---~--- Tire rr►oee off all Bummer CI offbeat's areetiS -redoce4.-- to closo--out:stock.—Amortmeut- istUl good. far both t !lathing sad piece goods, to_ ha ramie to ipriler. but talus oft - rapidly. ALI prices guaranteed totter Ulan ths loweat elsewhere and full satisfaction guaranteed ivery pnrehaeo. or tae oak can money refloated. ,ffaU'af_ay between ' Biaarerr & "ilk and • I Tommie Lieu, Sixth street& 03 Medd ire erdersr. Plutenzitine. AND GOO Bnaenw.eir. NEw Yana A Distressing Cough causes the friends of the sufferer almost es touch pain as the sufferer fiiroself. and should receive immediate atteutioa sur. Vaster's Balsam of Wild Cherry speedily cures coughs, colds. influenza, sore throat, dre. It will always relieve and in Many well attested cases it ham effected a perfect cure. attl7,6t WMiICONRAD MEYER, INVENTOR AND Manufacturer of the celebrated Iron Frame hag received the Prize Medal of the World's Great on. London. ling.. The highest prizes awarded when and wherever exhibited. Wareroonw. 999 Arch street. Established 1893. 1v29 w a miff, EVENING BULLETIN. mouday, August 17, 111698 oar Persons leaving the city for the stammer, and wishing to have the Evnartno Bunn rns sent to them, will please send their address to the office. Price, by mail, 75 cents per month. TIME INDIAN TROXIBLES. The latest reports from the We,st show that there is by no means that quiescence among the hostile Indians that some of the recent - at-- counts have indicated. In Western „Kansas a number of fresh murders, have been coin: mitted by the Sioux, Cheyennes and Arrapa hoes, and the demand is thus renewed for decisive measures for the permanent protec tion of the scattered settlers who' are so una ble to defend themselves fromthesemurdering and marauding bands of Savage's. The Indian question has been well-nigh talked and written to death, but very little has been done ,ha a , practical way to put a stop "to to these frequent outrages. There is a very strong and well founded public sentiment in favot of entrust ing the whole management of the . Indians to the War Department, thus breaking up the Indian Bureau, which, through the iniquities of its agents, is chiefly responsible for the enmity which the various , tribes foster so 'bit terly against the whites. This reform will undoubtedly be effected, and we hope that it will be done soon. The Indians have been shamefully robbed, swindled and persecuted by these Indian agents, and the peaceful and innocent emigrant and settler pay the pen alty of the wrongs thus inflicted. But it is in vain to pause now to philosophize or moralize over the causes of these Indian lirttragea. --- ThelnethWraf - dea'lliFg — fFith them is the practical question. Diplomacy, trea ties, appropriations, councils have all been tested to_the uttermost and have all failed. The Indian holds obstinately to two ideas. He believes that he is the natural lo,rd and master of the soil, and that the white man is an invader and so a natural enemy. And he believes, with good cause, Mit ' the whites cheat and rob him in all their dealings with him. Andso the war-path is kept open and constant reports reach us of retaliatory mur ders and outrages. This state Gf hostility is kept alive by the prevailing sentiment of the far Western people, who look upon extermination as the only solution of the Indian question, and who are carrying that idea into practical effect, as fast as opportunity offers. Said a very intel ligent and experienced Indian scout to us, very recently, "We go out to kill everything Indian we meet;" and it was said in no spirit of braggadocia, but as the statement of an admitted fact. A retaliatory warfare is thus constantly kept up. This practice of Indian hunting on the part of scouts and trappers has grown out of the instincts of Ixavenge and of self-defence, but it needs to be checked, and it would be checked were the manage ment of Indian affairs once vested In the War Department. But what is chiefly needed for the imme diate emergency is the effective punishment of offending tribes. Our past warfare with them has been ridiculously ineffective. When we strike we must strike hard, and dispel once for all the common notion among the J.ndianii that the losses we sustained during the rebellion have reduced us to a "nation of squaws." This idea is widely held among them, and it will need hard blows to boat it out of them. The hostile tribes need first to be thoroughly thrashed, and then forced into a gradual habit of sell-support. And this last end is to be gained only by a gradual reduction of the ap propriations. Let our Government fix a day, say thirty years from the present time, when all Indian appropriations shall cease. Mean time, let the appropriations be honestly paid, reducing the amount one-thirtieth every year, and the rising generation of Indians will be taught by that best of all schoolmasters, ex perience, that they must learn to work, or take the grim alternative that "If any man will not work, neither shall he eat." We believe that upon some such prin ciples as these, and upon no opposite •ones, can the Indian question be settled. The In dian must be treated honestly and fairly, in every bargain that the Government makes with him; but he must be severely punished whenever he assumes a hostile attitude, and be must be taught by degrees to adopt the usages of civilization, and to earn his bread by the sweat of his brow. Until these things are done he will be a stumbling block in the way of advancing civilization, and a terror and a scourge to the pioneers and settlers upon our western frontier; MAD WE A BOURBON AMONG US? Most persons will remember the excitement created some years ago by the appearance, in .Putnarre.B Magazine, of a series of articles designed to prove that Rev. Eleazer Wil liams, a clergyman of the Protestant Epis copal Church' in this country, was really Louis EVIL, son of Marie Antoinette, and the Daupnin of France. The mass of testi mony adduced was very great, and at the time it was regarded by many as conclusive; but in recent years very grave doubts have been thrown upon it, and the general opinion at present is, that Mr. Williams had no claim to the title. Now that the whole matter has • -p_nearly_forgotten, we are surprised-by-a revival of the claim, and the production of additional evidence by a prominent clergy man in New York, Dr. Francis Vinton, - • ...a :1 .• upon an inside page to -day ben:- • dew wire' le Oen+, are, first, s very remarkable display of emotion made n portrait of the jailor Sinton,' without kno w -ing_whoit.tns; 5e...c0:04,41e- teitimony_of_ the'Duke of Wirtemburg, oorukin . to the King of Wirtemburg, and to the . Czar Nicholas.; Tnis nobleintin Waif' preierif in lir. Viatoll'EV church in Brooklyn, in ,gebruary,. 1853; Mr. Williams officiated, and the Duke was very much surprised at his , remarkable likeness to the Bourbon familY.7,Xpon tleatiling the, trtt more about Mr. Wfillamsle , sald, "He: is - no doubt a Bourbon." . Be also ~ stated that he had heard it reported in legitimist circles in France that the Dauphin had been conveyed' 'to America: It was his wish that his state ments should not be made public until after his death,and Dr.Vinton now presents a mem orandum of them, certified to by gentleman who heard them. The third point is the most important. It is of the "strawberry mark on your left arm" nature. Mrs. Commodore Read, of New Orleans, wrote.to. Dr. Vinton that she had seen a woman in Louisiana whq had been in the family of the',Duatiesse d'An goniBme, the sister of the Dauphin. This woman stated that she, bad heard ',the Duch ease sat that the surgeon who inoculated her brother had made a crescent-shaped scar upon his back 'With 'a lancet. Dr. Vinton: asked Mr. Williamst.permission to examine his back, and he found the scar, in the precise position designite&- ' ' This, with all the other existing testimony, seems to establish a pretty strong case, and w4l be likely to convince very many persons of the truth of Mr. ;.Williams' identity.., The conflicting testimonY is historical. The Dau phin Weald to:have died , irk the ',Temple, In the arms of one of = his keepers. His body was identified and Certified to by four 'mem bers of the committee of public safety in Paris, and by,more than twenty officials of the Temple.. A. post mortern, examination was also made by four distinguished physi cians who professed to recognize him. Of course it is possible that some of these par ties may have been deceived, and that others were bribed to give false testimony. It is well known,that the Legitimists, headed by the Count:. of Provence, declared in favor of the Dauphin's right to the throne, and made several attempts to rescue him, so that the revolutionists may have determined upon the safe policy of re moving him from the country and circulating a report of his death. The exact truth will probably never be known. The whole matter is more curious thaii im portant, any rate. Much of its interest is derived from the tragic history of the poor royal boy, from the wild romance of his asserted life in this country,and from the mysf tery in'which the subject is involfed. The truth or falsehood of the story can make ho difference now to the subject of it, for he has gone to the eternal world. Indeed, Mr. Wil- ' hams, while alive, manifested great indiffer ence about the matter. He had devoted him- Self to the sublime career of a preacher and a missionary, and he was better content with the royalty of a priesthood devoted to the welfare of his humblest fellow-creatures, than he would have been with the heavy responsibilities and endless tribulations of a ruler of France. He had the gentle nature of his reputed father, and it found fuller expression and satisfaction among the simple Indians, to whom he car ried the beneficent tidings of the gospel of peace, than it could have done upona throne. Now, that he is beyond the influence of tem poral honors, discussion of the subject can do nothing mere than tend to the establishment of an interdating historical fact, and for this purpose Dr. Vinton's paper is important. If it reawakens public interest in the matter, and evokes other evidence, we may yet find that the old question, Have we a Bourbon among us? was susceptible of an affirmative answer. BRAIN AND STOMA.On. There is something very ludicrous in the various methods by which the Democratic orators at the South are laboring to catch the negro vote. After holding him in abject bondage for two centuries; after plunging the country into a bloody war to perpetuate sla very; alter opposing every measure that had for its object the elevation of the negro to whrd manhood and the opportunity of prov ing his capabilities for civilization—these ex slavehOlders are now haranguing political meetings all over the South, and bidding frantically for this despised negro vote. It is no longer possible to keep the negro in his quarters,while politics are being discussed upon the stump, and so the orator is com pelled to steer his difficult and delicate course between the prejudice of the whites against the negroes and the instincts of the negroes against the class who held them in slavery. It is a very "hard row to hoe," but clever Southern politicians are not stopped by ordi nary difficulties, and so we see them charg ing at this wide ditch, and floundering through, utterly unmindful of consequences. One of the latest specimens of this feat Of arguing for a."white man's government" and for negro rights, in the same breath, is pre sented in Howell Cobb's speech, which we published:on Friday last. Howell boldly informed his hearers that the' men who kept the negro in slavery were his best friends, and the men who delivered him from it his worst enemies; and then he gives them a pat ent for catching the negro vote. Here it "I never talk politics with my negroes, and yet they voted with me, and will do it again. The only argument that I offered them was four pounds of bacon, one peck of meal, a quart of potatoes, a good doctor when sick, and one-fourth of my crop. That's the very best argument that you can offer them. Try it. You will find that it will convince all sensible negroes." There is quite a show of' onesty a • out . Cobb's recipe for making "my negroes" vote his way. The bacon, meal, potatoes and medicine were originally the sole ingredients in it, and the treatment was thus made very simple. The improved remedy, however, includes the trifling ad dition of "one-fourth, of the crop." This, Mr. Howell Cobb would have it un derstood,*as an invention of his for the ; enefit - of - "my - negroes," and entitles him to peculiar favor at their hands, whereas= the negro well knows that he is indebted wholly to the Republican party for_anyAhare-th) ; as the profits of his labor on Mr. Cobb's lantation. But Mr. Cobb was not quite as honest as he looke. He forgot to give his hearers his r II " I r 1,11 I. • I I. 17 •W o i craw; or a e• e evation-z of Nay .nsgraes" to the diigh. digtittr 4:if democratic !_votPm - Hecintitted_tkaay;that,whirelhectik and meal fail to' Produiit n'ttitaYtheletlikect ,appeal to ' the . ,brain whith he ,evidently bolievea . r 4esides.. „ in the African stomacis, - 'than' the ' process is to stop thet , becett tin& Meal' on in 'other words, to drive the obstinate 'believers in the 'truths of Republicanism from, his employ ment. It iti‘simply 'a' Twitters of bacon with Howell Cobb, but he ought to , have stated it more fully, to, his ignorant hearers. He would have dono so; if heOpilidonli,itairekept,"my negroes" out of heirlitg; will "go to meeting;" and so he must needs leave a few, important ideas to the comprehension of his audiences without expressing them in 'se many words. The Cobb doctrine is : " Deniocracy and 'Bacon; Republicanism and Starvation." , The . - ,doctrine is a strong one all the world over, If it can only be pnt'in force.' 'Unfortunately for : its appli cation to the Democratic vote at the South, Mr. Cobb needs the negro labor:more than the negro' needs Mr, "CObb's•badon, arid it will be found that-the negro hag a portion of his brains located elsewhere than in his stomach, 'haddeus Stevens placed perhaps a just es timate upon the relative importance of his triuinphs,when 'deelaied that his successful eftbrkin;behalf of the estalilishment of a com mon school system , in. Pennsylvania, was the greatest accomplishment of, Ids political ca rter.' It was'indeed the crowning glory of a life that hit bitterest enemies confess to have been xionsistent in its intense struggle for universal liberty- 7 a life spent in the very forefront of progress: The greatest men this'world has produced- have been radicals, and Mr. Steyens, like , them, was, ever ahead, of his time. Ii 1834 he introduced to the Legislature of .tins State the bill providing for taxation of the people for,the Support of pub lic schools. Amid a iMweribl; wealthy, frantic opposition, he carried the- measure. 'lle next Legislature contained' <a majority elected to repeal the law, and just as, the fatal deed was about to be done, Mr Stevens arose, and in the ablest speech' of his life, turned the tide in favor of free education. He was un popular then, because he was the apostle of future, good, seeing in general education- a mighty agent for liberty, and for the eleva tion of his race, and a weapon against that hateful system of negro slavery, which found its sturdiest support among the ignorant. us~ea he writhe loader of th - e - Varignard in 1885, against the battalions of bigotry, so he was wiser than his generation in these later years. His old antagonists hardly dare questlon the superlative sagacity of his action in behalf of the school bill; and there are those in the ranks of the opposition to day, who will live to look back upon the Majestic presence of "the old man eloquent" in Congresg, and ac knowledge that his was a brave, unflinching, earnest struggle for the right; for a higher and purer civilization; for a jester estimate Of manhood, its privileges and duties; and for that perfect liberty which gives to all men equality before the law, and a voice in their own government. Thaddeus Stevens' unsel fishness proves the sincerity of his motives. His labors were literally without recompense, excepting that consciousness of duty well done, which belongs only to such men as he was. The time has not yet come to measure the stature ()fhb moral and intellectual great ness. It will come only when there is a final triumph for the mighty principles for which he contended. A brute of a fellow was tried at the :Quar ter Sessions for unmercifully beating a lame and briilien-winded horse, which had fallen in the street from exhaustion. The case was clearly made out, but it was unfortunately committed to one of those stupid juries who so often bring the whole system ofjury trial into disrepute, and a verdict of "not guilty" was returned. The biped brute went free for the time, but the officer who made the arrest very properly appealed to the Court for in structions m similar cases, whOreupon Judge Brewster sent for the owner of the poor beast and gave him, a lecture on the subject of cruelty to animals which he will not immedi ately forget, especially as it was accompanied by the imposition of a bail of $5OO to keep the peace, and a warning that the recogni zance would be sued out upon a repetition of the offence. The excuse offered in this case was so ex traordinary that the action of the jury has something mysterious, not to say miraculous, about it. The plea was made that the horse was lame and broken-winded when his tor menter bought him for thirty dollars. He seems to have believed that this fact en titled him to the privilege of beating the wretched beast whenever he broke down un der the heavy load of a coal cart, andthe jury was evidently of the same opinion. What the train of reasoning was that con nected the animal's infirmities with the right to beat and abuse him in the brains of this sapient jury, we cannot imagine. However that may be, the cause of humanity is indebted to the officer who called the attention of the Court to this unjust verdict, and to Judge Brewster for his prompt action and his stern reprimand of the offender. It is to be hoped that the police will not be deterred from their manifest duty by these occasional failures to convict in cases of cruelty to animals. All juries are not as stupid as this one, and where the case is as clear as it was in this instance, the chances are that the law will take its proper course against the offender. Whose business is is to keep the sidewalks free from obstruction by rubbish or building material ? Thirteenth street, below Walnut, has now been entirely impassable on the east side for several days, the entire sidewalk being blocked up with the bricks and mortar from a demolished building. It is, of course, somebody's business to prevent such an im position as this, and we call attention to it, in the vague hope that the particular authority entrusted with keeping the streets open to pedestrians may be stirred up to the exercise of the pgwers necessary in the premises. It is highly encouraging to see the numerous ,building improvements that are being made 'n-aillnartanf_the-city,-but_it_wouldnondu • more to the,order and comfort of the com- a little more closely within the limits of the .- , =ME THE PROBLEM SOLVED.' „ . Olothing need-not be shape lean when moderate priced ! Call at , =WANAMAKER & BROWN'S,. EDWARD- P. KELLY ; rr.4 1 1311E.C111., S. E. Cor. Chestnut end Seventh Bkl 16Fae stock and complete emertment of CriblCE' GOODS. Clothed miitia or mimior to Owe° of soi edict Pint, Maio Estabultunent atModerate Moos, • Pattern Coats and Clothes not tidied for now for sale at Reduced Pikes. SE BABLA ESPANOL. ON PABLE PRAbiOAIS. • IMMEASURABLY EIIMPLI3\__ A nice looking young lady came into a photographer s shop the other day arrayed in her Sunday-go. to-meeting clothes. She was a shy looking young lady. She looked at the photograph man, and the photograph man looked at her. Finally she spoke : "I want to get my measure taken for a p'hoto ra ph, ant ---- i — WUp - slesfisMe I me how soon I can have the photograph after I get my measure taken, sir?" And the man of photographs - was taken with a fit of laughter at the nice young lady; and she was afraid the measure wouldn't be a good fit; and so she went to her home in the country; and she hasn't any photograph yet; she is so simple. We don't get measured for our pho tographs but Rot , khill & Wilson are the folks who will take your measure for clothes. Come and sit for a new suit while the warm weather lasts. Ready MINN or made to order, cer tain to suit you. ROCKHILL & WILSON Great Brown Stone Clothing 603 nd 605 Chestnut Street. HENRY PHILLIPPI. CARPENTER AND BUILDER, NO. 10'24 SANSONE STREET, je.lly4p PHILADELPtIIA. JOHN CRUMP. BUILDER. Hal CHESTNUT BT REEP and MS LODUE STREET. Mechanics of every branch required for housebuilding and fitting promptly furnished. , feB7 tf WARBURTON'B IMPROVED. VENTILATED and esey•flttlng Dress Hats (patented). In all the ap proved tashiorui of the season. Chestnut street. next door to the Poet-office. sen-lyrp FOR MARRING NAMES ON CLOTHING WE FUR- L' nieh to order small Stencil Plates with Brush and Ink. Also, brands for marking tool-, and sets of Steel Alphabet and Figure Punches, at TRIMIANdo SHAW'S, No. 835 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street, below Ninth. FOE CORN OYSTERS, PORN FRITTERS, OR other preparations of Green corn, or for those who cannot masticate their boiled corn. Patent Corn.graters will be found to separate all the nutritious portions from the indigestible hull. Sold by TRUMAN (b. Shia W, No. 836 (Eight Thirty-five) Market street. below Ninth. EIAZAR STRAPS OF MA PPI.bPS,, CHARM AN'Ell Bunt's, Ilayne's,Monsans's. Emerson l Bmnd other good mall era' manufacture. Razor Hones and Razors for sale by TRUMAN & SHAW. No. 835 (sight Thirty-eve) Market street. below Ninth. Philadelphia. MISS ANA BLE'S follow., NU. 7 ABBOTWORD Place, MO Pine street. Philadelphia. will re-open Wednesday, Septemberl6, 1868. au17,24t• STOLEN.—FINE BONDS, FIVE HUNDRED DOL late each, Welvldere & Delaware Railroad. Second Mortgage. Interest March and September; Nut. 2,99. 260, 261, 262, 263. Brokere are cautioned, not to purch tee. IV LEVY & DOUGLASS, 139 South Third street. NOTICE.—ALL PER , IONS ARE HEREBY CM:ITV/N -ed against trusting any of the crow of the American Balk "Nereid," Beane, Master, from Liverpool, as no debts of their contracting will be paid by either the Cap tain or consignees. YETER WRIOHT & SON% aul6 tf 116 Walnut street 1QL•O~-6DT Saloon. YV v lTß fira f t l : 2l Ca r a te groEf t 23 dren•e flair Cut. Shave and Bath. 25 :cent. 'Etazori actin order. Open Sunday morning. N 0.125 Exchange Place. (It•) O. O. KOPP. 1 BAAO NATHANB, AUCTIONEER. N. E. CORNER Third and Elprnee streets, only one square below the Exchange. 8858,000 to loan in laze or small amounts, on reonelis,eilver plate. watches, erwelry. and all goods of . Mice hours from BA. to 7P. M. oar Estab ed for the last forty years. Advances made in large amounts at the lowed market rates. isi3-tErn NDIA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING STEAM PACK Lag HOllO, Ac. Engineers and dealers will find a full assortment of Goodyear's Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing Hose, dta.. at the Manufacturer's Headquarters. GOODYEAR'S, 908 Chestnut street, South AMC N. B.—We have now on hand a large lot of Gentlemen's, Ladl Gum ' and is es* Gum Boots. Also. every variety tyle o f O. FOR SALE.—TO idERUELANTEI, BTOREKKEPERI3 Hotels and dealers-200 Cases Onampairne and Crab Cider. MO bbia Chanivaane and Crab uider. P. J. JORDAN. . , ID) Pear street. RAMBLING WPM INDELTBLE INK. EMBR J OLDETI Lfl ing. Brai ding. Otamping. M. A. TOWER. Filbert airing; ep l MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON DIAMONDS, WATCHES. JEWELRY. P LATE„ CLOTHING, Are. at JONES & CO.'S OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE, Corner of Third and Hoskin streets, Below Lombard. N. B.—DIAMONDS. WATCHES, JEWELRY. HUNS. &0.. MR SALT AT REMARKABLY LOW PRICEB. 628.- HOOP BKIRTS AND CORSETS - - Do not fail to examine them. Best and cheapest in the market. 50 spring Skirts, "our own make," and war• ranted, at only $1 50, worth $2. Corsets retailed at wholesale prices, to get them introduced. $1 corsets for 81 cents: $1 50 corsets for $1 16; $2 50 corsets for $2; $5 corsets for $4, arc. The preeent low prices for our first-class Skirts and Corsets greatly eurprim every one. Please cannon% as we will advance prices let of Sep tember, material having already sovanced. ' a . uadeLio _order, altered—and--rarkeired,_at_6% Arch street, 71118 im,114 - WM. - T. TIOPSINS. HOOP SKIRT AND"CORSET MANUFACTORY, NO. 812 Vine street. All goods made of the best materials and warranted. :.op Bk 'IA roll ,iyl4 3m CORSETS. CORSETS. IST.A.DATEE A. BARATET - . :4+ -Is ••11...1 ~,, , , . . 11 1 from 115 Southutetr et to 112 South Elev. end', below Phila delphia.Cheetnut, e Attention is invited to - her beautiful light, I eneoreet for e .umei wear. lekVad MEN =ME th IP LINEN 'STORE 828 Arch !Street. Linen Dmiks mid Drills. White Drill and Ducks. Flex Calored DrlUs and Duck*. Buff Coating Ducks. Fanoy Drills Fast Wens Striped Drills Fast Colors. Mottled Drills, Fast Cobra. Blouse Linen, several colors. Plain Colored Linens, , for Ladies' Traveling Slabs Printed Shirting Linens. Linen Cambrio Dresses. The kraut assortment of Men Goods In the dtp Selling at Less then Jobbeieo Mem • GEORGE MILLIK.EM . Wen Importer. Jobber and Retail Dealer d w 828 Arch Street. ente • " sr ''ral Fourth and Arch._ EITTBINER AND BEABIDE S .W LS • BALMORAL SKIRTS. GORED BALMORAL SKIRT COFFIN & ALT.EMUS, -FITLER, WEAVER & CO. ti6lll/ CORDARE FACTORY B, BAYLEY. VINE WATCHES ATMOOED ' BM& - FREE! Just received ly • WM. dr. BROTHER; In:molten, levu•tfrp - 374 Chestnut street, below roam: ..:101i.; i $I1-41t.r.4.90., IDIEPOIATEISFiI JOBBERS and OFFEB. AT POPULAR PRICES; A VERY E7LTENBIVE /.513081'MENT OF FALL DRESS GOODS. RICKEY, SHARP &CO. E n' . % 727 Chestnut. Street. IN EVERY VARIETY. _ • • , • LADIES' SUMMER GOODS. LAWNS. ORGANDIES an GRENADINE% SUMMER POPLINS, FOR SUITS. TRAVELING DRESS GOODS. HMOS. COLLARS. GLOVES. etc. deli nw ■ CAIEIRETIIIOI9, atm. NEW CARPETS, Per Steamer "City of Antwerp," Made to order for REEVE L. KNIGHT di SON, Importers, 1222 Chestnut Street. iv2Stfr BALMORAL SKIRTS. iv co - v - .io 1.4 rr -Y" GORED lieosei " PARIS LA BELLE " THE HANDSOMEST EVER OFFERED* Will be oven for exhibition on THURSDAY, 13th Instil AT THE AGENTS, 220 CHESTNUT STREET anti et 4DIS Now IN FULL OPERATION. No. 18 N. 'WATER and f 8 N. DEL. Aria MARY 13 CONWA LAI&MLNIABING AND 811OPPM1 11201401 St South Sixteenth.Streeh • PIIMADELPIIM. Ladies from Lay part of the United Btates can send their orders for Dress Material, rester, Cloaks. Bonnets. Bboac, Under (nothing. Mourning 15.1304, ieddh peen. Traveling Jew elry. p MC I a ls o. Chil dren's Clothing. Infants* ardro Gentlemen's Linen, die. In ordering-. Garments. Ladles will please send one of their. MT Y 1721219 DRESSES for measurement; and Ladles. viritins the city should not fail to n orl .,to and hare their. measures registered for Entail:loony° Eaten, by pormiesion. to 'airrA=ns, GREEN GINGER. $ NEW AND FRESH GREEN GINGER. • JUS V RECEIVED. SIMON tout oN & CLARKE) 13. W. 001'. Broad and Walnut Stb wf tfrp Pennsylvania Elastics Pponga , - Chestnut Street; Ph il adelphia. ELASTIC' SPONGE, A SUBSTITUTE FOR CURLED HAIR FOR ALL UPHOLSTERY PURPOSES_ CHEAPER THAN FEATHERS OR HAM, AND FAR SUPERIOR. The Lightest. Softest and most _Elastloluni Durable ma. terial known for MAITRE/WED, P HAIR ILLOW CUSH • & R. CARRIAGE AND ON B. from d It in ust. entirely Indeetructible , perfectly clean and free IT DOES NOT ?ACK. AT ALL ! is always free from Insect use ; fri perfectly healthy. and• for the nick is unequaled. If soiled in any way. can be renovated quicker *sal 1 . easier than any other biattreaa. Special attention riven to FURNIBLUNG GRURDREEI. HALLS. de. Railroad men are especially Welted to examine the- Cuahlon Sp e. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. THE TRADE SUPPLIED. iv4on2 w f lyg ROASTED ALMOND, STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, a tio. 1210 Market Street. LOOKING GLASSES " - NG 'A ' • NEW 011110110-LITHOGRAPHS, EARLES' GALLERIES; 1106. REMOVAL. 1106. THE lIMER 11WHIFICTUEIN4 COMTE Have Removed their Wareroome to No. 1106 Chestnut Street. RINGER'S NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE la almple, durable. quiet and light running, and capable of' performing an sa-toniehing range and variety of - Ivor/L — 1G will hem. fell. ditch. Inteid , gather. cord. tack. Ont. embroider. dge. my 2 tarp Virld. E. COOPER. Agent FAMILY FLOUR, Made from Virginia. St. Louis, Ohio. Pennsylvania axon Kentucky White Wheat, at reduced prices, WAR-- RANTED SUPERIOR to any in the market. GEO. F. ZEHNDER, FOIIKTIEI AND VINE. .1981 ko Latest Improved Patent Low Steam and► For Warming and Ventilating Private and Public Bo Haw. Also. the approved Cooking Apparatus, AMERICAN KITCHENER, On the European plan of heavy castings. durehlllfv an& neatness of construct:lon_, for Hotels, Public Institution and the better class of Private Residences. _MOT Aix FURNACES of Ittelatest inappvereents. GRIFFITH PATENT ARCHIfdEDIAN VENTILATOR& • aeGIATEBB, VENTILATORS, &c. • Union Steam and Water Heating Co,, --- kl Z V• • • " COop 41 South Fol3llTll:4lteet, Phlladelphla. 8.-M. FELTM.LL. Suporiniendent. I JyB 4mrg, .I .l 4'h i l lAl L VE rl 3 erd i to l illt ß Try X . E Jo 3 B ll lligY ALlTY • CO., abou&DelaVero avenue, MR..7 M 7AFLElGE. iiainti street. BßSßßa. noNatkr i tf 818'434 BYO Chestnut street. WATOIFIEN JEWBLIftlf l . & IN BAILEY & CO" DIAMOND DEALERS, CHESTNUT STREET 819. 01101113 IEB, 1.1111111,1011118, drolDe ELASTIC SPONCE. E - 0 ` The Perfect Manuthotured by Nam - vv - warymams 816 Chestnut Street. SEWINO-DI&OHINEfb. CHOICE NEW WHEAT GOLD'S Hot Water Apparatuo, r•_: ; ,,~~~~ 74.7,T3111N - VELEIIa aniii4 r , FA 1 h; TO-DAY'S CABLE NEWS. State of the Markets: FROM HARRISBURG. THADDEUS STEVENS'S FUNERAL. The Governor in Attendanoe. By the Atlantle Lourrow, Ang. 17, A. M.—Consols 94X for money and 9434 for account. United States Flve-twentics,7l34; Illinois Central,9l3‘; Erle,3l. FRANKFORT, Aug. 17, A. 3L—United States Five-twenties, 71%. LIVERPOOL, Aug. 17, A. M.—Cotton active— sales of the day estimated at 20,000 bales: Mid dling Uplands, 1031; &WOG*, Orleans, -1034. Breadstuffs and Pkovisions unchanged. Lormox, Aug. 17th, A. M.—Tallow declined to 455 , / Spirits Petroleum, ls. Sugar dulL Lin seed Oil, £3l. Calcutta Linseed, 635. Linseed / Cakes, £l2, ss. Other articles unchanged. Arervireap, Aug. 17.—This belngia holiday there are no markets. SourtrAmprost, Aug. 17.—The steamships Weser and Heileman's, from New York, have The Weser at 10.80 P. M., yesterday, andlho latter at 6.80 P. If., Saturday. ' • LONDON, Aug. 17, P. M.—Erles, MM. Atlantl and Great Western, 89M. Consols unchanged. LIVERPOOL, Aug. 17, P. BL—Cotton buoyant and advanced Md.; Uplands, 1034; Orleans, 10M Breadstnffs quiet. Lard Orm at Ws. Pork dull. Bacon; 575. LONDON, Aug. 17, P. V.—Sugar declining. Sperm 011, .£lO. • The Harrisburg Helogation. [Special Degratchl to the Ildledelphtatveniza Bulletin.) HARRISBURG; August 17th.—Governor Geary, Secretary of Commonwealth Jordan, Deputy Secretary Gam and other heads of the Depart ments left for Lancaster to attend the funeral of Thaddeus Stevens, at 7-34 - o'clock this morning. A special train of twelve cars, containing mem bers of the Grant and Colfax Club; committee of colored people; • attached OC,the,yarious State Departments, and citizens generally, left at 11 o'clock. A large number tett In the regular train at 12.20, which bronchi large numbers from the West. Arrival of a team er-G old-Weather. Arrived-----Stesmsbig New York, from Bremen. Gold opens at 14N. The weather is cloudy, with the wind from the east.. THADDEUS STEVENS. Obsequies. ; at Lancaster To-day---The City Draped In Moarning---Arrival of Distinguished Visitors. ' Anangejnenta for the Procession•=-The Pall-Bearers and Guard of Honor• -- Abe Funeral Ceremonies. (Special Parental to the PM& Ernalog Beltetto.l Litxc.Aersta, August 17.—During the whole of Saturday, Mr. Stevens's remains lay in state in the parlor of his. late residence, the sunestion to place theta in the Court House having been abandoned: The citizens of Lancaster and vicin ity, to the number of several hundred, visited the house during the day,a constant stream of visitors thronging the street from the time the coffin was opened in the morning until the doors were closed late in the evening. The appearance of the remains is natural, the face being the same as in life ; the eyes are more deeply sunken than when he was last at his home, and the face thinner, but the firmly compressed lips still give evidence of the indomitable firmness which ever distinguished him—seeming even more stern and proud in the rigidity of death. His death seems to have, in a great measure, quenched the bitterness of partisan feeling. The unfaltering consistency of his life-long devotion to the principles he held has inspired the respect of all, and it is now fully manifested in the universal expression of regard for his memory. The colored people seem to be especially af fected by the less of one who has been their most earnest and faithful friend. On the evening of the 14th they met at the A. M. E. Church, the proceedings beMg as follows: At a meeting of the colored citizens of Lancas ter, held August 14th, }RCS,, in the A. M. E. Church, after singing and prayer, the Rev. James V. Pierce was called to the chair, and a com mittee appointed to draw up a preamble and resolutions expressive of the sense of the colored people of the city and county of Lan caster, relative to the death of Hon. Thaddehs Stevens, our much honored and fast friend. The committee retired and brought in the fol lowing: Whereas, It has pleased an All-wise God to remove from earth our late Representative in in Congress, and the fast and tried friend of our race, who has always advocated the cause of the oppressed and• down-trodden, and fought the battles of right against wrong and oppression with unflinching integrity and with iron will, such us very few, if any others, possessed; and, Whereas, It is becoming and proper that, whilst humbly bowing to the will of the Ruler of all things, who is infinite in wisdom, we should testify our sense of gratitude to one who has done so much for us as a people; by appropriate tributes of respect to his memory, we and our posterity ever cherishing the recollection of his great worth. Resolved, That, we deeply mourn the loss of our much-beloved friend, as the centre of our fu ture hopes of equal rights before the law, and a tried friend of our race. Resolved, That while we cannot fathom the In Canal stocks the only activity was ID Lehigh Nevi. mysterious providence by which he was cut gallon which sold at 21U1g2134 regular and 21 c 60. down in the midst of the great struggle of the In Bank and Passenger Railroad shares no change.. nation, nation, for the reconstruction of man's recious stgeetsrins.2:tDiot and Brother , itie B ge If ill e r f_ d and Godgiven rights and equality before the change to day. at IP. El :Gaited States Size% 1.1, 114 ms law, without distinction of color, we bow in 11414: do. do.. 'ea, 118 3 / 4 (4113%; d0.d0., 1864. 1091R102X; do. humble acknowledgment of His .wisdom and 1867 1865 ;e igvni z 1: : .&-Iry i ,,,,i,li ci ti-Alz i tt. ; goodness,Who upholds the universe and disposes forties, usuic@aus)s: Due Compound biterest Notes, Isg; all things for His own glory and the salvation of do. do. Sept., 18(Z.1834; do. do. do., Oct.. 1860.18; Gold. , His people. tef@tefm; tamer. 188141140. Smith. Randolph Go, Banitem.l.6 South Third street, Resolved, That as one of the pioneers of his quote at 11 o'clock, all follows: Gold, 14,73 i; U- S. race, regardless of party, his peer has not been Sixes. issl. U0.i®11,53,"; United States Fivektwenties, found since the great Washington. He is truly it. ;IVITy; I d 9 r,4l44, l °V._iit, PoitiliVe. one to whom we had looked as a leader in the so. 1868, 1 Mew; Fives, en-forties. 14.18 x, 1081 i• present great struggle,for liberty. Jay Cooke & Go. quote Government Securities. &0., to- Resolved, That we tender our heart-felt sycnpa- gy,a 3 we r T fitrai i nt u atrl, 61. v i , fa ve l n l o gras i s6c old thy to the•relatives and friends of our deceased iceNigiosx: do. do. teris, Ut3o4rinfi Five-twenties of benefactor. Juty, 107 0 q78%; do. do. 1867. 1073 4 "®108: do. do. 11368. 107 1 si eu @ n I : am Ten-fortlea, totimfemsy.,- Gold 1473,i Resolved, That the members of our society and & Keene. 42 80 . th Third 'sreet, the colored citizens of Lancaster city and vicini- quote Border State all fello w vi a : Tennessee(' old. ty,- with suitable clothing and badgesior_ the_oc-___ -_ 6 . f..'4 1 1ini,d5w,__ 0 64.0.53,0;-v las.-old.-5,3®,56;-do. elision, take an active part in escorting the re- 7s e i v elnatir l is ' , 4 ritaX""'o d. 721(®72,5; do. now. spected remains of Hon. Thaddeus Stevens to _ . ---.........----- . their last resting-place. irtalaidelphiet Produce 1211eurket. MONDAY, Aug. 17.-There is not much doing In Mover- On Sunday it was not proposed to admit v isa- seed. and prices are necesaullp unchanged ;_a sale of 200 .rs, .nt le .•- e on 'e part of - the 11:111 - a• .... •hehrstl2Bl2rsXrlltil. tielir7ift UAW - said at bushel-an improvement. The re ts of Fl eel- are per friends was so strong, and their number so great, trifling, and it Is in demand at $2 GO.' , The - market - 10 bare of Bark, and No I Quercitron ts thai many were permitted to tall - Ca - last look at . wanted at Sea per to .•, their departed friend—a kind and wise cones - 2 , at e da o,r, t „ . ..,.„{i„,,,in t ,,, t ve tte t,b o 4, A i tt r d i e t. t r a T t eg t . slon, as the hours allotted to visitors to-day '- pate thor ° Lunl ' faisfrivoo and 49 w ok: , t for thiptgeg of; the nuniber of his constituents who coin° from a distanO tinittenditaiotabgeffes. -The-84104A 4fllur ;AO a special meeting on the 14th to express their sense of the loss otline of-Die eirlieltaild ablest advocates of our ' Sch6ol Szstetn a ,itt, which xesolutions- Were adopted !silting' the a t of all the schools and, the Alumni of the High School to attend the funeral In a body. G. F. Bretton= and Dr. Carpenter deliVered addresses on the Occasion, in tribute to the services of deceseed to the school • The guard , of honor (Colored Zotutves) who escorted the remains from. ashington, returned honie orf Eliturday morning. The marshalship of the ,profcssion has been declined by Major Howell, and "Col. W. L Bear appointed In his place, who has issued the fol lowing order of pant& t • „ The Police will form under the direction of the Captain in South Queen ateeet, below the resid ence of the deceased. The Fire Department will form on Vine street, right resting on gneen„extonding eastvrardly. J. H. Hegener, Jr., Marshal. The. Mayor, Select and Common Councils, City Officers, County Commhssioners,County Officers, United States Officials; of the Ninth District, Medical Faculty, Members .of the Press, Trustees Faculty, Students of Franklin and Marshall Col lege, Trustee,s, Faculty, and Students. of Normal School, Millersville, Board of Schol Directors. Teachers of the Public Schools of the City and CoUnty,, the Alumni and. Pupligt of- the lligh School, and tbelkhool , DepartMent of the State, will form on Vine street south side, right resting on Queen street, extending eastwarifiy. John Herr, Marshal. Benefigial Societies will- form on South Queen e street. east islde, right resting on Vine street, extending sonthwardly: "Bum:Lel B. Cox, Organized Delegations from abroad will form on South Queen street, west side, right resting on Vine street, extending seuthwanfly. J. P. Rea, Marshal. The, Governor, Heads of the Department, Chief Justice and Judges of the Supreme . Court. Offi cials from other States, Judges of the Conrts and members of tbe Bar, will for= on Vine street, south side, right resting on South Queen, extend ing eastwardly. H. 41. Breneman, Marshal. The citizens will form on Vine street,< north side, right resting on Queen street. extending westwardly. Lewis Zercher, MarshaL ' All associations will march In columns of four. The citizens will march in sections of sir, fol lowing the carriages containing the friends and relatives. The different organizations ei they'arrive on the ground Will report to the Marshal of their re spective divisions who will be found at the right of their column. ' At several of the churches,.reterence was made to the sad event by the ministry, all paying high tributeß to the deceased. At Bt. John's Free Church, Rev. Dr..fluddards, of. Philadelphia, in cidentally mentioned the fact that since he had last filled that pulpit, two of the most distin guished of the nation and of the world had passed away from our midst, one of whom was _now-wsiting_to_be rarris to s_buft place—one whose statesmanship, patriotism and consistent devotion to principle had made his public life parrof our national history. At the primary elections of-the Republican Party on Saturday, the unanimous vote of the district was east for the name of Thaddeus Stevens for the representation in the next Con gress. This was done at the suggestion of, the County Committee, as an expression of the uncitminiehed confidence of the people hi their distinguished and lamented Representative. It may be interesting to mention the reason of the burial of Mr. Stevens in Shreiner's,CettleterY• He owned until recently lots in both thti princi pal burial places of the city, but disposed of them - and purchased the spot where he will now be laid, for the reason that colored persons were excluded from the two former, and he desired to recognize the universal brotherhood of man, for which he had so long and so bravely battled, even in his choice of his final resting place. The Mayor of the city, in accordance with the resolutions adopted at the citizens' meeting, is sued on Saturday a proclamation requesting the closing of all business places in the city from I o'clock P. M., until evening. Many places throughout the city are draped in mourning—the newspaper offices,the Post-Office, the house of the Shiftier Fire Company, of which the deceased has long been a member and officer, and the flags are all at half-mast. The event seems to have made a deeper impression noon the community than any other for, many ye - sit. Bo accustomed of late years to his repeated rally ing against attacks which threatened his life, his death at last fell upon the community with a shock the effects of which are universal. Oontinned in the next Edition. State of lhermonieter This Day at the Bulletin Office. 10 A. If 70 de;. 12 M. ..78 deg. 2P. 21 78 deg. Weather dear. Wind dorthetat. FLNAJXCIAL and COMMERCIAL Phlladelph Wee at the Philadelp 11T651 2000 Read 6s'7o 105% 25000 Lehigh 6601 d In r6Own 87k 8000 do b 5 lta 88 1800 City Mold vr at 100 80 eh 351eqh Bk 8136 BETWKE 1000 City 6'e new Its 103 100 do do 1 0 2% 3000 do 102% 100 eh Penn R b6O 53% 100 eh do 860 54 400 eh do b 5 53%1 SLOOND 1100 City6B new 102% 400 do 2 etfe 102% 500 N Pennaß 68 3034 3700 Pa 6e 3 sere he 104% 4 elk Patna R 53% 80 eh do 5331 80 eh Cam&Am 2dys Its 129 Monner, August 17.—Money continues as abundant as ever, but the 'Banks expect a heavy drain upon them from the West next month, and anticipate higher rates of discount at that • period. The statements of our Banks, made public this morniug.exhiblt a very healthy state of . affairs, and show,fhat they are amply prepared for any emergency which may arise. The stock marketwas greaby depressed this morning, and the general tendency was fora lower range of dawns. Government-and-State Loansrwere not so steady City Loans were lower-10M was the best bid for the new is• saes. brit the old certificates were steady at 100 Lehigh Navigation Goid Loan was lows r and gold at 8736 & 60. Readir g Railroad sold down to 46%, but cased at 461 i —an advance of 311. Pennaylvania Railroad sold at 53311. and Catawba& Railroad Preferred at 831,1—n0 change. 128 was bid for Camden and Amboy Railroad; 44 for Lit., tie Babuyan Ratiroadl-68 for Norristown Railroad; 5536 for Mine RIB Railroad; 64 for Lehigh Valley, arid 26 for Philadelphia and Erie Railroad. :THETAIVI EVENINbr 13IILLETIV --PITILADELPHIA._MONDAY.__AIIGUSt 17,1868. • Money Marko I. 'his - Stock &cottage. 100 eh Read R b3O 45W 100 eh do c 45.56" 100 eh do s2O 45 100 eh Cataw MO 33 k 100 eh LehNavetc c 21V EMII2I 200 obLehlly stk e5O 21 200 oh Cataw pr b2O 200 all do b6O '33% 100 eh Bead lt 45% 100 eh do on 45 25 oh Union Bk B.swni 6034 BOARD. 20 oh Lehlehl7al B 543 100 eh Leh NavStk 213; 20 eh Catawle Dr 31 100 ah do , 100 eh do 333 100 eh do 610 fiat 93X 300 oh do 8314 100 ah Ocean Oft sayf rtoarbw4l. Small infarct Extras et i r9 • • banelllo • glitxtrir-- • Mon _lO6ll lellef - _.,-160 , Vona. 8ye...M0ue. 12 ommand& /19 I to s. COin Moot .no. fatr.diinandforgood_WheataL wine, bnt infr lota are not want rtd.'-fsgva et 44730 b us hels' ;pod sad primoYenusylvatia and Wisofern Sada S 2 47 tea 40; alid conic of far q u ality tit $2 40. Rye not canbe owed over St 65. from Is_ quiet; small eOn of Yew 'UM rot 110; and Hired Western at St 76. Ode, are dull sad linsettled: sales of 4,000 bushels new South ern sad Mums. at 706576 e. The New Nom trieseittarfort• • IFrOM.tho New York Herald of today.] • Ammer Id-The market Was active rad rather wide in its fi nd na during the past week,the extreme range having n from 145% to 148, while the clarion Volition on the street= Saturday was 146%®147. The shipments of epode from tho port were limPed to $544.9e, making_a total since the B u b - Trea sury 'nuary of .62 115,140. The disbursements et UMali coin itinai meal of Intetest aggregal..e4 A278.000.-while the customs receipts were $1877,C00. The general tendency of the gold premium Is undoubtedly upward. owing to firmacial and commerdal causes as well iss political influences, which are even more powerful than the forme t and in estima ting its Inn:retor. most persona lose a tof thelatter. and therefore arrive at erroneous conclue tsisi MM. it is quite bla that our foreign entails might vrepoirderate largely over our imports, the rates of foreign exchange rule far below the specie shipping point and the stock of gold in the country be three or four times silage ae it is, and yet thatthe premium might rise far above its present point. ' and this - simply owing to distrust''of the _political future of the country- But added fo thie distrust we have now to deal with the fact that our foreign imports largely exceed our exports, unusually 'Leek andold in the country and the Trea sury is low. that webers) shipped from shit port alone to foreign wets since the lot of Janusry more than eixli.two tenons of aped* and bullion. Bat politi cal consideration? are paramount to all others as re. garde the future course of gold and .the speculators in operating fora rise are only antletagng a real move ment which would be experienced whet her there was any speculation in gold or not Of comae speculation temporarily exaggerates elects . but to be successful it must be besed upon somethin g more substantial than caprice, and this is especially so in the cue of gold. The speculators have, therefore, much lees control over its mite than is generally supposed. Government torcu.i•W , li were doll and steady dark's the early part of the week, but on Thursday afternoon and subeequently a bear attack was made upon them, under which trice, yielded from one to one god threenoar tem lows cent before one o'clock on datnr day, following which there was a slight rally and the market closed steady at the improved quota. Bona The meteors so sell vane. entirely from partili in the street, and hence it is reasonable to euppoes that there will be'a sharp re-action from this artificial depression, the "abort." interest outstanding; being very heavy and the borrowing demand for all the issues of coupon five. twenties so unusually active that the borrowers offer to cony the e l re ss e :thout interest. A glut bills drawn agairet shipments of Five t went'? bands d ed the rates of foreign exchange, and the leadingdrawers were willing to sell their sixty days sterling at 1093f,while German banker?' bike were offered in sonic instances at 109.4. At the dere the market we nose ttled,but there was a reduced supply . of bills offering. The effee.of this decline in raters is to check our domestic exports both of produce and securities, and indirectly, therefore, it tends to strengthen the gold premium by in" o wasreponderance of imports over export& Money la abundant supply during the week at four per cent. for loans on call on mixed 'collateral*, with ex ceptional trannicrionerst - one per .cent. both above and below thia- ot h er e principal dealers in government securities anfirst class bonsai having 'no difficulty la harrowing largely et three and three and a half per cent while borrowers of small amounts on sspeculetive raihnadshareo were 'willing,:in come thatancea. pay five: [Prim the N. Y. World, of today:]' Aro. 15,-11m Government bond market singularly dull and heavy. A decline of Ito 1% per cent. has taken place within a few days, without any very large amount of sales, butsimply owing to the almost total absence of demand. _ • '1 he foreign exchange market is firmer, and the supply of bills :gated bonds ii expected to fall off •considera^ly. The leading prime bankers ask 10934foreixty day *sterling, and 10% for debt. They are not lumens to draw at there rates, because they look for a resumption of specie exports to cover their bills as teen en the supply against bonds ceases, which may take place on env clay. The gold market has been sold down for the last two days by stock operators' short sales. continued heavy to the early part of the day. eelling se low as 146%. but to wards the close a marked increase in the demand from German Bankers advance dthe price to 146% regular, and 147 buyer. 8, at 5 P. M. The opening was 14654 and closiug 4674-at3.P. Isi. The-rates-paid-for--carrying-.were--3,- and 4 percent _ '1 he operation e of the Gold Exchange' Bank to-day were as follows Gold balance!. ..... . ......... Currency balances 4,167.862 0 Groan . . . . . 85,263,0,0 to The LOACiat gnotationr nom Mow York .M.Y.'relegrapb..E • blew Yong. Attg. 17. —Stock:" weak. Chicago and Bock Island: 9934:' Reading; 93; . Canton Company. 46X; Erie, DP': Cleveland and 'toted°. 983,1; Cleveland and Pittebtn4b. MX; Pitttbmgrh and Fort Wayno, I 07; litiehlga. Central. _ Michigan Southern,. 83; N. Y. Central. Mei; Minnie Central.l49; Cumberland preferred, 30; Virginia Siseep 53; Mbaonri dixes 93; Hudson River, 187; Five-twenties. 11362. 113 G; ditto.. 1864. ito3,;; ditto. 111%;_ new lame. 1 0 8; Temfor• ties. 1108.!i ; Gold, 146.3 i; Money. 4 per cent.; Exchange. 103 i. Markets by telegraph. New Youx. Aug. 17th.—Cotton firm at 2930. - Flour dull and decUned Balm of 6.500 Morels, State. 7 25@510 25; ' Vhioi. -€8 90(4513 40; Western. $7 254 $lO 60; Southern. $9 '207515; California. $lO 30@12 50. Wheat dull and declined . (42c. Corn easier; Bales of 43 - 010 bushels at $1 Ll®! 19 Oats quiet at 89(4 , 83e. Beef oak.- Pork dull at $2B E 0 Lard; quiet. Whisky firm at 6734. Baurnione, August 17.—Cotton firm at 30c. Flour qniet and lees firm; City Mills Eie. $ 9 50@10; do. Extras. $1125.241.9 25: do. Family 13 25 @14; Northwestern Su perfine. $7 75(48 25; do. sera, $8 754g9 60. Prime to choice Wheat firm at $2 gas 70; low grades dull at $2 20 (g 2 40. Corn dull; prime - white. 181 1841 28; prime Yel low. $1 17(41 18: fly cut and worm. I 15. Oats dull at 70 (?)20c. Mem Pork firmat $9O 50. Bacon active; rib sides. 17,W1730-. : clear sides. 17M@Inic.; shoulders. leagl e. hams 22@23c. Lard quiet at 19c. UPHOLSTERY GOODS IN GENERAL. A FULL LINE OF STRIPED AND PLAIN TERRIES, ALL SHADES OF COLOR. LACE' CURTAINS, SOME MOST SUPERB DESIGNS PLAIN TERRY CURTAINS, Mpov:0301:10-1;i!4:y4ara:maamo:l mosclurrop NETS, PINK, WIEITE AND BLUE. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF HOLMES, ROEBUCK PALMER'S LATEST PATENTS WiTT:inl7MrgrW7Pl loxiuoiting4w,i,..3DOOMltMO:44 WINDOW SHADES. HOLLAND AND PAINTED. OPAQUE. TRANS PARENT AND SEMITRANSPARENT.ZI3 I. E. WALRAYEN, MASONIC HALL, N 0.719 OHESTRUT'STBEET. DREXEL & CO., 34 8, Third St, Philada. DREXEL., WINTHRORA. CO., 18 Wall St.. New York. DREXEL, HARJES & CO., • Paris. RANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOTHNERT, BUM /RD RAILROAD BUIE GOLD IND FOREIGN SWUNG& bane Lettere of Credit available in all parts of Eartor p ENNSYLVANLS .RAILROAD COMPANY 14, TREASURER'S DEPARTMENT. ft:imam/sane. August 1,1819. Notice to Sharcholdere. Persons bolding receipts for subscription to NEW STOCK, dated PRIOR to July 23, are hereby notified that Certificates will be ready for delivery on and after th 4th fast: - • tlertifleattOoLle . teiDte dated July 2VI to b 1 incluolv vvillbe ready for delivery on and atter the 14th instant. -1 2E0S - . T. PIRT u f Treas er. MB. STEVENS'S OBSEQUIES Vurther 3Particiiilars. Arrival Al. Visitor". • LAzrymyrnit; August 17. [Special De:watch to the Plat. Evening BrllothLl The) first down train this morning brought an immense number of people from Harrisburg and vicinity, adding to t,he r alre.ady vat crowd in Liao city:; The remains are now being visited by thousands, and it is with difficulty that the passages can be kept open so as to give all an opportunity to see thon. From every direction the people of the district are pouring in,, and the crowd is now greater than we have seen for years. AMong the arrivals we noticed Gov.. Geary, Gen. Cameron, Col. J. W. Forney, several of the State officers, and a nu m b e r ' of other well-known . faces. • 'l'here is a marked differsnce between the senti ments displayed on this and Other 'similar occa sions.' It Is a spontaneous outpouring of the people. There is nothing of the usual excitement and confusion on such days, the solemnity of the occasion seeming to affect all. Appearance 01 the Body. The appearance of the corpse today is not so natural, the discoloration having appeared in several places on thc, face, but the expression is unchanged. The conn is decorated with a wreath and cross of evergreen and white roses tu3d =es. The crowd increases every moment: The noon train came a half hour late with sev eral extra cars all crowded to overflowing with delegations from the several stations along the routeJ • We have noted no further distinguished arrl vab3'as yet. -The special train from Philadelphia hail just arrived, bringing the delegations' from the League, and the Republican invinclbles, and the Mayor, City Councils and numbers of citi zens. The depot is constantly crowded. The railroad officials have displayed the national colors, draped in mourning, and a portrait of the illustrious dead. The Services at the House. The services at the house commenced with an invocation by Rev. A. H. Xremer, of the First Reformed Church, as follows: "Oh Thou Divine God, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, Who art our refuge in time of trouble, cast upon us the light of Thy countenance and grant us Thy help! Give us grace to impiove the afflictions of Thy hand and turn our' hearts to keep Thy -4ommandments!-May-weldt,be-fellowship - of - Thy -- Holy Church brings forth the fruit of a godly life, and that having persevered in tho way of virtue and piety to the emf, we may, with Prophets, Apostles, Martyrs, Confessors and Saints of all ages, come into full communication with one another in Thine eternal and glorious kingdom through the mediation of our Lord mid Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen. The Rev. Bishop Bigler, of the Moravian Church, then read the ninetieth psalm. He was followed by a prayer by the Rev. E. H• Nevin, as follows: Rev. Ale. Nevins's Prayer. `") God, the only true and living God, before whom angels bow and and archangels avert their faces, we come before Thee at this time with profound grief, humility and reverence. Thou bast been pleased in Thy mysterious providence to remove from this city and State and nation an eminent citizen,,who has filled high places of trust and honor, and we have been summoned together to pay our last tribute of respect to his mortal remains. While we mourn over his de_ parture, we would seek to be resigned to Thy so_ vereign will. We thank Thee for the many distinguished and heroic virtues with which he was endowed and the many xioble works that he was 'successful in achieving. We thank Thee that he sympa thized with the poor, and the oppressed, and the suffering, and that he was willing to employ his extraordinary talents and influence to alleviate and improve their conditiop. We thank Thee for his devotion to justice and righteousness,. and for the good that has been accomplished for the land and the world by his constant and unflinching advocacy of these divine principles. We thank Thee for his earnest and undying devotion to the cause Of education; for all the virtues that adorned his heart and the manly traits that distinguished his life. May his example be imitated by us all, and especially by the legislators of our State and nation! Bless his afflicted relatives, and comfort them in the midst of their sorrows; help us all to be true to our highest and most sacred convictions of duty while living, so that we may be enabled to triumph with the consciousness of inward peace on the bed of death. All these things we ask in the name of the LordkJesus Christ, our adorable Redeemer, Amen. Rev. G. T. Thurloeh, of St. Paul's, M. E church, read a prayer. tkmttaued In the Fifth Edition. From Boston. BOSTON, Aug. 17.—A man named Cunningham mitt run over on the Lowell railroad near East Cambridge on Saturday and killed. Frederick Jones, a Boston merchant, has given $15,000 to Andover Theological Seminary to wards, the foundation 'of a professorship of Elo cution. Fire In Canada. WHITBY, Ontario, Apgusti7th.—BrownVi Pat terson's foundry,which employed over fifty men, was burned yesterday. The loss is estimated at $30,000. Marine lutelligence. FARTHER Pourr, Aug. 17.—Arrived—Steamship Nova Scotia, from Liverpool. BOSTON, Aug: MlL—Arrived—Steamship Li beria, from Liverpool. LI) ki MVP :111 n m :4 4 BA FOR UweAsawn.—A special train left'the Penn sylvania Railroad depot; in West Philadelphia' this morning, at ten o'clock, for Lancaster. The passengers comprised the Mayor and many mem here of the City Councils, large delegations of the Union League, National Union Club and Repub lican Invincibles, and numerous citizens, who go to Lancaster to attend the funeral of lion. Thaddeus Stevens. TOLLING THE STATE HOUSE BELL.-At two o'clock this afternoon, the time designated for the moving of Mr. Stevens's funeral procession in Lancaster, the State House bell was tolled. • WHOM NEW YORK. NEW YORK, August 17.—The obsequies of B. W. Bro. Sewell Fisk, who for many years was an eminent member of. the Masonic fraternity, took place yesterday, at Bt. Ann's Church, Eighteenth street. The funeral was eittended..by_meenbers_of slab° F.:Ogee - Hi - 2, this jurisdiction. The remains were deposited at Cypress Hills Cemetery. Rev. Stephen H. Tyne, Jr. and three other cleromen with city congregations preached o e en-sir sermons in a s parr) of_timelty_yes— terday, generally to well behaved and decorous audiences. The yacht Fquadron left Newport on - Saturday for Helmet:4'll°ld, and will sail for Now Bedford on Monday. On Tuesday the race for the prize taorvoir by iltsi Wu Commode:l) wILI Witt plebo. V ~~a.~~~~ll~~. BY TELEGRAPII. LATER FROM WASItINGTON. LATE ELECTION IN MISSISSIPPI, The Frauds to be Disposed 0 ILLNESS OF GENERAL RAWLINGS, Military Int,elligenca. THE NEW TAX BILL. The Attitude of Commissioner Rol km. klac•maam WEST. MORE INDIAN DEPREDATIONS. A GENERAL WAR DECLARED Acoident. on> the Paoffio Railroad, The Mississippi Election. D• I to • . • • Wessnearow, Aug.- 17.—Letters have been re calved here from the CoMmittee of live appointed by the Constitutional Convention of Mississippi to receive and count the votes at the late election in that State, to announce the result,, and, if necessary, to 'reconvene the Convention. They do not contemplate calling the Convention to gether but are about to issue, a proclamation declaring the election in six counties illegal and void on account of frauds and violence used. As General Gillem refuses to recognize this committee ' they intend to call upon Con greats" to sustain their action, and to complete the work of reconstruction in Mississippi by appro- priate legislation. From Wou!hAngtcin. WASIITNGTON, Aug. 17.—Gen. John A. Rawl ings, Chief of Staff to Gen. Grant, is confined to his bed, having had two hemorrhages of the lungs yesterday. He is somewhat better this morning, and it is hoped he will be out in a day Or two. For the week ending Tuesday, August 25th, 285 patents will be Issued from the Patent Oliice. Ding the past week 880 applications and 65 eaveats have been filed. Second Lieutenant D. 0. R 0138803311, sth In fantry, has been ordered to duty as alcl:de-camp to Brevet Major-General Rousseau, commtandlng the Department of. Louisiana. Brevet Colonel. Charles C. Gilbert, 7th.. Infantry, has been or dered to report to Major-General Meade', com manding the Department of the South, for as signment to duty. Colonel Franklin . F. Flint, Fourth Infantry, bas been ordered to the Department of the Platte for assignment to duty 7 Brevet Lient.-Coloner DeWitt Clinton, Judge Advocate of the Advisory Board at the War Department, has been ordered to proceed to New York on special service.. The following named • additional paymasters of the army have been mastered out] and honorably discharged on account of their services being no longer required : Brevet Lien tenant Colonel Thomas H. Gardner, Brevet Lieutenant Colonel W. H. Scott, and Brevet Lieutenant H. P. Wolcott. The resignations of First Lieutenant Solomon L. Hoge, Sixth•lnfantry, and Second Lieutenant John N. TravisrFourteenth Infantry, have been accepted by the President. The Secretary of War has directed Brevet Brigadier General • James Folten,_assistant In spector General, to proceed to Augusta, Maine, and make a Lull investigation of the cause of the recent fire at the Kennebec Arsenal. The section of the new tax bill prohibiting the distillation and rectification of spirits in distill eries located within 600 feet of each other, will involve several complicated legal questions, and its operation will be to suppress some of the es tablishments where.they are so situated. Many of the largest 'distilleries aro in that proximity. Solicitor Binckley, of the Internal Revenue &mean, has, transmitted to Commis sioner Rollins, an opinion on this subject, inter preting the law consistently with the above state ment, although he has entered fully Into a legal disquisition on the subject. Commissioner Rollins has returned to his duties. He was this morning engaged for some time in conversation with the Secretary of the Treasury at the latter's office. It Is definitely set tled that Mr. Rollins will not retire froM office, at least until after the reassembling of Congress. The appointment of supervisors under the new tax law will now receive prompt attention from the Secretary. Nineteen nominations have been made by Mr. Rollins, and it is probable that a conference In relation to these as well as others will take place to-morrow between the Secretary and the Commissioner: The disposition is to make the appointments OS early as practicable. , ,as the business of the Department demands the attention of such offi cers. Indian Depredations. BT. Lotus, August 17.—A despatch from Solo mon City,liansas,says: The Indians were reported within 28 miles at daylight this morning. Their strength is estimated at from 600 to 1,500,and they are reported to have declared that they were going to clean out the settlements all along these streams. Women and children are coming in fast,-and the town is nearly full of refugees. It is reported that a detachment of soldiers had an engage ment with the Indians yesterday, between Sol omon and Saline rivers, in which the soldiers were whipped. Nearly all the settlers north of Asher Creek were surrounded, and eight persons killed. The settlers for 30 miles along Solomon river have been driven off. Governor Crawford is in Saline, organizing the militia. One sqviad have gone to the relief of those up the river,and others will soon go,. as arms and ammunition arrive from Topeka. A body of Indians are now moving towards Republican valley. An Omaha despatch says : A construction train on the Union Pacific Railroad, while backing toward Fremont Station, ran over a cow, tkrow lug the caboose off the track, killing live men and wounding two others. From Baltimore. BALTIMORE, August 17.—Last night it was dis covered that the People's Bank in this city had been entered by burglars and the vault blOwn operand_robbed_ of itucoutents, consisting of money, bonds and securities, belonging to'the bank, and valuables of a similar character, which tad been deposited by Individuals for saio-keep in! . The bank itself loses about $3 000, as far as ascertained, but the entire loss is not yet known, owing to the absenco fromahe city of depositors, who are the principal losers. The detectives have some clue to the thieves, and are now in pnret4 341.5. Ofolook. Inquest Upon the Murdered 'Man. LATEST FROM WASHINGTON. Another Opinion from Mr. Evart& DUBLIN, Aug. 17.—Late on Saturday afternoon a Coroner's inquest was held on the body of Scully, murdered by his tenants in Tipperary on that day. After hearing a mass of evidence, the jury brought in a verdict of murder, bat took occasion to , deprecate the conduct of Scully,' and suggested that new and more liberal laws were needed to prevent a repetition. . Lorimar, Aug. 17.—Rev.ndy Johnson, the Ame rican Minister ' who arrived at Southampton a few days since in the steamer Baltintore,"still re mains there, but will probably leave for London to-morrow and enter upon the discharge of his duties. He is the object of much attention. Lonnow, August 17, Evening.--Consobs for money, 94, and for account, 943. Five-twenties, 713 g. Atlantic and Great Western, 39. Erie? 8434. Illinois Central, 9134. Livartroor.., August 17, Evening.—Cotton ac tive and advanced y i d. today, at the close of the market prices were still tending upwards. The srles to-day were 20,000 bales---Uplands 10gd.; Orleans 113jd. Wheat easier. Lard quiet and steady at 6Ge. 6d. Opinion oft the Attorney... General. [Special Despatch to the Phila. Evening Bulletin,' - WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—The Attorney-General has submitted an opinion in relation to the power, of the President to appoint officers for Alaska. He decides that the case is one of origi nal vacancy, and therefore not affected by the civil tenure act, and that the • President Ids the right to grant a commission to a collector of customs for Alaska ; which shall expire 'at the end of the next session of theAandte. A similar opiniopllps also been submitted in the case of the Collffctorstdp at New Orleans. The Attu -General decides that the CoSec -I—torsitrof-tha t beLamervathe instal lation of Mr. gel gg, the former incumbent, as a member of the taped States Senate. Citizens of Lancaster,- and People of Pennsyl vania: We have brought home your Must:dogs dead, and not yours only, but ours—not ours, but the nation's. • Our journey from the Capital to your city wan marked, very appropriately, by flags flying at half-mast; by the tolling of bells and the tears of the people, and to , day, while we are here_en gaged in these sad obsequies, could we hear, there would come to our ears from afar the wail ' of sorrow and the sounds of grief. We should—behold not individuals only but whole States standing waiting around us hs pall bearers. We bad hoped that a favoring Provi dence would have spared your representative'.-. at least till the close oily another session of Congress, for grave' questions are pending, involving the interest of thirty millions of people, which seem to us to requirs pre-eminently his wise counsel's and executive skill; brit it is other- Wise ordered, and no doubt wisely. There fot e , we bow In submission to the wit of the Supreme Ruler who, when the clock of time struck the hour, sent His angel - to unbar the gates of the future, and said to His servant: "Well done! Come up higher ! And now, till the morning of the resurrection, we commit all that remains of our departed friend to the grave and to the guardianship of that God who watches alike over the living and the dead, and as the mouth of, the grave closes upon this sacred dust, we will.pray God to give to Vermont another son, to Lancaster another citizen, to Pennsylvania. another statesman, to the country another patriot, to the poor another friend, to 'freedom another advocate, to the race another benefactor, and to , the world another man like Thaddeus Stevens. The Psalm "Rest in Peace" was sung by is Choir under the direction of Prof. G. Lefler. The proceskion moved in. the followink order r. Captain of Police. City Police. Chief Marshal. Aida to Chief Marshal. Fire Department. Band. Mayor of the City. Select and Common Councils and City Officertr...' County Commissioners, County Officers. Government Officers of the Ninth District. Medical Faculty. Members of the Press. Trustees of the Faculty. Students of Franklin and Marshall College& Trustees; Faculty, and Students of the State Normal School of Millersville. Board of School Directors. Teachers of Public Schools of the City, awl County. Alumni and Pupils of the High School. School Department of the Commonwealth.. Beneficial Societies. Organized Delegations from Abroad. Mayor and - Councils of Philadelphia. Governor. Heads of Departments. Chief Justice and the Judges cif the Supreme Court. - Officials from other States. Judges of the, Courts and members of the Bar. Committee of Arrangements. Procession of earns. es. Clergy and Pall-Bearere."' (col W' B. Fordney, John Tanderemith, Bon. Jas. L. Reynolds, • Thonots Baumgardner.. Hiram B. Bwarr, David Bair. Br., Nathaniel Ellmaker; Chthrian Hansa. BOND' ES BOSTON AND - TRENTON BISCUIT.-TSB trade impelled with Bondb Butter Cream. Mills. am stare and Ega.Blecuit. Also, West di Thorab celebrated Trenton mid - Wine Biscuit. by JOb. &BUMHMER 604 Asyut% 11.43 lig 1401 Dshawsre um" : , • BY TELEGFRAPH. LATEST CABLE"NEWS': 'rite -Erylots By the Athustle Cable. Lennox, August 17.—Calcutta Linseed; 625. The case is therefore one of hn office which practically became vacant during the recess of the Senate, and does not come within the ' terms of the Civil Tenure act. The President can therefore In this case also issuela commission which will expire at the close of the next session , of the Senate. ' • !lamination In the Firth Congress atonal District. {Special Despatch to the Milled& Evening Baßetio.] DovLstsrows,_ Aug. 17.—The delegates to the Fifth Congressional Republican Convention met this afternoon in the Court House, at this place, and unanimously renominated Hon. Caleb N. Taylor. Mr. Lewis M. Troutman was President of the Convention. MR. STEVENS'S OBSEQUIES. The Concluding Address. The Rey. E. B. Gray, Chaplain of the fienate, made the concluding remarks, as follows: The Benediction was pronounced by Rev. e. F. Forney, when the service 3 concluded.. The Procession. Carriages with fa I ..-r+w1..1.~.~...~.r~..J' ily and relatives
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers