Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, November 26, 1867, Image 4

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    VINVEKOMIMLIENT _4(11" TUE Plinfilw
DrAIN
the .112d1Clinty Committee.
illeport or or. Theo WASHINGTON, Nov . -v.— Committee;
the Judiciary, to whom was referred the retain
! t thorizin them
ti" cit" th"th °l' official Maas cian a d u net of /ndrew
to inquire into the
Johnson, Vice Presidentotfi thnite States,
es ofthe office: of
discharging the peesent
President of the United States, and to
. r e epo_rtite•
this Howo whether in their opinion the said
drew Johnsen . 1 51 4 10 . 10
t ridelen, Jur t , ti be w en
4 tnitirewb"wdro ($1 9 1 1 tt, a
este% *or corrupt the oitdmmoit Of the
e • -e'v n it e e States, or. any denartment or office
thereof, and whether the said Andrew.,Johnson
has been guilty of any act, or has conspired with
others toile acts whh in the "contemplation ot
the Constitution are ic high crimes and mimic-.
..meanors, requiring the interfering of the consti
tatietualixrwee of this House!-- ~
,'Ree'peetfittlyMport: r That In the performance
of the important task assigned them, they have
spared no pains tomalie their investigation ms
complete as possible, not only by the examina
tion of the public archives, but in following
every indication that seemed to promise any.ad
ditional light upon the real subject of inquiry,
and they submit herewith the result of that por
tion of their labors in the voluminous exhibit
that accompanies this report.
The charges made, and to which the investiga
tion of the committee have been especially di
rected, are usurpation of power and violation of
law; in the corrupt abuse of appointing, pardon
ing and veto powers; in the corrupt interfe
rences in elections, and generally in the commis
sion of high crimes and misdemeanors.
under the Constitution ; and upon thid
recital it was charged with the more
general duty of inquiring into the offi-'
cial conduct of the President of the United
States. and of reporting whether he had been -
guilty of any,actestittelt..axe designed or eaten
lated to overthrow, subvert or corrupt the Go
vernment of the United States, or which, in con-.
eeedemplation of the Constitution, would constitute
a high crime or misdemeanor requiring the itt
terposition of the constitutional power of the
House. The report here says that the salient
point is usurpation of power, especially in re
ference to the reconstruction of the rebel States,
and that around this all the "special acts of
maladministration will be found to gravitate and
revolve."
"It is a fact of history that the obstinate and
protracted struggle between the Executive and
Legislative departments, arising out of the claim
of more than kingly powers on the one hand,
and as strongly maintained by the operation of
the first rights of sovereignty lodged with it by
the people on the other, which has convulsed this
nation for the last two years. and presented a
spectacle that has no example here, and none in
England since the era of the Stuarts,' began with
the advent of the present Chief Magistrate."
At the close of the war, says the report, the
extraordinary mission of the Executive was ful
filled, and merely to hold the conquered territory
until the Representatives of the , nation should
declare its will in relation to the rebels was all
that remained for him to do. 'The` civil govern
ments in the rebel territory had been swept away
while a people remained subdued but still hos
tile, with a loyal element asking protection.
"The duties and responsibilities of the men
who founded the Union of these' States, and of
those who assembled here in 1861 to consult
upon and provide the means for suppressing
this great rebellion, were as nothing in the com
parison, and demanded certainly not higher sa
gacity and no broader wisdom than the task of
bringing back the dismembered States and re-fus
ing these jarring and dhscordant elements into
one harmonious whole. Forthis great work the
supreme Exeentive of the nation, even though
he hadbeen endowed by nature with the very
highest of organizing faculties was obviously
unfitted by the very nature of his office."
If Mr. Lincoln had survived, it is not to be
doubted, from his habitual deference to the popu
lar will, that although a citizen of a loyal State,
and enjoying4he public confidence in the high
est possible degree, he. Would have felt it to be
his duty to convoke the „Representatives of the
people. to lay 'down his sword in their presence,
and to refer it to their enlightened judgment
and patriotic judgment to decide what WsS to be
done - with the' territories; and people that had
been brought„under the authority of the Go
vernment by' our arms. ',The bloody hand of
treason, unfortunately, hurried him away
in the -very -bour of the nation's triumph.
But if there were reasons which could
have made this duty an imperative one with him,
how powerfully: were they .reinforeed by the
double effect Of the tragedy that not only de
prived the nation of its trusted head,but cast the
reins of government upon a successor. The new
President was himself in the doubtful and deli
cate position of a citizen of one of the revolting
States, which were to be' summoned for judg
ment before the bar of the American people. It
was perhaps but natural that, he should sympa
thize with the communities' from which he had
mainly differed only on prudential reasons, or in
other words, as' to the wisdom of the revolt at
that particular juncture of entre.
If other arguments had not sufficed to con
vince him of the necessity of referring all these
great questions to the only tribunal on earth that
had the power to decide them,' it ought to have
been sufficient that'he owes alike his honors and
his accidental powers to the generous confidence
of the loyal Stateii. He expected, of course,that
they would insist, as they had a right to do, upon
such conditions as would secure to them, if not
indemnity for the past, at least the completest se
curity in the future.
Instead, therefore, of convoking the Congress
of the 'United States to deliberate upon the con
dition of the countrv, he seems to have made up
his mind to undertake that mighty task himself,
to forestall the judgment and the wishes of the
loyal people, and to neutralize the power to undo
his work, by bringing . in the rebel States them
. selves to participate in the deliberations upon
any and all questions which might be left for set
, Gement.
To effect this object, he issues his imperial
proclamations. beginning with that of the 29th
of May, in virtue, as he says, of his double ',au
thority as President of the United States and
Commander-in-Chief of the armies—declaring
the government °Uses° States to have perished;"
creating, under the denomination of provisional
governors, civil offices unknown to the law; ap
pointing to these offices men who were 'notori
ously disqualified, by reason of their participatime
in the rebellion, from holding any office under
this Government, aid yet allowed to hold the
same and exercise the duties thereof, at salaries
fixed by himself, and paid out of the contingent
fund of one of the departments, in clear viola
tion of the acts of July 2d, 1862, and February
9th, 1863. Declaring, moreover, that, the Go
vernment of these States had been destroyed, he
assumes it to be his individual right, as being
himself the State—rather the United States, to
execute the guarantee of the Constitution, by
providing them with new ones, and accordingly
directed' his pretended governors to call conven
tions of such of the people as it was his pleasure
to indicate, to make constitutions for them on
such terms and with such previsions as were
agreeable to himself. Unprovided, however, of
course, in the absence of Congress, with the ne
cessary resources to meet the expenses of these
regulations, he not only directs the payment of
a portion of them out of the contingent fund of
the War Department, but with a boldness un
equaled even by Charles the First, when he, too,
undertook to reign without a Parliament, pro
vides for a deficit by authorizing the seizure of
property and the appropriation of money belong
ing to the Government, and directing his en
deavors to levy taxed for the same purpose from
the subject people.
[The further reading of the report was (Ilse,
pepsed with, excepting the conclusion, which is
as follows . ]:
In accordance with the testimony herewith
submitted, and the view of the law herein pre
• vented, the committee are of opinion that
Andrew Johnson, President of the United States,
Is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors re
quiring the interposition of the constitutional
powers of this House.
In that, upon the final surrender of the rebel
armies and the overthrow of the rebel govern
ment, the said Andrew Johnson, President of the
United States, neglected to convene the Congress
of the United States, that by its act and authority
legal and constitutional measures might have
been adopted for the organization of legal and
eattliotional governments in the eteteo then
Pay , •
that, in his proclamation to'til l ! pee* of
North Carolina on the' 9th of MaY
as
sumed that he had authority to de'clietiVircether
the government of North Carolina and whether
any other government that might he upp
therein was republican in form; and that B i e n' hla
of a,B Frealdent, it was his duty r
and within his
power;toparieMbe to said people. a eptiblicarl
torn - of government contrary to the l e ct , c , - es t eu ..
O
- M which provides that the United
States
guarantee to every State in this Union a re apuab
lieen form of government '
and contrary also to
' deliberate opinion of the Supreme Courewhich
declared that Congress la vested excludyely with
TEE DAILY' !NrP.l, 4 l3Aq. tbiIITIX.-43MADELPItialrabilsDAY; 14 $4,10: i6i
the "Poinir to decide whetlici thb'Oeirftetet eff
state is republican or not. t
helnYhat did hereafter reorganize and treat a
plan of goVernment set up in North Carolina
'under' and .ebnfonnity to his own alike
and discretion as republican in form and entirely
restored to its fanettentras aStatknotwithstand
ing Congress 18 the bran& of die Government in
which, by the ConstiiOn' such power Is ezolw
eively,,vested, and n otwithstanding' Congress ;did
lefuse to recognize Snell government as a legiti
mate government, or AS governinent republican
in form, , • .
In that by a public proclatnation and other
wise, he did, in the year 1865, write, solicit and
convene, in certain other States then secretly in'
rebellion, conventions of peritonea many of Whom"
were knowt; traitors, who had been organized in
an attempt to overthrow , the GovernMent of the .
United States, and urged and , directed such colf='
ventions to frame Constitutione'for, such States.
In that lie thereupon assumed to accept, ratify ,
anti confirm certain. , so-called Constitutions
framed by Such illegal and treatonable assemblies
of persone, which Constitutions were never sub
mitted to the people of the respective States, nor
ratified and confirmed by the United States, thus
usurping, and exercising powers vested by thu
Constitution in the Congress of the United States
exclusively,
In that he pardoned large numbers of public
'and riotous traitors with the design of receiving
from themt aid in such conventions called by hie
advice and direction for the purpose of organiz
ing anti setting tap such illegal governments in
the States then recently in rebellion, prior, to the
annual meeting of Congress, with the intent thus
to constrain Congress to accept, ratify and con
firm.such illegal and unconstitutional, •proceed
ings. ' • -
In that he did within and for the States recently
in rebellion create and establish, as a civil officer,
the office of ,Provisiteral Governor, so called, an
el&'c unknown to the Constitution or laws of
the ' '
In that he appointed to such office, so created
in said States respectively, men who were public
and notorious traitofs, he well knowing, that
they bad been 'engaged in open, persistent and
formidable efforts for the overthrow of the Go
vernment of the United States;and well knowing,
also, that these men could not enter upon the
duties of said office• without committing the
crime of perjury or in violation of the laws of the
country.
In that he directed the Secretary of State to
promise payment of money to said persons so
illegally appointed as salary or compensation for
services to be performed in said office SO illegally
created, contrary to the provisions of, the law of
the United States,' approved February 9, 1863,
entitled art act making appropriation for the
support of the army of the United States for the
year ending - the 20th of June, 1864, and, for a de
deiency of the signal service for the year ending
June 30. 1863. ,
In thfit he directed the Secretary of War to pay
money Weald persons for service performed in
said otlice so illegally created, which moneys
were 80 paid under his direction, without au
thority of law, contrary to law, and in violation
of the Constitution of the United States.
In that ho deliberately ,dispensed with and
suspended the operation of a provision of a law
of the United States, passed on the 2d day of
July, 1862, entitled an act to prescribe an oath
of office, and for other purposes. In that he ap-
Rointed to oflices created by the laws of the
United States, persons who, as was ;well knOwn
to him, had been engaged in the rebellion, who
were guilty of the: crime of treason,
and who could net, with Out commit
ting the crime of perjury, or otherwise
violating criminally the said act of July 2d, 1862,
enter upon the duties thereof. In that, with
out authority of law, and contrary to law, he
used and applied property taken from the
enemy in time of war, for the payment of• the
expenses and the support of the said illegal and
unconstitutional governments so set up in the
said States recently in rebellion, and for a like
purpose, and in violation of the Constitution and
of his oath of office, he authorized and permitted
a levy of taxesnpon the people of, said States,
thus usurping and exercising a power which, by
the Constitution,. is vested exclusively in the Con
gress of the United. States. All of which acts
were a usurpation of power,contrary to the laws
and Constitution of the United States, and in
- violation of hie oath as President of the. United
States. -
In that the said Andrew Johnson, President of
the United States, has, in messages to Congress
and otherwise, publicly denied substantially the
right of Congress to provide for the pacification,
Uovernment and restoration of said States to" the
nion: and, in like manner, lie has asserted : ,his
exclusive right to provide governments therefor,
and to accept and proclaim the restoration of
said - States to the Union. All of which is in
derogation of the rightful authority of ConTsegs,
and calculated to subvert the Government o 'the
United States. • •
In that, in accordance with said d tion,
he has vetoed various bills;pissed by ongress
for the pacification and government of the States
lately in rebellion, and their speedy restoration
to the Union; and upon the ground and for the
reason that the said States had been restored, to
their places in the Union by his aforesaid illegal
and unconstitutional proceedings; thus inter
posing and using a constitutional Tumor of the
office he held so as to prevent the restoration of
the Union upon a constitutional basis.
In that be has exercised the power of remo
vals from and appointment to office for the pur
pose of maintaining effectually his aforesaid
usurpation, and for the purpose of securing the
recognition by Congress of the State govern
men a so illegally and unconstitutionally set up
in the States recently in rebellion. Such remo
vals and appointments having been attended and
followed with great injury to the public service,
and with enermous losses to the public revenue.
In that, in the exercise of the pardoning
power, he issued an order for the• restoration of
]:.3 men belonging to West Virginia, who, upon
the records of the War Department,wcre marked
as deserters from the army in time of war, and
this upon the representation of private and in
terested persons, and without previous investi
gation by any officer of the Ware Department,
and for•the sole purpose of enabling such per
sons to vote in an election then preceding in said
State, and with the expectation that they would
so vote as to support him in his said unconstitu
tional proceedings, he then well knowing that
the men so restored, and by virtue of such resto
ration, would be entitled to q large sum of
money from the Treasnry of the United States.
In that, by his message to- the House of Re
ptesentatives, on the 22d of June, 180, and by
other public and private meant, he had at
tempted to prevent the ratification of an amend
ment to the Constitution of the United States,
proposed to the several States by the two Houses
of Congress, agreeably to the Constitution of
the United States although such proposed
amendments provided among other things
for the validity of the public debt of
the United States, and rendered the
payment of any claim 'for slaves emancipated,
or of any debt incurred in aid of the vkallion
or insurrection against the United Stag Im-
possible, either by the Government of the
nited States, or by any of the States recently 1
in rebellion, he well knowing that the pro
visions inserted under and by his direction in
the said illegal constitutions for said States
were wholly inadequate to protect the
loyal people thereof or the, people of
the loyal ;States against the payment of
claims on account of slaves' emancipated and of
debts incurred by such States in aid of rebellion,
thus rendering it practicable and easy for those
in authority in the aforesaid illegal and uncon
stitutional governments set up to tax and op
press the loyal people of such States for the
benefit of those who, have been engaged in the
attempt to overthrbw the Government, of the
United States.
In that he has made official and other public
declarations and statements calculated and de
signed to impair the credit of the United States;
to encourage persons.rsentatlyAngaged in rebel
lion against its authority; 'to distrust and resist
the organization of the rejml States, so called,
upon a Republican basis, - and calculated and de
signed also to deprive the Congress of the United
States of the confidence of, the people as well
in its patriotism as in its emistitutiondright to
exist, and to act 'as the , department of the
Government, which, under the,. Constitution,
possesses exclusive legislative point, and • all of
this with the intent of rendering Congress inca
pable of resisting either his said Usurpation of
power or providing and enforcing measures ne
cessary for the pacification and restoration of the
Union, and that in all this he has exercised the
veto power, tho power of removal and appoint
ment, the ardoning power and other ,00nstittt
tional powers of his office, fpr the purpose of deb laying, hindering, - obstructing and preritsithlit
the restoration of the. Union by constitution*
means, and ,fonthelmrpose of alienating from
the government and laws' of :the, Vatted ,t3tstes
• those Timone whabad been. engaged in: thitA.ro
hellion, and who, without aid, comfort and en
' eeeragement thtus,hyldniptiveu to ,theory ; Would
have resumed ingoodfaitirtheir alle'nee WOW
Constitution And atkigith thedEpect tOn (Wean.
$
dilating them Whit:mit personally, at he might:
AO • n. Itirevett • s restorationof the'
A * l•
, onion - non lairetpassed 'by Con
as.
Anit•thrther,,that the said Andrew Johniieni
President of, the United States, transferred and
surrendered, , and authorized and directed the
transfer and , attrrendeit of inilway property of the
value of many millions of dollarskto persons who
hadiseen,engsged in the rebelliotr, es tO corpora
tions,''bitined wholiV,'or in part , by such persons,
he well knowing• that in some instances the rail
ways had been con4tructed,by the United States,
and that in others that fat&•railWays or railway
property had been captured from the enemy in
war, and afterwards repaired op great cost by the
.United„ States, such transfera')and surrenders
being made without authority of law, and in vio
lation of law.
In that he directed and autherized the sale of
large quantities of "railway rolling stock and
other railway property of the value of many
millions. of dollars, the property of the United
&Acts by purchase and const tion, to corpo
rations and parties then kno to him to henna
ble to:pay their debts then' Lured and due, and
this without exacting fro aid corporations and
parties any securities whatever.
In that he directed and ordered subordinate
-officers of the Government to postpone and delay
the collection of moneys due and payable to the
United States on account of,such"sales, in appa
rent conformity to an order previously , made by
him, that the interest upon certain bonds issued
or guaranteed by the State of( Tennessee in aid
of certain railways then due and us aid for a
period of four years and more should be first.
paid oat of the earnings of the - roads in whose
behalf' said bonds Were so issued or guaran
teed. In that, in conformity to• such order and
direction, the collection 'of • moneys payable and
then due to the United • States was , delayed and
postponed, ,and the interest on tench bonds, of
which be himself was, a large•holder, was paid ac
cording to, ttmtertno of his, own order, thus cor
ruptly using hie , offiee US defraud and wrong the
people of the United States for, hiii , own personal
advantage. In that he has not only returned
to claimants thereof larger *Mounts of cotton
and other abandoned property that
had been seized and taken by the agents
of the Treasury in conformity , to law,
tint has paid and directed the payment of the
actual proceeds of sales made theseof, and this in
violation of a law of the United States which
orders and requires the payment into the trea
snry of the United States 01 all moneys received
from such sales, and provides for loyal claimants
a sufilcient and easy remedy in the Court of
Claims,and in manifest violation also of the spirit
and meaning of the Constitution, wherein it is
declared that no money shall be drawn from the
treasury but in consequence of appropria
tions made by law; and further, in that the
said Andrew Johnson, President of the United
States, authorized the use of the army of the
United States for the dispersion of a peaceful
and lawful assembly of citizens of Louisiana,
and this by virtue of a despatch addressed to a
person who was not an officer of the army. but
who was a public and notorious traitor, and all
with the intent to deprive the loyal citizens of
Louisiana of' every opportunity to frame a State
Government, Republican in form, and with
the intent further to continue in places
of trust and, emolument, persons who had
been engaged in an attempt to over
throw the Government of the United States, ex
pecting thus to conciliate such persons to him
self, and secure their aid in support of his afore
said unconstitutional designs. , All of which
omissions of duty, usurpations of power, viola
tions of his oath of office, of the laws and of
the Constitution of the United States by the said
Andrew Johnson, President of the United States,
have retarded the public prosperity, lessened the
public revenues, disordered the business and
finances of the country, encouraged insubordina
tion in the people of the States recently in rebel
lion, fostered sentiments of hostility between dif
ferent classes of citizens, revived and kept alive
the spirit of the rebellion, humiliated the nation,
dishonored republican institutions, obstructed
the restoration of said States to the Union, and
delayed and postponed the peaceful and frater
nal reorganEzation of the Government of the
United States. The committee therefore report
the accompanying resolution and recommend
its passage. Signed,Georgegßoutwell, Francis
Thomas, Thomas Williams,.William Lawrence
and John C r Churchill.
Resolution providing for, the impeachment of the
President of ,the United States.
Resolved, That Andrei Jolinso tresident—o
the United States, be impeached for high crimes
and misdemeanors.
The Minority Report.
VIEWS OF MESSRS. WILSON. AND . WOODBRIDGE.
Representatives James V. Wilson and Freder
ick E. Woodbridge handed in a report dissenting
from the conclusions arrived at by a majority of
the committee. They say:
That on the third day of June, 1.867, it was de
clared, by a solemn vote in the committee, that
from the testimony then before them it did not
appear that the President of the 'United States
was guilty of such high crimes and misdemean
ors as called for an exercise of the impeachment
power of this House. The vote stood, yeas 5,
nays 4.
On the 21st inst., this action of the Committee.
was reversed, and a vote of 5 to 4 declared in
favor of recommending to the House an im
peachment of the President. Forty-eight hours
have not yet elapsed since we were informed of
the chcracter of the report which represents this
changed attitude of the Committee. The recent
ness of this event compels a general treatment
of some features of the case as it is presented by
the majority, which otherwise would have
been treated of more in detail. The report
of the majority resolves all presumptions
against the President, closes the dcor against
all doubts, affirms facts as established by the tes
timony, in support of which there is not a parti
cle of evidence tiefore us which would be received
by any court in the land. We dissent from all of
this, and from the temper and spirit of the re
port. The coot and unbiassed judgment of the
future,when the excitement in the midst of which
we live shall have passed away will not fail to
discover that the political bitterness of the pre
sent time has in no inconsiderable degree given
tote to the document which we decline to ap
prove: • _
Dissenting as we do from the report of the
committee, both as to the law of the ease, and
by the conclusions drawn from the facts de
veloped by the testimony, a due regard for the
body which imposed, on us the high and trans
cendently important duty involved in an' inves•
tigation of the charges preferred against the Pre
sident, impels us'to present at length our views
of the subject which 'has been committed to ps
by a most solemn vote of the House of Repre
sentatives. In approaching this duty we
feel that the apish of the partisan should be
aid aside, and' that the instincts of the
Republic,as they are measured by its Constitution
and laws, alone should guide us; and we most
deeply regret that in this regard we cannot ap
prove the report'of our colleagues who constitute
a majority of the committee. While we would
not charge them with a design to net the part of
partisans in this grave proceeding, we neverthe
less feel pained by the tone, temp rand spirit of
it ) l
their report. But regrets will n t answer - the
demands of the present grave an commanding
occasion, and 'we therefore respo to them by
presenting to tho House the resul of a careful,
dtliberate, und, as we hope, a e nselentious in
vestigation of the ease before us
Messrs. Wilson and Wood ridge then pro
ceeded to discuss the constitutional lilleatlOD
with regard to impeachment, showing, by refer
ence to legal authorities, that an impeachment
cannot be supported by any act which falls short
of an indictable crime or misdemeanor.
English precedents are referred to at leigtits
and copious extracts are made from the testi
mony before the committee, in order to refute
the reasoning and conclusion of the majority.
They conclude as follows :
A great deal of the matter contained in the
volume of testimony reported to the House is, of
no value whatever. Much of it is of mere hear
say, opinions of witnesses, and no little amount
of it utterly irrelevant to the case. Comparatively
a small amount of it could bonged on a trial'of this
case before the Senate. All of the testimony, re
lating to the failure to try, and admission to bail
of Jefferson Davis, the assassination of President
Lincoln, the diary of J. Wilkes Booth, his place
of burial, the practice.of vardon brokerage, the
alleged correspondence of' the President with Jef
ferson Davis, may be interestlag to a reader, but
is not of the slightent importance so far as a de
termination of this case is concerned. Still; Muck
of this irrelevant matter has been interwovertinto
the report of the', majority, and has served to
heighten its color and deepen its tone: • , •
Strike out the stage effect 'ef this irrelevent
matter, and the prominence given to the Tudors,
t the. Stuarts and Michael Burns, and much:of the
play will disappear, settle- down upon thu real ,
evidence in the ease, that which will establishin
i view of the attending circumstances a , aulffitan•; l
eel Crime, by making plain the elentellte.irlOt
cOPB4lllte it, and the - ease - in. many res ee4,
dwarfs into a political contest. Iu ;approae , tig
11•Ottrileelen we do , not .' all 'to regpx.n4oi ke
7: B o 4 abothts from which the ease , can - De viewea:
—the legal and the political. •' -1 , :, ,•, s
.„-the latier,,the'4c 4 iil 434 suer''
cos. :The Presidefithas disappointed the Wipes
and expectations of those who placed him'
power. Befitus destroyed, their fidence end
Joined hands with their enemies. Re has proved
false to the , express andimplied•conditlons which
underlie his elevation to power, and in view of
the case deserves the eensure.and condemnation
of every well-disposed citizen of the ?Republic.
pronounce cquit him of impeachab cmes, we
him guilty of many w r on g s. His,
contest with Congress has delayed reconstruc
tion and inflicted vast injury upon the people of
the rebel Sates. He has been blind to the neces
sities. of the t times, and to the demands of a pro
gressive civilization.
Judging him polltically,we must condemn him,
but the day of political Impeachments 'would be
a sad one for this country. Politica) unfitness
and incapacity must be fixed at the ballot box.
not 'ln the high court of Impeachment. We ,
therefore declare that the case before us,presented
by the testimony and measured by the law, does
not'declare such crimes and misdemeanors within
the meaning of the constitution as requires the
interposition of the constitutional powers of this
House, and recommend the adoption of the fol
lowing resolution: .
Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary
be discharged from the further consideration of
the proposed impeachment of the President
of the United States, and that the subject be laid
upon the table.
JAMES F. WILSON,
FREDERICK E. WOODBRIDGE.
VIRITS OF :MESSRS. MARSHALL AND xr.munGre.
Messrs. Marshall and Eldridge, while concur
ring in the conclusions of their associates in the
minority that nothing in the testimony before the
Committee presents a case for impeachment, do
not agree in their censure of the President's po
litical course.
They say that in his constitutional and legisla
tive sphere, in the exercise and conduct of his
department, the President is as free to act and as
independent as the Congress. While acting
within the bounds prescribed for it by the Con
stitution, he is no more accountable or responsi
ble to Congress than Congress Is to him. Con
gress has no more authority to censure and
condemn him than he has to censure and condemn
Congress.
They declare that the proofs before them will
not warrant a charge that the President was In
any Instance controlled by other than pure awl
patriotic motives. His greatest offence they
apprehend will be found to be that ho has not
been able or willing to follow those who elected
him to his office intheir mad assaults upon and
departure from the constitutional government of
the lathers of the Republic; and that, standing
where most of his party professed to stand when
they elevated him to his present exalted posi
tion, he has dared to differ with the majority
of Congress upon great and vital ques
tions. Acts for which Mr. Lincoln was unani
mously applauded are deemed high crimes in
Mr. Johnson. For every act so gravely con
demned the President had the sanction and ap
proval of his Cabinet; and yet, while he is ar
raigned before the world as a criminal of the
deepest dye, they are not only not impeached,
but are recognized as especial favorites of the
party for impeachment. The latter have even
gone so far as to unite in the passage of an ex
traordinary and unprecedented law to prevent
the President from removing these officers from
the places which they hold.
SYEOULIL ZIOTICEM.
se... GARTLAND HALL. No. 35 SOUTH SEVEN
teenth street, will be lit up for public inspection
every evening this week. n 09.5.30
TITE ANNUAL 'MEETING TIME STOCK.
•"*" holders of the Drnke Petroleum Company will be
held at their oftiee, No. 142 South Sixth trect, PhlinAlel
plita, on MONDAY, December 2d, 16tt7, at 12 o'clock,
noon.
n02.5.61* W. D. COMEGYS, Sec. and Trent.
THE ANNUAL MEETLNG OF TUE tivrocK
116rholders of the Elwell Farm 00 Company will be
beld on MONDAY. December 2d, 1867. at 11 o'clock, at
room No. 3, National Bank of Republic building, 809
Chestnut aired. SAMUEL P. FERREE
n023-tit. Secretary.
r KENSINGTON NATIONAL BANK.
PUILAIW.LPIIIA. Nov. R 3, ISM
The Stockholders are hereby notified that this Bank
trill pay the Three Mills Tax. now due, assessed by
the State upon the individual shares.
non dt§ WM. MoCONNELL, Cashier.
no-Nor. NATIONAL BANK OF GERSIANTOWN. PHI.
LADELYBIA. GTIZASITOWN. Nov. Bth 1867.
The Stockholders of this Bank are heroby notified that
the Bank will assume and pay the State Tax arsexied on
their shares. and now payable at the office of the Re.
elver of Taxes. CHAS. W. 0T1 . 9,
nell6ll- Cashier.
, NATIONAL BANK OF • Tian ,REPUBLIC.—
Pn I. AI) F;T:PiI lA, November ?A 1817.
The Stockholders of this Bank aro hereby notified that
the Bank will *game and pay the State tax of Three
asseceed on their Phnrot, and now payable atthe
°nice of the Receiver of Tasee`of thla city.
-JOS.- P. idnIFORP,,
C.lnekter.
ANION PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY.
••EASTERN D1V1510 . 21.. OFFICE AU WALNUT
BRTEET, 12, 1807. -
1 ho Interest in Gold on the First Mortgage Bonds of the
1:111011 Pacific Railway Company, Eastern Division. due
December 1.18d7 gill be paid, on presentation of the
Coupons at the Banking House of
DABNEY, MOEGAN ck. CO., •
63 Exchange Place, New York,
On and after that date.
noMd,th•e,tu,9t
DIVIDEND NogrwEs.
ger PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY,
TP.EASURER'S DEPARTMENT,
p!!r t m,r:l t illiA,Nov. 2, RAIL
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.
The Board of Directors have this day declared a semi
annual Dividend of Three Per Cent on the capitl stock of
the Company, clear of National and State taxes, payable
on and after November 30, libl. Blank powers of attor.
ney for collecting dividends can be had at the office of
the Company, Mt South Third street.
Personstolding Scrip Certificates can have them cashed
on presentation at this office.
n04.30H. THOS. T. FIRTH. Tremnror.
AIIIIIJSEIFIA3NT3.
A MERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.
XI. T. B. PUGH. .. , ...
T —.Lesaee and Manager.
THE EVENT OF HE SEASON. •
A LIMITED ENGAGEMENT.
MONDAY EVENING. December 2,
And every evening until further notice,
lOW. F. W. LANDER,
(Formerly ifiea Jean M. Davenport,) .
In her great Classic and Historic role of
ELIZABETH,
QUEEN OF ENGLAND,
In an English translation and adaptation of Giacometti's
celebrated Tragedy of that name. rendertid so famous by
Madame llistori in Italian.
MRS. LANDER AS ELIZABETH. •
ME. J. H. TAYLOR AS ESSEX.
Supported by
' TEIE LANDER HISTRIONIC COMPANY,
And as presented for
OVER ONE HUNDRED CONSECUTIVE NIGHTS,
Before crowded, fashionable and critical audiences In the
principal cities throughout the country
POPULAR SCALE OF PRICES.
Parquet, Parquet Circle and Balcony, 151. No extra
charge for reserved seats. Family Circle. 50 cents, Am
phitheatre, cents. Proscenium Boxes. $lO.
The sale of Reserved Seats Will commence on FRIDAY
MORNING, November•lA at 9 o'clock, at Trumpler's
Music Store, No. PH Chestnut street.
NOTICE.—To afford all an equal chance, the manage.
meet begs to announce that under no circumstances will
any orders be received for seats in advance of the date
named for the gale to commence. It§
ACADEMY O
AS F T
WEEK MUSIC.
L
OF THE CELEBRA
RICHINGS OPERA COMPANY.
Directress. . Aliso CAROLINE RICHINGS
THIS ance . day) EVENING. November N.
LAST 11 ME, POSITIVELY.
Of Ef nediet'n Romantic 0 sra
MIA _OF RNEY.
Observe the cant:
Eily O'Connor ...............................Mise Melange
Ann Chute............ ........ . E. Seguin
hire. Cronin ' Mre. J. A. Arnold
liardrcee ....... (hustle
Danny Mann. Mr. S. C. Campbell
Myles na Conoaleen... ......... Pierre Bernard
Father em........ ......... . ......... Mr. H. C. Penises
0 , 31 acre Mr. D. B. Wylie
Mr. Corrigan Mr. J. A. Arnold
TthMORROW EVENING I WEDNESDAY).
BENEFIT OF
MR. E. SEGUIN,
First time this season of Belle's
ROSE OF CASTILE.
-11ITALNUT STREET THEATRE, CORNER OF
ivy NDITH and WALNUT streets. Begins at 7X.
Second Night of the distinguished Comedian,
MR. JOHN BROUGHAM
THIS (Tuesday) EVENING. November 2f.
Second night of Brougham's Now Local Drama,
THE LOTTERY OF LIFE. •
Terry, the Swell Mr. JOHN BROUGHAM
GRAND PERFORMANCE ON THANKSGIVING
AFTERNOON,
When, will be presented the domestic Drains,' full of
startling incidents and ()Recta, entitled
• • WAITING FOR THE VERDICT.
Admission, tO cents. Children, half price.
Doors open at 1. tommence at quarter to S o'clock.
MRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE.
' Begins 34 pad 7.
UNDIMINISHED SUCCESS.
FOURTH WEEK OF .
A.i.READY WITNESSED BY OVER
8000 DURI N G THE AND DU E RING ON THE WEEK,
Olive Logan's American Comedy,lu •
DREW and
•-
ivhleh Mrs. JOHN DREW d the entire .Company
appear.
SEA BATHING EVERY NIGHT..
FRIDAY—BENEFIT OF MRS JOHN DREW.
SURF MAI INEE THANKSGIVING DAN: , •' ' • -
SURF AGAIN Tit ANICKIIVING ".•
Scale secured e 1 dap; in advance. . . !...
VOX'S AIIERIGAN_ VARIETY ..TILEAT*
Jr EVERY E . A . ?auliG
SATURDAY .411311140 ON,
GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE.
In Grand Ballots, Ethiopian bulooquaa. Bona. Doneek
Gymnaat Acta rantornhnos. duo , v,
HAsouoitv MONDAY !ArTERIS 0 %lON ,% pas.
at Concert Mall, every Itlond ay, from 516. tills o'clock.
Single odutiettM4lo cents. ,Ptiokatte,foutl:Ltkota• Rl °O•
"Coupon" of thirty Tickets, $5 W. ,p 0254. 4
INSTITUTICO YOR Tlir,Biop,,Tsv,
J. Race strepta.—tabibltioa every VMDA
P. tll. Adunaaion,lo cents.
- '—
UPPIVERT , PIALLe 4
GRAND COMPPIENTAitt Conlot
NES.
Tueeday Event/no, December 3,1807.. c
, EICIUMPF will be Imitated by the following dia..
tin u e
artiste:
a ( .. 11 Mlle LOUISE 8:1.11/AY. •
'The celebrated Soprano of t. StePhon'a Choir.
Mr. THEODORE HABELMA . Tenor.
Mr. AA.RON R. TAYLOR, Basso.
Mr. CARL GAERTNER, the eminent Violinist. ,1
Mr. HENRY G. THUNDER, Pianist.
TICKETS. ... . .ONE DOLLAR.
lita49 bo .......... Chestnut street
Mr. Ches. . 'frumpier, 9M Chestnut street, and Mr.
WM. H. Boner. 1102 Chestnut street.
Doors open at 714 o'clock. Concert to commence at 8
precisely. •
PROGRAMME.
rent. I.
1. Duo-Concortanto-Plano and Violin-on
"Norma 1 ' . . Benedict
MeloUif. 4. 9 I.I(II 9 IDKIViid,
2. Solo--" The Ezile,".., . ..
Mr. AARON R. TAYLOR..
3. Solo-" Robert toi quoPstime,P . -Moyerbeer
Mrs. JOSEPLUNR
9. Violin Concerto ..................... ..... De Boriot
• op. 94.
Mr. C f ARL GAERTNER.
5. Solo-" The Three Wanders e," (new).. . ... ...„..Abt
Mr. THEODORE HABELMANIC
6. Valse-"L , Rst „. . . . • ......Ardltl
Miss LOU.OIBI3OLLIDAY.
7. Trio-"Guai so ti Sfuggi 9, - . ri o ni z etti
Mrs. SCHIMPF and ilessro. 1LA.131,1 *- 1.11 . 4.,1 9 1N and
TAYLOR.
TA JILT if.
1. Romance-"Dg r unmf t ezrargie t t... . . .. .Gaertner
2. Solo-The Celebrated "Porter tf0ng.,...........P10t0w
Mr. AARON R. TAYLOR.
3. Balled -"Sly 1;666 It Heartfelt" ..... ....Maschek
LOUiSE
4. Duo-"La ci derein , Mozart
Mrs. SCIIIIIPE and bir. TAYLOR.
Sete-In Terra Solo.
Mr. THEODORE LIABELMANN.
6. Quartette-"Rigoletto."
NN iii .
... -Verdi
Mies SOILIDAYMMrs di
TAtAi;m& Messrs. HABEL.
no23.tde3ine
IJEW CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE.
. 1 . 4 Regina at 1.41. Deere open at 7.
BIXTE AND LAST WEEK
•
Of the eucceeaful engagement of
MRS. D. P. DOWERS.
And Second Night Ameriea of
_OHARLES READE'B
EXQUISITE AhM BEAUTIFUL DOMESTIC DRAMA,
Founded on AItFItED TENNYSON'S loyal,' Poem dd.
DORA.
Produced with New Scenery by R S. Smith.
TUESDAY EVENING, November 26,
A NIGHT WITH TENNYSON AND RENDE.
The performance will ceintutnee with the do:acetic
Drama, in three acts, entitled
Dora Mr. D. P. BOWERS
To conclude with he new Far ce
GIVE aI MI.‘4IIFE.
THURSDAY AFTERNOON,
THANKSGIVING 3IATINEE.
MRS. D.l'. BOWERS
will appear the only day performance of Boucicatil f'd
new Pay,
HUNTED DOWN. •
The Stock Company will appear in the Local Squib,
DOWN AT C.. 1 1. T. MAY.
DE. LEOPOLD Id EIONEN'S
BENEFIT CONCERT
AT CONCERT HALL.
(which has been generouely offered by Messrs. Beatty 4;
Luttnian for tide occasion.)
On WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. Nov. 1ith,1567,
At hulf.past three o'clock,
'when the fallowing artiute, having kindly volunteered
nth valuable valuable services, willnoiPt •
A. R. TAYLOR, JEAN LOUIS, CU. B. JARVIS,
11. 0. THUNDER, A. D. SA RTORI,
A. SARTORI. Jr., and
CARL BENTZ'S GRAND ORCHESTRA.
Tic For
e eale at the Mush) Sterne. ne22 tt
HORTICULTURAL HALL.
NO PERFORMANCE
On THANKSGIVING DAY. Nor. 26th„
BY CARL SE Z'S ORCHESTRA.
THE NINTH ORCHESTRA MATINEE
will take plats on THURSDAY, Dor. 6th. a: 3,4 P. L.
when Mr. C. 11. JARVIS
will piny MENDELsBOUN , S SECOND CONCERTO for
Piano. with Orchestra accompaniment.
l'itckage of Four Tickets for One Dollar.
WM J. PALMER,
Treantrer._
BD UNYA N TABLEAUX.
NATIONAL BALL, Market street, above Twelfth.
Scenes 30 feet in width. The finest and largest
MOVING MIRROR IN THE WORLD,
Illustrating lionyan's Progreso.
Open every night at 7.46 o'clock. and Wednesday.
• Thursday and Saturday at ternoons at R.
Admission. 86 cents. Fire tickets Inc $1 60. Reserved
Seats, LO cents. Children. 55 route. •
no2o-6t5 ROBEIC/' J. GREENWOOD, Proprietor.
y- .~~~ ~.
1,1
~'i
p HILADELPHIA C/R,CUS.
Corner TENTH and CALLOWHILL streets.
NOW OPEN FOR THE WINTER SEASON.
UNDER A NEW MANAG VENT.
This building has been entirely
RENOVATED. ALTERED AND IMPROVED. WITH
NEW MODES OF INGRESS AND EGRESS.
BOTH ON TMITET. 'STREET AND ON
CALLOWIIILL STREET.
A SPLENDID STUD OF HIGHLY TRAINED
HORSES. >'"
THE COMPANY ITNEICUPLT r. D IN UNITED
STATES.
PRICES OF ADMISSION.
Drees ..... ........ ....... cents.
Children under 12 years of 25 cents.
Family Circle feutranco on (:allowbill 5treet).....25 cents.
Doors open at 7 o'clock. Performance commences at a
quarter of 8 o'clock. Matinees commence at half-mud 2
o'clock. Doors open one hour previous. 0c341n4
NEW PHILADELPHIA OPERA HOUSE,
SEVENTH Street. below ARCM.
L. V. TUNISON- A: CO . :Proprietors
TUNISON
TUNISOI CO.'S MINSTRELS.
MONDAY AND EVERY EVENING DURING THE
ALSO, THURSDAY AFTE - ESOON AT HALF.PAST
TWO,
Thursday Afternoon at half.part Two.
THE PROGRESS UFA :4ATION;
M ACA LISTER OUTDONE,.
GUIDE TO THE STAGE.
YOUNG BOWEN IN FEMALE COSTIThIE.
Young Bowen in Found° Costume.
COTTON DANCE. COTTON DANCE.
• THE PERSECUTED DUTCHMAN.
Doom open at 7 o'clock. Counneuee at a.
Admtrston.2a 60 and 76 mat. 80x...v..86.
n 026 SAM. 8. SANFORD, Mein:lean Manager.
NEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA Lic'DßE,__
bLEVENTII street, above CHESTNUT.
THE FAMILY RESORT.
CARNCROSS & DIXEY'S MINSTRELS.
TIIE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD.
l'Aux I—GRAND DRAWING•ROOM CONCERT.
PART 2—VARIETIES.
TWO .1011NSONS. • '
STAGESTIWOR HEROES.
Concluding with the new Ametican-GermanDperatio-
Illieumatic•Sensationol•lesshionasle-Burluque on .
SURF; Olt, GENERALCGRANT AT CAPE MAY.
SSEMBLY BUILDING. LAST SEASON.
SIGNOR BLITZ.
EVENINGS at 7X; WEDNESDAY and' SATURDAY
AFTERNOONS at 3 o'clock.
Another Wonder, the Great Double-headed
SPHINX I SPHINX I SPHINX!
As performed by tam only. Feats , in Martin, Funny
Scenes in Ventriloquism, Marvelous Birds. and the Min
strels. Admission, 25 cents. Children; 15 cents. Reserved
Beats, 50 cents. nrolt•U
CIERMANIA ORCHESTRA.—PUBLID REHEAR/lA.III
Vf at the MUSICAL FUND HALL every SATURDAY at
Il}if A.M. Tickets sold at the Door and at all principal
Music Stores. Enron/rats can be made b_,7 ad
G. BASTERT,AW Monterey • street, or at R. WITT/G1
Musk Store. 1021 C estnut street. • • • MA
AMERICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUEIIO.--TRE
Regular Winter Term will begin January oth,
Pupils Beason Tickets for the Matineee are now reaSsi
and will be delivered on receipt of, tuition. Circulars at
the Office, 8. E. cor, Tenth and Walnut: nole,tu.th.l4Bo
pHNNBYLVANIA. ACADEMY OF FINE
CHESTNUT. aboseaTEL
Open from 9A. BL to 6 P. ht. _
Benjamin West's great Picture°, CHRIST EJEOTED
still on exhibition. lehtf
COAL AND WOOD.
LEWIS CONRAD,
COAL DEALER,
5. Ur CORNER NINTH ANDIMITER. -
ALL TIIE PAVOIMP COALS CONSTANTLY ON
HAND AND CAREVLS4Ly PREPARED. •
nol4th o ttdm
SPLENDID STOVE COAL.. ... ..... : ...........$0 00
LARGPANUT 0 00
SUPERIOR . 70
n013.2m E. D. ASELTEIIi, ...... MARKET S TitLL~ T.
FREON. ill CELEBRATED CENTRALIA, ,
RONEY BirK riEu Ia AND
:LI3 FIVILT.4. B WALES ;
WEIGHT AND Alla t i t iiii MID.
OKI_
• noll.ihrio , , MO MARKE T a3TBEET. , ,
B. PENROSE & CO., DEALERS IN OIIAL , 1411
E. CallowidU street, above Broad,PiffiadelPlda- ~,
Lehigh said BebuylkUl Coal, oral sites, proposed es.
rowdy for Family Use. „,.
oar Orders received at 1431 Nor th EIIDITH Btreetot
through the Bostoilice. rioalr4
swan .
INVITRfIQNED O ATTEIMO JOHN F M
theiratock or •
Mountain. Lehigh arid Locust Ile..
wfloV. with the pre p_ are uon given bine. we mart CSUMw
be excelled'', any other CoaL
/ 56 °411 1 X
t.
Otiloo, Franklin Institute )3,lllliyal t lini
Area, &
1%1043 irtriklirminu*
- rxwo , rx , w'
, A DYE/IT:IS/NG AMEX ,
' thEr ir an d•u6ern li
of en"
lined . advert meet
et
t th loweet
-
the whole eouutt le e e-
Where. rauosui
T tt
TO • irt4.oo,lciszior*eji
,
. 1 14 '5l-ebteiti no 2
" MOPP 4.1m4
Parties And • vita
do - FOE' a&LX-ELEGIIIIT ' NEW REAUDENCIN ,
NI NO4NANiN I MAM FirEElitT. 414 MODERN ..
4 ,
. O .PROVEMEN E.G.... .NEIROENCEi rs Ia
r ' ` l ttAtiE ', fiTNEET. ~. "Win , 0 , /1 . 4 "
KNOT. FORTY FEET FEONT, AND EMEND
WITH ALT. THE MODERN DEP VENENTS.,
. WILL' BE , gfpFx ,ON ACOOMMO ATSNG: TEE=
1., , . .. v..- • 241A.CT.E." BROTHER* tIO..
n02.4m NO. MO BOUTd STREET. •
WE SWEEET..-40,1t , SALE-AN N ELEGANT
`firown.stona Residence, SO feet front, with Mansard
roof, and Lot E 75 feet deep, situate on Arch atreet.
west of Eighteenth street, and .extending thtoh to
.cintiTY Itress: was SP ated Old 'Wished throughoun the
v e r y begtananner, of the boil materials, expregsly fo r the
occupancy of the present owner; has large back.uild
ings (Ivory convenience and improvement , and I A i n
perfect ordnr, J. M., 01.3414.F.X . es,,i4ONtig ill*,Walnut.
TOR SAJA-211111T-CLASJ4 DWEMA344II4 --
980 Frail 119 itrcet, Immtlditte poScpecion,
818 Ne!th Seventh st. • -••
422 5.,. rittonth etrikt. ,
2810 Lomhird effect •• u
?fie North Elevpnth street " 1
litOrlt and Dweatup,7os South Second stieet.
1218 04den street. Paciemion coon.
Apply to COPPUCIL4ts JORDAN, 488 Wahntt !treed.
FOlt SALE—.A GOOD I'ROPEItTY.NEARSTE AM
es Gars.—Stone lloueo.lo rooms. largo par
ka j:r d . ' and modern convenience". t Lot 4a by 475
I* rt. blind c, grayer. peace, and garden. very desirable for
buvinern or retired citizen. Immo dlato posecasion.
Apply to , CONRAD.
n0.2542t , 4775 Main street, Germantown.
fitA.U. STUMM—FOR SAIa.TEIE HAND.
come jonretory brick. reaidenco. with three.tory
dontle back buftelnee, - eltriate Mo. ISM Arch atree
Mali every mown convenience and ferment, and Ls
w
In het order. Lot 20 feet front by I eat deep Ina..
relate poeseacion Oven. J. M. GUM 'Y. & 130N13,60it
Irl i FOR SALE—AN ' CANT irfIMIITORY
FOR'
Reektened built and tjtdithed throughout kg
• the very beet manner, by the preeeht owner. Am
preeely for ,h Le own ocoupentri. turntehed with.extra eon.
yeulences—tiret floor panted in freeco—and',
order, attuate^ on Whet Loma etreek_near Et. I=
Church. J. M. GUMMEY At SONS. Egil Wll.lllUt Iltrein.
FACTORY FOR BALE OR ttENT.—A LAWN
three.story brick Factory Building. having fronts on
three streets. Is built in the most erubstannal man.
ner,nearly new and in perfect order. Lot Ili feet front by
114 feet deep. Immediate possession given, Nor further
pariMitlars apply to J. bf. GU/ABBY do BON 8.404 want
street • .
TO KENT•
Very Desirable Upper. Rooms,
No. 708 Chestnut Street.
m 22.60
TO LET,
Second Story S. E. tor. Seventh and Chestnut,
AND
Store 612 Chestnut street.
EDWARD P. KELLY it
ocZI ' R. E. Chedtriut and kieventrir
FOR RENT, FURNISHED lAt UNFURNISHED.
—The fourstery brick Residence, with' three.etory
doable back buildings, situate en the northwest
corner of Twentieth and Arch streets; has parlor, dining.
room, kitchen, out kitchen. library, 8 chambers. 9 Nab..
rooms, 2 water (Awns. Cre., dge. J. 11. (WILKEY & SONS.
508 Walnut etreet.
itTO IiENT. A TILREEIVIOJIY DWELLING.
No. Zia Mount N'ernon ttrect, willl an modem im
provement& Immediate Poongimion. Aitt the throe-
story Dwelling, t 3. E. corner of Broad sud.Columbta ave.
pile. all rnoderu Improvonents. Immediateewegion.
Apply to CON'UCK t JORDAN. 4.T..$ Walnut trees.
GIitMANTOWN VP.OPERTY TO LET.—A DE
Firnbier lteridenen With rood Stabling. altuato near
Mill Street Station. Apply at lit South Second
exert. nada to tit 8t•
riTO LET, .1 A NIYARY IST, A FIRST CLASS
hou et . North Thirteenth atrivt. Rent t. lc_ott in
board. Address 11. Genital Buildlnp. 21A 1 Widnut
move t. ottllt,
_. .. _
ft, YOE RENT'-4P.0.11. DEOEMBESIST,A LAEG
.. new bblre, on Delaware venire bekovo , Chet at mt.
Apply to
nee tf JOB: HOSIER &Oa,
-
109 South Delaware avenue
LEGAL. riOIaCEM.
THE DR3TRICT COUR r ,FOR THE CITY AND
.Itountyoi Ph Iladelphin.—LSKCE6 MAW.. EDWARD
IIAUL and HENRY MAUL., empartners 81104
TILER CO.. JOUN VT.. CULLEN and JOHN
CeNIEL, vend. ex. September Term, left. -No-IL—The
Auditor appointed to distribute the fund tatiring from the
rale by the Sheriff, under the above writ of the follow.
ing dertribed reale/tato. to wit: All that lot or piece of
growndwith the Wooster, brick building thereon
erected; situate in the First Ward of th e city Philadels
vide, beunixig et the Intersection of Tenth street with
the Payout:dr mid. thence extending eouthwisterudly
alms the eastmly aide of resefluthfcled one hilnentd end
eleven feet and one-balf of en inch. thence southeast
wardly on a line et light armies aril it the raid Yamyonk
read about thirty• Ave feet to anoint thence wet on aline-
at right angbm with said Tenth street about thirty-Ave
feet to raid Tenth street. and thence north aler4f , isaid
Tenth street one hundred '
and ten feet three Inchon the
place a beginning. Which said lot of ground GEO WM
W. NORRIS and wife, by indenture dated the IMb day of
June, A. D. IMO. recorded In deed book L. H. IL. Se. Virt.
pile 1,, 4c., granted and conveyed to the oddW
J. .
'ULLEN end J. trNIFJ., In fee. reeervingothereort the
Seat IT ground rent of two hundred and forty-10w dollars
and rerenty•Ave cents, in half yearly payments. on the
Arrt day or the the inonU t r of a J t ip t twirl and' &air, Cecil t
. gelget IS.l.leegmtger th e
c ie at gar A.
his office. No. VZ Walnut wee:, in the MO of Philadel-
Nrlivri and where all pardes interested are required
to prevent their claims or be debatred 13 front corning In
upon raid fund. JOL LY B. TUAYRIL
nol6-100 Auditor.
IN THE DIST/IRn' t;oiarr OF TIIE STATES
1 FOIL 'TOE EASTERN 'DISTRICT OF."PENN.BI - 1 ,
In the matter of GEORGE 0. ALLEN, of Philadelphia,
in the county of Philadelphia, in WO said Diotrict.
.Bankrupt.
'1 he said bankrupt having, under the Act of Cons - ream
of Id Match. 1867, filed his petition for a discharge front
all hl debts provable under the raid Act, and for a certifi
cate thereof, alleging that no asfeta have come to the
hands of the assignee. it fs ordered that fi tnee'lng of
creditor' be held on the 27th day of November, t 837 at
12 o'clock 11.. before the &voter, WILLIAIf
MICIMPL, Esquire, at his office.. at No. .6k) Walnut
street. Philadelphia (to be continued by adlottnimente.
if necessary), when and wtere the trgataination of said •—.. , •‘ ) s
banknipt will be finished; and any bash:mat:of the second
and third meetings of creditors reqiiired by the .27th and
'.:7th sections of the said net may be transacted : and that
if neither assignee nor creditor opposes, the .Register cer
tify to the Court whether the said bankrupt has in all
things conformed to his duty under the said act, and if
cot, in what respects: which certifibate, and the said
examination, when elneed, with all other papers relating
to the case, will he filed by the Register in the Clerk's
Office.
• it is further ordered that a heniing be hrid CIPOp the
said petition for discharge and certificate on WEDNES
, the fourth day of December, 1204 before the said
Court at Philadelphia, at ten o'clock. A. .111., when:end
where all creditors who have proved their debut. and
other persona in Interest may appear end show cause, if
ally they have, why the prayer of the said petition should
not be granted.
ftness the Honorable .101 IN CADWALADER , , Judge
of the said District Court, and the seal thereof. nt Mae,
dcl'hia, the twelfth day of November. A. 11. 1867.
O. it. FO CI X,
• erk.
Attest—Wu.t.t.tm MtiStreunEL.
licghter
TN THE DISTRICT coma . FOR THE CITY AND
.1. County of Philadelphia.--0. F. POWER vs. EDWARD
F. DRAI TON. June Term. 1367. N0.4.--And now to wit s
October RI, 18(37. On motion of 11. It. Warriner, and
upon return of petition made upon the treeve de vo Esq., lt-None
idefenda, tho Court grant a rule upon, all puttee in in
terest to accept or refuse the row parts 10 divided, and set
out in said return, and order service of notice of said rule
to be made upon the parties in interest by publicatime of
the Fame fn the Leval Intelligencer and htetening fitaletfres
newspapers published in the city of Phneddlphia, once a
week in_ each for six weeks consocutivel.y. Returnable;
fIAWURDAY, November 80, 1867
,
Certified from the Re . cord, this 2latday of Ochs:
ber, A. I). 1887. Witness my h
W and and theses&
of f i re said Court, DEO. HARKINS;
Clerk adm District Court.
Sheriff's office, Philadelphia. October 214, 1f037. •
HENRY 0. DWELL,.
tuBt4
0c22 Sheriff.
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND
County of Philadelphia. --Estate of MATIIIIAS W.
BALDWIN, deceased.—The Auditor appointed by MO
Court to audit. settle and adjust the first account . VI
JOHN CLAYTON and JOSEPH. li. TOWNSEND, Rae.
center of the last will and testament of MATTHIAS
W. BALDWIN, deceased, and to report distribution of
the balance in the hands of the accountants, wilt meet
the patties interested for the purse of his appointmeg i
on FRIDAY, December 13th,1 7, at four Weise* P.
at his Qf fi ce, No. 1111 South Fi th street, in the efts o
PhitadelPhle• DEORUE M. CDNARIB
n026.tu,th,a41.• , • ,•_, :411diter,
TTN .THE ORPEIA,NS . COURT TOR THE orry;AND
N ,THE Estate or JANE'
PRETP KmAN.—The Auditor appointed if the Court to '
audit settle and adjust tho account of PE ER bIoCA
Ecquire, Trustee _finder the Will of ES FIER CHA .
5 Jas. for JANE, PRETTYMAN. and to report distribm,
Of the balance In the hands of the , accountants.
meet the parties interested for the purpose of bic
appointment, ou Tuesday afternoon, December ad; D
leWAt 4 o'clock, at his office,' No.Bll North sixth str Aat
In Mb city of phlladelphia.
, • CH&RDEB WALDEN k
ii
noM ths tat 6t l • An' Ito — fte
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR
_!..y....,
J. County of Philadelphia.—Eatate of J , W.NH.Eltlf
deceased.—The ~ Auditor appointed ' y , the.,, c c
itia
to audit, settle and Kind the account d ANNL, =Ed
execu trix, and to report distribution of the balan ~in
hands of the accountant, will meet the Parts
for the purpose of Ms appo in tment. on 46 V1611 ~
ltd day of December. 1887, at 11, o'clock. A. a., at. QV...
flee of Samuel H. Per, ,kits, Esq.. tiq.'oa7 Walnut otreet, 14
,the City of Philadelphia._ ..L. .. .. ? c. ,
i 11021 th co. tubt'" . H. C. TOIVNtIEND,,AndIter.,
4.414 m
Ei pt aTE OF WILLIAM HUTR,J1L,D 0 .,....
tters Ado Inlatratlon on t eostite 2_
. Re, Jit., deceased, liming' been ' gran,tua.49 t o
ennoylvanis , ' Company for inspr_a e np oi ,o d ot o . , : 4 l• 4 s • r •
• Omaha!' Annuttlete' au 'peniona
and
araraquostod to make lit yinont, an,o •
_ole ce lutyld _
to presentiorn without llolay at 9". s9n r
' paw% • alnUt Rix,'VEPMEt
Aot4ita. et* OSA
Ipij o girt r OiraAblEil FUET FOR rTVITV 4 A
,on o Hilted/A 104 Vitata"ntill T ~.
iiti b ibideitietl.7 , lUqpe_ im1...0f 'fiwit o Oh' a J );.:
A
B dletodepthog woe tuoili.pra ii•ttlretli u
o of the estate of Bald decedent, n punsuarioo
act of April 14, 181 ii, and Thrill Jule , illifie.wgrqr,
1 ilitv_tbatijoi iw_l4,47f vild br. ~ I liv
IS
.iisittavilipi riovonet. • 4. , 11 111 , ~._. • one be mei
itheroto. m. , ' ' tA "I P
...e ' 1498.
N. polii-tu,thter , r ,IW , ~ ,, ,, I . , '' 'rue' , - oxier
1 ' d - s-- Vir -.
~0,,,,-,•.• • :q li itiCO' n '' ft 1t . • : J • RIC
by
J OSEPH a 1.1:il CO.
I,oBloltth minimum
nolA•tu2t4
seenelnitlitleilltretatith'elittrei- - I
!From the Montreal Telearatill, Novo* . 151
Last night the notorious and 'barn-44 1 0'1
theatre waif the scene of as liveliiiriotiV4l4' ,
could well be got, up in such small spadfk At, .
French company advertised With theldbteif. ,, ,
alone of a troupe front a first-Olasa theatre`in
New York, and , last? night the
" iiousel Was
crammed from the family circle to Alm
the latter being particularly? crowded—to
witness the performance of ;beautiful
French drama as the opening piece. The cur
tain rose'and the perfottaance went otu,
very ugly female acted in' a stillinore ugly
manner,, , Mul a very young num atteMnted l tit
act the part aatrold man, with an intmertsn;
quantity, ot
g otir on:his IWO and smoked
over his face. To crown all, another actress
made her appearenee r rattled off slew words
in bad French, and "leaned to have the one
desire th_get off the stage as quicidy
Bible. The drop-scene fell amid a. chilling
silence, and the' second act began by the
audience gradually ,realizing that they had
beeb completely gradually . ,
d "hkiir was
quickly followed by others, and yells
and hisses were then given with might '
and main. The performers looked
terrified, but still went on; but the crowning
act was accomplished. An actress fell on
her knees and in execrable French'cried 'Out
to the young man with the flour on his head.
The audience were furious. Yells and hoots
filled the air. ihniquets made- from the'
shockingly printed programmes were throten
,py dozens at the players. This was quickly
followed by a lobster thrown in the same di
rection, and cabbages, pieces of sticks
and cloth were vigorously thrown at the
stage. The performers in a terrified
manner flew from the stage, and amid a
storm of yells, impreations and hisses,, the
drop fell. A. man attempted to apologize for
the acting, but was glad to retire. The
whole pit then indulged in a free fight, while
from the family circle some two or three
seats were torn up and came crashing on the
stage. The house was in an uproar, and the
ladies were quickly leaving in terror for
their safety. The pit then sung a song and
indulged in another free fight. At length
the green curtain fell, and such a storm
arose as would be hard to describe. It was
well the performers did not
make their appearance again, for
the rage of the audience was thirsting for a
victim, and the first that came would surely
have been first served. At last the house
was cleared, and the stage was left orna
mented with the lobster and cabbages, sticks
and broken seats thrown on it. There
seemed to be a general impression that an
other performance would not be attempted,
and if the manager has any regard for the
heads of his • troupe he will not permit it.
Be will not forget in tr hurry the reception
he met with last night.
Caves In Selkoharie.
Home people of lichoharie have discovered
what they believe to be the entrance to a
great subterranean cavern about half a mile
from the' Schoharie Howe, on the farm of
Mr. Napoleon Clark. It is believed to form
a passage under the West Mountains. The
entrance at the head of 'a ravine is of arched
rock, from which hang various stalactite
formations; but it has SS yet,been explored
only about one hundred and fifty feet, on
account of a depth of four or five feet of
water reaching nearly to the top of thOarch.
The water will be drawn off by an excava
tion, when the cave can be safely entered.
Howe's Cave, in the same town, en the
Albany and Susquehanna Railroad, is well
known, and has all the wonders, splendor's
and horrors usual to such, long subterranean
passages. It has an abundance of ,stalactite
and stalagmitic formations. In soda placer'
you crawl on, hands and knees, in others you
are dazzled by the reflection, of the light from
thousands of glittering angles in the sides
and roof ; in others you pass in a boat over
dark waters; and again you walk along slip
pery ledges, where it seems as if a false step
would precipitate you,
"Through csvenia 104NOUre1aila to man,
Down to a sunless sea."
The cave was discovered in 1840 by Lester
Howe. In $43 he bought sip acre of land
covering the entrance, and i11W345. he and
his brother, Elmon Howe, bought about
seven acres, covering another entrance,
which had been excavated. There has been
a litigation for some time between the
brothers as to the ownerehip of the entrances;
but it has lately been amicably settled by
the payment from Lester Howe to Elmon
of tive thousand dollars for his interest in the
property.
Philadelphia Bank Statement.
The following is the weekly Matenient of the Phil*.
MOJA Banks, made up on Monday &Ramon, which
preemie the following aggregata:
Capital Stock . .....
Loans and Discounts.....
tipecie..... ........ ......... ......... 222,324
Due from other Banks. ........ .......... 4,673,536
Due to other Banks • 5,741,212
...... ....... ..... 34,019,266
Circulation.. ... .... .. 10,663,298
V. 8. Legal Tender and Notes 15,229,173
Ckartuge ...... . ........ ...... . 31.009,068
Balance... . ........... ....„ • 9085.565
The follovring statemet;t:showe the condition of the
Banks of Philadelphia, at various times during the laat
few months:
1866. Loans. Specie. Clradation.Depoeits.
Jan. 1.....45,941,001 890,322 7,226,369 85,842,306
July 2 48,266,906 863,454 9,825,474 37,242,971
1E47.
Jim. 1.....52,812,825 • 903,633 10,88+3,820 41,308,320
Feb. 4.:...52,551,130 874.664 10,430,893 89,592,7111
mar. 4.....61,979,178 826,663 10,581,800, 89,367,888
April 1. . —50,780,806 803,148 i0,4131,5n 34,150,285
May IL —53,664,267 886.053 10,630,695 87,674,064
Juno 1....52,747,308 834,893 10,637,132 87,332,144
July 1....62,888,90 365,187, . 10,641,811 36,616.847
Aug. 6....53,421,840 802,065 ' 10,655,926.63,094,543
Sept. 2....63.734,68.807, 658 10,625,366 36,323,855
7....63.t41,10ti 258,303 10.627,921 34,857,407
" 14. —Z2,989,057 20,714 10,40896 34,343,942
" 21....33,023,280 237.025 10,635,015 84,386,604
" 28....62,575,6 62 215,746 10,034,907 33,536,405
Nov. 4... .52,584,077 273,690 10,610,820 33
55, ,604,001
" 11. —52,236,923 280,884 10,640,612 ' o4sons
18_ .6+,914,013 .228,043 10,640,998 83,929,740‘
" 25....51,169,499 223,824 10,663,298 34,019.268
The following is a detailed statement of the busi
ness of the Philadelphia Clearing Hoagie for the past
week, harniehed by G. B. Arnold, Bea., Manager:
Clearinge. Balances.
.86,379,00 44 $842,069:80
5,272,601 12 619,429 01
5,011,018 79 335,741 84
6,017,861 71 612,620 82
4,691,869 69 678.009 57
4,731,103 71 877,696 00
Nov. 18
44 19
44 20
" 21...... • .
40 92
Total. Nov. 22........9,31.008.062 82 2.885.666 12
THAVISLEIiat GUIDE.
PHILADELPHIA & BALTIMORE
CENTRAL RAILROAD.—Winter
Atiancoments. On, and _after Mondu„
Oct 'Mit irthertut wM leave Philadelphia. from MI
DerMo e Wes ester &Pldladelohla Railroad,corner
of Thirty first an
_Pheatnuf streets,(Weet Mdiada.),at 7.45
, anA Cie I", fiL
Lea o ve Ridnga t th AM P. in, at P.M.
and OxfOrd at 11.80 A, M., and
,
A M arket Train with Passenger Car attached, will run
on Tueadays and Fridays, leaving the Rising Sun at 11.06
• Oztol at ILMOlL..tda lv u; at Leo P. if oms.
noothig at wort Chaster ' n with a Train for Pidle.
VgOnWedrd,J l 7!__ ' train leaving Phl
its.bis at 181 1,4,.,/sC tio ugh to xford.
The Train 1ea....
tin k a HM, at 741 9 ..t.hd. connects at
Word with a daily lin of la Bottom, in
Unosstor go _untz ,P t e ' OM eao 'Bottom to
donned at Mora wain the Train for Philadat.
obis.
I.he .. Train lensing Ma r , Pridelis at AgOP..II. runs to
man, It t e, , e f t ,g,. k , ,
a amengere owed to take Wearime Apparel on/youi
Mand COM , WM Satin any cue be = o m.,
an at m
dl =M be . . , „ er 4 . atkogitp , 444 , 4ro .
mllll - • ' : • i RY rriiiiii - 60 ,,,,,,, wt;
i ir" --
T -0114 v . .
t to .,„ mi „ RAIL.
City, Mount Carmel, C011.01444...4111. pO, 0 4 .,ug di k
'plumy Raßroad mid italatattonts,_ 7 , ..,....,..: .1 ,
By new Illranirh e /e/041 0 4,101 161 2104;r0ild
1 , ve s.e.v. I , - —1 - 1 azque , 60 — +
aPar ".
: ris accommodation leaves Heading at 7.15 A. tng M.
Berri' bat tio P. M. Connect Itesa
•Aftern pon Acconunodatian south g
at a 6.80 P. X
re urg
arriving br Plaidelpltits tit 9.10 P, X
irrda d wket train, wigs a Passenger car attached, leaven
elphia at 12.45 noon for Pottsville and all Way
tationa Licavos Pottsville at T A. M.. for Philadelphia and
all rya Mattoon.
the above trig= run fiall v t u lundays excepted. '
Sunday trains tom Potts. at &00 A. M.. and
delplda at 3.15 P. M.: leavi l li yw !phis._ for at
11.00 A. M.. returning born
at 4.M P t M. ..
OILIMTER VAL AD.---Passal 'Hans fo
too . =art
i nlir : d jo e ints take the 7.89 t o t
y irat i , % ,.... A. M t stcA.Olii AND
;HAT.—Leave. York iAtirrira) and 8,00
‘ l l.tiz.
•
sia M .. . ,:n r m w e s t iz at
h x =r m g ri r .V . l t i T.354 . 11.
Ins an_tral kailroall E =as"n`ra las or burgh. a
?s trt l m illistmaport. Balthnore. &c.
Express Tuft- kavieglisurritsbOrg. on arrival
i i ;ansvlyassfeere nem Pittsburgh. at 8 and 4.55
9.10 P Id at 4,4 f/ and AM A.M. and
and 1 .15.P.M. 147 ,1 1t R 1St e lVork 10.10 sad 11.45 A. M..
and &UP k. m. Cans aecontganylpg Hies' train'
through between any Oki sad mamma. without
Idi MW trahs for New York bores ilartebmi at 8.10 A. M.
i is a rl ii 24s P. X Mail train for Elscrisburg leaves New York
SCHUYLIaLL VALLEY.. ' RAIIIIO' 411. ---Trains leave
Pottsville at 7, 11,30 A. M., and 7.15 P. returning from
Tamaqua at 7.06 A. M. and 1.40 and 4.15 .M.
SCHUYLEILL ANIS SUSQUEHANNA EIVIZOAEL—
Trains leave Auburn at 7.55 A. M. for Pinegrove and Har
risburg. and at 12.45 P.
a tMor Pleegrove and Trempnt s re.
Wning from Harrisburg 8.55 P. M. and from Tremont
at 7.40 A. X mud 5.0 P. M.
neVeldlETS.—Through Ststolass
Can tets and emigrant
to
ada& al ths principal points in ick the North and Wast
awl
Excursion 1' %tete from Philadelphia to Reading and
Utritegiape tattoos, good for dray ouly,are suit r u r by
eg Accommodation. 'Make. , Re and
P=orn Acemnmodation Trans at reduced rata.
lon Tickets to Philadeillhia good for day caly,are
sold at Reading sad intermediate Stations by Reading
and Pottstown Aftomodatiou 'Trains at reduced rotes.
The followingt ic.kete are obtainable only at the Offiee
of &Bradford. Treasurer, No. V 7 ilonth Fourth street.
station
or of G. A. hicolla, General
station Tickets atito or cent &wenn% between
;Mgcleated. fort mill., and firms.
Tidregii 2. a r t nglal. between all points,
Tickets, for three, siz Tune or twelve mouthsjor
boilers only, to all point at rodaeed rates.
residing on the line of the road will be fur
ilialuvitlf cards. entitling themselves and wives to tick
ets at -fere. i
Excrusion Tickets fro= Philadelphia to priaelpol sta.
lions. good for Saturday, ilkmday mid Monday, at reduced
fare. to be le pe r at Wm Ticket Mos. Thhtemth and
Ciallowhßl
FREIGHT,--Goode of all descriptions forwarded to all
the above white from the Company's New Freight DePot.
Broad and Willow streets.
t.=
Freight Trai
at sad
ns leave Philadelphia dally at A.
lil
6.130
sat. fr i llienalisaleg.
the PAinielp&P tor an dada
oei i g i rr e and its broaden at 5 A. BL. and tar the pia*
elpsiStationantrattiPF.l(:-,
airgiplatjr. i '. . rzlier: n eme.
AND • ti.,/ a N AD COM
PANY'II WillikiLrogn ' • lm 7 • to York. and
was ploole, from Walnut strait VAMP.
_ _ Pare.
Ag 6 A. AL, via Cesoden and Amboy. Amu& SS 26
8 A. AL.via Cemoden and derEl oy - Zf i ßcre s el . Miii. a CO
I P. M.,Lia Bennlen and Am 8 CO
At AGO P. Via Camden and . 14 dun, 2 26
AttnEmbront. Malan& 180
. and 2 P. AL ger Freehold
Ate and 10 A. ligq ay and &SO P. AL for Ttinton.
At d SNAP A. 1. 2. 8.80. 6,6 n. ,..... , and ILIIO P.M..fer Borden.
town. minmeson, erb anti
At 6 and lo A. AL LI. 11.80 4 6 p, II and — firl 1 .. ALifor Florence.
Ate and le A.,,M..1. au. 5 and 1130 P.R. for Edgewater.
alvenchle, Hume= and • '
Alt I and 10 A. AL. 1. 8.80.1 si g et z inP. X. for Fish Roam,
iii=Thei 1 and /1.80 P,M. Lhasa .will leave from toot eg
iftedory irpper germ
lbw from limftgOon Depot willlesirjE p ollewo:
4.8011 A. M.. 4. P. M. and 12 M. ( ) via
and Jamey OM New York raw
... .. . . - .. .
at e. wijealEciiiMilikliiii, Am. 1. PaCiaVil j a Z 2
for ton end
At Send 1111.6.6. M.. AA e No 4 UP. M. for Agordnille sod
At 8.0) and AR .M.,1.*44,30p,1 and IA P.M. forBehincb.
At 1035 A. Y., RN Sad 5 P. Af. for Ed
At LSO and ULM A. M.. 11110. OA anal 12Prior Comwelb
Waßotoneiburs, oeonz, WU:Crumbs Brides.
r. U r
l 'ul Frankford. and T BP. M. for Delg and
ediate Station&
BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LLNES
from Remington Depot. -
At 00 A. 1.1.. for Niagara Fab; Wade:. Dnitlefilt. Cam
Elmira, Ith•ta or t o westLiccheeter. Bin=
tom Oswego, 8 Pdontroae.
Imre. Bcranton=a l itTeM l4 .
At &00 A. M.' d 2.80 P. fo r Belvldere,_Ealitt , in._ Lam.
bertvillr, itsc. SAO P. M. /A connects
Sheet with the train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk.
Allentown, Bethlehem. the.
At 6 P. m. for Lambertville and intermediate Eitatiomi.
From Weat Philadelphia Depot, via connecting Rail
.11.1, .
A9.At 9.a) A. M, and &PA P.M. New York Eap
)
Jormy_ Lb
Cety
M. rem
I n
The P.IO A. M. and 620 P. Linea rim daily. All o en:.
amidst excepted.
At 9.30 A. 1L.1.9n and 630 P. M., for Trenton. -
At 9.30 A. H., and 6.30 P. M. for drietol. _
For Lines leaving Rearington Daze* take ho u r ears on
Third or Fifth streets, at Chestnut. at half an before
departure. The Cars on Market Street Railway runs
direct to West Philadelphia DePOta t ?icstnuat and Walnut
within one square. On Sundays, Market Street Can
will run to comes! With the LSO P.
Fifty Brands of B e only *Sowed each Passenger.
Passengers are prohi. tram taking anyUdnat as bag.
gage but their twearhig apparel. All baggage over 6fty
pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their re.
ePeradbUity for baggage to One Dollar per lionnd , and will
not be
con tract. liable for any amount beyond gdoo , except by ow
dal
Tickets sold and checked direct through to
Boston, Worcester. So Hartford. New Raven.
Providence. NewvA totter anf ia ra. Saratoga. Utic a,
Rome. SYrseusa Niagara Falls and
Suspension Bridge.
An addlUonal Ticket Meads located at No. SS Chestnut
atreet, where tickets to New York. and all Important
Points North and East. may be procured. Persons par.
et=Tickets at this Office. can have ?their
from realdenee or hotel to deatinatlen. by Union
Transfer Baggage Express.
Lines tram New York for Philadelphia will leave from
foot of Courtland street at LOD and 4.80 P.IL. via Jersey
City and. Camden. At 7.00 A.M., 6.80 P. M. and 19 night.
via Jersey 0_17=4 At 1040 A. M. and 12 M..
and 6.00_1'.
No. via ersey ty and W. Phiadelphis.
.From.Pler
ousiz; . Rine. et 6d. id• and P. M. ail
Amboy and
Nev. 26. 887, WM.•R. GATZKEIR. Agent.
..$16,011,160
51,169,4 b,
iirallffligtiti ll E E Pl P llMTOß lS lra. .
T.a.w......--01 and after
Wediseedan Ma * ill kitmANrowN. -- '
% At
heave taitela47 aop kn. 12 .1. IL 11.1. au
4. s. 5 ono. .8. e. is
wave antown-4. 7 a," 9. le, lb 12 A. RI i I.
,li. CM, 9. 939. 7. 2, 9.,t/ • ; : - ,
The tive dovrn nun. the and IN tep trairui. will
sot stop on the Germ ON B antoup sD al
itralAk, .
. pave Philadelphia-9.M minuted4l s isind ttocr.lNL.
wave Germantown--8.11._& . M. • P. M.
_ _ _
_CHESTNUT r.
Leave Phelaaeiebis.-4. 8. 10. 12A. 12. ( . SM. 7. 9 and
Leave Cheshmt 11111-4.10 iniimitakedieti and 1140 A.
IL
I I" 8." 6.4°. e LVl 4° Sfli l litt k ih r.
.: r i' ' •I .; '
Leave Philadelp.....-&15 minutes .......1 2 an d 7P. M.
Leave Chestnut Hill-7.60 minutes A. M. 12.40. 5.40' and
minutes P M. , •
FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN.
Leave Phihuielp_lll6-4. 734.9 . 11.05 A.M.; Wee. lu*, vi,
gm, 9.05 and 113 M.
r. hi. • ~ - _:. ...... ,
Leave NorrWwn-41.40. 7. 7.50, KM sa.m.sue,9„o4 WS
111611 ,. .. A . 14. ' '.
' ON SUNI3AYS.
Leave P.......e1ebia-9 A, hil u i end m. end
4
RMAI~
Leave Norristown- A.'ll. 5 and 9P.
Leave PiMade .„ 'M. 9.106 A . IL i a. 0 00111( ,
Lis, g05,.9)6 and' )4 4i 0. .0, 4 ago, gm, We A. Ma 9. BMA •
Leave seen
~..
ex. 9 and 10M P. ON Er im A y s. . ' , .
,
Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M. 143 a anti:;EM. e
Wave Mattayunkbi w.wooN.
A. No= 1 11 r. tam ., A.
s.
P19944. 4 4* • 9 111 1, , ; :lir'.4 - 4 . 't
FORARW , YOWL-RAMAN
iggilllPlE AND - maLAWALF .IiAT NUL
, RolfiTh--Wiater 0.,. commencing
Oetoher Hat, MD. From Vino Street erry. Dilly, (son,
daYe exeeided). IA A. hi. kr. rotas Paaeonger Train for
New York. Long Branch, --. , ~ ,,,, , ,
~, ~ „
FAR 5 gilt i.:. ', -',
il.Bo P. M. Express Freight an& snip Train for New
York. - -1.45 A. M. Way ' Freight ' ain' from anipnee,
Point, Camden; reternipf /rem New York, , Pier 00, foot ;
• Duane street. 11.15 A. ea. Rome New
er Line per
'eteareer "Jesse Rod." 5.00 P. M. Eng= t and
PiniWant Line per steamer ' Wyomint .
_gar Freight should he de li vered at' 6 Warehotme am
North , Delaware SWUM) before 5.00 . ..; Ratarlora and
'quick time uniformly' made. A 1 to
V1.,9 .Agen t . - ,
, ,• - ID) • it 4.l.eaomeaa. j
THE DAgIY• EYANI,NO, 41:P.444TMAPILIAXOBIPMkTUESDAYirROVOIlt,it
Haieieb
anl'iug at Atit t 4 2-10
(lbws a
mi RAIL.
41T14
wur
.7.80 d.
..1/46 P.
..."
• /
.teo
lot
4 0,
TIRAVEILEW 011310156
QUICKEST TIME ON;RECORD.
THE ritsaisoLE
Ur go Etouns,6 dricitown,_viip lanttßA
A .
NIA RAILROAD A ND PAN.HANDurs. 7>i HOURS leas
TIME than by COMPETING LINES, '
PASEIENGV taking *48,00 P. M. TKILM a In
CINCINNAI next EVEI.!MiG
at 9.95 P. M:,'l6 la.
ONLY ONE IGLU on the ROUTE.
KW - THE WOODRUFF'S celebrated Waco State ,
, Room SLEEPING.CARS run through from PHILADEL.
PILL! to CINCINNATI. Passengers taking the 1200 M.
and 11.00 P. M. Trains reach CINCINNATI and all
Points WEST and SOUTH ONE TRAM IN ADVANCE
of all othey Nantes. ,
Pasiengent for CINCHNUTI N , IND.LANAPO_LIS.
.ST. LOUIS, CAIRO, (111ICA910. RIA, BURLING.
TONTINCY, MILWAUKEE. _UU OMAHA,_ N.
T. all points WEST. NORT.WAW. and SOUTH.
ILI _will be partic ular to ask for TH7KETS Or Via
FArt.iIANDLE ROOM
prTo 4r,ounn the UNEQUALED advantages of
thls LIN be VERY PARTICULAR and ASK FOR
TICKETS 'Vitt PAN.HANDLEP at TICKET OkFICES.
N. W. CORNER NINTH and CHESTNUT Streets,
NO. 116 MARKET STREET, bet., Second and Front Ste.
And THIRTY FIRST and MARKET Streets, West
O. F. SCULL, Gen'l Ticket Agt.. Pittsburgh.
JOHN IL MILLER, Gen'l East'n Agt..693 Broadway.N.Y,
MOM WEST JERSEY
RAILROAD LINES.
FROM FOOT OF MARKET STREET,
(UPPER FERRY). •
COMMENCING. TUESDAY. SEPT. 17, 1867.
will leave is follows:
of Salens._Vineland. Millviße and intern*.
diate Stations!, at &OiIA.M., and 8.90 P. M.
For Cape May Re P. M.
For Woodbury at ROO A. M., and 8.80 and 8.00 P. M.
Freight 'Frain leaves Camden at UM M. (neon.)
Freight will be received at Second Covered Wharf be
low.Wahtut street, from 7A M. until P. M. Freight
calved before 9A M. will o forward the same day.
Freight Dative No. South Delaware avenue.
J. SEWELL. Superintendent.
NORTH PENNSYLVANIA R. R.—
THE MIDDLE ROUTE.--Shorteet
a I R I NI and moat direct line to Bethlehem.
Allentown. - Mauch Churls._ Hazleton, White Haven.
WilkeebarreMahanoy In
c'armel,
mums Saran.
t i c i ;? arid all the points In the Lehigh and W.l o Coal
OD&
meager Depot in Philadelphia. N. W. corner of Berta
and Ameica' 'Streets
WINTER Al CE MENT—NINE EttkILYTIAINS:
On and after PLIURS AY, Nov. 14,1867, Parammtr=
leave the New Depot . corner of Batts and
Streets, daily (Sundays excepted), as follows:
At 7.45 A. Pt.—Morning Emma f or Bethlehem and Prin.
elpal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad, connect.
bat Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad for Allen-
town, Cataaauqua, Slatingt.m, Stanch Chunk, Weather.
Jeanervilli ce. Hazleton. White Haven. Wilkeebam
Kingston. Pi Scranton, and all points in
Wyoming V yit L also. in oonnection wit hi ehlgh'
and Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy
_City, and with Catawba's% Railroad Cor Rupert,DanviLle. =ten arid
Wit
liatorPort Arrive at Mauch Chunk at, 1206 A. M. at _
WI at BP. ILA at Scranton at 4. 0 e P. 111,3 -
at Mahanoy City at aP. M. Passengers i = an dit train can ;
take the Lehigh , alley Train, at ILIIS
A. M. for Easton and pointiron= 3l seney Central Rail.
road to New York.
At 8.45 A.PL—AccomModatiogribr Doyieattn.ra. stopping
Hall intermediate F,itationa. Pgraemgets for Wfllow Grove,
atboro' and Hartrtillo, by this, train, take Stage at Old
ork Road.
At lads A. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington.
stopptna at intermediate Stations.
At LSO P.M.—Enron, for Bettilehent.Allestown. Manch
Chnnck, White Havoc. Wilkeebarre Mammy Mt, Can.
Shmandoalt. Mt. Carmel. Pittston and ton,
and all points in /daho ley and Wyoming Coal one.
Paniessers for Green VIEW take this train to
At 9.45 P.
at all inter M.— mediat Accom e stations. omdation P
for Doyierami,atoPP o IIN
Doylestown for New Hope. and at Wale, fOrata
s VlTP.llL—Aecommodatfen for Daylestioni.d
at all intermediate station'. Passengess for liyaini . a d l utt
Flasad Hartsville e take stage
At tbmu rk.9o 9L—Through speozinnotrn for Bet. 7 and
all stations on =Wine of No
ti rt t h Pennaylv_anta Railroad.
a Bethlehem
msai iLsk t ikt tu T a llley Everting
41$ &SO tor roadside. "Gimping
at all intermediate etattonx
1.1.3) P. M.—Aecommodatkeinrt
TRAINS ARRIVE IN ni
From Bethlehem at 9.16 RR and 140 P. M.
• 2.011 P. M. train ma te s direct connection with Lehigh
Valley trains from Easton. Screataii. Witkit au Harze n .
Mshanin City and Elasleton. Pasemgars leaving
at 11.90 A. M. arrive in Philadelphia at 2.0 a P.M.
P era leaving_Wilkesbarre at La) P. M. connect
at at link% M.. and arrive at Philadelphia at
1140 P. kL
Elkiyiedatirn at ICE A. M.. 1110 and 7.00 P. M.
. Lansdale at LK A. M.
Ent Washhatten at 11.10 A. aasd SA P.
suriDAYIL •
• •
his for Bethkhan MEW 4L IL
' phis for_Dcmieetown at 2.40 P. M.
wn far Philadelphia
a t 4 at M .OOP M . A. M.
for Philiaddkhla .
and Sixth Arcata Parma& Cars convey Palma
era to and from the new Depot—
White Cars of Second and Third Streets Line and IMOD
that wfthista abort distance of the Depot.
mast be procured at the Ticket ales. In attar
to secure the lowest sato of fare.
EMS CLARK.
Alsold and Illestage checked thintet rp to rw atl
t Mann's North Penn. Baggage
o. South Fifth street.
PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL
Railroad.—Winter nine,Taklng
11514 M 11 effect No .241 b MI The tram of
,sman Central E v a . &md leave the I= z i r t .
.Scat and Market Agree% width hrresehed
by the elm of the ,Ilarket Street Passenger EtailwaY,
the lad ear connecting with each train. leaving Prong
and Market etreets thirty minutes before its departure.
pot.
wi Those of the
ows*: th Chestout slut
t aint Street Its lwa y run
thin me m e De
ON SUNDAYS—The Market Street Cars leave Yront
and Market streets at mitintm before the departure of
each train.
Sleeping Car Tickets can be had on application at the
Ticket Office. Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut
Streets, and at the Depot.
.4gents of the union Transfer Company will call far and
deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders left at No. 001 Cheat.
nut draft No. llg Market etreer. or No. 1 South Eleventh
street. will receive attention.
TitAINS Lb AVE DEPOT. VIZ.;
Pail Vain. ........ ................... 600 A. IL
grid Line ge II.UOM.
Erie Er prere
..... .......
Paoli Accmmodatlon No.
Harrisburg
Lancaet.r
earkeburg Train.
Cincinnati E.xpreer . •
Paoli Azeona. No. 2.. .
Erie Moil • . ..
NMSM
• -
id l ea v er . . -
.
Ezio ail as daily except Saturday.
Philadelphia Excreta leaves daily. All other trains
except Sunda'.
The Pi esters Aceortunoditicai Train runs daily. except
Sunday. For tbia train tickets must bo procured and
baggage delivered by 5 00 .P.ll.at 11d Market street.
THAWS AII.IIIVB A IT DEPOT. - VIZ.-
. •
- -
ChichmatL i Er&reee.... ....... L 95 A. M.
I. Philadoipreee. 710
". 8.20 "
Erie Mail.— ....... ...... " 9.35
Fast Line 64 935 6*
Parksburg Train "
9.i0 "
Lancaater Train. ... , ... ........... ........... 1.10 P. M .
Erie F.xprete " 1.10
Paoli Accom . ......... " 7.10 "
Harrisburg Accom . " 9.10 "
For further information. apply to
JOHN C. ALLEN. Ticket Agent.lol Chestnut street.
FRANCIS FUNK. tigen& 110 MIIOWet street
SAMUEL U. WALLACE. Ticket Argent at the Depot,
The Pe vania Railroad CODIP=rI not assume
any risk tor except for 1 0 0 Apparel, and
Sat ß.. thelr resrPo %One Hundred awl in vahrs.
e exceeding amount in value will be At the
1161-00W01Wing. unites entry_speclai
EDWARDM. Wit i rght,
General Superintendent. Altoona. Pa.
PEEILADELPMAAND ERIE
RAILLIND—WINTER TIMICOTA..
BLE—Throbgliand Direct Route be,
tween .e..riistiurg..
port and the Great oil Ren of PonnhyteWm--Elegant
Sleshis.Cre o r
e,all Nigh Train".
On Ina after moNDA oiA. 14th. WI. .the Trairui on
the Philadelphis, and Erie Railroad will run as follows:
WESTWARD.
1.411.1 . ?Lain le.aves Philadelphia. • 11.15 P. M,
&05 A. M.
arrives at Erie 9,45 P.M.
Erie ft - press liaves Philadelphia .....12.00 Noon:
" " .... 8.45 P. M.
" '" arrives at Erie. ...... 9.45 A. at
Elmira Mail levee 8.00 A. M.
.. 8.88 P. M.
" arrives at Lo4St
aven ue ............. 7.45 P. M.
/dell Trainleayes Erie. . ... A. M.
..... .IE4O P. M.
~ • " arr. at ...... 8.68 A. M.
Efy'ss laves Erie.. .. . . . ...... 4.25 P.M .
. . .... ....... 8.50 A. m.
arr. at Philadelpnia......... ......... 1.00 P. hi..
11.1.piraltiilleres Lock flatten. ;........... .... . 7.10 A. M..
Willi .... 8.85 A. M.
f arr. at Philtuielphia. 4.. 6.10
Mail
_and Express connect witlialltrains on Warren and
Franklin Railway. Passengers leaving Philadelphia at
'12.00M. arrive at Irrineton at 6.40 A. M ., and 011 Olt/ st
11101 .11.
ming Philadelphia at 8.00 P. M.. arrive at Oil City
4.121;11,
trains on Warren and Franklin Ridity dome
otiens at Oil Oity with trains 'for ; and
Ciente. Manage clacked ßED thro •
ALF
kat!: Generalliinpr
BWE
,I FILESTEII AND PHILA.
'MEW RAL1419A.%! MIA Mjo.
NTER AIuseriGNIUNTS
On aila,.._af , ONDS P . Oct ! ! th. 'lBB7. trod= wll
kf irizr
leave mcilo -first and Custard streetA, as fo ll ow
Arawailleave Philadelphia for. wait Ches.
n i t 7 . 46 Ai. , , P.OO A. Bt., SOO, 4.14,
, 4.F03. &Id and 11.80
tomtbii;oitiiiice , ituaiBBPhio, from Dep ot on EL
Market reef. ILA it.4411,eg and 10.48 A. /44 4.50 and
''Trainsin i vind Wet .oheiter at aao A. 88..,. and leaving
'FlillniNt J IG ~, AL., will atop at n. 0. Junction
and Monza 9 •
'PansenAlere , 'OS 'how atatlona v athreen West Cheater
a " Bb i `'• Jline t artiCW. take t r am leaving
W ag U r i t t 1L.,69 West win take train
, tsavind I" St P.m and . transfer at B. 0.
erso Igavbair , , *ti t le A.R. o:zige.go P.M.
l eiT h ut w. , I. . , • ~ , Aor,,,
lijprOlio . t ,
.. ~ , .. , , 4 , ... , . ~.,, . .
nett at " j '' ' ' .'' , 4, , ow rit: s l l 'd it L e.°R.n .
° LI 1 ' .• - ' '''' l ' •'''' .7 ` at e.so A.maso
.If,
p., .., , ~,
„ 3 ....... FAvw. , ; , ~..: , . , •
-ifikt. Sept, 110 h. •sw will leave Dayot, Corner L:
Bread Meet hington s renue, as fol l ow s .
ted). f
' 'Mf '
Waysziall 4 8.80 A. (EltladsyS entep.
sitimpre, storOmi it all regulur stations. co , , • ,
, , Delaware Railroad at Wilmington for %Weld :
, , .. orations
~ :2.00M.
: Mondays excepted) for ;
limore an :
Expreee _A at / . _P. M. (Sundays gaoled). for B al.
tooro and Waanlnalt stopping atanater. Zhorlow.
eigirTZ L irkortb. l o4= 4l l4r s rs4lll:
4 avre-d race, Aberdeen, Perryman% Irsigow , •
,wig, and Stemxr ar e,,
e i t,oreil ,at 11AO P. . ( /for Baltimore •
Waa at n (Saturdays a
ceptedlatta ttn. i=e li. R.stopping Ne •
Castle Clayton, Doran Harftgioni Sal.
alisbin7,L cam ,:ue and connecting at
witkboat for Fortrees Monroe, Mortal% Portsmouth
ttriouNi..
, for Fortress Mmulse and Nor elk via Bid •
takVit t AGO N. Train. via cruutou .
44 4
7 ., .. . ii, :g at all dation* betweet
•. , , p and W :
Leayg PhiladeistairZa goo, goo and'moo ( , ,
.ir, The,4•2oP./d.train connects with the Delaware • ,
,ad for Mluerd and intermediate dation". The 6.00 P .
• : rans_jo NOW CUM.
AT. ,
rAnw, , n 11 " "4 Peel A. lg. a4 II j 4 ANY: and;
... ( .
From e, to Philadelphia Leave 0 LW ..
A. M., W • ' ass A. M.. Ex • _gu a r IC
iliw giki
::, P Exyress. SAS P. :, : ' s. s FROM BALTIMO leave 'Balta.
..rp i r m.. itAaltutlive drtho Or
ewark to Pinellas for Philade , a, and leave
sluoigeru froM Washington or. 8 ore., and • at
' .r to leave passengers from Wa shington or Bald.
°re ' tickets
:: Throughto all points West, South and Southwest
.. be procured at Ticket-office, aligetiestuuteet,under
i..tinental Motel, where also State Booms Berta in
: - • pine Curd_can be secured during y. Persons
. , basing octets at this office can have baggage
hacked at their redden's:, by, the Union Tranater Con?:
H. F. KENNEY. Superintendent.
For Boston-- , biteamslup-lane Threat.
SAILING FROM EACH POET EVEIFIX
_FTTE DAY&
FROM ME STREET, PRILADELrtua, AND LONG
BOSTON.
MtThis line is composed of, the, tirst.claas
Steamehlo,
HOMAN, 1,468 tone , Captain 0. Oaken' '
SAXON, „1,250 tone, Ceti/Lin S. H. Matthews.
81011211.4 M. 1,208 tone, Captain L. Crowell.
The ROMAN from on Wednesday. Nov. 27.10A.1ig
The NORMAN from Boston on Saturday. Nov. Eh, 8 P. It
These Steamships sail punctually. and Freight will be. ,
received everyday,, a Steamer being alwayron the berth
Freight tor poin ts heyond Boston sent with damatch.
For might renege_ (superior accommodations),
apply to HENRY WINSOR dG CO
myBl BM South Dela Ware avenue.
j o i ra ffffari t hit LlNl RICHMOND AND NOE
THROUGH FT:EIGHT AIR .L.INE TO TEM
SOUTH AND WEST,. • '-
EVERY SATURDAY. ,
At Noon. from FIRST WHARF above It (MEET street.
THROUGH RATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all
pits in North and South Carolina via Seaboard Air ,
e Rath oad, connecting at Portsmouth and to Lynch.'
g, Va.. Tennessee and the West, via Virginia and
Tennessee Air-Line and Richmond and Danville Railroad.
Freight HANDLED BUT ONCE, and taken at LOWER
RA" ES THAN ANY OTHER LINE.
The regularity, safety and cheapness of this route tom
mend it to the public as the most desirable medium lot
carrying every description of freight
No charge for commission, drayage. or any expense el
transfer. .• . .
Steamships Insure at lowest rates,
Freight received DAILY.
WM. P. CLYDE /s CO..
14filinth and" South Wharves,
W. P. POIVER,Agent at Richmond and City Point,
T. P. CROWELL & CO., Agents at Norfolk. 0c91.11
PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN MAIL
STEAMSHIP CX)MPANY'II REGULAR.
LINES
FROM PIER 18 SOUTH WHARVES.
The STAR OF THE ' UNION : will sail FO R -NEW
ORLEANS VIA HAVANA, Saturday. November 30, at 8
o'clock A. M.
The JUNIATA will sail FROM NEW ORLEANS, VIA
HAVANA,
The WYOMING will nail FOR SAVANNAH. Satur
day, November 30, at 8 o'clock A. DL
The TONAWANDA will sail FROM BAY,ANNes,
Saturday. Nerrember 80.
The PIONEER will sail FOR WILMINGTON. N. 0..
on Monday at 5 o'clock P. M.
hrough Bills of Lading shoed. -and Passage Tickets
cold to all points South and West.- - -
WILLIAM L JAMES., General Agent.
CHARLES E. DILKEO_, Freight Agent,
noB No. 814 South - Delaware avenue,
DAILY LLNB 808 BALTIMORE
Via Chesapeake. and DeUware Canal,
Aft Philadelphia and Baltimore Union Stems
boat Company. daily .at 8 o'clock P. M.
The - Stamen of thil line are now plying refitdarlY bs
tween Port' and Baltimore‘ leavingriot Zie‘ I
North Delaware avenue. above Market street, daily at
o'clock /'.M (Sunda, e excepted.)
li
Carrying all description. It Freight as krw 111 any Wig
Freight handled with great elm delivered promptly
cos . nzassion and forwarded to all palate beyond ilia hued= tree
Particular attention paid to the transportation of •all
deecripidon Merchsuidise, Soma, Carriages, #4/..
For further information. aptly to - • •
JOrni D. RUOFF. Agent,
aplo-131 . • Zip. 18 north Delcrionr4 avenue. •
HAVANA STEAMERS.
Ste. I . NTEILY LINE,
HENDRICK...Capt. Howls
STARS AND STRIPES, . . ....Capt. Holmes
Tbeee steamers will leave Ilthi port for Havana every
other Tuesday BA. AL
The E p STARS AND STRIPE% Holmes:router,
will eat for Harms on Tneeday monies. _December IA
at 8 o'clock.
Pau rto Havana. EA currency.
No freight :waved after &dards/.
For freight or neatunke h arkly to'
bIAS WATTSON & SONS,
140 North Delaware avenue.
• NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXANDRIA,
Georgetown and Washington. D. 0., via
enesapeake.stul Delaware Canal, with eon
nections at Alexandria from the moot direct route for
Lynchburg, Bristol, Knoxville, Nashville, Dalton and tin
tlouthwest.
Steam.-ra leave regularly from the linrt wharf atm(
Market ' , treat. every Saturday at mien. '
Freight received daily. WM. P. CLYDE do CO..
14 North and South Wharves.
_ J. B. DAVIDSON Agent at Georgetown.
Id. ELDRIIXIE 00.,, Agent' at Alexandria, Vi
ginia. apll.tt
.at 12.00 M.
.at LOU P. M.
.at 2.80 P. M.
..at 4.00 P. M.
.at 5.00 P. M.
.at 8.00 P. M.
.at AA) P. M.
at 11.15 P.M.
FON NEW YORE, VIA DELAWARE AND
RARITAN Oh CANAL. Express Steamboat Company Steam Pro
pellors leave Daily from first wharf below Market street
Through in twenty-four hours. Goods forwarded to al
points, North, East and West, free of commission.
Freights received at the lowest rates.
WM. P. CLYDE dc CO., Agents,
JAMES RAND, Am 14 South Wharves
t. _
104 Wall street, New York.
.atILLSP, H.
at Mad P. M.
FOR NEW YORK SWIFTSURE
Tranaportation Comtany--Deanateh and
Swiftaure Linea Ida Delaware and RBA
tan Canal, on and after the 15th of March. leasing daily at
12 M. and & P. M.. conneethee with all Northern and East,
elm lines. For freight. which will be taken on aocomme
dating terms, apply to • WIL, M. BAIRD &CO.. ,
.No.lB2l3onth Delaware avenue.
DELAWARE AND - CHESAPEAKE
Steam Tow-Boat, Comacy.—Barge.
bUt
towed between Padelp Baltimore,
Havre-de-Gmee, Delaware City mid Interm ediate points.
Wld. P. CLYDE 4; CCA, Agents_Capt. JOHN LAUGH
LIN, Sort Office, 14 8. Wharves, PUla, apll4delE
WANTD.—A VBSSEL OF 125 TO 200 TONS
to load lumber for a windward port, W. I. E. A.
SOUDEIt. & CO., Dock street wharf. noM4t
rIONSIGNEES' NOTICE.--CONSTONEES OF MElt.
chandise per Amer. ship JOSEPH FlBll, Stackpole,
muter, from Liverpool, will please send ' thoir permits
on board at Arch street wharf, or to the countinghouse
of the undersigned. The general order will be issued on
Monday, the 25th Mat,- when 'all. goods not permitted
will be sent to the public stores. &
SONS. 115 Walnut street. no2l
CONSIGNEES , NOTICE.—CONSIGNEES OF. AMR
ehandise per Swedish bark. ALEXANDER from
Genoa, Almielt, mentor, will please eend thetepermite on
board at Mead alley wharf, or to the counting-room of the
undersigned. The general order will be issued on the dth
feet, when all goods not permitted will be itent,to public
dome. NVOR ut AN & 1.23 walnut/greet nod
NOTICE.—AMER: 81l1P . .N,SEPEI FISH. STACK
poIe, master, from Liverpool, is now discharging,
under general order, at Arch street wharf. Consiomeed
will please attend to theloceptlou of thoitgOOdit. •Pit.TER'
WEII
107 St SONS, 116 Walnut street. nogtitf
OTICE.—ALL PERSONS ARV - HEREBY CAE.
tioned against harboring or trusting any of the crew
of the Swedish bask ALEXANDER, aa. no .debts of
their contracting trill be paid hy the captain or WORE.
MAN di CO.. Cowl. M.", • • ; • • ;46
XTOTICE.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CAB
IN cloned against harboring or, trusting.of the, crew
of th e Bremen bark CARL GEORGE: Adman, master.
from London, as no debts of theircontracting willbe paid
by captain or agenta, WORKMAN di CO., Agents. noital•
QTEA3IBI.IIP ROMAN, , PROW BOEiTOlil,r-Cornilillieea
of merchandise= abbve'steaunor,in II l weiked Mind for
their goods, now landing at Pine street wharf. •
=Mgt RENNY - WRiSQ4 di -
AS. B. SlllNDLER;efineeegon to JOHN SHINDLER di
J
SONS, Sail Blakere. o. ; North. DebairaTo .avennO.
Philadelphia. • , •
Allwork done in the hest manner and on the 10w,e4 and
most favorable tam and weirriulted to givopeefeet aattil;
faction.
Particular attention' .Ilien'to . . „ • .
ArTYL,Ft.
arinlat i ent.
,VAE T9'...:N4p939,t..„„it.,cy50
annwrno on noon, io ors,
on andintkPritkiniele. nt 6,th;
steamerenriel and Felt:lnstill lesnee (Meet 4 ,
nut Street lynarf,ata*, M. and ,2 P_,
--leave Wilimi4tol3 at 7 A. M. t __and 111.80 P.
Litearo to - Wilmington. out. ; Excursion Tickets, 25 cts.
to Chester or: 40AtrEl gil t , : 4 • •nold4t;
UP THE RIVER.—DWROUR.
dons to Burlblitzd Tomb
ing each Ittv= itx mlakt
'A1164111418 gild Bever)",
_l/ a 0 ii
A. WARNER leaves nusstegohia. Gheanutstreet w
atVele*, P. M. Returning. leaves Bristol at 7 o'clo9j
, PUss '. 2 . 6
eta. each . ',..9 ." . ..-, . . MliAllii:?,, , JalttßiAt
Pahl
33,1 3
`iol
'ant Is
"nitwit
vow, •si
AppeilK3 3
griuLvalwswo aftli)k.•
llHjij
7EX011)8810N1%
INJEE~iiIIOT~OIY~,--:xc ~-:.
-.MUNICIPAL • .
. Orkoe,
PurTAnyt Noventir Isat.
NOTICE BE REIFIer 0 ; Rao twee with
,5
tin
Act of Assembly of the Common ealth 'o Pent:vvant*
' riffled 11th day .of 18417.0 entitled ` Arl . AOl
relative to Regletered Taxes and Muldel'ol in the
County of philadelphia„'a that the follomng writs of Satre
facies fur claim have'been placed fn. my heals terser
tics. wit: • ' '
XIENEY 0.116 WELL, Mulder.
.
The City of Philadelphia VS. Arrios Carlisle, owner, re
puted owner, or whoever may ho owtior DoecalboT
Tenn, 1867, No. 6; for the stmt of thirtyalkdollarafar Work
and labor done and performed; and puttortal furnished
evilest all that CeTtAill lot or piece of. ground situate on
the end mide of Onset° (late Chltrehotreet,at the distance
of o 2 feet northward from the north eide of Mifflin atreet.,
in the Fleet Ward of the said city, containing in front or,
breadth on the said Oteego Street-08 feet,imer In length or
depth eastward between lines
_parallel with said Mifflin.
street, on the north Ilne thereof aboltt 77feet 8 Thebes, and'
on the south line thereof nocint 64 feet 8 inches to the eetb
ire of Old Point road, now vacated.
•
Same vr. Jneeph Bilbrough, owner, dte., C. P., Decent.
ber Tenn, ISM, No, 7; for the sum of twelve dollars for
work arid labor done and performed, and materials
furnished against all that certain lot or piece of ground
situate on the east side of Howard dreet, at the "Sifecance
of ninety-six feet southward from the south side of Brows
street in the Fifteenth Ward of the City of Philadelphia,
containing in front or breadth on said Howard street six.
teen feet, and extending in length •or depth eastward
between lines paralleiwith paid Drown street fifty feet
Same vs. Daniel McCleary, owner, &c., and William
McDonald, actual owner, C. P., December Term, 1867, No.
8; for the SIM of fifty:four dollars and forty centB for
work and labor done and performed; and materials
• furnirhed against all that certain lot or piece of ground
rituate.on the eonthweeterly side of Cumberland Street, '
extending from U oward tceHOpe streatin the Nineteenth
Ward el said city, containing in front or breadth on the
said Cumberlsuid street 108 feet 9.3,1 inches, and extending
In length or depth of that width nouthwesterly between i
the said Howard and Hope streets twenty feet, more or
Surma vs. Mrs. teletinine, owner, &e. C. P. Deeember
Term, 1867, leo. 9; for the sum of nineteen dollars and
ninety-three cents for work' and• litbor done and per.
formed and materiels furnished against •all that certain
lot of piece of ground situate on the north side of Callow
hill street, at the disburse of forte feet east of Fifth erect,
fa the Twelfth Ward of the city of Philadelphia, eontain•
ing in front on said Callowhill street nineteen feet, 'end
extending of that width in length or depth northward at
right angles to said Callowhill street one hundred feet.
Sane ve. Thomas 43. Stewart, owner, &c., C. , Der
cember Term, 1867. No. 10, for the sum o'
ono hundred and fifty-three nine onctilun.
dredthe dollars for work and labor done and per
formed. and materials furnished against.all that lot or
piece of ground situate on the west aide of sixteenth
street, m the First. Ward of the City of Philadelphia.
Bertinning at the north side' of Ellsworth Sereet thence
I extending northward along the 'west. eide of Sixteenth •
greet 254 feet 134 inches to ground of Cook and others,
thence north ,westwardly along the same 104 feet 134 ,
inches to the eolith ride of Washington avenue, thence
southward parallel with said Sixteenth street 289 feet 05
inches to the north ride of said Ellsworth street. thence
eastward along the same 98 feet to west aide of Sixteenth
street and place of beginning.
Same vs:Robert Beatty. owner, &a; C. P., December
Term,lB67, No. 11, for the sum of thirteen dollars and fifty
cents, for work and labor done and Performed, and mate
. rims furnished pettiest all that certain lot or piece of
ctad situate on the easterly side of Hope street, at the
co of two hundred and. ninety-nix feet southward
from Cumberland street, in the Nineteenth Ward of said
city; containing in front or breadth on raid Hope street
-ceightmit feet, and extending in length or depth of that
streewidth easterly beter lines parallel to said Cumberlnnd
t one hundred and eight feet nine and three-eighths
.. inches to Front street-
Same vs. Norris .1. Embree, owner, dre, 7 , C. P., D. T.,
1867, No. 12, for the sum of thirteen dollars and fifty cents,
for work and labor done and performed, and materials
furnished nettled all that certain lot or piece of ground
situate on the easterly side of Hope street, at the dis
tance of 116 feet southerly from Cumberland street, in the
Nineteenth Wnrd of the said city,
containing in front or
breadth on said - Hope street 18 feet, and extending in
length or depth of that width easterly between lines
;parallel to said Cumberland street 103 feet 9)• inches to
Front erect.
Same vs. Getlelb -Schrieber, owner, be., C. P.,
Dec. Tenn 1867, No. 13, for the sum of twenty
seven. dollars, for work and labor done and
• performed. and materials furnished remind
an that certain lot or piece of groundsheets) on the easter
ly side of Hope street at the distance of 152 feet, southerly
from t :timberland street, in the Nineteenth Ward of the
said city, containing in front or breadth on said 'rape
street, 36 feet. and extending in length or depth of that
width easterly between lines parallel to the said Cumber
land street Ilas feet (43e Inches to Front Street
Same ye. Daniel McCleary, owner, dm., C. P., D. T., 1867,
No. 14, for the sum of fifteen dollars, for work and labor
done and performed, and materials furnished against all
that certain lot or piece of ground situate on the westerly
'aide of Hope street at the distance of 40 feet southerly
from Cumberland street, In the Nineteenth Ward of the
raid city ,• containing in front or breadth on said Hope
street 2u fret, and extending In length or depth of that
width westerly between lines parallel to said Cumberland
street 108 feet 9); McNutt° Howard. • •
Same vs. Smith Lave, owner &c.f.i. P., Degember , Tena,
1867,N0. 15,f or the sum of fifteen dollars for work and labor
done and performed, and materials furnished against all
that certain lot or piece of ground situate on the south.
westerly corner ofilope and Cumberland streets, in the
Nineteenth Ward of the said City, containing in front or
breadth on the said Hope street, twenty feet, and extend
ing in length or depth westerly along the southerly side
of said Cumberland meet, one hundred and eight feet
nine and threenightha inches to Howa rd. Same vs. Leonard lineman, former: owner, William
Hollinger, actual owner, &c., C. P., December,Term.'lB67„
N•,.16, for the Sum of Thirteen dollars, for wbrk ant - labor
done and performed. and materials tarnished against
all that certain lot or piece of ground situate 'on the,
northeast aide of York street, at the disr4nce of 109 feet
northwesterly from tiepviva street, lit the Nineteenth
Ward of the laid City containing in front or brealth an
the said York street nineteen feet, and extending. in -
length or depth of that width northeasterly, at right
angles to the said York street one, . hundred and
twenty-five feet more or leas, to mlen street
Same vs. 0: J. Shorday, owner. dm.; C. P., December
Term,lB67, No, 17; for the sum of twelve dollars for work
and labor done and performed and materials furnished
noted all that certain lot or piece of ground situate on
the westerly side of Hencociellstreet at the distance of
one hundred and fifty-six feet southerly from Cumberland
street, in the Nineteenth Ward of the said city tain-
trig in front or breadth on the paid 11k et sixteen
feet, and extending in length or depth w terly of that
width between linesparallel to tho said Cumberland
street one hundred and nine feet to Palethorp (late Perry)
street.
. _
Same vs. Samuel Wright, apparent ownerete.. and Wit
HIM Bower, actual owner, U. I'.,Decemoer Term, 1867,
No. 23; for the sum of ten dollars fifty cents, for work
and labor donesuad performed. and materials furnished
against all that certain lot or piece of ground, with the
buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate on
the north side of Sharewood street, at the distance of ono
kundred and forts•four feet eastward from the out aide et
Twenty-second an set. in the Twentieth Ward of the city
of Philadelphia; containing in front or breadth on the
said Sharswood• Pinot fourteen feet. and extending in
length or depth northward or that width at right angles
to the said Sharswood street ninety feet to Wright street
Same est ranklin S. Wells, apparent owner, dm., %Va
han, ‘l,, Buine, actual owner, ill:, December Term. 1867,
No. 24, f.r the sum of seventy-Imo dollars and fifteen
cents for work and labor done and performed, and mate.
Pals Itanished against all that certain lot or niece of
ground situate en the outride of Eighth street and north
side ot Jefferson street, in the '1 wentleta Ward. of the
City.of Philadelphia, 'containing in trout or breadth on
the said Eighth Btrect 18 fat, and in death exteuding
eastward of that width alone the north side of said Jet
lemon trs et lin feet to Pe.th street.
_ . .
Same vs. James J. Lonshery„ owner, &c., Ann tin
Fictirean, actual o vner, C.l'., December Tenn, 1661„
;35; for the sum of eight dollars and thirty cents, for work
and labor done and performed, and materials furnished
against all that certain lot or piece of ground situate on
1 the Routh side of Ferman street, ono hundred and two feet
1 east from Ninth street, in the Firs: Ward of tip , city of
Philadelphia, containing in front or breadth cm the said
,Fernon street aixteen feet, and in depth southward forty
eight feet •
Same ve. J.W, Potts. apparent owner, and James Evans,
actual owner, C. P. December Term, 1167, No. 2d; for the
mum of one hundre d and one dollars and sLxty-two cents,
i fur work and labor done end performed, and materials
fin niched' against all that certain lot or piece of gr ound
situate on the northeast corner of Nineteenth and ,', Yeah,
ington avenue In the First Ward, city of Philado phi's;
containing an front or breadth on the cad Nineteenth
I street 185 feet 6 inches, and extending in length or depth
eastward, between linen Parallel with the said Wash
' ington avenue, 66 feet, to the west end of Darrartce Arcot
lots.
name vs. Thomas Haney. owner, &c.. .D. P., December
Term. 1567, No. 27; for the emu 'of forty-tire dollemlor
work and labor done and performed, and materials fur.
niched against all that certain- lot or' piece of ground
situate on the southwest side of Lancaster avenue, at the
distance of eighty-three feet 'ono and a quarter inches
northwest -of Thirty-ninth street. in the 'twenty-fourth
Ward of the city of Philadelphia, containing in front or
breadth on the , said Lancaster avenue sixty feet one and
a half inches. and extending in length or depth south.
westward at right angles to the said Lancaster avenue
one hundred and ninety-three feet to Crean etreet.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT
, .
The City Of Philadelphia wt.. Mr. amManee, , °toner, or'
reputed owner, or whoever, may be owner; D. - C., Dewar.'
bet Team, 186,. 1...0. 88; fur the sum of twenty-tine dollen!. •
for removing a nuisance (a puddle of stagnant wateri:,
t from a lot, of ground situate on the northwest center . 1 ;li,
i DiamOnd and Leithgow (lute - Mechanici.streetts,' in. the, -
1 - 'city of Philadelphia, containing in front on said DidanOnd
i street fifteen feet, and extending in length orfieritli north:
i wurdly along the westerly side of said Leittigont Street
,'!, sixty feet, more or lees. - / ~• % i:. ".j . ~!"
panto vs. Miss U. Donnell. owner. &c., D. - g.; D ecember
Term,lBo7, l'sio. 39; for the sum of forty-seven dollars`and
I eighty-eight cents for removing a cuidance, a filthy cede."
pool from a lot Of .. ground . situate on the west' side Of
iEleventh street, at the distance of nicety-four feet eleven
and three quarter inches northward from, the north Wile
ofßuttenwood street, in the Fourteenth Ward of the City
- 'of PhiludelPhia ; containing in front or hi adtle on said
Eleventh Intrect, liftoeui feet three-andone-ithif inches,
.and extending inlength or depth westward•between lines
parallel withsaid Buttonwood street, seventy-four feet
1
dye inches o a three feet wide afiey. - rii , .. ~ ..
i - -. - Wherens,llY writing tiled dated November 4, Igdi,
Janice Lynd, City Solleitor. sugguata that U. Donnell, the
; abeto defendant, is not tlui owner of •the lot of ground
against which this lien is tiled, but ,that Mary o'Doituell
is the actual and present owner of said lot, and her mime
is therefore auggeeted as dilenclard.
Same TO: George It, Smith ' owner 'owner or reputed
Owner or whoever may, be owner, D. U. December Term,
.i 1867,:, No. te, for the sum of twenty.four dell am and
Ininety-eight cents, for removing a nuisance, a defective
- ..kdraiu, from ' a lot of ground situate ou the north side of
Callowhill 'street, at; the distance of roily feet east of
, 'Fiftb•street; in the Twelfth Ward of the city of Philadel.'
phlig -, dontalping in . . front . - or bro,dth on said Callowhill
' street , nineteen feet, and extending of. that width in.'
length qr depth uertitivard at, right auglea to said CallOW
, hill street' 0118 hundred feet: • 1 ism Jas'
[-,..,.Whereas.y writing filed, dated November , . ~ . ,.
spud, City Solicitor-suggests that George R. Smith, the
.401larenstm d defendant. is not the owner of above lot of
i .. gr.. Ound again et which this lieu id tiled; and that Matilda.:
trA. olB eArluN.l s Z l Adams street, is the actual and present
owner of said lot. and she is therefore augitestekne de.,
7 fendant. : ' .nolll.oVathaio' -
iii:03141412
ItII nt'OBEDIENCE'T O A RULE
.01P THE_, COURT` OF
-a.tionithaon }leas of th e City and (Aker of Phillidelphla,
the, Sheriff of maideitY Pl l ,.bildies thq;c o / l inkreffe of
4 liao Sunt, "" 4 ' ' ' _ vtiwn ilENßY O. IV,W4,•lo l ,ooilfr,
;Z 'Perir° Office.
Nollgr,bzim-hria:' ' ..,....- ' '
i c't and llVlgeovialiril CiPPENNS4744‘44I,'
TA the Sheriff of .Phillllllittotiltli•grile .
1 • . • We himmand you, outhekr JO' • ' 1 4rap summon
I,oildou•in Mee, late or r0nt.e.0... , , eDe .pd rt ftt
-veer before Ole Judges St rhu ' ..{. 1 "'t our cor) 4 . 1 x,
•11 . 0.1pnyin .Plagy i r d i : c la y , , ~,.:,,,,, I . ehmetz t o
tit . P 4 ilade , . 4.: it. , i.. . 1 . , , ir
fitv
'and 401? ! , of a , 14,,
D ant. And PAW! 'flab ~. k .. 40 ,..ti1„,..
3ommek , 0., • ~“_, •Ir Lyt• il . r .,,.• ,
gime .r , -44, , '!, ~ . • 110ithat WO. ‘,
oret , i , i, f 4 „ . , li r pf - kr, .. • 1 10 .„ . 1
A
c
.1.1 ...., i ,,,,,,..;,
~ ....or 4
... ~
f tleidel* • '44 1 .- i'' ~' ' t . % a t - VO ir
WO 4° I '. 1"
' ti*
the
* '
.. '
tri*fifitti* ln taleli
' cernher next , there to fillglV . ell u ,
Trustee for Hannah P. ffallotrall., of Pi :Olen% Of 0 4 11 . 0 . •N•
covenant' And have yott then ands ot* th.% ' ''' - -
1 % 0 c ol lo ll d Yolk. atibefOreto didi'tilnllintltintra ~,, , :.P-
James P. =rig, late o ~yeur * ilnUtls• so s a t IL an& 4. - .•.,
•
appear before onrJudgeelst Philltdiaphiat'4Vonetiottrr' ...:
•
at t.etmoon Plena,. for the Vity.4lo l l.Cctunt,ll,of.",tibiludt: ,, V:A,
pliin,' to los holden tit Phifinielphittelt. kr tile 5 dr- ..,,
C,ity and Coniity.ef PhihaiielnlisiC,tho' 'ttamtV eri f lt.-._
eember nekt,there to answer Allen 'i.Fellialorer 4 1' '' '
of W. B. penimore, by beri,tittanliathiTininnuttL "":. .h.
ham, of a plea of breath .of etWernlnt4lW,f lintstaill. ',I t t.lO ,
deed made bytharies IletirY Planer a'nalrit l ie I • '''' 1 ' l ' ..
A
ant, dated May :Md. 1045, recorded Ott the o. ti e,,,
1849, in deed hook 'AI. W.. C., Xo. Sit Witte itaittra: , , '.j ''''''"
ground rent of slity. dollars per . ,„, 81 1 1111 _ 11 1_.14 1 2424 • • ' 3
'''''
was by the said trharles lionrY cuther wow n'. ' —s' .
inter al la. to George Turner in feta by an'iriderltnthf ams l 39 , *:' -..
4 't
ground
tho 25th of lanuary,l4so, recanted, in dams litlo.k f tl , -... ' V:;. 1 i.. i 1 •','.
2,,0; an, page tei dte. The . said Beorga - Terner af sfra _,-
.. died intestate, seixedthereof..exi i g. by siortifts toweeg ,t5..v;1,ft•....
a
in. partition in the Or p hans' Cott ..for titti tioutivrOP ` 01} :';"'"' 1 ''
aelphia, . Oho said ground= was, infer alin MVOs „,:iir,.. , ,i , ,k'y,7 I ,
..illst of January, 1e59, allotted to ARce:Anti, ff dli lir -N.' • ;•' . ' l .'
Minor, and one of the heirs at late 'of tlie sit! eil 4`6. • ~, ,;;.,... t
Turner, decetsed, hiseveralty, in , fee,;,of•WhOnt Ulla . '.
'''
4
Thorne aS. utmnant *as, by the -inlet Virtu* ' sligk'' 3 ' ''''',l'; l '
pointed the Quotidian, on the 11th. of Aprit.lB(44" dtheigtw. -,..`", .'•
geld Alice Anii Edwards .afterwards intermsterleitWitit ,"...
W. B,Fenirnere, nrld - is •01 a. minor . And haveou ton v: - ~, . ..y.
Bier° this writ. ' - ' • ••.
...„...... ,
Wo Tenn:nand yon` , SW before we did, that YoUltiiiirtiofi l ..I''..-,'
George tt. Stinger s bite 'of your ConntY, so that hobo end''' .
appear before our Judges at Pbilndelphia. at our Cong' , '''
'Common Pleat forthmtlityr andtiounty ot 'Phila.:lot ~ ..,i:, , ti.,.. •.'
to be holden at „Mndolohit in . aud for sold Vitt , P. 1 , 4....1
County of PhflidelphieLthe fleet
_Monday of' Demstedber,,,
.; - ,
next, there to anstrer • .lo l ll'ol2lf.Aletvis of a ples,.of ~...1 ‘,... , ,„.
breach of covenant , stir gromid.rent weed, Chilies limar7, : - :' '
Fisher and. Ann. his wEs , e. to . Gehritti,ll.lltlnlfrantelir .1
' ..
' '
April 0, 1050, and, recorded in doodehook G... 1 11, t,„ ; tic
page '415, 4lre„. reserving grotuad..rent - o f . linitiVer an ituntlo
payable half yearly. on the first day of junlaltid i tdyr..
assigned by Charles Henry Fisher to' (Rare
diet, by deed troll,. dated Beptember 15, i8.50,.,_ . for
deed book A. 13.8.; N 0.1130, Pato 457: the Sad WaralAtilitut..
Benedict afterwards intermarriospwitltAlinta 80 - Potter • , • '• •
• who, with his wife, atelgned said groundrent thrtnifigt , .*
by deed 011, dated December-04. it 16.11, recordetTai" A 5.: , :. • ' .--
book 1... R. R. ho. n, Palle , 4 . 51 . 41 i. 0 . 4a- i lO-4 ;1 00 04 1 It'.‘
there this Writ. . •
1 1.: , .-.., , mg , c.,, - ,
IVo command yeti as beforeive did,' that:Yen' : j*,
Benjamin Willson,late of your County , . so that he' • I ' : ...
appear before our Judges at Philadelontli, ut.orte Court 4i ' 2 .. ' 7 . A. ,
Common Pleas, for the CRY amiConnty,of Philsdeloma i s r4s;el;:
thot
to be holderiat f hillujelhilita, in and for - the ttaid,...04.0,......,-oz . ,
nthselphin, the fitstMend4Y;Of.) 3 llo4 , lll,.. :.s", , ~,.,..,
and County of
her next, there o answer WfUlant,ss r Tediums. of .a..,plernq' -It ‘, -.-,,,
of breach of Covenant. ~ , . .. , - .., . - . -
_, . '-,
~ , ~
We command..you. that You summon Jetties ,litrillen.'"' ' :'; `'•',
Into of your county' as before - You did, so that ha : heal:01 1 i ,
appear before our, J udges ; et<Phila dolphin,- at our Court. f..•/ 5 ...!....,; • .',
ot tommon Pleas, for the CRY and,Coluity of; Phihidel. , i , 7,,,,........i
phis, to be holden at PhiladelPhit in and for the 'eild.'.. .. . ....
City and County of khilndelphin, the first Blan dly, of Mt:- ' (' - •,.
eember next,thero til, answer ThOMMI Janney t Astdigneet ..-.,',.. .. ...
oft. Taylor Randolph old wife. of a P lain oi_Di7eacli.C., .:.; . .'.,
env( nant cur ermind rent'deed made between we said
Taylor Randolph and wife of the one part and 'theta! '.•: • ~.
Janice Mullen. the defendant, of the other part.resorvftg r,
a yearly ground rent of eighty.eight dollars, dated Jan.—, .. . ~.
iumy 7.1652 and recorded in deed book T.',11,14m ft ge• , ' , ...
5;3, tic., assignment . of: said ground rent to "Jliomila
neyt aforesaid. dated October , 25, 1854 and record ed,, hi
deed book 2,11., No.llll. page 404.4 e. ~ And have yea... ~.-, ..
then there this Wilt' •
~...•
We command you, as before 'we did Tx you a Ink:
Aaron 1, enkirk and James Hughes, '&•, .of lour Op in,
tu i
KO OH. t they be- and appear heforeo - agog at a-
dolphin, at our Court of Common Pleat for the Cite and •-: . . "..
County of Philadelphia, to be, holden at. Philadelpnin .15i , .... ,
and far the said City and County
of .I:hiladalitilin, t he .. :
first Monday of Beeen_ber next, there, to ansyser, Ann ,
.lane Bresnan and George Brainen of a plea ofbrencit, ilf" .. '„• •.
covenant, etc. And have you then there this'Writ - •.. ,'' •:'
Witness the Honorable doeeph Minima, President ef Our
said Court, at Philadelphin, tile 18th day of , November.'
in the year of our . Lord ono thousand eight hundred and ' . . . - . •
sixty. seven.
TT 0 WEiltt,'
. . . ... -
. Pro Prothonotary,: ''' '. ' ' ' •
. I, , , . , •
noLq4u2t
„... -
'TN OBEDIENCE TO A RULE OF TEKDISTRICT':
1 Court of the City end Comity of Philltdelphia, the
Sheriff of said city publishes the following writs otAiitte
Summons Cove/unit: - . •
_ HENRY C. HOWELL, Sheriff. ', •
City and County of Philadelphia, 88,..
THE C O 3 I34ONWBALTII OP PENNSTDVANTA. 4 `
To the eheriff of Philadelphia county. greeting: , •'.
Sheriff's Office, Novem ber 18.1837. • , . - • •
-- ,
We command you ~ a rt beforowe did. that you summon;
Christopher Hatter, late of your comity, so that he be and
appear before our •Jud.gek at Philadelphia, at our Diatect .
Court for the City and County of • Philasielphilw.to la '•'
holden at Philadelphia. in and for the *aid City and ,
county . of PlaadeMbia, the first Monday of Decerieher ' '
next, there to answer ' William P . Hallowell, trotted for _
Hannah I'. Hallowell, of slams of breach of , col - eared.
And have you then there this writ. • - . , ' •
We command you, as before we did.that you. eneenem ..' •
Thome 13 McNulty, late of your county . so that he .. and -.,
appear before our Judges at. Philadelphia, at onr District •
Court for the City and County of PbiledeMbia,lo 'be ' '
holden at Philadelphia, in, and for the • Bald City and
County of Philadelphia. the first Mons of De mbar ,• , •
next, i here to answer Edward Peace and Anna C. Peace
his wife, in right of the said , Ape.' U. Team, of 'sspleit of
,breach .of covenant for nonpayment. of arrears of 'ground
rent of 8112 50f annum . nonpayment
ground, rent deed, ~ Meth: . •
Bth of May, 1 made 'between the plaintiffs . enktle. , •
fondant, reco rded in deedbook L. R. 11,, No. 171. Pella Ala
de., issuing out of a lot of emend situate tin the num •
aide of Martha strect.'N32 feet smith of Lehigh avenue don_
taming in front on Martha street 18 feet, and in depth
westwardlyllo feet to Collins street.. And have Too ..
then there this writ. , -. : _, ~,
We commandyou, as before we' did,•thatYoll sterieben, .
Janice McPcsk. late of yout•CountY he thet hobo oaten. • - •
pear before our Judge' , at ThlledeiPtiles et our 'Billfrieb”
Court for tho City' and County o Prilladelehin,..to be '
holden at Philadel p hia , in and for the said Oily and • -
County of Philat elpida, the lint Monday of December
next, there to answer Edward Pates and Anna ei Peal"' '• , • ,
his wife, in right of the said Anna C. Peace. of a Plea - •
breach of covenant, for non payment of annexe ef grou nd
rent ',
rent of 802 60 per annum, surgroundvent deedi teade W
be. -' , , ,
tween the elaMtiff and the 'deftmdant, dated_fBthtla, . ' '
ber.1254. and recorded in deed book J. T. 0., No Pleven& •
- ' ': '
892, etc., batting out of ti. lot of ground situate on the west ' '
side of 31artha street, two hundred and eight feet, south of ,
Lehigh' avenue; containing ' in fro on Martha Street.' -
eighteen feet, and extending in- depth northweetwardlY - • --
one hundred and ten feet to Collins street. And•bave
you then there this writ„ . _ _ , : . - •
We command sm, aanefortewe did , that yott sethmon
Adam Greenhalg !steel your county, so thathele and.'
eppear before our edg at Philadelphia, at oar District
Courr for the City and County of .Philade/Phia. to-be
holden at Philadelphia; in and for the said City and ' • '
- Count -of of - Philadelphia. 'the - first :Monday - of Deceniber'.., . "n - . ',. •
next, there to Ammer Edward Peace and Anna C. , ,,Veam
his wife. in right-of the said Anna C. Peace, of a Plea lif , i
breach of covenant for non payment of arrears Mind' . , . ".
rent of ® 9e 45 per annum. Sur etro and rent d 'made •' •
I the plaintiffs and the defendent, da te
of
the. Bth ..
day of 31 ay, .1144, and recorded in deed book' D. W.,,' ' • '
ir
No. 12, page ii', &c. . haulm out of a lot of emend situate. ' .
on the west ride of .iertha street, 3dl feet south.of Leidy , . .
avenue, containing in front on Mettl* street 82 feet and, ',' ' . ' •
,•., of nu inch, and extending in - depth westward. Mi. thee i ti.. --- .
northwurdly line lie feet to Collins street, thence south- '
,/
w estw erdly 213 feet 8?„ ; inelw. thence south 29 deg. Mid
min. east 110 feet 1,?.; inches, thence northesstwardlun . ,• : •
feet and 3.,' of an inch to the place of beet/nine And . ,
110 ve you then there this writ. • . ' • ' ' ' ' . - . '''.
We command you, as before' wedid, that you summon ' ... ' , .•
Bernal d Conran. late of your county, so that ,he it., and '. .. .
appear before our Judges, at l'hiledelphist;•at .our Dietrict • '.. .
Cretrt for ti , . City and County of l'hiladelobin. to be
holden at Philadelphia. in and for the sold City and
County of Plillsdelphia, the Brat . Monday ,of Deceeiber 'i•• ' , • •
next, there to answer Edward Peace and etntiait4 relic - • .
his u de, in right of the said Anna C. Peace, of a plea o •
hr.- a cli nt covenant, for Dumper/meat of arrears of greund ' ' "` "
rent of $22 oil per antrum, kW' , ground ne at
deed made ix tween the plaintiff and the defendant,' d •'',, - ' '•','
May Bth 1e54, and recorded hi deed book J. T. 0., NO.& . 4 " , ' ' "••
page 373, die.. issuing out of a lot et ground, situate on
west side of Martha street, ..'''.',6 feeteouth of Lehightiventie... ,
contai eine in front on Martha street 18 feet, and extend- .• . '
ing in depth westward 100 feet to Collins street. And neve. , •:.r. •
yen then and there this writ.
We command on as before wethat'you
did.
William McCarty, late of your county. so he ht: t - 9111'
appear before our Judges at, Pbiladelplila,nt-oer .0 et • ' ,
Court ler the City and County of Philathilli t tla, to be bbl.,
den at Philadelphia, in and f. ;L r the said , „and Count'', . •
of Philadelpf la. the lint Monday of Deeem r next,there
to D EIkW Or Mary G. Thorn_ , futile action 4 aO. ea Of CAVE.- •
cant cur deed of George . W. 3fichenee and wife to Willie= . ! '
Al ceiuty. dated theist da y of Igoe, find recorded in , .
the office for recording deeds„,drc, forth' City and Cou t n o 4
of Philadelphia, in deed book it. D. W., No. 90..Pege :' ' • '
de., on the 25th day of August, 1866, de., for lot of ileum
situate on the southeast , corner of Fed• ral and Sixteenth'
streets, in the First_Wardef the city of Philadelphia; 90n ,
taining in front or b readth ot. Fe d eral Street sixty stn' , , ' , •
'feet, and extendins, in length or depth on Sixteenth street ; •-•
sixty•eight feet: mat to a yearly ground rent of: enti ' .
hundre el and fifty d ollars, payable. iu equal half year,*
portee ds. en the I.t of January nod July in oVerlIon?, , ' ' ,.
Unto the Bald neon.) W. lilichsne- , big heirs and aidgnai
which said 'g round rout we, assigned by said . GeorgelV.. ,
Ml .burner and wife to the Merchants , Inenrarice Cornenuer,
of the eity of Philadelphia, by deed of'assignment,' oared i
August 214 1856, and recorded in Our <ghee for record/in •''..,•, ' : ,
deeds,
_&c., for the City and County of Philadelphia in - „ .. „
deed book It D. W., No. 92, nage 80,, c c.. on the /1* ex., ~ r
• . , ; ,,
of September, 1226, and which ground rest was re ea, ~,,
~ , ,
upon by the Sheriff ce: the Cit,y and County. of l'hiladel. '., .. - - -
pliftkas the property of the 3ferehantsf Insurance Cottle 'is'..''4
Deny of the city of Philadelphia, and Hold and conveyed . . ,
Ibylihn, by deed roll dated Octobe-r•28 4.1 1C, and reeordirelo. , ~ , riii,,..e
lin Sheriffs ' deed book A. No. 3. pugs de., unto jelnate , ~. ' 1,.„ ) .,
M. Sellers, hie heirs and assistint. and w c h gyoundAmide;_s.Ve
, Ittas by-him, the said James Si. Sellers ~ Assigned te.hlary c , k, , , i
U. Thorn. by deed of assignment, dated Deeetujiter 47,356,2 4 ,, ~e ,, , ,
and ree,orded in the office for recording deeds, din., itr i the.% , . ; , t. , ,,, , ~
City and , 'ounty of Philad'elphia, in deed book ~li., Li._ll., ,-0 ,!. 0 ~, -. , •,,
No, pis, page 179, ite., on the 21st day of DOC-ellaneri 000 ii i ,..) ,l- , i,-. .
And have. you then there this writ, ~.- - -, ---
'et e command you as, before we. didiithaki.loll •IttimMoriu if t• , : .14, .;
Alexander McCauley; 'late of your counlY.iso that lie he,, ; ~,,. ,•,
and appear before our Judaea. at . Philadelphia: - it one "',x .- '
District court, for the city and OottlitY, of; Phatleillf34. , ,-• "'• '
to be holden at Philadelphia , in and for • the salt/ ; k lty an ~', •'' '
County of Philadelphia, the that , Monday of December "" '',
next. there to annwerMary Kntherine Lowliehfi allele of ' • -
breach of covenant. • A rid Imre you then ands ,
there thin - c
We command you; its before we that you summone
Demo Thompson, with nottce , tor-Adam.Werthrnan. tarn/ , • - '
ter ant, late of your county, so , that thee be and appear
before our Judges at Philadelphia, at our District court
for the City and County, of Prilladelphia, to,. . ba ~
bolden in Philadelphla,in and • tor the ' said
City and Countyof .I.lolo.delphla._the first_ Monday ire, i.,.'..1..,,,, - ..,,
December next t h ere to 'Mower Chivies Norris, who sue. „ . • • „,,t.,'...,
vived Simnel gorrle,Trustetr, d.•., of a Mee of a breach Or ~, .i,, 1 :
covenant, ear Wapiti rent from plainliffit,to def 171.1 47 ;,,,,,,, •