, . . • . . . . .. , . , • . • . . . . . . s - ~, . THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN---PHILADELPHIA,-FRIDAY AVG-UST 7 1868. • , • - , , , , 2 . . . ~ - . . - ............. 80 ! • ' -', - - ... ia " " - - . . - -- . THE: DAILY ,ZVENTNG , ,BDIJLICTIN.-PIIILADELP/114,Y,RIDAY, AtiGAIST T 7,1568: 1.568: ' POLITICAL, , ward for the very same end, natnely, I to , 1 • Speeches were made by Colonel John W. ' i err - • CLEARED AY. • IRWVIII.IOROM. INIIIIIHIJINCRe ' TELEGRAPHIC' eximutufair.MD VCATION. •f. , •;% A l t .) • , . , ,D emugua t Steamer Pioneer. C tharin i e,M at raffigten, NO. Medd. . • phis and Bonlbern a lhall Se Co. " ADA ME cLatasENDS BOARDING AND DAY Maintain . through &ate' privileges • • the I Forney, '.- I , ' _ , , , THEY ARE corm INV. nlt• MEVIEOUIS aristocracy of , . color. . General Blair, and-others, end the meetin' ad'ortried at a ~„, ~,, ~ _ „ , , ~ , . ~ e, ~. , e; .-'' , ' , PUP lOR THE FALL TRADE Hon. J. M. Scol l 94_ ~ - HontG/A.GroW ~ I -, ,• , r , II 47 ANCIIALL.I.' i ' 's.'" ''' '''' SWAMIES i "Wiladitir a°. -. - 1829 -011ABTEE MarnljAill , . 431. 11L, sC) 13 . e, M School for Young Ladles, west Wide tLa Gar. m e a p n te to m o be -m r9t •r h tm next session WM open WIMPS/ BMX. ~,,, /S e J . GOLD - ANV . G6LIP OffErb9NS-BOISGHT- ' ' • . _____ . a . . , .. . - . . - , • , ' 'rite latest l'ettirna frOm Kentucky indicate a • hi s freedom ti d 1 1 ' V ft e 3' m i 1 (lull sgeb d et o m . liba.tya ni tter ose : 13" : 11 1 e1 OM paolt() G il td rsdWa hath n j o o t i:ed e Steamer it Wiums. Cunditt Baltimore. A Grove,. Jr. Steamer ... B fitaiver. Dennis. Baltimore. A Grove.. Jr. , nemearatie majority 'of 80,000. together no man origitt to Pit Minder. • • . , •I. • A " •' , -_,:,.........................., , Bark l, /trunswick.Dixon,__Marseilles th W og orlc v li t agt f a lf gons. , . . , . • . , Indeed, asserts •, plainly in , his letter latihour., - • , , , They are coming, Mr. Seymonr, a 'Vest of boys ' , . , 5,,..h . 3 3 y 1.,,,:z :•,- -, ~.., . , - ,' f --- * ------- 1 , Is LADoilms & to, , - '7 - - , Arroattin - GEsznia, EvArrs . has returned to u.nue.... Elbeldon.Barbad%_ ~ MUTUAL LIPE INSURANCE B Foreirculars apply to the Principal sits Warn -seta s. in blue, that he will witirthat object maintain those ... . saoFernor SeymoUr on . .I:eers Ilivnielon. 1 . ~. . 4 1 , . . • • • • Washington. . • - From 'our -late editions of Yesterday. ' Balk Adeline C Adams. Leavitt, Montevideo, I Heath & ‘2 . 1 bs gi it. IN S URANCE . COMPANY • Norris. • . TB' 'ltira.ll I l iNl3 Brrir• xEM, PA. Fresh from a hundred fields of war, the battle- privileges by,the sword-- testatement which, „ , . , When; in Abe , summetOf • 18.63 ,_General It• . ''• ' l7. *3l PE'kE'1314°14%.451 CO.` 'i -.-- . - . . . , , • , • - Tug Hungarian Bowen! Deputies sester,day , ____. Brig, Speed (Br), Lakin. Cork or Falmouth for orders, II ;• ~,L , COMPANY " First Term °pole . nesday, Sept. Ist. Applicanteex-' scarred and true ; ' considenng his antecedents, reads exactly 39 Bouthl'hird att . t. . DIAMONB BErAtERS - di JEWELEBiI. ) ' , '.- WATCHES, iIiWRIMI,J. gitY Ell TARE. „.. , ' paeeed the Army-bill.". , , say the Atlantic Cable. P Pedrick &t o. • ,mined at any time after An gnst 15th. Applz k t r o Not now with gleaming' b q and roll of like one by Mr. Disraeli avowing his deter aYolletp E. Lee marchectinto Maryland . at' the 'head ' ' ...'" •• WATCHES tiadZSWEI,II:3n-ItEPALBED, ' . ' ' - Qtrexx VICTORIA arrived in Paris on Wednes-NEW YORK... in estns. .in_DA ltr w a d ; j :l ur n a B l3 o 4 N b pb t m Eys fi ry R a i te : Aet r ybA.l7: ; Et . el lvmpe A ot eyr E n7, : nt, e 7 Fa l i tior liE 9: : : N tri ß nppLo i r r A cre plah N B.nr i na D soe l r..i: P sf t lS G:. 'i cyl l3 4l ' ol4:::: : : l:6l put c ir d E i r4 Da s Y7 . d : . 06 8 „.. r. B. , martial drum, urination to prevent Jewish emancipation by of a Confederatehrmy; ! the,Nitional A.dminis- Telegraphic Index of Quotations stationed in a con. ' • h ere y Bcs c i Brig hhrr Ida c j a M r a Gibson.C o 2 d m o e n t g 0 m Thatcher,eer y L e . 11 i L i zto ^ : k i w i n Bay, eostoj I n. arren ßazieLli dt wby G a r ury e be: FIRE r U. ox , But armed with ballots for the right, in peaceful the bayonet-and there can be no doubt in tration wrote to the Governor or New York iplcuous p l ace In our office. • B Q 2 ,lnteetnut St., Phila• ~ day evening, slid left the French capital last ste L" amrr hus °° t L nig Au h il t. ; 6.-jeff Dll'llB arrived night for Switzerland.' • , . ) Wickersham & Co. PARIS, Aug. 6.-Despatches .received from Behr G C Morris, Artie, Charleston (2d clearance), having ' PLINY OBERMAN, Preddent. te.pr ranks they come,STOCKS, BONDS. dm., spec ., . Bought and nold on Commission at the respective Ilsarth .... . ADVERTISE INPHILADELPHIA4 SPAIN declines to assume the protectorate of L JN O:I / N . CI B M ARD NOR E E I LII GH j ' To shield the starry flag they love, from traitors' the minds of any one who reads the proceed - for aid to resist the inroad. _ The Governor called together the State officers at Albany -- Watches of the Finest Makers.. Ban Domingo, which was proffered by one of the various parts of Spain ' rePresent rho - whole coon anew, ings that these were the ideas most ent h us e - of Brokers of New York. Boston. Baltimore and P hil, • , try in a state of disquiet, and the utinost efforts Tiff t r i orlioi r Al c o i s T a d ri e d .t er e . ' o f . or Baltimore. with a tow pkoiiii 435 end 437 chestnut stmt. ' BEAU C. MESA Secretary. , 'They are coming, Mr. Seymour, a host of boys astically received, and that Mr. Seymour was to consult them upon the subject. "A man delphia. . D 271 6 °mil ' Diamond and Other .J.ewelry. , , , 1 ()lineal parties of that Republic. ' of the Government are required to prevent out- barges. W P Clyde & Co. R. street. EDWARD CLARENCF. EMI I! 1I . R Tr A LOCUST n . e A r . nr :, in blue . e ected to support' them, and not repudiation, named Lee," said the GoVerhor to his assetn- .. . Rese - Dn. - Join: - Mansielor many years a pro- breaks. : Tng Chesapeake. Mershon.Lor Baltimore. with a tow of . Anietis on January 418613,t - • Of the latest s t y l e.. Ininent temperance advocate, died in Brooklyn ' ' Correspondence of, the Philateiyhta E'vering Bulletin. Cash Asset!! $1,200,000. except as an extremely subordinate and half- bled councillors, "has come from Virginia '• • -.........---- l'l•Ln c l i N p a l c . ° i ris , I a r o i F t! pre y i p n a t te c d i . f p o s r, HEADING. Aug. 5,1868. 02,0:1103,74-0 Ol d ORGANIZED. JUNE, 11304. Circulars at LE Eht WALKER'S. No. 721 Chaestrint streeC over into Maryland with soldiers, and seems - . -on Wednesday evening. Glen. nreadets !tow ComMand. The following boats from the Union Canal passed into or by addressing Box 2611 P. 0. Next session been' They are coming, Mr. Seymour, the loyal boys real issue. The Democrats, in fact, have ..POPULAR . LOANS . Solid Silver and Plated Ware, . THE COMMERCI.A.L LIST ; •4 ALL POLICIES NON-FORFEITABLE. in blue ; fallen back upon their old ideas, the ideas to be committing a disturbance there. Pres- Etc., Eta. i-• Trot Democrats of Missouri have nominated [Bpicial Despatch to the Phil& Evening Bulletin.l the Schylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia. laden and capital,. ..... ....,=,,,...,,,, ..... _game es September lith. , au3,36t] From Maine and from 'New-Hampshire, and the 1 ideal Lincoln and his people ha on here IASHINOTON Aug. 6- . le de a a Accrued iairiiiis 1108,893 81 PREMIUMS PAYABLE IN CASH. er: C Gifford. Preminme........ ........ ...... .......... 1.151.841 03 LOSSES PAID IN CASH BORDENTOWN FEMALE COLLEGE, '. From, ' 'Bay State ever trot, , which produced the thew are re-assertm' g - MALE STUBS FOR EYELET,. HOLES. . John r o lr i V ut f e o r r i a Governor,i orno a r t . l d NOMI an J. W , g Gen I!. aw s t Charleston yesterday, and assumed command • ........ • BORDENT4MN, N. J. ' It IteeelvesNo Notes and Gives None. the Green Meuntains of Vermont, and • them with their old auda ty and their old de- to ask us to help them turn Lee out; and as public opinion seems to be rather against Lee, A,.. large assortment just received. with a varlet"' of • THE office of the Star Fire Insurance Co. of kwell. dO tO L 0261 UNSETTLED clump. - neboatE poll tug Momently located ou the Lelnwere River, nbout 33"milee of the North - and South Caroli D t an a dleo Hopson. do F• MON 28. Mom By the provisions of its charter the entire surplus north of Cblladelphla. The very best educational advert. Little Rhody'e shore, fi ance of national feeling. The long rigma- . • - settings. . . na eper mem,' t " D Thu "' New York was yesterday afternoon robbed of _ ~, ,belongs to policy holder?, and must be paid to them in tag.. furnishedfin connection with a pleasant home. See " From the homesteads of Connecticut the hardy role about bad officials, corruptioh, and rho I don't see but we shall have to do it."-N. . « *lO,OOO in United States bonde. -' ' w hi ch was formally turned over by General discharge ce nt awllillpeartEoonneseempoiceo • - Bonasco ln oz re :E b n. e l ri nßi A tcp . , 7 . , dividends, or reserved for their greater security. Divt sloe opens September 1511. For terms. &c., nddres• veterans pour • ; rest of it-much ofyhich is well founded- Y. Sun. T A WM. B. IWARNE • ;flz CO.. , . . • York, points. Darter; :'' h a tte rntil 113P.l consigned rael P r i c k, a er a j t tafdei wish a o i : ' n ; I L i r a 1 0 a p. A . & N D e , to A mytain. frau Baltimore !Since.- perpetual n m ary licks Idberai TerMal Los , s . e . s T P . al , : Sin: 18 . 2: Over donde are made on the contribution plan. and paid annm sul.26t] JOAN II BRARELEY. o h n is tr r i c a! ally , commencing two years from the date of the Polio'. As late when flashing o'er the land the news of means clearly nothfitg, except that Repnbli- Wholesale Dealers! in ' AND and to concentrate . the tr7ops Ehip Uncle Toby. Leavitt, from New York 2lth Doe, at Iff;15,4500,000. It has already made two dividends amounting to IP LNNSYLYANIA MILITARY ACADESIY. proceed too l7 C e T vili p_ i l rid et n e uc i s h al e , u S th b Mr , ' Andrew v t ( a J l an . son. Mohan, cleared at San Francisco Cori. N. Baneker DIRECTORS / $102,000,-qa axo lint never before egnahhtdaring the first ./. • - 'Sumpter new cans are in Flower; the few words about the „,_ Presidential. Paregrephs. 'rhe next remarkable total eclipse of the sun UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD WATCHES AND JEIWELRY,. . Y e ok h o ip na v ni al a le 4 y ffi k n o i r i gw.E6 i a . mon, ~._._. three yearel• any company. CHESTER, DELAWARE COUNTY. PA. They are coming, ' Mr. Seymour, the loyal boys 1 debt mean little, except that it is necessary to Frank Blair, Sr.the total eclipse of rho son of S. E. corner Seventh and Chestnut libretti', . , . _ . . __ __ _ . • ._____ _ . The Seventh Annual Session of this Academy coin. in blue. \ 1 conciliate rho Western Democratic vote; and w- And late of Na 85 Beath Third street, l e2 ly , i f i O u j r Te i murderE:lce. customs ri s d N i 6 1 ;l u i E s r er .17c Colored l ap e k s : s l e e a d yesterday, Woe' tie i 1 Boston,Pe d i a ct . n e e d placed a e at at 1 okobama 9th ult. - Thiladelphia and San Francine, from the 251.11 to ' for Shi p Carrier Dove. Morey, sailed from Callao 10th ult. PERMIT TO TRAVEL GRANTED WITS- mencea THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 8. 1 the stet, and pith, and essence of the whole -Whoa Bob Toombs and Frank Pierce shake • ^the 31st of July, ainotinted V 52,793,761. • • The Indian Peace Closninission.- ~ . l e e r [N k re a Uey, Nichols. from New Yotk 26th Nov. at Tobias Wagner. • Geo. OUT EXTRA CHARGE. NO POLICY FEE They AN coming, Mr. Seymour, the loyal boysTHE FINE ARTS. Alfre.Mer REQUIRED. FEMALE RISKS TAKEN AT po Th i n t e m b e u n i t i s d . in in blue, , businees is S tate ilidependeoee, hands over the Democratic nomination, it Is time - . PRICE CIURJEUE NT'. A BILL has , been Alan:decal in the Alabama [Special Despatch to the l'IMIa: Evening Bulletin.] ' Yokohama 9th ult. Banmel Grant, Ent*. W. le4ts rd. D.; THE USUAL PRINTED . RATES, NO iis departmen t l i ;:ducte CA Mathematics and ,Civii Engineering , senate providing that the Legislature shall cast aVasiosceroe, Aug. 6.-Information has been gs are new and complete in all their sip. i t graduate. of high scientific From. New Jersey and from Delaware, arid Mary- IWe confess, as we Bald before, to being for all loyal men to vote' the other way. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS A. New 'Thing in A r t . • the electoral vote of rho State. received here that General lettermen will at once n i . 3lg e n i gme l a t ,, ,s tiehola, from Boston Bth March. at San Gee, w. R i et , rds . Thntomir. Gspur. Ship Anahunc, Jackson , sailed from Ban Francisco 2d lsa a cLea. , CRAIILEB N. BANCIEER, rradasat. EXTRA PREMIUM BEING DEMANDED. attainments: the Classical and English departments oy land ever true ; utterly , puziled. Slavery has always ap- -Vallandigham does not show much respect I • Two Democratic members of the Louisiana convene the Indian Peace Commission authorized . Applications for all kinds of policies. life, ten-year life competent and experienced professors and instractors. Applications terms or cnhdrenrs endowment, taken. and Careful attention Is given to the moral and religious cut. And from the grand old Keystone State, man an- I peered to us a moral question upon which for President Johnson when he says that Horatio • BERLIN PAINTED PHOTOGFIAPHL House were unseated yeeterday, and their seam by tbe recent act of Congress, and confer -with au. inst. all information cheerfully afforded at the Except at Lexinston. Kentucky.tide Company has no . swering for man, Seymour, next March, "will go into the White last ke l amg v de i r fi l ßtout, Ford. hence at Washington. DC. up. w. ag o Amag nE° l.- ER .- FALE S , l3 4„ tary Vice Frell pr , om i dent• BRANCH OFFICE OF TEE COMPANY, . no ternla are possible which justifies any . . given to Radical conteatents, on the ground of fell the various tribes, with a view to the prevention f r Bremen. chturreevottfiClacd.iiteltiltisere..e.t,rply to T. B. PEIERSON. Lag., No. SW With pledgee for the Star Brigade, - the ballot in - • • t House and cleanse It." A. S. ROBINSON - trends In their election. Steamer Miasouri, Palmer. cleared at N York yesterday ' NO. STREET Chestnut street, or to Col. THEO. HYATT, President to JAMES H. ORNE I Esq No. 626 the hand ; man, even if, like John Brown, he stands • •• • - • -The Copperheads are boasting that ex-Presi- At 102 and Accrued Interest, of fui (her disturbances. - _ o l3teamer Weser, Wenke, cleared at New York yesterday Agazdad _w es t o f li fto b ore , • . C. DEYRRIOAY, Hawaiian Foreign Mlnleter,has' for Havana. F‘ELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY INSURANCE COM. P. M. A. . jy26lml ' PHILADELPHIA. To yield the soldiers ' weed of praise to worth alone, in rifting in arms against any society, dents Pierce and Fillmore are for Seymour; but No. 910 CHESTNUT STREET, . - -. . .arrived at San Francisco on his way •to Europe: - Steamer Gen Grant. Quick , cleared at New Orleans let v ui r gb an i s is . !stampeded by the Legislature of Peanut. INFANT DAY SCIIO•Th IN THE SCHOOL BUILD -- and valor due t however prosperOus or however well mean- they take care to omit the ' faet that the extin- • • From Central and South America. inst. tor New York. Whis F. GRIFFITTS, Jr., Manager, ling of the church of the Holy Trinity. Philadelphia, They are coming, Mr. Seymour, the loyal boys lug in a ll other respects ; but State Boyer- shed President and Vice President of the re- Has Just received a superb collection of , , . Behas full power to effect a revision of' treaties - borough. As atic squadron), Commander &gasp, at' New Office. O. E. corner TRIED anti WALNUT Streets. corner of Walnut street and Rittenhouse square. Eastern Department of rho State of Pennsylvada. Miss A. L. Clark will open a school for children bc in blue. eignty, we can understand, presents itself to hellion (Davis and Stephens) argon the same side. Berlin Painted Photographs of , - HE'w Yoae, Aug SUL-Panama advices of the with European governments. . : 28th ult. state that no collision had yet occurred York yesterday from Hong Kong March 2: Singapore: Philadelphia. • St ea m mire Hartford (U 13 flagship of Com Gold. •• ' -.. . OEIIIIIIAL HOWARD has issued a circular , pro-'MARINE INsURANCES- tween the ages of five and ten years. on MONDAY, Sep!. Americana as a po li tical, and not a moral between the Government troops an revolu On ' Vessel.. Carg o and Freight, to an art. of the world. Particular attention _ even to 19th. 1868. Bows from 9A.N.t01 P. M. .TWENTY-11111; REASONS. mulgating tbe vet of Congress on the Freedmen'slNLAND INSURANCES FIRE AND MARINE RISKS, _ Terms: 525 per half year. The Schaal year will begin They are coming, Mr. Seymour, the earnest boys-No man has said a more senaible wo d than = CENTRAL PAOIF.IC RAILROAD . . question, as a matter, like Repeal, almost was written b Liebman y Alder, himself a Jew, to FLOWE,RS. Bureau, which was passed over the Preside:lt's tionists. Preparations Were active on both an ß d aiir mTi aigg.. iteicher. an a. o in t s i al s i e n i stan a c s eNyuaracri g nratedggri n l• September lith,and caril i t t irit ts 26 , l A, in blue,• s A t e H rit e m ienii eni ju l l e y r 7 A . pi s ] h l 27 e has Ca a pe cre of w ei o e f o m d Hope othcers un an e 20 d , m a ens nd . p sailed from 2lst On goods by liver. canal. hike and land carriage to an liC r h From shop, and mill, and forge arid field, the too large and involving too many issues to the Illinois Staats• Zeimay, the other day. Hoar They are exquisite gems of art, rivalling in beard% • veto on the last day of the recent session. . . _ sides, though there was a prospect of an arnica- un. for Swan Islanh. narta of the Union. flew York.New t ingland and Baltimore. Rev. PHILLIPS 114100103, • Prof. Cues. J STILL& steadfat3t and the true, allow of discussion, but still strictly within him : "But lam far from holding Grant as an naturalness of tint, end perfection of form a great variety ; BARON vox Bintsv yesterday declared in a pub- blo arrangement of difficulties. Bark R B Walker. Rogers, sailed from Aspinwall 2.5 th .. FIRE INNUILiNCEs ul4 for Boston. -.. . . ' On merenandhe generally. The heroes of the Empire State, despite her recre- the domain of politics. And vet even when enemy of the Jews. To-day no educated man is of the choicest exotic Aowering plants. They are mounted STOCK. Mr. LEMUEL COFFIN. Mr. Golsen Pzeooox. ant 80n, that distinction is made, and it is an unwar- an enemy of the Jews." -General Blair did not atop in St. Joseph on FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS on boards of three sizes, and sold from "scants to $8 and $4 each. . ire speech that Austria would not interfere in An accident on the Panama railroad had de -011 German affairs, and that any policy of vengeance . _ Buenos Ayres . _ • t , . . , . _ • - ' ASSETS OF THE COMPANY. Bark Contost. Mine, cleared at New York yesterday for -On Stores. Dwellings. dte. carefully attended to. in leading Campania of that kind. Mr. 14CONITITIE Rouirmost Mr , Tuoitas H. Pownr.a. By strict personal attention to , Bpd prompt despatch of Mr. Wu H. AI4IIIII7IIST, Mr.. Wa.m..31 P. ulieseoa. Who turns to shame and mockery the good that rantably large one,-for the right ofo For framing. or the album. they are incanarably Wirt' 'was utterly ignored by-the government. tamed the passengers from eiew York 'b y the : Bark Tomtit, Heuer. at Aspinsva.ll 24th ult. rrom raw, York. November 1. 1867. business entrusted to my care. I hope to merit and re. iyintscpl4 GAVE/ a full share of public patronage. Tuesday week last. A vivid recollection of an , Bits Resolute. Parsons. cleared at Savannah Lot Instant liaM,ooo United States Five Per Cent. Loan. has been done ; beautiful. r • Ocean Queen a day and a half. , a nation to continue existing is ,e, An immense crowd assembled in New Orleans. WM. F. GRIFFITTS. Jig.. • LASELL FEMALE SEMINARY, 10-401 ...-." . .....- ...-. ... ..... $231.000 o To spurn with wrath the devil's faults, the faith- experience with stale eggs in that city in 1859bi0. sea Walnut Street AT AUBURNDALE, M ASS , last night, to hear a speech from Willie Rollins,• Ten miles from Boston. on Boston and Albany Railroad. less devils, too. - earce y a esis orde ba te,-we are 0 1 th • f probably influenced him to pass on, though he EXCURSIONS. '• the coloeed Dentocratie Orator._ As; Rollins was Yanes, on June 1•Ith. Tbe Captain and crew Falmouth. ' - ' • . . 18- . . . .. .... 1134,400 00 affords superior fachitles for a solid or ornamental educes .. The American brig,M. Muller sunk' Iti.Caleta, f or Brlgßomalnc, r 1 B eau for t gßo m I S e C . c hi n rdballast sailed 50.00 e United ifeat; liiii fir - derni.lonn. They are coming, Mr. Seymour, the earnest boys tenable to understande act,ion of the th should also have remembered that those who At 103 and Accrued inter at. e. • • . about to Ins speaking, the platform gave svay were save d by the pilot boat Theodore and taken from Cienfuegos 26th ult. for 120.000 United States Six Per Vent Loan. rani w tii tiou. Rare advantages for Music, French and Painting. in blue. . Democratic leaders. Do ' they really think adminietered the eggs then giro his- supporters , and fell sidelong into the crowd, injuring two tit to Co • b Statee 'frigate Rear gum o. The United Selma Hate Callihan, and Henrietta, ailed from Nor- 220,003 State of Pennuivanliiix . Per Cent. 1 ADELPBIA. Trewary Notes .-. .... - ,-,.... 52,558 oo MBE RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF pHIL tion healthful and beautiful. Number liroited to fo ° l4. a psix. Nest year begins eektembsr .4th. 18% Ad' . - that - the Amerinan freeholders are going to now. ' - - " ' " - - • - - Belvidere and -Delaware Railroad Co .- . _ . .._. _ '" - EVERY . _., ~ ._ i z t i l i i i il gay Carney, at Aepinwall2sth ult. from : hens arid four poll , _ .5, rgo ha, been heat s i rere _h i ea ge h er c e &rel . te, with 4th wt. for Trenton. - - • - ---•-.. Loan. -..5".• ' ..--.- -••••••••• 2 1 0 . 0 1 0 00 _ PaeeriteratO in / 841 ., - Charti.. ll re r P 4mal • are.. .. uyai.m,w,..l2toi 'HAS. W. CUSHING. Behr L Pllmitb. - Crie, hence stßangorad fast 125,000 City al Philadelphia Six PerVult.. ,_ _ 01110, No.flegWannt street. _ They are coming, Mr. Seymour, the veterans of f treat the existence of an American nation, a -The Columbus Journal says , ' 'The last act THEM? were 2 . ,n5 cases of - cholera, 1.781 - of ' Schr Charles B McShain. Quickley. sailed from Wish. Loan (exempts - lam tax) ....... .... - MIMI SO • cAPITAL $300,000. 9:SELECT BOYS' SCHOOL, the West, I people with rights superior to any piece of of Rio rebels , before the war, was to vote the -. L e' , " - e'',7•:,..e... - ' l '''..e m - ;AMR '- e - C •1 el‘ ... - which proved fatal, in Havana during the mouth on her way to Coquimbo. ington, DC. sth Inst. for Alexandria, to load coal for this 60.000 State of New Jersey Six Per Cent. Insurer against loss or damage •by PME, on Houses, ij AT AUBURNDALE, MASS. From their grand prairies and their lakes, the I e _......--...... Loan.. .. .. ....-... 1400 00 &ores and other Buildings, limited or perpetual, and 0/3 Ten miles from Boston. Number limited to twenty. A P ever signed by man, as an open Democratic. ticket. The lirst act• of the rebels, Bonds on hand for immediate dellvery . of July. The t,rreatest number of deaths on any port. finest and the best, after the war, was to vote the Democratic ticket. . General Grant's lflovemente. Furniture. Goode , Wares and Merchandise In town or first class home school for training boys for boldness or for i 20400 Pearentelinia iceili;:ia • First Mort., I q uestion ?If the war settled anything We "DELAWARE WATER GAP." day was :17, on July Bth, and the smallest 9, on _ Behr Henry May, Rackett, from Dighton for this Port. gage Six Per Cent. Bonds ... _.,, , 12.800 10 COUILITY. college . Location and building not surpassed. Physical From the broad rivers, whose strong waves bear - -, As there was but one step from Democracy into Full reports, maps, dm., furnished upon appll- i 0, Peel' a Despatch to the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.i sailed from New 3d that 25. LOsSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID. training and general manners have special attention. joyous to the sea, should have thought it was this,-that sooner rebellibn, there was but one step from rebellion NOTICE.-For the especial accommodation of Pawn. , July 30th. The disease has now almost disap- ‘„ . , IN ASHINGTON, August 6.-A telegram was re-_gage Six Per Cent. Bonds- .. ... 23.375 0) Aszeta. ...... ................ ..... ..............:-.8421.177 71 Next year begins September 17th. 18% Address cation. MERCHANT „peered.2s.ooo Weatern Pennsylvania Railroad ' ---• jyll7-in w s ISt( CHAS. W. CUSHING. in. S t ch f r or l A sa lo b x e nn l. d G e re a g to g. l s o li d le l d um fm s Ochre Geo H Squire. Timmins • Charlotte Slimy, Shaw; . Washington, thurt DC. sth COO Pennsylvania RaUroad Boandllioit- The treasures of the continent, and the tribute of than not be a nation the American people back into Democracy." Sere doeiroue of spending Sunday at the DELAWAItE g PANA3tA a dvises of rho , `lBth ultimo aisle that ceived here from General Grant to•day. He is at , 13 L Russell. Smith. and Gilbert driven. Wetteott, hence atPer Cent. Benda (Penn& RR. Invested in the following Securities • viz.: the free; , Will ke their country once more become a The New York correspondent of the Chicago , WATER GAP, an additional Line will leave the Water Gap every BIONDAY MORNING, at 6 o'clock. Arriving • - no collision had yet occurred between the gov- St. Louis, and does not indicate when he will re- Lynn 24 that 1101/311OPTWIRFE.- TILTS CHURCH 13011001, FOR 80.000 State of Tennessee * Five Per Con t . United Stades Government LOELII3., . ..... ...... 111,000 00 .10 'Yonne Ladies will . opened the drat of September To speak once more, in thunder tones, a people's wilderness ; will give up all that makes life Journal says that Secretary Stanton will take the at Philadelphia about II A. M. (eminent troops and the revolutionists . Pre Bra- turn. sichr Clara Rankin. Rankin. hence at Lynn 3d inat. fromm er for guarantee). •- - • ~....., ••., - • n.OOO 03 nut Mortgages on Cit y Pr o 5e0ured..13126,000 00 Loan.. _ - .. .... .. 18.000 00' Philadelphia City 6 portent Loan; 75,000 00 next. Particular attention given to the physical edoca. high behest, worth having ; will give up life itself, perish- stump for Grant and Colfax. The first speech Lines leave Kerrington Depotfor Delaware Water Gap , lions were active on both sides, though there was . --.- sews 8 evety•titx, Teel, and T J Traf ton. Talpey,hence at Bath 2d inst. 7,00 State of 'Tennessee Six Cent, Pennsylvania 188,000,000 6 per cent. L0an....... 26,000 00 lion of the pupils French will be taught by a resident They are coming. Mr. Seymour, the veterans of ing determinedly elan by man. If the war, will be delivered at Cleveland. The same corres- , daily (Sundays excepted) at 7A. M. and 3.60 P. H. jy 18 tau3l W. H. GA•f23IER, Agent. a prospect of an Muieable arrangement of the The New York Quarantine. Bch,' Mabel Hall, and Champion, hence at' Bangor 3d Loan 11.5.%)0 800 dimes stock Germantown Gm 4,270 00 Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, first and second governess, and, so far as practicable, made tho language Mortgages- - -..-- .. _-.. -........ 85.000 00 of the family. ale West. - with its sacrifices of life, of prosperity, and pondent says that Cassius - M. Clayi -- Mintster to , I f i. - _ , . . 7 __ i _ 1 7 . 1 . ,_ _ _ _ _____ .._ ... _..._______ .. ___ .__ .__ _ . sToREKE E p E . Ry _____. _. • . 4111iletiltipq, - (natant • NEw YORK,_ August 6.-There are one or two ' s c sa_n_p_LowelkDessvitt,bencelatPortamouthistinst. Company, Principal and interest Camden and Amboy &enroll:if Compahy's 6 per Address, for Circulars, They are coming, Mr. Seymour, a host of boys of "constitutional" principle-for its man- Russia, will remain in that country until Spring; thus Grant and Colfax will be deprived of his ter- ;- : THE Colored Border State Convention at Bal- cases of yellow fever on the Ocean Queen, at •.' lichre H. V Miller, Miller, and Breeze, Overton. hence at Portsmouth 2d inst. guaranteed - try the-City - -tri-Phile.- ---- ------ - - --(lent-Loanr,.-.-...-.-•,,,,•-.,--,,,m,- , -,--.--:•:-..-.-ss-- 91.000-00 delphia . . ... .. .. . 15,000 00 Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company's - MISS-(J1-11,49E, Bishoothorea. in blue, agement was revolutionary throughout-did I I) - ....2 -f./ ,' tis -Old, Reliable and Popular Route (. , . timers adjourned on Wednesday night. Arrange- nuarautine. The brig Haviland, from Havana, , Behr MII heed, Benson, mailed from New Bedford 4th 7,500 L5O /Mares mock Penniiiiaida nab.. 6 per Cent. Loan. .. 5. 000 00 Jy2l.tu th sated§ Bethlehem, Ps. vices on the stump. rnents were made for the organization of the inst. for this port. road Company...-.. -.... ..... 7,8 0 0 00 Huntingdon and Broad TOP 7 per Cent. Mort- c Fresh from a hundred flelde ' Sr , ' war, the battle- not mean this, what in the name of the buried had one death ^ from yellow fever oa the voyag,e. S.(XX) 100 shares stock North Penneylvaula gage Bonds ---- - - .. ..... 4,560 In IIiEGARAY INSTITUTE,ENGLISH AND FRENCH. BETWEEN colored people in the Border State, and for hold- _____......____ MARINE MIRELLANY. Railroad Company....- • _., .-. &WO 00 CountaFire Insurance Company's Stock. 1,050 00 FOR YOUNG LADIES wont and true ; I • • did it mean ? We should have thought, -for . -Mr. Williamson, a prominent Democrat of Shreveport, La., made a Seymour and Blair leg a National Colored Convention next January. From Leavenworth. Scbr Wm 1., Sp i rings, Wihard. which cleared at Wil. 2.0,800 BO shares stock. Philadelp . hia . and Mechanics' Bank Stock.. -.- .... . ..... 4,000 00 BOARDING AND DAY PUPILS. Not now with gleaming bayonets, and roll of 1 that matter,we still thin k„--ethere could be_bue epeech in New-Orleans-recently--Re-4a' arras __ _______ NEW YORK AND BOSTON, MANUFACTURERI.I3,OOO 00 1527 and Lag SPRUCE Street, martial drum, --- - --- ------ -- - __ .__ _ ____ __ _._ a .Resolutions were adopted sepporting , Grant and LEA VEN IN ORTH KANSAS, Anglia 6th.-Be- i rtoQ 13 dd M rtgago. brit Union Mutual Insurance Company's Stock_ ... 880 00 Philadelphia, Penna.. --- 7 _, -- -.r ---cri.,............ t.... 4 1-.... ...1..1-.. ; ... .-..,---r-i 1 one answer to that question, yet here we have the radicals," and Valli is one of the counts of his And the only Direct /lento for Colfax, and asking it:ie.-colored - citizens to sustain fot - Jestice Tla °len; vester ad - . - 3 - Ythe caie or the ' fro/n ib- the l etVo ' at, andt!li t e ° wind bro:ing fresh frorS W, Ileum on el& - Proittr411A ' .... _ 201,000 -0 - - Rehm:Leer/am:ranee 9- ei s mnyuf-Phtladelphia's - - min i gtt i r• C. 88:l i ta for i r s.: r w York with t :p .. ooM: rosin, 201.90010 1, , , , j utrn Mall StearnahipCo... 15,000 00 ' Commercial Bank of Penissylvitnia * Stock --- - --Will-RE-oI'EN--on-MONDAY.-Sept 22d, B.MO 00 MADAME D'IIERVILLY has tho pleasure of announc imu O. dabl_t M si7U-rkairrtirrbilL--Th- . AMIE ....LA. ~„:,,,,.-si. nripr the dlamantinnance of the 0./..1,. •,.. /3,.,... 2,L. .U. r ,..---.1 n,i,,,„ r3,..--- _ Freedmen's Bureau -- -- . _, _ ...„....„ , „ . .... ..,, ' modia,4e. ........... .11.0 wn u r Azr ryourrnre ...tn. A....-4.-. Ma ranks they com — e --- - To guard the starry flag they love, from traitors' - hands anew, They are coming, Mr. Seymour, a host of bop , in blue. The Democratic Platform. [From the London Spectator.] We never remember to have read Ameri can documents which puzzled us so entirely as the Democratic "platform," and the report of the meeting by which that platform was ac cepted. They read as if the Democrats had lost their senses altogether, had degenerated from a great party into a mere faction, too hopeless of success to care for anything ex cept the programme which should mist fully defy and irritate their antagonists. The re pudiating clauses in the platform were intel ligible enough, for the West contains many men favorable to repudiation, the South can not in justice be expected to like a debt in curred for its subjugation, and taxation presses heavily on a population very indus trious, very thrifty, and very much richer in cattle and corn than coin of the Repub lic. It was to be expected that a party which throughout its history has never been able to conceive of government except as a necessary evil, which can no more rise to the concep tion of a nation than the conception of a church, would consider a promise by the na tion as a thing of exceedingly light import. But the platform when examined is not a platform of repudiation. The expediency of robbery is affirmed, no doubt, though with some odd practical reservations, such as the one binding the party to pay officials and sol diers in the same notes as the bondholders,— rather a serious reservation,—but neither the acceptance nor the rejection of the Eighth Commandment forms the real point at issue. That is the old one, the one main tained before the war, the one main tained during the war, the one mankind supposed to be settled by the war, the sacred dogma of Stale Sovereignty. Nobody any capacity for impartial judgment can in vest the platform with any other signification. The Convention does indeed accept a ' paragraph declaring that it '•recognizes the questions of slavery and secession to have been settled for all time to come by the war or the voluntary action of the Southern States in constitutional Convention assem bled;" but it never acknowledges in any way that the result of the war was a just result, never admits in the smallest degree that slavery was a moral evil and secession a revo lutionary measure. Indeed, it almost ac knowledges that the first paragraph is a form, for in the very next it declares that the elective franchise ought to be regu lated in the States by the citizens, and after- wards explains that it means by citizens only those who were citizens before the Recon struction acts were passed, those acts in volving "a flagrant usurpation of power which can find no warrant in the Constitu tion." Under these provisions the white men of every State are possessed of the entire suffrage within that State, a point reaffirmed amid enthusiastic applause by nearly every speaker in the Convention, and expressly asserted by General F. P. Blair in the letter' which produced his nomination as Vice Pre sident. In this letter he openly declares that the government belongs not only of fact but of right to white men, and that negroes must be reduced to political sub.irdination. How far the Democrats 1% ould push the power inherit in the suffrage thus limited is evident from the annexed "plank"—"Ee -Bolved, That the Union established by the Constitution is a Union of States, Federal in its character, composed of States thereby united, and is incapable of existence without the States as its continuing integral parts; and, therefore, the preservr Zion of the Union in its integrity depends upon the preservation of the States in their political integrity, the Government of the Caked States being a Federal Republic, and not a consolidation of the whole people into a nation." If this is not State Sovereignty in all the practical meaning of that phrase, what is it ? Even admitting, what individuilly we should not admit, that this is to be read by the light of the first paragraph, which assumes seces sion to be settled by the war, we have still a Republic which "is not a nation," which is a —Federation of States, and can, therefore, do only things which do not interfere with State 'independence, i. e., practically nothing at all. The nation for instance, could not punish the .Carolinas for refusing to arm their militia against an invasion. The State, su`,jeet to the single obligation not to arm against the Union, is Sovereign, may make suffrage laws, or labor laws, or laws about personal right opposed to the whole spirit of the rest of ti l e &immunity, yet must not be so much as offi cially censured. What is this but the very pretension which produced the war, put tor e eaters o ti e secons par y ii to anion affirming with enthusiasm that the war meant nothing; that its objects were not secured, and ought not to be secured; that,—the phrase is positively insolent in its naked de fiance,—the Union is "not a nation." Two years ago Mr. Vallandigham was a monster of iniquity in the North, to-day his colleagues have positively left even him iu the rear. On what do they rely? On the East, which sent every arms-bearing man it could raise to fight against this theory? or on the West, which to this hour is jealously maintaining that it endured, dared and sacrificed more than the East itself? That a defeated power should hope to trick ' a victo rious power into surrendering the re sults of its victory is intelligible, but that it should ask it to surrender also the principle for which it fought, surrender it openly by plebiscitum, this, we confess, does seem to us explicable only in one way. The Demo cratic party, conscious of defeat utter and final, carel es of consequences and reckless etsporc e of sup has allowed a few ultras to give exp sion to the most offensive and least practical conceivable expression of their ideas. One has seen that state of mind before. The Orange party victorious would be a tyrannical but tolerably statesmanlike supporter of a steady, cruel and consistent class despotism. Defeated, it screams out threats of rebellion if the "tenure of the Crown" is changed. The Fenians victorious would be socialist republi cans; defeated they maintain that outrages like the Clerkenwell explosion are acts of war. The platform is a Bort of yell of defiance, emitted without hope as the last in jury the party which utters it can inflict upon their opponents, the only revenge within their political power to obtain. At least, if this be not the solution, if the American people or any great section of them are prepared, after four years of battle, after the loss of one fourth their wealth and one-tenth of their adult p ipulation in maintaining their right to be a nation, to give up that right,then we ad mit frankly we have utterly misjudged their character, misinterpreted their history, and misread their future. Of all the mad freaks a great party ever committed, this platform of the. Democratii, unless indeed they mean war, seems to us the least sane. Republican Ratification Intaeting at Gerintintotvn. A large mebting of the Republican citizens of Germantown was held last evening at the Town Ball, to ratify the nominations of Grant and Colfax. The following officers were chosen, on motion of Mr. Wm. F. Smith, Chairman of the Ward Executive Committee : PreBi(lcul—William C. Houston. Vice Prcsiclints—George P. Evans, W. It. Wister, Spencer Roberts, William Morris Davis, William A.tiamsomT. Charlton Henry, Charles Spencer, Elliston P. Morris, Joseph B. Barry, Charles Weiss, James Di. Aertsun, Charlesllegarge, William Mcc allurn, Chas. M. Berger, Hugh McC'•ollucu, Norton John son, Thomas A. Newuall, Walter 151;Miehael, Robert H. Gratz and Matthias II las. &cretaries—Joseph T. Ford, John B. - Wicket sham, Ed ward Snowdon, Casper Miller, H. S. Tarr, C. N. Needles, William L. Smith, T. B. Raynor, Wm. Hergesheimer and L. P. Thompson. The following resolutions were adapted: Resolved, That now, as during the late war, the policy of the Republican party must be aggressive in order to be successful. Un repentant rebels control the so-called Demo cratic party,and they must be met in peace as they were in war, by offensive movements along the whole Republican line. Resolved, That the revolutionary tenden cies of the Copperhead creed render the defeat of Seymour and Blair essential to the preser vation of'our free institutions. Resolved, That the presence of Wade Hampton and his traitorous associates in the repudiating Convention at New York, and the insolent tone of their speeches and resolu tions, was a most disgusting yet consistent exhibition of toadyism and all manner of de basement of which modern Democracy is so susceptible. Resolved, That repudiation of an honest debt is a disgrace to the individual. How in finitely more so to a nation rich in the affec tions of its citizens, in the respect and confi dence of mankind ! Resolved, That in the nomination of Gen. U. S. Grant for President, Hon. Schuyler Colfax for Vice President,and the selection of eminent soldierii and civilians for our State and municipal offices, the 'Talon Republican party has shown a desire to administer the affairs of the nation in a manner calculated for the greatest good to the greatest number, , and we call upon the people at large to ratify , these nominations by an overwhelming vote in October and November next. our own dearly beloved Confederate dead [cheers], whose bones are strewn all over the Northwest, killed in battle by the atrocious cruelty of the Radical Governme4t !" [Cheers. I —The Buffalo Commercial, speaking of Horatio Seymour, says : "The lute Dean Richmond, the Warwick of the Democracy in this State, tho roughly disliked him, couldn't speak , of him without evincing a sturdy disgust for the two faced demagogue. 'He's a humbug, boys, a d—d humbug,' the Dean was :wont to say, when talk ing with those who possessed his confidence. 'Don't bet your money on him, boys,' said Rich mond, to his Central Railroad army, in the cam paign four years ago, in which Seymour was de feated and ran largely behind his ticket. Spirit of the Rebel Prcois. The Vicksburg Times says : "We venture to predict that Mr. Davis will be the recipient of much respectful attention and consideration from all classes of people in Eu rope, and assuredly no American has ever placed toot upon European soil, who is more eminently entitled to the homage and admiration of its peo ple. We of the South proudly present Mr. Davis as our representative man, and in all the attri butes of intellect, eloquence, statesmanship, courage, dignity and ettristiap character, we claim that he is at least the peetrof the noblest in In all the world." —The New Orleans Bee says: "For all the qual ities that dignify mankind, Mr. Davis is eminently distinguished, and the statesmen of Europe will hasten to recognize in an appropriate manner the worth of his character when they find him among them. They were made fully aware of his rare intellectual gifts by the able and eloquent speeches delivered by him in the former Senate of the United States, and the statesmanlike papers from his pen while the leader of the late Confed erate States." —The Richmond Enquirer and Examiner says that the white men of the Southern States "hare .q - in the day when they could use the bullet, and, if God, in Ills anger, permit the necessity ti arise,they will see it again." GROCERIES. 1.11/110KAI, do ii. TO IFALIVIEILAI]Es Residing in the Rural Districts. We are prepared, as heretofore, to supply families at their country residences with every description of FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, &0., &o. ALBERT C. ROBERTS, Corner Eleventh and Vine Street!), RICHARD W, FAIRTHORNE & CO., Dealer In Teas and Coffees, No. 1086 MARKET STREET.: All goods guaranteed pure, of the beat quality, and auld at moderate priced. myl.th a to 6ID TABLE (;LARET.-2a) CASES OF SUPERIOR TABLE Claret, warranted to give eatiel action. For sale by M. F. SI'ILLIN, N. W. corner Arch and Eighth etreete. `SALAD OLL.-100 BASKETS OF LATCSUR'S SALAD 1.) Oil of the latest importation. For sale by M. F. SPILLIN. N. W. corner Arch and Eighth streets. UABM. DRIED BEEF AND TONGUES. —JOHN Steward's justly celebrated Hams and Dried Beef and Beef Tongues; also the best brands of Cincinnati llama For sale by M. F. 13111.1r.11N, N. W. corner Arab and Eighth streets. SFENTILEMLEPPM M'IMM.NIBI9III.MO 610019 FINE DRESS SHIRTS AND GENTS' NOVELTIES. J. W. SCOTT & CO., 814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Four doors below Continental Hotel.. mill-tin w tt PATIENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIM MANUFACTORY. altars for these celebrated 13121rts supplied proMPhIP brief notice. Gentlemen's Furnishing Gonda, Of late styles In full varieb. WINCHESTER & co.; '706 CHESTNUT. iO to l ifdl a ver r iftsr 7Bl.Bll4 th. Leather AND BUT. _.7 and brown Llnenj aireten ati e l gih wh . j aii velat_Ltrags i„ to made to order A iti.-ci street, e e v t. ery coni det w ori o i N tic i , li nreraS e r G (31Ci sid 8 0 D +4 1 1 Or ladles and cent& at EICHELDERFE .8 882AAR. nollAtt OPEN IN THE EVENIN G.ft .1 1 IMPERIAL FRENCH PRUNES,_- ao CASES IN TIN ministers go:limy boxes, imported and for sale by .11043. B. BUFR IMU W.. /D 8 d oath Delaware swim% BROWN, BROTHERS & No. 211, Chestnut Street, Issue Commercial Credits; also, Circular Letters of Credit for Travelers, available in any part of the World. )ego 700 MILES OF THE UNION PACIFIC It.A.II_,II.COAM. Are now finished and in actipe operation. One hundred and sixty miles have been built in the Butt four months. More than twenty thousand men are employed, and this average of forty miles per month will be continued throughout the mason. making NINE HUNDRED COM PLETED MILES by January Ist, - and It is now probable that the ENTIRE GRAND LINE TO THE PACIFIC WILL BE OPEN FOR BUSINESS IN 1869. ' No other first-class railroad in tho world has been built and equipped so rapidly as the Union Pacific, which rune west from Omaha ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The United States Government makes of this railroad a GREAT NATIONAL WORS and aide its construction by very liberal graitta of money and of lands. To further insure the speedy completion of the Road, the Company are authorized to bane their own FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS - having thirty years to run, and having interest coupons payable semi-annually at the rate of six par cent. in gold. The principal, as well as interest, is made PAYABLE IN GOLD. The Mortgage Bonds of nearly all other railroads in this country, are payable, principal and interest, in cur- rency ; and it is asserted, without fear of coati adiction, that no other railroad company in the world, building SO great an extent of road, issues bonds of equal value with the First Mortgage Bonds now offered for sale by the Union Pacific Rol/road Company. The price of these Bonds is now 102 and accrued in. terest trona July 1, ‘in currency. The Company believe that at this price their Bonds are the Safest and• Moat Profitable Investment In the market, and they confidently expect that they will shortly command a higher premium than any similar se• curity. The Company reserve the right to advance the price at any time, and will not fill any orders or receive any subscription on which the money has, net been. actually paid at the Company's office before the time of such advance. hubecriptione will be receivedin Philadelphia by DE HAVEN & BROTHER, No. 40 S. Third Street, WM. PAINTER & CO., No. 36 S. Third Street. SMITH, RANDOLPH .& CO., 16 South Third Street. And in New York At the Company's Office,No 20 Nassau St, AND BY John J, Cisco & Son, Bankers, 59 Wall St, And by the Company's advertised Agents throughout tho United States. Remittances should be made in drafts or other lands Par in Now York, and the bonds will be sent free of charge by return express. Parties subscribing through local agents will look to them for their safe delivery. A PAMPHLET AND MAP FOR 1868 has just been pub lished by the Company. giving fuller information than. is possible in an advertisement; respecting the Progress of the Work, the Resources of the Country traversed by the Road. the !deans for Construction, and the Value of the Bonds,whichWilLbe sent free on application at the Cost• pany's offices or to any of the advertised Agents. JOHN J. CISCO, Treasurer, New York. SLILY 21. 1868. 791 to th tfft 1() 00 0, t2 g . 10 , $2,600, $303, T 9 1 1 : 7 1 6.N . , m n aus 233 North Tenth etreot. P OWEREBERVED TAMARINDS.-90 -20 KEG S MARITN Tamarinds, in eugar, landing. and for gale by J 4 E, HUSBIER d< CO.. 108 South Delaware avenue. NORTON'S PINE APPLE, CHEESE .- IWBOXES ON Consignment. Landing and for Elmer JOS. B." BOSSIER Agent's for Norton 108 South Delaware Avenue.{ Newport, Fall River, Taunton, New o 4; Ili u dle is ro ,an tha Brilgewaten, and all TOM on 14 Cape Cod Railway, and Nantntket. nue lino is composed of the BOSTON. NEWPORT ANu NEW YORK STEAM. BOAT COMPANY (Old Fall River Line). comprising the magnificent and fleet steamboats NEW. PORT, OLD COLONY, METROPOLIS and EMPIRE STATE. running between New York and Newport, it L and the Old Colony and Newport Railway between Rot ten and Newport. making a through Line. , One of the above boats leave Pier North River daily (Sundaieacepted), at 6 o'clock P. M. arriving in New. port at A. ; the first train leaving Newport at 4A. M., arriv ng In Boston hi season for all Eastern trains Families can take breakfast on board the boat at 7. and leave at 7%, arriving In Roston et an early hour. Returning can leave Old Colony and Newport Railway corner South and Kneeland streets, at 414 and 5 o'clock P. M. kor further particulars, apply to the Agent, E. LITTLEFIELD, 72 Broadway, New York. mv27-6m BRISTOL LINE ri MA NEW YORK AND BOSTON, VIA BRISTOL. For PROVIDENCE. TAUNTON. NEW BEDFORD, CAPE COD, and all points of railway communication, East and North, The new and splendid steamers BRISTOL and PROVI DENCE leave Pier No. 40 North River, foot of Canal street, adloinhug Debrasses street Perry, New York, at e P. M., daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with steam boat train at Bristol at CSC A. M., arriving in Boston at 4 A. M. In time to connect with all the morning trains from that city. The most desirable and Pleasant route to the White Mountain& 2kavelere for that point can make dir ston.ect connectfrms by Way of Providence and Worcester or Bo State-rooms and Tickets secured at office an Pier in Nzw You. IL 0. BRIGGS. Gen'l Manager. F OR CAP2IAY On TUESDAYS, TEIURSDAYS and SATURDAYS. The splendid now steamer LADY OF THE LAKE, Captain W. W. Ingram, leaves Pier IS. above Vine etrect, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 0.15 A. M.. and returning leaves Cape May on Monday. Wed nesday and Friday. Faro $2 25, including carriage 'hire. ervante $1 511. Beacon Tirkets $lO. Carriage hire extra. tier The Lads of the Lake in a fine sea boat, has hand. come stateroom accommodations, and in fitted up with every thing necessary for the eafety and comfort of par eengers. G. U. HUDDELL, CALVIN TAGGART, Office No. 38 N. Del. avenue. OPPOSITION TO 711 E COMBINED E iILROAD & RIVER MONOPOLI Steamer JOliN SYLVESTER will make daily excur alone to Wilmington (Sued eye excepted), touching et Cheater and Marcus Book. Leaving Arch Street what'. atIUA xi.. and 4 P. xi. Returning. leave Wilmington, at 7A. L. and 1 r. m. Light freight taken. FOR CHESTER, 1100 K, AND WIL MINGTON—At 8.30 and 9.60 A. AL, and 3 50 P. M. The steamere S. M. FEL,TON and ARIEL leave Chest nut Street Wharf (Sundays excepted) at 8.30 rod 960 A. M.. and 5.50 P M.; returning. leave Wilmington at 6.65 A. M., 12.50 and 3.601 5 . M. Stopping at Cheater and Hook each way. Fare, 10 cents between all points. Excursion Tickets, 16 cents, good to return by either Boat. J 77 115 ABIJZINESS UIIIIIDN. JOHN J. WEAVER. J. BELLEW; PENNOCK. WEAVER & PENNOCK, PLUMBERS. GAS AND STEAM FITTERS. 37 North Seventh street, Philadelphia. Country Seats fitted up with Gas and Water in first class style. An asso-tment of Braes and Iron Lift and Force Pumps constantly on hand LEAD BURNING AND CHEMICAL PLUMBING. N. B.—Water Wheels supplied to the trade and others at reasonable prices. 1111 Smi ROBERT M. O'KEEFE', Plain and Ornamental House and Sign Painter 1021 Walnut Street. Glazing promptly attended to.'mr."(.)timp JAYEB A. V7111611T. THOILIITOTI EIKE, OLXMENT A. o}llBoo7l rniconomc 'WRIGHT, seas L. MALL. PETER WRIGHT dt SONS, ' Importers ofand Earthenware Shipping and Commission Merchants. •*,,N0.115 Walnut street, Philadelphia. riOTTON AND LINEN BAIL DUCK OF EVERY Vwidth, from one to six feet wide, all numbers. Tent and Awning Duck. Papermakere Felting Sail Twine, &c. JOHN W. EVERMAN & CO., No. 101 Church Bt. PRIVY WFLLI2I.--OWNERS OF PROPERTY—THE only place to got privy wells cleansed and disinfected, at very low prices. A. PEYBSON, Manufacturer of Poo. drotte. Goldsmith's HaU. Library street. COAL AND WOOD& CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL. PLAISTED & MaCOLLIN. No. 3033.CTIESTNUT Street, West Philadelphia, Sole Retail Agents for Cox° Brothers dx Co.'s celebrated Cross Creek Lehigh Coal, from the Ruck Mountain Vein. This Coal Is particularly adapted for making Steam for Sugar and Malt Housea. Breweries, &c. It la also unsur paseed - as - a - Family — CoaL - TOrders - left - at tho office of — the Miners, No. 841 WALNUT' Street (Ist floor), will receive our prompt attention. Liberal arrangements made with manufacturers using a regular quantity. iyis te 15. D JOILN F. Int&Alt. MBE UNTAISIGNED INVITE ATTENTION TO A their stock. of Spring Mountain; Lehigh and Loonat Mountain Coal, which, with tho preparation given by us, we think cannot be excelled by Any other Coal. Office, Franklin Institute Building, No. If. S. Seventh street. BIPIES A SHEAFF • tale& . Arch street wharf. Schuylkil Schuylk i ll. BOND'S BOSTON AND TRENTON B/SCIJIT.—TIIi trade supplied with Bond's Butter, Cream, Milk, Ovs• stern and . EggiliscuiL Also. West dt Thorn's celebrated Trenton.and Wine Biscuit, by JOB: B. EtisslEß & Solo Agents, 108 South Delaware avenue. Should Read and Advertise in the COMMERCIAL LIST 1. It is strictly a Commercial Paper. 2. It contains reliable Market Reports. 3. It contains the Arrivals and Clearances. 4. It contains the Imports and Exports. b. It contains more 'Financial News than al the other daily or weekly papers. 6. It contains the best Ship News. 7. It contains a list of all vessels in Port. i. It contains a list of all vessels on the way to this Port. 9. It contains a List of all vessels loading for this Port. 10. It makes a specialty of all Commercial News 11. It makes a specialty of all 011 News. 12. It makes a specialty of all Gold and Silver Mining News. 13. It has special Marine Reporters. 14. It has racy local and biographical sketches. 15. It has spicy Editorials on Commercial Topics. 16. It has two columns of reliable Quotations. 17. It has a faithful report of the Petroleum Trade. L. W. BURN, Captai. 18, It contains OFFICIAL STATEMENTS of the condition of the Banks. 19. It contains the Annual Reports of all the Railroad Companies. 20. It contains the Annual Reporte'of the In surance Companies. 21. It contains several columns of Commercial Items condensed from original sources. 22. It contains a list of the BANKRUPTS, the names and the amount duo each creditor. 23. It contains Sketches which instruct and amuse tho clerks. 24. It is not apartisan paper. 25. IT IS ONE OF THE BEST ADVERTISING. MEDIUMS IN THE WORLD ! Published every Saturday by WINSLOW &' SON, 241 Dock Streetv PRICE CURRENT. POILADJELPII:M!ko CLERK Tun steamers Delaware, Potomac and Ella Porter, and a barge, were destroyed by lire at Cincinnati yesterday. The total loss is about *lOO,OOO. The Porter was owned in Pittsourgh. and was valued at $48,000; insured for $32,000 in Pittsburgh offices. The Potomac was valued at *32,000; Insured for 618.000 in Cincinnati offices. The Pine Grove was owned by the Nashville Packet Company, and was valued at 612.000; in aured for $9,000 in Chicinnati offices. The Dela ware was owned in Pittsburgh; valued at $12,000; insured in Pittsburgh. THE delay in taking possession of League Island, says the Washington correspondent of the Pre-cr. is occasioned by the necessity under existing laws of a thorough investigation of the title to land purchased by the Government. The natter was referred to the Attorney-General Fome time since, and by him referred to the - United Stales attorney for the district in which League Island is located. The papers In the case are exceedingly voluminous, including a continued chain of evidence of change of owner *hip from the date of the Penn treaty to the -present day. The expenses of the investigation are defrayed by the Navy Department. 1.31 1 3`i BULLETIN. CHARGED WITII BunGLAny.—Georgo Perve had a bearing before Aid. Beltler yesterday afternoon, charged with burglary at the house of Mr. Jardin :No. 841 North Nineteenth street, near Parrish' Verve was recognized by Mr. Fernberger, pawn. broker, as the man who brought certain valuables to his place. Mr. •Jardin identified the goods as ids property, which had been removed from his house on the Ist of August. The total amount stolen was valued at $l.OOO. The policeman on the beat saw Perve in the neighborhood of Mr. Jerdin's house about an hour before the robbery; he also saw a light in Mr. Jardin's house after he lost sight of the accused, but as he did not know the family was out of town he paid no attention lo it. Pervo was committed for trial. CONIMITTED.—John Wood. alas "Turkey," and Henry Newton, alias "Skinny," two young men, had a further hearing, charged with robbery. On last Wednesday week the residence of Mr. R. K. Stewart, No. 754 South Tenth street, was entered, the fire-proof opened and robbed of a large amount of counterfeit money. This money Mr. :-q.ewart bad taken in his store while is business, and saved it as mementoes of mistakes In trade. Te key had been left In a wardrobe door, and the boys by securing It had no trouble in opening the safe. Some of the counterfeit money was found in their possession. The accused were committed for trial. FUNERAL OF CHARLES BUCKWALTER.—The funeral of the late Charles Buekwalter took place yesterday afternoon from the residence of his father. No. (131 North Seventh street. The re ligious exercises were pertormed at the house by 11e\. Dr. Butter, and at their • close the body was placed in the hearse, and the cortege proceeded lo Laurel Hill Cemetery, where the remains were interred. Besides the family and relatives of the .deceased, a large number of his personal friends - were In attendance, as were also the James Page :Library Company, .the Buckwalter Club (named after the deceased), the United States Hose Com pany, and a very large number of the members 4ot the bar. :RAISE PRETENCE. CASE.—James C. Dennison had a further :hearing yesterday before Alder man Helder, on a charge of obtaining goods by false pretences. It will ho remembered that he -was charged with getting pianos by giving checks .on banks where he had no account, and then pawning the Instruments. A carman was ex amined yesterday. He identified Dennison as the man who employed him to remove a piano from 2r.4 Spring Garden street to Ninth and Buttonwood. Dennison was held hi $l,OOO to answer at court. • FUNERAL OF AN OCTOGENARIAN.-TlllB after noon the funeral of Mr. Simon Hirshler will take place from his late, residence, No. 407 Wood street. He had reaced the age of eignty-seven years. For eight years he served under the first Napoleon, .being ,attached to the body guard of the great military chieftain, having been with - him during the whole of the Russian campaign, and also during the operations in Spain. Five years ago he had extracted from his leg a ball -shich he received during the operations in and around Moscow. ALDERMANIC FINES.—The following are the Enos and penalties paid by the respective Alder men to the City Treasurer for the month of July: Joseph B. Maul, $33; Lewis 40db0u,527; Charles 3i. Carpenter, $5O; Wm. Neill, $99; J. C. Titter mary, $62; C. E. Pancoast, $72; W. R. Heins, .$4O; John Swift, $3O, and Francis Hood, $4l. Separation of the Siamese - Twins. T,he Paris correspondent of the Pittsburgh Chronicle says: Mr. Feldman, agent for the Siamese twins, Chang and Eng, has rented a suite of apartments for "these brothers of the mystic tie," in the Grand Hotel, from the first of September next. Fearibg that in death they might be divided, these Carolina farmers are coming to Paris to undergo an operation. It is thirty-two years since they visited Paris, and nothing is more na tural than that they should come to this land of McKeever, Lieutenant Levy, and Corporal Lee; for assault with slbres,etc.,taking postal stamps, envelopes, U. 8. Treasury notes. and postal cur rency, to the amount of 82,000, was partially decided. Corporal. Lee, who commanded the soldiers and forcibly ejected Postmaster Dunn from the reserve, was adjudged eiality. and fined one dollar and costs. The court 'adjourned until this morning, and the same verdict has been rendered in all except the case of General Sheri dan, who is fined one hundred dollars. The de fendants have appealed to the Criminal Court. WRECK OE THE STEADIER SEA MUD. Recovery of the Iron tinfe—Wo Record of the cost Passeug•er's. (From the Chicago Journal. A uguA 4 .1 On the 9th duy of last April the beautiful and favorite steamer Eea pird of Goodrich's line, was burned and sunk in Lake Michigan, near Waukegan. It is believed that nearly one hun dred lives were lost by the fearful calamity, and the painful uncertainty as to the exact number will never be dispelled, for it is now ascertained that the passenger list was destroyed in the iron a fe. On Burday last the propeller G. J. Truesdell, belonging to the Goodrich line, steamed from this city to the closing scenes of that fearful dis aster, and on arriving there. soundings were made for some signs of the sunken boat. It was found lying in the same spot where it has lain since it trent down, about three-fourths of a mile from shore, and some four miles this side of Waukegutf An expert diver had been tak-n on board the True sdtll, and, baNing made the necessary ar rangements, he was lowered to the wreck. He had been below but a few moments when he made signs to have a stout line let down Lo him, and this being done, one end of it was made fast to the iron safe of the Sen Bird. which was soon larded on the deck of the Truesdell. The diver returning, reported the sunken vcrsel to be lying partially on her side, broken id twain, about midships, and that after a careful search, he had been unable to find any bodies. The safe was broken open and discovered to be entirely empty, the terrible heat of the burning boat having en tirely consumed all the papers, including the passenger list, stored in it, thus destroying every clue as to the exact number who perished. The sale Itself is nothing but a stout iron box, intended to be burglar-proof, but not made to stand extreme beat. It is badly rusted and bat tered, and now lies just outside the office of the Goodrich line, near „Rush street bridge. Having finished the examination of the safe. the diver was let down for the second time and attached the line to the anchor of the Sea Bird, which was also hauled on board the propeller. Further Investigations were brought to a close by the rising of a high wind, and the Truesdell re turned to the city. There is a probabilty that the search will be continued at some future - day, though the certainty of not being able to discover anything additional concerning the number and names of the lost will tend somewhat to deter further inquiry. There can be no stores of value left upon her, and as the bodies of those passen gers that were carried down with the boat have all been washed away, there is little left upon the sunken hulk of the ill-fated Bea Bird to tempt continued investigation. BTON RePorted tor hernuadelrua l Evewng S, CHARLESTON—Behr Wm B Maim. Sanford-55 rail road wheels A Whitney ix. Son; 275 tons railroad iron M Baird & Co. 31017.1r.INENTS OF OCEAN STEAMERS. TO WI RIVE. TitOM FOB DATE Erin........ ......... Liverpool_Now Y0rk...........Ju1y 22 St George Liverpool-Quebec.. 24 Britannia ............Glaegow. Iv ow Y0rk...... ....July 24 Ata1anta......... ... . . London.. New York ...... July 28 'Union Southampton.. Now Yin k . .....July 28 Malta . . Liverpool-Now York.... . ..... July 28 M anhattan .Liverpool_New York ..........July 28 Ciiy of Baltimore..LiverpooL.New Y0rk.......... July 29 Nestorian......... -Liverpool-Quebec July 30 Hibernia. ... . . .Giasgow..N ow Y0rk..........Ju1y 51 Cimbri a outhampton..New Y0rk.......... July 3t Villa do Paris Breet..Now .........Aug. 1 Rut eia......... ...... Liverpool_New York - -.Aug. 1 TO DEPART. Wyoming -Philadelphda..Savannah Aug. 8 A1a5ka......... ...New Y0rk..A5pinwa11...........Aug. 8 St Laurent. .....New ork..Havro . ....Aug. 8 Wm Penn.. .New York.. London .......:.....Aug. 8 Louleituia.. New York..LlYerpool ...... ....Aug. 8 City of London.... New York.. Liverpool Aug. 8 Caledonia ....New York..Glaegow. d .... .. Aug. 8 riel- ....... .Now Y ork.. Bremenviaowes .. Aug. 8 Juniata . Philadelphia.. New Orleans. Aug. City of New York. New York..Llverpool yia.HaPxAug. 11 Ilolsatia .... New York-Hamburg............Aue. 11 Scotia .............Now York.. Liverpool Aug. 12 Erin ....... ........ New York.. Liverpool . .Aug. 16 Bntannia..........New 31 ork..Glaegow Aug. 15 130/7 OF TRADE.. JA.MEB T. YOuNti, COATES WALTON. Morrnmy ConaurrEE. THOMAS POTTER. MARINE BULLETIN. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA-AuG. 7. Um Rum. 5 8 1 Bon 8r 8. 6 671 Man WATZ3. 4 4o ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Bchr Wm-B -Mann.—Banforit--4-days-from -Charleston. with 800 tone old iron to Lathbury, Wickersham & Co. Bchr Plandoine, Davie, 4 days from Charleston. with 300 tons phosphate rock E A Bonder & Co. Behr Bld Sample, Little, 5 days from Leechville, NC. with shingles. Behr Belle Sage. Price r I day from Odessa, Dela with wain to JaeL Bewley & CP. Bch Arladne. Thomas. I day from Smyrna, Del. with grain to Jas L Bewley & Co. ' Tng Chesapeake. Mershon, from Baltimore, with a tow of barges to.W P Clyde & Co. Tug Lookout, Alexander, from Baltimore, with a tow of barges to W P Clyde do Co• BELOW. • Brigßrace Darling , from Cienfuegos , at the Lazaretto, receiving medical accietanco. near the western bar. She oprttng a leak and filled with water, the sea breaking over her the vessel will no doubt to to pieces. tier cargo was being taken out, and the larger portion would be raved. Behr Angeline Van Cleat, Heath. which war in collision with steamer Hunter, war towed by the enamor Into Patch leland BarLorr, where the now lies. AUCTION SALES. MARTIN BROTHERS. AUCTIONEERS. (Lately Salesmen for M. Thomas At Sons), Minor. Sale 6:9 CHESTNUT street. rear entrance from Minor. Sale at the Auction Booms. HANDSOME WALNUT PURNITURE. CARPETS, EVANS & WATSON FLREPROOF SAFE. FINE HARNESS, CHINA AND GLASSWARE, FANCY . GOODS. Gc. ON MONDAY MORNING. Augn't 10, at 10 o'clock, at the auction rooms. No. 591 Chestnut street, by catalogue. superior Walnut HOnSe bold furniture, including—Elegant writ WaIOLA and Lrimeon Push Parlor Furniture, Handsome Suits Walnut chamber Mindoro. Superior Wardrobes, Matreeseeßode and Bedding. Mirrors, Bookcases, Sideboards, Walnut harension Dining Tables superior Cane Seat Chairs, frtnch China, Glassware, fine Brussels and ingrain Car pt is. Government Goods. ale- Also, superior Doable and Single Barnes.. Also, superior Fireproof Sat s, made by Evans & Wat son. WINES AND LIQUORS. At 12 o'clock precisely ,a qamtity ofiWines and Liquors, including -`W bottles Currant Wino, Lou bottles Port N ins.. a) gallons Cherry Brandy, 60 cases Whisky.Brandy and Gin, Lavieder and Ginger Brandy. bherry Wize' Bay Rum. dm. • • SPECIAL SALE AT THE AUCTION ROOMS—VERY ELEGANT FURNITURE. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING. Aug. Pi, at 11 o'clock, at No. 529 Cheetrint etreet,by cable loeue very elegant Walnut urniture, incluking—Suit elegant Walnut Antique Drawing Room Furniture, An tique Centre Table, lirocatelbe marble; two handsome Carved Walnut Chamber Suite, eplendid Carved Walnut Sideboard, elegant Secretary Bookcase, Antique Library Putt, euit elegant Walnut Hall Furniture, Piano Stools. lac . Jac. The Furniture NVI43 made to order in the best manner, it entirely new, and will be sold positively without rTe. May be examined on the day Previous to sale. IkitTHOMAS & BONS AUCTIONEEBB, DEL. Nos. 129 and 141 South FOIJIITH sheet BALES OF STOCKS AND REAL ESTATE. Public sales at the Philadelphia Exchange EVERY TUESDAY, at 12 o'clock. Slir Handbills of each property issued separately. is addition to which we publish, on the Saturday preview to each sale one thotusand catalogues In pamphlet tons. givig FOLLOW criptions of all the property to - be sold on thecia . TUESDAY. and a List of Real Estatl at Private Sale. - Mr Our Sales are also advertised in the following newspapers : Nonni Anzamsn, Puma, LEDGEE, LEGAI INEELLICENCIaI. Dsqtrnrcri. AO_E , EVENING Birm.rrns, EVENING TELEGRAPH. GETMAN LIENOCILAT, &c. W - Furniture Sales at the Auction Store EVERY THURSDAY. tar Bales at residences receive especial attention. Assignees' Peremptory Sale on the Premises. VERY VALUABLE WIIOLEN AND COTTON MILL, MACIIINERY,FLXTURES, he., Known as the "Dexter Mill and Dye House," Main at , ,ouch of Lock etreet. extending through to the Schuyl. kill river, Manavunk. Pa. ON WEDNESDAY, August 12, at 12 o'clock, will be gold at public eale on the premises, 2 he Real Estate and Machinery to be cold In one lot, For particulars ace handbills at the auction rooms. BLNIING, TWBBOROW do CO., AUCTIONEERS, Noe. 222 and 234 MARKET street, corner Bank et. Succeeeore to John B. Mvere dt Co LARGE PELEMPTORY SALE OF MO CASES BLOTS, SHOES, TRAVELING BAGS, &c. ON TUESDAY MORNING, Avg. 11. at 10 o'clock, on four monttn3' credit. • LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF BRITISR, FRENCH GERMAN AND DOMESTIC DRY-GOODS. ON THURSDAY MORNING. Aug. 11, at 10 o'clock. on four month& cret AT PRIVATE SALE. 1000 rolls 4-4 to 5-4 CANTON MATTINGS, of choice brnnds. TPRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT. S. L 1 corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches, Jam eery. Diamonds. Gold and Silver Plate. and on all articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine u Goldaiunting Case, Double Bottom and Open Face English. American and Swiss Patent Lever Watches; Fine Gold Hunting Came and Open Face Lepine Witches; Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt. tug Case and Open Face English. American and SWIM Patent Lever and Lepine Watches; Double Case English Quartier and other Watches Ladies' Faney Watches; Diamond Breaatpins; Finger Rings; Ear Ring,; Studs, Ac ; Fine Gold Chattel, Medallions; Bracelets Scarf Pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings:Pencil Cases and Jewels, generally FOB SALE.—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest, suitable for a Jeweler •, cost 5650. Mao, several lots in South Camden, Fifth and Chestnut ctreets. THOMAS BIRCH & SON, AUCTIONEERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. No. 11.10 CHESTNUT street. Rear Entrance 1107 Bansom street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIP TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the most reasonable terms. t IAMEB A. FEErmA N. AUCTIONEER. No. 422 WALNUT street. AT PRIVATE BALE. A valuable property. near Fourth and Walnut, A valuable business property N 0.81.9 Arch street. BURLINGTON.—A Handsome Mansion. on Main st. lot 66 by feet. • WOODLAND TEREACE—Handsome Modern Rest dance. WH. THOMPSON & CO. AUCTIONEERS. CONCERT HALL AUCTION ROOMS. 1211 CHESTNUT street and 1219 and 1221 CLOVER street. CARD.—We take pleasure in informing the public that our FURNITURE SALES are confined strictly to entirely NEW and FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE, all in Palter) order and guarantee d irira every respect Out-door sales promptly attended to. AUCTIONEER/3. Storo—No.-451--WALNUT-13treet. - D AVIS 41 lIAII Late VEY rrith . M: Thomas & Sons. (Rear Entrance on Librar7 street.) BY BARRITT & CO., AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION HOUSE. No. 930 MARKET street. corner of BANK street. Cash advanced on consigrunente.vvithout extra charge BY B. SCO TT uOTT,. JR. _ B'S ART GALLERY No. 1090 CHESTNIPT !treat. Philadelphia. ( 1 D. MoCLEES & CO.. AUCTIONEERS. -t • No. 606 MA • ICRT AtrOft TL. ASEiIIRIDGE CO,_AUCTIONEERI3. . No. 505 billiffulT istrooLabove rifttr: Cost. 81.089.679 fa. Real Estate !x.OOO 66.000 00 Bills Receivable for Insurances made 219.1111 6 Balances due at Agencies—Pre. returns on Marino Policies—Ac crued Interest, and other debts due the Company. .„. ~.... 43.384 96 Stock and Scrip of sundryr Intsru. ranee and other Companies. $69.076 CO. Estimated va1ue...... LOl7 00 Cash in Bank " . gio3,a ct Cash in T r rawar. ..... . ----. 103.915 69 _ Thomas C. Hand. DIRECTORS C James C. Hand, John C. Davis, Samuel E. Stokes, Edmund A. Bolder. James Prima*. Joseph H. Seal. William C. Ludwig. Theoplailus Paulding. Jacob P. Jonas, Hugh Craig, James B. McFar/and, Edward Darlington. Joshua P. Eyre, John R. Penrose. John D. Taylor, H. Jonee Brooke. Spencer Mcllvaine, Henry Sloan, Henry C. Dallett, Jr.. George G. Leiper. George W. Benusdou, Willi m G. Boulton. John B. Semple, Pittsbrirgh. Edward Lafourcado. D. T. Morgan. • Jacob Riegel. THOMAS C. HA. B. AN Berger, D Proeldent, JOHN (I.DAVIS, Vice Preeldeut. HENRY LirLBURN, Secretary. HEN BY BALL. Assistant Secretary, FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PHILADEL phis. Incorporated March 27, 1420. Office. A No. 84 N. Fifth street, Insure Builefork ely-t Household Furniture and Merchandise , generally. from Loss by Fire (in the Of, Philadelphia Rtatementof the Assets of the Anoclation January lst, 1863, published in compliance with the Pre• B vil on i ds ns an cl d an Mo A rtg cl ag of es Ai o j n em Pr b o llY pe o rty f 6 e thA 43137 8411. of Philadelphia only 61.078.118 17 Ground Rents 18,814 93 Real Estate.. . 51,744 57 Furniture and Fixtures of Office 4.490 03 U. B. 530 Registered 80nd5................ ... 45.000 00 Cash on bond 81,873 11 ..... • • • •• • • 411.222.083 HI Tit% ftEill . William R. Hamilton. Samuel liiparhawk. Peter A. Keyser. Charles P. Bower, John Carrow, Jeese Lightfoot. George L Young _. Joseph R. Lomita]. Robert Shoe et. Peter Armbruster. Levi P. Coats. M. H. Dickinson. Peter W Iliamson. WM. H. HAMILTON President SAMUEL SPAM:UWE. Vice President. WM. T. BUTLER. Secretary. j s :4 J. : 1. I . t 11 , 1 41' AO • • • PHILADELPHIA. Thin Company takes riskaat the lowest rats, conaistent with BafetY. and confines its business exclusively to FIRE INSURANCE IN PHIL THE CITY OF PHUAADEI• OFFICE—No. 723 Arch Street, Fourth National Bank Building. DIRECTORS: Thomas J. Martin. Charles H. Smith. JohnHirst Albertus King, Wm. A. Roan, Henry Bum). .. James hiongan. James Wood. William Glenn. John Shalicross, James Jenner, J. Henry Aekin. Alexander T. Dickson. Hugh Mulligan. Albert C. Roberts Pinup Fitayatrick. CONRAD B. ANDRESIi, Yrecident. WM. A. Bourn. Treas. Wm. H. FAGEII. BeeY. riIHE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.-OF. .1. lice, No. 110 South Fourth street, below Chestnut. "The Fire Insurance Company of the County of -Phila. ,:elphia,” Incorporated by the Legislature of Penneylye. sin in leak for indemnity against Lou or damage by Bra. n xchaivelY. CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable in.tibition.with ample capita land contingent fund carefully invested, continues to insure buildings, furniture, merchandisa&e., either permanently o r for a limited time, against lose or damage by &cad the lowest ratan consistent with the absolute safety of its cus tomers!. Loma adjusted and paid with all possible despatch. DMECTORS : a l Clam J. Sutter. Andrew H. Miller. Henry . Budd , James N. Stone, John Horn, Edwin L, Reakirt, Joseph Moore. I Robert V , Massey , Jr.. George Marko. Mark Devine. 13 J. SUTTER. President. HENRY BUDD, Vice-President. BIIeJALICIN F. HOULEIXY. Secretary' and Treasurer. PHOENIX INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. INCORPORATED UN--CHARTER PERPETUAL. No. 224 WALNUT street. opposite the Exchange. This Company insures from loves or damage by FIRE gs in liberal terms , on buildin. merchandise, furniture. dm, for limited periods. and permanently on buildings by deposit or premium. The Company has been in active operation for more than sixty years, during which all /owes have bees promptly adjusted and_paid. DHIECTORS. John L, Hodge. David Lewis. M. B. Mahony. Benjamin Etting. John T. Lewis. Thos. U. Powers. William S. Grant. A. R. Mellen.u. Robert W. Looming. Edmond CRISMIOD• D. Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox. • Lawrence LeWis Jr. Louis C. Norris. 4:)1E1N VqICLIEBER. Pregideag. Sam= WILCOX. Secretary. TEFFERIION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PE L. J ladelphia.—Office. No. St North Fifth street, neu Market etreet. Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania. Char. ter Perpetual. Capibal and Amts. $166,000. Make In. Nuance age.but Lou or Damage by Fire on Pablo eVr_l• rate Buildings, Farniture , Stocks. Goode and Mucosa. due, on favorable terms. • DIRECTOR/3. Wm. McDanlei, Edward P. Moyer, Israel Peterson, Frederick Ladner. John F. Belsterling, Adam J. Glass. EMIT Troemner„ He Delany. • Jacob Schandeln, John ElB.tt, Frederick Doll. CbriallanD. Frick, Samuel Miller. George E. Fort. . . William D. Gardner. WILLMM MoDANDM_President. ISRAEL PETERSON. Viceßresidea Pear Coate. Secretary and Trearurer. AMERICAN ELBE; IN81:111.10101FOOMPAllY. - INCOE, NoBlo perpetuall. No. 1310 WALNI.Pr street, above Third. Ehiladebbln. Having a largo paidap_capital Stook and Elurpita in; vested in sound and available Becuritiee, continue to in. sure on dwellings, stone, furniture. merchandise, vends n port and their cargooa. and other moons." proaortg: Au lanes Liberally and .r I: orn e.d.jus • TboMall R. Marie. Edmund 4. Dutilh. Juba Charles W. Pouliztaii Patrick- - Lintel Morr is. John T. Lo John P. Wethertli. - - - - William Paul. - - - - Tnomwteitia. Itr:iddadt; L. &mime C. Etaawroap, Worth at Par Worth this date at market pricey DIRECTORS. Clem. Tingley, Thomas H. Moore. Wm. Musser, Banmel Cashier, Samuel Bispham. James T. Young. IL L. Carson. Isaac F. Baker, Wm. Stevenson. Christian J. Hoffman. Beni. W. Tingley. " Samuel B. Thomas. Edward Biter. CLEM. TINGLEY. President. PLICILLAB C. HILL, Secretary. Ynn.s_nzr.PaLc. December I, Mgt Jetta th s tr VIRE ENE3IJRANCE EXCLUSIVELY.—THE PENN. A. eylvania Fire Insurance Company—lncorporated ISX —Charter Perpetual—No. 510 Walnut street, opposite In. dependence Square. This Company, favorably known to the community for over forty years, continues to insur: perms loss or dam age by fire, on Public or Private. fil ii dii gm, either perm neatly or for a limited time. also on Furniture, Btoeitt of Goode and Merchandise genersify, on liberal terms. Their Capital, together with a large Surplus Fund. is in vested In a moat careful manner, which enables them to offer to the Ramrod art undoubte dßecuritY in the OM of lose DIU:MO Daniel Smith, Jr.. 'Jahn Deverenx, Alexander Benson. Themes Smith. • lease liszellmrst. Henry i, Ip , Thomas Robins. J. Gill Fell. Daniel Haddock, Jr.r. DANIEL SMITH. Jr.. ealdant. WIIJSAM Cl. Ctiowm.r. Secretary. des to odd A NTHE.ACI RPE TE TU INSAL. URANCE COMPANY.—C Hvfl TER PE Office, No. WALNUT street, above Third, naiads. Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire. on Build. ings, either perpetually or for a limited time. Household Furniture and Merchandise generally. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels Cargoes and Freights. Inland hwarance to all parts of the Union DIRECTORS. Wm. Esher. Peter Sieger. D. Luther, J. E. Baum. Lewis Andel:tried. Wm. P. Dean. John R. Blakiston. John Ketcham. Davis Pearson. John B. Heyl. WM. ESHER, President. F. DEAN. Vice President, la2dta.th.s.ti Wu. M. Minn. Becretax7 LIAME INSURANCE CO; .12' Street. PHILAD_— FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY: DIRECTORS. Francis N. Buck. Philip S. Justice. Charles Richardson. John W. Everman. Henry Lewis. Edward D. Woodruff. Robert Pearce. Jno. Kessler, Jr.. Geo. A. West, Chas. Bkes. Robert B. Potter. Mordecai Busby. FRANCIS N. B CR. "Prorident. CHAS. RICHARDSON. Vice Preddont. WR.T.14,101 I. RLAMTIMED. 86=21111nr. MAULE, BROTHER & CO. 1868. R JOIST. SPRUCE JOIST. 1868 1 SPRUCE JOIST. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. HEMLOCK. LARGE STOCK. LARGE STOCK. • SIAULE , BuoTtnEn. & co., 2500 SOUTH STREET. 1868. 1868. 1868. ILL'9'4llBlBliarMi: 1.868. WALN U T PL BOA ANK.RDS. 1868• UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER. 1868 • UNDERTAFER.T LUMBER. 1868 • 1868. SEASONED POPLAR, SEABONED CHERRY. lB6B. ASH. WtHl3l OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. 1868. get B OX C I _AR M ARKERS. SPANISH CEDAR LOWOARDS. 1868. FOR SALE 1868. °NrUITIA EAT'. mal . 1868. NORWAY SCANTLING. LARGE ASSORTMENT. CEDAR SHINGLES. CEDAR SHINGLES. 1868. 1868. . CYPRESS SHINGLES. PLASTERING LATH. CHESTNUT PLANK. AND BOARDS. 1868. ittlBH3Bkal PINE 1868. CDOICE PATTERN PINE. SPANISH OEDARJOR ,PATTERNS. FLORIDA RED CEDAR. HAT LE A BROTHER & 2668 SOUTH STREET. PHELAN & BUCKNELLI lrwenty-third and Chestnut Ste. LARGE STOCK OF WALNUT, ASH AND POPLAR. ALL THICKNESSES, CLEAN AND DRY. FINE LOT WALNUT VENEERS. CEDAR. CYPRESS A ND WHIT EMBER PINE /BUNGLER SEKD LU, MICHIGAN _ CANADA AND pgro - nriseraa. ALL SIZES AND gtUALITIES. L S PRU CE A ND OO AN ND HEMLO HEAVY CAROLINCK JOIST. TIMBER. S BUILDING LUMBER OF ALL KINDS. rohn•lta, D. M. LANE, Al CARRIAGE BUILDER, respectfully invites attention to hie tare: r a g a of finished curium; also, orders taken for es of avail &gerbil, n. at • AANUFACTORY AND WAREROOMS. MI. BM and MS MARKET street. Three wares wedt of Pennsylvania Railroad DOA Went Misdated& iaBB to this-1 'JOHN 8. UNE, COAOMAKIER. NO.19:1 Market street. has on band an assortment of tworlor built carriagasi Which` be offers at very reasonable prices,TAY4taiw.t.Wl _ _ ANY. NO. NUT4O4I CENT JLIIBIBEH. FLORIDA FLOORING. FLORIDA FLOORINg. CAROLINA FLOORING. VIRGINIA FLOORING__, DELAWARE FLOOIHN ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORIDA IL STEP BOARDS. RA PLANK. RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PINE. QASRIAGE,b. time excluattfriv to the Chegaray Institute. French Is the language of the family and is constantly spoken In the Institute. lelSa to th 6m 842,177 7$ 843%089 Se EDGEBILL SCHOOL, PRINCETON, N. J, Boys thoroughly prepared for Cbl.lege, or for Business, Next sesidon begins August 26. For circulars, address, VILAYTILIN, CASSIDSUEItiCUS.- asto. 01.0 TH HOUSE, No. 11 NORTH SECOND ST.s 1 .-.1 Sign of the Golden Lamb. JAMES & LEE Have now on band and are still receiving a large one, choice assortment of Spring and Summer Goodaexyressly adapted to Men's and. Boys' wear, to which they invite the attention of Merchants, Clothiers, ,Tailors and other/. COATING GOODS. Super Black French Clothe, Super Colored French Cloths. Black and Colored Pique Coatings. Black and Colored Tricot Coatings. Diagonal Ribbed Coatings. tin Cashmaretts,'elt Colors. L New Styles adies' Cloaking. Silk Mixed Coags, &c. -PANTALOON STUFFS Black French Doeskins. do do Caesimeres. New styles Fancy do. Also, a large assortment of Cordkßeaverteens,Satineta Vesting, and goods for suite. at wholesale and retaiL JAMES es LEE, No. 11 North Second street Sign of the Golden Lamb, P[IRE FAINTS.—WE OFFER TO TIM TRADE PURR White Lead, Zino White and Colored Paints of our own manufacture, of undoubtedeurity k in quantitiee suit Purchasers. ROBERT SHOEMAKER. dt CO., Dealers' in Paints and Varnishes. N. R. corner h'ourtli and Race streets. no27.tf RHUBARB ROOT, OF RECENT IMPORTATION. and very superior quality; White Gum Arabic, East. India Caster Oil, White and Mottled Castile Soap Olive Oil, of various brands. For sale by ROBERT 'SHOE. MAKER & CO., Druggists. Northeast corner of Fourth and Rano-streets no27-tf TIRITOGISTS° SUNDRIES.—GRADUATES, MOBTAR,, 1.. r Pill Tiles, Bombe, Brushes Mirrors, Tweezers, Putt Boxes. Horn Scoops, Surgical Iristrumenni, Trusses, Hard and Soft Rubber Goode, Vial Cases, Glass and Metal Bringes do.. all at "First Hands"price& fiNOWDR? , .I EaturrrEß, apf.tt 23 South Eighth otroet. °BERT SHOEMAKER di CO.; WHOLESALE R Druggista, N. E. corner Fourth and Race street, invite the attention of the Trade to their large stock of Fine Drugs and Chemicals, Euentlal Olhi s •Spongey Corks, n027-4I REAL ESTATE SALES, rASSIGNEES' PEREMPTORY SALE, ON THE premises. M. Thomas At Sons. Auctioneers- Very valuable woolen and cotton mill, machinery. fix - tunas. LTC , known as "Dexter Mill and Dye House," Main Bt.. - south of Lock street, extenaing through to the river Schuylkill, Manayunk, Pa. On Wednesday, August 12th. 1868, at 12 o'clock, will be sold at public sale on the prem ises, all that lot of ground and the improvements thereon erected described according to a survey made thereof by John 11. Levering, Surveyor of the Eighth Survey District of the city of Philadelphia, on the 7th day of July, A. D. 1868. Beginning at a point on the westerly side of Main street, in Manavunk. as aforesaid (as the same is now widened to the width of 60 feet), at the distance of 163 feet TX inches southward from Lock street.; thence extending along the said Main street, widened as aforesaid to the width of 60 feet south 41 dep. 25 min., east 2.89 feet 2.1.1 inches to a point; thence by land of David Wallace south 40 dog. Ti min., west 122 feet to a point at the end of a stone wall; thence following, the same course to low water mark of the Schuylkillriver thence up the said river along the line of low-water mark to a point at the said stone wall, where It intersects the raceway; thence north 38 dog. 39 min. west to a corner of laud granted to the Schuylkill Naviga tion company; thence along the call land of the Schuyl kill Navigation Company, the following courses and distances: north 51 deg. 91 min., east 7 feet 8 inches to a corner ; the nee north 38 deg. 29 min., west 68 feet I.l‘ inches to a corner ; thence north 51 dog. 91 111111.. east feet to a corner; thence north 38 deg 89min . west Mt feet 1 inch to a corner, and thence north 48 deg. 35 min.. crust 97 feet 10.' inches (crossing the head race) to the said Main street, the place of beginning. With the right and privilege at all times hereafter forever of drawing front the Flat Rock Canal as much water as can pass through a metallic aperture of 160 square inches, under a header three feet, for the use of the factory, under and subject as respects 150 square inches of the water power to the yearly rent or sum of $450, payable to the Schuylkill Navigation Company, and with the privilege of tho forebar and head.gates. and of the race; subject to the right of the Schuylkill Navigation Company of placing and forever maintain ing a bridge over the tail race, and the free and uninter rupted use, liberty and privilege of and passage over the eaid bridge, and over and along all that strip of ground to the southeastward thereof, extending from the eastern, end of the said Navigation Company's land, along the river Schuylkill southeastwardlY 95 feet, more Orlon, and.; in width, between the surface of the water in the said river. and the buildings as now erected, and with that privilege to the factory of a race-way or passage for water from the canal of the said Navigation Company diagonally across their land to the north of these premisest as particularly set forth iu an indenture made between- Jacob D. Deft and the said Schuylkill Navigation Cont. pang, dated the 29th day of March, 1867, and recorded iii Deed Book J. T. 0., No. 32,-pageB, dm. . • , The improvements are a tivestory stone mill. with, basement ; two story stone picker house; largo one story stone dye house, office, Ac. Abe. a large amount of machinery', fixteres,'&e. Bee catalogues. Terms cash. say v !thin fifteen days from mile, filLoco to be paid at the time df sale. can be seen by application on the premises. . „.. Selo abooluto By order of WM. M. COATES. H. G. CLAY. Aasigneee of J. D. HEFT. M. THOMAS do SONS, Auctioneer% jyls 25 aul 8 139 and 141 South Fourth erect- SADDLES, NOTICE OF MANGE OF NAME—IN ACCORD. Unit with ...he Act of Anaemia,. hate Ninth of- April, A. D., leek - no:lee hereby givetthe (haat of Common Pleas of Rhilsidelohla bounty did on the •FM teenth day of July, 12.11383. deeree that the. same- Debut Emlen Hare ahoind thercaftv Itn Elobro:t Amos Hare. REV. T. W. C ATTELL. DRUG% PERSONAL.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers