AND TOILET imrs. ' en North Ninth street. WTWEDDING AND ENGAGEMENT RINGS.. WAR ranted of *did flne old; BROTH assort Jewellers, FARR & ER, 824 Chestnut stree below Fourth , lower elde. ROCKHILL &WILSON, BOY'S FANCY SUITS, BOY'S OVERCOAT. FOY'S WEAR, Latest Styles, 443 pi 11. P X 45 _CKSTNUT STREET. INTPNIQED FOR nrE WESTERN, SOUTIIERN AND EU ROPEAN EDITION, 241. Str'eet,. Before 5 P. M.l:io Friday, To SELL RE PUBLICATION IN THE WHOLE EDI TION. Itfi An Opportunity Rarely Offered. AUCTIONEERS IMMENSE °SACRIFICE EDWIN HALL -& CO., of every descrlptton, con:doting In part of SILKS, Of every imaginable fabric, from their irnmenee stock, at prices which cannot fail to givo entire eatiefactlon, Ncte It) the time to make your purchasta for the Fall and Winter. ocZtiptf 4p 727 CECESTNLIT STREET. SIIIyS. A IiVERTISEMENTS OF Tlin COMMERCIAL LIST '1 AND PRICE CURRENT,. musT BB LEFT AT THE OFFICE, DRY GOODS. UNEQUALED CHANCES. No. as S. Second st., ARE NOW SELLING DRY GOODS SHAWLS, CLOTHS AND LADIES, LOOK TO YOU. MEREST/I. POPULAR PRICES k Silks, Shawls, Velvets, Poplins, Reps, Ye. our Rune, lierinoes, sous Del:does, Alpacas, Mohair', Alpaca Poplins, Chene Poplins, Me lange Poplins, Irish and French Poplins an* Plaids. Also, Bomb asines,Biarritz,Tandse, and other Mourning Goods in great variety, together with the most ex tensive assortment of Mi500114/3180U* Dry Goods in the Market. Also, Blankets, Flannels, Linen* Hosea Furnishing coeds, Cloths, Cass Were., etc,. In tellable qualltks, at lowprkes. RICKEY,SHARP&CO., MS. B. CAMPBELL & CO., No. 727 Chestnut Street. WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT, Dry • L a n d under ,by iece or PBates ack . age, ab P Mar ket RICKEY, SHARP & CO., tel4-tt rp RITTER & FERRIS, No. 36 South Eleventh , Street, IMPORTERS "VVHFI v JE GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS, Which they oiler to' the intact at itreatty reduced prices. LINEN SHEETING& Different widths and pi lees, of our own 1m- portatlon. PERKINS, NO. 9 SOUTH NINTH BTREEI 447-3 m .4 t rltrMr- T• STEWART BROWN, B.E. Cornet 9111101111 lIYHMTH & MESA, "UT STA. KANUYABTURER VALISES, BAGS, IVETIOVI,BS, snAvn, STBAP S,NAT OASES, POCKET BOOKS, PIASIG, and Traveling Goodsgenerally, (I TO 08T' 0 '8 BO T 7 STORE, _ 6118 South FIFTH street, below Shippen. Ghee oode in the eit . en2l4lmll ROCKHILL &WILSON, Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings. Chinchilla and Plain Beaver Cloths. Cloths for Coachmen. Goods for Hunting Suits.. 03 AND 645 CHESTNUT STRUT, DRUM GOODS, t:o. 727 CHESTNUT Street. LINENS, . 5V:).0..-p::-.grAgioisc. 13Y 4''X'FaLEGRAPII. .i. ..F...0,*.._,..*.:.'8iv....4:.,g.*,:::.7.y,:. ATTEBITED ittURDEIi, CASE. A Murderer Convicted. vnom ARRIVAL OF GOLD. The Revolt in Peru. FROM FORTRESS MONROE. Effects of the Late Storm-. Numerous Marine Disasters. Stiolitior; Affair in New Jeremy. Medal Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Be llettal Boatrirvii.mi, N. J. Oct. M.—Last night, be tween nine and ten o'clock, Mrs. Chas. J. Walker shot her husband at Bound Brook, N.V., live miles east of this place. Mrs. W. met her htus bead in a bar-room, and requested him to accom pany her home. Upon his refusing, she drew a pistol and shot him in the forehead, the ball glancing and inflicting a severe, though not dan gerous wound. The cause appears to be that she cpnsidered him unfaithful to his marriage vows. The parties reside at New Brunswick, W. J., and occupy a respectable position in society. The trial of Jacob Van Arsdale, for the murder of the boy Baird, in June last, was concluded here last evening. The jury, after being out about two hours and a half. brought in a verdict of "guilty of murder in the drat degree," but re commend him to the mercy of the proper autho rities. From Panama. NNW YORK, Oct, 31.—Panama papers of the 23d inst., have been received by the steamer Henry Chauncey. She brings $516 t 853 in gold. Guatemala has granted the privilege to certain parties to establish a National Bank, with a capi tal of .4:100,000. Isaac H. Steinbergh, an American, was as saulted in Panama by three natives, one of whom shot him, but the wound was not fatal. The American Consul demanded the arrest of the assailants, and a full investigation was ordered, in accordance therewith. The• affair was undoubtedly a premeditated attempt at assassination. The gunboat Waterce arrived at Panama on the 10th, and returned to Callao after coaling. The Panama Legislature has repealed the reso lution shifting a portion of the real estate tax to the commercial tax. ~.Ccptral American advices notice severe storms off the coast, and heavy rains in the interior. The cholera is disappearing. Valparaiso dates are to the 3d inst. The un certainty as to the movements of the Spanish fleet had a depressing influence on business. The treaty of commerce between Pern and Chile is mutually an Inauguration of free trade. A line of steamers is to be esMbiLshed between Valparaiso and LiverpooL • Bolivia is seeking to annul the guaao contract at the Mejillone Islands. The revolt at Arequipa, Peru, continues. Troops have been sent there, but Causeco still remains in command, and no attach has yet been made upon him. The Ecuadorian Congress had an embrogilo with the Government, but the matter was settled by the resignation of the Minister of the Interior. From Foirtreos Dioruroe. Fourukss Mosnort. Oct. 29.