Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 20, 1868, Image 3

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BUSINESS ; •
The PrlCei or all aumnaelt Clothing
vastly reduced, to „close out stock. Aseortmerot still
good, for both Clothing and piece goods, to be made to
order. bat selling dr rapidly.
Ali prices gtutranteed tower than the loutd elsewhere
onditsit satiafaction guaranteed every purchaser. or the
ar.le °smelled and money refunded. ,-
gaff may bowel; I, a Co..
"rth and -TOWER. BALL.
- ' ,6"izth streets. 518 Simmer writwer.
Pamspitt.rpits.
AND eao BROADWAY. BIN YOILS
A Distressing' Cough canoes the
friends of thesufferer almost se much pain as the sufferer
himself., and should receive immediate attention. s.,r.
Winter's Balsam of Wild Cherry speedily cures coughs.
colds. influenza. sore throat, &c. It will always relieve
consumption. and in many well attested cases it has
effected a perfect cure. aull.6t
EVENING} BULLETIN. ,
Thursday, August 20. tops,
_or Pe r so n a k l avingme city for the summer,
and wbhing to have the Evimmo Mazur= sent
So them, will please send their address to the
office. Price, by mail, 76 cents per month.
THE VASE OF ALEX RSIDER
We called attention, 'a few days ago, to the
case of the young mulatto, Alexander, now
ender sentence of death. ' It is one of pecu
liar hardship on many'accounts. The post
important of.these is the , one formerly , urgia
by us, that the death of Phillis Proctor-, re
sulted as much from the obstinate wilfalneas
of the woman herself' as from the assault
committed by Alexander. It is true that the
woman might have died from . her Wounds,
even if she had followed the advice of Ater
surgeons, but she did die _after ~reeldeasly
refining to obey their directions or
to take their advice. This - fact, alone, de
prives the case of one of :the essential ele
ments of "murder in the first - degreei s; , "13ttt
it is also a fact that the conduct of Aleiande4
after assimilting Phffilli,was not that of a mur
derer. He went to New York, and remained
there until he heard of her death, when he
immediately returned , to Philadelphia,
supposing that she lad died from some
natural tame, and interested to learn the cir
cumstances.. It is needless to point out the
inconsistency of his conduct, with any theory
•of wilful murder. There is nothing
in his previous behavior'or in his natural
disposition' to suggest any murderous tenden
cies in him, and those who have conversed
freely with him since his conviction are im
pressed with the belief that the case is one
which demands the utmost exercise of official
lenience and consideration. No application,
so far as we know, has been . made to the
pnblfc press by Alexander or his friends (if
he has any) in his behalf, but in the name of
a common humanity, and with_ a proper re
gard fora true administration of justice, 'we
earnestly press his claim for reprieve or par
don. This case is all the stronger for his pov
erty and friendlessness; and where there is so
much doubt as to the precise cause
Of the woman's death, and so little. ground
upon which to base the charge of wilfcd' in
tent to murder, and so strong a piibliO senti
ment in favor of the strictest limitation of
capital punishment to the most positive cases
of "murder in the first degree," we are sure
that Governor Geary will not err, when he
leans toward the side of mercy, and, by re
prieve, ehanges the extreme penalty of the
law to an imprisonment which would be the
proper punishment for the offence actually
end'intentionally committed. •
--- TI,VO -- KIEMIS OF IrVII&NN.Y.
The Democratic newspapers and. orators,
North and South, are very found of'-dilating
upon the despotism exercised by Congress in
the South. We hear very much of "grinding
tyranny," "the iron heel of oppression,"
"military despotism" and that
,sort of thing,
and the story has been so often repeated that
many o f the people believe it to be true. Let us
examine, the subject and see precisely at
whose door such a 'charge would best lie. The
tyranny of the Republican party has taken a
singular form. It has preserved• to the coun
try a beneficent republican government; it
has freed several million slaves, and removed
from the South
,a burden that clogged all the
wheels of its progress; it has pardoned the
crimes of Lee,Wade Hampton and other men
who sought to destroy the Union, and given
them this very opportunity to make such
charges on the stump; it has fed more whites
than blacks from its Freedmen's Bureau, the
instrument most accursed by the De
inocracy; it has established schools
in the South for a population
whose dense ignorance is disgraceful
to a free land; it has thrown open the
South to free labor and the application of
scientific improvements, so that, as a South
ern paper discontentedly says, "land that
was worth one dollar an acre is now worth
five;" it has made free speech for the first
time possible in the South; it has introduced
capital and an enterprising population, both
of which are building railroads, opening
mines, developing the general resources, and
increasing the wealth of the South, and flood..
ing a slave-cursed land with a new and beau
tiful light; and it has given them what they
never had before, but what the Constitution
commands Congress toguarantee, Republican
governments for all the States. This is a por
tion of the work of the party of the supre
macy, and if this is tyranny, down with
liberality, we say. This is the despotism that
blesses and elevates. There are other people,
writhing under "the iron heel of oppression,' ,
who Lava longed for these things, and would
he glad to accept them.
Now let us see what these fault-finding
Southerners, and these blatant Democrats
have done for freedom and the good cause of
progress. They have organized an associa
tion whose members spy out Union men,
track them, and assassinate them for their
principles' sake. They massacred a whole
convention in New Orleans; they defraud
their laborers of their hire, as in Virginia last
year, if they do not vote with them; they used
to tar and feather those who ventured to ex
press their opinions freely; they trafficked in
human beings, and often in their own flesh
and blood, separating fathers and mothers,
and sisters and brothers, that they might live
in ease and dissipation; they refused to per
mit the establishment of schools, and kept
their population in ignorance that they might
better oppress them; • and, to crown all,
they inaugurated a rebellion, which
. . , Ety
_iged agi
Id costa -id
,iturigellthe cottutrritniblind cost a
Eon lives itnd incalculable misery. During
the war they tried to seize the capital and de
istroy the records of the nation and the strong
*/r ~ 1-
- VIER - DAILY - NV
etttie — tiatiOzimitgelfc - they en- •
sieavored to sweep down on oUr oities, and
threatened to ravage, burn and destroy them,
and now they are canvassing the South, and .
declaring that.we must either yield to their
demands for power, or accept another war.
This is the record. It defies contradiction• ,
Most of the facts belong to histOry, and the.
cunningest ingenuity cannot obliterate or
overthrow them. The Democracy come be
fore the country and ask reinstatement in
power as the reward for their services. We
demand to remain in authority for the coun
try's sake that we may carry on the good
work. Let intelligent men of both parties
ponder the record, and determine which pro
mises best for bis individual interests, and for
the good of his fellow citizens.
IMPORTANT,' IF TRUE.
Chicago, which claims to be the New York
of the West, has a metropolitan taste for
highly seasoned excitements. Scarcely a day
passes that its newspapers do not contain
accounts of "moving accidents by flood and
ffeld," and what between fires; murders, rob
beries and defalcations, New York must look
to its laurels lest it be outdone by the young
giant upon, Lake Michigan., The latest ex
eitenent that las been started by the enter
prising 'and wonder-loving Chicagoans is ,a
stortto 'the effect that in some mysterious
and out-of-the 2 way, place near their town
there is a Barking establishment where young
gentlemen of tender "yeare are kept with
sticking plasters upon their niouths, except at
meal times, and that they are then and there
fattened for the doctors !
The journals of- Chicago gravely explain
how this terrible story got afloat, and give
their solemn conclusions thereon. It seems
that on the evening of Sunday, the 9th inst.,
a family - was returning from church to their
home en the outskirts of the city. One of the
children, a bOy, ran a. good way ahead of
his friends and *as among the missing
when the-)111y reached home. He re
mained aurcfng the missing for a week, when
he suddenly turned up with his mouth be
decked with a sticking-plaster. The young
gentleman, after being relieved of his
mouth-covering, stated that on the
night of his disappearance, and
while he was in advance of
hie parents,a man in a light wagon called him
into the road, and when the boy had come
within an arm's length of the vehicle he was
grasped by the collar by the man and placed in
the wagon, which then rapidly proceeded.On
its way. They drove until daylight,-when the
wagon came to a halt before a double house
with a stone basement. The bey was then
taken into the house, and subsequently trans
ferreil to the basement, where to his astonish
ment he found fifteen or sixteen boys of
nearly his own,age already congregated. All
had their mouths plastered up and the last
comer was at once similarly accommodated,
the plaster only being removed at meal times!
The youth further stated that he remained
in his plastered-up' condition for nearly a
week,when he managed to escape one morn
ing before daylight. He broke through a
window and made for a tree which he after
wards left to take passage upon a passing
freight train, while the search for him was
going forward in another direction. The
plaster was still upon his month when he got
uponthe train._ Upon the basis of this cock
and-bull yarn a huge excitement has been
started, and the police force of Chicago is in
search of the mysterious den where some
medical ogres have their larder, and where
the best conditioned boys are selected for the
dissecting table just as the butcher culls out
his fattest calves or hi ,most obetie pigs. That
a runaway boy should invent such a story to
escape a merited thrashing when he returned
home repentant, is natural enough, but that
the story should be credited by grown men,
and treated seriously by press and police, is
absurd.
Chicago having turned the old English
Burking disclosures to account in getting up
a first-class excitement in these dull times,
might keep up the same game and take some
other hints from ancient and modern history.
Leaving the "Fee, 03, fum; I smell the blood
of an Englishman" sensational line,it could get
up a Man in an an Iron Mask; set adrift a
western Caspar Hauser; improvise a Bour
bon Among Them; produce the identical man
who struck Billy Patterson; reveal the features
of the man in the claret-colored coat, and
bring to light the grandson, at least, of the
author of therm of Junius. There is a
wide field pr ented here, and we respectfully
commend it tto the attention of the enter
prising press of Chicago.
Some of the Democratic journals in the
North are beginning to publish extracts from
the Republican papers, for the :purpose of
demonstraiing the spirit of ferocity that ani
mates the great Union party. This is all very
well, and we wish more copious quotations
would be made, for truth, even when dis
torted by Democratic scissors and paste-pots,
is better than deliberate lying. But why do
these papers not print paragraphs from the
Southern journals, such as those we give
occasionally ? They are all working in the
same harness and for the same end. The
Republican papers do what they can to spread
the Southern Democratic tidings of revolution,
but if the Copperhead journals would only
take the matter in hand they would reach a
class to which the others are not accessible;
and it seems to us somewhat important that
this class should distinctly understand that
Southern Democracy is boldly declaring for
a war, in which, according to Fort Pillow
Forrest's declaration, "no quarter will be
given."
From Andrew Johnson up to the moat re
spectable fossil in the Democratic party, have
come frantic appeals for the preservation of
the Constitution, and denunciations of the
Republicans for their alleged attempts to de
stroy it. Wade Hampton; Howell Cobb, and
other rampant rebels in the South, are preach
ing from the same text during ther present
canvas, and yet the latter strove through four
long and bloody years to destroy, not only
the Constitution, but the country, and the
Democratic party in the, North opposed the
war waged against these men, and in 1864. in
Convention assembled, officially declared the
war a failure, and demanded its cessation.
The Constitution-is-not-in-half as much-clan
ger now as it was then, - and we are driven to
"<;• - ' , Yr
; ,
ribO Cmclubim that i ttliki—ientieless' howl -
Witt' simply tOcover the real design, of the
party, which is to get hold;of the government
again' and reinstate the rebelt whose life-long
efforts have been directed to >the destruction
of the Constitution we have preserved.
One year ago the Democnita entertained an
idea that General Grant sympathized with
their party. As they had not then,:—two
years after the conclusion of the war,--ascer
tained that he was a military failure, without
ability; that he was cashiered from the army;
that he was a drunkard, and that he, was
traveling under an assumed name, there was
serious talk of nominating him as the Demo
cratic. candidate...for •the Presidency. The
Boston‘Post, at, present ono of the General's
most hearty abusers, said, on the 27th of
July, 1867: '
"It will not be simply a National Convention
that will control , General Grant's nomination but
the national voice. If that detnand his nomina
tion it will be made, and his election rendered
certain. independent of all Republican commit
tees. .The people—tired of the nitraisms, vacilla
tions, intrigues of • hackneyed, unprincipled -and
debauched partisana—ntay seek a guide to pioneer
them out of the wilderness of civil anarchy who is
untainted with the compllcations,corruptiona and
hypocrisies of the leaders of the Radicals, and
give him the highest clan power."
Precisely so; and we have followed this
,programme out to the letter. But in the
of „
light. the present, does not the al
luslowto "hackneyed, unprincipled and de
.
bauched partisans" strike the .Post as a little
severe on Horatio Seymour ?
q STECK & C0.13.,AND HAINES BROVIEIRB
.
Pianos, and Mason & liamlheo Cabinet Or
sous. on _Vat • , . J. E. MOULLeB .New Moro.
au2ol3mo . NO. 923 Chestnut, street.
11UWPPI.
. .
CARPENTER AND BUILDER,
, N 0.1024 SANSOM STREET.
jealy4p • PHILADELPHIA. , ,
JOHN CIEUldr. BUELDER.
1781 CHESTNUT STREET
s .
and 218 LODGE mzem.
Mechanics of every branch required for houselmildins
and fitting promptly furnished. fe27 tf
WARBURTON'S IMPROVED. VENTILATED
'11214 eaey•offing
= Bat* (pat
o. a ted tliti ri t stP ° t al l
Fro i ga?:t i roft-orciL " . frinr
SCRAPING CUT TUE SWEET PULP OF THE
Green Corn from the divided hulls, which it leaved
adhering to the cob, is a peculiarity of the Patent (torn
Grater, which makes it superior to others in the prepara
tion of corn orders, fritters, puddings, oc. For sale by
TRUMAN at SHAW. No. t 35 (bight Thirty five) Market
street. below Ninth,Philadelphia..
PACKER'S. ICE CREAM FREEZERit: APPROVED
by 5 can of use, as producing smoother ice cream,
and in much greater quantities than most other freezers,
are for sale by 1 ROMAN di SHAW, No. 835 (Eight
Tlurty•five) Market 'street, below Ninth.
PEACH AND POTATO PARERS. AND APPLE
Parere. of several varieties, and Apple Corers, for sale
by TAUfdaN W. No. &lb (Eight Thirty-live) Mar.
ket street. below Ninth.
EXCURSION TO CAPE MAY, 63
The Hearer LADY OF THE LAKE
ill have pier 19, above Vine street, on
bATURDAY MORNING, August Md. at 9ld o'clock, for
Cape May, and return on Monday.
Excursion tickets, $3, including carriage hire.
Each way.,s2 25, including carnage hire. . It
WANTED.—BO4 RD WITH A PRIVATE FAMILY
living within a few squares of Fifteenth and Callow
hill streets. by a young man who will spend Sundays
with his parents. Address. No. 426 Walnut street, sJo
No 2. aultat*
lIRRICNESB'S BAZAAR, NINTH AND RAN
sora greet%
IarSPECIAL SALE OF AN ELEGANT ESTABLISH
MENT.
HORSES, CARRIAGE •, HARNESS. &c.,
- UN SATURDAY MORNING NEXT,
At 10 o'clock, at the Bazaar, will be sold, without re
serve, the following property of a gentleman who has
left for Europe, viz:
Liam pair of stylish Borges, sorrel and badriy, coming 7
years old, 15 hands and 3 inches high, free Vera and
desirable carriage horses; will be separated.
One Phaeton Wagon, by Brewster, with top and cover.
One Dog tart, by Brewster with coverings.
One elegant Clarence Coach, by Lawrence. N. Y.
One set Clarence liarnem extra traces.
One set Light Harness, extra traces.
One set Light Harness, square mounted.
Saddle and Bridles, three costly White. lot Bits. Hal
tom, Sundt:Wes. Sheete, Mae Horse Clothing, Stable Fla
tus ee and Furniture.
Full particulars in Catalogues.
A Milano top Wagon, for one person, in good order.
A siylith Barone-MN-for two-homesrmade--by--Br o
New York, almost now. A Carpi Rockaway, by L. W.
Jacobs • _
ALSO
About Fifty Horses, suited to harness and tho saddle.
Now and Second Hand Carriages, Dearborn, &c., Single
and Double Narne.e, Saddles,&c.
or Bale of Horses, &c., on Wednesday.
ALFItEII if. kiERKNEBS.
91120 2t Auctioneer.
eLOUNI RY RESIDENCES FOR SALE.
An elegantly improved Property near to German
town. Large Mansion, Stables, k lothouse, drapery,
&c., with.lo acres cf land.
A desirable Residence at Chestnut Hill, near the depot,
high situation. •
A convenient House Stable. dre., one acre of ground,
on gboemaker Lane. Germantown,
Large Mansion, Stable, &c., and seven acres of land,
11 miles from city,on Media Railroad.
atone Mansion, stone Stable, four acres of land, on
Nicetown Lane, Germantown.
At DOxlittroush, head ofGreen Lane, large lot 250x450
feet, on which - 'arty,two convenient residences. May be
divided. On 7 renton Railroad, extending to the Dela
ware, a ve ry finely cultivated place of 66 acres, handsome
Mansion. Outhouses, dm,. with abundance of fruit G 6
miles from the city. Apply to _ _
au2o th a 2t•
sl.o l 000 7 MSsrg and $2,000 TO INVEST ON
- ° C. W. ROBINSON, Conveyancer,
lt 4 812 Walnut street
13ATEN TED—FRENCH STEAM DYEING AND
1 Scouring on any kind of wearing apparel for Ladies.
Genie and Children.
- Pants cleaned and stretched for 75 cents. Patent aPPII ,
rants for stretching punts from 1 to 6 inches. 25 per cent.
reduction on dyeing and scouring.
aultl6t4p• MUTTET.2f9 South Ninth street.
1868 - GET YOUR HAIR CUT AT KOPP'S
. Saloon, by firsbclass Haineutters * Chß.
dt en's Bair Cot . Shave and Bath. 25 comm. Easons
so in ardor. Open Sunday morning. No. 125 Exchange
Place. Clb7 G. C. KOPP.
. • . O I `. VO :4' .i:
I . Tait - d and Byrne° atreete. only one square below th:
achange. $250.000 to loan in 'ar i l: or small amounts. o
. amonds l eilver plate s watches, ewetrp and
l all o
ne.
shed for the lte 3 t to nra fo y in onr 3 e. A. Adv to 7 made in lar ta g . :
oe,. • e.. • 2. LI Isatfro
NI/LA RUBBER MACHINE BELTING STEAM PACE
lug Hose. dm. •
Engineers and dealers will and a fall assortment of
Goodyear's Patent Vulcanized Rubber Belting, Packing
Hose. ac., at the Manufacturer's Headquarters.
GOODYEAR'S,
808 Chestnut street,
South side,
N. B.—Wo have now on band a large lot of Gentlemen's
Ladles' and Misses' Gum Boots. Also, every varlets , and
tole of Gum Overcoats.
filo3 SALE.—TO MERCHANTS, STORP.TrEryEBB
Hotels! and dealers-200 Cam Champagne and Crab
Cider. MO blob. Champagne and Crab Cider.
P. J. JORDAN,
ggi Pear street.
'EBNE WATCHES AT REDUCED PRICES. AFRESH
12 Invoice, Just received, by
FARR do BROTHER, Importers.
je2t3-tf . rp RN Chestnut street, below Fourth.
ARECIBO WITH INDELIBLE INS. EMBROIDEB
mg ig. Braiding. Stamping. dm.
M. A. TOB.RY.
Filbert street.
DIAMONDS ANY AMOUNT LOANED UPON
WATCHES, JEWELRY, PLAIT,
CLOTHKNO, dm. at
JOKES ag CO.'S
OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OFFICE',
Corner of Third and Goa= a facets,
Below Lombard.
N. B.—DIAMONDS. WATCHES, JEWELRY, GUNS.
ae.,
T i ffl ( V ETr Wrt 3 a tE Zharetel hNlZtowlre est a blishm e nt
't
l a t f e rarr a. led3 o cAh m tvgioth p {atat el to bi l a. l2 13 A o t u t g u r o r i ;
nvited to her beautifulhght Linen corset for summer
wear. my2B Bmrp§
BOND'S BOSTON BIStIurf.—BONIPS BOSTON-BUT -
1.., ter Ind Mk - Ms - colt landing froteamer Norman,
and for sale by JOB. B. BUSSISR as CO(., Agents for Bond.
108 South Delaware avenue.
628. -HOOP SKIRTS AND CORSETS
mDrkno fail
top exnmSner the m".
ur ß ownm h e e ," pand i
whre
ranted, at only $1.60. worth $2. Corsets retailed at
wholesale prices. to get them introduced. $1 corsets for
SI cents; $1 50 corsets for $1 15; $2 50 corsets for $2; $6
corsets for $4, dtc.
The present low prices for our firatclass Skirts and
Corsets greatly surprise every one.
Please call soon, as we will advance prices Ist of Ser•
tember. material having already advanced.
bkirts glade to order.. altered and repaired,. at-3328
arch street
/v2Blm,r pt
13 OOP BRUT AND CORSET MANUFACTORY, NO.
812 Vino intact All goods made of the best materials
-warranted
Hoop Bkb to repaired.
)Yl4 Sol
T ORTON'S PINE APPLE EItEESE.-100 BOXES ON
-1-11-- Beneignment — Landing - and - toraln - by - JO9: - B:
BUSSIER et 80.. Agents for Norton & Elmer. 108 South
Dohtware Avenue !
• , • , 1
- 4
POR 8..1.LE AT
REMARKABLY LOW PRICES. 1e24&
%S,urM•H
AUTUMNAL ATTIRE
FOB,
GENTLEMEN. AND JUVENILES.
WANAMAKER & BROWN.
EDWARD P. KELLY,
TAILOR,
S. E. Cor. Cheetnut and Seventh Ste.
Large rook and complete euertraralt Of •
CHOICE GOODS.
cattilttramieelgiirrat.
theit i oal L erky other Fire*
Pattern Coate and Clothes not ailed for now
for sale at Reduced Prkes.
BE BABLA ESPANOL. .
ON PABLE FRANCAIS. )
A nice looking young lady name into
a photographers shop the other day
arrayed in her Stinday-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
photograph, sir Will you please to tell
me how soon I can have the photograph
slier 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 afisid the
measure wouldn't be a good flt ; and so
she went to her home in the country;
and she hasn't any photograph yet; she
is so simple.
We con't get measured for our pho
tographs. but Rookhill & Wilson are the
folks who will take your measure for
clothes. Come and sit for a new suit
while the warm weather lasts.
Ready made, or made to order, cer
tain to suit you.
ROCKHILL & WILSON
Crest Brown - Stone - Clothing
603 and 605 Chestnut Street.
ONE PRICE ONLY.
JONES'
fold Established
ONE PRICE
CLOTHING HOUSE,
- 004 MARKET STREET,
ABOVE =TM
For Apia, durability and excellence of wakmauxhip,
our goods cannot be excelled. Particular attention paid
eall
toHZ, cuctomer work. and a perfect fit guaranteed in all
CBl4 SA lan th rPO
D. T. PRA IT.
1088. Fourth otreet
J . E v CALDWELL &CO.
ARTISTIC
SILVER . WARES.
No. 90f3
w c,MTNUT STREET.
CHOICE NEW WHEAT
FAMILY FLOUR,
Made from Virginia, St, Lords, Ohio, Pennisylvanig and
Kentucky White Wheat, at reduced prices, WAR•
RANTED SUPERIOR to any in the market.
(CEO. F. ZEHNDER, •
FOURTH ./Mlll VINE.
Jy3l Imrn
•
Flir'LEß, WEAVER & oth •
NEW CORDAGE FACTORI7
NOW IN FULL OPERATION.
r — No. II N. WATER mall 98 N. DEL. alma
rFALIAN VERMICELLI-100 BOXES FINE
_QUALITY
wlitte,_Amllorted•suid for:nab- byJu13.13.111.381ER a
CO,- 10E1 Boma Delaware avrmna. " . ' -
WM. T. lIOPKIN
NBW OtteP 'ARABIAN ..1.M.T.F.13.—L0G VATTS. FINS
quality.landing wad for sale di JOS; BUSBIKR a
Co.. SonthDalawaretkveuna. . t :
NEW AitEENONIAN.; , WALN:Ca'&=2.S.;BALB NEW
4.1 - Crop Poftahe Greritible Walnuts lattdirtg„ and for
mole by JON. ',II:V I EV#OIER Ab aotith-vehware
E. BAYLEY
IVTEMNA - OLANOMET:4INE T DAMETYIN — GOOD
nil order. Landln'it and for Bala by JOS. B. BUBBLED &
CO.,lee South Delaware avemeNl
:•.. 1 ;!..i.•' - 1,:Z.,..1: - •;,:l• ;L: , ', • , •?• . ::•.:Ti. - . ',:. :::.'i ,-,'
rfAy; - Awars7
IMMEASURABLY SIMPLE,
WATCHEIS JEWELIIIY, /Cu.
NE :11PUBLICiaTffffiNfa-----
.jappl.NColkr4.-!':gsOAZIN.N.
NOW READY
THE SEPTEMBER • NUMBER.:
CONTENTS:
I. DALLAS GALBRAITH. Ax Amentoan NOM.
PART IX.
IL 130 h RENTO. '
PRE.RAPHAELITE AT SARATOGA.
111. 'IWO AMERICAN PRESIDEN VS.
V. ON ESSAIE TOM; LES GANT&
VI. NANTUCKET.
VII. A VIGIL. • .
VIII. DISPUTE ABOUT EDUCATION.
IX. MY TWO.
X. AMERWAN IN WARWICKSHIRE.
XL THE KITCHEN.
XII. WHO SHALL SEPARATE UB I
XIIL EXPRESSION IN sOULP punk.
XIV. OUR MONTHLY clomp. •
X.V. LITERATURE OF THE DAY.
For sale by all Periodical Dealers.
Yearly Subtcription, $4. • Single Number, 85, cents.
erronmer Nemo= ant to any addt'em on receipt et
Thirty-five "cents by the Publlthent
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO, Publisher*,
715 and 717 Market Street, Phila.
snlB to th
SIZTAIL.Dgir, 000D/14
THE
46xt v 10
DRY GOODS STORE ,
N 0.920 CHESTNUT STREET,
J. W. PROCTOR. & CO.
CLOSING.OUT SALES
To Make Room for Fall ftck.
BARGAINS FOR 15 DAYS.
Fin al Reduction .
flaying completed our eemtartnual Stock Takla& w
have
MARKED DOWN
the whole of our
SUMMER STOCK
to close the Besson'e Balm, and nuke room for
FALL ARRIVALS.
J. W. PROCTOR & CO.,
The ""Bee-Hive,"
111 k 0.7g1P-11Kii • I '4:11 0%1414E3 li ;4 w :WO
Spring Trade.
WARD FERRIS,
Importer,
No. 36 South Eleventh Street,
(UP fiTA.IIIB.)
Dow °maths dedrable NOVEV/lES
Piques It Welts,
Meld and Striped Na ,
Hamburg Edgings and Inoartinga i
Needlaved' Edging, and huerettp
hnitatlon and Real Maly Utah-
Imltaßon and Real Valendennes Lusts
Jaeonet Buena,
Soft Hamblin,
Swim Manna,
Wrench nuallna, ae"
A general assortment of
White Gook Embroideries, Look &Cq
Which he offers to the trade at Importer's Daces. thti
'living. Retail Dealers the Jcibbeee profit.
N. 13.-1 he special attention of Idannfactarege 0
Children's Clothing is solidted.
th s
iii I CIA ID) :1:3r1C.9
TEAS !' TEAS ! ! TEAS !! !
-One of the finest assortment of Teas (New Crop) ever
offered to The citizens of Philadelphia, now in store, and
will be sold to families by the package at wholesale NUM,
FAMILY FLOUR,
Made from prime quality of Southern White Wheat,fro
the beet mills In the United States. always on hand.
SALMON!
New Smoked and Spiced Salmon. just received.
Families going to the country can have their goods care.
fully packed and delivered, free of charge, is any of the
depots in Philadelphia. All our Groceries are sold at the
lowest rates and warranted to be as represented.
•
CRIPPEN & MADDOCK,
(Late W. L. Maddock do C 0..)
Importers and Dealers in Fine Groceries, Wines, dr.c...
115 B. Third Street, below Chestnut.
mhl9-th a to emra
GOLD'S
Latest Improved Patent-Low Sfeam-and
Hot Water Apparatus,
For Warming and Ventilating Private and Public Buildings,
Also, the approved Cooking Apparatus,
AMERICAN 14,ITCHENER,
On the European plan of .heavy castings. durability and
neatnees oPeonstructiou r for Hotels. Public Institutions
and the better class of Private Residences.
DOT AIR FURNACES of the latest improvements.
GRIFFITH PATENT ARCHIMEDIAN VENTILATORS.
- REGISTERB, - VENTILATORS, &c.
Union - Steam - and Water Co.;
JAMES P. WOOD & CO..
41 , 110 u h F • •
_Mk
. B. M. FELTWELL, Superintendent.
Ienit(aELIOJAPELIN3.dsc.—OLIVEZ FANCIES
I ....L(Stuffod_Olives)._Hnpassii s.nd soperfine-Capenand
?Tench Olives: fresh goods; landing ea Napoleon 111..,
from Havre. and for aale , byJOß. B. BUBI3MR & CO.
South Delaware Avenue.
citunit,Azto rer acte •
Iteal Havana. Cigars-.
, .
,
" "Mariana Ilitan'brand ( c o pyr i g h ted ) of Vuelta - AbaJcs
Leaf, °lithely pure, equal to best imperted cigars, and.
cheaper. Try them. (le to reliable dealers and get genu
ine- vacb box bears cur trademarked label. We mate
twenty varieties of -sliarlans Rita," all of acme material
of %bleb revere] choice grades are now retailed at 8%
$8 60. s9,_ $9 60 and *lO per hundred We will, on appli
cation, direct consumers to those dealers who
cheapest W use this breed, "Mariana Rita," only or
real ugliest Arad° Havana cigars. Lower grades we " ra Diavolo,” • Lads IPur " "Fleur de Lys," etc.
The following city, retalleis k eep regularly our "Ma
riana Rita" cigars:
Colton & Clarke. grocers, Braid and Walnut. David L.
Boiler. dealt r. Nos. 50 and 62 Souls Fourth street. above •
Chestnut Charles 01. Mist, dealer. No. 216 South Fourth •
street, below Webtut. Crippin . R. Biaddock,groeers. No.
116 tout!' Third street. Mee tithe, dealer No, 43 douth.
b.leventh street. above Chestnut. Manning. dealer,No.
41 Fouth 'third street. B conoy. cruelest. sixteenth and
Arch. sollln, arocer, Eighth and Arch. Mitchell k
Pl triter, grocer., No. 1D34 Cheetuat. Bradley, grocer.
Vixth and durum. Stead, 'dealer, No. tell Chestnut.
VonneU & Son. grocers, No. gab walnut street. Eppel
sheimck_grow, Tenth and Spring Garden. Wright,
groeex, krabitun and dining (larders. Wells, druggist,
Ninth aid Spring Carden. Whiteman, grocer, Seven '
tecnth and Arch Bitchings, grocer, Fifteenth and alas—
ter. • Ambrose Smith, druggist. Broad and chestnut,.
Freer" & Neller,grccers,Chestnut 11111. Kollock.drugglst,.
1201 Ridge avenue. • , -
STPPLIEN FITOUBT & SONS,
/Manufacturers and Importers of Cigars,
A 0. wa South FRONT titreet;
Philadelphia.
NEW CARPETS,
Per SlBllll6l'
"City of Antwerp,"
Mode to erder for
REEVE L KNIGHT & 'RON;.
Importers,
1212 Chestnut Street.
NEW sninrEms
LOOKING GLASSES,
NEW ENGRAVINGS.
NEW OHROMO-LITHOGRAPHB.
EARLES' GALLERIES.
816 Chestnut Street.
MARY B. CONWAY,
LON DRYS ITENOMIG 131) 8110173 UPORIII,
81 South Sixteenth Street, '
PIMADELPHIA.
Ladies from any part of the Milted tastes tassenalhoir
orders for Drees Materials, . 1 rases, Cloaks. Soutane,
Shoes. Ender Clothing. binurning. Botta. WelldAtreTrOs
seen. Travel's& te
Guth's, Jeeby, tne.: low, rep
Clothing, Infanta' W ardrobes, Gentlemen's Lineal. ise.
In ordering Garments. Ladles will please send one of
1868.
rialtlus the city should• not fall to call_...
ZDeanires registered tor future sonverdoneo.
Bette, by rwrzolestort. to
MR. S. M 114111.1111311.
1012 and 1014 Chestnut street.
MEBBB/3. HOMP.R, (X)LLADAY es CO..
818 and 820 Chestnut rtroet.
aulo Bmrp _ .
COLUMBIA HOUSE, CAPE MAY.
TrCOLUMBIA HOUSE, at Cape Island
N E '. J., will be opened this season on the 26tIV
of Juno.
Situated but a few rods from the beach, with
three hundred good bathing rooms standing di
rectly at the surf, and with fine shade trees upon
the lawn, this house must surpass any other at
the Capes as well for its outside attractions and
conveniences as for 'its extensive and well regu
lated interior.
The Columbia has long been sustained by a sub
stantial end select patronage froia all parts of the
country, and its appointments may be depended
upon as strictly first-else& For rooms,&c., address
GEO. J. BOLTON, Proprietor,
Cape Island, N. J.,
BOLTON'S HOTEL,
Harrisburg, Pa.
Jel3 a to th WO
LA PIERRE HOUSE,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
The undervigned he,ving leased the above popular
Hotel. and having made extensive alterations and im
Provementa.it is now open for the reception of Gueets.witb ,
all the appointments of a first claw Hotel.
J. B.BUITEUWOBIB & 10., Proprietors.
ants
UNITED STATES HOTEL'
ATLANTIC CITTp N. J.
Will be opened for the reception of gusts on
SATURDAY. JUNE 27:.
The home has been repainted. papered and otherwiser
improved.
Music will be under the direction of Simon Hassler.
Persons wishing to engage rooms can do en by aPP/Yinitts
BROWN & WORLPPERII,
AUantio City, or
fie. 821 Biclbsnond Street.
LORETTO SPRINGS. CAMBRIA 00.. PAL-,-THIS
lwell•knowri •and delightfoleammerrilsort having been
thoroughly renovated and much improved aincelairt sea.
son. is now open under the management of the under
signed Excursion tickets .over the Pennsylvania Rail
road can be procured in Philadelphin.Pittsburgh suidiElar
risburg to Raslers Station, two miles distant from the ,
lipringa, at which point vehicles will be in readiness to..
convoy visitors to them. Visitors will take the 11 o'clock
P. M. train to avoid delay. The owner of the Springs,.
llt r. Gibbons, will give Me personal attention to the wel
fare of his guests. Terms $l2 per week.. For circulars ,
and further particulars, address
• JOHN BfaurosEr,
73.31.20 v. - Proprietor.
OUNTAIN HOUSE ,` AT CRYSTAL SPRINGS,
,
F -Allentown, Pa, will - be-opened-un- the 98d-of-Jung --
Thie new establishment is fitted out in maguißcent stale ,
for the especial accommodation of those from abroad..
who seek a healthy and pleasant mummer retreat. Room ,
can be secured by Letter, by addressing •
ie2B 2m* BERNDT di iißEft, Proprietors.
CIOTTAGE BOARDING--AT MIBB HMV% LAFAY—
ette oppostte Delavvaze House. Cape Wend. aMm.-
NEWIN6} M*OHIIVEFI.
1106. REMOVAL. 1106,
OE SINGER lIIINUFACTURING comity
Have Removed their Waresooma to
No. 110.6 Oheetttut Street.'
SINGER'S NEW FAMILY SEWING MACHINE La
idmple, durable, quiet and light running. and capable of
Performing an a torirlaing range and variety of work. It
• rtitob„pjmilaaUfer. card. tnek.lt x
YirM. FL COOPER. Agent._
rive 4mrPs
ots TRENTONB?saNII7I i_Bt,,l ,31 Cream , Milk, Ova.
ter and Egg nTilTcWeara r e
brn's - eelebrated
Trenton and Wine liinnit by JOB. B. BUBBLER & (.104-
Bole Amts. 108 &Mai Delaware avenue.
V PETIIII62I, &Goo
WIZ NINE AIM*
SUAILMIEit KESORTS•
hare their
ECO.ND
CATER CABLE NEWS
THE LONDON' MONEY MARKET.
Cotton' Steady.
FROM CALIFORNIA.
THE. WRECK OF THE SUWANEE
ARRIVAL TIER CREW.
Marine Intelligence
THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD
PRONE CAPE I%IA. N"
Important Improvements Projected
POLITICS IN
==s
, •
LowooN, Aug. 20, A. M.- Consols for money,
93f)4@93%, and for account; 93%; 11. 8. 6-20 s,
21%; Erie, dit Ildnola Central, 90.
FRANKFORT, Ang; * 20, A. .3(..-rirkire-twentlea,
LIVERPOOL, Aug.. 20, A. 31.+—Ootton • eteaAly;
sales of 10,000 bales. 'Breadstatre heart'. Lard
declined to 66i. Bd. • Other articles un
changed.
Lonnou, Aug. 20, A. M.—Petroleum is firm.
n All other articles are unchanged.
LONDON, August 20, P. M.—Consols for money,
. 1 , 93%; for account, 93 94. , Erie, 8134. Illinois
Central, 0l3(.
LtvErcrooL, August 20, P. M.—Cetton -steady.
Bacon advanced to' 595. 6d. Pork advanced to
77e. 6d. Lard flat and nominally declined to 665.
Spirits of Turpentine declined to 27e.
LONDON, August 20, P. M.—Sugar dull.
ANMERP, August 20, P. M.—Petroleum is firm
and unchanged.
From California.
ftAzi Fitlaicism, August 18th.—The officers and
crew of the wrecked steamship &mance arrived
here to-day.
The crow and officers of the ship Audttbon,lost
on July 19, were saved.
Arrived Ship. Clarissa, Valparaiso; Herma,
Ws, Acapulco. Cleared—Ship B. Robinson, Jr.,
Liverpool, with 42,000 sacks of wheat. Bailed—
Gold Hunter, for Liverpool, and Eldorado, for
Baker's Island.
50(46 VI Wheat (inlet at $1 70@1
N. Legal tendens, 69%.
SAN Fnasetsco, August tfith.—The passenger
trains on theSentral Pacific rallrbad are now
running 23.5 miles east of Sacramento.
Idaho adviees of August 11th state that Judge
fichaeffer,the Democratic candidate for Congress,
3a4300 ahead, His election is claimed by 600 ma
il:dila% • ,
Cleared, ship Valparaiso, for New York, with
27,000 sacks of wheat.
Flour firm and unchanged ; wheat quiet at
$1 70@1 80 ; legal tenders unchanged.
New Enterprise at Cape May.
-143pecial-Despateh telbe Philo& Evadng Bulletin.)
CAPE MAT, August 20, .1868.—A company of
four New Jersey. gentlemen, namely, Messrs.
John G. Stearns, Thomas. Jones Yorke, William
J. Sewell and-A. W. Markicy, have purchased all
_.she sea-front lying between the Excursion Rouse
and the Inlet. It is their intention to begin at
once a series of improvements, the first of which
Efalfiying - dowirof a Alkuk wink
from the Excursion House to the Inlet and Light
House. MIS will make a promenade of more
than a mile in length.
rirrrrllTa r - {7w fZ
bama.
Morroawcry, Aug. 20.—The following Demo
cratic electoral ticket his been nominated by the
State Conventions State at large, George Gold
thwait, of Montgomery, and Peter M. Doz, of
Madison.
let district, H. T. Ton!main, of Mobile; Alter
nate, W. H. F. Randall, of. Dallas; 2d district,
T. lit• v yre, Montgomery; Alternate, J. G. Moore,
of Coffee. 3d district, J. Henderson,
of Talladega; Alternate, F. 8. Ferguson,
of !flacon. 4th district, B. B. Lewis, of
Shelby ;' - alternate, J. J. Jolly. of Greene.
13th district, IJ. Crook, of Wham ; alternate,
William Richardson. of Madison. 6th
district, A. McAlexander, of Lauderdale; alter
nate, C. C. Harris, of Lawrence. The convention
adjourned at 9 o'clock this morning. An
immense mass meeting to take place to-day.
The city is full of people, from all parts
of the State, and they are still com
ing in by every train. To-night
there will be a strand torchlight procession,
and the business houses \ and residences on the
principal streets will be, illuminated.
Fron Atlantic City.
EBeeelal Deepatett to the Plilladelphla Eveninit Bulletin. ]
ATLANTIC Crrr, Aug. 20.—The excursion of
the Norristown Lodges, I. 0. 0. F., arrived at 10
o'clock this morning, half an hour behind time,
with twenty-three car's, and over fourteen hun
dred people. ' Aloe.
From Fortress Monroe.
FORTRESS MONROE, August 20.—The school
ship Macedonian passed in the Capes last night,
twenty-four days from Madeira. She is bound
for Annapolis.
--
• The Savannah sailed on the,same day.
POLITICAL.
The Ku. Klux Klan—The Murders In
*mulatto, Tenn.—Embers or the De.
belllon--Plans of she Democracy.
Nesaviraz, Aug. 18.—The Mayor of *auklin,
Tenn., arrived in this city this afternoon, and
reports that a party of horsemen, numbering 20
or more, masked and clad in the garb popularly
supposed to be .the Ku-Klux uniform, entered
Franklin, last night, between. 11 and 12 o'clock,
broke into the , store of a Russian Israelite,named
Bicrsteln, took him about 75 yards from
his place • of , business .• and , :killed him
by shooting him 'five times. A
negro in the employ of Bleratein - was also shot
and killed. At the time of this tragedy the streets
were thronged with people returning from a cir
cus. As above twenty Mots were fired, it is sur
prisin that no one save those mentioned above
was Injured. After the bloody business the horse
men shouted "Clear the street," and galloped off
.enmolested. It would appear that the citizens
were panic-stricken by the suddenness of the
appearance of these murderers - among them,
and the number of shots being fired, and
led from the scene in all directions.
Bierstein was extremely radical in his politi
cal-views, and very bold in...expressing them!
He kept a small fdry-goods and clothing store,
and it Is said that his customers were almost ex
;elusively negroes. The negro man who was
11mrdered wash's clerk. About three weeks ago
a negro who had been accused of rape upon - a
• young white woman, was taken from the jail at
Franklin and ;hanged -by- Is party of Ku Klux.
Thq next day a:report was circulated, that the ne
vem intended burning the town. Intense ex
citement prevailed and large numbers came in
art - thervountrytcrussist--the-Iltlestol-in,pr ,
renting -order. As Or party of these
-men were -•-_ returning . home they Were
'tired upon from- the roadside, and one Ezell,
hrothervf-the- upon' wnoin-thiYalleged- Out-
Brink:duffs NIL
' ALABAMA.
A correspondent of the Chicago Times (Demo
cratic) has been,writing sketches ,of the towns
along the -Pacitic—Railroad, These -towns, -he
finds, are the creations of a day, and their popu
lation is mainly made up of adventurers, mur
derers, gamblers, thieves and prostitutes. One
of the worst Is Benton, Dakota Territory. The
Pacific Railroad was extended beyond it a few
days ago,..and Frank_ as one of the Com
missioners on the part of the Government, in
spected It. On his return to Benton he was re
-0!4. d , and forced yi W nemarratie pnpula,
don to make a speech. He did so, and ire - make
the following extracts, as reported by the Times
correspondent:
"I regret I cannot talk to you an hour or two.
[Cries of 'Go on, go on.'] You don't look
ninth like bondholdersJmuch laup,hterl,, and
were you a little fur th er East I know your votes
would:fell fearfully against the =party of moral
ideas and excessive taxes for the poor; a party
which, by fair means or foul, is bound to win in
this coming campalgn—if it can. [Loud cheer
ing.] This Radical corruption must cerise. Next
Fall it will cems—and we hope forever. Oar
motto is Justice to White Men. The Democratic
platform adopted by the party has already
frightened thougands from l the cowardly
ranks of the Radicals, and thousands more
will flee. ,[A voice. 'The Democratic flea is too
much for them;' great laughter.] The great
masses of this mighty Republic have no
affinity with the negro. [Prolonged applause.]
The right of elective franchise is for the white
man alone; and the ruinous system introduced
into the Radical party and platform is opening
the eyes of the people to such an extent that
overwhelming majorities will crown our bright,
proud banners with such a glorious victory that
the buzzes will shake the very earth to Its foun
dations." [lmmense and enthusiastic applause.]
The reporter Is very jubilant over this recep
tion, and contrasts it with that received by Gen.
Grant, whom ho says was called upon by a few
people. After the graphic description given of
the settlers of this town, it is no wonder they
preferred Blair to Grant.
FINANCIAL aria COMMERCIAL
ma:
300 City 611 new 1033‘
1000CamitAnnt 68'89 88U
4000 NJ Rh 6'B eampt 1038
100 sh Read R b3O 444
100 eh do b 5 444 i
400 at do b3O 9434
100 eh do b3O 44-3.16
100 eh do b 5 49.81
ISETWENN
$2OO City6a new 103
300 N Fenno 73 e 9036
1000 Lehigh Con in 65
iikAtad Music 101
6EOO
3000 City 6's new 103
400 Penns 6e 3 sere 10730
21 eh Ofund9Am its 12930
100 sh do 88
200 eh Read 11 x 3 0 .4454
400 eh do e 5 Its 44%
100 eh do b 5 4430
PHILADELPMA, Auguat 20.—The demand for
money, although far from pressing, is still in
creasing, but astthe supply is large we continue
to quote "call loans" at 410 per cent. on Govern
ment and mixed collaterals. Gold took another
decided downward turn, and the announcement
of the failure of a heavy New York operator
caused distrust in the stability , of values.
!There was a very dull stock market to-day,and
the "bears" had the best of the contest—in fact,
"bulls" were sorely pressed, as all the fancies on
the list were dull and ;weak. government and
State Loans were not sold to any extent. City
Loans.of the new,issue sokLat 103Y 8 2—no change.,
with 99% bid for the:old certificates.
Reading .Railroad closed at 443—a decline of
X; Pennsylviada' Railroad was also X loweri
12836 was bid for Camden and Ambey Railroad;
443 y for Little Schuylkill Railroad ; 553 f for
Mine Hill Railroad; 543 t for Lehigh Valley
Railroad ; 82%, for Catanifeu Railroad preferred;
88 for North Pennsylvania Railroad,• and 253 a for
Philadelphia and Erle Railroad. ;.
Canal °flares were dull and nominal. 203 i was
bid for Lehigh' Navigation;and 18 - for ,
Navigation preferred : t it
In Bank and Passenger ailway shares there
i_wemnulatmeactione.
The earplugs of the Philadelphia and• Erie Rail
road Company 'for the month- of July, notwith
standing the suspension of bdsiness for a week
in - coneeseence of - axt' - aeOident -- ttr - olle of ^ t els
rage.
was
p_eipottaliia;:3o.,,
was _lt Is
lb at leratein was thought by the friends , of f Ezell
to te---In seine way connected with this killing—
that he bad supplied ammunition to pep:way-and
bad urged them to commit the deed. Of this,
however,_ there was no other evidence than the
fact that the greater Part of his patronage was
derived, from . that class. -This affair will, more
than cd/ket" all the speeches 'recently made by
the Confederate Generals to the Legislature In
opposition to the proposed .calling out of the ml
.litia for the preservation of peace; and there can
lb° no doubt that the Legislatnre,which adjourned
yesterday Until the 21st will Immediately
on its reassembling pass the pending Military
bill. The cry folt..eaca" which was sent up from
all parts of the Stew bed had considerable influ
ence on members, and it was thought that the
fact of the Legislature's being in session would
have a restraining influence on lawless men.
and that it would be much lee;
expense to prolong Its session than to call the
militia into active service. The only hope of
peace In this State is in the election of Grant and
Colfax. If the election should result in the suc
cess of Seymour and Blair, the rebelit would un- 4
doubtedly attempt to regain their "iota rights" by
force. It is the fear of: - United States troops more
than'the militia which now keeps them quiet.
Thty openly boast of their ability to overthrow
the. "BrosvnloW despotism," in • case of
no -outside interference. Notwithstanding the
earnest appeals ; ;made by. the__ . 'northern
Democracy for the withdrawal of the Democratic
electoral ticketln this State, there is very .llttle
yorobability of Its• being withdrawn. • At a meet,
;log or the Seymour and Blair Club of this count"'
yesterday, a resolution offered by ex-Gov. H. 8.
Foote was .-pnatilMonsly adopted. , in .favor , of a
vigorous canvass. :I This . Appears to be the pre
vailing sentiment of the Democrat!, newspapers
throughout the State. —N. Y. Tribuns. .
Genova I :l4oualvabit the Jews.
A Jewish Mere-hint of this city writes as fol
lows to the Morning'Post
Slit: The writer of this was in Rentueky,and
litiesouri shortly after the issuing of General
Grant's order No. 11, and would say that„ ha 4 be
been at that time military commander, ho should
have leaned the same': Order; excepting designs,
ting any particular, class of people. General
Grant was under the impression that all the tra
ilers were Jews, and when he learned his error he
apologized to one of the parties, expelled, and
also explained Die mistake. General' 'Rawlings,
Colonel Badein (his military secretary) and the
general himself issued the 'order under mistake.
General Grant tecasgood a friend to the Jews
as any other man. I have met the General in
Galena, 111., and know that ke was on good
social terms and very friendly_ to the Jewish citi
zens ofsthe town. .The class that followed the
army might be designated as wandering Jews,
from the fact of their not having any particular
residence or place of business. They were birds
of passage—soldiers of fortune. Occasionally we
hear of a Jew committing a felony. He, you
may be certain, is one of timeless that caused the
issuing of Order No. 11, and the Jewp know and
feel that theee of their co:religionist/I'l)ring their
faith in disrepute by their bad - conduct. They
generally vote the Democratic ticket because they
like the associations.
For example, look at some of our merchants,
lawyers, and men of characteriand in eight eases
out of ten they are Republicans. Gar ministers
in this city durirg the war were known for their
patriotic sermons, preaching that the Jews were
bound by all their past history to sustain the
government that accords to them and all classes
equal rights.
Again, how can we sacrifice all our manhood,
oar cherished Principles of government, our sup
port of Congress and its Reconstruction meas
ures, by sustaining Seymour and Blair? Had
the Jews been left to nominate a candidate, it is
not likely they would have selected Grant; but
as he stands .the-representative of a party
pledged to progress, human rights and national
honor, we accept, him as oar standard-bearer,
pledging the votes of nine out of ten of the Jews
that voted for Lincoln in 1864.
Yours; respeotfcaly,
Another Speech by Frank Muir.
• - ItiortOy Marko
Ida Stock Exal3abge.
The Philadelpht •
Bales at the Pht'Adele
•AHD.
1000 PhilttErieß 7e b 5 SO
240 sh Poona R 03
200 eh do 860 lts 53
11 eh do 2dys 53'
100 alt do bsBslnt 53
leh do Its 2dys
100 di do b6O 53
110.A1CD13.
84 sh Penns 52,N
23 sh do 2dys Its 53
100 &Reid E 44
100 sh do b 3046.3-16
BOAZ%
3 eh Fenno IL 53%
50 sh' do 53
100 eh do ao 53
100 eh do , 533‘
100 eh do .1)10 53x
IGO eh Catawls pf b3O 33
ALF.xemi. IiAI4ABEE.
La ....eloot Quotations trom New York
Telerra.l
Naw YORK, Ang.2o.—Stoc ph.
ks weak and excited.
Chicago and Rock Island, 97%; Reading - , 813;-;
Canton C0 . .,45; Erle,46.l‘;Cleveltuad and Toledo,
97; ' , Cleirelatid- arid Pittsburgh,- 85; 'Pittsburgh
and Fort i Wayne, 10534; Michigan Central, 118;
Michigan Southern, 82; New York Central,
122; Illinois Central, 140; Cumberland preferred,
29; Virginia 6s, 523‘; Missouri 6s, 92%; Hudson
River, 184; Five-twenties, 1862, 11; do. 1864,
108%; do. 1865, 110 ;do . new,107%; Ten-fottles,
'
1083‘. Gold, 144; Money,- unchanged and ac
tive; Exchange, 109%.
Illtaorketa byTeliegrapitt.
Nxw Youx,Aug. 20. - ,-,COttorl'easier at 29 1 1@; , 30.
Flour dull and declined 10015; State, S7Q9 90;
Ohio, $8 70@12 90; Western, s7@lo 20; South
ern, $8 90@14 90; California, slo@ 12 25.
Wheat dull; sales 15,000 bushels spring at $199;, ,
@s2 10. Corn active and advanced le; sales a
130,000 bushels at $1 16@$1 23. Oats quiet;
sales of 15,000 bushels at 81@83. Beef quiet.
Pork dull at $2B 62X.„. Lard, dull at. 18N®1834.
Wbisliyfttiliat 69@7.0.%
Bliimmonn, August 2D Cotton dull; nomi
nally 30. IFlour fairly active, but quotably un
changed. Prime Wheat firm and unchanged at
$2.60@2 65. low trades declined 10 cents. orn
n ; pr me w ie, . e ats .n 11; prime 700
77; ordinary, •55(05. Rye dell at $1 45@1 50.
Pork firm at 530050. Bitepa firm z -rib 17%
pl7R,'; clear 'sides,: 173N.1.7W shoulders : 14y,
(015; hams, 2 - T643. 10;
tbrldgea r near-Ution i .V.ll4, Fete s ,-42446, 66-4-1
For the correapondbig 'moiath'laat' •
year 200,418 74
Increase
The earnings for seven months end
ing July 31, 1868, were $1;439,077 74
For the corresponding time last year 1,291,110 34
Increase for the year, thus tar...
The Directors of the Locust Mountain Coal
and Iron Company have declared a semi-annual
dividend of 4 per cent. on the capital stock, clear
of State taws.
Messrs. De Haven and Brother, No. 40 South'
Third street, make the ,following quotations of
the rates of exchange to-day, at 1 P. „IL:
United States sixes, of 1881; 11.8%@118%:rdb.
do., '62,' 112%0118; do do., '64, 108X@108%,;
do. do., '65, 110%@111; do. do., '65. new,
107%@107X; do. do.. '67, new, 107X@107%;
do. do., '6B, 107%®107%; Fives, ten-forties,
1083 @108%; . Due Compound Interest Notes,
193' ; do. do. d 0.,. Sept. '65, 183,; do. do. do.
Oct. '65, 18; Gold, 144@14434; Silver, 136(0188.
Smith, Randolph do Co., bankers, 16 South
Third street, quote at 11 o'clock, as follows
Gold, 1443 ; U. S. 6s, 1881. 1183 @114; do.
5-204 1662,-112M1133; d0., - 1864; 10890108 X;
do. ' 1865; 110%@)111; di).'July, 1865, 107%®
107 X; do. 1867, 107%®10731; do. 1868, 107%@
107 X; Fivea-10-4043, 1868 10834@108%.
Jay Cooke it Co. quote Government Securities,
today, as follows: United States 6's. 1881,
11834®114; old' Five-twenties, 112%0)113;
new Five-twenties of 1864, 108%@108X; do. do.
1865, 110%@111; Five-twenties of July, 107;
@AVM; do. do. 1867, 107X®107%; do. do. '6B,
107%®107%; Ten-forties,;; 108X0108%; Gold;
144%.
IdessnieWallace Idc - Reene,-Bankerv4.2lSouth
Tbier street, , qtlotellorder Mate Botuili Its fol
lows: Tennessee's, old, 6434@64%; do. new, 633
0}68%; Virginia's old, 52y,,,@58; do. new, 52M
®513; North Carolina's, old 713,1®72; do. new,.
71M071X: Missonri's 923,0g3.
elilladelplata Jrzeauce Bisurket.
THURSDAY, Aug. 20.. 4 -Cloverseed is quiet and
nominal at $8 25e$8 75. Flaxseed has ad
vanced, and Is taken on arrival by the crushers
at $2 60@$2 70 per bushel There is a steady
demand for Timothy, and several iota changed
hands at $3 25. , „
A sample of. tidy - lithis, ,Every superior quality,
the first arrival of the season,
was. exhibited on
'change this morning, by Mr. William B. Grant,
and attracted much attention. They were raised
by Mr. C. D. Palmer, near Waterville, Oneida
county, N. Y.
The receipts of Quercitron are .
and No. 1 commands $66 per ton.
What can be said about Flour? The remarks
which we have daily made for a month past as to
the scarcity of the higher grades, and the limited
character of the dernand,:will apply equally well
to-day. • • s
About 600 - barrels changed hands; including 100
barrels Middlings at $6 50; small lots of Extra at
QB@9; 300 barrels Pennsylvania and Ohio Extra
Family at $10@)12 50, and 300 aarrels North
m11010.'410" 4149, ctfiv.,t 00, including a lot of
veryy - choice Minnesota at $ll 75. Rye Flour'
commands $9 50.. In Corn Meal not a single
transaction.
There is a firm inquiry for prime Wheat at full
prices, but inferior descriptions are dull and low
er. Sales of 2,000 bushels good and choice Red
and 4.mber at 82 40@2 50, and poor at s2@2 20.
Ryelanged from $1 601. 70 for new and old'
Penna. Corn has declined 3c. per bashel. Sales
of 1,500 bushels Yellow at 81 20. Oats are dull.
Sales of new Southern and Penna. at 50@.70c. per
bushel and old at 85c.
,The Now :Volt Molter fileurlzeit.
, Mom thik few York Herald of tcHiliwil
Acorn. 19.—The gold market has been under
the influence of heavy bear operations to-day,and
the fluctuations were from 144% to 1453, yvith
the closing transactions prior to the adjourothent
of, the board at 3 P. M. at. 145%, following which
the price was hammered for speculative effect to,
144%@144.. The men who did all they could to
put the price above 150 for the purpose of selling
out - upon 'the phblleitfiti all!' street at thS , advance novt.doing thole, besetia :for& - .an ' artificial
decline in order that they may profit by the
violent upward - reaction which - must follow. The
reputed leading bulls, while representing to the
street that they were buyers of gold, have been
recently bearing the market for the purpose of
buying at lower figures` preparatory to a
fresh upward movement. But it would be-.
well if the -half-dozen vagabond foreign
and native bankers, who make It their
business to manipula te the price of gold and
swirull*-the-publio-and-the-street. were indieted
as conspirators' against the, public credit and
lodged in a penitentiary for a season, for pick
pockets and burglars are comparatively harm
less and respectable members in the community.
What is most necetsary in the standard of values
is stability, and such fluctuations as we have
latterly experienced' are entirely inimical to
them. All kinds of trade are reduced to a species
of gambling when gold suddenly rises from 140
to 150 and falls back just as quickly to where it
started from. The speculators care nothing
whether gold goes up ..or down, for they have
their profit either-way, and frequent and violent
fluctuations are what they most desire. Such a
clash of men'would not, have been tolerated in
England during the period of specie suspension
there and the . existence of a gold room would
haVe been prohibited. There is no reason
why such an incubus should be suffered to
exist here, and the sooner the disreputable den
is broken up the better. Loans were made at 3
® 5-per cent per annum for carrying. The gross
clearings amounted to $80,231,000, the gold bal
ances to $1,836.715 and the currency balances to
$3,469,243. The steamer Russia, for Liverpool,
took out $76,000 in specie, and the Sub-Trea
surer disbursed $40,000 in coin in payment of
interest during the day. The price of gold varied
as follows
10 A. M 145% 3P. M. 14:4
10:10 A. M ..14534 5:40 P. NI 144%
There bas been a further improvement in t 4
market for government securities, although at
the opening prices were slightly lower than at
the close last evening. There was a decided
change for the better later in the day, but the ad
vance was stoutly resisted by some of the dealers,
who took the initiative in the bear movement.
Prices are now about two and a half per cent.
lower than they were a week ago, and for this
decline there is no legitimate cause. Moreover,
they are nearly two per cent. lower than they
were at this time lairt year.
[(From the New York World of to•day.],
Atreus'. 19.—The Government bond market
opened weak and at lower prices at the first
regular board, but afterwards rallied 3d, to X per
cent. in the new bonds. The ten-forties were
sold at 108 in the morning and closed at 1083‘ to
108%.iThe 1867 a were sold at 107 and afterwards
advanced to 107%.
The money market is more active at 4 to 5 per
cent. on call, and for prime discounts 63f to 73h
per cent. The recent theme on the stock ex
change has caused a number of loans to be called
in, and collaterals and borrowers are closely scru
tinized.
The foreign exchange market is quiet, as usual
after the sailing of the packet. Quotations are
unchanged; 109% to 109% for prime bankers'
sixty-day sterling bills, and_ 109% to 109% for
sight. Prancs on Paris bankers, long, 5. 17% to
5. 16%, and short, 5. 15 to 5.
.13%,
IRD
101,267 77
•
BY TELEGRAPH.
W EL INO T O N.
q 47,967 101
THE 'FOURTEENTH, AMENDNENTA
RATIFICATION BY. GEORGIA.
THE NEW POSTAL TREATY.
FROM HARRISBURG.
The Alexander Case
Deputy it.4orner4eneral'e Opinion
• WASIEURGTON, Aug. 20. The President offi
cially announces in a proclamation that the Leg
islature of Georgia has_ ratified the Pourteath
"Article as an amendment _to the Constitution of
the United States.
Information has been received at the 'Post
Office Department warranting the belief that
BOO& Post Office Department will assent to the
promed modifications a the , new postal con-
Tention between the.. two countries, by whICI,
among ether ' , things; the pOst,sge on small
vamphlets will,he'redneed:
The ,conyengon , fs tat inaprnretnent #n various
particuliira ovef the one now in force. Postal
n nekOttittona are now vending' between the
United States and France for a more liberal ex
'change of matia
lEtioelat &spat& to;the Phila. Evening Balletin.l
HMIRIBIII7ItO, 20.—Deptity Attorney
General Newlin this 'morning returned- to the
Governor the papers in, the matter of the' appli
cation for the repriew of Alfred Alexander, sen
tenced to be hung for the murdCr of Phillia
Proctor, with an unfavorable' opinion,
closing with the '.words, _ 'We was justly
convicted and deserves no mercy". The
Governor still holdithe ;under . ..advisement,
but will douotiess decide the Matter this P. M.
Ship News.
NEW YORK, Aug. 20.—Arrived—fiteo mabip
Miesieslppi, from Rio Janeiro.
August 20,
.
Port Hood
Halifax
Portland
New York
Wilmington, Del.,
Fortress Monroe..
Richmond. ...... .
Buffalo
Pittsburgh ...
Chicago
Louisville
New Orleans
Mobile
Key We5t........ .
Havana
State of Thermometer Thla Day at. the
Bulletin Office.
dee. -84 dot. 2P. M 136 des.
Weatker cloudy. 2'"*Southwest'
TIME PAIL&G VAYAM WAIL
DleastroutAteleatol the &Mee ati Welk
Jklninalta ati d In the Gran Chaco.
• LONDON, Aug. 19. 1868.--Advlces have been re
ceived here from Rio Janeiro to July 81 by the
regular mail steamers.
The alike, to the number of ten thousand, had
attackedßort-Humaita on - July IG, brit were re
pulsed with a loss said to amount to three thou
sand. •
, • •Imultaneonigtia
yan defences hi the Gran Chaco had been"also
repulsed.
F LA 0 0 13S
RICHEY, SHARP& CO.
1111PORTIZV9,
AT POPULAR PRICES,
A VERY EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF
FALL DRESS GOODS.
RIMY, SHARP & CO.
No. 727 Chestnut Street.
mwisro
GREEN GINGER.
NEW AND "FRESH
GREEN , 43-I.NGrErt,
JUST' RECEIVED.
SIMON COLTON & cLAHE,
S. W. oor. Broad and Wahint Sta.
wfmtfro
r 7 , e
Fourth and. Arch._ .?
SUMMER AND SEASIDE
IN EVERY VARIETY. a
LADIES' SOMMER GOODS.
LAWNS. DEGANDIES and GRENADINES.
SUMMER POPLINS, FOR SUITS.
TRAVELING DRESS GOODS.
lIDILFS. COLT.* Rd. GLOVES, etc.
&Dim w tl
jO ) EN'S BEEF TEA.--ELILLE AN OUNCE OP TELLT
extract will make a pint of excellent Beef . Tea in a
few mt.itee. Always on band and for sale by JOSEPH
HUS- , ...gi. CO.. 108 Smith Del Aware avenue .
BOAB.-100: BOXES GENUINE
WWite Cuddle Boa fr om brlgTennsylvant
S} ply and far .ft
South Delaware avenue.-
CANTON PRESERVED GINGER.— PRESERVED
Ginger, in eryrup, of the celebrated Chyloong brand t
also, Dry Preserve d Ginger. Le bcrtea. imported and for
saleby JOBRXH:B. BUM= & 00.109 South Dolaware -
avenue.
zaRinDAT:ATIGW7 - g - o,:ig_dit -
EDITION.
2:30 O'Cloolc.
Fpm wwintaistairi.
Alexander's Case.
Woittper Report.
Wind. Weather. ammeter
—.13 W. Cloudy 76
..:.B.W. Cloudy. 70
Cloudy...B. 74
....8. E. Cloudy. 1—;
... 8. W. Battling. 82
.... N. W. Clear. 82
.....8. W. C10udy.:..78
....—" Raining. 74
Raining. 79
.....N. W. Cloudy. 66
.8. W. Cloudy. 76
....8. E. Bholoreq. 81
N. E. Clear. 80
....E. Clear. 84
Clear. 84-
JOBBERS 'and
RETIUM=9,
OFFER.
M,
4,
FOURTH EDITION.
BY TELEGRAPH.
LATER. FROM WASHINGTON.
THE SOUTHERN NEGRO VOTE.
Democ.ratic"
TERRORISM IN TENNESSEE.
Democracy and the Negroes.
(Special Despatch to the Philada. Evenipa
WASHENGTON, Aug. 20.—Lettens , constantly re
ceived here leave no doubt that the movement in
the South to control the negro vote
through the agency of the land
holders and the employers, who refuse
to employ colored laborers unless they vote the
Democratic ticket, is assuming extensive propor
tions and pervading every State.
A letter received to-day,addressed to a Senator
from New Tork by a gentleman who has been tra,
veling on: the Mississippi river,says: "The system
of terrorism so succeshfullY used in Mississippi
is not, initigarated 'in Tennessee; and' is much
more efficient andthoroUgh than the landholders
are'",bitheigeney of , the Kit Klui. controlling the
suffrage , Of the' negroee r and unless some
thorough and deCided,,, action `shall be taken. to
vindicate the rights and privileges of the blacks,
Tennesseatanst surely be lost." • ,
says' he has information , from a trust.
worthy soiree that the Ku'Klux in Tennessee,
=thoroughly organize& and armed, 'numbers
one hundred and sixty thousand Men.
• He Gaya the twelve rebel Generate lately aisem
bled at -Nashville are leaders of the Klan,' and
this is coriarnteAl by letters from other parties,
who say that the ostensible ,purpose of thdso
rebels meeting in iniiclave was ncitthe real ;one,,,
and, their fair talk is purely strategic, intended;to
create public opinion..
01,TY BUI4 ETEN.
STEALING GAS.—Themas B. Davis, proprietor
- of ; a - tavern at No. 1601 North Eleventh Street,
was before Alderman Battier, this afternoon, upon
the charge Of defrauding the Gas Trustees.
tie
°lverson. a gas inspector, testified that
tie went to Davis'a house on Monday to examine
the meter; he found that the meter had been
taken out of the box,and that the service pipe and
the pipes in the house were connected with a
grata percha pipe; the gas was , turned on; he then
tureed the gas off in the street.
..Thos. R. Brown, chief engineer, testified that
in a conversation with the counsel of the - de
fendant, it was admitted that the fraud had been
carried on for a few days.'
Davis was held in' $l,OOO , ball to answer at
Lie hailed.
Mr. E. G. eqtdet sends to Frank Leslie's
Gaaette this contradiction from Admiral Porter
of a Copperhead slander uttered , against General
Grant:
"liza--I pronounce the story of General Grant's
Intemperance a falsehood! I have ,known him
since the commencement of the war. Oar rela
tions while co-operating : on the MlARlFislpg were
intimate. They. were, equally intimate on Hamp
ton Roade,on the James river, and the Potomac.
They have 'been so, since ,the war, both
in Washington and , Annapolis. I have
shared hie hospitality, and , he has
accdpted , mine. I have met him under all
circumstances of fatigue-and -- festivity. in -sun
shine and in storm, in despondency and in dan
ger, and have had every opportunity of learning
his habits and knowing his conduct;
and I say that, during the whole pe
riod of my acquaintanceship with him, I have
neverkflownilim .to taste, nor,have /Amer heard
of his tonching,intoxleating liquors of any kind,
not even wine:! In common with all the officers
afiheLarmy_lkta-the-nary—wfw-haVO--flerVed—Wit.
General Grant and shared his intimacy, I have
been both shocked and outraged in reading and
hearing this alleßation against him, and had my
position been different, and had it not been that
my motive might be nt ,
misunderstood or misrepre
sented, I would have long ago denounced the
slander on General Grant as it deserves. I re
peat, General Grant is decidedly a temperate man
In principle and in practice. You, sir, and those
who hear me, may repeat what I say to you on
my authority as an officer and as a man."
Splaastt blimMection.
Before the month has eipired, says the Paris
correspondent of tho New York Times, there will
be another rising-in Spain. - Governors of cities,
functionaries in the different - State Departments,
deputies and officers in the army and navy are
being deatitnted or cast into prison in great num
bers. To further complicate matters,the ear
flap are preparing to take to the mountains and
to maintain another guerilla war in favor of Don
Juan de Bourbon. The Queen and Government
are thoroughly alarmed, and I should not be at
all surprised if we should some fine morning hear
of the royal family taking flight with such of
their adherents as have made them
selves obnoxious to the nation. I
have been told that large sums
have been recently transmitted from Madrid to
Paris on the Qfieen and Queen mother's private
account. Nothing is more probable. Tee con
viction which is beginning to make itself felt at
the Conrt,that the army is not to be relied upon,
would be in itself a sufficient motive for such
precautions. The report that Prince-Napoleon
was about to sat out for Madrid has been contra
dicted. Matters have arrived at such a pass there
that the influence of this welt-fed and pesce•
lovirg mediator would be of little avail. The
Liberals have lost all faith in the present French
dynasty. Hence their desperation to take up the
Duke of Mofltpensier even at the risk of mor
tally offending the Emperor.
JUST PUBLISHED.
JOHN WARD'S GOVERNESS,
A NOVEL.
By &nate b. iffaearesor.
12mo. Fine cloth.
Publiehed by •
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO.,
715 and. 717 Market. Sweet, Philada
aul9 w dtf 2t
. • •
Pennsylvania, Elastic) Sponge 00.,
1111 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
ELASTIC) SPONGY,
A SUBSTITUTE FOR 'CURLED HAIR FOR ALL
UPHOLSTERY PURPOS ES
CHEAPER TITAN FEATHERS OR HAIR, AND FAR
SUPERIOR.
The Lightest. Softest and moat Elastic and Durable ma
terial kn wn for
MATTRESSES, PILLOWS, CAR. CARRIAGE' AND
CHAIR CUSLUONS.
Iraltni Is
dus entirely indestructible, perfectly dean and free
t.
IT DOES NOT PACK AT ALL I
alWaye free from insectilfe:la Perfectly healthy, and
for the sick la unequaled.
If soiled In any way. can be renovated quicker and
easier than any other Mattress.
Special attention given to -
FURNISHING CHURCHES. HALLS ete.
Railroad men are especially invited: to examine the
Cushion Sponge.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED..;
THE TRADE SUPPLIED.
iv2O m w f 111
ERAGRANt AND PLEASING.
COLOATIE dr. CO.'S l'Oll6llE r 80A.PS aXe
evldt ly Known—fragrant and pleasing"
—tily have a softening* Influence on
th hin.—Pittaburg h Christian Advocate.
Orowftflt4
riANNED F.R.IIM VEGETABLES,. 1000 CASES.
%../ fresh Canned-Peaches; 500 cases fresh C. ad pine
Apples ; cases fresh Pine Apples. in . glaiss; 1,000 cues
.pr, (Ism mni P.-s . . sazaaes-fresh-Platasn
sans ; 200 cases , fremb'.Green Wages; 500 eases Cherries. in
5Yrn 4 P 540 sues Blackberries in syrup ; 600 cases litraw.
berries.-.in syrup ; 500 cases mesh Pears, in syrup; 2,000
cases. Canned' Te melees ; 500 cases Oysters; Lobsters and
Clams ;'6OO 'canes Roast' bur, Mutton: Veal. BOUW,
-For sale by JOSEPH B. BilßB/Eff di COWIOB South Dela.
IMO AMIGO.
3:15 O'Cnook..
lllore / Indian Outrage*.
L017L9,'• Ang. 20.—A . despatch from Hays
City; 'Kansas, dated yestenlay, says that the body
of Bill Comstock, the famous scout, has just been
brought In. He was murdered yesterday by the
Indians, near here, and his companions were mis
cued, badly woinded. Eighty Cheyennes drove
off 110 mules 'yesterday from within a mile of
Fort Hayea. • • • '
The Indians are now retreating towards the
Arkansas, with the military atid•Vplinteera in
hot pursuit. Several children 'istolen by the In
dians have been abandoned and foun4 . lii the
woods. SLT women have been'earriedawaypip
tivei,. With the extensive Preparationti now'or
ganized against the Indians, it is thought there
will be nor mere trouble in Kan sas. ; The hostile
tribes are Cheyennes and Arrapalioes.':i • '
The Hon. Benjamin F. .Wade,„. and. his.so,
James F. Wade r arrived , here YealerilaY.; and left
last evening for the plains by , way 01,be ;Kansas
Pacific Railway:, 'General Harney also left yds
terday for Omaha 'and the Indian etnintry, on
business connected with the Indian Peace Com
miselon: " • "'•
TLe 1131.5 .*- 1111 01 6, •
BOSTON ) Aug. , 20.—A cordialjeception was
given to the Chinese embassy .byt the ;citizens
generally and the city authorities, en their ar
rival here about eleven o'clock to-day. Mayor
Shurteff_weicomed: the =bossy , atr-zaiwro
priate speech; which was responded toty Minis
ter 'Burlingatne. r The escort from the city line
consisted of four companies of cavalry, number
ing about 170 men. The embassy will hold a
public levee In Fanenil Hall ti.omorroiy, at*oon;
arid will be the recipients of a grand banquet at
the fit..Yames Hotel to-morrow evening.'
• Congressional Nomination.
Wu.s..l..smaronT, Aug. 20.—The €onferenco of
the Eighteenth Congressional District (Lyeo
ming, Tioga, Clinton, Centre and Potter coun
ties) met to-clay, and nominated William H.
Armstreng, of Lycoming, foi Congress.
Boma., Ang.2o.—The British brig Loftier ? , from
New York , for Truirllio, •with • a cargo of pro
visions waawrecked Jply 23. 4 The crew, and a
part, of cargo were
,
ahipment . .. of tmecle',. •
Nnw 'roux,
,Ang. 20.—The steamship Union
tookout so,koo in specie to-day for Europe.
1 . ;._ - J: 7 4ipAye•g : _x;
. D r . C.0.11, A T11.0.1f..;4,,
DREXEL & CO.,
34 S. Third St., Philada.
DREXEL, WINTHROP & CO.,
18 Wall St.. New Vork.
DREXEL, HARJES & CO.,
• 'as%
GOID IND FOREIGN RIECHENGE:
helm Letters of Cre'dit available in all parts of Earol,
I)IIIENNISYLVANIA RAILROAD COMPANY;
persons bolding receipts for subscrintlen -toy NEB
STOCK, dated PRIOR to July 23. are beroby notified that
Certificates will be ready for delivery on and; after th
4fittinst.
, ,
Certificates for receipts dated July Md to PO inclusive
will be ready for delivery on and after the 'llth iliatant.
AZIJ.ENE,
• CONCENTRATED 119b/CO: _•'
For the Laandri—Frea fnimOindlerkeld,liteettiamlat'a
Certificate,
A Potent Pocket Piociultied ot hntity Bag:
IN EkOlt TWEN'ilt o'l T BOX. .
or sal Feby all reapentabla (Inners and Drugs*
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T R..T..N' I TIC IS Cl.ll.oo,Lii
iter.LAtviuig.
One hour's ride from Philadelphia, on the Baltimore
Railroad. ASI sleet Family School for Boy& The Winter
Term of thi. School will open on -September Pth. For
Circulars containing full information, cettylogue.. course
of Studley, !tn. &derma
812151/ •
Strut ;Bor. J. STORM /13 6 'Reofer•
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Or ,BRAND i
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De l bwiire 'gonna. • -
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08. BALFI—AN ENVOICEI OF BAIILIITHO
mooned linen eotcon.
PETER, Wiuggr soNs.
q.io Walnut artireetAll
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.F.T.F:TITE: , '..,')4I.).)TrION
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BY TELEGRAPH.;
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More Indian Outrages
CHINESE EMBASSY AT BOSTON.
Marine Disaster.
Masoivxc rs.z,, ::
No. 719 OHESTNUT-ETREETi--
IMPORTER OP
LACE CURTAINS
Mosquito CancipieS,
BY THE THOUSAND OR SINGLE ONE,
WINDOW SHADES
TO ORDER, OF ANY STYLE AND TRICE.
BANKERS AND DEALERS IN
GOVIRDEEST, STATE AND RAILROAD SIMILE
TREASURER'S DEPARTMENT.
PIIILADELPHLA. August 1,186%,
Notice to Share;'olden.
THOS; T. FIRTH,
Trmunttr.