Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, November 21, 1868, Image 4

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    umesliw,sito siumnztv.
Tux - internal revenue receipts since July Ist
amount to 052,250,000.
Asf icc-bridge has already been formed CM the
lower. St. Lawrence river.
Tun officiarretarn of the vote of Georgia gives
• 45,268 majority for Seymour.. :.'
Tanaka B. Buunotrons,of Lancaster, has been
chosen to fill the vacancy in the Presidentitd chair
of the State Agticulttiral College.
Kino• & Emts's shipjoiner shop, in New
York, was destroyed by fire yesterday. Loss,
$75,000.
Joins S. BtrAcii has been arrested, charged
with robbing theßalt _Springs Saving Bank lost
NICKOLAS I/WRY Was yesterday convicted in
the New York courts of conniving in the procure
ment of a rale° whisky bond.
Is Is stated that Red • Cloud and several other
hostile. Indian chiefs have signed a treaty,with
the. United States.
Ix snowed at Washington yesterday afternoon
and last night. It snowed also at Richmond yes
terday for two hours.
THE customs receipts at New York, Boston,
Philadelphia and Baltimore, from November 9th
to November 14th, aggregate $2,248,486.
IT IV reported that new and rich silver mines
have been discovered on the White River, in
Utah.
Ax attempt was made, yesterday, to rob the
New York Central Park Saving Bankoi $lOO,OOO.
The thief dropped the package in'his haste to
escape from the bank officers.
Pirrx-Trisma million=dollars Were subscribed at
Rio Janeiro "the first week in October as a loan
to the government, which only asked fifteen mil
lions.
Tax American street railway in Rio Janeiro
was opened to_traffic op the 9th of October, in the
presence 'of the 'Emperor and an immense con
-crnirse of -citizens. -citizens. Toe-average daily_ receipts
were twice the estimatekainount.
CHIRP Jiiefricx CRAM is expected in Richmond,
VS., next Monday, to open the fall term of the
U. S. Circuit Court. It is not known what dispo
sition will be made of the case of Jefferson Davis,
which will come before the Court.
South AMERICAN advices to the 29th nit. report
the United States steamers Gnerriere, Pawnee,
Kansas and Quinnebaug at Rio, on the eve of
leaving with Gen. McMahon for. Paraguay. The
Wasp was at Montevideo, with ex-Minister
NVOShhtirp.
TitApp was great excitement at Bear River City,
Utah, on the 11th, growing but of 'the lynching
of three roughs. The lynchers burned the jail
and office of the Frontier Index newspaper, and
the citizens fired on them, killing ten, and
wounding many others.
Arrvicars from Paraguay state that the Allies
are besieging Lopez at Villeta; that four iron
clads had passed the fortifications there, and
that 7,000 Brazilian troops are marching along
the west bank of Paraguay river, with the in
tention of crossing to Asuncion, and thence
descending seven leagues to Villeta, to Pike
Lopez in the rear.
'AN" OFFICIAL banquet was given yeaterday in
the government palace by the Captaiftieneral of
Cuba,at which Admiral Hoff and the officers of
the merlean squadron were tne principal guests.
General Lersuncli made a speech, in. the course
of which he admitted •that had be been born in
the United States he would, in all probability,
have been a radical Republican; but being a na
wveh o b S e pain d beaes w . as a constitutional monarchist
He closed with a toast to the
Americas' Union, its rulers and people. Admiral
Hoff offered a toast in honor of Spain, saying the
governme,nts ot Spain and the United States had
been friends for seventy years, and friends he
-- 'hoped they would always remain.. The toast was
received with great applause' -
late Insurrection in.Cu..OI
RivisrA, Nov. 20.—General Valmazada has ar
rived with his troops at Puerto Principe, and
will immediately open the campaign against the
insurrectionists, in conjunction with the foxes
of Colonels Lono, Campello and Quieros.
A telegram has been received 'which announces
that live hundred insurrectionists had presented
themselves to General Valmazada, and been par
doned.
The following has been received from Port an
Prince
After the bombardment of ,Teremie, President
Salnave bombarded Miragoane for five hours, but
was n pulsed. Many of Salmwe's pickets
on shore surr,undered to the revolutionists.
The distrias of Be
rgnee and St. Nichdlas have
joined the revolutionists.
All the foreign Consuls have been notified by
Salnave that he intended shortly to attack Jae
mel, Aux Cayes and St. Mark's.
An American man-of-war was looked for with
anxiety. Several other nations have war vessels
here; but there has been no American vessel since
September.
The government continues to purchase and
sell till-the coffee and mahogany for the purpose
of raising resources.
The revolutionists are increasing in numbers.
LATER.
RAVANA, Nov. 20.—captain General L,ersundi
Says the statement that SQO rebels had surren
dered to Valmazada, and been pardoned, which
was publiehed in the Diario this
to' the
exaggerated the facts; that despatches to the gov
rnment reportlhat only about fifty men so far
have given up, but small parties of insurgents
are continually coming into Puerto Principe,
having abandoned the rebel cause.
The Artillery Target Practice.
Fonninse Monnos, Va., November 19.—The
experimental firing, under the direction of the
United States Engineers' Department, was Inau
gurated to-day. A large number of prominent
army oftleere were resnt, among whom we
* noticed Generale Del a fiel d , Humphreys, Barnard,
Cullum, Benham, Simpson, Tower, Wright, Di
nalck, Newton, Thom, Stewart, Gilmore, Casey
and Bees; General Ragner and Colonel King, of
the Ordnance Department; Generals Barryßrew
ertonlio'berts Hayes,of this post.— The firing
was conducted by Colonel T. G. Baylor, aesisted
by Major W. S. Beebe and Captain Poland.
There are three different kinds of targets here
for experimental purposes, ail of the latest and
most approved patterns.
The engineer department has been engaged
upon them for some months oast, and they
models of neatness and strength, The largest
one was ofgranite, and had a small embrasure
about four feet from the ground, and is said to
have been erected upon the same plan as the
"Biprape," or, more properly, Fort Wool. It is
of strong stone-work, and supported upon each
aide by heavy abutments. The second one is
composed of two heavy plates of wrought iron
over a foot in thickness, and firmly riveted to
gether, the back supported by heavy masonry.
The- parapet on one side of this embrasure
was composed of concrete, while the other was
common earthwork.
Toe third target is composed of brick, stone and
heavy plate wrought iron, and made to represent
the casemate of a fort. It has been gotten up
with much care, and it is thouht to be the
strongest one of the three. Asi de from these
three targets is a large tower, some twenty-five
feet high, composed of cut gneiss, a species of
stone which has not hitherto been used in
the construction of fortifications. Their object
, aisto test its relative strength as compared with
granite.
The firing was first commenced on the target
first described with a thirteen-inch smooth-bore
gun, the shot being of steel, and weighing 320
pounds. The object of the artillerist was to
strike the target at the embrasnre or near it, thus
dismounting or- disabling any piece that might
have been planted behind it. 'lle first shot Woe
well aimed and just grazed the side of the target,
going through it and landing safely in a sand
butt at the rear. The second was a little higher,
striking above the upper right-hand corner
of the embrasure, and doing consider
able damage. The third struck a
few feet above this, scattering the
granite: in nil directions. The third fourth - struck
_ ,to the right and rear of the embrasure, and did
an immense amount of damage, sending large
pieces of granite, which would weigh from two
to three hundred pounds, some thirty or forty
feet to the rear.. The fifth and last shot that
was fired at this arget was from a fifteen-inch
gun, and struck the target between the umbra
sure and the ground, tearing an immense hole in
it, and scattering things generally. They made
these experiments from a distance of one thou
sand yards. •They next tried the embrasure of
. • plate wrought iron, the one proposed by General
,_Bernard.. •
.The first shot from al3-inch emoothf bore
Struck the iron plate fairly in the ,Centre, nearly
• brotrig Wolf, smashed the bolts, and completely
demolished that'side of the work. A second shot,
frog i the 12-Inch rifle which arrived here a few
days singe, was fired at the opposite eldp of this
"Wert, striking It fairly, and knocking it all into
"smithereens." The shot weighed over GOO
pounds, and was fired from a distance. of 500
yards. This concluded the day's tiring, and was
highly satisfactory to all present, especially tv
(tie gehilepacrt of the Ordnance Department.
_ _ _
The Ordnance Department have a very Item
instrument—Schnitz's Chronoscope—for testing
the initial velocity ,of shot. It is worked by
electricity in the following manner: ' Two ' wire
targets are placed one about twenty yards from
the gun, and the second about the same distance
further on. These are connected by a fir,e insu
lated wire with the Instruments, which are some
four hundred yards in the rear of the firing. The
instrument is adjusted-on a similar plan , to Bon
ton's electro-balistic machine. :When the shot is
fired it cuts the wire In the first targei, which is
recorded by the machine; the next one being cut
In like manner; the interval , of time occupied by
tbe ball in passing from one target to the other
furnishes the data for obtaining the - velocity of
the shot.v • • •
The experiments will continue for some days
hence, and-it-isexpected that Gen. Gmnt and the
Secretary of War will arrive to-Morrow to witness
•
it.
It has been a long time since so runny of._ the
prominent army officers have been together,com
prieing,as it does,officers of all branches and from
every part of tbo - Country. Admirals Farragnt
and Porter are expected to be present also some
time during the firing.
These .experiments are very severe. and are
much more so then they would ever be subjected
to from ane,pemy. The ordnance is stationery,
and the artifferiets the beet which the army af
fords.
Mr. Walters, ' the photographer from the
( it
W ingion Arsenal, was on hand with his ay
p Los, abd after each shot took excellent pie
tu ecl of the target, Which will be used by the De
partment ' -
The Report oft General Sherman.
The following is'the concltision of the report
of General-Sherman, the first' portion of which
was published in the Bum - Imm of yesterday:
4:t is idle fortis . ' , 'longer , 'to' attempt to occupy
the Plaine in common with these Indians, for the
country is not'- susceptible ,of close settlement
with farms, like Missouri and lowa, and is-solely
_adapted to grazing. All of our people there are
necessarily scattered, and have more or less cattle
and horses, which te pt the Indian, hungry,
and, it may be. starving for want of his accus
tomed game, and he will steal rather than starve,
and to steal he will not hesitate to kill. There
fore, a joint occupation of that district of coun
try by these two classes .of people is a simple
impossibility, and the Indians must yield.
The Peace Commission has assigned them a
reservation which, if held for fifty years, will
make their descendants rich, and in the mean
time they are promised food, whilst they are
learning to cultivate the earth and rear tame
stock. Weber with their own hands, or even
to remain in one place, militates with all the he
reditary pride of the ndian, and force must be
used to accomplish this result. It was for this
reason that the Peace Commission,at its Chicago
session in October after the events before de
scribed bad occurred and were known to them,
was forced to the conclusion that the manage
ment of Indian affairs should be transferred back
to the War Department, where it belonged prior
to 1849.
That department of our Government is the only
one that can use force promptly without the cir
cumlocution now necessary, and no other depart
ment of the Government can act with prompt
ness and, vigor enough to give any hope that the
plans and purposes .of the Peace Commission
will be carried out, and even then there ie doubt
that the Indians themselves will make the neces
sary personal efforts to succeed, and I fear that
tuey will at last fall back upon our hands, a mere
mass of helpless paupers. lam fully aware that
many of our good people, far removed from con
tact with these 'lndians, and dwelling with a
painful interest ou past events, such as are de
scribed to have occurred in Minnesota in - 1863,
and attliti - Chivington massacre of 1864, believe
that the whites are always in the wrong, and
that the Indians have been forced to resort to war
in self-detente, by actual want or by reason of
our selfishness.
. Lars more than convinced that such is not the
case in the prevent instance, and I hope I have
made it plain. I further believe that the only
hope of saving any part of these Indians from
utter annihilation, is by a fair and prompt exe
cution of the scheme suggested by the Peace
Commission. which can alone be done by the
Congress, with the concurrence of the Indians
tithemselves. Even then it will require muchffi pa
tience and hard labor on the part of the office
who execute the plan, which I do not wish to as
sume myself or impose on other army officers;
but it is certain that the only hope to find any
end of this eternal Indian war, is in the t . nsfer
of the entire business to the War D .- :rtthent;
and for Congress to enact the laws :e pro Ade
the necessary money, at least a yea i fore it is
required to be expended. This le esp - tally ne
cessary in the case of the Sioux, because the
Missouri river is only navigable in early summer.
It is true that in the annual appropriation bill,
approved July 27, 1868, and which did not be
come public till the Cheyennes, had actually
started on the war path—viz: August 3, there
was a clause giving $500,000 to be disbursed un
der my direction as a member of the Peace Com
mission for carrying out the treaty stipulations,
making and preparing homes, furnishing pro
visions, tools and farming utensils, and furnish
ing food for such bands of Indians with which
treaties bad been made and not yet ratified, and
in defraying' the expenses of the commission in
making such treaties and carrying their provi
sions into effect as Boon as I.• got a copy of this
bill—viz: August 10.—I issued my general orders
No. 4, a copy of which is herein enclosed, in
hopes that by its provisions I could prevent the
difficulties already begun in Kansas from spread
ing to the powerful and dangerous tribe of Sioux
at the north. This clause in the appropriation
bill made no change whatever in the general
management of Indians with whom treaties had
been made and confirmed, which; as before, re
mained wholly with the Interior department.
Upon application to General John B. Sanborn,
the member of the Peace Commission who had
been its disbursing agent, I received a list of the
outstanding accounts against that Commission,
amounting to about $150,000. I therefore retained
that sum of money, and have disbursed thereof
the sum of $141,750 19, leaving in my hands at
this date a haboace of $8,249 81, Applicable to the
few items of account still outstanding. The bal
ance of the appropriation,viz: $350,000, were dis
tributed as follows: To Gen. W. S. Harney, for
the Sioux, $200,000; to General W. B. Hazen, for
the Cheyennes,&c., $50,000; to Gen. C. C. Augur,
for the Snakes, &c., $50,000; and to Major R.
B. Lamatte„, for the Crowe, $50,000. Total,
0
That the Indians will receive the benefit of
every cent of this money I know, and the high
character of these officers and their peculiar fit-.
nese to the trust named, will, I feel assured, carry
conviction to all that the disbursement of this
money will be in full harmony with the designs
and purpose of the Peace Commission, and Con
gress. In the same appropriation bill were two
other "items of expenditure entrusted to my
offich&supervialon, viz.: $200,000 for seeds,farm
ing implements, work cattle, and other stock,
provided for in article seven of the treaty with the
Navajo Indians, of New Mexico, and $12,500 for
constructing warehouse agency buildings, black
smith and carpenter shop, and school-houses for
the same tribe, Navajos. The whole of this ap
propriation, viz: $212,500 has been transferred to
General George W. Getty, commanding in New
Mexico, who will see that it is properly applied.
There , Was another item of appropriation in
the same bill, viz: $150.000 for the removal of
the Navajoce from their old reservation at Boeque
Redondo to their present reservation near old
Fort Barance, which was subject to the control
of the Interior Department: but before the ap
propriation bill passed these Indians had actually
been removed by my military orders given on the
spot, at a cast to the army of less than $50,000,
I
and am now at a loss to know if this money can
be refunded to the army out of the appropriation
referred to.
I expect to receive from the several officers
named in my general orders No. 4, and to lay be
fore the War Department before the close of this
. year, a full census of all the Indians for whom
they are required to provide, with carefully pro
pared estimates of funds needed to 'perfect the
sysiteni thus liegnnty them:, after which- they can
be transferred back to theiecivil agents; or re
tained, according to whatever action Congress may
take this winter on the several recommendations
of the Indian Peace Commission. But knowing the
pressing necessities of some of these Indians at
this moment., I would ask an early . appropriation
of $300,000 for General Harney, and $200,000 for
General Hazen. • I deem these sums indiepen
'sable to provide for the peaceful. Indians this
winter, and to enable them to make a fate be
ginning next spring in their farming operations
on the reseriations to whicks they have been or
may be removed.
,In conclusion, I will remark that I propose to
continue, as now, to have Generals Terry and
Augur to protect the Missouri river traffic and
the Union Pacific Railroad with jealous Care, and
to gather in all the wandering bands of Sioux to
the reservation north of Nebraska, where Gen
eral -WV& Harney is prepared to feed and pro
tect tVem to the extent of the, means subject to
my control; to destroy or to punish the hostile
Indians of his department, till they of their own
volition will go to Fort Cobb, and remain there
on the reservation assigned thorn, under the care
THE DAILY EVENING BULLETIN--PHILADELPHIA, SATURIIA.Y,.NOVEP3ER 21,1868 w
,
of General W,B. Hazen, who is also 'prepared to
limited extent to, provide for their necessities.
This double process of peace withintheir reser
vations, and.war without, must noon' bring this
matter to a conclusion. With great respect, your
obedient servant,
The Commissioner of Internal 'Revenue has
made the following decisions : - -,--
The return prescribed in , section 57 , 0 f the new
spirits and (tobacco law should not be required of
any person who bad not over fifty gallons of dis
tilled spirits in, his possession. for sale, on the
first day of November,in 1868. In case of seizure,
however, the burden of proof rests upon the
claimant under - section 86, and. to avoid the
trouble to all parties consequent upon' the deten—
tion possible under 41, or forfeiture after
thirty days, under section 67, it is advisable that
persons having in their possession 50 gallons or
less for sale, should, also make the return and
have the same gauged.and marked by the collec
tor. In such, case,, however, the return is op
tional, and cannot be required.
No allowance. can be, made for suspension , of
work in a distillery by reason of a breakage,
until a suspension.has been effected in the man
ner required by section 22 of the act of July 20,
1868. The loss between the time of breakage and
suspension, according to statute, must be borne
by the distiller as an incidental loss, for which
the present law affords him no relief. A lease
which has been recorded mine pro nune, by order
of a state court, since July 20, 1868, cannot be
regarded as duly recorded prior to the passage of
the act of that date within the meaning of the
term as used in section 8.
MEETING OF THE CHURCH. EXTENSION COMMIT•
TRE.—The meeting of the Methodist Episcopal I
Church Extension Committee was continued yes-
terday at the rooms, in Arch street above Tenth, I
Bishop Ames in the chair. The proceedings wore t
opened with prayer by Rev. Mr. Morrison. The
Conference Assessment Appropriations were con
tinued as follows: Nevada,sl,soo; Newark,sl,ooo;
New Jersey t $500; North Carolina, $500; North
Indiana, $5OO North Ohio, $500; Northwest Ger
man, $500; Northwest Indiana, $500; Oregon,
$1,500; Rock River,sl,ooo; South Carolina,sl,s o o;
Southern Blinois,ssoo;Southwest Gorman,sl ,000;
St. Louis, $1,500; Tennessee, $1,500; Texas,
$1,600; Upper lowa, $500; Virginia, $1.500;
Wasbington,sl,ooo; West Virginia, $1,500; West
Wisconsin, $500; Wilmington, slT,ooohe ; Wis
consin, $500; Wyoming, $5OO. follow
ing appointments were announced for Sunday;
Eleventh street, William Graham, D. D. ; St.
Georges, Bishop Kingsley; Haines street, G. T.
Bishop Scott; Salem, J. S. McMurray; St Johns,
Y. H. Hagerty; Trinity Chttreb, Bishop Morris
and T. B. Lemon; Wharton street, C. C. McCabe;
Green street, Dr. Newman; Bethel, B. Morrison;
Nazareth, Bishop Janes; Centenary, (Camden)
R. H. Robinson; Broad street, J.B. Mann; Emory
street, J. B. Mitchell: Spring Garden Street,
Bishop Clark; Twelfth street, A. J. Kinnett, D.
D.; Tabernacle, Bishop Thompson, J. S. Mc-
Murray; St. Paul's. William Graham, „
W. T. atnratwar,
lientenanlePenoral.
Internal flew:3lmo Deellion.
OITY BULLETIN.
PENNSY LVANIA PEACE Soctruy.—Yesterday
afternoon the Pennsylvania Peace Society re
sumed their. sessions at the Assembly Buildings,
southwest corner of Tenth and Chestnut streets,
Allred H. Love, President, in the chair.
The following officers were elected for the en
suing year: "President, Alfred H. Love; Vice-
Presidents, Lucretia Mott, Rachel W. Townsend,
and Isaac Mendenhall; Secretary, Henry T.
Child, M. D.; Treasurer, T. Elwood Chapman;
Executive Committee, Sarah T. Rogers,
Henry
M. Laing, A. Mary Wise, Clayton B. Rogers,
Joseph M. Truman, Jr., Jacob L. Paxson, Dinah
Mendenhall, Mary B. Lightfoot, Sarah T. Betts,
Rebecca S. Hart, Mary Child. Frances Parker,
Samuel Townsend, Rebecca T. Magill, Mahlon
B. Linton, Lydia A. Price, Lydia Th all, and
Lydia A. Scholtleld.
A memorial, prepared to be submitted to Con
gress in relation to the Indians, was read and
adopted.
The remainder of the session was devoted to the
delivery of short addresses by Alfred H. Love, H.
T. Child, M. D., Rachel W. Townsend, Adam M.
Powell, Jacob L. Paxson, and others, after which
the Society adjourned.
POLICEMEN IN .I.ltOUßLE.—Sergeant Hause, of
the Eighteenth District Police, and Joseph Win
mill, of the Police, were arrested on Thurs
day evening, charged, on the oath of John Call,
with an assault and battery, with intent to kill.
They had a hearing before Alderman McDonnell,
who held the Sergeant in $l,OOO bail, and the
other defendant in $3,500 ball for trial. The
prosecution grows out of the arrest of Call on
the charge of interfering with the officers in the
discharge of their duty.
SERMON TO YOUNG MEN.-A sermon especially
to young men will be preached to-morrow even
ing by the Rev. A. A. Willits, D. D., at the West
Arch Street Presbyterian Church, at the corner of
Eighteenth and Arch. Beats will be reserved for
young men. This is the fourth of an interesting
series of serfnons under the auspices of the Young
Men's Christian Association.
HELD FOR ASSAULT API) BATTERY.—James
Devlin, who was arrested in connection with the
disappearance of Mr. Valentlne,on the 11th inst.,
at the Columbia bridge, had a hearing before Al
derman Jones, yesterday, and was held to an
swer the charge of assaulting the watchman at
the bridge, and Thos. H. Watson, car inspector.
Mamas the. Younger and the Finan-
We have bad a very amusing letter from
the younger Dumas. It is too long for your
columns; I therefore must omit some -por
tions of it, while I try to retain every passage
which may throw light upon the author or
the man. M. Mires, the banker (who is
waging a fierce war on MM. Pereire, the
founders of the "Credit Mobilier," etc.), in
his last article against them, says: "You
came to an understanding with M.A. Dumas,
,Ji., and "La Question d'Argent appeared."
N. Dumas refutes, in a humorous manner,
this allegation, and then goes on to say:
"When I, of myself alone, took it into my
head to compose the comedy, in five acts,
entitled 'La Question d'Argent,' I sought to
patat the character of a man quite
common in this age, as well as in
past ages, who believes money, no matter
from what source it is obtained, supplies at
once the' absence of everything else, and then
leads to everything—even to consideration.
I bad a great many examples before me. M.
Mires insists absolutely upon being one of
them. Very well, agreed. He will serve
just as well as another. He is more widely
known. I wished to make my hero.-what is
called a good fellow, badly brought up,
sprightly, glittering, 'with golden heels, gen
erous when necessary, ever charitable—a
prince of the sewer, much more like •Figaro
than like Turcaret, and capable of becoming
honest the day it.proved more profitable to
him than the contrary; but meantime cas
trated, so to say, of all moral, sense, and liv
ing, moving and being in a state *of complete
unconsciousness of good and evil. He was
to comprehend that he was obliged to use the
shoulders of some honest folks, and some
people of position, whom he would enrich
withlis superfluity of wealth,and who would
henceforward become his guarantees aril his
protectors. He put hie foot too brutally on
the human ladder, which broke, and no fell
on tbe , &und just as he was about to scale
the last wall he had to climb, . He
was somewhat stunned by the fall,
he shook - bimeelf like the-dog which received
a kick as he *as stealing a piece of meat,
and he went on in this way, without clearly
comprehending the course of events,until the
definitive catastrophe, which one of the char
:octets predicted during the piece, and which
the author, easily a prophet, gave glimpses of
at no distant day. As I wished the action to
take place at the present day, I took care to
become familiar with contemporary financial
questions.. • , Le' Pare Enfantin, with. whom I
was quite intimate, engaged me 'to read the
politico-economical lectures delivered in Rue
Taitbout in 18112, by M. Emile Pereire, at
the (lawn of St. Simoniam, and, which
were published in pamphlet form..
They had become extremely • rare ;
it was, indeed, impossible to find
this pamphlet. I -requested Bixio to ask
one of the MM. Pereire, whom he daily saw,
if he could lend me a copy. M. Bixio gave
me, in their name, the only copy they had
in their possesalon, and begged I should take
the greatest care of it. I read this little pant
phiet, wberel found, in germ, all thq great
establishments since founded. 'I presented,-
as gayly as possible, these' qtiestions, which
were rather arduous fora theatrical audience,
and I wrote My Whether it was good
or bad is not the question. I returned.
to Bixlo the pamphlet he had leat
me, and the eve of the first performance
I sent to M. Pereire one of the best boxes in
the theatre. He wrote me to thank , me fora;
it. A year afterwards I brbught out "Le
Fils Naturel.' M. Pereire, in turn, wished, to
rent a box. He did rent it, and a few days
afterwards, as I crossed Rue du Havre (what
not know came up to me and said, 'I am M.
Emile Pereire; we must mate each other's
acquaintance.' Some compliments; which
anybody may divine, were exchanged be
tween us, and since then M. Pereire 'has in
vited me to his balls,-and I have invited him
to my plays. That's all. M. Mires,is ex
tremely ingenious; I defy him,, never
thelese, to'make five acts with that.
Now,• I declare, very willingly, I
have never had the intention 'to put
M. Mires personally on the stage. I sought
to paint the man whose character I have
above explained. If M. Mires was recog
nized in it--if he recognized himself, it is not
my, fault. But Ido not believe he recognized
himself; for, siqce the theatre •amel •
iorates
morals, had he recognized himeelf, his morals
would have been ameliorated—and his letter
to-day proves the contrary. The only person
then living I have placed on the stage ts s M.
Enfantin,an able political economist,as every
body knows—an eminent suggester of great
enterprises, and as honest a man as the sun
ever shone upon. I named him M.. De Cay
olio. He did not recognize himself. It seemed
to him the most natural thing in the world
that everybody should be honest."—Paris
Correspondence of Childs's Circular.
CITY ORDINANCES.
ESOLUTION TO AUTHORIZE THE COM
-1.11. pletion of the Keystone Grammar School
•
rilliereas,The contractors for the erection of the
new school building on Nineteenth street, above
Chestnut street, have failed to comply with the
terms of their contract, although they and their
sureties have been duly notified to complete said
building; now, therefore,
Resolved
By the Select and Common Councils
of the City of Philadelphia, That the Con
trollers of Public Schools ore hereby authorized,
under the direction of the City Solicitor, to com
plete the new school building on the west side of
Nineteenth street, above Chestnut street, known
as the Keystone Grammar School, under the
terms of the contract; and to that end they are
hereby authorized to employ any other person
or persons to do the necessary work
and furnish materials for the comple•
tion of said building. And the City Con
-1 troller is hereby authorized to approve of the
warrants drawn by the Controllers of Public
Schools for the payment of said persons so em
ployed or furnishing materials to the eitent of
the balancenow remaining unexpended of the
original contract price of said building. Pro
vidt d, however, that the contractor and his sure
ties shall be notified to finish said building, and
that, in case of their default to finish it within
fifteen days after , such notice, the same will be
finished by the Controllers of Public Schools, in
pursuance of the authority herein granted.
=JOSEPH F. MARCER;
President of Common Council....
Arrnsr—BENJAMIN H. HAINES,
Clerk of Select' Council.
WILLIAM S. STOKLEY,
President of Select Council.
,Approved this ninteenth day of November, A nno
Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty
eight-(k. D. 1868).
MORTON McMICHAEL,
Mayor of Philadelphia.
p..,, • 010 D. • *3 01
conicEßT nALL--nass KELLOGG.
Mr. Max Strakosch with pleasure announces the first
appearances in Philadelphia, Since her return from Eu
rope, of the rely caned American Prinia Donna,
- MISS CLARA. LOUISE KELLOGG.
IN THRbE GRAND CONCERTS.
WEDNESDAY and r RIDA Jim , . 45 and 27, at BP. - M.,
AND IN ONE KELLOGG MATINEE.
On SATURDAY. Nov. 28th, at - 2-P. M.
In order to make these Entertainments the most bril
liant and varied ever given in this city. the Manager has
engaged the eminent Piano Virtuoso., MLLE. ALUM
TOFF. who, in conjunction with SIGNOR LOTTI,Primo
Tenors: SIGNOR PETRILLI, Primo Baritone. and
HERR KOPTA. Solo Violinistovill assist Mies Kellogg at
these Covcerts.
Musical Director_............HEßß Wbt. GratitSSCURTH
Admission, One Dollar. Resery Performance ents extra.
Beats may be secured for either commenc
ing Saturday, November 2lat. at 9 A. M., at the Music
store of C. W. A. 7 rumpler. No. 926 Chestnut street.
Doors open at 734. Concert to commence at BP.
Matinee to commence at 2 P. Si.
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.
MUSICAL D1RECT0R.......... ....MAX MARETZER
ITALIAN AND GERMAN OPERA.
COMBINATION COMPANY.
GRAND OPENING NIGHT,
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1868.
The public of Philadelphia and vicinity arc respect
fully informed that arrangements have been concluded
with-the following EMINiaNT ARTISTS for their ap
pearance in Philadelphia during the brief Opera Beason
of TWO WEEKS:
Prima Donna Sopranos:
MADAME ANNA DE'LA GRANGE
(Her Farewell Engagement),
MISS STATES, MADAME ROTTER, MISS
DIcCUL
LOCH, M'LLE DURAND, MISS MACEVOY.
Prima Donna Mezzo Soprano A ,
MADAME RUB CELLINL
FiretTenors.
SW. DEIGN OLL HERRFERRL HABELMANN. SIG. MACCA-
The celebrated Basso Buffo
SIG. GEORGIU RONCONL
First Baritos and Bat Poll.
SIG. OR ne LANDINI, HERR FORMES.
SIG. AN TONUChi,
HERR JOSEPH HERMANNS,
Stage Manager... ....BIG. DUBREUIL
Conductors la X . ..MARETZ EK and BIG. TORRIAN I
. . THEItSFERTOIRE
(In German),
FAUST, MARTHA, FRA DIAVOLO,
DER FREYSCHUTZ and FIDELIO. --
(In Italian).
TROVATORE ERNAN I. DON GIOVANNI,
SICILIAN VESPERS, BABBLER DI BEVIGLIA
LE
ROBERT LE DIABLE.
THE CHORUS and ORCHESTRA have been seleeted
with the greateet ca. e from the beet available sources.
They are formed from picked members of the bodies who
have served under Mr.Maretzek'e baton for many yoare.
THE COSTUMES are entirely new, and have been
made regardless - of cost.
THE MBE EN SCENE will be carefully supervised by
regular members of Mr. Maretzek's Company.
THE. OPERA ITALIAN OPERA
consist of TWELVE
NIGHTS. ITALIAN OPERA every
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY.
GERMAN OPERA every
TUESDAY. THURSDAY and SATURDAY.
MATINEES EVERY SATURDAY.
ADMISSION, ONE DOLLAR.
RESERVED SEATS FIFTY CENTS.
EXTRA.
FAMILY CIRCLE, FIFTY CENTS.
SUBSCRIPTION BEATS SECURED
for the ENTIRE TWELVE NIGHTS. including TWO
MATINEES. ONLY TWELVE DOLLARS.
fieeut ed Beats for either the SIX ITALIAN or SIX
GERMAN Opera Nights and ONE MATINEE, only
SEVEN DOLLARS,
The office for subscriptions will open MONDAY, Nov,
23, and remain open TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY.
Nov. 24 and 25. at CHARLES TRUMPLER'S Music Store,
N o. Pte Chestnut street.
Tbe REGULAR BALE for any nights will commence
--T-IYURSDAY MORNING, Nov. 26, at CHAS. TRUMP.
LEt- 'S, and at the ACADEMY OF' MUSIC.
N EW CHESTNUT STREET --
THIS (SATURDAY) NIGHT
POnITIVELY THE LAST NIGHT
-OF TDB
LANCASHIRE LASS.
Prior arrangements demand the withdrawing of the
Lancashire Lars during the height of' its success. Due
notion will be given of its revival.
LAST NIGHT OF
MISS HENRIETTA IRVING,
THE LANCASHIRE LABS.
With the Streag,th bf the
TIIE NEW COMPANY
NEW AND BEAUTIFUL SCENERY.
THE GREAT PIER SCENE.
TO-NIGHT. TONIGHT.
MONDAY- BLOW FOE BLOW."
ALBN SREET THEATRE Begins lAN o'clock
TIM (ATURDAY) EVENING. Noir. IL
• IMMENSE BILL.
COMEDY AND DRAMA.
Stalin - 1j Chmedy, in ftve acts; of •
OLD HEADS AND YOUNG.HEARTS.
To conclude with the thrilling Drama of" • •
THE WRITING ON TRE.WALL.
• LAST NIGHTS OF MR..ED WIN FORREST.
MONDAY—KIN LEAR.
TUESDAY—THE orAMApcift.• ' • •
WEDNESDAY—JACK CADE. •
THURSDAY—METAMDRA.
- -
W - ARCH ISTREET TImATRE
JOW I M I6 • 111 •Beglna at 7,;11
TIIE LANDABDIRE LASP" .Ny.
• MRS. JuDN D10.4W A 13 IL(14
rs "THE BUcCESS 0
, r 1111 , 1..szABON."•
• 'CROWDED HOUSES.
13FAC '' N" V ghtfollT AND 'CROWDED
NIGHT. ;
O. IlY"4'4°Villittacii.nldtE LASS. ,
WITH EVERY SCENE NEW... a. .. O " EFFnurs
STARTLING M.ECH.Ar
GREA.T AST
All the Company M and
RS. JOAN DREW.
AT RECURED SIX DAYS IN AD v ANCE.
I3ox Chloe opdn from 9 to 8 o'clock.
VARIETIOMBIWILE,
EVERY EVENING and
SATURDAY AFTERNOON.
GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE.
in wand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesque& Sonia. DaEllati
Witintgat AMA. Pantomimes. &c.
flrißß "P.IITLADELPIIIA BOCIC-.
tlytt 'give their drat Cowart. at the AU ADBM.Y_OF
MIMIC; on the,BVening of the pith of JanttulilB69.:' For,
whictroccation the Board cif Directore have secured the
valuable services of Mlle. CAMILLA. 888% the eminent
at tint and world.renowned.Vlolinht, This charming fez.
.tore , combined with an orchestra of ; sixty performers of
our beet talent, will insure an. unexceptionable Perform
anee of the following programme;
'PAS/ . Y.. '
Symphony In A. :OM 67,; Four 100,romositi...,Boothoirer,i.,
' • . •, ,
Ovortnro—miurline," • W. V. Wallace.
Concerto Violin. OD 64. E minor. (Throe .
movements. Orohostral,Accompanimont), Mondolesohn.
s • • BitLLECIANIMA' , URSO.
•
Concerto—Plano. BL',V e yntnor. Liir
ghetto and - allegro TirAv.ape. ,p?rc.liettral.
AccompTiment...,. . . .. . .......
- •
bib. Lc J'ARVIS.
Overture"Jublice".... . . . NOD Weber.
Subscription hot now 'open . at ''''' music stores, and
at tho office of the Society. No 1109 Chestnut street.
SEASON TICKETS .
.
TO ASSOCIATE MEMBEILS.
Single $6 00
Ticket admitting two.atwons..... .. . ...le 00
Et titling the holder to admission to each"Coocert and
twelve Pub Lie Reheamals. 'Associate members shall also
have the pfivilese of purchasing tire, extra tickets for
each Concert. at ONE POLLI.I3. P 40114 ' •' • ' •
Extra tickets for each Rehearsal (only rold toAssociate'
Members) rs - ry Caters.
Single Tickets to Concerto " $1 50
BLIND TOM CONnurts,
ONLY TW<rMORE EVENINGS. •
MONDAY and TUESDAY, Nov. 23d and 24th.
Last night's this season of • • •
BLIND TOM.
THE "WONDERFUL 'NEGRO BOY PIANIST;
Secure Seats at .Trumplers, No. 926 Chestnut street.
N. B.— Blind Tont' ve p_orfonn WEDNESDAY, Nov.
25, at. Norristown ; FBIDAY, Nov, 27. at Mannyonk. and
at Germantown SATURDAY. Nov. 28. • n 021,130
It - E--A g•T R E COMIQ U, E
' SEVENTH STREET, BELOW ARCH. boxing 7 317.
Legged and Manacer.. , . O. GREOARY.
GENUINE SUCCES S—EVBRY ONE DELIGHTED.
THIS EVENING. AND SATURDAY MATINEE.
THE GATHERING OF THE CLANS.
100BEAUTMUL CHILDREN. ,
MLLE GERTRUDE:a ,
Elfin'iroape of Educated Animals,
THE GH.F.GORYS.
MLLE AUGUR - I'A.
Adrniedon to Matinee only 45 cents.
MCAT , FUND HATA,
CARL BENTZ AND MARK DABBLER'S
GRAND ORODEETRA MATINEE S' ek
EVERY 'BA.TUP,DAY AFTERNO ON , AT MI O'CLOCK.
Package ' of four Tick d.$L
Single Admission:.... . . , .. . .......Fifty CenU.
For sale at Carl Igen Oniceatoner j e Stord,llo2 Chest
nut street. and at M k Hassler% Chloe. No. 814 R. Eighth
-
street. oat
_ - - _
.. .
\
Gat
CRC ESTRA. PUBLIC REHEARSALS
the Ifortitultu Hall t every WeduesdaY.at $3 ll P.M.
131011T1 ULIURAL HALL. t i6 l 6 ,
Tickets sold at the doo d all principal nu a stores.
Packages of five, $1; sin e. 25 cents. Engag eats can
be made by_addressing . SASTERT. 1231 Monterey
street. WITTIG , I3 Music Store, Ch es tnu t
Chestnut street. er
ANDRPI3 Music Store, 1104 Chestnut street. 0e17415
ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS_
CHESTNUT Street. above Tenth.
Open from 9A. ht. to P.
Benjamin West% Great Picture of
CHRIST REJECTED
still on exhibition. ROW
„..._...__. _ _
CHAS. 11. JARVIS'S BURIES OF , IX CLASSICAL
SOIREES, SEVENTH SEASON. 18t-`69.
First lioirbe SATURDAY EVENING, November 53th,
18,38, a t
,Natatorium Ball. Broad etreet, below Walnuts
east eide. commencing at 8 o clock. n 018420
AMERICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC.
11 THIRD GRAND CONCERT,
At MUSICAL FUND HALL S FRIDAY. November 97th
Sce notice in Educational Codumn.
FALL, 3.868.
LUMBER FOR BUILDERS, LOW.
F. H. WILLIAMS,
Seventeenth and Spring Garden Sta.
nol2 the to 26t4
!VIABLE, BROTHER & CO.
1868. SPRUCE JOIST. 18681
SPRUCE JOIST.
13PRUV JORT.
PEW &
LARGE SVO IL CIT.
CK
iliAttelf3lloll & CO
' 2600 soma STREIT.
1868. - - FLORIDA MORIN* 1868.
CAROLINA FLOORINg.
VTROTNIA FLOORIfi,
DRLAWkRE FLOORWG.
ABU FlagalN
WALNUT' FLOORIN O.
G.
(FLORIAffiTEP BOARDS.
RAU, PLANIL
1868. rywnurßuatzmink. 1.868.
_LWVILOAJILIB.
WALN P BLANK.
Q • UNDERTAKERS' UMBER,
.11.) a. UNDERTAKERS'LUMBER. 1868.
WALirt*SAINE.
,f3RABONED POPLAR.
EIEABONEDintM 1868•
7I:144• 1. •. • -0: • : 41J:
1868. CIGAR BOX BILUIRREL
CIGAR BOX NIARBRB.
SPANISH Q_EDAR BOX BOARD&
FOR BALE LOW.
1868. "'CARONA %WIWI: ''-
1868.
N LA ORWAY SCANTLING.
RGE ASSORTMENT.
1868. BEBNI WWI 1868.
FICR2 ERO I3 M GUI ENOTIES.
e}:cr:yys Y w . I:9 027„
1868. REZNI? FRIE. 1868.
CHOICE PATTERN PINE.
SPANISH CEDAR. FOR PATTERNS.
MORIDA RED CED A R.
zumuc, mtortunt cm.
IWO SOUTH 8 •
J
UST RECEIVEDA SMALL INVOICE OF
by CHs
Fibs tt. C 0.% Green Beal Champagne for oak by
E. MIDDLETON,
no2l-M4 No. &North ktent street.
CHEGARAY INSTITUTE ENGLISH ANH FRENCH
FOR YOUNG LADIES,
BOARDING AND DAY PUPILS.
1607 and MS SPRUCE Street.
Philadelphia,
_Penne..
Will RE.nPEN on MONDAY. Sept.
MADAME DTIERVILLY has the pleasure of annonnn
log that DR. ROBERT IL LAVBERTON will devote fib
time exclusively to the Chegaray Institute.
French le the language of the family and im constantly
spoken In the Institute. - 10134 6m
OUNG MEN AND BOYS' ENGLISH, CLASSIOAI.A T
1. Ma th ematical sad Scientific Institute, 1908 MOUN
VERNON street . iru4tractlon Preparation
tor bunineas or college.
Ray. JAMES G. 'MINNA Prin M.,
cipaL
THEATRE.
WRIMENIENTS
OROHEVEM
PART. 11.
immrsius.
WINES, Liquotts, &c.
EDVCATION.
oa-tu th s 28t4,_
BIUSICJW.
8AL1...a) SINGING.
T. BISOP,
. 88 S H
outh Nineteenth street. se 28 8mo•
QIG. P. RONDINELLA. TEACHER OF SINGING. P.
Qrate lessons and classes. Residence. 808 B. Thirteenth
'street. an 25.19•
GAB FIXTURES.
fIA 15 FIXTURE 13.—MEIKEY, MERRILL di
GTHACKARe, No. 718 Chestnut street, manufacturers
of Gas Fixtures, Lampe, me., dus., would eoliths) attention
of the public to their large and elegant assortment of Gm
ChandeUere, Pendants, Brdckets,dm. Thoy also introduce
gss pipes into dwellings and public buildings, and tatepd
to extending, altering and repairing gm pipes. AU worlr
warranted
warms , ruitmemrie Gloom.
-...._ GENT'S PATENT SPRING AND' BUZ
4
r i , ~, toned Over Gaiteraeloth,Leather.whlto - and
ir, ,1 brown Linen; Children's Cloth arid Velvet
..,;41 7 ~ , Leggings; Also made to order
, :I` . " . "' lIM-GIENT'S EURNIBLUNG GOODS, •
•„. ~ •
of every dersuiption, very low; tOB Chestnut
. street: corner of Ninth. • '
,eat *ld Glove?
for ladies and
.gerds, at • '
-- -• a t BAZAAR.
Hold-tit. . .OPEN IN .THEEYENING.
INEATZUS "ND sTovmek,
• THOMAS. & SONS,
Late Androwo do - Nixon,
"""" No. If,,G 14 CHESTNUT d
S brout,pposita.Unit utates mmt,rhilada..
Mannfatturers of
LOO7 DOWN,
PARLOR,
CHAMBER,
•a OFFICE,
And Other- RATES, -
For intßracito, Bituminous and Wood Fire;
• • ~ wAnnalis FURNACES
For •
For Warming Public and Private uildingsi
, . ; REGISTERS, VENTILATORd,
awn •
CHIMNEY OAFS. -
COOKING.RANGES, BATELBOILERS.
WHOLESALE and RETAIL
; 5 IMAIIPLEI94.II3I.4I4IPIESS‘ me.
CONVENIENT
IR, o'o 111 S,
. . .
I EATE Er:WI 1111. STilt Pit
RTB
19E* VD - 11E111i BUILDIfiGt
Payer hmdikbul Ili required. :
Aj3 t plyin the Publioatioix
Chopin.
TO RENT.
The, Large and Elegant Rooms
Onthe Second. Third and F l own' Stories of the Eltiperlor
OfiNETE STORE.
723 Chestnut Street.
Appiy on the promisee. or to
MELLOR. RAINS & MELLOR,
40 stud 42 North Third Street.
nole 120
Pre - allow:1,809 Chestnut Street,
Also, Offices and tango Boozes, ea ble for a Cktnixnerele
College. Apply at. . .
BANK OP THE REPUBLIC.
Je
TO LET—A - TURNIa BED 110liBE TO A CARE
fuI and reeponelble tenant. Arch street, waist of
Twentptirst ottect. $1.600•
W , APO,'
TO LET--'ITIE STORE OR OFFICE NO. 2O
South Fourth street. Apply to WM. RosdELL,
" ALLEN. 13134 Walnut street.
T I I I, E M CE rke V t IN tr G e e—Tt
aSsOsRAaGE
sYtor ARD f 2rM lu . mbe o r. ix 2 n.
coal. grain. bark. produce and all kinds of murehan
dlso. Also. room for loading ears from shipment.
Terms Reasonable.
no2o tt T. L. STEM.
rFOR SALE—LEASE OF BUILDING N. W. t.X.)li
ner Eleventh and Chestnut streets, Girard stores.
Tbp apletuild buynovements made in this property.
and its commandleg noeltion, offer great inducements to
'meow vvishlng to locate In livbat le destined to be the
central "(dot of trade for meny.years.
volga,tu th. 4 tl ''.7. M. NEEDLES & CO.
ta . FOR BALE. NO. 13X1 BPIIIICB STREET, 25 B
lie feet, In perfect order.
u. H.
orattba.tmlSA N 0.9 Boot hlL Ü B R t B h E st lD ee
t
inTO RENT.—A. TURES.STORY DWELLING.
With threectory back buildings, No.Bl South SIX.
TSETvTFi street. The bonze le in perfect repair.
and has been newly papered and painted. Emmental:*
given after the bth of next month. Apply t#B. MUDGE.
lOU Market, street. - note 2t•
fa .20 TAT.,7 - 4 VARF,E , BTORY COTTAGE, lich
Green street, ivlta all modern coareal@ucet
• nolgat•
riTO LET—IN COMPLETE ORDER. INCLUDING
gaaftxturea. now modern • built throe 'tory brick
noose*. North Fifteenth street and North dixtecnth
erect. Also, a broarrustono Retidenco, North Broad east
dde. and four story brick Residence. west fide. C.
I!JSKEY. 411 - Walnut street. .
FOR RENT.—FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED,
laa tbree4tory brick dwelling. with modern convent
- tuner. situate on south olde of Clinton:tweet, went , of
Ninth. J. M.HUMMEY & BUNS. isrlvlannt etreet.
. ,
FOR RENT—THE MODERN THREBSTORY
rßrick DarelllDat with eating and tbrceatory back
bulldlno; Minato N W a lnutu Twelfth street. J. bL
DUMMEY & BONS. 133 atreet.
FOR RENT—THE. HANDSOME SPORE AND
lE Dwelling, No. 1024 Walnut street. J. M. GI3OMEY
At BONS, Walnut. etreet.
= TO "LET.—STORE AND DASESIENT,,
r Obeid' nt etreet. Inquire next doo r above.'
oel•ltte, A • •
TREE. - -SELLING OFF TO CLEAR GROUND—
large Sugar, Norway and Sycamore Maples; Norway
Spruce Arborvitae. Ate.. B' ELSION C Avenue and
FORD Road.Twenty.fourth Ward. Further
ulars at
DILEEIVS Seed Store. Chestnut /tree. noun to WO
PUBLIC BALE—MODERN RESIDENCE; NO. Gll
SNortb Eleventh street. Thome w 6: Bans will sell on
Tuesday next. at the Exchange.-ot 12 o'clock.
the handsome modern touratory brick Itealdence, N i r 6 1 11 .
North Eleventh street; has all the modern conveniences.
Immediate possession. Sale absolute. SEM may re
main. Keys at the auction rooms. 129 and 141 Booth
Fourth street. n021.2t4
NO. 615 NORTH. TENTEI STREET 'ABOVE
Green street,, A eltiperi or three story bt n ek
lac;33.wiporrielemondeeLnwlemprovementr. modiste
p ose BONO/AL BROS.
ntrlt~3t• - 116 North Ninth street.
YON. SALE.—A. VERY DRBIRS.BLE
Arch
on east Nide of Twentieth. a few doors above
• Arch street; four stories front. three.story double
back. buildings. 191100 - feet; immediate powaseion; bag
every convenience.
The 4 -story mastic front residence, No. 804 North Broad
street, with double back buildings, lot W:160 feet to Car.
lisle street, with good btick stable thereon; will be sold
low- immediate PONMESICiII.
Also, No. 21t.ti of the New Buildings. on the
south side of Vine street, west of Twonty•flret, is
now finished and ready 'IT I • 0 occupancy. It P osse s ses
every convenience, and mirably arranged ; lot
Oland. D. T. PRAT P.
n018.4t... No. 108 South Pourer street.
FOR BALE—ELEOANT MODERN BUILT REB
lDidencee In northern part of the city. ranging from
Sll,OOO to 627,000. To actual buyers—liberal Induce
ments will be made. M. C. MIOKEY. 411 Walnut
street.
...„
inFOR SALE OR TO RENT. FURNIBIJED.— A
Handsome Four.storY brown &ono Residencemith
three-story double back buildings, situ ste on the
south side of Pine street, west of Fifteenth: has every
modern convenience and Is In good order. Lot Da feet
front by 130 feet deep to a street- M.J. GUMMY &
BONS. TM Walnut street.
lOBSALTHP. fIAIMSOME THREE STORY
Brick Residence, with tittles and back buillines,
"
situate No. 819 South Tenth street. Lot Si feet 4
J
front be 95 feet deep. Immediate potaceslon given.
J. B . OtiMBIBY di SONS. 733 Walnut etroet.
WEeT PHILADELNEILL—FOR BALE.,--BUILD
r" lug sites of different stem very desirably located on
Chestnut. Walnut. Locust and f3prucestrecte. J.M.I
GUMISLIPf & SONS, 733 Walnut street.
GERMANTOWN.—FOR POINTED
stone ttiuter. ypith Avery:. city convenience. just
finislied.„within dye ininuteii , - walk - Min -Church
lane station. $5,000 each, J. a GUMMEY & SONS, 733
Walnut street.
FOR BALE — THE
ing,with two-story back buildings, *o. 123
"North:Blxteenth etreet,corner ot Cherry. M. GC 51-
MEY dr SONS. 723 Walnut street
FOR SALE- 1 BE ELEGANT FOUR-STORY
Brick Residence, with . three-eiory double. back
buildinye, eltuatelio 1713 Spruce Wok.. Has every
modern convenience; and is in perfect order. Lot 21 feet
front by foe feet deep to s street. J. M. GILNINIEY
ds
SONS, Walnut Orem
FOR BALE- - ItiELE FIRBT•CLABS DWELLING.
N0.13t3 North Broad street; built in tho best man
" nor, with all improvements, POSSC6eIOI3 with Aeod.
Part may remain . Apply to COPPUOK & JORDAN. 433
Walnut ertroet. .
' 'FOR SALD--DWELLLNOB. FIRSDOLASI
Country Sent, School-house lane.
NtylZiki North Broad street.
No. 2044'1Wrnat street.
No. 118 North Nineteenth above Arch street.
• No. 508 Routh Fifth greet
, :Two Fine Cottages, West rbno.dolPhta•
• Flne'Dwelllog. With Stable, West Philadelphia.
• Two threeetory Dwelligs; Kensigton. •
AA pig to COYPITOK & JORDAN. 488 Walnut street.
GROCERY STAND FOR SALE.—THE OLD ES.
tablished Grocery Bland, with good will, stock and
. fixtures. situate No.. 806 Walnut treese Ha been
eetekblished eince the year 1829, and.arnew doing a good
business. For further particulate apply to J. M. GUM.
MEY & SONS. 133 Walnut etreet.
t POR .SALE—A HANDSOME BROWN STONE
r g and Brick Residence, now finishing, situate on north
. . side of West De LanceY Place, fourth house east of
Twenty.first street. flee parlor, library, dining.room.
kitchen, six. chambers, nursery, two bathrooms and store
room. Lot feet front bY OS foot deep to setreet. J. M.
UUMMEY _4r. la 0N8.783 Walnut street. 0c1.7
_ ..
110 P EMoVAL—J. M. GI.3MMEY & $
ONI4.REAL ESTA
lb Brokers, have removed to No. '78.3 'Maw t street.
rTWO GOOD HOUSES 1N GOOD NEM/0 0 R"
hood wanted in exchange for firsteiavi furniture. at
cost pricce. Apply ,at 1801 spill. ,1808 ,Chernut
nolB
NTAVAL, ---
' BTOREB 4 4OO ISBLS. NO. L AND . PALE
.1.1 Rosin; 250 Bble. NA. 2 Resin ;160 Bble COTTIIIIOII Bodo:
100 Bblo. Wilmington Tar L.- 60 Bble -Wilmington Fitch;
12513M0. pure wtatst Botts. Turpentine,' store end for
eelo by cO9II.ItAN,ILIMELL'.---ar-co..' si -North- Front
otreet.
TO worm.
FOR RENT.
won STORE on OFFICE:
428 Library stroet.
ronTsiaouu
imri , frt%
NA ALL STORES*
riorroN-200 DALES COTTON._ IN STOVE AND
AJ for sole by DOODRAN. RUttiSELI , ' its Cp.. 22 N. Front
street. • -
IPLRITS TBRPENTINE-40 BARRELS SPIRITS TUR-
V.3Aftne 14 0 Bd limiting and .for $OO by EP VV 4
0..
Ey. No. 16 South Wharved, ' aux ,. tz
,
rei.?0f4111°, 1 41. 6- ,17g.+4,t0.
for solo aof,000181141No•RvABILL 0; ° %.4...22 ,o 4 oak
ri.T4 TEETENTINE 'ANDII.O3IN, 410 BARRELS
Eltii Turpentine bbl.' Polo Soap, itogin; 1165
bls. 'Np. 2 Shipping .11ogio,.landing from ateamor.Plonoor.
'for sale by:EDW. I.I'.,ROWLEY. id S. Wharves . tio2,6r
)pm - ONAILA•
MABBAU M. WARNER - WILL RETURN ERTA
Eurrpe and realm° the duties of hts nrofesaion on
December 2.1888: •
Address. care. •• - BONBALL BROS.. •
n01842t• •• • No. 118 North Ninth street
NGINGEit.—LA 6 R.
LANDING}AND FO EIALU BV
ri — MTE
J, 13. BUBBIER CO., 108 801;th Mtwara avenuo
NEW PERIODIC ALM.
Tbe December Galax," is a light ntunber,
containing, however, a mat -variety of
pleasant and gently-Atimulating tdssip. Of
this genre is thee — notice of, Mrs. Frances
Nemble.' (For the decoratidn ot' the letter
press a portrait . is contributed by Mr. Hen
nessy. We hardly know what.to say of this
effort of.the graphic art.. A. lock , of hair be
hind the lobe of the left ear we think a good
likeness; the rest of the head looks;"to our .
mind, more like Sarah Gamp's Mrs,
Harrig.) The notice, aforesaid thus interest
ingly rehearses fhb first appearince`of the fa-
moue reader: _ '
PA NNK KEM W• erB / I KRUT. '
It is the evening of 'the 25th of October,'
1829, and a great exc itement pervadee the
literary and artistic populace of London.
Frauces Anne Kemble, the daughter .01" the
famous Charles Kemble, and of his beautiful
and gifts it wife, is to make her • debut, and
many act brilliant are the auguries of her
success. Covent Garden Theatre, which has
so often beenthe scene of the triumphs of the
Kemble family, a family the members of
which, to their lasting , honor be it spoken,
have done as much to elevate their profes
sion by the purity of their lives as • by
the splendor of their genius, is
to-night crowded from the pit to
the topmost gallery with an eager, expectant
and brilliant audience. Perhaps, too, so
sympathetic and appreciative an audience
never ,before , greeted a debutante. Mrs.
Siddons is there,,old and .gray,, and a little
anxious, but stately and beautiful still. Tal
fourd is there, and to-morrow he will pub-
Lib a criticism on the performance which
will make the heart of the young debuutnte
beat_bigh_witkpride and pleasure; and Sir
Thomas Lawrence is there, pencil ,and: paper
in hand, prepared to listen as attentively, to
observe as closely, and to criticise at once
as severely and as intelligently as ;lie alone
CBD.
Seldom has a choicer feast been spread be
got° true Lovell?, of,the dramaAkan that Whic h
awaits the& to-night. The play is "Routeo
and Juliet," with Charles Kemble (for the
first time) as Mercutio; Mrs. Charles Kemble,
the originality and finish of whose acting in
vests the simplest and briefest parts , with , new
dignity , and charm, as Lady
,Capulet,- and
Fiancee Anne Kemble as Juliet. Miss Keel
ble is quite unknown to most of the audience.
She is but pat out of the French convent
where she has been educated. See is barely
eighteen; and six weeks ago she did not an
ticipate devoting her life to the stage.
The curtain rtse.s nt last, and a burst of ap
plause greets Charles Kemble as be bounds
on the stage as Mercutio, gay, pliant, grace
ful, `,`seeming to.trave cast all his cares and
twenty of his years behind hid." a living and.
most charming embodiment of "the delightful
creation of Shakespeare's happiest mood."'
Mts. Charles,Kemble is welcomed with equal
warmth and enthusiastia, but the eveat of the
evening is still to corne.and as the nurse calls
Juliet, the hush of strained expectation and
anxiety is almost painfuL There is a mo-,,
mentary pause,then a full , rich , voice responds,
and ' Juliet die very Juliet surely of whom
Shakespeare dreamed, glides upon the Stage.
There she stands; slight,. graceful, girlish.;
there is the youthful face, instinct with pas
sion and With pciwer,thete are the dark liquid
eyes, the softly sinning lips, the' low, broad
brow; '.:shaded by glossy raven hair. The
rust glance at her beautiful face has won all
hearts, and when she speaks, the enchanting
vibrating = voice which, after nearly forty
years, retains its mellow sweetness, and can
still
Fall down and glance
From tone to tone, and change to change,
Of liveliest utterance,
completes the spell. - After the first
tremor of excitement and uneasiness passes
off,'whic.h it does in a - very few moments; she
'lhsea all timidity and self-consciousness; and
giving herself up entirely to her part,„ plays
with a power and passion, an originality and
-'exquisite naturalness,'. which electrify her
audience. Even Mrs. Siddons smiles approval,
and-her tears speak more eloquently than her
smiles; and hire. Charles Kemble, whose
taste and judgment are so faultless that her
criticisms are more carefully studied., by the
Kemble family than any others—even 3fra.
Charles Kemble is delighted; and, as the cur
tain falls upon the last act, Fanny Kemble is
recalled with acclamations, and stands before
the footlights the acknowledged queen of the
English stage.
Her success on tbis occasion is perhaps the
more remarkable, as she was extremely un
willing to make her debut in Juliet. She
was anxious to play Portia (which subse
quently became her favorite part), and was
bitterly disappoieted at being refused permis
sion to do so. The next day nearly all the
London newspapers were unanimous in their
expressions of admiration ot her 'acting, and
of astonishment at its power and• originality.
"It never was our fortune," says Talfourd,
"to see Mrs. Siddons in this part,
but Miss Kemble gives it a
depth of tragic tone which none of hat pre
decessors whom we have seen ever gave to
it. Miss O'Neil, loth as we are, to-forget her
• fascinations, used to lighten the earlier scenes
of_the piece with some girlish graces that were
accused ofbeing:lnfrintine. Bo that as it May,
there were certainly a hundred little pretti
messes enacted by hundreds of novices in the
character which attracted habitual applanses,
but which Miss Kemble at once repudiated
with the wise audacity of genius: at the same
time, though she blends mit a particle of af
fected girlishness with the part of Juliet, her
youth and her truth still have in it a filiiikeipe ,
flan natocte. As _the tragedy deepens, her
powers ' are develOped id unison with; the
strengthened decision of purpose which the
poet gives to the character. What a nOble
effect she produced in that scene where the ,
nurse, - who has hitherto been the partner of:
all her counsels, recommends her to marry ,
Paris. and to her, astonished exclamation,
`SpeakSt thou from thy - heart!':` MIS were,
'And from my soul;too, or else heibiew them
both.' At that momentous passage, Miss
Kembleereeted her head, and extended; her
arm with an, expressive -which
we never ~sa.w surpassed in acting,
and with ,'a power like magic, pro
' nounced—Amen! In that attitude, and look,
and word, she made us feel that Juliet, so late
a nursling, was now left alone in the world—
that the child was gone, and that the heroic
woman had begun herpart. By her change
in tone and manner she showed that her heart
was wound up to fulfil its - destiny, and she
bids the nurse 'Go in' in a ton's "of dignified
command: That' there was suchva change in
Juliet we have ,always felt, but "to mark its
precise moment was reserved for this accom
plished actress, In ticsingle t0ne."7.2.
\The peculiar parallelism between the two
contemporary,writers Poe' and Hawthorne-7-
,
both so similar.and,,yet,so , personally strange
to eactrother;•and - bath- po different in gifts
from all the world besides—has alWays
struck us as the great curiosity inthe history
of American letterer, Let US hear Mr. Eugene
Benson a moment, on the subject, as he de
fines Wit h . great clearness the discrepancies in
two intellects which had so much in corn-
HAWTHORNE AND PON
roe and Hawthorne are two brilliant ex
ceptions in American literature. Among
Americans, -they; are, the only two literary
men who have had the sense of beauty and
the artist's ;conscience in a supreme degree.
'They belonged to • the haughty and rreserved
'Aristocracy of letters. Hawthorne was like
a magician, bidden/ from the world,brekting
de beautiftd phantasms; Poe was like a bin.
_
fished spirit, abased among .Inen, exercising
an Intellect, and; . drawing upon a merheity•
that implied a 'Wearer and higher state 'of,
being than that of material and common life.
His mental perspicacity; and unerrin,gness sug
gestra.Super-mortal quality, and 'make the
simple narrative of "The Gold Bue-appalliag;
for you- will remark,: that the sentiment of
strangeness and terror Which it begetsje.cift
cited withoht any of Poe'ti usual'resources--
thatls, of-death ormtuder in any torm. One
is aPpalled by:the preeition of the intellect
reVealed, which is unmatched by any English
story-writer. .
, Poe was dominated by intellectual con
science; Hawthorne was dominated by moral
conscience.- For the proper objects of intel
lect,. Poe had an intellectual passion. Haw
4home's passion,; on the contrary . , spent itself
upon moral subjects; 3rou will notice that the
texture of his stories is woven about a ques
tion of moral responsibility- and , the transmis
sion of IMAM,. ,The problem of sin engaged
• Hawthorne; the processes of crime—that is,
pure, intellect in.actioneagaged Poe.
Very ,few persons ,Ititi — e - a 'definite idea of
the difference between the unique and 'unri
valled genius of these two men, who`still had
positive, if hidden, bonds of sympathy with
each Other. They were radically, though not
übviowslyiliffe.rent in their works and in the
spring of their being. Both had an exquisite
sense of the music of thought; both loved the
mysterious. and Pizarre,, both, labored to
paint the exceptional and dominate Otir in
tellects with an intimate sense of the spiritual
and unseen.
Both Poe and Hawthorne were alike and
Splendidly. endowed with imagination; but
Poe bad More invention—in fact, a most
Marvellous faculty of invention--and he was
the more:- purely. intellectual of the two.
Hawthorne was a Man of delicate sentiment,
of mystical imattination ; Poe . was a man of
little sentiment, but great delicacy of Intel;
lectual perception, and had a realistic im
agination. , Ha*thonne incessantly lures the
mind from the visible and concrete to the in
visible and spirituaL To him, matter was
transparent; m his stories he paints material
bodies, and gradually resolves them into ab
stractions; they become allegnrical, typical—
uncertain' incarnations or certain affinities,
traits, qualities. Poe never is vague, never
indefinite. Hie most weird and arbitrary im
agination is made palpable and positive to the
reader.. The - predominating: sentiment of
Hawthorne is sad anddepressing; that of Poe
is melancholy and ominous.
Hawthorne, a descendant of the Puritans,
living in a Puritan. State, in a Puritan town,
without making hiniself the historiaa of Pu
ritanism, rettlefed it forek gave- the
:'spirit suidsentiment of its life, in_ a n i n te n se
and powerful story which contains the very
_soul of its , faith. Hawthorne, in "The Scar
let Letter," has made the work of the histci
riiiitand judge superfluous as an examination
and decision, upon Puritanism as a social
Piet. The most intense work of our greatest
'romancer, without a word of indignation,
•without au aggressive phrase, embodies Pu
, r,tlanism in a story,and leaves it with a stigma
more terrible than the scarlet letter it seared
upon She heart of the wretched Dimmesdale,
and fixed upon the black robe of the heroic
martyr, Hester Prynne. With what fine and
beautiful art he lets you '.,see .the , monstrous
pretensions of the legal spirit, which
was she 'soul of Puritanism, and
its brutal' blunder In intruding it
self, between a woman's heart and its most
sacred need-:-"sacred Oven in its 'pollution."
theareatment of his theme, how fine, how
elevated, how comprehensive is Hawthorne !
With what indulgence and sympathy, with
what, reverence does he consider the mourn
ful and mute woman, blank-eyed and helpless
before her judges, who seek to unmask the
secret of her heart, Poor Hester Prynne!
different her`treatment from the treat
ment of the Syrian 'Magdalen! Noble and
outraged, much suffering, silent woman? .
.victint,oflegal&bftise; and mechanical minds,
she shall forever exist os - Moyne Of her ser
wronged by bigotry, - victim of harsh, une
lastic social faith!
Charles Baudelaire, the French poet, who
his - Oven the hest literary portrait and the
briefest and best analysis of Poe's genius with
which I am acquainted, remarks that,in none
of his workadid he express the sanguine and
sensual side of love. "To Poe the divine
.passion of love appeared magnificent,star-like
and always veiled with melancholy. His por
_traits of women. are aureoled; they shine in
the midst of a supernatural vapor, and are
painted'in the emphatic manner of an adorer.
* *` * Hie women, luminous and sick,
dying of strange ailments, and speaking with
a voice that resembles music, correspond
with the nature of their Creator—by their
strange aspirations, by their knowledge, by
their incurable melancholy,they participate in
his being, and resemble him."
The remaining papers, beside the Driftwood:
Criticism and Nebulfe, may be estimated from
the following list of their titles AO authors:
"Cipher." Part Two. Chapters L to VIL
(With an illustration by Sol. Eytynge.) "The
Confederate Congress. A Chapter in the His
tory of the late War." By Edward A. Pollard.
"One Too Many." 'By Caroline Chesebro.
"Women as Physicians." By Mary E.
Wager. "Tied up by the Thumbs." By T.
A. Dodge. :`Acquitted:" By H ''H.'"The
Treasure of the Three Kings." .By Jane G.
Austin. "To a Friend." By Richard H.
Stoddard. "Words and their Uses." By
Richard Grant White. "Barcarolle." By
Lily Nelson. The Galaxy Miscellany. 1.
Who took Ticonderoga? By B. F. D. .
Boys. By Harriet Prescott Spofford. 8.
Exit the Blonde. By D. IL Jacques. "Ebb-
Tide." "Soft Brown Smiling Eyes. By C.
P. Cranch.
• Journal Hof the Franklyn Institute: the
• nninber for November is a very interesting
resume of the month's history in the scientific
:and; industrial lineonost ably edited by Prof.
.• , .
Morton, and adorned with eiact woodcuts
and lithograpls;' by its abstinence from untie_
cessarytechnicalities of style this magazine
constitutes itself a valuable aid in the great
work of popularizing science.
The mist attractive ,
embellishment to the
November issue of Moan's_ AreMtectural
P eview' is a good woodcut of Baiiry'e figure
of "Grief," executed for the monument to
Gen. F. E Patterson. Other more strictly
architectuial illustrations are included. The
follo'whig subjects,exhibiting the broad scope
of this interesting, Bevieiv, (Which contrives
to make out of Architecture and its collateral
interests as popular a lititns the whole, range of
literature affords to other magazines)are treated
of in the numbei: "The Cathedral at Milan;"
'"Metropolitan Savings Bank;" "Two Adjoin
ing City Dwellings;" "A' Gothic Cottage
Villa, No. I;"''A Gothic. Cottage
2 ;" "Gothl& bhurch; Style, Perlieridicular
Mixed;" - "Picture Galleries;" "Detail for a
Picture. Gallery;" "A, Bay Window;" "De
tails Of CBay , WirdoWi"."Pihtures;" "Table of
Plate Glasse!, "A History of Architecture;
The -Hindoo;" ``Landscape;, Decorative and
Ectinoinic' Gardening, No. 2;" . "Plumbing;
Water Supply itatiVater :Plries;"."Ari Am%-
riCan:SLYle;","lierai4TY; Pip Composite Ting:- ,
tures:--Furn;" Toreelain,, Glass and Pcif.-'
leiy;" "Formdations;""Fire'tscapils;""Scenie
:Effect." The Review hi -published ,by Clax-
Remstina Haffelfbiger;
THE DAILY EVENING BOLIATIN-PHiLADELP,IIIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1868.
•_ :We acknowledge the Ladies .Frlqnd, for.
December, with plenty of faihions and pat
terns, Vivo fair steel plates;, and a light range
of feminine- literfiture "skilfully,„editfd by
Mrs:Heng . Peterson.
The December Schootdall VisitUe,among
ivit.:very competent contilbaturk zulxibelo ) .
eB itarriei
dette, J. D. Vinton, S. 0.
.W. -
Lizzle - M. Hunt. There, are pictures, a song
by Alice Hawthorne, problems, puzzles and
the whole miscellaneous pocketful'which de
lights the boyish heart. The Visitor, when
he is not visiting,'ives at 424 'Walnut street.
Grace Greenwood's 'Little - iii/griln - is
lively - ruddy and - altogether comely this De
cember: 19 Widnat,streeL
We open the Occident in vain to see seine
clear statement of the Position taken by the
American Jews towards the next President.
The sublects treated of are in sublime, nega
tion of nineteenth-century issues, and seldom
contemplate.; more modern times than the
epoch ofPhilo Judseus or of the. destruetton
of the Temple. , This , organ is published at
29 South Sixth street..
Mut i. Huugbak's American illustrated
edition 'of Dr. William Bmith"e"Dictionary of
the Bible—the best, the fullest and the most
adaPted to American needs--tuta .reuched its
fourteenth Part, which includes names troak
"Jordan" to _ "Ku, of Moab." Bimoa, Agent
29 Borah Sixth street.
The following * the amount or coal transported over
the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, during the
week endhag ThluedayMOV. 10, 1888:
Ttams.Cwt.
From St. Clair —........ . ........ . . 80,398 01
Pot
, rPr.t.Carbon. ..... . 9,009_11
...............02,67TiV
Schuylkill .....
" Auburn . . .............
" Port Clintim . . . ..
" Harrisburg andDanihin...
Coat outtetnent.
.Total Anthracite Coal for week..
Bliuminotie Coal• frit= flarriaburg
Dauphin for week,
Total for week paying freight .....
Coal for the Company's
Total of all kinds for week............ 1.03,731 gp
Previously this .......................3,317,013 173
To elinie tune at year
M i-M1.412.1 , 14:1. UN it,
neeorted for the rnlinaelplua Evening Bulletin
SA VANNAB—Brig Life Boughton. • Morton-20.460 f
on, ber W A Levering.
510V.L.COLZPVIS' 'ow oOE,&i 1,416,90TLE8er.
. _
TO A/LRIVE.
aurra - - - MUSK ?OA DAT ,
Wm Penn. ..... ....London ...New York.— ....... Oct. 31
Aleppo .Livemool..New York. ..... . ..Nov. 3
Baltimore... _..Southampton..Baltimore..........Nov. 4
Columbia . Diaegow...New Y0rk.........N0v. 6
Liao- monia... .Soutbamoton..New York._ .... Nov. 6
(.3 ty of afhington.Liviirpool..N Y via Halifax... Nov. 7
Union Southarcrirton..New Yolk . .... 0V to
Baznaria.... .....Liverpool-New York viab....Nov. 10
Cliy of Baltimore..Liverpool..New York... ......Nov. 11
Denmark ...... Liverpool-New York ...... ....Nov. 11
TO DEPART
South America.... New York..ftio Janeiro. .... Nov. 23
Henry Chauncey.. New York..Aapinwall .........Nov. 24
Scotia -,........ -New 'V ..... N'ov. 25
York.. Liverpool. ....—..Nov. 23
Aleppo.... ........ .New York-LiverpooL...-......N0v. 26
F. .-..New York.. Havana Nov. Ville do •. .
Paris....-. New York..Efavre.. . ...... ....Nov. 28
City of Baltimore-New ..... nv. 26
England ..........New York..LiverpooL .....
Colon Dia ...........New York..filaygow Noy. 23
San Frar.cleco:: - .. - .: - New York..ll4v.Sieal&V.C....Nov.
vlty of New york-riew York.. Liverpool via.Elar:Dec. 1
Buena.'
.... .New York..LiverpooL .De.c. 2
qtara t5ll/1 Stripes.. . . ..... 2
Samaria.. .........NewYork.:.Livenmol.. Dec. 3
Morro 4..aat1e.......New,Y0rk..Havana........ --Dec. 3
PSO A ' ()F I.'4Al).Er
EAHUEL E. - STOKER.
GED. N. TATHAM. MONTHLY COMICITTEL
AbDEEW WHEELER.
~ y .
PORT OF PHILADELPHIA—Novsummx
Brx Rms. 7 11113rn Bare. 4,491 Hies Waras. 6 41
ineatner Novelty - Tuft. 24 ; gfrom New ci York., with
adee to W M Baird it Co.
BrigLije lionhttra. Mortara. 6 daya froth Savannah.
Kith Inmoer to Warren di Gregg.
SehrJtalla Elizabeth, Candace. 4 daya from New Bed
/ord. with mdee to Lennox & Burger&
Behr Ariadne. Thomas. I day from Smyrna, DeL with
withgrafri to jaa.L"Bilifle y & Co. ,
Bar-Garnet: Marehall. 1 iii i. y . . .
from•Loweo. Del. with
Brain to,late.j. Bewley et
log!rbGBJeffeavon, alien. froth Eiltimore..with s tow
of barges to W Co.-
BELOW.
- -
One ship. three herm brigs and one fall rigged brig
came in the Capes! on Thursday morning. Reported by
sami b ehelling araho TIPSTERDAY: •
Steamer R Willing. olYrdiff. Baltimore. A Groves. Jr.
Steamer Mayflower. Fultz. N York. W P Clyde di Co.
Steamer J Shriver. Dennis. Baltimore, A Groves, Jr.
Bark Mary , A 'Nelson (Br), Nelson. Cork or Falmouth for
orders; C C; Van Born.
Brig Alice Lea. Foster. Kingston. Ja. Workman & Co.
Seto - Sarah Fieber. Moore. Cedar Point. captain.
Tug Thee Jefferson, Allen. Baltimore, with bargee. W
P Clyde di. (-19.
Correepondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin,
READING. Nov. 19, lita.
The, followinf boat! from the Union Canal passed into
the Schy hound' to :Philadelphia, laden and
consigned os follows:
Emblem with grain to Hoffman & Canada;onitor,
Int:abort° Wilmington BR co; Sergi, J She , do to El
McTivaine & CO : Excelsior; do to W Malone & ; GOO
dchnure and Louiea.do tot., Shoemaker & Co; .1 K
do to iierbater & Co; S M Light, de to Boas & Roudan
buoh G W Wagner. light - to cavtain. P.
4 ' WRIGHTSVILLE, PL. Nov. Lq, 1888
L:Tbe followidge.snal boats passed this office to-day. east
ward boon& viz: -
Delaware and Gen Grant, with lumber to Taylor &
Bette Hard Utrdearaff. do to Watson, Twitchell & Co.
bewark ; Gen Waebington, F' W Loan, and Dories. do to
It Wolverton; Young Irwin. do to Craig & Blanchard;
J P Wolverton. oo to captain; Mary & Emma. do to J
Lagoarty di Co, Newark.
MEMORANDA
4 Shin Twilight, Sawyer, from New York 57th June. at
San 'Francisco yesterday.
chip Nor ammo. Upton, from New York.37th June, at
saw Fran Cisco yesterdas.
-Ship North . East: -Copeland, from Calcutta 11th Aug.
at how York yesterday.
Ship Industry Liunoll. off Canary Islands prior to ad
nit and • as ordered to Vigo to perform quarantine.
ship-Wanderer.' Nieman, trout !Cuxhaven. 3d
San Francisco yesterday.
Steamer Saxon, Boggs, cleared at Boston 19th instant
for this Dort.
Steamer Arindne. Eldridge, cleared at Galveston 12th
for-New York.
' Steamer Baltimore (NG), Voeckler. from Bremen let
and Southampton 4th, et Baltimore 19th Met-
Steamer Botussta (NG). Franzen, from Hamburg for
Now York. put k ip,to Halifax 18tH hut leaky, and with
pumps choked.
Steamer Union (lit i ez). Von Banton, from Bremen 7th
tint. and South:troll -19th. at New York yesterday.
steamer San Fraucisco; - ffeiiktm, from Vera Cruz 7th,
,ia Sirt.l 101 h and Havana 14th Nat. at New York yester
day. The bark Chilton, ashoro near Sisal. went to pieces
in the storm 01 Nov I.
Bat Mope. Weston. hence 'lBth July. at San Francisco
19th inst.
Bark Serene, Oliver. sailed from Pernambuco 17th ult.
for Valparaiso
. ,
Barg Brazil. II ibbert, from London Ist ult, for tale Part.
was spoken 15th met. off Nantucket
Bask Carobel, Ro v e. from Hong gong. 38th Juno, at
New ork 'yesterde.Y.
Brig W 'Bigelow. Parker, from Liverpool 80th Sept.
for this port. was spoken 15th inst. tat 35 W. lon 74 40,
lii ig Geo E Prescott, Mitis, sailed from N London lOW
st,"tor t hie port. , •
Sent Sui•ab E Prescott, hence at New London 18th inst.
for Boston.
Schrs artha Smith, and John Griffith, Griffith, hence
at Kelfast 16th inst.
Schr Emma E Safford. Hanson, hende for Providence,
at Now London 18th inst '
Sehr P L Smith. Smith, hence at Belfast 14th lust,
Schr Helen 51. Condon, Condon, hence at Belfaat 18th
ios , snt
Behr Nellie Tteat,_"Trim. hence at Bangor 17th inst.
MARINE MISCELLANY.
Captain Conway. of the schooner Nellie Tarbox. ut Sa
vannah from Rockland. reports that on the 9111
miles east of Delaware Breakwater, encountered a gal'
from SW ; had bowsprit carried away; bow damaged by
heavy seas; topmast backstay tore away, but smtathed
no other damage; had very heavy weather to the north
of 13 atteraa.
Ship Isaac Webb was floated and towed up to N York
on Thursday morning, by the coast wrecking steamers
-Philip and Itt:scue.
DIEDICIN&L.
tAPAL DENTALLINA.--,A SUPERIOR ARTICLE FOR
NJ - cleaning the Teeth; destroying animalcule, which in
fest them, giving tone tolliegums, and leaving a feeling
of fragrance and perfect cleanliness in the mouth. It may
be need daily, and will be found to strengthen weak and
incOging gums, while the Aroma and detersiveness will
recommend it to every - one. Being' composed with the
aeeietance of the Dentist,-Physieleneand -Microscopist. it
is confidently offered as a ti3lleble enbaUtute for the un-
certain washes formerly in vogue.
EminentDentine. acquainted.with the constituents of
the Dentallina, advocate its use; it containsnothing to
prevent its yareatildned em_ployznent. Made only by
JAMBS T.,SHlNN;ApothecerY,
Broad and Spruce streets.
For sale biDrUgglsti generan i 3." and
Fred. Browne, D. L. Steckhouse,
Renard Vo., . Robert C. Davis.
C. B. Rtieny. . ,Geo:.C. Bower.
lesao H. Kay, Chat Shivers,
C. H. Needles.• , S. MeColln,
T. J. Hoeband, - ' B. C. Bunting.
_Ambrose Smith, Chas. B. Eberle.
Edward Parrish;" , ; Jamas Macke. Wm. B. Webb. ' B.liringhurst & Co.,
James L. Bb3ph tun. Dyott & Co.,
Hughes & Combo, ' H. C. illoirte Sons. • '
Henry A. Bower, Wyeth & Bro.
Aphi 3 BLIA V ARTA NNO. OM
P.IS N. TAVEL=
Street. eonstaltetiolut tree. - • _ univir •
liiiTTIZEISS -AND , 'REDDING*
FN
all ER BEDS AND MATTREt3BEEtRENOVATED.
—Mattrcesce and Feathers ori hand. Factory. NO. it/
ot
LomPard rtrao4 cc% j
.
_ UltPliANts , COURT $ l Lt.
F.state of John Kohler. deceased.--Toomse & 'Sena
Auctioneers.---Puremant to an - order of the. Orobianat
Court. for the City end County of Philadelphia, will tie
sold at public, eats without reserve. on !rusted ay. Novem
ber 24th, lei 3, at 12 o'clock, noon, at the Philadelphia 15x
chaugeEthe followhoudescrined property; late. of -John
Kohler, deceased, . No. 1. —lwo gory; Brick Dwell.
witikaide yard, No. 846 Pranklin greet, between
-- Coates and , -Wallace - streets riot 27 feet. ft opt.- All that
2.4.stery, brick messuage,with two tery , "back building
Endlotof ground. situate on the wed ifianklin st..
--betweenCoates - andlersilace get, - DB feet southward tram
- Coatee.etreet. No: fife,. formerly A.Jetrict of opting tiarden. ,
= now cite cf Philadelphia; containingin fronton Franklin -
greet -2r feet, and In depth on. .the north line-TY feet 10
inches, and on the eouth line 'l7 feet 934 isChes, and on the
west line 27 leg I inch. Bounded on the north by ground
granted or intended , to have been gran ed to John Beek;
on the south by ground granted or Wended to ha; e, been
,granted to Geer ge Beck; on the w"Plat by ground now, or
into of. Samuel Noble, and, on the east by Franklin street '
aforesaid. (Ileina the same premises which John' Wood
and st ifs. by deed dated 26th of March, A: D. 1846, and re
tor ded in deed book A. W. No. 10, Page 'll5, &c..
wanted and conveye unto John Kohler. In fee:)
N 11.- , The above is'situate In a very degrableneighbor.
hood; hap the gas introduced. bath, hot' nd 'cold water,
cook fug-range, - dic. - Keys at No. 528 North - Beccnd street. -
• Clear of all incumbrauce, Immediate permeate.%
No, 2.--Two.-story brick dwelling, 230 Culvertatreet
twc.n Forirth and - Lharlotte streets. that:lot of
ground, with two-story brick meesuage thereon erected.
sit uate on the eoutheastwerdly aide of Culvert street, be
tween Irelaw are Fourth and Charlotte eneete, formerly'
in the Northern Liberties. now in the city of Philadel
inhia; cot telmng in front _.on Culvert street 15 feet 8
ches, and in depth southward, between lines parallel
with said Fourth area on the west line thereof 38 feet
MLitt% bee; and on the cad line - thereof 45 feet 7 inches to
a 4 feet wide alley. laid out by Joseph Smith, leading
eastward into a four feet wide, alley,whfch leads north
ward into Lulvert greet. Bounded eastward hy ground
intended to be conveyed to Catharine Stevenerrouthward
by first mentioned 4 feet wide alley,westward by other
ground of Joseph Sainte, Trustee and northwestwardly
by Culvert etreet aforesaid. (Being the same premises
which Joseph Bantle. Trustee..te... by deed dated 20th of
May. A. D. le3B, and recorded in Deed. Book B. IL le,_et 0.
2'3, page we., &c.. vented and conveyed unto Jonn Koh
ler, In fee.) Together with - th - erfree-use and Ptivilega of
both of the said two four feet wide allele respectively,
ser paseage ways and water couraes. and of laying and
repairing ther einreepectively. preen of conduct for intro
ducing water from Culvert treet Into said premises, at all
qtimes hereafter forever. in common with the owners
tenants and occupier's of the other lota of ground bound
ing thereon. isubject to a proportionable part of the ex
pense of keeping the said alters s In good order and repair.
Clear of all incumbrance. _
No. 3. irredeemable gr &rind rent, 927 a year. All that
yearly ground rent of 627, ,lawful Haver money of the
united Stat. a of Anierica clear of taxes., chargeable half
Yearly. cm the fast of - Januaryland July, imuing out of all
that lot of grounde,situate on the north aide of Jefferson
street and east, side of. Hope street, (as widened to the
,breadth of 25 feet.) formerly ha_ the District _of...Kenning—
,ton,now in the city of PhiUdelphia containing in front
on Jeffereon greet 18 feet. and extendirg in depth north
ward 64 feet. Bounded northward by ground of Henry
Norris. eastward by ground ground granted to Joseph Ruth,
southward by Jefferson greet. and westward by Hope
greet aforesaid (Being the same yearly ground rent
which Charles Clarke and wife, by deed dated Ist Jamb
arY. A. D. 1846. and recorded In Deed Book A W. M. No.
8. page 42 tic., granted and conveyed unto the said John
Kohler. in fee.) the alien eis punctually paid, and is well
secured.
By the Court. JOSEPH MEGARY, Clerk O. C.
GEORGE A. KOHLER, Acting Executor and Truetee.
M. THOMAS. & SONS, Auctioneers,
oat nol4 & 21 -422 and 141 South Fourth street
100,050 02
8,681 04
oILP ANC' COUIeT 1:121.1.E.-ESTATE OF DR.
g• David Gilbert, deceased '1 homes & Sons, Auctiont
eery. Putenant to a" order of the Orphans' Court
/ for the City and i;ountrefVhiladelphia: will be sold at
public tale on Tuer day, Nevem+ er 14, 1888, at 12 o'clock_
noon. at the Philadetthia Exchange, tile following des
ctibed property, late of David Gilbert, deceased, viz :
No 1 ery valuable business location. Modern four
story brick reeioeuce, No. 731 Arch street, east of Eighth
sirs et. 17 feet front, 140 feet deep to - e 22 feet wide Street.
Twetionta. All that four etory brick messnage and lot
of graund, situate on the north side of Arch street, at the
distance of 62 feet east of Eighth street; containing in
fronton Arch street 17 feet, and extending-In-deeth-l4ls
feet, to a 12 feet wide avenue called Winfield place
Bounded northward by the said Winf3e l / 4 1 place, south
ward by the odd Arch street, eastward by a measuage
and Lot late of Nicholas Weaver and westwardly by a
messes ee rind lot now or late of Joseph Price and Eliza
beth 0., his wife. B- ing the same premises which Joseph
Price and Elizabeth his wife, by indenture dated Novem
ber 29, A. D. 1164, recorded in the °the., for recording
deeds, &c.. in the City of Philadelphia. in Deed Boost L.
It. 8., No. t,3. page 34d. &e., grind° s and conveyed unto
the said David Gilbert. in fee. 'together with the free
and corer:con use. rniht, liberty and privilege of the said
Vs inoB4d place, at all times hereafter fore or
IM" - '1 lie above is a very desirable and valuable resi
dence; has all the modern conveniences, and located in
one of the most valuable business squares on Arch street;
four i tolies his h ; marble to second story ; four-story back
buildings; has office, diningroom. breakfast-room, winter
and summer fdtchene on the first floor; Terse parlor and
reception room on tho second floor; sewing room. and
commodious chair-there above; gas throughout, bath, hot
and cold water. water closet, furnace, cooking range,&e ;
flag pavement; vault under front pavement, &c.
No. 2 -Large. et, B. W. corner. of-Front and Mifflin
streets, IList Ward 134 s eet 10 inches front - -sit that lot
of ground, situate at the S W. corner of Delaware Front
and Mifflin street& First Ward, city of Phitadelphis; con
taining in Front on biliftlin Ars et 134 feet 10 !aches, more
or lees, and extending in depth on Front H. reet 114 feet 8
inchee, more or less, and on the we,t line thereof 89 feet 4
inches.. mote or leer, to the northerly line or Keeler'e lane.
Being the same premise. which Henry Stiles and Eliza,
his wife, by indenture bearing date Stith of July A. D.
• 1151. recorded iis.--deed book G. W. C.. No. 114, page nu
&c.. •and uavid W Derr and Mary Ann, his wil d . by in
denture bearing date December 20th. A. D. 1864, recorded
in deed book L. It. B , No. 74. page IC7, granted and con
veyed unto the said David Gilbert.
By the Court, JOSEPH MEC ARY. Clerk 0. C.
W K GILoERT. Adnahristra.or.
M. THOMAS & SONS Auctioneers,
r 03,14,21 139 and 141 South Fourth street.
3,420,741 00
3,347.700 07
kleat.Ci Ohre PEREMPTORY fi AGE.—EaTATE
ant Myers Er, d• CCM d —"Pt omas a ,OLIB, cue
ti mere. Very valuable Neck pro:Arty : , wenty acres.
Sla`den Lane now ca led • ewport street. Tweet - a-et:at,.
Ward'• valuable for Mick yarde tin a uesday. Novara •et.
si legs, at 'l2 o'clock. n. on. will be sold at public sale.
urtaiottriyi,e. re, at ,no f Excharre. All chat
ft act of laed, with the meesuagcs or improvements there
on erected:4'lwatt; ea.-the asterly side of a street Tritely
called Maiden r ane. now called lvewport street Li tke
'1 wentysixth Ward ;bounded and desert!, d according to
a recent survey made thereof for the estate of Is ac My
ere, s r., deceased. by Ilto‘Daly, Jr., Esq., tiurve or, a
follows to wit:—Beginning on the easterly side of
port street at a corner of land of J. Stinger, thence ex
tending along said Newpart street south 27 degrees 80
minutes, west 537 feet to a corner of land of —; thence
south 62 degrees EU min.,east 957 feet to a point in the cor
ner of land of.!. ribs lee: thence along the line of said
hieler'e land eouth 57 degrees. east 358 feet to a point on
the vi eeterly line of land of W. banter ; thence al-n the
line of said Lanier's, laud north Si) degrees, east 1044 feet
9 inches ti a point In the line of land of la. Clark; then 0
al-ng said line of Clark's land north 53 degrees, wait 354
fa et to a point; them e along the easterly • line of • aid
btLuger , e land eouth 33 degrees 30 min.. west 528 feet 'e a
c r er ; thence a one said at nger's land nortb 63 degrees
30 minutes, west 1014 feat 6 inches to a point on the east
erly aide of said Newp-art street, the place of beginning—
conteinin g 20 acres and three. roods.
N. EL—The improvements on the above property ace h
doable tbrecotory brick dwelling and one.story kitcnen.
Also, a large two-story house, with attics, large frame
barn, carriage house and granary. pump of good water.
ac.
Tide property wo"ld make 3 good brick yards, as brick
clay exists on the place.
It is 'within a few minutes' walk of the Gray's Ferry
City Care.
Terms—Cash. SSCO to be paid at the time of sale.
By order of Executor.
M. EMUS dr SONS, Auctioneers,
n 0.4 1911. Nos. If 9 and 141 South Fourth street
HEAL ].STATE—THOMAS BONti. BALE.—
On Tuesday, November 24th, 1868, at 12 o'clock. noon.
w ill be sold atpublTE sale, at the Philadelphia Ex.
change, the following described property, viz.: No. L
Desirable Three-story brick Dwelling, r'inetecnth street,
west side, second house above Market street —Alt that de
sirable three-story brick' dwelling, with double back
buildings, situate on , he west side of Nineteenth street,
second house north of Market street; containing in front
1.6 feet 2 inches, and extending is depth 82 feet, with the
tree use and privilege of an alley 3feet wide leading into
P.ineteenth street... The hone eld ittexcellentreptd.r; has
parlor. dming.rooin and kitchen on the first floor; larks
sitting-room; has gae,batli,hot and cold tester. ratige,ate.;
new 'y painted and papered throughout. Gas fixtures in
eluded in the EllllO. Terms —Due fourth cash.
Wear of all incumbrance.
No. 2.—Three story brick Dwelling. No. 1323 Kates
street. All that 'bre( -story brick dwelling situate on the
north side of Kates street, east of broad meet, No. 1323;
containing in trout on Kates street 16 feet, (including e e
the It e.t side thereof, •he one-halt of a certain 2 feet 6
inches wide alley, laid and op. ned between this .nd ad•
joinir g lot to the west leading into Kates street) and ex •
tending h. depth trrthward between lines parallel with
Broad street 48 feet 9 inches, with free use and privilege
of said alley. The house contaies 6 rooms and is in good
order newly Paneled. Terms—one-fourth cash.
IDirClear of all inesmbrance.
o. 3. Buildltg Lot, K etreet All that lot of aceintl,
situate on the westwardly side of K street, TiVerV third
Ward'. 1,31 feet 6inches south of Pike street thence we-t
111 feat B inches to land Gehl , ; so utile Ist 25h
feet, mere or isee: thence east 26 feet to K street; thane.:
orth along K street 2to f, et to the pt.tee of twgilinilig,
containing alma 2e an acre of land. Terms -Half cash.
Qom` Clear of all iiwemb once
M. 9 DOM AB dt St9NB. Auctioneers,
n 0714 21 134 and 141 8 utli-fore th street
ORPHANS' COURT SALF.—ES rATE OP LOUISA.
friC. Audenried, a minor. Monists de Sone. Atte
" t oneere. fialld2ol3l9 modern Pour /tory brick
Reeieence. No. 611 North Eieventle street, / beers
Green street. PI. renant to an order of the
Wean,' Court for the city and county of
l'biladelphia, le ill be sold at imbre einto co Tuesday,
November 81, 1688. at 12 WOO, noon, at the
pieta Exchange, the folio, lug Atiscrilied - property. of
Weita C. Andeuried, a minor, viz. All that lot of ground.
with the tour story brick meeeuage, three,tory
double back buildings thereon erected, sit.er
ate ou the. east vide of Eleventh street, No. 611, 90 feet
northward from the north side of Green itreut, your.
ter nth Ward, city of Philedelphia vooutaining in front en
Eleventh street 18 feet, and extending in depth eastward
at r ight singles with Eleventh street, uu be north Due
thereof. 98 feet 534 inches, and on the south line thereof
90 feet inches; whtcl ssid premises Samuel Rain
at d w He, by indenture dated Hane, 29, A. I). 1865, re,
corded at Philadelphia, in Deed Book R. D. W., No. 17.
e age &c., granted and convel43d unto the said Joao
Audentied in fee, tender and subject to the payment of
a curtain yea ground rent or sum of 18146 9eg.100 therein
mentioned. The house has all tho modern conveniences;
gay, bath. hot and cold water, range, furnaces, dec.
By the Conti., JOSEPH 111 EGARY. Clerk 0. Cs
• WILLIAM G. AUDENRiED,
N. B.—The whole property to be sold. Too minor's in
tercet by order of the Orphans' Court; tho other owners
muting In the sale. The purchaser obtaining a title to
the 'whole.
M. THOMAS dr. SONS. Auetioneens.
n 0114.21 • 189 and 141 South Fourth area.
ORPHANS'' COURT PEREMPTORY BALE.—
'Estate of Elias D. Moyer, deo'd.—Thomas & Roos,
Auctioneersr ,,, Modent twcf.story Brick Dwelling.
No. 933 North Fifth street,above Poplar'street. , Pursuant
to an order of the Orphana , Court for the, City and County
of Philadelphia, will be sold at public sale, tolihout re.
Adve, on Tuesday. November 29, 1868, at 12o , clo(aa, noon,,
at the Phliadelpr.la Exchange. the_ following described
property late of Elias 1). Moyer. deed;.; vie.: All that
two : story , brick messuage and lot ofir i oundeltuate on
the east side of Fifth street, 283 feet inches north of
Peeler street, containing in front on, th street 18 feat.
and . extending in depth 70. feet. --Bounded northward by
ground granted to George Albright on ground rent, east
ward by other ground, 4)i which this was formerly part,
southward by ground late of George F. Clay, deceased.
(Being - the same premises, which Jeremi all Kraft And
wife,_by deed dated the 15th January, A D. 1846. and re.
, fl
,corded in , Deedook. L.. 11 ., B.; No 450. Page 88. &a,
granted and couvoYad unto Elias D. Moyer; now ,
in fee.) 'Subject, to a ,mortgage debt of. $l. 819 46, being
- the balance due on 'a mortgage .for $8,060, held by the
Germania Building Association
By theCeart. '
' JOSEF El I.III(4ARY, Clerk OC.
BAUM:6 Adnagor.
• - • M. THOMAS 43 8 Md. Auctioneers,
cal no 1991 , .• 139 and 191 South Fourth street.
SEAL ESTATE SALES.
SEA ESTATE SALES.
SAM—THOMAS di SONe,' AOC
tioneers.. OtC Tuesday, November 24, 1868, at 12
noon..will be sold et_ pubU sale, at-the
Philadelphia - Exchange, - Vie following des criued proper'.
tivm; Neat country residence, Darby ,
H Darby, Rmd. , No. 1.-t
-it that tbreestory, brick cr.tt ge OUIIO (8 roetn9iind
:oh - 25 feet front; 125 feet deep., order, TCOVVIT Da - i
erect
-and painted, on Ds rby Passenner Railway, near
ount Mortal' lace with or without the adjoining_ lot,
game size. Pea session on or before MaYl, 15e9. nail the
purchort , ..rooney may remain.
• Brick Dwelling, No. that th - eastory brick house
and lot, adjoining N0.1,-Si feet front, .125 feetdeep..
sl,too.may temainon mortgage. '
No. 3.-eltthitt lot of ground, situate on, the .northwest'
side of Darby Passenger Railway, and a 40 feet wide
avenue, calk d tare; containing in front on Darby
road 90 fees, and , depth about 220 ,feet to 'a . 80 feet wide
street, narrowing on the rear.—
Terme—One third cash, balance secured on premises.
o. 4—5 lots of ground, adjoining No. 3, on the south
west, each 50 feet front, by about MA feet deep to said 30
feet street.'
Terms—Orw third cash.
Brick Dwelling. No. 6 —AII that three-story brick ;
house and to northwestaide Darby road. adjoining Na.
4, 50 feet fron 22efeet deep to eald-30 feet ;street.. Now ;
rested for & 3iPer annum, -
— Terms—Halt cash."
No. -.A triangular lot corner ,tionnt Moriah lane and
Oreenway avenue, 250 feet front ou each.
Further inquiry.maY be made of John Grimstine„ at the
Mt Moriah How, and at No. 128 South Sixth street, of J.
Terms—One.third cash: . •
M. THOMAS . dc SONS, Auctioneers,
139 Mid 141 South Fourth street. !
PEREMPI ORY SALE.—TROMAS SONS,
Auctioneers.—Largo and very valuable Building and
Large Lot,•.known as the Central Presbyterian
Church, No. 837 Coates street, between Third and Fourth
streete.—On 'fneeday, November 24th. 1868, at 12 o'clock,
'noon. will besold at public sale. without reserve, at the
Philadelphia Exchange. all that large and valuable two.
story brick (rough cut) building and lot of ground, situate,
on the north side of Coates street. west of Third street.
No. 337; the lot containing, in front on Coatesstreet3o icet,
and extending in depth of that width about 70 feet; then
widening east and west on each line 26 feet. and extend
ing this increased width further , in depth about 96 feet,
(being 80 feet wide in the rear,) including 6 feet on the
north end of the lot to be left open for and towards the
continuation of an alley, in cue such alley shall bere t
after be left open and continued by and through the ad.
I
joining ground. t has been occupied as a church edifice,
and is well and substantially. bunt is the middle tf the
lot, 61 feet by 76 feet 8 inches, and valuable for manufac.
turing . purposes, store and warehouses, or any building
roprirmg space. Subject to the restriction that no part of
this lot shall ever bunged sae court.
Terms—Cash. Keys at the residence of John Springer,
402 Maria street.between Brown and Coates and Fourtn
and F fth streets.
fir-Sale absolute.
Si. THOMAS A: BONS, Auctioneers.
.n 07,14,21 Ma and 141 South Fourth street.
inPEREMPTORY" BALE.--THOMAB & SONS,
Auctioneera Valuable teal estate. Brick ware
bonze, Noe- 316 and 818 North Front street.. 84 feet
front, 250 feet deep to New Market street, on which It has
a front of 54 feet-two fronts. On Tueen ay, Nov. 24,186'8,
at 12 o'clock, noon, will be sold at public sale, without re
serve, at the Philadr Iphla Exchange. all that substantial
well-built brick warehouse and lot (composed in five oar.
tale lots) of ground, situate on the w,est aide of . Front
street, Nos. 316 and 818; containing in front.- on Front
street 84 feet • extending in depth 250 feet to New Market
street, on which it has. a front of 54 feet extending east
wardly 108 feet 2 inches to a 6 ibet 4 inches wide alley run.
nivg into ewith and privileges.
£bf The above was built by Messrs, Hatria et. Stcitee
btu y in the most substantial manner for their own occu.
pancy, with a view of converting it into a Sugar House-
It has fast-class storage for 3,069 to 4.000 hogsheads of mo
lasses, and is well adapted . or a Bonded Warehouse.
U Subject to the payment of two certain yearly
ground rents of twentymne and one third Spanish coined
silver dollars each.
wer Clear of all incumbrance.
Sale peremptery. Immediate Possession.
Plan at the Auction Store.
May bo examined on application to r hiladelphia Sugar
House, Noble otreet Wharf.
.AL THOMAS 4: SONS Auctioneers,
0.91n0121_ 139 &nil 141 - 13mitirFourth etreet.
-
PEREMPTORY SAI.E.—THOMAS dt SONS,
Auctioneers.—OnTueeday, November 24, 1868, at 12
t o'clock, noon. will be sold at public sale, without ro.
serve, at. the Philadelphia Exchange, the following de.
scribed property. viz.: No. 1— Modern Two-story stone
I)wellins, No. 204 Haines street, near Morton street/ Ger
mantown, 42 feet front. all that two-story' stone mes
image, with ta &story . backbuliding and lot of ground,
situate on the westerly side of tiaines street, nee. Morton
Are'', No. 204; the lot containing In front 42 feet end to
depth 140 feet 6 inches. It has a porch front and back.
contains 7 looms. gas introduced, dm. ; garden planted
with vegetables, granary, f ult trees, &c.
'terms—sl,ooo may remain on mortgage.
Possession 12th September. May be examined any day
previous to sale.
EithPU to be paid at the time of sale.
No 2—Very desirable modern three atory brick dwelling,
No. 2628 Broad street above cumberlaud street. All that
modem three story brick meesuage and lot of ground
situate on the west aide of Broad street, above Cumber
land street, No. 2626; 25 feet - front and in depth 177 feet
10 inchsso Dale stNet. It has toe modern conyoniences ;
also, a frame stable. The house stands back from the
street; has a portico, grass plot. dte. enclosed with iron
fence.
TERMS—S3,OOO may remain on mortgage. $2.0 to be
paid at time of Sale.
M. THOMAS d SONS. Auctioneers,
139 and 141 S. Fourth street
intREAL ESTATE—THOMAS & BONS' SALLE.—
Handsome Modem Threo-etory Brisk Residence,
with aide yard. Stable- and . Coach-House, No. 617
south Ninth street. below Lombard street, 41 feat front.
168 feet deep to Cedar Avenue,- On Tuesday. Nov. 24.1866 4
at 12 o'clock, noon. will bo sold at public sale, at the
Philadelphia Exchange. all that handsome modern three.
story brick messuage. with two-story back building and
.lot of ground, situate on the east side of Niatthoreet,
south of Lombard 5t.,N0,517; the lot containing in innt on
Ninth street 41) feet 8 inches. having a side yard of - 2e feet.
and extending in depth 186 feet to Cedar avenue. It is
well and substantially built. and finished with all the
modem conveniences; mashie mantels. gas throughout,
bath, hot and cold water. water closet, furnace, cooking
range, Sic., also, a two story brick stable and carriage
house, with accommodations for three Nooses and three
carriages ; yard planted with a variety of fruit trees.
Cl ar of all ha cumbrance.
immediate possession. May be examined any day pre•
vions to sale.
Terms—sl2,o9o can remain.
M. TERMS/AS Az SONS. Auctioneers.
nol4 21 189 nd 141 South Fourth street.
REAL ESTATE—THOMAS ds SONS' S&LE._
Three-story brick Dwelling, No. 2343 Coates street,
" west of Twenty third. un Tuesday, November
29, 1868, at 12 o clock., noon. will be sold at public sale,
at the Philadelphia Pa change, all that three-story brick
swelling, with two-atory back ouilding and lot of ground,
situate on the north side of Coates street, west of Twenty.
third Street, No. 2343; hence extending eastward along
Coates street 18 feet; thence northward 77 feet 1.% inches
thence westward along a - 74 - feet Wide alley 18 feet 13. f,
inches, and thence s , nthward 79 foot 4ls inches to the
place of beginning. Together with the common use and,
privilege or said alley. It has gas introduced, bath, hot
and cotd. water, range. dm. Buoject to a redeemable
grouse rent of $6O
May be examined any day previous to sale.
l'oeeession March Ist, 1869.
M. THOMAS & SONS Auctioneers.
rat 4,21 139 and 141 Beath Fourth 'street/
ithAt. hoTATE.—TI.IO6IAS do SONS' SALE—
Very Valuable Four-story Brick Factory, No. 848
" North Fourth street, between Brown and Poplar
streets. ton Tuesday, November 24, 1868, at 12 o'clock,
noon, will be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia Br
change, all that brick building, part four and two-story
high, containing a steam•engine and boiler, and lot of
ground, situate on the west side of Fourth street, between
Brown and reeler streets. No. 848; containing in front on
Fourth street 35 feet 1 inch, and extending in dop.h 120
feet, including on the north aide a 3 feet wide alley.
two-story brick stable, old two-story brick
house. dm.
Subject to a yearly ground rent of $lBO
Si. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers.
12.0 and 141 South Fourth street.
REAL ESTATE—THOMAS & SONS' SALE.- , -
E" Very desirable 230 story Brick Dwelling, No. 3262
Richmond street, corner of Aell street. tiridesburg.
Lot 70 feet front, 200 feet deep to Salmon street; three
fronts. On Tueso ay, Nov. 14th, 1868„ at 12 o'clock., noon,
.witl,be.kold,At.public sale, at the,Phihdelplits Exchange,
all that 2,1 story brick (roigh coat) itiewiftts - 0' add Tete!
ground, situate on the west side of Richmond street,
north corner of Ash street, Bridesburg. Phila... No. 1252;
the lot containing in front on Richmond street 70 feet,
and extending in depth along Ash street 200 foot to Sal
mon street. The home contains 8 rooms; has gas and
cooking-range, good pump water ill the yard, writer pipes
laid on Richmond and on Ash streot.
Terme-831,600 may remain en mortgage.
M. THOMAS & SONS. Aizetioneem
nol4 21 139 and 141 South Fourth street
r2l. PEALE M I'TORY SALE.—THOMAS & SO Net,
Auctioneers.—Three.ston Brick Store and Dwelling
' No. 1236 Girard avenue. Ou Tuesday November 24,
1668, at 12 &their. noon, wilt be sold at public sale, without
tent eve, et the Plalkdelptua Exchange, all that three
tory brick store And dwelling, with three-story back
buildings and lot of ground, situate on the south side of
Girard avenue. 20 feet east of Ontario street. No. 1336;
the lot containing in front on Girard avenue 16 feet, and
extending. in depth 69 feet to a 3 feet wide alley leading
wet tward into flutsrlostt eel., with the free use of said
envy, The house has the modern conveniences; gas,
bath, hot and cold water, water closet, saloon parlor,
marl) e mantels, cooling range, ,Ite.
ho above is well located and te a good business stand.
luttnediale possession. to ay be examined any time
previt us to Bale. on application to the occupant of the
de (thing.
Term e- $5,000 may remain on re ortg age.
litlr" Clear of all incumbrance.
bale absolute.
M. THOMAS & SONS, Auctioneers,
139 and 141-douth Fourth street.
EPFLEMPTORY SALE —IIIOIIAS k SONS. At (I
flouter& - Thrce•htory brick Heaidence, No. 226
Washington Square, below Locust street—On 'New
day. 'November 24,1868 at 12 o'clock, noon. will be sold
t t public tale. without reserve. at the Philadelphia 1.4.
change. a 1 that three-itory brick tumult:Le, wit t wo
et ory buck building and lot of ground, situate on the west
de of Wathington equate. 51 feet 1031 south of
.I.ocret sti cot. No. 226: the lot containing in fro tun
arhinitton squire 23 feet 1% inches. and extending in
depth cal the 'meth line 143 feet, and on the north lhie IT4
feet 3 inches; then narro ing to the width of hi feet 4
iuchet, ; then extruding still thriller in depth Moot 1056
incbes to a 9 feet. wide alley leading into _Locust street,
with the free MU and :die& go of said alley Under and
BOP et to certain reetrictionq as to building on Mild lot.
Sole abeam e, Platt at the Auction ttooms.
TIIOMAB tts SONS. Auctioneer&
Nos. 139 and 141 S. Fourth street.
E., REAL ESTATE—THOHAB t 80t48 , BALE.
Nq Large and valuable lot, Forty-see aid street, south
"of t,hertnutetreet. Wort Phliadelohi‘. On Tuee
day, December I, 16t.11, at 12 o'clock. noon. will
be sold at public sale, at the Philadelphia' F.x.
change.. all that larre and- -:valuable lot of
ground, situate on the west side of FortY•second street.
120 feet south of chestnut street. West Philadelphia; con
taining In front on Forty-second street 100 feet 2 inches.
and extending in depth on the north line 153 feet
inChee, and on the south lino 151 feet 30 , 4 n jnch. Boum
ded south by Bannom street. •
Subject to a r. deomoblo yearly gumind rent of 03281
Terms-86,1.00 may remain on mortgage.
• M. THOMAS & SONS, nctitnears.
BM ;aid 141 South Fou th street.
n 014,91.28
BrAL,EBTATF:„„rn.ovue, & ROMP
Modern three story brick Residence, with side yard,
NO. 412' Wallace street,- west of .Twenty , Second
street. On Tuesday, .December , lit, .1868, at 12 o'clock,
noon, will be sold at,public, sale, at the Philadelphia tEx
change: all that modern three brick malamute, with
two story double backbuildine and lot of ground,
situate on the eolith , elde of Wallace tartlet, west of
Twenty second etreet;Noi92l2; the lot containing_ in front
on!Wallace street 19. feet (including side yard or 9 feet)..
and extending in depth 68 feet. Una the modem conyeni.
ntr - , Clear of all Inctintbrince.'
Immediate possession., •
Tcrule-6i3,689 may remain on mortsage. ' •
~.
M TUOMAR Ar. SONti; Auctioneers.
139 and 141 South Fourth etreet.
,D 0149144213
REAL ESTATE SALES.
drhallreass:l3 t'l.ll.6lderkillir 0.4.15eu TWJatika
ga sons, Auctioneers. On Tuesday, 'December Ist,
" IPA3B, at Id o'clock noon. will ba solo at public sale.
without reserve,- at the Philadelphia , Earshangerthe , fol.
lowing described property. viz: ho 1 Lot Everetratreet.
MI thatlot of ground. eituate tattoo south side of Everett
streol. in the city of Philadelphia, at the distance of 60
'feet east of. Thirteenth street: contemns in front on said.
'Everett street el feetatul extending in depth oath's 'east
line thereof 72 feet 11% inches.. and on the west line
thereof al feet 8)f, Inches. •
va aCel.l5 . 1.1......
14 b. 2—All that lot of ground commencing, at a . point 60
feet east of 1 lorteenth street , and 60 feet n orth .of Cara
penter atreet: thence outwardly on a nine' pars/lel with
• Carp - enter etreet,ls feet ti.izt Mehra; and of that widthcoa
tinuingriorthwardly on the east line thereof:s7 feet.'B Bt.
chez, and on tbo west line thereof 57 feet 834 inch u.
_.
.'
he. 3.-i-Tbree•etory brick dwelling, .1 hirteenthisteeet, ,
north'of Carpenter street; all that lot of groarl43Vith the
three.story brick messusge thereon erected; attest!, on the
east side of Thirteenth !street., 137 feet 8 indica nertWof
Carpenter street: containing in front on said fl, bi
street 15 feet. be the same more or loaf, and , eaten int
depth 57 feet- Together with the privilege of ; at t4 t l .. ~
hitreA ,
feet wide on rear. , ' . , -.
N. B.—Nos. 1 and 3 will be geld sribject to thertnpaid re._ -
aideo of, a mortgage, given by -Robert - Selfridge. to= ex. ,
ender B. Carver, recorded in Mortgage Book A. D 8., N 0.5 ~ page IA die.'
' Ati: 'I II OMAS & SON.% Auctioneers, , *
nol4 21 ' 28 -1 139 and 141 South Fourth otreet:
EXECUTORS` PEREMPTORY. SALE.- 4 ESTATB
of . Thon2as Woodwa, d, deceased. Tho man & Bons.
Auctioneers, Very valuable Wharf and large. Lot.
river Schuylkill and Mfil Creek, Twenty.wentit Ward.
near the Darby Read.' 10956 feet front, 551, feet deep'. 'On
Tuesday,,December 8,1888, at 12. o'clock, noon, will- bo
sold at public sale, without reserve, at the Philadelphia
EXChange, all that large and valuable lot of • ground (ad.
joining No. 8, oh a plan which be seen at the auction
rooms), and.exteudlng lit depth (measuring from -No. 8)
518 eet 4 Inches to the wharf on the. Schuylkill, and
extending in front along , the wharf line 1. 2 feet 61nches
to Mil I Creek. end thence along the .creek the-several
courses thereof 584 feet to No. 8. The juiprovernenta aro
a substantial new wharf fronting. On the SchaylkilL _lt
will be told subject to certain restrictions AndeXcentionr.
which will be made known on applicattorrto the auction
1128f"The above property is well ,adapted e Uri. business
eers. . .„
purposes, It laving such extensive frOngen 1 Creek
and the river Schuylkill. It will be sold according- to a
survey made by James Miller. September, 1865.
FErtiale absolute.
By order of BRENTON .T WOOODWARD,
GARRETT WOODWARD, 1 Executor,.
JOSEPH JAMES.
JOSEPH J. SIARTIB,
THOMAS & SONS, Aucti
189 and 141 South Fo t
121 014 21,03.
PUBLIC SALE—THOMAS es .130 NB. AUCTION
.O eery. Large Large and' valuable Tract,. Ill? acres, Darby
and Cheeter,Twmpike. Delaware county, Pennsylva
nia. 630 miles from Market etreet bridge, 3 mile of Clif
ton station on Media ,Railroad,... On,-Tuesday, December
lek - 186k - at-ISro , clockixtotthotinbeaoht-at public sale. - at
the Philadelphia Exchange. all that :vent desirable and
valuable tract of land. comprising 107 acres situate within
the limit's of the incorporated, borough of Darby,„Dela
were county, Pennsylvania, 854 miles from Market
bridge, several hundred feet front on Darby and Cheater
turnpike and on Clifton avenue (which is laid out) 60 feet
in width, ar.d leads from the piketo Clifton 'station on
Media Raßroaa; about onelourth of tile lattMa covered
with forest trece. It is surrounded , by country seats of L
Meson. Measra. Carpenters. -VP. Jackson, Mr. Longetreth.
Judge Andrews and others. The situation is very desira
ble ; commander a beautiful others.,
of the surrounding coun
try; very valuable for a public institution, park, country
seat or cemetery. Further particulars may be had on ap
plication to James R. Cummins,,„„No. 8d ;South rrenth
street.
M. THOMAS SONS. Auctioneers,
19 and 141 South Faurthetreet.
nol4 21 V 3
es t PknEMPI Oltv SALE OF .v ?'''
REAL ESTATE AND PEReONAL ;
• PROPEL TY. ON MONDAY,
November V. 1868. at the reit:deuce of 'S. Small; on
Oak lane, near Oak limo Station. N. L.R. , R.. the Farm
and Country Seat known, as Maple Shade, containing 24
acres of land.with a modernbuilt Pointed Stone Man-
Ace. containing 14 large rooms, spa: ions Halls mid 'Piaz
zas, 'surrounded by trees and evergreens; occupying
'an elevated m sition commanding a tine r taw of the sur
rounding country. There is also a, large Harr( with
Stabling for nine Hones, Carriege.bouse. Granary,' and
'stone Ice.house, , 'Well of tine Water, 'Bnd ,, abund
ance of small 1 raft. Ab 30,2 two-story Cottages on the north
Bide of Oak lane, five rooms each, a good well of water
and a halLacre of ' ground. Also `,4 acre* adjoining'.the
above. The pereonal property Consists of d valuable
horses (0110 a Patchen Stallion), all - blooded animals and
fast trotters, kind and 800 family horses, 'one 'pair can
trot in 145 doable (pedigree at sale); 5 superior Howl', 6
Heifere and other stock; 1 Phaeton andB light carrisges
in good order, Farm Wagon,Uart. and all the j.mplements
• n ece ssamt,,te.cultivate the harms also `Ho ueehold Furni
ture, including a fine Pier; Mirror all of the beet.natity.
Sale positively to commence at 12 o'clock A: -A. S.
BM ALL,. • .• nol4 18 ar
ISPECIAIi NOTIVES
IMPORTANT . I.ETTER.—THIS ISTO , IN
form the citizens of. Philadelphia that . I. 'am no
longer connected with the 'Colton: Dental:Assoclation.
of this city as their operator. . , .
Pomona wishing their teeth extracted 'absolutely with
out pain, by Nitrous Oxide Gas, will find me In nay new
office 10:7 WALN • OT street.
nolht - .
:R. ~THOMAS.
&or COLORADO GOLD MINING COMPANY - OE"
Philadelphia. A special meeting of titockholders
of tide • Company will be held at..the oftice, No; 506
Walnut street, on Thoraday, Decomher 3, 1E68; at 6
o'clock P. M.
A prompt and fall attendance isrequested. ,
By order of the Board of Directors.
n 016160 JOELN W. ELASELTINE; Seeretary; I
__OFFICE OF 'IRE MOUNT CAUBON 'UM&
RUM) colurANY.
PUILADEVPIIIA. Nov., leen.
The Annual Meeting of, the Stockholders of this Com
pany, and an Election for a President and'eight Mana
gers. will be hold.at No. 316 WALNUT etreeti . on MON
DAY, the 7th day of December neat, at 12 o'clock M.
• WILLIAM ROB 1: SO
Secretary.
nol4 t deE4
Ie'PHILADELPHIA; NOVEMBER* ..12th. : Ml—
Notice is hereby given that an inattantent Of Ten
Cents per share on each and every share of the - eapitai
stock of the GIRARD MINING COMPANY, of Michigan,
has been called in, payable on_or.before. the 28th day_of
November. 1868, at the office of the Company N 0.824 al
nut street, Philadelphia.
By order of the Directont.v-' ' ' •• '
non/2PS IL A. HOOPES. Treasurer.
DIVIDEND NOTICES.
mar GIRARD F. AND AL INSURANCE 'COMPANY,
OFFICE. N. B. CORNER -CHESTNUT. •AND
SEVENTH fi TEETS. ,
Prnr.sy)ra.vitra. November 10.1861
DIVIDEND NO. SL
The Directors of, this Company declared tiDiiidend en
the 9th instant. of Five Dollars per Share l ont of the
earnings Of the lastbiz months, and ordered t paidlo the
Stools holders, ;eithout deduction for taxes. on ' and af,or
this date. ALFRED S. (MLLE).
nolO-tu th a ita • • Tretuntrer.
tor. A DIVIDEND OF Tu'ENTE CENT/V PER.
share will be paid by the He etournlei Mantua and
Fairmount lailroad Company,. free of state Tax., on and
after December let, next, at tha Otlice of' the Company..
No, MI South Front enter.' Mahler Books will be •
dolled Nov. lath. and reopen Deeemberlith:
CHARLES P. HASTINGS,
ThEAS:I3II.EIt.
no fr ea6tq
le. PENNSYLVANIA. RAILROAD COMPANY.—
Taxesuttan's Llgrearamrr.
Itar.knammta.,_Nov. 2d, 1868.3
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDE.ttEI. ,
The Boarcrof-Directcre have this day declared a Semi
annual Dividend of FIVE. PER. CENT. oh the capital'
stock of the Company. clear of National and State taxes.
pay able in cast, on and after Nov. 30..1869.
Blank ' , aware of Attorney for collecting Dividends can
be had at the OffiCll of the OomPany. N0..238 South Third.
street. ,
The Office will be Opened at BA. M. and cloged at 4
P. M.. from Nov. 80 to Dec. sth, forth° payment of Div
idends, and after that date from 9 A. M. to 8.. P. M.
no33otb THOMAS T. F:Limi, Treagnrer.
!LEGAL Atokaion.
T EWERS OF ADMINISTRATION UPON THE ES
-14/ tutdoi, WILLIAM- B.:MAtx()Lff,_deceased,having.
be. n qranted to tl.e undersigned, by the Reglad* of Wills
of Philadelphia. all persons indebted to said Estate are
rt quested to make payment, and thoso having claims or
demands against it to make' known the saute without
delay, to IibNRY ORMSBY,Adminhtrator, N 0.908 No th
Eighth street. r hiiadel r hfa. no2ls
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE . CITY AND
L Countv of Philadelphia.—Estate-of --JAMES- DUR
KIN, deceased,—The Auditor appointed by the Court to
andit,settle and adjust the account of Eitt &STUB PO
SON, Administrator of tho estato of JAMES DURKIN,
deceased, and to report distribution of tho - balance In the
hands of the said accounttmt, will meet tho parties inter
ested for the purpose of his appointment, on WEDNES
DAY,bovember, 26,1868, at 4 o'clock. P. M.. at the Office,
of EIIASTLS POULSON, Esq.. No. 816 Walnut street, in
the city of Philadelphia, GEORGE T. DEIaS,
nnis.s su thLtj , Auditor.
N m it DISTRICT COURT Oh' THE—UNITED
1 States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania—ln
Bankruptcy:—At Philadelphia. June 9th, 1888 The un
dereigue d beret y gives notice of his appointrrient as
A asianee of .10 N HARI MAN, Jr. Ondivi malty and as
a member of the late firm of Hobart A. Smith,Adam G.
I.eckel & Co.), al rhiladelphia, fu the county of Phila
delphia and State of Pennsylvania, within said District.
who has been adjudged a bankrupt uponhis Omit petition
by the said Dieuict Court -
WM. VOGDES, Assignee,
128 South Sixth street.
r ',editors of said bankrupt. . , nol4 ea*
TIi.A.VM.E.IO 7 ViViE,
WAUELPIIIA,WELNINGTON
/7, - .'4 , -eniY.t.,V,o AND BALTIMORR RAILROAD—
' ' TIME TABLE.—Commencing _Mon
day, Nov. 23d, MSS. Trains will leave Dopet, corner of
Broad street and Washington avenue, followai
morn
Train; at e.£lo A. M. (RundAyn - excePted), tor
Baltimore, stop t'l gat all renlar dation& Conn
with Delaw are Itrilroad at Wilmington for Cried=
intermediate etat one
Express train at 13.00 Rl. (iundaya oacepied) ifor Balti
more and Waelungton, stopping at Wilmington. Pe
vine and Havre- de•Grace. Connects at Wilmingtonwith
train for - New turtle. •
Express' Train at 4.00 P . M. Olundays exeoptedkfor
timote, and Waehington, stoPpingat Chester,;-TeerloW.
Linwood. Claymont, Wilmington.NOWPOrnAtlintol3. NOW.
nrk, Elktomh ortheaetCharlestown,'Perryville,Bavre-des-
Orace, Aberdeen, Perryman s..' Edgewood.- Magnolia.
Chase's and Rterumer's Run. ~• •
Night Expiate at 11.80 P. M. (daily) tor idaltimore and
Wallington, stopping at Cheater. Thurlow. 'Linwood.
Claymont, Wilmington . Newark. Elkton. Northeast,
Perryville and liavre.de•Grace.
Passengers for Fortress Menree and Norfolk will take
the 19.00 Af Train.• • ,
Wilmington Tras, .stoPPinit at ell etetioluitinet
Philadelphia and Wnmington:
• lAave . Philadelphia at 11.00 A. M. Silk 7.0 e
P. M. The 6,00 P. M.. train connects with the Delaware
Railroad for Barrington and intermediate station.
Leave Wilminnton 7.00 and aio A. M. and 1.804.115 and
7.e0 M. The SAGA; M. Vain:will net lion between
(theatter and . Philadelphia. , The , 7,oo:P. ,c ,lsi:rTridn from
Wilmington. run*, ell ' 400pp:iodation
Traits nundays exceptea, . •
From Baltimore to Philadelibbi..4enyelltaithnore
Waldetil; 0.85 EI
-BUNDAY#TRAI • PRODI DA.T4'ool6ll.;•; , teave
amore at 7. P. X.. stopping. , at oliCFert7rtian'a.
Aberdeen, avre Ide Grate. .Porry7olB,_Vnersaalown•
North-easL blimps/4! Stanton. Newport, Wil
mington, Craymont4 Linwood. and Cheater; •
Tbroulthr=litallnalata`Weentiontn, and Southwest
may p a tleketnillon.,lotiChears trea o lnder
Continental hinty l liere mho statieltne lind Bertha in
filee c tiars c ril amine thr“ 4167 .
at mug ti e a tassoffleaearikeVitsaiLst.3 o=l.
at their residence by the Union Tranmer ,
_
IGNV TUMMY PRUNES LANDMQ . Op FORUM
a
LN by J. 1, BUM= 00.108 kklutOPOWltre cub
oneers,
arth street.