—The effect of the severe gale which visited the coast yesterday afternoon and evening, is beginning to show itself in the large number of vessels that tuive put into this port in distress. The British brig••Boa deacia was met at Sewall's Point. by the wreck ing Mgt, and towed to Norfolk for repairs, hay ing lost her mainmast. The Prussian brig lona has arrived from Rio de Janeiro with coffee, and is awaiting Orders. The squall struck her ofiCape Hatteras, carrying away her main jib and main top gallant mast. The sea run very high, and the bad weather con tinued up to the capes. The brig sustained no other Injuries, and will no doubt be ready to pro ceed to her final port of destination and discharge her cargo before repairing. The steamer Frances, from Baltimore for Wilmington, N. C., which put in here daring the storm, had her smoke-stack blown away in the gale last might. She is under repairs, and will he ready to sail again to-morrow. The steamer Saragossa, 'from New York for 'Charleston, put Into Norfolk, this afternoon, with her smoke-stack carried entirely away. It went by the board during the gale last evening. She will be repaired In Norfolk. • It is reported that the steamer Roston, bound for Baltimore, is ashore 12 miles south of Cape Henry, but the extent of her injuries has not as yet been ascertained. The wreckers will go to her assistance in the morning. The large fleet of vessels anchored In the Roads for thepast week have, with a few exceptions, sailed for their respective ports of destination. Among them were the ships Polar Star, for Bor deaux; Joseph Clark, for Panama; Sullote, for Mobile; Smits, for Japan, and Freeman, for Bal timore; brigs Mande, for Baltimore, and Maggie Hammond, for Liverpool. The revenue cutter Nerciaha has passlld up bound to Norfolk. The weather is still unsettled with the wind at the southwest. Marine Nrw Yoga Oet.3L—Arrived--Steatner . Minnesota, from Liverpool, with dates to the 15th inst.; steamer Rem - v Channeey, from Aspinwall, and steamer Moro Cantle. from Havana. The Indian Ayocittes—Juarez Falls to liznroa, lierico,October 1, by way of Havana, October 30 1867.— Juarez has not yet sent the two thousand men which were urgently de manded to stop the Indian atrocities. The tribes have united. CITY BIILLETkN. STATE OF THE THERMOMETER THIS DAY AT THE BULLETIN OFFICE. 10 A. ... 65 deg. 12 M.... 61 deg. 2P. dog. Weather clear. Wind Northwest. HALLow E'nx.—The time-honored festival of Hallow E'en, is rapidly falling into disuse with this generation. It is one of those relics of Pa gan days which has lingered along from Roman and Druid days, down through the local tradi lions of En land Ireland and Wales, bringing • with it its old myths of supernatural Teps and apparitions, mingled with l a g /OM , fin'ntii of boys and girls, tfailink huts arid bobbing for ApVc,§ teil,the • fortunes of their future loves. in this countrY, the old traditions have faded out of the know ledge of the late generations, and its chief ob servance is maintained by roving bands of boys who, without rhyme or reason, bang at doors, and pull at bells, without the faintest idea of why they do it. To the American boy the festi val is not Hallow Eve, but Holler Eve, a night to be kept with noise and confusion and disturb ance to peaceful housekeermirs. It is somewhat remarkable that while circuit : vestige of - the origi nal observances and superstitions of Hallow E'en has passed from the popular mind in this country, the fact of the annually recurring 'night is still remembered by the youngsters. it would be none the Worse for us if we could keep np =in this new world more of the pleatant old festal usages of the old. The time-honored festival of Hallow E'en was an innocent and merry one, and even to have the shadow of it !abetter than to lose • all trace of it. Let the boys pluck the' 'cab bage, and if they fail to look whether future wealth clings to its roots, or to taste its heart to try the temper of their future bride, and choose • instead to battle at 011e'S, door therewith, and merrily demand a holiday gift, let us givel it ' ' them, and praying for many happy returns of the season, both to them and ourselves, betake ourselves to our couches with fitting reflections for the Day a All Souls, which the morrow's sun will bring. • MEXICO. Send BeLief. • NOTAINCIKWORTII ScisooL.—The Ilsilinge worth school building on Loetist street, west of Broad, which has just been coMpleted add a de scription of which was published In the BeLtarratt a few days ago, was opened to the public for in spection, this morning, and will be continued open until this evening at six o'clock. A large number of persons, ladles and gentlemen, visited the building during the morning, and the , various Improvements made upon the old style school houses wore highly commended. The dedicatorY exercises will take place this evening., Addresses will be delivered by Prof. kale,- Mayor .k- Michael and Edward Shippers, Esq., President of the Board of Controllers of the Public Schools. gl UNVEILING A STATUE. —This evening Mr. Hazeltine's tine marble statue of America re warding her Defenders will be unveiled at the Union League House, and the event will probably attract a large attendance of the members. We are requested to state, also, that Captain John L. Worden, U. B. N. of Monitor renown, will be the guest of the League this evening, and the mem bers and their families will have an opportunity of paying their respects to him. RESCUING A PRISONEIL—Last night Policeman Kemble arrested a man on Tenth street, above Oxford, for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. John Barry interfered, assaulted Officer Kemble and rescued the prisoner. Re was arrested and locked up. This morning be had a bearing be fore Alderman Fitch, and was committed. in de fault of $l,OOO bail tb answer at Court. ROBBERY or A LUSOH STORE.--The wine and liquor store of John Gallagher, at Twentieth and Catharine streets, was entered last night, and was robbed of4wenty gallons of brandy valued at $2OO, and four barrels of whiskey. The plun der is supposed to have been earned away in a wagon. Rarr.nosn Aectorsp.—David Gardiner, a brakeman, in the employ of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad, fell off of the six o'clock passenger train last evening at Gray's Ferry Bridge. He was badly injured, and was brought to his home in this city. MACHINY: SHOP ROIMED.—The machine shop of Fred. Doelber, No. 405 North Fourth street, was entered last night by forcing open a back door. Brass and tools to the value of $2O were carried otf. BERVED RIGHT.-TWO young men, who have been In the habit of annoying ladies at Fair mount Park, for Borne time past, were arrested yesterday. by the Park Pollee, and were held to bail for trial at Court. MOM: STREET WALKERS Atutp_ , -,TED.—The Fifth District Police last night arrested Mx street walkers, in the vicinity of Ninth and Walnut streets. This morning the prisoners were com mitted by Alderman Swift. - "WAVER'S CAW Astarte SECRETS.. r-. 2 A novel and elegant Confection for Colds, Coughs, rfonrsenees and Throat difficulties generally. Coinpreed eldelly of boa:l)mnd, coltefoot, comfrey, elecampanc, spikenard, gam arable, paregoric, elixir and 'squills. Held In the mouth and allowed slowly to disFollie. they soothe the cough and shield the tlirbat and lungs. Manufactured solely by Bower, Sixth and Vine. Price 35 cents. CHILDREN Cutting their Teeth Hard. thereby intense pain, may be irreatly relieved by ap plying a small punkin of Bower 'a luntut Cordial to the gums . WARRANTED TO CURE OR TIIR MON'ET RE rcxyzn.—Dr. Mere Rheumatic Remedy has cared 4,500 caeca of Rheumatlam, Neuralgia and Gout in this Pity. Prepared at 29 South Fourth Meet. DRUGGISTS' EUNDRIEB and Fancy Goods. SNOWDEN a BsornEns, Importers, 23 South Eighth street. BEIROVB SoArx.—Elder Flower, Turtle 011, Glycerine, Lettuce, Sunflower, Mask, Roge, Snow prx BrArlirns Importer& 23 South Eighth street. Clow MEDAL FERrOMERY. - Napoleon 111 awarded the Prize Medal, at the Paris Exposition,lB6l, to B. &G. A. Wright for the beat Toilet Soaps, Ex tracts and Perfumeries—for sale by all the principal druggists. R.l G. A. Wright, 624 Chestnut street. •: - ~ • ~~ Bees at the Philade] $5OO UtS 620E1'65 I r. 1101( 300 eh Catawa pf 830 24 500 Patna 6# 3se 100 g 100 eh do b6O 243( 5000 do 2d mtges 93}; 100 eh do pf 24 9000 City 6e newsoo eh do pf e3O 23 1 4' 1616 - leO ; 100 eh Reston , : e R 11 4000 do 100 1 4 6eh Leh Nav stk. 35U' 50 4+13 Read R 403¢ 100 h Morris ent prof 03 200 oh Phil & Erie R 26 ) 2Eh Cam ds Am R 123 300 eh do F3O 26!. 341 Eh Penna R 52 100 sh do b6O 261;1 16 Eh LehiLM V 51X 100 Eh Ocean Oil .3.691 6Fh2d&3d St R a 5 T 73 Pattrkamrsta, Thursday, October 31. Iu the money market we notice some little relaxa tion from the late etringency,and disconnutare effected mere easily, yet the banks are cautions and prefer lending on call, as the recent decline in value, par ticularly of dry goods and wool, has canoed much dis trust in commercial obligations. Gold is rather fever ish, notwithstanding the supply will be largely in creased by the payment of the November coupons, as it is reported a ring has been formed in New York to force up the premium as soon as these disbursements are made. The Stock market opened quite rigorous this morning, but at the adjournment the bear influ ence prevailed and prices of the speculative shares generally fell off. Government Loans rose ,kfw; per cent. State Loans were without change. City Loans closed at 100% for the new and 96. for the old certifi cates. Reading Railroad opened at 49%, and closed dull at 49. Gamden and Amboy Railroad sold at 123- a rise of X ; Pennsylvania Railroad at 52-no change ; Philadelphia and Erie Railroad at 261:42634-an ad vance of %; Catawisea Railroad Preferred at 240243( b. 60; with 51 bid for Lehigh Valley Railroad; 64% for Germantown Railroad; 42% for Northern Central Rail road ; 80% for North Pennsylvania Railroad, and 22 for Little Schuylkill Railroad. Canal stocks were irregu lar. Morris Canal sold at 93. and Lehigh Navigation at 35%. 23% was the best bid for Schuylkill Naviga tion Preferred, and 11% for Susquehanna. Bank stocks were steady. Passenger Railway shares were but little sought after, and the,gply sales were of Second and Third Streets at 7934 and Hestonville at 11. • Smith, Randolph & Co., Bankers, 15 South Thir ertreet, quote at 11 o'clock , as follows: Gold. 140%; United States 1861 Bonds, 111®112; United States 5-20's, 1862, 11234a4112%; 5-20's. 1664, 109%0109%; 5-20's, 1665, 110%®110% ; 5-20's, July, 1665, 107148 107%; 5-20's, July, 1867, 107X9007,;; United States 10-40's, 100%@100% ; United States 7-30's, let series, par; 7.30'5; 2d series, 105%®105%; 3d series, 1053 46105 X ;Compounds,December,lB64,llB%,oll9. Jay Cooke & Co. quote Government securities, &c., to-day,as follows: United States 6's, 1861,111%(4112%; Old 5-20 Bonds, 112X•a1112%; New 5-20 Bonds, 1864, 109%@1091,1; 5-20 Bonds, 1865, 1103,{®110%; 5-20 Bonds July, 1865,107%@107 ;5-20 80nd5,1867,107%0 107%; 11140. Bonds, 100%(4160%; 7 7-10 August, par ; 7 3-10, June, 105%®105%; 7 3-10, July, 105%@ 105%; Gold (at 12 o'clock), 149X®140 1 4. Messrs. De flaven & Brother, No. 40 South Third street, make the following quotations of the rates of exchange to-day, at 1 P. M.: American Gold, 140X;@ 140%; Silver-Quarters and halves, 13,13434; Com pound Interest Notes-Jane, 1864, 19.40; July, 1664, 19.40; August, 1663,19.40; 'October, 1664, 19.40; Dec., 1864, 18%; May, 1865, 17%; August, 1865, 16%; Sept., 1865, 1534; October, 15%. The following is a statement of theoal transported over the Delaware and Hudson Canal for the week and season ending Oct. 26, and the same period last year: Week. Season. Tone. Tons. Delaware and Hudson Canal.. 37,636 1,151,428 Pennsylvania Coal Company.. 569 19,275 Union Coal C0mpany......... 2,896 • 24,844 !Fatal ~..r1.7.4.-.74=440 41,124 1,195,047 For same period last year:' Week. Season. Tons. Tons. Delaware an 4 Hudson Canal.. 98,148 1,129,844 Penneylvanla Coal Company.. 948 251,414 Philadelphia Illarketa. • Tuessniy, - Oct. 81.—There is a steady—inquiry for Cloverseed and further sales have been reported at $8 @ 8 20. In Timothy and Flaxseed no change and no sales have been reported. There Is but little Quercitron Bark here and we con tinue to quote at $54 V ton for No. 1. The Flour market is dull, there being scarcely any demand either for export or home consmnption. Only a few hundred barrels were disposed of at $7 50V18 50 V barrel for supertine, extras at $8 50059 60, com mon and choice` Northwest extra Family at $lOBll 85. Penna. and Ohio extra • family at $11410,19 50, a n d fancy at slB @ l4. Rye Flour is selling in lots at $8 76 4459. In Corn Meal nothing doing; we quote Brandy wine at $7 25. The Wheat market is dull and prices are drooping. Sales of 8,000 bushels good and prime Red, part on se cret terms and part at $2 5449 55 13 Intstiel. Rye is quiet, with small sales of Penna. at $1 70 and Southern at $1 80. Corn is dull. Small sales of yellow at $1 42 and Western mixed at $1 40. Oats are Mac. tive and range from 65 to 70 cente—a decline. In Barley and Malt no further sales have been re ported. • TKO DAILY El'irNING BULLETIN.