Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, December 12, 1868, Image 6

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    w(Mage.
lie 4 lesterassitae all lLassialr Than
the await elsewhere; also guarantee full
• oatisfaction to every purchaser, or the
wale cancelled and money refunded.
fhtotrorton TO.Oon ,Parnor.re.—To fully carry out the
• above busituiss 'rule at the present time, we
list Arr. Pnrons. Our stock , of Men's. Youths'.
eon' and Children's Ready-made Clothing.
which is large. complete and comprehensive
enough to embrace au - dealrablo styles, sizes and
kinds.
Limrr sx.s. ins Bonn. as it was manufactured_for that es.
pedal purpose. ' To insure this we intend to con•
time, sui heretofore. to give all Our customers
globs Verve you Twain Mount , than they can get elar
where, under any. and all circumstances. Call
On us, hear our prices, and examine our goods
before purcha:,lng.
law r l y between ) Butersrr & Co..
Fifth „ Townu HALL.
Birth etr, 3 518 Mesa= ST..
POILADIMPOIA.
A,CD eau BROADWAY. Thew YORE.
Honest:.assn are easily bound, bat
you can never bind a knave.
I.lateranolt BITTLNI3 Alga DI WWI&
Keep no more cats in the house than will catch mice.
PLANTATION BITTERS cures Fever and Ague.
:War makes thieves, and Peace hangs them.
PLAsarrioli Brrrsaa curea Liver COMPIANIt Nervous-
. .
Headache.. •
Time ia,a file that wears and makes WI noise.
Futtrrwrzort lirrratr.4 cures the effects of Diasipatiqn and
Late Hours.
Better have ono plough than two cradter.
Pl-anratiorr Bursas are an antidote to Change of Wa
ter and Diet
Foote and obstinate people make lawyers rich.
P....aroraTiori Bursas Purity, Strengthen and Invigorate.
A kind wife makes a faithful husband.
hfeerrowe WATEn.--Superf or to the beet Imported Ger.
man ti;ologne. and Bold at half the price. dad tu,th,eat
Ito 'almoner so maurwortliloss medi
cines are advertised for the cure of various diseases. -and
when tried. "found wanting: , that the invalid loses all
faith in specifics. We-have yet to learn, however, of the
first failure co l d s . TAIV Bainsie or Winn CUZERY, to
cure coughs. and pulmonary disease. de7 6t
PIANOS. PIANOS. PIANOS.
GREAT SALE OF ELEGANT ROSEWOOD
riaNOls AT AN EXTRAORDINARY REDUCTION
OF PRICES. .
PROM
.
PROM DECEMBER ler. 1868, TO ANUARY lex, 1889.
Ws /DIVE MADE A DEDUCTION OF PRIOK3 ON OUR EXTEN
SIVE STOOK OF mammon AND BEAUTIFUL ROSEWOOD PI.
ANON AS FOLLOW %SIP.:
NO. 1 Clam $4OO for $250. No. 7olass $575 for $4.25.
No. do 425 for 275. No. Bdo 600 for 460.
No.a .do 450 for 300. No. 9do 650 for. 500.
N 0.4 do 475 for 325. No.lo dcr 700 for 560.
1'10:5 do 500 for - 275. - - SquaroGrand-800 for 400.
No. 6do 668 for 400. Concert Grandl2oo for 875.
e offer the above great inducements to those wishing
to purchase at baroaine before the holidays. We have
the largest assortment of instruments on hand that has
ever been offered in this pity, and are - determined to
close out our present large Mock at.manufastureriejirst
()oat prices." Every instrument is warranted to give
satbsfaction, and at these low prices we place within the
reach of every one the opportunity of obtain Tag one of
these
••Jusay celebrated and highly improved Pianos."
Call and examine WARE our
new and beautiful
WAR at
E R 06.18,
• No. 1103 Chestnut street.
SCHOMACKER PIANO MANU FAO TURING CO.,
1103 Chestnut street,
Philadelphia.
no26m.s.nutdeSl4
CONRAD MEYER, INVENTOR AND
Manufacturer of the celebrated Iron Frame
nancieSaa received the Prize Medal of the World's Great
Exhibition, London, Egg. The highest prizes awarded
When and wherever exhibited. Warerooms. 723 Arch
street: Established 1223. 1119 w a ratio
ALBRECHT
EIEKES & /SCHMIDT.
Manufacturers of
FIRST-CLASS AGREFFE PLATES
PIAND,FORTES.
Waitroonis,
No. 610 ARCII Street,
Philadelphia. deli) th s to 31/11
STEINWAY'S PIANOS RECEIVED THE
iteahighest award (first gold medal) at the Interns
on Exhibition, Paris, 1867. See Official Report, at
the Wareroom of BLASIUS BROS.,
No. 1006 Chestnut street.
THE INTICKERING PIANOS RECEIVED
the highest award at. the gads Exposition.
DijTTON4S Warerooms. 914 Chestnut street, se2l,tf4
EUROPEAN APPAIRM
LETTER FROM PARIS.
[Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin)
Pears, Friday, Nov. 27, 1868.—1 wont theother
day to hear the farewell address of M. de Lesseps
to his friends and fellow-shareholders in the Sriez
Canal, previous to his departure for Egypt,
whence ho is not expected to return before the
completion of the enterprise. The "completion
of the enterprise"!—yes, we have now really got
to that, phase of the vast undertaking, and may
be said to be fairly in sight of port. M. de Les
seps told ',us, with that irresistible bee
/commie and transparent frankness watch
have been worth more than millions of
capital to him, from the confidence they have in
spired in the public—that there could no longer
remain any reasonable doubt that on the ,let of
October, 1869, the Suez Canal would be a fait
accompli. Of course. he said, he did not speak
of emtwittshments and Ilnishings-off, and all
such extra and additional operations. But the
"grand water-passage from sea to sea, from the
Mediterranean to the lifer Rouge," would be
completed and open to the traffic of the vessels
of the world. So confident were his chief
e ngineers and contractors on this head,
and that they had not named
too early a day, that they had bound themselves
in !penalties (I think I understood him to say)
of 500,000 francs per month for any delay after
the period announced. M. de Leaseps assured
us that after making the very largest allow
ance for all future expenses to be incurred, the
Association had now ample funds in hand for the
complete termination of all the work. Not the
least interesting portion of his remarks was that
in which, globe in hand. he demonstrated the
future prospects of the Canal as to traffic, and
showed the masses of population, East and West,
which it was destined to bring into direct
communication with each other. Ho estimated
the total expense of the canal when completed
to be 400 million of francs. The estimated rev
enue, taken at the very lo west figure and at the
rate of ten francs per ton - on the shipping pass
ing through the cant', was six millions per
annum. "And I 7:rophesy," said M. do Lesseps,
"that in ten years after its completion, the
average we love now taken of only six millions
oflineome will be regarded as perfectly ridicu
lous." Amongst other things, M. de Lesseps
confirmed the details which I think I have pre
viously Mid before you, respecting the
time and mode of passing through the canal.
The average time will be about sixteen hours,
at the rate of six of eight miles per hour, and
steamers will be allowed to use their own loco
motive power, with the Society's pilot on board
to see that the rate is not exceeded. The latter is
an important point; for a shareholder present
put a pertinent question to H. do Leaseps as to
the security of the embankments whore the Canal
passes though pure sand, and the damage likely
to be caused by the motion of the steam power of
vessels of large size. He explained that where the
. Catal passed through sand, the banks had
been slopel away. until they resembled the
sande of the seashore, over which the waves raised
by the motion of the paddles or the screw floated
altogether innocuously, like the flux and reflux
of the tide, leaving the banks only the more con
solidated. Speaking of the abuse and opposition
which he had met with in the long course of
years over' which his undertaking had spread,
M. de Leaseps, who is famous for telling a good
story, related an anecdote of his experience on
that head in England. He wont over to London
to publish there a pamphlet on the Canal
soon after its commencement. He ap
plied V a respectable publisher, and re
quested him to give an estimate of what
the publication would cost. On this being pre
sented ,o him, he was surprised to find one of
the largest items under the head of "abuse r ,
"Oh yes," said the publisher, "whenever I wish
make quite sure of the success of a thing of
this I'ln4, I always pay very highly to have it
'well abused'!" And so, M. de Lesseps added, "I
have always found that the more I and the Suez
Canal were 'abused' the better we got on at the
end I" The days of abuse, however, are over
now; and M. de Lesseps was greeted and taken
leave of by the large meeting which assembled
on t4e, premises of the Society, in the Square
Clary,4ith something almost like personal affec
tion.
The other great undertaking, which, with
the Fatsitie Railroad and the Canal, may be
said to comprise the three events upon which the
attention - ofthe - world just now is fixed—the new
cable between France and America—seems 41130
THE EVENING BULLETIN-:-PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY. - liEGEMBEII, 122, 841EF;i.
to beprogreseing most :favorably. The Gonne*
of Administration in- Parts has very proPerly
and wisely determined to publish every fortnight'
in the Monileur an account of how
_the work ad
vances, and its first statement has just appeared,
The cable will be laid 'first from Breen to. Bt.
Pierre Miquelon, a , distanae of 2,788 . nautical
miles; and thence to the American Continent, 4
a distance of ^76railes.• The first part will be all
a deep sea line; thesecond 'in comparatively shEd
low water; and the two divisions of the cable Will
correspond to this difference: The cable, as is
well-known, is being fabricated in England; the
first part at Morden & Enderby's Works, at .
Greenwich; and the second part, from St. Pierre,
at the North Woolwich Works. The outside
coating of the cable is made lessor more strong,
according to the depth of water, the deep water
requiring less protection, nnd the strongest parts
belbg where the cable approaches the shore, and
is exposed to anchors, rocks and othey, risks.
All parts, it appears; are now rapidly advancing,
and are deposited, when finiehed, In tanks* con
taining each 185 miles, where it will continue to
-bocwnstantly- tested: by- electricity- until 'litany
transported on board the Great Eastern. In'the
two establishments above mentioned, 205 pieces
of machinery are at work on the cable, and 700
men are employed ire the fabrication; while the
whole number of workmen engaged on the un
dertaking in various ways, counting those on
board the Great Eastern, is not less than 5,000.
The combined length of the materials of all sorte r
employed in making the cable is 278,855 nautical
miles; and their weight 8,548 tons. The order
for Its construction was finally given on the 25th
of August last; and the actual construction of
the deep sea portion commenced on the 23d of
October. At present about 90 miles per
week are completed, and this rate will
shortly be increased to 100 miles. Aboat 350
miles are completed. The second portion will
only be commenced on the first of December-
The Great Eastern, as is well known, is in the
hands of the Thames Iron Works Company, and
is being rapidly got ready forlief second great
enterprise. The -three tanks, destined for the
cable, will all be in their places by the end of
January; and the cable itself will begin to be
taken on board about the middle of the same
month. There is every assurance that the grand
operation which is to unite the two con
tinents of Europe and America directly
with each other will be commenced in
July, 1869. If that year does indeed witness the
opening of the Baez Canal, the laying ofthe new
cable and the termination of the route between
New-York and Ban Francisco, it will be an era
for ever memorable in the annals of the world.
I expected to have had another death and
another funeral to announce to you;—that of M.
Berryer, the great legitimist lawyer and orator.
But he still lingers just alive at his chateau of
Angerville, whither he has withdrawn to die
in peace:
Yesterday, Thanksgiving Day was dilly ob
served by Americans in Paris.. Religions services
were held in the two American Churches, with
suitable prayers, and addresses to the numerous
congregations there assembled.
SPAIN.
.The Bombardment of Cadiz—BevOlt of
the Workmen In Badrld. •
LONDON, Dec. 11,1868.—N0 newalicin - Pet been
received of the bombardment of Cadiz., tele
graphic communication being •interrupted with
Madrid.
A despatch from Madrid dated Thursday, De
cember 10, says: A large number of workmen
employed by the municipality on ,public works
yesterday armed themselves with carbines and
with bayonets fastened to sticks and assumed a
threatening attitude, which they still maintain.
The national militia were o rdered to proceed
against them, and several battalions are prepar
paring to march to the attack.
Great efforta are being made to raise a revolt
here, and the citizens are much alarmed.
Placards are posted in Estramadura threaten
ing the assassination of all rich citizens who take
part in the election of Cortes.
The Armistice Between the Govern
_ went •ireope and the Insurgents at
Cadiz Prolonged.
LONDON, Dec. 11—Night—The srmistice be
tween the government troops and insurgents
has been prolonged until to-night, both parties
consenting to await the arrival of the President
of the Republican Committee of Seville, who will
make an attempt at mediation. Should these
negotiations fail the government will recom
mence vigorous measures for the suppression of
the insurrection.
The Cadiz Insurrection Instigated by
the Ex• Queen.
PARIS, Dec. 11.—The Gaulois as.serts the insur
rectionary movement at Cadiz is instigated by
the agents of ex-Queen Isabella.
BY MAIL.
Military Demonstrations.
Tim Madrid correspondent of the New York
Times writes as follows :
The great military demonstration which was
got up to overawe the Republicans, came off on
Sunday last. Between infantry, cavalry and ar
tillery, there could not have been less than 20,000
men on the ground. The Minister of War, Gen
eral Prim, harangued the soldier& He declared
that the first duty of the army, under existing
circumstances, was to guarantee the exercise of
national sovereignty by preventing the passions
or interests of the bold or unscrupuleem from
stifling the voice of reason. That was the whole
burden of his speech. Plainly interpreted it
meant that the army would probably - soon be
called upon to crush out all opposition to the
monarchial programme of the Government.
I must not omit to add that, early in tb3 morn
ing, placards had been placed up throughout the
city, declaring that the review was a defiance
flung in the faces of the citizens and that the sol
diers were to carry loaded muskets. Senor Ri
vero, Alcalde of the city, sent round hie agent to
tear down the bills. The bill-sticker kivas ar
rested, and through him the owner of the office
where they bad been printed. They will be
brought before the tribunals. It is pretended
that the author of the placard is a well-known
Republican; but there aro better grounds for sup
posing that he belongs to the clerical and reac
tionary party.
Liberty of Worship.
While the troops were forming on the Prado
popular manifestation was being proceeded with
in favor of liberty of worship. A large number
of citizens paraded the streets and called upon
the Minister of Grace and Justice. A delegation
from the crowd had an interview with him
After declaring that freedom of worship was an
established fact in Spain, the Minister said that
be would leave the definitive regulation of the
question to the Cortes. When this was repeated
to the crowd it loudly expressed its dissatisfac
tion, and assumed a menacing attitude. • Some
influential persons, however, succeeded in calm
ing it, and great satisfaction was created by the
.announcement that the. Societe del Fontento de los
rtea bad authorized the Protestants in the capi
tal to have their services celebrated in their build
ing on the Sunday.
Gen. Prim has written the following letter in
reply to a communication from a Mr. Levy, con
gratulating the General on the success of his ef
forts to liberate Spain, and begging him to re
store the ancient freedom of worship, and the
ancient synagogues of the Jews in that country.:
MADRID, Nov. 16.—Mr. Henry Levyjr., Edin
burgh—MoNsmun: I have received your letter and
congratulations which you addressed mo ou the
triumph and success of the revolution. Believe
me, I am very sensible of the sentiments of the
high sympathy which you manifest toward me.
One of the principal liberties achieved by Spain
in the great work of regeneration that has been
made le that of religions liberty;only yesterday M.
Romero Ortez,Minister of Religion,in his address
to the people of Madrid, declared and proelalmed
that the edict of the fifteenth century, which ex
pelled your co-religionists from Spain, has been
repealed by the Provisional Government, and
that all religious bodies will be able in future to
raise their own temples and adore God according
to their belief. That solemn declaration of my
colleague is the best response that I cah make to
your letter. Receive, Monsieur, the assurances
of My distinguished consideration.
Signed] J. PRIM.
Punishment or Publishers.
The Imperial Court of Paris has confirmed on
appal the two Judgments of the Correctional
Tribunal, which had condemned MM. Aubulason
and Gaittet, successively printers of die Lanterue,
the former to ono month's imprisonment and
4,000 tranes fine, and the other to two months
and 2,000 francs.
HiMMV
AUCTION SALES.
MR. A. D'HUYVETTER'S
(OF ANTWERP) ;
COLLECTION
OF
HIGHEST CLASS PAINTINGS,
NOW ON EXHIBITION
IN THE
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts,
(EASTERN GALLERIES.)
To be Sold on the Evenings of
Thursday___ and Vriday,
December, 17th and 18th,
AT 734 O'CLOCK, AT
SCOTT'S ART GALLERY
1020 CHESINUT STREET.
den UM B. SCOTT, Jr.
:tnzi:i 34-1
From the Great Fire yin Market St,
HERRING'S PATENT SAFES
Again the. Champion.
The Only Safe that Preserves its
LITTER FROM T. MORRIS PIROT & CO.
romenntanne, Twelfth Month Bth, 1868.
Messrs. Farrell, Herring C0.,.4 629 Chestnut
street—GENTs ; It is with great pleasure that we
add our testimony to the value of your Patent
Champion Safe. At the destructive fire on Market
street, on the evening of the 8d inst., our store
was the centre of the conflagration, and, being
filled with a large stock of •drugs, oils, turpen
tine, paints, varnish, alcohol, &c., made a severe
and trying test. Your Safe stood in an exposed
situation, and fell with the burning floors into
the cellar, among a quantity of combustible ma
terials. We opened it next day, and found our
books, papers, bank notes, bills receivable, and
entire contents all safe. It is especially gratify
ing to us that your Safe came out all right, as we
had entrusted our most valuable books to it. We
shall want another of your Safes in a few days,
as they have our entire confidence.
Very respectfully,
T. MORRIS PEROT & CO.
Herring's Patent, Chpmptom Safes the victors in
more than 500 accidental fires. Awarded the
Price Afedals at the World's Fair,London, World's
Fair,- New York, and Exposition Universelle,Paris-
Manufactltied - and for sale by
FARRELL, HERRING & CO.,
629 Chestnut Street,
Philadelphia.
deis a to th St
phs 3 - g7. 1 17.4 *kJ F.O .4,0 4 , ): IO,PI • )1
The Best-Fitting and. Best-Made
s I xi., rr
OF THE DAY D 3
The "Improved Pattern Shirt,"
AT THE OLD STAND OF
. JOHN C. ARRISON,
Nos. 1 and. 3 North Sixth Street,
(And nowhere dee), which has given so much satisfac
tion to all nho have used it. GUARANTEED IN, ALL
PARTICULARS.
Also, a superior assortment of
Gentlemen's Goode,
Suitable for the season. comprising
SILK I.IE O.
&IN
WOOL.
and COTTON
Under Shirts and Drawers,
Wrappers, Stocks, Collara,Bcarfs,Ties, Gloves, Hdkfsolgo.
NEW ruiscroA rioNs.
Just P'ublished.t
Dr. Howell's Family.
By Mrs. H. &Goodwin. author of "Madge," "Sherbrooke,"
12mo. Cloth, $1 10.
This is one of the most charming and healthful stories
that it has been our fortune to read. The authoress has
woven from the tangled threads of real life, a web beau
tiful, net only with that beauty which fascinates and
pleisse ennobles, and chiefly, with that higher beauty
whichand strengthens.—Troti Prem.
Hillsboro' Farms.
By Mies Sophia Dickinson Cobb. limo. Cloth, $1 N.
A modest preface tells us that the author has not aimed
to teach or prove anything—but she has proved a great
deal—that she can write a delightful novel, one which fa
HO good that we hope she will soon publish another.
The Mimic Stage
A new collection of Dramas, Parsee, Comedies and Bur
lesques, for Parlor TheanicaLs, Evening Entertain
Inuits, and Pchool Exhibitions. Ey George M. Baker,
Author of "Amateur Dramas." 12mo. Illustrated.
$1 50.
'lb° success of "Amateur Dramas" has called forth
thin new work. which. while or a like character, contains
much that Is novel and amusing.
LIFE IN THE GOLDEN STATE.
CLOVERSON
HIS SILENT PARTNERS.
By RALPH KEELER
By the author of "Lion Ben,"
CHARLIE BELL,
TI-11±1 WAIF OF ELM ISLAND
By Rev. ELIJAH KELLOGG
16mo. illustrated. $1 2L.
Ming the second volume of ELM ISLAND STORIES
' By the author of "Itooedale."
--130-SA MO N D- -DAYTON;
By MRS. B.C. GARDNER.
t2mo. Cloth. $1 60
Bnld by all Booksellers and Nowedoalers, and sent by
mail, postpaid, on receipt of price.
LEE & SHEPARD, Publishers,
149 Washington st., Boston.
del2-4 2trPs
ASHMKAIPB BOOK-BTORE
,
NO. 724 CHESTNUT STREET.
sNO W READY,
A NEW ILLUSTRA TEDDAYS WORK FOR THE HOLI
:,'NOTHING BUT LEAVES," A POEM.
ILLUMINATED BY JEAN LEE.
This popular Poem-ba• been illuminated by Mies Jeep
Lee, eo well and favorably known as the illuminator of
"The Beatitudes," published by L. Prang & Co. The
work is produced in the beet etvle of the lithographic art,
the copies being fully equal in drawing and color to the
originaL The whole forms a email quarto and is bound
in elegant crape cloth, bevelled boards, gilt edges, and in
Turkey morocco extra. Price, in ototh, $5; Torkoy.mo
rodco extra, $lO. Only a email O edition published..
ALS,
ALL THE NEW ILLUSTRATEP-WORES, -
STANDARD WORKS IN FINE BINDINGS, •
JUVENILES AND TOY BOoKii,
WIGS= AS ST . .TIONERY.OSM.; Am.; acc.
For wile by
DUFFIELD ARIES -AD,
No. 784 Ottoottiut otreoi.
dolOtl& a m3lzW3
NEW 1PUBILICIATIONO•
New Book and Stationary Store.
HENRY GRAMBO- CO,,
(IL Grambo, of tho late firma of LIPPINCOTT
G RAMBO & CO., and•GRIGG, ELLIOTT & C 0.,)
601 Chestnut Street,
tOPPocite tho Now Ledger Office,/
Wholesale . and Retail. Booksellers,
Stationers, Blank Rook' and . En
velope iiianufaetureis, Litho.
graphers and Printers, im.
porters of Engineer's.
Materials.
We have just received our shipments of fancy articles
and novelties for the holiday trade, which are respect.
fully submitted for examination and sale- to our friends
and the public. Our stook of first class Blank Books and
Stationery for merchants is complete in every respect.
Annexed we enumerate a tew of the leading articles of
the fancy trade: . •
Work stores in everyvarietyl Jewel Cases : Odor Gages;
Travelling Bags; Shopping Bags Silk. Bags ; Bronze
'Figures;• Ladies' Dressing Cases; Gentlemen's Dressing
Cases: Card Receivers; Pocket Books of the finest and
newest patterns, imported ; Library and Office Inkstands:
Mahogany :Rosewood and Fancy Wilting Desks in every
variety of sizes and styles; Fans; Match Boxes; PAPler
Macho ;Cabinets. Tables and Deers; Dressing Cases ;Work
Bores and Jewel Cases:Scotch Goods; Pearl Thsrmemo•
tens: Pearl Albums; Pearl Pen.holders ; Pearl Polders;
ne plus ultra Desks; Bank Gum.banda; Cribbage and
Cribbage Boxes; Chessmen; Rodgers ' Knives; Panay Note
Paper (now styles). -
A superior assortment of Stationery, Domestic and Im
ported. all at the very lowest prices. . den let MS
FINE ILLUSTRATED
AND
CHOICE HOLIDAY BOOKS!
HENRY GRAMBO &
601 Chestnut Street,
---
(Opposite Ledger Office)
Have hut opened, with a large aseortment of STAND
ARD ENGLISH AND OTHER BOOKS; in fine bindings;
also, a very fine selection of ALL THE NEW AND
CHOICEST ILLUSTRATED WORKS.
JUVENILES AND TOY BOOKS, ALBUMS, &0.,
adapted for the present Holiday Season, and to which
they invite the attention of all in search of elegant
Christmas Presents, at moderate prices.
ENGLISH AND FOREIGN BOORS, PERIODICALS,
&c., imported to order weekly by steamer. delSlBtrp
J.B. LII-PINCOTT & CO.
Have Just Published
A NEW NOVEL
By "OVAL"
TM corms',
The Story of A Waif and Stray. By "Ouida,' ,
Author of "Strathmore" "Under Two Flags." "Idaita,”
"Granville do Vigne." "ChandoN" etc.
With Portrait of the Author ffoni an Engraving on 'Root
1 vol. Itlnto. (If nearly 700 Pages. Cloth. Mee, $2OO.
A FEW FRIENDS. AND ROW TREY AMUSED
THEMSELVES. A Tale in Nine Chaptern, containing
Description of Twenty Paetimed and Gamee, and a
Fancrdrees Party. By M. E. Dodge, author of "Hans
Brinker", and the "Irvington Storied." 12mo. Line
cloth. SI Z.
"in the name of Many reader", aenlord de well ae Ju.
more, we thank Mrs. Dodge for a very pleasant and face!.
eating wolurne, which cannot fail to be in great demand
during the holidaye."—.P/dia. Pram
uL
SEEKERS AFTER G 01): The Lives of Seneca, 'Entete.
tus and Marcus Mullins. By Bev. F. W. Fanams. M.
A.. author of ,Eric, or Little by Little. Illustrated.
Lamo. tiunerfiEVnaper. Fine cloth. S 2 00. Being the
third volume of the timidity Library.
IV.
_ _
THE AMERICAN JUROR: being a Guide for Jurymen
throughout the United States. Containing Rules for
testing the credibility of Witnesses, and weighing and
estimating evidence; together with a system of Forensic
Reopening for Jurors. By H. B. Wilson. 16mo. Cloth.
$125.
"ALL'S FOR TEE BEST "SERIES. By T. B. Arthur.
Embracing AU'.' for the Best—The Seen and the Unseen
—The Heroes of the Household. 3 vols. - 16 mo. Each
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JUVENILES.
OLIVER OPTIC'S Down the RiVer. •
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CHARLIE BELL. WORDS OF HOPE,
ROSAMOND DAYTON. &c.. &c.
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yOUNGIFOLKS' NEWS.
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And many others
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TOGETHER
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FINE JEWELRY.
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Superior Table Cutlery with Ivory handles. plain or
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Watches and Clocks carefully repaired by competent
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All goods. warranted of MIST QUALITY. at prizes
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BYZANTINE MOSAIC, NEWEST STYLES.
del2'de2fir
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". - GREAT REDUCTION.
',..i i llereat t Sar.troc:rul%lMgoianua" 1 . we
MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS
GREATLY BELOW USUAL PRICER. •
As we have, in addition to a complete assortment of
• AHIDTe, U6DEILWBAB AND HOSIERY,
An elegant variety of fancy goods' comprising Scarfs.
Tice, (ilovee, Cardigan Jackets, and other requisites for
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This will afford an opportunity for procuring '
Holiday Presents at Moderate Prices
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deli s tu th rp
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Uhildren'S,Uarrtages.
Uhildreu s Gigs.
Children's V. heol-barrows
Children's Ww>ons, -mo.
The finest assortment In the city. at most reasonable
den
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PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS
Largo and cOmpletO stock, great va.
_zloty, and at prices from
g 5 eta. to 650, at
PVI 0 0 11, E S
129 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET
del9 5 to th tde2.56
H0L.13D.A.,X7 Goons
We have now on• hand the Largest and finest assort.
montof fancy goods Over offered to tho public, of the
newest designstof late importations and unprocedentedly
low prices.
BRONZE CLOCKS, STATUARY, INKSTANDS, &o.
PA ELAN OBOUPS,BUSTS,S7'ATUATTES & ANDS
CHINA AND BOHEMIAN VASES,TOILET SETTS.
BOUQUE7' HOLDERS, &A,
LAVA SMOKING BOLDERS,MATCH
AND TOBACCO BOXES.
.14 'WINTERS OF VARIOUS DESIGNS, RICHLY
MOUNTED ON WOOD AND BRONZE,. BRONZE
AA ND .CHINA CARD STANDS, FLOWER POTS.
HANCHAG VAS.ESoko., &c.
- 1K A. 1-IARRISONi ---
Imo cIEtESTIigUT STREET.
deg•tu the faro§
0111.9.- 'EDWARDNOB.
HOSPITAL, 1518 AND 1520
••••"" Bombard street, Dispensary. Dep rtment.—Kodi
rid treatment and medicine furnished Vi mluitously to
the poor.
I READ THE LATTER PART OF THIS
ADVERTISEMENT.
Magnificent
gitock
exquisitely
FurnitUre
at •
unpAilallelect
low
Prices.
elegant
goods
exorbitant
prices,
offer
stupendous
assortment
superb
goods
superior
design
superlative
finish,
ornate
with
best
ideas
most
colebrted
artists,
comprising
Louis XIV.,
.LQuis XV.,
Eliabethan,
Pompeii,
Neo Grek,
Marie Antoinette,
Pompadgur,
modern
styles.
Discarding the above Superlative
Adjectives and coming to sim
ple Adverbs, which will fully
express what we wish to
inform the community,
that we have
on hand
A VERY NICE
Stock of
VERY NICE
FU R NI T URE
WHICH WE WILL SELL
FAIR PRICES.
GEO. J. lIENKELS,LACY & Co.
Thirteenth and Chestnut Sts.
Mr JAMES ILUSSELL. Lownw...
Don't believe in the Flying Datchmsn 2
Well; I have known him for'years ,
fly butts,(,wrenched from Mach:itch, main
I bhudder whenever he nears!
Ho 's a Rip van Winkle skipper,
A Wandering Jew of the sea,
Who sails his nedevilled old clipper
lu the wind's eye., straight also, bee
Back topsails ! you can't escape him ;'
The resin-ropes stretch with his weight,
And theAucercst old toggerica drape lum- .7
The Lord knows how fur out'of date!,
Me a long.disembodied Idea,
(A kind of ghost plentiful now),
Se stands there • you fancy you see a
Coeval of Tot:furs or Dow.
He greets you ; would Lave you take letters
You Bean tbu addresses with' dread;.
While he mutters hls,donsers and macre.—
They 're all frcitu the dead to the dead !
Yon seem taking tiwe for reflection,-
But the heart fllls your throat with a jam,
As you spell in each faded direction
re -
An ominous ending in duct.
Am I tagging my rhymed to 4 legend ?
That were eltani{lng green turtle to mock :
No, thank ) out I've found out which wedge-and
la meant for the head of a block.
The fellow I have In my mind's eye
Plays the old Skipper's part upon shore,
, And sticks like a burr, till he finds I
Have got just thu gauge of his bore.
Tbie postman 'twlxt one ghost and t' other,
With lan dates tbat emelt of the mould,
I have met bite (0 man and brother, -
Forgive me!) in azure and gold.
In the pulpit I 'ye known of hia preaching,
Out of bearing behind the times,
Some etatereent of Ealaam'e impeaching,
Olvinir Eye a due sense of her -
lhaveseen him some poor.auelent_titrashing
Into tometbiug (God save us !) more dry.
With the Water 01 Life Itself imaging
The life out of earth, sea, and sky.
O dread fellow-mortal, zet newer , *
DI epatebea to carry, or none !
We 're es quiets as the Greek and the Jew were
At knowing a loof - froin ketone.
TIII the Couriers of God fail in duty,
Wu oho' o't ualt: a rowanay for ne•rs, -
Nor sate the soul's hunger for beauty
With your drawings from casts of a %fuse.
—A llantgefior January
I.lppineows Magazine for January.
We think the many admirers of Lappincoteg
ifaqazine will be disposed to grant that this is
about the best number yet published. It really
affords every element of interest, being corn_
poundedof good stories, humorous and enter
taining ephemera, admirable essays and reviews,
and poetry of a high order. The sensation to
grow out of the new American, novel, "Beyond
the ro Breakers," will bo su to increase in a way
gratifying to the publishers if the author can
keep up the excitement and brisk movement
with which the story starlet. Here, for instance,
in the picture of the big-fisted, jolly lath inn—
keeper, Terence, on trial for theft before the
Mayor of Philadelphia.
fmrs wAlzr.-firativr 2tcrlC-iCHZPRII BEIVER THE
Cassiday was called as witness. Terence
started as the man came forward; then involun
tarity drew up first one sleeve and then the other '
oxpesing, as he did so, a ring of white on each
wrist, above the large, tanned hands. The May
or% quick eye detected the movement, and he
• turned to the officer apparently to give an firdcr;
then glancing again at the prisoner, from wheito
face the flush of anger was fading, he seemed to
think better of it, and merely saki-• to the wit
ness, "go on."
Cassiday deposed that, the previous night. he
bad lodged In - No. 36, a small trout hall bed-room
on the third dour of the house kept by the pri
soner; that, in the middle of
,the night he had
been awakened by the sound of some one mov
ing about in his room; that -be . -recognized the
prisoner by his general appearance, bat espe
cially by his cloth cap trimmed with far; that at
the moment he brat saw him the prisoner was
stooping over a chair, just beyond the washstand,
where he (the deponent) bad laid his coat before
going to bed; that he (the prisoner) rewained
for some time in this stooping position, as It
searching for something, then turned the
washstand, so that he (the deponent) elki
Mindy see his sloe face, took up a candlestick
which was standing there, and passed o _
of the room on tiptoe; that in the inside pocket
of the coat he (the depouent) had a hundred and
seventy dollars in a stout linen sack, and all in
gold eagles, which, on tieing afterward to search
his coat, he found was gone.
Terence eat like one in a stuptir, till awakened
by a question of the Mayor addressed to the
witness,:
"Did you lock your door before going to
rest ?"
"No; I tried to, but I found the lock wouldn't
work."
"That's a Ile!" burst forth Terence. "Di4ll
st lock out of order In my house from garret to
cellar l"
"Wuit your turn, prisoner," said the Mayor. a
little sterol); "you shall be heard in deteneu."
Then to the witness ;
' Yon env jou, saw the prisoner. Had you left
your candle burning? There was no moon last
night, I think."
"No, your, konor, but there was a lamp in the
same& just, opposite, and there was no cur
tain to the window; ao I could see well enough."
'•Why did not you stop him and raise the alarm
at ()Dec?"
"1 was scared, just wakincup and I was afraid
be might murder me if I stirred."
The contempt on the prisoner's bold frank
face was something refreshing to see. "ate
cbicken•sonled, perjured villain !" he muttered
undur his breath.
"Look at that money-bag," said the mayor to
the witness; "la it the one you had?"
After what seemed a careful examination, the
man snswered "No."
"Officer, see what It contains."
Seventeen gold eagles, ten half-eagles and
twenty-two dollars in bank-notes—two hundred
and forty-two dollars in all—were the contents.
"Prisoner, where dia you get these seventeen
eaglet?"
"A peddler paid me fifteen of them, to-morrow
will be a week."
•
"For what?"
"For a gold watch and chain and some jewelry."
"flow came you to have a watch and jewelry
for sale?"
"Sure,an' I took them from one of me board
ers fur a debt of two hundred and twenty dol
lars, bein' I could get nothin' elec."
"And you have kept the money in that bag in
your pocket ever duce?"
"Till thie bleseed day, yer honor.%
"Wee any one present when lola traded with
the peddler?"
"I diaremembet- exactly, but I think not."
"What was his name?"
"1 never axed him."
The Mayor reflected, then made a few memo
randa in pencil and handed them to the pollee
officer; "Bring me word whether the lock In
room 136 of the house occupied by the prisoner
works well or not. Observe whether the win
dow of that room has .a ctirtnin, and Whether it
is opposite, to a Street lanip. Then ask the chnta
bernuaid of the house if she found a candlestick
in No. 86 when she went to make the bed. Pris
oner, we shall have to detain you till the officer
returns. In any event, the offence you are charged
'with is bailable, and you way send by him for
any of your friends in case bail is required."
In nu hour the pollee officer returned.reportlng
that the lock ot No, 86 would' not work, that Lim
window of that room was uncurtalned, that there
was a street lump just opposite tp it, and that the
chambermaid declared that when she went, after
torts kfast, to do riP the room, instead of fluding
the candlestick there, as she expected, it was on
the flour of the passagnotitslde.,
After 'limning to this report, the Mayor again
caned up thes:nee, whed tke prisoner what. he
bud to 0.)S1 for himself, listened patiently to his
vague, incoherent protestations ofttiromence,and
than ordered that he find bail for his appearaneu
to stand trial at the next term for tareeny, and
that the mettey-bag.. and its contents be mean
while retained. • Two of his aSsociates, whom he
bud reluctantly sent for,-carne .ec. - ,rerly forward
with the requisite hull, And Terence was released.
Among his friends mice' more, Tcrimec • Berm
refolutd, ILL a measure, the habitual flow of high
spirits which had contributed to make him the
general - favorite he was,
THE DAILY, EVENING 13IILLETIN , --.I 3 IIILL,DELPHIA,
.SATURDAY, DECEMBER. 12, 1868. ----TRIPLESHEET:
Wo Mast men:tit to state that, with "Among
the,ll7erikere,',' Messrs. Lippincott inaugurate the
plan of embellishing their periodical. Mr. E. B.
Bernell's illustration to the novel is spirited and
carefully cut, and, it )13 appropriate that a Phila
dilphia story should be'entristed to the hands Of
E.O intelligent a Philadelphia artiat. Anolfier
feature, which, indicates the advance in common
sense of our time, is that the articles almost all
stand over the names 5 . .1" their authors,
'Mite good poets unite to form a tripodal
epitbalomium for a i'Seceind_Wedding." Too
bolt.) , to print entire, this three-fold tribute will
bear the unravt;ling of one of its cords, which we
separate for our readers. Leaving out the poems
of Stoddard and Ba3ard Taylor,we•copy
GEORGE. 11. BOILER'S "SECOND GREETING."
Look buck across 3 our fifty
ru years,
fAnd be again the an,' the maid,
Upon whose youthful hopes and fears
GOO'S swietest sacrament was laid.
Bridge Time's swift river with a Om
%ate web anal bide his waves from sight
Glide back lo where your lives began;
Let priKend present/reunite.—
Be this that far October day
Which distance only lifte the higher—
A day mid) clouds of smoky gray
Rolling above tho =a of Are.
Be dais that quickly-falling night
Which camdit you almost unaware—
Your mairinge-eve ; and to I bow bright
tibines every star that glittered Were
Make each of pa a wedding-guest,
A frietd amid the throng you knew,
Whom lips pronounced your nuptials blest,
Whose eyes were filled with tender dew.
Why think, 0 Bride, of how the hours
Have stored your memory as they rolled,
Or 'why your wreath of orange flowers
Time's alchemy has turned to gold ?
Why, Bridegroom, look from face to face,
AE though you knew, them, and could name
-=
YOur cbilerenwomon fair with grace,
And ripened men of worth and fame !
Why look you both for one who lies
lo glory, but eo tar apart ?
le 'earth d memory dims ou eyes;
You can hat see him with the heart
Think them not sours; but each a guest
Or kinsman; and ourselves your peas,
Who differ from 3 on, like the rest
Of mortals, but in looks and years.
We will it. thus. With Fanny's wand
We Fever and rejrno your chain
By this out golden lir bond
Whom tow:lanai make yon young azain
Men see the fruitwithin the flow . er. -
We see the flower within the fruit
About tLe Opt-uiog sun and shower
Our wilful lips to-night are mute.
The music culls, the dance is set,
Tliefeast is 'pried within the ball :
Bridegroom and Bride, a while forgot
A little, to remember all!
Mr. Dc Leon furnishes an amusing history of
"Christmas Pantomimes,”from which we extract
the following racy notice of two of the most re
nowned stars of the holiday stage of London:
men AND OttI.IIALIJI.
It was In the eighteeuth century that panto
mime first became the tint d institution of the
bridal stage IL has since remained. The ewe-
Waited Rich, under the assumed name of Lunfirst
introduced Harlequin to the British people, who
at once clasped him to their hearts, and are to
day loth to release him. From opinions of con•
temporary_ writers he must, in the hands of this
great master, have beau the perfection of droll
and effective comedy-
The popularity Rich gave the epeetaele
has never waned, and the love for it
has produced in England scores of able pantomi
-11216t6 she has honored at home or sent to other
Da I lot , 5.
In the first form of English pantomime, Harle
quin was the central figure, and all the odd con
tretemps of the drama were made to revolve
around him. Columbine might ogle and dance
as she %kited. Pantaloon sigh and groan, or .;lown
tumble and mug, without draveluE the main in
ten et frototbe black-maseed tignra,witit_sdagger
of leth and bludgeon of bladder. But a revolution
came In the timeof Grimaldi. This wonderful actor
—bred to the stage from almost infancy, acrd
possessing a magnetism that ever held his audi
ence to him—chose the Clown as hie, gracility;
and by the indescribable funs he threw into its
coact ption, be deposed Harlequin and drew the
chief ha terest of the piece to himself and his
cheraett. Thoroughly versed in stage e ff ects.
rne,
and e ly knowing the character of his audi
ence, pm easing tact to conceive and dariug to
-a me startling novelties, and, above all, - an in
finite sense of humor and a conscientious desire
to l It.VULC jibs profession, Grimaldi soon rose far
above competition. almost above envy. He in
veiled the hitherto coarse role with a droll deli
cacy peculiar to himself. An able gymnast,
an agile dancer and a rare comic
tenger, be still relied upon hie
vowels of speaking gesture and facial mobility
to produce his greatest effects. Shaven, painted
are parti-colored as ho was, a single change of
Grimaldi's face would convulses his audience.
The n membratice of those droll grimaces, effa
cing that of postures, daect saind even his iuimit
able song, “Tippitiwitchet," would cause a
smiley ears afterward on cheeks that Time had
furrowed or dorrow blauctied in the interval.
It, as the French cook said, landing hie condi
mer, t, "Monsieur. with this sauce one might cat
his lathed" Surely the recollection of Grimaldi
might cause the up tidal gourmet to laugh away
the consequent indigestion.
During a stage life of over forty
years, Joseph Grimaldi retained the high
position his original genius had wade him. He
wee ler many seasons the leading pantomimist
of "Drury Lane" and . ' Saddler's Wells" at the
in me time, acting in the first play at the one, and
then driving to the other just in time for the
after-piece. In intervals of town engagements.
country managers fought for him with ardor.
His receipts for a single performance in the pro
vintes frequently reached one hundred and fifty
pounds—a sum rare in those days for the greatest
tragedians or the pets of the lyric stage.
At his death be left boats of friends and few
enemies,and an enviable reputation, for dollloStie
as well as public virtues. He left, too, a blank ,
in the English stage that no ono has since filled.
Many new Clowns have arisen, who imitate
Grimaldi in vain; many have struck into new
veins that make fame for themselves and fortunes
for their managers; but it is generally conceded
that pantomime has steadily retrograded since
his death. The Clown is degenerated from a very
artist into an athlete, a tumbler, or a dismal
jester, such as the tan-bark of any, circus can
otter. The plays themselves,
no longer illumined
by his brilliant sallies and incomparable jests,
are hardly more' than motives to intro
duce the , bright thoughts of
their authors, agile feats of gymnas
tics, or magnificent effects of light, scenery and
machinery. They are either these or vehicles
for entire on the social and political abuses of the
hour; no longer the genial merry, entirely fairy
spells woven by Grimaldi. Garrick'a lament
over Rich seems equally applicable to him :
" When Luti appeared with matchless art and
whim,
He gave thp power of speech to every limb;
Tho' masked and mute, convoyed his quaint in
tent, •
And told in frolic gestures all he meant; •
But DOW the motley boat and sword of wood
Requires a tongue to make them underetood.,7
On Bolting-Night now, as grizzly old Fozzle
buttons his overcoat on t hei steps of "Old Drury,"
he looks at ancient Tozzle and smiles grimly. Toz
zle understauds that smile, and sighs as he
, wraps his 'head in his mutiler:'"Ah, yes! Flex
more is , good—very good; but ho is not Gri
meldi t".:
What wonder, then, that England showered
praise upon the facet exponent of her favorite
pastime—that Byron, Kemble and the greatest
of theland became hie patrons, or that managers
vied for the poestkision of a magnet all pote at to
attract the precious metals I .What wonder that
Charles Dickens should have dedicated his pen
to a life of the mime cellated from his own dt . trY,
and that to the English mind to clay Grimaldi is
the embodiment of pantomime—to,the) old bi ,
- re col It ction, to the young by tradition I
,
One of the most ." - excitiug papers is
an account of a body-guard of the, Em.
peror Napoleon 111. We are promised _a •
•
reeemption Of, this .Dumas-IlkOc - ,m . ritivec - --- -
Mr. George M. Towle, our aecomplished Con-
sill at Nantes, contrlinthes a charming ragout of „, i
-all Sorts of French customs apropos of the first i
Of the year, an epoch selected by the Genie for 1
celebrations similar to ours `of the` Week -pro
along. -
TDB STUDENT OF. TEE LATIN QUARTIfiI—DIB , ' JOVE
'DE L'AN.", ' '
, On New Year's morning Adelpho proceeds ; to
array himself in all -his glory. Ilia coat is `more
.. bobby, his inexpressiblea more tight-fitting, bin
cravat mere • glaringly - • varl-Colored;
his hair - wore bunchy than
ever. Be wears his -short, j:runty` - hat at
about the angle at which the rower of Pisa is
suppoied to Wan; and WS boots-are so small that
only by many herculean struggles and, larches
has he teen enabled to encase hie feet in them;
Follow him tta he struts briekly off down the
Street, swingleg his cane and pulling the cigarette
he has just been buaily,rnakieg in the doorway.
Be leans you througha seemingly endless laby
rinth of narrow streets and dark alleys, so that
you EOGD /08C all points ef ' the compass. Fi- -
nally he stepsat a little house, in , the suburbs,
and . disappears a moment ' through .the
close, little court. Ile. speedily reappears, bat
not alone. A dashv,' flabby. curly, bright-eyed,
tastily-dressed, coquettish demobelle Is leaning
on his artn; talkivg and geoticulating, and shrug
ging her -shoulders, and lifting her eye-brows,
and looking np sideways, and -tittering in •the
silliestllarry-of estitetuent and expectation.-;--It:
is his "atule;" all students have "amies," and
Adolphe is a student of studente. Anotuer are.
perm fly interminable -wandering; through streets
and lanes and squares; another pause, this time
before a large building; whence come sounds of
laughter and merriment, contention of voices
and tramping, of many feet, s mingled.; with
intermittent ravings .of trombones and
wild e creeeh in gs of fiddles. Adolphe
and his "arctic" catch the sounds, and
are infected; "amie" • begins ito' sing, and,
both go bopping up the stairs with impatient
glee. The door. swings open, and there,in a
large, light hall, profusely decorated with paper
garlands andsvergreens, you behold a hundred
Adolphes, with a hundred giddy counterparts of
• Adolphe's "amie." As they enter. a roar of "bon
fours" grecta them; they are 'surrounded by an in
definite numberfif enthusiastic bands; sad .one,
jumpson a table, with D huge goblet of wine, and
drinks welcome, amid wild plaudits, to the new- i
comers. _Adolphe, seizing somebody elae's
"tante," goes sweeping off into a wild and un
rhy thtnic waltz: his own partner has meanwhile
been taken posEession_of_bv_a prim. youthavith. a
long nose and solemn countenance; and the
two couples come bump apinst each
other in an incredibly short time at the
other - end of the bail.. Four chivalric
loosing, dark men, with, moustaches 4 , la
Napoleon and'artistic-locking hair, are propped
on a table opposite the door—the musicians;
these,_.sreing the spirit begins to move, strike up
one or Strauss' List with artistic zeal, bobbing
their heeds and growitnevery nal and earnest in
the lace. Pel.aw, we never see dancing in Ame
rica ! How they whirled and leaped; how the
hut.cired Adolphes swung their airy partners high
above the floor; how the hum of a hundred
voices. now and then interrupted by a scream._
from a demoiselle or an ecstatic about from one
of the - Mtn, kept pace with the inspiring music;
bow they all got rid, and their hair flew over
their !bees, and rosettes and ribbons fell over the
poi (pet in all directions, and some subsided, ex
hausted, on the benches. and others kept desper
ately up in sallatory rivalry; what a wild, reek
h FE, infectious scene it wag, —can only be ima
gincti by one who has witnessed it, this New
Year's festival, among the students of Pads Uni
versity!
Of a more solid character is Karl Blind's inter_
eating paper—we suppose wittier reviewers
than we will notice it as Karl Bliud's conundrum
,
—"Will Spain be a Republic?" His - review of the
leavening forces which have long been at wprit
preparing for this quietest of nistoric revolutions,
is most interesting; and as the infinence of men of
letters and of scholars is after all the deepest
upon a country's history, we select for quotation
the following account of
THE SPA-'9lBll ZTUDESZ:
It ought to be mentioned here that quite agen
eration of young men of learning has within the
last. twenty years risen up Irk Bpain, who arc
meetly wedded to the Republican party. They
form the intellectual vanguard of Progress. Their
infintnee Is especially to am observed in the
tal itself, where, togetherVvith the lower middle
and the working classes, they formed the corm
terpe lee to the large number of dependants and
bangers•on of the Court. Bat for them, and a
few men such as Ribero; the distinguished repre
, tentative of the people, and now mayor of Mad
rid, the prontinciamientio wettld not have been so
effectively carried oat in the capital before the
royal cause bad even been defeated by arm&
There are ten universities in Spain, which at
the !set census contained an aggregate number of
8,611 students. Those universities are in the,
towns of Barcelona, Granada, Oviedo, Madrid,
Salamanca, Santiago' Sevilla, Valencia, Vall.udo
lid and Saragossa. That Is to say, Spain 15 geo
gra ph ieully dotted over with centres, small though
they be, of the Intenectnal movement ; an impor
tant fact, In so far as the younger professors and
the students have in reality, in latter times, ire
qui ntl, mixed In political warfare. Germany, it
is hell known, owed much to her learned classes
during the time of the struggle against the tyran
ny of the First Napoleon, as well as after the re
covery of her independence. lam not aware of
the existence, in Spain, of a kind of Bursehen
sehaf t, or students' association. for political pur
poses. But, at any rate, tendencies somewhat
similar to those which characterized the more
revolutionaty eeetion of the German Burschem
saw' t some forty or fifty years ago have latterly
thou n themselves among the youth of the uni
versities in the Peninsula.
'ln some special branches of knowledge, as in
geography and statistics, Spain has latterly pro
(arced Ft'N el al esculent works,else it would not
be possible to get that insight into her condition
which can be gathered from the data laid abJve
before the reader. The light is thus flowing in,
dispelling the darkness in which a gifted hut
long oppressed people has hitherto groped. Al
moat tmobseryed by Europe, which mistook tne
withered outward aspect of the country for its
true character, a New Spain had been forming
for curs, until the day came when the miserable
tegument that disgrace(' her limbs was flung
aside, and a regenerated nation appeared in
youthful strength, ready to begin a new era of
—with no apology for the space we have taken
up with these interesting citations, we check our
selves, nevertheless, in the fear of reprinting the
Whole of a number which has struck us very
agreeably. We will hastily indicate the remain
ing contributions. Lucy Hamilton Hooper writes
a Christmas story, "The Blue Cabinet," and Al
bert Fabro another, "Golden Dreams." Mrs
Elardinz Davis continues her pOwerful romance,
"The Pearl of Great Price." "Justice for Blue-
Beard" is the taking title of a lively trifle of an
argument by Miss Campbell—which will, no
doubt, be a great comfort to Monsieur Aujac if
he sees it. Jane G.
.Austin writes a love story
called "Nor Dead nor Living." "Our Monthly
G ossiy" is filled with jokes and localisms,especial
to the season and in the original vein opened by
Mr. LippincoWs editor. The "Book Sots. es" at
tend to Mr. Potter's"lnstrument of AssoCiation,"
."Carmlula Collegensia," "What Answer," and
"The New England Tragedies."
With this number commences Hap Third Volume
and Second Year of Lippincott's. We congratu
late the publishers and editors - on having pro
duced a perkdical which, while elegant and
scholarly, has not bad its angles and individu
ality all rubbed down by the grinding of respec
tability and classicism—Lipiiticott'ols a cultivated.
couleur, but be is not just like- all the. rest of
them, for all that. To our readers we would offer
the reminder, which we learn from the business
adverilsement, tbat—"rzoto is the' time to sub
scribe "
LEGAL, N trfaucry.
j'l 111$ MUM; t' TOP THE lINITND
/Beta for the Faettru Itt.trict of renu.ylyanitt.—
I.LJAM MORIIIB. of Philadelphia, Bantrupt, late
of tho Urine of
MANN 1401tR.18 & LEE, .
rerz & Ato'
lItru,DON & NICHHIS,
Ilev;ng oetitlonod foe hie dl liii. ge, 4 r..eating of ore.
ditnro will de held on the sth day ot January, at 2
, be me hytitter WILLIAM MoIIItILIAUL'Itt No
58, Wa.t Ilt eurct..th the cify or
.t - hit'adetputa, th
( - XllllOllll ion of tho bankrupt lofty he 800 hod and t the
any
luoitio-Htll. oting quired by c.ctione 27 or 22 of th, net
of Cot tp re. trarraeteo. T he -Itegleter will certify
whether ihe 'tont:rept ha. cailorined to lii a duty. A
heating a 111 ntrn I hod On Iyht , NEol.)AY;the moth -day
Juni ftry, Doi before, the Vona. at Philadolph.ft, at le
Oti ik A: r ~ where too put tire Inte,toote.tl, may chow
online no.intiat th,;dhchargm.,
tiertcd by +he Clerkuuul Rep inter. Jg the name of, the_
vdre 1,1 r th.• ofti of the Court. duke ,21.
INsTltf)t
Ii ORBERA NS IT I? SCIENTIFICALLY
taught at OW 131113 Riding School, l'ourtt4
rtreut *boy° Vino. Tbn borro..unf gulPt nud
llioroveldy trained For taro s suddlo lioreea. • Alan cm ,
,j ugen ut oil fia nc e for rreddiugo. yanks, opera, funerdiA,
the 'll d iO EH LS OICLIGE &•SO
4145. florets trained
wnrysitinuffins.
AMERICAN AOADEMY OP MUslO
• , •
ITALIAN AND GER.MAN OPERA.
MUSICAL Di ItEILTDR. ' !,. MAX 51ARETZ •IMUK.
SATuktDAir,r.Ve:N7iNt.i c OeOembor 12.
GRAND MAttEW ELL NIGIIt.
GRAND FAitewEl...L. NIGHT,..-•
DER FREISO kJ U rZ.
DER ektßisellUrZ.
. Bung emiraly la "Jarman. •
NLVY
_ NEW PROP-Blatt fl imported expressly for the
WOL F*6 GbEN.
And the followhiggr..at - " • •
'AD .2'llE MME. ANNA DU LA. ORANGE
ANNA. ....... 51.1.0AUE 120 r CfLtt.
MAX.:. . ...... ........ ..... . .... tio.itit HAtuEt.MAN N
HeicAN'uttNll33.
HIFCE I.llCult ItElWlAltuf
liUNU • . . ~ HE ot DEURIAGER
ADMit.itioN. O:4E DOLLAR.
• RESERVE) , S EATII LP Y EXTRA.
NA13.1.1 , E.Y el tiCI.I.,I , IFrY OEN /'l3.
AM PiIiTiIEATRE. 25 cents.
1110 - TICKETts AND ail 1. Cl 3 lt&N - NOW BE SECURED.
Fog ANY tiiftliTH st the A.CADEMY OF MUSlO'and
CHAS.' TRUMI'LEWS Muth Store. No. ala Onetteut
street.
APJEBIUAN .&UADEMY U N
OLE BULL
respectfully announces one
GRAND CONCERT
GRAND MATINEE
SATURDAY EVENING and AFTERNOON. Dec. 10, 13%
misted by the following favorite artiste .]
lel6B bARTON. of Hoeton, soprano.
}LK 0W:3 . /0a:8 V. HALL. Barltnne.
311t.' EG BERT LANSING, l'ian l et and Accomnanist.r.
• .81)1 , 16810N. ONE 1.
I'AMILt WHOLE. FIFTY UENTB.
beats can be 'moored, rofthota extra charge, at Gould's
Plano Wsueroome, No. 921 tthestnut street, and at the
Academy of. &halo.
bale of rests will commence on Wednesday morning,
Mc. Id, at fi o'clock.
Ot.. , NUEKT.—Doora-open at 7; commence at 8 o'clock.
BIA'IINEE—Doore (mount 1.80; commence at t.80.e. hL
B. lcuttNaubt...
Buekreee Manager.
M IUEL JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE'.
Begins ht 7)4
MONDAY, L'ec. 7th 1868. and EVERY EVENLIG.
NEM as OF
Cc'. Fitzgerald's I.lsy.
iL VES AT Ns Y.
. . WITH EVERY SCENE NEW.
By Charles Hawthorne ano Mr. Fetters.
EW REAMS
MECHANItAb • EFI , EOTB.. ,
By John Furze and Assistants.
New Musk by U. ft. Dod worth.
' Vai legated 'tight Effects by Gso.lLentle:
And A FULL. AND PoWEHrt,t. CAST.
By Mrs. JUIIN DREW AND COMPANY..
BEA'JS BlEc U RED NIX DAYe 'IN ADVANCE.
ofiR,STNUT-STRELT THEATRE.
TIES. SATURDAY. NIGUT t
TUE. GtLEAT UIRA;Ua TROUPE.
Heeded by
. . ,
JAMES ROBINSON . .
In a EEEttlAiBe) PlilkinAMlSE,
WEDM.:6I)AI An I/ SATLJUDAY.
, .
IiaANI/ Clitutio MaTi , Y.E.
Eer Ini ther partici/lure eee morning Ledger.
141 ALM IT STREET THEATRE. Sock's! at 134 o'clock.
TEM (SATURDA IND. Doc. LI
M RS. D P. BOWERS
In her extraordimay Impersonitions of
JANE skit thE AND Yla
Nicholas hos% c's colebratod Tregedy. in 5 acts, of
- - titylr - 41.
Jere Shore MRS.a P. -- B-3W - ERS -
To concludo with ins interesting Domestic Drama of
MADEDAINE.
Madelafne WIS. D. P. 00 Mn. R 3
Monday—Mrs. D. Y. DOWEtIS as, ` ELL GWYNN E.
THE ORANGE GIRL.
A Christmas Storv, will be produced shortly
AII'EATRE ,CoMIQUE
SEVENTH . STREEr. below Arch. Commence at 7 30
J. C. ti Plt.t.it , HY. beccee and Manager
}trot WI ek of
TILE AUTOMATON.
Filet Week of the
t PIRAI, ASCENSIOv.
Pint Week JOCK°. Tat,'t.tl...UKEY.
'An entire change every night,
• Al' at
HAt' DEL 41ND HAYD'I SOCIETY
Wth perform, dui inft the s-aeon three Oratorios.
with the ataiatancer of eminent Ssioietafull Orchestra and.
(Mirth% •• . .
"ELIJAH "i +
I#VAM N D ..
"TWELFTH fda 4e... BY DIOZART.
"MOSES IN EGYPT,' HY ROSSINI%
Butircriptiona will be received at Trumplerls during the
trestllt Week, at Six Holl.re for tRo or Niue Dollars tot
three teats for the mufti:
This magnificent Oratorio will he performed on
ILLS HAY EVENING, Dectmber
AT THE ACADEMY tie MUSIC.
The part of tke - Frophet Will be' austairind by
Dr. GUILME CUE, of Horton.
taxa. bOPLIJA Ml zata, of New York Soprano.
Mrs HELEN JARYL3 DAVIS. Cont. alto.
1dr..1 GIL t.F. 'fano?.
Frill.Orchearra and therintlre Ch.,rua Society.
.4/DUt..ToR....
Er-served Beate ........... ......... . SI 50
Fatuity................ ..... ........ 50
An•tibithestre . . .... ... . . ...... 25
For Sale at Triirepfni'e. ifeelierinuiriieei. We:363
GRAND ANNUAL SAL MASQUE
I=l
YOUNG M..43NN MOHO&
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.
On THURSDAY EVENING, January 7th, NM
Tickets only to be had by subscription and admitting
Lady and gentleman. May be obtained et any member of
the Society. 1-%_ice, $5. de9-w a tf§
MUSICAL FL ND HALL
SA • ellt,A) EVENING. Dleember 19th, 1e69.
GRAND SYMPHONY U0N.,8R7 1W
EF..NTZ & 11A881.F.Wm . Uh,BI %EP ORCLIEdTRA OF
PIF Y PERFORMERS.
REF 01' Id AT I N Y PaONY.
Ny end( bn.
UAFIN ASH FA. eh MYHONY.
By Schnbeit.
RIENLI OVERTURE.
By Warner
Whf. STOLL, Violin Solo.
Tickets to Enbtcrl burls number).............51 00
71c11.-t8 to NOT-tillt4cnbers . 160
kor onle by Mr. Bohcr. li 02 Chentnut ntreet; Tramp
le).- VA Chestnut erect, and .t the door.
Li,ore ODt at 7. COLIC, rt punctually at 8 des-12..7t
N AMU:MUM HALL.
Broad etrt et, below Walnut, East Side.
CH AS. LI JARVIS'S
SECOND EItHREE *iF CLASSICAL MUSIC.
SAI LIRDAIr EVENING. Dtceniber 12th. 18$8.
Commencing of b o'clock.
Mr. Jarvis will bave tho valu..b•o assiettnce of
Alit- G. GUHLEM AN Violiniet, and
Mit. It. lILNN,,G, ioloncellist de7.6td
rpHE PUBLIC RELIEARFIALti OF THE GERM4NIt
11 OttlaiLeTßA will be din:optioned on account of the
al 1 C w ing hceu prr runt .p eugt.g d for fa.re, du: hay
IN ill I e resumeq on December Uuth. Fugagetuents cue
be made by adarcrsing G. ttAtirrEßT. 1:131 Monterey
etre. t. Wll More. 1021' Cbettuut street, sr
ATOM'SMusic Store, 1104 Ghe.st ut street. ocl7•tfil
IVI USICAL F UND DALE.
CARL SENT Z AND MARE HASSLER'S
GRAND uttUDI STRA MATINEE-,
EVERY BAIL. RAY 4FTLR O'
NOUN. AT 8)4 CLOCK.
Package of four tickets.
Bir gle .. _ Conte.
For ante at Carl Peutz's Otlicethouer'e 3t0re),1103 Che.t.
out street, and at Mark litteeleg's Ulnae, No. 214 at. Eighth
street. ocr tt
AMERICAN CoNS RVATORY OF MUSICWFNTY-t IFTLI MATINEE: JAN. 6.
Fin]. th Grind Concert. inauguration Day, Ma. ch 4th.
bee Notice in blurted column dell 10.1
A CADEMY OF FINE ARTS.
CHESTNUT Street. above Tenth.
Open from 91t. M. to 6 P. M.
Benjamin Weans Great Picture of
CHRIST REJECTED
WM on exhibition. le2e.tf
FOX% AIIERDJAN VA
RIE O
TY THEATRE,
EVERY EVENING A
IIATiTRDATe ALFTERNOOII.
GREAT COMBINATION TROUPE I
In Grand Ballets, Ethiopian Burlesquer. gonad, Dano
Gymnast Acts, Pantomimes. &a.
&611.4YZItatit
t jAMIla A. P'REEDIAN. AUCTIONEER.
Nn. 429 WALNUT street
Peremptory Bale No. 1924:North Fourth street.
VA LLA BLE MAUDINENI, JAt..Qt MID WOMB,
VIINDANG IeItAAIEB. WARP MIL. S,Nu t
DAM '
S. SPuOLIN. WesEELB. COTT , q , l• AND'
BILK bWIF, Y, ItHADiNG 51 , 13111N} b. HIJOToN
til‘LE &MING MACHINE., TUR' , IVG
CO) TON ANu WOuL, N YARN. TABSELB, GIMP,
WLBI3I.NIi, FRINUE, FIREPIe , OP. Aro. dine
UN TUESDAY MOILNINte.
Dec.ls. at Id o'clock. will be mold the entire Stock and
Ibluchinely of a duepetider and Drese Trimming manu.
fac.ory.
Peremptory Bala No. 1924 Worth Fourth kraut. .
VALUABLE IPAtriI)HY IN.CIRT,t AND HACKLEY
tiT.RBETS. NINIF.TiAIbaII WARD,
ON TUE iLAY iIIURNIA i.
Dec. 10.11, at 10 &Hook, eold.a.` public male, with.
our reFetve, on the premises. a valua , la trycoatory brick
celery. Pt beta:molt, 101)4 feet on llacklav gr. et. and
flit teat ourth turtat, wI h engine and hailer hone°,
blin.k a Pluck. euperlor in•horea powt engine. made by
In att.an, & flue bailer all complete, and In parfea.
order.
_ .
Dr' The Faeihry fh e ,, bt•lntiallu eo , serthettcl, in per.
Ito older and etnnvlttc in, atti.ta arrmwenu,n's.
Ire" e ale t,l'..rtleptor. it 50(1 to be paid at the time of
ea le •
machinery will be eold4tnntediatoly after the
Peal 17.P.tnte.
AT PEIV4 1 1!: BALE.
A vALUABLE 'I.ItACT 2U AC' E 9 OP LANE,
With Ileutdon 1/01.1130. Weiug Sun Lane, iutoreetlod by
l'ighth, Ninth, Touth and bh , venth, Outezio apt'Ploy,3
ntreev cithiu quo (.43t o he Old I.'ool Nowt' Valuestue
depend of limb Ctuff. Tonne ett‘y.
eulnnble nuAineee property No'. Arch etreat.
Bug txTUA a•—• 4 ti tuacloonic Manrtail. ou Mato
,ntstibylonfeet. • •
T) HAILLtI ' a"f &.AI.4.:TRiNEERS.
• 0.0 . 1.111 ucru nY HOUSE,
0. 2 4 ,0, MARE FT street o Iruer of SANK etroot.
Cite .nitvane.rd, nn condunn.ento withnat extra charge
ON TuntLay 01ORNIN4.
.1j7c,16 nclug nt 10 clock.- brootalo VIC. 8011041
Gentle,. l'lnct4. Cfneimorea otlek.at Ouode Garman
too n U,, de. t. , l)lrto Drowore. Elnifcry. Hot.. t.; onot , ,
Shoe & It( ady•ninati Clothing &c., ou two f:uontha , credit.
knyl•Nril TnAl)l , : 'l[4! .FURS, nons, nr,
tell A NS, &c. CO)TI Wring the I.rati . t itemutincotof
iorlvd an:: Ad:a:du Furs offered thin eo.uou, by c 040,.
ON Tli URBDAY MORNING.
Ike. 17, comir.oncing at 10 o'clock.
A cruTion- SALEM.
TiIOMAP di SONS. AUCTIONEERS.
431 .• Noe. and 141 Routh P.:meth Arai»,
PINE ART BX/1 1 1-11TION AND SALE OF THE VERY
111011EnT IMPORTANCE. -
M. xxozELEli, encecesor to GOUPEL dt: CO.. New
T wk. SIIILIOULIGeg I o the ptmpla of Philadelohla. that ne
will make an impel tam alt‘ring of Flue Works of Art.
in &Luau n xt and designs that it tae finest
and nit wt r Legqaant a Ilection of Pictures and Works,of .Art
ev..r offered lir. Phitadelte,ht at public tale The entire
Collection mill be on exhibition in the eastern galluctet, ,
the Pennsylvania Academy of Flue Arts, commemaine
about January ht, until the day of sale. '
At the rtqueet et M. I.:needier the entire arrangement,
exhibition and 'chiefs. s Ilf be ander the management'of
Mr. Charles F. Liam fine, 1125 (;heihnut, et. . .
SALES OF :WOOER AND REAL ESTATE. '
nr Public sales at the Philadelphia ExchamteEFEßli
T t .F 81) nY t at t 2 o'clock. _
Farniture Sales at the 'Auction Store EVER't •
Or Sales at Re., - •idences receive especial attention.
•
ON TUESbAIt. DEC/. 15.
At 12oclock noon, at the 'Exchange: by order of Esc.
cute. ra of heist° of A.'lleyrn an, - deceased— • ' •
One star, Is 0. 1, Pew 85 in Reneseth farad Cmgregir
Don. Wirth street, above Brown. •
A IA ell secure° ground rent of RA situate No. 1715
Carltonrtrect ~
$610,, 1, it Five-twenty Bonds, January and July.
7000 U 't en.forty Bonds. • ,
louu North Missouri itti. Bondi.
3100 Tennessee Bonds, 1859
186t1.- • -
Lehigti Navigation 45 per cent. Gold Bonds.
5560 IliOU Cal . I Company
3r5 lienemeth Ael Co , I/legation - 800dg.
60 A hemania Club Bolide. of Philadelphia.
75 Thant uta Cit) Bonds. do
160 Len, Certificate A. C. Norton. Yhilrtdolphla
We shall% Sheldon 011 and Militia Co.
750 *bare s Monitor,Oil Co. _ • •
2 Hemptield lilt Co.. of W. Va., $50.,
Vet Bond Chapman Mining and Lumbering Co. '
300 bonds tip baud. Mt. Vernon and Pittsbnith
Rat.road Co.
Continental' Insurance Co. Sarin.
•ketato of Anna Paispet—
illOt: Philadelphia t My. five 10 cent loan. • -
ball .rhils d• Ipuia. City 9.19 cent: loan, old. .
%tau Philadelphia tity..6 itt tent t oan, now, _
1000 Camden and Amboy CouPon Bonds. ' •
ltoo Delaware and Kai Stan. Column Ronde.
11.00 PtIIIGES tweed,' Railroad Convertiblo Coupon Bonds.
4146 dchnylkill Nay. Co. Loan, convertible.
7,419 hesapeako and DeL Canal ...owl. 1855%
shares clOl Nay. Co., common.
16 ebares Cheaaneske and Del. Canal.
97 thane Phoenix Insurance Co. . .
191 scares Pennsylvania railroad Co.
88 shares; Lehigh Yalta) , Railroad Co.
12 snares Mechanic& Nalidnal Bank.
17 shares Farmers' and siechanles• Rank.
11 eh art s Philadelphia_Nat onal Bank.---. -
98 ,hares Commercial national Bank.
2e shares Bank of North America,.
For Act omit of Um Pennsylvania RospitaL
- --18 shares Franklin-Fire-Insurance Company. --
For
usher ACCOLUI,GI--
10 shares Pacific And Atlantic Telegraph.
25 shares Urion Mutual Insurance
shims Academy. of. Music, with ticket.
8 eharra Southwark National .Bank.
*lO,OOO second too - tease Columbus and lndlanapolia Cen
tral Railway 7 percent bond.
20 shares etridesourg Mat nfacturing Co.
I entire Philadelphia Library.
$420 Delaware Mutual Insnrance Co. Scrip 1868.
11.0 shares Second and Third !Arcola Passenger Rail
way Co.
82600 Grum and Cower 7 :tit coat
10 ,harts Jeff. rron ire insurance Co.
6 shares Philadelphia and Southern Mail Steamship
om puny.
lOW shares Attie/ lean Gum Paint Co.
o alarms Mount Patin Coal ar.d Oil Co.
19 abates (ion. olid stioct National Bank.
15 shares Union National Bank.
IEO , shares Buck Mountain Coal Co.
I=i 94 shares Central Trarolporbition_co._
REAL ESTATE SALE, DEC. 15.
Orphans. Court Sale—Er , tate of David P. Moore. dec'd.—
NDSOSIE DIODEhN H• ORY ItESI
DEb CE. with side yard, bin 913 hranklin street. above
Pt plat% 26 f. et front. lies all the modern conveniences,
ata tu ex. ellent repair. May be eTnnined any day pro
el its to sale,
Orphans' Court Sale—Estate of Mary G. Lewellyn,dec'd
—LW It Ltlb G. Shippers street, east of Ninth
to phone' Court cale---Fstates of Archibald Mclntyre
ItolAns.az, deed. and Robezt Henderson Robertson, a
re:ion-2 three.stoty Ithlulf, ST ,•RES and DWELL.
.11%613 Nis. 1631 arta 1833 Spruce street corner of Rid.
mouth Place. with six three story Rick Dwellings in. the
it ar, from lug on Sidnionth Place, between Eighteenth
cud Nineteenth streets-37 feet front, 104 feet deep.
ER It VA LU GERNIANToWN PROPERTY—
Tu o-story Stone build!' g and Dwelling. Not. 4669 and
4671 Slain street, Germantown, 69 lest front, 435 feet deep,
boos n as the old Germantown Bank.
Sale Ity Order of Heirs—Estate of Chsa.4.. Snyder,dec'd.
—VERY VALI/ninth, COAL LANDS, 300 acres, Tremznt
township Schuylkill' cou'rty". Pa.•
S. le by Order of Heirs—Estate of John Yomer dec. I
ann VALUABLE LOT, 134 acres, Chestnut Hill
and spring Houle Turnpike, Chestnut Wit
VA LU A BLE BUSIbi C.:SS D—Fo ir story Brick
BO s.L and UW FILLING, No. 206 Pine street.
VALUABLE MILL PROPERTY and MARX. 4516
acres, with water power, known as Broadbent's Mille
Lobn's iretk, '1 u - orey.fouith Ward, tour miles west of/
Market street bridge.
VERY VAr VAR! E COUNTRY PROPERTYTORE
and DAVELLINDar and 97s acres, Lancaster Turnpike,
Lowe. Motion townzhip.Pdontromecounty, Pa.. 6 miles
frcin Market street bridge, 2 BRICKve Hastonville.
1110D1.1tN FOUR, bToktYIt,SUDENUE. No.
.119 Now eta eat
TlinEE-nTORV BRICK DWELLING, No. 1640 North
Twenty secend street.
Pi hEM oRY SA LE—For account of whom it Mat"
concern- TWti.nTR a FRAME RESIDENCE, No. tar 22
Ch. stout street, 25 feat front, 2.."0 feet deep, West Phila
d elpia.
51oDLRN THREE-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE, No.
112.3 (oaL' a street.
MODs-RN F UR-STORY BRICK RESIDENCE. No.
322 South Sixteenth Street. north of Pine et.
2 BANIOORE IUDDER • THREE-U'VORY. BRICK
b BUDA N(IIE3, Nos. 715 and 717 North Sixteenth street,
cozier ut 13n tun meat. They have all the modern con
ye us en ceP.
Dab LSOME MODERN FOUR-STORY BRICK REST
DEN. F, Nr. 1529 Pius sneer. e, st of Sixteenth street.
Bap all T modern ninveeiences.
APE. t. (Jul./WILL AND FIXTURES OF THE
DUNINEWS hUN DISTILLERY. No. 1053 Cumberland
street, Nitreteeuth-W ord.
Fxecutono Sale Real Eetate.
ESTATE SisSIIJEL it. HILL, DEC'D.
ue• neTtieD, y At TettNuON.
Pte. tilh, at 3 o'clo , k, will be mold at phslie .ale, at the
T teL Darby }toad. 27th want frame d velliog,
barn. daughter house and five acre 01 land. leland It nd,
Ki. Rrrrrp g AlFo, rtotto dwelling ..and. atable, Nor.h et.,
i'n ehalvillr, nrar Hine 80. Lot bU feet by 131.3 feet.
run gat ticulara handbille.
LEASE. 00f , DWILL AND FIYTUREB OF THE
ut DINER'S RUN DISTILLERY,
No. 1053 Cutuberlr 1, d street, nineteenth Ward, belonging
to hit ewe. tier & Becker.
uN TUESDAY, Dec. 15.
At 12 o'clock oron. mil. be sold at public sale, at the
Fhiludelrhla Fathoms. all that valuable Lease. (which
hat 6 ears to run from August 1. 1808, at dl SOO rtr
1111111 end% ill • rid Fixtures of the well kuuwu +limner
ry, situate rt N 0.1053 Cumberland street,
teLan'lt from Arsmingo Canal to Commerce street it to
fu t amide , . I until, g ceder with everything a• pertaining
to •Le Melt:tees, including Mills. Mash and rer
an nit. g Us, Ptah ye es lofting, Belting. Pumps, a coin.
plete nimbler, Apparatus, &c.
B one of the most complete Distilleries in the
rutted States; cost the present owner.'. Sili ear& Kahn
m eller & Berke , . 1575,000. The least and PI/beide Itiolle
They be .ern at the Auction Rooms and will be sold sub.
Ica to toime or sold lease.
la" , Intim eiate posl6E:Bawl. May be examined any day
r 0011, to sole
'1 be purebsser has the orivilege of buying the Real Es.
tate for SI:6.000 before the expiration at lease.
VALUABLE LAW AND MiScELL4NEOUS BOOKS.
ON TUESDAY AFTERNOON.
Dec. 15, at 4 o'elock—Valn,.Lla Lta, Books including
the 111 e renseshania Repot' e, in iine , der.
ho, elf guilt F nglieh and American Booke,llluctrated
NV ono, &c., in flue binding's
Fale by Order of Heirs.
ESTATE tIP Cli Aid. E. • A. SN DT.: R. DECEASED.
VI 1 Y VALU Alu I.A.ML L0kN13,3, 300 ACltei, THE
ttIONT TOWNSHIP. beHIIYLKII.L, COUNTY. PA.
ON TUI SLAY, IirXEM BEA 15TH,
At 12 o'clock noon, will he ald a. public sale, at the
Philsdch Ida Exchange all that valuable property to:u•
pos. d of the >•l.eeher & Mdler Coal Estate..
1-4/"Null 'particulars hi handbills at the Auction Roomy.
rxtensive sale nt 240 South Second el reet.
STOCK OF e UP w Riot, U yNiNET FURNITURE.
ON MONDAY 01011NINo
Dec. 21, at 1v o'clock, nt T dr J A. lleultela's Ware.
rooms, D o. 24e bouth Second etreet.will ho sold at public
Pile, nn uxteuetve araortment of suneri..r Fn. utter°, coat.
patine Walnut parlor emits, with rub And plain coffer
ing.: library, dining room a , d hall 'furniture; elegant
chamber furniture 'various • tylqe. all manatactured in a
auperier manner expreatly for their wareroom Dales. and
~vi arraf
3 . l , ecale•tvill bo peremptory'. and le made on no.
count a bit tern. lienkell being about to remove ta their
new wareroome, No IN2 Arch atreet.
DA lb its DABNEY. AIICTIONBERI3.
Late with M. Thomas & Bons.
Store Nos. 48 aid 50 North SIXTH street.
Sale No. 944 North Thirte , nta street.
GENTEEL El It. ]TUBE. 1108EW001) PIANO.
_ 80 , Re BEs, OARPE rS.
tag MONDAY MORNING.
t 10 o'clook. at No- 044 North Thirteenth otree. below
Girard avenue, the Intuit are of n gentleman leaving the
tit), in Inding elegant rose% clod eoven octave piano. 0001 C.
Caere beds. mattnutsts, gas consumers, glassware. kitchen
utensils, dm,
Sale at Nte 48 and GO North Sixth street.
ELFGAN't ItNITUSE. VRENtaI LATE MIttROES,
g suit AbD SUPERIOR FL ItEPtiOtil , SAFES. FINE
're l'i STY.Y 15tilEtti EARPETI3. BEAM. MAT
' ititzEn, OFF.II.:E DASKti,
UN TUESDAY MORNTNO.
At to o'cloc k at the auction store. Nos. 40 end 60 North
Sixth street, below ,arch street. elegant Oiled Walnut
• Fltrf hum lucinding handeoniu Parlor Suite. very enter
riur t htinber Suits.- best/ ety le and iluish;
Etuitiru Sidebtard, dtube.,, suoerlor Extuasiou
e, duel tenon - Plate Mantel Mirrors in rich gilt
frarbee t largo Fireproof Safes. by hymn; as W utxou;
he e.ling bate, tine peaty - Hills. els and other Carnets,
fine F. stb..r Sethi and lindding. Ei.tresaus. Walnut Ellice
TAres a. , tl Mike, Nancy it °ode. Elden. Parfait and Bo•
bowl an Wore, Gliasware, Housekeeping Articles, Stoveg.
r.,
PRINIDPAL MONEY kiSTAI3LtI3IIhIENT--:
B. F., corner of 81.XT1Iaud itAIJ itreets.
Money advanced on Merchandise gene , ally—watches,
.fen elry, • ititannes, Gold and Silver Piste. and on all
artfmes of value, for nny lonuth of Gino agroud on.
WAI OD EIS AND Ji,WELRY Al' PRIVATO SALE.
Fiat Gold !hinting llane,Doublo Uottom and Open Pace
Englldt, American and el sass Patent Lover Watches;
tine Gold Bowing Once and Open Face [Apia° !Vachon;
Fyne Gold Duplex and other Watehes; Fine 9ilverilutit•
lag Care and . Open. Pact, Trngllsh,.A.merican and tiwica
Patent Lever mud Leptne Watches; Dontilo Duo Englith
9nsiller and other Watchow• L I..adien• 'Fancy Watohea;
/diamond Breast Ans; Ignitor Rings; Ear Studs;
An.: 1 , Gold filli.tna,• itteditliohn; Bracelet's; Bear
Plait llreastpinti;.i Inger KUNO: Pencil Oases and Jewelry
generally,
}lilt SAM . —A huge and valuablo Pietipront .ghost,
imitable for a Jetrolor; Coot !USW .
Also tievoral Lots in South thundan.Piftli and Ghosting
" ARK ds ovAvs, AuvrioNvErvi,
O).(JIIESTNUT
" °°t. '
WI-I iell 'IIIIS i) )11 nt d liVlll4 INtt ,
• A Wm , +Jai We, of Slanlzotnoied tier alai Dry Goode
Clotho. .eupannt onidery. Stationary. T d
• Pottlc. t utlel7.. Notions' to: 4)
411
UHT
odd coutitr yr. lO'or,ohanfii 'wilt dad barrosius
`AIM; 'Xorrno 1111. , • „ r"
Good. rftolcod fro,. of char ge.
, .L /all/31111)6E & CI! AUtITIONEEItti
7 L. o. 6thi M.A . llXETetruet. abevo
wmnt;
B• SCOTT, Atk;Tiva•.wß. '• ''` •
-. 1 ..k&?! 1 1.1 1 CiALP.PIf/:
1020 Cifintittlf — slive — ClThiladedobia.
SECOND SPECIAL RALE OF FANCY OOODP.':
• . At No. 7tittChestemt etrPAL - •
_ ON 1 UEtillAY ,14.10NNINt.t.' ' ."' •
Dec. 11; atION o'clock: at•N6. 101 Chestnut- street,
be eold. - a large ateortmefit of 'lmported Fancy Onoilno
French Lblna Dinner and Tear'Pet& Ornamente; Babe..
mt , n Glees, %VI iple YhttedalDtable .
t or the Holidays • . • •
IMPORTANT SALE OP ELEGANT RLACE.MARBLIZ '
.21-DAY uLOOIO3. BRONZE DROUNI AND VAScli.•
ITALIAN MARBLE tyrox,./utv, ALA/SAS - Peat 4K ,
NAIALNTo. 41e, • • - t 2:
- THURSDAY HORNO 7 O:__. ,•;;,"
Dec. 17. sit 10,Sii o'clock. at ricatt's Ait Gallery, Na 1020
Chestnut street, will be sold a Urge collection of Black
Bl.lble and Bronze 21,drys_, locks, etatuary, etsc.„ gre,,, the
importation of Meant V/TI BROS. (late. Vito , Viti - st ,
hors). of this city. •
-
DAYcollection will be reads for
in inailon on - TUE&
1 folo hi n t and will consist in part of over fifty tine
} I et: .1 Beak Marble, with mal ichne, 2tday Cooke, the
movement* bearing - theirepostlr's name, and are Ppm-.
ratted. BRONZE GROLPES and }AHMED of Ma.
zeopa'andntiope,_ ' Manly . Horses, Hahne% Minerva.
Bebe and Pandora, Bites 4 c and l'oeiry, ite. •
ALA BAtTER STATUARY. • • ,
,Urcrp of Finland 'Weals, Canova, Danee of Verint.:,
VI Lila in the Elba, Saviour, Magdalene, Four Senora.'
ITALIAN MARRLE STATUARY. '__.
Flora.by Faricht; Dancing ' Girl of Canotra, Shephrd,
6-assortment of • Bionns4. - Agate. Bardlglio •
and Roman Cruesand Vases, Card !receivers, large Round
Columns, de. -
The wl GP: coNectior has just •been received from
France and Italy, and will be found .npon,examination '
to be well wor th y of attention. ,
.
SALE OF MR. A. 11 , BUYVETTERIS SUPERB VOL.
LI CTION OF IIIOiICi.ABd MODERN • PAINT
INGS.
Mr, A. Dainyvetter, previous to ha departure for En
rope, has instructed B. Scott, Jr, to Mamie of his entire
gallery on the evenings of THURSDAY and. PRIIYA
17th and 18th December. at 7.. 4 1 The names, of.
the f , Bowing distinguished artists are represented by
very choice and important works: • , - • •
Louis Van Muck. - 40. Verhat, •-•
Poitielje, G.M. Webh, ' •
B. Ten Nate. David Col,
Theo. Gerard, , B. Boa-h.
David L eNoter. _ Mmin. • • , - •
.1 B. B. Rockkook. Sondennann, • ,
Ilentiette Rohner. • , Berzon.'
Daerlac Verschnur. •
E. Verboekhoven. ,Coni,t A. Da Bylandf;
La , Erneenoler 11.1 Bawls'. and others.
The above collet tionatinds unrivalled for artistle merit
by any that bee °Vet' been presented to the American
public for exhit Mon and sale. ,_
-- how Academy v in the Eastern - Galleries - of - the - erinslYl
vapia of Fine Arts day and evening until sato
- DUNI DURIJOROVV & AUCTIONEERS.
iI Nos.-232 and 234 MARKET street. corner- Bank
Successors to John B. Mvare ,tr
LARGE BALE OF FRENCH AND °THE Et EUROPEAN
DRY GX/DOl &e.
ON MONDAY MORNING.
Dec. 14. at 10 o'clock. oe tour romans`credit. •, • .'•
DRESS GOODS.
Pieces Plain, Cleno Striped and Fancy Popellnee.
do. Black and Col, to rot Mr hsirs, Alpacas . Goburge.
do. Partin and Printed Delsines e Merinos.Caahmores
do. En.prese Cloihs. Server. Poplin Alpacas. &c.
ELVETS. &c. •
FieceS Bisek. Colored and Faney DrCBB Silks, and
do. Black and Colored Bilk Velvets, Velveteens.
Velve tea.
- SHAWLS- CLOAK 3. &e.
Proebe, Thibet. Stella iand F ncy Woolen Shawls. &c.
Paris Trimmed Llosks, secones, &c.; Mauls, Scarfs.
CLOAKING f.
A lino of rich Paris Fancy clo kings.
—__ALBo •
Fiji liace White Goods, brobrorderies.LAor - pandkf ,
Fu~l'lib tirraimoral and troop 61011'. Ornbredas.
Lull Mies Paris prom and Croak Trimmings, buttons,
&e.. Szc. _
Full lines Ribbons, laves Zephyr Goods,Toss,NOtioner.
StIAR Ett FLANNELS.
One case extra quality 4-4 real Shaker FlanneL
One do do do 34 do do
s n Invoice of Russian Sable and other high cost
MLFNIS, I :A PEr, CoLLA if", &e.
A ltn , :6 inch black Drop do Franco.
A lino t 6 in, it Mat k Drop de Paris.
A line 28 inch blac k Gros r . rains.
A line 20 loch colored Gros de Al dque.
a line 13 it dr hefty, Black embus. '
60 vette 64riihtlaAmereLPLIos.
CO caseal.ambkin XS. rostee skirts.
—AI so--
For A ccount of whom it may concern, for Cash.
A large stock of dry g - ods, damaged at the late tire, 30
Mat ket rtree.t consisting part of Mustius. Print& Flan- ,
nob., Satinets. Elerts nod Drawers, Traveling Shirts.
Bosoms. Cohort, NotL.ne, &c. •
BALE OF 2000 CASES BOOTS, SHOES. Ts 4.-
VELING BAGS, fee.
ON Tt.4,l3DAi MORNING,
Dec. 15. at 10 o'clock, on four months ' credit. including—
Cases Men's, bo,ys. and youths' calf, Klp, Butt Leather
and °MID CiValrY• Nan' !eon, Drees and Congress Boots
and BsIroorals: Rip, Buff and Polished Grain Brogans,
Buff
mines' and children's Calf. Rid, Enamelled and
Buff Leather Goat and Morocco Bahnorele; Congress
Gaolers; Lace Boots; Ankle ,Ties; dlipuers; Metallic Over
shoed and'Sandals; Traveling - Baum; Shoe Laces. de
—ALSO—
A large line of firm Fur Caps. ,
aLd
On Account of Fnd,. meters, for Cash.
48 cases men's end bo3 Wool and Fur Hata, Caps.
Palm B oods, &c., damaged at the late fire.
LARGE BALE OF BRITISH, FRENCH', GERMAN
AND DUMRaTIC: DRY GO )1.4.1.
UN THURSDAY mouths' credit. 17, at 10 o'clock, on four mouths' ctediL
LARGE SALE OF CAIIPETINGS, 100 PIECES OIL
• MORNING.
Dec.
FRIDACLuTY MORNING.
Dec. 18. at 11 o'clock. on , four menthe' credit, about 200
pieces Ingrain. Venetian. I it, Hemp. Cottage and Reg
Carpetings, NO pieces Oil Cloths. Rugs, &c..
_ .
1%/ARTIN BROTHERS. AUCTIONEERS.
(Lately Salesmen for 01 Thomas dc Sons)
No. 529 CHESTNUT street. rear etm anoe from mince.
Sale at r 0 2021 C maac street _
SUM TOR Ho tin NHOLD Fi ROSEWO9II
PJANO FORTE. FINE MIL SSELS AND OTHER CAR.
PETS. &o.
ON MONDAY MORNING
ut , ••• •• '
Dr c. 14, at 10 o'clock, at No. 2027 Cane etreet, between
Tv% ell th and 'Thirteenth. above Berk 3 th , entire iniiierier
11 clln bold Furniture, Rosen - old Piano Forte, Fine Brae
eels, ii grain and otner Carp,.te t China and Gbaewase.
Al an mhos, Bedding, Extenebm 1 able. am.
Ma) be examined at 8 o'clock on the morning of cal&
Public Eia eon the Pt 'mime MI6 Brandywine street.
ttEcl DM.% AND I'URNITL RD.
oN :11.1111i8DAY MORNING.
Dec. 17, at 16 o'c cut. on the promisee, all that neat mo
dern three-i tory brick residence, two-story back building
and .ot of ground, 16 feet f , out by 77 feet deep. situate on
the eolith ode of Braudyn Inc street, No. 9116. Subigec
to a yearly Rt ound rent of 11a4
filiPchltrit IP .USEIGJI.D FURNITURE, PINE BROS.
BEIB AM) OiHEII ukit.P.Er3, &o.
Immediately after the sale of •he Residence, at 10
o'clock, by r atilt situp, at No 2116 Brandy wino streat, the
supo ior iValuut Peri r Furniture, out erior Obarribar and
Lining t now Furniture, flue BUIS ele and Venetian Car
pets, übina and Ohutaware, Hair Mattees. Rtirigarator.
c.. &c. -
May be examined on the morning of sale at 8 o'clock.
Palo No. 529 Cheetnut street.
VALUABLE ittill HANUtIoMIL BOOKS AND
~ ,
ON 11JONDAY AFTERNOON. , ' *
14th inst. at 4 o'clock at ths ruction rooaim,by catatopid.
Vbl utibio cobection 01 hook, incrudlngfiniily illustratcd
works, Which handsomely bound photographic albums..
Ac., .ic.
Fate at No. 1= Arch erect.
VERY ELVOiI NT WALN UT FURNITU IP • PINE
I. It r. NCII. PLATE MANTEL. A NI) PIE it, MIRIIOII4.
LA' .E WINDOW cuitrAr s, llANu»eniL ENG
LI ell BhUtinELß, VELVET ANL) O'l%lEll (AIL
i El 13.&e.
ON MONDAY MORNING.
Dec. 21, et 10 o'clock, , a^t'Ne 1935 Arch street, by cat,.
logue.ihe entire very elegant walnut household furniture.
ineludiug nit hands° walnut drewing•room furniture,
coveted with green plash; elegant etsgere and centre
table; huge and tine french•plate mantle and oler mir
r re; ipleAdid cult walnut chamber furriture• elegant
wardr..ber, mirror doors; hamsoine walnut' and cottage
chamber . tilts; fine spring and hair niattressea and bed
ding; hull stand and °halts; bnok•eaeea; dist'ng•room
furniture; extension tables; rich brocatelle and lace win
dow curtains; shades ; china and gleam Lts.e; ht ndteme
English Brussels. Venetian. and other mrpets...llc. ALM.
the sitcheno tensile and refrigerator. etc.
May be examined at Betclock on the morning of male.
THOMAS BIRCH & SON,
_AttiTIONENID3 Arai
I. COMMISSION MELROEIAN'rE.
No. 1110 CHESTNUT Street. •
Rear Entrance No. 1107 Sawmill aired.
HOUSEHOLD FUhNITURE OF !!,VERY DESCRIP
TION RECEIVED ON CONSIGNMENT.
Sales of Furniture at Dwellings attended to on the moat
reaponable terms.
Gk.FAT SALE , OF ELEGANT GOODS. FRFINCII •
IMONZE.S. CLOCKS. SWISS CARVED WOOD
WORK. FANCY CHINA, uOHEMIAN GLASS.
111NA.41 TOYS, SILVER PioxTEo WARE, &C..
SUITABLE FOR HoLIDAY PRESENTS.
ON MONDAY AND TUESDAY EVENINGS,
At 7."4 c'clocir, at 1110 Chen.nut sheet. wilt, be Noll. a
large arnerunent of elegant g .ode, suitable for Hollday
kremlin.
EAU! OP Mu LACE CURTAIN°, CURTAIN GOODS
PINO AND TABLE I . .eVEI , S. oURTAIN 'TRIM
MINGS. to. . •
. - .
•,N WEDNESDAY MORNING.
De c. 16. at 10 o'clock. at the auction atom, No. 1110 Cheat
nut el r. et, mill be sold. a largo gook of BP7ite and Not
tin m ace Curtains.
Damask, r. era au caorry Curtain Nrateriale.
mtroMered l'isno and Takla Covers.
Taseola. corda, arc.
311 f this ideaxon'a impel. tattoo.
LARGE SALE OF ELEOART FUR. 3 FOR LADIES.
ELEXGH AiLD tiARR [AGE_ evil.: kit, &a
ON _
Dec. 17, tit 11) o'clock, et. tife -- auotion !store, No. 1110 •
Chestw. t atrett, will be eold.a huge awsurtmunt of elaant
Furp.
ei D. hioCLEEB &CO
No. 508 MET street ßa
• ,
SALE OF 160 e CABE 8 Bt 010 E% BROGAN%
BALMORAL% &a.
December
ON ON DA Y oRt/ I NG.
D 14. reamensing at 10 o'sloak. we will sell try
oltMogue, a largo and aul oxior amorttomit of raotA,
Sheep, r ,, ogane Italmo•als, d o.
A. 1.4.4 Women's, tares' and Children'e city made good&
SALE OF I'CO OAbES BOOTS, SHOES. BROGIA.Nb.
ko.: /to. : • ";,• •
ON TrIFSSDAY MORNING.
1) c. 17. at t o o'clock, we will sell by catalogue, for
cash, a 'Argo usooarpterit of B ots„ dhow.. .11roganr,,
I °role, die.
Stleo a larie IWO of ladies', 3.lisAce and ChtareiN
JSAAU NATIi'.NS. AUCTIONEER; N. othaNna
'llard and bpruco atreets. mds ono - square below the
Exchange. P 4154.11300 to laan in largo or animal amounia, on
diLmorida rllver phut, watehmw
loelrY and all goods of
value. Oftlao home from 8 A.. 81. to 7P. Id. ge•B &tab.
16hed for Rao that fortyyeata., ,kdvs lac e n ma d e In large
amquute at the laweAt Market rates, jiailrit
T1.:1 , 1` CEIVED .ANLY iN STiftE I.oeo CIES OF,
noir habit, r 1 (Ming 4 , ' , ntarrh.s and I;alifornia Wino!, .
C NI , (Pd. c , herrc. Jnotil und 'Ma Cruz liana.
Uno - old 'trundled anti W.:, i.k . oz. wholca4l mod retail ;
Juh 270 Pear street. - •4•••-
-. 'Reh r l I: emi - Wmluot it.eote und ahoy , . Doak.
N. , VW Cm)r Ai tAIIiAN ['U m *KV KA./
finality. 111111171iT and ior rain by JOS. B. 13U8tLIZEt
00.. tI lionth Delaware; scram.. - - •
El=