Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, September 25, 1868, Image 2

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    POLITICAL.,
/MOWER RIG 113fIrRe% , ,RT' . .RON ot
DEBT n
Speech or 8011610
Concert Hall was crowdadj lasijovenizig, and,
notwithstanding the ff4dit; _inatt;ladieb"Were
among the audience. Every seat *was occupied
and It was scarcely possible to obtain standing
room. The occasion was the second of the series
of materuteetings to be held under the auspices of
the Uniou League.
- .
- At tight o'clock the meeting was called to order
W.
Francis Wells, Esq., who nominated Col. John
W. Forney for President. The nomination was
ainanisnously ratified - •
Colonel Forney then said ;
Ladies and Gentlemen : This is an - occasion to
- which the loyal
. people of fhiladelphiahave
looked forward with bright anticipationa; 'They
bate impatiently . awaitedgreat the opportunity of
meetin and hearin Tribune ;in
the Sen g
ate of the United
that
States, when the who pub-
EC mind was distressed , ,by mischievous
sad varying accusations 'against. the great
acts of reconstruction laid before the
, country and the world the finest , arga -
Umnt which had been; 'heard in , the 'American
Senate since the days of . Webster and Clay. f
Ap
plause- l Among the galaxy of patriotic Gover
nors, who, during the perilous period of the war,
f'centributed by their and by their re
sources to the A elevation of the loyal mind and
to' the strengthening of the armies, - ' Geyer
nor Morton stood prominent.: (Cheering.l
is : one of that-cistas of , men who have". , been - ?ea
rned from - thetrierrors,by.the , great lea:chirp - of
the War, kind who, by their± independence and
their ,courage, have given so much, strength to
tige. :grand and. ...athletic ,IlePublicart
finitation. It ` waste his indomitable .Courage,
rireaching intellect,, and unwearied vigilance,
- that the country was indebted for the position of
Indiana hi the foremost lino Of loyarStates. And
that which redounds signally to hls individual
, ctedlt and to the ininor of bis State,'ls the - fact
-that in a' large degroe he shared the confidence of
that illustrious martyr, Abraham Lincoln.(Ap
plause.] Now, ladies and gentlemen, witnout
,-detaining you longer from' the feast that awaits
Norton,
Lhasa the honor, to introduce Oliver Perry
Norton, of Indiana.
....areEct3S OF SENATOR MOUTON.'
, Senater. Morton was received with tumultuous
sPplause; .-When quiet was restored he spoke as
gollows:
Futrow Crrizirust—l am suffering from a
severe cold and am-physically weak,and fear. that
- Tann not be able to make myself heard to-night
'.:.by this large audience. The very kind and fiat
'terlig terms in which I have been introduced by
nY friend, Colonel Forney, serve to increase my
embarrassment, inasmuch as you may have been
led to expect &mit me more than you will realize.
-' However, I shall endeavor to the extent of my
ability, to discharge my duty to you and. to my
' self.
'When the walls have been erected, thereof put
on, and the house nearly finished, the incendiary
may, cast his brand into the shavings and rats
bish that are still left, and cause the structure , to
szbe consumed to ashes. SO the work of recon
struction, now nearly finished, end which ,we
, desire to complete, is exposed, to,a like danger;
.. the - Incendiary is lurking around the prenitses
seeking to kindle thetubbish and refuse 'of 'the
T. rebellion into a flame that shall destroy all, that
;• has been; accomplished,. and place the 'country
back in a < :condition -Worse -- than that in
which it , was In the beginning. "Shhll
the ,work of <reconstruction be completed as
It-bas, been begun" is: the - great itiatielobe de.
cided,by the people et the approaching eleetion.
[Cheers.l The Republican party presents to the
country Writs adoption the policy of completing
the work of reconstruction upon the I:awls:upon
whieliit, has been . carried forward—the basis of
equal righta of equal ..and exact : justice to
I
ail men. It presents the policy. of peade;
repope, and stability; presents the policy of
protection to American industry and of placing
Hie burdens of taxation upon.the rich rather than
upon - the poor upon capital rather than upon
-labor,upon the luxuries insteadof upon the maces
'. eaties of life. '.Viiitibelelty, It , presents the policy
to specie payments at, the earliest
practicable MoMent, and ofinainMining the pub
',lle faith by the payment of the national debt
ateerdink to the , very letter and epirlt of the con-,
tract. I Applatuie. - 1 It preaents the„policy of
rer,ertting - the public lands for actual settlers, and
-giving them to every man who will ma ke a
farm and a garden where before there was a
Wilderness. The so-called Democratic party
' presents for the adoption of the country,
the policy of nullification and revolution.
They propose to nullify the reconstruction
laws of Congress, and to overturn by
military force the new State governments that
bhve been erected in the South; they propose to
undo all that has been done; to retrace all the
steps that have been taken towards the settle
ment OZ Out national troubles, and, to place the
country in a condition compared with which it
Would have been infinitely better for us "had we
let the rebel States" go and suffered the Union to
be dismembered. They propose the equal taxa
tion of all kinds of property,whereby the articles
of prime necessity, which are indispensable to the
poor and to the laboring men of the land,
shall be taxed equally with those articles of
luxury used only by the rich and which enter
only into the pleasures and dissipations of life.
They present the policy of repudiation, of na
tional dishonor, which, according to the lessons
of history, has proved fatal to every government
which has adopted it. In this country political
nullification is where the people of a State or the
members of a great party conspire to defeat the
operation of the laws by force and violence. In
1832 the people of South Carolina met in conven
tion, and resolved that the people of each State
bad the right to determine for themselves
whether an act of Congress was constitutional
or not, and that If they held it to be unconstitu
tional, they have a right to resist and prevent its
operation within the limits of that State. They
resolved that the then existing tariff law was un
oonetitntianal, null and void, and that it should
not be enforced within the limits of the State of
South Carolina, and that its operation would be
Prevented, if needs be, by military power. This
was uullificationpure and simple. General
Jackson, then President of the United Stetea,met
this first by a proclamation, in which he argued
conclusively that nullification was wicked,
- unconstitutional and treasonable. He then
Mit it by. making prepara
tions for putting it down by military force, and
by threatening to hang John C. Calhoun and all
his treasonable conspirators. I Renewed ap
`planse. j Seeing that President Jackson was de
termined in the matter, the nullifiers took conn
-661 of their fears and abandoned nullification.
They then admitted that while a State remained
in the Union, it had no right to nullify or to
- resist the law, but they claimed that when a
State was aggrieved by the passage of an uncon
stitutional act, of which it had the right to be the
judge and the right to determine for itself, it had
the right to withdraw from the Union,to separate
, itself trom the Republic. And this was the doc
trine of secession which finally culminated in the
rebellion of 1861. That rebellion was subdued at
the cost of tiers) than four hundred thousand
loyal lives and five thousand millions of dollars,
and with it was extinguished the doctrine of
secession. But the people of, the South, so far
from accepting the situation, acting in concert
and harmony with the Democratic party of the
Ncrth, have abandoned the doctrine of accession
only to retreat to and adopt the doctrine of nulli
fication. The Democratic party assembled in
convention in the city of New York, following
the example of the people of South Carolina,
resolved that the reconstruction laws of
Congress were unconstitutional, null, and
void. By ibis resolution they Instructed the peo
ple of the South that the reconstruction laws, be
ing -unconstitutional, were no laws at all, and
were not binding upon any body: that the new
State governments which had been brought into
existence by these laws were equally illegal and
unauthorized, and were not entitled to the obedi
recce or submission of the people of the United
States. This resolution was an invitation to
the people of the South to nullify the
laws of Congress and to overturn by force
the new governments that had been
A erpeted. It was a full and complete assertion of
,
the , nullification doctrine of 1832, which, if admit
tedor, carried out, would be as fatal to 'the Gov
_rranent as th e doctrine of secession. General
- 181,a1r, the Democratic candidate for Vice Fred
.
d'ent, letter written some three or four days
before the COW/MUM), which was placed in the
hands ci every member, and which letter brought
his unanimous nomination, asserted the doctrine
of nullification even more explicitly than did the
...platform of the convection. He declared that
,„
.jeconstruction ,-- as Are only issue; that all;'
Nnestions of ee, i...tariff," and the curranc.t.
4
V e ,' 1P,,.. , _ . ' , ` bo t ' eiti :tit ' of 'view He' said -
tittek,mauqc.rattip party 'bright am; a Presil
,deritirtti ‘, a MirjortW l ,o thtt,Hottse of - Heine- -
4 ilentativeih but; that„ owing tCthekteegar•or- -
tanlzatlim of the Souk* they 4:m441:n0t ehaulte
'the, chatocter, of that, , ,,body tOder . fearyears;
;therefore, ltwan,itntrinandble - lb repeal the' 'aeon
olfaction labs or tb,undo by legislation what had
been done; and, consequently, it was the duty of
the now President to nullify the laws, and (to use
his own language), "to trample them into the
dust; texemploy„the army oltheNnited States to
over turn and destroy the new State govern
ments in the South.' He made nullification—
broad, direct, forcible nullification—the only issue
to be decided in the, election, and declared
that upon this issue alone would he suffer his
name to be presented to the convention. Upon
this issue his name,was presented to the conven
tion and he was unanimously nominated. His
nomination:lsms moved by a rebel general from
Kentucky, was seconded by a rebel general from
South Carolina ,anticarried by the overwhelming
rebel sentiment ' in the convendoth The Democrs
tie party goes to,the country upon. the broad pro-
Cosition that it will trample into duet the laws of
ongress; that it will destroy, legislation.by force
and violence; that the executive shall crush out
the legislative power. This, my friends, is warl
Peaceable nullification is as impossible as was
peaceable secession. When the President of the
United States shall, by military power,overthrow
the laws of the land, the Government is de
stroyed, and we have 'nothing left but a despot ,
isrn. The Democratle party has become a trea
sonable faction; it proposes to elect a President
for the purpose of overthrowing the laws, and of
fers no policy which does, not involver revolution
and war. , . i
Already,we see the effect of this avowed policy
in the South. :Already the new constitution of
Georgia and the reconstruction laws of Congress
have beerrnttllifled by the action of the Decno=
cratie members of the GeOrgia Legislature. In
Ablation of their oaths , they expelled from their
Legislature twenty-fottr, colored members,simply
on account of their color. The Democratic
members were in the minority in the Legislature,
but they very ingenibusly inibraced the
expulsion of all these colored men in one
resolution; and' then declared that upon
this resolution the colored man should not vote;
and this, with the defection of a , few weak-kneed
and treacherous Republicans, gave them the ma
jority. The colored , men by the same process
might have expelled all the whites, by embracing
them all in one resolution and upon the question
of adopting that resolution .refusing to allow
them to vote.
[At this pointi gentleman in the audience pro
posed.three-aeers for the.twenty-four memoers
of the Georgia`Legislature. The proposition was
immediately-carried out.
It was an act of nullification and revolution
which Will demand, and I doubt not, will receive
the correcting hand of a loyal Congress. We
do not admit that the power of Congress over
these rebellious) States is exhausted. "Renewed
enthusiasm.] Reconstruction is not complete
until these new State governmenta are estab
lished. [Applause.] ft would be absurd to say
that Congress has power to set up new
governments in the rebel States, but has no
power to protect them' from being • overturned
the next 'day by the resistance of rebels.
The Constitution declares that the United
Stated "shall guarantee to each State a replabli
can form of governmept." The word "guaran
tee" is a law term, and is used here in its legal
Rinse. The contract of "guarantee" is an undert•
taking to do something in case somebody else
fails to do it, thet-,-Other party being primarily
liable to do it. To guarantee the payment of a
debt_is to undertake to pay it in ease the original
debtor does not. It is the duty of the several
States under the Constitution to maintain a re
publicati form of government; and the udder'
taking 11*#1, Constitution is that if the States,or
any ottbem, shill fail to maintain such govern 7
went; the United States shall take such steps or
use such moans whereby a republican form of
government shall be'arected' and maintained. I
say maitygitzed; for if the now State government
which has been set up shall be overthrown, the
duty of the National Government to re-establisa
it at once recurs. So that the duty of maintain
ing a government as established is an essential
part of the execution of the guarantee. As Con
gem had the constitutional power to bring about
the erection of these governments, through the
operation of the reconstruction laws, so it has
the power to protect them until they are estab
lished, and can maintain themselves against their
enemies.
And now, my friends, riot and bloodshed pre
vail throughout the rebel States. Organized
secret societies are attempting by murder, eon
fit/grating, and robbery to drive into exile the
Union white men and all who do not anceamb,
and to compel the negre to vote away his rights.
It is now the deliberate and settled policy of
the Southern Democracy by violence and
bloodshed and by an unrelenting and
cruel proscription to drive out every Union
white man who does not give in his adhesion
to their policy, to compel him to abandon his
property and fly from his home for his opinion's
sake. Ble is proscribed in all the relations of
life. In a recent speech at Atlanta Mr. Toombs
pointed out the course to be followed. The
Union white man was to be treated as a political
and social enemy. The physician should not
allow himself to be called into a Union family;
the lawyer should not take a fee from a Union
man; the mechanic should not shoe his horse or
mend his wagon; the merchant should not sell
him a pound of coffee or a yard of mnslin; they
should not be his neighbors recognize him upon
the street, speak to his family, or in any respect
treat him as a human being. Wade Hampton,
soon after his return from the New York Conven
tion, proclaimed the policy which was to be
pursued toward the negro—which in short was
coercion by starvation. He said that unless the
negro would vote the Democratic ticket he
should not be allowed to live on their planta•
dons: he should not receive from them any em
ployment; he should be deprived of every means
of putting bread into the mouths of his wife and
children. They presented to him the alternative
of surrendering his political rights and
returning to his dependent condition or
of starvation for himself and his family. What
was the poor negro to do? Turned off of one
plantation, he could not go on the next; he could
not live on the public road; he had not the means
of getting North; they knew their terrible advan
tages, and have proclaimed their purpose to use
them. Human nature, weak and frail as it is,
never appeared to worse advantage than in this
proposition of Wade Hampton's. The King of
Dahomey never adopted a policy more fiendish
or inhuman. In the presence of such a sugges
tion, the boasted civilization of the South sinks
to the level of a scandal and a reproach. f-Ap
plause. 1
Should Seymour be elected we may expect
nullification and revolution in every rebel state;
we may expect that all that has been done will be
undone. The negroes will be dclitered up to the
tender mercies of their former masters, stripped
of their political rights, and most probably re
duced to slavery. Every Union white man will
be driven from his home and his property into
exile, as a punishment for his fidelity to the
Union. War will become the chronic condition
of the country, and, in all probability, will not be
confined to the Southern States, but will be ex
tended to the North.
The success of the Democratic party necessa
rily involves the repudiation of the national
debt. It will be morally impossible for that
party to pay the debt if placed in power. A.
great party, like an individual, has an organiza
tion and a temperament from which it cannot ,
escape any more than a man can get away from)
the temperament and character with which be
has been organized- The character and action,
of a party is determined by the character of the
men who compose it.. Whatever may be its pro-'
fessions, its action would be determined by the
elements that compose it. The Northern wing
of the Democratib party is composed chiefly of
the men who opPosedAhe War; who sympathized
with the rebellion, (many of them giving it ac
tual aid and comfort,) Who opposed the creation
df the debt in the beginning, who declared that:
the legal tender notes were illegal and worthless,
, who not only refused to lend tiaeirmoney to the :
Government, but endeavored to prevent others
from doing so, and whose every prejudice and
feeling is now hostile to .the payment of the debt,
and to the men who own IL The. Southern wing
of the party is composed of the actual rebels; the
men who waged War against "the - Government
for four years; the men who invested their
property in Cofederate Mocks and bonds and
lost everything; they were subdued, and
are now impoverished, embittered and desperate.
Is there any man insane enough to believe that if
these men were placed In power they would tax
themselves in common with the people of the
United States to pay our debt or the interest
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA; FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1868.
- .
upon Ist In a moral sense, it would be impos; , - I '' Peal to the odfishnoto of tho ho love • .4".
• siblefor them to do it. Repudiation would fol- their country nor their kind,' , t ate ,r, y' , .1..
ottl u
low inevitably from theitittecesidcree",to r , tower,' sderitligjd .lb their,own an
,_ sts r „-to is - nct
• There is" only one condltiolkupornarbi ''theyt layllitt IP, alit p ' et;r4dikia labor and
4
he
the nationalAbnjend that Id be . prop 4 oind that d.' d4he rights Of try
e as sumption by the ~
_'Voysteriment of the rebel, matt" T esta the la* fa Plauslikj Let ea; p
debt,
ebt, placing it upon thalseirtil foundatiop with . pe4 thay. great clasp that 194 Merin, tr*.ti,2
e te
our. own. But this would i swnll the Was ,I. iystf , tuashumanlty te titan& by the partY Pat-,
gate such an extent- Oak .the debt could not Ameltsbediaavery- Ttretnendernn enlansiasawnwae I
bepaid at ail, and, ',-trepidlation would be ing 'with three cheers); that will secure to every
, the final result. Is any man insane enough to man the enjoyment of life, liberty . , and property
believe that these men would -"`voluntarily tax j applause]; that preserved the Republic; that
themselves to pay pensions to Union soldiers, would now bind up the bleeding wounds of the
and 10 their widows and Orphans -without their nation;-that would lift up the weak and lowlyand
own were provided for at the same time? That, restore the blessings of to all the land.
would be against human nature. , ~.They- ivorfid ', When. the fierce tempest has twisted and
never provide for the Union soldier except upon crushed the forest, and the swollen rivers have
the condition of the rebel soldier being placed risen over their banks and carried wreck and ruin
upen. en equal footing, and receiving thesame - • through all the valleys; the rain epddonly ceases,
bounty'auid Tension. • , • Bat = while - repudiation the Winds are hushed, the clouds break away, and
would be the inevitable result 9f Democratic sue-• . the sun shines forth in all hiseplendor,,drylegnp
eess they do not say so in this canvass, for the tears of nature and making the land, bright
that ' . would be • unpopular. They say , and. happy; 8o when; the storm of war has
"the national debt must be paid, . butt ' mutt passed, when the sword has been beatee into the
be 'aid in greenbacks." ' They were opposed ploughshare, and 'the' voice of angry faction is
togrhenbacke during the.war, when the necessity huelied; 'the , sun of peace will shine forth,
for them was of the most absolute' character,; making- the hearts of all 'men to .rejoice, and
but they are favorable to them in a time of• peace, causing happinesa, prosperity, progress, , and
when: the same necessity does . not • exist. But Ire power to spring up like thi n* , plants in a v irgin
what greenbacks do they propose to make pay- soil.
ment ?In the old ones that were used before, or Hearty cheers were given for Senator Morton,
contemporaneousty,with the sale of bonds, or Grant and Colfax, and the Republican 'ticket,
with new ones to be now issued for that purpose? and then the meeting adjoarned.
Their proposition is that after the war is over
and long, after the bonds have heed sold, the . . /Fifteenth. 'Ward Bleelling.
Government shall issue new greenbacks in quart- Quite a large meeting WM held last evening at
titles sufficient to pay the debt. We
-have now Sixteenth and Parrish streets. Three superb
in circulation ; three hundred and , sixty- Anierimin flags sere raised—one on Parrishatreet
five millions of these notes. They are and two on Ridge avenue. Jialan M. liakey pia
overdue.. and draw. no interest, and the Gov- sided on the occasion, assisted by a number of
ernmentams fixed no time at which ,to redeem vice presidents and secretaries. Addresses per'.
them; they are consequently under par, and are tinent to the occasion were ' made by Mesard.
now worthonlysixty-eight or sixtynine cents Christian Kneass, Heiary Huhn, Samuel H.
on the dollar. That is all we get or give for them. Orwig and James B. Roney, • •
But what makes these notes worth as much as
they are? It is,the hope , and' expectation that
the -Government will yet redeem them—will
redeem them in gold, according to , its 'promise.
Should the Govenamenemake a new issue of five
hundred, a thousand or fifteen hundred millions,
then all hope or expectation that they 'will' ever
be redeemed will pass away, and they will fall to
the eround, like the leaves in , autumn, utterly
worthless, as was the fate of a similar currency
in France during the- French revolution.
The people then would know , ' that the
Government never expects to redeem the
notes, and they would soon be worth less than
the paper on which they are printed. If at this
time it -is hard for the Government to get gold
enough to redeem three hundred and sixty-five
millions of these notes, how much more difficult
would it be to get gold enough for the redemp
tion of a thousand, fifteen hundred, or two thou
sand millions of them. This whole proposition
is a mere swindle that will be felt first by the
bondholders,and afterwards Mainly by the peo
ploue,
ld in
die. The wose hanfurther ds 'this i nflation of mmense currenc
the
w
currency is to be deprecated; for, while it would
injure every branch of business,' its evils and
hardships would fall chiefly upon ,the. laboring
men. The inflation of the currency 'and a great
abundance of money, stimniate speculatlon and
increase the prices of everything that is bought
and sold, and especially do they Increase the
price of provisions and of all the necessaries of
life. By this means every species of,merchandise
acquires a speculative value; the different com
modities being bought and held in , large quanti
ties for a rise of prices. Flour, pork, tea, coffee
and dry goods are hoarded up in warehouses,
awaiting the realization of large profits. While
this is true of all these commodities, it Is equally
true that,labor cannot be hoarded up in aware
house. Its character is such that It cannot be
collected in quantities , and held for a
rise in prices. The demand for labor la a de
mand of the time being, an immediate demand,
and the only ptices are those which are agreed
upon temporarily. When the prices' of every
thing go up,,labor is the• last:thing , which (feels
the amputee; and when the , revulsion' comes, as
come it will as surely as that man shall die,
labor is the first thing to .suffer. When alarm
takes the place of confidence,when businessistag
staters and everybody feels that speculation has
run wild and must soon cease, at, such a time
the manufacturer stops his mill, the. house is
left unfinished on the street; work upon
the new railroad is suspended, , and tee
first blow of the crash fails upon the
laboring man. We have already experi
enced a great revulsion, and have got down
a part of the way to a healthy basis, but the
path is marked on every aide by bankr uptcyi and
commercial failure. Do we wish to make another
ascent to a still higher point, that we may be
subjected to another descent, marked by still
greater disaster and rain ? No ! in my opinion
we have currency enough, and we should rather
try to make good and sound that which we al
ready have than to risk its character by a further
increase. [Great applause.] We should return
to specie payments by making the greenback as
good as gold. As to how this shall be done there
are various opinions; but in my view the pro
cess is a simple one. I would
not attempt to do it by contraction, for I
think that has gone far enough. But I
would do this : I would fix a day in the'future
—say, for illustration, the let day of July, 1871—
as the time at which the Government will begin
to redeem the legal-tender notes in gold. [Ap
plause. I Let the time be fixed, that everybody
may know it and get ready for it and shape their
business accordingly. And let the Government
get ready for it by reserving for that purpose
the present surplus of gold and that which is to
accrue. The effect will be that, as the appointed
time approaches the greenbacks will appreciate
in value gradually getting up to par, and
the premium ongold will gradually be lowered.
The process will be so regular and the in
crease in the value of our legal-tender cur
rency so steady that when the appointed day
arrives the legal-tender note will be found
to be at par, and the people will not want
the gold, except for specific purposes. Gold and
silver are not now a part of the currency, but are
simply an article of merchandise, like cattle and
horses; but on the day that the legal tender note
comes up to par, and the work of redemption be
gins, all the aold and silver of the land will come
I orth from all the secret dra. were, the vatats,and the
"old stockings," in which they have been con
cealed, and be emptied into the volume of cur
rency. This will inflate the currency, but it will
be a legitimate in fl ation. At the same time a
contraction of the legal-tender currency will
take place, by the cancellation of so much of it
as shall be presented for redemption.
The quantity of gold required will be far less
than many people suppose. The history of cur
rency is full of instances in which solvent banks
have successfully resumed anemia payments, when
they had gotten into their vaults one dollar In
gold to three dollars of outstanding currency.
The Bank of the State of -Indiana was compelled
to suspend under the crash of 1887, but the Legis
'iature met and gave the bank five years in, which
to resume. At the end of three years the notes
of the banks were at par, and by the expiration
of the five years the people had forgotten
about it, and no "run" was made upon the
bank for gold. There are many similar
bank =histories in this country, and in Eng
land and Scotland. Gold follows the law of sup
ply and denaand, like any other article of corn
meree; it accumulates whet° it is needed and used
as a currency, and naturally deserts that country
where It is not used as a currency. Canada is
now flooded with American silver, which will re
turn to us when we return to specie payments.
Our gold now naturally goes abroad, because
there is but one demand for it,to wit: the demand
for the payment of duties upon imports. But
,when there is a demand for it as currency it will
return to us. The history of finance lor five httn , J
dyed years shows that the supply of gold is
governed by this law.
But, my friends, I have spoken longer on these
topics than I intended ; in fact, I have spoken
longer than my strength would justify. (Cried
of "Go on!" I In conclusion, let me appeal to the
soldier, the Union soldier, to stand by his great
leader—[long continued cheering]—to stand by
the party that rejoiced in his victories, and wept
over his defeats; that fed and clothed him dttring
the war; that nursed him when sick arid
wounded; that will love and honor him
while living, and mourn over him when dead.
ißenewed c heers.] Let me appeal to' the labor
ng man to stand by the party that would make
labor honorable, and give to it its just
rewards; that would place the burden of taxa- ,
Lion upon• the rich and-upon capital, and make
smooth and easy the path that leads from labor
to wealth. Let me appeal to the banker, the
merchant, the manufacturer, the man of capital,
to stand by the party that will give repose to the
country and stability to business of every kind;
that will improve the currency; that will main
tain the public faith, and protect every man in
the enjoyment of his property. Let .me ap-
Meeting In the Eighteenth Ward. '
Notwithstanding the inclement state , of the
weather last night ; an immense Republican
meeting •assembled at Hanover and Girard
avenue. A stage was erected, which was deco
rated with flags and, lamps.- 4 A band of. Intislc
was also present and discoursed patriotic airs.
The meeting was called to order at 8 o'clock
and the following °Ricers elected•:.• •
President—Alderman John Clouds. '
Lice-Presidents—Daniel Buhan,GeorgeJ. Ham
ilton, Moees Redpath,' Robert Grahame, Jacob
S. Neal!le Peter Bakeoven, John P.: Pots, Peter
Cramp,Joseph Clark, Homy Kessler and James
Milligan. .
Secretaries—James pindly, Georgd C. Murphy,
Samuel Altkons, Thomas W. Duffield, Hugh
Hood and George•MeNcely.
Speeches were made by Hon. Leonard Myers,
Colonel Win. B. Mann and others.
Fliii-iteitning in ate Twentieth - Weirdo
A large meeting of the Republicans of the
Twentieth Ward was hbid last evening, at the
corner of Twelfth and Jefferson streets. A band
of music was in attendance, and enlivened the
proceedings with a number of popular. airs: The
Republican Invincibles and the Grant and
Colfax Campaign Club of the Twentieth
'Ward were present at the ' meeting, and
were enthusiastically cheered as they
came upon the ground. A large American flag,
bearing the names of Grant and Colfax and the
motto "Let us have Peace," was thrown, to the
breeze. Andrew Caldwell, Esq., presided, as
sisted by a number of vice presidents and secre
taries. The following-named gentlemen de
livered short addresses:—John L. Baer Fred;
Dittman, George Connell, and Christian Kneass.
The meeting adjourned with cheers fbr the whole
Repablican ticket.
The insurrection in Spain.
PARIS, Sept. 21.—The French . Government will
immediately strengthen the poets on' the Spanish
frontier. It is reported that Queen Isabella has
entered France. There is an tusanthenticated ru
mor that Prim has been arrested.
The Pays says the Spanish army is loyal and
that the insurrection is confined to the provinces
of Andalusia and a few seaports. -
The following Is an official announcement
from Madrid: "Catalonia, Aragon and Valencia
are quiet."
The Monifeur bas the following:
The revolution in Snain makes no headway,
and the people are indifferent or repulsive to the
project. Active measures are being taken by the
Thefor the suppression of the rebellion.
The insurgents in Andalusia are retiring before
the advance of the Royal troops.
LONDON, Sept. 24, Evening.—The following Is
the latest news received from Spain:
The Government at Madrid has declared all
Spain in a state of siege.
General Janader, who was sent out with a de
tachment of royal troops against the province of
insurgents.
A
has joined the
A desperate affray took place in Santander be
tween the opposing parties, in which many per
sons were injured.
The report that Prim Is marching directly on
on Madrid is reiterated. He is accompanied by
General Serrano and the Duke de la Torre, and
it is estimated that the force under his command
is now 20,000 strong.
The Duke de la Torre is said to be acting as
Provisional President and civil head of the revo
lution. He has refused the offers of accommo
dation made by General Concha from Madrid.
The Spanish ships of war in the port of San
Sebastian have declared against the Queen and
joined the rebel fleet.
The revolutionary leaders have issued a decree
dePlaring that any Officer who orders an attack
on the people or patriot soldiers shall be adjudged
a traitor to his country.
PAEIS, Sept. 24, Evening.—The report that the
Queen of Spain had crossed the frontier intd
France was premature. She still remains at San
Sebastian, but it is rumored she will soon leave
for Pan, in the Department of the Lower Pyre
nees. The French authorities have arrested
a number of refugees who have crossed the fron
tiers.
It is reported that Manuel Gasset, Captain-
General of Valencia, was seized by a mob and
killed, and that his body was dragged through the
streets. Official despatches from Madrid Make
the following statements :
"The insurrection has been suppressed in
Grenada. A. battle was fouglatf, lasting two hours,
and resulted In'the defeat of the rebels. The dis
loyal movement is confined to the province of
Santander and the cities of Malaga and Seville.
"Letters from Cadiz say the citizens there have
taken no part in the rebellion, and basines . ss is
not interrupted.
The Caterpillar and the Cotton Crop.
The bavannah News and Herald of September
19th says:
"A friend exhibited to us yesterday a stalk of
Sea Islandeotton measuring ten feet in height,,
well limbed, but latterly destitute of foliage, and
with only six immature and four mature bolls—.
all the rest of the fruit and foliage having been
devoured by the caterpillar. This cotton stalk;
was taken from a field of fifty acres, belonging to.
Mr. Charles S. Yoram* of. Pierce county, which'
four weeks, ago promised an abundant yield or
the best quality Sea Maud cotton,but whicenow,
is utterly ruined, the few early bolls that have
been left by the caterpillar being. not worth the
trouble of picking. When our friend proposed to,
cut a stalk from the field to bring to Savannah,
Mr. Yomens remarked: 'You may take it all, for
it is valueless to me.'
"We are told that the field from which the stalk
pow in our counting room was taken is but a fain
sample of hundreds of cotton fields to be met with
all through Southwestern Georgia—the fields
which a month ago gave promise of a handsome
yield, but which now present, only an array of
leStless and bollees stalks, with not ,enough of
cotton to distinguish the growth from that of a
field of leafless and fruitless hemp or polk stalks.
"Such is the prospect in Sout,liwestern Georgia.
And from what we hear from other quarters of
our own and the adjoining States, we feel justi
fied in believing that the lowestestimates of this
_year's crop will come nearest to the mark.
Well informed persons say that that; the crop
in -Georgia will not reach two-thirds of an
average crop, and that some of the best cotton
;growing counties in the State will not make:
more than half a crop. Judging fromt
the accounts which reach us from , the most,re- ,
liable sources throughout the cotton growing
-States, our cotton, friends who ha,ve,given atten
tion to the subject are of opinion that it, is un
safe to calculate on a crop of more than two
million bales this year, which would be some two
hundred and fifty thousand bales short of last
year's crop." _
--Au Italian who has invented a, flying Ma
chine, in attempting to prove its excellence, fell,
and broke an arm and nieg, but didn't cure him-'
self of bis infatuation; for - ho proposes to try
again as soon aside limbs are mended.
4 .
4.
p--i.;,,,,.i„,.ti0mps 41 ( 5: - ..'
:., il :it
BLUR/Mr D LEB; . ELEM.
WAT I :1:•••' • . - Itigatt W'r Antl
WaJoh B 4. o thsk. f blast Makers. .
Diamond and Other Jewelryi
Of the fated etylee.
Solid Silver and Plated Ware,
Etc. Eta
SMALL STUDS TOE EYELET HOLE&
A largo assortment jut roomed. with a variety of
& Cleo
WAT073.E13 AND JNWEIARY,
toner Seventh and Cbeffind Invoke
&tit late of N6ffiSolthTbhrdatreeti .fe2 b
DRY 11000 S, Ace.
MOUPCNING GOODS •
MOURNING 000D3.
, .
AT POPULAR PRICE& '
Figl and Winter Stock now readir. LugOlt az.
tOPP"
szitatfigo3
ado' to
, EAU/MAIM: •
inithe etiTortest notie44,, • '
ordergi
stobfralNpvh,
Rip NEW
‘ ll:l l 3 l iniEs . TNUT STREET, 0
eoii.tmw m*
qu ili ge ,.'" /?
MtPO/. B E ST
• Pure Bf k Blass unmaumrs.
Summer Poplins, steel colones
Black Lace 'Shawls and Itomndas,
• White Lace Shawls and Rotundas,
Beal Shetland Shawls, -
imitation She tland
White and Black Bareke Shawls,
White and Black Llama 'shawls
- SUMMCI" OfoOk Of Bilk -0 NA DMA) Geod.% cyng out
cheap. EDWIN BALL .
Jitistf ' 213 South Seco stied..
,MWAS CLEANED FROM MOTH. REPAIRED AND
1. altered to the latest etYle by MRS. iIOLLE; No. 429
BPrOCO meet.
Kid silovea cleaned.' sengt•
THE • FINE . 41111%;
THE TRIUMPH OF ART.
Splendidly executed Cbg i f i tyt e r a itliogrupli after Pre7er,
HA REGAL DESSERT."
NEW ANII RIM CHOIR PAINTED PBOIOI.
NEW FRENCH KM& NEW DtpuRNAlBl,
NEW IBRAVINC3,
Just received by
A. S. R()BINSON,
No. 910 CHEIFITNUT STREET,
Free Galleri, Looking Glasses, i&o,
. ,
e—EirrLiMWS X(MINIIMWO 5MOle
PATENT SHOULDER SEAM SIM
,
MANAMAaI'OItr:
Mtn tot Uwe colebrated. Shirts larsatalk iennaval
aivolig4 o46 .
Ontleifiern tibial*, 3 00411 '
Of lato Atlas Info:. ,
WINCHESTER ' & ' OO.l
EiEtk i tlU
eimit4 i 1706 °
FIRE DRESS SHIRTS
AND '
. •
GENTS' NOVELTIES.
J. W. SCOTT & CO.
814 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
Four doors below Continental Hotel.
mhttmwtt
,-- GENTS' PATIO ITOMIT AND vr a r.
4
I - '..iuriptngnj o cnaretro at Mi .3
n _mode to.grder •
- 44 gr . AunriD3HlNu GOOD&
t A ~,.. , 124 " I
... of every flooer o r cA u verie o w; loa Chootaol
1 .treat comer N best NM Gkmr.
,
or 084 , 11112 " at " RIOEMI.DEDI4IPB DA /R
a 014401 OPEN IN TUN EVENING.
03•111: iffr3,l
PURE WHITE WINE
AND
CITER,
DEAN UM, !WARD 13 3i D, SPICES, &c.
11. the regulates for preserving and pickling purposes,
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Dealer in Fine Groceries,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streetai
ri ES FAMILLES CHOCOLATE MANUFACTURED
Josiah Webb is Co., for sale by
E C. KNIGHT & CO.,
Agents for the manufacturers,
ee7nmls Boutheast cor. Water and Chestnut streets.
FOE LUNCH-DEVILED HAIL TONGUE, AND
Lobster,t:PCOVai"e';4t'T9jigile'End Anchovy Pasta anti
Second area.. G rocery, No. ;IS South
NEW GREEN GINGER. PRIME AND GOOD ORDER
at OIJUBTY'I3 East End Grocerye-No. 118 thattn
and stmt. • •
NEW MESS SHAD, - TONDITES AND BOUNDS IN
kitty, put _up expressly for family us pOn store and for
sale at COUBTY'S East End Gretery, No. 118 South Be
cond street
MAME CLIARET.-200 OASES OF BUPERIQJITABLE
J. Clarearranson to give catietactiort• gor sale by
M. F. N. W. corner Arch end Eighthetreete. ,
QAIAD 014-100 HABECETB OF 11ATOUR , 13 SALAD
1.7 Oil, of the tided importation. For sale by M. F.
gpji,Liii. N. W. corner Arch and Eighth streets.,
111DAPER SHELL ALMONDS—NEW CROPPRINCESB
1 Paper Shell Almonds—Finset DebesiaHouble Crown
New Pecan Nuts, Walnuts 'aild Filberts, at
COUBTY'S East End Urodbry Store, No. 116 South
Second street
AMB.'DRIED' BEEF AND TONGUES. —Jour;
H
Steward's Justly celebrated Hanin.mul. Dried Beef
and Beef • Tongues; also the beet brands of Cincinnati
Rams. For sale by M. E 81111114 1 Cotner Arob
and vivbil , streets. ' • '
1111IIIIIMEIM • UAILDE•
Joint J. wai. TEE. 'J. rolimmla pirrmoon.
WEAVER. & PENNOCK,
PLUMBERS, GAB AND STEAM FITTERS,
87 Norik,ileventh Street, Philadelphia.
Cotuatrj Beata fitted up with Gas and ;Water in first
clue style. , An,assortment of Braes and Iron Lift and
ForcePUJXIOB constantly_on hand.: - --
LEAD BURNING AND CHEMICAL PLUMBING.
N. B.—virtootybrueas supplied to the trade and others
at reasonable prlces. ,
• .IyBlBms
Min A. 'amours THORNTON ' aratinctlT . A. ciszeoon
Ixir4) . P I ErEr T a7nl 'at 11.1"
'inverters of Earthenware
and Shippin g and Communion blare
' . No. /IS Walnut otreet,Thtladelp
OTTON AND LINEN BAIL AMR OF EVERY
‘1../ width. from one to aix feet wide. ail numbers. Tent
and Awning Duck._Papermakers Felting: Bail Twine. &c.
JOHN W. EVERMAN do co.,'No. 103 Church St.
WELLS.—OWNERS OF 'PROPERTY—TEE .
I only place to get privy wells cleansed and disinfetteu
at very low prices. A. PHYSBON. Manufacturer of Poo•
draft°. HoM=iltb , s Hall. TAbrary street •
VORCELAIN CLAY.-28 CASKS PORCELAIN CLAY
rum lam ditot. For ealo A. SOPER ds CO.,
Dock Street wharf. . • 50234 t
EW TIIRXEYERUNESLANDINO AND FOR SALT'
VINO BUNTER dk C0..108 Southpaws:* :wenn
THE \
zr :`
0: NATIONAL BANK,
ji N . W. Corner
ri4114 1 6,1td Market Streets,
4 'l4.g "41}'"A
The Accounts of Merchant& lifacufactureri, ire.. are
stllcited.
prompt sad fibers!policy will bo manifested to
parties favoring payrith ' e
E. S. lAA - 14U Cashier:
5e244m11
: ANDOIIII , P t
# 1 ; tbl4-= ER • •
S
GOVERNMENT SEOII,RT.TIEG
-And Foreign Facehanger.
huh. for sale'eh London, Parts, Frankfort,
ete- lettersot-tredll on I7eSin, James W.
Tucker NO., Parts. available for traveler.'"
use In ant pfr.of the world.
STOOKS, BONDS AND GOLD
adt: l l4 l4l oConielsden.
Deposits Re c eived and
r lnterest Allowed.
trk
Gold !muted., Codeeßone,Mede.
, T, • • ' •
: SMITH, f
IiANI) dbo..
10 South Tbird Street.
PACIFIC RAILROAD,
—reeelvin e e,rdd and auperrlxion the• CA:ernine
and corn forward by the extraordinary r urea, a nd
enetay of the powerful Gorporationa to whom . was in
trurttd—ia rapid ty approaehtny completion; audit la Sate
to pay that PHILADELPHIA AND BAN VIDOICD34.:O
INUAL llb COMiEtrrflp RAIGIVIC TUE'
FOUR'S' ifa F jILJLI NEXT.
- 'Neje thati licathirds of thoThr`ou i~ll~ Me and Branches
between the Missouri , 'Over and the radfic . Ocean are
constructed, at a coat of nearly ,
0211 E SI Oh DR.18,1, 21.1[1LXIO19R,
And the remainder is being pushed forward with un
paralleled vigor. , •
l'he tusiness ortbe Central reale Railroad for tho
Month of July hist was'as fellows, tif
Gross -earn:nes. Operating Papaws. Nat Earnines,
2719,(190 S 9 • VAS= 72 'MUM 17
This result. was upon less than SOO miles opened for
business , . witb Insuflicisut rolling stock, and wu derived
from legittruate commercial business only--being alto
pother independent of the transportation of the Immonact
amounts of mat., onhalstence and , =tends required for
grading and extending the track nearly one hundred
miles eastward during the game period.
miles
undendimed eller for sale, and recontinaud to in.
the '
First fllorlgagg 3(h.itear Gold Bonds
Ornri ,
CENTRAL . pAciffixe B. co..
bearing six percent. per annum interest, both principal
and interest partible , in • "UNITZE/ iiTATE ci
S QOM>
cont.* _ Theme bones are tha first Hen upon_one of the
most productive and tainahle'railroad lines in the world
—a lice which will be dabbed within twelve niontimand
which is already earning. after paying operating ex
some& more than twice the manna/ charge of Ili Bonded
About ea.coo,ooo or the BcindS flaw been taken in
Europe, asnere they are well 'lke&
A limited amount will be disposed of at
Ib3 Crite AO RI UUD MIEFS L° WAVY.
The • • A ,
Th Bonds sin of $1,030 tub. with tendainntud geld
coupone attached. payable in July and, January.
We receive all clams of Government bonds at Gude full
Market rate' in exchange for the ()canal Pacific trodße
bat dia tilos enabling the bohtlere to realize from TO 10
TElt CE.NT. PfLOYIT sad keep the Princlkul of uaar
in
veetmeaL equally lemma.
Orders and intbdrisa mill metre prompt attelition. In
formation. Descriptive Pamphlet& miring • full ac
count ot the' °evaluation, Progress , Badness Pror
year of the Enterprise furnished on application, Bongo
sent by return Sipa= at our coat.
' ,~~ ~o-
- , ~,
Beaten in &mimed karities, Ged,
No. 40 S. Phird
mamma:noun
JAY OOKE •
112 and 11480. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A.,
IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
We will receive applications for Policies of Life
Insurance in the now National Life Insurance
Company of the United States. Full information
given at our office.
GOLD AND GOLD COUPONS DOUGH?
P. a PETERSON' & CO..
89 South Third Street.
Telegraphic_ Index of Quotations stationed in s cont .
office.apienona place to cur offi ce.
STOCKS, BONDS. &C. dro
•11
Bought and Bold on Comtniadon at the fee peWve Boardo
of Brokers or New York. Boston. BaLt=ore and Phil*.
delpfda. rale dralf
GOLD BOUGHT.
I)E HAVEN & BRO.p
40 SOUTH - THIRD STREET,
$3O '000•• 62 0 4 . P0; $lO 000. 66,000 toirr''s , est - on mort.
sixth s t reet. • gage. AlOOl3 , to A. EITL EB..
0e25N,3t• 51 orth,
• ika . ni TO LOAN MORTGAGE.
WPOLIv i u Lalcg:',lB 41MONTGO3IERY,
4 024-3 t" ' 1035 Beach street
buciss CREEK LgiIIIGH COAL.
PLAIBTED d 4 MOCOLLI__
_ No. 8033 CHESTNUT Street, West riumaelphie.
Bole Retailehents for Ooze Brothers & !Op.'s celebrated
Cross Creek sh Coal, from the Mick Mountain Vein.
This Coal parOcniarly sulapted for snaking Steam Toro
Sugar and Malt Homes, Breweries, dm. -It is also unsur
passed as Family, Coal. Orders left at the office of the ,
Miners, No. 841 WALNUT Street (let floor), will receive
oar prompt attention. Liberal arrangements made with,
manufactures • a regular Min • . - 910 tf
EAGLE VEIN AND LEIIIGH COAX •AT B.EDUe.EI)
uPriees, No. 'DM Market etreet. , A liberal redaction
Made to retailers. 5e2.13m4 WALTER , MM.
S. loam Buns. '• - - • Itarir r• - " ..A
MEE SI GH UNDE INVITE ATTEN'ELON xv
a their stock irjol , , wi t Br tale . at i :
Spring Mountain. a and Lee eon
Which. with the Amara on given be' tia. we think
be exeeilt4 ler ..earother Cosi. • . . _,_ . _ ~.
Office. Eranxim Inetitute IlitiEhiti E ri 4 3 % t ualk a7 Serveniti
"-eat wharf., Schuylkill.
/3. All FIXTURE ' hiERBII ; Qi
THACKARA., No. 715 lawn:taut street. Rinktinfactarens
of Om Fixtures. Lamps; dee.;dr.c., would eau the attention
of:the public tothetr large and elegant seachtment of Gee
Chatuiell=Pdanatinte. i i ir ma aoke t ta mi to. b ßez i also introduce
t o " •ega i l e ding; a i rterar and repairing " gal pipes ge, and attend
warranted.
DEAI4Faii3
IN ALL
THE GREAT
DEALFIRB
COAL AND IWOOII4
Arch 'tie)
C4AS JILPIX.WIIAILM,
IMil
r:M?M4`,7fiTtRIM9 , II
Cum Jtriercue;gls,Saalif Vow Yoyk. •
Ai I:4*kri*s. :,ardiecVat AugastB,lo,%:.l
last evening.
Tim reported rising in Calabria and Sicily Is ,
denied.
ADVICICBaiii6Ei` Ayres': ‘nounce that
Sarmientonewly elected Presidentipas been
duly insta ll'
Ronsurr'R. Ltnrcois, son of the late Preei dont,
was minded at Washington; yesterday, to Mayk r ,
dpughter'ol Senator Harlan, of lowa.
TIM. National Labor, Congress was,,ongao . 4";
yesterday in dismissing its acuttitution 4 abd elect
ing officers. vie fenialememberh4Vcitedr
GEN. BULLY has driven tho Indians ho was pttr
swing boyon4 the Texas Lis:Ardor*/ t3ofeut7 'of the
Indians wernWed:" • •
SEVERAL bnildbms on Myrtle avenue and Jay
street, Brooklyn, well:thus-vied yeste\ditty. stifts,T
421V100:i .•":„1 irt
THE Neil 'York" Chamber of Commercrliss
called a meeting to take steps for the relief of the
sufferers:by theVititilefTfripaikeuttti,
CAPTAlNtlenor.z an ex- non officer, coin%
zoitted suicide In Richmond. Va., yesterday, in
- the garden of a eitissu, Stsotii who - Omployment
he had been disehtiged.,- "1 - .
D it,
Jr is believed tie steamer umbarton, reported
as leaving New York a few days since as a slaver,
'wee nay ludenr with tonxdUons for the Bpatdsh
Mi
sevsdedete. ,
Mt ad — diteiihai been — 6- sued to the soldlere and
43allore of Massachusetts, calling for a large dale
sgation to attend the apploaching gathering of the
`'Boys in Blue" in this city.
Ton' eontreet for:printing internal merino
ostatnpa` for tobaceo, snuff 'and cigars has been
awarded to Abe Continental Bank Note Company
of New York.
,
Trrr. receipts from customs, from September 14
to 19, inclusive, are as follows; Dopektzt, $444,032;
.New York,A $2,841,429; Ehltadelphbt,- $180,999;
Baltimore, $146,5411; total, $3 611 002.
Tun office, of,Superintendetg, Of, Exports and
Drawbacks in No* Tork,Audereal 40 I be , discon
tinued on October 1, will be continued until the
Ist of> JIMUSIT, ,dispose 'of ; secumt laye4l.
haIiLLIGENCE from col. Forsyth's camp,
brought by a scout, shows that the party were
still besieged by 'llse 'lndians, bat confident of
bolding out until assistance should come. They
(bad inflicted aloss of 23, killesi_and a number.
-wounde4 on the ,Indians. , • - ,
L. D: Potato.; at East Berlin, has been: sorind-;
ling merchants in Hartford, Conn.', by means of ;
forged acceptineeo, to the amottnV of 4316,000;
Portico in Meriden and Middletown are also suf
ferers. . Porter has,le ft for,parts unknown with.. ,
sonic epamo gluts bylls IMEetlO6,
AN immense Republican demonstration took
place in Pittsburgh yesterday . . A procession. of
great length paraded and business was partially
suspended. A drenching rain storm forced a
pot . ; , ',lnement of the , speeches, which were fs? ,
have been delivered in the Open air: . : • - -
Tun Ersaing Blur says:, "We have every raison'
to believe that , thapuse. of the prot;racte&seasiOn
of thei:Cablnettyesterday was, adiscuasion Vl'
whether there was a session of Congress on the
21st instant, the question being that if there was
a session, all the appointments made during- Ate,
recess bad terminated, and the °Maim were Fa-,
cant. The - President held that he bad not been
notified of seeelini, and, therefore, Old notre-..
Munn= Revendy Johnson visited the Leeds
Exhibition yesterday. in rcply to an addre!a of
the Exhibtdou Committee, ha reiterated i bis_
seenranc&of the maintenaned 04
between England 'aid America. Ho also paid an
eloquent, tritintopf prAse,io 21u3,BtItIoh Army,
.ana highly;.eulogized 1.6n1 Napler,'of , Afagdabc,
whose name, ho said, was a household word in
America,.; his courage' and' humanity 14 the
.Abysainian win • 1 +
AT the aeaalon of the Grand Lodge L O. O.'F.
in aterday, Past Grand ekes Ken-
Ted.; of New y ork, and Nieholiokot.Pectml-
Tanla; Grand Blre elect Farnsworth, and repro.
oentatives Ford, of Manaftehnagtte; Gorey, of
Maryland; Reed. of New Jerse g y. and Marie, of
Delaware, were appointeed b committee to select
an orator and arrange the detalla Of the gr eat
celebrationcelebration of th e fiftieth anniversary of the or
der. to take place In Phllsidelphi.s, on April 26,
.1869.
CULTBUILGETEN.
City Cons:cos.—A elated meeting was held
ytsterday afternoon.
Select Branch.--Mr. Marcus submitted an or
dinance repealing the ordinance rearranging the
Election Divisions in the Fourth Ward, and
creating a new Division.
Mr. Fox moved, to; refer to the CotamittAe, and
this was ag reed to.
The resolution directing the Public squares
open ,during.the entire year was repealed.
Mr. Smith submitted a resolution directing the
leopimittee on Water to report a resolution au
thorizing the laying of water pipe on Mechanic
street, from, Morton eastward, Twenty-second
Ward. ,Referred.
The ordinance creating the office of Assistant
Engineer of the Survey Department to superin
tend the Construction of sewers, the salary $2,000
per annum, gave rise to a long debate. Tne bill
was finally postponed until Thatsday next.
The bill authorizing the purchase of a lot for
school purposes at Sbippen and Guilford streets,
Fourth 'Ward wasspassed.
The resolution from Common Council direct
ing certain transferisoof Items' of appropriation
to the Highway Department for 1868 was taken
sip. The bill Musters the item No. 24 (for new
paving, 4911,000), to the /following items: Re
pairing streeta, $15,000; repairing streets,B3,ooo;
repairing roads and unpaved streets, 815,0044
for.grading streeta and roads, $15,000; for con
structing,brancti culverts, 810,000; for construc
ting new inlets, $5,000. On the question of the
passageof the bill : a 'quorum failed to vote, and
the Chamberwas declared adjourned.
Compon Broch.—Mr. Milton offereda resola-.
lion thut his Honor the Mayor be requested to;
conitounidate to Councils by what authority the
police foree has become'a Naturalization Com
mittee. • '
Mr. Evans Moved to lay the resolution on the
table. ,Agreed to—yeas 23, nays 9. ,
Mr. Dillon offered resolution instruct the
Committee on .Finance to report to .Councils by
the Ist of Oetober the tax rate of 1869.
Mr. Harper. moved to lay the resolution on thy
table. ,- Agreed to—yeasiti, nays it . •
Mr. Evans offered a resolution changing the
holdlig•the election in the first division
of the "Eleventh Ward,. to the N. W. cornet...of.
.1 - sJont and Tine Streets. ' • •
After a hank dieditehibb, in which lasers. Har
per, Evans, Hetzell, Wagner and, others partici
pated, the resolution was agreed to.
During the dir,cmision on the above resolution,
air. Evans said a Meinber of this chamber; in a
(public speech, had called the leader of the Union
army a bummer.
Mr. HetzeU said, "If the gentleman refers to
xne, he is a liar."
Wagner presented the following resolution
of censure
2?esolped, By the Common Council of the city
of thiladelphia, That George J. Hetzell, member
of put Common Counell'of the city of Philadel- ,
pima, is guilty
,of conduct grossly unbecoming a
lumber of this body lu calling Robert M.-Evans,,
a member of saidfCouncil, A Dun, ; and threaten
ing the said, RobertX.,Evatut with, personal vio
lence, for, words spokenju ,debate, and that the
[said George J. - Hetzell iskereby censured for such
langna ge . and conduct. , . , • ,
Mr. W. D. Martin moved to lay the resolution
on'the table, which was not agreed to. Ayes, 10;
slays, 22;
Mr. Hetzell said that a man' who had been
proven guilty of- appropriating other persons'
property—.
The Chair decided the remarks of the km:ale
num out of order, and directed-the' words to De
taken down by the - Clerk.
Hetzell said he had a right to defend him
self' as he pleased, and said he would not be in
lerfupted by the Chair. •
The Chair said it is my duty, under my oath, to
keep order and decorum, and the Chair is able to
preserve order 'and Will do it. '
Mr. Hetzell stated that he would defend himself
motwithstanding what the Chair might say. He
was entirely indifferent as to what was done by
the resolution. If it:should be adopted ho would
consider it a compliment.
The resolution was then agreed yeas 22;
nays 14.
Mr. Campbell submitted a resolution censuring
Louis Wagner. a 'member, for saying in debate,
“thatle Wagner) was the superior of many on
the floor or honesty, integrity and bravery."
...MING MLLE - isf.PitiWithittint tswehrmtEit:l2s , lBll§ ;•
a'
Mr. Harper. v i
' . &
•" y.• . . • • , nouthe
table. Agreed to; yeas 26, nays 10.
Mr. DWG:: offered a resolution directing the
G l ommittee on Law to investigate the charge that
police officers ham been detailed, and are now
aetnally ' employed in obtaining, by both legal
and illegal means, the naturalization of aliens
forMr the purpose of voting atrfip the
khe coming election.
;. pu rpose
Comosigoe
Law.''- - - 111, I
Not dl.d.fiays on
15. :.7 1 :I
' Mr. J. C. ar t pin amid itp,:,,,t*re? the Pollee
Committee. Agreed:lo t - .:‘
;Mr. Bardslet4 01 SAKllirdiffkiliel%" l ' ' re'
ported a repolution, ,, ,for_ A tie. PS eg,,,Q VrtY"
eighth streritionildarkft•lta Vllettovtir: treat;
' Woodland street, from Mat .: tiptnnt; also,
ngn
for gradii_beirtattitti k, r , .m r,to_Wood
tnstreet's, alktrfatialett nab . - V.'2.34 - 1
_Also, one for.,euxbing4P. :paving footways on
Ridge avenue fidiniffcrat to Schntoi Hone° lane;
also, for paving Twenty-ninth street from Ridge
„avenue to York street. Agreed to.
;Also e resolution directing the Chief Engineer
, and Surveyor to prepare plans for a bridge over
the needing Railroad on Broad- street, north of
Germantown avenue. Agreed to.
:The following bills and resoluticir3 from Select,
Council were concurred in--One to lay::waten::::
pipe; one for the purchase ar... . grolArlti in the
kEoerth Wird foe. tie:ht . :4d V, iiipoivs; . tend s may
?, bilis for tbCcoilativetten,tof.o 80wert..0,00',Igrah
orizing contracts for heaters for school houses;
one to pay commissions fOr selling city property;
one approvingot . bills-:(or - jurnlture : for- new,
sehoolhelis' rind for the' -cOnipLetion of school
in Tenth Section. Adjourned.
CRICKETtTcn.—A return rnatch, between
the Yonii•A rice and GeneantoWn chrbs• wns
.commenced Weitnesdayafternoon s And .was con
'eluded yesterday the score was
rsawr /.if' amour? mutate:
J. Large, b. C. Newhall, 11 c. G., b. C. N e who'll.— I
Meade, b. D. Newhall,. 0 c. - G., - b, D. Newhall— .. 0
M Te kPe wbel' c L .B11 61. 11 . 1 4 " : 1 : .. !..1 7 , c; G., t. NorfVulic r i...,
flurrearrg, 0. IA Nor'; " • •
ba11..1. .1.... ' 0 'c. and b. D. N0rtha11....,15-
Cadwalader,c
b. D. lf ,fe. and A: Newtal,.
... 0
Motion, c. Gunirorry, b.
D. Newhall. . 20. not out.. - ..... 0
S. alai, tf. G. 6 c. - Buidertrii: Netvuu. 0
Irwblte,.h.D..NewhaD....., . c, D., h.• 4.4-. )100di11 • 0-
" Berry b. G Nowban 8 . ;1,,A 4010,41 4
bilehsleon. G Newball. - •
h a Newnan 0 c. D., b. C. Newhall 0
.
Shia not out, c, Bander. b. C. Nerrhall,
ei. . .. .. 7 ;.• 0
Leg gyve • • 4„) ' CI
' '1" :•525
JSOWLING ANALYST&
Large No. Malls. \'o. Rung. Maidens. ll'icketa !Vides.
. 163 41 18 7 7
Meade, 133, , • 43 r 11 • 8 . 7,
Ban . ", *a6 19 - • • .
YoI.LNG 4317.111C1L
I
VIEST tannin- SEGO-NI/INNINGS.
G. bewhall. c.
eon, b Barry,..ree),..e.rf -
W. to., Jaluis, e 4 .,
greaves„ b. Large.... . 0
IL h ewball. Nichol.
son. b. Large. ..... /2
C. -Ikt:ix/op.
Large , • 4'
J. Large, e. Hargreaves. b.
Large, 5
D: Neu balL b. Large.... 8 not ont... ..... . ~..... II
Nentall. lemda.'.. IS 'nor' 6
Li Baird, b. Aleade....„. e. .13intri.b,..Large. • 7
!iP Baird. C. 'tuba; b.
Gornmcy c NicLolwn
•
b. Largo . .. ...... 9
Carpenter, n ot • Ourt., 2
La er fi rer . ..-......... ........ 3 1
2
g -
Widee iD - 4
...... . ..."; . 126
; • ~.11.0W. L .114 i Ci ANALYSIS.:
"Arafritelik ' ; nada.
`C: Newhall 111 - 615 ,9
LI; Ncwb IJ ... D3B' ` 49 21 11
••-••• Yeste rday
Samuel Rosengatterf man He n went
~Isito the office of the; t'leili6rthe t eciiitt tidi 'Com
lion Pleas, the former rtogsecnrok . hlinatEvalisa
don papers dud thelatferas vcatcher. Mr: Win.
CF. Russell, the clerk, administered the oath to
:Rosengarten,who deposed that he ,resided at
N0.'442 GlenWOdlittreet; ilip came to this
country 16'1856; and 'that then he' was nut' 18
3ears of age. Turning to Heyman he held a
cenversatiou GermaN, which Mr, Ewell_ did
not .understand , but", fortunately, ',George
Brill; painter residing at'. Fourth ", and
Noble streets , was preseht,' ' and " did
understand it. Brill detailed - the
conversation to 33r. Russell, who -tuull)ffitT the
tiermuns arrested 'aisd-thkeiirbefore dennan
Battier—the first named on the charge of perjury,
the latter on the charge of subornation ,of per
jury, -,,
and both for colls_pirillk 0 pr o cure natural
ization papers. Mr: Br il l testified that ' Rosen
garter, when he turned to Heyman in the clerk's
office, said: "I was over eighteen when I came to
this country, "to which Heyman said: "It makes
no difference. It was onlya law dos." To a
question propounded by the magistrate, Rosen
),,arten admitted not having come into the coun
try until September, 1857. They were then held
tor trial.
800rtrrrort.--ii.er...tty afternoon Sarah
Smith had a hearing before Ald. Balder, upon
the charge of the larceny of two pair of Inuits
trom the store of Messrs. Rockhill 6a Mahn.
Her mode of operation was by goinginto stores
and ordering large bills of goods to be sent to
Blakeley & Smith, Parkerstrlrg, Virginia, while
in the places purloining various articles of cloth
ing. She in ‘this way ordered a bill of between
three and fciur thousand dollars at J. Bunting 'l* -
Brother's dry goods store, No. 506 Market street;
a till of the BOMB amount at Bockhill & Wilson's
place; and also bills at Henry A. Duhring & Co.'s,
and Wood, Marsh, Haywood & Co's.
'Detective Brown arrested her at Second and
Walnut streets, and as he was conducting her
into the Central Station she dropped two pair of
pants from under , her shawl. They were identi
fied as having been stolenfrom Messrs. , Itockhill
& Wilson. Held in 52,000 bail for a farther
nearing.
,„
Dtscuanomo.-'-The charges orougut by
Joseph K. Ferry, of the brig Waverley, against
Henry Arthur, of attempting to create a revolt,
and the cross charge of .Fienty, Aithur against
the Captain of the same vessel for unusual and
barbarous treatment, which were held under ad
visement by United States CommLssioners Hibler
and Phillips, were discharged yesterday.
Coat -i!atittiniaki.
The following is the amount of Coaltransported over
the Huntingdon and Broad. Top Illquntain Railroad.
for , the week .emling Sept. § 22d. 1146 a, Mid since
January'', 1868, together with corresponding, period
last year:
Week. Previously. Total.
Tqns. Tons. f. . Tons.
1668 . ..T;650 1'19,190 • t 186,840
1861 ........ 164,81)0 169,605
Increase....;... :2.45
Rauniams, BAKNI S 3, &c•
INSTBAUCTROBW - 1 +1
HOSSEIMANSHIPAT TEE panduaga, ,
PiIIABIDING SCHOOL, .gourtt. stmt. ..,abey+
Vine, vrlll befoul:A "evW • faeMty 'for ammni
a knowledge of this heigthful And elegant ecoompligh.,
=mt.' The School la pleasantly vnntilated and ligarmei
the bonne safe end wentrebied.!_
• • Atn Afternoon Class for Young Ladles.
Saddle Horses trained in the bentnikruiet. , . •
Saddle Horses, Hones and Vehicles to hire
&leo, Clarinet's to Depots. Parties.' Wedelns:BJ-IMo
ping, atc,
nel tf SO W
THOMAS CRAM .
Cl/Q.7MM ,EBBIT,„ VEGBTABBEB, drON-10 0 0 omPa
kJ fresh Cartne4l reaches; 500 cases tresn c stoned rme
Apples; 200 canes fresh-rine • Apples, in gam; 1,000 Wes
Green Corn and Green Pew 500 cases treat; Pin= in
cans; 200 caves froth Green 0 ageS 500.eates Cherries. , in
berries, 510 cases Bleu-Marie; aYmP; 500 vases Straw.
°ernes , inernP; 500 eases fresh Pears. in, syrup; 2.000
C. 4808 Cannon Tomatoes; 600 CUM 07sters , usmor 5 and
Clam: 500 cases Roast Be Mutton. Veal. Sonya, &C.
tor sale by JOSEPH B. BUST EE &CO.. 108 l3ontn Vela.
NVWOASTME SOAR-100 BOXES GENUINE
dte Castile Soap. 'guiding from br W' lvard.h
from Genoa; end tot Wet by JOS. p. mama a 0 0 .'•
Smith iDelaware own& F Za• r•
Meß FAMES. CAPERS, dm,--OLIVEB FAKIRES
nfied °liana), Nonpareil and ihmeribm Capersal . l
French Olives-froth goods; p. etrg ex-Namlgon
from Sayre; and for tale by JOB.; BUt3=n &
108 South Ualsmrare Avenuon
MCOADINI , AND - VERMIOELLL-126 BOXES
Italian:curled, Pdacearoni . and Vermicelli landlnd
from ship Memnon, from Genoa. and for We bi
JOB. B . IUBB/BR &CO.. LOB South Delaware avenue.
lifir• OFFICE OF THE FRANKLIN FIRE DISCI&
Ah CE COMPANY:
PLIMADELIMIA.Sept.tin Election for Ten Directory for the e Bl rn y 2L 18'1i '
blheld. agreeably to charter, at a general o frneo g in e g arw th ili e
8 ockboldere for that_yerpoe , , at th e of fi ce of t th '
p ny, on MOND eV, October e fith, 1868. at le o.cloel, e it i lk in i;
J. W kIeALLIST.II,
ae2l4lloct4 ' ' Secretary.
LAW DEPARTMENT. UNIVERSITY PENN.
Wren's. A term Will commence on_Thursday.
• tuber 1. Introductory by Prof. E. Spencer Miller. at 8
°Work. P. M. so 21„t eel*
. NOTICE.i i .1 ,
~iii ~. ....:.„ .. • ~
...„ Er ii...- .1. 3.;.: Zv t , : i ' I , ~' 1 1 j`j, , ',:
DELAWARE AND RARITAN CANAL.
9 TRENTON. N.J., Hoot. 11. VW
The toll on coal pawing through the canal from bor.
dentown to New Brunswick will be Thirty-fire (8)
1 , 45 r ton. on aafter-the 20th hut.-, , - . T, cite
1 '1. ,. 1 !U.' •c...J.v.a.srants. 8....$
•sei2 °" r ' ' ' Engineer ana Buy's.
PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD
r tz COMEANE. OE:EWE NO. 227 BOUTHATOURTLI
. sty .27 MB
NOTICE to the holders of bonds of the Philadelptils
21 Reading Railroad Company. due April I. 1870: _
he Company oiler to exchange an y of these bonds of
000 each arattylNeffeffiar. a 1110411 st MblEceflbe,Anext•
agl.ar. for a new mongisgs nona or mt.= amountosearing
ILrcent. Interest. clear of United Stater and State taxes.
sing 26 years to run.
.._ bonds not mutt .... ...- • on or before the Id of
har peat , ~ p d sti maturity._ in a.T.oricti with
chair Oti .. ' Taz • •:, a BRAPFt B.D. eserver : •
DIVIDEND NOTICES.
AT A MEETING OF THE BOARD OF MANTA.
gen+ of THE PHILADELPHIA. GERMANTOWN
A 7i) NORRISTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY. held
pt, 10. 1868, a dividend of Five per cent, on the Capital
Stock of the Company was declared. payable clear of
teXes,on end after the First of October next.
a'be Transfer books of the Company will be closed on
thel9tl:l bat, and remain closed until tne First of Oc
tober. 1806. A. E.,' QUOHERTY,
tell f t ocl 4 Treasurer.
EDUCATION.
(331bL FOX WILL DEVOTE MB ATTENTION OF
• eventheioArtiate.64o,ollFirothi French'and
rman. erfne tamable. ,Apply to'lnt*Cathatine
. t atteot Watt§
• STRUCTION IN GERMAN BY DR. SCHMIDT. OF
Marra Hall. BrulLogton. Apply for circular at the
Mule 'Vote of NEBBIO3. ANDRE .a CO, No. 1107 Chest
euM area. ae2l-12t•
VIIBS K L 4U3LIBURNER will reopen her school.
Northwest corner of Fifteenth and Pine streets,
.on
BEIMEMBEIt 7tti, 1868. Entrance on Pine street.
rultAloamilA:AnE. 28. 1888., .603.18-.016.w,1me
pox J. MAROTEAU.
French Teacher,
tee wfmlm• Zi0,264 Routh Tenth street.
,y : I ' o'-:iLt: Z'l
1717 Pine street, Wednesday, Bent. 16th. seZwfm•lnt
fifIIE UNDERSIGNED WILL OPEN A PRIVATE
14 School for Boys., Mellen ' , Avenue. ,Germantown.
litember Ttb.. A limited number ofpupils will be re
ceived into th e family of th e PrincimL Residence.
8 obool Lane. above Green. - Partienlatil from circulate,-
aul9iii J. IL WITUINGTON, A. M., Principal
CGlEWlliatfi 13.211ER'T IMHALE SEMINARY, PHIL.
liadelphia—Mire Bonney and Mies DiUayo wfl reopen
their Boarding and Day School (Tbirty•seventh session)
September 16. at
- • .a.,l6lsCheatnat street:
partictuire from • -•• auliNoctlf
ARY P. RQBESOWS ENGLISH AND' FRENCH
AV. Day Eithoblffor, Yarns Ladiesoit N0:3613 Filbalt
Ert, will be relpexted Ninth Month (aepterer)
isEt ElizA W.' MUTH — WILL' RE OPOI ----- lER
BoarditUradThiyikhoot.Revt 1 atllo.lMayruCe
BE 31IBBE8 InOIIDECAL WILL .RE-OPES
School Mr Young Ladles on IliOND.pc; September 21:
Is.in Sprnoostoeoto ' Aseilnr,
CIATHARINE M. diIiPLEY WILL BP OPEN BER
kOcbooLlfo.` BotitlVldertisk4kreet. (begemluilia,
month. I.stb. IE6B. : , szatitpt
.• ; • T I :A nT , , •ie
43 South *lghteenth street, "wlll reeved op "Mcmday.
Si ptember 14tb.7 Circulate at the Academy. Call bew
the beure,44, r. SL and M. for_ fimilter nalormatlau.
kulsittm' 'L, LIAMMOVVEL,PritueIIoaL
OLABELICAL. FRENCH . AND ,MNGLISJI 13011001.”
Thirtenth Mead' stretta. • Next. abeam
Sept. 14tk. B..KENDALL. A Id..PliAelpel etti4lpe
OLASSICAL AND ENGIIM 16MHOOLy AT 1112:MAR;1 ,
ket street, re opens September 1. Boomtlarge. -
00326-Im._ . ,Wid,,t3. COOLEY.
N NA BAIGBIin3 1301100 Lt FOll YOUNG LAD
nlio. 1819 Grettriftreet; will reopen cui the 14111 of Baps
tetaeri . - " ' . c,5144,6a0r
lIHE MISSES JOHNSTON'S BOARDINChriNH HAY
School Young Laelles, N0.,1327 ,Spruce streelvwill
reopen Y%) September 14. 186a* -ite&im4
QAGNOIV.BiIi72./k, - PROFESSOR OF 'THE • ITALIAN'
e,
Lavgnag silli.e,tharossity :of ~ ,PanzurSiMio. 1339„
(4ertnut.atreet. , _ •- 4c,4440.
BE ARCH STREET INSTATOTE FOR. YOUNGIe
Ladles, 1345 r ` Arch street' wßliiNoOttr' MONDAY;
Bert. 1404 MISR L. M. BROWN,
4e11n4 51 : PrliielVlL
rIENTRAT: LRBTITUTE;¢;.TEFTH igND zZPßitillb ,
garden stmts. ye•oPells:lleptlm 7 4. , big 7. Pre_RaTatire.
fog College or - lltudnetta - Specula attention wen to
cPrimary Pupa& Residence of the t ITtricipost, No.: sag .
th Tenth street. Si. G. he oGUKE,.A.M., Principal.
an; 6w¢ w. SEWENTA lirnlzi Vies piln.
•
YOUNG MEN AND BOWENCLISII. CLASSICAL
Natberositical . aid Institato.l.9oB MOUNT
vgimos &frog; reop.eno lieFf,ember 7tb. rrePAratjon
for Wadi:teas or college, • • •
r Bey. JAS G. SEUNN A
su2s 6w , 5 PrincipaL
flll/13113AL.
Tlfo , ROPES SUR T. RIZZO HAS RETURNED FROM
Europe, end will resume his tinging lemons n t he
14 of Octottetr. .sejt.
- ganANo. buss EIBETH AND MISS JULIA
13 Allen. Apply at Prof.t GEORGE A I rya,
bouth Seventeenth street. -
b S BYRNES, 7 EACHER OF bilidlC AND
Ft ench. Lessons given at the residence of p apiln, or
a ber own, No. 1717 Pine street. re3l,tin
VA R. CARL WOLFSOELY WILL RESUME HIS PRO
feeslonal datles on the first of October. Address all
erimmunleatlcoce to 214 South Twelfth street, or Andre's
Miele Store. re•1&12t1
4tRuFESSOR E. BARILI WILL COMMENCE • MIS
Staging Lersona on the 14th of SEPTEMBER. Ad
( ea, 1102 CHESTNUT Street. Circulars e,air be ob
seined In all muale etores. , eel-1m•
10 It. JAB. N. DECK WILL RESUME HIS LESSONS
111 in Murk between the 15th and 20th of September.
ke,idenee No. 1806 Mt. Vernon et. ' ees
rpH G E MISSES DIIRAN WI L L RESUME THEIR
11 instruction in Singing and th e Piano. 1729 FILBERT
cot. sel4 m w
BACHMANN, ORGANIST OF THE CHURCH OP
/1. the Ateneinent,resumes Lessons on Plano, Organ
add Violin. 1342 Brown street.
ltif R.. J. G. ossomm HAS REMOVED HI6 V ROORS3
.1.13. for Musical instruction to No. 805 - Race street. Mr.
l,sbourn taken pleasure in offering - hia services to the
public onmoderate Lerma, and invites particular atten
tion to his Theoretical and Practical method of Piano
Forte and Guitar instruction. au..361m5
Q,..10. P. RONDINELLA. TEACHER OF SLNOING. PRI.
•vnte lemons and dame. Renidence. 308 S. Thirteenth
erect, an 95.131
aSY R. V. VON ADISBEIBRI. TEACHER OF THE PIANO.
Mr has resumed his lessons. No. 2/4Sonth-Fifteenth
street. aul73m•
LIINIEBEK.
. ..
. ,
, -
MAULE, BROTHER & CO.
1868. HMG= JOILBT. ,
BPRUGE JOIET., ' 1868 1
ersucz ,iOIST.
HEMLOCK.
1 HEMLOCK.
HE
3 • LARGE eng .:.
LARGE BTO . :
RILAIII4E t 11,111,0TIKER - it- CIO.
9500 Bourn smdi.
XB6B. . riirjet FABBlllt 1868.
CAROLINA FLOORINut.
VIRGINLE. ORIN_ _ G
DELAWARE F'LOORING.
ABU FLOORING.
• WALNUT FLOORING.
FLORIDA STEP BOARDS.
RAIL PLANE.,
'4RNNETI 3 3BVRTIM: 1868.
WALNUT BOARDS.
WALNUT PLANE.
q..±140 . UNDERTAKERS' LUMBER, -, gita s Q
•Ut). tINDERTARERS° LUMBER.
RED CEDAR
WALNUT AND PINE.
1868. tiLAIRS' tiWur. 1.868.
ASH.
Warfb OAR PLANK AND BOARDS.
HICKORY.
1868. Ent 1181 MR - , 1868.
ormasaCEDARSOX BOARDS.
• FOE SALE DOW. , .- ,
4 18 C 1 CAROLINA - SCANTLING. - • 1 868
uu.p. CAROLINA IL T. SILLS. 1.
, NORWAY SCANTLING: ,
LASSEAREI,ORTNENT.
prt Q CEDAV 13 BING
LANKI Qost
Vi7AWEEIN H GS L 'iII" '
CHESTNUT ' LANK "
1868. HAArmosLEALEARFR 1.868.
CHOICE PATTERN PINE.
SPANISH CEDARJOR P47/7 ,1 1N5.
FLORIDA RED CEDAR.
BRAIJ4I3I, BIEIOTEINEI Ac 00.
'woo Bourn svourri:
Tkorars BorroN AND TBiarrort ruscurr.—Tan
n,y trade aupptied with Bond's Butter. Cream. Milk. Om.
Mere and scult Also. . West & norms celebrated
a ni
Trenton be Biscuit, by JOB. B. LIB=.B
&le &gents. Boutb Delaware man& &
j4 - 108 BALF AN.. INVOICE! OF 111M1317/10 RAXIB
assorted man and cotton.
• PETER WRIGHT BONG.
Inyllgte 91111 Walcott street.
1 taiill-iiii.j-
' ..: ;,,,,.,,;kmxvipy4k.L..,.!;,,,,,,...,)
4 .. .w4 t itgn ialA s 0
fr / 40 . 3 /t 4 wl'Unf PELAWAT O 4 II" 44 &VIP,
.
~ , ‘ ~ L..,, ,
4 , Queen Acted Wham 1 -'
._• 1 ., !. 1.1
ilte t ePtagements will be p2arde and RasseaterFlei
Ws it ri0.136 Wahnt; strdet.up4tairm , ,i - -J '.- 7 ~
111 0 1 4INI ; ,.. - 1 M:h.f.. 1 41 7410 144.0 4 04 11 04119 1 4t0 n.
'tot Zogon=-13timanehipline'DirOV
L. ,,,,.. aiiiiiii , fi , 6itilvfir ,,, .. • 0 0 ~..1 ), ..1 , ,i
F . :M=5174m 0 - w ynnats . atart , Mo
. BO
0 .1 , . t i 4,.
. IVI a M atago ll i, oomposeti Alr pm trirklaw
-.J sc , i Ili,
Baker 4 ,-,,, , '• ,
I 0 1 N . "i,46o . tirAgri ,l74: 41: BolL' Lf ' "
___, iitititirotopt I.lo3.cormillsaiiiivetcrwe i '..) ', ,,. 1
ram as-0 from Pblia.. on giaturfl.y, amt. 96, t a (IY.M.,
Trbea--- MB N.ltora Baatrrar , PridaW SeiptiJ6s. as 6Pi M.
ire 6%114
ltpaldra,reterforterM. hl beef
efallt r prnt; kopysond Jcistis , ili sant dessritah, _..
littaken for au panto bi Near azta eor•
, a• innate& • limarspee fC' r , : i; -•. ', i . f.s •ril r 1
'Mil= or Palaa4ol4r r i a l.
s econuxtaitout'
apritiOn ,-) • • - HIM KY SOU it 4 ~- )
tam . .ME South ware &mum
tam`-'' ' NOR.
:WOLK STEAMS _ Jik ••I_„:_2Ll, % •
THEOUGII FREI(MIT Am, 4/N TO TDB
SOUTH AND WEST •-• x • • -- •
. ........ 13VIA . j ,..,, 1t /1443101111
SWIM . EVA WTTLIVIIt• •
r i to . .WArth co and IBonqt at clarolltAo=ll•Alr. l
PoitmiWt. • ynch.
Ve..4 4 vonernal , Vie Mot, sitb . cod..
T/%1Ist•O -Linz Metro owl sad Dan
T
I)
( 331E10N taw
tom T
I = l be im,the ded tf ia k bin mak= for
evisy desseption of might. ,•• •
o charge roc enondsdon..dramse. es an a"ausa
falutitunatlPreeetigmiunitilr rata~ ','.!' ....,
1 , • . , . „ • Wid.l. OLTDE I / 1 00.. .
14 North and South Wharves.
W. P. PO L4Nikilysed at Sichnsond anst9Rvirotar.•
T. r.CROWPIWL 0 /3 - o,.'Agents' at Noncom' fold!
'PHILADELPIHA ANDSOIMV HASA
2TEEIBISHIP• '_O42IIPANYIS • ULM,
FROM LINES
dITEEN ATREET. WHARF. •
The JUNIATA will aaII,POS t 4 SW uttLEANII. VIA
HAVANA,'Situr.ley,Detober at 8 °Work EL M. '-
The- STAR OF THE UNWN will gall FROM NE!
WILES be. via HAVANA; on'-.--: Octobet •
be TONAWANDA trill •esEl FOR. SAVANNAH. on
Tnesdarrember 2.10. at 8 o'clock EL
The W will sail .FllO2ll SAVANNAH, on
Tuesday Sept ember eplernber 29M. •
Tim PIONEER wM bail FOR WILMINGTON. N.C1,4
00. Sept. at o'clock P.-M.
clahrolS Mg of Lading Ird• grid Passage Tioketa
to Write South and, eat.
'•J • • WILLIAM L. JAMES. General
Queen Street ,Wharf
NOTICE.
e 'WE NEW YORE.
Via Delaware and 'Raritan Cattal.
EXPEESS STEAMBOAT COMPANY.
qhe Steam Propellers - of • the Line leave Dolfir 'from
&Lusted below Market street. - •
. • • • TBROUGHIN SI ROUE&
forwarded by. all the Linea going out of New
York—North:East and West—free Of 'Commission. '
Freight received at our astualowrates.._
-W.'ld. P. CLYDE di CO
BAND. Adeu "3"Va11 ' 4761.1 Min1"1 " 1416
119 Wall atreet.'cor. ElOuth. Pew York. • • m 131941
• 11A VANA STEAMPN4. -
SAJLINGRVERY2I DAYEr
Tbeee, atetunere - lvill leave thteipprt. for
.0 vane every third Tueeday. at Qoociciek:A. H.
•e ate/L=ll , lp BTaRtIAND STRIPES.Cri Hoble4
.
wl
ean for Havana on THRf3D43I, rt/litt.
40th; at 8 o'clock A. - • • •
Paaeage. $4O currency. f
Pilakengera mint nruilded-Nitthtkaiii)orfa.
Vo Freight received , afternalurdaY. . •
Reduced Rates of freight.'
- TLIO '14A13, WATTSON.44 SORB..
140 North' Delaware avenue,
- -"" FOR CHARLES •N. ' S.' C.; 13 iITHRHAZ - '
r.. it.;‘, Noon.
The steamship PROMETH 13„ Gra.,
3 , 1 • . vrilliall positively oh SATURDAY.tlieliith'M y at..)
atMoon. Shippers will please hurry their goods- along
-side. below tine street wharf. 'and BIDE of-LadlOg tor
' E.A.l3otlDtit
• • • No.3,Doch err
„ • 0 KEW EXPRES :d DMA
i'jl, ol Georgetcarsr and `ESN
- vist
pligeapeake and klilelianireit= Withaark,
• . meet Alexandria froze the' moire route fat
Llluellbtlxll.dridak irnoxrdil4 flestrrallk thaton Ica the
Sauthwart.
Steamers leave roplarlli [ATM tthe Ord istait'abinr
siszicet 'street, ever ynatarday lamed.
LYacht received deny. • WhLIr—CLYMPAhI CO..
. Il xim . DA RID VIDSO oz iIiid uiro elFa Ase r=
ezto
lit I t= saireL vir
:,diat it , WANTED' IMMEDIATELY, V 123332318 To
toad at gharleston for Philadelphia. Liberal
freights paid and deepatch given. A -kerb' to
F4=414.6.8 •, • er& tlo.. 3 Dock street wharf. je.9o-tf
. FOR ANTWERP.—THE FIRST-CL ABS SHIP
,3,7:2" "GRAHAM'S POLLY" is now lending for Ant.
werp, having a large portion of her cargo en
giged. Will have quick d atch. For freight. Reload
Oh oni t. y., apply: 'to WO & 192. Walnut
stree anl2 if
' NOTICE—FOB NEW YORIt. VIA
lowan) and Raritan Canal—Swiftsure
nansportation Company—Despatch and
Silftenre Linetc—/Ehe busitu3ss by thew Lines will bare.
mined on and after the 12th of March. For Freight,,,
which will be taken on accommodating termN 4111 , P17 to
W2d. K BAIBD & CO.. LT. South Wharves. MUM!
, . DELAWARE AND. CHESAPEAKE
't Stem - - Tow-Boat — Collq u y:Earges
_ owed between Phlladelp blalttmore.
Hisvre4e-Graee_ Delaware City and lute= koints.
WEL. P. CLYDE & CO, Agenta. Capt. JOHN LAUG H. LIN. Snp't Offiee. 14 S. Wharves. Phila. later
TOTICE.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY GAB
tioned against trusting any of the crew of the. Amerl
eau bark. Adelaide Norris, Reed, master, from Liverpool,
as no debts of their contracting will be Paid by either
Captain or Consignees. PETER WRIGHT & SONS. 115
NV alma street.
10NSIONEES OF MERCHANDISE PER AMERICAN
k...% Bark Adelaide Norris. Reed, Master, from Liverpool.
will please send' their permits on board at Shy yen street.
a half; or at the office of the undersigned. The general
order; will be loaned on Saturday, the 26th inst., when all
goods not permitted will be sent to the public stores.
5e2.52t PETER WRIGHT & SONS, 115 Walnut et.
ie.UTION.—ALL PERSONS ARE FORBID TRUST
\ Ing or barboring any of the erew of the N. G. Bark
}Jolene, Knuth, Mester, from London, ae no debts of
their contracting will be paid by Captain or Monte.
WORKMAN & CO. eelltf
ALL PERSONS ABE HEREBY CAUTIONED
againat trneting any of the crew of the Prussian bark
- Fredwick Gustav,' Muse. Master, ae no debts of their
contracting will be paid either by the Captain or con.
eigneee. - PETER 'WRIGHT & BONS. BB Walnut
etrrot. es 7 tf
CIONBIGNEES` NOTICE.—CONSIGNEES OF KER..
lJ chandiae per Bark Heide. %math. Master, from Lon.
Lido, will please send their permits to the office of Melia
defraigned. WORKMAN & CO. sel7 tf
IAUTION.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CAU.
kJJ tionedagainst trusting or harboring any of the crow
eithe N. G. ship GERMANE. Rohn sere, &f.oner, as no.
debts of their contracting erM be.nald by master or con.
pigneee. WORKMAN. & C0.,"1= Walnut street.
BELIEF ASSOCIATION.
N OTICE.
t. FFICE OF THE MANHATTAN CO-OPERATIVE RE ,
LIEF ASSOCIATION, _.
No. al WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA.
OBJEOT.—The object of this Association is to revue a
cast; payment wittily' forty days after the death of a mend
be; of as many dollars 88 there are Members in the churl
to which he or she belongs, to the heirs , ILLUSTRA
TION :Claw "A. use 5,000 male members. A member dies.
The Association pays over within forty days $5,000 to the
widow or _heir', and. -the remaining members 'forward
w (thin thirty days one dollar and tea -cents each to, the
Aisociation to reimburse it: Failing to geoid this sum,
they forfeit to the Aaaoclation all moneys paid. and the
association supplies a new member to flit the Place of the
ietiring_one. , -
TEN CLASSES FOR MEN AND TEN FOR WOMEN.
otwessa.—ln .Cill/38 A all , persona between the ages
of 15 and .20' Years; in Class 10 all • persons
between the. ape .of ' 20 and 25 Years: in Clare
L I all persons, .between the ages of 25 and 30
9 mum ;in Omni D aliperaona between the ages of SO an d 35
Snare; in Class E all persona notween the ages of 35 and
•loy ears in Class all peroores between the ages of 40 and
45 yearn In (Jima 0 all persona between the ages of 45 and
:.years in Class II persons between the ages of 50 and
55 years in (Italia I all pen:ons between the ages 0155 and
6o years fp Class K allpersona between the ages of Leland
55-yeara. The classes for women are the earn° as above.
Each class is limited .to 5,000 members. Each person
pays six dollars upon becoming a - member and one
dollar and ten .gents each time a. member dies belong
ing to. the 1383510 clam he or she is a : member of. One
dollar goes direct to. the heirs; ten , cents to pay for
celled ing. A Member of one. clads carnet 'be assessed
!ids dollar if a member of
another cla ss EachCBB
4 1 eVa nd a rin i °comiecto i t l anyoih lerMelb or tisnec :ioaiSix Dollars
into the Treasury the time of Prating the
7
application;
to;pay One Dollar and Ten Cents into the treasury imon
- the death of each and any memberof the claw to which
he or she belongs; within thirty CAW after date' of notice .
of such death ;_ to - give your , Name, Town." County.
Rate. Occupation, etc.. .also a medical certificate, Ev
ery minister is asked to act as agent, and will bo paid
regular rates. FUNDS--Circulars will aspfully in
regard to funds and investments. Circulars g iving full
explanation - and blank forms - of application be sent,
If;
on request or upon a personal application at 0 Office of
Ste Association.• , • -.. • • , . . . ,
I ; TRUSTEES AN D OFFICERS. . .•
E; Mom uxDV. President. , . 2 .
ET. WRIGHT (President Star Metal Conniany), Vice
President _
W. 8. CARMAN : ( President of the Stuyvesant Bank)
Treasurer.• - . • :- _
LEWIS. SANDERS, Secretary.
,i. ft. MANGAM (President National Trust Co.) •
D.' a DUNCOM B. No. 8 Pine street.
the
The trust funds will be held in trust by h
i NATIONAL -, TRUBT: COMPANY,
. .
No 383 Broadway. New York.
A§enti wanto tot t4is.city:.-- -- . - --- ••- . - - - -
WILLIAM LIPPINCOTT A General Ag ent,
n, Manhattan Cckiperative Relief Asaoclation,
tellmt N0.432 Walnut street. Philadelphia.
NCROP ARABIAI DATES,-100 MA g ENE
IN quality. landing earl for or sale by JO& B. /11.Aa
Co.. Boca Delaware avaana.
=i "' ' : iktrOlorir 8111410: 1- : -' '
i "Tnokso cauAtituellifitis&i,_, —
4
..,, , i ,4 6, mot 7 .. r.,
mastip I, AND al s,
Cr Public sales at the Philadelphia radium, r•vg 44,44
. 1 1
'ESDAY, at 12 o'clock. -,_ ..., -
_.;-..-. ~,,,.„' t,.
k' H AY, of t lZ,rl - - 2 017,4 A;
is don to width We ` pit on 5
ri.obirtzfrirdi nthrtarbo, a
otig, .x 414 mumbitiarraseihßea
at Priv D =l dstilifirfii WWl*
SOT! ' i also:- iid nada •
nen spa : Norm A ardeadan Pniese.,liata t = l. , ,
i
Tztrirti.
_.. oltilrbentlttrk, Acne, Eva.,
,I„„jrNia T =Asmara, (tIiKAIR DIDNIOCILM aO. ...... K
• Purnisft•• Saki t the ANort Start ' EVEA
MW 4l,3 r• ierlaital‘g" (tiro ... or/cid ttente d!''
sir Sales at rec a o .
', ~ ..-.''' 0. , .. -i' '• , "--.....• , r ' , , ..! . , ',
GN., +TUE STOC
SDAY: KS. LOAN SEPTS,
__fre. ' •
'' -, - • ' . iltl ekli
At 12 o'clock MOOD, at the Philadekda =SR,
Ig) ilibilig filitill Bank cap tlita •- • -
59,sphares Western Nathmel,l3 . _ • .
6 shiresAnaderoyof Medd. , • ' ' • '
. I share ,Academy of.fd_uslalrrefarted• y
12 shared rhiladelphie Eithartir d i
5 abases North sseasslGMenl4..... Vt. ' ' I
IS' shake Minehill and sen =I even Railroad. '
, • 6 rbarekLebtinGoal Anni ILK
j
' 10 shards, kbiladelphi a and &ding Railroad.
11. i •4 sbards.,Libractsiiiudd P. ;. • .7;
1 ba.- tch treet T• .a
1 thaisTP in tithe V tr t
•
IS t ast, sal& t • ,-, • .
Sio,ooo Steubenville and ndian*,6 par cent
-153,f arlabian Nev. Itauroad(Losin. '.
1 share • Pitiladelphis, Libratiy., .. ~ , •
18 Shares McMillan Oil Co.' • 4 '
100 shares Central Trsupportathin Cot '
120 shores Cape May and Millytne Railroad. •
1000 . hares West Bangor State'lllnins Co. •
, 100 shares Pacific and Atlantic TelegraPh Co.
, _ Etrocutore rile-. - , • ,
135 sh ares Delaware Division Canal.
._ ' REAL ESTATE SALE. SEPT ' 29. ...._. .....„,_
11.11%,11•111.2 Litomrstat 'Loostlort-DESittABLE mu-.
P.k.IVIY FOR A BUBINEOB STAND. No, 236 South.
El/03th et., 22 feet 8 inches front. 100 feet deep - having a
' marthetmlightuf /*fee t =or the adjoining colliicr pro's
De IIANDBO Y.' ME, , MOD ERN THREESTORY. BRICK
•REBIDENCErio. 1 torten st : hve all the modeni con•
vet fences.- Lot 48 feed. treat : Inimediate Dominion.
V• At it the Adction Room Ez4yr - oRT -
intim
DwEL.
lei c a m . § t4 os- rY" Zi ' lt i 24ol Ind 2412 blare t.... 15th Wa d.
Feratoptery Sale--LOT. fibssawodes4weet of lEwenty
rerenintbrytilele-:-LOMDuntinkflots and Serrviva Its.
, Peremptory eale-lay II,F ORO GNI), N. E corner of
Emerald and York sta. and a Grodird Rental 272 a yeas.
•L 3.lODgaN THRPE-VitlitY BRICK ILESIDENCE. No.
1027 Nine st. Has all use modern convenhmees.
E-STORY BRICK
thrititYAGE ri e goilrittd " lTM E C.lNG. Noe 1517 and
1619 North Filth at. above Oxford,: Lot 44 feet front. /52
feet deep. . binned la i r
_possession.
THREESTORY RICK HOTEL end - DSTELLING.
No. 2729 Franktord road, corner of Adams et.
THItEE-tsTO.RY BRIM STORE and' DWELLING;
Nc. 2227 Frankuird road.
__
7. BREE-STORY 'BRICK STORE and DWEILING.
No 2225 k rankford road.
'lllftEE STORY FRAME DWELLING. No. 815 Car-
Peremptory Balo-To Close a Partialship Account-43
''THREE-STORY BRICK DWELLINGS. Nos. 1.7801 1722,
5724, 1728, 1728 and 1780 Leib at.. between FrOt Vetriet and •
Irankford road s ind south of Harrison et 19th Ward.'
MODERN THREE STORY BRICK DINT.LLING,,, No.
2311 Lombard at. , -
_ .
71VOSTPRY MUGS DWELLING. No. 2306 Ashburton
to rear of the above. - • -
GEN'IIeh.II7BREE43TORY spacir.pvyELLMG. No.
1112 Wistar st,fabeveliprlntt Garden.
TW creak/RI SeltAßlE,Wiyk...l.l..rti9l;l,Browtt treet, :
northeast of Anthracite st: -
MODERN TIIREE,I4ORS' BRION; REeaDENGE.
E 56 hortfa Thirteintb it.. obese Wallace et. Safi the mo
-dem ton Tin *neat. Immediate possession: , • :
11 ANDoOIdE MODERN ISTONE 11F.81DENCE, Man ,
said roof.' No: 221 South rottlr.see,ond et.. south of Locust'
sto finished in elegant style. with all the modern ILD47
provements. • • •
t IkiNCELLANEOI:_II SAND LAW BOOKS,' VSO3I
LIBRARIES
• Sept - ON'FRIDAWAFTERNOON.
S 25, ott4 o'clock.° -.- , 1, r , •
.
• I
. ' Sale No. 312 Marshall Street. '
NEAT HOUSEctpLD PURNITURE, BRU S SEL
. S EAR
,. - • PET& se. :I_,.
__ .. ~,,, ' :. , ,
.a_
1 ,ON SATURDAY MORNING. •
Beet 26. at to O'clock, at No 7112 Marshall. streitabiritY
Wood, street by. cattdogne, i Me t entireiParlor„.Hini
Rom- and ' il.bamber FurMbire; China and GlavaW4
Feather Beds., fdarressea, Biankete•Bedding, Brussels
Ingrain Carps to, Kitchen Utensils, &es -
May be examined , at no t elet* °RAID morning of 'sale:
_ _ ... . . .
Bale :No 123 North Thirteenth *treat . ~'
ELEGANT FURNITURF... PIANO, MIRROR,, , FI N
.. ~. t:AfrPETS; ate..
ON MONDAYSMOHNIN_ _,. G. -,,
ept. 28, at 10 40clock,atNe' 123 Not thThirtbeisthstre' atc
by catalogue, the, entire- Furniture,_compriaing 7 4lande,
oorne Walnut DraningßotniP•Furnitm* covered with
fr. n plush: superior Walnut• tibiary,,HB4l and Chain.
Furniture; Oat Dining Room Furnitnre,ifine China
43 %Sil t s st i r Cor nan al
ascan Pier. e . eiLrro ze r.. as ßose e.
imina vitood/F, vases hutoi and ahl e a t,:
i i
.m eta, Bich Velvetand Brualtina Gantt, Fine alatreases,
Iligh_ rase Clock, Aachen Utensils . , Refrigerator s . k.c.
pir The Furniture was mule to ordoebY-Yolliner.
: •' t Adniinhtratorta Bale: 1' .. • . L . • ,:. . '
COPPERSNUTII4I STOCK. AN D TooTA...
. . ON.MONDAY-MOHNiNG,' - '''
28th hurt, atili o'clock, at N0. , 491 North, hird street; by.
order of Adniiiiistrator. will be'r.9ld the stock and tools
or, theist° Anthony Hongler_ . - . , .
iiißo JtnitY Eind Wagon and Single Harness.
May be examined on the morning of sale at 8 o t oloCk.
Etecuterst, Sale-N0:714 Spnico 'etreet4-Estate.bf Joiseph
; B. LaKey,dec'd. ,
SUPERIOR FURNITUR , MAN v Elk ' AND-PIER M.
. HORS. 881713 S li CARPETS, ito. -
ON TUESDAY HORNING,
Sept. Mt. at 10 o'clock. at No. 714 Spruce street, bY cor
der of Executora the entire Household 'P urnlture, in.
chiding superior Roabwood and Walnut Drawing Room
F rniture, two, fine French Plato Mantel' Mirrora, two
er IliirLere. fine Brussels Carpets, ..Parlor,. Entry and :
S ir Carets, Hall Furniture, superior Dining Room and
C amber Furniture. superior Wardrobe, China, Glass and
i t
}red Ware, fine Hair Mattresses, Bede. fine Ingrain
a d oi her Carpets , Oil Cloth. Kitchen Furniture , RefHge.
r ors, &a.
Full particulars in catalogued.
Salo No. 107 Wallace street
HANDSOME WALNUT PARLOR, DINING ROOM
AND CHAMBER FURNITURE. ELEGANT -DRUB
EELS CARPETS. dic.
ON WEDNESDAY MORNING.
rept 30. at 10 o'clock. at No. 1630 Wallace street, by
catalogue, the entire Household Furniture, including-
Handsome Walnut Parlor Furniture, covered withgreen
Plinh, made to order by Allan: Dining Room Furniture,
elba ant Sideboard. elegant Brussels Carpets, China, Glass
add Plal ed W are, two suits of handsome Walnut Cham
ber Furniture, Bouquet and Centre Tables, marble tops;
pule Hair hiatresses, Kitchen Manila, &c.
AT PRIVATE SALE
ELEGANT RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE. OIL
PAINTINGS OBJECTS OF Ana'. dm. N. W. corner
FOrtieth and Pine streets. Lot 100 by 175 feet. Inquire at
thr auction roomer 4
Bale. a VALUABLE STORE. Front
street. ootween Market and Chestnut. Inquire at the
Store.
Mdlialt.ll 11111.)Ttllatb, Alilattlrirmßg
(Lately_ Salesmen for M. Thomas di Sons),
__
N co. 529 CHESTNUT street. rear entrance from lillnor.
SALE OF FINE OIL PAINTINGS.
ON FRIDAY EVENING,
Bert 25, at 734 O'clock. at the auction rooms, No. 529
Chestnut street. by catalogues` collection of Fine Oil
Peintints, handsomely framed. She collection com
prisee eighty Mermen of a varied and pleasing character.
W ill be on exhibition two days previous meal%
Sale at No. 9124 Spring Garden street.
ELEGANT W A LNUT ROSEWOODIGO AND CHAU
PER FURNITURE,PIeNO - FORTE.
HANDSOME ENGLISH BRCS 'SECS CARPETS. dte.
ON I , ESDA.Y MORNING. •
Sept 29. at 10 o'clock. at No. 2124 Spring Garden skeet,
by catalogue, the entire Furniture. Including -Elegant
'Vvialnut and Plush Drawing Room- Suit, two Handsome'
Snits Walnut Chamber Furniture, Oak Chamber Set, 3
sults fine Cottage Furniture, fino.toned Rosewood Piano
Fume. nearly new; Handsome Englisll Brussels, Imperial
and Ingrain Carnets, tine . Spring' ?entreats, Pankets.
China, Ritchen Utensils,dca
PAY be
HANDSOME MODERN ESD
RESIDENCE.
Immediately
previous to the Bale of fumittu'e will be
sold the handsome modern three-story brick residence,
with three story double back buildings and side yard,
and lot of groend. situate on the south Bide of Spring
GArden street, No. 2124, containing in front 25 feet. and in
depth U 5 feet. The house is built in the most superior;
• and substantial manner. and has all the modern conve
niences—gas, bath. range, water clues, etc. May be
eeen at any time.
BPI CIAL VALE OF FTATIONERY, FANCY
00Dlit c.
ON THURSDAY 4e - thItNOON,
October 1. at o'clock. at suction rooms. by oats
cgues a qtantity of Stationery. Fainty_goods, dm. •
PHOTOGRAPH ALUtalo.
Sale No. 629 Chestnut street:
LARGE SALE FINE Olt, PAINTINGS.
ON FRIDAY EVENING. -
Oct.% at 716 o'clock, at the auction rooms.. (second stry
sslearoom.) by catalogue, a Collection of Fine Oil Paint.
Inge, neatly trained. ,
open for exhibition two days preyious to sale.
Sale at, the Auction Rooms.
EXTRA FINE TRIPLE 'SILVER PLATED WARE.
ON :SATURDAY : MORNING.
Oct. 3. at 11 o'clock; at the auction rooms, by catalogue,
a very desirable aesortreent of fine riple Silver Plated
•Ware, including Tea Bet% Coffee and Tea Urna,Epergnes,
1r 0-water . Pitchers. !Tea. Trays. Salvers, Dinner and
Breakfast Castors, Tureens, Vegetable Dishes, Table,
Dessert and Teti/beans and Forks, Ivoryllandle Knives.
lite Table Cutlery, in case's ; Ton and Call Bella, Egg
Hailers, Toast Racks, Cake Baskets. Berry Dishes, dm.
These goads are from one of the beet manufacturers in
this city, and all of the newest patterns and latest de.
signs.
Hay be seen'early on morning of sale.
THE PRINCIPAL MONEY ESTABLISHMENT-.
S. E. corner of SIXTH. and RACE streets.,
loney advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches,
Jeuehl, I iamones, Gold dad Silver Plate, and on all
articles of value, for JEWELRYnyf time weed on.
WATCHES AND AT PRIVATE SALE.
Fine Gold Jaunting Case. Double Bottom and Open Face
English } American and El wiss Patent Lever - Watches;
Fine Hunting Case and Open Face Loins, Watches;
Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt
ing Case. And Open - Face English. American and Swiss
Patent Lever and Lapin° Watches; Double Case English
Quartier and other Watches' Ladies , Fancy Watches;
Diamond Breastpins; Finger Binge; Ear Rings; Studs;
Arc.; Elam Gold Chains LMedallions; Bracelets_; Scarf
Pins; Breastpins; Finger Rings ;Nadi Cases and Jewelry
generally.'
FeE SALE.—A large and valuable Fireproof Chest,
suitable for a Jeweler; cost 41650.
Ala°. several Lotsin South Vamden,Fifth and Chestnut
BY BABBITT 6s CO.. AUCTIONEERB.
CASH AUCTION HOUSE,
No. MO MARKET street, corner of BANE Meet.
Cash advanced on consignments without extra charge.
L. ASHBRIDGE & CO AUCTIONEERS.
T
No. 506 Reimer atreet. above Fifth.
j'AIBIB9 A. !MLA,*AA 1,1300 n.'`? n. - ^ t.
TTl*SM+,:tarart til,i-ributovi 11.
SEPTEMBER
Bale, on WEDNYEDAT-At meol4l,l9Efs'
Exchanggrogill. tactudeMobitait,•n ;+
tr
n . •
UV% ?hares MonitorAill Co.
. BAY iharesNorthwc:terndill7' •
10‘truhoreaMeliatstFarra OD Co
Admtoistrattlxlaß 1
ON , WEDNESDAY,IiE e tt.2O,,
! At 12 o'clock ndon. - at the Exthange•-' '• .
eloeo IL LIM. - •
eggge Philsdetptria el 6e, old.
s2‘oo Thiladlphis and. Reading Railroad 6e, extended
: 80 sEares' Veit se ;
, and Mourd 'Phiaissitt"
Road Ca r- • •••.• z..
thane Sommercet•and Johnwown Plaalc'llogglo
BAttlll',Vrigni
By cater of 'Ardiane_e, in Bardruftey. 'the ' 1.13 Alert 'IL'
$9,109 09 payable on the death of the grandpart.M of UMW , '
bankrug, both of n horn now are living and wellettatree TAU
dee in ernmeadorf. , Kingdom of „Bavaria.
BROAD . ,I3tA valuable iilusie:ottr_aaid. bowlided by
Broad, Bleeper; Venangolts. • arid ` Py l e l avenue *WU! .
sold in 6lt b.:eat:hid) feet front Bro ad eb. by 82g% feet ^• •
dgep to ifith ezecitOr 1' 5. f4 0 7 , 04g 46 41:4f9ne1. !fa
iv..115T1113.1..-A Mined- ri ft titbit ft W. cemer Or
Erie averl a 946Y fet eon elitliat; and as fieton Eriessv.
1 WAR ST. , A2tI) KRI TAV.; Allot ite 166' N. , VT: coda*o
39iX feat on lith at and 826.teet on Erte "Eta:lntent'
bale: , ElfiltOfr - riitite. , 'Man abire.l ' • ,
.The late *arose& ktrode'paritaf trick clap. •
tl ACRES 26T71 WA RD.-A valuable, tract at land it%
to ected north and south by B.ltk3sth • and 98th'stroetar
8 therland mr,. - and east and - wear -8 1 0 Kek0:::"
Snyder,' Jack Boni-Wolf: - Bltnet-aoB rener eta: attui"Ct:
ten dingle the river tlahnnyylkilk h ming tilwesCotrUllt river
over a mile.- It Will be sold in 9 Watts, acentatartit :a`
cent enrrey; Plan and full delft:riptide may nee ,
Auction btore ...Executors , Sale. Sams
g AtlttEß, - CIERMaNkOWN-•A datirabM,:bid/
fronting 'ortArniat' street and(molten, ;Wentz's' eet.^ 1 tF
and 695 feet Aeepirom ono to the ether, Aipachon, the lag,'
are sand and alone. Clear oVencumtrraiiek -
• ALLECiIiANY , letir,of around,frmitii9 on
I egh any arenne.Ratb and ayrtle, , Brabant and Angttlia,,„
streets. eath 22517 BM. TruilMs'a PerelPfdrit Raid
ALLEOHAN It AV.-A lot extend/a „front. A
street to Delaware &Venue. 271 feet on eghauY'us-
207 feet onAmaricattreet, and on Delaware avenue ant
feet. Trustees' terettWrffif Wale. r ' ,
EADERIN - COURTL-Tbre6arry ntfelc 1101310 in root o
Iv Mary meet, Bth Ward. lot 11 by 117,. 4 6 feet; subject to
.01 23 ground rent. Eccecutars,Sate,.•.l. •
71 ABM-A valuable farm of $ 9 acres and iraprolOomente.
oo the Byberry turnpike. oppositetheited Lion road,
•
and ; it is llg miles from Cornwell station, on the'frm..
top Railroad. 1 - 3‘, Callett_froin ApdttlaMt, wharf ' ) qn the
Delaware river. $4.100 may remain.
• ALLEOIIANY AV.-2 lota B. aide of AlleghenY ay.
west of Bath it 20 and 60 feet ' trout by 119 feet deep--
'2lruateur Peremptory Sae-
BAXON St-S lots w. of Bath etreoeach 16 by 63 feet.
Tsteeteee.Peremptory Sate. Platter the store.
V.rt-r(q11 AV.-8 tote at the comer of. Walkeratrent.2slft
ward, each 13 by 57 feet deen.
WALKER ST.-slots at the corner o f Raiding av„eacb.
14by 41 feet Plan at the store.
t No. 1029 MELON BT.-A. threeetory_brlck bnildlntr.
wettable for a factory, lot 30 by 87 feet. .• Wilt rent for SM.
Clear of incomerauce.,
No. 785 8..' 9TH:4-A formate - 6r brick dwellia9, oethe
corner of Fitzwater at.: lot 18 by 76 feet. flea it s =dares
coriventences and fa in perfect oder, Immediate POO
-
pi - YAIIEPD LET CATALOGUES ON SATURDAY
•
i' ercmptory Sale at the West Jervey'Hotel, Camden. N.
'3, flea Satan/ay afternoon. September W,11383 at_g_o'cLock l
will beeold at public sale without reserve,A. VALLI lILBLb
MARL FARM. with dwelling, near slarltork Burlington
county, N. .1., contain/I*AB aeresi
the. land l l uratratida.
with a superior qualley_or Marl 'ull particn ars a
h r . Sale absolute. 5250 to be paid lathe time of gale, -,
ASSIGNEE'S SALE OF OFFICE.rum/rtußr, FIRE.
l PROOF SAFE, NIALT WAGON; &O.`
ON FRIDAY MORNING. _
October 2, will bez. geld at‘tbe Al. etion-Store, No. e h :
Walnut street, by order of Assignee in Bankruptcy.
0121ce,Deslis Tablea. Railtnim &c. , ••• :- _ „.,... j ,- .. ..„
FIREPRO6 P'-•Also,' a Farrell b Herring tare.
XleS MALT WAGON—AIso, a Malt Wagon and set of liar
S. . , , . .... . ..
AT PRIVATE SA
A VALUABLE %seam OF' ACRES OF LAND).
, With Baneful II drtee:Rieinft ben Lane:intettiectes by
P,ight.b. Ninth, VentNati i il, Eieve7 3ll 4 Ontari°
etreete, within Wm tee; o hee Old York Road.
deimitit of Brick Claw, Tenn4ionar."_ 4.“ t 4 .1
A Yeleabie Bonham property No. elwareit street.'
HUItI4NGTOtte-thklatuoltomo td&ottlott# ult
lot 68 by .70a feet . • ' '
rilpioM.eti . BIRCH its ISONAUCTIONCO ;Fi AND
Al ,^ - `. ' OtSklidl33Blolc-MERCHANTENJ ~, ~1., . 1 t: t L.L. .1 .
,_ 6 , N.A. 1110,011ESTN CM, atreet.„.„
ite ' Entrance No:4107 fhweera'streete • '•-- • ' -
110USEHOLli- FURN_ITURS. Or- rAfF.RXDESSSIIrc. .
. , TION' RECEIv_ED . ON - CONSIGN.H4NT.
Sales of ruttihrst.lissros sites:4oM . ortthozsylsA
reasonable r ' -
• ! . gal at No . 1'26 North Twentieth street; - ,
-1
HODS OLD FOREITiIitE CAlLOSl'd,dte.' . ,
~-. ~... -.ON '„ftiONDAlrr-,IIORNING.,---,2i:-. .1, ~ f, ( tit`,
Sept at, at 10 o'clock, at:No..EMES
t i t if Twenti eth i l v
will be sold the funtitnret-of , i, fa a/tannin ho .- 1 - ,
keeping,. comprhing—Bruessela., In n."-and. - ettatiaA yl
tirpete, -, Widnut 'Parlor - FurWture.: CoVered- ttr' hail. '-- 4
vi ii
cloth; 'Walnut Gbaraber rurniture, Oak.,-Bideboard,mar-..,5 - ,
foe top"; Oak - Extension Dining 'fable 'Oak' Cane Seat
theirs, aqapprtawnt gg'lC3tOumtitenilbsi4i%. 1 -,,' ~ I ,c - -;'; •
?tient ge'SantirrigEtetintliltreat -1 '. --.',, „;,,; s
~ •, , IiOUESEtiOLD FUSINITURE4.dsc. .. - .
. „ . , ON TUESDNEMORNINt.:„ , ,1 -., 1.15-11 - ,- --; , 7 :
Sept Aat 10 o'clock., at No. 40-Q Boulit,Eighteentiset..,, ,
will e eoldetltis •FertdturW-of 'I.- fandlv detisalar house- '"
keeping..comPrialuArSrmilele ,and Inlllrain , Pamela we
nut s hansber and ratio, eurnittsre; uedd , and 'II Pamela
Dining 21.00iti Furniture, China, Glues:lslam dsci
also, an assortment of Kitchen Furnituro.-
SALE' AT PIORTICULTUILIL HALL
LARGE COLLECTION OF CHOICR ANDIXARR ACT.
I
I AND r GREEN-HOUSE PLANTS.
L - - • OnTUEZDAYMORNINtic • • ~. ,
Eept. 29th. at .10 o'clock. at .Bortionitural Hall. iiroad
street. below Locust street, will be sold, , ti large and .,
'
valuable collection of Rot and Green.house I'lanta, coin.
. .
prising—
C
ieneei d ei
Orchidaceoue Plante . Philodendron Pertuesnin .
ZII
AllB/1. Leek tromias.
Pomegranates. Rhododendrons.
Variegated Pine Apples. Bananas.
Ficua Elastmes. Testudinarie
Dracoina Braze .. propedium 4 varieties.
Together with a largo ce
an collection,, that
have been selected with great care.
The collection will be open for oxamination the dm'
previous to sale. ' • ' ' ' - '
fiale No .y. 607 Summer street
ELEG6 NT ROREWOOIi ifIobIi(SI..D4ERNITERE,
PIANO FORTE LARGE MIRROR,_ CARrxiTS,
lIDAY
Oct.l, at 10 clocko' at No. 1607 Bummer street, will be
Noll, the Furniture of a family declining honaekcej;dng.
particulars hereafter.
11e,..°2129.918834
ORR .A w E AUCTIONEERS.'neat, cOrnel.
Successors to• John B. Myers & Co • . •
LARGE SALE OF FRENCH AND OTHER EURO:
PEAN DRY GOODS,___ N •,tre
ON MOND IIY MORN ING.
September 28, at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit.
eluding—
DRE'S GOODS. •• • • • • 2
Pieces Pa' is Plain and Fancy Merinos, Deleunes,,Scrge&r
do. London Black and Colored Mohaire." , AlPacask,`
Cobnrga
do. Empress Cloth, Poplin Alpaca. Popennee, Mem
do. bilk and Wool Plaids. Cashmeres. •RollbUgs,
Ta Ills.
Pieces Lyons B
l ack and colored Groe Tal
c etas,_•
do. Gros de Naples. Dray de Franco, Cadrilles,
SHAWLS, CLOAKS; dm. • • • • •
Full lines Broche. Wool Plaid dud Stella Shawls.
Full lines Trimnied Cloaks. Basques, Maude, ,bc.• •
• • .
MILLINERY. VELVS,TS.
A. line of Black and olored'Lpons Silk`Civets.- •
FLOWERS AND FEATH.F.,R.S. - ••, - .
A line of rich 'French Artificial bloprets. and Fain*
Few here, •
BOWERY. FCRNIeStr4G- tif.louS, sze.
Ge nt's Bleached and:Brownn Cotton Half Hose.' :
Gent's Merino larder dhirts and Marvell,
• _.•'• • "
palmoral and Hoop Skirts. Ribbons, Ties," Gloves, Dress
rad ua lc e. s r i i ,l k hit Tr e i t r o i c tgk in tilt4tgi, Buttons. Um-'
LARGE BALE • OF 2000' CASES ROOT% SHOES.
TRAY FLING BAGS. c.
• ON TUESDAY MORNING.
Sept. 89. at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit.
,
LARGE SALE OF BBITISO. FRENCH. GERMAN
AND DOMESTIO DRY GOODS.. - •
ON THURSDA NING.
Oct. 1, at 10 o'clock. on four months' ere , it
riAVIB & HAMMY, AUCTIONEERS.
.1-g • Late with M: Thomas & Sono.
Store No. 421 WA,144 up street, •
Rear Entrance on Library stn3et.
Bale No. 0_36 Federal street.
UUPERTOR `FIIRNITURY: 'ROSEWOOD
FRENOB PLATE MIRROX_OARPETS. &o. •
ON MONDAY MuRNING,
At 10 o'clock, at 636 Federal street the .Farniture•ot
gentleman leaving the city, • including duo-toned Roser
wood Piano. ' 7 octaves, by Gals & Co.- line ',French Plato
Pier Minot, fine Ingrain and other' Carpets, Blankets", ,
Comfortables. &a
Sale No. 411 Walnut street.
SUPERIOR FURNITURE, FRENCH BLATEIMISRCIR,, , ,L
MEP/ 00 TUESDAYARPETS . BE OS, &a. • •
ON MORNINO.
At 10 o'clock, at the auction store. a large assortnieint
of ,superior New and Secondhand Furniture: Oiled
her Suit, large Pier Mirror. noel tor Fireproof, by Meru's;
ak
Co, ; Fine Ingrain Caipets and other Clupematreeneth,
Bede, Office Desks. rca
Also. 2 shares Mercantile Library Co.
0 1 . D. IdoCLEES do CO..
• AUCTISINEEM
Gt 11ARICET2streat
No._ etre., . _
BALE OF 1500 OAlaEciio - 6 — TT3.SHSPES..B.ROGIANIL
• BALMORALa.- .
ON.MONDAY .111082M01% IC;
f;ept aP, commencing at 10 o'clock. we wilt 5e11... , by
catalogue. for, cash, 1500 cases ' - Men's, goys' and Youths"'
Boots, Oboes. Brogans, Balmoral% , , • ,
Also, a superior line of 'Women's,' Althea'. and 4068.
dren's wear. • ' ,
B. SCOTT. Jrc. AUCTIONEER.
SCOTT'S ART CALLER*,
1020 CHESTNUT street, Philadelphia.. ". I .1
SALE - OF FINE MODEB.N OIL PaINTINGEI._ON
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY - EVENINGS,'SEPT..2II
and 25, at 736 o'clock.
ON THURSDAY and'PRIDAY EVENINGS. '
At 734 o'clock; will be• sold at ecett's Art Gallery. 1030
Chestnut street. *Pine Collection of Modern ()II Paint
lea., all handsomely framed; • .
Also. a line of ROMAN PHOTOGRAPHS.
KT EW
Crop WALNUT _BALEELNowI
1.1 Crop borrAtugi GreziobloWainnbilandin&aAd tor
side by RIM B. BUM= di ILX?. 11243 figatb osAwari
MOND'S BOSTON BIBITIS I BONIYS BERTTON
LP ter azd Milk Eibenit. lan fitim rtosater Norwalk,
and for age bY JO& a Bus a Go..asonti 8014 4.
108 South Del/more mina ' '
. ~:x
Elepaiittpe.