_ ft110"' POLITICAL. Large Meeting of Manufacturers and Workingmen: A meeting of the manufacturers and "working men of the Third Congressional District was held last evening at Howard and Oxford streets." There was an immense turnout of peoole, and the as semblage was ono of the largest over witnessed in the District A huge stand was erected in the yard of the carpet-weaving establishment of John Doman, and it was gaily decorated with flags and lanterns. The meeting was called to order by Richard Wildey, Esq., and the following officers were se lected : PRE6IDE:ST-A. R. Samuel, of the Keystone Glass-Works. , \len PnEsroErrs—W. T. 61Hinder, of the. Franklin Flint Glass Works. John Dorn an, of the Monitor Carpet Mills. Thomas Dolan, of the Keystone Knitting Mills Thomas Stinson, of Stinson & Irwin. A. Kline, of Warner, Kline & Co. Chas. Craig, of Thos. Craig & Co. Chas. Porter, of Porter & Dickey. John Link, William McAfee, Robert Scott, - James Nichols, Christian Healey, Joseph Johnson, John Gay, James McCain:Ley, Joseph Hemphil!, D. Goldey, Daniel Currie, James Boyd, John Greenwood, James Daley, John Boggs, Mark Daniels, Joseph Allen, Win. A. Hindman, A. Kurlbaum, . George Bromley, James Conlon, - John - Pickens , , ' J. T. Sproul, Chas. McClurcken, Richard Wildey, Thos. Bringhurst. skcaminins. W. H. Samuel, Robert Doman, I James Gillinder, Arthur MeMasters, James Pickens, j Francis, Burger, Edward Steele, Charles Clark. The Ameriertn Vocalists then sang a campaign song. The Vocalists consist of the following gentlemen Samuels, _Thomas B.' Barrie, William H. Moyer, axtd N. H. Levering. Mr. John Dornan was thettintroduced. He said —We have met here this evening to approve the nomination of the Republican candidates for President and. Vice President; General Grant and Schuyler Colfax. The nominees are men attach sterling ability and energy' that their past his tory is snfficient recommendation for our ap proval and support. The record ,of the Demo cratic party with Blair's letter points directly to war, with desolating and ill - Inoue Influences upon the mechanical and industrial pursuits of the nation. The letter of acceptance of General Grant assures us that it is his desire that the country shall have peace, from which lows prosperity to both the workman and the business man ; and the country generally. I tell you, the intelligent citizens, ,the workmen and manufacturers of the Third Congressional Dis trict of Pennsylvania, are not prepared to give countenance to a party whose leaders are those who sought to overthrow the country, and, who placed the burden of debt and taxation upon us, and now we are asked by these very traitors and sympathizera to give them our support. Neither the manufacturers nor workmen of this district are prepared to take such a step. for the evils which would arise in consequence are so evident that all right-thinking minds will unhesitatingly cast their ballots for the General who conquered the Rebellion, the Statesman who has wielded such an influence as the Speaker of the House of Rep rerentatives, and for the Hon. Leonard Myers, the candidate for re-election to Congress from this district. To the latter gentleman,we,as working men and manufacturers, should lend our entire support, for he, in connection with other Repub lican Congressmen from this city, have been un tiring in their efforts to advance the interests of the community they represented and that of the whole country. The manufacturing statistics will show that through theirinfluence in securing protection to our industry, that upon ono single article—manufacture of carpets—the increase in the producing power since the in auguration of the Rebellion has increased from three hundred and fifty looms to over three thousand, and all the great indus trial works have increased in proportion in this community to the same extent. Against Mr. 3ioffet, the Democratic candidate for Congress, I have nothing to say, as his antecedents and views during the Rebellion are well known in this district; but to the manufacturer and work man I would say, organize Grant Clubs in every manufactory and workshop in the city, and see that every one votes who is entitled to vote; use your influence to elect the Republican ticket in October, for upon the success of the Republican party depends the future welfare of this commu nity and the mechanical industry of the whole country. ... _ . Hon. , Leonard Myers was then introduced and was received with the greatest enthusiasm. When quiet was restored be spoke as follows: Citizens of the Third Congressional District— I can scarcely and words to thank you for this enthusiastic reception, or respond to the kind ex pressions in regird to myself. Let me pass from the subject with the single remark that I have only endeavored to do my duty. The people must judge whether I have succeeded. This vast concourse of workingmen reminds me of the palmy days of Harrison and Taylor, when from the field and the mine, the workshop and foundry, and factory, the laborilig masses determined to reward the heroes who led our armies to victory. Lamartine truly said, the other day, that Amer ica was the model Republic of the earth, for it yearly adds to its glory by proving that repub lics are not all ungrateful, and thus once more, as in the times of Washington and Jackson, the people are meeting all over the land to prepare for the to mph, which in some slight manner will repay e soldier of the age, who, under the providence o God, did more than any other man to save the co ntry—Ulysses B. Grant. \ If any benighted Democrat of the Third Dis trict has not heard the news from Vermont let him look upon this meeting and learn what Philadelphia laboring men mean to do in Octo ber and November. \ Let him note these Invinci bles and clubs turnin4out in unexampled force, and be assured that we are inspired, too, by the memory of yet anothey time and a still prouder - name, and that when( we shall go to the polls Abraham Lincoln Rill not be forgotten, nor the teachings which sped the bullet of his assassin. There are in the Third District, 146 large carpet weaving factories, employing 3,000 people, and there are nearly 1,500 employed in glass-blowing. 'These arc merely illustrations of the various manufactures of the district-824 in number, giving work to 25,000 men and women, many of - them here to-night; and fitly indeed do they rally under this Republican banner, for it represents the right and power and dignity of Labor; Pro tection to our own industries, and above all Peace, without which a nation cannot thrive, taxes cannot be lifted, or happiness dwell in the home circle. Now, my friends, who are arrayed against the Republican flag? A party of men who call them selves Democratic—with them an empty name which "keeps the word of promise to the ear, but breaks it to the hope." What are their principles? Forgive the suppo sition that they have any. Laughter.] What are their professions and practices? We are upon the question of labor so I will speak of that fist. They are in favor or "free trade." Ido not in tend to explain a doctrine so familiar to you, bat will merely illustrate. That means you should buy your coat, or carpet, or glass-ware at We cheapest rate, and if the British importer can sell it cheapest buy of him. Nom, tcould not Mat close till o, ,nos of these factories? If not, your em ployirs must reduce your wages to the European standard, and you have less money to buy with. You understand that,and many of you who come from abroad know better than I can tell whether you were better fed or clothed, or happier there under pauper wages in countries where a long system of protection at last enabled them to man ufacture without it. Among other devices do not think this issue a dead one. There is ap /per called the Free Trade League, published in New York, and circulated by thousands, against your interests, by We Sey mour leaders, who get the money for their cam paigns from the importers, and expect to send men hero to carry Pennsylvania in October. The Democracy say they want to reduce the taxes. Who brought about the debt and pro duced taxation ? The Demo,:raor Leaders. They sided with the South. They robbed the treasury and armories and went into Rebellion. In the North, We . Vallandighams and Heeds, the Say moursr,ClYmers and Woodwards, by their sym pathy will the traitors, by declaring not a man nor a dollar should be voted to quell thew : by their rejoicing at Union defeats, and their asser tion that the war was a failure,gave aid and com fort to the enemy.prolonged the contest, doubled and trebled the debt, besides sacrificing a quarter million more lives,and brought this very taxation on as. After all, tell me who are taxed, except upon a few luxuries, upon which every government gets a revenue; and even on cigars and whisky we have lessened the taxes. The rich men, finally, must pay the taxes, not the poor. In comes to the amount of $l,OOO are exempt. lam afraid not many of you make more than that. The Republican party has not only, since the war, paid $100,000,000 of the debt annually, bet reduced taxes every year, and on the 31st of last March we took off over $60,000,000. How much. do yore , suppose, that relieved this district? 9703,000 a year! ! 1" said Mr. Eldridge, of Wisconsin, lo me—an anti-war Democrat—"you only relieved a few rich manufacturersi," and replied on the floor of Congress as I do hero, that we relieved the laboring men who are employed in these industries. If we did not relieve - the la borer, then it shows he had not been taxed. Think of the infamy of the Democratic leaders, who hope to succeed by prejudicing the working man against his employer! The Republican sys tem of protection, which the great Henry Clay did so much to foster, has given them this prosperity, and It holds out the same hope to every man who is willing to labor. It has trebled the industrial wealth of this district in a brief period, so that since January alone 1,500 building permits have been granted to es—many for factories, still more for those small but cermmodions dwellings, the pride of our city, which prove the increasing prosperity of the laboring men. Now, my friends, what other country holds out this reward? Many of you come from the lands which are watered bythe vine-clad and beauti ful Rhine: They are lovely to look upon; the air is as delicious there as here. Many of you have sailed from — the white • cliffs of England — that isle Of the sea, where the hedges are ever green and the fields seem to bloom like a vast garden. Still more, perhaps, come from the broad Shannon, the sparkling Lee, the hills and valleys of old Ireland. You loved them; • and you would be _fah() to human nature:lf memory did not at times carry you fondly back to those scenes. But why are you here to-day? It is that you lore liberty more! Your labor there, even as teat of slavery at the South, helped to fill the coffers of an aristocracy. The avenues to wealth and • honorable station were rarely at your command, and then, lured by the Declaration of Independ ence, that "all men are created equal," knowing from afar of that starry flag which in its bright promise spans the American sky like a rainbow, you sought these shores. Have you been disap pointed? No, never! Here labor meets its ra ward. Here men are lifted into the sunlight of justice—aye,and the mission of woman and her holy Influence are recognized. On American soil all stand alike, if they obey the law. There are no vestiges of fendallsm, no vassalage, no ten antry to obwthe behests of their lords. Thank God, too, ne . more slavery. John Connees, the poor Irish boy, graces the American Senate even as the gallant Englishman, General Baker, did. Beck, from Scotland, repre sents Kentucky in the House, and sunny France gives us a Representative from Louisiana. I sup pose ,our opponents will call these men carpet baggers. (Laughter.] Abraham Lincoln, the son of , toil, hewed a path for himself to the Presidential chair, where the affections of a free people blessed him with a love which will burn throughout the ages; oven as Ulysses S. Grant, the tanner, will stand upon the topmost round of the ladder, and next to him Schuyler Colfax, the printer's apprentice. Ap plause. I No, my friends, the burdens of the country are to pay the Democratic debt of the rebellion; and, I confess, the Republican party added to them by giving bounties and pensions, caring for the wounded, the widow and orphan, and in the language of Mr. Lincoln, bridging up the nation's wounds. If that be treason, make the most of it. Blair and his friends, North and South, would relieve from taxation by repudiation. That was one reason why the Democracy of Ohio and New Jersey repealed their ratification of the Four teenth Amendment. And I say now, as you will —never---never—never!!! It is now sacred, a part of the Constitution, and if a new war is to t.e inaugurated to oppose it, we will defend it to the death. A sl3gle mere reference to the Democratic ap t eal affecting your interests and intended to arouse your prejudices—they are against the bondholders. If you will notice, Seymour has dropped that cry. Perhaps his fritnd Belmont has too many bonds on hand, and wishes to sell out before the crash which the loss of a nation's honor would surely entail. Who are the bondholders? They were origi nally the men who had faith in the government and lent their money that we might carry on the war, and we boasted with pride that our own citizens took the bonds, without recourse to a foreign loan. It Is true, the German bankers, who were our friends, bought a great 'many of these bonds, and since England failed to make the Confederacy a success quite a number got over there. iLaughter.] But go to your banks and saving Institutions—go among the mechanics Who have saved a little—and you will find them. The farmer owns them; the widow has invested her pension money in them. And I care not who owns them. The money for which they were given paid our defenders to put down the rebel lion. The debt is sacred, and I will never con sent to tax it out of existence any more than I will repudiate it. It is time enough to talk about paying the principal when we have money to do it with; by that time if we preserve our honor, which means our credit too, gold and greenbacks will be on a par; but if the Pendleton plan should prevail, and it will if Seymour