Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, September 29, 1868, Image 2

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    HEW PUBLICA2'fOM6
"Intends." By..idah laws enke.n.. With
Portrait, and Dedication 44:1'Cluixlea Diekert.
Lippincott & Co.
The new and brilli ant theatre of La Gaiet6,
on the Place des Arts and Metiers, used to
be thronged night after night, during the
winter before last, with the young sculptors
and painters and medical students of Veda—
their motive being asserted withoutequivoque
in the fact that their mothera and sisters
were hanging on their arms "Why, she is
achevie," we heard a stout matron—the very
ideal of the dame du comptoir,—assert;
"she has a good arm, a good ankle, a fleshy
knee, a firm bust—what more can a man
want?"—for e in this horse-jockeying way,
without dreaming that she offends by her low
standard, will the French bourgeoise 'Mother
speak of a fine woman to her son. The
heroine of that frank eulogy was meantime
fluttering over the stage in an adaptation of
the French Spy, crammed by the playwrights
with every conceivable variety of historical,
geographical and anachronic error, and
named with safe vagueness "The Pirates
of the Savannah;" but the whole gorgeous
mass of , confusion aid falsehood only
existed for the purpose of revolving around
the one glittering figure,that darted down the
boards like a spectrum from a mirror, struck
an attitude, vibrated a rapid finger at the lip
like an animated statue of Silence, and then
was gone ; always soundless, lonely, bright
and evanescent as the lightning on the lake.
Now it was half lost in its cumbrous envelope
of drapery—the ranchero's wide trousers,
burly with spangles and bullion, the sash, the
close gorro de pane confining the short
black hair, and overshadowed by the heavy
sombrero; now,knitted from head to foot into
a gleaming sheath of silk that embraced the
curves of the perfect limbs, the figure gave
freely to the eye all that it had of grace and
animal freedom—and the young artists held
their breath as this living marble, this Grace,
cette adorable Afenken, fulminated across
the Black Rocks lashed to a sable steed, and
executed, in a series of Phidian attitudes,
"La Course dite ppa."
In the entr'actes the people talked, in the
low well-mannered French way, of the his
tory and private life of La Menken. Although
compelled to a silent part on the Paris stage
—for the benighted Americans can talk no
language but Spanish—her conversation, to
those acquainted with Castilian, was some
thing ravishing : she could range from Ger
man philosophy and "Comtisme" to poetry
and the long romance of history. Her taste
in art was finished. Those noctes ambro
sianm, those midnights of Aspasia that set in
after the play was over and the dissipated
black horse was safely stabled and taking
beer with his oats, were commented on as
something unknown since the experience of
lxion. Her salon was crowded with the
poets and peerage of the century. Her
round cheek was not afraid to brush the
monstrous shoulder of Dumas. Were the
spirituel Dickens, the young Ovidian poet
Swinburne, passing eight days in the witty
capital ? they might be looked for at those
adorable feet. It was an Olympian feast,—the
Paris Olympus, you understand, where
pearls of genius occupied the lips of the diva
alternately with the cigarette and the sharp
est champagne from Reims.
Had not the adorable Menken at length
found her niche? After the inconvenient out
spokenness of the whole Anglo-Saxon press
in both hemispheres, was not the apprecia
tion and charity of the Paris public a haven?
Here was no censure, no vulgarity, nothing
but sympathy exalted to worship. In Paris
alone could the liveries of convention be safely
thrown off, and the realm of Aspasia be re
established, on a foundation of poetry,
bouquets, and Greek art in silk stockings.
The moral of that frank paganism did not
show itself till afterwards. The journalists
did not 'know how actively the censure which
had expired from the press was eating its
way through a more inexorable organ of
opinion,and that the self-sense of the Aspasia
herself was filled with all the condemnation
that the public had forgotten. It was' not
until the splendid woman, stricken down as
by a blow, was laid with Jewish rites in the
graveyard of the city that guards the bones of
Rachel, that the dry limestone lips of a com
mon French tomb opened to utter the one
word that could contradict all the seeming of
that life,—"lnfelicia."
On a few leaves formed into a slender book'
the wretched diva wrote that she was unhap
py, and thus died. Perhaps it was the irre
sistible need of sympathy from the sex she
could approach in no other way. Perhaps
there was a touch of vanity, which in a wo
man, and above all such a woman, might
very likely say they shall see that I can re
pent with some eloquence. Whatever the
motive, we have as a legacy this handful of
pages, from which our rudeness is excluded
because they are sad, and our phariseeism
because they are pure. From the wretched
offal-heap of a life outcast from the world of
good men, blooms up this astonishing flower,
aseredinits unworldly odor and its tremu
lous dew. Literary criticism is excluded, for
these lucubrations do not rise into literature ;
it is one of those cases where there is only
the motive to consider, in looking to the au
thor, only the moral, in looking to the public.
Many of these tentatives are in poetry.
The subject is ever but one—
"Myself ! .las for theme so poor,
A theme but rich in fear ;
I stand a wreck on error's shore,
A spectre—not within the door—
A homeless shadow ever more,
_
An eaiie &re."
The titles are always fine and suggestive,
and show the Menken in her best inventions.
There are "The Drifts that Bar my Door;"
"The Ship that Went Down;" "Into the
Depths;" "The Battle of the Stars;" "Sale of
Soule;" "Resurgam;" "Miserimus;" "Hem
loch in the Furrows;" "The Autograph on
the Soul," and "Where the Flocks Shall be
Led." The writer is - Present at the centre of
every one of these delineations. Now, re
calling the famous past of her people, she
imagines herself Judith; she has enslaved, she
has Inade drunk, she has done to death the
rases granny of opinion or of society that
go oppreafilfi her, and she comes back to the
arklamatiorul of her tribe, singing songs
and bearing wealth: "I mix your jeweled
heads and your gleaming eyes and your his
sling tongues in the dust." Now she is dead,
With "au uneoffineil and unburied death,"
a p
" ,f r . aiyer .ge ." rs-gras . _ ping -the-iv-kite-throat-of-many
"fie, I am certainly dud.
Deed In this 'bewail
Dead in this velvet and lace!
Dead In these jewels cf light!
Dead in the music;
Dead in the dance!" -•
In "Myself" we find the splunism, so
strange under the circumstances, and cer
tainly never taught by BM nbnrne,',Loving is
not living!" In "Dying" this superb Lamis
calls herself "the poor wounded snake, bur
dened to the ground—"
"How it lengthens limberly along the dust,
Now palpitates into bright rings only to un
wind, and reach its , bleeding head up the steep ,
wails around ns.
Now, alas ! falling heavily back into itself,
quivering with untatered pain;
Choking with Its own 6100(116 dies in the dust.,
There are constant references to some
glimpses of a higher, more ideal Lave, and,
occasionally, what seem to be references to a
pure infant, laid from off the mother's breast
among the graveyard flowers—the hapless in
stinct of maternity, whose appeal to our ears
nothing can make vain. One hears again,
as the reiterated complaint of poor "Infeli
eia's'" ruined motherhood is read—hears again
the piercing "Arrestati, 0 madre infelice," in
Sor 7eresa's pealing tones, as Ristorre fine
eyes lift upward to the cloister arches,
and that great voice vibrates
to the maternal passion. But these details
are not separated out without difficulty and
mutilation, for the utterance is often as tur
gid, as confused, as hopelessly and helplessly
magniloquent as the poetry of Turner, or as
those long rhapsodies of William Blake that
nobody ever yet read through. Among the
less personal pages we flad an essay on Ge
nius, short-paragraph declamations in the
style of the Hebrew poets and of Ossian, a
national tribute in which this poor soiled
Goddess of Liberty dedicates the purest
bowers other soul to her country. a poem
descriptive of the "Seamstress" of the sculp
tor Muller (artist of the "Minstrel's Curse")
we find this really fine couplet:
"Haggard and white as the ghost of a Spurned One
Sewing white robes for the Chosen One's epee."
But the beauties are interjectional and fit
ful, and are nuggeted in discouraging masses
of prose-gone-mad. The real worth of the
book is its terrific moral, which we think has
come forwa'rd just about in time for this
heated age apparently beginning to tire of its
morality, and to fancy that real advance and
civilization may perhaps lie outside the world
of convention. To such an opinion—to the
very soul of her old friend Swinburne—the
ghost of the brilliant, the intellectual, the
"adorable," the detestable Menken cries
warningly back from the grave that immo_,
rality is misery, that "loving is not living'
and owns "her life was vain, a desert void of
peace."
"The Sehoolday Visitor," a monthly
issued by Daughaday & Becker, 424 Walnut
street, addresses itself to that difficult age
when the tractability of childhood is gone, the
self-respect of adolescence yet to come, and
the urchin is left on the hands of the house
hold, a graceless Ishmaelite and pest. This
magazine, neatly applied, acts like a charm.
Jacob Abbott, Harriet B. McKeever, Mrs.
Boyd and George Mogridge (more recogniza
ble as 'Old Humphrey'), are among the com
pany of contributors whose effect on the exu
berant vitality of the mischievous age is such
a happy one. They all write, with their
usual excellence, for the October number.
One of the best contributors to the Visitor
above named—one of the kindest friends of
children, the most studious of their ways and
and most conversant with their capricious
little tastes,—has devoted her spare hours to
copying out a series of favorite poems adapted
to their time of life. The volume is entitled
"Children with the Poets, - and has been very
prettily got up by Claxton, Remsen h ELaf-
Miss McKeever's collection,—by
no means omitting the poems of her own au
thorship—is marked throughout with an in
terest in juvenile ways of thought, that will
surely be appreciated by the apple-checked
auditory. The only suggestion we would
make for a future edition would be a little
more attention in looking up the names of the
writers—surely a trifle of industry would have
supplied authors' names to poems so flue and
popular, for instance, as Bryant's "Robert of
Lincoln"—here credited to Miss McKeever's
most eloquent and prolific author, ..401071il
mous.
"Beppo, the Conscript." By T. Adolphus
Trollope. Peterson 4; Brothers.
This is a fine wild story of life among the
Romagnoles, full of the most perfect local color,
and traced from beginning to end with an
honest enthusiasm which bears along with it
the heart of the reader. How Adolpus Trol
lope enjoys those Italian people he lives to
create !—a kind of prompt-voiced opera
chorus, who are always saying Basta and
dolce far niente, and whose ready talk, lite
rarily speaking, is rather morelaithful to Ital
ianism in general than to the individuality of
the characters. The adventures of Venni,
named Beppo, spread over that fine hill
region of North. Italy which declines from
the Appenines to the Adriatie, southward
from Bologna and northward from Ancona.
Of Beppo's bad luck in the draft—of his
shelter in the care of the mountain monks
when he hides to evade it—of how the ob
ject of his jealousy, Corporal Tenda, is left
behind with his little Giulia—and of how
everything comes right at last,—Trollope de
lightedly tells; tells with his own easy viva
city, and with all that familiarity with peas
ant.life in Italy which constitutes him the
most vivid and reliable of improvvisatori.
Except the "Shilling Shakspeare," we
_know_ of-no- edition--so cheap —and -- dainty as
the "Half-dollar Tennyson," just put out by
Ticknor & Fields. In this rich pamphlet, we
have all that Tennyson has written and ac
knowledged, (as well as, p. 241, a canticle
or so he does not acknowledge,) to the pres
ent time, printed with the elegance that be
longs to the University Press of Cambridge,
and revised and punctuated with that nice
care which characterizes Messrs. Ticknor &
Fields's proof-reader. Accuracy, compact
ness and cheapness have never gone further
together. The profile of the -poet, in his
present bearing, forms a telling vignette for
the cover.—Pitcher has it. - -
"Talks with a Child on the Beatitudes" is
an earnest, prdfound investigation of the high
est doctrine ever promulgated among men.
But it is surely too maturely expressed for ju
venile readers. As worthy the consideration
of the man, still more than "the father of the
man, - " we conscientiously recommend it.—
Published by J. B. Lippincott & Co.
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN--ITILA.DELPIIIA,:TUE,SD.AY;, SEPTEMBER 29, 1868.
RSOLUTION TO AUTHORIZE THE CON
CL pletion of the School-house, Cherry street,
above Nineteenth street, Tenth section.
IVhereas, The contraetore for the erection of
the school-house, Cherry streetabove Nineteenth
street. In the Tenth Section, have failed to com
ply with the terms of their contract, notwith
standing notice has been served upon them and
their sureties to complete said , buiklin but have
altogether stopped work thereon. Now there
fore,
Resolved,By the Select and Common Councils of
the City of Philadelphia. That the Board of Con
trollers of Public Schocils are hereby authorized,
under the direction of the City Solicitor, to take
measures for the completion of the schoolhouse,
Cherry street, above Nineteenth street,in the Tenth
Section, under the terms of the contract ; and to
that end they are hereby authorized to employ
any other person or persons to do the necessay
work and furnish the necessary materials for
the completion of said building. And 'the City
Controller is hereby authorized to ap
prove of the warrants drawn by the
Board of Controllers of Public Schools
for the payment of said persons so employed, or
furnishing materials, to the extent of the balance
now remaining unexpended of the original con
tract price of said building. Provided, That
nothing shall be done under this resolution that
shall in any wise release the contractors or their
sureties from their liability to repay the city the
cost of finishing said building above the contract
price agreed to.
JOSEPH F. MARCER,
President,of Common Council.
Attest—ROßT. BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September,
Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-eight (A. D. 1868.)
MORTON MoMICHAEL,
it Mayor of Philadelphia.
A N ORDINANCE TO AUTHORIZE THIII
Aok, purchase of three contiguous iota of ground
and messuages in the Fourth Ward.
Sacsion 1. The Select and Common Councils
of the city of Philadelphia do ordain, That the
City Solicitor be and he is hereby authorized to
examine the title to all !hose three contiguous
lots of ground and messuages thereon erected,
situate at the northeast corner of Shippen street
and Guilford Street, in the Fourth Ward of tne
city of Philadi Iphla, containing together in front
or breadth on said Shippen street tifty-four feet.
and in depth along Guilford street sixty feet, and
if be approve of the title, that ho cause a convey
ance of said lots of ground and messuages there
on erected to be made to the city of Philadelphia
in fee, the consideration thereof to be the pay
ment of an annual ground rent or sum of six
hundred dollars ( 600), payable in equal semi
annual payments, to be charged thereon.
SiecTion 2. The Mayor is hereby authorized to
affix the corporate seal of the city of Philadelphia
to such deeds as may be necessary to reserve the
said ground rent to the grantor or grantors of
said lots of ground.
JOSEPH T. MARGE%
President of Common Council.
ArrEsT—ROBERT BETHELL, .
Assistant Clerk of Common Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLET,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September
Anno Domini, one thousand eight hundred anfi
sixty-eight (A. D. 1868.)
MORTON MeMICHAEL,
It Mayor of Philadelphia.
RESOLUTION TO LAY WATER-PIPE ON
Emlen and other streets.
Resolved, By the select and Common Councils
of the city of Philadelphia, That the Chief En
gineer of the Water department be and he is here
by authorized to lay water pipe on the following
streets:
Emlen, from Cedar to Gaul streets, Nineteenth
Ward.
Coulter street, from terminus of pipe to Knox
street, in the Twenty-second Ward; and on
Federal street, from Seventeenth to Twentieth
street; and
Eighteenth street, from Federal street south
ward to Rutter street, in the Twenty-sixth ward.
JOSEPH F. MARCER,
President of Common Council.
ArrEsT—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September,
Anm, 'Domini one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-eight (A. D. I 868).
MORTON MeMICHAEL
t Mayor of Philadelphia.
I)ESOLLITION TO LAY WATER PIPE ON
Oxford and other streets.
R,,,,teed, By the Select and Common Councils
of the city of Philadelphia, That the Chief
Engineer of the Water Department be and is
reby authorized to lay water pipe on the fol
lowing streets:
Oxford, from Eighth to Tenth street.
Hubb street, from Twentieth to Twenty-first
street.
Dott street, from Hubb to Jefferson, in the
Twentieth Ward.
Arch street, from Thirty-second to Thirty-third
street, Twenty-fourth Ward.
Savannah street, from Salmon to Edgemont
street, in the Eighteenth Ward.
JOSEPH F. MARCER,
President of Common Council.
ATTEST—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WM. S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September,
Anne Domini one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-eight (A. D. 1868).
MORTON MeM ICH AE L,
1 t Mayor of Philadelphia.
ESOLUTION TO AUTHORIZE CON-
L tracts for Furnaces for certain School Sec
tions.
Resolved, By the Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia, That the Controllers
of Public Schools be and they are hereby autho
rized to contract for the erection of furnaces in
the following Setiool Sections:
Fifteenth section, to coat not more than twelve
hundred and ninety -seven dollars and ninety-live
cents.
Twenty-fifth Section, to cost not more than
seven hundred and fifty-nine dollars.
Sixteenth Section, to cost not more than one
thousand rind thirty-five dollars.
The said furnaces to be paid for out of Item 339
of the annual appropriation to the Controllers
of Fuhlic Schools for 1868, approved March 4,
1868.
JOSEPH F. MARCER,
President of Common Council.
ArnisT—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Common Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September,
An no Domini one thousand eight hundred and six
-ty-eight (A.D.1868)- MORTON-McMICHAELT7
it Mayor of Philadelphia. -
• ---
•
A N ORDINANCE TO MAKE AN APPRO
-11 to the Department of Markets and
City Property to defray the expenses of adver
tising, commissions, &c., for the sale of city
property, situated on Buttonwood street, and
cast of Broad street.
Snarling 1. The Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the
sum of two hundred and fifty-one dollars and ten
cents ($251 10) be and the same is hereby appro
priated to the Department of Markets and City
Property for the purpose of defraying the ex
penses of the sale of the property sold by M.
Thomas & Sons, situated on Buttonwood street,
east of Broad street, lately purchased by Messrs.
Hoopes & Townsend. And warrants for the
same shall be drawn by the Commissioner of
Markets; and City Property, in conformity with
existing brdlnances.
JOSEPH F. MARCER,
President of Common Council.
ArrEsz--ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September,
Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-eight - (A. — D. 1868).
MORTON ➢icTIICHAEL,
It Ma yor of Philadelphia.
The serial novel in "Evary Saturday is an
impoFtant institution, for :many- a . reading
family up and down the land a very admir
able tact in selecting thOss.running fictions
has been constantly shoWn bi , th'e editor. A.
new serial, to take the Aace Occupied by
"Foul Play" will be begun next Saturday.
Those who have learned to relish the still,dry,
finished humor and perfect feeling of Anthony
Trollopo will rejoice to know that die new
novel will be from his pen.
1:11'1" pun Kamm tnes4
cvrw 01101NeiNUE8.
1, ESOLUTION TO 'APPROVE OF THE FUR ,
IX chase of the furniture ft:4 certain now school
buildings. --„ • • ,
tZeagfrec..tti eel Select and` Ccifukon etymons
of the City of Philadelphia, That estimates of
expenses for new furniture for now school.
houses having been submitted to Councils by the
Board of Controllers of Public Schools, the fol
lowing'. amounts are , hereby approved for the
several new school buildings folio wing,to be paid
out of item No. 888 of the annual appropriation
to the Controllers of Public Schools for 1868, to
wit
For the school building in the Nineteenth sec
tion, one hundred dollars. ($100.)
For the school building corner of Edgemont
and Neff streets, Twenty-fifth seetion,two thou
sand two hundred and sixteen dollars and seventy
five cents. 02,216 75.)
JOSEPH F. MARCEE,
President of Common Council.
ArrEst—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Connell.
WILLIAM S. STOBLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth • day of September
Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred, and
sixty-eight (A. D. 1868).
MORTON MoMICHAEL,
it Mayor of Philadelphia.
AN ORDINANCE TO MAKE AN APPRO
priation to the Department of Markets and
City Property.
Buenos 1. The Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia do ordain, That the
sum of four hundred and fifty, dollars (450) and
seventy-five cents (75) be and the same is hereby
appropriated to the Commissioner of Markets
and- City Property for the purpose of paying
bills of Joseph D. Maull for constructing sewer
on the line of Spruce aad Front streets in front
of the Tobacco Warehouse.
SECTION 2. And warrants shall be drawn by
the Commissioner of Markets and City Property
in conformity with existing ordinances.
JOSEPH F. MARCER, -
President of Common Council.
ATTEST—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of Sept., Anno
Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty
eight (A. D. 1868.)
MORTON McMICHAEL,
It Mayor of Philadelphia.
D ESOLUTION TO REPEAL IN PART A C ER-
Ittain resolution of instruction to the Commis
sioner of City Property.
Resolved, By the Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia, That the resolution
entitled "Resolution of Instruction to the Com
missioner of City Property," approved December
14, 1867, be and the same is hereby repealed so
far as relates to the instructions to the Commis
sioner of City Property to keep the public squares
open during the entire year.
JOSEPH F. MARGER,
President of Common Council.
ArrEsr—ROBERT BETHELL,
Assistant Clerk of Select Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
Approved this twenty-sixth day of September.
Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and
sixty-eight (A. D. 18G8).
MORTON IacMICHAEL
t Mayor of Philadelphia.
DR GOODS, &c.
CLOAK OPENING
Thursday, Octob©r 1, 1868.
CURWEN STODDART & BRO.,
Respectfully announce their display of
Promenade and Opera Cloaks,
Sacques, Circulars,
And Suits as Above.
By the employment of acknowledged taste, and with
increased facilities in this department, combined with
the advantages of a cheap location for conducting our
business, we are prepared to offer decided advantages to
bnyera.
CURWEN STODDART & BRO.,
460. 452 and 454 N. Second Street,
se2S Etb
AND 3-4 BLACK IRON BAREOES. BEST
8-4 qualities.
Pure Silk Black Grenadines.
Summer Poplins, steel colors,
Black Lace Shawls and Rotundas,
White Lace Shawls and Rotundas.
Real Shetland Shawls,
Imitation Shetland Shawls,
White and Black Barege Shawls,
White and Black Llama etawls—
Summer stock of Silks and Drees Goods. closing out
cheap. EDWIN HALL t CO.,
isle tf H South Second street.
MILLINERY GOODfi,
FAALIL. COIP lEll:Narita.
CHOICE
MILLINERY GOODS.
S. A. & D. STERN,
72.4 _A_reh Street.
erls tri th s 3ca6
MRS. H. WRIGIiT, 137 PINE STREET, WILL
VV: open Fete!Sonata° Millinery on
THURSDAY, OCTOBER. IST, 1868. ee2&.3t•
011.00ELCIEB.
PURE WHITE WINE
AND
C11:01E11,
GREEN GINGER, MUSTARD SEED, SPICES,
the requisites for preserving and pickling purposes.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
Dealer in Fine Groceries,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streetaa
FAIRTHORNE & CO..
Dealers In Tens and Coffees,
No. 1036 --MARKET ISTICEEIN
All goods guaranteed pure. of the beet enalitr, and sold
at moderate prima
Day7.th a to Bm
TIES FAMJLLES CHOCOLATE MANUFACTURED
DES
Josiah Webb th Co., for sale by
E C. KNIGHT dt
Agents for the manufacturers,
se7-Im6 Southeast eon Water and Chestnut streets.
1 elt LUNCH—DEVILED HAM, TONGUE, AND
Lobster, Potted Beet, Tongue. xnchoey Paste and
Lobster. at cousTY , s East hnd Grocery, No. 118 South
Second street.
NEW GREEN GINGER, PRIME AND GOOD ORDER
at cuusarvs East End Grocery. No. ItB South Sea
and street.
EW MESS SHAD, TONGUE'S AND SOUNDS IN
N
kitti. L put exErcial for family me, in afore and for
ea/o at etiCSTY'S East End Grocory,'No. 118 South Bo
cond street
niABLE CLARET.—MO CASES OF SUPERIOR TABLE
J. Claret, warranted to give eatiefaetion. For sale by
Dti V. Sytt.T.lN. N. W.coner Arch and .
SALAD OIL.-100 BASKETS OF LATOUR'S SALAD
Oil of_ the latest importation. For sale by • AL - F.
.13P/LLIN. N. W. corner Arch and Eighth
'DAPER SHELL ALMONDS—NEW CROP PRINCESS
Paper Shed Almonds--Fineet Dehegia Double Crown
Raising. New Pecan Nuts. 'Walnuts and Filberts. at
COUSTY'S Rest End Grocery Store. No. 118 South
Second etreet.
HAMS. DRIED BEEF AND TONGUES. JOHN
Steward's justly celebrated Hams and Dried Beef
and Beef Tongues; also the best brands of Cincinnati
Hams. For sale by H. F. SPILT iN, N, W. corner Arch
and Fighth streets.
COAL AND 'WOOD*
CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
PLAISTED do MeCOLLIN. _
iTo. 3033 CHESTNUT Street, West Philadelphia,
Sole Retail A genta for Coxe Brothers & Co.s celebrated
Cross Creek Lehigh Coal. from the Buck Mountain Vein.
This Coal is particularly adapted for making Steam for
Sugar and Mat House,. , Broweries, .dio- It 15 also unsur
passed as a Family Coal. Orders left at the office of the
Miners. No. 841 WALNUT Street (let floor), will receive
our 1 rompt attention. Liberal arrangement, made with
manufacturers using a regular .liatatitY. yl6 tf
EAGLE VEIN AND LEHIGH COALS, AT REDUe.ED
L' prices, No. Ina Market street. A liberal redaction
made to retailers. den 3Jll§ WALTER LEE.
O. MASON MI MI. JOll2l B. RIM"
TE UNDERSIGNED INVITE ATTENTION Td
their stock of
!Spring Mountain, TAMh and Locturt. Mountain Cop
walcuitarutivon by -
excL-_.)y--- any other Co
°Hits. Mullin institute Buntline. Na. -15 3 Mentb
street. MBES .5r.13
Jab -U Arch street wharf. Bthuylidal
ItENT•:'
SECOND-STORt FRONT ROOM
OP
•
NEW BULLETIN BUILDING,
607 Chestnut Street,
22 feet front. 20 feet deep, bested by steam. handsomely
painted, and has ail the modem improvements.
Apply in Publication Office of EVENING BULLETIN
. 'FOR BENT..
Preadee 09 Cheitnut Street,
FOB TORE OR OFFICE*
Also. Wavy an lamb Booms, on Wafer a Commerela
College. Apply at
BANE Or THE REPUBLIC. .
le24tt
TO LET—THE WHOLE OF THE SECOND FLOOR OF
the building, 608 WALNUT street. opposite Indopen.
denco Square. Apply Second Story, Deck Bundle g. It.
oriTO RENT. AT GERMANTOWN—A COTTAGE
furnished or partly furnlebed, handeomely located
near Main etreet. It has etabllng, water. kat, Azo.,
on the premises. Terme moderate. APPLY at 737 Market
etTeet. se2s-*
rSTORE 0:s1 MARKET STREET TO EE LET.—
Store on Market street,. as to size and eltuatlon.
adapted to dry good& jobbing. boalery or notion
MlA:tees. Possession on or before January next. Addreee
E. 1). 8.. this office. . eat 5t.•
fr.FOR RENT—TELE If AND3O3IE THRESSTORY
5 brick Residence. with attics, threes tors doodle back
buildings, every convenience, and 5 loot eldayard,
No.10:1 North Nineteenth street. J. hi. GUSISIEY & BONS,
to Walnut street.
- TO ILENT—No.IO HAMILTON TERRACE, WEST
Philadelphia. Large yard, fine shade, dm. Imam%
" ate potuendon. Apply next door above. avail§
molt issaass
ritFOR SALE-11AND1303fE ATONE DWELLING
hollee, steno stablo and lot of ground. 139x.740 Ifeet,
at tho Northeast corner. of Walnut Lane and
Wayne street. Germantown. House has large parlor,
dining room, two kitchens on first floor, live chamberv,
nursery,water closet. and bath-room on second noon and
three chambers, store-roomy, Sc.. on third floor. French
plate vs indows, hot and cold water, gas and Ere-proof[
built in house; tine garden, shrubbery,k,c. The situation
of the place and the surrounding view is unsurpassed by
any residenco in Germantown.
apply to
LEWIS 11. REDNER.
se26.s.tuf. ID Walnut street.
rcourerity SEAT FOR SALE.—A VERY NANO.
'' Pomo Country Seat, with 2,-4i acres of Land attached.
situated on the heights at Conthohocken. within 1
a mile from stations on Norristown and Reading Rail
roads. Double stone mansion-house, containing parlor.
library. dining-room, two kitchens and seven chambers,
built in bent manner expressly for the occupancy of the
owner, and has every city convenience. including gas, and
is heated throughout by steam: large stone stable and
carriage house, grapery, tenant-house, Sc., dc. The
gr ounds beastefully laid out and planted with a variety
e and shrubbery. and the garden contains
every kind of vegetables, with all the varieties of small
fruit In abundance. J. M. CiUMMEY k SONS, 501 Wal
nut street.
jr.FOR SALE—NO. 1429 NORTH SIXTEENTH
street, a first Miami brown-done and brick dwelling,
" ' with all the modern improvemente. Tema cagy
Aka—A neat threegtor, brick dwelling at the couttigact
corner of Sixteenth and Cherry otreete. Price. e3.60d.
Apply for three days to
S. MUDGE.
re'. 3•30 14. Z Market street.
FOR BALE. OR EXCHANGE —AN ELEGANT
hotme, with large lot of ground. beautifully located
in Germantown.
Will be sold on accommodating terma,or exchanged for
ilrat.class city property. For particulars. address Box
1706 Philadelphia Yost-office. se2l-tu th a ea*
FOR MALE—NORTH BROAD STREET- -
riElegant Residence. Apply to
J. Q SIDNEY.
Ida tu,th.e.6o Architect, fadif3. Fifth 'trout.
.13.F0R BALE—THE HANDSOME TfiREE.STORY
brick residence. 53 feet front, with threastory
double back buildinge. Every convenience and in
perfect order, situate N 022.4 North Twentieth street, J.
M. GUMIIitY dr SONS, RE Walnut circa.
L" FOR SALE—A HANDSOME BROWN STONE
Residence. four stories, with three- double back
buildings. every convenience, and in perfect order;
situn to on the south side of rim street. between Fifteenth
and Sixteenth streets. Lot. abcl3o feet to a street. J. M.
°EMMET .1; SONS, 106 Walnut street.
FOR SALE—TWO TEIREE-STORY COTTAGES
—With fine yards, parlor. dining-room and kitchen,
and outbtchen. 5 tine chambers, gas and water.
front and tides entrances, all fenced in; I square from
Iladdington Depot, West Philadelphia; 81.403 can re
main. Lot Z) hp HO feet deep. Applyto COPPCCK 5:
.101iDAN. 433 Walnut street.
rMARKET STREET—FOR BALE—TME VAL.
nettle property. 21 feet front by Ltd feet deep, to a
20 feet wide etreet. Situate No. 1815 Market etreet.
.1. M. GUMMEY & SONS. 509 Walnut etreet.
IeGERMANTOWN—FOtt BALE—TWO POINTED
mune cotiaima new. Just finishing, with every city
convenience. within five minutes walk from Church
Lane Station. J. M. GI MMEY & SONS, MI Walnut
ctreet.
OR SALE.—A HANDSOME DOUBLE STONE
;;•Re idence, furnished with every city convenience
and over an acre of around attached, eltuate on
'Novi street, within five minutex walk from the railroad
Etatieu. Grounds beautifully improved with over f'.,f.o)
rote blißber J
choice ehruhhery &c., and email fruit of
i
every kind n abundance. J. M. GUMMEN SiNd.
th . ! - iliß,d 6 ;;V: - 1,E,..! - , 1 • - „G,„AnNneTr y "E6 -:..o l d p f E n . N( '•: E.
v 11 fence, Eltu ' ate Fifteenth r_treet ‘ atto r ve 'A
urto r ra. c
ee.4 M. U. 311ttliEY. 411 %Valiant etreet.
4.IIESTNU'E STREET—FOR BALE —A IiAND•
.ule Iteeldence. a) feet front, In Perfect order. and
ith every convenience. Situate on Ctle,:tnut
F trect gear Fifteenth. J. 31. (11.1.3131.11 Y b 0 3 , 41,.;,-n9
Walnut ctrect.
fir•-. FOIL SALE—A I'D LUABLE COUNI'EX HEAT
and about JO acre of land on School Laos: sth
" v. Loth,' unto Railroad etation. Excellent location
for hotel or driving park. Also, dePicablo building lot
:' , nth Broad Ptre e t, Edda, frOitttiO; two fronts. AP-
O , : to COPPECK. &JORDAN, 433 Walnut etreet. 5012,t1
jmN FOR bALE---AN ELEGANT COUNTRY SPAT,
W 4...„ with over coven acres of land attached. late the reel.
ma.- dere° cf DAVIS PEARSON, Eau.. dec`d. situate nu
Brood street and the Old York Road, with eight bun.
dred feet ft ont on each. below Fisher's Lane, Man , lou,
44 by 40 feet. with back build nge, built and 'Whiled
throughout in a superior manner. finished with every
city convenience, and in porlect order. Largo stable and
carriage house—green house, ac., and grounds beautifully
improved with choice shrubbery. and well shaded. Pho
tographic views way be aeon at the office of J.
.tt SOX'S, 569 Walnut street.
vvAwrzs.
WANTED—A SITUATION AB RESIDE Sr OR D ALLY
f Governeen by a Lady who teaches Music. Drawing,
French, the canal branches of .EngLieh and rudiment., of
I i erman. No obJection to the country. Address IL
011ice_of
_ _
ANTED.—A POSITION BY A YOUNG MAN WHO
TY is a Ming to make himself generally useful. 145 a
food pe, man. The best of references given. Addreao
Clerk." BULLETIN Office. eel° tf
1, 1 t7 ANTED.—ACTIVE AND INTELLIGENT GENTLE.
V men to engage as Solicitors for the HOME LIFE IN.
SURANCE COMPANY, in this city and adjoining coon
ties. Apply at tho office of the company.
• B. K. ESLER, General Agent,
anlkm W f am§ Corner Fourth and Libra-vs Sta.. Pali.
WANTED TO RENT, ABOUT THE BEGlN
ping of October t a tirstelass Dwelling in West Phil.
adeipbin, (northern part Preferred). containing
from ( ight to ten bedrooms, and all modem emcee.
niences. Rent not exceeding 81.5(0 per annum. Addresc,
N.-O. with particulars. P.- Box o. 257): - aelfiLf 111,1Vtir
EWANIED 70 RENT, A FURNISHED RESI.
dince, woFt of Tenth etreet, between Pine and Vine.
No email children. Addreee W,hox 2751. P. 0. lie2s
BOARLirDi
U OARD WANTED BY A GENTLEMAN AND WIPE
In We at Philadelphia or Germantown. Two second
floor tunny room,. heated by open tire. Location high
and healthy. Addreto NEW ENGLAND, .1.704 Allister
etrc et, Philadelphia. 5e2.42P,
TX9O SECOND-STORI: ROOMS TO RENT, 'WITH
board in a private family, at 1924 Spruce st. seff6t,..
FIRST CLASS BOARD FOR GENTLEMEN AT 1001
Vino street; private family. 5e20,31.
MO LET. 'W ITH BOARD—TWO SUITES OF ROOMS
on the second and third floore, with private bath
room attached.
Private table if desired. sante
Apply at No. 1333 Spruce area.
ELIGIBLB ROOMS. WITH BOARD. AT 3921 LO.
mist Street, Weet Philadelphia. ees tm•
- " --- " -- 1301 - XR.TNUMBmPS
NOTICE OF -COPARTNERSUIP.--I .HAVE- THIS
day associated with inernyson,WlAßLE6 J.1(10 ti6N.
The bueiness will be in future conducted under the name
and style of Henry Cohon at Bon.
Phila., Sept.• 2. 1868; [lt•7 " HENRY COHEN.
L d;M lYil ?} sli:l,::J:l~['Y+-i~I~3
GENT/3" • PATENT.i3YEING -AND 81.3 T.
f - toned Over Gaiters, Cloth. Leather, whits
and brown Linen.; Childreda Oloth end
4 4 1 , Velvet Leggings ualse_ matte to order
110 - 61PIDITSP PURNISEBENG GOIDDB,
•-• !of every desorlytion,very_lovr, 803 Chestnut
street, corner of Ninth. The beet MA Glove,
or ladies sail teats, at
BIUELLIAIs' 1 1 WIPER'S BAZAAR.
oomos OPEN IN THE IgvilNlNfl,
SADDLES, EIIUMBLEFIa t &Ca
P.ESSONILL.
I'l W tING-AGEN
GEORGE DELP I CO..
—Agents forall newepapere at the lowed rates. Offiee.
NChestnut etreet. second floor. PRESS BUILD.
norrtanke,l7
BANKING HOUSE
OF
00XF
C 66145-112
112 and 114 So. THIRD ST. PHILAD'A.
DEALERS
IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
Wo will receive applications for Policies of Lifo
Insurance in the now National Life Insurance
Company of the United States. Full information
given at our office. _
GOLD AND GOLD COUPONS BOUGHT
•
Telegraphic Inde x of Quotations stationed In s caul
rplcuous plata in our office.
STOCKS, BONDS. &C., dre..
Bonaht and Bold on Commitalon at the reapective Boards
of Broken of New York. Boston. Baltimore and Phila.
delpkta. LOIN fml
GOLD BOUGHT.
DE HAVEN & BRO.,
40 SOUTH THIRD STREET.
gel 7 fts
SEVENTH NATIONAL BANK,
N. VV. Corner
Fourth and Market Streets,
PHILADELPHIA.
The Accounts of Merchants. Manufacturers. /sc.. are.
solicited.
A prompt and liberal policy will be manifested to
patties frivoling tin with their Busineel.
E. B. HALL. Cashier:
Et 24.1m§
ITII 4AND01111:f
r
J , kERs I I
DEALERS
El ALL
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
And Foreign Exchange.
Bins (or sale on London, Paris, Frankfort,
ete Letters of Credit on Hears. lames W.
Tacker a. Co, Parts, available for travelers'
use in any part of the world.
STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD
Bought and Bold on Commission.
Deposits Received and Interest Allowed.
Gold Loaned. Collections Made.
SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO.,
18 South Third Street.
PACIFIC RAILROAD,
—receiving the aid and enperviricor of the Government,
and carried forward by the extraordinary reeources and
energy of the powerful Corporatione to whom it was in
tratted—te rapidlyapproaching compietiot: , l, and it Pnto
to ray that PHILADELPHIA AND BAN FILINLIBC,)
WILL 1.5 L CONNECTED *$Y RAIL BY THE
FOURTEI OF JULY NEXT.
5113 Walnut ntrcet
More than two thirds of the Thronell Lino and Branch ca
yen the Mietourt Ricer and the Pacific licean aro
court rutted, at a coat of nearly
ONE UNDRED MILLIONS,
And the remainder la being vurhed forward with un
paralleled ris or.
'1 hot uainess of the Central Pacific Railroad for the
mouth of July last wee es fatless's, z:. Gott,.
G,wa Lortonva. Operating .Ex , sensea. _Vet Earnines.
15 , :. , 59 t rAtt) SifF.s2 72 5179,22 S 17
This result was upon less than 2w miles opened for
business, with insufficient rolling stock, and was derived
from legitimate commercial bltainesa only—befog alto
gether mdepeudentof the transportation of the luuttense
amounts of men, subsistence and materials required for
grading and extending the track nearly one hundred
milts eastward during the same ;erie/.
The underelgued offer for sale, and recommend to in
vestors the
First Mortgage 30-Year Gold Bonds
CENTRAL PACIFIC R. R. CO.,
bearing six per cent. per annum Interest, both principal
and tntarest payable in "UNITED STATES GOLD
CO/N." ThPse bonds are the first lien upon one of tho
most productive and valuable railroad lines in the world
—a line which will be gobbed within tweivo montbs,and
which is already earning, after paying overattng
eb ex
pense s, more than twice the annual charge of its Bonded
dt.
About $3,C(0.000 of the Bonds have been taken In
Europe. where they are well `Med.
A- limited amount will - be diepeeed of at
103 PEEL CLNI, AND ACCRUED IfiIERESr, I 3 CURRIENCY.
The Bonds are of 61,000 each, with semiannual gold
-coupons attached. payable in July and January.
it% e receive all deuce of Government bonds at their full
market rates, In exchange for the Central Pacific Railroad
hor ds, thus enabling the holders to realize from 6TO 10
PER CENT. PROFIT and keep the principal of their in
vestments equally secure.
Orders and inquiries will receive prompt attention. In
formation. Descriptive Pamphlets, d:c, giving a full ac
count of tho orranization, Progress. Business and Pros
meta of the Enterprise furnished on application. Bonds
sent by return Express at our cost.
Dealers in Government Securities, Go!d,
NO. 40 S. Tice ird
SIO.OOO—WANTED TO BORROW ON FIRST
mortgage.
Apply to
J. COOKE LONGSTRETH,
N 0.1255. Seventh street
PeZtn the t.
15 7 000 TO 830,000.—TRUST MONEY, TO LOAN
on mortgage of goo i bueincim property in
t e city. Apply to E. E. JONES, No. S:N Walnut
street. se:B3t•
5.000 WANTED ON FIRST MOR.TGAGE—IM-
Proved city real estate. unexceptionable
ludo. 151. C. MISR EY. 411 Walnut etreet. ec118.a...
117111M41LE111 9 .7131RFULISTA EMU
r— (---
LEWIS LADOMUS & COTT7
:DIAMOND DEALERS .is JEWELERS.
• WATCHES, JEWELRY k SILVER IMRE.
6, 11 : . !...TC1ZES and SENITELRY REPAIMED.
` , ....___L302 Chestnut St., Phila.
_...di1l
Watches of the Finest Makers.
Diamond and Other Jewelryp
Of the latest etylee.
Solid Silver and Plated Ware,
Etc.. Ete.
SMALL STEDS FOE EYELET • 'tour.%
seA large assortment just received. with a variety el
ttings.
rp Wll2. B. 'WARNE CO.,
. Wholesale Dealers in
WATCHES AND JEWELRY,
11. E. corner seventh and Chestnut Streets,
And late of No. 85 South Third etr434st. . jeS
13 19721
REYWN BRAND LAYER MIRIN . OLEB.
1./halves and quarter boxes of this splendid fruit, land-
D 8 and for male byJOR. B. BUSSIER & 2UB Rooth
elaware avenue.,
inuturcriax•
aY
P. 8h PETERSON it 0 0..
89 South Third Street.
litazeal
• Dry) DV44