Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, November 12, 1868, Image 3

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BUIIIMVM4 NOTICES
BIM* tents. Kest Made, Best Fittlrig.f:
Rsai•T•x•ric Currmaa to the city equal to mot= work,
tim any relieet also choke stock of seleetett elzolee
Piece Om% to be nude*, order‘ ' ••_
than the
AU prism gu4rante4d kneer *Pest dam/fere
lad tail satisfaction guaranteed atm iv/via:Wm or the
eiliteanellied and maw Winded. _.• • • •
fief between Bmagorrr
rxa
a Co.,
BV - th and Tov
r Sixth iltreets. 1518 AlAsart "mat%
itut.e.mmplah,
AND 600 BROADWAY. NEW 1 01131.
...11 I men. or women cop but find the
fabled fountain which is said to restore • health and
strength. and beauty. with what eagerness they would
rush to drink its waters." Itis found in the S. T
Z. The sale of the .PLarcramorr - Brrrerts is without a
Precedent rn the Listory of the world. ,They are at once
the Inert speedy. strengthening health•restorer over dia
covered. it requires. hut singe triar to uudoistend
au' • w s ta
ONOIAA ATIZEL- aperior o Et imported Got
=ex l olotue, and sold at halt tbo price. nott‘ta.tti,e3t
ItrEtl i gi tE ETLIDT.
.1 7 12.9 T Clfllqler(l tu til re E7V o Z PLATES
No. 610 ARCH Street.
aiti,rinith.e.l3m§ Philadelphia.
illaiation 1-711 our. ch tau goable Init°
con Alia, Cale and divearea of the throat, lunge and' cheat
wail always preset!. Cruel consumption will claim its
virtlina. 'There dieemea, if attended to in time, can be
arreated and cured. The remedy is Dr. Wistar , s Balsam
QJ Wild Cherry
no9-dt
---D014.7.AD MEYER, INVENTOR AND
Manufacturer of the celebrated Iron Frame
ru.uos, has received the Prize Medal of the World's Great
Mhibition. London, ling. The higkest prizes awarded
when and wherever exhibited. Ware rooms. 722 Arch
Ae
st-t.' F.sfahlished . - 1v24 w s vita
AMP'
riTtANWAIrd PIANus
erZhighest award (first gold medal) at the Interns,
hibition, Barbs. 1867. See Official itepert, , ,at
'the Wareroom of BLASIUS BROS.,
- : N 0.1006 Chestnut strwit.
tegiTHE CHICKERLD4O Plaziod nat.; r,, vh,l)
the highest. of atj the Paris Expodhon,
DtTTON , I3 Wareroome. 914 Chestnut street. sell,tfq
EVENING BULLETIN.
likursilaP, No*ember 12, 1268.
ALITTLIE CLOUD IN
There is already a speck of trouble in
'Spain. The enthusiasm with which the Sno
ods of the revolution and the triumph o
liberty werehailed has' so far subsided, that
men are coming back to the practical ques
tion of the reotganization • of the government
with sufficient coolness to remember their
prejudices..: At first there"vtas a fusion of all,
liberal interests into the one great opposition
to the reigning dynasty; but now, party lines
are becoming distinct, and the choice of
a fottn of:government daily bedomes more
diffiCultandperilous. The men who led and
controlled the revolution are in favor of the
establishment of a constitutional monarchy,
and they display the same wisdom in making
this'choice as they did in conducting the most
rapid and successful insurrection of modern
dimes.-.'.But there is a large and powerful
party whose members are clamorous for a
republic, and they are fast assuming a threat
,
ening:libation, which augurs ill for the
pescesble rejection of their demands. As a
kind of compromise, the monarchists have
nominated Espartero to the throne, hoping to
satisfy their own party with a King, and to
appease the Republicans by choosing-a popu
lar man from the liheral ranks. " It is not at all
likely that either party will be'conteuteff to'
acdepted the offer. Espartero is a tried and
true friend of freedom, an able statesman,an
earnest patriot, and in every respect capable
of ruling Spain- wisely and well. But the
monarchists want the scion of some royal
honie—a man 'who has a birthright to a
throae; and they will regard Espartero as an
upstart and a pleblan; while the Republicans
will see in his elevation to regal dignity a taint
of selfishness and a precedent which may
suffice as an excuse for other nobles who, in
the. future, may have similar aspirations.
The only solution of the difficulty will be
to let the matter remain in the hands of the
Cortes, which is to be chosen under the new
law.of universal suffrage. This body will be
likely to represent fairly the wishes of the
majority of its constituents; and the Spanish
people, if they are to remain free, must learn
to submit, as Americans do, to the will of a
majority. In the meantime the adherents of
Isabella are making the most of the growing
quarrel, to advance their own cause, by aug
menting popular discontent and creating new
dissensions among the various parties. It is
a propitious time for , them, and the revolu
tionary lea do will do wisely if they defeat
them in the only possible way, by organizing
the government finaby,se quickly as it can be
done. Delay at this time is very dangerous,
and it may prove fataL
PEACE AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
Now that our, great quadrennial national
agony is over, and the country is once more
in safe hands, there is a very fair prospect
that business will revive in every quarter.
and the sluggish pace at which it, has pro
ceeded for months past will be quickened.
Renewed activity is, indeed; perceptible al
ready; and everywhere, except in financial
circles, where temporary.distress has resulted
from purely artificial causes, business men
are inspired with anticipations of active
operations and increasing profits. The
abatement of political excitement and the ap
prone or — the — belidays — logellie suave
temporary stimulus to trade in the large
cities; but this is, of course, merely upon the
surface. There is a deep ground-swell which
finds its motive in a' tronger influence, and
which reaches into' every remote section of
the land. The election of General Grant settled
two things which have a, vitally important
bearing upon the productive and commercial
interests of the Country. It gave the infamous
Democratic theory of repudiation its quietus,
and thereby prevented depreciation and 'sub
sequent vaxiableness of the currency. If this
doctrine had prevailed, values would haye •
been unsettled; there would have been such
constant fluctuation that everything would
have been in a state of uncertainty, and busi
ness would have been harassed by countless
perplexities and embarrassments. Now,
prices are in a degree fixed, and there is a
firm,substantial basis upon which to operate;
and this gratifying condition of things is
guaranteed to the country during General
Grant's term of office. It was not the slightest
claim of the Republican party upon the coun
try that it promised this much.
But it wrought another good work for the
commercial interests of the country. A De
mocratic success would have been followed
by an attempt to overthrow reconstruction' in
the Southern Btates,atd it might have hurried
trs into another rebellion. Even the first con-
tlagency would have ruined all hope of a re
newal of , Southern industry, and of that
Southern trade which has proved so prouta
bleu North and South in the past. Under
AGellattkerantliadministsation, life and prop
erty will be sae In the South; Southern men
will, we Met sincerely hope, accept the in
evitable result graciously, and determine to
abandon political agitation, and turn their
attention to developing4 l p resources of their
SeCtIOD; If COMM crilW9G be king, it can, at
leak, be a very important agent for securing
wealth for the Southern people, and for re
toiing the old equilibrium, which 'kept - our'
foreign exchange even,and brought Southern
Merchants into cur markets.
.the xecOnstraction laws remain in force
for four years longer, they will be: beydnd
WO probability of defeat or , overthrow; and,
with judicious administration; the people
Will have been completely convinced or thpir
excellence. — Feeling assured of their autism=
Utility, and, pf Ithe final reOrganizailbn `Of the
South, Noithertk merchants will iko longer
fear to give' credits in that.direction, and we
can transact business, as in the old time be
fore the - war, without any apprehensions
whatOer, The whole country will behatte
fitted by this institution of "an era of good
feeling," not leas than by a conviction o f the
fact that we bave,at lai3t reached the Conclu
sion of the troubles which niiturallrfollowkid"
the war, and kept the nation in continual
agitation. At last we will have profound
and enduring peace, which will bring its , own
blessings with it, and will nomptil the con
viction, even in the Democratie mind, that
General Grant's• election was the happiest
event that could have befallen the country.
THE Aftitei Jug ititIERICA.
Positively, when, one looks around at the
various methods in which our people seek
their intellectual recreation,one is discouraged
about the future of the race. The American,
so astute, so intelligent, so respectable in the'
daytime, appears to take on quite another
character when his place of bnsiness goes to
sleep behind its iron curtains at sunset, and
he escapes, With the key of the connting
room in his pocket, to that other life which
represents for him the refinetnent and amenity
Of existence. With the shades of night he is
supposed to give tether to his more elevated
instincts, to those desires for intellectual re
treshment which are necessarily starved
down and kept in abeyance through the day.
Well, and to what pasture does he partake
himself? Does he join the swine of Circe,
and go to batten on one of those now-popular
entertainments where, to music a little lower
than Stephen Foster's melodies, the legends
of Homer or 'the cherished wonclers of the
Story-book are vulgarized by French
cocodettes, who appreciate of their own
roles nothing but the obscenity, and of their
audience nothing but the possibility of private
patronage? Does he study out the bills of the
bourgeois theatres, and take his choice,among
the forlorn Bowery pieces which managers
are thrusting on the notice of the public by
, the leverage and eclat of their personal quar
rels? Does he lie back in his easy-chair at
home, and turn the pages of the last English
novel thieved by some American publisher
who knows his purchaser will never inquire
by what right he obtained the literature he
grabs and sells?—does he skim the magazine
stuffed with copied tales and badly-transferred
prints, the proprietors of which have yet the
courage to bluster about the proportion of
"stolen" articles submitted to their editors?
Does he, with an uneasy sense that gilded
paper is not the sole and sufficient righteous
ness of a spick-and-span American drawing
room, frequent the picture-auctions and buy
medallions in - gold-leaf arabesques?
The weak point abcint him in any of these
undignified positions is• his lumberingainno
cence. At the Offenbach polichinelle, he
is not at all in the state of the Parisian who
has exhausted experience; who has compre
hended Fidelio and Don Juan until they have
bored him, and who tranquilly declares that
a low singing hussy is the best medicine
after all, for the ennui of living; no, our
American, goes to Offenbach as laboriously
as he ever went to church, looks out the
improper calcmbours with painful conscien•
tiousness; has precisely the same reverence
for the Dites-lui as for the Casta
and takes his daughter for the purpose of
committing to memory, through the slang of
Helen and Boulotte, the idiom of her French
teacher. lie goes to see the leg-pieces, the
"realistic-drama" pieces, of the bourgeois
stage with, we fear, as high a motive as ever
carried him to Booth's lago. He turns over
the literature supplied by his privateering
publisher with no more sense of a fraud, with
no more knowledge of being responsible for
the literary elevation of his country, than the
old lady, who buys lace of a Bremen sailor,
has care for the custom-house revenues.
And he buys the cheap picture with as proud
a sense of art-patronage, and boasts of it to
his friends with as piteous a confidence, as
the king felt when he picked up the pencil
for Titian.
For some of these shortcomings we believe
that time bears the remedy. Literature car
ries within itself the element of its own pu
rification; and the man who has once imbibed
the sacred thirst for letters will gradually be
come interested in the rights of copy, in the
nationality of the author he studies, and
-finally r in-the-littl • Tint nnmenninagnilyisms
of the publisher which throw around a wor
thy literature the charms of Style - arid the idi
ot race. In pictures, we attach great import
ance to the mere taste for acquisition. More
than books, far more than the drama, the
fancy for art includes the elements of its own
progression; a man buys this year chromes
and auction-pictures for his parlor; next year
these are found replaced by the proof-engrav
ing and the water-color sketch; afterwards,
the centre of honor on the parlor chimney
is occupied with some luscious Rothermel,
some half-mad, enthralling Hamilton; while
the old collections, at first the grounds of
boastfulness, are now the grounds of apology,
and mount from story to story, up the grades
of dishonor, from the dining-room to the poor
relation's bedroom, thence to the servant's
room, thence to the loft, thence to the four
winds. The proud possessor of one of the
most recherché and — gemlike - ccrilections
Philadelphia, was proudly collecting, a few
years back, the mezzotints from annuals and
the simpering faces out of books of beauty.
AB for the dramatic and musical arts, we
are not without hopes for them either. Cap
ital actors are not bereft of patronage,and we
willingly overleap the difficulties of a foreign
tongue to study out for ourselves the tradi-
tional reputations of a great German or Ital
ian tragedian. We run with avidity to hear
the best German music. -As for the Offenbach
hurricane—it is hard to collect one's self and
talk philosophy out of the very depths of the
simoon; but this whirlwind of mediocrity
which now has the day, is at least giving us a
curiosity about French acting and a superfi
cial familiarity with a language containing
ihe most exquisite diction in the world; and it
m u y be that the present demand for the lo west,
and fattest, and moat usi;es of the leavings of
Paris theatres will soon change for a demand
!! 11., . : JO, 12- • k..a
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN---PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, IS 0 VEMBER:I2;-1.868;
for their elegant , ocniedy; and thelrerrAtner
leans *ll6 riniii throV dahlias' and ohrysan
themntes,h? Irm a and,a,la ~ Tostee'! may be
presently throwing to'.:Faipuil or
Brohan, or even Frederic Lemattre or the
Dejazet, on the: Ohathtit:trees= or Broad
street boards.
FISH BISICEDINO 'PENIVISYLVES.NIII..
The citizens of Harrisburg and of the towns
upon thriSusquoihilihrtr river shots that city,
are making arrangements to stock the river
andlits confluent streams with,black bass; and
With very encouraging prospect of success.
The scheme is a very praiseworthy ono, and
deserves.the hearty eupportr of- all the people
Of that section. Ever since the discovery of
this country, the inhabitants have engaged in
the work of destroying,' its=• game, and have
neglected to protect,it in any manner, or to
help its propagation. . This reckless havoc
has produced inevitable Scarcity, until, in
river and land alike, wild animals worth pur
suing can hardly be obtained without going
into the wilderness. 'Happily, the reaction
has begun. Pisciculture has attracted a great
deal of attention lately,and in various portions
of the country is is conducted so successfully
that it bids fair to become a very important
and valuable. interest. The people of Penn
sylvania succeeded,some years ago,in arrang
ing the dams in the Susquehanna so that the
shad could ascend to waters to which it had
long been a stranger, and the very gratifying
results of thia undertaking have encouraged
them to other efforts in the same direction.
It is intended to introduce the black bass into
the Susquehanna, Juniata, and other rivers, in
large numbers, and as this fish propagates
very rapidly, and is of delicious flavor when
served up for the table, it is thought that a
new, abundant and cheap article of food will
soon be provided for the people of our inland
towns. If the experiment is successful there
is no xeason why salmon and other good fish
may not be cultivated also.
But to insure success,the fish must be pro
tected by stringent and severe legislation.
The American people have been so accus
tomed to regard wild fish and flesh as com
mon property, that it is difficult to restrain
them from wholesale, indiscriminate slaughter
when opportunity offers. Fish placed in the
Susqnehanna should be permitted to remain
there unmolested for five or six years at least,
and seine fishing should be prohibited daring
that time. If the Harrisburg people carry out
their design, there will probably be no diffi
culty in securing the necessary legislation.
All far-sighted and prudent men will , at once
recognize,the excellence of the undertaking,
and the necessity' for giving it all the encour
agement and protection possible.
The extremely sensitive condition of the
public 'mind 131..Ettrope, .upon the subject of a
general war, was demonstrated by the agita
tion which ensued upon the utterance of a
few words 'by Baron Von Benet, the Prime
Minister of Austria. He urged upon the
military commission of his Parliament, the
necessity, for keeping the army upon a war
footing of eight hundred thousand men. In
stantly ...Europe was alarmed; and it was as
serted and believed everywhere, that Austria
was secretly allied with France, , and pledged
to inaugurate a war for the overthrow of the
Prussian supremacy. This is the old story
that was in circulation last year, and there
is no greater reason now to believe its truth
than there was at that time. The fact is,
that all Europe is armed to the teeth, in ex
pectation of a coming struggle, and no nation
dares to trust its neighbor; while all are
listening with painful intensity for the sound
of the first blow, uncertain where or upon
whom it will fall. That it will fall, is not
unlikely, but not absolutely certain. The
very preparations made to resist attack may
deter those who meditate it. In this country,
we have only a passing and secondary in
terest in the matter. Our day of strife has
past, we hope forever, and we will have
renewed assuarance of rest and quiet in the
inauguration of the statesman and soldier
whose policy is peace.
General regret is expressed at the resigna
tion of Mr. Edward Shippen from hie posi
tion as a member of the Board of School C.-in
trollers, of which he is President. Mr. Ship
pen has been so completely identified with
the educational interests of the city for so
many years, and has done so much to bring
our common school system , to its present
high state of perfection, that his withdrawal
at this time will inflict upon us a loss which
cannot easily be repaired. He will carry
with him in his retirement the sincere respect
of all who have perceived and properly ap
preciated his very valuable services.
11C1 OVER'S PATENT
COMBIA&UON-SOFA--BEIMITEIt—hatVe
--appearacoof a Parlor Sofa, with spring back and
opting seat, and yet in less thanone_minuteh time, with
. .out unserewin gordetaching 'in any way, it sun be ex.-
tended into a handsome French Bedetead, with hair
spring mattress, complete. It is, without doubt,tho hand,
somast and most durable Sofa Bed now in use.
For sale at the Cabinet manufactory. of
If. F. HOVER,
Owner and Sole Manufacturer,
0c28.13m4y No. 230 South Second street.
LIGHTLY ATTD QUICKLY PUSHED OVER A CAR
pet, the Patent Sweeping Machine gather.' up 'thrum
of threads, comps of paper, pine, needles. dirt, and duet
quite so well nein sweeping with a broom, and with no
injury to the nap of the carpet. For sale by TRUMAN dr.
-- 13 - 11AW, -- Ner. - flatef Eight-indrtj4 five.) -Market •etreet, - betsw
- Ninth, - Philadelphia. - - -
Mr. Hazeltine's Collection of 011
PAINTINEIB.—The collection of tine European and
American Paintings, collected by hit. V. P. Basel
tine, will be sold fhLs evening, at 7% o'clock, at Birch
Sans' Art Gallery, No. 1110 Chestnut street
STECK & CO. I B..AND RUNES BROTMSES
libaWlanoe. and Mason & Hamlin's Cabinet Or
gone. o at 'J. E. (MULL'S New Store.
a 1320 Bmo 4p¢ . No. MS Ctioetnnt street.
JOHN CHUMP. BUILDER.
1731 CHESTNUT STREET.
and 213 LODGE STREET,
Mechanics of every branch required for housebuilding
nd fitting promptly furnised. fe2ltf
HENRY EFULLIPPL
CARPENTER AND BUILDER.
NO.IO24BAMOM STREET.
PHILADELPUIA.
s j WARBURTON'S IMPROVE'), VENTILA'rID
and enayfittinp Dress Usta (patented) in all the
approved fashions of the season. Chestnut street,
next door to the Post•oftlee. owl tfrp
AIDNIPPERD, WHICH QUICKLY. NEATLY AND
without pain. cut a toe or linger nail with a natural
round edge. are toreale.by TRUMAN & 811A.W. No. 835
(Eight Thlrty.flve) Market erect. below Ninth.
FOR MANY OR FEW WANTS IN HOUSEKEEPERS'
or other Hardware, we shall be pleased to show you
our assortment. Perhaps you may then conclude to pur
chase of TRUMAN be lo wHA No. (Eight Thirty
five) Market street, Ninth. Philadelphia.
1868 ? - 1Fjb1: 4 ;11 1 7 . st•P
HAIR CUT KOpP'S BA.
Hair Cu. Shave and Bath,, cent r
e. itazons g. po ( t l i ti n i trl i c k x B .
Op{ n Sunday morning. No. Ub Exchange place.
G. C. KOPP.
WHITE AND BLACK LACE BAQUEB AND BAS•
I'l' quee.—GEORGE W. VOGEL. No. 101 ti Chestnut
etieel, has Just received from Paris an aseortment -of
White and Black Lazo Segues and Baequee, very suitable
for the Opera, dm. nolttit•
HDOI' BEM AND CORSET MANUFACTORY, NO.
812 Vino drat. All geode made of the beat material!
and a arranted.
Hoop Skirts repaired.
no 7 EitorPt E. BAYLEY.-
XS AMONG WITH INDELIBLE DM, EMBROIDER;
.111 Wit Braiding, Stamping. &c.
M. A. TORRY. '
1800 Filbert street
OLIVES FARCIES. CAPERS. &c.-OLIVES FARMS
(Stuffed o , ives), Nonpareil and Superamo Copeni and
French Olives; fresh goods; landing ex Napoleon Ili.,
from Havre. and for sale by JOS. 13, BOSSI - ER & 00.,
IC9 Bouth Delaware avenue,
OLOT$lPi(i:
V,ANTED—A chance to PROVE
, to every ' Man and Boy in Phila
dOphia that we can clothe him
better and cheaper than any other
House.
WANAMAKER & BROWN.
CAM—This house hoe no connection with any other
eatablishmer tto our cu nor any other lino of buidnose.
that imitates Ito advortieomenta.
L'AL.L4 (400.00E1f3.
EDWARD P. KELLY,
TAILORR
S. E. Cor. Chestnut and Seventh Streets.
MILK!
A few weeks ago Mr. Trulyrural, from the in
terior of Bucks county, went, with four other
gentlemen, to the city of New York. Arriving
at the Metropolitan Hotel, they deposited their
carpet-bags in a place of safety, and then sought
refreshment in the bar-room. The four, pro
ceeding to imbibe from the contents of the cus
tomary bottles, asked Mr. Trulyrural
"WHAT WILL YOU TAKE ?"
To which Mr. Trulyraral, in all the simrlicity
of his rustic constitution of mind, replied,
" I'LL TAKE A GLASS OF MILK !"
And they were all amused ; and the bar-keeper
man said he was very sorry, but he hadn't any
thing as strong as that; and just then a big,
stout fellow spoke up, and said that ho never
knew of anybody strong enough to stand a regu_
lar diet of New York milk ; but that the strong
est things ho ever had known of, were the clothes
they sell at Rockhill & Wilson's.
And the four other men, and Mr. Trulyrural,
too, agreed that the best thing they could do,
under the circumstances t was to seek the strength,
elegance, comfort, and economy, which result
from buying clothes at
ROCKHILL & WILSON'S
Great Brown Stone Hall,
603 and 605 Chestnut Street,
I'HILADELPHIA.
S GOOD FOR -q ' t°l4
R
DOLLAS
J ..J
IIarCUT THIS OUT.,eja
This Card will be good for Two Dollars in part
payment for all cash purchases of ready-made
clothing, amounting to Twenty-five Dollars or
more. CHARLES 8 COKES & CO.,
seB 824 CHESTNUT Street.
FOR
S • Tv - •
1 9 (fN cy l k
waft 12. FA
116:4 v OUR,. °el
_s•
i k f qto
.44 8b
0 .4 0 I & •C
.4 9 1
ONO"
THE ABOVE
Celebrated Premium Family Flour.
E 9 GEOF - . --- ZEIENDER'S---
FLOUR DEPOT,
FOURTH AND VINE.
-90 #l, B to ti9£l
FAMILY FLOUR.
In tots to snit GROCERS, or by the single Barrel,
For Sale by
J. EDWARD ADDICKS.
1280 MARKET STREET.
.e2R !IMO
FALL, 1868.
LUMBER FOR BUILDERS, LOW.
F. H. W ILLIAMS,
Seventeenth and Spring Garden Sts.
ran 41LP hi 213t4 _ . _ _ _ _
OPERA GLAESES.
A large and fine areortment of Plain and Fancy OPERA
CLABBER lust received—new ety lea in Pearl. Fancy and
Morocco Cues.
WILLIAM Y.' M'ALLISTEB,
OPTICIAN,
No. 728 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
n.lO to th a firma
ENVELOPES! ENVELOPES!
5,000,000 SAFETY 'ENVELOPES
An colon.; qualities and sizes, for sale at reduced price,
at the Steam Tovelop , Monefe (tory.
223 SOUTH FIFTH STREET.
'ren•Siorp§ SAMUEL TOBEY, Aunt.
(2.IIEEN GINO F It. -LANDING AND H
YOSALE BY
%-A J. B. BUaSIER & 108 South Delaware avenue
FLOUR.
AVUTION - EM.EO4
sp.v o c,i:A,Tas - A:T - ig,!'::7.:.':F
- :
OF,A
GALLERY : OF PAINTINGS,
Of the Highest Olass.
.
B. Scott, . respectfully ,aimonoceS that-be has
received instructions front the oldest ettablished
porting house connected with. the Fine,Axta in, the
United States, to dispose,' of, a Gallery of-, Modern
Paintings by-the most`celebrated artists of the, preqent
Full partienlais of the sale which, it Is'exPeeied, will
talc place on the let and 2d of DecernbeT, will be given'
in a few days; in the iaantiete ho takes
publishing the following letter in ; Mitten thitratio:
,
Ni lj;1868.
MR. Score: - • •
Dear Sir--- ' ,
•
I shall be most happy to ac
cede to your request' and 'terms, and en
deavor to have my Collection of Pictures ready
for public view In the Eastern Galleries of. the
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts by the 20th
Instant. -
I will do my best to make the present exhibi
tion, if possible, more interesting. to yotrr Con
noisseurs than my last of two years ago, and
having purchased quite largely during the Ex
position in Paris last year, besides giving orders
to various prominent artists in Dusseldorf,
Berlin, The Hague, Brussels, &c., many of which
have but recently been completed, I think it pro
bable that my endeavor to that effect may be
successful. Also, as lam ordering my affairs so
as shortly to be able to absent myself for a pro;
longed sojourn in Europe, it is my desire that
yob should sell the entire collection free from
any limit or reservation whatever. - •
Yours, very truly; -
J. P. BEAUMONT.
No. 7 Bond Street---Eothbliehed 1830.
WATIMEII. JEINIELECIr. dr4i.
JAS. E. CALDWELL & CO
Have Nat received a large Invoke of
French...Tewelry,'
DIRECT FROM rests. •
No. 902 CHESTNUT STREET.
no 7 tf,
TIFFANY tz .00.
Nos. 550 and 552 Broadway, Nov Yotk.
DIAMONDS,
EMERALDS,
SAPPHIRES,
And Other Precious Stones.
DIAMOND AND GEM JEWELRY
Oft he Newest ,London and, Paris styles of Settings, worthy
of the notice of purchasers and of parties
wishing to have Gems reset.
HOUSE IN PARIS:
TITVANY REED & CO.
OPERA GLASSES
OPERA FANS.
• New Importetione,
No. 902 CHESTNUT STREET.
JAS E. CALDWELL '&CO. ,
J. E. CALDWELL &
MANTEL CLOCKS.
Direct from Paris.
No. 902 CHESTNUT STREET,
awa tu th WO
J. T.' GALLAGHER ••,f-
Watchmaker and Jeweler s
. .
1300 Chestntrt Street,
(Late of Batley es Co.)
WATCHER, Dunne, SILVER WARE, M u
AT LOW PRICER.
ore ta th tdesl roO
J. E. CALDWELL lz CO,
BYZANTINE MOSAICS,
Direct from Rome.
NO. 902 ;CHESTNUT. CHESTNUT STREET.,
tu th th's4
MONEY TO ANY AMOUNT LOANED. UPON
Ivv dir r OND.3.I9 c. ArHER. JEWELRY. PLATE.
u• JONES as opal
OLD ESTABLISHED LOAN OPIUM.
Corner of Third and Osakill street.
Below Lombard.
diN. D.—DIAMONDS . WATCHES. JEWELRY. GUNS.
e..
REMARHAniii LOW PRICES. Mtn
ItirACCARONI AND -VERI.UCELLL-196 BOXES
LY I Italian Curled Maccaroni and Vermicelli landing
from ship - Memnon, direct from - Genoa ; - and for sale by
JOB. B. SUDSIER di CO., 108 South Delaware avenue.
..,:~ .. „
MENEM
Tig - ILL otmair TRIO DA:y . 7 pm,-
Y hundred and tan piectee of
and Chene Poplins, at 25 -,ats.' per
yard, have been sailing `at 6,3
STRAWBRIDGE- CLOTHIER,`
moll 2tivil
DELAWARE M ,TUAL SAFETY
INSURANCE COMPANY.
PIIILADELISIA. November llib.lftea`
The toik fwlns statement of the affatm of the Corriyany
is pi:bibbed in conformity with a provisional its charter.
PREMIUM' ItECEIVED: • r '
Fund Nevernbet W. 1867: to October Mt; 10:'
On 14441ne and Inlrna Blik# 88011606 14:
On F1144314kt • ' ' ' 145108`08 '
Premiums on Polieleantot marked
off No:member 1. le67J '
. , - : :PREMIUMS MARKED OFF
As earned from Nov:10867. to Ootst, Dm •
OA 74artnotatd.4tIo4d , Rttjto..:.-.5746603
Op Ilse ' 148.14' 7 72:, ' •
,4011.512 49,
Intereei d'uting the este° period—
Balvageo, 60.
LossEg s , EXPENSES,
During Ilia year as above.
Maxine and Inland Navigation
roues.„, 74
Ere , . ... .. 74455
'Return Premiums r 41441 ‘l3
lielnscruices ' 3411:4 In
AgencrCbarder, Advertislre,: '
rrintlig. &e 60,688 as i
Taixei=lilbigStatee, State” and"'
Mnnicijial zee ,
.E'rpenare
ASSETS OF TUE COMPANY.
, .
' November 1, ISM
5200,C09 United Statte Five Per Vent Loan.
10 40's 1V05.500 00
MAU United States Six Per Gent. Loan.
1891 .
....,. 13 3,803 00
t 0.003 'United States l'ar . Vent. Loan
a (for PaelOc itailroad) .60,00 t) OP
MO.OOO State of Pennsylvania 161. i. Par
• tent 20.875 00
im,ooo City of Philadelphiel3lx . Per bent.
Lean (evenkpt trom Tax) 12.t94 00
E 0,030 State of Zso wJerecy BirPer Cott •
Loan ............. 01.500
00
2.3,00 a re-rmyis'ilLili Railroad 1. fret
gage Six Per Cent. 80nd5.....„ 'AVM 00
2.5,(00 Pennsylvania baiiroad • Second
Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds.. 24,000 00
2.5,6C0 We,t,rn Penntylvania hahrond
Mortgagileix Per. Cent. Bonds
• (Penna. R. 'guarant.2).. . AIM 00
20,000 Stabs of lelgleetet Five Per Vent.
Loan , 21.000 00
14100 State of Tennessee Six Pet' Veal.
Loan 6031
,y otlo Gerinautown Ciao
mny„
f t % atil i l n g itlidn.ycrantee.l by
114 Iptlia, .
0
shat a' stock
10,000 psuroylvanta 1541°1
200 shares stock.,
5,000 North Pennsylvania Railroad lekrat
' oany. 100 chores stock 600 00
:74,01X1 Philadelphia and Southern Mail
Steamship Company, 80 shatee
stock. 15,000 `00
301900 Leave on Bond and , Morteasie. fdat
;Jenson t;ity Properties P/31.900 00
" m ew Par. • Marta Value, 811.13 - 7.E525
Cost. $1093,604 26
Real Estate... 86,000 00
Receivable for Inatome"
made .. . . • 34486 91
Balance's due at dsmtelea—Pea .
rams on Marine Policies-4e.
crned Interest
-and other debts
due the Company 40.171; gs
Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpora.
Bona, 683.166 00. Eatunated
value. „ „. 1.813 ,00
Cob in Rini .... Eitarsiiiii
Cash in Drawer. ........ 413 65
116.563 '73
151.647.367 80
PEARLS,
Prtrunstaiita. November 11, not.
The Board of Directors have We day declared a CASH
DIVIDEND of TEN PER' CENT. on the C &PITAL
hTOCE. end SIX PEE t;ENT: Internet on the BOEIP, Of.
the Company. payable on , and after the let Peeetnber
Proximo: free of National and State Taxes. ,
They have she declared a SCRIP DIVIDEND of"
THIRTY PER CENT. on the,EARNED PREKIIIIHIfor
the dearenedog Octotier - 4 - 18% - eartiftoates of, which will
be leaned to' the partite entitled to the limo, tin and after
the ',At December rrotituto, free of National tuldState
Their have' Ordered, aloo, that the SCRIPSIMIEF-1;
CATES OF PROFITS of the Company. for the yearend
inti October a 1 1861 be redeemed in °ASTI; at_ the office
of the Company, on and: sifter lot December pro:Intl:Nall
interest thereon to CONIOCIA that dim liirßY a =Melee
of the Charter. all Ceitifleatea of Scrip hot presented for
redemption within five years after 'labile notice that they
will bo redeemed. &hall tie Ardreiteit and oanceited Cr)
the Books of the Company.
1131r1Vo certificate of profits *mud colder $25. Ry.
the . Act o f r n torporarion„ "no cert flcataehatt mous un
less darned within two sears_aftor the_doolloration of the
eividendwheneof it fo evicieece.%
• DIRECTORS; "
Thomas C. Hand. Edintind A. Bonder.
John C. Davis. • Samuel E. Statee,"'
James C. Hand. Henry Sloan,
Theophilna Paulding, William C. Ludwig,
Joaaph Seid, George G Leiner.
Jr.igh Henry C. Hallett, r.
John IL retirtwo. John D. Taylor.
Jacob P. - Jonee. George W. Bernadoue
James Tregnalr. William G. Boulton: .
Edward Darlington. Jacob Riegel.
H. Jones Brooke. Spencer 111./Irelne.
James IL.BlWarland, John B. Semple. l'ltteburglu:
Edward Lefourcade, A, B. Bergor. ' do.
Joshua P. tyre. .112. T.. Norgan. - do .
THOMAS C. Ills-ND, Preeident
INaveßraelit ----
/tl4l Secretary.
RENRY BALL, ArAlSecretary.;
DREXEL & COl, Philadelphia,
DREXEL,WINTHROP& (10. 1 1ife'sv York..
DREXEL, IL&RJES &- CO., Paris.
"Bankers and Dealers •in
XI. Si. 13 CoNIDS:.
Parties going abroad ton make all their' iinantdal ar
ranßgrmente wit
arts o i r t tins. a o nd vrocnre kittens of credit avails
bte In all
Drafts ?or ewe on t E . 3 'Jut& Irebutd, Prime& Germany
H. P: & C. R. TAYLOR,
rEnFIIIKERIC Anri TOILEV SOAPS,
641 and 643 N. Ninth Street.
"bVC'T J. blitis*BirSl' a' CO.. 13. 1 .stliLl.' taveaua
Dirr iiOODb
ESSIENE
!' .. !:."
.. -
...;
Corner Eighth and Xarket, •
1102111:1/1
OFFICE.
(OP TWA
eita.ar
Financial r and C,onperetal Quotation
~_
_, z
*Rani w'
Ada AS 71
111456.657
147,498 e 3
181,402411
.13.555 139
119.908 Etp
sidaiaoo
nolltdel;
SECOND':EDITION.
TO-DAY:S A CAB ;E
the Atlputtc
. •
LONDON. Nov. 12, A. M.— Console, 94,f, for
both mond' and account, if rive4tventles,
743(4,1111411s Central, 9614;,Erie,•20M-,: F , ; 4-r
LIVERPOOL, Nov. 12, A. M.—Cotton quiet; the
eales for to-day are estimated. at 10,000 bales.
Other articles aro ifrieheigeii. `Zfi
LONDON, Nov. 12, A. BL—Tallow easier at 525.
Linseedoil t ..£2B ss. :
Death off a Citizen or potteylite.
[Special Dentatell to` thAlilla:
PorrsvaLLE, Nov. 12.—Mr. BeNaraln Pott died
M hits residence hero, laseevenhig aged seventy;
six. Mr. Pott was one of the soldiers of the war
of 1812, -and- be was -,nolv,eroally -respected
tbrongbota Behtiyiklil'eotinty. HlB deenase has
caused general sorrow.
From Foriroso Monroe,.
Pour/tam ?doNaos, Nov. 10.—Tbe United
States steamer Col. , Backer, Captain Be%arrived
yesterday from Baltimore, having
~,on board
the ponderous 12 inch rifled Rodman gun for this .
port .It was east some two months since at the
Port Pitt worke l •Pittaburgh, weighs 53,225 lbs.,
and is the second one of the kind ever manufac
tured In this country. The'first one was cast at the
same works before the late rebellion, and when
loaded on a vessel at, Baltimore for this port
was rolled overboard by some rebel Baltimoriens
who thought they had effectually silenced her.
She was, however, recovered and mounted
on the fort. Since the war she was taken on the
beach to be tested, and burst after having some
seven hundred rounds fired. The gun which
arrived yesterday will be used` about the 20th
instant for experimental tiring on a large stone
target, erected during the last summer
p y the
Engineer Department at this plamS. The
experiments • were, 'to , '= have taken ' place
some two months ago, but have been delayed in
order to have the twelve-inch gun here for
the occasion. It Is mentioned that Gen. Grant,
Secretary Schofield and a number of ether
prominent officials will be present to,witness the
firing. The target Is immense granite atrue
lure, about 20 feet high, 30 feet in breadth and
8 or.loc feet In thickness. It is similar to the one
erected during the summer 411866, except that It
is not , iron.clad. • It is Surmounted by heavy
ordnance, and is a very formidable 'structure.
The three companies of heavy artillery; which
were ordered to Atlanta, Columbus and Raleigh
a short time previous to the election, returned . to
the fort this evening and were welcomed back by,
a large concourse people. The band of the ar-
Mery school was on the wharf, playing ',lnes
Johnny Cornea Marching Home" and other ap
propriate airs. The boys look well and express
themselves as highly pleased with their trip.
Thabody.of Capt. D.C. 'MUMMA, an old amd ., .
experienced ses-captaln, who was drowned a
abort time since in the York River, has been re
covered, and - arrived hens to-day from Yerktoorn,
on the steamer Arges, and was taken charge of
by his friends.
Capt. Clarke, of the livgels Hotel, which has,
been closed Rine the first of April last, fa rapidly'
refltthilit and It will be reopened about the
ItArtiatbeer Mover&
,
Nov: 12, , A.M. Wind; Weather. 22ter.a
Portkuut. W.B. W. C!ear. • aslt
Boston '.. .. .W.
Sew 0rk......' , W.
Wilmington.
Washington...... ......V7.
Richmond • N. W.
Augusta. Gs W. Clear. .
51
• N. W. Clear. , ,37
2=0 4). .. ? N. W. , Clouds. 41
Pittaburgb.....•...... .... -. Clear. a , ' 113
Clilc:ago. . „ ......... ... —B. E. Clear. 32
Mobile.. ..N. Clear, :` 50
Neer Orleans N. E. Clear. ..62
state of Tnennotnerter Tail* KOUT at the'
Bulletin Office. •
10 A.... ' .40 dee.. - 12 lit '43 &it, 2P. 44.
Weather cleat. Wind bonhvvett.
POLITICAL.
Humors About the V. N. Senatorshi * Purtanz usma. Thursday. Nov. 12—The demand for
p
...ant, continues active, but the pressure is not se !heavy
trtom the Pittaburgh Gazette of Nov. 111 , 1 as yesterday. NVe quote call loans on Goverinnent Hari&
The presence this week of a considerable ; from 7to io net cent.. with exceptional negotiatims no
number of members elect, of the . Legislature in', high sus 111 per cent The offerings of mercantile paper
this city as jurors in the United • Slates Circuit: are very light, awl &steam paper on Ma street ranges
Court, has awakened an interest in the Senatorial, tra,
T a rie!t t ett a ifa 'ar gelVals aqu this morning. but them was
questiori. The friends of various candidates have , , more firmness in prism Government bonds were a frac.
hien active in pressing their respective debits.' Con blither. but state said city Loans were inactive at
The canvass so far shows an activity and earnest- yesterday 's
_ . " l =', l dose d sway at
48N141485.1: Per:nisi.
nets which may foreshadow the actual contest • !sane Rail road add at 533:1®831;',--an advance or 4-, and
when the Legislature-Shall -4 , - • mhie
-• ovittedentr-ankhoy Railroad,
Yesterday, - a isell-kaown Senator' announced
the withdrawal of :.the Hon. Wm. LI. Kemble
from the field. The, announcement was made
I r .E7 o e t irra rr kij efPredr -ii4abid. an
a°34 fa r
(stawlg'a "k
-in Canal Shares the o n ly &dee were of Lehigh Navigs
on the strength of that gentleman himself, and' +; t k i t tt, IT
ilal end Passenger Railroad shares there was a firm
took many here by surprise because of the ap- feeling .but not mach inqub y.
prehension that he was the most formblable c011..' Berm. Be Haven and Brother. NO- 40 south Third
teatint for the position. • street. make the follo quotations of the rates of ex
change today. at IP. St United States Sixes. 1881. 112ia
The novelty of this withdrawal consists in the„ , ti , e. ; do. do.. NI% leakgUilikrdo. d0..1864. 105_ , ..? . 4Caun,.. -, . do
complete ignorance that each a contingency war.., do. two. ini-a@.dons: do. do.. '0 nevr. 10914(.4lio; do. do.
contemplated on the part of - the-individual spo Laf26,ll. zr 4 ...ftlit u to. co usla. no lt iciest ittot t give,
otes ISM:
daily enaged with the management of his CUM, ootamniii. 4 4Tste 'Sneer, milsox: -
until Mr. Kemble's conalBlon was promulgated Smith. Randolph la Co., issaters.l6,South Third street,
as has already been stated.
_. _ quote at 10X o'cli - ick as follows: G01d.1341i: United States
taxa% 1881. 114(4usit do. Floetwenties. 1862. 108.%41.313:
What relative positions this' withdraw/ leaves do. do. d0..1864.10%8W1N: do. do. do.. Mb. 1071.1410 V :
the remaining contestants in, We shall not under- do. da r n . o., July. less. ii.titei; do , do. d0.d0..
take to tell. But ,we feel satisfied that if there kir tiycook i e t ac 44l 4. l -- qu ita. ate do Giff , usl. mm ue: it o sec ilog ud i ti u es. . S. Fl . v to. ee . ,
was but one aspirant in thin county his chances
would be greatly improved, insomuch that his day rusfollowst U. Is ere, not e no4ttostz old Fivetwen
tinmetie would appear probable. Shill-there not: l i k r . de gr , a1i ta1 0 ,7.714= 1 ,,V r jr4,• Ma i t nl
be only one? - ~' - . do. 1867. Itoollo.Vi tt i a io n . 1868. 110%(41.111%; 'Ten-forties.
Ifis just to state thit Mr: Bauble's friends who ' ifto lo sAf; Gold.
are ion the ground entirely discredit the state. Avenue & Keeney kani.42 13outh Third street. erfoka
Border State Sands to-day sw foll we: Tennessee's. old.
meat of his withdrawal. - 8:470: do. new,.a9Xotom Virg inia. old. 55e..36554: do.
------------- new, 651. Wail/or*. carotins% old, aai@ii3s%. dO. new,
' • '" 61131 Ind: blissourrs. 89 1 2118116. -
SOUTH.
The Savannah Biota- and Their Na
tural Sequence—Who matte Riot—The,
Truth at laud—The BealSerail° 'Pre
grainnio for a Victory.
A Savannah correspondent of the N. Y. 'rri
be Fie - Willa lisliadvre _ • • ,
The only object of t hi s letter Is to give the
simple truth in regard to the barbarone measures
adopted-by-theffeymour and Blair Democrady to
carry this city and county on Tuesday last: ^ '—
The polls were opened at 7 A. M.—there being
but. hree boxes for the whole city and all these.
at the Court House. The , negroes begin to as
eemble as early as '3 o'clock. As the hour for
opening approached theyformed !aline opposite
the several entrances, and when the doOre Were,:
opened, moving' quietly forward, proceeded .to
cast their votes. There was no 'struggle on the
part of the negroes to obtain the advantage.
Few _white.reen were preterit at_ the _time, and
they—the negroeft—gained their position by.
virtue of that most remarkable patience they have_
always manifested under such circumstances.
There was no disturbance, no demonstration, no
exultation, not' even the ordinary excitement,
until about 8X o'clock, when quite a large num
ber of railroad employds marched up in a bOdy
and an attempt was made to open a way through.
the solid ranks of negroes, to: enable these Demo
crate to reach the polls. This ravor, it was pro
posed by certain officiate, to grant the employes;int
order, it is-alleged, that they might not lose their
day's work by waiting: quietly their turn—by
placirg themselves either of the linee and
moving up in_their regular order, like other pea
pie. The object ; .of opening the „ way was
not explained to 4 the negroes, and, of course, was
not understood--by-themi-and.-raight-have-heed
juet as strenuously related by them'if It - bad - been
explained. First came confusion and jostling.
Blows followed clubs . were need, and so -on,
through the regular mob gradations,
until the ' final resort 'to firearms,
with the Impel result , when freedmen
attacked their former •masters. One white man
killed, four more or less wounded, five negroes
killed, and 20 to 30 ,wounded. The negroes. In
compliance with the repeated instructions of their
leaders, had gone to the Polls; with very few ex
cePliOnal unarmed, and were „ unf
prepared to offer any great resistance. The
struggle was short.' They were driven from the
polls, and, fleeing their lives In'-eVeiy, ..
ceivable direction,., were 'pursued , for equaree
by citizens and Vence, and ' fired -on
whenever opportunity offered.- Only -
small number of the negroes ventured to return
to the poll% and the ',:stead distance,., am t .
finally left the ; Vicinity_ altogether. The .Demo
crate by this time had rallied byp thousands; and
now pressed tetward in lines, the same ae the
negroes had done,:crowding every avenue of
proach; so that it was - utterly impossible, if in.
deed'it had not been a reckless exposure of life,
tinder the then . existing excitement and, blood-,
thirsty rage of the crowd, for a colored Republi- .
can to attempt to reach the polls.
The etloltr' Farce
New Orleans hag tilidCherielf 'for past weeks
the theatre of violtidebapd proseriptibt. Capital
and commerce..lye:-shunned her - sew plague-,
stricken spot. Se warehouses have been' empty,
her merchants, ge ntlemen and all her
ibwer industries proltratedi 'At the election yes
thrday, detetrediby'a paralyzing fear of violence
rourdeatli,the mastics of Republicans avoided the
volle, , and (vim a registered strength of nearly
20,000, ehowedtu voteot only 270. At
aji th e ' yester day, there • Was a
remarkable degree of quiet and order, in
marked eontrast with the turbulent and bloody
scenes' enacted in Anguita and Savannah, Geor
gia. No ono can tell what would have been the
condltlbb 'of affairs here had the colored voters
of this , city also attempted yesterday to exercise
the'right of suffrage. The passions of the pee.
pie bad been excited by unworthy appeals to
tbeir prejudices, and by almost constant declare..
Lions that forbearance had ceased to .be a virtue,
and, that tile time had come for forcible resistance
to what have been pronounced oppressive laws.
Our reporters visited every poll after 12
o'clock, and . none of them saw the
slightest indication of disturbances. Bat
few , people, were gathered around the
Voting placea, and no colored men. Business gene
rally was suspended, coffee-honees and retail gro
cery stores were closed, and the city rather wore
the aspect of Sunday in a Northern city than the
appearance of a general election. There were but
few intoxicated men on the streets during the
'.day, but in the evening, once In a while, an in
ebriated individual shouted for Seymour and
Blair, to which a sober Democrat would respond:
"Seymour and Blair are played out." About dark
lhe interdiction was removed from coffee-houses,
, and the hospitable doors were thrown open to the
over-sanguine but disappointed gentlemen, who
gently drowned their sorrows in Ilawkim's and
Santhal's best --New Orleans Republican, Nor. 4.
Cosmos PLlCAB—Judges Allison, Ludlow and
Brewster.—This morning an application was
mode on behalf‘of Col. Mulholland, commanding
Becond Regiment Reserve Brigade, First Divi-
Sion, P. M., for a mandamus on Joseph N. Peir
ecd, City Treasurer, to compel him to pay an or
der made by the'Brigade Board on the City Trea
sury for the sum of ISM, being the amount .f
tbe audited account for said regiment
The petition alleges that the order was re
sented to the City Treasurer, but ho refuse. to
''pay the amount, notwithstanding the possession
of a large amount of money to the credit of the
1 Militia fund.
The Court granted an alternative mandamus,
returnable on Saturday next:
QUitATER timisiorts—Judge Peirce.---Angast
Graff pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing two
watebis and a quantity of clothing.
• James Conden pleaded guilty to two charges
of larceny. The accused entered jewelry stores,
tuidamder pretence of examining and purchasing
goods, watched Ids opportunity to steal.
Michael Gallagher pleaded gul:ty to a charge
of Masan and battery upon a child four years of
age. The child was playing around a bale
• of
cotton, and other boys *bed been picking
cotton from the bales, when Gallagher came
~out and Moak the little one with a whip.
William Bell, colored, was charged with assault
on Otto .boy. The defendant was a
coachman. In charge of a carriage, and it was
alleged that_he cut the boy with a whip, and in
jured his eye. The defence denied that Bell was
the party who inflicted the injury. Jury out.
insairmALL
into rtinadelPft
Balei et the
Vint
rhil*Erteine -
.1000 Pena 3111 me GO /01
20 eh 2d .t-3d Stit 'l5O
200 eh Loll Nay etlf Its 2016
100 eh' do. WO 29
100 eh do 2811
1.00 eh LehVal 8. KO 65
leh - do ' , ..bOltrit. UV.
Clear. BO
Clear. 40
Clestc .44
Clear; :• -41 •
Clear. 31.
s nrewmcw
2000 elty - 6 ' e 'new 10236
1000 Pa 46-2 sera 10531
IWO Fenno a! war In:, .
coon 10134
100 eh LehValll Its 810155
40 eh do elswri 155
10 ph Morrie enl pref 72
36 eb Penn nof
100 ennead II Dio '0.44
1090 C&,A 65 mtg 99
1000 City We new - 102%
2000
900
Lehlzh GldLii do Its 1 93 0234
LOO do do 9314
Phliladelptiiii r.rodace Market.
. .
TrwitsDAT. NoV.l2,llrhe weipte of Cloverseed act
email, sued it meets a ' limited inquiry at the lite decline:
''MAI 00 .1e0 at $ 718471 A: of Timothy are entirely
nominal. Email Bales of Flaxseed at $2 GO@ 2CI per ism
• - Tbere is no chants in Quercftron Bark. We quote No.
1 at $42 50 per ten.. The last pale of Peterson & Mustard's
aat c s. n
re - deMlualorPlonr and more - srmnessin
wises. About 1,000 barrels changed hands at 87 2508 per
barrel for common and choice Wleconsdn and alinnmota
Extra 8 $9410 78 for Pennsylvania and Ohio
tre. Family; $ll - 2111for fancy iota, and $6 75a7 for ex
trap. fflie it in at $8; In 'Corn Meal there 'is
nothing dolma' to fur quotatiow • •
The market is very bare of priine Wheat, which -sells
at full while inferior sorts are not ted. dmaU
es les of Red at $1 6502 00,, and Amber a t e ,
$2 10421 15.
Bye is unchanged; a sale of Western at 121 50. Corn dull
and very muell..nnsetiled.. • Bales of 500 bushels prime
I+ 'Yellow at $116; 500 .bushels unmixed Western. sold at
$1 28 • 6.000 bushels do. do. atAl 12g,1 IS, and new Yellow
904t95c. A sale of 6400 western Oats at Me. Barley
Malt held at $l-40, and 500 bushels Rye Malt sold' at
88150
Whisky is firmer, and sale s at $l - 0881 12, duty paid.
• .
biov.ll.—The stock market has been on the whole
weak and unsettled to.day prices having declined
througheut the Hat. notwitatanding that money wee in
abundant supply at merle per cent—in currency. No
fresh semi.oflictaletockJobbing despatches were received
from Washington: and the _Trealury has made no at
tempt to rtissue three per cent. certificates or otherwise
tamper with the money market for the benefit of the
Treasuryling. ill vielaidon of the law and mould Ord ay.
-The banks report that . they -are 'fending large amounts
of currency to tbe eolith and douthweet, and
ther•t".. are alrentij-expand d that
they confess their inabtlity to llnd Inc.
on securities of any kind. In many butane et
they have made time loans ou spec , ' lativeetocks--a prac
tice ft aught a ith great danger end much to be condemned
and, in some cases they have become the virtual owners
of the's° in consequence of the decline in prices and the
inability of the borrowers to out up fresh margins. That
this is bad banking admits of ne question, and the aun
t ti-,n a-the-Cornett ollerof theeturenr.y_should_he directe.
to en investigation of- the_ affains_of rauclusfitliem_na..are
unduly expanded on stock loans. The aemaed for cur.
rency •to move the pork crop has not yet been felt. but
it soon will be, and the Western money markets continuo
very Reties'''. while the drain southward will doubtless in.
crease as the mtreement of the cotton erOp progreeees
The gold market has been steady and free from • excite.
moat all dilqq and the fluctuations were from 1.33 X to
.1343it'ivith th e closing transactions prior to the adjourn
tient, of the board at three o'clock. at 1844. following
which the latest quotatiOn on the street was 134'4,®131.5.
There was a brisk borrowing demand for coin and loans
were made at retest -varying from ono to four per cent.
per annum tor _canting, and at Led a 1.82 per cent.
per diem lor
, wingborro as well as ”flat.'' The gross clear
ings amounted
,11,, the gold balances - tri
81.726,Ed8, and the currency balances to t 8.1.810,624.
armm the N. Y.' World of tO-daY.)
Nov. 11.—The statement that the Secretary of the Tres.
eery Intended to relieve the money market by the inning
of 111‘001.1. 1 300 of:three per centecertificatee is contradicted
by the AmistantTreasurer. All the relief which the
Treasury Departimmtle lady to give the money market
or the banks is by abstaining from selling gold or bonds
7fany legal tenders 'are reissued it will be to supply the
necessities of theTreaaut7.inid not with any view of inter
fering with the course or the money or stock markets,
The money market is quiet, and harrowers are supolled
At 7 per cent. In currency, but there . is no confidence in
the continuance of tht_present comparative ease. The
money markets in the West are stringent, and the drain
lot greenbacks to the south will enforce farther contrac:
tion on the part of the New York banks. The loam from
the heavy decline in produce have falleq mainly on the
West, and the bee ko in that section are in a crippled
condition. < Tho cliqued stocks are held , by thorn, to some, •
ea tent, - as collateral&
The government bond market was ' steady at tho (Med:
ing and became firmer as the day advanced. Tho 18a7s
12; 1868;
THE COURTS.
COMMEEQIAL
noney Karim s.
I Stock ituAuatim
500 Leblnl93lo In 93 (
2000 do b 5 W
ZOO , do • 93W
. 411 eh Pease lta 5336
100 eh do C&P 53W
200911 dO Its 53W
100 eb .: , do , IS3w
14 9.l:Lit Sebß 45W
100 ell Need • 483(
100 eh- -do c 4034 -
800 eh, do c 4.34 r
100 443 c ' 483(
100 eh do bll 4934
1.00a11? do bl 2 48.,v
100.8 h do ell Own 483(
100 eh 4 do elOwn 481(
100 eh -do reg&lnt 483(
noaaar.
8 eh. Morrie C of 72
2 eh Cam & Amboy 1233¢
6ah Far&Meelik 126
69 eh LebVal II 010 le 65 g
60 eh, Leh Ny ack 23
New `fork - Money Market.
[From the.N. Y. Herald of , tcrdas.
have been largely owniold; and. they ri?sed ettong at
0 'dock market opened heavy and -lower a c t
mostly'. but afterwards tallied and Prices adr
TkeirOsesdont..bowever. was not ingrained, and after:
bIP M. th ere was s break lathe marketEtic gelling down
to et *lib symptom of running into a_psnic, which was
chec edbyibe Broadway brokers' firm employlniiein ,
menus brokers to bid the market up. Them efforts
clopped the panic which was Impending, The market
clotrdpusettled. • • . -
„ , . ,
The foreign exchange market Is dieturbedig te _males
of heavy amounts of borrowed sterling bi from the
Prime banking firm that draw. on itself. . These .excep.'
Hovel trent action‘ have been madb against stock coif/47
erste. and they are now , the main prop of the atoce-j!b
bins cliques who are sustained ,by_the borrowed bill. ef,
this prime banking firm. The rate for bank.
, ere , sixty-dav sterling hills was 10914 sniff
' there • borrowed bills were forced . -upon titul
market at 109, reducing the reader quotations to 109itt to
It93i. The extent to which there Wile are becoming
mixed up with the stock johls;.:Jg cliques is the rubject Of
free comments among business teen. Theme bills can be
used only by telling them 4or remittance to Europe. as no,
loess can be obtained on them lu this market The re.,
cult of this procere le to retry the stock. jobbing cliqueti
with itiftirh cepital, obtained by discounting -in Lou.
don the bills of the prime banking lirm that draw. en.
bo gold market opened at 1333,1, declined to • 111351: and
cloted at 1304 at 3 I'. M. The , rates paid toe carrying
were 4. 8.2 and 1: per cent At 11.40 A. M. 1.61 end at
12.20 P. M.• 1.22 was paid for borrowing. After the board
adjourned soles were made at 1343‘(@,13434c105ing at 1344
Q 13454; at 820I'. • - .
The operations of the Gold Exchange Bank to : day were
as tallowy:
Gehl balances , ' 411.726,02314
t'nrrever be .4,010.e224 II
Grote clearances 122.183,04.111 00
The Latest tuloitationa 1101111 Lew Work
ITha Telegraph,'
ligut Yung.Havernber 12. IF 64.—Btocka feverieb ;Chicago
and Hock Maud, IC2N •, Reading. 97; Canton C0..4636; Erte,
2.8,% ; Cleveland anti 'l'oledn.2Bll ;Cleveland and Pittaburgb.
; PS ttaburgh and Fort Vv at ne,lo7kl: Michigan Central,
115; Michigan Bouthern, 8.3; New York ceutral. .120;
1111nole Central, 14114; Cumberland preferred. 20; Virginia
6c. 5534; irt ouri ricer, Et; Hudaon river. MI; Fivattvem
Hem. :1662, 10914 ; do,. 1864, 1071,11 do.. 1865. MU; New.
11 0 34; l'emfurtier, 105; Gold, 12414; Money, .7 per=cent;
Exchange, 934.
Market by 'telegraph.
NEW Yong,Nov.l2.—Cotton steady; sales of 250 bales at
24Rc Flour without decided change; sales of 9.000 bbla.
heat firmer; sales of 26.000 bushels No. lat $166•
No- 2 at $1 51@l$1 55; White Michigan at
$2 25. Corn firmer and advanced ic.; sales or 69 000 bus. ,
mixed Western atsl 15c41 17. Oats advanced le.; sales
of 21,000 bushels at Tic. Beef quiet. Pork—quotations
are nominal: new mess. $23 76. Lard dud; Steam. 16)
@16% Whisk , quiet.
fiewrotortit. Nov. I2—Cotton dull; middling Uplands
ominally , 243 i. Flour quiet: Howard stre.t Superfine
$6 60fa7 25; do Extra €B@.lo 10; do Family $lO 7.5(1i 75;
City Mille Btmerfine_s6 50,@,7 25; do Extra $8( . 10 - 75; do
' *ll@m 75; Western Extra sBa9 25; do Fa idly
swan 76. Wheat a shade better, but not quotably
higher. Corn firm; new white 76185 Oats dull; prime
66€3,70; ordinary 50C560. Rye nominal. Pork firm at 829
0960. B,coo active; rib sides 173.t . :_ ciPar sides ill
Shoulders Hams 1902 Lard dull at I*.
CURTAIN itLITERIALa.
I. E. WALRAVEN,
MASONIC HALL
No. 719 CHESTNUT STREET.
ADDITIONAL IMPORTATIO‘IB
By Last Steamers
IN
LACE CURTAINS
DECORATIONS,
Embracing some of the Richest Novelties
ever introduced in this Department.
THE TUB. ir-
' Point Breeze Park.
To-Molrow. Prida 3 o'clock P. p
PURSE ANP STARE. 5500.
Mile heats. 3 in 5. in hasnees.
J. McCUSKER names e. In. RUBY.
B. D. STETSON names a in. LADY LIGHTFOOT.
B. STETSON names b. m. IDA: '
M. GOODIN names g. g. GENERAL THOMAS.
Omnibuses will leave LIBRARY steam. and BROAD
and PRIME streets. It
Admission. OIL
GIECOCEALES, &t,
CORN AND TOMATOES.
150 Cases Winslow's Coin..
150 Cases Fine Tomatoes.
By the Case or Dozen.
SiMON -BOLTON & CLARK.I3,
oor, Bro - aittitid - Wzdtintita - i
PHILADELPEt[a.
nog
727 OBESTNUT STREET 727
REDUCTION IN THE PRICES
OF
DRESS GOODS.
RICKEY, SHARP & CO.
No. 727 Chestnut Street,
OFFER. TO-DAY
50 Cases of Imported Dress Fabrics,
At-2&-tentli-per-yard, worth double the price.
RICHEY,SHARP& CO.
No. 727 Chestnut Street.
MWMTD
GERMANTOWN TELEGRAPH HAS AN IMMENSE
circuia• ion in the greatiegion fifty miles around the
city, tendering it an unsurpassed medium for adver.
•
Ving
Asa family and agricultural nbwspaper it is the best
published.
Price $2 60.
It can be eent to any Post Office station iti PitiladelPhia
free of postage, and to any parr Of the State for SO cents a
year.
VERSE LOBSTERS AND SALMON'-500 OASESO L OO
dozen,. fresh Lobetem and Salmon., landing and ror
Bale by JOS. B. BUSBIES do 00..108 Lindh Delaware
avenue.
BRAND LAYER RAIBIOIS. WHOLE%
uhaves and quarter hones of this splendid fruit. land.
In and for sale by JOB. B. BUSSIER ds 00.. 108 13ontb
Delaware avenue.
RESERVED TAIWARTNDB,—M KEGS MARTMQ
IZII
Taraarinde, in sugar, landing and for sale J..n.
WRIER CO.. 108 Routh Delavraro manna.
Kr ORTON'S PINE APPLE ONEESE.-100 BOXES ON
d for ealo by JOB. B.
f c°" l g e Lnuding
rt & Elmer.loB South
URsi - E!r. & CO., Agents for o on
Delzwara Avenue.
THIRD' ::EDITION.
• EtY; t TELEGRAPH:
LATE- OABLS ~I Q~U~` A TYORB
The Cole sccicil Triaf
„
fly the Athuttle Cubic;
Lounon; Novi 12, P.11.-Coneole 9434 for both
money aid account ' Erie Railway shares firmer,
and Idgber. Cenirat 'enster 4 96M.
U. tS. ive-twentles
• , •
,
Lxvisnroor., Nov. 12,T. M.—Colton fist; Mid-,
dling uplands, 1014 d; Middling
Lard, dull Cheese 66s commorkitoein, ss. 2d,
Fin° Rosin, 16s.
Como:!, goir. 12, P. itt.--Linsee,d 011, 428105.
TallOw, 610. 2d, , ; •
14.v1z, Nov. 12, P. M.—Cotton 136 -francs. on
tho spot,. „ ,
The Ccqe-Illsoork, Trial.
, .
Aiitsrer Nov. 12.—Tho second, trial of Georg°
W.,Cele for murder of L. flitscock. coin
meneed thia mornMg, Judge llogebtrm
. prSsid
fug. "No jurors have as yet - been sworn.
Correction.
RICHMOND, Nov. Wainwright, of
Fhilidelpbia, not H. 'C. • Wainwright as pub
lished,ls to be President Wither Fredericksburg and .
Gordonsville (s) Railroad, which is to' be fin
ished by a PhiladelPhia coritpany.
Attempt
ALnAirT, Nov. 1.2.—A bold, but uniMeeesatul
attempt was made 'to rob the National Bank at
Behoharle county, lattt,nliht.,,
ItocutsrEn, Nov. 12.—Billler's Brewery, on
Lake avenue, waa destroyed by fire last evening.
Loes. 417,000; insurance: 48,000. ' .
EXCELLENT SECURITY.
THE FIRST MORTGAGE,
Thirtyrlrenr 6 Per Ct.
GOLD BONDS
OF TIM
CENTRAL
PACIFIC RAILROAD_ CO.
There Bonds are the , duly authorise& agd accredited
obligations of one of the most respomibte Corporations of
the American Continent, and ire 'secured by an absolute
Sot lien npon tbe valuable 'lrteurts. franchises, railroad
equipment, imeiness;etu, of the best 'pbrtf on of the
Great National Pacific Railroad Linos
extending catitwardly from the navigable waters of 'the
- Pacific Gout to the Mims now rapidly tmliolng from tho
.
They, bear Six per sent interest per suanum. In, gold
AND BOTH PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST ABE DX:
PRESSLY MADE "PAYABLE EN - UNITED STATES
GOLD COIN." •
The semi-annual Coupons are payable, Jul tat and
January let. In New York Olt,.
The purchaser Is charged the accrued Interest from the
date of the last paid Coupon. AT THE ,CURRENCY
BATE ONLY. - • '' • -
This issue of Bonds °Dual:it:atm one of the LARGEST
AND MOST POPULAR CORPORATE LOANS of, the
country, and therefore will be constantly dealt In.
The greater portion of the Loan is now in the hands of
steady investors; and It le probahle that before many
months. when the road is completed and the Loan closed.
THE BONDS WILL BE EAGERLY SOUGHT FOR AT
THE HIGHEST BATES.
They are trailed ONLY A 8 TEE WORK PROGRESSES.
and to tho eamo exttnt only ae the 11. 8. Subsidy Honda
granted by the government to the Pacific Railroad• Com
pantea.
Nearly FIVE auNr RED MILES of the road are now
built, and the grading Is well advanced on two hundred
and fifty mil• a additional.
The I lIROUGH LINE ACROSS THE CONTINENT
a ill be completed by the middle of next year. when the
-er an . .ve w 'every arge.
The local oneness alone, upon the completed portion, is
eo heavy, and eo advantageous, that the gross earnings
average MORE THAN.A QUARTER OF A MILLION IN
GOLD PER BiONTH,.OI which 15 per cent only in 're
quired for . operating expenses.
The net profit upon the Company's business on the com
pleted portion is about double the amount of annual in.
Wrest liabilities to be assumed thereupon, and will yield
a SURPLUS OF,NEARLIE A M I r•f.ION IN GOLD after
expenses and interest are paid—even if the through con
nection were not made.
The beet lands, the richest mines, tegether with the
largest settlement and nearest markets, lie along this ror
Lion of the Pacific RailreadAnd the FUTURE DEVELOP
MENT OF BUBIERSB thereon will be proportionally
great.
From them consideration, it fe,nbmitted that the
CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD
1340NY:05 . ,
secured by a Flat Mortgage upon so productive a pro
perty. are among the most promising and reliable securi
ties now offered. No better Bonds can be made.
A portion of the remainder of tide Loan is now offered
to invest:lra at
- 103-Per Cent, and
Accrued Interest, in Ormency.
The Boogie are of $l. each.
The 'Compary reserve - the ~right to' advance the
price at any time; but all orders actually in tra situ at
the time of such advance will be filled at present price.
At this time they Pai..more than 8 PER CENT. UPON
THE INYINSTMENT. and have. from National and Fiats
laws, ouarantees peculiat to themselves.
We receive all classes of Government. Bonds. at their
full market 'rates. in exchange foi the Central Pacific
Raliroadllonds, thus enabling the holders to retulae from
5 TO lo PER CENT. -PROFIT and -keep the - principal - of
their investments equally secure. .
Orders and inquiries will receive prompt attention. In•
formation. Descriptive Pamphlets, etc.. giving a full ac.
count of the Organisation. Progress. Business and Pros
pects of the Enterprise, furnished on application. Bonds
sent by return Express at our cost.
SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED BY BANKS AND
BANKERS, AGENTS FOR THE LOAN,THROUGHOUT
THE UNITED SPATES. CANADA. AND EUROPE,
AND BY
DE HAVEN & 13TtO ,
410 South Third Street, Philadelphia.
IC fAll descriptions of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
BOUGHT, SOLD. OR EXCUANGED. at our office and
by Mail and Telegraph AT MAbKET RATES.
lair - ACCOUNTS OF BANKS. BANKERS, and °there
received and favorable arrangementifmade for desirable
accounts.
FISK & HATCH,
1, I,l' (;*
Financial Agents of I.,..s . Central Pacific R. R. Co.,
No. Si Naostm Street, Blew York:
non thett. •
BOUDEWS BFJAF na,—sexai , AN MINCE OF THIS
extract will nuke a pint of excellent Bert Tea •
B e .
minutes, Always an and for sale Dy JOSEPH
B. miasma & Co.. toa S outhPalwan) avenmal
BOND'S: BOSTON A.IsD TRENTON BIBOUIT.—THE
trade •supplied with. Bond's Butter, Cream. Milk.
09bters and Egg Biscuit- also. West There'a cell.
brated Trenton and Wine Biscuit, by_.loS. B. BOSSIER
&AX., Bole Agents,loB Eolith Delaware avenue.
=MS
2:30 0'014:rook;"
MEE
FOURTH EDITION.
2 3 : 15 Q!Cixwk•
WAS -
Efforts to 'Remove Mr. Mitt
ArlY-FRther Attempts Not -Ukeii,
The ,Vg4 celltred In . othdt.' Quarters
Diet -Att'y Courtney the Neict Viotm
, I'mportant ;:' 13 ecislo
BAILINGrOP, A' U. El. STEAMER
The Efforts• to Remove Commissioner
Itotitos.
[Special t)eepatch to the l'bristdelphia"Evenbgl3alleU,!:o
WAtinmexorr, 'Nov. 12.—The repeated. fidlufeo
that have attended the efforts to get up, charges
'against' Commissioner RoHine and Secretary Mc-
Culloch strong, enough to Justify the President in
sue Pending the first and'removing the latter,
dis
courages those who hod led the movements so
much that any further attempts are not likely to
The fight now seems to, have centred upon Dis
trict Attorney, ,Canrtney, and a very strong pres
sure is being brought to bear upon the'Attorney.
General and the President to have him removed
Judge Fullerton' arrived here yesterdey, and at
once made direct' charges against Diatrict Attor
ney Courtney, Collectors ,'Callahan,Bailey and
Marshal Murray, of New York, and at the same
time,it is anderstopd p presente.d alleged emplanes
going to implicate those officers with schemes to
defraud the Goveirnment. The charges Made by
J. H. ' Gilmer of Richmond, Va:,` against the
Revenue officials, was brought about.' by, a re
fusel ,of Cmandssioner to reta i n him
as assistant counsel for 'the GovernMent
an annual eatery of $3,500. :Roth the Dietz:W.4AV,
torney and , the Supervisor at Richmond; advised
the Department:Ahat ,his, services were !not re
quired, aid.that he was, not tt,, proper person to
have connected , with , cases that might , come up,!
Subsequently he, - turned his attention to lading.
out alleged frauds against these Officers, with
whom - he wished to be connected.% • ' •
District' Attorney' Courtney arrived hero
morning and. was closeted for some time with th'e '
President'and'Attornev-General Everts. He pad'
to them his reply to the chaigee made by Faller
ton` and Giliner:
Censiderableinterest is manifested in the result':
of this tight by members of the Whisky' Ring,.
who are , here in laige numbers. It is noticeable'
that they meetly appear to favor Courtney'd re
moval.
impomuii neaoloik.
(Special Dematchpthe Phlindelphia Evening Millntim,/
Wessescron - , ,Nov: 12.—The: (Comptroller 'at
the Treasury, under date of ;November' 10th, to.
Commissioner Internal Revenue, decides thstahe
law.of July 20tH, 1868,. allows Asiessors corn.'
mission of one fourth of one per rcentrint of
amount of the - tax collected on spirits distilled
since the passage of the act; in addition to r the
other commissions allowed. This is an t hicreme '
upon the Salary and commissions heretofore al
lowed, as under former laws the commissions
were lirnited to' twenty-five hundred dollars, in
widition to a salary of fifteen hundred dollars..
This decision will give many assessors of in
ternal revenue two er three thousand dollars in
crease of salary. ,
.
of a Steamer. ,
rSpecial Despatch to the PhiladelphinEvenhig Itullettn.]
Wegnnicroir, Noiember 12th.--The United
States steamer Nlpsle, under command of Lieu
tenant Commander Selfridge, sailed froni . the
Navy Yard this afternoon, to join the West India
squadron.
New Brunewielc.
13T. Jona', Nov. 12.—There is a better feeling
• •ing-theeOMIXICT(.IIII Dinh. 'rhey-are-p: •
log notes to their depositors whic.h 'are current
at 85 to 90 cents per, dollar.
BOSTON, Nov. 12 =A fire 'occurred last night•
in the store of Thomas-Kelly & Co., dry goods
merchants, on Otis'street. The loss Is estimated
at 03 70,0 0 0 . 'pawed princlpally ip Boston offices.
Marine Intelligence.
HAVANA, Nov. 12.—The steamshi - p Eagle ar
rived at this port this morning.
NA AA * I K4 4'
LINEN STORE, IP
S2S Arch fStreest.
Several Cheap Loth Of
TOWELS,
TOWELING by the yard,
TABLE LINENS;
LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS.
Of The largest Linen Stock In the city at
Importer'' prices.
ac.ww■ -
FIR.ENCEI
MANTLE CLOCKS,
NOW OPENING.
CLARK BBIDDLE
Na 712 CHESTNUT Street.
(4.OItEEAM
SOLID SILVER
GORHAM PLATE.
A very Large Stock at Marturacturenit. List Prices
CLARK atRIDDIZ
.4.1.PTE:.:: - ?:...; . .:EiD11.,10.15.T
LATEST
THE E UHEAO ~i3fAiiii7TlCS
An ElaboraUt , Eeport in Prep.zilion
l ' g}/itithtft CARICUM O=43kik
The irrepreselhielpelmaiou Teilaitlon
Wasarescrrosc :Now 12.—The 'rirector of the
Bureau of Statistied la preparing an slaborate re
port u pon the statistieff oftaXation .in the 'United
States. It will exhibit the gedetal,' Etat°, county,
township and , corporation taxea M detail through
out the country. 4
' The total sum„ of the yakh reyennos now
exceeds $7d0,000,000 per; annum a sum , which
forms a`considerable portion - of the eAt*Mira
ings of the_ people. The vaic.ue forma 'ottaxa;
tio'n : are discussed with minutenesS; and :the re-t'
port' eMbraces the statistics of ui States' 2;769 "
counties, and of a still larger:number of Inerilef -
'lFrorti otailiforacie,
SAN Fitmirciiico, Nov. 10.:—Seymour 'ax ea
the 'State: of.' Oregon by about 200 - majority
Flour. 05 25016 25; Wheat, 'choice shipping.
$1.,75;.Legal tenders, 74c.
Vrorrif sew York
NEW Youir i Nov. 12.-:•Governos Fenton hat
under advlamnent prooohltion to call =li:dr&
session of the State Senate. The alleged election
frauds la Bald to be one reason of , the contempla.
ted movement.
PENNSYLVANIA
::Full Ot~icial Retui.ms‘
Cottnefet.
Adams
Alleghevy •,23289 • 14923 25487
,14671
Annatromg.... r ... 8987 8459 4082 8412
3540 '-' 2675 6278 5250
Bedford i '2625- '• 8019 •-2687, • 2898
1 7413 • , 18921 7917 *'13973'
Blair:.. . 9341 ' 8183 8986 , 3066'''
Bradford... .. . ... •.7612' 8863' 7768,-:° ::: 3638
... 6981 7888 7085 ;7613; -,
Butler. ..... 3728 8292., , 3803 8256 .
Cambzia.: - 2849 • 3587' ' 2935. 3558
Cameron , 637 •' 441 ,508 894
2129 2772 '2lBB' 4 2743''
8388 - 8765 '8429- -8646
Chester::;.::::: ;8850 • 6658 • '9178 • • 14.90 i
1908:2956 ,:1998.-• • i'2929.•
Clearfield 1895; 8087! • 309 -
Clinton . 1992 „ .2765 2056 $2582
Colnaibia 2077 -4058 - 2143 ,f.A02,2'2.
Crawford." .. . 7026 "` 5890. 7822 5155;'
Cumberland..;.. 'BBOl " 4483 4171- 4594
Dauphin.. .. .... '6190 4585' 6507 4891" '
Delaware... . -; 4016; 2764 - 4166 - 261G' ,
Elk I. 508 1054 ••568 . 1119
Erie .
„ 7702 4531 8007 , 4555 : _
Fayette ; 8745 4778 3792 , • 4608 4 ,
Forest..... ... . 352 . 348 ' 855" s; 294
Franklin' .. . ,4821 ' 4278 4451 4171'• ;
Fu1t0n....:::.:.:782 - • 1118 812 1107`_''
.." 1722 • 8874 . ' 1809 ' 'BBOl
Huntingdon 3473 2498 3417 .2179
'lndiana 4842 2301' 4809 2228
Jefferson 2076 2094 2147, ; , •,,2068
Juniata.. ... ... 1467 1863 .1473 1753
ILancaster ..
15313`" fis7o 15792 8513
.Lawrenee ' 3691 1716' 3789 1647
Lebanon.. ... 4267 . '2858 4345 2858
Lehigh.... • 4733 6305 ' '5004' 6321
.Luzerne 9992 18420 .10723 14303
Lycoraing.... ~.. 4680 • • 5081 .4713 .-4839
McKean.. . . ... 983 , 809 1028 '7BO
Mercer.
Monroe
7918 .8905 '''‘ 8083 . 8803
1194 -1683 1269; , ,1697 1 '
Nortbamptoin.... 1 4452 7701. :4788:..7759 ,
Northumberland.. 8694 : 4146 8825' , .:4240:
Philadelphia
Pike
'otter,
SchtrypELU
Snyder
Sullivan
Basquehaniqta .... 4682 3377 4882 3392
Toga 5410 2051 .5549.:.,,1951
Union .. . 2054 1840 •. 2081 1277
Vanango 4431 8761 ' 4769' , 3774 '
Warren • 2990 1882 , 8020' 1757
Washington 4946 4948 5051 . 4867
Wayne 2698 3397. . 2909 % 3539
Westmoreland "5335 6669 6285 6360
1549 1765 , 1623 1766
York 6053 9006 6449 9094
:Majority. 9677'
k tlilil:ii i '[i)lr:l;.t akl
PEACE—WKSGANDT.-011 the 19th but at the Arch •
Street Presbyterian. Church. by taa Rev. Alfred U. Kel
logg. Mr. Thomas Peace to. Bessie EL, daughter of Mr.
Thomas J. Weygandt, all of this city. • • •". • ••'
DirP ADELPUTA. NOVEVBER ,19th.'
Noticeis hereby given that an itultailment Of Tett
Cents per share on oach and every. share of the !mite
stock of the GIRARD MINING COMPANYof bli
has beewcalled in Rayable on or before the 98th ra,,i
.veraber;lB6% - st tosaillotrattlustlempeitgralmlOgaral- ,
nut street, Philadelphia. • - -- • • ,
By order of the Directors. - -
nol2-4295 B. A. actoi.he. Treasurer_
tR
t4ci ere,,
BANKERS
NAPKIN,
NO. 35 SOUTH THIRD STREET..
PHI LADELPHIA:
ekOYXRNMAI R gicumTiri;
AND NOTE BROKERS.
AeconiLta of Banks, Firma, and Individuals root:axed =Vito*
to chock at sight.
INTEREST ALLOWED ON BALANCES.—
*NERAckENTa.„
FOR
w .,PENNYLVANIA
cr- 2 ,„.
41Z RN N E S N SIV.I
;9 . 1 . (.) ,
OF THE -
off!'
1.
i ft ,
yok Of PIE 7. l Nett i i
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
The NATIONAL Livr. INSURANCE. ColsVsarr IS a
oOrporattoß chartered by speetal,Act of C e ongter,.. ap
proved Jl:fly 25, Hes, !Rya a
• • .
CASH CAPITAL, $1 000 000 FULL PAID.
Liberal terms offered to Aentit and Solicitors.. *Lk*
erl invited to apply at our owe°. - -
Full particulars to be bad On application at ouroilloe,.
itioated in the second story of our Banking Hone.
lttera Circulars and Pamphlets, tally describing the
atlvantages, offered by the Company, tnAY be bed.
E. W. CLABIL sit Ca... -
- • No. 85 South Third fft,,;.
'MEW GRENOBLE Wa=o26 BAL•4O- aura
4 . 1 ' - Crop Bat-shell Greuable Walnuts landing 'mid
by JOH. B. BUEISIELi ds CO. it Beath Oelaware.
av nue.
re4LOO <Q'Olobk.
BY trELEelEts.
Elections of 1808.,
OC/0)31121. Novirsinza. A
Auditot General. President. ,
'Eastratift." Balite. Grant. Seinnatir..
... 2832 3174 " 2917,,- , 8170
.
4793 '4177 4979 • 4078,
1858 '...1828 ;,1846 1807
735 * 2789 813 2915
.. 2570 2526 2664 , 2416
,60633 60808 60985, ~55178
... 838 1269 370 1313'
8192 9588 8707 9428`
1865 :.: - 1843 1925 1818
8195 1829 ' 8261 ~ ••1775
~ 4 61 846 473 851.
. 331,163 821,486 344,41.8 816,00
821,486 316,008
28,805
STOCK, GOLD