Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, February 01, 1868, Image 3

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    ant in the'suit happens to be a corporation, it I
- - I stands tout little chance of lenient cons«deta
improved c ' tEtJ ; tion • Consequently, in fixing damages there
tfcN ovEKsruuNG pianos, . ■ ' i f re auently as many sums named as Ihefe
■““ />d,£0!;S are jurors, and as each juror clings twMfl
Arch ! original figure, the expedient is resprtfid to of
kvSmnq bulOtinT Zlt X TS:
being subsequently opened, an average is
made between the highest and the
BiULBOABTAATEb . . iowcstsunisnamed.and thejurors avmg I
The wisest railroad, management cannot bound * 1 Thc advocate? of
1 SfSa»o c^ = —:
against the and severe frosts of the ® gur ®’* d cbanC e way the mo3t
mountain regies of Pennsylvania.* Iron of . low sums, anA " ay arrivcd at .
the best qua’;** is liable to’ snap under heavy j JL tSTSUing a game of
pressure, i'a m atmosphere below the freez- : The W10 “ g should be a subject for grave,
fngpoinV When a rail snapping thus yes- j chance £mo
terday moitting, near Mill Creek, in this ■ careful and mtelugen cll uWcab-'
SnJTtrata of cars was passing, let ; evident teheed.comment All
svwndof the rear cars off and they went , bag” trialand subversive of the
/whirling'over an embankment, the wonder is to the object of th , would doubt
that-any one in them escaped with life. For- ; “ ds “ f g B^ ce ’ the fac ts made known to
innately the railroad management has even 1 less so decide w
kept in view the contingency of a breaking i them,
rail. The road is more thoroughly policed in
winter than during other seasons, and when a
train Is behind time conductors are cautioned
against trying to make up the loss, lest the
increased speed should produce a strain that
•would break a rail. The train on Friday
morning was, therefore, going at a moderate
speed, and the rail broke after four cars had
passed, the other four being thrown from the
track. Had the train been going rapidly,
the Angola calamity might have been re
peated. But as It was, the crush' of the over
turned cars was not so complete, and the
passengers, With the exception.of one haplosff
woman whoseems to have been killed out
right, escaped before the fire which con
sumed thecars could seriously have hurt any
of them. Under the circumstances, it can be
honestly said that the railroad company was
not to blame for this disaster. . _ v
But after all, ? it is worth while to inquire
whether tbierc cannot he additional precau
tions on our railroads, against breaking rails
-t-rui -ngahast the horrible burnings which
always follow the demolition of arpassengcr
car in cold weather when fires are lighted in
iron stoves. As for the rails, steel is coming
into iire on some of our roads. Will noi
steel tie better able to withstand frost than
irenff, ‘ If it will, ought not steel to be sub
-sututt'id as rapidly as possible, especially on
eurvos, and on embankments, where the
■crea test damage is likely to result when a
•irabtt is thrown from the track? At such
poi nts the beginning ought to be
meide of the substitution of steel rails
fbr iron. Then, as to the stoves
the cars. Can they not be dispensed
■with? Cannot some arrangement be made
for heating cars with steam or hot water ?
There have been various reports, at times, of
contrivances for this purpose, and it does not
seem to be impracticable; certainly it cannat
behalf so difficult as many of the inventions
of the day. On the continent of Europe, as a
late letter hom a Bulletin correspondent has
described, vessels-of hot water are supplied to
the passengers, by which they can warm
themselves, and these are replenished at stated
intervals. Such an arrangement, which is
the best yet devised for the. small compart
ments of European railway carriages,
ie not likely to be undertaken on
the lone American cars. But it
ba ß the great merit of being
a decided safeguard against being burned up,
se ow passengers are apt to be when an over
turn or a collision demolishes a red-hot stove
and scatters the live coals among them.
"W hoeyer contrives a plan by which our pe
•au-bariy constructed cars can be warmed
iaul heienfly by means of steam or hot water
.pip eB) w ill deserve to make a fortune. Most
»eo pie would be willing to pay extra fare for
the itake of traveling in cars thus heated.
Ri vilroad traveling, with all its latest im
provi tmente, is new business.
One generation has scarcely elapsed since
people* began to travel by steam over .iron
la jj 3 The contrivances for safety and com
fort ai ’e, therefore, those of a business
that is in its infancy. There is
room for improvement in many
wava, an <1 there can be no doubt that ere
another g enerationpasses, there will be many
improvem tuts. There are competing lines
of railroad in every direction, in this country,
.and' more axe springing up. Borne lines,
longeMhan their rivals, will only be able to
compete sue. tessfhlly by adopting improved
methods of making travelers comfortable and
safe. There iWO few people who would not
be willing to go by alonger route and pay a
hieher fare, for the sake of obtaining the best
irprovisien for thrir comfort and satety. There
will inevitably be * competition in .procuring
(gneb provision, and it is at least to the con
sfidenUy expected tjaaX .there will be less dan-
Berhereafter-than there is now, of people
being hurled over p rets pices by breaking
mas, and then being reacted to death by the
white hot cOak. that ere now carried inevery
passenger car.
mth»INKS6 WOTIOKS.
Saturday* 1» tSOS,
Tim .heavy damages of $33,000 against , the
CataWissa Railroad Company, recovered by
Jane,E. Caldwell, in-Ihe Supreme Court, «
Thursday excite surprise. The plaintiff
claimed that the accident -which resulted in
tfce iujuries for ’wliicii she obtained so large
an amount in damages, was caused by care
lessness/ while the comply contended that
» rail that had been made bnttlo by frost had
broken and that the mishap was beyond !
Seir control. The jury took the plaintiffs
Sew of the question and the result is seen m
an award of damages to the amount of 1,-
'*oo We know nothing-about-how thts par
ticular verdict was arrivld at; but there is a
most pernicious eßStom|hat h “
Retrials of cases whe& damages are in
volved, wMch render thel verdicts *
itfarswtO'f-daniagea
In such-suits there is generally a w ide <hver
aity of opinion: first as w whether theie
should’ to damages at \ all, and J^ c ~
/ad—tho first question having toen
Settled affirmatively—what amount of dan»-
•IKB shall be fixed ? There is a wide field
• soeved hT thisquestion, and ©pinions areas
various as different men’s estimates of human
suffering, vaJfi® of time, and the many other
Moderations invoked, arc varicxu*. Per-
Venal feeling and prejudice often have macb
lotto with these and if the d<\end-
Select Council, on Thursday,. adopted a
preamble and resolutions P™testing agamst
the interference of the State Legislature mthe
domestic a Hairs of the city by the <contem
nlated passage of. a law abolishing
d P lWiphij.
base the objection to the abolition of street
markets on the broad ground of the impio
oriety of State interference m city affairs, an
SU* ««». they will
I endorsement of nineteenth twentieths of the
citeens,whoare sick andtired of
meddling of members of the interior of the
State in affairs that belong exclusively .to the
city Much of this'legislative interference is
about as improper and as impediment as i
would he improper and mper ment fo
own city councils to meddle .with the
domestic . affairs of private “teens As
ato the motives that too often p P
\this interference upon the part of men
have no rightful interest at stake, that is so
notorious that it is beyond controversy. Ihe
abstract' question of the abolition 0
markets matter.- street- markets,
are a relic of primitive times, and there is no
more reason why the butcher, the farmer or
the huckster should have a portion ot the
public highway given over to him free, for
the prosecution of his business than tfceje w
why the same privilege should be
to lie baker, the dry goods dealerthesho
maker or the hatter. The commodities of all
i are equally indispensable to the community.
The Secretary of the Navy has ordered the
immediate cessation of work upon the new
Em frigate Colorado, now upon the stocks
at theßroeklyn Navy Yard. Tiie effect o
this order,.it not countermanded, will be to
throw out of employment between four hun
dred and five hundred workmen. There are
already many thousands of unemployed men
in the city of New York, and if the orders
of Secretary Welles are carried out, the aggre
gate of suffering will be increased. Economy
and retrenchment are very good things, but it
is not a wise or liberal economy in a great
government to discharge its working people
hi the middle of a hard winter, when business
generally is depressed and when there is
much unemployed work
men A wiser policy would be for the gov
ernment to aid in tiding the country over the
present commercial depression by furnishing
all the employment possible to working men.
An administration that is so lavish in pouring
from the treasury bung-hole the means fof
the purchase of uninhabitable ice-bergs and
shaky islandß of uncertain tenure, should not
commence the practice of economy by saving
the dribblings of the spigot that are so im
portant to hundreds of families.
The streets during the recent severe wea
ther have presented the usual scenes of cru
elty to poor over-worked horses. The ill
used animals, with shoes that are as smooth
as polished steel, go trembling over the ice
covered streets, and brutal drivers and
heartless owners compel them to drag heavy
burthens where they can hardly maintain a
foothold. There is scarcely any direction in
which the Society for preventing cruelties to
animals could turn its attention more pro
fitably than toward the winter treatment of
hard-working homes. A good first step
would be to procure the passage of a law re
quiring that all horses in use on the paved
streets should be rough-shod during the win
ter months.
Bailey & Co’s. Collection of Fine Pictures,
on exhibition for some time at the Academy
of the Fine Arts, is to he sold on Monday and
Tuesday evenings of next week, at Horticul
tural Hall, M. Thomas & Sons conducting
the sale. There are many exquisite works of
living artists of Germany, Belgium, Holland,
France and Italy. The collection is partic
ularly rich in works of the Dnsseldorf artists.
The sale is the most important held here for
somei time, and it excites much interest
among collectors and connoisseurs.
A New York letter to a morning paper has
referred to the circumstance that the New
York merchants have agreed to reduce the
prices of silks from 25 to 50 cents per yard.
There is nothing remarkable in this. The
best Philadelphia dealers, whose advertise
ments may be found in our advertisement
columns, have made greater reductions than
.these, in silks as well as other commodities.
jUI S uch articles can be purchased cheaper
in Philadelphia than they can in New York.
