tr«aKM«Amie -mnnaitv. A loirirAj. FAHBAt.ta; is much honored at Flor t I,IV. In the north of China the war between the to pi rial'and rebel'forccs ia vigorously Waged: V The cholera ia reported to be raging violently in the i&iaftil of St. Thomas. The Arkansas . Convention was- occupied on Saturday id discussing the question of finances. Joiijisoii Purer:, ex-Scarbtary of State of Cali fornia. died on Saturday in Batt Francisco. The 'steamship Rising Star arrived at New York, from Aspinwall: on Saturday, with $1,255,-. .'iSl; in treasure, from California. A nifSTnuertvE fire occurred; in Dobg Kong. China; November 27th, and u number of Chinese were scalded. The Virginia- Convention has adopted a section. authorizing tlie creation of a Bureau of Agriculture and Immigration. The SouthUarollnaConvention discussed the hill of rights on Saturday, butadopted nothing 01 importance. AonmosAr. returns of the Alabama election show a light vote, and it is doubted if tlie Consti tution,has been carried. 5 U bring the stay of Admiral Famgut Jn Shly, the fleet under his command will, bo stationed on the west, between Genoa and Clvita v ccchin. It is reported that a strong force of regular troops Will be stationed along the Niagara fron tier, on the opening of navigation, with a view to prevent a possible Fenian movement. F..ngl!sh & Co.’s publishing house, in Pitts burgh, was destroyed by Are early yesterday morning. The loss 1b about $145 000. The Are is believed to have been incendiary. The Mississippi Convention was chiefly occu pied on Saturday With business matters. On motion, Gen. Glllem was requested to issue orders-fortheYelief of the Restitute. , The feeling!of'uneasiness in London, created by the threatening appearance of affairs in Northern Turker has somewhat subsided. The reporta qf troubles on theDanubc provp to have bten greatly exaggerated. ’ ; ; : Aobsts to obtain emigrants for the southern portion of Chile are to leave in March for the United States, Great Britain. &c. Salt works on a large scale will soon be established near Valpa raiso. '•> ; ' ' ■ . The Minority Florida Convention have signed the Constitution adopted by thorn In secret ses sion, and have also nominated a State ticket. The Majority Convention willmeet to-day, and, it is said, will disregard the other division. The. Lbnlsiana Conventioh haa adopted an ordinance providing for an election,ty ratify the new Constitution, and choose State and ■munici pal oflaeers, after its adjournment. Tho Conven tion has not yet Axed a day for adjournment. The building No. 87 : John street, New York, occupied by W. & B. Douglass andA. W. Payne, was burned on Saturday night. The total loss is estimated at several hundred' thousand dollars. Two Aremen were Injured by falling walls. In the Georgia Convention, on Saturday, an ordinance was adopted levying a tax of one mill to pay the expenses of the Convention. An ad ditional section of the franchise article: was adopted, leaving the suffrage open to. all without distinction of raco or color. Nai-olros, it is said, now evinces a disposition, to abandon the position of champion of the Pope. The Papal Legion; , which was being recruited in Madrid uuder the warrant of the been dissolved, Napoleon objecting to ils service in the came of the Holy See. : t , -/■ At ah. .ibiervtowjf last week, Count Von Bis marck (told Garl Schurz that it was tho most earnest desire of the King df Prussia to cultivate the good will of the people of the United States. This favorable disposition of. tho King is re garded by .Americans there as most important in view of the necessity which may arise for thp se lection of some European power as an umpire in the pending differences between the United States and Great Britain. ■. The bill for the regulation of' thepress is still under discussion in the Corps Legislatif.: .Last week the Liberals proposed, as an amedment, to insert a clause specially providing for trial 1 by jury of all offences of the press. After a!heated debate, W vote was taken on Saturday on the amendment, and it was defeated by a vote of 200 to 35. The: French; governor has consented to expel the Hanoverian refugees from France. '. Ais Y&aiNiAN adv ices state that a strong fprc’e of British troops had advanced, from Senate towards the interior oni January 20th: : Water had been • bored for according to the American plan, and found in abundance hear the English linnet' _march,_ The_co|ist_shore haariiEsniiighteil J lgfshe' Bnglish'for naval pgrposcsl and 'the tstrap-foi lowers from India were being, sent baefc. The said with the approvol of Ihe'BrUlsiianthcK rities. ' ■ ■ ■ - ’ ■ . ° A CITY BUIaJLETIN. ' Meeting or Cotton and Woolen Manufactur ebs. —A meeting of cotton and woolen manufacturers was held on Saturday afternoon, at the Board of Trade rooms, for the purpose of receiving the report of Mr. W. Divine, a delegate appointed to visit Washington to look after the interests of the association. Mr. Divine stated that his visit had been attended with succcbs. , He considered from the pledgee that he had received from Congress that thore was no donbt but that the taxes on cotton and manufactures would soon be repealed. A letter of John S. Newberry, of Detroit, Michigan, to a meeting of manufacturers in Chicago, to hear re port of delegates from the National Manufacturers’ Convention, at Cleveland, on tax reform, was read. He says that in regard to the amount of the,.revenue, and the expectationh of the government, I am entirely satisfied that there is constant, persistant, and willful misstatements put forth In the • ‘estimates” given to the public,/ A charge of falsification, even, could be easily maintained against the Secretary of the Treas ury. In any other country, if the head of the Treasury should he so outrageously incorrect, he would be com pelled, by a deceived people, to resign. Let me give a few illustrations : In 1885, he esti mated the total receipts of the government for nine months at $305 500, (100. The actual receipts for the same time were $895,4(16,905; showing an excess of re ceipts over his estimates lor nine months, of $89,905,- 905. He “estimated” the expenditures for the same time at ...../- . .jj. $484,759,408 The actual expenditures were Excess ot “estimates” Add excess to receipts, as above Actual surplus over the Secretary’s esti mates, for a year $290,435,240 And on the strength ot such outrageous estimates scut to Congress, he actually compelled them to levy taxes (or $290,000,000 more than he wanted, i'or the year 1867 he “estimates” that the taxes, under the existing laws, would produce only $396,000,000 They actually produced for, that year,.... 490,684,000 Excess over estimates .. $94,648,000 Again, in putting forth his estimates for the com ing, or present year, in 1868— Be estimated receipts...;... Estimated disbursements Thus estimating excess to apply to reduc tion of debt 886,752,939 In 1857, fearing that Congress would reduce the taxation, he changes his estimates for the eame year, so as to Induce Congress not to reduce taxation. He then reduces his “estimates” of receipts about $lB,- 000,000, and increases his “estimates” of expenditures $43,000,000, making the sum total of difference $Ol,- 000,000, so as nearly to dp away with ills former esti ' mated surplus of receipts. So, for the first quarter of the present fiscal year, his actual returns show an excess of receipts over ex penditures for the quarter, of nearly $23,000,000; and yet he estimates, for the remaining three quarters, that his receipts will only exceed his expenditures £1 000 000. ' The letter was approved by the association. Ad journed. , Man Suot.—A young man who gave the name of Thomas Duncan, was admitted into the Penn, eylvanla Hospital on Saturday, with a pistol shot wound in thought side, a severe but not a dan gerous one/ 'fie stated it had been done by a policeman at Niiith and Chestnut streets, on Saturday morfiing abont two o’clock, while he was running from the officer. A difficult; had occurred between him and ayonng'maU,ond the policeman seized him (Duncan), when he broke away and ran. It was then, he saye,-that the pistol was discharged. He was subteqnentiy ar rested and remalned In one of the station houses the rest of the night* and did not reach the Hospital until the afternoon. Alleged Forgery.— John J. Eayle had a bear ing before Alderman Butler, on the charge of forgery. Defendant, it was testified, bad bMp a clerk for Johnson Greer. now deceased, and that in 'the estate two checks weresffllr) comcdr-pne for $250 and the other for #450 —wUlchChad been pateCd on Uxe Fanners’ and Mech>nlcs’_Bank. Defendant, It was alleged, had confessed rwat the checks were fOrgedhyhltu. He wa§ heW'fljrtrial * “ Hi ot i in-. G<t.*Co.\i.. —The follo wing were tho I >!ds for teal at the meeting of the Trustees of the Gas Worksi February 7, 1KC8; Price . 1 Tons. Westmoreland Coni C 0.;.... ...$6 68: 100,000 Penn Cool C 0 .............■■ 668 100,000 N. West Coal Co.. 0 76; .80,000 T. ColJips.V... 600 .30,000- St. Mary's Coal Co. , 7 JO.- . 16,000 IVlpden St. Mary’s Coal Co 7 11 16,000 T. Collins..'.. - > v...... 7 16 . 60,000 Sr.-Mary’s.CoalCo.... 7 20 15^000 Tannieaalo Coal Co 7 25 50,000 .St. Mary's Coal Co. ... 7 25 15 000 Sbaffon Coal Co. 750 , 15,000 ' Yowrliipgheny Coal Co.. . 7 25 10,000 Cameron Coal Company 755 • - 40,000 Tlio Board authorized contracts for 60,000 tons each with', the Westmoreland and West Penn Companies. ■ . Feeding the Homeless. —-The Young Men's Christian Association of the Tenth Baptist Church commenced yesterday to feed thOße com pelled to take refuge in the Station-houses. ■On Saturday ticketswcre left: nt tho stations; and in the vicinity,: and yesterday morning over fifty unfortunates presented themselves and obtained a good hot breakfast.... Religious exercises were held. Contributions can. be sent to Mr. J. A. Stoddarts, 326 Chestnut street, or the Rev. Mr. Kennard, No. 720 Broad street. Survey oy theSoiidylkili,.— The City Sur veyors have' been engaged for several days m taking soundings from the ice on the Schuylkill river, frorh the Wire Bridge to South street, for the purpose of determining the present condition of the currents, and modifying tho Port Warden’? lines in conformity with the changes which have taken place. A full corps Is 'employed; under the charge of Messrs. Stredaker, Smediey and Roberts, of the Board of Surveyors. Visit, to an Indian Village in Alaska* A correspondent of the Boston Journal gives the following account of a visit to an Indian village in Alaska: “The dwellihjgs or ‘lodges' are abtiut twenty five feet square, built of Jogs, about ten; feet posted, and extend in line along the water front. I counted over eighty dug-out cedar canoes moored in front and fastened by ropes made pf the wild nettle, which grows abund antiy oh the island, and is: covered with a coating of the toughest fibre. Around each cabin is a group of wolf-faced dogs, which lie torpidly during the day and howldismaily all flight. 1: Five 'or six sbppety steps lead up to a hole, not unlike the opening in a kennel then there was an eipial descent down greasy steps to what constitutes the floor. In the centre bums a huge log fire—the sucks laid crosswise, in cob-house fashion. The smoke works its way up through an opening in the roof., Seated around the fire, ih abject lazi ness, were all the occupants, old and young of both sexes. They nave no tables, a few ;low stools, a large quantity pf wooden-trays, copper kettles, horn ladles, bowls and spoons, and a numerous variety of wooden spears, lances and darts pointed with bone and ivory. “The most curious articles of workmanship are their ladles-and dishes, wrought out of the horns of the wild mountain sheep which live on the mountains of the mainland. They are a fleet animal, and every traveler who has tarried long about the ‘Cascade range will Well remember how he has seen them leap down from crag to crag, striking upon their horns and bounding again upon their feet with a flCetness which no other quadruped, can equal. The ladles have long handles fan cifully carved in imitation of a goose’s neck and head, or the leg and hoof of the,deer. Some of these ladlfes will hold three quarts. The dart is a wooden shaft, five feet long, rimmed with: a bone socket at the end. In this socket is inserted an ivo/y point sharply barbed. Whenthe sea otter is struck by the dart he dives.. The point is detached, and being fastened lb the shaft by a string the an imal drags the wooden missile,, till wearied he falls an easy prey. “In'each ,of these native lodges are little coop-like apartments ranged along the walls, which serve, at night for Separate sleeping rooms, and in which the respective owners Store their;choice goods, Piled on the top of theseToonis sire heaps of smoked salmon, game, skins, and a variety of articles emit ting odors most ancient and fish-like. Our entrance into their cabins did not disturb or surprise them in the slightest degree. They \ were ready, blit not anxious, to trade with us. Like other human beings, they are dis posed to treat every one well who treat them well at least I have inva-, riably found this to be the case when traveling among the aboriginal race of this coast.; Now and then we saw an invalid in their lodges, vifctim of consumption, and showing the same unmistakable symptoms here as in the Eastern States. Flint-lock muskets are hung up in every lodge, for the Russians years ago furnished them with fire arms to kill the wild fowl, but never allowed them to shoot fur animals with the gun, as the noise will lead them to seek new haunts. “The females are not abused so badly by their husbands as among the tribes east of the Rocky , Mountains. They have less drudgery to perform, and participate in all hunting and fishing excursions. They have the hideous practice of streaking and some times entirely covering their faces with black paint. At first I was told it was a badge of mourning, but its frequency led to a second inquiry, when I found it was an ancient custom. Their complexion is much fairer than in California, and is a shade lighter than. in Minnesota. Still, unlike the Onalaskan maidens, none of them have ‘chubby,’ plea sant faces. Some of tbfebi have married Russian laborers, and prond of their associa tion with the Caucasian race, maintain a strict fidelity. Yet these are exceptional in stances.. In no native language on this coast; is there any-word to designate female virtue.” .;■ ■ ■■■'■ ' - 28i;524;227 $20(1,829,338 , 89,906,905 Distillery Seizure A Still Found at Brandywine springs-lt is In Full "... ®pe*twi«» Wlien Found, , ,Las|t evening, about C o’clock, Mr. Frank A. Taylor, of the. U. S. Internal Revenue offlee/and Officers Heal and Vyingate, of the city policy the former also acting as U. 8. Deputy. Mafshal, procured a large team and started to make a raid on,an Melt whisky distillery, concerning which they had gained information. They proceeded directly to Brandywine Springs, and to the engine house which, in the dayß when. this was a popular Summer resort, before the large hotel was burned,’contained an engine for pumping water; to the baßin from wSch the house and outbuildings were supplied. ‘ The door of the engine-house was apt. locked, and walking in and lighting a lantern they found a large still in foil operation; the fire banked up to keep, and the whisky trickling from the still. There was also' in the room a barrel ofwhißkjyand a conside rable quantity of molasses mash, alt readv for distillation. The man who had “rim the machine” was not there,and the officers believed that a man they met on the road, Just before reaching , the place, .was him.;. He had evidently been away hut a short time, and had fixed the fire to keep while he was gone. There Was ho use waiting in hopes he would return, how evw, for if he ljad not seen them he would s undoubtedly see the track of their wagon and stay away. -Pa. ■ .. The fleers leaded up the still apparatus and whi»ky cn their wagon, and came into towgy destroying the mash and the hogsheads which tiafr nemd not bring with them. Hoanwrts were made. The nronertvon wMchithh WM was found was in P (he ocoh '.jmney ;Of Phter Coyle, and, we believe, owned Wilmington Commercial ' $486,000,000 . 350,247,641 THE'-DAILY EVENING BULLETIN,—PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10/1868. AsSanlra! Faßoant at (Be Birthplace of bis Father, A letter from Port Mahon, Minorca, gives au interesting account of. the festivities at tending Admiral; Farragut’s reception at the birthplace of his father, from which we con dense the following: , “Upon his arrival within four miles of Ciudadela he . was formally received by tie Alcalde, and a large committee, comprising many prominent citizens,..tendered ; the hos -pltaUties of the city, and cordially 'welcomed .hinj as its guest. After a brief interchange of courtesies he was transferred to a very handsome barouche,*' and conducted for -1 ward in the van of quite a formid able-looking procession, ... demonstrations of |every‘ kind increasing 'as - he ap proached this ancient capital of Minorca. Outside the walla of the city his appearance was no sooner heralded than masses of people of every age, sex and condition rushed for ward to greet him, filling, the air With cheers and acclamations. A? he passed the gates of the city the walls, house-tops and balconies were crowded with throngs of anxious specta tors, uniting demonstrations of welcome with equally expressive shouts from (he, Bvvaying multitude who had taken possession of the principal thoroughfares. “The excitement continued, unabated, however, throughout the entire evening, and it was not until, near midnight that the crowd slowly dispersed and the peaceful little city of Ciudadela , resumed its wonted quiet. “On the following morning enthusiasm arose with the sun, once more took firm pos session of the street fronting, the headquar-, tors of the Admiral, and there kept anxious watch. At an early hour, accompanied by his entire suite, hd was escorted by the com mittee and other citizens to all the places of interest in and about the city, and' finally to the cathedral, in which he had scarcely been seated before it was literally packpd in every part by people of all sorts and conditions, their hundreds of eyes being rivitefi upon the pleasant countenance of the unappalled Ad miral, who withstood this onslaught with as much sangfroid as if accustomed to such tiylng ordeals. Soon after the great organ pealed forth our own national melodies, re calling our far-off land even to thoße whose knowledge l of its power and glory was. limi ted to its history and the sparse infoflmation derived from the few Americans who hav& visited this city. . - “Upon Mbs return to headquarters he-was yisited by the Alcalde aud the members ,df the Ayunta miento in a body, and by them presented with a book containing the register, of the baptism of bis father, and also with a copy of a law passed that day making him a i' Jzen of Ciudadela, and on the .same eve ning he and his suite were very handsomely entertained by them at a grand, banquet. “During the course of the evening many highly complimentary and flattering senti ments were proposed by the Alcalde and other gentlemen in honor of the admiral, his officers and the ladies, to which the admiral and Captain Pennock responded, sometimes in Spanish and sometimes in English, ah the" spirit and the sentiment moved them; they also, on the part of Americans generally, offered toasts which were received with the most enthusiastic vivas. Upon the conclu sion of the entertainment the- party returned to Signor Squella’s, where a large , company soon assembled. Pleasure ruled the hour, joy was unconfined ahd the evening Wore ■ away in the most agreeable'enjcmnenty, , “Next morning the Admiral took leave,; ' and braving once more the tempest of excite- ’ : ment before him was escorted four miles out of the city in the same manner in' which he entered it, the same: scenes transpiring, the iaine demonstrations and the same enthusiasm manifesting itself to the very : last;” ~ ;i ■■ - ■' The H'oeg of a Prince, “ Let me crave your sympathies in behalf of a prince," which. bis name it is Christian. The said PrinceChristiatrinarried the Princess Helena, and the people, by a sort of instinct, came to the conclusion that the young ladyjhad been forcedinto the marriage, and that the whole business wap a shame.” Bince that time Prince C. has been growing, more and more unpopular, not onaccount of ’ anything that be has done, I think, so much as because he is disliked. It is the Dr. Fell ’ sort of business. The other day the Prince went with his wifjp and some others of the, royal family to Liverpool, and the people who waited outside hissed him heartily, but cheered all the rest. The affair was hushed up, but. there is reason to believe that it caused some little sensation at Windeor. The photographs of the Prince have partly been the cause of his, unpopularity. He is a churlish-looking man, with a very bald head, and the bald bead lias, I fear, done his , business. The Princess Helena was only 19 when she mar ried, and the English people-(who like the royal ladies especially) were not satisfied, and (bought her husband was not nearlvgood enough for her. Then, again, the Prince of the Bald Head was unquestionably one of the very smallest of the ver.y small Germans who have been strapped on to the shoulders of Eatient and cloudy-witted John Bull, He ad, before he came over here, as revenue from his immense estates and other sources -in Germany, a total income of exactly £2OO a year! This enormous income was not enough to be married upon, and very glad he must have been to catch one of the Queen’s daughters, and be taken into comfortable lodgings in the house of the aforesaid, J-B. The njext thing, of course, was to make an ; income for this rather farcical Princes.-. Some . very ugly stories of him were in circulation, most of them probably untrue, ihut they helped to make people dislike, him. Never theless, Parliament voted him agiAht of £30,- 000 (as dower to his wife),and £6;O0O a year. Imagine what a change jfpf h.pobr devil to be taken from the midst of debttand poverty to llve in one of the Queen’s have a large income given to him upon no harder condition that that .he . should marry a yvell-educated and rather pretty girli But things dp AOt dvvays ghsmbothly with Prince 'he was. soundly hissed in the publicstreete the other day, and now this week a stinging caricature has been levelled at him in the Timakawk, a pspCr which is making wonderful progress ' in coneeqhencb of the boldness And freedom tifits cartobpSi We are shownap unpleasant little man perehed on the back of the British lint apd tugging; awayat* his made. Under neath is written “Betaßeggar, on Horseback, or—Translated froin the-German;’’ This will not please the family circle at Osborne or Windsor. The Tomahawk goes everywhere now: it has cut Punch out,- so far as the influence of its weekly cartoon goes. 1 There Mono other illustrations in the.number, and tte •‘jolp” fire, rather, of theiltterary gent.