should win, Uncle Sam's mill will turn out twenty-five hundred millions new greenbacks to pay the debt with, which must finally be paid in gold or repudiated, and then you who have been down South know what will come—like Confederate scrip, there will be plenty of it, but it will take fifty dollars to buy a pair of boots. The Republican party is jealous of the national honor, and will not see it violated. It has, with the aid of the ,soldiers and sailors, put down the most infamous, causeless and gigantic rebellion known to history, and does not intend to give up the fruits of the victory. It has struck the shackles from four millions of human beings. Led by Each men es Thaddeus Stevens, it has estab lished public schools throughout the land, and opened up new avenues to labor by encouraging native industry. It has almost spanned the con tinent by the Pacific Railroad. It is the party of liberal ideas. which believes in lifting We lowly, asserting the rights of our citizens on every soil, and making the country the asylum of the oppressed and the home of freedom. But no man will attempt to point meto a single gener ous act or policy performed by our opponents. I have told you they truckled to the South in the interest of slavery and brought about the war; they tried to extend slavery, and deluged Kansas with blood, and endeavored to prevent the admission of California because she had free dom in her constitution. When the war came, they preferred that all our white men should be killed rather then put negroes in the army. They voted against abolishing slavery, although they knew that was the strength of the Rebellion. Seymour and the rest invited riots to, prevent our armies being filled by the draft. They tried to get an armistice. When they knew that Lee was marching to his defeat at Gettysburg the Demo cratic Convention at Harrisburg did not take to its legs laughter till it passed resolutions against our own Government. When our men were at the front, with death whistling past them, the Democracy in every State voted to de prive them of citizenship, and Horatio Seymour vetoed the bill to give them the right to vote. He knew the soldiers would vote as they fought-- nine out of every ten—so he vetoed them. The veto, you know, is a favorite weapon of his party, and now_the soldiers will veto him. Wee have had the views of the Democracy on the Constitution already, and now, men of the Third District, what is the Democratic platform? It is exactly the same as Blair's letter, that the Reconstruction acts are,vold, and the old State Governments must lie restored. - Do you realize fully what that means? Not Andrew Johnson's Provisional Governments even—for no, one will contend he had greater pOwer than Congress,- that means the rebel slaveholdcrs' governments set up by the Confederacy ; and when Jefferson Davis and Alexander Stephens arc in the Senate, and Wise and Albert Pike are in the Hope, the Union men being driven out of the Federal Le gislatures, they will consent to draw their salary again, provided they got the back pay due for the period of the "late uttplcasantuess." - - The vilest thing yet is the attempt to fasten on General Grant the responsibility for the starva tion of our prisoners, and, to do it, they call on the rebel General Ould, who even intimates that their prisoners were treated no better. Now, want your attention to a statement which has never before been made public. When Jeff. Thompson, the rebel, was exchanged, he passed tiirough Anderson vine. He had the heart of a man: he had been treated by us with great kind KINCES Tio , f)..4l.liTgyporq.JAJbti,EiiiN -: 4lintAß4pgm..wp,pNgspiky i spiq.EmpEß . .9;'lB,6.k nese, and be waited on Jefferson Davis to bog better conduct towards our prisoners. Davis re piled: "We can kill them that way mach quicker than in battle." He is the stern statesman who was fed on fried oysters; has• been cheered in England by our "free trade" friends, and stands about as much chance of hanging as John H. Surratt. Let modern Democracy call up Jeff. Thompson as their next witness. If the law is to be ppturped, either there must be fresh war or degnidation. Labor stopped, credit ruined, greenbacks will be plentiful, bonds low, and marketing out of sight. Thank heaven, this sad picture will not be realized. Grant will be our next President, and Colfax our Vice Presi dent. General Grant's name will be a household word as long as the Republic lasts. Modest, honest, brave, true tie steel. Who.. will forget, when he wrote that the removal of gallant Sheri dan was more than the loyal people of this coun try would stand? Who will not have faith in him who declares that he has no policy of his own to set against the will of the people?` Who wilt not believe him when he says that he will lead the country to peace? And, now, fellow-citizens, I do not regret that I trespassed so long on your time. I have spo ken entirely of national- issues, because, even in the October contest, they overshadow all others. The battle is being fought on that lino, and on it must be lost or won; but for every position that I know, save one, of. which modesty forbids me to speak, the Republican party may be proud of its standard bearers. , In every case we have nominated loyal and de serving men, and the Democracy, true to their instincts, now as elsewhere, have, in most in stances, given us the most nitra representatives of their own violent policy , Wa shall .succeed. . Maine Will follow Ver mont next Monday; the accessions to our ranks are by the thousands hrevery State; and when, on the 4th of next Match; the conqueror of the rebellion takes the civil power in hla hands ? the country will rest content that 'we shall have peace indeed, happiness in all the Sections, a still higher civilization and a still' greater prosperity, for labor will own itself, and trout the rising to the going down of the sun That flag will float the symbol and shibboleth of freemen. While Mr. Myers was speaking the Campaign Clubs of the Sixteenth, , geventeenth. and Nine teenth Wards came upon the ground. Each was out, in full strength, and the men were uni formed, presenting a very fine appearance. The Republican Invinelbles, 650 strong, were also present at the meeting. Mr. Thomas Bringhurst read the following resolutions: Resolved, That feeling deeply convinced that the success of the Republican party in the pres ent contest is essential to the peace and prosper ity of our common country, we cordially indorse the nominees for the Presidency and Vice Presidency—Grant and Colfax—as presenting in themselves the highest types of military genius and of a comprehensive and enlightened states manship. Resolved, That the Reconstruction acts of Con gress, embodying as they do the most liberal terms ever vouchsafed by any government to a conquered rebellion, should he maintained invio late in spirit and specific and fearless in applica tion. Reolered. That protection to American industry is a doctrine appealing now, as ever, to the homes, hearts and interests of all the mechanics and manufacturers of our country, and shall and must be a cardinal principle of our party: a pro tective tariff, allowing no destructive foreign competition with the product of American labor, is the nation's safeguard of the interests of the mechanic of America, as well as his employer. Resolred, That it is the duty of the government to afford military protection to the loyal people of the South, without distinction of color, against the insidious and unlawful acts of unrepentant rebels, until the administration of civil law will be assured by a free and untrammeled judiciary and an unbiassed and unawed public sentiment. Resn&•ed, That protection should be granted to the personal and political rights of American cit izens abroad, and that no interference in our affairs on the part of any foreign government should be tolerated. Resolved, That, wishing a lasting peace as the result of an unparalleled expenditure of, blood and treasure, we will demand such security for the future as will render any revival of the late rebellion impossible, impolitic and impracticable; and to that glorious end—to secure that perma nent peace and lasting prosperity of our glorious country—we promise our hearty and undivided support to Grant, Colfax and the whole Republi can ticket. The iesolutions were unanimously adopted. The meeting was further addressed by Col. John W. Forney and Mr. Wm. Moran, and ad journed at a late hour. Meeting in the Fourth Congressional District. A large Republican meeting was held last even ing, at Spring Garden Hall. John Hanna presided. Hon. Wm. D. Kelley addressed the meeting. He discussed the financial questions involved in the present contest. Mr. Seymour himself, in his letter to Mr. C. M. Ingersoll, admits that this is the vital question. Never were grander issues presented to the consideration of a people than those to which their attention is now invited, and never did the argument all lie so absolutely with one party to the contest as is fortunately now the case. The Republican party does not propose to dodge the financialquestion. They have no cause to shrink from the discussion of the debt and of taxation. Who are responsible for the indebted ness of the nation ? The Democracy complain of it, bet the history of that party since the Mexican war shows their extravagance and recklessness, and that they have never been economical in the disbursement of funds. In eight years of peace the Democrats ran the expenses up from twenty five millions to seventy-five millions of dollars a year. Mr. Benton, a staunch Demo crat, at the time, called attention to this fact in 1856. Mr. Kelly, &aced the progress of the rebellion, commencing with the ordinances of secession adopted by the Southern States. Republicans had no lot or part in this work. All the trusted leaders then were Democrats, and those who have survived the shock of the war are found to-day fighting the battle of Seymour and Blan. If James Buchanan, the then leader of the Democracy, had exerted the same energy that characterized Andrew Jackson in 1832, not a life would have been lost and not a dollar would have been added to the national' debt. Bu chanan,.and Black , bis Attorney-General, decided that there was no power to prevent soeession,and in December. 1860, Mr. Seymour, at Albany, en dorsed this view, and warned the North not to attempt to coerce the South, as it would result in an inglorious war. Coming back to the financial question, Mr. Kelley referred to the fact that, while our credit was unbounded at the end of the Mexican war, at the commencement of Mr. Lincoln's Administration the debt was seventy millions, and just before this Mr. Cobb went begging for a loan of five millions at extraordinary rates. All ' , the members, of Mr. Buchanan's Cabinet thi] are leaders in the Dem ocracy to-day, and with Mr. Seymour in the. Presidential chair these men would again take their position in the government of the conntrv. Mr. Kelley at considerable length discussed the financial question, attributing to the Democracy the cause for all our indebtedness. He was loudly applauded throughout. Lleventh Ward Grant, Colfax and Berry Club. This club turned out in strength evening at its headquarters, Second street, allow Willow. The following are its officers : President—James F. Neal.: I'ice-Presidents—Charlesl3.Conv,or and Phineaa Jones. Benj. L. Berry,Esq., the candidate for Congress of the First Diatrict,swas Introduced, and was, re-_ ceived with terrific cheers, and after the cheering had subsided he addressed the eitM as follows. I thank you for your kind l greeting to-night: I am satisfied that you gentlemen of the Eleventh Ward are in earnest and mean work. It has sel dom occurred, if der before, that you 'had so large a body of men of the Ward together at the beginning of a campaign. You show the right spirit, and I am proud of your services. Yon are engaged in a holy tind a just cause, for you have ranged yourselves on, the side of humanity and freedom. The great Republican party 'of this country, according to_ my ideas of Demo cracy, Is the only true Democratic party. The best men of all parties brought it Into existence, and now maintain it. _ It gnores all distinction of birth, country, religion, and champions the right of man to all the bless ings of this great country before the law and un :4ler the Constitution. I meet you to-night, not for the purpose of making a speech, but more with the view of seeing you, and to be seen, and to assist in the practical part of your organiza ,4.44 - Secretary—Edward Smith Treasurer—E. L. McGlue. _ _ ~^»s~- __~ _.... c~: _.___ ~ ~. - }_. - tion. Yon aro pa# of my district, and I should hold myself culpable; AM of great neglect to my party, if I did not, go in person, and look after each precinct org:shization. We must win,. and lam entirely satisfied that we will, if we devote our time and attention to our public duties. The fearful cost of our sad war was too great to slumber now. The old enemy is again in the field, but under a different pretence; the slavery question is no longer the issue; they accept the situation; but they groan for power, and their resistance to the law means "fight or. power." God forbid clam! Hence the necessity of oar success to calm the troubled waters. There is no sane man, who understands the political situa tion of the country, ,who doubts Grant's election. It is as certain as deatn; absolutely_so.__By_plac, ing per owThe men we trusted during the war we will gain the confidence of the whole world. • • It will aid and strengt h en our finances, stimu late business, bring prosperity to all elasses, and make us again a happy and united country. Mr. President, there are several gentlemen here who would take pleasure in addressing you, so I bid you good night. I have another engagement, Speeches were also made by Wm. Moran and Jos. A. Bonham. Thirteenth Ward Grant and fiottax One of the largest meetings ever held in the Thirteenth Ward, took place at Ninth and Spring Garden streets last evening. The follovring were the officers:— PreBidetit—Edwin H. Finer. Vice Presidents—John L. Shoemaker, Louis Kneipp, William H. 4o des , Joseph Hemple, John W. Woodward, James P. Wilkinson, Samuel Allen, John Kennedy. __ Recording Secretary—James W. Sayres. Corresponding Secretary—Willlam Palmer. George H. Earle, Esq., then addressed the meeting. NEW CHESTNUT STREET THEATRE.— FOURTH WEEK Of the Grand Spectaclo, • THE WHITE FAWN. AN D JARRETT di PALMER'S COMBINED PARISIAN AND VIENNIESE BALLET U THE WHITE FAWN RECONSTRUCTED. • NEW DANCES, WI" ARD IMPE NEW SONGS. GU NEW ETS. ANDRIAL TAB , LEAUX. THE Composed of little children ON HORSEBACK. MILITARY BALLET AND MARCH. NEPTUNE'S DAUGHTERS AT BATH. THE FESTIVAL 13 OF THE BELLS. THE BUILDING OF_TAURWER. THE FIRE-FLY B GRAND PROCESS OfiS, KINGDOM OF FISIRES, THE AIKA BALLET, FARRAGUT MATELOT, AND TRANSFORMATION SCENE. SATURDAY AFTERNOON—MATINEE. WALNUT STREET THEATRE. Begins at 8 o'clock. THIS (WEDNESDAY)EVE NING, Sept. 9. UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS. HOUSES CROWDED TO THE DOME. Ninth night of the Grand Romantic Drama, in five acts and prologue, by Charles Reade, Esq., entitled FOUL PLAY. From the celebrated work of CHARLES READE AND DION BOUCICAULT. View of the Bay and City of Hobart Town, Australia. THE LOVER'S LEAP. THE Si IS SCUTTLED AND SINKS. STORM Oh THE PACIFIC OCEAN. Rescue of Hazel from a waterygrave. SATURDAY AFTERNOON,AT TWO O'CLOCK, FOUL PLAY MATINEE. A CADEMY OF EINE ARTS, CHESTNUT Street. above Tonal. Open from 9A.M. to P. M. Benjamin West's Great Picture of CHRIST REJECTED ertill on exbibition. Je2941 FOX'S AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE. EVERY EVENING and SATURDAY AFTERNOON, GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE. In Grand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesque. Songs , Dances. G z mnast Acts, Pantomimes, dm. soar FAIR FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE FRANKFORD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The ladies connected with the church will hold a Fair for the sale of fancy and useful articles in "Wright's Institute," Unity street, Frank' ord. commencing on TUESDAY, Sept. 8, lSii. A du:lesion-15 cents : Sesion Tickets, 25 cents; Children, 10 cents. The Fifth and Sixth and Second and Third atreete cars pass within one and two blocks of the nail every twenty toinutev. actltft reir PHILADELPHIA. AND READING RAILROAD COMPANY. OFFICE NO. 227 SOUTH FOURTH STREET. Pnrt.anersmA, MAY ,27 1868. NOTICE to the holders of bonds of the Philadelphia 'rid Reading Railroad Company, due April 1, 1870: The Company oiler to exchange any of these bonds of SUMO each at any time before the lit day of October next, at - iar, for a new mortgage bond of equal amount, bearing per cent. interest, clear of United States and State taxes. having 25 years to run. The bonds not surrendered on or before the Id of Octo. Der nextiwill be paid at matunty, in accordance with their tenor. my29-t octl 8. BRADFORD. Treasurer. itv. e ' ( IaIj Ai gNNSYLVANTA FIRE INSURANCE BEPTEMItit 7th. The Directors have this day declared a dividend of Seven Dollars and Fifty Cents per Shane on the Stock of the Company for the last i months, which will be paid to the Stockholders or their legal representative& after the 17th instant WM. G. C ROWELL, se et§ Secretary NOTICE. ()FMB OF THE MANHATTAN CO-OPERATIVE RE LIEF ASSOCIATION, No. 432 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. On.ixor.—The object of this Association is to secure a cash payment within forty days after the death of a mem ber of as many dollars as there are members in the class to which he or she belongs, to the heirs. ILLUSTRA TION: Class "A'. has 5.100 male members. A member dies. The Association pays over within forty days $5,000 to the widow or heirs, and the remaining members forward within thirty days ona dollar and ten cents each to the Association to reimburse it. Failing to vend this sum, they forfeit to the Association all moneys paid, and the Association supplies a new member to fill the place of the retiring one. TEN CLASSES FOR MEN AND TEN FOR WOMEN. CLASSE6.—In class A all persons between the ages of 15 and 20 years ; in Class B all persons between the ages of 20 and 25 years; in Claes C all persona between the ages of 25 and 30 years; in Class D all persons between the ages of 30 and 85 years; in Class E all persons between the ages of 35 and 40 years; in Class k' all persons between the ages of 40 and 45 years; in Class G all persons between the ages of 45 and 50 years; in Class El all persona between the ages of 60 and 55 years; in Class I all persons between the ages of 56 and 60 years ;in Class all persona between the ages of 60 and 65 years. The classes for women are the same as above. Each class is limited to 5,000 members. Each person pays six dollars upon becoming a member and one dollar and ten cents each time a member dies belong. ing to the same class he or she is a member of. One dollar goes direct to the heirs; ten cents to pay for collec ing. A member of one class cannot be assessed this dollar if a member of another class dies. Each class is independent, having no connection with any other. To become a member it is necessary: To pay Six Dollars into the Treasury at the time of mating the application; to pay One Dollar and Ten Cents into the treasury upon the death of each and any member of the class to which he or she belongs, within thirty nave after date of notice of such death to give your .Name, Town, County, State, Occupation, etc.. also a medical certificate. Ev ery minister is staked to act as agent, and will be paid regular rates. FUNDS—Circulars will explain fully in regard to funds and investment,. Circular, giving full explanation and black forma of application will be gent, on reeueet or upon a personal application at the shies of the Association. TRUSTEES &ND OFFICERS E. IVIeSIURDV. Premident. E. T.WitIIHT (President Star Metal Company), Vice President. W. B. CARMAN (President of the Stuyvesant Bank), Treasurer. LEWIS SANDERS, Pecretary. J. R. MANGAM t President National Trust Co.) D. B DUNCOM B, No. 8 Pine street. The trust funds will ne held in trust by the NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY. No. 386 Broadway, New York. Agents wanted for this city. Address. Manhattan LIPPINCOTT, General Agent, manhattan Co-operative Relict Association, pc2.lm§ -•- N 0.433 Walnut street, Philadelphia. WANTED—FORA FAMILY OF FIVE PERSONS, IN a central location, comfortable second story rooms. with Private Table. Board. Three rooms. with use of bathroom. remit] ed. Prefer to be with a private family. Address, with pniticulars, J. B. M., Box. 8., Philadelphia P. 0. [se 4t*. . AA FEW YOUNG , MEN CAN BE ACCOMMODATED with Board, and the comforts of a home, at - N0.150 North kifth areal aed.dtf, , _ WLIGIBLE ROOMS, WITH BOARD, AT' acr2l . 124 cud Street, Wed PhiladelPhic. ' ee5114", , AN M r - Va l p g o — oP Y b E enrcalo i g In O d U l l' i z iare b s i a eituatio S al ar yhich he could make himself generallY. useful. not so much of an object as a permanent' situation; has served in the late war with considerable credit to himself; can furnish' undoubted-reference:—Ad dress u "ENERGY," BULLETIn OiliCM a 19 tfo WAISTED.—ACTIVE ANb INTELLIGENT GENTLE. men to engage Be Solicitors for the HOME LIFE Ibf. SIMANCE COMPANY, in this city•and,-.adloining,coun. ties. Apra" at the oflicelzfitellcartiinioraAgent. aulo.id f3m Corner Fourth and Library Sta.. Phila. _ DODGERS' "AND WOSTENHOLiP___,B POCKET .1.16 RNIVEA PEARL and STAG ITANDLES, of beauti. Ira finish. RODGERS , and WADE & BUTGBERII,_ and the CELEBRATED LECOULTRE RAZOR. SCISSORS IN CASES of the tinsel quality. Razors. KniVeSPrium and Table Cutlery, Ground and Polished. EMT. iriBTRU. MEETS of the moat approved earistraCtion to ambit the hearing, at P. MADEIRA'S, Cutler and Surgical Instru meet Maker. liftieup Streetbelow Chestnut. t AffIVSEBIENTS. SPE4UIAI. NOTICES. (0 :40 Lm;all 01:AM RELIEF ASBOCIA.TION. BOAIIDING. WANT& HARDWARE.' EDUCATION. MB. H. Y. .A VDER.ll4l.lpliva Select Classical, Scientific and Commercial School for Boye and Young Men will open on Monday. September H, at tho 'ASSEMBLY 13ITILIMIla f , TENTS and CHESTNUT Streeti, This School will combine the thoroughness and intent of a firet.claaa public school, with the Peculiar advantages of a wen-appointed private academy. _Applications for admission may be made' at the rooms daily, from 9 to 12 A. M. au22 (MI p ENNBYLVANI/k htwrre CADEMY. (FOR BO4ItI)ERS ONLY.) 'I he acceion commences THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 3u For (ArcoLori apply to James ll.Ortualso 696 Chestnu ; street; T. B. Peterson. Esq., 306 Chestnut street. or to COL. THEODORE HYATT; a u 28.12.0 President Pennsylvania Military Academy. FY,IENDS. SCHOOLS. S. E. CORNER OP FOURTH and Green streete, will re-open on SECOND DAY, the ith of Ninth Month, H6B. These School), :conga of n Primary, for Boys and Girls. Secondary. for Boys and Girls, ands Grammar for Girls only. Additional classrooms have been added to the Primary and Secondary Schools, affording superior accommoda. tionr. , (se4l.2i Application may be made at the Sehqou, to FANNY lit .1V iILe,N, Principal of Grammar School. REBECCA. T. BUOKMAN,Principal of Secondary SchooL ABBIE T. LIPPINCOTT. Principal of Primary SchooL ANDALUSIA COLLEGE Ite.opens Sertember Pik 1868. PRIMARY DEPARTMENT for Boys from six to twelve 3rears of age. ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT for Boys of the usual age at Boarding School. COLLEGIATE DEPARTMENT for Young Men In the Higher Departments of a Business and Liberal Education. Address REV. IL T. WELLS, Ma, President, out; Imo* , Andaiught, Penna. TNRawr DAY SCHOOL IN THE SCHOOL BUILD. ling of the Church of the Holy Trinity. Philadelphia, corner of Walnut street and Rittenhouse square. Mee A. L. Clark will open a school for children be. tween the sties of five and ten years. on MONDAY. Sept, 14th. 1868. Hours from 9A.M.t01 P. M. Terme: $W per half year. The School year will begin September 14th and clam June 25th. REPEREt.CES. Rev. PurumB Bnoone. Prof, CLUE. J. STILLY. Mr. J 0112% 13 , 01ILLN, Mr. Atrociornen attown, Mr. LEMUEL Corytx, Mr. OzusoN PEACOOK. Mr. blortereg RonnisoN, Mr. TllOll4/1 11. rewires. Mr. Wm It ABLUICUBT, Mr. WILLWI P. CUIMON. jyiSteepl4 rPAE G 1 bi.NABlUad. 1. Corner of NINTH and ARCH otreets. For Ladles. Gentlemen and Children. is now prepared for the Winter Course, and open Day and Evening. This Iwtitute has been 111 successful operation since 110, and thousands of pupils have been greatly benefitted by it. Call in person or send for a Circular. Prof. L. LE WlB. GEORGE EASTBUFLN„ A. B.:, WILL OTEN, an English and Classical School in tho Third National Bank building, West Penn Square, on September 14th. 1868. Previous to the 14th, the Principal may be seen at the school room, from 10 A. AL to I P. Ai. se:l,10t• ERMANTOWN ACADEMY. SCHOOL LINE A'4l:o 1,31 Green Street Fall Term opens on MONDAY, Sep tember 7th. Boys prepared for College or baelneaa. Send for circulars to 510. E. Germantown Avenue. nulllmp C. V. MAYS, A. M. Principal. T ES SONS IN DRAWING AND PAINTING GIVEN Ai in Echoole or to private I upile, by a graduate of the school of Design. ao3l to w l6t• Inquire at No. 1733 Filbert street. MlBB M. K. ASIIBURNER will reopen her echoot Northwest corner of Fifteenth and Pine Areas. on SE PTENIBEH 7th. 1868. Entrance on Pine street. I Le 0.1.1'111A, Aug. :8, VW. aro3.f.ntwatn• MADAME cLemENra BOARDING AND DAY School for Young Ladies, West Walnut Lane,. Ger mantown, The next seeelon will open WEDNESDAY, September Ptl. For circulars apply to the Principal. any BELLEVUE INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES. ATTLEBORO. PA. The neat school sear commences Nth ino.(September) 7. For catalogues address the Principal. THE MISSES MORDECAI WILL RE-OPEN THEIR School for Young Ladlee on MONDAY, September 21, at 1205 Spruce treet, de2 I.m• lATHARINE M. SHIPLEY WILL RE-OPEN HER school, No. 4 South Merrick street. (September) 9111 montb.lstb. 1968. auNtoctl.s; VOUNG MEN AND BOYS` ENGLISH. CLASSICAL. X Mathematical and Scientific huditate, DOS MOUNT VFItNON street, reopens September ith. Preparation for buainese or college. Bev. JAMES G. SHINN, A. M., Principal. au2.5 6w TBALDWIN'S EINGLISILM.A.TIIENIATICAL .1 end Chteaical School ter doe. N. E. corner Broad and A rch. will reopen September 7. auZim• 1. HE BEST PROVIDED SCHOOL IN AMERICA.— The Scientific and Classical Irustitute. a School for Boys ana Young Men. corner of Poplar and Seventeenth etreets. reopens MOND&Y. September 7. au24lm* J. ENNA A. 31., Principal. ENTRAL INSTITUTE. TE? , TH AND SPRING lJ Garden etreete, re-opens Sept.ernber 7. Preparation for College or Ruelnees. Special attention &ten to Primarlff•uptia. Residence of the Principal, No. 631 North Tenth street. H. 0. IecOURE. Principal. au2,4 sw; J. W. SHOEMAKER. Vice Prin. M. 11.3 GRIFFITTS WILL IIiFeOPEN HER SCHOOL September 9th, in the large second•story room of the building in the rear of the Church of the Epiphany, cor ner of Uhestnut and Fifteenth streets. au24 Log, HD. GREGORY. A. M., WILL REOPEN HIS .Olaealcal and English Bawl:4. No. 1108 Market street, on Tneeday. Beptemb, r Int. auB4.lm• EOROE R. BARRER, A. M. WILL RE-OPEN HIS UL and Classical School. Price ctreet, German. town, on MOP4DAY, September 7. ' au2.11 If§ AT 158 STOKES' SCHOOL, 4ein MAIN STREET. GER. Le . mantown, will reopen Monday. September 14th. 10124 /Mt. MB. JAMES M. CHASE WILL RESUME HIS CLA:3- see In Latin. °reek. and English. Sept. 14. Addrua sel to ti elm, P. O. Box 1849. MOE MISSES ROGERS, 1919 PINE STREET, WILL A re-open their School for Young Ladles and Children Ou MONDAY. dept. ith• eel tu, iii. e - J.HE WEST PENN SQUARE BEMINAIW FOR Young Ladies, NO. 6 S. Merrick streetovill reopen on Monday. September 21st. Circulars may he obtained at the school. MRS. M. S. MITCHELL, rel - titia,Rt• Principal. ISI3 KLD'S ENGLISH AND FRENICH DAY SCHOOL 'll.for Young Ladtee,St. ClemenVe church building, will reopen Tuesday. Sept 15. Applications may be made at the School on tho 11th. 12th and 14th of September, between 11 A. M. and 1 P.M• ee1.4.8.10.12.15* 1 IRS M. TSCHUDY WILL REOPEN RER SCRO9L. /Tx 1717 Pine street, Wedneedas. BePl.l6aL B Win 34,11 PEV. ALBERT HENRY BARNES. A. M. WILL RE open Ms Classical and English School, No.tal Chest nut street, on MONDAY, September 7th, sea-dt• rl 11E ARCH STREET INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG I Ladies, 1345 Arch street. will re-open MONDAY. Sept. 14th. MISS L. M. BROWN. eel Imo Principal. ATMs ELIzA W. SMITH' WILL RE OPEN HER 111. Boarding and Day School, Sept. 14, at N 0.132.1 Spruce btre et. angl-Im4 PENN INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LADIES, No. 1436 North Fifteenth street. EDWARD GIDEON. A. M., Ynncipal. Open September 14th. au3l-12t• 4.2CH00L FOR BOYS.—MR• R. H. CHASE WILL BE at the School. rooms. 1818 ffhestratt street. dally. after Sept. 7th. Term begun Sept. 14th. eel•tf.l A RT SCHOOL PROFESSOR F. A VAN DER WIELEN'S EUROPEAN SCHOOL OF ART, At 1334 CHESTNUT Street, Philadelphia, The only one of its kind in America, will reopen for the reception of pupils, SEPTEMBER 7,1888: Thls Institu tion is not designed to be limitedto Artists exclusively Its istutructiona aro carefully adapted to the wants of teachers; while amateurs, and all vt ho desire proficiency in any branch of Art as an accomplishment, will And ire the scheme a liberal as well as an exacting course of; study. - The Rooms are open to students through the entire day; hours of instruction from 10 A. M. to BP. M. Admission may be had at the beginning of any, month. Circulars on apultcation. • - • . ses ato th 12? CBI:GARAY INSTITUTE.ENGLISH AND FREN9II. . FOR YOUNG LADIES. • • •• ' BOARDING AND DAY PUPILS.. ~ 1527 and UM SPRUCE Street. • • •- • Philadelphia; Penns:. Will REOPENon MONDAY, Sept. 22d. , • - MADAME DtHERVILLY has the ideality° of annotate. iuF that DR. ROBERT H. LABBERSON • will devote his time exclustv ely tp the Chegaray Institute. • • .•• ..- .French •le the language of the family and is, cOnstantiY spoken in the Institute: tu th 13m BISHOPTHORPE.—THIS CHURCH SCHOOL FOR Young Ladies will be opened the first of leptember next. Particular attention given to the physical 'edeca. • ton of the pupihs. French will be taught by , a resident' • governess, and, so far as 'practicable. made the language of rho family Address. for 'Circulars. BUSS CHASE. • ,"4 , Bhdlontorpe. 1 3y21.tu th sateen • , B et h l h ehem, p a. • ~ .'--/VCADEMY OF THE PROTF4BTANT EP seopAL CHURCH,•Loeuatand Juniper, atreete. • The Autumnal Seeelon will open on MONDAY ; Septem ber 7th., Applicatione for admieelon may be , made during ,the preceding reek, .between 10 and • 12. o'clock In-the :morning. JAMyS 1.11: - ROBINS, M. A. -auII4PAU-r29t4 • - - Head tdaater;;! FBENCH AND • ENGLISH DAY. SOHOOL • Fon young Children, No: 1717 PINE etree pfiee BYIINES will ;esume duties on WEDNESDAY, September 16th. For circulars,' apply at the Bookstore of Mre. Hamilton Thomas, 1844 Chestnut aired. eel to th 11111•••••=ilni GUILLEMET. Al. French Teacher. 237 South Ninth street. - au27 th.e.t TIIE MIbSEB WILSON WILL RE-OPEN THE school for young ladleaformerly Mies Palmer's, Green etreet, Germantown, on TUESDAY. September Iftth 18438. tutl34ll,tuAteel2. otT CRESTEIt, PA.,' W. T. SEAL. Altl' I'. ROBESON'S ENGLISH AND FRENCII Day School for Young Ladles. at No. 1613 Filbert street, will be re-opened Ninth Month (September) 14th. Lse3-Ice reopen on y,_ Sep tember Mb, at No. sect Main Wed, (Lonantire'a no) Residence, corner of Main street and Market Square. auls Im• J.II,ITTEN HOUSE ACADEMY, 43 South tighteenth street, will reopen on MondaY. September 14th. Circulars at the Academy. Call from 8 to 9A.M. or from 4t05 P. . auls M 1.. BARROWS. PrittelpaL (ILABBICAL, FRENCH AND ENGLISH SCHOOL. Thirteenth and Locust streets. Next session belOw Sept. 14th. B. KENDALL, A. M., Principal autn-Idi• ANNIE AND SARAH COOPER WILL OPEN THEIR School for Young Ladle.e, No. 1723 Filbert street. Sept. 14th. sarlt4 12t• `ELECT HIGH SCHOOL s„) FOR YoUNG MEN AND BOYS, No. 110 North TENTH street. The exercises will be resurnsd bli..th Month I.M.h. su2B44t• CALEB S. HALLOWELL, A. IL ILASSICAL AND ENGIBU SESTOOL. AT 11.1.2 MAR ket street, re.opens September 7. Rooms large. au:6-lm• OVAL S. COOLEY, A. M. AN NA IKAIGHN'S SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES, No, 1819 Green etreet, will reopen on the 14th of Sep tember. au2B.lm, AGENTLEMAN OF EXPERIENCE WISHES A short engagement. daily, in reboot or family. Addrera P.. Care Dr. Bali. 23 North Juniper street eel m.k.vitt• .CADEMY OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL Church, Locust and Juniper streets. The Autumnal Session opened on September JAMES W. ROBINS, M. A.. see-tu.th.s.l2t; Hea d Master. MlBB MANY F. HOWELL HAVING RETURNED TO the city, will begin her !wow at her realdence, tl H. Nineteenth etreet, on the 15th of September. se6-61 "%lONS ALEXANDER wor.owsKr, PIANIST AND -13-S Voteliet, having taken parlors! at No. 7Q3 SPRUCE etreet„ announces to the public that he fa ready to Impart Instruction In .Vocaliem and upon the Piano by hie new }system: The pupil will speedily accomplish not only reading mule at eight, but become' perfect is regard to time, so essential in musical education. Reception hours from 9 to 11 A. M. and 4 to 6 P. ht. ea •OHARLES B. JAIWIS WILL RESUME THE . dutiee of Ale proisselon MONDAY. Sept. 14, at 1817 Green greet, . sob-120 DROFESSOR E. BARILI WILL COMMENCE . HIS 1 singing Lepsons on the 14th of SEPTEMBER.. dress. Inn CHESTNUT Street. • Circulars can boob. twined In alimusic stores. - se7.lm* .7i 4R. JAB. N. • REOE. WILL RESUME 1118 LESSONS .131 in Music between the 16tH and Nth of September. Residence No. HOS Alt. Vernon st. • , ses ABACIIMANN. ORGANIST OF THEVETURCII.OF ~ the Atonement, returnee I.emons on Piano, - Organ and Violin. 1392 Brown street. eel-lm• 1%4Y,. J. G. OSBOURN HAS REMOVED HIS. ROOMS /IL for Musical Instruction to No. 805 Race street. , Mr. Osbourn takes pleasure in offering his services to the public on moderate terms, and invites parUcula atten tion 'to his Theoretical and Practical method of' Piano Forte and Guitar instruction. i . au26lni§ , . QIG.' P. RONDINELLA. TEACHER OF SD;GING.Inu. vate , leetons,aild chines. Residence , 808 8, Thirteonth Arcot - ' , • , - au25.131 IA R. V. VON AMSBERG,T,EA.OHER OFTHE PI. NO. t9~ will resume hie letOons September 14, No. • 254 South Tifteenth street. . . . auritm•. NAVAL STOREB.--100 barrels Pale and•No: 1 'Resin .1.1 '2su barrels 50. 5 Rosin: - 200 barrels Common Rosin; 60 barrels(H) - Wilnlington Pitch; 100 barrels Prime White Spirits Turpentine. In store and for sale by VOCHRAN. RUSSELL Zs CO., 22• North Front street. ' soB--tf 1? ICE.:-50 'CA SKS CAROLINA RICE IN 'CORE AND 1.1./ . for sale byCOCHRANi RUSSELL & C0.,1 92 %North rront etregt. • ' • sail, ' 8 U'P' .N IN 50 ARR oLBB •IR --. I • _pentino.now landing and for, a ale by EI)W.H. , ROW. LEY. No:16 South Wharves. nat127,11, 7•TATIILL STOREB.-800 No 1; ROSIN; 60 £'4 'bulaels Palo Roan No, barrels o, 2 Egaill; 1 90 bard role "Prime White Spirits ',turpentine; 89 barrels - North Carolina Tar; 2/8 barrels . Anchor Ship MlN__ • For sale by EDW., klt. ROWLEY. au3 • ' ' No; I 6 South Delavvare avenue. 4.ITOLEN-$5,000 UNITED STATES. 5,93 BONDS. 1865, IJJanuary and July. Nos. 1601, 72.0M:59,014, 59,015--eacla 03500; Nos. 515,1113, 205. 4177—each $l4OO. A reward of Five 13 undred Dollars will be paid for the detection and con viction of the thievee, or the recovery of the Bonda. WLIELEN BRuTHERS, 105 South Third street. Philadelphia. EN= EDVONZIOVio utiIVEIMITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. (FACULTY OF ARTS.) RUM J MER J. taTiLLE LL.D.. Provost and Professor of History_and English Literature. JOHN F._ FR*ZEH , LL.D., Professor of Natural PhilaL sophy and Ohernistri. ' tsEORUE ALLEN. LL.D.. Professor of the Orook RuFRsANCI LtAe.r JACKSON. SON. A. M., Pretw or of the Latin Language and Literature. E. OTtS KENDALL. LL.D., Professor of Hattie. maths. OSWALD REIDENSTIOBER, Pb. D. Professor of the German Language and Literature. JOUR G. R. lifcEll.ROY. A. Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Illst..ry. REV. CHARLES T. KRACITIL D.D., Professor of In. tellectual and Moral Philosophy. BREVET ' BRIGADIER.GENERAL CHARLES P. RUFF, United States Army. Professor of Military Science and g action. —LEON DE LA. C LWA4-Instructorlti. Spanish. OUOPPPE MAZZA. Instructor in Italian. CHARLES BEItAULT. Instructor Iu Ercnch. RP V. RoIIERT R. THOMPSON. A. M., Instructor in I%4llaq:wales. . bA 616 EL M. *CLEVELAND, A. M.. Instructor in Coat position and Elocution. The fiat term of the Academic Year will open op TUESDAY. the 16th of September. at 10 o'clock A. M. Applicants for admission will be examined at half.past ten. . Students who have completed the two Snit yeari of the College Course, or who, having been educated elsewhere, may pass an examination in the studies of these two years, may thenceforth relimmish toe studies of the Ancient Languages and of the higher alathematiciy and punmeinstead courses of Modern Languages liisterY and Applied Science , and receive the degree of 'Bachelor of Arta at the end of their contra'. Or open passing an examination in all the studies of the Freshmen and 'sophomore years, excepting the Crook and Latin, they may then taku a two year.' course in Philosophy, Mathematics, the Physical Sciences and Modern ' Languages, and graduate as Bachele: o of Science Students may also. With the approval of the Faculty be and r eceive admted to one or seeral of the aove of sdy it v a certificate of pro fi cien b cy in co the urses particu study ar branch or branches pursued. • The fees for the full cow se (either for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Sciences) are thirty.five dollars per term. payable in advance. Partial students, takinA less than four subjects of study. are charged ten dollars for each subject. FRANCIS A: JACKSON, set Secretary of the Faculty. HI: NORTHWEST INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG T Ladles, No. 1839 Thompsen street. under the charge of Misted t3NYDER, MORTON,. BUNS and ALDER ECIOZi. will open September 17.1868. - 1149 lt• pßor. J. MAROTEAU. French Teacher No. 2*4 South Tenth street. wfm lm. lkilBB MARY K. AERTSEN AND MISS MARY E. !Reveres will open thetr !school for young !adios. Adams street, shove Walnut lane. Germantown, ou WedneedaY. September ft. Ibtle. etft•let• TMISSES JOHNSTON'S BOARDING AND DAY 1 School for Young Ladles. No. 1327 Spruce street. wIU reopen (D. V,) September 14. IEDS. seAlcue youNG LALIES. INSTITUTE. 1642 GREEN STREET. Duties restnned September 14. Fe7-16t * REV. ENOell 11. 13UPPLEE, A. 21., PRINCIPAL A LADY WISHES A FEVif MORE PUPILS FUR .bk French, German and Piano. Terms moderate. Ad dress J. M. T., 450 North Fourth Street. eel 3t. MAZZA. P RESSOR OF TUE ITALIAN s) Language, at the U PROFESSOR of Pennsylvania. MN Übe/dung street. se7.lm• fIARRIE S. BURNHAM'S SCHOOL FOR YOUNG V Ladies and llama. No. 1616 Filbert street, opens Sep tember 16th, 1666. A few Boarding Pupils derired. See circular, at the Bruarrir: Office, at address Miss BURN. bt. 1616 Filbert street, Philadelphia. aldtkitnt 111t1VATE. INSIRUCTION 1N THE CI SUDS AND 11 Bfathematies, and e„Select School for Boys (reopened bopt ith). by Roy. bAMUEL -EDWARDS. LiO6 Chestnut street. Philadelphia. ADP's before IP. 14. sulistm• T IIE UtiDR ERIGNED WILL OPEN A PRIVATE Bchool (or Boys, Chelten AMAIN Germantown. Heptember 7th. A limited number of pupils will be re ceived into the tinnily of the Principal. Re:ldence. School Lane. above Green. Particulars from circulars. aulP tfq J. H. WITIIINGTON, A. SL, Principal MISS ANA DLL'S SCHOOL. NO. 7 ABBOWFORD AU Place, 1350 Pine street, Philadelphia, will re-open Wednesday. Septemberl6. t&B. aul7a4t• ERMANTOWN SEMINARY FOR YOUNG LAME& Vf Green street. south of Walnut Lane, will reopen &Sep tember idb. Circulars furnished upon application. auliat Prof. W. 8. FORTESCCE. A. ES.. Prix:4 Psi. IBA LAIRD WILL OPEN A SEttINARY FOR Young Ladles, Sept. 14. at No. "..0; Noah Eighth etreet. Circulate may be obtained of the PrinclpaL No. o.fl North Seventh greet anti true BORDEtiTOWN FEMALE COLLEGE, BORDENTOWN. ti. J. Pleasantly located on the Delaware Elver, about 3PnAlas north at Philadelphia., The very beat educational adv an taste f nrnlshediin connection with a pleasant home. Bea. 'don opens September nth. For terms. &e., address JOILN IL kiIIAKELEF. R UG tr ß ee Y t, AOWAMY . FOR BO:1YCE N M IITIH,L O A L M ST ... PrizicipaL Pupils prepared tor Bratarasor. WWI STAN D III Cr 1n coo-atir- Firet-cl.tre preparatory_ departmen t Circulars at LE}a: WALKER'S. No. :22 Chestnut etreeC or by addre.ring Box WO Y. O. Next mdon bejina September 14th. att3.:lotl (111E8TNUT' BTREET FEMALE SEMINARY. PHlL lladelphin—Mitts Bonney and Mies Minya wlll reopen their Boarding and Day Behooi (Thlrtyaeventh session) Bepteruber Itt. at 1618 Chestnut street. suinoctls Particulars from Circulars rTIDE PHI AIOELPHIA SCHOOL OF DESIGN FOR I Women, bort/mein Penn Square. reopens on Monday. September 14th. Cataloguer can be had at the mehool h ono° by pervonal application or by_port. autba.tu.w.th.t tel 4) T. W. 1311.61DWOOD.PrintipaL LABORATORY 1 WALNUT STREET. Practical iruitruetion with the blow.pipo and to al branches of dun:ditty. Terms moderate. amidst• AIL USIVAILm , "/VAVALIA SWGRES. STOLEN. oetfan,w.3o To Mltirry or Not I. Murry. THE QUESTION TIUMOItOUSLY COMPERED. "Cornelius O'Dowd," in the new num ber of Ektektoood, dittettetenlie questiOn.of marriage in a pleasant way. We cull a few passages: ; • "Is life really 'life' if one must pass it on the tight -rope? Is existence worth having, where it is eternally a question of balan cing—swaying to this side, and bending to that ? "Is it proven that all i people have a voca tion for marriage, and s conjugalism per 86 certain to requite those who, to attain it,must divide between two, what they had already found barely sufficient for one? These are the. simple questions which we have no need of a philosopher to ask or answer for us. If one were simply to pronounce from what ap pears on_the_ sarface---4--life—and .it is very hard to go deeper—we should' say that the single people,especiaily the men, have the best of it. They are more ittrequest among their friends,available for more attentions,and keep longer young than their married brethren. "The double-barreled egotism of marriage spoils many a good fellow, and destroys the charm of many a delightful woman. The firm, that terrible partnership, crops up at every moment, and routs that glorious sport tamety, that delicious irresponsibility, ,we once remembered. , "I have no patience with those people who want to marry on what it is a puzzle to them to live singly upon. They must be moralifor- Booth ! at the cost of reducing some unhappy girl to drudgery, on the false pretence—for it false—of loving her. " 'Why can't they let it alone?' as the great master of common-sense said of a less event ful contingency. "I have met more pleasant and compa nionable people among the single than the married; bnt there is a canting notion abroad that marriage is a sort of backbone for good behavior, and so the curate must be married, and the doctor ought to be married. . I don't know how far the theory goes, or whether a lady's shoemaker shoiald have a wife, but I'm sure her coiffeur ought. "I hope we shall soon hear the last of this' tiresome controversy ; for if any man wishes positively to ascertain, from his personal ex perience, whether it be safe to marry on .Ereo per annum, let him commit a small misde meanor in Ireland and be sent to jail for three months. If his constitution stands the diet ary—the seven ounces of gruel and pinch of bark:Apes diem—he may have his bans pub lished The day he comes out, and certainly there will be nothing in his absorbent system to interfere with his happiness. "But it is a- mistake to suppose that mar riage is a necessity, except to a three-volume novel. lam certain that a very large num ber of people are not made for that species of companiunship. 31ind,I. am not enamored of Mormonism or Spiritual-wifery, nor have I the slightest sympathy with Agapemortes. What I desire to insist on is that our present day civilization inculcates conjugalism too indiscriminately, ,and takes most unjusti fable means to support its position. One of these, and the least commendable of all, is to disparage those who are called old maids. I have seen many a timid rider in a hunting field jeered into riding at a fence that cost him a 'cropper;' and I am convince-I that many women are driven into marriage to es cape the obliquy and sarcasm of belonging to that maligned category. " It is no exaggeration to say 'maligned.' I would ask any one who has seen much of life —who has, so to say, been a man of the world, watching its ways and studying its do ings—l would ask of him, has he ever met in any section of humanity greater kindness, gentleness and patience than amongst these same old maids? Where has he found more hearty, genial, generous natures ? where sound views of lite disfigured by fewer preju dices ? where more thorough charity in dis cussing the motives ? where, in one word, less of those very attributes by which it has pleased the world to characterize this class? It is no part of my task to call witnesses to what I say ; but one I will cite, because she eminently represented all that I have so feebly attempted to picture; and if her genius might seem to outshine the lustre of her personal qualities, it is only to those who had not the happiness—and it was a happiness—of her intimacy. lam talking of Miss Edgeworth, and it is well worth all the weight of the years it obliges to have met and known her. "I will not affirm that marriage could have spoiled such a nature, but I will say it could not have bettered it. Nor is it a small part of the matter that at eighty she was the guiding spirit, the delight and the charm of that family which derived glory from her name and happiness from her presence. "Is it to a class which numbers Miss Edgli worth and Miss Nightingale among its mem bers women need shame to belong? "I have done. I will only add that, instead of heaping ridicule on the condition of un married women, and, out of sheer derision, driving them to accept anybody—anything as husbands, let us accord them all the defer ence and regard we bestow on others; and let ns not forget, in the presence of some 'old maid' whose qualities of mind and ,nature have charmed us, and whose traces of beauty are not few nor faint, that if- we do deem . matrimony the great prize in life, it is a living shame to our sex that such a woman should be single. "If I have wandered from my text of 'Mar riages on Starvation Allowance,' it is simply because I have not that overweening impres sion of conjugalism that I would recommend any one to face beggary to attain it, any mote than I would advise a man to lay out his last shilling to buy a ticket in the lottery." —They have at Easton, Pa., a champion fat girl. She 1616 years old, and weighs over 500 pounds. In P A PASSENGERS ARRIVED. SSENGERS 1 onawanda.froat tiavannan—Captain Coles bury and five in :amity; J Lipman. Mr John H Pope, Miss Caroline Thihle. Rev A L Holland& Mr Hermandy and lady. • IFErQB,TAWIONS BAYReported or tne rnuadeipnia Evenhig NigAil--Steanaehip Tonawanda. Jeanine's-5 bales Wee 423 loosed° 6 bales wool Boston BB Co; 33 übLi mein 155 bales cotton 1 do.tvocd Cochran, Russell & Co -181 bales cotton.lsl balsa domestics 14 eacite 'dried fruit CR:s he, n. herring & Co: 32 bales cotton Randolph di Jenks; 9 do Wood dz Garrett; 3 do wootAlex.Wbilldin its Sons; 120 beer bbls Chao Engel; 90 tone iron Farnum & Samuel; 100 ale bble Massey. Huston:& Co; f 33 .bbla dried fruit C Rogers; 11 bales rags 1 bbl brass. J;Roeenthal; 24 bble 96 sacks dried fruit Beleer'& Bro; Ribble roots and vines Set. lers. Sadder dr. Co. . 11101711211KENTS or arreatmass. TO AlitSfYlf. mars rem ros DAWN Cella ,London.. New JaverpooL .New York... Attg,.. 25 Allemannia„....Scuthampton-New York.. . An& 26 Pennsylvania Liverpool-New York ... .. ... Ang. Cakdonia . .Glasgew..New Y0rk....:.... . Aug. 28 Napoleon 111- York. 89 City of Cork........ l ..dverpoOLT.NYorkViallaliftm.Ang. Scotia Liverpool-NewYork. Aug. 89 Palmyra ..Liverpool..New York.... ...... Sept 1 City Bdtrin . ore..Liverpool-New Y0rk...... .. .. Sept. 2 •'. TO DEPART. • Mono Cardle New York. Havana 10 en , York .ILiverpocil J . Hepilo San Francisco ....New York. San Juan, Nic.....Sept. 11 Columbia. New York..GLasgow..... ...... Sept. 12 City of Loadon....New York..LiverpooL. .... —Soot 12 FIRD3C ..New York.. Liverpool. Sept, 12 York..Bermnda.... Sept. 12 Yok..Hamburg Sept 15 Scotia ."...........New York..LiverPool...- Sept 16 Caledonia ... .Sept 16 Y0rk..Liverp001...........5ept 16 Tarifa ... „ . . New Yora-Liverpool. .. Scot 17 Star of the Unioit-Philadelta..N. O. via flavarut...Sept. 17 Pioneer. .. ....Phtiadelphia..Wiktdagroty........SePt. 17 Napoleon .New York..Havre..,. ...... ....Sept 19 Peansylvanla......New York..Livarpool... --Sept 19 City of Li altimore.N ew York.. Liverpool.... ..... -Sept 19 Col= Ida.. ......New York..Havtuaa...... Sept. 19 , Guidhut Star. _New York..Asoblviall Sept. 19 Stun and Stripes....Philad'a-Havtula Sept. Eio.A.RIt OF TRA.D.U. JAMES T. YOuNli_, (*ATM, WALTON, Mourn at COlinwrTzei. THOMAS POTTER. ,;cll4 :Vet Y,14 PORT OF- P tat Maze. 6 87 I 8887: BEIM 8 171 Sam WATBB, 6 60 ARRIVED YRIITERDAY. Steamer Tonawanda: Jawing/3, 70 house-from Bevan. bah with reertton. , &c. eta I"Madeiphiv and Southern Mail 0.13 Co. - - - 1 Steamer Vulcan, Morrison. %I bourn from New York, With Inds* to W & co. ; Same , B YPheips: Brown. 24 hours from New York witb mdso id E liza. dßird & Co.- Steamer Ai Richard/4VA bourn frorti New York, with mdse to W P Clyde & Co. I s Behr Lena Hunter. Sheppard, from New York. with colt to Wm Bumm di Bon. f Behr Caroline Hall, Vickers, from Lanesville via Dela, ware Breakwater • - , • • • Behr Marcia Maria. Dean, from Providence.'- • . t liarßehr Rate McLean. arrived' on' Monday frOm"An tigua, is consigned to Lennox & Burger,, CLEARED *V EISTEhiro.Y. Etearner fawner: Jones. New York. W P Clyde .t Co. Steamer TaconY. Nichols. New York; Wif Baird & Co. Bat k Iteaum, Burrell. Liverpool, John ft Penrose Behr Queen of Clippers. Macomb, Halifax.., C Van Horn. Behr lionteri Crane. Dighton. Day..Huddell &' Co. • schr Martha Marle,Dean.liangor. fiords. Keller&Nntting. Behr Caroline I.l4l, ,, Vickersi hichroond. - Weld;Nagle&Co. WRIGHTSVILLE. PA.. Sept. 7. 1869. The following canal boats pawed this office today, out- ward bound. viz: Win Mackey and J C Rhoads; with lumber to R Wool. Berton; Quaker City, coal to captain; al E Strine, J E Illackw, , od and Louisa. lumber to Pattereon & Lippincott; Geo Hopeon, do to Trump, Bon & Co; .1 8 Hall , do to Brown & Wolpher; No eller. do to Dodge & Co. Jereev City; Washington, _2. do to Malone dr Co; , W & ',NVallace. do to D B Taylor & Son; Naoini, do to Norcroes & Sheets. - MEMORARDA . Ship Joseph Fieh. Stackpole. from Lieerpool for cal bio. was spoken 11th July, let 7N. lon 244. • .__Ship FA Palmer. Mccaehn, from ,New York tor Hong Atom was spoken 27th Jnne , let 83 loner 3 W. Shin Franklin, B nrsleye from hi for -New York.was spoken. 16th Jane. south of Java Heat s Holy Endeavor, Doane, from Manila 27th April. with auger and hemp. at New York 7 th toot Ship Nightingale. _from Victoria. VI. March 19, via Valparaleo Juts 9, with telegraph cable, at N York 7th inst. tthip Herald. Bickford. , from Beaton for . Calcutta. was spoken 11th July. lat 4 S. lon al W. Steamer Prometheus. Gray. hence at Charleston yes. Steamer Homan.,liowee, hence'at flostozi yesterday Steamer i'iyeruing,Teal. hence at Savannah yesterday.- Steamer City of Washington MO. Tibbetts. geared at New York yesterday for Liverpool. - Steamer Creecent City. Wetr, at New Orleans 7th fruit. Steamer hiarieotra. Semble. at New Orleans 6th inetattt from New York. illeamer Pennsylvania, Hall. sailed from Livel7 l oo l .2Sth ult. for New York • •• •• • , Steamer Cimassian, Ellis, called from Geestemunde 22d nit. for New York: ' , Bark Chasca.',Bmith. at Ban - Francisco. 14th - ult.. bad been chartered to carry kreadstuffs to Philadelphia ~ The charter K re m lin ; e ship DasbLog Wave had been cancelled. • Bark Nichardson. cleared at Portland sth inst. for Buenos Ayres._ Bark Burrs. (Nor. Johnson. 45 days froM Rio Janeiro, at New York yesterdai_, Bark Nicotine (NG): Helm.sl days from Rio Janeiro, at New York yesterday. Brig 8 Strout. Strout, hence at Jacksonville 2 , ?th ult. Brig it & W Welsh. Watson. was at Leghorn 19th ult. for this port in I days. via Denia and Malaga. Brig dlex Milliken. Gray, from Lanerillle for Cones of Delaware, at Gloucester bth lost, Brig Heinrich Moll (Neck). Bradhe ring. hence fur Stockholm. was spoken 10th ult. lat w aitin g SO, In 42 04. richrBki lark. Loring. hence. was orders at Gib= raltartOth ult. Behr Ella Hodsdon, Hodsdon. at Navassa 20th ult, for this port 26th. f3chr Hamburg. Laird. and Potomac, Eldridge, hence at Washington., DC. 7th hut Behr E Coyne, Facemire, railed from N Bedford 6th inst. for this port. _ Behr Brandywine, Irelan, railed from Salem 6th inst. for this port Behr R Vans. Birci, cleared at Wilmington. NC. sth , et for New York Behr Alvarado. Whitmore. hence et Beverly 3d Met. net.Behr Aimee, Do tisuudere. railed from New Bedford 6th for s rt Behr B thi oeton. hence for Provhicetewn. at Holmes' Hole th Met Behr J Paine, Rieb, cleared at New York veeterday or tble port Behr (ieean Traveler, Adams. hence at Beverly 2d !wit PERSONAL. LA PIERRE HOUSE. PIILLADELPIILA, PA. The tinder/fined having leased the above popular Hotel and h 4vthg made exteneive alterations and ho. Prevenient/At Is now open for the reception of Oueatl,with all the appointments of. a firet-class Hotel. J. B. BUITERWOBiII at°, Proprietors. aul2 !me LVAIBE.R.- MAULS, BROTHER & Co. 1868. sparcp. SPRUCE JOIST. /868 1 SPREUCE MLOC JOIST. H. HEMLOCK. LARGEHEMLOCK. B LARGE STOUK. L =AIME, BROTMEIT. & CIO.. ZOO SOL"TH STREET. IB6a . FLORIDAR mum- 1868. CAROLINA FLOORIN G. VIRGLNIA FLOORING DELAWARE FLOORING, ASH FLOORING. WALNUT FLOORING. FLORDAUTEP BOARDS. FLANS. 1868. WA D I. HO BONE .NI) PLANK 1868. WALNUT BOARDS. WALNUT PLANK. 1868 UNDERTAKEFtEP LUMBER. 1 QaQ • L - NDERTAXEREP UMBER. ALJLIPU• RED CEDAR. WALNUT AND PETE. 1868. SEASONED POPLAR. SEASONED CHERRY. 1868. ASH. Warrk; OAK PLANK AND BOARDS. HICKORY. CIGAR BOX MAKERS. MAR BOX MAKERS. 1868. 1868. SPANISH CEDAR BOX BOARDS. FOR SALE LOW. 11368• CAROLINA SCANTLDIG. 1868 . CAROLINA H. T. SILLS. NORWAY SCANTLING. LARGE ASSORTMENT. 1868 CEDAR SHINGLES. 1868. CEDAR SHINGLES. CYPRESS SHINGLES. PLASTERING LATH. CHESTNUT PLANK AND BOARDS. 1868 REIMER L qiitil MT. 1.868. 1868. CHOICE PA rl ERN PINE. SPANISH CEDAR, FOR PATTERNS. FLORIDA RED CEDAR. NIAIALE. BROTHER & CO. 2500 SOUTH STREET. xrELLow LUIMBER.4OOOI FEET SCANT ling; $30.000 feat boards: not received from St. Mary's Georgia. For sale by E. A. SOUDER dr. CO., Dock St Wharf. se£l.3t CLOTHS. VABIIiBLEIZEIS, my. CLOTH STORE—JAMESLEE.. No. 11 NORTH SECOND street, have now on hand a large and choice aevortment of !'all and Winter Goode, particularly ad. apted to the Merchant Tailor Trade. comprising in wt., French, Belgian and American Clothe of every deecrip. Lion. OVERCOATINGS. Black French Castor Beavers. Colored French Caetor.Beavers. London Blue Pilot Clothe. • Black and Colored Chinchillas. Bluee, Black and Dahlia Mose° we. PANTALOON STUFFS. Black French Caseimeree. Do do: Doeskins. Fancy Casaimeres new style& Steel .Mixed Doeskins. Caksinieres for suite, new atylea. S 4 andf4 Doeskins; best makes. - Velvet Cords, Beaverteene, Italian Clothe. Canvas, with every variety of other trimmings, adapted to Men's and -Boys'. wesr;to which we invite the at ten tion.of Merchant Tenon; and others.' at 'wholesale and retail. ' JAMES & LEE. ' , No. llNorth Second street. aulftf _ Sign of the Golden Lamb. - -ELEJLTIBIRS— AND- - 510V/ills - o gl i THOMAS S. DIXON a BONS. usi Jav e adr u ens t UDix imaa — Manufacture= l oi P"ltte linitedl344l3. Mint* , • LOW DOWN, ,Ant ri a lgt mt „ • ForAzdhriudta. Blinsdnons T lA Wood WARMADI B AHINACE/b_._ Rat W l TW r l zias. 'zddia and rr vale mamma CHIMNEY 000HENGRANGER, BA id W a3OIL RE AIL. S. WHOLFAatri m RET INSTRIICTIOA. di UttENO SCHOOL * Fourth abovi i Vine. will be found _every incillt9 for dechalilli. I a krunoledge or this healthro and Oegant aecomplim ment. The School is pie= venWated and mama the horses sate and well do Artimmu Class for Young Ladies. Saddle Henri trained in the best manner. Saddle Horses. Horses and Vehicles to him AlsVarrimes to Ihmoth,ParCes, ' Weddin g s ' 13k° PliTtr THOMAS CriIAIGE & SON: taiuw„.rixmum GA s'4ARA. IXTURE B..AIII3KEY. 'BIPRRITSi .4 o es. THA No. Lamps, Me eiheatnnt street-manufactures f Gas Firta.rworad wentention of the public to their I e andi elegant asof Gas Chandeliers, Pendants. eta, dco. 'They also hitroduct ass obea lute dwelh.nas and vane bolldlnes. and attend to extending. alterme end toosirhm scui piper 411 work warralltki THE DAILY It.,VENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1868 lArett27xern For Baiiiiixi- - - I :l3loabairiLiticaelot EIATLYNO FROM EACHEVERY FIVE DAYS MOM ME STREET rixnuk. AND wzna,f 0 ..... * ,..._Thfa Una la ecentaxed of the tintelsa MIPS ' it0n1W73741 tone, criptaln 0. Bakin. SAX oN, I.= Unix, Captain F. M. Boma. • . BI4IIFMANs 1.283 tong. Captain Crowell. . The BA SQN from Phi a . on - SaturdanflePt. Met /. 0 A... H. Tee hOltmeN. from Boston. Thorrday. be= t1 m r . .._,,a 1 '1 hews steamships sa il minettudlY. and t mu ma' received every day. a Steamer being ahv y f i lls on the berth ' Freight for points bevond Barton sent with desPntek: Freight taken for ail points in New England anci fo r. warded as directed.' Insurance ff.' . - . , For ..Fredgbt or Pasanal r e N ßerl y mw or ariutio ß a co aa . ti ono) sPVIY w nivel , '. .- . - .Bgellouth Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA. ftiMIBIOND AND FOLICATEADISHIP LUYE. NOB THROUGH PREIGW EB A .TR LINE TO THB ...SOUTH AND_ EVERY_IIATURDAY.' - ' nt Ziottroin VEST_WEIARP above BIARXET :treat. THR N o BATES and THROUGH RECEIPTS to, ail points North and Beath Carolina via Seaboard M. Lice Railroad. ,cormecting at Portsmouth and to Lynch. Marg. Va.. Tenn...To and the West, via Vir gini a and Tennessee Alr.Lino and Richmond and Danville Hatband. Freight HANDLED BUT ONMezul taken at LOWER RATEBTHAN ANY OTHER LINE. . The regolaritY. safety and chewmn of this roide cony mend at to the public as the most desirable medium tor var yi ng row description of freight tr ea No charge for commlulon. drayage. or any expense - der. - Etteamshipi insure at lowest rates. Freight received DA/LY. PHILADELPHIA AND SOUTHERN MAIL ¢ . /IRAILSHIP COMPANY'S, REGULAR ' • FROMkUEEN STREET WHARF.... • The STAR OF HE UNION will sail, FOR NEW ORLEAnds, via HAVANA, on Thnrsday, September 17, at ero , eloek A. NI,. • ' • The JIHHATA will sail FROM NEW OELEANA. VIA HAVANA: on Hey tetnber , • . . The . TONAWANDA sail FOR SAVANNAH on Saturday, September 12th, at 8 O'clock A. IL The WYOMING will tail FROM SAVANNAH -on t3aturda September . 12th. The P IONEER-will. sail FOR WILMINGTON, N. on Thursday. Sept.l7tlt' at 5 , O'clock P. , M. • Throngh Bills of Lading ekned. and Passage Ticket, sold to an pcdut.. , and West. WILLIAM L J.ln t General Agent, CHARLES E. D Freight Agent, No: 814 South Delaware avenue. NO TIC. -; • • 1"" FOR NEW YORE., "' • Via lklaware and Raritan Canal. EXPRESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY. The Steam Propellers of the Lane leave Dally froth firer wharf below Market street. THROUGH IN 24 HOUR& Goode forwarded by all the Linea going out of New York—North. But and Wert—free of coramfeelon. Freight received at our aerial low ratee. WM. P. CLYDE & CO JAB. HAND, Agent, 14 South Wharves. Philadelphia. 11.9 Wall street. nor. South. New York. mhl9-tr4 HAVANA STEAMERS. ''Lltoo. • SAILING EyERY 21 DAYS. These steamers tvill leave this port for Havana every third Tuesday. at E o'clock A. M. The steamship ST and AND ST it IPES.O tptaln Holmes. will sail for Havana on TUESDAY I‘IORNINC3, dept. feilh, at IS o'clock A. M. • - - Passage: *4O currency. Passengers must he provided with Passports. No Freight received after Saturday. Reduced Rates of freight. mONAII WATTSON Sir SONS, 140 North Delaware avenue. NEW EXPRESS LINE TO ALEXANDRIA, Georgetown and Washington, D. C., via Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, with con. Lynchburg. Alexandria from the moat direct route for Bristol, Knoxville, Naahville, Dalton and the Sonthweat Steamers leave reialarly from the find wharf ahoy Market street, ermy Satarday at noon. Freight received daily. WM. P. CLYDE 4; CO., 14 North and South Wharves. J. B. DAVIDSON, Agent at Georgetown. M. ELDRIDGE & Agent, at Alexandria, Vir. fel4l FOR ANTWERP—PETROLEUISL The Braid) apip Santparell. Captain Me ALPiN, f 2 now loading for above port for feight or=ge. apply to WORKMAN & CO.. No. 1-M 'Walnut " . ant m • . • • Dig; load at Charleston for Philadelphia. Liber freights paid and despatch given. Apply • Edmond A. Solider & Co., Dock street wharf. je30•14 aoFOR ANTWERP. , —THK FIRST-CLASS SHIP g '4:MAHAN'S POLLY" 1/3 now loading-for Ant erp. having a large portion of her cargo en gaged. hare quick despatch., F,or ,freight. Relined Oil only. apply toikeopa Eor.freight. WORKMAN & CO.. LW Walnut NOTICE—FOR. NEW YORK. VIA laware and Raritan Canal—Swiftsure naportation Company—Despatch and Swiftenre Lines.—The business by these Lines will be re. 'turned on and after the 19th of March. For Freight, which will be taken cn accommodating' terms, apvly to WM. M. BAIRD & 139 South Wharves. cktf DELAWARE AND CHESAPEAKE Steam Tow-Boat Commasr.—Barges towed between Philadelphia , Baltimore. Hasrede.Orskee, Delaware City and intermediate _points. WM. P. CLYDE & Agents. Capt. JOHN LAUGH- Snp't Office. 14 S. wharves. Phila. (el-U lONSIGNEEEI OF MERCHANDISE PER PRUSSIAN 't..'bark "'Frederick Gustav," Dime, muter, from Liver. Pool.'Will please send their permits on board at street wharf. or at.the Mike of the undersigned. Thegeneral order will be issued on WEnNESDAY, the 9th inst, when all goods not permitted will be sent to the public stores. PETER WRIGHT & SONS. 115 Walnut street 'ors nIGNEES OF MERCHANDISE, PER ANIERICAN X. Ship "Bombay." from Liverpool. will please send their permits on board, at Shippen street wharf, or to the office of the undersigned. The General Order will be issued on Wednesday, the Rho instant, when all goods not permitted .wlll bo sent to Public Stores. PETER WRIGHT dt SONS, 115 Walnut street. se; 3t ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CAUTIONED against trusting any of the crew of the Prussian bark "Frederick Gustav," I:hose. Master, as no debts of their contracting will be paid either by the Captain or con. signets. PETER WIUGHT dt SONS, 115 Walnut street se 7 tf CAUTION.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CAC- Boned againet troeting or harboring any of the crew of the N. G. chip HERMANN, Bcbweere , Master, as no dente of their contracting will be paid by maeter or con eigneee. WORKMAN d CO., 1M Walnut etreet. • • SPICY NEW BOORS, 429 SMOKED GLASS. • A new humorous, burlesque work, by OR PHEUS C. Krug, whose celebrated "Orplreus C. Kerr Pa. pers." for originality and raciness have never been sur passed by any satirist. *.• illustrated with many side splitting, comic drawings. Price $1 50. WOMAN, LOVE AND MARRIAGE. A charming volume of pleasant. light and graceful talk upon a topic that cevergrows old—" The Old Theme." By Farb. SAC.IVDEItB, author of "Salad for the Solitary." *,,r. Price $1 50. THE PHILOSOPHERS OF FOUFOUVILLE. A humorous and satirical work, showing up the comic and ridiculous side of Fourierism. Socialism, and all other isms of the day. Price dl 50. THE NEGROES S IN NEGROLAND. Negroes in America and negroes generally. A compi• lation of nearly everything statistical about the Negro; embracing extracts from all books of travel, and from nearly - every writer upon the subject By HINTON rrOWAN HELPER, author of "Impending Crisis of the South," &e. *.*Paper cover, price $l. These books are beautifully bound—cold every where—and sent by mail postage free, on receipt of price, b G. W. CARLETnN, Publisher, ee2 w e 4t 497 Broadway, New York. JUST READY—BINGHAWS LATIN GRAMMAR.— New Edition.—A Grammar of the Latin Language for the Use of Schools. With exercises and vocabularies by William Bingham, A. BL, Superintendent of the Bingham SebooL The Publishers take pleasure in announcing to Teachers and friends of Education generally, that the new edition of the above work is now ready, and they invite a careful examination of the same, and a coarison with other works on the same subject. Copies - will be furnished to feathers and Superintendents of Schools for this purpose at low rates. Price $1 60 Pnbliehed by E. H. BUTLER is CO.. 137 South Fourth etreet. Aed !or sale by Booksellers ienerall9. Philadelphia. aral Laecznree.—A new Course of Lectures, as delivered at the La New York Museum of Anatomy eiriMe.cing the sub. loots • Howto live andowhat to live fo r; Youth, -Matmite end Old Age; Manhood generally. reviewed; The came et In etioa, . flatulence and Nervous Diseases-accounted for. Pocket volumes containing these lectures will be for. /verde(' to parties unable to - attend on receipt of four denim by,addresking J. J. H3o3r BC &hoe! strest.'Boe to= fele 131 DRANO'S AMERICAN CHROMOS FOR SALE AT IL all respectable Art Stores. Catalogues mailed free by mYSs.fim L. PRANG &Ca', Boston. ROOKS ESOUGHT SOLD ANE EXOHA NGED AT JAMES BARB% 1105 mama dreet: PAWL f 010.17 DVRE PAINTS.—APE OFFER TO THE TRADE PURE White Lead. Zinc White and Colored Paints of our Own manufacture. of undoubtedpurity; in tuantlties to suit purchaser& ROBERT SHO.M&A.:Wi & CO.. Dealers In Paints and Varnishes. E. corner Fourth and Race streets. n027-tf I)PHUBARI3 ROOT. :OF RECENT IMPORTATION, 1.1 , and very sn o ierior quality .• White Gum Arabic. Eon India Castor White and. Mottled Castile Boa% Olive C/ ( 10 %if E rrions rands. For male by ROBERT SHOE. & DruilOstS: Northeast corner of Fourth and Race streets. n 02741 10: ll' f s • qi ;7.11, . ;1; • ti Tues. Com bo Brushes. Mirror,. Tweezers._ zee, Horn Scoops, Surgical Instruments, Trusses. Hard d son , Eubbog •Boode s Vial Omar. Glass and Metal TriMlea. ell a 2 "First Itandi3" prices. SNOWDEN a BROTHER . exigf 23 South Eighth street. ROBERT' SHOEMAKER dr '...OO...,„WHOLESALE Druggists, 'N. E. corner' Fourth and Race streets. Invite the attention lathe 'Trade to their largo'etock of Pine Drags and Chemicals. Ementlill doongea. Corks. e. n 0.1741 CANTON PRESERVED 'OENGER..— PRESERVED Ginry xi,'B ger, in syrup, of th ge r,...e celebrated Ch n yloong brand) lso t D Preserved Clinin beau. Imported and al° by JOSEPH ÜBli= di.00..E8 South Delawforare .1811P/PEEZIP WM. P. CLYDE & CO.. __ Tills 14 North and Routh Wharvel. I.:. e ritai wE at Richmond and City Point, .. Agents at Norfolk. Eel 1208 - SEW PUBLICATIONS. DRUGS. EIMEM toy. mewYoRic...THE CAMDEN AND AMBOY and PriIhADELPEUA T ANIVIRENTON RAILROAD COM. *ANY'S .1`om• PhlladeleMa to' New York e and way idatelriro7M Walmit street wharf. Fem. iat 5130 A. 111.. via Galndetrand Ainbete_etteord:__ - ; $ll 66 At BA. M . via Camden and Jersey eity_raPrees MIA 3 00 ' At 2.00 P. via Camden and Amboy nrpress. 3ee At B.BOP. M., via Camden and Jamey City Ennui. 800 At 6 P. M. for Amboy and intermediate Arians. At 6.80 and 8 A. M,. 2 and &Bo P. 121., for Freehold. At 8 and 10 A. M.. KAM and 4.30 P. AL. for Trent 226 At 6.30.8 and 10 A. M „ .1.2.3. &M. 4.80, 6 and 1160 r. M. for Moroehtown, Burlington, Beverly and Dolma , . At 5.80 and la 26.61..1.0. a. Ur. 4.10, 6 and /1.80P.M., for Floren g t ai k i • At 5.3 10 A. 314. 3.1X1.4.80. and 11.30 M. ter Edge water, veralde. Riverton and Palmyra. 2P. M. for Riverton and B. al for Palmyra. At 6.80 and 10 A. M.. 1.3,6 21,8 and 11.00 P.M.for Flab Home. 11180 - 2 be 1 and 11.80 P. M. Lines will leave from foot of Market street by upperferry. From Kensington Depot- At 11 A. M . via Kookeram and Jamey City . New York Express Line. and 5 .$3 00 At 7.00,22nd 11.00 ., CM.,.f.ii . ,8.6 W.3L'iCilEr . dniOn and EriewL And at 10.16 A. A.M. for Bristol. - - - - - At 7.oland owm 11 A. M.. 2.80 and 6P. M. for Morrisville and Tullyt. At 7.00 andeton 10.15 A. 11. 2.30 and 6 P.M. for &hawks and Eddin. At VA and 10.15 IL IL. 2.16,4, 6, and 6P.M.. for Cornwell , . • Torresdale,Llohreabrarg. Tacony,Wiesinotains, Brides- Mug and irrankford. and BP. M. for HoLmeshare and intermediate Stations. From West Philadelphia Depot. via Connecting Rail. Swim At 9.20 A. M.. 1.80, 6.80 and 1.11 P. M. New York Express Line.vla:yryey Cil.4a ty.... - ........ nt The i P.BO AZ M.and 6.80 P. M. Lines ... run alUIY; • • an omen. Sundays excepted. At 0.01.1 A. M., 1.10, 6.10 and 12 F.M., for Trenton. At 2.10 A. M.. 6.30 and 12 P. 11.. for BristoL At 12 P. M. (Night) for Morrisville, Tullytown, Schenck's. Ed din gtom Cornwells, Torriedale, Holmesburg. Tacony, . Wissincming. Brideeburg and Frankford. _For Lines leaving Kensington Depot. take the can on Third or Fifth streets, at Chestnut, at half an hour before departure. The Can on Market Street Railway run di. rect to Wert Philadelphia Depot. Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays, the Market Street Can gr ill run to connect with the 9.10 A. M and 6.80 P. M. lines. BELVIDERE DELAWARE RAILROAD LINER from Remington Depot. At 7.00 A. M. for Niagara Falls, Buffalo. Dunkirk, Elmira, Ithaca , Rochester,Biaghampton. Oewogo. e, Great Bend;brontnle,Wilkeebarre, Schoolev's ountain. fic At 7.00 A. M. and 8.80 P. M. for Scranton, Stroudsburg, Water Gap. Belvidere, Easton , Lambernille,Flemlugton, dsc The 2.30. P, M. Ling connects direct with the train leaving East= •Lirktauch Chniik.Allentown. BethleheM. At 6 P. M. forLambertville and intermediate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON CO., AND PEMBERTON AND HIGIITSTOWN RAILROADS, from Market Street Ferry (Upper Side.) At BA. 81.1,4 and 6.15 P. MI for Merchanteville, Moores. town, Hartford, Id seonville, lialneport, Mount Holly. Smithville, Evansville, Vincentown, Birmingham and Pemberton. Ati and 4 P.M 4Ex for Lewletown,Wrightetown,Cookstown, New Egypt, )3ornertstown, Cream •Ridge, Imlayeto Sharon and Hightetown. • . $ .' - Fifty Pounds of Baggage only allowed each Paesenger. Passengers are prohibited from taking anything as bag. gage but their wearing apparel. All baggage over fifty pounds to be paid for extra. The Company limit their re eponsibility for baggage to One Dollar per pound„and will not be liable for any amount beyond 15100. except by sPe• dal Contract. ; Tickets sold and Baggage checked direct' tnrough to Boston. Worcester, Springfield, Dartford, New Haven, Providence, Newport, Albany Troy,: Saratega, Utica, Rome, Byracuee, Rochester, Buffalo. Niagara Falls and Suspension Bridge, An additional Ticket Office is located at No. 828 Chestnut street, where tickets to New York, and all im. portant points North and East, may be procured. Per sons purchasing Tickets at this Orno-0, can have their bag. ,gage checked.from reeldentea or hotel to destination. by Union Tranefer Baggage Express. Lines from New York for - Philadelphia will leave from foot of Cortland street at 7 A. M. and LW and 4.0 u P. M., via Jersey City and Camden. At 6.80 P. M. via Jersey City and Kensington. At 10.00 A. M. and 12 LL, and 6.00 P. M., via Jersey City and Weet Philadelphia. From Pier No. 1, N. River, at 5.30 A. M. Accommodation and 2 P M. Express, via Ambnv and Camden. June lh. loiPt WM. IL GATZMER. Agent. NORTH PENNSYLVANIA B. R.— THE MIDDLE ROUTE.--Shortest and most direct line to Bethlehem, Easton. Allentown. Manch iChun. Hazleton, White Haven, Wilkesbarre,Mahanoy.City L Cannel. Pittston, Scranton. Carbondale and all the Po is to Lehigh and W l T =ler ' Dep oal r o e t l fn P ons idhdelphia, N. W. corner of Barks and American streets. BUMMER ARRANGEMENT ELEVEN DAILYTRAIN . —On and after MONDAY JULY 26th. _18613. Pas senger Trains leave the New Depot , corner of Barb and American streets, daily (Sundays excepted), .—Aas follows: At 6.45 A. Mccommodation for Fort Washington. At 7.46 A. M.—Morning_ Express for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad, con necting at Bethlehem nth Lehigh Valley and Lehigh and Brusonehanna Railroads for Easton,Allentavn. Cata itattonaailatington, Hav en ,_ MaWr Jeanerville. Harleton, White ...Wlkeabarte, _ Kingston. Pittston, and all points.. in Lehigh and WYonung _ VallsYs, • also , in connection with Le high and Mahanoy Railroad for Mahanoy City, and with Catawirsa Railroad for Rupert, Danville, Milton and Wit Wmsport Arrive at Manch Chunk at 12.06 A. M.: at Wilkesbarre at 8 P. M.; at Mahanoy City o_2 . P. M. Passengers by this train can take the gb Valley Train, parsing Bethlehem at 11-155 A. M. or ton and points on New Jersey Central Railroad is New York. At 645 A. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, 'atop. ping at all intermediate Stations. Pamengers for Willow Grove, Hatboro' and Hartsville, by this train, take Stage at Old York Road. At 10.30 A. M.—Accommodation for Fort Washington. stopping at intermediate Stationa: , • At 1.45 P. M.—Lehigh Valley Express for • Bethiebern. Allentown. Manch Chunk. White Haven. Wilkeebarre. Mahanoy CL-y, Hazleton. Centralia, Shenandoah. Mt. Cannel, Pittst on and' Scranton. and all points In Maw 1107 and Wyoming Coal Regions. At 2 35 P. M.—Accommodation for Doylestown, stopping at all intermediate stations. . . At AL—Lehigh and Suegnebarma Express for Bethlehem. Easton. Allentown. Mauch Chunk. Wilkes. barte and Scranton. Passengers for Greenville take this train to Quakertown and Sumneytown to North Wales At 41.15 P. td.—ACCOMMOnStIOn tor DoYlestown, stoxinng. at all Intermediate station!. l'acsoluters for Willow Grove. Hatborinutb and Hartsville take stage at Abing. ton for New Hope at Doylestown. At Lou P. M.—Through accommodation for Bethlehem, and all stations on MITI line of North Pennsylvania Rail. road, connecting_ at Bethlehem with. ,Lehigh Valley Le high and usquehanna Evening Train'for Easton. Allen. town. Manch Qhrntr. • • At 6.23 P. M.—Accominodation for Lansdale. 'stopping a all intermediate,stations. At 11.80 P, M._ Accommodation for yOrt Washington. TE NB AB.RWE LN PH LADELPUTA_ Prom Bethlehem at9.Wan 1105 A. M„rard 8.36 P. M. 11 66 A. M. and 2.00 P. M. Trains makes direct corona Lion with Lehigh Valley and Lehigh and Sas nehanna trains from Easton. Scranton. Vfllkesbarre, Mahanoy City and Hazleton. Passengers leaving Wilkesbarre at L 45 P.M, connect at Bethlehem at 6.05 P. M. and arrive in Philadelphia at 1.30 P. M. _ From Doyleetown at 8.25 A. 5.00 and 7.00 P. M. From Lanedale at 7.30 A. AL From Fort Waehington at 9.80.10.45 A. AL and 8.15 P. M. ON SUNDAYS. Philadelphia for Bethlehem al 9.30 A. M. Philadelphia for Doyleetown at 2.00 P. M. Doylestown for Philadelphia at 7.00 A. M. Bethlehem for Philadelphia at 4.30 P. M. Fifth and Sixth streets Pieeenger Cars convey passen gers to and from the new Depot : White Cara of Second and Third StreeteLlne and Union Line run within a short distance of the Depot Tickets. suet be procured at the Ticket °thee, in order to secure the lowest rates of fare. CLAIM Agent. Tickets sold and Baggage checked throng_h to principal points, at Marua's North Penn. Baggage Ps - prega Office. No. 105 &nth Fifth street . MA PHILADELP,_WILMINGTON • • • AND BALTIMDB.4 RAILROAD— TIME TABLE.;--Commencing Mon day, April 18th, I Trains will leave Depot, .corner of Broad street and Washington avenue, as follows: Way.suail Train, at age A. AL (Su nd ays excepted), for Baltimore. stopping at all regular station!. Connecting with Delaw termediateare Bear' oad at Wilmington for Crisfield and in tations. Express train at MUD M. (Sundays excepted)for Balti more and Washington, stopping at Wilroington. Perry. ville and Havrede-Grace. Connects at Wilmington with train for New Castle. Express Train at 8.80 P. M. (Sundays exeeptel),for Bal. timore and-Washingteni stopping _at Cheater. Thurlow. Linwood. Claymont, Wilmington.Newport.l3binton, New ark, Elkton,Northeast,Charlestown.Pin,Ly Grace, Aberdeen, Perrzmair's„ Edgewood. Magnolia, Chase's and Stemmer's gun. - • Night Express at_ 'llOO P. M. (daily) for Baltimore and Washingten, stoppng at Perryville and Havre. de - Brace. Connects' 'Wilniiintton '(Saturdays excepted( with- Delaware. Railroad —lAne, _stopping at New Castle, Middletown, ClaytOn;Dover,'Harrington,Seliford. Salisbury, Princasa Anne, and connecting: at Crisfield with boat for Fortress Monroe. Norfolk; Portamonth and the South. Passengers for Fortress Monroe and Norfolk via - Balt!: more will take the 1108 hi, Train. Via Crisfield will . . Wilmington Trains, stopping at all stations between rn Philadelphia and Wii ngton: , Leave Philadelphia at 11 A.XL,2.80,5.00,7 and 11.80 (daily) P. M. The 5.00 r. trap. connects with-the Delaware Railroad for and intermediate etationa Leave Wilmington 7.00 and 8.10 A. M. (daily) and LBO, Lit and 7.00 (daily) P. M. The 8.10 A. BL Train will atoll between Cheater and Philadelphia. From Erre tOPhiladelphia.—Leave Baltimore 7.55 Wa ail.' 9.40.- A. M..-ExPrese. 2.25 P. IL' Ex' preas 8.85 . M.. Empress. 8.55 P. M., Express. SUNDAY TR.AINS FROM BALTEMORE.—Leave Bal. timore at 355 P. M.. stopping at Havre de Grace, Perry. vile Wilminn., Also stove at North East, Elkton and, to .t.a.ko psiasengers - for Philadelphia,' and leave passengers from Washin_gtou or Baltimore, and at Cheater to leave passengers from Weald/Mit= .Or 'Bank more. ThroUgh ti eheb to all points West.Bouth andsOldhwest may belproadatticket.oftlee.: 888 Chestnut street,under Continental Hotel. where also State Rooms and Berths in SleepMgUarecan be' secured daring the day.. 'Pena= parchng tickets at this office canhave baggage checked, at their residence by the Union Transfer Com ay,' EL F. KENNEY. Eln dicaL PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE 10111 M -BUMMER TIME TA. Throughand Direct Route be. tween Philadelphia, Baitimore, Harris i b se ? Williams port, to the Northwest and the Great Oil Re an of Penn. elves:Lb.—Elegant Sleep% Gars on all 61 t Trains. on and after, goisiine, Mayllth,_ the on the PhlllidelphiA and Erie ailroad runes follows: WESTWARD. Mail Train leaves Philadelphia 1115 P. M. r liann ," rt 8.0 A.m. arrived, utrie. tuo P. M. Erie ENereis Wave* adelttla • - '12.00 Noon. HlL4moort 50 P. " arrives .a . .......... 1 8 0.06 A. M. Elmira Mall leaves Philadelphia Wt Erie. .. ....... 8.00 A. M. 6.28 P. M. " 'arrives at Lock - maven 7.45 P. M. EASTWARD. Mail' a l ° lel:11*r.. 7 ..... A. M. illianwport.. 10.16 P. M. *". " • arriTesi 7.10 A. M. Ede 14Preigi !paved 3mu . .. . ... '... 7.40 P. M. waerGipOr . e. &lb A arrives a 6 Philadelphia ... • •• • • W-1"; ..n Mail and Express connects with Oil Creek and ALIO. &heel' River Railroad. Bag a e (Mocked Through. • i Generai L. TYLPds. Enperintendent. ENIIMI ‘TRAVELEItIr eviii QUIT L TrittEON BEOORD I t flit Piti-tiSoLk iota: fo CI& _via PENNEHIL_ VA. OAD AND PAN- ND , E, HOURs ten - *ROB than hi COMPETING LINES.'• • , PASI34 O IDRRO tikttle AOO P. M. TRAIN, rive hi O C nirO N N A PN I ra T E IWM TT. P. " 2 21. - • 7- _WEE WWDRDFF'S celebrated . Padua • SW* ra S 240 LEE-Prell-CARWita throuch from PHILADEL. PHU to CIN INNATL Passengera taking the -moo M. and 11.00 P. M. Trains rcach CINCINNATI and all oointa WEST and SOUTH ONE TRAIN EN AX ANCE of all other Rontea. • • " ' ear- Pargengera foroilTl.: „INDIANAPOLIS. tIT LCUI .8 CAIRO,_CHIO%3O; PEORIA. BURLING. TON. QUINCY MILWA WEE ST.: PAVIA OISAILA.N. i ;,. r, iAnd all trinta WEST. , NO THWEST and ROUTE, • T, will tarUcidar te: ask, far =CUM, Per Via PAN.HANDLE P.OUTE. - • - larTo SECURE the HNEQUALED . 'lllVanties of this LINE, be VERY PARTIJ;ULAII and ASA. FOR TICKETS nris PAN-HANDLE." at TICKET °Emma. N. W. CORNER NINTH and CHESTNUT Street's. NO. 116 MARKET' STREET, bet: Second and Ftont Star , And T lIIGTZPIRST and htmaczr Streetr.Watt Phila. S. F. SCULL. Gen , ' Ticket Agt. Plttabtlrei.• JOHN IL MILLER. Oval EastilAit.A.% BroadwaY.liar 121G, 7 ,_Eirmain READING RAILROAD.— GREAT TRUNK LINE from Phila. • "" 111111 T, delphia to the interior of Pennsyfda. nisi; "UVSchuylkill, Susquehanna, Cumberland and Wyoming .Valleys. the , North. Northwest and the Cana. day... Rummer Arrangement of Passenger Trains, Austin& ma; teaving the liempanqDepot, Thirteenth and Cal. lOri hilrstreete, Philadelph at the following home.-_ ' MORNING ACCOMMOD TION.—At 1.80 A. M. for Reading and all Intermediate-8 tationr.._and Allentown. Returning, leaves Reading at ILBO P. M.. arriving in Philadelphia at 9.15 P. M. . - •• • • MORNING - EXPREBB.—At 8.15 A. M.for • Reading. Le. banon. Harrisburg. Pottsville. Pine . Grove, Tamaqua, Ounbury.l'iMaresport,Elmit a, Rochester,Nlagara Faille.- Buffalo. Wllls...sbarre. Pittston. York. Carlisle, Chars. bcreburil. Hagerstown. dic. The 7.30 tr ai n connects at Reading with the East Penn. sylvania Railroad trains for Allentown_ , dr.c., and the &15 A.M. connects with tk e Lebanon Valley train for Harrisburg',_&c.; at Port Clinton with Catarrhs& R.R. trains for W illiamsport. LoCk*HONen, 2.Eimira dm.; • at Harrisburg with Northern Central, Cumberlan dVatter. andcbcgallimd- finegtehannttrains for Northumber land_,_ WI rt,_ York,Chambersburs., Pinegrove. Ac. AFTERNOO EXPREBB.—Leaves Philadelphia at 8.20 P. M. for Reading, Pottsville, Harrisburg. dm., connect ing with Reading and Columbia Railroad trains for Col. mnbie. dm. pOTTi3TOWN ACCMODATION.:-Isitioist Potts. town at 6.45 A . M. , stopp ingat intermediate stations; ar rives.in Philadelphia at 9. A. M. Returning leaves Phl. lades at 4.80 P. M. •, arrives in Pottstown at 6.43 P. M. READING AC(XMIMODAT/ON—Leaves Readim a. tt 7.80 A. M.. stopping_ at all way stations; arrives In delphia at 10.15 A. M. Returning, leaves Philadelphia at 6.15 P. M. arrives In Reading at 8.05 M • u c i _ . Trains for Philadelphia leive Efartisb at A. 8.10: H. and Pottsvi ll e at 8.45 A. K., arriving inPhiladelphia at LOO P. M. Afternoon trains leave Harrisburg ni 2.05 P. end Pottsville at 2.45 P. lll.; arriving at Ph il adelphia at 6.45 P. M. • - -- . . Harrisburg accommodation leaves Reading at 7.111 A. 51., and Harrisburg at 4.10 P. M. Connecting at Reading with Afternoon Accommodation loath at 6.30 P. M., arriving in Philadelphia at 9.15 P. M. • Market train. with a - Passenger car attached, leaves naiads - tibia at 13.45 noon for Pottartille and all Way Sta tions leaves Pottsville at 7A. M., for Philadelphia and all Way Stations. - • All the above trains run dail Sundays excepted. Sunday trains leave Pott at 8.00 A. 31., and Phil& delphia at 3.15 P. M.; leave Philadelphia for Reading at 8.00 A. hi returning_ from Reading at 4.25 P. M. CHESTER VALLEY RAIIAIOAD.-Passenger for Downingtown and intermediate pointa take the 7.30 A.M., 1e.46 anti 4.30 P. M. trains from Philadelphia. returning from Downs own at 6.30 A. M. 1.00 P. M. and 5.45 P. M. PEIIKIOME RAILROAD.-Passongera for College. ville take 7.30 A. and 4.30 P. M. trains from Phtladol. phia, returning from Collegeville at 8.27 A. M. and 1.49 P. 31. Stage lines for.various points in Perkiomen connect with b abs at Collegeville. NEW YORK EXPRESS FOB PITTSBITROH AND THE WEST.-Leaves New York at; 9 A. M.. 6.00 and 8.00 P. 10., paasing'Reading stn. A. M., 1.60 and 10.10 P. M., and connect at Harrisburg { nth Pennsylvania and Northern Central Railroad Express Trains for Pittsburgh. Chicago, Williamsport. Elmira. Baltimore. Lrc _ • • • Returning, E xpress Train loaves lISIMEDTIrg, on arrival of Pennsylvan ia !Express from Pittabergli. at 3 and 5.25 A. M.. 9.36 P. M.. passing Reading at 4.49 and 7.06 A. M. and 11.40 P. M., arriving at New York 10.10 and 11.45 A.M.. and 6.00 P. M. Sleeping .Cors accompanying these train s through between Jersey City and Pitbiburgh, without • • ebanite. Mad train for New York leaves Harrisburg at 8.10 A.M. and 2.06 P.M.: Mail trainforitarrisburg leaves New York at 12 Noon. SCHUYLKILL VALLEY RATLROAD.--Traine leave Pottsville at (L 45, 11 , 90 A. M. and 6.4 D P. M.,teturningfrom Tamaoua at 5.85 A M. and 2.15 and 4.35 P. M. ectilyyr.R - 11.1. AND SUSQUEHANNA 'RAILROAD—. Trains leave Auburn at 7.56 A. M. for Pinegrove and Har risburg, and at 12.15P.M. for Pinegrove and _ Tremont; re turning from Harrisburg at 830 P. M. and from Tremont 1,1 at 7.40 A. -end 5.852,. , ' • TICHETEL—Through Ant-clam tickets and migra n t tickete to all the principal paints in the North and West and Canada& Excurnon Tickets from Philadelphia do Rending. and Intermediate Stall° ne • good for day only.._are sold by Morning Accommodatiom liar/cot Train, Reading and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced ratee. Excursion Ticketa to Philadelphia, good for day only, are sold at Reading and Inter ' Witte Station" by. Bead. lug and Pottstown Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. The following tickets are obtainable only at the Office of B. Bradford, Treasurer, 'No. 727 South Fourth street, Phila ing delphia, or of G. A. Nicolls, General Superintendent. Read. ...o . i . ninuistlon Ticket, at lig per cent. discount. between any points desired, fot families and firms. Mileage Tickets, good for 2000 mile; between all points at efd do each, for families and firms. Season Tickets, for three, six, nine or twelve months. for holders only. to all points at reduced rates. Cleruman residing on the line of the road will be fur nish:2th cards. entitling themselves and wives to tickets a half fare. Ex on• Tickets from Philadelphia to principal sta. tions, good for Saturday, Sunday and Monday, et reduced fare. to be had only at the Ticket Office. atThirteenth andOallowlffil streets. FREIGHT.—Goode of all descriptione forwarded to an the above _pointe from the Company., New Freight Depot, Broad and Willow streets. Freight Trains leave Philadelphia daily at 4.85 A. M., 12.45 noon, 2.10 and 6 P. M. for Reading, Lebanon, Harris burg. Pottsville, Port Clinton, and all pointe beyond. Mails close at the Philadelphia Poat-Oflice for aft places on the road and its branches at 6 A. M. and for the prin. cipal Stations only at 2.15 P. M. BAGGAGE. Dangan's Express will collect Baggage for all trains• leaving Philadelphia Depot Ordereaan be left at No 22.5 South Fourth street, or at the Depot. Thirteenth and Cal• !Durbin streets. PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL flathead. —Summer Time. TaM. ng effect May Lath, 1168. The trains of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad leave the Depot, at Thirty-first and Market streets, which in reached directly by the cars of the Market Street Passenger Railway, the last car connecting with each train, leaving Front and Market streets thirty minutes before its departure. Those of the Chestnut and Walnut Street Railway run within one square of the Depot. ON SUNDAYS—The Market Street Cars leave Front and Market streets 15 minutes before the departure of each train. Bleepisig Car Tickets can be had on application at the Ticket Office, Northwest corner of Ninth and Chestnut streets, and at the Depot. Agents of tne Union Transfer Company will call for and deliver Baggage at the Depot. Orders left. at No. iOlChest. nut street, ho. 116 Market street., will receive attention. TRAINS LEAVE DEPOT, VIZ.: Mail Train. Paoli Accommodation No. 1 .at-10.00 A. M. Fast Line at 1200 AL Erie Express. . .. ...... .._ _ . —at 12.00 AL Paoli Accom. Nos. 2. 3as4 .. . ... .at L00,.6..0036; 1(180 P. M. Harrisburg Accommodation at 8.30 P. M. Lancaster Accommodation .....................at 4.00 P. Parksburg Truitt. . —at 530 P. AL Cincinnati ..... ..... ....at 8.00 P. M. Erie Mail....' at 1145 P. M. Philadelphia Express atlLl3 P. M. Accommodation. . . . ...at 11.80 P. M. Erie Mail leave; wily, ezcept Saturday. Philadelphia Express leaves dans. All other trans daily, except Sunday. The Western Accommodation Train rans daily., except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured and baggage delivered by 5.00 P. AL.. at 1.16 Market streeL TRAMS ARRIVE AT DEPOT. VIZ: • • Cincinnati fiPriee.. Philadelphia Ex - preen Paoli Accom. No. 1.. urg Train. 9.10 Erie Mail " 7.10 " Fast Line. - ................... " P. 25 `! Lancaster Train.... ....... ............. "1-' BU P. M. /Me Exp.-ea; , - . " 6.00 " Paoli Accom. Noe. 24R 8. ..............at RA di 7.16 Day Express. ......... ..... ........ ...... 6.00 " 'arrieburg Accom..... ...... R. 60. " For further information, apply to . JOHN C. ALLEN, Ticket Age Marke t hestnut street, FRANCIS FUNK, Agen_,t 116 treet. SAMUEL H. WALACE. TickotAgent at therpepot The Pennsylvania Railroad Company will, not assume any risk for Baggage, except for. wearing apparel, and limit their rprponalbility to Une Hundred Dollars in value. All Baggage exceeding that. araount la value will be at the risk of the owner. unless taken by s eeit I mi a tixt or EDWARD H General Superintendent. Altoona. Els. • imamPHILAI)ELPHIA4 BALTIMORE CENTRAL, RAILROAD . —*Summer Arrangenientis, On and after' Monday 4pril 18.1868, the Trains will leave Philadelfil i tiC the epot of the Weet Chester & Philadelphia d, cox' • ner of -first and Chestnut, streets (West da:). at 7.15 A. M. and 4.50 P. M.. , • Leave Riling Sun, at 5.15 A. 21.,_and Dxford at 6.00 A. id.. and leave Oxford at &25 P. M. • A Market Train with Passenger Csr attached will run .fa Tuesdays and Fridas, leaving the Rising Sun at ILIA A. M., tnford at 11.45 M. and Kennett at LOu P. M., can. netting at Weet Chester Junction with a train for Phila. delphia. (in Wednesdays and Saturdays train leaves Philadelphia at 2.80 P.:Malmo throng - lite Oxford. t The Train leaving Philadelp h i a at 7.16 A.M. connects at . Oxford with a daily line of S tag es for Peach Bottom. in Lancaster county. Returning. caves Peach Bottom 'to connect at Oxford with the Afternoon Train for Philadel. Phis. IThe Train leaving Philadelphia at yid A /Y. riles Rising Sun, Md. • " - Passengers allowed to take wearing apparel only; agg Baggage. and the Compani will not. in any case, be re. winnable for an amount exceednag one hundred dollars, maims a special contract be iade for the same. • - • miil2 Y WOOD. General Supt. PAST___FMIgOHT LINE VIA ORM. FENNBYLVANIA .BAH. IiNINWIOAD, to Wilkesbarre. ldstbtimr 010, Mount Carmel, Centralia, and all point; on valley Railroad and its branches. Lehigh _ l lly new arrangements, perfected this day, this road is enabled do give Increased despateh to Merchandise -eorr d=ed to the above named points. voagg dforeredrat. the Through Freighl_POol. , EhE, , cor. of FRONT and NOBLE Streets. Before 6 P. M., will reach Wilkesbarre, Mount Carmel, Mahanoy C 1 414424 the orer stations in Mahanoy and Warns v baler/ f bledfAbamding day. duct Fl* Cape May Via Westiersey Raitroad • Flom Moot . ei Mdrkit farce& (rpper Ferry). Commencing Thursday , Sept. 10, 1868. • Trains leave as follows:' • • • FUR CAPE SPAY. "• , 3.15 P. M.. Cape 31 ay Pansenger. due at 7 03 P. M. RD.( LlPthinti LYNN z.CAPfI ISLAND. • Sun d a y !n ai lrnin Mail due at 10.06 A. 31. and Paenenker trivia leaven PhiladelPhla at 7.16 A 31. Yeturning leaves Cape Island at 510 P. M. • xcurefon tickets *3.. Cape May Freight trafen leave Camden daily at 9.20 A. 31. end Cape Island at 6.45 A. 3i. 4lc lame:tattoo Tickets between Philadelphia and Cape May, at the following rates: Animal fckets $100; Quarterly Ticket& s2ot for pale at the oillco of the ccm.panyin Late - , litre:fad Mkt fe - Eatibe procured at No. I3M CHESTNUT rireet, (Continental Hotel.) where orders CATI also be left for baggage. • Inch will be called for and checked at reel. denten, by thn Union Transfer Company. • WEST JERSEY RAILROAD LINES. • For Biljget on, Salem. MiTiville Vineland and interme dlate station', at BA . M. and 3 .20 1' Bf. • For I ape M•y, 9.A. 3f. and .6.15 P. 3f. z' Woodbury sccommodatfon train, 6 P.' M. Bridgeton and Salem freight train leave Carnderndaily at noon. Commutation Cheeks between rblladelPhia nd all asta tions at reduced rata. • •'• , WILLIAM SEWELL. Superintendent. PHILADELPHIA, ___: GERMAN I INIERINTOWN AN D __NOREUSTOWN RAIL. ROAD TLee.r, TABLE.—On and atter Friday. May 1.1868. • FOR OERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-6, 7,8, 9.05,10. 11. ULM.. 1. RI& 3'e,4.6,51f. 6.10. 7, 8. it to, IL my. Leave Germantown-6, 7, 7.ki B.2[N i 9, 10, 11. 12 A. M.; 7, 7. 4,4 M, tk 630 7, S. 9, 10, it B. , • • The KW down train. and the eM and 5M n 9 trains, wil not atop on the Germantown Branch. _ - ON RUNDAYS. • • Leave rhitadelyhla.--o.lsmlnntee A. MILT and 10'6 P.M. Leave Germantown-9.15A..M. •1: 6 and OM P P.M. CHESTNUT HILL RAILROAD. . LeaVe Phltadelphla 8;0.,} la A. M . t 9.100 ismi• oana Leave Chestnut 11111-7.10 , minntea_, &Etta and 11.40 N.; Lt a, 8.40, MO. 6.4k8.40 and 10.40 P. M. r l ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia...4.ls mina.* za.t_ *nal P. M. Leave Chestnut 0111.-.7.A0 minute" A. AL 5.40 and , 9.25 minutes P.M. • • FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave rhilaAelpbla--6, 736,, 9. It.as, A- 1 . 3 k 8 , 14 % 11011 . 616.8.06 and 118 E. ' PL Leav 8.36 F. M e Norriawn--5.47 and , 7.7 . 66.8,11 A. 3 . 4 3‘ 113 . . oN MONDAYS. _ Leave Philadelphia—wk., 31. • 934 and 7.16 P. M. • Leave Norrietola A. M.• 134 and l i . ) P. M. Leave Philadelphia-643C 9, ILO6 A. 136,, 9, 436,1634 1.16.8.06 and 1134 P. M. Leave Manaytinkr4lo. 734, ELM; 9 35.11 X 9 34 16 630 and 9P. M. 4:31 . 4 swm t 3 s;. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. 9 ; 434 and 7.16 P. M. Leave Manarink,- 1 134 A. M.; 6 and 934 P. EL W. S. WILSON, General Superintendent, Depot. Ninth and Green etrWs. WEST CHESTER AND PHILA. IrDELPHIA RAILROAD. VIA ME ,DiA. BUMMER ARRANGEMENTS. On and after MONDAY, April 18th, 1868. the trains will leave Depot, Thirty tint and Chestnut greets, as follows Trains leave Philadelphia for West Chaster, at 7.15 A. If , 11 A. M., 2.30, 4.15. 4.50, 7 and 11 P. M. 6 Leave Weet Chester for Philadelphia, from Depot on Market street, 6,15; 7.15, 7.80 and 10.95 A. M., 1.55, 4.50 and 6.50 P. M. On and after Monday June 15th an additiontil Tra n will leave Philadelphia for Media and Intermedia Points at 5.30 P. M. Trains leaving West Cheater at 7.30 A.' M., and loath g Philadelphia at 4.50 P. M.. will atop at B. C. Junction and 51edia only. Passengers to or from stations between West Cheater and B C. Junction going Bast, will tako train leaving West Cheater at 7.15 A. 51 . - .. and E2ing West will take train leaving Philadelphia at 450 P. M.. and transfer at B. C. Junction. Trains leaving Philadelphia nt 7.16 A. M. and 9.50 P.M.. and leaving Weat Chester at 7.30 A. M. and 4 50 P. connect arid. C. Junction with Tram on P. and B. C. it. i. for Oxford ar d intermediate points 6UNDAYB—teave Philadelphia at 8.00 A. M. and 2.00 P. M. Leave West Chester I 45 A. M. and 5.00 P. M. The Depot is reached directly by the Chestnut and Wal. nut Street cars. Those of the Market Street Line run within one square. The care of both lines connect with each train upon its arrival. Or Passengers are allowed to take wearing apparel only as Baggage, and the Company will not, in any case. be responsible for an amount exceeding SlOu unless seeds contract is made ter the same. ERN RY WOOD. General Superintendent. SHORTEST ROUTE TO SEA SHORE! On and after MONDAY, Bcpt 7th, 1868, trains will leave Vine street Ferry, as follows, viz.: Mail. .7.80 A. M. Freight, with passenger car attached 9.15 A. M. Atlantic Accommodation. —-.— . M. RETURNING, WILL LEAVE ATLANTIC: Mail M. re . P . aseinget: 11.40 M. Accommodation 5.60 A, M. JunctionjAccommodation, to Atco and Interme diate Stations leaves Vine street ...............5.10 ...........5.50 P. M Returning, leaves Atco 6.25 A. M. HADDONFIELD ACCOMMODATION TRAINS WILL LEAVE Vine Street Ferry at 10.15 A. M. and 2.00 P. 141; Haddonfield, at...... P. M. and 3.15 P. M. SUNDAY MAIL TRAIN TO ATLANTIC CITY. . Leaves Vine Street. .......... ......... . ........ 7.30 A. M Leaves Atlantic ...... 4.110 P. lIS4 Fare to Atlantic. $8 Round trip tickets. good only for the day and train cur which they , are issue UN d. $3. DY e 3041 f). M. Agent LEON FENCING The nnderaigned are prepared to receive orders for English Iron Fence of the beat quality, known as Cattle Hurdles, the most durable mid economical fence that can ' be used. This fence is especially adapted • for pountry seats or for the protection of lawns. It Is in universal Use in England in parks and pleasure , grounds. YABNALL &.:TRIALBLE., No. 418 South Delaware Avenue Philadelphia. MERRICK & SONS, SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY. 430 WASHINGTON Avenue r _Ptdiadi3lphis. MANUFACTURE STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure. Horizontal. Vertical, Beam. Oscillating, Bleat arui Cornish Pomo. BO s. ILERS--Cylinder. Flee. Tubular, &c. - STEAM AA mutnsi—Nesmyth. and. Davy stYles. and of all sizes_ , • CASTINGS—Loam, Dry and Green Sand, Brace, &c. riooFs—lron Frames. for covering with Slate or Iron TANKS—Of Caat or Wrought Iron, for refineries, water. oil, dre.. GAS MACHINERY.—Such as Retorts. Bench Castings. Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar rows, Valves, Governors. &c. SUGAR MACHINERY—Such . am Vacuum Pans and. Pumps, Defecators, Bone-Black Filters, Burners. Wash. era and Elevators ; -Bag Filters. Sugar and Bone Black Cars. &c. Sole manufacturers of the following specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity, of William Wright's Patent Variable Cutoff Steam Engine. In Pennsylvania, of Shaw & Justice's Patent Deadatroke. Power Hammer. In the United States, of Weston's Patent Selteentering and Self-balancing Centrifugal Su g M achine. Glue dr BartoPs improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsors Cenugal ilartol's trifPa tent Wroughtlron Retort Lid. Strahan'a Drill Grinding Rest. ' Contractors for the design, erection, and fi tting up of Be fineries for working Sugar or Mollusc& at 6.N) A. M. (101'PM AND YELLOW METAL SHEATHING. Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and3ngot %Japer, con stantly on hand and for sale by WI ZiRY Y.MlifOlt es , co.. No. Mil Booth WharreL ..,.8t1.25 A. M. 7.10 840 MO. 1 GLENGARNOCK t3COTCH PIG IRON, FOB .1.1 stein lots toga purchasers, from store and to ar. ive. PETER WRIGHT tr SONS. IMIS 115 Walnut ottrbet. OPA,L DENTALLINA.—A SUPERIOR SIATICL,EFOR cleanital'Peeth, destroying animalcule which in. feet them. tone to the game, and leaving a feeling of !rascal:ice an perfect cleanliness in the mouth. It me be need daily, and will be found to atrengthen weak and bleeding gums, while the aroma and detendveness will recommend It to every one. Being composed with the assistance of the Dentist, Physicians and Microscopist, It it confidently offered as a reliable substitute for the um certain washes formerly in vogue. .. Eminent Dentists, acquainted with the constituents of the Dentallina, advocate its use; it contains nothing to Prevent its unrestrainectemployment. Made only by JAKIDEI T_ S ~EOLDlNN,Anetheisarr.. . Broad snd ignotraireets.: ' For sale by Druggist, generally, and . • , Fred. Brown , D. L. Stackhonse. Hassard'di Co.. Robert C. Davis, C. R. Keen y. Geo. C. Bower. Isaac H. Kay. Chas. Striver% ' • C. H. Needles. S. M. McCollin. T. J. Husband., S. C. Bunting, Ambrose Siml?, ' Chas. H. Eberle. Edward Perri. James N. Marks, Wm—B. Webb, - E. Bringhnrstds Co. James L. Hisphrun. Dyott Bl ast's _,, Hughed dr Combo. H. C.eottlial Henry A. Bower. Wyeth di Bro. TBABELLA.IIABLiNNO.,p.: - 225 , / I,, TwFtrru "Street. cozuraltattonn tree. • CROSS CREEK 'LEHIGIX•.COA.L. • plumate & mocoLuts • No. 3033 CHESTNUT Street, West Pnifadelphia. Sole Retail Agents for Coxe.Bretbara & Co.'s celebrated Cross Creek Lehigh Coal. ,from the Buck Mountain Vein. This Coal Is particularirs4aPted for making Stearn for Sugar and Malt, doures, Breweries, dce. It is also unsur passed as & Family. Coal Orders left at the office of the Miner!. No. 841 WALNUTS Street (Ist floor), will recel ye our t roropt attention. Liberal arrangements made with manufacturers uting"®ular eusntkY.' . - fyle tf VitiE°,'‘Atrasici t it - t l s - ritraTibilM their steolt,of pring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal, winch, with the Preparat ion given by us, we think cannot be excelled by any other Coal .ffice.,Frararlirk /mutate Buildixtg., No. 15 S. Sorera street. , SiNES dsI3.I3EAFF,.. 1a1513 • Arch street wharf. hishuslUlL 'rue VE)GERSI GUIDE. CAMDEN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD SUMMER ARRANGEMENT MIACIIIIMERIC, IRON. lad. DIFJOICIN &L. 410A1lk AND. WOO/1U