- , 7* ',•;; : • • •-•,- - . • • MEE ' - .1[11:1b CONGRESS—Third Session. CLOSE OVICESTRIEDAY'S ht1008.6D,1NG.9. , . Seasts..--The • core:lacteal' of the resolution disapproving the President's financial recem mendatioes was continued. - • . • , Mr: Dixon discussed._l4o ll :gth • Senator - Wt., - - ion's plan foe ring specie paymente, aim said he hoped it wouldnet be adopted, because - if It - waSit : would prodtme astate of protracted ' --finenelaingtffiymptOthe timewbeispeele iir• merits were to be resumed:under it. , ' • Mr. Ferry repeated what he said 'lli the Speech commented upon by his colleagu, that the pre sent state of things Was entirely different from that which existed at the South two years or one year ago. The Southern oligarchy being now convinced of the uselessness of farther resistance to the nation, or, if not so a:MI/need, powerless to lead the people further in that direc tion. _ ,- , ,Mr. Dixon remarked that although ho doubted -, the possibility of resuming specie payments, to legislation, he did not with to be niideritOod, as.: saying that he would not `Vote for a bill for that purpoSe." He' moved to amend the resolution 1 before the Senate by inserting a' statement 'that Congress agree with the President in that state ment expressed in his message, "that our na tional credit shall be sacredly observed." He proposed this amendment; he said,- to show-by this resolution that all departments of the gov ernment agreed that the faith of the nation lOWA bo_preserved. Mr. Howard objected to the amendment, be-„ cause, in his judgment; it was not in, , harmony With the plain object ,of the President's repay. mendations On this subject; which object Was rf- Mr. Dixon arguedthat the ynessage Cettldi not be fairly considered to 'liken 'repudiation, be cause it proposes nothing compulsory upon the creditors. - Mr. HoWard thought that it must necessarily mean tbeincommendation of legislation which would bo compulaory. Mr. Corbett concurred in this view, and thought the preservation of the credit and faith of the nation,. the meat 'lmportant 'object - .:for 7 which . Ciffigress could legislate or the people -Mr Howe moved to amend the resolutiOn Co as, to state , that ,Congress, agree with, the ,Senti= ment which ,ought to have been; ; but which Was not expressed in f the' Presidehtla` message, that the national faith should be sacredly observed. Mr. Saulsbury ironically* suggested that the President be impeached for having expressed his _views iningard_tothnhational debt._ _.• _ Mr. Whyte: 'wished to say a few words abOut the resolution, so that his vote upon it should not to misunderstood. He looked upon this as a re solution of, censure upon the President for an ex pression ;of -Ids ophiron;•• and he could 'not vote for it, because be held the:righf ppinien.sacred. Mr. Vickt o ets also denied - ;that the President had proposed repudistionpand expreased - theopinion that the government could not get specie.enough in the world to pay the debt. The amendments were lost, and - the resolution, as reported by the committee, was then adopted by a vote of 42 yeas to 7 nays, as follows : YEAS—Messrs. Abbott, Anthony, Cameron, Cotten, Chandler, Cole, Conkling, Corbett, Cra gin, Dixon, Edmunds, Ferry, Fessenden, Fre linghuysen, Grimes,Harlan, Henderson, Howard, . Hew°, Kellogg, Morgan,. Morrill (Vt.), , llyet, Qa bortle, Pomeroy, :Ramsey, Rite - , Rotifirtson, ROBS, Sawyer,. Sherman;:' . Spencer„ Stewart, Sumner, Thayer; Van - Winkle, 'Wtide, , Warner, , Warner,Willey, Williamd, - Nlison end-Yates. , NAYS—Messrs. Davis„(-McCreery, Patterson (Tenn.), Saulsbury, Vickers and Whyte. The resolution as adopted is reported in the proceedings of Tuesday last. Mr. Trumbull introduced a bill to provide for giving effect to treaty stipulations between this and foreign governments, for the extradition of criminals, which was, referred. It provides that whenever: any: person` Chill have been delivered by a foreign , government to an, agent of the United States,for the purpose.of being brought within iliel,UnitedStatee, and tried for crime of which he is accused, the President of the United States shall have power to take all necessary measures for the transportation and safe keeping of such accused person and his protection against lawlessness and violence. Mr. Conkling offered a resolution requesting the President to communicate any information in his possession' concerning the exercise by the United States • Consuls, in Japan• "of . judicial powers Incases arising between American citi zens and citizens of foreign 'eotintrleS; other than Japan, and to tell by what authority such powers have been and and also , what further legis lation is necessary for the better protection of the rights of American citizens in Japan. Adopted. Mr. Harris introduced a bill to relieve from political disabilities certain citizens of Louisiana. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Mr. Spencer introduced a bill granting lands to aid in the construction of the New Orleans, Mo bile and Chattanooga Railroad. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands. Mr. Pomeroy introduced a joint resolution, . "That all men who volunteered to serve as sot . 'diers or cooks for three years or during the rebel lion, and were honorably discharged, shall re ceive the same additional bounty upon the same terms and conditions as other soldiers who have received and are receiving bounties under the acts of July 22, 1866, and acts amendatory thereto, 'l,' notwithstanding they may have been borne upon the rolls as slaves." Referred to the Committee ' on Military Affairs. At 4.40 I'. M. the Senate adjourned. Royale—After the reading of the journal, Mr. Dickey, of Pennsylvania, the successor of Thad deus Stevens, arose and said : Mr. Speaker: The painful dirty has devolved ) Houseupon me of announcing to the the death .1 of my predecessor, Hon. Thaddetis A. Stevens, t of Pennsylvania. This distinguished statesman -N, was not merely my predecessor in this body, but * in my childhood my father taught me to admire and love him who was the in rtructor and guide of my youth and the friend of my mature years. If an inti macy with wise and noble men be, one of the 1 greatest blessings that can crown a man, therein . no part of my career have I been so fortunate as in my association with Thaddeus Stevens. It.was in his office and in connection with him that I commenced my professional life, and from that moment, through the turmoil of my legal end political contests down to the moment when\ in his last will he selected me to perform the last ser vice one man can ask from his fellow, our friend ., ship suffered neither diminution nor Interruption. .( Thaddeus Stevens was born at Danville, Cale dente county, Vt., on the 4th day of April, 1792, end died at his residence in this city at midnight on the 11th day of August, 1868. His parents 0,• " were poor, in a community where poverty was the rule and wealth the exception. Of his father I know but little, save that he enlisted in the • war of 1812, and died In the service. Upon his ._ mother chiefly fell the burden of rearing their 'f , four sons. She was a woman of greet energy, strong will, and deep piety. Early seeing the ambition and fully sympathizing with the aspire : none of her crippled boy,she devotedly , seconded i' his efforts for the acquisition of knowledge, and 6 by her industry, energy, and frugality, larger . y d z aided him to procure a collegiate " education. He •-* returned her affection with the full strength of Vi his strong nature, and for many years after he had acquired fame and fortune in his adopted Scotched the pleasure of making an annual pi!- , ' grimage to the home which he had provided for ~., her comfort, and where she dispensed with - means he furnished a liberal charity. --' 4 A In the last year of his life, in writing his will with his own band, while making no provision for the care of his own grave ho did not forget that - of his mother, but set apart an, ample sum for that purpose, directing yearly payments upon the condition "that the sexton keep the grave in good order, and plant roses and other cheerful flowers at each of • the four corners of said grave each spring." In the same instrument, devising one thousand dollars In aid of the establishment at his home of a Baptist church, of which society , his mother was an earnest member, ho says, "I do this out of respect to the memory of my mother, to whom I owe whatever little of pros perity I have bad on earth, which, small as it is, I desire emphatically to acknowledge." I need scarcely say that Mr. Stevens shone at ' I , ,7`, the bar with • the same clearness -of statement; , r force and eloquence of expression, power of an , ~ A •,• gumentation, wit, sarcasm, and Invective which ? - .4 f: - he employed in legislative.halls, and that there, ,- as here, he was master of all the weapons of de , bate. As an advocate, he was always Jealous of NI -. the rights of his profession, and resisted their innovation. He was always courteous to the •,_ ', court, and uniformly brief, never speaking 40 beyond an hour on any question. In ar gument he cited but few authorities, and ' - those directly to his purpose. Grasping one or '• ~ . two points which he conceived vital to the cause. i . ‘t :7,: be directed all his energies urd concentrated all , ~,),, his powers upon them, giving little attention to ? .subordinate questions. No matter with whom -or associated, he never tried a cause save upon his ,t.. own theory of the case. At NIA' Prius he mil formly insisted : on personally Beth:lß and examin y ing before they were called, the important wit nesses on his own side. He never consented to • .1, be concerned or stet as counsel in , the prosecution of , a capital . else. Ile was always willing.to give advice and as-. - sistanee to the.young andinexperienced members. Of the profeeslon, and' hitt large library was ever open to their nee. Ho :had many young men read law-withlim, though 'he 'did 'nor' tcl!-- bayie;eindents. -There 'were; however, twp, comMencialions which never failed to_procara_an entrance into lillf - offiet=atribitiori to - learn and inability to pay for the privilege. politics= Mrs Stevens lira -engaged stetivelr with theAnti•Masonie partlierlB2B-'29, svhlcli he joined in their opposition to secret societies. Ho was elected to the popular branch ot - the Legis lature of his MAW-in , 1833, as a:representative from the county; or' Adams, and continued to serve in that body almost Without interruption until 1840, during which entire period he was the leader of his party in the Legislature; if. not - the* State: 'Daring this service he champloried-mink measures of improvement; among others, the common school system of Penosylvania, which at a tritidejinoinent liestried front overthroti a speech which he always asserted, to3have, in his opinion, been the most effective he ever made. By that single effort he estab lished. the . printiple, never since seriontly questioned in Pennsylvania, that' it' fa' the duty of the State to I provide the facilities for education to all the children of the Common wealth. In behalf of this measure he joined, hand with his-bitterestpersonal`. and' peditieeketiegtles. He highly eulogized for his course upon this question the chief of the opposing political partY Governor George Wolf, and denounced with all hieepower. 'of invective the:-.„tingeserverst Ofids: own Party e BlStrself the echilcl of poverty,-.ho WO the cause - of the poor, and by the forge, of, broke down thcl barriers by Vgallit; Cade 'and ignorithen; anffearned a Woe that will,endnre AS long as child-of : rennaylvania, gratefully e ereembene, the blessings Cbriferretrupod him. The remains - of Mr. Stevens liein - Laneaster: a private cemetery, established by an old friend, itt a lot selected bv.himself,-for reasons stated-in MO - touching:and 13tatttif tff - epitaphprepared by himself for inscriptionuporihis tomb: ".T.,repose in tide qttiet, tecluded'ipeit.sibt from anynatural , preference for solitude, but finding other ceme teries limited by charter rules as to race, I have chosen it that Insight be enabled to illustrate s In mydeath the principles *hied I have advocated through a long lito--equality of man ,before his Creetor-7- Let us trust„and , believe that it,the earnest and @theme prayers of milllOnd of 43por; down-trodden and oppressed may smooth the pathway of a•treveler on his journey- frdm , world to the bourne of all, his has been a happy exit. Hon: Williamo.4teltey s gofLPAnstesylvaeltg in the courtiii - of eloquent tribute to - the inemory of the statesman, spoke as follows: Thaddeus 8 tevenstw as one of-the most practical; of inen,thoggh his Whole life was colored and itt finenced by a vision.” Timid Men and MOM' who" Were without faith, called him dogmatic and im eiraeticable,and others spoke of him as a-theorist, who, to gratify a malignant or-vindictive spirit, orged extreme measnresregardless of the rights, interests or sentiments of those they were to affect. They knew but little of the man they judged. -How thoroughly practical he wash at tested by that he carnal* teaching the redimentary branches. the means to procure his 'collegiate training; that, hating Settled•ln'-anoui inanity in which hereditary wealth was deemed a) the to a respectable position at the 13ar, ho rnade no,concealment of his poverty, and taught school while preparing for the prac tice of the legal profession, and the acknowledged leadership or the bar of alarge section of his adopted State; that he commanded the confidence of every judge before whom he appeared in his extended range of-practice.and seemed thei affec tionate regard of ad his, young professional brethren; by the frequency with which the people among whom, he settled, whether of the York, the Adanis,'or 'the e Lancaster district; required him, at whatever sacrifice or prejudice on their, part or of pecuniary interest in his, to represent -them in the Legislatures of the State and nation and conventions summoned for the consideration of the gravest topics; and, above all, by the com manding influence he - exercised in every delitiera tive assembly of which he was a member. Mr. Stevens believed in the possibility of the ebmmercial independence - of the - llnited States. He also knew that when that should be achieved the people could bring their domestic relations into harmony with the fundamentalideas of their republican Geyeitircient Wise meta not think of him is visionary, beetruse he anticipated coming events and proposed henefieent changes 'before the public mind was ripe for their recep tion:. A.,great tretlebravelynttered is never in opportune. Nor do time and age blunt the apts nese of such utterances; and the advanced pro-- positions and fervid words with which Thaddeus Stevens so often stirred our blood and swayed our judgment will shape the future of the country. When the age is riper, other- lips will echo them with persuasive and conclusive force. Then the American people, instead'of.asking the little nationalities of Europe what they , may do, wilt dictate the internal policy those nations must adopt on pain of seeing their most valuable citi zens, allured by our happy condition, come to swell the power and grandeur of the Great Re public. Then will his dream be fulfilled, and then will the world behold the fitting monument of Pennsylvania's greatest statesman, Thaddeus Stevens.: '- Mr. Broomall said:—Few statesmen of any country have maintained throughout a long public life the steadfast adherence to the princi ples laid down in early manhood Which charac terized Thaddeus. Stevens. Univereal education, equality of human rights. the elevation of the weak, the poor, and the oppressed, were not more ardent aims and objects to him when he first espoused the cause of human progress than , when three-quarters of a century had rendered I his infirm body an ill-match for his still young and vigorous mind. Too frequently, in men of all stations, the gen erous impulses and noble sentiments 'of youth give place, with advancing years and prosperity, to that fossil petrification of humanity called conservatism, which is nothing more than the want of ability to see the line of progress marked out by the hand of Omnipotence ' and the want of energy to follow it. But this dry rot of the soul never tainted Thaddeus Stevens; one of the last acts of his old age was the preparation of a Plan for a thorough and universal education in the District of Columbia, and =egg the first of his early manhood was the patron age, almost the parentage of the common school system of Pennsylvania. Those who have heard him within a year, and when, he required support to stand, dononnee,-as we know how he coutdilenounce, the bare suggestion of recon structing the South without providing' for uni versal suffrage,are irresistibly carried back to the pet iod long years before, when he stood almost alone in the Constitutional Convention of his adopted State, the advocate of the cause of Self government against those who found it prudent silently to out-vote the man they did not dare to answer. In contrasting the two pictures, the mind is led to believe and to wonder that, in the lapse of thirty years, the man had grown no older. His conduct In that convention is a lesson to the young statesmen of his country. The cause of universal suffrage, which he espoused, was then an unpopular one, and there seemed little prospect of its ever being otherwise. The slave holders of the South had long seen that if the voice of the black man could be heard in the North, their bold upon their human chattels would in time become insecure. With their usual sagacity they had induced Northern politicians, by flattery and patronage, to enter their services as voluntary bondsmen. These bondsmen had created a public sentiment in the North which as signed to the black man a condition somewhere between man and brute, or rather a condition sometimes the one and sometimes the other, as best suited their Southern master. Man, as ail element of political power in his owner; man, for the purpose of accountability and punishment— brute for all other purposes. When the. Pennsylvania Convention of 1838 sat, the public sentiment was at its height, and that body was made up , to a. large extent of these voluntary bondsmen: True to their vassalage, they hastened to record their servility to the slave power by silencing, as they believed for ever, the voice and the vote of the black man in the councils of the State. They thought it safe to do this. The victims were few, the poor and the powerless. It was in vain that Stevens and those who telt with him protested against the shame and the wrong. The deed was done. Thousands of American citizens were disfran chised, and that too upon the spot where Penn a century and a half before had founded the purest system of self-government the world up that time had ever witnessed . upon the spot where the fathers of the Revolution sixty years before had declared that all mon are born free and equal, and had bound themselves by the most solemn obligation to write that holy sentence upon American annals with their blood. But, when the work of Vie convention was complete, and the organic law came to be signed by the members, he who had done so much to make it in other respects what it is, refused' to give it the sanction of hie name, and to this day the Constitution of 1838 remains in the archives of Pennsylvania with one vacant seal. THE DAILY EVENiirti BULLETIN-PHILADELPIIIA, FRIDAY, DECEMSER 18, 1868, be,the se • name t;evea to aid MW'S - lun h A g o the instatution in whose ff ln tereet Pennsylvania had sacrificed her honor,and to see universal suffrage Made the cardinal priu-c ciple American' Institutions. That missing name will be remembered with gratitude, when the names and principles of those who so,degraded. their State htive'iong been eL.nslgned tcl merited - oblivion, Let - the future statesmen oil-America learnthat,it never sale to do Wring., • R9 O/ 7 , _l l3 ) t tlit . prjusticp is :Sometimes slow, -bul It IV always- The memory of Thaddeus Stevens needs no monument, The imprint of his mind is upon the history of his.country, and is more ineffaceable_ there than would , be the image of his body upon marble. He was among the first to see. that the- contest into which we were forced in 1861i,Was war, not mere •Ineurreetion to be suppressed in sixty days, and that it must end, in victory neon one. side or the other, with•all its rights and disa-, Millie& When that contest was at' last'over, he was among,' the first to see that' all civil Mottoes • pre-existing between.: the • 'victors and the vanquishedhad • ceased to be, leaving, tiie latter whelly, without civil; gov ernment.. Brushioraway the ingenious sophie tries with which a faithless Administration sought to bewilder the,pubileMind in the interests of a fallen institution, he sefabout the work of recon structing the conquered country in the interests of loyalty, progress Pnd :the rights of :Maw To himymorethan to any other single individual; is attributable the fact • that eight Statee 'of the Union balm been, organized upon the , iis6lB of universal suffrage, and- three more are abont to ,be.. As long . as self-government Shell 'remain, a `Stevens the &aerie:an heart', Thaddeus - Steyets !dab° remembered as its greatest' cham 41on. He needs no monument, `,yet Penniyivania „owes a tante, to ber:departed statesman. The 'time will come,. andlhat speediit'when She will r;purgelier organic'faweVall traced of •when uhhal lowed institutione,',all evidences of her former vassalage.—From human -stand-point it would seem that-,Theddeue Stevens --should have wit- , `ceased that event; but it suited the porposes of , an Inscrutable Power decree , other wise. . ; , ; Let. hie beloved 'State do fore him what ho did; net., live A02:1:10...f0r himself. • When that day ewes, let the Hovernor <of Pennsylvania, by ,of 'a solemn act of ' her, Leglala ture,•on some day sacred to .the,cattee of 'human- ItY, in thefresence Of all ;that is great and-good within her, borders, take from , her archives the • Conetitutfon of,lBBfi, and•reverently,with humil .rietion for the Padt, pnutbeicia for ••the Attu - L.6, - 1)16c optlorever, the- discrimination between man and man; whieh God never made, and opposite, the vacant eeal-WritertheMile Thaddeus _Stevens Then will be accomplished; what for, Theis ' Pennsylvania worthy to enemt him amonethe sons she has loved, honored and mourned. - • ' Mr. Orth made an eloquent address:Suring wblelf he said i-'*The grave has closed over the -earthly-remains-of one of freedom's meet_ardent and,eloqttent advocates. . The voice once• so fa miliar in•thesehalls lehnehed in death; Its sound' co longer gTeete our oars, but its , bold and fervid enunciations will never be forgotten. That he roic devotion to truth and juetice, to equality' and fraternity, we - so often admired; and which is ex emplified by countless acts and incidents, extend ing through years years of an •active exist ence,is a most, worthy example for all good men. The principled which he professed, and the work rho performed, professions and practice being in perfect harmony; will in all future time, and in all nations, render the name of Stevens a syno nym for human liberty. Living in an age when opportunities for: the accomplishment of .great deeds' abounded, he seized upon and improved, these opportunities. His mind grasped the true_ plilloiophy of events, and his practical common sense molded it into forms of enduring. useful ness Living not unto himself, his life has not been in vain, and the impress of his genius upon the age in which he lived will be ae permanent es his fame." Mr. Fernando Wood said—Mr. Speaker, I feel nd embarrassment in rising to. onnite.my _voice with those who thus appropriately pay this last public tribute of respect to the memory , of our late distinguished associate. The:wide difference of opinion between us , on the questions of the times cannot deter me from the expression of a just homage to hie character as a man, whether considered as a citizen or as a states- As when living we recognized him as one of the foremost intellects of this House, so - now, thltleing dead, let us forget the controversies' which divided us, and remember only the higher qualities and personal attributes which have at all times commanded our attention. speeches were also made by Messrs. Poland, Mborhead, Maynard, Ashley (Ohio),Whittemore,, Covode, Miller, Koontz, Donnelly, Cake, Wood ward, Robinson and Sypher. Mr. Myers (Pa.) presented the memorial of the Universal Peace Union on behalf of the Indians. The House then adjourned. • Address of Victor Hugo on the Slavery question. From several points in Spain, from Corunna through the organ of the Democratic Committee, from Oviedo, from Seville from Barcelona, from Saragossa, the patriotic city; from Gaols, the re volutionary city; from Madrid, by the generous voice of Emilio Cantelar, a second appeal is made to me. They interrogate me. I respond. What is the question? It is Slavery. Shall Spain, who by one single effort has rid herself of all the old approbrions evils of fanati cism, absolutism, divine right, capital punish ment, still preserve that which is more odious than them all—Slavery? I say, No. Abolition, and immediate abolition, is her duty. Is it possible that there can be any hesitation? What! that which England did in 1838, that which France did in 1848, Spain not able to do in 1868! What! to be a liberated nation, and to have under its feet an enslaved and fettered race! What! this contradiction—to be at home the light, and abroad darkness; at home justice, and abroad unrighteousness; citizen here, owner of slaves there,- to make a revolution that shall have ott glorious side and a side of shame! What! after expelling royalty, to allow slavery to remain!. to hold property in your fellow men! to have upon your head the cap of liberty for yourself, and in your hand a chain for him! The plan ter's whip is simply the ungilded sceptre of the king; the one broken, the other falls. A Monarchy with Slaves is logical; a Republic with Slaves is unbecoming. That which adds to the Monarchy dishonors the Republic. The Re public is a virginity. At present, without waiting for any vote, you are a republic. Why? Because you are the great Spanish nation. You are a republic; democratic Eprope accepts you as such. Oh Spaniards! You can continue to be great only on the condition of remaining free. To retreat is impossible. To grow stronger is according to nature; to become weaker no! You will remain free. Now, Liberty is a whole. She has a gloomy jealousy of her grandeur and ber purity. No compromise. No concession. No falling off. She repudiates Royalty at the top and Slavery at the bottom. To hold slaves is to deserve to be a slave. The slave below you would justify the tyrant above you. The year 1768 was a frightful year in the his- toty of the slave trade. in that year the maxi mum of the crime was reached. Europe stole frbm Africa 104,000 -blacka, whom she sold to America. One hundred and four thousand! Never has the sale of human flesh shown such shockinfigures. It is now just 100 years since then. Weil, celebrate the centenary by the abo lition of Slavery; let a year of glary answer to. a year of infamy, and show that between the Spain of 1768 and the Spain of 1868 there is more than a century—a profound abyss separating the false from the true, the bad from the good, the unjust from the juet, debapeinent from glory, monarchy from the republic, servitude from liberty. There is always an.open precipice behind.progress,and those who draw back will certainly fall into it.. A people increases with every man it enfran chises. Be great Spain, in its completeness. Gibraltar is more necessary to you than Cuba. One word more. Alike profoundly evil in themselves. Slavery and despotism meet each other, and produce the same effect. The yoke of slavery presses perhaps more upon the master than upon the slave. It is a question which of the two owns the other? It is an error to be • lieve that one is the proprietor of a man when you con buy him or sell him. On the contrary, one is his prisoner; ho holds you. You, must partake of his rudeness, his vulgarity, his igno rance, his savageness; otherwise you would look with horror upon yourself. The' Black, you believe, belongs to you; it is you who belong to him. Yon have laid hold of his body' he has seized your intelligence and your honor. He has established between yon and him a mysterious level. The Slave chastises you for being his master. By sad and Just retaliations, you are placed in, the power of a stern ruler, not , having any conscience. His vices are your crimes; his misfortunes become catastrophes to you. A slave in a house is an evil spirit that is not only 'with fon but within you. It enters into you and darkens your • soul. Aid we cannot commit with impunity the great crime of sla very. i ~~, EMMMMMii ilia The denlsi of fraternity Wonld'lL3 fatal, If yam are e glorious and illustrle.tie people slavery- an , cep i cd as an institution• makes you; abominable. The crown oulbe brow of the despot, and thcr ring around the nook of the ,elave, are,but, the same Circle confining youriinergies se' a Townie; All your splendors have the . blot - =the negro. The elAve throws his shadows upon yOu. You would, nbtimptirtrivilinatioirbrAtimottuTheclatt - cOm_ , Munleatcd barbarism- to you: ' Through slavery 1 -Europe bas inoculated itself with Africa—A _ Ob, noblolEipanish people!" Eitiro - is=,a. second', liberation for you. - You bevel dellterect your selves • from ,des,potlsin;' now_deliver, youraelves from slavery. . '• • ' Woron. fictutevilleßoute, Nov. 22, 1868 - A The liaiiid,lllobbopry =glint off. [Ili). PfippOiied. 01411Vrit toLt Elizatboth. < . ' i ' ,• v, On the 28d of - Stne last the house of - Mr. John' D. Egbert, at'Plalnfieldi N. J., was, robbed, of about $16,000 worth of money, bonds, and • jewa, elry, while the family were - absent - at; ti •Sttuday School celebration. The robbery was committed , during the afterniaon, and id a manner that was eo adroit that for a long period of time`the iden tity of the culprit or culprits battled the ingenuity, of the:most skilfel-detectives to discover.- The' proprietor of the bodes which was's° successfully: ourglarized, , Mr,-John .Eg ber t,' 14 a gentleman of.considerable wealth, who had returned- to - Plairiffeld - :' after st -- reeldence i ,.of Several - years in the West,'atid had'engaged in business in New York Onthedaywhen the robbery took place be `'left at an early hour, saying:to:his wife that he might possibly return to accompany his family to the' Sunday school celebration," At .about noon, however; ; lffrs, Egbert, Cancludett to. wait for bim no longer, and locking up the doera gave of the keys to the coachman, while'she kept the.other.. - The coachman, a' man •_named'. Emil Seheyll, was , - told - that •he could :go ; to the celebration ff ha deeired to do so, and.'it, Was sup- Toseff that he went. During the; abisenee , of, tho inmitylthe house was robbed, and , the fact was tiscoveredimMediatelY ution:.their - return:: ':.The „matter was placed. in the hands of the. New .• Jersey'. Detective .•Association, one of -whom, Mr: ' Morris, " • anent several - , days'in the.icinity In an.• effort to discover;the culprit, and he finally became convinced that'the man Scheyll was_the guilty; persdn.. - :110 Was dr 'rested and' placed in chstody,'but no eltte,was &Covered to the missing property. • The case came' irfor trial at` the Union County Court, sil l ' tine in Elizabeth; on - Tuesday, anirwas,giVervto • the -jury yesterday:' rfi the-course of the trial it was shown, on 'the testimony of Mrs. Egbert, Mdt Selwyn bad 'helped her in making, some arrangements of, furniture, dia l and he had - at that time seen her-open -- the boxes - Whioh . coth tallied `the 'jewelry, and that he had also seen her take the - safe-key from a bureau-drawer and open the, safe,- whlch -containedthe• money and bonds., It was proved, too, that a knifewhich bad beenanissedirom , the house at the time of the robbery, and which had;evidently been used . ;by tholfurglailif opening ;the — bokes; In *hick operation he had broken the blade, was found in the possession of Scheyll at - the, time of `b/13 - rest, he having previously denied_ all knowledge of the knife. The marks of a knife with a broken blade were upon the' opened loxes, , and these marks corresponded exactly with' the knife in his . possession. _The prisoneralso admitted his hay.:" ing entered the house, to get some, tobacco, dur , log the absence of the family, but denied having committed tire robbery... The evidence against him being wholly circumstantial thejury yester day had failed to agree after being out during the greater part of the day s and were still divided at a late hour last evening- 4 _ —The two young sons of the Viceroy of Egypt, who are now travellngin Western Europc,viaited the other day the famous cathedral of Colo,cfne. Upon entering the magnificent church, they im prudently kept their Turkish caps on-their heads i and, when reminded of the impropriety, thq turnedlr deaf ear to the remonstrance. A surgeon of college, who was present, waxed very" wroth at the Conduct of the Egyptian striplings, • and drove them`out of the cathedral: r ti i rKWlT refereVe3l B /killathi. YR° N—Bark Destah, Gilkey—Ear tone old railroad on Workmen Lc Co- SWAN. ISLAND—Bark New York. Gibbs-320 prig lan° Merchant itt Co. IJAViNA—Brig Annette. Wainwright-650 Imo guitar ohn ?Anton Co. 4 . . . - WINDSOB, NB—Brig 0 0 Van Horn. ColBll-4550 tone laffter C C Van Horn. • ..• - • • . WILMINGTON. NU—Steamship Pioneer, Catharitte.- 100,000 feat lumber 244 bbh rosin 256 do spiritiof tu , pou nce 6 cords lightwood 16 H RoVvie_y•, 300 bbh rosin - Cocits ran, flussoll & Co; DV do tar Prentlea. & Fitter: 1,2d0 rosin E A Thomas; 171 bbis tar 500 do rosin - 48 do spirits of turpentine 70 bales cotton 200 bags peanuts 2 bales rags order.— 910FE1QENTS OF OCEANINE SWF ArtiFinfi. TO AM. MN MTN Bellona.. -L _..London..New York Nov 28 City of Para iverpool—New York .....De c. Liverpool—Portland, .. .... D ec. Cimaria.........Southampton..New Dec. Berlin-. " . SouthemPton—Baltimore......... .Dec. United Eingdom....Glaegow..New York.... Dec. Bt. Laurent........ .• .. Brest.. New York Dec. City of Cork. Livertool—NYorkvialialifax..Dec. Europe ..—.Brest..New York.. ..... Dec. Java.................Liverp001—New York„... .....Dec. Tarifa ... —Liverpool—New York via 8.... Dee. America SouthamptonEPA .NRT. .ew York.... —....Dec. TO D Granada .. •.. . Crmadto Dec. 19 Tonawanda Philadelphia—Savannah. ....Dec. 19 Peruvian............ Portland ..Liverpool..... ....... Dec. 19 Britannia.... New k ork..Glazgow. Dec.l9 PAoneer.... Phitadelphia..WiLminitten..........Doc. 19 City of Paris New York..LiveropooL Dec.l9 Pennsylvania ......Now York.. Liverpool..... Dec. 19 Umbria.— . ...New York.. Hamburg ..... Dee. 23 Java.. ....... .Now Y0rk..Liverp001............De0. 23 Et leeltsiPpi New York..Rto Janeiro. drc.....Dec. 23 Manhattan....... New York.. Liverpool..... Dec. 23 Morro ILYork..Havana. ..... . ...Dec. 24 York.. Liverpool.. Dec. 24 Juniata. . Philadelphia.. New Oriciana........Dec. 25 United Kininio . m..New ......Deo. 26 City of Lonnon....New York.. Liverpool Doc. 26 Stara and Stripea....Philad'a..Havana ..Jan. 6 Bp.A.F.r) TF THADRI. SAMUEL bTuREEI, GEO. N. TATHAM, Mown:cur Comurnza. ANDREW WHEELNE, FO:T OF p : -$ . Bra Pam. 7 251 Bun elm ii 351 Hies Warm. 5 0 ARRIVED YESTERDAY. Bark Deeiab, Gilkey. 66 days from Troon, with old rail road iron to Workman so Co. Bark hew York, Gibbs, from Swan Island, with guano to Merchant & Co. Brig Annette (Br). Wainwright, 16 days from Havana, with sugar to John Mason & Co. Experienced heavy weather, and has been 10 daya north of Hatteras. Brig C C Van Horn (Br. now), Coffin. 12 days from VVindsor, NB. with plaster to 0 C Van Horn. Behr French, Doughty, 6 days from Wilmington, NC. with lumber to I B Phillips. Bchr James Ponder. Hudson. from Boston, with mdse to captain. Bohr W W Pharo, Allen. from Boston, in ballast to Lathbury, Wickersham & Co. City Ice Boat Ni 1, blamon,4 hours from Reedy Island. Brought up barks Desiah and New York. Towed to Bombay Hook bark Wilheludna, for Antwerp. and brig Potosi, for Gibraltar, and left them at anchor there at 12 M 16th inst. CLEARED YESTERDAY. A Steamer sFranklin . Pierson. Baltimore, Groves, Jr. Bark George H Jenkins, Durkee. Rotterdam. J E Bagley & Co. Bchr H T Hedges, Franklin. Calbariett. do Behr W W Pbaro, Allen, Boston, Lathbury, Wickersham & Co. , Bchr Mary Riley, Riley, Charleston, do Behr Ida F Wheeler, Dyer, Portland, C C Van Horn. Ship Othello, Tinkham, cleared at Savannah 16th inet. for Liverpool. Ship Alaska Small, from New Orleansfor•Havre,ealled from the SW Pace 11th Mat. Steamer Hannah Sophia, Teal. hence at Norfolk 16th inetant. Steamer Java (Br), Lott. from Liverpool sth instant, at lew York yen r ay. Steamer Eagle, Greene, cleared at New York yesterdaY for Havana. Steamer New England, Prentiss, cleared at New York , yesterday for Havana yia Key West. dreamer Cuba, Dukeh art, cleared at. New Orleans 18th inst for Baltimore via Havana. Steamers Oeo Cromwell. Valli; Gulf Stream, Spencer, and Santiago do Orbs, N cDiaraid, cleared at New Or leans 12th inst. for New York. Bark White 'Wing, Pike, at Kingston, Jam. 26th ult. from Porto Cabello. and _sailed 28th for New York via Black. laver. • Brig fi Strout, Strout. at Kingston, Jam. 27th ult. from Barbados, and sailed next day for this Dort via Orange Bay.. Brig Anna, Morrow, at Kingston. Jam. 26th ult. froth Trinidad snit sailed for New y. rk via Yantis, Brig Walter Howes; Peirce, hence at Portlandl.6th inst. Brig A Richardson. Wright, from Portland for this Port. at New York yesterday. Brig Julia E Arey. Babbidge, from Portland for this port. at New York 16th inst. -1` Schr Wm L Springs. Halsey, at Kingston, Jam. 28th ult. from and for New York. Behr T D Wilder, Heather, cleared at Portland 16th inst. for Havana. t3wn c E W Pratt, Kendrick, hence for Heston. at Edgar tohr Hth inst. Schr Dick Williams. from Boston for this port, at New London 14th inst. Schr Althea A Godfrey, Godfrey. at New York 16th inst. from Salem. Behr Milton Corsey. hence at Richmond 15th Just. Behr L B Wing, Endicott, cleared at Jacksonville 10th inst. for this port tiehr Van Brunt, hence at Norwich 15th init. MAME MISCELLANY. s;chr Charlotte Shaw. Reeves, from Philadelphia for Dighton, was abandoned 18th inst, in lat 4030, lon 7360. Captain •UCEIVek reports; Sunday, 16th c _wind WNW, blowing heavy, with heavy sea; at 2 AM Wed pumPs, schooner tight; at 4AM found her water.logged; cleared away the boat and all hands left at 4.10 AM; she sunk at 4 PM; was taken off by the piiot boat Chas 11 Marshall No Ltd New York; crow coven. all told: were saved with lose of clothing; were in the boat 12 hours. Bark J E Wentworth, for Wilmington, NC. was ashore 10th inst. on Peake's Island, mouth of •Cape Fear Elver. Bark Doncy. from Bondout for Boston, ashoro on Wont Chop. Holmes' Hole, is leaking badly. . --- BMOND% BOSTON BISCUIT.—BOND`B BOSTON BUM ter and Milk Slam% landtntrom steamer Norman and tortsale by JOB. B. BIIBEILIBEI DO.alsents for Bond -108 Bon tb Delaware atones. A • iAMead•kMalaiaaailiZM2=ll==l 4.szi MEMORANDA. ',.:. - : - !'i::t - 'H'iiLtil - iiisuniErrirs.• AMERMAN ACADEMY OF MUSIC; OLIS BUM respactiukv anninuices ono GRAND CONCERT •, • , • SATURDAY EMI GI and 3rrERNOON.Der..I9.IO.. 'waisted by tho- following favorltefirtista; M liSt. S BARTON sof . toa A to L s n L , , oopra,ono. MR.• GUSTAV gANSI H NG HMAan n. A rn • om ptni ; - e t ADMISSION.ONEIiLiaAI, 9ARILY filitULD:• IIFTY.CENTS. • • - • ;ideate combo ;moored, without extra charge, at' Goultre Plano Warerootrut. No. 90 Dheetnuk etreat;. and , se,' e'. ,eademy °retina • • 1., • Sale of Beate wilt commence on Weenoefley morning. lee. 16, at 9 o'clock. • tX)NCERT.—Doore poet at 7." commence NAB o'chiekL MAT/NEE—Doora open at 1.30; commenceo atIL/30 L'. TURNBULL... Bualneee Manager. 1/010AL FUND HALL." . _,•• • - rnb _ • . iiitl IJRUAY EVENING ; Dsceer ; GRAND SYMPituN CONL.ERT•BV _ SENTZ do .11AfitiLIEWS 011011ESTRA. OP 1 4 1F4 Y PERVORNIERS. _ MISS utNRIETTA. eitivyruitst. ' • • 71'he first _speettrabce In this city of tbh yOttnelaid" 'Wonderful l'lsalst. • Mlt. WM. STOLL,_Ja A . REFORMATION , sICiarkLON • • • • By Bloodelhohu.•_ : • • By Schubert. RIENZI OVERTURE. lV Bielitter.• • " t Tickets • • • —II 00 For sale by Mr. Boner, 1102 Llbiartnut street; mr. Trump. ler, 928 (lbestuutto root. • • , tickets at the door. oat he evening of Contort; $1 W. Doors - oven stl. Concert at 8. .. - dets.et r, Ct 'IIII STNIVDSTIIEET THE4T4.14., , •••• • •• • • .•.T.lllB, FRIDAY. ORNINGh, LAST NIOLIT BUT ONE of the PrelenV L . , , 4 GREAT-CIRCUS TROD ROBINSON IN LOUR ACIII.-: JAMFid 'IIIADIGAN IN HIS DOUBLE soMERseULT. LITTLECLARISNOE.LE.PETITE ELIE E,...ds T0410131K1W., SATURDAY.zAFTRILDIOON. • - , - - °BAND Ciltetid GIAND cisQLIa,MATLNEE.- . • O AND CIRCUS MATIREE. GRAND tlittOUS - MATINEE: • TUE LAST DAY APPEARANCE OF TDE ' • • raEBENT 4.:IROUS TIIOUP27. • -- • ;And Last Opportunity for our • . , LITTLE PATRONS to tv 'Laces MA sTER CLADEN CE AND DIE WEE PONY. Matinee Admierioa--2.11 and 60 ends. CURTAIN RISE% at Week. , ft Ad Enleeion 2d Cants, BO cod and 'llll. NO EXTRA CHARGE _FOR RESER ED S EATS • Monday--A Noir (Amur Troupw" MPS. JOHN :DNILIVIES ARCH :13T/HIET TIIFATHE, • POSILTTVErIe.T.ABT.nVH % . Egf_ _ BiOndaY.-- piutelisti-ant sway - The Leif Nlibt of Colonel Fiigeraldi With tie Excellent V eli VEB A‘ Et Ili 1 B cencry SATURDAY NIGHT —A Change Orwd Effects. In active Preossution Auquetin EtalroY4s7,4--- A FLAtskl Ok LallatdlNG. NIITALNUT STREET :1D • TRE. Be_ains at Motolocilt. - BEFIT WRIDAY) -EVEN us_th BENEFIT OF WEB. Fr. F. - BOWERS, The Great Moral Sensational Dratna of EAST LYNNE; OR THE ELOPEMENT. ME .B . P . BDWERS To conclude with Frances Eatable Butletai Comedy; of TEE DAY - AFTER THE WEODLNG - . - Lad,* Elisabeth Freelove. „ .MRS D. Y. isowErts Sat URDAY . TILE BIL L OVT . IIE SEASON. For the Christmas HoUdaYs:' '' . THEORANGEOTNI. - - ' • ACERESIII4IB &TOB.Y. ' . • O.•BA•TR - E C O. MIQU B. L SEVENTH STREET:beIow arch. Commence at 7.3 e J. C.'GREGtiItY. Lerma auad Manager TiLUI.F.YENINOCAND SATURDAY MATINSet , LAST WEEK OF . Milo Gertrude 's Trained Quadrupeds. -•-- - Little Beale. Fine Champiotill*ainsatir. - "- • Augueta._ $ • The Miniature Circus. MONDAY, Dec. 91—Engagement of - The Fyne and Galion Faglteh Comic Opera Troupe. A NATIONAL - POULTRY_ zxninrrloN, Bader the auspices of the • .. PENNSYLYrqoa POULTRY RCILTOTY. 'Wilt he held at HORTICULTURAL HALL. • Broad street. below Locust. from December 21 to K. hicicushre. Open from 10 - A. 3L- until to P. M.; daily.--Admieehp. igrcents; Children 15 cents; Season Tickets. SL 'Fee Germania Orchestra Brigade, Bind has Wert ea.' gaged for the occasion. • ' ' -- 4C.XAI OP alinaNOtaCEWlli., Thomas A. Andrew.. ' Samuel J. nharlicar. .• John McGowan. WEL whiter. . Charles T. BonealL de17.13-1F44 th HE PUBLIC, REHEARSALS OF THE GERMANIA T ORCHESTRA will. be discontinued on account, of the Hall having been previously engaged for fairs, lice. The" will be resumed on December Seth. Engagements Ivan be made by addressiris 0. - SASTERT. 1231 Monterey street, yarrio , B Music Store. 10H Chestnut street, or ANDRE% hiusicißore.-1104 Cheattautetreet. .0c1741§ MUSICAL FUND BALI. CARL SEMI Z AND MA RK HASSLER'S GRAND ORCHESTRA AtATINEES, EVERY SATURDAY AFTERNOON. AT al4 O'CLOCK. Package of four Ticketa . _ SL Single Admi55i0n........... . ...... Fifty Ceuta. For sale at Carl Rentz , _ . aGMce(Boaces Store).l.lo2 Cheat nut street. and at idartillassiefa Ulnae. No. 214 B. Eightb street. r - . , • . Ocl tf PARLOR. CONOERTEL—NATATORIUSI HALL. Broad Street. below Walnut. SECOND CONUER V of the Season SATURDAY EVEttING, December 19th. Tickets and programmes at L. lifoyer's Music Store, and at the door. delft-vote-4V AMERICAN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. TWENTY-FIFTH MATINEE, AN. G. Fourth Grand Concert, Inauguration Day. March 4th. See Notice in Mucked column. • dell 101; ACADEMY OF FIN I S CIIE A EMiUT Street. above Tenth. Open from 9A.M. to P. M. Benjamin WocVa Great Picture of CHRIST REJECTED still on exhibiticm. • Jeiiiktf F OX 3 EVERY AMERICAN EN VA Y RIET TREAT= EING sad SATURDAY AFTERNOON. GREAT CO MBINATION `I7IOUPE. In Grata Ballots, Ethiopian Buziesquog. Sono. Dance& Gramma Acts, Pantomimes. tte. lIIMEHIPVEJEUP 4111171Dits For Boston---Steamohin Line Direct FROM PINE EACH PORT EVERY FIVE DAYS. FROM PINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA, AND LONG WHARF, BOSTON N - ri , „ • This line is composed of the Snit-class Steamships, 11101111111, 1,488 tone, - Captain O. Baker. SAXON, 1,200 tons, Captain . 'M. Boggs. Olt&fili a N. 1.293 tot% Captain Crowell. The ROMAN. from Phila., Saturday. Dec, 19. at 6 P. M. The SAXON, from Boston. on Saturday, Dec. 19, at 3 P.M These Steamships 'mil punctually, and Freight will be received every day,a Steamer being always on the berth. Freight for points, beyond Boston sent with despatch. Freight taken for ll points in New England and for warded as directed. 'lnsurance 34. For Freight or Passage (superior accommodations) apply to HENRY WINSO.II. &CO.. mvBl 338 South Delaware avenue. PHILADELPHIA .A ND SOUTHE N MAIL t EAMSHIP COMPANY'S REGULAR LINES. FROM QUEEN STREET V73IARIP. The JUNIATA. will mail for NEW ORLEANS. via HAVANA. on Tuesday, Dec. 23, at o'clock A. M. The-- will sail from NEW ORLEANS.via VANA. . The TONAWANDA will sail for SAVANNAH on Sa turday. December Ihoth. at 8 o'clock A. M. 'I he WYOMING will sail from SAVANNAH on Satur turday, December 19th. The PIONEER will sail for • WILMINGTON. N. C.. on Friday. December 19th, at 8 o'clock A.M. Through Bills of Lading mimed. and Passage Tickets sold for all points South and West. For Freight or Passage apply to CHARLES E. DJIMES. Freight and Passenger Agent,l36 Walnut street. WILLIAM L. JAMES. General Agent, Queen Street Wharf. HAVANA STEAMERS. . 1 t" . lt.i.' • SAILING EVERY.2I DAYS. These eteamers will leave this pia for Ha vans every third Wednesday, at 8 o'clock A. H. 4 The steamship STARS AND STRIPES. Captain Holmes, will sail for Havana on Wednesday morning. January 6, at 8 o'clock. A.M. Passage. $4O currency. Passengers must be provided with passports.. No freight received after Monday. Reduced rates of freight. THOMAS WATTSON Sc SONS, 140 North Delaware avenue. FOR BREMEN—PETROLEUM—THIS N. G. Ship Germania will be despatched for too above port. For freight Refined Petroleum only, or peoooge. apply to WORKMAN d; (JO ., No. 123 Walnut etreet. NOTICE—FOR •NEW YORK, VIA Delaware and Raritan Canal—S ?Angara Transportation Company—Despatch and wsttsuro Linee.—The business by these Lines will be re. gamed- on' and after the 19th of March. For Freight, which wi 1 be taken on accommodating ,torms, apply to WM. M. BAIRD - Es CO., 192 South Wharves.- ' CONBIONEES OF ;FIFTY-SIX TONS OLD IRON Flange Rails (561 pieces), shipped by Messrs J. &hole. field gone & Goodman per Amer. Brig M. Louise Miller." Leighton. )4aster. from Liverool to ~Fbiladelehia. will Vi e e n t s ito c t i e. l t t n t Pr e eg i g: 111tdcritfiltiPalftle tht oic SONS. Ilb Walnut street. . . de4 tf DRUMM w •• • : • • . ID•I IJ White Lead, Zinc, White and Colored Paints of o own manufacture, of undoubted ipturßy, in quantities . cult porchasens. ROBERT BBOESIARER ds CO., Ocala in Paints and Varnishes, N. E. corner Fourth and Ha streets. n 027.11 RHUBABB ROOT, OF RECENT IMPORTATION AND eueerlor quality; White Gum Arabic, Hut In. dia Castor oil, White end Mottled Castile neap. Olive OR of various brands, For sale by ROBERT BEIGEMAICER do CO., Druggists, Northeast corner Fourth and Race streets. • noMtf DRUGGISTS , SUNDRIES.—ORADUATES, MORTAR, PM Tiles, Combs, Brushes, Mirrors, Tweozora,Puff Boaca. Ilona Scoops. Surgical Instrumonta, Trusses, Hard and Soft Ilutdoor Goods, Vial Caeca, -Glen and Metal By r i n ges, dtc,, all at Goods Hands , . prices. . SNOWDEN At !MOTHER, aps 23 south Eighth street. 130 BERT SHOEMAKER it C 0.., WHOLESALE ,Drugghts, Northeast corneorrourth and Race streets, invite the attention of the Trade to their largo stock ot k'tne Drugs and Chemicals, Essential Oils, Sponges, Corks. &O. noll7 tf if '? t riD•, , ;'••'''• . WIT. ; ,c ,--, : , .. r ."-.7.. ~- 4 , , , -,. fr'..'.. . . , • , 2 . 2 - . 2 . 2 • 2 :' •• . . . SECOND STO RY: FRONT licloll, -- ..'.) ...- -, , - ;,...,: , •,f ',:1e..•.. - ,f1,..i.':]...;•i ::',. - ..4'•:? e.;:.' I=.• ' -",:" ~,;•'; ~c.' - -,-.. ' --'- : -.' - : . -.. • , i •:±„, tint-'4111a14-1-'-, .. , ',i. , ' ',7, • :.; . . , . he TO itErier. MEER= TBE - LARGE AND DEIDRABLB - --T—. - No. 6 2 0 Chestnut.Stroot, 4 , Extending through to Jana street. Rent $5,000 per teiinum. Apply at%l ! Tioxt door. WC , ,- 3, i. 0 ;- .:: , LET . , - The kecond i Third and Fourth Floors B. W, °inner Eightkand liarket 84, ;71 These are very destrabletoome, and the location Ww scapatecd for 'Wetness purposes. Apply to sTitAwiifttoog* - otolielittr:k.' ON TEM PEEKS lit; dol4f i . :::: - .YORRENT , ;,:.',•...-.11-;',‘, .. .. ... ..,.. ... , ~.,......_ • ..... .. ~.. Premises.4lo9,oheatnutAtMti FO t AIRPEWt OS Prii,Cooo .; _ Also; Offices aiid Moisuge ea Wit for - siflrnmeiet, College. ADPI7 at seigkop THE REPtllittee • a &UAW CJI42 Co Yard. newly 'Led up. 9DI-011/1-:- No. 2500 blArkpt street AdJoinklit the premises. "' .12 FORMENT—TBE DEsaftil. B STORE PROP , orty.'No. 532 Morlcot olzeotinuOgng tforoagh:fo Dor etreet _Two rroxua, Illoo,)11ret floor and boo.. meat of 8:ore. No. 521 Mlnorotroot.- J. - 111. • (111MbIBB' ' BONS.-2251,-Wakus-streot,- . TO LET.--9 ROOMED MODERN HOUSE. NO. 51236 Locust street,. By N. Lt. HOFFMAN. inTO LET -TSB.' DEBIRABLE RESIDILNOE;NO 024 Cllnton Omit ; 10 rooms, 2 bias room, heater. ; hotoind coldloster, and gas to third floor In corn piste order , Inuned Late possession,- OON El, 7'4 Woloutatroet., TOR RENT—LARGE AND:I3I4ALI.. - . ROOMS weAlldbte6.- 'unable for .11/Intatt COlnginit °Ma t e bodiloota Purposes. n the handaomq_ , lox No. 612 and 614• Chestnut street.. J. M r 0112L11E1r &- EON% 233Walnotatztek • ' • • RENT,A THREESTOSY-- DWELLINCP with tsvoatary hse.k buildhaa, Ne.o244Latnit (treat: with all modern -iMprovementa, gu, !Wax aage,4a 4 : 'immediate pow:swim ' itgply ig COPPLICK & J 01104% 938 Walnut atreet,' FOR HANDSOME ArO Ml_ AND Dwelling, -No. 1.041 Waltuit street.' LIB, G m gir dc SONS. =3 Walnut street. , - . KIM Alija* .raFOR BALE - OD TO, 11.11NTrrFUNNISIIED.— A If wad 15 ome rour4rttwy Aro w a Stone Reddeacerith three-dory double beck buildings; angst* oh' the south side of lion Area. wait of YU month ha s er off modern convenience enirls in good order. Lot 2hi__."feee . Irdrit by - LW feet deep7lo - - ,xtrett; J. AV GUMISIBT , BONS: .7733.Wii:ntit stmt. YOB, 13.1.LF..-411r MANDSOME - . ,MODIT.RN tbroo*brtek Reeiden-et nith , threader, - doable backb mu two beaters. - range. - ba th , dto.; welt bunt, - and - reflect order : No, Mente,Etoverith. J. M. lIUMME-Y-.11. SOME.-4 Vilannt 'treed:- FUlt BALE-MODERN BUILT llOUdEfi_ SITU. • ate North Elft-euth, etxteenth. N. Thirteonthl street. N. l'extb. N „ .Broad otreetWeat Green atreet, Weet Owing 021.3 den and N. Nineteenth /44', ?S. C. ItIBRET.-411 Walnut rtrect. . • IEIFOR BALE tre e dENT LARGE STORE. No. 418 Areh iteplY on the premiees. et to D. IL FOX.IIe. 640 orth Fifth tireet, or the °Watt' may be *eau by addrereins Box 2207 rhiladelpbta Post. office. de4 tt rs..FOR BALE—TEE HANDSOME , DOUBLE 3 story brick liesidenca. 3.3 feet trent v lorith back , `handless; finished in the beet manner, extra _ conveniences. No. 400 South Eighth street. feet deep. J.IL OUMHEY dr. SONS.= Walnut Meet.' nFOR SALE—THRVALUABLE FOUR-STORY Brick Reeldencoadtuato on the aouthoast ear. 13road and Spruce atrenta ; foot front on spirruce by 810 feet' on Broad enter. J. Id. CILTALIIEY & BONS, 733 Walnut street. FOR SALE—THE HANDSOMETIIREKBTO RY leßrick Residence, with attics° and but ballet innate No. Louth Tentb street. Lot 21 feet 4 inches trout by i 5 fret deep. Immediate possession Wen. J. IL GUALSILY & lAMB. 723 Waltrnt GREEN STREET—FOR StLE.—A HANDSOME I Modern Brick Residence. 20 eat front, with three tarp double beck building% built and finished throughout in the best manner. with extra conveniences, and in excellent order, situate on the north side of Green etreet, above Y'tventleth• street. Immediate possession given. J. M. SIiMMEY k tiONS„ 733 Walnut street EFOR SALE—DWELLINGS. FIRST-CLASS Country Seat, &boathouse hum No. iSui North Broad street. N0.'g144 Locust street. No. 118 North Nineteenth above Arch street. No. NB South Filth street. Two Fine Cottages., West Philadelphia. Fine Dwelling, with Stable, West eluladelphia. Two threeetory Dwellings. Kensington. A pply to COPPUCK di JORDAN. 433 Walnut street. REMOVAL—J. M. GUMMEY SONd,R.F.AL ESTATE Brokers, bare removed to No. :83 Walnut street virlom• STOREHOUSE WANTED.—WANTED TO RENT, etarehotne, between Vine' and Spruce street and " Delaware avenue and Second /street. Apply COWL. RAN. RUSSELL & CO.. MI N. Front street nontf V• 1.1 L111:1111 /Amp A, WRIGHT. THORNTON puce, °mum A. 68A150011 IHEROTORR WRIGHT, TRANS L. !OULU PETER WRIGHT di IR/NB. Importers of Earthanwaro and Slappingand Conuntodon Ifforehania. , No. lib Walnut street, Philadelada. OOTTON AND LINEN ' SAIL DUCE OF EVERY uridtb„ from one to six feet wide. all numbers. Tent and Awning Duck, Pk . Pelting. Rail Twine, &c. JOHN W. EIMRNAN dr CO., No. 103 Church St. DIUVY WELLS—OWNEIIII OP PROPERTY—THE .1. only place to get privy wells cleansed , and Wahl. fected, at very. low 'prices. A. PEYSBON,. Manufacturer of Poudrette. Goldsmith' Hall. Library street. TOBAG E DISEREIViNG AND STORAGE,YARD.2OOB, OM .11.11arket street.—Trackege and stores° for lumbdciron. coal. grain.. bark. produce and ell kinds, of merchan• dbe. Also, room for loading cars from shipment. Terms Reasonable. ' ' poll) tf e ' . BTEIN Gas FIDIETUKES. GAB FIXTURE 8. 1 -1111BREY, MERRILL & TBACKARA,Ro. 718 Chestnut atreet,. manufacturers of Gas Fixtures, Lamps. dm.. die.i would call the attention of the public to their large and islegsort assortment of Gm Chandellere; Pendants. Bracketsote. They also introduce gas sloes into dwellings and public buildings, and attend to extending, altering and repair-Ingalls Ow. AA work GILA tiIEIWAIIIE. DYOTTVILLB GLASSWORKS IN PULL BLAST. And manufacture Carboys with or without boxes; Demijohns covered with willow or ratan; Wme Bottles " all sizes; Pbrter bottles Mineral ' Water bottles .• and druggist's bottles of eyed' description: • K. D, es G. W, BUNKERS, del Im*. 27 South Front street. moors AND SHOES. ERNEST SOPP, , NO: 230 NORTH NINTH STREET. onn Sae on a supply or Gentletnen'a Booth anti Shoes of the fixtept. quality 'of -,leather and workmanship • aba; made to order. de2 dmo INSTAVUTIOI OR BEM AN SHIP ' SCIENTIFICALLY taught at the Philadelphia: Ridhtg School, Fourth street above Nine. - The horses :aro quiet and thoroughly trained. .'For hire, saddle horaee. Mao ear. Tinges at all times for *weddings. parties, opera, funerals. dm. Horses trained to tho saddle. ' • THOMAS CRAIGH& 00 , ,•111A.HDIMITA.MLIS• U ODGERS , AND WORTENDOLAPS: POCKET KNIVES, PEARL and STAG HANDLES, of beau tiful finish. RODGERS` and WADE dc BUTCHER'S. and the CELEI3RATED. •LECOULTRE RAZOR. SCISSORS IN CASES of the finest quaRIT. Razors. Knives,Elelssore and Table Cutlery . , Ground and Polished. EAR INSTRUMENTS of the moot approved construction to amid the hearing,at P. MADEIRA'S. Cutler and Sur giCal Instrtunent ' Maker, us Tenth street, below Chest nut. • - myit.td KEI►IO VJLL: DEMOVAL.—THE LONG EBTABLIBEIED DEPOT .for,tho purchase andsale of, second land doors. windows, store fixtures, ace., from Eleventh street to Sixth street, above Oxford, where-such articles are for sale in great variety. • Also new data's. sashes, shutters, dre. don 2m6 .. NATIIAN W. ELLIg. NBWOURKEY PRUNES LANDDIGAND FU R SAL bi J, 8 81188.1.88 80.1(880u Daiwa, wenn - r <~,.~~. ~.. . . • "OP 113:11 • NUILADELYNIA . E VENLIG BULLETIN FIUDAY,.. - DecOmbor 18, 1868. ninOoiro to Oorioluipiule t 4:ll."—The corrections - being - comp a WeFhall not need the end-games. The twelve - move ending Eiiitween - Meserei. - IttnoltT,T7-rf solvable in eight moves, e. g. ' 1.. Q toR 6 (ch) K. to K sq VQTO4I loh) IC to Q.Sq f. R al) 4.4 tO Bto ( Rt 5 (el 2) B x B ti. Qaß(ah) RtoKsq C. QtoKt 8 (eh) ..-- tb 7. QtoB8(ch) KtoK3 ti. Q to B 6 mate. t, Solution to c 10.803 .. ~ wITITTL ' ',TALON. 1. PtoK4 Px,P Kx P, then Bto B (ch); 2. Q x P (ch) -B'tcrß 3. Q x B (ch) 'es 4. Kt to Q 3 : ,, Aso - 74(eh)- b. Kx P Any move O. lit or B tastes, i ti ..? • • - Solutionsollro. „ • AILAOI4 I.BtoQBG K to Kt 3 2. B to K 4 (ch) K to It 3 3. Rtoß6(ch) PxR • 4;,-,11-tcrityB taste. •,• „, ,+. solution to IQo. 605. wailsistoSF 1 It 1. Tr Kt 4to B 4 (ch) to'R 7 2. R to .B 2 (ch), and 66;0 move., Solugon Swig In part of our edition this problem was printed IneorrecUy._ tAtt: /L it OS' OD uld(! )0 _ *Lunt.. 1. Btolt 8 (eb) Q. 4 - • 2. Q s t ilt P 4 4660bbr'' " O. Mate. • SollaltiOnt 110 Slio v egrt-- • 1. Pto.K.B P 1 Qtoßb K moves D. Q mates. Solution to No. OSS. BLAME. 11ito PtoQb • Rtolt 3 -- to B (ch) 8. R anclmates next move., - - ILISS COS/POSIN, IDNAUOLICIAIWg*O" O CUES "jAl r4 ls' A i • 'MyTrio dVTliiell" ,t,ilo,Prolo, - " HalletkOlUfOlOw-1-1 have a piece of = . news that will into you,".exclaimed a friend amine, - bursting into my room ; " that composer, whose problems have so interested you, is on a tempo ray visit to Ibis city I, made nis acquaintance at the - Mereintile Library Yetterday, atidhaVb in vlted ldin ;to spend to-morrow , evening at rmy non He his promised to come; so don't fall tO,',.'arourtd sae, I knOtv-Yott-Wll l -be pleeeetr-to become Ocapialited with bin." • I assured him that I Would - eertainly'idedth my appearabee,-aniieW-friend pleading frre" hum ImmediatiVieltzueegairt,' ' The gentheinetiVektWot had lately published in the various Cliess'pertedicaleseme - very pretty problems, novel - in Was end, pretty la conetnic-.. lion. ' I thiiught that' I hid 'detected more then ordinitay talent in these coMpositiona, and I was: therefore, only too. glad . for ,an opportunity to form his esecteahritatice.' :Itt - nry• mind I already antielpated_tke:plessare we should And in thaw ing to each ether our httess'"`stunners," - and this and similar ideas occupied me. daring the day, and indeed, more then was exactly wholesome for my business. Thiliiext net out ._to friend's house--thqugh well knowing, the way, it seems that t'Vras 'so twirl engrossed With my thought* that Float thyself, and it was not until I bad walked amid( pretty tired that I at last found the house. I was admitted by a stream'. looking little negro boy, whom I had never seen before, and ushered into a room. My friend, contrary to expectations, was not present, s' huge' individual with an immense heatrord namented with a red turban, and smoking out of a Neonate:Li - pipe of the most,immensepropor tioasovissee..ed ungainly arm-claair,before ricketty table, on which an immense Chess-board, covered all over with dents, which - looked as though some "strong players" had shown their powers by pounding- the pieces on it, was laid. The pieces, of a size to correspond with the board, were the strangest I had ever seen, and ineptred ree with some of the awe that the servant girl in Dickens's " Curiosity Shop " felt for the pipe with the mystic flgure,, which her master had pur chased of.the German student .. The indlvidual the armchair eyed me in silence as I entered the room, and the idea struck me for a moment that it might be perhaps Maelzere Chess Automaton resurrected. Bat recollected • quickly that the Automaton in. question was a .gentleman of ezemplary, - ,hablia. , who neither • d-snk < nor smoked, and who looked grave and t ,onghtf4l, whilst the strange devotee of Cases before We looked like the "strong man" of a traveling show, out on a spree.. • - • "Bit down, and show me some of your pro blems," said ho at last, in a deep bus voice. I took a chair, sat down opposite him, and ar ranged one of my problems. But no sooner had I out it up than he, with a broad grin, showed me the solution of It.. The second and third that I showed him speedily met the same fate. Piqued at this. I finally arranged a Position on the board, which I considered the best I had ever composed, and which I had reserved for some es occa,- eion. • • "Is this the bestyou can do?" asked he, with a coarse laugh, afterlooking at the position a moment. " Why, it's as easy, as lying. This is the solution," and in: a moment more he had shown it to me. "I don't think you have much of a head for making problems,"'he kindly re marked, after a pause. Jhough I suppose they have cost you a great deal of time and labor, too. I, however, compose very quickly, and by an en tirely new process. Look here 1" and he pushed together the pieces that • were. standing on the board,'Scemingly, et lap-hazard. and rounded them off with a swift motion of his big hands, until he had formed: them into the.following ehepe. r/A //A - - • ." Dj ' 7 .4 A : • : - ; . , '•VG ..' f /4 It • ei# • . ;, : / •••, 1 ' • -;• • .v „ „i„,-.. 0.4.47,04 0,„,..6 _ /, • . d ~r % V/-412k, r , /. . . . „ "Now here is symmetry for you." "Whyl what fort of a thing.:-do, you call- this 2."„ exclaimed "thiutte certainly not a problem." "No"' replied he, "not 'yetfbut wilt be," and striking the table with _ his clenched nit with a force that made-me - .43tat; he exclaimed . r :Now It wone,' , ' ' The ricketty table had swayed to and fro under the force of the'blow, - aiiesonte br theltiftdres hid danced ont,of placenntil they haf), assumed the f ollowing_poaltionL _ Problem No. 020. '''.. -:L:.....:'.-':'33-ii:iic-,7:i..."- //: e/ at V A , A E , , ,d041i,2„,,e, 4/ i h„A- e-1,4- etiri,k p i // rd , f a 2, x , 4/ • r- „, ~. ~, WIIITH. "Whito to play, and mato in Eve 1:110V013. 0-40% 1E3173 " kn9i,t+:7oP:*l4:olvl),Al," add 4 be,,With I chuckle, gYou are such a sharp one, you area and leaning back, be resumed his smoking with the utmost complacency. This !tinheariliof " retbodk, of composing otilal der othetipulpsfances, have left me e ties - is anyittluvmorty-tha sell, bad I not seen enough of his powers to con 4incsteWthettithererwas MO doubt-of-Its correct 'laced.' I "esithilied the-position for a long Ume, but was unable fns discover thssolntione lc eral` times I thoughti wtte on theright:traelo ; but the , cants:m.oo 000 seemed to'shave,morelwltthes and twists to it than any position I had ever seen. ,-_,There were also other .eircumatances that pre /4/anted-my devoting my fail attention to it. The Kings ind Queens had carved faces. The white Queeriad aellylooklng faccovhilst the black Queen looke d at me with such a woe-begone and crest-fallen countenance, that I caught myself asking her id a private; confidential sort of a way, you _at which the vibit(t'Qtteen,,seeddeti'totae to grin more, and the black - One, if possiblei to look more dejected than before . felt chagrlnerrand'eriraged almost beyond' en durance, trail knocking in my impatience against the tablici ripat sottar,of - the plates. The white Queen and a black pawn fa Into my lap, and a white ibright'and_paWn - rolled - Off on_thelloor— Hurriedly taking up the Queen and pawn from llie4 ll P9 o . l liclowq int° tt different. position, andwas just about folcking up the pieces Itom,the floor, when my companion stopped "tie; sa3dig,- " Never mind. My positions are not easily - disarranged." - - As It stands now, It is: ,-°Mlrokkbens MO* 64 . 16`, stACIF., •• V. . 7/ 7 / /% 4 jlar, z;;,/, // • /*/ ,rte ,• ?. mAIL-Atig -- • • ,; . dj '::•• • • • - ,/ Ai, -C2 „ ja / a , . iniNtelo Play and Mats In seven moves. - But / WAS In no More mood for problem-solv ing.___Lbcgsn to feel more and , more uneasy, and I was just about giving vent - to my impatience, when my amiable - compatdon, - stretching his blg Ideated lukidt.forarant , to such_ an extent 29 to Make me ibiink buck;iald with Indescribable Im pudence. "I see these problems are too much for yeti. Let me- give you a nice, soft, easy, two. soave probb3m 7—and,ln amoment more he had swept off sole more pieces, andsdiptly changed .the position tame of the others— -• now; here 4 • /Problem t0.,63.1. z ///),_- x • " 1 / - - f V Mr , ÷ / .1 /* A 21 - • "// A • ;;,/, / „ • • White to play and mate in two mores. . This was a little more than I, could stand, and rising from the table, I took the melancholy black Queen into my.hand, as a weapon of defence, and said, "What ass insolent, ugly creature you are." " What!" "do yon suppose I'll take any impudence from a noodle like you?" and he made a lunge at me with his big hands. I flung the Queen at him with all my force, and had the satisfaction of seeing her hit him square in the false, and hearing him cry like a ehild. With a violent effort.' turned around and—awoke "Why, what in all the world is the matter with you ?" exclaimed my wife; "yon have, been lighting With the bed-poat for the last five minutes, and you have wakened up the baby, too—just hear how its a-crying. I told you -not ,to cat so much of that heavy pie foesupper, and now you have had a nightmare." I was bathed in. perspiration, and felt quite ex hausted. It took me some time to collect my thoughts.; and to dime . to the conclusion that the whole supposed meeting, every detail of which I bad seen with such distinctnees, was only &dream, and to recoiled that was only in the afternoon that my 'friend had called on me, and that the - real "peeling with the Problernist was only to come off dle next evening. The positions.the strange in dividual in my cream had shown me were fresh in my mind, and I concluded to note them down,so I would not forget them. I quietly slipped out of bed, procured my board and men, and com menced noting down the positions. " I believe the man has gone stark mad," sud denly exclaimed my better-half, jumping out of bed, and putting out the light. If I don't make kindling wood out of these clumsy old figures to morrow morning . , my name ain't Fanny." But the transcriptions were accomplished, and the positions were safe in my portfolio. * * * • * * I visited the celebrated Problembat at my fnend's house the next evening, and found him a plea sant, agreeable young man, and we derived much pleasure and amusement from each other's society. With his aid, after some labor, I °VOA solved the positions which the turbaned hero of, my dream bad mannfactured,inso Eitng - ultu• a manner for my own especial benefit. My darling Fanny, did not burn my Chessmen (though her name is Fanny); and I am still making, Problems with a vep eance. cggss 113 . pfuITATELER.LL • • Game N 0.2109. Messrs. C. R. Hoskins and C, F. Huch consult figainst,Mr. Jacob Elson.- (Scotch Ganibit.) War.(ME. ELsou.) BL. (44T.Lins.) 1. P to K 4 tO K • 2.1 Kt to B • ' , I,Q9Kt B 3 B:"PtoQ4' PxP 4.8t0Q8 4 - • -Btoß4 5. Kt to Kt 5 Kttoß 3 6. Q to R 5 Q to 331 7. Castles P to Q 3 8. 1 3 to KR 3 - KctoK4 e 9. B to Kt 3 BtoQ2 10. P to K B 4 Castleu(Q 11) 11. P to B 5 11 toKt. 4' 12. Rto . Q sq • - - (Mr. Eisen should; of course, have played R to K eq.) (This was thought to Vsthe - best mcie.)' Y 1 01 409 B x"Q (cia) PxP KtxKti" KU° B 5 QaR - Ktto - K - Kt xlit(e,h) K R ) 6 - sq 14. Q to - 1K."3 16. 13 x 16. 17. B to B sq 18. - 19. It to'B sq 20. Kt to K B 3 2 — . - Rao 82. P to B 6 28. R x K.t _ And Whitelesiglie,d. ~ ' , . ''"- -' "AttrgltUit.''''7 " :' A MERICANCONSERVATORY OF MOOG. • -El. B. E. toruerTENTEI AND WALNUT streets,. The regular Winter Quarter wilt begin on • - MONDAY; JANUARY 11, 1869. Names of new pupils should be entered atart early, day during the month of December. - ILLIAM.I3 nud CARL GAERTNERr do u. lon • . Directers. ALLAD B . T. BlSHeis;''' , " sa Houto Nineteenth otroot se 238m0 QIO..P;RONDINEGLA;VEACtIER OF BiNGING. PhL vate lessongi and ; clusects. Re&idouco, 808 B. Tltirtoentb 6treet.' . , nu55.1v8 ' IMU,CATION. 14011 N 85., P . O)IM, D.. d tiouthraftfionth street, will give instructions in Frouch and Gorman, at alai pplacttliatired: to gontlernenvviehingr hnorriedgo of these angusgestwith a view to the 'medical pr ofeaelon. 'Ode deetrablo opportunity. iio24.tr4 GRAIAN AND THE ANCIENT LANGUAGES TAUGHT. sAfldreto, Prof. J. OTTO URBAN. 1621 flummox' otrect. dolll-136. V - 14. ' ; 4 ,? e jo, 7 . S. 1. , 4 e l / 2 ` 4 T. ,s 4 otrt rn - Al tvtNixt-isoilwrixi - 111111ADL.1411A 12. B to If 7 eiII'EADI A law NATIONAL BANS OF TUB NORTHERN _ . FnuAnytenia. Dec.ll.lBBB. The Anneal Election for Directors of Ohl Bank will be held at the Dunking Donee on Wt•DNESDAY the 13th day 01 - Jannary. 180 1 . between the hours at' 10 o'clock. A. • , 4134 ;to/Jock k'. Id, — rite] 1 , 1 nt:w;rtiiitt:3l = alThnirEW l64ll n - "31";'. COMMONN.EAIini NATIONAL BANK. -,k---turtAtm.trze.A....A:ke. - 11=1 1 M8. ,— The ar.nußteleer,od to* Mattered! this , bank will lie beld at thekbeg Babe, as TUESDAY. "au at 7 12ta Iffd. between i he bowl c 4: 10 A. M. and 2 Y. M. YUUNO. Cashier. tiapoNAL BANK.:. ve r 490 8 Pnimannl.nnta, DM= • Tno Annual, Meeting , or the tltockholderemill held at the !soaking 191Ouse e ;on,TilEaDAY4 ,, Jannary 12. , 1800. at 10 o'clock A. M.; and on the same day. between the home of 11 A. M. end 3 et. itli; an election will be held for ntue Directors to nerve during the awningruc year. -valuer delLftza PENNSYLVAI , I A RAILROAD._: OFFICE OF GENERAL PREIGIIT 'AGENT. NO. 1302 Market otreeL , . • _l2 s. Piiitinzuta,Derent,ber NorlOire The rates for,;:tyansportation of „Gas and- ; other Numinous Coalto be carried on tho Pennsylvania Bath °ed. Western Pennsylvania Pailroad. snd Philadob. hbiseldirrEale tat takeeffeet -January Ise, 1M„ , can be obtainpd upon apyllcat ion at this Office. , S. II KINGSTON,. , . ' :General Freight - Agent 'PennsYlvants Rsiiroad Oompany.. delGtJal4 imar....A.SPR.CIALMEETING Q1 1. 241 E BTOUSkiOLIX , era of the Clarion River 'end Spring Creek OS Company - will bd 'bad - No.' 34 North Front street; 1M TUk SSA'S% the 99th tinit• o'ooa 44- • dets-12r ese-str. PIIILADELPRIA 'AND RIMI)ING ItATONOAD COMPANY. OFFICE zit SOUTH FOONTH BT. • . • • • PaII.4.2 O ELT,ITIArDATAA W.t Webb° is hereby riven to the Stochheldere of this at. pally_ that the annual n eetleKand election for President. six Manair,ers, Treasurer and Secretary will take place on the SECOND MONDAY OW9 eusTalli*X. next= a 12 11 . deft tilhlt : W. Wirdeei.l3eeretazy.:J ZONAL , BANK OF. I.IIIILADEIfi' 4 " . imoznetalui:Detembeal, Woo l& thla kialliOna of danutry; 181110! , ites_im Ainlirm,n an 24 11r4/ / - 14,16:ift lik - atabadEt. Cilibig;t": - Igor; LOBISERSX-OttE,Elf. RAII.ROAI3 COMPANY. . December 14,1802.. the ithnuld meeting of the Sinekholders of the Lorne:l7Y CreeMMthlthltd tuiffilialtY 34lll be held at the office of.the Phillidelithianti Readies Sailroaii VotepanY., 227 South! fourth street, Philadelpm*, on ]MONDAY. January 1,11124 lad, et 10 o'clock A, U. when an election will be held for Pretident and six uh'ectora to_,wtvejer the eoutdeli year.., U. VMII/3.l3ec'ry... wart EAST ISAIIAbIOY a RAILROAD. COMPANY. voica. 22.7 89 , 11111 Au wall STREET. .p. # 4 'Pinzaintwons. - Dec 14; Jen The Annual Wetting of the Stockholders of this Coto piny and an election for - officers to servo tacit/se within% year will be held at the office o f th e Company , on moil , M 14.7142.1 1 1.120% at 2 o ' clock,P. M. i.- - - Secritaif. s o r ALLENTOWN RAILROAD COMPANY. PlutAnntruia. Dec. 14, 186 a The annual niceties of the stockholder of the Allen town Railroad Company will be held at tie office Of the Fhllsdelphia and Reading Railroad Company. No. 227 Louth Fourth street. Philadelphia. on MONDAY, Jana ary_ll, 18n_ at 1034 o'clock A. M.. when an election will be had for a Fresident and six Directors to nerve for the ea g year. deWtlailll W. IL WEBB.-Secretary. _ MABANOY -AND BROAD_ MOUNTAIN .ItAildlOAD COWAN Y.7-OFFICE,No33I SOUTEI FOURTH STREET- .- • •6k -Paimarnmprim-Deeember 14th; The- - Am:ital. Meet:lna ... of -the Btockholdeta4of., th e' Mabatioy an Broad Mountain Railroad Company, sent be hel4lat the, Office of tha Company. No: 92/, Booth Fcrarth emit; onMONDAFJannasyllth, .1868-at -one o'clock 1":11;:,_whon an'election will be hb for ' Presi dent and eix Directors to serve for the em ult 4 year. ALBRAT FOSFRR. dtlt:Ultlld- ''' 7 7 • E - OP THE RELIANCE INSURANCE COMPAIfir QFPHILALELP.ELL.No. '302 Walnut istreet. Putz.aortrxru. November 20.1888. Theithauilmeetinget the Swaim - Ude °Vibe &Zane° Insurrume.• Company: et - -Philadelphia,; aziA -thelemaaat election of (13) thirteen Directors to serve for the amiss year. he held at this office. - oa - IdONDAY. Dec. 21, ISeaat ld. THOMAS C. BILL, deSlOtt. gar— OFFICE OF '"THE BELLI:NOE INSURANCE "`"'"- COIiPANY, OF Fll - ILARILL.FiIIAsn. Ito., :310, 'WALNUT 13111M17,, • "Finuoittrias. Doe. 7. The Board of Directons of -the ,•The=liallance:/ruirm once Company of Philadelphia" have this day.4lochisMl a ilivicerel of Four Ferfieat,oe their capital •Aft., for the pad els rnontbe: payable-to 'the • Stockholders or their legal represesiativea. on dammed,. free of taxes. • _ de8•10t1 THORASP. RILL. Seteretart. NABllßittp AND ,bIECLUINICEP.: NATIONAL, _ .....Pint.ansuotima.DeeeinbegUMßS. The annual election for Directors of this Bank willbe held at the Banking House, on WEDNaSDAY. thoUth day of January next, between the holm of U o'clock A. and 2 atlork . ,P. - • eni.thoso W. 11111'." ` k :4 : 4'o TVA M(MANION. be old firm of Thomas H. Craig. it Co. was dis solved. by Mutual consent. on the Mt at December, 1868. CHART 'RR H. CRAMS, THOMAd IL CRAIGE. Mato of THOMAS H. CRAM,decessed.late partners. Dr.° 170801 The undersigned, on the 7th of December. M& entered into a copartnership al manufacturers of cotton and wol len gooft, at rater Mille." PhiladelPhbikundec the name and oblo of THOMAS ELCRAIG a CHAR E LES CO. IL CRAIGE, T IL CHOMARAIGS H. E. CRAIGE. A. Ilse. 17, ISM del? 6t' IsASTNEntiIiIP DISSOLVED. - .L The partnership heretofore existing under the, firm of ROOF,KIBBE & CO.. this day dissolved , by the deash o f SAMUEL W. ROOF. The ,business will be settled by the eurviving 'partnere at Noa. 24 and M Bank stmt. JOSEPH C. ROOP. Executor of Samuel W. noel). 'HENRY R.'ICIBBE,_ CM{ J. TROUT. ' JOSEPH C. ROOP WILLIAM Y. COLLADY. Surviving Partners. PEELLILDELPIILL, December 1,1868. • • - LARTNERSHEP FORMED. - The undersigned hereby give notice that they have. ed a limited partnership, under the provisions of the act of Assembl, entitled "An act relative to special art. nerships." approved March 91,1836 , the suppleaumt p a thereto, the terms of which are the following. vig.•. I.'l be name of the firm under which such partnership is to be conducted is KIBBE. COLLADAY di TROUT. 2. The general nature of the business intended to be transacted Is a general Dry Goode Importing and Cera m:disarm business. , b. The General Partners are HENRY R. KIBBE, re siding at the Girard House, in the City of Philadelphia ; WILLIAM Y. COLLADAY. residing at 'No. 1529 North d Street, in the same city, and CLINTON J TROU residing at No. 792 North Nineteenth Street, in the same city and the Special Partner is JOSEPH C. ROOF, resid ing at No. 9006 Wallace Street. rid the said city of Phila delphia. 4. The amount of capital Contributed to the common stock by said Special Partner is k Ifty Thousand 0350,0a9 Dollars in cash: - • 5. The said partndrehip is to 'commence on the tint day of December. A. image, and is to terminate on the first day of January, A. D., 1871. HENRY R. KIBBE, • 'WILLIAM Y. CULL &DAY, • CLINTON J. intouT, General Partnere. JOSEPH C. ROUP. . deb thug Special Partner. HEATERS AND STOVES. ...THOMSON'S LONDON KITCHENER, OR 'European Ranges, for families, hotels Or public institutions, in twenty different sizes. Also, Phil adelphia Ranges, Hot Air Furnaces, Portebto Beatets, low down. Grates, Firoboard Stoves. Bath Boil ers Steyrhole, -.Plates: , Broilers. Cooking Stoves, etc., wholesale and retail by the manufackurors. , ... : . SHARPE ix THOMSON., ro2s.wit,m;gratr '•` ' ' :No. 209 North Second street. THOMAS 8. tONS, Late Andrews No. I=4 CHEBITBr ' hilada., Opposite l United States T 4) LOW DOWN, PARLOR CHAIMAt; ~OFFICE., :And other For AllLLlTllCite,Bituminous and Wood Fire • WARM-Alit-FURNACES. For Warming Put:Alward Priv:lW Hui/dings, REGItiTERS, VENTILATOR 4. ^ r AND < CHIMNEY' CAP, coolNn-RANoEs; BATH4RAERB W 1101.ESALE• d RETAIL imstatuNEßN, IRON. diem 11(1 BOUT ARK FOUNDRY. 430 WALRUSTON AAveCT nn • PhlladelPhla. • MANCF STEAM RNOINES--Righ and Low Hori , zontal. Vertical. Rearm. Oscillating. ,Diast and Cornish pump BO ERS--Cylinder, Fine. Tubrdar, &a, • 13 TM / , 1W1' i r4 18 , 1 : 18453/37 4 / al 4, ! :114Y3 ' 43 , 41 `,. 6/ CASTINGS-I.SarMilDri andilrianit SiMd._Braini. ROOFS-Iron Friantuh or covering with blade or Iron. TANKS-Of Cad or Wrought iron. for refineries. water, Qh* MA dsa 4EtriNEAY 4 riah as illetarti.• B l ench Castings, folders and Frames. Puri fi ers , Coke and Charcoal Bar. -Tcrich-Valves, ____-fitVernera. SUGAR MACLIMERY---Such as Vacuum Paw eve - Pumps. Defecatorshßone Black Filtenr.Burnens,Maah. era and Elevators; Bag Filters. flugaralul 4lone Black Can, dra. Solo niknufacturersal the following epealaithri: ' In Philadelphia and vicinity, of William Wright's Patent Variable Cutoff Steam plague. Permrilvania, of Shaw & notices Patent vea&Stroke P r . l Inio taas, e resna. r te n e u .ce wins , and Self-balancing Centrifugal BuZer-aralalnegachls% glue d/ Ba tore improvement on Aspinwall & Woolsey's Barters Patent WrotightlronNetort Strabanm Drill Grinding Rest. • Contractors for tho design, erection, and fitting up at Rd; fineries for working Sugar or diolassea. DIG IRON --TO ARRIVE; NO.I SCOTOII PISIRON— Glensarneekk end Cerebra() brands. For solo in lots to suitby pr..TE.tw.jsrip . ny RONB, 115 i Walnut street; PhilitdelPhia. • • nolO tt • 10PrEft ,, AND YELLOW "METAL 81.1EATMNO. Bfaziarls Copper Neils; Salta and !Ingot (.I_ , 22p§m: eon. stantly on hand and for sale by HENRY WirqWll, a 00.. 'No. 832 Booth 'Wharves. - • • • IV ORTON'S PIN'E APPLE Crinaksg,..—ma BOXER ON Connignmant. Landing and for gale by JOB. B. BUESSIER dc CO.. Kgenta for Nocton4b Ebner.lo3'Soutir neklawara , • - . 111 - .II(JARONI AND VERMICELLL-125 BOXEB /11. Italian ended Efacoaroni and Vonalcoill landing from midi? Efernnon,,direct from Genoa, and for pate by JOB. D. uusalrat OD.:108 Booth Delaware avenue. ': .: s):i.i .: o4V:, -- : - .i1. - s . 'o.sV - i.ita'l's:'' , lB6g-..;. , -, WNST .TBESEY RA.IIIIID ADS. • IWELIWMMWZMOI - ----- kNoiwnimme --- 1r 1 . 14 1 —l-Ftom-litoot of-Market St. (Upper ferry). commencing IN edneedayo3 - Opito. 16,18813, o Trains leave asfoilows: • - For Cave May and stations below MHiviUe alg P. M. - ; For Millville. Nrinehuid and intermediate nations 8.15 a ofi For Bridget On. Salem and way stations &1b A. M. and SAO _ For Woodbury at alg A. M.. 8.150120 and 8. P. M. Freight train loavea Camden daily at 12 o'clock. noon. Freight received at second covered wharf be...100v WILL gropeysht beliveet, daily. red No. 228 S. Delaware Avenue. wir,t3 A al J. SEWELL Superintendent. - _ JIMEMNORTH PENNSYLVANIA R. R.-- TIIE MIDDLE ROUTS--Shortest and moat direct line to Bethlehem Easton. Allentown, Mauch Chunk. - Hazleton. while us' yen. Wilnesbarro, Mahanoy City. Mt. Carmel, Pittston, Turk hannock, Scranton, Carbondale and all the points s in the Lehigh and Wyoming coal regl_oms. [ Passenger Depot in Philadelphia, N. 99; corner. arks 1 , and American streets _ WINTER ARRANGEMSOT, TEN DAILY TRAINS. -`On-and-after-MONDAY. NOVEMBEtt,-2241. Passenger t Trains leave the Depot, corner of Berke and American * streets, daily ,Atirmilays excepted). as follow's! At 7.45 A. M.--Morning_ Express for Bethlehem and Principal Stations on North Pennsylvania Railroad. con. Emoting at Betblehem with_ Lehigh Valley hailroad for Allentown. Catirianqua, Blatington, Manch Chunk, Weatherly, Jeaneaville, [Hazleton, White Ilaven.Wilkes. barre.[Rizsgston, Pittston. -- Tankbannock., and all points. in Lehigh and Wyoming Valleys; able. in connection with Lehigh and Mahoney Railroad for mahanoy City. and with Catawba& Railroad for. Rupert. Danville, Milton and' Williamsport. - 'Arrive at Mauch Chunk ' at 12 51.; at .Willtesbane 44,2_40 P. M.; _at Mahanoy My at L5O IPareargers by this train Our 'take-Ike Lehigh ,Tratir., Passing Be th lehem at .1155 A. M..forEaa a and „ points & ou A N, e M w .- J A eri c s c e o y m V m e oda a ti ß fo lr r m D u o i s t l o- sw Y .s eolag at IUI intermediate Stitiona-PasUengetefor Wow - GroVel Hatboro' and Etartzville, by this train. Wre Stage at Old York Road. • 41,45 A. M. tEsopress) for Bethlehem, Allentown.llanch Chunk, Havenk.Wilkasbarre, -Pittston.' *Stanton and Carbondale via Lehigh and:, Susenehanua Railroad. also to Easton and points oh Muria and Reset Railroad to :rluesc,York and AllentownindEastop. andoirita on New iJerserCentral Railroad to Nets York via Lehigh Valley • At 1045 M.-Acconfinidatiim for Fort Washington -;topping at intermediate Stations. . , M•,..-Lehigh"Valley!Foristeso for' Bethiehem,; Allentown. Mauch Chun_ly While Mayen. , Pittrion,Seranton,and • Wyoming Coal Restore. - • =r. • At 2.46 P. Nt.-7Accommodation _fop Doylesto w n . atop:::, ping stall intermediates • • • t --P.-IL-Accommodation- or DoyleatownttOP-_:. Ping at all fn triMMIMO stations:' • • • - At 5.00 P. -2,113=0 accommodation, for Bethlchouy and-Mations ort - MalnAine' 'of liorthranis Rail , -rozd,tetp...mettng sq. Bethlehem ;with ,V alley-Eve.; ning - Tram for PArtOn;AllentOWlL - Mancli hunk. - - At 15.20 P. SL-Mcomodatlon all intermediate stations • • - At 11.80 P. M.-Accomnodallons for Fort Washing • - TRAINS'ARRIVE IN PHILADELPHIA. From Bethlehem at 9.10 P, M. 2.10 P. M., 1.15 P: EL and 8.89 Y M. Tralna make direct connection with Lehigh Valley or_ „Lel and, aliSqUe• hums trains from Foust= Scranto n . W= barre, Maha. 11.09 CRY' and Hazleton. _Das- engeralta Ing Wilkesbirris M.;t45 P. if., [ convect at Bethlehem and arrive in Philadelphlia at 5.25 - • From Doylestown at 825 A. 25.. 4.55, r. M. and 7. P.M. From Lansdale at 1.80 A. M. - -••- 4 • .From Fort Washington at 1045 A. M, arid _ • ON SUNDAYS. • Philadelphia for Bethlehem at 9.80 A. M. Philadelphia I or Dlestirwir at - 2.001'. Doi iestown for Philadelphia at 7 A. Bethlehem for PluladelpMs at 4 00 P. 0. Fifth and Sixth Streets Passenger ears convey passim. gees to and from the new Depot. • - White curs of Second and Third Streets Line and Union Line run within a short distance of the Depot. Tickets must be procured at the Ticket tiffica, Inorder to secure the lowest rates tif fare. - . ELLIS CLARK.,Age `Tickets sold and Rig isehecked through to . prin cipal l points; at Mann's North mut. Baggage Expriass„office. 1 , 40.105 South Fifth street. ; • , IMINE R XRINSPLVANIA CENTRALad. Fall effect Nov: 22d. - I.BBB. TiFl 4le — trr i r j A the _Pecconyivania Central Railroad leave the DMI r Thirtylirst and Market sheens. whit/flit reached , by the cars of the Market Street Psussertger Ray . , the hatecar camellia. ..., $ with eseh Iran, lea= and Market streets to= before Ito d of the Chestnut and 233l Wr i sYt t ird Street Rai/Wa7 run one square of No rthw estDep - • TakVOfficeicketinbe lusil 'eses application at Ma ame .ef AM= and Chestnut .treeta. and at the Detest. - - - - -; - deUse r atts of Me Won 'Dundee Company will confer ea Baggage at the Depot. Orders left at No. 901 Chest nut street. lie,LlSMarket sase & r o rais . sitseition. TRIS LELA. Mall Train..:.. .at 8.00 A. M Paoli Anc0m.........." "at law A. it. iab:iaid too P. M Fast Line ........at 1L504.. M. Fade Express.. ' &LILCO A.M A.M. 11 . =Lci1ea1 .11 ;"; 6 4 . 01L..... ..... ..... —4220 P. M. .....„ ... . '. ... . ... at 4410 P. M. - TTrain.................. . ... . ... .... . . ..... At 580 P. N. ". ....... ...at 800 P. Mall and_ Ewen. at 10.45. P. M. . —...— ". . .., .. .1t1.2.00 night r ifir &leave' Assay. except * Sunday, running on Saturday night tdW il liamsport only. On Sandhi night passengers wlil leave Philadelphia at 12 o'clock., Phi lad except ~ _ The Western Aorsomnsneation Train nun dal* except Sunday. For this train tickets must be procured end baggage delivered byliSek_t AL_atll6 Market street - TRAINS ABS AT DEPOT. VTZ: GlechinAD Eijrre44..... .. ... ..................tt 8.10 .1L.21. Phtladelp . s , Mamxpress ... . . ' 8.10 E .iiiii.Bo . 4i: it ziwkio & 7.x, P. IL Erie Dian allnun.Buffalo.Mcpress " 10.00 A.M. Fastine, ............ .................10 0 . 00 0 " Lancaster Train. ........ ..... 112.00 P ,21, Day, Express:.- at 4.90 " Hanish= Accom. ... . .... ' 9.40 . JOHN C . information, Syr ic; C. ALLEN. Ticket ent, 901 Cheatnut street. FRANCIS FUNK,4gent. I 8 Market street. IL WALLAC ' - .n -- Tiaretent at the Depot C I l t l VE6 'munsYlvania flathead Company will not mom any rick for Banes_ .e, except for wearing apparel. and limit their meponsilonity toone Hundred Dollarsinvalue. All Baggsee exceeding hat amount In value will be at the Mac of the weer. unkm taken by_amt us inob EDWARD H. General Superintendent. Altoona. An PHILADELPHIA, __ OFERMANI lIMMTow - N AND NORRISTOWN RAIL. ROAD TIME TABLE.-On and, after Ella" ' May 14 7( 8 )1 . 1 GERMANTOWN. Leave Philadelphiar-40. a9.ofh IN.II. 12A. 51.4. 2, au 5. 5N 6.1(1. , &Mn-13. IL 12 r. rs. armanlew, 7 .736. 8. 8.93. 9. 10, u 4 5L2 A. 1. 1. 1 ,96 4 5 6.lo6v)inaS bra n fir & and 5% up trains. nil not stop on the Germantown Branch. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philad a e n lpha- - 9.6 minutes & MI 11 ,7 3 ( endlo ( P.M. Leave Germ caE wn ryr l HlLLAmLnoetv. a. Leave Philadelphia--6.8. 10.12 A. M. t Y. BK. Ed(, 7.9 an II P. M. Leave Chestnut 11111-7.10 4001 minutes and 11.40 A M. ; 140. 8.40. 5.40, 6.40 and 10.40 r. 52. ON SUNDAYS. Leave Philadelphia -4M minutes A. IL t I and 7P. hi Leave Chestnut Hlll-7.50 minutes A. M. 12.40.6,46 and 6.25 minutes P. M. FOR CONSHOHOCKEN AND NORRISTOWN. Leave Philadelphia-43, 736.9. *ICC A. M. 1135.8. 4)5, 5)6, 1.15, 8.05 and 1134 Leave Noi•t•iwil-5.4 0 . 7.7.60, 9. 11 A. IIL il)6. 8.434.11.11 and 8)6 P: M. ON SUNDAYS. _ Leave Philadelphi ;id 7.15 P. M. Leave Norriotown-7 ,ISIL • sid and 9P. M. FOR DIANAJNB. Leave Philadelphia—it, DA A. M. 1134 8,136, gm, 4.1.5, &OS and 11M P. M. L 01 1 ,70 Manayank--61.0. 736. &27. 934;11,36 A. M. 15. 13A1. eiC and 9 P, M. - ON BIINDAYI3. Leave Philadelphia-9 A. M.; . P. M. Leave Mnaronk-735 A. IL; an and7 d 935 15 P. M. W. B. WON. General an .Depot, Ninth and Green streets. • PHILADELPLEM.LWILISINGTON ' l -' . - AND BALTIMORE .11A11.110A1) °— ' T.IME TABLE.---Commeneing Mon day, Nov. 23d. 1838. Trains will Leave Depot, cornar.of Broad street and Washington avennrk'as follows: Way-mail Train, at 8.30 A. M. • (Sender:. excepted). for Baltimore,. stopping at all gallons. Connecting with.Dehlwarekalliroad at rnillgtoll, far crialtaltland • intermediate station. ' Exprees train at 12.00 H. (Sundays excepted) nor gjialti ' mere and Washington* stopping at Wilmington: Perr ville an4llavrade- , Grace., Connects at Wilmington wi train for New Castle. ExpreseTrain at 4.00 P. M. (Sundays excepted), for Bal. tiliaore and'Wsabin:_ iltunPing.:_at Chester; ThurlOW. Linwoo4 Clxymont, wilmington,Gewport,Stanton. New ark, Elkton,Northeast,Charlestown.PerryvilleArivrede Grace. Aberdeen, Perrynimes. Edgewood. magnolia. a:mote and Stemmer% - Run. Night Express at 11.80 P. M. (daily) for Baltimore and Washington. stopping at Chester, Marlow, Linwood, Claymont, Wilmington. Newark. Elkton, Northeast, Perryville and Havre.de Grace. Penang:ars for Foram:Monroe and Norfolk will take tho 12.00 M. Train. wesassgron Train&stopping at all stations between Philadelphia and Wilmington: - Leave Philadelphia at 11.00 A. IL, SOO, 5.00, 7.00 P. M. The 5.00 P. M. train eonnecte with the Delaware Railroad for Harrington and intermediate stations. Leave Wilmington 7.00 and 5.10 A. M. and 1.20.4.15 and 7.00, P. M. The 8.10 A. M. Train will not atop between Chester--and Philadelphia. The 7.00 P. 51. Train from • Wilmington rune Daily ; all other Accommodation Trait Sunday:a excepted. From Baltimore to rbiladelphia.—Leave Baltimore 7.21 •A. M., Way Mail. 9.35 A. IL, Enron. 2.25 P. 11.• Er -Mass. 7.25 P. M., Express. SUNDAY W.A.-FROM BALTlMOltil—Leaveßal timore nt 7.25 P. M.. stopping at Magnolia, Perryman% Aberdeen Havre de Grace, Perryville,_ Charlestown, North-east Elkton. Newark. &Beton, Newport, .. ..reington, aymont, Linwood and Cheater. w: Through negate Coati points Westaiontn and Southwest May to procured at ticket.office, 828 Cheetant streetornder Continental Liotek where oleo State Roomsaxid Berths in Bleeping. Cars can be ,secured during the llaY. Perms purchasing tickets at this office can have baggage checked ' at thelr residence by the Union Transfer Company. U. P. KENNEY,.up aainteruient. _ CAMDEN AND ATLANTIO RAIL ROAD. r 2 t4%, or WINTER ATtßANtittt,T. On and after MONDAY, Octobor 28, 1668. trans will leayo Vine Streot Wharf ao follows, yin. : 144 ail and Freigt.t 7 SO A. M. Atlantic Accommodation 11.45 P. M . Junction Accommodation, to Atco and 'Worm°. diate btationo.. . , .6.001'. M RETURNING, WILL LEAVE ATLANTIC. Mail and Freight. ........... M Atlantic Accommodation 6 10 A. M • J unction Accommodation, from Atco ~•6.25 A. M. -- . -- lIADDONFIELD ACCOMMODATION TRAIN WILL ALE Vtl Vino Street Ferry at 10.15 A. M. and 2 00 P. M. lladdonßeld at............... .. I.® P. M. aud 8.15 P. IL .10.41 ' ... D. IL MUNDY Agent. samliGigetitial &NIA? tik . ., &aphis, to the interior of Peruarylva tthe Rehnylkill,,, atuatuchanna, Ccunberiand and Wyoming Vfnellq. the , flortin' Naillevelt mid the Cana. Pinter Anssmaralatt of Piusentl a =pee. u. h ill. aving the. Com Er a, and Cal. Ant h &tuna° atNasurs. I - MORNING /LOCO 0 TION.-At ~, _, -- 1 - - 11, - 7C:ror Reading. and all Intermediate litatioes,__Mild entown. mikvikNIAIRIV fit :6 +36,Pk.htictirtiving_ln ri+l= l . 4lat R. 28 IMQ 0 RXRP.EBI3. - - , At B.ls A. M. for Beading X•e, ran, • atrictrarg, Potbviun pine Om% Tamagni. unbar" Willisunniort,Elmira. RocheiterANimitars Palls. uffalo. WiLkesbarrn Pittston. York. CAMIW , UMW+ hamburg. Hagerstown dic. • - I The 7.80 train col:meets at Redding with' the Bast Penn. iiisivisnin Railroad with for Allentown he., and the 8.15 A. it; cohnectit ' 0 e 'Lebanon Valley train for Harreitang,_dcro et ark Clinton with Catawba& &B. trains for wißiamispart.' le Haven. Blagira, Med , Alt Harrisburg_irtik Northern . ntral. Cumbermna , Valley, and flebnyi and Busuriehminattaitut for Nortlinnibgt-•• .1 1 m Al V ATkrth n i :T - 00 n gat i a l -% l at t els b i l itglad rl XWAl r iti ; P. Si. for a. Pottsville. Harrisburg, dm., connect ing with Reading and Columbia Railroad trains for Col. lIM P I OMICION atOCOMIICHATION.+- Leaded+ Patbs. towns at B.4f,A.M..idopping at intermediate datiOns rtves,in Philadelthis atil.lo A. M. Return:km leaves M.. ladelphistat 4,oot__._' Mt. arrives in Pottstown at 6.15 Pi M. AR AMING ACCIOMMODATION-Leavee Reading__at, 7.00 A. M. stopping at all ray station ; " arrival EU mus. dit t,...i.. his al+ /o•26loarbuideaph& 5t .. 4.48 P. M. arrives In Readiiii - afit.4o P.M. .-:s + - . . ,- + 1 - Trains for Philadelpir I re nallisbnnta" t sb and Polgavige it 8.4. arriving-in o_ ii. . Lia P. Si. Afternoon batty! estrogarrhikvirvitacia Pjd.,. andPothwille at AMP. Si.: atria= at Madge/ft at it accommodation leaVec Reading .st 7.15 a. and jElaubbag at SAO P. M. Conneetinig at Reading wl Afternoon Aceedittion: feting 'sig 1125 +. P. m.. striving in Madel'phist - Matter .nririt.h . at car -attaattelte leaves - Philadeltkla Mato noon for Potand all Way Ms. Ur • leaves P • Msivilie at 7.80 A. . fin Ptilleilitdpida and An 0 ii= nin .t i t t uutikla it. VlW. i iira pm& d Btatlona. ;z el his&H P. let e llave_P Wils — EFßaidinfr *1 , _B.o&fiMfavilizMii, in naMtit m l96l l . IL: ••• - and Ix* , ae_ tho ulserf rAll. I=P. Si. from Mu t iouip_ht t AndsN front likan at ele A, , M.1_12.88 P. m. fklii iti - - rEamaomEN EAILROAD.--raagenaere for_ilkip• pack taki reta ga Rianult 4100 P. Si. balms from- lidel•t front filrippack ULU& 111.antiPIX48 P.' Selltage lissenfar lesions points in Perldomen yaks 'conneet with trains at Collegeville andilklopack. • ORM • • • - it neti llelit AND TH Y W e WEBT-+Lasiros • '- t lit 9A: IIL. 11.00 sad 8.00 . ; P Reading st IRl` . + and 10.12 P.initi 'connect a* bung • + - L. , . an •=n V ntral Railroad Ruses k r for :.... - • dit=ill Tista leavaa l garrislaws. on arrival Pelm ar nis M 2 F am Vaq iit aft i tai a r d A. 6 ll? Ai Si.. and MO P. Si., at New York UM ii• 125 .M.. _and 6.00 -P. lit, Objming Cars swam a =O4 tn 414.1 thM 4llll4 ,tiveen lea " , P 1 0 ' A nd ' . 11 1, 419 • - for efW ' ell attithl '... 41 Itaik team_ iiillaiiitini airkii." antir.* man ftliaverk)FiPitkveB l iitly-XOrig 6Cg +L VALLEY• AD. leave Pottervilki at, 6A6, A.M. and 6Ao 4. P Bi ntsturnhigfrolti / T ruM I; sat a V irl i . 6 sgari._ii........ . E 4 Tram hewn Auburn Ulf A: Si. rove o_ and Maw risinirs,ana st_Afilili t ..for PMegr and I W , Mi re- Wning front Harrill) at IWO P. IL, and fr o m Trament St 7.40 A. lel. anA 6.135 R. TICICETB.-=ougn drat•elant Rasta_ and tickets to all the nits:Mal lit4n481!+1 18 irth o +/ -I T - Vr .11 4 , f " l3=fickets his to Reading and = dials Btano good for only, are by. Acconinc Market: " 4, voa- P t t Accommodation Trains at reduced rates. Tickets to Philadelphia. good for day 0 B ead croly are mold at Reading and inter • editte W hY sand PottatoWts ;idoetSo2o l 9o l titialt "MAMA .14 Maimed The following tickets , are obtainable on yy OM NI of B. Bradford. Treasular - No. 221 Routh Mom= street. litadten.- _ Commutation-irkact.lllPer ingkdisoptutti: between is desired foriammas and coons. - Tickets. good I for WO miles. between all points alWeath. far mollies and arms. n Tlekets. for three. ail isbus ec i w y tat e. rtp . r e months , fur _Clawman h". on gelitiol "" = L ' a tizrot thei r rOad achew with enuning • thernielyel end - who to ced et half fare. Dousursion Tickets from Philadelgii% principal_ its-_ to team good for Ba .. fa a to be. ,bi l aunda he uc r ie r o crj,g a rgro c a - 7BMGHT.--Goods of all deaeriltiall farmstead to all :the above fromthe tllonns blew Freight Dego. lekve his ßmih, at ,it A. IL. 645 ire I t p our for l i giaus. — ros tomyond. ; I,7lhri .r tor supisees _on the read ant Its at II d. iy*tor th e ids. eipal ittatiomi tolls at 9,111 P. ysellAusi. Dimgan's • will collect Baggsee for all Was hisorders can be left at N0.J141 V. l l A le arate Depot. Thirteenth and cab. bill streets. :•• •• • • • :r: .1 sty' • • 1 •77 .•t • and 1989lEADELPHIA • `-• • . t :"• s F TTEOAD COM. P " LINESMont •••• • • : to kW York. and :WILY threel. fram Wang • Wharf. Peng WE A. kL. via CaMden antAmboy.__Aeeom. $2 m - BA. id„;via Camden.andJerseyrditar Burma Mall. 800 .ts 2.00 PM.. via CaMden and Amboy Emmaus. 00 At 6 P. M.M for Amborand intennediate eta ow. _ At 6.80 and BA. M i mi 2P. M.. for Mahal& 8 and 10 A. K. SAO stadia) P. M., for •_6.80,8 and 10 A. . S. hao. 4.9 0. 6 and MTV ' ', M., for mornentown. Burlington. Beverly' and Delano. At 6.80 and 10 A. hL.101.191.4.80. 6 and lUD P. M. for Flax. rence, Edgewater. Riverside ; -Riverton Palmyra and Wonse, and 9 P.M. for Florence and Riverton. H The 1 and 11.80 P. M. Lines will leave from foot of Market street_ by upper fora. From Kensington Depot: _ At 11 A. thlia Kensington and Jersey QM New York 88 00 A 7. 0 and 1.140 - gravo:a do and 5 P.M. for , renton and toL Arid ' at 10. A. M. for Bristol. A 7.80 and 11 A. BL. EDO and SP. M. for Morrisville end AD l • l i t43 ) and 10.15 A. M.. 880 and 5 P.M. for/Schen' cks and di:oBton. At 7.80 and 10.15 A. M.. 2.80.4, 5. and 6 P.N., for Cornwells. Torresdaleaiolmesburg. Tacony. Wiseinoming, Brides. burg and. Franinand. and BP. M. for litihnesburg and intermediate Stations. From West Philadelphia Depot.via•Conneeting Ball law, At 9.45 A. ht. IE4 4.680 and MP. M., New :York Express Line. via Jersey City ^ - wr.issid At 11 Pa P. M. Emigrant Line.. - - • ....2 00 At 51.45 A. Id. 1.20, 4, 6.80 and MI% Trento:a: At 9.16 td.. 4. and 12 P. M.. for BrintoL A L 9 P . M. (Night ) for ,Morrisville,,Tullytowor. Schenck'. Wi=rn, ComweUs,Torrisdale, Holmesburg. Taman ming. Bridesburg and Frankford. TheE4s AbLand dal do 12 rad.r..4Learurel,4l3,F. All others. For Lines leaving Kensington Depot, take the cars on Third or Fifth streets, at Chertnut,_at half an hour before departure. The Cars of Market litreet Railway tan dl. rect. to Worn Philadelphia. Depot, Chestnut and Walnut within one square. On Sundays,, the Market Street Cats will run to,connect with the 9.45 A. ld and WE and 12 P ML _ _ BELVEDERE. DELAWARE 11,3ILROAD LINES from Remington Depot. At 7.80 A. M., for Niagara Fails, Buffalo, Dunkirk. Elmira, Ithaca., ego.ltochesterj_3ldahampton, °awes°, Syracuse, Great Bend.Montxase. Wilkesbarre. Scranton. • Stroudsburg . Water ap. Schoolev , a Mountain. dm. At 7.8),A. M. and, 0.80 P. M for Belvidere. Eaatrni. Lambertvine,Elemiri l iton, rac. 'Tho 8.30 P. M. Line 13011. netts direct with e train leaving Easton for Mauch Cbunk,Allentown. blehem. &cc At 5 P. M. for Lambertville and intermediate Stations. CAMDEN AND BURLINGTON•42IO.,AND PEhtBERTON AND RIGHTEITOWN RAILROADS. from Market Street Ferry, (Upper Bide. ) At 7 and Md. - id-J.848.80 and 5.80 P.M.for Mernbantsville, Moorestown. Hanson!,•.Masonville, Raiment, Mount holly Smithville , Ewaxusville.Vincentown.Birmingham and r emberton. At 7 a.M..1.80 and 13.M1 P.M.for Lewistown,Wrightstown. Cookstown. New Egypt, Horneretown. Cream Bldg°, Imjaystown. Sharon, and Hightstown. Fifty Pounds of Baggage only.allowed each Passenger. Passengers are prohibited from takinit h anything as bag. gage but their wearing aPParel. • All aggage over, fifty pounda to be paid for extra. The Company limit their re.. monalbility for baggage to OW Dollar, per pound t and will noth be co ntract%► liable for any amount beyond 8100. exec% by cit •• Tickets sold and Bagaarte checked aired =rough to :, worcestex, Elpnnglield, Hartford. New Haven, Providence, NeWport,' Albany.' Troy, Saratoga, • Utica, some. syrgeusq Rochester, Bank:. Niagara Fans and Sus Pension Bridge. An additional Ticket Office in located at No. 828 Chestnut street, where tickets to New York, and all im- Portant points North and East, may be procure& 'Per rone purchasing Tickets at this Office,. can have their' bag gage checked from residences or hotel to deatination. by Union Transfer Baggage Ex p re s s. Lines from New York for Philadelphia will leave from toot of Cortland etreet at 1.00 and 4.00 P. M.. via Jersey_CX4 o d Camden. •At 6.80 P. M. via Jersey City_ and K n. ..At 7, and 10 A. M.. 12 M,5 anda and 12 Nig via Jersey City and Welt ' Mad& phis. From Pier N0.1.N. River. at 0.10 A. M. Aacammodation and 9 P.M. Exuma, via Amboy and Camden. • • Nev. 28. 