‘. description. But the cartoon (drawn by a iffr. Matthew’ Morgan, of whom no one • Scarctily ever heard before) is first-rate, and would make any paper. I fahoyFrince CbristLap bas rather a had time before him. The Queen is understood to insist upon his residing in this country, and nnder her own sye—apparently with a due regard for the protection of her daughter. A man ought to behave himself prop Spy op £6,000 a year, 1 seeing that he has done nothing to merit a Tkrthlng. There are Englishmen (would you believe It?) of better ana nqbler descent than (his very little Ger man, pnd off 5 handsome prlvAtepreaiJjSiid who would be too happy (ojpj&g fiood husbands to any pf the Royal Princesses (except those who are already married, pray understand.), Rut no; , that would not do; A seedy gentleman,' :all: out at elbows, from Faderland, is the only eligible person. The inevitable consequence of scich a system is— Prince Christian. —London Correspond ence JV. Y. Times.- Is Westminster Abbey a Royal Palace? A strange case came befdre Mr, Arnold, a police justice in London, last month. It turned upon the answer to the question—is (Westminster Abbey a royal palace? A ;mason and a builder who have recently been ’fixing a hot-water or hot-air pipe near the roof of the Jerusalem Chamber, were sum moned by-the Board of Works for neglect-: ingto consult the district surveyor. They that, as the building was a royal palace, they were placed by a special apt-: beyond the surveyor’s control. The Board affirmed that the Abbey was not a royal palace at all; that it was the property ot the Dean and Chapter, who, of course, could not make apy alterations without the usual perniisssion. The Dean and Chapter were thus the real, though not the nominal, defendants; and, ef-course, their object was to prove that the Abbey did not belong to them. Their counsel argued that, as a chapel attached to one of the royal palaces, it had always been the property of the Crown. It was called “Our palace of Westminster" in the order for Queen Victoria’s coronation. In the time of King Edward it was actually adjacent to the palace, for in the Bayeux ta pestry a man is represented holding on by the tower of the one and the weathercock of the other. ’ . It was true the charter of Queen Elizabeth dissolving monasteries might be considered to have alienated the property, but since her time the monarchs of England had claimed exclusive rights over it which had never been called in question. When it was announced that refreshments would be provided in the Abbey on the coronation of the Queen, the Dead and Chapter were obliged to petition her Majesty not to permit of it. They could not order the refreshments to be taken away, though they only consisted of a cold collation.. IC>he Crown cboseto hold a'sacred concert therej weekly it might, though of course it was not likely to dp anything of the sort. Besides, the night before the coronation a Royal beef-eater kept guard over the Crown jewels placed in the Jerusalem Ghamber. Mr. Philbrick, on the other side, contended that the free-hoid living passed from the Crown to the Dean and Chapter in the time of Elizabeth, the Abbey thenceforth ceased to be a royal palace; and in proof of it the burial fees of theklpgs had always been duly paid. It was not likely that kings would pay to be buried in their own ground. Mr. Arnold considered the case was too important for him to deal with, and adjourned it sine die. Tbe Coming in an No Smoker. Whether the coming Man will drink wine or be a teetotaller has not yet, perhaps, been positively ascertained; but it is certain he will not smoke. Nothing can be surer than that. The Coming Man will be as healthy as Te cumsah, as clean as Shirely, and as well groomed as Dexter. He will not fly the fe male of his species, nor give her cause to pre fer bis absence. We are not left to inter or conjecture this; we can ascertain it from what we know of the messengers who have announced the coming of the Coming Man. The most distinguished of these 'was Goethe—perhaps the nearest approach to the complete human being that has yet appeared. The mere fact that this admirable person lived always unpolluted by this seductive poison is a fact of some significance; but this important fact is, that he could not have smoked and remained Goethe. When we get close to the nian and live Intimately with him, we perceive the impossibility of his ever having been a smoker. We can as easily fancy Desdemona smoking a cigarette, as the highly groomed,alert, refined,imperiaLGoethe . with a cigar in his mouth. In America, the best gentleman and moat variously learned and man we have had—the v man, too, who had in . him most of what will constitute the glory of the future—was Thomas Jefferson; Democrat, of Virginia. He was versed in six languages; he danced, rode and hunted as well as Gen eral Washirigton; he played the violin well, wrote admirably, farmed skillfully, and was a most generous, affectionate, humane and great-souled human being. It was the des tiny of this ornament and consolation of his species to raise tobacco and llVo by tobacco all bis life. Bat he knew too much to use it himself; or, to speak more correctly, his flue feminine senses, his fine masculine instincts, revolted from the use of it, without any as sistance from his understanding. There is ho trace of the plpe In the writings of Washington or Franklin; probably they never smoked; so that we may rank the three great men of America—Washington, Frank lin and Jefferson—among the exempts. Washington Irving, who was the first literary man of the United States to achieve a uni versal reputation, and who is still regarded os standing at the head of our literature, was no smoker. Two noted Americans, Dr. Nott and John Quincy Adams, after having been slaves of the weed for many years, escaped from bondage and smoked no more.—Atlan tic Monthly for February. Almost a. Uepetltlon of tbe Angola • .Disaster. The Milwaukee Sentinel of Saturday says: Yesterday morning about half-past three o’clock, as the train on the St. Paul Railroad, dtjjß here at BeVen o’clock, was about three miles , wos of Lowell; the Bleeping and the ladies’ car were thrown from the track by a broken rail. They became detached from the main train ; and rolled down an embank* mept some: twenty feet in ’ height; landing bottom upwards; The passengers in both cars were knocked around, and several of thepa bmised to a greater or lasts extent. ,The ■ stoves In the care were torn from their' fast enings, the doors broken open. and the Are scattered all over the car; : The ladles’ Oar took fire, and fbratime it was feared that it would be destroyed, and a number of the pas sengers who were lyinghelpless within it meet i,a horrible death. The coals from the stove set fire'to the Clothing of the paefiengers, bumlng; severe? of them, some quite badly, but none ladywho got aboard the train at Co lumbus was compelled, from, the painful nature of her Injuries, to remain at Lowell, and a inan who was badly burned remained at Watertown. The remainder of the injured parties came through to this city.- We have been unable to learn all their names. The conductor, Mr. Warren Howard; received some painful injtfriesj as did also # brakeman ,on ithe train, named Timothy Shay. Another .employe of the road;namedCharfta Williams, :badh£s leg bruised slightly. Mr. lttoward is quftpbadly bruised, Ms face Undl neck being lammed out in several places, and his umfbhrnlfied.; He had to be taken to his homO in a carriage. - , ‘‘Rev. Hr. Raymond, of the Garrett Blbll cal TnHtitufe' Chicago, was injured internally; Rev: Mr. TfarWilugei; of Appleton, was 'struck on the tsmpte and his'.free badly bruised, and aMr. Ring was slightly Injured. We have been unsble to leant the ~h>jnes of any others of the, injured parlies, but- these■ are tire most seriously hurt. The scene is ' Baldtojhamtbeen one of the .Wildest confU-:, sion, the women waeechink frightfully, and the men, seemingly bereft of all presence of • r. ‘i-; ' ■ .V » -A I .. mind, did little to rescue themselves or their companions' from tbcit perilous position. The presence of mind and energy of the em ployes of the road.probably prevented a more serious disaster." ■ /■' . • ~ WATOHEB, ' jriBWEliWTs AC. LADOMUS % //DIAMOND DEALERS a jewelebsal II i WITCHES, ttH.t'Eß trARK. '* II V-WATOHEB and JEWELRY BEfAIRED, .802 Cheatnnt 8t„ Phila-; Would invite the attention of purchasers tethelr Urge Btocfcof ; -• Vv ' ' GENTS’ AND UIJJEtf W A. T CUES , Just roccived,of ,tho finest Euro peon makera,lndopendont Quarter Second, and Self-wind in*: in Qbld and silver Cnaes. Alf»>; American Watchce of all sizes. _ , Diamond Beta, Pins,Studs, itlnss.dic. (Joral.Malachita, Garnot and Etruscan Sets, in great variety. Solid Silverware or all kinds, including a large assort ment suitable for Bridal Presents. ■ ■ AiaustiiiuEßnrs. ACADEMY OF MUSIC. . MIC H. 1.. BATEMAN’S Renowned Parisian OPERA BOUFFE COMPANY ■ Will appear in Offenbach's Opera, the GRAND DUCHESS • Or GEEOLSTEIN, ron - ' IPOSITIVELY NINE NIGHTS ONLY. TUESDAY EVENING, It. 18ffl, Thle Famous Opera, which has this aeasoto been already Performed by ° f Wili be prodded ™^ f^OUPE , OItIGINA^AJKTISTS Brought by Mr. Bateman from Paris last summer, M peclally for tbe I purnose.,togother with the • GRAND FRENCH CHORUS 1 Numbering more than Fifty voice*. THE * GRAND. ORCHESTRA, win number nearly,, THIRTY MUSICIANS. coNDeerrotte j MESSRS. A. BIRGFELD and LEFEVRE. THE GORGEOUS AND CHARACTERISTIC COSTUMES. Are made exprewly for thla Opera, and liave juatly been proclaimed the Wonder of the Axe. '. new and appropriate scenery. RICH AND ELEGANT PROPERTIES, Forming an Unrivalled Combination for the production ‘ MAGNIFICENT MISE EN SCENE’ ADMISSION. .ONE DOLLAR. Reserved easts..... GO centsextra! Family Circle : ..J6O cent*. SEATS MAY NOW BE SECURED FOR ANY' NIGHT A 1 J. E. GOULD'S I'iano store, <■ No. MJCHESTNCT Street - - OFFENBACH’S GKANI> DUCHESS OF .... : GEKOUSTEIN. ..._ ._ ADMISSION., ...ONE DOLLAR, NO EXTRA CHARGE FOE RESERVED SEATS- T IBHEITOB I i OFTHE GRAND OUOMESBE GEROLBTEIN. Correct edition, copied from the Score of the'.Opera ,. with the Music of the principal airs. PRICE 30 CENTS,at C. W. A. TRUHPLER'B. . fc3 tf _ 326 Chestnut street. Doors open at 6.45.. Curtain rises at 7.45. ‘ MONDAY.EVENING, February 10, Will be presented, at a '»■ . GREAT EXPENSE. MR DION BOUCICAULT'S LAST GREAT BRAMA. o EKTinEn FLYING SCUD; A FOUR-LEGGED FORTUNE. Rater Rideout. ..Miss JOStr. ORTON Mat Gosling. rw. IL HEOLEY SMITH And the entire Comptny; •••■-.' " Incidental to tbePl»7« , A'JWCKEV BALLET, In which will appear A COKrtfOF twelve young ladies. JOCKEY DANCE AND SONGI THE GREAT SCENE Which baa been pronounced to b« the most exciting, and the greatest ecneatlooal effect ever produced upou'the etagc. ia a life-like representation of the . EPSOM HACK CO USAS', AT THE TIM EOF A RACE. NEW AND ELABORATE SCENERY. Act L-IXYING SOCIVS STABLE. Act a~FLYINGSCUD’S YKAH. • . THE riGSKINSCLoPATLEAniERIIEAD. . Act 111.-DERBY DAY AT EPSOM. ■ THE WINNER OF THE RACE. Act IV.-CALAIB SANDS. SATCKDAY-FAMILY MATINEE. MRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE. „„ BeginsJdWStf. NO ABATEMENT. HOUSES FULL. THIRD WEEK—UNDER THE GAS LIGHT. EVERY NIGHT AND SATURDAY AFTERNOON, Daily's Oreat Local Mar of UNDERTUE OAB LIGHT. W'ith all itsßrand features. • THE TOMBS AT NEW YORK. OREST PIER SCENE, ’ Tho North River by Starlight. A Train of Cara at fuU Speed, and ‘ Mr. LEWIS BAKER ae.....7.,.....; Snorkey. matinee Saturday afternoon. BEAT'S SECURED SIX DAYS IN ADVANCE. ■WALNUT STREET THEATRE, N. E. CORNER OF W NINTH and WALNUT atneta. Birina at * put 7. THIS (MONDAY) EVENING, Fob. 10,186 A The great and world renowned Comedlaoa. MIL and MRS. BARNEY WILLIAMS. First night of the beautiful Fairy Drama of THE LAKES OF KILLARNEY. Laoly VcGlaugh]in Mr. BARNEY WILLIAMS. Kate Kearney. ..M'a. BARNEY WILLIAMS. To conclude with Buekitone'a Comedy of THE IRISH LION. Tim Moore.', Mr. BARNEY WILLIAMS. Mrs, Fitzgig Mrs. BARNEY WILLIAMS. OEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE O SEVENTH STREET, below Arch. TUNISON A CO.'S MINSTRELS. - MONDAY EVENING, February 10. The Great Burlesque, UNDER THE LAMP-POST. UK DER THE LAMP-POST. THE GREAT PIER SCENE, THE DOWN TRAIN, a> the GREAT SMASH-CP. DON'T FORGOT . THE GREAT TRIAL SCENE UNBERTHEL AMP-POST. MONDAY EVENING, February 10. OF ACADEMY.-. _ X f FOURTH BEETHOVEN MATINEE CARL WULFBOHN, ASBiftTur, nv MUDAYACTERNOTRFeb. 14, 1868. TICKETS.ONE DOLLAR, EACiL At the Mule Stores, and at the Door. Dooia open at 4, Commences at 4jtf, , foUMt "VT EW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE CABNCROBB A PIXJSY»ff MIN§TRELB. EVERYBOBY DELIGHTED. Of the new Anglo-American-Meric an Ethiopian Operatic and Military Burlesque, endUod - OURS: ' ' ■ 08. AYENGBBB. TUTR CHARLES DICKENS’S READINGS.—IT IS m respectfully announced that Ml. CH SELES LICKENB will take his FAREWELL of Philadelphia In TWO LAST READINGS. ? On FRIDAY. Fehruary 14. his "Dr. Marigold,” and "The Trial from Pickwick." , r ., .... The Readings win commence at 8 o’clock, and wul be com prised within two hours. The .audience la earnestly ' requested to be seated ten inlaUtea before the commenco tnentof the Reading. . feBtl4B CHARLES DICKENS’S FAREWELL READINGS TtUrespecuStoknnounced thatthetloketa for Single Readinm will be on sale at JR WJ'rtTG’S Muaio Store, 85. I<af Chestnut street, THIS MORNING at 9 o’clock .a/Nut ... ■ featoHelE tq-ABSpBR’S CONCERTS. riARL SENTE’S ORCHESTRA MATINEES IN HOB XI TIOULTUBAL, HALL, every.'THURSDAY atBM P. M. Package Off oar Tickets (or One PoUar, to be had at Boner’s, HOUChestnut street, and at the door. Single Ticket,» cents. fmt A C ' AD GHANIFDUtfHESS OF GKROLSTEIN. Librettos of,this .highly sucoesoful Opera Comlqoe (French and English wordsl can now be obtained at om ACADEMY, anAFETORBON'S, MdChestnnt at.’,. JaXßtf; ..... pEMNBYLVAHIA ACAPEIgYgy • POLIViOAI. WO TICES. ■sap- ltooais t in the republican city exeuu, COMMITm:. 1106 IHIESTNUTTaTUEBT, In accordance with tho call of tho BOpdlll^uu' Suto ' Executive Committee, tho Republican citizens of Phila. dolpjhia williheot in their respective election divisions on the 4th TUESDAY of February, BBth instilbettfeia tho 1 hobre of 6 and 8 o’clock P.M., to elect one delegate from each,division to a Congressional Convention, said conven tion to elect two delegatee and two alternates frdm.'each f CongressloualDlstrictto ths National Convohtioft,'te b« ‘ held in Chicago, on the SOth day of May nett, to nominate v ~ a candidate for President and Vice President »of the, United Statcsifj.fyjrt. VH , Also, ono Senatorial acd ono Reprcsentattvo delegate ■ ’ from each division to the several Senatorial and Repre- 1 eentativo Conventions, "to elect delegates to tho State' Convention to bo hold in Philadelphia. on the 11th day of / March, next, which Convention shall nominate candl datesifor Auditor and.Survoyor-Genorah'ClcQt four dels. -, gates to the National Convection, And. form the Electoral•' Ticket. ' The elections to bo held in, conformity with,tho follow ing supplementary rules for tho govirnmont of the Itopub , lican party., • By order of tho Republican City Executive Committee. W. R. LEEDS, President . John J;. Hii.r., ISAAtf McßsiriK; Secretaries. • Rctzi.—lt shall bo the duty of the Kepublioan Judges and Inspectors, elected at tho election Id October, 1857. to conduct tho delegate election to Bo held on the 4th TUBS, DAY In February, 1888. In the election divisions that failed to elect the republican candidate for judgo.nald candidate shall act as judge,, Whore a vacancy occurs the rom&iningolectlon ofUccrs, in conjunction with the Division Executive CommUteo, shall till such vacancy. ' Ali,appointmCntS or change of election' officers must be re- P°rtcd by the Division Executive Committee to the pleail dent of th» Ward Executive Committoeat least ono week prior to said delegate, election. No election pffioer ebMl bo a delegate to or a candidate before any Of the conventions provided tor in these rides. Tlia delegate elections shall be held at the regular places ofholdto* elections, or if a change Is desired, the place of holding the election may bo ehanged by the Division Executive' • Committee irytonjunction with the election officers bf said division: provided that one week's notice shall be given to the voters of each dlvlsian (where a change Is made) of the place of bolding tiny delegate election. ” Rpi-u TUESDAY EVENlNG,*,bruary 1L 1888, the Republican eloctioßOfficers of. each election division and the Division Executive CommttteeohaU mental the usual place of holding said delegate etocllon. or at such place as may be pcovMed/ bOtweett the hodrserttead 8 o'clock.topreparenregiftryol theßepubtlcnivotorc of < Bald division. No personshali beregUleredbytlistrais tering offletra unless he Wsh a quail Bid voter la aaik divi slonat theprooeding election, hereinafter pnW sided. Any person claiming the right to veto who did not reside In said division at the election! Of . whose rlghl to vote may have originated since said elec. * t lon. shnilnukc persohat application to; be registered, ' and must prove to the satisfaction of a majority of the re.- gistering officers that he is entitled to vote ia said divisteg f r Said officers shall enter in a book, containing street Ustv provided for that purpose, the names and. residence of si ~ Republican voters known to them In said division Said registry sbaU be open to the inspection of alt Republican, voters in the rovoral election divisions, cad If it shall be proved to the satisfaction of a majority of the t*-. gistet tag officers that the name of any person shall have been enrolled who Is not a member of the BepttMl. can partyithey shall strike hla name from the list, and no person shall be aßowcd to vote at the ensuing-delegate election unless bis name nppmrs duly registered to tho enrollment book of said dLisloa- Thc Original each division registry ehaU be deposlted withAeprtei dent of the Ward Executive Committee, sighed by the ■ registering oißcora, and dniy attested by Oatberaffirmd tlon of two of the registering officers before one of the 1 alderman of thle cltv. The president of the Ward Exoca. tire Committee shall cause to be prepared - a. sufficient: comber of tbc: lists of voters for the use of each divU eionu ■ ' , '' ' itMli TO THE UEPI BLIC'AKS OF TUB TF.HTU >V»rd,—ln •ocoidinca with therulA forth* govern ment ol fhe,UNION ItEPt’BUI'AN l'AirrsrTuie Web, slon Exmitire Commltleea uid Election Qttitm wilt meet on TUESDAY? EVKNINGVFehraMT J 16h, brt*wff; the home of /our and tight c'elotk. to prepare a KegUtrt - of tfie itepublihan Voter* residing in the nuiau (Hutit El* Wont throaghaot the ward.” (Saa AdrereMswnt <5 CUT Executivecommittee in tfik peper.J ..-T -1 at Dii'lt lon »t No-141N'ninth rtrnct. M “hi. W. eor. tdMnth and Cherry street*. tsi 8. W. eor. of Kt**en2T aed Vine street*. 4th “ , * B.W. cor. Eleventh end Kaos street*, elh :: “ IS: “ ■. Hrsnvlltr.-pi, Secretary. fe»3t' ■nwiAi. Rorieu. fflp- PEHMBYLVAIgA BAUJtOAD COM- FmurawoAi/«iuTS,I)S9. NOTICBTOBTOCkIiyiSjKKS. 1860, atloagtock, A. M,a* (Wart HaU,No. l&t;!iM£ nqlitnAFUlimiUi. _ _The annualelection for Director* will be held on MOV. >: DAY. the Six) dir at March. UW, at tho office of tba com- , P.*. So.Sßßo«hT!<lrd*»«. umD B!pTHi •»wS E X COMPAN*. Hi, » Poiut9i!.nii. <Jifitni7tLlM. Nottcola hereby given (bat all Block oFtltoTßtaa Minina Company, on which hyrtalmen to are due and un paid, 6a«.heea declared forfeited., andwul baaoUat public auction on SATURDAY, February tt iKat U o'clock, noon, at tan Office of the Secretary of ifieCorpe- ■' ratton- Bccordlnr to the Cbartat and Bybawa, unlaw previourfy redeemed. ■ , ■». • By order of the Dlrecto*. ~ . B. A. IIOOPBS. laMtfcga , . Traaaarar. KBf NOTICE—THE ANNUAL MEETING OF and the election for officers of THE of PbttMelphUoa WEDNESDAY, *F% ftVAtflf. PM, •- . 5 . W .IOHNW.DgAP^ ■a- ELECTION FOR DIRECTORS OF THE mrm ' Philadelphia Expreaa Steamboat Company wttl bo held at toe office. No. M Booth Wharve*, mTBBSib DAY. Jlth lnat, at H A- M. WM. H. HOWELL, . fe7St} Secretary. mtar- NOTHJK.-A THE STOCE holdora of tho HICKORY COAL COMPANY wtU be hrldat the Continental.llotel, Philadelphia, on WED, NEBDAY, Feb. Utb, UWt at 4 o’clock, PJ*; laao-ltc WM-F, MaTuHETT, Bocretary.. MTfDENX>NOTIO£S« MP , OFFICE OF THE HAZELTOM R4ILROAD . COMPANY, No. SOS WALNUT STREET. - ■ ! ■’ Pini.aoEi.rirt*, Feb. LIBSA ta .At a meeting or the Board of Directors held tula day H Reste«f, That a Dividend of THREE PERCENT., equal to one dollar and a half per ehare, frpe from State . and United States taxes, la hereby declared, payable on ■ and after the twelfth day of February next. The traaafer hooka of the Company win be closed from February Ist'’- to February 2Ut „ _ .. . -i CHARLES a LONOSTRETH, .. , fel-Btj , ■ ; Secretary and Treasurer. "■. ;. Mr* INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE STATE OF I'BNNSJOA’AtiIA. _ . • r Fxhboarv B, 1908. The Director* havethi* lv declared a Dividend of Flt®Per tot,or Ten dolivnwrtfßiddMrttJWW State* and State Taxen, gawl» ta or tff^ re “ tI WS» SecmUry. \ ; Fnujamtnna, Januarr SOth, 1868. ' AtA meetlgddfthe Board of Blre<dgnih»dttl*dar% Dividend of Foot rer Oent.on the OMWM-Wgjfcweat«(. ,: dylyedtpWlao 8011-Bmp [KVIT* SBrnaatf. • ounm ffisitSSSlSlffls;,. Boyavweuv OV ERCOATOLOTHB. - ■ ■ ■ 1 cioth.> , ®rtCQt, ftU cojoftk ■1 ’ j LOCUST i. • j'. J <• ‘ atareWoMk, i, : - ■ •''! -' r - r* ' From onj.-late Editions of Saturday.; Bjr (be Atlantic Cable. | Berlin, February Bth.—Count Von Bismarck; v has Obtained leave of absence from Ms poet- as; through various parts of Europe- Hi* health,) which has not been good for a long time; has att length compelled him to seek relaxation from his! arduotu.dnuee. rltAonJl^jitcedthat,the present Minis® OfFlnahMWill replace Bismarck. f London, Feb. a-Dcspatchcs have bean re ceived here from Athene Which state that new Cabinet le at length formed, with Bulgaria as* Presidentaßd Minister of the Interior. ■? AWtgfflfciMjifleemtlWieAuatcdJii' thtfiPapal! Zouaves at Home. ‘ ;; London, Feb. B.—The notorious Fenian, Cap-( tain Mackay, was captured in Cork, last evening, \ by the police, and while the officers wore taklng f him to the jail, his friends rallied In great force, and, * dciporetd fIK&E-PBWtitel, hut: theTOOD'waa finally beaton down, and Mackay | ■was lodged In jail. Daring the night, the guard! arOund lhe jail was dohbled,'to prevent a rescue, f Southampton, Feb. B.— The steamship Ger-i mania, from New York January 28th, arrived at i •) A. M. Queenstown, • i Feb. B.—The steamship Etna, : from New York, January 27jh, has arrived. ; London, Evening, Fcbrnary B.—United States , 87%; I Liverpool, February 8, Evening. Cotton ! • closed active and higher, sales 18,000 bales; Up- , lands, B@B% in port, and Bto arrivti; Orloans, 1 dd- ’?ofk l &ulJ. So. ' Comm’on Rosin, Os. Turpentine 30a. Antweht, Feb. 8, Evening.—Petroleum, 39% francs., .. ...... . ...- r „ Jplmsojn’w Eorthconitng jbetter. ; & t» Uw Huh. tmtutJMkma ; ' " , etood that the President will not publish bts letteßln i»ply, tO*Cten.l Grant's at present. If- it tpe lighti lt will, dot be Jut tW'shape orimiagjly setucd upon by Mr. Johnsoh atid hls friends. ~Those wno havo sccn U say that lt was extremely bitter In its tone and belligerent towards Gen. Grant and ln__ylew of/’Utfiactlon of the Cohn- ;wbich -was,.; unexpected & by.vxjlft. Johnson,. bis friends have advised him to withhold the letter from ..the public. Another, (Hflfctilty, it is stated, 1 Is, that sonle of the mem bers of the Cabinet whom, the President had counted on to indorse his state ments about General Grant now re fuse to.,doiit, allegliß<j that Sfr.' Johnwn' has made fheih w'buot™ Iths beUeved,however, that the real cause of the refusal of the President to pnblisb the tetter te.Ahe lnvestoitionentered up<jn -•••■■ Wire in Walne. _ lire occurred Mnich destroyed thebuilding known as the Excelsior Factory, occupied as follows/ lo«a Bro'r® *; Barbee, carving-knife manufacturers, loss 'ssoo. ■ The, bJffidlng__was „entljelv ls d£*stroyed, and was dteniff by 3t?WUlte, wfioiw jites Is fWW. None of the above property Is insured. The fire crossed the - street ahtrentlrely de stroyed a two-aud-a-half-story wooden building, owned all® oewMedJ ma chine shop Tbe-jotl on tnl»baild wof including machinery, is $15,000. The prop erty la, Ipsured vln -a toringaeM eorqpmiY-Lor $2,500/i aiH.'ln^Bo^ !: 6TußmS% “Cempftiry, of Provwencfc R, ,L. f0r,52,500.., • aHpfketn , . , 'iB > -' fiwtofy:. was slightly damaged fthd is insured. Half of the bridge crossing the • river was burned. >*Tot»l loss. $80,000: insurance, 85.00% . The CJrmnt.jrolm.on Correspondence. (Special Despatch to tbePhfladeiphla Evening Bulletin.] WaShisotok, Feb, B.—The Committee on Re constrnction met at 2 o'clock and formally or ganized for business. At the hour of meeting Gen, Grant had not appeared- Tho Committee therefore ordered the' 8c rgeant-at-Arens to bring J. B. Stilson, of the New York World, before mem. He was examined concerning hia interview with the President/accounts of which have appeared In the " World from time to time, over the signature tof J. B. S. ... At this writ ing, 3.30 o’clock, Mr. Stilson is still before the Committee. .. j-.W <~v ; j-.y.. ■ 6«ver»ni«otßaleof Gold. [Special Despatch to thePhiUdelphia EvenlngtßulleUii.] Washington, Feb. B.—lt Is understood that the fk-ensiwy of the'Treasury has been - ficlllng large amounts 'Of gold to-day. iu order to keep down tbe premium which It Is feared would ad vance on account of a revival of the impeachment excitement. ' , • -n & ' ®on,vehtion wsaOpened tOidtiy by a proyer by the Rev. R. L. CollyefrOf Chicago. Gcn._Walbridge, of New York, offered a series of resolutions,"which he moved should lie on the table, and be in order for the action of the Con vention next year. Tbeso resolutions affirm the duty of Congress to foster all' projects for the improvement of the present lines of -eommttni-- canon and of those which shall be projected; pirtlcnlariy those byiand er witer: Bwifteiji the AtlanUc.and ffie Mlssisslppl and PacdflCj'snd that faclJltieS sbpuld, Wfar 04 possible, be afforded to ' enable through Hnesfrom the North to the South and from East to Wept, to have double tracks. Another resolntlon recommends a combination , of all to„*ecure a uniformeyßtem of freights onihrough trains 1 or' connecting'trains, at a speed say or ten miles an hour, ana favors the use of the same tracks for passengers, and light and costly freight and of other tracks for heavy freights. The Currency and Finance re port Was, then taken up. Wire in Milwaukee. Milwaukee,, Feb. fire at N0.,100 West Water street'last night UMiaged thie building to the amount of *6,000. The, occupants, E. W. Fowler &,Co.,,prgducecdeslera,'loses7,ooo, coy crcd by lnenfance, . TTanninnsiiini.i FiiMiiii i JT)l( '"'PTCflfi Ifiiiin. an attache of ffie' TreastuftDepartmenf since the of the New York Asseßnbiy. dropped dead this morn ing while standing at tnobar of Cook & Duff's restaurant. . .. j Boston, Feb. B.— Major &x^on ( Joy’s on whlchTe wlil erect a ne^qp|(j)^(»|lon;«yDsej?. ; ,o oss? ciqr r OBfliiASCEs. U EBOLUTION TO ; PLACE CERTAIN II Streets uponthe City, Plans# 'S' ■ Resolved, >ByAheßelect and CoffimonConnella of the City of Philadelphia,/piattte Department of Surveys be and' is hereby authorized and di rected to place upon the, sectional plans of the, ' city,ffio following fctreefe, with widths-dfthlrty ‘ feet, viz.: ~ • . Sheridan street, from Montgomery to Berks., ■’ strect. hStvreen.BevsnihnndMai'Hhall streets..' 'M Hewton street from (Saul to Ced ir street.-bO-J. tween Vlennr&ndOtlffnate'Wbody street Knorr street, fromPmmQM.atreet to Hunting don street, within thh-iKangle formed by said , —Fillmore and Huntingdon streeta/wUh Kensing ton avenue. •... tiff/} P t£L', F.f Jpl: Provided, Thatjplans of thesamo shall not be gnDJpittea to ttg until file the deed thereof In the Department of Sur ■ TCyß ’ '■* "fo s sipS#i' r iiAfcSt'i ■ - ArrKST-.JOIIN r EGlBTOr mmOnCOlm9U - • ' Clerk of Common Council. : thi * * f P" J^|®? t '® r *®^ouoU.' Approved this seventh day of February, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and alxtv eight {A; D. 1868). H “ * MORTON McMICHABL, it Mayor of Philadelphia, Obituary. CllpTr OK PI NANCES. * N ORDINANCE TO MAKE AN APPRO-; priatlon to the Superintemtent of Trusts, for : the purposes thereto mentioned, for the year eighteen hundred and sixty-eight. , , SBC5’ioN j.,The i and Common Councils ftM That the i flUmB hereinaftcr mentioned, be and the same arc hereby appropriated to the Superintendent of! Trusts, for the purposes following, that is to say: Item 1. Out of the income and loan paid off, of. the fund bequeathed by’John BleaUJcy to the Yel low Fever Fund, the sum of two thousand one ’ hundred and filty-two dollars and seventy-five icents to bo invested in six per cent, loan of the city of Philadelphia. - i ,g Itcm S. The aum ot two thonsandbne hundred and thirty-five dollars and forty-two cents, out ot the income and loan paid oil, of the fund be queathed by Elizabeth Kirkpatrick and John Bleaklcy, and the trust created by the first lodge Of Free Masons, to apply the sum of threo hun dred and thirty-five; dollars. and f'orty.two cents to p4y tho'eosf Of - purchasing • and distributing fuel among (he poor, according to the directions of the devisors and donors aforesaid, and the sum of eighteen hundred dollars to invest In six per cent, loan of the city of Philadelphia. Item ft. The sum of two hundred and nine dol- lars and four cents, out of the income of the trust created by Acts of Assembly of March Bth, 1847, and March lflth, 1848, for supplying the poor residing wjthln the iimits of tbfelate district of fiprlDg Qi>rdcaj,foß provldedßd with Item 4. Out of the Income of the fund be queathed by Stephen Girard, for the purpose of purchasing and distributing-duel to poor white roombeepers and housekeepers, residing In th* cilyot Philadelphia, the sum of five hundred and 4b irty-sevem doltersamd’ seven ty-r oneceots. ■ Item 5. But of thElbcoml and loan paid off, of tbc legacy of John Scott, of four thousand dollars, the sum of six thousand and seventy-one dollars and twenty-six cents: For advertising by Franklin Institute, fifty dollars; . For. proportion Of'expenses, one hundred and fifty dollars;; v ft lb i '*■ li To invest In six per cent, city loan, five thou sand eight hundred and seventy-one dollars and twenty-six cents. Item 6. Out of the income of the. legacy of - John Scott, of. three thousand dollars, the sum of seven hundred and two dollars' and seventy-two cents: • To proportion of expenses, one hundred dol- l^hi' > 'six'hun dred andAwo dollar audeevenWrtvwr cents. ItemF-iWitefthe Incomeof-thU Dr. Benjamin Franklin, the* sum of one thousand, nine hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty five cents: . .. 1 To proportion-of, expenses, one hundred dol lars; Tojnvest in 81x per cent. City Loan, the sum of eighteen hundred and thirty-three dollars and : thirty-five cents. Item 8. Out of the., ineotne -qf the .devise of ] Paul Beck, to ihel JUdefn&n and Citizens of Philadelphia, foE supplyingz the; poor with * soup, the sum of five hundred dollars: To Western Soup Bociety, half-year’s ground ; rent for 1668, two hundred and fifty dollars. To the Society ■ for BUDplymg the poor with i yesrs ground rent for 1868, two htm ; drea anf fifty dollars. Item 9. Out of the income of the devise of Samnel Seottin, the sum of twelve dollars, to pay -for bread fox the poor of the city of Philadelphia landthe DistriCt of Bo*hrark. ■ t Itemlp. Outof thelncoiac Df tho bequcst.of 'Btephen Girard to the Corporation of the’Public Schools for the city and county ot Philadelphia, lln trust for the schools of the flrst section ot the 'first school district of Pennsylvania, the sum of sfive hundred and ninety-four dollars, to pay the tame to the ConfroUtgsr of. the -Public Schools, - ‘fov tbe useitf said atmdols in the: FlfthviSixth, -' ’Seventh, Eighth, Ninth and Tenth Wards, the 'said Wards constituting what was at the time of said bequest, the first section ot the first school district, aforesaid.'" f s Item 11. The sum of three thousand three hun dred and fifty-four dollars and forty-eight cents, (being balance on hand January Ist, 1868, in terest on city loan, and amount "estimated to be received on account of Gmber leave) to Invest in city loan, and to pay the .following expenses in curred in the management of. and visiting the lands In Centre county, Pennsylvanla,bequeathed to the city of Philadelphia, in trust by Dr. Ellas Boudenot, as follows: 1 Attorney fees, one hundred dollars. : Taxes for 1866, 1867, 1868, twelve hundred dollars. ' Expenses of’visiting lands, five hundred dollars. ; To Invest In Six per . cent. City Loan, fifteen hundred and fifty-four dollars and forty-eight dents. j Item 12. The sum of four hundred and fifty ’ dollars out of the Income of the Franklin and Scott legacies, and the devise of Thomas D. Grover, lor the purpose of paying the following expenses for the y ear one thousand eight hundred Una sixty-eight, of the Superintendent for his care and management of the trusts in his charge, that is to say: : Salary of Superintendent, two hundred dollars. ; Bootes and stationery, one hundred dollars. Office furniture, one hundred dollars. Incidentals, fifty dollars. : Item 13. The sum sf eight hundred and torty tws dollars and seventy-five cents, being the amonnt of Five per cent. City Loan paid off, of eight hundred dollars, and balance of Investment February 23d, 1867, of forty two dollars'and seventy-five cents: i [To be Invested in Six per cent. City Loan, for ' the use of Wills’ Hospital. S Item 14. The sum of thirty-four hundred and spventy-nine dollars and twenty-nine cents, out of the Income of the estate di vised by,Thomas D. Grover, for the following annuities charged In and expenses incurred and to be incurred in the management of said estate for eighteen hundred apd sixty-eight: fltem 1. Mary Grover,twelve, months’ annuity, due March Bth and September Bth, 1868, twelve hundred dollars. ■ltem 2. Catharine Grover, twelve months’ an nuity, due January Ist and Jnlv Ist, 1868, one hpndred dollars. litem 8. Priscilla Grover, twelve months’ annuity, due January lat and July Ist, 1868, one hundred dollars. ;Item 4, Spphia Grover, twelve months' an nuity,<dUe January lat and July Ist, 1868, one hUndred dollars. '• ’ litem fi. Water rent and insurance, fifty dollars. jilteip e. Taxes for 1868, Rvei hundred dollars, ilfemY. Repalrs to house In Twenty-seventh Wasdglneloalngi'floor. In stable and' painting house, Your honored and fifty dollars. am to houso N 0.112 Federal street, dollars.'£ - VM-v 11 1 ■ •; ’■ -. am-9.Repalrsto N. A. HalJJtwenty dollars:, am 10. to PointßbadEstatfl, Includ well and punp/bne hundred'ond fifty donani. am.U,vFnrehase. totoain burial ground, three jredandffiftydonars.'' ■ ■ = u ' i 5 ' ■ ant 12. Incidentals, one hundred and fifty dol ls**. , irn%m mo Item 13. To invest in Six per cent. City Loan, -.tvtfo hundred and fifty-nine dollars and twenty 'nme cents. ■ Bbctipn-2, !WorruntB shall to ffiawn ta confor mity with extetlrg ordinances; * ‘ : I v jose|m^f.,m^cer,.-: I, . President of CcbUmon' Council. Attest—ABRAHAM STEWART, | Assistant Clerklof CbiUiuon Connell. f wilbmo7stokley, i . President of Select Council. .... Approved . this , soven|h_ day. pf' February, iI'MP O Domlniohe thousand eight hnndrod 'aijd D.1868), r ' I MORTON McMICHABL, 8 T. o^jgliU99elphla.' AN ORDINANCE ENr, titled an Ordinance to enforce the prompt J|| 8 m ep.t of CIW Warranto, approved Jannary 17,, Section 1. The Selecl 'and Commoh "Councils Of i tho,city ofThliadelpWandp racjrdato, Thatc'tho? truelnient and Seetibn l B ' of the abovo as relates to., the only ’wtttTft riW^bn day of January, 1868. t. , f Joseph f. mabcer; President of;Common* Council. Attest—J,OHN KOTOTOINi:, 4 , „ , ■ Clerk of Common CdUmstl. ■ ' ' , t:.* V i^ddMtVs^ec?'®^?'; 1 ’ ' Approved this seventh day of FebruMJ, Anno Dontlnione thousand .eight-hundred %nd slxty-clght (A. D. 1868). ' MORTON McMICHABL. it Mayor of Philadelphia. ■■ • ' . \ ...... THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN -FHILADELFHIa, MONDAY) FEBRUARY-10,1868. i OKPMtjUfCES.'.,, . ,|....■ AH OKUiNANCE TO SiAKE AN 'APPKO priation to pay for Boobs and Stationery for iho Courts, andfor other purposes, - Section 1. The Select 1 and Commou Councils'' of tho. City of Phlladcli>hia do ordain, That the. snm of one thousand and nine dollars and sixty four cents be ■ and .the Aatho is hereby' appro- ; pfiated foi tho following purposes, viz.: ? Item 1. To pay for books and stationery for* the Court of Quarter (hree hundred and fourteen dollars and-Yoriy'cehts. j Item 2. To pay/or stationery for Grand Jury! room, one hundred dollars and thiriy-Ulnoconta. i Item 3. To pay for stationery for the Court of! Common Pleas, sixty-four dollars and eighty-j Item 4. To pay for printiiigblanks for District- ; Aitoriscy, sixty doiloTß. ‘ > ■ ■ Item 5. To pay for Purdon’s Digest for Court; of Common Pleas, ten dollars. • Item C. To pay for carriage hire for Grand! Jury, for the year 1868, four hundred dollars. ; Item 7. To pay for unryey, plan and profile of; road crossing Cobb's'crcck, sixty dollars. •. I Arid warrants for Items 1, 2 and 3, snail be: drawn by the City Solicitor; for Items 4, o and 6, by the City Commlisioncrs, and for Item 7, by; the Chief Engineer and Surveyor.., .... JOSEPH F. MARCER, President of Common Council. Aitost— JOHN ECKSTEIN, , Clerk of Common Connell." WM. S. STOKLEY, . President of Select Council. , i Approved this seventh day of February, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight (A. D. 1868). .... ' . ... . 4 6 MORTON MoMICHaSL, It • r . ! , .- yiAyor of Philadelphia. 1 Resolution of bequest to tue le gislaturd 6f Pennsylvania'. ' , Whereat, A billhas beeif preßented to the Le‘- gislaiure to change the" syOtem ! of teiteg Rural property in tho city, of Philadelphia; • v A ndqbtreatffjie precept .system of< taxation has e J xtetcd since the j ear l«54 r .and value ot pro perty has been fixed ln aceordahce therewith: 'An& vheredsi To s.uch Bye'tetn Would in terfere scriotlslv with the municipal regulations of tbecity, tendlng lo onhance the value of those properties affceied by aald -bill; -which wouid be ! unfair, and nnjnst to other property owners; r 'And whereas, Rural properties have been as ' sessed low on account of their peculiar character, . being so far removed from the improved portion of the city, and inconsequence thereof, have-paid a small proportion of the'taxefl of the city; - therefore, . - • •- Resolved , By the Bel<Jet and Common Councils of ’the City oi Phlladelpfila r That the Legislature , ol Pennsylvania be requested’nbt to paaaany law : relative to the municipal taxes, of, the city, with out bc-ing requested so to So by the Councils of said city. ; T JOSEPH F, MARCER, . ’ • ' President of Common Council. Attest-JOHN ECKSTEIN, i - Clerk of Common CounclL . WILLIAM S. STOKLEY, President of Select Council. Approved Ihis seventh day of Febrnary, Ann* Domini one thousand eight hundred and slxty . eight (A. D. 1868). - : '-„ , MORTON McMICHAEL, i It Mayor of Philadelphia. Resolution relative to wharf Hc-ighU on the Schuylkill River. ! Resolved, By the Select and Common Councils iof the City of PhUadeinhiU; That the "Depart-' ment of Surveys be and & hereby authorized and. 'directed to revise the gradients upon Filbert, Ureb, Cherry and Race streets, betwefen Twenty-! !thlrd street and the River Schuylkill, and also thb iheights for wharves upon said river, between said Filbert and Race streets. : ” "J*SEPH F. 3IAROER, President of Common Council, p Attest —JOHN ECKSTEIN, ’ ' ! Clerk of Common Council. , WM. 8, STOKLEY, President of Bdect Council, i Approved this seventh . day of February,- Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and aixtT-cight (A. D. 1868.) MORTON McMICHAEL, It Mayor of Philadelphia. For Boston—Steamship Line Direct. RATT.TNG FROM EACH PORT EVERY FIVE DAYS. FROM PINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA. AND LONG - ’ J WiiAßFt BOBTOHi ’ „TMs .llne la compoaSd of tbs firtt-clau ■; > KOM«?,TV^tons,Captain O. Baker. .j,.: ; BASOSjI,2Cp tons, Captain F. M. BoggS. WORlttA»,l,BoB tons. Captain LCrowelL The SAXON fram Phlla.. Batardmy. Feb. 15, at 10 A M. The NOllMONTfrran Boston on Thursday. Feb. 13,3 P. M. These gteamahips sail pmetually, and Frelght wfil be received every day, a Steamer being always on the berth. ’Freight for point* beyond Boston sent with despatch. For Freight or Pamagefsupcrioiv accommodations), HK4RY WINBOR ds CO., tnvsi S3B South Delaware avenue. , PHILADELPHIA. RICHMOND AND NOK. steamship une. THROUGH FREIGHT AIR LINE TO THE SOUTH AND WEBtT EVERY SATURDAY. . At Noon, from FIRST WHARF above MARKET rtrset THROUGH RATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to all polnta in North and South Carolina via? Seaboard Air line Railroad. connecting at Fortemonth and to Lynch; bnrg, Tennessee and the Weit, via Vtarinla and Tennessee Air-I.ine and Richmond and Danville Railroad. Frelaht HANDLED BUT ONCE, and taken at LOWER RAT EB THAN ANY OTHER LINE. ' . The regniarity, safety azul cheapness of this roata eom nsend it to the public as tile most desirable medium for carrying every description of freight No charge for commission, drayaga. or any expense of transfer. 0 Steamships insure at lowest rates. Freight received DAILY. WU. P. CLYDE A CO -14 North and South Wharves. W. P. PORTER, Agent at Richmond and City Point T. F. CROWELL A CO.. Agents at Norfolk. fel-tf i mm .nrrpnT. :.«m SOOTHEBWMAIL STEAMSHIP . COMPANY’S REGULAR lB SOOTH WHARVES. The STAB OF THE UNION will tail FOB NEW OBLEANSfVIA HAVANA, —,Februaryat .8 “SIuijUNIATA will «*n FROM NEW OBLEANB, VIA y wUl l Satur ® I FBOM SAVANNAH. IQTON.N. C.i Ticks tn ,F?el2ht IfeSt! l>cl»wars aveuns. BALTIMORE, '''»ware Canal 'Union Steam .<*&onb. IWgtBeVEBBO. . iOALEXANDBIA, ihfigton, D; C-, via Canat with cob direct route for.: Delton audthe 4 regplariy < wharf above aJi^^CTS^»' , bLVD E^ «CO.. BLDKEDOB *W, Agent) et Alexandria, Vir- WWI '•> 4 ' ' ■'■ fol-tl : - tB AND CHESAPEAKE r-Boat J Company en'MUdelpMerßaltlmoro, Myandlntenneaiate point;, SISSSS All wortdoneln'tlietleit maimer, and on the lowest and most favorable terma, and warranted to give perfect satisfaction. ■ Particular attention giren to repairing. SHIPPERS’ GUIJDK. De lving! Pier Ho. 3 ' Itctot, dtUr «t 8 other Ivered promptly, tnrmlnn» free of oortstleaef >ll lei, dw., Ac. JFF, Agent. .1 ■ware aveftoa. LINE. ~Capt.HowB» apupt-Hotaei Havana awy Tolme*,martor, February 11, t * -TPHUt 1 jebset RAIL.BOAD LINES. FROH FOOT OF HARRET ITREET, ./. (UPPER FEBBV , ,;i OOMMEMOINa TUESDAY. SEPT. 17.15«7. Tr*m»wfll leave Mfonow*: ’ Bridgeton,-BeJene,VlnetanU, HlltvlUa and interma <u»^oßtaUonjatMOAJI. v anda3»P, JL ; ~ ftaWwiaKliytaltoA. 'M* taaiio nridioo k m. Fretgbi Train leaves VsmSen at' IXW M. (noon.) Freight will be receiVSd iltSicoiid Covered Whirt be low Walnut street; from 7A. U. Until 6P. M. Freight r» oelved before 9 A. M. will go forward the same day. Pralsait Delivery. Hoi xta South Delaware avenue. : WllXlAldJ. BE WELL, Superintendent %tmn ifiC dolphin to the iuterlor of Ponnsylva ni*. the Scliuylkill.: Susquehanna, Cumberland and Wydniing Valleys, the Kotth,' NortUWestand the Cana das. Winter Arrangemcnt-W-faesengor Trains, Nov. 18, 1867, leaving the Company’s Depot, Thirteenth and Cal. lowhill streets, Philadelphia, -at the folio O’lug hour*: MORNING 7.M ATM. for Beading and all intermediate Stations, and Allentown. latv«i_R«dißg at 6.30 P. M, arriving in ba»oi)d.‘H**Tirt)Ui«v r W«villo, Pine. GroV« f Tamaqua, Bimbni7iWilUftmffport£Umirs, Kocbe&ter.Niaeara Falls, Buffalo. rWUkeabarre, Pitteton* York* 1 Carlisle, Chom. tnSneoMoefa Beadingwltti tho East Penn, eylvouls Kosirdftd trams' for Allentdw*, and the 8-15 A. U. connects with the Lebanon Volley train for HarrfcXrarft Ac, rat Port Clinton )with/C*tawififl& R.E. . tadne for TOJllam«i>ort, ' Lock Haviui, ElmiraJ &c,: at BSirialmrg with NorthernCentrol, CurijberUuaj Valley, . ond-fichnylilll anaStisqiiehaEiiatraliiß.forNorthuinber-. Unde \ViUiaiD6port Y o rK,ChamberHbui«, Pinegrore, Lc, \ AFTEBNLON^EXPRESS-—Leaves Philadelphia atUW) . P.SL lor Beading,PottoviHe, llarrioburf?- &c., connect ijig oudColumbia. Byroad drains for Col : town at 6.45 A. 51., stopping at iut<irmedlatestations; ar i rived in Philadelphia at 9.06 A. 51. Betursing leaves Phi t Uaelphi*at 5s OQP.Mj arrives in Pottfltown at7.OSP.M. \ BEADING ACGOSOIODATZON —ldCaves at ; 7,60 sto^ua^. at ail way stations; arrives to Phila * turning, leaves Philadelphia at AOO P. M.; arrivcw in i Reading at AL4S P. M. ! Trainsfor Philadelphia leave HaniaburgatAlO A. M-, j and Pottevllle at S.4S A. AI« arriving in Philadelphia at LOO P. M. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg ai 2.10 P .M., i and Pottsviße at 2.45 P, M-; arriving at Philadelphia at ?6.45P. AL -::v -- • 1 ■ Harrisburg accommodation leaves Reading at 7.15 A* ]Mm and Hartieburg at 4 .10 P. Connecting at Reading iwlth -Aftcnioou Accommodation routti at &60 P. AL, : arriving In Pbiladelobla at 9.10 P. M. : M&ikct train, with a Pasaengcr cor attached, leaves iPbiladclj hia at 12.45 noon for Pottavßle and all way Bto tiocs; leaves PottsviUe at 7 A lL,for Pliiladelphia and ali Wav Stations. ■ } All the above trains run daliy, Sandays excepted. ! Sunday trains leave Pottavilie at &00 A. AL, and Phfla 'delphia at 3.15 P. 1L; leave Philadelphia for Reading at B.OOA. M..returningfromßeading.ai 4.2sP.sL CHIjiTEB VALLEY RAILHbAD.-Paesengen for Dowrdngtown and intermediate points take the 7.30 AM. and-4.00 P. M. trains from Philadelphia, returning from Downingtown at€.3o A. M. aim LOO P. M. t S EXPBE6B, FOE PITTSBURGH AND THE 'WEST.-Leaves New York at; 9 AVAL, 5.00 and aOO PaM n pasaing Reading atU A. M.* L6O and 19.10 P. M., and connect at Haoisburg with Pennsylvania; and'Northern Central Railroad Eipresa Traohs for Pittsburgh, Chicago, >ViUiamsport- Llmlra, Baltimore, Ac.-- - - - i Retumiug, Express Train leaves Harrisburg, on arrival of Pennsylvania r Exprcea from at 3 and 5.25 A. M..9.65P. SL. passing Reading at 4.49-ana 7.08 A. M and XL4O P. M., arriving at New York lo,loand 1L45 ASL, and 5.00 P.M, Bleeping Curs accompanying these trains through between Jersey City and Pittsburgh, without Mafftroin for New York leaves Harrisburg at 810 A. M. and 2.05 P. M. Mail trainforHarrisburg leaves New York at 12 Noon- - - , hCHUYLKILL VALLEY RAILROAD. —Trains leive rottavllle at 6.30, llfiO A. 51. and 7.15 P. M.,retumJng from Tamaqnaat 7.85 A. M. and 1.40 and 4.35 P. M. ! BCHTiyitelLL AND SUSQUEHANNA RAILROAD— Trains leave Auburn at 7.65 A. M. for Plnegroye and Har. rkhurg,and at 1X45 P.M. for Pluegrcrvo and Tremont; re. turnuig from Hantwanf at&ss F. Si* and from Tremont at7:4OA.M. and6^6P.M. , TlCKETB.—Through firatelaM tickets and emigrant tickete to aU the principal pointe In tho North and West and Canadas.-- Excuxilon Ttdceta from Philadelphia to Reading and Intermediated Btatlona, good for-day only, are rold by Morning Accommodation, Slarket Train, Reading and Pqtli-town Accommodation Xralnii at reduced ratw. Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at Beading and Inter ediate Btatlona by Read, big and Pottatown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. ... The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of 8. Bradford, Treasurer, Ko. 227 South Fourth street, Philadelphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, GeneralSHperintendent, Beading. Commutation Ticket,at 35 per cent discount, between any points desired, for families and firms. Mileage Tickets, good for 2.000 miles, between all points at $52 50 each, for families and firms. Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve'months, for holders only, to all points at reduced rates. Clergyman residing on the Une of the road win be for* nlehcawith cards, entitling themselves and wives to tickets at half fare.; r : Excursion Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta tions, good for Saturday. Sunday and Monday, at reduced fare, to be had only aftne Ticket Office, at Thirteenth and CaUowhiUetreet*. FREIGHT.—Goods of all descriptions forwarded to all the above points from the Company's Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 5.30 A. M., 12.45 noon, and 6 P. M., for Reading, Lebanon, Harrisburg, Pottsviller Port Clinton, and all points beyond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Post-Office for allplaces on the read and its branches at SA. SL, and for the prin cipal Stations only at SJo P. M. AND^' B a£?^W^E V^£rold^ ...» - TABLE.—Communing Mob. day. Sept 80th, 1807. mine will leave Depot, comer of Broad etreet and VfMhuigton avenue, aa follow,: Way .matt Train, at 880 A. M. .(Sundays; exempted), for Baltimore, atopplng at all regular stations. Connecting with Delaware Railroad at WUmington for Criafield and Intermediate stations. •• . • ' . • Eiprees train at 12.00 M. (Bundaya excepted) for Baltt. more and Waahingtoa. ■'■■■' , . Expteas TrataataSOP.M. (Sunday, excepted), for Bal timore and Watibingtpmetopplnrat Chester, Tourlow, Linwood. ClaymonOVUminxtomNewport, Stanton, New ark, Elkton, Northeast, Charleston, FerryviUe, Havre-de- Grace; Abanleen, Penyni»nV, Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer’s Bun. ..... . .... t Night Express at 11.00 P.m. (dally) for Baltimore and Washington. Connect, at Wilmington (Saturdays ex. cepted) with DelawaraßaUroad ldne, stopping at New Boaford. Salisbury. RWfceße. Anne, and„eounecttng.at Crtafleld withboat for Fortran .Monroe, Norfolk, Fnrtamonth and the South. - ■••• • • • ...... Passenger, for Fortran Monroe and Norfolk via Haiti. mere win takaf the llOOi M. .Train. Via Criafiold-wttl takethell.ooFM,traln. . . . . WlhnUmto»TOHin>i atojipliig at all atationajbetwaen ■ F KaTO l Hnßffih!Ma;at fSh 4.80, 400andD.M (dally) P.mT TheCSoKM. train connects with the Dclaware Eaiiroad-'for Harrtnrtoh and intermediate atatlona. The 6.001\ M. train run, to New Castle. • , .Reave Wilmington' 7,00 mid B.OOA. M., and4.oo an^&Bo 9 6SP^ H^tM-plng viUeWilmington. .Afio "topyttjgflhEaa^• InTetUMwrS wiehtugtohor Baltimore, and at Cluster to leave passengers from Washington or Batti may!rewwu^i*tyoie?offlcl;SlCTee taut stpSifcurSer CoOtlnentatHotek where also atateWoma. gmUterthata BleeptogCaraean he -aWflrtid during the day. Persona purthamngtleketaat (hfioffloe cmrhave fraggagecheckod atthelrreudOneebythetlnlonTranrferCompany. ' : , “• h.f.ii^!^x«aw>w^a>dent;, rMaWimfrt’ri > r:^PWlT»APl^P^A li .' v '. Alflli •- F}Rfiß • ww .agyffweasziyg^a^w*”*-^ nortand t&o <&^PWimly«Ma«?T|}logMit tiutfi-iina on -‘*4 wttt run w folio m : ,;::» :::;:::|Slm: ”";1.7.«r m: .. ..mas a. m. M, •aUway nuke cloea jt tor Franklin and „ id through. •ALFRED L. TYLER, . General SuMrintendenL TMUkVjßl.Kftl** ,-iaaiiBMMBP FP 11 «EW Yon.K?-TBK CAMDEN BmmtxZ&VvM WO AMBOY aniIiI'IIfLAPHLPIIIA Sss^ '• • !■•.'■■■■• Pari. !*Ja*»r* KftSiP.4 0 ® r*s^^ In * 10 y> Aeroln. . 13 35 ■£iS£;£^^“h'’i?;, aDII J WJ tiity Express Mall, 3<W Citv Express. foo AMF.iMvvJaLAmdctiandAjnboy, I litclaes, 1 325 .uIAIKSg, and Emigrant, 2d class, ■ 180 ' AtBA.M,,aC(I2P. M.,for Freehold.- sAy§todlp , A;Mi,3RndaBoP.M.,for'lTrenton. ! A* M„ 1,2,0). 4.30 and tt I*. M„ far Bordeip, At 5 end 10 A.Mi, 1, 2.3.30, 4.14) and aP, M,, for Florence. Are, Band IoTa; Mi, 1,2,330, 4.30, 6 and 11.30 P.M.for Burlington. Beverly and Polanco. ■ • At « Ana W.A.,5L..1.2,180,6 and. 11.H0 P.M.for Edge ■ Water, Riverside,'Riverton and Palmyra. ' jAMandlOA. Mai; # and 11.30 P. M. for Fish Home. SSnPifti VI* 11 ' 30 P Idoe» will leave from foot of Market street by opperderrr. . Frbm Kensington Depot; At U A. JU via Kensington and Jersey City, New York Express Line. ;.S3 Ou At 8 andi H A.JL.a.3O and 5 F. M. for Morrisville and At' 8 and* id IGA. M., 3.30 and 5 P.M.ior Schencks and Eddington. • ' ' r ■' ' ■ At 8 and 10.15 A. oC. 330,4, 5, And 6P. M,» for Cornwells, : Torteodajejf<olrneeburg, , iacony v Wlsetnomlne, Brides- B e‘ “• ior Holmeaburg and . SeLVUJEBiP iiELAWABE. RAILROAD LINES from Kensington Depot. At B,OOA. 41,, foe Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dunkirk, Elnilra.lfliacn, Oweso, Rocltcster.liinghumpton,Oswego, Syracuse, Great Bend, Monerose, WUkesbarre, Scranton, Stroudsburg. Water Gap, Ac. - . At 8.00 A. M. and 3.80 F. M. foi Belvldcre, Easton, Lara bertVillej- Flemuigton, Ac. the 8.30 F. M. Lind connects directwith'fhe train; leaving Easton for Mauch Chunk; Allentown, Bethlehem; Ac. ■_ , A (TsHp.m'. for Lambertvffio and Intermediate Stations. ' Front West Philadelphia Depot; via connecting Rail. At%BOA,;M.,Lso;e.SO and 13 P. ILNow York E xpresa Line, via Jersey City.. .... .... *3 S 3 Ttie'9.3o A. M.-andtt3oP.Jl. Lincs niu dally. All others, &t P. 30 5?. |l. jSojlsa and 12 P. M~ for Ihenton. At MO A. M.V 6.50 and IZ r.'M., forßriatoL At 12 P. M. (Night) for Morrisvllie, TunjrtOwn; Bchencke, TiiACataoU MarXet Btrebt Railway run di-' recfto Weat Philadelphia Depot. Chestnut and Walnut, within one Square. Oh Sundays, the Market Street Cara’ willnintoeonnectwiththo6J»P. Al. line. • ' Ptfty. Pound* of Baggage only allowed each Passenger. Passenger* are prohibited from thidng anything as, bag. gage buttheir wOaring apparel. All baggage over fifty pouudstobopnidfor extra. U'he Company limit their re- BPonslbiltty.for baggage to One Dollar per pound.and wifi not bo liable for any amount beyond $lOO. except .by spe dal contract. : Tickets fold and Baggage checked direct through,, to Boston, Won ester, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven, i NcWMrVAlbany, Troy, Saratoga, Utica, j-Bo:meJ3MjCTUj<3| Rocbceter, Buffalo, Niagara Thalia .and; /u additional Ticket Office la located at . No.' 838 i Chcstnutatreet, where tickSts to :N,cw York, and a& lrn , portantpolntoNorth and .East, may he procured. Fer i sons pnxchanng Ticket* at this Office, can have their, bag-. -. gage chdckedfromreridehcea or hotel to destination, by i UnlohTr*ntferßa*«aae Exi,rcs«.-. “ ■ ;, :Llnea fromNewkDtk for Philadelphia will leavo from ; foot ot Cortland street at ,7 A. ,M., andl.OO and 4.0(1 P, BL, , via JrreevOity and Camden. At ,&50 F. St via Jersey City end Kensington. At 10.00 A. M. and 13 St, and AIM and Wot Philadelphia, v , ' I'rptnFler No. 1, N. River,.at 4F, M. Expro a aodtP. SM. Emigrant via AmhOy and Camden. ;• flee, 16,1867. . , : WSt It GATZSIER, Agent Ifni i'tumtusaa-i NORTH PEftNS) LVANIA 8.1- ‘JmWmTnllTlir MIDDLE, KOUT&-Bhortest »<*»■ •" ni and niost direct line to Bethlehem. Al lcnimyn, Mauch Chunk. Hazleton, White Haven, Wilkes (barre, Mahanoy City, Mt Carmel, PUtaton,Soranton,Car- ail'the points in the Lehigh and Wyoming t bepot in Philadelphia, N. W. corner of Berks and Ataferießnati-cete. • 1 WINTER ARiIANOESIENT-NINE DAILY TRAINS, i—On ' and after MONDAY. February 3d. 1868, Pas. venger Trains leave the New Depot, corner of Berks and (American streets, dally (Sundays excepted), as follows: 1 Af 7,<i A. 51.—Morning Express tor Bethlehem and (Principal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad, con meeting at Bethlehem with, Lehigh tValley und. Lehigh (and Surquehanna Railroads for Allentown, Cotaealiqua, Blatington, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Jeancavllle, .Hazleton, White ; Haven. ' Wllkesbarre, Kings con, Fittstom Soranton, Carbondale, < and> all Points ;in ;Le (high i nd Wyoming Valleys;also, in connection .with Le tigli and-Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy City, aud'wlth atowiaa Railroad forßupert, Danville, Slilton andWU smsport. Arrive at Mauch CHunk at 1105 A. AT. :at (Wilkesbane atBP,Sl.iScranton at 4 05F. M,; at Maha noy City at 3F. M. Fassengen by this train can take the Lehigh Valley lraln, passing Bethlehem at 11.66 A. SL for Eaeton and points on New Jersey Centra) Railroad to 1 At 8.45 A. M.—Accommodation for Dovleatowri, stop ping at all intermediate Stations. Passengers for willow Drove; HartsviUe, by this train, take.ptf^e ( W JU l l d for Fort Washington, topping at intermediate Stations. . r At 1.30 P. M.— Express for Bethlehem; ' Altentown, Mauch Chunk, White Haven. WUkesbarre. Mahanoy City, C'cntralitt, Shenandoah, Ml. Carmel,' Pittston and Scranton, and ail points in Mahanoy and Wyoming Coai Regions. Ptiasengeri for Greenviue take this train, to loylea town, stopping it *ll intermediate stations. Passengers take stage at Poylestown for New Hope, and at North Wales for Bum* neytown. i At 4.15 P. for Doylestown, stopping it all intermediate stations. Passengers. for Willow grove, Htitborough and HartsviUe take stage atAbiutf \ At 5-2# P. BL-rThrough accommodation, for Bethlehem tpid all stations ohmam line of North Pennsylvania Kail road. connecting at Bethlehem with Lehigh valley Even ing Train for Easton, Allentown* MaucU Chunk. ; At d2O P. for Lansdale, stopping at 11 intermediate stations. , ' ' At 1180 P. for. Fort Washington, i TRAINS ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA, i From Bethlehem at 9.15 A. 115 and 8.40 P- M. f 8.05 P. M. Train makes direct connection with Lehigh Valley and Lehigh.and Susquehanna trains from Easton, Scranton, Wilkesbarre, Mahanoy City and Hazleton. Passengers leaving Eaefcomvia Lehigh valley Railroad at 1120 A.&L arrive m Philadelphia at 2.05 P. M. (Faesengen leaving-Wilkesbarre at 1.90 Pi Rf, connect at Bethlehem at 6.15 P. H., and arrive in Philadelphia at 8,40 P.M. From Doylestown at B.® A. M., 5.10 and 7.00 P. M. From Lansdale at 7.30 A. M. , From Fort Washington at 11.10 A. M. and 3.05 P. M. ON SUNDAYS.. Philadelphia for Bethlehem ai 9.30 A. M. Philadelphia for Doylestown at 2.00 P. M. Doyleetown for Philadelphia at 7.20 A* M. . i Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.00 P.M. Fifth and Sixth streets Passenger Can convey assen genr to and from the new Depot White Cars of Second and Third Btreotsline and Union line run within a short distance of the Depot* •Tickets must be presented at the Ticket office, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. • " • ELLIS CLARK, Agent Tickets sold and Baggage checked through to principal points at Mann's North Penn. Baggage Express Office, No, 105 Sou th Fifth street - R'l • i PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL AfißAESßaSsSllßaQroßd. —Winter Tims.—Taking -y ■’ ■um w* effect Jan. S6th,lBBB. The trains ot the. Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot, at Thirty-first and Market streets, which Is reached directly by the cars of. the Market Street Passenger Railway, tlie lafet car connecting. wuh each train, leaving Front and Market sheets thirty minutes before Its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Street Railway run within odo BQtum of toe Depot* ON SUNDAYB—The Market Street Cars leatM Front ;and .Market streets 86 minutes before thp departure of > AMfth train, , pleepliw Car Tickets can be had,, on application at Hie TfcketOmcerNotthwcst corner of Ninth add Chestnut streets;' and at the Depot. Agents of the Union TraneferCoinpany will call for and ddiver Baggage at the Depot. Orders left at No. 901 Chest nut strect/No-lltf Market street, or No. 18outhElevsnth street, will receive attention. - , ” ■ TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: „^ Mail Train... • ....atAOOA. M. FOoli Accommodation No. 1. ..at IO.OOA. M. «« no. .at 13.00 M. ccotmNoslS, 8 *4.......v.atL00,&D04t 1080P.M. yart Accommodation ..ataaop; M. ier Accommodation. .at 4W P. M. irgTrain... at 6,00 P.M. nau Express. V..... .at 8.00 P. M. a&u!i»ti .at ILI6 P,M. elpbia.Express .ratIMBP.M. modation;., ~1..,. .at IL9OP.M. MaUleayes dany, except Saturday. ■Philadelphia Express leaves daily. All. other trains The Wes tern Accommodation Train runs dally, except Bnhdsy.t For this train tickets must-be procured and baggagedSlvercd by Marketrtreet, Cincinnati ExprSe..... ...."...at 1.85 A.M. Philadelphia depress “7.10 “ PabliAccom-No. 1. ...;...... “ Fafkaburg-Train-. "am “ ErkMai1,..................... “ftBs *• FaitLlne...... “81* “ Ls&MUrterTrain., •>- 5f,.......... “1.10 P ;i M. PatUASom.‘iios! a &B.’^.'.' iat’i.’lO &MO “ d?9oi Chestnut street. > - ug-that amoent in v4tue.will be at . uidMs^enbysr^slconhaet. Superintendent, Altoona, l’a, , iOT JP^EA. leetnutetreeU,aßfoUows! • ,gfor WMt CoMter* at 1M A. &1S and U.SQS, n£, . _ : Pfillaoolplila. from Depot On E, .00 and Mi» £ tt. ujk 4J50 aa<i lister «t B.QQA- KL»;en4. leaving . will stop at B, t Qi Jiutottoa ana > mg E»V will take train 'leaving mjadcJphia M. ana iwed to take wearing apparel Company will sat, In any taw* unt exceeding 9100, onleea ipe- theeamo. . , HENRY WOOD. General Superintendent tisa vfxkkn» idvtMniL [ .T“? *“■»*«& 'r xAn i FOR GERMANTOWN.' 12 A ‘ M - K 21 :u: ’- W®* * 10 ’ IUI3A - M ‘ : '■ The 8.20 down tram, nod ffie 55?* end np trains, will not-stop on theXJermontOTni Branch, ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia—P.ls minute A. M: 2.7 andlDVP.>f. Phliadolphia-6,8 ,10 ,13 A.M.i 3, 8%, 5?.', 7,9 and Leave Chestnut HlU—7.lO fnintitaF, 8,9.40 and 11.40 A. LeavoPhiladelphia,-0.15 minutes A.M.; Sand 7P. M. Ledge CheainufHlll—7,6o minutes A. 31.; 13.40,6.4 ii and 3,25 FORCONIjHbHOCKES' AND NORRISTOWN. Leave IA, 9, H. 06, A. 61.; IM. 3,1 A. SM. ■ B.GO end MI ■ . : Pvavc Norristown- 6.40,7,^50,,9, U A., -M-; IH,‘ 3,4 Vu Cls and BMI. ' ‘ ojf SUNDAYS.’' ' Leave andV.lg P. M. . Leave rhnadclpMiv-g.YJg, ft 11.06'A, M.'; VA, % 4A, HA. AUS, 8.05 and IIJO F. M. ! ■ \ Leave Mnnayuuk_6.lo,7«,B.So,9M. MVj A, M. -.L aK. 5. 6Msnd9P.M. \ S - N ’■ . Leave, ; A^ahd^.lsb.'.’®-i Leave Jinnaynnk—7A. 11.;6and HjgJßjJfjiFfi > " her wTOrw-first and Chestnut streetlti West FhQAds,). at 7.40 A. M. and 460 P, M TT 1 ! Jtiiaya'MaSijg SM, .gt 6.4S»Sid ■ , 6,80 A. Jl.,dnd leave Oxford at 8,36 P M. ... - ASiarketTrain with PasFengerCaiftttSchedwill run On Tuesdays itad Fridays, leaving thoßiring-Bun MlhUSl delnbia. On Wednesdays and Saturdays traift leaving PhUsdelphia at 3,80Ft,M, rims (tEoUghifoOkford.-■" - * TheTraiu leaving PiiiladelohlaatSß A,M.connccta at Oxford with a daily UneofStagta for Feadi Botlocn, in Lancaster county. Rctumibavleaves, Peach Bottom to connect at Oxford with tha Aftornaon Ttaln for Fhiladel- Jr all l.l eftvlD g,?siibideipiu»,at' 46o p.,M.-njhsto RiSlllK oTm, 1 Md> ■ ? • - - , i ‘ ( pMeengersnllowed to tako wefcrfn# dppftrol oQly. ns Ba#te«ei *nd the Company will not, m any c&se, he re* epomlblefor an amount exceeding One hundred, dollars,' unless a special contract bo madefor " .|Rl»13,'(?;;(;(;:; ; . .HENRYWOOD.GenendBtip>L : AND ATLANTIC E4IL- . AttaW^Accommo^ti'on'!,".";'. , '.'.'.' > Ul'.V.‘.‘.'.’''.BtJo:FiMl Junerfon Aecottmodatlon to Atco and Inter imedtate.statiqmi.'...................- .(....B.toF.M. •iv i jEJSAVE jATIzAJITLO t i Atlantic Accommodation; dig A. M, - Mail and freight ....IiBOF. M JuncttcnAccommodationfrom'Atco!,....;..... 6.3 u A. 61. I ncJOitM 1 - P.<H;MPNDSj Agent, i BS'-mmaaigin FAST FREIGHT LINE. VIA 1 1W WT g^llir^."" m " PENNSYLVANIA . RAIL. ',????■ iV'v'™ *RQXD. to .Wilkeabacre,' ? Mahanoy ; City,' Mount* Carmel, Centralis, and all points on Lehigh, (Vauey.RaUrqadandTubfanchUs." 4 ' ■ , ( 5 , By new arrangemenhs porfected this day,-thisroad is 1 enabled to give increased despatch to merenandise eon slimed to the above mimed points. . : iJ'fs'i't*'! i Goods dSivered at the Throtigh PrelghtDmiet,, •: B.E,cor.ofFßONTandNOßLWßfteete,' . Before 6 P< M„ will reach VVOkeeharre. Ntotmt Carmel, Mahanoy City; and the other .stations in Mahanoy and Wyoming yafieyg beforell H*(- CAMDEN~AND~ ' r Y ItAILItOADr-OnaUdlafter •- . 'Monday- February, Ioth.iBiiB,.Trnias ; swill leave from the foot of Market , treet (Upper Ferry ) . for Merchahtvllle, (MoorwtaWn,' Hattfota,'TStssonvilfe; ' Haincsport. Mount Holly. Smithville, EwaUsvlueiVineen, ton rij Biraiingham and Pemberton, at 19.8 Q A-M-t B>oo and 1 - - - . . RBTURNING. i Leave Pemberton, 7.20,8.2 a A.M- and 3.20 P.M. 1 - .Mount HoUy, 7.46,8.47 A.M.,and2.44P»L ' “ Moorestown; 8.18,9.i5A.M,. and 3.12 P.M. ■The 800 P >M; liner will nnlturough to Hlghtstown; stop- Plngat ftll theintcrmediatcpiareFj, ' . . ,<,i • j . ‘ r• , U BAtLER, Snperintenilritf. •. MHMinHBK Fehruary lo,lBaB, a Bne wilWcave Hisbtetown via Tcm bertonand Mount HollyyforPhiladcinhla.atVo'olookA. arriving about 10 ATMt., Returning, will leave Fhila deiphla. front foot of Market'' street (upper feny), at 3 o’clock P. MhaniVlng at liiMitsfown about 6 P. M.' { ' ■, Tv» H. GAT2MEB, Agent FKUKUARV7,IBag .'. . . . , '.-'.(featf'.- 1 --v . IJ r '' B , VEPHRATA, . MOUNTAIN BPRINGS»”—FOR • ealctboAcßgtttfuT^SumntafV resort^knownas tha Ephrata 6lsmat^ttB^^>^ij^^^^jeom^»t^tha theiSeofthe Reading' a^ffwumfeßeSroaL wSilfin five houni' riaefrom Philadelphia; < Bva hOurafrom" Bal timore. and one hoof from Reading and Lancaster, 7 The hotetbußdinguare Urge, substantially built and.in per fect order; *6O, several cottages, Lmiard and ( bowling Bpioon.ice-house, stable*&<v,&e.' The whole property fi in perfect order and (ready for .immediate use. .. Alb the. furniture, bedsteads,, bedding,linen and table warewlli be sold with the property. For further particulara and, diagrams ofthe propert vrtnd'buildingH, apply to .1. 61. GUMMEY & SONS.fOB Walnut street; 1- - r - r-.~. i ; ; A* PUBLIC SALE.—THE FARM, CONTAINING ■SB 73% iicrea. machinery,, ice., ice., of "TheSheeti! l'»nn Oil Company oY Philadelphia,” on Dunxard Circek.'Greend county. Pa.,(subject' to a leade of 23 acres and 63 perches of tiie farm for the pnrposoof boring and drilling for oil, ore, saltor other minerals), will bo gold w itbont reserve, at the Philadelhb la Exchange, Philadel -sbla, on Tuesday, March 84th, IMS, at la o’clock, noon. ’erma cub.- $3OO tp be paid at time of Bale, and balance on deliver? of deed. -i -i M. THOMAB & 80NS, Auctioneers, jal6tmh24{ 1 189 and 141 South Fourth street. MS, WALNUT BTREET.—TOR S ALT!—AN ELEGANT ■ml brick Residence, 26 feet front, built and finished -AM-throughout in asuperlor manner, with extra eonve njencea and in perfect repair, situate on the. eenth aide of Walnut street, above Ninth, Largo stable and carriage, house, and lot 173 feet deep. J. M. GUMMEY & SONS. 668 Walnut street. - - ■ ' y MS, FOR HENT-HANDSOME MODERN RE3T ■jtS dence, Not. 1713 Race etreet. Modem four-story Hesi ■atdence.No. 326 South Fifteenth etreet Uandaome modem Residence, northwest corner of Fourth and lillt tomvoOd streets. J. M. GUMMEY & BONB, 508 Walnut street , MS, FOR SALE.—NO. 813 NORTH SEVENTH Ki» Street No. 926 Pine street • , No. 2406 and 3409 Lombard afreet ■' ‘. Hamilton etreet, West Philadelphia, ; No. 2116 Pine street. I West Arch street, aboVo Twentieth. ■ , i Flrstclssa Mansion, West Philadelphia. . jAnply to COPPUCK. A JORDAN, 433 WlUnUt street MS, FOR SALE-THE HANDSOME THREE-STORY Hja brick Residence, with attics and - doublo-back build ■tutlnca, famished with every modem convenience, tin ; Isbed throughout in the best manner, and In perfect or, dir: nitnateNo.-Ul4 Vine street Will ho sold low Ifeold within two weeks. Deeplot funning through to a street on tho mar. J, M. GUMMEY it SONS, 608 Walnut Stfeot-, )' ■ o : , U > FOR SALE—THEH ANDSOME MODERNBRICIK IM Residence, with three-itory double back buildings pXand extra- conveniences, built and finished throngh 14n the best manner, and in perfoct repair. No, 88 street ,J. M. GUMMEY A SONS, 6» NO. 8090 SPRUCE BT. FOB SALE—TERMS EASY. MAULS. BROTHER A QO+ A 2500Sout* Store** del®,2m* TO BENT. S TO BENT.-A THRBE-STORY DWELLING. 710 N. Elghtb street. AU modem improvements. Tm mediate, possession. Also, setor* Store,No.4MS. Delaware avenile. Apply toCOPPUCK A JORDAN, 433 bVSlimt street . r * . TT., •' b MARKET STREET.—FOR RENT-A .VALUABLE i Store Property, 26 fOot front with lot 160 feet deep, ‘•altukte on’Market, street- between Seventh,**na I. JTQR, RENT—FROM DECEMBER IST. A LARGE [new,Btom,on Delaware avenue, below Chestnut it i Apply to ' JOS. B.BUBSEBB AGO.. . atfi.b,b . RIB South Delaware avenue. RENT—DWELLING HOUSE, No. 480 SOUTH Third-street Apply at ’ : ‘r feB-3t» , 82* Walnut street. , TO LET—A HANDSOME STORE AND, DWEL iling,'No,4lS Nortli .Eighth ; street. Apply to ,W. street fe7-3t* TO LET'i-TUB OFFiCE ON THE FIRST FLOOR at the northeast corner of Fifth and Walnut Streets, Inquire sit No. lUgChostnut street fcS-3t T?OR RENT.—TWOADJOINING ROOMS, 8. B. COR. J? , r 0 f ohestautand Eleventb streets, second floor. J. M. GUMMEY ARONS,MB Wajput street. ; j --j, ii t/r cas rixTUBEs. TrANKIRK A • MARSHALL HAVE A CWtPLETE •V rstock of Chandeliers. Brackets, PortablO . llrqnaes. at No. 913 Arch street ' -’ (TIAIjL AND BUY YOUR OAS-FIXTURES iRtOl ■V ; map"facturers. v^NKJßK & C Abo.mfiS«hold fixtures.■ ' f- . -.'J - YrANKIRK NO, 913 AROH STREET, JS OLD, GJLT' AND -' ELECTRO" BtLVER-FLATED So. 91 AU work guaranteodito (lye Satisfaction: Ntmib'.but iiratchus wotknjep.timpßffel ' WMmugfad Gas Am, Ac.. wm!d o* the public to their'taige and elegantuaormunt of CM CbandeUera, Pendanmßnmkets, *c.Th«w also iutrodusa gas pipes into dwellings and publio buUdnigs. and attenA to extending, altering and repairing gas plpea All work warranted.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers