Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, June 18, 1868, Image 2

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    UItOIVNED,
BY CtULHERS GARYIf,'
Ships aro fosßlng at see, ; ,
And ships sail In to the windy cliffs of tho
But the ship that is dearest to me
Will never some in with the tide—
Will ripple In the bay no more,
Riding In with the tide.
Under the froth of the foam, i
the Jcasty surge and thoshuddoring gusts ot
rain, ; ■ . . ■ ,
Lies the lad who will never come home,
- His white face hid In the sand;
He neitlier.has caro cm pain
Under the Ben-weed and sand
Down by the reefs and tho shells,
far down by the channels that fafrow tho dolo
rous deep, .
Where the torn sails rise with tho swells
. And swing in the pnleo of the sea.
Ho is only Bleeping a sleep, '
Down in the sorrowful sea.
Above him the wrack and the drift,
The red-lit cast and the dark, sad glow in the
The C cnrrents that change and 6hift, '
Add the rain-blown face of the storm:
There i 6 nothing but sllenco.and rest
Under the beat of the storm..
Tangled in rigging and ropes,
And fenced by the wreck of spar and the ruin of
most, '
The purple sea-plant gropes
And wanders over mv dead:
He shall waken and rise at last
When the sea gives up its dead.
vi.
80 in the dark and dawn,
In the gloom of keels and the shadow of hoinc
bound ships,
My mariner slumbers on,
While I am awake and forlorn,
With a weary song on my lips
Out of my heart forlorn.'
[Lippincott's for July.
NEW PDBMOATIONS<
lApplncoti’s Magazine for July*
The opening number of the second volume is a
lively one, the reading in it being of a rather
lighter tone perhaps than heretofore,and exacting
no deeper attention than we can afford to pay in
summer-time. Mr. Joseph S- Silver has a sensible
paper about the Chinese in California, in which a
problem, which wo believe to be one of the grave
problems of the future, is approached with admi
rable temper and sagacity. With the quiet force
of one of the most practical and well-balanced
minds wo have among us, Mr. Silver fearlessly
takes up a subject heretofore made inaccessible
by prejudices and antipathy.
“A vast increase in the production of the pre
cious metalß," Mr. Silver considers. “ comes to
quicken commerce, and to multiply consumers
by improving their means to purchaso. This
physical improvement generates mental eleva
tion. Even-paced with this comes universal
education and improved machinery for more
thorough instruction than formerly. It is only
too evident that this mental advancement brings
disinclination for manual labor. Tho great strug
gle is how to escape work. Hero in California
this tendency is all-pervading. While all this is
going on with rapid pace, sixty thousand Chi
namen are sent by Providence, as if to meet some
exigency. Tho history of cotton shows that the
negro was sent to provide a large supply of that
aruclc, and through it to improve the general
condition by cheapening clothing, and to give to
invention, to machinery and to commerce that
vast expansion which has its beginning in cotton.
“Can it be that the Mongolian comes for a
similar purpose in respect to gold and silver ?
and that, to provide heads to devise and direct
the horde of Asiatics, the great mass of our Pnciflc
Americans the being-trained and educated ac
cordingly ? Certainly, children bom in Cali
fornia come forth with heads notably larger than
children of the some parents born on the At
lantic front; and youth ripens into manhood and
womanhood full three years earlier.
“The Chinese we have spoken of are the work
ing class. But there is a superior class of China
men, in no respect Inferior to ourselves. Thore is
• a numerous body of Chinese merchants here; they
stand among the highest for wealth, honorable
dealing,Bagaeity and Intelligence. They would,not
have been here but for the working mass ofitheir
race. In the Sandwich Islands there is a general
intermarrying of English planters with Kanaka
, women, without social derangement. There is
something in the climate of California that acts
destructively on the organism of our women.
The daughters of such high-bred Chinese mer
chants as we have seen are far more comely than
the woman ol the Sandwich Islands. Tho ways
of Providence are mysterious. May it be posslblo
that there will he in time a gradual social inter
mingling, as with the Kanakas, to give constitu
tional elements adapted to this semi-Asiatic
climate? We cannot look on this possibility with
pleasure. But as a worker for us wo can afford to
tolerate the Mongolian. Ho was good enoutrh
for the Almighty to create and to sustain, who
a!sp io father to him and to us." ’
■■" Nor is the Chinaman Incapable of a degreo of
civilizatifcn and mental enlightenment which may
one day place him as a companion beside the
Cancaslan:
“They are a religions race; and missionaries
now here say that they take kindly to the Chris
tian doctrine, saying, ‘All same ours.’ Bat sup
pose they are benighted heathen; suppose the
altars and images in their temples—so very like
what we see in tbc chapel at the Mission Dolores
indicate a worship ot images (which, however,
is a fallacy), should wo not all the more be glad
of their coming, that gives us so good an oppor
tunity to convert them?
‘ Every Chinaman reads and writes, and in
figures he is our superior. By meaus of a curious
little instrumcn t composed of rows of balls moving
on wires he reckons the value of his gold-dust, in
whatever fractions, with an accuracy and quick
ness beyond our comprehension. Very few
Americans have become skilled in the use of this
machine.
“That they arc a check npon the tendency of
Trade Unions to advance the price of labor Is no
donbt true; but miners’ wages continue at three
dollars a day in gold, and domestic servants get
twenty-five to thirty dollars a month and board,
which are the extreme rates that can bo borne.
But it Is to be cods idered that the manufactories
that are multipljing here, to the great benefit of |
the whole community, are kept np solely by the
cheap labor of China. Scarcely one could stand
against imported manufactures if forced to pay
the wages of whito labor; and many of the minor
productions of the State could not be gathered
and utilized bnt for cheap labor. We have said
that white working men are universally opposed
to Chinese importations; bnt equally unanimous
are all Droducers and manufacturers, and all
housekeepers above the laboring class, in desir
ing to keep up the supply of Chinese labor, as a
necessary means to check artificial combinations
to run np wages exorbitantly, and by wholesome
competition to lessen the cost and trouble of
housekeeping, even now hard to endure.
Some of the latest results of lunar topography
are collected tor the reader by Dr. John Bell, In
his article on tho “Mapping of the Moon.”
“More than a thousand objects,” computes Dr.
Bell, “are now known and mapped, and.together
with Ebay-four craters and larger features, have
been symbolized and recorded by a committee
of the“Britl6h Association for the Advancement
of Beiencc," in 1865. Micrometrical measures of
tho length of th e shadows of the chief moun
tains have been followed by a calculation of the
heights of many of them. From measurements
of this kind, Beer and Maedier, in their elaborate
work, Der have given a list of no less
than one thousand and ninety-five lunar*
mountains, among whbh are seen all degrees
.of elevation np to nearly twenty ; three'thousand
feet, or two hundred feet higher than Chimborazo
in .the Andos. When we remember that the bulk
of the earth is to that ol the moon as one to ono
forty-ninth; a mountain in the former orb, to be
of an altitude proportionate to that in the latter,
should rise te one million one hundred and twen
-1 Jy-sevcu thousand feet, or more than-two hun
dred and fifteen, miles above the level of the
ocepn, and more than one hundred andr seventy
milts beyond the atmosphere which surrounds
out Earth."
As a place of residence, setting aside tho ab
sence of air, Dr. 801 l does nlot commend; tho lu
nar surface .to living boings whose bodily Bhb
sUtnco may bo based, like oursj on the principle
of carbon; the lunaV thermometer ranges through'
932 deg. Fahrenheit! •- * .
“The absenco o'r such an atmospheric invest
ment, with its attendant clouds, as is given
to the Earth, exfioses the lunar surface to the di
rect and unbroken force of the sun’s rays, which
ore olbo radiated back from it into epace without
being refracted. Tho vaporous atmosphere
which acts os s warm clothing to the Earth is
wanting io the Mood. Tlio great extremes and
rapid alU'malionß ol temperature would of them
selves'render. animal Jifo impossible at least in
such organisms as ore found on tho Earth. Tho
alternation is that-of .unmitigated and burning
sunshine continued for an entire fortnight, and
an intensity of cold far exceeding that of our
arctic winter for the same'time. Wo read in
Captain Blurt’s 'narrative of his travels of explora
tion into theinterioroi Australia, that in one place
•tbo ground was almost a molton surface, and if a
match fell npon It, it immediately ignited.’
“But even this is quite tolerable when compared
with the maximum heat of the Moon, which iB
estimated by Althaus, tho German physicist, to
bo eight hundred and forty degrees of Fahrenheit;
it occurs on the twenty-second day of lunation,
or seven days after tho day of full moon. This
heat exceeds that of the fusing point of tin and
lead. Tho greatest oold is about half a day after
the first quarter; it is equivalent to ninety-two de
grees Fahrenheit below zero, or one hundred and
twenty-four degrees below tho freezing point,
which would suppose a fall of nine hundred and
thirty-two degrees in about fifteen days.” ‘
Mr. Epes Sargent has selected a few of the more
revolting and ridiculous vagaries of positivism, and
Comte, with a pick at some other modem philo
sophere, and dished them np under tho title “No
more Metaphysics." Tho article, though it
evinces only a destructive, and no constructive,
instinct, will be useful to those who have heard
of nietapbyslcs, and wish to know what remarks
the latest French critics have made on the sub
ject
“English Society in Paris” is written with
plenty of pleasant republican malice, apropos o'
the wretched English who try to keep up their
state and forlorn family pride iu the French capi
tal. It is one of Oliyo Logan’s most readable ar
ticles. - She contrives to introduce a delicious
mot of'the poor Duke of Brunswick about his
diamonds—tho conversation being dropped in
Olive’s little car while the rich Dukewas waiting
to lead the dance with an over-occupied hostess;
the latter
“Wanted to dance with tho Duke of B ,
who had asked her, and who while waiting had
been filling np the time by talking diamonds to
me—one of tho subjects, by the way, on which I
was and am still shockingly uninformed. At
length the baroness was free, and the duke, put
ting his arm about her substantial waist, mut
tered to me, as a parting bit ol wonderment: ‘I
have nothing on me now that is not buttoned
with a diamond.’ The remark wo« overheard, it
seems, for the Figaro of the following week
aired the story in its columns, without content
ing itself with printing the dnke’s initial only,
as I am doing. It was only a few weeks
alter this that the duke was mercilessly robbed of
all his jewels by his clever but wicked groom,
Henry Shaw, who, learning tho secret of the iron
ribbed walls, had easily found means to accom
plish his nefarious purpose."
Mrs. Davis’s absorbing story, “Dallas Gal- ,
braith,” developes a new and startling incident ’
in the burning of a whole oil region at night.
Of minor articles “Miss Judo’s Revenge” is a
comic poem by Cl D. Gordette; “The Logcnd of
Ball’s Lake,” by Rev. R. Wilson; "On Expression
in Painting,” by Hugh Davids; “To a Book
worm,” a poetical appeal by Edgar Fawcett.
“A Pilgrimage to the Gravo of Humboldt,” is the
reminiscence of a lady at once lively and intelli
gent, Misß Burgin. “Made Whole,” is by Maria
L. Pool. “Drowned” Is ,a poem by Chalmers
Garvie; we have already s&arkcd it for dur own,
and assigned it to tho poetical comer of the
Bui.i.ktin. “Lady Houghton’s Mistake” is a
short story by Annio Thomas, and “Old Letters”
a poem by Edward Renaud. Tho elegance of
print and paper lends an additional pleasure to
the reading of these varied articles.
Still another edition of Dickens, and this time j
a more substantial effort on the part of Appleton Ac .
Co. Instead of the “plum-pudding” pamphlet, |
we are now to have a heavy, blue-coated, serious
volume of nearly eight hundred thin-paper pages,
closely printed in fine type, and containing a
number of books arbitrarily sewn together.
Volume I is now ready, with “Pickwick,” “Bar
naby Radge" and the “Sketches” shaken into it-,
Volume II wUlcontain“Nickleby,” “Cliuzzlowit,’
and tho "American Noteß.” Six of these solid
books will embrace all the Dickens library, and
tho cost will be only ©1 76 per volume. The
books are a large duodecimo, bound iu a nove -
ultramarine cover stamped ovor with gold
medaie, and the illustrations are reproduced
(shabbily) from the original etchings of Cruik
shank and Phiz. Our copy is an attention from
Claxton, Remsen and Haffo!finger.
Tlic “European Concert.”
In the memory of man and of diplomat
never have the powers that compose what it
is agreed to call “the European concert" acted
with such unison and unanimity. Each
seems to embellish the ideas emitted by its
neighbor, and bring forth a "new argument in
their behalf. We may judge qf this fact by
the following dialogue, exclusively composed
of soliloquies:
Russia, in Velvet Tones. —Sivis pacem,
para bellum. The more we arc armed, the
less war is to be feared. Thus, conversely:
If the nations had no soldiers, thoy would be
pummeling each other within a week. Such
is the logical converse. It may seem absurd,
but it is none the less true, that I am going to
order fifty vessels more, to form twenty new
regiments, and raise my arsenals a story
higher, since they are already piled up full.
And then, if France provokes me, verbum
sat !
Prussia, in a Growl. —For others to leave |
you in peace you must seem to desire war.
The point then is to be prepared. I have
Btill some places to fortify, some hundreds of
cannon to caßt, and we must make haste to
be ready against all events.
France, in a Ciiassefot Voice. —The best
means of being quiet at home is to make
.other folks afraid of you. While they are
barricading their doors they do not think of
forcing yours, and you are nearly certain to
have peace. Ido not say that I absolutely
desire peace, but in short, it ought to appear
so. Besides, as nobody knows what I want,
and as I am perfectly ignorant of it myself, I
need not fear my secret being surprised. My
' line of policy, at present, is to be armed
stronger than all the rest. Prussia has a
caeque, I will have two casques; Austria has
c. 00,000 men under arms, I will have 1,200,-
000. What vexes me is that Russia has an
eagle with two heads while my eagle has
only one head. I mußt reflect upon that,and
after that, oh! la! la!
Austria—in a Voice Still Feeble. —
After receiving a good thrashing not more
than two years ago, and now to be obliged to
get ready to begin again! Ris a hard case!
But what’s the use of talking ? They are all
buckling on their armor, and I must do like*
wine. lam very much needing repose, but
it .seems that for this I must looklmischiev
ous.' Come, let us buy a few thousand more
muskets.
Italy, in a Discouraged Tone.—Sa
pristi! It is not amusing to have an empty
purse and still be obliged to spend money for
chassepots, breech-loading cannonß and ex
plosible cartridges! ■
Choir of Different Powers (Spain, Tur
, key, Switzerland, Denmark, Holland, Bel
gium, etc). — Si.. :vis.. .pacem.. .para. ..bel-
Tflfi PAILY EVENIKG mJLLECT---
lum.- Bayonets, biscabis, dj&nori| j'nbefile
grmß,chaBBepotB, Armstrong, Dreyseiei forflge,
cavalry hoißCß.—2< I rcncft,-i/outnalf, < tJ*
the ’ REFORMED i PaESBVrEBIiII
ciiuucfi. ;
Public attention having been very generally
called to a resolution paesed by the General
Synod of the Reformed PresbyteriatrChurch,;
at its recent meeting in Pittsburgh, Pa., sus
pending Mr. George H. Stuart from Elder
ship and membership in the Rcformed Pres
byterian Church, because “he Has in the 1
worship of God used imitations and unin
spired compositions called hymns, and has
communed with others and; in other- churches 4
in sealing Ordinances, and has declared that he
will continue to do so,” the subscribers,
Ministers and Elders, present at : the said,
meeting of Synod, as principals or alternates,
desire that it should be known that the’ fol
lowing persons voted against said resolution,;
viz: Rev. J. H. Cooper, J. P. Hill, Thos. |
Johnson, Dr. McLeod,* John McMillan, ;
Robert McMillan, Dr. Me Auley, Dr. Scott,
Dr. Sterrett, S. Wylie, Dr. T. W. J. : Wylie,
Ministers, and H. De Haven,, Benjamin Mil
ler, R. H. McMunn, Ruling Elders.
And further, they feel it to be due to their
own character, to announce . that • they do ;
most indignantly, and decidedly, condemn and
repudiate the . said action of said Synod, as
unjust in principle, unconstitutional in form,;
tin hind in the circumstances, unworthy in
the -ecclesiastical body by which it ,'yras;
passed, and undeserving of regard ’ by the j
Christian world; and further, the subscribers
as aforesaid declare that they hold Mr. Geo. :
H. Stuart in the highest esteem, as a Christian;
of eminent piety, and a philanthropist, who
has nowhere ft superior, and they do • most 1
profoundly deplore thb disgrace and detri-!
mentto the Reformed Presbyterian Church,
and to the Christian religion, which said ac
tion of said Synod haß already, produced and
will continue to produce. : ; >
Samuel Wylie, Sparta, 111. . ,
Geo. Sooxt, East Palestine, Ohio.
T. A. "Wylie, Bloomington, Ind.,
T. W. J. Wylie, Philadelphia.
J. McMillan, Allegheny, Pa.
W. Steeeett, Philadelphia. ■ <■
A. G. MoAuley, Philadelphia.
R. H. McMunn, Philadelphia.
W. Ray, Philadelphia.
R. McMillan, New Castle, Pa.
Herman De Haven, Allegheny, Pa.
William Gum, Allegheny, Pa.
B. Miller, Talley Oavey, Pa. •
J. P. Hill, Centretown, Pa.
A Card—ha the similarity of names may
lead some to suppose that the Rev. A. G.
Wylie, by whom the resolution to suspend G.
H. Stuart was presented in the General Synod
of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, is a
relative of the late Rev. Dr. Wylie, of Phila
delphia, the subscriber thinks it proper to
state that’ said Rev. A. G. Wylie isno con
nection whatever of the late Dr. Wylie,
whose nephews and sons, who were mem
bers of the same Synod, would regret that
any should suppose them capable of suggest
ing or'sustaining such action as was. taken on
this subject. T. W. J. Wylie.
Philadelphia, June 8, 18G8.
"It is proper to'state that Rev. J. N. McLeod,
D. D., spoke in favor of Mr Stuart’s suspension
both before and after the vote was taken, but
when the roll was called to record the ayes and
nocs refused to state hiß vote until all the other
votes had been given, when he announced his in
the negative. It is for himself to explain his in
consistency,as those with whom he so strangely
associated himself by this vote were as much
surprised as those whom ho so strangely deserted.
Mr. Stuart’s friends cannot regard htm as One of
their number.
SUICIDE AT THE MAKIIE BAB-
A Veteran Sorcemit Shoots Himself—
Letters' 10 fits Commandant and,
Innilly.
This morning about 2 o’clock, Mr. Win-
A. Wilker, Quartermaster Sergeant United
States Marine corps, committed suicide in
front of the officers’ quarters of the barracks,
Eighth street east, between G and I streets
south, by shooting himself through the head
with a heavy Savage revolver, large sized.
Two of the watchmen at the Navy Yard—
Messrs. Overby and Batham—in going to
their homes, found his body lying on the
porch, his feet resting on the door mat, and
his head towards the south, and the pistol
with which the deed was done lying near
his right hand, with hut one load discharged.
His body was taken into the barracks, and
t was found that the pistol must have been
placed just inside of the right corner of his
mouth, and the ball passed through and out
the top of his head,carrying some of the brains
through the crown. Subsequently the ball was
found to have lodged in the top of the portico,
and some of the blood and brains had been
spattered there also. The deceased left the bar
racks on Friday last for Baltimore on business,
and had not been seen since until he was found
dead. He was dressed in citizen’s clothes, and
his clothes and boots appeared to be very
dusty, as if he had been on a tramp for some
time.
This morning, Justice James Lynch, of the
eighth precinct,acting as Coroner, summoned
a jury of inquest, before whom the following
testimony was taken:
Lieutenant Miistead testified that he found
in "the pockets of the deceased a small
amount of money, two letters, box of car
tridges, &c. ■ ■ ■ |
The first letter is addressed to Gen. Jacob;
Zeilin, commanding Marine Corps, and is as
follows:
General:— One of the most unfortunate
men appeals'to you, the last appeal iu this,
world," in' behalf of his wife and children.
Made reckless by the designs of that ua
fprtunate oil company speculators, I find my
self now involved beyond redemption, and
unable to stand the sneers of those, who
helped me on in my ruin, and too old to go
to work or commence something hew to;
support a large family, f I rather would leaye.
this unhappy world. 0! donottake,.the
ration away from my wife, and should ,it be
possible enlist my boys. Please, GeneraVdo,
so. It is I who has sinned, not they—and;
how I have suffered. . Under a meek outside
I fear Mr. 1 has a heart of flint; if other
wise, he ought to make an effort to secure
lor my family at least a portion of the 1,500
dollars which I only invested through his re
presentations. Would you please, General, 1
to show him this note. It is the last request
of one now numbered with the dead.
Wm. A. Wii-keh.
The other letter is addressed to his wife’s
sister, “Miss Indiana Shanahan, care ,of Mrs.
Mary A. Wilker, ilB G street,. Washington,
D. o.,”;and on the inside envelope was writ
ten, the following: “Read the inside letter
yourself, better go away from home to do it.”
The letter reads:
Dear Puss:— When this comes to your
hand 1 will be .no more in this world,. I have
been of late unfortunate in everything besides
being persecuted by that detestable Major
, who has taken the bread from the
months of my family. lam -too-fficTfoi' hard
work or to commence something new, and it
is impossible tor me to stand the sneers of
those who have worked my ruin. Break the
sad hews to Mary gently, and. may the Lord
protect her ■in her hour of sorrow. Omy
dear children, to part from them iB hard in
deed. Mary will be entirely helpless; assist
her in commencing a new life. 1 have written
to -Gen. Zeilin to. do. for .her all- he] can.
You will have, of course, to sell all you can
h. Disclaimer.
RACKS.-
jILAPELFHJA, l3^
spare and takeA smaller house,' 1 ;, I cann
'or write anymore bat; to say that -the
*oay ptbtcct;Von. |® ■ ; --
~s? Your unfortunato friend,.»
V WILIJAM. A.
[lt' is but jußt to the officer alluded to, to
state that neither he nor any other officer of
the corps can stop the pay and emoluments
Ofany enlisted man unless hois so directed
by, court-martial, and it would appear that
the decfcasedj'iri ihafcing this statement, wa3
laboring under : a wrong' impression* Some
inoijtbs, since some little occurred
in'regard td‘his . intimate relations with the
contractor, acting as his agent, and doubtless
it was because oi the action then taken by
the Officer he made this statement about being
persecuted.;) - - ■ ~ --- ; _
’i; • The jury r rendered a verdict: that the de
ceased’came to his death by his own hands,
by shooting himsclf through tho head,_ while
laboring under - a temporary depression ■ of
spirits, ■ caused by an unfortunate specula
tion. s- V, 1
, The deceased.had been a sergeant ,on the
Marines for 30 years past,and at the outbreak
of the rebellionhe held a similar position, to
the one he has held here at the'Norfolk Navy
Yard, but being a.loyal mail, when many Of
the marines there stationed united with the
rebels, he made his way to this city, bringing
nothing but,his clothes,and sent for his family
subsequently. He resided on E. street, be
tween Sixth and Seventh streets, and leaves a
Wife and two children—-bright twin boys, at
12 years of age. He was about 54 ! years of
age, a native of; Pennsylvania',- and' auniem
ber of Syracusan lodge, No. 10, Knights Of
Fythiafij Naval Lodge, No. 4, oi Masons; and
of the Schnetzen Yerem,and among the many
with whom he, associated he ; was generally
esteemed.— Washington Star ., ;
An Important Discovery.
• The following highly interesting account of no
important scientific .discovery has appeared in
several of oar dolly, papers, mode much more in
tercsting and gratifying from the fact that the
discoverer Is one of ’ Phuadelphia’s sons, a young
physician who-promises to attain a'htgh position
among the scientific.men of our country: •
. “Some time since Dr. Henry B. Butcher, of
this city, started for tho interior of Mexico to
search for raro specimens in ornpthology and
geology. In the course of his researches thero
o learned that several hundred miles In the in
terior certain large meteors hod been seen-by
roving hands of Indians. Full of ardor the
doctor proceeded to prepare for his tedious and
hazardous journey, and having secured a suffi
cient escort of Mexicansandlndinns, he Btartcd
forth, determined to secure the rare curiosities,
which, from tho rude description, he was led to
believe were of tho largest class. Wo are happy
to state that the doctor was successful, boyond
his greatest expectations.
“The meteors, seven in numbor,. were discov
ered on an of the mountain, and
at first sight, seen in the distance, sparkled in the
sun like a collection of diamonds. The largest
of these heavenly visitors, it Is said, weighs ovor
twelve hundred pounds, and the smallest about
four hundred.
“These, rare strangers are now on their way to
this city, and are expected soon to arrivo. WO
understand „that-the fall of these ponderous
bodies is clearly noted In a certain astronomical
work, the evept having been noted by scientific
observers:
“We have sinco learned that Mr. E. W. Butcher,
a brother,'who accompanied the doctor in his
travels, has arrived in this city, and states that
the meteors are of the rarest quality, both for
size and brilliancy, and are expected to arrive in
New York ip a few days.”
CARPE'fINGN, AC. 1
NEW CARPETINGS,
Of the. beet French, English and American Manu
facture, embracing Moquette, Chenille, Axmin
ster, Wilton’s Velvets, Brussels, Tapestry, Three
ply Ingrains, Damask and Venetians. Also, Oil
Cloths and Mattings, every quality, great variety-
All at the lowest Cash Prices.
K. L. KNIGHT & SON,
1222 Chestnut Street.
jfp tfrp .
The Company right to advance'the
price to a rate above par at any time, and will not
fill any order* or receive any subscription on which the
money has not been actually paid at the Company’ll office
before the time of such advance.
Subscriptions will bo received in Philadelphia by
| DE HAVEN & BROTHER,
d q rausTco ss^
DEALERS & JEWELERS^
If WATCHES, JEY. ELUY &fill/Yl£tt >VA!tE. II
V. WATOHE3 and J3WELBY EEPAIBEO^F
802 Chestnut St., Phila;
Watches of the Finest Makers.
Diamond and Other- Jewelry,
Of the latent styles.
Solid Silver and Plated Ware,
Etc., Etc.
SMAUL SXUUS lOK ETEIh? ISO EEB.
A largo assortment lußt received, with a variety of
JEWELRY ! JEWELRY I
S. E. oorner Tenth and Chestnut.
NEW STORE. NEW GOODS.
WRIGGINS & CO.,
(Formerly Wriggins & Warden, Fifth and Chestnut,)
Invito attention to their New Jowclry Stoto. S. E. comer
-TENTH and CHESTNUT Streets. ■; .
w o nr© dow prepared with, oar Extensive Stock to otter
GREAT INDUCEMENTS to Buyers.
WATCHES of the most celebrated makers. JEWELRY
and SILVER WARE, alwayn tho latest designs and best
designed for.BRIDALFREBENT&
Particular attehtiin given to the Repairing *
WATCHES and JEWELRY. !
WRIGGINS & 00.,
8. E. corner Tenth and Cheitnnt Street*.
• myS iu tli a3m 1 : _
;«k WM. B. WARNE & CO.,
Wholesale Dealers in
WATCHES AND JEWELRY*
B. E. corner Seventh and Chestnut Btrceti,
. ' l ' And late of No, 35 South Third street
AMERICAN
ANTI INCRUSTATION CO.’S,
OFFICE,
No. 147 South. Fourth St,.
FHIUhELPHU.
Anti.Kcrdßtator will remove icalefrom iteam 4 ”
boilers and keop them clean, rendering tho boiler letf'
liable to explosion, and causing a great caving of fuel.
The instruments hard been in successful use during the
last two years in many of the large establishments in this j
city, and from which the moßt flattering testimonials of
their wonderful having of fuel and labor have been
received.
J parties having boilers would do well to call at the office
and examine testimonials, etc.
JOHN FABEIRA, Presidents ’
EZBA Il'BEiVfl, Secretory and Treasurer.
my!3 3mrp ‘
tvtEw TURKEY PRUNES LANDING AND FOR SALE
Jjrby J. B BUBBIEB A CO.. 108 South Delaware avenue
&■!* *§
coo-
i! fe'up the
7,,. . ■
UNION PAC
RAILROAD
Are sow finished and in operation. Sixty miles of track
have been laid this epitaft and the work along the whole
lino between tho Atlantic and JPaclflo States ia being
pushedforward’moro rapidly than ever before. More
than twenty thousand men are employed, and it is not
Impoeaiblo that tho entire track, from Omaha to Baers*;
mento, willbe finished in 1809 instead of 1670. The means
provided arc amplo, and all that cnorgy, men and money.
can do to secure the completion of this ’
GREAT NATIONAL WORK,
at the earlleet possible day, willbe done.
The UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY recelro:
1,-A Government Grant of tho right of way,
and all necessary timber and other materials found
alons the line of it. operations. '
11, _A Government Grant dr 12,800 acres of
land to the mllo, taken In altOmate .eeUoiu on each
side of its road. This is an absolute donation, and
. will be a source of largo revenue In the future. ;
111. A Government Grant of United States
Thirty-year Bonds, amounting to from *lB,OOO to
848,000permilo, according to tho, dUQcultiesto.be
surmounted on the various sections to he built. . The
Government takes a second mortgago as'security,
and it u expected that not only tho Interest, but tho
principal amount may he paid In services rendered
by the Company In transporting troops, malls, Ac.
Tho Interest is now much more than paid In this
way, besides securing a great saving in time and
money to tho Government.
IV,—A Government Grant of the right to
issue its own FIRST MOItT GAGE BONDS, to aid in
building tho road, to the siuno amount as the U. S.
Bonds, issued for the same purpose, and no more.
The GbvnmjiKNT Pehwits tho Trustees for tho
First Mortgago Bondholders to. deUver the Bonds to
the Company only as the road is completed, and after
ft has been examined by United States Commis
sioners and pronounced to bo in all respects a first,
class Railroad, laid with a heavy T rail, and com
pletely supplied with depots, stations, turnouts, car
shops, locomotives, cars, Ac.
Vo—A Capital Stocb Subscription from
the stockholders, of which over Kioht Hiliion DoL
tare havo been paid In upon tho work already done,
and which will be increased os the wonts of tho
Company require.
Vl,—Net Cash Enrnlntrs on its Way Business,
that already amount to none tiiah tux istecest
on the First Mortgage Bonds. These e timings arc no
indication-ef—the vast through traffic that must
follow the opening of the line to tbo Pacific,tult the
certainly prove that t
First Mortgage Bonds
npon each a property* costing nearly three times
their amount*
Are Secure beyond any Contingency
The Company havo abundant means In their treasury,
and make no appeal to the public to purchase their Bonos,
tvs the daily subscriptions are entirely satisfactory j hut
they submit that, for entire , security and liberal returns,
there Is certainly no better Invettment Id the market
Tbe Union Pacific Bonds arc for ShOCO each, and havo
coupons attached. They havo thirtv years to run, and
bear annual interest payable on tho first days of
January and July, at the Company's Office, In tho city of
New York, at tiro rate of six per cent In gold. Tho Prin
cipal is payable In gold at maturity. At tho present rate
of Gold these bonds pay an annual income on their cost of
NEARLY NINE PER CENT.,
And it is Believed that they may soon
be at a Premium.
Tills delightful Bummer resort will open for reception ofr
KiuetH on WEDNESDAY. JUKE 17th. Excursion, tlekote
on the Pennsylvania Railroad-can be obtained at Phila
delphia, Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.
For further information, inquire of
GEO. W. MULLJN,
WO 38 S. Third Street. | loiaini ,
Summer resorts
No. 40 S. Third Street,
Vm PAINTER & CO,,
And In New York
At the Company’fe Office. No 20 Nassau St
AND BY
John J, Cisco & Son, Bankers, 59 Wall St.
And by the Company’s advertised Agents throughout
the United States.
Remittances should bo made In drafts or othor funds
par in Now York, and tho bonds will bo sent free of
charge by return express. Psrties subscribing through
local agents will look to them for their safe deliver,
A PAMPHLET AND MAP TOR 1868 has just been pub
llshed by the Company, giving fuller Information than Is
possiblo in an advertisement, respecting the Progress of
the Work, tho Resources of the Country traversed by tho
Road, tho Means for Construction, and tho Value of tho
Bonds.which will he sent free on application to the Com
pany’s offices or to any of the advertised Agents. -
JOHN J. CISCO, Treasurer, New York.
MAY 25,1868.
SMITH, RANDOLPH
&co., ' ;
AGENTS
'■ / FOR ■
UNION PACIFIC) EAILROAJ)
FJKST MORTGAGE BONDS,
CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD
FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS.
Coupons, duo July Ist, of these bonds bought at best
‘ rates, ’
Government Securities Bought and Sola.
—Gold-furnished at meet reasonable fates,
GOLD AND GOLD COUPONS BOUGHT
... . "■ BY ■
I>. Si PETERSON & 00..
39 South Third Street.
Telegraphic Index of Quotations stationed in a con
epicuous placeln ojir oflice. ...
SX<(|CHS) BONDS, Sect, See.,
dolphin. ...
iCIAI,
EES
jcß tutha tl}
rininoiu.
THE «
CENTRAL PACIFIC
RAILROAD
hM now an important and valuable traffic on both alopea
cf the 81erT& ; Nevada Range, and wili command th»
through overland business, -WcbaTe for rale-
!IB FIRST MORTGAGE
CENT. BONDS
SIX PE
(totheiame amount'oniy-a* the O. 8.-Subsidy bonds
granted them)
Both Interest and Principal Payabie
GOLD COIN.
Pamphlets, Ac., giving a fall account of the property
pledged, furnished by
No. 40 S. Third St.,
DHALEBB O' GOTESIEXT BEpaHB, GOLD, &&.
BACKING HOUSI
JayCogke&Cp,
112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PSALAD’A.
Dealers in all Government Securities.
WE HAVE FOR SALE
A LIMITED AMOUNT OF THE CONSOLIDATED
7 Per Gent. Mortgage Bonds
OF TOE OIL CBEER ASD ALLECDEKY BIFBE
BAILBOiD CQHPASY,
At 80, and Aoorued Interest.
Thl» road, ever 100 mtlee In length, paraea through ana
control* the trade of the great Oil producing region of
Peaenrplvanla, connect, wllh Uio various leading Unco
running East and Wert, and la now earning about 13 per
cent, cn itaetock over and above all Interest and
We do not know ol any Bonds which offer euch rceurity
at eo low a rate.
BOWEN & FOX,
18 MEBCHANTS’ EXCHANGE.
fA 64.000, 62.000, AND BWW TO IN;
*x.DUU., vestln Mortgages. Apply to BEDUKJE
I‘A BCD ALL, 715 Walnut etreot, mv23-tf _
scimnußa resorts*
CRESSON SPRINGS.
MOUNTAIN HOUSJJ.
ON LINE OF PHILADELPHIA AND READING
RAILROAD AND BRANCHES,
MANSION DOUSE, MT. CARBON.
Mrs. Caroline W™d| & co,
Mre . M. L. Miller. T~a P. co.
W. F. Smith, Mahanoy City P. 0., BchuylkUl co.
WHITE HOUSE, . •
E.A. Moss, Reading Pa
Hen.y WeaveN g
Dr A fitnlth. Werueraville P. 0.. Berks coimtT. „„„ „
cold springs hotel. Lebanon county. «
Cluih. Kodearmel, Box 110, Harrlehurg P. O.i
' ■ BOYEKTOWN SEMINARY,
L.M.Room; BojcrtromP. p Oj Berkscoonty.
...
Dsvisl-^^^l^gJ^oOAtr.
Dr. James Poiinor, Froeland* Montgomery county.
my37-2m- ; . - ; y •
LI GET- HO USE COTTAGE,
a ■ ■ATriLAiY'iici cirivN JF» ■:
This well-known House has Seen Removed. Remodeled
and very much Enlarged—with commodious and cora-
LOCATe'd BETWEEN D. 8. HOTEL ANDTHE BEACH
The grounds Bitrrouodlng are nicely- enctoaednndwou
eluded. Guests for the houie will leave, the cars at U. B-
JONAH WOOTTON. Proprietor.
1 ‘C°Thle nowfcommodione, twarains-hoaßO.
to
fun view of .ho oce |n . isHA KOBEUTS^oprio^
V New Jersey.
A SUL AND tig eITYi -, N; .j.- ~,
Now being renovated and refurnMioib.will open as a first-,
class Boarding-House about the -)th HESS,
■ jelMatf ■» Proprietor,
fpmOBUOADa'O^MOTNTAINHOUSK,
will open for tiio reception of aucete on Juno inn. tor
terme, *c.. addicßi W T PEARSON, Proprietor.
Broad Top, Huntingdon connty,Pa.
H EA «°& MOUNTAIN SPRINGS, N. J.
June, with terms rcducoA Fer
route, etc., addreaa S. T. OIMAtNB,.
apgWtmiroi i. .... Proprietor.
A -1 . PEW BUMMER BOARDERS CAN .__BE: AC
commodated at a handsome Form Bouse* •beauti"-
fully situated, near county.
* ’ Address .7. B.r.,Concordvflle, Pfiu
__Reference given at this office. jeltHrt.
SUMMER BOARDING AT. A, PLEASANT REBl
dence, near Germantown. Large rooms ,and nn&
Bliade. Apply 1034 Walnut street. V . , je!36t*
a&Qvmmtm
I At PRIVATE SALE:
OiPirKiN.&.eo.
TENTH. AWNINGS. HARNESS. SADDLES, HORSE
SHEETS. FLY NETS, Ac., &e.
je!7 lm PITKIN & CO., 71 North SECOND St,
Petition of Not* Beotia.
Lohoos, June 17_-r-ln the Home of Commons on
Tuesday nighti'an" literalUog aeb»Wlo<sK i on
the petition of the people of Neva (Scotia against
■Canadian union. Mr. John Bright moved that a
commission be appointed to Inquire info tho canses o(
discontent in Nova - Scotia in conseqncnoe of the
operation of the act of confederation. He declared
an investigation into, this matter could not be other
wise than advantageous; if lt. was refused, the pcpple
■of Nova Scotia would feci that they weire the ■ victims
of a policy with which they did not and could not
sympathize. Such refusal would increase that hos
tility to Canada, estrange' them from England, and
give powerful stimulus to their sympathy with the
United States.tJ ustlce and generosity to the people of
Nora Scotia demandod thts inquiry. The Ministry
would be greatly to blame should any untoward event
j-csult from a refusal to grant this demand.
Mr. Baxter, member from. Montrose, seconded the
...motion, -■ ■ ■'• ■ - :
Mr. Addcriey, under Secretary , of. the Colonial De
partment, acknowledged that' discontent prevailed in
Nova Beotia. ,Ho took occasion to flepy the correct
ness of the statement made by Mr. Bright in his
speech on ihelbtb of May, to the effect that the pas-.
sage of .the Canadian uulon.net In Parliament hero
was hot dual, but merely preliminary to its condona
tion ,by the . acta of , tho legislatures of each
of the provinces concerned. Mr. ... Addcriey
■continued by declaring that the appoint
ment of this ( commission of inquiry would bo a
.great evil, and would be considered an Insult' oy tho
Dominion of Canada.. Ho nformod the Bouse that
steps hod been taken by ,the government to allay the
present feeling in tho North American Province*. He
said thiafeelinff wu not so. bitter na had been-repre
sented, for the sicte of tbo Canadian Parliament sit
ting at Ottawa bad since term approved' .by- Nova
Scotia, and whatever discontent still; existed .would
rapidly disappear, as the people province, had
urn reason iiow' to apprehend an Increase I 'of taxation
or expenditure.
After further djscufsion-a division- took place on
Mr.‘Bright's motion, and' resulted aa follows; For
the commission of inquiry, 87;. against It, JB3; major
ity against it, 90.
Late in the evening tho Irish Church : appointment
suspensory bill was passed too third reading.
Wapa- WASHINGTON.
, . ... Wasuisgtow, June 17.
tub BEwann ten CAPTtmiso rErrznsoN Davis.
The bill reported from the House Committee on
■Claims to-day provides that tho reward of 8100,000 of
fered for the capture of Jefferson Davis bytho Presi
dent of the United States, In his proclamation of May
3,1865, shall te paid as follows;
To James H. Wilson, of Illinois, late Major-General
of volunteers, $8,000; W Benjamin D. Pritchard, of
Michigan, late Lieutenant-Colonel of the Fourth
Michigan cavalry, $3,000; to Harvey Hamden, of Wis
consin, late Llcnten sn t-Colonel of too First Wisconsin
•cavalry, $3,000; to Joseph A. O. Yeoman, of lowa, late
Captain of the First Ohio cavalry, $3,000, and to the
following officers, non-commlraloned officers and prl
-vates,*ln proportion to the monthly pay proper to which
they were respectively entitled, in the grades which
they held at the time of said capture. [Here follow tho
names of one hundred and forty-four Officers and men
of the Fourth Michigan cavalry that were present a
the capture on' tho morning of May 10, and of sev
enty-five officers and enlisted men of the First Wis
consin cavalry, and of twenty-seven others, being tho
detachment accompanying Captain Yeoman, princi
pally of Ohio.] The bill provides that to tho heirs at
law and legal representatives of such soldiers named
therein as were killed in action at the capture, or havo
since deceased, the same proportion of claims of such
killed or deceased soldiers shall be paid. Tho sum of
$lOO,OOO is appropriated to carry the same into ef
fect. " , ■ . ■■'■-■' - ■'
Tbe following telegrnm.vraa received last night, and
read In both the Qonse of Representatives and benste
to-day:
AcbtiH, Texas, Jane 16 ISG3.
To Bon. B. -f. Wade and Schuyler Colfax. Pres
ident of the Senate and Speaker of the House of
Representatives.
I am directed by tjio Texas Convention to forward
yon the following resolutions adopted this day, duly
attested copies of which will be sent yon by mail
Tho Immediate action of Congress is earnestly re
quested by the loyal people of tale State.
II hercae, . Lawlessness and crime exist to each an
alarming extent in portions of this State.it is deemed
proper to do all in the power of this Convention to
protect life and property, and for tho suppression of
crime. Therefore be it
lie solved. That thiß Convention respectfully urge
npon the Congress of tho United States the necessity
■at authorizing the organization by this body of a
military force in the several counties of this State,
to act In conjunction with, and under the direction
of the military commander therein, for the protec
tion of tho ilvesand property of the citizens, now
every day being preyed npon by assassins and robbers
to an extent unparalleled In tho history of civilized
communities In times of peace, and which, if not
speedily arrested, must result in the destruction of
eocial order.
Resolved, 2. That if protection is not speedily pro
vided, in some form, by the national government to
the loyal end law-abiding citizens of Texas, they will
be compelled, in the exercise of the sacred right of
self-deieme, to organize for their own protection.
Resolved, 8. That this Convention havo full con
fidence in Brevet General J. J. Reynolds, Commander
of the District of Texas, and that to the extent of the
means placed at bis disposal he will give protection
and preserve peace, _
(Signed) E. J. Davis,
• President of the Convention.
KATtmurzES cmzEKB Ar.noAD.
'i’tio following ta the preamble and resolution on the
.subject of naturalized citizens, offered in the House
by Sir. Van Wyck:
Wfureas, Foreign natlona’ should not bo allowed
to raise the question whether American citizenship
was acquired by birth or adoption, the rights of citl-
ZGDShip being the same to all citizens; and
Whereas, This Bepubllchns pledged its faith to per
sons of all nations that residence, renunciation of
former allet lance and compliance with our laws makes
them citizena here, and the honor of the nation Is
pledged that each promise be redeemed, no matter
whence came the citizen, or howeyer powerful the
■nerion that denies It; and ' „ . ,
Whereas, Great Britain has, in deffance of the law
•of nations, a portion of her own history, and thero
,suits of the war of 1812, lately establisned In her
• courte the dogma “once a subject always a subject, ’
and hap, in repeated instances, refueed to recognize
the rights of American citizens, by denying them the
privilege of mixed juries, treating as subjects of her
realm many of our citizens who had periled life in
defense of this government during the war of rebel
lion, in some cases arresting and imprisoning for
words spoken in this country; therefore, be it
Resolved, That the President of the United States
Immediately demand from any foreign country who
• may have Imprisoned American citizens for words
. spoken in this country acknowledgment-ae complete
and ample as was made by this government in apology
for the arrest of Mason and Slidell, and if such
apology le denied he reports the fact to Congress for
its action. Also, that ne demands reparation in all
cases where American citizena have been treated as
- subjects of a foreign power, and that to all such per
- sons now imprisoned the rights herein claimed shall
be granted, and that he report to this House what he
has done, if anything, to secure snch rights, and re
• drese the wrongs above sot forth.
KbU CO NGIIESSk—SECOND SESSION.
01.081 OF VESTEMAY’S rBOOEEDIMa A
senate.
Mr. Williams opposed the motion to strike out the
first section of the pendine bill. He insisted that-the
flow of banking capital to the East Is largely caused
by this principle pf paying interest pn balances. It
■ was sought by the bank", not by the people. He was
• opposed also to the proposition to arbitrarily wlttt
- draw twenty millions of circulation from one Bection
■of the country and giro It to another,. . . •
Mr. Blobbill, of Vermont, contended that the bill
gives to the. city banks an advantage over the country
banks, as the former will thereby receive a large
amount of deposits upon which they will pay no lnter
•est, while the latte? will be deprived of their (profits.
Mr. Howe argued that the matter should be left
to the course of business wlthoutlnterference by legis
lation. • •
The motion to strike out was agreed to—26 to H,
as follow B : ■ .
Ivan—Blesprs. Anthony, Bucknlew, Cameron, Chand
ler. Cole, Conkliug, Cragin, Davis, Doolittle,Edmunds,
Ferry, Harlan, Hendricks, Howard, Howe, McCreery,
Morrill of Blaine, Patterson of New Hampshire. Pat
terson of Tennessee, Pomeroy, ’ Sprague, Stewart,
Trumbu.il,..Vickers, Wade nnd Yates-20. _
7?a»s— Messrs. Cattell, Fessenden,Henderson, -Mor
gan, Morrill of Vermont, Sherman, Silmner, Tipton,
Van Winkle, Willey and Wilson—ll.
Mr. Frednghuysen, who. would have voted aye, was
paired with Sir. Drake; Mr. WUliams.who would have
-voted nay. with Mr Thaver. -
Mr. Suebman then offered his substitute for the
fifth section, providing that for the better distribution
of the national bank currency an amount not exceed
ing twenty millions mav be issued to banking associa
tions organized,in tbe States and Territories,havin'* a
less banking circulation than five dollars per Inhab -
I ltaou tod that, within one jear.tke same ahall.-bfi;
| withdrawn pro rata from the banks Instates and Terr
rltoilea bavingan.smount toexcee* of their propor
tion trader the act or March B,IBM. to ascertain watch
the Comptroller of theUarrancy le to make .a state
ment showing tbe amonnt to beTottrad bjr esch of
each banks, and to mjake a requisition upon them,
commenting with those havingthe largest excess,sad
In case of failore to fnrnlsh It, It la made the duty vf
the Comptroller of the Currency to sell at auction a
ho indent amount of the bonds held to aecore the cir
culation of such banks-" :. :r; i n ;■ r t ;■: t
Tho'bllfhavlng passed through the committee,
Ur Hoiranx, of Vermont,, again offered his
amendment, voted down In the committee, to etrlke
oat section live and insert "that upon tholssneof
any such national circulation provided for In thlasec-'
tlon,' ofthe,Treasury Is hereby author
ized and to permanently withdraw an eqnHl.
amount of United States notes. ” -Rejected without a
division.
- Mr. FassETOmr moved to amend, by adding the fol
lowing: "Provided, That the circulation herein an-t
thorlzed shall bo issued only as circulation Is with-.
drawn, so that the aggregate circulation shall not at
any time exceed $300.000,000.” Agreed to. r
’ Hr. Sherman's amendment was also agreed to.
Mr. Ramsxy ’ offered an amendment, prepared, he
sold, by the comptroller of tho Corrcncy, as an addi
tional section, authorizing changes of name or loca
tion by national banas upon application to tbe Comp*
trailer of the Currency and pnbllc notice given. Re-.
jected—ll toSIL 'V;". i.’' 1 -V '
Mr. Davis offered tho following as an additional
section: . , . -- - • ■ ■ ;
“That all laws Imposing any tampon tbe.circu
latlon notes, or notes of lasne made by any bank of.
any State or Territory, or Imposing any tax in any
form upon such banks, be and the same ate hereby re
pealed.’'' ' ■ ' ' ' ' ~ ■'
' Rejected without division. .
ThehUl then passed by the following vote: “
Yeae—Mettn. JBuckalew,. Cattell, Chandler, Cole,
Craglu, Davis. Doolittle, Ferry, Harlan, Henderson,
Ho sard, McCrecry. Rye, Patterson of New Hamp
shire, Patterson of Tennesson, Pomeroy, Ramsey,Boos.
Sherman, Stewart, Sumnor. Yan; Wlnkle; Wadp, Wil
ley and Wilson—2s. ' ■ _ .
JV'ays—Messrs. Anthony, Bayard,. Cameron, Conk
llng, Edmunds, Fessenden, Hendricks. Howe, : Kor
ean, Sprague, Trumbull,. Vickers, Williams and
'v i r -•-• V, j . ! .' ••' \ • ‘i ' ■* *; ; i
ilr. Mobbili*.’ of Vermont, who would have voted
aye, was paired with Mr. Morrill, of Maine, opposed.
The bill now goes to the House. , .
Tho following la tholbill: , • s.
Til* CVBBBSar BILL. :
i Sectiob 1. Be it enacted, <tc., That every national
banking association selected as a depository of'public.
monels under tbe provisions of section'4s of thena- 1
tlonal currency act shall deposit .United States bonds
with tbe Treasurer oftheUnltedßatesna seCurlty for
such deposits, and whenever the public monejrs oe
pOsited In such asaodattoa shall exceed ninety per
centum of tbe par value of such .bonds so held by the,
Treasurer as security, it. shall be -the i duty of the
Treasurer forthwith: by- draft Of Otherwise, to reduce
tbe omountof such deposite to a sum not exceeding
ninety per centum of the bonds deposited as herein
specified. If any officer or,agent of, any, associa
tion designated as a depository of pnbllc moneys shall
pay or Offer to pay any money or other valuable conald
cration, directly or Indirectly, for tbe
purpose of obtaining or retaining deposits
of public • moneys,- . or • If any. .officer, or
agent of the government shall receive any money or
other valuable consideration, directly or todtrectly.for
making such deposit of public moneys, such officer
or agent shall be deemed gulltv ota misdemeanor,
and, upon conviction thereof, snail be pnnlahed by a
fine of not less than. $l,OOO or imprisonment for not
less than one year nor more than five years, or both,
li the discretion of the Court. - -
Bec 2. And be ft. further enacted , That section
forty-two of said act be so amended as to provide that
within ninety days from the date of the notlce eerved
upon the Comptroller of tho Cnrrency by any national
banklig association, that Its shareholders have voted
to go into liquidation, ns.provided In said eection, the
said association shall pay over to the Treasurer of the
United States tbeamonnt of Its outstanding notes Jn
lawful tuoney of the United States,'and take nb the '
bonds which said association has on deposit with the
Treasurer for the security of its circulating notes,
which bonds shall be assigned to the bank in the man-,
ner specified In the nineteenth section of said act,'
and in default of which the Comptroller of the Curren
cy shall sell said bonds to the highest bidder at public
auction, at the Stock Exchange in the City of New
York, and from the Droceeda thereof shall pay over
to tho Treasurer of the United Btates, In lawful money,
an amount equal to the outstanding circulation
of such association, -and shall pay over any
surplus remaining to the officers of the asso
ciation, snd any association which has heretofore
gone Into liquidation under tho provisions of the sco
tlon to which tils Is an amendment, shall pay over to
the Treasurer lawful money equal In amount to Its out
standing dr eolation, with In 30 dayß from tho date ofthe
passage of this act, in default of which its bonds shall
oe sold as above provided, and from that time the
outstanding notes snail be redeemed at the Treasury
of the United States, and the said association and the
shareholders thereof ahall be discharged from all 11a*
billty therefor, provided, that any association winding
npltsoffalrs for the purpose of consolidation with
another bank shall not be compelled . to pay to the
Treasurer of the United States the amount of ita out
standing circulation In lawful money, nor shall Its
bonds be sold as above provided. . „
Sac. 3 And be it further enacted. That there shall
be allowed to receivers of national banking associa
tions, appointed in accordance with the provisions of
tho national cnrrency act, In full compensation for
their services, a salary of $1,500 per annum, and In
addition thereto, a commission of two per centum
upon the first $100,000; a commission of one half of
one pel cent, uponallsums above* $lOO,OOO and not
exceeding ssto, 000, and a commission of one-quarter
of one per centum ‘ on all sums over $500,000
that may be collected, which salary and cbm
mlssion shall be paid by the Comptroller of the
Cnrrency out of any moneys realized from the
assets of the bank so in the hands of the receiver.
Provided, That the payment of one-half of the com
missions may be reserved, in the discretion of the
Comptroller, until the affaire of tho bank are finally
closed, which Eum shall then be paid to the receiver,
or In case more than one receiver has acted, it shall
be’apportioned among this several receivers by the
Comptroller of the Currency according to equity, and
all receivers appointed as aiorcsald Bhall be consid
ered officers or ageDts of the government, and shall
have the right to bring suits In the United States
courts, and may Invest the assets of the bank In their
bands In the bonds of the United States while
the affaire of the hank are In process of liquidation,
which bondsshall be deposited with the Treasurer of
the United Btates, subject to the order of the Comp
troller of the Currency; and . the receivers Bhall. also
make report to the Comptroller of all their acts and
proceedings, and the Comptroller shall bo authorized
to sell such bonds, from time to time, in order to
mahe the dividends and payments provided for in the
fiftieth section of the act to which this Is supplement
ary; and the Judge of the United StatesDistxlct Court
'or the district In which such suits are brought, shall
fix the fees or compensation to be allowed to the at
torneys for such receivers, having due reference to
the amonnt of labor performed and to the interests of
the creditors of the bank. „ „ „
Sac, 4. That to secure a better distribution of
national banking. currency there may he Issued cir
culation notes to banking associations organized In
States and Territories having a less national banking
circulation than five dollars per tobabit&nt, but the
amount of such circulation shall not exceed $20,000,-
000, and the circulation herein authorized Bhall within
one year be withdrawn pro rata from banks organized
in Btates having a circulation exceeding that provided
for by the act of March 8, 1565, entitled “An act to
amend an act entitled an act to provide a national
currency, secured by pledge of United States bonds,
and to provide for the circulation ana redemption
thereof” to ascertain .which the -Compi roller of the
Cnrrency shall make a statement, showing the amonnt
of circulation to be retired by each of such banks, and
shall make a requisition for such amount nponßuch
bank, commencing with bankß In .States haying, the
largest excess of circulation, and upon failure of auch
bank to return the amount so required within the
year aforesaid, it shall be the duty of Comptroller of
the Cnrrency to sell at public auction in New York an
amonnt of the bonds deposited by said bank as se
curity for its circulation, equal to the circulation to
be withdrawn from such bank, and with tbe proceeds
to redeem so many of the notes of such hank as they
come Into the Treasury as will equal the amount re
quired from It. : ... .
Provided, That the circulation herein authorized
Bhall be issued only os circulation la withdrawn, so
that the aggregate of circulation shall noS at any time
exceed three hundred millions of dollars. ,
Mr Howaud tried to call up the bill relative to the
Union Pacific Railroad Company, but a motion to go
Into Executive session prevailed. ,
In tbe meantime the hill for the removal : of politi
cal disabilities came over from the House, with the
request for a committee of conference on the amend
ments, which waß ordered. “ b
After a short .Executive session, the Senate ad
journed.
Honse of Keprescntatlves.
The House proceeded to the consideration, as a
special order, ofthe bni'reported by Mr. Eliot, from
the Committee on Commerce, to promote American
commerce.: ,
Mr. Eliot addressed the Honse on the national im
poitance of the bill, which provides as follows:
That sectionjfonr of; an act entitled an act amend
atory of certain acts imposing duties upon foreign
importations,. approved March 8, 1865,. and section
fifteen of an act entitled an act Increasing tempor
arily the duties on imports, and for other purposes,
approved July 14,1863, be and the same are hereby
amended, so that the tonnage tax thereto Imposed
shall be collected only: from vessels arriving from
0 a drawback equal to the duties paid,
be allowed to shipbuilders on lumber, cordage, Iron,
copper, chains and anchors actually Used and em
ployed by them to the .building and rigging of any
ship, steamer or other vessel built within the limit of
thc United States. The amoimt of drawbackta all
cases to be ascertained and pald’to such manner tod
under each regulations' as may be preacribed.by the
Secretary of the Treasury; provided, that five per
centum on the amount of all .drawback _soaUoweii
shall be retained for the use'of the United States, by
the collectors paying such drawbacks respectively.
Sic 3. That the fifth section of an actcntulcd “An
ner rnncernii'E tbe registering and , recording of ships
undyes^ek!”approved December 31, 1702, is hereby
re fec.-'4' That hereafter, boats cr other vessels of the
THE DAILY EVENING BPLLETIN- : FHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1868.
.United State* of lew lhsnlwenty, tom*, tardea (!uUr>
not bseino*lM,WaAqeertlllc*te«tsnq{l>tftr«li*U;fte]
'required of theni:_Biaclif)6aW dr.vessdn sbMJ. barlT
- censed, ahd *hali.ln every othet rMpetit?
itbe roles and regulation*andpenalties now In force
t relating to registered and enrolled vessels. -
i Brc. 8. That the provtalons of the act entitled “An
act authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to lssae
(registers to vessels In certain cases," approved De
icembcrS3, 1£52, are herebyextended to vessels within
the United Btates; provided, that the ,samo were-not
transferred daring ini rebellion to foreign owbeM.;
Mr, O’fißiLL suggested that the bill, In an Indirect
manner, took tbe taxes oft Imported materials used In
tbe construction Of ( ships, .Ahai thereby, operated
against tbe Interests, Of domestic producers, which
wonld be required to be'equalized by allowing a
(bounty for the nsqof domestic material. ■
5 ' Mr. Eliot declined to argue that point aa ontslde of
tbe range of the bill. 7: Ho read, a ( letter from Donald
McKay,, the , Boston shipbuilder, stating,that _he.cn
deavored to get up a convention Of shipbuilder* td.pe
tltton Congress;, but that ho found that the gentlemen
whom ho bad addressed had all left the business.and
had not built a ship, since the commencement of the
war. The passage of the bill could not, affect toe
Treasury, as at present no 'revenue was derived from
shipbuilding materials, there being no ships.now butit.
In tbe United States.: Be did not claim that thtsblll
would re-pstabUsh tbc old condition of things, bat ho
claimed that, until the country retumod to specie pay
ments, nntll prices came down and laborbcoune'more
, regulated, something like this was absolutely meedfn 1
to rescue from destruction the interests of American
commerce. » . t •
Hr. Mobbell moved to amend the eecond section by
providing that in order that, American lumber, cor
dage, Iron,copper, chains and anchors, might be used
In the construction of American; vessels, there should
be allowed n bounty equal to the drawbackof duty on
these materials actuaUv need in construction. _ _
' Mr. Buor opposed that amendment,. claiming
that the bill had steered dear Of everything like
bounties. _ ....
: Mr. Bbooks addressed, the House, in .advocacy of the
(Mil. The three great Interests of a conn try were com
merce, agriculture and manufacture. Although Ameri
can agriculture and manufactures were now In a high
(degree of prosperity, there was not now crossing the
,’occan a single steamer under the American flag, ex
cepting a small steamer running occasionally from the
port of New York, and an.. American: line running
from California to Japan and China. This line was .
(created and protected solely by the generosity of Con
i grew, without Which it would hot be able to maintain;
Itself against the competition if France and England.
It was a mortifying spectacle to see in thpportof New
'York the flags of France, of'England, and of tbe
'northern countries of Europe floating over ships that
carried American trade, and, commerce and pasaen-,
,'geiß.-> ( ; l . /■.- ■' , ■ '< 7 '/■ 7 '
Mr. Eudbidob inquired why It was that the English
| were able to build ships so much cheaper .than Amerir
cans could.
r Mr. Bbooks remarked that the gentleman, from
'Wisconsinwas roguish and- mischievousmpatting
that question. Tt was for the purpose of Involving
■ him In a tariff and free trade argument, but ho de
clined to go into that question: ... . ,: . -i ii; (
Mr. Hakdino inquired how the line between Cali
fornia and China was able to maintain lteeltf * ~ n
■ Mr. Bbookb’ replied that that lined! steamships—
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company—had a subsidy
of 8500.000 a year for ten yean for carrying the mails,
and that in addition our navigation laws prevent for
eign vessels entering into bur coastwise trade. -
Mr. Bldiudge inquired whether it would not be a
good apecniatlon for Americana who want ships to go .
to England to buy them?
Mr. Bhooks replied that: thq ;iaws of the country
would not allow that to hp done. .
1 Mr. Blaine added that then in a ' few years there
would not be a sailor ora ship builder in tho country.
Mr. Eldbiiiqe suggested that plenty ol Bailors (mold
be got by giving bounties. »' ■ -W
Mr. B kooks appealed to the House to.reflect, upon
iho absolute necessity of maintaining American com-’
iheroe on the ocean: He spoke not for or againstcop
per or iron, not for tariff or antl-tariK, but he. spoke
ior the predominating interest of the country, the pro
tectlon of the flag. Unless something , was done to
protect the commerce and shipping Interests. of the
coontry the American flag won Id soon cease to -be
seen on the-ocean except in the coastwise trade, and
between California and China: _
Mr. Allison, as a means of testing the sense of the
noose, moved to lay the bill on the table .
Sir. Pike offered to amend tbo bill by striking cop
per out ol the second section. .... O
Mr. Allison remarked that he would Btill move to
lav It on the table, ‘
*The question was taken, and resulted—yeas, -82;
nays,’4s, aq follows:
Peas-Messrs. Adams, Allison, Ashley of Nevada,
Ashley of Ohio, Bailey, Baker, Beaman, Beatty,
Beck, Benjamin, Bingham, Blair, Broomall, Buck
land, Cake, Cary, Clarke, Cobb, Cobnm, Cook, Coy-ode,
Cullom, Delano, Drlggs, Eldridge, Farnsworth, Ferris,
Ferry, Fields, Garfield, Getz, Golladay, Griswold,
Grover, Halsey, Harding, Hawkins, Higby, Hill,
Hooper, Hnbbard, Ingersoll, Jones, Kelsey, Kerr,
Ketcham, Kitchec, Knott,Koontz, Logan,- Loughrldge,
Maynard, McCarthy, McCormickJMercur, Miller,
Moore, Mullins, Mungen, Myers, Niblack, O’Neill,
Poleley, Pomeroy, Baum, Schenck, Scofield,
shanks, Shellabarger, Taffe. Trimble of Kentucky,
Trowbridge, Upson. Van Horn of Missouri. Van
Trump, Washburn of, Illinois, Washburn of Indiana,
Welker, Williams of Pennsylvania. Williams of Indi
ana, Wilson ol lowa, and Wilson Ohio—B2.
■Maps—Messrs. Archer, Baldwin, Banks, Barnes,
Benton, Blaine, Boutwell, Brooks, Butler, Churchill,
Cornell, Dawes, Dixon. Eggleston, Ela, Eliot, Haight;
Holcbblsß, Hnlbnrd, Humphrey, Jenckes, Johnson;
-ludd, Lynch, Mqrrell. Nicholson, Peters, Pike, Price,
Prnyn. Kobertsofl. Eobinson. Sawyer, Smith, Spald
ing, Starkweather, Stevenß of New Hampshire,
Stewart, Btone. Taber, Taylor. Twlchell, Van Aemam,
Washburn of Wisconsin and Washburn of Mussachu
te' te--45.
So the bill was laid on the table.
POLITICAL DISABHJTIB3._
On motion ol Mr. Fabnswobth, the Senate amend
ments to the bill to relieve certain citizens of North
Carolina from political disabilities, were non-con
enrred in. and a committee of conference asked.
Mr. Bing ham gave notice that he woald to-morrow,
after the reading of the journal, call up the motion to
reconsider the vote on the twenty per cent, resolu
lion. , .. ■
The Bouse then, at 5 o olock, adionrned.
nlletiii.
CARL ENAS-Schr Mary E Lobg. Hardy—s 22 hbd*sB
tea molaseea E C Knight * Co.
r\TGTUT— Brig Natrona. Robertson—44o tons kryolite
P NC. —Schr Sea Bird, Robinson—9s,ooo
bunch cypress ebingles 15,000 do cedar shingles Nbrcross &
GA.—Schr Jeeso L Leach, Stafford-174 M
yellow pine lumber E A Souder& Co.
JIOVfcffLENTS OF OCfiAKI STEAffIJEH^.
TO ARRIVE.
sziira from • fob Difi
Siberia Liverpool. .N York via Boston.. May 36
United Kingdom Glasgow. .New York May S 7
Columbia Glasgow. .New York gay 29
China Liverpool. .New York May 30
Atalanta London. .New York May 30
Hub .Liverpool..NewYork June 4
Berlin Southampton. .Baltimore June 4
Caledonia Glasgow. .New York. June 6
City of Wafihin*ton.Liv6rpool..N Y via Halifax... June 5
Auetral&eian Liverpool; JNew York June 6
Napoleon ill Brest.. New York Juno 6
Nebraska Liverpool. Juno 9
Palmyra Liverpool..NewYork. Juno 9
Union Southampton. .Now Yoik June 9
Citv of Paris Liverpool.. New York. .....JunelO
Peruvian Liverpool. .Quebec June 11
Russia L TO r BEPART V YOTk JUne
• oulelana. New .Liverpool June 20
Columbia New York. ,Glaa«>w: Juno 20
Juniata Philadelphia. .New Orleans June 2u
City of Antwerp.. New York.. Liverpool. 'i ailo S l !
Guiding Star New i ork. .Asuinwall—..... .Juno 2o
MieaifisfrpL.,..!.... New York..RJo Janeiro, &c...June23
Allemania New York. .Hamburg Juno 23
China....... New York. .Liverpool .Junr24
Colorado New York. .Liverpool 4 uno Se
Pioneer .Philadelphia. .Wilminjgton......... June 2&
Wyoming... .-.^.Philadelphia.. Savannah Juno 27
Stars and Stripes... -Bhitad’a. .Havana Jnno 3
BOARD OB' TRADH*.
JAMES T. YOUNG, )
COATES WALTON,> MoNTimv Committke.
THOMAS POTTER,) ,
MARINE BUUxJBTJLth.
FORT OF PHILADELPHIA— Jung 13-
tpii Rrazs. 4 851 8m» Bets. 7i251 Hioa Wavzb. 13 44
ARRIVED YESTERDAY. , . , .
Brig Natrona (Br), Robertsop. S 3 days from Ivigtut,
with kryolite to Penns Salt Co—vessel to J E Bazley *
Co Tbe N has on board Captain Doane and throe of tne
crow of bark Flying Scud, which was lost, as before re-
P °Bchr'Mary E Long, Hardy. 9 days from Cardenas, with
molasses to E G Knight A Co. „ _ _ . -
Schr JL Leach; Stafford, 13 dave from St Mary’s, Ga.
with vellow pine lumber to E A Souder s Co?
Schr. Chief. TownHend,! day from Indian River* with
lumber to Collins & Co. ._ , ...
Schr Ocean Bird. Marsh, 4 daya from Laurel, DeL with
lumber to Collins & Co. , _ _•
Schr John T Long. Tunnell* 5 daya from Indian River,
with lumber to Collins St Co. • . _ , ‘ _
Schr Clayton & Liowber, Jackson.l day, from Smyrna,
DeL with grain to Jaa L Bewley & Co. ' _ ...
Schr Eldorado, Inßley, 1 day from Laurel, DeL with
lumber to Collins 6 Co. • ...
Srfir S P Meleon. Ford, 4 daya from Snow hill, Md. with
lumber to Collins A Co. , - •.
SehxJHEreneh^Bmgess^wYork^
Thomaa Harward, Stricklapd, St John, NB. Peter
Providence, DS Stetson <fc Co.
Steamer E Fraiiklin. Pierson, Baltimore, A Grov<», Jr.-
Bark Niobe, Weaton, San Francisco. Merchant «Co.
i Schr B C Scribner. Burgeea, Boston. D S Stetson A Co.
Schr M H Weatcott, Gandy* Lynn*Van Duaen A Bro.
MEMORANDA. t ..
Ship Taviatock, Tate, aailedfrom Shanghae 19th April
*°Shi£Frank Flint, Robinson, from New York 20th Feb.
for Manzanillo,/Mexico, .wafl epoken 2d April, lat 90,
- steamer Prometheus. Harris, hence at .Charleston yes-
Colo* • cleared at -New York yes
terday for Galveeton/ .I __ . 4
Steamer-Brnnette; Howe*, cleared at New Yorkyester
day for thispoit. ..
Bark Devonabiie, Drinkwater, hence at PorUana ioUi
Wortinger, at Baltimore* letbtrinfit. from
M Bwk Z SlWDodge; Hooper, from Trinidad, Cuba, for
tbb pot t, which put into Key Weet in distress, had ais
charged cargo loin imt and wae taking out b&Uaat that
df«v t preparatory to undergoing repairs. ■ _ _
Bark Rocket Dill, cleared at Now York veaterday for
Hons Kong.
elearedathlYorkyeetorday.
*-*°Bi*g J MeAni.Wcibgtießee atPortland 16th taat J '-'■ -‘
Umtber. hcsoaat Key Wwt Jld huW
•-• Bohr MaryMltae* Bardie. sailed from Key.Yfaet Mh
B&rltaret Crocker, hence at Cardenu 6U> tart, and
tailed for Sierra Marena. v , . ,i--v -v-\.
■ Bchr Unexpected (Br>. Nove, called from Cardonaa 6th
bet/foy* port north of H.ttera* f • .■ ...
1 Bchr Laura Bridgman sailed from Charleston yesterday
FBchf^fihfPote.Abbot,hence at Charlestonrerterday.
: Bchnt'eorgla, Brier, from* Bangor for this port, sailed’
fffty ‘Hfllfiit fflh l'
1 Bchr AugnrtueJ Pabena (new), Bragg, called from New-'
hpryport ltth Inst for tbi* port. :
t Benia A Wooley and C W May, May, hence at Glouces
ler 16th tnit : 1 ••
< gchra Brandywine, Irelan; M P Smith, Grace: Volanto,
Hodgdon* ud John Biraman, Weaver, hence at Salem
IStbiDlt.’ j.
) Bchr Clara, Mulford, sailed from Salem ISth Instant
for.thic port. . . .. . r_
; BchrsW C Atwater, Baekett and- George F. Brown.
Bcdney. hence at New London JSth instant, the tatter for
{Pawtucket. ’
* Bchr? U N MlU6r. Miller: C W Locke, Huntlev ;Ladf
EllCOe Cotbod ; J Kienxle. Steelman r D Gifford, Jprauld:
Amos Edwards. Somers; W G Dearborn, bcuU; L « M
Eeed, Steelman; S 3 mckmore* Barter; 8 L Simmona,
GandrvandEphraim * Aniia, Grecn, henco at Boston
f 6 fechw Ocean WaveT Baker, and M M Lindseyi Thalfcher,'
hchceatFawtdcket 16th Inst, . ... . ■ ...
* Bchr V9m Loper, JdeUUntcck, hence at Provide nee 16th.
Isits&t , ■ ,
. Bchr Vernal, Perrr, tailed from Providence 15th Inat.
for tbia port or Bangor. . . r .
, Bchr EG Irvine; Atkina, Cleared at Calaia 11th Inatant
for »W» port.
> Schr J Trtunaxr, Gibbs, hence at New* Bedford 15th Inst,
i :i } MARINE MISCELLANY. ' '
< Captain Hawkins, of the ecbr Wapella. at Savannah'
on Friday* reports that off Cbarle*ton,.on Tuesday night,
9th tout experienced a tremendous-northeast sale, which
lasted sixteen boors; bad boat (which was on deck)
stove to pieces; hod defcks washed, but sustained no other
damage. - •» -
: Schooner Watchful, of Philadelphia, 138 tons, Hew
measurement, built at Clayton. N York, In 1863, now in
New York, has been purchased by Captain W H Jack
eon and others, of Providence, on private terms.,, She
will hereajter hall from Providenco. ..
■_„ < ' NOTICE TO MAKINBBS. . .• '
■ The ughtbonre on Castle Island, in Cmoked Island Pas*
sage, ivas U| hted on the let inst for the first time, • ■
■ .The Coast Beacon Lighthouse at Sandy Hock has been
'destroyed by fire, A temporary light will be erected from
the old coast beacon as eoon as possible. '
■: GBOOBBIBR, MQBOBS, *«>•
TO FAMILIES - ■
Residiog in the Rural Districts,
! We are prepared, as heretofore, to supply families at
their country residences with every description of f .
FINE GROCERIES, TEAB, &o, &o,
i ALBERT a ROBERTS,
Corner EleventH and Vine Streets
ÜBBANA WINE COMPANY.
HAMMONDBPORT (NEW • YORK) CELEBRATED
-IMPERIAL CHAMPAGNE,
X pure and delicious Wine, unsurpassed in quality and
price. For sale by the Agent, -
JAMES B. WEBB,
.. Ja26 B.E. comer WALNUT and EIGHTH Streets,
RICHARD W. FAJRT HOME,
Dealer >n Tea* and Coffee*,
BTo. 205 NORTH SlflTH STREET.
All goods guaranteed pure, of the best quality, and sold
at moderate prices. .
, . . my7-th stu 6tn
IiTRESH PEACHES FOE PIES, IN Sib; CANS AT,»
r cents per can. Green Com, Tomatoa, Peas, alst
French Peas and Mushrooms, in store and for sale al
COUSTVB East End Grocery. No. 118 South Second
itreet. -
O AMS. DRIED BEEF AND TONGUES, —JOHN
r I steward’s justly celebrated Hams and Dried Beef,
and Beef Tongues: also the best brands of Cincinnati
Hama For sale by M- F. &PILLIN, N. W. comer Arch
and Eighthßtreets,. ’ ’
SALAD OEU-100 BASKETS OP LATOUR’B SALAD
Oil of the latest importation. For sale by M. F.
SPILUN, N. W. comer Arch and Eighth streets.
rpABLE CLARET.—2OO CASES OF SUPERIORTABISE
i Claret, warranted to give satisfaction. For sale bj
&L P. SPHXTN.N. W. comer Arch and Eighth streets.
Davis* celebrated diamond brand uin
cinnatl Ham, first consimment of the season, just ra
- ccived and for sale at COUSTY*S East End Grocery: No
lla South Second Street -
NEW BONELESS MACKEREL YARMOUTB
Bloaters. Bnlced Salmon, Mesa and No. IMackorel
for sale at COUBTY'S East Sod Grocery, No. 118 South
Second Street. . . .
OHOICE OLIVE OIL. 100 doz. OF SUPERIOR QUALI
Vy ty of Sweet Oil of own Importation, Juat receives
and for sale at COUBTY’S Boat End Grocery. No. 11l
Bonth Second afreet.
CTIEBT INDIA HONEY AND OLD FASHIONED
W Bn par House Molasses by the gallon, at GOUSTY’B
East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second afreet. .
NEW YORK PLUMB. PITTED CHERRIES. VTR
gtala Pared Peaches,Dried Blackberries, instore and
for saleot COCSTY’B East End Grocery. No.US South
Second Btreet
■UCMHIEBX, IBOH. All.
M ERRICK *SONS^ akk ForaDßY>
430 WABULNLWriN^Avmui^Pnitadelphia,
STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure, Horizontal,
Vertical, Ream. Oscillating, Blast and Cornish Pump
ilO&EßS—Cylinder, Flue, Tubular, Ac.
STEAM HAMMERS—Nasmyth and Davy styles, and oi
all sizes . „ . _. .
v;ASTIN G3—Loam, Dry and Green SimiLßraes, Ac.
ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Slate or Iron.
TANKB—Of Cast or Wrought Iron, for refineries, water,
GAlk MACHINERY—Such as Retorts, Bench Cartings,
Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar.
rows. Valves. Govern-rs. Ac.
dUGAR MACHINERY—Such as Vacuum Pans and
Pumps, Defecators. Bono Black Filters, Burners, Wash
ers tmd Elevators; Bag Filters, Sugar and Bone Black
Cars, &c.
Sole manufacturers oi the following BPBcifdtip«: .
In Philadelphia and vicinity, of William Wright’s Patenl
Variable Cutoff Steam Engine. # .
(n Pennsylvania, of Shaw & Justice’s Patent Dead-Stroke
Power Hammer.
In tbe United States, of Weston’s Patent Self-centering
and Belf-balancing Centrifugal Sugar-draining Machina,
Glass & Bartol'a improvemmit on Asp inwall & woouey*i
CentrifugaL
Bartol’s Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid.
Strohan’s Drill Grinding Rest.. • , . . n
Contractors for the design, erection, and fitting up of B*
fineries for working Sugar or Molaeaea.
nOPPER AND YELLOW METAL SHEATHING,
L/ Brazier’s Copper Nails, Bolte and Ingot Copper, con
on hand and for sale by HENRY WXNSOR A
No. 833 Bouth Wharves.
VTO. 1 GLENGABNOCK SCOTCH PIG IRON, FOB
UN gale in lota to suit purchased, from store and to ar
*peter Bright a sons.
mvls.tft H 5 Walnut street.
MEDICAL,
OPAL DENTALLINA.—A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOf
cleaning the Teeth, destroying animslcula which in
feat them* giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feellni
of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the mouth. Tt msi
bo used daily, ana will be found to strengthen weak ana
bleeding gums, while the aroma and de tersivenesi wu)
recommend it to every one. Being composed with tw
a&siitance of the Dentist, Physicians ana Microscoplit, IJ
Is confidently offered-as a reliable substitute ~f or the tuz*
certain washes formerly in vogue. .
Eminent Dentists; acquainted with the constituents «
the Dentallina, advocate its use; it contains nothing 1 1
ureveut »t« M^o^^
Broad and Bumc6 vtraott -
F«r arte by Druggirt* generally, and
Fred. Brown, Stackhouae.
Haasard A Co„ Robert C. Davia,
C. R. Keeny, Geo. C.Bowor.
Isaac H. Kay, ChM. Shiyera
C.H. Needle*. g-M. McCoilin.
T. J. Husband, 8. C. Bunting, ,
Ambrose Smith, Chaa.H. Eberle,
Edward Parriah, James N. Mark*.
Wn B. E. Bringhnrrt & Co
' Jamea L. Blspham, Dyott«>Lon „
Hugh OB A Combe. H- C. Btaga Bona.
Henry A, Bower. Wyeth A Bro.
WIFE. , -
No. 609 Catharine afreet. Advice free. jelS-Ht*
ISABELLA MARIANNO, M. D.. 537 N. TWELFTH
ABtreet. Commltatjona free. my9-ly
DRUGS.
PURE PAINTS.—WE OFFER TO THE TRADE PURE
White Lead, Zinc White and Colored Paints of our
Bui?purehaaereL 1 r’OBE a lta alon
in Patata and Vamißhea, N.E. comer Fourth and Rare
rtreete. n037-tf
TkOHERT SHOEMAKER A CO.. WHOLESALE
li Druggißts, N. E. corner Fourth and Race atreeta
invite the attention of the Trade to their largo atock of
Fine D ruga and Chemical, Eaaenttal OUa, Sponges,
Corks* Ac. - - n027-tf
IJHDBARB ROOT, OF RECENT IMPORTATION.
KuJot Buperior quality: White Gum Arabic, East
India Castor OIL White and Mottled Castile Soan. Olive
Oil, of various brands. For' sale, by. ROBERT SHOE
m aker A CO.. . Druggist*, Northeaat comer of Fourth
and Raceatreofa. -■ "V: --.-. noaT-tt,. .
TvBUGGISTS' SUNDREEB.—GRADUATES, MORTAR
U -pillTßai.-Conibk Bruahea, Mirrors, Tweezensv-Pufl
Boxes, Horn Scoops, SnrglMl Ipstaunonta, Ttubsob, Hard
and Soft Rubber Goods, yial Caaoa, Gian and Meta)
Syringe* A*. aB at
aps-tf . • S 3 South Eighth street
(DHE VERITABLE BAD DE COLOGNE-JEAN
1 MARIA FARINA.—Tho tnoetf aeolnaUDg of all toUot
water* in feaUvlty or eleknea* and that wgchhM glvra
: name and celebrity to this exquisite Mid refreshing par
. fume. Single bottle* 76 tar two dollare.
j ap27-U ma CUaetaut atwot.
. AUCTION HALBIi
M.
BAUEB OP BTOCKB iilD REAL EBTATK__
salsa at the H>£sdelphU Exchange EVKRI
TUEBDAY. at IS fttloek. . ’ .. .
tar Handbills of each nroperty.taued keparateH.lz
addition to which wo' publish, on the Saturday prevlotu
to each tele, one thousand catalogues In vampmat tarn
are alto 'idv&tlsea'iiii'tt*'fcnotftbi
newspapers: Moßnr AiaraiOAß, Paras, Lroq«B.L«QAx
Ihtxtjjokhoxe, InQuruzit. Aox, . EvrNlHO Bgiura,
Evkhiko TtueoEAPii, GebujCk DknocßAT. AO. • •_• •
BT" Fnrnitaro Bale# at the Aneticn Store- EVERY
THURSDAY. ■-'■■■ i . •• .
. VT Sale*, at residence* receive especUl attention. ,
y REAL ESTATE SALE JUNE 2V. ■ !..
Peremptory Bale—by Order of Helm and Orphan*’
Couit—Estate, of Nathans, Minois, Isabella Coleman,
under V,ill of Isaiah Nathans, dec'd.—THREESTORY,
BRICK BTOKE and DWELLING. No. 423 Norm Second
street. • ♦ .
• game Eftate-THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLING*
No, l4BMargaretta Bt
Bazoo Jfcetate—'lllßEE BTOP.Y BRICK BASE HOUSE,
No. 160 Margaret! a it. ■ .
Same Estate—TWO BTORY FRAME STORE No. 134
CftllOWhlU at. • ■
"BRICK HOTEL;
known flßthe,'‘EloYcatti Ward Hoaße.” No. 126 Callow*
Same Eatator-FOUR-STORY BRICK DWELLING.
No. 347 North Front st, extending through to Water at,
, Orphans' Court Sale— Egtato 01 Jo«oph Conrad, dec’d
LOT,bprucott., west of Fifty-second
' Orphans’ Court Sale—Estate of IX 11. . Brown, d'c’d.—
3)ii-BTOKY FRAME STOKE and DWELLING and
IIAKGE LOT, No. 1453 Hancock fit,cornerot hthl, with
5 Three afory Brick Dwellings adjoining. on Rlhl ah . ,
Orphans’ Court Sale—Eatato of alary Lewlellyn, dcc’d.
—TWO-STORY BRICK UWRLLINO, Lombard eh. Weef
i°VameEstote—DWELLlNG, Shlppen at, eaat of : Ninth’
Orpbana’ Court > ale—Estate of Georg. aaher. deo’d.—
LARGE arid VALUABLE CLaY la)T, 6 ACRES, Ridge
avenue, b, W. of Mifflin st. .
Cohans’Court Selo-Eetate of Thomas L.'Wool,ton,
deed—MODERN THREE al ORY BRICK DWELLING,
No; 771 North Twenty fourth st.i below Brown.
IinNDSOJIE MODERN THKEE-STOnY BRICK RE
SIDENCE, N. E. corner of Nineteenth and Filbert sts.
Two HI STORY BRICK DWELLINGS, No*. 1337 and
a TIIKEIvSTORY BRICK DWELLINGS, No 88
Beck'*alley, between Front and Swanacn and Christian
BRICKDWELLINO. No. 3M9 Hand
at,, between Pino and Lombard and 201 b and 2lat, with a
T Admfnlltriitore^ Tacy Roberta dec'll—
THKEE-STOKY BRICK DWELLING. No. 325 North
; N RENT. 854 a year. „ .
: TWO-STORY BRICK DWELLING. No. 1134 North
Third th. above Poplar,'With a Three story BHok Dwell.
I by Order of Heirs—Estate of ——— Hood. dec’d,
BußtitKsa Stani>—THRE&STORY. ..BRICK-uSTORE,
and DWELLING N. W. corner of Fiontahd Quecnats,
with a Frame Dwelling on Queen at, . y! - • • ■ ■
Business LooaviOH—4 contiguous LOTS, Broad street,
corner of Hodman.'between Lombard anddouth ata, ;
MODERN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No
2330 Green Bt, 40 feet front,'l26 feot deep.' Has the mo.
dam conveniences. Immediate possession. . , .
FRAME DWELLING. Pear at, Heetonvfflo,BJockrey
Townebip, W.est Philadelphia. , ■
BUILDING LOT, Thlrn at, between Norris andDla-
Diond, 19tb Wwd.; .
RhDKfcMABLE GROUND BENT, 8195 ft year. '
TWO-STORY FRAME DWELLING* No. 713 South
8 HANDSOME MODERN THKEE-fiTOBY BRICK RE
SIDENCK, No. 1604 Green st- Ha* all the modern con
veniences—lB bv 121 lect. ... vc • •; ,
• VALUABLE LuT, jJ. E r corner 42d and Market ita., ;
Administrators’ Salo on the Premises. ~ t
handsome residence and furniture.
ON FRIDAY MORNING. . . i - ,
June IP, at 10 o’clock, will be pold at public sale, on the
'premises No. 2033.M0unt Vernon slreentho handsome
Three-story BRIUX RESIDENCE, with Three-story Back
Buildings, 20 feet 3 inches: front 83 feet 5 inenoi deep,
finished in modern style, has, batb, hot and cold water,
furnace, &c. ImmsuHte boißeesion.
SUPERIOR EURNII'URE, Ac. ■
Immedlate’y after thesaloof Residence, by catalogue,
the cutiro superior vValnut Parlor. Dining-room, library
and Chamber Furniture, Mantel Blinorß, fine Carnets,
superior • Walnut Bookcase, Glosa- and China ware,
Kitchen Utensils,'Ref rigerator, &c. , . , .
May be examined on the morning of sale, at 8 o'clock,
EXECUTOR’S SALE OP WINES AND LIQUORS.
ON SATURDAY MORNING.
JuneStt at 11 o’clock at the auction store* by order of
Executor of the Estate of L. S. Levering, will bo sold, a
private stock of Wind and Whisky. „ . *
ftr May be examined one hour before sale.
Bale No. 1814cArchstreet
SUPERIOR FURNITURE, MANTEL AND PIER
MIRRORS. VELVET OARPETB, dw.
• ON MONDAY MORNING. .
June 22, at 10 o’clock, at No. 1814 'Arch street by cata
logue, Rosewood Parlor Furniture, Walnut Dining-oom,
library end Chamber Mantel nod Pier
, Qlt£Bee, Piano, Velvet and Brussels Carpets, Curtafna&c
May be examined on the morning of sole at B o’clock.
f Sale No. IM3 Mwclier street
.HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE; CARPETS, 6c..
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
June 23, at la o’clock, at No. 1343 Maechcr st, between
Front and Second steeetß, above Girard a\ r dm»e, the
Household Furniture, Feather Beds, Carpets, Kitchen
tnraiture, &c. • , .
Sale No. 1412 Lombard street . .
SUPERIOR FURMTURE, ROSEWOOD PIANO.
BRUSSELS CARPETd. CHINA, 6c,
ON FRIDAY MORNING. , _
Jnne26,at 10 o’clock, at No. 1412 Lombard atreot by
catalogue, tho entire very superior Walnut Parlor and
Dining-ioomFurniture, elegant Rosewood seven octave
Piano, made by Hazeltou Brothers; Cottage Chamber
FurnUnre, fine Feather Beds, Hair Matresses, Brussels
and other Carpets, China and Glassware, Cooking. Uton*
May be nvamined on the morning of sale, aft 8 o’clock*
rnHOMAS BIRCH* & SON, AUCTIONEERS ANT
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
No, IUO CHESTNUT street.
Rear Entrance 1107 Bansom street.
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCREP
TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT.
Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended.to on the nioft
reasonable term*. _ , . ,
Sale at No. 1110 Chestnut street.
SUPERIOR HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, ROSEWOOD
PIANC FORTES. MIRRORS, CARPETS* ORGAN,
MLLODEONB. Ac.
’ ON FRIDAY MORNING. _ ‘ ■
At 9 o'clock, at the auction store, No. 1110 Chestnut et»,
wfll-he sold— , . _ . . ..
A targe assortment of superior Furniture, including
elegant Walnut Parlor Sulfa in plush and repß; Rose
wood Suit, in Brocatello; Walnut Chamber Suits,‘Ward
robe#. Sideboards, Bookcases, Library Suita. Extension
DiningTablee, Spiing and Hair Matresacs, Velvet, Bros,
tela and Ingrain Carpets, Mirrors. &c.
PIANO FORTES AND MELODEONS.- „
Alio, elegant new Rosewood Piano Fortes, made by H.
&Bon, New York: secondhand
Pianos, by Philadelphia Co-.. Nuna, Clark cOo,; Parlor
Organ. Melodeons, &c. __
B ELEGANT SHOWCASE, ire.
One plate glass silver mounted counter Showcase; one
Fireproof Safe; “"g^l^TS.
Aleo, SO FURNITURE.
' Also, liandsome Office Peaks, Tableß and Chalra.
TJUNIING. DURBOROW * CO., AUCTIONEERS.'
Jj Nob. 333 and 234 MARKET street, comer Bankst.
Succeßsora to John B. Myers dr Co
LARGE- POSITIVE BALE OP CARPETINGS. 500
ROLLS WHITE. REP CHECK ANP FANCY MAT
TINGS. die.
■ ON FRIDAY MORNING, .
June 19- at UJo’ciook, on FOUR MONTHS’ CREOIT,
about 25t> pieces Ingrain. Venetian. List- Herap, Cottar*
and Rag Carpetings, 500 rolls Canton White, Fancy and
LKRGE'pEREJMpi-ORY SALE OF FRENCH ANP
OTHER EUROPEAN PRY GOODS, 6c. .
ON MONDAY HORNING. •
June S 3, at 10 [o’clock, ON FOUR MONTHB’ CREDIT,
LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF 1500 CASES BOOTS,
SHOES, STRAW GOODS. TRAVELING RAGR'dic.
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
June S 3, at 10 o’clock, on FOUR'MQNTMB’ CREDIT.
BY BAKRITT dt CO.. AUCTIONEERS.
V CASH AUCTION HOUSE, ,
No. 230 MARKET Btreet, comer of BANK street.
Cash advanced on consimunents without extra charge
NOTICE TO AUCTION BUYERS.
ON FRIDA* MORNING. „
Juno 19, commencing at 10 o’clock, aa follows—
-200 lot. Assorted Dry Goods.
180 lots Ready-mado Clothing. '
130 cases ana cartons Straw Goods, Felt Hats, Boots,
S & invoices Motions, Hosiery, Sewing Silks, Stooks
from stor, a declining business. dtc. ■
mHE PRINCIPAL MONEY EBTABUBHMENT, a. R
I comer of SIXTH and RACE streets. _ _
Fine GoldiHnnting Case. Doable Bottom and Open Fact
English. American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches;
FineOold Hunting Case and Open Face Leptao Wktchos:
Pine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt
tag Case and Open Face English, American and Bwlu
Patent Lever and Lenina Watchest Double Case English
Quartlcr and other Watches: Ladles’Fancy Watches.
Diamond Breastpins:, Finger Rings; Ear flues; Stnda
ftc.; Fine Gold Chains, Medallions: Bracelets: Scarf
Pina; Breastpins; Finger Rings iPencti Cases and Jewelry
‘fEfflto-A large (and. valuable Fireproof Cheat,
lotshli Filth and Chestnut
streets,. ■■ .. . ■
W.
CHESTNUT etreet and 1319 and 1331 CLOVER street
CARD.—Wo take pleasure in Informing,the public that
our FURNITURE BALES areconflnedßtrlctly to enUreh
NEW and FIRST CLASS FURNITURE, all in perfect
order and guaranteed in every reepeot. ■ _ ■
Regular sales of Furniture every WEDNESDAY,
Out-door sales promptly attended to.
TVTARTIN BROTHERS. AUCTIONEERS.
jyjL (Lately Salesmen for M. Thomas dr Sons),
No. 639 CHESTNUT street rear entrance from Minor.
SALE OF MODERN OIL PAINTINGS. '
ON WEDNESDAY EVENING. V
' June 24 at 7M o’clock, at the Auction Rooms. No, 529
1 Chestnut st , opposite Independence Holt by catalogue,
i a collection of Modem Oil Pointings, handsomely iramed.
The collection comprises 100 Pictures, and will bo ar
ranged tor examination In the second story sales room on
Tuesday and Wednesday, 33d and )14th lasts. : 11 '
Gd. MoClees & coj ; ■ 7
. SUCCESSORS TO , . , -
McClelland & 00., auctioneers,
■ ... N 0.608 MARKET street.
i SALE OF 1800 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, BROGANS,
; f, f - BAIiM|ORAIA &0> ’
ON MONDAY MORNING,
I ■ June 28, at to we will aell by catalogue, lew
t caaea Men'aßoyo* and Voutha* BootarShocs. Bro&ans,
\ ll asioitmcut of Women’s, Misses’ and
Children’* wear* ■■■ - ■ " '
,gY B.BCOTT & OALIERV,
Na,KBOCHFSTNUT street Philadelphia.
AUCTION 9ALE9
REALKSTATB - .■■»
: Tbla 8«J«, on W*aj.\£BDAy, at_l3o’clock, doto. «t t£l».
Exchange, will loetad*Urnf oHewlng—• ' • ,
TIOGA ST.-A two rtnry ftamo. dwcWng ««*. !<*«*? - »
by 170 feet, near'Tcwn-hlpUnw Robdi W .
phan#o4tri Sctic—BxtiiU af,iriUi&nillt&lner t -
r CTIIB ST.-Frame heaee ahd lotai 0.J5 .
Girard avenue, 18th Ward. Cfrbrt SaiA-KtiOtA . ' .
of'Maroarti Pote. cU&tL • •- ••••.• ■
Ros 825 and 837 MTZ gMltwl f<wr- >
story brick dwcllinga with three story brick dwelling 1%
the rear, lot 37 by B*l feet deep. Bubrect to }|y3 .GO ground
rent, ImmtdUiU possession. Sale Vcrempwnr.' •
.•-Peremptory Sale, Darby Reads. .
HOUSES. WAGuNiL HinNEflS, 60* •
ON TbESDAY AF'fEUNOON.
At 8 o’clock, will be sold without reeerve/fcttbo Butter
fly Hotel. £> .rby road and 67 th street the entire stonlsos
lioTVfs of agentfeman going to Europe. Included wfno
celebrated eUllion^Tullytown. , • Afen, d other HonMMU
Wsgoce, Harness, BMnbcts, 6c. Tha horses Will bd
ranted.' -
May bo examined st any time.
Termicash. *
: - AT PRIVATE BALE. „ f '
BURLINGTON.—A Handsome sfanslos»-on Mala eta :
TEEKACE-H vrtMOma WOer*Tß4&- ’
dene*. ■ ■' • • : ' -
TV AVIS SHARVBY, AUCTIONEERS,
JLI Late with M. Thomas A Son*.
Store No. 421 WALX4UT Street
(Rear Entrance on Library street)
TU ASBBRIDGE A CO., AUCTIONEERS,
. No. IB MARKET street above FlHli.
RETAIL DRYGOODS.
T CHAMBERS, 810 ARCH STREET.
; ‘ BARGAINS FROM AUCTION.
LLAMA LACE POINTS,
, LLAMA LACE ROToNDAB,_. ■■■
LLAMA AND THREAD PARASOL COVERS?.
WHITE GOODS.
Marseilles for dresses from 25 cents up.
Plaid Nainsook front 25 Cents nn.:
French Muslim 2 vards wide, 60 cents.
1 Fienchßreakfast Sets very cheap.'
''Hamburg Edgings andin*ertlngs,cholco deslgns,undor
regular prices. '■■ ; my2B-ln»
PAUZE FLANNELBI GAUZE FLANNELS!
VJf . Domet Gauze rlannels.
Gauze Merino Vesta for Ladles.
Gauze Mcilno Vests for Gents.
Gauze Merino Vests for Girls and Boys.
A full line of Flannels.
jelb-tf STOKES A WOOD. 702 Arch o*reet.
New styles op fancy silks. :
CHENEA BILKS.
STRIFE BILKS. ,
PLAID _ ■ -
FLA IN BILKB. _
CORDED SILKB.
SUPERIOR BLACK SILKS, -
EVENING SILKS.
WEDDING BILK 3.
EDWIN BALL tt CO.,
88 South Second street.
; mpastf
COAJk AND WODDi
CBOSB CHEEK LEHIGH COAL.
: .FLATBTED & MoCLLIN,
: No. 8033 CHfcSTNO'i' btreot, Wcat Philadelphia, .
: Bole Retail Agente for Coze Brothers & Co.’a celebrated
Crokß Creek Lenigh Coni, from the Buck Moon tain Vein*
This Coalia particularly adapted for making Steam, for
Sugar and Malt Houses. Breweries* <fcc. It is also linear*
Ked as a Family Coat : Orders left At the office of the
ere. No. 841 WALNUT Street (Ist floor), will roceive
oar prompt attention. Liberal arrangements nfade with
TOanufactnrerß using a regular quantity. lel3lmft
KEUBEN HAAS. . •; . A. O. FETTER.
TORfNmTUUUwireFFEIiSON BTB.,
Keen on band a constant supply of LEHIGH and
SCHUYLKILL GOALS, from the beat Mines, for Family,
Factory, and Steam Purposes. - •ft ap!4 ly,
s. mason nizizs. • 5 ~ some. v. sheatt, ;
/THE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTENTION TO
X thoirstock of .*.•
Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal,
which, with the preparation given by ns, we think cannot
be excelled by any other Goal. . '
Office. Franklin Institute Bolldhig. No. 15 B.Seventh
street. . ■* • ■ ■■ JBINES & BHEAFF.
lalQ-tf •- Arch street wharf. SchnvlkiiL
RJSAIj ESTATES S-nXES.
A ORPHANS’ COURT SALE.—ESTATE OF WM.
I|iig Rlielner, dec’d.—James A. Freeman. Auctioneer. — •
Dwelling, and large Lot, Tiog&Dtreet and Township.
Line load. Undfcr the Authority of the Orphans* Court
for tho City and County of Philadelphia, on Wednesday*
June 24tb, 1868. at 12 o’clock, noon, will bp sold at public
sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the following de-.
scribed real eitate, lato the property of William Rheinor*
dec’d.: All that certain triangular lot or niece of. ground*
with tho two and one-half story, frame doubq and frame :
stable thereon, eituate on tho north aide df Tioga .street* '
68 feet 6K inches eastward from tho Township Line road* ,
28th Ward: thence extending northeastwardly 351 feet,
6¥, inches to a point, and thence south £l9 feet 2)4 inches'
to a point oh the north side of the said Tioga street, and '
thence westward along the north side of Tioga street 270?
'feet 5% inches to the place of beginning. Plan at tho
Auction htbre. , , • . /- ■ - '
B2f“ 8200 to bo paid at the time of sale.
By the Court, JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk. O.C.
JOHN RHEINER, l, AdmlniatmlWr*
HANNAH RHEINER.) Administrators.
JAMES A..FREEMAN. Auctioneer, ~.
Store, 422 Walnut street
PEREMPTORY BALE.—JAMES A. FREEMAN*
H»3 Auctioneer.—Genteel, four-story Erick II tvelllngs*
JBiajjos. 825 and 8*37 Fitzwater street;—On Wednesday.
June 24th, 1868, atl2 o’clock,noon, will be sold at public
sale,'without Teeerve, at the Philadelphia Exchange, tho
following described real estate: No. I.—All that certain
fouMtory brick dwelling situate on the north side of Fitz
wfttcr street, east of Ninth street (No. 825); containing Itj
front on Fitzwater street 18 feet, and in depth BOieot to a
ICJeet wido alley. Subject to 345 ground rentier
No. 2.—A1l that four sjory brick dwelling situate on the
north side of Fitzwater street, and cast or Russell street
(No. 827): containing in front on Fitzwater street 19 feet,
and in depth.along Russell street 80 feet to a 10 feet wide
alley. Subject to 347 50 ground rent per annum.
On the rear of the above lota is erected a three
story brick house fronting onlUuasell street.
Sale of the whole peremptory. '■
Immediate .possession.. Terms nt Blue.
B3f“ 3100 to oe paid on each at the time of sale.
- . . JAMES A. FREEMAN, Auctioneer, t
je4,11,18 Storo 422 Walnut street.
■Bn, ORPHANS’ COURT SALE—ESTATE OF MAR
BSiis CARET POTE, deceased.—James A. Freeman, Auc
■E^tlonecr.—Frame Houae and 1 ot* .Otis street below
Girard avenue. Under authority of the Orphans* Court
for the city andcounty.of Philadelphia, On/ Wednesday* ;
June 24,18G8,aM2 o'clock, noon, win be eold at publlcr
sale, at tbo Philadelphia Exchange, tho/folio tving de
scribed real estate late the property of Margaret Pote, de
ceased' Ml that certain two story frame messuage dnd
frame stable tbereon erected, situate on the southwesterly
side Wood), at the distance of 879 feet
inches southeasterly of Girard avenue, in the Eigh
teenth Ward of this city; containing in frppt 21 feet and
oxtending in depth of that width 131 feet 10 inches, be tfao
same more or le#r, to a 30 feet wide etreet called Howaon
street. Clear of incumbrance.
B3f“Slootobepaidatt!moof aal*. • _ , _
By the Court, JOSEPH MEG ARY, Clerk O. C.
- J JOHN LUFFBARRY. Administrator.
JAMES A. FREEMAN; Auctioneer,
je4lllB Store, 422 Walnut street
BEHOYAL.
DR. P, D. KKYSER,
Having returned to the city, has removed hia office from
the coiner of Fourth, and Buttonwood streets to UO7
ARCH street, where he will reaame the Ophthalmic prac
tice only. ie4lm»
BUSINESS C’AJItDS*.
ROBERT M. O’KEEFE,
Plain and Ornamental Homo and Sign Painter
1031 Walntxt Street.
Glazing promptly attended to. - mySQ3uls
COTTON AND LINEN SAIL DUCK OF EVERY
width from one to six feet wfdo, aU numbers. Tent
and Awning Duck. Papermakera’ Felting, Bail Twineibo.
JOHN W. EVER MAN dr CO.. No. 103 Jones’s Alley. ...
..urft A. WRIfIBT. TIIORNTOH PIKE, OLUMSHT A. 001800*
TnXQUOKE WEIQIIT, SHANK L. NSUiL.
PETER WRIGHT * SONS,
Importers of Earthcnwaro
• and . •
Bbippicg and-Commisaion Merchants,
. :N0.115 Walnnt street. Philadelphia.
DRTVY WELLS.—OWNERS OF PROPERTY—THE
L only place to get privy wells cleansed ahd dlsinfebtedk
at very low prices. A, PEYBSON.Manufacturorof Pou.
Goldsmith’s Hall, Library street.
INSTRIiCTIUN,
i / tHEGARAY INSTITUTE; ENGLISH AND FRENCH
O FOR younVj ladies.
BOARDING AND DaY PUPILS.
1531 andl639 BPRnCE Street,
. i 1 ‘T Philadelphia, Penna.,
wm reopen on MONDAY. Sept. 33d. French is the lan
guage of the family ana la constantly spoken in the lusu
tuteV . MADAME D’HEBVILLY.
lelBstuth6m ~ - - ■ PrtoclpaL
*» • • HORSEMANSHIP-—AT THE FHILADEL
PHIA RIDINQ SCHOOL, Fourth Btreot,^abovj
,•“1 Vino, will he found every facility for aeouteiMt
a knowledge of this healthful and olsgaut flfcompllih.
. nent The School is : pleasantly ventilated and wanneo,
the horses safe and well trained. _ ■
r An Afternoon Class for Young Indies.
■ Saddle Horses.trained in the best manner.
; Saddle Horses, Hones and VehiclM tohfa-e. _ ■ ,
- Also, Carriages to: Depots, Parties, Weddings, SB*
OAS IIXTI/BES.
Gar ptttDBES.—MI3KEY, . MERRILL.
THACKARA. No. 718 Chestnut
They also Introduce.
snap public buUdtogs,andattenA
|f“exlmdlS* sSSaSd repairing gaspipet ; All wo* ?
: WftTTftßtOd : —— 'mtmmmmmmmmmm .
r->ANNFD FgUTT. VEGETABLES, # &a---1,000 CAfIE3
CJjreah Canned Aoches; 600 cases fresh Camwd Pina
Apdlm- 200 ckies fresh Pino Apples, In glasarLOOD eaaais
: Green born and Green Peso; 600 cases fresh Flams in
: o ans- DOO cases fresh Green Gages; fiUO.casea.Charripg, as
SSp; »0 cases Blackberries, IrTsymp; 600 cases Strew.
1 berries, in syrup; 600-cases fresh; Pear*, fn syrup-. IWO
cases Canned Tomatoes-J5O0Oyster* Lobster* ana
i Glams* 600 cases Roast Beef. Mntton.Voal. Souqs, Am.
Fo“ietW JOSEPH B. BUaaiEß* CO M lOBSouthDels.
* ware avenue. . . •• •' ;*
VTORTON’S PINE T APPLE CKBESE.-10U BOXES ON ;
JN Consignment. Landing - and for |sale by JOE 15-
BUBSIEB A CO;. Agent* for "Norton 4 Elmar, 108 South •
Delaware Avenue e, .. . .
NEW GRENOBLE WALNUTS—2S BALES NEW
Crop SoftsheU GrenohleWalnufs and foe
sale by joa. R BOSSIER * CO» Il« South Delawam
avanua. ■
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