The Bread-and-Butter Brigade meeting
laßt night passed some immense resolutions,
'" onfc of which is intended to-be laudatory of
! \ndrcw Johnson who, it says “-'as never
i foiled to plead the people’s cause under the
Constitution, amid the clamors and denunci
ations of an overwhelming majority, drunk
with rage and thirsty for .power. ’ This
reference tothh msident’s famous Chicago
trip is ungenerous in the extreme. Mr.
Johnson will not thank his friends for this
reminder ofhis th iratihess.
A careful estimate of the losses by the late
conflagration at Chicago foots up an aggre
gate of $2,-77i!,5Y5. The insurances, amount
to $1,334,571,; In the long list of insurances
oh the destroyed property we do not find the
name of a single Pennsylvania company.
The companies losing belong chiefly, to
******* l>im
Chicago,' Cincinnati, New 'York, Hartford
and Boston, and severaiareEnglsh, th
heaviest losses being amohg the tatter. ■
the companies, it is stated, will be able to
weather the storm.. /
Death of Rev. Isaac fcwwr*
The Rev. Isaac Looser, rabbi of, the prm£lp«*.
Portuguese Congregation in this city, died at his j
residence, in Walnut Jstreot, this morning. Mr. ■
Lceser was' horn in Westphalia, in 1800, and
came to the United States at the age of nineteen.
Ia 1829, he became rabbi of the Portuguese Syna
gogue in this city, and about twenty years ago,
owin-- to some difficulties, arising out of purely
temporal questions, be resigned his post, and
with a portion of tho Congregation organized a
second synagogue, according, to the Portuguese
rite,over whioh he has presided ever since. He
has long been distinguished as a theological
writer of much force>B*rW»=ftr many years
the editor of the Occident, a Jowish journftl ol
high reputation.. Among otiwv literary labors,
Mr. Lcescr published, in 1856, a translate
the Hebrew Scriptures. He was highly catccmci
among his people, both for his scholarly attain
ments and for Ills many personal good qualities.
His death will bo severely felt by the Jewish eo
munity in Philadelphia. \ „ ,
To Mr. Lecser’s untiring exertions the mic
tion of the various Jewish societies in this city is
principally due. The Jewish liducation feoeie y
and the Jewish Hospital were especially his oil
spring, while all of them, now twenty or moie.in
number were largely indebted to his
the time of his death he was the oldest officiating
clergyman of auy religious body in this city.
credit, 2,000 packnccs Hoots, Shoee, Balmorals, •,
ttft&Miafin
'Bm'iaps!cai' B v?iq o |Sc.,^Si 1 lk I Han(lkercUiei3, Oil Cblntt
credit, 200 pieces Ingram, Venetian, List, licmp,
tuge, and Paa _
t'ssSSS2®Sffi s s«
Storu, No. Soi» Market
Real Estate, StocUs, Ettt
aiutlpg^oofc^,t^ oC<>^°omaß 0 C <>^° 0maB "~
adrertieements and pamphlet catalogue-
' fV Bargains in Qf t j!K no
fir~ Bargains m CjoMWiP- -M-J
0T Bargains in Ctothing. _«*
wap~ Bargains in Ltpthino. -MX
j*r Bargains in Clothing. Jil
IfT Bargains in CtofAjw-
Bargains in l joJ*tn<f. -MX
—arßargains m (Mhing. -
fir~Baroaim .in Cnthing. -Ml
tar BarfHXMW in ttßf**'’*' -3
IB" Bargains in tip thing. -Ml
rsrßargains in Clothing. _MJ
1&- Bargains m Ctpthiiig. -iCM
*y Bargains in clothing. -Ml
tar- Bargains in Clothing. -Ml
t*r Bargains m IfpthiW. -Ml
■ar- Bargains in (lot/mig. _MI
Bargains in Cjetjnfig. -Ml
|3y Bargains in Clothing. -Ml
*ar- Bargains m Clothing. .-Al
and Overcoats etiU very <?o<x ‘- Wa1 iAmakeb & Browii,
Wanamakeb & Browt«*
Wanamaksb A Bbown,
, . Wanamakeb & Bbow»«
. Wanajaakbb & Bboww,
' THE Labgkot Housit,
TEE ookneb OF Sixth and Market bts.
Bread Mixing and Kneading Machines
Cull or tend for circular.
blanchaiw&king,
030 MARKET Street, Philadelphia-
Acente wanted on other eoode. jufi-wp
T'kOWNING’S AMERICAN LIQUID
!& o“the S to be mended, or the Cement. Al
way* ready for Stationer,
f e7-tf K 9 South Eighth etreet, two /loora ab. Walnut
door to the Poet-oftlce. _
(TIE \ TRAYS AND WAITERS OF OVAL AND.
Street, bel?w Ninth.' Philadelphia.
T~\noß GONGS FOB PLACING OVER STORKS OR
l£f^SS«'SffS«:s
Market street, below Ninth- ±—
/ /— -w- /.ira rnJ'F’ OFF! 1 * MAY BE HI Ul*
atreet..bcli/W Ninth.
fi. tolient:-thb stTreswmarketotrbct.
Bandpoaeoßßion oth of March. Apply from 11
X o’clock, at 604 Commerce btreet, Bccond »tory. [fel Jt
1868 ~im? T Saloon* 1 'by R * f hXcYL« K() 'l uFivOKtor^
Whiicm Uyedf, Shave andl Bath. » cent..
Rnrorauctin order. Open huuday morning.
chimgc Place. - tit i : —:—,—
N °The Hmlted vartnerahiji heretofore
SriffbfeM-sr iB ai,thorized to 1,66
Ceneml Partnera.
JOSEPH M. FKEBK» Special I’artuer.
Fihla j»KJ.i’iiiA, January 31, lßttti.
xTOTICE -LEWIS rothermkl will continue
Philadelphia, Januavy_3f,_l«6B.
mw'lTijgM~bP WATTS & BUTLER WAS DIS-
T solved on 23il .Tonunry, 1868, by mutual consent
i a m i i i* ttHTLEK baa taken the 1 actory and Balearoom,
No 412 Locustßtreet, where ho will continue the menu
h ,6 ®-_ _j*«*
C" 'nwrnrNsiST-MILK OF NKW YORK MAKE; EX-
Hrimt of Beef- ltobinnon'B Patent Barley; Fresh Bctli
inm Oatmeal: Select ltio Tapioca, with full directions;
i'ia S'H Fariiiaccous Food; Pearl Saco: Oar.accas Cacao;
Racahout and other Dietetics of the best quality. For
sale by JAMES T. SIUNN, Southwest coru«d Broad,
and Bpruce atract. .)aHU,imrpa_
AJHS. JOUANNA ’ IEN £J R j rRESg AS „ MiowrFK,
No. 609 Catherine atveet._ 12tri>*_
TTnRDDING AND ENGAGEMENT KINGS, WAR
W ranted of solid fine Gold; a full assortment of aize*
M r&ntcaoi feOU F ajSr & BROTHER, Jewellers.
334 Chestnut etreet, below fourth, lower eide^
iftiiij lookT LOOK! u ok;-wall papers
IUOO. reduced. Beautiful styled li”d. 15,20 and 2ac.
Also. Gold and Plain Papera. llune cheap, window
Sliatleß at manufacturers' .pncoß, JOHNSTON'S Depot
in No. 1033 Spring Garden Btrcet , tel4-lyrp.
cpiIANKBGIVING WEEK. -TO GROCERS ~ AND
L Dealer*.- Jnut received from Rocheeter, a superior lot
of iweet older. Alec, recelvedfrom Virginia, crab cider. -
P. J.' JORDAN,
220 Roar street*
Below Third and Walnut etrootJ.
JNDIA RUBBER MACHINE.BELTING.BTEAM PACK-
Engineers and dealers wiR find a (nil nenortment 'ol
Goooyoar*B Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing
Ho*e, &e., at Headquarter.
' 308 Cheetoni Street,
South ride.
- NJEL—We have now on hand a largo lot of Gentlemen**
LaJnee’ and fiii»fie6*Gom.Boots. Atoo every variety and
itvleof Gum Overcoat*
grocers, hotel-keepers, families and
Other*—The andendguodhaa juet rooeived afresh
nißDly. Catawba, California and Champagne Wina*
-l’caie Ale, : tfw tov«Hd«;. on I^^^
‘ 220 Pear street.
Below Third and Walnut etreot*
rilSu NATHANS, AUCTIONEER. N. E. CORNER
I 'rule d and Bpruce utreete, only one square below the
Exchange’’., ilMftW# to' loan in largo or email amount*, on
Slnmnnff Hher plat*, watches, lowalry, and oßgoody of
hours from BA.M.toI P. M. l IT E”tat>
Ha hod for the tet forty years, Advauocr made intege
nmomik'aVuic .Vivgrt niarhct rute.
SUPERB QUALITIES
BUCK AND SOLID COLORED
'.SILKS
' '• - tVIIX IRE OPEJSEB- « *
Monday Monamg, 3d tost-,
At Bess than Regular Prices, ’
BY
HAMRICK & COLE,
WHITE MARBI F. BCILDINC,
No. 45 North Eighth Street.
__ =
J, C. STRAWBRIDGE & CO.
GREAT STOCK OF LINEN GOODS.
50 doz. Linen Towels, SI 50 per doz,
100 doz. Linen Towels, $2 00 “. .
100 doz. Linen Towels, $2 50 "
125 doz. Linen Towels, $3 00 “
Elegant Bordered Towels,
Blue Bordered Towels,
Bath Towels,
Turkish Towels,
Elegant Damask Towels.
leavy Half Bleached Table Linens, 550.
Very wide Half Bl’d Table Linens, 62c.
Heavy Loom Damasks, 75c.
Super quality Loom Table Damask,B7o.
Block pattern Loom Linens,ss,6s, 75c«
tabl:
Bleached Table Linens, 75ei
Bleached Table Linens, 87c.
2 yards wide Table Linens, $1 00.
Barnsley Linen Damasks, $1 25.
Elegant Barnsley D masks, $1 50.
Unbleached Table Linens, 50,62,75 c.
LINEN NAPKINS.
50 doz. Napkins, $1 75 per doz,
60 doz. Napkins, 82 00 “
ICO doz. Napkins, $2 20 “
50 doz. Napkins, $2 50 “
100 doz. Doylies, 81 25 “
100 doz. Bor’dDoylies, 81 37
100 doz. Bor’d Doylies, 81 60
French Napkins and DovlieS.
Large Size Winner Napkins.
Half Bleached Doylies.
LINEN SHEETING.
WIDE LISES PHEETISCB, $1 25.
BABSBLEY LISES BHEETISG, $1 50.
EXTBiWIDE PHEEIIS6B,'SI 75.
BUTCHEKS’LINEN,
Butchers' Linens, 45, 50, *3 3c.
Pillow Linens, all widths.
D uck Towelings.by the yard.
Iluolr Toweling hy the niece.
•20 dozen Bureau covers, cheaji.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
Buyers for Hotels, Boarding Houses, Public
Institutions and Private Families will do wed to
call and examine our immense stock and ox
trcmclv low prices. Many of the above goods
we are offering at less than importers’ and manu
facturers’ prices.
j . c. STMWB RIDGE & CO.
■N. W. cor. Eighth and Market sts.,
PHII.AnEI.PHIA.
inimitable
AND
bare confections
FOR
CHOICE PRESENTS.
STEPHEN F. WHITMAN,
No 1210 MARKET STREET.
fal-3trp -
.TAMES M. TOY,
Dry Goods Commission Merchant,
907 Church Alley,
PHILADELPHIA,
Sole Agent fo v
HOOD SIMPSON & SON’S
>PHIEA»EEPHI a cits JULIS
Skirting Tweeds,
Plaids and Stripes,
Ckeclis.
BEEBOSE MI EES Balmoral Skirts.
OTTOWA Ml EES Kentucky Jeans,
lloeskins.
Skirting Elonncls, Ace.
' fel-dtS . ■—
ELDER flower soap,
H. P. & C. R. TAYLOR,
• ■ No. 641 Norti-NlntU etree^
L ,NK UUEAr?#BT bakgainseveh om^,.
J will open this lnoralM! »tpnt d*ty nje o figaroB
urdeou’f rliirtinc Linens ol llio be W . t tiicm from a
unite »«low bu befcii o A' l ?.’J?,• trade, at 20 per cont.
house that ia ?om* ont Of be n° I,lore offered th e
oil regular pnccH. lheio. Mt
‘ I S-;"rd. lo, lhere iB Jno'tot if the. Golden Flax Alt.
■"ai.w, Bome'tine Table sl
$2 25 and $2 50 per yard, «°n»> D ' ,uu " ■>
i“BSSSBn unm. •fluff# d.«».
. Haii^oim 1 Nai ki™ at ® l '7 *
Sf Weaeh.
&"r-tocKnL»‘i! aa°d,\ Ul er $ ica n O aet at 10,12)4
and lDothtß. oItANVILLE B. HAINEB.
-iota Market Blreet, above fenth.
1,1 —=rTT^r7iTKr^wi«nm A BFSUATION AS
A or 2> <lo Oha.abenvork wd waiting.
treat City referee. »
A HEAVIT REDUCTION
I N THE
PRICES OF
FIRE SILKS.
EDW. IIALL & CO.,
28 S. SECOND STREET,
HAVIKG SML ON BAND A HMB IWOK OF
FINE COLORED SILKS,'
CORDED SILKS,
FANCY SILKS,
v.’JIL i.TFER nu:M ON
MONDAY NEXT
At R reduction oi fioin cue to two do 11 arc ay**jj oil
l-riccn we have been wiling them »*»>'’'
find j: Iltt oi the foods, with Kice* and r .
Antique Poult-de^Soies,
from $8 00 to $6 00.
Oiloman Velours, “ 750 to 5 50.
Poult-de-Soies, “ 600 to 4 50.
Corded Silks, “ 550t0 4 00.
Figured Silks, “ 450t0 3 50.
Moire Antique «■ ....Z.OtTfo.. 5 00,
ci « « 600 to 4 50.
ic ii 11 500 to 3 50.
Jf.B. -llioaTarlefy of Evening lllk* Whlth
have undergone a Redaction.
GREAT BARGAINS
WHITE GOODS. ETC.
The diHol ition of .oar tirrn on the let ol January, re-
Jring lei its settlement a heavy redaction of our Steck.
we bare decided to offer, on and alter ,
Monday Next, Feb. 3,
; OUR ENTIRE ASSORTMENT OF
White Goods,
Linens.
Laces,
Embroideries,
House* Furnishing Artioles,
Etc., Etc.,
At ft Tci; Heavy Bednetlon In Price* to
Iniure Speedy Sale*.
Ladke will find it to their advantage to lav in tbeir
3PKING SUPPLIES in
WHITE GOODS, ETC., NOW,
Ab they will be able to purchase them at about ANTI
-ExUTnduwmentßwillbeoflaed to tho-:e purchase
by the piece.
E. M. NEEDLES & CO.,
Eleventh, and Chestnut Sts.
OIHABD BOW.
TlliAaraa IOBABW
“MARIANA RITA.”
Our a jo
as above, contain ®nly tbo . „ rB *i Tea for our own use.
Havana Tobacco, imported OT ° u r»o Mut uce (
Owing to its high cost alien“« BUch SB we n ow offer. ,
priced” cigara, but only hno uig cent, leefl coat.
Snukl to tfiebeat imported, atjotoaup tlcal export-
Each of our partners baa had jearaoPt flf our ac n o r
ence in thia manufacture at, liav “g i ty . ei( , tlt conaocutive
partner alone ”S b i hfch we™ apent in the Vuclta Abajo
yeara, a portion of w hichwcro J import duties on ci
dißtrlct itaelf. t j,ii experience available in
Kara, we determined to mnao turn i t 0 have every
tho manufacture ol _ fi ?® l s : ol’wc CBtablblied our factory
thing under our own conhob we eat under constant
atourplaceof huainePß. wnero f ourflrm
poraonalauperviaionof twomcmDLra aurp i y 0 f tho
WoHOCured tearlv laat auiumei) a i joldci j ttoc
lineat \ ueltaAhajo Leaf tot lcoocrooi untU thß nult i u .
through wtibout rartoftonq/ rttot V u Hrra nged to ee-
C cre , of,»Zre l wS'i? , Blmllbu readyto ahip next sum
’"Hiving the necCßßary cxtcience }»
proper une; bolding * euro that (out of 1866
ficlngdeteiroiiied touaon. u ntt than we
are m"h lug herc under •■MarianalWa’' b r and. {
' *AB rtricW fir«t-cla« of abm.t> to, TO
, from tho Lclta Ab j . that brucctlth—and aU the
miles Jons bj i eP .® See in of liifh irade, without
It at cultivated m thin‘ ® p t h C ochlci difference betas that
itu< h diticrcnceof na.or, yjeida more cignu*
the leaf Ij? nl80 SH P Y H g Wo nevorfounsl ditllculty in oh
than that from othtru. V T)a ving a high prl-Mi for It.
tninins the beyt oithbßfJ> by v g«M» erh b ttpT , MO joumed
andill" that is
live llftvor to their cigars; * e V information. J'
the leaf/’ and oihercitually incorrect iti tko ins and
W « believe our exj erienco nun wcu taut about it.
oufu of the huuiuf 88. l a *J Knowledge of the
• «a
> uot B “”* d
. , the light, unadulterated, nmufifUg than at Havhna, if a*
j.ndroUcd iutocigamwi , branded only
& 'upon •SfSWS
; -
trademark- . iu.t nn imperative demand compels ne
jaSl4frP<
MOIRE ANTIQUE
TWENTY-FIVE REASONS
BfERY
MERCHANT,
STOREKEEPER,
MANUFACTURER,^
Should Read the
PHILADELPHIA
COMMERCIAL LIST
PBICE CrBKEST.
1. it jy etrictly a COMMERCIAL PAPER
2. It contain* i(liable MARKET REPORTS.
3. It contaiue ihARRIVALS and CLEARANCES,
4. It contains the IMPORTS and EXPORTS.
5. It canUlca mere FINANCIAL NEWS than all the
other daily or weekly pnj*er*.
A. It baa the best BHIP NEWS.
7 It contains a list of all VESSELS In Port.
It contains a list of all VESiUHhffon the way to thiv
I’oit.
ft Ttcostaixu alwt of all VESSELS LGADINO fcr thte
Tort. _ .
10. It makes aefrocialty of all COMMERCIAL NEM '■
11. It makes a afceialty of all OIL NEWS.
12. It makes a specialty of. all GOLD and HIL\ER
Mining News.
n. It ha* eredil MAKI.se Reporters.
H. It haa racy LOCAL and BIOGIt VPHICAL Sketches,
u’ jt haa spicy EDITORI \L9 on Commercial Topics.
If, It baa two columna of reliable MAltKETQuotation - .
17 It has a laithfal leport of the'PETROLELM. Trade.
IS. It cantatas OFFICIAL STATEMENTS of the con
dition of the Banka.
IP. It contains thu ANNUAL REPORTS of aU the Kail.
ro*<s Companies
20. It contains the ANNUAL REPORTS of the Inau.-ance
Coxnpanit*.
21. It ccntalra reYerat column* ol COMMERCIAL
Items condensed from original aoorcea.
22. It containa a list of the BANKRUPTS and tl.o
amount dne each creditor.
23. Itcontaina SKETCHES, which Inrtrr.ct and amu.e
tbc Clerk*. _
24. It is cot a PARTISAN PAPLR.
25. IT IS ONE OF TIIE BEST ADVERTISING
MEDIUMS IN THE WORLD.
READ
The Commercial List
PRICE CURRENT.
PviToHslied every Saturday toy
WINSLOW & SON,
341 Dock Street,
PHILADELPHIA.
FOB NEW YORK—Outside.
iflSlW STEAMSHIP
VALLEY CITY
la now loading »nd will leave from
First Wharf below Market Streets
On Tueiday, February 41b, at O P. H.
W Jl B P ou?U^«v e ?.V>ffiphi».
Now York. *«**>•■
LINEN store,
@S© A-rcl l Street#
We are opening the bneinesß of the now year with
A THOROUGH REDUCTION
IN PRICES,
To Clear Off Surplus Stoek*
Wo offer to Linen Buyers T ”
|Tbe Largest Linen Stock in the City
At Less than Jobbers’ Prices. [
All oar Lineal are of our own Importation and are
Warranted Free from Cotton.
dOABWt
CLERK,
iEcoiJFjßlSffi-!
BY ,
LATER CABLE NEWS.
Financial and Commercial Quotations.
..V tS>e Atlantic TelegrapU.
. **, y rfpv. w Forenoon.—The Bank of
tare reduced the rote of discount to 3
Erie’s, U. 8. Fivc-twenUes
fimer— 72J,f@i2%- Forcnoo n .—Cotton am® l
tiuVsteady. 01 Estimated sales, 10.000 b**. Other
articles unchanged.
Woatlicr B«l> or ** .
. [P,y the Weetcro Union Telegraph Compwy.]
T'l 1 ’ Wind. Weather. meter.
V*lt A N.W. Clear <>
Halifax, V ‘ Clear 12
§SJ°virk, W.S. W. Clear 13
Clca, 20
Ft Monroe, N. E. Clear
Oswego, B.fc. cear. 1(
Buffalo, rloar 10
Egof’ N. tV. Clear-. 0
Louisville,' ij-,, near’ 37
New Orleans, >• t? ;;2
Mobile. »«<j
MT ~n f .|:o &y -
«»L11; 00..»‘J. __
POLITICAL.
f’KOSf WASHINGTON.
PrcdciilJolin.oa to Ucclarolto «r
Britain the American ilimmtum.
The tergiversation .of Secretary Seward is of
avaUnOiiKirc. Another .ml higherauthority
has determined upon the courte wl icU is to bo
pursued in respect to the claims ol the Lmt.d
States Government upon Great j ‘
authorized to state, most confidently and do
cisively that the legitimate demands which hau.
been too meekly urged by the Secretary ot State
upon'the B rit ish Cabinet , are to be enforced at
W Thc V new a ßr r itieh Minister, Mr. Thornton, will
KS'f *as3S.
rpf remains that a speedy and satisfactory re
snoneVrnust be made by the British Government
in the ultimatum of the United States, or i.Lc a
declaration of war against Great Britain must in
evitably ensue.—A- I- 11 »""•
A Slander Hefuted.
(iv,-m' die New YorkTriUuae. 1
3RKSSSSSS?fSS!KRi«
have been prepared by the Secretary of the
frimoTUdal records In his[ office. and'
represented that during the pastfisca. >ear,
with the one the Internal
Revenue receipts had decreased nearly 03>,-
000.000; that out of the changes of col
and assessors made within the year, one handred
and nineteen were brought about on the recom
vnendation °* Mr. KtjlUus. and.only Uvcntj by.
Mr Johnson; that m the districts where Mr.
Rollins’s appointees were placed, the average
losses were nearly $124,00p per district, and that
in those districts where Mr. Johnsous followers
were provided for, the dosses averaged
*47,000 per district; in other words, that
Mr Rollins's men stole nearly three times
as mnch as Mr. Johnson’s. From beginning to
end there is not one word of truth in the state
ment. The .Secretary of the Treasury neither
prepared, nor caused to be prepared, the docu
ment in ((ucstion, and knows nothing whatever
about it. Mr. Rollinß did not suggest a dozen
changes in the Department, and the removals
were made, in most cases, against Ins express,
wishes. The paper was drawn
„p at the instigation of the
President, by a clerk in the Treasury Depart
ment, and was intended as a means of escanpefrom
the odium of having placed the public flow m
the hands of a gang of thieves. It is ctafged in
official circles that the document came from the
White House; that Mr. Johnson authorized its
concoction and publication, and that tlie whole
transaction is of a piece with the Grant assault—
an untrue, cowardly attack upon a faitbful
officer.
Foreign Secret Service Agent*.
The following Is Secretary Seward's 1 titer to
the Senate, remonstrating against the
of the eecrct service agents ot the Depaitmont of
State
Di:rARTME>’T or State,
W\mh.v<.ton, Januorv 28. 1867. —It is to be
hoped that the bill which, it is underetood, has
been introduced into the Senate, prohibiting _thc
appointment of special agents and terminating
the functions of such agents as may now boi em
ployed, is not Intended to apply to agents ot
that character in connection with foreign affairs.
If it were to embrace them it would
not only create great embarrassment m the man-
of those affairs, but would often make
the transaction of important public business im
practicable. Special agents for foreign affairs j
havo been more or less employed by c\ery,
administration from that of Washington to Uie
pre stint time. Washington himself sent Gover
ncur Morris to London as a special agent. The
occasion for such agents cannot be anticipated
they often depend upon emergencies which may
6nddenly arise, and require an appointment not
onlv prompt, but one where the fact of the
appointment and the name of the person ap
pointed must not, if success is to be expected,
fipedal'agcnm in connection with foreign af
faire are usually regarded as officers, under the
law of nations. They are employed by al- gov
ernments. Though not expressly authorized by
any act of Congress, their employment has always
been indirectly sanctioned. Frotn the formation
Of the government there has been an annual ap
propriation for the <*>»tingent expenses of I foreign
intercourse, from which appropriations the com
pensation and expenses of such.agcnte arc paid,
without, it is believed, material objection, there
ia special legislation by Congress upon the sub
ject of the accounts for this appropriation, evi
dcntly iii contemplation of the employment ot
special agents. Some of the most important
treaties of the United States have been concluded
by special agents, and could not easily have been
negotiated by any other officer. . .. .
I have the honor to be, sir, your obedient
servant.
(Signed),
/• nVI Andrew on the Movement to
Change Piesident JLliicolii’s Cabinet.
Co.MSIONWEAI.TIL OF MASSACHUSETTS,• Ex “£“"
tive Dhtautment, Boston, Jan. 14,
"F W Bird M*! Dear Counsellor: —First, as a
seimral rale it is best, I think, not tosignclr
£Xra or memorials lo onier to attect usefully
and really tho mind of any magistrate, but rat jj° r
to write and speak privately and personally.
!£ "X i ffink the memorial, by aim-
at 5 ’ no specific Cabinet Officer, is
UaLlo to misconstruction. Can
that the memorialists in Boston mean those
intended by the Senators ? The B ®M te t^JJ ul J^r
together, but wo do not consult with tbem, n
should we generally with them. his
vising tho President m a popular way about hm
Cabinet, js. not a safe precedent. Such ofiorts
should only be made In strong castle, on ctoar
-victlou, and with a specific P. u V°®. e
thly, six good and true men, distinctly
'.ing to a given construction of the
tot, and plainly proposing another In
Ma, would bo more efllclent than one thou- .
,»uU names to a memorial of such general lm-
fOTi<lt#nt-to sigtr~—iPihing
about anything, or for any purpose. We are not
to be saved In Washington by any machinery
•whatever. We can be saved, and that aftor we
; shall have passed through a great purgation, only
by a revival of the religion ot patriotism, and
; the power of a resurrection getting its hold
en ©nr own friends who are set’for the de
fence of the people and the truth, which Is their
' salvation. Floundering along, without clear
purpose, wise, united and practical statesman
ship, wltbpnt any real head, how can wo be vie-
torioTii? I ■write to yoa what X dare no. say i
aloud. I see what ia'terrible, and yet am not
terrified. But it La’well that one should not ven
ture to say needless things, calculated to aiarm
others, unfeefl those others can administer the
eU Thtf truth is, I have never found in many men
in "Washington whftt 1 »;all realizing sense, pra -
tlcal sagacity and victorious faith. Numbness,
flghtiness, selfishness, and all sorts of little
nesses, not singular in times of general pros
perity, when men are not summoned to
be ’great, but astounding at a moment when
men should be giants and pigmies should be
men—these strike me always, when I visit
Washington, as the qualities most apparent ana
the uppermost. ’Where is the union of noble sp r
its? Where the few noble and unselfish hearts,
M) be the universal solvent, melting all others into
union ? Where is the grand good sense which
is tiio great trait of every great person m
a Hairs? Why, wc can’t pay our army even,
when money is cheap and is spent like
water' There is enough of contentious criticism
—too much—but little of the “pull-together
duality needed to the very existence of a party,
even much more of n very
able men in WaebiiiKtotT But they-ha ye got
rerv little idea ofwlffit God mode them lor, or
else he means to/how how much he can do
for us without tlunr aid. Now, for one, 1 am
bound to be patient. I think we may even have
to sillier great Democratic, secession, pro-slavery
political defeats; that the Republicans may have
to be driven out of power, and the cau»e ot
liberty and right have to win its way back
in a travail oi soul; but all these experiences will
pay a recompense in the end, will help assure lie
great hereafter. Wc must make U P ,?4'j
now that we are “in tor a long storm. -MavGod
held his own to he faithtul to the end. lam,
faithfully, your friend, John A. Axnm-.w.
nianstcr in Ottumwa, lowa —A. Young
* tuly anil TWO Children Burned to
Dcutli—fatal Heroiwn.
tl’rojn the Ottinriu u (Iowa) Courier of Monday.l^
Mr. Phelps, of Competine township, has just
given us ail the particulars of the most terrible
and shocking affair that ever occurred m this
seems that the house of Mr. Howdy shell,
near Capt Mcßevnolds’, in Competine township,
being a storv and a half frame building, caught
fire on Tuesday morning last, just before day,
from, as it is supposed, some ashes that had been
carelessly left in ashed part of the building. Mr.
H. was not at home, but the house was oeetipied
at the time by Mrs. H. and her family, besides a
young ladv ot some eighteen or twenty, aoi ster
of Mr. H/s, named Carrie HowdyshcU. .
The house was enveloped with flames before it»
inmates were aroused. Mrs. JjL escaped, badly
burned, with two children, while the young Itoy
aDd two of the children, aged respectively five
and three, perished in the flames. The noble girl
lost her lifein her heroic efforts to save the chil-
bodies were finally recovered from the
rains, the children literally burnt to an unrecog
nizable mass, while the young lady had both of
her lower limbs burnt off above the knees, and
had one of her arms pulled out of the socket in
Maxtricatmgher-bwly-from-thC--dcbr|fi.
\i.v, Yoi: a, Feffi I.— Captain Mills yesterday
received information that a party of roughs from
bis Ward intended visiting the saloon of Ito.ky
Moore, in Tremont, for the purpose of witness
ing a prize-fight between two noted braisersfroni
this city. The Superintendent of Police was
notified of the projected fitrbt, and be instructed
the Tremont Police to look out for the party.
At a later hour the roughs made their appear
ance*, hut were dispersed by the police, and re
turned to this city. No arrests were . .
The eleventh annual hall of the Caledonian
Club was given last evening at the Irving Hall-
The members of the Clnb were dressed in the
Scottish costume, with kilt and plaid, and bon
net and feather, the differentplaids representing
the various clans. The Hall was tastefully de
corated with flags and bunting, and an innume
rable quantity <u Scotch and English bannerD.
Scotia s sons and daughters were everywhere to
t>e seen participating in the festivities of the
the Central Park ponds were crowded
with skaters. The ice was in tine condition, and
the 6kater» xnado the most of it, continuing the
healthy pastime till late in the evening.
The offices of Messrs. John J. Cisco it son,
bankers, have been removed from the old stand,
at No. S 3 Wall street to larger and more con
venient quarters, in Brown Brothers buUding,
No. 57 Wall street. The House of Cisco has eu
ioved in a high degree the public confidence, the
Senior member having been for eleven Tears
Assistant United States Treasurer in New York,
and being distinguished for high integrity and
sound judgment. In the placing of the national
loans, and more lately, in the promotion of the
sale of the bonds of the Union Paeluc Railroad
Company (of which Mr. Cisco is Treasurer), these
qualities have been of marked advantage.
WILI.IAM n. SEWAItD.
DISASTERS.
(HO» SEW SOBK.
Acceptance of _ tlte
Senator. .
The Maryland legislative Committee, appointed
to notify don. William T. Hamilton of hie elec
tion as United States Senator, visited him on
Thursday at Hagerstown. A letter signed by the
Committee was read, and Mr. Hamilton replied
bb follows, in writing: . .
Gtnthmen : Your communication informing mo
of my election by the General Assembly of Mary
landas a Senator of the United States for a term
of six years from the 4th of March, 1809, you were
pleased to deliver to me iu person. In accepting
this Important trust, allow me to express my
deep sense of the distinguished honor conferred
noon me by the representatives of the
people of Maryland, and that profoundly im
pressed witn the responsibilities attached to
the position, especially in view ol the present
unhappy condition of our beloved country, it
shall be mv earnest endeavor to merit the great |
confidence reposed in me by a diligent, faithful
and conscientious discharge of duty. Actuated,
hi common with vourselves and those you repre
sent, solely by considerations for the general
good, and the safety and welfare of a
once prosperous and united people, bo assured
that it 6ball be my constant aim to cooperate
with all patriotic men in restoring unimpaired
the just and equal relations of all the States under
the Constitution, promoting peace and harmony,
cultivating friendship and good-will, cherishing
the observanee-of law and order, reviving and
reinvicorating onr industrial interests, now per
lshinefin the South and- languishing in other
parts of the Union, and in maintaining
and preserving tor all time onr
constitutional form of Government, and with it
securing to ounittves and to our posterity all the
precious blessings which did always and will
still attend its rightful administration. Accept,
gentlemen, for yourselves, my sincere thanks
for yonr personal consideration. With great re
spect, I am your obedient servant,
'The Proposed Repeal off tUe British
North American conffedorajioru
■Mostbisal, Jan. 31, 1808.—'The anu-confede
rato repeal movement In Nova Scotia causes some
sensation here. It is believed that tbe_KOVorn
ment made overtures to Hon. James Howe to
induce him to renounce his opposition to the
new order of tilings, but they failed, Air. Howe
remaining faithful to the interests of his pro
vince.
judge Kelley’s Advice Jo tlie Georgia
'Convention*
The Atlanta (Ga.) Opinion publishes the folmw
imr extract- from a private letter from Hon. Win.
D. Kelley, of Pennsylvania, dated Washington,
29th inst.: , ,
“I hope your Convention will make a good
Constitution, which shall provide a generous
system of common schoolß, and secure every
citizen equal jpolitical rights, and which shall
not be nai rowed by vindictive political pro
scription. One provision.of the Reconstruction
act requires the popular indorsement of the con
stitutions' to be made. ' Some" suggestions
havo come from your State that that provision
should bo repealed. It is idle to think of such a
thing. It is the very essence of the act. Con
cress means that the future government of the
South shall bo formed by the people, and I hope
that the Constitution, framed will no so wise and
•TuSSissttMfcrtt receive tha-pop^r
‘ -'oroval.” ___
Scurvy and Potatoes.— Dr. Stone writes to
the London Times that cooked potatoes are as ef
ficacious againßt scurvy as raw onesj.af aet not
the addition of a few pounds ofpota
tocs to the weekly dietary.
EVENING BULLETIN -PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1868.
THE HAIL
THIRD EDITION.
From South and central America.
Nkw Yoitu, February 1.-TUe steamer Henry
Cbaunccy brings H»n Francisco dates of tne lltb
and Panama of the -'."d ultimo. She brings
S 'ii?’S.S.' l, SS. I , >» "»
States from Honduras and Nicaragua, is a pas
“xtidnews from the Isthmus is unimportant.
The news from Pent is
been defeated at Arequipa and
is said. The revolution had proved a success.
and the Prado administration was hurled Irom
suffered the threatened
bombardment for thirty-six hours, during whkh
time over three thousand shells and .halls were
thrown into the place. At the twentieth round,
Prado’s OS-pounder burst, reducin'; the eflicleucy
of bis artillery irreatly. . .
The news from Central America is ummpoi
tant. Messrs. Almond & Co. s store at Nicer,
gua had been destroyed by fire—loss fr'O'MO.
The cholera is very severe at Cholucteca, Hon
dU The steamer Nevada, of tiie Opposition
from San Francisco January tth, had rcacnea
Panama On the passage she ran short of coals,
and had to bum £ portion of her —^pa»
A Tinrtlon of her cargo liau to be lorwarucu
to Now York by the brig Magdalena, the connect
ing steamer not being able to take it.
Arrivals at Blew ,VorU«
\Vv Yopk Feb. I.—The steamers Erm and
City oi New York, from Liverpool, have armed.
BT ATE OF Tm E TmBRMOMBTBnTHia DAY AT
10 A. M... 32 deg. 12 M 8-J deg. 2P. M...deg.
Weather clear. Wind Sontliwcflt.
Crrv Moutautv.- The number ol interments
in the city for the week ending at noon to-day
was 235, against 277 the same'period last year.
Of the whole number. 120 were .adults and Ijo
children—Od being under one year of u^e, Ij<
were males, 08 females, Go boys and 41
The greatest number of deaths occurred m the
Twentieth Ward, being Ik, and the smallest num
ber in the Sixth Ward, where only two were re-
P °The principal causes of death were: Apoplexy,
5; croup, 7: congestion of
sumptioD, 3?: convulsions, <: disease ol tfie
heart, 0; debility, 13. typhoid lever, o: mhamma
tion of the brain, 8; Inflammation of the lungo,
•20: old age,!.': and pals?-, X.
Tin: Fwvr W.un> Comustui. Et,K' riox Cask.
This morning, in the Supreme Court, the ap
plication for a mandamus to compel the com
mittee in the Barlow contested election case to
issue attachments for witnesses was argued. Mr.
Hirst appeared for Mr. Sterling, and Mr. Lynd
-for-lhe committee.—Tiuuwiiok. que-tl<M>-°f-tfob
power of the committee was discussed, ami the
court held the matter under advisement until
Monday. _
FINANCIAL and COMMERCIAL.
The Pblladclplili
Sale* at the Pblladelpi
BV.FOKKI
400 f-li >lcElhcniiyO:l44.lo6i
fiost i
4150 L T SS-20s'C8 Its 10SI4
3100 City 6'e new Ite 301
0-200 do 102
000 do -~IOIS
-4000 do
, 600 Pa 0? 2 fere c 105/4
lOOO'PennoCs warm I
rc" 1(2 :
7 eh Leh Nvstk 29.’4
ICO Fh do 2010
200 sh Sch Navpf bGO 22>£
•07 fh Penna K lto
Ifh do c&'P 55
50 fb do 55
19 fb Leh Val 11 Its
BF.TWEEU
50 eb Leb Val BMO MH\
100 eb Birr Mountain I
ancond
10(0 PS 5-20s'65Jy CD 108
11000 do'6s re” c 103
10000 Pa 6s 1 ecr 105
1000 City 6e new 101/»
600 fb St Nicb Coal 84. P-0
14 eb LehhrhValß Its 52)4
lts Penna K f ’sh' |
Pinurtmiu. Satu.es>, redruary I.—Tbc *JPPt3_ ® 1
unemployed capital continues lamb- and there u no dub
cutty in placing “call loam” at4X«s|>er «nt T he re is
scarcely any new mercantile paper being created, and it
ranges from 6to 10 per cent. Among the merchants there
is a more cheerful feeling, and a little more activUy and
if they could now be assured that no sudden contraction
or inflation would be permitted, wo might n-Monably
hope for a season of comparative freedom from the has:
ards ol business, attending the constant tinkering -f the
currency. But there is such a diversity ol views mi. ting
between the different sections of the country represented
in Congress on this question that the ccmmcre.a IworW
has verv few elements ol stability. If Congress will turn
its attention to the subject of reducing the taxes and 1..
‘the currency question stand where «
a more healthy state of affairs will certainb exist
Government Loans continue in good demand, and
piiceß may be quoted per cent higher. State Loans
were nnchanged. City Loans sold to a limited extent at
101 7 (i for the ntw issues. All the better class oi invest,
ment bonds were held firmly, and Lehigh Navigation
Gold Loanaold up to 9*3*l:, .. .
There was a decided reaction in Reading L«Iro«d
shares, which sold up to 48.au advance of V PhiMel
rhia and Erie Railroad was much stronger, and closed at
27b bid. Pennsylvania Railroad dropped 1, and closed
nt 55, Lehigh Valley Railroad sold at 521,. and Ca.a.
wissa Railroad preferred at 26’4-both a decline.
Canal shares were quiet Lehigh Navigation a.
oqw-a decline, and Schuylkill Navigation Preferred at
3M: 50 was bldfpr Delaware Division; 30 for tVyoming
and U'A for Susquehanna.
In Bank Shares there were no transactions.-
Passenger Railroad sbares were inactive. 72 was bid
for Second and Third Streets; 25?, for Spruce and Pine
Streets; 17M for Thirteenth and Fifteenth sheets . 2t>a
for Green and Coates Streets, and 1014 for Hestonville.
It is worthy of note that Pacific Railroad securities xre
rapidly advancing. The Union Pacific bonds, which
have been heretofore advertised at 90, are now held at
05. U ith a prospect of future advance. The rapid constii.c
tion of tho road and the great increase of its business are
sufficient reasons for the advance,
Bi'l’be llar.lcton Railroad declares a dividend of
lar and a half per share, free of tax, payable on the Uh
New Maryland.
£2:30 O’OlooJc.
BY TELEGRAPH.
CJITIT BULLETIN.
. Uloucy Mark<
)hia Stock Exchange,
BOABItf*
JOABD. , , .
NiO J.ehigh GeGoln m 92’,
4000 do 1)5 93
1000 do do 93
IOOONPcnnaGs ~S 9
100 eh Kcad R c 4S
100 sh do 49
1100 eh do 1)10 49
Eh do lots sls ■49
100 sh Catawa pf 2G'„
ino sh Phila&'Erk' 27i{
10 sh do '2S
100 sh IVesiChestß pf 18
200 sh ShamOkin cl hGO 4
100 eh Gr Mount 3
50 sh Ridge Ave 1
a BOABBB.
,100 eh Phll&Erieß 2711
1100 eh do l>3own 27 X
I BOABP.
100 eh Beadß 47U
100 sh do e 5 47.81
200 eh dobslt« 57’,
100 eh Leh Navetk b3O 2914
TO sh do 29>j
100 eh NY & Middle X
,D McPsrP. Do Haven & Brother, No 40 South Third street,
make the following quotations of ,h o ra ‘ c " ° f
to-day. atTB. M-: V. S. 6e, of 1881, *>£«*-
m.-.«in?ii 40., asst. i«?.®i«m,; a*. w* l ,?**®?.
do., 1865. new. 107?i@108; do.. 1867, new. 107
Fives. T emfortica, 104? B @104?a; 7 3-10 e. June, 107 \,@lo7s.
,lnlv. 107;',, @1077.; Compound Interest Notcs-Jooe
1864, 19.40; July, 1664. 19.40; Außuet, 18e4 ; j?- 40 = .
1861,19.40; December, 1864, 19.40; May, IM. I'-; -™ 1
Anguut, 1865,16M@16«; September,
her, 1865, 15;\>@15?a; American Gold, 140. „@140..,; Silver,
Randolph & Co.. Barkers, 16 South Third street,
quote* at 11 o’clock aa follows; Gold, tWi; United Stake
Sives. 1881, llDatSllUi I United States 1 ivc-twenties. letsi
do. 1861.109<3U09>4; do. 1865, M»li@110: do.
July, 1865,10ru@107 7 „; do. 1867, 107?.,'®1<»i United States
Kivee, Ten-forties, UtlilSm, 1 .; United Statca Sevon-
I thirtiee, second ecriee, 10U 4 @?»; do. third eonw,W.:a»
°Jay Cooke A Co. quote Government securities. etc., to
day, aa follows; United States<Ps.l6Bl, 1U !4@lU ; .. '
4- Bonds, lll’i@lll«: New 5-20 Bonds, 1664.
620 Bonds, 1665, 1«1’„'@U0; 5-20 llonde,
5- Bondß, 1667. 1077i(ai08‘,'; 1640 Bonds. 10 1/ *
7 2-10 June,' 10731 @108;" 3-10, July, 107?i®106: G01d,141,.>
Pblladelpliia. Produce taarnot.
Fliu..«>i:i.rmA. Satui day, February I.— There is n
much Cloveraced coming forward, and « f M
$8 25(56 75 per 64 lbs. 100 busheb Timothy so d.a.#-.
There is a fair demand for I'laxßecd, and it is t.
arrival at $2 80 per bushel. j^-udforthe-
Th.ro IB a steady horns consumption demand
better grades of Flbiirat* former qntrtations. hovai
grades are neglected, and prions of the loiter
barely mnintained. Sales of lOObaircl” , o p cun eyl-
Fsmily at #lO 75(5)11 50 per barrel; email lots of U“
vankand “hie do. do.at $lO 80@12 25: M-tomb to ta
on secret terms: and fancy lota »>tsl2 JXa'Je
Belling in a small way atsB 50. Prices of Com Meal ar..
t ' V 'ThofespK? WheataVr«BSM6^ut'ethii demau? .*!“
fallen off; small ealca of Red at $3 n ean .
for very choice. Kyelaateady at 91 60®#1 to forJ
sylvania and $1 55 for Southern. . Com h in **S 0( y
quest, and further sales of 3,000 bushels of N(*v ’, i
were reported atsl 15. Oats are unchanged.smalUal oj
74<57& WjOOfcmhcla- New Yjjwk Barley «>U on «oc }
there is a finner.
’ Mesa Pork at $23 CO; Hams in plekle at _J3Af@l3.l4>
ILard at 14 cents. -
'TJbc New York money market.
' l-'i'om fo-divy I '* TlCi'uld,} .
Jan. 31 -The gold market has beej»,V'««‘‘.?- d t K
...»vnrv Tho largest holder** of coin arc the bng'P'n ana
German bankers and the “short”interest'
remains light, in eonscpienee oi the pro y'}„ P r ?. f . ,J¥m ck*
flon that the tendency ol the price of «o!d in gr.xmmcKH
5h upward, owing mainly to the »hoa*trouH reconstr
policy of <Wtw. Gm-h gold Ip. ■{? e d C vcn
and loans were mude at ratea varying from tnr .0 to •
per c( nt. for earrvlnp. The grow clearing* cm.
iifcB,74fM>'ii; tho gold balances to $l, b ® n ,!,f£'Y n the
rency balances to It was v,r
afternoon that the House *fß©preson tn ti ve a h adfigr ee d y
a vote of I«j4 to ft to the import ol the t-onforcnce Gommit
tee on tho bill repealing the tu,x on cotton *,* JfL 1 {fe,,
atid exempting foreign nations troni imnoi tdiity tittu ■ »
first of November imxt. but the nowa was
ble inHnenrcf upon the tmneaction?. ‘\Xp„i tv
imperatively demand' d on the score or pumic no<r-es y
in the South, and even with th t? rope til of the l *{.*
doubtful whether the n* xt crop will ho a* la in, •
one. for the poverty of planters andthe.dcmoi ftUzation
the labor system arc elumblmg-bloeks in tl }'££ a °* {ft*
ton culture hard to be overcome in the face of tho acn
competition ol othcrcouutrica in tho cotton markets ot
| the world
[From to-day's Tribune.]
J»M-Ar.v 31,-The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Coin
l>flDy bftß iu.-t pi.blbhed its report for the '
tog Sept ;W. im. The Company lma deemed it projy.* 0
place nil the expenditure* <lbr the maintenance and m
crease of machinery, the ceuMruction t^n i ri { l f' k t i'r r p’ifu
the year 1505, as expenses. Iho following in *
in the comparativo canting?* and working e^pc-nar ■* on
the nmin stem for tbreo ye»w = J 5&
5g0.50f.945; working expenses* Jo-
ing«. IW, £8&77.*>93: working expenses, do -<\ £v
earning?*. IKOS. working expenses. do., *.).ba »
72*. Thnstho earning-in 1*». hi coinnarHon
fiscal year IHO4, ••increased %l 510.018, whlW.tlm >Yl r Al®"
expenseK decreased making
decrease of net profit* of the main stem *Jf
pared with . the . fiscal year ltt>4. rt th ‘L < J® { i r ''J wc *i\
earnings btmg s?;3.Vto.7>>l, and the js c l;,Ar> r ofit«!
working expenses the dacreaec ofnctprolita
nmrninted to «ilo6 113 f I he balance of cash in the treft
?Sv Ol?sTptt-iWr 30. lfifi-3. was after deducting
fktl&SHO for payment of interest on the city ' loan, and ( on
the bonds of the company, which m; i Hue d<) cto b u i L,
i«jk Of the 'Washington branch the earning* for the year
were m'&*\ ahoS ins an increase of »sim;ompafcd
t.v. ilit*i.ievious veur. f I heexponditurccehargcdauiount
to *;65.f'.»4. K-tDg'for the; completion of tim .HfinoyJl traclc
ami otlioi irruroycmcnts.for ttieri'confitnicthm ot hrlili,cs,
the renairs ol railwoy dep'-t. 4 , bridges andwi.t 4'®ta io ,
A yh ■ earnings of the main stem and all the
feel,,, “film read in 1866 were *11.771,875. mid the ei
prllPf a $6,740,621, leaving net earnings auiomiting to *■>,•
tv!l sS4,nnd> peregete net decrease, compared tvith the
Wednesday. .
Some two o? three of the bunk, report** «“■»”<!»«*
demand tor money, but elscwbce it win ot .‘boat the
aorni. magnitude as noted Yesterday. Most ot tm, ais
count bouton report the market comfortably easy,tkoiuOi
in ,onie-cir*'lc‘* it i? at*H pronounced close, luts ia mo
cate with those Institution, whose customers arc mostly
i»min orcratora There is no niciciu'o in tho \oiuni« oi .
t\u‘ gewr l the city. The demand for mcr.
ch is of the “bund to 'mouth” order, and purchasers
' are restricted.to meeting thiimoit pressing w»n£
Piimers.- Exchange was steady and fjmet at 40\« ./»c. pre
mium I'etween banks. The counter, rates tire steady at
par buying, and l-loCfi! 1 .- premium selling.
i From to-day', Timca.l . .
T. M : u - V -The sales of Gold this morning ran down
from to 140', if cent..but after one o'clock returned
to Hob* ituf, per relit. Exchange on London, oh day s.
‘\vh* advanced hy .Messrs. Blown and other standard
houses to lift 7 6f.no per cent, (sales at hip 7 , per cent..)
and as thiVadvSn every eloselv approach™ the rate at
which it wifi uav the Banker? to ship Go d/the specula
tes In Geld shio. had no political or tinr.ncal sens*-
Inns iron- Vashiniionto go upon.
frnm it There 1“ a fnir :unoiint of Cotton Bill* on r.u-,
lam? offered to the Wankers, both hero and at the bouth.,
but this Fi'pply ift partly neutralized by .a steady and
rerv gratifying •■improvement in tire d'-manti foi r’or-
Ifgn MeiVhaLdiae for the raring trade. ’J he reeling
aiSng the holder* of both Wign and nomet'-
tir Dry (roods in much better than at the close ot the Uld
•> ear. and tln-re i 4 also an advice m demandland price*
for the leading Btaplc-i of foreign general merch.-ndi-e.
The cotton ti nde U 4 cent- pc 1 pound better than the low
c »t price tnr« e ortour weak? ago, and l tins ia expected to
ipiut materially tin spring demand for goods from the
rate. lov Money to day arc T; er ., cf , it- tS.J'mV
Stock Brokers on coll, and *'/. per cent to tlic Di-coun-
Brokers on prime Merchant paper of i-hnit 'J.'t'.. no ne
larcc carii balances continue to be lef t n lth the Brok -r
-!5 the Public Knud., at 4 percent. It in nretty well undiu-
thouch not officially announced,
that the am of Concre™ to -top the contraetton
■ f Greenback* line, or will in a day or two, b< -
come a law The President will not Bien the
3 allow it to pass without a vote. This is th A
Currency legislation the country at pieftot ruimrca to
give asriirance of a steady movement totrade t e en*n-
Vmineftrd Summer 1 No expansion m
nank Notes, and no convention of the latter
inM the fomer. Will probaby be authorized by
w?4 n «r .
(Sa Grecnbicks for National V, nk Currency, but it Li
lloii-e after another'weelVn rejection by tb^Committee.
tinned hv the House, and certainly .not hy the Senate.
The aueetion, while kept open, may encoui age the pPecu
lotm-i in cold but we entertain no fear of auch wholesale
inflarion of ; no each foUy in regard to the Na-
Unnnl Banking system. .
Xlie Latest Reports by Tclegfrapli.
Vru- Yons. February l. — Stocka steady. Chicago and
*•£\„XshReading. 96; Canton Company, 08;
irieVj“?'cieveiand and Toledo, and
pi
York t“nttal IMhois Central, ; tmmberlmd
Preferred. let ■ ; Virginia 6b.
River 47; United States Five-Twenfe, lSed,
Hudson !-> • iooi 109:1; new issue, ll»7?«; Ten.
lll7’*'; Money,s per cent.;
FeT-&-%tton firm at 19*. Elourdnß:
4Wu barrels told at previous qaotnttone. Wheat
. ’hot r* o rn nnict- 21 000 buslietß told; Western, *l2o(e
-25*11: oMu! WerfSn.«3W. Beef-inlet Porknrm,
at 523 fi2*. Lard quiet. Whisky quiet.
B ci nvionit. Feb. 1 .—Cotton buoyant at 19. Floiir steady
and unchanged. Wheat dull but Bteady at $2 bOC<*isu %,
: gVs7X(®s9 00. Provisions quiet and unchanged, Receipts
of Cotton during the week3,o6o bales.
OFFICE OF THF. HAZEL.TON R«LKO A P
COMPANY, No. UuO WALMT nPUFFO.
V, jjix « p l!n i-iii v, Feb. 1. lew*
_ At* meeting of'the Board of Director* held tbwday
That a Dividend of THREE PERCENT.*
“2 aftertietU' lfOi dSV of Fcbriiary next. Vl,» tranFler
boobs of the Company will be closed from February Ist
to February 21st chaISLES C. LOSGSTRETH,
Secretary and Treasurer..
fel-MTpJ
ACADEMY OF'ML*SIC.
u t niTrMAN .Leescc and Director.
ahniramKGFFLD"': Actiug Manager.
ADOLPH 11. BATEMAN’S
OPERA* BOUFFE^IOMPANY
W “ W «W& b E3S Per “ ,the
OEROLSTEIN,
ror.
A limited number of flighted
MONDAY E\M?NIN™, C Felniary 11.16®.
This Famous Opera, which Ib pronounced by tho.'ewho
hive witnetfaed iierepceeentationß abioadt to aurpaa® it®
nroa®isftffff Farif, or in any city, or Europe, where it
hie been for nearly a year the most fashionable Opera of
aid Whtch naß this season been already per-,
formed by .Mr. Bate* ft; f „»*-««■
produced ‘e'n Tl£ E TROU P E , i
Including all the
ORIGINAL ARTISTS
Brought by Mr. Bateman trom Paris l«et Bummer, es
pecially f 0? HORUS!
Numbering more than Fifty voice*.
THE OPERATIC. ARTISTS. .
Art aotnowled.fd to bo. without rivalry :n their rcspt^
tivc r.Wex, and inclu e, among others,
M'LLK ARMaSD,
iM’me Duehe*nf.
! Eugenie VinfiftJli,
! Etrillio Duni»y..
! Leonid* Deviuftißne,
irarmou Berlin,
| Blanche do Cii'juot,
| Anne Boudiuot,?*
Marguerite de Bongavs,
Mathildc D'Arthmoß,
Faustire Berthillot,
Suzocne Dregmans.
Bertha Motelle,
Anna I,avi*niere t
M’me Monier. „
LEOPOM) BENEDIC.
G. BrS E ' S‘‘?S“^ nC ’
feEHte.
SS- Esssste-
Motor ScbHwr. „ D ot; cU'riTl!A, .
Comnoited of the elite of the Now York Philharmonic So
compcßea oi iii , iu number nearly
TIIiRTY MUSICIANS. __ _
.....Meeurß. A. Birgfjcld ft Icftwre.
TliE SaEUi:3 c . f ASh I;Si CuARAGTEMb > EJC
Are made eiprtsriy for thia Opera-by Moiw. Nonan. Coa
tinner of the Grand Opcre, Paris, and have .uatlybcen
iiri olnino il the NVonder of the Ape.
EW AND Al,l> RICH AND aiMAM' PROPERTIES,
FornilDg an Unfiyalldd Combinatk-Q for tho productum
° f a ' MAUWIOFNT MJSB EN HORNT,!
NOTICK.—I iuflibrotto of the Op*na, na poriormed by
u. only-cofMi'L idi.ion /*U>*
lluhtd.) currfimy tuxt of IfAl s '7 l
[rom tho Prdmpt Hook, thusi bpcio fi« auntl.tmlo
betWfh tbVOpyfA m sun* on {hVrta*e r an 4 t-*« Ü
bb rend ii tho.Hudtop.cn t»o mtwi -of lh^
choicest mocoeaux, roK salt; ont.y at tha bosOm.onna
MJlieMi»*lcftioreof U. Andro « Co, One Dollar.
Adniltßion. • *'! ’**,6o coats «xtr*.
I ThoMlo l of wllf-commence
NfchDAY MORNING,' February 6th, nt-9 o.Hock v *t J.
■ • • '■ y-*
■D'iierHWiriicVotorore tho
tetdlugflnß.OllAßEaßUflll- _ r Pir »-j* '
- j/inotßON boHn,
- • . - Jf. W\»tJBU.
Tjluubiuju, Fefc.l. lB6P. . I '
FOURTH EDITION;
BY TELEGRAPH.
from'washington .
CONTESTED ELECTION CASE.
Contested. Election Cases#
(Special Despatch to the Phlla. Evening Bulletin.!
Washington, Feb. 1 —The Committee on Elec
tions hone to get through with the Delano-Mor
gan contested election esse in the early part of
next week. The evidence and arguments
in this case have been unusually volumi
nous, and whatever may be the result,
the cost to the Government will be ,arge.
The next case taken up will be that ot to well
a'mlnst Butler, from the First Tennessee
District. Butler is the siting member, and
at the election received a decided majority ol
allthe votes east. Bowell contests his scat on
the ground of certain alleged disloyal acts in the
early part of the war. Butler was elected as a
Republican, and has usually acted with that
party in Congress. Powell is also a Republican,
and claims to be more radical than Butler.
Funding tlie national Debt.
rsnccial Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Eutldtiil.l
Washington, Feb. I— The Senate Kinanee
Committee has been in session over three hours
to-day, discussing the proposed bill for Binding
the national debt. Thus far, no conclusion has
been reached.
Con cress—second Session#
"Washington, Feb. 1. 1808
Housk— The Speaker presented communica
tions from the Secretary of
report of the Commissioner ot the Genual band
Office, in relation to the sale ot the Sioux Indian
reservation in Minnesota. Iteierrcd to Committee
on Indian Affairs. , , .
Also, a communication from the same, relatne
to the claims of the Choctaw Nation ot Indi ins
against the United States, growing out Ot treaty
BtiDulaUons. Same rclcrcnec.
On motion of Mr. Kelaoy, tho President was
requested to furnish iulormatiou as to the l ost
master at Pen \ an, N. \. ,
The House then resumed the consideration ot
the election case from the Second Congressional
District of Kentucky. , #_ T t
>lr. Beck (Ky.) addreeaed the House in oppo
sition to the report of the Committee on Klee
tloDs. quoting extensively irom the speeches
of Mr. Brown in Kentucky during the rebellion,
to Bhow by tlie first that Mr. Brown’s election
bad been bitterly opposed by the secessionists on
ncconnl. of his determined Unionism, and by the
second, that all bis public speeches had been
against the rebellion, and in favor of IheUmcm.
MARINE BULLETIN.
PORT OP PHILADELI'IIIA-
~See Marine Bulletin on Tin
schr I mily & JcSny!^ afaSsL, Johu MasoafcCo.
Correspocdence of _
Antwerp, wentto edbrthia aftcrncoir
Steamer Eut«rrt(lawyei\ ll ut N Galveston 23d alt from
for New York, cleared at
Fordr cleared atr-Palermo 80. instant
f °Brig fl C rtobin, Thomas, cleared at Palermo 21 nit. for
I, Scbr k Ma i gßieT f 'smltli t Grace, cleared at New York ves
“SJg SteplwnMorrla, Seaman, cleared at Portland 30th
al Boh°r r A h sailed from Kockport kid ult for
Wilmington. ; ——————
CARD.
I have received by the
“ PERSIA ”
An invoice from Switzerland, consisting in part o
The most elaborately.
EMBROIDERED
LACE CURTAINS
EVER OFFEREE,
together with novelties is
FRENCH BROCADE,
STRIPED TERRYS,
PONCEAU VERT VIF
AND
azult&e.
They are now open for Inipettloo.
I. E WALRAVEN,
MASONIC HALL,
yi9 Chestnut Street.
HIGHEST PREMIUM AWARDED
FOB N
biane books,
By the Paris Exposition.
WM. F. MURPHY’S SONS,
[339 Chestnut Street,
P-aetical Blank Book Mannfactor era, Steam-Power
Printera and BUtionora. Diaries, Gold IPctulb,
A foil assortment of Blank Books and Co mwimrrt*
Stationery,© ©wtantiy on band. , na*«n*w«nrp9
FRENCH DRESSING
LADIES’ & CHILDREN’S
BOOTS AND SHOES.
ThoFRENCH DRESSING is the mast elegant article
of the kind ever produced, Ladies' Shoee whlob
havebecomer'ed and rough by wearing are tp
their originslcolor and lustre.
For Traveling Bags, Trunks. *c., it Is uneqoaUod
Thompson Black’s . Sea. jfe Co.
Broad and Chestnut Streets,
TJORDEN’S BEEF TEA.—HALF WOWtCf 1 OF THIB
D estjrsct wlllmake a pint of JOBBFH
fcwrrmntes. Always on hand
fc BUBBJBB * CO.. 108 Booth Delaware aveao*
:‘>i;p.l»Al’.v
for sale by
neUMothatf
FIFTH,.EDITION.
BY TELEGRAPH.
LATER FROM WASHINGTON.
SALE OF THE DANISH WEST IN DIES
Treaty Ratified and Signed by the King
File Sale ot the Jlanisli YVcst Indies.
Washington, Feb. T—Tho following despatch
was received hero at 3.30, P. M. yesterday:
Copenhagen, Jan. 31— Uon. FPw, H. ,S eicarf
Beep tar// of State, Washington, D. 6—Treaty
tent to Washington, ratified by Rigsrad and
signed by King. ■ Yeahan,
■ * b U. S. Minister to Denmark.
, By tbe Atlantic Cable.
Losihjn, I'eb. I—The latest despatches re
ceived here from Athens give accounts of another
battle between the Turks and Cretans, in winch
tbe latter were successful. Tho Spaltiotean
mountaineers were attacking n party of Turks,
who stood their ground, and the fight lasted all
"da/v.' ■’ "•
Tlio Turks acknowledged a loss of 250 killed.
The Cretan loss ishot stated.
Madrid, Fob. I—ln accordance with the,ex
pressed determination of tbe Spanish Govern
ment to uphold tho temporal power of the Holy
Father, steps have been taken for the formation
of a corpß, to be known as tlie “Papal Legion.”
From Florida.
Tam-Aiiasskii, Jan. 31 Tn the Convention to
day a resolution was offered that no delegate now
in the Convention shall bo eligible to the office'of
Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, Secretary of
State, Auditor, Treasnror or Register of Public
Lands for Ihc period of ten years from this date.
Laid over under the rulcp. A resolntion was of
fered asking Congress to repeal the cotton tax.
Laid over under the rules. The rest of the ses
sion was occupied in debating the recommittal of
the report of the Committee, on Privileges and
Elections, pending which' the Convention ad
journed. But little order and no harmony pre
vails.
Bills Approved by the President.
Washington, Feb. I.—The President has ap
proved the bill providing for the distribution
among the people of tile South of the accumu
lated desiccated vegetables and preserved meats
which afe not required for tho use of the army.
He lms also approved the bill providing that con
tracts for stationery for the Executive Depart
ment shall not lie made lor more than one year
at a time.
From Charleston
Chaiu.eston. Fell. I.—Gen. Canby, in com
pliance with tbe request of tbe Convention, has
issued an order staying for ihree months exscu
tior s on real and personal property.
L/»RGE OPENING SALE
1.500 Cases Boots, Shoes, Brogans, &c„
1-OR
SPRING OF 1868.
On Monday Morning, February 3,
Commencing at 10 o’clock*
■\Ve will sell by Catalogue, for cash,
1,500 Cases Den's, Boys? and Youths’ Boots,
8fco«, Biogan»rßalmoral»rlMi.,
ALSO.
mm% HISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S WEAR,
Including’'■> large and special assortment of desirable
Good?, direct ftommanuliftturer, to winch buyers will
to N d ?a t -Sfa r I SS?a , §;fe U rday m orn i ng.
C. I ). McCIIEES & CO.,
0
McClelland & Op., TAnotioneers,
506 MARKET Street.
3aS7-6toP
RETURN OF THE
UP ITED S TATES BRANCH
OF THE
Liverpool and London and Globe
INSURANCE COMPANY,
on tbo first day of January, 18«8,
IN CONFORMITY WITH THE UW OK
Authorized Capital.. ® s’oss'ar.O
Paid-upCopital •••• in’aTl’GTO
Total Amount of Assets (G01d)........ ie,271.bT0
INVESTMENTS. AND FUNDS retained in the
' UNITED STATES.
Real Estate held by the Company in the
United State?..
Cash D*posits in Hanks. ? ... ■■ .••••• •• • ••• •• ■
Amount of Cash in bands of Agents and in
course of tram mu eion • • •
Amount of Loans, on Bond and Mortgage,
constituting first liens on Real Estate/.. rt £he
United States) on which there is less than
one year’s interest duo • • • ■ • • ■ ■ • • •
Amount of Loans, Stocks, etc., held by tlm
COn,P ° THE' UNiTED STATES.' '
Cash Premiums from Jan. 1, 1867, to Jan. 1,
1868...
Amount of Premiums earned
Amount of inteicst ■••••
An ‘ mm t^“ D nmEsYNDuTßii; l T l EB.
Amount of Losses during tho year which have
been paid •••*••..* 7* Vi'******
Amount of Losses in suit of«mteit«4'«i«nn*-.- -
Amountof Losses' during the year not yet paid, 128,508 50
Amount paid for reinsurance and return pre-
miuxne. ••>*••• • • • * *
Amount of expenßCß during the year, Includ
ing commiaaiona and feca to Oiheere and
Agenta in the United States. ...... •■•••••;- ,
Amount of ailothcr ex peneea of the Convpany. 21,035 8*
STATE OF NI, W X Copntt tirh'tw York, bb.
j. remembered that on tliiß 18th day of January, A.
n ifur."before nic, the eubscritier, a notary public, in and
State of New York, duly domifatairtoned and autho
red hv the Governor of Now York, to take acknowledg
r i,W?rriH and otb« l rwritlDgo; to botifodaod recorded
lUaVdwft's^nittu^ofHlie^ivorpom'au^Lo^lon^tiloho
insurance Company, and made oath that tho above awd
“ifc"
?'n,naiTiv on this day. and am satisfied that they have
invested iu the United States to the amo-jnt
W ; that I have oxamined the securitiesinow
in thu hundsof tlm Company, as set forth in the foregoing
ehitemeut, slid the same are of the value represented in
'* I° furthencertify that I am not interested in the affairs
&v£sus
t - 01 A. it. 1807. JOHN F. DOTLE,Notary Public.
DIRECTOKB IN NEW YORK.
EM. ARCHIR'LU. 11. M. Consul.
A. HAMILTON,
it. C FEHGUSSON, K»(|. F( |.
lieeideut Manncer-ALi
Counsel—ALlA. 11A Ml' lVi ,\f J vv £ (JO.
Hankers- Flimm* Hank, CAM.M
ADVISORY IIOAKn INFUH'AnELPnIA.
n ™SWOk ■
j/bwARDfi«EIh JN *
ATWOOD SMITH,
■•GENEKAL AGENT FOB mWSVLYANIA,, .
»’o, a yef chant*’ Exchange, Philadelphia,
* UiWra tu-thetsP
pAUwarp *v«in«y = . -*.....
»wno». ,
4:00 O’Cloote.
8253,722 S 3
tVxi 13
190,959 13
813,790 00
1,847.118 30.
1,100,271 16.
101,079 57
54,312 52'
920,458 92
160,374 01