-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1867. hia Mock Butting% 1,151,758 THIRD 'EDITION; BY TELEGRAPH. IMPORTANT FROM WASHINGTON. THE EFFECT OF THE ELECTIONS. The Late Slaveholders Jubilant. They Are Making Out Their Bills. Slavery or Compensation. The Counterfeit Seven-Thirties. FROM THE WEST INDIES. IMPORTANT PEON MEXICO. From VVasitlngUm. [Special Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] WASHINGTON. Oct. 31.-A private letter re ceived here this mortiing, frotn one of the Dis trict CoMmanders of the Southern States, states that since the result of the recent elections at the North became widely known, the condition of affairs in hisDistdet, has undergone a complete change. The late rebels are no longer disposed to accept the situation. They regard the elec tions in Pennsylvania and Ohio as an endorse ment of the friends and sympathizers of the lost cause. These sentiments, the letter says s were not confined to the lower and more ignorant classes of the Southern whites. The most intelligent and respectable of the late slave owners openly assert their belief, that in a year or two slavery will be restored, or that the Government will compen sate the late - masters for their losses on this species of property. That this is no mere fanciful idea, the writer says, may be gathered from the fact, that the late slave-holders all through his District, are preparing lists of slaves held by them at the breaking out of the rebellion, and are having them valued at the Government market rates of 1860. The Treasury Department has endeavored, un successfully, to obtain one of the recent seven thirty counterfeit bonds for the purpose of pho tographing it. All efforts in New York were fruitless, although many of the most prominent bankers there . who held large amounts deny having any on hand now. It being necessary that such photographic copies should be made in order that employees might become familiar with the points of difference between the genuine and the counterfeits Treasurer Spinner sought through the agents of the department to procure such notes, with the result mentioned. All spurious bonds now in the hands of officials are imperfect copies, the names of the Register and Treasurer being punched out. Assistant Secretary Chandler left last night for. New York, on official business. [Correepondezice of the 112 - rociated Preee.) WASIIIN;;TON, Oct. al.—Official publication is made of the convention between the U. S. Post office Department and the General Post-office of the Netherlands. The offices for the exeliange of mails are to be New York and Boston. The single rate of postage on the direct corress poridence from the United States IA fifteen cents, and from the United States 40 cents. On all correspondence, in cluding newspapers, books, packages, litho graphs; etc., and grains and seeds, the rate is to be for the mails despatched, that which the de spatching office shall adopt, adapted to the convenience and habits of its interior administration. On registered letters and, newspapers, books, Sze., prepayment is obliga tory. Registered letters are subject to a fee not ex ceeding ten cents in the United States, and not exceeding twenty-five cents in the Netherlands. Whenever regular mail steamers shall be estab lished between the two countries the postage is to be reduced. ' The convention is to take effect on the first of January next. THE I:ETRE:SCUM:NT CORMITTEE The Sub-Retrenchmeat Committee thus far has been ascertaining the mode in which businese generally has been transacted at the Treasury Department, and this involves the examination of the books, the obtaining of information by per sonal inquiries and facts connected with the printing bureau. It is not probable that the in vestigation will be concluded before the first of January next. Some of the detectives of the Treasury Depart ment profess to have information leading to the conclusion that only about $150,000 of the coun terfeit seven-thirty notes were presented, and that these were divided among three parties, to be put in circulation. The Department has not within the last two or three weeks received any more of these counterfeits. Eight of the old counterfeit *3O notes overe recently received at the Treasury Departnilient; but being examined by an insufficient light their spurious character was not at once detected. The Treasurer has adopted measures additional to those heretofore in force, to guard against such impositions and has assigned several ladies, known to be reliable experts, to assist the men in the examination of the more important issues. THE BRITISI MINISTER. The State Departmentfias not, as yet, received any - Information as to o will be the successor of Sir Frederick Bruce, as British Minister. • (From Havana. HAVANA, Oct. 26.—A frame building in this city fell yesterday, killing six Chinese and wounding seventeen. It is reported that the Bay of Samana, in Hayti, bas positively been sold to the United States. Adviceii from Mexico state that the Apache Indians in Sonora are very troriblesorne. Thb companions of General Quirogas have been captured. The General himself is still at large. Fire in Boston. BosTos, Oct. n.—At an early hour this morn ing a fire broke out in the large building,Nos. 101 and 109 State street. owned by Banker & Car penter, dealers in paints, oils, &c. The Interior of the building and the stock were mostly de str_9yed. The loss is heavy txt t was Insured. WEST SANDWDAT, Mass., Oct. 31.—The carriage manufactory - of Isaac Keith & Son, of thisiplace, was totally destroyed by tire last night: 7 Loss $lB,OOO ; insured for $12.000. Counterfeiters Connuttted. TORONTO. Oct. 31.—Alrich and Haveque, the New York counterfeitere,were to-day committed for trial. They now await the action of the Government on the application tor their.,,ef tra dition. Financial and Commercial News from Now' York. IFe YORK. Oct. 11.—StOcks are lower. Chicago and Rock Bland, ti; Reading, lit31.:11 Erie, 73', ; tlleaveland and Toledo, 10456. z, Ckareland and Pitteiburgh, 633 e; Pit o burgh and Fort Wayne, 9;',,; Michigan Central.loB,i6; Michigan Southern, 79'.,; N. Y. Central, Central, 111 A ;; Cumberland PrefetTed,l7,ki; Nlioiimtri 65, 94?,: Hudson River, 117; U. S. Five-twentia '62, 112'4; do. '64. 10.9'i ; do. '66, 110'4: Ten-fortieo, 100',i; Sci - en-thirties. 5 , , • Sterling Exchange, 169 7 .. Money, 6 per' cent. Gold: 14113 , ,, Cotton, dull at 196i1914c. Flour, eaoier and '10(4.20e. lower-10.000 bblo. oold ; State. $8 athapi , lo 61; Ohio. *vita *ll 30; Western, $9 40CR4613 '2l; Southern. 610 161 , i'.514 30; California, $ll 501al11 60. Wheat, dull and 2(a13.... lower. Corn, dull, lia,lc. lower. Gate, quiet. Barley, firm for Imin;e;-of common. 23,000 buohelo were cold: Canada, ;61 40. Beef, aide. Pork. dull; new mole, $.2.0 87(ii; $2O 95. Lard, dull. k UITY BULLETIN. BREACII 01 , mg PEACE.—An individual named William Smith was arrested yesterday, and taken before Recorder Erica on the charge of breach of 'the peace. It is alleged that on Sun day afternoon last, he was running about in the neighborhood of Twentieth and Callowhill streets, with scarcely any clothing on, swearing and otherwise behaving badly. He was com mitted in default of $l,OOO bail. FRONT NEW WORK. NEW Wax, Oct. M.—About half-past four o'clock yes terday morning a lire was discovered on the second floor of No. 348 Broadway, in the premises occupied by A. Blum dr Co., dealers and importers of Swiss and German goods. When the smoke was first seen issuing from the front windows an Warm was given, which brought the lire Department very quickly to the premises. There are skylights or well heles through each floor to the roof, and through these openings the smoke and flames mdckly ex• tended, and at one time bid fair to destroy the entire edi fice. The firemen fought the .devouring element cc of. fectually that at the end of two hours they succeeded in extinguishing the flames; having confined the fire, except where it west up the openings; exclusively to the second floor, and time preVented the destruction of a meat amount of ProPertY and,PerhipthoadlOining buildings. The total loss is estimated at Quo; - A soldiers' and sallond. Rein loan ratification rooting was hold in the Brookbm Academy 0 1 Music j u t evening; whim-war attended ti a very largo audience, but the 2:15 O'Clook. . . nly_ . speaker, Who made his appearance, was, General IlseKcan, the Republican candidate for Secretary of State. no Inside &lengthy speech, which wag well received. The investigation into the circumstanceo connected 'With .the Dean Richmond disaster , was continued before the Government inspectors ,yesterday A numberpf yit. fusses on behalf. both of the Dean Richmond and of the Vanderbilt,,were examined. but nothing new was elicited. • At the sale of Scranton Coal. yesterday, Prides advanced on some detterinflens, forty cents per ton over.the prices of thoprevions month. The Commissioners of Emigration held their regular semi-monthly meeting yesterday. An important remit'. Mon was adopted by the Board, extending the advantages of the Labor F.:xebange to both employers and emigrants. THE COURTS. QUARTS:. STFISIONS—aIIIdge Ludlow.—Edward Buckley was convicted of a charge of stealing a watch. He was caught While attempting to pawn the watch which he had stolen. Joseph filevin, a boy, WOO convicted of a charge of lar ceny.. Lie had been .engaged in visiting. auction dome, and operating on the attendants.. The defendant is about fifteen 'eared age, and had but recently been discharged from nelson. Be made no defence to the case this morn ing, hut for some reason the jury, in convicting him, re commended him to mercy. John Baptiste Durand was convicted of a charge of stealing a watch and clothing. Diexeicrr Collor—Judge libantwood.—ilenry Burchali vs. Bugh MeAnamy, Otho B. Tice, and the Union Pas senger 'Railway Company. This was an action to recover damages for the loss of the eon of plaintiff, Aged 13 years. The boy had taken passage on one of the Union cans, on the 17th of June. 1861 i, and was standing on_ the front Whtfetn"thewictahr.hiwg face t w o' as var roit t l i g Le ur Kill ll4e str c e l e i t: reached South, it had to pass a large pile of bricks, which, it is alleged, were placed there by Messrs. McAnamy & Tice, who were engaged in building. The space between the brick pile and railroad track was but a few inches, and:when the car reached this spot the bore arm was caught by the bricks, his body was drawn around, and he was crushed so seriously that he died in about fifteen minutes'. After the accident the brick pile was removed. It was in evidence that the RallroadCompany had com plained to the owner of the property of the dangerous po sition Of the brick pile, and tine complaint was eommuni. cated to Tice & 3fcAnatny, who then set back that por tion of the pile which was on a line with the car windows, so that no accident could occur im consequence of messen gers putting their arms out. The lower part of the brick pits wasr not disturbed until after the accident tei young Buchan. At the close of plaintifre case, the counsel for McAnamy & Tice asked for a nou-suit as regarded them. ' Judge Sharswood suggested that, under the testimony. McAnamy.as a w orkm an under Tiee. would net be liable. The plaintiff then preferred to call McAnamy as witness ile.tcctified that he had no contract with Mr. Tice; that Mr. Tice merely asked him to tear down the building. lie did ais, and employed men to do it: he denied that there was any agreement between them as to the price, and up to this time he had not presented a hill, Mr. Tice was then called and he testified that he asked McAnamy,- to look at the building and say how much it would cost to take it down. MeAnamy naM it would cort tin. 'lbis was before Mr. Tice _got the contract. After he got the contract, he went to hicAnamy and told him to go to work, and he did so, and McAnamy employed the men. This was the only contract. 17nder this testimony. the Court refused to enter a non suit in regard to these defendants, as it would be for the jury. The conned for the railroad company said if his client was sued alone, he would ask for a non-suit. Judge Sharswood said he would not se dispose of the case, for if this was a particularly dangerous place, it'%vM the duty of the railroad company to take extra precau tions. On opening the ease of the defence for the railroad, it was contended that the accident was due in part to the negligence of the deceased. The boy, instead of getting on the platform, preferred to stand on the step, and he was beckoning to an acquaintance, when his arm was caught by the brick pile. On trial. POLITICAL. VIRGINIA. Gen. Schofield andlr. Gilmer' s Pro- 1:1/111`4 , 0.1 , , Va. Oct. :ie.—Gen. Schofield has made the following re ply to the communication of John H. Gilmer, Esq.: ii pqi'-. ne , r Mj I.iTtTIT DIKTII . II7I - . ST'S.TI: ye Vim: t Si A, RicitAto.i., Va.. Cct. le67.—Mr. .1. H. Gilmer. Rich mond. l'a.—St n I an, directed by the Commanding Gen eral to Acknowledge the receippt of your communication of the 25th inst., referring, to the late election in the city of ilichtnond, and to say in reply that the charge of Mt dal misconduct preferred by you against the Superinten dent of the election will be duly iltivestigated as soon as You shall tile proper specifications In support of the Charge. The question you raise sum to the legality of the elyetion will be referred to the Convention, which will be the proper judge of the "election. returns and qualifica tions of its own members." Very respecfully, your obe dient servant, B. F. Assistant Adjutant-General. . Mr. Gilmer maker the following publication: To the People of Richmond: As I intend to prefer regu lar charges and specifications against Colonel Rote, the superintendent of the elections in this city. I desire at oncewritten statements to me of all such factaconductacts aad declarations of Col. Rose embraced or alluded to i n my protest. I want no rumors, but facts, and these from reliable and trnetworthy sources- I again counsel the utz most forbearance, prudence, and propriety The reign of I law is not at an end. JOHN I. GILMER. October 01110. The Vote on the Amendment Counted. GoLmosus, Oct. 31. The Board of Canvassers, consist ing of the Governor, Secretary of State and Attorney- General, to -day finished counting the vote on -the consti tntional amendment giving the nearo the tight of suffrage. The vote stands as follows: For the amendment. 216.967; against the amendment, 266,340; not voting, 12276. As all the votes not given for the amendment are counted against it, ft will be seen that the proposition to enfranchise the blacks is beaten by 50,629 votes- The banner to begiven by the State Democratic Ben. tral Committee to the county showing the largest Demo cratic gain for one year was on last evening awarded to Lawrence county, she having made a Democratic gain of I,=l votes. THE INDIANS. Alarm in the Commissionars , Catnp— Six Hundred Cheyenne Warriors Ad. vancing to Attack—Treachery of the Indians—Preparations for Defence. Loncer. CLERK, Kansas, Oct. id, by way of Fort Barker, Oct. 30, 1807.—Considerable alarm (a felt in camp this morning in consequence of the movements of the cheyennee. numbering six hundred warriors. The Ara pahoes, informed the Commission that they suspected the Cheyennes of bad faith, and warned them to beware of an attack. Some of the agents and interpreters also be lieve they mean mischief. We have about three hundred fighting men to welcome them. The Cheyennes sent word that they were comingin on a charge and with a yell, and desired all the other In diana to get away from our camp. Some of the Commis sioners are nervous. They (the Cheyennes)(are expected tomorrow. A treaty was concluded with the Apaches, nunibering eighty•five lodges, yesterday. They are confederated with the Slowest and Comanches, and receive an annuity of rive thousand dollars. A Narrow Escape for General Sheridan. A despatch to the Boston Journal says :—The train con veying the General and party from Portland to Augtinta, this morning,narrowly escaped a serious accident. It was run through a dense fog, through which the engineer could not see more than two rods ahead. Just beyond Stockton, the engine struck a hand-car on the track. and at the tremenduous rate of speed at which it wan traveling hurled the kand.car in frag ments from the track. Two, iron bars in the hand-car, used by the workmen, were thrown into the air, one of them passing through the smoke-stack of the engine, and both falling through the baggage car, or train, narrowly missing the occupants. The engineer states that the train would undoubtedly have been thrown from the track had it been traveling on a curve, and the con sequences to the country can well be imagined. The lamp in front of the engine was hurled off, and other parts of the front of the engine torn in pieces SAFETY RAILROAD SWITCH MAIN TRACK UNBROKEN. I am now prepared to furnish railroads throughout the United States with my Patent Railroad Switches. by the use of which the MAIN TRACK IS NEVER BRO=l. and it is impossible for any accident to occur from the misplacement of switches. The saving in rails, and the great saving in wear of tie rolling stock, which is by this means provided with' a level, smooth, and firm track at switches in place of the isual movable rails and the consequent severe blows eaused by the open Joints and battered ends, ie a matter deserving the especial attention of all Railroad companies. AS A MATTER OF ECONOMY ALONE thisanrsn len needs only to be tried to insure its adoption: but beyond the economy THE PERFECT LMM UNITY FROM ACCIDENT caused by misplaced switches is a subject not only: of importance in respect to property saved from 'destruction ' but it concerns THE LIFE AND LIMB OF ALL TRAVELERS UPON. RAILROADS. I refer to the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Com. pany, and to the New York and Haarlem Railroad Co. I am now filling orders for various other Railroad Com panies, and I will gladly give any information in detail that may bo desired. WM. WHARTON, Jr., Patentee, Box No. 2745 Philada., Pa. Mike, No. 28 South Third Street, Philada. Factory, Walnut above 31st St., Philada. oclP3m rDi 1867 , FALL AND WINTER. 1867 FUR. HOUSE, (ESTABLISHED IN 1818.) The underst siock gned of invite consisting the attenti of on of the Ladies t thar large Pure. HMS, TIPPETS. COLLARS. so. Di RUSSIAN SABLE. HUDSON'S SAY SABLE. MINK SABLE; ROY 4L ERMINE. camoncta. En= ao.. allof the latest ~ail~ , iTUt;~~:1i:1-~ mil at reasonable inlema ladies in mourning will find bandoomeartielie tnPX SaNNES and =UM the latter unmet beautiful F CAIMACIE ROBEIS. SLEIGU WAX*. and FOOT MIT I'S in mid variety. A....,.g;* .1,.,410,111)- 417 Alob Street. - FOURTH' EDITION BY TELEGRAPH. THE PEAift COMMISSIONERS. THE NEW INDIAN TREATIES. The Cheyennes Holding, Off THE FIRE IN BOSTON. Tlie Death of Governor Andrew. The Now Indian Treaties. By. Louts, Oct. 31.—Despatches received from Medicine Lodge Creek say that a treaty has been made with the Camanches, by which they con federate with the Kluwas. The Comanches go on•with the sale of their regervation, and are to receive $5,000 per annum, clothing, tte. The Arapahoes will make a separate treaty together with the , Apaches, and dissolve their former connection with the Cheyennes, on account of the hostile attitude• of the latter to wards the whites. • All the tribes here except the Cheyennes, held a council on the 26th, and agreed , to renew their friendly relations with each other, and to return the stolen horses. The Cheyennes have not arrived yet, and some suspect bad motives on their part, while others think all will come out right. They claim to have not yet finished their medicine ceremonies, and ask two days longer time. The Commissioners have already waited thir teen day on this tribe. They have got tirecl,and if the Cheyennes are not here by Monday they will leave. The Bostoivrire. BOSTON, Oct. 31.—The lose by the fire at Nog. 107 and 109 State street, this morning, is esti mated at $50,000. Messrs. Banker and Carpen ter arc insured for $40,000. The Death of Ex-Governor Andrew. BOSTON, Oct. 81.—The death of ex-Gov i ernor Andrew causes profound sorrow amongst all classes of citizens. The flags are at half-mast on all public, and on many private dwellings. Commercial. BA rrt MORRo Oct. 31.—Cotton dull at 19R , 19)4c. Flour very dull; no mien of moment ;.pricea are weak. Wile at ix flat at 50610 e. lower; prime to choice red, $ll riso?"2 75. Corn doll and declined ?,e.; new white. $1 Wel 10; and for dry do.. $1 20; old white, *1 36 1 i01 3s; old yellow, 8135.'0 ?A; new dry Southern yellow, $1 2.5(0:1 20. flea dull and un changed. Rye dull. Provielona that and neglected. Philadelphia Stock Exchange. BETWEEN BOA RDA. $lOOO Phil A: Sun T 92 501) Ph Rend R 1000 Read 6s '44 2de 01 134 sh Penna R 92 10 eh Cam 8, - ; Am eep aswn 033 5 eh Morris Can pf 93 • 200 eh Hestonvilleß e5ll 100 eh Cataw pf U2O 23; 7 ; 200 all Ocean Oil 3.69 50 sh Ches 6R"uln 4i; $l5OO II S 7 3-108 Je 1000 Phil it Sun 78 b 5 92 2000 Penn R 1 me 61. 99 PASSENGERS ARRIVED. In steamer Star of the union, from Newrlcans Mies Isabella Vose, Jae 0, Gradev, Jno Watson, Win Wallace, E Townsend and lady, T L Hand and lady, Geo H Greenleaf, Mrs H Bowman and svt ; James A Browne, Dr Bates, Mrs J C Romain, Chas E Clark, Chas Murray, Horace W Oldenhonse, Jas H Davide, A Rosherean, H "V.,Wesson, Mr Cook, lus o ; c I) Graham Mrs M Scott, ET Hand and sevt (coPd); J C Hamrick, and 14 on deck. AT, RenortelNtle9htirreipm I a Even ONS ing zulletl2l. NEW ORLEANS—Steamer Star of the 'Union, Cook s ey-20 !ibis mdse G WBernadon & Bro; 74 bales cot ton Claghorn & Herring; 15 do moss Baeder & Adam son ; 1097 bbls floor Hoffman & Kennedy; 16 bales corks Jose de Besse Gnimarains; 185 empty bbls Mae sey, MIMI! At CO; 201 bbls flour Brook, Colket & Co; 11 has T B Peterson & Co; 50 bales cotton Prentice & Filler ; 437 do H Sloan & Sons; 21 bits Woodward, Jones & Co; 10 bbls oil Ziegler & Smith. From Ha vana-265 kiss sugar John Mason & Co; 40 bales to bacco S Fuguet & Sone. po El ;411a Mali fl n Dinill Ilall PORT OF PRILADRILPHIA—Ocrr. 31 Or Bee-Marine Bulletin on Seventh Page. ARRIVED THIS DAY. Steamer Star of the Union, Cdoksey, from New Orleans. via Havana 6 days, with sugar cotton, &c. to Philadelphia and Southern Mail SS Co. Experienced heavy gales of wind the whole passage. 26th inst. let 19 19, lon 19 CO, spoke hark Vivid. of. Liverpool, from Matanzas for New York—had experienced heavy weather, waaleaking badly and had stern stove; re futed assistance; would try and reach Charleston. Off the Capes of the Delaware saw a bark and two brigs, bound in; off 14 feet bank saw an English brig beating up. and a large fleet going to sea. Steamer J S Slither, Dennis, 13 hours from Haiti with mdse to A Groves, Jr. - _ Steamer Decatur. Young, 13 hours from Baltimore, with mdse to J D Ruoff. Brig J Bickmore, Graffan, 5 days from Portland, with mdse to Warren, Gregg & Morris. Schr Julien Nelson, Cavalier, Wareham. Bchr H Croekey. Potter. New Bedford. Schr P A Graw (new), Lake, Dorchester. Seim M L Vankirk, Haley, Pawtucket. Schr Maria Roxana, Palmer, Boston. Behr Lady Ellen, Sooy, Boston. Behr A Garwood. Godfrey, Boston. Schr D Pierson, Pierson, Boston. Schr T J Trafton, Talpey, Boston. Schr P Price, Yates Cohrtsset Narrows. • Schr C E Jackson , Jeffers, Cambridgeport. Schr J P McDevitt, McFadden, Portland, Ct. Behr E E Wharton, Bonsai]. Dover, Del. Behr Jas Bradley, Bradley. Georgetown:- Schr Aid, Smith, Salem. CLEARED THIS DAY. Steamer W Whilden. Higgins, Baltimore, J D Ruoff. Bark Maggie (Br), Putnam, Marseilles, C C Van Horn. Brig G Tard, Willeby, Marseilles. Workman & Co. Behr Minn) Repplier, Conover. Barbados, D S Stetson Its Co. Schr W P Phillips, Somers, Norfolk, Audsnried, Nor- ton & Co, Scbr Grace Watson, Nickerson, Norwalk, L Audenried & Co. Sam M L Vankirk, Haley, Pawtucket, do Sthr Northern Light, Ireland, Providence, Hammett & Neill. Schr Polly Price, Yates, Washington, Caldwell,Gordon Or, Co. Sam Lady Ellen, l SooY, Boston. do Schr Artie Garwood, Godfrey, Boston, captain. Schr Maggie Waver, Boyers. Boston, J It Tomlinson. Schr J P McDevitt, McFadden, Georgetown, Borda, Keller & Niitting, Sam B B Wharton. Bonsai!, New Haven, W 11 Johns & Bro. Sent Pathway, Haley, Heston, captain Correskmdence of the Philadelphia Exchange. LEWES, DEL., Oct. 80-6 AM. During a heavy blow from, the East on tho night of the 28th, the ship Crusader, from Philadelphia for New York, dragged her anchors and. grounded on the bar, opposite here, but was hove off yesterday morning, without damage, and proceeded on, her voyage. 'rho echr Gorham, from Philadelphia for Boston. dragged into the pilot boat Moses if Grinnell, carrying away the Grinnell's bowsprit, foretopmast head, and main mast by the deck; hull not injured. She left for Phila delphia). for repairs, under fore sail, the only sail she could set. Brig J W Woodruff, from Calais for Phila delphia, had main boom broke, stern damaged and boat stove. She remained at the Breakwater in com pany withlrigFrHarriet Amelia, from St Domingo fur Philadelphia; Superb, from Rio Janeiro (ordered to New York); J W Sawyer, from Satins River for Boston • Thomas Walter, from Now York for Port Louis, (quad; echr Gorham, Philadelphia for Boston; L Herrick, do for Dighton; yacht Dauntless. from Fort Monroe for New York, and bark Tejucca, from Philadelphia for Cork. The schr 0 Burroughs (probably the Owen Bearse. from Philadelphia for Boston), sprung a leak and sunk off the Breakwater, this morning. Yours. &G JOSEPH LAFETRA, MEMORANDA. Ship Nesutan, &Jaye, cleared at Boston yesterday for Hong Kong. Brig Almira, Galley, sailed from Fall River 2dth inst. for this port. Schr Lochiel. Haskell, from Calais for this port, at Newport 49th Behr A S Simpebn, Churn, sailed from New. Bedford 29th inst. for this port. Sobs Jonathan May Neal , hence at Boston 29th Inst. 'Sohn, Ocean Bird, Kelley, hence for Boston; Sidney Price, Stephens, and John Strout, Crawford. from Breton for this port, at Holmes' Hole 28th inst. Behr Trade Wind, Gardner, hence for Boston, at Holmes' Hole 29th inst. OEB C A ZWilli ll l 7 4 223 l 3 l E sL A O 3 se r it ieoeSAPitta App'apnoea fresh — klao tee. ilso, Ha ma Orem sad Green peas; coos cam; ems froth Green Gips: 60) sense 6 I Cherr ies 6 pyrup; 690 eases Butekwrrias• syrup • gap come rYVV.l oo .o=fmazoice..&aLuili . l ,g5. 0 7.44' itßrisbildgrl re for guthelZ7wll4l 3:15 O'Cloott. 10 eh do 4934 200 eh do 49 400 sh do 810 113 49 100 eh do s6Own 483;', 100 eh do elOwn 40 100 eh do cash 49 100 eh do blerm 40 100 eh do e 5 int 49 100 eh do slOwn 44,94 160 sh Leh Val It b6O 513/ 20 eh FUEL Bk s 5 164 F1FT11..5 . .....:,..:' .. .E,1)11..;r0iN. 4400 .o'olook. BY TELEGRAPH' " THE ELECTION IN onowim _ Order Froth. cterkeral ,Vope; T he Georgia Ziectloll4 , ,, , AtIOVISTA, OCt. 111.--The Repubticon pUbliShell the following additional returns : ' For the nti on. A gang.. Wilke county, let day 189 Conve Talliafero county, 16t day.. ,87to , Green :s If •..500 Pierce f g ...122 "Avratstt, Ga., Oct. 30.—General Ordtra 1 No. 83.—1 t appearing from representatieret made from many parts of the State since the com mencement of the election, that on accOunt of delays, occasioned in voting under registration, there is a probability that a large umber of voters, will, be ,deprived of an opportunity of casting votes within the three days designated for the purpose in order that there will be &triple time for*all regis tered votes to be cast. The boarde:of registration are hereby directed to keep the polls Open until 6P. M., on Saturday, November 2nd. Of this extension, the *lids will give Immediate and general notice throughout their respective tricts. .".TOnlr Popsy. ' Bvt-Major-general, CoimMindteir-$ Arrest of Main NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—A gang of. Lige fnimbite were caught in Brooks Brothers' clothing estab lishment this morning. They had carried off three wagon loads of expensive clothing before the arrest. Only fifty pair of pantaloons were , re covered. Two of the gang Were women. They have been fully committed for Walt the Ifisex Market Pollee Court. War Department Order. • WAWA INGTON, Oct. 31.—An order has, been W issued by the ar Department, saying that the practice which prevails of giving to soldiers, whose term of service is nearly out, furloughs for the remainder of that term, is found to be attended with serious detriment to the interest of the soldier, who Is often deprived of his arrears of pay, for the want of his certificate of discharge and. final state ments, on the expiration of its service. This practice will cease for the future. The New York Stock Market. NEW YORK, Oct. 81.—The Post's financial arti cle says the loan market is easy at B@i7e. There is no change in discounts. Stocks opened strong but closed drooping. Railroads weaker. I. E. WALRAYEN, MASONIC HALL 719 Chestnut Street • Would call the attention of the publicro his • Fall Importation of. • UPHOLSTERY GOODS AND LACE CURTAINS. Special efforts have been made to excel in the taste, quality. and variety of the fabrics. which were ilmnionally selected from the celebrated manufactories' of Parts • Lyons. St. Gslienadanche.der and Nottingluun. • . • A visit to_the establishment involves no obligation to purchase. 7-30'S Converted into 5-tVR 431-014.1 D And Compound hterest Notes Wanted. ECELEX.EL. ar e CO.l, BANKERS, $4 South Third Street, pENEBERTON AND HIGETSTOWN RAILROAD 7 Per Cent. let Mortgage Bondi ; The Loan, amounting to only 8160,000,1 s the tint,liert on the above road, which will cost, with in anintemsnces« about Waken Pr They are GUARANTEED PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST by the CAMDEN and AMBOY RAILROAD. DELA; WARE and RARITAN CANAL and the NEW JER. BEY RAILROAD and TRANSPORTATION CoMDSWIeSs REPRESENTING SOME 840,00k000thaVAL.' There can be no eater or more desirable- invet. makingr them for sale thear with interest Ire% did; Ist.. the Bonds net purchaser about Btl • • BOWEN & FOX , N 0.13 DIEECHANTIVEIXOILINGE. °calm spis .BANKING HOUSE C7P yCo oKE &Cp. 112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAIYA. • , D e alers In all Government &entitle& wawa ll a. wan" OARIALE dt' L JCiIG,..,. &UM Sat En Fabian sad EssEmii No. 437 Aleph PtraiailltipPhilisde4lo,ll Hi a ssing 10._Jobtobjedinidd told* • • • ilopsab. uns an INS TIRUGGII3ffIitIMOK:4I . O 4 bIatt.,2 I: 4 : • JIJ PM Wm . Combo,. Brushes, Miry"... • Bono, Horn &Doom is widest logirtuomb•P and Boft Babbor undo, trek Modo look Bringo o oliciStarlitst o grAn c rg Ati 4 l::,. • • spdttrp , a Booth (1/4.1,1'0N yRESERVED 41311.N0g13.it.0 "-' vine' wier4 4 1, of Um mi x /Drama w , LtoTlokri F irreSue.