CITY SII;,LfT ddieila• Horticultural Hall was well filled last evening, to bear an address by Wendell Phillips on the "Perils'of the Hour." The meeting was held under tbe evispices of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Sociatis • • itneert r'Esq.,* came forward and ' introdnced the 'orator' of the evening as one Who, for his xidelity to humanity, freedom, and the best interests of our country, had been ' pro noonceditiS deserringjho gallows by , the.shame lest. ingrateund traitor who disgraces the Execu tive chair of the nation, but who, the speaker hoped, would soon cease to dishonor it by the prompt :Mace of a resolute and patriotic Con greo. [Grai'aPplause.] Mr. Phillips then came forward and said: ' • Ludies awl Gen(lemen: The hour., of which I ion to seicak to yon is one not only of great apparent danger to the Republic, but it is one when men's opinions are keenly divided as to tee cauraeter of the danger and the method by vi filch it is to be averted. Of course, In speaking of it, I shall have occasion perhaps to criticise in and men. Please to understand me, that in all this criticism I ,have no motive distinct from that:of any one of you, and that is to heoefit the Republic, to endeavor in the promptest and easiest manner to secure the end which every good citizen has in view. I am sure I haw no (iPare either to wound the feeling or to mar the fettle of any American, The Crew on bear&ata, ship in the trough of the waves do not quarrel; there is no time for quarrelling or angry dispute. In my coetemplation to-day, as in the summer of 1861, afterthe proclamation .of .Aliiraham Lin coln, 'theilteirs neither Republican not e ,. Democrat —we areal! citizens, with only one geal,and that in a united country, prosperous and permanently happy. I take it for granted that every man be fore We, no matter what his preference as to' men, no matter what his line of party, has bit one cen'sc, purpose; stand-point =- that is, in the shortest time, at the cheapest rate, and in, the most effectual manner, to cure tke great didease of the Republic, to make us one again forever. Iconslder that we stein just that state to-day in which we were in 1861. n the great statesman like and civil 'battle; we Stand just where are did then; 'we are to call on the same loyalty for inspiration and strength; we are to dig down to the same granite. I believe that the idea of American civilization is the single ono of equali ty in the Staid based on Manhood; a total denial of caste, class, race—everything that is acciden tal. I believe that the central idea—the underly ing tendency and the point to which we gravitate manhood, simply, divested of its accidents,as the corner-stone of the Republic. It was to get rid of hierarchy and nobility; it was to throw off - wealth and mere book education that, not know ing exactly what they came for, Puritan and Ca valier(New Englander and Virginian)reached this coast. They obeyed the great impulse which very few of them comprehended, fulfilling their feebly and imperfectly understood mission of founding a State where every germ of soul and thought with which God teustcd the • World should have free and unobstructed space to grow. With faltering' steps, in the twilight, confused, our fathers stumbled onward in the foundation of suchs State. until at last, at the opening of the Revolution,' Jefferson found the sagacity and the courage to enunciate the principle in words. For the first time in the history of the race, the great law Was discerned. and Jefferson humor talized it in that most invaluable of all lines—the first of the Declaration—"all men are created equal." But the men who enunciated it did not comprehend the principle, could not see its ap plicatiou, and would have been.unable to reduce it to prackice. As In a thousand other instances in history, they stated a , truth which they were not. mature • enough to prac tice ; and the old colonies formed into States, and retained the rags, the hampering, and the fetters from which' they thought they had been freed. They . acknowledged slavery par tially. The race made its way onward. A very few: far-sighted men were conscious of the an tagonistic elements wrapped up ha the civil life of America, but the multitude comprehended them not.. Mr. 'Seward touched- - this point in 1858; •tit Rochester, before ho lost -his brain laughter], when he analyzed the history of this very tendency of American thought. He said : "Our fathers knew well enough—they under stood. perfectly well—that when they ac knowledged, not guaranteed, 3-ecoenieed only, the system -of -slavery side by side -with the great principle of freedom, they were putting' e into the Constitution the absolute certainty of conflict. They did not dare to caned,- they only hoped, that the great deyel opulent. of freedom, the normal unfolding of the f o rces of such millions would so absorb and maiermine. so temper and blot out this excep tional element of shivery, that perhaps America weelu survive. and become a unit without actual bloodshed: that party conillet r intellectual dissection, moral quarrel, not physical, would be the worst evil: in other words, as I. once be foie illustrated it, our fathers took a cannon, filled its bore half full with, anthracite coal at a white heat. poured upon that a quantity of Dupont's finest powder, and plugged it, hoping it would not burst—not expecting, but only hoping. The speaker said that in 1861 the explosion c:une—the irrepressible 'antagonism, of' the two ideas could no longer be confined within civil hicite and teen began the divergence of Ameri-. cnn statesmanship. Then it was proven that - if:Ws could not be transgressed without blinding the moral sense of the transgreesor.• Then when Ole two elssEes of men looked at the problem, the one bald. "We have learned—sev'enty years' eeperience are enough—we have decided that teese two elements cannot lie side by side peace ably;" The other said: "No, we have learned no such thing." • What were called the compromises of slavery were a mere film. a screen, which 1789 had put between the monster and the magistrates of the Republic, and which prevented the Chief Magis trate of the nation from seeing wide his official eyes the sin and the evil which he knew to be hidden behind it. But when the first gun was fired at Sumpter. the war power rolled up that screen and threw it away and, for the first time iu the history of the nation, the oyes of the Chief Magistrate had the constitutional right to see slavery, and to see it to be a 15113 ; for the first tune in the history of the country the. Constitu tion remanded its Magistrate back to nature, and allowed him to see as a President all that he could see as a man. Economy and patriotism and safety at once dictated that the first thunderbolt which he hurled at rebellioo should be that which wan sure it, and sure to give a guarantee for pence. , The Olvergent line to-day is the thought which says to the nation in the law of God . , whether you like it or not. in the essence of things, whether you see it or not, there is but one prominent cornereeone for the peace of this people, and it by the preient recognition of the rule that the negro has on this belt of the Continent every right which any white man can have. [Ap plause. I Do not think that, standing here to night, Mr. Chairman. I announce or urge that principle in behalf of the race which you repro aeut—not in the least, sir. The man who has the beet right to fold his arms and await the future with the least anxiety, the man whose future is the least crowded with any uncertainty coni,ng thou is the negro.. This is the only rate that, no matter what happens, uo matter what clouds or thun ders break over w e can see no change that is not for the better: eta enter upon no future that is not sure. unless the Republic goes to pieces, to elevate lion in the stale of equality. I am not new :arguing to the white race of this continent ou the ground et . duty: there is a nearer argu ment than that: a seithlt one; it is evident that God has not put it within the growth of poesibility that in this generation this nation Sliolild belarmonionely reconstructed, and leave out the oegro. You may try it, but it cannot be done. Instead of holding the negro at arm's length, every sensible inan with the light of his tore stivarning over his pathway, knows that the lace should be on its knees thanking Cod that there are „four millions of black such south of Maeon Dixon's line. The spreeaer claimed that, old as he was, he was not easily to be dazzled by what was called aistesuomehip. A. pretentious dignitary, who talked polities. Ness not necessarily a statesman. Some men, if they went to Europe to hunt for Kan:smote, would go to the palace of the Tuile ries, for a Bonaparte, or to London for a Disraeli; bita hundred yc:ln singe, when the statesman ship GI the nineteenth century W:l5 spoken of, • men would tern to that rocky island on the Italian to:ot 'where one Yuan knew What his tuition needed : jGreat applau,e,l Statesman ahip terniey linoWitdg,: 01 . What a country needed, and tow to devise the weans' to reach that need. The (Ly would cone: perhaps when mankind would hall one name on that gibbet at 14 arper's Ferry, for be who:died upon it knew at icaet how to Melt the coeaeletieee et e ll ,„ i nto ono purpose, and to ,make them stand aghast at the great evil that was MO • to wrecking their St ate amt the it FlateFreanship. ' B:lerriog to the Newts:mu:non policy, and the Progress of the work.. the speaker advised Ills hears not to be too sanguine 'of ;a ;speedy: tot` urinationof the task. Some men imagined that after Antietam, Gettysburg, Atlanta, and Lee's surrender , every Southerner was an Abolitionlit; but itWatonly, when sigeneration ,vanished that 'an idea vanished. Take a single man, and you may convert him; take five millions of men, and tieuth is the only guarantee or conversion. Had Bull Run been the last.battle of the rebellion, would Phtlathelphin,-have...been...converted . . to the belief that' slavery was right? Had Bull Run been continued from' the 22d 'of Julv, 1861, down to the trump of doom, would kassaehusette have been . bullied out of ' the ' Deelaration of Independence? Never. You cannot bully a courageous mad. out of- his con ' victions; and what was true of Missichusetta was .equally true of South Caroline. You heap - An decant, and Gettysburg, and Atlanta, and. Rich mond on the heads of the Wadelfamptons of the South and you have stricken them.dOwn,but you have not converted them. Wade llamp ton and the millions of the South believed to-day just as they believed in .1.860, that it was the wreck of civilization and, the peril of society to put the ne gro on an equality with the white man. They did not affect to believe that=they did believe it; they did not sham it—they , were sincere in it. The speaker knew of a woman in Georgia, who, be fore the war, had never known what it was to la bor; whose revenue might be counted by ninety or a hundred theusind dollars a . ,year. That wonian gaveher husband and two sons to the Confederacy,: and now they-slept in Confederate graves, beneath'the sod of Virginia; her wealth was scattered and from early dawn to twilight she worked, in order that by keeping her house as a boarding-house she might give bread to her infants.. Was she sincere? Had anyone else an this continent given better evidenee,of aineerity Lid that class of people sham their cortaletions , . and . did the smoke of battle wipe them out? What student of history could point to a time in the history of our race when any great minority tore in rebellion for an idea and gave it up for single whipping? France, again and again, bad upheaved the throne, and again and again. with thdpriceless blood of the purest and the best bad the endeavor been made to blot out the deinocracy Of the Eighteenth century. Eng land with the. Highlands ftuthished another illustration. Ireland, • heaving forever beneath the moiled foot of the British empire, was another. Why was this? It was because til you buried the men von cannot bury the idea. We had abolished slavery, we could not abolish the master: God alone couldabolish him. The result of inference from this principle was that you could not reconstruct the rebellious States.on a white element, if at all. until at least twenty or twenty-five years had elapsed. We never could build safely on the Beauregards and Wade Hamptons or the elements of which they were representatives. If the South was one homogenous white race, this Union could not be reconstructed for twenty-five years. The God-given opportunity, the exception that made the result possible, was that in the Smith there were four millions of a race which could not. by any possibility, but love the Union. " From that the-speaker derived his ides of restoration. The. question - was not whether he liked the negro auffrage or not, or whether or not it was the best thing (we did not make governments of the best things, but of the best possible things), but if any man wanted a prompt restoration of the Union, there was no pass to it except by negro suffrage. Men talked in a very foolish way of negroizing South Carolina, and timid Republicans shrank back at the idea; but the question was not what we are going to do, but what we are not going to do. God would negroize South Carolina, if she was going to be a part of this Union. Referring to a recent article in the New York Evening Post, the speaker said that whether a „Republican in name, without the essence, or a knave. calling himself a Democrat, sat in the White House,was a matter of indifference to him, because they were both equal. Tne only thing was to get the idea into the White House that would insure the safety of the Republic. The epoch was not ended. The work to which a God calls this generation was not finished until a Mag istrate was seated in , the White House who was color-blind—who did not know a negro from a white man. All that was gained before the South came back into Congress would be all that' we should gain as the fruits of the war. That point which the nation touched when the South came back, if she came back in any way but in the hands of the negro—if the reconstruction was hetero geneous, the point which the nation touched when the Southern States came back was the advanced point; we should not go beyond it. Whether we should - keep - all that-we -then gained was doubtful, butwe would not, in this genera tion, go a hair's breadth beyond it withotit blood shed. The history of all legislation furnished sufficient proof of this. The speaker narrated several instances as illus trative of the corruption of our, legislators at Washington, showing by what mercenary means the passage of nian-y measures of great national importance lied been accomplished. By similar base and fraudulent transactions, the Southern States might and doubtless would secure the re cognition and payment of the Confederate debt, or compensation for the loss of their slave pro perly. Ref erring briefly to the results of the re cent elections, he charged that the true cause of the Republican- defeats was to be found in the fact thatthe Republican leaders had torn up the Problem of the hour, instead of keeping it whole. If the Fortieth Congress had said to the Ameri can people by the law Whiell Mr. Sumner pro posed, or by a constitutional amendment, "the necessity of the hour is negro suffrage as a na- Ilona] measure," and sent it out as the policy which the nation needed and• the party sanc tioned, Men Ohio would have bowed her head, Con - rect lent would have adopted the amendment, and Pennsylvania would have adopted it. Not One Republican State of decent fame would have refused it, and at any rate two-thirds would have adopted it. But instead of that. CongresS sent a rag to Ohio, and a fragment to Connecticut, and a piece to Pennsylvania, and, steeped in rum or covered up with local issues, the thing went to the dogs. If we put into the Presidential chair the idea represented by Thad: Stevens (using his name merely as a counter), we shall gain ninety-five per cent. of what we have earned in this war; put George B. McClellan there, and we shall gain two and a-half per cent.; put there the idea that Ulysses Grant represents, and wo shall get forty per cent. Mark me, Ido not care anything for the names; lam merely using them as symbols of the ideas they represent, and my anxiety is to secure all that our blood and treasure have earned. - The speaker touchingly referred to the return of a Boston regiment from the war, and after ex pressing his own emotions at the sight, he said that the country owed it to those who had risked, and those who had lost their lives in our struggle, that nothing which they had earned should be lost or jeopardized. The men who sleep in the swamps of the Chickahominy, asked that a man be put in the White House who re presented the idea for which they were willing to die. What man at this time more prominently, than any other stood before the country? LA Voice, "Grant." . ] General Ulysses' Grant was that man, to whom the speaker - would most .cheerfully ac cord all the praise and applause which that Gen eral was entitled to receive. Be it was who said; . _ "I will fight it out on this line it' It lasts forever;" and therefore was it unwise or unnecessary that we should ask of such a man, who never quitted the line he had once adopted, "Sir, on what line do you intend to carry the nation out?" He is the man of granite and iron. It was be cause he was granite and iron that ale carried us safely through Virginia. Before you stamp the policy of the future in granite and iron, be sure you have the right instrument with which to stamp. Men say that Grant's merit is his reti cence. ' Reticence! what is the meaning of reti cence? The Pope in the Vatican is reticent, and the world bows at Ms feet. Aristocracy sets in the palaces of France, and is reticent; and the enslaved millions put their hands on their lips, and their lips in the dust, and accept it. Reticent! It is the symbol cf aristocracy; it-is the corollary ofed u cation and wealth. But Demti cracy, the millions with the thought, the mil lions with the conscience; the millions, with the ballot—tell them they are to sit down at the feet of a man, and accept him as a leader, because he does not condescend' to tell 'them Where he is goint to had [Applause.] IS that Democ racy? Is that Republicanism? Is that the genius of our institutions? Was it not Calhoun who said that in this country there was nothing that could be kept secret. that Could be worth keeping se cret, for the genius et' our institutions Is pub licity? And now the American people boasethat their leader does not condescend to tell them what he 0111,6! There may be two reasons why ,a man does not talk • One Is, that he has got nothing to ray. That Is not the timber out of which to make a President. Anotlier is, that he ditto not tell what he thinks. But a man does not speak lov lots tongue. lie speaks by every drop of his Mood, by every motion of his body, by every c i= i i= n= m M M M tl=l emotion of billion], and Grant has not made that record. General Grant is the only prominent man of the , day whose acts have been folloWed up 'by a long chapter of apologies. He never takes a step but thp whole American press sets out to tell you that it does not mean what it seems to mean. In conclusion, the speaker spoke in terms 'of ; eulogy of Thaddeus Bterrens as a fit representa tive nfprogreeslyo ideas, and one whose record did not admit of question or cavil as to his meaning. He casually alluded the IMneachment propo sition. Ily impeachment it was not simply to get rid of Andrew Johnson. Impeachment meant reconstruction. Impeachment. meant: that having convicted Johnson of an intentional purpose to resist Con gress ind the coue of ettion, one' of Con his acts since '65 is rs void; th and ia th at the disloyal records of the last two years should be torn up, and the land south of Mason and Dixon's line belongs to the nation. This might be radical talk. So it was. But the land was filled with graves; from almost every family had been taken 'a loved member of the household; from all quarters of our land had been heard most pitiful lamentations for the brave dead of our cause; and it was our duty to see to it that if possible, our children ,should not have to fight over again the battles we had once gained. PENNSYI.3,'ANIA ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY.--The thirty-first annual meeting of this. society was held yesterday, at the Franklin Institute. Mr. Robert Purvis occupied the chair , at the request ref the President, James Mott. Lavinia T. Reed was atosen as secretary. Committees to nomi nate officers for the ensuing year and on finance wore appoint fl. ; Addresses, urging the friends ot the societyM , contribute lilmrally and to devote their energies to the cause were made by Edward M.Davis,Mary Grew,E.H.Coates,Aaron M.Powell, Wendell Phillips, Col. Hinton, of Kansas, and Col. Mose, of Missouri. The following officers were elected for the en suing year: (resident—James ; Mott; Vice Pre sidents—Thomas Garrett and Robert Purvis; Secretary—E.M. Davis; Treasurer—Mary Grew. The following resolutions, read by Miss Mary Grew. were adopted: Reepteed, That the revelatiene which are daily made of the continued purpose of the rebel leaders of the South to regain, by political diplomacy, the supremacy they have lest on the battle.tield, and continual .manifestations of hatred towarde the colored man throughout the South, excepting where such suanifestatione ate restrained by the presence of the military forces of the United States, prone that the week of the American Abolitionists is not completed, and call upon us to staled faithfully atom' posts until those to whose .redemption we are fledged shall be secured in the full possession of their liberty. Received, That the timid and faltering course of the Re publicanparty, its lack of confidence in the principles of ale elute Right and its lamentable failure to meet the de. mends of the nation in this perilous crisis, forbid us to leave etir work in its 'made. Assefeed, That we regard as titter faithlessness to its professed principles and worse than suicide of the party, tee proposal to contend against the. Democrats for the neon Motion to the Presidency of a tuna whose principles, if he hue any, ere so nuclei:led that friends nate lose of freedom alike claim him as their coadjutor; whose love of lieerty; it he has tiny, bi so taint that it inspires no word from his lips in behalf of imperiled justice; and who listens in silence when his great name he quoted against negro suffrage, and eulogized by Montgomery Blair and the New York Herald. !frt.:reit. '1 hat in the present Defier al crisis, we appre ciate' the influence which the Sational Anti-Slaver?' .storiatirtl is exciting on the public sentiment of the coun try. through our daily journals, SO well as its own renders, And through the radical rertien of the members of Con ger=s, phe testily eurneetly to its great value to them selves in their centlict, and implore its continuance; and we heartily respond to its claims on all the trim friends of freedom for its support; and urge our coadjutors te re plenish its treasury, and extend its circulation as widely as possible. That we hail with joy the accession of tho Jl, rninti Post to the list of daily journals of Philadelphia, end that we eenttratitlate the public upon the high moral tone iu which it speaks on the great questions of the day. and the fearlessness and fidelity vrith which it contends for the right and rebukes wrong; and that we heartily commend it to the patronage of our felloweitizens. Resolved, That with el - Melia joy we record the fact that, since our last annual meeting, the doors of our city railroad ears have been opened by our State Legislature for the admission of our colored fellow-citizens: and though we regretithat the Christisnity of this city was in sufficient to accomplish this act of justice without the in tervention of the authority of the State, we rejoice that it is done, and that our colored citizens are relieved from the cruel insult and our city front the deep disgrace which for so rr any years they have endured. Resolved, `f hat we call upon the American Congress to be faithful to its ditty, in this perilous crisis, by impeach ing and depoeing Andrew .Johnson from' the tbreeviency of the United States, and placing the Executive Depart ment of the government in loyal hands during the re. maiuder of this Preeideetial term. Nom STILLS SmzEo.—Deputy Collector Thos. S. Foulkrod, of the Fifth Collection District, ac companied by four men, and supported by a posse of the Eighteenth District Police, piid a visit to the old Richmond District, on Thursday, and seized seven copper and tin stills, be Odes a quantity of whisky. One of them was found in an old shed on Ann street, below Millville: an other on Salmon street, above William; a third, back of No. 1114 William street; a fourth, back of No. 1038 Huntingdon street; • a filth, back of No. 1136 Huntingdon. street; a sixth, at Cum berland and Almond streets; and the seventh was captured., after it had , been taken from a cellar, and the parties in charge of it were in full night across a common. All of this work was not done without considerable opposition. The stills were all brought to.the city, and placed in charge ollthe , United Btates Marshal. AL all the places were stills where found the officers de stroyed a quantity of mash which was ready for use. Two or three of the stills were in operation at the time of the seizure. Revenue Inspectors Ohegan and Doneelly visited Coward's distillery, on Otsego street, be low Washington avenue,"the proprietor being accused of not making proper returns. The fol lowing articles were seized:—A three-chamber still, With worm-tub and doubler attached; eigld, fermenters, each having a capacity of :;,500 Ions: a cistern full of spirits; a charger for the still, with a capacity of 2,000 gallons, located on the roof, and two bins of ground meal. CurryAny.—Owen isneridan, Esq., died at his residence on Chestnut-Hill, yesterday morning. in the seventy-third year of his age. He had all his life enjoyed vigorous health, but was unex pectedly attacked on Monday last with paralysis and did not again rally his powers. Mr. Sheri dan was of foreign birth. He came to this country when quite young. Throughout his whole career he has been an active and useful citizen. He was for many years a mem ber of the First City Troop; served in Councils and other-public situations, and at the time of his decease was a director in the permantown Bank. His large •fitrin at Chestnut Hill was,: while under his management, regarded in many cclects as a model. Mr. Sherivan was a geula., kindly-natured man; and his loss will be severely felt by his family and a large circle of Mende. NEW JEUMEY 'MATTERS, TuE DeiEA•r.—Although at the recent election the Republican Union party in Camden were badly beatun, they are in nowise disheartened. They fully realize that the defeat is but a tempo rary affair, and a more complete organizatto,, ann the distribution of facts throughout thl rural dis tricts will be at once commenced and carried forward with unflagging zeal until the county, district and State are again wrested from the present dominant party. SUNDAY SCIIOOI, ASSOCIATION.—Tho New Jer ky Sunday School Association have decided to hold their tenth annual convention in the First Presbyterian Church of Camden, commencing on the 12th inst.,and continuing the 5e58i011 through the lath and 11th. A large attendance is ex pected, and many able ministers will be present to participate in the proceedings. Inisn CITIZENS' Cwt.—This is the name of an organization recently formed in Camden, com posed of „the Irish population of that city. The following gentlemen have been selected as officers for the ensuing six months: President, John Hocy. Vice Presidents—North Ward, Mi chael Burris: Middle Ward, Thomas Kennedy; South,Ward, James Slack. secretary. Thomas Curley. Treasurer, Cornelhistnnes. INTERESTING LEcrunEs.—A course of highly interesting lectures will commence in the First Baptist Church iu Camdeo, on the evening of November 25th, under the auspices of the officers and members of that church. The °imbi.. lec ture of the series will be given by Henry Vincent, who will be followed by Rev. :Dr. Willits, Mr. Talmage and others. Amyrium li.w.noAn.--Applications will be made to the next session of the New Jersey Legislature, asking that body to grant a charter for building a railrQad from w oodbury, Gloucester county, to Blackwoodtown, Camden county, thence to White Horse Station, ou the Camden and Atlantic road. A NErom , IMPROVEMENT.—WOrkIIIeII are now engag, din building anew and large culvert along Market street, Camden, and have progressed with the wui k from the Delaware river to above Sec ond Rh cc t. This is an important and much-needed improvement. CI IN cENT. well'-attended and interesang concert was given at Haddonfield on Thursday evening, the proceeds of which WM appropriated for the benefit of the Methodist Episcopal Church of that place. MOM RELIGIOUS:INTELLIGENCE: "The Presbyterian Nat! could 'Union Coll. viOntion, The Coniention reassembled yesterday after noon and was called to order by the President, who requested the Rev...ldr. Edminston, of - the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, to lead in prayer. , The second article presented by the Committee on Basis of the Union was then taken up and adopted nefollows : That in the United 'Church, the Westminster Confession of Faith shall be received and adopted as containing the system of doctrines taught in the Holy Scriptures. Rev. H.B. Smith, of New York, offered the fol lowing amendment, which was agreed to, and the article, as„amended, was adopted: "It being understood that it is received in the historical, that is, the Calvinistic or Reformed sense." While the committee recommend the foregoing basis of doctrine, they do not wish to be under stood as impugning the Heidelberg Catechism and the canons of the Synod of Dort and the larger and smaller catechisms. The third article was then taken up and adopted, as follows : That the United Church shall receive and adopt the Presbyterian form of church government. The hour of adjournment having arrived the Convention united in singing, and was dismissed with the benediction. Evening Session.—The Convention reassembled in the evening, and was called to order by the President. Rev. Dr. Wallace opened the proceed ings with prayer. The Fourth Article, already given, was then taken up, and after considerable discussion was adopted as follows : The Book of Psalms, which is of Divine origlu,is vvell'adapted to the itate of the Church in all, ages and al circumstances, and mhould be used in the worship of God. Therefore we recommend that a new and faithful version of the Book of Psalms be provided as soon as practicable. Bnt inas much as various collections of psalmody are used hi the different churches, a change in the report shall not be required. The following resolutions were then adopted : That we unite in requesting our respective churches in their supreme indica tion to appoint a committee of live, each of which shall constitute a joint committee, whose duty it shall be to meet at a time and place to be_ agreed upon, and proceed with all convenient despatch in attempt to form a basis of union ac cording to the principles of this report, which basis they shall submit to the churches for their consideration and adoption. It being understood that this is not intended to interfere with the ex isting arrangements for reunion between two of the larger bodies represented in this Con vention. As there is so much agreement among the churches here representedin all essential mat ters of faith, discipline and order, it is recom mended that friendly and fraternal intercourse be cultivated by interchange of principles, by fellow ship with one another in religious meetings in every practical way. The third and fourth reso lutions. already given, were adopted. • The Business Committee made a report recom mending the first Thursday in February, 1.868, as a Day of Humiliation and Prayer. The address to the churches was read by the Rev. Mi. Davis, 94 Ohio. The closing moments of the Conven tion were spent In devotional exercises. VOLVIC ICA_L. FORMATION OF A GRANT CLUILIN A meeting of the Republicans of the Twenty iirst Ward in favor of General Grant for the next Presidency, was held last night, at the Masonic Hall, in Manayunk. There was quite a tine turn out, and, altogether, the meeting was a success. Hr. James Magee was chosen chairman; Mr. Louis D. Blondlia was appointed secretary. On taking the chair, Mr. Magee explained the object of the meeting, and said it gave hira_pleaSure to Introduce to the people of Manayunk their young fellow townsman, Wm. M. Runkel, Esq., who would deliver a few remarks on the duty of the hour. The speaker commenced by saying that it was now plain, if it had never been before, that uni versal suffrage was unpopular with a majority of the voters of the United States. He referreil to that issue being successfully forced upon the party by the Democrats, and cited Ohio as an ex ample of the weakness of the cause. It was the strongest abolition State in the Union, but nev ertheless it failed to poll a full half of the total .vote in favor of giving the right of suffrage to the negro. He did not believe that any man who believed in the fundamental prin'ciple of our Government, namely, that, all men were created free and equal, was against the enfrancnisement of the colored man, but the cause was not yet popular. The Republican party, continued the speaker, is without doubt the party to which the loyal people of the country naturally cling, but in the haste °rite leaders, the victories which justly belonged to it were permitted to slip from its grasp. lie passed on - from-one subject to another, and said that no good Republican should be dis couraged at the result of the recent elections. The Republican party was as stray to-day as it ever was; but it wanted new leaders. lie be lieved General Grant to have too much propriety and good sense to mane a bid for the 'Presi dential chair;_ but I doubt not that when the time comes he will be found on the side of justice and right. Men say they would not vote for him did he not make a declaration of his preferences be fore he is nominated. Would any man who is not a professional politician make a declaration that could be construed into — fin insatiable thirst or bid for office ? I think not. Actions speak louder than words, and I would rather a thou sand times see Grant act as he has than hear the countless windy proinises of all the politicians in the country. There is a meaning in actions which cannot be construed as words can, and Grant's nctious, as well as words, will bear all the inquiry tad scrutiny that the nation chooses to bestow upon them. The speaker referred to General Grant's corres pondence with Sheridan, Sickles and Mr. John son, when directed to take the place of Mr. Stanton, and he firmly believed that he was the only man to-daywho can carry the popular vote of the people. Another meeting of the Grant men will lee held on Wednesday evening next, ,tt Morrie. lintel. , 3011111SERS AND I.IIIPORTERS. E. S. JAFFRAY & CO. 608 CHESTNUT STREET, Are receiving and new opening for Fall Trade.foi deer Linens, Table Cloths, Napkins, Huckabacks, Piapers, Towelings, Damasks, Sheetings, Pillow Linens. L. C. Hdkfs, Hosiery, Gloves, Crapes, Ladies', Gents' and Children's Undo) Wear, Embroideries, Nets,: Ribbons, dm The above will be sold at the lowest New York prices, and on the most advantageous terms. mas th Ire re Renrementecl by B. Story. THOMAS WEEK, (Successor to Wm. F. Hughes.) FORKS OF SECOND AND CHRISTIAN STREETS, BALED, FRESH, BALT. AND PACKING HAY, BALED, WHEAT, OAT AND RYE STRAW, FOB SHIPPING AND CITY USE. gemvscp worm,' rrLE, WEAVER a co. NEW CORDAGE FACTORY EDWIN PULL OPERATION. ,-- No. SE N. WATER and 23 N. DEL. SVOIIIII fait WAlrenra t MENVEltallir, &O. 1, CORAL JEWELRY' ICLARK &BIDDLE 71,ta Chestnut Street, • nave just opened an innteruie invoice of PINK r CORAL jEWELRY - To which they call special attention. rel7.tn th c-am Sterling Silverware Manufactory, 414 LOCUST STREET. GEORGE SHARP , Patentee of the Ball and Cube patterns, manufactures every description of fine STERLING SILVERWARE. and offers for sale, wholesale and retail, a choice assort. moot of rich and beautiful goods of new styles et low prices. J. IL SHARP. A. ROBERTS. • , sel7.3m CORAL JEWELRY. CLARK & BIDDLE, 712 Chestnut Street, Have net opened an immenee invoke of PINK CORAL JEWELRY, To which they cell special attention. LEWIS LADOMUS & CO., Diamond Dealers and /enders, No. 802 Chestnut Street ) Would invite the attention of purcimere ,to their Mega stock of Gents' and Ladies' Watches, Juet received, of the !Meet Eitmpean makers,lndopendPet Quarter Second, and Self-winding; in Gold and Sil ear Cam!. Ale°, American Watches of all sizes. Diamond Sete, Pine, Studs, Hinge, &c. coral, Malachite. Garnet and Etniscau Sete, in great variety. Solid Silverware of all kind,, including-a largo assort ment suitable for Bridal Preeents. FUUNITILIKE. &c. SPECIAL NOTICE. We are prepared to watt Purchasers of Fine Furniture, ROM IN STYLE AND PRICE, GEO,LIIENKELS,LACY & CO,, CABINET MAKERS, 13th and Chestnut Streets. Realm rp .ALITISC). MTJEBIXS FIN© EXIMICION. in acne de Conrtos. COLOCADU colt() t3alas de reeibimiento CUARTOH I) Y E CAMARA. GEO. J. .IHUENK ELS. LACY dic CO., E BANN TAS, THIRTEENTH AND CHEST:kiln', ge2s tfry§ Special Card. FINE FURNITURE ON EXHIBITION , IN SUITES OF ROOMS, CARPETED AND FURNISUED AS WANDERS AND PARLORS. GEO. J. lIENKELS, LACY t CO., CABINET MAKERS, THMTEENTII AND CHESTNUT, PELILADELPHIA. e 2.- tf rp§ Dle felasten Moubel arrangtrt In der ganzen Etage fertig zur Ansteht, Teppleh and Gardinen einbegrtilen• GEO. J. HENKELS, LACY & Meubel Fabrikant s , Thirteenth and Chestnut, Philadelphia. se '9.-tfrpt AVIS IMPORTANT. BEAUX MEUBLES, pour Salons' et Chambres A ,Coacher. Arrangs pour Exposition dans Appartemesta Ganda et Couverta de Tapis. GEO. J. HENKELS, LACY & CO., lEBENIBTES, se2s-tfrpi CHESTNUT STREET. an Coin de L3rne. A. 83 H. LEJAMBRE Have removedtheir Furniture and Upholstering Wareroomi TO No, 11.03 Chestnut Street, (up etaire.) ae7-8m CLOT lIING. EDWARD P. KELLY , TAILOR, S. E. car. of Seventh and Chestnut Ste. Complete assortment of Fine and Extra Fine Black and Colored Clothe. caster Cloths, Winter Clothe and /Batons. Silk Velvet and Velveteens. Scotch Cheviot Suitings. Fur, Elysian, Astracan, Chinchilla and Smooth Beavers, Black Doeskins, Plain Colored, Banded, Striped and Plaid cassimeres. silk, Cashmere, Plain and Fancy Velvet and Casein:Lore Vestings, Clothes equal or superior to those of any other estab• lishruent, at moderate prices. avf7-17t7 1867. FALL AND WINTER. 1867. An elegant selected stock of the newest fa brics, by ALBRIGHT dr RTITTENBRAUCKI MERCHANT TAILORS „,pta,l?-u.iinioChestnut Street. GOLD'S IMPROVED PATENT LOW STEAM AND • HOT WATER APPARATUS, FOR WARMING AND VENTILATING WITS PURR EXTERNAL AIR. UNION STEAM AND WATER HEATING iltiSSI P. WOW() at CO., NO. 41 S. FOURTH Strent.. S. M. FELTWELL, Sup% 0 018tf ri;4 FIII.E.POOOIF BAFIE9 ORDEALS. Our Safes have been subjected , to the asverast ordealtkasul always 'preserved thrir content. entii'lly unharmea—La accidental fires as follows London C. W., March 18th 1864. "Exposed to mat" boat foe map yi hours." London Freo'Press. • ' July lath,_ 1864.—"1n a largo building filled with genera! Inerchandise, making touch Waddington, N. Ir., Moro than an ordinary' tot." T. 0. hloMir.t.art. ' October 12. 1861.—" In an eg. te..elve mill with 80 tons of tow and flax etraw,besidet a large quantity of timber.'! DM:M:I' It 103)DINOTON. , Charleston, S. C October 18th, 1865.-- "Fifty'. "I three hours exposed to intense heat." WJo. 11. CUAXILF. Whitby, C. W., MARVIN'S PATENT. Muni and, Dry Plastpr . • • C e .(471 " ' • , Broadway. Y . N Y April 7, 1801,--"At comer of -N. Barclay street, after ' floor burnt through, the safe fell from second story to cellar; taken out of boining ruin second day after." NV.n. A. Daum.; k Co. Newbern, N. entire row °Chirac buildings consumed, causing as intenso fire as can be conceived." DISOEIWAY, Gown . Bankers. Jun. Dif.woirru .k CO.. L. limmt. Feb 111867.—" Marvin's Bars. size 0, don bin door, fell from second story and endu red the severest test of au intense heat." dre BILUTP. In each and every one above, the contents of our Safes were taken out after the fires in perfect condition, pre serving books, money and papers of great value. Full certificates can bo ecen at our office. OUR BURGUR PROOFS Mobile, Ala., byre been attempted but Woven , instance anew:cern:dully. New York., Deed Co Dee. 21.4,He1. owned by CF. W. White Sept. 14th, 1881, owned by Clum. W. W. Baker. Cleveland, Oct. 11, it 466. owned by Cleveland. Ashtabula K R. CO, "Severely tented by innoter me. chanter. and pronounced land= nerable." Sept. D!47, owned by IL P: Buck at NEM tot Co. littrelara were nt work from SR turd ay night till Sunday P. M.. and ' then had proepeet of getting in; were frightened oit Left .sl‘3,futi in the safe. We Invite the attention of nil intercetkl, and would retzord to th Fire •T ' roitimttg. Wu dull The , ptiblie to learn all tho few Proof qualltiel of our Sale before pr. be glad to Stuport our tdotro of rho inforrum MARVIN & CO., 721 Chestnut St. (ITlasonle JFlall),Phatea. Bran(Oley, V.Y.I fiff - Send for Illuagied Catalogue. Oclw.ara.4l2 itioutUZlMl EX, • I(11110216,4, 411 Po. NEW BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, WHITECLOVER HONEY, FIRST OF ME SEASON. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Dealer in rate Grin 'rim, Corner Eleventh and Vine Streeteb JAMES R. WEBB, Tea Dealer end Grocer. B. IS. corner EIGIATII and WALNUT. Fxtra Fin, Sonchong or El' 3gLiirti Breakfast Tess: eape lotCbiilan Teas. very clits.p;o4loA,S Teas of oven , irradet TrAting Ilyeon Teas of Anse: qlndiefee ; all fresh imported.; j. 26. ~ N.ION (A)UVA - GiIoC. I )LATE, COWS. 1...) Boma. and ether t Ineolate preparations. Inanufse. tared by Joatah Webb 4t Co. For eale by E. C, & ' • Agents for the Minaret ()calm; El. E. Cor. Water and Chestnut titres 1.):71:E OLD Jd.M . ,AICA RCM, HOLLAND .L Medicinal Wines 'and Brandies. Speer's Port:AV and California Wine.. in More aw l for sale at COUa East-End Grocery, No. lib south Second street. • CRP:NOBLE WALNUTS.-5 PALM OP W1F.2•401441 a.. 4 Po per Shell Wolnutookrul Prioceso As. Ito for sale by M. Y. BPILLIN, N. W. Cot Are! ondi l = Eighth street/. • FRENCH WINE ve.r.y ,urfrgau t d: French White Wine Vinegar. in store and :tor use M. F. SPILLIN. Ew GREEN OINOBIi.-57 5 .1 LESS. .TEST RECF2VFD, 104 !n prime order. Fornele at COLISTY`B Eset End Gro cery, ho. 118 South Second. lint:et. NTENV hiESS MACKEREL, PICKLED SALMON.bfESS 13 Shad. and Tongues nn.l Sounda Mile. Just received and for pale - nt COUSTIOS Earl-End Grocery. No. Ili South Second erect 11AACCARONI AND vua.NLICELLL—ICO BOXES OP /XL choice Leghorn Maconroci anti Vorrniee the IaLS Imports in store and for sale by B - PaiLl24 W. Cot. Arch and Eighth streets. h W- B "l l; co d —i n t d a riT t n : E T tro T hi'r er t. B l 7 lre YES-SRVI-P-RieL''''N:MM24BBdta"rOdNroceryDSeYe.d..P.Uo"..ajilf—:ja-LD—ugi Pi *lO Ot 4:LI 11.111.9:1 Mir itrill) GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. JOHN C. ARRISON, Nos. 1 and 8 N. Sixth St,Philada., Would invite the attention of gentlemen to his- extenalra. assortment of Furnishjit Goads. • consbung or arm SHIRTS AND DRAWERS. Cartwright a Warner's Merino Shirts and Drawers. , Lambs' Wool do. do. do. Buckskin.l do. do. do. Cotton do. do. do. English Swan's Down Canton Flannel made to J. Q. A.'e express order for Shirts and Drawers. ALSO. GENTLEidEti.I3 WRAPPERS. HOSIERY. • GLOVES, STOCKS, TIES, • itta.,&cl4M J. C. BARNES & CO. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. nINFFACIFURO OF Fine Shirts, Collars, Wrappers, &o. NO. 245 N. NINTH ST., PHILADELPHIA. och-2mry IfiTATIr Eats. - SALTY MORErI B IMPROVED BASE BURNING I FIRE-PLACE EAT)pli 1160 MAGAZINE dc ILLUMINATINGDOORS. 2041:44,aVeget The most Cheerful nud Perfect Heater in Use. To be had Wholesale and Retail of • • J. S. CLARY., 1008 Market street. Valuta. 0c17.1m5 4 MATTRESS AND r.coniNti• VEATLIER DODS A.NI) .I.IAIR 31.6.T1t1iSSES 'RENO• v ated; n 1 o, Feu them coustatitly ou hand. Factory, No. 311 Lotobardatrect. na3.1110 fItUGGISTS SU MDR lES.—GRADTJATES--MORT. TIICB, fdirrona4 Tweezers, MORTAR Boxes Horn SCOoliii, Purgicia Inotrinnents, '4usilos, II rod, and tioft Rubhor Goluiff, V ipi CAECS, Glass and . Motail SYriugoo dm., all at "OW tlioldf" prices. 1111.0TIIER., apstf•rti ' 23 South Eighth otroot. A Plea for Comte* Every question has two sides." The Eng- Nshwomart's Convernalo'ne has invited' discussion on, the subject of tight lacing. We had not supposed that any one would defend the subject,.theoretieally or onipaper,,what ever their. practice Might be. The following comes from some English, ball-room devotee, signing herself Mignonetto: "As several of your correspondents have remarked, the personal experience of those who have for a number of years worn tight fitting corsets can alohe enable a clear and fair judzment to be pronounced upon their use. Happening to have had what I believe you wifi admit to be an unusual experience of tight-lacing, 'I trust you will allow me to tell the story of my younger days. Owing to the absence of .my parentS handle I was, allowed to attain the age of fourteeit before'any care was bestowed Upon my figure; but their return home fortunately saved me from growing into a clumsy, inele gant girl; for my mamma was so shocked at my appearance, that she took the unusual plan, of making me sleep in my corset.. For the first few.• weeks I occasionally felt con siderable discomfort, owing in a great mea sure, to not having worn stays before, and also to their extreme tightness and stiffness. Yet, though I was never allowed to slacken them before retiring to rest, they did not in the least interfere with my sleep, nor pro deco any ill effects whatever. I. may men tion that my mamma, fearing that, at so late an age, I should have great difficulty in securing a presentable figure, considered or dinary means insufficient, and consequently, had my corsets filled with whalebone and I furnished with shoulder-straps to cure the habit of stooping which I had contracted. The busk, which was nearly inflexible, was i not front-fastening; and the lace being se cured in a bard knot behind and at the top I effectually prevented any attempt on my part to unloose my stays. lam delighted to see the friends of the corset muster so strong at the 'English-woman's Conversazione.' What is most requisite, however, are the personal experiences of the ladies them selves." We suspect the "personal experiences of the ladies themselves" will not be forth coming very freely. If the ladies choose to testify, however ; we should insist on cross examining their lungs and hearts, and viscera in general. A "Young Baronet" also enters the list in favor of the corset. If any young American holds the same opinions—we know of none —we advise him to go to England where "members of the sterner sex" express their admiration of wasp-like, unwomanly waists: "Kindly Allow another member of the sterner sex to give his opinion on the sub ject of small waists. These who have en deavoted to abolish this most becoming fashion have, not hesitated to e declare that gentlemen do not care for a slender figure, but that, on the contrary, their only feeling on beholding a waist of eighteen inches is one of pity or contempt. Now, so far from this being the case, there is not one gentle man in a thousand who is not charmed with the sight. There is one suggestion I should be glad to make, if you will permit me, and that is, that all those ladies who possess that most elegant attraction—a slender waist—should not hide it so completely by shawls or loose paletota, when on the promenade or in the street. When (by good luck) I chance to meet a lady who has the good taste, I may say the kindness to show her tapering waist by wearing a close-fitting paletot, I not un frequently turn to admire; and so far from thinking of the means used to obtain the re sult, I am held spellbound by the beauty of the figure." The young Baronet's idea of beauty is evi dently entirely independent of rides justified by the form of the Venus de Medici or of the A' Venus de 'Milo. . The correspondencecorrespondenceis something entirely novel tor its frankness and unblushing effrontery.—E. Y. Mall. A Crimson Parapinie. In the London Melhoditit Bewilder we find a story of a crimson umbrella. It con tains a good hit at the public, ever ready to meddle with business in no wise concerning zit,,Nad has a moral also for a class of re formers who are ready to set themselves in opposition to popular opinion in matters in volving no question of morals or principle : Some years ago an English gentleman ar rived at his lodgings in Pall Mall, with a bright crimson colored cotton umbrella in, his possession. The article was one in com mon use in the country from which he had -- come, and be had bought it without thought. A few days' residence in the climate of Eng land naturally occasioned the use of an um brella, and he took his foreign acquisition with him into the streets of Londe!). It an swered his purpose; it kept off the rain, and our hero was not particular about the indifferent accidents of color and fabric. But he soon became aware that his appearance was creating a sensation. Every one turned and stared after him; the crossing-sweeper stood aghast and forgot to beg; then a little crowd. gathered at his heels, and people began , to give expression to their opinion. Some said he was a foreign spy; some thought he was a Red Republican refugee; but all agreed that he was an excep tional and dangerous person. Being a man of plain common sense, he at once concluded that this was too heavy a cost to bear for the sake of a five shilling umbrella; so he folded up the too remarkable article, and submitted to a sprinkling on his way home. A few days afterward, he was visited by a gentleman not very much in the habit of deferring to public opinion, who was, in deed, rather fond of being remarkable. AR English shower was falling when this guest took leave, and the owner of the umbrella, while telling the story, offered him the loan of it. The dauntless dandy laughed at his friend's weakness, and sallied forth canopied by the bright crimson. There was the same sensation. At first, he was pleased to be the object of attention. But the crowd began to accumulate ; the little boys asked him questions; the cads of the omnibuses, always inimical to umbrellas, ' shouted impertinent observations to him; the crowd pressed upon him; and when people asked each other what was the mat ter, guesses soon grew into the form of actual assertions. Sometimes he was a ticket-of-leave man; sometimes he was identified with some notorious criminal of whom the police were in search. The popu lar hostility was too great even for him; he .returned the umbrella. The original proprietor told his story to many, and among others to a young man of a determined, but rather bilious tempera- f i liNF, OLD WHISKIES. ment, who did everything, to the paring of 'ld i il.=a i re' r i e m ( i l it ft liZe his nails, and the tying of his cravat, on ooo'twee Pure Ohl Wheat. principle. He was indignant at the popular , For dale by tyranny. What was there in the color of au _its umbrella? There was no moral harm in wor,s, eieuoits, FOREIGN arm mixkw bright crimson. He would set himself 1., k k ae l l v ist,Ule!a i re ( 4'e l a u i, B iieloccraird and Wal. against the despotism of the . public. no nut etreote, begs to call attention to hie large ond varied took the umbrella, with all its responsi stock of goods now. on hand Winceembra c el i ng ee of all gradee, anionget which aro wino very sherries Rua bilities, and persisted in carrying ciaeaa; Brandiee, all gualitiee and differ c tn n viutales; it. He always had a little mob of urchins at li v e h a i lVl3Tv e n v Stout, r o together i ~1% ',verTat his heels; he was three times in a police Tonic Ale now eo extensively need by families, office; he was often hustled and 'robbed'; ci trfe i r n . v eat a lp d pli t 3 h t, r h B. mengne, and Sweet Cider, of twice his umbrella was broken to pieces, and . qualities unsurpaseed. These goods are foorniebed in pack. be had another made upon the same pattern. Ittg, ° ,! . ,f gloggg' and will bo delivered, freorcoet. all The companionship of this umbrella became more important to him than his business; he ; was even reedy to be a martyr in the cause of bright crimson. The story says that, ifi the end, he grew morose, and, as some , thought, not quite right in his mind, because crimson umbrellas would not come into I _follicle Coal Statement. ' wne fo'Jowing ie the autennt ofcoal transported over the 1%111141011a and Reading Hail:pad, during the week ending Thursday, -Nov.. Tons. Cwt. From Ht. Clair..... . . ......... . ..213.2T0' 05 " Port Carbon: .. ... . .......... : 4,940 01 "' Pottsville.. 943 14 ..... ......... ...... "' Schuylkill Haven... , • 16;526 08 " :Auburn. . .... . 3,6 3 T 05 " Port Clinton... - ... . ..... : 6,239 17 ". Harrisburg and 3,875 10 Total Anthribile Coal for -week Bituminous Coal from Harrisburg and Dauphin for. week: . . . .... 6,415 05 Total of all kinds for week, 73,049 05 Previously this year 3,123,014 11 • T0ta1..., .. . .. To lame timelnat year...... • 290.105 07 Deoretwe Itmr9hlrr ATIONB. Reports or t o ausiphia Evening Bulletin. B ORCBILLA—Brig A Illteholliecott-260 tons guano F Folsom. CALAIS, ME.—Schr Locblcl, Ilaskell-45,000 bad slats 27,000 4 2 1 feet pickets 50,004 English laths 800 ship knees W A Levering. MOVEMENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS. TO ARRIVE. a ,' 04111714 PROM TOE DATA. Belhma..London..New Y0rk......... Oct. 19 Baltic— ..... •Bouthampton..New York ' . 0ct.123 Palmyra..........Liverpool—New York Oct. 26 City of Boston Liverpl—New York ........Oct. 26 City of Cork....Antwerp..New York Oct. 26 He:monis •Bamburg..New York, .... •••Oct. 26 Deutschland —Bout hampton..New Y0rk........0ct. 29 Chicago Liverpool—New York Oct. 29 Britannia. Glasgow.. New York Oct. 80 Clty of N York..Ltverpool_New York Oct. 30 Arago .... Falmouth..New York. Oct. 81 Scotia.... ...... —Liverpool—New York Nov. 8 Wm Penn..Londen..New York.. Nov. 2 Siberia.. ..... . —Liverpool..New Y0rk...,...N0v. 5 Baltic........Southaxnpton..Now Y0rk........N0v. 5 TO DEPART, • HenryCbauneey.New Ybrk..A.spinwalL Nov. 11 Stare and Stripea...Philacta..Havana Nov. 12 Tarifa.— . . . ~ .. New Y0rk...Liverp001........N0v. 18 Russia . :. New York.. Liverpool... Nov. 13 C01um1ia..,.....New York.. Havana Nov. 14 Herm all a New York.. Bremen.. . .' .. ..Nov. 14 Santiago de Cuba..N York.. San Juan, Nic...Nov. 15 Fulton. ... ...... New York..Havre.. .Nev. 16 City of N York.. New York..Liverpool........Nov. 16 Helvetia ........New York.. Liverpool .. Nov. 16 Germania.. ..... New York..liamburg Nov. 16 Bellona New York.. London Nov. 16 Georgia ..... ....New Y ork..Sleal& Vera Cruz.. Nov. 16 lowa New York..Glaegow N0v.16 Barone.. ..... ...New York..llavre ...........Nov. 16 BOAlup OF TRADE. GEORGE N. &LIAM ATTIIEW BAIRD, f Mozrnix.y Colorirem JOSEPH C. GRUBB, _ rwTluminrmTv PORT OF PHILADELPHIA—Nov. 9 SUN RISEN 6 59 I Sun Sam 5 1 HIGH WATU, 12 14 ARRIVED THATERDAY Steamer Beverly; Pierce. 24 hours from New York, with mdse to NV P_Clyde.,k Co. Brig A Mitchell (Br;, Scott, 18 days from Grchilla, with gnarolo B F Folsom. Left brig S W Wein , on, ]eadtng for Philadelphia, to esti in 8 drays. Behr Maryland, Green, 14 days from St... John, NB. yrith lumber to T P Galvin Ac Co. Schr Gettysburg, Sprague. r, days from Bolton, in ballast to Warren, Gregg & Morrie. Srhr LoLle, Taylor, b days from Boston, with mdse to Crowell A: Collins. Schr Olivia. Fox, 1 day from Odessa. Del. with grain to .Jas L Bewley t Co. Schr Tycoon, Cooper, 1 day from Smyrna: Del. with grain to Jas L Bewley & Co. Schr Loeblel, Haskell, from Calais, with pickets, knees, &c. to W A Levering. Schr John Thomas, Griflltb, 4 days from Seaford, Del. with bark to Bacon, Collins & Co. Schr John Johnson, Mcßride, Bodeen, NY. Schr R C 3 Whillden, Messick, Boston. Tug .Thos Jefferson, Allen, from BaltimOre, with tow of barges to W P Clyde Ca CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer Tonawanda, Jennings, Savannah, Pbtiadel. phia and Southern Mail Steamship Co. Steamer Millville, Nenear, 311.11 ville, Whitall, Tatum it Co. Steamer Ann Eliza. Rieharda.N York,W P Clyde &Co. Steamer It Willing. Condit/. Baltimore, A Groves, Jr. Brig Ellen P Stewart, Holland, Port Spatz, Workman &Co. Behr J Maxfield, May, Boston, J G & G S Repplier. Behr C W ay. May. fronton, L Audenried & Co. Behr Jane N Baker, Wilson, Gloucester, Blakiston, Grand & Co. Behr Elias France!, Henley, Portland, Bords,Heller & Hunter. Tug Thomas Jeffervon, Allen, for Baltimore, with a tow of barges,W P Clyde a Co. MEMORANDA. Steamer Wyoming, Teal. hence at Savannah sth lastant. Steamer Geo H Stout,Ford, ealled from Georgetown, DC. 7th inst. for this port. Steamer City of Antwerp (Br), Mirehouse, cleared at New York for Liverpool. Steamer Caledonia (Br), McDonald, cleared at New York yesterday for Glasgow. Steamer Cimbria (limb), Trautman, cleared at New York yesterday for Hamburg. Steamer Relief, WHI ame, clessed at New York yes terday for St Thomas. Steamer Europe (Fr), Lehlinire, from Havre Oct 24, and Brest 26th, with '2lB passengers, at New York yesterday. Steamer Georgia, Deaken, at Havana 7th inst. from Vera Crdz. Steamer Wilmington, Cole, sailed from Havana 4th Met. for Sisal and Vera Cruz. Steamer Quaker City, Duncan, at Glbraitrr 18th tilt from Alexandria, and cleared for Madeira. Steamer Liberty, Bair', at Key *lst 7tb mut. from Baltimore. Ship Napier, lintchinqon, at Batavia 3d Sept. from Boston. Ship Robert L Lane, Ameden, from New York, at Acapulco 79th ult. Ship Alexander (Dutch), Dekker, sailed from Singa— pore nth Sept. for Boston. Ship Edward O'Brien, Oliver; cleared at San Fran ch,eo Gth inst. for Liverpool. Ship P Pendleton, Pendleton, cleared at Liverpool 24th tilt. for Bombay. Bark Lord Byron, Enrico, was loading at London 2Gth ult. for this port. Bark Annie E Boyd, Griffiths, from London for this port, parsed Deal 2tith ult. Bark American Lloyds. Park, from Bangor via Montevideo for Buenos Ayres„ was spoken letti Sept. off Point Indio. Bark Arthur Kinsman, Means, hence for Salem, was below Boston ) etterday. Brig C Matthews, Cox, hence at Salem 6th inst. Brig Bride, Blauvelt, hence at Barcelona 19th ult. Brig S V Merrick, Norden, was loading at Havana 2d !net for New Vora. Behr L Batchelder, Thompson, hence at Savannah yesterday.. Schrs 11 Crosby, Potter, hence for Boston; W Tice, Tice, hence for do; Nightingale, Beebe, hence for Providence; A Farrell,Shourds, hence for do, and II E Russell, Mehatfey, hence for Bridgeport, at New York yesterday. Schrs It Law. York; R H Wilson, Harris; W M 'Wil son, Brown; W Collyer, Taylor, and Clara Davidson, Jefferson, sailed from Providence 6th inst. for this port. Schr Emeline McLean, Backlin, hence at Boston 7th instant. Schrs Sally S Godfrey, Godfrey, and E L Marts, hence at Washington DC, 7th inst. Schrs Kate E Itch:Doughty, and J L Tracy, Tracy, cleared nt Washington, DC. 7th inst. for this port. Schr Eliza Ann, McCoy, cleared at Baltimore 7th inst. for Wilmington, Del. Schr J W Hall, Powell, hence at Boston 7th inst. Schr Mary Ann, Adams, sailed from Norfolk 7th Schrs C Carstuirs, Mee, and L Frazier, Holman, hence at Norfolk 7th inst. tt , chr Wm Capes, hence at Portland 6th inst, Schrs F It Baird, Bernard; II W Godfrey, Sears,and Jas Alderdice, Jackaway, hence at Salem 6th inst. MARINE MISCELLANY The following veSSQls,._among others, were at St. Thomas Oct 21, one Week prior to the hurricane, viz: Ship Charles Sprague, Pike, ding; brig Alecosta, Nor ton, from Boston, err 12th, ding, for New York, to take on cargo 'brig Alice; achr Clinton, Holmes, from York,.arr 15th, Msg. Schr Sallie Nears, Pine, from Baltimore July 23 for Fortune Island, has not been hear from since sailing, and It is feared she foundered in tt e gale of about the Ist of August. Schr Jelin Forsyth, Applegarth, om Georgetown, DC. for Hudson, NJ. pat into Norfolk 6th inst. with loss of stilh;, malriboom, and leaking.. Would repair. Schr Winonah, from Pensacola Oct 5 for Boston, ut flolincs' Hole 6th inst. csperienced heavy weather; lost part of deck load. "WINES, LIQUORS, &Ct. k T MIC A. Po r 1" Suo6essor 0, Geo. W. Grey, n 304 NV" its. • • >'- 24.26. 98 and 00 South Sixth' 81. E Phil/ 4 " stok& Nut•BrownAloe,' • -- ----tqt,l9r rparau s . ana THE DAILY a AVIERING VtULtiEfiN.—VRIADELPUIk,SATU 60,633 00 3,196,0112 16 3,402,201 03 E. P. MIDDLETON. No. b North Front !Arcot SPIEOIAL NOTICIES• oar COMPLIMENTARY ;TESTI , KONIAL. _A GRAND MUSICAL AND VOCAL ENTERTAINMENT Wili be given to MR: STEPHEN CAFFREY, (Plenhlcd from Pulmonary Diaeitie and Lou of Sight. contracted while in the Army), by Ida military , and per ;tonal (dimly, on Friday Eventlg t November:22,lBo7, Al' MECRAtI'!GB' BAU, 40111{THAfir MINK ORM -Ticketa 25 cents Reroved soma 50 cents 11. G. 131CKEL, twat. Maj.-Gen, U. 8, V. HENRY IL BINGHAM,I3rvt. Brig-.-Gen. U. 8. V. WM. B. THOMAS, Col. U. IL Vote. , WASHINGTON M. WORnALL, Lieut.-OM. Vole. GEO. I'. DI eLEAN. CoL P. V. , - Taos. F. B. TAPI'Mi, Brvt. COl.ll S. V. C. D. BROURE. Capt. U. IL V. WM, J. MACKEY. Cate, U. 8. V. lion. HENRY D. MOORE. JOSEPH B. HANCOCK. JOSEPH F. MA ItChdt. w. . AM. GEO M . P. PAR OLI H VER, M. D., BuYgeon V. 8. V. BENJAMIN BARR, M. D. trollffl MAW" UNION PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, EASTERN DIVIBION, OFFICE NO. 424 WAIe NUT STREET, Pin LAM:IA.OIA; Get. 2let, 1867. The Infercet on the Find Mortgage Made, Leavenworth Branch of the Union Pacific Railway Company, Eantern Diviefon, due November let. 1861. will be paid on presents. Ron of the Content therefor, at the Banking Douse of DABNEY, :MORGAN & CO., 53 Exchange Place. • New York, on and after that date ocntu th elOtq bier. OFFICE "ETNA MINING COMPANY. ILLA . DELI.III A. October 31st, DWI .. Notice le hereby given that an inetallfnent of Ono Dollar per chere on each and every Share of the Capital Stock of 1 1 the AITNA MINING COMPANY has Me dal' been called In, payable on or before the 14th day of November, 11367, at the Office of the Company, No. VA Walnut erect, PUHA. delphla. I 1 order of the Duectom. no 4-10) B. A. 'HOOPES, Treimurer. witigss MERCANTILE I3ENEnCIAL ASSOCIATION,— The Twypty-sixth Annual !Jetting of this Associa, tion will be held on TUESDAY,'Nottember l2th, ltdl, at 3 o'clock, P. M., at the Rooms of the Association, Northwest corner Recent!' and Bannon) streets, second story.- The Annual Report will be submitted, and an ejection held for a Board of .Managers to serve the ensuing year. n 05-3 t• WILLIAM A. 110 LIN, Secretary. THE INDUSTRIAL HOME; CORNER OP Broad 'street and Columbia avenne, is open for the admleoion of Gino from' twelve to eighteen years of age, who are neglected or deyertcd by their parents, and who need the shelter and inetruction of a Christian home. II tilt public will enstain thin inetitutlon, many girls may be kept from evil, and made reepectable and tteefu women i Contrbutions may be sent to JAMES T. SHINN, Tree. surer. Broad and Spruce etreete. nofl2-rptf stir POST•OFFICE, PHILADELPHIA. Pa., November 7, IF , A7. \falla for India, China, Honolulu, AudtraHa New %ea. land. and Japan, via California, will clone at this' office November 10, at 9 o'clock P. p05 , 9t H. H. P,INGHAM, Poatmaaterli DIVIDEND NOTICES. PE:s.NSYINANIA RAILROAD COMPANY, CREA6CRER'S DEPARTMENT, I'liffilypEr.va, Nov. 2, 1E47. NOTICE TO S'FOCKHOLDEItS . - The Board of Directors Imre thls day declared a semi. annual Dividend of Three Per Cent. on the apitl stock of the Company, clear of National and State taxes, payable on end aft.rr November 30, 1667. Blank powers of attor. ney for collecting dividends can he had at the office of the Company, 228 booth Third street. Perron, holding Scrip Certificates can have them cashed on preryntation at this office. n04.30t¢ 'lllOB. T. FIRTH, Treasurer. sea. OFFICE OF TILE AMERICAN ANTI-INCRUS TATICN COMPANY, N 0.147 South Fourth street. PII 11, AT/EI,IIIIA, October 29, U 937. At a Stated Meeting of the Board of Directore. held thin day, it WRY Itexolred, That a dividend of Five Per Cent., In Cash, be declared, out of the earnings of the Company, payable on and after November 11. 1867.. . . Ilemdrol. That the Transfer Books of tho Company be closeo from November 1 to 14 18417. EZRA LUKENS. ocre,nolol.7.K Treawurer. ser NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE. PUII.ATIEI,PIII&. Nov. 5,1&37. The Board of Directors lave this day declared a Divi demi of Six ,Per Cent., gable on demand, clear of United States tax. JOHN A. LEWIS. hie nov&tit.th,e2ts Caer. stir 'HIE SIXTH NATIONAL BANK. PuII.A.DELPIILA. Nov. 5, 1F157. The Directors have declarea a Dividend of Four Per Cent.. cleAr of taxes. payable on demand at their new Banking House, N. W. corner Second and Pine streets. ROBERT B. SALTER, tuff lit. Cashier. misiv. NATIONAL BANK CF THE NORTHERN LIBERTIES. NOVVeMber 4,1847. The Directors have this day declared a Dividend of Ten per IL:cnt for thepast Rix months, clear of United States tax, payable on dernand. not-et W. HUYLMERE, se CO3I.IIO'NWEALTII RATIONAL BANK, PIIILAMELIIIA • Nov. Sth, 18 4 37. The Directors have this day declared a dividend of Five Per Cent, clear of taxes, payable on demand. H. U. YOUNG, not ' Cashier. ,NATIONAL BANK OF PIII I.A.DELPII lA. November sth, PO. The Directors have this day declared a Dividthd of k ive per 4 'tot, clear of National taxes, payable on demand. nos-43ti , 8. PALMER, Clothier. ir THE MANUFAg rU NATIONAL BANK pLADELPII;oLZberSe . The Board of Directors have this day declared a di* dead of Five Per Cent, Payable on demand, clear of U. S. Tax. tios . M. W. WOODWARD. Cashier. A br. . GIRARD NATIONAL BANE.— Pull.. DELVIIIA, NOV. 5. I&7. The Directors have declared a divident of SIX PER CENT. out of the profits of the last six months, payable on demand, clear of United States tax. W. L. SCIJAFFER, Guider. FIRST NALIONAL HANK. PIII r_ADELPITIA, Nov. 5,16437. The Directors have this declared a Dividend of Six Per Cent, clear of btate and 'United Staters tax, payable on demand. MORTON MoMICHAEL. Catthier ter KE:s;SINUTON NATIONAL BANK. P1111.A71F.LP111.1.. N0v.5.1501. The Directors have this day- declared a dividend of Thirteen l'er Cent., payable on demand, clear of tar. MoCON YELL, Cashier. MECHANICS' NATIONAL BANK, PIMA DELPHIA, Nov. Oth, The Board of Directors have this day declared a divi dend of Six Per Cent., payable on demand, free of taxes. J. WIEGAND,Jo.. nor,-tit; • Cashier. iskr• FARMERS' AND • MECHANICS' NATIONAL "•"•"" BANK, PHILADELPHIA, November A 180. The Board of Directors have this day declared a divi. dead of Six Per Cent., payable on demand, clear of U. S. tax. • • n0.5.4t0 W. RUSHTON, Jr.,Cashier. THE WESTERN NATIONAL BANK OP PHI LAPELI'MA. November 5, 18d7. he Directors have this day declared a dividend of Eight 1 er Cent. payable on demand, clear of tax. nos-64 C. N. WEYGANDT, sot* THE PHILADELPHIA NATIONAL BANK, w•-•' PIIII-ADFLPIIIA, November 4. 1867. The Director.. Lave declared a Dividend of Nine Per Cent clear of taxes. payable on demand, B B. COMEGYS, Cashier. LEGAE NOTICES. EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, ss.—lN Bankruptcy—At Philadelphia. the 25th day of Septem ber, A. D. IND. The undersigned hereby : given notice of bin appointment an assignee of GEORGE CLARKSON and CHARLES P,MASSEY, of the City and County of Philadelphia and State of Pennsylvania, who have been adjudged hatikrupta upon their own petition, by the Dia. trict Court of maid District. To the creditors of mild bankrupt, GEORGE D. BUDD, Ansignco. e 7 Walnut street. I.N THE ORPIIANb' COLRT FOR THE CITY AND County of Philadelphia.—Estate, of COLEMAN, Minors. The Auditor appointed by the Court to audit, s ettle end adinot the lust accountAf M. J. COLE MAN. Guardian of lilA, WILLIAM and JOHN H. COLE. MAN, minor children of EBENEZER COLEMAN, deceased, and to report diqribittlon of the balance in the hands of tht accountant, will meet the parties interested for the purpose , of Ids appointment, on Mon. day, No , ember, Oth, A. 0., 1867, at 4 o'clock, P. M., at his Office, No. tat South Sixth street. in the City of Philada phia. HENRY E. WALLACE n02e1,6, R. 9 Auditor. IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND County of 1 hilodelphia.—Estate of CATII - iItINE MILES, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by the Court to makerlistributionef the, fund in I ourt arising from sale of real estate orFaid decedent, under' Proceedings iu partition, and io report distribution of the balance in the hands of the it:count:nit, will meet the. parties in. tempted for the purpose of Ina appoibtment, on Novem ber 12th, 1067, at 4 o'clock P. M. t At his Lance, 727 Walnut street, In the city of Philadelphia. - • ociiith,a,tu-fe G. HARRY DAVIS, Auditor. 1 4 STATE OF MARY WILSO DEGEAS ED. —ALL VrAt c EDEEIIE. Executor. No. 9.39 N. Sixth street:. mile a iitS COAL AND WOOD. 1 - 1 1 It. PENROSE & CO., DEALERS IN COAL, 1113 12./. Call°lollll street, above l3road. Philadelphia. Lehigh and Schuylkill Coal, of all elate, prepared ex presrly for Family tot. QtF UNICCH received at 1111 North maim Stroll', or through the Post-odic°. 110$ :;nt✓i N. KANO:4 DINENI.JOIIN N 611.E.1.re, rpm: uNogatsioNuo INVITE A f IT ENTION TO their stook of Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, which, with the prepttratiou given by tie, we think cannot be excelled by any other Coal. Office, Franklin Institute Building, No. 15 South Seventh etreet. HI ES ,Y, S BEA FT, ialtttf Arch etreet wharf. Schuylkill runs, dcC. ---------- r, twit, I FURS! FURS! —ERN EST THANE% ier Manufacturer of all kinds of PA.-NCY FURS. at No-113 Berth Fourth street, above Arch, Philadelphia, is Pure for I,,adica' and Children's wear. Cheap Carriage and Buffalo Robes coo. stantly on hand. N. ts..—Ptirm repaired, re-lined and altered to the latest styles, at moderate pricat.- , oche to th 3911 IloAltil N6i. DEOIRA FMB ROOMS wrria BOARD, JU4T VA -I—tested, 1524 Clmtuut 'Arcot. • no9A. ASUITE (F HANDSOME WELI , PURNISfiED SE. coed story s.tuf other rcoms, with board, at 814 South Eighth et.; ger.. ef Spruce. Private tablet( doeired.oall-t Uhl 112 FOR, SALE,; TIM LARGE AND VALUABLE PROPERTY NIO.I4O6,NORTH FIFTEENTH STREET, 40 feet front x 166 feet deep to Carlisle street, House built in flrevelase style last. ypur for the present menet. Apply es - the promisee, nod.it§ vOit• RESIDENCE, NO. M 2.1 SPRUCE STREET. ALI. MODERN IM• YROVEMENTS. IcALSO, ELEGANT NEW RESIDENCE, WAL. LACE STREET, EAST OF TWENTIETH sTREBT, FORTY FEET FRONT, AND FINISHED WITH ALL THE MODERN IMPROVEMENTS. WILL BE SOLD 014 ACCOMMODATING 'TERMS, 4 MAULE, BROTHER ttr. N 0.2500 SOUTti STREET. TILE AWELLING , No. 1426 WALNUT iStreet, , For tale, with or without the • Furniture, Or to Let FURNISHED. _ STABLE and COMM-HOUSE. • Weet elde of Fifteenth street, above Locust. Can be had with the house. APPLY to. ' JESSUP & MOORE. oda No. 27 North Sixth street. FOR SALE.—FIRST-CLASB DWELLINGS. 950 Franklin street., luundiate posseesion. • Ka• 818 North Seventh et • " 4ZI S. Fifteenth street. " I. 2310 Lombard erect. " .. 260 North Eleventh street. " , 1 Store and Dwelling, • _7(iti South Second erect. 1228 Ogden street. Possession soon. Apply to COPPECK & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street W-SL J. PALMER, Treassuret." FOR BALE - -THREKSTORY BRICK HOUSE, Green street, west of Twentieth street. handsome Brown Stone /louse, North Broad street. New Brick Ifoitre, Nineteenth street, below Spruce fit. Building Lot, Nineteenth street, below Sonic° street. J. L. EDWARDS, no2.Bt' 524 Walnut street. ARCH STREET.—FOR BALE—TIM - HAND. some fony.story brick reeidence, with three-story double back Milli, in e, Waste No. 1808 Arch stre-c. nee every moat= convenience and Improvement, and ie In perfect order. Let 80 feet front by 140 feet deep Im mediate posseeidon given. J. 111. GiIS:IIMEY & tIUNS, 508 Walnut street. inFOR SALE—AN ELEGANT FOURZTORI Stone Reeidence, built and finished throughout in the very beet manner, by the preeent owner, ex• prerely for his own occupancy, furnished with extra con• veniences—first floor painted in (reaco—and In perfect order s Situate on Went Locust street, near St. Mark's Church. 'J. M. GUMMEY & SONS, 603 Walnut street. inFACTORY FOR SALE OR RENT.—A LARGE three-story brick Factory Building, baying fronts on three streets. Is built in the most substantial man. ner, nearly new and in perfect order. Lot 84 feet front by 115 feet deep. Innnediate coameasion given. For further particulars apply to J. M. GUMMY & SONS, BUB Walnu street. InPRICE STREET, GERMANTOWN—FOR SALE. --A handsome modern Stone Cottage reaidenc -with all the city conveniences and In perfect order, situate on Price Street, within four minutes' walk from tile De,pot. Immediate poaeeselon given. J.. 31. G UnBLEY & SONS. bOB Walnut Street. rFOR SALE. " The elegant and commodious Residence, south aide Walnut etreet ; 345 feet front. 140 feet deep. Terme easy. Poaeeesion at once. C. U. IL P. 31131f11EID, oel7-1m as South Sixth street. FOR SALE.—TILE NEW TIIREFATORY . 11r. Dwelling, No. FAO Green titreet, with or without the furniture, the occupant declining housekeeping. Apply to H. E. TURNER, ie South Fourth 'Arcot. no 7 tit§ rDESIRABLE INVESTMENTS—PROPERTIES Norte Ninth street, above Race; Eleventh street, above Arch. Fine Loth Noah Broad street. EDWD. S. SCHIVELY, :223 North Ninth street, 9 to 12 A. M. ' nos to th s 3t• FOR BALE—A LOT OF GROUND AT THE swim east corner of Spring Garden and Nineteenth streets, SO feet front by about Duti feet deep to Buttonwood street. Fine improvements adjoining. alibi is the most desirable let for building purposes in the northwestern part of the city. Apply to I. U. PRICE, ocle.r.tu,th.l3t• 54 North Seventh street. TO LET ) Second Story S. E. coy. Seventh and Chaffin*, AND Store 612 Cheitnnt street. EDWARD P. KELLY, oddl 8. E. Chestnut and Seventh. BREWERY—FUR RENT.—AN OLD ESTAB , Riled Brewery and Malt House now in active ration with a large and good a r Dug coding. The Brewery has spacious Vaults wi steam -engines and machinery, and all the latest impro emeriti for carrying on the business. The Malting floors and kiln are inr• feet pe order and well arranged. The present capacity of the Brewery is 15,000 barrels, which, can be increased uy a small outlay to 20.000 barrels. Or favorable arrangements could be made with a party having capi , al, to take an interest In and extend the business. For further particu. lara apply to J. M. GUMMEY dr SONS, 508 Walnut street. TO. RENT.—SLARKET BTREET.—THE_ FIVE_ story brick istore, No. BM Market street (third house west of Eighth sheet, south side), 2t feet front b 7 110 feet deep, will be to rent on Ist of November. Apply to GEORGE CUTHBERT, American Hotel, oe.A-tfo Opposite Independence Hall. from 9tollA. M. FOR RENT, FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED. ir —The fourstory brick Residence, with three•atory double back buildings, situate on the northwest corner of Twentieth and Arch streets; has parlor, dining room, kitchen, but kitchen, library, 8 chamber+, 2 bath rooms, 2 water closets, &c., &c. J. ,SL GUMMEY & SONS, 568 Walnut street. TO LET—THOSE SHOWY NEW STORES, NOV' CU 420, , 424 and 420 North Eighth street. suitable for dry goods trimmings, millinery, shoe or hat store. French piste glass windows. Apply to V I LLIAM SADLER, 424 North Eighth street. To RENT.— A THREE - STORY DWELLING,. No. 3012 Mount Vernon erect, with all modern tin " provementa. Immediate Poesesaion. Alpo the three. Ftory Dwelling, S. E. corner of Broad and Columbia ave. nue. all modern improvement!. Immediate ,pokiessinti. Apply to COPPC‘K k JORDAN. 433 Walnut Street. 'lO LET—A '• T PHILADELPHIA.— DWELL. ing, N. E. corner Thirty-eighth and Walnut street. Large yard; HO feetlfront by 2.20 feet deep; grape vine& fruit trcee,&c. Inquire at N. E. corner of Tenth and Cbertuut Ktreete. 3PDALLA'S Hat Store. noMff. 10 RENT—AT A NOMINAL RATE FOR I'llE • I T , :r4 winter. n Furnlahed Honer) on School Bongo lane, -near tlerrnanlown. Address A. 8., BULLETIN Ofh noh•St. LLET -A HANDSOME MODERN RESIDENCE, in, he vicinity of Rittenhouse Square. ' Apply to CLARK A: ETTING„ n09.3t• 707 Walnut street. EFOR RENT—FROM DECEMBER IST, A LARGE TICIV store, on Delaware avenue below Chestnut st. " Apply to JOS. B. BUnSIER & nob tt 108 South Delaware avenue. TO RENT.—A FOUR-STORY RESIDENCE, 12.T.3 South Broad • street. Apply to GEO. SER. " GEANT, SW South Fourth. uo7 Bt• TO LET.—DO UBLE OFFICES, S. E. CORNER SIXTH 1 and Locust streets. Apply to TllOB. MARTIN, N. W. corner Fourth and Pine. F. H. - virry,x...TAms, Lumber Merchant, \ Seventeenth and Spring Garden strette. A FULL STOUR OP BUILDING LUMBER AND HARDWOODS ALWAYS ON HAND. ee2lB tu th2M 1867. - sELE BOA_ DI I AYD PLANS, 44, 54.64, 9, 25:1, a and 44nel. CHOICE PANEL AND FIRST COMMON, 16 feet Ion& 44, 64, 64, 2, 2A6. 9 end flinch. MAULE, BROTHER & CO., No. 2500 BO UTII Street. G! 1.867. - ERY3kiii? 'LITITE D IPL I UN3IVI LN 4.4 CAROLINA FLOORING. 54 CAROLINA FLOORING. 4-4 DELAWARE I , I4JORING. 5-4 DELAWARE FLOORING. ASTI FLOORING.' • WALNUT FLOORING. SPRUCE - FUJORNG. STEP BCrXRDS, RAIL PLANK, PLASTERING LATH, • MAULE, BROTHER & CO., No. 2500 South street. 1.867. - wALNIVAMTPLANK. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. LARGE STOOK—REARONIED. MAULS dr. BRO. 1867'LUMBER FOR ITNDERTAKERS! . - LUMBER FOR UNDERTAKERS CEDAR, WALNUT,: - MAHOGANY. ijEDAR, WALNUT, MAHOGANY. MAULE, BROTHER tit CO 1867. - OM OBER OF ALL KINDS. SEASONED WALNUT. SEASONED WALNUT. DRY POPLAR. CHERRY AND ASIL OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY ROSEWOOD AND WALNUT VENEERS. MAULE, BROTUER. ds CO 1867. - V,I3III:ME itIZNISTREIIi: SPANISII CEDAR BOX-BOARDS. No. MOO' SO tali street. 1.867 . JOIST. - srktucEjOlST-SPRIICE JOIST—JOIST—SPRUCE FROM 14 TO 12 FEET LONG. FRAIN 14 TO 82 FEET. LONG. • SUPERIOR NORWAY SCANTLING. • 111AULE, BROTHER 44 CO., I No. MOO ISO uTu atreet (ZIGNOR MAZZA, PROFESSOR. OF THE ITALIAN Language at the University of Peamaylvaoia. No:211 South lifteenth4treat. .; 1I 1 R GARb a WOLFROHN FILL RETURN FRO* o'opbery. it% i;IuaE9OPH Agit, bf„ fl. CROSS ' PROM , ~ d 1.1'..1 and resume hle Tte o C 3o 14,7 1106 Race btleet. ' " . .. __.,...., . ..,...... .. -,..., ... , .. . AP AY.'; liQYAIPXRA;',1807;,:i.:::::y:::0.. - ' -_:. ~.. , • FOIL BALE, TO RENT. LURIBE2t. C.s.ll:lAi4. SEAL ESTATE SALES. RtAL:Ei T tel'AE.-'flit/Musi 114:524 U. dALE.— ' Haindeeme Modern threcetery' brick residence, No, 1986 ti hao etreet, west of Twelfth street. On Time day, November i 12,1887; at 12 O'cleek,lioomll be sold a public gale; at the PlilledelPhia ExcallingN , all that hand/ some modern three-storY prtielebriek fronrmeiesuitee, with three story back buildings and lot of ground, situate on the south side of Vino street. wait of Twelfth street, No. 1200; containing in front on Vine street, 10.1 feet, more or lees, and extending in depth of that width about 49 feet, then widening to 22 feet 10 inches and extending in depth of that width about 41 feet-the entire depth being about 90 feit, to Struthers greet, on whichit :has &front ee,,211, feet 0 Inches: The bete iiPerell ,buil4,and in excellent: reps r; tin roof ; handsomely papred throughout; marble vestibule; parlor, dining-room and two kitchens on the first floor; two ch RlDberl!. sitting-room, library, bath mom with copper-lined tub, and verandah on amend floor; four chambers and large store-Mom on the third floor; gas throughout, permanent washstands, hot and cold water, water closet, furnaces, two conking ranges, excellent dry cellar, vault under front pavement, &e. It was built by the present owner, Alexander Hay, Esq., and always oe. eluded by. him. • eltiir of ma y mbrane°. • Terlins2B.ooo remain on mortgage. 110 - Immediate possession. Reys next door west at Dr. Hay's. May be examined frcrrn 3 to 4 o'clock. 31. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers, 0c20,n0v2,9 lii9 and 141 8. Fourth street. --- - - REAL --- ESTATE.- THOMAS SONS' tiALE.-- E"llandsome modern I threestory Brick and .Brown Stone Residence No. 1413 North Sixteenth istmet, be tween 3laster and Jefferson streets. On Tuesday, No. ember lath, 1937. at 12 o'clock, noo- , will ho sold at public sale, at the Philndelphia Exchange, ml that hand. come modern three•story brick and brown stone inessuage, with double three-story hack buildings and lot of ground, sltuate on the east side of Sixteenth street, between Mas ter and Jefferson streets, No. 1411: the lot containing in front en Sixteenth street 21 feet 8 inches, and extending in depth 112 feet to Sydenbani street,_ The louse is built in ens crier manner, and has the modern conveniences, consisting of two heaters, two ranges, hatii,.water closet., and Stationarywaeli tabs in the' majtltetisn. ' The housee in this 'mare are all built under the restriction to recede 20 feet from the line of the Street, and are inclosed with handsome iron railings. Tim street in front is paved with what is known as the Belgian pavement. The house will be sold complete in all respects, except the gas fixtures. Or Clear of all incumbrance. 109 - Immediate possession. Telles-48,600 may remain on mortgage. Can be examined any day previeitio to sale. 111. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers, not end 141 South Fourth street. - REAL ESTATE.--THOMAS A:: SONS' SALR._ • Andante Modern Three-story Brick Residence, NO. 1805 tifinice street, 22 feet front, 140 feet deep.—On Tuesday, November 12th, 1007, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale at the Phihidelphia Exeliange, all that handsome modern three-story brick mennuage, with dou ble three-story back buildings and lot of ground, situate on the north side of Spruce street, west of Fifteenth street, No. lies; the lot containing in front on Spruce street 22 I ect, and extending fu depth 140 feet, with the privilege of a 3-feet wide .alley, leading into Fifteenth street. Tito house has 2 parlors and 2 kitchens on first floor; library, dining-room, butler's pantry and 2 chambers on second floor; 4 chambers on third floor, and 2 attics; han4lic dern conveniences, gas, bath, hotand , cold water, dumb waiter water-closetMard, gas-range, furnace, lew.down grate in dining-room, cellar paved, &c. rir. Clear of all incumbrance. Terms —Half cash. Can be seen between 12 and 2 o'clock daily. M. THOMAS & SONS Auctioneers, n 02,9 139 and 141 south Fourth street riTift,,EceA.4.4sm . evicainvie. .10,isns...pesrAleEw, " „,t„ cell ace and Vine streets.—On Tuesday, No yen' her, 12th, 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon,will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia ExChange ' all that three-story brick tnessuage, with two-story back building and lot of ground, situate on the west aide of ,1 unipeu• ntreet,between !lace and Vine streets, No. 250; thence extens ing east, ward 03 feet 10 inches; thence irutthward 13 feet 10 inches to the privy wall; thence eastward 4 feet 2lnches; thence northward across the middle of the well. of said privy 4 feet 2 inches ; thence eastward 59 feet Binches to Juniper ,street; thence southward along the came 18 feet to the place of beginning. Together with the privilege of a water course extending westward over and along the southernmost 9 inches in width of the said lot into and from Lybrand street. Also the privilege of using said privy and well in common with the adjoining property. M. THOMAS -AT, SON 4, Auctioneers, n 02,9 139 and 1413. Fourth street, EEXECUTORS' PEREMPTORY SALE.—ESTATE .of Thomas G. Connor, .deceased.—Thomns ck. Sons, Auctioneers. Two two-story frame Dwellings, Nos. 526 and 528 North Front street, south of Green mtrectovith two frame dwellings In the rear on Ocean street. On Tuesday, November lath. 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, will ho sold at public sale, without reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all those frame rummages an 4 the lot of ground :hereunto belonging, 'Rueter on the west side of Front street, south of Green street; containing together in front on Front street 26 feet, and extending in depth 124 feet 10 inches. to Ocean street. The improvements are two frame dwellings Nos. MI6 and 5.%1 North Front street, and two frame dwellings in the rear on Ocean street. re" Clear of all Ineumbrance. Sale absolute M. THOMAS di SONS, Auctioneers. 1.11 and 141 S•uth Fourth street. PUBLIC SALE—TO CLOSE AN ESTATE—U. Thomas As Sono, Auctioneers.—Valuablo country site. •436 acres, Indian Queen lane and Norristown railroad, Falls of Schuylkill. Twenty-first Ward. On Tues day, Nov. 13.1807, at 12 o'clock. noon, will be sold atpublic sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that valuable tract of land at the. Falls of Schuylkill, fronting on the Norristown railroad and. Falls station; or Indian Queen lane. '1 wentv-first ward; containing 25136' acres, 15 acres of good timber land, and 73. acres cleared. Has a front of 1145 feet on the Norristown itallroftd, two excellent springs of water, and a stone quarry on the place--sultable for country sites. building lota or factories. About three minutes walk tram the Ridge Avenue Passenger railway and a Steamboat landing. Terms—sls,ooo may remain on mortgage. 18500 to be paid at time of sale THOMAS_dt SONE3_,,Auctioneers, 0c19,26.n0v2.9 139 and 141 B. Fourth street. rREAL ESTATE.- ! -Tli d OMAS_& SONS' SAI I P:— Three•rstory firicg Iltei time, No. 1614 North Sev enth street, above (ford street.—On Tuesday. No vember 12th, 1867,' at 12 — o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that three story brick meg:mare, with double three-story back build ings and lot of ground, situate on the went side of Seventh street above Oxford street, No. 1614; containing in front on Seventh street 11' feet 9,14 inches (including half of an alley), and extending in deeth 66 feet; has parlor, dining room and kitchen on first floor; 2 chambers, bath room and store room on second floor; 4 chambers on third floor; has gas, bath, hot and cold water, dm. tir - Clear of all incumbrance. M. T . - HOM • A • S it SONS Anctionoera, 139 and 141 South Fourth street. 0r26,n0v:19 irREAL ESTATE.—TLIOMAS & SONS' SALE.— Large and Valuable Lot, Arch street, mud of 'Twen tieth street. 52 feet front, 150 feet deep. On Tues. day, November 12th, 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that large and valuable lot of ground, situate on the south aide of Arch street, 80 feet east of Twentieth street: containing in front on Arch street 52 feet, and extending in depth 150 feet to Cuthbert street. 137 - Clear of all incumbrance. Terms—WOW may remain on mortgage. 112 1- The above is one of the most desirable building lots in the city,avd situate in the immediate vicinity of elegant residences. M. THOMAS th SONS Auctioneers, 185 and 141 8. Fourth street. 0c26,n02 9 14F‘iST‘Tr.H OM A S & SONS' SA L E.— rees Brick Dwelling , No. 1346 Catharine street. t 2 three - story brick dwellings in the rear on Kates street...on Tuot9lay: - November 12th, 1667. at 12 o'clock, noon. wilblltreold at public male, at the Philadel phia Exchange, all that lot of ground, with the improve ments thereon erected, eitunto on the south tide of Catha rine ttree, eabt of Broad street, No. 1346: containing in front on Catharine street 16 feet, and extending in depth 97 feet 6 inches, more or lets, to Katca street. Meim provements consist of a. three-story brick dwelling .fient nog en Catherine erect, No. 1346, and 2 threastory brick dwellings in the rear on Kates greet. 1r2 4 " , , • .Clear of all incuinbrance. Ternis—sl,Boo may remain on mortgage. M. 'lllo3lAti & BONS, Auctioneers. no 189 and 141 South Fourth street, inPEREMPTORY SALE—THOMAS it BONS, AEC- Mums. Three Brick and Frame Dwellinge,Nos. 1513, 1515 and 1517 Race street, west of Fifteenth street: lot 50 feet front, 120 feet deep. On Tuesday. Nov, 12th. 1607, at 1.2 'o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, without reserve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all those frame and brick messuages and the lot of ground thereunto be longing. situate on the north side of Race street, west of Fifteenth street: the lot containing in front on Race street 60 feet. and extending in depth along Path street, on the east, 120 feet to Hay street, with the privileges thereof. The isnprovements aro two frame dwellings and one brick dwelling fronting on Race street, Nos. 1518, 1515 and 1517. Subject to a yearly ground rent of $4O. , Terms—sl4,oo may remain on mortgage. 31. TuomAs & SONS, Auctioneers, n0v4,9 190 and 141 South Fourth street. TRUS`:I:ES' SALE.—THOMAS & SONS. AUG. Honey r.-4 inreeatory Brick Dwellings, No. 1723 St. Joseph's A , .•enuo, west of Seventeenth street. On Tuesday- Nov. Bah, 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, will he sold at Public Sale, at thel'hiladeinhia .Exchange, all those brick messuages and lot of ground, situate on the north ride of St. :Joseph's avenue, (am the same has been widened and enlarged by Matthew Newkirk, by the ad dition on its north side of all his ground, 7 feet, to its for mer brendih;) 188 feet west of Seventeenth street; con taining in front lit feet, and in depth dO feet, to a three feet ride alley running cast and west, and communiea• ting with H. 4 feet wide alley, which leans Into St. Jo seph's avenue. Together with the common use and privilege of both said alleys. The improvements ,ire a three.story brick dwelling, No. 1723 St. Joseph's avenue, with thrte-story brick dwellings adjoining in the rear, forming a court. M. THOMAS & SONS. Auctioneers, 139 and 141 South Fourth street. ECUTOR'S PEREMPTORY SALE.---ESTATE of Mary Main, deceased. Thomas A; Sono, Aim tioneero. Uenteel threoatOry brick Dwelling, No. 'll3 South Seventh etreet, north of Catharine street. 00 Tluo.day, Nov. 19th, 1867, at 12 o'clock.uoon. will be odhl at public oak:minima remerve,ekt the Philadelphia Exchange, all that genteel threcatory, brick inesouloge and lot of ground, situate oaths Houtheast corner of Seventh and Evorigtlist streets, north of Catharine street, No. 773; eordittning in front orrSoyentli street Id feet, and extend. ing in depth' 37 feel, it eontidno 6 ?wino, besides linea ment and bath•rooni ; gao introduced, dm Ire" Clear of all incumbrence, Sale absolute. H. A. PIM, Executor. M. THOMAS k SONS. Auctioueent, 139 and 141 South Fourth street EXECUTOR'S SALE,--ESTATE , OF RACHEL t;;; Dougherty', deceased .— ThomasB onn, Auctioneers. " Two•etory Frame Dwelling, and large lot, ch erry street, west of Eleventh street. On Tuesday, Novem ber 19,1167, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be gold at nubile sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange; AU those 2 frame Ines eungee end lot of ground thereunto belonging, situate on the north rido of Cherry street, 118 feet west of Eleventh street; the lot cent/lining in front 20 feet, and extending in depth 129 feot,to blark'm lane. Vito improvements aro a two-story triune dwelling, frontinit,on (Awry Street, and a two.moryi frame dwelling On blo ' ws lune; Or Clear of all Incumbranee. I,,EORGE BIRE Executor. M. nIONLAB Ar. BONS, Auctioneers, 189 and 1 1 11Beath Fourth street. —_. iREAL. ESTATE:I...THOMAS .1b JIIONS' BALM— Mc Old established Buslitesit Btsud: Thros•storY brie "' Tavern And DWONIPB, No. glti anon streek „ ..to l i Eighth qtreet. uy.uctioy, Novembcr 13th, I ,at 111 n'elock,.noon, will 40140 imbu e sa l e , Ag gu t }lode!, phi Exer lingn, ta 014 Iriannble threNitorir.,nrink med. rusgo sod lot of ground gitngsgaig o the nth sine of San 'NOM street, irtlit•RA AO fittest, No Ale' containing In front on ingQOI,4TAVi ti„ o , l 410 extending in deptitloo feet. It St Picon.Qqc.mto,4o.ltitvern and dwelling for a, somber '* .99,01, Aim id an sxcellent boss stand. rir (UV' Pt. al intuntbritng ' '. l ' znia—ts 'on morlsasc. '1 0 AI.,IWOMAS & A AO enemy, . ''." , /Wand 141 out Yourtb street: , =Z= d eb.: EXECUTORS' VALEr-ON- THURSDAY, TIX eulumenbeing kit to o'cloea .01.,..T" 41.11.140 id FRTIII au'd Country Seat, thA estate of TUVAiAd I .)ANIEL, deceased, known as the ,'.'Sharolt Warm, 'III miles teem Philadelphia, In EsettMwri 'township, Chester' county. of a mile south of West villa statiOn; on' the Penniyl ania Centred Itallroad t , ConSietitig; firatv 01.1 0 0 ' scresof excellent farming land, building*, alir netvmuld• complete. A a stqw 81106 C house, Containing 13 . I "PalliVzS • Ir double decker glint, barn, EA by 60 feOtt Aprizit ht'dqos,;_' acres, aiiinlnting the above, beautifed bastion for building, with acres of wood land; and. An ottani:llS pririff Of. water. For particulate iuquire of the subutlbenc t,. on mixed, Itcceevillo P. 0. Also see handbills. • DANIMI4 1 - E. oo df ort , , JOSIAH. PHILII'd, j. no 9 19:•2t IEORPHANS' COURT SALE.--ESTATE or 3ovet . Gee, deceased.—Thoman t Sour Anctiercerg . immanence to an Order of the Orphans' Omen foe the:••• City and County of Pleiledelphla, will be sold ,at sale. on Tuesday. November leth,lBol. at 12 o'clock, noon,— at the Philadelphia Exchange, Abe followle4 datcrileed property, late of John Gee, decetuted, viz.: No. I:—Busi-' noes Stand—Three4nory Brick Store and DWellittge &condi street, mouth of Master street.--All that meamage and lot , of ground, either e on the west side of Second street, begin ning 800 feet eenth from Master street; containing in front on Second et - root 20 feet, and extending westwerd atrlght anglee to Second etrect, on the north hide, 270 feet..B%;;. inches, and on the south vide 272 feet 7 Inches to Cadwala, der street; Bounded eastward by Second street, westward , by Cadwalader etreet 'and South by. ground ,leto of H.R. 'I Memel. and north by ground late of Mary Penn and others. On which maid lot is erected a three•sto brick • dwelling-house and store; alga; it rope-walk extending the length of said lot. No; 2.—Ground Rent, 840 a year. All that yearly ground rent, hinting out of all that lot'of ground, with' the fretful messuage thereon erected, situate on thd north Bide of Oxford street. at the distance of 190 feet 'westward Irene. Front street, in the late District of fietterthgtOrt (now city of Philadelphine ; containing in fronton Oxford street 20 feet, and extending in depth northwardly at. right • angled to said Oxford street 110 feet, to a 20 feet wide municating east with another V) feet wide . alleyeathith lends southward into said Oxford street. • Baihndednoeth.; ' ward by the tirst mentioned 20 feet wide alley, eolitieWeed, by said Oxford street, eastward by ground mated on ground rent to James Matlock, and westward 'by ground now cr late of the representatives of Johneieefleinton, deceased, and which maid premises' were, by Deed' dated the 2d day of February, A. Ti. 1865, eranted and conveyed by the mid John Gee, deceased, unto James C. Metle r p reserving to him, the said Jelin Gee, and to his heirs.•r assigns, a yearly around rent of 540 per year to • be pit di , in hell yearly payments, on Ist January and July, LA each and every year, end to be released on the payment to the' said John Gee, or his heirs or assigns, of the' stein 'of :1 , 666 67, es by reference to said Deed will more • fidlY and at largo appear., Nn.:3.—Greend Rent. $72 a year. Also, another yearly; groin] d rent. issuing out of all that lot of grottud,sithetti OA. the north side of Swain "street, at the distance of 181 feet','. 8 Mehre west of Sixteenth street, formerly , Seventh street, In said city; containing in front on Swells "e street 18 feet, cud extending of that width northward,tio- , • tWeen lines parallel with said Sixteenth street insdepth •,, 60 feet, in eh; d iug on the, eastern side of the same, onohaif • of an :they 2 feet 2 inches wide in the clear, egto northward to the depth of 29 feet 4 inchee front &Vain ' street, where it emedit*lly narrows to a point tee it extende••' the further depth of 2 feet 9 inches. lionnded westward •' and northward by other ground now or late of Ethelbert A. Marshall, eastward by a lot of ground granted to Azariale 11. SIMI - 1101W ore ground rent, and southward by Swain street. i3eine the same teaming which Ethelbert A. Marshall, by deed datedelst of June, A. P. 1865,granted: to John C. Minter. Reserving thereout a yearly gretend rent of $72 per year, payable half yearly on the Ist of January and July in each year, and which said ground" rent was conveyed by the said. Marshall unto David' Whiteman to trust, end by said I avid Whiteman, on the 12th of October, A. D. hHh, wen granted and convoyed, unto the snid John Gee, deceased, which said deed is th rottled in deed hack A. D. 13., No. 82, page aeg, TdereOC° ther••unto had will more fully and at large appear. 13ytheCourt, E. A. MERRICK, Clerk O. 0. .TORN S. SNYDER, Administrator. • M. THOMAS ,tr SONS. Auctioneers, 129 and 141 South Fourth etreet 0c96,n0'l 16 1E: oit Pli e' COURT SALE .—ESTATi6 01 0 Brower, minors.—Thomas .t." Sons, Auctioneers.— Twostory Frame Dwelling,land Stable, ellen street, between the Frankford road and iihackamaxon street. Pursuant to an Order of the Orphans' Court for the city and county of Philadelphia, will be sold at public sale, on Tuesday, November I9th. 1867. at L 2 o.clock noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following dessribed property of Brower, minors, viz.: All that twostory frame mos. suage, two•story frame stable, and lot of ground, Wolfe en toe northwestwordly side of Allen street, between the Frunkford road and Shackamaxon street, Kensington:' Beginning at the distance off about HS feet 8 inches' north. eastward. irom the southwesterly line of ground formerly of Charles Esenwoin, of which this was part: containing in front on Allen street 16 feet 4 inches, and extending that breadth in depth 76 feet 6 inches, more or lees, to = k rider street, including on the southwest side thereof, the use and privilege of a B-feet wide alley, extending back 'from Fraley street towards Allen street, a distance of, 38 feet, until the frame buildings thereon 'erected, belonging at, present to Charles G. Boehm, shall beremoved. Bounded southwestwardly by other ground of the said Choke G. Boehm, northwestwardly by the said Fraley streetnortbs eastwardly by ground of Morris Condon and southeast. wardly by Allen street aforesaid. Subject to an irre. deonable ground rent of $49. By the Cotirt, E. A. MERRCK, Clerk O. O. 1V1.1.• B. R 081146, Trustee.. M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers, • 119 and 141 SoUth k'onrth Street oc2 nog 16 faSALE BY ORDER OF HEIRSESTATE OP* Matthew Thompson. deceased: Thomas ds lion& Auctioneers. Valuable Lot, aonthweat serum of Twelfth and Catharine sheets . n Tueaday s 1867, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be Boldat public sale. at, the, Philadelphia - Exchange. - all that lot of ground,eitttafe at the aouthweat corner of Catharine and Twelfth street': containing in front on Twelfth street 32 feet, and, extend. ing in depth 85 feet. M. THOMAS At SONS, Anon% • 189 and 141 S. Fourth rtreet. NEW PIIBLIQATIONII. QECOND EDITION NOW READY. HAREM LIFE. HAREICLITE.-- HAREM LIM. HARE3I EGYPT AND CONSTANTINOPLE.' BY EMELTNE LOTT. WITH A PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR. Frrmz.the Alithoee Preface. "It was reserved to an humble individual like myself, in my official capacity as Governess to his Highness. the Grand facia Ibrahim, to become the unheard-of itudanee in the annals of the Turkish empire, of residing within those foci of intrigue, the Imperial and Viceregal Harems, of l'urkey and Egypt ; and thus an opportunity hail been afforded me of, esmodonallke, uplifting that impenetra ble veil, to accomplish which had hitherto baffled alt the • exertions of Eastern travelers. It has-been my aim to give a Colleite yet impartial and sympathetic account of the daily life of the fa .famed Odalisques - of the nine ter nth century—those mysterious impersonifications of eastern loveliness. With what success I have achtelimi this difficult bulk is left to the Judgment of the putmo to determine." I'ilco $1 50in Paper; or, $2 00 in Cloth. Copies of this extraurdinar , book will be sent, free of postage. on receipt of retail priceby — "-- T. B. PETFIP,bON Ac BROTI - IREN Publishers, Philadelphia, Pa. A BOOK FOR THE TIMES. . • - li T. ELLWOOD ZELL ft CO.. Noe. 17 and 19 South Sixth Street, Philadelphia. Have just Published "AMONG,THE IN GLANS ;" o}l. MORT YIEAIIB IN 'TIM PAP. WERT. With interesting Sketches of SALT LAKE, the MOH: MON ri, and MONTANA, and a Msprof BY HENRY A. BOLLER. - The long and intimate acquaintance of the Author with his subject has enabled hint to produce a thoroughly original and interesting work: Giving a Graphic and truthful description of the Home and Inner Life of the Indians, Salt Lake, and the exciting times in the first settlement of Montana.. With an able review of the Present Indian Difficulties, their Widen and remedy. Sold by all Booksellere. One handsome cloth 12 mo. volume. 428 pages, .$2 oaf; s to th to TIVERY SATURDAY FOIL NOVEMBER 16 CON. .emu taino: "I'h} Wrenn of the Curragh;" "Plain (Iris;" "at r. Courbet Vioiting;" "The Future of human clia. racter" The Visitor's Book at our Swim • Inn:" 'Author and Editor; ": "Some Dinners In Rome ;" "Dow: Princes are Made Abroad ;" "Foreign Nott ;" "Tlie Synagogue of Swallows," &c., ke. o s . For sale ever yworre. TIC:KNOB di FIELD'S, Publishers, Houton:.. 8A81L143 IVOCAL ALBUM.— The pecond delivers', containing "The Angel of Mercy," 'A Woman's Advice," and "Devoe, Tender Doves," is Out. Tor gale at the principal Stores on Chestnut street, where show cards aro on exhibition 11074.." JUST READY —BINGIIAM'S LATIN , GliAldhLW.-• New Edition.—A Grammar of the Latin La1 . U . v21 . . For the use of Schools. With exorcism and vocab By W illiam Bingham , A. M., Superintendent of thtnria ham School. The rubliehers take pleasure in announcing to Teachers and friends of Education generally, that the new Amen of the aLove work is now ready, and they invite a careful examination of the same, and a compatisutt with other, works ou the same subject. Copies will ho Punished to Teachers and Superintendents of Schools for this purpose at low rate& Price $1 60. Publiabed by E. 11. BUTLER dt 137 South, 'Fourth street, Philadelphia. And for !laid by BoehmHere generally. , , *en JUST PUBLISH ED.--KATHRINA; HER LIVE , AND Aline. By .F. G. Holland, (author of "Bitter Sweet.") THE BULLS and the JPINATDANS. :Dyn.r..goUle dine, 1 lIE ART OF DISCOURSE. By Henry N. Day. TILE ART OF COMPOSITIQN: Henry GRACE KENNEDY'S WORKS 3 vole.' Vol. I—Anna Hors. &c. Vol. 2—Father Clement. die, Vol. 9—Duronlant or, Know whatyon Judge. All the New Booke received as soon as publiithod. JAMES S. CLAXTON', Successor to Win. S. & A. Radek!. 1314 Chestnut Street. PROPOSAI4O. 1 lEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC 11WAYS—OFFICE No. lel Southl l lfth etreot, ov.dtit,ll:Bl7. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed Proposals, will be received at the Wilco of the Chief Connziesioner of Highways until 19 o'clock If., on MONDAY, 11th hut, for the construction of the following two (cut six inch sewers, viz.: On Tanker and on Dickin son streets, front Seventh to Eighth streets: on Otis street, front Coral street, Que. hundred tind eighty eight feet northwestward, and on Warnock street, frog Poplarstscet to tWOPittindred and three foot south of ( rard avenue, With !fich man boles as play be tlirocted by t e Chief Engi.. weer and Surveyor. The undentanding to be that the Contractor shall take bills prepared against the nropert i fronting on said dilWer to the automit of one dollar twenty-five cent,' for earn foot'oEfrrun'On cockade, of the otreet, as eo much cash; the balance, as limited , by Ordinance, to bet raid by tho city, and the Contractor will he required to ke,t , it the Arent and sower in good order for three years a fter the sower is fluielied. V hen the street 18 °erupted' bya, City Passenger Bail . road tr ac k, the Sewer ehall 'be! . constructed elOrnodde at sold track 111 such manner tut not to obstruct or interfere with the lode passage of the oars thereon ; and no claim for r e muneration titian be poid the Contractor by the company tonic said track, unspecified in Act of Assembly approved Mav Btll, All bidders aro invited to ho prevent at the limo an a l place: of opening tho aald_Propoeals, Each proposal wi be accompanied by it portifionte that a Mint has.boon * In the Law Department as direetcd by• Ordinance of Mkt! 260, kids. If the Lowest Bidder shall not execute a con- ' tniet within•AVO day after tho..work. •awardod, ho Will bo deemed as declining, and Will he held liable on tile bond for. the difference between hie bid and tho next, . ldghest bid. Specifications may be had at the Department: , of leurvoys. which . ,rillho strictly : tprodila.. •nha.htt. - Chief COunidesioner of • tlighw • . w4vr , ilvs. WAN AD 'TO '''PVENIIASE.—A Green /trent, west of -vroad and gnat of Eigh. tistnth etrfots. POW/Oda!). April lat. Addrers - Box No. 1 73u41.rilcN OrrION, staling Fr 40 . ' 0011-40