Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, December 10, 1868, Image 2

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    NEW PUBLIWATIONS.
'Under the Willows, and other Poems. By,
James Russell Lowell. Fields, - Osgood &
Co. On sale at Turner's, late Pitcher's.
The present volume is mule. up, with the
exception of two pieces, Of contributions to
periodicals and poems published with other
collections. Werecognize such old friends
fui "The firpt snoW-J'all,", and "Row looks
Appledore in a storm ?", The collection,
covering the working' period of the . poet's
entire maturity, shows him under every
mood—now scholarly to the very verge of the
pedantic, now racing among the June hies-
SOMS like a country boy. Poems of nature,
perhaps, axe in the majority; and'
if :we were asked what •gives the
compilation its prevailing tone,we should say
that it'was the poet's peculiar fashion of look
ing. at '4AV:if-doors. Lowell is penetrated,
thrilled; often elevated, by the most exquisite
sense of nature; yet, for his misfortune, .he
: never is quite at home therei the' reader feels
throughout the scholar, the man of books,
-the,man of in-doors; ono sees that his lyric
'guide is pale,lhat his gait is a little 'cramped
by the. Academic fauteuil, that his voice
misses the reverberation of the library walls.
in;the following extract, for instance, exqui
- elle as it is, one scents the literary man, one
cattiothelp - thinkinghow - Burns - would have
turned the same thought:
"Mt& is a pions fraud of the almanac,
A gbastly parody of reallipring
Shaped out of snow and breathed with eastern
wind;
Or if, o'er-confident. site trust the date,
' Aiad, with her handful of anemones,
Herself as shivery, steal into the sun,
The season need but turn his hourglass round,
And winter suddenly, like crazy Lear,
heels back, and brings the dead May in his arms, t
Her budding breasts and wan tlislastred front
With frosty streaksand_drifts_of his white beard
All overblown. Then, warmly walild with
While b my wood-tit l e supplies
ooks,
the sun's defect,
Whispering oldforest-sagas in its dreams,
.1 take my May down from the happy shelf
Where perch the world's rare song-birds in a
row,
Waiting my choice to open with full breast,
And beg an alms of spring -time. ne'er denied
indoors by vernal Chaucer, whose fresh woods
Throb thick with merle and mavis all the year."
Here again, as it strikes us, we have nature
spoiled and hurta little by the self-conscious
tees of the historian and pundit:
'9Jpon these elm-arched solitudes
No hum of neighbor toil intrudes;
The only hammer that I hear
Is Wielded by the woodpecker,
The single noisy calling his
In ell our leaf-hid Sybaris;
The good old time, close-hidden here,
Persists, a loyal cavalier,
While Roundheads prim, with point of fox.
Probe wainscot-chink and empty box;
Here no hoarse-voiced iconoclast
I
Myself too prone the axe to Wield,
I touch the silver side of the shield
With lance reversed, and challenge peace,
A willing converrof the trees."
Lowell as a' nature-poet is at his best just
in proportion aslaeforgets all this Puritan pa
rade; and the followiiik ektracrit3 admirable
for that reason; the only trouble about it is
that the philosopher is too clever in reason
ing out the why and how of the sentiment he
so exquisitely perceives:
"Once, upon a rock's brown bosom,
Bright as a thorny cactus-blossom,
I saw a butterfly at rest;
Then first of both I felt the beauty;
The airy wldm i the7grim-set duty,
Each from the other took its beat.
"Clearer it grew than winter sky
That Nature still had reasons why;
And, shifting sudden as a breeze,
My fancy found no.satisfaction,
No antithetic sweet attraction,
_Bo great as in, the Nomades.
"Beythians, with Nature not at strife
Light Arabs of our complex life,
They build no houses, plant no mills
To utilize Time's sliding river,
Content that it llow waste forever,.
If they, like it, may have their wills.
"An hour they pitch their shifting tents
In thoughts, and feelings, and events,
Beneath the palm-trees, on the grass,
They sing, they dance, make love, and chatter,
Vex the grim temples with their clatter,
And make Troth's fount their ittoking-glass."
A welcome part of the volume is that in which
.are.printed in succession M.r. Lowell's very
earnest and heart-full contributions to the
lyric history of the war; —not, of course, the
Biglow papers,which form a tithe of peculiar
folk "all by themselves," but such noble
songs as "The Washing of the Shroud,"
"Memorim Positum," and the patriotic lines
called "On Board the '76," and written for
Mr. Bryant's seventieth birthday.
When the Atlantic was a new breath and
a new force•in the land; when its pages were
much more fastidious than now, a stanza in
cluded in these poems was accepted by
thoughtful critics as one of the most profound,
most honey-sweet of the utterances of West
em poesy; in its singular completeness, ma
turity and air of ennui; it seemed more likely
to have been poured forth from the window
of some old historic hotel or palazzd, to run
down with the tide of some storied river used
to be stained with the blood of con
tending races, than here in a new
land, by the fresh Charles, from the heir of a
springing nation; it was a little poem called
"Happiness;" it almost alarmed people by
what we called its maturity, by its experience
in fatigue, so odd and apparently uncalled-for;
time passed, and the small, wise verse was
found clipped and set into a longer poem.
This poem, this "Ode to Happiness,"polished
and finished to the last degree, is the final
expression of the poet Lowell, atter all his
Biglow Papers and Fables tor Critics,—and
is found as the central jewel in the present
reliquary.
"Among the Hills," and other Poems. By
Whittier. Published by Field, Osgood &
Co., on sale at Turner's, late Pitcher's.
It is needless at this day to sound the
praises of the Quaker poet. Not Beato An
gelico, working away at the laces of saints
and sainted men in his Florence cloister,
kept his soul more virginal from the spot of
the world, or infused into the visages of his
creations an air of more unconscious purity.
Of- these stainless types are the heroes of
"Bearcamp Water," with which our volume
opens;—a brave young farmer, nobleman of
the fresh New England field: a city maid,
who has brought from the haunts of Men all
their refining influences without a taint 01
their corruption: when two such souls unite,
their life is a poem—and who but Whittier i 3
fine enough to catch and seize it?
Other poems are added, the harvest of a few
meditative months; until the golden ears blend
into a sheaf. Everything is gentle, refinedly
nnitzlc, pure enough for an angel to linger by.
All who wish to surround themselves with
refining influences, will care to add Bless
bars of liquid muds, to their collections,
The nublisners aye, by exquisite printing
w d tti e addition df three or four harmless
Me engravings, given an entity and a hal.-
mony to these poems which they hardly seem
to have if we merely turn over our old 'At
lantica for them.
;From among the seasonable publications of
the solid publishing tondo Of p. 'Appleton ez,
Co.,Nve select the following for notice.' Messrs.
Appleton's books may be found in this oity
on the shelves of Claxton, Repsen and Haf
felfinger : ,
AZ pleton's Juvenile Manual for 1869 is
a collection of stories, adventures; fables and
legends, obtained from all sorts of sources,
illustrated with brilliant and spirited engra
vings, printed On toned paper, and gilt and
stamped in the style of a decoratiie holiday
book. It is a large 'duodecimo, and its four
hundred pages compose a labyrinth of hair
breadth napes, wonders and perils. These
stories have the advantage or disadvantage of
being scrupulously authentic, and—we hope
the statement will not scare away any of our
„
young iriends—of embodying a vast deal of
practical information about the habits of Ilea.;
ven's creatures.
Their edition of Prof. Alexander 13ain's
"Mental Science" is solid and neat, suitable
for students in the higher class of seminaries.
The Scotch professor condenses into a man
ageable volume a systematic exposition of
Mind, together with a historical portion
devotee to the retrospector - the • greit ques
tions which have agitated the schools of
Mental' Philosophy. Not avoiding these_
vexed disputes, he lends a new clearness to
old theories of Nominalism' and Realism, the
Origin of Knowledge in the mind, Free-will
and External Perception. The easy, popu
lar style and ready enthusiasm which lend so
much charm to the critical studies of the
Aberdeen professor are visible, throughout
the book,-and give a grateful fluency to these
more solid lueubrations.
An exquisite spirit, detained for but too
short a time on earth, was Alice Neal; whom
her little friends loved to call Cousin Alice.
At once witty and good, she could 'entertain
without planting a sting; and her satirical
writings, of which she became morbidly
ashamed before she died, contain the seeds of
an exquisite-honor and a generous. morality.
Her children having desired to see their
mother's fictitious sketches made up into a
collection, the compilation has, been put by
the Messrs. Appleton into the hands of a ju
dicious editor, acting with the assistance of
Miss Neal's early patron and counsellor, Mr.
L. A. Godey. The volume is plain, work-a
day, and thoroughly companionable.
Ellsworth's Bookkeeping, as published by
Appleton, contains the rules of the science in
rnirable---ertery-and . -
densed, with an Introduction , which ably
elucidates the philosophy of the science.
Saintine'e exquisite blossom of Picelola
has always thriven well on American soil.
Printed from carefully-edited proofs, with all
the elegance proper to Hachette or Didot,
and introduced by an interesting essay on
Life in State Prisons, the faultless French
edition of Appleton & Co. will be almost a
necessity to lovers of the purist. literature of
Paris.
Appleton's standard editions, not easily
matched for neatness and bon marche, are
advancing. The Dickens (made up of the
attractive plum—pudding pamphlets bound to
gether in a rich blue cover with medallions),
has a very classic look, and the price—only
$1 75—is a surprise. The last volume—
very dense, yet not too heavy for the-hand,—
contains, with a number of the original illus
trations, the whole of the long novels of Our
Mutual Friend and Little Dorrit, together
with the delightful essays reprinted from Mr.
Dickens's periodical.
Messrs. Appleton's pamphlet issue of Mar
ryatt, also, c has every element of popularity.
It will be completed in twelve volumes, of
which the sixth, Japhet, is now ready.
Below is a group of books, all marked by
the spirit of selection and refinement which
we look for when that scholarly Boston
house, the Roberts Brothers, commit them
selves to a publication:
"Miss Lily's Voyage Round the World."
Boston : Roberts Brothers. Miss Lily,a kind
of Donna Qu?jotte of seven years, together
with Master Paul, Master Toto and little
Peter, saturate themselves with Robinson
Crime, Cook's Voyages and the Swiss
Robinsons. They then become uneasy with
an interior press of the chivalric spirit, and
determine to conquer new worlds. They
journey round the globe, and get as far as the
woods, where they meet a white cow, who
proves her' savage disposition and barbaric
hauteur by avoiding them anxiously. After
combating any quantity of windmills they
come into the realms of the Ogre,whose mere
human semblance is that of a wandering
artist; ho tyranically 'drags them hcnne o tO
mamma, who is irrationally prepared to die
with joy at the return of her brave adven
turers.
This light little story ripples like an impor t
taut young rivulet among a series of
forty-eight large chocolate-colored engravings
after the Strasbourg artist Frolich, which are
big enough and conspicuous enough(to over
ride the text completely; children will appre
ciate this delicious preponderance of the icing
over the cake,the fine•arts over the literature.
The book is a pretty large, huard, flat
edition de luxe, with a most tempting holi
day air. Miss Luyster's translation preserves
the evanescent aroma of the original French
(by "Elie Sanvage"), in which this graceful
trifle was written.—Sold in Philadelphia by
Duffield Ashmead.
"Happy Thoughts." By F. C. Barnand.
Boston. Roberts Brothers. Whether Brit.:
ish Humor is decaying or not is a question
we are happy to leave to those who are too
old and wise to laugh. Howe'er it be, w
believe Mr. Bernand's contributions are ad
mitted to have been the best haul made by
Punch since the - - adolescent writings of
Thackeray. Last summer we extracted and
smiled over some detached " Happy
'Thoughts" with the readers of this column.
We now welcome the complete series, in the,
shape of one of Roberts Brothers' "Handy
Volumes." Mr. Burnand's philosophy;—as
the nsicinum of it remains in the mind after
you have done shaking your sides—is that
everybody is petty, cowardly, clumsy, base,
secret, mean and prone to contreleinps. His
hook is the very Ecclesiastes of minor vices.
The expression and lifelike movement of his
sketches is, at the same time, in pen- portrait
tire what Leech's studies were in pencilling.
—For sale by Duffield Ashmead.
Roberts' Brothers have issued in a delicate
little,,volume the "Rural Poems" of Willianai
Barnes, an — English writes of bucolics WhO
Pi_ DAILY EVENING. BULLETINLPHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBERIO;IB6B.
has secured the warm admiration of the very
bestoEnglish critics; such as the reviewers of.
the Spectator, Athenceirni; Mall and
Saturday. Mr. Barnes ',paints nature with
the loving detail of a pulst, White his realism
never degenerates into hardnesS: • his origi- ,
nality gives an exquisite piquancy to what
ever he says, while never,.tempting him into
anything, that is not classical and chastened in
style. If' a middle-age illuminator, inter
lining his tender botany-.; ameng tbe pious
thoughts of a Book of Hours, Could be meta
morphosed into a modern poet, he would
reveal that peculiar preservatien of a cloistrAl
purity and, delicacy which is the attraction of
these fresh thoughts; or if Cowper, keeping
all his priceless air of introversion and, rural
privacy, could have been* .madea a contem
porary writer, subject to but' not'overcome
by the thousand pressures of our. uneasy age,
he might have produced something as dewy
and cool. We like these Remus' greatly our
selves, and are mire' the public will learn to
like them too.—On sale at turner's, late
Pitcher's.
"Tablets," by A. "Bronson Alcott, is a
handful of essays, of a refinement of culture
that is only too rare in this country and in
this age. - Mr. Alcotßias learned to examine
his thoughts narrowly and express them with
accuracyLto_digest hinwide_reading and har
monize hits ctinclusinns. Ment - il - refinement
•and moral refinement lend their seal to every
Dnerof - these fine papers. We recommend
them with it cordiality that we can hardly ex
press in our necessarily short notice of the
book.
"Little Women, Meg, Jo, Beth and
Airy," is a very pleasant story in which the
heroes are children..
_We have found it very
good juvenilereading, and for once in it the
small people - talk childishly. - - The writer,
Louisa X Akar, - deSerMs, at; - a" - Christmas
tribute, a whole world of little hearts to love
her for writing so exactly down to theii'com
prehension; while - many a parent will pick up
the volume half on the sly, and find himself
committed to its perusal by an involuntary
laugh of enjoyment. Some very feminine it
by May Alcott are bound up with
the work. Sold by J. B. Lippincott & Co.
Duffield Ashmead publishes, as an uncom
monly elegant (and rather costly) Christmas
trifle, the little religious poem "Nothing but
Leaves," in a series of chromo-lithographed
tablets, bound together, and each_ containing
a stanza of the lyric surrounded with rich
and heavy colored borders by the tasteful
illuminator Jean Lee. The figure of the Leaf,
which is at the centre of the poem, has been
.:41-by-the-artiat-o4 the rulingspirir—oLher_
designs, which all represent some variety of
foliage, apparently studied as a general thing
after nature. This is a luxurious decoration
for holiday centre-tables.
The novels of Messieurs Erckmann and
Chatrain (writing in partnership on the
French plan) are about to have a 'tworld-wide,
instead of a Parisian, celebrity. The 41 rk
power and Poe-like detail in the "Con
script" were appreciated as a new sensation
by novel-readers „in England and this cot n
try, while the touches" of humpr by wh eh
the miserable histery - was - relieved gave a
zest to a jaded public. "Madame Theri se'
is another historical novel, now just issued by
Scribner & Co., and destined, we think, to
secure a whole populac2 of admirers. The
fact that it has attracted the interest of s' re
spectable an essayist as Colonel Higginson,
who prefaces it with a very lively biographi
cal sketch of the twin 'authors, is an earnest of
its intrinsic value. It is handsomely issued,
with the illdstrations by Riou, the accom
plished French designer, by Scribner S.:, Cr.
For sale by Claxton, Remsen astral
finger.
The essays, which proved so stimulating,
so provocative and so widely attractive in'
Hours at Some, of Rev. R ,race Bushpril,
have been collected in a volume by Scribner
under the title c of "The Moral Uses of Dark
Things." Their perpetual suggestiveness and
frequent profundity imprison the attention of
whoever lights upon them. The moralizing
of the day, which seemed to be going to
wrack under the perilous assistance of well
meaning weaklings, receives an immense
succor from this good man and energetic
thinlier. We do not wish to inflict on so
good a book a degrading monotony of praise,
but we will copy, that the reader may taste
for himself, a passage or two in which we
think the reverend philosopher is at his best.
In the essay on plague and pestilence• occurs
the following argument:
"It is s most important use of great pestilences
that they enforce, with an energy so terrible,the
convietion•of the unity of the race,and especially
that they compel the higher and more privileged
ranks of mankind to own their oneness of life
with the humbler and more degraded or even
savage classes. It is a most remarkable fact that
as the Asiatic cholera, so called, toolt,its birth in
the remote East,aniong a most degraded and de
cayed family of the race, so all the great pesti
lences of history , bad their rise In Ceina,
Egypt, Africa, or among some other
people of the globe,run down by heathendom and
its vices. Here, among the mine of BM, whore
race has been reduced in quality by along course
of physical and moral corruption,by savage pas
sions,by indolence,filth,falsehood,oppression,fear
and licentiousness—just here, I say, when we are
beginning to doubt whether a type of humanity
so low can be properly called human, there is
generated the virus of some death that !s to deso
late the world. First we hoar of it in the distance
of a half circumference of the globe; thou that it,
is marching on through kingdom after kingdoui
till, finally, it reaches the highest points of
civilization, filling cities and palaces with death
and terror * Lnd so the highest rauki
of character and cultivation are seen to be one
family with barbarians and savages. *
We cannot escape•tbe dark fraternity of woe in
which they claim us, for there is no other anti
separate world to which we can retire. We an
abut up with them to breathe the miasma of their
sin, and die with such kind of deaths as they
may propagate. * This terrible brother
hood, this oneness of organic order and fate sig
nified by the word humanity!—what an appeal
does it make to us for the gospeling of these
barbarous and decayed nations!"
Ilere is his admirable picture of the man
who has learned to bridle his moods, and to
acquire the habit of balance and self-control;
it is from the paper on "Insanity."
"Now a wise man is one who understands him
self well enough to make duo allowance for such
insane moods and varieties, never concluding
that a thing is thus or thus because just now it
bears that look; waiting often to see what asleep
or a walk, or a cool revision, or perhaps a con
siderable turn of repentance will do. Ho does
not slash upon a subject or a man, from the point
of a just now rising temper. Ho maintains a
noble candor, by waiting sometimes fora gentler
spirit, and a better sense of truth. Ho is never
intolerant of other men's judgments, because he
is 'a little distrustful of his own. He restrains the
dislikes of prejudice,.because he has a prejudice
against his dislikes. His resentments aro
softened by his condemnations of himself. His
depressions do not crush him, because.; ho has
sometimee seen the sun, and believes it may ap
pear, again. ..He revises his opinions readily, be
cause ho has a right, he thinks, to better opin
ions, Übe can find them. He holds' fast sound
opinions, lest his moodiness in change should
take all truth away. And if his insane thinking
eptiears to be toppling him doirt•,., the ',,golfs of
Ekepticlam, be recovers himself byjust raising the
question - , whether a r maTril sane way or thinking
/eight not think differently:2 Amen who is duly
aware thus of his own distempered faculty,
&life how diffarout from one who acts as :if ho
were infallible, Tit - A, haffnothing to do bat just
to let himself be ' pr eliciunced
Other conspicuously original ' essays are
those on Bad Government, on Oblivion, on
Dead• History, on Solidarity, on Things Un
sightly, on the Bea, on'Distinctions of Color.
The philosopher's sturdy optimism, among
all these depressing considerations,—"from
seeming evil still educing" hope—,-is what'we
like especially, about him.' ,The papers are
sixteen in all, and we commend them, in the
guise of moral necessities, to scholars aud,to
those who are only students.--Sold by Clax
ton, Rernsen & Haffelfmger.
The second weekly number of Zell's
Popular Encyclopedia and Universal
_Dictionary begins with the word Abro
tanum and ends with AcidOcation; • there‘
are eleven neat little -- engravings, in seven*
pages; the idea of the work,—to combine the
features of both dictionary and • encyclopedia
—is surely • an expellent and pcipular one; the
definitions are very full, and often swell into,
the proOortions of small essays, _while con
centration is evidently aimed at; the , staff of
editors appear to be careful and intelligenL
The weekly tax on - anyunbseriber - COuly - ten7
cents) is so ridiculously small that we do not
think any one who gives his attention to the
prospectus can avoid sending his address to.
Mr. Zell—Whose subscription and publishing
office is at 17 South Sixth street.
,The "Pair Times," printed by Ringwalt 45'
,Brown, and devoted to the interest of the.
Home Fair, now in progress at Horticultural'
Hall,is a very neatly printed quarter sheet,and'
issues a suitable - selection - of - light -matter.
NEVIT USIC•
We receive the following piano-music,
recently published by Mr. Reed Meyer, No.
722 Arch street, to wit: by the publisher,
Mr. Reed Meyer, a "Parade March," and
"Roselawn Galop;"—by Herman Heinze, a
March, "The Chieftain's Return," a "Mat
inee Galop; "The Day Dream," a fathasie;
and a polka-mazurka, "Fire Flyr—by .A.
11. Rosewig, "Review Grand March," and
a ballad, (words by B. W. Lacey), "You ask
me if I'll danstant Prove;"—by R. J. E.,
"Mount Pleasant Polka Mazurka"—and three
Souvenirs from Offenbach, by M. Reed,
"La Belle Helene," "Grande Dnchesse," and
"Barba Bleue."
NEVI PUBLICATIONS.
OPENING
OF
Pictures, Fancy Goods Books and
Stationery,
AT
MRS. J. HAMILTON THOMAS,
1344 . Chestnut Street.
de2
DEPOSITORY OF Tat. PENNSYLVANIA BIBLE
SOI IEIY.
CORNER uF WALNUT AND SIWENTH STREEYS,
431 - ,_b,:t.,P l IA
A largo assortment of BIBLES and TESTAMENTS.
publtibed by the AMERICAN BIBLE SOCIEry and
Britieb and Foreign Bible Boci.ty , foe sale at low priced.
No other booths sold. delhatrp•
min BECONT NUMBER OF /.ELL'S
UYCLOrEDIA rEDIA &NO UNTV DICTIONARY
ready TO-PAY, December IU. Tho third number i in
prtes. and ready neat week. Sent upon receipt of ten
cente each number.
T. ELLWOOD ZELL, Publisher,
Noe. 17 and 19 SOUTH biXTII event.
Jt: ST PUDLISUED.—"SEIAKESPELCIti. O 3 SON N EPS,
with Counuentioice," by Titre. D. Bitdd. Price 75
eerier. Stroll quarto: Dever cover. JOHN (JAMPttELL.
740 &Intern Eine t. . ip
CHILDREN'S BOOKS; LONDON EDITIONS.—THE,
extraordinary advancement in the manufacture of
Books for Children is thown la the books published with
in the last two years in Loudon, and to be had in great
profusion At
BA ZARD'S. No. 7112 RANSOM CITEdItT.
The artistic deadens. decently printed in colomin large
sized pictures, with bold figteres,make them not only very
ttrective, but very improving.
Dere you will see in almost endless variety,and at lower
picot than much inferior American editions, books for
all ewes, from Baby and Toy Book, sn linen, and unteer
ble, up to the young master's Books of Adventure or
Sports, ,or the young miss's interesting Story or Fairy
'I ale.
An early inspection of this attractive keel le invited,
while the areortment Ls complete and full attention can
be g iven.
UST READV--RINGIIAM'S LATIN GRAMMAR—
efi New Edition —A Grammar of the Latin Language for
Ito nee of Sehoole. With exerciee3 and yoeabulariee by
bilam Bingham, A. M., Superintendent of the Bingham
'1 he Publishers take pleasure in announcing to Teachers
and friends of Education generally. that the now edition
of the above work is now reedy, and they invite a careful
examination of the same, and a comparison with other
. works on the KUM subject. Cookie will be furnished to
Teachers and kkuperintendents of Schools for this purpose
at low rates.
Price $1 ge.
Published by " E. H. BUTLER. At CO..
En eolith Fourth street.
Philadelphia.
And for sale by Booksellers generally. au2l.
T ELTURF ti.—A NEW COURSE OF LECTURYIS, AS
delivered nt the Now York IM nseum of Anatomy, em.
hi acing the suojects • liow,to live and what to live for;
Youth, Maturity and old • age ; Manhood generally re
f lowed ; the cause of indigestion, flatulence and Nervous
Diseases accounted for. PockervOlumes containing these
lectures will be forwarded to parties unable to attend on
t ecoipt of four stamps, by addressing J. J. Dyer, 25 School
street. Roston.
felBll4
COLA AND WOOL.
PATENT FUEL!
The Hous ekeepers' 'Friend and the
Cooks' Delight.
PURe, ANTHRACITE COAL,
Positively free from Slate. Bone, Rock, Dirt or Clinker.
Quickly ignited and durables turning with a cheerful
flame and to a fine pink ash, leaving nothing in the aels
pan to riddle. For years past inventive gentile has been
directed toward, the utilization of the immense waste
h ea p, in our Anthracite Coal Region, which is really the
purest Coal, and which is now manufactured by curious
and powerful machinery hit° a most conveniont form for
tho use of consumers of CoaL A trial will won convince
you that the PATEnT Pun. is truly a boon and blessing.
Orders received and pl oncptly filled itt the office of the
SOLE AGENT,
•
T. M. MITCHELL,
134 south Third Street.
de3 lmS
CEDEIS CREEK LEHIGH COAL.
PLAISTED & MoCOLLIN
No. 8038 CHESTNUT Street. West Philadelphia.
8010 Retail Agents for (Joao Brothers dr Co.'s celebrated
Cross Creek Lehigh Coal, from the Buck Mountain Vein.
This (Mal is particularly adapted for making Steam for
Sugar and Malt Houses. Breweries, &c. It is also unsay.
passed as a Fatally Coal.---. Orders left at the office of 'the
Miners, No. 841 WALNUT Street (let floor), will receive
our 'Tempt attention. Liberal arrangements made with
manufacturers using a regular quantlt • . • ylB tf
B. MASON 1INI:13, JOIIN P. BLIP.A.PP.
frilE UNIMESIONED INVITE ATTENTION TO
1 their stock of
Spring Mountain, Lehigh and Locust Mountain Coal,
which, with the preparation given by us, we think can
not be excelled by any other Coal
Odic°, Franklin Institute Building. N 0.15 S. Seventh
str } eet. • - BLNES
muff Arch street wharf. schitylkill.
ICEIROVALE.
D EMOVAL.—TII E LONG EETABLISIIED DEPOT
Itfor the purchase and rale of second band doors,
voin4olls. store fixtures, sc., from eleventh street to Sixth
street, above Oxford, whore such articles arc for sate in
great variety.
Also new deers, sashes, shutters, Sc.
NATHAN W. ELLIS.
GI.ASSW AIIIIE.
D yorrvimig GLASBWORMB
IN PULL BLAST.
And manufacture earboya with or without boxes:
Demijohns covered wish wilinw.or ratan; Wice• Bottles
a ll eise,s; Porter,. bottles, Allneral„Wator bottles, and
druggist's bottles of ovary description:' '
11. A, at G. VV.. BENNER'S.
del lm• 27.150utis runt street.
• THE' GREAT
;
ACIFIC''RAILROAD
- -receiving ihe aid and etiperilsbm Of the Deveininent,
and - carried forward by the extraordinary resources and
energy Of the powerful Corso - anoint to whom it wag
trusted—is rapidly approsching completion, and it to info
to say that PiliLAjoybeklie. AND BAN eItANCISUO
. WILL BE COIN NY TE!) BY RAIL BY THE
POUILTH' OF .JULY NEXT.
More than two-thirds of the Through Lino and Brat:whet'
between the Mieeouri River and the Pacific Ocean are
comtructcd, at a coet of nearly
ONE II'UNDRED !MILLIONS,
And the remainder le being pushed forward with un
pat elided vigor. -
"7 he bueinees of 'the eintral Pacific Railroad for the
month of Julyiaet was a* f,,llows, let oot.u:
Orme harninge, • • Operating Expenses. - Not Earnings.
$2,69,620 E. 9 680.852 12 $179.210 11
'lhis result was upon lee, than 200 miles opened for
businees. with insufficient rolling eMek. and was derived
from legitimate commercial business' tally—being alto
gether independent of the transportation of the immense
amounts of men, subsistence. and materials required for
grading, and extending the Artier nearly. one hundred
mike eastward during the elute period. , •
The under:dip:led offer, for pale, and, retcOntinend to in.
waiters the " - •
First Illortgoge 30. Year Gold Floods
CENTRAL , PACIFIC R. - :R. CO
bearing six per cent. per minim interest, both principal
and interest payable in •"UNITED BTATEB GOLD
COIN.n Theo bonds are the tint lion upon one of tho
most productive and valuable railroad lines in the world
—a line which will be flubbed within twelve menthe,and
• which la already earidafr, after paying operating ex
penses. more than twice the annual charge of its Bonded
About 3.01!0 000 of the Bonds have been taken in
Europe where ditty aro well liked:
limited
A mited amount will be disposed of at
-10311B:IMINfrACURUIDINTERFSI'MURREICY
. The 'Bonds are of BLOW each, with senatannual gold
copper is attached, payable in July' and January.
We receive all cleans of Government bonds at theicfull
mar Itel. reles,in exchange to , the Clentral Pacifle Ra il road
bonds. this enabling the holder, to realize from 5 CU tO
Flit CENT. PROWV end keep thOPrinelP l ll of their iti•
vestments etinally secure.• , •
Orders and Inatihies will receive prompt attention. In.
formation. Dereriptive Pamphlets. &e.. giving a full ac
count of the Organization Progrees. Business and eres.
peens of the Entenrire, furnished on application. Ronde
ecnt by return Express at our cost. •
, i ,
,y • •,-
• , 1 •,. ,• _ _ ,_ j
~7 ....; i
_ E.,._:. .: . 4-- ii-,4
Dealers in Comment Stages, Gold
No.. 40 S. Third St.
nol9ll
BA:I.TKING 'BOCISt
de
- '
• -
112 and kl 4 80.
- DEA,Latlnfil
IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
We will receive applications for Policiesof Life
Insurance in the new National Life Insurance
Contnany,of the United Btatea, Fullinfonnation
given at our office. • ,
ITII :'/ANDOIIII'
rd
-
13114 WERs
Dealers in all Government Securities,
HAVE IMMOVED
To Tai;
OLD " LEDGER " BUILDING,
S. W, corm Third and Chestnut Streets.
Having a private telegraph wire direct to our New York
office, we have always the latest New York quotations of
ROCKS, HIM and GOLD. Orden for the game are promptly
executed,
111118 OF MILS NGE drawn on London, Pair, Frankfort,
&e., &c., and LEITERS OF CREDIP hued available throughout
Europe. 1 ' '
SMITH. RANDOLPH & CO.,
Corner Third and Chestnut.
ifIIBCEY.LA iEOIJ .
~
, 1
. . -
STAR
c,z
- ..
SPRI.NG,
SARATOGA, N EWNORIt.
The analysis proven thatthe waters of the
SARATOGA STAR SPRINGS
have a much larger amount of solid subatance, richer in
medical ingredients than any other spring in Saratoga,
and shows what the taste indlcateinamelyythat Ms the
Strongest Wat er.
It also demonetratee that the STAR WATER contain.,
100 Cubic holies-More of Gas •
in a gallon than any other spring. It Is this extra amount
of gas that impart., to this water Its peculiarly spark ling
appearance, and renders it so very agreeable,to the taste,
It also tends to preserve the delicious flavor of the wate'
when bottled, and cameo it to uncork with an et:fervor
tame almost equal to Champagne.,
Bold by the leading Druggists and Hotels through
out the country.
JOHN WYETH & BRO,,
1412 Walnut Street, Philada.
Wholesale Agents.
del-tu the IvrPIS
*3O Per Week.
ANTI-WINDOW RATTLER,
The Greatest Invention of the Age.
Any active man ont of employ oan make $5O per week
with the above useful and verynortable eatent. •
The attention of Carpenters, Milldam Mechanics and
all others is invited to this really valuable Invention.
Call on the General Agent,
0. P. ROSE,
Zro: 727 JELYN - E1 Street,
Between Karket and Chestnut, Philadelphia.
By enclosing 50 Cents and, two, stamps samples will be
sent by mail deb to th 3n4
p ITltkrA
NTOUNG MEN AND . BOYS' ENGLISH, CLASSICAL,
I Mathematical tied Scientific Institute, 1208 MOUNT
VYRNON street. Instruction thorough. Preparation
for bueineme or college. _
.Rey. JAMES G. SELENN_, A. M.,
deb•tu th e 260 Principal.
CBEGARAY INSTITUTE ENGLISH, AND FRENCH
FOR YOUNG LADIES.
BOARDING. AND DAY PUPILS,
1621 and 1629 SPRUCE Street,
Philadelphia, Penna.
Will RE-OPEN on MONDAY, Sept. Md.
MADAME D'HERVILLY has the pletu3ure of annonno.
ing that DR. ROBERT B. LABBERTON will devote him
time exclusively to the Chogaray Institute.
French in , the language of the family and In constantly
epoken in the Inetitute. lelge to th 8m
1 OEM IL FOX. BE D
ey 611 tiouth Fifteenth street,
will give instructions in French and German, at any
wane desired. to gentlemen wishing a knowledge of theeo
longue gee t with a view to Hui npadienl. prob.:l4in. This
is a desirable opportunity.!' , ' • nontfir
litllo CS, ABID-Sitims:
VRNEST BOPP. '"' ,
. 114 • NO. 230 NORTH NINTH STREET,
llao on hand a Ripply of
Oentlemenhy Bocite and Shops.
of the fibeAt• quality of leather and'work (natality; alai)
made to order. de2•2ml
FALL opercarkida.._.
CHOICE
MILLINERY GOODS.
S. A. & I). STERN,
ir3llo A A.
84316-tu th Shit -=' Sums.
TUE EINE . AVM'.
614 ARCH. STREET • 614
LOOKING GLASSES,
PICTURE FRAMES
01L.:.9►t107`,11.?t:,
C Hit 0 AlO
la Great Vtaitty,
At tae Very Lowest Pobsible Pikes.
OW EN & SH
614 ARCH STREET_
It is an acknowledged fact by all who exorable our
quality of work and scale of prices. that we rot up the
"BEST" work for the "LEAST' , amount of money of any
Ilona In the city of Philadelphia.
toirgaremnen, allifitrea . :4l24 allo•
- • .
ty, l 4 4 l:iS & Co
IMMO:1M )f!..,` A 1,1:1t6 JIMELEItii. •
iv,,,Tcurs:, ilrl'le.l.lß :410' 4Z
WATOICE3 3.711 ,TF,741.11:,7 AEPAIRED.
8 02 Ch0.41:..-At st..
Watches of the Root Makers.
Diamond and_Other Jewo
Of the latest style&
Solid Silver and Plated Ware,
Etc.. DM
SMALL STUDS EDI; EYELET ISIOLESs
A. lama einortment !us received. with a variety Q 9
settbsm
Wfll. B. WARNS & Co n
;.`' Wholeeale.Deabrs in
WATCHES a.ND 3 LfIWEIARY,
11. IL corner Ceventh and Chestnut Farces,
And bin of No. ES South bird soseot
&c•
EX'~~A~.~
FINE FURNITURE.
Lidest Dedgne•-•Superlor !flake and Fintsb.
A. & -IL LEJAMBRE,
French Cabinet Makers & Upholsterers,
No. 1455 Chestnut Street,
' PIIILADELPIILI.
del-tu th int*
GIBLCMUIEEF.I34S. LiQVOlfite t ass: •
FRESH MILS- AND PRESER,VES.
Bunch, Layer, Seedless end Sultana
Raisins, Currants, Citron, Oranges,
Pam, Figs &0., &e.
Every description of Groceries suitable for tire lioEtlsys,
ALBERT C. ROBERTS
Corner Eleventh end Vino Btreetat
Patented September 8, 1868
Boston and Philadel phia
SALT FISH COMPANY-
~,f*reer
to,
7 k
7 41- AF7O(
DESICC&TED COD MB FOR PUBIS EBB.
OND POUND EQUAL TO FOUR, POUNDS EAU tlsfl. ,
Warranted to keep in any climate for an y , number of
gre.thir Greato peoat2i'mhgettilllnte'aranglt decay. and
sample cases 24 and 98 pound. each.
Bold by all Grocera, and manufactured by the
Boston and Philadelphia 114di Fish Company,
LEDGER PLACE, rear of No. 52 North SECONDSt.,phdada.
nol9 eom 6m•
'DI RENEW CHOCOLATE. -COCOA AND BROidA.
A manufactured by Josiah Web
KNI Co.. for Ba
(X) le
by C. GHT dr. ..
Agento for tbe Manufactures.
8. E. cor. Water aed Cheotnut ate.
VOW LUNCH--DEVILED ,lIANG TONGUE. AND
Lobster, PotteLpeet Tgngne Anchovy Paste end
Lobster .at C01.1131A 0 8 EasVED.d urocery, No,llB South
Second ;street
./VrMESS SHAD. TONGUES AND SOUNDS-IN
titts. put up. expressly for family we, in *coo emai for
wale at OLI
OESTY , S Earl I:J . ld Grocery. No. ns South So
cond street.
'MEW PRESERVED GINGER IN SYRUP AND Day.
AA of the celebrated Chyloong
_Brand, fur sale at
COUSTIPS East End Grocery. No. US South Soma
street.
NEW GREEN GINGER. PRIME AND GOOD ORDER,
at OuIUBTY , B East End Groom'. No. 118 Santa E ea.
and street.
PAPER BIIELL ALMONDS--NEW CROP PELNCESa
Paper Shed Almonds—Finest Dehecia Dorado Crown
Raisins, NOW Pecan , Nuta, Watanta and Filberts., at
COUBTY'S East Rnd Grocery Btore, No. US Sonib
Second street
POC T BOOM;
:!_D i) I) Ice
II It C 2 II I :, :III:
II
- .Boat quality Hair Matttesses,
Bed.
Extra quality Goose Feathers for sale.
Binh Mattresses with hair tope.
Ilusk'Mattressea and Straw
Beet quality , Spring Mattresses made to order..
Tucker's Springs And Howe's Lola.
Bedsteads in groatvariety.
Suits of Walnut and Cottage Furniture,
Dining. Chamber and Kitchen Chaim.
• • •
Bureaus,
Chairs, •
• and Bedsteads for children
COMFORT 4 TILES,
BLANKETS
• . AND t6OLINTERRANI3.3.
The above goods and many other altvaye on band and
made to order by ULI allt.ltd FL Clatill34
5c4.5.1m, " No. 11 :Sort') I.leven.tit Erred.
RIDAN,
Balaton; •
- and ElHowe.
1 TALICORAPHIO SILIMMILKT.
! Glut Z. B. VANCE has been elected Grand Mas
iter of the Masons of North. Carolina. •
TuE AnnUal Council of the North - , Carolinao
Friends of Tedperance is in session at Raleigh.
Tins Townsend block, in Syracuse, N. Y., was
damaged by fire yesterday. Loss $35,000.
AT Chicago, yesterday periling, the ther
snometer marked zero.
Bonn Chicago speculators are enjoying a cor
ner in pork, and lard.
'Tim Gettysburg Cemetery Association met in
Washington yesterday.
1, • Tun Academy
of - Letters and Fide Arts was or
, panized in New York on Tuesday night. J.
Lotbrop Motley was chosen lirosident.
GIiiNERAL itIBANT had it ma6niflcent recect i itin at
the residence of Marshall . Roberts, New
York, last evening.
Tun death, sentence of Christian Gorlies, Of
Buffalo, has been commuted to Imprisonment for
THE loss by the buriling of Bailey's hat factOry,
at Newburyport, Mass., is $80,000; insurance,
$30,000.
Yu.srEttney the Supreme Court of the United
; States was further engaged in hearing the legal
, tender cases.
- A nitloK stable iri-New:rork wow blown down
by the high wind yesterday. A boy was killed
by the falling walls.
Is South Carolina the Legislature has elected a
colored man to be Register of idesne Conveyance
for Charleston county.
THE Commissioner of Emigration at San Fran
' ciseo has sued the Pacific Mall Company for, vio
' latton of the Passenger act. He lays the penalties
at $5,000,000.
Grotog P. BANTON, late cashier of the COM
mental Bank of Brunswick, - Canada; was
arrested In Brooklyn. yesterday, oa the charge
of embezzling the funds of the bank to the
amount of-elOO,OOO. - He was-Imprisoned• -In`ds
fault of ball.
I k 4 411 4JII hf : 1) 4ti ('1
EIZIES.
Ilse Continent and. Winding: Seas of
the Planet Ilars-11. World Unlike
Ours.
'[From the Baton Jonnisi I ' _
The/planet Mara is the only object in the
whole heavens which is.known to exhibit tea ,
tures similar to those •of our, own earth, and
the acctimulated explorations and discoveries
of astronomers during the last two hundred
years have resulted in the construction of a
globe representing the characteristics of this
planet as astronomers believe them to exist.
At a recent meeting of the Astronomical So
ciety of England, a globe of Mars was ex
hibited, on which , lands and seas were de
picted as upon an ordinary terrestrial globe.
By far the larg er portion of these lands and
seas were lai ddown as well known entities,
respecting which no more doubt is
felt among astronomers than is felt by
geographers concerning the oceans of our
own gl obe . An interesting description of
this glo be appears in .F'razer'B Magazine.
To the lands and seas, .developed in the
planet, are applied the names of those astron
omers whoae researches have added to our
knowledge on the subject. Each pole of
Mars, it seems, is capped. with Ace, which
varies in extent according to the progress of
the seasons. Around each cap is a polar sea,
the northern sea being termed the Schroter
Bea; the southern, Phillips Sea. The aqua
tarifa regions of Mars are mainly occupied by
extensive continents, four in number, and
named Dawes Continent, Hadley Continent,
Beechi Continent, Herschel I (Sir W.) Conti.
Lent. Between Dawes and Herschel
Continents flows a sea shaped
Bee an hour-glass, called Kaiser Sea, the
large southern ocean out of which it lbws be
ing denominated Dawes Ocean. Between
'Medley and Dawes continents flows Dawes
Svelte, connecting a large southern ocean
and a northern sea, named after Tycho.
Herschel continent is separated from Secchi
continent by Higgins. _inlet, flowing trom a
tarp southern sea, teamed Maraldi Sea. In
like manner Bessel inlet,flowing out of Airey
Bea (a northern sea) separates the Nadler and
'&ezhi continents. Dawes Ocean Is separa
ted into four large seas, and large, tracts of
bad lie between, but whether they are
islanda or not is sot` certain. In Delarue
Ocean there is a small island, which presents
so , bright and glittering WI aspect as to aug
ge, st the probability of its being usually snow
covered. These seas, separated , by lands of
doubtful extent, reach from Delarue Ocean
to the South Pole.
One of the most singular.features of Mars
is the prevalence of long and winding inlets
and bottle-necked seas. These features are
wholly distinct from 'anything on our earth.
For instance, Higgins inlet is a long, forked
Stream, extenditirg for about three thousand
miles. Bessel inlet is nearly as long, and
Nesmith ' \st still more remarkable in its
form. On r earth, the oceans are three
times as cite • e as the continents. On
Mars, a very d c • rent arrangement prevails.
In the first place,
there is little disparity be
tween the extent of oceans and continents,
and then these are mixed up in the mast
complex manner. A. traveler by either land
or water, can visit almost every quarter of
the planet without leaving the element in
'which he began his journeyings. If he'
chooses to go by water he could journey for
upward of thirty thousand miles, always in
eight of land—generally with land on both
Sides—in such intricate labrynthine fashion
are the land and seas of Mars intertwined.
Anecdotes of Epicures.
One of the Most"heartless things ever done
was a trick once played on Pope, the epi
curean actor. A. wicked man asked him to
dine oil a small turbot and a boiled aitchbone
of beef, apologizing for the humble fare,
with the usual feigned humility of friends.
"Why, it's the very thing I like," said
Pope, in his reply, referring to the aitchbone.
"I will come, my son, with all the pleasure
in life."
He_came„he_saw, he ate; ate till he grew
nearer the table, and could eat no more. He
bad just laid down his knife and fork, like a
soldier tired of war's alarms, when ;a bell was
rung, and in came a smoking haunch of veni
son. Pope saw the trick at once; he cast a
look of bitter reproach upon his friend, trifled
with a large slice, then again dropped his
now useless weapons, and burst into hysteri
.cal and unrestrainable tears.
"A friend of twenty years' standing," he
sobbed. "and to be deceived in this matter!"
One of the greatest vexations to a true epi
cure is to see the obtuse blunderings of an
ignoramus, who does not • knoW what he is
eating.
A dinner was given to Lord. Cheiterfield
on his quitting the office of Master of the
Buckhounds, at the Clarendon. Thirty per
sons sat down. II was ordered by Count
d'Orsay, an epicure of the highest taste, and
the price was six guineas a head. dinner
got up at the . Albion, under the auspices of
g.dir William Curtis, cost the party between
thirty and forty pounds apiece; but then,
special messengers had been sent to West
phalia to choose hams. Lord Southampton
once gave a dinner at the Albion at ten guin.eas
a head.
Curious Letter from Dumas.
Alexandre Dumas, Senior, has published
the following letter in a Havre journal:
"To the Editor: One of your writers is
anxious to know why I have preferred stay
ing on. the second floor of the Hotel Washing
ton to inhabiting the charming palace of
Chiatamone, given to we by Garibaldi, by,
virtue of a decree inserted in the Monitore
of the 7th of September, 1860; for service
done for the Italian cause. You may well
ask me'also why I spent 65,000 francs in that
campaign, instead of - investing them in the
funds. To these two questions I will reply
that I tore up the decree which gave me the
palace—that is to say, 400,000 franc's
—because I 'considered it baneath me
to receive pay for 'anything I had done for.
Italy. As to the 65,000 ihe.ca with whiCh
left ParbstheY vi6re'doBfried Prit My share
of a general vengeance in which I had a pri
vate:Vengeance to ,satisfy..-Ferdinand.l. of
Naples AMPrisoned my father at 'Brindisi . .
You know the words hi the Bible, the sins of
the fathers shall visit the children even to the
third and fourth generation. I did my part
towards making the.sin ef Ferdinand visit his
grandson. and I paid,without regret, the main
of £2,600 for the pleasure of seeing the throne
of the Bourbons of Naples crumble before my
eyes. In a word; sir, lam not in the palace,
because I never OW , where I do not consider
myself at homePaud I stay on the second
floor of the Hotel Washington because I pay ,
any way with the money I earn,givia:g,by my
presence alone, a standing to the hotel, which
it never had until I crossed its threshold.
"A. DUMAS."
nonannoo Writing for the uormons.
' Mom the Montina Gazette.] '
Unless some gifted 'saint will vrite roman
ces in which the 'hero can make love to a
whOle platoon of, fair Mormons at once, it
would seem ,that romances of ail, despriptions
must be included in the index expurgato
rim; of the new Tabernacle. What a vista
of greatnead - thisldea opens to romantic
and poetical Mornioti. ground'.' of
vantage he wotild have over = common novel
ists. They are confined to one heroine; he
might have it dozen. „They can only describe
the perfections of one beauty; he might revel
in the delineation of every type and style of
beauty of which an artist could dream: They
are confined to one sweet thrilling de
lineallonot.love; he might tluill-us-throngh
a dozen chapters, as his 'hero tendered WS'
undivided heart to a dozen or morejvarying
his.sentiments to stilt theiriemperaments,and
his praises to accommodate their different
oomplexivnts, and all the degreea „..of .
form' ' from the plump 'beauty
with a merry face, to the scraggy
beauty with a sentimental air. Then, as to
the plot, how much more, intricate and.
highly sensational it can, be made, when the
hero has a different rivalfor every fair object
of his affection. How all the , schemes,, and
counter- schemes , - eplisOdetti can
be worked up and mixed, in, till even Wilkie
Collins, or his most inveterate readers, could
not give a gtuiss - as - to "how it watt' coming
out." But ail these pale before the interest
with which he could invest the finale. Im
agine a denouement when the virtuous hero,
and his loves, having worked out their de
liverance from the evils that beset them, the
machinations of the wicked and the enmity of
rivals, have arrived at that point where vice
is punished and virtue rewarded. This troop
of blushing brides,each and severally attended
by a half-dozen blushing bridesmaids, shall,
like the seven women in the scriptures, re
cently quoted by our Saltlake cotemporary,
lay "hold of one man," and claim him as
their own, their only Augustus. Then the
hero and his , dozen brides are made one by
the Reverend Latter Day Bishop, and two
dozen father-in -laws bless him, and two
dozen mother-in-laws smile at him through
their tam. , - Here, fortwuttelyter the writer
the moat apPreVed rules of - lltition_will allow
the novelistio drop the curtain;.nor have we
any desire to follow the development further,
content to permit the happy man to regulate
his dotuestic institutions to suit himself.
We are perfectly-impartial In the matter,
and only throw out these ideas for the benefit
of reformers on the one hand, and on ,the _
other, as a Mat to W. W. Phelp% Mr. Lyon,:
or whatever erudite and.tune fu l gentleman
that' may be, at this present writing, the
Pixtt Laureate and Novelist in Ordinary - .of
his moat serene and comfortable highness,
Brigham Young.
A RTNERSHIP DISSOLVED.
Thepartnembip heretofore existing_ under the firm
of ROOP , KIBBE CO is this day - dissolved' by the
deaM of SAMUEL W. HOOP. The busineas will be
edited by the surviving partnere at Nos. 24 and 26 Bank
street.
JOSEPH C. ROOF'.
_ - Executor efSamuel W. Roop.
HENRY R. EIBBP,_
CLINTON .1. TROUT.
JOSEPH C. HOOP.
WILLI* 1.1 COLLADY. '
Surviving Partnere.
PUIL*DELPIIIk. December 1.1868.
PARTNERSHIP FORMED.
The undetsigned hereby give notice that they have
lesrmed a limited partnership, under the provisions of the
act of Assembly, entitled 'Au act relative to special pub
Ismaili," approved March 91.1838, and the supplements
thereto, the terms of which are the following. viz.:
1. The name of the firm under which such partnership
is to be conducted is KIBBE. (X)LLADAti ROUT.
The general nature of the business intended to be
transacted is a general Dry Goode Importing and Com
mission beakless.
3. The GenemlPartntms - are - HENRY R. KIBBE. re.
atthe Girard House, in the City of Philadelphia ;
WILLIAM Y. COLLADAN . residing at No. 1329 North
Broad Street, in tne same city. andt:LINTON J TRUU
residing at No. 749 North Nineteenth Street, in the same
city : and the bpecial Partner is JOSEPH C. ROOF'. resid
ing at No. 20e6 Wallace Street. m the said city of Phila
delphia.
4. The amount of capital contributed to the' common
stock by mad Special Partner is t ifty Thousand (830.0 0 :0)
Dollars in cub.
5 The said partnership is to commence on the first day
of December. A. D• 181,18, and is to terminate on the first
day of January. A. D.. 1871.
HENRY R. KIBBE.
WILLIAM Y. CoLLADAY.
CLINTON J. TROUT,
General Partners.
JOSEPH C. HOOP,
Special Partner.
des Imat
ENSIIII,AACTJEs
MILE COUNTY FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY—OF
fIee, No. ilo Booth Fourth street, below Chestnut
' The Fire insurance Company of the County of Phila.
jnevporated by the Legislature of Pettru3ylva.
uis in JIM for indemnity against loss or damage by fire.
exclusively.
CHARTER PERPETUAL
This old and reliable institutioMisith ample capital and
contingent fund carefully invested, continues to insure
buildings, furniture, merchandise, dm., either permanent
is or for a limited time,against lose or damage by fire, at
the lowest rates consistent with the absolute safety of its
•customers.
Loans adjusted and paid with all possible despatch.
DIRECTORS:
Ara l
Chas. J. Satter. Andrew EL Miller,
Henry_ Budd, *James N, ?Stone.
John orn. Edwin L. Reakirt ,
Joseph Moore • Robert V. Massey, Jr..
George Meat.; - - - Mark Devine.
CH 8 J. BUTTER, President..
BRhItY BUDD. Vice President.
BENJAMIN E. HOECKLEY. Secretary and Treasurer
el
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF
el Philadelphia-OMo% No. 24 North Fifth street, near
Market street ... .
Incrorperated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania: - Char
ter perpetual. Capital and Assets. $166.000. Blake hon.
muse against Loss or damage by Fire on Public or Private
Buildings, Furniture, Stocks. Goods and Merchandise, on
favorable terms.
DIRECTORS.
Win. McDaniel, s Edward P. Moyer.
Israel Peterson, - Frederick Ladner,
John F. SaLsterling, Arians J. Glasz,•
Henry Troennu3r, Henry Delany,
Jacob Sclumdein„ IJohn Ernott,_
Frederick Dolt Christian D. Frick.
Samuel Miller, William D. George E. E. Fort,
WILLIAM fdoDANIEL. President
ISRAEL PETERSON, Vice President.
Pais' E. COLMLILN. Secretary and Treaeurer.
HtE NIX INSURANCE COM ANY
AF PHILADELPHIA.
INCORPORATED 1804—CHARTER pERTETUAL.
No. 224 WALNUT Street, opposite the - E•rehange.
This Company insures from Losses or damage by
FIRE,
on liberai terms on buildings, merchandise. furniture,
&c., for limited periods, and Permanently on_ buildings
by , deposit or premium.
.T, he Company has been in active operation for more
than sixty ears , during which all Mena have , been
promptly adjusted and paid. •
DIRECTORI3:
Lewis. John L. Hodge, David L
M. B. hlahony, Benjamin Etting.
John T. LewisThos. H. YOWOrB.
Wm. S. Grant, A. R. McHenry.
Robert W. Learning, Edmond (Alamo%
D. Clark Wharton, Samuel Wilcox
Lawrence Lewis. Jr.., Louis C. Nonls;
JOHN It. WUCLIEREE, President.
SAMITEL WILCOX. Secretary. •
A NTHRACITE INSURANCE COMPANE.—CHAR-
Jon- TER PERPETUAL.
Ellice, No. 311 WALNUT street, above Third. Phila.
'Who insure against Loss or Damage by Fire on Build
ings, either perpetually or fora limited time. !leasehold
Furniture and MerchancUse generallv. •
Also, Marine Insurance on ,Vessels. Cargoes and
Freights. Inland Insurance to all parts of the Union.
DIitECTORtI.
Wm. Esher, Peter Sieger.
1). Luther J. E. Baum,
Lewis Audenriod, Wm. F. Dean.
John R. Biakh3ton. • John Ketcham.
Davis reateon. John B.
ESHER. President.
F. DEAN, Vice Preildent.•
ja22.tu.th.a,tf
Wit. M. SMITIL Secretary.
A BILIIICAN VLRE INSURANCE COMPANY. INEIO/1-
.LI. porated 1810.--Cbarter, perpetual.
No. WALNUT street, above Third Philadelphia.
Caving a large paid-up Capital,. Stock. and Surplus hi
vested in sound and available Securities. continue to in.
Mae ou `
nye stores, furniture , 'merchandise, veneele
inmort,and their cargoes. and other pereonat property.
All lanes liberally and fromot i ll ad lui husted. -1,, •
Thomas It Edmund 6. nutim.
John Welsh - , Medea W. PouLtnaY..
Pstrick Brat. lerael Morrie., --
4ohnT. Less .• William John P. Wetherill.
. Paul.
',MONA R
ZULIMUT GALlitirOitiot§4crettly, l'reddent
THE DAILY EVEN.ING 13IILLETIN--- :I - 4
I
INSITR,ANCE ,COMPANY.
_ •
The following statement of the affairs of the Vompany
lo Published in conformity with a pnwidon of Rochester.
PREMIUMS RECEIVED
From November ist. MI : to 043: 45.205 ber US.
Ott Marine and Inland Risks 5M3.506 74 '
On Fire Risks
Premiums on Policies not marked
off November 1. 1867............ . — 400.845 71
PREMIUMS MARKED OFF -
Ai earned from Nov. 1.1867. to Oct. 314868.
On Marine and. inland Blake. ...$7 77
On Fire Mao— ..... ...... 148.817
Interest during the game peijod_--- d 991.993 49
Salvages. &c 101.493 Pd
5L808.421 81
LOSSES, EXPENSES, &C..
During the year iss above.
Marine and Inland Navigation
Um" ' ' 5424,05214 , ~ -
Fire Lessee 73.485 87 '
Retina Premiums 69.141 02
Ite.lusurances.... ..... ...... 16.108 61
..liermr — Obarges, - - Advertisinc —
Printing. dm 60.68863
Taxes—United States, State and
Municipal Taxea.. ........ 43.555 82 • , , ,
Eiperiaes. .... - 23.908 66
111230.000 United States Five Per Cent. Loan.
13238,500 00
120.000 Vatted litaitiri Siz 4or Cent Loan.
1881. . . 110,800 00
50,000 United States .
(for Pacific Railroad) _ . 1 . .,....:50.000 00
230.000 State of Pennsylvania. dix Per
Cent: Loan.. ' 211,875 00
125,000 Citr of Yhtlsdefphfa Biz Per Celia'
Loan (exempt from Tax) 123,594 00
50.000 State of hew Jersey Six tor Cont.
Loan.. .. suceoo
2000 i iiiiii
gage Six Per Cent. Bondi.-- . %MO 00
Z. 400 Pennkylvania Railroad Second
Mortgage Six Per Cent Bonds.. 24.000 00
25.000 Weiteru Fennsylviuria Railroad _
Mortgage Starer ()ant. Bonds
(Penna. RR. guarantee)...- . 2105 03
Lo
30.000 State ofan. lennearee Five Per Veit.
•
7,000 state of iii _
• Loan.. i . . 5,081 25"
18,000 Germantosinaliabo - inPani.
pal Priad
and interest guaranteed by
tire I,lly .01 khihdelphia, 303
shares mock 15.000 00
10,003 Pennutranni - Railioad ompany.
nalo shams stock. 11,800 00
5,000 horth_Pennsylvania Railroad Com-
3.505
co
Parry. 100 shares stock
23,0)0 Philadelphia and Southern Mail
Stetimship Company, 80 shares
stock. . . . 15,000 al
207,903 Loans on .... Mortgage, Bret
Bens on City Propertiee 207,900 00
--
$1.14900 Par. Market Value, $1,130.825 25
Cost. 5L093,604
Real Estate ... 86MM oa
sins itecetr;:iiii far lnenraneea
made . 322.486 94
Balancea due at Agencies
miums on Marine
_ d
Policies-Re.
g u ee thenComd other &ila
40,178 83
Stock and Scrip of sundry Corpora.
Dona 53,156 00. Estimated
value 1.813 00
Cash MBank 51118,150 08
Cash in Drawer. 413 65
116563'73
The Board of Directors have this day declared a CASH
DIVIDEND of TEN PER CENT. on the CAPITAL
bTOCK. and S/X PER CENT. Interest on the SCRIP of
the Company. payable on and after the Ist December
proxlmo, free of _National and State Taxes.
They have': slab declared a SCRIP DIVIDEND of
THIRTY PER'CLNT. on the EARNED PREMIUMS for
the 3 ear ending October 31. MA certificates of which will
be issued to 'the parties entltled to the same. on and after
the Ist December proximo. free of National and State
Taies.
They have ordered, also, that the SCRIP CERTIFI
CATES OF PROFITS of the Company, for the year end
ing October 31,1864, be redeemed in CASH, at the office
of the Company, on and after let December proximo, all
interest thereon to cease on that day. lar - By a provision
of the Charger„ ail Certificates of Scrip not presented for
Todd:option nithin Sie years after public notice that they
will be redeemed: shall be forfeited and cancelled on
the Books of the Company.
133 r -No certificate of profits tutted under 'STA By
the Act of Incorporation, — no certificate shall issue an
ew claimed within two sears rifler the declaration of the
atridend scheregt ft ie evidence."
_DEFLECTORS;
Thomas C. Hand. Edmund A. Souder.
John C. Davie. Samuel E. Stokes.
James C. Hand. Henry Sloan,
Theophilus Paulding. William C. Ludwig,
Joseph EL Seal. George G. !Alper.
Hugh Craig. Henry C. Hallett, Jr..
John E. Penrose, John D. Taylor,
Jacob P. Jones. George W. Bernadou.
James Traqualr, William G. Boulton,
Edward Darlington, Jacob Riegel.
H. Jones Brooke. Spencer Mllraine.
James B. ht'lcarland. John B. Semple, Pittsburgh,
Edward Lafoureade. A. B. Berger, do.
Joshua P. Lyre, D. T. Morgan. do .
THOMAS C. HAND, President
JoHN C. DAVIS. Vice President.
HENRY LYI.J3IIRN. Secretary.
HENRY BALL. Ass't Secretary. nol2-Im4
LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST
Office l Southent Col% Fifth and_Chestnut,
- - --$1,000,000
GEORGE H. STUART, Philadelphia.
GEORGE W:OHILDA
WILLIAM A. PORTER.
F. A. DREXEL. "
WM. V. Pd °KEAN. --
THOMAS W. EVANS. ‘,*‘;
S. H. HORSTMANN,
A. J. DREXEL.
JOSEPH PATTERSON.
WM. 0. HOUSTON.
. J. SOLM
HENRY EOOD. "
New York—JAMES M. MORRISON. Provident Minzaat•
tan Bank- •
JOSEFI3. STUART. of J. at J. Stuart at Co..
Bankers'.
Boston—Hon. E. S. =BEY (late Provident Board of
Cincinnati—A. E. OILA3II3EBLEUN, of Chamborlainla
Chicago—t,. Z. LEITER, of Field. Leiter & Co.
.• C. M. SMITH, of Geo. P. Smith & Brothers.
Bankers._ '
Louisville. Kv.—WDL GARVIN_ ,
__of Garvin, Bell & Co.
at. Louis—JA•,YEATMAf‘ VaaMer Merehante
National Bank.
Baltimore—WM. PitaSCUTT SMITH, Superintendent
Coneolidated Railway , Line New. York to
IVu lfafi n far
B. B. 0 it, of Adam &..Co. Es.
.
" Crl r ititiTlAN_of G. W. Gail &Az
FltAr4ClB T. KING. Preeident Central
Savings Bank.
Hon. J. W. PATTERSON, U. S. Senator from N. IL
411E0i1GEH. STEditT, President..
Tbig COMbatlY iStllOO Policies of Life 'neural:ice upon
all the valuate plane that have been proved by ttus expo.
rieuco European and, American Companies to bo says,
sound an reliable, at rates no LOW nag IleowrinßritS
AB r 1 OItABLE as those of any. Company of equal
etnbilltAid es are• non forfeititble af the porn:tont of two
or more premiurrio. . , .
ot‘ieic
OF THE
DELAWARE MUTUAL SAFETY
PHIUDELPIUA. Novombv
*'SETS OF THE COMPANY.
November 1,1868.
Pitft"rpru , ata. Nov6tber It, U.
UNITED SECURITY
COMPANY,
OF PENNSYLVANIA.
PHILADELPHIA.
DIRECTORS:
REIM L ROOD, Vice President.
C. F. BETTE, Beentary.
J. L. LUDLOW, M. D., Consulting Physician
R. M. 0113.V1N, IL D.,
JOSEPti F. IC DEEPER, M. 0.,c Medical Era/33111ml
_ .
C. STUART PATLERBON,I
RICHAID LUDLOW, 5_ c°"':!s°'•
The Liverpool & Lon
a'on', Globe Insurance
Company.
The Report of this Com
pany for 1868 s ows:
Premiums - $5, 79,278
3)344)7 28
and after paying a divi
dend of 30. per cent., the
TO tal Afets are_, in. Gold,
$l-710051026.
8L8E61i57 51
ATWOOD , SMITH,
General Agent,
'No: 6 MERCHANTS' ,. EXCHANGE,
de,ba,
1829 CHARTER'PERPETUAL •
]'RANT TIN
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY -'
' PHILADELPHIA,
_Noe, - ,.. - 435_ and _437. Chestnut Street.
Assets on 3mi:wiry 1, 1868,
- $2,60.3,740 09..
- Capita 1..... .......::.:..
Accrued Surplus MAC S ° 9
Premium, .... • •• • -------- •• • • • .1.184.646 29
UNSETTLED CLAMP, INCOME FOR 1.868,
833.693 Y 3. • - - - 8.356,006.
Losses Paid Since 1829 Over
- - 4145,500,600.
Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Liberal Terms.
Chas.-N. Bancicer, Fares: -
Tobias Wagner. Alfred
W.
Lewis,Fitts . is..
D..
Samuel Grant.
Geo. W. Richards. Thomas Sparks,
lease Lea. Win. S. Grant.
CHARLE N. BARMIER. President.
GEO. PALES, Vice President.
JAB. W. MoALLIBTF.R. Sec retary pro tem. -
As E crelen t i gt e rNtr Mfr e gr c 114.1116 Company
any
ht:4°
SVI SEG 00
*MUTUAL FUSE INSURANOIf, COMP*.
OFI3FIeE2I,Iif No. 8 SOUTH RUTH STREET. SECOND
1t
AISSEIB, $170,000.
Mutual system exclusively. combining economy with
safety.
Insures Buildings, Household Goods, and Merchandise
generally.
LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID:'
Caleb Clothier. .
Benjamin Malone.
Thomas Mather.
T. Ellwood Chapman. '
Simeon Mat'
Aaron. W. Gefs, _
CLO'
81,4317.28/ 80
BENJAMIN
TIIOIIAB MANESS, Treat
T. ELl,woor, CHAPMAN.
frliE RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHIL.
ADELPIILt
Incorporated in 1811. Charter Perpetual.
Office, No. 306 Walnut Street.
CAPITAL 5300.000.
Inflates against loss or damage by FIRE. on Houses.
Stores and cOtter Buildings. limited or perpetual, and on
Furniture. Goods. Wares and Merchandise in town or
country.
LOcSES PROMPTLY ADJUSTED AND PAID.
Assets .. 5421.177 78
Invested in the following Securities, vine: —
First Mortgagee on City Property,well secured-$16.600 00
L:nited b tatea 117,000 00
Philadelphia City 6per cent. Loans,— ... 75.000 00
Pennsylvania $3,004000 6 per cent. L0an........26.000 Cki
Pennsylvania Kaihoad Bonds. first and second
Moitgagee. •• • BUBO OD
Camden and 'Amboy liallrOadUomPani's 6 - Per
Cent. Loan 6.000 00
Philadelphia and Beading Railroad Company's
6 per Cent Loan. . . . 5.000 00
Eirmtingoon and Broad - ToP 7 per bent: mort
gage Bonds v. 4.660 00
County tire Insurance Company's btock— 1.060 00
Mechanics' Bank Stock.. —' . 4.000 00
Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania Stock 10,000 00
Unioublutual Innovate() Company's -Stock 880 00
Reliance Insurance Company of Philadel phia —
Stock dCaah in Biakodaliii 7,587 10
Worth at Par.
Worth thia . date at market p_riees. S
DIRECTOR.
Thomas H. Moore,
Samuel Butner,
James T. Young,
Isaac F. Baker,
Christian J. Hoffman,
Samuel B. Thomas,
Biter.
M. TINGLEY. President,
Clem. Tingley.
Wm. Mune;
Samuel blenneun.
Can3on,
Win. Fib:mention,
Beni. W. Tingley'Edwar
TEIO3IAB C. B I Beare •
PIIEWDELYHIA. December
FIRE ASSOCIATION OF PEITLAD
this. Incorporated March 27. 1820. Otfice.
W11.' 17 -6' No. S 4
Fi"4 t Btr'et. ure ari l fr ir ALlCl ldin df a / 3 0
generally, from Lou by Fire (in the City of
• •!--- C .
Philadelphia. only.)
• Statement of the Aeeete of the Aaeociation
January let. 1888, pubbehed in compliance with the pro.
visuals of the Act of assembly of April sth, 1842.
Bonds and Mortgagee on Property in the City
of Philadelphia only ..... ............. ......$1,076,166 17
Ground Rents 18,814 98
Neal Estate • 51.744 57
Furniture aii ..... 4.490 93
U. S. 620 Registered 80nde......... ..... 45,000 00
Cash on hand.. ............... ...........-.... 31.873 11
' 6BB 86
William H. Hamilton, bamnel fiparhawk.
Peter A. Keyser, Charles P. Bower. .
John Darrow, _ Jesse Lightfoot,
George 1.1 oung,__ — Robert 'Shoemaker.
Joseph R. Lynda.% Peter Armbruster,
Levi P. Coate, M. H. Dickinson.
Peter Williamson.
WM. H. HAMILTON. President.
BAMUFL BPAILUAWK„ Vico resident.
WM. T. BUTLEJL Secretary.
MTED - PIREMEN'S INSURANCE COMPANY OP ,
II
PbILADELPIITA.
This Company takes risks at the lowest rates consistent
with sofetY, and confines its business exclxu3ively to
FLRE INSURANCE IN
PAHA.THE CITY OF PHILADEL.
OFFICE—No. 723 Arch street, Fourth National Bank
Building.
DEFLECTORS.
Thomas 3. Martin,. Charleaß. Smith.
John klirat, Albertus King.
Wm. A. Bolin, Henry Bumm.
James Mongan. . James Wood,
V Main Glenn. John Shalicross.
James Jetmer,_ J. Henry Arkin.
Alexander T. Dickson. Hugh Mulligan,
Albert U. Roberts , Philip Fitzpatrick.
CONE B. ANDRESS, nesilont,
Wm. A. Bor.nr, Treace r Wm. IL Fangs. Sec's.
VISE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY.—THE PENN-
I! sylvania Etre Insurance Company—lncorporated 1825
—Charter Perpetual—No. 510 Walnut street, opposite In
dependence Square.
This 4. orepauy, favorably known to the community for
over forty years, continues to insure against loss or dam
age by fire. on Puolic or Private Buildings, either perma
nently or for a limited time. Also, on F urnitui e, Stocks
of Goods and merchandise generaliy. on liberal terms.
Their Capital, together with a large -Surplus -Fund, is
Invested in a most careful manner, which enables them
to offer to the ituiurbd an undoubted security in the case
of loss, 1 . . _ -UIRECTOIV3.
Daniel Dmith,Jr.. John Devereux„ j
Alexander Benson, Thomas Smith.
loam; Hazlehurst, Remy Leccia, - •
Thomas Robin's, J. Gillingham Fell.
Daniel Haddock, Jr.
tiSlllll, Jr., President.
Witham G. Cnownxi. Secretary.
'LIABLE INSURANCE CUM
12 ntree .
PHILAD:
FIRE .INBURANCT
• . ,
Francis N. Ike DIREt
Chan Rich on
Henry Lelade,
Robert Pearce.
Geo, A. Went, •
Robert's. Potter, •
gjtl) . .NCll4 N. BD
RICHAR
Wm. L. DIANOII.A.ED. Score
C ROWN
MANI) LAYER RAISINS. -- WHOLES.
Citalves end quarter boxes of this splendid fruit, lan&
=me for sale by JOB, UUF.,II
BB di CO,lOB South
{7IT : fiASTIGE 8011 E-100 130XE5 .orsurNs
VT White, °utile soap. landing from brigßesmoylvania,
frorn'esnoa;, arid for saW by JObi. BUIIIWAH do CO. ; .101
Sout4 Delaware smuts, , •
, ,
\LIVES PAROLES. CAPBRS. &c.—OLIVES PAROLES
N../(Stuffed °fives).- Nonpareil and Superfine Capers and
French_ Olivet; fresh goods. landLng ex NaPoleon
from Benue. and 'for JOIL othafsusa 46 uO.
1940oRtliRolaware 41 , 031Ti0; • ' • "
wavnuTiiwwiimirgri
' AMIONISMOISs
William P. Reeder.
Joseph Chapman,
Edward M. lieedloe
Wilson M. Jenkins.
Lukens Webster.
Franols T. d Atkinson.
Prodent.
I B AME, Vice President.
Secretary. 5e1.3.3m5
' ANICINO. 408, CHESTNUT
lELPHIA
E EXCLUSIVELY.
JTORS.
Philip S. Justice.
John W. Everman,
Edward D. Woodraff.
John Kessler. Jr.. .
Chas. Stokes,
Mordecai Buzby.
OK, President.
ISON, Vico President.
Mary
LI 2110111 AF ds 130biS..AUCTIONEEBS. . •
ZULL
Noe 189 and lel South Fourth stenar,
ONE ART EXIEDITTUN AND SALE OF Ta.r. VERT
1.11011.E8' T - DIPOIITANCE.
Di. REDEEM:ft, successor . to 0131.1PEL is C0... N0w
Ydrk. announces , to the people of Philadelobia, that he
will make an impotent offering of Fine Works of Art.
in January nest, and designs that It shall be the finest
and most elegant c"llection of Welt:tree and Works of Art
ever offered In Pbiladelimis at'•publie sato. Theentire
Collectlon.will be on exhibition in the eastern galleries of
the Pennsylvania Academy, of ' Fine Arts, commench3g
about January Ist, until the day of sale.
At the request:'of Df.Knoedler the' , entire arrangement,
exhibition and be under the management of
Mr. Charles F. Dominus, 1L95 Clecolinnt at: •
VALES or STii;1011 . 8 AND Palk, ESTATE.
Or Public sales at the Philadelphia/2.A1 EVE=
TLFSD_ eY at-18 o'clock. ,
T r - Furniture Sales at the Auction Store EVERY
eir7 Bales at Residences receive especial attention.
' _ STOCICQ._LOANE, Ago
ON TUESDAY,: DEO. 15, At 12 o'clock runni„ at the ' , Exchange. -by order of 'Eats
.cutcra of Estate of A. Heyman deceased— •
One seat, No. I. Pew 85 in Seneseth /wad Com:toga.
Pion. Sixth street, above Blown.
A well IlleCOnd ground rent of $4B, situate bro. 1715
Marlton street • - •
.. . ,
$5600 U. Five.twino Bondi:Janitor, and July:
7000 b. q en , forty Bonds:
1000 North Missouri/in. Bondi. •
13C00 Tennessee Bonds, 1869 • -
grtgtztt entieesee Bonds, 1868 • • '
1020 Lehigh Navigation 6 per cent Bold Bonds.
5500 Onion Cans 1 Company Bonds.
• 325 lieneseth Israel Coregation Bondi.
50 Allemanla Club Bond gr s; of Pidiadelphlad
76 Ilarmitua Club' Bondi, ,• . • -
160 Loan Certificate A. O. Norton. Philadelphia.
1000 shares Sheldon Oil aad Mining
750 shares Monitor Oil Co; _
2 shares lien:infield Sit 'Co.. of W. "Va.. gi SOL
$5OO Bond Chapman Mining and Lumbering Co.
300 Bonds Springfield, Mt. - Vernon and Pitfebtirgh
Railroad Co.
8 Continental Lisurance Co
FAMte of Anna Pauper—
sloo Philadelphia City five cent. loan.
8640 ..nhtlad.lphia City 6lft cent.; loan, old.
-P
18000 Philadelphia City 6 lg cent. loan, new. '
1060 Ciandext and Amboy Colman Bonds. •
• __looo Delawareand Radian Coupon - Honda. - -
1000 Petmevivaida Railroad Convertible - CoupOn Bond.
4116 Schuylkill Nay. Co. Loan, convertible,
7439'62 Cbessfoeske and Del. Cana Loam, 1865:
15. , ear ip Chesapeake and Del, Canal_xpan, 1855,
10 shares Pal Nast Co., common, •
8 Bharat C'hosaneake and Del. Canal. ,
97 shares Phcenix Ineurance'Co. -
197 stares Pennsylvarfia Railroad Co.
88 shares Lehigh Valley : Railroad Co. • - •
lanhares Mechanics , National Bank.
17 sharettFarmers' andMechanfer:Bank,:-
11 aharte Philadelphia National Bank..
28 e hares Commercial National Bank.
sbarea Bank of North emetic...
For other Account of the PennsylvanittHospital
18 sharea Franklhi Fire Insurance Company in lota to
_sr.itpuretuisers.
• , rFor - OtherAct
- 10 shares rennin and - AtiantleTelegraPh. -
25 ROAM Union Mutual Insurance CO.
5 enamel Academy of Music. with ticket.
3 'bares Southwark National Bank,
• $ second mortgage Columbus and Indiana Central
Railway 7 percent bond. -
20 sharer) Rridesourg Idanufachiring CO,
1 sham Philadelphia Library.
s42oDelawarp Mutual Inaurance Co. Scrim 1883.
MEAL-ESTATE SALE, DEC.IS.'
__Orphans' Court Sale—Eetate of David P. fdoore. deed.
id NDSOME MODEBN '3 Hr EBB CRY BRICK RESI
DENCE, with aids yard, No 912 Franklin street, above
Poplar; 26 fret front - Ilas all the 'modern - Conveniences;
and in excellent repair. May be examined any day pre
vious to sale.
• Orp_bans* Court Sate—Estate of Mary G. Lewellyn,deed
DWELLING. Shippen street, east of Ninth
Orphans* Court bale—Estateaof Archibtdd Mclntyre
Robinson, dec'd, and Robert Henderson Robertson, a
minor. - 2 ,three-story - BRICK &AIRES -and DWELL
INGS Noe. 1831 and 1833 Spruce street. corner of Bid
mouth Place. with six three.stoty Brick Dwellings in the
rear, fronting oa tildmonth Place. between -Eighteenth
and Nineteenth streets-37 feet front, 104 feet deep.
FRY VALUABLE GERMANTOWN PROPERTY—
Two-story - Stone Buildir g • and Dwelling, Not 4669 and
4671 Main etreet, Germantown. 59 feet front, 435 feet deep,
known es the old Germantown Bank.
Sale by Order of Heim—Estate of Chas.& Snyder,dec'd.
—VERY VALUABLk COAL LANDS; 800 acres. Tremrnt
tosvaship Schuylkill com.ty. Pa.._
Bb b. by Order of Beire—Estate or John Venter deed.—
LAROE and VALUABLE 'LOT, 13d acres, Chestnut Bill
and Ewing House Turnpike, Chestnut
VALUABLE BUSINaSS STA- D—Foirstory Brick
- 801 EL and DW ELLINO,' No. 206 Pine street.
VALUABLE MILL PRBPERTY and FARM. 481 i
acres, with water power. known as Broadbent , a
•obh , s t.reek; Went y-fourth Ward. tour miles west of
Diarket street bridge. • ..
• VERY VALUABLE COUNTRY PROPERTY—STORE
and DWELLINGS and 831 scree. Lancaster Turnpike,
Lower Merlon townehip.biontaoroery county . . PtL,_6 miles
from Market street bridge. 2 mike above ilestonville.
MODERN k 011.11,13T01CY BRICK Rt. SIDENCE, No.
119 New street
'I'IIitEE:STORE MUCK DWELLING. No. MO North_
Twenty. second street.
PEREMPJORY SALE—For account of whom it, may.
concern-- TWO.t+TON s FRAME RESIDEP.O No.
Che etnut street, 2u feet front, 220 feet deep. West Phila
delphia.
MODERN TURFY...STORY BRICE RESEDENOE. No.
IM3 Coatis street.
. . .
MODERN F..JUR,STORY ERICH RESIDENCE. Na
t 2 south Sixteenth Street. north of Pine at.
2 HANDSOME MODER , THREE.STORY, BRICK
RESIDENCES, Noe. 715 and 717 North Sixteenth street,
corner of Swain street They have all the modern con
veniences.
HANDSOME MODERN FOUR-STOW BRICK RESI
DENLK No. lEM Pine street, mat of Sixteenth street
iiBß all the modern conveniences._
LkASE. GOODWILL AND FIXTURES OF THE
GUNNER'S RUN DISTILLERY, No. 1053 Cumberland
street, Nineteenth Ward.
SUPERIOR _nourEktoLD FURNITURE. LARGE
MADUSL 'APILI PIER MIRRORS, BRUSSELS CAR.
PETS. &a. _____
_ . _
Dec. 11, at 10 o'clock. at No IVA Walnut street, by cata
logue. comprising Thawing Ro,,m Furnitaress in -overe;
pair large and cusgant French Platn..Mautel and...ffinr
hhrrsrs. fine Muscle's and other carpets, superior Birch
wood Chamber Funnta.e, made to ordsr by Parker; do.
gent Choval Glees. Ingrain Carpets. Oil Cloths. ,tic.
May be examined on the day of sale at 8 o'clock
Executors' gale Real Estate.
ESTATE OF SAMUEL. O. RILL. DECD.
UN SATURDAY As TERNoON,
Dec. I9th, at 3 o'elbek. will be sold at public sale, at. the
Blue Bell Hotel. Darby Road. 27th ivard,fransod
barn, slaughter house and five *e.t.a of land. Island Road.
Kir peessing. Also, stone dwelling and stable, North et,
ParchalvMe, near Blue Bell. Lot 10 feet by 13135 feet.
Ftitll particulare in handbills.
•
LEASE, GOODWILIAND FIXTURES OP THE
GUNNER'S RUN DISTILLERY.
$421,176 70
No. 1053 CurnbElann elret . 3t., hißetecnth. Ward. belonging
OW L 022 24
UN TUESDAY, Dec.
At 12 o'clock noon. wits be sold at public sale, at the
Philadelphia Exchange all that valuable Lease. (which
has 5 3 ears to run from August 1. 1808. at $1 800 per as
num), Goodwill and Fixtures of the well known Gunner a
Run DiatillerY. situate at No. t 053 Cumberland street, ex
tending from Aramingo Canal to Commerce street. it is
in complete sunning ceder with everything a , pertalning
to the business, including Boilers, Mills. Mash and For
Tubs, Pulleys Shafting, Belting. Pumps, a com
plete Distillery Apparatus.
Bang one of the most complete Distilleries in the
United States; cost the present owner's. Misers. Kahn
weiler & Becker, $75,000. The lease and specifications
may be seen at the Auction Rooms and will be sold sub.
Ject to terms of said lease.
10, — immediate possession. May be examined any day
previous to sale.
The putchaeer has the Privilege of buying the Real Es.
tato for $26,000 before the expiration of lease.
Bale by Order of Heirs.
Jal-tu the tffil
ESTATE OF CILARLE:i A. SNYDELt. DECEASED.
VERY VALUABLE COAL LANDS, 300 ACRES, TRE
MONT TOWNSHIP. COUNTY.
ON TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15TH. 1868,
At 13 o'clock. noon, will be si Id at public sale, at the
Philadelibils. Exchange all that valuable property coat.
pop. d of the "Leshor Jx - Miller Coal Estate."
2X - Full particulars in handbills at the Auction Rooms.
IrktelleiVe Bahl at NO South &WWI(' street.
STOCK OF hi:Pl.:Rita; U IttINET FURNITURE
ON MONDAY MORNINO
Dec. 21. at lu o'clock.. at T J A. Ileaksis'a Ware
rooms, No. 240 South Second street, will he sold at public
sale, an extensive assortment of superi .r Furniture, com
irising—Walnut parlor suits, with rich and plain cover
ng.; library, dining room a..d hall furniture; elegant
chamber furniture various . tylss, all manufactured in a
superior manner expressly for their wareroom sales, and
warrarted. -- •
tier - ;The ealo will be peremptory. and L 3 made on an.
count of Memo. Lienkela being about to remove to their
now wareroome. No. iota Arch street.
DURBOROW & CO., AUCTIONEERS.
.A.O Nom. 232 end 234 MARKET street, corner Bonk st,
Successors to John B. Were & C•
LARGE BALE Qp_ctulpfamog. (?LL CLOTHS. Ate.
ON FRIDAY MORNING.
Dec. 11, at 11 o'clock. on four month's! , credit, about 200
Clem Ingrain, Venetian. Libt. Hemp. Cottage and Rag
Carpetinic4lol_Cletblkituge. &G
LARGE BALE OF FRDRY O ENCH na a E
AND 0 . UROPEAN
, lODS.
ON MONDAY MORNING.
Dec. 10, at 10 o'clock. on four montbe ccedit,
SALE .OF 151 m CABER 800T5..13110E15. TRA
VELING BAGS. dm
ON TUESDAY MORNING.
Dec. 15. at 10 o'clock, on four months' credit.
M. WOLBERT. AMU. NEER,
N 0.16 South Sixth it - reet,below Market.
LARGE. AND SPECIAL SALE OF RICH FANCY
GuODS. DECORATED CHINA. SOIIENItAN GLASe,
WINE SETS. TOYS, LARGE AND GENERAL
ASSohTMENT OF CROCKbRY IN GREAT VA
RIETY.
ON FRIDAY MORNINO. •
OM Inst., at 10 o 7 clock,'sit 18 South Sixth street, will be
sold a large and general assortment of Fancy Goods.
Glassware, Toys. itc.
Also, Granite and C. 0. Ware.
1130 7 Notice. special attention is rogue ted to this sale.
ss it - comprises the best and largest assortment offered
this season.
THE PRINCIPAL MO VEY ESTABLISHMENT—
S. E. corner of S x.ru and RACE streets.
Money advanced on Merchandise generally—Watches,
Jewelry, I ianionrs, Gold and Silver Plato, and on all
articles of value, for any length of time agreed on. _
WATCHES AND Jt;'WELRY AT PRIVATE SALE.
Fine Gold Hunting Case:Double Bottom and Open Face
English, American and S wire Patent Lever Watches ;
Fine Gold Hunting Case and Open Face Lupine Watches;
Fine Gold Duplex and other Watches; Fine Silver Hunt
ing Case and Open Face Irnglieh, American and awls'
Patent Lever and Lapin° Watcher; Double Case English
Quertior and other. Watches; Ladies' Fancy Watches;
Diamond• Breastpins; Finger Rings; Ear Rings; Studs;
4 1c . ; Fate Gel& Chanss• Medallions; Breceletsi Scar
Pins Bre a stpins ; 'Singer Rings; pencil Cases and Jewell*"
generally.
FOR SALE.—A large and valuable Fireproof • Chest,
imitable fora Jeweler; cost SOW
Also.aeveral Lots in South Camdathirifth and Cheetzut
streets..
CLASH & EVAN% ALICTJONEBRB, , • : ,
CIIBEVI'MUT ntroet.
Witl''ell TIIIB DAV, MORNING and FIVENINO_.
A large torah:at of Blankets. Hod aprsads;, Dry Monde
Cloths, Canoltneres, 11 °sissy. Btationery , Table and
Pookst.Cutlery, Notions Rto.
City a nd toUntly merobentivlll Bud Barg no. ' '
W — Tema ensh, , .
Onods packed tree n of charge, i 099 tt
11;4811BRIDOR it: CEP.: ' , AUCTIONENRat' ' "
w • -• • ENltigt 11tre061449.Q Mho
pvi ON: lOadt4ebw.
Sale at No. 1624 W.lnut street
JUU.Sga&==LI
to Messrs. (ahnw. filer & Bucker.
AVOTWN
111ARTIN IHROTTIRRIL AUCTIONENWir.
ATI ALately Saleantenfor M Thomas
eblo. WI/CHESTNUT otreet.Tear OUCcoluse IkOrllkUntror
Solent No. 1317 Cheednut street.. •• • • •-
HANDSOME ; ! FURNITURE .' SUPGitleili- GOTTA=
en A 14BEK SUIT& Fllib 11A1 MATSCSSES•
BRUSSELS: INGRAIN AND VEN,TIAN CAnp,ffiTS.
• ON mums 'MORNING!. i
• men, U. at 10 o'clock, at No. 1817 Cneatont orroisact
re - ,
catalogue, the entire oaperior 'Household FurnitUre,
ducting Buyorlor. Walnut Parlor Furniture, throe Suit. .
Handsome Walnut Chamber Furniture,. four; Sidle Sot-
MatreQees,pp tier, Cottfffe d C i li n aingr Fumltt i t i r c ihrine ci li : at i r t I . eg ri athe an t , •
Yenittan Ca;pets.t hin7. Glanware. KiteGariFterat'
tore and Utensils, Window Shades. drO. • • ' •-;:•••••
May be examined at 8 o'clock on the monument s aid
• .
LARGE SPECIAL SALE OF I'INE TOILET WARN AV
THE AUCTION ROOMS. • •
• ON SATURDAY . FLOItNiNG,
Dee.l2, at 11 o'clock, at the Auctionßooms, by i*ta.
logne, 'oritlont reserve, a largo assortment of "plake and.
fancy painted line toilet sem, Una slop jaw, foot tube' line!
water carriers. -
Salo at No 20'27 amac street.
511pEPIOR HOUSEHOLD FoRNITuRe., RoBEWOIIII'
PIANOFORTE. MB BRUSSELS AND OTHER OAR:
PETS, Edo. _ •
ON MONDAY MORNING, ,
'• Dec. 14, at 10 o'clock , at No. 2021 Cannot emend: between
Tw elf th and Thirteenth. above Beds, theontire superier • '
Heuechold Fundtnre, Roeonted Piano . ' Forte; Fine Brwrio
sale lz grain. and other Caryet4 China , end,
Matrenaes, Bedding, Extension , Table. 'etc.'
, • ,
• May be examined at S o'clock on the morning of s&ie,
Public 8a e on the Premise& MI6 Brandywina
13ESI9ENOR AND FURNITURE.
ON THURSDAY MORN/NO, •
17, at 10 o'clock. on the premises, all that neat ma.
darn three-story brick residences two-story back bailout/6
and lot of ground, Id feet front by 17 feet deeo.eitttate
the south side of. Brandywine street. No. 2116. Subject
to a yearly wound-rent of 10d4:- •
SUPdHIOII HoUSEHoLD FURNITURE. FINE BUGS
, //ELS AND OTHER, OARPETd,,dta. --
Immealately after the sale' of the Residence, at 10
o'clock. b_y_t•atalegue.- at Non 116 13rand y wine street. tan.
Superior Walnut Farl r Furniture, sueerio,r_gbaseber and,., '
/Anima Roondlfurrtiture, fine firm .els and-Venetian
pets, uhina and Glassware. H,alr, Metro% Refrigerator. .7
Slily, be examined oath° morning of sale at 0 o'clock.
Sale No. 6/9 L'histaut street...
VA.LUABIR AND, Ha Nugoz4EAogpikori
ON MONDAY. AFTERNOON.
14th inst.at 4 o'clockat the auction rootas,by catalogue,.
valuable collection of bookalncluding finely illustrated
works. bibles, handsomely bound photographic albums.
. _
Sale at NA.= Arch street.
VERY ELF.OANT WALNUT. FURNITUII3. PINE .
His.NOII.PLATE, MANTEL- AND PIES MIRRORS. - -
LAIE, WINDOW—CURTAIN% HANDSOME
Linn BRUSSELS. VELVET AND OTHER,'
MONDAT .• ING. •, •
Dec. 21, , at 10 o'c lock.- at No 13MO RN -
st
5 Arch by
logne.the entire very elegant walnut honsehcad furniture..: ,
Mending .tat handsome walnut drawing•rocet'furnittire:-
covered with gre en plush; elegant etsgere and centre •
table; large an fine Fretichnla • :;,1 ' e,-and lA= PO- •
son; splendid suit walnut chi .rteiterer—elegaut
wardrobes. mirror doors ;ham:loom triat" -- atitt - hbttagtr --
chamber suite; tine spring and Wife m esses. and bed
ding; hall stand and chairs; book Asses; . ditaniproom
furniture: extension tables; rich brocatelle and lace win.
dow curtain/sr shades ; china and glassware; natidsoure
English Brussels. Venetian and other csrpeta. dec.
the , "lichen utensils and refrigerator. dec. • -
May be examined at 8 o'clock - on' MO ra °ming or ItlgN ,
THOMAS • BIRCH di SO N
_AUCTIONEERS AND
COPdhiII3BION MF,RUHANTI3.- • -
No. 1110 CHESTNUT street.
• . Bear Entrance No. 1107 BUIS= street.
HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIP
TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT.
Sales of Furniture at Dwedlingsattended to on the most
reasonable terms.
Sale at No. 1110 Chestnut street.
SUPERIOR NEW AND SECONDHAND HOUSEHOLD
- FURNI'EURP: — PIANOI3, -- CARPE MIRRORS.
PLATeD WARE, GLASS Iv ARE, MELODEON.
CHINA, dm. •
ON FRIDAY MORNINII. , -
At 9 o'clock, at the Auction Store , No. 1110 Chestnut
street, a ill be sold—A largo assortment of superior Ileum.
I old Fundture, including—Elegant Walnut Eerier Suing
in plush; Chamber Suite of Walnut. finished in oil and
varnish; Sideboard*. Extension Dining Tables, Spring end
Hair Mattresses. Marble Top Tables. Cottage . Chamber .
Furniture, Brussels Tapestry, Ingrain and Venetian Car-
Pets ; Melodeon, Parlor Organ; Rosewood Pianofortes.,
•
Also. Office Desks and Tables, Fire-proof Chest,Letteg
Press,
16 CASES OF GL ASSWARE.—AIso. 16 packages of new
slassware, consisting of band sets. goblets, nannies , tum
blers, dishes . bowls. ,ke. • •'.
)3 OILS ON ARCHITECTURE Ales a number 'Sabra
bin works on architecture, belOnging to the estate of a
deceased architect. • • t, - -
RunEWOOD FURNITURE—One Parlor suite of rose
wood furniture ,covered with satin Rrocatelle.
Fl' NOM ORGANS, de,—itho, 3 rosewood pianofortes,
parlor organs,_l. melodeon-------
1110TOtittAtil GALLERY—AIso. a large wimber Of
elegant phonograph show frames,counter cases, 5.000 nese.,
elver', and other fixtures of a photographer, --
SALA uN FIXTURES-4h° fixtures of an eathne saloon.' ;'.:'
comprising 8 tables. DI) oak dining room chairs, table
elotbs.napkina castors. knives, forks, spoons, mockery
and cooking utensils,
— Sale at N 0.1104 Green street.
HOUSEHOLD PURNITIInE, i OTTA.GE SETS., OAR
' • ON SATUDD7S I i I deI e iNING NEXT. '
At 10 o'clock. at No. 1104 Green street, will be sold time
Fut nit ure of a family declining housekeeping. comprising
Walnut Parlor Furniture, covered with hair cloth ; Mar
ide Top Tables Parlor, and Chamber Carpets. Walnut
Chamber Furniture, three Cottage duties, Spring and
B air 'Mattresses, Feati er Bees. Dining Room and. Bitting
Room Furniture. China, Glassware. Moves. Kitchen kin
niture,
The Furniture may be examined 'early on the morning
cf ea e. , • „
J N 0.422 w
TAMER A. FREEMAN. AUCT/ONEME, AL dent. "
Peremptory Sale No. f 924 North Fourth street.
VALUABLE MACHINERY._ JACQUARD LOOMS.
WINDING FRAMES. WARY MILLS;• HIND
LOOMS. SPOOLINL* WHEELS. COTTON AND
BILE SWIFIS. SHADING MACHINES. BUPTOW
HOLE SEWMG MACHINES, TURNING LATHS.
COI TON AND WOOLLN YARN. TASSELS, GIMP.
WEBBING. FRINISE, FIREPRtiOF,
ON TUESDAY MORNING,
Dee. 15, at 10 o'clock. will be sold the entire Stock and
Machinery of a Shepender and Dream Trimming mann.
factors , . .
Peremptory Sale N 0.1924 North Fourth street, •
VALUABLE PALI:DRY FOURTII AND HAUKLET
bTREETd. NINETEENTH WARD.
ON TUESDAY MORNING
Dec. 15th, at 10 o'clock. will oe sold at public' sale, with.
out reserve on the premises, a valuable threeatory brick
Factory, with baeement, 1904* feet on Hackle, street. and
119 feet on r onrth street, with engine and- boiler horse:
emote stack. superior 20. horse power engine, made by
organ. Orr dr, Co„ flue boiler all complete, and in porfect
order.
C_ - The Factory f 3 substantially construated. itt. per
fect order and complete in all its arranoements..
VP' dale LPeremptory. $5OO to be paid at the time or
Hate.
rer - Ibe machinery will be sold immediately alter the
Beal tetate.
AT PRIVATE SALE.
A VALUABLE TRA.CT OF 20 AORES OF LAND..
With Maiusion House. Bun Lane, intermemd fry
Eighth, Ninth. Tenth and Zleventh. Ontario and TiOffi
streets, within 200 teot *he Old York Road. Valuable
deposit qf Brick Clay. Torma easy. _
A valaahle businem property No. 819 Arch street.
HUEUNOTON.—A Handsome Manion. on Main alai
tot 66 by lazi feet.
D. Jr
SCOTT. J. AUCTIONEEA.
SCOTT'S ART. GALLERY
1020 CIIEsTNUT street. Philadelphia.
SALE Olf MR. .A. D'HUI VETTER'S SUPERB UOL
LI.CTION OF MGM CLASS MODERN PAINT-
INGI3.
Mr. A. D'Huyvatier, previous to his departure for Mi
me, has instructed B. Scott, Jr, diepose of his entiret
gallery on the evenings of TRUitSDAY and FRII)A.Y,
17th and 18th December, at 734 o'clock. The names of
the 'showing distinguished artiste are represented by
very choice and important works: •
Louie Van Kuyck, Verbat.
Portleije, !C. U. Webb,'
H. Ten hate. David Col,
. - .
Theo. Gerard, S. Bos-h„
David De Noter, P. UMW.
.1 . ti. t 3. Kookkoek. H. Bondermann,
Henriette Ronxter, Herzog,
ijauriac W. Verschuur.
E. Verboelthoven. Donut A. Da Bylandt.
tt, Erusemier • IL Savry. and others.
-The above collet don vtanda unrivalled for artistic-merit -.
h 3 any that has over been presented to the American
public for exhibition and sale.
Now on view in the Eastern Galleries of the Penns l•
yenta Academy of Floe Arts day and eveni ,, g until sale.
't D. MoCLEBB s CO.
AJ. AUCTIONEER%
No. 506 . M A RICRT street.
SALE OF 1600 CABER BOOT BEM% BROGANS.'
BALMORAtak&c.
ON MDAY G
December 14, co mm en cing at M 10 0 o ßNlN 'clock..
we All sell
raia,ogue. a large and superior assortment' of BoOta.
Shoo, itrogana Raimondo, ,no.
Alm. Women's. &tines' and (ndidreres city made gooda.
BY BABBITT & CO., AUCTIONEERS.
CASH AUCTION HOUSE - •
No. MO MARKET street, corner of BANK street.
Cash advanced on consisnmentt Mazola extra clusrathl
IIEGULAR SALE OF 800 LOTS ASSORTED DRY
GOODS.
•
ON FRIDAY MORNENO,
Der, ilth, commencing at 10 o'clock. comprising a large ,
assortment of Fall and Wint or Dry Goods, viz.: Cloths.
ssimeres Dress Goods. shirts. Drawers , Hosiery, Ger.
mantown Goods, Stocks from Retail Stores, &a. &c.
Also. heady 111 ado Clothing, lanbrellas, Boots, Shoes ;
Bats, cape, C. Sc.
D AVIS & HARVEY. AUCTIONEERS.
Late with M. Thomas 4s Sons,
Store Nos. 48 aid Co North SOUL! street
Sale No. 944 North Thirteenth street.
GENTEEL FL 1108.EWuOD PIANO
BOI,KCASES, 43ARPETS. &c.
- UN MONDAY MORNING.
t 10 o'clock, at No, 944 North Thirteesith, drool', below
Girard avenue, the furniture of & gentleman le WIWI' the
city, inrludhan elegant rosewood soven - .TcfaVir.aklßKild - 0k.. 7-- --
caeca beds. mattresses, gas consumere, glassware, kitchen
MIISIVAL•
B ALLADB1 1 1 33 1 1 1 S ( 1 1 i0P
:13 son& Nineteenth is - eet. so 28 Una-
RONDINELLA. TEACHER OF STROHM. PM
Ovate lemons and dune. Reatdence t 4oB 0. Thirteenttt
treat • sn2Llfl
UOAKIfINC•
mo LET—WITII BOARD, TWO'HANDSOME rooms.;
1 with rticatelutth.room attached. Appt5,1333804 t'
ca
CANNED Fnurr. VEGETABLES. 5rA,....t oce .ojkass
froah Canned Peaches • 600 omen frosts Canned Fins
Applun ; 200 cacek fresh Pine- Apples, in glass•. 1.000 '
-Groan Corn and Green Penit tie oasen-freab Pion* in ----
odui3; MO Mos trod" Green Otago; 500 oxen etterried.
syrup i 5;.0 oluseo Blackberries; In only; 500 noes Straw ,
berrion. in ey'rn2 , ; 600 case* !rah Pears, in Ing; t 3D; 5.005
cases C0.M184 Toms 600 elms' Oystors, Lo ealt and 1:0F
For sa t e
500 gases Roast , t Mutton. Veal. Scow p , 40. L ,
For by JOSEPTiII. n & co...ussoutt, nat.
ware avenue ... _ . , .
-- I R SALE, TONS OF OIXELLIC
altoat. &POT to NVORKX4Ii 41 CO,. 223 Wanat