-40143 surrIEL&RIN ow' • ' nut I.2trti met ye,t4erday, and was'rut• FOrtiess Monroe yester y' to his new command. EC: , yk.IIE.A. it is reported from rWay to reorganize tno Italian in treasure at New York in 1867. ruia,52:),..`7 4 06.225. against :ii11,901,00.5 <Am •- . - en of the norninationstnade by the ' notion of iibtbaum have de e: ()• candidates. ' -address to Parlia .ltalyis passing abrough a erisit., ALOpeople;ut3d,,t►ieir legislators to bu • iret6ting m w iassnehusetts fora I".gfigland nianufacturers, to en the late Clevehind Conven- • . ONT addressed the colored end vesterday on the occasion the fowin -anniversary of • , severe-storm - off Hatteras on .ortions of the debrisfrom wrecked the bodies of three sailors, have .ore at Fortress Monroe. . r4T - tos day Was Celebrated In Charles ,C. yesterday by a general parade of the societies, fire companies, and political or • Lions; an address by F. L.' Cardoza, and __ties at night." The best of order. prevailed. Sp' • ON- Goraz was yesterday received bv s the Ambassador of Prussia. Ho r7t 4, .4ssperor that his Sovereign desired hB-.l.'aeleon, in turn, assured-the Baron ‘too. watt anxious to maintain kind and °e relatlloins - with King William. , 4t 4 has it that the Secretary of the Tres.- • wilillext week appoint a Solicitor for the stertud'Revenue Bureau. Hon. Philip B.Foulke, ''.*.*'-ntietaber of the House from Illinois, is the '-most. 'prominent candidate, -and the indications sst now are that he will be appointed. ril,sTo the incidents at the Executive Mansion • • , testidy. Mr. Noble Hurdle, a very old gentle- Inah f residing in Georgetown, took the President by.; .4 theltand, and said "God bless you, Mr.> Pres': :Itt,i4thave shaken the'hand of every . President "ss -Wolington's time, and now str, I am py 01 shake yours, the last President, but by -meants the least." stariacnas received at St. Petersburg by the ited States Minister, from Pekin, are to the led that the Emyeror of China has resolved to ;.•nd a special Embassy to, the treaty powers, itb the object of having arevislon made of the treaties betwee,n the great pewers'and China. To is end the 'lmperial Government has selected • .d_pecial ambassador, Mr. Burlingame, • States. Minister to Pekin. 'This ctiotee 'with especial favor among the Foreign with 'whom Mr. Burlingame is &- . f•' The appointment has been se nd Mr. Burlingame was to leave, at the vices, via On Francisco, on his new Cti! Y B ULLEITM TI( M STATISTIC6.—The annexed statistics • , eweather for the year 1867 were.; prepared r.,lithn Conrad, from a daily record kept - 4 ;Pennsylvania Hospital, showing the tem .! re of each month of the year : • • Mean. tinpary.......25.89 degs. 40.50'degs. - 9 ' degs. - ebniary 40.21 'ss " 17 " March - 38 • ' '6l " . •21 " •April... ... :64.13 ". 80 " 38 " May.. 4 r 4 :• . • . 59.44 :, tk 86 '" 38.50 " dune:;... ' 72.19 ~ ' r 88.50." - 53 " July:lW. ..... .76.98.'"Ar 92.50 ";- 62 " . tignst l :—.-.1..75:10 . ",i'l ;88 ' " - 58* " zepternber...6B.2l • '",. -' 86 " 45 " 4 tober! .. .57,65. ". "78 " 41.50 " - tit evember:.:...g.l.9 ".- 70 " . 24.50 ember... :31.78 " •-• 5.1 " 10 " he moan tediperature;ofe the year is 53.90 de . s; is' ,533{ mean annual temperature for forty ..‘ 145W - degrees. The 'warmest year in this :rind was 1828, 55% degrees;, and the coldest, 4.; , ;49 degrees. -.. eviim ..1"" ' .'following table shows the mean tempera '..l each month of the year,' for 93 years: iy 31.7 dcg.lJuly 76.1 deg. nary.. , ."., . $3.2 '• t 'August 73 5 " ...., , ...01,2 "• September..... 66.2 " ..14.52.0 " October 55.1 " . ....62.6 " Noveniber 44.6 " _72.0, '',„ December :11.8 rain for each month of 1857: 11702,inch: August ..... 15.816 Inch. 3.892 ..' " , September.. 1.720 " 5.965 ,', i October 1 0 1.320 " ~;" ' 1.810 • November . , 2.940 ". • ~ 2:325 I .' December... 2.730 " (~,-,. ''': . • 1.025 " • , .r ~. .. ... 2.387 " . T0ta1.....61.1.27 " ;. 8 amount of rain, over 61, inches, exceeds .the rainfall of any other year on our record. in 1859 ' how ever. 58 inches fell. The fall of rain in •Juniibadlpever,beenslrueen`ceeiceedexl, and that fortxuautt was 4i inches more than ever had fallen in a monthNThe least amount for any ono r was ,2934. 4 inches. in 1825. The average of ' , LS ty year,,i; 4W, inches. ': 'int. PitliipELttilA COUNTY PEISON.—Tho fol lowing figures havec:di obtained from Mr. Su ' perintendent der Ins his assistants of the County Prison. -' Number c7f_perions committed' during the year ien'; itll UM ITES. L 'NS. '' I Men. 11VMen, Men. Women, Total, . Uar . - 4 922 223 92 27 1,264 hruary .... 1 . :95 285, 80 25 . 1,285 March 946 297e51 28 1,325 • April 1,061 390 102 57 1,610 lay ....• .... 965 429 .85 -12 1,521 - -- . ... 1,075 419 77 '47 1,618 ; 1,133 486 84 81 1,751 rt l iul ulu . s?.. - .``.. 1,116 486 95 71 1,765 ' •ptoniber... 1,181 526. . 101 60 1,868 1.247 426 92 50 1,814 • 943 405 95 47 1,190 . $BO 281 68, 35 1,261 !!.4...111361 4,619 1,025 570 18,575 umber of commitments during the 1867 ning in prison Dee. 31, 1866 i 19,003 :charged during the year 1867. 18,619 gin prison December 31, 1867.. 384 .1. 'IA 384 remaining in prison 276 were white ,;: t , white women, 35 black men, and 10 black tler of commitments during the year 1846: on 13,053: white women, 4,743 ; black . 51 k ; bin k women. 521. Total.. 13,468 maining in prison December 31, 782 al, during the year 186 G, of.. 20,250 lag the \ year 1866 19,472 icon December 31, 186 G ri-oners remaining, labor. lenvin:4 - 428 prisoners tocl for In the statistics for the Fatal shooting case occurred portion of the First Ward. dreQq . d in fantastical cos ton. I mong their friends, ~,,. :e "mummer's sports." 1 1 / 4 v . 'pet—W. Humel, et . l * the party, and Is six c, each house visi the be jz,es; after Rumcl had humorous address, George W. ' le party. walked up behind Rumel a pistol at a'tall hat ho wore. The auld,..bad no ball or shot in it, but , d passed through the hat and into the log death in a very shOrt time: • The . :.o laborer, and resided in Rumel's vv. opt of Corn street. He leaves a . iildren. Mayberry has a wife. •et Street. near Morris. He he police yesterday, and was . - . nit of the Coroner's *quest. • .-- General Thomas W. mand of this depart si,,, loving Major-General .. 'ekes command ..let. General the Mexican • Is too well s'... A. num • , at the La d their :eted the North Care .ijlatleigh on the lite Altair° met yesterday , rl by electing their 0111- PITESiZINTATION TO 611IEF MCCUSKETL-LflEit, evenine . Chief Engineer Terrence McCusiter was the recipient of a complete set of equipments, consisting of a bat, coat and belt, the donors be ing the Active Association of the Independence Steam Fire Engine. The presentation took place at the house of John Donohue, 2110 Cal lowhill street. "Admiral" Semmes delivered his two lec tures on the Cruise of the Alabama, in Lex ington, Ky., a few nights ago. The editor of the Statesman, the loyal paper of that city, attended, and thus records his impressions: As he progressed with his subject, we won dered bow it was possible that, under a gov emtnent like ours—where the people are op pressed, trodden down and. trampled under foot; where there is no freedom of ,speech or liberty of the press—a man could be found fvho had the nerve to stand before an American audience and use such dar ing utterances as came from the lips of the distinguished "Admiral." Why, he spoke of the vessels consti tuting the American marine as "ships be longing' to the enemy," as glibly as if we had just closed a war with some foreign power, and he had just returned from a cruise upon its coast: And then, how his eyes sparkled, in describing the capture of a merchant or whaling ship, when he uttered the words: "We applied the torch!" It was grand, noble, 'chivalrous." Beside, the Admiral never Interfered with private property—as did "Sherman and his bummers"—not he! He overhauled an outward bound California steamer, mistaking her for one homeward bound, with a million or two of gold on board; but as the ship was onitfreighted with men, women and children, (some five hundred iii all) and not gold, he was greatly disappointed. As it was, however, the passengers had a consi derable amount of money to pay their 'travel ing expenses. but, although, according to the laws of war the Admiral had a perfect right' to seize it all, he magnanimously refrained from despoiling the passengers. Had he; acted "like Sherman and his bummers" in their march to the sea, he would have taken the last dollar; but the Admiral never inter fered with private property ! The lecturer's description of the fight between the Alabama and the gunboat Hatteras, which resulted in the sinking of, the latter, was extremely. graphic, and delighted his very attentive audience beyond measure. It must be borne in mind that this was a great victory, as the Hatteras was a heftier ship, and in every other respect equal, if not superior to the Alabama. But notwithstanding his success on this occasion, the wily Admiral was too cautious to risk another fight with a Yankee ship. It was worthy of remark to note with what delicacy the lecturer referred to the attack, death and burial of the famous Alabama; and we were much enlightened by the contrast between his own magnanimous conduct and that of Captain Winslow, of the Kearsarge, who permitted one-third of the Alabama s crew to drown, in not using proper means to save them. But, the lecturer forgot to tell us that he himself preferred that anybody else should save him than Captain Winslow or his men. These lectures, delivered- 4 in the Southern States,will have a most salutary effect. Union men will be made to feel that they have acted in a most dastardly manner in not per mitting the patriots of the South to sweep through the country like a whirlwind to plant the Confederate flag upon the battlepents of the nation, and to proclaim Jeff. Dlivis Em peror, and Raphael Semmes Lord High Ad miral. The hearts of those who fought against • the Union will thrill with renewed patriot biro, and will leap with joy at the recollec tion that they assisted in the attempt to de stroy this despotic government; they will like wise rejoice that they had a sea captain who could apply the toren to an unarmed mer chant ship with as much indifference as he would sit down to breakfast, and yet respect private property—even watches, chronome ters and 'spoons." 778 150 were MAO OF A bLooP.—Eat ' V -yeiztoraii , y 11113 - ing the sicup Victor; from Morris river,;belong tig. to' Captain Jas. Hard i a storekeepet'i Point Morris, N. Y., sank suddenly, just' above fie Ft cowl wharf below, Spruce street. She was ,deb with oysters and had been towed up by a lig. Tin' first intimation of danger was the water flowing Into tht Captain's' "bunk," which .•waltened Lim, when he at once gave the alarm, 'nut the men, four in number, with himself, escaped ou shore, losing everything. She was cut through by the ice in her passage up. Every one on board was asleep at the thiad, and their preservation was truly providential. 111li NEW CITY TIII%At , I;Itt.It. —Jos. N. Peirsol, EA., the new City Treasurer, took possession of ais office yesterday. He was met by Mr. henry Bumm, .the retiring officer, and by him intro duced to the clerks of the office, after which Mr. Bumm made a brief address to those with whom he had been associated sq long, and stated that his Intercourse with them had been of the most pleasant character. He had ever found them capable and honest, and ever ready to perform Their duty to the public with slut* and, cheer fulness. • INsTamivrroN.—The Installation of Rev. J. B. Riemesnyder as pastor of St. Luke's Evangelical Lutheran Church, Fourth street, above Girard avenue, took place oil Monday evening. TinT church was decorated with evergreens. Rev. C. P. Krauth, D. D. preach«l the sermon, after which the Pastor elect was duly installed y Rev. 0. F. Krotel. A large audience was in attend ance. • SEMMES , LECTURES. A Loyal liontrick.y Criticism. Girls and Wives. Two publications of merit, ono a quarterly review, the other a monthly magazine of the elder and. graver sort, attempt this week to reopen a discussion which three years ago almost occupied the Recess. 'ln the North British Rericw, an eloquent writer, whose identity requires no signature to establish it, points to the disuse of marriage in the upper and middle class as one of the great "sores" in British society. There ought, he says, according to the census returns, to be only -100,000 women between twenty and forty still unmarried, and there , are 4230,000, the difference representing the number wilfully shut out from their most natural and most useful position in society. We may add that this frightful disproportion is mainly within the ranks of the so called middle class. Peasant women all marry, and the workmen, amidst their thousand complaints, certainly do not com plain that their daughters cannot fled hus bands. Ho is evidently inclined to attribute the evil mainly to an increase in luxury and vice, observing, with epigramatic justice,that it celibaCy included chastity, almost all men would marry; but even he is severe on the love of luxury and show for which some women sacrifice so much, The writer in Fraser's ILlartazine, on the other hand, who ,professes to give reasons why he, with £BOO a year, is still a bachelor, boldly throws the whole blame on the women, and launche out in a tirade against them, which reads as if it, had been taken from an expurgated Juvenal. Their dress, their cosmetics, their demands for settlements, their extrava gance after marriage, all come in for his unqualified censure, and he even lugs in the wedding breakfast its ono of the reasons which disincline men to matrimony. The annual premium on the insurance , which lathers usually demand often, he says, crip ples a man almost through life, the £lOO a year so bestowed making all the difference between plenty and discomfort, a remark which breathes the very essence of the bach elor selfishness, doubtless assumed rather than felt by the writer, but which comes out still more strongly in the following pars guipb : "My £BOO a year keeps me in luxury as a bachelor—the club, the'rpbber, the iltW THE DAILY EVENING .1311 LI dinner at Hichmond, the bottle of ':lt claret, the opera stall,the month at Baden Baden,are quite within my modest means ; but the mo ment I marry, I exile myself from this easy par adise." Most people,we fancy, would feel it a luxury to know that the with and the babies were safe from the utter misery which comes on an 'educated household whose head has left nothing at all; but, however, selfishness is,' not our topic to-day. Apparently the bachelor would not mind :all these annoy ances so much, the loss of luxury, of inde pendence, of income, the wadding breakfast, and the payment to the insurance office, the weary ceremonials, and the more weary waste, if only the wife, when won, were worth having. But he argues she is not : "Simpson, for instance, informed me confi dentially, and not without a touch of pathos in his manly voice, that Araminta (who 'adored' smoking in the days of their wooing) requested him •to retire to the guard's van . when he :mildly .. .suggested, a week after they were married, that a cigar would not be an altogether unpleasant companion on the road." 'The matron nowadays quite eclipses the maiden. She flirts more industriously; she "Vitzes more violently; she dresses more'out geouely. 'Hang it; ' said D—, the other day, speaking of a well-known beauty, who has not yet ceased to. reign, 'she knows as much slang as a cabman, she drinks as much as a fish, only it's Curacoa; she gambles like Fox and Sheridan together; she wears a dress which the French police would exclude from the Jardin Mabille; and it is for a jade like this that you ask me to give up my crust of bread and liberty—my shilling whist and my pipe. Not if I know it.' -D-- is a cynical philosopher; but I suspect that in some respects his sketch, s not much overdrawn." This violent paragraph is the moetimOortant in the article, for it expresses in a rough way a feeling which seems to pervade the whole literature of the subject, a, sort of disgust and antipathy for the women Of the day, which breathes through all satirical literature, which under lies the most serious comments on society, and which we may see cropping out every now and then in Punch, perhaps the only satirical paper ever established in which wo men were treated with nearly uniform re spect, laughed with, instead of laughed at.— , The London .Spectator. • A Journey 3 hrougla Central Chtna. In addition to the letters concerning Dr. Livingstone read at the last meeting of the Royal Geographical Society, in London, an interesting and important memoir"On a Jour ney through Central China, from Canton to Hankow,' by Mr. A. S. Bickmore, was read and discussed. Mr. Bickmore left Canton on the 7th of August, 1866, with the intention of following a route proposed for a future rail way to Hankow, by way of Quei-lin and the banks of the Siang, affluent of the . Yang-tae. Traveling up the Si-kiang to Wuchan, he ascended the Cassia river to Hingnan, and near that place found that this northern afflu ent of the Canton river was connected by an artificial canal with the great Siang river, flowing northward into the Yang-tse.. It being autumn, and the season unusually dry, the upper courses of botk.the Cassia and the Siang were encumbered byrapids; at other times he believed it would be possible to tra vel from Canton through the interior of China to Shanghai in the same boat. Near the populous city of Quei-lin Mr. Bickmore narrowly escaped massacre at the hands of the unruly populace, notwithstand ing the protection afforded him by the Man darins. The whole country had been in a state of anarchy since the Tae-ping rebellion, and even new boats belonging to the impe rial government, with the Mandarins on board, were frequently plundered by hordes of rufflans on the banks of the river. Thence forward his Chinese guides kept him closely confined in his boat, that he might escape observation and reach the Yang-tae in safety. The canal connecting the Yang-tse basin with that of the Si-kiang can only be used by boats drawing two feet of water. The water is kept in by dams built across wherever a ,rapid would occur, rum allowing• an escape only through a small gap deep enough for a single boat to pass. At Siohang, on the Siang river, are situated the principal coal mines of the region, and some fifty boats were seen loading. The mines are nothing mere than deep pits in the sides of the hills, and consequently only sur face coal is obtained. It is to be expected that better coal would occur below the water level, but as - soon as the miners come to water they are obliged to abandon the mines for want of proper pumping apparatus. From Sichang to Monkden, north of Pekin, there is a jontinued series of coal mines on the flank of the elevations that form the western border of the great plain. A striking spectacle was presented on arriv ing at Tung-ting lake, at the junction of the Siang with the Yang-tse. A heavy northerly wind had been blowing for six or seven days, and few or no boats had been able to proceed; a southerly breeze then set in, and all the boats that had been harboring in many creeks and bays came out, and at sunrise such a sight was obtained as could only be seen in a land where the population is numbered by the hundred million. • As far as the eye could reach the surface of the take was thickly feathered with white sails, some in sunshine, some -in shadow, and some in the dim dis tance apparently gliding on a thin film of air above the water. Four hundred and forty boats were counted in sight at one time. The Poyang lake, lower down the river, is or the same character. It has been noticed that these great lakes have near them a group of high mountains; this is only another way of stating that where there has been an unusual eleva tion there has been a corresponding depres sion. The President explained that .Mr. Bick more was a young. American traveler of high promise, who had been occupied during three years in exploring the islands of the Malay Archipelago, and had finished his travels by passing through this unfrequented part of China—unvisited by Europeans since the days of the old Jesuits—and traversing Mongolia and Siberia from Pekin to St. Pe tersburg. Statement 'or the Assistant Treasurer The following in an °Metal statement of the business of the oillee of the Assistant Treasurer of the United States, in New York, for the month ending I)ee. 31, 1861: Dec. 31, 1867, by ....... $lO/,055,982 S 1 Receipts during the mouth: On account of Customs... V 5,448,244 02 On account of Gold Notes.. 8,181,220 00 On account of Intl 1tex”..,.-844‘872 58 On account of 3 per cent. Ccrtiticutes 10,410,000 00 On account of I'. 0. Dep't. 103,000 00 On account of Transfers... 8,038,616 at On account Patent Fees... 4,1525 65 On account Itllsectlancous.34,l97,4o9 49 On account Disbursing acc.11,657,645 71 Assay 011 ice........ ....... 494,799 04 On account Interest acc't..11,087,645 71 '' - • Total Payments— Treasury Drafts.. ........$70,372,508 50 Postr-Oillce Draft 261,994 29 Dislirminv, Accounts 13,1114812 93 Assay Office 290,013 23 .Interest Accounts, viz In C01n.... In Currency . . ........... 16 By balance to Cr. 'Treasu rer United States By baiattec to Cr., Dis bursing Accounts 10,794,841 79 By Fum in buud, lu As say 011 Ice.. ..... 9,00,642 96 101,083,21 16 By balance Cr.,lut. Ace't. 1,971,819 03 13(2411...15 OF TRADE. OEO N. TATmal, ANDEr WitEELENI MONTIILY COMMITTE 0, oOAMAION. IN.-PHIL In Now York. 81,421,195 23 $185,550,128 04 1,439,7113 23 1,413,712 70 57,4;16,91)S 85 50,260,919 3S JANI: • The Graces of Greeley. tYroin the' \. Y. Word. Jan. let. H. G. ' as is well-known to the learned in current literature, occasionally inundates, so to speak, the Tribm/e, and overflows irrigu ous instruction into more congenial columns. The waste places of the Independent, of the Ledger, of Hours at Home, have been by turns made in this manner to blossom as the rose. The latest of these extra-forensic ef forts has just been injected into the Herald of Health, where it was the part of prudence to print it, inasmuch as the `shocking senti ments it embodies would have alienated many a true Tribunitian heart. "There is a time," audaciously announces this frisky senior, "to dance." He tries, it is true, to palliate this atrocity by abbreviating the hours and elongating the dress commonly appropriated to that entertainment, but "the fact remains that the horrid Horace aids and abets this profane pastime. He owns deprecatingly that the "saltatory phase" of his own educa tion was neglected, but through this Dog berrian humility we can trace the flush of conscious pride. We are not without hope that in the cycle of public balls which have just been opened the fairy figure of the grace -lul Greeley; may- be sees tripping it with the best of them. We do not doubt that that lithe leg which we jive been • used to contemplate swaddled in the volumes of limp doeskin, will, like the nether limb of the immortal knight Andrew Aguecheek, do batter even than "indifferent well in a flame-colored stock," nor do we permit ourselves to question that H. G. `bath the back trick, simply as strong as any man in Illyria." The case standing thus, we are constrained to ask of the philosopher, as Tobias Belch of his prototype, "Wherefore these things are hid, and wherefore have these gifts a curtain before them." Why dust thou not go to church in a galliard, and come home in a coranto? Thy very walk, it is- true, is a jig, and doubtless on proper occasions thou usest the - cinque-a pace. To, the barber's then, Horaae, with those centrifugal locks. Burnish with ben zine that ancient claw-hammer. Let unfa re illiar blacking illustrate those highlows,and gloves of Paris, if American industry be un-. equal to the proper "protection" of them, encase those honest hands. Disembogue thy pockets of their newspapers, let a prize strawberry plant dangle from thy button hole.as pendant to a ball-card; call Susan R. Anthony from the vasty deep of politics to be thy partner, and hie thee to the Academy, or better still, to the German wherein thy kindred shoddy does homage to fashion, and show us the veritable avatar of Terpsichore. It is a pleasing fancy which depicts Hor ace as girding his loins for the Lancers, let us soy. How benignantly he would be sure to beam under his spectacles upon the wrong. female, to ramble to the right when his duty called him to the left, to involve himself in hopeless labyrinths of trail, to call down chaos on the company and to evoke Mas i phempfrom the tic,h enduring floor-mana ger. But as in olitics, so at parties, the more hopeless is entanglement, the more sublime would be his confidence. Optimism corrugates his countenance though Fact de tain his legs. Partners may snub, as Loyal Leaguers have frowned, but all the more serenely does he smile upon the ruin he has wrought : O'er his warm cheek and rising bosom move The bloom of young Desire, and purple light of Love. Anti he remains the same amiable old ah. surdity, the same vehement inutility, the same helpless, hopeless imbecility that we know so well and cherish with such a pitying contempt. 1111017EUENTS OF OCEAN ISTEAIS/Elfille TO All cIIVE. cnlPs PROM FOR DATE Den m 0rk............Liverp00l ..N ew York ...... ....Dec. 12 Sell ona.. ~.... . ..., . Lontion..N Now York.... ...... De 0.14 Palmpra............Liverpool—N ow York .... Dec. 17 Nebraska ...... ..... Liverpool. New York.... ...... Dec. 18 Nova Scotian ..... —Liverpool—Portland— . ....... .Dec.. 1.9 . . Cuba . . ----Myer p001..80s t0n........ ...... Dec.Dec.2l ... Tripoli._ ...... . . ... LivZils3ol..New Y0rk...........Dm 21 City of Limeriik—Liverpool_New York.. ... .....Dee.2l Ilronen.........Bouthampton..New Y0rk...........Dec. 21 Ilammonla.....Bouthampton..New York.... ...... 1)oc. 21 Oil Vol Washington.lAverpool. .New Y0rk.......... Dee. 25 Perdu Liverpol_New York Dee. M TO DEPART. Eag1e........t ......New York. Altmann .............Jan. 2 Arago New Y0rk..Ua1if0ni1a.............fan. 4 De1vetia............New York.. Liverpool Jan. 4 Hibernian—. Portland.. Liverpool Jna. 4 lowa. —.. ......... ..NewYork..Glazgo NV Jan. 4 Helvetia.— —.....N0w York.. Liverpoo l..... --Jan. 4 star of the Union..Philadel'a..N. 0. via Havana.. Jan. 7 Nebraska .... ...... Now York.. Liverpool . Jan. 8 8c0tia........... ..New York ..Liverp001............Jan. 8 Morro Castle New York—llavana ...-... • ...• • ...fan. 9 Pioneer.,. .......Philadelphia. :Wilmington. Jan. 11 Henry Chauncey. How York..Aspinwall ..........Jan. 11 Baltimore New York..Glaegnw Jan. 11 Denmark........... New York.. Liverpool Jan. 11 Napoleon...—. —..New Y0rk..f1avre......... ..... Jan. 11 City of IVashington..N. York..LiverpooL .... ....... Jan. 11 Stars and Strinee....Philad'a_flavana ..... -.. --Jan. 21 pi) KI foi la 4 ail 01n :A4 ill CA PORT OF PHIELADELPMA-JANt• 2. Hut+ MBE& 7 WI BUN BEM 4 871 HUM WATES. 7 07 ARRIVED YESTERDAY Steamer Norman. CrotA ell, 98 have from Batton, with 'fide° and pameengere to 11 Wineor it Co. City - Ice Boat, Cart Schetleuger, from Reedy bland, having towed thereto bark eliza 1 oung, and left her at the piere yesterday morning. Towed up from Reedy Inl and, one bark. Nothing in eight. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Schr Wm II Mann, Stanford, Richmond, Va. captain. MEMORANDA. Ship Samoset, Greenleaf, hence for San Francinci, was spoken lith Nov.lat9 N, lou N. ship Wyoming, Julius, henco at Liverpool iSth ult. Ship Pocahontas. Graves, from Manila for NeW York, sailed from Mauritius Nth Nov. . . _ Ship Celestial, Armstrong, cleared at Liverpool 16th ult. for San Francisco. Ship North . American, Mitchell, cleared at Liverpool 16th ult. for Ad, n. Ship 11 1) Metcalf, Anderson at Flushing 16th ult. from Callao. ' Ship Hudasn, Potter, for Germany, remained at Chin ches 16th ult.. Ship Garibaldi, Atwood, from New York for San Fran. cieco, was spoken Bth Nov. let 134 N, lon 31 35 W. Steamer Africa, hi acauley, cleared at Boston Mot ult. fdr Liverpool via Halifax. Steamer &Andrew, Scott, cleared at Boston 81st ult.. Glasgow. Steamer Norfolk, 'Waste, hence at Norfolk SOth ult. and milled to return. Steamer Propontis, Higginson, at Liverpool 17111 from Norfolk. Steamer Moravian, Wylie, at Liverpoollith ult. from Portland. Steamer Cuba, Dokehart, at New Orleans 31st ult. from Baltimore._ Steamer Sidon, Watson, - sailed from- Liverpool 17th ult.. for New York. Steamer City of Antwerp, Mirahouen, from New York for Liverpool, at Halifax Both Mt. to proceed at 9 A.M. let instant Bark Pere, Mullenhauer, hence at Helvoet 19th Bark Myra, Dix, hence, called from Queenetown 18th ult. for Bremen. Bark Meteor, Bulbar, sailed from Foochow 28th Oct. for Boston, Bark Geo 1111unt, Woodbury. hence at Antwerp 15th ult. Bark Banger (Br) Doty, cleared at Boston slot for this port. Bark 'Warren Hastings, Perry, sailed from Foochow 21st Oct. for how - York. Brig M Shepherd, Robbins, from New Bedford, at St. Heti an 135th Oct Brie M C ComerY, Colliery, sailed from AspinWall Hjtt ult. for Apalachicola. Schr Mary E Alllk den, Smith, hence for Boston, at Pro vincetown 20th ult. SeimS P M Tasker, Allen, sailed from Portsmouth 2.9 th ult. too this port. schr M H Reed, Benson, sailed from New Bedford Beth ult. for this port. Schr It Vaux. Whitaker. sailed front dArood's Bole Slot ult. tor Charleston. Schr Race Horse Bragg, hence at 'Newburnort reth ult. Schr Mary Milnee, Bnrdge, cleared at Charleston 29th nit. for Bucksville, Schr Lucy .1 /Warren. Hatch, hence for Newburyport, at Holmes' Hole 27th ult. and sailed again 20th. MARINE MISCELLANY. Among the Marine losses during the loot month, the bark Maximilian, nonce for Antwerp, is estimated at 10341001 brig Martin Burns, from St tr artins for rhilodel. phis, IMN000; Jennie Achorn, from London for Philadel• gire,ooo; seer Caleb Stetson, from Philadelphia for Poston, $l5 000; Mary Ann, from Philadelphia for Alex , unarm, $2500. Ship El Dorado, at San Francisco from New York, re. corns: Sept let to the 14th, when oil Cape Horn, had very h eavy westerly gales, shifted cargo, stove bultvarkm and cabin doors, partly filling the cabin with water; was compelled to throw overboard LO tons of coat, NOTICE TO MARINERS Citi:s.Arc:v6l: ILlca—Liohthaus4 at beep WAY ~ g ioats, Janice klivrr, riroinia 1 -0111clid notice is hereby 0011 that a screw pile lighthouse bee been erected at Dr.-ep Water Shoals. in the Jellies Ricer, Virginia, to take the place of the one destroyed by the ice, inn winter.' - The light iv ill be exhibited fo l f , the first time on the u evening of the 16th :Junea, 18 when the llght.vemsel now marking the station ma be withdrawn. The illuminating apparatus is a Fresno' lens of the sixth order, the focal plane being thirty.live feet above ordinary tides and the light can be seen in clear weather a distance of nine miles. • By order: W. 11. SHURRICK, Chairman. Treasury Department, Office Light house Beard. ington, 1B.;„ Dec. 21, 1887. A sunken schooner, with topmasts ' just above water, Iles off the mouth of the Rappahannock River, right, in the back of TeBBobl. Slic Is supposed to have Wen slink by Boma steamer. WIEW TURKEY PRUNES LANDING AND FOR SALE J. by J. BUBBLER & Itt South Delwin van& ARV 2, .1888. ADIVSEMLEINTS., MEW C;IiEBTNIYI , sTEEET Till;• DLIT= tING, 11MaSJA I, AND 1;]I - - NG n • .:3 n.Z ....., . ‘ A . A C ... . . , • ''• NEW * ..-.1, '.. . 14 c. 4. , Gizt:A.T. ~... ~L.- : DANCES. .., •islo4. . , * 11 . 44, Z . ...., II : 111 8 1 . . C: i : i :S v ''''.. . ..... . 1. °4:".7., cd Founded on the Fairy Story, of CINDERELLA ; OR, THE LIMA GLASS SLIPPER, GALLEI TI, PE NIN 0 YER, AND ROEL LA CHANGE OP BALLET. • NEW SCENERY AND COSTUMES A BALLET OF 75 YOUNG LADIES, The whole to conclude with A MA titiIIFIOUN T TRANSFORMATION SCENE, SATUIWAY—CENDUILLON MATINEE. • ur STREET THEATRE, N. E. °Of:NEB OF V T NINTH and \l'AL\ UT streets. Begins at , Past 7. TI (TIitTIISDAY) EVENING, Jan. 20968' TENTB. NIGHT of the charming young Artiste. LUCILLE ,WESTERN, • When sho will appear as LAD} ISABEL AND MADAME VINE, (FOR THE LAST TIME BUT ONE) in C. W. Tnyloure's Groat Moral Drama of EAB'I LYNNE, OR THE ELOPEMENT. No play of the present day onto •a the popularity of "Enat Lynne," it being not only a thrilling Emotional Drama, but an undoubted • CORRECT PICTURE OF SOCIETY. --- MRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE.— Begins ..56 past 7. The New Play, LIGHT AT LAST'. MRS. JOHN DREW A NEW PART. MONDAY AND EVERY EVENING. Col. Fitzgerald's Original Play_ LIGHT AT `LAST; OR, THE SHADOW ON THE CASEMENT." New Scenery by Hawthorne and Falters. NOW Music by J. Remington Fairlamb, New Dances by Constantine Ca enter . Mechanical Effects by Rough, and a Groat Cas including MR . JOHN DREW as CATHERINE rAntLAWN Friday—Benefit of Mrs. John Drew. Saturday—Light at Last. QEVENTII STREET OPERA HOUSE, SEVENTH Ki STREET below Arch, L. V. TUNISON d CO.. . . _ ... —Proprietors. TUNISON di CO.'S MINSTRELS. HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL! Santa Claus! Santa lima! Santa Claus! A new Spectacle for the Holidays. A TREAT FOR THE LITTLE ONES. O,NE THOUSAND DOLLARS DInTR ' W ORTH OF TOYS ILL Oh IBUED: Nightly appearance of JOHNNY MACK, The Celebrated Ethiopian Comedian, Together withal the other cciobrities of this mammoth troupe. .MATINEE NEW YEAR'S AFTERNOON, at 2 oclock. On Monday Evening, the Nevrilurierglie, —l",) FAUST. Which will be repeated nightly until further notice. floors open at 7 o'clock . Admission " b, f 0 and 7o cents. Commence - deli FOYER OF THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. FRIDAY AFTERNOON. January 3d, At half.peu,t four o'clock. CeitEL WOLEguLIN"B FIRST DEETIIO-YEN'. MATINEE, With the valuable assistance of Mr. THEO.IIABELX ANN. Single Admiluion, One Lollar. Tickets, Progrdramer and subscription Lists at the MIIFIC Storer. de27 A SSEMBLY BUILDINCL—LARGE NALOON. FAREWELL SEASON. ;MANOR BLITZ. Alro, every Afternoon and Evening during o days. Afternoon, :I; and Evening, at ;X. 1101113 Y, BIRDS, SPHINX AND MINSTRELS. First appearance of the CELEBRATED ROPE DANCE, The greatest invention et the age. me ono and all to see the CURIOSITIES. Children, take your parents, and parent, lake your children. Admlarion 25 cents. Children 15 cent. de23tf Reserved rents 50 contr. NEW ELEVENTH STREET OrERA iIutTSE. ELEVENTH street, above CHESTNUT THE FAMILY RESORT. - - - - - - GAIINCROSti & DIXEY.S MINSTRELS. THE GREAT STAR TROUPE OF THE WORLD. HAPPY NY .W YEAR. Second week of the Gi cat Holiday Pantomime+ cull tied THE MAOIO P.k.ARL. NOTICE.. MAGIC PEARL MATINEE, On NEW YEAR'S DAY. at o'clock. rtARL BNZ'S Tt.) ORC HE STR A MATINEES, EVERY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. At a% o'clock. IN 'HORTICULTURAL HALL. Violinist—WM. 'STOLL, JR.—Jupiter SymPhdrly. Package of Four Tickets for One Dollar. Single Tickets, tA cents. To be had at Boner & C 0.% 1109 Chestnut street, and at the door. 13.62041 LAST WEEK OF THE BUNYAN TABLEAUX. INational Hall, Market street. abcve Twelfth. Matinee every afternoon, at a o'clock. Exhibition every night, excepting Wednesday night. at 'P.; o'clock. Closing positively January 4. Admission, 30 cents. Four tickets for *l. Children, 15 cents. dellS 1' O` EVENING andS AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE, ' SATURDAY AFTERNOON. GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE. In Grand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesques, Songs, Dances!. •Gymnast MCP, Pantomimes, be. GERMAN IA ; HEST RA.—PUB LIC It EU KA RS ALS at the MUSIC AL FUND llALL,every SATURDAY at 336 P. M. Tickets kW at the Door and at all prim:Mal Music Stores, Kngsgenaents can be made by addressing G. Bs STEW. 3131 Monterey street, or at It. WITTIG'S Annie Store, 1021 Chestnut street. pENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF FS - YE ARTS, CHESTNUT, above TENTH. °pet! from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Benjamin West's great picture of CHRIST REJF.CTED still on ezbibition. je4-tf • MABBLER`Ii MONDAY AFTERNOON CONCERTS, at Concert Hall, every Monday, from 3„tg till 5 o'clock. ale admfeeion, 50 cents. Package, fora Tickets. $1 011, "Coupon" of thirty Tickets, $5 00. nor.r.tf MEBICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC.—SEE AD vertisement r.nder head of "fklusicol de3O4t wrovr,s AND. HEATERS. REMOVAL. W.A. ARNOLD Efts removed hit Depot for the sale of FURNACES RANGES, GRATk,S, SLATE MANTLED„ &c., from No.lolo CHESTNUT. Street to 130? CHESTNUT STREET. tylßrn w ly THOMSON'S LONDON KITCHENER, OR ED, ropean Ranges, for families, hotels or public insti. tutions, in twenty different slices. .Also, Philadel. 4. phis, Ranges Hot Air Pinnaces, Portable Heaters, Low-down Grates, iireboard Stoves, Bath Boilers. Stew hole Plates, Broilers, Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail, by the manufacturers, SHARPE & THOMSON. No. 2o9.North Second street THOMAS S. DIXON SONS, Late Late Andrews & Dixon, No. WA CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia. °PPc'elth United S tatue Mint' Manufacturers of LOW DOWN, PARLOR, CHAMBER, ~ • AndE other (MATES, For Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood Fire. Alllo_,_ • WABM-AIR FURNACES, For Warming Public and Private Buildir.gs. • . REGISTERS, VENTILATORS. AND . CHIMNEY CAPS,_ ' COOKING , RANGES, BATH-BOILERS, • • WHOLESALE and RETAIL. WATCHES, JENVELICY, &Go Western Watches. k ti National Watoh Company, Elgin, 111. iVatch-makers Supplied at Factory Pircen. JOHN M. HARPER, N 0.308 Chestnut St. (Second Story.) de24lrn4 STOLEN. STALEN.—TbE PUBLIC IS HEREBY CAUTIONED from negotiating the following notes, the some hay. ing been stolen from our Counting Room, on MONDAY, December Ea. one drawn to order of H.S. Hannie k CO., September 2d, 4 months, for $4,245 61. Ono drawn to order of Solomon Alter, October Bth, 4 months. for $1..000. One drawn to order of Solomon Alter, October leth,j4 months, for $4,054 la Ono drawn to the order of Solomon Alter, October 15th, 4 menthe, $2,610 89. ' Ono drawn to order of Patterson do Bolton, December 17. four !moths, $1,401112. The whole alummting to $14,892 75. MAOKY. BEATTIE A. , HAY de7u-It7 No. 25 South Water strool, Philadelphia. MUSICAL. A MERIC AN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC.- 11 Winter Term begins MONDAY. January 6th, 'Vacan cies for Beginners and Advanced Pupils. Singing, Piano. Cabinet etrgan, Melodeon, Violin. Flute, liorn, ; Has mony, Elocution and Languages. Tuition, $lO, $l5 and $2 per quarter, under a thoiough en.stein of Inetruation,,t_aught by the best Professore. E. corner Tenth and Walnut. Ottico hours, 3 to 10 P. M. de3o-4t .1 ML. FY/U(IEI3 umtmoNy CLASSES COMMENCE on January 2d. For particulard sooty at tho Music Store. . „ "deaohtu,th,l4t4 ALLAD-SINGING. T. RIBHOP, de3.lrn. 33 South Nineteenth street. C ANNED FRUIT. XEGETABLE.--1,000 OASEB fresh Canned Peas Pineoo oases !Canned Pine Applte 200 cases fresh A ..les. Sian; 1 3. 000 °Mal Green Corn and green Peas I eases [nen rlnms. cane; 900 cases fresh Green (Won; 600 cases Cherries, In EYr_up; 600 cases Bleckberried, In syrup; 64X) cases Straw. "ernes; syrup ; 600 cases fresh Peary in syrup ; kin Cann Canno Tomatoes; 600 cases Oysters. P o bater oa n a .P lao Ml app Ci cites ßOzu3t. V 130.1. nouns. d;o. or flue by JOSEPH B. BUBBLER Qs CO.. 1106 Bouth Delaware ONOIIIIO. BORDEN , I3 BEEF TE4i..—WiLY A N'OUN C E °FIII / 8 extract will make A joint of excellent Seof Tea In few minutes. Always onliand. and for mils by JOSEPH B. 8U151E4 di Ci).195 &SUL DigaWard NINO+ SPECIAL NOTIROIM OFFICE OF, TIIE, AMYGDALOID MI 'FW OM PA rS YOF LAKE, tieI'ERLOR, :No. 114 NUT :STREET... . - - . PIIILADELPTUA, CCOMbOT aa. 1: Notice is hereby given that an instalment of Fifty Ceuta on each and every Share of theCapltat Stock e Amygdaloid Mining Company of Lake Superior svl due and payable at, the Mice of the Company, N. Walnut streeMon or before Friday, January lUth,lBti3, interest added after that date. By order of the Board. dattjAllo M. IL HOFFMAN, Treasur THE PUILADELPIThI AND BAUM. l er CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY. P1111.A1.1111911A, Deeembor 26th, l• The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Phil. phla and Baltimore Central Railroad Company wi held on MONDA' . January 13th. 1868, in the Hall of borough of Oxford. Chester county. Pa.. between hours of 12 M. awl ^ P M., for the purpose of electl President and twelve Directors, and for such other I new as may legally conic before said meeting. dr 2641104.j/cid, JOSEPH lIUDDELL, Secretor irog—r tt — oFFICE OF THE NORTH PAINNSYLVA w`w Railroad Company, Pit tf.ADM.P.nrs, December 21, V: The Annual Meeting of the ]Stockholders of the null PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY will be . at the office of the Company, on MONDAY. January 1. 1868, at 12 o'clock M., at which time and place nn oleo will be held for n President and Ten Directors. to se for the cunning your. de2:idalBf EDWARD ARMSTRONG, Secrets • NOTICE. k ir OFFICE PITILADELPIIIA AND TRENT RAILROAD CODIYAN Y. YII ILADMPIIIA, December 24th, 1:; The annual meeting of the Stockholders will be hei the Company's t .flice, No. t.. 24 South Delaware avenue, MONDAY, the 10th Jarman - , lit 8, at 1 o'clock P. M., which lime an election for Twelve Directors to servo thde enstjuang year will take PIJ.M ORRELL, Secretary AMERICAN MEE INSURANCE AND TRU; it l6r COMPANY. IWALNCT inttEET, BOLT HE. CORNER OF FOURTH. PIMADELPIJIA, DOCOMber 23, 1887. NOTICE.—The annual meeting of the Stockholders this Company, for the election of thirteen Trustees rem for the ensuing year, will be held at the Office, MONDAY, January 6th. 1868, between 10 M. and o'closiomou. JOHN B. WILSON del'A•tja6§ INNURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE PENNbYLVANIA. PII T.ADELIMIA, Dec. 130. leB7. An tlectlon for thirteen Director!' cf the Company WI be held at the oilico of the Company, Noe. 4 and LE: change Building, On MONDAY: January 18th, 18 1 38, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M and 1 o'clock P.ls WILLIAM HARPER. • Secretary. d 'ad.l2t§ ter PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAMBO COMPANY. OFFICE, 027 SOUTH FOURTH BT. PIIII.A.DELPLUA, Deo. 16. L 867. Notice is hereby given to the Stockholders of this Con pany that the annual meeting and an election for Prea debt, six Niane, Treasurer and Secretary, will tak place on the SECOND MoNDAY. lath of January nazi atl2lll.___ .-WtLll. wEpe, dela:Cal.% „ stir OFFICE PHILADELPHIA ANDMONTGOMER) t OIL NTY RAILROAD COMPANY, 127 SOUTI, FOURTH ST. Pnir.auttenza., Dec. 27, 18t17. NOTICE.—The Annual Meeting of the Stockholder§ of tills Company, and an Election for officers to serve fo, the ensuing year, will be held on MONDAY, January.l3 18(8. at 12 o'clock M., at this office, SAMUEL C. FORD, • Treasurer. kir NATIONAL BANK OF THE NORTHERN' Liberties. _ _ de27,20.ja:',4,7,10,13: PHILADELPHIA, Dec. " 1867. The Annual Election for Directors of this Hank' will be held at the Banking House on WEDNESDAY, the Bth day r f January next. between the hotu a of 10 o'clock A. M. and o'ctock I'. bL de7.satu th t ja7; S- THE EO3I.MERCIAL NATIONAL BANK OF PENNSYLVANIA. PHILADELPHIA. December 7,1867. The annual election for Directors of this Dank will be belt at the 13..nking liouse, on WFDNESDAY, January Bth , 01 between the hours of Le . H,. 14,24 2 '. M. 8. C. PALMER., M s tu lb tie., Cashier. FOURTH NATIONAL DANK OF PHILADEJ, PIIIA. 7 ARCH street: Pliti.sbyt.P/11A. December 7th 1887. The annual election for Directors will be held at the Banking Louse, on TUESDAY. January bleb, MAK be tween tbe houra of 11A. M. and 2 P. M. - SAMUEL J. bIAUMULLAN, delll4h,e,tu.tjalli Caehler. PRN ( I nic S a lU r T O lll 9 l 2 D i LIFE,b ,. INSURANCE COM ELEMI4.—A n 'election for t t e n i t ;te h e a li m t e l e P o h I a e for three Team will be held at the Wilco of thei ( 'ompany„ on MONDAY, the dth day of January, 18dd. oils open fromto 12 M. IL El. !STEPHENS. de24-tu,th,edby Secretary. (X)I4MONIVEALTII NATIONAL BANk. Bnitammmits., December 14. 1867. The Annual Election for Directors will be held at the Banking Donee on TUESDAY, the 14th day of January, 1868, between the hour. of 14 o'clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. del44s.tu,th,tjal4 soy- NATIONAL EXCHANGE BANK. PlimanzErno.. Den 10. 1807. The Annual Election for Directors will be held at the Banking.bouse on TUESDAY, thellith of January nod. between the hours of 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. J. , GILE:OUGH t doletri.tho.toJal.3 Outlier. riapA mi;ETING OF TEIE CONTRIBUTORS TO THE ..""" Northern Dispensary of Philadelphia, will be held on TUESDAY. January IS6B. between the hours of two and.fonr o'clock P. Id.. at the hall of the Iruitltution. No. till Spring Garden street, to elect Managers for the coin ing year. 131-st• LA. TREASURER'S EIYI EN AND AT IPILJGZA. The con one on the first mortiase bonds of this Com pany. falling due January Ist, Ifide, will be paid on pre sentation ut the - Company's office, Cooperti Point, Cam den, N. J., ou and after the 2d proximo. El. WHITEMAN, ide2o.Btfl Treasurer. Dee. 28. 1867 sir BANK. FARMERS' AND MECHANICS' NATIONAL, PLIILADZI.PII.I4 4 Deal giber 43.1891. The Annual Election for Directors of this Rana will be held at the Banking Honda, on WEDNESDA Y, the Bth day of January next,between the hol' of II o'clock A.M. end 2 o'clock Y. M. W. RUSHTON, Jr., deti ROC Cashier. DAISIIRIA IRON COMPANY.—TILE ANNUAL. meeting of Stockholders of the Cambria Iron Com pany will be held at their ()nice. No. 400 Chestnut street. Philadelphia, on TUESDAY, the 2let day of January next, at 4 o'clock, P. M., when an Election will be held for *even ph - cetera, to serve for the easuin ear. JOHN T. Secretary. PolLanrt.vnte. Dee. IP, de2l.D3t• sop. OFFICE OF THE PIDENIX INSURANOE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. Dbettmern27th. 1667. The Annul , 1 Election fer Five Directors, to serve for three years. will be held on MONDAY. January 6th, 1980, at 11 o'clock. at the °nice of the Company, No. 22-1 V alma street. dell;J:t; SAMUEL WILCOX. Secretary. NOTICE.—THE. ANNUAL MEETING OF THE Oar STOCKHOLDERS OF TlO PMILADEL,PLUd. SIM - EI:MINING COMPANY OF NEVADA.wiII beheld et their Office, No. 211 South Third mime% In the city of Philadelphia, on TUESDAY. the 14th day_ of January. lEik. at 2 o'clock P. M. CIIALES TAYLOR, de2slst Secretary. naive THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE BTOCIC .w holden of the Atlantic Petroleum storage Company will be held at the office of-the Company, No. 115 Walnut street; on MONDAY, January 13, 16,58, at 3 o'clock. P. M. ELMO ROBEP.TIL !Secretary. de30•10t• Rte' OFFICE OF' THE DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE COMPANY. . Pill L ecember D:412„ 1981. The mumi election for twenty-eight Directors will be held at this Office, on MONDA.A., i he sixth day of January next, between the hours of ID A. M. and 2 P i M. &WOW. HEN']LYLBUttIi. Secretary. air OFFICE AN'PIIRACITE INSURANCE COM PAN Y. No. MI WALNUT Street. P.111LA1.F.1.1.111A, Dec. 30th, 1867. The Annual Election for Ten Directors will be held at Ibis Mee on MONDAY. the Sixth day of, January next. between the hours of 10 and 12 A. M. de3o.llts WM. M. SMITH. Secrete DIVIDEND , NOTICE& PHILADELPHIA AND.RE ADDiO RAILROAD 11116)7 COMPANY, OFFICE 227 SOUTH FOURTH ST. PMLADELPIIIA, December 24th, 1867. DIVIDEND NO fICE. The Transfer Rooks of this Company. will be closed on d'uesday, Slat inst., and be reopened on Tuesday. January 14th, le 1. A Dividend of Five per Cent. has been declared on the Preferred and Omnmon dtock, clear of National and State taxes, payable id Stock, on and after the 20th of January next, to the holders thereof, as they Audi stand registered on the books of the Company, on the 91st hut. All payable at this Office. AR orders for Dividends must be witnessed and stamped. de26-Iddi ITHE GIRARD LIFE INSURANCE, ANNUITY AND TRIAIT COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. DECEMBEIt 81 IBd7. The Managere have this day declared a dividend of Four Per Cent. on the Capital Stock for the last six months payable to the ateckholders, clear of the dtato and United States taxes, on demand. JOHN F. JAMES, Actuary. stiF — DIVIDEND NOTICE.—OCEAN OIL COM PANY. A Monthly Dividend of Two Per Cent. (being twenty cents per :Mare) ham been declared payable on and after Janpary 2d, next, clear of taxes. Books cleire.Dec. 26. at 3 r.. M.; open Jan. DAVID BOYD. Jr.. Tram:Men December :23, 1867. , de24 24 28 81 ja2-30 par NATIONAL EX CII ANCiE DANK. p,111.ADN.1.1.111A, January 1, 1888, The Direstora have declared' a Dbildtml. of FOUR PER dear of blies, payable on demand. w. GILBOUGIi. Jrll-61 Cashier. EttAIL, !VOTIVE:V.. TN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED sT_A•rits FOR TEIE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENN.. inii'VANlA.—in Bankruptcy.— In the matter of JAMES D. MABEE, a Bankrupt.—To whom Jet may 001100111: The undersigned hereby gives notice of his' apPointment tut Assignee of JAMES D. MABEE, of Philadelphia, in tho county of Philadelphia, and State of Pennsylvania, path, in said Dish let, who has been adjudged a bankrupt upon his ownipetition, by the District Court of said District.; Dated at Thiladeiphia, tho6th day of November, A., D. 18f7.WM. VOGDES, de2o-thW . No. 1 28 South Sixth attest. TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE ern: AND County of Philadelphia—Estate of EDWARD BICH. PflY, deceased.—Notice Id hereby given that the inven tory and appritipernent of property of said decedent,. elected to be r, tamed by me under the Act oflith April. 1861, has been filed in and will be confirmed by said Court, unless escoptions thereto aro filed before Saturday, January Md.- ELIZABETH 'MURPHY, delil-tu,th,4t* Widow pi Edward Murphy, deal. CUTTERS OP ADMINISTRATION 'HAVING REIM granted to the subscriber upon the estate of OR AS. LELAND, deceased, all persons indebted to the same willmake payment and those haying claims present them to ;ALBEAT 0, THORe. Adminietrittor, 1620 Locust otreot, dol2tkißt• • 9ccrotaiy. BecTeiiry. W. GU3IMERE. Caahfer. - . 11 C. YOUNG. C;a4thier JOHN KF,BSLER, • Secretary 4 11 T 7 Ift .. ... . _ I, i . Cnnipse or tin; Clever American ;q -,: -r ninnerisi miner reennar Circling i, 1 1 i ifo„. A. WAKO. i ' '''' ' i n ' foe!) ~ ~, . 00 , 3 , It was 'luring dinnerti ( a , t ' te 'l d . Tade . . the 4te iiintattee of the bl , Jck 6 6 I i knew a very clever ca cou t n n t e i l m " a n n . of ors," said 1, addressing him when our in= function was over, and we were on speak g terms.. ' , lndeed, so; and who was he, sir ?" he ked, drily. "Artemus Ward," 1 answered. . Ou hearing the name of the late lamented amorist, the ladies smiled: it reminded them, suppose, of his droll writings. "He was a talented man, and pretty sue ,sstul in his line," rejoined paterfamilias. "No writer in so short a time, and having fritten so little, ever made such a world 'ree reputation," I remarked; "his name is a Aouiehold word in England, where every one e,, 'ad his book. He has had imitators in unierable, but none are comparable with the ,„,, itty original." at;, "He died very young," said the Scotch -I'l,a an, who had been listening to our con -ia:'. ersation. . „ 1 '.,f. .. . ~e'. es; in a decline," I replied. "His death. *, as hastened by the lectures ho gave in Lon- W. 4. on, when in too delicate a state or' health to ~:.:.. resist such a fatigue as they incurred. I did ".;;!: : all I could," I continued, "to persuade him •,,..',':r a o abandon them and go to a warmer climate; ut, he was self-willed and went on, until. at -fVhist. the hard work proved too much for him, : , :f,and lie succumbed.' Artemus "But there never was such a person as 'A rtemus Ward, was there?'' aske:Lone of the ' , ,- ,. t young ladlesi; who was thereupon informed ,a;tiy her sister that the name was assumed by 4 §.,,a, Mr. BrOwne. "I attended one of his lee ., tura in New York," continued the last .speaker, "and never laughed so much at any entertainment." •1 he last time I saw Artemus -Ward, or Mr. Browne, as you rightly call him, it was under rather singular circumstances. 6 1 0b, do tell us!" exclaimed the youne . 1 ladies together. "Ile called. on me in London, when I was a prisoner in my own house." I continued. "It was between one and two o'clodk in the day. 1 was at luncheon wttl, a lady. Re- quiring the servant, L rang the bell: The ' servant Caine; but on trying to open the door of the dining-room, in which we were, found ! it impossible to do so. She knocked. • "Come in," I cried. -Ican't, sir; the door's locked, ' was the reply. 1 1 "Nonsense!" I. exclaimed, and rose to open I the door. 1 turned the handle round and . round in vain; the lock, in some way or other, had got out of order; and resisted all our eforts. outside and inside, to set it right. The door could not be opened. What was to le done? The lady got nervous-the ser vant more vigorous in her attempt to effect an entrance. She was the only domestic in ' the house, which made the position still more embarrtaising; for there'was no one to send l for assistauce, or rather, to admit her again, if , t . she wait out. Most fortunately, I had the key of the street door in my pocket. • I requested :.: , the servant to fetch a locksmith,and . gave her :). the • key of the window. She started, and ", stayed long - enough to fetch all the lock smiths' in London. She was gone at least i: - `, two hours. During this time several people I.: came to see me. The first was Artemus . ' Ward. I saluted him from the window, ex plained my position, and asked him to wait. He did' so. Presently Alfred . Mellon drove up in a hansom. I had to re ceive him in the same distant manner, and introducing . him to the first-comer, begged them to have a - little patience, and that they should be let in. Then a well known member of _the_ bar_arrived,-and took such delight in chaffing the two unhappy prisoners, and made so much noise in the amen as to attract the • attention of the op posite neighbors, who soon came out on their respective - „balconies, and enjoyed the strange scene that ;was being enacted. Other friends were shortly added to• the three already '',.. parading the pavement until, at last, there was a crowd before the house. At length the long-looked for locksmith made his ap pearance, and after a difficult operation on the lock of the door, we were set at liberty, and those outside obtained admittance. The I ta ly, my fedow-prisoner, was a relative of mine, which was rather fortunate under the circumstances." . "Ent what was the end of that story you were telling us?" inquinol one of the ladies, W lien we were resented at table. "The temporary imprisonment resulted in our passing a very pleasant afternoon with Anemias .Ward;" I replied; "he was greatly amused at the dilemma in which we had been placed. To cninnemorate the event, be and Alfred Mellon wrote their names in my scrap- book. By a sad coincidence, the tia o died within a short time of each other, very soon alter. Both their names are on the same page; one signs himself twice: .. "Faithfully yours, ' "CllAlttEs P. BnowN. "Trooly yours til deth, " 'A/ITEM lii WA nn."' "lie was a IMet man in society, I have heard," said the American. ~ "Very much so,- and spoke but seldom," I answered. . , "When at home he always had . Ids attend ant with him, a bey to whom he was very much attached. 1 never knew any victim of consumption in whom hope and - confidence in ultimate recovery ,were so great. He would not acknowledge any failing of health, but always declared he was strong and hearty, ,although his pale face,emaciated appearance, and fatal symptoms, "too stately- indicated his forlarn condition to all who saw him."—",l Wort Time in Germany," in Once a Wed. . 4 lhe 44 11Va.Sled Lakes” or lowa. LETTER FROM THE STATE GEOLOGIST. Mr. White, State geologist of lowa, writes to the Dubuque : "From time to time, during the last ten or fifteen years, the public have been treated to accounts of the so-called walled lakes of northern lowa, one of them being situated in Wright and the other in Sac county, and al most every writer seems to have entertained the belief that the 'walls' were the work of human bands, and those were the hands of a departed race of men who, ages ago, inhab ited that region. While making examinations of the peat marshes of that part of the State during the past season I had excellent oppor- ; tunities to examine both of the lakes just named; as well as others of the same char- I acter, fourteen in number, of which the fo-- I lowing is- the list:, , I "1. Clear Lake, Cerro Gordo county. Rice lake, Worth county. :). - Silver Lake,: Worth county. 4. Bright's Lake, Worth county; 5. , Crystal Lake, Hancock county. 6. Eagle Lake, Hancock county. 7. Lake Edward; Hancock 'county. ti. Lake Mary, HapeeckcOunty, 9. Lake Flora, Hancock county.. .1.0..,9w1 Lake, Humboldt county. 11. Lake , Gertrude, Wright county.. 12. Lake Cornelia, right county. LA. Elm Lake, Wright county. 14. 'Affair - Lake,' i Wright county. IS: Twin bakes, Cabman county: 16; `Wall Lake,' Sic county. . "Almost every pne of theta lakes presents the samenhenomena,and is just as worthy the name of 'walled lake' as those are concerning which so much has been said. They vary from half a mile to five miles hi length, some of which,are beautiful little sheets of water; but others are so grown up with wild rice and rashes that they are quite, uninteresting in appearance, and all of , them are shalliw. The region where most of them exist has a gentle,u4dulating surface, and the depresairms between the numerous rounded 'elerations not communicating so freely with each other as the depressions in Well-drained regions do, many of them have become_ occupied by peat - marshes ani small lakes, which drain into the upper branches of the rivers that rise in or flow through that : region. "The- or; more properly, embank ments, are really very interesting natural'ob jects, and it is not surprising that they have attracted some attention. They vary much in height and width, as well as in the mate dale which compose them; sometimes they aro principally of boulders, but more often of sand, gravel and earthy material thrown, out of the bed of the lake. In many in stances where a peat marsh extends out like an arm of the lake, it is entirely separated tiom it by an embankment of turf thrown up by the fame agency, but of turf; because that, and no other material, was within reach of the ice. These turf embankments sometimes have a growth of willows upon them, and have been called ' beaver dams; but beavers never attempt to dam still waters. They 'dam running streams to ob tain ponds of still water. These turf embank ments very much resemble the material thrown our of a ditch in draining a marsh, but their origin is unmistakable. When the embankments are composed principally of' boulders, they are usually thrown up from two to four feet high, and from five to fifteen feet wide, and imbedded in sand, gravel and earth, the outside of the embankment being usually as steep as the inner or lake side: and the latter often faintly resembles an arti ficial levee. Although they sometimes have a degree of regularity, the boulders which compose them are never arranged in any. order, nor is there an: appearance of any work of art - upon them "The water in these lakes is almost always low in the latter part ,of the year, and the frosts of winter still farther reduce the actual depth, so that very little unfrozen water re mains in some of them. This is often known to be the case, and only a few winters ago nearly all the fish of Wall Lake, in Wright country, were killed by that means. "It is evident that wherever the ice became frozen to the bottom of the lake, it would freeze fast to, and in many instances inclose the boulders and gravel which were streeed upon the bottom. .Now when spring re turned, the ice being raised by the rains and melting snows, would be carried with its burdens to the high ivater shore by the pre vailing wind. Let this process be 'repeated vear after year, from age to a,gp, and it is evi dent that all the boulders within reach of the ice would in time be taken up and carried to the shore, and left exactly where the force of the ice ceased to act. Addesi to this, the almost constant dashing of the waves against the beach during the warmer parts of the year would have tee eiiect of carrying out large quantities of ;_rra'. el and sand, which would kcompletely iinfall the boulders. „There is also another cause which doubtless assisted more than any other in giving the embank ments their definite form. "The whole surface of these lakes freezes up almost simultaneously, and, to a consider able depth. Now the natural expansion of a solid cake of ice, from half a mile to five miles in diameter, has, as every one known, enormous power, quite equal to any amount required to throw up any and all the boul ders we find in the embankments, or crowd them quickly against the steeper shores. No natural force would bring them back again, and the annual repetition of the forces above referred to affords sufficient explana tion of the phenomena. "It may be thought by some that the pro cesses described would be too slow to pro duce the results which we see, but slowness is quite in keeping with the mightiest operations of nature. 'The ruins grind slowly, but they grind exceeding tine.' "The shores of_Crystal Lake .s.hows two sets of embankments, showing that at a remote period the lake occupied a higher level, and that its surface was lowered by the deepening of its outlet, when the second embankment was formed. . _ . 'Seeing, then, that the origin of these em bankments cau be accounted ibr by the action of natural forces alone. it is difficult to under stand how anyone could suppose the human hand had anythicg to do with their construc tion.- Oit MAR. 4, c' FOP. SALL—A VALUABLE I'ItOPERTY rot: ::: ittve:atom.t, con-i‘ting of two threo,tory brick tator,., w th dwelling., and five three,tory modern brick dwellim:l, Malt in tint bet manner, nod turutehed frith evety cnnventence. eituate un the S. is corner of Furth and Diannmd et meta. extending to Otbum xtreet. Are: all occoMed by good reeponsible t‘mantg. J. M. G UM NI EY & SONS. titki WRIDItt etreet. COUNTL. SEAT AT IIfiItDENTOWN. N. Large three-story brick Mansion iloue. containing '22 room., ite,utitully located and supplied with rue, water, het air furnaceA, and every modern improvement. EllitAle tor a school or summer boa”ding.liottie stabling for ten Muses. carriage houSe. &e.. with nearly'dve acres of ground. upon which are large forest trees, thrubbtrY. mineral springs, &v.. near railroad station. For sale by I. C. l'ItIt;E:. No. 54 North Seventh et. FACTORY FOR SALE OR RENT.—A L. 4.1101 three-story brick Factory Building, having fronts ot, three ttreeta. la built in the moot nubatantial man ner, nearly new and in perfect order. Lot 84 feet front'', 116 feet deep. Immediate poaee.mion given. For fluthea particulara apply to J. M. GUMALEY b SONS, 56ki Walnut meet. jr.FOR SALE.—THE lIANDSOME TIIREESTORY Dwelling, with three-story back buildings, No. 918 North Seventh street; has every modern convent. ence and improvement, and is in perfect order. Immo. 'Mate possession. One half can remain on mortgage. Apply to COPPUCK Is JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. FOR BALE OR REN —A HANDSOME MODERN Residence, % feet front, bu , lt in the beet manner, ' with every convenience, and lot I% feet deep to a 9, feet wide street, eituato on Summer street, near Logan Sqpicre. Is in perfect order. Immediate possession given. J. 91..GEM..1161 - EY & SONS, 508 Walnut' street. - - FOR SALE-A lIANDSONIE THREP-STORY Dwelling, with • threo4tory back buildings, with all " the modern improvements. on Arch street, west of Twentieth street. Lot •KI by 190 feet. Apply to COP. , PUCK & JORDAN, 433 Walnut street. 1. 868 ELEGANT , RESIDENCE. ELEGANT RESIDENcE. NO. 9020 SPRUCE ST. 868. FOR BALE-.TERMS EASY: MAULE, BROTHER & CO., del3,2rn• . 9600 South Street 1868. It:TIME i4 4 0) 7 `; DWELIANG, 1868. No. 1031 WALLACE STREET. Muse 40 feet front, lot ICA) feet deep to a street. FOR. SALE— :UAL:LE, BROTHER & CO., detA lm• 2.300 South street. TO SENT• NAM.: CHANCE ti' 1101.;SKREEPCItS. EThe convenient Residence. 1103 Arch street, for " rent, mil, to a party who will purchase the entire household tff. ctu. l'he house is handsomely famished throughout, clupeth.g, furniture anti budding yearly new, and will be sold at a sacrifice, SO the occupant leaves the city in a few days. immediate PuBscauluu aye% Apply at No. 5e6 31arkct Btreet. jaltf FOR RENT.—UNPURNISEIED OR PARTLY furnished,withearpets complote, a handsome four. story brown kitone residence, having all the modern conveniences and in perfect order situate on Locust street, year St. Itlark'slOhuren. J• M:GUMALEY soNs, 508 NYal.unV street. FTO LET STABLE AND COACH HOUSE. —TO ~ let, a superior Stable and Coach liouso.o ith stalls for four horses. on Dean street, between Spruce and Lo. coot. Apply to THUS. It PATON, de4Bi,tu,tteat , ' Corner Thirteenth and Locust. FOR RENT—A lI.O.NDSOMELX-FURNISHED Revidence. with parlor. dining•room, aitting-room, kitchen. and alx chrunhera; large yard. and every ?IOUMMEYn aitnate on Race street. near Sixteenth. J. , & SONS. 608 Walnut street. rTO RENT.—THE BUJiDING No. 303 BRANCH 3; etree•, vith from . 6 to Whom Steam Power. Ira " , Inediate _po;moniou can be had. For particulars aPPLY !hi STORY, UM RAUL et. . THIRD BTREET—FOR RENT, THE FOUR• riatory granite and brick store Property, No. 221. North Third etreot. Immediate pone...aim UUI . J. M. MEY dr, SONS. 508Vainut street. FOR IU DEOEMB a i IST, A LAROIi new Store, on Delaware avenue below Chestnut it " Apply to JOS. B. BU§SIER nod 108 South Delaware avenue. rTO RENT—FOUR•STOitIi RESIDENCE, 1233 a; South Broad street, for six months or ono year. Ap ply to OEO. SERGEANT, 21.0 R. Fourth at. de2B-60 mO RENT—WITII IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, THE II second, third, fourth and tifth floors of very eligible m:niece on Market street. Apply to B. IL SLEEPER & Co., to o. 7'4 Market ;Street. ileltf I INSTRUCTION. PHILADELPHIA., NOV. 19. HORSEMAN. ship. The Philadelphia Riding School, Fourth street above Vino, is now open for the reception of Scholara for the Winter seasoia. rAdieS And Gentle ! men, desiring to become proficient in HoreemansidPs find every faeility at thie, establishment... The School Is comfortably . heated dad ventilated. 'The horses'eafe and well trained Saddle horsoe trained in the best manner; Carriages and Saddle horses to hire, and Horses taken at ino2e,tlll THOMAS CRA/OE & SON. THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN.-- 1 -PHILADELPIIIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1868 THAVIEILIERS' IPICAVELERS , 611,111111143, PAN VIP way p' QUICKEST TIME ON RECORD. A t e At THE PALIULNDLE ROUTE.. Ng - NS HOURS to CINCINNATI, via PENNBYLVA. NIA RAILROAD AND PANHANDLE, 734 HOURS less TIME than by COMPETING LINES. PASSENGERS taking the 8.00 P. M. TRAIN arrire in CINCINNATI next EVENING at 9.65 P. M., 26 11OUR13. ONLY ONE NIGHT on the ROUTE. oar THE WOODRUFF'S celebrated Palace State. Room SLEEPINGCARS run through from PHILADEL , PII/A to CINC/NNATL Passengers taking the 12.00 M. and 11.00 P. 21. Trains reach CINCINNATI and all points WEST and SOUTH ONE TRAIN IN ADVANCE of all Other Routes. 1W Passengers for CINCINNATI,_ INDIANAPOLIS. ST. LOUIS. CAIRO CHICAGO PEORIA, BURLING. ,TON. QUINCY MILWAUKEL, T. PAUL, OMAHA, N. T. and all .points WEST, NORTHWEST and SOUTH. WEST, will be particular to ask for TICKETS 11r Via PAN.HANDLE ROUTE. Sr - To SECURE the UNEQUALED advantages of this LINE, be VERY PARTICULAR and ASK FOR TICKETS "Via PANMANDLE," at TICKET OFFICES, N. W. CORNER NINTH and CHESTNUT Streets. NO. 116 MARKET STREET, bet, Second and Front Sta., And THIRTY-FIRST and MARKET Streeta,West Phlia. • Si F. SCULL, Gen'l Ticket Agt., Pittsburgh. JOHN H. MILLER. Gen'l East'n Agt..626 Broadway,N.Y. &WE WEST JERSEY RAILROAD LINES. FROM FOOT OF BURNET STREET, (UPPER FERRY). I ' COMMENCING TUESDAY, SEPT. 17. 1067. Trains will leave as , follows: For Bridgeton,) Salem, Vineland, Millville and interne. dime Stations, at B.ou A. 1., and 1.10 P. 21. • For Cave May 3.30 P. M. For Woodbury. at 8.00 A. IS., and 3.30 and 6.00 P. M. Freight Train leave. Camden at 12.0 u M. (noon.) Freight will be received at Second Covered Wharf be l• low Walnut street, from 7A. M. until SP. M. Freight re calved before 9A. M N o. e forward the same day. Freight Deliver a South Delaware avenue. NV/ J. SEWELL. Sonerintendent. .7...•17,...=:,f,,e*.fne it EA DINO RA IL It 0 A SiLL -1.-714-n--*,:iiir."""r,IGREAT TRUNK LINE tram- Phila delphia to the interior of Penusylea nia, the Schuylkill, Sunmielinnna, Cumberland and Wyoming Valleys, the North, Northwest and the Cana da,. Winter Arrangement of Passenger Trains, Nov. le, 1567. leaving the Campany'e Depot, Thirteenth and Cal lOU hill streets, Philadelphia, at the following hours: 3101:NING ACCOSI.SIODATIONS.-At 7.40 A. M. for' Rending and all intermediate Stations and Allentown. Returning, leaves Reading at 6.20 P.'M arriving in Philadelphia at 9.10 P MORNING F. X PRESS.-A t 6.11 A. M. for Reading. Le banon, Harrisburg, Pottsville, Pine Grove, Tatuaana, filinbary. NVilliaineportElmira, Rochester,Siagara trails, I Buffalo. Wilkesharre„ Pittston, York. Carlisle, Chum -I,el elm rg. 1124seratown. The 7:00 train conuecte at Reading with the East Penn. nylvania Railroad train? for - Allentown. kc.. and the ftls A.lll. connects with the Lebanon Valley train for illirrichtlrg. &a. : at Port Clinton with Catawisfe, alt. trains for Williamsport. - Lock Haven. Elmira. ke • at Harrisburg With Northern Central. Cumberland Valley, and Schuylkill and liunmiehatnatrainn for Northumber, laud, W 'Main:wort. o rk,Cliambersbarg, Pinegrove. &a. AFTERN , ON EX PRESS.-Leaves ehiladelphla at aa) P. M. for Reading, Pottsville. Ilarridnirg. Ste., connect ing wit. Reading and Columbia Railroad trains for Col- POTTS'S OWN ACCOMMODATION -Leaves Potts town at 0.41; stopping at intermediate atatimen; ar riven in Philadelphia at 9.05 A. N. Returning leaves Phi ladelphia at 5.00 P.M.: arrives ha Pottstown at 7.05 P. Id. REAJOING ACCOMSIODATION-Leave? Reading at 7 51., 'topping at all way stations; actives in Phila. deli, lila at 10.11, A. 71. Ramming, leaven Philadelphia at 4.(X0 P. M.: arrives in Reading at 0.45 P. SI. Tr aILIB tar Philadelphia leave Harrisburg at 6.10 A. M., and Patten - Riff:a &4' A. M. arriving in Philadelphia at 31. Afternoon f rainaleave Harrisburg .142.10 P. 11.. And Pottsville at 2.451'. M. arriving at Philadelphia at 0.45 P.M. liarrinharg accommodation leaves Reading at 7.15 A. )1.. and liaii Miura :it 4.10 P. 31. Counecting at Reading with' Afternoon ' Acconituodatian south at 6.71 P. - arriving in Philadelphia at 9.10 P. M. Market train, with a Panisenger car attached, leaves Philadell. his at 12.45 noon for Pannell'," and all Sitay Stu tions ; leaves Pottsville at 7 A. 31.. for Philadelphia and all Way Stations. All the above trains run daily Sundays excepted. Sunday trains leave Pottwille at B.OU A. M., and 17rilit delphia at 2.15 P. 31.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at etai A. 51. returning from Reading at 4.25 P. M. CH} WIER VALLEY RAILROAD.-Peasengers for Downingtown and intermediate points take the Lai A.M. and 4.001'. N. trains from Philadelphia, returning from Downingtown at 611 A. M. and 1.00 P. 51. NEW YORK EXPRESS. FUR pnvsnurtmi Al'l3 THE WEST:-Leaves New York at :9 A. M.. 5.(X) and e. 6.1 P. 51., passing Reading atll A. M., 1.50 and 10.10 P. 31., and connect at Hatri?burg with Pennsylvania and Northern Central Railroad Express Trains for Pittsburgh, Chicago, Williams rt. Elmira. Baltimore, it:e. Re turning, Express Train leaves Harrisburg, on arrival of rental 'yam& Express from Pittsburgh, at 3 and . 5.25 A. M.. : 4 .:15 P. M.. passing Reading at 4.49 and 7.06 A. 51. and 11.40 P. M.., arriving at New 1 ork 10.10 and 11.45 and '5.16 , P. M. Sleeping Cars accompanying these [mina through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without change Mail train for New York leaves Ifarrinburg at 910 A. M. and' .lEi P. N. Mail train for Harrisburg leaves New York at 12 Nova. 2C1.1 U 1 LIULL VALLEY RAILROAD. -Trains leave "Pottsville at 4.T9.1. 11.1 W A. 51. and 7.15 P. 31.,returning from Tamaqua at 7. 2.5 A. N. and 1 . 40 and 4.35 P. M. SCHUYLKILL AND SUS.I.IEHANN RAILROA.D-- Train,. leave Auburn at 7.15 A. 51. for Pinegrova and Har risburg. and at 1145 P. .51. for Pinegrove and Tremont; re turning from Harrisburg at 3.55 P. 51., and from Tremont at 7.40 N. and P..M. TICELTS.-Thruagh first-clans tickets and emigrant tickets to all the mit:ara taints in the North and West or d 4.'14L 3dlo. Excursion Ticket, from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediate station?. gaud for day only, arc sold by Staining Accommodation. Market 'frail), Reading and pett , town Accenunodation Tiains at reduced rates. ENO!, 01011 lacto to Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at lb ading and Teter ciliate Stations by Read ing and Patten) Kit Accommodation Trains at reduced following tickets are obtainable only at the 011 ice of S. Bk 3( 1101,1, '17c3,1111r, No. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicoll?,.(teneralSuperinteudent, Rem lug. , Tieket, at 25 per Ont. di-count, between any point,' desired, for 'nunlike and firms. Mileage p ickets, gaud for 2 ueil ,bits, between all points at each, for tantilies and firma. re 3.011 Tick,•U, for three, cis. nine or twelve menthe, were only. to all puinto at reduced rates. Clergyman residing on the lint, of the road will be fur: eL-hed with earth, euutliug themselves and wives to tickets at half faro. EI Clirt ion 'I ickt tSt from Philadelphia,to principal et a- Hone. good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, at reduced fare. to he had only at the Ticket ulnae, at Thirteenth and calla streets. FRE.161.11.-Goads of all descriptions forwarded to all the abase points from the Lommuiy's New Freight Depot, luoad and W illow streets. Freight Trains feave Philadelphia daily at 5.30 A. M., 12.45 noon, and ti I'. M.,for Reading. Lebanon, 'llaniabarg, Pottsville, Nat Clinton. and all points beyond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Pont-Onico for allplaces on the road and its branches at SA. 31., and for the prin cipal Stations only at 2.16 P. M. NORTH PENNS') LVANIA. R. R.- g-(171 yi-.44 , :,.4 - 4-.7,ITHE MIDDLE I :Orr E.-tiliorteet and most direct line to Bethlehem, Al lentown, Mauch Chunk. Hazleton, White Haven, Wilkes barre, Mahanoy City, Mt. Carmel, Pittston, Scranton and -all the Pointe in the L.enigh and Wyoming Coal regions. Paiernger Depot in Philadelphia. N. W. corner of Berke and Am crican atreete. WIhTEH ARRANGE3IENT--NINE DAILY TRAINS. -On and after , THU IteiDAY,November 14th, 1867, Pas eenger alas lohve the New Depot, corner of Berke and American streets, daily (Sundays excepted). ski follows: At 741 A. :IL-Morning Enures for Bethlehem .and Principal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad. con. fleeting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Railroad for Allentown, Cataeauqua„ Slatington. Mauch Chunk, Weatherly,.leariesville, Hazleton, white Haven: Wilkes barre, Kingston, Pittston, Scranton. and all 'points in Le high l id Wyoming Valleys; also, in connection with Le hie h and Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy City, and with Catawbua Railroad for Rupert, Danvillejilllton and Wil liamsport. Arrive at Mauch Chunk at 12.05 A. Iff.; at 'Wilkesbarro at t P.M.; Scranton at 4 tri P. 51.,; at Matta nov Cit - at t 1 P. M. Paseengers by tills train can take the Lehigh Valley'l rain, passing Bethlehem at 11.55 A. 51. for Easton and points on New Jersey Central Railroad to New York. At 8. 1 5 A. M.--Accommodation for Doylestown, stop ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers for Willow Grov... liatboro'and Hartsville, by this train, take Stage at Old Yoi k Road. At 10.15 A. M.-Accommodation for Fort Washington, stopping at - intermediate Stations. At 1.20 P. M.- Express for Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk, 'White Haven. Wilkesbarre Mahanoy Centralia, Shenandoah. Mt. Carmel. Pittston and Scranton, and all points in Mahanoy and Wyoming Coal Itegions. Passengers for GreenviUe take this 'tram to. Quakertown - At 2 45 P. M.-Accommodation for DoslOtown,stopping at all intermediate stations. Parsengers take stage at Doylestown for New Slope, and at North Wales for Sem . ILls ytown. At 4.15 T. M.-Accommodation for Doylestown, stopping at all intermediate stations. •Passengers for V, blow Grove, llatborough and Hartsville take stage at Abing ton. At 5.28 M.—Through accommodation for Bethlehem and all Fta t !owl on main line of North l'elmaylvania Rail road, connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh Valley Even ing! rain for Eaeton. Allentown, Mauch Chunk. At a 2.0 P. M.—Accommodation for Lansdale, atol)ping at 11 intern) ediate atm. ions. At 11. TRAlNS Aomodation for Fort Washington. ARRIVE IN PtIILADEL.PLIIA. From Bethlehem at 9.15 A. 'd, 2.tS and 8.40 P. AI. 8.05 P. M. Train makes direct connection, with Lehigh Valley train front Easton h era uton, Wilkesbarre, Mahn 'Joy City and Hazleton. Passengers leaving Easton at 11.80 A. 51. arrive iu Philadelphia at 0.05 P. AL Passengers leaving Wilkeabarro at I.BU P.'Bl, connect at Bethlehem at 6.15 P. 81., and arrive in Philadelphia at 8.40 P. M., From Dylestown at 8.115 A. M., 5.10 and 7.00 P. 31, 11 , 1 cm Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. • From Fort WaShington at 11.10 A. M. and 3.05 P. M. ' ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia foißetblehem ai 9.80 A.M. 1 .; • Philadelphia for Doylestown at '2.00 P. M. ' Eoylc.town for Philadelphia at 7 - ..a0 A. 31. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.101 P. M. Fifth and Sixth streets - Passenger Cars 'coliverpassen.. gore to and f rom the new Depot: White Cars of I,econd and Third Streets Line and Union Lino run within, t elm t distauce of the Depot. rickets must be presented at the 'I icket office, in order to secure the lowest rates of faro. • ELLIS CLARK. Agent, Tickets sold and Baggage checked th , ough to priori pal points,at Mann's North Penn. Baggage Express °lice. No. 105 South Fifth street, Et 4_ CAMDEN AND'.ITL.B.NTIC RAIL -I=-I.ROAD. INTER AR R ANGEMENTS. On and after Thursday, October Met, 1867, trains will leave Vine Street Ferry daily (Sundays excepted): Mail and Freight...,. ............. ...... ....... 7.30 A. M. Atlantic Accommod'afion...._ ...., . . . . 335 P. M. Junction Accommodation to Atco and inter. mediate stations - 5.80 P.M. RETURNING, WILL LEAVE ATLANTA,: Atlantic Accommodation. 6.16 A. M, Mall and FXSlght .. . .•,..12,641 P.M Junction Accommodation for Atcc....—......... 6.30 A. M. II addonileld Acconnnodation will leave Vito Street Ferry. . 10.15 A. M.,100 F. M. 11 addonfteld .......... • 1.00 P. M., 3.15 P. M. 401). D. 11. 511.:ND1 , Agent. TY: FOR NEW YORIC—PtI CASIDIi.%I ~:g 41af. 4 :=,,ai.a.40, ia.MBOY and t'/1 lA. AND TRENTON RAILROAD CUM PANVS LINES, from Philadelphia .to New York, and way plaeu , , from Walnut street whin* Fare. At 6A, li., via Camden and Arbboy Accom. $2 35 At 9A. 51 via, Camden and Jersey City Express Mail, 306 At 3.30 P. M.. via Camden and Jersey City Express, 300 At 6P. M., via Camden and Amboy, 7 lot class, 225 Mem. and Emigrant, 2d clime, 1 80 At 6 A. M,. and 2 P. M., for Freehold. At t and 10 A. M.. 2 awl 3.1 A P. M., for Trenton. At. 6, 8 and to A; M., 1, 2,3.30,4.30 and 6 P. M., for Borden- town. At 6 and 10 A. M., 1,2, 2.30, 4.30 and 6 P. M., for Florence. At 6. and 10 A. L 3.30, CA 6 and IE3O P. M. for and Burlington, Beverly a DeTanco. At 6 one 10 A.. 31.. 1 2, 4.20, 6 and 11.80 P. M. fer Edge water, Riverside . Riverton and Palmyra. At 6 and 10 A. M. 1 . 6 and 11.20 t', M. for Fish Bowe. re - Thal and Mai P. M. Lines will leave from foot of Market street by upper ferry. From Kensington DepOt: At 11 A. M. - via Kenettigton and Jc , rvey City, New York Express Line........ . . . ... .. .. At and 11.00 A. M.. 2.00, it 30 and 51'... .31. for Trenton and BristoL and at 10.15 A. M. for Bristol. At 8 and 11 A. M., 230 and 5 I'. Al. for Morrisville and At 8 and 10,15 A. M., 2.30 and 5 P. M. for Schencks and Ed dington. At 8 and 10.15 A. M., 2.30, 4,5, and 6. P. M., for Cornwells, '1 orresd ale, Iloimeshurg, Tacony, Wlssinomlng, Brides burg and Franktord, and BP. 151. for liohuesburg and intermediate Stations. BLIND/ERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINES from Kenslngtonlrepet. At 8.00 A. M., ter Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, •Eindra, Ithaca, Owego, Rochester,l3inghampton, Oswego, Syracuse, t.; rent Bend, Montrose, Wilkes berm, Scranton, Stroudsburg. Water Ban, d:c. At 11 CO A. 31. and 8.201'. M. for Belvidere, Easton. Lam. bertville, Flemington, dm. ho 3.301'. 3.1. Line connects direct with the train leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem. tic. At 5 P. 31. for Lambertville and intermediate Stations. -From West Philadelphia Depot. via connecting Rail way. At P. 30 A, 31., 6.30 and 12 P. 31. New York Express Line. vin .Jersey City.. ....... . ..$3 25 The 0.z,.0 A. 31. and 6.11 P. 3L Lines . run 'daily. All others, Sunday excepted. • At Pre A. M., 1.30,45.30 and 12 P.M., for Trenton. At 0:11 A. IL Cs) and 12 T. M.. for BristoL At 12 P. 3L tNight) for Morrisville, Tullytewn, Scheming. • Ed dington, Cornwells, Torris d ale, 1101111 CS burg, Tacony, Witionoining, Bridesburg add Frankford. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the care on .1 bird or Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour before departure. The Careen Market Street Railway raft dr reel to West Philadelphia Depot, Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays. the Market Street Caro will run to connect with the 6.30 P. M. line. Fifty Pounds of Danga,ge only allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag gage but their wearing apparel, All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their re aponstifility for baggage to One Dollar per pound.and will not be liable for . any amount beyond 61100., except by film cial contract. Tickets sold and Ilaggage!cliccked direct through to Horton, Won ciao'. Springfield, Harlord, New haven, Providence, Newport, Albany, Troy, Saratoga, Utica. Rome, Syracuse., Rochester, buffalo, Niagara Falls 'and WiFTCIII-1011 13//ege. An additional ticket Offiee is located at No. af.l6 Chestnut street, where tickets to New York, and ull im portant points North and East, may. be procimid. Per. sone purchasing Tickets' at Ode Otlico, can have their bag• gage checked from reridences or hotel to destination, uy Union Transfer ltaggase Express, Lines from Now York for Philadelphia will have from foot of Cortland etc. et at 7A. 31. and Lift and 4.015 P. M., via .1. TFCV Gity and cannier'. At 6.30 P. IL via Jeri , .3 , City and Kennington. At 10 00 A. M. and la 31., and sou r.*, via Jersey and Went Philadelphia. prom Pier 1k b. 1, 1,. hirer, at 4 P. M. Expre a and IP. 31. P iniarant.iia Amboy and Camden. Dec. 1'). Pi 67. WM. IL GATZ3IER, Agent. r PEN NSYL IA CENTRAL "Itl:sfse•zS 1 i 11 ••-,111ailroad. Winter Time.- 'Faking effect Nov. 24tb,. 1067. The trains 0: the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot, at 'Hart) -first and Market streets, which Is reached di, ectlY by the taus of the Market ktrect Pao Benger Railway, the beet ear connecting with each train, leaving Front and Market streets thirty minute s before its departure. 'Those of the Chestnutud Walnut Street Railway rim within.. One square of The Lac. ON .61.:;31/A3.43—Tbe Market Street Cars leave Front and Market p.treeta 35 minutes before the departure of each train. eleeping Car Tickets can be had on application at the Ticket °like, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets, and at the Depot. Agents of the Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot Orders left at No. %I Chest nut street, No. 116 Market street, or No. 1 South Eleventh at. vet, will receive attention. TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT. VIZ.: Mail Train. . at 8.00 A. M. Fast Line. ................ ........... ...... .at 12.00 M. • Erie Express at 10.00 51. Paoli Accommodation No. 1 ....................at 1.00 P. 51. Ilarrisburg Accommodation at 2.30 P. M. Lancaster ACCOMM ........... at 4.00 P. M. at 550 P. M. Cincinnati .......at B,ool'. 51. Paoli Accom. NO. 2 at 9 00 P. M. Erie Mai 1..... ............ ............. ....at 11.16 P. M. Philadelphia Expressat 11.15 P.M, Accommodation . at 11.30 P. M. EriteMail leaves daily, except Saturday. Philadelphia Express leaves daily. All other trains daily, except Sunday. The Western Accommodation Train runs daily, except Sunday For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 5.01) P. M.. at 116 Market street. TRAINS ARRIVE AT DEPOT. VIZ: Cincinnati Express . atl 35 A., 31. Philadelphia Express-- ............. " 7.10 Paoli Aecom. No. 1 " 8.20" Erie 12 . • "-9.35 ~ F ast Line " 9./15 Park sburg Train , " 9.10 " Lancaster Train... ........... ......... . " 1.10 P. NI. Etle Ex ....... "1 10 Day Express " " 6.t.50 " Paoli A ccout. No. 2. ..... .. ; ..... 7.10 " than isburg Acc0m.............,..... "9 50 " or further information, apply to • .1011 N C. ALLEN Ticket Agent, 901 Chestnut street. PRANCIe FUNK. , , Agra', Da Market atrect. tiA,3II'EL ki. WALLACE, '1 icket Agent at the Depot. The lvania, Railroad Company will not aamine air,' rlrk for Baggage. except for wearing apparel, and limit their reaponidhility to One Hundred Donn in value. All Baggage exceeding that amount in vieue will be at the rick of the owner, unlees taken by bpecial contract. EDWARD H. WILLIA.II3, General .itperintendent, Altoona, Pa, PHILADELPHIA. WINNING CON AND BALTIMORE RA IL, lIOAD— TIME TA BLE.—Commening Mon day. Sept. IlOth, 1167. Trains will leave Depot, corn-r of limed street and Washington avenue, SS 10110Wd : 33 aywnail Train, at 830 A. M. (Sundays excepted). for Baliraore, stopeina at all regular stations (oneecting wit/ are Railroad at Wilmington for Crisfield end inten, edlate stations. E.7.11es train at 12.i5.) M. (Sundays excepted) for Balti mote and NVrahington. E.:press Train a' 3 30 P. 51. (Sundays excepted), for liil tineire and Washington, Flopping at Chester, T?itrlo .v, Lin vend, Claymont, Wilmington. ‘ewport,Sranton, New ark. Elktou, °ahem( charlo ton, Perryvide, Havre de- Gra:e. Aberdeen, Peers man's, Edgewood, Magmlia, Chase's and Stenwnerls Run. May Lam ese at 11.1.10 P. M. (daily) for Baltimore and Wiehington. Connects at Wilmington (Saturdays ex. cept,.d) %vitt] Pilau are Railroad Line, stopping at New t Middleton Clayton. Dover, ilarringtow, Seaford, Salhbury, Princess .Inne, and connecting at Crisfield with boat for Fentress Monroe, Norfola, Portsmouth and the South. Paisengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk via Balti more will take the 12.00 31. Train. Via Crisfield will take the 11.00 P. 31. train. Wilmington Trains. stopping at all stations between Philsdelthia and Wilmington: Leave Philadelphia at 1.30. 4.30, 6.00 and 11.30 (daily) P. 31. Tht-4.".:0 I'. 31. train connecta with the Delaware Itail.oad for Milford and into , mediate stations. Ihe 6.00 ?. M. train rune to sew Castle. Leive Wilmington 7.00 and 0.00 A. 31., and 4.00 and 6.30 (daily) P. M. Frani Baltimore to Philadelphia —.l erica Baltimore 7.25 e. al., lvay Mail. 9.35 A. 31 Express. 2.15 P. m., Ex preen., 635 P. 31., Express. ti 55 P.M., Express. 131NDA1 TRANS stopO LIALTIMORE.—Leave Bah tinitre at T, 31 pping at Havre de Grace, Peery. vine and W ilmingtou. Also stops at North East, Elkton and Newark. to take pasliengera for Philadelphia, and (haternrs from Washington Or Baltimore. and at to leave paseengers I. om Washington or Balti more. Through tickets to all points West.Sonth and Southwest may be procured at tick etotlice. 833 Chestnui streetunder Continental Hotel, where also State Rooms and Bertha in sieefing-Cars /an be secured dining the day. Persona purrttasing tickets at this Mike can have baggage checked at their tesidence by thle 1 i K on E TNrNnEsYer Cupmpnny dent. PHILADELPHIA. HERMAN POWS AND NIJIIII , STOWN "vr r MAD TLME TABLE.—On and after Weineaday. May 1.1807. FOR IIERMANTOWN. Leire Philadelphia- 6. 7,8, 9.05, 10. 11, 12A. M., I. 2, 3.15, „ 5, 514. 0.10. 7, 8.9. 10, 11. 12 P. M. Loire Germantown-8.8. 8.20. 9, 10, 11, 12 A. M.; 1, 0, 838 7,8, 9, lu. 11 P. 31. 'ft e 8.20 down train, and the 3,`.1 and 5?4: up trAine, will not :top on the Germantown Branch. UN SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia-9.15 minute,. A. M ;2, 7 and 10 P.M, Letve Gmlivpcowr .810 A.\1.;1, 6 Lied? P. M. cilysTNuT HILL 11.X.ILItuA13. Lowe Pt Padelphia—ti, 8, 10,12 A. )1.; 2. 37. i., 7.9 and 10 P L(AVC C)testnut Hill-1.10 minutes, 8, 9.40 and 11.40 A. \l,; 40. 3.40, 5.40, 6.40,A40, ,, nd 10.411 P. M. _ ON 31:1DAYS. Lose Philadelphia- 9.15 minuted A. 31.; 2 and 7 P. NI. Let ve Chestnut 11111-7.50 minutes A. M.; 12 40, 5.40 and '25 ItYtteDK.STfOIIOCKEN AND NORRIS ['OWN. Letve Philadelphia-6, 7,5 , j, 9, 11.05, A. 31.; 1,4, 3, 44, 5515, 6.15,8.05 and 1131 P. 31. we Norristorl n— 5.40, 7,7.50, 9, 11 A. 31.; LYt, 3,4;14., 0.15 andl34 P. 31. ON SUNDAYS. Levee Philadelphia-9A. 51.; 15, , , and 7.15 P. M. I.o.\'e Norristou n-7 If. 51.; 556 and 9 P. 51. FOll ANAYUNK. Lave Philadelphia-6, 7;6, 9. 11 05 A. 1.3 i 3, 456, SX, 6.153.05 and 1156 P. i. LetVC 51:inuytluk:-6.10. 756, 8.70, 9;x,11;5 A. 5!.;1, 356, 5, 6: 9 P. 51. )N SUNDAYS. Lave Philadelphia 9A. 51. ;156 and 7.15 P. 51. Lave Alauayunic- 7 16 A. M.; 6 and 956 I'. H. . W. S. WiLig )N,• General Superintendent, Depot, Ninth aid Green etreets. EIZIE il l' i gi k ' iM L -tlq i N 't rElTi u.1 1 . ,1 :----I.l ' iro.igh and Direct II , ole Iteltint ore, arrisborg. tWell po)rand the Woe! r oi • ser n o i , im a Tn 1 461 14 ' ' .ltl :6 on ‘ i D Y, Nov. 2411,1361, tllo on '" ' n4 Erie Railroad will cuu as follows: thebila6ll4ll3-au VESTWAIIII - . 3 E l I li it e v i iEaitet NVilliainnport nrriwa F.rie..„.:. Elnita..7 , 4 ail leaven Philadelphia. arr,Ve3 at Lock. avon. ' EASTWARD. Mai Vain leaven Frio. . .... ..... —llO6 A.. 51. .• '• ' P.„M. ardves at Philadelpnla 96i 4 . Erle.Exprenn leaven , 4.45 l'. riven at Phil ..... E. A Bite ra 51ail leaven Lock Haven • ••• —.7.10 A. NI, •. " arr. at Philadelnliin, . . .. 31iii and Exprenn connect With all trains on Warren and banklin Railway. I'unnUngern leaving Philadelidd at 90 Di. :nave at tryington. e.te A. M.,,and Oit city. • LeA inn I'MlrdelP.hin at 41,15 at; Pitgv: lat Warren araiFraliklln Railway make clone competiolui at 01117,ity With trains for Franklin 'and Petrdenin Centre. • -Baggage check , d through.. ALFRED L. TYLER, Uoueral Superintendent. TRAVELERS' GUIDE* NV CHEBTEtt AND put I 11LLP111 A. RAILROAD, VIA Nth U "" r • 7- D.. WINTER ARRANGEMENTs. On and after MOND '.Y, Oct. 7th, 1867, trains will less , . Depot, Thirty,fintt and Chestnut streets, as follows: 1 rains leave Philad Aphis. for West Cheater. at 7.45 A. M., 11.00 A. M.. 2.30,A.1.8 4.50. 6.15 and IL3Ol'. AL • Leave West Chester for Philadelphia, from Depot on, E. Market street. 645, 7.45, 8.0(1 and 10.48 A. AL. 1.65, 4.50 and 6.55 P. M. Trains leaving West Chester at B.UO A. m., and leaving Philadelphia at 4.60 P. M., will stop at B. C. Junction and Media only. Passengers to or from stations, between Went Chester and B. C. .Junction going East, will take train leaving West Chester at 7.45 41. 64.. and going West will take traits leaving Philadelphia at 4.50 P. M., and transfer , at B. C. Junction, Trains leaving Philadelphia at 7.45 A. M. and 4 50 P.ss„ and leaving West Chester at 8.50 A. M. end 4.00 P. M., connect at B. C. Junction with 'Prelim on the P. and B. C. P.R. for Oxford and intermediate points. ON SUNDAYS—Leave Philadelphia at 8.30 A. M. and 2.00 P. Leave West Chester 7.55 A M. and 4 P. M. The Depot is reached directly by the Chestnut and Wal nut street care. Those of the Market 'street line ran with in one square. The care of both lines connect with each train upon its arrival . itaPrrnasengens are allowed 'to take wearing apparel only as Baggage, and the Company will not, in any case, be responsible fur an amount exceeding 8100, unless ape. cial contract is made for the same. HENRY WOOD, General Superintendent 5= PHILADELPHIA. BALTIMORE ~..!.......eseeessi:s4CENTßAL RAILROAD. Winter Arrangements. On and after Monday, Oct 7th. 1867, the Trains will leave Philadelphia.f rote the Depot of the West Chester 'A Philadelphia Railroad, cor ner of 1 hirty-first and Chestnut streets, (West Philada.). at 7.95 A. M. and 4.50 P. M. Leave Rising Sun, at f, 45 and Oxford at 6,10 A. M., and leave Oxford at 3.25 P. 3f. A Market Train with Passenger Car attached will run ou Tuesdays and Fridays, leaving the Rising Sun at 11.05 A. M., Lxfordcit 11.45 61.. and Kennett at 1.00 P. M., con nee ing at Went Chester Junction with a train for Phila. dolphin. On Wednesdays and Saturdays train leaving Philadelphia at 2.80 P. AL runs through to Oxford. he Train leaving Philadelphia at 1.45 A.M. connects at Oxford with a daily line of Stages for Peach Bottom, in Lancaster county. Returning. leaves Peach Bottom to connect at Oxford with the Afternoon Train for Philadel. 'Die Train leaYing Philadelphia at 4.10 P. M. runs to Rising Sun, Md. Passengers allowed to take wearing apparel only, as Baggage, end the Company will not. in any cans, be re sponsible for an amount excezding one hundred dollars, eel, sea special contract be made tor the some. I mill HENRY WOOD, General Sup% P~ FAST EINNWA-ARE' R CIA ROAD: to Wilkesitrre; MaltanoY City, Mount Carmel, Centralia. and all points on Echigb Valley Railroad and itti branches. By new arrangements, perfected this day, this road is enabled to give increased deapAch to merchandise con signed to the above named Pointe. Goode delivered at the Through Freight Depot, 4. F. cur. of tIiONT and NOBLE Streets. Before SP. M., will reach Wilkemberre. Mouut Carmel, 31uhtmoy City, and the other station!? in Mehanoy and Wyoming valle.ye before 11 A. N. of the succeeding day. jeai ELLIS CLARK, Agent. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON , ;;_,,COUNTY , RAILROAD.—On and after Monday, December 16th, 1887, traine will leave from foot of Market etrcet (upper ferry) for 51ercbantville,Iloorepto a n: Hartford, M mon ville, flaine9- port. 51ount Holly. Sruitbville, Evansville, Vincentown, Birmingham and Pemberton at 10.70 A. M. and 430 P.lll. P.ETURNING, Leave Pemberton at.... ...... ....7 '2OA. M. and 2.20 P. M. 51ount Holly A. M. and 2.95 P. M. " slooreetoc - .9.18 A. H. and 318 P. M. deli C. SAILER. Superintendent. 6131PP.E1 S 7 GI/11)o2 For Boston---Steamshio Line Direot. SAILING FROM EACH P( IRT EVERY FIVE DAYS. FROM PINE STREET,ARF N PHILADELPILLA. AND LONG WH. BOSTO. MI. This line is composed of the thaterlass Steamships. • ROMAN, 1,468 tone, Captain O. Baker. SAX ON, 1,233 tone, Captain S. H. MattheWil, N Oft MA N, 1,208 tone, Captain L. Crowell. The NORMAN from Phila.onSaiurday Jan. 4, at 6 P. M. The ROMAN from Boston on fsaturday. Jun 4. 3. P . M. These Steamships sail punctually , and Freight will be received every day, a Steamer being always on the berth. Freight for points beyond Beaton sent with deepatch. For - Freight or Passage (superior accommodations). apply toHENRY WINSOR dc CO., my3l FO3 South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN MAIL Eldr Et rUP COSIPANY'S REGULAR FIRBI - ViER 18 SOUTH WHARVES. The STAR. OF THE UNION will anti FOR NEW ORLEANS, L VIA HAVANA. Tuesday, January? 7, :a 8 o'clock A. Bi: The JUNIATA Will Dail FROM NEW ORLEANS, VIA HAVANA. Saturday, January 4. The TONAWANDA will sail FOR BAVANNAI3. Batt.rday, January 4, at 8 o'clock A. M. The WYOMING will sail FROM SAVANNAH, Satur• day. January 4. The PIONEER will sail FOR WILMINGTON. N.C.. on Saturday January 11, at 8 o'clock A. M, Lrongh Bills of Lading algued, and• Passage Tickets gold to all points South and West WILLIAM L JAMES, General Agent, CHARLES E. DILICES, Freight Agent, nob • • • • No. 314 South Delaware avenue. DAILY LINE FOR BALTIMORE, Via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal. Philadelphia and Baltimore Union Steam. boat eumnanYidatly.at a o'clock P. M. The Bteamers of this line are now plying regularly he• tween this port and Baltimore, leaving Pier No. ti North Delavjare avenue, above Market street, daily at 8 o'clock P. hi (Bnndaae excepted.) Carrying all description of Freight as low as any oth . er line. Freight handled with, great care, delivered promptly. and forwarded to all points beyond the terminus free of commission. Particular attention paid to the transportation of all description of Merchandise, Hornet], Carriages, &a., Etc. For further information, apply to JOHN D. RUOFF, Agent, ap16.1y5 No. 18 North Delaware avenue. HAVANA STEAMERS. SEMIMONTHLY LINE. The Steamship! HENDRICK II ........ Capt. Howes STARS AND STRIPES..... .—..... . ...Capt Holmes These steamers will leave this port Havana every other Tuceday at 8 A. M. The steamship STARS AND STRIPES. Holmeamaster, will sail for Havana on Tuesday morning. January 21, at 8 o'clock. Passage to Havana, dtfe, currency. No freight received after Saturday. For freight or paeease. aPhIY to THOMAS WATTSON SONS. an2o 140 North Delaware avenue. F NEW YOKE" t4WIFNURE 'i-L i c' , ...Z.:..arrane ß port.tion Company—Despatch and Linem via Delaware and ltari tan 'anal, on and after the 15th of March, leaving daily at 12 M. and 5 M., ronnertii.i.l with all Not thorn and Eartern lines. For fmight,whirli will be taken on accom modatiug terms, apply to WM. M. DAUM &CD., nibl2-ly No. 139 South Delaware avenite. A Lt• I-ERSONS ARE HEREBY CAITIONEf) against trusting any of tho crew of the Br. Bark " nWaniN " Allen, NlaFt.r, tram Liverpool, as no debts of it contracting will be paid either by the Cuptsin or consignees. PETER WRIGHT & SONS, de,%3„tf SValout street. OT I THE RIT7 SI I BA "COI:NAVA E.LlS,tt ° .01 Allen, Manter, from Liverpool. is now diacharging under gtuernl . nrdel at Shippen Street Wharf. Con eignees will phase attend to the reception of their podia. Pk.TE It IN SWIPE` k. SONS, 115 Walnut dt. JAW' JAS. S. INDLER . eucceaoortoJOOINSEWSDLERb R SONS, Sail Makers, No. 300 North Delaware avenue, Philadelphia c All Rork dine in the heat planner. and on tholowest and wort favorable terms, and warranted to give perfect satisfaction. Particular attention given to repairing. NIA4UIIIIIVkIkiV., 11KON, d 4) witmcx & SONS, I3OI;IIIARR FOUNDRY, 410 WASHINGTON Avenue, Philadelphia. MANUFAETURF. STEAM ENGINES -High and lAw.Pressure, horizontal, Vertical, Beam, Oscillating, Blast,and Cornish Plumping. 13 , TILERS- Cylinder, Flue Tubular, Ac. STEAM HAMMERS-Nat:mYth and Davy styles. and of all sizes. CAST I N US- Loam, Dry, and Green Saud, Brass, &a ROOFS-Iron Frames, for coveting with Slate or Iron. TANKS-Of Cast or Wrought iron, for refineries, water, GAS MACHINERY-- Such as Retorts, Beach Castings, Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar. ron a Valves, Governors &e. SUGAR MACHINERY-Such as Vacuum Pans and Pumps. Drfecatots, Bono Black Filters Burners, Washers, and EleTators; Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone Black Gars, &c. Sole inanuiticturcre of the following specialtien: In Philadelphia and vicinity, of William Wright's Patent Vitriol - de Cnt-off Steam Engio, In Pennsylvania, of Shaw dr. Justice's Patent Dead. Stroke Power Hanover. In the United States, of Weston's Patent Self-centering and Seltbalancing CentrifugalSugsr.draining Machine, Glare & fiartol's improvement en Aspinwall & Woolsey's Cent' iftigal Bart , ,Pe Patent Wrought-iron Retort Lid. Strnhan's Drill Grinding Rent. Contotetors 'for the design, erection, and fitting-up Of Refineries for working Sugar or Molasses. I, 3I3ILADELPHIA ORNAMENTAL IRON WORKS.- ROBERT WOOD & CO., Manufacturers Of OAST, WROUGHT AND WIRE RAILINGS , GARDEN AND CEMETERY ADORNMENTS, FOUNTAINS, VASES, STATUARY Aa VERANDA lIS, SETTEES, STABLE FITTINGIL 1138 RIDGE AVENGE PlillaiDELPlllA, PA. THOS. S. ROOT, ROBERT WOOD. BRONZE WORK. Having fitted up our Foundry with special reference tc, the above class of Work,we are now prepared to fill with promptness all orders for Bronze Castings of every de. scription, to which thesubscribers would. most relined: fully call the attention of the pti hi look also to their varlet' and extensive assortment of ORNAMENTAL CROW GOODS, the largest to be found hi the United States. 03 n4.41,4 . ROBERT WOOD & (X/. • - AS. F I-X TURE B.—MiSKEY,. MERRILL 4111 Thackara, No. 718 Chestnut street, manufacturers of Gas Fixtures, Lamps, dm. etc., would call the attention of the public to their large and elegant assortment of Gas Chandeliers, Penduute, Brackets, 61c. They also introduce gas pipes into dwelling* and public buildings, and attend to extending, altering and repairing gas pipes. An work warranted. • .11.15 I'. M ... 9.09 P. M p.l. 0 Noon 9 511 l' \ I 9.45 A. \I 9.90 A. m 1,40 P. M rOPPEW AND Ify.LLOW MMTAL • BIIBATHINO, VI Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts said , Ingot cApppr,con• Stoutly on hand and for sale by HENRY WINBINA A tif 4. No. Mt ebuth wharves. UMBER . NF, filik n Old o 1111924 LENGILR. Nnook trand,:_in store and gale in lots to suit, by PIMPR WRIGHT di AONS. 15 walnut atreet. - loYls IIEM• 1 '4 , .tLtv...,lirosip ß of t4 pG r gri , fts t ; 'istlll N 0. ., 0 h atreet; above .1.1 . lranauriphla, le *ening rem for.Ladjalmut t , n e wear. "Mean umirrime and Buffalo Robed eon. .. etantly on hand. N. U.—Furo repaired , re-Hned and altered to the West itylee, at moderate price& 003 e tatkillffi I'""0 0 ,,....,' , ',, , '. ..! I=MtIMM ILhew wiek,deeero.o.- Japten A.Fr " --Under authority of the Orp, .."...,,-; ;, :i , i, (Jay , and 'County of Philadelphia, on er'Zstailectis .t my 15th. 18,653, at 12 o'clock, noon, w , ouisimmiiy , pale, without reserve; at the Nitta I? . t -.. , s • , .-s- ~ the following , described real estate, 1 ",..,;•:,',, • kit - Ellen Rene, ick, deceased. No. 1.--Pro T..' 40 . Ah ir ' • r. street. Allthat certain lot of grourutv 4 1 1, ""•••••40k" , ' l l i frame menningeS thereon crected r ldtua e,...4,;,',,1. t . I . - side of Vine street, at the distance 'of 80 fUl.r ''''''t f'.' h et ! , , from Elevertit street, in the Tenth', Ward orsstftn,a;;!--s. containing in front on Vine street 18 feet,andthr,,,,iS ..f . ' feet to a 5 feet wide alley leading into Elevnt , , 4 --.7: -t , and extending shir said alloy 60 feet, and li t er , fi11t,,,', 1 raid alley 15 feet. übiect to a proportionsb e PAI '4 yearly irredeemable ground rent of sl2 l o,,eher . A this and the three following des_ed iota Og„fitful.-- , ...., The above lot forms a lettqtjaWnd'otY fe l , , 4 two-story frame house frontln ee ponWine ',twills,: story frames, and 2 thretory , brick, lieut. : ... stable fronting on the kffot wide alloy. 'el , -,-,, , 7 7 No. a.—Ground tient of lliZr per annum. tain•yearly ground rent or sum ref : Twenty charged upon and issuing out of,fail 'that i - le ground situate on the south side of ;Vine s p. Lance of i'S feet eastward from Eleventh st, ;,, ,4 "; A lug in front 14 feet and in depth 05 feet. 1.811; al 2 . 1 . f portion of a certain irredeemable ground ruriri r ,., charged upon lids and the other ptoperth : ,P ,„'„;,' Kea —Ground Rent of $2ll per annuni.—,Tio. trill yearly groundieent of $2B. tuning &it of ' 4 tain lot of ground situateion the south side of —, co at the distance of 52 feet? stwnrd from El . ..,-,...., r , • 'I. co :lining in front 1 yearly and In depth "" 0, 1 0 ) . ''„,,,l ton proportion of the irredee.nal. 1. 4 " tiro & sl2o,charged upon this and the other tlit PE' I•4' ..tabielis scribed. ~,,, • „ , the F.• ••+ S. - ,, ....,,,,,,1 No. 4.—Groond rent of $2B per annul or dart . EL .1111 yearly ground rent of SZ3 belling °tie. s f.outhifou , lot of ground situate on the south ef44l. feet & , i r „, the distance of 66 feeteaet of Eleventl4. on _ in front 14 feet, and in depth 63 feet. ' n , .' /A. 9 :‘,41115-E Lion of said ground rent of $l2O, chai•tiier Virme otlan.!. the other properties herein described. SiWsea ill fkr/ 2 .t hi n% u ! peremptory. it - W - $lOO to be paid on each at time of ear _:,,_ 9 ~. ''s4e' By the Court. E. A. MERRICK CM , . - , broi FRAN(IS RENWICK,_Adr4,II3eIt. JAMES A. FREEMAN. Arrete,tre, ,S . ' i Store 422 Walnur+, , r 0 bi,,,, rsi " I %Pr* irkORPHANS' COL'lti' SALE.—ESTATE Ohba'',. ,.4 e,A lh• Root, deceased.--Jamee A. Freernan,Aucte . % if 1 , " V aluabletract . „22 acres.Twentyeighth ward. 4•4 434: 4„, ~' e. fifth, Thirty sixth, •rhirtyseventh, Thirtycighth.l , • tel and &arks streets, and 31ontgomery avenue. 5L,......:-....2.....• .. a., authority bf the Orphans' Court for the CRY Mind hiIIENN.C--• 'a, of .Pbiladelphia On Wedneeday. Jan. 1.5 j 186, A 1825 ' . 1 o'clock. noon. will be sold at public sale. without i ..ersaln,i4',:, ~,,, . h at the Philadelphia Exchange, the followinvdeacr tirr' I a .:9,',. it i real estate" late the property of johrt e ltuot, dee:Patt, ifOg,„ ....111 • • that certain lot or piece of (wound gelato on toe arn- r ', „•. eaPtcrir tide of a4O feet wide lane cal.M Wintery , arms ... - ht. ff in the , Twenty-eighth Ward of the city,* extendir4 -Atko 1 / 4 „, the river Schuylkill to the Ridge Road; berryningi: 4- ~ ', port on the sloe of Williams Lane, at a corner of Nathattl4Ml Cooks' land; thence by th a said Cooks's land S. 27 deg.;l+;:ore."..', 56 perches to repent in tbo line of Henry liarrleons. land . r • thence chef. to another'po.t; thence partly by Jo Parrhell'e laM s, „ 4 „ and partly by another lone of 2 perchea In breadth, 51. •I:'•Qy 4 ; deg.. W. P 9 penile?' to a poet on the side of Williams • . t an suer along the side of the name N IL' deg, . 4. ' .4 . -A , .'"•+ I•+ pen-11M to the place of beginning, containing„3l es k. -,' 41 6. it 0. „., 151 acyclic.. On the above tract of land are erected a •thrtNi etn• 7 ! ii. brisk and a tiro-story tory stone dwelling, also, a „ i., • ' .. . • frame ha tr. It will be intersected by Thirty. - Ilt di - 1) 4 --. i• . , i ty , ixtli. 'lhirtyseventh and Titirty.eightli, 0 „ 1 .'i , 4 and Berke streets, and. Montgomery avenue. war e . yir ~• '+ p Anction Store. eir ' 4 - . 41- 4Nterts l se s - ..' Ille - hate peremptory..... 4: irr - Loo to he paid at the time of sale, ""is . 11 4. ,_,, By the Court, E. A. MERRICK_ Clerk O. G __..'-• ' ' --'• t". ANDif.EIV.SJ ROOT,: 4 , 4 4 re • ELIZABETH 1V10MA5.41a,,,, ", • ......1 JAMES A.•••F 'EVILAN, Auctroncer, „ , 11, 11 p1 .7 4, ,i, , 0 in 2 9 475422 Ar4funt sir eh, '4':t Vir Ehi. , ..,.......,,,,„Lit 1' CALF—f.e LAIL Vl , ' JOHN . . `'PO. Root, deceased. Valuable tract, two acres, Rid ~ , • •. 1r " 1 ;, ,,:,1, • " avenue, Twentieth Ward. Under authority of 1 'a ' Orphane' Court for the city and county of Philadolp . ', • Y„ on Wedneaday, January' 15[11,1968, at 12 o'clock, noon. 4,7.,"4. i' he sold at put tie ealeox ithout 'vs, rve, at the Philadelp rt,,.• Exchange, the following described real estate, la . • 4,:',Vi• i II property of John Root. dcc'd. All those =spruce . .-• I:: menta and lot of ground, situate on the soitthweat ,-. ' n k, ~, Ridge Road,beginning at a stake.thence extending' . 4 ; „ 4 ...e., 4 road North 44 deg. 20 min ,West 100 feet to a stake,. . new ~• 5 ', - by land, late of etandieh Fordo, since o on. 'M. ,I- .-•,1. '''' ''.. booth 51 deg. 10 min: Went 986 feet 2in ress to , 5 ' ilisg , 4• . ek,,• 4 4% the line of George G.woelpper's land ;to bee b ''''i.. .. ear., • .I. South. 37 deg. 50 min., Ea.t 100 feet to a ko ; 1 - 'k . I- . 4 land of Blair McClenachan. North 51 ilegtlo4hl e' , l4 .9 ' ' , 0.41 f feet 7 inches'to the place of beginning. Genital. . .55 ~,..,.4 ~.. ~ • more or less. ' t ' ~. '-wi, :vi;:i . The above is e very valuable tract, commencing I. s., 4 inches below Montgomery street, being .1110 fee.. ' . 7 .'4 ..,, rade° Road, and extending between parallel Rhea at ' j, ' :melee therewith nearly 900 feet to Twenty•sixth a . ~ , crossing Twenty.fifth street and Columbia avenue,; - herb,. fror to of abort 15534. feet on the former i*,,;•:, 7 , a 1 feet on the latter. Plan at the Auction Store. - • •00. , •m 4. riff'Clear of incumbrance. .. " , s , ''''l.4 rir - Sale peremptory. ' . - a, it fir.. to be paid at time of , sale , . ..„.`,.."”, . W.1, 4 11t,,, By the Court, E. A. MERRICK', Clerk V. V. •••••• 4, '..fe. ; ANDREW S. ROOT. 1 Exc ut v' • ..,* ri; de.:6,3eM l it f ELIZABETH THOMAS c 01. . + it,,, 1 ., JA3 A thl A...F REDMAN, Auctioneer. •- ' , if 1: 04 'Store s Walnut strksit. ~', ' 1,4 12 ORPHANS' COU A.LE •+"'il, p 00VOUNklif, , - Kelly, deceased. ~,, A - 5 Fr,,,, i • Auctienegr,* • --Lot of ground, arysl 4 streetr . rVe j .,o_,OU'er. o 42ll .‘ j Twenty-fourth Ward. sUnder authors • e` - ‘I4P Pr I I Alk Court for the City and County•of Philadelphda. on g ^.. , hesday. January 15, 1868, at 12,o'clock, noon, will b' s -dl ..i. at public sale, at the Philadelphia Es.ch.tile, the fOssaliatecl ins described real estate; late the property of Johneltbrrers an •, deceased i All that certain lot of ground eituate' , '.., .. „ ,'" r - southwesterly side of Mary street, between So eyP llkt NE: , street and 'a ccrtain,2o feet wide etreet 19 feet of- whis P'e- " I Nr. ,, , , he opened immediately, and laid out by Ilugh3l,fl •• - .li eic ..., ,if 4 on the wester - aline of hie property, commencier• at. 4 ,i., distance of 93 feet 7 1 1 inches N. NY. of the line of souir l ii j •-, , •., al street; thence along Mary street 100 feet 6'. inched, ~ u , iA .1 19 feet wide street; thence northward along the e , gsietk, i . •e line of said alloy 72 feet 2 inches; thence eaatward 70 4 / 1 111u- s y. . ' „A 10 inches to:Mary etreet, the place of beginningVA, bdifjr , - r a ,y',,IL a triangular piece of ground. 4 Alit * The above is near the market'and Race,and ,g l iretploco• ' ) Pa , PCllgor Railway Depot. --5.....-1,4 4P. Cr , trl s 4 .,,,, e . ,, r , IW'' - ' Cheer if all incumbrance, ill -.4.4.. . . . , ..... .j, 1, 1 . , air" SIUU to be paid at timo ofl'ahe . ~+ leg . , r `r.; By the Court, 4.,;',A. fliVilr,lfßlOK. ClerkO. c,. . • !I• II MARY KELLY:fAdministratrix. - u -' A . . JAME 9, A. Fitl3l:5lAN, Auctioneer,„_„) ' Store, 42e Waireitetr4iet. i q , ' O •7 , i h KEA , Pi ultl tidlA-.IAMES„A..FREE.II4OI, . o ,.iii ; , t , i i a; Auctioneer.—Business Stand. No. 776 South , leeoniill estu . 7 , e.• street, and Court House% Un IVedneeday, Jan. 15, '-. -•• T., 0 1.66, at 12 o'clock, noon,.will•bef sold at public sale, at the e c -. ,' Philadelphia Ex - change. the 'following described real -^* .+. r 1. , ' ' 7 extate, viz. All that. valusble business property—two. 0 suer' frame store and dwelling (No 776) South Sccon4 ,4,,,,,4 ~..• i•ti Co, w ith tl e lot of ground ou ',which it is erected, on ,ge the -, e.t tette of Second street, below Govan stre4, in,1. 4 the Third Ward; containing in front :13 feet 5 Inches, and 04' vale, dive in depot 100 feet, then widenieg r on the KWh • ' to the width of 3.4 t‘ et 1 inchem, and then extending the, • 1:, , further depth of fel feet, being 150 feet deep ou themorrit -;'), . , k ,.. hut. Un fhb rear of the lot Are erected two three story 4 k ..i ';',IC ..', hi It k Louses, ri riling for $144 a'year each. Reserving to . , .”, 4 .I‘ , + the • roperty adjoin fug ou the south the use of an alley. '•I './il s 'A ay.:: feet wide and 60 feet deep, for a prissage•Way and ...It , S . wat, r coinve, 60. Subject to the pay , uent of $4O ppr, + ~.. •1 4 : , ~ min, part of a ground rent of $77 40 now charged upon , : 4,1, ‘rp,i. I hii I,nd the property adjoining on the south .."13he•wholei 1,14,„,,,,, `,, ‘, rents for $760 a year. Teii.c, $3.0()) carhl,..treinainden 'it .. ?4 , :i may rem am on mortgage if (leak( d: Sale abeillute. Jr.....,, ~, ...q.. ,, 1 rtf - sloti to he ps le at the time ofeisale.r" - • 11 , • 'I yr *Zit gl 3 t ; : JAMES A..F.RESIA. auctioneer., ..i . , 1' tY , *,",: ,+, Stle 42• I ,4 fi ' , 4", tp, , & , :1..... 1 defIRJ•I2,P dP`26.1A2.9 iiP ti ANS. :WAIT SALE,—ESTATIB 01/JOILN "C. and Edward S. Hewn!, and Mary Jane Swat re; minors.--James A. Freeman,( Auctioneer.-- 'liven- , story Brick Dwelling, No. 708 New 3 , llarklttfitreet--Onder , authority of the Orphans' Court for the City.and aburfty. of Philadelphia, on Wednesday, January I6th, lEtld,dit 13 o'clock. noon. will bo sold at publlesale, at the Philadels phia Exchange, the following described reaPestate, property of John r, and Edward S. Hensel, and Mary,' Jane Summers, minors. The undivided half part ot and in ail that threeelory brick messuage and lot of ground situate on the wc. t ride of New. blarket etreet;hotwee Poster and Brown streets, In the Eleventh Ward, 0fge0 . .f.,;, city; containing in front 31 feet, and in depth 3d.iteet. Clear of incumbrance. . ~ OAT" The remaining half part will be gol d by . thetothai owter, the purchaser obtaining a title to the vr Ir?" Sloe to be paid at the Hunt.. of To. By the Court, E. A. MERRICK Cr , DANIEL HENSALI iTA.M.ES A. FREEMAN, de26,Ja2,9 . Store: 428 ultHiAN6' (Ail. 61' 6A.L.8.-1(..6 - . ?ward Baxter, deconsed.—Jaines A. tloneer.--Two three-/tory , Wick trot and 2423 Factory atroct, SeventhAVard., lit of the orphans' Court tor the city and cot delphia. on Wednesday, January 15th, 186% noon, will be sold at public sale, atAtte 1:911' chanse, the followinge described :real ostatt pert% of Edward Baxter, dec'd.:' All those the co story Mick houses and two and a In back buildings, and lot of ground, situate sidc of Factory, at cet (above . Twentyfot . streets), in the deventli Ward of the city, a el 50 t vet alnches eastward of Twonty•nfti tainlng in front on, Factory street t feet, gni le tit in' lien. Subject to +OO R'oundrent nc ittelwo to be pa id at the time of sato, E. 51ERRICii., By the Court' pei nrtyp it . . A INt: JAME& A. FREEMAN, An detije.e. store. 9SJ \P Py-71, I I. W.V.. -- na r.r.,.- .I,t.e.i,e, ~,.. e' /,..e.: " tioncer.Thrreatory Brick. House. ! A- ford Road. On Wednesday, Januar.lt 12 (Mock noun, will bo sold at public salt (1,?...ry, dcipinit FA - change. the follow ipg deaciii --., :aIA viz.: All that certain , liree,-stony brick' hp :,, • - A ll story frame back building and lqt, of grit,: ! . ~t , longing, tuttrite on Frankford road ilslo.:," - . i . s ktrEet. In the blur:teen th Ward of tho ag r ' , o r 4, • L ~,,,-. , ..). , 1 1 front 20 fect.and in 0, pill on vie south ite . i m bps - f" ' ('4 .- :' av .., refill Frankfort road 79 feet to tap:o464 A mpwar 1,4 , / westwardly parallel with . York sore - ...ity ^ , iIN.. gy .' ' I s• le s. to a, 5-fert alley called ililhark`e r nx ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,n,.,:,1,. ~,.,11, i , ,, , ( on the raid dley, and in depth also a . ' 7',', 1 ,1 Ft ; ~,.., il if.,s ,N . . 1 f , ,, A,. 91 Icet 5 Inches. ,AI orf"" _. • 1 i le 4 , 1; Tr - Clear of incumbrancd. Occur, f o * " t i lt.l by T' , ...1,,,az,V1, '.,, •t e ,/ , , , , i ii.'2, 0 00 not, n BMW. ', ' . ' lf of r, d iiiod , V l4 •SgaV'' J .?) ' tit - $11lX) to be paid n t the i 0, . •, o l t a . .. t . ,..%c ' ioax iai , tiztmireet, -4- ; ,it ::: .. ` - ' 1,. /,;.'4 J 1.1.• A. Ft 'IC ~. v -,,,,' ' - .10r188ri..% , ~,,. - i,,,,,1.,9.0 . ~-„ I. -.1 ~ c 1 ~ .140 , Ott 1.1. • I ..4.213.,*110 0 " Atliq LiHaws, &cense(' -Jana If , . ere ~,,,. ~ 1,..1,,,,,.- 4 , 4 ,k 44 Dwellings Mu , lisla 11, li mill '', ArdPnfln"r. - ;tl o ,'. I. e, %nolo Seyeutlf Ward. I - 0.1" r otithorllmb274 . 1 ,. , . I v lw will of tho lout John Willitiole, deed, ; 4 77; O''''' °7 ' t'' , ' ' my 10111, I*oo. at 12 o'cl , ck, noon. 'mill n, „1.4 a v ;./ , , o ic . , pale, ar Int' Hal tliCi Ajar EX Change ' •ti' ..""- 4 ' tel ii.ed real estate. .viz.: .1 1 1 that venal OWE , -., '. . ''''f,y; • ' vr it li t'ao two tin ~.:.story 10 irk houses I - T' Ire ..;! i.,. .;,1, (each cont.ining lIVO MOTO , ' .ti 0041.10 On OP IM' p:Z, ~,-,'. ii.. 110 WI dtreOr, nt, the filirltnee of di loot .1 . tt of,th ',. t I eat, hi the deren th-Word'ef the eltit. .. a 5 f , -S" , ' ,' in front 10 fort and au depth 65 foet to Idich,A,o l * .i . ;, sohjeut-10 $2O ground - runt Or *flown... $ • ~,. .., it.'9 ,- $lOO , tv be paid at tithe at 00.10. -By c!rd 3/: ..."..,'' toy. . ' JAMES A..FLREMAN ) ,' "' •"'' 4 , ~ storostimiNi $ ,v,,, - - Ft.i.51..1,• i - ,1/,,i1 , --JA *4 l'..ta .1..: iveln't ' 1 ' • ... :: i t i '`r ) t u Al t p — ri f Tu ° re d dii t giny N „ c i - or : ',.•• , click, noon; will ho gold at tail ~`..- , ( 44 1 delitlia Exchange.' the 'followitiß,lllll 16:4' ~,i. .. it : -All that let of ground pitnati. ~1, : 1.7 ,jde ef ebuieli sbeet. ;lerankfind..-1 '..4. , ft 100 2" feet front and oxtoodi * , !•;),A . , I:nrafiel Linea at v 1 0 14.9 lit . ', TIN ahoy° la,a' WILok 1 . , ,'," 1 r.I. e kitchen attw - r . INN. POOIIEMCICIUJIMV three nitintbs, 'lt e Ifi t :leat.o; ; inentA f r Tlt''. ~ ').l '% ,0 ,diie °A.jit2 9 4.liCr7 KA N slls also, ~~~~~~: . ~. ty " ., .3.. a.., V, .....2 - '.;:i,, , , , ..•: - : !...,..;...., 4: ..,..r,., , ,,, ..,,- e-- , .....•., ...1-..-?,...,1-, ~~:a ' fi b • die s ;1: S ) . ,~~ . ~. „~ `,._ r`
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