M== THE WINE AMTS. The Apollo Belvedere in New Light. The APOLLO is one of the few ,antiques admiration for which is not merely technical; but Is expanded throughout the cultivated circles Of society. A new theory . for the much criticised attitude of the figure is found in the following paper, translated for Litteles • ing Age from the Bremen Weser Zeitung. Considering the origin of the essay, we are in no hurry to credit the Bremen sculptor'Stein hiluser's discovery with all the importance claimed for it in what may be a kind of local puff; we shall wait mitt the artist publishes casts of his duplicate Apollo before we admit that in it "all the forms are carved more grandly and powerfully." Our readers, who will find at the Academy the masterpiece of Steinliflueer as well as a clean cast of the Apollo, will at least be interested in read ing the article. We may say that we find nothing, • among its arguments to disprove the theory that the Belvedere Apollo is a copy from some bronze; the treatment of the hair and dra pery"seems to us almost proof positive, and the fact that the curtain is found omitted in a Email bronze imitation two feet high, which besides exhibits other differences, has much less to do with the question than the intrinsic marks of plastic treatment: "The statue of Apollo is the highest art ideal'among all the works of antiquity that have escaped destruction." With those words Winckelmann introduced his spirited description of the Vatican Apollo, a descrip tion which he desired to lay at the feet of the statue, "like the wreaths of those who could net reach the head of the divinities they would have crowned." At the time Winckel mann thus wrote, the sculpture of the epoch of Phidias, destined to work so substantial a change in the notion of the state of Greek art, was not yet known; and what he said of his favorite statue was the common judgment of his own and previous tines. Since then opinion as to the artistic merit of the Vatican Apollo has assumed quite a different aspect, and from being excessive in praise has ot'late become often too severe in fault-finding; yet in spite of a multitude of criticisms, in spite of the obscurity of the motif repre sented, the traditional preference for the Vatican statue has maintained itself. If on account of its numerous defects it could no longer be esteemed a work of the highest order, all the more jealously were its excel lences vindicated; amateurs, artists?. and the learned-in art found it an inextinguishable source of enjoyment as well as occasion for the meet serious study, and it may be affirmed that to-day the Apollo Belvedere is still the best known work of ancient statuary. The. current decade has brought revelations which have frilly insured the understanding of the motif represented, and materially advanced the question as to the originality of the statue, and its place in the development of art. It may therefore be appropriate to set forth, briefly and in connection, these revelations, and i the results deduced from them by archer oloeleseffnce. The Apollo was found in the neighborhood of the harbor of Porto d'Anzo, the ancient Latium. Antium, situated in a charming re gion on the coast of Latium, was, in the last days of the Republic, a favorite resort of the Roman nobility, and later of the first empe rors; flourishing at its height under Nero, who, like Caligula, born here, restored the harbor and embellished the place with palaces and sumptuous villas. The coincidence of many circumstances has made it highly pro bable that the Apollo was formerly used to adorn a villa of Nero's, perhaps not without reference to that emperor, who loved to com pare himself to the Pythian god, and to be portrayed in his image. The statue was se cured by Cardinal Julius de Medici and car ried to the Palazzo Colonna, but afterwards, when tne Cardinal had become Pope Julius IL, was set up in the Vatican in the palace Belvedere, from which it has since been com monly called. It was in avery fair state of preservation, the head—incontestably the finest part— being entirely uninjured; the legs were ma terially damaged; the fingers of the right hand were lost; the right arm was broken in two places, and lay originally, in its lower portion, somewhat nearer the body; the left forearm, from where the mantle rests upon it, was wanting, and like the rest was re stored by Montorsoli in 1532. The god wore at his back a quiver, of which some parts are unquestionably ancient, and Montorsoli accordingly placed in the left hand a piece of a bow; which, as was CU3- binary in ancient art, was thus only slightly indicated. Scarcely any other restoration could have appeared possible, and yet it was the beginning of an error which, for more than three centuries has prevented a true in tei pretauon of the statue, and could not be dispelled, till the beginning of the present decade, by means of a statue which then la came known. Of course all who have sought to explain the action of Apollo as here exhibited nave proceeded on the presumption that he held a bow in his left hand; the majority thinking that the moment immediately succeeding the discharge of the arrow was represented; An aelm Feuerbach alone endeavoring to prove that the god was only on the point of shoot ing, or at least had the air of just meaning to let-fly. The mark was supposed to be the dragon Pytho, or the children of Niobe,or the humenides, who, in the .pursuit of Orestes, bad intruded upon the sanctuary of the god. But all these attempts at explanation could not stand before an uuprejudiced criticism of the statue and of the attitude bestowed upon it by the artist. The god's gaze is turned in one direction, his steps in another—a want *f unity in the treatment fur which no satis factory hypothesis could be framed from the former interpretations. Moreover the god is represented at a moment when of a sudden he.cheeks a motion which was evidently ra pid and continuous, as shown by the back ward bent body and the vertical fall of the mantle. He has not reached the quiet posi tion necessary for shooting, and if he would prepare for it, at least the right hand must make a movement towards the bow, or atm iv traces of an arrow in the same plane with it, neither of which is the case. On the other hand it cannot be assumed that Apollo has aheady discharged the arrow; fur when could that have happened? It is physically ioapos- Bible to shoot while walking; or had the god peinaps shot before the beginning of the MO• lion, at d during this have kept his arms in so natural a .posiliun?—a positionde_pri xrP , Ulf the - in ""ltary unity in_so far as -the- left,--arin would still be found in the shooting posture, while the right arm had already abandoued it. There was not a single duplicate of the Vatican Apollo, no statue which would have shed light on its motif, and the interpreters saw themselves entirely shut up:to the wilily ma of tLe:statue. Only the Frenca author Pouqueville, who in 180 G-1815 was Consul.: General at Janina, mentions in his "Journey in Greece` that a certain Dr. L. Frank had ;been presented by Veli Pasha with an Apollo one-quartet life-size, "resembling the Belve dere a Gorgoi-head, and several objects, of the state of winch Pouqueville could give no information. Not beterathe leer 1860 did the archteolo jst Stephani, of st. Petersburg , make known a B,„„ ue t h en in posNsion of Count Straaa npff, ai.i . nurchased In Italy in 1818 ur 1819, ;by the a! q Of which the Drooleta on which so many critieb had exercise/ their wits in vain, was enabled to in a completely 43ausfactory manner. • -pc, la atititne of Adollo ..m ,bronze, sixty centuries Ligh (about 24 MEM= inches), and, with anme insignificant differ•_ eneal completely :agrees 'with the ApollO, Belvedere, and leaves not the slightest room' for doubt as to the attribute held in the left band, although in this part it is somewhat damaged. - Several particulars make it, in tr high degree probable that ` ; the statuette is identical with the one mentioned by Pouque ville,and was found together with the Gorgon head, which meantime has been lost, in. 1792, , mythic in Epirus (thirty miles from abina. The attribute in question must be supposed to consist of a yielding substance, aS it is tightly pressed together by the hand, and spreads above and below in numerous folds. Evidently it can be nothing else than the tug's. The aegis originally belonged to Zeus. The thunder-cloud, freighted with , all the destructive and terrible manifestations of the powerful ruler of heaven, begot the notion of the tugis, in which the Greek fancy created a symbol 'of the dread violence of nature : the sight of it excites horror, and brings death and ruin. At first it was conceived as a hairy goatskin, then as a scaly serpent's-skin; later it com monly ap - pelirs as a Medusa-ead, encircled with snakes, and such a' one doubtless was not wanting in the lower and evidently bro ken-off portion of the attribute of our statuette. The Gorgon-head mentioned by Pouqueville in connection with the statue of Apollo was clearly nothing else than the lower half of the vigils. Apollo- borrows the tegis from Zeus, the nature of the former being closely allied with that of the Supreme Deity. We read in Homer (Illiad, lib. xv. 229-30), how Zeus commands Apollo to hasten to the re liet of the Trojans hard pressed by the Greeks : "Up, now! and bear in your hand the aegis bor dered with fringes; Shake it with might, and so daunt the heroic Achalans !" And further on we read (vv. 318-322): "While in his hand the tegis at rest held Phcebus Apollo, Meantime of either host the shafts told—perished the people; But when he shook it, and glared in the face of the swift riding Grecians, Loud voiced shouting the while, their hearts in their oosoms Spell-bound htt_took, and they forgot their tur onfent courage." And here we have the key to the under standing of the two statues. • With long and hasty strides the god has hurried along, to the opposing lines of battle; for a moment he halts and, still holding the mg - is aloft, looks back with an expression of greatness and noble reluctance upon the hosts which lie subjected to the terrible influence of his weapon. In a moment he will continue his victorious course. There can be no doubt that the artist in the creation of his work was under the influence of the Homeric narrative. This is the only passage in which we flhd Apollo bearing the aegis, and we have seen how well the whale treatment of the statue agrees with. the situa tion depicted by the poet. Whether the sculp tor simply meant to reproduce a moment of the epic story; whether he borrowed from it only the motif, -in - order without a specific allusion to represent the god as a protector in battle; or whether he meant so to exhibit him with reference to a definite event, were questions which were temporarily forced to remain unsolved. A far ther lucky discovery was to bring an answer even to them. In the year 278 B. C., a horde of Gauls under the lead of Brt3nnus had fallen upon Macedonia, had outflanked the allied army of the Greeks posted at Thermopylae, and had pressed onward to Delphi. But here the Gauls were compelled to turn about. Light ning, rain, and huge boulders came down from Parnassus, and "the Gallic host was visibly annihilated by the Delphic god and by spirits." According to another account, Apollo had manifested himself as a beautiful youth of superhuman stature, and made known his presence by earthquake, the falling of rocks, storm and hail, which had swept away the enemy. The whole legend is patterned after s an older one, which in like manner describes the overthrow of the Persians before ,Delphi. Now, in the year 1860, the same in which the bronze statuette became known, an in scription was published at Athens whose importance for the understanding of the Apollo Belvedere was forthwith recognized and pointed out by Preller. According to the inscription, a festival was appointed in honor of Zeus, the Preserver,and the Pythias'. Apollo, to commemorate' the victory won over the Gauls at Delphi; and Athens was also invited to share in the festival. There fore the conjecture has great probability that on this occasion a statue of Apollo was set up in his temple as an offering. If, how ever, there was a desire to represent him as one who had protected the Greeks and his sanctuary from the barbarians by producing extraordinary natural phenomena, he could not well have been carved otherwise than as bearing the aegis, which is precisely the emblem of overpowering natural forces. And thus for both statues, or their common original, the Homeric description became the model, as formerly an Homeric verse suggested to Phictias the creation of his ideal Zeus. No doubt, then, can longer exist as to the treatment in whi h the arttat meant to convey the Apollo alluded to but, again, in relation to historic art, with the help of the bronze work several notable results are derivable. Count Stroganoff's statue is distinguished from the Vatican,—whicb, in every particu lar, was wrought for effect, and was very probably produced in Nero's time—by sim plicity and naturalness, and is evidently the older work. Thereby the question whether the Apollo Belvidere is an original was an swered in the negative. That it was copied after the bronze found in a city of Epirus is scarcely credible, and we shall have to admit that both statues were executed after a common original, or, more likely, after different copies of it. Now it has been asserted iu many quarters that the original of the Belvedere must haye been a bronze work, and in support of this theory, the elegant treatment of the hair and especially of the mantle, that falls down in rich folds over the lett arm, has been adduced —a motif which, it was acid, is very difficult to execute in marble, and only to be explained on the supposition of a bronze original. But we now know an antique duplicate in bronze which lacks exactly that mantle motif; one of the few points in which a considerable difference in the two works manifests itself. Thus the comparison of the bronze heightens the eredibility of the opinion already based _ on_it t _that_the,„pres_gmed oriej nal was of ma,r -_ The questions we have touched upon were destined to obtain a substantial furtherance through a third important discovery, whose significance for the judgment of the Vatican statue was set forth by Dr. Kekule in a paper read at Rome betore the Archtellugical Institute. In the summer of 186 G, to wit, the well-known sculptor Steinhauer, a native,of Bremen, discovered and purchased at a marble-cutter's a marble head, lying amid a heap of rubbish, which bore a surprising resemblance to that of tbe Apollo Belvedere. Its origin cannot be exactly ascertained, but several circumstances indicate that it was found at Rome. The nose and a portion of the hair were wanting, and the upper lip was somewhat damaged; for the rest, in every particular, such an agreement was displayed with the head of the Apullo Belvedere, that it seemed necessary to believe not that both works were executed after a common original, but that one is a direct copy of the other. However much the Vatican Apollo has been condemned, no 4~~. THE DAILY, EYENING BULLETIN-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, NOVE DER 3, 1868. one hat; dared to criticise the,head; to it, the ,worshipers,of the statue were went to point when the criticisms and fault-findings became uopleasant, It could not, tkerefore, bat be of the highest interest to be able'to compare a second copy, executed us the istne , material and with like care—two conditiona'that were not answered by the Straganoff statue. And then it was found that in the'newly.' revealed head all the forma were carved more grandly and simply, more powerfully and freely; the treatment of the shape of the head for the profile view, the outlines of the face, and the figure of the chin, were tokens of. genuine Greek art'; the Vatican, Apollo seemed in comparison a closely executed "copy, but' with an unmistakable striving after- softness and elegance. It has been opp?rtunely conjectured that among the numerous monu ments reckoned at more 'than five hun dre.d-,which Nero took from the IMphie sanctuary, the original of the Vatican statue was brought to Rome. Perhaps we , have in the Steinhituser Apollo a fragment pf this original, at least a very faithful reproduction of it, while the Apollo Belvedere is a copy executed in the taste of the early empire for one of the villas of Antium. The composi tion, which is calculated to be seen from a single point of view, is opposed to the nature of the more ancient art, and therefore it may not be supposed that perhaps the overthrow of the Persians before Delphi, attributed to the interposition of Apollo, soon afterwards occasioned the production of the original ; much rather shall we be forced to assign its origin to the time which succeeded the vic tory over the Gauls. Curious Indium' Ceromonials—Mtaking ••ucdicitio • [From the Daily Wisconaini Some three hundred Winnebagoes had a great medicine dance a day or two since near Tunnel City. It was the largest gathering they have had for many years. The dance com menced at sundown on Monday evening, and lasted till the evening following. Desiring to be "in" at this moat wonderful and mysteri one of Indian gatherings, I reached the Tun nel about ten o clock. With the friendly aid of a lantern and a hand-car, some boys of us took the back track for a mile west. We then struek the Indian trail a mile or so through the woods to the north, where we found the grand encampment. The night was dark, but the camp-fires of sixty wig wams lit up the forest far and wide. Near the centre of the encampment was the great medicine wigwam. It was brilliantly illuati tinted and the orgies were in full blast. As I approached the wigwam the sentinel met me at the closed entrance. "Inkah-do-quatch-a," said he ; "no go in." This was a stumper and disappointment, but I was prepared for emergencies. I recognized the sentinel in his blue military coat. It was Nau-he-gab, one of the six Winneboga braves who were in Sherman's great march. I had a small flask and a few stamps in my pocket. In a brief space I was snugly cornered inside. The medicine dance among the Indians is purely religious in its origin. None but those who have been initiated are allowed to juin it. To be a Medicine man or a Medicine woman is the great thing among the Winne bagoes. Only the better class can afford it. It costa from $5 to $l5O to be initiated—that is, to make the presents and provide for the dinner and feast. All the Indians fast during the day preceding. The great wigwam is open only to medicine men and women. Sentinels are posted outside. At dark the lights are struck inside and the unearthly pow wow of rattles, drums, chants and cheeches commences. From my corner by the doorway could be seen the whole splendor of the great wig wam. The structure was over a hundred feet long. The ground had been shav&i . dear of grass and was smooth as a floor. The sides were thickly bedded with fresh fern leaves. A bnght row of lights set on poles gleamed down the centre, while a blazing wood fife shone up from the farther end. The Indians, about half and half as to sexes, were closely squatted along the whole length on either side. Half a dozen were beating drums, shaking rattles and singing in low gutturals around the wood fire. The rest held solemn as a graveyard. The dress of the medicine squaws would put Mad. Demorest to shame. Many were rigged out like princesses. No two were alike. Every one had on a new calico skirt, petti coat, fancy blanket, sash, legging and mocca sins, Bet off with every possible trick of finery and ribbons. Beads rings, trinkets, wrist ets, bracelets and earbolts giestened in pro fusion. Little bells jingled from their leg gings. Months bad been spent in trimming off their petticoats with bits of silk and beadwork. Every cheek was painted with the brightest vermilion and yellow, and crossed or circled with a line of blue. The men were less "got up.'' Many had showy head gear, and some had elaborate breech clouts stitched with beads. A dozen or more bad borrowed coats from white folks for the occason. Old "Four Deers," horn Portage, who got up the dance, had on a yellow scarf and a black silk shirt. His head was girdled with long red deer's hair, hung with ribbons, feathers, eagle quills and snake rattles. Little Fish had the lower half of his face painted blue. Nearly all had stripes of red across their faces. dotted with yellow and blue. All the young bucks were lavish with paint and feathers, while the two old chiefs "Dandy" and "Carrimoonc," pre served their every day plainness But the most noticeable feature of all was their marvellous medicine bags. These were generally of otter skins, made up whole. Most of them were large and of the finest fur, lined with silk and beadwork. The mouths of each skin were hung with scar let feathers. They were carried in front, like muffs, with the tails reaching to the ground. No profane bands are allowed to touch them. They contain the wonderful medicine, and are held and guarded as sacred. The ceremonies during the night were as solemn as a Quaker prayer meeting. Speeches, marches, songs, and all kinds of mystical and musical ding-dongs were kept up tall sunrise. The different songs had different ceremonies attending. Indians, by ones and twos, filed up and down the long lines, swinging their hands to each Indian as they passed. A. lo grunt was beard with each motion of the band. Presently the old medicine man arose, and for ten minutes followed a rapid, jerking "talk" with the Great Spirit. I ciluld gather only the drift of their talk. They mention the names of Indians who have died slime their last medicine dance. Tney recount the everyday events of their life, which can never happen to them again on earth. They then picture their occupations In the Spirit Land, killing their foes, or chasing the game over the happy hunting grounds. These ghostly recitals -are listened-tp _with--the stillness - of. death. FolloWing theif u talenemnes a chant or song, attended by rattle or drum. The old men lead off for a strain or two, when the squaws join in the refrain. No words can describe these wild harmonies of the "forest maidens." They seemed to have learned their music from the muskrats in their cabins and the blackbirds in the fields. The tobacco song is one of the most im pressive. As the leading medicine man walks around the wood fire, dropping handfuls of tobacco in the flames, the whole camp joins in the chorus : Tan-ne-nah ho I Tan-ne-nab ho ! Tan-ne nah hah ! Tau-ne-nah hab! Meanwhile drums and rattles keep up a din loud enough to frighten the Great Spirit out of his wits. The whisky or Padg-a-ne nab song takes a more seductive turn, and a sip from the passing bottle makes all right with the spirit above and below. Alter the to bßcco song is finished the peace pipe is lightea and' passes - the rounds, each one• taking a whiff or two and giving a grunt of satisfaction in return. The dancing propemset in .about , daylight, and was alternated witliehante, speeches and marches as before. When the dancing menced the sides of the great 'wigwams were thrown outwards, thus affording open views to all. Sometimes'ility, 13oniecimes a' hun iired joined in the dance up and down the wigwam. The squaws have a sort of side long hop motion, with both feet together; while the men jerk up one leg . at a time, reminding one of the turkey in the picture ,dancingon hot ashes. This most exciting ceremony commenced about noon and lasted an hour. I shall not attempt to describe it. Suffice it to say that the "victim" of the occasion was the son of old "Four Deere," a tall, long-haired; dull eyed gawky of twenty summers. Old "Four Deers" bad brought in presents of blankets, calico, and petticoat cloth, worth over a hundred and twenty dollars., After a'deal of flummery the young man was seated on a pile of blankets at the open end of the wig wam. 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DEALERB IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES We will receive applications for Policies of Life Insurance in the now National Life Insurance Company of the Unite& States. 'Full information given at our office. ITS,ANDOIIII B c •P r i : OA I "eRS 1 -- "N.4___/*B6 . DEALERS DI ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Ms of Exchange for sale on London, Frankfort, parts, eta We Issue Letters of Credit on Ileum James W. Tucker a CO., Parts. available for travelers' use through. out titer ttorld. :Raving now direct private commit. nicatiok by wire between our Phila.. dee pinta and dew York Winces, we are constantly in receipt of all quotations from New York, and are prepared to execute all orders, with proinpfuess l in STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD. SMITH, RANDOLPH & CO. GOLD SONI S CENTRAL PACIFIC R. R. CO. A limited quantity of the THIRTY-YEAR SIX PER CENT. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS of the Central Pacillo Railroad Company ale Wend to Investele, for the present. at 103 and Accrued Interest, in Currency. These Bondi are secured by a Trott Deed neon the most Important link of the treat Inter-Oceanic Railroad. two• thirds of which are already built, at a cost of nearly ONE HUNDRED MILLIONS, And which °Weirs algae, a sell-allataicanS way traffic. The whole line of eontinnoue rail between New York and San Franoisco will be completed by July next, when en Immense throosh business will undoubtedly follow. More than 1.200 tames of the distance between the Missouri River and the Pacific Ocean are already traversed by the Loco. motive; and it is probable that 800 miles additional will be completed during the current year. The future of this Line. therefore, is unusually promising. The Central Pacific RailroadiCompany eceive from the United Btatee Government &bon tten millions of acres of the PUBLIC LANDS, situated along the line of their Road ; also a Subsidy Loan of U. B. SIX PER (EN r. BONDS, averaging €35,000 per mile. as fast as the sections of twenty miles are com pleted. They have received, in addition, important GRANTS. from the State and cities of California, worth more than tF 8,000.000 IN GOLD. Tho proceeda of these Lands. Bondi, Capital Stock, Subscriptions. Subventiona. and Net Earnings are Invested in the enterprise, to which is added the amount realized from First Mortgage Bonds. THESE LATTER RAVE THE FIRBTLIEN UPON THE wnotp, PROPERTY, and are issued Ur 'the same amount only as the Government advances, or to the ex test of about ono.tkird the cost value of the Road, equip. meat, etc. The Cash Resources are abundant for the completion of the work. and the NET EARNINGS, FROM THE WAY TRAFFIC UPON 850 MILES NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS. ARE MOKE THAN DOUBLE THE CUR. RENT INTEREST LIABILITIES. [r' Besideso. mileage upon all through business, this Road, having the beat lands for Settlement, the most pro ductive mines, the nearest markets, and being exempt from competition, will always command LARGE REVE NUES, WHICH ARE WHOLLY IN COIN. - - . Two•thi;ds of the entire Lonn is already marketed.and. jtdging by past experience. the Loan will soon be closed. Investors who desire an unusually safe, reliable and pro. fttable security would do well to purchase before the Bonds ate all taken. The Company reserve the right to advance the price at any time; but nil orders actually in transitu at the time of any ouch advance will be filled at present Price. At this time they Day more than 8 per cont. upon the Investment, and have, from National and state laws. guarantees superior to any other corporate securities now offered. The First Mortgage Bonds are of $l,OOO each,with semi annual gold coupons attached, parable in July and January. Both INTEBEST AND PRINCIPAL ARE MADE EX PIIESSLY PAYABLE IN UNITED STATES GOLD COIN. The back interest from July let is charged only at the currency T ates . We receive all classes of Government Bonds, at their full market rates, in exchange for the Central Pacific Railroad Bonds, thus enabling the holders to realize from 6 TO le PER CENT. PRUITT and keep the principal of their inveetnients equally secure, and receive the came rate of interest for a longer Period. Ordure and .nquirieu will receivo prompt attention. Iry formation. - Beerrivtivo - Pamphlets. etc:. giving a nal f i e' COMA of the Organization. Program, Business and Prow poets of the Enterprise furniuhed on application. Bonds sent by return Exprees at our cost. rar All deecriptions of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES BOUGHT. SOLD, OR' EXCUANGED, at our office and by Mail aid Telegraph AT MARKET RATES. I ACCOUNTS OF BANKS. BANKERS and others received and favorable arrangements made for desirable accounts. I.) E A,kygli& R i n, , Bankers and Dealers In Government Semi- 40 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PE/ILADELPHIA. vINANIMMk lowa st 4 ties, Gold, to, IMMMInIMMEiiaI riarslT CULL. GOLD BOUGHT. DE HAVEN & -13R0., 40 SOUTH THIRD STREET POCKET 111001Fid: TO 111,Eri a. TO RENT. LAB GE AND CONVENIENT - n,c)c)m.s, HEATED wzrii STE&M, IN TEE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 607 Chestnut Street. Power furnished If required. AN i ply in the Put:at - oat fon Office. FOR RENT. Preadses 809 Chestnut Street, FOR STORE OR OFFICE. Also, Offlees wd largo Roma. au bia for a Cozamm-da Collegp. APPLY at RA.NIC OP THE REPUBLIC. 64tf TO LET.—AN ELEGANT DROWN STONE' residence. lt °rat liroan PfreCt. Three-story Brick flouter. North Fifteenth street, and a Three /tory Brick Route, Wert boring Garden street. They are all now booms, In excellent order, containing all modern conveniences. and will be mated low to good tenants. M. C. lIINKEY. all Walnut street. lata tl sTO LET.- THE SECOND STORY NO. 409 Cbestont street. Su feet by 20 fest. suitable for (Alcoa Jobbing or light manufacturing business. M. O. )11OKEY. 411 Walnut street. no 3 tfl . _ FOR RENT.—TiIE MODERN RESIDENCE with 6 feet srlde side rutl. situato No. IDS N. Nino. teentb street. above Arch. Has *lithe modem crews. nterces. and is In perfect order. J. rd. GORMLEY & SONO, 733 walnut s FOR RENT—TDE HANDSOME STORE AND Dwelling, northwest corner of Pine and Eighteenth streets. Dwelling contains U good chambers with every convenience.; store bee been tong established In the grocery truelzweg J. ht. QUIMBY A SONS. 733 Walnut street. IeTO LET.—STORE ANOVIZASE.ALENT. CZ Chestout street. Vied door *boy& ocatilt VAN OLIieSEN. BOEHM= & CO. FOR RENT, FURNIBLEED—THR THREE43TORY bylek kesmence, with attics and back bulMing.a. situate. No. 1612 Chestnut street. J. M. GRAMM & /30N8. =Walnut street. roll SAM S, IePUBLIC BALE OF COUNTRY RESIDENCE. -FUbNITURE, ETC., IN DELANCO. BURLING. TON COUNTY. NEW JElitlEY. Will be gold at Public Bale, at if o'clock, noon. ott Til DAY. the ith day of November, on the eremirea. a three.etory double frame Dwelling. with twestory back building., and lot of newly U.ree acre. of ground, front ing on the Rancoess river, five minutes' walk from the Camden and Amboy Railroad de, , ot and wharf, forty.fivo minute.' ride from Philadelphia. and three hours from New York. Lawn on 'the river. Abundance of shade. gravel. beach, every varlet? of fruit. Immediately after the above will be sold Plianol Jae. Mat ogany and Black Walnut Parlor Li n ing room . and lied-room Furniture. Cooking Utens ils, Gardening 't toots. etc.. etc. reraona wiehtns to examine the property before the Bale may apply to T. S. & C. E. FLETCHER. DELANCO. N. J. ---- GERMANTOWN t 'Oll AgE FOR SALE.—A hardeome dretaed atone UwellMg. fourteen rooma. water, gas and ail modern iznprovemente, near .a Btatlom Apply to or address SAMUEL 'Sr. FJX. Race street no3tu th s3t• or 30 12t• OERMANTOWN.—S EV ERAI. DESIRABLE COT. tag ea for ealocheap. Tenon, half cull. " Alio, Largo Blandon for rale or to rent. Apply to W. IL sTeK Inaarance Office. Germantown. FOR SALE. NO. MCC SPRUCE STREET. 25 BY E 170 feet, in perfect order. C. H. & It.. P. MUIRREID, No. 295 South Sixth street.. oa.fLtbs-tu-154 WEST PHILADELPHIA, FOR SALE A bandeome double pointed stone Residence, with stone stable and carriage bouee,and lot 141 feet front by eBO fret deep, ettuato on Spruce etreet, west of Forty. second street Lime every convenience., and is In excellent order. J. M. GL lABIEY d< SONS, 73S Walnut street. FOR SALE.—THE HANDSOME Til REF-STORY brick retidencca. juat tilde ed, with three-story don. ble back buildings, extra conveniences, and 5 feet wide aide yard. N oa. 1723. 1726. and 1727 North Eighth Wet t, and Noe. 1724 and 1726 Franklin street. Tanta ac. commodating. J. M.GUMMii Y.b SONS. 723 Walnut ;thee. rFOR SAL.E—THE DESIRABLE COUNTRY Seat, with 10 Acrea of Ground, on School Home " Lane. filth house from aaliroad 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 CUPYUCK & JORDAN. 411 Walnut street. POR SALE—A BARMY iME BROWN STONE ;it. and Brick Residence, now finlaning, eituate on north, " able of West Do Laucey Place, fourth house east of Twer.tr.tirst streeL Has parlor. library, dialog-room. kitchen. Dix. chambers, nursery, two bathrooms and store room, _Lot =feet front by 45 feet deep to a street. J. P.L. GL'AILDIEY & c.ONS,IRS Walnut street. oar/ itGERMANTOWN—FOR BALE. A MODERN sa stone cottage with largo lot of ground. stablo and ' carriage-house, situate on the northeasterly corner of J.inden and Knox streets. Has every city convenience and lain excellent order. J. M.GUMME.Y di BONS. 723 Walnut street. inCHESTNUT 1111.1..—F0R BALE.—AN ELE. gent Country Seat containing 11 acres of land, with Double Stone 80. Wetter. in. Dished with every con venience. Stable and Carriage House, within half a mile from the railroad station. Grounds handsomely improved with carriage drives. walka choice shrubbery. shade tees, dm. J. M. G LIMEY .t BONS, 183 Walnut street. WEST PHILADELPHIA—FOR SALE—TILE ET handsome modern stone residence, built in the best manner, with every convenience. and lot 60 feet front by 176 feet deep, situate No 217 outh Forty.second otreet— one of the moot desire blo locations in Went Philadelphia, J. M. GUM 61 FY dr. SON tt, 733 Walnut street. EGERMANTOIVN.—FOR SALE—TWO POINTED stone Cottages, with every city convenience, just iinhhed, within 5 minutes walk of Otauch lane sta tion. $5,000 each. J. M. GOMME Y alnut s & BON tr S, 183 Weet. FUR BALE—AN ELEGANT COUNTRY•SEAT. with over eeven acres of land attached, late tho re sidence of Davis PC876.11, Erg., clocemea, atria° on Brood street and the Old York road, with 800 feet front on each, below 'Fisher's bow, MtPsion 44 by 40 feet. with back building?, built and finished throughout in a superior :rumour with ever.) city convenience, and in perfect order. Large e t able. inuo.,go hou so. green house, atc.. and grounds beautifialv improved with choice shrubbeor; and Well•ph.ded. Photographic viewe mar be sr, not the office of J. M. GITALBEY k BONS, 7: ' 'V% about street - FO - A-BALE.:_ww-EANDsortmotEn - i3Tottx -- 7 Iticelling.with three:story back buildings, No. 30a North broad itreet, hulk in the boat manner. with all the modern improvements. Possession with , deed. LotY634 by 10u feet deep. apply to COPPUUK dG Jo' , DAN, 433 Walnut street. EM( VAL—J. M. GUYIM EY Lk SON4,REAL ESTATE -Lt Brokers, have removed to NL. ;BS Walnut otrsot. WAN rao in WANTED TO PURCHASE. A DWELLING HOUSE, With modern conveniot. ces, in a ;rood neighbor hood. situated between Vino and Pine streets and Sixth, and Ifigbtcm th tit cats. Address, stating number of some and terms, U. MAO VIER. Walnut street. STORHE 0 LiSE WANTED.—WANTED TO ItENT a storehouse, between Vine and Walnut streets, aad Delaware aVenuo and Second street. Apply to Olailta. N. ItIiSSEIA. L CO,. I'2 North Front street. AGENTS AND FARMERS WANTED. "THE m 146 OF S"OEK BOORS," 1,200 pages-200 illustrations—all about the history and va rieties, crossing, breeding, feeding and • management, dis. eases ann their reme - Aus, of the 1101 . d0, Cattle,,Blloop.Polll. t"9, (AC., etc. Inchearme ssand fulineeß it has no rival. Dimly farmer absolut, ly .n, eds it. -run NEW MAP WONDER," and a St..to map givcii to every subscriber, rib.° to m.i person who will procure a good agent, FOC descriptive pamphlet, addr--s GOODSPEED ck CO., Chi cago, New York and Memphis. 0c12,1m4 MMEEEM. &Recollections of a Clerical Clamorint, 14 /11lir , ' Ilibbard and lila Recall. aritier. Elizabeth Heywood writes to a Methodist paper in this city : "Billy Hibbard, a noted ministerial hu morist, was a friend of my father's family during my early youth, and my mind teen received a vivid impression of his sweetness of piety and beautiful simplicity of character. I saw him often, for we lived within a few miles of Canaan, New York, where he had settled when superannuated—'quite an appro priate .resting-place for a prophet. of :the: Lord,' as he said in his usual pleasant way. "I well remember my first sight of' him. I was at the house of the Methodist preacher in West Stockbridge. It was a cold day of the season, when fall shakes hands with win ter; the wind was blowing a gale; and we saw approaching, in the distance, an old boat shaped wagon, and in it a manly figure in a cloak,which the wind was distending into the shape of a balloon. Does the present genera tion of Methodists remember the old camlet cloak of the itinerant,' wonder,cut in straight breadths, and gathered full into a high,square collar, lined with the fur of some animal not described in the books of natural history, nor found—walking the earth, that I have ever seen, and flowing out in ample folds,and reaching down to the feet ? I have always had a deep reverence for the garment,though my recollections of it were not of the serious . kind; for, when a little girl, and comparing notes with brothers and sisters on favorite ministers, I always carried the point, that the `funniest men' came not up to the door in shining broadcloth, but in camlet. And such material,taking it in two senses,now alighted from the old wagon; and as it came toward the house, ands droll face was jest visible at the opening of the wide cloak collar, the minister got up and made breathless haste to open the door; for ho knew and loved the `funny man' under camlet at this time. "'Now, did I scare ye?' asked the visitor as he entered, and saw the looks of curiosity on the faces of the younger part of the bouse hold. `l'm Billy Hibbard, and that is the Gospel-chariot at your door!' "We all laughed, unbecoming-as it may seem; but that was the name he had given his old wagon which had carried him over the `ups and downs' of the itineracy; and when we laughed, he did so too, for he liked his oddities to be appreciated. He would not be seated, nor would he let the numerous eager hands outstretched to receive it take hold of the camlet cloak. `d merciful man is merciful to his beast,' said he, following the minister, who was going out to take care of the steed harnessed to the Gospel-chariot. SERMON TO TILE MORMONS. "Sometime before Mr. was stationed in West Stockbridge, Mormonism had made inroads upon the village, taking captive some of the prominent members of the Methodist Church; and so infatuated were they with this folly, that they would come into the church on Sunday, and make aSdisturbance— contradicting the minister to his face in the pulpit, and otherwise interrupting the ser vices. Yet such was the feeling in their favor, in the community, that the preacher hesitated to openly denounce them, or order them out of the church. Mormonism was a moral blight upon the place. The members of the Methodist Society were so discouraged, that they contemplated selling their church and brsaking up. But Mr. —,who was eminently. a peace-maker, persuaed them to hold the 'waste-places' a little' longer, and pray for relief. "Billy came to'consult with the minister in West Stockbridge, respecting the best means of dealing with the Mormons. Said he, "We must ridicule (pronouncing the finn i of that word long, as in ride,) these powerful saints;' and he began to repeat to him some of the. Mormon Bible—for he hada wonderful mem ory--making Mr. laugh, both at the' senseless matter'of the Mormon gospel and his rendering of it. Then he urged him to give notice from a pulpit of a meeting for some night during the week, and he would come "over' and preach from the Mormon Bible. Mr. hesitated. He did not think he would like to hear ridicule from the sacred desk. But Billy was urgent, declar ing that some errors could best be overcome by ridicule, and proving his argument by many ludicrous stories of his own use of the weapon on various happy occasions • and Mr. was won over at last to his side of the question, and gave notice as he desired. This created great excitement; and on the ap pointed night the church in West Stockbridge was crowded with eager listeners, for all the `country round' had coins to hear the well known 'clerical wit' discourse on Mormon ism. "He began by saying drily, though with a quiver of' the month that told there was mean ing behind the mere assertion,that it was cus tomary with ministers to choose only one verse of Scripture for a text, but he was going to proceed upon a new plan, for he should take the whole Bible for his text. His audi ence made wide eyes at that, and people of steady habits began to fear that they 'should not get home till morning.' But soon they perceived the joke, when he began soberly, I though in a tone imitative of the drawl of the Mormon prophets, to read from the Mormon Bible; and a broad smile spread over every lace, and here and there a suppressed laugh was heard. Then he looked up with pretended expression of reproof that anybody could laugh at things so serious, intimating that he should come to something by-and-by that would sober them. He read on, commenting a little now and then, till he came to a verse before which he paused awhile, as if deeply impressed with it himself, and then-deliberately and in solemn tone, read a portion of Mormon scripture, of which I remember only this, ' the devil laughetli,' when, instead of being sobered, the whole audience burst into a roar of laughter,' for his tone and look for comic effect as he read 'that were seldom equalled. - Then, when the mirth had a little subsided, he began again in that dry tone of serious ness which always provokes people to. laugh the more : 'Now, 1 have heard of the Devil doing very curious things, but never before that be laugbeth; but Ido not wonder that he laughed, once in his life—when this ild3r man Bible was wrttten.' And again - the people shouted with laughter. "He soon calmed them down, however ; he managed his audience well, perfectly imitating the ingenuity of the practised orator, who intimates that something more ludicrous is coming. The people listened and laughed, but did not know how in geniously the speaker was dispelling from their minds the delusions of Mormonism." whe Jesuits and Education. The Paris correspondent of the London ,Star says ; "From Spain we hear of a projected law onTublic - inatructionoharr whictrncme7cpuldii be more needed, the.hole education of the Peninsula being, as you are aware, in the hands of Jesuits, who, adepts in the art in countries such as France, where education is carried to the greatest perfection, confined their efforts in Spain to keeping the popula tion in debasing ignorance; insatiable lust for spiritual and temporal power, and the axiom that the end justifies the means, having ever been their principles. The Jesuit fathers, quiet and gentle as doves, and cunning as serpents, have ever endeavored to lay the iron-grip of their velvet-gloved hand on the young, and thus influence whole generations. This is not the first time they have been .1 1. e xpelled from the peninsula, ' n 1767 they were banished from Spain, perfidiously, however, and cruelly, by anda and Charles lIL "Jesuitism may feign death, but never re ally dies. Spain may truly be said to be its native land. lib school of art ever painted the Jesuit as the Spanish Roelas has given us 'the stealthy gtfinalkind courtier, and Ribalta ;those 'men in black from under the ground' whb.yesterday I wild two and threes glid ing through the streets of Paris, unmistakable in their Wick gowns and huge, hats' turned up at the 'side; whose one pecullar'mark, whether .disguised in one of the most irre-, proaehable of costs,cand the brilliant man of the hour in a fashionable salon, or confess edly a Jesuit in the dress of the order, Is, that they never look at you straight in the face. Five hundred of them have arrived -in Portu gal. How many hkve reached Paris I know not. "It cannot be denied that the French Jesuit College of Vangirard Mina out the best edu cated aspirants for Saint-Cyr and the naval colleges at Brest,the examinations for each of which are so difficult that on an average half the young men sent up are turned back,or, to use the word of the day,apun.' So powerful is the influence of these subtle priests that a young man educated by them is sure to ad vance, whatever be his profession; and I have myself known instances of families who have sent their sons, destined for the army, to Vangirard, not atone for the education there imparted, but with the view of securing their rapid advancement as well as a brilliant marriage; indeed, in the Quar tier St. Germain few are the marriages accom plished the' history of which, if thoroughly sifted, would not reveal the fact I assert; and unfortunately this subtle influence extends far beyoud that unimportant fraction of French society." Medical Eaueatton of Women In Pitrie. Mrs. Caroline 11. Dall writes to the Boston Aclvertieer `•ln your paper you draw attention to the fact that an American lady has been admitted within the last few weeks to the first of the series of medical examinations in Paris, and that those examinations are now thrown open to all women. I wish to direct attention to the manner in which this has been done, for it is an admirable illustration of; the views which I have for many yearn pressed upon the American public. There was no clamoring for rights; they were earned and taken. There was no assault upon established bar riers; they yielded to the first competent force. ' "The lady in question received her first in struction at the hands of Dr. Zakrzewska. Of the best connections in the city of New York, and entitled to the best social help;, she went abroad almost without letters, deter mining, as she expressed it, to stand only on her own feet. Her steady demeanor interested at once persons of influence. While she worked on, utterly innocent of the fact that her quiet walk was the theme of observation, the wife of the Minister of Public Instruction watched her narrowly. When the proper time came, this lady asked her husband to open the gates of the university to this one studont by the exercise of his authority. It was quite uncertain whether more could be done. The bearing and success of the first student has thrown them open to all women. If women would only stop deziaiming, and earn What they seek, like Dr. Zakrzewska and Miss Putnam, their friends would find no special pleading necessary." Forrest's Antecedents Cotton Mather, in his Magnolia, giving an account of some of the remarkable criminals who were executed in New England dining the seventeenth century, writes as folio we: "An English ship, in the year 1673, sailing from somewhere about the mouth of the Straits, was manned with some cruel mis creants, who, quarreling with the master and some of the officers, turned them all into the long boat,with a small quantity of provisions, about one hundred leagues to the westward of the Spanish coast. These fellows in the meantime set sail for New England, where, by a surprising providence of God,the;master with his afflicted company in the long boat, also arrived; all except one, who died of the barbarous usage. The countenance of the master was now become terrible to the rebel lious men, who, though they had escaped the sea, yet 'vengeance would not stiffer to live ashore.' At his instance and complaint they were apprehended, and the ringleaders of this murderous piracy had a sentence of death executed on them in Boston. "The horrors which attended the chief of these malefactors, one Forrest, in the last hours of his life were such as exceedingly astonished the beholders. Though he was a very stout man, yet now his trembling agonies and anguishes were inexpressible. One speech let fall by him was, 'I have been among drawn swords, flying ullets, roaring cannons—amid all which I knew not what fear meant, but now I have dreadful appre hensions of the dreadful wrath of God in the other world, which I am going into, my soul within me is amazed at it.'" Is not this the first of Fort Pillow? A Famous Kostaurant. One of the Paris cafes to which the greatest number of literary souvenirs is attached—the Cafe Talma—in the passage Choiseul,has just been sold for the sum of 2,850 f. Many years ago it was the rendezvous of FrCderic Soulie, Balzac, Theophile Gautier, Alphonse Darr, Henri Monnie. The actors of the old Theatre de la Renaissance used to gather there after the night's work was over, along with the au thors whose pieces they played. Alter mid night the noise of talking, laughter and the clinking of glasses used to re-echo from the rooms above: How many witty things have been said there, says an English paper, and what a tale thoge old *ells would have to tell if they could speak ! It was there that Dumas the elder first related the marvellous adven tures of the young captain of Marseilles, long before "Monte Cristo" became famous. Wow= adays a very different comp y frequents the old cafe, and nothing, s e the portrait .of Telma, retrains to tell o its bygone popu larity. The name eVen of the illustrious tragedian has been effaced from over the door. Reverts or rnuadelmna Evening setilletin. S AVANNAH—Brig Fannie. 2. - unier—`43,ooo feet yellow pine-boaide-T-P-Galvin•-&-Co. - - - - - • - • PBNSACOLA=Brig Charlotte. Stnpell-221.150 Ityellow plue'boards Patterson dr. Lippincott. BOSTON—Steamship Roman. Baker-1 organ NE3 Bach ; 21 rolls 66 bdls paper W B Flitcraft & Co; 39 cs machines Glover & Baker Sewing Machine Co; 30 bens allow Le Hus ton & Denckla ; 91 bdle 1,0.1 rolls paper klowlett.Onderdonk & Cu ; 50 bbls syrup P Alcßride & Co; to do W J McCabe° & Co; 50 hbis apples Irina pears T Sheffield 50 bblo syrup White Bros; cs boots and shoes T L Ashbridge; 60 cs do Boker Bros; 86 do Brown & Co; ;7 do -Bunting & Dux borow ; 94 do Clallin & Partridge; 29 do Chandler. Hart & Co; 29 do Cunningham & Miler; 80 do Fletcher - 8;Co; 24 do C M Fay ; 24 de Grail & Watkins ; 28 do A C Harmer; 47 do O D McClvese &Co; 123 do A A Shumway ; 30 do Gard ner. Brewer & Co ; 10 bales 24 co 2U rolls dry goods Hough ton. Renshaw &DWilkins; 150 rolls do 2 bales do Frothieg. ham & Wells; 27 pkgs nn se Johnston. Holloway & Cow den; 99 cs do Lewis & Wharton; 4 bales do 67 Thayer & Badger; I 0 bales carpet Atwood & Itanck; 60 bbls mack erel B B Cray croft & Co,' 68 bola do 75 hlf bbls do Crowell & Vollins ;50 bbls do Harding & Bro ; 25 do Kennedy, Stairs &Co; 176 bbls fish John eowor & Co; 32 do Shobor Sx'Co_;_gl lulls do ir.3 bbls do 90 bsyrels cranberries or in% WILMINGTON. NC.—Rthamihiß Pioneer, Catharine -106 bble epirits turpentine 1224 do roam E H Hosvley ; 1 lihd 6 bble 2 bdls 2 pa old iron 86 bbls spirits turpentine 62 do tar 296 do rosin Cochran. Russell A: Co; 129 do rosin TO Negue ; 60 do pitch 100 do tar 31 do spirits turpentine 18 bales cotton Prentice (1; Pitler ;88 bbls rosin.) . & -T Elkinton; 51 bbls rosin 1 box mdse. Mayer di Morgan; 206 bbls rosin James Tully ; 4 cheats mdse Wm L James; 2 bble vinegar 1 box sauce E Mathieu & Bon; 3 bxe mdse Isaac Donnelly; 36 empty ale bbls Massey. Huston es Co; 22 do Wm Gaul; 342 bdle shingles Patterson & Lippincott; 3528 do D B Tay lor & Sone; 4 empty ale bble Whitney & Bon; 6 do G Bergner; 3 empty has Fliover ;83 bids rosin 8 casks 5 bbls spirits turpentine I do crude do 15 do pitch 46 bales cotton order. !MOVEMENTS OF 0 JEANPaF. STEAMISEfis TO eaters ?BOX / 101 MIN Britannia .... ....... .Glaagow. New York Oct. 16 Cella . Lonaon..New Y0rk...........0ct. 17 Germany............Liverpool—Quebec. ..Oct. 17 Tarifa . . . Liverpool.. New Y0rk...........00. 20 Manhattan..........Liverpool—New Y0rk....... ..... Oct. 20 America.. ......Bouthampton..New Y0rk............0ct. 20 City of Aniwerp.. •Liverpool—New York Oct. 21 England....., Liverpool—New York Oct. 21 TO DEPART. Nebrzeica. New York.. Liverpool.... ....... Nov. 4 China Now York.. Liverpool.... ....... Nov. 4 Pa1myni............New Y0rk..Liverp001.:..........N0v. 6 Eag1e...............New Y0rk..Havana......:::7...N0v. 5 PaWiyra........ ~.New York.. Liverpool. ~.... —...Nov. 5 riOwler. • • •• • . •,:riAlladolDhia.munanace• • ~,,•. ,Nor, 6 THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN-PHILADRLPHIA,, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1868. Penniylvanis . New York-Liverpool. Nov. 7 iintannin.....". .. Nosw V orit..43lsegow Nov. 7 City of Antwerp.. New York..l.lverpooL Nov. 7 Sitars and blztpes....Philatra../Savarke. ..........Nov. 10 Cuba . .. ....... New's ork..l.lverpoof 'iov. It TManhalisa...., ..New York . .. Liverpool... - Nov.ll arifa .............New Yors..Liverpool N0v.12 Juniata .........Philadelphla..New Orleans. N0v.14 11ibenna............New York..Glassow ......:.Nov. 14 St Laurent ... ....New York..liavre..... ........ ..Nov. 14 City of Marta New York..Ltveropc,ol Nov. 14 Bins Ems, 8 631 01:14 Bz. 71 Map Wasani. 4 0 ARRIVED 'YESTERDAY. Steamer Pioneer, Catharine, 60 hours from Wilmington, NC. with .cotton, naval ...three. &c. to Philadelphia and Bonthern Mall BB Co. Left lying at Bmithville. sabre Geo If Mille and I. A Van Brunt, for New York. Above the Cross Leda, saw eche Abide (of Yarmouth) at anchor, lumber laden: above the Buoy an the Middle, a foreign bark and brig Marla Wheeler, bound up; o ff Bforria Ida tones. Alp Tnonlaa Harward. trom Liverpool. bound up; below Marcus crook: achr legit*. lumber laden, bound up. Bttanter Vulcan. Morrison . &Chown from New York, with rodeo to W M Baird & Co. Steamer Mayflower. Robins o n. S 4 hours from Now York, with rudee to W DC Baird & Co. Behr Izetta. Coombs. I.V days from Satins, Ga. with 186,- 600 It lumber Pottery,'" & Lippincott—verael to J E Bazie7 & Co. Tug ThoeJefferlov. Allen, from Baltimore, with a tow of bargee to W P Clyde dc Co. CLEARED YESTERDAY. Steamer Ann Eliza. Richards. Now ork. W P ClydedrCo. Steamer W Whilden. itiggans. Baltimore. A Groves. Jr. Bark Daring. Libby, Portland, Warren & Gregg. Brig (Otto. Dow, Boston, L. Audenried & Co. Solar Lilly. Francis. Savannah, Lathbury, Wickersham &Co. Behr Glenwood. Lawrence. New London. J Rommel. Jr. Behr It W Benedict. Case. Bristol. EL do Behr Sarah Cobb. New Bedford. do Behr E S Theft,. Chase Charlestown. ' do Behr Ruth 151 Baker, Loring. Boston. Warren & Gregg. lug Thee. Jefferson... Mien, Baltimore._ with barges, W P Clyde & Co. Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. READING. Nov. 2. 1.865. The following boats from the Union Canal panted into the BchylkW Canal, bound to Philadelphia, laden and consigned as followe: Wm 8 Taylor. lumber to E D & E Jones; Emblem. flotur to Hoffman & Kenedy; J W McFadden. lumber •to H. if ford;Shillin Fame, do to Taylor & Betts; Gen Pope. do to Christman & Co; Aaron & Catharine. do to A B Day. aber; Pilgrim Circle do to J Deyeher ;G W Coder. do to Patterson & Lippincott; Mary Ann, do to do; R Hain. do to A Johnson; Gmega , pig iron to Lott, Dale & Co. Yours, &c. F. MEMORANDA. Ship Anna, Nielsen, for this port, entered out at London 17th ult. Ship bland Home. Newell, from Grimsby for this Dort at Deallfith ult. Ship Betty (NG). Nntzboro. honco for Hamburg. off Dungeneve 16th ult. . . Ship Suean L Fitzgerald. Raffle, ftom Chanaral 9th Aug at Baltimore 91st tilt with copper ofe. Steamer Star of the Union, t,ookeey. hence at Havana. 311 d ult. for New Orleans . _ Steamer Junlata.Hozie,from New Orleans for this port, at tillVBl3ll3let ult. Bark Banton Gregory, Eipeedaway, hence at Boston la instant. Bark Mary Bentley, Clark, hence at Dunkirk 17th ult. Bark Lord Byron (Greco), Embark°, hence at Bremer haven 16th Mt. . . _ Bark Wilhelm Ana (NG), Rhetz from London, at Deal 7th rcpt. for this port, was spoken 20th nit. fat 42, long No 20. Brig L H Himball, at Naraaaa 10th ult. loading for this port. Brig N Stowers. French. hence at Boston Bet ult. Brig Jost° A Devereaux. Clark, hence at (Marieston sleterday. Behr J J Spencer, Fleming. from Cardenas Md nit. for this port. put into Cha , leeton yesterday disabled. Sehr Moses Patten. Cummings. hence at Bangor3oth ult. Schr C H Mellor, Brown, cleared at Boston 31st ult. for this port. . . Schr Burney, Burney, failed from Washington, De.iilet ult for Gecrgetown , to load coal for this port. Schr Emma D Finney. Tuttle, was loading at Savannah 20th ult. for this port. Schr J V Wellington, Chipman, cleared at Boston iiist tilt. for this port tichr Henry Harteau, Jones, sailed from Newport aetti nit. for this nort. LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Or THE UNITED STATES OF AMEE-lOA CbEntered by Special AO of Congress, Ip proved July 25, 1868. Cash Capital, $1,000,000 BIIANCII OFFICE: FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING DIRECTORS: CLARENCE R. CLARK. E. A. ROLLTNEk JAY COOKE, F. RATCIIFORD STABIL, W. E. CHANDLER. W. G. MOOBHEAD. GEORIAE F. TYLER, EDWARD DODGE, J. HINCKLEY CLARK, H. D. FAHNESTOCIL OFFICERS: CLARENCE H. C....A233, Philadelphia, President JAY COOKE, Chairman Finance and Executive Com mittee. HENRY D. WOKE. Washington, Vice Preeident. EMERSON W. PEST, Philadelphia, Bec'y and Actuary E. S. TURNER, Washington, Asaistant Secretary. FRAD.CIS G. SMITH. M. D., Medical Director. J EWING MEARS, AL D. Asa:latent Medical Director. This Company, National in its character, offers, by reason of its Large Capital, Low Rates of Premium, and New Tables, the most desirable means of Insuring Life yet presented to the public. Circulars, Pamphlets, and full part:iv:dans given on ap• plication to the Branch Office of the Company or to its General Agents. Genera], Agents of the Company. JAY COOKE & CO., New York, for New York State and Northern New Jersey. JAY COOHE & CO., Washington, D. C., for Delaware, Virginia, District of Columbia and West Virginia. E. W. CLARK do CO.. for Pennsylvania and Southern Now Jersey. B 8. Ruaronn, Harrisburg, Manager for Central and Western Pennsylvania. J. ALDER ELLIS & CO., Chicago, for Illinois, Wisconsin and lowa. Hon. STEPHEN MILLER, St Paul. for Minnesota and N. W. Wino:win. JOHN W. ELLIS & CO., Cincinnati, for Ohio and Con . _ tral and Southern Indiana. T, B. EDGAR, St. Lonie. for Mhicouri and Kansas. S. A. KEAN dr. CO., Detroit, for Michigan and Northern Indiana. A. AL MOTtaRSHED, Omaha. for Nebraska. JOHNSTON BROTHERS & CO.. Baltimore. for Mary land. New England General Agency under tile Direction of E. A. ROLLENB and! W. E. CHANDLER,) Of the Board of Directors. NITED FIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OF U PIiILADELPIILA. This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent with safety, and confines its business exclusively to FIRE INSURANCE IN THE CITY OF PHILADEI, PHU. But F ILE —No. 733 Arch street, Fotltth National Bank ng. DIRECTORS. Thomas J. Martin, I . Charles R. Smith, John Hirst. Albertus King. Wm. A. Rolin, Henry Bumm. Janice M ongan, James Wood, William Glenn, John dhallcross. . James...loaner—. J. Henry maim AlexanderT.Dickson,..- i -Hugh Mulligan Albert V. Roberts, • I - Philip Fitzpatrick. CONRAD B. ANDRESS, President . Wm. A. Roux, Trans. WAt H. PAW:N. See'y. A MERICAN EIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, LNICUrf -011- PoratedlBlo.—Charter perpetual. No. RIO WALNUT street, above Third Phil a delphia. Having a large pald-up Oapital Stock and Surplus in vested In sound and availa Securities, continuo to in sure on dwellings, stores, fu iture, merchandise, vessels in port, and their cargoes, amid other personal property. All looses liberally and promptly adjusted. DIRECTORS. Thomas R. Marie, 'Edmund G. Dutilh, John Welsh, 'Charles W. PoultneY. Patrick Brady, I v l7ael MOrris John T. Lewis. John P. Wetherill. William . Paul. THOMAS R. MARIA President ALIISITT C. CRAWFOP.D. se.vretary. FM INSURANCE COMPANY; NO. 908 CHESTNUT atree . _ PHILADELPHIA FIRE INSURANCE TO EXCLUSIVELY.; D.LRECRS. Francis N. Buck. Philip S. Justice, Chas. Richardson. John W. Everman. Henry Lewis, Edward D. 'Woodruff, Robert Pearce, John Ressler, Jr.. Geo. A. West, Chas. Stokes, Robert B. Potter, Mordecai Buzby. FRANCIS N. BUCK Priesident. CHAS. RICHARDSON, Vico Priderit, w ilt L. BiAzigjj AMP. Secretary. v Emm a(ll3 - ta "I'lCAL)ki.i. GEO. L. BUZBY. Morrnax Comarrnt. SAMUEL E. STOKES rlwmwTmirwm 'FH,' INSURIABIEUE• NATIONAL Washington, D. C. Paid in Full, PHILADELPHIA, Whore alreerrerpondence should be addreesed. J. P. TUCKER, Manager, B Merchants' Exchange, State street, Boston. I. _,LICE NIX INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPIILA. INCORPORATED MN—CHARTER PERTETUAL. No. IN WALNUT Street, opposite the ExehanFe• 1 his Company Insures from losses or damage by FIRE on liberal terms on buildings, merchandise, furniture, &c.. for limited periods, and permanently en buildings by deposit or premium. The Company has been in active operation for more than sixty years, during which al2 Posses have been promptly adjusted and paid. DIRECTORS: John L. Bodge, David Lewis, M. B. Mahony, Benjamin Rain& John T. Lewis. Thos. H. Powers, Wtn. S. Grant, A. R. hie:Fleury, Robert W. Learning, Edmond Castilian, D. Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox, Lawrence Lewis. Jr.. Louis C Norris, JOHN IL WUCHERER, President, SAMUEL WILCOX., Secretary. HENRY D. COOKE. JOHN D. DEFREES. ~. ~ FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PIIILADSL. ss ~ phis. Incorporated March l 27, 1820. BBuildings, Y ii - #.ikk . ' ~.:1' 1 1 1 °. 34 L ' l r d th"th "treu L anr u gerc u ha d iPli g se ,N 4 .. .. , , - 1 -.:AF ge o n us era u R o y from Furniture i....oss by Fire (I n the City of '' ...,--.- '-'-,- Philadelplda only.) ' , 1,4 - '''''', Statement of the Assets of the Association January lst, 1803, published in compliance with the pro visions of the Act of Assembly of April 6th.1142. Bonds and Mortgages ou Property in the City of ehliadelphia only ......81.076,166 17 Ground Rents 18,819 98 Real Estate..,.._ 51,744 57 Furniture and Fixtures of t ice........ ...... 4,490 OS C. S. 520 Registered 80nd5......... ... • ....... 45,000 00 Cash on hand..... ..... 31,873 11 Total TILE couNTY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.—OF. flee, No. 110 South Fourth street, below Chestnut. The Fire "neurone° Company of the County of Phila delphia," Incorporated by the Legislature of Penney Iva. Dia in 183 g, for indemnity against lose or damage by tire, excluelvely. ..... CHARTER PERPETUAL. This old and reliable inatitutiomaith ample capital and contingent fund carefully invested. continues to insure buildings, furniture, merchandise, thc., either permanent or for a limited time,against loss or damage by fire, at the lowest rates consistent with the absolute safety of its customers. J >FrERSON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF Philadelphia.—Oilice, No. St North Fifth street, near Market street. . - . incorporated by the Legislature of Penneylvania. Char ter perpetual. Capital and Aeents, sisauoo. Make insu rance againet Lees or damage by Fire on Public or Private Buildings, Furniture, Stocks, Goode and Merchandise, on favorable terms. Win. McDaniel, erxet Peterson John F. Bolster'lin& Henry Troemner, Jacob Selland ein, Frederick Doll. Samuel Miller. William D WILLIAM 6 ISRAEL PE' Pm Lir E. Cottmoi. Secret . ItNTERACITE INSURANCE COUPANY.—CHAR TER PERPETUAL. ollioo, No. SU. WALNUT street, above Third, Phila. Will insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build inv, either perpetually or for a limited time, Household Fm Laßue and Merchandise generally. Also, Marine Insurance on Vessels. Cargoes and Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union. DIRECTORS. -- PeterlSleger. I). Luther; " J an Letris"AUdenried, vv . m E : F K D ut ea , n. .101 in R. Blakiston, John Ketcham, Davis Pearson, John B. Hoyt WM. ESHER. President, WM. F. DEAN, Vice President. Wm. M. Surrn. Secretary. ja22-tu,th,ssiof Tgot lg :n m I SONS, ilad N 0.1324 CHESTNUT Street, hilada.. manufact Cr o e f site United States Mint, 'WEATHER BEDS AND MATTRESSES RENOVATED. —Blattrogees and E ionatArd gitrecti eatag o ca; halide Factory. No. 3u 9Cal /se 1829 _ HARTER PERPETUAL. FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, Noe. 435 and 437 Chestnut •Streist. 44sset8 on 3annary 1,1868, 'tf , 2,413 03, 7'40 09. Capital. ..... ......... ........ suuceo 00 Accrued ifuraus ......... .............. .. .. 1.1 ,1 8,M 2 9 Premiums .:1,t8i.046 20 UNSEWAT &LAIRS, cd) 7 5 12 WI Loseea Paid Sinee 1829 Over 1105 500,000. Perpetual and ToMporary Policies on Liberal Terms. DIRECTORS. Chas. N. Daimler, Geo. Fates. Tobias Wagner. Alfred Fitter, Samuel Grant. Fess. W. Louis, M. D. Geo. W. Richards, base Lea, CHARLE N. lIANCKEtt, President. GEO. FALEB. Vice Provident JAB. W . MQALLIBTJ R. Secretary pro tern. Except at Le:ineton, Kentucky, th e Company has no Agencies wee. of Pittsburgh. fel2 DIJUTIJAJL FIRE INSURANCE. CORPA. N Y Oxe ERIE SEELPIIIA. OFFICE: No. 8 SOUTH FIFTH STREET. SECOND ll 81016/. ASSETS. $170,000. Mutual system exclusively,. combining economy with safety. Insures Buiblings, Household Goods, and Merchandise generally. LOSSES PROMPTLY PAW. Caleb Clothier. DI ro William P. Reeder. Benjamin Malone, Joseph Chapman, Thomas Mather, Edward AL Needles. T. Ellwood Chapman, Wilson M. Jenkins, Simeon Matlack Lukens Webster, Aaron W. Laski Francis T. Atkinson. CA B CLO 'LITER, President. BENJAMIN MALONE, Vico Provident. TIIOMAII MaTnre, Treasurer. T. Etiwooa Cuansser. Secretary. qua: RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHIL. lI ADELPICA. Incorporated in 1891. Charter Perpetual. 01lice, No. 306 Walnut street. CAPITA $BOO,OOO. Insures acalnet lose or da L mage by FIRE, on Houses. Stores and other Dulidinge, limited or perpetual, and on Furniture, Goode, Wares and Merchandise in town or country. LOOSES PROMPTLY, AND PAID. Amete . .8421.177 76 Invested in the following Beet:lntim. viz.: Bret 51ortgages on City Property,well eecured.sl26.6oo 00 United states Government 117,000 00 l'hlte.aelphia City 6 per cent. Loarut,... . . .... 75,00 u 00 Penney Ivania $3.000,000 6 per cent L0an......., 26,000 0.1 Prineylvania liallroad Bonds. first and second 510, (gager. ...... _ . .... _ ..... 35.000 00 Camden and emtiOy Railroad Caimpanl'a d per . 6,000 00 Philadelphia and ifc:adlng . iftdroidi Company's 6 per Cent. Loan.... 5,000 00 Ilantingoon and Broa - d : f 01;1 .. 7 per Alort gage Bonds._ ... ..... • . ... 4.56000 County Fire Insurance - company's 'toot_ .... 1.050 00 evhanlca' Bank 5t0ck........ . 4,00 J 00 Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stoik . • 10,000 00 Union Mutual insurance uotopanra Stock..... 8 , 30 00 B. tierce insurance Company of Philadelphia .... .. • .... ....... 8430 00 Cash in Bank and on .... 70 Worth at Par. Woith this date at market prices. Thomas H. Moore, Samuel Castner, James T. Young, leaae P. Baker. Christian J. Heilman, Samuel id. Thomas, Biter. :3L TINGLEY, President. I lem. Tingley, Wn.. ?Jeerer, tzamnel tsleohom, 1-1. L. Canon, Win. St.:rumen, Benj. W. Tingley. Ed war, T11031A13 C. B Secretor Ph ti.o.uoi.rni.o, December VIKE INSURANCE EXCLUSTVELY.—THE PENN eyivania Fire Insurance Company—lncorporated 1815 --Charter Perpetual—No. 510 Walnut street, opposite In dependence Square: This I_ oropany. favorably known to the community for over forty year., continues to insure against loss or dam age by &re. on Punlic or Private Buildings, tither perma nently or for a limited time. Also, on urniture, Stocks of Goods and Merchandise generally. on liberal terms. Their Capital. together with a largo Surplus Fund, Is invested in a moot careful manner, which enables them to offer to the insured an undoubted security in the case of loss. DIRECTORS. Daniel Smith. Jr., John Deveroux, Alexanaer Benson, Thomas Smith, Isaac liaziehurst, Henry Lewis. Thomas Eobinr, J. Gillingham Fell, Daniel Hadoock. Jr. DANIEL 13511TH, Jr., President. Wrinan G. Cnownir. Secretary. TEUBTE .... ES. -......•81.°...18.088 86 William H. Hamilton, Samuel Sparhawk, Peter A. Keyser, Charles P. Bower, John Carrow, Jesse Lightfoot, George 1. 1 oung, Robert Shoemaker, Joeeph It Lynda', Peter Armbruster. Levi P. Coats, H. H. Dickinson, Peter W Hammon. WM. B. HAMILTON. President, SAMUFL SPARHAWK. Vice President. WM. T. BUTLER, Secretary. Losses adjusted and paid with all possible despatch. DIRECTORS : Char. J. Sutter. Andrew IL Miller. Henry - Budd, James N. stone. john Horn, Edwin L. Reakirt, Joseph Moore, ' hobert V. Massey. Jr.. George Atecke, Mark Devine. CHAR SJ. SUTTER, President. HENRY BUDD, Vice President. BENJAMIN P. HOECKLEY, Secretary .and Treasurer DIRECTORS. Edward P. Moyer. ' Frederick Ladner,. Adam J. Glasz. Henry Delany, (John Elliott, Christian D. Prick, George E. Fort, I. Gardner. idoDANIEL. President. ITERSON, Vico President and Treasurer. -- HEATERS AND STOVES. LOW DOWNR LOR, . PA CHAMBER. OFFICE, And other GRATES. For AntbracitanDituminous and Wood Fire; _ sum, .WARNA ,, IR FURNACES, For Warming Public and Private Buildings. REGISTERS, VENTLI..ATORd, AND CIIIMNEY CAPS, COOKINODANGES, DATEI.I3OII,ERS. WHOLESALE and RETAIL 0141CTILESS AND BEDDIIVG. it i f TIIOMAB & BON& AUCtiONEILAB, ; JAI. • bloc .I.l> and 141 &nab onrth street. 'BOOK BALE% • - • • • Tb lards'', Nov Ph-dil•cenanaque. Friday nov. &Li -Medical and Mbeellanoona. • - TnesdriT and Wedneaday. inth and 14tH - Rare and Ve luable vale Library. '1 horads,y. Nov. 12th-Vsilasible fdisMdlaneenk: Friday. Nov. 19th--Lam Library.' , 'Tuesday. Weduesdal , and Thanday.llth, Rita stailleth •;--- Very Valuable Books from tlu3. Block •of John Camp. Friday. Nov. 20th-Privato Collection of FL W. Smith. BALES OF STOEHR AND REAL ESTATE._* ; Efir Public sales at the PhUadelehlaEnchsinkeEvxda , TI..' , EBDe Y. at 12 o'clock. _ - • Fun:More Bales at the Auction 'Otero TN ERBDAV. 7,1 Bales at Residences receive medal attention. SALE OF STO( HS, LOANS. dtc. ON TUESDAY. NOV. 10,_ At 12 o'clock neon. at the Philadelphia Exchange. , For Account of Whom it may Concern— sSP,oo to olio aced Morig • ge Sonde of Co al ngto nd Braid '1 op 'Mountain gailroad and Ott. win" three overdue coupoue attached. ' Executor's rale— . 88000 Union Canal Coupon Bones. 111000 McKean and elk Land and iMPtovernalll Co second mortg.ge six per cent: ton& / share Academy of Fine Arts. A dmlutatratore Sale 20 shares West ;heater and Phila. R. R. preferred. 21 shares Camd,n and Atlantic Railroad. old. 9 sham Corn Exchange Bank. 10 shores Penn's Steel Co, par BICO. 197 shares Atlantic Co. , • For tither Accounts -5 shares Academy of Music, with ticket. 1 share Point Breeze Park IEO shares Paden and Atlantic Telegraph. • 42 shares Central Transportation Co. Sale at Nos. 130 and 141 South Fourth street. • HANDSOME FURNITURE, PIANOS; 61 ZEROES. I.IItEPhf.DP SAFE, HANDSOME V.F.LVET,BEHS BELS AND OTHER CARPETS. drc. No v . ONIIIURSDAY I.IOIIN LNG.' v 5 at 9 o'clock, at the auction roomsh by catalogue, a large assortment of superior Household Furniture comprising—Handsome Walnut Parlor, Dining Room and Chamber Furniture, superior Rosewood Piano Forte, made by E iN , cherr: two Mahogany Piano Fortes, French Plate Minor!, two wits tine Damask Window onatar, Wardrobes, Bookcases., kidebonrda, Extension Tables. (Winn and Glassware. Reds and Bedding: fine Hair. Blatressca Office Furniture, superior Fireproof Safe, fordo by Evans dr Wabicn; Rolling Mill' Scales. weigh 3000 lbs.; Turning Lathe. Hatters , Pressing Blocks. Steam Vat and Troughs., Gaseonsuming and Cooking ' Stoves. Ilsothorna Velvet. Brussels arm other Carpets.dro. Afro, 2 Theodolites and 2 Surveyors' Compasses. also. by order of Exec.. ors Estate of U. F. Hagedorn. deceased—Large quantity of Engravings and Photo graphs. MISCELLANEOUS AND DIFIMCAL BOOBS FROM LIBRARIES. ON TBURSDA.Y AFTERNOON. Nov. E.. at 4 o'clock Sale No. LSO South Third street. STOCK OF LIQUORS. ON' FRIDAY MORNING, Nov C, at 10 o'clock. at No. 130 South Third street, mill be cold the Stock of Liquora of J11111(33 Jones. comprfaing Inch Vl'hiaky. London old Tom Gin, Port Wino, aic., in barrels. demijohns nod bottloa Alco, three years lean of the office. Particulars at sale. Ti. Nurserymen and °thorn. EXTENSINE c E . 3I . c.; .. I . 4I,..OF PLANTS, TREE 3, • iN Nov. dat 10 o'clock, i.t Rising Suno.'s Nursery. No. 3118 Gennantov,n avenue. will be sold at public tale, by order of the Sheriff, tt e entire valuable collection of '1 roes. Plants, comprising a general portto eta. ICS" Full particulars in catalogues now ready. DE VALUABLE MEDICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS ' BOOKS Fr. 0151 PRIVATE LIEIR RIES. Including Early Printed and Illtutrated Works, in Fine Blndinas ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON. Nov. 6, at 4 o'clock. To Lumbermen, Ship EtnildersWheelurrighta and Wham reremFtory Salo on the Premises. 31) ACRP's ELEANDINO TIMBER. Turner's lane, west of lit ead street, opposite Monument Cemetery. ON BATI:hiIAY MORNING. Nov. 7, at E o'clock. wid be sold at public sale, without reeerve, on • he • remises, thirty acres of Menthe* Timber, comprising White Oak. Chestuut.Y allow Poplar, Hickory and a variety or odier hard wood. It will be eold in one lot, and to ship builders, lumber and cord wood men this is an opportunity seldom °tie cd. The object of this sale is to havetbe land clewed by the first of April next. Mir' Bale absolute. $431.176 AO s4n.on 24 7ime-6'SSO to ha paid at the time of sale. balance when the party purchasuog shall commence to cut .he timber. and appr..vcd security given that the laud will be Vetu ed by April 1, leak For further particulars apply at the office of Mean. O. IL & 11. P. Muirheid. Nc. 205 South Sixth street, or the uctioneers. Jal•tu the tf Pale No. 726 Buttonwood street. NEAT EIOUSLIIOLD FURNITUktr., CARPETS, MIR- A ux c OANi•ELIER.d. &a. ON MONDAY MORNING. Nov. 9, at 10 o'clock. at No. 726 Buttonwood street, by catalogue, the mire Walnut and Mahogany Parlor. Dining Room and Chamber Purn'ture. Pier Mirror China sad Glassware. Brussels nnd Ingrain Ca pets, Feather Brds and Bedding, Veneti,n Blinds, Vhandellerailtchen Utensils. dm. Peremptorry Salo No 211 South Second street. STOCK sUPEIOOR CABINET FURNITURE. ON WEDNESDAY MORNINCI. Nov. 11, at le celocs, at No. 211 South Second street by catalogue, the entire deck of superior Furniture. inelm ding NV alma Parlor bait,, in green plush and hair cloth,• Sideboards*, Walnut Centro and lioquA Tablets, Hat Stands, supolor Walnut Chamber Furniture. elegant. Walnut Wardtobee, Lounges, Cane Seat Chaim Cottage b. vita, &c, $f - The entire stock was manufactured expressly for pnvate ealee, and finiehed in the beat manner. Bale Peremptory. THOMAS BIRCH di SON, AUCTIONEERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, No. 1110 CHESTNUT street. Rear Entrance No. 1107 SJULHOM street. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIP TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT. Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the most reasonable terms SALE OF ELEGANT SHEFFIELD PLATED WARE, FINE PEARL AND IVORY HANDLE TABLE CUT LERY, RICH BOHEMIAN VASES AND TOILET SETS, JAPANFED TEA TRAYS IN SETS, Aro. Will be sold at public rale, , n a few days, a large and elegant assortment of the above Ware, just arrived from Messrs. JOSEPH DEAKIN Ar. SONS, Sheffield, England. Particulars in future. SALES OF VALUABLE OIL PAINTINGS, ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS. Nov. 12th and 13th. at bail-peat geven o'clock.at the auc tion store, No. 1110 Chestnut street. Mr. Chas F. Hazeltine (previous to removing to his New Bullding.No. 1123 Chestnut street) will dose several A:linable cons.gnments. including epocimene of the fol lowing famous artists European and American: Backalowicz,Beaumont. Patvois. F. nglehardt, Debrechon, Warders. Pape, Duche. Women, Ft chef. aitters, Prof. Walraven. Rico, Mehner, Van Eitarktnborgh W. T. Rich rods, Nocrr De Drackeleer. 1. 13. Irving. Bezel, Laurent de Bud. li oquet, Itothormel. Behead% Boul elle, Brevoort, Fairmatn, Sully. Bellows. Bristol, J. D. Smillie, ),. Wrzn Parton, Paul Weber, G. W. Nicholson, Cresson, W. S. Yonne, Ramsey. Arc. The Pi:imbues will be open ior exhibition from Wed. needay. Oct. 28, until day of sale. azr Persons having Pictures at the Gallery are re quested to have them removed previous to the sale. SUPERIOR Hut SEBOLD FURNITURE, ME CAR YE'IB. PIANO FORTES, MIRRORS SILVER PLATED WARE. PAINTINGS, FRENCH CHINA, FAKE GUNS, &c. _ . ON FRIDAY MORNING. Commencing at 9 o'clock, at the Auction Store, No, 1110 Chestnut street, P ill be sold—A large assortment or Superior household 'Furniture, from families declining housekeeping. comprising—Piano Fortes, by Chickering, Schomacker Hardman and others; Suit of elegant Parlor Furniture, coveted with blue silk, with Brussels Carpets to match; Rosewood Parlor Sur, in green reps; plush Parlor Suits, Library Suits, in reps; Walnut ttagere, Walnut slanaber Suite, Velvet, Brussels. Tapestry and Inarain Carpets, Walnut and teak ;sideboards, large Library Bookcases, JCitension Dining Tables. Ward. robes, French China Dinner Set, Bronze.. Parian Fi• sures, French Plate Mantel and Pier Glasses, Silver Plated Ware. Pahitini FINE GUNS. Also, an invoice of fine Fowling Pieces. Bale at No. 1109 s_pring Garden street. BTOCK AND INSTRUMADAI3"OF A PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. ON MONDAY. NOV. 9 Parttculars.in future advertieemente." 13 , Y BARRITT & CO.. AUCTIONEERS. CASH AUCTION HOUSE, No. MO MARKET street, corner of BANK street Cash advanced on consiaments without extra charsa FIRST FALL TRADE SALE OF IMPORTED AND AhtER]UAN FURS, SLEIGH AND CARRIAGE ROBES. BY CATALOGUE. Commencing 'I'II.URBDaY,Nov. 5. at 10 o'clock, corn. oriaing Ladles'. hibees' nod Children 4 Haft)+ , Bay; Mink ould., Siberian Squirrel, French Ermine, Often, American Fitch .§c., in large variety. Also, Butfgdo, Wolf and other Robe& in large dasortmenta. V D. MoOLEE A S CO.. UCTIONEERS. No. 506 MARRET street -- SALE OF 1800 CASES BOOTS, SHOES, BROGANS. BALMORALS, ON THURSDAY MORNING. November 6. commencing at 11) o'clock. tvo will sell by catalogue, a large and superior assortment of Boots, 6hoee, brogans Balmorshi &c. Al•o, Women's. Metes' and Children's Citymade goods. T. L. ASHURIDGE its CO , AUCTIONEERS. • No. ba MARKET street. above Fifth. LARGE SALE OF BOOTS. SHOES, BROGANS AND HATS. ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, November 4, at It o'clock. we will sell by catalogue AltaZialine,oLtirti,‘ clan city=: do Bo_ols_anS illrins.allso of. Eastern manufacture. embracing BieraTri. Soya' and Youths' wear. Also, Women's, Misses' and Children's Shoes, to-which the attention of city and country buyers is called. Open early on the morning of sale for examination. CLAIIIC d 1 EVANS. AUCTIONEERS, Ern CHESTNUT streets Wi l l sell THIS DAY, MORNING and EVENING,_ A large invoice of Blankets. Bed Spreads, Dry (Goode' Cloths, Cassimeres, Hosiery. Stationery, 'Pablo and Pocket Cutlery. Notions &c. (.4.y and country merchants will And ba.rgallis. Ps — Terms cash. Goods packed free of charge. ee S tf MBE EPINCIPA.L MONEY ESTABLIBHMENT— B. E. Corner of SIXTH and RACE streets. Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watched. Jewelry, L. ismones, Gold and Silver Elate. and on all articles of value. for any length of time agreed on. WATCHES AND JEWELRY AT PRIVATE SALE. Fine Gold Hunting Case,Double Bottom and Open Face English. American and 13 Mad Patent Lever Watched; Fine Gold Hunting Case and Own Face Levine Watches Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt ing Case and- Open Face English. American and Swiss Patent Lever and Lepine Watches; Double Case English Quartier Breastpins; Watchas ; dles , Fancy Watches; Diamond Finger hinge; Ear mails; Studs; &c.; Fine Gold Chains,' Medallions LBracaletel Scarf Pine; Breastpins; Finger Pings ; Pencil Eased and jewelry generally. FOE SAIM - - - -Lt - large • ant Fireproof Chest. suitable for a Jeweler;_eost $650. Also. several Lots iulfoutll Qamden.Fifth awl Clalebillt 'greets. ATICTION SALES. Salo at NP. 1110 Chestnut street. AUCTION ill=1:1; ELThitk DUIEBOROULUOTIONNAD. -4311! Eta "d 0 ., • t 6 John B. "AAR: BALE OE , EUROPEAN AND uOit REMO DV • ‘001,115. - . ON 'THURSDAY moßNnich, ,Nov. 6, et 10 o'clock, on farm marithal Bales idesehed sad brown Shirting. and Sheeting& do. Bleached and Colored. do. White, Blue and Gray all wool Blanket& " do. White one Scarlet-ail wool and Canton' Flennelei Cates Miners% Dotneta and Fancy Ohio tin Flannel& do. Indigo Blue Ticks. Stripe", Checks, ; do, Kentucky Jesse Gingham& Prints. 1.._01,01a01N do. Count Jeans. si!xn betas; Linings. Stlet.ow. do. Manchester and Scotch Gingham& do. Hersey" Caestmerea SaUneti,Linseor& . &C. MERODApT TAILORS* GOODS, Pieces Belgian. En sh an d Smoltt all wool imolf Union . " A ix Ch-pelle Black and Colored FdquiminX. do. Chinchilla ", French Cloakines, Moscowas. do., gur cent Fancy Canimeree,„' castors, rilote. do. Whitney", Velours, Peters h am.; Melton". • , d 0.,: Black and Colored - nab:me and Satin de C.Mnee. , DRESS GOODS, SILKS, de. Pieces Black and DRESS Mohair" Alpacas. Coburg& J - ' -Empress! Cloths, Poll de Cheerer, Poplins, paria`Plain and Printed Detainee and sterinos. , Black and Fancy Dress Silks , Velvatn, Shawl& dec.. ke. F till lino Broche Shawls, Linens, White Goods, de. Full lines Ineb SiVrting Benishy Sheeting& Full lines Victim Canvas. Bucks, Ducks, Drills, dm ti n lino" menet!! et sod W. B. Damasks, Diaont, Grub. Full lines Cambria', Jaconets, Nal/meek& Mulls, Lawns, • Balmoral and Hoop iklriv. Traveling and Under Shirts and Draße/a. MeViiir ge, TR.llore 'Trimmings, i.mbrellaa, Suerendera, ctn. IMPORTANT SPECIAIfpq,E . OP PINE IMPORTED otz.vr,miliP7,,V'gqmitict Nov. 6, at I 0 & 1 / 4 ilock, on four months' cred including— Full lines Ladies' Colored Duclieege Gloves. Full lines La dies' Colored Berlin Gloves. Full lines Ladies' Colored Silk klixts4loves. Full lines Ladies' Colored ISlerino Gloves, • lon lineal Ladies' Black and Colored' 131 th and Cloth . . , .. . . Full lines Ladles' Colored Berlin and rincheese 'Gaunt ets. F all lines Ladies' :'ilk Mixt Berlin Gartntlata. ' Full linen bleat's Black and Colored Berlin and Clotis 'locos irliiines Gent's Black - and Colored; Silk and M . OllllO , GIOVeB 1 , 1111 lince Gent's Colored Berlin and White and Bleak - Gloves. - Full lines Children's Gloves and Gauntlets, . _ N. B.—The above line will comprise scam of the Roast goods imported. in plain, Plush lined and fleeced, and am all fresh goods of a very poJular make. . LARGE SALE OF CARPETING& 100 PIECES 111. 1 10 n OIL cLoTids, &c. ON FRIDAY MORNING. Nov. 6. at 11 o'clock. on four mouths° credit, about 800 places of Tapextry Brusselo, Ingrain, Venetian., List. Demo, Cottage and Rog Carpetings, Oil Cloths, Rugs,.bc. LARGE SALE OF BRMBII, FRENCH AND GERMAN DRY GOODS. ON MOND MOnNING, • Nov. 9, at 10 o'clock. on four months' credit. JAIdEB A. FRERmarg. AUCTIONEER, N0..422-WAENCT vixen, REAL ESTATE SALE, NOVEMBER 4. This Sale. on WEDNESDAY, at 12 o'clock. noon. at the Exchange, will include the 1 0 1 1001ing-' No. 1118 GREEN ST.—Genteel three story brick dwell ing, with back building., lot 16 by 78 feet. Immediate p •seesslon. Orphan. Court Safe—Estate of Nary Ann AfoConneff, B. E. CORNER 11TH AND MT. VERNON STA.—Mo dern three-story brick dwelling ,lot 18 by 88 feet. Orphans! Court Sok— .Kstate 4f Abraham Jordan.deo'd. MAIN bT.—Stone rmst at ' , Clorlivin town. lot 24 by 830 feet. Orphans' Churt Sale—Estate of Robert Titania& deed. MohillElM ST.—Stone dwelling, near Green st Ger. mantown, lot 16 by 104 feet. Orphans' . Court Saill—hls tate of John McDevitt deed. 1235 11 &MILTON ST.—Throe story brick bowie and lot. 14!4 by 45 feet. Clear of ineumbrance. Orphans' Cant Sate—Estate of Ann Waoner, deed. 1815 N. bECONII BT.—Frame house and lot. 53 by scr feet, subj. ct to $2l ground )ent. Orphans' Court Sate— Estate epf John McFarland, deed. ORuLI.4I RENT OF $9O per annutn, well secured. oat of lot 15 by SO fest. Fifth Si.,, above South. Orphang• COurt Sale—Estate of Thomas G. Conner deed IRREEDEEMABLE GROUND. RENT well secured. $2OO per annum, out of lot of ground at the N. E. corner Sixth and Spruce eta. Sale by order of the Court of Com mon Pleas. 1 ACRE OF GROUNP—Fifteenth street, above Ontario. :57 feet front on 15th Ht. Clear of incumbrance. B LULU , G LOT—G mantown road and Dauphin st.,, 28th Ward. 90ft. front on each, bj 109 ft. deep, subject to $5O ground rent 25TH WARD-1 brick end 8 frame houses at the corner of Somerset and Almond Ste., lot 21 by 100 feet, subject to $2O ground rent. Sato atwolute. NO. lEa5 N. 12TH ST.—A modern three-story Brick Dwelling, above Montgomery ay.. 1.6 ft. 2 In. front by 75 ft. deco to a street. In geod repair.' Keys at store. immedfate /.08Se8e071. • NO. 2121 ARCH ST.—A modern 4.atory brick residence and back buildings, with all the c .nventences ;418 by 102 feet to an alloy. $6,000 may remain, Immediate Done& :ion. VW - PAMPHLET CATALOGUER NOW READY . . . AT PRIVA'T'E SALE. A VALUABLE TRAM` OF 20 A 0 4EB OP LANDS - • With Mansion Douse, Bun. Lane, intersected by Eighth, Ninth, Tenth and Eleventh, Ontario and Timm streets, within goo teat of ;he Old 'York Road.: , IrdlttaM deposit (If Brick Clay. Terms easy. A valaable il btrinese pinpertv No. Bl9Arch street lu • BitHIHO N.—A Handsome Mansion. on man at lot baby 700 eat. • • • eLEITIN BROTHERS. AUCTIONEERS, - (Lately Salesmen for M. Thomas & Sons ) No. 529 CHEbTN UT street.reav entraties from minor ti WALNUT 29 Chestnut street. • HANDSOME HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.' ROHM tiOD PIANO 'Or. I'E TRENCH - PLATE rand - tom. LARGE FIREPROOF eiAkEt3„ HAND— iiOIIL7, VELVET AND BRUSSELS CARPETS. dro. uN - WEDNESDAY MORNING, Nev. 4 at 10 o'clock, at the auctionrooms, by catalogue. very excellent t urnitore. it eluding—Handsome Walnut Parlor and Library Furniture, four dolts han teem Wal. nut Chamber Furniture, superior Dining Room Fang. Owe, handsome Rosewood Piano Fort% large fine French Plate Mirror, very superior Fireproof Safe, made by Farrel di Herring; Handsome Velvet and Brussels Can. pets, China and Glassware, fine Feather Beds, Cooking .nd Gas-consulting Stoves, C ounters . Extension Dining 7 able% Chandeliers fine Double Barrel Guns, &a Also, very large Platform Scales and Weights, weighs 3,400 the., made by Howe. Importer's Peremptory Sale. STOCK OF FINE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES. ON FRIDAY MORNING, At 1036 o'clock, at the Auction Rooms. by order of the Lae porter, without reserve, for cash, a very excellent assort ment of Fine Watches; included will be found Fine Eng lish and American movements, quarter seconds Apple ton, Tracy & Co.- English Levers. by Johnson, Bemoan, and others ,• Ladies' Fine Watches, in fine Gold Cases. Plain. «rested, hnamelled and Engine-turned Silver and other Hunting Case Watches. Catalogues ready and the goods arranged for examina; tion on the morning of sale. SALE OF A MEDICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS LIBRARY. ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON. Nov. 6, at 4 o'clock, az the auction roome. by cata/o:gge. a Valuable Medical ant Miscellaneous Library, including many scarce Medical pamphlet& Open for examination on ThWxd ay. BP SCOTT, SCOTT ' SONEER. . ART GALLERY 1010 CHESTNUT street. Philadelphia. SALE OF mu L ERN PAINTINGS, CRYSTAL ME DALLIONS. dm. Part a Private Collection and Part Belonging to the American Art Gallery New York. ON THURSDAY• and FRIDAY EVENINGS. Nov. 5 and 6. At 7.X o'clock. at Scott's Art Gallery, 1030 Chestnut It. w ill be sold al' bout reserve , a cohesion of Modern Pie turer, Crystal Medallions, dm, of varied and pleasing subjects, all elegantly framed. _DAVIS & HARVEY. AUCTIONEERS. Leto with ht.• Thomas & San& Store No. 421 WALNUT street. Rear Entrance on Libear7 street. IMAGNIINEUT, Ham% arou. MERRICK Ls BONMAgw RS - • . BOUT A FOUNDRY. 430 WABBIN TON NUFA AvCTUßEertrie,_PhiladelPmis. • STEAM ENGINES—High and Low Pressure,lgorizontsf. Vertical, Beam. Oscillating. Blast end Cornish Pump. BO l TLER=l.lr rais_ ider . Flan' Tabular, - • . STEAM Nesmith and Davy IfYies, and, at CASTINGS—Loam.Dry and Green Sand. Brass, dro. ROOFS—Iron Frames, for covering with Blate or Iron. TANRE.—Of Cast or Wrought Iron, for refineries, water. oil, dec. • GAti MACIIINERY—Bush. as Retorts. Bench Casting; Holders and Frames, Purifiers, Coke and Charcoal Bar. rodAVVe l agernora. (he. BUP umpe„Def C ator E B B Y n—Bcah k a Filters . B m utn ePraswW d ' era and Elevators ; Bag Filters. auger and Bone Black Cam, &c. Bole manufacturer's of the following 'specialties: In Philadelphia and vicinity, of`WWlam Wright's Patent . Variablo Cutoff Steam Engine. Yn Pelvania, of Shaw & Justice's Patent Deadatroke Powes Ammer. In the united States, of Weston's' Patent Belt-centerin;2 and Self balancing Centrifugal lingar.drainhiglltutinn.' Glass dr BartoPs improvement on Aspinwall ylrooLserg CentrifuaL • • • Barleys Patent Wrought-Iron Retort Lid. &ration% Drill Grinding Rost - C on t rac t or . ) for the design, erection, and fitting up at SAf fluorine for working Sugar or Molasses. - OPPEB. AND YELLOW METAL SHEATHING. G Brazier's Copper Nails, Bolts and Ingot Cooper, con. stantly on hand and for sale by zWasFRY V/DISOB CO.. No. 832 South Wharves. • VOA GLEXGAENOCK SCOTCH PIG IRON. FOR aaleln lota to unit purchasers, from store end .t* an. rive. PETER WEIGHT & 50518. 15.tfe 115 Walnut street: -r DIEVGIV• PURE PAINTS.—WE OFFER TO THETRAD • I: White Lead, Zinc, White and Colored. Paints of our own manufacture, of undoubted purity, in, quantities to milt purchasers: ROBERT BIIOEBARER &CO., Dealers in Paiute and Varnishes, N. E. corner Fourth and. 67 Race streets. RHUBARB ROOT, OF RECENT IIdPORT&TION AND' very superior quality; White Goon Arabic,- Ea In Castor OH, White and Mottled Castile doap. Olive Oil. of various brands. For sale by ROBERT SHOEITAKE CO., Druggists, Northeast corner Fourth and. Race streets.no3? ti RUGGISTS' D SONDRIES.-+GRADUATEB, /.IORTAIr Pill Tiles, Combs, Brushes. Mirrors...TH. cezer%__Pu ff Boxes, Horn Scoops. Surgical hastruments,-Trussesadisel#, and Soft Rubber Goods, Vial Case% (Bass ami biet i syringe% drc„ all at "First If axidan prices: ' I3NOWDEN..& BROMIEIt. 2 3-SontllSlghth street; - 7,OBERT - 8110EMA.KER & : CO., WHOLESALE' Druggists, Northeast corner Fourth and Race atreeta i invite the attention of the Trade to their large at , ick rine Dritge tuld.Ohenticala. Essential 011 a, liPougea , Cor k ao`Yr tfa GAS JFIXTILTIIIES. AB FIXTURE S.—Alla/MY. 'AfgABILT" 4 TRACHABA No.llB Chestnut greet: manufacturers of Gaa Pixtures, Lampe, de., .tc.. would can the shanties of the public to their largo and elegant assortment of Gas Ghandellers. Pendants. Bracketa&e. They also introdnee gas pipea into dwellings and public buildings. and attend' to extending, altering and repairing gaIR 3 / 4 e 2 . 4 WotIG warrtMtesa, (itiwis
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