Busume noTiozis. Slew tstyier.F . iall Cie&Ring.—lM SLore and receiving daily ; afro new and choice styles in the Sites to be made up to ado:- Great bargains In Summer Goode, ready made or made to order. Stgle,fit and toortmanship ofour garments surpassed by none. equating bView. Ail prices gnaretedeedtentier Matt the lowest etnnohers andfkili satisfaction guaranteed every purehastr. or tea sole *mailed and vmetirdflautei. gaff u ri ly h teiseen Stentrrr & Co, • ToWlit HALE. BWtt streets. GIS Pdamaer Gramm. PLULADELCICIAA AND 600 BROADWAY. NEW ]olt/C. Lyorkle luaguetic Insect Powder. , IT KILLS INSTANTLY. goarroachis, Am, bota;and livery kind of insect ver min are most troublamme Stirring the fall months. They are killed at once by this remarkable powder. It is not poimous; but certain to do Its work . .A single 25 cent Cask has often • KILLED A PECK OF COCKROACHES. Bee row; it keeps vermin tram depositing their eggs. and tins prevents next year's crop. Be luxe you get /Jest. It is the original and true Insect Destroying Powder. Beware of imitations. Bce the signature of E. LYON en the flask. Bold by all druggists • an21.2m4 The Cape Map Ocean Wave in a Eiret CLASS FAMILY AND. AGRICULTURAL NEWS PAP! R. and la one of the beet ADYERTNING DIMS IN NRW JERSEY FOR PHILADELPHIA MISES. rel9-e w4t' Have you a Cough, Cold, Pain In the Cheat, Bronchitis? In fact, have yen the pr.vrlonitory symptoms of the "insatiate archer; Consumption? at' se, know that relief ie within your reach in the ahape of Dn. WISTAB'S BALSAM or 'WILD Curium which in many cares where hope had fled, bite snatched the victim from the yawning grave 8014 6t fiJRIE ALBRECHT, REII & SCHMIDT. Manufacturers of FIRST CLASS AGREEFE PLATES PIANOFORTES. No. di W AROu m t reet, • vo.tu.tb. o .l l l l Philadelphia.: •All'4 kap MEYER, INVENTOR - AND Manufacturer of the celebrated Iron Frame ranea. Eas received the Price Medal of the WorliTs Great Exhibition. London. Eng. The highest prizes awarded when and wherever exhibited.. Warerrwme. 722 Arch street. Established 1822, , 1a29 w il.Mt% S EINWAY & SONS' GRAND B' ARE and upright Putnam, at BLAMES ROB, dTNTJT eltreet. roll tf§ EVENING BULLETIN. Saturday, Septcnibcrl9. 1 1808. ar'An Unusual pressure of advertisements requires a change lathe position of some of them to-day. The political notices will be found on the second page, and some ethers have been transferred to the inside pages. AJUVJEEMISING. It is no unusual thing to see an individual who has the appearance of neither Pagan nor Christian, promenading the streets and dis tributing printed circulars of some patent shoe-blacking, universal pain -killer, or sci entific mouse-trap. The bill-distributor is dressed as fantastically as a clown in a pan tomine, with "Neckem's Patent Mouse-trap," or "Cureall's Great Catholicon," printed in staring characters all over his motley-coVered body and limbs. And this display is intended as an advertisement, a cheap and effective announcement, which will give fame to pain killers or mouse-n*i and bring fortune to the pockets of their inventors. Such adver tising dodges are worthy of the old "lays -of - English-- country--Fairs, -when mountebanks kept their professional fools and when customers were summoned to the sac rifice by the braying of tin horns. There are yet other seekers after outré modes of adver tising, Who bedeck rocks and trees with their names and wares; who plaster them upon curbstones; who stencil them upon street nagging; who bedeck dead walls and fences with admonitions to bpy; who send around showy vehicles emblazoned with the praises of hats and coats, and who resort to a thou sand other expedients to attract attention and sell goods. Now, there can be no denial of the assumption that there are two great primary 'subjects in advertising, the first of which is the giving of the utmost publicity to the objects of the advertiser, and tke second the securing of the largest possible returns for the enterprise. How to obtain these ends moat cheaply and effectually is the great aim of every judicious advertiser. Let us see how it works. Take first the case of the advertising clown. Fifty dollars is paid for his outfit ; five dol lars a day would be a cheap compensation for him to receive for making himself a pub lic, laughing-stock. The handbills which he distributes in a day cost perhaps five or ten dollars more, and what is the return ? Of twenty thousand persons who have been passed in the streets, nineteen-thousand-five hundred have been disgusted at the exhibi tion ; most of the remaining five-hundred have forgotten all but the ridiculous features of the display, and of the thousands of circu lars distributed, ninety-nine hundredths have fallen on barren soil. There may be some substantial return for the outlay, but it does not comport with the expenditure. The same rule that applies to the placarded clown applies in a degree to all others of the irregular modes of advertising, and those who indulge them will find "in the long run" that they have operated upon a system of false economy. Common sense and every day experience prove that the cheapest and most effective advertising medium in the world is the popular newspaper. Take, for instance, a journal which has a circulation of twenty-thousand. It is a well established rule that each good newspaper has an average of five readers for every copy of the paper printed. This gives one hundred thousand readers for each days's issue, and the very great majority of-these readers are, of neces_ city, at least measurably intelligent and all have wants that advertisers are ready to supply. The cast of a hundred-thousand circulars would pay for an advertisement of such a character in a first-class newspaper that would attract the attention of all its readers, that would be perused care fully and leisurely, and that would be at hand for future reference in the event of' use aris ing for the thing advertised. Those who practice the "clown dbdge" would save fully seventy-five per cent. in their original invest ment by I ollowings legitimate mode of ad vertising, while the returns would probably be a thousand-fold greater. A careful inves tigation would satisfy the grotesque adver tiser that the most profuse stencilling, the showiest of emblazoned vehicular advertise ments, the gaudiest of show-bills and the most ridiculous-looking card-distributors ut terly fail of bringing forth as satisfactory re turns for a like outlay of money as are _ ytiellied_by the judicious use of the advertising COhinkall of the popular and influential newb paPer. Bli11PL!(YA OFFICE S l'here appears to . be remarkable confo :rilon among profesinonal and public men in ' . ..ilference to the laws go7erning h t-e tenon ; o f ;7 , 47+ #3uplicAte offices in this city. The question has betn discussed again and as in; and was brought up in Councils on Thursday by an ophdon,from tlipCity.Solicitor in the Cases of Messrs. IlobereM. Evans and William H. Barnes, The two gentlemen are memhers of Councils, and have received appointments to i' i tither offices since their election; in the one cies, as Oil Inspector, and, in the other, as Deputy Sheriff. The question of their ineli gibility to hold their seats in Councils being submitted to the City Solicitor, he decided, first, that the holding of the sec ond (Ace does not invalidate the first, but that kir. Dins ) , ag Oil Inspector, will not be eligible for re-election; and, sec ond,ihat a Deputy-Sheriff is an officer , not re cognized by law,and therefore that Mr. Barnes is entitled to his seat, and to' a re-election to it. In other words, being a;Councilman does not prevent one from being an Oil Inspector, but being an Oil Inspector prevents"one from being a Councilman. Whether a Deputy- Sheriff is an officer recognized by law or not, would seem to be settled by the "higher law" of necessity. The law recognizes , the obliga tion of the Sheriff to perform duties which are physically impossible unless the agency of Deputy-Sheriffs is employed, and in this plain, common-sense view of the case, the office of Deputy-Sheriff is and must be "re cognized by law." The decision of the City Solicitor appears to be in opposition to the latest ruling of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. In the Gi rard College case,Justice Read gave this opin ion: "The constitution of 1790 exhibited a strong jealousy of the appointing power in the 18th,now the 19th section of thOrst article, which re-ap peers in the Bth sectioWf the Gth article of the amended constitution of 1838, in this direct lan guage : 'No member of the Senate or of the Honst of Representatives shall be appointed by the Governor to any office during the term for which he shall have been elected." "In the act of 1854, which is the city charter, the 48th section provides that no person shall be a member of more than one of the bodies enu merated in it, and in the 4th section is a proviso `That no member of the State Legislature, nor any one holding office or employment under the State at the thee of said election, shall be eligible as a member.of said Councile,nor shall any mem ber of said ,COnneils during the term for which he ehall be elected, hold any office or employ ment herein created or provided for of ,a muni cipal character. , "The first clause of this proviso has been ex tended by the act of the 18th of March, 1863, and the second clause dearly excludes any member of i 'ounells from the offices of City Treasurer, Receiver of Taxes, City Controller, City Commis frioner, Alderman or Mayor during the term for which be Is elected, being a copy from the pro hibition in the Constitution." The spirit of these enactments seems to be a prohibition of the holding of two public offices at once, and the wisdom of the princi ple is manifest. Under a republican form of government, a distribution of offices, so that all respectable citizens shall have an equal benefit from their honors and emoluments, is certainly better than a concentration of them in the hands Of a few. In all cases of elective ( thee the practice is uniform. The people never elect a man to an office in addition to one he already holds. It is felt that the duties of one office, if properly discharged, are enough for one man's attention and time, and there are always enough respectable citi zens to fill all offices, without saddling one man with double responsibilities. If the City Solicitor's opinion is correct, we need still further legislation upon this subject, in order to remove temptation from our office-holders, to save them from being over worked by duplicate duties, and to provide for a free distribution of offices among the people. Mr. Wallace proclaims to the Democracy that "Maine has proven (!) that you can again bring triumph to the principles you love." The proof is to be found in the fol lowing facts and figures. We are advised by telegrams from Maine that,by estimating the vote of tr few unimportant towns, not yet heard from, the same as last year, though it is morally certain there will be a Republican gain in these towns, the total vote of the State will be as follows: Republican 73,377-58.84 per cent. Democratic 53,027 —9l 16 " 20,350 Rep. majority. Last year the vote stood: • Republican . 57,649-55 GO per cent Democratic . 40,035-45.40 " Last year the Republican vote was but 10.20 per cent. more than the opposition; this year it is 17 68 per cent, more. The total in crease in the vote amounts to 22,720. Republican 15,728 69.22 per cent. De mocratic 6,992 30.78 " It will be seen from this, that although last year the Republicans had but 10.20 per cent. more votes than the opposition, they gain this year of the increased vote 38.44 per \ ctnL more. Surely the Democracy have cause for congratulation that it was tio worse. Another case of the "great reaction" oc curred 3 esterday, when an election came off in the dock of the Quarter Sessions. There were eight votes in all, of which Seymour got seven, and Grant only one, and he was a colored person. Comparing this with Lin coln's vote in 1860, when he carried Penn sylvania by a majority of 59,618, in a total of 476,442, we see a tremendous reaction. Of course, if Lincoln carried Pennsylvania by 36 per cent, in 1860, and Seymour and Blair carry the Quarter Sessions by 87k per cent in 1868, it follows mathematically that ,Sey moues majority in this State in November, will be 143 k per cent better than the result in 1860. In other words it will be 43A per cent of the whole vote, which may be put down at 600,000, in round numbers. Such a majority as this, rolling up the magnificent figure of Two Hundred and Sixty-One Thou sand, is a reaction as 18 a reaction. Isn't it Mr. Wallace? If twenty-five Democrats parade in a Grant club, from a single Ward, how large a reac tion for Seymour and Blair does it indicate for the whole twenty-eight Wards? Ans. About seven hundred, •or an increase of fourteen hundred in the majority for Grant and Colfax. But where one convert parades with a club, at least five go - quietly to the polls and vote Without sayingtauch about it; and the majority for Tyndale and Gibbons in October ought to be six or seven thousand, preliminary to a • ten-thousand majority for Grant and Colfax in November. Steady w ork and, thorough organization will accom plish this. .riiiiti.• .. .to.Ait - 7. -. Ev*.N..6..:'8eAt.11.17.4' , ...ii1t'A::b:F;T....T'T'8.':.,...,v.t.v..k1j;,..Y..;.:''._ , _,9010.1.k:1.(,).',..•.:.1._q.K....''.. 11,624 Rep. majority John Quincy A. ams, who dilgraces the venerable : name be . bparS, 'by accepting, a nomination' fran theillatn - tremo6racy of Massachusetts, writes a very odd letter to his constituents. He repligiates the Tammany repudiatori, sayS,liave committed themselves "to an indefinite extension of an intolerable nttbutne.n.P He then makes the rnonstrots assertion` that the RepUbliem party have "staked their existence" on the "permanent domination of .the African race." He then declare+ that "the path upon which Congress has , entered' peradta no halt, and retreat is ruin," and, in the next breath con tradicts this by saying, "we must begin anew," having just shown that "retreat is ruin." Many more absurdities and falsehoods are crowded into this extraordinary epistle, but these specimens will suffice for to-day. Letter trout an o.ldOemocrat. PUILADELNILA, Sept. 19, 18613.:—.:EditorEveiting Bulletin : Mr. Felix Grady has sent me the fol lowing communication, which I enclose •to you that it may elicit from some of your leaders a satisfactory reply, if poesible. Mr: Grady ,is an octogenarian Democrat. His forehead., is ploughed with the furrows. of care, and his hair would be silver if his head wasn't bare: Four- Ecore 'winters have sprinkled his head with their snows, and the blossoms of eighty campaigns fringe his nose. He writes : Mum JOHM—This is the enssedest country that ever was seen. " Which is which? What is what? Where are things? What do things mean? Here there was an election in Kentucky the other day, and the Democrats had 80,000 majority. The World said it was a great victory. Now there is an election in Maine and the Radi cals have 20,000 majority,and the same paper says it also is a great victory. I don't understand If one dog fights another dog, does one dog 'beat whether he does or not? If the yellow dog gets whipped does ho whip the speckled dog ? And is it any proof that he rallied Or got up a reaction? I can't grasp it? It never used to be so. This is another result of eight years of Radical rule. This is what the Freedmen's Bureau has done for us. If this is so, heads and tails are both tails, and both heads. I'm you and you're me, and we're both each other. Inside out is inside in, and upside down is right side up, topsy-turvey is straight, and the deuce takes the ace, and they both take One another. It don't make any difference whether I am an oyster or a Democrat, and if I don't drink rum I do drink it and vice versa. No wonder we have earthquakes and such convul sions. I am not mad, but soon shall be. If a Radical majority is a straw that proves that De mocracy will win, I ought to vote the Radical ticket, oughtn't I ? That would defeat the Demo cracy, and yet it would give them " a great vic tory." If I vote for Seymour, it ought to elect Grant; but will it? will it? Why is this thus? Why are things so mixed? It seems to me that I could sit down and cry almost exactly like a baby about it. MR. JOHN QUILL Bunting, nurborow 6: Co.. Auction eers,Nos. 23s and 234 Market street, will hold daring nest - week, by catalogue; the - following. important sales, viz.: ON MONDAY, Sept. 21, at 10. o'clock, onfour moqths' credit, 1,000 lots French and British i l2 x ;Goods, in cluding 23 eases British Fancy Dress G sup pieces Paris Merino Cloth of a superior make. In t most se lect • shades, 10 cases French Fowl Dress 'Goode; 10 cases Black Alpacas, 10 cases Colored Alpacas and Poplins, 23 pieces Eugenie Cloakings ; also, Silks and Velvets,3B pieces tine Black Velveteen,Vienna,Broche, Long and Square Shawls of a favorite importation, Brothe Border Stella Shawls, German Linen Goods, Hamburg, Irish and Scotch Embroideries and Ildkrin. 800 cartons St. Etienne and Basle Ribbons, by order of Memo, Kessler & C0.;C0.; also hill line St. Etienne Colored Velvet Ribbons; also, Trimmings, - White Goods. Gloves, Umbrellas, &c. ON TUESDAY, Sept. 22, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit, about 2,000 packages Boots. Shoes, Balmorala, &c., of city and Eastern manufacture. ON THURSDAY, Sept. 24, at 10 o'clock,on four months' credit, 800 packages and lots of Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Fancy Cassimerea, Beaveni, Softies ins, Chinchillas, Cloths, Doeskins, Satinets, Italians &c. Also, Dress Goode , Silks, Shawls, Linens, Shirts, Balmoral and HoopEkirts, Sevrings, &c, Also, 10,000 dozen German Cotton Hosiery and Gloves. Alpo, 150 packages Cotton and Woolen Domestics ON FZUDAT, Sept. 2b, at 11 o'clock, on four months' credit, about 200 pieces of Venetian, Ingrain, Romp, List, Cottage and Rag Carpetings, 200 pieces Floor Oil Clothe, &c. Sale of V a.anattele a.und on the Selauyl- KILL, li/ALOW GRAS'S FEIII6Y BRIDGE.—We wouldlcall attention to the Ex. cutor's sale, to be held at the Ex change, September 30th, by James A. Freeman, Auc tioneer, of a valuable tract of land fronting on the River Schuylkill, in the Twenty-sixth Ward, adjoining the Philadelphia Gas Works, containing 161 43-100 acres, intersected north and south by Thirty-fourth, Thirty.flfth and Thirty-sixth streets and Southerland avenue; east and west by Mifflin, McKean, Snyder, Jackson, Wolff, Either and Porter streets, as said streets are now laid down on Smedley's Atlas. This property will be divided and sold in 9 tracts, in conformity with the lines of the streets, as laid down on said atlas; the streets being not yet opeue', will probably be coullrintd as designated on said atlas. The several nine tracts will contain from 10 to acres, and are particularly well located for manufac turing purposes, as well as suitable for depots for Pe troleum, Anthracite and Bituminous Coal. A branch leading from the Pennsylvania Railroad, which now extends to the Gas Works, will bring this property in communication with the Reading Railroad, Philadel phia, Wilmington and Baltimore, and other Railroads; and can be readily extended through each tract to the River Schuylkill. Eight lots will front upon the Schuylkill, having in all 6,468 feet at low water mark, altogether over a mile frontage for wharf improvements. For Sales of Real Estate, Stocks, Far. NITULE, Booze, see Thomas gl: Sous' catalogues, ho,uta to-day. SPECIE & C0.43..AND H AINES BROTHERS Pianos, and Mason & Hamlin's Cabinet Or gam, only at J. E. LiOIUI4.OB New Store. auto 3mo 4p§ No. 923 Ohostnut street. HENRY PHii.L.IPFI. CARPENTER AND WILDER: NO. 1024 SANSOM STREET. je3.ly4p PHILADELPHIA. T 01IN CAUMP. BUILDER. - 1731 CHESTNUT STREET, and 213 LODGE STREET, Mechanics of every branch required for houeebuilding and litt/132 promptly furnieed. fe27tt DR YOUR OWN POLICE BY USING STRO s G 13 wrought iron bolts for outer doom, and a variety ref neat Brave and Plated Bolts - and Door Chains for chamber doors, and a Watchman's Rattle as a means of alarm. They are sold by TRUMAN & SHAW, No. 826 (Eight thirty.Bvo) 3iarkct street, below Ninth. QOUII.CROUT, CABBAGE AND COLE SLAW CUT. 0 tors, Mincing Knives, Egg Whips, Skewers. Basting Spool's and ether hardware for Housekeepers,for sale by TriUMAN dr. ShAW.. No. 835 (Eight thirty.five) Market street, below Ninth,Phlladelphia. 1 OR OUTDOOR CROQUET WE HAVE VARIOUS priced sets, from $4 upwards. Also, galvanized and iron_Quoits and Iron Dumb Bells. TRUMAN dr. W SHA, No. 835 (Eight thirty-five) Market street, below Ninth. pERMANBIIIP. • • Thorough education of the hand in the free and rapid use of the Pen. by PrOfessor Long's new 'system, now in troduced for the first time in the I.lnited States. PRIVATE' WRITING ACADEMY, 1103 Chestnut street. Separate and elegant rooms for ladies. FAMILIES AND SCHOOLS ATTENDEDi The highest testimonials from the Us. iversitlees of Ox ford. Cambridge, and London. and Glasgow. if • "UGT.JET At SONS , STANDARD CIGAR/3. 'Mariana Rita"—all Vuelta A bajo leaf, equal to beet Imported Cigars; 19 varieties (retailed 98 to 919 per hundred.) "Fre Diavolo"—all Vuelta Abajo , s Fillers ; 6 varieties (retailed 96 toligner hundred.) '"Loula d'or," "Fleur de Lys," etc., (retailed 94 to 56 per hundred.) Send for Circular. We will gladly direct customers whore they can buy genuine and cheapest. We continue importing Cigars by every liavalia Steamer. FGUET N, eel7-16trP1 No; B. Front street. itiIARKING WITH INDELIBLE INK. E 3 IBROIDEB.- ing.Braiding, Stamping. tic. M.A. TORBY. I&SJ Filbert otreet. TTENRY REINHARDT, I• 1101+EL A: 4 ID RESTAURANT. NO. U 6 BOUT)! XTH STREET, BELOW CHESTNUT (OErO. - >ITE THE NEW COURT HOUSE.) MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS. Wines, Liquors, etc., of the choicest brands bel2lm,4p§ e F l y t o•Y Vso Wi b l — di ba e rp i l eM e ic an iAr . I I: B lA T tri 170 and Crab. 4 P. J. JORDAN. 380 Pear Wed" • You Wished You Had Your FALL CLOTHING • .Yesterday. Get It Immediately, AT WANAMAKER & BROWN'S EDWARD P. KELLY, S. L Cor, Chestnut and Seventh Streets. THE BEARS AND THE BOYS. A man in Quebec, the other , day, So the daily newspapers elm) Et ad two dancing bears on the street, Keeping time to his musio with graceful feet. He kept them dancing, in pleasant weather, Safely and strongly chained to gether They gathered a crowd of men:and boys, Who made a cheerful sort of a noise. But some folks thought they dis turbed the peace ; So they went and called the Quebec police. So they daneeilalong With indignation. And music and - song, To the pollee station- And one man after another declares That he considers them dangerous bears; t or bears will bite, if they get chance. Even if they've been trained to FELIX GRADY dance. • The bear man all.the evidence heard. All the time speaking never a word; Till he gave awhistle,and said ••Ouc boy a!" And tben in the Court was a jolly noise! For a healthy boy from each bear's skin. Stepped out of the place in which he'd been ! Those folks were sold 1 And the weather's too coldA we may safely deolare, for anybe 61,* - either here or there, t o go bare. and it isn't fair. to rig the boys in the skin of the bear. So between the two. we know what we'll do We'll ask them all. to hurry and call at our Brown Stone Hall, and get knit of clothes for the Fall; well fitting and nice; and at such a shocking abatement in price. Come along, boys! And bring your fathers ! RQ CK HILL & WILSON Great Brown Stone Clothing Hall, 603 and 605 Chestnut Street, ONE PRICE ONLY. JONES' Old Established 01 4 1 E PRICE CLOTHING HOUSF, 4304 MARKET STREET I , ABOVE SIXTH; For otyle. durability and excellence of workmanship , . our Goode cannot be excelled. Particular attention paid to customer work. and a perfect At guaranteed in all CRUM apt' to th emrPO REASONABLE PRICES. TUE NEW STORE, un solemn.lC SREZT \ • (Under Continental), Is the place where you can got the first quality of goods cut and made in the latest style. .Idy-PRICEB will Butt yin. Call and examine for yourself. Cloths and 0158i meres of all shades and style,. JOHN N. FLOYD, Merchant Tailor. -rat ito IS G it SCUT TAM OUT.4* This Card will be geod for Two Dollars in part payment for all cash, purchases of ready-made elotbincn amounting to Twent y - five Dollars or more : : tgARLES STOEDES ife , CO., 'se 824 CHESTNUT Street- INDIA BERBER MACHINE - BELTLN - G, ..BTE&M, Packing Hose, din. Engineers and deafen] will find a full assortment of 000dyearei Patent Vulcanized /tubber Belting. ranking Rom thc.cat the Manufacturer's Headquarters. a ct r' 3.08 Chesbrat street South side. 8.--We have now on hand a largelot of Gentlemen' Ey . Ladies' and Misses' Gum Boots. Alen , every varlet' ana etylo of Qum Overtealai VLO$'H*lW FALL G :04:101)S. TAILOR PIIILALDELPHIA. wr" attobak; OHANGBABLE: STLX:';POPLIIS. , r EDWIN :HAIL .isz co., r No. 28 SOUTH SEPOND:St i ••-• • • • , I g i ot i d e .f.!,7l= ll, 4il 7 l .U n l i ine : 43f these now: and deeir abla Plain (bulge/LW ,- 11112 L Pepin, L Ribbed Changeable bilk Pipllor, Cbaogeable • " hangeable hiltPengeer, Irkh Pepligh - Plain,• • "Tim's" Irish Poplins, Changeable, With a treat variety of New Fabrics . of the chanielibio • order:for Ilona Drestin end Walicine Butte, : ; Ladies' Draw mane , and Walking Suite nee to ordera!Y the moat elperienced betide.. , ' _ iel9 atotb tf el, A. rilaVir siiIRTING:•_.. -, ! .:. : musLlN DAVOL MILLS: Manufactured on entirely new enechinerst-ezrretely, for the best city trade. In order to Iritrodnie this =Win to the favorable notice of memo* it hi Whiled at the present - price of inferior, though betterlmown makes. It ia fully e gnat, he Levelebt and theencia to ,thei celebrated New York Mille , . 'and much meteor to etch goods he Wamentta or Williamsville.' FOR BALP. BY 1110111El1, COLLADAT C 0.4". )318,vhostriot ipiriroT'• srazi.'&lloll4 713 North Tenth Street. . cuankaes sicOzeurchs, Eighth and Chestnut. JOHN W. •THOMAS, . 406 4 . 407 b. Second Street. ram= & WOOD, ; ' 327aorth Eighth Street. 11 ASH/ CH & COLE, 4t. borth Eighth Street. BELCIiEU drisEED, 3.4 North Eighth Street. GEOUGE H. WiBULAlt'll • 7 North Eighth Street. E. WORLAND & 1632 Midge Avenue. N. HALL & Co., 28 South Second Street. ETUE 6: LANDELIe, Car. Fourth' and Arch. JOS. 11. ',sawmill Cor. Bth and Sprang Garden. HENUT ALUEUTSON& DUO., 20 South Second Street.' JOHN 7. ETTLE, CO?. 7th and Spring Garden. JAMES Melt 1128 Chestnut Street. JAHES S. JONES, Hain Street. Germantown. JEREZ GAMS, Main Street, Germantown. J. Az A. JONES, Arun Street, Germantown. Eel 94 2to et) ifgh SHEPPARD, VAN HARLINGEN & ARRISON Respectfully invite the attention of buyers to their FALL STOCK OF NEW LINENS HOUSEKEEPING DRY GOODS, • NOW OPENING, Purchased FOR CASH at Featly REDUCED PRIDES. comprising all the different varieties and widths in HEAVY LINEN SHEETING& HEAVY PILLOWLINENS. REAL BAnNEILEIE TABLE DAMASK. . TABLE NAPKINS AND DOYLIES. TABLE CLOTHS, WI 111 NAPKINS TO MATCH. DAMASK TOWELS AND TOWELINGS. EMBROIDERED PIANO AND TABLE COVERS. STRIPED AND PLAID TABLE COVERINGS. FIB E MARSEILLES QUILTS, VERY ELEGANT. RICH CRETONNE AND FURNITURE CHINTZES. AT.6O. • Superior Quality Blankets, AR 11(001 and extra widths for best Family we. lIEDIEM ELLNKEIS, For Hotel/. Public Institutions, dm., Ac. Crib and Cradle Blankets. Flan nels, Mnslins, ifeco. No. 1008 Cite§trriit Street. POl9 a tu'fb lotto rs, , tl_lJ OCTOBER MAGUINES, THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY. CONTENTS :.—lnebtlate-AsYlams. and a-Visit, to One, by Jamee Parton; Petro'enm in 'Burnish, by J, W, Palmer; The Man and. Brother, Part 2, by 3: W. De Forest; The Two Rabble; by John IL,Widttler; meg. , crowns and lode' Caps, by hire. Jane •G. Austin; SL Michael's Night, Part t, by Miss Agnes Bfarrhon; Ed. trend Brook; The Face in the Glass. Part 2; Love's Queen, by Wm. Winter; Bacon (First Paper), by E. F. Whipple; Free Pi oduce among the Quakers, by W. P. Garrison ; ho Finances of the United States; Pandora, by Bayard Taylor; Reviews and Literary Notices.: OUR YO:UN% FOLKS. ,• CONTENTB:--Second Lecture on Heat, by Leraise E. Chollet ; The Peterkine at the Menagerie, by Lucretia P. Hale; Corn Harvest, by J. T. Trowbridge; The White Hoods of Ghent, by J. H. A. Bone ; Autumn. by Mari N. Prescott; 7he Talk of the Trees that Stand in the Village Street, by the Author, of "The Seven -Little Sisters Little Dilly, or The , Use. of Tesxs..by Mrs. 4L IL Diaz; Marjorie's Almanac. by T. 13. Aldrich ;, , Lessons in Magic, No. 12, by P. H. C.; Our Little Prince, tly G. W.43eares; Cast Away in the Cold, kart 15. by 1. I. Hayes; Our Barmy. by Julia e B. Eori; Music ; flonnd the : Evening Lamp; Our Letter Box: • , • 131:17 NINETEEN ELLiJSTRAVOyB. . For 8010 by Bookrollors and Newodealoro.c i • TICANOII & FIELDS,. Publishers, Boston. ppeeial Stibieription Agent, for Philadelphia; w. B. ZIEBEII, No. 106 lo — ottiThlrd Stieet• _ _ , , H. PI & C. R. 'TAYLOR, FERFEINIZRY Ann TOILE r Attar% 641 ande;l43 P. Ninth ntreot. . . MOST DE518.4,81 E COAIP.s.eiION Evil AN 'Z. Mufdeal Box. • • ••• BIWTBER. ImPagers. Cheetaut etreet, below ..ourth. BRA,DLBE'S COLIMIN. pis -NEU Sr.rORE, JUST OPENED, At 1 311° Chestnut St.. CON131111Mi1301 ) MST CLUB GROCERIES SUGARS TEAS, &o. 125 CANES OLD KENTUCKY BOURBON Cheap •at No. 1311 CHESTNUT STREET.. NgNy::„.N . g,§.§...,...4.A .- cc..Efig-r.,. kite, B b esi., tt CHEAP ! : :P44.1.:0LE No. 1311 ' .Orni3 1 141 UT • STIMET,.. SMOKED TONGUES, SALMON .: BEEF, CHEAP AT EItADLkE'S, NO: 1311 CHESTNUT' STREET.. nit OPOLTHION o MacoaronliVermieelli, fre4cl MEM' ,AT r, BRADLEE'S', No. 13R f biINEITBUT STREET. Fresh no.portatiomit of Londongugax Ztaisint4: IN Bp X Ef);, QUARTERS, CITZAP AT BRADLEE'S; No. 1311 CHESTNUT STREET. FINE JAVA 00 FFEE, Fresh, Itoo,aiiad and Green. at BRAD L E E'S, No. 1311 CHESTNUT STREET; 200 Dozen Assorted Jellies FREl3ll—$2 ZSO per dozen. BEADLE E'S , No. 131 GII.EiSTNUT STREET., PAILS BRUSHES; BROOMS, Cheai at BR ADLEE'S, No. 1311 CAIRSTITUT STREET: 100 Doz.. Can Fruits, CH.EAP. BRA DLE E'S, Po. 1311 OHESTISTET STREET. STEWART'S NEW YORK SYRUP. . BRADLEE'S, No. 1811 CHESTNUT STREET.- rel9•Qtrp§ NEW STORE JTJBT OPENED. J. IL BRADLEE, DEALEE IN CHOICE GROCERIES. WINES. LIQUOR/a, CORDIALS, FOREIGN AND , DO3IDaTIC FEUIES, Na 1311 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. ,014.11 a tiosiokirriti*Tm;le. SWEETNESS IN CRYSTALS. The most pet fest and dentate CONFECTIONS, FOR PRESENTS. STEPHEN F. WHITMAN, ManufactUrer, Ng ; 121,0 Market Street. `ySt4iilLUio'A Paint Breeze - Park 181 0 n "ISCp 2I , Purse 111500. Mile heats. 3ins, to harness. Horses/hat have not trotted in'2.55 prlor te Julyist - • $3OO to first. $ll6O to second. 850 to third horse, " Gomez to start at 3O'clock P. BL J. TURNER enters . L g. HARRY D. ' R. P. STETSON clitoris b. m. GAZELLE. ' JNO. RUSSELL enters s. g. FRANK. OWt% ER enters BLUE LICK. B. D. STETSON enters b. m. IDA. The piitiloge of a member introducing a male friend' without tittYle sUsponded • 'Omnibuses start from Library street at 2Ai o'clock P.M., Admission. $L It Envelopes EnvelcTes 5,000,000 SAFETY ENVELOPES All ceders, gnalitiee and sizes, or sale at reduced prices at the Steam Encelope Manufactory. 223 SOUTH •FIFTH STREET. ge."tain l 3 4 . , tiAtdcrELToBEY. Agent GENTLEMEN'S. HATS. The Autumn Fashions. are now , ready. The favor of an opportunity to submit the . same - to your inspeotion. is respectfully solicited_by Your Obedt. Bervt., • • W. IR WARBU R. I ON' Hatters 430 (Miami*. ot,, net door to theßoet,Offite seu to 27 91) .1.9itt.1 NATHAN dUUTIONE , tR,.N. E. CORNER and,Bpruce Stre. te. only ono 64U aro below the Exchange. 48250 OW to I•an iv largo or small rmiounta. diamond. , ether piate..walcbeA. fovrelry,midOivode of *value. , OP.lco home from 8 s. M. to 111177 Eetab. Mk lit d for tue last forty yertm..: 3dy'anu.is made in large amounts at the toweat market ratee: ja?,ttry ~'~ 3 , ~,~`` {,'~l SECOND t EDITION. ATLANTIC citpLE NEWS Financiaj and coFmexcial Qp9t4tiops. LoNpos, Sept. 'ID, d. IL—Consola unchanged. Erica, 8 051; Atlantic tind - 9,teat ;Nt r eftcni...o,X.l 1111nOla Cential, BOX. V. 8. Vlve-Twenues un 4 changed. , - ki! LxvziroOL, Sept.l9, A.llt. r rPottott quletf .tho salekwlll prate* reach 10,000 bales.. retroleum dull. ' Sugar, 255. afloat. . - - • Marine Intellitidlice., _ Nnw:Yonn,t3ept. 19:--Arrived-43tearnehin Her mann, from •Bremeni on her mkt" to &mitt :mph:tn. September 19, 9 A. M. Portlfood Halifax Poraiio e 54 Bostnt'. .... Mar * 64 NSW York. . Clear. I = 60 Wlln►ington Del N. E '= Clear. 65 Washington ? D. 0., ...N. W. Clear. GO Fortress Monroe. E. Clear. 61 - Richmond. .. .E. Clear. ; 52 OFwego S Clear. .60 Pittsburgh , Clear. 48 Buffalo ' 48. Chicago N. cy. Cloudy: 69 Louisville .... . .. Clear. '57 Mobile E. Clear. 72 New. 0r1ean5..........N. E. Clear. 76 Key West.— . .... E. Clear. 83 Havana E Clear. 82 State of Mhtr i t t s i tati t rlttr i T t l e i m itu Day at the 10 A aa ,, ; al fated , 12 ..67415e,. itte. Wvertba! cleat. lirhul Zotabtast • - , , , The French War Preparations. The. Paris correspondent of= the New York Tribune, ,speaking of the specebe,s made in the Departmental Council, says: The speeches get printed. They have a little interest sometimes when uttered by the month of eminent °Metals, on ithe supposition -,,that - they may reflect the views of their chief—or what he is wining to have pass for his views—on'Peditleal questions of the day. Such Small interest in this kind as attaches to them this year 'comes from their allusion to youcan hardly say direct treat ment of—the war'question and the liberal reforms (?).War 'Minister Niel is almost,Finance Minister Marine, with some other of the bead clerks, quite pacific. • . The response to that sort of talk is: "Why then keep u,p au army more than twice as lame as that which the Prisoner of Ram in Louis Phlt ippe's time declared to be uselessly large? And is it really your Imperial Majesty's intention,, now that the 'detested treaties' are torn to lamb, to rest quietly within the limits, so much narrower than those of. Republican Prance, imposed by those treaties? Since you began to reign, Pled mont bas grown to en Italy, Prussia has grown to a North Germany, and both have made ad vances toward political , liberty. ni during all that time your other neighboor,Beyu. Switzerland, England have enjoyed tulip° deal libeztr- Can yonridajesty long rest auletly, unless you give to the growhjg glimiet_l sl 4.Yetir-POPle ta 3 = ---- thearthings, either th eir geograpnicaVnat • _ frontiers' or an enlargement of their political The French Aray, in Rogue. Bayglhe Boman correspondent,of the itror/d: We hear and' read 'of mighty efforts on foot In diplomacy being brought to -bear on the imperial Govenruzent to Induce the recall of the ,French army of occupation, now that the signature of Italy•luts been accorded to the protocol regard ing the payment. of the Pontifical "debt. Italy having performed her share, at length, of the oft quoted Convention of 1861, Would seem to ex- - pee t the immediate reciprocal fulfilment by France of her 'ehare. But the undisguised sympathy now abroad throughout Italy for Prussia, the declarations In the camp of Fojano of General BUJ° When he speaks of the brothers yet lan guishing without their freedom (in Rome) and the letters of , Garibaldi from time to time give ample exam, did the Emperor need any, for the pres ervation of a footing in Italy by means of French occupation of the Papal territory. The toast to His Holiness on the 15th, at the dinner given at Clyne Vecchia in honor of the Emperor's fete, by General Dumont, now in command there, seems sufficientleexplicit to the meanest-capacity. He drank "to his - Holiness, Pins IX., the Sovereign Pontiff. We look forward to the prolongation of his precious days. Placed near him to watch over the maintenance of his- rights, we should know how, in case these were again maimed, to fulfil the noble mission tonfided to us by our Em peror. Long life to the Holy Father !" Death of a Prominent Chinaman iii San Francisco. Chun-Lock, better known as Chy-Lung, a noted character in San Franciseo, died recently in that city. A correspondent writes that he was the best representative of the Chinaman in California. He went to Sea Francisco in 1850, and immediately bekaii business as a mer chant, importing teas, opium, silk and lacquered goods, Chinese •groceries, 4.m., extensively, and soon built up a large wholesale and - retail trade, which extended over a large part of .California and the Pacific coast, and has continued nadl rniniihed up to the present time. lie was noted for his correct business habits, strict probity and honor, and polite and courteous manner. The A Ito Californian says of him: • "Intelligent and highly educated in his own language and literature, hospitable and charita ble, he was respected by all classes, and the mean , prejudice of caste, and''race, never displayed by him, was seldom exhibited towards him by any one in our community. He was particularly noted for his liberality towards ,charitable jects. Daring our civil war he gave liberally to- • wards the Sanitary Relief Fund, and was thanked therefor by Father Bellows, 'in a special letter from New York. When the great. Sacramento - , flood of 1861-2 brought dedolation and distress I to somas y American households, his liberality was manifested towardsour people and his' own alike—no call for a contribution by our Relief Committee passing unheeded by him. His coin merclal sagacity was well known, and his enter prise was as great aa that of any of our American' or Eurcipean merchants. The firm had a honse in Shanghai, one at Canton, another at Hong • Kong, and recently - one in Yokahama, in addition to that in San Francisco. " A - few days — afeitiliis death he expressed his determination to visit New York and Chicago as soon as the Pacific Railroad was completed, with a view'of establishing stores in` those plaCes, but death put an end to his plane of extended enter prise.. Chun-Lock was seized with the dropsy, and might perhaps have recovered, but he obsti nately adhered to-.the practice of the Chinese physiclane—of' when:the had five—and died ac cording to ride, and like a true son of the Central Flowery Empire. His age was fifty-three years, by our method of computation. He leaves an immense fortune—said to be front 050,000 to sboo,ooo at the least—and his extensive business will go on as before, under the old style, the in terest of his family being _cared for by, r his ea 'lying partnere. . _ • "He was a native of_ the province of Canton' • (Qnang-Tung), China, where his family; consist-• • in g of a wife and two or, .three children,• reside, and where his remains, now, resting, in the vault 1 at Lone Mountain, will eventually-be sent for • finial interment." . , .• , • , The Alta thus describes the funeral : • ••The remains of Chun-Lock, clad in' costly robes bf enibrOldered satin,Were yesterday raorn ing laid on a mattress in the store, and , were cov ered with a rich, red satin fabric. ,The usual in cense sticks and colored Was candlesweraburn=. ing at the foot of the body, and vessels ciantaining. tea, pork, rice and eggs, were by the side. There was Il_quantity_of brown palm' cut into slips f on each of which was a Chinese inscrlpidon. These were hurned by the friends of ~dec.cased, as they ,arrived to view th remains,-` 2 and the ashes - placed in "a eel:dal:Mt - OMo af . .hand., The' Buddhist priest,' clad , in a' blue rived at 11.80 and ,eommenced:' the pen.... formance Of. the 'ceremonies, He used a bell and cymbaiti,; as lie proceeded, and'from time to time' passed' burning masses of paper over the .Corpse. MIMI :wgrriEGV.A.Pa. ":..) By thy Atlainte'‘eabla Wencher Report. Ther. Wind. ,Weather, monteter. Ckitr.',' 70 ,;. SO r. Mna,MM AFTAIREI Cn e k He!stood before a table crn wnlch was a quantity of artieles,and chanted prays**. in *elver and not ;unmusical- Volpe.' Ai, the ,e oriehislon'the tiefdy was placed - 1n a:meta/lie, cofilu, *deb wasorna toented With silver plate , and handles. On the tbriner was ; a Vary. briet leseriptioh Chinas Tharacters, and the werds. b ehung-Lock.' . There teas an absence of the fail commies at .Chinese . funeralsEthey were attert'and•altonle. BoOn teilT., M r " the colon was placed in, a,qtlearse drawn ; y four gray horses., A large number of , carriages followed.the body to Lone Mountain, wbere it was placed in a receiving vault prior.to< the transmission to China for anal interment.) There' was •It considerable number of citizens present to witness the ceremonies, and pay a last tribute of respect te the memory of the do- . Tito ltiedisuo %Vox. .. On the 7th instant Went.-Glen..-filierman tele graphed' from St. Lonis to Gov. Hnnti , of Colo -redo akfollirts—‘.(l Would' Make no concessions to clamor, but wattid Assure the 'people of Denver p a that if they want to ht Indians they can have all they want: ' The' • t bullerifthe Arapahoes -have surrendered to, en. Shendateat Fort Dodge. He has one column 'after the Cheyennee'of the Cimmaren,and another toward Beaver Creek: Gen., Grant promises me moro:,,cavalry, and: now the. Indians ardicleorly in tlitv, wrong, L, Will not pre vent your people; froth'. chaetising thentrlf they are really in earnest; btit•it is-more; than one small army can db - t0... f defend.. eve_7 rancho in Colorado, Montatia,r'llebraskwand 'nsati.% The settlers should collect and defend , their!ocin" pro perty, Leaving thereguiar tpaops to, go after the Indians:', , . , " ' ' '• - ' urn BI)IaaMN. Sorannust Aso Samosa' NATIONAL COWIN , rira.—The National Executive,Committee. Of Eioldlers and 13ailOfrd have called a grand Na tional COniention, to meet in Philadelphia' at Independence Hall, on the lst and 2d or. October. .The Committee of Arrangements have issued a ' , stirring address, calling on all returned soldiers aud sailors of Pennsylvania to be present, to as sist in welcoming their brave comrades in.arms from sister States,. to concertwith then:Measures j to secure the election of, Genend Grant as Treat - - dent, and thus to preserve Wipeout° and liberties ;of thecount:l , , whose - Union they saved - through' Telegrams have been received from the follow ing roads that delegates to the Soldiers' and Sailors! National 'Convention in this city, on 007 tabor Ist and id, will, be carried at, one cent per mile, as agreed, to by the Transylvania Central and Philadelphia and 'Erie" Roads: The Steuben ville and Indiana Road.- Camden and Amboy . Rallroad,,Bilchigan Central Railroad, and North Pennsylvania Railroad. • COMMEMOLSI. The Phlieuieljga Bales at the rbliaael • • • • 71 .8 8 T 6000PennA 2114 Cs 98„. 1 / 4 " 1800 Crty der old lte• 1003 800 do • c 100 X 100 do tow 10010 100 do do 1031 g 2000 LeblzOGld In ' c , 00h1 100 eh Leh Val 11 081; e • h 0 180 ab Penns Itg 7,i 100 eh do c 80jd BLTWZZPI 100 Pb Read R 2dya 4534 200 eh do b6O 46% 700 eh 'do WM Its 45 100 ab do 8 d3'll 46 aou eh do cite 4G 100 eh do bBO 46 106 ah , Ponni R 56 WO eh do"" bBO 55% 160'b.-_ dO eOO 81/ lleid 463 i 100 elk do 880 44,‘ 400 eh- ; do ltr, 4631 100 de do 46 81 100 do 4.41y8 ' 46k 160 sk do blO , 46.81 PHILADELPrirAv . B attado3 r , SePti' l9 .—The do mend for money was quite active thlemorning, but it was freely met at 4X I to 6 f)ei Cent. for call loans, the bulk of the transactions' being at 5@6 percent. The 13anks are nuking preparations for their quarterly statements, which must be furnished by the first Wednesday in October, but no dlettubance need be anticipated from this Cause. There was less activity In stocks this morning, and some reaction in the speculative shares. The better class of Bonds, however, were at fair re quest and steady prices. Government and State Loans were quiet ; City Loans sold at 1033 for the new and 100 X for the old issues. Lehigh Gold Loan sold at 90X—a decline. Reading Railroad declined X, and closed at 45%. Lehigh Valley Railroad sold at 55%—a de cline of X. Pennsylvania Railroad at 55%®555-- an advance of X. Catawissit Railroad Preferred at 33 3—a , decline of X. Little Schuylkill Rail road at 44%; and Northern Central Railroad at 49. 128% was bid tor Camden and Amboy Railroad; 35 ' for North Pennsylvania Railroad; 57 for Mine fun Railroad, and 25X for Philadel phia and Erie Railroad. - In Canal shares the only change waran ad vance of jg in Lehigh Navigating. In Paisenger Railway iluirea the xmly tictivity waa in Heetonville, which was in demand at 10. Jay Coon & Co. quote Government Securities, to-day, as follows: United; States 6'5.1881, 114111431; old Five-twenties, 114®1143.1: new Five-twenties of 180, 110®11038; do. do. 1865, 111®.1.11, 1 / 4 ', ; Five-twenties of July, 109 11094; do. do. 1867, 109®109,V,; do. do. '613, 109®109.1.C. Ten-forties, 104%®105; G01d,14434. Messrs. Deßaren and Brotner, No. 40 Sonic Third street, make the following • quotations of the rates of exchange to-day, at 1. P. • United 'States sixes, of - 1881, 11336®1143: do. do., '62, 113%®1143f 3 ; do. do.; '64, 1993®110%; do. d0.,: , '65, 1103/A111,%: do. d0.,:-'65,-new, 1083( 3 ®109X; do. >d 6 ., .67, - new, 108%®109%; • do. do., '6B, 109®10938; Fives,' ten-forties, 104%®104%; pile Compound Interest Notes, 193; do. do. do., Oct. '65, - 183;Golli, 144 7 ® 144 %; Silver, 18734®139: ' • Smith, Randolph & Ca , bankezi, 16* South Third street, quote at 11 o'clock, as follows: • Gold, 144%; United States 65,1881., 114®11.4 5.205, 1862, 114®114 38 ; do. 1864, 110®1103 ; do. 1865, 111®1113,f; do. July, 1865, 109® 1093 x; do. 1867, 109®109%; d 0.1868, 109.,%®109„x‘; Fives-10-40'5,1868, 104, 8 10104 X. :Messrs. Wallace & Re.ette, AAolrors, 42 South Third street, quote Bard& State Bonds,' uo fol lows: Temieseee's, 2 old,--693®70;- now; - 69.® 693..; Virginia's, old, Gird at . 54; new, 53%154; North Carolina's, 'old, 74%®7435'; now, 7336®74; ASlsßourl, 94-0)0235% ' Philadelphia Pirto4duce Marlc.et. PHILADELPHIA, SATurwity, Sept. U.—There is not much doing in Cloverseed, and we con• l ' tinue to quote at $8 26®9, as in quality. There i is a good demand for Timothy and it s selling freely at $3 3003 GO per bushel. The last sale • of Flaxseed was at $2 80.- There ,is bat little Quercitron Bark here and We continue to quote No. 1. at $6O per ton. -There is no life in the Flour market, and_Rrices rule irregularly. Sales of 900 barrels new Wheat Northwestern Extra Family at s9®s9 60 per ber rel ; small lots at slo@slo.so, for old_Wheat ; _ $10®912 for, Pennsylvania and Ohio do. do.; $l2 25,@14 foifancy brands, and '4llB®sB 25 for ,extras, including 100 bbls. fancy - and 150 , bbis. extra on secret terms. About 100 bbls. - Rye floor sold at $8 76®59 50. '•• In Corn meal noth-' ins doing to fix quotations: • The Wheat market is very quiet, the demand . being confined to small lots for the supply of the local millers. Sales of 4,600 bbls. fair and good Western and Pennsylvania Red at $2 20®2 28. Rye may be' quoted at $1 50®1 CO for Penusyl-' Tanta: Corn is 'very quiet, with' small - sales of yellow at $1 28®1 30;.and 2,000 bushels Western Mixed at -$1 27®1 28, Oats are . held firmly, 'W)th sales of Pennsylvania at 75®77c. per liggurir-Tork—Atiliztey Bliarkfie• ' • [From the New York Herald of today] - SuaT. 18.--The goliimarkettinsbeen dead's , and mod , rarely active today. and the finctoodons were from 1443; to with the closing: transactions' prier to the ad jorirrunent of •the board at three o'clock • at 144 M, follow-, Jug which there was diminished aetivity , and the latest gpointiorton the street was 4 4 4311(4144N, Thorn. WM brick borrowing demand for coin, conaequent upon the • large "abort.' interest outstandbag, said 'Monk Were roads( ...mainly without in creel to either betTOTVarCor lender. the exceptional transactiona being, at one •and - two Per Cant. per annum ' for borrowing, and two end DAILY IVENINDP BULLETINI-PHIL'ADELPHIA , SATURDAY SPPTEMBFR 10, 1868 • Money Marko t. Stock sachaho3, B.eh lit &bit '' 44,4 ,44:6b Meth Blt 132 100 ehadsivirie of b 5 831 f 1200 eh need ft ban Ith 45,ti 100 kb Leh Navfitk b6O 213; 7 eh'lrar&Xec Bklts 1000 okb 800 Bde 58 100 eh liorthCentß 49 100 eh do 99 WARD& 8400 Finn Cana/ ads 59 WOO W Jemeyf 6s 923 i 5 eh Fantilecßk oid stock Gs 50 an Girard Bak 24s 62 [WO eh Leh Nv atk ' 1 . 213fi 100 do • • c 11% g ilOO eh J.O 05 c 0000 West 'Penns es 83% 500 Leh We Gold In' , ; 9036 400 sh Parma .11. 66 187 eh do Ha • 66 98 sh Lit#Scti B b 5 -44‘f 100 eh Oceen,oll % 100 eh LehNav stk 29 i-three per tent fog estr,ing ThitiroiSefeirliais nmatlnted to fitla E pro, the gold balances to - V.19450Z end the ear. ready balances to $1.118.0411. The Bub Treseury 431-bureed 0E5,688 in payment of interest on pablio debt during the fray. The demand foe coin' for corms duties continues 'at the rate of nearly four toillione week,. tuld this re- Head at trait an average degree arty in the general trade of the city'. There is ids an at in the depart ment of drirerotids, hewever. thin ere was last week, but this I. tante owing to the Jewish New Year, festivi ties new going forward. -. • • Adoney was in extremely abundantsepply, as usual of lite, and large swunts,w , re o ff ered . tbe principal dealers In gotereMent tiritka two per cent. though t he reads rate on United Btatfis docks is three and on;mixed coll 3 Fals four, The banks revert that they • are , redi g more currency from - the West thin the : sending there mid th at the applicatien for discounts from 'western banks are light, *hie they apprehend no disturbance from preparations • for the quarterly statements of the national bank. to be on theaWedneeday in October. commercial Payer therafs e my, moderate degree of activity and the best grade dr eely at 04A7 per cent. discount Hot although Money biro cheap and abundant at prevent it , is reasonable/to loakTor diminished ease later in the sea son and an advance in tie rate of interest for a limited lengtlf of timer to di enelserves Der 14; • , . Government securitiee have . been and in good de• mend born from thereign tankers; • or shipment. and .from city and count ry investors, who can find no other equally profitable. employment for th money. The divined; banks are alse.gradu slly absor bing ing bonds,' and the diepositioir of the prinel all dealers is to buy rather than to ec.11.: .The limpness of the market today was' at trihrted in COMO degree ito. the strength shown by ilve-twentles in London/ and the scarcity 'on this 'side of eeccurities 'for: shipmettit, Th. I bend,. of t .1203 • are, scarce. and.q , these advanced. per cent, • while .. • these of len are in eepecially brisk demand. both on foreign 'and demesne account. .Tbe .l'ehort“ interest in the last men. firmed ht ea heavy that there is also an active borrowiag„ demand for them. In comparison With railway and other speculative shares our =Meal securities are remarkably cheep, and eventually they must permanently anninand uch higher prices. Those whoa pprehend any legisla tion by Conjurers adverse to the public credit are mom than likely to be disappointed. and the gee/mien of the go; detention of in coin or greenbacks wintered with no tolation until the ` elommtion of specie payment (neon the NeW'York World pfto-day.] herr. 18.—Tbe money martinis 'easy at s,to 4 per cent. on call , and the to 7tPer eent.discatinte. _ The gold market opened ati4Ot i and advanced to 144 J. at 3 , chiefly on actonnta e high ' rates paid for borrowing he seareityol geld st i tyl to tkidl.: 101 111011 'whether tiovemiteent Will Mier! ocardke_tnet may occur by daily Mega balfthe ditto receipts, or by an ticipating the Illovember.interest„ . , Tb e rates paid for far rowing were 2.64.1, 2i134: 'sada per tent,and for carmine 2 and 8 per cent - after the board Adjourned the wrote- Orme were 14436 to 144', ' The, Government bond market was-strong throughout the day I.BfEes advancing to 114 to 1143 i. and the new bands 109 to 1093 f; There ft a steady . demane for the new. bonds from the country. - , . - Tbe texture in. Walistreet to-day was the butmtincyal the eteck market, and . the discomfiture of the ."beam clieuelt" schemes to engineer a tight men ey-market . and ;stock 'panic,.home of the smaller bear - firing failed today. and fits reverted that the bear clique has arranged with some of. the. banks, present their three _per cent, 'Certificates- 'to the Amid ant-Treasurer to-morrow. and demand greenbacks as if they were abort, in order to force 'Government, by the lens of currency. to sell:either. avid or bonds, and thus bring about a tightness in money by that process. Govern. ment, however, holds the reserve of e 60.000,000 in backs to disburse for any unusual amount of certifi tee that may be presented, audit is not likely that any a the banks will venture to outrage public sentiment by owlet. inp in mevementto make money satifici_ally. AMOS Tbe operatione of the Gold Exchange near" to-asy• were as follows: . . .Gold balances.. —. . ... .. . . 1.190.502 N urrencrlialances . .... ..... ..... • 1.739.090 62 Groot clearenees....... .. .... .. ... 60,083,000 00 The Latteeri . itituDiation. :from New York NEW YOItIC. Pont 1.9.--Btoe firm. Chicago and Rock Island, KAT ; Reading. 81„45, Canton Ce..: Cleveland and Tolodo. Cleveland and Haab 8a34: Pittebnrgh and - Fort Welt% 110: Michigan Ceti. trai. 1183¢,; Michigan Sontb'ern, h 5%; New York ilertftal. / 30 36: Illinois :Contra. /43; Cumberland. preferred..la ; Virginia sixer..s3.}ialfteouri aI:AA Mit; Undies river.lig; West erei Vnion Telegraph. 24 • Five-twentiee,l:K%.' 114.!5; do.. 1861.11031 - d0..1645, 111h1;:Nerw..109; Ten•forv, 104. t. poi& ;40,11. 2doney, envy sea unenauged; Exehange„ 8,; • Ira/bets by TolcitirPiPP• FEW YORA. Sipt..l9.—Cotton. quiet, but Steady at 23M. cents. Flour berms, and declined hg4;l2 cents; sales of 00 barrels r nosrfine at $6 700:7_26; hatras,_so 6508 60: Choice. 80 4 •16(g9 20; Fancy • 8 604 i 0 9o; California, $9 00 01 00. Wheat dull. and declined 1.(2 cen tavions era nominaL orn cruder; sales-of 51,000 bushels Mixed Wceern at $1 184g11 19.. Oatequiet: Wel , of MAIO bushels at 67®70.6ents. Beef steady Pork dull; new Mess. ets. Lard dull; Steam. 19M(g203; Whisky firm, but quiet., BALIVION.I4 Bept. 19.—Cotton Ann and in fair. demand at 28N(527,.. kb= more active-and hairood demand for shlppMn•but prices are unchanged. Wheat firm to choice red 122 25@5925@59 60: lcraterimules dl 7 00. C Com and Oats unchangerL_ .Itre $l-4001 45.--. easy and in fair demand., Mees Yorks,WbL .Bacon—rib sides, 16.4; clear sides. 17; shoulders 14: Items Mt..l.trd 20. LATEST MULKINE ARRIVED THIS DAY. rk Steamer Prometheus. Gras , . 80 hours ism Chariosto EaL with mdse. &e. to E A *louder & co._ . Bark Village Belle (Br), Little. 82 days from 140i0308,, Jerry. with oldie sad 112 passengers to it Taylor & Co Bark Phileaa. Davis. 8 days from N York. la. ,to Warren & Grief. Behr C Woolsey. rerker, g geys from RearYork.;.' , Steamtue Amarlras:, Virden: 15 hours from Delaware: Breakwater. having W tow barks. Village Dello and DI& teas. Roporta having vaned is the bay ship Admiral. from New York , one foreign bark, two lumber M4= Was and reveral seboonsew, botaid up. 1:i :44 ill. i;.11 THE GREATEST OYSTER,PLACE In the Cit3i, H, LEAC • N 1 E. OORAINTH & CHEST MIT; : 1 4 Wkl.ll Old, Reliable and Popular ll,outs iz)vora*piq NEW YORK'AND' BOSTON. And the only Direct Route for Rewport, Fall Wirer, Taunton, Newitedfoni, 'fiddle ro, an the Bridgewater', and all Tom on the Cap Cod Bailway;and Nantucket - This linele conin s o_Md of the 110STON, NEWPORT...4.IW NEW:YORK STEAM. 80. T COMPANY (Old Pall itiver,LireAl comprising the ma cent and fleet steamboats NEW PORT, OLD COLONY, METROPOLIS and EMPIRE STATE, rimming between New York and Newport. R and the Old Colony and Newport Railway between Bog ton and NewPort:lslaithni thro. e o line. One of the above boats eave rier 28 North River daily (Sundae eaceptedl:at 5 o'clock P. Id arriving in New it.rt 11 %1 . 1 1 1'1=in; M= 6 l'. -leavin g Newport ern trtg. Pamillea can take breakfast on board the boat at 7, and leavu l tW i arriving in Boston at an early hour. Re can leave OLS Colony and Newport : Railway corner Bon and Kneeland streets. at 4,M and Of o'clock For further partleularu. apply to the Agent, E. LITTLEFTELD, 72 YrOitiay, New York. rriv•Yam 'BRISTOL :LINE , BETWEEN NEW YORK AND :BOSTON,- VIA-BRISTOL, For PROVIDENCE._ TAUNTON. NM BEDFORD, CAPE COD. and all points of .vallwas commtadeation c Eaat and North- The new and ohmaid steamers BRISTOL and PRON . ' DENCE lair/wrier No. 40 North River `foot of Cana) street, adjoining Debrasses erect Ferry New York. at I P. hi., _dab', Aundaye excepted. eannectini n vtith dean boat train it Bristol at 4.130 /4. AL, arriving Boston at A. in time to connect with all the morning trains from that city The moat deetrabte and pleasant route to Mt White eiountains. Lto.veterBJbr__ _mat point 'tan make direst co!aneetiona byway aidorce and Worcester or litate.rooma and Tickets seemed at office on Pier in bliew YOHN• ap2o 5m4 ' • ' 0 BRIGGS. Gen , l Mannger. OPPOSITION MONOPOLY. C9MMOUID BAILROAD & RIVER Ste(uner JOHNSYLVESTER willinake daily .excur- B ioni l ;to Wilmington (Sundays excepted), touching at Cheater and Marone Hook. . Leaving Arch - Street -what.' at 10 A. as, and 4 r. - Returnit t ageave - Villnaington at 7 ay: Lb and I P.)1: Lightfrj • ' ' Cantain PHILADELPHIA ARD-READIRG R. R. SIX PER CENT. Exernptitrom Unite Slates,- -State - ;:zonitliliiisnieipal Th,;,ge, 1) . 006 having 0.14 very iaridiY 747 . 44 bat a't ansia annotmtleft to offer: • , ' 'iC4 l EXtia & 09.;,,,840rdiefi4 VA.t DINH £l,-.100 GABES, HALF —,Q-11.; Tcar2 ~ ai len dineand farialaby.3oB. 1111881P41,108, South Pelawara avenue. - : - . '' 111~~~3J- TEL.EGIUkPIt- :;:' , .)v - As,ttp'o,ToX.; , :. , . Affairs at the - South:. TERRIBLE. A copporhen.d Lie Nailed. Iseeets,lAisp.iitih to tbe Phileds , ..Eveales Panetta, Wesarscrott, Sept. 19.-An' Associated Press despaWlaat Thursday, giving' an • accAntnt of a meeting. at Raleigh,N. C., which said J. W. Holden made ad Incendiary Speebb;ndvising•coloied Men to go to, the polls armed, . and invoking, the god Of turpentine to cover with tames the dwellings of rebels; has called forth the following despateh': ".2 . v Hon: T. L. Tollock; Setritary Republican` Conirreshithia; Committee: :Thil Astleektttyl:tkesa despatckin ''''''"".tci my. speech it the 'Repub.,- lican Masa-meeting hero is false.• Imado fone"ig. the assertions attributed-to me, nor did 'any . °W I else. :. '' Josit4 W. not.tone. "Itstuxon,. N. C., Sept., 18tb." • .• • AFFAIRS Al' TIrE SOUTIr. ' The - caked niembers expelled frOm the Cleor gia Legtidatere, hare formed an association called the "Civil and Political Rights Associa tion;"arnithave Issued a call fora State Conven tion Of colored el - thews, 'to be held in Xacon on the first Tuesday in October. ;, A letter fromkn a well-own gentlemao . traveling In theliOnth, to tie National Executive Ace, espi'i "The northern patters do not Over state the Intimidation. Every time one ono kirea. into the country it is at, the peril of bin hls ored men are daily , seriously or wounded killed. "The rebel plan is to get ready to buy arms and powder, and on election day kill enough colored men early in the day to'intimidate and ;keep away all the rest. I. tell this , not as . . httricambe s but just as what the Governor and others actually think, and have corroborated evidence' to. Prove." Other letterd saY large numbers of a new mag *trine rifle, carrying eighteen shots, have arrived in Charleston and other peinta in South Carolina, w;thili a few weeks, and there seems to be a con certed, plan for the purchase of arms, by the irealtCy_ rebels, and for their distributiou among the rank and file. From Washington. • • Waproscrost, Sept, i9.—Joseph W. nolden, son of governor Holden; telegraphs from Ral eigh that the despatch relative Gable speech at a mass-meeting there is false;'that he gave none of the incendiary advice attributed to him, nor did any one else. [A correct version was published in the Box, J From Georgia. Meow; Sept. 19.—Tbe Tefrgraph publishes a statement shoviinic that stho Southwestern Rail road received - last week:Selfili algid of Colton, from the southwest and -west of 'Macon, for transportation over that road. Of this amount, 3,066 bales were received for Ike through ship-, scent, lint is, for Savannah, New York and other Eastern cities. The :remainder were • received for delivery at Macion. The receipts this week;j edging from whit Was received on Mondiy and Tuesday, will far exceed those of last week. Nov, Itlampshue•Statelrafr• 31 - Aztorcsrms, Sept. I9.—The'New Hampshire State Fair closed - yesterday. It was the most successful ever held in the State. The receipts amounted to $13,000 ,and over $6.000 were given in premiums. Suicide. McCoys - mamma, Pit.,Bept. I.9.—Jacob Barmant, a respectable farmer residing near this plape,tang himself in his barn early - this morning. No cause is assigned for the act. He leaves a large family. OB ITITARY. Beata of an Old Delamiarean. The Wilmington Comm'ercial of yesterday says: Hon. janres"Rogers, the oldest member of the Bar of this State, died at his residence near New Castle on Tuesday. Mr. Rogers was an able lawyer and served two or three terms as State's Attorney for Delaware, and we think he was also U. S. District Attorney for this District. He was also amenther of the Convention in 1832 that formed our present:State Constitution, and took an active part in the:debates of that body. He was remarkable for his exemplary character, and although enjoying excellent health, and possess ing much of the. activity of a young man, has lived in g'reat retirement- for very many years. He died In his: eighty-ninth year. CITY BULLETIN. CITY Morrrmsry.—The number of interments in the city for the week ending, at noon to-day was 262, against 246 the same period last year. Of the whose number 111 were adults and 151 children-98 being ; - under one year Of age. .105 were males; 112 females; 90 boys and 61 girls. The number of deaths in each Ward was : Wards. First.... Second.. Wardd. ,1018Ixteenth 8 1218eventeenth 11 2lBe. Might(*nth '9 , B:Nineteenth 24 .11:Twentieth 17 .. 2 1 TWenty-tlrat. 9 —lolTwenty second 8 Third.... Fourth .. Fifth .... Sixth.... seventh . •,, - ;, - -s!'fiscron!,y-fpßrth... • "7 rrwenty-fifth 0 i Twenty-Binh. 4;Twerl!y-sovyx±th. Tenth .. Rleventh twelfth. Thirteenth 51TwentiNighth 3 Fourteenth U,llnknown ....19 Fifteenth.l7; The principal CalU3eS of death were: Congestion of the brain,6; convidsions,l2; consumption, 22; cholera infantutn, 28; disease of the heart, 6;de bility, 6; dysentery,7; diarrhoea ; 8; typhoid fever, 13; scarlet fever 6; inflammation of the lungs, 7; inflammation of the Stomach, 9; marasmtu3, 22 ; o ..p. ro s y. 5. J..E.ICALDWELL,4:CO AM , lNaWrxe SILVER -- VARES. :,'N':'.;:ocia. a x i tigmuir STREET: EDITION., 2:30.0'41&3]=., POURTII EDITION. BY TELEGRAPH. LATEST FROM WASIEIidTON. THE TREASURY; DEPARTMENT. FROM'.:' LOUTS. THE INDIAN -WAR. FIRE' IN NEW , YORK FROM WASHMTON BY'NAIL iii Irne Treasury Department. WAsemeT6, Sept. 19t11.--Nationsil Bank eitr reney Issued for the week, $91,500; total to date, -$309,790,376;` Ott:Mated bills returned, $9,138,620; ine'olvent bank'notep t redeemed, $808,829; actual circulation' Of ;Allis 'date,. $299,849,027; tiona.C. ceriency P' rioted for the .:week, $842,- 500; , United States' shipped to Assistant Treasurer st St. tours, $108,000; ' do: New York, $100,000; da. do U: S.Depoillory,Chleago, s6o,ooo;do.'tio.; Cinclunsti.:sso,oWierectional . ,Cuireney shipped: ASsistant Treasurer, - -Plailadeiphla, - $50,000; U. S. Depository, Cincinnati,' $50,000; dd. Pittsburgh, *50,000; to National Banks, 5365;613. Securities' held for'notes, ':5341 ? 02,1,700; " do. de posits of riptilic, incite'', *88,052,350. FractiOnal currency redeemed, $483,000.. _- • FEconi St. ZeitlE. Sr. Lours, Sept la.—An Omaha despatch says st party of Government surveyors were surprised :by Indiane; `en the it9ublictui - river, south of Ireaineir, on Wednesday: • dwanl Malone,.' kflagman, , was killed,;but the =minder escaped: with the loss of their implements and , mid team. The Denver • Tribune makes ' SradfiirdWrna, Jority for Congreds 66, with : two towns . to: hear; Fire rfew Yorks , . NEW Yortic Sept. 14 ' The extensile carpet factory of E. . Higgins: Ba Co„ NiresiForty-third street, was Partially destroyed by fire this rnonL. big Lam, $25,000.' ' was partially covered by insurance., ' • • The. foreign steamers Balling to-day take ont 4)325,000 in specie: LETIIER 1:11011. WASHINGTON. Preparations for the Opening of Con {tress on 4nenday--arrival of Senator Si tide and breaker Celinix--Grette En. thnsiasm Along the notate —A Knotty Parliamentary Point to be Decided —Proposed otranater of the can Members to Pennsylvania., after a Short Stssion=lltom senator alew Controls the Post Orrice Pap trionage in Pennsylvapia, &e a , . . , .„ (Correepondence of the Philadelphia Evening Ballettu.i , WAsnincrox, Sept: 18, : - 1868.-The notes of • preparation for, the approaching session of Con gress are-Increasing-on every side; Already the members of both Houses are dropping in quite rapidly, and there's every indication that there . wilr,be„ a ; quorum in both Houses on Monday. Senatoi Wade L and Speaker Colfax arrived this evening, in company, and Jiir. Wade -- proceeded to Mr. Colfaxli. residence, on? President Square. Colfax joined Wade at Jefferson; in Ohio, and the two . came through via Pittsburgh and the Pennsylvania Railroad to Harrisburg, and thence by the Northern Central to Baltimore, arriving here early this evening. A passenger who sc. companied them from Pittsynrgh, says he never before saw so much enthusiasm as was , displayed on the cars, and at every stopping place where it was known these distinguished gentlemen were on the cars. On the train they were called_ upon to-make impromptre speeches to which they could make no refusal, so pressin were the demands ' upon them, and when Wa de" assured the passengers that the election of Grant and Colfax was as good as accomplished, the excitement of his hearers was unbounded... Colfax avoided saying much. A NICE PARLIA.3.IEzi 'AIM QUESTION TO BS SETTLED. The question whether there will be a quorum or not on Monday has caused considerable dis cussion in advance, and already some knotty points have been raised which would take a skilled parliamentarian to decide. For instance, some maintain that if a• quorum , is not present when the roll is called in the House, the Speaker has no discretion, but must, un der the resolution of adjournment, declare the House adiourned till • the first Monday in December. This view is opposed by others, principally Southern members; who argue that the House adjourned to meet on a certain day, and that if a quorum is not in attendance on that day, then "a call of the House" should be had, and the Sergeant-at-Arms be directed to go out and bring In (or "arrest," as the phrase goes) absent members, till the House does have a quorum, if it takes a month; and that the fraction of the House present can adjourn from day to day indefinitely, until a quorum is present. The same rule which is laid down for the House is equally applicable to the Senate. • The language of the resolution is somewhat ~ambiguous, and upon an examination of _it to day, it was found to be susceptible of both inter pretations, and the real question in dispute, therefore, cannot be decided until brought be fore the House in open session. As It Is a question which is open to argument, it is hardly thoußht the Speaker will decide it arbitrarily without discussion, in the event of a quorum not being present. Should a quorum be in attendance, of course there will be no discussion on this point, and the question will then be for the House, with the concurrence of the Senate, to decide whether they ,will go into the consideration of general legislative business, or adjourn over till some other period between now and December. 1. The Southerp members are, without excep tion, so far as known, favorable to remaining in session for the transaction of legislative business, but there is much diversity of sentiment on this point among the members now here from the Northern and Western States, which cannot be settled until Congress actually meets, or a caucus is held, which may take place at some period be fore the two Houses meet. A GRAND RALLY FOR FENNSYLVANLi. It is propOsed by'some Republicans to have a short session, and then to send every member who can be spared, into Pennsylvania, to "sweep the State" at'the October election, and secure it beyond peradventure for Grant , and Colfax in November. There are none nowwho doubt that we will have a handsome majority in Pennsylva nia, and the accepted flgnres generally are 15.000 to 20,000 majority, prophesied by. Senator Came ron, but there are many who will not bo satisfied with less than 50,000, and they say we can make it, if the proper -kind of exertion is only pat forth. The Democrats are doing their best, by controlling the Government patronage, as far as -. they can, and the small post offices are generally in their interest, as time are mostlykontrialled by Senator Buckalew, through Postmaster-General Randall. To such an extent is' this done that Buckalow even selects the neWßßaPqrs in the State to do the advertising for the rest-Mike Department, and in this Way .manottes to subsidize the country papers in favor of the Democratic party. • . TM: RILVILE/UE 'SUPERVISOR -DIFFICULTY.. Secretary McCulloch and Commissioner Rol; line had another long "talk" today aboutlim ap pointment of Revenue Supervisors,- but no: con , elusion was reached, and they . separated as -be— fore— It 1/3 scarcely_ thought tlicy_wilLAa_any ,thing further •is ascortned -.what :acticin' ';CongTese may take;.whlak if it should', go , into legislative .bneliiesei wlTh wipe out giving -the - distribution tof ristternal .Sievenne :par renege to Svcretary , . • • ' .-Eineuninanirat pkiaLERVED EAMARINDS.-83 EEO BlAdampli. 'cgr•gailEMen • fArtEENOFR =LANDING AND FOR SA UR FY 1 ..4 J. B. B U 012,1231 1, dr CO., 108 math Delaware avenue. 3:15 , 0'01m :1k: Invite the attention of their patrons Ito their large ancl7` elegant assortment of DIAMONDS, Beautiful Designs in Sliver and Sliver-Plated `Wares for Bridal Vans. - • • 1. W. CLARK & CO., No. 35 South Third Street, Philada,t ' POE TILEI , NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO'* States of Pennsylvania and Sonthern, New Jersey. The NATIONAL LIFE' INSURANCE COM PANY 15 a corporation Chartered by Special ACt of Congress, approved July 25, 1868, with a Cash Capital 'of One Million Dollars% And Is now thoroughly organized and prepared ibr business. Liberal terms offered to Agents and Solicitors, who are invited to apply at our office. Full particrulars to be had on application at our office, located in the second story of our Banking Rouse, where Circulars and Pamphlets, fully describing the advantages offered by the Com pany, may be had. K. W. CLARK & CO., No. 35 South Third Street. gel9B tn th • DE ;_4Ay.s:.,::„-:-ki,:,0.4.0,:. . 40 SOUTH 0111 RD BTRgEnt TER, v, o-i Turf—At 840 end 950 AL 3.50 P. ,Tbe dement S. M. BELTON and-alirgt, leave Chat. nut Street Whig 93=0%017;4.1,1 7 5t B.Bo g 4 n ut n j o t9 1 . 1 5=d P 0.50 . .#. M. EitoTplrts ve st Übe:Ur &ad I"oir. ei rar l e v , a rd cents between all ' points: Beat. . ' Bast. 'T:tkete. 15 cents, goal - to return by eithev 19741 EXTRA. 'Ff - FTIT' . ..?: - ..EDITICiI BY TELEGRAPH. THE :NORTHERN LIGHi. She.A:itie ol . - iSafel'ii':::siiiitilaiiiii.iiio . ._': - vv4:SM - X,N':'051 , T. , 0. , -' - . Mex. Syphens!s lilatOzfof Rebernon. Safety 01 thO'Tlvickirtbiei AY THE ATAilliCi 61:111..Z. ISPecfl/I , D !' ll r l dr . h to the rhihaelphfix‘reninx BuIMMO • NEW YORK", Stipt.l3, 3.45,7440 000Mii".,*0itki;: em Light ' arrived iaffelijitti pcnaqtampiOn'Elepteici-' ber 19th. , • RUOER BR antirits °linen 4,lqofrt,hepillisilt. 'Alexander Stephens , ' Historp•,:at• tlit • it0ki4 1 . 161, •-• • • • -• • , • , •- . 1 • ESPodal 11 ?grbateli to the *lll4olli Evining Thilietho • WasuntoToN,43eptenktair 13th.;LAdexander Stephens to-day vlsitcd, • the Secretary of War to get rt' acs 'to :the Conrad', erate records in the 'possession or our • Governitent for hishistory of thelite,wari:, , lle ,f obtaleeil the assurance that copies ef,any papers now on file would be tarnished l'i ..J..',:,:Ny:Alat..*y.Bs;:,:: MASONIC HAIL 80. 719 iIHESTMIT aTIME't Fall Importations Now Opening. BROCIIETERRIES,' • Criinion, Green, Blue find thole!. A NEW AuTictac' • BBOCAULLES I ALL COLORS. Freseh Tapestry Fainiture' FIGURED qrioxibms._, LACE -Cl E TAIIB Ifoltiiitim Curtain! of 111114111,Deiliptsi PLAIN TERRIES . . ALL.,SHADES,.' TABLE AND PlANO'coyEgg!, Window 'ShAdes. The above Goods are new, choke and very desirable. CLA5.K . .:4:::P.PP,1.4.:;.-.:. leiclers and 1111yergadthi p No.• 712 CHESTNUT Streets WATCHES, JEAVEMIi r, SILVER WARE, ibm&TEß,w4lEt_ BANKERS, GENERAL AGENTS United States of Aatnieficay FOR 'rum GOLD BOUGHT. .5 ' 4400 O'dlook