Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, October 24, 1868, Image 4

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    TIUM3IIIAIP/110 8U,?1D1ABY•
Synod of Philadelphia met at Lancaster
on Thursday evening.
t op. GROEGX H. PaNntarrort is ill of inflam
mation of the lunge.
Tint Deinocrutte State Executive Committee of
uth Catolins reprobates the recent outrages
on the freedmen.
6,i immense meeting of business and working
men was held in Hartford. Conn., last evening,
in favor of Grant and Colfax..
Tux official vote in Colorado at the late elec
tion was: Republican, 4092; Democratic, 4075—a
Republican majority of 17.
Bin - moue made speeches at Dunkirk,Westfield,
Erie, Ashtabula, Painesville, and Cleveland, yes
terday.
Joie; Mum RN, a seaman, from Philadelphia
was washed overboard from the schooner Vade,
.off Nantucket, on the 17th.
Tan steamer General Quitman was snagged
and sunk In the Mississippi river, above Bivou
Sara, Louisiana. on Thursday. No lives were
lost.
THE New York and New Jersey Synod of the
,New School Presbyttrians adjourned yesterday,
afar adopting - resolutions in tavor of a union of
the Old and New School divisions.
Two negroes, who bad been convicted of
atrocious crimes, but respited by the , military au
thorities, were shot by disguised men in Jeffer
son Parish, La., on Thursday night. '
IN accordance with the recommendation of the
Central Junta of Spain most of the local Provi
sional Juntas have dissolved. It Is reported
that Olozaga will be appointed Minister to France.
Parson Naronnos has written a letter to Gen
eral Prim advocating the claims of the House
of Savoy and the Duke of Aosta to the throne of
Spain.
Sosm negroes were discovered stealing goods
during a fire near New Orleans yesterday morn
ing, and a Eight ensued, in which two of them
were killed. A mob was then threatened,but was
prevented by the military.
$23,700,000 in coin will be taken from the vaults
of the Treasury Department on the first -of No
vember, to pay the semi-annual interest on the
5-20 bonds. No further interest will be due until
January 1, 1869.
THE special Washington despatch to tho Ledger
says: "The contest for Supervisors of Internal
Revenue for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
has become quite lively, and there-are new can
didates for the -position appearing daily. As
the Supervisor appointed for the Western District
of that State is a Republican, it seems to be taken
as settled among the applicants that the other
district must be a Democrat. Commissioner
Rollins some time ago nominated Mr. South
worth, a Republican, tor the Eastern Distriet,but
it is understood that Secretary McCulloch will
not appoint him." .•
EUROPEAN AFFAIRS.
Hon. Res•erdy Johnson's Reception In
Liverpool.
LIVERPOOL, October 23d.—Mr. Johnson, the
American Minister, was welcomed at the Town
Ball yesterday by Mayor Whitely, who also pre
sented to him an address from the Corporation of
Liver pool. •
Mr. Johnson •replied briefly, to the effect that
the peace of the two countries was not likely
to be disturbed, and that the negotiations
which have ['heftily taken place give assurance
that nothing ie the past or present will affect the
peaceful relations of England and the flatted
States.
He declined to respond to the remarks of the
Chamber of Commerce favoring free trade, as he
regarded that as a question of legislative and not
diplomatic action. While the experiment of
England had been successful, and had resulted in
the wealth of both countries, the same experi
ment might not serve young and growing na
tions.
At six o'clock in the evening, a grand banquet
was given to Mr. Johnson at the rooms of the
Law Association. The rooms were tastefully
decorated for the occasion. Stewart Brown oc
cupied the chair. Among the ~,o^uests were Lord
Stanley, Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, the Bishop
of Chester, and many celebrities, commercial and
parliamentary, among whom were several repre
sentatives of the press of the United States. The
usual toasts. of the Queen of England, the Presi
dent of the United States, the Royal Family, the
Clergy of all denominations, the Army and Navy
and Volunteers were proposed and rernded to.
The Chair, alter a few words, gave he health
01 Reverdy Johnson."
Mr. Johnson, after.expressing his acknowledg
ments for the enthusiastic reception given him,
said : He was told that persons would attend
whom he ought not to meet, who had aided the
South. His only reply was, that such a meeting
was most gratifying to him, because it afforded
assurances to the people of America, to the Go
vernment and himself, that former differences
had been forgotten, and that now the heart of
Liverpool, like that of all England, has but one
feeling of warm friendship for the United States.
When I remember the war through which our
Government passed unharmed, so far as its unity
is concerned, I was satisfied that you would see
that the Irnion still stands on foundations never
to be shaken, however some of you may have
differed as to the cause and probable results of
the war. I thought I knew, and now realize
here, and find friends as sincere as anywhere in
the realm. Our Father made the nation, and we
have shown our will and ability to maintain it as
long as Providence will suffer human society to
endure. Mr. Johnson then complimented the
Americen Chamber of Commerce on its history
and usefulness. Nothing but absolute insanity
on the part of either nation can involve us in a
conflict. This I say for the future and not for
the present, for nothing is further from my
thoughts than that I should be insane, or that the
government that is (turning to Mr. Stanley), or
that which may be (turning to Mr. Gladstone);
shall become so. Peace is beyond a possibility of
a doubt. We have discarded the mysteries of di
plomacy, and frankly said what we wanted,asked
nothing not right to ask, and I may say, so far
as we have gone, that all has gone merrily, and
we have every reason to believe all will go mer
rily to the end. What has been done, or is to be
done, I leave you to guess.
Mr. Johnson was warmly applauded.
Lord Stanley, in responding to the toast, '•iier
,Majesty's Ministers," said:
It was a settled principle in England to respect
the rights of every nation, and in points of
honor, not to hastily or impetuously resent any
real or imagincd wrong, but rather to willingly
submit to the dispassionate arbitration of some
competent tribunal.
Whatever claims, he said, we think we may
have upon others, or claims others may think
they have upon uts, these are the general rules of
conduct, which are equally accepted by both the
great political parties dividing this country.
which are Equally certain to be carried out by
the Foreign Office, whether that department re
mains in my hands or passes into those of fol
lowers or collesgues of the eminent statesman
whe is entertained with me as your guest to
night.
Atter dwelling for some time on European al
bite, Lord Stanley said:
Some of you may sek why I say nothing of
America. My answer is that that subject has beet
pretty well - taken out of my hands. Our es
teemed guest, who has, it seems to me, on hasty
computation, made a good many more personal
friends in England than he has passed days, and
with whom. I may say it to his face, it is a pleas
ure to do business, has told you clearly and mi
nutely of the relations between England and
America. He has stated with perfect accuracy
that two at least of the impending ques
tions have been, I will not say abso
lutely and fully disposed of, because
that would, ander circumetances, be impossible,
but so far dealt with. by mutual agreement
that the American Government should
ratify the nets of its envoy, of which there can be
no reasonable doubt, there is hardly any possi
bility of any difficulty arising upon them. With
regard to the last. no doubt the greatest question
is the claims arising out of the late war. lam
not in a position to say anything more than that
we have on both sides approached the subject
with au earnest desire to find a satisfactory solu •
Lion, and I think there is on both sides, I will not
say a confident expectation, but a decided hope,
that a solution may not be very far off.
Lord Stanley,aeserting the growing friendliness
between England and • America, concluded by
saying:
Stever like to look forward confidently to the
Suture; but if it should happen within the next
WOO that the American Minister or I should
have an opportunity of settling those questions
which are still pending] between the two C 01133-
tries, thereby removing the last pretext for a
quarrel, I can only say, I for one, shall feel that
the result is ample Compensation for all labor,
responsibility and anxiety attached to the con
epicuoua and not always enviable position of an
English Foreign Eitcretary of State.--] Repeated
Cbeers.l
Mr. Gladstone followed in a speech, approving
Of Lord. Stanley's position jti referqnce to Amcr_
lea, and eaid that neither England nor America
ehonld disregard their eredit,but if there be ddubt,
the benefit of the doubt should be given to the
creditors.
I) tê'Mit Milltti 0.11
THE Simian , AND Ms DErirrar.s.—Tlie follow
ing correspondence explains Itself
OFFICE' OF ATTORNEY GENERAL. BEILADEL
rEIA, October 19, 1898 • To Jane,
Lylnd, Esq., City Solicitor : Dear
Sir.—l propose t9apply for a quo war
ranto to teat the right of the Sheriff to ap
point deputies with gmeral police powers, or in
any way to interfere with the Mayor of the city
and his police by deputies. appointed for police
purposes at the election approaching in Novem
ber. Before I shall so proceed, let me request
you, as the City Solicitor, to learn from tho Sher
iff what it is he intends to do. lam truly your
friend, with respect.
BENJAAIIN HARRIS BREWSTER,
Attorney. General.
Pirtwinnt.rniA,. Oct. 19, 1868.—T0 Peter Lyle,
Esq., High Sherif, County of Philadelphia.—
Thum SIR : Please inform me if you propose, at
the approaching November election to appoint
deputies, either with general pollee powers or
with powers. merely to attend , at the various
places of election and clear the windows, or the
avenues to the windows thereat, in case thesz.me
shall be obstructed, so as to prevent voters from
approaching the same.
The object of this inquiry is to prepare for such
legal proceedings as will subject your power and
duty in the premises tojudicial investigation and
settlement. You will doubtless concur with me
in the sentiment that alike your own interest
and dignity and those of the municipality
—the city of Philadelphia—demand this action.
Requesting an early reply, I remain,
Yours, ever respectfully,
JAMES LYND, City Solicitor.
SHERIFF'S OFFICE, PHILADELPHIA October 21,
1868.—T0 James Lynd, Esg., City So l icitor: DEAR
Bin : I have just received your note of 19th inst.,
in relation to the appointment of special deputies
at the November election. In reply, I beg leave
to state that it is not my intention to make any
such appointments, unless some emergency shall
arise between this and the day of election re
quiring some steps to be taken on my part for the
preservation of the public peace. Before making
any such appointments I will confer with the
Mayor of the city on the subject in due time, for
the purpose of acting in concert with him.
Yours, respectfully, PETER LYLE,
THE UNION BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION.—The
annual meeting of the Union Benevolent Asso
ciation was held last evening at their rooms, Sev
enth and Sansom streets, Mr. Samuel H. Perkins
in the Chigr, and Mr. J. H. Atwood, Secretary.
The annual report was road and accepted and re
ferred to—the new Board of Publication. The
Treasurer's report was also read, showing a bal
ance in hand of $99 98. There was a discussion
on the subject of the purchase of coal.
It Is reported that coal cost the Association but
$2 50 per ton. The fact is owing to the liberality
of coal dealers atd the Reading Railroad Com
pany. Resffintions of thanks wore offered to the
lady visitors, after which the Association went
into an election of officers and a Board of Mana
gers, and the following gentlemen were elected:
President—Samuel H. Perkins. Vice Presi
dents—Richard D. Wood, J. Fisher Learning.
Treasurer—Edmund Wilcox. Recording Secre
tary—John H. Atwood. Corresponding Secre
tary—L Montgomery Bond. Managers—Ben'
min Coats, Thomas Latimer, John Bohlen, Wil
liam Purves, Arthur G. Coffin, Benjamin Or no,
John W. Claghorn, Thomas Watison, Joseph H.
Dulles. John Ashhurst, Thomas A. Budd, Charles
Rhoads, Richard Wood,Charles S. Wurtz, M. D.,
E. R. Wood, James Bayard, Joseph A. Clay, Al
fred M. Collins, John E. Graeff, Henry D. Sher
rerd.
On motion, the question of an amendment to
the charter, altering the time of meeting, was re
ferred to the Board of Managers. Adjourned.
AN OUTRAGRIIIIS ASSAULT.—Yesterday more,
ing Wm. H. Keegan was before Alderman Scaler,
charged with assault and battery upon James
Grogan, and breaking his arm with a black-jack.
It is said that the accused was a deputy sheriff on
the day of election in the Seventh Division, Third
Ward, and on that night it is alleged that several
men were, beating a crippled soldier named
Henry Cooper. on Oatharine street, below flub
bel. Grogan rescued him from the crowd, and it
Is said that Keegan and a man named Campbell
then attacked him, committing the above de
scribed assault. The accused was held in $2,000
bail to answer at court.
MILL DESTROYED BY FlRE.—About ten o'clock
last night, the extensive cloth mill, owned and
occupied by James Armstrong, situated on Wis
tar street, below Germantown avenue, German
town, was burned to the ground. It was a stone
structn re, four stories in height, 95 feet broad by
60 feet long. The loss is $5,000 on machinery,
$20,000 on stock, and $lO,OOO on the building,
which i,. partly covered by insurance. The ori
gin of the fire is unknown. This establishment
was destroyed one year ago, and has been rebuilt
only five months.
Siformrri:km.—Anna Peters was arrested yes
terday afternoon by Detective Levy on the charge
of shoplifting. She had a hearing before Alder
man Beltlhr, when Mr. Levy testified that he fol
lowed her for several squares, and at last saw her
take a pair of shoes from the front of a store on
Eighth street, below Vine, and that in her bas
ket was another pair of shoes and a piece of
calico. She was held for a further hearing.
Poor Mrsdlorrfttlialle; The Neale Siooter
The last" Woman Article" in the AS'aturclet,y
Review seems to us so brutal as to be hardly
fit for our columns. We will give a few ex
tracts simply. The fellow who writes it,
taking up the case of poor Mrs. Borradaile,
who was victimized by Rachel, evolves the
type of the "weak sister," and then clubs her
in the following manly way : "As a wife,
she was probably a docile, gentle kind of
Dledora—at least on the outside, for we must
not confound weakness with amiability—suf
fering many things because of unruly cnildren
and encroaching friends, none of whom she
has so much moral power as will enable her
to hold in check; but on the whole drifting
through her days peacefully enough, sod,
tnough always in difficulties, never quite
aground. She had a tower of strength in her
husband, on whom she leaned for assistance
in all she undertook, whether it was to give a
dose of Dalby to the child, or a scolding t,
the maid, or to pronounce upon the sound
ness of two rival sects each touting for her
soul.
"Take away the husband and what becomes
of the wife, when one has been the life and
the other only the parasite? Abandoned to
the poor resources of her own judgment she
is like one suddenly thrown into deep water,
not knowing how to swim. She has n
judgment. She has been so .long accustomed
to rely on the mind of another that her own
is paralyzed for want of use. She is any ones
tool, any one's echo, and worse than that, if
left to herself she is any one's victim. All
she wants is to be spared the hardship of sell
reliance, and to be directed tree of individual
exertion. She is utterly helpless—helpless to
act, to direct, to decide; and it depends on
the mere chance of proprietorship whether
her slavery will be degradation or protection,
ruin or safety. For she will be a slave, who
soever may be her proprietor,being the pabu
lum of which slaves and victims are naturally
formed. The old age of Medora is Mrs. Bor
radaile, who, if her husband had lived, would
have probably ended her life in an honorable
captivity and a well-directed subserviency.
•`one often sees these poor things left
orphans and friendless at forty or fifty years
of age. They have lived all their lives in
leading strings. and now are utterly unable
to walk alone; they are infants in all know-
ledge of the world, of business, of human
life; their youth is gone, and with it such
beauty and attractiveness as they might have
had, so that men who might have liked them
when fresh and gentle at twenty do not care
to accept their wrinkled helples3ness at
forty; they have been kept in and kept down,
and so have made no friends of their own;
and then, when the strong-willed father dies,
or the termagant mother goes to the place
where the wicked cease from troubling, the
mollusc they have hitherto protected is left
defenceless and alone. If elle bee money b,or
THE DAILY, rATENING . I3ULLETIN-PHILAD.ELPHIA, SATURDAY, 00T0Bglt, 24,1868
•
"If she is a widow, theyoung people man
age matters for themselves under the perilous
,guidance of, youthful passions and inexperi
ence. .Andlime times out of ten they give
her but a rough corner for her own share.
They have no respect for her, and, unless
more generously compassionate than young
people usually are, scarcely care to conceal
the contempt they cannot help feeling. Whkt
can she expect?
"As for the woman who is able to think and
act for herself, she has a.kind of superstitious
horror of such a person, and shrinks from one
who has made herself notorious, no matter
what the mode or method, as from something
tainted, something unnatural and unwomanly.
She has even grave, doubts respecting the
lawfulness of doing good if the manner of it
gets into the papers t and names are men
tioned as well as things; and though the
fashion of the day favors feminine notoriety
in all directions, she holds by the instinct of
her temperament, and languidly maintains
that woman is the cipher to which man alone
gives distinctive value. Griselda and Medora
are the types to her of womanly per
fection, and the only strength she
tolerates in her own sex is the strength
of endurance and the power of patience. She
has no doubt in her own mind that the or
dained purpose of woman is to be convenient
for the high-handedness and brutality of man,
and any woman who objects to this theory,
and demands a better place for herself, is fly
ing in the face of Providence and forfeiting
one of the distinctive privileges of her sex.
For the weak sister thinks, like some others,
that it is better to be destroyed by orthodox
means than saved by heterodox ones ; and
if good Christians uphold moral suttee, they
are only pagans and barbarians who would
put out the flames and save the victim from
the burning. So far she is respectable,in that
she has a distinct theory about something ;
but it is wonderfully eloquent of her state
that it should be only the theory of Griselda
dom ras womanly perfection, and the beauty
to be found in the moral of Cinderella sitting
supinely among the ashes, and forbidden to
own even the glass-slipper that belonged to
her.
Sheriff.
LafliusigneDramatique in France, by
"Don Juan" as Mozart wrote it, but "Don
Juan" as Castil-Blaze improved it. What is
also rather remarkable is the fact that M.
Crczet's account of the piece is borrowed
from the notice published in the' Monileur,
iu when M. Castil-Blaze was the musi
cal critic of that journal. "Here," says the
critic, not of his own work but of his own
pasticcio, "the two acts of the Italian libretto
are divided into five. * * * In this act
(the second) a ballet has been introduced, for
which an occasion is furnished by Zerlina's
marriage. The duet from the 'Marriage of
Figaro,' [Sull' aria?] has become, under the
pen of M. Castil-Blaze, a dance tune, and this
charming motive is mingled with waltzes so
fresh and beautiful that one has only to hear
them to retain them by heart. * * * The
fifth act consists of the supper scene. A few
phrases from Mozart's 'Requiem' have been
introduced into the infernal, or rather the
Elysian picture which terminates the piece..
The eagerness, the enthusiasm of the specta
tors" (concludes the favorable, and, as it
seems to us, the interested critic), "the sen
sations, now delightful, now terrible, which
they cannot help experiencing, complete the
tardy but so much the more honorable tri
umph of Mozart on our lyric stage."
A PAPE): in St Paul's Magazitv on the
French stage begins admirably, but falls off
a little when it conies to personal description
of particular plays, players, and playhouses.
In the sketch of the general contrast between
English and French theatres, English and
French actors, English and French plays—
or rather between French plays and the
English verisons of them—we find many in
teresting details and some searching criticism.
Here is one of the numerous explanations of
French superiority :
"Again, too,it must be said that the French
artists are a superior class to the English play
ers; superior in tastes and accomplishments.
Their tastes, habits, mode of life, everything,
are superior. Their pastimes and accomplish
ments would amaze our English players, and
perhaps excite their contempt. They are
nearly all collectors, and what are called in
France 'amateurs.' Thus M. Grivot, of the
Vaudeville, is fond of etching, and is curious
in bronze:s. St. Germain collects rare books.
I)esrieux delights in pottery, and people go
to see his specimens of old Valence ware. Tne
more famous Doche has an exquisite little
musuem of rare Dresden and dainty curiosi
ties. Kopp, one of the droll coterie in the
(.'inutile Duchesse, has a collection of' pic
tures worth bo,oun trance. Lassouche, of the
Palais Royal, collects china. One actor has
a collection of el,cks of Louis XIV.; another
a choice little cabinet by Meissonier; a third
is a good sculptor; a dozen paint
landscapes,nearly all are musicians, and most
play on the violin. As for the actresses, it is
net too much to say that every second one
sings skilfully, and plays the pianoforte as a
matter of course. Many French actors write
elegant and lively verses,—'proverbes' some
times,—which they act for their own amuse
ment. All this betokens a refined tone of
thought. The directors of the theatres are
very often skilled and successful dramatists,
and more of ten still trained and refined critics,
who have served an apprenticeship on influ
ential papers. The green rooms are not like
ours, bare, unfurnished apartments,but noble
salons; full of busts of great players and dra
ruatic authors,cuvered with pictures of scenes
from great plays by great artists, furnished
with presents from the Kings of France. As
we look up from the streets between the acts,
we see these attractive salons, and know that
the artists who are entertained therein cannot
but respect themselves and hold their profes
sion respected."
J. 11. ROGERS, N Y.
Mr. Rogers has been in the country during
a part of the summer. He has been lately
engaged on a group designed to illustrate the
two strongly marked types of Southern men.
An ad white Unionist is offering his vote at
the polls, accompanied by his granddau;hter,
who looks up toward him trustingly and
lovingly, with an expression of entire con
fidence. Sitting at .a desk is an ex-rebel,
who is looking over the registration book
and evidently anxious to discover some ob
jection to the right of the Unionist to vote.
The face of tl old man is one of the finest
type,broad, hrgh, intellectual and full of reso
lution and manliness.
Mr. Nehlig has made some progress with
his large-historical picture of the saving of
Captain Smith from the vengeance of Pow
hatan, but has been engaged for the most part
pf the past summer on a picture representing
chances of escape from the social sharks
always on the look-out for fat morsels are
very small indeed.
%is a mother, the weak sister is even more
unsatisfactory than as a spinster left to herself
with funds which, she can manipulate at
pleasure. the is affectionate and devoted;b at
of what use are affection and devotion with
out guiding sense or judgment? Even in the
nursery, and while the little ones need only
physical care, she is more obstructive than
helpful ? never having so much self-reliance
or readiness of wit as to dare a remedy for
one of those sudden maladies incidental to
children, and dangerous just in proportion to
the length of time they are allow to run un
checked.
-•----
MUSIC AND DRAMS.
C. Crozet
The "Don Juan" described by M. Crozet
nhis "review of music in France" is not
ART I WEI:WS.
NEHLIG, N. Y
the Apostle Paul in , the attitude of preaching
to Festus. The scene is the interior court of
a palace. Pestus is' sitting in the' chair of
state on .an elevated platform and is sur
rounded by white-robed o ffi cials. At his
right is_Berenice, dressed in plain white.,
Festus is attired in a red, flowing robe, which
is thrown aside enough to show a muscular
left leg. Below stands Paul, with his right
arm held up and hitrieft extended towards
Festus. He is dressed in a blue robe, which
falls over his lett arm to the ground, and has
a face full ef earnestness.
GOTTPIL'EI GALLERY, N. Y.
The exhibition room of this gallery has
been lately ornamented by a fine bronze bust
of Laboulaye, the distinguished advocate of
the Union cause in France during the late
war. The artist is Bartholdi. Mr. Knoedler
has also some of. James Hart's pictures;
among them, the "Quiet Homes." He will
put on exhibition this week two pictures
which are certain to attract a great deal of
attention. One is a fruit picture by Desgoffe,
which gives a glimpse of a most elaborately
finished interior. The sideboard on which
the fruit rests is beautifully carved,
and •on it are a large platter,
plates and glassware of the rarest
and most expensive character. The velvety
peaches; the rich, translucent, white grapes;
the large, red chenies; the • lemon, partly
peeled; the over-ripe orange and the luscious
raspberries are seen with a rich and appro
priate setting. Another picture, which is to
be brought out this week, is one entitled
"Sleeping Innocence," by Bougereau. It
represents two nude infants asleep on a larip,
richly covered bed, thbir arms interlocked,
and their repose that of the perfect and beau
tiful sleep which childhood only knows. As a
specimen of flesh-painting this picture should
be carefully studied.
THE proposal to erect a memorial of the
late Leigh Hunt, in Mensal Green Cemetery,
where the poet and critic is interred, origi
nated with Mr. S. C. Hall, editor of the Art
Journal, London, and has been well re
ceived. Mr. Joseph Durham, A.R.A., has
been selected to execute a portrait bust and
pedestal.
A copy, in fine Parian, of Woolner's bust
of Alfred Tennyson, the poet, has just been
published in London. It is fourteen inches
high.
The History of a Brigand.
The Italian papers are publishing the
biography of Gaggino, the brigand of the Ro
magna, who, with his associates, the two
brothers Barizani, still keep the field. His
history becomes more and more legendary.
Gsggino is a nickname, which means the
`•little fair man" in Romagnol patois. The
bandit has no name of his own. He is the
natural son of a Ravenna girl and one of the
Pope's Swiss guards. He was very gentle and
good up to the age of twenty-two, which he
attained in 1864, when he underwent two or
three terms of imprisonment for offences com
mitted in the exercise of his occupation as
facohino or porter. In prison he made the
acquaintance of the two Barisani; one grown
up, and the other quite young; the former, it
is said, lame, the other handsome and active.
They entered into. compact against their fel
low-citizens, and so began their depredations.
CAMPETINGS. all.
1868. FALL. 1868.
"GLEN ECHO NULLS."
McCALLUAT I CREASE & SLOAN,
Manufacturers and Importers of
CARPETINGS,
Wholesale and Retail Warehouse,
No. 509 CHESTNUT ST.,
Opposite Independence Hall.
eeH.to the 3mrp
CARPETINGS,
IFA-11,1L. OPENING.
Elegant Wiltons, Velvets, Brussels,
TAP ~:TR 3 PLYS and IM AL%
Parlor, Hall and Stairs to Match.
LEEDOM & SHAW,
910 ARCH STREET,
Between Ninth and Tenth Streets. aels.3mryd
NEW ARRIVALS.
Opening Daily.
CARPETINGS,
Wiltons, Velvets Brussels,
OIL CLOTHS. &c.
REEVE L. KNIGHT & SON.
1222 Chestnut Street.
v-lAirp
XLEDIUUNIAA.
RHEUMATISM;
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA.
$5,000 REWARD
Will be paid to any person producing any article that can
refer to half eke many Genuine Permanent Cures of Rhea
modem and Neuralgia in Pennsylvania as made by
DR. IFIErFILAJE
Grea't Vegetable Rheumatic Remedy
Within two years. As a security to sufferers, a written
guarantee is Liven, stating the number of bottles war
ranted to cure each case or money to be refunded. Posi
tively need by Physicians in practice as the only recourse
in severe cases. Warranted uninjurious to the most
delicate.
Prepared by Dr. J.V. FINDER, a regular graduate.who
bite, for thirty years. made this dleesee a specialty.
Office, No 29 S. Fourth Street. •
All inquiries by letter answered. Sold by all Druggists.
au2o th s to tf 801
CANNED FRUIT, VEGETABLES: 4 h o r -1 . 000 CASES
fresh Canned Peaches ; 5(10 cases fresh Canned Pine
Apples; 200 cases fresh Pine Apples, In glass 1,000 eases
Green Corn and Green Peas; 600 cases fresh Phu= in
cans; 200 cues fresh Green Gages; 800 cases Cherries* in
sYrusi; 540 cases Blackberries, in syrup; 500 cases Straw.
berries, in syrup; 6420 cases fresh Pears. in syrup 1,2,000
cases Canned Tomatees; 800 cases ()infers. Lend.= and
Clams 600 CAMS Roast Beef, Mutton. -Veal.-Boupk dse.
}Cr sa t e by JOSEPH B. BUBBLER di CO„ 109 South . Bela:
ware avenue.
CrtURRANT JELLY.—GENUINE. CURIIA.I , IIV " LY
in 6 and 10 lb. Gana, for alto by J. D. BUONEIi
Utht LI/fit/ALI DPIIIIIIIII AYlNang •
ANUS
POIRT BREEZE
PARK.
THE EXHIBITION AND FAIR DAY
EEEE=I
Benefit of the Improvement Fund
IN RIM HER POIITI'MIRD,
ON ACCOUNT OF THE :WEATHER.
o T Monday, 26th inst.
da at
NEwci-POPRIA.EZLIEATIThr go„,
SUCCESS! SUCCESS!
THE THE . ATSE FILLED NIGHTLY!
With dellahted audiences.
TO SEE THE GREAT
LAST DAY OF THE
DANLONSI
HANLONEP
HAISIONS'
TO-NIGHT.
POSITIVELY THE LAST NIGHT !
POSITIVELY THE LAST NIGHT !
POSITIVELY THE LAS I' NIGHT 2
POSITIVELY THE LAST I' I
THE THEATRE FILLED NIGHTLY
WITH DELIGHTED AUDIENCES,
TO. SEE THE GREAT
HANLON BROTHERS 'IROBEE.
This !a positively she Farewell Tour of the
HANLON BROTHERS.
MONDAY -THE WORRELL AISTERi3
WALNUT STREET ATRE. Begins at TM o'clock.
Mill (SATURDAY) EVENING, Ont. 2i,
E. LIIAVENPORT,
Who will appear In his great character of
In John Banim ' a Celebrated AM PI N ay of
DebiON AND PYTIIIAS.
To conclude with Mr.. Honiara Comedy of
FASHION; OR, LIFE IN NEW YORK.
Adam Trueman MR. E. L. DAVENPORT
In preparation, an entirely new Romantic, Sennational
Drama, in 5 Acta, entitled
F..• OR, BRANDED.
MR. E. L. DAVENPORT in Four Charactere.
N EW CHESTNUT' STREET THEATRE.
MONDAY EVIS NINO, October 26.
Flrat Appearance of Vie Popular
WORREL.. SISTERS.
SOPHIE, ISE* E AND JENNIE.
And thou entire
NEW YORK r:ATite; tX)IIPA.NY.
In their Enallah Tendon of
THE GRAND DUCHESS.
Box sheet now open.
Further particulars sec Sanday papers 0c23-2t
A/RS. JOlll4 BMW 'S ARCH STREET THEATRE.
Begins to
LOTTA—FIRE FLY.
'MONDAY AND EVERY EVENING.
Falconer's Play written for LOTTA,
Witb new Scenery, Costumes. &c.,
_ . FIRE PLY."
_ .
LCYTTA as FIREFLY.
With her Great Drum Solo.
Her French Song and Mad Dance
With Mr. Craig as Rage.
Mr. Barton Hill ea Loeb Victor.
Miss Lizzie Price as the Princes.
FRIDAY—BENEFIT OF LOTTA
SATURDAY—FIRE: FLY MATINEE.
„ MUSICAL FUND HALL.
CARL BENI Z AND MARK HASSLER'S
GRAND ORCHESTRA MATINEE...,
EVERY SATURDAY a FTERNOON. AT 2}4 O'CLOCK.
Subscription Ticket, admitting to thirty C0neert5.....134
Package of four Ticketa. ..SL
Single A dmieshm.... Fifty Cents.
For eagle at Carl Sautes °Meet Boner's Store),lied Chest.
nut e [rect. and at Mark Hassler's Utiles, No. 214 is. Eighth
street Engagements for Concerts,Commencements. Balls,
Private Parties, etc, can be made at the above oilleea.
Oct tf
FERDINAND PAUWELS'
GREAT NATIONAL PAINTING.
"THE NEW etEPUBLIC,"
on
EMANCIPATION IN THE UNITED STATES
Now on Exhibition in 'he Pennsylvania Academy of
Fine a rte (Eastern Galleries). oc.L.' , 3we
Open for examination from 9 A. Sl. to 10 P. 3L
(IERMANIA ORCHESTRA. PUBLIC REHEARSALS
fiat the Horticultural liall,every Weduesday.at 834 P.M.
Ho RTICULTURAL HALL.
Tickets sold at the door and all principal music etorea.
Packages of five, SI single, 9.5 cents. Engagements' can
be Made by addressii G. HASTERT. 1201 Monterey
street, WIITIG'S SI Store. DM Chestnut stmt. or
ANDRVB Slade Stor 104 Cheetnut etreeL oel7-tf*
A CADEMY OF FINE ARTA,
CHESTNUT Street. above Tenth
Open from A A. M. to 6 P. M.
Benjamin WeaVe Great Picture of
CHRIST REJECTED
EBB on exhibition. 1€624.1
FOE'S AMERICAN VARIETY THEATRE,
EVERY EVENING and
SATURDAY AFTERNOON.
GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE.
In Grand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesques. Songs. Dawns
Gymnast Acts. Pantomimes. de.
NEW PUBLIVATIONN.
MRS. DAVIS'S NEW NOVEL,
DALLAS GALBRAITH.
By BIBS. B. HANDING DA.vis,
Author of "Margaret Elowth." "Waiting for the
Verdict." etc.
Rvo. Fine Cloth. Price $2 00.
"One of the beet novels ever written for an American
mariazlxic."—Philaielphia 'Horning/ Post
"'The story is most happily written in all respecta."—
The North A mei-team
Published by
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO.,
Nos. 715 and 717 Market. St., Phila.
oc2l w e 211
N 1161Bott.
A THE RUFFIAN, By CHARLES DICKENS.
He Knew Ho Was Right. By ANTIIONYIEOLLOCE.
The Two Sides of the River. By the author of "rho
Earthly Paradire."
711/ICVirtly as a Humorist and Satirist. By JAN/1.11
HAINNAY.
News from Sirius. By It A. Preo4:Tnn, B. A.. P.R. A. S.
And a half a dozen other readable articles, from the
latest and best Foreign Periodicals, in
EVERY SATURDAY,
ron ocronEk. 31nT. sow RELIn
•.• For ale by Bookmllera and Nerradealere.
TIuKNOE FIEL Bao DS.
0c24-20 Publithers. tou
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
Doit.A.B STE WARDSHIP. Half bound, 24 cents
mualln, 85 cents,
MM=
FRANCES LESLIE; or, The Prayer Divinely Taught
-70 cents.
LIFE TRUTHS. "With Thee is the Fountain of Life."
Ihreize 12mo Half bound. Si oents ; cloth, 60 cents; cloth
gilt 15 cents.
AlllEttlOAN SUNDAY SCHOOL UNION, No. 1123
Cheetnut street, Philadelthia. octl Sty
QUPERxILY ILLUSTRATED BvoKii.-31 ex uK'
I.JArrnor. Plates in gold and colors. Three vole.
Turner.Oallery. Artist's proofs. Folio.
Baronial Balls and Castles of England. 2 vols.
Shaw's Dresses and Decorations of Middle Ages. I vole.
Doi le's Chronicles of huglend. Illuminated plates.
N salt's 'Mansions of England. 4(k) p'ates. 2 vole.
Claude's Liber Veritatie. 3 vole eolio.
Nalberbe Monographic dee Piccidets. 3 vole.
Dore's B,b , e, Don Quixote, and othe' works.
Eroissarrs.Chronicles of England. Illuminated.
THE ENULIuB BOOK STORE.
0c22,1f NO. 722 Ransom street.
JUST READY—BINGIIA3I'S LATIN GRAMMAR—
New Edition —A Grammar of the Latin Language for
the use of Schools. Witßuyc and vocabularies by
w Sham Bingham, A. M.erintendent of the Bingham
School.
_
The Publishers take pleasure in announcinito Teachers
and friends of Education generally, that the new edition
of the above work is now ready, and they Invite a careful
examination of the same, and a comparison with , other
works on the same subject. Copies will be furnished to
Teachers and Superintendent, of Schools tor this purpose
at low rates.
Price
Published by B. U. BUTLER dt CO.,
137 South Neural street,
Philadelphia.
And for sale by Booksellers generally. ttu2l
T EUSURES.—A NEW COURSE OF LECTURRS. AS
delivered at the New 'York Museum of Anatomy. em.
bracing the suojects • flow to live and what to live for;
s(cuth. Maturity and old age; Manhood generally ro•
viewed; the cause of indigestion, flatulence and Nervous
Diseases accounted for Pocket volumes containing three
lectures will be forwarded to parties unable to attend on
rceelpt of four stampe, by addressing J. J. Dyer, 35 tich
street, Boston. felBlA
DRA.NG'S AMERICAN CLIROMOS FOR BALE Al'
1 all reepectable Art titareo. CaNtlognea 'mailed free by
myite.6m L.. PRANG & CO.. Roston.
MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COPITEDA.
NY Or riiii•Asocumium•
IFFICE No. 3 SOUTH FIFTH STREET. SECOND
owl?.
'ASSETS $170,000.
Mutual system exclusively, combining economy th
safety.
Insures , Buildings, Household Goode, and Merchan he
generally.
LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID.
• DIILECTOIII3.
Caleb Clothier, William P. Reeder,
Benjamin hl alone. Joseph Cbalun an.
Thomas Mather, Edward M. 04eedlea,
T. Fliwood Chapman. • Wilson M. Jenkins,
bimeon Matlack, Lukens Webster,
Aaron W. Onsh Franch T. Atkinson.
CALEB CLO — HIER, Prnsident.
BENJAMIN MALONE, Yice President
TLIOMAB MATIIER, Treasurer
T. Etr.woon thimmen, Secrotar3r.
1 ".,L PERSON'
ABE HEREBY. CAUTIONED
a
ag iALL iaTtrueting any of the crew of the Pruasian bark
"Frederick Gustav," Muse., Master, as no debts of their
contracting will he paid either by the Captain or con
eigneCa. PETER W RIGHT ,Ss BONS, 115 Walnut
street ao 7 tf
riAtaION.—ALL PERSONS ARE HEREBY CALL
Boned against trusting or harboring an of. the-crow'of the G. ship HERbIANN, acbweens, blaster. as no
debts of their contracting will be paid by master or con.
tigraVi IYQ/SIDIAti Qvttifil rituutoltrut
POLITIOAL DIFOTIOES.
THE REPVELICIIN INVINCIEGES,
AND ALL
Young Men of Philadelphia
Favorable to the Election of
GRANT AND COLFAX
Are invited to assemble in Con,veidionni
CONCERT HALL,
Saturday, October 2 1 1, at 8 o'clock P. M.
The public to invited to attend.,
Hon. BENJ. HARRIS BREWSTER
Will addresa the meeting
egar. HEADQUARTERS REPUBLICAN 0/TY ER
."' EtJUTIVE COMMITTEE.
"TO THE REPUBLICAN et OF PHILADELPHIA."
In accordance with a resolution peened this day. the
DIVISION ORDAIN I Z ATIONS throughout the CITY
are earnestly rivittested to assemble in - their respective
ELECTION DIVISIONS at the regular places of holding
the elections, for at such places as may be designa•ed by
tlieward Executive Committee) on MOND A.VE VENING.
Oct 26, 1869 at 73[ o'clock, for the purpose of. THOR
OUGHLY or.OANIZtNG AND CANVASSING THEIR
DIVISIONS. It has been ascertained that over 5 ,500
npuBLII•ANK FAILED majorityE AT THE OC TU
BER ELECTION. A large of these CARELESS
REPUBLICANS can be Induced to come to the polls and
vote for GRANT and COLFAX, if the division organize-
Hone attend promptly to this duty.
By order of the Committee.
WM. It LEEDS. President.
Secretaries
•
JOIN L. nr.L,' • - -
A. M. WALKINSLIAN
SPECIAL NOTICHIS.
DEPARTMENT OPP SURVEYS. OFFICE OP
1115r Gbief Engineer and Surveyor, Philadelphia, Octo
ber 111, 1668.
Nt..+l 10 e..—Doplicate p'ans t f the revision of grades on
Wayne fstren', between Roberts avenue and Queen street.
No. 18, and Plan No. 148; eh*. revision of
_grades on Part
of the Fifth ;section of the Twe-ty-third Ward. bounded
by Alleeeny avenue k Kensington avenue, Lehig a ave.
nue and Fihuord Wee are now prepioed and deposited
for public imp& Ms the 18), at the office of the Survey
or and Regulator of the Tenth Survey District, FR OM
FORD,and No 148, at the office of the 13fir vevor and Reg
ulator of the Ninth District, GER3IANTOWN, aril also
at the office of MI . Depar. went, No. '2•24 South PIPPLI
street; and the Board of nerve, ors have appoLuted MON.
DAY. November 2. 1868. at 1034 o'clock, A. 61 . to consider
any • bjections that may be urged thereto by any citizen
interested therein.
0c.M,21,31
STRICKLAND KNEASS.
Chief Fuglueer and Surveyor.
U. S. INTERNAL REVENUE COLLECTOR'S
kir Office. First Dist let Penn'a. No. 247 South Third
etieet. Philadelphia.
NOTICE TO LIQUOR DEALERS.—AII persona in this
District having in their DOM:W.6OD, on the tat day of No. s
vember next. any Distilled Spirita intended for rata. ex
ceeding in quantity fifty gailow. and not then in Bonded
Warehouse. are requirea by law to make return of the
same In detail to thus Mike. The prescribed blank forms
Mr said returns will be furnished on application at this
Mlle., en or after the Ist of November.
ocN) 1114 CUARLBS ABEL, Collector.
or OFFICE OF THE A MYGOALOID MINING
COMPAN Y OF LAKE SUPERIOR. No. 534 %Yak
;nut street.
-
PHILADELPHIA. Ott 16.18i8.
Notice to hereby given that all etock of the Amygda.
told 2litithg Company of Lake Superior. on Whitt' in
rtalments are due and unpaid. is hereby declared foe.
fe Bed, and will be cold at public auction on TUESDAY.
November 17th. 1868. at 12 o'clock. noon, at the ollice of
the Secretary of the Corporation. according to the charter
and bylaws. milers prerrimurly redeemed. with interest
and expense of advertising.
By order of the Directors.
g octets nol7l M. 11. HOFFMAN. Treasurer.
seirOFFICE RESOLUTE MitelNG COBBANy.
O. 4,4 WALNUT STREET.
Pin 1.A.P73.1.111A. Odolier le. The
Notice le bereby given tbid all Stock of the Resolute
Mining Company. on which ituitaiments are due and an is hereby declared forfeited. and will be sold at
public auction on SATIJRDAv. November 14. WA. at 19
o'clock. noon. at the Office of the Secretary of the Corpo
ration. according to the Charter and By-Lalve. unless Mee
woody redeemed.
By order of the Directory.
B. A. Llutrl'ES. Treasurer.
ocl4 tnol4l
.OFFICE OF THE CITY TREASURER.—
Philadelphia, °etcher 14.181 A—Notice.—To Holders
of City Warrants and Certificates of City Loan.
egistertd City Warrants. numbering from No. I to
3.oth inclusive, will be paid upon presezdation at this
office. Interest ceasing from this date.
Certificates of Loan of the City of Philadelphia that
have been left at this mike for Reghtry are now ready
for delivery-. Holders of receipts are requested to "pre
cent the same and receive their cettificates.
Loans of the City of Philadelphia maturing January I.
Ikl+, will be paid with the accrued interest on presenta
tion. Interest 1;411 cease on date of nistcuity.
ocl7s.tu.tlt4ti • JOSEPH N. PE111304
OFFICE KENSINGTON AND OXFORD TURN-
S t ir PIKE ROAD COMPANY. 127 &FOURTH street
Primarsgt.ruis.. Oet Bed.
The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders of this Com-
I. any will be held et their oillee on MONDAY. November
at 1.2 M... when an el. etion will be held for a Presi
dent al a Managers and Treasurer to serve for the ensu
ing year. r SAMUEL C. FORD.
President.
I. OFFICE OF THE PENNSYLVANIA MINING
COMPANY OF MICHIGAN. MO WALNUT street.
PHILADELPHIA. October 7th. Isol
A special meeting of the r tockholders of the Pennsylva
nia Mining Company of Michigan will be held at their
Other. on mONDAY, November 16th, 1, ,pt 11 o'clock.
A. M., for the purpoye of deciding upon the proper course
to be adopted in view of the cersation of work at tho
Mine.
By order of the Board of Directory.
ockitnoir.4 WM. F. WEAVER. Secretary.
DIVIDEND 1110TICEFi.
ye. OFFICE CATAWISSA RAILIiO I II3 COMPANY.
No. 424 iss ALNUT street.
rifILAM:LIWIA. Oct. 20, lika
The Board of Directors of thin Company have declared
a dividend of Three per cent. on account of the &Paden&
due the preferred etockboldera, payable on the sth of No
vember next to thoee Persona in whole name the atock
rtande at the close of the trattrfer books.
The treader bcoke of the Preferred stock will bo closed
on the hot ef October and re opened on the 6th of No
vember. , W. la GILROY.
e untnosl Treasurer.
cv — iil4lm.
OY WANTED—IN AN OFFICE; SALARY LOW.
ddre.. alnut Street." at thfa office. in handwrit
ing of applicant. with ago and references. It'
WAiliVilty. - °vh.7,l'?.°, l "evntieravY), b oueo ; would be
willing to purchaeo a portion of the furniture. filnot be
central, and contain 12 to 16 rooms, t, itoxcep
Clonal ll<~l
crencee Address M.V. 11., Bulletin 011ico. oe2llll*
WANTED.— A PARTNER WITH $7.009 C. 1.1311, IN
one of the moat profitable manufacturing bittinesaca
In the city. Profits exceed WO per cent per annum. satis
factory evidenctrof u hich will be given on interview.
A thorough invertigation invited. Address
'COM NiERCE."
lict.t.trriN
AGENTS AND FARMERS WANTED
- TilE KING OF El OM BOOKL"
pages-2eo illustrations—all about the Watery and vsv
dative, croerieg, breeding,lceding and management, die•
miles and their remeeies,of the horse, cattle,sheempanl•
trY. etc., etc. Inchestpm , Pa and fullness it Mut ym rival,
Evely farmer absolutely needs it. -rim MAI*
WONDEII," and a ,hate map given to every subscrllnr,
alto to any cerson who will procure A ot 00d n out, I. eV
descriptive pamphlet, address 0001MWEIM) & 00., (MP
care. NAW York and Memphis aclll,lmo
10111;BE I'AINTB:=WEIWPER 1 Pi TRADE;
of
.1 W tide Lend, Zinc.. White rind C ol o red Painhi or our
ncrn manufacture, of undoubted Nut, lu wiantitlem to
Putt porebemere,
_ROHN:ILT di lOUNI elt A: CO., Dealors
in Palate and Von:dither. N. ly. corner Fourth and Raw
etreete. ntr.ri•tf
llt IlAbB ROOT. OF RECENT IMPORTATION AND
IL vef 9 eurorlor quality; w bite Gain Arable, End In.
din ClllOl . OA Whit. , find NIOIIIrd Croddo coop. 011va Oil,
of varlaux brandm. For anlo by lOIIENT HOONIdAKEtt
& CO., Ornaglmns, Northonot corner Fourth and Risco
etrectr. no27.tf
imiti:,(ioleiTtP SUNDRIES.— GRADUATES. MORTAR.
/ PRI Oonibm Bruntiox, Mirrors, Twoozord. Puff
hoses, Horn Brom!. Hurgtcnl lustrninontn, Truenot, Hard
and dolt I,libber Hondo, Vila Cit ii , Olaxs and Metal
ElyrJuges, Atc,. all at "First Handn' ,
i3N./WDEN A: BROTHER,
23 South Eighth street.
1)OBERT SHOEMAKER Ai CO., WHOLESALE
IV Druggists. Northeast corner Fourth and Race streets.
invite the attention of the Trade to their largo stock of
Fine Drugs and Chemicals., Essential Oils, Sponges, Corks,
no 17 tf
HOOP SKIRTS.
628• NEW FA Hoop SKIRTTY S. LL s LES. — 628.
Le ranter Fkirte. together with all other styles and aims
of "our own make" of Celebrated "Cnampion" Skirts for
Ladiee,' Minees,` and Children, every length and size of
valet. They are the but and caeapost Hoop Skirts in
the market.
Cortete, Corsets, Corsets, especially suited to first class
trade. Thompson & Landon's Celebrated **Glove Fitting**
Corsets. Superior Fitting Fine French Woven Comets
from $1 10 to $6 O. latra Handmade Whalebone
Corsets at tic.. 190 c., $l. $1 10, $1 25. and $2 20. Trade
KIP Pile d at manufacturers lowest rates. 628 ARCIEI street.
au29 2Turp WM. T. HOPICINd.
61811IPPIEMAIP QiUIDB.
For Boston---Steamship Line Direct,
BALLING FROM EAO FORT EVERY FIVE DAYS.
FROM PINE STREET, PHILADELPHLIL AND LONG
WHARF, BOSTON.
Duo line Is composed or the &stet=
- eamsin
ROMA flt
N, 1 428
tone, Captain O. Baker.
MAX Omoyzo tona.:Captgla F. M. Rogge.
Pa OR ffl AN. 1.293 tong.. Captain Crowoll.
The SAXON, from Philo—on Tuesday. Oct. 27. at 10 A.M.
Tag , NORMAN, from Boston. 13.turday. Oct. 24. at 6 P. ht.
These Steamships , mall punctually. and - Freight will
received-every day. a Steamer being always an the berth.
Freight for points beyond 13oston sent with despatch
Freight taken for all pointe in New England and tog.
warded as directe - d. — lngurance
For FreiSht or rlinage (Importer accommodatiorut,
apply to BENRY WINt3OR
coral P 3 n iltA Dear=
POLITIOAL.
'xpeedhCl the 41? int,, Prelim yler Cottax at
Detroit.
•DIUTROIT, 23.—The great Republican masi
meeting to-day was a highly successful affair.
Special trains on several railroads brought large
crowds from the interior of the State. and at two
o'clock' as • runny people as could obtain an en
trance gathered in the passenger depot of the
, Detrolt, and Milwaukee Railroad, where speeches
were delivered by Hon. Schuyler Colfax, Hon.
'B. F. Wade and Hon. Samuel Galloway.
On being introduced to the immense audience
Colfat spoke just an hour. " Tho following
hre his words in reference to Mr. Seymour:
I have been reading this morning a speech
made by a' distinguished gentleman and citizen
of New York, a candidate for the office of Presi
dent of the United States, which has diverted my
thoughts from that line of remarks which I in
n nded to follow to-day. That gentleman, and I
allude to Governor Seymour has recently com
menced a canvass of the United States, as, far as
time will permit until the Presidential election,
believing that the exigencies of his party
demand it, as I think they do—(laughter
—and I think it will be "love's labor
lost." propose to devote •my remarks
to-day before this largo assembly to a
brief review, hurried as it must be, in time for
others to speak alter me,of soma the views laid
down by this distinguished citizen. I listened to
speeches that the telegraph announced to ne had
been made by him with no common degree of in
terest, but when I read these speeches I must as
' knowledge with regret that I found not a vindica
tion of his own political platform,but an arraign
ment and denunciation of the party to which
ho - stands opposed, and which, thank God.
• blocks SID the way to the Presidential chair. I
villlread a sentence which is the gist of his Ro
chester speech: "What we hope and aim to do is
to check this usurpation and unwise legislation.
The men in• power have neither established a suc
cessful system of reconstruction nor done any
thing to lighten the burdens which oppress
the people of the North." 'He is now travelling
through our various States for the purpose of ar
raigning, unjustly and untruly, as I are com
pelled to say, that noble party of whose member
dip I with you am , jtiatly proud.
What does ho call a record of usurpations and
unwise legislation? Let me put itin review before
you, for there is nothing more triumphant, there
is nothing more soul-stirrlog, there is nothing
more inspiring to every lover of his country than
the record we have written down on the pages of
• our country's history. Look back at the very
birth of the Republican party,when it sprang into
existence,almost originating with yon in the State
of Michigan, finding its hundreds of thousands
all over the land standing with it shoulder to
shoulder. What was its first usurpation ? Was
it when border ruffians sought to invade the
plains of -Kansas and , punish devotion to liberty
there by outrage, by murder, by midnight assas
sination, by stealing ba ll d-boxes and stuffing
them to make them speak untruly the voice of
the people in the struggle between liberty and
ollsvery ?
This young Republican, party ever devoted itself
to that whole principle of liberty and justice
which has illuminated its banner ever since. It
dared to throw down the gauntlet of defiance at
the feet of the Administration then in power at
its devotees, at its supporters, at its apolog i sts;
dared to ma ke the cause of Kansas our own and
yours and those in Adjoining States and else
where.
Mr. Colfax continued at length and was fre
quently applauded.
West Virginia Election•
WHEELINO, W. V 0.., Oct. 23-9. P. M.—Later
retume look better for the Republicane,. Fifteen
counties, casting half the vote of the State, give
2,500 Republican majority; a loss of 1.000 on the
vote of 1866,b1:it a gain of 1,000 on the vote of 1867.
The same ratio will give theßeptiblicans the State
by 5,000, and their State Committee claim it by
from 3,500 to 5,000.
For t.ongress, the First District gives Duval,
Republican, 900 majority.
The Second district gives McGrew, Republican,
2,000 to 2,500 majority.
In the Third district, a large territory, thinly
settled, with no telegraph. meagre returns Indi
cate tbe election of Witcher, Republican, by a
mority of 500.
The Legislature will undoubtedly be three
fourths Republican, thus securing a United States
Senator in place of Nan Winkle.
Ohio county gives 123 Democratic majority,
a Republican gain of 615 over 1867, and 20 over
1166.
Wrnammo, Oct. 23.—Complete returns from
Hancock and Ohio counties show Republican
gains over the vote of 1866. The Democratic
majority in Ohio county has been reduced to 120,
a large Republican gain: Brook county is close.
Wood, Harrison, Jefferson, Mineral and Marion
counties show Democratic gains. Marshall
county goes Republican by 700 majority, a Re
publican gain. Partial returns from Mason
county show Republican gains.
The Secretary of the Republican State Cen
tral Committee claims the State by 3,500
majority, and the ei ction of General Duval to
(..ougresta from the Firat District beyond a doubt.
Tire Chairman of the Dt mocrnuc State Central
Committee claims the State Ay a small majority.
It 111 be several days before full returns are re
my, d.
lIF_FLING, Oct. 21—Wood county, formerly
reported Democratic, gives a Republican majority
of 150. This Insures the election of Duval to
Congress in th. First District by about 1,000 ma
jority. Marion county gives aoout 200 Republi
can mojorlti , a mull Democratic gain. Mow:L
.:alit la county is claimed by the Republicans by
51.11 to ;00 mujonty.
Partial returns from Marshall county show a
Republican majority -of 500. The Republicans
t tam that their insiority there will exceed that of
1866.
Wirt county gives a reduced Republican ma
jor.ty
The Democratic gains thin far are not suffi
cient to overcome the Republican majority of
Dl6O, which was over' 0.000. The Republicans to
n *la claim the State by 2.1)00 to 3,ooo.—Pre.as.
Ylailoadelplala Boys In Blue at 4.lDany,
mu•ir York.
ALIIANY, October 23d.—The Mann-Collis
Phila
delt,bia delegation of Boys in Blue were enthusi
astically received here to-day with banners of
welcome and triumphal arches. Daer was
givo.n by Governor Fenton to Gen. Ktipatriek,
Hon. Mr. Griswold, Col. Wm. B. Mann, General
Charles H. T. Collis. Senator Thayer, Gen. Gar
field..of Ohio. Senator Harris. Gen. 3. M. Read,
Jr. Gen. McKean, of Saratoga, Hon. Martin J.
Townsend, (Ail. dugout:le and others. &t teu
o'clock a grand supper was given to the Philadel
ia.delegation by Gen. Read, at the Delavan
House •
The procession was everything that could be
dean d, both as to nowhere, etc. At least teu
thoueand Wide-Awakes were in line. The Phil
adelphians are tee lions of the day. Great thanks
for ebe goud sppnintineut of everything %re due
Gent J M. Read, Jr.. ton of Judge Read, of
Phiwoeiphie, the chairman of the committee of
arrangements,
The PhtladelphifL ' iu Blue" leave here at
tritorliebt,and rtilli reneh Philadelphia at '2 o'clock
to worrow.—Prtsa.
rresident Johoftwx for Seymour
Tt loitowing dc-patch from President John
sni was received by Mr. Seymour yesterday
morning:
rovb: Mektestei.x, wwsutsciToN Oct. 22.
Hun. Horatio Seymour sueltamuouucedin the
paters tins wornliia that you will cuter the Pre-
Pidel•tifti CtillVta6B in person. I trust this may be
Fu, as the present position of nubile ni n t drs justi
fies and demands IL It is hoped and believed by
s our frit nds that all the enemies of COOStiEll
tiou,,l government, whether secret or avowed,
will not be spared, and that their arbitrary user
, adults, together with their wasteful. protli
te and corrupt - uses - of the people's trea
4--sure, will be sthnielly. exposed and-rebuked.
The masses of the people should be ar o use d ,
and ',yarned against the euererietimentß of cies
po,ie pow( r 110 W ready to enter-the very gates of
the citadel of liberty. I trust you may speak
with an inspired tougue,and that your voice may
penetrate every just and patriotic heart through
out the land. Let the living principles of a vio
lated Constitution he proclaimed and restored,
that peace, prosperity and fraternal feeling may
n Uun to a disordered aud oppressed nation.
LI VERA RV • I rEns.
The last novel of annul pr?re is called
"La Terreure Prtissiene." Bls.uarek, under
the transparent • di4guise of "Le C Ynte
Edmond de Bo,l3ewerk," is tired at -by a
`•young man elegintly firessed." Act a novel,
&chive the Fall Mal? Gazelle, tun book is
ennt,thptible.. It simply an nufair narca
t;ve, lc Dumas's wort manner, of the few
campaign of 1 - 8,;6 - in Flatvwar aturittie
PgUsi.fial Ireat 'APIA i.LLF.ritakfor..% Itis_written_
.1, itdou'aler,s AV; and i . id pity It
sbould. It hi a p a.tr attempt to meet what
13cOr Ellen Pease, Jones. hence at Pawtucket 2—`'d inst.
Saws Mlnnle. Hudson; John. Price, Nickerson, and
En.ILS bens. at Fall Elver 21st inst.
tichr Dearborn, Beaver, sailed from Kingston. Ja. for
this port via Grange. Key—before reported sailed direct
ricbr fd E Graham. Fountain, for this port, went to sea
from Newbury,port 20th inst , and returned same day.
ow lug to bead winds and bad weather.
Schr Mary di Francis, Boyle, sailed from Richmond 21st
,net. for City Point. to load (or this port..
iichr Potomac, Eldridge, sailed from Alexandria 21a
,net for this port • .
AND
FALL RIVER LINE.
On and after MONDAY, Oct. 19, 1868,
A 1.2! the Stentnerd via Newport and eall River
Lloarou, will (cave
Com ecting at Newport with Old Colony Railroad, ar ,
riving in Bodo ou at 6 d. M tile.] to connect with all
'indite for the Noah and Baer. Paeacnaere can remain
tin the t.oat, Breaufnet - , to 7 A. 111 (Me le on the European
take Oa 7.45 A. M. Train, arriving in Ruston at
MIA A. Cl.
kV' * Freight train ported as low Rt 3 by any other Regular
Moe (imp 0.. 1 ors, and doltvc dln lioston.by Aca
cia! Frcight ‘‘hich leaves r.ewport at 6 A. M., ar
ching at noston 9.16 A. M.
s or tif=p OPPOSITION
TO lIIE
COMBINED RULROAD dc RIVER
MONOPOLY,
CHANGE OF HOURS,
Steamer JOHN AY LV LdThil will make daily excnr•
elope to Wilmington (Sundays excepted), touching at
(:heeler find Mamie Honk. Leaving Arch Street what'
at 9 45 and 8110 p. .
Returning. leave Wilmington. at 7a. and 13.30 P. AL.
Freigut taken ue low ao ony other Line.
L. W. BURNS,
Captain
A ND/MAN' Jo iiNsoN
tlo G ie E d N O TL, l3 l(iii PAi t;oh rE risi N at T lon SP ,Lcel itlaf era.. D
,BuT, j
LerighigH: also made to order otn
,--, ~ 4 . • gir-GENT,I3 FURNISHINO r GOODS.
e
w d hi velvet
o lp f t m lo in n , , m ver l y t l e or m , lio3 K. Alle Q tT e l i
. ' ' '74'l"
street, everyet decornerßa'
----
for-ladles and ganla--at- toR
THE m SE va GiNt-
GRs
BAz „ R.nol4tf OPEN IN_ E ___ _
MEBSINA ORMLIES.—FINE FITIII7—ANDIDSLOOD
/Ts order. tandem and for sale by JOB . B. i3USnusit
CO.. 109 South Delaware awlawa
' : I. ~...,. ~':
M. Dumas has shrewdly c.alculated to be a
Vt a nf the day in France—a want to which
he s pandered to the full extent.
, The great ornament of the October number
of the Fortniehtly Review is the exquisite
poem b y _ Mr. Morris called "The Two Sides
of the River."
coal Statement.
The following is the LACIOUXIT, 01 coal transported over
the , Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, daring the
week ending Thursday, Oct. 22, 1848:
...... .............. 80,8T1 08
Tema.Cvrt.
From St. Clair ~
Port Carbon. —* ::
.. Pottsville" •• " ..... • • ...... 9,076 11
3,929 03
" Schuylkill Haven
,::.
nr A o u arrion bu c ru blinn . rto .. gn . au .......... a .. u .... .. ....... ...................... 81,152 05
12 3 :2 °1 99 9 02 10
d. Ph............ 5,39105
Total Anthracite Coal for week 96,209 10
Bituminous Coal from Harrisburg and
Dauphin for week;,..,... 6,875 06
Total for week paying freight
Coal fur the Company's use...
Total of all kinds for week
Previously this year...........
T0ta1.............
To some time last year.
1101711MIENTS 'OF OCEAN STEAMLEBA•
TO ARRIVE.
salve 1310311 YOU DAVI
Bellona .London.. New York. . Oct. 3
Arago - .....Southampton..New Y0rk......-- .Oct... 5
Moravian. . . .... .....Liverpool-Quebec Net 8
Caledonia.--•
....,.01segow-New York. —. .... 4 -Oct 9
City of Cork Liverpool-NYcirkvia Halifax... Oct 10
Bangs- ..... -.Southampton..New York (Oct 13
Palmyra ............Liverpool-New York via 8....0ct. 13
Nebraska . . ..... Liverpool. New York. Oct. 13
City of •Boidon. ....Liverpool-New York.... ..... ...Oct. 14
Pennsylvania Liverpool-New York ....... .. Oct. . 14
Peruvian. LiVerPOOL.Quebee......... ...... Oct. lb
TO DEPART. -
Virginia. New York.. Liverpool. .......Oct. 25
Russia. —........New Y0rk..Liverp001......... ...Oct. 28
Allemannia New York-Hamburg Oct. 28
C010rad0............New York..LiverPool. • • •- Oct. 29
C01umbia...........N0w York..liavana Oct. 29
Tr/P011..............N0w York.. Liverpool Oct. 29
Bbein New Y0rk..8remen..............0ct 29
Caledonia New York -Glasgow-- .. . . .oct. 31
City of Boston..... New York..LiverpBantrQu • eitol.Oct 31
Nebraska New. York.. Liverpool......• ...Nov. 4
China . -..... ...... New York.. Liverpool • Nov. 4
Pa1myra..........-New York..LiverpooL. ... Nov. 5
Eagle... ...........New York-Havana.... Nov. 5
ralrnyri...
_. ..... ..New York.. Liverpoo l. ......... Nov. 5
Pennsylvania— ...ew York.. Liverpool ..... ..i...Nov. 7
Bntannia New Ifork..Glaegow Nov. 7
Stars and Bttipec. Ildlad's..llavann. ..... ..... -Nov. 10
Cuba.... ' New Y ork..Ldverpool Nev. 11
EDMUNWinLir E" •
OEO L. BUZBY. Zdo.-ator Coxm=cr.
SAMUEL E. STOKES,
mimrnrrmrr"'"lm
POET OF PHILADELPHIA.-Ocrronza 24.
eon Burn. 8 411 BON fists. 5 191 MEM WAWA% 8 44
&RIVED YESTERDAY.
Steamer SF Phelpe. Brown. 24 hours from New York.
with mdee to W M. Baird & Co.
Steamer Sarah Jones , 24 hours from New York, with
mdee to W 51 Baird & Co.
Steamer E C Biddle. McCue. 24 hours from New York.
with mese to W P Clyde & Co.
ling Mary E Thompson, Rose, B days from Boston. in
ballast to .1 E Barley & co.
Brig Mary C Haskell. Haskell. from Salem.
Behr Southerner. Campbell, b days from Onancolk. Va.
with lumber to Moore. Wheatley B Catingham.
Bchr clayton & Lowber, Jaelutom I day from Smyrna,
DeL with grain to Jas Liles/ley B Co.
Behr Id Grilling Griffin& from Madden, with stone.
Behr Jour Fender. Hudson. Boston.
Bcbr W Allem. Grant, Boston.
Behr Telegraph, Roark. Rappahannock_
Tug Thos Jefferson, Allen. from Baltimore. with a tow
of barges to W P Clyde B Co.
CLRA RCM YESTERDAY.
Bteamer Tonawanda, Jennings. Savannah. Philadelphia
and Southern Mall SS Co.
Steamer Claymont, Platt, Norfolk, W BM= B Son.
Steamer W Whilden. Biggana, Baltimore. A Groves, Jr.
Steamer Cheater. Jones. Sew York, W P Clyde & Co.
Bark Daring. Libby, Portland. L Audenwed & Co.
Brig Mary Er Thompson, Rose, Boston, J E Barley B Co.
.Bng N !Mowers, Frenen. Borten, Scott Walter B CO.
Brig Id C Haekell, HatkeLl, Boston, Caldwoll.Gordon&Co.
Behr Jaa Ponker. Hudson, Georgetown, fiords, Helier &
Nutting.
Behr M. Griffin& -Griffins. Hartford, Westmoreland Coal
Company •
Behr B B M D Scull, Scull, Boston. Scott , Walter & Co.
Behr A Jones, Jones. Waabington, do
dem Wm H Tiera,Moffm an. Char teeton, do
Behr Jessie Bart, Pearson, Easton. L Audenried B Co.
Tog
Clyd Thor e
eff o
Jerson. Alien. Baltimore , with bargee. - W
P & C
Se" Bark (not ecbx) Adelaide Norrix, cleared oa Th
•day for Hey West.
Cornseperulenee of the Philadelphia Evening
READING: OM W. MB.
The following boats from the Union Canal passed into
the Schylkill Canal, bound to Philadelphia. laden and
consigned as follows:
Major Anderson. flour to captain ; • Grapeshot. lumber to
13 W Boyd ; 0 T Waters. de to 11 BLillinford ; General
Weigle. do to A L A snmea d ; Lime Boat. limestone to P
Brown; Thoa Q Wearies. lumber to Evans di Co; John
Blonesker. di to Patterson & Lippincott. F.
CAPE ISLAND. NJ. Oct 23.
The bark St Jage. Capt Lund. from Portland for Phila.
a.bore on Townrend'e Inlet Bar and will pro
bably be a total lora £ , HUB. B. lIUGEIES.
SfIUTH SEAVILLE Oct?.
Bark SE Jago. Loud. from Portland.Sle.for Philadelphia,
in ballast, came ashore on Townsend Inlet Bar the night
of the 21st Crew saved. Vessel will prove a total loss
Arsistance was rendered by the underwriters' agents
Captain t homas Townsend and Capt. Swain T Godfrey
Wind NW
lowa, am. F. SIDNEY TOWNSEND.
WitIGHTSVELLE, PL. Oct. n. I£6B.
The following canal boats paned this office ti-day. out
ward bound. viz:
Thais Red. with lumber to Craig & Blanchard; Ni It
/licks. do to Patterson & Lippincott; Harm & Duncan.do
to captain. Gloucester, NJ ; tiarvey & Showers, do to Bax
ter. irming &t.lovd.
M....bit/BANDA
Ship Orion. Hall. cleared at San Francisco it2d instant
for this port, with 40,1tta/ sacks wheat.
chip Hermon, Mores. from Baltimore. at Acapulco 9th
mat 10a days from the Capee.
Ship Harriet Erving. Salter, from Boston, at Melbourne
31st Auguet.
Ship ov Langdon, Davie. at Rio Janeiro 25th ult. from
Ca. difT for Callao. had been hove down and caulked; was
reloading cargo.
chip Pocahontas.Devew.frorn Boston for San Francisco,
was hove ,4 own at Rio Janeiro libth ult, and was being
newly caulked and eoppei ed ; would probably remain
there two or three mom ha.
. . . -
Steamer 'rhos F Cahill, fklaith,he nee at Geo, getown,DC,
.natant.
Mealier Kensington. Babson, sailed from New Orleane
21st inst. for .Boston.
steamer Fah K«e, Steele, 33, days from Bermuda, at
New lark yesterday.
Steamer Columbia (Br),Carnagban,cleared at New York
yesterday for Glasgow.
StearnerSacrameuto, Parser, sailed from San Francisco
Mil in t. for Panama.
Balk Caro,Beals, hence at Gibraltar, let instant, and
cleared for Genoa.
balk Lelia. Dolby. at Kingston. Ja. a 3 th ult from St
bou.aa. and mailed 29th for Old Harbor and Dag port.
Brig bpotteman. Morton. cleared at Boston 2d instant
or this port.
brig ete/la Lodge. Allen. cleared at Windsor. NS. 9th
.st. tor this Dort.
Brim. chilutu, Strum. called from Kingston. Ja. let inst.
or than P,St
- - - .
Behr Jainta B Moore. Nickerson, cleared at Boeton 22d
• t for Mi. oort.
Bahr aen Dole, naley, sailed from Fall River Mat Mat.
or thin wort.
EXCIIMMONS.
BOSTON, NEWPORT
Si-'ECIAL NOTICE.
CHANGE OF SOUR.
Pier 28, North River, Daily,
Bundaye.xcepted.
At 4 P
•
E. LITTLEFIELD, Agent, 72 Broadway.
ti,v27-6m
' s WOW
.1)1t V.kl7l.i,rG
103.(64 16
2,774 17
~.. 105,859 13
-.2,888,696 12.
2,094,556 05
3,034,536 15
Wll. B. WARNE & CO.,
Wholesale Dealers in
WATCHES AND JEWELRY.
I. Z. corner Seventh and Chestnut r
Itr
And late of No. South Third street. til)2
ADOLPH WOYTT,
No. 328 Walnut Street,
111:POZTEIt, OP
REM AND HOME ELMS; CLARETS CHAMPUNES,
Philadelehla Agent for BINENGER &CO.'S celebrated
GOLD MEL AL PORT. SHERRY AND M&DFJRA OLD
COGNAC, RYE, LOIVDOb, DOCK GlN..bc.
oc6 lm§
NEW
BUCKWHEAT FLOUR
First of the Season.
ALBERT C. ROBERTS,
realer In Fine Groceries,
Corner Eleventh and Vine Streets,
FAIRTHORNE & CO..
Dealers in Teas and ';;tfeee,
No• 1036 MARKET STREET,
at
A ra ll o s=granteed pure, of the beat quality, and mold
e,.
myl-th a to ttm
t'OR LUNCIJ—DEVILED HAIL TONGUE, AND
I. Lobster, Potted Beet, Tongue, Anchovy Paste and
Lobster. at COLTSTY'S East End Grocery, No. 118 South
Second street.
NEW GREEN GINGER , PRIME MID GOOD ORDER
at CoUSTYI3 Eaet End Grocery, No. 118 Soutn Sec.
and etreet
NEW MESS SHAD, TONGUES AND SOUNDS Di
kitte, put up exprerely for family use, in store and for
rale at cobsTre Eaet End Grocery, No. 118 South Be
cond etreet
WCLARET. --200 CASES OF SUPEMOR TABLE
ret, warranted to give sahataction. For sale by
M. F. BPILLIN, N. W. corner Arch and Eighth streets.
SALAD 014-100 BASKETS OF LATOUR'S SALAD
Oil of the latest Lot .ortation. For sale by M. F.
I k '9 .9. 9 9 . 9 . • : •9 9 .' •
PAPER SHELL ALMONDS—NEW CROP PRINCESS
A. Paper Shed Almonds—Finset Dehesia Double Crown
Ratable, New Pecan Nute, Walnuts and Filberts, at
COUSTY'S Past End Grocery Store, No. U 8 South
Second 'treat.
NEW PREBERYhD GINGER IN SYRUP AND DRY,
of the celebrated Chyloam Brand, for szde at
COUBTY43 East End Grocery, No. 118 Booth Second
street.
HDIF AMIS. DRIED BEEF AND TONGUES. JOHN
Steward's justly celebrated Hams and Dried Beef,
and Beef Tornmes ; also the test brands of , •Casbmatl
Hamm. For sale by M. F. SPILLIN, N. W. corner Arcb
6aAFlehth streets.
EDWIN HALL &CO., 2 8 SOUTH SECOND STREET.
invite attention to their new and fashionable stock of
Dry Goode.
Fancy Silks,
Black Silks.
FLO COW .
S Goods..
Y Drees Goods.
Shaw le,
CHAMBERS,_ 810 ARCH STREET,
- -
elel • HAS JUST OPENED
44010 YARDS
HAMBURG FLOUNCING,
Bought at a discount Ni 80 per cent
WHITP
A complete lire under regular pricee.
French Muslin, 2 garde wide. 50 cents.
Hemstitched Hdkfe.
ranging m price from %l cents to *2 SO.
Itr. AL I ACP: GAODS.
Special attention in lnv'ted to recent noveltiee in
l'011NTP: HLKI , I6. SETTS. 1.X.L.t..e1h8, (JOIFFIEURS,,tm
111 k. Thread Guipure snd Valencienne.
Laree at remarkably low p ires.
HORSEMANSHIP—AT THE PHILADELPHIA
RIDING SCHOOL. Fourth street, above Vine.
will be found every facility for acquiring a
knowledge of this healthful and elegant accomplishment.
The - School' is "pleasantly ventilated and , warmed, the
horses cafe and welLtrained.
An Aft-rncon Class for Young Ladies.
Saddle Horses trained in the,beat manner.
Saddle Horses. BOTI3eO and Vehicles to hire.
adeo, carriages to Dspota, Parties.Weddmos,Shopping,
&o. THMMAS CIiAtGE & SUN.
ritoibmwLis.,
TIEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HIGHWA.YB,
JJ OFFICE--NO. 104 SOUTH FIFTH BT.,
PHILADELPHIA. October 22. 1868.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
Sealed Proposals will be received at the.Oince
of the Chief Com Missioner of Highways until 12
o'clock. M., on MONDAY; 26th Inst., for the
construction of thefollowing:
Three-feet Sewers, viz.: on Seventh street from
Market street to Arch street, Marks street from
Eleventh street to 63 feet east of Twelfth street,
Sixth street from Green street to Coates street,
Sartain street from Girard avenue to Poplar
street, Woodstock street from Berke street to
Norris street,- Montgomery street from Broad
street to Twentieth street.
Two feet six inch Sewers, viz. on Eleventh
street, frops 95 feet north of Jefferson, to 30 feet
north of Reeves street, from Twentieth to
Twenty-first street.
Thirteenth street, from 253 feet north of Jef
ferson, to 260 feet norm of Oxford street.
Moyer and Dauphin streets, between Norris
street and Belgrade street. With such iron and
stone inlets and man holes as may be directed
by the Chief Engineer and Surveyor. The
underitanding to be that the Sewers herein
advertised are to be completed on or before the 31st
day of Dec., 1868. And the Contractor shall take
bills prepared against the property fronting on
said sewer to the amount of one dollar and twen
ty-five cents for each lineal foot of front on each
side of the street as so much cash paid ; the bal
ance, as limited by Ordinance, to be paid by the
city; and the Contractor will be required to keep
the street and sewer in good order for three
years after the sewer is finished.
When the street is occupied by a City Passen
ger Railroad track, the Sewer shall be constructed
along side of said track in such manner as not to
obstruct or interfere with the safe passage of the
cars thereon; and no claim for remuneration shall
be paid the Contractor by the company using
said track, as specified in Act of Assembly ap
proved May Bth, 1866.
All Bidders are invited to be present at the time
and place of opening the said Proposals. Each
proposal will be accompanied by a certificate that
a Bond has been filed in the Law Department as
directed by Ordinance of May 25th, 1860. If the
Lowest Bidder shall not execute a contract within
five days after the work is awarded, he will be
deemeil as declining, and will be held liable on
his, bond for the difference between his bid and
the next highest bid. Specifications may be had
at the Department of Surveys, which will be
strictly adhered to.
MAHLON H. DICKINSON,
ne23-3t Chief Commissioner of Highways.
.116111//&11.11.111. 410.
DIAMOND
LADOMUS CioTh
DIAMOND DEALERS & JEWELERS.
WATCHES, JEWELRY .5, SILVER IVIRIL
WATCHES and JEWELRY REPAIRED.
8 02 Chestnut St., Phila.
Watches of the Finest Makers.
Diamond and Other Jewelry.
Of the latest style..
Solid Silver and Plated Ware,
Etc., Etc.
SMALL STUDS FOB EYELET HOLES.
A large wortment Jae received. with a variety ci
WINES. miquomus, &cp.
GJEWCIEIZIES, zaquous, MO.
DRY GOODS, &c.
Velvet?.
Cloth?,
Ladies' Cloaks and Suits.
Ladles' Dre sea and Comks made to order
POCKET- BOa►K s.
Pocket Books,
PortemonnieS,
Cigar Cases,
Portfolios,
Dressing Cases,
Bankers' Cases.
ri
a , 0
„i"
•Ir
Lad & dents'
Salamis and
Travelling Bags,
IA a l styles.
Rosewood
Mahogany
Writing
Desks.
INSTB.IICrTION.
ELPHIA, SATURDAY, 0bT011324.188.
a FOR SALE. a
Two new, first-elites itiale,rn Haun t
271 feet front, with tido-yards and all the latest improver
mente.
Noe. 1724 and 1726 Master Street.
85000 may remain on Mortgage. Balance CABS.
APPLY TO
• ROBERT CODE, 1637 Rivard Avenue.
oe7 tit, •
CAPITALISTS . WISHING TO LNVEST .IN FIRST.
clan mortgagee on improved city property can be
suited by calling on M. 41: idISHEY. 411 Walnut street.'
11)..81RABI E BUILDING . LOTS." NORTH BROAD.
J -g North Thirteenth, South Sixteenth and West Phila.
Iphia, for eale or exchange fOr improved city property.
• •or.ll.if' BIISKEY. 411 Walnut.
FOR eALP. ON EASY TRUSS: THE YALU&
Lit ble property 321 and g 27 rgortti Fourth street ; • 49 by
180 feet, extending to Dillwyn street; two fronts;
arched cellar 14 feet deep. Building and location Yet 7
eligible for manufacturing purposes. Apply to
D. T. PRATT.
0c17,e,mw,0b5 108 Eouth Fourth street.
r 51 7 SOUNTIU—DANDBON7E HOUSE AND
E. Stable -Spendd Lot, 91 by 19O—Salo or tient.
Bargain. W. J. P. Wti/TE. 401 N. Ninth. 0c23 tit•
TO CAPITALISTS : FOR SALE, A VALUABLE
piece of Real Estate, conflating of thirty Wardne
" half acres of ground, In the Twenty-151:th of
the city of Philadelphia. The following streets, when
opened, will pay/ through, Nineteenth,' Twentieth,
7 seenty•firet, Twenty•eecond. Moore, Mifflin and McKean
erects, on which streets there will be a frontage of about
ten tboneand feet. The above property will be cold at
public sale, at the Philadelphia Mebane% by M.
THOMAS & BONE on TueedaY. October 27, 1131%.
N. B.—Plane and full Particulars may De had of M.
THOMAS & SONS, Anctioneere, Noe. 139 and 141 South
Fourth etreet.. oe2l-6t
rFUR BALE—THE WELL-BUILT AND DEAUTf.
fully located brown.stone reeidence, with Immedl
ate poesesaion, N. W. corner Secoad and Penn ete
Camden. N. J. Terms accommodating. Apply on preml.
see or at lid South Sixth street, Phila. 0c31.41.
WEST PHILADELPHIA.—FOB SALE A
' handsome double pointed atone Residence. with
stone stable and carriage house k and lot 141 feet front
by E 430 fret deep. Monte on Spruce street. west of Forty.
second etreet. Line every convonlence,and In excellent
order. J. M. Glild3lET it SONS, 508 Walnut street.
rFOR SALE.—TIIE HANDSOME TEIREEZTORY
brick retidences. Just Sobbed, with threeatory dou
ble back buildings. extra conveniences, and 6 feet
wide side yard. Noe. 1723, 1725, and 1727 North Eighth
street, and Nos. 1724 and 1726 Franklin street. Teams ac
commodating. J. M. GUMMEY & SONS,
ice Walnut street.
FOIL SALE—THE DESIRABLE COUNTRY
Seat. with 10 Acres of Ground. on School 1101120
Lane. fifth house from statiroad Station; excellent
location for Hotel or Driving Park; adjoining some of the
finest residences in Germantown; one-half or more can
remain on mortgage. Apply to 'COPPUCK .1; JORDAN.
433 Walnut street.
POR SALE—A HANDSOME BROWN STONE
and Brick Residence, now finishing, situate on north
side of West Dc Lancey Place. fourth hones east of
Twenty-first street. Liss parlor, library, dining•room,
kitchen six chambers, nurnery, two bathrooms and store
room. Lot 22 feet front by_os feet deep to a street. J. H.
OUMMEY dt bON 8, 508 Walnut street. ocl7
jrGERMANTOWN—FOR SALE. A MODERN
etone cottage with large lot of ground. stable and
carriage-house, situate on the northeasterly corner
of Linden and Knox etreets. Use every city convenience
and bin excellent order. J. M. GUMMe Y a SONS. &98
Walnut etreet.
inCHESTNUT HILL—FOR SALE.—AN EL&
gam Country Seat containing 11 acres of land, with
Double Stone Reddence, in, called with every con-
venience, Stable and Carriage House, within half a mile
from the railroad station. Grounds handsomely Improved
with carriage drives, walks, choice shrubbery, shade
trees. &c. J. M. GUMMEY & SONS, 608 Walnut street
JrWEST PHILADELPHIA—FOP. BALE—TEM
b andsome modern stone residence, built in the best
manner. Wilh every convenience, and lot 50feet front
by 175 feet deep, situate No =7 nouth Forty-second street—
one of the most devil's We lotions in West Philadelphia.
.J. M. GIIMMEY ca SONS. 508 Walnut street.
EG ERMANTOWN.—FOR SALE—TWO POINTED
stone Cottages, with every city 'convenience. just
ftni,hed. within 5 minutee walk of thumb lane eta,-
tion- $5.000 each. J. M. GUMME Y & SONS.
508 Walnut street.
IaFOR GALE--AN ELEGANT COUNTRY-SEAT,
with over seven acres of land attaehed, late the re.
eidence of Davie Peareon, Eeq., deceased situate on
Broad etreet and the Old York road. with 800 feet front
on each, below Fieher'a lane, Mansion 44 by 40 feet,
with back buildings, built and finished throughout in a
superior manner with over city convenience, and in
perfect order. Largo stable and carriage -house, green
house. &c., and grounds beautifully improved with
choice ehrubbery, and wethehaded. Photographic views
may be setn at the oflice of J. M. GUMMEY SONS,
508 Walnut etreet
IaFOR BALE—THE H A NDSOME THREE-STORY
• Brick Dwelling with three-story back buildings. No.
1303 North broad etreet, built in the best manner,
with all the modern improvement& roeeesaion with
deed. Lot BM by luu feet deep. Apply to COPPLA.M.
JORDAN. 433 Walnut etreeL
FOR RENT.
Preinises 809 Chestnut Street,
FOR S FORE OR OFFICE.
Alpo, Of and large Rooms, en Cae for a Commercia
College. AWAY at
BANK OF THE REPUBLIC.
e24tl
Tom) TRENT.
SECOND-STORY FRONT ROOM
op
NEW BULLETIN BUILDING,
607 Chestnut Street.
25 feet front, 70 feet deep, heated by steam, handsomely
painted, aro nag all the modern improvements.
Apply in Publication Office of EVENDiti BULLETIN
TO RENT.
First Floor Back of Bulletin Building,
607 CHESTRIIT STREET.
ocbtf
TO REN r.
Third Floor hack of Bulletin Building,
607 CHESTNUT STREET.
ocbtf
r, 70 LET—A THREE-STORY HOUSE, NO. 2320
Green street, with ride yard ; in good order, and lm•
mediate poesessi9n.
FOR REST.—THE MODERN RESIDENCE
with 5 feet *lds side yard, situate No. 102 N. Nine
teenth street, above Arch. Has all the modern conve
niences. and is in perfect order. J. AL GUMMEY &
SONs, 608 Wain , t street.
EFOR RENT —THE HANDSOME STORE AN
Dwelling, no , thwest corner of Pine and Eighteenth
"
streets. Dwelling contains 12 good chambers with
every convenience; store has been tong established in the
grocery business. J. M. GUMMEY & SONS. 508 Walnut
street.
NO 1N SOUTH NINETEENTH STREET—TO
Let—Three-story double back buildings; all modern
conveniences, large yard. ocls-tf¢
inTO LET.—STORE AND BASEMENT, 62.3
Chestnut street. Inquire next door 9bove.
oel3-tfe VAN DEUSEN, BOEUMEIt & CO.
rFOR RENT, FURNTEIHED—TiIic THRER-STORY
Brick Yesidence,with attics and back buildings,
situate No. 1613 Chestnut street. J. DL GlifsDIRY
& BONS. 608 Walnut a ti cot.
Eitaple Goode, ,tc.
BOND'S BOSTON BIBUUIT.—BOND'S BOSTON BUT
ter and Milk Biscuit, landing from steamer Norman,
and for sale by JOB. B. BUBBLER ,t; CO.. Agents for Bond,
Leg South Delaware avenue.
FOR BALE INVOICE OF HAMBURG- RAGS
escorted linen and cotton.
PETER WRIGHT it SONS.
mvt •115 Walnnt ergot
CROSS CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
PLAISTED & MoCOLLIN
Ne. 3 1 33 CHESTNUT Street, West Philadelphia,
Sole Retail Agents for Coro Brothers & Co.'s celebrated
Cross (,reek Lehigh Coal, from the Huck Mountain Vein.
This Coal is particularly adapted for making Steam for
Sugar and Malt Houses, Breweries, &c. It le also unaur•
passed aa a Family CoaL Orders left at the office of the
Miners, No. 341 WALNUT Street (let floor), will receive
our I rompt attention. Liberal arrangement. made with
manufacturers using a regular .uantitY. 1416 tf
S. MASON NINES. JOHN . EIREAUP.
THE tiNbt RBIGNED INVITE ATTENTION To
1 t'eir Mock of
aOl
Spring Mountain. Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal,
which, with the preparation given by us, we think can
not be excelled by any other Coal.
Office, Franklin Institute Building. No. 15 S. Seventh
street. HINES az tillEA
jalOtf Arch street wharf, Schuylkill.
RI ÜBEN HAAS. A. C. FETTER.
rj aAS t FETTER. COAL DEALERS
.11 W. COIL. NINTH AND JEFe'ERBON STS
Keep on hand a constant eupply of LEHIGH and
SCHUYLKILL COALS, from the bt et 'dines, for Family.
Factory and -team Purpoeee. • octOtuo2s.
Ladies'
and C3enta
.presatnit
Caeca.
EAGLE VEIN AND LEHIGH COAX t S. Al' RED U. , Et)
prices, No. 11W.5 Market vtreet. A lioorxl rtiduction
made to retallaro. ee23.3m4 WALTER LEE.
DODGERS' AND WiSTENHOLIPS POCKET
KNIV rS. PEARL and STAG DANDIES, of beau
tiful finish. RODGERS* and WADE & BUT. 'DER'S,
and the CELEbRATI..D LECOCL TREI RAZOR.
BURSON'S .1 1 `. ,CANES of the finest quality. Razor....
-Knives, Scistorwand Table Cutlerk, Ground and Polished.
EAR INSTRUMENTS of the fucut apornved construction
to vadat the heating, at I'. MADEIRA'S, %Ai tier and Sur
gical Inetrumant Maker. 115 Tenth btr , et, uelow Ch
nut.
10$ 1AJ1196,.
MEZ!aU33
GOAL AND WOOD.
IFIARDWAIitibt
lIJEAI. INMATE SALES.
REAL ESTATE.--THOMAS & BONS* BALE.—
Valuable Distillery, Steam Engine, Boiler, Grain
Elevator Ferclenting .Tubes. dtc., Noe. 408 and 410
North.hrollt
Elevator, Fe
between' Callowhill and arsamta
streets, 40feet. fron —4lnTuesday,'october 27th. 1888 at
12 o'clock. noon. will be sold at publ ic Balm at the Dulls.
delphia Exchange, all those, 2 contiguous lots of ground.
o d the lmprovemente thereon erected. sitnate on the
west side of Front street between Callowhill and 11arga.
retie streetr e Nos. 408 and 410; containing together in [tont
on F, but street 40 feet, and extebding in depth on the
north lire 104 feet three inches, and on the south lino 74
feet 9 inches The improvemen ts are a three.ctory brick
building. frame shedding. &c. Together with all the ma.
chit:unyoke.. appertaining to a grain distillery. compriaing
40.bonepower boiler. 25 horse power engine, large maeh
Mb, 19 feet over. 0 fermenting tubs, 3 large tubs, hot and
cold water and worm tube, errain elevator gristmill gear
lug. and everything complete, together with. a 'neyer•fail
biz spring well, completely arranged. &c.
The above described property could be converted into
any mannfacturing purpoee.
rune- 83,800 may remain on mortgage.
Mr' Clear of ell Incumbrance.
_ . . .
Heys at B. W. corner Second and C8110;711111 atreeta.
May be examined soy day previous to race.
M. THOMAS as BONS. Auctioneers,
ec10.17,24 . , 139 and 141 South fourth street.
REAL ESTATE.—THOMAS dc SONS'
"r —Very valuable Business Stand. Brick Livers'
Stable and Dwelling, Nos. 1026, 1028 and 1030 Coates
street, west of Tenth street 80 feet front, 178 fact deep to
Mellon street; two fronts. Belonging to bane
1). Casrelberrv. On Tuesday, • October 27th,
1B&, at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale,
at the Philadelphia 'Exchange: All that largo and valu
able lot of ground,and the improvement,. thereon erected.
situate on the south side of Coates street, west If Tenth
street- containing in front on Coats street 80 feet, and
extending in depth of that width 106 feet 5 finches; then
narrowing tote feet, and extending still further to depth
of that width 72 feet 4.14, inches to Mehen street; the en
tire depth being, by survey, 178 feet 9,.f. inches, and by
deed 176 feet. '1 he improvements are a genteel twn-etety
brick dwelling, with two back buildings; has gas, bath,
hot and cold water, range, furnace, d,c. No. 1026 Co atea
street; and a large tivostore brick stable, Nos. 1028 and
1030 Coates street, has stalls for 04 horses; carriage room,
hay loft, rte.
Term s-1611.600 may remain on mortgage.
10?" Slay ne examined any day nrevious to sale.
M. TRUMAS & SONS. Auctioneers,
0010.17 24 las and 141 South Fourth street.
rORPHANS' COURT SALE.—ESTATE OF
i Samuel W. Roop. deceased.—Thomas at Sone. Ane
w tioneers. Twastory stone Dwelling, Queen street.
Germantown. Pursuant to an order of the orphans'
Court for the city and county of Philadelphia, will be
sold at public sale. on Tuesday, October 27, 1868, at 12
o'clock, noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the follow
ing described property.late of Samuel W. Root:, deceased,
viz : ell that lot of ground. with the twoetory'stone mea
image thereon erected, situate on the eouthea4 side of
Queen street (formerly called Bowman's lane) at the dis
tance of 490 feet 134' inches northeastward from the north.
ctusterly side of Wayne avenue, Germantown, Twenty.
second Ward, city of Philadelphia; containing in front
on Queen etreetBl feet. and extending in depth south.
eastward of that width on the northeast wardly line
thereof 238 feet ID Inches, and on the southwesterly line
thereof 239 feet 34, of an Inch; bounded northeast.
wardly b. , other ground of Lucy P. Slocumb, of which
tbis was art;p eoutheastwardly by ground•formetiy of
Samuel Batton; sonthwestwardly by other ground for
merly of said Lucy I'. Slocumb, now of Wilson Frau:And
northweetwardly by Queen street aforesatd.
By the Court. JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk 0. C.
M. THOMAS di SUNS, Auctioneers.
oc3-10,24 . 189 and 191 South Fourth street.
EREAL ESTATE.—THOMAS BONS' RALE,—
Handsome Modem Residence and Largo Lot, north
corner of Walnut lane and Green street, - 83 foot
fiont, MO feet deep. Oermantown.—On Tuesday. October
27th, 1868, at 12 o'clock. noon. will be sold at public oak.,
at the Philadelphia Exchange, all that handsome mod
em 236. story stone rough-cast mermage and lot of ground,
sittu to on tt e north corner of Walnut lane and Green
en eet Germantown; the lot containing in front on Wal
nut lano t 33 feet 4 inches, and on Green, area 200 feet 10
inches, atd the other line 200 feet, being 78 feet in the
rear. The house is well built, and has all the modern
conveniences; parlor. dining room, sitting room and two
kitchens on the first floor; 4 chambers and bath room on
the second floor, and 4 above; gas introduced. hot and
cold water, water closet, furnace, cooking range, numer
one clo•ets, Ac. The grounds are beautifully laid out and
planted with shade trees and shrubbery: alma vegetable
garden_ It is
treee. urrounded with an iron fence, green hedge
and beautiful
Or Clear of all incumbrance.
Terme— &Coco may remain on mortgage:
Immediate posseesion. May be examined any day pre.
vioue to sale.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
Wand 141 South Fourth street
rREAL ESTATE. THOMAS d; SONS' BALE--
Handsome Modem Three-story Brick Residence,
No. 836 South Thirteenth street.belo w Spruce street.
—On Tuesday, October 27th, 1868 , at 12 o'clock. noon. will
be solitat public sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, all
that handsome modem three.atory brick meantime, with
double three story back building and lot of ground,sitgate
on the west aide of Thirteenth abreet.below Spruce street,
No. 836; containing in front on Thirteenth atreet 20 feet 9
inches, and extending in depth 150 feet to a 20 feet street,
which is well calculated for a stable. 3he hone foie all
the modem conveniences, and in perfect order; occupied
by the owner; has gas. bath, hot and cold water, water
closet, furnace. cooking range; main building 40 feet deep;
back banding. 38 feet.
I Clear of all incambrance.
1 erms-55,500 may remain on mortgage.
May be examined any day previous to sale between the
hours of 10 and 1 o'clock.
M. THOMAS dr SONS, Auctioneers.
188 and 141 South Fourth St.
- -
IaEXECUTORS' SALE—ESTATE OF JOS. B.
bs itchell, Esq.,dee'd.—Thomas ASons.Auctioneere
" Handsome Modern Residence., o. 76 Tulpebocken et.
;Borth corner of Green street, Germantown. 50 feet front,
390 feet deep, three fronts, On Tuesday. October 27.1863,
at 12 o'clock, noon. wilt be eold at public sale, at the
Philadelphia Exchange, all that modern none meesuage
and lot of ground, situate at the corner of Tuipohocken
and Green street:, Germantown: the lot containing in
front on Tulpehocken street 60 feet, and in depth along
Green street 390 feet to Washington lone —three fronts
The house is finished in handsome modern style. and
has all the modern conveniences; has parlor, large
dining rcom, kitchens and wash house on fi rst floor: 3
chambers. sitting.room, lineorroom and bathhouse on
second floor; 3 good chamber: on third floor, with cheer.
vatory above ; good dry cellar. gas, bath, hot and cold
water. watercloset. furnace, 2 cooking ranges. dm. The
grounds me beautifully laid out, planted with shade
trees, enrubbou, } ltches - garden. dm.
erme—slo.‘ 00 may remain on mo; tgago.
U' Immediate possession. Keys next door.
M. THOMAS de SONS, Auctioneers.
ocl7 24 139 :nd 141 South Fourth street.
REAL ESTA't E—THOMAS & SOW SALE._
Ilandeome Modern Four-story Brick Residence, No.
" 123 North Twentieth street, above Arch street. —On
Tuesday, October 27th. IfBB. at 12 o'clock, noon, will be
cold at public eats at the rhiladelphla Exchange, all that
handsome modern four-story brick ineseuage, with three.
story back building and lot of ground, situate on the east
side of Twentieth street, north of Ar !h street, No. 123;
containing in front on Twentieth street, 18 feet, and ex
tending in depth 100 feet to an alley, The house is well
finished.with the modern conveniences; has parlor,dining
room and kitchen on the first floor ; has the gas introduced,
bath, hot and cold water. water closet, stationary wash
sten& furnace, cooking range, ke... Immediate posses
sion.
Teime—slo.ol.o may remain on mortgare.
May be examined any day previous to sale.
M. '1 I.IOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
ne.1.7 29 Nos. 119 and 141 South Fourth street.
PUBLIC BALE.—THOMAS & SONS, AUCT'IIS.
r t r, Valuable two story brick factory, S. E. corner Di^lt
• erron as.d Swanson streets. First Ward. On Tues
day. October 27. 1868, at 12 o'clock, noon. 1%111 be cold at
rale. at the Philadelphia Exchange.
All that valuable twe.rtory brick niessuage and lot of
ground situate on the southeast corner of Dickerson
and Swanson streets, First Vi and containing in front on
Dickerson rtreet 100 feet, and extending in dept a along
Swanson street 44 feet, and on the east line about 65
feet. Ihe factory is about s 9 feet by 44 feet: has engine
of 20 horse power, and two large bonen& all in good con
d Mon. (The chemical tanks are reserved 1
Subject to a redeemable ground rent of $OOO a )ear.
M. THOMAS di SONS, Auctioneers.
0c22-24 139 and 141 South Fourth street
REAL EBTAT F.—THOM .8 & SONS' S ILE.
irModern three-story brick Rudd , nc.. No. 742 youth
- Tenth street, below Fitzwater. On Tueadav,Ostober
27, It6B. at 12 o'clock. noon, will be sold at public sale, at
the Philadelphia Exchange. all that modern threeetory
brick mt saw. go, with three story back buildings and lot
of ground, situate on the west side of Tenth street, 110
feet 8 incip-e south of Fitzwater street No 742; contain
ing in front en Tenth et. 18 feet 8 inches, and extending
in depth 112 feet to a 3 feet a ide alloy leading intc another
8 feet wide alley The house bas the modern convenien
ces, gas introduced, bath, hot and cold water, water
closet, furnace, cooking range, dm.
tirlmtnediate possergion Keys at the Auc ion Rooms.
M. THOMAS & SONu, Auctioueors,
ocl7-24 139 and 141 South Fourth street
fREAL ESTATE —THOMAS & SONB' SALE._
. Large and valuable Lot. High at - eet between Main
and Mortowstreets, Germantown. 18t feet front. 170
feet deer. On Ti esday October 27, 181 , , at 12 o'olock,
noon, , A ill be sold at public sate, at the - 1 1tiladelphm. Ex
cbat ge. all that large and valuable lot o' ground, situate
on High street. Germantown, adjo'ning the country
plac, s of A, (I , ,rvill and Mra Long , dreth: containing In
front on High street 181 feet. aL d extending in depth 170
feet. It bas a well graded lawn, covered with stately
m•ple trees; a new iron fence (and ga.e) clove t he entire
front. Subject to a yearly ground rent of itititi 75 MI
TiluMAzi & SONS, Au,.tion.u4,
0c22.24 139 and 141 South Fourth erect
ADMIPISTRATOR'S PERE:1101'011N SALE.—
Eneate of Silas ( in hundro, dec - tused. -Thomas k,
Song, Auctioneers. On Tuesday, November le,
1E4.18, at 15 o'clock. noon, trill be told al public
ease, withLut reserve, at the Philadelphia. Ex•
change, the following described property, viz:
Non 1 end 2.—e.... handsome modern throe-story
brisk (eidetic:et*, with aide ya*d.s Non, 154* tied 1511 Pop
ler otrret, beta* en Fifteenth and Sixteen - th atr. ets, each
25 feet front 167 feet deep to Cambridga etre-t. Two
lronnu No. I: All that handsome modern three qor.v
b.i• k messuage with three-story back buildings and lot
of ground, situate on the north aide of l'opla a-reet, meet
of 1 itteenth street. No. 151.9; the lot containing in front on
Perini street, 75 feet, and extenditg in depth 167 feet 5
inch.-a. niure or lean. to Cambridge street two front , .
The hour° ie iced ohilt, and is finished with ail tea 11:19.1.
n con Yen it nee,. and is in excell,mt repair, lila pari.i,,
dining room, e hoer lied rummer kitchens on the first
tioor • commodious chandler... mar. Ie ye. land*, ,re.; large
yet d. ulanted with Sea ere and shrubbery.
Ne• 2.—A1l thin 11..necomo modern three-story bcie:c mew.
imago. w.fli throe-wore hack buildings and lot ground
adjoinir g the above on the creel, :win,. No. LI I thelot
aming rout on roplseetreet 25 feet, atm lu depth
167 feet 531 inches,
more ..r lees, to ilainheidge etreet. IL
in well built, and hap all the modern con venieace,
trie" Sale absol .te.
der of W. l'l P.PENTI:II, trier. ii•rator
.*:. Tfli).llAS & SONS, A.uctioneers.
139 and 141 South ereet.
UC • 7 2.4 ❑O9
SA La—TOOM AS d: SONS, MX.
tionsers, ye- v Desirable Country Property, 3 acres.
"
dl cc; Ace, in the vintage of Itoyernford, Montgomery
coat ty, Pennsylvania. On Tuesday, November 10th, 181:,,
at 12 (Pt lock. noon, wilt be sold at public sale, at the Pada.
delphoa [lunge, all that large and valuable lot of
ground of 3 acres and , q pelTileS. with the improvements
thereon erected, situate in the village of Ituvarsford.
Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, at the corner of the
Philadelphia and heading tenures d. and the main public
road or street of the village immediately oppu.dto the
del ot. '1 he limp; ovements are a large three story stone
dccolllnp, le bstan i .11y built and in excellent repair; con.
tab • 11l rooms; high ceilings. The grounds a:•t) baud.
1011101 y lafd our,
mad planted with fruit and shlde trees;
and spring • url cistern water, stone barn, 5t0,,,, carriage
icc. house. d stlid:Ler houses, corn crib, 6:c !Argo
grape at bur over 21r1 feet long: over 150 choice i ir.p,; %Wes
in p r i ms bearing ; ;15 dwarf pear trees 30 .typie tr,,ets, be
side. ar rico.. phui , reach and 'cheery trees
goesebet riee,currstits, stra‘. berries, respite, ri, aid .nany
choirs roses and other plants.- 1 ifs p
collated for a private summer residence; boot,
summer boarding nowt , 'or hotel The h , tel at
this place Is oboe , to be closed by the Aty.
'came. the viii go ei hoot hotel and
this lnoperty ie trnveniently located b_ t itvly the ae.
tie iet
aeries- One•thi.tl RA.
M. TIIOM AS 85 SUNS, •,, tieuee:s.,
139 and 141 South 1 , cis
ocl7 24 007
zwra.TE somas.
rADIII".IIBI2IATRIX'S . F.llEsl,FTOiti. t
by order of the °Whine' Court.—petite of
. ton Cress, deceasest.-Thomas & Song. Anctioneereir.
Pursuant to an order of the Orphans' Cond. ter-, tette/tit
- and County of Philadelphia will'be , sold at nubile sale
without reserve. on Tuesday,. November 10th
„.4116% tun
o'clock. noon. at the Philadelphia Exchange, tbaktOlAnV”
in/ delaibtd property, late of Herniae!) dress dettesen‘
secondite on Mara street, Chestnut fint..7twelenr•
Ward, near the Ton gate. and above Graver!
lane. N0.1.-Very Desirable 2344t0ry Stone Residence s
Stable and C'oach.house. I Acre.-ell, 2.31f4n0ry• dou
ble stone residence and lot of ground, sittusta on Chestnut
Hlll, in the late township of Germantown, now in the
wentyeecond 'Ward. city of Philadelphia; beginning at
a stone set for a corner on the westerly side of the Oct
mantown and Perkiomen turnpike road. it being a Min=
of land of Christopher Y eakie and thence by the same
mouth 89 deg 45 min., west 41 6 10th perches t a stone:and
south bU deg 15 min., east 3 perches 13 feet 8 Inches to a
stone in a line of Abraham Heydricks; thence by the
same north 39. deg. 45 Min., east 41 910th perches Co an
ther steno set for a corner on the aforesaid roads thence
y the same north 50 des 15 rain , *cat 8 perches 13 feet 6
inches to the place of beginning: containing( gismo! l and.
2 he house is 40 feet front, w ith back building` and in good
order;
saloonnd cistern und chambe r s as 5 rooms on first
floor; parlor and 8 furnace. cooking.
ranee, &c.; ice-bouse, barn and stabling, fruit trees. dm.
I/nr - Clear of all incumbrance. Immediate poeseestorn
Noel and 8-Handsome Dautne Frame Dwelling House
and Lot. All that frame messuage and lot of ground, sit
nate on the southwest side of . Germantown avenue.
Chestnut Hill, Twenty-second Ward. Beginning at s
stake on the southwest side of Germantown avenue
aforesaid, 245 feet 10 inchea northwest of northwest aide
of Union avenue, as the same is laid out on the confirmed
pouth4f2 hedes es r o
m; t nn n e c s e .
w by es t n 7 d f o e f t
3
c s e n
ches te
corner: thence by land now or late of Charles Helmer.
north 47 degrees 32 minutest, west 98 feet to a corner, and
north 42 degrees, cast 272 feet 5 inches to the eouthwest
side of Germantown avenue aforesaid : thence along tha
same south 47 degrees 21 minutes, ettst3B feet 5 inches to
the place of beginning. The hones is upwards of thirty
feet trent; has well under cover; hilidsouie parlor, five
chambers. two attics, kitchen and silting-room. Subject
to a mortgage of 16700. held by tne Franklin Fire' Insu
rance Company. Together with lot in rear thereof, fur.
nishing a back outlet to Highland avenue, being all that
lot of around, situate on the southeast side of Highland
avenue as laid out and intended to be opened of the width
of 60 feet. Beginning at the distance of 803 feet, „85 , inch
southwest from southwest side of (.ermantown &Venue.
and containing in front on Highland avenue • 20 feet, And
extending of that width in depth soutnettetwardly .11511
feet,then widening, toithe northeast DO feet,thence extend
ing of the width of 50 feet southeast, -in depth, on the
southeast line thereof about 84 fo.t % inches, and on the
southwest 83 feet 113 f inches, making the total. depth' on southwest line 91nifeet 111.1 inches, under and. subject
to the restriction that no building shall ever be erected on
the last described lot within 15 feet of the southeast side
of_Bighland avenue.
Clear of all incumbrance.
roeseasion of Not, 2 and Bellrll Ist.
"Sale absolute to settle estate. • .
By the Court. JOSEPH 111F,GARIG Clerk 0.,C.
ELIZABETH CRESS, Admintatratrix.
H. THOMAS &St/NS, Auctioneers. •
139 and 141 South Fourth stamet:-,
ORPHANS' COURT PEREMPTORY '
Eatate of John O'Brien. deceased, Thomas & 800.
Auctioneers. Frame dvrelline, No. 826 Tront street
between South and Shippen streeb3, Fourth Ward: • Pun.
anent to an order of the Orphans , Court , for the City
and County of Philadelphia, will be sold at public. sale.
without reserve. on Tuesday, Nov. 10, . 1888, at 12 o'clock.
noon, at the Philadelphia Exchange, the foltowing do.
scribed prope rty late of John O'Brien, deceleed. viz.
All tha e teenage and lot of ground, situate on
the south de of a2O feet wide alley, called Pine *Rev.
(now %root street). leading westward into Fourth street.
between Cedar and Shippen streets. Fourth Ward. City
of Philadelphia, No. 326; containing in fronton Pine
alley 20 feet. and in depth southward 39 feet .0 timeliest.
Bounded on the north by Pine alley, on the east by
ground now or late of Frederick Fay, on the south by
ground now or late of Elizabeth Cordy,Au t d h o o n the west
(K.ll7l.gtgr.,;)rpigxnige Caspar and
Ann Antho ny
others. by indentures dated respectively the 9th day of
September. 1858, and recorded in Deed Book A: B,No.
I , l,pages Hi and 325, granted arid conveyed unto aim
O'Brien. in fee, under and subject t. the payment of a
certain yearly ground rent of 6128.
By the Court, JOSEPH MEOARY. Clerk 0. C.
SAMUEL SIA4P6ON. Administrator,
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
0c17,24.n07 129 and 141 Elotith Fourth street.
EEXECUTORS' SALE.—THOMAS & SONS. AEC.
tioneers.—Fouretory Brick Dwelling. No. 763 South.
Thirteenth street, above Catharine 'treat.' Om
Tuesday, November 10,1869. at 12 o'clock , neon, will be
sold at pubic sale, at the Philadelphia Exchange, Ml that
four•story brick mearaage and lot of ground. situate ors
the eut side of Thirteenth street. 66 feet north of. CUM.
rine street, No. 763; the lot containing in front .on Thir
teenth street 16 feet. and extending in depth 70 feet to a 3,
feet wide alley leading into Catharine street; with that
privilege of said alley. The house has the gas, dr,e.
131 - Clear of ail incumbrance. .
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers..
ocl7 R4no7 - I,Vatul 141 South Fourth street:
LEGAL fiIOTAILLEr.
IN THE ORPHANS , COURT FOR THE CITY AND
I County of Philadelphia.—Estate of ELIAS D. MOYER.
deed—Notice is hereby given that SARAH R.
her putt.
of said decedent, has Wed in said Court her pet!.
tion and appraisement of real estate of her said husband,'
out of the proceeds of which she elects to retain $9OO for
her and children. under the Act of Amembly of April
14, 1851. and supplements, and that the mania will be al.
lowed by the Court, on SATURDAY, October 24th, 1558.
unless exceptions thereto be filed.
H. G. HARTRANFT,
Attorney for Petitioner.
ocM•th 8.9 P.
TN THE ORPHANS' COURT - FIA:t THE CITY AND
1. County of Philadelphia.—Estate of. ROBERT H.
HENDERSON, deceased.--The Auditor appointed try_ the
Court to auditsettle and adjust the account of.CHARLES
fdoNEAL. Executor of last will, and testament of
ROBERT H. HENDERSON, deceased, and to report dia.
tribution of the balance in the bands of the accountant.
will meet the parties interested for thepurpose of his ap.
pointment, on MONDAY, Noyember, 2, AL D. 1868, at d
o'clock, P. M.. at his Office, No. 113 South Fifth street, in
the city of Philadelphia. WM. L. DENNIS,
ocilatu,th.s,fitt Auditor.
TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE .CITY AND
TN
County of Philadelphia. Estate of DANIEL W.
COXE, deceased. The auditor appointed by the Court to
audit. settle and adjust the second and final account of
ELI K. PRICr. El3q.. Executor of the last will and, testa
ment of DANIEL W. COXE, doceszed.and to report dis.
tribution of the balance in the hands of the accountant.
will meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his
appointment, on THURSDAY. the 6th day orNovember.
1868, at 4 o'clock P. M., at his office, No. 717 Walnut
street, first story. in tbo city of Phila. ocilatath 06t•
7N THE ORPHANS COURT FOR THE CITY AND
.1. county of Philadelphia. Estate of MARY. BAL(111P.
dec'd. The Auditor appointed by the Court to report
distribution of the balance in the hands Of JOHL4 S.
tiNY DER, Executor of the last will and testament of
MARY BARER, deceased, Will meet the parties inter.
sated for the purposes of his appointment, on MONDAY.
October 26th, 1111, at 4 o'clock, P. M. at his office, NO.
217 South Sixth street i in the city of Philadelphia..
JOkIN GuFOIKTIEr,
Auditor.
ocl7•n,ht,thst
N THE ORPHANS' CO RT FOR THE CITY AND
1 County of Philadelphia.—Estate of Mrs. CHRISTINE
BIDDLE, dec'd.—The Auditor appointed by the Coart to
audit. eettlo and adjust the first account of CLEMENT
BIDDLE, THOMAS A. BIDDLE, and ALEXANDER
BIDDLE Executors of the lust will and testament of
CHRISTINE BIDDLE, dec'd.. and to report distribution
of the balance in the bands of the accountants, will meet
the parties interested for the purpose of his appoint.
mente, on THURSDAY. Nov. sth, 'lBl2l. at 12 o'clock, M,
at his office. 191 South Fifth street', in the City of Phila..
delphia. GEORGE M. CONARROE,
ocl7 s to th ot§ Auditor..
LISTATE OF CHARLES WILLING. OF GERMAN:.
..U.Rown. Notice le hereby given that Letters Testament—
ary upon the Estate of CHARLES WILLING. of • Ger
mantown, Philadelphia. gentleman. dedeased;
been granted to me, and that all persons having claim&
or demands against that estate are hereby raqueeted to.
present the same to mo'Nvithoat delay. JOHN
WALLACE, No. 728 Spruce:street. Phila. 5e26.5.6t.'
F. , t 11:1 oh ei
MR. PEARCL'S HARMONY CLASS FOR GENTLE.
men commences on MOND Y,36th Instant. at
7.30 P. M. Particulars may be had at 1430 Spruce
street. oel9-6t.
A GOOD ORGANIST WILL BEIORTLY ARRIVE IN
.40. flits city. wbo is dt sirens of ft Uhtirep engagement,
Particulars may be obtained of JASIEO PEARUE. Or.
ganlat, St Mark's, 142 a Spruce street. -ocl2
A IcIERICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC.
Jog. S. E. CORNER TErall AND WALNUT STREETS.
A few Vacancies for beginners and advanced pupils
may be secured tbia and next veek. ecal to th a 3t•
MR. J. G. OSBOURN INFORIIISAIIS PUPILS AND
friends that he has removed his office to No. W 6
Race street. where ho win be pleated to see those whe
wish to take music lessors on piano, violin, &c.
Mr. Osborn calla the attention of young men to his
MllEiC Class, for Flute and Violin, at 730 P. M. oclUlm§
VALERY GOMEZ WOLOWSKA, PRIMA
./..Y1 DONNA of. the Dalian Opel a., is ready to receive
pupils who desire to become accomplished la vocalism• $l4
taught In the high Italian Scheel. tlcsideace, 333 South
MOUTH Street oc3 Ins§
BALLAD SINGING.
T. 1118110 P, •
83 South street. ea Wartiog
Mlt. JAS. N. BECK WILL RESU ONS ME HIS LESS
in Meric betwf en the 15til n nd::utb of. September.
Rekidence No. ItiVti Mt. Vernon I es
(21(1 P. RONDINELLA, TEACH ER OF SINGING. PRI.
Ovate lessona and elaeees. Reei.Acuoo, 1308 S. Thirtimmth
AA It. V. VON AllirlßEßO. TEAt.:III2O. °ETRE PIANO.
IV! haw resumed his lessons. No. 2t4 South Fifteenth
street 'aul7.Bm•
ED UCAIt .14b111.
EGARAY INSTITUTE ENOLISIt AND FRENCH
lJ FOR YOU LAI tIES.
Dr.:
BOARDING AND rums.
1521 and 1529 S ?HUGE Sment,. '
Philadelphia, realm'.
Will RE- PEN on 51i iNDA V, Sent. .
MAP * MI D'IIERVILLY h“e the Measure of announo.
ing that DR. ROBERT B. LABisERTON will devote, Ida
time ezeitiatv , ii, to the (Riegarey .
French ie the language of th' family , and le conetand)
epoken in the Institute. 1e134 to th Our-
YOEN G MEN AND BOYS' ENGLISH, GLASSIOAT A
Mathematical and Scientific I ih.titutes, 1901 MOUNT
V.FItNtiN street. li:arem:lola thorough. ereettratien
for M. tom or collage.
Rev. f ARIES G. SHINN. A. M.,
Priucipe3;
ocE-tu the :otS
LBABBoWS , SCEIOOI, FOB ' BOYS IN THE
.Pilndelrbia City Inntitute, !F. E. corner Chestnut
and Eighteenth etreete. 00154.1n§
C. 2101.4,11 MAZZA, PROFESS 1R OF THE ITALIAN
ij Language, at the IJniveltuty of .Peepnylvanla. 1339
Chet tnut etroet. ' seTava•
M. FOX WILL DEVOTI2 GIS ATTENTION OF
L. evenings to a private elms 'of pupils in French and
German. Terms reasonable, Arply to Litt Catharine
street. se2s tf§
SADDLES JR' AIit.NESX, 411cA.
sr
AR
'(, AICOP-14,-PRL'•!:4:.
)
- Hittor ''-v.
' 7- fi . ORS . 1314 NiTUR P - I
GREEN GINGE—L4 AST) FOR SALE BY
W W
J. B. BCaSIER & CO.. 1. , *60.1th Delaware acme,