Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 28, 1868, Image 2

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    ' 2
AEA TIENKEN•
(From the London Stixj: •
The death of Miss Adati Isattes , "Menken in'
Paris will attach peculiar interest ?A a volume of
semi-religions poems in the prcasovhichi will be
published in a few days under the-title Of I"lnfelf
- elk" and-dedicated-by-special-peraisatort-to-_
Charles Dickens. In the meantime it may not be
uninteresting to quote the letter from Mr. Dick
ens which is prefixed to the volume of poems we
have just alluded to :
GADS HILL- PLACE, ITIGIIAM-DY-ROMIESTS ft,
RENT, Monday. Oct. 21, 1867.—Dear Mks ilea
ken: I shall have great pleasure in accepting your
dedication... I thank you for your portrait as a
Idglily iemarkable spicithen of photography. I
also thank you for the verses inclosed in your
j )
no e. Many such inclosures come to me, but f•lw
so athetically written; and fewer still. so mod
es y sent. Faithfully yours,
~ ~ , etrartrats DICKENS.
The poems to Which a fad sifigilabbpy of this let
ter acts as a kind of- preface are•abortt 30 in num
ber... The tiriitpriem.irt the .holik is called , "Itd
anfgata ',' audit may not be inappropriate . at • the
present to quote the following passage : •
"Why,did 1d1e.?, ; , ,
O love! I waited I I waited ' , Cara and years,ao.
Once the blaze of a far-off edge of living Love
crept up my horizon, and promised a new.,
moon of poesy. -
- . . A soul's full life !
A soul's full level
And promised that my vele° should ring trancing
shivers of rapt melody down the grooves
of this dumb earth..
Arid promised chat echoes Should vibrate along
the purple spheres of. unfathomable seas, to
the soundless folds of 'the clouds. • ,
And promised that,' should know the sweet sis
terhood of 'the:stirs. • ,
But apidnight swooped down to bridegroom the
The blazing sphynx of that far-off,, echoless'
• promise, shrank into a drowsy- shroud that
mocked the crying stars of my sours unut
tered song.,
And so I died.
Died this uneoffined and unburied death, .
Died alone in the young Ida3r,night; „ .
Died with my fingers graspingthe *bite thrust of
many a prayer." •
One poem, called "Judith," with 'a quotation
from "Revelations" under its title, has the folio tv
lowing passages : ' • -
,"Stand back, ye Philistines!
' Practice what ye prtfach-to me;
I heed ye not, for lattoW
Yep are burning Lies, and . profanation to
the garments which with stately steps ye
sweep yourtnarble palaces.
*•* * * *
. Stand baek !
lam no. Magilalene wafting to kiss the htm of
your garment"
Another poem is en avowed imitation of W
igan.' Most of the titles are sad •or Biblical, and
two or three prose "fragments" form part of the
tn
volue.
There are, in the following verses from the
poem ballest . "Drifts that Bar my Door," traces of
profound melancholy and a real passionate sad-
MSS 41
O Angels ! will ye never sweep the drift from my
door ?
Will ye never wipe the gathering rust from the
hinges ?
How long must I plead and cry in vain ?
Lift back the iron bars and lead me hence.
Is there not, a land of peace beyond my door ?
0, lead me to it—give me rest—release me from
this unequal strife.
heaven, =Attest that I fought bravely when the
heavy blows fell fast.
Was it my sin that strength failed?
Wcis it my sin that the battle was in vain ?
Was It my sin that I lost the prize ? I do not
sorrow for all the bitter pain and blood It cost
Inc.
Why do yo stand sobbing in the sunshine ?
I cannot weep.
There - 16" - no sunlight - in - this - dark
starving for light.
-Antrata I EIPPR Din drif to astratr_nrthar ma
do - or I
Life is &lie, and love a cheat..
Therein a graveyard in my poor heart—dark,
heaved up graves, from which - no dowers
spring.
The walls are so high that the trembling wings of
birds'do break ere they reach the summit,and
they 'fall, woimded,abd die in my bosom.
I wandertaid the gray old tombs, and talk with
the ghost of my buried hopes.
They tell me of my Eros, and bow they fluttered
around him, bearing sweet messages of my
love, until one day, with his strong arm, he
struck them dead at his feet.
Since:then these poor lonely ghosts have haunted
Me night and day, for it was I who decked
them in my crimson heart-tides, and sent
them forth In ebariota of fire.
Every breath of wind bears me their shrieks and
groans.
1 hasten,to their graves, and tear back folds and
bolds of their shrouds, and try to pour into
their cold, nerveless veins the quickening
tide of life once more.
Too late! too late!
Despair hath driven back Death, and clasps me
la his black arms.
And thelamp See, the lamp is dying out !
.0 Angels I - sweep the drifts from my door !
up the bars
NEW PUBLWALTIONS.
"THE MOONSTONE."•
We can enjoy the examination of this book
more, and do it a better kind of justice, if we
clear our souls of the confession, at the out
set, that the "Moonstone" is an inferior dis
play of Mr Collins's style, andthat
lins's style, when at its best, 'is an inferior
style. , This conviction once expressed, we
are free to admit that we have now, and have
had since Brockden Brown, but one author
able to excite intense interest by pure plot
work,and that this writer is the author of the
"Moonstone;" also that his present composi
tion, tvhether inferior to its predecessors or
no, is ingenious, finished and artistic to a
degree that no prentice hand in the art of
mystification could have made it. •
The story begins in the eighteenth century,
when Aurungzebe removes the Moonstone,
a yellow diamond, from the forehead of the
god of the moon; the gem arrives in England
after the sack of Selingapatam, meets in that
c ountry the adventures which form the bulk
of the romance, and is finally restored to the
idol, in his shrine in the sacred city of Som
nainh. It is' bequeathed by the English
officer who had seized on it, is Tippoo's
dagger, to his niece, our heroine : the stone,
to fulfil the exigencies of a plot meant
to baffle the most experienced navel
reader, is obliged to undergo, while in subjec
tion to the morbid ingenuity of' the Anglo-
Saxon mind, trialS to which the trials of the
dwarf in Malzel's chess-player were baga
telles. To the confounding of all its oriental
precedents of lethargy and quietism, it is
dragged through the machinery of what it is
only necessary to define as one of Mr. Col
lins's puzzles. It must be alternately watched
andlet slip; it must nick the finest conjunc
tures of time; it must be left, as a damning
legacy, to the heroine, from motives of re
venge—yet she finally marries, happy and
commonplace; it must arrive unchallenged at
the heroine's country residence,—yet the
watch-kept on it by its Indian proprietors is
of a perfection only to be found in fiction,
and keeps it in view supernaturally every
where,else but on this journey; them, to, con
struct the plot, the hero, who never somnambu
latad Inlore,, must turn sleep-walker, and
tuiVic4eooKlOuf,ly ; the heroine must see
luin do At,„ in order to coin
plicate
roitte7';' - and, furnish herself with a
goorajouil • 4 BoveL" By Wilkie Collier.
yquirlarptratiorits. r taaryer 4 Brothere.
ICI=MM=I
romantic reservationibut e. e must not see,f,a
minute after, when :the sonambulist (most
credibly) drops the cliatraind WO the hand of
'the villain, of the Itiecd, , 4arid goes tcr sleep.
The troubles of the. tory depend:on this situa
,
thin, where the heredne believes the liero a
thief; - the hero mistrusts a - melodramatic
chambermaid; a detective, who has been a
miracle of sagacity up to a point, turns idiot
and accuses the heroine herself of milliners'
hills and the pavvnbroker; the villain, en
dowed by that supremely lifelike accident
with sudden fortune, pasties himself off fur a
sailor with the most intelligent people (he
has been an Aminadab Sleek, and the intelli
gent people were his old acquaintance) , by
means of a black• beard; an improbably sharp
boy comes suddenly into the story expressly
it> unearth him. He murdered by the
indian proprietors of. the diamond, who get
safely back to their idol, with it., Meantime,
to unravel his troublesOme plot for . the :reader,
Mr. Collins is driven WI ti /device Whose arti
ficiality we do not thitik he has ,had to
descend to in any.Previcitis construction. The
hero, represented , as a capable young man,
lends himself to' a' 'scheme of self cleirvoyance
which in.' atare would' be,nothing but self
dam' ; hits himself drugged, in the house
where he ,had tinconseionsly Committed the
theft; has himself can-versed with, in such a
way as to induce the former dream; and does
finally'Steal, m a second visitat en of sleep
walking,. the paste dummy which representa
the jewel! However carefully this kind of
, e'keleten is filled up, no:amount of persuasive
paddhig can. possibly‘deaden: the creaking of
the machine. . • '
The style of Mr. Collins, when speaking m
his own . proper person, 113 a. grave, sharp,
idiomatic style, very,' well 'adapted to his own
effects, aritlictipab ' le, on he one side;of a labo
lions dignity, and on the other of a dry, tart
humor. There are plenty of pass,sges which
reveal.theie virtues, and the description of the
Shivering. Sand,in the "Moonstone," is almost
equal to the glorious delineation of the
Br6ads, in ••Armaidale." What a picture's
created by these isolated paragraphs !
"The sand-hills here run doWn to the sea, and
end in two spits of rock jutting oat opposite each
other, till you lose sight or them in the water.
One is called the North Sett, and one the South.
Between the,,two, shifting backward and forward
at certain seasons of the year, flee the most horri
ble quicksand on the shores of Yorkshire. At the
turn of the tide something goes on in the unknown
deeps below, which sets the whole face of the
quicksand quivering and trembling in a manner
most remarkable to see, and which has given to
it, among the people in our parts, the name of
Thu bhivering band. A great bank, half a mite
out, nigh the mouth of the bay, breaks the force
of the main ocean coming in from the offing.
Winter and summer, when the tide flows over the
quicksand, the sea seems to leave the waves be
hind it on the bank, and rolls its waters smoothly
with a heave, and covers the sand in silence. A
lonesome and a horrid retreat, I can tell you! No
boat ever ventures into this bay. No children
from our fiebing-village, called Cobb's Hole, ever
come here to play. The very birds of the air, as
it seems to me, give the Shivering Sand a wide
berth. *
"1 ookeil where_she.pointed.—The-tide-was-on
the turn, and the horrid sand began to shiver.
The broad_brown_race of it heaved slowly, and
'i.e' a In V'''• a er. to you
know what it looks like to me? says Rosanna,
catching me by the shoulder again: •'lt looks as
if it had hundreds of ;suffocating people under it
—all struggling to get to the surtsce, and all
sinking lower and lower in the dreadful deeps!
Throw a stone in, Mr. lietteredge! Throw a stone
in, and let's see the sand suck it down!' * ' *
"In this position my face was within a few feet
of the surface of the quicksand. The eight of it
so near me, still disturbed at intervals by Its
hideous shivering fit, shook my nerves for the
moment; * * * the bared wet surface * * *
glittering with a golden brightness, hid the
horror uf Its false brown face under a passing
smile."
But Mr. Collins has not the slightest turn
for drama, and where he feels it necessary to
diversity his book by chapters written in
character, his failures harm the interest of
the whole narrative. Collins, who has
powers of self-retention and of climax which
Dickens does not possess, had better leave to
Dickens such character-parts as the old
steward whose oracle is Robinson Crusoe,and
the religious spinster who conceals tracts in
people's-battling-robes; out of such concep
tions Dickens. would make rollicking, immor
tal caricaiiires; out of them Mr. Collins
makes pointless and feebly-ridiculous mons
ters. We say nothing of the alight offered to
many generous and selfssacrificing lives by
the sort of unpleasant satire he devotes to the
poi tray al of Dr usilla Clack; leaving that con
sideration _quite aside, we only say that his
hand is not tine enough to do the thing well,
and that he had better leave such future temp
tations as Miss Clack and Betteredge unde
veloped, in the matrix of his fancy.
The latest production of Wilkie Collins's
complex hrain, with all its infelicities, is
nothing like a failure. The interest is in
tense from the first page to the last. We
cannot choose but hang upon the master's
motions as he steadily and deliberately un
folds the broad and plaited web from the be
ginning to the end. it is like some tangled
jungle of Indian palms woven upon a skillful
loom, in which the complements of relieving
colas, and the resolution of capricious lines,
fascinate and charm the puzzled eye. If for
nothing else, we are hearty in our admira
tion for the Indian prologue ani epilogue of
the romance. That dusky Brahmin element,
woven like a thread of wire into the plot,
gives it a wonderful continuity, and sease of
time. By its means the novelist associates
his fable with immemorial dignities ,and su
perstitions that are musky with age. The
envoi is superb, with the diamond once more
at rest, and the shadowy figures of the Brah
mins, who had gone through knavery and
heroism with equal willingness in its service,
separating without a murmur to meet their
awful fate.
"In a whisper he explained to me the appari
tion of the three figures on the platform of rock.
"They were Brahmins (he said) who had for
feited their caste in the service of the god. The
god had commanded that their purification
should be the purification by pilgrimage. On
that night the thre,e men were, to part. In three
separate directions they were to set forth as pil
grims to the shrines of India. Nevermore wore
they to look on each other's faces. Nevermore
were they to rest from --their wanderings, from
the day which witnessed their separation to the
day which witnessed their death. -
" As those words were whispered to me the
plaintive music ceased. The three men-pros
traitd ihr inskives on the,rock, before the curtain
which bid the shrine. They rose—they looked
On one another—they embraced. Thiin they de.
set mien ba parateb among the people. The peo
ple ntch; 14 for them in dead silence. In tbxee
(tiff( rent directions ,I-sa w the crowd partat, one
Att
and the same hackent.. SLOKY-tho,grand,-whith'
iambs ut the people closed together again. -21'i:te
tra( h of the doomed :men tbropgh thnsanks of
their fellow-mortals was cibliteratek"..We r tioW
them no more. ,
"41 Ea: w strain 6f ,iaueiclOlld,Aand j4bilapt,
THE DAILY EVENING BULLEM , r,PBILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 28 1868.
MIIIMOI=EII
crow , arOnn
tin shuddered and pregae4,:tegether .
"11 - 07.turtain betweenX , ,tlict.;itreesivaS ,AlraW4l
asidk'tuidiho shrine wan eel to
"Theroi.raised high on a ` , l - . ;'sdatOkonitils
tyPical antelope, wlth..his
toward the four corners of theharth% thereaoared
above us, dark. and awful itr;the mystic light of
heaven, fk - d god of .tb - iftlifoon,:;„..Anikthere,.in.fho
-forehead - of the deity , - gleamed tho yellow Dia
-1 mond, whose splendor had last shone on me, in
England, from the bosom of - ii,vonian's dress !"
As the result of wide reading, deep feeling,
and the commentator's art of digesting his read
ing without losing his sentiment, Dr. Albert
Barnes's Bible notes have been the chosen
company of Christian readers fora long way
back in the history of the American churoli.
ThoseM the New Testament, and on the
books of 3 Job, Isaiah and Daniel, have testi
fled to his rare union of simple-hearted piety
and scholastic research. The large class of
readers with whom they, are favorites will
extend a gratified welcome to the Rev. au
thor's "Notes, Critical, ..B.xplanatory and
Practical, on the Book of Psalnis," the first
volume of which is now published by Har
per 4k . Brotheis. ~ In a dignified and mov
ing preface, the: , venerable author, takes
leave of his life-task of' • forty years,
than:Miming hours of which long period have
never failed to see the faithful steward at his
desk, rendering count, in these industrious
volumes, of the delicate talent committed to
him. Barnes', commentaries, , ranging from
the pre-hieoric,. study of Joh—through
Daniel, who g.e.W, plain as a landseape before
him a world's' future We cannot seez-to the
New Testament and'now, back to the
higheit oriiinte.l'achieveMent in :impassioned
imetr3r-4indicate a deo, a falthfully;indus
trious, and a lopiniexatnination of the great
Book of.BOolni. He is always thoughtful,
observant, pious, reverent, ' and wakeful :
he loves the wonderful Jewislf ccillection' of
rhapsody and chronicle, •and his • investiga
tions combine the courage of an explorer
with the zeal of a minister and the faith of a
child.
The fust tliird-part- of 4-jiarnees-z-com
•ments on the Psalms includes the forty-first
of those grand old lyrics, in whieh the suf
fering King has set to immortal music his
heavenly trust, mingled with invectives
against some insidious enemy. This psalm took
part, they say, among the day's services read
together by Marie Stuart and Daxnley, on the
last night previous to their eternal separation
by means of treachery and murder; the beau
tiful, false queen must have httd zinging in
her ears, when the news of the assassination
reached her, those accusing words "yea,
mine own familiar friend, in whom I
trusted, which did eat 'of my
bread, bath lifted up, his heel
against me;"—words which. have been the
constant brand of traitors since the Saviour
quoted them, on his last night, , against his
own false steward, who ate of the aop and
who had the bag. Dr. Barnes's notice of
this poem,_as-of the others,-lagravaand close,-
weighing every sentence, balancing all au
study in a little introductory outline which
sets the hymn picturesquely in its historical
surroundings and in the temporary mood of
the royal singer's mind. By the taste and
piety combined with which Dr. Barnes wears
his scholarship, he gets the ear of the whole
class of ordinary readers, Who would be re
pelled by a harsher doctor. The volume is
for sale by G. W. Pitcher.
We receive from the agent, Mr. J. K. Si
mon, 29 South Sixth street, the third and fi
nal volume of Putnam's Knickerbocker edi
tion of the Life of Columbus, by Washington
Irving. It is prefaced by a portrait of Ame
ricus Vespuccins, and contains notices of the
voyages of the great navigator's companions,
with an appendix filled with information
about the experimenters in discovery and their
historians. An index of the most elaborate
character rounds off the work, and completes
the general impression of watchful editorship.
The publishers, on their part, have brought
out a peculiarly neat volume for the book
table, printed- on toned paper with ample
margins, handsomely bound in imitation
Turkey, with Irving's shield and autograph
in gold, gilt top and bevelled edges. All
Americans who have "heart enough" to want
to know when and how they were discovered
should select the Putnam issue of that fine
old story.
J. B. Lippincott 4 Co. have added to their
Globe edition of Bulwer, that author's" Night
and Morning." The story was originally
published in 1841, just before his,wild specu
lative romance of Zanoni. The present edi
tion is plain, handy and cheap, while it is so
tastefully bound that it looks remarkably well
on the shelf.
PROPOSALS.
TAEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC . HIGHWAYS.,
Ll OFFICE, No. 104 SOUTH FIFTH STREET:
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 27th, 1668.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
- -
Sealed proposals will be received at the Office
of the Chief Commissioner of Highways until 10
o'clock, A. M. on SATURDAY, 29th inst.,f or the
construction of a Sewer on the West foot way of
Broad street, from the south curb line of Colum
bia avenue to the south line of Oxford street,
with a clear inside diameter of two feet six
inches, auk ? with such inlets and
man holes as may be directed by the Chief Engi
neer and Surveyor. The understanding to be
that the Contractor shall take bills prepared
against the: property. fronting on said sewer to
the amount of one dollar and twenty-five cents
for each lineal foot of front on the west side of
the street as so much cash paid; and one-half the
balance, as limited by Ordinance, to be paid. by
the City.
When the street is occupied by a City Passen
ger Railroad track, the Sewer shall be constructed
alongside of said track in such manner as not to
Obstruct or interfere with the safe passage of the
cars thereon; andito claim for remuneration shall
be paid the contractor by the company using
said track, as specified in Act of Assembly ap
proved May Bth, 1866.
All bidders are invited to be present at
the time and place of opening the said
Proposals. Each proposal will be accom
panied by a certificate that a Bond; has been
filed in the Law. Department as directed
by Ordinance of May 25th, 1860. If the:Lowest
Bidder shall not execute a contract within five
days after the work is awarded. he will bo deemed
as declining, and will be held liable on his bond
for the difference between his bid and the next
highest bid. Specifications may be had at the
Department, of Surveys, which will be strictly.
adhered to.
MARIAN H. DICKINSON,
ant?-3t§ _ Chief Comnissioner,of Highways
Q qu g a ilf ten Z-4 BLACK ILION' BAREGES. BES"P
- Pure sillt-Blaik Grenadines. ...- - • •
_ _ ' _ Summer Poplins, steel colota,
• • - rocuith --I - - Black 1, 1 1 , ce A41 1 1 8 ,4 3 3 1 djt „,tun t d„,,n
ari-.A. ,-13- -P I Xl' Li It P. 13. --3118KKIt. Memitru, -et . iin ßaidiTAoPK&BL and STAG HAND of" 1 ' ' 7 1 —, 4 , 4 ahotunt rii hm -a,. —u.
vs , . ThiefirrA 14 A , No. 7113 simesttmt street, manoracturon • tat
of Gas Pistimeli. Lamps, dm., it c., would call thO attoutiot the CELEBRATED LEOOMNS.P. RAZOR. 13(0 ---___ 15 °Ela ' - White and Blacir_Btre Shawls --
of the' Obits to their Large and' elegant assortment cotery '. IN CASES of the finest quality; itazona Illikeeseleaele " i ' ' "_ : White and Blatt. Limo ge s ohavvis—
ChandollaracPandants.Bracitota,tc,. They also introdoct, • and_TabloCutler3i. Ground and Pollah&L . BAB. STEC-%
gas pipes intod tdiingsluid Dolma building. • and iittaut RENTS,.. of the elettAPProvoll construction to asehit.the, ' Summer steak of Silki . and Gress 'Goods: cicosixig , out
Rcheap - - : BOMB lIALL gi CO .. • - .
to extending. and renuiring gas PiP , • All,Wcr) "be at P. 14 -ADr.&'l3. Cutler and Surgical ..butra . var - "-- --"--- "—Si - South - Second ft-ten: —
vorragia. . • ' ' .
__
_. ______
_LINA XlXere-ILS Tenth Streetbelott-Chesilgut -- tnylif -- - - a :.. ~ •..
..„ • .
-...
oAs mirwilmys.
:4 : • 0 74 ." if :A •: IP • •' I ,
. 1 1, 7
LD
' V•;,'
'PATENT,. SHOULD ER ,SEAM ,
It
..- -,
: 1,11,14 Nu 1 41: 7 4a014*
item toe these ttaiLbralkii AMODIO mmatei
•-• , ~1 aret, `l,„siz__
' - - Ointlemen'e Padshintiloodic . -,-- •,-
Of late styles in full =zloty.
WINCHESTER & CO.;
708 CHESTNUT: ' ' '
Jellan.w.f.tf
FINE DRESS SHIRTS
. -.-.. ..-
AND '
GENTS' NOVELTIES:
J. W.'SCOTT & CO.,
814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
Four doors below Continental Hetet
mhl.f m w id
4 11, FAT
. BENG AENDw, Be
-:
toned , Over lkal th y . Inathe:whl
,;,. At j , •rmpar lM=. nmtcooDs
" t;
1 ' ".
grWorrier OrNaribi l Tes i rE=
or lailleg a" genbkl4 inuctimitriss nankin.
n 01445
WATCH] a,: ate.'
1 .-EWIS LADD nius'4. co , ,
.-DIANOND - DIIA.IIIIRS'ct JEWELERS.
' .. -. Wenn" Jrwrufx di biLiPL'lTtilin. •
WA T OP S ilia JEWELRY IitPALRED.
, • '' ' .802 Oheßtnnt St., Phila. •
. . , •
Wabikes of is Finest Makers.
Diairiond an' a, Other arerwatra
, .01 the lateet stales.
.„-- /-
Solid Silver and Plated Were,
ate., Ei3. -
s3tazz.. sus nmos ' sinnprr lijolLlta.
A large assortment . jest received, with a yeast? 41
...- - .1 .
Wholesale Dealers in
WATCHES AND JEWELRY,
I. E. corner &Ararat and Chestnut /tree%
And late of No. fie Beath Third street lid ly
WiNA.NCILILIW
GOLD AND GOLD ,COUPONS BOUGHT
BY
P. SI PETERSON .II CO.,
39 South Third Street.
Telegraphic Index or Quotations stationed in a con•
spiCUOUS place in our office.
STOCIICS, BONDS. &c., &e.,
Bought and Bold on Commission at the respective Boards
of Brokers of New York, Boatori. Baltimore and Phila•
delphia. *0716 end
BROWN; BROTHERS & 00.,
No. 211 Chestnut Street,
Issue Commercial Credits; also, Circular Letters of
Credit for Travelers, avail/2U,, in any part of the
-World.—
Jew am*
rAI lIIVATITIIIIMuuMrato v - : 4:004%-awnitl
8. W, as SOS.
244 Bout Third great
:44t
TO 'F'AItICELeIrJES
Residing in the Rural Districts.
We are prepared. ea heretofore, to orcaPV famin e s! al
their county reside-Ince with every deeeripuon of
FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, &o
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets
FA.IRTII.ORNE & CO.,
Dealers in Teas and Callen.
No. 1036 MARKET STREET.
at All o =gralteed pure. of the beat quality, and .0143
PAPER SHELL ALMONDS—NEW CROP PRINCESS
Payer Sheul Almonds--Elneet Dehesia Double Crown
Reigns, New Pecan Note, Walnuts and Filberts. at
COUS2Y'S East End Grocery Store, No. 118 'Gantt'
Second street.
VOE. LUNCH—DEVILED HAM, TONGUE, AND
Lobster, Potted Beef, Tongue, anchovy Paste 'and
Lobster. at COUSTY'S East had Grocery, No. 118 South
Second street.
NTEW GREEN GLNGER, PRI3IE AND GOOD ORDER
CoUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 Oman Sea
and street
NEW PRESERVb D GINGER IN•SYROP AND DRY.
of the celebrated Chyloong Brand,--for sale at
COMITY'S East End Grocery, No. 118" South BeCOlda
street
EW MESS SHAD, TONGI`Ed AND SOUNDS IN
N
kitte, put tfp expressly for family use, iu store nod for
eale.at (MUSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South de
coed atreet
►IIABLE CLARET.--200 CASES OF SUPERIOR TABLE
I. Claret, - warranted to give satisfaction. For eale by
M. F. fifUlaN, N. W. corner Arch and Eighth Street&
SALAD OIL.-100 BASKETS OF LATOUR'S SALAD
Oil of the latest importation. For sale by M. F
SPILLTN. N. W. corner Arch and Eighth died&
AMB. DRIED BEEF AND TONGUES.
1-1 Btewarti's Jrustly celebrated Have sad Dried Beet
and Beef_ Tongues ; also the beet brands -of Cinchurtt.
Hama Fiir• sale by M. .F. SPILT TN. N. W. corner Arcb
and Eighth etreete.,
MU31111E323, VAItC.Dri•
101:124 J. WEAVER. J. ermems PENIIOOK.
WEAVER 8c PENNOCK,
PLUMBERS. GAS AND STEAM FITTERS.
37 North !Seventh Street, Philadelphia.
Country Seats fitted up with Gas and Water in first
clews style. An aceortment of Braes arid Iron Lift and
Force Pumps constantly on band. ,
LEAD BURNING AND CHEMICAL PLUMBING.
N. B.—Waxer Wheels supplied to the trade sad others
at reasonable Prim&
.193 f arns
JA A. armour. MORMON mar, mama= A. 011,18 u the,
ITILLODOILE WRIGEIT, MUTE L. IfLAW..
PMER WRIGHT dalol , lB.
Importers cif Earthenware
a
Obliiping and Gomrahalon Merchants,
N 0.115 Walnut street, rhiladeblata.
etOTTON AND LINEN SAIL DUCK , OF EVERY
iliwidth, from one to aix feet wide, all numbera. Tent
and Awning Ducks Papermakere Felting. Sail Twine, dze.
JOHN,W. EVERMAN & CO., No. tx3 Church Bt.
0 :4 •' I•• s • • " • •
only place to' get priyy wells cleansed and -infe - cted.
tvery low pricer: 'A. PEYSBON. Blzwinfactnror of Pon
'l4l
COAL AND WOOS.
CROSS • CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
PLAISTED dt PIeCOLLI_
No. MB CHESTNUT Street; West r nuadelphia,
Sole Retail Agents for Coke Brothers & Go. , e celebrated
Cross Creek Lehigh Coal, from the Buck Mountain Vein.
This Coal is particularly_ adapted for making Bteam for
Sugar sod Malt Housee„ Breweries, .tc. It is also unsur.
tamed as &Family Coal. Ordera left at the office of the
mitten. No. 841 WALNUT Street (let floor). will receive
ear 'prompt attention. Liberal arrangements made with
nuMnfacturers rein a • . ar anal . - le tf
rlllUgef HMS. JOIEW r. stomas
E •lINDE}3BIONIM INVITE ATTENTION TO
• their stock of • •
Earths Mountain. Lehigh and Lootust. 11.1aantidn: Coal,
whh. with tha preparation 'Lyon by no. w e think Can=
be o=4o by any ottwr coaL •, •
Ofeme.Krhhh / 1 1 1 84540 BolidinA No: 115 O.
street. • BMEA: 8
Jaloo Arch ' street wharf. &hue IL
HA.R.OVITAME.
4,
taividere and Delaware ailpa4
. .
i•WgO "
_a A
_ff• N',/:1 A4Mik VirAN ti :at caLN
NOTICE.—For the espeetal iteconanodation of Passe&
tsars desirous of spending' Sunday at the DELAWARE
WATER GAP an additional Lino will leave the Water
Gap every MONDAY AitiliNlNCl. at d o'clock. .Arriving
at Philadelphia abut 11A. M.
Lines leave Kensington Deriot forDeirmare Water Gap
daily (Sundays excepted) at 7 A. M. and DA P. M.
iylB tato \V. H. GATEMEN. Agent
Old, Reliable and Popular Route
BETWEEN
NEW YORK AND BOSTON.
And the only Direct Route for •
Newport, Fall River, Taunton, New Bedford, Eddleboro', as
the Bridgewater', and all Toills on the Cape Cod
Itallway,, and Nantieket;
Thro lino is composed of the ' BOSTON,
NEWPORT ANL/ NEW YORK BTEAm.
BOAT COMPANY (Old Fall River Idne
comprising the magnificent and met steamboats NP.
PORT, OLD COLONY. METROPOLIS and. EMPIR
STATE, running between New York and Newport, R L
and the Old Colony and. Newport Railway Datum= Bo&
,ton and Newport. making a throegh line.
One of the above boats leave `Pier 28 North River dish
'fflondays eseiptedl. at 5 o'clock P. M. arrivinglin Now.
port at 2311 A. M. the first train leaving Ne wp ort at 4A.
cs., arriving in Boston in season for all Eastern trains
Familles can take breakfast on board the boat at 7. and
,leave at 7%, arriving in Roden at an early hour;
Retunstrig can Imre Old ColonY and Newport Railway
corner South and Kneeland streets, at thl and 536 o'clock
kor trirthcr particular,. apply, to the Agent.
N..LITTLEFIELD; 72 Broidway, New York.
BRISTOL LINE
NEW Ypitit AND' BOSTON,'
VIA BRISTOL.
For PROVIDENVIWINTON. NEW
EDVORD.' CAM 11.• and all . 4
. railway conununica_on,
_East paid No
-The new . and aplendld steamers BRIST OL and Ilk
ul i
'DENCIE. leavo . Pier No. 40 North ItiverLfootat,
street. adjoining Debra's/lee street Forty New Tot 'at 5
P.' Id. d in t a ily n: IlLandays excephid. with steam.
,boat at Brietol at 4.8 0 A. bi-, arriving Boston at
A. M. in oto connect with ail the march* train!, from
Whiteum The must desirable and toctiatu route to the
Bountatne. Dl:meters or tktdne ern snake
'direct conneettenerby why or alit warveger at
Boston.
State. rivals ant . r . ifekets .SeeuretLat-offki--ois-Pler is
41.avelfor
&MacFOR OAPM- , M. A Y.—
On TUESDAYS.: TLIURSDAYS and
SATURDAYS.
The splendid new. steamer LADY OF VIE LATER,
Captain W. W. Ingram. , leaves Fier. 19. above Vine
'street. evegZesday. Thursday and Saturday at 9.in A.
M.. and ruing leaves Cape May on Monday. Wod
nesday and day.
Fare 192 2.5. including canine hire.
Servants el 50.
Season Tickets $lO. Carriage hire extra.
fer The Lady of the Lake is a fine sea boat, has hand.
some stateroom accommodations. - and is fitted up with
everything necensary for the safety and comfort of par
rangers. G. IL_IIUDDELL.
CALVIN 'rAGGART.
je3o.tfr Office Male N. Del. avenue.
E.0 0= 4 , 1 OPPOBrtION
To nut
4 . 1111 " 1111 . 111111111 . COMBINED ULROAD & MEN
MONOPOLY.
Steamer JOHN SYLVESTER will make daily excur
done to: Wilmington (Sunda,ya• excepted). touching of
Cheater and Marcus Hook. Leaving Arch, Street whir
at 10 41,,' M., and 4 P. M.
Returning.' leave Wilmington. at 7a. it.. and IP. a.
Light freight taken.
L. W. BURNS.
IYISta Captain.
adastin lITWEIFBI HOOK, AND NJL
1350P.M - •
The idea:mire B. M. FELTON and ARIEL leave Cheet.
nt_Street_Wiumt(dandivanicented)_at_ll.l2ll4t.
M.; and 8.50 P returning. leave Wilmington at Hook
M. 12.50 and 8.50 P. M. /Stopping at Canner and
each way.
_
Excuredon Ticket.. einieciood to return by either
Boat. 377,
!MULE, BROTHER & CO.
aDap. SPRUCE 40D3T.
10110110. SPRUCE JOIST. 1868 1
SPRUcEJOIIyr.
LARW I YAIK.
LARGE STOCK.
faL&ITLE, BROTHER. &
Moo SMITH STREET.
1868.
1868. NIUNOTEBAABONBRINNIE 1868.
wedwußwit4PS.
WALNUT
1868.MEITM: L'uurißßEE: 1868.
RED CEDAR.
WALNUT AND.ME.
1868.
my74h a to 6m
. ASH.
WHITE OAK PLANK AND BOARDS
HICKORY.
1868. CI GA GA R BOX R BOX
MAKERS. MARERt3. 18i4Q
CI uU.
*WARM.' CEDAR BOX BOARDS.
FOR BALE LOW:
1868.
1868.
1868. OEABONED CLEAR PINE. 7 OUG)
REASONED CLEAR PINE. 1.000.
CHOICE PATTERN PINE.
SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS.
FLORIDA RED CEDAR.
mAiuzze, BROTHER. & C0. , 2500 Boum STREET.
LARGE BILLS
OP
SEASONED LUMBER
FOR BALE AT LOW PRICES.
R. A. Bo J. J. WILLIAMS,
Broad and Green Street.,
PHELAN & BUCKNELL'
Twenty-third and Chestnut Ste.
LARGE STOCK OP
WALNUT ASH AND POPLA.I4
ALL THICKNESSES, CLEAN ANDDRY.
FINE LOT WALNUT. VENEERS.
CEDAR. CYPRESS AND WHITE PINE BIEUNGLEFI
SASONED LUMBER._
ISIGIUGAN.cANA DA AND PNNSYLVANIA.
ALL SIZES AND QUALITIES.
FLOORING AND HEAVY CAROLINA TIMBER,
SPRUCE AND HEMLOCK JOIST.
BUILDING- LUMBER Or ALL
mhZem
YELLOW PINE LUMBER-401E HUNDRED AND
Sixty Thousand Feet:Yellow Pine Boards from• at.
Mary's,oa4., afloat, for gale by E. A. SOUDER Es CO.,
Dock st:Wbart. au2lst
A. New Thing in Art.
BERLIN PAINTED PHOTOGRAPHS.
A. S:ROI3INSON,
No. 910 C.RESTNUT STREET,
just received a iumb collection of
Berlin Painted Photographs of
PLOW E-R S'.
. ,
! They are eaanfflte :gems - of art, rivalling in beat
naturalness of tint and. perfection of form a great earl
Of„the choicest exotic flowering plants. They are mann
on boards of. three sizes; and sold from 25 cents to . ea and
+ For framing, or the albu.m, they are incomparably
beautiful. . • , • • •
.IEII3TIMOI
,
H. 0. BIUGOB. Gen't Idsztager
LEMBlan•
FLORIEA FLOQRLNG.
FLORIDA FLOoRING„ 1868.
CAROLINA N_
FLOORING
ei.
VIRGINIA
DELAWARE FLOO Rai G.
ABll FLOORING.
WALNUT FLOORING.
FLORIDA STEP BOARDS.
RAIL PLANK.
SEAED POPLAR.
SEAS SO ON N ED CHEESY: 1868.
CAROLINA SCANTLING. 11QtaQ
CAROLINA IL T. SILLS. LQUU
NORWAY SCANTLING.
LARGE ASSORTANIENT.
CEDAR SHINGLES.
CEDAR SHINGLES.
CYPRESS SHINGLES.
PLASTERING LATER
CHESTNUT PLANK AND BOARDS.
TRIM FINS , MITS.
13/EVAJLIf PUY ,0001013.
PREyku : i4' Tam FALL TRADE,
f ;. '
~F 1_
RE=
ADVERTISE IN
THE COMMERCIAL LIST
PRICE ciaxtztE NTO
11 ,'WE,1Q'U-PIVE REASONS
MERCHANT
STOREKEEPER,
Should Read and Advertige in the
COMMERCIAL LIST
PRICE CURRENT_
1. It is strictly a Commercial Paper.
2. It contains reliable Market 'Reports.
8: It contains the Arrivals and Clearance!.
4. It contains the Imports and Exports.
5. It contains more Financial News than a
the other daily or weekly papers.
G. It contains the best Ship News.
7. It contains a list .of all vessels In Port.
8. It contains a list of ally gge Ron the way to
this Port.
.9. It contains a list of all vessels loading for
this Port.
10. It makes a specialty of all Commercial Nowa
, 11. It makes a specialty of all-Oil News.
12, It maims a specialty of all Gold and Silver
Mining News.
13. It has special Marine Reporters.
14. It has racy local and biographical sketches.
15. It has spicy Editorials on Commercial
Topics.
16. It has two columns of reliable Quotations '
17. It has a faithful report of the Petroleum
Trade.
1868.
Is. It contains OFFICIAL STATEMENTS of
the condition of the Banks.
19. It contains the Annual Reports of all thq
Railroad Companies.
20. It contains the Annual Reports of, the In
surance Companies.
21. It contains.several columns of Commercial
Items condensed tom original sources.
22. It contains a list of the BANKRUPTS; the
names and the amount dile each creditor.
23. It contains Sketches which instruct and
amuse the clerks.
24. It is not a partisan paper,. •
20. IT IS ONE OF THE BEST ADVERTISING
MEDIUMS IN TEE WORLD!
Published every Saturday by
WINSLOW & SON,
241. EPook Street.
WHY
EVERY
MANUFACTURER,
zadexEiruk,
CLERK
The Batt and Brother.
Col. J. W. De Forest contributes some of
his excellent testimony as officer of the
Freedmen's Bureau to the September ntim-'
ter of he__Atlantie AA mighi-have-heen
expected; the more pointed anecdotes relate
to freedmen who mingle the negro and plan
ter blood.
SAXON SPUNK AND NEWS) ENTHUSIASM . .
Now and then there was a bad boy of this
stock in my -district. There was one such
called Wallace, a bright, restless mulatto 'of
seventeen or eighteen, who stole 'hens, over
' conts, Sc.,nd occasionally f ' ought. Tom
'l e arner, a 'low-down white m an, getting jo
cosely drunk ono day, thought its fine thing
to slap this youth in the, face with a meal
bag. Wallace collected a party`of his com
rades, chased Turner nearly half a mile,
dragged him from his wagon; stabbed him in
the shoulder- with a jack-knife, and was
hardly prevented from killing him. All the
parties in the scuffle, including the white
man, were arrested, fined, and sentenced to
various terms of imprisonment. Wallace
became a convert to the Baptist Church, and
vas let out of jail one Sunday to undergo
immersion.
"Well, have yon got the wickedness all
.out of you?" I heard an unbelieving citizen
say to him. "I reckon you ought to have
hot water.
"0 yes! all out this time," returned , Wal
lace; with confidence which I thought fore-
Shadowed a speeo fallin g frOrri glace.
' TUX muLATTo EARLY.
Another day I was kepi M a e ferment of un
certainty. for a couple of hears by :two :,boys.
of about twelve = -a black and a Mulatto—ona,
or other of *hem bad stolen Avalifttble Pocket
knife from a llttlAwhite toy. -The plundered ;
Youth, and "his fitber=s"hrm'a-sgmed In
stating that the black boy had borrowed - the
knife - "to leek it,it," and. had never returned
it.
"Yas, so I did borry it," Admitted the ac
cused, a shiny-fareit youngster, glib, loud
tongued, and.gesturing wildly in , his excite
ment. ",But I didn't steal-it. Yere's a good
knife of:My own," an' why should_ I steal
another knife ? I jes' borry'd it to see it, cos
it-bad „so-man yore ` yeller_
boy asked me to let him take it to cut a
water-million. So I handed it over to
him, and that's the last I see of it.
That's so, jes' as snah as you's bohn."
The mulatto, a handsome, dignified little
fellow, faced this accusation in the calmness
of innocence. A citizen whispered to me,
"The black boy is the thief," and I also felt
pretty sure of it. I had both the youngsters
searched, but without result. Then, find
ing that the property had disappeared near
the farmer's wagon, I told him to take the
accused back there to search tor it, and, if
they did not find it, to Wing them to me
again, to be sent to jaiL In ten minutes the
party returned without the knife. The
mulatto still wore his calm front of innocence,
while the negro was now quiet wild with ex
citement.
"I shall have to confine you both for
trial," I said, "If you don't give up the
knife."
"'Fore God, I dam° whar 'ds,"•exclaimed
the darkey. "I'd lose a hundred. knives 'fore
I'd go to jail. • 'll€ don't care 'boat jail, he's
"Oho :" said .1 turning to the mulatto.
h OVA 1141.3 n trk inn —boast cents
you are the thief. If -you don't find that
knife in , ten minutes, .I will have you severely
punished."
There was another search; the criminal was
still obdurate, but, his mother arrived on the
scene of action, and "got after him" with a
brootnstick; and the result was that he pointed
out the missing article amidst a pile of straw
where be had contrived to secrete IL Yet
so blameless had been his countenance during
the whole transaction, that probably not one
person in ten would have selected him as the
gailty partY.
rr!MR) tt . i b
tell you the nigger is a no-account eree
tor," went on the old planter. "All the men
are thieves, and all the women are prostitutes.
It's there natur to be that way, and they
never'll be no other way. They ain't worth
the land they cover. They ought to be improv
ed 01l the face of the earth."-
- Here the meek-looking New. Yorker sp)ke
for the first time in an hour.
"You are improving 'em off pretty fast,"
he said, meekly. "Got some of 'em' 'most
white already. -
So unfair is the human mind that nobody
but myself laughed at this retort. The plan
ter turned the conversation on crops, and the
audience looked out of the windows.
JULIM CITMDRORS- POMP OF SAXON PRIDE
"Multitudes of planters, never had a negro
whipped," said the elderly Carolina doctor.
"I have owned twenty or thirty, and I never
punisheß one. I'll tell you the whole story,
and I believe you'll allow that I did right.
It was a girl named Julia, who was brought
up in our house, a regular pet of the family.
Finally She went wrong somehow, and had a
mulatto child; they would do that, you know,
no matter what pains you took with them.
After that, I noticed that Julia didn't have no
more children; wouldn't havo nothing to say
to her own color; wouldn't take a husband.
I
At last, thought I ought to talk to
her, and says I 'Julia, what does this
mean ?' Says she, 'Doctor; I've - had one
•white man's child, and I'm never going to
have no black man's child.' bays I, 'Julia,
that's wrong, and ybu ought' to know it.'
tAays she, 'Well, Doctor, wrong or not, I feel
that way, and I'm bound to stick to it.' Now,
I knew she was wrong, you see, and I
couldn't-let the-thing go on so. Lfelt in duty
houtid,to'get `such ideas out of her head. I
whipped her. I took her out, and I give
her one right good switching with's hickory.
I thought I ought to do it, and I did it."
Whether the hickory reformed Julia of her
wicked and unfruitful pride, so deleterious to
the growth of the Doctor's planting popula
tion, I was too fastidious to inquire.
411ANOE mTnit NEGRO VIEW OF PROPERTY.
Stealing, althotigh as yet more common
among them than even among the low-down
whites, is far less knpwn than when they
held, not ,without' reason, that it was no
harm "to put niassiis chicken into massa's
ingger."
TUE FREEIWAN AS •A FARMER ON SUARES.
As farm laborers the, freedmen fail to real
ize the fact that it is nedful- to work entirely
through spring, summer and fall, in order to
obtain a crop, They do admirably, iti the_
planting season, and are apt to sow too much
groundi, then comes.a reaction, and they, will
indulge in a succession of day hnntiogs and
night frolics, and the consequence is a larger
crop of weeds than of corn. - If the planters
were forehanded enough Lto'pay; their-people
day wages, and discharge a man as soon as
he turns lazy, things would go . better. But
the general custom, dictated by - habit-and by
lack of capital, is to allow the negro share
of the crop; and-he he thus becomes' a partner
in the year's business;he is disposed to believe
that he has a' righflo manage it:after-his own'
pleasure.
It was enough to Inakeime both laugh_ and
cry to go out to Colonel Irvine's fine pinta
tion, and look at the result of his - Lording for`
1867, on land which could _produce withent
manure, an average ot, thirty bushels-of corn
to the acre:- A. gang of negroeSi - cotuoting
thirteenfield hands, had taken a large part of
his farm; and, as, the produce of ona_Aeld_of
thirty-five acres, tlAyhad,..to show about
hundred bushels of , wretched "nubbins;" the
weeds meanwhile stinding four feet high
among the cornstalks, ' -
"They neglected it, during the hoeing
season," said the Colonel, " and they never :I
could tet.uv et - their Eryttad - 13fterwards. ---- 11 - il
was of no use to order or scold; they
.were
disobedient, sulky, and insolent. As for
frolicking, why, sir, from fifty to seventy' .
darkids pass my house every night, going
into the village, The next day they are, of
course, fit for nothing."
And now, after the land had been used for .
naught, these negroea did not want to repay
the advances of rations upon which they had
lived during,the summer• they were deter
mined to take their third of the crop from
the fields, and, leave the Colonel to sue or
whistle, as ho pleased, for what was due him
in the way of corn, bacon, molasses and to
bacco.
HIS SELF-CONTROL.
Like all uncultured peoples they have 'a :
keen relish for the sense of, freedom and
grandeur which., it gives to man, and _al
ready many: of them have'learned""to - destroy
a power of whisky." ' Of General Howard's
temperance pledgee they certainly thought
very small beer. I never got &signature;
nothing but snickers and "guffewlepres
sible anti-temperance laughter. If anything
is done it .this way it must be through the
medium of secret societies, with passwords,
ceremonies, processions, insignia—something
to strike the imagination. To the Good
Templara - and the/8511aa . of Temperance I re
commend' this missionary labor: It is needed,
or will be.
I .AB A ' POLITICO..V.'
As I have , already hinted, the negroes waste
Much of ; their `time- in amusement. What,
with trapping rabbits by day and treeing'
'possums by night, dances which last til
morning and prayertmeetings which are little
better than frolics, they contrive to be hap
pier than they have "anycall-to be,", consid
ering their chanceh of starving toAleath. _lt
is not •entirely without:foundation that the
planters and the reactionary journals com
plained that,the loyaljeagues were an injury
to both whites and blacks. As an, officer, I
wanted to - see reconstruction. furthered,
and as a Republican I desired that.
Lthagreat_partyfftkiefx-had-sayed--the r nion
should prosper; but, • believing that niy
first duty was to prevent famine in my dis
trict, I felt it necessary to discourage the zeal
of the freedmen' for political gatherings. X
found they were traveling ten and twenty
miles to league meetings, and, what with
amine and going, making a three day's job
of it, leaving the weeds to take care of the
corn. The village was ,an attraction; and,
moreover,there was the Bureau school-house
for a place of convocation; there, too, were
the great men and eloquent orators of the
party, and the secret insignia of the League.
I remonstrated strenuously against the abuse,
and reduced the number of meetings in the
school-house to one a week.
" Go horrie, and get up your own league,'
I exhorted a gang who had come fifteen miles
from a neighboring district for initiation.
'Let your patriotism come to, a head in your
own neighborhood. Do you suppose the
government means to feed you, while you do
nothing but tramp about and hurrah?
"My belief is that, nearly, all my brother
officers pursued the, same policy, and that
- ibex - eta - little or no foun - atiori -- 11 -- )r -- th - e - cliArge
that the Bureau was prostituted to political
THE NEGRO ti PEACEABLE CILARACTER
"As chief of a sn&districa madea monthly
report headed 'Outrages of Whites, against
Freednien,' and another' headed' 'Outrages
of Freedmen against Whites.' The first
generally, and the second invariably, had a
tine in red ink drawn diagonally across it,
showing that Otero • were no.• outrages to re
port. After three small gangs of white
robbers, numbering altogether ten or twelve
pertoris, bad been broken up hy the civil and
military,anthorities, few acts of , serious vio
lence were committed by either race against
the other. The 'high-toned gentlemen,' a suf
ficiently fiery and pugnacious race, were
either,afraid of the garrisons, or scorned to
come to blows with their inferiors. The
'low-downers' and small farmers, equally
pugnacious, far less intelligent, and lilting
on cheek-by-jowl terms with the negroes,
were the persons who generally committed
what were called outrages. -They vrould
strike with whatever came handy; perhaps
they would run for their guns, cock them,
and swear to shoot; but there was no 'mur
der. There had -been---shootings, • nit there
had been concerted and formal whippings;
that was during the contusion which followed
the close of the war; that was mainly before
my time. Such things were still known in
other districts, but mine was ma exceptionally
quiet one.
"The negroes• themselves were not dis
posed to violence. They are a peaceable,
good-tempered set, and, unless when drunk,
are no more likely to pick a fight than so
many Chinamen. Whether it is a virtue to
be pacific I cannot say. Anglo-Saxons are
the most belligerent race, whether as indi
viduals or as peoples, that the world now
contains; and yet they have been of far
greater service in advancing the interests of
humanity than negroes or Chinamen; at least
they will tell you so, and whip you into, ad
mitting it. But if peaceableness is a • virtue,
and has any promise of good in it, the negro
is so far admirable, and gives hopes."
“As We 5a11. 91
Curtis, in the last number of lletrper's,
drops for a moment into that youthful tone
of his which used to be so fascinating in
"Prue and. I” and "Lotus' Eating." He
atches the Green family going otl to Eu
rope :
. _
Indeed, an Easy Chair can have pure pleas
ure in this great city where is so much un
pleasantness, if it will meryly repttir to the
wharf when a steamer is about sailing and
feast its eyes and imagination upon the vari
ous members of, the -Green; ,who are
busily taking - pOssession . orilletr - staterooms
and adjusting themselves with immense para
phernalia of loose coatsiancl colored shirts
and caps to the blissful unknown exigen
cies of sea life. No moment will ever be
fuller or fairer with expectation. And yet
often and often there will be unimaginable
dhys and scenes in Switzerland in Italy, in
t e'East;when the' happy trays d.will 'recall
the sweet vaguehope - with - Which he sailed
away, beyond th - e ~narrows, beyond Sandy
Rook, out up6a_thel..brotul,'Avater as mystic
and alluring to him as the Western Sea to
Columbus, and he will own that even the ex
pectption of that hour is more,thah-fuLtilled;, - .
See how'enchanting it is, 'that thelnenitirr
even holds an ancient mariner prattling, as if
you and he were sittings upon the Shore, this
summer-Morifing,l':Orashing idle, i - -feet ,the
cool Water - Sill talking at random of the won
ders beyond the sea. How imperishable-is its
romance l= and'another: and
another! Why not the fleet of. which Para
celstiseung?, • '
"Over _the sea onr galleys west,
With cleaving prows in order brave,
To a speeding wbuf - arid atinndingWave,
A galhuit -- ttrtatnifeitt - • • -
But each ujabore a Ntatelir tent
i nerecedespalen : iriaderitedTo* -
Kept out the . nahen of -the darichrgiirine,
And ruilmnin_ . drooped the:pallet teleoty.
II& fold on fold of the purple flue,
That neither-noon-tide'norstaris
Nor moonlight cold which maketh mad,
.• - t- - -.' - - I:1' 7.T::..TfriTf... 1, . ..'
I„AILYI:EYSILING:JUT
• Might pierce the regal tenement.
.When the sun dawned, oh gay and glad,
We set the sail and piled tic oar ;
But when the ni,ght-wind blow like b- •
For joy of one Osy's vo;) age mere, •
We sang together on the wide ses,
1. - lkt men At yeac.e - bira - p - creck latahree ;
,Each sail was loosed to the wield so tree,
Each helm made sure by the twilight star,
'And in a sleep as calm as death,
We, the voyagers from afar,
• Lay stretched along, each weary crew
In a circle round its wondrous tent
'Whence gleamed soft light and curled rich scent,
• And with light and perfume, mask too ;
;Bco the stars wheeled round,and the darkness past,
:And at morn we started beside the mast,
And still each ship was sailing fast."
,
Beer in its perfect condition 2 —beer mule
from pure malt and hops alone—is generally
looked upon as an 'excellent and healthy
I beverage, but how seldom do we get this in
;London? We ourselves readily admit that a
'moderate use of pure beer is as harmless as
!tea and coffee, but if this pure beer inevitably
contains one substance which is an active
poison-=-namely, the alcohol of spirit—how
'much greater will be the injurious effect of
;an immoderate quantity of sophisticated or
poisoned beer? About 500 persons die an
nually of delirium tremens in England
alone, while a much larger number are at
tacked by the disease. Our most distinguish
ed medical writers agree that about one-third
of the insanity in Great Britain may, with
'certainty, be ascribed to drinking, and we all
know that the children of drunkards are very'
frequently,Adlotic. Quite recently, out of 300
idiots at Massachusetts, 145, or nearly 'hill;
were fimnd to be the children of Imbitual
drunkards. All terrible effects are of
course heightened considerably by the habit
ual Use of poisoned , beverages. In. theery
every kind of beer can be produced by use of
malt and hops alone; no other ingredients are
required when,the process of , brewing is con
ducted by honest ' and clever' men: ' Bat , in
reality what an endless list of injurious Com- ,
pounds have we not detected in the 'widens
beers, porters and ales recently' Submitted to
our investigations! Cream-of tartar, alum,
green vitriol,small quantities Of.C6pper,sOnte
times lead, picric acid, cocenlus .
grains of paradise, coloring matters of
sivauaia
cheaper and more hurtful bitters, together
with the harmless, but still needless com
pounds, liquorice, molasses, coriander, cap
sieuni, carraway seeds, .ginger, salt, malted
boreebeans, &c. ,To this list. already far too
long, we might still add'the names of three
plants, Lednmpalustre. Diyrica gale,-Datura
stramonium, occasionally used to adulterate
beer both at home and abroad.—London
Scientific Review.
451- Lo /13
MUTUAL LIFE , INSURANCA
COMPANY.
NEW YORK.
rum SHEERAN,
LORIIW ANDREWS,)
Jail A. RARDENDERGH,c tate ' Pre " 611
il
HENRY C. FREEBAN, secretary.
Gash .Assets:::::
irsitrzAmzmn. .71111V112-
ALL POLICIES NON-FORFEITABLE.
PREMIUMS PAYABLE IN CASH.
I.ABSES PAID IN CASH.
.
It Itecelvei No Notes and Gives 'None.
•
.
By the en:widow of its ' charter the entire Wring
belongs to policy lioldersould _must be paid' to them in
dividends. or reserved for their greater security„
deeds are made on the contribution plan, and paid arm•
ally, commencing two years from the date of the policy.
It has already made two dividends' amounting- • to'
e num an amount never before equaled during the iirst
three years of any compan.Y.
PERMITS TO TRAVEL GRANTED TF7TH
OUT EXTRA CHARGE. NO POLICY FEE
REQUIRED. FEMALE RISKS TAKEN T
TIIE USUAL, PRINTED RATES, •NO
EXTRA PREMIUM BEING DEMANDED.
A PPlications for all kinde. of policies, life. tge-year /He
m dowreent, terms or cnildren's endowment, - taken. and
all information cheerfully afforded at the
BRANCH OFFICE OF THE CORP/NY,
NO. 408 WALNU r STREET
PHILADELPHIA.
1111. M . BARKER, .Mailaier,
Eastern Department of the State of Pennsylvania.
Particidar attention given to
FIRE AND MARINE RIB
Which, in allinstances, will be placed 1191 rd-clan Cora•
panics of this city. as well as those of known standing in
New Yorriß,,New , s.glaind-and-Ilaitirnore.
ACCIDENTAL ELMS. AND , DiBURANCE ON LIVE
STOCK
carefully. attended to. in leading Companion of that kind.
etriet personal attention to, and prompt deapateb of
brininess entrusted to my care. I hope to merit, and re.
ceire a full share of public Pal:roma& '
31. 31. BARKER,
w 134 No. 08 Walnut Street
rinHE ILIKLIMME INSURANCE COMPANY OF Pall
ADELPII.I4I,
Incorporated in MI. Mutter ParDelliat
INac 508 Walnut street.
tAPITAL San,ooo.
Insures against less or damage by PIRA on House;
Etores and other Buildings, limited or perpetual. and on
Furniture. Goods, Wares and Merchandise in town or
comrav
LOSiIES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID.
Acseta .... ....................:..:..................15911.17776
Invested in the following Securities.
first Mortgages on City Property welt secured..sl.ll,SX 00
United Statm Government ..... 117,000 00
Philadelphia Ca t i m i percent:Loans 75,000 (n
Pennsylvania 000,000 per cent. L ea n... ..... 94,000 00
Pennsylvania adßorids, first and scond
Mortgages. . . . . 85,000 00
Camdsm and Amboy Railroad Company's 6 per
Cent. Loan. . . .. 6.000 00
Philadelphia
0 per Cent. Loan. . . . . 5.000 00
01 ontingdon and BrcatiViur7 . eta 31 . 0r . i.
gage Aonds . . 4,580 00
Zooo ty Pile Insurance compiiijoi Bioa: 1.060 00
Mechanic& Bank Stock....— 4,000 00
C , :mmercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock. 10,000 0.1
Luton Mutual Insurance Company's Stock. 880 00
Eellance burarance Comptuty of Phlladelplaneg
Stoer... •- • . ..... . 8450110
Gat: B ank Sid Oil:ilia . • • . ....... 7,33771
Worth at Par......... $421.177 71
Worth this date at market mice/ •. ...... $432,00 96
DIRECTOBS.
Clem. Tinley. Themes IL Meer%
Wm. Munger.. Samuel Castner.
S amine Sispham. James T.-Young.
1.1. L. Carson. Isaac P. Baker,
Wm. Stevenson, Christian J. Hoffman.
Beni. W. TinsleY. Samuel B. Thomas,
Edward Biter.
CUM TINGLEY. Peesident.
,THONAS C.o' Luz, Secretary.
December 1, 188/. lattri th
WIRE INSIDIANCE , EXCLUBWELY.—THE PEND.
.I 2 sylvania Eire Insurance Company—lncorporated MX
—Charter Perpetual-71%K. 010 Walnut street, opposite in.
doyfindence Squy, fa are. - .' •
,This Companvorably Imown to the community fat
over forty years, eolith:men to insure against ion or dam
ago by fire, on Public or Private Buildin_gs ,, either rerms•
nently or for a limited time. Also, on rnitnre, Stocks
Og (loads and Merchandise generally, on liberal terms. ,
Their Capital , together , with a large Surplus Fund, UM
,vsated in a most careful anner; which enables them to
offeroffer to the insured an undoubted security in, the case of
- -, - - •,_ • DIRECTORS.
I
Dasslellitalthi Jr.. _ John Derverettx,„
Alexander Benson. -:, , . Thomas Smith.
Isaac Hazelhurst, He t: ay:Lit •
Thomas Robins.- • J. Fell.
•• , • Daniel Haddock,' r.
DANIEL SMITH. Jr.. osident.
Warsaw G. Cztormir.. Secretary.:: . . .
NTHELIOPTEMSMIANCE ,COMPANY.—C HVEI
23_
TEE PERPETUAL. . •• ; ; _
___; _
Office, No . 811 WALNUT street. aDoveTtartli Faiths.
Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire. on Build.
ings. either perpetually or for a limited time. Household
Furniture and Merchandise generallYi
Also. Marine Insurance on Vessels Cargoes and
Freights. .I.afaxill Insurance fa al_d_harts of the Union.
. _ , ... . DDMOTORS.
-I
'Wm.-Esher. - 7, -- --- -- 7- - . -- .. --- Peter Sieger. ,
D. Luther •:'-' "; '• • - •J. E. Baum,
i Lewis Aneeppled. , ~,. Win. F.. Dean..
I John R. 81a.8140n. ' - '- ' ' ' John Ketcham..
HMIs Pearson. " . ; John B. He
WM, t;
•,. • , -F3l Pres
43Elt.' .; en •
' . WM. F. DREW. Vice add(
.___. ..._ .
Wi%'S!A'B~aiu. Seorelarv.
'LIME INSURANCE COMPANLNOvIII3/10.411
- - PS3LADELPmA. " - •
B'INB - u,NAN - crE m.914.p/vEx;ir:
O r ruirlA l4 lLnaraoiii Jcduz. ,verutan.
Herczypywirie Woodruff:
EnralhiCal, Edw •
Jno. Reader, Jr..
'Aft Buzbr.
CHAS. RlOHAEMY.Wiraddent:
Wu.xsua LBLiaciamiD.Boaretarn
Poisoned Beers /
INECIIIECABICk.
el 11 - A.—tent.
1a294u.t.1%.01
-14010MIWIRO -LMAITRILSR:
_ _
;(.17: , .'..- - .:; .5 ...i . -.:7 , :: 1 113011 1 101111/11111111b ,: •: - '
1829:44werkti... - '
. . .A.T4
FIRE. INSURANCE iNSURANCE COMPANY
. PHILADELPHIAy
, t
, S.
Km 435, and 437 , Che stnu t., Si
....._., ,
•
. - . *Beets on January iti lam;
$2,0085 740' 09
,Capital..,
'Accrued moms
Premiums— . ............ ....... ....... ..... . . .1.04.2,2 lid
„
UNSETTLED CLA W& INCOME FOR UN
MAU 2a, VOA%
Losses Paid Since , 1820 Over
•
: .. $5,500,0 ,
00
, __ ~
Perpetual sad Temporary Policies oft LAIIMIrid Terms)
DIRECTOR& •
I
Otas. . Bancker.
Clew gaJes„ .
Tobias Wavier . ' ' Alfred FMK
Manniet fil _Tsui, ' Fru. W.: Lewis. M. D.;
Geo. W . rucharda. , Thomsul Sparks.
.Traso Lea. • ~„.._ _
____ ; Wra. 0. Grant.'
OrieuiLkas N. BANWIDER. Preddreit.
„_ GEO L FALEB, Vico Preadult. - '
-- miaow. srodLLlßTEß.Becretary_oro tam..
__ _
Exceet at I.e.,eirtrton. Reutuckr.tbis Oomularr has nu
AAaacies,W,est of Tiftaterrab. f . • . . fell -
irdAWARE . I2II3TIIAJ.I3AFE
vat r i iii i, 4 l W./Parted by the beinslatare of Renal*
' S. E. cornet tTEEIRD.,!intI WALNUT Street'.
MokRII ,4e iftANCES
O ! R .2,Y1 13111 !* P ar Wrig it tarM i .9g,Pla Worie.
El
?err& blears .c19e14 lake Seel,444. o "glege tO
Mem Wan.
~;., ; , PERE INKOLANCEB.
On Store.. Dwegunp~. dca;
f SETS DETRE COMPANY.
November L 1687. ,
8503.000 United States Five Per CenE.Lealf.
104Irs . $201.000 0,.
Mil,ooo United •
. 184.400 00
50.003 'United Stater-7 810 Per Cant Loan.
Treasury Notes_ ...,.. Imre' 00
MeV State of Penzuwvania Per ea 7.'
, 105.0 0 0 City of PhiladelpiaW
00
Loan lexemotamtax.).. .. ammo 'OO
80;086 State pf
_Mx • Per ua.:
Loan. . . . . • 1.000 . 00
20.000 Pennsylvania Rafkoad First fort. .
renns.o_ gage kii=r2l4.2,3onda.'. . ...... ?5.000 ..
_sago )31% PerWiiTho_ =8:4215' 01
15000 westerntelv
_nada Rallroad . eil
Per Cent. Bonds (Pemzut. RR.
• guarantee). . 0.08 MI
same oboe of Tenn essee Five Per Cent.
15.000 Loan OO
Me) State of * Tel.:aim:no Six Per Cent.
Loan.. . .t.......::'. . 4.210 0
MOW 800 share; (Mc
Company. Principal and interest
•
guaranteed by the City of Phila.
amnia 15.00) - 00
7.503 150 shares stock PernfolTania
road Company..., - 7,e00 00
MOO 100 shares stoat Nortnl4cm . s3l . 7tzna
Railroad Compaany,.,...._., 8000 00
20.000 80 shares, .ateck. Ph il adelphia . and
Southern Mail Steamahip Co 15.000 00
WL9OO Loafs; on Band and Mortgage. Brat
liens on City Props:lle.. ....... 201,900 00
81.101.400 PAZ Market Value $1.1.026802 50
Cost. 151.089.072 22.
Real Retata....„. MAO 00
Bills Receiva ble for Insurances
made...................
MAUS 6
Balances due at Aonclee—Pre.
minims on Marine follcieii—Ae.
mad Interest. and other debts
Ana the comoany,...• 43.834 as
Stock and 11cripl1 sundry
- raneeand- er Companies.
eati
CO. Eatlmated value. 3,017 00
Ll ........ ....11103, 6 / 1 1;
109.311®
€1 1 .507,005 1
_____DTORS; _ ..._ _
.orces 0. C . , James and.
John C. Davis, Samuel% H • Stokes.
E.dnpand A. Baader. James Trissudr.
- WillnaltHamesstg,
Tileophilm; Faradic' s. Jacob P. Jonah
Hugh Craig, James D. hleFarland,
Edward Darlington. Joshua P. Eyre.
John R. Femora. John D. Taylor.
H. Jones Brooke. Spencer MeDvaine.
Henry Sloan. Henry C. Hallett, Jr..
Owlye 0. Leper; George W. Bernadon t
Wiifiam G. Boulton. John B. Semple. Fittailarilh.
Edward Latonrcade. D. T. Morgan.
,Jacob Riegel. ii. - B,Serger,_ _
THOSULEI C.. HAPM. Wadden%
JOHN C. DAVIS, y/ce Precidont.
HENRY LYLBUItN, ecretary_ . N
HENRY BAT...L. Asslstaut : "Saaratary. 665 to oat
FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PHILADEL
Eohia. Inrporated March 21. bZaO. 'Offic. --
34 NFifth !treat
and
uaehold Farnitere and &smal l' s=
v°;!i: P y generally, from Loss by
, Fire an tba City of
C ' r rbiladeipnia only.)1
Statement of the Assets of the Associatkm
January brt, 18S3. published in compliance with the pna•
visions of an Assembly of April sth, 1843,
Benda and Mortgages on Property in the : W
0 f Philadelphia 0n1y.......... ........ .. .. 111.1176.111 t 17 I
Ground Rents 18,814 93
Real E5tate.:....'51.74417
Furniture and Fixtures of . . ... SAM 03
U. 8. 590 Registered Bonds . 45.000 00
Cash on hand...... ...... .......... ....... 81.873 11
Total ...... .....
William IL Hamilton, Opel BParhaut' -
Peter A. Keyser. r. Bower.
John Carrow. ease Ligh= •
Geome Yo,- Robert alh
Joreph B. La 33. Peter Armbruster.
Lori P. COSti.— ALB—Dickinson.
Pffor amson.
Mt H. HAMILTON President
SAMUEL SPAItHAVhI. Vice Ereddent.
WLL T. MOILER. 800ratar9.
TINITED
AD FIR EELP MENS INSURANCE COMPANY OF
II NI
Tlas Company takes risks at the lowed rates consistent
ith safety, and confines its business exclusively to
FIRE INSURANCE IN
FRIATHE CITY OF PHILADEL.
OFFICE—No. 723 Arch Street. Fourth National Bank
Building.
DIRECTORS:
Thonias J. Martin. Charles B. Smith.
John, Alberta' Kin&
Wm. M. Henry Bumm.
James tiongani -Jams Wood.
William Wenn. John Shallcrors.
James Jenner,_ • J. Henry Auskin.
Ale:ander T. Dickson. Hugh mulligan.
Albert C. Roberts Philip Fitzpatrick.
CON B. ANDRESS, Pilseadent.
Wx. IL Romer. Treas. W.m.'ll. Feats. Seel.
COUNTY. FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.-op,
flee. No. 110 South Fourth street, below Chestnut.
-The Fire Insurance Companyof the County of
&lob La," Incorporated by the Legislature of Penneylya.
nie in - M, for Indemnity agalnitiou or damage by lire.
erolnervely.
CHARTER PERPETUAL.
This old and reliable imititution.with ample capita land
centingent fund c&nfully invested, continues to bosuns
n.iloinge, furniture, merchandise...ha, either permanently
ox fora limited time. agaitutt loss or damage bykg the
forest rates consistent with the absolute safety af ens.
toners.
adlusted and ald with all possible despatch;
Diitra+row : _
ans. J.' gutter. Andretc_FL Mau
henry Budd. James rt. M.
John Rom. Edwin L, °stet.
Jooeph Moore, I Robert V. Ilisakey. Jr.,
George Bleck& Mork Devine.- -
'8 J SUTTER, President,
HENRY RUDD, Vice-President.
linen met Horasomnr., Secretary and Treasurer.
piERENIX ~.114suatAlias cobtrAny
OF PECILADELPELL
iNCORPORATED IRI4-..CHARTER PERPETUAL.
No. 224 WALNUT 'treat. opposite the Exchange.
This COmpany insures from tones or damage bY
liberal terms. on-buildings. nierehanthe, furnitlirth
dm., for limited periOdn and permanently on buildings b!
ea or premium
1. he' Company has been In active operation for morill
than, sixty . „yours,. during , which all Jones have bee.
prOMP47 ILOJI,IteCH REidea u tp ar
VOdie. David Litrit im
M. B. shon
John • _ Thos. fl. AMU%
William S. Grant. A. B. Menem";
Robert Leming. - Edmond Casunon.
D. Clark Wharton, flamueA
LawrenceLewfa r. Louie OR Norris.
WUCHERER.Prealdenta
SAMUEL WiiCIPDX, Secretary. . ,
JFFERBON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHI
'adeJidda-001M No. ill North Fifth Istr!ata) ne 4l2
Market street L , ~, er , t .. . . ~Jj
Inommoratedb, Ina Letigledpre of Pecusylvaciin. Char.
ter Perpetrad. • turPital - and is 18168,004 Make In
onrance against Lon or DamagebY Me op radio o
vete Bulldia",,
favorable prom
........." „....'
__
1
Wrn. , .......cnia.vr.:yi , p , -t. . Edwelvd.P. mem; t . t - 1
wnel,retenolik Frederick Ladner:- •
John F. Belaterungi ' r.rl J, Adam J. Glass. . , .
Henry Tromoner. Hicory__Delany.
Jacob SohandehL - John rainett,_-L • ' ~ r
Frederick Doll. —-- , T - • chrldianD, MIX
Simnel Indere " '' • , -, • 'George E. Fort. - '
~ • W- I J . D. Gardner.
Ii ni. Aell_
_AMNIA,' Preddent.
N !FNFEABON' , lTloe.Preekleid;
Pirrul. E. GOLacamr.l3earetary and %remora.
A KIIRIGArt VDIIII INsueenan -ooge f oor. moos,
ja. pasted ).111An.-_43borter perspetaaL. • . . .
No. 810 WALNUT street,. abOTO I ”.'ai Philadelphia._
Having S am lilmtvistwe an d . gurplas taht
lopes
voted in I kmoz•u. d: continue to bt• •
ore al dWe Korai. turbi '',umirchandloo. vends
sort; and • • • +and•il
w alosuill
. roPottl:
Thomi . tip 4, 1
_, . , NarkDutrib.
John W . . . W. 1 7 04#1.
Monis. • •
' aba " -- L iVinWii - • , .
trit b i
THOBIAB . R. BEAM. Predisal:
alariairO, lk Chilwrosahniacelan.
28-
.]. "Avezzon-AiAxam..' -
ITAMEB A. FREEMAN: ATAMONW%
• Met. 422. A UT street.
ill:Z.riLL. SAM Or lit at. ESPATIB PPM: Elt
sato. on wEriNzati at 12 OWO4OIOOII. at the
lueltt•e targ—
shareeVri.rd Mutual °ICC°. .• _
800 shares Philadelphia and Tidioute Island Oil C 3.
HO shares Silver Farm Petroleum 011 Co.
100 therm ti Ueghenv and Walnut Bend Oil Co.
Co.. shares }lapel 1. arm OR Co.
3 0.0 /hares Maguire Petroleum Co.
WA she ell Red Mountain Coal and Improvement Co.
ro. 1233 It SECoND BT.—Three story brick store and
dwelling: with back builditw. lot lo by feet. Clear of
imumbrance. Orphans' o,u7t lilaw.—.Estatkof Charles'
Sheble,deed.
tio. 1255 CaDWATADER'ST.-Threeetory brick house
and lot, 16 by 70 feet. Clear of incumbraoce Orphans`
Court Sate.- Same Atetate.' ,
METH ST.-Large lot of
_ground, at the N. W. corner
of Erie avenue. 140 feet on kifth et. and 103 on Erie ay.
OrvhantelOottrt Sale-Sane Estate. •• .
BUlLiDlNO'Ltirs.. , 3 tote. at the E Corner of Thomp
son and birch ettLe 25th Ward, each 20 by 125 feet. Or
phan*. Glum Sale-lodate of Joh 6 Ct.opett.
711051 PEON•tiT —a bendies t tots, bore William at,
2rth Word. each 21 by 121 ( cut deep Orphans' Court
Sate-Same Estate.
dearablo'buildlna lot, moan of Walnut st..
Btll ard. 7
28it tic iBB he • cep . to asp Ili FL. Orphans.
.9.-,m
Court Satalr or linger in 'we.
No. 4 Wool.)6aND T• RAtlil --4edern thieoldery
rough-cast dwe ling, with back bulldart4l. Lass tae
inodern conveniences:l.A oy 115 .oet. Um,* of' truant-
Grant& bale at solo , , ••
frampleitatorsin nT three4tory bilek dwel
ling with side yard, lot 120 by Bo feet to 6m Ire St .7 th
a two-story frame static (routing thou', ot. a üblect to d 566
groundrent nor atone.' ,
11TH ST.-A Pe Sable bolldine lot,bsloor titan] a"..
17 by 75 feet .Clear of f eeumbrance; Kale absolute
No. .2117. _
ItA:.E.I. URI) ,-Threat4t9 orick
dwelling vvltlt back building, lot SO 152 foot to- area s'.
Orphans' Court Sale---Altafo , a> -James Brown, dew d,•
sll4' PER ANN U td. , -Oroand tent out of a lot of gromol
19 by 100 fen. , on west inde of dread ; et, a b ove P arr i s h i t
Iffaster's:Perernptc, I, Sate.
frenit'PrlftANt.l 14.-oronnd rent out o' a 'at of ground
66 by ,95 feet. on N. side of Cirmn ahoy., lino et. Mas
ter* Peremptory Sate...as 1., ,
ic) PER ANNUM-oround rent , ut of a bit of groom&
street, at the t3..W. corner 17th , And Mt Vernon tits
Mae •PArertinplory Sate__ _ _ _ , .
Gt.t/UND . RENT of ssolper annum,
ont of a lot. of groped ant en west side of St, above
IHamond at; 15 by WS feet: Alta:4..ll'r3re** port/ sidra
.4114.11.1ND . .tne.NR.0r 8368,P, Nati ed 4 (int of a tot on,
itAllol7#f et:. abovio av 18by 100 foet itatifrr's
db*otute Sale
11111.PDEEMARLE GROC,SD REQT or 124$ per annum,
outnf a lot On. th sr., ne.ow blettiond st.. 12 by
100 feet. Masters i'erernnUnv Sale.
Ver - ...4 , EV. the abbot, Ofrouruf LiPaV arc tele/1 wired
and punctually .Pertd.
4T.H. ' 111
AND CHERRY Tw,t-A,' valuable Ilesiness pro
petty.. suitable for- omsnufactory. at the N.; E. corner of
Fourths end Cherry 'itreets; known as • Zion's German
Lutberan Lbinrcb,” lot 125 feet on Four th street, as ft
on (,herg street. Clear of Incumbrance. rlan at the
store. Sal nbv order of the Courtsf Camtum6Pleae.7'
CATALOGVEri 11E41/Y ON 13ATURDQY,
_ _ RIVATE ;BALE.
*valuable property P
neat Eburtb and Walnut.
A valuable business property. No.Bll arch street.
Bult.blrftfrOrf.-41, Llandsonte Manion. OLI 'main n.
lot 66 bY Mieet
TROMBB-dr-SONS.-AWIIO.NR- Eta. . •
- . --- Natc - ttraxitil4l - Binitb 1 7 04`, tifistreet--
_ _SALES OF IdTCHin AND. Raab btsPAfE
VW" Public sales at the Philadelphia Exchamce EVARY
TUESDAY, at 12 o'clock. • ';
Handblbe of each propertY fissile separately. in
addition to which we. publish. un the .Sat to day , previous
to each tale, one thousand calatogue-, in painkh.ot term,
paving lull due. iptions - et .11 tbs. plop .rte to be ,opf on
the FOLLOWING. ,TUFSD AY, and a tof Real 10.. tate
at Pritate Sale. `,
SD:' Oar sales are alio advertised in the.
nen sp,A)ert N owl if y rat °AN, Panes, tAnGEE LEGAL
iNTELLIGENOEEL iNQUIREIL AGE. ' EVENING BULLETIN.
EVENING TALEURAV/I. LvETIMA.N bEIIIOIIAT. &11.
1 Enrol ure Sal, sat the Auction titoie EVERY
THURSDAY.
W Sales at Residences receive especial attention.
- •
Peremptory F *IA
STEA utiAT. ti
CliaN N.
Ttie-PDAY, i-CPTESIBER 8.
At 12 o'clock 1 0.0, will be . o dat t.yhiw &ale. with mt
reserve at th Prilsdelphla I. a Lange th steam ferry
boat known. at th e WIT LIAM b longing
t. the Raighn.s oint awl hi a Ferr tiompalY.
The host LI3 ES 9 10 fait one; 29 819 lent in breadth, 6 1:10
feet deep; measures .152 94 100 t Es; low ore sate . 0441111
3 Indio diem ter. 7 fe t at oko v ith low & reseal;
boiler.l4 feet long, 6,1 feet dia-neto . • - .
1M" be elle is peremp' My, a. the booti. too em all for
the present want+. of la.e_l..oru.iitUY, •
Mry be examined on a., n at the of11:0 tb
Company. at . lisighti"e Point; at Clam N, J.
.BLNT/NG. BUBBOROW t CO., AUCTIONEERS,
Noe. 832 and 234351 &BRE r street, corner Mank
Successors tc John B. Moots &Co - •
LARGE POSITIVE SALE OF FitEN,IFI, nAXONX.
BRIT/gli-AND-ATALIAALLIRY_GLAWS,..sIo.
O' It.OND IX MO _NINO; H.
'August 2l 'at 10 o'clock. on four months' credit.
Its lines Paris ,Veil Bare:vest and Binnblzines. •
Full linen Paris 54 an , 8-4 &muse ne Pu -
Full lines Paris Popilii.ed ;:t1 Po, eline Arjutirca. •
lines Biarritz Empress Cloth and ut^litte Ottih,
'Ol the' celebrated =Mutat:Vire of L. MAILL AK >J & CO.
Pieces Black and Colo ed Mohaire. Alpacas and Co.
bnrge
do. Paris Plain and Printed 'Merinoea
do. kancy Ginghttus, atilt and Wool Plaids. Per.
Eli. n 6.•
BM , ' B. Stl AWLS, &a.
Pieces Lyons.Tha -Ic and t;olorsd rose Silks. •
Pull Imes Woolf n, broche and Stella its Maud!.
Aa, &c.
—A LSO
Full lines Balmosal azd Hoop Ekirts, Shirts and
Bistro e.
Full lines Paris Dro.aned Cb , ak Trim min's. Braidsottc.
Fun linos Ribbons. Gloves, Ca brel an, Tie., N
I' all lines White Good, llounefornhu ing Luton (loads.
&c &c.
LAE.GE.P.S.REMMORY SALE , OF BOOTS, BOOM
G BAGS, &c.
ON- Tt ,ESOA.I MONNINO,,
Sept. I, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit.
LARGE POSITIVE SALE 'OF BRITR3 • ',ERERELT.,
VERA:LAN! AN; i'DOME£3IIO .DIIV. GOODS.
, UN . TRUESDAX MORNING. ,
Rept.' at 10 o'clock: ou fourmontlie czot it. '
ABTIN. BROTHERS, ATICT(ONEEItti,' •
p (Lately Selenium f0r..111 .Thomas 411, Sons) ,
N0:.520 'UNLIT street : Year enhanc e from Minor.
Our Regular Weekly claire of llounehcld Furniture &c,
at the AUC , iOD Rooms., wilt b,held on WELINEcHAY,
Inutead of Monday, m heretofore.
Bale Nty 240 Waseca sire
HANDSOME WALNI) CURNir IRE, ROdEWOOD
PIANu, MANTEL' • MIRROR, eIRaPRJOF SAFE,
HANDhOME VELVET CARPETS &c., sac.
. ON TUESDAY. MORNING.'
Sept 1, at 10 o'clock, at No 2000 Wallace etreet,bY
catalogue, the entice .Forniture, cotaPriang—Rosewood
and Brotatalle Parlor Butt, superior Walnut Chamber
urnituro, Oak Inning Room Furniture, Ronewond Plano
Eerie, .Prencli Plate Mantel -Mirror, Fireproof Client, by
Evans & Watson ;Handsome Velvet and Wunsch, Car
nets, Refrigerator, Gook' , g Utennile„Ac.
May be men early on tho morning of sale.
Peremptory Salo No. 2:212 and 2214 Filbert !Arent.
SIX VALUABLE SYEA e: EN 'UN k.S• 46D BOILERS.
ON SATURDAY MORNING.
Sept. kat 10 o'olock, by catalogue.' at No. 2212 and 2214
Filbert street, without reserve, nix valuable Steam En
gines, of the following power-18, 15 12, 9, 6 and 4 hor.e;
large Portable Boners. three Stationary Boilers, two
Portable Boiler!, Smoke Stacie, Framed, Sic.
May be seen at any time.
MHE PRINCIPAL MO VEY ESTABLISHMENT—
S. E. corner of SIXTH and BACC streets.
Money advanced on ilierchandiss Reuel ally—Watchee,
Jewelry, a lamerp e, Gold and Silver r'eate. and on all
artic,es of value. for any sengtu of time agreed on.
WATCHED ANDJaWEI.KY Ai PRI VA'T'E SALE.
Fine Gold Hunting (Jae° Double B Atom and open Pace
Prigliele. American and Bvise Patent Lever Watches;
Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lepine Watches;
Fine Gold Duplex and other IVetche. • Fite +liver Haut
ing Case and Open Fac, English, Alnerie.an and . ‘witse
Patent Lever and Lepine Watchne; llotn•le Case English
Quartler and other Watchee; Lredies` Fancy Watches;
Diamond Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; Studs;
Arc.; Yoe Gold Ch,me,• Medallieq. ,• Bracelets; Scarf
Pins: Breastpins ; ); Pencil Cameo and Jewelry
generally , .
FOR SALE.—A large aud valuable Fireproof Chest,
suitable for a Jeweler ; co,t $650
Also, several Lots in South Camden:Fifth and Cheetnut
et: eebs.
D AMS & 'HARVEY, AUCTIONEERS
Late with t. Thonuts ' & Sone.
Stere N 0.421 WAL,AU t etrßet. - • ,
Rent Entruri.e on Library- street.
Sale No: 421 Walnut street
SUPERIOR FURNITURE.— • BOOKCASES,' ONTIOE,
_CARPEArs. BS uai
~, • ,
ON` TIJESEAIi s MORNING.
At 10 o'clock. , at the, auction!, liter% `No 4 LWalntitet..
euperior Furnfirmelßookcasea s Walnut Unice ka and
Tablet , . pett. fine Oil Oloom.JFeather , Bea, flume`
keeping Ar Wee ,&c. _
D.; hicCLELS do GU..
C•, , 1; fr 0'; YAUCTIONLY.III3, •
' No. 506 MARA ET street
SALE OF 1400 CAt3l. 8 HooTl3. w 11048; 'BROGANS.
• . 11,1..510E4MA ac.,. •
• •ON MONDAY 510$.V1NG
• August .31. commencing at Jae 'look we will, sell by
cata.ogne. for eash.'ailarise , acid liesirable ssortmont of
BOokis, hoes ttrogane latorole4-,dlo. •
Al-o. Wm:atm% - .Mikes?' laud' Children's City made
rpriotimis _BIRCH • fit, IJN4: 4 ALIGTIONDERS AND
1. C'.MN•IBsIor SIZE lIA4TB,
• ' ' N 0.4110 CtIII3I74VD etroet • •
• RotitrEmtrance NO. 1101 treat.
HOUSEHOLD , FIJiaNITURE. tiF• ..Vai;t3( DRSCRIP
,TION DEUDIVED (;ONSIGNINENT•
Sales ofFtnniture et Dwellings attended to on the most
retutona - ble,termn. , --
BY BARiurr c0...AuG5v01im9N,,,,,, •
- ALCT ore
O. MO3I4.IMET Over, c maw' of B.lo.listrect.
Cook adyanced on conelera,onte without (Jahn charge'.
BY B.'sc oyw„
. , EUJP '
PI:1 aRT',04.1.1.,LE8. • "
No.' hr2o CHESTNUT super. PlOutorobja
aP , Iv ASTIBRIDGE At IVIONI:Etts. r
11 No 505 Nl' KKET Week •yhove Fifth.
copAßTNEitsit up*
fIIHE PARTNERSHIP HERETOFORE ''EXISTING
between CHARLES CABOT, JOHN F. CABO C and
EDWARD J. .ETT/NG. trading in 'the city of Philadel
phia a 8 " CABOT 4 ETTiNG;mand In' the city of New
- York as "CABOT - it C 0.," 18 this . day 'dh3so ived.
- • •• JOHN F. (JABOT.
EDWARD J. -ETT.INCI.
Pinr..nnttrilinatnitualg2&lBCB.: - ---
THE LEON Cglidl.llBlllON AND'BROKERA.GE DVS'.
nese will be carried on. by the suluctiber.
• . • EDWARD J. ErriNG.
. . No.4lß.Walnut *toot,
• '-Auguat 22d. Thal • ' auiD.d&Wlt• •
ratiosltiVET2s - CASEI3 - I. I EW'CROP A VARIOUB
gnaw.
CO.. US South wan ammo
WOK 111411714 i
Manufaetureie, Commlaelott Merohati*
Grain Dealers.
. •
LASOP. AND COMMODIOUS
Two-Story Brick Building
On WathingUni Avenue, wenn( Twentieth It.;
155 feet front and 150 feet deep to. Alter street. • Cart be
divided. Baltimore Itailfoad passes the property.
Possession at once. • . • •
LUKESS & MONTGOME*I",
1035 Beach etreet, abOlre Laurel.
anB P&P?, 411{0.
CRESSE. REAL ESTATE AGE N T.
WASIIINGI ON HOUSE, WARRINGTON ST"
• • CAPE ISLAND N. J
Seal Estate bought and sold. Persons desirous of .rent
log cottages during the season will address or. applygas
Respectfully refer: Charles A. Rubicam. Er 4„ 'Maly C.
urnmrEso., Francis Melly...in. h:sq.; and .Augusttus ,
tin% Eeq. - • • ,
LARGE AND VALUABLE LOT •OF , GROUND FOR
9ale-102 feet on Seventh and tat feet on Yranklba
stt ere. above Thompson. • NATHAN W. EWE.
au2a-6t• „ 1804 N. 13eventh.streOLli
• FOE -.SALE—A,..VERY.DEEn.RABLE ..1301IBLZ
17*. 11011 PC; recently put in perfect order. Wainixt street.
" West- Phhedclpbta., , Lot 50 feetiront: 87.030 , cea
r* main an.martgage Adirregc I:4;thie office.. aued.6t!
le FOR BALE, WITH POBagnglO'N". -- A -VERY
Im pertor , four-story dvrellinneith, t o Yard—No.
" ' 1488 South Fenn square, near leant
_Applzjo.
• - wraiftei.. ---
n&r.m.w.tll , N 0.834 Walnut streetaligtory.
e FOR SAS.FtDWE LLINGB.— No.
pmE ST.
d..:
.~31
.
i No7llBorth Nineteenth Street
dual Thirteenth street.
WA
Hilton street:
1021,• 'UK, and lOW South Eighteenth if.%
705 Rooth Second street,,titoro.
, • . 1 grgAcarnille retreat.. Apply hi COPPUC&
ch JORDAN, 488 Walnut erroet.,
L & Ft It SALE — THE 'FiEnumaToßy BRICK REST
' F., nee. with three 'dory double back buildings` and 9
et ;a id° side.yark mituato, No. 800 Martha! street.
below Spring eittdeglit. & tiONSi
WALNUT. ISTBEE'T--FOR. t ALE OR RERT.;.> A.
handsome residence, 26 • 'foot • front. with
Btatne ard , —. Carriage ' Howe, and • Lot.
feet deep% with ride-light on a 30 feet
wide attest; situate No. 912. Walnut street,'
convenience and is in good order. J. M. 6LbilfEY do
BUNS, 568:Vireirint street.' . ' •
.
- PHIGADEUPWA , 4 7 O_, R> S , C/44--TEDB
Handsome Stone Residenee,,buut In.tho best ro at.
nes with every converdsztes, and largo lot disarm,
athlete bro. =South Fortyesoqnd street. one of the best
locatione in 'West Philadelphia % J. • salnitatZY , dl
seB Walnut street..— t • =
. - - • .
lE. TOR BALE—TIM HANDSOME THREE.STORY
brick Residence, with attics, three.stary double back
but dings,, every convenience and toot .side yard„
Nixing North Nineteenth street. J. M. GUMMAC do Boriß.
MIS Walnut street. , , • . - .
inWEST PIIILADELPITIL—FOR HOD
!! ern Cottager Residence with every convenience and"
desirably located on Locust street noar Tlurtsrserr
mak street: J. at, tiummEy & SONS, No. 60S Walnut
"ICEN'ksv
FOR RENT. ,
Pre:a:tins 809 Chestnut Street,
NOR S tORZ OR OFFICE.
co V2 , ofr r amn a l Mr* Room, au ma fora Comma:Obi
'RADIX OF THE REPUBLIC,
HANDSOME COTTAGES, n
ioely, F'urarlished,
To Bent for the Summei Season.
APPLY OR ADDRESS
-A..11-L,,-C-RE SSE,
WASHING" ON HOUSE,
Washington Bt., Cape Islazuli
,1318 84 .
et:„TOR RENTS-AN OLD AND - WELL7 , ESTAO;:,
Hated Confectionery. No. 704 South 1 d, 3econ
Goodmill and , Fixtures for sate::Owe movir_tit to ,
the country. Apply on the Pretnides or to Ur .WHOInAft.,
& SONS. 139 land 1 1 South' rOurth street. • att27 St"'
fiaMARKET AND FOURTM ISITREETB,‘LBTORM
gotagEn AT CORNER '/'0 LET. Apply eit
No: 805 marketitreet.
Dann from', /OA° /I O'clOCk.:;.
TO WENT—No.IO HAMILTON TERBA.O WEST
Philadelphia. Large yard, tine shada.'&e.
- ate postegaion.. , Apply 'text 'door above. , au4 tf¢
15. FOR RENT—TEE S CORE AND DWELLING ON
North Broad street, S. E. corner of Poplar street: Haa
long been established in the grocery. and Provision
buginees. J. N. GUMMY As SON/3, 508 Walnut street
lc• WANTE t TO RENT—A DWELLING BETWEEN'
la Race and Rine, and Tenth and Twentieth drubs..
Rent not to exceed 8800 per annum. J. M. GENNEIC
80Nn 308. Walnut strcet. •
o RENT—DWELLINGS:.
T
No. 421 South '1 hirteenth street."
. 113-Arelt-street.
No. 1338 Oxford street.
Store and Daiellingeltlehinoild. -
All n odern hnprovemonte.
immediate noereaelon: Apply to ' • •
t)OPZIJO)I & JORDAN.
433 Walnut street.
. .
W.tMMI•
—WANTED TO- PUROHASE—A,-GENTEIIa,
dwelling: between Pinoand Chestnut streeta..ssrest
,of Broad.street, Price, $l2 000 to Sib,ooo. •
• ' ' MULEA.N dc SCOTT,
No. 222 South Fourth streak •
WANTED TO PURCHASE—A MODERATE.:
Plzi d modern home, eltuat d West of Broad street,'
and between Pino and Wabitnt etreota. Addreea Box
1.602 Pi:Abdo. Poetoffice. au2.0.43V
VrANTED—BY AN ENERGETIC YOUNG MAN
h good business qualifications and addresha
situation in which ho could. make himself generalist ,
useful. dalarp o not so much of, an object as a permanent
situation •. has served in the late war with ..conaiderable
credit to himself; can furnistrundotibted - reference.' Ad.
dress "ENERGY,. BIILI f ErI-N °Rice. . aura
ANTED.—ACTIVE
;n jj °ic iprna
IN
SURANCE COMPANY, thiacity and
.adjoining coon-,
tlee B pply at the office of the doirAiny. -
B. K. ES Odneral Agent,
aulOon f 3n24 Corner Fourth an Library Ste.. Plana;
AYERII OATIZIAWM .
ALL TEM
PURPOSEFSO ft
OF A LAXA. •
TIVEYEDICDIE.—Perhapt
one medicine, is so univer
v required by 'everybody
reathartiecnor was - ever- - 7
before' so universally
Pted into in every .
(mtry ,and among all
(asses, as thin mild' but etil
mt purgative Pill. The
lone reason is, that it in a
to reliable and far more .„
- effectual remedy than any
other. , Those who have
it eared them; those who have not.
-.---. cures their noighbore and friends, and AR
know that what it does once it does always—that it never
fails through any fault or; neglect of its composition. We
have thousands upon thousands of certificates of their re.
111Tnkablii cures of the following cTflainbi, but such
Imiree are known in every neighborhood. and we need not
publish them: , Adapted to all ages and conditions in- all '
'clin.ates; containing neither calomel or any deleteAores
drug, they may betaken with safety by anybody. - Their' '
anger coating preservea them ever freak and makes them •
11deasant to take, while bedre purely v egetable no llatnk"
tan =y
arise from their nee in ell=
They operate bytheir powerful nonce Oethe inter.
sal-visero.,to purify; the blood Jurd eddranlen .
'action—removehealth the obstructions of, the stomach.
_ b °realm of the bednrestoringtheinc,Z;_
irrttegn ar action to health, and by correcting, wherever
wy lankt. such derangements as are the-first mi,"
• )kinuttrdirections are given in the Wrapper en ` the bo • -
- for the following complaints, which these Pills rapidly„
For Drerarera or, lannuravion, larruntonnut. Lars.,
'oven and Lose or Arrnrrrn, they should be taken mode&
at , lyto stimulate . 00, Linn/lath, . and'. restore , Its healthlf.7
tone and action.
otli,Vrratlolstri,:trim and Its
Ora AIEADAanE,, SIDE lI.EADALWE, JAMMU= gir, Gapes
gineuses, BILIOUS Corso Ando 811-101n3 'IOW • '
phoidd be judiciously taken tor each. ease, to correct ,the.
diseased action or remove the obstructions which `cane
For DYinnillant or Drartiners. batoniimild - dose IS gata! -
orally require& - , tt T 1
For linktnwntor, Gorr, Patamr. arm* di rite'.
13 Fara. PAIN ix ELIE SIDE, DADE and Lone , e _
be continuously takenus require& to change the din aced
action of the system. With such aange these complaints
disaPPear.
For Moran aud Ththreiesioa
te ehotai .be
taken in large , and frequent doses to ptuduee e effeof
a drantiepurge.. .'• Ali • ," • ,"7 . 7
For Serenrearier ii , large'dos'eah falcate; as it pie:
duces the desired effect by sympathy:, t. ,
As DOMED ra.r.,=take one or 'two' te promote
digestion and relieve the ettimach.D,,,j . , ,
An occasional dose adnildAtbil the 'eto %War
Int° ilealthY.Laetbniclusterfisihepne and Yrivigturatec , , -
the system , assts it Ls ottenkavantageoue where no
rims dmangemett exista. , tz•Orie feebi; tolerably walls • •
often finds that a'doee of these Ftqa makes him feel de.
dedly better, from theireleaosing and renovating end
on thedigestketLapparatus.
DR. J. 111. AIME &ADO.; `Practical Chemists, Lowell. '
3,13AR1K - 4fl CO.. Pldr4 WholeedeUantir.
• •
IPC EW GRENOBLE -WALMITSI—ar =MI %NEW
4-`• en* BottibuilllfFWaluitto far ,
sale by uOS. EL OPIUM Ma a CO. 03 &nth- uusirsplt
• s css • • 5+ ANcss 4e. it. _
▪ extinct Will aWnt of excelleut Beef Ina an a
ren_mk titin....eswars.on hand Alla for ode bY• iCkaatlV
ouMplg.es tad South Delaware Javelins. , _
imPERIAL -FRENCI-PSDNED.-eu-Aahma IN TIM
earmbrters and tiLt 47_ boxes, imported and evenWe by
JO& a ausausit sup. lie Boetb Delaware u