1868.. WhL EL GATZmvn. Agent. IintiLADEL.PLUA. , AND_.I4 p. 7 iv: . •••. RAILROADt— FALL TIME TA. BLE.—Tbroutk and Direct Route bo. tnoen Philadelphia; Baltimore, Garristun , winiamit„, port, to the_lgorthweet and the Great 011 Re aso n of Pann• sylvania.—Elpicant fileopbag Carlon all Nig t Trains. On and after MONDAY, Nov:. 20d, 1068,'. the Tram on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad will run al follows: r • ~ • WESTWARD, An gilliT'r4lll lB6 ;i'ee 1 174 ;itidelptib r ii ..... • w 810 as P : A. O ' • " arrives at Fzle:. .. •.. • 9.50 P. Ege Exfr,'" Leaves lylrietr; ,11.50 A. IL • 840 Pi' M. " " arrives at ... . ..... 10.00 A. M._ Ei l l l 4 l4 R-La4/etYP sr w hil &W e" A: aniv es at Lock Haven 7,45 P; M. EASTWAR. .. 10 55• A .: Mail Train ItT" Erie " • """'rk "' ..... ..". .12.15 A. M. "... ...... " " Willi e.ms_ po arrives at-rhitadmpime , 10.00 Eke Express loaves Erie... . . .. ... ; ... 625 P.: M. .. . 7.20 A. " arrives at Philadelphia • 420 P. M. Mail - and Express connect . with Oil Creek ;tad 4116.; c h alk y Ewer troad. jiiiiggato Checked Through,, ALFRED L. TYLER, - • Detitog SaPeFintekdent. PEULADELPIILA BALTTI.IOIO3I • CENTRAL- RAILROAD. Winter • •""" ' Arrangements. On and afterlionday. Oct 6th. 1868, theTralna will leave Philadel hia,from rho Depot of the West Chester dr. Philadelphia con ner of Thlrty,first and Chestnut streets (West Ballads.). at 1.96 pA,. _M. and 4,60 P. N. - • • . LeaveXising Bun, at 5.46 A: M. acrd Oxford at 6.80 A. M., and leave Oxford at 3.25 P. M. A. Market Train with PLUME/a al a attached will run on Tueadays and Fridays, leaving thoßlsing Sun at 11.15 A. 8., ()afford at 11.45 M. and Kennett at 1.00 P. 6L_, con. nesting at West Chester Junction with a train for Phila. delphia. On Wednesdays and Saturdays train _leaves Philadelphia at 2.110 I'. M.,runs through to Oxford. Who Train leaving Philadelphia at 7.46 A.M. connects at . Oxford with a daily line of Stage' for Peach Bottom, in Lancaster county. Returnin& leaves Peach Bottom to connect at Oxford' with the dlegnoon Train for Pbliadel. The Train leaving Philadelphia, at 4.60 P. M. rune to Wang Bun, Passengers owed to take wearing app ar el 0 1 3 1 .1 rs Baggage, and • e Company will not. In any oast, no re. sponsible for an amount exceeding one hundred dollars, unless a social contraet.be made for tho mime. tohlll • ; Y WOOD. (lateral Don't. QUICatEd 71:Mr ON , ,RUTOita ' *--- -7777 11111111191AgaMMOlfili. ~, ! :. 1 7,:, - tii - mitifflogA m Ml E M il imealML..' Timm than bp:10 , viiPM:iiii4T6.,:. PABESENG z.n talg.o.,_ 4 ,- _. . „... :,,, OINLINNATI__fIost Av=iuo.* az F. fftir ~, . fi.,„. ~. ~,,, ONLY ONE NIGHT o n ttut RO ..,: - ,i, , -.:, : 4 %-• ,:, fliafrVElLElV_oon.:_mrst , cieletite- Room EILEEPEMEaIta tun through iftmh- ' TECULto OINOINNATL : YaMongza t lVlDO ..B l., , „ mid: 'll_,' I" fiL ' TWO - tosotr Vili points WEET.sad ROUTE ONE ! ;WWII of all Ismieng i°lltell .iiir ' EIECONEWMAnt, .... rel LO . WA _ _dr&O . I:IMAGO ' .8 ViDiCY MILWANE#PAU4'. 1 • - ' - '' ?I :' %.• 9 , • i eal ,• WEST 0 SWM - ; 274114. ~ .1 - •. . ik&lawienha")4 for.ll9l![Fr ~- v #-:-. .. siv-To' EAEWM.p,,m, ... .. ~.. sad-- -VO . . tha" NriWii UANDLE; L ACKSV oniumev' -. N: w: commitment isius BUT otftlitik, NO. MMUCET 13THEILI% bet. Second and Ettertint; Anti Tifilfalt-ifillElT dna DlARKentiliettsWett H. r. Genq Ticket AUL rilisburith• • - JOHN .11. , MITs;P:e. Ciern raiWn Att.llll6 BraidwaratT trat.. - - . RUMWEST OHESTIIft AND DELPIDA - RAILROAD NIA. , , ,_ DIA... , WINTENAERANO On an _d safterMONDAY. Oct. 6th. .1803. ..the wilt ; leave Depot, Tnittylint and Cluestantetreete, sefollower, Trains leave PhiladelPhiw for WllafLeheaud:* at 7 ;. 47 4 4 ' SI, II A. 11.:2.20.4.15. 4.508‘16 and /Lou V , heater far rhiladelphlar atpr o cat id i tir a t k e v etl r e e atlil. 7.45.00 and Mee A. . 11 1 , 4 , Trains leathli *eat Mester atltee IL: IC, 'mid' felObiii Philadelphia.. at 4.50 P. X. wit:Feb:lP lit Media. ~ , ld. G. 4111409:"Iwie passengers te or from, stations between Weft Moder And B. O. Junction. adnCest. will take train. leaving West Cheater at 7.46 A, and.gc_dneg-Weet. wln.mktv trete' .. _ . leaving' Philadolldlia at E. M. ara Mode* af , B. - 41 , Jnncuon Tram* ieming — Rhilidelphlei at 7.45 A; m... and 4.50 P.Mft-... and leaving Cheater at doe A. M. and , - - eV 1.1 m... connect at .u. O. &motion with Train on r. and .u. u. It. N. for Oxford and intermediate pelmet. oN autuDA/M - bawre knuilmonii at SAO' A•if l44l. Leave Weot Charter 515 'A. IL and 4.00 p.m..._, ,, , _,, Tile Depot breached directly! le the Oheettedg e Wae• nut Street, squintsme of the market- Street Kiel , within ontk , The care or both Alps .. otriT , !,c4 mik;,a , . esandl, as =l e torga l 4, o d t o . take only's& Bilegiega, and the Company -VII notiin . altrip: be reeponitote tor an amount emwedlng_sl.oo.unleek. . I contract le made for the same. , ~ us NUE Woo - r , ..-+ - - ~.. •, - • i - - ,-. Generalfhwthetendente , ' - • RO k to FOAL ifilkellT4=o:" a i llosM=aragratt t i 5,54.16 thUtoad IS 4 0 1,„ 1O a reed MEW " ='" • ; *Wandt E Trnir prer sz li 6.116, eared N and 0 ~ P. , reign - WlErsobann: = toy YOftz. and al other gitiqns in WYeuda4 berme II A* Pliat ra tha r =d i ug &Ail • L- 7 N Tilß ORPHAN& -COURT POD THE CITY AND_ 1 :Comito , or , ' Pbiladelpbla:.L , Estate of CHARLAti -D. WAGHTarAN, deceased.--The Auditor appointed ise. the Court to audit, settle and adjustthe lecond and final ac. count of ERPIIML;DUTTON, Administrater rot: the Et. tate of said deceased. and, to report distribution. of the below 'tithe hands of, the' accountant. will meet the nartles interested fotthe purpose ofhie Appointment, on wg.DnE SDAY.Decomber etith. 1665. at 4 o'clock P. lds at the office of N. CAM PBALL. Peg Of VPle Welds n the city! CitY &Az m wig§ TN THE ORPHANS' COURT FOR THE CITY AND County of .philadelphiin- - .Estattr ef' CHARLES T. AMOS, _ deceased. hereby ;even - Mg' RIP SAN Amos. the widow,of said decedent. has tied in said Court her petition and appraisemelit of 'persona pro- , perty of said decedent elected:tor be 'retailed by her under - the act of Assembly of, 14th April,-IE6I, and ite• en_pple. menta. and_that the seize will be approved by the court on - SATURDAY. -- Jannary 9, 189'unIca. - exceptiotut thereto be Sled. ROBERT 31. LOOAN dote fats 4N Attorney for WiflOw. 114.{- HE COURT OF: cOltbtON NAVAS' FOIL Wt.. Citlt and County of Philadelphia... Assigned Estate of N. fin RTEVANT &CO. The auditor appeinted by the CoUrt to audit, oebtle stint tpet, second aessuut of JOSEPH A. CLAY. Asdanee of 13TURTEIVANT bOO., and to report distribution .of.the, balance' in the hatadr of the accountant. will meet the Parties interested , _ for the purpose-of his:appOinMmitims MON A L _Y.4anu., *4 4. 1180. at the-of fi ce of JOSEPH A. C.E. 271801e111 FIFTH strret. is the City of , P elphia. delatinsratt• • THOILAS - OUGHBAN. Auditor TN TEMA:MOUND , COURT ,FDILTII3I CITY AND 1 1 WsiT County_ of. PALladelplda.--Eatate of ITURNUE DEBTO. desed.—TiaeAnditor appointed the Court to audit, Bettie and.adhuit the account of JO B. DEB. TOUET- and • RINODOLD WILMER. • Executoria a OATUIINUO,DRIS:TOUE'r,doceased, and to report distil; button of the -, balance' Ili the 'halide of the , acconaitant. will meet the in for the emotes of = his appointment, on MONDAY. Detttliber•Dith.-18613, o'clock A. M.. at his office,N 311 South Third streak in the city of Philadelphia. r 8. aragill:' NORMA, dole w, f ••• . • • 1 N THE ORPHANB. COURT, FOR THE, MTV% AND L. County_ of Philadelphia—Estate of JACOB: L. FLORENCE deceased.—The Auditor. appointed by the Court to audit, fettle and adjust the first and final account of HANNA FLORENCE, F.•:IL FLORENCE, E. J. FLORENCE and'A. MIMI.. Executers of the lig Will of JACOB L,FLORENCE. deceased: and to report distribu tion of the balaucb in the hands 6f the acetwitantsogli meet the parties intereste.: for the purpose of hliappoint. meat, on MONDAY, December 21 186& at 4 o'clock, F. at his office. No. %Law Building, 532 Walnut greet, in the city of Philadelphia, dell-f mE53111. TIIE.'ORPHANS , cousr 'FOE THE cur 'AND -- .* County Philadelphia —Trust Estate of JO/UM& - LAME, under the will of 'JOHN WRIORT A - dectmeed;,—. The Auditor.appointed by tbe ACourt to • audit. settle •and 'V; adjust the that and tinal account of SAMUEL, WRIGHT EDMUND WilIGH3`,, JOHN WRIGHT and GEORGE. BOLLOCE, Trades's under the will of the said decedent and to report , distributlon of the halauCe in the hands 'of , 4 the accountant; Will meet the parties interested toed's!' . purpose of .hut appointment, on TUESDAY, the 224., of December. A: D. 1868, at 3 e'dock P.ll . at hie office: Nct. 708 Walnut street, in the city of Philadelphia. -• dell tte.wBt§" ItIOLLARD tiONTER.Aut IrN THE %ORPHANS'' COURT -FOR THE - CITY AND 'l. County of ; Philadelplda, Estate of LOUIS LAENLMEL; deed.—the Auditor aPpointedbythn.clourtM audltmettle ' and adiust the 'first account of 4... YEAR SS' F. WICW, MAN, Administrator of , LOUIS LAESIMBL,f• deceased. , and to report diatribution.of tbe balance In the halal of t the actotmten will meet the parties inters sted_, - for- the PurPnre Of his appointment,' on MONDAY,' December sl. 18E8, at 4 o'clock M.. at. his °dice, No. 113 South Eif Mr-street: in the city of thiladelp_hta._. NY al. L. DENNIS, dell f m w 614 Auditor. , , • N THE ORPHANS , COEDIT FOE IRE CITY* , AND County of Fhiladolphia.—Estate of TaoslAB VI PON D.—The Auditor appointed •by the Court. to, audit. , settle. and adjust the firet and final account of JAMES A. STEVENS,JOSTAR GILBERT and NICHOLAS SHANE, Executors of the Estate of THOMAS VIPOND, deceased, and to report distributien of the balanee inthe halide or the accountant, will meet the parties interested for the Purpose of MA appointment on MONDAY. December 21st. A. R, ism at 4 o'clock . P. Ws Office, No.l2B:Soutts Sixth street, in the city of Philadelphia. • dell f"wety J . RN C. KEDLISFEER4 Auditor. IN THE., ORPHANS' COURT FOR: THE CITY-AND County of Philadelphia —Estate of PRISCILLA. ROBERTS, doceated - -Thel Auditor apoointed by. the court-to audit,settle and oiliest the fh st and final account of kIABICAVATtiON, Executor of toEISCILLA ItOSEETS. deed., and to make ,distribution .of the ball the bands of the accountant, will meet the parties interested. for the purposes of ids appointment. on TUESDAY: Dec. 52, In% at , 034 o'clock r. et Ida . office. S corner bath and 'Walnut streets, in the City of Pi iladelphia. • doll f m w W. J. MoEfAROY, Auditor.- N TIIN ORPHANS' COURT TOR' TLIE CITY AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA.—Estate of HENRY • .D. GILPIN, deceased. The Auditor appointed by the . Court to audit, settle and adjust , the fourth , account of ELIZA GILPIN, ,crtARL,Es fdAtIALE STE R. and CHARLES GILPIN. Executors and Trustees bf , said de• ceased. and to report distribution-of the balance in .the hands of the, accountant, will moot the parties interested, forth° purpose:!of his appointment, on WEDNEdDAY. December 23d,1268 at 11 o'clock - , A. 'AL, at hitr office S. E. Walnut and Sixth street, 2d story. in the city of Ptilladel. phia • -." . . dett.f m wfit* , ; • , ;Apdltor. IN THE COURT OF COMMON , PLEAS FOR I 1 pity and Conn of Philadelphia. • NOTICE is hereby giyen to all persons inter. 4 (listed that the boom able the Judges of our said 56 ""S Court have appointed MONDAY, the 2841 day 1 ,,,a" tour of December. A. D. 1868. at to o'clock A, for hearing the application for the following ()barters °fan -corporation, and unless exceptions, be filed, thereto eathe will be allowed, viz ' • The Philadelphia Infirmary. The Industry Saving Fund and _ Loan': Assoedation of fdanayunk. , FRED..O. WOLBERT. f USTATE OF , ANN .E.fistration, cmn..testamento ,annexo,; on the estate, of Ana Wood. , of this city. 4 deceased having been granted to the suoscriber by the , ltegister.,of Wills of the,City and 'County of Philadelphia, all persons - havfouclattrie against said estate, aro requested to present them for set tlement witho ut delay. 'MOH RIOHARDSON,Admv, - • , , _ Nez&ZiArtti street. .PurcanA.. limo. 20.1068.. no2il.t. • I - BTATE OF; ANNAPAUSSET, DECEASED. ' LET tars testamentary having• been thee, agder &good under the will of Anna Fausset, deceased. 411.per 'sops indebted to the testatrix will make pay mint and those having claims against her will present thera.to _ I ' wiLiaAm STRONG. . ••, • . 117.1Yalnat street: - EDWARD 3. DAVIES, , Pottstown, Alontgomerio ca. Po. Or to their Atierney. ROBERT N. WILLSON,7I7 al, • • • nut street. not3f 6t d USTATE OF PAUL 'KNOFFLOCEL DEOF&SECO. , .: , • Lettem testamentary having been granted, to, the undersigned, under the will of Fuel Knoilloeh, all persons indebted to the testater,wilt unlike Veyment. and Mose havtng , _clairne against him will precent them to • • MARTIN if.NOPF MEE Executor, - EDWARDA. HEIN'FZ. Atvy in toot. End ti Third street, 4 . Or to his Attorney, 11. E. WALL/3(1E028 Sou& Sixth a, --sAv4ll6 swouips. , norroN.-43 , NOW 101.14 DING, FKOM" V Moamar Tonsmando.. froirt•Savantiata, Georgfa l . and for rale by.00011.11.004,U45.E1at N0r0.,40 11 c. street. • TURPENTINP..-100 BBLS. SNTS, TURNEN. tino. per otontnorYlonner, now landlo. and for inkt byT.OOI3IIAN, RUSSELL & C0.:22 North ?rout stront„ SPIIIITS TURPENTIND-50 BARRELS SVIRITS TUE. pputino now landing and for sale n 9 EDW. 304/.110,1V. LEY. No. tti Wharvea. 11Mari-W TUrd'ENTINE AND ROSIN--110 BARRELS 13 Spirits Turpentine ; 142 bbl'. Polo - Soap Eosin; 1125 b bk. No. 2.Shipping Itoolo,toodfug from atoomiet for gale by L'DW. IL EWA...ELM 8. Wlxarves. n 02.14 : .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers