Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 27, 1868, Image 2

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    POLITICAL.
••
OPENING OF TIME CAMIPALION.
. t
rent--ilepublican-llemoulatraiston-Gast
flight, - '
Last evening, at eight o'clock, a large and en
thusiastic mass meeting of the Republican citi
zens of the Finit, Second and Twenty.sixth
Wards, was held at Fassynnk Road and Wharton
street. A spacious stand for the speakers, deco
rated with nags and blazing with lanterns; was
erected on Wharton street. Brilliant.bon-fires
and booming cannon in the vicinity denoted the
'raciest:taken by the people of the Wards men
tioned, in the gathering. A mighty mass of Peo
ple surrounded the platform upon every aide. En
thusiasm and excitement reigned.
During the coarse of the evening a procession
Of the Invineiblea, the Grant and Colfax Clubs of
the First, Nineteenth and Twenty-sixth Wards,
and the Berry Campaign Club,aquares In length,
came upon the ground, their arrival producing
the wildest and most prolonged cheering. Bands
cif impale- disconrsed patriotic airs, and , the very ,
children lent •thelf childish voices to swell the
volume of applause. The buildings upon the
streets near the place of meeting were all hright
With Chinese lanterns and
The very trees overhanging the stand shimmered
in a blaze of glory. Every window, doorway
and housetop was crowded , with attentive listeu
tn. • - ,
'ln the intervals between the speeches bands
played and people ehonted.
Themeeting was called to order by Captain
David B. Baker.
The alms were as follows:
'B.• R. Sdby, Esq.
Vice Presidents—First Ward—Alderman Jesse
S. Bonsai], John. M.Howland,Thomas N. Miller,
William S. Irwin, John A. Houseman, Joseph
Bailey, Charles Humphreys, William. Parks, Ab
salom Taylor.
Second Ward—Byron Danby,Alderman Joseph
C. Tittermary, ' William F. Cushing,
Harper, Jr., Joseph Patrick, `James" M.. Gibson,
Colonel Benjamin L. Taylor,. Edward S. Red
streako, Edward Karcher, Samuel Tudor, Joseph
C.' Champion. " •
Twenty-sixth Ward—*Williath. Barnett, Lorin
Blodgett - , Jacob Mdord, JuthesEVens;Harry dart
lett, Robert B. Murrell, Joseph - Cartledge, Sr.
Robert Brigas, John 8.. Parker, J. W. Scott'
Joseph Parker. ,
Secretaries.—First Ward—Wlßlain Graham ,
Captain W. W. Wynn, Charles Vanzandt.
Beam& Ward—Joseph Schooley, Charles E.
Davis,,Robert T. Gill, Samuel F. Stringfellow.
.Twenty-sixth Wani--Dayld B. Baker, John 11
Peterson, Morton A. Eyerly, Harry Price.,
Speoch oi Hon. 4.)flarleo O'Neill.
Hon.Oharles 'O'Neill was the first sneaker. In
the course of his remarks he alluded to the fact
that Philadelphia lad always been true to the
Union, and hoped that she would yet remain
thus loyal. Re discriminated between the Demo
cratic and Republican platforms, reprobating the
fonder and praising the latter. /le adverted to
the local candidates, and urged his hearers to do
their whole duty in the coming contest. His re
marks Were general. He covered a great deal of
ground in a very short time, and was frequently
greeted with applause.
The Resolutions.
The resolutions were then read, as follows:
Whereas, The citizens of the First, Second and
Twenty-sixth Wards, in mass meeting assembled
to inaugurate in the city of Philadelphia the most
important political campaign in the history of
our country, the result of which shall decide the
stability and perpetuity of a republican form of
government in the election of Grant and Colfax,
Insuring to the people peace and prosperity, autt
restoring every branch of trade and industry to
healthful vigor ; therefore, be it
Resolved, 'That we indorse the action of the
Convention of the National Union Republican
Party, at Chicago, in their patriotic and ludielous
selection of Grant and Colfax as our standard
bearers in this Presidential campaign.
Rein/reed, That Gen - oral Ulysses. S. Grant; the
patriot soldier, we recognize the greatest captain
of the age, whose unparalleled military genius
and unflinching courage rescued our country
from dismemberment; a master in the field; and
in the councils of the nation a statesman firm
and true.
Resolved, That in Schuyler Colfax we have the
patriot statesman who, never deviated in his
loyalty during the darkest hour of our nation's
tribulations, and whose official career has been
dietinguished by unimpeachable rectitude, en
lightened judgment and dignified consistency,
and whose nomination by our National Conven
tion is a just recognition of these traits.
Resolved, That the nominations of the Republi
can Conventlons—State, Congressional, Legisla
tive and City—meet with our hearty approval,
and . aato the 'citizens of the First, Second and
Twenty-sixth Wards belongs the honor of Matt
pirating the campaign, they do pledge themselves
to nee their utmost exertions to insure the suc
cess of the whole ticket at the coming election.
Speech or Colonel Forney.
Colonel John W. Forney was then introduced
and received with continued cheering. tie
said that ae distinguished speakers from other
portions of the State were present, ho would not
consume the time of the meeting by any lens
d remarks.
Introducing the Hon. Bucher Swope, of Clear
Meld county, he resumed his seat.
Speoels of Dlr. Swope.
Mr. Swope was greeted with a perfect storm of
cheers.
Be began his speech by relating a few humor
ous anecdotes, which amused the audience with
commingled applause and laughter. The policy
of the Democrats is to return to the rebels of the
war their former power and prestige; the policy
of the Republicans is to secure to the loyal men
of the Union the Government they tomdit to save.
We affirm that the war for the suppression of the
Rebellion was right and just; that the traitors
abrogated all their rights and privileges, and We
intend to retain intact the just fruits of the war.
Since the war the defeated Confederates do not
return in penitence and contrition—they mani
fest none of the spirit of the "prodigal son;" they
assert that they will again rule the land. Are we
to submit to this? No! Cheers. ] The Consti
tution guarantees to every State in the Union a
republican form of government; and shall we not
give, in our process of recopatruction, to the
Southern States a true republican government?
Henceforth, all who are denied the right of suf
frage shall not be represented in Congress. This
is but right. The Fourteenth Amendment seeks
to secure this, as well as other equally plain and
just provisions. Oar power is great, and the
Democrats know it. Seymour and Blair know it.
• They know that they can'do nothing with the
national debt, with the measures adopted by the
Radical Congress, as it is called. They cannot
undo what has been done; they aro fully aware
that though the result of the coming election
should go against us, we will still have a majority
in the Senate. Yet their endeavors are to bolster
up the principles of the Tainenany platform; but
they will fail. •
Look at that Convention. Of what was it
composed? Of rebels—traitors. There was Wide
Hampton and other notorious rebels. The spirit
of the disloyal South penetrated the whole pro
ceedings of that body. Seymour has proclaimed
in the city of New York that the doctrine of
Republican necessity could be proclaimed by a
mob as well as by a State; and the highways of
that city ran red with blood. His draft revolt,
hoviever, was stopped by our brave "boys in
blue."
This man, this very man, is now before the
country a candidate for the Presidency. Shall he
be elected? [Cries of "Never ! no !"J Shall all
our blood and treasure spent in the war go for
naught? Brittle Democrats would have it go for
naught. They would have us swindle the men
who gave their money to carry on the struZgle•
They would have us repudiate. Repudiate! Why,
by doing so, yen would sever the 'bonds between
the citizens and the Government. They say the
bonds are to be paid in greenbacks. But we will
pay in the same money in which we ever paid.
The speaker then went into a long discussion
of the injustice of paying the bondholders accord
ing to.the Democratic or Rebel Idea. He referred
to the Democratic assertion that the debt had in
creased—largely increased—since the war, and
Said that the reason why it did increase at that
time was because the Government paid out to
our soldiers and sailors, within a short time after
the.eonclusion of the war, $625,000,000. The
averment that the debt was still increasing; -
nefoloiliy.the statement that it had diminished
$2,59.000.000 - within two years.
arittratt eloquent peroration the speaker closed
Alnidapplrfuse:
. • risipenista .01 General Fisher.
,Getietild.'W. Fisher• the - n-eame forward. He
sattlitEst he'ciiiiie mote particularly to talk to
the EoldierF; that tiil,,kneriibero about them than
be did about poll Refitting Refitting to the Now York
ttkitlioerstie Convtintion,holem&that it.was cotn
posed of, rebels aridpf meiajust aabad and viral
lint as rebels. Wide Hampton: was - a "member,
arid E 0 alto was General Porrest. '',Buch WAS its
eotipositiop. It is as,opitritld adage that a:man
is to be incliid - O r tlio'comPoni - E6 heePs A n d-11
,Se}mour het eornpiitir with rebobi; ho Is noth
itg hut a rebel himself. Will you thee vote for
him?
He then alluded to the career of Grant and
Colfax, and said that it was the duty, not only
of the soldiers, but of the whole people• to •• vote
for them. You have rebels nominated for all
offices, but any man who has lost a brother, or a
friend In the•wor, cannot consistently veto for
them. With some few additional remarks Gen.
Fisher closed.
The following despatch was received
lIICHFII3I,D SPRINGS, N. Y., Aug. 25. 1868.
To Daritt-B. Baker, No. 1165 South Tenth street.
Your letter was received too lats...::lt.will be im
possible for me to reach home in time for the
meeting • • 'C. GIBBONS.
The following ' letter from Governor Geary _was
also .TICCIVId
EXICCUTIVE Cruisman, Aug. 18, 1808.—David
B. Baker, Esq.—Denisßirg—l have the honor to
acknowldge the receipt of your favor of the 13th
Just., Inviting me to attend a - masa-, meeting in
Ple.ladelphia on the 26th Lust.' It ivould afford
me great pleasure to be with you on that occasion,
but a previous:engagement to ,hein _Washington
county on the day you name will . render it Im
practicable. Be assured of, my best wishes and
bearty co-operation for our triumphant success
in the campaign that , has sot auspiciously corn-
Piens° tender the tisstirandeorny kind regards
to thtrinernbers of the Gritllt Alid'ColftitClub;of
which you are the'Se6retarY. ' •
Respectfully and truly yours, •
' ' Jourr W. GnAtty.
The meeting did not. adjourn until a late hour.
Parade of Republican Xnvinciblos.
The Republican' InVi. rjelbl • es,i nUnibering some
five hundred ,men, formed'at :an early hour, last
night, on Bansom street, and took up the line of
march' for the tieeting,with,litusle playing,colons
113 ing, and torches and, transparencies - gleaming,
amid deafening cheers from the throng assem
bled to witness the success of-this the first turn
out of the. campaign. '.They stepped off to the
must , the Union with the precision and ear
nest so:characteristic of the veterans of our
rand a. boulder to, shoulder , in,compaet ranks,
front, nk and rear in perfect - order,. and en
thusiatin beaming from every eye, their 'appear
ance recalled the 9cenea of the campaign of 1860,
and the tubs( quent terrible days of the re
belliorir--- - when the beat .in the land
shouldered the musket or assumed the
sword to defend the nation's life, offering their
holiest possessions on the altar of their country.
The same spirit seemed to animate them again as
they , marched the streets equipped in the old
uniform of political campaigns,and were greeted
on all sides with cheers and Ile most uproarious
applause. As in every yearn which they have
taken an active part in the campaign the Repub
lican ticket has been invariably elected, their re
appearance le but another evidence of the fact
Penns) lvania will be carried overwhelmingly for
Grant and Colfax, and "as goes Pennsylvania so
goes the Union."
Atter pbseing through several of our principal
streets, the house of thief Marshal B. F. Taylor
was reached, where a stand of colors, consisting
of three. elegant red, white and blue sags, were
to be presented to the company, the gift of Miss
Hannah Moore.
Ruddiman. on the part of Miss Moore,
in Presenting them, said :
The present important occasion, the beginning
of a great struggle, has brought you here to
night. The women of the land are as fully in
terested In and appreciate the importance of our
success in November as we are,and as'determined
to do all within their power to preserve untar
nished the flag, and protect from infringement
and assault the liberties of the land that was purt,
chased by the blood of the Revolution, and prd
served through the sacrifice of countless precious,
noble lives in 'the rebellion.
If, then, eight yearsago i you wereassailed with
passion, and infamy declared to be the inaliena
ble portion of. him 'who sympathized with you,
you stood fast, you surely will not fail in this
Lour, but remain firm and. loyal against all at
tacks, and as in the past'ber found upholding the
country. On behalf of, ,a lady,Miss Hannah
Moore, (no relation of Seymour), who, possessed
with affection for her Country, and who will see
more in November next than the election of Sey
mour, to evince the interests she feels in this
campaign has prepared them, I offer you this
stand of colors, and trust that the day will come,
ere they have been touched with decay, or their
bright hues have begun to t fade, when from the
verge of the forest to the ripple of the golden
Pacific the names of Grant and Colfax will be a
synonym for vi !tory.
Colonel William McMichael, on the part of the
Clue, said :
I acts thtm on behalf of the Republican In
vineibles, whose delegate I am. They'come to us
with significance; they come from a loyal wo
man, sympathizing with a loyal and patriotic
General. I ace. pt and swear by these colors that
wt will forever perpetuate the cause of universal
literty. They come to us with greater sig,nifl
esnee from a woman, and at the opening of
ell wpaign iu the holiest cause of the country.
In the breasts of our countrywomen and im the
hr rte of our countrymen Is written the lesson
that ell, no matter what their color may be, are
tn‘bled to freedom, and never, with the slags iu
our possession, and the impulses that led to their
presentation grten within our memories, can we
ever prove recreant, And in November next, the
joyous hosannas swelling from the hearts Of all
loyal men will greet us once more as victors over
the enemies of freedom and human progress.
The line was then reformed, and the cldb pro
ceeded to the place of meeting, where they were
saluted by other clubs already on the gronnd,and
vociferously cheered by the large assemblage.
I , ‘ bile the Berry Campaign (fllub was passing
Fourth and Catharine streets an attack was made
upon them, and a large stone thrown through
their transparency. the bearer was also struck
in the mouth with a brick. The members of the
club turned, but the dastardly assailants fled.
This is a specimen of .the boasted Democracy of
the First District, and no doubt the Berry Club
Rill be prepared for them the next time they
parade.
The Invineibles, after leaving the meeting at
Wharton au eet, filed into Broad street, and
marched alone; that noble thoroughfare to the
Union League House, which was splendidly illu
minated to do them honor. Halting in front,
they were called to order by the veteran Republi
can, Daniel Smith, Jr., who requested Colonel J.
W. Forney to address them, which he did, briefly,
as follows :
invincibles ! your name, appropriate in for•
mer conflicts, is infinitely more so in • this mo
mentous hour. Established to help the mar
tyred Lincoln, and to give hope and heart to our
noble armies,you are now reorganized to defend,
vindicate, and elect the Great Soldier, to' whose
genius, under God, we owe our country's salva
tion. [Cheers. I Bow well your title symbolizes
his rare characteristics ! Invincible in arms—in
vincible in constancy—invincible in unselfishness
—invincible in integrity—invinclble in humanity!
[Great cheering.j Do you wonder that his cause
is prospering ? Do you wonder that his enemies
stand appalled before his splendid record ? There
Is not a Democratic leader in the North
and hardly a rebel in the South, who has Rot,
on some occasion paid tribute to Grant ;
and, however high they may now
pile their. calumnies against him , -they cannot
fi
overtop the monument of praise theyvoluntarily
erected to his greatness. (Cheers. Go on, In
vincibles !, To you and the yout of our land
this noble cause is now specially Confided, for
yon will reap the glorious harvest of your present
endeavors. I Cheers.] Under the influences of
a reconstructed Union—a Union founded on the
rock of 1m amiable justice - and 'complete' equality
—you and yo lf children will flourish when older
men have passed away. , (Cheers. j Every young
man in Phlladelphirt - rhould join theliivincibles
—every young man a Intelligence,, enterprise,
and patriotism; and I hope before the first of No
vember to see at least an army corpiv of your
beautiful uniforms and shining . 7ampylia.saing
along our streets, and making the air jocund
with shoots fur Grant and Colfax. (Great ap
plause j
_Th&lnvincibles, , whlle Col. FOrney. was.p_ealt
ing, were joined by the' Tr/oily-sixth Ward
I Vorkincreen's Clubi and.the two bodies mingled
together with loud rotittii4l, , after ;Which they.
filed off-to their ittqiectlito quarters, the%yin
elbleri marching down Chestnut street, amid the
applause of the people from the sidewalks and
windows, ' `
VENING BULLETIN-PHILAD
THE DAILY
Union League.
This Important organization held a general
meeting at their rooms hist evening. - Vice Piesi
dent. Morton McMichael occupied the ehair. - On
- motion'of Mr. Lindley Smith, the following reso
lutions were adopted : - • •
-'lllmas,The policy priniolniLthe_lict,
called'Democratic party, /Wits .:Platform apd in ,
the utterances of its candidates, ; and "repregenta
tive lenders, is such as justly . to Create the pro
foundest alarm as to the Intare of our country;
and •
Whereas, In the perils to which aro thus_ ex
posed all the great principes 'which this League
was founded to support, it is, proper that wo
should express our sense of-the issues which are
to be decided at the coming , elections, and that we
should 13E0 all honorable means to wort the
dangers Inseparablcr front ; - a Democratie 'Actory
at the polls; therefore, • , A
Resolved. L That we see with the deepest sot ,
row the peace, won through the sacrifices of four
years war, imperilled by the action of reckless
demagogues who are Industriously laboring to
rekindle the ember 9 of rebellion..
IL That as the Demeerritie paity now seeks to
reopen the questions which 'were settled' by the
war and by the , legislation consequent thereon,
the endless strife with'whiph they threaten us can
-only be avoided by the emphatic condemnation
at the ballot box of the lawless and revolutionary
- programme for which they have the effrontery to
ask the favor of the people. '
111. That in view of the open alliance now
. acknowledged between the bemecracy and the
rebellion, it is the, first duty of 'every eitizen to
spare.no exertion to defeat ' that faction which
sought, in 1864, to force upon'us- a' treasonable
peace, and , which' now endeavors" to destroy
our glorious peace thrdatening a treason-,
able war, consistent m nothing but the in
sane desire to foster and protect 'treason and re
bellion.
IV. That we confidently look to ,the gallant
men wlio stood ky ' the flag during long years of
desperate war for efficient aid In ourisfforts to de
feat a platform dictated'by the rebels whom they
had conquered, and to prevent thb success of
candidates who pledge thernselves- to 'undo, in,
the Cabinet, all that has been accoMplished in the
V. That.we echo the words of our 4featleader,
"Let us have peace," ns the expression of, the end
and aim of our political "actioncaad that in no
way can the blessings of a durable pacification be
attained except by the triutoptilint, election of
him who was first in war, and whom Wp are re
solved to make first in peace.
VI. That the financial policy deieloped in the
Chicago platform meets, our warmest approba
tion ; that we denoulee with it as, a, national
crime all the forms of repudiation open or dis
guised, suggested by the Democratic Coavention;
that we believe "the best policy to diminish our
burden of debt is to improve our credit," so that
a specie currency may be insensibly restored by
the appreciation of the national securities, and
that the demagogues who are insidiously assail
ing the credit of the government`are the greatest
enemies of the people whom they are seeking to
cajole.
VII. That the thanks of our citizens are due
to our representatives in Congress who have so
gallantly resisted the encroachments of the Ex
ecutive, and have, in the face of the
,apparently
insuperable obstacles, wrought out a practicable
plan of reconstruction, based upon the Immuta
ble principles of the rights of man.
VIII. That in the unexceptionable tickets,
National, State, and Municipal, presented for the
suffrages of the Republic - an, party, we see an
assured guarantee of our triumphant success,
provided we do not throw away our, advantages
through supineness and over-confidence.
IX. That we would especially warn oar friends
to be vigilant and determined toprevent a repe
tition of the enormous and bare-faced frauds by
which the Democratic
- party last year gained an
arparent victory in ourcity and State.
X. That a committee of fifty members of the
League be appointed by the chairman of this
meeting to give effect to the views expressed In
the second of the above resolutions, and that the
said committee have power --to -fill-vacancies and
to add to its number.
Mr. Henry C. Lea, on behalf of the Board of
Directors, presented the following Address, which
was approved and! ordered to bo published:
Fellow-citizens: Again you are called to the
polls to defend the cause for which, since 1860,
you have shown your devotion in, so many sac
rifices.
You doubtless thought, when the rebels laid
laid down their arms and acknowledged them
selves vanquished, that the struggle was over,
and all for which you had fought was secured.
You may ask yourselves why, three years after a
triumph so complete, your exertions are still ne
cessary to settle the questions vhich were 'appa
rently forever decided at Appomattox Courthouse;
and perhaps you feel dissatisfied that the country
has not subsided into the peaceful quiet so ear
nestly desired by all good citizens. If so, you
have erred, and still err, in regarding the rebel
lion as merely the movement of a few unquiet
spirits, who made skilful use of slavery as the
means by which to gratify the longings of per
sons] ambition.
The rebellion was much more than this. It was
the struggle between two opposite systems of
society. On the one hand were the traditions of
ft udalism, of caste, of class privileges, the mac-
Lion against modern thought and liberty, which
for three generations had moulded every institu
tion, and had trained the people to one unvary
ing course of thought. On the other hand were
the expansion of progress, belief In the dignity
of labor, faith in the liberty of thought—in line,
the absolute right of every man to reason for
himself, and to carry out his own destiny. That
syetem so antagonistic should, sooner or later,
measure their strength in deadly strife was in
evitable.
Human slavery was the most prominent bul
wark of the southern system, and it naturally
__hteama the ostenghle_cause_of---tho—struggl..
Naturally, also, it perished •in the war which it
had provoked, because it was the most assailable
and least defensible portion of the system: When
we marked the downfall of that great iniquity.
we shouted that our work was done, for we had
given too little thought to all that lay behind
slavery, that had fostered it, and had been fos
tered by it. Nor had we yet sounded to its ut
most depths the baseness of that faction, falsely
styling itself Democratic, which crazed with the
lust of office, is ready to sell itself into bondage
again to the masters whose rule had wrought
such ruin to all.
No, our work is not yet done, nor will it be
done until northern ideas shall have been pene
trated throughout the South, and society there
shall have reconstructed itself on the basis of
true democracy. When' Abraham Lincoln said
that the United States could not remain half slave
and half free, he gave utterance only to a por
tion of a great truth. Our country must be
homogeneous. One section pf it cannot be aris
tocratic, nureing seduously the exploded notions
of class privileges, and persecuting men be
cause they labor for their daily bread, or because
they entertain ideas repugnant to the dominant
caste; while the other section honors labor and
the laborer, admits of no distinction between
citizens, -and grants the fullest toleration to
every shade of opinion on every subject. One
section cannot set up the State as the sovereign
object of Its allegiance, while the other admits of
no rival to the Union in its claim upon the citi
zen. Yet now that slavery is legally dead. and
secession has been nominally renounced, these
differences between the 'North and the South
exist as sharply . as ever. `Until
. they shall,be re
moved, political strife must continue, as keen
and eager as the strife lately hushed on the bat
tle-field, The result "mustnecessarily be that
either northern ideas must conquer the South,
as northern arms have already done, or that
southern ideas must accomplish what southern
arms so miserably failed in attempting.
Enclosed as we are between two oceans, Occu
piers forever of the same land, this it 3 the strng
gle which is set before us. We cannot shirk it.
We cannot shun the necessity which is upon us.
We may seek in cowardly mood to shrink back
from our appointed work, but we shall merely
postpone the inevitable, and prolong the labor
and the suffering. It only by pressing for
ward resolutely, but prudently and wisely, to do
that which Providence has ordained us to do,that
we can escape with the least amount of toll and
loss.
,
The burden of this task which lies before us
" has been immeasurably increased by the= selfish
stolidity and short•slghted . recklessness of the,
Democratic party. Even as in 1860-61 they in
, vlted their , slave-:holding allies into ruinous rebel
lion; se, now, in the hope'of a temporary rest)-
; ration to power; they are sedulously urging those
1.4
Bain llies to resist afresh the inevitable- course
of e eiits. Forgetful of the fearful record of the
' pest, wilfully disregarding the irresistible devel
ru
opnts of the future, they seek only to paUder
to popuiar paesion. in the present, wad rest their
hss opes "of success solely on their skill to work
LPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27,_1868.
s'pon the meanest motives and prnjudie I,
dupes. ,
We wOuld.alet judge themilirshise forie.the l Y Art
:our fellcivr.euntrYmeits t Tliat the masts of the
party ;are lidnelti,twiehinglo doetheirAnte,*
dare no; dettl)t, but NO
. hat, et sueiendered theta, -
_sieves•tetlettders_whojnake infort_ettitelLhe
forstheillesffrice that •ever i free ,
, nen' thiird - eo•herdes
cued thathis cheek Aid not tinle with sliteine'
when he 'learned that General Forrest, of Ten
nessee, Forrest the negro-trader, Forrest the
guerilla, Forrest the butcher of Fort Pillow, was
a Democratic delegate to a National Convention
assembled tearame a platform and to select can
didates forlvhotn'men of the North are expected
to vote? Yet, abject as is this degradation,
they succeeded in reaching . a further depth,
for this name time Forrest, was; able to boast
publicly on his return that four-fifths of the
Northern Democrats whom he had met apolo
gized to him for having, opposed the South in
her rebellion.' When the Democratic party thus
entrusts itself wholly to 'Men , who abjure their
manhood, is it to be wondered at if they-adopt a
set of principles dictated to them by Wade
Hampton, and present for your suffrages men
who are pledged ko undo so far as possible all
that the war has accompliehed. even at the cost
of another war? Or Can we be surprised that
the South, finding such• facile allies, should,
' eagerly revert to the old ideas, and should strive
to make those ideas perthanently triumphant as
the guiding principles of the Republic?
• In this we do not blame the South, for South;
ern men have been educated in the beliefs to
which they cling, and they at least are honest in
theirlaith. That they are struggling for an ob.
eolete theory of society is theiremisforturieS s and'
while duty to the , country•and to millions yet
unborn' compete tis to combat that theory as'
destructive to the well-being Of es all, yet for the
men , who conscientiously - uphold it we would
personally entertain none butt the kindeatand ,
' most charitable feelings. It was the tint act' of
the government, after , the surrender of
Lee and Johnson, to feed the
starving masses of the Southern
people, • and ''that ',much maligned institu
tion, the Freedmen's „Bureau s has consistently •
dlepented its:bounty without regard to the boy-•
altycni therecipientss We have always rejoiced,
in these facts, and:it is our pride to think that in'
all.the movements to relieve the wants of the
South,' _ without distinction of race,.color or .
.political opinion, since the close of: the' war, the
members of this League and the party which it
represents have ever been foremost with active.
sympathy and •substantial •aid. Yet, wails wo
would gladly assuage the calamities which they ,
have brought upon themselves, we cannot but
resist.them to the death in their mad attempt to
bring back a forgotten past.
Whether they are to succeed in this will be de
termined at the November election. In asserting
this we are not theorizing, for the• proof lies
within reach of every man who can note and
weigh the events that are passing before his eyes.
As in wino there is truth, so in the excitement
and enthusiasm of the South at the surrender of
the Democracy in New York the restraint of the
last three years was swept away, and the glad
ness of anticipated triumph seemed to render
caution and reticence no longer necessary. When
Governor. Wife, at the Richmond ratification
meeting, assured his hearers that Recession was
as much alive as ever. he only crudely. declared
what Wade Hampton, the dictator of the
Democratic platform, expressed more covertly at
the tharleston meeting, in pledging his sword
once more to his natire State, and swearing nmcr
at her call he would hasten to her rescue from
the uttermost bounds of the earth. Fresh from
the meeting of the "Natior,al" Democracy, and
planning sa political campaign for the whole
nation, he yet had no thought for the nation.
His allegiance was confined to the petty borders
of the sovereign State of South Carolina.: No, Se
cession is not yet dead, and the Memphis A ppoul
only' gives form to the secret vows of the South
ern Democrats when it bluntly declares that the
South will yet be independent.
If secession is thus still rampant, the other old
heresies are-not less . vigorous. The spirit of feu
dal oppression and class privilege, the contempt
for honest labor and the determination to keen it
in subjection, which formerly manifested them
selves in slameholding, were, when• slavery was
abolished, promptly reasserted in the black codes.
enacted throughoutthe South by Mr. Johnson's
reconstructed legislatures. Now that these
also have been swept •• away, the same
spirit reveals itself in the schemes to
control the , negro vote and to render
by him the instrument of his own disfranchises
went. Public speakers openly advise combined'
action to throw out of.employment every man
who does not vote the democratic ticket, and as
sociations are springing up every where pledged
to
_carry out this policy in an organized manner .
It is fitting that men styling themselves Demo.
crate should manifest such utter contempt for the
first element of republican democracy.
Nor Is the old intolerance, which placed a pad
lock on the lips of every man who did not think
with the majority, one whit abated. Free thought
and free speech—the vital breath of our institu
tions—aro as obnoxious to the southern mind to
day as when peaceful citizens were tarred and
feathered for disbelieving in the Divine appoiroe
went of chattel bondage. All who frankly ac
cept the results of the war ; all men, whether
northern or southern, who honestly believe, that
the south can be re-adjusted to the necessities of
the new era, are denounced as unfit for human
companionship; •they are to be placed under tin
ban and exposed to ingenious persecution, until
driven away in despair from a community which
is obstinately determined to learn , nothing and to
forget nothing.
Still more portentous is the undiminished vigor
of the old spirit of lawleeslees —the spirit that
taught that it was noble and chivalric to dray the
law, and which ever sympathized with and pro
tected the law-breaker. The peculiar boast of mod
. AngleeSaxon ciellizatiorsissthe--Innatesrever--
ence for the sanctity of law which enables vast
communities to the with perfect safety to person
and property, and without subjection to the bay
onet. It is this training which ranges every
citizen instinctively against the law-breaker,
and thus relieves na from the ruinous
expense and demoralization of large standing
armies, and in this training the South is unfor
tunately more deficient than ever. Witness the
hundred murders a month now occurring un
punished in Louisiana; witness the nine hundred
and thirty-nine hernia J.es which have been per
petrated in Texas since the rebellion was sup
preseed,and for which but one murderer has been
hanged; witness the burning of ,pegro schools
and the lynching of negro teachefe; witness the
outrages of Ku Klux Klans,combining every ele
ment of grotesque ferocity. No one understood
'the power of this spirit better than general Blair,
when,foreseeing th ,t the South would control the
Democratic Convention, be bid for its support by
pledging himself to trampleupon the la we of Con
gress, to coerce the Senate into submission, and
to dieperse by force the reconstructed govern
ments of the Southern States. The artful bait
was easily swallowed, and simultaneously every
organ of Southern 'opinion appeals ,to 'force to
carry the election, or to upset the election in case
of defeat. Every disfranchised rebel is to vote,
and if these illegal votes are refused the bayonet is
invoked to compel their receptien: Virginia is to
vote. and Texas and Mississippi, , States not yet
organized or recognized, and Congress is to be
overawed into counting their ballots in the E'ec
toral College; while, if , these hopeful schemes fail
in winning success for their revolutionerY Candi
dates, civil war is freely threatened as a last re
sort.
We have no fears that this antiquated system
of lawlessness, of oppression, of aristocracy and
of secessien, can win an ultimate and piermanent
victory, for the spirit of the age is against it, and
Withor later it mast go down, and be buried
With the kindred relics of now forgetten wrong
and error. Neither can we promise yon that the
meals of the Republican party at the coming
election will ,at Once elevate the South from
darkness into light. We only 'know that, as
sure as there is a God in heaven, pro
gress and enlightenment and freedom must
trinroPh in the end.' It rests with yon , to say
, whether this triumph shall be speedy and peace
, fuLor whether the struggle shall be prolonged and
arduona, leading to convulsions as fierce as those
from which we havejust emerged. The alliance
between the Democracy and - reaction is so
thorough and cordial that the nomination of
Seymour and Blair is.everywhere, hailed at the
South as the justification ef•the rehellion,and the
bitterest rebels openly declarealiat in striving for
the sweetie of their candidates they are but con
tinning. the - battle for the lest . cause—.
that .they are fighting now for what they
fought for from 1801, to 180. Should they by any
I possibility of force or fraud carry the day, think
what a dreary vista of anarchy and strife we shall ,
have to traverse ere we can restore the country
tb even the measure of, peace which we now
enjoy! £xhaueted ae we are, and needing years
of quiet industry to make g... o l osses and the
savages of war, four years Democratic nits
hole, under the gfddastee of "RdailatUpthe attd
Blair, would deJaorts- for ontproStrationttihm
was effected by the four 'Tara& the rebellion;
Nor can we flatter ourseivedthat .the cautious
Mange) of anlntriguing :p olitician like Re • -
InOur would arrest the madness of those to — iiiEtim
to would owe bladed - don.% = That' _ wonia . bii-his:
masters, for in times like those:which would be
upon us, negatilie . measures must succumb to
positive ones. We should see our destinies in
trusted to such men as Wade Hampton in the
War Department, and Raphael Semmes at the
head of our Navy. Should he falter in the work
he would be made to feel that his safety de
pended upon his obedience, and if this were not
enthelent, the men who are already invoking the
dagger of Brutus and the shade of Wilkes Booth
would not serunle to remove him, that they
might obtain the services of the reckless and un
principled Blair.
Whichever way we WO, fellow-citizone, we
therefore see that our only hope of safety lies in
electing Grant by such a majority as may show
to Democrats and rebels that the American people ,
intend to persevere In the path which they have
entered; that neither threats nor blandishments
will turn thein from their duty, and that they are
irrevocably determined that the causes which led
to the rebellion shall be forever removed from the
nation.
These are the main issues awaiting your deci
sion, but scarcely eecond to them in their in
fluenee on the people are the questions connected
with our national finances. Simple as the nota
tion of these questions may be to commonsense :
honesty, it is in the power of demagogues so to
complicate them, by tainpering with the national
credit, as to Inflict inerdeelable injury on all the
industriapand financial interests of ,the country.
It is nen on the bondholder that the. chief
loss would be inflicted, for .thagovernment
credit is so , inextricably intertwined, In every
transaction of daily life that "every = man is a
creditor of the government. The poorest citizen,
who has nothing but hialabor to sell, can receive
in exchange for his labor nothing but tokens of
government credit, and his 1111-18 dependent upon
its maintenance. Moreover, the' ruin of that"
credit would necessarily thus bring about a par-
Wye's ruinous alike to the;.farmer and the me
chanic, the merchant and the workingman; and
while all would suffer, thatkaffering would fall
with peculiar hardship 'tipon the Industrious
poor, whose.dally labor is "" their only provisi on
against want and starvation:
Had it not been for the assaqlts already made
upon the national credit, the problem , would
already bo near its solution, tor all:that is re
quired is a rigid adherence to plighted faith. Let
the world once believe that our promises to pay
will be honored without reservation or equlvo--
cation, and those promises will speedily become
equivalent to gold in the markets of the world;
and when once that point is reached,the questions
which now rack the brains of political &Indere
diaappear of themselves. Fortunately the utter
ances of the Colcago platform on this
point are so clear and unmistakable that
the indorsement of that platform byutho people
will at once smooth our path towards re
sumption of Epecie payments and the lightening
of the public burdens; while the dubious and
threatening phrases of the Democratic profession
of faith would render its triumph the source of
the most disastrous complications. Strange that
the hard-money Democracy of Jackson and
Benton and Van Buren should ,of
be conspir
ing to inflict npou us the unimaginable miseries
of - countiesablinons of hop — eTessly Irre - dietna.ble,
paper!
Such, fellew-citizens, arc the mighty issues
which you are now culled Upon to decide. A
your votes are cast, so will be the future of our
country. With Grant you may enjoy peace,
prosperity and progress: with Seymour you can
scarce hope to escape anarchy, desolation and
endless years of strife.
'inauguration of the Campaign—fie.
ception of General (Tart Schurz is
Lon cosier—Enthusiasm Manifested
Ilundred'stenable to Obtain. Admit
tance to the Hall—Policy of the Re
publican Party Reviewed The
names of Grant, Sherman, and Other
Heroes Received with Wild .411. p.
plause.
[Special Telegraph to the Freer.]
LANCASTER, Pa., August 26.—The Republicans
of this city inaugurated the campaign Luis even
ing by a large and brilliant meeting at Fulton
Elan, the immediate occasion being a speech of
General Carl Schurz. At an early hour in the
evening crowds of people ti wended their way to
the hail, and at the appo led time the house was
literally jammed with eager and enthusiastic Re
publicans, and hundreds were unable to obtain
admittance, and returned to their homes.
The arrival of General Schurz was the signal
for an outburst of prolonged and genuine enthu
siasm. Be was accompanied by General Hart
ranft and Hon. Alexander McClure. The meeting
was immediately organized by the appointment
of Amos Henderson as President, and the elec
tion of a number of vice preSidents and secre
taries. Mr. Henderson introduced General
Schurz in a lc* appropriate remarks, and when
the fatter came forward he was greeted with
another storm of applause. Ho held the attention
of the large audience for over an hour in a speech
of great power and eloquence.
He said there were many great questions to
discuss bearing upon the present campaign, but
he would consider a few only of the more impor
tant. He then reviewed the policy of the Reput, T,
lican party since the close of the war. Under
that policy. eight States bad been restored to
their possession in the Government; the rest
would soon take their places, and the work of
restoration be complete. But for the policy of
the Democratic party, which impeded restora
tion, that work would have been done. l'eace,
order and quiet were most necessary for the
coun try.
- The - Republitem - illl/ ceririlivb
party, because it desirdd to conserve that which
has been accomplished. The Democratic party
struggles to subvert what has been done and re
turn to slavery and class government, which was
the cause of the war. The negative, destructive
portion of the histhry, but the necessary, an
avoidable consequence.
The speaker paid a glowing tribute to tree
labor, and the greet field opened to it by the de
struction of slavery. EC drew a parallel between
the abolition of serfdom in Russia end the aboli
tion of slavery in this country. In the former
case the despotic word of the ruler was law,
while here the solution of the trouble reverted to
the bands of the, people. In the South the whites
for four years bore, arms against the Government,
for the perpetuation of slavery._ After the strug
gle it was not to bd expected that they could be
converted in favor of free labor itP.a Web t.
The speaker then reviewed the policy of John
son, which compelled Congress to take the pro
blem of reconstruction into its own hands, and
place the State governments under.the control of
those who identified themselves with the existing
order of things. The Democratic party declared
their measures unconstitutional. In 1861 Mr.
Buchanan asserted, as Democratic doctrine, that
while the South bad no constitutional right to
secede, the Government had no constitutional
right to prevent secession. Under this theory
the Government would have been broken up into
little republics, and the American Republic would
have become the laughing stock of the world. It
is this principle that the Democratic party wish
to restore. Should it prevail, the Union soldiers
who whipped the rebels on the field will - discover
that they have, only whipped them into power
again. That goVernment was never heard of,
which, at the end of a war, did not dictate the
terms of peace. The point was illustrated in a
number of cases in recent warsin Europe.
The speaker then reviewed Johnson's policy in
appointing Governors for the Southern States,
and then spoke of the policy of. Congress in con
ferring the franchise iapon the colored people of
the South. The negro votes for free labor, and
he who so votes favors the only safe peace of the
country. The abolition of slavery was not only
a great blessing to the negro, but for this genera
tion and for ell times tto come..
The epeaker ridiculed the Democratic bugbear
of negro-supremacy in the South by saying that
if nine millions of whites could be ground into
dust by three and a half millions of negroes, they
deserved to be. The boast that one Southerner
was equal to five lierthernnien, was proven false
during the war, and now it seems : , that one
Southerner s,notequal to half a negro.
The Southern:predictions, that in: the event of
the abolition of slavery the'shives would he cut
ling, their masters' throats, and that they would
Swarmin herds to the:North did' supplant white
labor, have both proven false. Where they ' are
not among us the Democracy charge that the
business of the country is in a state of stagnation,
and that the Reptiblican•party is responsible for
it. It isi'"untrue. Wars are always costly,
and the :ifamine c which is now , desolating
some portions of Germany is directly traceable
to thill:sl± 'Weeks of war between Prussia and
Ambit We have had oac million four hun
dred lifousind Men taken from the walks of in
:dustryl'-and deleted to - destructive employ
ment Who made this war ? The Democracy of
the Offitll, encouraged by the Democracy of the
North. , - •
fa - illic. -- fithig of the debt - con rac 0( . carry. on
- the war; Gen. Schurz referred to the fact that
there was no money in the Treasury when the
Government 'came into the hands of the Repub
lican party, and the Government was compelled
to step forward and borrow from the people, and
when people lend money they expect compensa
tion; this compensation was in the, exemption of
the bonds from , taxation. The Southern. people
aro opposed to paying this debt, and so are the
Northern Democrats. Upon read the financial
planks of the Democratic platform you will see
repudiation grinning out between every word.
The financial policy of the GoVernment was
then elaborately and clearly explained' by the
ta.peaker, and his propositions enforced by fami
liar illustrations. - _
In regard to the bonds being held by the bloated_
aristocracy, the speaker said' that fully two
thirds of them were in the hands of the middle
and poorer classes, both in America and Europe.
Bring down the Value of the bonds, and you
break down the. credit of the Government, and
the whole business of the country is ruined. We
-have fourteen years to pay the first dollar for
' these bonds. s ln that time we will have .a popu
'fatten of fifty millions: our resources will increase
in greater ratio than the population, and we will
be in splendid condition to pav the debt. The
Democratic, platform says pay the debt right away.
The Republican platform says pay it in a term of
years. Which will yon choose? Th_ l veakor
folio - We'd With A scathing review ofi emo
'crane party and its policy of ritconstruc On, and
closed by saying: If yoirwnnt war, if you want
the material prosperity of-the country postponed.
for unknown time, vote the Democratic ticket.
If you want peace, ,vote the Republican ticket.
`Let ns have a change from Andrew Janson to
Ulysses S. Grant.
General Schurz retired amid the most enthusi
astic•applause, and was frequently applauded
'during Ilia remarks. The mention of the names
oi,Grant, Sherman, and other heroes of the war
also produced the wildest applause. The above
Is the Merest _outline of General Schurz's magni
ficent. sPeenb,.to Which no abstract report can do
justice.
Ron.-A. K. McClure followed in a speech of
over an hotar; in which he reviewed the history
of the Democraticparty, during and since the
war. ant:l:concluded with a brilliant' tribute to
Lancaster's Great Commoner, Thaddeus Stevens.
Tito meeting was a brilliant success , has
infused renewed spirit into the hearts of the Re
publicans of.the Old Guard.
Carl Schures Eaga4roment9 itt renta
..,•. siyivartia.
General Carl Schurz will address the people of
Pennsylvania as follows, viz :
At Pottsville, Friday, AuguA
At Philadelphia, Saturday, August 29.
At Philadelphia, Monday. August 31.
At Allentown, Tuesday, September 1.
At Wilkesbarr ,e Wednesday, September 2./
At Scranton, Thursday, September 3.
These are the only engagements — Mat 5/r.
Schurz will be able to make in Pennsylvania.
C11"1 1 B ILL T LIN .
CE:SIETERIES IN THE: ClTY.—Complaints ha YU
bet n - made at the office of the Board of Health
that the following rule of the Board Is being vio
lated in several cemeteries located in the built up
portion of the city "Rule VL The burial of a
body in the thickly inhabited zind,bullt uo, nor
tions of the city, at a less distance than eight feet
below the surface of the adjoining street, or the
burial of a body in the rural districts at a less
distance than six feet below the surface of the
around, is in either case, according to a resolu
tion of the Board of Health, a nuisance, preju
dicial to public health, and Is positively tor
bidden." The Board, In consequence of these
complaints, have adopted a resolution requesting
the Health Officer to notify the Officers and Su
perintendents of the cemeteries in the city that
the rule be strictly enforced, and the officers held
accountable at law for any violation of the same.
NEW BASKING HOUSE.—Tbo new banking
house of the Third National Bank, at Merrick
and Market streets, has just been finished, and
will be opened for busineAs this morning. The
building formerly belonged to the Polytechnic
College, and was recently purchased by the
banking company. The old structure has been
remodeled and improved, and the accommoda
tions throughout are complete. 'The banking
room fronts on Market street, while the rooms
intended for the President and Cashier are di
rectly back of this apartment. The room in
tended for the Board of Directors is on the second
floor, and the lunch room and kitchen are in the
basement. All the apartments are neatly fur
nished. The rooms in the upper part of the
building will be rented out.
PAunos oP Enwiii-n Brim h.—Edward Broak,
formerly a bond clerk and deputy collector in the
Third Revenue District. who, on the 4th of Jan
uary last, was convicted in the United States Dis
trict Court of aiding in the execution of a
fraudulent bond for the removal of whisky from
the bonded warehouse, and sentenced by Judge
Cadwallader to three years' imprisonment, was
pardoned yesterday by President Johnson_
Therewere five bills of indictment against
Edward Brock, but he was only tried upon
one of them. The pardon was granted be
cause petitions numerously signed had been
sent to the Pres Pent, in which it was repre
sented that the prisoner was a prOper &object for
clemency.
DEATH OF DR. WISITART.—.Ibout half - past 61z
11r. - --1.-Q.—Q---Wishm , t- died
suddenly at Vogelbak's drug store, on Frankford
road, above Columbia avenue. The deceased re
sided at No. 2956 Frankford road,and was known
for many years as the manufacturer of the Pine
Tree Tar Cordial.
4.IE,AIIIMEINSIETP3 Aillanl.ll6ollrni 000015
FOE DRESS SHIRTS
AND
GENTS' NOVELTIES.
J. W. SCOTT & CO.,
814 Chestnut Btreet, Philadelphiai,
Four docre below Continental Hotel.
mhl•tmwtt-
PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SHIRT
MANUFACTORY:
3tatca tot these celebrated Shirts capplied troalFfilf
brief node°. •
Gentlemen's Fitrnishing , Goods,
Of late styles hi filll-variati.
WINCHESTER it CO..
-vott, CHESTNUT.
14-mwAtf
....„,., • GENTS' rATENT-NYEING. AND totrr4
• il;lP;toned , Over Getter& Cloth. Leather,_wldtto
ett i
iii 'and brow* Linen; Oldhlren's Clan ant
f i_ Veliet Le_griees Lew made to order ,
I*..'"' r- , , INIrGENTIP 2•NeEDIG GOODS.'
-•-... of eve:7 44ertption,vermlow.,903 Chestnut
- , • _ street. corner et Mote. The beetEld %Nue
or Maths aeltdento, • •
• at '
RIOHIN.DEBFEWI3 MEWL
n 01.406 • _OPEN IN THE EVENING.
INSTj i trllOl .
IVIOS6 !k, ElpiCKNElt.
LABORATORY '1:•: WALNUT STREET.
• Practical inetruotion with the blow-pipe and in a L
branches of chemistry. Terme moderate. anillBt•
2611 HORSEMANSHIP- - AT THE PHILADEL
PHIA REDING SCHOOL: F11 1 :1 1 th drool. above
Vine, 7: ll ,l:tabula& every facility for wanking.
a knowledge of healthful and elegket accomplish
meat Tke) Bch - Ift pleasantly ventilated and warm*
the horns safe and.well trained. Ladlel. •
An Afternoon Claw for iYounjfe •
SaddieHorses trained In the beet manner.
iladdlerliarsea; Borges and Vehicles to: hire.
l Aleo Carriage. to Veaota. Parties,' Weddhigs. llbe
• " THOMAS ORMOE its SON:
•
nANNED FIWIT A • .VEGETA.I3 LEO: ae,-1?000 Cdfiria
fresh Canned reaches; 500 emu treat kaatued Pine
Apples; 200 oases fresh Elam3,M ia gesin
Oren Corn ;and . Green Pews k 54V eases then 'el
cans ; 200 eases' fresh; Green Gages; TOO eaSes GberrinKtli
Mull; (.ocases•BlaeWrriest In s yr u p; WO. eases straw.
berme. in ' Byrne; £OO oases rreeb Poara amp; sae.
cases Canned Tomatoes ,_• 600'cases Oysters; LoUters ans
Clams; (.00 eases. Roast Beef., Hutton, Veal. Boum_ ito.
l'or sale by: JOSEPH B. BUNIEB dr 00.108 South Dela.
ware evenna
TELEGBALPIIIIC Skini.3l&lLlG
A Cowss schooner beat the Sappho.
Tug Tennessee House has passed the Militia
bill: It is expected to fail in the Renate.
GENERAL Scutum spoke at a Republican mass
xnectiegin_Lancasterlackt night.
THE Fenian Convention is still in session in
.2sicw York city. Proceedings secret.
Fluty thousand tons of coal were sold at auc
tion 3 tsterday, in Now York, at advanced prices.
BALTIMORE breathes freer now that the
" roughs have left for their homes In New York
and Boston.
PROFESSOR AOASSIZ, Senator Conkllng and oev
al other gentlemen, left St. Louis yeaterdaY for
Denver.
Gcs:unni. W. A. PILE has , been renominated by
the Republicans of the Firsit Congressional -rds
trict ot Missouri: • • --- -
Oarm two foreign vessels remain in ,the waters
of Crete — English and French—the Russian and
Austrian gut:oho:us having left.
Tun Demoeratic wigwam at Detroit fell down
on Tuesday,fatally injuring one man and severely
wounding several other citizens.
BECIIETATtY BROW:SI:C.3 o of the Interior Depart
ment, has gono to the White Sulphur Springs, in
Virginia.
THE South Carolina Legislature elected , eight
Circuit Judges, yesterday, ex-Governor Orr being
one. • •
A rim s. has been introduced in the Georgia
House of Representatives to establish a State
police force. -
JAMES MANN, Democratic Congreasman frotn
Louisiana, died yesterday, of congeation of the
GEOME SACKRIDER. a clerk In Boston,• has
disappeared after having forged checks to the
amount of $16,000 or $lB,OOO.
MAR.43ILAL VAILLAIS7, 3itolsterol 4 the Emperor's
household, has made a speech which istighly
tranquillizing. , „
Tun United States gun-boat Canandaigua
arrived hi the Scheldt yesterday, and sills this
morning for Hamburg.
Tua Sappho la reported to havebeen In no Carl
dltlon for the regatta. for captain offers a new
challenge for along run at sea.
Tli E Emperor of RllOl2 on the termination of
his visit to the German watering resorts will pro
ceed to Wareaw on his return to Petersburg.
TEE Queen of epain having requested Leuis
Napoleon to [meet her at Biarritz, that gentle
man declines the honor of an interview, which to
many persons appears ungallant.
ALI. Consuls at Eiavana have been notified by
the Captain-General that passengers arrived
from abroad, not provided with, passports rises
by the proper Spaniel Consuls, will not be al
lowed to land.
As Attempt was mane by some villain or vß
lam6. on Thursday evening, to throw the train
from th e track of the NV vrcester and Nashua Rail
road. A rimilar attempt was made one night last
k.
accordinz to the official journals, has
acceded to the proposals made by our govern
ment for the establbhment of effective regula
tions for the protection of emtgrants to this
Collt (Ty.
U HITE SITI.PHELT SPRINGS.
(General Itosecransls Visit-The Object
et It-Ills Intervsew with General
Lee-Substance of their Conversation
-inter View with .11r. Stuart-Probes.
ble Promulgation of an Address by
bout hern litepresentatiVe nen.:
. z •
ICorreEpondence of the Richmond Whig.l
Wisirr. Sot...mon Sriaaes, August 22.—The ar
riv.il et General Rosecrans yesterdayereated quite
a stir among the . rattle sojourners here, among
them many who figured largely in other days'in
the councils of the nation. The object of his
viqt. before his arrival / was understood to be for
the purpose of conferring with General Lee and
others as to the best means of placing before the
North a statement of the real feeling of the people
of the South towards the - Union. He had stopped
in Staunton to see Mr. Stuart and compare viewis:
with him, but that, gentleman wast here at the.
time. General Rosecrana had, however, a• lon
interview with the Bon. John B. Baldwin, 'widely
he grass was very satisfactory Whine._
As soon as dinner was over, General Resccrans
sought General• Lee, and they conversed freely
for sonic hours. 'There sat in the same room
two general officers, who, early in the bloody
drama not long closed, figured as the leaders of
the opposing armies, talking of peace and eon=
ciliation and a restoration of the Govenament:
And what Robert Lee said then and there the'
South said, for he is the embodiment of her
sentiment, and she is willing to confide her
honer, her interest, and her all to his keep
hie:, knowing that whatever he does is right.
General Rosecrana„ said that there were many
honest, well-meaning men in the North and
West who have been led to believe by the mis
representations of the southern correspondents
of the Radical press, as well as by the speeches
of the leaders of that party, that the people of
the South are just as hostile to the Union now
as during the war, and as mach embittered
against the Northern people as they were when
both were in. arms ; that they hate' theliegromi
- with a deadly hate because they have been freed,
and but fer the strong arm of the military would
reduce them to a state of practical slavery, and
perpetuate all manner of outrages upon them.
Be proposed, thcrefore,that the general officers
of the Confederate army representing. 88 they do
the valor,tbe chivalry and the truth of the South,
unite and lay before e Northern people, in a
tangible form that cane it be disputed, the true
state of the feeling as he ad found it everywhere
in his travels South. ' l / 4
General Lee denied that the
ou are in e to. .e 1 . on. hey want
peace, and long for it. This is their universal
sentiment as far as he has been able to ascertain
it, and his opportunities have been many, from
frequent conversations and extensive corms.
pondenec with representative persons in all parts
of the South. As to their animosity to the negro
.nothing could be farther from the fact, and why
should there be? Said he there is no rivalry be
1w een the races, but a reciprocal interest growing
out of the fact that each is dependent upon the
other to a great extent—one needing employ
ment and tho other employes. Apart from this,
they had been reared together and ther^ is
natural affection and sympathy between than.
General Lee gave his cordial approval to the
patriotic object which General Rosecrans has In
view and is so z.ealonsly proseenting.
the close of this interesting interview,which
lasted some hours, a numberof — gentlemen, in
cluding Hon. A. H. H. Stuart,..General Echols,
General J. R. Anderson, Xajor Sutherlln, of
Danville, called on General Roseersins and pro
tested against his leaving this morning, as he an
nounced he intended to do on his arrival. He
referred to his meeting with General Lea in terms
of great satisfaction, and readily consented to
remain until Sunday. As they were leaving, ho
requested Mr. Stuart to remain "and confer with
him in the same *auk, henna, sOldieNike man
ner he had with our great captain in, the 'after
noon. The views 'expressed._ by him were
substantially_ the same - as - I have
in the abstract above. ' The conversation,
however, took a wider range and embraced .the
political issues now before the country. Upon
these General Rosecrans was not at alfreticeiat ris
to his position, nor, as to his. preference' between
the Presidential tickets. Stuart gavelilm a
full, frank and clear sLateutent of, the condition of
things in tho South,-the feeling of the people as
to the Union, their friendly regard for the ne
grecs, their detestation of carpet-baggers Radi
cal emissaries, and theirnesirefor speedyAstora
lion to the Union in a constitutionalway. To
day G enera l Rosecrans wasAreconversatien with
other gentlemen here, omitting no occasion to
expression to the,samel views,: ',He fig `evl-
2ently in earnest. • '•• •
No plan has, yet been deckled upon, bnt.it r is
- probable that spine diStilignielfed "gthatlerdin,
known to the whole country, will be requested
to prepare a paper in eccordande with the sug
=alien of Gen. Rose,erans, which i hall. , set forth
clearly and fully the real state of_teellng now ex—
isting in the. South. This will be :Drinted.and'
forwarded to all. the general 'ollictilv of the Gen-'•
federate army and - such representative • Southern
statesmereas it is deemed desirable should sign.
it, for their signatures. At the same titnelhey ,
will be requested to acid such comments as they.; .
may think preper. •
General Rosecrans was in The ball 'wont'
night, and was escorting a lady:, Generals• Lee
and - Beanregard were at thesame tline.promenri-.
ding with two of the belles •of the Springs.
Alex. H. Stephens, of Ga.; Gov: Pickens, of
S. C.; Mr. Conrad. of Louisiana; Gov. Letcher,
A. H. H. Stuart, Allan Capertion; ReV J. 4.. M.
Cully, formerly member of Congress from Ala
bama, are among the visitors here who have a
national reputation. There are any number of
others well icnown in the State.
FRENCH .REDICINES
GRIMALT & CO.
(himlsta to 11. 1. - 11, s- Mace Napoleon,
No. 45 Rue de Richelieu. Paris.
SOLUBLE PHOSPHATE OF MON,
By Lea. M. D., Doctenr es Sciences. Gritnault & Co.
According Medi c ine nion of the members of the Paris
Academy of . this article is superior to all the
ferruginous pt eparations known.. It agrees pnest with the
stomach. never causes costiveness; it contains the els.
mei ts of the blood and the osseous frame., and succeeds
where other preparations fadd such as Valleys pills. iron
reduced by hydrog e n. lactate of Iron. and ferruginous
mineral water. One tablespoqnful of the solution or syrup
contains three grain of sat of ' MI . 212 " are p°l°
colorless. . .
Chlldren 7 o . lllooasea-lodlzed Syinp 01
Prepared by Glttrutu & Co.. Paris.
This syrup contains iodine combined with the juice of
hervesredhh.: and scurvy.srass, in which
iodine and sitlphur exist naturally. and for this remain.,
is an excellent substitute for cod liver oil, which is gotta
rally supposed to owe its efficacy to the prawn ea of iodine.
The lodizedhyrup,of fionoradish ins &debt? product*
most satisfactory results administered.to children suffer
ing from lympbatitm, rachitinn , congestion of the glands
of the neck, or the various eruptions on the face so fro.
quest during infancy. /t is also the best remedrfor the
tart stage of Consamptisn. Being at once tonic and det
curative, it excites the apletite, promotes digestion, and
stores to the tissues thelchataral tininess Auld vigor.
Dr.Durin Du Dtlisson,s Digestive Lo.
zengep (kJ the 4111,1caliziet Lactates.
The Alkaline Lactates exercise the most beneficial in
Annie,e over the derargementa of digeation, either by
their pee-altar Action on_tt! tutomons membrane of the
stomach. or by affording to tbo latter through their com •
bination with the salty& the gastric once a lovely of
lactic acid. which all English, French and other pitysiolo.
obis admit to be an essential - principle of dtgftffon. For
the information of those who may be without medical
advice, it may be stated here that the emptoms of. Loa.
vaired- digestion am: headache, pain in the forehead,
beraicralUm• irrillsigutralee, heartburn.' wind fn the
stomach and bow els, oas of appetite, emaciation. &c.
DISEASES OF THE CHEST.
Syrup. of HypophOsphlte of Lime,
,
Crimault "0.. Chemists, Paris.
A syrup compounded with this new salt has been infra
duced by Dr. tAlurchill, for the treatment of. pulmonary
phtlaisia. Iteccut trials made at the .Brotnnton Consuniti-
MD Hospital. an institution especially devoted to the
treatment of <theater of the cheat, have abundantly do.
mcnstrated the absolute necessity of obtaining thin new
tberaptutic agent in the most perfectly pure'and natural
condition: Each table spoonful of. syrup' contains four
'rains of perfectly pure hypophospluto of lime: and as
compounded by MM Crimson Gs Co.. of Paris the syrup
is the only preparation which guarantees to the medical
profession all the properties required in this vainanla
medicine.
DIARRHCEA, DERANGEMENTS OF THE
TOMAC EL
GRIMM:TIM dc. CO.'S GUARANA.
This natural Vegetable production, perfectly innocuous.
has been long used io Brazil with the utmost success, as a
remedy for diarrhoea, sick headache, dyrenterY, and all
disoruers proceeding' from derangement of the stomach
or bowels. This powder is indispensable for all families,
and far rr ore efficacious than opium and the subnitrate
of biininth.
PARIS, at GRDIALIT & CO.'S. 45 rue de Richelieu
FRE.NCH, RICHARDS & CO.,
. of Car: .1 1 - "enili and Market Ste .
AVM - CATHARN
-1011- T
OF `A LA
LIEDICL-N2.—perbsee
medicine is so unlver
req'ulind by everybody
ntor was ever
before so universaMy
>pted into nee, in erg ,
'dry and among
ma na this mild but ell.
purgative Pill. The
uts reason is, that it fa a
reliable and far more
:nal remedy than any
Those who have
trt those who have not,
know e el :run and friends, and all
know that what it does once t does always—that It never
fails through any fault or n net. of itneompotitlon. We
hare thousands upon thousands of certificates of their re
markable cures of the following cOmPlainte, but inch
cures are lnaowitin every neighberhood. sand we laced not,
publish them. Adapted to alleges and conditions in all
climates; containing -neither- calomel 'or - any deleterious
drug, they may be taken with safety by 'anybody. Their
sugar coating preserves them ever fresh and makee them
pi, saint to take, while being purely vegetable no harm
can arise from their use in any quantity.
They operate by their powerful influence on the inter.
nel CU cera to purify the blood and stimulate it into
healthy action—remove the obstructions of the stomach,
bowels, liver, and other organs of the body, restoring their
irregular action to health, and by correcting, wherever
they exist, such derangements as are the feat origin of
disease.
Minute directions are even in the wrapper on the box,
for the tollossinis cothpth.thte. width these £WB rauldb
F a m.&
For Drew . or Implor , anorr, Lterimeinces% Lan
oron and L ose op ArPrrrns, they should be taken moder
ately to stimulate the stomach and "naltore ita healthy
tone and action-
} or LIVER. Commas:err and Riverton', trYmOtoroi,Bru
-01:8 Itnanaaer., SICK lizanacrar. JAUNDICE Or WEE=
Sf caccrse, BILIOUS COLIC and Bloom Pi:vim, they
ibeold be Judbricnialy taken for each caie, to correct the
di , cazed action or remove the obstructiona.which" muse
For DYSEMTIVIIT or DLuraucisa, but one mild dose hi gen.
endly required.
For flurtataxim Govt, Gasmer.„ Pazrrrarrou or Trig
Fi p_sur, PAIN uvrire Smr, Baez and Logs, they should
be continuously taken , as required, to change the diseased
n-of-tlie-system. Withauch - ohange-thoseoeinplaints
disappear.
le of the
For DROPSY and Dnoremes.SwELLnves they should be
taken in large and frequent doses to produce the effect of
a drastic purge.
For Surrarasiort a large dose should be taken. as it pro•
duces the desired alert by sympathy.
AS a Duvlvan Pim., take one or two Pasta to promote
digestion and relieve the stomach.
An occasional dove stimulates the stomach and bowels
into healthy action. restores the appetite, and invigorate'
the system. Hence it is often advantageous where no se.
iloue derangemett exists. One who feels tolerably well,
of ten finds that a dose of these Ptnia makes him feel de.
aidedly better, from their clew:using and renovating effect
on the digestive apparatus. ' .
DR. 3. C. AYES as CO., Practical Chemists, Lowell ,
Mass., U. B. A.
J. M. MARIS dt co., Phila., Wholesale Agents. ' ee9 mly
kJPAL DIENTALLINA.—A. SUPERIOR ARTICLE POS
cleaning the Teeth, destroying, eahnalcula which ha
fact them, giving tone to the gums, and leaving a feeling
offragrance and perfect cleannueoe in the month It Mal
t,e used daily. and will be found.to strengthen Wreak and
bleeding game, while the aroma and detedvivenexa
recommend it to'every one. Being composed with the
foriatance of the Dentist, Ph:yob:tans 'tad elicroscopist.it
la confidantEndered as a refin e '? gidnditnte for the .rus,
ter tain wail formerly in Yo
Eminent , tists,'acquaint with the constituents of
tb.t Dentellitte, 'advocate 'lts use: it contalini nothing to
prevent its unrestrained emploffment.' -Made only by
JAVIER T. SIIINN, Apothecary.
Broad and Spruce streets
lin and •
D. L. Steakhouse.
Robert C. Davis, '
Geo. C. Bower.
Chas. Shivers,
S. M. McCollin,
S. C. Bunti ng. Chas. H. Eberl.
James N. Marks,
E. Bringhtirst !It Co.
Dyett dr. Co.,
IL C. Blair's Som.
Wyeth di Bro.
For ealo by' "Draidat• gene
rnert'llrown.!
aesard
C. H. Remy,
Lane H. Kay.
C. IL Needles
T. J. Husband.
Ambrore Smith
Edward Parrish.
Wm. B. Webb.'
;lames L. Bisphem.
Hughes & Comb%
thump A. Bower.
SABELLA MARIANN°. M. D.. 225 N. TWELFTH
Street. Consultations Ina. mvSly
110612TIVS AND wroinm
,ea THOMAS 8. DIXON dr SONS,
Late Andrew! ds Dixon,
No. 1824 CHESTNITP Street, Pbßadelphia
Opposite United States Mint.
ulatafacturare of
•
PA_RLOR • DOVirN
A - ; '
CHAMBER.
.
OFFICE
And other (RATES,
,S'or Anthracite, Bituminous and Wood Fire.
„ verso
C WARM-AIR FUR A
Wor Warming Public and Private BnßdinSe.
REGIBTERS,NENTILATORS.
AND
CHIMNEY CAPS,
COOKING-RANGES, BATH BOILERS
WOOLBSALE'sad
"'WINES; LIQIIOII,-9,-4ic:
BENEDICTINE. -
LIQUEUR%
• Des Manes Bectedictins do l'Abb . nye de FOctunp. !Frame).
, . ---
enrapael Rusaian Kummel, French BROM
Brendle& 'ChamPaknes. - Clarets; and other-Wine
7,, C°llllak 2;_f C. DE tiAtidtmii
Cieneral Agence aid eiP
ane, _
ortail for u mum waglut
no a •
tOtainitiee
- jel7.*.f..arns - ow-York CI , .
lictobliPirsosToN AND . -ftenTorti , sistn - 71 -
JIA trade a/Vaal w i t a Dondwilutteraireeiryt eaki
Trenton
,ta and Ega_ilwollit. lso, West - mora s s eeletratie
Trenton ena wine Biscu A it ay JOB. B. BUBBLER COts —
Sou Atenbols South Delaware arena%
Ting DAILY 0
_
MULDICINALi';
PREPARED BY
Chumista, Pada,
liorse.liadisb.
AGENT 6 Di PHILADELPHIA,
TO FAIVILICACEt4
Residing in the Rural Districts,
LIT!
a T, ;:a spared. as heretofore, ts`savily fam il ial as
residecoss with every &scrip= of
FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, &0., &o,
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets.
FAIRTHORNE &
. Dealers fa Teas and: toffees,
„
No. 1036 D1A1416.164' STSEET'e
•ALL goods guaranteed pure, of the beet quality,,and eold
at moderate Weed.
myith ta
LAMR SHELL ALMONDS—NEW CROP PRINCESS
kaper Shed Almonde—Fln,st DMusla Double Crown
slns, New Pecan hub, Walnuts and Filberts. at
COUSTY'S East End Grocery Store, No. 118 South
Second street •
A'N LUNCH—DEVILED HAM, TONGUE, AND
Lobster, Ported Beet, Tongue, Ancbovy Paste and
Lobster. at (MUSTY'S East Lnd Grocery, No. 118 South
Second street.
NEW GREEN GINGER, PRIME AND GOOD ORDER
at CuUSTY'S End End Grocery, No. 113 Sonta Sec
ond street.
'STEW PRESERVED GINGER IN SYRUP AND DRY.
.1.1 of the celebrated 41:bytom Bread, for sale at
COUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South Second
NEW MESS SHAD, TONGPEB AND SOUNDS IN
ktcte mama expressly for family uattia score and for
Bale at GDUSTY'S EastEud G
candid:met rcm k e7 ' . /1 . 6 '.1 1 ! 8 # 0421 §4
TCLAFET.-200 CAAEB OF OUPE4OI.OItTA.I3LE
A Garet.
_warranted to ,Alrgf roihien. For male by
AL F. APILIJN. N. W. corner Arch and Eighth streets.
A:LiAD 4 01L.-400'13 • :1: 1, • . OF' LATOUR% SALAD
13 011 of the latest importation.' For we by
/WILLI:N. N. W. cornareirchand Eighth streets. .
HAMS: DEIFID, DEBI' TONGUIW JOHN
Eitewird's,e4l7 ftrebrittel st auEut a n id '= 3 h
and Beef Tampa. - also the breeds -of
Hams . far slue !:orx!erArFli
THE y FINE -ART&
A. New Thing
.in.
BERLIN PAINTED PHOTOGRAPHS.
A. S. ROBINSON . ; - •
No. 910 CHESTNUT STREET,
Has just received a euperb collection of • •
Berlin Painted' Photographs of
, •
F 45 'W E',Ft S .
They are . :eiqUislto germf of art, rivalling •in be
naturalness of tint, and perfection of form a great v ariety
of tbesholcest exotic flowering plants. They aro mounted
on boards of three sliceet,land sold from 25 cents to $3 and
$4 each.t . •
For framing, or' tile album, they are incomParably
beautiful.
arII3I.424IXIVIrr
E IA 0 8:T
MUTUAL LIFE . INSURANCE
POMPANY. •
' NEW YORK.
PLINY FREEMAN, President.
LIMING -ANDREWS": Tice.prowts.
AO. A. HARDESNERetIy)
MIRY C. FREEMAN, leaetary.
Cash $l., 2 . 0 0 , coo°.
on.GAmaara.,,J wigs 1864..
ALL POLICIES ICON TOBFEITABLE. ,
PREMIUMS PAYABLE IN neon.
4344E3 PAID IN VASIL ' •
It Bete eel% Notes sad Blves None.
Bg the' r
provialons of its charter the, entire' surplus
belongs to policy holders, and - smolt be paid 'to them in
dividends: or reserved for their greater security. Divi
dends are made on the contribution plan,and Raid anti. any; commencing two years from the date of the Poll%
It has alreadr made • two dividends amounting
muck, an amount never before equaled during the first
tiree.yeare of any company.
PER MIT B . TO TRAVEL GRANTED 'TVITH-,
OUT - EXTRA CHARGE. NO POLICY FEB
REQUIRED. : FEMALE RISKS TAKEN AT.
THE USUAL PRINTED RATES, NO
. EXTRA PREMIUM BEING DEMANDED.
! Applications for all kinds ofikolides, life, ten-year life
endowment, terms or cnildren's endowment , taken, and
all information cheetfalLy afforded at the
BRANCH OFFICE OF THE COMPANY,
O. 408 WA.LNU C STREET
PEUI.,kDELPECIA.
M. M BARKER, Manager.
Eaatern Department of the State of Pennsylvania.
`Particular attention SVISIL tO - -
Which. in all=cee, placed in &stylise Corn.
parolee of thin city. as well as those of known standing in
New Y ork. New BD land and Baltimore.
ACCIDENTAL IU KS. AND INSURANCE ON LIVE
- STOCK:
calef trill , attended tekin
I,nlly a.. eau . . dadins Companies of that kind.
7 Etrict personal attention to, and prompt despatch of
business entrusted to my care, I hope to merit and re.
ceive a fat share of public patronage.
IL M ItILRICEEt.
rohl3lw U . § No. 408 Walnut Street
rphE R.ELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHIL
ADELPHIA,
incorporated in 1844 Charter Perpetual
Offic No. MS Walnut 'tract.
CAPITAL $240,001
Inane( rigatoni lora or damage by on Hoorn.
Furniture. Deeds. Wares and rderatuandile in
c"- ttgi3EEl PROMPTLY
... . '
Invested In the following Securities. viz.:
.11rat Mortgages on City Property.well secured..Sl2s.4oo 00
thuted States Government L0ana................ 117,000 00
Philadelphia City , 6 per cant. Loans.. ........ 75.000 00
Peunnylvania $3,000,0136 6 per tent.
Loan. .. . 00,000 00
Poumylvania Railroad Banda, Brat and iecond
Mortgages— ... 85,000 00
Camden and Amboy Railroad Company's sper
Cent. Loan. • . . ' 0,0:10 00
Philadelphia and Beading
pas Lent Loan.. . - 0.000 01
liuntingdon and Broad Top 7 . per Cent. Mert
gage Bonds 4,560 00
County Fire insurance Company's 5t0ck....... 1,050 00
Stroh/MACS' Bank Stock... . ..... 4,660 00
Commercial Prink of Pennsylvania . 3tocir.. 11 . 4000__ 00
L pion Mutual Insurance ComPanp Stook two 01 1
lie:lance /unman& Company of hiladelPnia's
tocS . ..... 8,2150 00
Ca,li in *
Bank and onland. ~. 7,387 70
Worth at Par......... ... ... .......... 84214177 7$
Worth Mb date at market twice' $44082 RI
DIREPTOBB.
Thomas EL Moore. •
Samuel Castner.
James T. Young.
Isaac F. Baker,
OhristianJ. Hoffman;
Samuel B. Thomas:
Biter.
TINGLEY. President.
gh g
Clem. Tingley. —
Wm. Musser.
klarnuel Bispham.
H. L. Carson.
Wm. Stevenson..
Beni. W. Tingley.'
Edward
.• CD
Thossan C. Rua, Secreto LE r
PIIILADELPITIA. PeCeMber
ULU'. ENSITAA.NCE. EXCLUBP7ELY..—THE PENN.
I sylvania Fire Insurance Company--Incorporated Mil
—Charter Perpetual—#o. 61. C. 1 - Walnut street. opposite in..
de_peodence Square.
This-Company. favorably known to the commun. .W. for
over forty years, continues to insure 'gazed lom or dam.
age by Are. on Public or Private Buildings, either p_erma.
stonily or for a limited time.' Also; on Furniture. Stooks
of Goode and Merchandise generally. on liberal terms.
Their Capital. together with' &large Surplus PI:m(1.1a id
vetted inn most careful maannartivnich enabler- themba
oifer,tektile luscired_an undoubted seeptity.iti_the.asre of
Daniel
DDIECTOREL
I n
Daniel Bmith. Jr.. • John Havered*.
Alexander Benson . • ' - Thomat Smith.. '
. ,
Isaac Hazelhurst. .". , e ',wry Lewis.
'Minas Robins. - -: . * J. Cittlinjaam Fell:
• Danie l Haddock.' Jr. ' -
-__--- 7 -.. DANIEL smrra, Jr.. added.
Wumure H. tesowitm...l3ecretarv.
A NTHILACT_U'ECH ,HOMPAffp.I-4.3 avid
ti TER PERP
°Mee, No. MI W 7 P.A.llMetroet, aboveTitikif Philada.
- • Will insure against Loss or Damage_hz Fire. on Build•
ints, eitherpermtually or for a limited ume. Household
Erin:atom and morobandiee general/Y. .0- '
Also, Marine Insurance on Vends Cargoes and
Freights. Inland 'amputee to Sit t rartio of the ynlon
DISECT. Pe
• Wm. Eeher. ter Sieger.
D. Luther, , .! J. E, Baum.
'Lewin Aodenried. Wm. F. Dean.
John R. Blida:U.lU John Ketcham.
Davis Poarson. - ' john B. Heyl.
• President.
F. E, -El l a Vice President.
-
Wx. M. awn% Rai=
FAME INSURANCE CORPANY.I 4 iO. NUT4OI OMR=
_ PHILADELPRIA.
FIRE INSURANCE .gxqLusivEspir-; -
DMEMORS
~.... .. I ,.... ~-
B I T
Frauds N.--Bne.k. - - - -•-• .P,NlVl7..„_ . zulttee:V , ..- 3
. m a d" giehardop i , : .'John W. mvernisd. ,
:ReA17140711%. , - EthrardD.WooAratt;
!Robert. rwitce. , Jae. Neuter. Jr„,,
PotterA l rest - .
' aionpaii Ist4i , ,
acibelt L dßi a wAlteetatent.' '. 1
_QUAIL BI N. Vico Prodelad;
Malmo R RassmuLsr l / 4 BeavAary.
tagtionx. am.
AND PAID.
• .'.....1.11.177 71
- TERRE/380N FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF rm.
e) lade/ph/A.—Office. No. Di North Fifth street s near
Market street. ,
Incorporated be , the Legialatare of PertunGivarda. Char.
ter PorpotnaL apital and Assets ,111160,000. Make Issi
xeranee against Loss or Damage by Fire bn Pnb1292 . 1.
ra t a Bcardi i
ngs, Furniture. Steaks. GaAs and
disc. on favorable terms.
"Ed:RECTORS.
Wm. McDantel.. Edward P. Moyer.
Israel Peterson. Frederick Ladner,
John F. Bolster/ing. Adam .7. Glue.
Henry Troemner. Henry Delany
JacobNchandeM, John Elliott,
Freda ck - ChristlanD. Frick.
Samuel ifiher. George E. Pert.
Wallam D. Gardner.
WILLIAM MoDANlElb.President,
/SHAEL PETERSON vlooßresident
Pauses. N. CoLaxan. Secretary and 'nommen
CONPAIM MOOR.
A CAN FIRE 1N131=14
e oa
oomted,.....mmlßla—Ch.....ftrtnaebrioVen.Third. FhilAdelPtdaln.
N u o s .n
45 0 .. tirse par".
.. e. "bapit A l ......._ ? l ___l3 cag end Bwp m :l:vi tals..
la gare lregte o r l ei n in d ow w " u L na Mig th
Edattind . .
Raw.*
John wettunip.-
4:; -6 :7% . : ma" , E crea.. hArles ;
rael;mara W cw : ria 7l : 34 ll / 43816
Urn
V C. L. Osmium searatarr.
Ipll~ls+rAQ.
1829.—CHANTER lIIMP/MULLie
ORE - INSURANCE COMPANY
IDI
PHILADELPHIAi
Nee, 435 end 437 Chestnut Muds
Assetkon January 14-1888 t
00,4303,740 00
ItaL ...... IMP
Acaved Burping. ...... ... .. . . . .
ESI3
IMESETTLED cunt.% INCOPEC Eon asis
.14 811 L
awn sa. MAO.
Losses Paid Since 1829 Aver
wr5,600,000.
Pmetnal and Temporary Pollefee oa Ulmral Teruel
DIRE
LBCllllB.luneoldssinWeir24-1741r-a4=sgaer, fftaFd
Mtg. 111— D4
-
1 4 311 ABLE S NIIADICII2I4fIL
Vica
Itimptataton_wa•BeeretarT_ WU=
Uencieo Wen of Mfaffigk , '''"it k al ColuSnitil has so
•
•
OE Coil.
Iria aw . A ldmlrruAlethAMPL=Nt Penn
+nu Oftiftei . oFt4t , •TIEUTeI• and, WALNUT. Newts,
MARINE W t
on veitisig,CirmAtuipkwitc•4l, l amy of the mein.
ltartu - /NBUS.ati
°Amag e r
17 4v0r, canal, nion too' "oatitom to aid
P lNO4ttorts
On likeuttahe c t= •
MI T3/ 3 o °F Ver t i. 43(3lP r_ -
3867.
sip? ;m1 United Mater FAT Per Cent L ogo.
'United sii6 Six Per Cant..l.oalai it2r11414 g
. 151,400 OS
1881
.50.00? triii rr coculii6; ..
2mmxxieasnryNotes 5 0 !552 90
til2s,ozo ci g via m wa y 7 r f
on a a liT ) T . er
(sit 51°9" 00
korastate a fetrw3 tt
eney S a x Fa' 115.613
9° '
Loan. '
C: I4c° (X
20.000 MA
Po Six Per Cent:lkea_ „. 11030 co
mow rencoolvacdaftsucoodiaoconciatoit.
v,,E 4 ci Six Per Cent. Bonds .2=o 01 ,
20.000 Western Pennsylvania Railroad Six .
Per Cent. Bonds (Penna.. M.
guarantee). . 0,000 00
00.000 State of • Wad •
L0an....18.00 -
0 00
7.500 State of. Tennessee 'Biz Biz Per Cent
Loan. ' 4.270 .0
15.000 500 shares stock Germantown Gas
Company. Principal and interest
guaranteed bythe City of Phila.
delphis 15.000 00
7.500 ILO shares stock Pennsylvania Kali. ' •
• road Company..... . 7.800 00
6,000 100 shares stock North Veraryfrima
Railroad Company 1000 03
MAO Blr shares stock Philadelphia . and
Southern Mail Steamship Co - 10.000 00
701.000 Loans on Bond and Mortgage, first •
Rem; on City Properties:.......... 201.900 CO
•
$1.101.400 Par Market Value 51.14932 60
Cost. 81.080.010
Real Estate. ...
Bats Recei vable. 10.000 00
made, . •.. ...... • -
Balances due — Pi; 219436 6
min= on MarinePolicies - -Ac.
ezu due ed the ht eo ter m est. pany ird_
. othe_r debts
....
43,334
36
Stock and Berle of iundry"inra
rance and other Companies.
&MO 00. Estimated value. . MO 00
;osh in Bent ....
Cash in Draya: . ........ ,017 111
• RAMS est
. .
DIRECTORS:. 81.507.6051
Thomas C. Hand. James O. Hand.
Jct.', O. Davis, ' Samuel E. Stokes.
Edmund A. Studer, Jamas Tragindr.
Joseph IL Seal, William C. Ludwig, .. .
Thoophilns , Pauldbu. Jacob P.:Janos:*
Hugh Craig. James B. McFarland.
Edward Darlington. Joshua P. Eyre,
John R. Penrose, John D. Taylor..
B. Jones Brooke, Spencer Mclivaino,
Henry Sloan,
Henry C. Hallett. Jr..
Geo . e 0. Leiter. George:W. Berniadon,'
Will , on Gt. Boulton. Jobn B. Semple. Pittellattr gb.
Edward Lafonrcade. D. T. Morgan. "
Jacob Riegel. A. 13 .Barger._
THOMAS C. HAND yrement,
JOHN C. DAVIS,Vice President.
HENRY LYIBITEN._ Secretary. ~ ,
HENRY BALL. duistant Secretary. dog to oaltl
„,,, FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PEULADEL
„... ;.s.aii . ?, • , ' p_hia. Incorporated March 27, MO., Office.
zr i t:4 4. A No. 24 N. Fifth street. /mire
...y..-.-,, . Household Furniture and . hiercits
, I • ,-...':-. 4 genersdly, from Lena by Fire (kith. Untr QS
,-,....- --- liadelphla 0n1y.).1 .
e ^=""t 1 : - ' ”. ' Statement of theAmmts of the Association
January Ist, 1868, published incompliance with the: Pro.
vinionn of an Act of /assembly of April sth, 18th
Ronda and Mortgages on Property in the cm'
of Philadelphia only- stoma 17.
Ground Rents 18,014 90
Real Estate., 61.744 67
Furniture and Fixtures of Office. 4.490 08
U.S. 5-20 Reentered Bonds ...... .....,........ 45,000 00
Cash on hand. 81.978 11
Total .--.------
41=088 U
TRUSTE/123.
Pe W g i rt U.
Ha
ton, L I sr ma l: l n Pr , o h z. k.
John Carrow. jesse,Ligh= r
George L Yi r. = a, Robert Sh .
Joseph R. Peter Armbrinter.
Levi P. Coats, Peter M. a
n. Dickinson.
o
WM. H. HAMILTON President.
SAMUEL SPAP.HAWII. Vice President.
WM. T. BUTLER. Secretary.
'l7 NITED BLADELPHIA. FIREMEN , I3 IN/31MM= COMPANY OP
U P
Thio Company taker dolts at the kin'est tataa considont"
w ith seam' and t outlaw/ Ca bnaineu enaloalvelY to
FIRE INSURANCE Ut
Pillift THE errY OF PIEULADE4
OFFICE—No. 723 Arch Street. Fourth National Bank
Building,.
DIRECTORS:
Thonias-J. - Martir6- -- -- OhariesiL-Bmit4 -
Jebn Hirst. Albertus Bing,
Wm. A. Bolin. Henry Bumni„
James Mongaii. James Wood.
Will in Olean. John illialicross,
James Jenner._ Jiaienry Asktn.
Alexander T. Dickson. Hugh Mulligan.
Albert C. Roberta Phni_ p Fitzpatrick.
CO B. ANDREnn. _President.
Wis. A. Romer. Treas. WM. IL FLOxN. Sec'y.
ry
, HE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE) .COMPANY.—OF-
Iice, No. 110 Booth Fourth street, below Chestnut.
**The Fire Insurance Company of the Co nuty of
detrhm,"lncorporated by the Legislature of PennnlYa•
Ina In 1039. for indemnity against loss or damage by am
exclusively.
(MAIMED. PERPETUAL.
This old and reliable institution,with ample 'capita twill
contingent fund carefully invested, continues to insure
buildings,
_furniture, mercluandiseelsc.. either parmanentie
or for a Limited time. against logs or damage by fre.at the
to
rates consistent with the absolute safety of its mut
to:11Kx
Looses adjusted and paid with all possible despatch.
DMECTOItS
tins. J. Butter. Andrew H.
hoary Budd. ." James NanOn_ei
John Born, Edwin L Reakirt,.
Joseph Moore. i Robert V. Massey. Jr.
George Macke. Mark-Devine.
J. BUTTER. President.
HENRY BUDD,. Vice-President.
AretrASal! Emma:mfr. Secretary and Treastm
pIICENIX lIIWURANCE COMPANY
-OF PHTLADELPHIL • •• - •
INCORPORATED 1204—QUARTER PERPETUAL.
No. 324 WALNUT street, opposite the Exchange.
This Company Mimeo from - glows or damage bY
on liberal torn* on buildings, merchandise. furnitero._
so., for limited periods ; and permanently on buildinill far
dopoeit or premium.
the Company, has b een In active operation for more
than ebtlY _Years. during which all bales iavo been
promptly adioated and_paid.
--• Bra*CTORB.
I
John TA Hodge. David Levt& tur.
M. B.Mahonv. ' • Renfamht •
John T. Lewis , . Thos. U. Powers. •
William B. Grant. A. E. McHenry,
R o bert W . Leming, Edmond Castillon. -
D. Clark Wharton , Samuel Wilcox.
Lawrence Ldwis,_Jr,,_ Lords O. Norris. '
JOMi WUCHERER. Preddelet•
Saimaa. Wir.dox. Secretary.
iT611746/C ?Yr
/10
TAMES A. FREZWAIsr,,e4IIOIr/411;
nwALNitpr. *ape*.
101141. IlW.par AL, gi 8E17D21 BEAL
••
19118.
WMlE.BDA l. .44l4o'clock,bpoM at We
!..sehargm• hde the fctileeMlA-e t...• •-" ' -
10 ; 0 o 0- abstree4tr*u . diduttretr -,- " 4 ' 7 ' — ' ----- "
--- eon *hare* Phlladttphts . ruld'T/dlttbtkraWoll - ai. --
ICO thared S il ver Sarin Pottblintm Qil Co.
100 ebaree.Uelthenv and Woilpnellond Oil CO. •
• 7.ove shares Martel atratill
3.01.0 /hares Nag/tire rettoleaat Co.; , ;
5.20 shit es Red Mountain Coil and Improvement Co.
Ito. I=llll. MLA& 21T.-LTlrret 'defy • briek•store and •
wiUsbeek btldime, 10t.L . 5 , b7 65 feet. (Pea:rot
inenmbrenee. , Orphan," Veto/ bal6-ifskite 'of Charles
Sheble.eleed.• ;
110:1296 CA DVir ALADEFt S IT,=-Threeetdry Mick house
and lot s 16 by 70 tedt. Clear of Ineumbrancet Ornhane
Court bate.- Same Estate. •
01 a /ST.--Darge /qt of ground. it: the br.l W. corner •
Foie avenue, 140 feet on if th et:and 101 on Erie ay.
_phaturCburt.klate-.lSante ' • -
• DItILDIND L0T13.-3 lots. at the E. corner of,,Theron•
eon and Birch eta:. 251 h Ward,• 44. ch 20 bj , 125 foot.' Or-
Dhotis* Court.kkar- /Oral" of Joh, L./..l"c7aett. dtta'tt.
tritoMPHON EIT*-3 building lots, 'bore William at,
2/th Watd, each; 21 ; ;pl feet deep ' Orldt4lltte:Cvlart
Bata.--Barne .Estate.
12111) 4 . 1.-A desirable ha/14101(1ot, tiouth. of • Walnut at.,
nth V. 2566 b' ltd fee cep to 4ap,:n at. Opertane*
Court bale --Matekr Bizarr swiszors; , • t •
No. WOODLAND T ARACE -Modern threo-otorr
rough-cast dwe ling, with back balldintt, nra 411 tne
modern convents twee :IA d O ( hear ere:vice. bale atenlo.. • • • • of, tncten4-
82448.5 1C1114061 -IGlentoel three-etory,brlck
ling with ithe'yard. lot'll.o by 160' feet to •E,m , try et wth
a twovtnry franca etesle fronting therce,l: , aublect to d 66
ground tent rer annual
11TH o treble' bending lot, below (Ward /1.- . ./
17 by 79 feet. .Clear or I.cumprance. . Halo abaolude.
. O.* /7 :•• oriels
dwelling with bat k bonding. lot 20 by Lel feet to Gray
orrehene , Cour Sate= LEstats oJJameaßrowit decd.''
$ll4 Y.Eit-Abils,Utd.--raround rent oat Of a lot of grourd
19 by 100 feet on weet Mee of Broad - at.. *dove Parr/411'AS.
Nesters Perentfolove •Vale: r.• . I
$OOO PER AN r. "11.-4iround ret out 'o - a 'oEof ground
86 by Id feeli'on elde/af Drums et; above 19th et /fa&
ter!a Ferempiar_v Sale. -
11240 .P.KRAICNUM.4-Oroubd rent out Of a lotot around
to by 09feet, at thee. NX. corner 17th and Ift..lfetnon ate
eiasteoe Perefotptors,l4Sal,O. - .. • • -
t NvEztqISLE. CitstrUND, ItENT,of WO per annum.
ou Ora lot of ground on she %net aide of &unto at'. above
Diamond et., 1b by 201C , feet • t rAlaefel's•reraTAPcoro;'s:"Pe
fiat fUND 'ItnNT 18121 ANN on.: of a lot (ia
naaatlT et-- - aboYe.:ObatAlW; 18' by ,vl. tiotv llascr.„'s
eitAotette Sale.
thiteDittfdABLE , GROUND, - 11ENT of ',4B'por annum.
out of a lot on W. nide rlfth et..he , oly Dt,aelprid et. 1.2 17
IWieet. ' Mader'sPeliftripteity' &ties ri •
Fir Ail of; Me above Cl` ropnef Am% are ..toett...,BepuTed
and jounatuastd
tru. AND cautpty BTP.—a, valuable business .nro.
RettY: ealtable for a manufahtorVat the N. - K. corner - of
Fourth and Cherry etreeta .knovra sa‘", Zlou , a,germin
LutherattLblifeb." lot 125 feet on Fourth street. and 89 ft
on; Cherry' etreet: Clear :Of tnenlntorance.. - . - flan iat the
store. Sole by order of the Court st/COmmon Melo.
Lir CATALOGUES ItEADI: ON SATURDAY.
AT PRIVATE BALE. • ' -
A valuable property not r Fourth and .Walnut. •
A valuable euatheerpropertt Ko.BI Arch atreat
BiltuarttaTuN.—A llaadloma Manion. on Main it,
lot fat by 'roe feet. ►
'• TTIOMAB 'BONK' AUt..el WNW. Fla' M•
• j. Noe. I£o•end • tat South , Fourth street.
sAirs'OF EiTOCi AND Ri‘AI.."E'STATE.
lar". Public sales at the P4 i ladeleklaßercharike EVtRY
TUEBDo.Y at 12 o'clock., •
arir - liandbiluu 01 each :twolv_rty.fiteee, toparately, fry •
ddition to vertig.ll we poblfeli. on the Styli , day enevioue
to each cede, ona thousand' catilognim fn plimphiet term.
giciug lull deec: irtione of ill tha op,rty tr , tre nri
the 'FOLLOWING TUFSDAY, and a Lt t of 'Real ZULU'
at Private Bale.. - -
Ur"' Our sales are 'alto 'advercitiod in the. folloorin.
tiewepeeere : owl II A m r.r.ToAx, :moan, Lamar.
laTrx.raoracan. IN QUM; ARE. EVYNENP 11 1 2 1+1. MTN.
LVENING TELVIIIAPIL. GEfSIAN .11E111013.A.T. Cl. _
is Furn Pure Balr,a at the Auction Store EVERY
THURSDAY. • - •
Residencee receiva especial attention.
Rule is.o 322 :lortti. Ninth, efreet
WALNUT 1101Tt EL-0 D FL'ltvirUa BRUSBEL9
AND OTII 1-. R VDT F 01,t REDO.
ON MORNING.
Aug 28. at 10 o' 'ock b 3 c talegue s tb,„eutiro 11,usehold
Furuituraincluriti Arstott l'ertur a. 11 - Cattege quber
Furniture, u vele nd oh^r tlarnete. t eatuer Bede. six
Stews. Eifel:.., F ri tune, &c. • .
May be exeruined ou thelUvrtAng of Bale at 8 o'clock,.
Peremptery t'alh). •
• PTEAMtn,A .51^1 . ,N.
Tth,..ql3X,, ;:EPTEMBEit 8.
At 12 &Mock not n. th be ro d outd/..., with , nt
roaerce at th Poiladelphia Pse:-alige .th ato - m:ferry
boat known a; the WILLIAM U,aaMa j e t. b lengths
t' the %Rigby:ea I Dint and Phllaael• hi • I err Cornea
The boat,Lak3 31u te.t "ng. 931310 re It in timadeh B.Liu
feet dein.; roeqaurce 152 64 bet t na;lo.v„re sure en on”,
23 icehee t• r, 7 fe at eke with low vresaare
boiler, 14 teat brag, 634 feet dia oete;
rfir: Übe 8.1, , no I. en.tereory. as, the boat is too em%ll for
the ;menet want of the vow oany,
May be manly& on anell••aldin at the Mlle° of the
Poinv,f, 'lam j__
til/A, At CTioNEEttla AND
CeM 18 SIUN bf.P.R IRA laTty
No. 1110AirafaibiLT street..
Real Entrance "0 llen - Sansom street.
BOCTSEIIOLD PUENITI 3 II.E .c.V env Dr,scßip-
Tuns, REcRiV ED Oh' CON itaNiiiENT.
Sales of Furniturc - atOwiellinita attended to oathe most
reasonable terms_
• Sale at No. 1110 Chest Met street.;
NF,W' AND SEColstim AND I.IOUS )1..D EURNI-
TuRE. _ PIAN )si iltHOR•r, CAL,I'ETO,
PLIVIDD lei ARE, PstitLes..,',' WIGAN. dm.
' •
ON FICIPAY -* MußsleN ,, ,
At 9 o'clock. at the Auction .Store No 1110 Chestnut
ate eet w ill be sold—
;A large , assortualt of Superior Furniture, from fa' uiliss.
declining hobseke deg comprising - Walnut Parlor Suits
in Pluabal Brocat le and !tilairrlitith ' [Abram?: Suits,
Walnut Chamber. Sioeboatds, Wardrobes. Bocci:-
tory and FloOkeases, , -)ExCenilori LDlnireg , Tables, Silver
Plated Ware, Spiny and lieu Alatress a. Feather Bade.
Velvet, 'Bruss6P - and ingrain' Ceuveta. Prisneh . Place
Mantel aod,..Pier Mir. ors,., bra, ed fogravolgs and
Uhromos, Vases.' China, A:4. •••
0 •triANS..
Also, one superior Organ or Tlsrmonian, suitable 'Ecer a
of or small Church, co 835094 •
also, two .Parlor Organs.
PLANO FORTES. • . •
Also, one Elegant Rosewood Piano Forte, made by
Peck. cost $6lll.
Also. one Cottage Piano Forte.
FINE kinttlNGlol3l;- RASE' BALL AND
OR.ICKET•CSIPEEMENTS, . .
Atso, will be sbld, four seperior Doable 'tlarrel rowlibg
Pieces, sever t fine kiddie& Rods, Elam - Balt and Cricket
Implements, Boxing Gloves Eumb • Ftells, Gunning Amin.
rams, &c.
Also one superior Double Barre' Shot Gun. OreaCh
Loading. laminated. Steetßarrela and , Silver 'Mount opt
, •. ,
, s
Bo LEUNG. DLIIIIOItOW & itUCTIONEERd.
Le Noe. 211An4 204 Ma .1.1.E.ET street, corner Ranker.
Sueoestore to John - E. Were di Co
LARGE PuEdTIVE BALE.. F. , (ARPERINGB, 900
PIE,A tilt IL CLUTIId. &c.
ON FRIDAY MORNING;
Augaet 28. at 11 o'clock. on four moutts' credit, about ES
pieces of Ingrain. Venetian. Lid, Hemp, Cottage and Rai
Carpetinge, dLL Clotbc. Rug% 4c. ,
LARGE - PEREMPTORY BALE OF FRENCH AND
OTHER EURuPEAN DRY GOODd.
MONI.
August Sl:ain't o'clock. on kY
fou O mo
r n NG ths` ore t.
SPEOIAL — BALE - 01
Included in our sale of MONDAY NEXT, 81st instant,
will ke found— • r•
Foil lines Paris Veil Borexes.
Fdll lines Black BombaXines.
Full lines b4,Paris Del sines.
Fell lines 34 Mousseline'Detainee.
Full lines Paris Toplius.
Full lines Paris Poplin &mores
•
Full lines Paris Epingline Cloth.
Pull lines Paris Biarritz
The above goods'aro of a Well known make, and of this
se son's isnportation. to which the p .rticular attention
of the trade is requested.
LARGE PEREMPTORY SALE OF BOOTS, SHOES,
TRAv G. HACiti,
ON TLEB MottNIN
Sept. 1. At 10 o'clock, on four month& credit.
IV'hh.oll.lEhis, AILAALIONEERB.
(Lately Sainslllfr for M Thomas di Sotug)
;sic!. OldEdTbiLiT street. rear enhance from Alimor.
°TICE.,
Our Regular Weekly' S of if oriseheld Furrilture*.e
at the atle ion Hoorn% N. 10 .b, 11.1.1c1 on WSUNE,DAY.
instead of Monday, as heretofore:
' Sale No 240 Wallace vtreat.
HANDSOME. W ALNIU C. eIJRNIT. RE,. ROSe. WOOD
YlANti IdANTEL MIRROR, MIR t PROOF SAFE,
/I A.NDSOME
ES VELVIV CARPETS, &a., ac.
ON' 'II.,DAI MORNING.
Sept :at 10 o'Cluelt. ho 2020 street bY
catalogue, .the , enthe Forniture, comprang—Rwe.wood
- and tßre-at• Ile • Parlor 'Suit, superior Walnut 'OhdU2ber
uft - niture, Oak Dmlng Room Furniture, Rotewo.d Piano
Forte: i'rench Mantel Mfiror, 'Fireproof Chest, by
Evans & .Wateon; Handsome , Velvet and iirmsebt
pets.'itefrigerator, Cool& g
May be seen early on the morning ottaale., , .
Perernptery Bata NO. 2212 and 211.4 Filbert street.
SIX .YALtJABLE 0..3 41. ND tits.. cERS.
, • • ON SATURDAY , MORNING: • •
Sept. 6., at le olock, by catalogue at No. 2212 and 2214
Filbert etreet. Without •ieeerve: Mx:valuable Steam En
ainea, of •the following ,pow.qr-18. 1,6412, 9, 6 and:4 tion.e;
Jorge 'Portable 'Rollers. thr,.,b• Stallfonary Boder.i, two
Portable Boilers, Smoke Steer e;.Frameer &e.
Mns ha pi4n RVILT , II thco.,
d a. VS
L.' Le South SIX'II3 street.
LARGE BALE F
ENGLIfiqCFUNA DsI,O.ItATED CHAMBER SETS,
FlNEtig4 WMITE- GE, .NITE Wd.ttE, T ENTON
Vira - 2 •”.1 `.
• t UI9 EItioAY MORNING NEXT.
Aug.llBi at •10 4i1=N0. , 16 South Sixth street—
, A larguquaptity, uf .kngllsh (SA a Ithamber 41
huge quantity of Imported Fine - White (Plinite Ware,
ants a large and a enersl :ati3Ortuieett Treutnn Ware, n
)ntl to omit tb•aruv Ana h-,10 q +lt
TILL T •.E.
RINOIPAL MO Y Lts'LaisLiStint;zs
-
• ' '13, , E. earner of SiX.'lll and BAC 0 - 1 streets.
Money advanced on n
Meteha also gene; ally—watches,
sisE Orr. - latnoXsta .Gold ;and Silver Psate.nrid on. all
articaes of val.'s,. for an length of time agreed on.
WATCH Eli AND JesWELKY.Ar PRIVATE SALE.'''
Fine Gold Hunting Case Double Bsttosn and Open. Face
English.' ;American and 14 Niss ' Patent . Lever • Watches;
Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lepine Watches;
Fines Gold Duplex and °thin' % :Itches Fide 'ander }runt
lug Casa and. Open Face English. American and wen.
Patent Lever and [Arhs Watches; Double Case English
Quartier and other :Watchest_ Ladles' Fancy Watches;
Diamond Breastpins ; Finger Rings; Ear Binge ; Studs
&a.; Flee Gold eh...MIL Medallions; .Braceletst .13cart
Pins : Braman:tip ; inget Mugs,: Ps nen Cases and Jewelry
gene - ..s,: . I .; ,
; -,FoR BALE.-41*.ty,. p and . valuable Fireproof Chest,
;pitiable for taiscrelev"-ebitto69
Atermigili t cle 4.34l4ll..ofundeutifth and Chestnut
airs
I.I2I I IIkraOTIONI. ,
B°43 '
. - ~hear ratranie•onfifillzary , ottet.t.o :ill
T : 4 .1034,441, 0 FA1 fadeggoinbertiA,;,,AiL
ivy nes
IL9RIIITT-A CO. AUCITC.
CAM R1 10„11_
No. MO MAKSET st Bll reet. UGTl corner og larl•sm
Gash advanced on'ootdamoneaavithent silts
REGULAR. SALs. RN LOTS exams AND r
Dry Goma READY. MADE • 01.0 , 111N0. Sl= 2
I* ' /ID---D3aWk;lV6— Tl l 4Wfr -. 7.bliigrgilAVlALlat a..
OTI
ON FRIDAY MORNING. •
Ann* t& emennencine at 10 o'clock.
Also, a Lam Assortment of Goods from stores declining
business, manufacturers and others. • •
C MoCLEEB A. CO..
• AECTIONEZEEE.
•
No: 608 MARKET street. •
SALE OF 1400 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, BROGAN%
• kieI.MORALIS, kc
ON MONDAY,MOBNING.
Angor 81, cornteoncing at le o'clock. wei will gen b
catalogue, tor cash, a large and deeirable assortment '
Boots. Shoes Brogans Balmoral% dra.. •
"." 1- eti thart . 7 ol Ci ty aM s.
. .
B Y ' I42IC 7Wa L -
'vik:in2DOHE JT'street.-Philailthibla.
marea4itureriN, Ociinrhissidn Marohsti%
Goan 'DessiOra: '- •
FORSAME TO.RENT . ,
L BI
LARGE ANOPOBIOC101:03 . : •
Tura-Story Brick B4ll4ing
Co Weablogtoniviiine, west Tirentlotti It.,
156 feet front and IVO feet deep to Alter street. Can tat
divlded,, 'Raffia:lore Railroad Paufas thdPFDPcntr•
Possession at otice. , - • ' t - t•
LUKENS BeITONTGOIEBEY,'. •
, •. _
- 14035 , BeiCih stieet, above "Liikliciti
aus goo 4v•
FOR„ SA.LE.
lisorsome Not Brclid st. 'Realdenee;
West side, in perfect or4er, and with all the modern Im
provements. ILddreMß
Hor t 2,elQ olipaiipata .
anlsatoth 2190 4 - • • 4 4
ILLIA3I (TRIBSE7ItEACESTATE ARE T, •
. , WASHINGI 0 N.DOLISE „,.
.
' -
Real Estate bought and sold. Persons desinnie of rent
ing cottages during'the season will address or apply,As
Rerpectfidlyrefer: Charles A. Rubieani. Esq.. Henry C.:
Rump,. Rea., Francis ilicllvain, Eaqk and'Augustatr sfe r ,
rine, Esq. • )71 5- 45
•E FOR SALE-4 - VERY DESIRABLE - DOUBLE
house, feceinla put in perfect order:: Walnut atbset.
West Phi, adelplhia., Lot 50 feet front. $7OOO can
remain:on mortgage. , Addressz, this ofiloe.....atmOtt
it FOR ;SALE,; WITH POBSEBBION, , . 'A ; VERY
u "
r ßeat hPnn y a d re, e nlinr tFwie t e h n t ( h ri ., d App a yytyto
a.
M. IIOFFMAN...
f 0,4 Walnut street, Ed stou.'
rtua e,m,w,til
mpg FOR SALE,v , DWELL/1 , 1G5.-110. 924 PIIZE Br.
No. 1 4 1 213. M, 4174,1:1111=k.
925 Clinton street. _
" 1022, - 109A, and 10'26 ;South' Flghteenth at.
" ios,South Second street.--btore. _
" 818' Carlisle street. 'Apply to CORFU - CS
dr Jr)RDAN, 433 Walnut street. , •
feSALE—THE. THREE-STORY , BEIGE. REST,
dence, with three story double back buildings 'and 9
• eat x ide aide-yard, .eltuate No. B.loMarshall'atreek."
btiow Spring Garden et. J. M. GUStafEY. di SONS.
508 Walnut/street.,
WA LNIIT STREET—FOR BALE OR RENT.
handeoree residence, 26 feetJrcnt, with_
7 StatSe ' CarriageHcnise.. and Lot ,
IE6 feet deep; with sido•light on a 20 feet ;
wide street; Nitwit° No. 912 Walnut street, Has every
canrrnienco and is in . good ,order. J. M. OOMMEY.44,
BUNS,'I6B Walnut street. '
4
EST PHILADELPHIA—FOR ' BEILE.—Tag
Ilandeorno Stone Residence, buil - tjxobo. beat man. ,
• her. - with eying convenionce and large lot of ground
Wilma No. Stl7 tionthFortreecond street.; , une of the bea t '
locations in West. thiladelolda. J. K. GU,Kidraf . Alf
bONP, 508 Walnut effect. •
.FOR. SALE-,T FIE HANDSOME THREE-STORY,
brict Residence. with attics, tbreesterr double bat%
bui dings. ev,ry convenience, and tobt side rent
N 0.102 North Nineteenth street; J, M. OUIIIIIIEY dc SONS.
608 Walnut street. ' •
WEST PHILADELPHIA.-4'OR 11101)
ern Cottage Residence with every convenience:and
" desirably located on Locust street near:. Thitity sav
dab street. J..!AL "...61 - fillilkiEV -13Qiie. No; 508 Wahnlt
ItErrk".
FOR.' R ENT.
,
PrernigQ.B.oo,P,.olap#4o
FOB isropac ' .
also, °facet+ and Woe Room!, su Al. tor a COnlltagiehli
College. Apply at
NBA, X ORTHEIREPUBLIC..
J(244
r HANDSOME COTTAtES,
Nicply FtwiciAtexed,
To Bent for the'Sunnaer Settkon.‘
APPLY OR ltiontss , • ,
W11AL1442 Lt. CRESSE; •
WASHINGTON 11101JSR;
Washington et., cape telaid,
yl5 1:113
MARKET AND FOURTH STREETS.—STORE,
EBOUTIIEAST CORNER TO LET. Apply at
No. /3051itaret aired,
Daily, from 10 to ll o'claok.
rTO IiENT—No. 10 HAKILTONTERRA.OE, WEST
Philadelphia. Large yard. fine ohade„ , &c.
" aro pootesaion. Apply next door above,, auil.
itFOR RENT—TEE S LORE'AND DWELLING ON
North Broad street B:aeon:tarot Poplar street= flea
" long been established in the_ igroceryand provision
btudness. J. M. GUMMY & BONS. OS Walnut street"
• ce and — Pin% and Tenth and Twentieth street&
Bent not to exceed $BOO per atusum. J. M. GUMMEY
80Nn :608 Walnut stroet.
TO RENT—DNVELLINGS.
No; 421 South hirteenth street.
No, 2113 Arcl; street.
N0:•13.*. Oxford street. - -
Store and Dwelling, Itiehmond.
A ll rr odern improvements.
Immediate possession. Apply to
COPPUCK dc JORDAN,
433 Walnut street.
L2M20!1
WANTED TO PURCHASE M
- - ODERA.TE.
f, eizcd modprn house, eituat d west of Broad street
and between Pine and - Walnut streets. Address Box
Jiiu Philada. Post-office, ; -, • .
rWANTED TO RENT., PREVIOUS TO OCTOBER.
;.1.. 1F t a Dwaine - Douse; • betty . ..en Pine and . ..Walnut'
' and Ei, lith.andSviueteenth streets, (inclusive)'--Ad
re rs. with terms - and lecality, Box 2703 Post
cf. , • a (322 pen tk
TA! ANTI lI—BY ENERGETIC YOUNG_ , MAN
Y :nlll
-. .goad 'business ' qualifications and addreesa
situation which., he, . could make: himtelf generally
UP& till. - .Salary not so much of an object as a permanent
Bitnation; baa served in. the tate war.with considerable
ctrdlt to bhnsolf ; can furnish uqdoubted reference. Ad•
drrre "ENSltGY."..Eintzrrin Oe. anISIMF _
ANTED.—ACTIVE AND INTELLIGENT GEN TLE-
V V - men to engage as Solicifor thruosiE LIFE IN
SURAN DE COMPANY, in Ibis.city and: adjoining coun
ties. apply at the office of the company. '
B. ESLER, General Agent, •
aulo.to w f amt Corner Fourth and library Sta.. Phila.
COAL AND 'WOOD.'
CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
PLAISTED•it McCOLLIN '• • .
No. 3033 011EBTNUTfitreet West Philadelphia, • ' '
Sole Retail Agents for COI@ Brabant Attle.'s celebrated.
Cross creek Lehigh Coal, from the Buck Mountain Vein.
Tide teal is particularly adapted for making Bteanefor
Sugar and Malt Houses, Breweries,&e. It is also =our- ,
passed as ' a Family Coal Orders elt at the office of the .•
Minere. 80. 891 WALNUT &met (let floor),,will receive ~
our , rompt attention. Liberal arrangements made with '
manufacturers using a regular quantity. .• A iylett
T.. brA uE so , r u g; mee. DEß2ap i lED
immo . .
ATTl3z3 , n xoner I.. 9 innaln d r lsr.
their stock of . . -- . , - , e .f,. .:
Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Loctud m oun t a in Am; • . •
which, with the preparationgiven b.,' lei. we Mit* eingreft • . ~,
be excelled by
83 4 8 any other Coa l.
Offi et ce, Franitlin Inititate RandinAjblo,
stre lli 13. ,
8 / 2
Jele-ti ' .: Arch /treat wheat. ilebhvildlV,-,,
COPARTNEJEESUIPS
RE PARTNERSHIP EfERETOFOR EXISTING
T
between CI3ARLEII.CABOT. JUAN F Catto rind
EDWARD J.--ETT.ING. trading in inn eitY'of Phil Y i -
phis as " CABOT & ETTlNG,land;in theicityOf Nets ,
1 ork IA "CABOT & C 1;.," Is this daydiesolved.
,
JOHN - F. O,OIOM ,
ED.WAItD J EvrING.
T'InLAIM,LVIta. August Mai-1868i :
MEE IRON CONnwrcisit•N 'AND BkOSERAGt BUSP:
A nese will be carried on by the anbeeriber. r j
• EDWARD J.
Np. lo Walnut irtreet,
PuiT;Ansi.PutA. Avß>iet Di& itac -atlSSsacit r it.
':' -r~4o~i~.:
CLEANED' F . : 31 MOTH, Rthil!tED
Atteredlo,the blest'4 10,b1 , hi
au2113t., HINGE, 41.5)Sprace etreet,
`- A VVERTIIIENG . . •
-sr q ' GEM:111 RELPL - .4i
Agents for ion newspaper. at_the towed cri.terx, tg et.l
70124phe#4 - 01,' , b00.u4 Gov. loakl9Bl f.t.
11.1q0.